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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":" _\u2022-\n\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0p\nSayt Tunisia would be in Dangerous\nPoeJHon in Attack. Pig* 3.\nPerformance of Now Battleship\nSatisfies Admiralty. Pag* 7.\nCanadians Pliy Heroic Part in\nRescue During Raid. Page 7.\nVOLUME 40\nFIVE  CENTS PER COPY\n \u25a0\nto UjHHUeroiH\u00ab|~ Pegs\nFigurei on Britiih Troopi Taken\nIn Creece Reported. Page 7.\nMinister Surveys Commoni Damage,\nPlans Reconstruction. Page 3.\n(o^3\nN. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 13, 1941\nNUMBER  11\nHESS. NAZI\nY HEAD. FLIES TO\nFantastic Hess Flight Gives\nBritain Rare Prize of War\nRadio Station\nfor Kimberley Is\non Board Agenda\nKIMBERLL \\ B.C., May 12 (CP)\n-Erection of a 100-watt tsroadcast-\nIng itation for this district, legislation op obstruction of the highways\nby liveitock and depletion of trees\non Government land along the hallways will be on the agenda when\nthe Board ,of Trade here playi host\nto the Associated Boardi of Trade\nof Eastern British Columbia at then-\nannual meeting May 27 ani 28.\nIt is hoped representatives of the\nRocky Mountain Boards' Association\nwill also attend the gathering.\nAt the regular Kimberley Board\nmeeting circulation of hand bills\nwarning residents of a typhoid fever\noutbreak which has made its appearance here was recommended.\nludge Commends\nWest Kootenay\nLack of (rime\n\"It Is a mutter for congratulation that In theie timei no crime\nat all it charged agalnit anyone\nla ba tried at than auiiei,\" commented Mr. Justice Robertion,\nwhan ht wai Informed by Sher\nIff M, E. Harper, it the opening\nof the Spring Asiliu In Nelion\nMonday, that there wen-no crlm\nInal cam for thi Aulzei.\n\"In aome other loeilltln there\nli a great deal of crime and In\n\u2022ome localltlei very itrlquj\ncrime,\" ha continued, and congratulated tha Dlitrict \"on ltt\nfreedom from crlm* for the list\nabf trSre9*i ,\nNews Is Withheld for Two Days Until His\nIdentification Verified; Could Tell\nStory of Entire Nazi Setup\nANNOUNCEMENT SCENE IS DRAMATIC\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nRudolf Hess, Hitler's beetle-browed henchman and the\nofficial No. 2-heir to the Naii realm, has parachuted to the\nsoil of Britain from a commandeered Nazi fighter plane he\ntook aloft in direct defiance of the Fuehrer's orders.\nAs a Nazi Party leader and erstwhile Nazi war councillor, Hess thus became an extraordinary prize of war beyond\nthe wildest dreams of many Britons.\nSo fantastic was his solo flight out of the Reich that the\nBritish Government, after thorough identification of its hostage, announced it only late\nBritain Shows Biggest Gm for First Time\nS\nMonday night, two days after\nhe landed in Scotland. Observers were still openly at a loss\nover what to make of it.\nIf Hess ihould talk he could lay\nbare to Britain the entire framework of the Nail enemy\u2014information of inestimable value.\nThe first clue that something had\nhappened to Hess came from Germany Monday. The Nail Party announced that though Hess has been\nforbidden by Hitler to fly, he took\na plane from Augsburg, Bavaria,\nSaturday at 6 p.m., and presumably\nhad met with an \"accident,\" since\nhe had not been heard from since.\nThe Nail announcement said he had\nleft a note indicating he had \"hallucinations.\" The implication\nthat he wai dead.\nrn\nfor Some Time\nto Join Defences\n\u2022 t     ,*   -    \u25a0\u2022\nOTTAWA.-May 12 (CP1.-MII.\n(tary authorltlei tonight took the\nposition 'that for iome time to\ncome young Cinadlant called up\nfor four monthi\" oompuliory\ntraining will likely be detailed\nfor defence dutlei when their\ntraining counti an completed.\nWhen Defence  Minister Ralston\nnnounccd that recruits called up\nwould be retained in the army and\nuied to replace men of the active\narmy now on coast defence and\ninternal leciirity who had volunteered for overieai service, he placed no limitation on operation of the\npolicy. However, be did Bay that it\nwould definitely apply to the first\ntwo claisea\u2014those starting their\ntraining in April and May.\nQuestioned about the matter today Col. Ralston said he had nothing to add to his earlier announcement.\nThis reply, coupled with the need\nfor men to fill up formations destined for overseas service \u2014 a recruiting campaign for 32,000 men in\nthe next two months was opened by\nthe-Minister last night \u2014 was interpreted by military spokesmen as\nan indication there was no Immediate Intention to change the policy.\nTwo csjmpulsory .training classes\nnow are in training under the four-\nmonth plan and the third will be\ncalled up later this month. The\nclasses approximate 9000 each, depending on the number of active\narmy recrulti requiring accommo-\ndition at the lame time In the\ntraining centrei which can absoft\na total of about 10.000 men ln both\ncategories each month.\nLate Flashes\nMEXICO CITY, May U (AP)-\nUnconfirmed reporti circulated in\nInformed quartan hen tonight\nthit a large German lubmarlne\nthree weeki ago landed levint\npauengen \u2014 presumably Nazi\neganta\u2014In Mexico and left after\nloading a cargo of antimony con\ncentratei.\nLONDON, May 13 (Tuesday) (CP)\n\u2014\u25a0Kle Admiralty mnounced today\nthat the trawlers Rochebonne Ind\nKopanes have been sunk.\nLEWISTOWN, Pa., May 12 (AP)-\nMr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brewster,\nsocially prominent New Yorkers\nmilling four dayi on i cross-country pleuure flight, were found deid'\ntonight In the chirred wreckage ot\ntheir airplane itop a heavily wooded central Pennsylvania mountain.\nKANSAS CITY, May 12 (AP) -\nViicount Halifax, the B-itish Ambassador, told an audience tonight\nthat \"perhapi Herr Heu acted as\nhe did because he saw the writing\non the will.\"\nThe Ambassador brought chucklei\nfrom hii llitenen several times ss\nhe devlited from his prepared addreu to comment on the Impromptu\nparachute landing of Rudolf Heu in\nSiflUasd.\n... the midat of commenting on\nthis and eulogising Hess as \"the\nonly'Idealist\" ln the Nasi regime\nwhen it suddenly broke off to\ndeliver this breathless announcement from No. 10 Downing Street,\nthe Prime Minister's residence:\n\"Rudolf Hess, the Deputy fuehrer\nof Germany and Party leader of the\nNational Socialist Party, has landed\nin Scotland in , the following circumstance!:\n\"On the night of Saturday, the\n10th, a Messerschmitt 110 wu reported by' dur patrol to have cross-\nad the coait oTScetlaWiM tb'he\nflying in the direction ot Glasgow.\n\"Since the Messerschmitt 110\nwould not have fuel to return to\nGermany, thii report was at first\ndisbelieved.\n\"Later on . a Messerschmitt 110\ncrashed near Glasgow with its guns\nunloaded. Shortly afterwards a\nGerman officer who had bailed out\nwas found with his parachute in\nthe neighborhood, suffering from a\nbroken ankle.\n\"He wu taken to a hospital ln\nGlasgow, where he at first gave his\nname as Horn, but later on he declared that he wu Rudolf Hess.\n\"He brought with him various\nphotographs of himself at different\nages, apparently in order to establish his identity.\n\"These photographs wefe deemed\nto be photographs of Hess by several people who knew him personally. Accordingly, an officer of the\nForeign Office who wu closely\nacquainted with him before the war\nhas been sent up by airplane to\nsee him in the hospital.\"\nOnly that and nothing more, for\nthe moment at leut.\nBut it was clear that Hess' disappearance from Germany was no\naccident.\nAnd assuming that the Nazi\nannouncement correctly! gave his\npoint of departure, he could not\nhave made so great a mistak\nfor it is more than 800 air miles\nfrom AugSburg to Glugow\u2014the\nabsolute maximum range of a\nfully-fueled Messerschmitt 110\nfighter plane.\nComparison of the German and\nBritish announcements, however,\nbrought the picture into sharp focus. The Germans said Hess adjutants who permitted him to fly\nwere under arrest. So it wu apparent that either with the connivance est close personal friends\nor by sheer personil bravado,\nHitler'i erstwhile handyman had\nseized a plane and fled direct to\nBritain from Germany.\nHesa had been cloaest to hitler.\nAlthough Goering wai the officially-designated successor to Hitler\nin cue of death, Heu, because he\nwu personally far closer to his\nFuehrer, ostensibly* \u00bbnu next in\nline.\nThe tall, dirk, uturnlm Hen\nwai Hltler'i liter ego,\nAlmost Immediately atter tne\nPint* Gnat War, tha thrice-\nwounded Heu threw In hli lot\nwith Hitler and thi Nazi Party.\nThey itood together ln the ill-\nfated beer hall putsch at Munich\nin 1923. They fled together, and\nwere captured and imprisoned together.\nIn prison, Hitler dictated while\nHeu wrote ind edited \"Mein\nKampf,\" the itrange autobiography\nand exposition of grandiose schemes\nof the then little-regarded \"boss\" of\nthe Nazi Party.\nHess and Hitler were together\nthrough all the storm-toued years\nthit followed, ind were together\nwhen Hitler cime to power ind\nwhen he carried out the \"blood\npurge\" of 1934.\nHess brought Italy'i Mussolini\nto aee Hitler when the fateful\nRome-Berlin Axli wai accomplished He becime Hitler's personal deputy and Minister Without Portfolio, putting Into action\nthe visions ot his chief. Hiller alwayi conildered him reliable\u2014\nand like Hitler he neither drank\nnor imoked.\nAt practically every nubile appearance by Hitler, Hen lurked\nIn tht background.\nwhen Hitler told the Reichstag that\nGermany was at war with Poland,\nHeu was designated as the \"Crown.\nPrince'1 after Goering.\nHess gave the funeral oration for\nthe victims of the beer hall explosion of November, 1939, which\nhe and Hitler barely escaped.\nHe was with Hitler eight days\nago when the Fuehrer addressed the\nReichstag. He looked his usual self\non that occasion, unsmiling, a trifle\nmorose, u alwayi. If he had \"hallucinations,\" they were well concealed.\nYet even at that moment he unquestionably was harboring in hii\nmind the plan to leave Germany.\nThe fact that HiUer had forbidden\nhim to fly might indicate that the\nFuehrer had aome inkling of his\nwas bosom companion's disaffection.\nBut today the 47-year-old Hess\nThe British Broadcuting Cor- had made good his scheme of es-\nratlon late Monday night was! cape in hairbreadth fashion that\n\u2022 \u2022-\u2022-*- \u25a0\u2022-- \u2022-\u25a0 -was proof positive of his fertility\not imagination\u2014and of his courage,\nsince with sn unarmed German\nplane he risked death from British\nguns with no means of defending\nhimself.\nThe magnitude of his determination wu indicated in another way.\nfor he left behind his wife Use,\nwhom he married in 1927, ana their\nthree-year-old son. What their fate\nwill be depends on Hitler.\nHesi; the \u25a0Esjyptian-born German\nwho was the stage-manager for\nHitlerism. novt is beyond the reach\nof the man he once defied, '.,\nLondon, May 13 (Tueiday)\n(CP).\u2014Diicloiure of tha astounding nawi of tha landing In Scot-\nland of Rudolf Hui, Hltler'i deputy, to the world preu it the\nMinistry of Informition ranki al\nonl of tha moit time behind-the-\n\u2022cenei dramai of the wir.\nNewi writeri were lummoned\nto the conference room when\nthey found the atmoiphari oni of\nhigh expectation. On tne platform on which preu announcement! ire made both Alfred Duff\nCooper, Informition Mlnliter, ind\nDirector \u25a0 General Sir Wilter\nMonckton wera itanding.\nThey did not disguise their excitement. With them were the officials of the Censorship Department\nObvioui to the aasembled press-\nmen was the tact that some extraordinary news was about to be\nbroken.\nThe buzz of speculation was followed by a dead silence.\nJt preas liaison officer stepped\nforward. He read the official statement issued as from No. 10 Downing\nStreet.\nSeldom had anything been read\nhere with such strained carefulness.\nEvery word was significant. As the\nofficer concluded his message there\nwu a sudden wild stamping for\ncommunications to relay the news\nto all parts of the world.\nNewsmen disappeared so speedily\nthat Mr. Duff Cooper, the Director\nGeneral and the rest of the staff\nwere left in absolute possession of\nIhe large hall, in the fixed positions\nthey had taken to hear the announcement read.\nAlthough the story broke last\nnight in London at a late hour\nsuch was the sensational nature of\nthe implications that lt produced\nwidespread wakefulness.\nOfficials were reluctant to advance theories for publication at\nleut pending word of those dispatched to investigate the circumstances. The public, however, spoke\nfreely of the astounding news as a\nmanifest disaffection of a Nazi\nleader, and wondered whether it\nmight be an authentic Indication of\nthe break-up of the Naii hierarchy.\nThe Impact of the news was greater because London newspapers,\nbasing their stories on the radio\nreport, carried headlines that Heu\nhad been killed and was a probable\nsuicide.\nThe fict that air raid warnings\nhad sounded and that London wu\nunder alert for the second night\nafter the extremely severe raid of\nSaturday night seemed of secondary\nImportance.\nBelieved to\nDeserted Germany\nLies in Glasgow Hospital; Broke Ankle In\nParachuting From German Fighter\nHe Piloted Across Channel\nHE  WAS   FRIENDLY   SAYS   PLOWMAN\n(See Today's News Pictures for Photo)\nLooking down into the muzzle\nof the Slant \"Boche Buster\".\nThis gun, top, of unrevealed calibre, is now belng'used by the\nBritish army, and takes its place as one of the world's largeit guns.\nA super heavy railway mounting is needed to carry it. BeloW is tbe\nname plate on the gun which seems to couple the name of the gun\nwith England's leading war aim. The \"H.M.G.\" means \"His &T^\nGUD\"- \u2022' jg.\nijesty's\nUnidentified Launch Tak\nPolice Search Continues al Daylight\nIng\nout\nReporti of a large launch tak-1 board roWboat, but Mr. Wilmot told\nfire and linking about a mile The Daily News that by the time\n' they had arrived, the boat had sunk.\noui from Wilion Creek on Kootenay Lake early Monday evening\nwera received by Provincial\nPolice .at Nelion, but up to late\nMonday night police had been\nunable to determine the owner of\nthe launch or who wu on It. It\nwai feared that there wu little\ndoubt but thit the penon or perion! on the boat had perished.\nOne report uld that It wat\nundentood that three penoni\nwere on the launch, but Police\nuld thiy had no verification.\nPolice aald that the launch might\ncontain.any-one of a few parties\nfrom Nelion, but it that time they\ncould not determine which one, if\nany, It wai.\nThe first' report received by the\nPolice came from H. F. Wilmot of\nGray Creek., Mr. Wilmot said that\nihortly before 7 o'clock he saw a\nfire apparently burning across the\nlake. On looking through telescope\nglasses, he realized that a boat was\nburning some distance out trom the\nfar shore. He notified the Police,\nand he and J. D. Bacon, also of\nGray Creek, went out in an .out-\nFINDS WRECKAGE\nBits of charred wreckage were\nfloating about, and Mr. Wilmot\npicked up two gas cans and a piece\nof the side of the boat, painted\nwhite.\n\"We know that certain parties\nfrom Nelson have been out, but we\nnave no statement to make as yet,\"\nConstable G. A. Brabazon, who went\nup to investigate with Constable C.\nW. House, stated. The two constables went out in a boat from\nProcter, but their search, in darkness, proved of no avail. They\nplanned to resume their search at\ndaylight today.\nWhen the police left the scene of\nthe accident, a privately-organized\nsearch party of one or two boats\nwas working, but it wes not expected that it .would bear results in\nthe darkness..\nWilson Creek Is the first creek\nSouth after Irvine Creek from\nProcter, on the West side of the\nLake. It is .seven miles from Procter.\nBritish Attack\nAxis Forces al\nTobruk, Salum\nCAIRO, May 12 (AP).\u2014British\ndesert troops have, taken the offensive against Axis forces in the\ntorrid heat of the Tobruk and\nSalum areas, the Middle East\nCommand said tonight, while two\nBritish columns are closing in on\nthe last isolated army of Italians\nln Ethiopia.\nAlthough the Tobruk-S\u00bblum action was described as local in\ncharacter, British methan zed\n- enita' made many attack\u00bb-mflicl-\n\" ing casualties and incapacitating\nnumerous Axis tanks during\nfighting in temperatures ss high\nas 120 degrees Fahrenheit\nThe Royal Air Force started three\n' ,.-ge fires in Bengasi harbor, set\n,.ur planes afire at Benina and\n.amaged airport buildings at Ber-\n,;a, today's communique announced.\n(London announced a heavy fleet\nbombardment on Bengasi last Saturday night.)\nSurrender of 38,000 Italians clinging to the lofty fortress of Amba\nAlii in Northern Ethiopia was considered inevitable.\nImperial troops were reported to\nhave occuDied the nearby stronghold of Gumsa.\nThe situation in Iraq has become\n\"more stabilized,\" the Air Command\nsaid. There hu been little sustained\naction, apparently since the British\ntroops recaptured Rutba station on\nthe oil pipeline to the Mediterranean.\nLabor May Challenge\nMenzies Government\nSYDNEY, May 12 (CR Cable)AJ\nThere appears a distinct possibility),\nthat labor will challenge the Government almost Immediately after\nthe return of Prime Minister Menzies, despite the prestige he gained\nin Londbn, Ottawa ani Washington\non his study four.    \u25a0__, %\nLabcs leader John Curtin declares\nLabor will aeek to lead the Government If lt wins a forthcoming \"by-\ntln argues that In view bf events\nafter the lul FMeral electic i. notably the record swWig toward Labor\nIn New South Wales In last week's\nelection, the Prime r'nlster ought\nto Interpret any further Labor by-\nelection gain as an indication that\nAustralia desires her war effort to\nOn the dramatic Scot  1. 198S. be directed by Labor.\nejection In South Auitralia, Mr\"Cur-1 formation about Canada are greater\nNazis Strike af\nBritish Airdromes\nLONDON, May 13 (Tuesdsy)\n(CP) \u2014 London had a two-hour\nair-raid alert starting last midnight but there was only a brief\nburst of gunfire and no planes\nwere heard overhead.\nDuring Monday the German Air\nForce made only light stabs at\nBritain, while the Air Ministry\nannouced that during Sunday\nnight's fa-ays nine enemy aircraft\nwere shot down.\nThe Nazis appirently switched\ntheir attack from seaports and\nsought out Britain's air bues, but\nan authoritative source declared\nthe German claim to have bombed\n20 airdromes wu, \"as usual, grossly\nexaggerated.\" It said some .damage\nwu done at air stations, however,\nand that a number of casualtiei occurred among lervice perionel, including iome killed.\nStill piled up their record-breaking bag of Nazi night raiders\u2014already far ahead of the 90 mark for\na whole month let in April\u2014Britain's defenders raised this month's\ntotal lo 133 so far. Of these, night\n\" ;hters are credited with shooting\nwn 107\n)\nirist Head Looks\nfor Record Season\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP)-In-\nautries and requeiti for tourist in-\nnow than at any time since the Canadian Travel bureau was formed,\nD. Leo Dolan, Bureau head, said\nhae today on his arrival from California.\n\"Unless some major crisis occurs\nIn the meantime,\" Mr. Dolan said,\n\"1 think we can look forward to a\nrecord tourist season.''\nI  '\nHITLER RECEIVES\nADMIRAL DARLAN\nBERLIN, May 13 (Tueiday)\n(AP)\u2014Hitler hu received the\nFrench Vice-Premier Admlnl\nDarlan In the preienee of Foreign\nMlnliter Rlbbentrop, It wu innounoed urly todiy.\nThe Communique announcing the\nmeeting did not lay where or when\nit took place.\nThe announcement ssid:\n\"The Fuehrer, in the presece of\nthe Reichsminister of foreign affairs\nreceived the Vice-President of the\nFrench ministerial council Admiral\nDarlan.\"\nWoodward Suggested\nas Hamber Successor\nOTTAWA, May 12 (CP)\u2014The Dominion Government had expected\nLleut.-Governor Eric W. Hamber of\nBritish Columbia to continue in office for at least another year and\nconsequently little consideration\nhad been given the appointment\nof bis successor, a government\nspokesman said today.\nThe name ot W. C. Woodward of\nVancouver is one of those suggested\nfor the post. Mr. Woodward u one\nof the executive assistants to Munitions Minister Howe. For a time\nthese dutlei were heavy but with\nthe reorganization of the department lut Fall the responsibilities\non the executive assistants were\nlightened to such an extent that for\nsome time Mr. Woodward has been\nback ln Vancouver and looking after\nthe duties of hii munitions post from\nthere.\nCOAST WOMAN  DIES\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP) -\nFuneral services will be held here\ntomorrow for Mrs Ethel May Rose,\n36, widow of A O. Rose, former\nmember of Ihe Vancouver Sun editorial staff. Mrs. Rose died Saturday.\nHamburg, Bremen\nSeverely Struck\nLONDON, May 12 (CP)-Aircraft\nof the Royal Air Force Bomber\nI Command, apparently still copcen-\n! trating on efforts to paralyze Germany's sea power at its source, were\nannounced today to have left Ham->1\nburg and Bremen,'two of Germany's\ngreatest shipbuilding centres, in\nchaos after new ova-night poundings.\nMuch-smashed Hamburg and Bremen were R.A.F. targets for the\nthird night in the past four and an\nAir Miistry News Service bulletin\nsaid shipbuilding yards which line\nthe Rvec Elbe on both sides for\nnine miles at Hamburg \"were\nthreaded and crossed with fire.\"\nThe bulletin mentioned specifically the Blohm and Voss yards,\nwhere some of Germany's mightiest\nbattleships have been built, and\nwhere, it said, high explosives and\nincendiary bombs added to damagit\npreviously done. The R.AJ. lost\nfour planes.\n(The German High Command\nmade the unusual admission that\n\"stronger\" R.A.F. formations had\nattacked Hamburg and Bremen over\nthe weekend, causing heavy damage\nand inflicting numerous cuualties.)\nFIND KIMBERLEY\nMAN DROWNED\nACCIDENTALLY\nCRANBROOK, EC, May 12 (CP)\n\u2014A coroner's jury Inquiring into the\ndeath of Nick Armand, 30-year-old\nmine employee of nearby Kimberley, B.C., found today that he was\naccidentally drowned Sunday when\nhe fell from a boat while fishing on\nMoyie Lake.\nCyril Pratt, Loy Haue and Nels\nPaulion, othes.- occupants of the boat,\ntold how Pratt Jumped into the lake\nIn an attempt to rescue Armand.\nGeorge Hayman' of Cranbrook\nwho was nearby also dived into the\nwater to assist ln the sesrch for\nArmand who sank as soon u he\nfell s om the boat.\nThe search was abandoned after\nabout 10 minutei. Haue then pulled in his fish line and found Ar-\nmand'i body entangled In Its. Ef<\nforts to revive him by artificial\nre-tnirstion failed.\nArmand leaves a widow at Kimberley.\nBy HOLAND NORGAARD I\nAssociated   Preu  Staff  Writer\nLONDON, May 13 (Tuesday)-\n(AP)\u2014Rudolf Hess, head of the\nGerman Nazi party and one of\nthe oldest and closest confidants\nof Hitler, has landed by parachute\nln Britain under circumstances\nsuggesting the most profoundly\nimportant desertion in all history.\nThe British Government announced from the home of Prime\nMinister Churchill at No. 10\nDowning Street that Hess is ln a\nGlasgow hospital under treatment\nfor a broken ankle suffered in\nfloating down from a German\nMesserschmitt fighter plane near\nthere.\nWhile the statement did not\nspecially lay that he had deserted. It made three observations of\nleeming inescapable significance:\nThat Hess had brought along\nphotographs taken at varying years\nin his life to establish his identity\nif It were questioned.\nThat he had arrived In a plane\nwhich' would not possibly have had\nenough gasoline for a return to\nGermany\u2014and thus, inferentially,\nthat his trip was clearly hot a one-\nman offensive but a one-way flight.\nThat the Messerschmitt'! guns\nwere empty.\nThis moit etraordlnary flight\nof thli or any other war wu dii-.\ndoted In London a few houn after the\" Germani In \"BeMlh had\nannounced that Hen \u2014 Hltler'i\npolitical heir but once removed\u2014\nwu milling, that he presumably\nhad taken a forbidden plane flight\nand had cracked up; that he appeared to have been suffering\n\"hallucination!\" and had \"left behind a confuted letter.\"\nThe implication was that he was\nmentally unbalanced and had been\nderanged for some time; for it was\nstated that Hitler personally had\ndirected that he not be permitted^\nto use any plane.\n(Early Tuesday German Informants in Berlin insisted that they\nknew nothing beyond the Reich's\noriginal announcement of Hess' dis\nappearance).\nHess from the beginning of National Socialism had stood at Hit\nler's right hand and in the Reich's\ncouncils of war he had held an in\nner place\u2014the possessor of the\ndeepest of military secrets and one\nof the most influential of all Nazis.\nAt the war'i outlet Hitler publicly gave him in extra-ordinary\naccolade by announcing that\nshould he himielf fall, Goering\nihould be considered the new\nfuehrer and the dour and earnest\nHeu Goerlng'i \"heir-apparent.\"\nThe itory of Hess' strange and\nlonely flight to Britain, as told in\nthe Government's announcement\nfrom Downing Street, showed that\nhe first crossed the Scottish coast\nlast Saturday night (and that was\nthe date given by the Germans for\nhis disappearance).\nHe flew on in the direction of\nGlasgow and later\u2014just when was\nnot disclosed \u2014 his Messerschmitt\ncrashed. He bailed out. Taken to\nthe Glasgow* hospital he first identified himself ai \"Horn\", but later\nby his correct name.\nHli photographi were examined, the Government wid, by several people who knew him personally. All these agreed that\nthey were in fact pictures of Hess.\nTo check still further, an official\nof the British Foreign Office\n\"closely acquainted with him before the war\" wai ient by air-\nSlane to Glasgow to see the pa-\nent.\nThe announcement made the\nIdentification positive by referring to him as \"Rudolf Hess, the\ndeputy fuehrer of Germany and\nparty leader of the National Socialist party.\"\nSubsequently, the Minister of Information declared that he had been\nidentified as Rudolf Hess beyond\n\"all possible doubt.\"\nThe implications ot all this, while\ncautiously avoided by Government\nofficials, were fully discussed by\nthe public.\nPeople spoke of lt as an indication\not serious disaffection in Germany,\nand wondered If It could be considered an authentic Indication of a\nbreakup ln the Nazi top command.\nMACINTOSH RETIRES\nFROM ARMY SERVICE\nVICTORIA. May 12 (CP)-Lt-Col\nMacgregor F. Macintosh, Conservative member of the Provincial Legislature for The Man*!, has retired\ntorn active army te\/vice on account\nof ill-health.\nHe arrived on tht coast over the\nweekend and ii spssiding a month\nal Galisno Island before moving\nwith his family )o Salt Spring Col\nMacintosh until a short time ago\nwu in charge of the small arms\ntraining centre at Lethbridge.\nBy ERNEST AGNEW\nAuoclated Preu SUff Writer\nGLASGOW, May lg (Tueiday)\n\u2014(AP). \u2014 A Scottiah plowman\ntold today how ha armed hlmieli\nwith a pitchfork to challenge a\nNasi parachuting to earth on hla\nfarm but that tha 'chutist\u2014Rudolf\nHess\u2014offered no resistance and\nwaa in good humor. He gossiped\nfor an hour before tba authorities took him away.\nTotally unaware of the political\nstature of his air-born* vlaltor,\nDavid McLean found Heu lying\nin the field, his ankle broken, and\nassisted him to his cottage. Two\nsoldiers who turned up on rou-\ntine duty thinking they had\ncaught an ordinary German airman chaffed Hess about hia bad\nluck in bailing out\nThis was McLean'i itory:\n\"I waa in the house and everyone else was in bed and I beard a\nplane roaring overhead. I ran out\nto the back ot tha farm. I beard a\ncrash and saw the plane burst into\nflames about 200 yards away.\n\"I was amazed and a bit frightened when I saw the parachute coming slowly downward. I could see\na man swinging from the harness.\nI concluded it was a German airman bailing out and ran\nback to my house for help. They\nwere all asleep. I looked around\ntor a weapon but tound nothing\nexcept a bay fouls.    ....\n\"Fearing I might lose the airman\nI Hurried 'round by myself again\nback of the house and in the fteld\nI saw a man lying down with his-\nparachute nearby.\n\"He smiled and I helped him to\nhis feet. He thanked me but I could\nsee he'd injured his foot some way.\n1 helped him into the house. By this\ntime my mother and sister were\nout of bed and made tea. He declined the tea and smiled when we\ntold him we were very fond of ib\nHe asked for a glass of water.\n\"We sent word to the authorities and in the meantime he chatted freely to us and showed us\npictures of his litle boy, of whom\nne spoke very proudly.\n\"He told us he had left Germany\nabout four hours betore and bad\nlanded because nightfall waa approaching. I could see from the\nway he spoke that he was a man\nof culture. His English, although\nit had a foreign accent, was very\nclear and he understood every\nword we said to him. .\n\"He wu a very striking looking **\u00ab\\\nman wearing a magnificent flying\nsuit. His watch and identity bracelet were of gold. , ;\n\"He wouldn't discuss his journey. '\nHe was most gentlemanly In his\nattitude to my nfcther and sister\nand thanked us for what we had\"\ndone for him. He wu most anxious\nabout the parachute, which he uld\nhe'd like to keep because it saved\nhis life. He wouldn't tell us who he\nwas, and we thought he wu just\nanother German airman.\n\"When the officials came be greeted them with a smile and assured\nthem he was unarmed and stood up\nand allowed them to search him.\nThen he was taken away.\"\nLater McLean wu shown a picture of Hess and uid:\n\"That's the man. We have no\ndoubt about it\"'\nWeS%\nMln. Max.\nNELSON         53\n73\nTrail          58\n64\nVictoria    _    54\n67\n68\nVancouver      55\n65\nKamloops  _ _   53\n79\n65\nEstevan Point     52\n56\nPrince Rupert  _    43\n54\nLangara    _   43\n51\nAtlin -   SO\n55\n64\nSeattle       55\nTil\nPortland      _    54\n72\nSan Francisco      51\n69\nSpokane    \u201e    58\n75\nPenticton        51\n71\nVernon         _    _   57\n\u2014\nKelowna     _     50\n\u2014\nGrand Forks     54\n\u2014\nKaslo _   51\n\u2014\nCranbrook       53\n73\nCalgary              52\n65\nEdmonton         ....   .    58\n60\nSwift Current          58\n82\n82\nPrince Albert    _    54\n76\nWinnipeg                 51\n73\nForecast: Kootenay \u2014 Light to\nmoderate local winds, cloudy\nand\nmild   with  showers.\nLevel of the West Arm at Nelson\nMonday was 1 111 feet above the\nlow\nwater mark, unchanged from\nthat\nof Sunday.\nVUttjt\n.;\u25a0 rl_ij_\n mm\n__\n\t\n.^'WPfP11   \u25a0-\u25a0- \u25a0\nIrAOB TWO-\nJGuger Death In Gold Bell Mine\nAccidental; No Blaine lo Anyone\nA eoronerli Jury returned a ver-\nJlct Monday afternoon that John\n.Guger. 28-year-old sklptender, had\neen accidentally killed in the Oold\nieU mine Thunday morning by an\nIght-pound hammer falling 120 feet\nind uttlng him on the head, fracturing hii skull in several places.\nIng instantaneous deatji.\n\"We find that no blame can be\n(attached to any penon or other\ninom,\" the verdict concluded.\nThe inquest wu held at the City\n\"\" and wu presided over by Dr.\n. , MacKenlie, Dlitrict Coroner.\n'he Jury ooniiited ol R. V. (Ty)\nCulley. Foremin; J. J. Blnni, Walter Duckworth, H. A. Nicholson, J.\nFlnlay Jamleaon and Harry Wu-\nalck.\nHAMMSR KNOCKED\nFROM HAND\nAccording to testimony given by\nCharles Killer, shift boss, trom\nwhose hand the hammer was\nwienched when it struck m obstruction while he wu pounding the\naide of a chute to loosen some ore,\nliy Walter E. Anderson, mucker,\nwho wu working with Killer, and\nby Michael O'Donnell, General\nMine Superintendent, the accident\noccurred while Guger had apparently been loading steel on the skip\non the 1800-foot level. Killer and\nAnderson were working on the\n1500-foot leveL\nKiller told the Jury that he\nclimbed up two ladden about 20\nleet above the 1500-foot level so\nthat he could pound on the side ol\nthe chute to free some ore. The\nhandle of the hammer caught on a\ntimber and was wrenched out ol\njLhis hand, he said and It dropped\n\u25a0 to the floor of the station where\n1 he wu itanding, md bounced into\n\u25a0 the ikipway, and down  120 feet,\nto strike Guger.\nThe lut either Killer or Anderion had been dealing with Guger\n\u00bb. wai a few minutei before the acei cident, when Guger called up il\nJ they wanted more steel. Anderson\nf went down a couple of ladders ln\nI the manway so that they could\nJ hear eaCh other better, and the an-\nI awer wu \"No\",\nI SHOUTS WARNING\nOn dropping the hammer Killer\n5 -wu heard by Anderson to shout,\nFAREWELL TO\nBACKACHE!\nHa keck edO-afe\n(_s.f uaUa'lYe\n\"WI>.r\u00abl\"to.owl\u2014\n<f Um etntteX Irish Iw\nI Mafcin-irulmly.\nS  Hirilituidvliisl\n5 ker to taka Dodd's _\nKkkMyPms. H\u00abb.ck.th.\u00bb\u00ab\n\u2014mthaiiua ue mr0 NkBMi Mr\n'j vi.p\u00abkle<l-befitep\u00bbMipri|htlT-.n(l\n3   sw\u00ab i|sSn she wu kc \"dd sell.\"      IIS\nI  SnMODiriTOMCMCHIwlfl\nDoddsKidneyPills\n\"Look outl\" Tlien they looked down\nthe skipway, and when they could\nnot see the light ln Guger's helmet\nthey nurried down to the level below. They found Guger lying inside\nthe tnck nils, and to the nest of\ntheir knowledge he wu dead.\nThe helmet, ihowed in court, was\nbadly split where the hammer hit\nit The hammer wu also an exhibit.\nGuger and Andenon Immediately\nwent for help, and Thomas Foreman, fint-aid man. examined Guger.\nDr. W. M. McCallum later arrived\ntrom Salmo, and he pronounced the\nman dead.\nMr. O'Donnell the General Superintendent, testified that Guger\nhad been fully warned of the danger of standing ln the skipway,\nparticularly wben the skip wu ln\nmotion. Mr. O'Donnell said that\nGuger had been at the Gold Belt\nabout five monthi, and had had\nprevious experience u a skip-\ntender. He considered Guger careful and reliable.\nA PARTITION\nHe said that a partition sepanted\nthe manway and the ikipway. The\npartition consisted of six-inch wide\nplanks, which stood perpendicular\nabout six inches apart. This wu in\norder that if anything went wrong\nwith the skip apparatus, one could\neasily reach through the partition\nInto the skipway. The hammer, after being lost by Killer had bounced\non the station floor and gone\nthrough the partition.\nAsked by Dr. MacKenzie whether\nthat wu the usual manner in which\nto loosen ore when it became caught\nin a chute, Mr, O'Donnell said\nthat it was one way. Power methods\nwere never used. In his experience\nit was the third time that that particular chute had become clogged.\nAt another time, water had been\nhosed down from above to loosen\nthe rock.\nDr. McCallum, Thomai Foremin\nand Dr. F. P. Sparks, who performed the autopsy, also gave evidence. Dr. Sparks said that death\nwu caused by multiple fractures of\nthe skull, dislocation of many bones\nwhich caused pressure to bear on\nthe brein, and hemorrhage of blood\nvessels.\nDr. McCallum and Foreman also\ndescribed the wounds.\nQueen's Fund Is\nNear $200 Mark\nNelson District contributions to\nthe Queen Elisabeth Fund far\nbombing victims neared the $200\nmark Monday night as three new\nglfti boosted the total to $101.40.\nDonors of Monday's gifts and the\nfund standing follow:\nA. Tregillus  $ 10.00\nJ. B. Stallwood       5.00\nBluenose    _       2.O0\nTotal   $ 17.00\nPreviously acknowledged ....   174.40\n' Total to date  $191.40\nWe're Always\nat Your Service\nWhen you want aotnething\nmoved or itored, we're right\nhere to help you. Years, of experience quality us to be\nclassed as experts in the art of\nmoving and hauling, yet our\nlow prices belie our efficiency.\n\u25a0\\\n-s\n-e\nLong-Dhtanc* Hauling to Any\nPart of the Country.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS NELION\nHESS COULDN'T FIND\nSUITABLE LANDING AREA\n.LONDON, May 13 (Tuuday)\n(CP Cable)\u2014The Dally Express\ntoday quoted Rudolf Heu, self-\nexiled Nazi leader, u uying after\nhis capture in Scotland:\n\"I had Intended landing the\nplane but I could not find a suitable landing ground so I stalled\ntha machine over the open country md Jumped out\"\nTernan, Ayres\nWin Rossland\nFlower Show\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 12\u2014Tie\nSpring Flower Show held Saturday\nby the Rosslmd Horticultural Society wu successful ln every wiy.\nA beautiful bouquet of tulips, entered by W. G. Ternan, wai awarded the prize ln thli class, md \u2022\nbonquet of paper-white narcissi\naugmented by grape hyacinth, the\nentry of John Ayres, wu chosen\nthe best in the competition open to\nSpring flowers other thm tulips.\nIn the evening, the entire dliplay wai turned over to members\nof the local Red Crou Society for\nsale, and atter the expeniu of the\nHorticultural Society have been deducted the proceedi from the ule\nwill be used by the Red Crosi.\nAlthough Saturday'i show was\narranged on a comparatively small\nscale, members of the Horticultural\nSociety feel the interest shown augers well for a larger ihow to be\nheld in late Summer or early Autumn.\nMiner Is Carried\nto Last Rest by\nFellow Workers\nSix fellow worken Monday atternoon carried the body of John\nGuger, ikip-tender at the Gold Belt\nMine, Sheep aeek, to its final rest\nin Memorial Park, after funeral\nservices from the Somers Funeral\nChapel. Rev. W. J. silverwood conducted servicu at the Chapel ud\nat the graveside.\nMr. Guger was killed at his work\nThuriday when an eight-pound\nhammer dropped from the hands of\na fellow worker on a level 120 feet\nabove him and struck him on the\nside of the head.\nMany other employeu of the Gold\nBelt and residents of Sheep Creek\nmd Taghum attended the funeral.\nFloral tributes were numerous.\nThe pallbearers were Mike Gub-\nbln, Charles Killer, Albert Bau-\ncheresne, James Donald, Elliot\nSchmidt, and Walter Anderson.\nSoldiers and Marines\nBattle Peace Group\nOutside White House\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP).-\nA clash between what police nid\nwere soldiers and marines off duty\nand a group picketing the White\nHouse occurred tonight.\nPolice were called to Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White\nHouse brought one soldier and marine back to headquarters and said\na picket had been sent to hospital\nfor treatment of minor injuries..\nPlacards carried by the pickets\nidentified the demonstration a:\nthat of the American Peace Mob\nilization.\n* Guide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B, C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME-F. 0. Meredith, Mr. and\nMrs. F H. Meredith, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Anderson, H. L. Northey, N. Holland, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dobson,\nVancouver; H. C. B. Gibson, H.\nGuy, Greenwood, Vernon; Donald\nMacDonald, Trail; Mr. and Mrs. J.\nH. Manus, L. H. Luther, Calgary;\nR. Steedman, J. H. Lewis. Medicine Hat; F. J. O'Donnell, Winnipeg;\nMiss Muriel Cameron, Ottawa; M.\nW. Woolley. Salt Lake: Mr. and\nMrs. H. H. Goetz, Mlu Goetz, Mlu\nL G. Hoover, Longbeich, Calif.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PITER KAPAK. Propi.\nIn our new wing you miy enjoy thi tineit\nPHONI\nPHONI\nj 3 A     in our new wing you miy enjoy mi Iinest     ->-.\n**~    roomi  in  the  Intertor-Bith or Shower     *9T\nSPICIAL RATES SY THI WEEK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n\"VflUR VANC6UVSA H<5Me\u00bb\nDuff erin Hotel\n800 Stymovr St Vincouver, B. C.\n'iy\np\nout   Phonei   and   elevitor\nA   PATTEKSON   late ol\nColeman, Aits.  Proprietor\nlor   I\n\u25a0or   [j\nArrow Lakes\nService\nEffective May 10, S.S. Columbia will replace S.S. Minto\non the Arrow Lakes between\nArrowhead and Robson West\nuntil further notice.\nSchedule will be as follows:\nLv. Nakusp     6:00 a.m.\nMonday-Thursday\nAr. Robion West      5:30 p.m.\nMonday-Thursday\nLv. Robson West      6:00 a.m.\nTuesdiy-Frlday\nAr. Nikusp 5:00 p.m.\nTuesday-Friday\nLv. Nakuip     8:00 a.m.\nWednesday-Saturday\nAr, Arrowhead        11:18 a.m.\nWedn\u00absday-8aturday\nLv.  Arrowhead       12:36 p.m.\nWednesday-Saturday\nAr. Nakusp 3:35 p.m.\nWednesday-Saturday\nPassengers will be ticketed\nonly between Arrow Lakes\npoints. Landings will not be\nmade at Oatescott, Mackin-\nsons, Birds, Rock Island and\nGlendevon, and possibly not\nat Burton. Passengers to and\nfrom these points will be accepted or disembarked at the\nnearest accessible landing.\nNo sleeping accommodation\nIs available on S.S. Columbia\nnor will automobllei be\ntransported by thla steamer.\nFor further details apply to\nnearest agent or\nJ. G. WATSON, C.T.A.,\nNelson, B, C.\nMalacord Floats\nMile in Rubber\nBoat Down River\nTRAIL,   B.   C,  Miy   tt-A.  B.\nMalacord of Vancouver Sunday\nmade hli announced trial of a seaplane's rubber boat, on the current\nof Kootenay River, but did not get\nto the Brilliant Rapids as intended.\nDriving out from Trail with the\nrubber boat, which is 10 feet long,\nSVi to four leet wide, is lupported\nby two inflated tubes, one on elthei\nside, and weighs 45 poundi, Bir\nMalacord and Tony Carscllo put it\nin tbe water at the mouth of the\nSlocan River, at Shoreacres md embarked tor a trip.\nThey did not uie the oan, except for guiding the craft, md keeping moitly ln the eddies, floated\ndown itream about a mile, to\nThrumi.\nThere the trip hid to ba abandoned for want of a third man to\ndrive the car, which wu to pick up\nthe boat at Brilliant. Mr. Malacord\naccosted various people, but did not\nsucceed in getting a driver, the boat\nrequiring a crew of two for the\nrapids.\nGeorge Carter Is\nConvicted Under\nSecurities Ad\nGeorge A. Carter, who at one time\nresided at Vernon and Nelson, was\nfound guilty at Fernie Saturday,\nunder the Securities Act, before\nStipendiary Magistrate J. V. Rewers.\nHe had been acting ai a broker\nwithout holding a certificate of\nregUtratlon. He pleaded not guilty,\nbut waa convicted on trial.\nHe waa sentenced to serve 30\ndays at Oakalla Prison Farm and to\npay a fine ot $100. In default of payment, he will be given another 30\ndays.\nThe cue opened it Fernie April\n20, but had been adjourned to last\nSaturday.\nRossland Library\nWill Have a Book\nDisplay, Children\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 12-May\n11 will open \"Children's Spring\nBook Festival Week\" at the Rossland Library, and for this occasion\nthe library windows will display\nhew junior booki for children of\nevery grade. These books have been\nrecommended by the leading authoritiei in the Juvenile literary\nworld.\nPurpOl of the Book Festival Week\nis to stimulate an interest in good\nbooks for children other than at\nChristmai time, and the sponsor of\nthe event, The New York Herald-\nTribune. Is giving three $200 prizes\nfor the three best books for the\nthree age groups \u2014 young children\nm;ddle-aged and other children.\nTlie public is Invited to inspect\nthese books during the week in\nwhich they will be on display.\nMacalister Heads\nRossland Tennis\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 12- At\nthe annual meeting fo the Rossland\nTennis Club held ln the City Hall\nFriday evening, the following were\nelected to fill executive positions\nfor the present season. D. K. Macalister, .President; Robert Saxton,\nSecretary-Treasurer; Mrs. A. Mowbray, Bob Melville, Ken Gallie and\nMorris Liftuss, Executive Committee.\n-Fees were set at $2 for Junior\nplayers, $5 for ladies, $6 for men\nand $2.50 for school teachers.\nThe courts are now being put into\nshape, and it is hoped that play\nwill commence Saturday,   .\n133   NAZI   P.LANES\nDOWNED IN 12\n.   DAYS\nLONDON, May IS (Tuuday)\n\u25a0 -(CP Cable).-The toll of Nazi\naircraft during the first 12 dayi\nof May:\nNight bomben  IW\n.Tighten    -    37\nTotal  170\nOt this number Royal Air\nForce night fighters bagged 100\nbomben in BriUsh skies and\neight over Northern France.\nAnti-aircraft downed 23. Two\nwere caught by balloon barrages.\nTells Court Clerk\nWorked Late on\nTemporary Basis\nHearing at Stanley Gee, Chineie\nconfectionery itore proprietor, who\nIs charged under the Houn of Work\nAct, was adjourned until Wednesday\nmorning by Magiatrate Williim\nBrown In City Police Court Mondiy, ifter the cuei tor both the\nErosecuUon md defence were\neard.\nThe defendant charged on information laid by Bliss W. Dysart,\nLibor Inipector, appeared in Court,\nand was charged Thursday, and the\nhearing was remanded until Monday. Mr. Dyiart, who proiecuted,\ntestified Monday to vUiting Mr.\nStanley's store, SB Baker Street, at\n9:55, p.m. May 3 and that Misi Irene\nChew, clerk, was serving customeri\n\u25a0t thit time. A notice posted ln\nthe itore fixed the houn of work\ntor the clerk it from 10:00 a.m. to\n6:00 p.m.\nThe B. C. Gazette of January 14,\n1934, containing the regulations\npursuant to a clause in the Houn of\nWork Act governing the houn ot\nwork of such ah employee wu entered as an exhibit\nThe defendant, who conducted his\nown defence, itated that for two\nweeki during which time Mr. Dysart visited the itore, Miss Chew\nhad arranged to work between 2:00\np.m. and 10:00 p.m. so that the could\nvisit \u2022 relative In Kooteniy Like\nGeneral Hosital. Al this irrangement wis only \u25a0 temporary one,\nhe hid not changed the houn of\nwork on the notice.\nMr. Stanley Is chirged with unlawfully employing a woman clerk\noutside of the houn of work fixed\nin a notice posted in his store.\nAdanacs Deieat\nCoast Fishmen\nNEJW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nMay 12 (CP). \u2014 New Westminster\nAdanacs edged out a 20-19 victory\nover Salmonbellies, their Intra-clty\nrivala, here tonight ln the first box\nlacrosse game of the season ln New\nWestminster and the second game\nof the Inter-City Box Lacroue\nLeague's 1941 schedule.\nSalmonbellies led 11-S at half\ntime. Adanacs cut the lead down\nslightly ln the third period, icoring\nseven times to six for Salmonbellies\nthen tied up the count at 19 all in\nthe last period. The winning score\nwas made by Bill McColl in the last\nminute of play.\nThe game wai rough throughout\nwith players spending a total of 59\nminutei ln the penalty box, S4 minutes of this penalty time being called in the lut quarter. At one stage\nof the game five Adanac and two\nSalmonbellies players were off the\nfloor at the same time.\nBob Lee was high scorer for Ad-\n\u25a0snaes with five goals while Ralph\nSalmonbellies\nAP)\nlouit-\ntoday on $500,-\nwarship   conitruction\nothir defence contracts  In\nWut cout shipyards, and on a\n$3,000,000  naval  drydock  project\nIn Boiton.\nIn addition:\nA itrlke wu called for tomorrow In tha Hudion Motor Company at Detroit, greit Michigan\nInduitrlil centre already. In t h e\nthroes of I teamsters' strike and\nfaced with tha threat of a walkout In many General Motora\nplanti Thunday.\nA walkout ot 200 employees of the\nSmoot Sand Sc JeGravel CorportUon, building supply concern\nthreatened to delay emergency construction In Wuhlngton, Including\nnew buildings for the War and\nNavy Departmenti and additions to\nthe Army War College.\nEngine, train and yard aervice\nmen ot the Atlanta, Birmingham Sc\nCout Railroad voted to strike, but\nset no date.\nOnly a relatively small number\nof workers\u20141700 A. F, L. and C. I. O.\nmachinists \u2014 were involved ln the\nWut cout ihip conitruction dispute. Their walkout, described by\nPresident William Green of the\nAmerican FederaUon of Labor, u\nan \"outlaw strike\", forced the clos-\ning, however, of 11 shipyard! and\ndrydocks In the San Francisco area\nwith betwen 15,000 and 20,000 employees.\nGreen applied the designation\n\"outlaw\" becauie the walkout violated, he uld, a management-union\nagreement prohibiting either atrikes\nor lockouts. The A. f. L. machinists\nreplied that they had not ratified\nthe agreement; the C. I. O. wu not\na party to it.\nPrestley Nelson\nEntry In C.Y.O.\nOratorical Meet\nMichael Prestley will represent\nthe Nelson Catholic Youth Organization! Friday at the Diocesan\nC.Y.O. oratorical contest at Rouland. Speaking on \"The Work of\nthe Prospector In the Nelson Diocese,\" PreiUey of the Junior C.Y.O.\nwu chosen by \u25a0 trio of judges it\n\u2022n elimination contest Monday evening.\nJoseph DeLucrezio represented\nUie Senior C.Y.O. ln the elimination\nand wu second choice to represent\nthe Nelson parish ihould each organization be permitted an entry.\nDeLucrezlo'i lubject wai \"The Pope\n-*. Peace.\"\nJudges wen Miu Mircelle Nedelec ind Mr. md Mn. Joieph Win-\nkelaar.\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING. FlSHINC\n20 miles from Nelson.\nvia Harrop Ferry\nKooteniy's  Best  Flitting it\nTwenty-Minute PI\nPROCTER.   B.C.\n'Rales   reasonable\nHess Probably More\n\"Sane Than Crazy\"\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP>-\nOne of the leading psychiatrists in\nthe United States tonight declared\nthat Rudolf Hess, Hitler's second\nlieutenant who landed from a plane\nin Scotland Saturday, was probably\n\"much more sane than crazy.\"\nDr. Winfred Overholser, head of\nSt. Elizabeths Hospital, the Federal Government's principal Institution for the insane said that while\nit was possible Hess \"got the jitters\nand thought the world was coming\nto an end\" he probably did a cool,\nsane job of calculation and estimated that his chances were better\nin being interned in Britain than\nthey were in staying in Germany.\nVon Papen Leaves\nBerlin for Turkey\nISTANBUL, May 12 (AP)-Franz\nvon Papen, German Ambassador to\nTurkey who may bl carrying German collaboration suggestions to the\nTurkish Government from Bedin,\ntook off in an airplane late today\nfor Ankara, the capital,\nThree German consular officials\nmet Von Papen at the ilrport here\nduring a 40-minute stop in his\nflight from Berlin.\nThe Turkish Press meanwhile\nforecast closer relaUons between\nRussia and Germany, with iharp\nrepercussions In the Far East.\nTRAIL HAS 11 CASES OF\nCERMAN MEASLES, WEEK\nTRAIL, B. C, May 12 - Eleven\ncases of Germin measles were reported to Dr N. DC. MicKinnon.\nMedicil Heilth Officer, lut week.\nNo other   infectious diseases were\nreported.\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS\u2014ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing 6- Heating\nCompany, Limited\nBurton   topped\nwith four.\nthe\nVictory or Death Is\nAnswer Says Halifax\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., Miy 12 -\n(CP).\u2014If the democracies are to\ndefeat Hitler and those \"who serve\nhim with an almost religious fervor, our faith must burn with a\nflame as white as theirs,\" Viscount\nHalifax said tonight.\n\"Thus and thus only,\" Uie British\nAmbassador to the United States\ndeclared In an address to a public\nmeeting, \"may this dark menace to\nour people's lives and human freedom perish in the unquenchable\nfire of our resolve.\"\nLord Halifax expressed confidence in Britain's ability to win \"if\nyou are willing to give us all the\nhelp you can.\"\n\"This is a war In which . . . there\nis no room for compromise and no\nhalf-way house. We must achieve\nvictory or death.\"\nNazi Papers Print\nLittle About Hess\nBERLIN, May 13 (Tuesdiy) (CP).\n\u2014Berlin morning newspapers handled the story of Rudolf Heu' disappearance in uniform fashion.\nEach paper carried the headline:\n\"Heu hu met with an accident.\"\nThen the paper printed only the\nNazi   statement   Issued   yeiterday\nthat Hess had been suffering from\n\"Hallucination!.\"\nThe London announcement of his\narrival in ScoUand wai ignored,\nNEW YORK, Miy 12 (CP).-The\nEnglish-language newi report of the\nRome ratlin tonight reported only\nthe German venion of Rudolf Hess'\nflight from tha Nazi Reich.\nHess' First Public\nAddress Made May 1\nBERLIN, May IS (Tuuday) (AP)\n\u2014Rudolf Hesa, Natloml Socialist\nLeader listed u missing after a tor\nbidden airplane flight trom Augsburg, mide hii tint public address\nMay 1 to worken in a Messerschmitt fa\u00bbtory In that city.\nHen bestowed Hitler's desigm-\nUon of \"pioneer worken\" on severil\nindustrial leiden Including Dr. Willy Messerschmitt, designer of the\nGermin fighting plme, whom Hess\ndescribed u \"the minufictunr of\nthe best punult ind destroyer\nplinu on earth.\"\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nWESTERN  INTERNATIONAL\nWenitchee     \u00ab 14   0\nVancouver    -..____   1   1   1\nWilliami and Farrell; Goldman\nKenhaw and Brenner.\nSpokane     _.    8  10\nTacoma     4   8  0\nBudnick and Beard: Unde, Smith\n(7). Dupuli (0) ind Botelho.\nHouse Winds Up\nDebate on Budget\nOTTAWA, Miy 12 (CP)-De-\nbate on the budget ended tonight\nwhen the House of Commons\nidopted, without i vote, Finance\nMiniater Ilsley's motion to go into\ncommittee of wiyi and means.\nAn imendment from the New\nDemocracy group calling for use\not Bank of Canada oredlt to help\nfinance the war effort, and an\nimendment to the amendment\nfrom the C.C.F. party, calling for\nnationalization of financial institutions, were both defeated on\na call of ayei md nays. The Home\nat once adjourned.\nThe New Democracy amendment\nto Finance Minister Ilsley's motion\nto go into committee of ways and\nmeans, moved by Victor Quelch\n(N.D. Acadia) read:\n\"Thia House regrets the failure\nof the Government to establish effective control over the issue ot\ncredit by the chartered banks to\nthe end that the amount by which\nthe proceedi from reasonable taxation sn dsale of interest-free war\nsavings certificates fails to meet\nGovernment expenditures, miy be\nmet by funds torn Bank of Canada\nwithout fear of Inflation.\"\nThe C.C.F. sub-amendment, moved by Angui Miclnnii (C.CF. Vancouver East) read:\n\"That all the words after \"banks'\nIn the third line of the amendment\nbe struck out and the following sub\nstltuted therefor.\n\"Further that ln order to achieve a\nmaximum and equitable war effort\nthe nationalizaUon of the financial\nsystem and lti use as an Instrument\nof public policy ire fundamental\nsteps In the elimination of interest\nand the dangen of Inflation.\"\nReport Degree Was\nRefused Aberhart\nCALGARY, May 13 (Tuesday)-\nThe Albertan uid thit morning in\n\u2022 newspage story under an Edmon\nton date:\n\"The Senate of thi Unlvenity of\nAlberta wu in session practically\n\u202211 diy Monday discussing a propoul to award the honorary degree\nof doctor of lawi to Premier Williim Aberhart\n\"The reiolutlon wss twice de-\ndefeated after considerable contentious debite.\n\"It wu euthorltitively itated the\nmain reaion given for the refusal\nwu that it wai felt that 'Premier\nAberhart'! record wu not one that\ncould be approved by an Institute\not learning? \"\nRossland Clean-Up\nWeek Proceeds Well\nROSSLAND. B. C, May 13-To-\ndiy mirked the close of the tint\nweek of tha City'i cleanup week\nbeing carried out by the Board of\nWorki Depirtment undir Uie direction ot Aid. A C Ridgers ind Al-\nslstant City Foremen Roy Hancock\nWorkmen report thit tbe tidying-up\nproject li proceeding much more\nrapidly than usual, with mailer asn\npiles a predominating feature, due\nto the mUd Winter.\nIt la expected that the entire ctty\nwill have been cleaned up by Uie\nend ot next week.\nSpanish Ship Picked\nUp British Survivors\nThen Defied U-Boat\nLONDON, May 12 (CP).-How\nthe captain ot a Spanish ship de-\ntoured 300 mllu to reicue survivors from a torpedoed Britiah vusel\nand then \"defied\" a German submarine commander'! order to surrender them wu disclosed tonight\nin a Spanuh wireleu itation broad-\nnut quoted by tbe Britiih Broadcasting Corporation.\nThe BBC uld the Spaniih ihip\nwas proceeding to New York when\nit picked up an SOS signal from\na British vessel. The ciptaln then\ntook the ahlp 300 milu ott ita\ncourse to pick up survivors.\n\"Shortly afterwards,\" the BBC\nsaid, \"tha Germm submarine which\nhad torpedoed the Britiih veuel\nstopped Uie ship and demanded Uie\nsurrender of iti priionen.\n\"But the captain of the Spanish\nvessel refused to hand them over\nand wu allowed to proceed.\"\nHess Suddenly\nBecame Sane Is\nBaBaC's Verdict\nNEW YORK, May 1] (AP). -\nInstead of being insane, u the\nNazi uld, Rudolf Hess \"suddenly\nbecame une\" when he flew to\nBritain, a British Broadcasting\nCorporation commentator declared\ntonight\nIn a commentary on Heu' get-\n, away, picked up in New York\nby CBS, the BritUh commentator\ncalled 'The Mm ln the Street\"\n\u25a0aid this, in part:\n\"lha newa that Heu, officially\nthe third mm in Nazi Germany\nhu landed in Scotland Is sensational enough. It never wu possible to believe the official story\nthat, although unfit for flying and\nforbidden to do so by the good,\nkind Fuehrer, he had got hold of a\nplane when no one wu looking md\nthen met with a fatal accident.\n\"For one thing, Hus wu a tine\npilot and there had been no suggestion unUl todiy that he wu\nsuffering trom a long standing dlieue'\u2014except the dlieue known aa\nNaziism.\n\"There wu no trace of (riet or\nregret in the announcement ot hia\ndisappearance. Indeed, the whole\ncommunique wu callous md ho\u00ab-\ntile. And that reference to bla men-\ntai confusion, hli hallucinations re.\nvealed ln the letter he lett\u2014mental\nconfusion and hallucinaUona are\nalwayi attributed by Uie Nazis to\nthose who disagree with them.\n\"No, it looki lo mi u 11 Heu, so\ntar from becoming a victim of hallucinaUona and mental confusion,\nmay have suddenly begun to think\nstaight and-to get rid of the hallucinations thit mide him we Hit.\nler u the Fuehrer destined to con\nquer the world.\n\"it looks u If Han mddenly\nuw tha truth, perhaps, after living for yean In a drum. Ha may\nall at once havi realized that tha\nwhole Nui system wu a monitor shim, and that Hitler wu\nleading tha German peopli ta\ncatastrophe. . ,\nTt looki as if Heu luddenly became une, perhaps, md uw Uie\ntruth. And lt meant ona thing\u2014to\nHess\u2014death unleu he could escape.\n\"Well one Germm who suddenly\nsees the truth hu ucaped. One\nday, mlllloni of Germans will\nthe truth. It wont be possible for\nthem to escape, except In one way.\n\"So let ui look to the diy when\nthe Germin nition comu to Ihare\nHeu' 'hallucinations'.\n\"Someone else then wiU have to\nflee for his life\u2014if he cm.\"\nKID'S FINEST\nCHESTERFIELDS\nTHE WORLD'S FINEST\nPhona an\nCooking School\nOpens Today at\nCapltol Theatre\nDesigned to assist ln providing\nknowledge of tasty, economical and\nefficient cooking, thi Vancouver\nProvince Cooking School will open e\ntwo-day coune In Nelion today.\nMrs. Margaret Hendenon, In charge,\nmd Miu Ruth Himlln, dietitian assisting, will hold their school at the\nCapltol Theatre, demonstrating on\nUie stage.\nThe School Is sponored ln Nelion\nby the Nelson Electric Company.\nGross receipts obtained trom admissions will be turned over to Kokanee Chapter I.O.D.E. for welfare\nand war work.\nAn electric Ironer and an electrle\nketUe wUl be grand prizu. AcUclu\ncooked by Mrs. Hendenon ln demonstrating wUl be diitributed to\nmemben ot tha audience.\nCatalano Fined\nal Trail, Charge\nReckless Driving\nlano, Trali, was fined $10 ind costs\nafter pleading guilty More Stl-\n-lagistrate E. L. Hodge ln\nPoUce Court tp.a #rge\nof driving in a manner dangerous\nto (he puMic.      ...-\u25a0     ..5 Jt'-\nHighway Patrol. Officer D, C.\nGeorgeson, who laid Uie charge,\ntold th\u00ab court that Catalano had\nbeen Involved In a sideswipe colllilon on the evening of April 27\non (be Trall-OasUegar Highway,\nwith a car driven by W. E. Graham\not Slocan City. Tbe accident was\nnot reported to the police, Conitable Gcorgeaon laid. ,,.'. ,\ni i'''' \"   'i'l\nRossland Collects\nVolunteers Honored\nby Kimberley Club\nfor Parkland Work\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., May 11 (CP)\n\u2014Eighty-four volunteer! who buUt\na cabin, cleared a boat landing\napace, and conitructed a wharf at\nthe newly declared parkland at\nPremier Lake were entertained by\nthe Kimberley Rod ind Gun Club\nwhen the park wu opened recently.\nOther work done by the volunteer\nworker! Included construcUon of\npicnic tablu beside the lake, tablei\n\u2022nd chairs, clearing of a boat landing space* and erection of garbage\nbarreli.\nArnold McGrath, M.L.A., through\nwhoie efforti the area wu declared\na parkland, congratulated the club\non the job It had done.\nTourists Reported on\nMove at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., May 12 (CP)\n\u2014Tourist roads through thli dlitrict\nare gradually being opened up for\nSumma- traffic and tourists are al'\nready moving over them.\nThe Big Bend, a link on Uie Trans\nCanada Highway, completed lut\nyear, joining Golden and Revelstoke,\nwas opened for traffic a week ago\nand the Banff-Windermere Park\nroad this weekend. The Lake\nLouise-Jasper road, completed list\nSpring, will be opened tha weekend of May .4. \u2022\nCranbrook's City tourist camp hli\nbeen put ln ihape for the aeuon.\nCastlegar Man Will\nAttend Trade School!\nTRAiIL, B. C, Miy 12 - L. K. T.\nMclvor of CuUegar left Trail on\nSunday morning to attend Military\nTrade School af Vancouver.\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 10 -\nAbout 75 poundi of scrap licence\nSlates ara on hand at Hendenon'i\narage u a reiult ot an Invitation\nrecently extended by Imperial Oil\ndealen asking motorist! to bring\nin their can and have new platei\naffixed, ud leave the old onu behind.\nThla lervice hat;.bean provided\nwithout charge to till motorists,\nand the old plates wiU be shipped\nto tbe Cout and turned over to the\nRed Crou for salvage.\nFrank McKenzie, manager ot Uie\nHendenon Garage, addi an Interesting note by uvlng that \u2022 good\nmpny plates of other than 1940 vintage have alio been brought in for\ntha pUe.\nDay of Vancouver\nShows Gyros Film\nof B. C. Scenery\nMajestic beiuty of thi witen ot\nthe Weat coast of B. C, md ot the\nKooteniy md Arrow Liku wu\nihown ln color fllmi to Uie Nelaon\nGyro Club Mondiy evening by W.\nS. Day at Vancouver. The motion\nElctures carried Ull Gyros on an\niterating boat trip ot tbe coastal\nwaten and to many ot the beauty\nipoti of the Province.\nNelion'i glint Salute-to-Brltaln\nparade on St, George'i Dsy wu\nrecalled by i splendid color film\nihown by R. E. Crenr.\nR. E. Horton wu Progrim Chairman, and he thanked Mr. Day on\nbehalf of the Club for the entertainment\nGerman Book Store\nWrecked in Bucharest\nBUCHAREST, May 1] (Tuuday)\u2014(AP). \u2014 Two unexplained\nexplosion! occurring in quick\nsuccession last night wrecked a\nGerman book store near the royal\npalace on Bucharest's main\nstreeti md damaged the office of\ntha newipaper Vrdinca.\n'luinlcc^\nJOCK McCOVERN, M.P.,\nREFUSES FIRE-WATCHING\nNELSON, Englind (CP) - John\nMcGovern, fiery MP. for Gliagow-\nshettleston, told Independent Libor\nParty annual conference here he\nhad refused to do fire-watching it\nUie House of Commoni.\nMcGovern said the sargeant-at-\narmi told him and Jamu Maxton.\nanother I.L.P. member, they muit\ndo 1 few hours' fire-watching on\nthe roof of the House. McGovern\ndeclared he would \"see the Government in hell\" before he would\ngo on to a governmtnt building.\nBODY FOUND IN SAWDUST\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP) -\nThe body ot R. F. Thompson, 29-\nyeir-old employee of the B.C hardwood plmt here wu found todiy\nIn the sawdust tower of the plant\nwhere he ia believed to hive smothered to duth Siturdiy. He apparently fell Into the big uwduit bin\nwhile attempting to dislodge some\nclogging sawdust.\n3ST1R\nRYE\n^s350s\n^BnlishColumbiaDislillery\nThli idvortlsemcnt ll not pnbllihei)\nor dliplayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Oovernment ot\nBritish Columbia.\n_\n\t\n NELSON\nMinister Surveys Damage\nto House of Commons\nand Plans Reconstruction\nLONDON, May 12 (CP)-Arthur\nGreenwood, Minister without portfolio whose job ia to plan the rebuilding of battered Britain atter\nthe war, surveyed wreckage today\nIn the House of Commons, which\nonly four days ago wu a thronged\ndebating chamber.\nStanding beside a teetering wall.\nMr. Greenwood observed rubble,\ncharred wood and masonry piled 90\nfeet high where pillars once soared\nto the vaulted roof and where oaken\npanels md tall windows once had\ngraced the galleries.\n\"Thia too will come within my\nprovince ind I must think about its\nreconstruction,\" he sadly remarked.\nAmong the thousands of bombs\nwhich irained the moonlit skies Saturday night were those which unroofed part of Westminster Abbey\ndamaged the British Museum and\nBig Ben, the giant clock, and\nWestminster Hall.\nWhile blocks ot the sprawling\ncapital were devoured by flames\nwhich the most strenuous efforts\ncould not check.\nThe cetni:al tower ot the Abbey\nknown as the Lantern, was smashed\nin and wreckage fell on the spot\nwhere England's kings and queens\nare crowned, but the coronation\nchairs had been moved to safety in\nAugust, 1939.\nOther relics, too, were being found\nsafe today amid the wreckage.\nMa). Vyvyan Adams, a Member\nof Parliament .emerged excitedlv\nfrom the smoky House of Commons\nruins and reported, \"I've found the\ncabinet over there in what used to\nbe the 'no' lobby. It hu in It the signatures of Gladstone and Disraeli.\nThat at any rate is safe.  '\n\"The mace Is safe too,\" said Mr.\nGreenwood. \"Luckily, it was taken\nto another room in the building and\nthis wu untouched.\"\nThe great oak doors which\nslammed by ancient tradition in the\nface of the Black Rod when he came\nto the Commons  now are some\nwhere among boulders and bricks\nwhere the Speaker's chair, the famous dispatch boxes, the benches, and\neverything that wu parliament are\nlying.\nThe shelter where members gathered during raids stood up to the test\nbut another shelter, which the Premier and his cabinet colleagues used,\nwas wrecked.\nPrime Minister Churchill's rooms\nwere untouched, as were thoie of\nmost ot the cabinet ministen.\nThe bulk of the documents in the\nvote office, too, were saved, but\nmany papers were smudged and\nsmeared.\nThe tomb of the unknown soldier\nnear the West door of Westminster\nAbbey also escaped damage.\nAmong those killed in Saturday night's raid was L. Eaton Smith.\nMayor of Westminster and Deputy\nChief Air Raid Warden.\nThe destruction caused to the\nHouiu of Parliament will not Interfere with the House meeting on\nits next appointed day. New accommodations are available and the\nHouse will be able to carry on with\nmuch oHU customary ceremony unimpaired\nPrime Minister Churchill, Lord\nBeaverbrook, Minister of State; sir\nJohn Reith. Minister of Works and\nPublic Buildings, and Mrs. Churchill\nvisited the Houses of Parliament\nduring the day to inspect the damage. They were cheered by a group\nat the gates.\nSun glints on the water, and\nlights up cloudi in Uie diitance,\nwhere Kootenay Lake flows Into\nthe West Arm. The photo was\ntaken from the pilot houie of the\nSteamer Nasookin while she was\ntied up at Fraser's Landing. \u2014\nPhoto by Miss Isa MacKinnon,\nProcter.  ,\nRev. Armitage\nLeaves (reslon\nQuit! ftcltc(> [a\nSTRAINS, SPRAINS,\nSORE MUSCLES,\nBRUISES\nifflT'.^\nthe Antiseptic Linimeht\nSAND\nand\nGRAVEL\nFor All Building\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nCranbrook Advised\nAirport Lighting No\nLonger Necessary\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-At the meeting of the Cranbrook City Council\nThursday evening a letter from the\nDistrict Inspector of Western Airways at Lethbridge was read, advising' that tield lighting at the airport la no longer required and that\nthey would not voucher any further accounts attes.- May 1. The matter was referred -to the light com-\nilttee with power to act.\nIt was pointed out that the rev-\n:nue .from Slaterville Street lighting\ns only $8.75 per month, not suf-\nlcient to cover maintenance cost\nind consumers will be advised that\ntnless   this   revenue   is   increased\nwithin  thirty dayi to an  amount\nsufficient  to  cover   this  cost   the\nservice will be discontinued.\nThe relief department report was\nas follows: City direct relief was issued to the following during April:\n6 married persons with 23 dependents, 16 single persons and 7 Chinese. Unemployables: 2 married persons with 2 dependents and 19 sinele\npersons. Total cost of relief was reported as. $881.20 (Citys share\n\u00a7132.24) against a total of $775.75\n(Citya share $100.95) for Mareh.\nCRESTON, B. C.-Rev. H. J. Armitage. will not be returning to Creston as Pastor of U-inity Church for\nthe conference year 1941-42.\nHe resigned his charge a short\nUme ago but was asked to reconsider\nand remain another year. After father thought he has notified the\nboard that he will end his pastorate\nat Creston June 30.\n\u2022 He has no idea where his next\nsphere of work will be as yet. He\nwill attend the B. C. conference of\nthe United Chucch in Canadian Memorial Church, Vancouver, this\nweek.\nMr. Armitage came here in 1938\nfrom Robson Memorial Church, of\nVancouver, and has enjoyed a successful three-year pastorate at Creston which includes services at\nWynndel and Canyon.\nDAILY \"wSnVlsYn   BC.-TUI8DAYMORN.NQ   MAY tt\nDoctors Trained\nIn Many tines\nlor War Duties\nBy FRANK FLAHERTY\nOTTAWA (CP)-Watar-teiting ll\none of the imporUnt jobs ot the\nRoyal Canadian Army Medical\nCorps. Men of Uie corps in training\nat the medical training centre here\nlearn how to test water supplies tor\npdlnson and for sterility.\nEich medical unit carriei a number ot water-testing kits in acUon\nand the task, with the equipment\nprovided, is reasonably simple The\npoison test Includes a chemical analyili but as the army goea on Uie\nassumption that the only safe water\nIs chlorinated there is no need of\nan exhaustive bacteriological teat to\ndetermine what, If any germs, may\nbe in the water. It is just a quesUon\nof finding out how much chlorine\nneed be added to make the water\nsafe for men to drink.\nWater on a battle field may be\npoisoned either deliberately by the\nenemy or accidentally by the use of\npoinson gas. Some gases are absorbed by water and make it unfit for\nconsumption.\nHARDE8T WORK\nThe hardest but most important\npart of medical wefrk in the acmy is\nstretcher-bearing. The stretcher\nmust learn to march out of step\nwhen carrying a wounded man so\nthat the jar ot four carriers putting\nthe same foot down at the same\ntime will not make things uncomfortable for the casualty\n' ____\u25a0 na 1\/5 Ol Mf\nTHREE DAY SALE\nToiletries and Home Remedies\nExceptional Values in Toiletries and Home Remedies\nTUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nLydia Plnkham\nVeg. Compound ..\nSd Hepatica.\nLarge liie  .--\nEno's Fruit Salts.\nLarge size _,....\u201e..\nHBC Health\nSalto   _\u25a0\nAbiorblne \u00ab.\nLarge size\t\nIroniied Yeart.\nBotUe   \t\nBayer Aspirins.\n100's\t\nHBC Magnesia.\nPrice\n$115\n$1.15\nm\n$1.00\n98*\n391\nKaslo Men Pass First\nR.C.A.F. Trades Test\nKASLO. B. C. - Mr. ind Mrs. A.\nCarney and Mr. ind Mn. R. C.\nMorton hive received word that\ntheir loni, A. Carney Jr., and Frank\nMorton, who are attending the R.\nC. A. F. Trades School In Calgary,\nhave successfully passed their first\ntests, (Gussie) Cirney making 95\nper cent, highest marks in the class,\nand Frank Morton 88 per cenL\nREPORT AXIS LEADERS\nPLAN MEETING SOON\nVTCHY, France, May IB (API-\nDiplomatic circles reoorted today\nthat meetings among HiUer. Mussolini and Stalin are considered likely\nIn the near future.\nNazis Claim British\nTaken Prisoners\non Greek Island\nBERLIN, May 12 (AP)-Germany\nclaimed today occupation of Melos\nIsland, in the Cyclades group of 75\nmiles North of Crete.\nMelos would be the 12th of the\nGreek Cyclades islands which the\nAxil have announced occupied thus\nfar. The seizure of Melos, the Germans claimed, \"completely surprised\" 188 Britons and 200 Cretans\nwho were found there and taken\nprisoner.\nKaslo War Services\nFund Well Over Quota\nKASLO, B. C. - The local War\nServices Fund Committee report\nshows that Kaslo has gone well over\n'\u2022he $300 quota set. It is expected\nthat final results will show a surplus of around $150.\nLOCAL STRAWBERRIES\nSOLD AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP) -\nFirst local strawberries of the new\nseason went on sale in retail stores\nhere over the weekend. From Mission, B. C, the few a;ates that arrived were snapped up in short\norder. They sold at 30 cents a basket.     .\nA thorough training in gas protection is also a part of medical\ncccps training. The men must know\nhow to protect themselves and their\npatients from poison gas in its various forms.\nCompetent clerks are an Important group in any medical unit because extensive records must be\nkept. Cooks able to prepare diets\nsuitable for Uie sick alio need special training.\n\u2022Army medical work involves a\nmore complicated job of storekeep-\ning than other branches of the army\nand specially trained storekeepers\nare required. In addition to the\nquartermasters' stores of food,\nclothing and other material carried\nby all units, medical units have\ntechnical medical stores and steward's stores.\nPLANS GO AHEAD FOR\nLARGE AIR TRAINING\nClNTRE AT EDMONTON\nEDMONTON, May 12 (CP) -\nNegotiations towacd establishing by\nthe Dominion Government of a\nlarge air training centre in Edmonton were advanced over the weekend.\nMayor John Fry said today nothing has been definitely settled regarding taking over of the Edmonton exhibition grounds for a Manning Pool but he disclosed the latest proposal is to prevent the program from interfering with this\nyear's fair, scheduled for mid-July.\nHBC Magnesia 216\nTablets \"**\nPhillips Milk of\nMagnesia.\t\nHBC Kidney\nPlUi   -\nFrultatives.\nPrice   .:\t\nScott's Emulsion.\nBottle \t\nVicki VipoRub.\nJar  \t\nHBC Malt\nExtract, 2 lb. Jar\nListerine Antiseptic\nLarge size\t\nLavorli AnUiepUc.\nLarge size\nHBC Petrolatum.\n32 oi\t\nDental Needs\nLtiterine Toothpiste.\nGiant siie\t\nListerine Toothpaste.\nRegular size   \t\nPepsodent Toothpaste. Large size \t\nIpana Toothpaste.\nLirge size \t\nDr. Lyon's Tooth\nPowder. Largfilze ...\nColgate'! Toothpaste,\nGiant  \t\nDr. Weit's Nylon\nTooth Brush \t\nI     Price\n|APAN FIGHTS SPIES\nTOKYO, May 12 (AP)\u2014Bent on\nmaking the public, even school\nchild.en, more spy-conscious, Japanese officials today entered uoon\nhigh-pressure observance of an Empire-wide Spy Prevention Week.\nMELBOURNE (CP) \u2014 Increasing\nwartime industrialization and loss\nof pre-war markets for agricultural\nproducts has resulted in a marked\nswitch of emphasis in Australia's\neconomy, from the land to the city.\nOfficials said serious drought conditions in most of Australia caused\na large flow of labor from the land\nand \"implemented the munition and\nsupply program.\"\nMercolized Wax.\nLarge jar \t\nIngram's Milkweed\nCream\t\nNoxzema.\nUrge jar \t\nWoodbury Cold\nCream   \t\nWoodbury Facial\nCream.   \t\nWoodbury Cleansing\nCream\t\nPond's Cold Cream.\nLarge jar \t\n39*\n23*\n37*\n43*\n39*\n39*\n33*\nToiletries\n98*\n98*\n89*\n47*\n47*\n47*\n49*\nSkaving Needs\nPalmolive Shave _\u00bbQ(J\nCream. Large tube  *9*T\nLifebuoy Shave _M(t\nCream. Large tube m*T\nListerine Shave _\u00bb\u00bb\u00abJ\nCream. Large tube *m*r\nColgate's Cup 1-JgJ\nSoap. 2 cakes  m*fr\nWlUiam's Aqua AA&\nVelva. Large  _  *\"\nWilliam's Talc. \u00bbe|J\nPrice  \u2014\u2022 m*+\nPalmolive Talc. JC|J\nPond's Vanishing\nCream. Large jar\nLady father Cream\nCream. Largt \t\nJergen's Lotion.\nPrice   \t\nOdo-ro-no. Reg.\nor instant\t\nMum.\nLarge jar \t\nQuest.\nLarge tin\nD'Rene Shampoo.\nReg. or dry hair\n*%&r\nBfe&\nr%&\nKootenay Lake Ferry\nS.S. NASOOKIN\nNOTICE is hereby given that the\nFerry service on Kootenay Lake\nwill be discontinued for Monday,\nTuesday and Wednesday, May\n12, 13 and 14, owing to the fact\nthat the S.S. Nasookin has been\nordered in for inspection under\nthe Canada Steamships Act.\nThe S.S. Grant Hall will run\nbetween Fraser's Landing and\nGray Cr.eek on the regular ferry\nschedule carrying passengers,\nmail and light express, but no\ncars or trucks can be carried between these points until the S.S.\nNasookin is permitted to resume\nher run.\nNotice will be given of any\nchange in. this arrangement.\nDept. of Public Works\nO. G. CALLAHER\u2014Engineer.\nSays Tunisia Would Be in Dangerous\nPosition Under Any Heavy Attack\nTUNIS, Tunisia, May 12 (AP) \u2014\nAlthough neither optimLstic nor pessimistic concerning th eworld situation. Admiral Jean Esteva, resident-general of Tunisia, believes\nthis part of the French Empire is in\ngreater danger than any other.\n\"Obviously\" this is true, he sajd,\nin an interview, \"because, it is in\nthe dangerous middle Mediterranean Basin.\"\nHe declined to hazard a guess\nwhen asked if he thought French\nAfrica was in gi. eater or less danger\nof invasion now than several months\nago.\nTunisia, wifh Nice and Corsica,\nlong has been a sorepoint in Italian-\nFrench relations. Fascist demonstrations shouted \"Nice, Corsica Tunisia\nln pre war agitation symbolizing\nItalian colonial desires and Tunisia\nitself, containng 103,000 Italan residents, has been a smouldering voK\ncano in world affai-s for 60 years,'\nsince France made it a p--tectorate.\nCompetent observers h ' 2 believe\nthe French would have a difficult\ntime holding off any powerful aerial\nand motorized force unless help\ncame quickly from the outside.\niThe Free JVench Leader, Gen.\nCharles de Gaulle, recently said an\nattack on Tunisia would bring the\nwhole French Empire back into the\nwar.)\nDiscussing the problem of food\nin France, Admiral Esteva said \"we\nare sending as much as possible of\nwheat, vegetables, fruit and mutton.\nQuestioned about economic collaboration between Tunisia and the\nAxis'Powers, the admiral replied.\n'There is no such collaboration.\"\nAdmiral Esteva, an evtremely religious bachelor who spent the happiest of his 61 years at sea, declared\nthat only \"the eternal Father\" can\nsay who will win the war and said\n\u25a0he felt the world was \"in need of a\ngreat i.-eligious revival.\"\n\"What will be the repercssions\non the Moslems of French Africa\nin your opinion, if the war continues in Iraq?\" he was asked.\n\"I don't think its going to continue, he replied.\nPlan Repairs to  '\n(reslon Hospital\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Directors of\nCreston Valley Hospital were ou*.\nalmost in full strength for the May\nmeeting of the Executive at the\nTown Hall, Friday night. President\nD. K. Archibald presided.\nChairman James Cook of the\nBuilding and Grounds Committee\nsubmitted a comprehensive report\non needed repairs of the hospital\nbuilding. The committee was given\nauthority to at once proceed with\nthese betterments. The need of a\nnew operating table was stressed\nby Mrs. Charles Murrell, head of\nthe House Committee. The different\nAuxiliaries will be consulted in\nconnection with donations and when\nthese are to hand the matter of purchase will be left to the Finance\nCommittee.\nErickson Auxiliary was thanked\nfor the donation of a linoleum which\nhas just been placed on the halll\nfloor. A copy of a contract used\nby the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital at Nelson was discussed\nand information in this connection\nwill be sought from hospitals in\nsmaller centres such as Nakusp,\nSalmon Arm and some others.\nHoliday season commences at the\nhospital May 15, when the Assistant\nMatron, Miss Phyllis Hamilton will\nbe on vacation. On recommendation of the Matron, Mrs. F. Nadon\nwas chosen to provide the necessary\nrelief April was not a particularly\nbusy month. Miss M. Dixon, Matron, reported 325 hospital days.\nThere were but two births at the\nhospital last month.\nGrocery Specials\nON SALE TODAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nSTRAWBERRY JAM; CQ\u00a3\nEmpreu, 4 lb. tins       *'~\nSODA BISCUITS: lflft\nSunalta, 1\u00ab oz. carton   *~\nNEW POTATOES:        _-C*\nS lbs.  \"-**\nPEANUT BUTTER:       AC*\nMcColl's, 40 eft tin      I-**\nBusy Summer Spot\nVEGETABLE SOUP: Campbell's, 2 tins  23f\nCRISCO: 1 tb. tint  22f\nRICE KRISPIES: Kcllqgg's, 2 pkgs   23*\nMINUTE TAPIOCA: 2 pkgs.    21 c\nWOODBURY'S FACIAL SOAP: 4 cakei .... 25f\nSALAD DRESSING: Miracle Whip 16 ox. bot. 331\nPork\nShoulders\nUnion\u2014Per Ib.\n21c\nEGGS\nCrade A-Large\nPer dox 25c\nNEW CARROT8:\n3 bunches\nHONEY:  Linden,\n4 Ib. tins\n;'nd,n' \u2022*\u00bb jhcorforauo tn h*t mo. \t\nNelson ttrry landing on the South Shore ol the\nWest Arm. On holidays and each day through the\nSummer the terry Is the busiest traffic (pot In the\nNelaon district.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nCranbrook Students\nHold Annual Tea\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The Home\nEconomics Class of Division 3\n(Grade 7) at Cranbrook Cental\nSchool put on their annual tea ln\nthe Home Economics room Friday\nThese girls are trained by Miss McKay. Mothers of the girls and teachers at the school wert invited to attend. A silver collection was taken\nand about $7.65 waa made which\nwill go to the Junior Red Cross. The\ntables were decorated with tulips\nand daffodils, and the servers wore\ntheir white work uniforms. Those\npouring wei-e Miss M. Davies and\nMiss M. Kiever and the servers were\nMiss I. Coleman, Miss H. Mann,\nMiss H. Schellenberg, Miss B. Stanton. MUs E. Walsh, Miss R. Wilson,\nMiss H. Cochkanoff, Miss G. Isa-\nman and Miss M. Rex. The refreshment committee consisted of Miss E.\nCarson, Miss T. Cerevola, Miss T.\nDyre, Miss M. Gnucci, Miss A. Hopkins, MUs G. Owens, MUs E. RJrae\nand MUs M. Grey. The hostesses\nwere Miss B. Stanton, Miss E.\nWalsh, and MUs G. Isaman. Mias L.\nLarson was also on the Refrehment\nCommittee.\nUNIVERSITY GROUP\nURGES AID TO BRITAIN\nLOS ANGELES. May 12 (AP) -\nSixty Three faculty members at the\nUniversity of California at Los Angeles have signed a telegram td\nPresident Roosevelt urging \"every\npossible step to assure the delivery\not war materials to Britain and her\nallies.\"\nSIXTH MENINGITIS\nDUTH AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, May It (CP)  -\nVancouver's meningitis death toll\nrose to six over the weekend with\nthe death of a three-year-old child\nin hospital. Officials reported then\nare still three meningitU patients\nin hoipital.\nARCHBISHOPS RECEIVE\nPALLIUMS FROM POPE\nVATICAN CITY, May 12 (AP) -\nAt a secret consUtary of the College of Cardinals, Pope Plus today\nconferred the customary Palllums\nof 20 archbishops, including Most\nRev. Joseph Cnarbonneau, Axdi-\nbishop of Montreal, and Most Rev.\nAlexandre Vachon, Archbishop of\nOttawa.\nRECOMMEND CHANGES IN\nWAR MEASURES ACT\nVANCOUVER, May  12  (CP) -\nExtensive amendments to the war    II\nmeasures act were recommended by    j\na Provincial conference here yesterday,  called  by   the   Vancouver\nbranch,   Canadian   Civil   Libettiea\nUnion, and attended by nearly 100    j\ndelegates. '\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany ol Canada. Limited\nManufacturers of\nProducers and Refiners of\nElephant       Tadanac\n* Rs-sssssi\nBrand\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphate\nSulphate ot Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\nMonocalclum  Phoaphata\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD-ZINC\nGOLD\u2014SILVER\nCADMIUM-BI8MUTH\nANTIMONY\nMERCURY\nAlio Sulphuric Acid and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilizer   Sales\u2014Marine   Bldg.,   Vancouver,\nMetal end Fertiliser Sales\u2014215 St. lames St.,\nB. C.\nMontreal\n_._.\nim siiiaiii.-1-iwi'listiiaMffi\n.\u25a0\u25a0mnn .i..!!^ I llllHMfcl.< \u25a0 a.^.aMiaiiaai-rtaii^i^^^miia\n m\\ \u00bbjw\u00bbwwp|ijwiu'' ni->. j\n\u00bbA0\u00bb FOUR ^^^\nIdeals...\nH^lness In\nMprrknetoual\nto M Parties\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\n' Mill Chatfleld:\nol was. married to my hui'\nwhom I didn't love I met my\ndeal and It was love at first sight\nSoon atter that he moved to another\nplace to live and we didn't write to\neach other. Then my husband and\nI were separated and a third romance got under way. This man has\nbeen wonderful to me and wi were\nnlannlng to be married in early\nSummer- A short time a\u00abo I told my\nfriends of my plans. How little I\nk\"ew myself!\n\u2022   Next day my love-at-first-slght-\nfriend\"1phoned that he wai In town,\nllllllls\"\"\"\u00bb>\"\"l'\u00bbllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nEmergency\nUses\nBecome\ntegular\nInes\n\"Pacific Milk has so many\nmerits it has become almost\nindispensable in our household. A few cans, set aside\nfor emergencies, in the beginning has become our regular milk supply now.\"\nThis same letter goes on to\nsay their use of Pacific Milk\ncovers many years.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nhed come back becauie he wanted\nto see me, and when 1 heard hli\nvoice l knew my heart. We hive had\ndates and the happiest houn I've\never ipent hu been -'1th him. But\nthere'i a fly la thli ointment. He\nhas not mentioned marriage and I\ndon't want to throw away a sure\nthing for an uncertainty that might\nend In a broken heart for me. Please\ntell me what to do. It means to\nmuch to me to have the ucond\nmarriage happy.\n.     IN A QUANDARY.\nAnswer:\nWonder if your quandary won't\nbe solved when you discover that\nlove is lomething more than physical attraction and marriage tome-\nthing more than a matter of convenience? Being attracted to one\nman, marrying nlm, divorcing him\nand straightaway being attracted to\nanother and another Indicates pretty\nclearly that you are none too certain\nwhat you want beyond the desire to\nbe happy. This Is what every woman\nwants but she doesn't get it unless\nshe has the ability and the determination to make her partner happy.\nShe can't snap up a than, marry\nhim because he seems the easiest\nway out of a jam end give hint a\nfair deal on that basis. When she\ndangles her \"Intended\" while Ihe\nplayi for time to wring a proposal\nfrom an ex-flame, there's the proof\nshe hain't even a ilncere regard for\nthe \"intended.\"\nHowever, business Is business to\nthe divorcee bent in getting married again. Presumably the proper\nbusiness procedure will be to ask\nthe man who came back Just what\nhis Intentions are. Strong probability li that if they had included marriage he would have mentioned the\nmatter. Since nothing less than a\ncategorical aniwer to this question\nsatisfies a woman, you should get it\nSOUTH SLOCAN C.W.L.\nNAMES TRAIL DELEGATE\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-Mrs. R.\nG. Elliott entertained the Catholic\nWomen's League. Mrs. H. Hilts was\nappointed delegate to the Euchar-\nistic and C. W. L. convention in\nTrail May 30 and 31.\nPlans were made for entertaining\nFather Killingworth, who Is conducting the mission ln the Sacred\nHeart Church.\nLONDON (CP). - Under Wer\n'Office instructions, vacancies In\nHome Guard troopi cauied by men\ncalled up for the Army or for munitions work, must be filled limnedi\nately by recruiting.       \u2022\nCountry Life ...\nCorner Druggist\na Passing (Ian\nBy LOGAN CLEND.NINQ, M.D.\nWithin tbe nest tew yean our\nliterature has begun to notice the\nfigures in life who have been so\nfamiliar as hardly to attract the attention of the literary world. There\nwas Dr. Hertzler's \"Horse and Buggy Doctor,\" followed by \"Country\nEditor,\" \"Country Parson,\" \"Hon\nDoctor,\" end now we have Robert\nB. Nixon, jr.'s account of his father,\ncalled \"Corner Druggist\"\" (Prentice-\nHall, Inc., publishers, New York,\n1M1),\nThe comer drug itore still exists\nand I suppose there must be iome\ngood reaion why corners are ie<\nI  \t\ndruggist,     _\n3, ii largely disappearing.\n\u2014NELION DAILY NEWS NELSON  B. C.-TUESDAY MOdNINO, MAY -ra 1MT\nllllllllllllilll.l.lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIltIs\nII\nimw\u00bbmi'-[m,m,^-!m-Mmw>**-\n.ected, although I am not io lure\nI understand it, but the corner\nin the old lense of the\nword, is largely disappearing. He\nwas the neighborhood druggist,\njust as the doctor was the neighborhood doctor and the minister\nwas the neighborhood minister. His\nposition, as Mr. Nixon lays, was at\nonce the most obscure ana the most\nimportant in his community. He\nperformed the greatest service for\nthe lowest pay.\nAPPRENTICE AT\n8EVENTEEN\nThe corner druggist hera de>\nscribed, began his apprenticeship\nwhen he was 17 years old. He\nlived over the drug itore. He was\navailable day and night. He did\na good deal of medical practice in\nthe way of prescribing for common\nailments. So far as I can see, he\ndid it pretty well. He took care of\na great many Illnesses at a cost\nwhich the patient could afford to\npay and filled a place ln the practice of medicine which I am pot\nsure was supplied by the regular\nmedical profession.\n\"The old-fashioned neighborhood\ndrugstore was an institution unique\nin American life. . . .\n\"The corner drugstore was an\naccommodation center much like\nthe modern filling itation. People\ncome there to use the telephones\nor the rest rooms, to get free maps\nand free information, and occasionally to buy. So It was with the\ndrugstore. Father said that loaf-\nen bought cigars In other places\n. and came there to smoke them;\nI that they bought drugs somewhere\nBUY   WITH   YOUR   EYES   OPEN\nRLMJ&\niiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii   -, .\nTODAY'S MENg\nBroiled Cube Steake\nMashed Potatoei\nCreamed Onions\nLettuce and Watercreu Salad\nBaked Rice Pudding      Tee\nBAKED RIOI PUDDING\nOne-third eup rice, 3 cups milk,\none-third oup sugar, white or brown,\none-third teaspoon salt, Vt teaspoon\ncinnamon or nutmeg, one-third cup\nof raiilni.       .\n , sf ! _.\t\ndfauMWWQA\nty BETSY NEWMAN\n(lllllllllllllllllllllllll'\nMeasure rice and wash well In\ncolander, then drain. While riee is\ndraining, greue biking diih. Put\nriee, milk, sugar, salt and cinnamon Into tht diih, mixing them\nwell together.\nPut In ilow oven (375 degreei F.),\nuncovered and bake until rice Is\ntender, about thrte houn, itirrlng\noccasionally with fork during first\nhour of cooking. Add raisins or Vs\nteupoon grated lemon rind at end\nof first hour. Then bake without\nstirring. This serves four.\nSERIAL STORY...\nBy Allen Eppes\nEYELESS EDEN\nREV. AND MRS. SMITH\nOF MOYII CO TO\nNORTHERN CHINA\nMOYII. a G-Rev. and Mrs, G.\nG. Smith have received word from\nthe Foreign Mluion Boird of the\nUnited Church of tht ippolntment\nto North China. They will leave la\nAugust for Wat China for tanguagt\nLONDON (CP). - Box otflee receipts ln Britain from Charlie Chaplin's \"The Great Dictator\" are re\nported at \u00a3800,000 ($2,870,000)\nMrs. Gertrude Lynde\nof Kimberley Diet\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-Mrs. Gertrude Lynde, aged 41. wife of T, H.\nLynde, died at thi McDougaU Hoipital May 8.\nLOOK for these\nVITAL\nDifferences\nin\nWALLBOARD\nltt\"\nGYPROC Fireproof WALLBOARD (Modi from Gypium Rode)\nCombines All These Advantages:\nProtect Your Home Agalnit Fire\u2014\nWith GYPROC\nGyproc Wallboard Is made from gypsum\nrock\u2014It will not burn. Equally important, Gyproc shields the wooden frame,\nwork of your houae and prevents the\nspread of ure.\nNotti Many types of uullboanl are not fireproof.\nBuild For Lagtlng Beauty\u2014\nWith GYPROC\nYou'll never have the expense or bother\nof costly repaln when you build walla\nand ceilings with Gyproc Wallboard, for\nGyproc il not affected by atmospheric\nchanges. It will not warp, shrink or crack.\nNotei Onlisinry smlllsoardj cannot guarantee\nthli permanence.\nDecorate The Way You Wish\u2014\nWith GYPROC\nGyproc allows you the choice of panelled\nwalla or imooth, seamless walls, with all\njoints rendered invisible. So invest in\nGyproc, and decorate your roomi to suit\nyour individual taste.\nNotei Flush, seamless walls ami celling, cannot be\nobtained with ordinary wallboards, io that your\nchoice af decorative treatment it limits-4\nFREE SAMPLE and Illustrates! Booklet wtll be\nmailed on request to Gyproc. SO Maitland St,\nToronto.\nTO IDENTIFY GENUINE\nOYPROC\u2014\nL !__\u00ab. fa\u00bb mm, m_-\nGYl'ROC sm du\nbtck'of.ssst\nJ, Look for the Orssers\nittipssoo both lido\nOHAPTIR TWINTY-THREE\n\"Thanks,\" aald Eve, as Joel helped\nher into the cer. \"The ankle's still\ngot a lot ot strength ln it.\" She released the brake. \"Bye, you twol\nAnd thanks tor everything.\"\n\"Juit a moment!\" BUI said. \"When\ndo I see you again?\"\n\"That'i hard to aay,\" Bye replied.\n\"Im busy down In The Gap during\nthe day, trying to get the old homestead in condition\u2014and then thete\nare the three evenings I teach, \u00abo\u2014\"\n\"Why not pick me up one day,\nand let me go to the ichool with\nyou?\" BM cut ln.\n\"All right, I'll do that,\" Eve said.\n\"But you must promise to do the\nichool Justice\u2014if you write about\nit.\" '\n\"I promise! Now, what day shall\nI expect you?\"\n\"I'm not sure,\" aaid Eve, She wai\nthoughtful lor a moment, looking\nat Joel and then at BiU. \"I'll juit\npop in one afternoon and take a\nchance on finding you home.\" And\nshe thought\u2014I mustn't let mysell\nbecome too fond of these young\nmen; I mustn't let them take up msr\ntime. Then ihe smiled and said:\n\"After all, you DID tell me this wai\nsupposed to be an Evelesi Eden.\n... Now, didn't you, Joel?\"\n\"Yu I did,\" aald Joel. \"But-\"\n\"But I dont like Edens without\nEvea,\" BiU cut in; \"So TU be looking\nfor you.\"\nLaughing, Eve started her car.\n\"I'U try to stay out of the coUairdi\nthe next time I coma up,\" ibe said.\nAnd then the called out a cherry\n'Goodby, boys!\" end went bumping\noff down the narrow, rough road.\nJoel and Bill stood watching her.\n\"Wonderful girl,\" Joel laid very\nsoftly.\n\"Yes,\" said Bill. \"Wonderful. I\nbelieve that's the same word yott\nuied to describe the day.\"\n\"It ll,' laid Joel. ''And it hu\nlust occurred to me what a spineless creature I've been.\"\n\"Yes? How do you mean?\"\n\"In not putting up a fight.\"\nBill wai puzzled. \"What in heck[\n\" Kelp. os. both tld.      a^l      I\n\u2022ypraa It nld eenywfcw fct\nC\u00abvsd. by tumbor \u00bb W*n'  _d\nf\nBttf WAR SAVINGS\nCERTIFICATES\nSold In Nelion by\nWood Vallance Hardware Co* Ltd.\nPhont 26 Nelion, I. C.\nWe Carry a Complete Stock of Cyproc\nBurns Lumber & Coal Company\nPhono 53\nNelion, B. C.\nelsa and came there to be entertained. People dropped in for the\nweather report, too look at the thermometer, to buy two-cent stamps\nto have specks taken out of their\neyes. , . .\n\"Father, Uke most old-time pharmacists, cursed the people who came\nto talk Instead ot to buy, but he\nwould have been lost without the\ngossip and mustla around him. Because he was on duty eighteen hours\na day, ha had no opportunity for\nany other social life. The familiar\nstory was of the pharmacist and his\nfriend ... who were playing checkers. ... The latter whispered, 'Doc,\na cuitomer just came into the store.\n'\"Yes, I know. Keep still. Maybe he'U go out again, '\nSlimming Down\nby Easy Exercise\nBy ALICE WADE ROBINSON\nThinking about slimming li a\npleasant form of day-dreaming.\nEven though you are not getting\nanywhere, you are inclined to put\nSood intentions on a footing with\nie accomplished fact.\nOne sure way to snap out of lt\nla to have aome candid camera shots\ntaken without your good girdle and\nyour Sunday best pose. Stand as\nyou do when off guard so your\nfigure wiU look its worst H you\nare in real need of diet and exercise the resulta will be auch that\nyou wUl want to take direct action.\nTo keep from toying with tlw\ntemptation to let things sUde now\nand then post the evidence on your\nmirror where your glance wiU fall\non it often.\nThe less you have to think about\nexercise beforehand the better. It\nhelps to aet a definite time for your\ndaily dozen. The regularity tends\nto make lt more or less automatic,\nlike doing tbe dishes at 8:30. At 10\no'clock you exercise.\nSo long as It is tha same time\n\u2022very day the hour Is of no consequence. The only time not to\nexercise is immediately after a\nmeal. You ahould wait an hour.\npreferably two. Exercising right\nafter \u25a0 meil won't keen the excess\ncaloriei from turning Into fat and\nit might give you Indigestion.\nThe aim of a daUy dozen is not\nto reduce. It won't help you to\nlose mutfh weight, but lt will give\nyou a beautiful figure. You will\nscarcely beUeve your own eyes\nwhen you see the improvement\nthat can be made ever a period of\ntime with juit a little exercise (very\nday. If you are accurate u to the\nposition and movementi, you ean\ntake lt ai ilow and euy as you\nplease, \u00bb<.\nLying down exercises arc twice\nas eaiy u the onei you take standing. You dont even have to hold\nyourself upl On your ho4mm dayi,\nlie down on tha floor and take a\ngood big itretch. Stretch ind pull\nunUl you reach every lazy muscle.\nRelax and stretch again.\nOver em your back now and flex\nyour knees with feet on the floor,\nand puU up and In with the lower\nabdominal muscles and dig the small\nof tha back down against the floor.\nThat's an exercise that rests your\nback. From the same position, keep\ndigging thi beck Into the floor u\nyou flax alternate kneei up to\nchest.\nThen sit up, clasp the arms about\none knee and hug It to chest and\nitretch the other leg itralght out\nIn front on the floor. Hold that position ai you rock back and forth.\nRock backward until shoulders are\non tha floor, straight lag In air.\nthen rock forward to ilttlng poiition\n\u2022gala\nare you driving it?\" he demanded.\n\"I'm speaking about you\u2014me\u2014\nand a girl,\" said Joel.\n\"Meaning Eve?\"\n\"Yes. Heretofore I've lort of\ntaken for granted that you'd walk\noff with any girl w\u00ab both knew\u2014\nend I rather convinced myself that\nit wai your divine right'\n\"Yes\u2014go onl\"\n'Well, today I woke up.\" There\nwas a new tone in Joel'i voice\u2014one\nBiU bad never before detected there.\n\"I like Eva Allgood; I like her a\nlot. And I'm going to leave no stone\nunturned in trying to make her\nIlka me.\"\n\"I see.\"\nTm glad you do. I take it you\nlike her also.\"\n\"Yei, I do. J Uke her very much.\"\n\"Then,\" said Joel, \"that makes\nui rivals\u2014aa weU as cousins.\"\nWith thii he drove his car around\nback ot the cabin, where he had\nrigged up a makeshift garage.\nAs he did so he found himself remembering a lot of things about\nEve Allgood; er quick, eager movements; her sweetness; her interest\nin her work, and her hands\u2014ilender,\ntanned by the sun, and yet so completely feminine. .\nDuring thi next few dayi Joel\nand BiU did a lot ot thinking. They\nhad very UtUe to uy to each other.\nNot that there wu any hard feelings between them, or that they\nwa-e in the leut unfriendly. It was\nnothing Uke that at aU. It was only\nthat each appeared to ba so lost in a\npersonal forest of tangled thoughts,\nand just didn't care to pur any of\nthose thoughts into words.\n(To Bl Contlnuid)\n\u2014the one soap especially made to prevent \"B.O.\"\n(Body Odor)\nYou may be pretty as a picture and a wonder at\nyour job ... but you'U never be popular in tbe\noffice or out of it if you have \"B.O.\" Every one\nof U perspires\u2014all the timei And perspiration\nleft on your body becomes stale, offensive. That\nla why we all need LIFEBUOY. No other soap\nhai LIFEBUOY'S special DEODORIZING\nINGREDIENT-FOR LIFEBUOY IS THE\nONE POPULAR SOAP ESPECIALLY MADE\nTO PREVENT B.O.\nStart using LIFEBUOY today for face and\nhands and for your bath. You'll love lta rich,\ninvigorating lather that leaves you so refreshed,\nconfident of LASTING, ALL-OVER cleanlinenl\nAs necessary m\nlh* btal\nol your dear\/\/\n1 (tvtr product\nWttt* tr giMMr\u2014*-\u00ab__* rot trt aethe or _* titling\nitUl\u2014nu mttl perspire (rom I to I plats dtlly. OttanriM\nyou would die of hyptr-pyrenn (hat itrolte) I Umt of tho\ntime yoa cinnot SM Or fed this periplrttion becluH Its\nwiter tvnporsttf. Bat uveal depotltt remiln on tbe ikin\n\u2014decompose tsA CUM offensive \"B.O.\" (Body Odor).\nOnly when you ass lifebuoy malady oa yoa ba an\nyoa never offend.\nNowcostsLESS!\n0\nH0$P\nif you W\u00ae\n1**'*\u00ab*\nI couldn't figure out why so many folks\nBought Airway. I admit that it smelled marvel.\nously good going through the grinder. But that\nlow pricei It didn't seem possible! So, when I saw\none of my neighbors ordering this coffee, I blurted\ntight out: why Airway? And tliis is what she said:\nWe like Airway for its satisfying mellow-\nrich Savor. And because it's always fresh! Out\ngrocer orders Airway in the bean, right from the\nroasting oven! That means we have no costly\ncontainers to piy for, no delays! What's more,\nwe're getting this choice coffee at its very best!\"\n1 hat made sense... so I tried a pound on her\ntty-io! \"She's tight!\"agreedourgrocer.\"sAirway's\nmighty popular... my biggest seller. Feel free to\ntry it on the toaster's guarantee. Unless you think\nit's a smart buy for flavor, freshness, and economy\n... bring it back. It won't cost you a penny!'*\nwa \u00ab SAFEWAY STORES, LTD.\n\u25a0 i\nJ, ...-.:\u25a0_. ,.__.tM:^_m*,.\u00b1.__^,_______.\n^Sf^^^^^^^\n \u25a0 .,,.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,,\u25a0, ,.-^^.-.,1_p_^.l.i, .,,.\n~~\nCOLD STRIPE\n[OSIERY\nall tha New Spring Shades\nt. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nProblem ...\nTraining a (hild\nMakl Has Spoiled\nBy Gtrry Cliveltnd  Myen, Ph.D.\nHundreds of mothers who can\nafford to have domestic help might\nhave written the following about a\n19-month-old child.\n\"Because he was our first child\n' tnd because we had domestic help,\nj\nJUST ARRIVED\nSummer WASH DRESSES\n$3.50 to ?7.95\nFashion First Ltd.\n438 Baker St. Phone 942\n_i\n NILSON DAILY NtW* NILtON. B. C-TUISDAY MORNING, MAY 13. 1941-\nRalston Speech Causes Speculation\non Part Women lo Play In War Effort\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP)-When\nthe tlmt comes for womtn to ttkt\nan active part In Canada'i military\nendeavor they likely will be Called\non first to fill clerical and other\npositions in the administrative diviiion, It was suggested authoritatively here today. '\nThe whole question of women and\nthe war effort now U \"on tht mat\"\nand under discussion with decisions\nlikely to be announced in the near\nfuture, one source said.\nEncouragement for women wanting to take an active part wai seen\nIn the statement of the MinUter of\nNational Defence, Hon. J. L. Ralston, on recruiting during the weekend.\n\"Already,\" the MinUter said,\n\"many women are taking men's\nplaces In the \u25a0factories. Again there\nare positions in the fighting services\nwhich women can fill and which\nwill be filled under arrangemenU\nwhich the Department ot Nttiontl\nWar Service*, in collaboration with\ntht defence Mrvteta, btvt In hind.\"\nNo decuioni havt bten reached as\nto whether women will Wear unicornis, whether mtrried women will\nbe eligible or whtt othtr requirements are likely. One official laid,\nhowever, that lt wai probable worn-\nCreston Bride to Live tn Calgary\nen would be governed by tht ume\napply\nto   tht\nregulationi   which\nArmy.\nMrs. Arthur Couchman, Commandant of tht Ottawa Branch of\nthe Women's Auxiliary Service\nCorps, t volunteer, uniformed\ngroup of womtn who havt been\ndrilling and taking various courses\nfor several month., said the Minuter'! remarks wtrt gratifying.\nMrs. Couchman holdi t witching\nbrief hert tor the mtny voluntary\nWomen'i Auxiliary Service bodiei\nthroughdUt Canada and has been in\nclose touch with Defence Department executives. r\nSaa tha Naw 194!\nRefrigerators\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n(74 Bakir St Phone 260\nin my ignorance I spent and am\nstill spending every waking moment with him. Now when 1 attempt to leave him in a room by\nhimself he cries and since it is im-\npossibe to interest him in a toy\nbefore I leave the room or to persuade him to stay of hU own accord, he consequently follows me.\nHe doesn't mind in the least when I\nleave the house entirely, and the\nmaid advises me that he is usually\na much better boy than when I *m\nat home! Any of the few household\nduties that I perform afe only accomplished with great struggle and\nwith many interruptions. He never\npermits me to sit down quietly to\nread or sew for over two minutes\nat a time. This to an actual fact.\nNow that he expects this constant\nattention what can we do to discourage it?\"\nDEMANDS CEASELESS\nATTENTION\nPlease notice the \"because we\nhad domestic help.\" The mother\nwho has not is compelled to leave\nthe little child to do for himself\n'.'.'.. \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\'.'.\" lit i'Lnn\n???????\nWhat is\npharmacognosy?\nPharmacognosy Is the science of\ndrugs treating of the characterU-\ntics of crude drugs and simples.\nIt is one of the many branches\nof study your Fleury's pharmacist undertook to prepare himself for the important work of\ncompounding prescriptions. This\nknowledge is your assurance of\nRapid frtt dtllvtry service\u2014 accuracy and dependability in\nTelephone 23 our prescription work.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\nCleaned to Look Like New\nDRESSES\u2014Plain     75*\nSUITS\u2014Man's and Ladiei'  85*\nSPRtNC COATS\u2014Man'i and Ladies' ...... 85*\nNelson __i Laundry\n& Dry Cleaners Ltd.\n711 Bakar St.\nPhone 128\nNation, B. C.\nfrom five to 20 minutei or longer.\nat a stretch. From 8 monthi to a\nyear or more ot agt tht child's\ncries and complaining may drive\nthe mother almoit frantic as ihe\ntries to finish this Job or that about\nthe house. Nevertheleu, _fat tends\nto harden to it and to extend the\nperiods ot letting him wait as she\nfevvs more absorbed ln getting\ne potatoes on to cook or the pie\nin the oven to bake. But if the\nmother has a maid to do the work\nabout the house it U easy for the\nchild to demand her ceaseless attention and harder for her to reilst\nhU demands. She teeU that since\nshe has domestic help all her time\nshould be at the disposal of her\nchild for his best education. Her\nconscience hardly IeU her do as\nshe would like, while this little\nchild bids for her attention. Be-\nfore she realizes what has happened she haa made him entirely\ndependent on her for hU amusement and she has made herself his,\nslave.\nSince she has no pie to bake, fish\nto try or potatoes to put on to\ncook for a certain time, nor anything else compelling her to leave\nthu child for a definite period, ihe\nwill need to create work for herself. Let her, therefore, write out\na program which will provide for\nintervals of time (short at first\nand gradually longer later\u2014 during\nwhich she will be buiy \u2014 sewing, knitting, retdlng, playing the\nipiano or solitaire. Let her refuse to give any attention to the\nchild until the end of the definite\nperiod. It might be well to have\na clock near to ihow tile child just\nwhere each hand must be before\nshe will amuse him again.\nBy and by the child will discover\nthat hU criet will not bring Ius\nmother to him. Having ample toys,\nhe will amuse himself. Let her\nshow great appreciation of hU crudest creation! at Iht turns her at'\ntention to him.\nAs soon as the child can move\nabout it will be necessary, of course\nfor him to have learned that there\nare some things he cannot do and\nsome things ht cannot have.\nMR.  AND  MRS.  GILMORE  PEARSON\nThe bride before marriage was Miss Dalia Pelle, only daughter of\nMrs. M. Pelle of Creston. The groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Pearson\nof Calgary. The marriage was solemnized at Holy Cross Church, Creston, Rev. M. J. Cooney officiating Mr. and Mrs. Pearson are to live\nin Calgary.\u2014Photo by Larson.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOk, B. C. - BIU\nHaynes vUited hii parents over the\nweekend.\nMiss Mat Voisey, teicher at Jaffray, vUited her home at the weekend.\nEddy Eberline has retumtd from\nVictoria where he attended Victoria\nCollege.\nCpl. and Mn. R. C. KoweU of\nBrandon spent the weekend in\nCranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. P. A. McGrath of\nCanal Flats spent tha weekend in\ntown,\nMiss D. Olivier of Creiton wu ln\ntdwn for the weekend.\nMiss Betty Patmore of Vancouver\nIs visiting her cousin MUs Gertrude\nPatmore.\nMUs Irene Countryman of the\nKimberley High School staff spent\nthe Weekend in Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Scott have returned from Vancouver.\nAdvertisers Are Invited\nUse Daily News\nAdvertising Office\nFacilities* \u2666 \u2666\nSome Nelson advertisers find\nit convenient to write their advertisements at the Daily News office.\nWe welcome them.\nDesk space, advertising layouts and paper, illustration service\n\u2014 everything is available that an\nadvertiser needs in the preparation\nof copy.\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINB BAY, B.C. - MUs\nLouella Hong who U to marry Blan-\nihartft;. Birtlet of Ymlr thU week,\nwas guest of honor at a surprise\nshower at the home of Mrs. Oscar\nB. Appleton, Thuriday atternoon.\nA large basket decorated with\nand topped with a doll dressed as\nan old fashioned lady contained the\npink and whitt true loven knots\nmany presents.\nThose present were Mrs. J. Ferguson, Mrs. W. Donaldson, Mrs. A.\nMcWhinnie of Trail, Mrs. J. Sewell,\nMrs. T. Neale, ML-s. Fred Neale, Mrs.\n0. P, Appleton, Mrs. J. Berry, Mrs.\nW. J. McConnell, Mn. H, Came,\nMrs. J. E. Fitchett, Mrs. D. S. Taylor, Mn. Oscar Appleton, Mts. H.\nMcCarthy, Mrs. N. Dosenberger,\nMrs. Melvin Ziegler, Mra. R. Stevenson, Miss Roberta Stevenson, MUs\nJean Ferguson, Mrs. R. L. Hong and\nthe guest ot honor.\nCreston Institute\nPraised for Donation\nCRBSTON, B. C. - Mn. H. A\nPowell was hostess to members of\nCreston and District Women'i Institute at Uie May meeting Friday,\nwhich wai in charge of tht Preti-\ndent, Mra. Charlei MurrelL*\nThe Institute wai highly complimented on ita donation of $25 for\nthe Overseas Mobile Kitchen Fund.\nAccording to the Secretary handling\nthe fund in BritUh ColumbU the\ngrant from Creston waa ibout the\nmost generous ytt to hand.\nThe Secretary wu authoriied to\npay the bill for the new awnings\nthe Institute U placing on tht windowi of ltt ward it Creiton Hospital. A request tor help items the\nsalvation Army welfare effort was\ntabled until revenues trt more\nbuoyant\nCreiton Inititute will be at home\nto the members ot Wynndel Institute Tuesday afternoon at the\nhomt of Mn. c. T. Htyes. The Entertainment Committee is Mn. W.\nJ. Scott and Mn. 0. Howird tnd\nMn. Chirlei Ptrry tnd Mn. R\nIbbotson will bt in ehtrgt ot tbe\ntea.\nA practical demonstration on budding ratei wu given by Mn. M\nYoung, htld of tht Agriculture\nCommittee. A illp that had been\ndonated the Inititute was raffled,\nand was won by Mn. Emil Johnson\nThe tea hostess wai assisted by\nMrs. James Maxwell, Mrs. James\nCook, Mrs. p. A. Conkey and Mrs.\nSissssl*lssn\nt The marriage took place in\nthe Rectory of St. Augustines\nChurch, Vancouver, Wednesday,\nMay 7, of Mary EUen May MacDonald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. MacDonald, NeUon, to Donald Douglas Burns, younger son ot\nthe late Mr. and Mn. Robert Burns\nof Humboldt, Sask., Rev. Father T.\nJordan performing the ceremony.\nAttendanU were Mr. and Mrs. W.\nG. Briggs of Vancouver, brother-in-\nlaw and sistec of the'groom.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bush of\nTrail were weekend guesU of the\nlatter's parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Dunwoody.\nt Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Donnell\nand daughter, Dr. Margaret Donnell, and Mrs. Donnetfs mother,\nMrs. Meggs, have left for Vancouver to attend the B.C. conference\nof the United Church in Vancouver.\nt MUs Mary O'Donnell of Trail\nwas a weekend guest of Mr. and\nMrs. J. B. Gray, Baker Street.\nt W. R. Bourque of the Royal\nBank of Canada staff in Grand\nForks visited Nelson Sunday.\nt MUs R. Hindley of Harrop\nspent yesterdjur ln town.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the City yesterday included Mrs. C, C. Webster\nof Kaslo.\nt Mrs. Oliver and young daughter Alice of Grty Creek were Nelson\nvisitors yesterday.\nt Mrs. Phillips of New Westminster and her father of Chilllwack have arrived to visit the former's son in NeUon.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Allen,\nBaker Street, had as a weekend\nguest Perry Landerucci of Trail.\nt Rev. Foster Hilliard, Silica\nStreet, left yesterday to attend the\nB.C. conference of the United\nChurch in Vancouver.\nt Mts. John Murray of South\nSlocan vUited NeUon yesterday.\nt Shoppers In town yesterday included L. G. Morel of Ymir.\nMrs. W. Cant was in town from\nAppledale yesterday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. E. Henri Gaut-\nsohi of Trail were weekend guests\nof the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ, B. Gray, Baker Street.\nt Mr. and Mrs. E. Trozzo of\nSouth Slocan and young son Don,\nvUited Nelson yesterday.\nt Mrs. R. A. Yeld is a vUitor in\ntown from Edgewood.\nM. C Donaldson spent yesterday in Nelson.\nt Graeme Steed, son of Dr. and\nMts. W. B. Steed, Latimer Street,\nleaves thU morning for Victoria.\nt Mrs. W. C. Kettlewell, Chatham Street, Fairview, left yesterday\nto attend the B.C. conference of the\nUnited Church in Vancouver.\nJohn ChrUtian was in town\nfrom Ymir yesterday.\nt Mrs. George Mclnnes of Kaslo\nipent yesterday in the City with\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. T. Lawrie, Vernon\nStreet    \u2022\nt Mr. and Mrs. D. J. McGregor,\nwho have been holidaying at their\nAppledale ranch and spent a couple\nof days in NeUon with friends, leave\nthU morning for their home in\nPenUcton.\nt W. J. McLean, Medical Arts\nApartments, who has been seriously\nill in Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Is improving.\nt Circle No. 3 of Trinity United\nChurch met at the home of Mrs.\nJ. H. Wallace. Mill Street, when\nthose  present   were  Mrs.  Arthur\nInonoaklin Miss\nWed at Edgewood\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\u2014A pretty wedding took plact here Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock in the Church ot\nSt. Agnes, when Marvel E. Lewtu,\nonly daughter of Mr. and Mn. W. E.\nLewtas of tht Inonoaklin Valley,\nwu united in mattriage to Edwin\nGavin Milne, resident of Edgewood\nfor a few years. Rev. F. W. DaglUh\nperformed the ceremony before a\nlarge congregation. The Church was\ndecorated with flowers. Mrs. W.\nBoothby played organ music.\nMisa Lewtas has lived all her lift\nin this district, tnd tttended the\nEdgewood School up to about thret\nyears ago.\nTht bride wu attended by MUs\nMargaret Coates, daughter of Mn.\nJanet Coates of Nelaon. Albert Partridge acted u beat man. The bride\nwore a dress of white iheer and carried a bouquet of lilies of the valley\nand pink roses. Miss Coates wore a\nsimilar dress but of pink material\nand carried a bouquet of pink tulips.\nAfter the service tt the Church\nthe parents of the bride were \"at\nhome\" at their residence in the\nValley. Invited guests were Mr. and\nMrs. Boothby, Rev. and Mrs. DaglUh, Mrs. Yeld, Mr, tnd Mrs. Cole-\ngrave, Mr. and Miss Naomi Naylor,\nMrs. Kelso, Mrs, Courville, Mr, and\nMrs. Allardice, Mrs. Nesbitt, Mrs.\nWaUon, the MUses Watson and Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Milne.\nAt night a dance waa given by Mr.\nand Mrs. Lewtas ln the Edgewood\nHall, to which the whole dUtrict\nwas invited.\nHistory of Sunday\nSchool Van Told to\nSouth Slocan Ladies\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B. C- MUs\nHannah and Miss IlUngworth ot tht\nSunday School Van attended the\nmeeUng of tht Womtn's Auxiliary.\nMrs. A. Mitchell presided. Mn. P.\n0. Bird wu tea hostess assisted by\nMrs. Yeatman and Mn. DavU.\nMn. IlUngworth gave an address\non the history of the Sunday School\nvan. Miss Hannah assisted tn the\nservice.\nMUs Hannah and MUs IlUngworth\nstarted out with their van \"The St.\nCuthbert\" Friday morning for Eut\nKootenay where they will apend\nthe Summer in and around Cranbrook and the Windermere dUtrict.\n-MOt OlVt\nFREEMAM,\n\u25a0       FURNITURE CO.L~*yK\nThe Houit of Furnlturt vTififc^'\nEagle Block    Ntlton . Phtnt 111\nYour Dollar\nBuys More\nin Our Store 1\ni ^\u2014*\/\nCROSS\n%h\nQUEEN'S BAY\nQUEEN'S BAY, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. Harold Thome of Winnipeg\nspent a few days with Mrs. Thome's\naunt, Mrs. J. S. Mahood on their\nway to Vancouver where tbey will\nreside.\nMatthew Aylmer of Trail spent\nthe weekend at his home here.\nMUs Betty Porteous has return\ned to NeUon to resume her studies\nas business college.\nPete Osby ca\nmon last week\n,ege,\nPete Osby caught an 18-pound sal-\nTerrill, Mrs. J. B. Stallwood, Mrs.\nD. StDenis, Mrs. W. E. Coles, Mrs.\nD. D. Townsend, Mrs. W. M. Buchanan, Mrs. H. Emery, Mts. Wilfrid Allan, Mrs. B. Lowery, Mrs.\nR. . D. Hall, Mrs. Jack McDonald,\nMrs. N. C. Stibbs and Mrs. Dorothy\nWallace.\nt Mr. and Mrs. w. R. Dunwoody,\nwho spent the past few months in\nthe City, have taken up residence\nat their Crescent Bay home.\nt Mrs. J. H. Wright of Nanaimo,\nwho spent the past few weeks\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter\nMr. and Mrs. James Spencer, Victoria Street, left yesterday for her\nhome.\n\u2022 George W. Steele, Silica street\nhad as guests yesterday, Acting\nChief Fred Steele and Mrs. Steele\nand their daughter Doreen of Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. B. Gray, Baker Street,\nleft yesterday to visit her mother\nand sister at the Coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Vallance and\nthe latter's sister. Miss Annie Bird,\nvisited Kaslo Sunday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Henry Brown of Ymir\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Nordquist\nleft last weekend for a holiday at\nTacoma and Vancouver. While in\nVancouver thoy will be guests of\nMr. and Mrs. 0- Radelet, West Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Carlisle\nwho have been visiting the former's\nparents. Mr. and Mrs. James Carlisle, 108 High Street, have returned\nto Vancouver.\nt Complimenting Mrs.\" Thomas\nCarlisle, nee Miss Lily Erikson,\nwhose marriage took place April\n30 in Vancouver, a miscellaneous\nshower was held Thursday at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. James Carlisle, 108 High Street. Guests in\neluded Miss Deanie Wallace, Miss\nDoreen Long, Miss Eva Henrickson,\nMiss Nonnie MacLanders, Miss Alice\nMacMillan, Miss Sibyl MacLean,\nMiss Beda Moen, Miss Swanhilde\nMoen, Miss Iris Johannson, Mrs.\nFrank Korolak, Miss Natalie Com-\nIshen, Miss Madelaine Foreacre, and\nMiss Bacbara Carlisle.\nFrank Phillips of NeUon wu a\nrecent visitor t othe Bay.\nGinette Merz of Nelson spent an\nafternoon at her home recently.\nA meeting of the Church Guild\nwas held at the home of Mrs. Alec\nAttre. It was decided to discontinue\nthe meetings during the Summer.\nKASLO\nKASLO, B.C-J. C. GUker of\nBonnington was a city visitor,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Timms had as\nguest their son William of Trail.\nJohn Dinney and Jack Raper of\nJohnson's Landing visited town.\nMrs. D. Bruce had as guest her\ndaughter-in-law, Mrs. Harfey Bruce\nof Chicago, 111.\nE. Montpelier has returned to\nTrail after spending several days\nfishing here.\nHarry Abey, who has been ill for\nsome time, has left for Vancouver\naccompanied by his father and\nbrother, F. T. and F. H. Abey. Harry\nAbey U suffering from pressure of\na piece of shrapnel in the head received during tne Great War when\nhe was in the R.C.A-F. He was\na prisoner of war in Germany, prior\nto the end of hostilities in 1918.\nBONNINGTON\nBONNINGTON, B. C.-Mrs W.G.\nElsdon had as guest her sister, Mrs.\nC. Marshall ot Vancouver for a\nfew days.\nMr. and Mrs. W.C. Motley spent\nFriday fishing on th emain lake.\nGordon Thompson has returned\nfrom a two-week visit to Victoria\nwhere he and Mrs. Thompson attended the graduation of their\ndaughter Elizabeth from the Royal\nJubilee Hospital May 1.\nDouglas McDonald has left for\nVancouver.\nMrs. Gordon Jewel of Marysville\nwho visited her parents Mr. and\nMrs. A. Somerville; for a few days,\nhas left with Mrs. Somerville for\nVancouver and Victoria where they\nwill visit relatives foe a few week?.\nMrs. Alan Willey and her sUter\nMrs. Armson of Grand Forks have\nreturned from a week's motoring\ntrip to Cranbrook and Fernie.\nMrs. A. McFadden was a NeUon\nvisitor Saturday.\nMrs. R. Greyson has Teturned\nfrom Nelson where she was a guest\nof Mrs. W. E. Wasson.\nMr. and M\"S. G. N. Brown were\nSaturday shoppers in Nelson.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-Lloyd Armour, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nArmoU.-, has left for Vancouver\nto train with the R.C.A.F.\nMrs. J. F. Haszard is vUiting Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Martin before going on\nto reside in Penticton to reside with\nher  mother.\nAlbert Della-t has arrived home\nfrom U. B. C. at Vancouver.\nMrs. E. G. Smyth of NeUon is\nvisiting her daughter, Mrs. L. D.\nThompson,\nMrs. J. Palm left for Kaslo for a\nfew days.\nMrs. Tony Mercier and son who\nhave been the house guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Handley, have returned\nto their home in Camp Uster. Tney\nwere accompanied by Mrs. Mercier,\nnephew Allen Handley who will\nvisit them.\nMrs. M. Roark of Chelan, Wash.,\nleft for her home after spending a\nfew days with her sUter and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Curran.\n\u20ac0(M YSbm\nMaterial for 19\nBlankets Sent In by\nSouth Slocan Group\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C- The\nregular meeting of the South Slocan Red Cross Auxiliary wu held\nin the Community Hall, Mrs. P. 0.\nBird officiating.\nThe Committee ln charge of the\nwoollens for blankets, reported the,\nhad sent away to the factory enougi\nwoollen material to make 19 blank\neU. They will continue collecting\nwoollens to be sent in the Fall.\nIt was decided to hold the meet\nings in the evenings during Uie\nSummer months.\nMrs. C. Gray donated the proceeds\nfrom a shawl she had knitted.\nMore patchwork blocks were\ngiven out to be made into quilts.\nA splendid report on the annual\nmeeting of the Red Cross in Vancouver was read.\nCRESTON SENDS\nSUPPLY SHIPMENT\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014President Mrs.\nW. R. Long wu in charge of the\nMay meeting of Creston Valley\nbranch of the Canadian Red Cross at\nthe work room, Thursday afternoon,\nwith a representative turnout of\nworkers.\nThe community auction sale held\nlate In April accounted for an intake of $200.38, and the president\nexpressed appreciation of the donations and the help given in connection with the sale. The sum of\n$55 was added to branch funds ss\na result of a recent raffle at Boswell.\nFor the work committee, Mrs. R.\nB. Robinson reported shipping a\nlarge crate of supplies to headquarters, and another was almost\nready to go. The latter had a considerable quantity ot refugee garments\nas well as quilts.\nA neW sijpply ot wool has arrived. There is a demand for 100-\npound flour sacks which ean be\nused to advantage for quilt linings.\nThe sum of $3.85 was realized on\nthe raffle of a centrepiece donated\nby Mrs. Vic Mawson, along with t\nrunner. Mn. H. A. Powell won tht\nformer, and Mn. Wells won tht\nrunner.\nMOYIE RED CROSS\nSENDS IN ARTICLES\nMOYIE, B. C\u2014The rtgultr mtttlng of the Red Cross was held at tht\nhome of Mrs. Pennon. Carda played.\nThe following work wu ient for\nApril to the headquarten of the\nRed Cross at Cranbrook: 8 ladlu\ngowns, 3 chtldreni dresses, 4 pairs\nloomers, 12 diapers, 1 pair loelu\nand 2 helmets.\nPRATT, Ku. (CP). - Bobby\nHolopeter, seven, walked in hli\nsleep, barefoot and in pyjamas down\ntpwn to a mortuary where an attendant awakened him.\nThe Japaneie Foreign MinUter\nthinks his nation and ours must understand each other \u2014 which suggests that perhaps we understand\nhis pretty well already. \u2014 Kaniu\nCity Star.\nCOATS\nJust what you want in either\ntailored or full backs.\n$13.95 Up\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St. Phone 874\nASK FOR\n4X\nBREAD\nAt Your\nGroctn\nFrtth Dtily\nWATCH REPAIR\nll i Job for experts. Our work\nassures your satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\nYou Ctn Whip Our Cream\nBut You CAN'T BEAT Our\nMILK\nVOOTENAY\nValley U\nAIRY\nSouth Slocan\nMr. and M--s. P. 0. Bird had as\nguests Miss M. McDonald, Miss H.\nMcDonald, Ernest Welsh and W.\nDuncan of NeUon.\nMrs. G. C. Cobb entertained a\nnumber of guests. The lovely wool\nafghan which Mrs. Cobb is donating for Red Cross funds was completed. Attending were Mrs. Yeatman, Mrs. Nixon, Mrs. Bird, Mrs.\nSweet, Mrs. Anderson, Mrs. Olson,\nMrs. Locke, Mrs. Dunsmore, Mrs.\nMarshall. Mrs. DavU, Mrs. Jacobson\nM-. W. Nixon, Mr. James and Mrs.\nW. P. Rogen.\nMr. and Mn. W. D. Ridge and\nfamily spent Saturday in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Elmore Ridge were\nNelson visitors Saturday.\nMrs. R. Main of Beasley was a\nguest ot Mrs. R. G. Elliott Sunday.\nML-, and Mrs. H. Metzgar were\nSaturday visitors in Nelson.\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.\nT EATON C\u00b0\n\u25a0\u25a0       WESTERN        ^^LIN\nLIMITED\nNELSON, B. C.\n...\nAt your grocer's ln7\u00bb\nand 12-oi. package!\n\u2014 also In tht ntw\nFILTE--type tM bills.\nt\n\\\nFO*\nMAKI\"0\n\u25a0\"*\"  m*\u2014\u00bb~L\nUOTfOF\nV\nT\ntwo sbains-\ninstead of\nonly one, make\nGRAPE^NUTS\nmfnmirfitoM\namen\n' cekeals!\njjMi||p|U\neBAK'NVTS\n>Q\n>m*m_.\n[)\n.    A SPECIAL\nPROCESS OF DOUBLE\nBAKING MAKES\nGRAPE-NUTS\nEAST TO DiOESr.-\nGmpe=Nuts\nGET A PACKAGE FOB T0M0K80W\nCift\n-\u2014Sitii\niM_____\n____t\n^-^ I irlMiiiiiitifii\n.'_\/\u25a0\u25a0' ,\ntMi*\u00ab_t_\n_____^.   _________   _Sm      .^^\n .\n-i i 111 ^iii .JM\n -NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C-TUISDAY MORNINO. MAY 13.\n_\\\\W______m_____u_\nNf lamt Balls Jfrma ? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nEstablished AprU 22 1901\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nubltshed every mornlni except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBllSHING COMPANY LIMITED ltt Biker St Nelson British Columbia.\nMEMBER Of THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTUESDAY, MAY IS, 1941.\nWater-Power to Transform\nOklahoma\nA new future for Oklahoma ia believed to be dawning with the completion, just effected, of the $23,000,-\n000 Grand River Dam, plajis for which\n7ere mooted by pioneers even before\nthe territory achieved statehood in\n1907. The big development, unlike the\nGrand Coulee Dam on the Columbia,\nwhioh was first conceived with irri-\n,4I_;tioh of a vast dry basin iriind, is\nsolely for industrial objects. When the\nwater creeping up behind the great\nconcrete wall reaches the proper level,\nforming an irregular 52-mile Jong lake,\nthe big turbines will start the production of electric power, with an eventual\ncapacity of 200,000,000 kilowatt hours\na year.\nThe Grand River is a tributary of\nthe Arkansas. The dam, at Pensacola,\nbelow the meeting of the Neosho and\nSpring Rivers, which gives rise to the\nGrand, is said to be the longest multiple-arch structure of its kind in the\nworld, its length being 6565 feet. The\nlake, with a shoreline of roughly 1000\nmiles, will cover 46,295 acres, or 72.3\nsquare miles. It buries 20 feet under\nits surface the village of Venice, whose\n100 inhabitants'moved out, this duplicating the experience of Marcus,\nWash., the Great Northern division\npoint, which had to move up from the\nColumbia Valley to Little Falls on the\nbank above, while the original site will\nbe overflowed by Columbia Lake,\ncreated by the Grand Coulee Dam.\nUnlike the Grand Coulee Dam development on the Columbia, which is\na federal project, the Grand River\nDam development is a State affair,\nthough federal aid was invoked. In\n1935 the Oklahoma Legislature established the Grand River Dam Authority, and two years later a federal grant\nof $8,437,000 and a loan of $11,563,-\n000 opened the way for the work to\nbegin. Other costs bring the total to\n$22,750,000. In 33 years, engineers\nestimate, the revenue from the sale of\npower, with some from water for the\nrepressuring of oil fields and for irrigation, will repay the WPA money\nborrowed, leaving the State of Oklahoma with a permanent money-making asset, whose chief value, however,\nwill have been the industrialization of\nthe State and the development of its\nmetal and other industrial resources.\nEventually two other dams will be\nbuilt, one at Fort Gibson and one at\nMarkham Ferry, and their potential\ncapacity will increase the total available low-cost power on Grand River\nto around 444,000,000 kilowatts annually.\nOpen to any reader. Namei of parsons asking\nquutloni will not be publiihed.\nWhat are the qualification! tot membenhlp in\nthe Ancient Arabic Order of Noblea ot\nthe Mystic Shrine?\nOnly Masons ot the thrlty-second degree\nof the Ancient and Accepted ScottUh Rite, or\nKnighU Templar ln good standing, are eligible for admission.\nReader, Trail\u2014How many hospitals for tha\nInsane are there ln Canada?\nPrince Edward Island, 1; Nova Scotia, IS;\nNew Brunswick, 1; Quebec, 9; Ontario, 16;\nManitoba, 4; Saskatchewan, 2; Alberta, 4;\nBritUh Columbia, 4. Total-57.\nWhat appean to be the cauie ot most Insanitty\nin this country where the people have not\nas much to worry over as tbe people ln\nEurope? Speaking ot worry, as I have\nheard people say \"I have much to worry\nme\", what U worry? What are the reiuHl\nof worry?\nInsanity may be caused by many things,\nand no record! are available to ihow what tbe\nprincipal cause! ire\u2014they may be phyilcal,\nmay be through brain injury or may be purely\nmental Worry is the habit of taking thingi\nmore seriously than is warranted by the circumstances. There are io many pouible results of worry that it U impossible to lUt them.\nInsanity is the worst consequence, though not\na frequent one.\nF. K., Nelson-On what date did Italy declare war on Greece?\nOctober 28, 1940.\nH. F\u201e Procter\u2014I have painted iteam pipes,\nthe work being done by regular painten,\nbut it has aU peeled off. What can I do to\npaint them so paint will not peel?\nRemove the paint with a solution of three\npounds of trisodium phosphate to the gallon\nof water. Rinse with clear water. Protect all\nsurrounding painted and varnished surface!\nby covering them with several thicknesses of\npaper. When the surface is dry, finish with a\nheat-resisting enamel or a good quality flat\nwall paint. Brush the paint In thin, even coato,\nallowing plenty of time for each coat to dry\nthoroughly. Thick coaU of paint are apt to\npeel. All the work must be done when the\npipes are cold. The last coat must be thoroughly dry before allowing heat to go through\nthe pipes.\nWords of Challenge\n\"Once we accept the fact that we are at\nwar\u2014even though it be undeclared\u2014we shall\nat last find a peace within ourselves which\ncan never come as long as we leek ufety at\nthe cost of others' sacrifice.\"\u2014Manifesto of\n\"The Fight for Freedom Committee\", New\nYork.\nGems of Thought\nLITTLE THING8\n\"Most of the critical things in life, which\nbecome the starting points of human destiny,\nare little things.\"-Robert P. Smith.\n\"Trifles discover character more than actions of seeming importance; what one is in\nlittle things he is also in great.\"\u2014Swift.\n\"In great matters men show themselves\nas they wish to be seen; in small matters, as\nthey  are.\"\u2014Gamaliel Bradford.\n\"It's just the little homely things,\nThe unobtrusive  friendly things.\nThe \"won't-you-let-me-help-you\" things\nThat make our pathway light.\"\n\u2014Grace  Haines.\nWords of Wisdom\nHe who acknowledges a kindness has it\nitill. and he who has a grateful sense of it\nhas requited it.\u2014Cicero.\nEtiquette Hints\nIf'you are a lone woman in a city, don't\ntake an apartment with a newly-made acquaintance. Find out something about the\nother woman's tastes, habits and background\nbefore you team up to share a home with\n.tr.\nWar-25 Years Ago\n.By The Canadian Press\nMay 13, 1918\u2014Three German attack! repulsed between the River Somme and Mar-\nicourt on the Western front. Scottish troops\ndispersed raiding German force near Ploegs-\ntraet Wood. Prime MinUter H. H. Asquit vUited Dublin.\nTest Yourself\n1. Of what United States possession ll\nCharlotte Amalie the capital?\n2. What Is the Southernmost city ln tha\nUnited States?\n3. There are 21 republics in the Pan-American Union. Which one has the largest population?\n\"Seeing that we have to attain to the ministry of righteousness in all things, we must\nnot overlook small things in goodness or in\nbadness, for 'trifles make perfection, and\n'the little foxes . . . spoil the vines.' \"\u2014Mary\nBaker Eddy.\nToday's  Horoscope\nIf your birthday is today, you should\nguard against some imposition or deception\nduring the next 12 months. Your fortunes\nshould be mainly good, and your year full of\nactivity. You should avoid changes if possible,\nand also disagreements. Born today a child\nwill be active, hard-working, generous and\nfar-seeing, but also somewhat sarcastic and\nquick-tempered when aroused. Such a personality is acwised to be cautious in the spoken and written word.\nTEST ANSWERS\n1. The Virgin Islands.\n2. Key West, Fla.\n3. The United States.\nVerse\nSALUTE TO DEMOCRACY\nI'm proud of my inheritance\nAnd to know that I belong\nTo that brave race of people\nWho strive to right the wrong,\nAll through the long night watches\nAnd bright daytime as well\nThey stand on guard for Britain\nMidst fire and shot and shell.\nGod bless our faithful Allies\nWho take their place there too,\nBeside our gallant soldiers\nTheir duty for to do.\nUpon the sea or in the air\nThey pledge to do their part.\nFighting hard to win the day,\nThey're brothers all at heart.\nWe salute the land of stars and stripes\nFor her grand and noble stand;\nWhose factories hum frpm morn till night\nSo extend the helping hand\nGiving us ships and tanks and guns\nAnd airplanes by the score\nThat we may bravely fight to keep\nThe Huns from off her shore.\nGod speed the day when all thy latida\nFrom murderous wars be free;\nWhen guns and bombs be heard no more\nAnd tanks the ploughs shall be;\nWhen ships shall sail the story main\nWith  every flag unfurled.\nAnd plloU fly their Planes ot Peace\nTo all nations of the world.\nJEAN M. PICKARD.\nNelson, B. C.\n70,000,000 Pencils\nBritish pencil makers have set up a new\nrecord by their foresight in laying away great\nquantities of Virginian red cedar wood during\nthe last months of peace. These stocks, with\nnew deliveries from Kenya, are enabling Great\nBritain to snip more pencils overseas then\nshe did before the war: the Increase for the\nlast quarter of 1940 was 60 per cent, up on\nthe like period of 1939.\nThe result is that 70,000,000 pencils a year,\nIn 3000 styles, are now going out to world\nmarkets from the British Isles. The finest of\nthem, and the largest quantities are bought by\nSouth Africa for the use of the multitude of\ndraughtsmen in the drawing office! of the\nUnion's great mining centres.\nThe dear pencils exported cost 30\/- a\ngross; the cheapest 5\/6. Pencils with \"gadgets\",\nmetal rings and rubben and other novelties,\ngo to the bazaars of India where the deman.\nis for cheapness.\nLead hardness Is determined by the proportion of China clay mixed with the graphite.\nReal gold is used for lettering the best; bronie;\nor silver, or aluminum for cheaper goods.\nPlaced end to end, Britain's 70,000,000 pencils would extend to 778 mllu.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetten may be publiihed ever a nam it\nplumi, but tha actual name ef the wrltar\nmuit ba given to the Editor as avldinoe of\ngood faith.  Anonymous letten go In the ,\nwnti paper baikat\nSays Married Women.Take\nJobs Girls Need\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014I think It'i about time something wu\ndone about a condition existing ln thli city\nwhich ii nothing ihort ot shameful, namely,\nthe employment of married women. I can\nthink ot at least eight cases ot a married woman holding a position which ihe doesn't\nneed, and which many a single girl doei.\nWhat's going to happen to these girls It\nthiy can't earn an honest living? We can\nthank our working married, women It they\nturn dishonest. They'll be driven to lt. Atter\nill they can't Juit sit back and 'starve. Even\nIf they were willing to do so, many of them\nhave dependents. I know, because I have two\ndependenta myielf.\nNot only does thli sort ot thing ruin the\nlibor mirket, it alio makes a mere plaything\nof marriage. Almighty Ood never meant lt to\nbe such, and it we lived a little more by Hli\nlaw the world would be a lot better off.\nDISGUSTED.\nNelion, . C, May t, 1941.\nShow Service Men\nAround Between Trains\nSir\u2014I would like to make a suggestion\nfor the coniideration' of the Service Clubs ln\nNelson.\nNearly every day when Westbound tnln\nNo. 11 li itanding here for tha 20 minute itop\nthere are a bunch of soldien putting ln the\ntime gazing up the hill toward town and looking as it ttey would appreciate being able to\nsee it.\nOne morning there were about 20 of the\nAir Force ln one lot and other soldien, too.\nI also noticed that there are uiuilly ibout\nhilt a dozen can, other than the taxis, down\nhere at the same time and the thought hai\nseveral times come to me that it Would be a\nfine idea it iome of the motoriiti would pick\nthe boyi up and ihow them iome of our\nlovely city while thay ara hera.\nIt certainly would be a fine gesture on\nthe part ot Nelson citizen and I am sure iome\noi the boyi would appreciate it very much.\n\"OBSERVER\".\nNelson, B. C\nUrges Conserve Natural\nBeauty Along Highways\nTo the Editor ot The Daily News:\nSlr-The writer wu i ihort Ume ago driving down ln Oregon ihd California and noticed signs along the lide of the roid ln California absolutely forbidding tha picking ot\nwild flowen, term, shrubs, ate.\nIn the State of Oregon, tha restrictions\nwen not quite as stringent but they, prohibited\nanyone gathering wild flowen, ferns, shrubs,\nor cutting trees, within I believe 900 yards\nof the main highways.\nThli I believe ln both Statei Is done to\nsive the natural beauty which one finds along\nsome of the roadi.\nIn driving up the Kooteniy Lake road\nrecently I noticed thit during the put Winter\nand Fall that a number of apparently logging\nroads have been constructed, no doubt with a\nview to cutting the timber on the mountllni\nsurrounding the lake and I believe it one\npoint on the West Arm i lumber cimp ind\nsaw mill is being installed at the present time.\nA few years ago the road from Nelway to\nNelson was a very fine drive, especially that\npart South of Salmo, but it hai become denuded by forest fires'md lumber camps and\nuw mills.\nOne ot the greatest assets we hive here In\nNelson are the beautiful drives md viewi\nthat tourists can come visiting us for md lt Is\nto be greatly regretted that no stepi have\nbeen taken to prevent the removal of tbe\ntimber along the lakes, thui spoiling the\nleenic beauty.\nThe Boards ot Trade of the Kootenayi in\noften very active ln locil concern! but this Is\na point that has apparently been overlooked,\nthough the people of Vancouver Island are\nprotesting strongly to the Government about\ntrees being removed from near the roads and\nI would suggest that the Nelson Board of\nTrade make every effort to prevent further\ndisponing of our scenery.\nA KOOTENAIAN.\nNelson, B. C.   '\nYouth Must First Prove\nCapability\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014The third Provincial Youth Congresi\nthat met in the city of Vancouver dissolved\nafter making loud disclaimers of cherishing\ncommunistic aims and having made voluble\nclaims of their attachment to the cause ot\nfreedom of speech and freedom ot thought.\nThe writer hopes he will not be thought unkind or unsympathetic If he polnti out to these\n\u2022mbitious, well-meaning youthi thit unless\nthey cm prove worthy successors to the men\nand women who are passing tt will not mitter\nin the smallest degree what they may think\nabout anything whatsoever.\nFor instance, a boy goei to work for a\nrailway company at one of the divisional\nround houses. He will soon discover that nobody carei what he may think about traffic\nmanagement, government ownenhlp of railways, etc. But they will appraise bis fitness\ntor his daily duties in double quick time and\nlt he falls to fit into the pattern he will find\nhimself Jobless no mitter how theoretically\ncorrect hli attitude on world problems may\nbe or how eloquently he may have addressed\nthe Youths' Congress.\nBetore any youth cm change the pattern\not existing things he must tint prove hli\nability to fit definitely Into some part of the\npattern himielf. A would-be doctor of medicine must first acquire the reputable md recognized ideas on history, geography, etc., al\ntaught in our high schools. Must then attend\nmedical college a number of yean to learn-\nnot what he thinks\u2014but what other men\nthink they know about medicine. Finally \u25a0\nboard ot medical practitioners will submit\nhim to a rigid examination to find out\u2014not If\nhe has ldeu of hli own\u2014but rather to dis-.\ncover If iuch ideas u he happens to hive ire\nune ind reputable.    \u2022\nTha greatest spectacle of tolly undir the\nsun li an Ignorant, ill-mannered youth of\nquestionable habits\u2014sitting up lite\u2014rising it\nany hour\u2014Indolent md careleu of duty-\nImagining that any Ideas hi may cherish will\nhive uy power to remould or remodel the\nworld.        A\nThii Is merely i hypothetical case. No reflection li Intended on the memben of the\nYouth Congress. As fir is my knowledge ot\nhli body gou they ire ill of exemplary char-\nicier.\nDIOGENES.\nNelson, B. C.\nTODAY'!\nH\nelson Plants Tree to Honor Banting\nHnM\nA.v*& lT      *tI___I                    Mtrt                  1 H\n___. ___L-,^_B*'\"\u00a5ri' \\ W**    mk'-       \"\"\u25a0\u25a0'-'\u2022  1\ns^jBPlfi.\n\u25a0Tr*l                                                        \"   1\n>^>\u00aby$v.t*# V\nNelson Airman\nAbove\u2014The tree planting ceremony at Kootenay Lake Genenl\nHospital Sunday.\nLeft\u2014Dr. L. E. Borden, after\ndedicating the tree gives place to\nMayor N. C. Stibbs, who is holding the maple while J. E. Bedford, Presdient of the Nelson Garden Club and donor of the tree,\nsees to Its planting.\u2014Dally News\nPhotos.    .\nNo. 3 Nazi-\nNo. 1 Mystery\nLeading Aircraftman Carlyle\nFerguson, who has Just left to\nresume his training as a student\npilot at Brandon. He spent leave\nwith his parents, Rev. and Mrs.\nT. J. S. Ferguson.\nAntl-Saxl Beaten\nto Death\nMenzies In Ottawa\nRudolf Hess, Hitler's bosom pal,\nwho created a sensation by flying\nout of Germany ln a fighter plane,\nto land\u2014in Scotland. \"Hallucinations,\" Slid Germany.\nDr. Henrich Simon, tl, exiled\nGermin publisher md pre-Hitler\nowner of the newspaper Frankfurter Zeitung died in New York\nafter being attacked on a street\nMouthpiece\nArriving ln Ottawa where he was greeted by\nPrime Minister King, Prime Minister Robert G.\nMenzies ot Australia told the Canadian House of\nCommons \"So long as these Dominions stand, Great\nBritain shall not fall.\"\nOtto von Reinebeck, German\nMinister to Central America, who\nit is alleged, Is not only the diplomatic representative of Nazi Germany, but also is head of the German intelligence lervice In Central America, md is responsibla\nfor Nazi propaganda which emanates from the German legation\nat Guatemala city.\nAmerica's Fastest Plane Clocked at 4SS Miles an Hour\nA powerful addition to any nation'i fighting force Is thli new\nLockheed P-38 Interceptor, one of the first to come off the production\nline at the Lockheed plant In Burbank, Calif. After the P-38 was clock-\nit 498 miles an hour In its first public performance, army air corps\nofficials acclaimed it as \"America's fastest plane\". In the background,\nabove, are several of the now-famous Lockheed Hudson bombers waiting to be flown to England for service with the R.A.F. Interceptor\nP-38's will soon be taking their place In the sky over Britain, too. They\nare armed with both cannon and machine guns and arc powered by\nAllison motors.\n.*,......,.!    \u25a0,..,,, .. i.:-.'.ri.jt4m.-\\   -,^   j.\n..-_._--\u201e-.--,....\u2014-.._,\u25a0\u25a0\t\n '\n_\u2014\nCanadian Airmen Play HerQic Part\nIn Rescue During Terrific Raid\nBy ROSS MUNRO\nCanadian Press War Correipondent\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nMay 12 (OP) -Two men of the Royal Canadian A' Force Army Cooperation Squadron\u2014Sgt. Gordon\nArmstrong, an air gunner from Toronto, and Cpl. Glen Campbell, a\nfitter trom Calgary \u2014 rescued at\nleast six persons from the blazing\nruins it > London building during\n\u2022 terrlt: \u25a0 raid.\nWinding up a four-day leave ln\nLondon, they were In their hotel\nwhen \u2022 bomb exploded nearby,\nblew out their windows and Uttered the flbor with debris. The\nairmen prepared to move into the\natreet shelter when a basket of incendiaries lit up the end ot the street\nand tl.ey pitched In as fire-fighters.\nMost of the fires were under control when a warden dashed up and\nasked for help.\n\"The last one wiped out most of\nthe rescue squad,\" he shouted.\nScrambling over debris and between twisted girders and broken\nbeams, the airmen tunnelled through\nprecarious passages and crawled on\nhands and knees through the shambles.\nFinally Armstrong and Campbell\nreached a group ot badly wounded\nvictims, placed them on stretchers\nand passed them to the open where\ndoctors were waiting;\nDawn broke before the Canucks\nleft their work and new rescue\nsquads took over, praising the\nsweating, grimy airmen for their\nnight's Job.\nThe first available train took them\nback to thet squadron and they\nappeared on the airdrome after\nroll call, a UtUe late.\n\"It was quite a night, quite a\nnight,\" said Cpl. Campbell, \"we got\nout at least half a dozen of those\nsmashed-up people.\"\nTo the civilian workers' praise\nwas added that of the squadron's\nofficers and airmen. And the squadron newspaper, \"Wings Abroad\",\ndevoted its weekly column, \"Orchids to\u2014\" to the deeds of the two\nyoung men. '\nOfficials Appointed lo Investigate\nSeamen Hindering Ship Movements\nOTTAWA. May 12 (CP)-Apolnt-\nment of (8 officials of the Navy,\nTransport and Immigration Departments to boards ot Inquiry to deal\nwith cases of seamen ship movement from Canada was made\nknown today.\nUnder an order-ln-councll tabled\nIn the Commons April 28, the Minuter of Justice, Rt. Hon. Ernest\nLapointe, was empowered to nominate officials ot the three Departments and the Royal Canadian\nMounted, Police as representatives\non Committee with power to board\nany British ship or vessel of an\nAllied Power ana Conduct investiga-\n\u2022 tion Into the conduct of seamen\nwhile in a Canadian port.\nIn addlUon to British and Allied\nahlps, the order aet forth Its provisions may be applied to snips\n\"registered ln or belonging to any\nother foreign Power which may be\ndesignated by the Governor-ln-\nCouncll aa a foreign Power.\"\nThe order was approved following\na report by the Navy Minister, Hon.\nAngus Macdonald, that a policy waa\nrequired to avoid delays in departures of ships from Canadian ports,\nOccasions had arisen, the Minister\nreported, where crewmen of outgoing ships had created conditions\nlikely to eau-; delay.\nJustice Department officials said\nthey had no record as to whether\ntbe powers o! the committee had\nalready been used in any Instance.\nAppointments Include:\nTransport Department:\nVancouver\u2014Lionel Henry Lindsay, Hugh Gilmour Robinson.\nVictoria\u2014Arthur William Roger\nWilby.\nPrince Rupert, B.C.\u2014Noel Sydney Brewer.\nImmigration Department:\nVancouver\u2014Donald N. McDonell,\nWUliam J. Fraser, Harold Crump,\nHenry T. Peters.\nVictoria\u2014Clifford D. Reid, James\nA. Anderson, James Marshall.\nRalston Charges Dr. Bruce With\nAttempt fo Upset Recruit Campaign\nOTTAWA, May 12 (CP)-\"Selec-\njlva compulsory i enlistment\" was\nurged ln the House of Commons today by Dr. Herbert Bruce (Con.-\nToronto-Parkdale) who was charged\nby Defence Minister Ralston with\ndoing something to Interfere with\nthe redrulting campaign started last\nnight\n\"Selective compulsory enlistment\nh the only fair and efficient way of\nmeeting Uie needs of Canada now,\"\naaid Dr. Bruce.\nCol. Ralston rose as soon as Dr.\nBruce sat down.\nThe Defence Minister said Canada\nentered the war as a united nation.\nBie only province (Quebec) in\nwhich the Issue of war was put to\na vote voted for war.\nThat province and all others had\naccepted the National Resources\nMobilization Act, the 30-day training plan and the tour-month plan.\n\"I say I can not understand why\nhe (Mr. Bruce) at this time, Just\nafter I launched our recruiting campaign, should introduce this discordant note,\" said the Minister.\nThe advocacy of a different meth\nod of obtaining men from that being\nfollowed by the Government was\napt to Interfere with or defer the response of men to the recruiting campaign.\nCol. Ralston urged Dr. Bcuce and\nall other members to get behind the\ncampaign and make it a success.\nARTIST KILLED IN\ntEAP-FROM WINDOW\nST. PCTERSBURG, Fla., May 12\n(AP)\u2014Haskell Coffin, 63, nationally\nknown artist, committed suicide by\nleaping from the third floor of St.\nAnthonys Hospital today, Magistrate\nJohn T. Fisha.- said.\nScotch Whisky\ni&Sca&rHc\/\n40ez.-S5.60\n26'\/2oz.-$3.75\n-*\u2022-\nV\nOld Parr Scotch Whisky i$\nbailed by thousand who like\ntheir Scotch robust yet smooth,\nlot that real Scotch flavour\nchoose Old Parr. It comes to you\nin the famous, old-fashioned,\nuntippable flagon.\nMacDONALD GREENIEES tlMhED. IEITH, SCOTLAND\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl  Board or by the Government of  British Columbia.\nu,v,.>.:.... I\nSELASSIE TO AID\nBRITISH IN BATTLE\n,, to?\u00bbT na InttB-tJto release\nitlsh forces trom their tm of\nreconquering   Ethiopia   trom   Italy\nand aid thtm In their defence^ else-\nIn a message to President Roosevelt and tht people of tht United\nSUtes on the occulon of bis return to his capital, he declared \"It\nwas fitting thtt the first victim of\nAx la greed should be the first to be\ndelivered\"\nIrishman Leads\nStrange Unit\nON THK BIMIOPIAN SOUTHERN FRONT, May 8 (Delayed)\n(AP)\u2014Capt. Thomas Henfrey, a\ntall, dark-moustached Irishmen\nfrom I\" -rater whose troopa call\nhim \"Somali Joe\" leads one of the\nstrangest units harrying Italian\ntroops atlll fighting in Southern\nEthiopia.\n\"Somali Joe\", whoit uniform Includes the iky-blue cloak ol an\nEthiopian officer with the Lion of\nJudah head on gold clams, lived\nfor 20 years In Tanganyika after\nhaving fought In tht Khyber Past\nand Saudi Arabia ln the lut war.\nTodey he leads about 19000 Ethl-\nmounted on mules. His scouts nip\nin ud out of Uie Italian Unea and\nsay they operate so iwlftly the\nFascists seldom know of their presence until it is too late.\nAn Associated Press correspond-\n\u00bbnt found Henfrey and his men encamped in the primitive Galla country at the end of one of the worst\nroads ln all Ethiopia. With him was\nhis aide, a white officer from Kent\nwho formerly worked ln an export\noffice in London,\n\"I started out with, a few volunteers and the other fust seemed to\ngather around. At the end of three\nweek I had over a thousand,\" said\nSomali Joe\".\nSenate Approves\nShip Seizures\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP) -\nLegislation authorizing the United\nStates Government to take over\nforeign ships lying idle ln American\nharbors -was approved by the Senate committee today, 11 to 4.\nThe committee wrote an amendment into the House-approved leglslaUon to forbid tht Government\nfrom taking over any vessel actually owned by a foreign country, except by purchue.\nChairman Bailey (Dem-Notrth Ca.\nrollna) ot the Committee said that\nnone of the foreign ships now lying\nidle ln American harbors actually\nwas owned by a foreign government. He said they all are the property of the nationals of foreign\ncountries.\nSecretary of States Hull advised\nagainst restrictions on tha ust of\nforeign ships that may be taken\nover, but administration opponents\nrenewed their demands that the\nship requisition biU be altered to\nban the outright transfer ot seized\nAxis vessels to Britain. HuU set\nforth his views in a letter made\npublic by tba Senate Commerce\nCommittee.\nAny restriction, ht wrote, would\ntend to pltce vessels acquired under\nthe leglslaUon in a different category from other vesitls now under\nthe American flag.\nTestimony before a closed committee lut week, made public today\nby committeemen; showed Chairman Emory S, Land of the Maritime Commission had urged \"wide\nopen leglslaUon with bo strings\nwhatsoever.\"\nFighting in North\nChina Is Serious\nSHANGHAI, May 12 (AP) -\nFighting along both banks of the\nYellow River in North Central\nChina appeared today to ba teaching major proportions.\nDomel said two Chinese divisions\nwere striving to form new defence\nlines in extreme Southwest Shansi\nProvince, while elsewhere along the\nYellow River, where it divides\nShansi from Honan Province, routed\nChinese were reported fleeing toward fording points.\nAs the latter sought to escape into\nHonan, Domei claimed, Japanese\nwarplanes punished them severely\nand sank 20 largt junks lodaed with\n.Chinese troops.\nSHANGHAI, May 12 (API-Japanese military authoriUes claimed\ntoday their forces were closing in on\nChinese troops in Southwest Shansi\nProvince after a battle which cost\nthe Chinese 19,000 dead and 6000\ncaptured. Japanese casualties were\nnot given.\nChina Prepared\nto Handle Japan\nCHUNGKING, May 12 (AP) -\nGeneralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek declared in a speech Saturday night\nwhich wu released only this morning, that China, without tht help of\nan expeditionary forct or naval acUon but wlto material and economic\naid, wu prepared to undertake sin-\nJle-handed uie Usk of putUng down\nspan.\nHe added It wu hit convicUon\nthat any county ln the world match\ntog Itself agalnit American Democracy would mttt with certain destruction.\"\nHe spoke at a farewell Mme.\nChiang for United States Ambassador NelsOn T. Johnson, who it\nleaving to become Minister to Australia. Many leading figures in\nChina attended.\nDRY CLEANERS TO HOLD\nMEETING AT QUALICUM\nSEATTLE, May 12 (AP)- Dave\nCook, of Nanalmo was elected President and Quallcum Beach, on Vancouver Island, near Nanalmo, was\nchosen as next year's convention\nsite at the annual mtetlng of tht\nPacific Northwut Launderers and\nDry Cleaners Association lut weekend.\nPETAIN RETURNS TO VICHY\nVICHY, Frtnct, May 18 (A?)-\nMarshal Petaln retumtd hare today\nfrom a six-day vacation at his Riviera home, tnd conferences with\nVice-Premier Jetn Darlan and the\nUnited States Ambusador, Admiral\nWilliam Leahy, were high on the\ncalendar.\nAdmiral Darlan is due back tomorrow from Paris to see Petain on\nhis continuing negotiations with\nGermanv.\nION DA\ni. e\u2014TunoAY momnm. may 11. imi.\nPerformance of Super Battleship\nPrince of Wales Satisfies Admiralty\nLONDON, May 12 (CP)-Admlr-\nalty officials wtrt highly satisfied\nwith Uit performance of Brltain'i\nnew super-battleship, H.MS. Prince\not Wales, says a Reuters ipeclal\ncorrespondent who was aboard the\nwarship during her trials.\nThis mighty sister-ship of H.M.S.\nKing George V contains .even more\nsecret devices than that floating\nfortress, though completed only a\nshort time later.\nThis is tht correspondent's account:\n\"Tht Prince of Wales hu been\nmade virtually unstnkable by elaborate sub-dlvlslonlng of the interior\nby water-tight bulkheads. Should\ndimtgt occur it could bt quickly Isolated.\n\"The ntw battleship li tven more\nItcrtt than 'KG9', first of the class\not five 3,000 ton batUeships. The lut\nword In warship design, it is the\nworld's most formidable seagoing\nfighting unit\n\"Elaborate wireless and gunnery\napparatus, costing many thousands\not pounds, ia closely guarded from\nprying tyei.\n''Ten 14-inch (ttn, mounted In\nthree gigantic turrets, form the main\narmament. Theie turrets Incorporate revolutionary\u2014but thoroughly\ntested ntw ldeu that enable more\nshells to bt fired in lest timt with\ngreat accuracy thu tvtr before.\n\"Secondary armament It sixteen\n5.25-inch guns arranged ln four turrets along etch ildt ot tht ship. In\naddition thtrt art a number ot multiple pom-poms, tilt terror of dlvt-\nbombers. Thickness ot dick armor\nis secret, but lt la calculated to resist vtry hetvy bombs.\n\"Alio secret is tht thickness of\nthe side armor encasing tht hull. A.\nfigure of 16 inches hu been mentioned unofficially ln tht cut of\nKGS and it ts uld this armor should\nwithstand high-explosive bombs and\ntorpedoes.\n\"Top speed li another factor that\ncannot ba revealed but I ctn aay\nthat It Is around 30 knota.\n\"Despite toe tub-dlvlsloning tht\ninterior is probably more spacious\nthin ln any othar battleship ao full\not novel instruments. Great attention hu been paid to tbt comfort\not officers and crew. Offlceir have\ncabins fitted with running hot and\ncold water and built-in electric\nfires and furniture.\"\nSmiling Salmo Cyclist\nNAOMI LINDSTROM.\n\u2014Dany Newi Photo.\nOn Jhn QJjl\nTUESDAY, MAY 13, 1941\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n8:0O-BBC News\n8:16-<Juestlons of the Hour\n8:30\u2014Sweet hour ot Prayer\n8:45\u2014CBC News\n9:00\u2014Time Signal\n9:30\u2014Pelham   Riohardson's   Orchestra\n10:00\u2014Prelude to a Happy Day\n10:3O-CBC News1\n11:30\u2014A Friend in Deed\n11:45\u2014Mid-day Musicale\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014.B. C. Farm Broadcast\n12:30-\u00a3BC News\n12:46\u2014Club Matinee\n1:00\u2014Talk\n1:15\u2014Wishart CampbeU Sings\n1:30\u2014Western Five\n1:45\u2014To Be Announced\n2:00\u2014Claude Thornhlll's Orchestra\n2:15\u2014Rhythm Roundup\n2:30\u2014Popular Songs\n2:45\u2014BBC News\n3-00\u2014Salon Music\n3:30\u2014\"On Our Factory Front\"\n3:45\u2014Recital Seriei\n4:00\u2014Drama\n4:30\u2014Musical Rendezvous\n4:5&-WiUson Woodside\nEVENINC\n6:0O\u2014Singsong from an Army Camp\n6:30\u2014CBC Strings\n6:45-Talk by Prime Minister Menzies of Australia\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014Classic Strings\n8:00\u2014Theatre Time    -\n8:30-Speaking of Books\n8:45-Recital\n9:00\u2014Vesperale\n9:30\u2014BBC News-reel\n10:00\u2014Isabelle McEwan\n10:15-CBC News\n10:30\u2014Dance Musio\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWINC:\nMORNING\n7:50-0 CANADA\n9:00-Thls Rhythmic Agt\n9:15\u2014This and That\n10:45\u2014Our Family\n11:00\u2014Women's Corner\nAFTERNOON\n12:55\u2014The Notice Board\n5:00\u2014Radio Birthday Party\n5:30\u2014Edwin Le Mar Trio\n5:15-Meet toe Band\nEVENING\n6:30\u2014Edwin LeMar Trio\n6:45\u2014Meet the Band\n11:00\u2014God Save The King\nOTHER PERIODS:\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RED\n6:00\u2014Bob Hope's Show\n7:30\u2014Johnny Presents\n8:30\u2014BatUe of toe Sexes\nNBC-BLUE\n6:30\u2014Uncle Jlm'i .Question Bet\n7:00\u2014Grand Central Station\n7:30\u2014Information Please\nCOLUMBIA\n7:1 J\u2014Lanny Ross\n8:00-We, the Peoplt\n8:30\u2014Hollywood Showcase\nAustralians Moke\nThrust Against Nazis\nNEW YORK, May 12 (AP)- The\nAustralian radio aald today Australians among BC-ltH hforces at Tobruk thrust through German flaroe-\nthrowera and tanks Saturday night\nln a moonlight attack to reduce Ax-\nAxis salient in the Libyan port's\nouter defences.\nThree German tanks were knockr\ned out by West Australians using\na captured Italian anti-tank gun.\nThe radio said several Axis-held\nstrong points were captured In the\nAustralian thrust against the shallow Axis advance lines ln the South\nwest corner of the outer detencu.\nThe broadcut, from Sydney, wu\nheard hert by toe Columbia Broadcuting System.\nLAVAL AND GOY\nAPPOINTED MAYORS\nVICHY, May .2 (AP)-Pierre Lava] and Jean Goy, leader of Paris\ncritics of Vichy policies, were maintained in office ta Mayors of municipalities today in a decree affecting\n62 Mayoralty .posts in toe Seine Department.\nNew 'Lawrence of\nArabia' Leads Troops\nLONDON, May tt (CP Cahle)-\nTherc's a new Lawrence of Arabia.\nBritish troops protecting the oil line\nof Iraq are being led, according to\nan enemy communique, by Capt.\nAbu Heneik, which means \"Father\nof the Little Chin\".\nThis letder actually is Maj. John\nBagot Glubb, 44, a Cornishman who\nhas carried on tht Lawrence tradition in the desert, where a good\nmany Arabs beUeve be Is Lawrence\nsent back to them.\nGlubb, who brought peace among\ni the nomadic Bedouins ln Trans-\nJordan and Iraq after living 22\nyears among them, is Commander\nof a desert patrol of hand-picked\nArabs, ttch i' whom hu sworn his\nlltt to Abu Heneik.\nGlubb knows Iraq better than al-\nSo\u00abt any  living  Englishman  and\ne Bedouins have called him \"Lord\nof the Desert\".\nVICTORIA, May 12 (CP)-HJel-\nmar Larson, 45, employed by Boar-\nman Logging Company at Lull Point\non Knight Inlet, died last Saturday\nfrom injuries received ia a logging\naccident.\nCHINESE JUNKS IUNK\n.SHANGHAI, Mty 12 (AP) \u2014\nEighty Chinese junks wert sunk today ln Soochow Oreek u Japanese\nsailors raided toe craft, bringing to\nmort than 210 tht number sent to\ntot bottom tlnct Saturday, Chinese\nln many cutt were given the alternative of destroying their boats\nor having them confiscated, and toey\nchose tht former. Japanese mUltary\nauthoriUes descended on the Junks\nln a Itarch for Chinese terrorists\nallegedly sheltered thtrt.\nNo Need Declare\nWar Says Pepper\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP) -\nThrtt United States Senaton it-\nported today they have been re-\nwiving dtmands oy maU that tht\nUnited States formally enter toe\nwar agalnit the Axis.\nSenator Claudt Pepper (Dem.-\nFla.,) advocate of unstinted British\naid, informed reporters he wai receiving many letters advocating a\ndeclaration of war. a break in diplomatic relations with the Axis Pow-\neri or any other steps necessary for\na realistic, affirmative defence.\"\nSa,ying he did not believe a de-\nclatatlon of war necessary, Pepjer\nadded \"we should do what wt need\nto do and let it go at that.\"\n\"When you occupy teitritory, you\ndon't have to declare war. if we\nshould accidentally let go a broadside at a Japanese battleship It\nwouldn't bt a declaration of war,\nIt would Just be letting them know\nhow the White man shoots and\nwould teach them decent respect\nfor the rights of their neighbors.\nTht office of Chairman Walter\nGeorge (Dem.-Geolrgia) reported his\nmail had tripled in the last seek\nand that many persons were advocating a declaration of war or a\nsimilar major step to aid Britain.\nAt the office of Senator Jamu\nMead (Dem-New York) a spokesman said, \"a number of letteri and\ntelegrams are advocating for the\nfirst time that we declare war or\nundertake any other measures that\nmay be necessary to preveht an\nAxis victory.\nR.C.N. Casualties\nOTTAWA, M\u00aby -1 (CP)-A lilt of\nont naval rating presumed lost, one\nmissing, one dead from natural\ncauses and one slightly injured was\nmade public late today by Royal\nCanadian Naval Headquarters here.\nToday'i official casualty list\nbrought toe number of dead and\nmissing In the Royal Canadian Navy\nlince war began to 332.\nFoUowing is toe cuualty list, with\nofficial numbers and next-of-kin of\nBritish Columbians:\nRoyal Canadian Navyt\nPresumed lost:\nBell, Sydney, Os, R.C.N.V.R.,\nBritannia Bay, Ottawa.\nMissing:\nKirk, William B., Os, R.C.N.V.R,\nToronto.\nDied of natural causes:\nRoss, Norman R, Writer, V-14284,\nR.C.N.V.R., Mrs. A. Ross mother,\n2206 Cypress St., Vancouver.\nSlightly wounded:\nBristow, Richard, Ordinary Telegraphist, 3689. R.C.N., Mrsr. Alice\nBristow (mother), R.M.D. No. 3\nCarey Rd, Saanich Victdria.\nMURDER SUSPECT FACED\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP) -\nA Chinese held for investigation\nhere in the murder of Tim Kee, 56-\nyear-old Chinese employment agent\nof Victoria, has been released, police\nsaid today. Tim Kee wu found dead\nin his room of head wounds May 8.\nGives Figures on British Troops <oS^\nTaken Prisoner In Greek Campaign\nBy L0UI8  LOCHNER\nAssociated Press staff Wrlttr\nCORINTH,, (by Courier to Berlin)\nMay 6 (delayed) (AP)\u2014An Australian brigadier, 300 British and Imperial officen and 9560 troops from\nthe United Kingdom, Australia, New\nZealand and India are held prisoners\nalong with four Serbian generals,\n382 officerl and 743 soldiers.\nThe group are awaiting transportation to Germany. I visited them\nfor thret quarters of an hour at\ntheir quarters ln Greek barracks\ntwo mllu from Corinth and talked freely with them.\nThey corroborated an Impreulon\nSained from travelling htrt ovtr\nit route of Britiih retreat\u2014that a\nlack of Royal Air Forct planei wu\ntht big factor ln the British-Greek\ndefeat\nAmong tht distinguished prisoners\nwu an Australian, Brig. Parrlngton\nAnother captlvt wu G. P. Farsoun\nof Haifa, leader of a Palestine con\ntingent of 1000 Jtwa and 550 Araba.\nFrom tht offlctn u will u til*\nsoldiers I gained the Impression tha\nBriUsh expeditionary force In\nGreece realized it wu matched\nagalnit huge odds, with tot Germans outnumbering them both on\nland and in tht air.\nOnt ot tot offlcen, commanding .,\n800 men, told me 400 ware killed in\ntheir stand at Thermopylae.\nForcu etught ln tht Peloponn*a<*\u2022,,\ntu wer etroopa who had smelled -\npowder aplenty at Bengul ln tht\nLibyan fighting. I wu told lack of\nair protecUon coat them their chanca\nof getting away from the Pelopen-\nnesus on destroyers sent to thf\nGulf of Corinth for them.\nOfflctn predicted toe Germ n\npush across North Africa would not\nget beyond tht Egyptian Hornier\ntown of salum.\nNorth America hu mort species\not game birds than any other continent\nPackage for Package\nSweet Caps are yonr\nbest cigarette bay!\nJudge by the package.\nSomt few people aay they can't tell the difference\nbetween one cigarette and another. Bnt regular amokera\nknow that, by the package or the day's smoking, there'*\na big difference. It'a this big difference which makes\nSweet Caporal Canada's mott popular cigarettes, and\nin addition they're more uniform and taste better.\nOn all counts, package for package, Sweet Caps are\nyour best cigarette buy.\nSWEET CAPORAL\nCigarettes\n\"The purett form in iMch tcttwo ean be tnsekef\nIS THE DIFFERENCE between an Executive and an Employee marked by Ambition, Opportunity or Education .. <\nor perhaps a combination of all three? *\nIt 1$ to be admitted thet In most Instances the\n\"higher-ups\" attained their position because of Ambition,\nand ambition is \"The Consuming Desire to Achieve.\"\nLeaders In Canada . . . Statesmen, Industrialists\nand Professional Men . . . have always been men of\nAmbition. Most certainly, all men are not born ambitious\n... a great many acquire it through propeF associations and\nencouragement.\nBoys who fail to make practical use of their spare\ntime may not be lazy or aimless... but they may lack\nguidance or encouragement in harnessing their energy\nin the direction of profitably devoting a part of their spare\nmoments to an early business training.\n\"A Newspaper Route Is the Best\nJob for a School Boy\"\n\u2014say our Legislators, Senators, Educators, Business and\nProfessional Men, Actively engaged, school boys become\nenthused and inspired to achieve further success ... they\nare associating with people who \"do things.\"\n( Among the thousands of Canadian Newspaper\nBoys are potential leaders of the future. AMBITION?\n...they PERSON I FY the word.\nBoys Wilt Be\"      ;rraw'\nt\t\nHii\n 'AG!  IIOHT\npwppwmw\u2014\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nt   \u25a0\n>**\u2022\u2022      **-+*%*.\n\u00bb~^\n*****W\"*-,yV>\nc*\/\ne^>\n\u25a0 f.\nW    *!_!\nMORE CANADIANS ARE NOW\nAT WORK THAN EVER REFORE!\nIH ROM the Atlantic to the Pacific, factories hum day and night\n-\"- producing the guns, shells, trucks, tanks, planes and other\nequipment essential to the winning of the war. Shipyards bristle\nwith activity . . . echo the ceaseless chatter of compressed air\nriveters as dozens of Corvettes are rushed to completion to patrol\nthe Atlantic . . . escort merchant ships... ensure a steady flow of\nvital supplies to Britain. Over draughting boards and around the\nconference table, men toil far into the night . . . planning new\nplants, new tools . . . methodically and efficiently organizing the\nmighty production power of our great nation ... a power that is\ngrowing stronger day by day.\nYes, indeed, Canada is all out! In throbbing cities ... in towns\n... on farms... Canadians have responded to the call of the Navy,\nAir Force and Army... to the demand for workers in every\nbranch of industry ... to the need for help in financing the\nweapons of war.\nThe next six months will be critical ones for the British Empire.\nWe Canadians must meet this challenge with ever-greater sacrifice\n... must labour in the factories, and toil on the farms with ever-\nincreasing energy ... and be prepared to bear our share of the\nstern price of freedom.\nDEPARTMENT OF FINANCE, CANADA\nW\n\u2022'V\n\u25a0*%\\l\n'4 l\nIssue Ultimatum\nto Rumanian Iron\nGuard Students\nBERNE, May 12 (AP)-An ultimatum to Rumanian Univenlty itudenti clinging to Uie Iron Guard and\na new series of \"house arrsets\" of\npenons iccuied ot agitating againit I\nthe State were reported today il\nBucharest dispatches.\nAuthoriUes gave 120 students of\nthe liw department of Bucharest\nuniversity unUl 8 p.m. Tueiday to\ndivulge the namu of leaden df a\nMay 10 horla Slma demonstration\nln which itudenti ung forbidden\nIron Guird songs.\nThe Miniiter of Education declared that lf'tha namu wera withheld\nthe univenlty would be cloied, examinations for degreu,this month\nstopped, all studenti sent home, and\nUie 120 now under arrest would be\nlubject to imprisonment.\nPremier Ion Antoneicu'i cabinet\napplied a mw law ordering one\ngroup of 2W ptnoni to undergo\nhouse arrest\u2014confinement to their\nhomei.\nA military tribunal continued the\nhearings of those chirged In the\nJinuary Iron Guard revolt, which\nHorina Slma, Vice Premier and Iron\nGuard leader, wu accused of head-\nin*\nThe court sentenced 225 persons to\nterms ranging from three monthi\nup to life imprisonment, iome of\nthem In solitary confinement.\nRobert Inger, 65r\nDies, Kimberley\n.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-Robert In-\nSet.-, aged 09, pined away Siturdiy\n[e leivei his loving wife, a stepdaughter in Alberta, five grandchildren and a iliter living ln Englmd.\nMr. Inger wu born in Nottingham\nEngland. He had ruided in Kimberley 12 yean, being employed by\nthe C- M. lc S. Company, i\nWheeler Charges\nU.S. Seeking to\nForce Eire in War\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP). -\nSenator Burton Wheeler charged\ntoday the United States Admlniitration \"apparently\" is seeking to\nforce Eire Into wir by promising\nluppllu thit could not be delivered.\n\"Now, ipjiirenUy, we ire trying\nto repeat in Ireland whit we did to\nYugoslavia. In Ule latter case we\nfiromised good! we could not de-\nIver.\"\nWheeler noted Hire had been\nseeking food and military suppliu\nhere and said that \"although we are\ntalking of helping democracies, my\nunderstanding is that representatlvu of Ireland have -been given the\nrun-around.\"\nMUTUAL ACREES TO\nA.S.C.A.P. MONEY TERMS\nST. LOUIS, May 12 (AP) r The\nfour-monthi music controveny between United States broadcasters\nand Ascap hu ended for the Mutual Broadcasting System but foe\nNBC and CBS Uie discord lingers\non.\nMutual agreed Sunday night to\npay the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers a\nthree pet- cent of gross recelpti for\nfour yein ind 3!4 per cent thereafter unUl Jan. 1, 1850, for the right\nto rutore the Society'i 1,200,1)00\nsongs to Uie air.\nThe tunu will flnt be hurd at\n1 p.m. tomon-ow.\nSTUDY OF ALASKA ROAD\nROUTES CONFINED TO B.C.\nOTTAWA, May 12 (CP)-Offlclala\nof the Canadiah section of the International Commission on the proposed Alaska Highway said today\ntheir studies of possible routes were\nalwayi confined to BriUsh Columbil ind the Yukon.\nAt Edmonton during the weekend. Alberta Motor Auociation Di-\nrcctors urged consideration of\nroutes other than through British\nColumbia. C. H. Grant, mover of\nthe resolution, said Ottawa had\ngiven authority for study of Alberta\nor other routes outside BriUsh Colombia but later this portion of thi\norder was rescinded.\nPOSTPONE HEARINGS\nON TRAINING CASE\nMONTREAL, May 12 (CP). -\nPreliminary hearings of eight\nyoutlu charged with failing to report for medical examination or\nmilitary training were postponed today unUl May 20.\nAlso stt for Msy 20 by Judge Edouard Archambault were the hearings of six relativu of the young\nmen who are charged with bribing to obtain deferment or exemption from military training under\nthe National Resources Mobilization Act.\nNAZIS PREDICT ROOSEVELT\nTO BE NEXT 'WARMONGER*\nBERLIN, May 12 (AP). - The\nBerlin newspaper Der Montag declared today President Roosevelt\nwould take over the role of \"supreme warmonger\" after Prime Minister Churchill and Viscount Halifax, British Ambasudor to United\nStitet, \"fill ln their efforts to drive\nthe American people to war\nhysteria.\"\nNEW CLASS ENTERS\nCOAST NAVAL SCHOOL\nVICTORIA, May 12 (CP). - A\nnew group of naval probationary\nsub-lieutenants today began studies\nat H.M.C.S. Royal Roads from which\nthey will graduate after a three-\nmonth course to assume duties in\nCanadian naval establishments a-\nshort or afloat.\nRoosevelt to Make\n'Fireside Chat'May 27\nWASHINGTON, May 12 (AP).\n\u2014The speech which President\nRooievelt wu te deliver Wednudiy night to thi dlplomiti oH\nLatin Americi wu einetlltd todsy and tht Whltt Houm uld that i\nMr. Rooievelt, lniteid, would\nmikt \u25a0 \"flruldt chit\" ttt Von*\nnight tf Miy 21.\n.\n'__...__...m.m,mm r,.^.._m**'-_r.r.. ...\n\u25a0din [111   tii-M\n_________\nm_____m___\n__.\n\u25a0_^._,___.__________________ \t\n\t\n p\nHP\nSlim\" Porter lo\nSponsor Hie Aces\nin Girls Softball\nM. N. (Slim) Porter stated Mon\nty that ht had taken the Aces\ntht Girli' Softball Leagut under\n\u2022 whig. Ht will outfit thtm in\nappy sweaters.\nCarl Locatelli Is Coach of tht\nam, and Isabel (Red) Donovan,\nack third baseman, is Captain,\nirttr will bt manager.\nA fairly impressive lineup has\neen practising regularly for the\nrst League game next Monday\njainst C. Y, 0. Several players\nre Well-known ln Nelson senior\niftbal', notably Isabel Donovan,\niargaret Henry Mary DelPuppo.\nbuilt Coletti, Vera Matheson,\neorgie Eberley, Laura Nelson and\nDssibly Deanie Wallace.\nFrcnoes McMullen Irom up the\nfeat Arm hu been recruited as\nitcher, and sht hsa had previous\nkperience at the High School. Amy\nstttt, a veteran Infielder from Ed-\ntontom and Susy Bowers round out\n>e present talent.\nAdditional practices are called for\nrediwtday and Friday.\nPorter uid that there were still\nne or two openings for more play-\n\u00a5:__\t\niunday Allotment\nof Ball Grounds\nMade by StDenis\nIn the allotment of the use of the\nlecreation Grounds up to mid-Sep-\nimber made by Denis  StDenis,\neeretary-Maniger of the  Nelson\nIvic Centre, senior bueball hai\nten given 10 Sundayi, cricket four\nnd softball three.\nCon Cummins, President of the\nrelson Bueball Cluh, who attended\nmeeting of the sports organisations\nrlth Mr. StDenis, said that Junior\nsaseball officials could expect to be\nivtn consideration by the Seniors\nrhen they wished to ichedule games\natmselvei in Nelion on Sundayi,\nMr. StDenis polnetd out that or-\nttnizations- affected cpuld lnter-\nhange dates and make satisfactory\nBtngtments, between, themselves\nfhen the occasion atriiti.\nT_ allotment of Sunday after,\niponi, subject to change when re,\nrulred for military use, followi:\nStnlor baseball-May 18, June 1\n'une 15, June 28, July 13, July 27.\nlugu-t 10,.August 24, Sept. 7, ahd\n^Softball\u2014Junt 8, July 6 and Aug\n*Cricktt-M\u00ab JJ, Junt 22, July 20\n\"August 31 Is not allottd u Jtt\nlnce tht groundi may bt needed\n\u00bb an organisation that uses the\ngroundi tnt following day, Labor\nMT- -\nBaseball\nScores\nAMIRICAN\nIHI\nAw Yo*  -    4 10   J\nBoston   8 8 1\nGomez, Brtutr li), Branch (8),\ntnd Sown Grovt Md Peacock.\njwitdtlphla       1   0  1\nWuhingtpn    - \u2022-  5 8 0\nMcCrabb, Btblch (6), R. Johnson\n<() and Hayes; Leonard and Fer-\nfell, tarty li).\nNATIONAL\nft Loull ..- _  \u00ab 18 0\nIttaburah   2. 7 0\nWarneke and Mancuso; Heintzel-\nnan, Lanahan (8), Dielz (8) and\nSiigmo 12 14  2\nCincinnati    1  0  4\nLet tnd McCullough, George (8);\nPeanon, Turner (2), Moort (8) and\nLombardi. West (0).\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nLouisville \u2022\u2022    6  8   1\nMinneapblU    8 14   1\nScheetz. Butland (\u00ab), Powell (8)\nand Glenn; Hogsett md Denning.\nIndiantpolli _  .... 12 18 0\nSt.  Paul       8  8  1\n0111 and Lakeman; Coffman, Stra-\nhan (S), Sloat (4) and Bauer.\nColumbui      810 0\nMilwaukee     2   5   1\nBarrett and Poland; WIeland,\nLambert (1), Dickinson (5) and\nGarbark.\nToledo     4 12   2\nKansas City ,    3   8   1\n(15 innlngi.)\nMarcum, Blldilli (B), Sorelle (8).\nWlrkkala (tl). KImberlln (1?) and\nSpindel; Wenslotf, Candinl (11) and\nRoblnion.\nCATCHER BILL BAKER\nIS SENT TO PIRATES\nCINCINNATI, May 12 (AP).-Bill\nBaker, third-string catcher for Cincinnati Beds, was sent to PltUburgh\nPlratei on waivers today.\nI\n\u25a0NELION DAILY NlWt, NILION. I, C-TUMDAY MORNINO  MAY 11. 1041 .\nSpokane Angler* Successful at\nGray Creek\nFrom left: Mrs. Jensen, A. Jensen, Mrs. Peyton and Mr. Peyton\nof Spokane display a 12-pound Kamloops trout caught by Mr. Peyton\nat Gny Creek on the second day of the season. Mr. Jensen caught a\nfive-pound char and a number of trout.\nGRAY CREEK, B C\u2014With the Spring drought breaking almost\nsimultaneously with the opening of the fishing season, the trout\nhave been coming to the fly in great style, Fine catches have also\nbeen made by trollers.\nMr. Peyton of Spokane caught a 12-pound Kamloops trout at\nSouth Gray Creek on the second day of the season; while hit fellow\ntownsman, A. Jensen, caught a five-pound char and a number of\ntrout.\nFred Wilmot of Gray Creek, using a Gibbs No. 4, caught a six-\npound Kamloops.\nThe water has been covered with flying anti, a record for early\nappearance of ants, \t\nBoston Tightens Hold on Second\nPlace by Whipping Yankees H\nLefty Bob Grove Wins\n295th Victory of\nMajor Career\nSPOR\nSpokane Man Enters 14 Lbs. k Oz.\nCatch in Gyros' Lake Trout Derby\nKaslo Reports Mony\nFine Catches; Butcher\nCatches 20-Pounder\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 Fishermen here\nhave been roost wocessful. Some\nof the fine catches made were C.\nButcher of Rossland, 20 pounds, 2\nounces, Kamloops trout; F. Sam-\nmons of Shutty Bench, 16 and ttVt\npound salmon and a 16 pound\nchar; B. F, Ptlmer, 16 pound Kamloops trout.\nR. Leroy and son and R. Scott of\nColville, \u00bb.,Wa\u00abh.r.\u00bb-landed several\nbeuties as did J. Marshall, E. Mon-\npelier, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Campbell\nof Trail and Mr. and Mrs. G. Wilson\nof Kimberley. Otto Auguistine\ncaught a 17 pound Kamloop troul\nBesides the \"big ones\" many smaller ones weighing from 6 to 12\npounds were caught.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n.   Associated Presi Sports Writer\nNEW YORK, May 12 (AP).\u2014Bike-\ndrivers Gustav KUlian and Hans\nVopel quietly boarded a Japan-\nbound boat one day last week,\nheaded for Germany. . . Tony Canzoneri, who has been bouncing\naround from one thing to another\nsince he quit the ring, will operate a roller skating rink near Fort\nBragg, N. C. . . . Jack Doyle has\nJuggled his odds again and the\nDodgers and Cardinals now are co-\nfavorites tt 7-5, Reds slipped to\n2Vs to 1. Yanks still favored in the\nAmerican at 6-5. . . Don Budge is\nseeking draft deferment because he\nis the chief support of hia parents\nONE-MINUTE INTERVIEW:\nCasey Stengel: \"People who belittle the Dodgers are Just crazy. ; .\nWhy MacPhail buys somebody every Friday. . . It's Tuesday before\nthe other clubs leaxn how to pitch\nto the guy and by that time the\nDodgers hae drawn enough crowds\nto buy scme*ody else. . . You can't\nbeat that system.\"\nWEEK'S WASH;\nHank Greenberg Is going over big\nwith officers and men alike. If he\nbobs up with a lieutenant's commission on somebody's staff, don't\nbe surprised. . By the by, Del\nBaker Is telling friends Hank never\nmay return to baseball. He Is said\nto be considering offers trom two\nbig Detroit firms who'll start him\noff at $35,000 per when his army\nhitch Is done.\nBy Thi Canadian Prest\nBoston Red Sox took a tighter\nhold on second place in the American League by conquering New\nYork Yankees 8-4 yesterday to\ngive old Lefty Bob Grove the\n295th victory of his major league\ncareer. It was the fourth straight\ntriumph for the Red Sox and\nmoved them to 2Vi games behind\nthe idle Cleveland Indians.\nThe game brought together two\nof the leading lefthanders in American League history, Grove and Vernon Gomez of the Yankees, who\nwas pounded for all Boston's runs\nand left at the end of three innings,\nWashington Senators, behind six-\nhit hurling by Dutch Leonard, defeated Philadelphia 5-1. Philadelphia took the series, two games to\none.\nVeteran Lonnie Warneke hurled\na seven-hit ball game as St. Louis\nCardinals defeated Pittiburgh Piratei 6-2 to iweep the two-game\nNational League leriei. Vince DIMaggio robbed Warneke of a shutout by blasting a home run in the\nfifth inning to score a runner ahead\nof him.\nThe victory Inched tht woond\nplace Cards a half gama closer to\nleague-leading Brooklyn Dodgers\nwho were Idle. A game and t half\nnow separates tht contenders.\nBehind Bill Lee's six-hit hurling,\nChicago Cubs clawed out a 12-1 victory over Cincinnati ln a weird\ngame. Three Red hurleri allowed\n14 bits, served up 10 bases on balls,\nand one, Jim Turner, contributed\none of his team's four errors.\nBALL STAHDINGS\nAMERICAN\nSocial Announcements\nDemand the finest in printing and engraving craftsman-\nihip. For suggestions about wording come in and look at\niome of the fine work that we've done in the past.\nPeople of distinction come back to us!\nPHONI 144\nPrison SaUy Nntia\nCommercial Printing Department\nti\"\nCleveland\nBoston \t\nChicago   ...\nNew York\nDetroit   \t\nWaihington\nW\n16\n12\n12\n14\n11\n10\n0\n7\nPhiladelphia\t\nSt Louis \t\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn      20 6\nSt. Louis   17 6\nNew York  12 10\nCincinnati  10 13\nBoston  10 13\nChicago  8 12\nPittsburgh  8 14\nPhiladelphia  7 17\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nKansas City .\nLouisville   _.\nMinneapolis\nColumbus ._.\nToledo   \t\nIndianapolis\nSt, Paul .\nMilwaukee\t\nPAC.FIC COAST\nSacramento\t\nSeattle\t\nSan Diego \t\nSan Franciico\t\nHollywood _.._____\nOakland   .\t\nLos Angeles \t\nNewark\t\nPortland\t\n12\n11\n11\n10\nU\n8\n26\n19\n1(1\nPet.\n.667\n.600\n.571\n.538\n.478\n.400\n.381\n.333\n.769\n.739\n.545\n.435\n.435\n.429\n.300\n.292\n.501\n.565\n.545\n.500\n.478\n.476\n.456\n.361\nUnofficial Reports Say\nThat a 24-Pounder\nHas Been Caught\nA week ago R. W. Wtrd ot Calgary became the first Isaak Walton\noutiidt tht Provinct to make an\nentry in tht itcond annual Nelaon\nGyro Club Kooteniy Uka Trout\nD\u00abby, but only two days lattr tht\nscope of tht ract for $700 ln prizes\nwidened to Include South of tht\nborder whtn G. M. AUan ot Spokane\nUndid a 14 pound 4 ounct buuty\nnear Irvine Creek.\nThU catch wu included ln tht\nweekend returni received by E. E.\nHopwood, Chairman of tht Derby\nCommittee. Ward's catch, which had\nbeen announced in ireporta last\nweek, weighed Just two ouncei under 16 pounds, and was madt at\nPilot Bay.\nOfficial results of tht weekend\nflihlng have yet only bten rtcelved\nfrom O. C. Thomu1 weighing station tt Balfour, where 24 of good\nDerby size wert recorded,\nMr, Hopwood heard Sunday tt\nAlnsworth that a 24-pounder had\nbeen caught and had bttn registered at Queen'i Bay. He had no othtr\nparticular!, but expected word today or tomorrow. If true, the fish\nwill take over the Derby leadership from Percy Craven'i 2114-\npoundec. It would make tht fourth\nfish over 20 pounds this'season t\u00bbi\nbe reglitered in tht two-week-old\nDerby.\nFish reglitered by Mr. Thomu\nover tht weekend follow:\n8. Sinyck, NeUon-* lbl, 10 01.\noff Queen'i Bay near Outlet May 11\n\u00bbt 2 pjn.. Jack Loyd lutt. Cludy,\nLeslie Pickard, NeUon-14 lbl. 7\noz. and 12 lbs. 8 oz. oft Queen's Bay\nPoint May 11 at 10 a.m. and 1:80\np.m. respectively, Gibbi Glendon\nStewart. Cloudy.\nJack Maariund, South Slocan\u201414\nlbl. 7 oz. tnd 1! lbs. 3 oz. it Kootenay Bay and Coffee Oreek, May\n11, 9 t.m. tnd 11 tm. respectively,\nGibbs Stewart No, 5. Bright.\nGeorge Clerihue Jr., NeUon\u20146 lbl.\n9 oz, at Lime Quirry May 11 at 11\na.m., Gibbi No. 5.\nL. W. McDonald, Trail\u20147 lbs. 10\noz. at Pilot Bay May U at J P-m\u201e\nGibbs Stewart No. 4. Bright.\nCapt J. A. McDonald, Nelson\u2014\n10 lbs. 12 oz. at Queen's Bay May 11\nat 2 p.m., Gibbi Stewart No. 3.\nBright and calm.\nAndy Speirs, Nelson\u201413 lbs. 9\noz. and 18 lbs. 14 oz. at Irvine Creek\nand Coffee Creek May 11 at 9 a.m.\nGibbs Stewart No. 4. Bright and\ncalm.\nL. Gausdal, Nelson\u201410 Ibt. 4 oz.\noff Pilot Bay May ll at 11 a.m., One-\nEye Gibbs No. 4. Bright.\nT. Mansell, Nelson\u20145 lbs. 4 oz. at\nKootenay Bay May 11 at 2 p.m.,\nGibbs Stewart No. 4. Sun, and some\nclouds.\nR. C. McGerrigle, Trail\u201411 lbs.\n14 oz. off Painted Rocki Max 11 at\ntt:30 p.m., Jack Uoyd. Cloudy.\nJimmy Heuston, Balfour-13 lbs.\n12 oz. and 9 lbs. 5 oz. from Queen's\nBay to Kootenay Bay May 11 from\n10 to 10:80 a.m., Gib'\nWoggler. Cloudy.\nBob Sandgren, NeUon\u20145 lbs. 10\noz. at It-vine Creek May 10 at 3:45\np.m., Andy Reeker No. 4- Sunny.\nWilliam Brown Sr\u201e Nelson\u201410\nlbs, at Queen's Bay May 10 at 2:05\np.m., Gibbs Glendon Stewart No, 5.\nSunny tnd calm.\nFred CurtU, NeUon\u201411 lbs. 12\noz\u201e 11 lbs. 4 oz. and 6 lbs. at Twenty-\nMinute Point and Pilot Bay May 9\nat 12 noon, 12:50 and 2.45 p.m., Gibbs\nDevil-Eye. Sunny, with clouds.\nJack Boyce, NeUon-\nStacks May 0 at 1 p.m. with Gibbs\nCopper No. 5. Sunny, some clouds.\nMike Brader, Nelson\u20149 lbs. 12 oz,\nat Outlet May 11 tt 2:30 p.m. with\nDouble X lure. Hazy.\n. G. M. Allan, Spokane\u201414 lbs.\nbz, near Irvine Creek May 8 at 4\np.m.. Gibbs Stewart No. 4. Cloudy;\nwindy and somt rain.\nAndy Speirs, Nelson\u20149 lbs, 4 oz.\nIn Irvine Creek Bay May 7 at 4\np_n., Gibbs No. 4. Some cluds.\nDodgen Expected\nto Hold Top Spot\nWhile Travelling\nNEW YORK, May 12 (AP). -\nBrooklyn Dodgers, starting thev\nfirst Western swing of the season,\nShould havt Uttlt fear of losing\nthtlr National League lead while\naway from homt.\nIf only road games had counted\nlut season tht Dodgers would have\nwon the pennant and the club haa\nshown already this Spring that it\nU at its best when appearing before\nhostile fans.\nBrooklyn has triumphed In 13 out\nof 18 games at Ebbetts Field; its\nrecord on the road has been seven\nout of eight.\nThty whlpptd tht world champion Cincinnati Redi In three out\nof four games, took two Itralght\nfrom SL Louis Cardinals, and altogether won eight out of, 10\ngamu from tha Weitern elubi In\nthelf recent Interactional skirmishing.\nSince Billy Herman was obtained\ntrom Chicago Cubs to fill a gap at\nlecond base the Dodgers have won\nfive games In a row. Herman\nbrought his batting average from\n.194 to .3(6 In less than a week.\nThe, Dodgers' first Western series will be two games at Cincinnati. w\nThe Western clubs of the American League will open their first\ninvasion of the East tomorrow with\nthe tint-place Cleveland Indians\ntaking on New York Yankees ln\ntwo games.\nBalling Leaders\nBy Tht Associated Preu        ,\nBatting (three leaders in each\nleague).\nClub, Player GAbRHPct.\nTravis, Senators .... 21 87 16 37 .425\nCronin, Red Sox .... 18 64 16 26 .406\nJurgei, Giants   23 82 12 32 .390\nSlaughter, Cards .... 23 95 21 17 .389\nDiMaggio, Red Sox 20 65 1ZTT .388'\nVaughan, Pirates .... 17 67 11 24 .358\nHome Runs; National League \u2014\nOtt, Giants, Camilli, Dodgers. 7;\nAmerican League \u2014 Johnson, Athletics, Gordon, Yankees, York, Tigers, 6.\nRuns Batted In: National League\n\u2014 Nicholson, Cubs 28; American\nLeague \u2014 Keller, Yankees, 28.\nLegion Ladies' Bowling Champions   f**** Win (|||| Ipd-'\nDistasteful to\nNewsnanerRow\nBy WHITNSY MARTIN\nAssociated Prtu SUff Wrlttr\nNEW YORK, May 12 (AP).-AK-\ner mtny years of harboring the\nquaint Idea that tbt man who wins\na fight U tha man who gets thtrt\nfutest with the mostest punohea, it\nii disturbing to learn that his syitem of dead reckoning is all wrong\nand that the victor ihould be picked\nnot on the punlihment he inflicts\nbut on tht punishment ht would\nlikt to inflict wert ht able.\nResponsible for this shattering ot\nan 'illusion wu tha Ken Overlln-\nBilly Sooie middleweight champiomhip (Mikt Jacobs' copyright)\nfight tht other night In which Soose\nwas awarded the title liter he had\nalmoit pitched t so-hit game.\n' \"Wi wert a little tpprthemive\nabout making public our own\nopinion, which wu 11 rounds for\nOverlin to four for Soose, but\nwe learned later wt wert juat\ndrifting with tht tide.\n'- Htrt art a ftw comments:\n1 Stan Frtnlf, Poit\u2014The most severe damage Inflicted during a\ndull evening came whtn the official decUion wai tnnounced. Virtually every ringildtr recoiled\nwith horror...  \\ \u25a0\nEd Vin Emery, Sun\u2014Silly Soose\nwears tht middleweight crown but\nat t decidedly cockey\u00bbd angle,\nwhich U the way the officiaU must\nhave looked at the fight.....\nMurray Lewid. Mirror \u2014 Ken\nOverlin fell victim to one of the\nworst decisions handed down in'the\nGarden since the late Tiger Flowers\nhad a limilar verdict agalnit him\n15 years ago.\nft* two Judgei tnd the referee\nundoubtedly had their reasons for\nthtlr votei, but thty seem to be\npractically alone In their opinion.\nReferee Arthur Donovan uyi he\nClized Overlin for hick pedal-\n_ and. clinching,\n1   I        i H 11      s I, .\nBriggs Stadium\nIs Going to Hiss\nSkipped by Nelson's vttertn tnd No. 1 lady bowler, Mrs. J. H.\nChapman, the Canadian Legion team took the Cassios Cup, emblematic of the Nelion ladles' inter-clty bowling supremacy, In a serin\nwith the Gelinas Club. The Legion players, from left, are Mrs. Jack\nAnnable, Mrs. Con Cummins, Mrs. Chapman, Miss Josephine Riley,\nMrs. Jack Edwards and Mrs. Victor Graves.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nMacKay May Give Up N.H.L. Hockey\nlo Work as Engineer at Kimberley\nMay Be Possibility of\nHis Playing for the\nDynamiters\nEDMONTON, May 11 (CP). -\nDave MacRay, rookie defenceman\nwith Chicago Black Hawki lut\nseason, said today he may -not pity\nin the National Hockey Leagut ntxt\nseason.\nMacKay said he had been ordered to report for four months\nmilitary training June 20 and added:\n\"I don't think I'll play next year.\"\nThe rugged redhead U a graduate mining engineer. He said that\nas hii work In this line might be\nfound mort essential than army\ntraining, the order to report to tht\narmy June 20 may be rescinded. He\nexpects to begin work soon u t\nmining engineer possible at Kimberley, B. C, and he said ht would\nnot leave this work next Fall to\nplay hockey.\nMacKay, 22 years old, was called\ntor one month's training last Fall\nbut this was postponed,\nMAY BE REIN.TATEO\nIn order for MacKay to play for\nKimberley Dynamiters next Winter he will have to be reinstated\nby the Canadian Amateur Hockey\nAssociation. Usually a professional has to stay out of hockty for \u2022\nPAVB \"RED\" MgeKAY\nwholt ituon btfort being re-\nstorad to amateur rating, but In\nview of hli cut tnd of thi C. A.\nH. A.'s pruent policy to dt everything poulblt for playeri engaged In war work, particularly\nthose In uniform, MaeKay stands\na good chance of being reinstated.\nGALLACHER INDUCTED\nBUFFALO, N.Y., May 12 (AP).-\nJoe Gallagher, former Brooklyn\nDodgers outfielder, was inducted today in the United States army as a\nselective service recruit. Brooklyn\nrecently sent Gallagher to Montreal\n8 lbs. off the of the International League.\nBombers\nSoftball Schedule on Friday Evening\nFirst Girls' Game  Is\nBetween C.Y.O. ant-\nAces Monday\nHank Greenberg Unburdens His Soul\n16 18 .471\n19 20 .429\n14 30 .412\nIt 1 W\n12 2.1 .304\n(The following itory tppetrtd In\nThe Detroit Times. It U tht outcome\nof an interview between Henry\nGreenberg, erstwhile first-baseman\nof the Detroit Tigers and Bob\nMurphy, a Times staff writer just\nbefore he entered the Army. It\ncarried the by-line: \u2014\"By Hank\nGreehberg\u2014as told to Bob Murphy.\")\nI'm in the Army now, or will be\nIn I few hours. There U no reason to\npull punches.\nFlnt, I'll itralghten out the many\nguesies on my 1941 salary contract\nwith the Detroit ball club.\nI ilgned for $55,000.\nI would aUo like to straighten out\nanother thing.\nMany stories have betn Written\nthit Owner Walter O- Brlggi paid\nmy utary for the entire aeuon.\nThii isn't true.\nI wu paid through Tuesday's hi\"\ngame.\nNo more, no less.\nThat U perfectly u lt ihould be.\nI have bargained for my lervicu\nwith the Detroit ball club, and,\nperhapi, I was t hard bargainer.\nI always uked for what I thought\nI was worth.\nI tlwiyi got lt. .   t\nAt tht tnd of the 1939 seaion I wu\nasked to give up first-bue.\nRecords ihowed I wu one of tht\nbest first-buemen In either league.\nI was uked to go to the outfield.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal   \t\nRochester\t\nBuffalo  \t\nJersey City .._____\nSyracuse ...._\u201e_....-_\nBaltimore ,'n,,\nToronto .\n18 8\n13 11\n13 U   .\n13 13   .488\n9 11   .450\n8 18\n7 15\n.632\n.542\n.522\n'm\n.318\nMontreal Moves Up\nby Beating Orioles\nMONTREAL, May 12 (CF). -\nMontreal Royals scored a 4-0 win\nover Baltimore Orioles today and\nmoved to within half, a gamt of tht\nidle Newark Bears, International\nLeague leaders,\nBaltimore     0   6   3\nMontreal  _  4 11   0\nTrlnkle and Howell; Head and\nFrank*.\nI agreed.\nBut I agreed to go only lt I got\nt 110,000 raise.\nI wu glvtn that riUt tnd I tven\ngavt the ball club the privilege of\nballing off the whole deal by Opening Day.\nOn or before Opening Day I was\nto be told that the contract was on,\nor off.\nIf I wasn't to be given the outfield lob, I had asked the privilege\nof going back either to play firtl-\nbase, or at least fight for first-\nbue.\nI made good in tht outfield, and\nI wu given \u2022 raise over lut year's\nsalary.\nI havi no quarrels at all with\ntht Detroit ball clubi Thty have\nbeen tine with me.\nI htvt made a lot of money ln\na ihort time ih baseball, and I\nletve bueball well situated, financially.\nI've bten lucky enough also to\nmake somt good investments.\nTaxes being what they art, I'm\nnot crying about dropping from\n$55,000 to 121 a month.\nTht public deserves -ome explanation on why I refused the extra\nday's reprieve from the Draft Board\nto play in tht flag-raising game.\nI'm refusing this grant, first, btctuit I never^sked for it Secondly,\nbecause the ball club never asked\nfor it.\nBut to be truthful, the main reason is because I don't trust a man\nnamed Floyd Smith.\n(Editor's Note: Smith U one of\nthe three members of local Draft\nBoard No, 23, which has Jurisdiction over Greenberg.)\nIt is apparent to me he hu been,\nand still is, out to grab all the publicity for himself he can find.\nI'm going to be at the draft board\nheadquarters on time.\nI'm not going to give any one\nchance to concoct any more stories\nabout me and my requests.\nDespite the way I feel about Smith\nand his colleague, Ralph J. Norton,\nI have all the trust in the world for\nMr. Ben O. Shepherd, chairman of\nmy draft board.\nHe hu been fair.\nHe hun't tried to make selfish\npublicity gains at my expense.\nEven if the army physicians\nihould find me unfit for service I\ndon't believe I could play baseball\nagain, soon.\nMy spirit for tht game has been\nsapped during tht past few weeks\nand months.\nI feel I have been given more unjust raps than anyone ever deserved.\nI never knew Jack Dempsey Intimately.\nBut I still hear people talk about\nhow he wu a slacker.\nI have never had any intention!\nof dodging my sjuty.\nBut u I go Into tht army I know\nthat people everywhere have me\npainted u a man who didn't want\nto go.\nNothing was ever more untrue.\nI get it everyWitrt. Through letters, telephone calls and personal\ncontact . ,,\nThere U Just one grand thing that\nsilves all wounds. ,\nWhen I think of all the friends\nI really have\u2014I mean the honest-\nto-goodness kind\u2014well, I know I'm\nlucky.\nOne of the greatest presents I\never received came Irom the ground\ncrew at Briggs Stadium on Tuesday.\nIt wu a desk pen and pencil set\nI'll treasure that always. It came\nfrom the hearts of those fellows.\nGoing to the army doesn't seem\na bit tough when J think of the\nwty Lou Gehrig had to go out of\nbaseball. And no grander, finer\ncharacter ever lived.\nBut I Just had a few things to\nsay.\nNow that I've said them\u2014well,\nI'll still be trying to bend over\nbackwards in order to'make a good\nsoldier and keep the confidence of\nall the friends who really believe\nIn mt.\nThe 1M1 schedule of the Nelson\nSoftball Association gets under way\nFriday in the boys' division, High\nSchool Blue Bombers meeting the\nC.Y.O., according to M, N. (Slim)\nPorter, Association Secretary-Trea-\nsurer- .  ,v\nThe second game of the meni\nschedule will be played Sunday between Pucksters and the champion\nSavoy Hotel nine following the Senior baseball game, and then on\nMonday the first girls' game Is\nscheduled between Aces and C.Y.O.\nPorter has prepared the first half\nschedule in each division, but the\nschedule is divided.into halves for\nconvenience only. The records of\nthe teams will be' carried right\nthrough the entire schedule.\nIn the firat hall each team will\nmeet each other team twice. ThU\nmakes 12 games in 'the men's section, and six in the girU'. The men's\ngames are scheduled Fridays and\nSundays, and the girls' on Mondays.\nFour teams, Pucksters, Savoys,\nC.Y.O. and High School Blue\nBombers, have entered the men'i\nleague, and Aces, C.Y.O. and High\nSchool Bomberettes are in the girls'\nsection. ....\nFollowing is the schedule for Association play in the first half, laat\nnamed being home teams:\nFriday, May 18 - Bombers vi.\nC.Y.O.\nSunday, May 16\u2014Pucksteri vi.\nSavoy.\nMonday, May 19-Acei vs. C.Y.O.\nFrfday, May 23-C.Y.O. vt. Pucksters.\nSunday, May 28\u2014Savoy vs. Bomb-\nMonday, May 28 - C.Y.O. vt.\nBomberettes (girls). ,\nFriday, May 30 \u2014 Pucksteri vi.\nBombers. ___\nSunday, June 1\u2014Savoy vs. C.Y.O.\nMonday, June 3\u2014Bomberettei tn.\nAces (girls).\nFriday, June 6\u2014C.Y.O. vi. Bomh-\nSundey, June 8-Savoy vs. Pucksters.\nMonday. June 9\u2014Bomberettes vi.\nC.Y.O. (girls). .\nFriday. June 13 \u2014 Bombers vi.\nSavoy.\nSunday, June IB\u2014Pucksters vi.\nC.Y.O.\nMonday, June 18-C.Y.O. vs. Aces\n(girls).\nFriday, June 20 \u2014 Bombers vs.\nPucksters.\nSunday, June 22 \u2014 C.Y.O. vs.\nSavoy.\nMonday, June 23\u2014Aces vs. Bomberettes  (girls).\nMONTREAL FIGHTER\nKNOCKS OUT BAGNATO\nTORONTO, May 12 (CP) .-Harry\nHurst of Montreal tonight knocked\nout Joey Bagnato of Toronto at\n2:07 in tne fourth round of a scheduled -10-round lightweight bout.\nHurst weighed 136, BagnaTo lMVs-\nAt 48 years George Bremner Is\nplaying his 31st season of bueball. .\nHe's well known throughout Montreal and district as a standout\npitcher and plays with the St. Clement team in the Starr League.\nSt. Paul's Boys to\nPlay Prospectors\nSt.'Paul's boys will be shooting\nfor their first,victory of the Netaoo\nChurch Softball League schedule\nthis evening at .the. Junior High\nwhen they meet the Prospectors.\nProspectors divided their fint two\ngames, while St. Paul's lost the\nopening two.\nBudpath favored\nIn King's Plate\nTORONTO, Miy 13 (CP).-Some-\nthing among horsemen which draws\ninstinctive support of a good horse\nhas made Harry Hatch's chestnut\ncold Budpath rated among those\nthoroughbreds most likely to.win\nthe 82nd running of the King'i Plate\nhere next Saturday.\nThe sturdy three-year-old ion of\nBuddy Bauer, out of Luress had\nno startling record u a Juvenile. He\nbroke hU maiden at Thorncliffe in\nthe Spring over five furlongs, and\nwon again ln his last start of the\nseason, at Dufferln, that time over\nleven furlongs. In four other races,\nhe had one second, one third,- tnd\nran out of the money twice.\nHis monty winnings of the year,\n$1650, and the more general aspects\nof his record are not so imprusive\nas those of the Parkwood Stables\nWarrigan, or Harry Giddings'. Undisturbed. But when the boys who\nmost patronize tht pari-mutuel windows are looking for angles, they\nfind one most definite in Budpath's\nsecond victory of 1940. For he won\nthat seven-furlong event driving,\npoening with every beat of his king\nlegs the 10-length gap between him\nand J. E. F. Seagram's Taffarail,\nanother Plate candidate.\n' DlSrttOtT, May 1] (AP).-Ajntr.\nlean League baseball games at\nBriggs Stadium, homt of Dttrolt\nTigers, won't sound the stmt without Dick Bartell chattering tway\nit his shortstop poit Tht illence\nmay be deafening.\nFlnt Bueman Rudy York hai\n.often been publicized for. all Indian stoicism; ' Second Baseman\nCehringer and Shortsto*' Frank\nCrouoher, who ditplaced; Bartell,\nbojjji art famous for economy of\nwords, and the voice of Third Baseman Frank (Pinky) Higgins has\nneither the resonance for tho carrying power of Bartell's,\nYesterday at Chicago, after the\nTigers dropped a 2-to-i decUion to\nthe White Sox, Manager Del Baker\nannounced Bartell's unconditional\nreleait. Tht pepper ihortstop, who\nhad recently teen riding the bench,\nleft Immediately for his home in\nDetroit while liis teammates departed for Washington,\nThe 33-year-old Bartell moved to\nDetroit In tht Winter of 1939 when\nChicago Cubs swapped him for\nBilly Rogell. After 13 seuona in\nthe National League Bartell regained hU old-time vitality tnd\nbecame one of the ringleaders ln\nDetroit's unexpected drive for the\nAmerican League pennant.\nBartell began his career as a professional In 1927 with Bridgeport\nof the Eutern League and in 1930\nwu traded to Philadelphia Phillies.\nFive yetri later New York Gianti\ngavt tip lour playeri to ilgn him.\nTwo years ago he figured In a\nsix-player trade that sent him to\nthe Cubs. Bartell's lifetime major\nleague batting average U 288,\nAUSSIE CHAMP\nQUITTING RING\nSYDNEY, N.S.W. (CP). - Ron\nRichards, triple boxing champion of\nAustralia and recognized as British\nEmpire middleweight champion, hu\nannounced his retirement from the\nring. His australian titles wtrt tht\nmiddleweight, light heavyweight\nand heavyweight\nEfforts were made to match\nRichards with tbe BritUh boxers\nJock McAvoy md Len Harvey for\nEmpire titles and when these failed\nAustralia decided to stage her own\nconteit for the Empire mlddle-\nwelght crown. In this Richards baat\nFred Henneberry, a former middleweight\nTwo of the largest gamt clubs In\nthe world art located in t. Petersburg, Fla., one for ihuffleboird tnd\nthe other for lawn bowling.\nMcMillan Ring Fret\nMOTOR OIL\nCosts you less.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker St NeUon. B. C.\nand&Mitmt\n,WJ\n.   ,\t\n\t\n Young Special-\nOccasion Dress\nTJttVlUUL   71t<Vl-_t\nPATTERN BT14\n\"Look u young and sweet as\nyou arei\" decrees Fashion. And\nMarian Martin gayly answers\nwith Pattern 9714. In street length,\nthis frock makes a delectable\ndatertime style; in floor-length\nit's a locely graduation or party\nfrock. There's young-appeal in\nthat sweetheart neckline, copied\nby the shape of the front yoke.\nYou might have the yoke and the\nshort sleevs in contrast for a\nreally dress-up effect. The softly\nbloused bodice, so becoming ot\nan adolescent figure, is gathered-\nin below the yoke; the skirt ii\npanelled. As a finishing touch,\nencircle the waist with a soft,\nwide girdle that buttons in back\nand may contrast. Here's a style\nto thrill any girl\u2014and it's simple\nenough for even a beginner to\nmake.\nPattern 9714 may be ordered\nonly in junior miss sizes 11, 12,\n13, 14, 15, 16 17 and 18. Sizetl3,\nstreet length dress, requires %Vt\nyards 39 inch fabric and Vt yard\ncontrast.\nSend twenty cents for this Mar-\nIan Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your size, name, ad-,\ndress and style number.\nSend your order to The Daily\nNews, Pattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be sent to your\nhome within 10 days.\nAUNT HET\n1\n\u2666 -\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n 4\n\"Cousin Amy down in Mlisiss-\nppl pays her lervant only a\ndollar a week, but I'd u soon\npay good wages u to have\na ninety dollar grocery bill every month.\"\nStopping Dread\n\"Damping-Oil\"\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nThere it nothing more discouraging to the gardener than to discover aome morning that the plants\nwhich seemed so healthy yesterday\nare wilted today.\nWILTED \u2022TOMATO\nPLANT\nCAUSED Br PuWSyg\n5-2\nWl.-t to do about \"damping\noff\"\nAs illustrated\" in the Garden-\nGraph, \"damping-off\" is Shown by\nthe sudden wilting of the tomato\nseedling. There is ne way to cure\nor save a seedling attacked with\n\"damping-off\" but it can be largely\nvented by sterilizing the soil and\nseed before sowing. Overcrowding\nand an excess of moisture and\ndull weather are contributing fao-\ntors which bring about the disease\nAs soon as a plant or group of\nplants show signs of \"damping-off\"\nremove the diseased plants and the\nsoil surrounding them and burn it\nimmediately as the disease spreads\nrapidly.\n<\n-\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbKw>e-uiiikiii\u00abeiw'RiFmiiil'WJij__\u00bbwwB\u00bbv'HUIIIIB*U MAV II WW\nLaura Wheeler Plants Geraniums\nIn StUehery on Your Linens\nCOM mi, NtSDUCBATT SIBVsCI, INC\nGERANIUM   LINENS\nPATTERN   2850,\nWhat would be gayer than bright geraniums on your toweli,\nicarfa and tea cloths! It's such fascinating stitchery\u2014you'll enjoy\nevery minute1 of it. Pattern 2850 contains a transfer pattern of 10 motifs ranging from 3ta4ft inches to 7x12 inches; color schemes; illustrations of stitches; materials required.\nSend twenty cents for this pattern to The Nelson Daily News,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly pattern number, your name\nand address. Pattern will be mailed to yuur home within 10 days.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nL Foreign\n6. Leading\nactors\n11. Part of\nGreek\ntemple\n12. Masculine\nname\n13. Kind of dog\n6. Samarium   29. European\ntsym.) country\nT. Kind of cap 33. Colonist'\n8. Part of\n\"to be\"\n9. Ornament\nof ribbona\n10. Neta\n14. Organs of\nhearing\n15, Flat-topped 18. Bank\nhill employee\n16. Aloft 2L A dessert\nIT. Ostein 23. Crippled\n19.Compara-    24.Wrltlng\ntive suffix fluid\n20. Plant juice   28. Shallow\n22. Hermit\n2S. Goddess of\ndiscord\nST. Slopes\n38. Unable to\nhear\n30. To enjoy\n\u25a0SI. Biblical city\n32. Type measure\n33. Rodent\n35. Pause\n38. Quiet\n40. Junebuga\n42. Forced\n44. Wager\n45. Indefinite\narticle\n48. Go astray\n\u25a047. Land meaiure\n48. Kind of duck\n61. Dl will\n54. Wading bird\nS<. Simpletons\nJOT.Muaeof\npoetry\n88. Sounds\nDOWN        '.\n1. Blame\n2. Spotted oat\n8. Sick\n4. Length\nmeasure\n5-Artleae\n34. Malt\nbeverage\n36. Weep\n37. Molasses\n38. Scorch\n39. Duration\n41. Emphasize\n43. Tentative\nsketch\n49. Constella\ntion\n60. Plot of\nground\n62. Game at\n_u_a awn   1\nmaa anna 1\nS H O R EliC A N E 5\ntots|bunole\nA R E | 1 A 51  | 1  5\ng e s r u R eUe V A\naaauHti unwin\nhuhmh\nHQ0B   HUmiSWE\n0 1) IBM A 1. [ E S E\no r | m o E r. | \u00a7 P A\nMOB 1  L E|G 1  RL\nSA i ntWloes\n\u25a0oaceBpun <\u25a0\nP-P-P S F. iMf. M 5 _\u25a0\nyesterday's Aniss-er\n53. Electrified\nparticle\n55. Negative\ndial\ncards\nreply\n1\n2\ni\nH\n\u00a3>\n1\n6\n1\na\n9\nIO\nII\n%\n12\n|3\nV\nIM\nV4\n\\t>\n16\n%\ny4\n17\nIS\nVa\n^\n11\n20\n21\n%\n22\n23\n\u25a02*1\n26\n2.\n%\n27\n1\n2&\n71\n%\n30\n'i\\\n1\nfjy\n31\nV\/\nwi\n32\n%\nVA\n%\n%\n33\ni*i\n%\n35\n34\n37\n%\n58\nit\nVa\nHO\nHI\n12\n43\n%\n\u2022M\nf\u00bb\n%\n'i\nvi\n%\n%\n17\nfa\nHI\nio\n'%\nbt\n52\n53\ntH\nSE>\n%\nbm\nbl\n%\n56\n5-\/3\nCRYPTOQUOTE\u2014A cryptogram sjuoteUon\nSPYTVWZYV    TXXCZU    RCZT    DYPOQEB\nJt-TL YKTZYD   IOBE   CBEYZY;   BC   TLGCA\nI1EYB    OL    VCPOBWTJY    OT    T    UZYTZA\nBKOLQ-HEZAVCVBCR.\n\u00bb*_hjf*m. <t)H*mtm_* ZW  OlfB   WISHES TO   BB   BS.\nTEEMED, ONE MUST UVE WITH ESTIMABLE PEOPLE\u2014\nHOW TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTE8\nCryptoquotes are quotations of famous persons written in cipher.\nA substitute character has replaced the original letter. For instance,\nan \"R\" may substitute fof the original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote, or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\" Find the key and follow\nthrough to the solution.\nCONTRACT. . .\nVUNSIDKR YOUR ENEMT\nAGAINST ONE kind of enemy,\na'(rood general will adopt a certain pfiDi of campaign. Against\na different one, another sort of\ntactics will prove more advisable.\nSo It la when yoa think ot dou-\nbling the other fellow'- contract\nIf he la the kind of cardsman who\nla Ukely to Uke the fullest advantage of the information conveyed by the double, you had better bi wary about making IL But\nIf be Is one of thoee stodgy fellows who disregards iuch a fator,\nthen go ahead and take a chance\nif you feel Uke it.\n4532\nVAKJM4\n\u2666 5\n+ A4S1\n\u2666 \u00bb\n\u00a598765\n3\n4-\u00bb\n+ K J107\ns.\n\u00abKQ8\n4 Q 10 8 8\n2\n*Q985\nA A J 10 T 6 4\nAAK9T48\n4 None\n(Dealer:   South.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\nSouth     Weil     NOrth Beat\n1. -v        Dbl Paaa\n44 Paai      44 Paaa\n4 NT Pass 5<y Pan\n6 NT Pan 84 Pais\n8 4         Paaa      Paaa DU\nIn a rather strong dupUcate\ngame, every table reached the\nspade small slam, but iome of the\nEast players had enough self-restraint to refrain from doubling.\nIn all of those cases, the contract\nwaa aet, because the declarer\nplayed the trumpa unhappily. In\none of those situations, the heart\n5 was led to the Q and the apade\nA Uld down. The ipade J then\nBy Shepard Barclay\nlost to the Q and Eaat also cashed\nthe apade K to take out dummy'a\nlast trump. The diamond 2 then\nwent to the J, whereupon the dc-\nllarer loat two more diamond\ntricka because he could not get\ninto the dummy, ao he waa down\nthree.\nIn moat cases where tha doubla\nwas made by East, the declarer\nmade his contract. Instead of letting the heart lead run to the Q,\nhe overplayed It with dummy's A,\nso he could lead for a Spade\nfinesse. East ducked the 2, and\nthe 10 won. The diamond A waa\ncashed and the diamond 3 ruffed\nby the ipade 3. The club A furnished a dlicard of the diamond 4,\nthen the heart K waa ruffed by the\napade Q and over-ruffed by the A\nNext the diamond 7 waa trumped\nby the spade 6 and the heart J led.\nEast ruffed with the ipade K, but\nSouth.discarded hla diamond (\nand had nothing left in hia hand\nbut good cardi. East returned the\nclub Q, but South ruffed, cashed\nthree trumps and took In tbe diamond K for the final trick.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTokkxttow'i Problem\n4AK2\n-\u00bbQ76\n4Q\n4KJ10542\n410 8\nf J 10 4 S\n497832\n+ 76\nN.\ns.\n4QJ9T4\nV952\n4KJ84\nill\n4653\n\u00bbAK8\n4 A 10 5\n+ A98!\n(Dealer: South. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nHow ihould South play thia\nband for 7-clubs, after a lead of\nthe heart **\nADVENTURE   STRIPS...\n13 Tobies in C.Y.O.\nWhist at Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-The C.Y.O.\nheld\ndrive Thursday, 13 tables being In\nplay. The first four prizei were\nawarded to Mrs, Shea, Mrs Canfield.\nMrs. Waselne and M.s. W. A. Brown\nConsolation wenl to Mrs. Conroy,\n,, Mrs. Bond, Mrs. Cimoli and Mri\na successful  military    whist1 Kooer.\na_.-_mtm^.^^Mlm_mi_ _;_\n___________________ \t\n.\n___\n r\"\n' \/\n\\   *   '\u25a0'\n\u25a0\nJ^P\nI\t\n\u25a0\nV.\n\u2022     \u25a0\"\nimmmmm\n\u2022wm*-mm\n-mm\n>--\u25a0\u2022-\ni'W ipi u ^mi'i-T-wtmrtmtif^rPftg,\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B, .-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 13. 194J-\n{folium Ikiihi Nrttta\npi Telephone 144\nTraU: K. Lowdon, 716-V\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per insertion\n1  44c per line per week (6 consecutive Insertions for cost of 4),\ntl 43 per line a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion)\nI  Box  numbers lie extra   This\n:   covers any  number  of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nI 18c per line, first Insertion and\n>  14c each subsequent insertion.\n.' ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNen commercial Situations\nWanted for 26c for any required\nnumber ot lines for six days\n,. payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle oopy ....  I  .09\n<   By carrier, per week       .25\n. By carrier per year 13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month     ._\u00bb..-_\u2014 $ 75\nThree months    2.00\nSix months        4.00\nOne year         8.00\nAbove rates apply In Canada,\nUnited Suites and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outalde regular carrier areas.\nEliewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage Is required one\nmonth $1.51), three months $4.00,\nlix monthi $8.00. one year $15.00.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot\nSALVATION ARMY. IF YOU\nhave 2nd hand clothes, footwear\nfurniture to spare please Ph. 618L\nFOR A BETTER DEAL IN USED\ngoods of all kinds\nSee CHESS tint.\nHELP WANTED\nApplications will not be conildered from persons engaged In\ntba producUon ot war supplies.\n1IACHINISTS, PATTERNMAKERS\nIron and brass moulders, core\nmakers wanted. State experience\nWrite Heaps Engineering (19401\nLtd, New Westminater, B. C.\nThose engaged in war work need\nnot apply.\t\nCapable girl or woman for\nrneral housework. Apply to Mrs\nG. Blaylock, Trail, B. C, Mon.\nto rrlday and to R. It. No. 1,\nMay 17 and 18,\t\nRanted - reliable farm\nhand, ilngle, good milker. Good\nWagei. Creston district. Steady\nwork. Mrs. M. V. Learmonth,\nCreston, B C.\t\n*$&: tfARM HAND, MILK THREE\ncows, handle horses, $25 monthly\nboard and cabin. Year-round.\nState age, Dolman'a Poultry Farm,\nNakuip, B C.\t\nm___* FOS_()AlRV,'G60b\nmilker, alio boy or girl for milk\ndelivery and milking. Columbia\nDairy, Box 28, Trail, B, C.\n$15 - FUR COATS RELlNED\nGlazed, minor repairs. Free storage Polar Furs Ltd., 548 Granville\nSt., Vancouver.*\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not less than 12 Inches\nsquare, 9c lb. F. O. B. Nelion\n___________\nGREAT WAR VWtftAN, SXTOi\nBattalion would Uke to meet a\nwidow or ilngle woman - view\nmatrimony. Aga 80 to 80. Box 149\nDally News,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS and MINE AOENTS\nHAROLD S ELMfiS. ROSSLAND\nB. C Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual representative for ship\npers at Trail Smelter.\nSTAMMERING\nSCIENTIFICALLY    CORRECTED\nBooklet  gives   full   information\nWrite   William  Dennlaon,  843-N\nJarvis Street, Toronto, Ont.\nATTENTION! YOU MAY ASI. 8\nquestions 1 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$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrap,\nped. Tested Guaranteed and pre,\npaid Free Novelty price list.\nPrinceton Distributors. P. O Box\n61 Princeton, B C.\n25c - The Photo Mill - 2Sc\nP O Box 335. Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed. 25c\n5x7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement, 35c\nLADIES - DR COOK'S COM-\npound Is a sure and safe remedy\nfor delayed and painful monthly\nperiods $1 per package postpaid\nWest Remedy Company. Box 2253\nWinnipeg, Manitoba.\t\nMEN! WANT NORMAL PEP, VIM?\nTry Ostrex Tonic TableU Stimulants and oyster concentrates ai.\nto normal pep. Results with first\npackage or maker returns low\nprice. Call, write Mann Rutherford\nCo.  and  all  good drug stores\nPOLE MAKERS, EXP. MEN ONLY\nneed apply. Cady Lumber le Pole\nCompany, 580 Baker Street.\nFARM HAOT. ABLE TO MHjC\n$25 a month. W. J. Loughery.\nEdgewood, B, C.\nWAhtes WAifffifi TO CAT \u00a3\nwork. Apply L. D. Cafe, Salmo.\nSCHOOLS\nCIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYMENT\nExaminationi announced tor\nClerks, Grades 1, IA and 2, and\nCensus Clerks. Open to men and\nwomen 18 and over. Shorthand\nand typing not required. Applications to reach Ottawa by May 22.\n'Several hundred appointments to\nbe made. Our advice has helped\nhundreds get Jobs as Clerks, Postmen, Stcnos., etc. Information and\nBooklet Free. M. C. C. SchooU\nLtd, Winnipeg. Oldest In Canada\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratei for noncommercial advertisemenU under thii classification to assist\npeople seeking' employment\nOnly 25c for one week (8 days)\ncovers any number of required\nUnei. Payable in advance Add\n10c If box number desired.\nWANTED - JOBS CARPENTER-\ning, repairing, shingling, painting, concrete work, sidewalks,\nbasemenU, etc. Work by hour,\nday or job. Box 202, Daily News.\nAN EXPERIENCED DRESSMAKEH\nAlterations, remodelling of suits\nand coaU, desires work by day\nor hour. Willing to go out of\ntown. Phone 36TL.\t\nHousekeeper - with some\nnursing experience, middle agM\n- wishes position. Steady or temporary. Go anywhere. Referencei\nBox 124 Dally News.\n.EXPERIENCED GIRL DESIRES\nhousework at once. Preferably ln\ntown. Mae Matthews. 140 Baker St.\ntoOMAN WANTS WORK BY THE\nhour. Mrs. E Clark. Ph. 94.\n\u2022SlRL. 17, DESIRES HOUSEWORK\nSPECIAL'-MEN'S PERSONAL\nDrug Sundries. Finest Quality\nTested. Guaranteed 12 for 50c assorted. Including world's funniest\nJoke novelty and catalogue of\nSundries and Novelties. Western\nDistributors. Box 24, Dept. NC,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\t\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned. any size 6 or 8 exposure, roll\n25c. With 5x7 enlargement SOc\nWe have hundreds of regular\nsatUfed customers aU over the\nWest. One day service done ln a\nreally modern, air conditioned\nPhoto FlnUhlng Plant, establUhed\nover 30 years. One trial will convince you of our superior workmanship. Krystal Photos, Wlkle,\nRsssslrat-yiPvvan.\nA. J. BUIE, INDEPENDENT MINE\nrepresentative. FuU Ume attention given shippers' interesU\nBox 54, Trail B C.\t\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. B   MCMILLAN, D. C, NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch Blk\nDR. WILBERT BROCK, D. C\n542 Baker Street. Phone 989.\nENQINEER3 and SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P, O. BOX 104,\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En-\ngineer. Phone \"Beaver Falls.''\nR. W. HAGGEN, MINING it CIVIL\nEngineer; B. C Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B. C.\nINSURANCE and REAL ESTATE\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals. 557 Ward Street,\nAnnable Block, Phone 197,\nC.  D.   BLACKWOOD  AGENCIES,\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone Di)\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135,\nH. E. DILL, FIRE, AUTO, ACCI-\ndent Insurance. 532 Ward Street.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrist\n1458 Bay Ave., TraU       Phone 177\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nh.rdwood merchant 273 Baker St.\nCanada Turning\nOut Cartridge\nCases in Millions\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE.\nWhat have you? Ph. 534, Ark Store\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\nBox 88   Daily News.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE\u2014COM-\nplete Meat Market equipment, including slicer, blocks, cash reg s-\nter. scales, glass top counter, Hobart chopper, compressor and coil\nand stuffer. All practically new\nThis equipment which was formerly in the Sims Market will\nbe spld at sacrifice prices. Can be\n\u25a0een at the Butcherteria, NeUon\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\n Vancouver, B C.\t\nIPIPE-FITTING. TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\nH18 Pci-vell St    Vanrnnvrr   R   C\n*OR SALE-DlNINGTA BLEA ND\nchairs $25. All in excellent condi-\ntlon Phone D L. Kerr.\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE-SIX\nIn Rood conditon. 619 Cedar St.\nLOANS, INSURANCE. ETC.\nFUNDS AVAILABLE On\"~YORK-\nshire plan 1st mortgages Nelson\nproperty, monthly reductions. C\nW Aoolevard\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npad Active Trading Comoany\n918 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\n8HIP\nUS   YOUR   HIDES\nMorgan   Nelson   B C\nWanted\nT~F\nUSED\n181 Daily News.\nIANO. BOX\nWILL MAKE 1941 YOUR\n\"BANNER YEAR\"\nTHOUSANDS ot poultry keepers\nin Western Canada will vouch (or\nthe vigor and productivity of these\nchicks. Whether you raise 28 or 6000\nchicks, you must get RESULTS\nThis year decide to get chicks from\nfamous British Columbia flocks. Expert breeding and management Is\nyour guarantee of a healthy flock\nMay 1st to 15th Prices.\nPer 100 chicks: Unsexed Pulleti\nR & S Leghorns $11.00 $23.00\nR & S Super Leg'ns $13.00 $2700\nRocks. Reds and\nN   Hamps $12.00   $22.00\nSup Reds. N. Hamps $14.00 $24.00\nLight Sussex $14.00   $24.00\nLower prices on 500 and over.\nFree books: \"Banner Year\" Book\nand \"Raising Chicks for Profit\"\nRemember\u2014It's resulU that count\nRumpRSei><UW\nBOX N, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.\nA free \"Room For Rent\" card\nwtU oe provided at The Daily\nNews office to persons advertising Rooms tor Rent in thu\ncolumn.\nKERR APARTMENTS. QUIET AND\nrefinement, unexceUed appoint\nmenu Including new ranges, refrigerators and vacuum cleaners.\nFurnished and unfurnished suites,\ncourteous service, ideaUy situated, well kept lawns. Weekly\nand monthly tenancy at most rea-\nsonable pricea.\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATfeD\nhouse keeping rooms in Annable\nBlock for rent R. W. Dawson.\nAgent. 557 Ward Street.       \t\nFOR RENT - 2 RM. FURN. SUITE,\nihower, storeroom, etc. Priv. Very\nreasonable. Apply 617 Victoria St\nFOR RENT - 7 ROOM HOUSE\nat 618 Mill St. Write to James\nFerguson, R.R. No. 1, NeUon,\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOM MODERN\nbungalow after June 1st. 604,\nFourth Street. Phone 935X.,\nLARGE APARTMENT, 3 BED\nrooms, electric range and refrigerator Johnstone Block.\t\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOM HOUSE.\nGarden and orchard. $15 month.\n213 Houston West.\t\nFURN. SUITE FOR RENT. APPLY\n116 Vernon St. Phone 712R.\nFOR RENT-2 ROOM FURN. APT\n$10 month. Apply 507 Railwty St\nFOR  RENT   -   FURNISHED   OR\nunfurn. house. Mrs. C. Becker.\n3 ROOM FURN SUITE FOR RENT\nClose In $18. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT - APT. ON GROUND\nfloor. Private bath. Petty Apts.\nA    HOME   FOR   THOSE   AWAY\nfrom home Strathcona Hotel Apu\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrissj.daire equipped suites.\t\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nOTTAWA \u2014 Cartridge cases, like\nmost things in this world, are the\nBroduct of man's Inventive mind. In\nlis particular case, the march of\nman's mind wu singularly alow.\nThe old muzzle-loading rifle was\na clumsy and stupid weapon, It was\nsol w to load and fire. It seemed Uke\nthe simplest thing to produce a\nbreech-loading gun and one was developed in England in 1670. There\nwere traces of the same idea earlier.\nStill, the armies of the world did\nnot rush to the acceptance of the\nnew device. FlghUng men have conservative minds.\nThe difficulty lay ln the fact that\nwith the breeoh-loadlng weapon,\n\u2022he gases were Inclined to come\nback in the face of the man who\ntired it. This was unpleasant and, at\ntimes, dangerous. Besides, it lessened the efficiency of the gun. Many\ndifferent devices were tried but the\nproblem was solved eventually by\na close-fitting metaUic cartridge\nwhich closed the breech and gave\nthe world the modern weapon of\ntoday.\nThe breech-loadeiMt was called\nthe Needle Gun\u2014was first used in\nthe DanUh-Prussian and Austro-\nPrusslan wars of 1884 and 1966. Today, artillery is breech-loading, and\nCanada is turning out cartridge\ncases for the artillery In milUons.\nThe 25-pounder cartridge cases\nare produced from disks of brass\n6.290\" in diameter\u2014505\" thick.\nThe curious thing about these cases\nis that they are loaded separately in\nthe gun; they are not \"fixed ammunition.'' This permit! variation\nin the size ot the charge,\nThe brass U rolled in the mill to\nthe required thincness. It Is annealed to toughen it and then lt is\nblanked out on presses. From'that\ntime on the process Is one of drawing the disks to a shape through\nvaried operations followed in each\ncase by annealing and pickling. The\nobject of this process Is always\nthe same, to toughen the metal and\nmake tt more ductile.\nAt the end of Uie first draw tha\ncartridges are 3% Inches In diameter, approximately 4 7-16 inchei outside diameter and about three inches\nlong. After the second draw, the\nbase of the cartridge U flattened\nin a heavy press, flattened and Indented. It then goes through two\nmore drawing operations. Before\ngoing through each draw, the cartridge Is dipped ln oil, for cartridges have cylindrical walls of\nthin metal, the metal must be strong\nand tough, not brltUe, and much\nof the work of making cartridges\nconslsU of theae operations -\nannealing, dipping In acid baths,\nwashing, and repeating the process\nso as to insure uniform quality and\nalso to avoid the possibility of\nbreaking in the operations.\nThe cartridges, after the fourth\ndraw, are trimmed for length. Another trimming follows after the\nsixth drawing operation. The next\nprocess is the shaping of the head,\nwhich is done in a very heavy press,\nIt now has a very distinct cartridgelike appearance. Anyone would recognize it for what it Is. Annealing\nil done in oil furnaces and the cartridge Is passed slowly through the\nfurnace. The trio last! 45, 60 or 70\nminutes, depending on the circumstances. They travel through at slow\nspeed. The temperature is approximately 1200 degrees F. The mouth\nof the shell must then be tapered.\nThey are first heated and then are\nsqueezed in two operations in a\nspecially constructed press. The\nhead is then bored and threaded.\nThe cartridge cases are now headed lor the packing room; but cleanliness seems to be an extremely important factor In the life of a cartridge\u2014at least while it Is growing\nup. It has another caustic bath, this\ntime to remove all traces ott grease\nand oil. It then takes IU final annealing In an electric furnace at a\ntemperature of 500 degrees F. for\na period of 75 minutes. They are\nnow run through a weak solution\nof sulphuric acid, washed In water\nand buffed to give then a perfect\npolish. Then comes inspection. Visibly, they must be free from flaw.\nTlwy must be of a definite standard\nof hardness. It .is essential also that\nthey should be perfect in size and\nall measuremenU must be exactly\nright. The factory has standardized\niU methods. The Inspectors of the\nBritish Government find few re-\njecU.\nCoast Copper Spent\n$5245 Maintaining\nMine in Past Year\nVANOOUVUt, B. C. - Dlrectori\nof Coast Copper Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of Consolidated Mining Se\nSmelting Co. of Canadi Ltd., announce i.i the atatement for 1940\nthat ISMS was expended in maintaining the mine during the year\nand that 26 ouUying claims considered, after a itudy, ai having no\nvalue, have been abandoned.\nCoast Copper his been Idle for\nsome years. AceounU payable, excepting $857, are placed at 31,148,-\n881, this letter amount being owing\nto Consolidated Company.\nStocks Steady\nBURNSIDE CHICKS\nStrong,  uniform,  grow  fast,  high\nproducers. Easy to handle and fine\nmeat quality.\nTrapnested  pedigreed  and  blood\ntested under R.O.P. supervision.\nLeghorns,    Rocks,   hampshirs:s,\nCrossbreds, Barred Rocks puUeU 6\nweeks to laying age. Write for illustrated  catalogue and late May\nprices. '\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nA. E. Powell   Port Hammond. B. C\nRUSH DELIVERY - HAMBLEY\nElectric Chicks. Thousands batching each week for prompt delivery\nmosl breeds. Write, wire, phone\nor call. High quality Govt Approved Chicks at competitive\nprices. J. J. Hambley Hatcheries.\n607, 1st St. E\u201e Calgary, Alta.\nATTENTION ALL POULTRYMEN!\nTo ensure the best for your chicki\nuse Canada Poultrymen chick-\nstarter mash, developing mash\nand laying mash etc Phone 174\nNelson & District Fanners' Supply\nCo   P  0   Box 6. Nelson. B  C\nRHODE ISLAND RED CHICKS\nFinest stock. Mixed sexes. 25-$3\n50-S6. 100-$12 Pullets 22c Cockerels 7c. Also started chicks a\nmonth old upwards. George Game.\nArmstrong. B C\nBABY CHICKS, RHODE ISLAND\nReds and New Hampshires. Good\nutility stock. Approved and bloodtested. $8 per 100. John Goodman\n1655 Gilley Ave., New Westminster\nFOR SALE - PURE BRED A^R-\nshire young bull. Wray. Waneta\nFOR   SALE-MILiTToWn.   B.\ntested. M. Kozlov. Crescent Valley\nFOR  SALE  -  YOUNG  JERSEY\ncow   Phone 667L3\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE - CARIN CRUISER\nStar motor 18 fl Excellent condition $250. Cheaper for cash Ph 90\nFOR SALE - 8 HORSfPOWETl\nengine. Nelion Auto Wrkg. Ph. 948\n-\u2022\u25a0-'-\u2022-'\u2022\u25a0'--'-\u2022-\u2014arifT*ititMatiii>iiiiiai|flijij\u00a3iMiii\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full in\nformation to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. C. P. R., Calgary, Alta\nWANTED\npair, 3\nHOUSE IN GOODIE\nor 4 bedrooms, furnace\nimproved  grounds, close to the\nschooU. Client has cash for prop.\nerty to suit. Robertson's.\t\nBALFOUR BEACH - LOTS FROM\niy< to 6 acres with water front.\npartly*cleared, being offered cheap\nGet particulars. Robertson's.\nFOR SALE - RANCH PROPER1F?\n(about 10 acres) with bu Idings at\nAppledale. price $650. Apply to\nBrown Se Dawson.\nEXCELLENT BUY ON STANLEY\nStreet, $1750. 2 bedrooms. Corner\nproperty. C. W. Appleyard\nTWO FINE HOMES ON NORTH\nShore, 10 minutes from ferry. C\nD. Blackwood Agencies, Ph 99.\nFOR SALE Vt AC. RANCH ANt) 4\nroom house. City light, water.\nA  Francis, 700, Seventh Street.\nFOR SALE - HOUSE 4 ROOMS\nTerms Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nMill St  Box 126 NeUon. B C\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\n'37 CHEV COUPE. RADIO. HEAT-\ner equipped. Chevrolet's famous\n\"Blue Flash\" motor. In perfect\ncondition. A guaranteed bargain\nat $695. Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd\n1938 FORD 4-DOOR TOURINGSE-\ndan, completely reconditioned. A\nperfect family car, $850. Sowerby-\nCuthbert Ltd., Opposite Post Of-\nfice and Hume Hotel.\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK\nof farm Implements Central Truck\nSt Equ pment. 702 Front St Nelson\n1935 FORD SEDAN IN GOOD\nshape. $465. Interior Motor Fnance\nCorporation. 554 Ward Street.\nMAIL ORDERS ON PARTS XT-\ntended to City Auto Wrecker\u00bb\nBaker Street\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE 1.44\nm^____mMi'*\nCANADA MAINTAINING\nTRADE WITH AUSTRALIA\nSYDNEY, N.S.W. (CP)-Canada's\ntilde with Australia 6hould be\nmaintained this yea- in view of the\nCommonwealth's policy of building\nup reserve stocks of a wide range\nof materials, says the Canadian\nTrade CommUsioner's office.\nMany of the commodities\u2014which\nrange from saw cotton and Industrial chemlcaU to Industrial diamonds and medical supplies\u2014are\navailable in Canada and the \u2022Dominion will thus be assisting the general\nEmpire war effoct in addition to\ngetting Australia's business, ac\ncording to a report to Ottawa,\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, May 12 (CP).-Week\nend receipts, cattle 442; calves 3;\nhogs 93; sheep 406. Today, cattle\n250; calves 3; hogs 300.\nGood butcher steers 7.25-8; tor\n8.25. Medium to good heifers 7-8\nGood to choice fed calves 8.50\n8.75. Good cows 625-6.75; top 7.\nCommon to medium cows 4.50-6\nGood to choice bulU 6.33-6.85.\nHog Saturday, B-l dressed 10.70-\n10.80. Sows mostly 5.25 per cwt.\nalive at yards for export.\nNIW YOIB-, May 11 (AP)-Buy-\nen gave the stock market a \"lick\nand a promise\" today with emphasis principally on the latter.\nSeveral oil, utUities and aircraft!\nheld up fairly well under a dribble of selling which came in after\na moderately ateady opening. Tramfen were around 450,000 shares.\nAn estimated expansion of 2.4\npoints at 96.2 per cent ot capacity\nin this week steel mill operations\nwei partly offset as a financUl inspiration by word from Defence\nauthorities that there was a \"distinct\npossibility\" of a second 20 per cent\ncut in 1942 model automotive output\ndue to pressing demand for armament material and plant facilities.\n: Canadian issues were mixed.\nDome was unchanged and Canadian\nPacific showed a minimum gain\nwhile DUtlllers Seagram lost Vt. In\nthe bond market Canada 4s were\n% point higher.\nWheat Prices Fall\nNearly Three Cents\nin Chicago Trading\nCHICAGO, May 12 (AP)-Wheat\npricea tumbled almost three cents a\nbushel today as a result of profit\ntaking and liquidation stimulated\nby Washington reporta on proposed\nadditional controls over commodities\nspeculation and uncertainty concerning the Government loan rate\nfor Uie new crop.\nWheat closed .ft-.\\ lower than\nSaturday May 95tt. July 93%-y4;\ncorn Vt-lVt lower, May 1\\Vs, July\n72-7H4; oaU y\u00ab-K lower.\nBralorne Climbs 25\nin Light Coast Trade\nVANCOUVER, May 12 (CP) -\nTtading continued light on Vancouver Stock Exchange today. Few\nprice changei were boarded as\ntransfers totalled 8500 shares.\nAmong the golds Bralorne at 9.75\nadvanced 23 from Saturday's closing bid and Privateer firmed a cent\nat 45 while Big Missouri was unchanged at 4.\nPricei were unchanged in the oil\nsection is Pacific Petroleum at 20\nshowed no alteration while other\noiU and base metals were inactive.\nTheatre Admissions\nin Canada Gain, 1940\nOTTAWA, May 12 (CP)-Crovyd-\nIng of a number of Canadian centres\ndue to war activities meant more\npeople going to motion pictures In\nthese areas during 1940, sending admission recelpti tor Canada up nine\nper cent in number and U per cent\nin value compared with the p-evlous\nyear, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today.\nThere were about 151.000,000 admissions recorded, while receipU,\nexclusive of provincial amusement\ntaxes, totalled almost $37,600,000.\nThere were 1226 motion picture\ntheatres in Canada, compared with\n1188 ln 1939.\nDuring 1939 there were 138,491043\nadmissions and $34,010,115 receipU.\nNew War Contracts\nAwarded in B.C.\nVICTORIA, May 12 (CP).\u2014Five\nwar supply contracU have just been\nawarded in British Columbia, E, G.\nRowebottom, Deputy MinUter of\nTrade and Industry, was advUed\ntoday.\nThey are to the following firmi:\nBritish Wire Ropes, Ltd., Van-\ncuver. $30,000; Storey Sc Campbell\nid., Vancouver, 11,000 leather belU:\n.ancouver Trunk & Bag Company,\nLtd., Vancouver, 4500 atladhe cases;\nStar Shipyards Ltd., New Westminster, two gate-closing vessels; Jant\nzen Knitting Milla, Vancouver, BJKX\nsweaters.\n1A\nWallJIreelHead\nUrges Scheme lo\nRenew Business\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP). -\nGeorge P. Bea, President of the\nNew York Curb Exchange, today\nadvanced a tentative plan to bring\nbusiness back to New York's second\nlargest securlUes market which.\nalong with the \"Big Board\", haa\nlately been suffering a decline of\ntransactions.\nTbe over-the-counter dealer mar.\nket has been taking much business\nfrom both lUted exchanges because\nof the wide ipread between buyers'\nand sellers' prices in the organized\nmarkets.\nRea'i idea contemplates, especially\nfor stoeki where pricei of buyeri\nand sellers are far apart on the trading floor, a method by which these\nwishing to offer for tale may cauie\nto be printed on the stock tape an\noffering price lesa a concession to\ndealers throughout the country.\nThus by giving to non-member\ndealers an extra profit,,Rea believes\nhe can encourage them to find buyers.\nSimilarly, dealers, seeing a stock\nthey feel cheap, could offer to buy,\nlees a concession for their efforts.\nThU, said Rea, would give them an\nincentive to find takers,\nCurh Exchange authorities think\nthe plan would channel much former dealer business back to the\ntrading floor by giving additional\nIncome both to the dealer and to\nthe exchange member.\nMontreal Prices\nFirm aldose\nMONTREAL, May 12 (CP) -\nIssues firmed up a point ln final-\nhour trading on the stock market\ntoday.\nNational Breweries continued IU\ncomeback, which began on Saturday after the stock's spell of weakness. It topped the gains during the\nsession.\nMontreal Power, which opened\nlower In utilities, recaptured the\nlost ground, but Shawinigan remained soft and sank to another new\nlow. A firm spot was Canada Steamship common, which advanced a\nfraction.\nAmong miscellaneous stocks\nboarded, Celanese preferred sagged\nthree pointa.\nCANADA-EIRE TRADE\nSHOWS COOD CAINS\nDUBLIN (CP)\u2014ImporU to Eire\nfrom Canada rose substantially in\nvalue during 1940 and the flow was\nfairly well maintained through the\nyear although there was some in\nterruptlon in direct shipping service, James Cormack, Canadian\ntrade commUsioner, reported. Ex\nporU to Canada also Increased\nsharply in value, but their total\nvalue was roughly only five per\ncent of ImporU from the Dominion.\nMONTREAL    STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS:\ns\\ssoc Brew ot Can    17\nCan Car & Fdy Hd   2U.\nCan Celanese Pfd   110\nCan Steamship _ 41A\nCan Steamship Pfd  _ 18\nCon Min Se Smelting   32\nDom Steel Se Coal B   6V.\nDominion Textile   70\nDryden   Paper    _ 4\nH Smith Paper Pfd  97\nInter  Petroleum\nInter Nickel of Can\nLake of the Woods ..\nMcColl Frontenac   ....\nNational Brew Ltd ....\nNaUonal Brew Pfd ..\nPrice  Bros   \t\nShawnigan W 8t P\t\nSouth Can Power ....\nSteel ot Can Pfd       69\nBANKS:\nCommerce       140\nDominion    \u2014   183\nImperial    _ _   193\nNova Scotia  _    270\n15 Vi\n31\n12Vi\n4\n20 Vi\n30\nSVt\n12 Vi\nIsland Crofters\nWeave Special\nCloth for Canada\nLONDON (CP)-Tweeds that look\nlike twilU are being specially woven by the, crofters of the Outer Hebrides lor the Canadian market.\nThis Is their reply to an increasing overseas demand for the famous\nBritish cloth they have been hand-\nweaving for generations, which has\nnecessitated additions to the traditional pattrens of HarrU tweed\nthat Canadian women wear so widely-\nFashioned into tweed coaU tor\ntown ahd country, many feature\nracroon, beaver or lynx collars,\nworn,with mitu. English designers\nprefer velvet and felt for collaii\nand some even have cuffs.\nCoaU and sulU reveal more and\nmore \"back\" Interest. SulU have a\n\"shooting iacket\" split at the back.\nJackeU are (tucked Into waistbands, to 40.787.722 bushels compared with\nand topcoau are drawn into back 144,040.711 a week ago and 21,637,306\nfullness, held with tabs, ln 1940.\nIAPANESE MARKET HIT\nBY U.S. WAR RUMORS\nTOKYO, May 12 (AP)\u2014Quotations on the Japanese stock market\ntook a sharp drop today as a result\nof persistent minors United States\nis about to participate ln the wax.\nShipping issues were especially hit,\nNippon Yuaen KaUha the hardest.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, May 12 (AP) .-British stock closings, in sterling:\nAustin Motor A 12s 9d, Bab-\ncock & Wilcox 40s, Courtaulds 31s\n6d, East Geduld \u00a3..%; Ldn Mldlano\n\u00a312%, Springs 21a 3d.\nBonds: Brit 2V. p c Consols \u00a378tt,\nBrit 3Vi p c War Loan \u00a3013 13-16,\nBrit Funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3113%.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal; Pound buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar buying 1.10,\nselling 1.11.\nAt New York: Pound 4.03V4; U. S.\ndollar .87%.\nIn gold: Pound 10s, Id; V. S. doi-\nlar 61.06 cents; Canadian dollar 55.06\ncenU.\nDIVIDENDS\nInternational Petroleum, 50 cenU\nper share, semi-annual coupon number 55,\nImperial Oil, Ltd., 25 centa.\nOTTAWA\u2014Th\u00ab vUlble supply of\nCanadian wheat on April 4 waa\n479 388.441 bushels compared with\n483014,004 on March 28 and 310.-\n995.432 on April 4. 1940. The itocks\n\u25a0ii elevators ln Canada on the latest\ndate totalled 438.398.719 bushels com\npared with 438.973,293 on March 28\nand 289,358,148 a year ago. Canadian\nwheat In the United Statei amounted\n150\nToronto   -....\n___.____.\n245\nCURB:\nAbitibi 6 Pfd \t\n5%\nBeauharnois Corp ..\n __,\n9%\n16%\n10\nCan Industries B ....\n,_______.\n1.71%\nCan Marconi \t\n__.___.\n.80\nCons Paper Corp ..\nWalker Good Pfd\n2%\n10%\nVANCOUVER\nSTOCKS\nMINES\nBig Missouri ,\t\nBid\nAsk\n.04\n\u2014\nBralorne  \t\n9.60\n9.78\nBridge River Con _\n\u2014\n.01\nCariboo Gold -\n\u2014\n2.50\nDentonia   \t\n.0O'\/4\n,\u2014\nFairvieW Amal ...._\n\u2014\n.01%\nGeorge Copper .\t\n.14\n\u2014\nGolconda _. __\nM\n\u00ab%\nGold Belt\t\n.23\n.11 Vt\n.12%\n.01%\nGrandview  \t\nGrull-Wihkine ___\n,01%\nHedley Mascot ____\n.48\nta\nHome Gold\t\n.00%\n.00%\nIndian Mines  _\n.00%\nInter. C & C _\nM\n\u2014\nIsland r:ountain __\nm\n.90\nKootenay Belle\t\n.20\n2ft\n.01%\nJMV4\nPend OreUle\t\n1.35\n\u2014\nPioneer Gold\t\n1.115\n2.10\nPorter Idaho\t\n\u2014\n.01\nPremier Border\t\n.02%\n.02%\nPremier Gold\t\n.90\n\t\nRed Hawk Gold __\n.01\n.02\nReeves-Mac \t\n.10\n\u2014\nSheep Creek ....__.\nSilbak Premier\t\n.72\n\u2014\n.75\n\u2014\nWellington\t\n.00%\n\u2014\nWesko Mines\t\n\u2014\njOM\n.00%\nYmir Yankee Girl\n.04%\n\u2014\nOILS\nAmalgamated  \t\nO0%\n.00%\n.04%\n\u2014\nAnglo Canadian ....\n.50\n.57\nBritish Dominion .\n.05\n\u2014\nCal 4 Ed\t\n1.10\n\u2014\nCommoil  _\n.18\naa\nCommonwealth\t\n.20\n\u2014\n.20\n\u2014\nExtension .\n.12%\n\u2014\nFirestone Pete\t\n.04%\nHighwood Sarcee _\n.08\n1.01\n1.7S\n.01%\nMadison \t\n.00%\n.01\nMcDnugall-Seg\t\nMill City Pete __\n.04\n\u2014\n.04%\n\u2014\nModel  \u201e._\n.12\n*t*\nMonarch Royal\t\n\u2014\n.03%\nRoyal Can  \t\n.07\n\t\nOkalta oom\t\n.03%\n\u2014\nUnited   _\n.03\n\u2014\n.03%\n\t\nVulcan   .,\t\n\u2014\n.40\nINDUSTRIALS\nCaoital Estates \t\n\u2014\n1.20\n1.28\n130\nPacific Coyle\t\nXS\n\u2014\nMETAL MARKETS\nMONTREAL, May 12 (CP)\ncopper, electrolyUc 12.75; tin 6062%;\nleu 5.50; zlne 5.56; anUmony 15.25\nper 100 poundi f.o.b. Montreal, five-\nton IoU.\nMONTREAL\u2014Bar (Old In London\nwu unchanged at $37.54 an ounce\nln Canadian fundi,' 168s ln BritUh\nrepresenting Um Bank ol England's\nbuying pc-lci. The fixed $85 Wuhington price amounted to $38.50 ln\nCanadian.\nNEW YORK \u2014 Copper steady;\nelectrolytic spot, Conn. VaUey 12.00\nTin iteady; ipot and nearby 5228:\nforward 52.00.\nLead iteidy; ipot, Naw York\n5.85-90.\nZinc iteady; Eut St Louli spot\nand forward 7.25.\nLONDON, May 12 (AP)-Bar illver 23%d, unchanged. (Equivalent\n42.62 centi.)\nB.C. Has Record\nMineral Output\nVICTORIA May 12 (CP).-Re\nvUed figures on the Mlnu Department place 1940 mineral production ln British Columbia at $75,-\n352,730, an all-time record, Hon. W\nJ. Asselstine, Minister of Mines,\nannounced today. The Department's annual report wiU be Usued\nshortly.\nThe total was nearly $10,000,000\ngreater than 1939 production, and\nmore than $1,000,000 higher than\nthe previous record of 1937.\nThe gold output accounted for\nnearly one-third of the total lode\ngold production wu 573,368 ounces\nworth $22,113,091. Placer gold, totalling 39,067 ounces, wu worth\n$1,236,928.\nIt was dUdosed that for the first\ntime British Columbia entered the\nfield as a substantial producer of\nmercury, a vital war mineral, with\nthe opening up of Pinchi Lake Cinnabar deposlU.\nCattle Cars Stop\nOver ot Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. May 18 (OP)\n-More than 200 freight can of cit-\nUe and hogs hava made stop-overs\nhere within the past two months\nfor feeding and watering on their\nway from the Prairie Provinces to\nSpokane, Portland, San Francisco\nand Lqs Angeles.\nMost of the cattle are Hereford!,\nthe majority destined for beef. A\nSercentage, though, are going to Uie\nhited Sstatea cout for breeding\npurposes.\nNo Grain Trading\nWINNIPEG, May 'l (CP)-Ths\nWinnipeg Grain Exchangi waa\nclosed today for the Ardor Diy\nholiday. Sessions will resume tomorrow.\n\"\" ,l'v\u00a9\u00a3l\nQuiet Industrial,\nMining idvance In\nToronto Trading\nTORONTO, Miy 12 (CP)-Mlnlng\nind industrial itocki hid another\nquiet idvinee todiy on the Toronto\nexchange while trading In comparatively light volume, wutern olla\nclosed narrowly lower.\nBell Telephone and Consumer!\nGu firmed a point or more, Walkers pfd and DUtillers-Seagrams\nadded %.\nWMght-Hargreavei weakened te\n$5, a new low for the year but recovered. The close wu up for Hoi-\nlinger, Macassa, MacLeod-Cockshutt,\nTeck Hughes, Pickle Crow, McKenzie and Siscoe, Sm Antonio, Eut\nMalartlc and Sigma were down a to\n4 cenU.\nSm'all gains came out for Noranda\nand Smelters and Ventures.\nHome Oil, Anglo-Canadian end\nDavies were mildly soft spoU in the\nWestern oil Ult\nNEW   YORK   STOCKS\nOpen Close\nAmer Can \u201e 79 81\nAm Smelt Se Ref  38% 39\nAmer Tel   150 150%\nAmer Tob _ 66 66%\nAnaconda    28% 26\nBaldwin    _.... 14 14%\nBait Sc Ohio _     4 4%\nBendix Avi   34% 35\nBeth  Steel    71% 72\nCan Pac       3% 8%\nCerro de Pasco  29% 29%\nChrysler    58 58%\nCon Gu N Y  _ 18% 18%\nC Wright Pfd       8% 8%\nDupont    140 140%\nEut Kod  _. 124% 125%\nGen Elec  28% 29\nGen Foods  \u201e 86% 86%\nGen Mot   89% 39%\nGrt Nor Pfd  _ 26% 26%\nHowe Sound    \u2014 29% 31\nInternational Nickel ..25 28%\nKenn Cop  _ 24% 34%\nMont Ward   32 32%\nNuh Mot  \u201e_     3% 4\nNew York Central . 13% 18%\nPack Mot       2% 2%\nPenn R R  24% 24%\nPullman      25 25%\nRadio Corp        3% 3%\nSafeway  Stores     37% 38%\nStan Oil of N ]  36% 36%\nStudebaker      4% 8\nTex   Corp    _ 39 39%\nTex Gulf Sul   89% 89%\nUn Carbide   06% \u00ab6-X\nUn Oil of Cal   14% UM\nUnited Air    39% 39>S\nUn Pae   81% 82VI\nU S Rubber _- _ 22% 22<Y\nU S Steel    54% 54V-\nWest Elec  ___ 86% PV(\nWest Union  21% MH\nWoolworth ._  27% 27%\nYei Truck ._   18% 13%\n30 industrial\n20 raiU\t\n15 utlUUei \t\nDOW JONES AVERACES\nHigh   Low Close Change\n _..__    117.45   117.14 117.14 off    .40\n      28.15    28.88 28.88 off     .43\n     17.48    17.4* 17.49 up    .05\nTORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nMINES:\nAldermac Copper\t\nAnglo Huronlan\t\nArntfleld Gold  ___\nAunor Gold  \t\nBagamac Rouyn  \t\nBankfield Gold   \t\nBase MetaU Mining\t\nBeattie Gold Mines ._ _\nBidgood Kirkland \t\nBig  Missouri    \t\nBob)o Mines _ \t\nBralorne Mines  _\nBuffalo  Ankerite   \t\nBunker HiU Extension\t\nCanadian  Malartlc   .\u2014_\nCastle Trethewey\t\nCentral Patricia  \t\nChromium M St S \t\nCoast Copper  \u2014\nConiaurum Mines _-\u2014\nConsoUdated M Se S\t\nDome Mines\nDorval Siscoe  *r\nEast Malartlc   \u2014\nEldorado   Gold    \t\nFalconbridge Nickel \t\nFederal Kirkland \t\nFrancoeur  Gold   \t\nGillies Lake   \u2014\nGod's Lake Gold \t\nGold Belt  \t\nGrandoro Mlnu\t\nGunnar Gold  \t\nHard Rock Gold\t\nHarker Gold \t\nHollinger \t\nHowey Gold  -\u2014\nHudson Bay M 8t 3   \t\nInternational  Nickel   \t\nJack Waite \t\nJacola Gold  ______\nKerr AddUon _ \t\nKirkland Lake \t\nLake Shore Mlnei\t\nLeitch  Gold     \u2014\nLabel Oro Mlnu\t\nLitUe Long Lac  _.:.\t\nMacassa Minu  _____\nMacLeod Cockshutt\t\nMadsen Red Lake Gold \u2014\nMandy   \u2022\u2022 \u2014\nMclntyre Porcupine  _\t\nMcKenile Red Lake\t\nMcVlttle. Graham \t\nMining Corporation\t\nMoneta Porcupine  -._.\t\nMorrU Kirkland\t\nNipissing Mining\t\nNoranda  \t\nNormetal  _.-_--.\u2014\nO'Brien   Gold    \t\nOmega Gold\nPamour Porcupine \u2014\nPaymaster Cons \u2014__.-\nPend   Oreille    \t\nPerron Gold  \t\nPickle Crow Gold\t\nPioneer Gold   \u2014\nPremier Gold  \u2014\nPowell Rouyn Gold\t\nPreston East Dome .\nReeves MacDonald ..._.\nReno Gold Mlnu \u2014\nRoche Long Lac ...:\u2014\nSan Antonio Gold \u2014\nShawkey Gold  \u2014\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSiscoe Oold   ... \t\nSladen Malartlc\t\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury  Buin\nSullivan Consolidated \u2014\nSylvanite  \t\nTeck Hughu Oold\t\nToburn Oold Mlnu\t\nTowagmac    \t\nVentura    ______\nWaite Amulet\t\nWright Hargreavu\t\nYmir Yankee Girl\t\nOILI:\nAjax    \t\nBritish American      16.75\n.00%\n2.00\nM\n1.75\n.08%\nMV,\n.07%\n1.09\n.03%\nj04\n.07%\n0.75\n3.50\n.01%\nj51\n\"   .51\n1.65\n.35\n1.05\n1.20\n81.75\n21.60\n.01%\n\u2022m\n.33\n2.30\n.03%\n.38\nj03%\n.25\n.20\n.04\n.25\n.72\n.03\n12.75\n21%\n24.00\n81.00\n.13\n.01%\n3.80\n.79\n18.75\n.48\n.01%\n1.81\n3.85\n1.58\n.57\n.05\n47,50\n1.09\nM\n.71\n.41\n.02\n1.10\n80.25\n36\nXS\n.13\n1.05\n.18\n1.41\n1.30\n2_\n1.96\n.91\n.60\n2.90\n.10\n.09\n.03\n2.10\n.01%\n.70\n.68\nJ58\n.16%\nm\n1.13\n.51\n2.46\n2.95\n1.49\n.12\n3.20\n825\n5.05\n.04\n.10\nINDU8TRIAL81\nAbitibi Power ...\nBell Telephone ..\t\nBrazilian T L  &P _\nBrewers Se Dlstiltei\t\nBrewing CorporiUon \t\nB C Power A _\u201e,\nB C Power B   _._\nBuilding Producta\t\nCanada Breed  \t\nCan Bud Milting  _\nCan Car Sc Foundry\t\nCan Cement  _\nCan Malting  \t\nCan Pac Railway   ,\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nConi  Bakeriu\t\nCosmoi  \t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDom Tar 8c Cfiem _ _\nDisUUers  Seagrams _____\nFanny Farmer  \u201e.._\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Warei\t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypium L Se A\t\nHisnUton Bridge\t\nHiram Walker\t\nImperial Tobacco .\nLoblaw  A  ._  \u201e\nLoblaw  B  \t\nKelvinator   _\nMaple Leaf MlUlng ._._\nMassey  Harrii\t\nMoore Corp  \t\nNat Steel Car  .\nPage Hersey\t\nPower Corp    __\nPressed Metali  _.\nSteel of Cm  \t\nStandard  Paving   _.\n\u00bb\u00bb.|.|.\u00bb\u00bbi, i et a 11 e\u00bbe 11 \u00ab\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\nGranville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL AsSSAYHU\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONI 111\n189 Bakir St.    Nelion, I. C\n\/eeeeet. i eee 11 eee 11 ee 11 ee\nBeautify Your\nDOOR HARDWARE\nWith Ollstenlni Chrome PJite\nLC M. Electroplating\nLiurltx Bldg. Nelson, B.C.\nChemical  Research\nImperial\nInter Petroleum .\nTexu  Canadian\n.15\n9.50,\n15.50*\n1.05\nLetters From\nGreat Britain\nReaden ot thi Nelson Dally\nNews are Invited to send la\nletteri they receive trom the\nwar unu so that other\nreaden can share this news.\nLetten will be copied and\ncarefully returned Only newa\nof general Interest wlU be\npublUhed Othar Items ta the\nletteri will, of course bi kept\nconfidential Please land or\nbring iuch litters tot\nWAR ZONE EDITOR.\nSMamt\n1\n 'ABITWIlVI-s\nCIVIC\nLatt Timet Tonight\nComplete Showi 7100-8:40\n\"We're Toons.\nWe're Marrie\nCLAUDE RAINS\nPLUS-\"MONIY AND\nTHE WOMAN\"\nwith\nJeffrey Lynn-Brenda Marshal\nTRY\nGrenSell's\nMushroom Sandwich\nWith Coffee 25c\n-DUCO-\nDRESS UP THE OLD CAR\nMake It look like new.\nRamp Body & Fender Workt\nPhone 198 A. Farenholtz.\nBARGAINS\nIn Used BABY PRAMS and\nCOOK STOVES\nHome Furniture Exchange\n418 Hall St Phone 1032\nHave the Job Done Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\nFAMILY WASH\n7c PER LB.\nWe call and Deliver\nPhone 1042\nCIVIC\nStarti Tomorrow at 2:00\n\u00a3\/*^ the world\nwill laugh again!\nUta\/Ltze<\nin hiy in ic >\"iiu r\/i\nTin* (irt'al\nliHTATOK\nABIE1S_\nVITAMIN*\npu,nt\"roWTH.\n100 TABIE1S\n(MAKES 200 GALLONS S01UIII\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Company\nPHONE II\nNELSON. B. a\nC.Y.O. Increases\nSoftball Lead by\nSwamping Trinity\nIt aaami there'i Juit no stopping tha C.Y.O. team.\nCarrying the Catholic banner \u2022\u25a0\ndefending championi Into thli\nyear'i Nelion Boyi' Church Soft-\nbill Leigue icehdule, they hive\nnow met every one of their op-\n, pcnenti, ind have three vlctorlei\nIn \u25a0\u2022 many itarti to ihow for their\nefforti.\nTheir most recent conquest wm\nover Trinity Monday evening at the\nJunior High, and they again showed\ngreat superiority by marching to a\n31-3 victory. Paced by George\nFrocklaze's nifty elbowing, which\nnetted him 12 strikeouts In the\nseven frames while allowing seven\nhits, including Bob Collinson's home\nrun, the Catholics were ahead 19-<l\nbefore Trinity got its first runs In\nthe sixth.\nFrank Oliver, Trinity chucker,\nwai blasted tor 17 hits, and recorded but one strikeout. Included in\nthe Catholic barrage was a home\nrun by Louis Gagnon, leadoff man,\nwho icored four runs altogether.\nScore by Innings:\nC.Y.O    533   1\u00ab   2\u201421 17   2\nTrinity     000   002   1\u2014377\nLineups follow:\nC.Y.O.\u2014Louis Gagnon 2b. Frank\nKohar 3b. BOb Hunden lb. Mickey\nPrestley c, Johnny Arnott cf, George\nFrocklage p, Jimmy Eccles ss.\nShorty DeGuglielmo If, Gordon Ball\nrf and David Lunn.\nTrinity \u2014 Bob Collinson e, Gordon Stirzaker ss, Martin McLennan\nIf. Bob Andrew lb, Rev. Edward\nDoyle 2b, Bob Nnakes 3b, Jim Har-\nbinjon rf, Frank Oliver p and Frank\nKennedy cf.\nSenior Ball Lineup\nto Be Chosen Soon\nThe Nelson lineup for the forthcoming West Kootenay Baseball\nLeague opener will be chosen at\ntonight's and Thursday's workouts\nof the Nelson Senior Baseball Club.\nCoach \"Lefty\" Mydansky said Monday.\n-niLSOn  BftlkT m\u00abW\u00bb   |-\u00bb_\u00bbvs-    s>.\nEight Marriages Are Dissolved on\nthe Opening Day of Spring Assizes\nat Nelson; Three Are Conditional\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nMed. Arte Blk.\n*wwow9wtnewww99wwwwww*tw9trt\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Widdowson\n301*306 Joseph ina St.   Nelton. B. C\n1936 FORD COUPE\nSmall mileage. One owner.\nLooks and runs like new.\nQueen City Motors\n661 Joiephlne St     Limited     Ph. 43\naa_o_a.ia_!X!xnnjxniTa~\nCrem-0\nFor Cereal and Fruit\na\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedicil Arts Building\nLET A   WANT-AD  SERVE  VOU\nFILL UP with\nBed Indian Gas\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n205 Bcitcr St    SERVICE   Phone 122\nWATER-COLOUR TINTS FOR RESTFUL LIGHTING\nPROTECT CHILDREN'S EYES\nAiujcjcAt* Mlabottlne M'\nThere's oo glare in Alabastinc-\ntinted walls tod ceilings. Those\nlovely water-colour riots\nare restful to the eyes s; i\npleasing . : i artistic i \u25a0 I\neconomical^\nV-_;\n.HE NATIONAL WALL COATING\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nGovernment Marriage\nCertificate Needed\nby These Three\nEight marriages were dissolved\nby divorce decrees granted by Mr.\nJustice Robertion on the opening\nday of the Spring Assizes at Nelson\nMonday. Four more petitions to be\nheard today will complete the Assize calendar.\nIn three instances Hli Lordship\nmade the issuing ot final decrees\nsubject to the filing, of approved\nGovernmental certificate! of marriage. In these three Instances minister's certificate! were lubmitted\nas proof of marriage, and Hii Lordship ruled In each cue that approved certificates satisfying the requirement! of the Evidence Act\nmust be filed. The minister'! certificates were not sufficient, he said.\nEdwapd Lawrence Welsh, Ron-\nland, obtained a decree dissolving\nhis man-lage to Delilah Mae Welsh,\nwith costi against the co-respondent,\nAllan L. Jackson of Vancouver. The\npetitioner was awarded cuatody of\nhis two children. R. W. Young of\nFruitvale appeared as a witneis.\nMr. Justice Robertson's Judgment\nin the petition of Harry Briggs Paterson of FL-uitvale was similar to\nthat given ln the preceding case,\nthough it was subject to the filing of\na certificate of marriage. He granted\na decree dissolving Peterson's marriage to Mary Elizabeth Paterson,\nnow of Fernie, and granted the\npetitioner custody of their two children, with costs against the corespondent, Gardner Clark Thomson of Vancouver. Witnesses were\nMrs. Marguerite Wick of Fruitvale;\nProvincial Police Constable R. B.\nMcKay of Trail; and Acting Chief of\nPolice EVed H. Steele of Trail.\nDiisolution of the marriage of\nMona Neville Meagher of Nelson\nand John Francis Meagher of Vancouver was decreed, Mrs, Meagher\nbeing granted custody of their two\nchildren, with costs against the respondent. Henry Hall of Trail waa\na witness.\nFUTURE  ACCESS TO\nCHILDREN\nProvision for Mary Ann Weaver\nMcTague of Victoria to apply for\naccess to her seven children in the\nfuture should she desire it, was\nmade by His Lordship lh granting\na provisional decree to Joseph John\nHarry McTague of Annable, near\nTrail. The husband was granted the\ncustody of the children. The decree, which was granted with costs\nagainst Theodore Bartlett Lean of\nVictoria, co-respondent, was subject to the filing of a satisfactory\ncertificate of marriage. Sheriff\nHamer was a witness.\nWilhemina Cant of Golden, who\nat one stage in her testimony broke\nInto tears, was granted a divorce\nfrom William Cant, formerly of\nTrail and now serving in the Royal\nCanadian Artillery, with costj\nagainst Cant and with custodv of\ntheir only child. Mrs. Diana Minchuk of Fernie was named intervener Witnesses were Mrs. Kitchener Bannatyne of Trail. Acting\nChief of Police Stee'e of Trail and\nSheriff Harper of Nelson.\nHarold Stanley Taylor of Rossland was granted a decree di'solv-\ning his marriage to Alice Emily\nTaylor, North Vancouver, with costs\nagainst the co-resoondent, Frederick\nFarrar of North Vancouver. George\nH. Roberts  was a  witness.\nIn dissolving the marriage of\nFdythe Leask of Kimberley and\nRoy Leask of Trail, His Lordsh;p\nmade no order concerning their 18-\nvear-old daughter, now married,\nbut placed their 13-vear-old daughter In the custody of her mother, the\npetitioner. Costs were awarded\nagainst the respondent. Mrs. Leask\nnamed Margaret Cunningham of\nTrail as intervener.\nFIVE WITNES8ES\nFive witnesses testified in the petition of Alexandria Chapman\nMaida of Trail for a decree d;s-\nsolving her marraee to Albert John\nMaida. also of Trail. The petition\nwas granted subject to filing of a\nsatisfactory marrigae certificate,\nwith Mrs. Maida receiving custody\nof her child and with costs against\nMaida. The witnesses were Robert\nD. Flnlayson, of Nelson, hotel clerk;\nMrs. Maida; Mr. and Mrs. T^om^s\nB. Couch, parents of Mrs. Maida;\nand JoseDh S. W. Hardy. All except\nMr. Finlavson were of Trail.\nC. H. Clegg of Rossland represented Idward L. Welsh and Harold\nS. Taylor, both of Rossland. Parker\nWilliams of Trail acted for Harry\nB. Paterson of Fruitvale. Edvthe\nLeask of Kimberley and Jo*\u00bboh J.\nH. McTairue of Annable. DonMd\nMacDonald of Trail was counsel for\nAlexandrina Chapman Maida. A. G.\nCameron of Trail represented Mona\nNeville Meagher of Nelson and Wilhemina  Cant of Golden.\nMOYIE\nMOYIE. B. C.-Mrs. Mary Conrad\nhad as weekend guests her granddaughters, Gertrude and Bernice\nCurrans of Chapman Camp. Mr. and\nMrs. Ray Currans and daughters\nmotored to Movie to visit Mrs. Conrad, mother of Mri. Currans.\nMark Nicholson and Mrs. Hurry\no f Crantrook visited Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Johnson.\nMrs. A. Hurry of Cranbrook wai\na guest of Mrs. A. Guindon, returning accompanied by Mr. and Mri.\nSpence and Mrs. Harvey all of\nO-anbrook.\nMn. M. Nicholson ipent \u25a0 few\ndays in Calgary with her lon-In-\nlaw. and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nMcPhee. She also visited her niece\nand nephew, Adjutant and Mri.\nFisher of the Salvation Army.\nMr. and Mrs. Bridges of Oan-\nbrook visited Mrs. A. Guindon.\nMrs. D. Raurk of Chelan Falls,\nWash., spent a week with her mother.\nThe Trail Ranger Group had sun-\npa- at the manse Memberi oresent\nwere Gordon and Harold McFarlane\nHenry and Denli Simmoni. Ronie\nWilli. Frank Sanden. Billy Solecki.\nmd Paddv Stillar.\nMr. and Mri. Hennlng Anderion\nand Mrs. EHckson and son Emil of\nCrinbrook motored to the Sunny-\nilde Ranch to visit Mr. and Mri.\nAlaot Johnson.\nMr. and Mrs. Donn of Crinbrook\nvisited Mr. and M*s. M. Nicholson.\nMr. and Mrs. Hlnton of Cranbrook were guests of Mrs. A. Guindon.\nMexico hai Invited the 21 American governments to lend delegatei\nto a highway and travel conference\nin Mexico City in September.\nFour  More   Petitions\nWill Be Heard in\nCourt Today\nTour petitions for divorce decreet\nare to be heard today by Mrs Juitlce Robertion ai thi Spring Assizes at Nelson continue Into tbeir\nlecond day. Twelve divorce cues\ncompriied the entire Assize calendar. >\nCourt will open at 10 i.m. Petitions to be heard are those of Lyle\nRalph Harding, Trail, for divorce\ntrom Elsie Harding, Trail; Mary\nMargaret Detta, Trail, for divorce\nfrom Herman Carl Detta, Needles;\nDorothy Evelyn Arlt, Trail, for divorce from Elmer Carl Arlt, Ron-\nland; and FrSnk O'Genski, Apex,\ntor divorce from Dorii Loulie\nO'Genski, Vancouver,\nHeavy Showers Spoil\nHousewives' Washday\nHeavy ihower? turned Monday\ninto a poor waihday for Nelion\nhousewivei. Falling'In brief, heavy\nshowers throughout the day, the\nrain by 5:00 p.m. .measured .36 inch\nA stiff breeze sprang up in the late\nafternoon and cleared the sky\nsomewhat.\nTemperature extremes were 53\nand 73 degrees.\nEmeralds are among the oldest\nof gems.\nRotary PlansSale\nSavings*Stamps for\nPeriodical Drawings\nH. M. Whlmster and Arthur GUker were named te a committee,\nwith power to add, to arrange plans\ntor the Nelion Rotary Club to hold\na monthly or fortnightly drawing\nof War Savings Stamps, when the\nClub hid its luncheon meeting on\nMonday,\nThe plan, propoied by Mr. Whimiter, li limilar to one in effect at\nVancouver and Creston. War Savings Stampi would be iold outiide\nthe Club, and there would be no\nprofit for the Club tn the drawing.\nWUliam Day of Vancouver wai a\nluncheon gueat\n15 Men on Team\nCommittee for\nLoan Campaign\nFifteen men \u2014 13 of Nelion, one\nof South Slocan md one of Bonnington \u2014 have been named the\nTeams Committee for the Victory\nLoan campaign tn Nelson dlitrict.\nThe committee consists of Robert\nFoxall, Chairman; C. Bland, South\nSlocan; John P. Cavill, Bonnington; B. C. Poulsen, V. C. Owen,\nA. B. Gilker, Ellas Fisher. Reeve\nHarper, H. H. Logan, John Towler,\nA. C. Emory, A. 5. Homersham, P.\nC. Richards, James Fraier and\nGordon Williams, Nelson.\n._-\nBrazil has increased lti comumption tax on cigarets made in Brazil\nwhile permitting taxes on foreign\ncigarets to remain the lame.\nThree Koolenay Road Reconstruction\nJobs Are on Heavy Traffic Sections\nMarket} Improvement in1 three\nheavily-travelled sections of Kootenay roads will result from the reconstruction projects for whick\ntenders are now being caUed by\nthe Department of Public Works.\nTenders must be in Victoria by noon\nMonday.\nA mile of reconstruction planned\non the Nelson-Salmo roaa Is In\nthe vicinity of Hall Creek and will\nconnect two pieces of permanent\nconstruction \u2014 Uie lections of road\nbuilt by Bennett St &White in one\ncontract, and by General Construction in another.\nOn the Trail-Salmo Road 1.8 miles\nof reconstruction is projected. This\nis a section of road about three\nmiles Southwest of Fruitvale, and\nil described roughly as \"from the\ntop of Uie hill toward Fruitvale\".\nThis project will permanently improve a section of road heavily\nused every day by employee! of the\nConsolidated Mining Se Smelting\nCompany commuting between\nFruitvale and the Tadanac ahd\nWarfield plants.\nThe Nelson-Kaslo Road project Is\nin the Cedar Creek section immediately North of Ainsworth, It is eight-\ntenths of a mile in the vicinity of\nthe Highland and Kootenay Florence mills. Motorists wno use this\nroad wUl recognise lt best as the\nsection of road high above Kootenay Lake where the road passes\nunder the ore chute of the Kootenay Florence mill.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS KAY LOWDON\nTRAIL, B.C., May 12-J. D. South-\nworth of Trail and Dan MacNaughton of Nelson,' left Friday for Tacoma. They expect to be back the\nlatter part of the week.\nW. H. Whimster left Monday\nmorning for his home at PenUcton,\nfor six weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Nelson, 1141\nBurmby Street, Vancouver, announce Uie engagement of their\ndaughter, Doris Eileen, to Gordon\nFlennell LeFlufy, of Trail, elder ion\nof M.\"s. Violet LeFlufy, of Vancouver and the late Edsard M. LeFlufy.\nThe marriage will take place at\nHoly Trinity Church, Vancouver,\nMay 24, Rev. N. D. B. Larmonth officiating.\nThe Trail-Tadanac teaching staff\nheld a social evening at the Crown\nPoint Hotel, Friday evening, featuring a Klondyke Night. Games, contests and music were enjoyed, and\nrefreshments were served at the\nclose.\nMiss Dorothy Mead visited Mr.\nand Mrs. B. Trussler at CasUegar\nover the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Ralph Crawford left\nSunday to visit Medicine Hat for\na month.\nMr. and Uri. H. P. Ellii of Red\nDeer, Alta., visited Trail at the\nweekend.\nMiss Edith Johnson ipent the\nweekend with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Axel Johnion at ChrisUna\nLake.\nMr. and Mn. Ronald W. Klinck,\nCommerce Apartments, have ai\ntheir guest Mrs. Klinck'i mothar,\nMrs. F. H. MacPherson, of Vancouver.\nMrs. M. M. O'Brien returned Sunday night from a weekend visit to\nher niece, Miss Audrey Driver, stu-,\ndent of Washington State College af\nPullman. She was accompanied by\nM.-S. Harry Delespee, who had visited her daughter, Misi Denis Delespee, also a student at the college.\n\u2022 D. Sorrentino is a business visitor\nto Kamloopi.\nMi.;s Edna Bush and Miss Diana\nDeHart visited Nelson during the\nweekend.\nMrs. Cecil Mulrhead Is visiting\nMr and Mrs. D. Ferguson, at Longbeach.\nMiss Rose Williams is being taken\non the staff ot the Trail Post Office.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Reid are now residing at CasUegar.\nJ. M. Spowart, A. B. Clark, William Lauener, Ernest Cook, L.\nCampbell, and L. Reid spent Sunday\nfishing at Kootenay Lake pointi.\nMr. and H,-i. W. H. Badgley have\ntheir daughter, Elizabeth Badgley,\nnurse in training at Vancouver General Hospital, visiting them this\nmonth.\nMrs. J. C. Martin, of Kelowna and\nMrs. A. Sl'evenson of Vancouver,\nvisited Trail at the weekend.\nMiu Constance Cain visited Nelson at the weekend.\nS. W. Drury was a Nelson visitor\nduring the weekend.\nThe Senior W. A. of St. Andrew's\nChurch entertained at a delightful\ntea and sale of work in the Parish\nHall Saturday afternoon. The hall\nwas decorated with lovely Spring\nflowers, and M's. L. A. C. Smith and\nMrs. Thomas Jenkin welcomed the\nguests. The serving table, covered\nwith a lace cloth, was centred by a\nsliver basket of Spring blooms. Officiating at the urns were Mrs. A.\nH. W. Busby, Mrs. W. H. Cuff, Mrs.\nC. T. Conry, and Mrs. G. R. Thompson Miss Florence Bird, Miss Audrey\nDoubleday, and Mrs. Findlay Moore\nserved. Conveners were Mri. F. J.\nGlover and Mrs. Ralph Spence. Mrs.\nW. H. Saunders and Mrs. John Hewlett were in charge of the fancy\nwork booth, and Mis. John Gibson\nand Mrs. M. Waganthall supervised\nthe home baking stall. Miss Selma\nReimann and Mrs. M. Bird catered,\nand Mrs. H. C. H. Broadwood was\ncashier.\nMrs. William Arnold was hostess\nat a tea Sunday afternoon, honoring\nMiss Pauline Crowe, whose marriage\ntakes place May 14. Miss Crowe was\npresented with a fernery and fern,\nand also a bride's book, composed\nby the gueits during the afternoon.\nOther guests were Mrs. J. L. Crowe,\nMrs. J. ,S. Page, Mrs, C. Tyson, Mrs.\nW. Taylor. Mrs. WUliam Forrest,\nRuelle, Miss Flora McLeod, Miss\nLena LePage, Miss Helen Talbott,\nMiss Isobel Crowe, and Miss Eileen\nCrowe.\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666.\nROSSLAND, B. C, May U\u2014The\nRed Shield Auxiliary held Its weekly meeting In the officers' quarters\nof the Salvation Army Hall Friday\nevening. Refreshments were servea\nfollowing the usual business period\nduring which knitting was carried\non. Present were Mrs. George Nixon,\nMrs. S. Mason, Mm. David Funk.\nMr!. G. Donelly, Mrs. William\nThompson, Mrs. A. Stevenson, Mrs.\nHarold Evans and Capt. Chlffence\nand Lieut Bowering of the Army\nstaff, as well as Irene Stevenson.\nRita Christianson, Catherine Evans\nand Pearl and Bonnie Donelly.\nA successful tea and bake sale\nwas held in the office of Cunningham Agencies Saturday afternoon,\nby the L. O. B. A., and thi committee ln charge Included Mrs. Jessie Rutherford, Mn. R. H. Mason.\nMrs. John Phillips, Mn. G. Jorgensen. Mn. J. Cameron and Mn\nR. Richardson.\nFrank Blackwell. staUoned at Halifax, with the R.C.A.F., Is expected\nhome on leave this weekend and\nwill visit hli parents, Mr. and Mn\nW, Blackwell.\nAmong the Rosslanden attending the Extension Club dance In\nTral on Friday evening were Mr\nand Mn. Albert L'Eciuse. Mr. and\nMrs. L. V. McLeod, Misses Ruth\nNorthcott, Cleo Nyman, Violi\nSmith, Jean Buick, lou Bickel],\nFreda Clare, Ruth Clare, Olive Mills,\nVirginia Johnson, Josephine Hutchison, Joan Harriion, Jean McDonell, Delphdne Vetere, Gladys\nErickson, Margaret Monoghan and\nIrene Besso ana Rene Clelland, Fred\nGraham, Irvin Conroy, Pat RUey,\nBob Smith, Albert Nichols, Henry\nFourtt, Ted Moorcroft, Cliff Clelland, Henry Miller, Harold Lins and\nNick Holoboff.\nMn. Paulson of Portland, Ore., Is\nthe guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Lipsett.\nMr. and Mn. George Brown are\nleaving at the end of Uie week\nfor a holiday at Vancouver.\nMn. Leonard Lins has returned\nto Rossland after visiting her cousin. Mn. C. Horey of Nakusp.\nMrs Robion, who has Been visiting her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mn. C. Robion, is leaving\nthis week for her home In Vancouver.\nMiss Irene Brooks is recovering\nat Mater Misericordiae Hospital\nfollowing an appendicitis operation\nMr. and Mrs Max Caldwell, the\nlatter formerly Miss Lorraine Hold-\nren, who were married here last\nmonth, have left for Cranbrook.\nwhere they will reside.\nRobert McAllister returned Saturday evening from the Univenity\nof B. C. ina wUl spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mn.\nR. L. McAllister.\nI\nWarfield Wins in\nTen Frames Over\nLifes in Softball\nTRAIL, B. C, May 12\u2014The War-\nfield Aces edged out a 12-10 victory\nover the Saskatchewan Life Sunday afternoon in a Trail Men's Softball League game at Victoria Park\nin 10 innings.\nThe game was a hard-fought one,\nboth teams trading leads right\nthrough the 10 Innlngi. Russ Graham, lor the Aces, struck out three,\nwalked two, and gave 12 hits. Steve\nJankola, for the Sasks fanned tour,\nallowed 11 hits and walked five.\nJoe Benoit hit e homer for Uie\nAces, and Smith and Scheppert\nmade circuit clouts for tbe Sasks,\nDuke SeodeUaro hit a three-bagger\nand Frank Petrosky equalled Scod\nellaro's hit for the Liters.\nGraham, Benoit, Jarrett, Hoffos,\nAces; Stanton and Smith, Sask, collected a double each.\nScore by Innings:\nWarfield        300 003 211 2-12 11 2\nSask. Life     032 110 120 0-10 12 2\nUmpires-Al Hall and Wlih Mill-\nburn.\nLegion Auxiliary of\nKaslo Gains $36 From\nSale; Gifts Go to Men\nKASLO, B. C\u2014 The President,\nMrs. A. Carney, presided at the\nmeeting of the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Canadian Legion with IS\nmemben present. The Secretary\nTreasurer showed that $36 had been\ncleared from a recent bake sale and\nthat finances, generally, were in a\nsatisfactory condition.\nThe sum of (29 is to be used foe\nthe purchase of wool and $10 for\nsmokes for Kaslo men now overseas. Parcels have been sent these\nmen, containing cigarets, candy, and\nknitted comforts. More are to be\nforwarded to men who have only\nrecently gone overseas^ All Kailo\nmen have been presented with fine\npencils by the Auxiliary.\nThe ladles are asking for further\ndonations of suitable reading matter. A letter was read commending\nthem for their splendid efforts In\nsecuring literature.\nU.S. SCHOOL TEACHER\n\"ANTIQUES\"  DOLLS\nSTAUNTON, Va. (AP)-A lot of\nlittle girls will wish they w\u00ab.-e\nMiss Helen Sebold Walter. Dolls\nare her business. What used to be\nher hobby has become a fulltime\nJob for this retired school teacher.\nTen yean ago Misi Walter started repairing, refinlshlng and trading period dolls. The only period\ndolls known then were treasured\nantiques or family heirloomi. So\nMiss Walter made reproductions of\nthe dolls\u2014even to tHe muslins; calico, homespun and silks of their\nclothes. Displaying and selling the\ndolls and writing about them has\nproved a lucraUve business.\nShe doesn't know how many dolls\nshe has, probably several thousand.\nHer display at home totals 500.\nOil extracted from grapeseeds ln\nItaly Is being used as a substitute\nfor linseed and olive oils in manufacture of soap, paint and lacquers.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED GIRL\nfor housework. One child. Must\nbe willing to spend the Summer\nmonths up the lake. P. O. Box\n283, Nelson, B. C.\nsssswsessssssawwsssscsgaresswsa\nNEWS OF TNE DAY\nsW\u00bbatWsMSSWS<\u00abS\u00abS<S$8S33S3K\u00bb3$:\nI. O. D. E. Monthly Meeting postponed until May 20th.\nSmoke \"Virginia\" shorts. Course\nor fine, 39c pkt. Valentine's.\nCnolce bedding plants. All kinds\nBealby's. Phone 328X1.\nWhist drive tonight at Cathedral\nHall. 8:15 p.m. Refreshments.\nKINSMEN   CLUB   MEETS   TO\nNIGHT, HUME HOTEL, C30.\nPrompt efficient typewriter repairs.  Underwood Agency.  Ph   99\n\"Fresh Fields\", 3-act comedy, Friday, Capitol Theatre. Tickets 50c al\nMann-Rutherford Company.\nNew 8 tube Roger Console radio\nQuality assured' by Rogers name.\nOnly $79.50. McKay & Stretton.\nTRANSPORTATION wanted on\nWednesday for several Hume Schooi\npupils to and from Trail. Ph. 856Y.\nMAY FROLIC\nEagle  Hall,  Wed.,  May  14. Prizes\ngalore. Novelties, Fun, Silver Cups\nfor Jitterbug winners.\nAnnual meeting Ymir Water\nWorks in the Company office on\nTuesday, May 20th, 7:30 p.m.\nH. D. Craig, Sec.-Treas.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nWe carry a fuU stock of\neverything required.\nMail us vour enquiries\nBURNS LUMBER AND COAL CO.\nThe Hospital Board and Women's\nAuxU'.ary wish to thank all those\nwho contributed so generously to\nour Tag Day and their services at\nour Hospital Day.\nWe carry ln stock the largest\nand most complete stock of typewriter and adding machine parts in\nthe Interior. If your mach nes need\nattention get In touch with us. D.\nW. McDerby, \"The Typewriter\nMan\", 654 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\nMake sure your future refrigerator Is made In Canada by a reputable company. Frlgldalre Is\nmade In Canada at Leaslde. Ontario, by General Motors. You are\nassured of servl*- and r\u00ab-isiee.\nment parts. Sold only by Hipper-\nson Hardware Company.\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. Helen Ouger and William\nDownko wish to thank all friends\ntor kindness and expressions of\nsympathy extended to them in their\nsad bereavement in the loss of a\nloving husband and son-in-law.\nREXALL\nORDERLIES\nThe original Chocolate Flavored\nLaxative. \u2014 Ideal   for   women,\nchildren and elderly people.\n25*. 50.f and fl.00 Pkg.\nSold only at your Rexall Store.\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34\nBex 460\nHot Buttons and\nWings\nJOYCE AND BARRY,\ndaughter and son of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. B. Ehrl, formerly of Nelson\nand now of Vancouver.\nSPORT\nSHIRTS\nSport shirts that live up\nto every sport  requirement in long and short\nsleeved styles.\nf 1.75 \u00a52.00 to ?3.50\nEMORY'S Ltd\nThe Man's Store\nSPORT SHORTS\nFROM BRITAIN\nBy DOI'OLAS AMARON\nCanadian Prin Stiff Writer\nLONDON, May 12 (CT). - The\nDerby and the Oaks, classics ot the\nflat racing season, will be run at\nNewmarket June 18 and 18. Previous arrangements to stage these\nraces at Newbury, Berkshire, June\n8 and 7 were cancelled.\nGordon Richards is well on the\nway to another British jockey\nchampionship. The veteran- rider\nwon 17 of his first 56 races, placed\nsecond in eight and third In seven.\nHarry Wragg, only jockey within\nstriking distance of the champion,\nhad 11 firsts in 47 races. Last week,\nhowever Richards broke a leg\nwhich may handicap his 1841\nchances.\nLeading bloodstock exporters say\nonly a few horses have been lost at\nsea owing to enemy actltfn since the\nwar started. Among the losses were\nDain and Cosaque, at one time well-\nknpwn performers from Boyd-\nRochfort's stable.\nA newly-fledged officer of the\nRoyal Air Force Is Po. C. F. Walters, better known as the famous\ncricketer who captained Worcester\nfor five years and an England XI\nagainst Australia ln 1934. Walters,\nwho completed a training course aa\nan administrative officer, has taken\nud hii duties at R_\\iF. headquarters.\nMajor A. W. Brlscow, South African cricketer who played against\nAustralia, was killed in action.\nEdward Wentworth Dillon, 60,\nbrilliant left-hand batsman for Kent\nand an England rugby three-auart-\ner, is dead. Killon was caotaln of\nthe Kent XI from 1908 to 1913, leading the county to three championships. As a ru\u00bbby player, he com-\noeted against Scotland. Ireland and\nW\u00bb'es in 1904 and against Wales in\n1905.\nSandy Herd, grand old man of\nF,nglish golf and professional at the\nMoor Park Club. Rickmansworth. is\nstill giving lessons at the age of 73.\nHerd, who played In his first open\ncharr-'onship In 1885, won the title\nin 1902.\nJargenloflrail\nFined $50 (har\nReckless Driving I\nThomu Henry Sargent of Trill I\nwas fined $50 and costs when he I\nappeared before Stipendiary Magii- f\ntrate Wlliam Irvine in Provincial\nPolice Court Monday on a ehirflt 1\nof driving in a manner danger- ]\nous to the public, which resulted\nin a bad car accident at the foot\nof Tagum HIU lait Wednesdiy night.\nSargent's plea was guilty, and he\npaid the fine.\nHis car went off the road on the\nright-hand side as he started to\nswing up the hill from the straight\nstretch from the bridge across\nKootenay River.\nThe charge was laid by Constable\nFrank Slater.\nHaving Wrong Plates\non Truck Costs Der\nLang a  Fine of $10\nDer Lang, Nelson laborer, paid \u25a0\n$10 fine in City police court Mon*\nday morning for being ln charge ot\na truck displaying ucence platei\nother than those designated for use\nof that vehicles. Hi pleaded guilty\nto the charge before Magistrate\nWilliam Brown.\nConstable R. R. House laid the\nInformation.\nHAVE DINNER TODAY\nat\nButler's Cafe\nOpposite Dally Newi\nii nn in nui 11 ii nun\nHOOD'S\nVOUR HOME BAKERY\nSOMETHING NEW\nWheat Germ Bread\niiniittimiiiiiitiitef\n1928 ESSEX 4-DOOR SEDAN\nLicenced. Good tlrei.       ftA_t\nReady to go _ V'Kf\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Pott Offloe,\nFOR RENT\nTWO er THREE ROOM SUITE\nAnnable Block\nR. W. Dawson\nLONDON (CP). - Crech airmen in the Royal Air Force have\nalready taken heavy toll of German raiders over Brita n and large\nland forces of Czechs are in train-\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nGet the\nFURNACE\nPut in working order NOWI\nR.H. Maber\nPhone est'    B10 Kootenay St\nSo Many Admirers\nwhen   you   have   a\npermanent that\nbecomes you\nHaiAh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block.\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nHats Cleaned  and\nBlocked\n827 Baker\nPhone 283\nI\nLAMBERT'S\nPHONE\n$2\nWaffles and Coffee\n25*\nThe PERCOLATOR\n509 Baker St\nPhone 102\n(^j^0R MM VALUE\nBRIDAL WREATH'\nFOR SALE\nExecutor of J. E. Annable; Estate offers for Sale: 12 roomed\nhouse, located at 1103 Hall\nMines Road. This property ia\noffered for sale at far less thaji\ncost. Is ideal for duplexing or\napartments. Any reasonable offer will be considered. Cash or\nTerms to responsible party.\nPHONE 925X OR 197\nStill Going Strong\nBankruptcy Sale ol\nGROCERIES\nAT SIMS' GOLDVALE STORE\nSale will continue all thle week with pricei too\nnumeroui to mention, but all lower than ever\nlh a n   \u25a0\u25a0 fcniMftfirm atm mil il     hi ii ir' 11 ll Ha_-tir.lll.i--_\n-.;_&_'-_  _v 'fct^i'.J*  . :\nIBB\n .\t\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_13","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\/1.0414965","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":"1941-05-13 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":"1941-05-13 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":""}]}