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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":" French Fleet it Alexandria\nYlelda.-Page 5\nMiin Given Powera to Writs\nNew Conititution.\u2014Page 8\nRichelieu, Pride af French Fleet\nll Damaged.\u2014Page S\n^\n\/ON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. JULY 10. 1940\n=\nnumber ea\nllll I        \u2022   \"^- '\"\u25a0>i-.1. '       ''\"\"  \"   \" I    I I   II llll       I     >    I I        II      'I        \u00ab\nITALIAN NAVY TASTES BRITISH SEA MIGHT\nRe Ae R Sets Nazi Warships\nAfire, Downs Eight Planes\nNEW MINISTERS\nTO GET $12,\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP).-Hon.\nC G. Power, Minister of Air anil\nHon. Angus L. Macdonald. Naval\nMinister-designate will receive\nthe same $12,000 salary as the regular Defence Minister and will\nserve until six months after peace\nls restored, according to provisions in amen, ments to the\nNational \"Defence Act.\nA new bill, introduced and given\nfirst reading last night, was distributed today. It re-defines the\nduties of the Minister of National\nDefence for Air and provides for a\n' third Defence Minister for Naval\n, Affairs.\nIn all matters referred to in the\nDepartment of National Defence\nAct the term \"Minister\" will refer\nto either the Defence Minister\n(Hon. J. L. Ralston) or either one\nof the additional Ministers provided.\nThe Minister for Air will have\nexclusive jurisdiction over all matters respecting the air services, and\nthe Minister for Naval Affairs will\nhave similar exclusive Jurisdiction\nover naval activities.\nEither of the three Ministers will\nhave power to act for all the de-\npartments ln the absence of his\ncolleagues, and in matters affecting two or more departments th?\ndecision will be reached by the\nMinister of Defence in consultation\nWith the other Ministers concerned.\nFrenchmen Held\nfor Repatriation\nLONDOtl July 8 (CP).-Mem-\n>:rs of the French military and\nnaval missions in London are being \"held for repatriation,\" it was\nlearned in informed quarters today.\n\u2022-Official sotntes said the missions\ndefinitely had not been Interned,\nbut observers regarded the phrase\n\"held for repatriaUon\" as elastic\nenough to cover virtual internment\ncf the members, who worked with\nthe British authorities up to the\nFrench capitulation to Germany.\nIt was explained they are in possession of much information about\nmilitary and naval forces here,\nwhich Great Britain does not want\nto reach the Axis powers.\nA return to France now might\nplace the mission members in a\nposition where they would be forced to give any information they\nhave to Germany, it was said.\nHome Improvement\nand Housing Loans\nIncrease in June\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP). \u2014 Home\nImprovement loans totalled 3754 in\nJune and had a volume of $1,516,270,\nan Increase of $118,300 over May,\nFinance Minister J. L. Ralston reported tonight.\nNumber of loans since the plan's\ninauguration November 1, 1936, was\n110,870 on June 30. Total volume of\nloans was $44,410,525.\nNational Housing Act loans made\nIn June totalled 594, an Increase ol\n47 over June, 1939, and had a volume $1,807,981. Total loans made\nto June 30 was 17,115, with a volume\nof $58,514,610.\nTURNS DOWN MARTIAL\nLAW PROPOSAL\nLONDON. July 9 (CP Cable). -\nSir John Anderson. Home Secretary and Minister for Home Security, turned down a suggestion in\nthe Commons today that martial\nlaw be established in the event ol\nan Invasion\nCivil authorities already had full\npowers lo control the movements\nof the civil population. If it became \"impracticable\" for the civil\nauthorities to carry on, the military\nulhorlties could issue any necessary orders under existing powers.\nhe said.\nGerman Supply Ships, Minesweeper, Kiel\nDocks, Oil Refineries Suffer; 10\nPeople Die in Britain\nBy |. F. SANDERSON\nCanadian Press Staff Wrlttr\nLONDON, July 10 (Wednesday) \u2014(CP Cable). \u2014 At\nhome and abroad, the Royal Air Force smashed at Germany's\nmilitary machine throughout Tuesday, setting two warships\nafire and damaging other surface vessels, and knocking down\neight Nazi planes in fighting off raids on Britain.\nScores of Cerman planes were over the British Isles all\nday and night. They caused at least 10 deaths.\nLate last night a joint statement by the Air Ministry and\nMinistry of Home Security told of the destruction of the eight\nCerman planes. It said:\n\"This evening enemy aircraft\ndropped a number of high explosive\nbombs on a town in East Anglia,\nsome ot wh ch fell on buildings and\nin the streets.\n\"There were a number of civilian\ncasualties, including some killed.\n\"It is now confirmed that in ad\ndition to the four enemy aircraft\nalready reported shot down today,\nfour other enemy aircraft have\nbeen destroyed in today's fighting.\nA number of others were severely\ndamaged and are unlikely to reach\ntheir bases.\"\nAt least 10 persons were killed\nduring the day, six in the Southwest, two in the Southeast and\ntwo in Wales.\nAt night some German planes\neklmmed  low over the sea Just\noff the Southeast coast while others, flying high, dived 1000 feet\nto drop \"whistling\" bombs on one\ntown.   Several    buildings   were\ndamaged.\nOn a mission of destruction over\nGermany and Nazi-occupied territory of Europe, R. A. F. planes hit\nand set afire two destroyers or light\ncruisers of the four surprised while\nriding at anchor East of Germany s\nnaval base of Wilhelmshaven.\nDespite mist and heavy fire from\nland and sea batteriei. \"our aircraft succeeded in their attack\" on\ntwo ships, firing them with Incendiary bombs, Uie Air Ministry\nannounced.\nThe R. A F., trading blow for\nblow with the Nazi forces which\nhave bombed Britain almost daily\nfor nearly a month, also attacked a\nGerman supply ship near Aalborg,\nDenmark, and the vessel was believed hit by a salvo of heavy\nbombs.\nFarther off the Danish coast,\nthe Ministry told of a bomb from\na patrolling Hudson plane lifting the bow of a German minesweeper right out of the water.\nAnother Hudson followed up a\ndive-bombing attack on a German supply ship with machine-\ngun fire and the vessel was seen\nsettling down by the stern. A few\nmiles away another German vessel started to throw up smoke\nafter being raked by machine-\ngun bullets.\nOther bombing raids were made\non the Kiel docks, sheds and slipways and on oil refineries at Hom-\nburg and on barge canals in Western Holland.\nThe R. A. F. lost seven planes In\na bitter fight over the airdrome at\nStavanger, Norway, where aircraft\non the ground were attacked and\none enemy fighter shot down,\nBUTTER AND MARCARINE\nRATIONING ORDERED\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)-Great\nBritain ordered today a joint butter and margarine ration of six\nounces a week. Previously butter\nhad been rationed at four ounces\na person a week, and margarine\nwas not rationed.\nThe reduction in butter and margarine allowances followed by one\nday a further rationing of tea, fish\nand meat.\nUnder the new restrictions Britons will be limited to two ounces\nof tea a week\u2014about two cups a\nday, starting today.\nMedium-priced tea costs 34 pence\na pound.\nNelson Ratepayers to Vole July 25\non $40,000 Bylaw for Waterworks\nExtension,    Renewal\nNumber of Mains\nProoosed\nNelion ratepayers will vote\nJune 25 on a $40,000 bylaw to extend the City water system and\nreplace a number of malm to Improve the distribution system.\nThe date was set by the City\nCouncil lueiday night. W. t.\nGaston, city Clerk, was aooolnt.\nsd Returning Officer and Fred\nL. Irwin, Auiitant City Clerk,\nwat named hit Deputy.\nSetting of the date for the bylaw\nvote was among highlights of a\nmeeting in which waler service\nand distribution were debated at\nlength and with some heat The\nCouncil decided first to seek cooperation of householders in using garden sprinklers at specified\nhours, so as to permit residents ln\n'he upper levels of both Fairview\nand the unhill section to draw\nwater Should the response fall to\nbring results, sprinkling regulations would follow. It was pointed\nout there was no actual shortage\nof water, but that the City distribution system was inadequate to\ndemands on it; and that while some\nresidents were wasting water In excessive sprinkling, others were un-\nable to obtain even domestic supplies.\nSuggestion was offered that a\nplebiscite might be held at the\nsame time as the water bylaw to\ndetermine public opinion on proposals to build a new city nail,\nbut it was felt that a \"straw vote\"\nby mail might be more effective.\nAlderman held that no other issues\nshould be introduced which might\naffect voting on the waterworks\nbylaw.\nCarol Reported\nlo Have Arrested\nIron Guard Head\nBUCHAREST, July 10 (Wednesday) (AP)\u2014King Carol, taking\nstrenuous measures to keep his\nown totalitarian party in the Rumanian saddle, was reported today\nto have caused the arrest of General Ion Antonescu, veteran Iron\nGuard leader,\nAntonescu's arrest was reported\nto have resulted from his attempts\nto unite various Iron Guard\ngroups. King Carol has forbidden\nrevival of old political parties,\nAntonescu, known as a stern army\ndisciplinarian and war minister in\nthe former cabinet of Octavlan\nGoga, was mentioned only Monday\nby political observers as a probable\nsuccessor to Premier Ion Gigurtu if\nthe Iron Guard should reorganize\nthe government to its own tastes.\nReports of his arrest followed by\na few hours a government decree\nforbidding the- sale outside th|i\ncountry of stock in any foreign-\nowned Rumanian company. This\naction waa taken when reports\nspread the $100,000,000 BriUsh oil\ninterests here might be transferred\nto Russia.\nBUDAPEST, July 9 (API-Hungary's Government leaders were\ncalled to Berlin today to discuss\nsettlement of their country's claims\non Rumania with the German and\nItalian foreign ministers, Joachim\nvon Ribbentrop and Count Galeazzo\nCiano.\nP.E.I. Likely lo\nKeep Prohibition\nCHARLOTTETO WN, July 9 (CP)\n\u2014Retention of the Prohibition Law\nin Prince Edward Island appeared\ncertain tonight as the count of civilian ballots in the Province's June\n25 liquor plebiscite concluded with\nan unofficial majority of 2593 in\nfavor of continuing the \"dry\"\nlegislation.\nSoldier ballots that might favor\na proposed amendment to permit\nGovernment-controlled sale of beer\nand wine could not materially affect\nthe outcome Only about 1000 soldiers voted.\nThe unofficial civilian total was\n11,589 in favor of retaining the 20-\nyear-old legislation that makes\nPrince Edward Island the only dry\nCanadian Province against 9096 for\nbeer and wine amendment.\nUnder the present law, no alcoholic liquor of any kind may be\nbought except under a doctor's pre-\nscrintion and from Government\nvendors.\nBritain Loses 30,377\nTons Merchant Ships\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)\u2014Britain\nlost six merchant ships totalling\n30,377 gross tons by enemy action\nin the week ended June 30, the Admiralty announced today.\nIn the same period three Allied\nvessels totalling 9622 tons and three\nneutral ships were sunk by enemy\naction.\nThese losses, it was said, were\nslightly above the average, except\nin the case of neutral shipping.\nIt should be borne in mind, however, a naval source said, that the\nnumber of neutral countries har\ndecreased progressively.\nNazis Report Second\nAttac1, at Oran\nBERLIN, July I) (AP By Radio)\n\u2014The German wireless, quoting\nFrench sources, reported from\nVichy today that a new British attack was made on the French naval\nbase near Oran yesterday and that\nwarships already wrecked there\nwere further damaged by bombs\nand air torpedoes.\nIn addition, this report said, several smaller vessels in the port\nwere sunk by British fliers.\n(British planes revisited Oran\nJuly 6, three days after the British\nnaval action against the French\nfleet there, and scored six bomb\nhits onithe crippled, grounded, 26,-\n500-ton French battleship Dunkerque to make sure she neve-\ncould be af use to Germany.)\nConvicted (oast\nWhite-Slaver Is\nReturned to Jail\nVANCOUVER, July \u00bb (OP) .-Joe\nCelona, convicted Vancouver white-\nslaver whose parole from prison\ncaused a storm of protest here, was\nre-arrested today oy Royal Cana^\ndian Mounted Police and returned\nto the British Columbia penitentiary\nat nearby New Westminster.\nInspector James Fripps of the\nR. C. M. P. said that Celona's\n\"license\" which gave him his liberty after serving five of an 11-\nyear sentence, had been \"revoked\". Celona was picked up in\ndowntown hotel and returned to\nthe prison from which he was released only recently.\nJames Sinclair, Liberal Member\nof parliament for Vancouver North\nand Howard Green, Conservative\nMember for Vancouver South, raised the question of Celona's release\nin the House of Commons at Ottawa. Mr. Green described Celona\nas a notorious white slaver.\nVarious Vancouver organizations\nincluding the church ana branches\nof the Canadian Legion Joined the\nprotest against the release of the\nconvicted white slaver.\nMayor Lyle Telford tod_y fc-\nmanded to know who had recommended Celona's tlcket-of-leave,\nunder which the convicted white-\nslaver was to report to police periodically. Informed of Celona's rearrest, Mayor Telford said ht would\ncontinue his demand to know who\nordered the release.\nReport Iran Threatens Iraq\nSoldiers, Those\nWin Exemptions\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP).-rijjf\ncommissioned officers and merr*Bf\nall Canadian forces, and those who\ngive shelter in their homes to dependent children brought from the\nUnited Kingdom Government-sponsored schemes benefit by amendments to the Income tax resolutions adopted in the House of Commons today.\nHon. J. L. Ilsley, Minister of Finance, moved adoption of both\namendments. They met In some degree protests that followed presentation of the budget June 24, but\nConservative members declared\nthey did not go far enough.\nWhile all warrant officers, noncommissioned officers and men of\nthe forces are to be exempt from\nincome tax under today's amendment their final status under thc\nnational defence tax remains to be\ndecided when that clause is reached.\nCommissioned officers remain taxable under the Income Tax Act un-\ner the amended regulations Commissioned officers, non-commissioned officers and men serving\noutside Canada, and those serving\nwithin Canada in the navy and air\nforce are exempt from the national\ndefence lax. It was Indicated by the\nMinister exemption from the defence tax is being considered for\nnon-commissioned officers and men\nserving in Canada in other than the\nair force and navy.\nI.O.D.E. Campaign\nto Buy Bomber for\nAllies Completed\nTORONTO, July 9 (CP).\u2014Thc\nmonth-old campaign of Imperial\nOrder Daughters of the Empire\nto raise $100,000 for purchase of a\nCanadian Bollngbroke bomber for\nthe Allies, has reached Its objective, Mrs. W. B. Horkins of\nToronto, National President, announced at a meeting of officers\ntoday.\nThe bombing plane will be presented to Defence Minister J. L.\nRalston at Ottawa next Saturday\nfor immediate shipment to Britain.\nJapanese Paper Rages\nAgainst U. S. Marines\nSHANGHAI, July 9 (AP) - A\nviolent tirade against United States\nmarines was spread' today across\nthe front page of the newspaper\nTairiku Shlmpo, generally regarded\nas a mouthpiece of the Japanese\narmy in China, as the aftermath of\nan international settlement incident.\nJapanes authorities demanded an\napology for \"mistreatment\" ot Japanese plainclothes gendarmes arrested by marines ln the settlement\nJuly 7.\nThe Tairiku Shlmpo declared the\nmarines were \"gentlemen with human faces, but with the skins of animals.\"\nRussian Dies, Wife\nWounded at Coast\nVANCOUVER, July 9 CP). -\nMike Mafatow, 35-year-old Russian\nis dead and his wife Polly in hospital seriously wounded tonight following a double shooting at the\ncouple's home here this afternoon.\nREZA KHAN PEHLEVI AMIR ABDUL OF IRAQ\nm.      < \u201e, ih. d.\"-n .,.rn.aill to the Near East, led by a Nazi-\ninspired drive against Iraq and its British-controlled oil, ls feared\n ,\",.. \u201e.... assert that Iran (Persia) is ready to\nco-operate with the Germans in an attack upon Iraq. Position of\nIraq and Iran, both rich In oil, is indicated on the maps, along with\nthe. connecting links Joining them with neighboring states, and the\nspheres where vital British interests are touched. Reza Khan Pehlevi\nit Iran's monarch, while Iraq, ruled by the boy-king Felsal II, ls\ngoverned by the regent Amir Abdul Illah.\nNational Registration\nIs to Be Supervised by\nChief Electoral Officer\nTo Be Held Four Days About August 14 Along\nVoting Lines; Members to Appoint\nRegistrars and Deputfes\nBy R. K. CARNEGIE\u2014Canadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)\u2014Jules Castonguay, Chief Electoral Officer\nfor Canada, today was appointed by order-in-council as Chief Registrar\nfor Canada to supervise the national registration. His assistant will be\nHarry Butcher, who was his assistant during the recent general election.\nNational registration will be held during four days about Aug. 14\nwhen every man and woman in Canada above the age of 16 years will\nappear before local registrars- and provide  the answers  to some 18\nquestions which will be asked them.\nThe entire machinery for takings\u2014\nthe registration will be patterned\nalong the lines followed in tiking\nthe vote In a Dominion election.\nHowever, unlike voting, registration will be compulsory and a responsibility of the Individual. Penalties will be provideV for failuie to\nregister.\nThere will be at least as many\nregistration districts as there ore\npolling subdivisions in a general\nelection. Large polling subdivisions\nwill be subdivided for public\nconvenience.\nThe Chief Justice of each Province has been sent a letter asking\nthat either he. or a Judge he would\nname, act as head of the Provincial\nregistration organization. Thc members of Parliament were being.\nasked to name a registrar and a\ndeputy registrar for each riding.\nThe plan is that the registrar\nand deputy registrar will name\ntwo men to act in each subdivision\ncorresponding to a deputv returning officer and a poll clerK\nin the general elections.\nRates of pay will cpproxlmate\nthose given to election officials\nas will the pay for rental of registration offices. The registrar and\nassistant registrar will be allowed their necessary travelling expenses.\nThe Minister expressed the hope\nthat the members of Parlaament in\nnominating constituency legistrars\nand assistants would pay no heed to\nparty affiliations except tnat when\nthe best man available for registrar\nwas a known party man n;s assistant shculd be of opposite po1!-\ntics so there would be no politics\nin the appointment of the official\nunder them or at least a fair\ndivision.\nThe registration subdivision will\nbe divided into four areas and the\npeople ln each area w .1 register ,n\na given day so as not to clutter up\nthe machinery by all comiiag on one\nday.\nThe understanding ia the Defence Department does not wish\nto mobilize more forces for home\ndefence before September 1 .nd\nby that time the registration ie-\nturns should all be checked and\nclassified.\nThe Defence Department for example will decide when it is ready\nto open up a camp for say 40 days'\ntraining of 3000 men for home defence. A district about each ramp\nwill be plotted nnd be called upon\nto supply the men for the particular camp.\nIn this case the requisition of\n2000 men would Le handed over to\nthe Provincial Registration Headquarters and from the rc\".s the\nJudge would designate what r.-en\ncould be called up without hindering other spheres cf war effori. For\nexample men on farms would not\nbe called up during mr-teiung or\nFall work.\nBe Prepared Is\nRalston Message\nOTAWA, July 9 (CP) - \"Our\njob is to be prepared for whatever\nmay come,\" Defence Minister J.\nL. Ralston told the fighting forces\nof Canada in a special message tonight.\nThe Minister said world conditions made it impossible to tell\nwhat lay ahead.\nSpeaking for himself, Navy Minister Designate A. L. Macdonald and\nAir Minister Power, Col. Ralston\npointed out that physical fitness,\ndiscipline and training form the\nfoundation of preparation for the\nfighting services.\n\"We ask everybody to make the\nvery best use of the things we have\nand to use their brains and ingenuity to keep going full speed. The\nenemy works Sundays and holidays\nas well as week days and nights as\nwell as days. And so shall we because victory depends directly upon\nthe untiring energy and effort of us\nall.\n\"The Department of National Defence must spare no effort to provide the personnel and manpower,\nThe task of providing equipment is\nnot being allowed to lag for a moment. The abrupt cutting oft of\nmajor sources of supply and the\ngreatly increased requirements\nwhich the changes in the last two\nmonths have called for are making\ntremendous demands on purely Canadian production.\"\nJEHOVAH'S WITNESSES\nLITERATURE SEIZED\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP). -\nVancouver and Royal Canadian\nMounted Police today seized 12 tons\nof literature in raids on three\nbranches of Jehovah's Witnesses, an\norganization recently banned as illegal by the Dominion Government.\nNo arrests were made.\nYUGOSLAV CROWD\nCHEERS FOR ITALY\nZAGREB, Yugoslavia, July 9 \u2014\n(AP)\u2014Twelve persons were arrested today as the result of a demonstration last night in which a crowd\ncheering loudly for Italy hurled\nstones through windows of the British Consulate.\nTO ASK IF BRITISH\nSUBJECTS WILL BE SHOT\nLONDON, July 9 (CP) - Lord\nMarchwood announced today that\nhe would ask the Government in\nthe llouse of Lords tomorrow if it\nwas prepared lo shoot any British\nsubjects convicted of trying to help\nthe King's enemies.\nShips and Planes\nPursue Force to\nContinue Battle\nItalians Make Off Behind Smoke Screen as\nBritish \"Contact Enemy\"; One Shell\nMakes Direct Hit on Italian Ship\nLONDON, July 10 (Wednesday) \u2014(CP).\u2014 A British\nshell struck an Italian battleship Tuesday in the opening round\nof,the naval battle that the world has been awaiting ever since\nMussolini entered the war.\nEarly today British ships and airplanes were in pursuit of\nan Italian naval force with which the Royal Navy opened battle\nyesterday, within a few hours after the Britons had swept the\nFrench fleet from the seas.\nThe Admiralty announced the fight. It stated a long-\nrange hit was scored by a British capital ship upon an Italian\nbattleship after the British force came upon two Italian battleships and smaller craft.\nFurther information was being awaited, the Admiralty\nsaid.\nThe Rome Government was silent,\nbut Stefanl, the Italian news and\npropaganda agency, put out a host\not claims that the actl&n had favored the Italians.\nThese claims, as made public In\nLondon by Reuters News Agency,\nwere to the effect that Italian airplanes had sunk a British cruiser\nand damaged other British ships off\nCrete, in one engagement, and that\nin another, near the \"boot' ot Italy,\nFascist naval forces were pursuing\" the British.\nThe Admiralty announced the\ncommander in chief of the Mediterranean naval forces said contact was\nmade with an Italian force consisting df two battleships, and a number of eight-inch and six-inch gun\ncruisers and destroyers.\nThe Admiralty's pi.hle account\ncontinued:\n\"Almost Immediately after contact was gained the enemy retired\nbehind a smoke screen laid by\ntheir destroyers but before the\nenetny waa obscured one nit at\nextreme range was obtained by\none of our capital ships on an\nItalian battleship.\n\"At the time of receipt of this\nInformation the enemy was being\npursued. The enemy ships were\nalso attacked by our fleet ait\narm aircraft.\"\nThen the Admiralty said It was\nwaiting for more details of this first\nclash of British sea power with Italy\nwhich is threatening the Empire\nlife-line through the Mediterranean.\nThe Admiralty said that simultaneously with the operations ln the\ncentral Mediterranean, another\nforce based on Gibraltar earned out\na sweep toward the central Mediterranean. _\nFour enemy aircraft were destroyed by this latter force. Seven\nothers were damaged, with three\n\"unlikely to return to their base.\nThis unit of the British force did\nnot meet surface vessels, the Admiralty said.\nA Reuters News Agency dispatch from Rome iaid the Italian\n(Stefanl) News Agency claimed\nthat wave after wave of Italian\nbomben attacked the British warships and after a \"battle that raged until 9 p.m.\" Italian naval\nforcet \"pursued\" the British ships\nto the South.\nThe Italians claimed that a British\nbattleship and aircraft carrier were\ndamaged, and a cruiser was sunk.\nThe Italian news source account\nof the fight, Reuter said, placed the\naction near the island of Crete,\nSouth of Greece and between the\nBritish naval base at Alexandria\nand Italy.\nAdmiral Sir Andrew Cunningham\nis commander ln chief of the Mediterranean fleet, and his flagship is\nthe 30,000 ton Warsplte which took\npart in the second battle of Narvik last April 13.\nDuring the First Great War as\ncaptain of the Destroyer Scorpion\nAdmiral Cunningham won fame by\ndaring operations ln Mediterranean\nThe only previous British-Italian\nsea fight occurred June 27 when a\nlight British naval force sank thc\nItalian destroyer Espero.\nRain Ends Month of\nDrought at Coast\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C. July 9\n(CP).\u2014Rain came to Vancouver\nIsland's West coast area today,\nending a month of drought and relieving hazardous fire conditions\nas forest crews brought all fires\non the Island under control.\nNo tresh outbreaks were reported. The 2000-acre Big Home\nValley fire, another blaze at Elsie\nLake near here and a third fire\nnear Cowlchan Lake, all were\nreported under control.\nW. C. MORESBY HEADS\nB. C. LAW SOCIETY\nVICTORIA. July 9 (CP). - W.\nC. Moresby, K. C, Victoria bencher\nsince 1913, was unanimously elected\ntreasurer of the Law Society of\nBritish Columbia at its annual\nmeeting here. He succeeds W. E\nBurns, K. C, Vancouver, in he\noffice which corresponds to that\nof president in any other organization.\nHis nomination was proposed by\nR.   L.   Maitland,   K.   C.\nBAHAMAS H&IL .\nNEW GOVERNOR\nNASSAU, The Bahamas, July t\n(CP-Cable) \u2014 Appointment of the\nDuke of Windsor as Governor of\nthe Bahama blends was received\nJubilantly ln Nassau tonight, (Alio\nsee \"Windsor\", Page 8).\nIt was believed appointment ot\nthe King's brother to the post would\ngive tremendous impetus to the islands' tourist industry, upon which\nSic Bahamas largely depend for\neir economic existence.\nThe Duke and Duchess will live\nln a green-shuttered frame house of\ncolonial design, overlooking Nassau's quaint streets. From Uie terraced steps of this vantage point\nmay be seen horse-drawn hacks\n'filled with-tourists and deep Nassau Harbor lined In Winter with\ncruise ships and yachts.\nThe Bahamas consist of about 20\ninhabited islands and a large number of uninhabited islets and docks.\nThe population is 66,900 and among\nthe chief industries are sponge gathering and preparation, and growing\nof tomatoes for export.\nThe Governor ls aided by an Executive Council of nine members, a\nnominated Legislative Council, also\nof nine members, and an Elective\nRepresentative Assembly of 29\nmembers.\nAxis Powers Plan\nNew Campaign\nROME, July 9 (AP)-An Italian-\nGerman agreement Ior a threefold\ncampaign against Britain was reported today by Virginio Gayda,\nthe Fascist editor.\nThe Axis partners, Gayda said,\nare to attempt;\n1. To blockade the Britiah Isles.\n2. To break Britain's Empire\ncommunications.\n3. To defeat her \"at home, ln\nImperial territories,\" and at sea.\nEach Axis power has been assigned tasks for these goals, said\nGayda, writing in II Giornale d'ltalla.\nItaly's job, he declared, is to strike\nat the British Empire at four places\non land and harrass British shipping in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Red Sea and Indian Ocean,\nand above all, keep a part of Britain's sea power in the Mediterranean.\nOn land, Gayda said, Italy is assigned to strkie at Egypt from Cy-\nrenaica, in Libya, at the British-\nEgyptian Sudan from East Africa,\nat Kenya and at British Somaliland,\nMin. Max.\nNELSON   5_ 90\nTRAIL   .._-  60 76\nVictoria  49 63\nNanaimo  _  48 69\nVancouver   50 71\nKamloops  -.... 55 93\nPrince George  52 71\nEstevan Point ...._ _ 49 57\nPrince Rupert  48 63\nLangara  _  48 \u2022   61\nAtlin     44 60\nDawson   45 80\nSeattle     \u201e  47 78\nPortland        56 81\nSan Francisco   52 68\nSpokane..  37 86\nPenticton     54 \u2014\nVernon     \u201e  51 \u2014\nKelowna   50 82\nKaslo         53 -\nCranbrook    50 78\nCalgary    _  51 67\nEdmonton       54 67\nSwift Current   51 90\nPrince Albert   49 \u2014\nQu'Appelle          51 88\nWinnipeg               . 57 85\nForecast, Kootenay \u2014 Moderate\nvariable winds mostly fair becoming cooler with thundershowers to-.\nward night.\nNelson water level Tuesday, 5.30.\n. -.\n______________\u00bb!-___.__-\u25a0-\u25a0__.___--^i n'irii'i_iiiuite\n\t\n\t\n_________\n___-\n___________\n T\nPAGE  TWO\n(ily lo Ask Voluntary Restriction\nof Sprinkling to Aid Those Unable\nHow lo Obtain Sufficient Supplies\nRegulations    Likely\nIf Voluntary Move\nShould Fail\nHouseholders will be requested\nby the City of Nelson to restrict\nsprinkling hours voluntarily in order that higher sections now unable to obtain sufficient water may\ndraw lt. Should voluntary regulation fail to produce the desired effect, sprinkling regulation* may be\nInstituted.\nInstructions were given by 4he\nCity Council Tuesday night to H.\nD. Dawson, City Engineer, to outline sprinkling hours for specified\nsections of the City and to advertise\nthem appealing for cooperation of\nhouseholders.\nDebate leading to this question\nwat lengthy and heated as Aid.\nRoy Sharp opposed sprinkling regulations until thert was an actual\nshortage of water, apd other members of the Council asserted only\nregulations would achieve results.\nIt was pointed out that there was a\nLAME BACK\nmay result from faulty kidney action.\nGin Pills help kidneys dispose of waste\nnutter that causes congestion. In the\nUnited States ask for \"Gino Pills\".\ntat tht 11 .S.-Ratular\nEconomy il_t.    114\nsurplus of water at tht Five-Mile\nCreek Intake, but that the City distribution system wat Inadequate to\nserve all sections of the City properly when householders and business placet ln the lowtr levels were\ndrawing heavily:\nHEAVY WASTE\nNight sprinkling of gardens to\nthe point where \"thousands of gallons were running down the\nstreets Into catch basins, while in\nsome sections householders could\nnot obtain water even for domestic\npurposes, was not fair, Aid. T. H.\nWaters  contended. ,\nAlderman Sharp was concerned\nwith the condition of the lawn at\nLakeside Park, asserting that\nthousands of people are using the\npark\" and they should not suffer\nwhile water was wasted st other\npoints. His remark grew out of the\nCouncil's restriction of sprinkling\nat the Park, the cemetery and on\nboulevards during periods of heavy\ndemand.\nIt was suggested the Fire Department might carry out Its pumping practices at Lakeside Park as\nwell as anywhere and so help out;\nor alternatively that a pump could\nbe installed at the Park to use lake\nwater.\nDISTRIBUTION  FAULTY\nMany sections of the City could\nnot be properly served, Mayor N. C.\nStibbs declared, unless sprinkling\nregulations were invoked, because\nthe distribution system was not adequate. The growth of the City had\nresulted in more services off some\nmains than there should be, he\nsaid, and until this was remedied\nsuch sections could not be terved\nln competition with other, more\nadequately served sections.\nAlderman. Sharp insisted he was\nopposed to restrictions until there\nwas an actual shortage, though he\nagreed an appeal should be made\nto householders to avoid wasting\nwater. He would not oppose restriction if there was an actual\nshortage, he declared.\n\"We've g6t the rottentst kind of\nrestrictions now,\" commented Alderman Waters. \"Those who can get\n\u2014NEtSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO, JULY 10. 1141.\nBose-Boivered Nelson Home\n,..f*>\u00bb\"\nA*'\n\u25a0\n*\nLack of Water in Higher Sections ot\nCity Due to Unrestricted Sprinkling\nand Wastage Engineer Dawson Slates\nr    \u25a0     *    ---     '\u2022    \"!:\n\u25a0   -*0mm^, . ;,.-.'.\nResidence of W. H. Hoare, 317 Silica Street, a bower of beauty as roses bloom.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\nwater use lt all, while others can't\nget lt.\"\n\"All right,\" countered Alderman\nSharp. \"If we don't want to do\nanything about the park let the\ngrass burn up.\"\n\"Every time a suggestion Is made\nvou start off on another angle,\"\nAid. P. 0. Morey told Alderman\nSharp. \"We've got to try to help the\nother fellow out.\"\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nQEORQE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. W. B.\nNey, J. S. Davidson, C. S. Williams,\nN. D. Squires, L. P. Carter, R. J.\nBailey, Frank Lee, Hugh Russell,\nW. Solway, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs.\nI\". S. McKinnon, Victoria; W.\nWright, C. A. Yule, Penticton; C. V.\nMeggitt, Grand Forks; E. S. Jones\nand son, Peter Graham, Cranbrook;\nJ. Burke, B. Berger, Winnipeg; C.\nL. Mulloy, Toronto; H. M. Coursey,\nMedicine Hst; Ruby Carratt, Wenatchee, Wash.; Dr. J. Z. Cole\nSpokane.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n- MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\n\u25a0In our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms in the Interior \u2014 Bath or Shower.\nR00M8 $1 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY  RATES\nCouncil Asks lor\nPlan of Rearing\nPond al Hatchery\nPlans for a fish rearing pond at\nthe Nelson fish hatchery, now in\nthe hands of Nelson District Rod\nand Gun Club members, will be submitted immediately to city officials\nin order that an estimate of the\ncost may be obtained.\nWhen a Rod and Gun Club delegation consisting of J. J McEwen,\nPresident, John C. B. Wallach,\nGeorge Fleury and P. E. Poulin,\nwaited on the Council Tuesday\nnight to urge action in construction\nof ponds, it developed that neither\nthe Club nor the Council was clear\non what was to be done, nor by\nwhom it was to be done.\nCouncil members, expressing\nsympathy toward the proposal to\nbuild retring ponds\u2014not only is\npart of the beautification plan at\nthe park surrounding the hatchery\nbut also to aid in building up tourist trade\u2014asked for the plans as a\nfirst step toward taking action.\nNelson Fire Loss\nin June $,215\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHING\n20 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, B. C.\nRates reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn This Space\nWher* Thousands Will Road It\nCAMP PARADISE\n4 miles North.of Kaslo, B.C.\nModern cabins, electricity,\ngas,   running  water.   Inner\nspring mattresses, bedding, linen, cooking utensils furnished, meals\nfurnished.\nCabins for 2 to 6: Week  $12 to $18\nPhone or Write Camp Paradise, Kailo, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"        Newly renovated through-\nfl___.C___.__.   U___.__!   out- Phonai and eltvttor.\nuuiierin notei A. patterson. me \u00ab\u2022\n900 Seymour St.        Vtncouver, B.C. Coleman. Alta., Proprietor.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying st th*\nHotel VOLNEY \u25a0\u00ab\u00ab.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\n410 Riverside\nAvenue\nRELAX\nat the GALAX\nCamden Money at Par\nRoomi $1.00 to $2.50\nTREE GARAGE\nDooms from *l\n854 Main Ave\nSpokane, Wn\n'otd,\nHOTEL     %_*\nRIDPATH\nTbt  Hotel Canadians Likt to\nCall Homt.\nIN  SPOKANE\n19S Outtldt Rooms tnd\nApartmenti\nALL Al MODERATE RATES\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prep.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nFire loss of $35,275 in Nelson during June \u2014 the result of the fire at\nthe Nelson Sash It Door Co. Ltd.\u2014\nwas reported to the City Council\nTuesday night by Fire Chief G. A.\nMcDonald. The Department answered five alarms during June, but\nthree ot them were to chimney fires\nand the fourth was a sawdust pile\nfire, in none of which was there\nany damage.\nThe Sash Sc Door Company fire\ncaused a building loss of $10,275\nand content loss of $25,000, the Chief\nreported. Two other buildings, Macdonalds Consolidated and the Wood.\nVallance Hardware Company LU.\nwarehouse,  were scorched.\nKootenay Plumbing\nTender for Work at\nHospital Accepted\nKootenay Plumbing Jt Heating\nCompany's tender o( J12S for ad-\nlusting the preient hot water boiler\nin the Nurses' Home, and lor Installing asbestos covers for boilers\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nwas accepted by the Board Tuesday night. Two other tenders, one\n(rom Vic Graves ot $175 and the\nother from the B C. Plumbing Sc\nHeating Company of $142, were\nheard.\nFire Hydrant to Be\nInstalled Vicinity\nB. C. Veneer Works\nInstallation of t fire hydrant on\nthe North side ot the C.P.R. tracks\nin the vicinity of the B.C. Veneer\nWorks, was authorised by the City\nCouncil Tuesday night. The B.C.\nVeneer Works in a letter to the\nCouncil agreed to pay the cost ot\nthe installation over $100. It was\nestimated the hydrant would cost\n$180.\nAid. T. H. Waters asserted \"We\nwere very fortunate the night ot the\nSash and Door Company (Ire, for\n\u2022if there h(d been any wind the\nVeneer Works might have gone\ntoo.\"\nHe de France Is\nReported Seized\nLONDON, July 9 (CP).\u2014Rtu-\ntefs Newi Agency quoted Jtpa-\nneje reports from Singapore today that the British auth6rities\nhad seised the 43,450-ton French\nliner He de France.\nDEATH FROM PARALYSIS\nIS FIRST IN SEATTLE\nSEATTLE July 9 (AF)-State\nDepartment of Health headquarters\nhere reported today there were ll\ncues of infantile ptrtlysll in King\nCounty, two in Everttt, one in Che-\nhtlls, three in Grand Coulee and\nitVtrtl la Pierce County whtre tn\noutbreak of the dittase first appeared.\nThe dlsttst claimed its first life\nin Seattle yeiterday In the death\nof 19-year-old Joan Mary Desmond,\nart student.\nNine persons have died in Pierce\nCounty of (he disease, but no new\ncues' have been reported in the\nvicinity.\nAt lakeside Park\nOverflow  at   Intake;\nRoad Surfacing\nGoes Ahead\nWtttr tSortlge of which rttldentt\nIn higher levels of the City complained wat largely because \"residents ln the down town sections allow thtlr sprinklers to run almost\nday and night and waste a great deal\nof water, tnelr own ground becoming waterlogged and the surplus\nwater then running away down the\nstreets Into our catch bailni,\" stated\nH. D. Dawson, City Engineer, ln a\nreport to the City Council Tuesday\nnight. His report covered the City\nPublic Works Department operations for the two weeks ending July\ni The report follows:\nWATER WORKS\nWater flowing over the spillway\nat Five-Mile Creek Intake now\namounts to 5 Inches in depth. Some\nsmall amount of wdrk nas been\ndone on the Intake road to facilitate\naccess. In cooperation with the Forestry Department a number of ligm\nhive been posted up warning persons that lighting of fires In the\narea is prohibited.\nNtw water services are being Installed' for the new Hancock and\nRenwick houses on Sixth Street\nSouth from Behnsen Street, and\nnew services have been installed for\nthe Waters duplex house on Hoover\nStreet.\nFour leaks have opened up and\nhave been found and stopped,\nnamely, one on Cedar Street, one\nin the lane behind the Rex Cafe, one\nin 300 Block Houston Street, and\none it 215 Innes Street. That in the\nlane behind the Rex Cafe occurred\nIn a very old ft-lnch pipe and Its\ncondition Is such that we are replacing a section of it with new.\nMany residents ln the upper sections of the City, both uptown tnd\nTHE WORLD'S FINEST\nCHESTERFIELDS\nMiss Coral Sahara and Iverson (Bud) Ruppel of Nelson.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\nYoung\nNelsontte\nMarylin Rose Eleanor,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. W. Somers of Nelson.\n\u2014Photo by Vogue,\n197 Enter Hospital\nDuring June; 2 New\nTuberculosis Cases\nSome 197 patients were admitted\nto Kootenty Lake General Hospital\nfor treatment in June, Miss Vera\nB. Eidt, Superintendent, stated in\nher monthly report to the Hospital\nBoard Tuesday night. Sixty-five patients remained over from May.\nwhile at the close of June 70 patients remained over into July.\nTwo new tuberculosis cases were\nadmitted to the Hospital, and one\ninfectious disease case was treated\nin the isolation hospital. Deaths at\nthe hospital numbered two, while\nbirths numbered 25.\nA total of 9829 meals, 752 of which\nwere special diets, were served to\npatients.\nLane to North of\nBaker to Be Paved\nPaving of the lane North of\nBaker Street between Kootenay and\nFalls Street was authorized by the\nCity Council Tuesday night on recommendation of Aid. T, H. Waters,\nPublic Works Committee Chairman. A good base wis in place and\nblack topping could go ahead on\nit, he said. The lane carried heavy\ndaily traffic, serving residences on\nVernon Street.\n3115 Are Covered by\nHospital Contracts\nSome 3115 persons are covered\nby the current 1337 hospitalization\ncontracts of the Kootensy Lake\nGeneral Hospital, D. D. Townsend ot\nthe Hospitalization Committee re\nported to the Hospital Board T.r-r\nday. Since the opening of the\nscheme in January, 1939, over $9692\nin hospital services have been dispensed to contract holders.\nEarly Closing Bylaw\nto Regulate Stores\nNotice of motion tor an early clot\nIng byltw. to govern stores, wis\ngiven by Aid. Roy Shtrp at Tuesday night's Council meeting.\nFOLKSTONE,  England ,<CP)\nFor keeping 1470 gallons of petrol\nwithout a  licence.  Henry Durrell\nwas tided \u00a350 ($222) here.\nMissing Fishermen\nBelieved Drowned\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., July 9\n(CP)\u2014George and Robert Robert,\nson, fishermen brothers formerly of\nBurnaby, were reported missing to\nBritish Columbia Police today and\nbelieved drowned.\nThe Provincial Police patrol boat\nPML 7 made the report to Prince\nRupert after patrolling the rivers\ninlet district off Queen Charlotte\nIsland.\nMcNaughton Thanks\nMaj.-Gen. Crerar\nWITH THE CANADIAN FORCES\nIN ENGLAND, July 9 (CP CABLE)\n\u2014A message of appreciation and\ngratitude on behalf ot himself and\nthe Canadian forces in England was\nsent today by Maj.-Gen. A. G. L\nMcNaughton, Commander ot the 1st\nDivision, to Ma).-Gen. H. D. G. Crerar who has relinquished his post\nas Senior Officer of Canadian Military Headquarters, London, to become Vice Chief of the General\nStaff in Canada.\nGen. McNaughton paid tribute to\nhis colleague for his efforti In ft-\ncilitttlng the organization ind\nequipment of the Canadian overseas forces.\nthe Falrvltw District, are com'\nplaining continuously of shortage oi\nwater. With our present distribution\nsystem this trouble Is almost entirely caused by residents using their\ngarden sprinkler* thin drawing the\nwater off from tht higher sections\nUnfortunately many of the residents\nln the downtown sections allow their\nsprinklers to run almost day and\nnight and waste a peat deal ot\nwater, their own iround becoming\nwaterlogged and the surplus water\nthen running away down the streets\nInto our catch basins. . . . None pf\nthe considerable number of City-\nowned sprinklers In Its parks, flower gardens, boulevards and ln the\ncemetery, ire allowed to be oper\nited tfter noon until lite In the eve<\nning.\nSTRUTS\nGradlng-The werk of laying pre-\nmix aiphalt on Front Street con-\ntlntlei, tnd we ire now using our\nthird ctrlotd of asphalt for this\npurpose. Occasionally a great deal\nof damage is being done to the new\nsurface by horses driven over the\nnew surfacing.\nWe hive removed iome of tht\nsloping bank from Poplar Street between Front Street tnd the Canadian Pacific Railway thut allowing\nmore parking space.\nOn Silica Street we hive used\ngravel from the Roiemont pit for\nbuilding up the grade adjoining the\ntwo new blocks of concrete curbs\nrecently Installed. The Rosemont\ngravel contain! more bonding material than the Fairview gravel, and\nin cases where it is not intended to\nlay hard surface, it Is found better\nto use this gravel. Wt hive given\nthe surface thert t treatment with\nroad oil.\nWe have removed a btnk on the\nEast side of Fifth Street South from\nElwyn Street, widening out the\nstreet grade.\nWt art now txcavatlng poor material from tht 900 block Vernon\nStreet tnd ire b_ckfllling with\ngravel and crushed rock, and this\nwill be finished with premix asphalt The excavated material has\nbeen taken to make a fill at the\nChatham Street roadiide.\nDuring the course of these street\nballasting operations excess sand\nproduced at the gravel pit has been\nhauled to our Winter storage pile on\nVernon Street.\nIn the early part of the period we\nran the diesel cat and road grader\nover most of the city roadways and\nproceeded to spray coat with rotd\noil. One ctrlotd of 8000 gallons has\nbeen used and another carload ll on\norder.\nAll the teal coat work proposed\nfor this season his been completed,\na total of 8070,gallons of asphalt being used for thii work.\nDRAINAGE\nNew stwer connections hsve been\ninstalled lor the Jeffrey house at\nthe corner of Hall Mines Road and\nKootenay Street, and new catch\nbtslna were Initalled at the lower\nend of tht 900 Block, Vernon Street,\ndesigned to conform with the pro\nposed finished hard surfacing on\nthis block.\nMalntentnce work has been car-\nritd out on road ditches, catch\nbasins, sewers and manholes continuously during the period.\nThe usual itreet cleaning operations, cutting of grass ana weeds\non boulevards and hauling twiy o(\nsima and rtrhoval of refuse, have\nbeen carried out. The lighter sections of th_ work, such as tht removal of light debris, Is carried\nbttn dttlt With Two new plumbing\npermits htvt been issued tnd tight\nbuilding permiti to tht value ot\n$3190 have also been Issued.\nJ. C. Robfson Is\nInstalled Head\nof Nelson K.P\/s\nJ. C. Roblson waa Installed as\nChancellor-Commander ot the Nel\nson Knights of Pythias Lodge ln In'\nstallation ceremonies conducted at\nthe Eagle Hall Tuesday evening by\nO. R. Drew of Nelson, Deputy\nGrand Chancellor.\nOther officers installed were E.\nL. Wright Vice-Chancellor; Thomas\nStemon, Prelate; E. A. Calbick,\nMaster of Works; David Laughton,\nKteper ot Records and Seals, and\nMaster of Finance; Frank Goucher,\nMaster of Exchequer; A. Matassi,\nInner Guard; David Reel, Outer\nGmrd; William Irvine, Herbert Logan and S. 3, Newell, Trustees.\nThe meeting wu concluded with\nrefreshments and a social progrim.\nDOG POUND TO BE\nMADE \"DOG-TIGHT\"\nInstructions for the dog pound\u2014\nthe former steam roller shed on the\ncity Incinerator groundi\u2014to be mtde\n'dog-tight\" had been Issued, H.\nD. Dawson, City Engineer, reported to the City Council Tueiday\nnight after Aid. Roy Sharp itated\nJames Robinson, dog tax collector,\nwaa having difficulty in holding\nimpounded dogs.\nIt was said thert had betn Instances of Impounded dogs being\nreleased. On ona occasion a lock\nwas broken off.\n\"Tint's i dog-gone dirty trick,\"\ncommented Aid. C. W. Tyler amid\ngeneral laughter.\nBuilding of Wooden\nSidewalk on Fourth\nStreet Authorised\nConstruction of i wooden sidewalk to serve the residence ot\nRev. and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood,\nFourth Street was authorized by\nths City Council Tuesdty night.\n441 Baktr 8t\nBRITISH TO RESUME\nAIRCRAFT SHIPMENTS\nFOR AUSTRALIAN FORCE\nMELBOURNE, .uly 9 (AP)-Tht\nuitralitn Air'Minlltry tiday caressed    gratification   ovtr   word\nAustralian Air'Minlltry today ef\npressed gratification ovtr wort\nfrom the British Government thtt\nthe litter will resume shipment pf\naircraft to Australia for training\npurposes. Theie shipments waft\nsuspended for t tlmt earlier In tha\nyear when Lord Beaverbrook first\ntook otfict as Minister of Aircraft\nProduction. Efforts will bt continued 16 obtain aircraft from tht\nUnited States, at tha Australian\nAir Force Is capable of training\nairmen as flit ai airfrafl can It\nobtained from all source*.\nITALIAN PLANE OVIR\nMALTA SHOT DOWN\nVALETTA, Malta.. JUly 9 (API-\nAn Italian plane wai shot down by\nBritish guns during a brief raid today. Flvt tir Harms wera sounded\nyesterday, but there was no tctuil\nI attack.\nSoroptimisti, Nurses\nHospital Donations\nto Be Acknowledged\nDonations of $100 from the Nelson\nSoroptimist Club of $11 from the\nNelion Graduate Nurses Association to tht Kootemy Lake General\nHospital will bt acknowledged with\nletters of thanks, it Wai decided by\nthe Hotpltal Board ot Directors\nmeeting Tueiday night. The done-\ntions were received during June.\nNelson Red Crois Is\nGranted Permission\nfor Holding Tag Day\nPermission for Nelion Brinch of\ntht Canadian Red Cross Society to\nhold a tag day August 3 wis glinted by the City Council Tuesdty\nnight The Branch also requested\na date in September but no action\nwas taken on this request pending\na definite date being requested.\nThe tags were to finance purchaie\not materials used in the Red Cross\nwork room, a letter to R,. Council\nexplained.\nCommittee to Study\nHospital Exemption\nof Sales Tax on Food\nConditions under which hospital\nmay be extended from sales tax\non food purchases contained in a\nletter received by the Koolehay\nLike General Hospital Board Tuesday night, was referred to the Finance Committee for study, by the\nBoard Tqesdiy night The flnince\ncommittee will prepare a report on\nthe letten.\nThe letter suggested that hospitals\nwould be exempted trom salts tax\non some food purchases if no specific charges were made for meals\nserved nurses and other members\not'the stall. Under'the present system a specific charge fof board of\nHospital employee! ls mide.\nReceipts of Street\nRailway Show Gain\nof $250 Month June\nReceipts of the Nelson street railway in June totalled $1402.10, compared with $11515! In the same\nmonth last year, a gain of $3.0 5B. it\nwas shown in a report to the City\nCouncil TJuesd.y night\nWar Equipment\nStill Leaving U.S.\nSAN FRANCISCO, July 9 (AP)-\nThe San Francisco Call-Bulletin, ln\na copyrighted article, said today\nvast amounts of United States war\nequipment from the San Francisco\nBay area and Nevada \"havt.betn\ntnd still ara being shipped to tbe\nBritish undtr circumstances of utmost secrecy.\"\nIn all, 42 carloads of vital war,\nmaterial!, including light firearms\nand ammunition from the Benecia,\nCalif., arsenal, have been shipped,\nthe article said, adding:\n\"High explosives, Including big\nshells, htve bteh shipped trom the\nmilitary dump at Hawthorne, near\nWinnemucca, Nev....\n\"The first shipment wat tbout $0\ndayi ago, and ihtpmenti continued\nfor 10 days, some of the latter ara\n\u25a0till en route ...\n\"Theie war munitions have Bten\nihipped by Amerlcin fail to a\npoint about 75 miles below Winnipeg, from which point they are being trans-shipped across tbe border.\"\n(Lltut.-Col. Otctr Krupp, Commandant of the Benlcla Arsenil.\nsaid no such shipments hid been\nmade from there which \"would\ntall Into that category.\" Local offices of the army ordnance depart-\nment alto denied knowledge ol\nthe shipments, and headquarters\nof the Ninth Cofpt area declared\n\"no comment\")\nMiss Eidt Reporti\nNurses Convention\nHighlights to Board\nHighlights of the Canadian\nNurses Association convention al\nCalgary ot especial Intereit td the\nKootenay - Lake Ganertl Hotpltal\nBoird wtrt outlined ln a convention report to the Board by Miss\nVara B. Eidt, Superintendent\nTuesday night.\nMisi Eidt called attention ta tht\nAssociation1! donation of three tur-\nCleat unit* for wer work, the decision! to purchaie war bonds with\nsurplus funds, and to obtain information to teach air raid precau-\ntions in Canadi, and the Asiocia-\ntion'i pledge of lervlce in tha wn\neffort A report on an address by\nMn. Rex Eaton, B. C. Industrial\nWorkmen's Cpmpenaatlon Board\nmember, urging nurses fo continue\nto ttrive for tn'8-hour day, wat\nalio read.\nA vote of thanki to Mist \u00bb_\u25a0\nfor her report wat passed.\nCurb in 500 Block,\non Mill Street Is\nAuthorized, Council\nConstruction of a concrete curb In\nthe 500 Block, Mill Street, to direct\nsurface water Into catch baSini, wn\nauthorized by thl City Council Tuesday night The cur)) wn requeited\nrecently by tht Church Committee\nof the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate.\nExamination of Army\nRecruits Increases\nX-Ray and Lab Work\nX-Ray examlnatloni and labor\natory tests of recruits for the Department of National Defence Increased considerably the work of\nX-rty ind laboratory departmenti\nof the Kootenay Lake General Hospital. Miss Vers B. Eidt, Superintendent, reported to the Hoipital\nBoard Tuesday.\nLaboratory work on 102$ oases.\nInvolved 800 for the Department,\nwhile Of 242 X-ray cases, 190 were\narmy recruits.\nout by elderly relltt men who art\nonly able to carry out light work.\nPARKS AND\nCEMETERY\nThe contractors tor the cem\u00abtery\npiers ire continuing the work of\nquarrying and stone cutting.\nAt   Lakeside   Park   some   smill\nareas undtr swings htvt been given\nhell and certain \u2014\n\u2022bards. etc\\, havt\nt cott of asphalt and certain [lours\nto diving boards, etc., hive been\ncirrled out. The water jupply pip-\nto the float wai broken ind his\nbeen repaired.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nParking and other signs ilong\n6aker Street 'aft being rtbainted.\n\u2022nd i number of dlsJOiltl parking attics tre also being p.lntad.\nThe Bind Stint on Vernon Street\nhu alio betn painted.\nId accordance with certain aerie-\nmenu mtde *lth N. Ntlion, Douglu Boid, wt have aeiuttd in moving hii two houaei to i new location on Chttham Street\nZONING, BUILDING\nAND PLUMBING BYLAWS\nA number Of Inveitlgiilom and\ninspections under these Bylaw's hive\nINDIGESTION?\nCONSTIPATION?\nTake this Modem Vept.Me Lix.HI,.\nII your llvw ll ilugglth \u2014 If It lin't pumping\nthi nied\u00abd quantity of vltil liquid bill into\nyour bo.oli ivory diy \u2014 you*vt bgund to\nluffor trom indention and conitlpitlon.\nThat', whirl Dr. Morol'i Indian Root Pilli\ncm help you. TM apiclll vtgltlblo Intro-\ndionti In till gcintli ittln. liittlvi iniouflgoa\nDili flow, lid! dilution, promotll thl clock-\nllki regularity Hill klopl y\u00abJ bright ind right\nill Ily, Ivory diy. Oil your livlr In llll jtb\nwitb thli Improvid M yoir old romody. Aik\ntor tho gonulno \"Dr. Moron\" \u2014 It your\ndrutalll'l,   St Pilli 290. (Advt)\nTake the Worry\nOut of\nMoving\nPhone 33\nIt's just\nas simple\nas that\nOur staff are all men with yean of\nexperience. To move your furniture\ncarefully and speedily is of prime importance to them.\nWest Transfer Co.\nEitabliihed in 119?\n\t\n\t\n________________________________________________\n___________!\n TODAY'S News Pictmes\n'\u25a0'\u2022*\u2022 ''    ; 7 ' :       ' r'-v '-'\u25a0'.  '\"' '       \"*'    '\nFirst Shipload of British Children Arrive Safely In Canada\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. JULY 10. 194a\n\u25a0)__feiiftii*_al\nThe first contingent of the army\nof British children who are expected In Canada where they will\nfind a safe refuge from the threat\nof bombardment in the embattled\nold land, arrived at an Eastern\nCanadian port and the majority\nimmediately left for their new\nhomes in different parts of the\nDominion. Above are pictured a\ngroup of the children as they gathered for entrainment from the\nport of disembarkation. At right,\nyoung Master William Elliot start\nout on his new adventure armed\nwith his cricket equipment. Two\ntypically English lads also ln the\ngroup are shown, below centre.\nGoes to Bahamas\nfliiiiira__\n'7~W$r'r77-: :^H\u25a0\u25a0\ni.-*V  B      *i_Bib\u00bb_a.\n^Iftfe4v_i\nL1 l f^W\nw    vi\n_L ^*\">    _______\nw__H^Hi\niff\n1 7 1:\n1 WSt\n__m\n\\   \u2022*   *\u00bb ^B\ni           _\u00a7 * _**$*_ %*&?\n_____________B____\u00bbPiH\n\u25a0\u25a0 __* m't_iiii\n__r' -\"\u00bb-\"\u25a0_-''\"''\".-'\n___a_W'^'________h\nWW' ^Hi\n^\u25a0r.      *\nFamous names appear with British children.\nLeft to right the Earl of March, son of the Duke\nef'Richmond; Hon. George St Lawrence Neuflize\nPonsonby, son of the Earl and Countess of Bess-\nborough, and Hon; N. C. Gordon L.nnox, youngest\nson of the Duke of Richmond.\nGerman Arrested\nJoin Canadian Cabinet\nThe Duke of Windsor has been\nappointed Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Bahama\nIslands.\nRules France foi*\nHitler\nDR. HERBERT HOEHNE\nLOS AJTOELES, July 8 (API-\nUnited States Commissioner David Head ordered Dr. Herbert\nHoehne of Germany held for\ngrand Jury investigation today\nand suggested the possibility ot\nprosecution of San Francisco German consular authorities on\ncharges of conspiracy to violate\nthe Federal law requiring registration of foreign agents.\nHoehne was arrested on charges\nof failure to register under this\nlaw.\nTo Join R.A.F.\nMUSS\nPride of French\nRichelieu' Is Put Out of Commission at\nDakar; British Only Attempt tq\nCripple Huge Ship\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\nCtntditn Prut Staff Wrlttr\nLONDON, July'l (CP Cible)-\nThl battleship Richelieu, 35,000-\nton prldt of the French navy, hli\nbttn heavily damaged by tlr tnd\nnaval attaoki while lying tt anchor It Dakar, Weit Africa, A. V.\nAlexander, Flnt Lord of thl Admiralty, announced In the Common! todiy.\nRunning the risk of blowing\nthemielvei up, British teamen\ntook t small boat through the\nouter defences of the harbor to\nplant depth charges under the\nitem of tht niw battleship, the\nmort formidable In the World, ind\ndamaged her propellon ind steering apparatus.\nA few minutei later aircraft of\nthe Fleet Air Arm flew low over\nthe harbor to drop torpedoei on\nthe shiny new warship flying the\nFrench trloolor. Both attacks were\nlucceisful, and the big ship now\nlies with t heavy lilt tc pert ind\ndown by the stern, obviously.In\nno condition to be uiediby Hitler\n\u2022nd Munollnl.\nThe, Britlih Navy ittempted to\n\u2022ipple the French craft only after\nthe  French Admiral  refused  the\nPRtMIER MACDONALD\nHON. J. L, ILSLEY\nPremier Angus I. Maadonald of Nova Scotia is to head the new\nDepartment of National Defence for Naval Affairs, and Hon. J. L.\nIlsley becomes Finance Minister, in the Canadian Government.\nAt Canadian Gathering In New York\nsame terms offered earlier to the\nFrench Commander at Oran.\nThe measures Britain has taken\nhave removed a source of \"grave\nanxiety\", he aaid, thanking the Naval itaff which planned \"these opera'\ntlom Immediately following the\ncompletion of the evacuation (from\nFrance) in the face of the enemy\ntroops and refugeei totilling not\nless thin 000,000,\"\n'Thii Is the greatest achievement\nof Its kind in the hlitory of naval\noperatloni-^a remarkable tribute to\nthe value of our seapower, a power\nwhich we do not Intend to lose,\"\nMr. Alexander told the cheering\nHouse.\nThe action accounted for all of\nthe French battleships except the\nJean Bart, a sister ship of the Richelieu still far from completion. .\nFrance had eight capital ships\nwhen the armistice was signed, he\nsaid, accounting for\" them thus:\nThree ln British control, one sunk,\none badly damaged and immobilised, one driven aihore at Oran\nand Incapacitated for months if\nnot permanently, one which escaped to the naval base at Toulon\nafter being hit by a torpedo, and\nthe Jean Bart.\nMr. Alexander disclosed that the\nRoyal Navy had engaged in two further operations since its attack July\n3 on French units at Oran to ensure\nthat France's fleet be kept from\nGerman and Italian hands.\nSeven French capital ships now\nhave been accounted for, he declared.\nThe depth charges which crippled the Richelieu were dropped\nfrom a motorboat close under the\nstern to damage propellors and\nsteering gear,\" Mr. Alexander said,\nwhile aircraft dropped torpedoes.\nAll the attackers escaped safely,\nhe said.\nTha motorboat, thl First Lord\ntold tht Houstt waa t ship's boat\nunder Lieut.-Cmdr. R. H. Briitowe\nwhich wu tent into the harbor ind\ncirrled cut iti mission \"with great\ndaring.\" \u25a0\nThese four alternatives were offered the French Commander, Mr.\nAlexander said.\n1. That the Richelieu nil with i\nreduced crew under escort to t\nBritish port;\n2. That she sail with a reduced\ncrew to a French port in the West\nIndies where she could be demilitarized:\n3. That she be demilitarized In\nDakar within 12 hours;\n4. That she would be lunk within a time limit\nNo satisfactory reply was received\nwithin the time limit, he declared.\nThe other naval action since the\nattack at Oran mentioned by Mr.\nAlexander was the raid by British\naircraft July 6 on the battleship\nDunkerque.  *\nIt already had been disclosed that\nBritish fliers scored six hlti on\nthe damaged, grounded, 26,500-ton\nFrench capital ship July 6, and Mr.\nAlexander said the aerial attack\nwould incapacitate her for a long\ntime.\nTelling of the raid on the Richelieu, the First Lord said:\n\"On July 7, the flag officer entrusted with these operations sent\none of his captains ahead in a sloop\nln order to present the terms in\nperson.\n\"On arrival, this ihip wai Informed by French luthorltlei that they\nwould be fired on If she approached\nclose to the port, and it wai only\nafter an interval that the Frencn\nconsented to receive this communication by signal.\"\nAerial reconnaissance ifter the\nattack established that the Richelieu was listing to port, down by\nthe stem and surrounded by a large\nquantity of oil, he said.\nWhile the motorboat was \"still In\nthe harbor, Mr. Alexander related,\nher enginei broke down and she\nlay helpless for a time, but the\ncrew succeeded in getting one engine running lust as they were discovered. The boat was pursued, but\nmanaged to escape by crossing harbor defence nets which fouled the\npropellor ot its pursuer, he said.\nPaying tribute to the bravery of\nthe motorboat crew, the Firit Lord\nsaid it was obvious that all aboard\nran the risk of blowing themselves\nup.\nThe main attack was entrusted to\nthe Fleet Air Arm later, he said,\nand a number of aerial torpedoes\nhit the Richelieu.\nHe said the crew of the motor-\nboat, still In the harbor, witnessed\nthe attack, and reported seeing\nsmoke pour from the battleship after five explosions were heard.\nDespite heavy anti-aircraft fire.\nhe reported, all the British planes\nreturned safely.\nThe Jean Bart, sister ship of the\nRichelieu, remains, but.her construction will not be completed for\nsome months to come, Mr. Alexander said.\nPAU\nGeneral Joachim Von Steulp-\nnagel, from headquarters at Wiesbaden, Germany, will govern conquered France\u2014Wiesbader; was\nheadquarters of the French army\nof occupation in the Rhineland\nafter the World War.\nHolds Army Purse\nSon of the U.S. minister to Bul-\ngt _-.rg. .,. aiarie IV has re-\nsig. -d as his father's secretary m\nSofia and will go to Egypt to join\nthe British Royal Air Force.\nGuest speakers at _ Canadian gathering in New York on Dominion Day were Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, whose pet hate is Adolf\nHitler, and Hon. James MacKinnon, Canada's Minister qf Trade and\nCommerce. They sre shown together on the s. -aker's plalform. Both\nstressed the danger to the North American continent in German\noverlordshlp of Europe,\nDonald M. Nelson, pictured\nabove former business executive,\nwas named by President Franklin\nD. Roosevelt as co-ordinating\nagent of all Federal purchasing in\nthe U.S. defence program,\nItaly's Navy Was\nAnxious lor War\nLONDON, July 9 (OP)\u2014Infonm-\ned sources asserted today that a\ndesire of the Italian Navy to achieve \"glory\" comparable to that\ngained by Italy's army and Air\nForce in Ethiopia and Spain was a\nfactor in Italian entrance into the\nwar.\nThey sal dthe navy nda shown\na definitely \"pro-war\" attitude for\nsome time.\nThese sources said they believed\nItaly would be unable \"at present\"\nto replace submarines at the rate\nBritish forces are sinking them, estimated generally to exceed the\nrate of destruction of German submarines.\nThey estimated 80 per cent of all\nItalian naval personnel had been\nconscripted.\nThese sources said the new 35,000\nton battleship Vittorio Veneto and\nLittorio \"probably\" had completed\ntheir trials, but suggested that\nItaly might \"prefer\" to keep them\nout of action in the Immediate future.\nThe same sources estimated that\nItaly's battleship strength at five\nships, including the Vittorio Veneto, the Littorio and three 27,000-\nton vessels which have been reconstructed.\nThey recalled that the Italian Naval Under-Secretary, in a statement a month ago, had said that\nconstruction of two new cruisers\nwai being delayed \"in favor\" of\nnew destroyers and submarines.\nThis iction wis interpreted here\nas due to a shortage of material.\nJapanese Demand\nApology From U. S.\nSHANGHAI, July 9 (AP)-Mi-\nJor-Qeneral Saburo Miura, Commander of Japaneie gendarmes,\ndemanded in apology todiy from\nthe Commander cf United States\nMirlnei In the International Settlement for alleged maltreatment\nof 15 plainclothes gendarmes while\nin Marine custody.\nHe declared thit \"speedy settlement of the Incident li neceiury,\nor the mitter Is likely to tike \u2022\ngnve turn.\"\nMORNING SPECIALS\nMEN'S COMBINATION UNDERWEAR\nAT HALF PRICE\nWhite non-run rayon combinations, button and crossover athletic style. Cfti*\nSizes 36 to 44.\nWHITE GLOVES\nWashable white rayon\ngloves in pull-on styles.\n)ust the thing for these\n.hot Summer days, CQ -\n6 to 7'\/j. Pair .... \u00ab*C\nFLOWER VASES\nYou'll want extra vases\nthis Summer. These are\nmade- from crystal glass\nwith modernistic design\nand flared top. Oft,.\nEach   itVC\nREXOLEUM MATS\n5 dozen hard wearing felt base mats in size 18x36. 6 designs and colors. VLm\nWednesday Special, 2 for ,\nSale of PANTIES\nLacy knit briefs, panties,\nbloomers. Tearose or\nwhite. Size small, medium,\nlarge. Vests to match.\nWednesday Special OQ\nEach    \u00a3OC\nSale of CRETONNE\n50 yards only, 27\" printed\ncretonne. Cood selection\nof designs. Wednesday\nSpecial, A\nYard       3C\nWOMEN'S D'ORSAY SLIPPERS\nNew shipment just arrived of these high quality slippers.\nLeather tops, padded soles and cuban heels. (110\nPopular colors and sizes 4 to 8    <p 1.1 J\nEvacuees  Expected  in\nB. C. About End of July\nVICTORIA, July 0 (CP). - First\nevacuated British children will\nreach this Province about the end\nof July, it was announced by Dr.\nO. M. Weir, Provincial Secretary,\ntoday, on his return from Ottawa\nwhere he attended the conference\ncalled in connection with the removal to Canada of the youngsters.\n\"British Columbia will receive at\nleast 10 per cent of the total number ot overseas children,\" Dr. Weir\nsaid in a statement Issued to the\npress. \"Our plans ire well advanced, thanks to the mahlnery built\nup by the Child Welfare Branch,\nWelfare Branch and Children's Aid\nSocletiei over a period of years.\n\"Because of this fact, this Province, with one or. two others, are\nJapan May Fight\nfor Opening of\nthe Burma Route\nRegistration lo\nStart al Once\nRumanian Soldiers\nGuard Offices of\nOil Companies\nBUCHAREST, July 9 (AP). -\nRumanian soldiers with rifles and\nbayonets threw cordons around\nthe offices of the foreign oil com-\npaneis today to prevent the removal of plans or papers concerning Rumania's  rich oil fields.\nSimultaneously, a report ipread\nthat the British were negotiating\nto sell their oil interests in this\nBalkan Kingdom to Russia.\nIt is estimated approximately\n$100,000,000 of British capital is\ninvested in this country's oil industry. Rather than let these holdings fall under German control\nthrough possible development! the\nBritish Interests are believed willing to transfer them to Moscow.\nASK ALL UNEMPLOYED\nTO BE CONSCRIPTED\nFOR HOME DEFENCE\nTORONTO, July 9 (CP) - Hon.\nHarry G. Nixon, acting Premier of\nOntario, said today the Ontario\nGovernment will ask the Federal\nGovernment to conscript all phys-\nicslly fit unemployed persons for\nHome defence, Irrespective of age.\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Prepan-\ntions for national registration of\nCanadians to mobilize tnem for war\nduties will begin at once, Government sources Indicated today.\nMr. Justice T. C. Davis of the\nSaskatchewan Court of Appeal is\nexpected to arrive here today to\nbecome, along with Major-General\nL. R. LaFleche, Joint Deputy Minister of National War Services Department, under Hon. J. G. Gardiner.\nDuring the First Great War conscription for overseas service did\nnot await national registration. The\nconscription law waa proclaimed\ncalling single persons withouf dependent! between the ages of 20\nand 34 years to present themselves\nfor enlistment. Exemption tribunals\nwere set up for those who claimed\nexemption under the ict of that\ntime.\nPrime Minister King said last\nweek ln Parliament that mobilisation would not await national registration, so some system similar to\nthat used in the First Great War\nwill likely be employed, with the\ndifference that ln the present case\nmen mobilized under the Mobilization Act will not be liable for service overseas unlesa they so volunteer.\nNo definite decision will be reached as to what ages will be called\nup until the Department has been\norganized, or how the mobilization\nwill be carried out.\nWhile there will be no exemptions within the agee decided upon,\nand the measure will apply to married as well as single men, those\nwho can best be spared from their\nnormal occupations and with least\nfamily responsibilities will be called\nup first. Some of the others may\nbe expected to train at night while\nnot actually being mobilized.\nCREEK STOREKEEPERS CIVE\nDAY'S MONEY TO GOVT.\nMELBOURNE, July.9  (AP)  -\nipers tnrougboi\nState of Victoria are sending their\nGreek storekeepers throughout the\nentire receipts for today to the Government to help defray the war\ncosti. Employeei of the shops ire\nalio giving their day's pay, and tbe\nGreek Consul ls adding to the fund\n23 per cent of the total.\nTOKYO, July 9 (API-Informed\nquarters asserted today Japan Is\nprepared to take military action\nagainst H6ng Kong if Britain continues refusal to close the Burma\nroute of war supplies to Chlni.\nThese sources said Japanese plans\nare complete and merely iwait\nLondon's reply to a requeit for reconsideration of the  refusal.\nThey pointed to the removal of\nwomen and children from Hong\nKong as an Indication of the seriousness with which Britain views\nthe situation.\nThe Japanese cabinet decided today to send new representations to\nBritain, and Domei, Japanese News\nAgeniT, said the ministers expressed \"strong opinions\" in their meeting.\nGOVT. RECEIVES REPORT\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)\u2014The Gov-\nernment has received a report from\nSir Robert Craigie, British Ambassador to Japan, on hia talks with\none Japanese on the question of\nclosing the arms route to China\nthrough Bura, sources cloie to the\nforeign office said today. K was\nsaid the report is under consideration and that discussions with the\nJapanese likely will continue.\nPLAN TO TICHTEN\nCOAST TRAFFIC RULES\nVANCOUVER, July 9 (CP)-Al-\nderman George Buscomb, Chairman of thc Vancouver Traffic Commission, said today the \"growing\ndisregard\" of automobile drivers for\nthe law would be brought to the\nattention of the Police Comission\nat its next meeting, and stiffer law\nenforcement requested.\nexpected to carry tha major part\nof tbe evacuation in the Initial\nstages.\n\"Present plans contemplate the\nopening of reception centrei In\nVancouver it the Provincial School3\nfor the Deaf and Blind, and at St\"\nGeorge's School kindly loaned for\nthe Summer monthi by the Directors ind Head Muter.\"\nPlans at firit were made for re-\nceptlon' of 3000 children arriving\nin Canada about the middle of July\nwith three groups of 750 each arriving at intervals of five dayi\nthereafter. Theie plane hive been\nchanged, both as to numbers and\ntimes of arrivals, but it is assumed\nthat the movement will be on a\nmuch larger basis and over a longer period of time than originally\ncontemplated.,\nDr. Weir stated that children will\nbe kept In receiving centres for\nabout 10 days ln order to complete\nthe necessary medical examination!\nand arrange detaili of placement\nin approved homes.\nHe said that by the weekend 400\napproved homes would be on file\nwith the Child Welfare Branch and\nothers who are willing to receive\nchildren on i free-care baili are\nurged to apply In Vancouver to\nthe Superintendent at Child Welfare. In other areas throughout the\nProvince inquiry ihould De made\nto the Provincial Welfare visitor or\nsent to Vancouver.\nVOGUE\n). PURE WHITE\n[InziBiOwwttq\n^ Cigarette Papers\nDOUBLt Automatic 5'\nWOOD SAW\nWORKING        FILING\nReasonable Ratei\nKootenay Sash tt Door Work*\n301 Wird 6t Opp. City Hall\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS \u2014 ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing flr Heating\nCompiny, Limited\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Michlnw\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n(38 Wird 8L Phone 99\nFOR\nIROVBll-fMi\nSEI\nYOUR\nGUTTA  PERCHA\nDEALER\nCUTTA PERCHA TIRES\n-^  \u2022 -\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0      \u2022    \u25a0    i\n\t\n\t\n\t\n |iinpifwii_tjuvn.p|.\nHP\nPASI   POUR\nFaff* Bathers at Nelson Bark\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B. C.j-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. JULY 10. 1940\u2014\nMiss Eleanor Simpson, Miss Trances Jones and Miss Gladys Wigg at Lakeside Park.\n< \u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\nExactly (lie Spot for Youngsters\n. * 1     f   .\nI\n-   \u2022   'v,''.*|^',\n|\n__\u00ab*_.  ___\u25a0\ni   r - ft\nM\n?\u25a0*        V__fe            -J.\n.. .       ____.<>    <_i_ir     \u25a0             , ? ;     _\nMi *s\n\"\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0\" --tM\n\u00ab \"    . \u25a0\"!*\u00ab\n...                 j.\n'j tf'   ,s_\u00abNp     \u25a0*               ' S*   '                 .'     *     i.A|           \u25a0\u25a0\n                             -     -.*\u2022\u2022\u25a0 i 7 _\u25a0.,\u25a0\u2022..\u25a0 ._- ...\u00bb\nMaureen, left, and Gall, children of of Mr. and\nand Mrs. Stewart Paterson, at Lakeside Park. Mr.\nand Mrs. Paterson recently returned to Nelson from\nBralorne.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\nSERIAL STOPtf\nBy Oren Arnold*\nHAPPINESS, C. 0. D.\nCHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR\nGayle drummed a tattoo on Bill\nBailey's door with her fingers.\n\"Bill!\" She waited a moment and\ndrummed again. \"Bill!''\nShe heard a stirring, then a sleep-\nladen, \"Yes?\"\n\"Get up! The sun is out and the\nbirds are singing. And anyway, 1\nwant to go walking with you before breakfast.\"\nMore stirring, then\u2014\"Not interested in sunshine, or birds.\"\nShe smilad at thc oaken door.\n\"Or breakfast, or m_\"\n\"Yeah, I like breakfast.\"\n\"So!\"\n\"All right, all right, you too. Ltt\nme get a robe on, can't you?\"\n- He turned the knob and poked\na tousled head out then, smiling\nhappily. Sleep had worked its miracle, last evening's gloom had fad-\ned. \"What's the idea, disturbing a\ngentleman in lhe\u2014\"\n\"Hush and gu dress. I'll wait on\nthe front porch. Comb vour hair,\ntoo.\" She reached quickly to pull\n\u25a0t one of the black crinkles that his\npillow had ironed down near to his\neye, then she laughed and left him.\nHe came down in whites\u2014white\nduck trousers, white sox and shoes,\na white sport shin, that laced part\nway down, his big chest, and that\nhad very short sleeves. He had\nshaved hurriedly, so that he now\nlooked like a youth of 17, pink and\nplump and pretty. Gayle told bun\nthat.\n\"Your voice will even be changing soon, I betcha!\" she concluded.\nHe grabbed at her in mock fury.\nShe dodged, ran, shrieked and ran\nfaster. There was no escaping him,\nthough, ln a moment he had her\nin his powerful grip. As if she were\na little sister aged 10 or so, he lifted\nher bodily up onto his shoulder\nand carried her across the lawn on\na trot. Quite by chance he circled\naome massed shrubery and came\nwithin sight of the old Merrifield\nswimming pool.\n\"Ah ha!\" he cried, suddenly. The\npool, thoroughly reconxtioned and\nrepainted, had been filled. Even\n' now its water caught llie Springtime dawn and reflected colors. The\nfaintest wind ripple made patterns\nthere.\n\"Bill Bailey, what are you going\nto do?\" Gayle suddenly cried.\n\"Wake a gentleman up at midnight, will you1 Disturb a thinker\nat his sleep Pound on his door like\na blacksmith, and drag him out\ninto thc cold. Ha! Vcangeance is\n'mine!\"\nShe began a terrific squirming\nand kicking and flailing and pleading, half-laughing and half-fright,\nencd at the same time. The more\n\u25a0-she wngj.lcri, the faster he ran-\nand Ihe higher up he held her in his\n\u25a0powerful arms. All at once they\n'\"Were   at   the   edge   nf   Ihepool.\n\"EE-YEOW!\" he yelled, and threw\n,Jicr in.\nShe har barely hit the water\u2014in\nthe part marked nine feet deep-\nwhen he had dived in headlong.\n\u25a08he struck mi her side, but Bill's\ndive was a graceful head-first. He\ncut through the water to come under her. In a matter of seconds he\nhad gripped her again and was\nholding her face up in  lhe air.\n\"I \u2014 hope \u2014 you can swim!\" lie\nshrieked, through the drip.\n\"I can't swim a stroke!\" she sto.\nrled. \"I hope you\u2014drown\u2014with mo\n\u2014hateful thing! O-o-o-o-oh!\"\nShe leaped at him then, plumped\nboth hands onto his head and quite\nthoroughly soused him. She used\nthe leverage lo step up onto his\nsubmersed shoulders and plunge\naway, Wlvn he sputtered lo the\naurlace \"(igain  she   was sitting on\nthe blue tiled side of the pool,\ngrimacing at him and squeezing\nner hair.\n\"I\" hate you until the year 2000!\"\nshe avowed. \"I spent hours primping this morning. Hair-do, nails,\nface, everything. Now look at my\ncurls! Or ex-curls.\"\nIn her own estimstlon she was\na 6orry looking mess. Bill, though,\nlooked at her appreciatively still.\nHer hair, cut in a long bob, was a\ntangle of wet, straw-colored material which captured golden points of\nsunlight now. The water had no\nwhit damaged the color of her\nchecks and lips, and BiU doubted\nthat the color was artificial anyway.\n'\"I'm sorry about your dress,'' he\napologized, suddenly earnest. \"I'll\nhave it cleaned.\"\nShe smiled forglvenes. \"No, it's\nan old one. Washes easily. I wear\nit mornings, some.\"\n\"It's beautiful on you, Gayle! It\nwas. and it still is, even wet!\"\n\"Silly!\"\n\"I mean It Gayle, you're so very\npretty!\"\n\"I don't care. There's no harm in\ntelling the truth occasionally, is\nthere?\"\nShe laughed > little, sweetly, happily. \"Thanks, Bill. You're nice\nyourself. You feel good today. Much\nbetter than yesterday, don't you?\"\n\"Yep. But I got to face that again\nthis morning. Matter of fact.\" He\nclimbed up and sat beside her,\nflipping water off himself with a\nfinger. \"We've got to stir up something for those girls, or I have. Been\nresting after the play, and getting\nmy neck into trouble, doggone it!\"\n\"The girls needed to relax, I imagine. Anyway, it was a good thing\nfor Jeremy. He has shown remarkable progress of late, Bill.\"\n\"Yeah\"\n\"And Bill\u2014the first play, 'Maid to\nMeasure,' was such a success that I\nthink you'd be foolish not to do another one immediately. Don't you?\nYou're awfully wet.\"\n\"I agree. So are you. Cold?\"\n\"We are well advertised. Not\nmuch. I'm glad the pool Is ready,\nIs.'t it beautiful!\"\n\"The newspapers put us across\nand we cleared most of the $600. If\nyou want to swim a little bit more\nyou might as well, since we're already wet.\"\nThey dived in and swam briefly,\nthen crawled out on the other side.\nHe held her hand as they walked\nbriskly back toward the mansion,\nand they planned more activity for\nThe Oaks.\nMr. Merrifield, rubbing hia hands.\nin a sort of tribute to the beauty of\nthe morning, suddenly espied them,\nand came off the porch in some\nalarm.\n\"You are all wet!\" he exclaimed.\n\"Are you\u2014did you have an accident?\"\n\"She sassed me and I threw her\nin Ihe pool.\" Bill explained, grinning, \"women should be treated\nrough.\"\nSlowly, then, the old fellow smiled, visibly relaxing. He sighed audibly. \"I live in fear that something\nmay happen to spoil It all,\" he murmured, as If to himself.\n\"Spoil what, Mr, Merrifield?\"\nGayle looked up at the tall, gray\nold man.\n\"All of this\u2014you, and young Bailey, and all the other girls, and all\nthe renewed life you hava brought\nhere. Has it not been priceless?\nFor years I lived here In a matter\nof-fact world, my dear! You cannot\nbegin to understand. You won't\u2014\nyou won't let anything end it, will\nyou?\"\nHis face showed such an earnest\nness u the young couple had never\nseen before. Bill was deeply impressed.\n\"Not if I can possibly help it, Mr.\nMerrifield,\" Gayle declared,\n\"Right, sir,\" Bill nodded. \"It's a\npeculiar job you hired us for, but\nif you like the way we're doin_[\u2014\"\n\"Jeremy Is a new man!\"\n\"He Is lest shy,\" Gayle sgrecd.\n\"Really he is.\"\n\"If you have no objections, sir,\nwe expect to present another play.\nGayle and I have just been discussing it. The first one was quite a\nsuccess. People liked it and we\ncleared enougli money to more than\npay all our salaries\u20141 mean, all\nthe six girls' salaries \u2014 and expenses to date, so we reasoned\nthat-\"\nMr. Merrifield Interrupted. \"I\nhave created a special fund of that\nmoney, son, for a special charity\nuse, I shall add to It. You have\nmanaged well and I compliment\nyou. Just remember, whatever you\ntwo plan, to create happiness first.\nHappiness for yourselves, for Jeremy, for the six young ladles who\nhave become a part of our living\nhere. I do not meet with them so\noften. Are they pleased with their\nwork here? Arc Ihey happy?\"\nBill and Gayle looked quickly at\neach other. Each knew the other\nthought of Lola Montesa. Of the\nfact that one of the six was a thelf.\nAnd yet Mr. Merrifield must not be\nannoyed by petty things!\n\"The girls, naturally, take a little\nmore time adjusting themselves,\"\nGayle hedged adroitly. \"But they\nhave been thoroughly thrilled by\nstaying here, and working here, Mr.\nMerrifield. They have come to love\nyou. as we all do.\"\nTo love you. To love you.\nOld Mr. Merrifield murmured\nthat phrase once and again, to himself. He was not even looking at\nthe wet young couple standing\nthere. He hooked thumbs under his\nsuspenders and stared meditatively\noff across the lawn, thinking, daydreaming. Bill and Gayie walked\nquietly away.\n(To Be Continued)\nKASLO\nKASLO, B, C. - R. C. McGer-\nrigle of Trail was a weekend viiitor\nin town.\nMr. and Mrs. Parker Williams of\nTrail were weekend city visitors.\nMiss C. Blaine of Ymir visited\nKaslo Saturday.\nA. H, MacPherson of New Denver visited town.\nRalph E. Read of Kimberley, formerly of Kaslo, visited town.\nR. McGhie of Trail visited Kaslo.\nE. Peterson of Ymir visited In\nKaslo.\n\"Scotty\" Mart- of Nelson was a\nSaturday visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. H. C. Giegerich of\nYellowknife have arrived lo spend\na few days with the former's sister,\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerich.\nJack Chapman of Nelson, former\nKaslolte, visited town.\nA. C. Beguin of Argenla was a\ncitv visitor.\nW. C. Green of Newport. Wash.,\nvisited Kaslo at the weekend\nR. S. Terhune of Rossland was a\nweekend  city visitor.\nEd Amel. who has been employed\nIn timber operations In East Kootenay, arrived In town for a few\ndays.\nKing G. Greenlaw of Howser\nwas a city visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. McLeod of\nNelson were city visitors.\nLONDON, (CP). - Brosdcasllng\nBritish prisoners' names from German stations is just a device to\nobtain an audience for propaganda\nthe Ministry of Information warns\nthe public, as next-of-kin \u00abr\u00bb notified of such captured by thc War\nOffice.        '\nIntestinal ..... ,-\nApple Beneficial\nIn Case of Colic\nBy  LOGAN .CLENDENING,  M.  O.\n\"Yea.\" said Dr. Adrian Gibbs to\ntha mother. \"I know that the cause\nof this child's colic Is .eating apples\nand I know it sounds queer to\nvou for me to tell him to eat applet.\nYet I want you to fix the apples\nln a certain particular way.\n\"Take a food Jonathan apple\nand pare lt. and then take a spoon\nand scrape around and around until you get a nice mush and then\nfeed It to our little Mend here a\nsmall amount at a time in the\ncourse of the next hour or two.\nAN, EFFECTIVE CURE\n\"I have been doing this for years\nand It Is only recently that I find\nmyself in fashion and having soma\nauthority behind me. Some European scientists began to use raw\napple pulp and apple powder In\ndifferent kinds df Intestinal disorders Including Summer complaint In infants and children several years ago I do not really believe that this child's diarrhea\ncomes from eating applet, It Is\nprobably an Infection but at any,\nrate the apple will do lt good, whatever ls the matter.\n'It appears there ls something\nln apple fiber that is called \"pectin*\nthat is supposed to do the work.\nDon't aak me too much about pectin because I don't understand lt\nmyself although I have read all\nthe scientific literature on the subject. AH that I got out of the last\narticle I read waa that there were\n1000 cases of diarrhea of all kinds\nstudied and 98 pej cont of them\nresponded to the use of scraped\nraw apple pulp.\n\"You can give as much as two\nheaping teaspoonfuls of this to the\nbaby with prospects of benefit, If\nyou spread the dosage out over a\ncouple of hours. For older people\nit Is bast to withhold all food for\nthrea or four days, except for a\nglass of water containing scraped\napple, at three or four hour intervals.\n\u2022OFT DIET\n\"When this baby begins to get\nbetter, don't feed any solid food\nfor three or four d,v_ g've \u00bb h'nt\nbut custards and egg. I should classify raw milk as a solid food: It\necomes solid as soon aa it gets into\nthe stomach.\n\"If It Is any comfort to you, you\nmay also know that thla raw apple\npulp contains Vitamin A and that\nIs supposed to have some beneficial\naction also\n\"I understand that you can get\ndried apple powder now at the\ndrug store, but _ see no reason for\ngoing to that trouble and expense\nwhen you can take a nice raw apple yourself and if you scrape it In\nfront of the baby, it will probably\nIncrease his aopetite for it and the\nvery smell will make him feel better right away.\"\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nC. E. N.\u2014\"Is there more suffering from heat today than back in\nthe 'horse and buggy' days?\"\nAnswer\u2014Certainly not. With the\nuse of electric fans, air conditioning and the availability of the\nautomobile to carry people to the\nseashore and lakeside, our position is far better than our ancestors in the \"horse and bu.ffv\" days.\nAs a matter of fact, statistics show\nthat heat prostrations have been\nreduced in the last decade about\n50 per cent over the period of\ntwenty or thirty years ago.\nB. R.: \"Please tell me how to\nobtain Vitamin E other than In\nwheat germ oil and green vegetables. I am under the impression\nthat it can be had ln concentrated\nform,\"\nAnswer: It has recently been\nisolaetd in concentrated form bu'.\nthe process U Very expensive and\nthe product correspondingly expensive. It can be obtained when\na patient with a rare form of paralysis needs It, but it is not necessary for the average person to\nobtain It in this way because in an\naverage diet there is plenty of\nVitamin E to take care of the\nneed_.\nStyled to a Tee\nBy PRUNELLA WOOD\nHow's   your   game?   Here's   a\ndress designed especially for the\ngolfer who wants all the freedom\nof her stroke without hampering\nher style Nobody would hesitate\nto have luncheon or a cool drink\non the country club terrace dressed ln this shlrtmaker. At tha\nsama time, the wearer has every\nadvantage In action on tht course.\nTwo pleats ln the skirt front and\nback, and a special under-arm\ntreatment bring tha score downward. Naturally, this frock won't\nbe bought by'golfers alone, but\nwill be snatched up time and\nagain by those who have a tendency to rip shoulder and arm\nseams.\nPastel shades as well as vivid\nare available In the sleek, cool\ncrepe.\nJOHNSON'S\nLANDING\nJOHNSON'S LANDING, B. C.Mr and Mrs. K. M. Spence -rf Trail\nand son Munroe of Nelson, are vacationing here.\nEric Bacchus has left Birchdale\nfor Vancouver.\nKenneth McPherson of Kaslo was\nat the Landing.\nMrs. Noel Jlaochui of Birchdale\nspent Sundajj with Mrs. A. C.\nRaper. ,'.\n' Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Raper\nare spending the week at Birchdale.\nA. R. Barrow. Florence and Larry\nMcNicol, returned after camping\nfor a week at Riondel.\nMr, and Mrs. A. Brokenshire and\nMrs. D. Hewlett were in Kaslo.\nTom Shelley of Murphy Creek,\nis spending a few days here.\nJ. Dinney shopped in Kaslo.\nRonnie Dinney spent a week at\nBirchdale.\nRespect..\nExample Sel by\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. Oscar Anderson and family of\nNelson visited Mr. and Mrs. Eric\nAnderson.  Oscar's  parents.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Dunsmore motored to Salmo, spending Friday with\nfriends.\nWilliam Muir has left for Vancouver for an Indefinite stay.\nA. F. McDonald, who motored\nto Oliver with his wife and family, has returned. Mrs. McDonald,\nColin and Gaie will spend the\nSummer at their ranch home at\nOliver.\nHARROP\nHARROP, B. C. \u2014 Miss Neena\nMcClement, Miss Jessie Heath, Miss\nDoreen Manahan, Miss Helen Alexander, Miss Georgina Willlscroft\nand Miss Kathleen Pearce of Nelson are spending part of their holiday at Harrop and Longbeach.\nW. D. (Bunt) Ogilvie left for\nNelson where he entrained for an\nartillery unit at the Coaat.\nMrs. F. Andrews, who spent several months with her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. I.\nCox of Castlegar, has returned.\nMr. and Mrs. W. S. Ashby and\ndaughter. Miss Joan Ashby, shopped\nin Nelson Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie spent\nSaturday ln Nelson.\nMiss Yvonne Poly of Handel.\nSask., and Miss Gwen Warstal of\nEdmonton, are 'spending a few\nweeks with Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nAndrews.\nL. C. Piper visited Nelion Saturday.\nJlfV\n*w_m\nMLnhmfot\ndtouAsw'wuL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S   MENU\nPressed Corned Beef\nPotato Salad or Creamed Potatoes\nSiring Beana      Chocolate Pudding\nIced Tea or Coffee\nPRESSED CORNED BEEF\nWash a 4-pound solid piece of\ncorned beef, cover with cold water\nand bring to boil. Remove scum\nand simmer 3 hours or until lender.\nCool in liquid, then drain and put\non large plate, cover with another\nplate and weigh down with a heavy\nstone, a crock or something similar. Put in refrigerator and let\nstand for 24 ho\\irs.\u2014Tested in Good\nHousekeeping Institute.\nPOTATO  SALAD\n8 medium sired potatoes, 2 small\ncarrots, 1 cucumber, diced, Vt cup\nchopped celery, 1 green pepper,\nshredded, 3 or 4 green onions, 1\nsmall bunch radishes, salt, paprika.\nScrub potatoes and cook In boiling salted water until tender, but\nnot too soft, peel, and slice when\ncold. Dice or shred the other vegetables, being sure the raw carrots\nare sliced very thinly or diced\nsmall. Combine all Ingredients,\nsprinkle with salt and paprika, and\nmoisten well with mayonnaise or\ncooked salad dressing, unless you\nprefer French. This amount will\namply serve from 4 to 6 persons.\nCHOCOLATE CUSTARD\n4 cups milk, t eggs, Vt teaspoon\nsalt, % cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 2 squares chocolate, ]\/t cup\nwater.\nMelt chocolate, add sugar and water, and cook until syrup is formed.\nPour into milk and add eggs and\nflavoring. Pour Into buttered baking dish or individual custard cups\nand bake until firm in 350 degrees\nF. oven. You can stand the dish\ncontaining the pudding ln another\npan of hot water If you wish. Serve\ncold. Will serve 8 persons.'\nHULA MILK SHAKE\n2 cups pineapple juice, Vt lea-\nspoon lemon juice, 2 tablespoons\nNew Orleans molaases, 1 quart milk.\nCombine pineapple Iulce, lemon\njuice and molasses. Aad slowly lo\nmilk and mix thoroughly. Chill.\nServes six.\nPRUIT PUNCH\nJuice 3 lemons, juice 3 limes,\njuice 3 oranges, 1 cup coarsely\nchopped fresh pineapple, 2 whole\noranges, ,4 cup raspberry syrup,\n2 cups sugar, Mi cup maraschino\ncherries, ,1 qt. cold water, 3 Qts.\ncharged water.\nBoll the sugar and plain water to\na syrup. Take off the fire and add\nfruit juices, pineapple, raspberry\nsyrup, and slices of unpeeled oranges. Let stand 1 hour In a cold\nplace.\nAdd maraschino cherriei and the\ncharged water and. pour Into a\npunch bowl with a large plice of\nice. Serve In small punch glasses.\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nI believe lt would do ut parent!\nfood to recall some teachers of\nour children or of our childhood\nwe have admired, to note some of\nthe splendid things they have done\ntnd observe some of the lovable\ntrails tbey possess.\nAll of ut have known that teacher whom the little child almost\nworshipped In the early years at\nachool; who wu quoted and re-\ntarred to as tht final authority in\nmany matters arising in the family\nconversation, Wt tully could be\nwrong, but that teacher, never.\nSome of ut may even have entertained faint Jealous feelings of the\nteacher who had io completely captivated the confidence and affections of our child.\nDEEP RESPECT\nAlso that teacher wt know,' to\nwhom tha older children, even high\nschool students, refer always with\ngreat respect, whose sympathetic\nunderstanding attitude, whose constant effort, at being fair and just,\nwhosa kindliness, whose honesty,\nwhoee humility, whott humsn Interest In etch pupil u a sacred\npersonality, ire on many occasions\ndescribed by our children or thtlr\nplaymates.\nWe know that teacher whose\nspeech movement and appearance\nbespeak culture and refinement.\nWe like to meet her and be in her\npresence. We count our children\nfortunate to be In the classroom\nwith such a teacher. It is the quiet,\nsweet-voiced teacher who is most\nclaiming to us and our children.\nWe wish we might imitate her well-\nmanaged voice, and we wish that\nall other teachers were, in this\nrespect, like her.\nWe parents know teachers who\nmake us feel auured that they are\npersonally interested in tach of\ntheir puplli as ao individual different from all others. Our children know that such teachers have\na very high regard for their personality. How our children strive\nto do well for these teachers.\nMASTERS OP SELVES\nTeachers we know, moreover,\nwho tre perfect muters of themselves, who are completely self-\ncontrolled, no matter what happens; whose composure is no near,\nly perfect and so contagious that\nour children acquire poise ln their\npresence. Too bad there ll not some\nway to have such teachers properly rewarded. Yet they do reap\na rich reward in the Joyousness\nthey afford their pupils and the\nwholesome atmotphere for mental\nhealth they help create for their\nschool children.\nSome of the teachers s^nd out\nalso in our minds u powerful at\nimbuing our children with high\nideals, with the wish to live good\nlives and to grow always as good\ncitizens.\nYet, there are some bad teachers; but why not keep our eyes on\nthe good ones with the hope that\nour children might have mort like\nthem?\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. My eleven-year-old diughter\nsometimes  sulks.   Should   she   be\npunished then?\nA. No: be not the least annoyed\nat her sulking. Act as if you did\nnot notice it. Talk ol things in her\npresence so Interesting to her she\ncannot resist entering the conversation If possible, touch upon some\nof her achievements and successes.\nAMSTERDAM  STOREKEEPER\nSENTENCED  3  YEARS  FOR\nMAKING OWN RULES\nAMSTERDAM (Via Berlin), July\n9 (AP)\u2014A Dobrecht store manager\nwho urged his women employees\nnot to associate with Germsn soldiers\u2014not even to talk with them-\nwas aentenced to three years' imprisonment by a German court martial today.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C. - Mrs\nA. Derbyshire and two sons have\nreturned from Blairmore. She wu\naccompanied by her mother, Mrs.\nTinllne, who will be a guest for a\nfew weeks.\nMr. Millan Is a patient in Creston VaUey Hospital.  .\nMrs. Braster and two sons\nJimmy and David viaited Nelson.\nMrs. Roy McGregor and daughter Winnie left for Victoria to visit\nher father, A, G. Woolgar, and her\nsister, Mrs. James Richardson.\nMlu Edith Hedstrom is spending\nthe holidays with her parenta, Mr\nand Mrs. Hedstrom.\nMiss Willoughby of Winnipeg is\na guest of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Lytle.\nFreedom...\nModem Women\nGel More Breaks\nBy. CAROLINE CHATPIELD\nThis may itill be a man's world,\nas some people cla.m. but c.,18,11,y\nthe women are gettln\" fine brc1'*.\nWhile marriage remains the best\ncareer for a girl It Isn't Hobson's\nchoice with her. She doesn't have\n'0 get marr.ed tn\nIly to eat. nor to save er pride. She\nmay remain single \"as long ss she\nlikes and needn't compromise with\nthe first man that comes up, fearing\nhe will be the last. She has a Job.\na place to sleep, plenty to eat and\nwear and she may take her time in\nmaking the great decision. Social\nconventions, widened conslderaly,\ngive her the right to tag the man\nshe wants and go after him. Because of her educational advantages\nand her experience with men in\nbusiness, ihe ls In much better poiltion to tag a suitable man.\nOnce the great decision is made\nshe Is a lot luckier than were her\nmother and grandmother. If the\nhusband can't build up the bank\naccount to reasonable proportions,\nshe. can go out and help shovel In\nthe shekels. Even when economic\nnecessity doesn't enter Into her\ncalculation!, she often has 10 much\nleisure time on her hands, due to\nthe labor saving devices of the\ntwentieth century, that she goes\nout anyway looking for Interests\nto take up her slack time. The modern wife who does nothing but\nkeep house and tend to babies is the\nexception. The wife of today can't\nnlty herself and comolain ^f hnr\nhard lot u a household drudge.\nModern times haVe taken the martyrdom out of matrimony.\nOf course husbands have changed too with the changing times. If\ngrandfather had come home In the\nmiddle of the day and found grandmother gone, he would have died\nof apoplexy.. Today the hutbands\ndon't go home exipeetlng steaming\ndlshei ready to be ierved them.\nThey eat sandwiches and drink\nmilk at drug store counters and\nrush back to their offices. They are\nnot even surprised to get home in\nthe evening and find notes telling\nthem that wives won't be In until\nbedtime. When the wives do come\nin there is something to talk sbout\nbeyond babies, bottles and butcher's bills. Modern times have taken\nboredom out of matrimony.\nEven the advent of babies In the\nhome doesn't mean that mother In\nan ordinary nurse. Science offer!\nthe mother expert advice on the\nbaby's health, his training, his discipline, his education and tells her\nhow to accomplish all with a minimum of time and physical effort.\nBonnington Folk\nHave 8000-Mile Trip\nBONNTNGTON. B. C.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. J. E. Gilker have returned\nfrom a motor trip to Quebec, where\nthey visited Mr. Gilker's mother\nat the family home at Pennisular\nGaspe. They covered 8000 milei,\ngoing via the States and returning\nthe Canadian route. They were at\nCampbellton when the Governor\nGeneral and Lady Athlone arrived,\nand also visited Callandar to aee\nthe Quints.\nSkin Care ...\nGood (osmetics\nShould Be Used\nWith Confidence\nBy DONNA GRACE\nRecently, wa were told hy an\nanxious woman that a certain well-\nknown cream was simply awful and\nwould ruin any skin. She admitted\nshe had never used It, but she knew\nlt was bad.\nAfter soma conversation, wa\nlearned she knew someone who told\nher the whole thing was made up\non a soap base and certainly would\nbe bad for any skin. Why, we want\nto know?\nThere art any number of good\ncreams that may have soap u an\nIngredient. The real virtue in soma\nof tht vanishing creams Is that the\nrefined soap mixture doea a tho-\nrough cleansing of tht surface, and,\nto the amasement of the user, may\nmtke the skin look many shades\nlighter.\nHowever, formulu of many of\nthe better creami do not include\nsoap, but will have the lame satisfactory affect. Tht manufaaturlng\nof all cosmetics Is a highly scientific business, and. li done under\nstrictest supervision, The imall\n\u25a0mount of soap used In some acts\nnof only as a good cleanser, but,\naccording to the modern physician.\nIs a good antiseptic.\nWe do know this\u2014that the skin\nthat has frequent association with\ngood soap and water Is likely to be\nfirm, fine-textured and healthy.\nWe do not advise the exclusive\nuse of vanishing creami, but they\nhtve their Importance In quick\ncleansing, and may be used ai a\nmakeup base for those with oily\ntype skin.'\nSoap, however, should really\nhavt no other function except to\ncleanse the surface, and wa believe\nlt should be removed by rinsing.\nThis applies to the average vanishing creams. Some-of the Hollywood\nstars have long mtde a practice of\ncovering tht face with these vanishing creami, following with plenty\nof warm water, just as If soap Instead of cream wu uied.\nWhut wt Know ail products are\nnot perfect, we believe one should\nnot make a. practice of worrying\nabout new mixtures ind trying to\ndelve Into tht formulu. Every\nformula is the private property of\nthe manufacturer. He It not going\nto tell us how It Is compounded,\nand we don't care. All we want it\na good product, and there are plenty of those.\nEvery, manufacturer wants hli\nown producti to be the best he can\nmake up. He Is smart enough to\nknow quality sells, and selling ii\nhis buslnets.\nYOU'LL SMACK\nYOUR LIPS\nWhen you \"pep-op\"\ntomato juice this way\nKINGSTON, ONT.-From this\ncity comes the news that tomato\njuice is made much more flavour-\nsome by adding 1 little H. P. Sauce.\nTry this Idea yourself md you will\nenjoy tomato juice with more nst\nthan ever.\nH. P. Sauce Is a.general favourite\nand has been used in cooking and\non the table for many, many years.\nBeing a thick, rich, fruity sort of\nsauce, H. P. hu extraordinary flavouring power. It makes hot and\ncold dlshu of every description\ntastt much nicer. Use this English\nsauce for adding flavour lo soups,\nstewi, meat pies, gravies, macaroni,\nchops, steaks, cheese dishes and io\non.\n**?\ny&\n9*\u00a3*\nm^Mgi\n**$<**\n*r<\ns_\n53\n^fESs-*\"*\n;-__\n\"As *-*\nI \u2022 Delicious, iiiil-awcet\n' Grape-Nuts have a flavour\nthat ia wonderfully different from any other cereal\n\u2014 and they supply \u25a0\nvaluable quantity of\nenergy-giving, body-building nourishment. Get \u25a0\npackage for a really satisfying breakfast tomorrow.\nm\nG2A\nGrape=Nuts\n Cool Luxury in 90\nDegree Heat\nPerforations are tha\nreason why\nAir rushes through the tiny\npunches to cool your feet\nlike water through a sieve.\n$5.50   to   96.50\nL Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\n.NOTHER JEHOVAH\nWITNESS ARRESTED\nWINDSOR, Ont., July 9 (CP>-\nfindsor police continued their\noundun of the recently outlawed\nehovan's Witnes.es today with the\nwest of Gordon Crips, 31, Windsor,\nnd seizure of 20 cartons of litera-\nUre, Including more than 10,000\namphlets. Crips is held under De-\nMice of Canada Regulations.\nb.\n\"Wedneiday Morning Spekal\nlAUSAGE MEAT: in\nBRADLEY'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONE 831    832\nPHANTOM HOSIERY\nCrepe and Chiffon\nValues to $1.13\nv\"ed. Morning Special . 98<\nBETTY ANN SHOP\npp. Capitol Theatre     Phone 1047\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nSPECIALS\nWEDNESDAY\nOATS: Quaker,\nChinawarc, Pkt. ...\nECCS: Local, Crade\nIA medium, 2 doi. ..\n[MILK: Tolls, all\n[kinds, 3 tini\t\nCHEESE:   Mild,\nLfc\t\nPICKLES: Sweet\nI mixed, 26 ox. bottle\n28c\n49c\n25c\n18c\n27c\n| MOOMS: OC .\nEach       t-Ol\n{APRICOTS: No.    {1 OC\nl'l. crate   \u00abPl.i)D\nBOLOGNA: By Hie     li.\npiece, Ib.   14C\n--NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B. ..-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JULV 10. 1940\u2014\nFrench Fleet Yields to\nBritish at Alexandria\nALEXANDRIA. July 9 (AP). -\nFrench naval authorities here\nagreed today to turn over the entire French fleet at Alexandria to\nthe Royal Navy.\nThe French are arranging transportation to France of the crews of\nall the warships.\n(The French fleet at Alexandria\nwas described by Prime Minister\nChurchill July 4 as one or more\nbattleships, four cruisers (\"three of\nthem modern, eight-gun vessels\")\nand a number of smaller ships).\nThe French decision removed the\npossibility of a naval action here\nsuch as occurred- at Oran, Algeria,\nJuly 3, and left the British fleet\ntree to move more of its power\nagainst the Italians ln the Mediterranean.\nA French steamship was reported\nto have sailed with approximately\nS0Q members of crews of French\nwarships who had asked repatriation. The French liners Athos and\nthe Providence are expected to take\nthe remaining sailors who are returning home.\nAn undetermined number of\nFrench officers and seamen who\nelected to continue the fight alongside the British are staying aboard\ntheir ships awaiting orders.\nThe newspaper Le Reforme published a British Admiralty order\npermitting the repatriation of\nFrenchmen who prefer going home\nto continuing the war.\nThe following official statement\nwas issued by British authorities on\nthe surrender of the French ships:\n\"In the Mediterianean fleet, the\nclosest comradeship and goodwill\nhave existed between Ailed forces\nconducting the war from Alexandria.\n\"As soon as it was realized that\nFrance must surrender, consultations were held between the (British) Commander - in - Chief and\nI French) Admiral Godfroy at that\ntime in the hopes that it might be\npossible to continue the fight side\nby side.\n\"When terms of the armistice were\nmade known, It became evident\nthat a new situation had developed,\nand Admiral Godfroy was therefore asked to consider various proposals on the lines of those sent at\nOran.\n\"Seeing that in a foreign harbor,\nIn the presence of a greatly superior\nBritish fleet, there was no possibility of taking the French ships to\nsea, and that an attempt would only\nendanger valuable French lives, tt\nwas agreed by (French) Admiral\nGodfroy:\n1. To put his ships ln a condition\nIn which they could not go to sea.\n\"This was done by reducing the\noil on board so that there was sufficient only for harbor purposes.\n\"1 To demilitarise the shi^s. This\nwas done by landing certain portions of armament and placing them\nunder the care of French authorities ashore.\n\"3. To reduce the crews, In order\nto leave sufficient only for care and\nmaintenance. This is being done now\nand crews who are leaving are being sent to Syria, to be sent to\nFrance later as decided by the\nFrench Admiralty.\n\"For their part the British Government have guaranteed supplies\nand the pay of men running the\nmaintenance of the ships, and also\ntheir return to France at the end\nof the war.\n\"This is how matters stand at\npresent. It Is hoped these conditions\nmay continue.\n\"In the Eastern Mediterranean,\nterrible events of which we' all\nknow have been avoided, and the\nbest hope is that our good relations\nhere may continue as before. Our\nonly wish throughout has been to\nmake sure that Italians and Germans should not possess French\nships in order to use them against\nthe British who still are fighting on\nto defeat Germany and Italy, and to\nreestablish France.\"\nNever Dull Momenta) Catholic (amp\non West Arm; Juniors Go in Friday\nNEVER DULL MOMENT\nThere's never a dull moment in\nthis camp.\nThe day commences at 6:30 rising,\nfollowed by morning prayer. After\nwashing up the campers assist at\ncelebration of Holy Mass. Then\ncomes tidying up of the huts, and\nbreakfast at 8 a.m.\nHut inspection is followed by\nflag raising and awarding of the\nbanner for the best hut. After an\nhour and a half in work around\nthe camp, cleaning the grounds and\nso on under direction of Rev, William J. Harrison, Camp Director,\nreligious instruction is given for an\nhour.\nThen comes one of the day's highlights, the morning swim, lasting\nuntil lunch at 12:30. Alter lunch an\nhour's rest is compulsory.\nTRAINING AND GAMES\nCamp training and games, followed by free time, take up the remainder of the afternoon. Supper\nat 5:30 is followed by the second\ninspection of huts, games and camp-\nfire until evening devotions at 9:30\nEvening devotions consist of a short\ninstruction period followed by recitation of the Rosary.\nMost popular sports are boxini..\nvolley ball, pinjr pong and long ball.\nVisitors' Day, Sunday, brought a\nlarge number to camp. On Monday\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson, D.D.,\nBishop of Nelson, visited the camp\naccompanied by Rev. Dr. W. T.\nDavis of Tornto, Director of the\nPropagation of the Faith Society.\nThey brought a welcome gift of ice\ncream.\nRev. Austin McGuire. C. Ss. R.\nand Rev. Gerald Murphy, C.Ss.R.\nwere also visitors.\nSenior boys conclude their camp\nFriday, and the junior boys will\ntake over. The senior boys in camp\nare:\nCAMP  PERSONNEL\nNelson\u2014Henry Choquette. Arthur\nChoquette. John Lang, Louis Gagnon, James Riesterer and Ernie Defoe.\nSlocan Missions \u2014 Jack Kelsall,\nNew Denver; Andrew Bellargeon.\nSlocan City; Paul Dumont, Rosebery.\nTrail\u2014Louis Forte, Emilio De\nQuito. Enzo Georgetti, Albert Rella,\nAlfred Decembrini. Lome Zinio,\nLome De Paolis, Tino Magliani, Isadora McLaughlin, Bill Jarvis. Dick\nLoughery, Bill Farnum and Evo\nDelia Lana.\nKimberley\u2014Ted McMahon, Mike\nSAFEWAY\nEFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nBlue Ribbon Coffee: 1 Ib. fin  49c\nHeinz Ketchup: 8 ox. bottle .\u201e_ _ 10c\nTomato Soup: Campbell's: 3 tins 25c\nMEMBA SEALI\n2 packages\t\nJELLO ICE CREAM\nPOWDER:\n,,_ packages \t\nRUBBER JAR RINGS:\nPer doisn\t\nm\nm\nm\nw\nQUAKER  PUFFED\nWHEAT: mg>A\n3 packages     ******\nMINUTE TAPIOCA:\nPer package \t\nSEEDLE88 RAISINS:\n15 or. package\t\nClastic Cleanser} 2 tins    1 lc\nTuna Fish Flakes: Vi's, 1 tins 27c\nApricots: No. 2, lug   $1.20\nQuality Guaranteed\nCider Vinegar: Gallon   59c\nPlease Bring Container\n1\nField Tomatoes, Basket 35c\nGreen Peas: 4 lbs. ... 19c\n-RESH  PORK\nTENDERLOIN:\n'er Ib\t\n.EAN  BEEF AND\n(IONEY:\n\u00bber Ib\t\nm\n8WIFT COTTAGE ROLI.8.\n3 Ib. average _K_\n15<\nPer Ib.\nBOLOGNA:\nPer Ib\t\nSA. SWAY  STORKS  LIMITED\nDyduck, Rudy Escra, Alan Bond\nand Roland Fontaine.\nCranbrook\u2014Ray Bertoia and Jack\nFrey,\nRossland \u2014 Mike Johnson, Joe\nProfili, Dennis Lalond, Dick Bouchard and George Bouchard.\nRevelstoke (Scouts)\u2014John Jones,\nJack White, Santo Fuoco, Joe Oziro.\nJunior McKenzie, Leonard Ceroline,\nCharlie Delacherois Francis Nelson, Albin Bownick, Jack Kubin,\nYlik Wasylik. Junius Keough, Gino\nFuoco, Dominic Orlando and Ginl\nCecchetto.\nThe camp statf consists of: Rev.\nWilliam Harrison, East Trail, Director; Elmer Gelinas, Nelson; Scoutmaster Noel Duclos, Revelstoke:\nMrs. M. Horrigan, and Miss Mary\nHorrigan, cooks.\nDarwin Fined $5\nfor Carrying Gun\nWithout a Permit\nRemanded for seven days after\npleading guilty to a charge of having a revolver on his person without\nhaving a permit, James Ernest Darwin Tuesday morning was fined $5\nby Magistrate William Brown in\nCity Police Court. The case was\nremanded to enable police to make\na search for the revolver, thrown\naway by Darwin when he was arrested July 1 following-a complaint\nby a neighbor that he had fired a\nshot from the gun. The revolver was\nfound try officers and shown to the\nMagistrate.\nConsideration for the defendant\non the ground that he was a foreigner and unaware of the necessity\nfor having a permit was entreated\nat the first hearing by C. H. Hamilton  defence counsel.\nInformation was laid by Chief of\nPolice Alex Stewart.\nBergstrom Pays $5\nFine for Violating\nDriving Restriction\nEdward Bergstrom, remanded on\nJuly 4 for sentencing on a charge,\nof driving a car at night in violation ot restrictions placed on him\nfollowing the recent driving tests,\nTuesday morning was sentenced by\nMagistrate William Brown ln City\nPolice Court to pay a fine of $5. He\npleaded guilty to the charge, laid\nunder Sub-section 6, Section 17 of\nthe Motor Vehicle Act, when he\nappeared July 4.\nBergstrom, who was restricted to\ndaylight driving, was driving on\nBaker Street at 9 p.m. June 28, according to information laid by\nChief of Police Alex Stewart.\n11 Successful Test\nCandidates in Third\nNelson Scout Troop\nEleven badge tests have been successfully passed by candidates of\nthe Third Nelson (Fairview) Scout\nTroop. The tests and successful candidates were:\nFirst class Morse signlaling \u2014\nJames Hoover, Roy Tallyn and Ian\nGreenwood.\nFirst class swimming\u2014Ian Greenwood, Leslie Stillwell and Stanley\nFisher.\nFirst clsss first aid\u2014Ian Greenwood.\nCooking and fire lighting\u2014Roland\nBrown, Ted Hendricks, Stan Fisher\nand Fred Moffatt.\nThe Troop during the past year\nrecorded 90 per cent attendance,\nwell over that of previous years.\nNo Word on Nelson\nFire Insurance Rate\nAdjustment as Yet\nResults of the survey of Nelson\nmade by the B. C. Fire Underwriters Association, witli a view to ad-\nJusting fire insurance rates have\nnot been received here yet, but are\nexpected shortly, possibly in August,\nNotice of a reduction in Trail\nfire insurance rates has already\nbeen received, but this was expected as the Trail survey was conducted some time previous to that\nin Nelson, Fire Chief G. A. MacDonald stated Tuesday.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. I. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Blaylock\nof Trail announce the engagement\nof their daughter Louise to Pilot\nOfficer James D. Hall of the Royal\nCanadian Air Force, son of Mr: and\nMrs. Oliver Hall, Toronto.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. O. Rose, Vernon\nStreet, has as guests Mr. and Mrs.\nR. W. Drew of Calgary and their\ngranddaughters, Patricia and Marion. Mr. and Mrs. Drew are pioneer\nresidents of Nelson.\ne Mrs. P. W. Hutton of Minnedosa, Man., announces the engagement of her elder daughter, Martha\nGrant Cecelia, to Martin John vanVarseveld, only son of Mr. and Mrs.\nM. J. vanVarseveld of this city. The\nwedding will take place In Nelson\nearly In August.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Vere McDowell\nof the Kootenay Belle mine visited\nNelson yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. Carr and\nchildren, who have been visiting\nMr. Carr's mother, Mrs. A. P. Davis,\nand other relatives in Nelson, have\nreturned to Winnipeg.\ne Mrs. F. W. Wright, of St. Petersburg, Fla., is visiting her son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nStuart Mcintosh, Silica Street.\ne Mr. and Mrs. George Gibbons\nannounce the engagement of their\nonly daughter, Constance Zoe, formerly ot Nelson, to Ronald J. Allen,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Allen of\nPrince Rupert, the wedding to take\nplace in St. Paul's Church Vancouver, July 27.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. M. McLeod\nof Edgewood are holidaying ln Nelson. Mr. McLeod is President of\nthe Upper Arrow Lakes Board of\nTrade.\ne Mrs. W. Ogden of Procter and\ndaughters Ruth and Elaine have\nreturned after visiting Mrs. Ogden's\naunt, Mrs. A. Jerome, Hoover Street.\ne Miss Phyllis Gray of the Trail\nTadanac Hospital staff will be in\nthe city for the Edmondson-Todd\nwedding this morning in St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral.\ne Miss Betty McDaniel of Pendleton, Ore., is a guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Stewart, Granite Road.\n\u2022 Miss Ruth McAlplne, domestic\nscience teacher, has left for Winnipeg.\n\u2022 David Kerr of Vancouver, ex-\nresident of Nelson, who accompanied his family to Nelson, has returned to the Coast.\n\u2022 Red Sands, the Madden Summer place, was the scene of a hap-\n\u00a3y gathering, when Miss Glenna\nowes, popular school girl, was the\nhonor guest at a bonfire weiner\nand marshmallow roast given by\nclassmates of the Junior High\nSchool. The guest of honor received\na handsome snap shot album containing snaps of her school friends.\nAttending the party were Miss Beverley McCosham, Miss Margaret\nMcCosham, Miss Hazel Nelson, Miss\nPatricia Hunter, Miss Joan Hunter,\nMiss Sheila Gallaher, Miss Joan\nNagle, Miss Connie Hammond, Miss\nNorah Gormley, Miss Grace Peer-\nson, Miss Isabel Goggin, Miss Elsie\nBradshaw and Miss Betty Jones,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rossmand,\nNelson Avenue, Fairview, have as\nguests their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jordan of\nCopper Cliff, Ont., and their two\nchildren, Walter and Bobby. They\nwill also visit in Trail.\ne   Miss Ruth Orr, in Nelson from\nEthiopian Rails\nCAIRO, July B (A*?) - British\nbombing planes have raided the\nEthiopian railway town of Diredawa and scored direct hits on railway workshops, the Royal Air\nForce announced today.\nDiredawa is on the Jibuti-Addis\nAbaba Railway, running from the\nAfrican East coast to the capital of\nItalian Ethiopia.\nToday's Royal Air Force communique said:\n\"Numerous reconnaissance flights\nwere carried out in the course of\nthe 24-hour period under review,\nand much valuable data was obtained.\n\"Bombing aircraft raided Diredawa and scored direct hits on railway workshops. Enemy fighters attempted to intercept without success.\n\"An Important enemy bas* at\nZula was attacked by our bombers\nand direct hits were obtained on a\njetty and on stores. Two fires were\nstarted, accompanied by much black\nsmoke. One enemy aircraft was en.\ngaged and shot down into the sea.\nAt Massa, direct hits were registered\non camp buildings, causing considerable damage.\"\nC.P.R. First Aid\nClasses Open at\nNelson on Friday\nCanadian Pacific Railway annual\nfirst aid course will open, at Nelsoif\nFriday evening, under direction of\nFred Blakeman of Winnipeg, C. P.\nR. first aid instructor for Western\nCanada. Classes will also begin in\nLethbridge, Cranbrook, Castlegar\nand Robson shortly. The courses are\nopen to C. P. R. employees and\ncitizens generally.\nA considerable Increase in class\nattendances and in examination\ncandidates is likely this year be-\ncsuse of the interest aroused in\nsuch study by the war, Mr. Blakeman said. In 1939 over 3000 were\nsuccessful in their examinations.\nSince January 1700 persons in Western Canada have taken exams\nalready.\nThe course comprises six weekly\nlessons, the examinations being held\nin the seventh week.\nAfter concluding his present itinerary Mr, Blakeman will conduct\nclasses at Calgary, Edmonton, Wilkie\nand Saskatoon.\nAustralia Ponders\nGeneral Election\nMELBOURNE, July 9 (AP) -\nWar has posed another problem for\nAustralia\u2014whether a general election due at the.end of the year\nought to be postponed by an extension of life of the Commonwealth\nParliament.\nAustralia's constitution limits the\nlife of Parliament to three years\ndating from Ha first meeting and\nthe present Parliament normally\nexpires Nov, 29 with elections mandatory within three months after\nthat date.\nMany members snd electors be-\nlievevkey war ministers should not\nbe asked to foresake their posts for\nelectioneering.\nVictoria to attend the wedding of\nher brother, James Orr, to Miss\nElsa Gansner, is-visiting Capt. and\nMrs. James Ferguson at Sunshine\nBay.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Mickey McEwan\nhave returned from New Denver,\nwhere they apent the weekend. Mr.\nMcEwan and Dr. A. Francis celebrated their birthday at the doctor's\nhome.\ne   Robert Jerome has  returned\nto 49 Creek after visiting Jack van\nBuren, Hoover Street.\n>  e  Mr. and Mrs. Louis Houde ol\nSheep Creek visited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. D. F. Peters was in the\ncity from Appledale yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. -Lawrence Simpson, Fairview, have as guest Mr.\nSimpson's sister, Mrs. Palmer Rutledge of Trail.\ne Miss Gerry Gowans\" of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nstaff Is spending her vacation with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nGowans of Grand Forks.\ne Jack vanBuren ls spending a\nfew days at Procter, guest of Mrs.\nW. Ogden.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. N. McLeod of\nEdgewood visited town yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Dunwoody,\nWard Street, have taken up residence at their recently purchased\nhome at Crescent Bay.\ne Mrs. C. H. Doyle and her\ndaughter and granddaughter, Mrs.\nB. Doneau and Miss C. Doneau of\nVernon, and ex-residents of Nelson, are city visitors.\ne Miss Thelma McEwan has left\nfor Princeton to spend a week.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Macdonald were visitors from Corra Linn\nyesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Choquette,\nLatimer Street, ha\"i_ as guest for a\nweek Mr. Choquette's nephew,'Edward Gigot of Winnipeg.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. W. S. Clowes\nof Calgary are spending their vacation in Nelson. Mr. Clowes was formerly Assistant Manager of the\nImperial Bank of Canada in Nelson.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Donaldson\nof Salmo spent Monday in the city,\ne Mrs. E. Halbauer of Sheep\nCreek visited Nelson yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riesterer\nand the former's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Julius Riesterer, are spending\na few days fishing at Queens Bay.\ne Carl A. Lindow was in town\nfrom Salmo yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Price of\nTrail and their daughter Patricia\nvisited Nelson Monday.\ne C. S. (Pat) Fowler of Riondel\nvisited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. Fred Johnson was in the\ncity from Sheep Creek yesterday.\ne Jack Aldridge of Trail is a\nNelson visitor.\ne Carl Johnson of Sheep Creek\nspent yesterday in town.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J, E. Batley of\nBonnington shopped in Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. J. Clark of New Westminster and her son Bobby are\nguests of Mrs. Clark's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur\nW. Clark, 410 Nelson Avenue,\nFairview.\ne Campbell Bridgeman, who has\nbeen visiting relatives, leaves today\nfor his home in Vancouver.\ne Mrs. A. Ogden was in the city\nfrom Procter yesterday.\nRev. G. Smith, Guest\nSpeaker at Creston\nTrinity United Church\nCRESTON, B. C.-Rev. Geoffrey\nSmith, Missionary Designate to Japan, was guest speaker at Trinity\nUnited Church, Sunday, and was\nfavored with a large congregation\nfor his timely address on the efficacy of faith, basing his remarks on\nthe text, \"He did no gieat miracles\nthere because of their unbe.'ie!.\"\nMrs. Arthur Dodd favored with\na solo, \"Saviour, Forgive.\"\nMr. Smith took the service in the\nabsence of the pastor, Rev. H. J\nArmitage. who is inaugurating evening worship in the United Church\nat Canyon for the Summer months.\nThe visitor has just completed his\ncourse in theology at Emmanuel\nCollege, Toronto, and with Mrs\nSmith is spending July with the\nlatter's parents, Rev. H. J. and Mrs.\nArmitage, before proceeding to Japan to take up their missionary\nwork.\nFor July. Christ Church is to have\na guest pastor in Rev. J. T, Hague\nof Blairmore, who will take the services tor the balance of the month\nin the absence ot the rector, Rev.\nA. S. and Mrs. Partington, who\nare on holidays at Vancouver.\nFor July and August pastor Rev.\nE. Larsen announces the withdrawal of evening worship at St. Stephen's Presbyterian Church.\nSukas Has Licence\nSuspended, Fined $25\non Dangerous Driving\nSuspension of his driving licence\nfor six months, in addition to paying a $25 fine, was the sentence\nimposed on Nick Sukas of Trail by\nStipendiary Magistrate William Irvine Monday when Sukas pleaded\nguilty in Provincial Police Court\nto a charge ot driving in a manner\ndangerous to the public.\nThe charge was laid following Investigation of an accident Sunday\nin which the Sukas car left the\nCastlegar-Nelson Highway and\ncrashed into the bank. Information\nwas laid by Constable Ralph A. Lees\nof the B. C. Police Highway Patrol.\nCanadian Export\nof Hides and Skins\nWill Be Licensed\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP) - The\nWartime Prices and Trade Board\nannounced today that exports from\nCanada of hides and skins, other\nthan fur skins and leather, will be\nsubject to licence by the Board.\nThis action, which brings all export shipments under the scrutiny\nof Maurice Samson, Hides and\nLeather Administrator, is to ensure.\nthat adequate supplies of both raw\nmaterials and finished products will\nbe available when required for military and civilian needs.\nF.D.R. Not Candidate but\nCan't Refuse Nomination\nWASHINGTON. July 9 (API-\nRepresentative Sabath (Dem., Illinois) said after a visit to the White\nHouse today that President Rmise-\nvelt was not a candidate for a third\nterm, but that he cou'.ii -<>J refuse\nthe nomination that will be given\nhim,\"\n\"Soldiers' Sock\nFund\" lofal .60\nI.O.D.E. Is Told\nSocks, Sweaters and\nBlankets Sent to\nB.C. Convener\nSeveral donations have helped to\nswell the \"Soldiers' Sock Fund\" to\nnearly $60, members of Kokanee\nChapter, I. O. D. E,, learned at a\nmeeting Tuesday afternoon. A shipment consisting of 55 pairs of socks,\n12 sweaters, three pairs of blankets\nand books, had been forwarded to\nthe I. O. D. E. Provincial War Work\nConvener, It was reported.\nThirty property bags were provided by the Nightingale Branch of\nthe Nelson Red Cross, and were\nshipped at the same time.\nRecruits leaving Nelson will be\npresented with cigarettes or some\nother small gift by the Chapter and\ntwo members will be appointed to\nbe at the station when recruits\nleave, Mrs. H. E. Thain to be ln\ncharge of arrangements.\nCLOTHING FOR\nREFUGEES\nMrs. Leo Gansner reported that\nclothing was being collected tor\nrefugees and that a list was being\ncompiled of persons wishing to help\nwith refugee work other than caring for refugees in their own homes\nA request for members to donate\nold leather 'was made by Mrs. Nelson Colville, War Work Convener.\nA group of young girls wishing\nto do war work had requested that\nthey be allowed to send such work\nthrough the Chapter, Mrs. J. H.\nArgyle told the members who agreed\nto comply with the request.\nMrs. S. A. Maddocks and Mrs.\nNorman McLeod were welcomed\nas new members. Mrs. A. L. McCulIoch was also welcomed on her\nreturn from California.\nMrs. H. E. Thain, tea convener,\nwas assisted by Mrs. P. G. Morey,\nMrs. B. Lowery and Mrs. W. R.\nGibbon.\nMrs. John Cartmel conducted the\nmeeting.\nGen. McNaughton\nPays Tribute lo\n'Outside7 Forces\nBy EDWIN JOHN80N\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, July 9 (CP Cable)\u2014Watching men of\nthe Canadian Active Service Force\ndeploy repadly over a section of the\nhome front, Major-General A. G. L.\nMcNaughton, General Officer Commanding the Canadian First Division, told a party of Canadian newspaper men today \"that by constant\nmovement we are trying to leave\nthe enemy in doubt that will be\npaid for in valuable lives.\"\nThe General said he wished to\npay tribute to forces outside the\nmilitary setup, declaring. \"They are\na defensive force inside the citadel\nwho are simplifying procedure and\nare facing up to facts.\"\nGen. McNaughton said the division was being given a particular\nassignment and every request for\nassistance was being met promptly\nas conditions permitted.\nHe said he was satisfied the people at home were fully awake, adding that \"one has a feeling that Canada is going on with a big job.\"\nModern armies are not much good\nwithout the necesary instruments ot\nwar, he said, because \"you can't\nput bare breasts against machine\npower\".\nTactics of improvement are going\non day by day, and \"we are constantly on the alert.\" he said, adding the warning that \"there is no\nuse basing our plans on wishful\nthinking.\"\nHe referred to the stepped-up\nmobility of a modern striking force\ncompared with the slower moving\narmies of the past. Hhe said the\nenemy probably could put thousands of men on a coast \"quicker\nthan we could meet them,\" but\nthrough superior mobility and\nspeedier concentration\" we have a\nbetter chance of repelling an invasion.\"\n111 th Auxiliary Tea\nfor War Certificates\nPostponed, Weather\nBecause the weather was uncertain, plans of the lllth Battery\nWomen's Auxiliary to hold a picnic\ntea at Lakeside Park Tuesday were\nabandoned. The tea, a means of\nraising funds for purchase of war\ncertificates, will probably be held\nlater.\n|. N. MARTIN TO DIRECT\nWILLKIE CAMPAIGN\nWASHINGTON, July 9 (AP) -\nRepresentative Joseph W. Martin\nJr., of Massachusetts, House of\nRepresentatives minority leader, today was named Chairman of the\nRepublican National Committee and\nDirector of the Willkie Presidential\ncampaign.\nJohn D. M. Hamilton, present\nCommittee Chairman, was selected\nas Executive Director. He will work\nunder Martin.\nSUPER SILK HOSE: Crepe and\nChiffon\n89C   and $1.15\nFashion First Shop\n438 Baker SL Nelson. B. C.\nT11111 1 11 1 I I I till 11! IM!\nASK FOR\n4X Hot Dog and\nHamburger Buns\nFOR YOUR PICNIC\nimiiniiiiniuniiiii\nOrder Your\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nby our delivery.\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nf6\nPAGE   .IVI\nJuly Sale SPECIALS\nWEDNESDAY MORNINC ONLY\nALL WOOL JIGGER COATS\nFine materials, correct length. Red, blue, green   tf Q QQ\nand gold. Regular to $15.95. July Sale $0.30\nNEW VOILE DRESSES\nIn dark colors of navy, black, wine and saxe. A flock of\nfancy and spot voiles so useful for d*1 QQ\nSummer wear. Sizes 36 to 40 <PltOa\/\nJANTZEN SWIM SUITS\nIn all wool material, Cold, blue, rose. Only a few left.\nMisses sizes 12 to 16. Regular $2.95. (PI AA\nJuly Sale  4>1.UU\nARTIST SMOCKS\nIn fancy prints of blues and browns. Long\nsleeves. Sizes 16 to 20. July Sale\t\n79c\nIf you need a, smart\nnew coat for Fall see\nthe Printzess Representative in our\nstore Wednesday\nmorning only.\nSAVE AT OUR\nJULY SALE\n($ farmanThint (g\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nFrench Officers\nJoin Ihe British\nin Palestine\nANKARA, July 9 (AP)-Persons\nreturning from Syria reported today that approximately 8000 French\nofficers, including the stafl ot General Eugene Mittelhauser, had\ncrossed the border into Palestine\nand Joined' British military forces\nthere.\nGeneral Mittelhauser, C\/nmand-\ner-in-Chief of France's Near Eastern armies, recently announced the\ncessation of hostilities in the Near\nEast.\nThe British, who have warned\nthey would not countenance any\nGerman or Italian effort to use Syria as a base of operations, were\nreported massing troops along the\nfrontier, leading to the belief action of some sort might be imminent.\n29 Births, 4 Deaths,\n15 Marriages Nelson\nDistrict During June\nTwenty-nine births, (our deaths\nand 15 marriages were registered\nin Nelson and District during June.\nThis compared to 24 birthi, 11\ndeaths and 11 marriages in June,\n1939, according to vital statistics reported at the Registrar's Office, Nelson.\nThe comparative figures for Nelson and district follow;\nNEL80N 1939   1940\nBirths       21     19\nDeaths   _       8      3\nMarriages        9    15\nDISTRICT 1939   1940\nBirths       3    10\nDeaths       3      1\nMarriages       2      1\nWAR? NAVY MINISTERS\nWILL BE SWORN IN\nAFTER BILLS PASSED\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Hon. J.\nG. Gardiner and Premier Angus\nL. Macdonald of Nova Scotia will\nnot be sworn in as Ministers of\nWar Service and Navy respectively until Parliament passes the\nbills setting up their new departments. This might take a week or\nmore.\nThe other four Cabinet Ministers affected in the Government\nshuffle announced yesterday by\nPrime Minister King have all\nbeen sworn  in.\nReynaud Appears\nWith Head Bandaged\nVICHY, Pranee, July \u00bb (AP)-i\nPormer Premier Paul Raynaud.\nhis head wrapped In bandages,\nmade his first appearance In public today slnoe an automobile accident In which he was Injured\nJune 28 near Montpetler.\nReynaud was among those attending the tession of the Chamber of Deputies to approve a new\nconstitution.\nHorswill'f\nGROCERIES\nThe best service in town.\nPHONE 235\nThe\nButcherteria\nBetter Meats for Less\nPHONE 527 FREE DELIVERY\nffi KSSKS 4_X\u00abHX5H\u00bb__S___S.\nWATCH REPAIR\nIs a Job for experts. Our work\nassures your satisfaction,\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Baker St\n.5CH_g_____I\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home of Better Foods\nQUAUT _  GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Delivery\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St.\nPhont 280\nComplete Showing, of\nSUMMER  HATS\nWhite and Pastels\n$1.95 to $4.95\nMilady's Fashion Shopp*\n449 Baker St Phont 874\n>' MODERN\n'   M-Ar\nPHONE 1009 ^W\nPRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY ONLY\nBeets: 3 bchs 10c\nCarrots: 3 bchs 10c\nLettuce: Large, head      8c\nGreen Onions: 3 bchs.    7c\nTOMATOES \u2014 2 lbs. 19c\nOranges: 2 dox.   39c\nGreen Peas: 3 lbs. 16c\nMarmalade: 4 Ib. tin  39c\nSoap: Fels Naptha, 3 bars 22c\nOxydol: Large, pkt. 21c\nPork and Beans: Heinx, med., 2 tins   29c\nCoffee: Goldvale, Ib.   -44c\nTea: Goldvale, Ib 58c\njELL.OAHH-vor.4Pkts.25c\nIn our Meat Department we offer you ipecial\nprices on delicatixed steaks, and all smoked\nand Cooked Meats\n__\u25a0_,,_,,_\u25a0'_.,-___\u25a0. -.Xifdnii\n \u2014\n', s \u2122\nPAGE  SIX\nMmt lattg .Stat*\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritith Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelaon   Brltlth   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE  AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1940.\nFRENCH IMMUNITY ONLY TEMPORARY\nFrance, under the respective armistice with Germany\nand Italy, retains seven out of 17 principal French cities,\nthe other 10 being in occupied territory.\nSo far she has not been deprived of her colonies.\nBut who imagines there would be any French Empire\nleft if the British should fail to reestablish European free-\ndom?\nThere are three points to remember:\n1. Worthless as any pledges made by Hitler and Mussolini are, if made, in the case of France's colonies none have\nbeen made.\n2. Hitler expressly put in the armistice conditions,\nand France accepted this provision, that the final dispositions and demarcations would be made in the peace treaty\n>. after the war was over.\n\\ ' 3. Mussolini, in announcing the Italian armistice,\n'stated to the world that it could be revoked at any time\nWithout notice.\nIn other words, neither Germany nor Italy is bound,\neven by one of its worthless promises, to leave France ultimately in possession of either its own sacred soil, or of its\ncolonies.\nAs a mater of fact, what Hitler, the dominant partner\nin the Axis, wants at present, is France's fighting equipment-navy, tanks, artillery, planes \u2014 of course to use\nagainst Britain, the promised demilitarization being, we\nmay assume, a form of words.\nWe know that the Petain Government, when it asked\nfor terms, was expecting to lose colonies, for one of fts\nmembers broadcast the hard terms it would be prepared to\naccept Handing over of the fighting equipment may have\nJieen the price for momentary immunity of the colonies.\n\/ When the Axis Powers decide to dismember the French\nEmpire, France will have not a soldier or a gun, and will\nhave to wait for the British victory\u2014against which the\nPetain Government is doing all possible\u2014to recover her\nliberty and her possessions.\nIT PAYS^TO MAKE REPRESENTATIONS\n\"Why bother making representations, that will not be\nacted upon, and that will only be pigeon-holed? I can employ my time to better effect otherwise!\"\nThis is the attitude taken by many citizens in the\naverage community, when some question comes up of trying\nto get something done.\nIf this defeatist attitude had inspired the mining men\nif the Kootenay , there would never have been a lead\nbounty. They and the Boards of Trade fought for it, year in\nand year out, till they got it.\nIt is simply defeatism to accept the first refusal. It\nis worse defeatism to make no move at all.\nOne of the greatest examples in the history of this continent, of what can be accomplished by making representations, has just been recorded, in the nomination of Wendell\nWilkie as Republican candidate for the presidency of the\nUnited States, an event to which The Daily News has already been reference.\nThe delegations who were to do the convention voting\nhad, in many cases, been named many months before. Most\nof them were pledged to the aggressive candidates who had\nbeen in the field for a year or more.\nWhen the delegates left their homes for Philadelphia,\nmost of them were avowedly determined never to vote for\nthe \\itility magnate, no matter what turn events took. As\na matter of fact, Willkie had about 1 per cent of the delegates pledged to him in advance. Politically speaking, his\nnomination was an impossibility.\nNow, if every deep thinking citizen in the Republican\nparty had said to himself: \"I know that Willkie is the clearest thinking and the straightest acting business executive\nin the Country and just the man to bring the Country out bf\nis rut by going back to American principles, and if he could\nbe nominated he would carry the Country, but my voice is\nonly one, and there is not a chance (in the world for him,\"\nand had proceeded to act on that defeatist view, the nomination would have gone to some Republican \"regular.\"\nBut that wasn't quite what occurred.\nThere was such a storm of wires to every delegate from\nhis \"home folks,\" who had been reading and hearing of\nWillkie, that the firmest delegatest were shaken, and when\nIt was realized how the common people were feeling,\ndelegates found themselves reconsidering.\nAnd the result we know. The Republican convention\nnomination a big business man, who two years ago still\nlisted himself as a Democrat, who voted for Roosevelt\ntwice, and who supports Roosevelt's foreign policy. It did\nthis unheard of thing because the \"people at home\" believed\nin the able fight he had waged for years in defence of business, and of tried American principles, and because they\nspontaneously, and without any leadership, went to the\ntelegraph office to make their desires known.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON  B. C.-WEDNfcSDAY MOHNINO. JULY 10. ,W0\u2014\nAs OOP Neighbors See tt\nTHOSE AIR-BORNE TANKS\nOne of the incidents of the Russian lightning attack\non an occupation of Bessarabia seems to have escaped\nnotice and comment, in the volume of weightier events,\nsuch as the cession of the whole country desired, by\nRumania to Russia, the prospect of a descent upon Rumania by Hungary, the certainty that from now on Hitler\nwill have all the oil that Rumanian can supply, the Nazi-\nf ication of Rumania, and other Balkan events and issues.\nIn other words, a new weapon was disclosed; and if\nRumania had thrown its armies against the Soviet troops,\nundoubted the plane-borne tanks would have done utilized\nhssbowo\namerica by\nMM4CK\nLiberty's hour of grief.\n\/ \u2014From the Chicago Dally Newt.\nCONTRACT.,\nPULL DUMMY'S TEETH\n. WHEN TOU tee a aet-up suit in\nthe dummy, with no entrlet for it\nexcept trumpi, there may be only\nona possible way to disarm It.\nThat ia by pulling ita teeth\nthrough making the dummy ruff.\nThereby you ahorten hit trump\nholding to that declarer may not\nbe able to get the lead over there\nexcept while you or your partner\nmay not yet bt out of trumps. If\nthat situation develops, you may\nbe able to ruin that aet-up suit\nJuat In the nick of Ume.\na>QJ8\nVKJ109.\n\u2666 None\n+08543\nA ivt\nfAttt\nt-732\nfQJIO\nA.\n5.\n\u2666 9.14\n*765\n\u2666 KQJ 4\n+ AK2\n\u2666 AK802\n*Q\n\u2666 A108._\nt76\nluth. Eaat-West vulnerable.) r\"\nSouth     Wett    North       East\n14 Paat     2f        Pass\n3 \u2666 Pan     3*        Pass\n4+ Pan 44\nI^That contract worked success-\nfully at one table of a tournament.\nEast overtook the club Q lead and\ntwitched to a spade to prevent\nruffs. South won, led the heart Q\nto the A, and West returned the\nelub 10 to the A. Learning from\ndeclarer1! heart lead what South\nwaa up to. East tried to foil It by\nleading the diamond K, but It was\ntoo late. Declarer won with the A.\nicored ivith the spade K and Q.\nthen ran four hearts for diamond\nBy Shepard Barclay\ndiscards, to made his contract\nAt another table the tame con'\ntract was set. East took the flrtt\ntwo club tricks, then led hit diamond K\u2014before declarer had a\nchance to get a heart lead. The\ndiamond A won, Uie heart Q went\nto Weat'a A and the latter fired a\nsecond round diamond, which\ndummy had to ruff. Now declarer\ncould win only the tecond round\nof trumps ln tht dummy. When\nhe led hearts, East had a trump\nleft Declarer toesed two diamonds\non hearti, but Eaat ruffed the '\nnext, compelling an over-ruff. So\ndeclarer lost a diamond at the end.\nWhy didn't South, atter the\ndummy's diamond ruff, come to\nhla hand with a club ruff, trump a\nthird-round diamond ln dummy,\ndiscard the laat two diamonds on\nhearta and thus make hit contract\nanyway? He said he didn't think\nof IL Did you, while reading the\nparagraph above?\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\nA None\nVA104\n\u2666 Q109654\n+87 \u00ab8\nmoantttettemtnttenttttitntsti\nAAK104\n. 2\nVK863\n\u2666 3 2\n+ 5 2\nN.\n*\n4878\n\u00bbQJ8_\n\u2666\u25a07\n+ AKJ10\n\u2666QJ963\n\u00bb75\n\u2666 AKJ8\n+ Q4\n(Dealer: West East-West vulnerable.)\nWhat is South's beat way to try\nto lure a mistake from his opponents and thus seek to make 5-\nEdamonds on this deal?\nDistributed by Klo_ Fetturei Syndicate, Inc.\nthe element of surprise and speed in crushing the defenders\nand driving into the country, opening gaps for the troops\nand artillery to pass through.\nWhen France capitulated, Berlin boasted that the war\nupon Britain would be like nothing else in history.\nAccording to General Krivitsky, former executive in\nthe Russian secret service, writing in the Saturday Evening\nPost, the Russian military machine has had the advantage\nof secret German guidance and supervision from soon after\nthe Great War, and it is not to be doubted that the airborne tank of Russia had this inspiration.\nIf there is one place in war that the air-borne tank\nwould have a peculiar utility, it would be in the case of\nattack on an island, such as Britain.\nQuite possibly the air-borne tank is the secret Hitler\nhas been holding back, for the assault on Britain. But in that\ncase, Stalin has given it away.\nIf hundreds of light tanks, or ever thousands, are\nlanded in Britain, no doubt a type of defence will have\nbeen worked out, for dealing with them.\nVery probably Hitler, who obviously cannot view very\nfavorably the westward-moving Russian armies, has, in the\ntank disclosure, one more reason for being irritated with\n\"Friend Stalin.\"\nJ? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen ta any reader. Names ei\nperioni asking questions will not\nbt published. '\n\u00abiiW,',wi'VisssoMto\u00bb'a\u00bbe*sso\u00bb\u00bbx\nSpray Lilies fo\nPrevent Disease\nE. R., Nakusp\u2014What ls put in silk\nmaterial to make it teem heavier;\nSilks are weighted by tha additions ot solutions of tin or iron salts.\nThey make, the silk seem heavier\nwith more body. However they decrease the wearing quality ot the\nsilk.\nT. H.. Trail\u2014What la the North to\nSouth span ot tha Pacific Ocean?\nThe North to South distance ol\ntha Pacific from the Bering Strait\nto Antarctic, near Cane Adare, ia\n19,900 kilometers, or 8390 nautical\nmil a.\nA. M., Nelaon\u2014Doei a dry atmosphere in a houte damage rugs?\nOne of the contributory cauaet ot\nwear in rugs la air without moisture. Wool, in lta'natural state, holds\n38 per ceqt water. Lack ot lufficient humidity causes the rugs\nto fuzz out, thus loiing part of the\nwool woven into them.\nJ. W., Balfour\u2014Do swallows carry\nbedbugs?\nNo, but they have their own parasites which resemble bedbugs.\nT. R., Robson\u2014How much doet a\ncubic foot of solid gold weigh?\nPure .gold   weighs  1204  pounds\nper cubic foot.\nD. J., Trail\u2014What are the black\nraces?\nThe Negrito, Negrillos and Bushmen, the Melanesian Negroes and\nAustralian Negroes and the African\nNegroes.\nDEATHS\nCLEVELAND-Henry J. Widen,\ntha), 70, associate tditor of Cleveland News.\nURGES AMENDMENT TO\nFARMER'S CREDITORS ACT\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Amend'\nment to the Farmeri' Credltori' Ar\nrangement Act to provide for a\nright of appeal to the courti from\nthe decision of boards ot review\nwat urged to_\u00bby before the Senate\nBanking Committee.\nT. D'Arcy L'eonard, ot Toronto,\nrepresenting the Dominion Mortgage and Investments Association\nmade the submissions during con.\nsideration of the measure to reopen operations of the Act in Man!\ntoba.\nThe Act is now functioning ln\nSaskatchewan and Alberta alone.\nMr. Leonard advocated the right of\nappeal should exist in any Province\nwhere this legislation was in effect.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n1-<*\nMOT TUO CFF1CP\nIS E.IDtNCE Of\nJ&-L yowt-sdil\n\u00abtostossoessees!Mm\u00bbit*soHm))t\n\"Cousin Jim knowi the secret\not sellin'. If you act humble and\nanxious, folks act haughty and\nturn you down; if you seem rich\nand indifferent, they grab for\nthe hook.\"\nMoitic on liliei\nOne ot the moit serious diseases\nwhich affects lilies It carried to\nthem by a tiny bug known as the\nmelon aphid,\nWhen lilies have become Infected\nwith this virus disease, the foliage\nbecome* mottled at ihown in the\naccompanying Garden-Graph, and\nthere is a general stunting ot the\nplant\nSince there ii no cure, lor mosaic\nonce a plant has become infected\nwith the diseate, apecial care ahould\nbe taken to prevent the disease by\nspraying lilies with a nicotine solution at the very first sigh of varicolored aphids clusterlnat on the\nundersides of the leaves.\nPlanta which show definite signs\nof the disease should be taken up\nand. burned immediately to prevent\nthe further tpread of the disease,\nVERSE\n;\t\nEmbarkation Farewell\nWhy! Why! Why! it my angulihed\ncry through the long night.\nI arise with renewed courage, as\nto our Father, I confide,\nEver tearless  and  unbending \u2014\nthrusUng toward the light.\nGrowing straight and .growing true\n\u2014eerene and confident\nThla tragedy and trouble will abate,\nVictory will be ourt in thli itrife,\nHopeful and patient we will wait,\nSpring will come again\u2014\"It'i long\nis never stifled!\"\nFarewell my son, 10 straight, tall\nand clean,\nMy toldler boy, I will talute\u2014\nAs the tulips ln the Spring I glean.\nEvery flower hi* soma spiritual\nattribute\nThey  symbolize  tome  virtue  or\ngrace.\nClean-cut the tulips emerge trom\ntheir leavea of emerald.\nDiscerning eyea\u2014thS qualities they\ntypify can trace\nAa  erect  you  ttand\u2014God't  own\nmeahing you herald.      v\nUnbroken and unbent till the finish\nYour courage and faith ao strongly\nrooted.\nStraight and true like the tulip and\ntbe British.\nNo gust of doubt will uproot\nYour unbounded spirit calm and\nreaolute,\nI know no stortnof grief can break;\nIn our soul's silence remembering\n\u2014''that brave salute,\"\nGreat sorrow ennobling\u2014\"It'i then\nwe tread the highest peak.\"\nE. Froom,\nTraU, B. C, July 8, 1940.\nPOLISH AIRMEN ARE\nTRAINED IN BRITAIN\nLONDON,' July 9 (CP)\u2014The Air\nMinistry reported \"very satisfactory progress\" today ln the training of thousands of Polish airmen\nas bombing crews in Britain. Some\nof the best trained pilots, many of\nwhom fought In France, probably\nwill fly fighter planes.\nONI-MINUTI TUT\n1. How tar does the body tall In\ntbe tint second ot ltl descent?\n2. Where are the two Cleopatra'a\nNeedles?\n3. What posts are held by Lord\nCraigavon ahd lamon de Valera-\nHINT8 ON ETIQUETTE\nSmile whan you thank a stranger\nfor tome little courtesy; the thanks\nthus seem more gracious.\nWORDS OP WISDOM\nThe mora discussion tha better,\nIt passion and personality be eschewed. \u2014 Dlicunlon, even if\nstormy, often wlnnowi truth from\nerror\u2014a good never, to be expected in an uninquiring age. \u25a0\u2014\nChanning. \u2022    .-\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nEvan, ateady fortunes which may,\nhowever, be accompanied by gain\nthrough a legacy, may be the portion of those whose birthdays are\ntoday. Some sorrow will be thair\nlot during the year, nevertheless.\nBorn today, a child will be tactful,\ncourteous, urbane, keenly intelligent and extraordinarily Intuitive\nbut somewhat vain. Success in scientific research ia Indicated.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. Sixteen teet.\n2. One ii in Central Park, New\nYork City; the other on tha Thames\nEmbankment, in London.\n3. Viscount Craigavon Is Premier\nof Ulster, North Ireland; Mr. De\nValera il Premier of Eire.\nJapanese Seize\nBritish Ship\nSHANGHAI. July > (AP)-The\nJapanese navy seized th* 3000-ton\nBrltlth steamship Shengking today,\na Japaneie warship stopping it attar a chate up the Whangpoo River\nfrom Wobtung to Shanghai.\nDomei Newi Agencv claimed tha\nShengking wai carrying munition!\nbelonging to \"a certain belligerent\ncountry in Japanese-occupied terri-\nBr'itlih circlet taid the Shengking\nwaa carrying rifle ammunition froi\nthe French Concetiion at Tientall\nto the French Concession at Shanghai. They Mid the Japaneie at Tl\nentain had given the ship clearane\npapera, and had approved the man!\ntest.\nBANDITS HOLD W\nCOUPLE IN COAST HOM\nVANCOUVtR, JUly 9 (CP)-Twi\ngunmen held up Mr. and Mrt. Phil\nlip Winrtm in their Cedtr Crescen\nhome early today and eicaped wit.\nbetween $10 and $19.\nSWSBttWSWSWSWSWMSSSiSSSJW\nMANSFIELD, England (CP).\nOne ihot killed two soldiers at\nStanton Hill here. Tbey were being shown how to load a service\nrifle when a bullet wat discharged,\npenetrating both their headi,\nStVlltblLjm\nGOLF CLUB PLANTING\nThe Job ot planting 1000 youn\napruce and pine trees on the ground\nof the Kawartha Golf and Countr\nClub wu undertaken by the Bo:\nScouts ot Peterboro. They complete\nthe talk during a Saturday mornini\nSCOUTS AID JACK MINER\nBoy Scouts were used by Jac\nMiner to help band and liberate\nnumber of wild ducks and geei\nthe pretence of a record crowd 0\nschool children trom Detroit\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nTEN YEARS AQO\nFrom Dally Newi of July 10, 1930\nRev Father Smith hat arrived in\nGraritl Forkt from Armstrong to\ntake up his new pott with the\nSacred Heart Parish and Rev. Father Mclntyre went from Grand\nForks to Kelowna\u2014Viola Sheridan,\nKatherine Hanna, Lavona Christi-\nano, Alfred Sheridan, Margaret\nWood and Viola Simt won awards\nas the Elko school term closed.\u2014\nMrs. Walter Newton and children\nof Trail are spending the Summer\nat Kaslo.\u2014D. C. Maniey of Grand\nForks, B. C. Grand Chancellor, conducted ceremonies for the opening\nof a new Knights of Pythias Lodge\nat Salmo.\nTWENTY-FIVE YEARS  AGO\n-From Dally Newi of July 10, 1915\nElected pro tern of the newly-organized Arrow Lakei Central Cooperative Association were W. R.\nRogers of Nakusp, President; E. R.\nFreeman of Needles, Vice-President;\nA. Harvey-Smith of Nakusp, Secretary; and R. W. Ashworth, of East\nArrow Park, Treasurer. \u2014 James\nMarshall ot the Strathcona Hotel is\nspending a week at Sandon, where\nhe is interested in the Dunedin\nMine.\u2014Thomas Abriel of Nakusp ia\nA TOTALITARIAN ECLIPSE HAS BEEN ARRANGED!      !\n\u2014From the London Daily-Mirror\nGas Service\nANYWHERE\nNo matter where you ere\nwe cen provide you with\ngas convenience just es\nthough you were connected to city gas mains.\nRockges goes where city\ngas does not and it gives\nits users the seme convenience for cooking,\nlighting or weter heating.\nConsult us about this\nwonder fuel.\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\n887 Baker St.\namong representative! of the B. C.\nFruit Association at a \u25a0 Calgary\nconference,\nFORTY YEARS AGO\nFrom Dilly Tribune of July 10,1900\nThe Emily Edith Mlnea Ltd. is the\nname of the newly-organized company to operate the Edith mines\nnear New Denver.\u2014John McMartln,\nwho has left for Sault Ste. Marie\nwith his family, has a contract for a\n25-mile section of the Algoma Central.\u2014J. A. Thompson of Victoria,\nInspector of Steamboats for the\nMarine Department, is in Nelson for\nhis annual inspection of the C. P. K.\nfleet and other craft plying out of\nNelson.\nO\/i J Jul CLvl\nWEDNESDAY. JULY 10, 1940\nC K L N AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:00-0 Canada\n7:03\u2014Toatt It Coffee Club\n(CKLN)\n8:0O-BBC Newt\n8:30\u2014Joyce Trio\n8:45-The Newa\n9:00\u2014Tin Pan Alley Goei to Town\n(CKLN)\n9:15-Rainbow Trio (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014The Balladeer\n9:45\u2014Melody Rendezvoua\n10:00\u2014Blue Net VarleUea\n10.3O-Favorlte Waltzet\n10:45-The Newt\nll:0O-The Cornhuskera (CKLN)\nll:15-Operatlc Gems (CKLN)\nll:30-Concert HaU\n12:00\u2014Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\n12:45-Gypty Strings (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The Newt\nl:15-Talk\n1:30\u2014Closing Stocks\nHJ-BBC Newt\n2:15\u2014NBC Concert Orcheitra\n2:30\u2014Mirror For Women\n2:45\u2014Organ Recital\u2014Joy Redden\n3:00\u2014Music You Llka to Hear\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\n3:45\u2014To Be Announced\n3:57\u2014Newi Bulletin\n4:00\u2014Dancing Dlici\n4:30\u2014Paul Martin'i Music\n5:00\u2014The Queition Box\n5:30\u2014Serenide for Strings\nEVENING\neoo\u2014They Shall Not Past\n6:30\u2014The Week In Parliament\n6:45-__clfic Paradise (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014The Newa\n7:15\u2014Winnipeg Summer Symphon\n7:57-Newi Bulletin\n8:00-BBC News Reel\n8:30-Accordlan & Violin (CKUI\n8:48\u2014String Ensemble (CKLN)\n9:00-Popular Music (CKLN)\n9:30-Tafk\n9:45-_oe Arseneau'i Orch.\n10:l_-The News\n10:80\u2014Joe Reichmaa't Dance Orel\n11:00\u2014Gary Nottingham. Orch.\n11:30\u2014News Roundup and Tall\nRebroadcasts\nlMO-God Save the King\nCJAT^TRAIL\nMORNINC\n7:00\u2014Church to the Wlldwood\n7:15-Breakfast Club\n8:30-On the Mall\n10:00\u2014Voice of Memory\nll:30-On wtth tha danct\nAFTERNOON\n12:45-From A to Z to Novelty\n4:00\u2014Theatre Newa\n4:15\u2014Choral \u00a9oncer*\n4:30-Melody Time\nEVENINC\n8:15\u2014Happiness Revue\nU:0O-Slgn Oft\nOther Perlodi\u2014CBC Programing.\na\nFAMOUS RADIO SHOWS\nMovt ^WEDNESDAY\n8:30 P.M. UNCLE JIM'S QUESTION BEE\nA hilarious, fun-making instructive halt.\nhour; Canada'i new, favourite, quiz pro.\ngram.\n9:00 P.M. THE FAMILY MAN\nHear this intensely human (tory ot I\ndoctor who is father and mother to hit\nown three children.\nEvery Wednesday Starting\nTonight 8:30-9:00 P.M. P.S.T. CJAT\nPrinting Paper Prices Up\nPaper wholesale houses and manufacturers have notified commercial printers of another increase in prices,\neffective July 5th.\nThe new wholesale list is increased\/per 100 lbs., 60c on\nbook paper, from 60c to 75c on ledger and writing\npapers, 35c on cardboards, cover papers, etc. Envelope\nprices are increased by 5%, wood pulp and padding\nboards by 10%.\nFOR HIGHEST QUALITY PRINTING AT\nECONOMICAL PRICES CONSULT\nMstm la% \u00a3foma\nCommercial Printing Department\n ,\t\n______________________\n\t\nm____^\n \u2122^?P\u21221\u2122\u2122\nw\nTH Show >Em!\u00bb\nT0NYARCUR1\nOne ot the moit enthusiastic ot\nNelson's baseball element and one\nof those who still feels there'i a\n.lot of baieball life In his aging\nlimbs yet, Anthony (Chum) Arcure turned out to Tuesday's senior workout to get Into condition\nior next Sunday's old timer classic\nat Slocan City.\nArcure, whole baieball Idol wai\nJohn J. McQraw, and whom he\ntriad to emanate during his Nelaon playing and managerial career,\nla a member of the Nelson oldsters\nwho will take on Frank Hufty'a\nfang up .the.Slocan on the ensuing\nSabbath.\nDoyle Trying to\nResume Playoffs\nChurch Softball\nAlthough how the Nelaon Church\nSoftball League will continue its\nplayoffs aeems to be a bit ot a problem, Rev. Edward Doyle of thc\nJunior C. Y. 0. team is attempting\nto have play resumed in the semifinals with Trinity so at ta decide\nSenior C. Y. O.'s opponents in the\nfinal series.\nJack Clements, one of the high\npowers ot the Trinity team and\nPresident of the League, recently\nenlisted and left for Vancouver, bttt\nFather Doyle, who had been Vice-\nPresident, will likely assume the\npresidential duties. Agnes Stewart\nIs Secretary-Treasurer.\nTrinity won the only game of the\nsemi-finals played so far, md another win would place them In thc\nchampionship series. However, they\nhave lost several of their mainstays\nbesides Clements, and may find it\nimpossible to field a team. Disaster\nalio ttruck Junior C. Y. 0. when\nPitcher George Frocklage,suffered\nan attack of appendicitis and underwent an emergency operation.\nIt Is expected that Ernie Beland,\nwho Is signed with the Senior C.\nY. 0\u201e but who has not played a\ncame In the Church Letgue, will do\nthe chucking for the remainder ot\nthe playoffi for the Juniors.\nDraper Defeats\nMorgan, Bowling\nJack Draper's lawn bowling team\ntriumphed zl-6 over J. P. Morgan's\nrink in Atlyle Cup play on the\nC. P. R. greens Tuesday nighL\nScore by ends:\nDraper  211 303 031 221 001-21\nMorgan  ..... 000 020 200 000 110- 6\nMrs. J. T- Sindel, F. Geder. Mrs.\nT. A. Temple and Jack Draper; C.\n1. Archibald, W. G. Graham, A. G.\nHarvey and J. P. Morgan.\nSchedule for the remainder of the\nweek's play follows:\nThursday\u2014J. p. Morgan vs. N. B.\nBradley.\nJ. S. Goulding vs. E. W. Penwill.\nFriday\u2014H. H- Sutherland vs. Jack\nDraper\nCubs First Baseman\nUndergoes Operation\nCHICAGO. July 9 (AP)-Glenn\n(Rip)  Russell, Chicago Cubs first\n| baseman, underwent an emergency\nappendectomy    in    hospital    here\ntoday.\n; Kimberley Wins |unior\nBall Game, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014 Cranbrook\nComets look as wild a course as\n. the nebulous body tor which they\n.*re named, when they lost to the\n! Kimberley Junior bill teim 12-11\nalt was-their first loss to Kimberley\nthis season.\nThose  making  three   runs  were\n' Bert Erickson and Al Bakken ot\nCranbrook, and Hystead ot Klmber-\nVy.\nLineups follow:\nCranbrook \u2014 Scotty Malcolm,\nOordy McDermid, Bert Erickson, Al\nBakken. Red Stevely, Blue Malcolm,\nBIU Laurie, Bud Holmes, and Curley\nCox.\nKimberley \u2014 Dickson, Hystead,\nMusser, Leith, Caldwell, James, Rice,\nChesham and Sparks.\nThe Comet batting averages now\nput Met Ukralneti at the top\u2014at\n\u25a0bat 14 limes. 7 hits, percentage .500.\nCurly Cox is second with 21 times\n\u2022t bat, nine hits for an average ot\n.429. Ai Bakken la third with 27\ntimes al bat, 11 hlta and an average\not .407. Cordon McDermid and\nScotty Malcolm have been at bat\nmost often 29 tim\u00ab. .\nJunior Soflball\nW.K. Playoff Is\nAccording to rumors circulating\nin Nelson toftball circles, playoffs\nwill be conducted ln September for\nsupremacy ln West Kootenay Junior\nsoftbail with whleh will go a newly-\npotted cup by S. G. Blaylock of\nNothing of a definite nature is\nyet In the hands ot Nelion officials,\nbut it seems that teams from Trail,\nRossland, Fruitvale, Castlegar and\nNelson will battle for the dlatrlct\ntitle. Atl-star teams.will probably\nbe chosen to represent each centre,\nlt ls conjectured.\nThe Nelson Junior C. Y. 0. team,\nbolstered by Nigh School Bombers\nand other available teen-age talent,\nIt expected to form tha nucleus of\nthe Nelaon team. It is believed that\nJunlor-ege playen who play In thc\nWest Kootenay senior playoffs will\nnot be eligible for the Blaylock Cup\nplay.\t\nColden Bears Out\nto Check Redmen\nRossland, Tonight\nTRAIL, B. C, July I \u2014 AH pepped up after a successful barnstorming trie in thc Okanagan, the\nTrail Golden Bean are figuratively\n\"champing at the bit\" to take that\nwin back from Ihe Rossland Red-\nmen, who downed the Nelson Maple\nLeafs Mondty ln tht flrtt game' of\nthe Weit Kootenay Lacrosse Letgue\nsecond halt.\nBears go to Rossland Wednesdsy\nnight, and should they win, they\nwUl shirt top berth in tht loop\nstanding with the teepee dwellers.\nA victory for IWdmen, however\nwould give them \u25a0 two-game letd,\nwith Nelson and Trail snaring the\ncellar.\nThere ls a potslblltty that the\nBruins will have a player of former seatons back with them when\nthey take on the Redmen. Smoke\nHarrison, who has been a busy\nman with baseball playing and\ncoaching, managed' to get in a\ncouple of boxla practices, and\nmight play wing With MarAs Smith\nat centre tnd Rolando Sammartino\non Smlth'i other flank. If Harrison\nIs unable to make the grade, Earl\nLeRoy former goaltender will be\nln the game.\nThe remainder of the lineup will\nbe as previously, with Moro ln goal;\nCoupland, Bill Turik, Jim Kendall\nand Baker Merlo on defence: Bob\nKendall and Desmond Hood playing rover; and Pagnin, Temple\nand Booney SemmafllnO comprising the other atrlng.\nTrail Bantam Ball\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILION. 1. .-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. JULY 10.1540-\nWeet Coast Yaulter Trys to find the Celling\nIt there's a celling In the pole vault, Cornelius\n\"Butch\" Waimerdam of the San Francisco Olympic\nclub hasn't been able to locate IL Tlte amazing\nvaulter, who scaled IS teat with the pole a few\nweeks ago, came back at tha U. S. senior A. A; U.\nchampionship meet on the Pacific coast to push the\nbar up to 19 feet IH inches and ls pictured here\nclearing this-height on his fint attempt. The photo'\nwas meoVwith a.Speedray camera \"stopping\" the\naction Juit is Wirmerdam cleared the bar.\nNational League Hurlers\nBlank American Hitters\n\u2022     i-.__.-_ j       I Three-Hit\nRossland Redmen  west s\nHost lo Bears In\nLacrosse Tonight\nLEAGUE STANDING\nWLGtOl Pit\nTrail  8  3 172 14fl  16\nRosiland 8   4 141 121   12\nNeUon     2   9 127 173    4\nTRAIL, B.C., July B- Butler\nPark is the place and 4:30 p.m. the\ntime where and when the Trail\nBantam Baseball League gets un'\nder way tor the 1940 season. Beav\nen and Cubs will meet in the open'\ner, Cubs playing (Slants the third\nteam In the loop a week hence.\nCoaching the Beivers ire Tommy\nRoutledge end \"Brick\" Edmunds.\nThe Cubs are led by Smokie Harrison and Barss Dimock. The Beavers are being handled by Eddie\nCrellin and Mike WoUe. Edmunds,\nHarrison, Dimock and Wolfe all\nplay for the senior Cardinals.\nThe Beaven ire boys picked from\nEast Trail, the Cubs are from the\nCity Centre area, and the Giants\nfrom the Rossland Avenue district.\nThe league will continue through\nJuly and August, the third game\nbeing slated for July 24, when\nGlint* and Beavers meet; the\nfourth, July 31st between Beavers and Cubs; the fifth, August 7\nbetween Cubs and Giants and the\nsixth between Gianti and Beaveri,\nAugust 14. ,\nKelowna Beaten\nin Coast Cricket\nVANCOUVER, July . (CP) -\nKelowna failed to maintain their\nform of Monday In the second day's\nplay of the British Columbia cricket\nweek thli afternoon, and were beaten by Pro-Recs on the Lower Brockton pitch by 68 runs. Kelowna scored\n157 and Pro-Recs replied with 215.\nIn the other two matches Vancouver defeated Burrards by 146\nruns on the Upper Brockton ground,\nscoring 242 for nine wickets and declaring, then dismissing Burrards\n(or 96. while the Mainland League\nand Wednesday League Elevens\nplayed to a draw on the oval, the\nlatter compiling 200, and their opponent pitying out tlmt with two\nwickets to fill md only 122 runs\non the boird.\nPro-Recs and Vancouver are tied\nfor the lead In the tournament with\ntwo wins and no defeats to date;\nKelowna comes third with one victory and one loss; the Mainland\nLeague XI and the Wednesday\nLeague XI have each lost one and\ndrawn one, while Burrards bring\nup the rear with two straight losses.\nRiding the creel of a three-game\nwinning streak In Weat Kootemy\nLacrosse League, .play, Rossland\nRedmen can climb to within two\npoints ot the pace-setting Golden\nBears tonight When the Trail club\nplays at the Golden City.\nThis game will be the second ot\nthe last half of the schedule, the\nRedskins having toppled Nelaon on\nMonday jilght in the opening game.\nIf the ndians dio pull ont a victory,\nwhich they did In decisive fashion\nto the tune of 20-5 last time the\nBruins visited Rossland, they will\nhave a game in hand and be within\neasy shooting distance of tha top.\nA Trill victory tonight and at\nhome Friday night, when Nelsdn is\nthe opposition, will virtually put\nthe Leafs out ot the running for\nfirst place in the 20-game schedule.\nIn thtt event they would have to\nwin all their remaining eight games\nand the 'Bears drop all theirs tor\nNelson to finish in a tie.\nSo tar thit season Trail has won\nthree   games   out   ot   five   with\nRgssland.\n.     .\nVancouver Stars\nin tennis Semis\nPitching,\nHomer,\nINTERNATIONAL\nToronto 8. Montreal 11.\nRochester 0, Buffalo 4.\nNewark 6, Baltimore 4.\nSyracuse 3, Jersey City 2.\nASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 5. Columbus 6.\nMinneapolis 2, Louisville 6.\nKansas City 2, Toledo 1.\nAustralia his cancelled all national golf tournaments because of\nthe war. a\nBy JACK MITCHELL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nQUEBEC, July 9 (CP)-Top-rank-\ning Canadian net stars, Eleanor\nYoung and Jean Milne of Vancouver advanced into the semi-finals\nof women's singlet play In the Dominion Tennis Championships today, together with Mrs. Rene Bolte\nof Montreal and Winnifred McConnell of Ottawa.\nMiss Young, flnt In Dominion\nranking!, defeated Mrt. Harold\nJonei of Hallux 6-1,6-1, and will\nmeet Mill McConnell. Mlu Milne\nwho meet! Mrt. Bolte ntxt, gained tht round with a 6-4, 6-4 triumph ovtr Marian- Edgar of Montreal.\nIn the opening round pf women'i\ndoubles play, the Vancouver pair\ncombined tor an Initial triumph over\nMiss M. Guay and A. Samson ot\nQuebec, 6-1, 6-0.\nAdvancing Into the quirter-fln-\nnls ot the men's singles, which top-\nranking Ross Wilson of Toronto\ngained yesterday, wert Don McDl-\ntrmld of ottawt, and Lewis Dutf\nand J. W. O'Hara of Montreal.\nIn the men's doubles, the top-\nseeded pair ot Wllion and Phil\nPearion of Montreal, both former\nDavis cup players, gained the\nthird rdund with a stralght-stt\nvictory over the Quebec team of\nJ. Letourneau and N. Douvllle,\n6-4, 6-0.\nIn a mixed doubles aecond round\nmatch the team of Phil Pearson of\nMontreal.' formerly of Vancouver,\nand Jean Milne defeated M. Gagnon\nand Miss H. Desroches ot Quebec,\n6-2, 6-1.'\nD. Hodges of Regina was eliminated from the junior men'B singles\nby M. Marois of Quebec who won\n6-4,4-6,6-1 In a second round match.\nlock Walmsley It\nOut of Hospital\nJock Wilmtley, Nelton Miplo\nLetft' Playing Coach, was releaied\nfrom Kootenay Lake General Hospital Tueiday after being under observation overnight as result of hcai\ninjurlea suffered lata In the Rost-\nland-Nellon boxla game here Mondty night. Dr. N. E. Morrison, Club\nPhysician, attended Walmsley.\nNelson Rep Softball\nTeam Practice Today\nUnder the direction at Coaches\nLouia Aurelio and Tony Scanlin.\nthe tint practice ot the Nelson\nmen's rep loftball team ii tcheduled thit evening at 6 at the Recm-\nttlon Grounda. Eighteen playen\nhave been asked to turn out, and\nmoit of them will be carried on the\nrepresentative roster for the\nKootenay pi\na\nToo Much\nNEAR-CAPACITY\nCROWD AT GAME\nBy JUOSON  BAILEY\nAnoclated Pren Sportt Writer\nSPORTSMAN'S PARK, SI\nLouis, July 8 (AP).-The National\nLetgue Humiliated the aces of the\nAmerican League with the tint\nshutout ln tht eight-year history\nof tha all-atar. game today, 4-0, on\nmagnificent three-hit pitching aad\na first-inning home run by Max\nWest of Boston.\nA sweltering erowd ot 32,373,'\nslightly lest than capacity ot the\nEirk, thrilled ea five National\neague hurlen stifled the bally\nhooed batting of tha Americans.\nThe onlyMowa given up by Paul\nDerringer, Bucky Walters and com-\nSany were two hits to little Luke\n.ppllng of Chicago White Sox and\none to Pitcher Buck Newiom of\nDetroit Tigers.\nThe National Leaguers fielded\nfaultlessly and collected seven safe-\ntics, four of them In a surprising\noutburst oft New York Yankee?\nRed Ruffing ln the tint Inning.\nThe embittered senior circuit\nstan, victon tn only two ot the\nseven previous all-str tussles, never\ngave tnelr foes t chance.\nArky Viughin of Plttiburgh PI-\nfates, a \"goat\" in tha beating the\nNational League took last Summer,\nled ott the aaaault on Rutting with\na scratch ilngle over Joe Gordon's\nhead. Billy Herman of Chicago\nCubs, who had a perfect day at\nthe plate with three hits, put on his\nfavorite play, the hit ana run, and\nsingled Vaughan to third. Then\nWett lotted a 360-foot four bagger\nInto the right field pavilion.\nWatt, Ironically, wat hurt In\ntha flnt half of the next Inning\nto oontlnue the all-itar itruggle'i\nitrlng of caiualtiei. He crashed\nInto tht right field wall In a\ndtiperate leap for a liner by Ap\nSling and bruised hli left hip,\nppartntly not terlouily.\nAfter that first-inning flurry the\ngame settled down to a tight rope\nact and the only other run was\nicored in the eighth inning wtth\nBobby Feller ot Cleveland on the\nmound. Feller took over ln the\nseventh.\nHa walked Mel Ott ot New York\nGiants on tour straight balls and\natter Frank McCormick ot Cincinnati had sacrificed the runner to\nsecond, Catcher Hank Danning of\nNew York Giants, the NaUonal\nLeague's leading hitter, drove him\nhome with a sharp single to right\nfield.\nThe only error of the game occurred on this play at Catcher Rollle Hemsley of the Indiana let Lou\nFinney's throw roll through him\nand Danning get to second, but no\ndamage wit caused.\nBoth Manager Bill McKechnie ot\nthe Nationals and Joe Cronin of\nthe Americans captured the spirit of\ntha all-star struggle as a show and\n36 players got Into the game, 22\nfor the NaUonal League.\nDerringer, who  started on  the\nmound for the senior circuit worked\ntwo innings and was the winning\npitcher.  He fanned  three batters\nand   gave  up  one  hit,  Appling's\ndouble when West was hurt.\nSo  perfect was  the National\nLeague pitching that only five\nballs, betides the threa hits al\nlowed, went out of the Infield. No\nmora than ona American Leaguer\n\"wai ever on base in an Inning and\na tut double play  wiped out\nNewsom when he led ott with a\ntingle ln the sixth.\nCronin used only three pitchen\nand his choice ot Rutting, with a\nrecord of seven and six this set-\nson, as hit starting hurler, proved\nfully as bad strategy as tana had\npredicted.\nThe Yankee veteran was cuffed\ntor tive hlti ln three innings he\nworked. Newsom gave up one during his tour ot duty and Feller, hero\nof the American League triumph\nlaat year, Uie other.       '\nBUI Terry sits on tht Gianti'\nbtnch like an old woman worn out\nafter doing the Monday wash. He\nsits for Innlngi with hia handi on\nhit hips and seldom moves anything\nexcept hli head, hands and feet\nMcKechnie Happy\nOver Triumph of\nNational League\na\nHam (Deacon) McKechnie, 53-year'\nold leader ot the NaUonal League\nall-stars, was supremely happy today at the 4-0 triumph of his play-\nera over the stars of the American\nLeague.\n\"Those guys got a look at some\nSood pitching today, didn't they?\"\nIcKechnie asked. \"It was a great\ngame, I'm proud ot my players.\nWe had a fast fielding club and a\ngreat defensive team. Wasn't Max\nWeet't clout a beauty?\"\nHe shook the hand ot each player,\nthanking them for their performance. He was particularly pleased\nat the hitting of Billy Herman, Chicago Cubs' second baseman, who had\na perfect day at bat with three\nsingles.\nMcKechnie was surrounded by his\nlieutenants, the veteran Casey Sten-\ngel. Manager ot Boston Bees and\nDoc Prothro, Manager of Philadelphia Phillies. They whooped it up\nwith boyish enthusiatm. \u2022\nFord Frick, President of the National League, shouldered his way\nthrough the perspiring players to\ncongratulate McKechnie. Frick wai\nfoUowed by William Herridge.\nPresident of the American League,\nwho warmly congratulated him\nalso.\nIn contrast with the enthusiasm\ntn the National League dressing\nroom, the American League's quarters were quiet and businesslike.\nJoe Cronin, Manager ot the defeated Americans, said two words\ntold the whole story: \"No hits.\"\n\"They pitched well, those fellows,\" he went on. \"They looked\nvery good. You must know they\nwere good, if we couldn't hit them.'\nThe only happy man In the Ameri\ncan League's dressing room was\nLouis Norman (Buck or Bobo) Newsom, Uie Detroit pitcher who had\nthreatened to stay away from the\ngame unless he was named as the\nstarting pitcher. He wasn'L but he\nshowed up anyway, and did the\nbest Job of the American League\nhurlen.\nAll-Star Bal\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nTravis, Wash., Sb ._.\nKeltner, Cleve., Sb .\nWiUiams, Bott., If ...\nFinney, Bot. rf\t\nKeUer, N York, rf\nGreenberg, Dct., It .\nDiMaggio, N. Y., et .\nFoxx, Bos., lb __-.\nAppling, Chicago, ss\nBoudreau, Cleve., ss\nDickey, N. Y.. c\t\nHayei, PhiL c\t\nHemsley, Cleve, c .\nGordon, N. Y., Jo\t\nMack, Cleve, 2b \u201e\nRuffing, N. Y, p _\nNewiom, Detroit, p ,\nFeller, Cleve., p s,\t\nTotal* ..---..._ 28\nNATIONAL\nVaughan, Pitta., is....\nMiUer, Bos., st ..........\nHerman, ChL, Zb ....\nCoscarart, Brook, 3b\nWest, Boston, rf \t\nNicholson, Chi, rt....\nOtt, New York, rf .\nMize, St. Louis, lb ....\nMcCormick, Cin, lb\nLombardi, Cin, o ...\nPhelps, Brook, c\t\nDanning, N. Y, c .....\nMedwick, Brook., It\nJ, Moor*, N. Y, if ..\nLavagetto, Brook, 3b\nMay, Phil, Sb\t\nT. Moore, St. L, cf\nDerringer, Cin, p .-\nWalters, Cin, p\t\nWyatt, Brook, p _\nABR HOA\n3   0  0  0   0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n2\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n1\n0\n1, 0\n1   0\n0   324   5\nFrench Chi, p ...\nHubbell, N. Y, p ~\nTotals \t\n7 27 10\nAmerican leegue\nNaUonal League .\n. 000 000 000\u20140\n. 300 000 Olx-4\nError\u2014Hemsley.\nBuna batted in\u2014West 3, Danning.\nEarned runs\u2014National League 4.\nTwo-baae hita-Appling.\nHome run\u2014West.\nSacrlflcet\u2014French, McCormick.\nDouble plajr\u2014Coacarart, Miller\nand McCormick.\nLett on base*\u2014American Letgue\n4; National League 7.\nBases on balls\u2014Off Derringer 1\n(Williams); otf Hubbell 1 (Finney).\nOfl.Newsom 1 (Phelps); off Feller\nJ (T. Moore, Ott).\nStruck out\u2014By Derringer 8 (Keller, Tox, Gordon), by Wyatt 1\n(Gordon), by French 2 (Mack, Feller), by Hubbell 1 (Keltner), by\nRutting 2 (Derringer, Vaughan), by\nNewsom 1 (Wyatt), by Feller 3\n(Miller, Coscarart, T. Moore).\nPitching tummary\u2014Off Ruffing 3\nruns .hits In 3 innings; off Newsom 0 runs 1 hit in 9 innings; otf\nFeller 1 run 1 hit ln 2 Innings; off\nDerringer no rune 1 hit ta 2 innings; otf Walters no runt no hits\nin 2 innings; ott Wyatt no runa 1\nhit in 2 inningi\"; ott French no\nrunt 1 hit ln 2 innlngt; ott Hubbell\nno runt no hlta In 1 Inning. Hit by\npitcher-By Feller (May). Winning pitcher \u2014 Derringer. Losing\npitcher\u2014Ruffling.\nUmpires: Reardon, National\nLeague; Plpgras, American League;\nStewart, NaUonal League; Basil,\nAmerican League (tint iV, innings). Basil, Stewart, Plpgras and\nReardon last 4 Innings'. Time 1:83.\nAttendance 32,373. Receipts $42,-\n420.78.\nTis said tint Terry gives his ilg-\nnils by the position of his hands\non hit hips. He doein't say much\nto hit playen, who stay aa (ar at\npouible down toward the other end\nof tbe bench. Terry keepi hit eyei\nrivltted on the field and doetnt\nmiss much that goti on out thtre.\nHe started Ihe season ti third base\ncotch but gave lt up, some ity, be-\nzzing he received\nOverlin Knocks\nOut Balsamo\n. NEW YORK, July 8 (AP)-Ken\nOverlin of Washington, D.C., recognized In New York and California as middleweight champion, scored a technical knockout over IJirry\nBalsamo of New York In 2:38 ot the\nninth round of the 10-round main\nbout on the Milk Fund Benefit card\nat the Queensboro Arena tonight.\nOverlin opened bad cuta over both\not Balsamo's eyes in the seventh\nahd eighth roundi and the New\nYorker bled So freely he finally\nuked Referee BUly Cavanagh to\nstop the fight because he could not\nsee his opponent.\nOverlin weighed 161%, Balsamo\nmvt.\t\nLONDON, Ont.\u2014WUliam A. Reid,\n83, once a member of Baltimore\nOrioles ot the International Baseball League, died in hospital here.\nIndians Sign Catcher\nfor Twin Falls Club\nSPOKANE, Wash, July M*onty\nMontgomery, Business Manager of\nthe Spokane Indians, today announced that Hal O'Bannlon, catcher\nwith the Wenatchee Chiefs last year\nhad been signed for th* Indians'\nfarm club, Twin Falls, In tbe\nPioneer League.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, July 0 (AP)-Scoo-\nparade: Postmaster-General Farley\nhaa been patrolling Wall Street for\ntwo weeka trying to rait* enough\nmillions to buy the Yanka ... fiio,\nthe firm which does the club's accounting bat received a ruth order\nfor a complete financial statement\non each of the farm clubs ... to\nthere ia something In the air besides genUe zephyrs . . . The 300\nshares of stock owned by President\nEd Barrow are currently valued at\naround $400,000 ... It Farley does\ntake over, It Is pretty certain he'll\nask Barrow to remain aa General\nManager, and Jo* McCarthy as\nManager.   \u2022-\nSUPERSTITIONS\nBall playen are a superstitions\ngentry, but no more so than the\ngolf pros... for years Bobby Jones\nwould play only with balls stamped\nin black . . . Tommy Armour htld\nout for green markings while Dick\nMetz uses only red teea . . . Billy\nBurke always smokes the same\nnumber of cigarettes to a round.\nBUSINESS NOTE\nThe Yankees drew 88,135 people\nIn two days and one night in Philly\n\u2014more than the Philt nave drawn\nthere all season . . . also, Cincinnati concessionaires sold 88,000 bottles of soft drinks during a recent\ndoubleheader,\nFELLER'S FEARS\nSomebody asked Bob Feller to\nname the five most dangerous hitters In the American League . . .\nHe listed Charlie Gehrlnger, Taft\nWright, Rip Radcliff, Joe DiMag\nglo and Ted Williams . . , Honor\nable mention: Jimmy Foxx, Bobby\nDoerr and Joe Gordon.\nEuerby at Second\nNow for Seniort\nAl Euerby Is apparenUy designated to hold down the keystone\nsack for the Nelson Senion tor\nthe remainder of the West Kootenay Baseball League schedule. The\nenergetic Al wiU replace Roy Anderson, who Is now at Kimberley, but\nwho may be back for the playoffs.\nEuerby looked extremely good in\nTuesday night's practice and with\nCarl Locatelll at short, they formed\na sparkling keystone combination\nThe team will practice again Thun-\nay evening In preparation for Saturday's game with the Zulu Giants\nand Sunday. batUe at Trail with\nUie Indiana\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy tha Canadian Pratt\nLeather-lunged Joe Humphreys,\ndean of sports announcers, died at\nhis Fab-haven, N. J, home four\nyears ago today, at 83. Humphreys\nintroduced from the ring most ot\nthe world's greatest fighters during\nhia 40 yean as in announcer.\nSchwengers Wins\nTitle, Chapman\nTennis Oping\nCRaANBBOOK, B.C. \u2014'Thirteen\nCranbrook playen motored to\nChapman Camp Sunday to take part\nin the official opening ot the Tennis\nClub there, marking completion of\ntheir Uiird tint-class hard surfaced\ncourt\nFinals of tha East Kootenay open\ntennis tournament, postponed from\na fortnight ago, were played. The\nmen's singles went to Bob Schwengeri of Nelson, who played against\nHarold Sinclair in a hard-fought\nmatch. The final scon waa 4-8, 7-5\nand 6-4.\nIn th* doubles, Harold Sinclair\nand Schwengers won trom Jim\nSims and Owen Haley, 8-2, 8-0.\nPhil Edgecumb, Chapman Camp,\nwaa official referee. 'The finals in\nthe mixed doubles, deferred because\nof Insufficient Ume, were played oft\nat Nelson last week, when Bob\nSchwengers and Miss Doreen Dunnett won trom Jack Stewart and\nMn. James Lyon.\nThe new Chapman Camp courti\nire mulch surfaced and were splendid to play on. The clubhouse on the\nproperty has been rennovated, and\na lawn and trees will complete an\nattractive setting. McDougall Club\nmembers were also preient at the\nopening.\nTea waa terved during the afternoon and many of the Cranbrook\nand Chapman guests continued to\nGreen Bay tor a picnic supper that\nevening.\nMorrow Goes First\nGome Without Goal\nWhile Nelaon's Maple Leafs absorbed their fourth successive\nLeague defeat in Nelton Monday\nnight at tha handi ot the Rossland\nRedmen, tht game alao marked the\nfirit tlm* that Frtnk Morrow, rookie Leaf winger, had gone without\nPAGE SEVEN\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nTha Houit of Furniture Vtluea\nbgla Blk.     Ntlion     Phona 116\nSTUDIO LOUNGE\nWith Bedding Box:\nPrict\nNelson Catholic\nSoftball Teams\nWill Play Trail\nNelaon C. Y. O. toftball officials\nhave a heavy program of garnet\nwith Trail teams lined up for July\nthere being gamea each of the next\ntwo Sundays and maybe on the\nthird aa weu.\nFor next Sunday Rev. Edward\nDoyle It arranging a game with hia\nJunior C. Y. 0. and the Blue DevUa\not the Trail Junior Softball Leagu*\nto be most likely played at Junior\nHigh, providing arrangements to\ngain use of the Recreation Grounds\nfollowing Spokane-Nelaon cricket\ngame fall through. The Junior C. Y.\n0. girls will also have a game tha\nsame day, the Trail Maryettes supplying the competition.\nOn the 21st an all-star team from\nUie Golden Eaglet and the Colombos. alao of the Trail Junior League,\nwill come to Nelson to do battle\nwith the Senior C. Y. O. boys, according to Armando Maglio's tentative arrangements. Later In the sea-\nton, possibly the next Sunday, Nelson Senior C. Y. O. men and ladles'\nteama wiU entertain the Trail C.\nY. O.'s, return games for the double defeat Nelson suffered earlier\nIn the season. '\na goal this season. He has played\neight ot the Leafs' 11 games, and\nhaa scored 10 goali, and banded out\ntwo assists.\nF. A. C. BANTS WIN\nBOXLA FROM C.B.C.\nF. A. C. Bantams made lt four\nout of five victories ln Nelaon Bantam Lacrosse League play at tha '\nCivic Arena Monday evening in a\ncurtain-raiser tor the senior game\nby handing the C. B. C. team a 5-3\ntrimming.\nMcCallum led the Fairview icoring with two goals, Whitehead, Moffatt and Hielscher getting tiie othen while McCallum was alao cred- .\nited with two assists and Thaln\none. R. Johnson icored twice for\nthe Catholic boys, and Sahara\nnotched the other. Appel and Linus\nMorrlion drew assists.\nWhitehead, Moffatt, Breeze and\nThaln were tent to the penalty box\nfor the wlnnen and Choquette,\nLinus Morrison and Sahara ot th*\nC. B. C.'s.\nScore by periods:\nF. A. Ca   II1H\nC. B. Ci     1110-8.\nLineups follow:\nT. A. C. - J. Waldie g, Paul Hielscher, Jackie Breeze, R. Thain,\nGordon McDonald, Jackie Whitehead, F. Moffatt, D. Coleman, D.\nPotoski and J. McCallum.\nC. B. C. \u2014 J. Crowther, L. Appel, Reed Sahara, Linus Morrison,\nr. Morrison, L. Choquette, Bill\nFreno, Don Ross, R. Johnson and J.\nDeGuglielmo.\nGlen Price waa referee and Harold Long timekeeper.\nYAKIMA BUYS SCHIMLINC\nYAKIMA, Waih., July \u00bb - Tha\nPippins of the Western Interna- \u25a0\ntional Baseball League have optioned Pitcher Chuck Greer to Twin\nFalls ot the Pioneer League and\nhav* purchased Hal Schimling,\ncsrtcher released by Yakima early\nln the season, from Salt Lake City\nof the Pioneer circuit\nBRAKE RELINING\nWe have the proper machinery\nfor regrlndlng brake iho**.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 BAKER ST.    NELSON,' B. C.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\n12oz.H.20. 25oz. $2.30-40oi $3.40\n_-_umsM-___-__t-______-_____MjJi^\n\"JUST THAT MUCH BETTER'*1\nThis advertisement ta not published or displayed by th* Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of BriUsh Columbia.\n -Tfr-^ir\nP*\u00ablifj_JipP,,.lLl\nPetain Gov't. Given\nPowers to Write\nNew   Constitution\nVICHY, France, July 9 (AR-The\nFrench Parliament gave the Government of Premier Petain a free\nhand today to write a new totalitarian constitution.\nThe swift Parliamentary action\nvirtually sealed the doom pf the\nThird French Republic.\nAfter tha Chamber of Deputies\nvoted 395 to 3 for a bill granting\nthe Petain Government full powers\nto write a new constitution, the\nSenate concurred with 225 votes to\nonly one against.\nAll that Is needed now ls formal\napproval of the National Assembly\n\u2014composed of two Houses sitting\ntogether. The vote in both branches\ntoday makes the outcome at the Assembly meeting tomorrow ln the\nVichy Casino a certainty.\nThe three Deputies who voted\nagainst the bill, were the Radical-\nSocialist Margawne and the Socialists Jean Blond! and Vileon Roche.\nThese Ministers or former Ministers\nwere present: Camille Chautemps,\nCharles Pomaret, Andre Fevriergn,\nAlbert Chichery.\nPierre Laval, Vice Premier, moved that there be no debate on the\nbill, and the motion was accepted,\nlie promised to answer questions at\nanother Chamber session tomorrow.\nEdouard Herriot, President of the\nChamber, read the brief text of the\nbill, approved last night by the\nCabinet with President Albert Lebrun presiding, and by the Chamber's Legislative Committee this\nmorning.\nThe bill now will be submitted to\nthe Senate, where approval by a\nlarge majority ia considered certain,\nand then it will go tb the National\nAssembly, composed of both Houses\nsitting together, for purely formal\napproval.\nIt will give the Petain Government greater power than that held\nby any previous Government since\ntha foundation of the Third Repub-\n}ie\u2014the power to create Its own\naws and own constitution, and then\ncreate lta own Assembly to ratify\nthem.\nIt ssid thst the constitution \"must\nguarantee the rights of labor, family and country.\"\nHavas News Agency distributed a\ncommunique of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs saying that Roger Cambon, French Charge d'Affalres in\nLondon, who Informed the British\nForeign Office July 5 that he Could\nno longer hold the diplomatic post,\nhad been \"provisionally suspended.\"\nCambon'a request that he be placed on the retirement list wu refused, Havas said.\nHis action came after he delivered to the British Foreign Office\nthe French Government's protest\nover the British naval attack on the\nFrench Mediterranean fleet.\nThe National Assembly is to be\nconvened tomorrow in the Vichy\nCo'sino.\nThis probably means the end of\nthe democratic Third Republic,\nwhich followed the Empire ot Napoleon IIL\nThe Identify of the three Deputies who cast opposition ballots was\nnot ascertained Immediately. But\nthe Provincial press noted that Jules\nJeanneney, President and for years\n\/'grand old man\" of the Senate, ab-\n'stained from participation in any\nmeetings on the constitution although he was In Vichy.\n(A dispatch to the Grenoble newspaper Le Petite Dauphinoia said\nthat Deputies going tb Vichy from\nwines still occupied by the Germans were Surrounded by eager\ncrowds asking what life wu Uke in\nthose parts of the country.\n(Generally, the dispatch said, \"it\nseems tha .there are no serious Incidents to report, but the enemy\nSoke ls no leu unrelenting nor less\neavy.\"\n(Some Deputies aald that about\n1,800,000 French prisoners had been\nassembled in those areas, for the\nmost part in concentration camps\nor \"marching In long; melancholy\ncolumns along the roads.\")\n'Not True\/ French\nCrew Attempted\nto Scuttle Ship\nOTTAWA,  July  9   (OP)\u2014Naval\nofficials here today described as\nuntrue a New York report that an\nattempt had been made by the crew\nof the 30,000-ton French liner Pas-\nteur to scuttle the vessel' at anchor\ntn Bedford Basin at Halifax.\n'The story ls untrue,\" said a terse\nOff-cial navy statement.\nThe New York report said reliable sources stated the French\ncrew sought to sink the vessel lut\nThursday night\u2014the day following\nthe naval engagement off Mers H-\nKeblr, Algeria, in which British\nwarships put out of action teveral\nunits of the French fleet to prevent\ntheir surrender to the Germans.\nQuick action, however, by the\nBritish authorities at Halifax\nthwarted the attempt to scuttle the\nPuteur, the New York report said.\nAn armed party of Britons was\nlaid to have forced their way\naboard the liner just In time to\nclose the seacocks through which\n. water already was pouring Into the\nholds There was scuffling, but no\n'gunfire.\nEye-witnesses uid that the following day the Puteur wu lying\nalongside a Halifax dock discharging the cargo of munitions with\nwhich she sailed from New York\nJune 17. the report added.\nThe liner, third largest vessel in\nlhe Freoch Merchant Marine, was\nUnder command of Capt. Francois\nMarie Pctiot. Carrying a normal\ncomplement of 272 men, she was\npainted a dull gray. There were\ntwo guns on her after deck.\nNot Enough Ships\nI       to Take British\nChildren to U. S.\nWASHINGTON, July 9 (AP)-\nStephen Early, President Roosevelt's Press Secretary, said today\nthe reuon English refugee children\nare not coming to the United States\nin large numbers at present was attributable largely to the fact that\nmost British ships are crowded with\nenemy aliens being taken to Canada.\nEarly made the statement to reporters when questioned about criticism of the State Department's\nhandling of visas published in United States newspapers.\nTo date, Early said, the number\nof refugee children for which passage has been provided by the British is nowhere near the 6500 which\nUnited States immigration laws per-\nmtt to come in from England\nmonthly. Until the number reaches\nthis quota, he added, Congress will\nnot be asked to raise the limitation.\n\"American ships are not calling\nat British ports, and under the neutrality law they can not,\" Early\naaid. 'The responsibility for bringing the children is entirely that of\nthe British Government. At the\npresent time the British are sending\nsuch 6hips as they have coming in\nthis direction with enemy aliens to\nCanada, and there isn't too much\nroom.\"\n\"BRITISH BOMBINGS\nDRIVE POPULATION OUT\nOF HOOK OF HOLLAND\"\nLONDON. July 9 (CP.-The German-controlled Netherlands wireless announced today that a large\npart of the population of the Hook\nof Holland, Netherlands seaport,\nwu being evacuated because of\n\"senseless British bombings.\"\nCOLONIAL AMENDMENTS\nBILL IS APPROVED\nLONDON, July 9 (CP Cable). -\nThe House of Lords today approved\namendment, to the Colonial Development bill providing that the\nColonial Secretary must satisfy\nhimself that the law of the colonies\npermits the formation and operation of trades unions. The amendments were moved by Lord Lloyd.\nSecretary of State for the Colonies.\nFrench Royalists'\nSee New Hopes\nfor Restoration\nBERNE, Switzerland, July 9 (CI*)\n\u2014France's forgotten family \u2014 the\nHouse of Orleans\u2014hopes for restoration of the throne fn the virtual\ntotalitarian dictatorship which Premier Petain is forming in the new\nFrench.State.\nReports reaching Switzerland today said the Duke of Guise, claimant of the French throne, and his\nyoung heir, the Count of Paris,\nhave renewed their bid for recognition, working under protection of\nthe Spanish Nationalist Government\nat their headquarters near Larche,\nSpanish Morocco.\nDispatches from Vichy, new teat\nof the German-vanquished French\nGovernment, have said tie 84-yetr-\nold Premier Petain would become\n\"Chief of State\" under a new constitution described as \"corporstlvc\"\n\u2014the term Italian Fascists apply to\nMussolini's Government.   '\nThese dispatches added that Petain would assume \"only the title\nof executive power\"\u2014presumably\nas a figurehead\u2014and that the Government would be dominated by a\ntriumvirate composed of General\nMaxime Weygand, former Allied\nCommander-in-Chief; former Premier Pierre Laval and former Labor\nMinister Allien Marquet\nWindsor Named\nBahama Governor\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)-The Dominions and Colonial Office announced tonight the Duke ol Windsor had been appointed Governor\nand Commander-in-Chief ot the Bahama Islands.\nIt was not disclosed Immediately\nhow soon the Duke and Duchess\nwould go to Nassau. They now are\nin Portugal.\nThe text of the order of appointment said:\n\"His Majesty the King has been\npleased to appoint His Royal Highness, ths Duke of Windsor, to be\nGoverner and Commander-in-Chief\nof the Bahama Islands.\"\nThe Duke will succeed Sir\nCharles Cecil Farquharson Dundas,\nwho was appointed November 27,\n1937.\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP) \u2014 A'\nBritish broadcast intercepted here\ntoday by NBC said the Duke of\nWindsor had been named Governor-\nGeneral and Commander-in-Chief\nof the Bahama Islands.\nNAZIS SEE U. S. STAND ON\nNEGATIVE ASPECTS OF\nTHE MONROE DOCTRINE\nBERLIN, July 9 (AP)\u2014The controlled Nazi press today centred attention on reports from the United\nStates of President Roosevelt's suggestion that Europe and Asia adopt\nprinciples of the Monroe Doctrine\nin solving international problems.\nNazis read into the President's\nproposals an impression lhat the\nUnited States waS giving more\nthought to the \"negative aspects\"\nof the Monroe Doctrine\u2014interpreting this as a sign that in return\nfor keeping out of \u2022 the Western\nHemisphere, \"European powers\"\nmight expect the United States to\nkeep out of what the Nazis regard as European affairs.\nPlenty of Material\nto Indict Nazi Aqent\nLOS ANGELES, July 9 (API-\nActing United States Attorney William Palmer says he has \"plenty of\nnew#materlal\" to place before the\nFederal Grand Jury tomorrow ln\nseeking the Indictment of Dr. Herbert Hoehne, 29, held on a charge\nof falling to register as a German\nagent\nMeanwhile, Palmer Indicated he\nIs asking the advice of his superiors\nIn Washington on whether to take\naction against German Consul General Fritz Wiedemann and Chancellor Herman Loeper of the San\nFrancisco   German Consulate.\nNELSON DAILY NIWI. NILSON  B. C.-WEDNEIDAY MORNINO  JULY 10 1*40-\nSell What You Don't Want\nThe Classi,'i\nNr lium Sailil JJcuis\nTtlephont 144\nTrail: Call A. R. Joy\nRoisland: Call K. Lowdon\nClassified Advertising Rates\nHe par line par Instrtlon.\n44o per Une per weak (6 consecutive Insertions tor east of 4).\n$1.43 ptr lint a month (26 tides).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox numbers He extra This\ncovers any number ot timet.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18o per line, first insertion and\n' 14o each subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nIPECIAL  LOW  RATH\nNon-commercial  lltuatlona\nWanttd  for ffio  for  any   required number of lines for ilx\ndays, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy t   .05\nBy cirrier. per week __     .25\nBy ctrrler, per year    13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month\n\u25a0Three months\nSix months ....\nOna year\n 1.75\n \u25a0  2.00\n    4.00\n    8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnltid States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage ls required, ona\nmonth (1.50, three months {4.00,\nsix months (8.00, one year (15.00.\nHew Air Liner\nCrosses Continent\nand Sets Record\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP)-A giant, new air transport, called a\nstratoliner, roared Into La Guardia\nField at 9:29 a.m. today to set a\nnew West-East transcontinental record for commercial planes.\nIt bad taken off from Burbank\nField, Los Angeles, at 6:15 p.m. last\nnight, and stopped briefly at Kansas City on its flight through the\nso-called substratosphere\u2014an altitude of about 17,000 feet. It was an\nhour and 11 minutes ahead of Its\nschedule.\nThe four-motored Boeing, a 23-\nton, (450,000 craft, spanned the Continent in the elapsed time of 12\nhours 14 minutes; the former East-\nbound transport record was 15 hours\n42 minutes.\nA sister ship reached Los Angeles\nfrom New York at 7:42 a.m., today,\nin the elapsed time of 14 hours, 9\nminutes, slso a new Westbound record.\nBoth inaugurated coast-to-coast\npassenger flights at the new high\nlevel, th\u00bb planes being designed\nwith pressure-equalizing equipment\nto enable them to fly \"up to 20,000\nfeet without discomfort to passengers.\n8 Million Pounds\nof T.N.T. Shipped\nFrom U. S. Port\nNEW ORLEANS, July S (AP)-\nA new safety measure went Into\neffect today as reports circulated\nin shipping circles that an additional 10,000.000 pounds of high explosives for Great Britain were\nen route here.\nCaptain J. L. Ahern of the Coast\nGuard, newly-named Captain of\nthe port under an emergency presidential decree, said all explosives\nwould have to be loaded at an\nanchorage more than 12 miles down\nthe Mississippi River from the city\nproper.\nA shipment of 8.500,000 pounds ot\nT.N.T. released from the Government arsenal at Fort Wingate, New\nMexico, passed through here in\ngreat secrecy more than a week\nago, and was shipped to Britain.\nSubsequently lt was learned the\n132-carload shipment was transferred from port docks.\nNews dispatches from Gallup,\nN.M., yesterday said that 10,000,000\npounds of additional TNT was being loaded for shipment East, presumably New Orleans.\nCaptain Ahern also announced\nthat shipping companies, transportation companies and shipping associations would be required to\nobtain from him a permit to load\nand handle high explosives of wa-\nterborne craft within the port\nHis announcement led shipping\ncircles to believe New Orleans\nmight became a major port for the\nembarkation of war materials.\n\"TREACHERY AT TOP\"\nCAUSED DEFEAT OF\nFRENCH AND SPANISH\nWINNIPEG, July 9 (CP) - The\nfight against Fascism In France and\nSpain was lost through treachery at\nthe top, made possible by the suppression of civil and political liberties of the working classes, Alderman M. J. Forkin- declared at a\nCity Council meeting here last\nnight\nHICHWAY TRAVEL NOT\nAFFECTED BY COAST\nFOREST CLOSING ORDER\nVANCOUVER. July 9 (CD-District Forester C. J. Haddon today\nemphasized the' Forestry Branch's\norder closing the greater part of\nthe Vancouver forest district because of the fire hazard does not\naffect travel on the highways.\nCANADIAN SOLDIER'S\nMATH ACCIDENTAL\nLONDON, July 9 (CP Cable). -\nA verdict of accidental death was\nreturned at the Inquest today Into\ntheh death of Private Rotarlo Bla-\nouierre. 24-year-old meber of the\nCanadian Active Serviqe Force,\nwhose body was found yesterday\nunder a window of the V'ctorla\nClub\nHa ls believed to have fallen 60\nfeet from a fifth story window\nwhile teeking fresh air.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED. -   COMPETENT MA-\nchlnist witb second class B. C.\nEngineer's papers. Apply with\nreferences and state age. Box\n8066 Dally News.\n-Alt' FOR DAIRY. WKra -6-\n454; Roasland, B. C.         '\u25a0 .\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements' under this classification to assist\nSaopla seeking employment,\nnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number ol required\nlines Payable In advance.\nAN ALL ROUND HANDY MAN\nwants work by the hour or lob\ncalcimlnlng, painting, carpentry\nor general house repairs. Quail-\nfied steam fitter. Phone 1024R.\nATTRACTIVE GIRL 19, FJfLlABLE\nand trustworthy, desires work.\nSome experience in a store. Apply\nP. O. Box 24, Nelson, B. C.\nWOMAN 35 WANTS POSITION AS\nhousekeeper. One child. Mrs.\nLacy, Trail, B. C.\nEXP. GIRL WANTS HOUSEWt_ ftR\nall day. Sleep out Phone 138L.\nEXP. GIRL DESIRES HOUSEWK.\nBox 3032 Daily News.\nSCHOOLS\nUNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIES TO-\nday in Aviation Sheet Metal or\nAviation Engine work; Diesel or\nGas Engines; Electricity; Air-\nConditioning; Radio or Radio-\nCommunication and all other industries A 35 year old Trade\nSchool prepares you through the\nlargest and finest equipped shops\nln the country. Courses Include\nall essentials in Theory and Practical shop training. Increased'war\nproduction means more Jobs. Specialize in some particular line. It\nyou are mechanically inclined,\nthen we can help you. If you\nare ambitious and wish to gain\nground, write for information giving age, occupation and correct\naddress. No obligations. Address\nyour enquiries to National Schools\nDept N, 120 Pacific Bldg., Vancouver, B. C. National Schools are\nregistered under Canadian Provincial Governments.\nNOW IS THE TIME TO GET A\nGovernment job as Clerk, Postman, Customs Clerk, Steno., etc.\nThree Dominion-wide exams held\nsince war began. Free Booklet.\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest in Canada. No agents.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be inserted without vcost to\nyou. We will collect from tba\nowner.\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nWE HAVE CONSIDERABLE\nmoney available for Mortgages,\nrepayments monthly. Yorkshire\nPlan. C W, Appleyard.\nFOR CAR INSURANCE, FIRE IN-\nsurance\u2022 or burglary insurance\nPhone Appleyard, 269.\t\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\n.HIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St.. Vancouver. B. C\nWANTED TO RENT FOR 1 MONTH\nboy's bicycle. Box 3010 Daily News\nEXCHANCE\nEXCHANGE 1 GEN. ELECTRIC\nrefrigerator, 4-plece Bedrm. auite\nand Electric Range for good used\ncar. Apply 508 Houston Street.\nPERSONAL\nMURPHY BROS.-FOR DEPEND'\nable work. Wallpapers, and Glid-\ndens Time Tasted\ntrait special at Vogut Studio now\nonl .'..-*_*_\"*_-'_, ?_w**^ry\nsinks, trunks, etc. Chess, 2nd Hand\nStore, 524 Vernon Street.\nSo - FILMS PhiUTH) . OSTAUE\npaid. _Reprintt__fc;Lioha_Photo\n.    484. Vancouver, a C.\nSALVAitoN Awiiv.-\u00bb- lrvap\nhavt old clothing, footwear, furni-\nture to.spare pleata Ph. us, 6181,\nPURCHASE M\u00bbl fAUITs.ANl.\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Always fresh In modern refrigeimtion\nA PORTRAIT B_1_\u00ab0J_\u00bbM..44\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street\nSave it Least 10% on Our\nPrt-Budfcet Sal*\n\u25a0  ot'      \u25a0 7 -:7\nGuaranteed Used Cars\n\u202288 Chev. Vt ton '*'\"\u25a0\u25a0   \\      (675\n'88 Chev. Master Coach $775\n\u25a037 CJiav.'Matter Sedan $725\nAnd other makes and models\nNelson. Jrtinsfer\n,. ,     Co,, Lid.\nhaVe _6lJ AMAJftlftUES*\nTop prices paid for. antiques at\nThe Home Furniture. 413 Hill'St\nCHOQUETTE BBSS \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helpt build healthier boyi\nand girls. Ph 258 for dally dlvry\nWHEN IN VAN.6UVER STOP. AT\nAimer.Hotel; Opp. P.P. R. Depot\nLN SPOKANE MAKE _\u00a3>UR HoBf\nThe Empire, 106 N. Division St\nThe friendly hotel tor Canadians\nHAIRQ00D8\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees \u2014 fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue,\nHanson Company, P. 0. Bcfx ,601,\nVancouver, B. C. \u2022\u25a0_ ,\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY.'VIG-\nor, pep. Try Vitex, 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed. 24\npersonal rubber goods $1.00. Free\nprice list of drug sundries. J.\nJensen,-Box 324, Vancouver, B.C.\nHALF PINT FINEST VANILLA JJc\nRegularly 35c. Equals five 25c\nbottles. Real bargain. Worth $1.25\nretail. Agents, trial dozen $1.75.\nPrepaid. Reply to Concentrate!,\n216 Dunn, Toronto, Ontario,\nMEN'S SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples.\nPlain, wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist Princeton Distributors.. Box\n61, Princeton, B. C\nWRITE FOR _*_-.'PRICE, LIST\non Hygiene and Sanitary Supplies, or send $1.00 for special\nsample assortment of 27 best\nquality latex, postpaid under\nplain sealed cover. Western Supply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver.\nAMBITIOUS MEN,\" SEVEN WEN\nand over wanted Immediately for\nsecret-service .and detective work.\n. Complete training course by correspondence. Free Information,\nwrite to M. L. Jullen, Box 28,\nStation T: Montreal, Quebec.\nMEN PAST 40! RUNDOWN. PEP-\nless feeling? Try Ottrex tableti\nfor stimulants, tonics, oyster elements as aid to recovery normal\nvim, vigor. Get package today If\nnot delighted,' maker refunds Its\nlow price.' Call, write Mann,\nRutherford Company, and all\nother good drug stores..\nANY SIZE 6 6ft 8 DCRJBOKI\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We havt installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlargement, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\n\u00a7 licking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie,\naskatchewan.\nFARM, GARDEN fr NURSERY\nPRODUCTS,   FERTILIZER '\nSTRAWBERRY  lc RASPBERRY\n.  crates. Prompt delivery. Wynndel\nBox it Lumber Co. Ltd., Wynndel\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ate.\nPETLAND - W 241 RIVERSIDE.\nSpoktne.. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish\netc. _|ull line supplies, accessories\nWIRE HAIRED FOX TERRIER\npups. Harding, Nelson, Phone lid.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1937 SPECIAL AUSTIN ROAD-\nster, 4 passenger, genuine leather\nupholstery; 16,000 miles, looks and\nruns Ilka new. 52 utiles per gallon. 1937 Deluxe Dodge 4 door sedan, radio, heater, defrbatar, $785.\nPEEBLES-MOTORS LTD.\nDependtMe Used  Car  Dealers.\n__jV,J_tl___ tt.ir \u2014 a -\n\u25a032 Ford Light Delivery      $300\"\n'35  International  Light.Delivery, Long w. b. lik\u00ab new     $500\nCENTRAL TRUCK &\nEQUIPMENT CO.) Nelson, B.C. \u25a0\nBEFOfli BuVlMd, sfck 6Ur __L.\nection oi low priced used cars\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd., Opposite\nPost Office and Hume Hotel.\nFOR SALE CHRYSLER 52 SEDAN,\nfair running order $50 or trade for\na good milk cow. Apply Mrs. C.\nHealey, RTr. 1, Nelson.\t\nFOR SALE,' 'SI INDIAN JUNIOR\nScout Motorcycle ln perfect condi-\ntlon $200. John Robinson, Ymir,\nFORD \"A\" C(5Ut* M(WOft ftfi-\nbored, V8 tires, licensed, $185\nNelson Auto Wrecking, Ph, 846.\nWANTED TO BUY FORD LIGHT\ndelivery. Must be late model. Ap\nply Box 8036 Dally Newt.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES. FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge itock tor immediate thipmeni\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenut and Main St\nVtncouver, B C\nFOR SALE - MtSd_tLAM_5US\nbedroom and sunroom furniture,\nodd chairs, .tables, tea cart, rugs,\nsink, 40-gallon tank with electric\nheater, etc. Phone 642R.\t\nCREAM ENAMEL COAl\/TOn.\nwood range, $70, large gale leg\ntable  apd  porcelain  top lable.\n313 Second Street\t\n1200 FT. GOOD USED WOOBIN\npipe, 3\" and 4\", tarred and wired,\ncheap for cash. Apply to Box\n8999 Dally News.\nPIPE-FITTINGS _UM__'- SfJ.\ncial low pricea Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St. Vancouver. B C\n120 BASS AdCO-DlON. PERPEST\ncondition. Half price. Apply Box\n3050 Dally News.\nFOR CASH MASOFI lc -tSCsTill-\nano. Excellent condttiqn. Ph. 742Y.\nFUEL OIL RANGE, GOOD- CON\"-\ndition, used 4 months. Ph. 382R2,\nFOR SALE-U4 ACRES 6F 6ATS.\nPhone 638R2.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nC W. WALTON is SON. BOAT\nBuilders. Boats for rent Brtggs\n& Stratton air-cooled inboard and\nJohnson Outboard engine agents\nFOR SAL-5 27 Ft. BOAT, MAftlNfe\nengine, fully equipped. No finer\nboat on the lake. Apply to W. &.\nClark, R. R. No. 1, Nelion.\nRUDDERS AND PRl_P]__I___\nshafts made to order. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, Vernon St., Nelson\nWanf to Sell Something? A\nDaily News Classified Ad will\ndo It. PHONE 144.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nBUNGALOW STYLE HOME, TWO\nbedrooms, bathroom, white plumbing, large living room, dining\nroom, kitchen, basement, attic finished giving accommodation for 2\nextra bedrooms. Four corner lots\nin- garden. Price $2650. very easy\nterms. C. W. Appleyard.      '. \u25a0\ntb- 8AJ__.- tAHfil iftXME\nhouse in Procter, corner of Railway Avenue and Second Street\u2014\n125 feet frontage on Railway Avenue, .Large garden, fruit trees.\nPrice $900. Close to lake with\nadvantages of town. Chas. F.\ndy.\nNICELY LOCATED WEST ARM 7\nacres fenced, water piped under\n{iressure, 5 room modern bunga-\now, white plumbing, -tire place,\nhot and cold water, elec, light,- etc.\nPrice $3300, terms. H. E. Dill, Fire\nand Car Insurance, 532 Ward St.\nWILLOW POINT HOME SITES\nwith or without lake frbntage\u2014\nwith or without orchard,\narable land in bay and potatoes.\nSpecial prices for prompt buyers.\nWrite or phone, J. J. Campbell.\nR. R. 1, Nelson. Phone 462L3.\nFOR SALE FIVE ROOM HOME ON\nLatimer Street. Living room, dining room, kitchen, two bedrooms,\nsmall laundry, House in first class\ncondition. Splendid location. Price\n$1800. Chas. f. McHardy.\nIVi ACRES OF GOOD LAND,\nclose to the City of Nelson, some\nsmall buildings, $300 cash, balance In small monthly payments.\nP. O. Box 24, Nelson, B. C.\nFAIRVIEW PROPERTIES IDEAL\nHome sites. Easy terms to suit\nTie-up one of these sites now for\nlater building. R. W. Dawson,\nsole agent Hlpperson Block.\nPhone 197.\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 jL Calgary Alts\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate.\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE 4 RM COCTAfitt AT\nPilot Bay. partly furnished $300\nJets Sanders. Nelson, B. C.\nMODERN. HOUSE FOR SALE OR\nlong lease. Apply 311 Union St.\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT-VERY ATTRACTIVE\n4-room apartment, electrically\nequipped. Hot Water heat, attractive location. Phone Mrs.\nLincoln. 542R.\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM FURNISH-\ned suite, very close ln. $20 month.\nC. W. Appleyard.\nNEWLY\nDECORATED    HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms and suites   S1\nRooming House, 705 Victoria Alley\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR' RENT,\n507 Silica St. Phone 440X\nWE HAVE SEVERAL HOUSES\nfor rent C. W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT, JULY AND AUGUST\nsmall furn. house. 101 Chatham St.\nFOR RENT. FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Sfrathcona Hotel.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR    RENT - SMALL    SUITE.\nPhone 628X.\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES, ETC.\nNEW HAMPSHIRE PULLETS, 3\nmonths old 90c each. T. Neale,\nR. R. 1, Nelson, B. C\nFOR SALE 6 HVY. WK. HORSES.\nsaddle horse. Ellison Millg. Co Ltd\nFOR   SALE   -   LAYING   HENS.\nyrlngs. 75c. Box 3005 Daily News.\nONE HEAVY GREY HORSE FOR\naale. Wm. Popoff, Perry Siding.\nmmm-\nSUMMER  RESORTS\nGLENAIRLEY LODGE, EAST\nSooke, V. I., 23'miles Southwest\nof Victoria. Ideal resort for restful holiday. Lodge and cabin ac-1\ncommodatlon\u2014new \u25a0 spring mattresses throughout Homa cooking,\nJersey cream, fresh fruit and\nvegetables. Riding, .swimming,\nboating, tennis, indoor badminton. Riding only extra. Phone or\nwrite David Gray, R. R. 1,\nVictoria, B, C,       ,   ..    \/       .   .\nCALLING ALL HOLIDAY SE-_T-\ncrs. Your desire tor a good time\nit the only paiiport needed at\nKokahee Lodga, IVi miles Eaat\nof Nelson Ferry.\nSpeMd y6Ur HOLiDAY AT\n\"The Holme,\" Gibsod's Ldg., on\nbeautiful Howe Sound, S12JH\nweek, '8 roomed apartment foi\nrent. Furniihed.\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS!\nAppledale Ratet by day. week\nor month. Fully furnished Apply\nAppledale General Stort.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nA8SAYER8\nE W W1DDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Asiayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter, 304-303 Josephine\nStreet Nelton, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRfMWpOIT\nProvincial Asiayer and Chemist 420\nFall Street, P O. Box 9, Nelson,\nB.   C   Representing   shipper?\nInterest at Trail. B. C j\nHAROLD S. ELME_, S6__l__STJi\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual representative for ship-\npers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj r. McMillan, d. c,\ncalometer, X-ray McCulIoch\nDR WILBEhT btbC-, C.\n542 Baker Street Phone\nCOBSET1ERE8\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V   M.\nCampbell. 370 Baker St. Ph. 668.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS -.\nR, W. HAGGEN, Mining & Civil\nEngineer, B. C. Land Surveyor,\nRossland and Grand Forka.\nBOYD C. AJFL_(X ftuitvale, B.C\nSurveyor and Engineer. Phone\n\"Beaver Falls\".\nINSURANCE AND REAL E8TATI\nC p. BLACKWOOD, Insurance oi\nevery description. Real Est Ph. M.\n<_HAS. F1. McHAtoY,' iNStmANCB,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR W. DAWSON, ileal Estate. In-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, scetylent and electrle\nwelding,  motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 \u25a0 324 Vernon\n3\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES At\nForest Lawn Memorial Park. Get\nprice list from Bronze Memorials\n\u2022Ltd., Box 726 Vancouver. B. C..\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker St\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,  SELL  tt   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph 534.\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\n' .\nS t- M* TV4ERB 15 ANVONE ,\n\u25a0 VJHO MASREASONYO\nSA[    OfWSCTTO-THI*\n1 H    MAKMA&E.. LET HIM\nX_U     MOWJSPKAK.OR           \/\n.<*i^. FOREVER. KOLO \u00bb\u00bb   J\n____...J*mmCX~-                     (\n(\nA\n__**&\nw\/\/S_                  ___A^___L_vk_hr\n__w^\nm\n__r      tH          ______    '^\"l\na\ne\n-\n3\n.....__\u25a0. .............(|11 ll(,anMini 1 n\u00ab.ii_____rtifiiifMiiiimyiiinlifm\n **wmtsWm^mm\nmmmsevwtmimi\n.\n%\u00b06\nintrol Board Issues Regulations\nI Money Taken Across Border lo U.S.\nITTAWA, JUly 9 (CP)-Travel-\nI to tbe United States must here-\nfr carry with tHem forma certi-\nn that tht meney they carry\nh them\u2014of whatever amount and\nether in Canadian currency or\n,\u2014has been released by the for-\nn Exchange Control Board or its\nmts for the purposes of their\nMi    \u25a0\n\"he Board today revised Its pre-\nus regulations, which permitted\nvellers to cross the border witb\nmuch as $10, to provide that\nmi muit be obtained covering\ni ran.\nrhe Board also reduced from $100\n$25 the amount Canadians mignt\nport to the United Statea month-\nwithout licence. Permits will be\nmted for export of larger sums\n\u25a0reasons of health, emergency\ni certain business dealings. This\npiles to both United States and\nnadian exchange.\nDm new regulations follow on\ns heels of the announcement of\nm. J. L. Ralston, former Finance\ninister, that no fundi tor pur.\nses of pleasure travel in the\ntiled States would be Issued.\nThe official wording ot tbe new\ngulations follow:\nNo permit shall be necessary tor\npurchase ot foreign exchange In\ni form of postal notes, money oris, checks (excluding travellers'\necks) or other Items of a similar\ntoe by any resident from an au-\norized dealer or from a post oiie or other special agent ot the\nMid, where the total value of\n;ch foreign exchange and ot all\nher foreign exchange in any form\nlrchased directly or Indirectly by\nich resident from the ume or\nber authorized dealers, post of-\nMt or other special agenti of tbe\nsard ln the same month docs not\nccted the equivalent of $25 in\nnlted States currency lor all for-\ngn exchange expressed In thc\nirrency of countries outside the\nerling area and does not exceed\nia equivalent of \u00a325 sterling for\n11 foreign exchange expressed tn\nIt currency of countries in tbe\n*rllng area:\nProvided, however, that no au-\nlorized dealer, post office or other\nSal agent pf the Board shall sell\ngn exchange Under the provi-\nof this paragraph except in\nlies and for purposes which come\nrtthln the authority of such au-\naorized dealer, cost office or other\npedal agent of the Board.\n[Every resident desiring to take\nlinadian or foreign currency in the\nprm ot notes or coin or travellers'\nieeki out of Canada shall apply\nif. a licence, which may bt Issued\ny an authorized dealer subject to\nJ initructloni ot the Board.\no iuch licence shall be deemed\ni authorize the- expenditure, di-\nictly or indirectly, of any Cana-\nian currency or foreign exchange\nept for necessary travelling and\nzonal expenses of iuch resident\noad in connection with tbe jour-\nty ior which the licence was\nranted; any foreign currency not\nsquired for such purpoie shall be\nresold to an authorized'dealer.\nNo permit shall be necessary tor\na' transfer of Canadian dollan by a\nresident to or to Uie account oi a\nnon-resident where the total amount\nof such tranifer, together with all\nother transfers by such resident to\nthe same or other non-residents ln\nthe same month, does not exceed\n$29;\nProvided, however, that thii exemption shall not apply to any payment made or to be made in connection wtth. a purchaie o{ securities from t non-resident or from\nany person acting for I non-resident, nor to any payment for travel\npurposes.\nWAlLOEELS\nFAIL TO HOLD\nYORK, July t  (AP). -\nird   '\nNEW   _\nStocks edged forward selectively in\ntoday's market without the benefit\nof a great deal of bullish Inspiration.\nSteels and motori got an early\nitart on recovery, but failed to hold\nbelt marks. Gains, running to a\npoint or ao, wtre reduced or cancelled ln many instances at the\nclose.\nTransfers approximated 280,000\nshares.\nMost Canadian Issue* were fractions higher. They included Canadian Pacific, Dome, Walkers and\nDistillers Seagram. In the bond\nmarket Canada 4s went up IH\ncenti.\nChicago Wheat Low\nas Market Closes\nCHICAGO, July 9 (AP). - Tht\nwheat market was without definite\ntrend today and prices moved over\na range of IU centa. Final prices\nwere at or near tht day's extreme\nlows. Hedging pressure wai light\nbut lufficient to prevent the mar-\nWINNIPiC CHAIN\nWINNIPK. July \u00bb(CP)\"-ar_ln\ndole:\n__w__B_!_ Hil* L\"r cl0M\nJuly \"1        -        - .     71*\nOct. _     73*    \u2014       -       73*\nDec. 74H    \u2014       -       74*\nMinlmums: July, 71*; Oct, 73*;\nDec, 74*.\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NILSOfl I. C-WIDNIIDAY MORNING JULV 10 1940-\n82*\n28T4\nUV,\n85*\nffi\n81*\n26*\nMtt\n35*\nUVt\n43*\n32y\u00ab\n284\nUV,\nSB*\nSS*\n128\n131\n44*\n43*\n44\nket from maintaining uptumi and ,ni u__ii_\u00ab_r\nbuying on the dips offset the hedg- \u25a1,#\u201e qST,\ning sales. .\u201e_, \u201e, .,,,.  .,\nOATS-\nJuly SI*\nOct. SB*\nBARLBY-\nJuly   ....   34*\nOct.     .     W*\nDto. \u2014\nTLAX-\nJuly      _ 128\nOct.       -\nRYI-\nJuly        44*\nOct. i    43*\nDtc.  .. .   \u2014\nCASHPRICES-\nWheat-1 hard, 71*; 1 Nor., 71*;\n2 Nor., 68*; 3 Nor., 63*; 4 Nor.,\n60*; (.wheat, 87*; 8 wheat. 56*;\nfeed, 52*; 1 Garnet, 63*; 2 Garnet,\n61*; 1 Amber Durum, 82*; 4 special, 61*; 5 special, 57*; 6 special,\n58*; 1 mixed, 37*; track, bull 1\nNor., 71*; screenings, 25 cents ton.\nOats\u20142 c.w., 32*; ex. 3 cw., 31*1\n3 cw., SO*; ex. 1 feed. 30*; 1 feed,\n39*: 2 feed, 27*; 3 feed, 25*;\ntrack, 30.\nBarley-1 fted, 31*; 2 feed, 31*;\n3 teed, 30*; track, 34*.\nFlax\u20141 cw., 128; 2 cw\u201e 124; 3\ncw.. 116, 4 cw., 103; trick, 128.\nRye\u20142 cw., 44*.\nTORONTO FIRM\nTORONTO. July 9 (OP). - The\nitock market displayed occasional\nsigns of life today and the price\ntrend held firm to itrong except\ntor minor losses ln golds.\nBell Telephone advanced 8 or\nmore to 138. Shawlnigan firmed\n1* to 18. Smaller gains were posted by B. C. Power \"A\", Canada\nSteamships common, Consumers\nGas, Gatineau and Union Gas.\nDominion Bridge and Steel of\nCanada moved higher. Senior oils\neased off to net minor losses.\nWalkers common tell back * and\nGyosum   weakened   %.\nMclntyre eased off * to a new\nlow for the year 37* and Dome\nng sales.\nThere wu no Important change\ntn lhe moisture situation overnight.\nThe official forecast promised only\nscattered shower! ln the domestic\nNorthwest, where heavy soaking\nrains were needed.\nWheit closed * to 1 cent lower\nthan yesterday'i final prices, July\n74*. September 78* to 75*; corn\nwas V. off to * up; July 61, September 98*; oati * up to * lower\nand rye cloied * to * oft\nRail Loans Gain\nNEW YORX, July 9 (AP)-Se-\nlected rail loans slanted upward in\ntbe bond market today, U. S. Government obligations tended downward.\nFrench stamped 7*1 off '41 Jumped 5 to 50 on sales of 4 bondi. Italian and certain South American\nissuei alio Improved.\nMONTREAL  STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nB\"\nNDUSTRIAL8\nIta Pac Grain ...\t\nisoe Brew of Can\t\nathurst P tt P \"A\" ....\nin Car & Fdy pfd\t\nK Celanese   \nSteamship\t\n\u2022n Steamship pfd \u2014\nin Min tc Smelt\t\nHtn Coal pfd \t\nom Steel <_ Coal\nTextile   _....\na Paper \t\nition c of C\t\ntu Power  \t\nitineau Power pfd\nurd Charlei \t\noward Smith Paper\n[ Smith Paper ptd\nnperltl Oil\t\nnter Petroleum \t\nnter Nickel of Can\n*ke ot the Woods ..\nItColl Frontenac ....\nlational Brew Ltd.\nlit Brew pfd\t\n>ellvie_ Flour new\nrice  Bret\n100\n15\n9\n14\n28\nT\n18\n6%\n76\n4*\n10*\n79*\n4'i\n14*\n90\n9%\n14*\n31\n15\n5%\n25\n33\n22*\n11\nQuebec Power    ....\nShawnlgan W tt P\nSt Lawrence Corp\nSt Law Cdrp pfd ..\nSouth Can Power ....\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nBANKS\nCommerce _ \t\nDominion  ~\t\nImperial \t\nNova Scotia \u201e\u201e_\t\nRoyal  \t\nToronto ...\t\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd\nBathunt P & P \"B\"\t\nBeauharnois Corp\t\nBritish American Oil ......\nB C Packers  _\u201e\nCan Industries \"B\" \u201e_._..\nCan Malrconi .....\t\nCm Vicken  \t\nCons Paper Corp\t\nFail-child Aircraft\t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nInter Utilltiu \"B\" \t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd\t\nMitchell Robt\t\n13\n18\nIVt\n13\n10\n63\n139\n155*\n155'\/,\n275\n145*\n200\n.70\n24\n4*\n18*\n104\n178\n1\n3\n3*4\n3\n6\n21\n83*\n6V,\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nAINE3:\nildermac Copper ...........\ni\u00abpin Gold  \t\n.nglo-Huronian\t\nSBtfleld Gold \t\nistoria Rouyn Minei\t\ntanor Gold .\n__imac Rouyn \u2014.\nlankfield Gold \t\nlut Metals Mining\t\ntttie Gold Mines\t\n_.igood Kirkltnd\t\nlig Missouri \u2014.'\t\nhilorne Mines\t\nluffalo  Ankerite\t\n\"   ker Hill Extension\t\nidian  Malartlc  \t\nio Gold Quarti\t\n -Trethtwey   \t\n)tril Patricia  ..._ \u2014\nomium M Sc S\t\nt Copper  \t\naurum Mines \t\nblidated M tc S\t\n_ie Minu  \t\nirval-Slscoe    .................\nit Malartic   \t\n\u2014dorado Gold \t\nfilconbridge  Nickel \t\nRderalKirkland \t\nncoeur Gold .............\u2014\nUu Lake  _\nd's Lake Gold \u2014\nipdoro Minei \t\nJlnar Gold  \u2014\n)T* Rock Gold \u2014\nttker Gold  \t\nJllinger   \t\nwiy Gold\nMUdion Bay M & S\t\nrational Niclrtl  \nConsolidated   \t\n~ alt Gold  ,\t\n_rr-Addlson    \t\nfltkland   Uke    \u2014\nIkt Shbre Mines\t\nJltch Gold\n.Ittli Long Lac  \t\nliclssn   Mines   \t\nIlcLeod Cockshutt \t\ni_sen Red Lake Gold\n[andy\n-Klntyre-Porcupine   \t\nMcKenzie Red Lake\t\nKVlttie-Grahlm     \t\nBlWattera Gold      \t\nWining Corporation ,\t\nMOfttta porcupine   \t\nMbfris-Klrklind   \t\n|ipi_sl_G  Mining  - _\nporanda  \t\nhftrmetal \u2014...\nMrlen  Gold \t\nptreits Gold \t\n'.irour ''or-up'ne \t\n------ r-ns     \t\nr-r-iu\n. ..or. Gold'\nPlokle Cmw Gold\t\nfloheer  Gold \t\nao\n.04\n.02\n1.02\n.03\n.05\n.07*\n.68\n.10\n.04\n7.70\n2.15\n.01\nJO\n1.75\nJK\n1.50\n30\nJX\n1.00\n32.00\n17.50\n.01*\n2.20\n.30\n1.81\n.02\n.IS\n.01*\n.28\nfJiVs\n.33\n.57\n.03\n9.75\n.20\n21.00\n31.50\njOO*\n.01*\n1.75\n.78\n15.75\n.45\n1.86\n2.50\n1.10\n.24\n.07\n\"fi\n.04\n.23\",\n.35\n.37\n.02\n.81\n43 00\n.18\n.50\n.11\n\u00bb\\\n.21*\n1.20\n112\n215\n1.00\nPremier Gold \u201e_.\nPowell Rouyn Gold ....\nPreston Eut Dome ...\nReno Gold Mines \t\nRoche Long Lac\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold  \t\nSheep Creek Gold _.\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSiicoe Gold  \t\nSladen Malartic \t\nSt  Anthony\t\nSudbury Buln  _,\nSullivan Consolidated\t\nSylvanite    _ \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Minei\t\nTowagmic\nVenturei\t\nWaite Amulet  \t\nWright Hargreaves .\nY\u00bbir Yankee Girl .\nOILS;\nAjax  \t\nBritish AMirican\n\u2022Chemical Research\t\nImperial  v \t\nInter Petroleum\t\nTexu Canadiin  -\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi power A\t\nBtll Telephone \t\nBrazilian T L & P \t\nBrewers Si Distillers .....\nB C Power A  __\nB C Power B   \t\nBuilding Producti \t\nCan Bud Malting  \t\nCm Cir & Foundry\t\nCm Cement _.\nCan Dredge \u2014 \t\nCan Malting  \t\nCan Pacific Railway _\nCan Ind Alcohol A \t\nCons  Bakeries\t\nCosmoi \t\nDominion  Bridge  ..___\nDom Tir It Chem\t\nDistillers Seagrams\t\nFanny Farmer       ...,\u2014\nFord of Canada A ..__.\nGen Sttel Warn \t\nGoodyear Tin   ....-_...\nGypsum, L tt A \u2014\nHamilton   Brldgt\t\nmil Metali       \t\nImperial  Tobacco  ...........\nLobliw  A    \t\nLoblaw   B       -\nKelvlnitor\nMaple Leaf Milling ,.,..\nMwey H\u00abrli     \u2022\u2014\u2014\nMontreil Pbwei _...^\u00bb-\nMnort Corp\t\nNat Steel Car     _.,\nPage  Hersey     .\t\nPower Corp      \t\nPressed Metals   ...............\nSteel of Can\nStindird  Paving  \t\n___\n.70\n.58\n1.43\n.10\nA3\n1.50\nw\nJb2\n.60\n.24*\n.08\n.80\n.52\n2.00\n2.60\n1.00\n.10\n2.00\n2.80\n4.95\n.04\n.10\n16.50\n.19\n9.50\n14.10\n1.00\n137*\n4*\n3.i\n25\n2\n12*\n4Vi\n6\n3*\navi\n30\n13 '\n20%\n22*\n4\n22*\n22\n14*\n4*\n62\n3*\ni\nit*\n6\nil\n26\n36*\n87*\n91\n6\n6*\n61*\n.40\ndropped lightly.\n\" icttoi\n- added I fraction, idling it 18* tnd Home, Calgary lc\nEdmonton  and  Anglo-Cm traded\nat unchanged prices.\nLittle Change in\nVancouver Stocks\nVANCOUVER, Jul\u00bb 9 (CP) -\nFew changes were registered during light trading on Vancouver\nStock Exchange today. Transactions\ntotalled 21,050 shares.\nIn tht oils Homt loit 2 it 1.65\nind Anglo Canadian eued a cent\nto 67. Extension gained 2 to 18 tnd\nBrown cloied fractionally higher\nthan yesterday's bid at 7*. Royal\nCanadian wu unchanged at li.\nPremier Gold dropped 3 to 72 and\nIsland Mountain illpped 1 to 64.\nBralorne at' 7.15 and Prlviteer at\n42 remained unchanged.\nWhitewater, lona but metal\ntrader, gained t fraction to 1*.\nColqory Trade Up\nCALGARY, July \u00bb CCP).-Oils\ndisplayed mild itrength on the\nlocal stock exchange this morning,\nwith moit trtmtctloni on odd-lots.\nTrading volume improved, 9300\nshares changing hinds.\nSpooner advanced 2 to 4 and\nPhillips Pett gained 1 to 8 on\nbroken-lot deals, while McDougall\nSegur climbed 1 to 7. Vulcan ud\nUnited remained unchanged and\nModel dlped 4 to 16 on an odd-lot\ndeal.      f\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, July t (CP)-Yuter-\ndiy'l receipts: Cattle, 87; calves, 30;\nhogs, 267; sheep, 42. A share of this\nmorning's cattle through billed. Cattle, 130; calves, 3; hogs, 11; sheep,\nnone.\nCattle market fairly active at\nsteady ratu.\nPlain to medium heifers, I to 6.\nAn odd grass atter, 6.(0.\nCherry Carload\nLeaves Creston\nfor Montreil\nCRESTON, B. C.-Feature of the\ntrult export at Creiton thii week\nwas tht rolln - of t carloid ot cherries to Montreal. It went out Wednesday tnd carried t capacity load\not 1253 lugs, Bings tnd Lamberts,\nIn which Bosweil Bings were in\nevidence.\nCherry growen will bt partially\ncompensated for their ihort crop\nwi\" better pr. a than prevailed\nthe put two ituom. Tree Fruiti\nLimited trt to confident ot tht\nmirket that t rise ln -rice becai. .\neffective Monday.\nTrucki have figured in the tr -is-\nGort ot tht cherry crop this year,\np to Mondty the Exchange htd\nrolled three truckloads, the third\nbeing t consignment of 750 lugs,\nheaded for Rtgina. The two other\nloads were ont each for Saskatoon\ntnd Lethbridge.\nCreston's estimated cherry crop\nof 7800 crates thows about the satue\nshrinkage as the Okanagan, where\nthe 1940 yield li down, to 1.5.378\ncratu, u compared with a 1939\nahlpplt.j of 207,131 crates. Creiton'i\n'39 shipping wu 12,488 crates.\nStrawberries are over for 1940,\nwith the unbroken heat wave shortening up the expected yield considerably. Wynndel hu supplied t\nconsiderable volume for Jam, but\nno..e ire being \"rocessed there this\nyeir. In 1989 clou to 72,000 poundi\nwere processed for the English mirket. The demand for strawberries\nwu quite uniform throughout the\nseuon and there wu no price varia.\ntion once the fruit itarted moving\nIn commercial quantity.\nRaspbetrlu were at their peak\nat the weekend and continued well\nabove 80 ln the ihide, weather hu\nreduced the yield, in unlrrlgattd\nsections par\" -.larly. The 1940 MB\nmate of 10,000 crttei will have to\nbe cut as much u 29 per cent ac\ncording to some growers.\nThe populir English gooseberry is\nnow available ln considerable quantity and wu commanding t half\ndollar prtmlum over the common\nvariety on quotations to tht trade.\nBlack tnd red curranti art itill\ntrickling ln but the season is over.\nCrow'i Neit Pass polnti ire not\ngetting a lufficient supply of their\nown iocal grown potatoes, and there\nare more than a few enquiries, but\nat never better than S35 a ton.\nThe steady heat ls advancing all\ncropi md there Is every prospect\nCreston will have ripe field tomatoes to offer well before the tnd\nof July.\nWheat Prospects Off\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Cana\ndian Spring whett proipecti declined four per cent during June\nand were 10 per cent lower than\nthe lame dttt list yur, a report\nIssued today by the Dominion Bu\nreau of Statistics stated.\n. Irregular conditions have develop*\ned in several sections ot the whest\nareu ot Saskatchewan, while only\nslight declines ta the condition of\nthe Manitoba and Alberta crops\nwere recorded since May 31.\nWHOLISALE COMMODITY\nPRICE INDEX RISES\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-The gen\neral wholesale commodity price in\ndex rose to 82.2 the week ended\nJuly S from 81.6 the previoui week\nand 73.2 the corresponding week a\nyear ago, the Dominion Bureau ot\nStatistics reported today.\nThe Index for Canadltn farm\nproducts wu 86.8 compared with\n64.2 the previous week ud 63.3 last\nTat*.\t\nLONDON   CLOSE\ntONDON, July 9 (APl-Brltlsh\nitock closings, In sterling:\nCent Mining, \u00a310; Consol. Gold\nfields, 25s l*d; Crown, \u00a312; East\nGeduld ghu exr; Mining Truit, li\n3d; Springi, 17s 6d.\nBond*\u2014British 3* per ctnt war\nloan, \u00a399*; British funding 4s\n1960-50,  \u00a3110*.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industrials\n20 ralli\t\n15 utilities ....\nHigh\n122.33\n26.43\n22.63\nLow Close Change\n121.86 121.60-off   .03\n26.17 26.19-up   .17\n22.37 2248   unchg.\nQUOTATIONS  ON  WALL   STREET\nAmer CaA  \u2014\t\nAm Smelt & Ret \u2014\nAmer Tel \u2014\nAmer Tob  \t\nAnaconda    \t\nBaldwin    \t\nBait 3c Ohio\t\nBeth  Steel\t\nBorden    _\u2014_.\nCtn   Pte    \u2014-_\nCerro de Paico \u2014\nChrysle.        \u2014\nCon Gu N Y\t\nC Wright Ptd \u2014\nDupont\t\nEsst Kod\t\nGen  Elec    .........\nGen Foodi \t\nGen Mot \t\nGoodrich   \t\nGranby    \t\nGrt  -tor Ptd \t\nInter Nickel \t\nKenn   Cop   \t\n-Mn Close\n\u00ab* \u00bb4*\n36 30*\n180 1S9*\n77* 77*\n18* 19*\n14* 14*\n3* 3*\n75 73*\n18* 18*\n2* 2*\n28* 26*\n84 64\n28* 28\n7 6*\n138* 157*\n130* 119*\n31* 31*\n41* 41*\n43* 43\n12* 12*\n6* 5*\n23* 22*\n23* 23*\n23* 28'\nMont Ward  ....\nNaih Mot\t\nNY Central _..\nPick  Mot   _.\nPenn R R\t\nPhUlipS    Pett    mm\nPullman    \u2014\nRadio Corp\nSafeway Storei\nS Cal Ed \t\nStan OU of N J\nStudebaker\t\nTex Corp \t\nTex Gulf Sul\nUn Ctrbldt   \u2022\u2022\u2022\nUn Oil of Ctl\nUnited Aircraft\nUn Pac\nU S Rubber\t\nU S Steel ._;\t\nWeat Elec\t\nWeit Union \t\nWoolworth\t\nYel Truck \t\nicn\n&*\n4*\n12*\n3*\n20y*\n31*\n21*\n4*\n41 Vt\n27*\n32*\n6*\n38*\n30*\n68\n12*\n33*\n80*\n19*\n51*\n92\n17*\n32\n11*\nClow\n39\n4*\n11*\n3*\n19*\n31*\n21*\n4*\n41*\n27*\n32*\n6*\n38%\n30*\n87*\n12*\n33\n80*\n19*\n51*\n91*\n17*\n31*\n11*\nVANCOUVER\nBid\nMINES)\nB|g Mlnouri       M\nBralornt    *\u2014    1*>\nBtidgt Rlv Con \u2014     \u2014\nCiriboo Gold      175\nDentonla _\nFairview Amal ....\nGrtndvitw ...._.--\nGrull Wihkine ...\n3edley Mucbt _\nome   Gold   \t\nIndian Mint!\t\nlitter Coal    *_\nIsland Mount \u2014<\u2014\nKObi Belle   \u2014\nMlnto  Gold   \t\nMcGllllvr-y\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\n.00*\nJ09*\n.02\nm*\n.00\nNicola M It M -\nPtnd Otelllt ....\n?iorteer   Gold   -\norter Idaho   ...\nSr   -\nQUfUlM    \"     \"~mm\nRtlvti MicD -.\n.01*\n.18\nA*\n1\n.71\nAsk\nm\n7.85\n\u202201\n1.85\n.01\n.oo.\u00ab\n.12\n.03\n.00*\n.01\n.35\n.65\n32\nJ01*\n1.25\n1.60\nMVt\n.00*\n.71\nRelief Art\nEm-\nSalmon Oold\nShelf) Creek\nSilver Crest \t\nTaylor Bridge ...\nWellington\nWhitewater\nYmir Yank QUI\n- 35\nj04% \u2022*\n.10\nE _\n.02\n.01\n.OS*\n.06\n.03*\n.01\n-01*\n.61*\n.05\nBid\nOILS:\nAmalgamated\nAnaconda  \t\nAnglo Cm\t\nA P Con \t\nBrown Corp ..\nCalgary Sc Edm .    126\nComoil 19\nCommonwealth    16\nEast Crest     OS\nExtension   \t\nFirestone Peta -\nFour Star Pete .\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome\t\nMadison    \u2014\nMar Jon  \u2014\nMcDoug Seg \u2014\n.00*\n.03\n.53\n.08*\n.07\n.16*\n.05\nAsk\n.00*\n.56*\n.08*\n1.30\n.24\nMercury\nMill City\nMonarch Itoy _.\nNational Pttt _\nPaealts .      \t\nPIC    P\u00abtl     mm\nW^lrlt Boy  \u2014\nBOyil  CM\nRoyil Ctnt Ptte\nRoyillte      \t\n1.53\n.01*\nXX)*\n.07\n.03*\n.04*       -\nJ05*       -\n- AS\n.11\n.12\n1.60\n.01*\n.08*\nM\n_     JU\nZ      .13*\n*7*\n_.\n.15\nSpooner\nSuniet      \t\nUnited     \t\nVanilla\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCiplttl JJJt\nCaut Bfew .....\n.02\n.19\n.04\n.03\n26-\n....    IM\n19.50\n1.23\n130\nEXCHANCE MARKITS\nMONTREAL, JUly 9 (CP)-British tnd foreign exchinge, nominal\nratei between banks only:\nArgentina, peso, 2364\nChina, Hong Kong dollan, 2811 '\nFinland, flnmark, .0228\nJugoslivtt, dinar, .0251 -\nSwltierlind, franc, 2317\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCintdt)\nCloiing exchange rates:\nMontreal: Pound, buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar Vying\n1.10, idling 1.11.\nNew York;\nSOW! -S3*.\nPound 3.78; Ctntditn\nNIW YORK. July \u00bb (CP)-Tht\noptn  mirket  prict for  tht free\nund iterling advanced 1* cents\n13.73 against United Statu fundi\non tht Foreign Exchims Mirket\ntodiy ln tht face of London hints\nthat restrictions would bt tightened.\nTht Ctntditn dolltr swung off\non tnother tangent, Idling * cent\nto.t discount of 14* per cent. (Ot-\nttwt Foreign Exchange Control\nBoard rate 5.09\u20149*1, per cent dli-\ncounO\nRains Needed lor\nPrairie Crops\nOTTAWA, July \u00bb (CP). - Crone\nIn Northern Manitoba, Central Saskatchewan and Southern Alberta\nwill tall considerably below expectation unless good rains are received ihortly. The Dominion Bureau\nof Statistics reported today in tht\nseventh ot 1 series of weekly tele-\nnhic reporti on crop conditioni\nit Prime Provlncei.\nRainfall over tht Prairies during\nthe put week varied considerably.\nManitoba received light to moderate rains ind moiiture supplies ln\nAlberta were sufficient to maintain\nthe favorable crop prospects.\nIn Saskatchewan, however, rainfall was quite light md in many\nsections of the Province deteriora\ntion of crops took place. In Man!\ntoba tht crop is well headed with\nstands varying trom fair ln the\nNorthern jiart of the Province to\ngood ln Southern  sections.\nIn Saskatchewan about half the\nwheat li In head with the best\nstands 'looated in South-Central,\nSouth-western and West-Central\nareas. Heading has started in Alberta.\nCropi in tht South hivt deteriorated ind in the extreme South-\nEast grasshoppers hive destroyed\nmott of tht stubble crop. Hall damage wu reported from scattered\npolnti in Manitoba, Southern and\nCentral Saskatchewan and in Central Albtrtt.\nTo carry tht crop through to maturity, adequate moisture supplies\nwill be required during the next\ntwo weeki or serious deterioration\nwill tike piece ln mtny areas, particularly where reserve moisture\nbu been heavily drawn upon the\nreport uid.\n1 Won Market Slows\nLONDON, July 9 (AP). - The\nrecent forward drive in the stock\nmarket slowed today. British Government bonds lost early moderate\ngalni tnd most Industrials' were\nchanged, were 1 tew pence lower.\nOils levelled off at lower quotations. Copper and tin stock showed\nt little fight but Kaffirs slipped t\nnotch   Rails continued In demand\nU. S. Survey Show\nCosts of Repair\nIn Flood Areas\nCRESTON, B. C.-Visltors here\nfrom Bonners Ferry, Idaho, tor the\nfnternationil Joint Commluion\nmeeting, state that tht corpi of\ntrmy engineers undtr Capt. Cul-\nbertson, are making iittsfactory\nprogress with tht survey ot the\nKootenty River between thit town\ntnd Porthill.\nThert ttt 14 ln tht group tnd\nthty hava been at work tor about\nt\\. monthi, .nd are not e::pc lg\nto complete that section of the lur-\nV.   until Septei.iber.\nTht very practicil intereit U. S.\nFederal authorities are ihowing 1\ndrainage diitrlct matters In the\nvalley of the Kootenay ln Idaho\nis due tht ftct that at leut $13. 0\nhu been advanced tor repair work\non many of the 14 dyked districts.\nFollowing tht extensive dyke\nbreaks ln 1938 more thin $100,000\nwu advanced trom Waihington to\nmike theie repairs tlont, ln addition to which advances hid been\nmade trom timt to tlmt for rehabilitation.\nAccording to G. I, Crocker, Secretary of the Idaho Kootenay Valley Drainage Districts Association,\nthe present work ls to enable the\nArmy Engineers to submit to Washington the quite definite cost of\nputting all the districts In shape to\nwithstand flooding in the light of\nchanged conditioni due the widening of the narrowa at Grohman\nCreek, below Nelson.\nThe total cost of such a reconstruction program might euily run\nto a quarter of a million dollars. A\nthorough iob would be made, the\nwork contemplating the use ot a\nsuction dredge that would lift 30\nor 40 feet from the bottom ot the\nriver for strengthening, and raising\nthe dyke leveli where necessary.\nInformation at present indicates\nthe effort may be confined solely\nto the PorthiU-Bonnert Ferry lec-\ntlon of the river, but recently word\nwu given out that lt might cover\nthe entire watershed of the Kootenay River, and might require a\nyear or more to complete.\nUtilities Lead on\nMontreal Market\nMONTREAL. July 9\nUtilities continued to\nstock market today.\nBell Telephone gained more thu\ntwo while fractional improvement\nwas shown tor Gatineau, Montreal\nPower, and Shawlnigan. National\nSteel Car advanced a point.\nGeneral Steel Wares tacked on\na sizeable fraction,\nCanada Celanese tnd Dominion\nTextile gained a point etch.\nLONDON (CP)-The King has\ngiven his sporting rifles for uu by\nEnglish anti-parachute corps.\n(CP).  -\nlead   the\nBeautify Your\nDOOR HARDWARE\nWith Glistening Chrome Plate\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLiuritz Bldg.\n704 Ntlion Avi.\n. METAL   MARKETS\nLONDON. July 9 (AP). - Btr\nsilver 2 U-19d, unchtnged. (Equivalent 30.33 cents based on tht dollar it $4.03.)\nBtr gold 188s, unchmged. (Equivalent $33.83.)\nTin eisy; spot \u00a3383 Ss bid, \u00a3283\nIM uked; future \u00a3283 5s bid, \u00a3263\n10s uked.\nMONTREAL - Bir gold ln London wu unchnged at $37.84 in\nounce in Canadiin funds; 168s In\nBritish representing tht Bank ot\nEngland's buying price.\nSpot copper, electrolytic 12,73;\ntin 62.80; lead 8.80; line 3.65; antimony   15.23.\nSilver tuturei closed unchmged\ntodty. Bid: July 37.73.\nNEW YORK\u2014Copper itetdy; el-\nelectrolytic, ipot, Conn. Vallev 10 75\nto 11.30; export ta* N. Y. 10.45 to\n10.50.\nTin itetdy; spot and nearby at\n31.50; forward 80.25.\nLead steady; apot New York at\n5.00 to 5.0S; Eait St. Louis 4.83.\nZinc iteidy; Eut St. Louis apot\nand forward 023.\nBar lilver 34*, unchmged.\nPAOI NINI\nRobertson Has a\n$75 Gold Nuogel\nFrom W Creek\nRichest prln to come out ot:\nhli Forty-Nine Creak plicer leases to fir ll 1 $76 gold nugqtt cur.\nrently In tht possession of H. W.\nRobertion of Nelitn. The nugget,\nweighing tbout t'\/t ounces, ll\nimooth surfaced tnd somewhat -\nhurt shaped. Tracts of quart!\n\u2022how on It.   .\nMr. Robertson, explilnlng that\ntwo young mm art working hli\nleases this yeir on a royalty bills,\n\u2022tated the nugget wis recovered\nfrom t rich pocket which considerably iweetened the better-thin-\nwages returm obtained io fl'\nthli seaion. Tht ground Ik described u \"spotty.\"\nForty-Nine Creek wu 1 scene\nOf early-day placer diggings.\nHavt You Read tht Classified?\nNILSON TO JASPER  |86.70 Return\nViiit the Edmonton Exhibition\nSingle .ire for tht Round Trip\nTickets on sale July 13 to July 20 Inclusive.\nReturn Limit July 23rd.\nPutt and schedules subject to thtngt without notlot,\nGREYfiOUND\n\/    l IK'S\nPEERLESS DENTI5TS\nJAMIESON BLDG.\nCORNER   WALL   AND   RIUERSIDE    AVENUE\nTO THE EDITOR,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nNELSON, B. C.\nDEAR SIR:\nS.OKANE. WASH.\nJULY 8.\nI am being asked many questions by friends of ours In, Canada with\nregard to Passports, under the new United States law which came into effect\non July 1. Naturally, Lam delighted to do anything in my power to secure\nthe answers to such questions.\nIn a letter from Sheep Creek, B. C, I have been asked:\n\"Can I obtain a passport from the United States Consular Office\nat Trail, B. C?\"\nf find that many people are still under a misapprehension upon this\npoint. The United States Vice-Consul at Trail does not issue Canadian Passports. Canadians, by birth or naturaliiation, who desire to secure Passports\nmust do so through their own Government. Applications may be sent to the\nPassport Officer, Department of External Affairs at Ottawa, where the regular passport good for five years and costing $5 may be obtained or the dollar passport good for one year, or, in the case of dollar passports only, application may be made to the new Passport Office which has just been opened at\nVancouver, B. C. Then, after the Canadian Passport has been obtained it is\nnot valid for travel in the United States until it has been visa'd by an American Consular official. These visas are granted at the office of the Vice-\nConsul at Trail.\nAnother question which I have been asked, In this Instance by a friend\nof ours from South Slocan, B. C, is whether it would be advisable to apply\nnow for a passport for a trip which our friend does not expect to take to the\nUnited States until October.\nMy advice would be to make application immediately. Passport officials in Canada have been deluged with applications and while it is evident\nthat every effort is being made to get them through quickly some delays\nare inevitable. I hear that the other day the Passport Officer at Ottawa had\nno less than 100,000 applications fo be dealt with. This situation is being\nno doubt cleared up rapidly, but there is nothing to be lost by making an\napplication as early as possible.\nSincerely Yours,\n.1\n.\n7\n\u25a0H\u2014.\n pppppfpw^wsfflppp\nHgjQHIPflS\n**tt*mWm>Wk***^**^^\n\u00ab     Ult Timet TODAY\nComplete Showi 2, 7, 8:25\nDorothy Lamour\nRobert Preston\n'TYPHOON\"\n(Technicolor)\nAt 2i14, 7:14, 9:44\n|   Plus: \"Money to Burn\"\nStarts Thursday\n\"Waterloo Bridge\"  '\n&0&0)S!!&SSOOS\u00bb!ISSSSS!>SSSt>S&ei>SS\nHave You Read tha Classified?\nessosssosssosisoososesssssossssosoto\nCUT FLOWERS. WEDDING\nAND FUNERAL DESIGNS\nPhone   KITCHENER\nttmettooies&soeiseeeetoeeeoommteo\nLoco Mazda Lamps\nf for fl.00 up to 100 watt\nStandard Electric\n433 Joiephlne St Phont 833\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTOR8 SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savlngt Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox tl    Hlpperson Blk.    Ph. 117\n1     **\nMealing you is a privilege\nWe Enjoy\nPhone )ON ELLA 1042\nOnly Filter Cleaning\nIn the Kootenays\nMiniiiiiiiiiiiinmii\nCome to\nQrenfelTs Cafe\nFor Fresh\nHUCKLEBERRY PIE\nJIIIII11II1III1II11I1III\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed. Arte Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPreicriptioni\nCompounded\nAccurately\n1929 OLDSMOBILE\nSEDAN\nNtw tires. New paint Job.\nMike ut an offtr.\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 48      Limited      Ml Joiephlne\nFOR  PICNICS  AND\nFISHING TRIPS\nThe Best If...\nColumbia\nLager Beer\nPHONE   THE\nVENDORS\nIt Dcliv-\n- It'i to\nvery convenient\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThli idvertlsement ls not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or  by   the  Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nOur\nOf flee Supplies\nPill Everyday Needi\nTtos, Saalt, Labile, Paper Fut-\nentn, Index Tabi, Reinforcement! Molitenert, Rubber. Bandt\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81        NELSON, B. a\nOld Time Miner\nJames Jeffrey,\nDies al Kaslo\nA few dayi after he returned IU\nfrom a week'i prospecting trip to\nsome claims upon Eureka Mountain in the company of another Vancouver mining man, James Jeffrey,\nold-time Kaslo resident, died Tuesday morning in his sevenUes In his\nKing George Hotel room at Kaslo.\nAccompanied by Joseph Hobson,\nhe registered at the hotel June 26,\nand after a couple of days, made the\nweek's journey with Mr. Hobson to\nhit claims. He returned to Kaslo\nlast Friday quite HI, and was confined to his room. He took a turn\nfor, the worse Tuesday morning, and\nMiss Emily Dudley, Matron of the\nVictorian Hospital, waa called in.\nbut he died five minutes after she\narrived.\nMr. Jeffrey, who lived in Kaslo\nfor a long period ln the old days\nbefore going to Vancouver, died\n\"evidently from an acute abdominal\ncondition\", according to Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie of Nelson, Coroner, who\ninvestigated the death. Dr. MacKenzie judged the dead man to be\nabout 73 years of age.\nThe body was taken to Nelson by\nSomers Funeral Home, who will bo\nin charge of funeral arrangements\nin Nelson, where the burial will\ntake place. A son is expected to arrive in Nelson tonight.\nDeputy Coroner Claude MacDonald of Kaalo, who Is also Government Agent, also Investigated.\nRecruits Draft\nDeparts, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, July S\u2014Repetition\not duty has not dimmed the enthusiasm of the Trail citizenry as\nit turned out in Its usual strength\nto see off another draft of recruit'\nfrom the railway station on Tuesday\nmorning.\nAs briskly as ever, the Trail Pipe\nBand and the Veterans' Home\nGuard escorted the recruits ln parade from the Armory to the railway depot The boys leaving for\nKamloops and Vancouver were\nshowered with tmokes and other\nglftt.\t\nBONNINGTON\nBONNINGTON, B. C.-Mr. md\nMrs. W. G. Elsdon had as guests\nMr. and Mrs. J. Reed of Greenwood.\nMrs. Elsdon's brother-in-law and\nsister.\nBobbie Elsdon ls spending a few\nweeks in Vancouver.\nMiss Mary Gordon and Sandy\nGordon are spending the vacation\nat Marysville with Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon Jewel.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Biddlecombe have\nreturned from a week's visit. to\nGrand Forks.\nMias Monna May Walley of Nelson was a guest of Mrs. J. Cavell\nfor a few days.\nDavid Motley, wbo la training ln\nthe Royal Canadian Navy at Esquimau, is spending a two-week vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. C. Motley.\nMn. E. Y. Brake of Nelson was a\nguest ot Mrs. A. Somerville.\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nSUPERIOR SERVICE\nPHONE 1-2-8\n114 acre lots at Balfour 100 feet\nrea! sand beach, and trees for shade.\n$250 each. Easy terms.\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCo., Ltd.\n1937 AUSTIN\n10 horse power, 4-paitengar\nroadster. Likt ntw.\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker SL     Limited     Phont 119\nCOLD PACK\nCANNERS\nFrom $2.25\nWe have also \u2014 Cherry Stoners, Strainers, Mixing\nSpoons, Preserving Kettles, Kitchen Scales, etc.,\nto fill your needs.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\n-NELSON DAILY NIWI, NILION. B. CpWEONESDAY MORNINO. JULY 10.1MS-\nSet for Summer\nMiss Muriel Smith and Miss (Hive Waters at Lakeside Park,\nNelson.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramiay.\nTrail's War AM\nExpected fo Be\n$75,000 a Year\nTRAIL. B. C, July 9-With a\nfew canvassers still to Le heard\nfrom, the Trail District Patriotic\nSociety campaign is expected to\nyield approximately $65,000 annually In contributions to the patriotic drive, and about $109,633 for\nInvestment ln War Savings Stamps,\nJ. B. Twaddle, the Society's Office\nManager, announced Tueaday.\nPledges for War Savings Certificates totalled 2111, and for iona-\ntlons to the patriotic fund 2502. War\nsavings fledges did not anclude direct purchases from banks and ihe\nPost Olfice.\ntaONDON. (CP). \u2014 Because the\nringing of church belli now Indl\ncales the landing of parachute\ntroops, the British Broadcasting\nCorporation has abandoned the\nBow Bells interval signal, uaing\ninstead the once discarded \"tick-\ntack\".\nThree New Forest Fires Are Small;\nGuard Line al Lumberton Extended;\nFire South ol Nelson Troublesome\nStaff of Trail Firm\nHolds Picnic Outing\nat Woodberry Creek\nWhen the staff of Bryan's Tranifer, Trail, held a picnic outing at\nthe Nellls home, Woodbery Creek,\na weiner roast, fishing and swimming featured the day.\nAttending were Mr. and Mrt. J.\nE. Bryan, Mr. and Mrt. I. Trembath,\nMiss Maizie Campbell, Malcolm McPherson, Ed Dawson and James\nSheenan, Trail; Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge McPherson apd Miss Lor-\nainne Trembath, Nelson; and Mr.\nand.Mrs. D. H. Nellia of Woodbery\nCreek.\nBISHOP PAYS TRIBUTE\nTO CANADIAN SAILORS\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP). - At a\nspecial Requiem High Mast here\ntoday In St. Patricks Church for\nthe victims of the sinking ot the\nH. M. C. S. Fraser, Bishop C. L,\nNelligan, Principal Roman Catholic\nChaplain of the Canadian Active\nService, paid tribute to these Canadian sailors. Naval off1 rial<, 'n.\neluding Hear-Admlral Percy W.\nNelles, Chief of Naval Staff, attended the Mass.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS FLORENCE BIRD\nTRAIL, B. C, July \u00bb-Mr. and\nMrs. C. W. Guillaume have as their\nguests at their Summer home at\nRobson, their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Scott. Mr.\nand Mrs. Scott will visit there for\ntwo weeks.\nMrs. D. Gillis and Miss Dorothy\nGillis and Lennie Lane are spending a few days at Robson as the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. William\nBrown.\nMrs. Neil Derby and infant daughter are the guests of Mrs, Derby's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Thain\nof Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Lauener and\ndaughter Madeline have returned\nfrom a motor trip to Revelstoke and\ndistrict points.\nWarwick Parker ls spending a\nholiday with his grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Howard Parker of Slocan\nCity.\nLawrence Greig of Golden Is the\nguest of his sister, Mrs. E. S. Thomas\nfor a few days.\nMrs. T. H. Horner and daughter\nreturned to their home at Nakusp\nafter a visit spent in Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Taylor and son\nhave taken up residence at\nFruitvale.\nAt Camp Koolaree . . .\nApaches Take All Koolaree Titles\nbut One; Tillicums Are Runners-Up\nHappy Day No. 10 of the Senior\nBoys Camp at Koolaree. Wot a Day!\nWot a Day! Championship volleyball, soflball and basketball all to\nbe played off. Right after breakfast the Tillicums met their rivals,\nthe Apaches, in volleyball, only to\nlose in straight games 15-12, 15-9.\nThe boys got a rest for an hour by\ngoing to their Bible groups for the\nclosing sessions.\nAPACHE8 WIN ALL FINALS\nSoftball proved a pushover for\nthe Apaches, when they took the\nTiUicums in the morning fixture\n19-10, and the afternoon game 27-11.\nThese Apache, were Just on, could\nnpt miss, and every player a hitter.\nBill Dimocks' smooth work at shortstop for the aggreatlon probably\ncontributed most to the victories.\nThe evening basketball final proved another close victory for these\nApaches at the hands of the fighting Tillicums. with a 12-10 score.\nWith the league all polished off,\nthe boys washed off the dust ind\nprepared themselves for the evening of evenings, the Campfire review of the Camp songi was done\nwith a zest. The scribes were at\ntheir best, and the Tillicums, ln\n9pite of their heavy^ athletic day,\ncame through with the finest dramatization of the camp, staging \"The\nLamp That Went Out\", produced\nby Camie McKenzie, with Ian Currie as the leading lady and Frank\nWilby the hero.\nCAMP LETTER8 PRESENTED\nThe event of the evening was\nthe presenting of the camp letters.\nThe Apaches won the Camp championship with 453 points, to receive\ntheir big block letter \"K\". They also\ngot a second letter for having won\nmore than three championships. In\nfact thev won just about everything Table Inspection, softbail,\nvolleyball, basketball, field and\naquatic meets ilso the treasure\nhunt. On paper they do not look\nexactly the team you would pick\nfor a winner, yet with e*ery lut\nmember working his heart out,\nfrom Little Chief Martin McLennan, Hugh Worsfold. Don Maddocks. of Nelson; Eddie McGregor,\nBonnington; Bill Dimock, Don McDonald, Harold Moen, Troll; Norm,\nGallie, Glen Langdale, Rossland;\nmd Alan Qlll, Cranbrook.\nThe cabin Inspection went to the\nTillicums. winning them a small\ngreen \"K\". The boys: Angus McDonald. Camie McKenzie David\nWorsfold, Don Wutke. Ernie Jones,\nIan   Currie,   Joe   Hilliard,  Frank\nWilby, Hawkshaw Powell, Gordon\n\"Big K'l\" were presented ta the\nstaff: Wesley McKenzle, Rev. Bill\nSelder. Gordon Allan, Frank Wilby and to Miss Evelyn Carlson, our\ncook.\nThe Little Chiefs received small\nblue \"K's\"; Bob Mcintosh, Angus\nMcDonald, Camie McKenzle, Russel Jones, Tom Griffiths. For meritorious service to the camp, small\nblue \"K's\" were also awarded to\nJerry Jerram, Garth Barnes, Jack\nSteed and Lewis Jones. Rev. Bill\nSelder pointed out that the Big\nChief always spent much tune preparing these awards, and moved on\nbehalf of the boys that the Big\nChief Freddie Robins do wear one\nof his bog block \"K's\".\nIn the cabin inspection the points\nwere within a spread of five at the\nfinal kill; Tillicums 75%: Pontiacs\nand Senecas tied with 74; Apaches\n12Vt; Cherokees 71. Likewise, with\nthe table markings, a range of 9\nwas noticed for the first four:\nApaches 1MH; Tillicums lMVi:\nSenecas l\u00abfly\u00bb; Cherokees 180, and\nPontiacs 150.\nBOYS LIGHT\nTHEIR  FAGGOTS\nThe Senior Boys have completed\nanother camp seuon, and as the\ncampfire program closed, they\nrobed themselves and circled the\ngreat tire to light their faggot.\nThese they take home, and return\nwith next year, to kindle that fire.\nFrom the camoflre the tribesmen\nproceeded to the cairn for the\nburial of the records by the Little\nChiefs. After a brief ceremony recalling the days gone by, thev once\nmore moved along the trrll that\ntook them to the chapel. Here, In\nthe Sanctuary of Sanctuaries, the\ncamp Holy of Holies, the boys received their departing^ messages\nfrom the Big Chiefs, here they were\nappealed to, to dedicate their lives\nin Christian Service.\nThe night ls done, and they are\nback to ihe campfire for cocoa and\ncake prepared by Miss Carlson.\nThe camp ls quiet. The Senior\nBoys have completed t very successful camp, and tome of the old\ntimers are wont to say, \"the best\".\nTomorrow thev give way to the\nJuniors. The first of these laddies\nnrrlved last night In the person of\nBruce McKay of Ymir. It w\"1 be\nonly a few minutes now till the\nfirst caomer departs at 2:00 a.m.\nfor Cranbrook, and we received\nHugh Sutherland of Grand Forks\ninto our midst for the tint time.\nA new ctmp li aout to dawn, and\nthe first signs are for a large camp.\nKailo Visitor Given\nSurprise Party\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014Mn. F. S. Chandler and ber daughters, the Misses\nDaphne and Winnie, were hostesses\not a surprise party ln honor of\nMitt Eloise Little of Biggar, Sask.,\nwho, for some time, haa been a\nguest of Mr. and Mrt. F. S, Rouleau,\nand la leaving ihortly.\nBeautiful (lowers adorned tba\nrooms, and linging, games and\ndancing enjoyed. Miu Little's\nmother enthralled all with vocal\nnumbers.\nMr. anS Mrt. Little, Mri. Dale ot\nBiggar, Sask., who ara visiting here,\nMr. and Mrs. F. S. Rouleau, Mr.\nand Mn. Percy Amas, Mr. and Mri.\nT. V. Webber, Mn. Carl Hild, the\nMiaset Peaty .Dryden, Betty Robertson. Kate Riddell, Clara and Eleanor\nHorner, Lorna Spain, Pat Andrewi\nand Jack Dryden, Frank Morton,\nJohn Coles, Douglas and Robert\nStrachan, Ian Shaiddel, Harold\nAbey, Jerry Fitzsimmons, Bill\nChandler and Lyle Holland were\ngueiti.        \t\nTrail Glee Choir\nConcert Realizes\n$211, Red Cross\nTRAIL, B. C, July 0 - B. E.\nHawkes, Secretary-Treasurer of the\nC. M. & S. Glee Party, announced\nTuesday that the choir's concert,\nstaged recently in the High School\nauditorium reallie. $271 lor the\nRed Cross Society.\t\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B.C\u2014Tom Speak-\nman hat returned to Armitrong, after visiting S. Romano.\nMr. and Mn. F. Eremenko and\ntheir grand-daughter Ruth Frie, visited Nelson. .\nMr. and Mn. C. Appleton visited\nTralL\nCharlie Appleton hat arlved home\nto ipend the Summer, with hli\nparents, Mr. and Mn. C. Appleton.\nMist Dorle Davidson\" ot Ymir ll\nhome for the holldayi.\nMn. A. Wallner has returned to\nVancouver, after vltltlng Mr. and\nMn. E. Wallner.       \u201e    \u2022 .,\nMn. P. Toogood viilted her mother, Mn. Connon, who is a patient\nln the Trail-Tadanjc Hoipital\nMn. Rinke and two children ara\nvisiting at Deer Park.\nMn. J. Scott and children are visiting Mrs. Scott's parents at Penticton.\nMn. Cornwall visited Rossland. _\nMr. and Mn. O. N. Askew have\nleft to reside at Blueberry.\nMn. Olson of Nelson was a guest\nof her daughter, Mn. E. Wallner,\nMiss C. Pitacreato is visiting Mr\nand Mri. Ross Defoe.\nMrs. Wool! hu left to Join her\nparents tn Nelson. Mr. Wools hu\njoined the army.\nElmer Dams, and Edwin MacGtul-\nley have lett for Broadwater on\nthe Arrow Lakes.\nMr. and Mrs. D. A. Shea ara visiting at Vancouver.\nJ. Henry is visiting Victoria.\nMrs. Andrews has returned to\nHarrop, after visiting her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrt. J. Cox.\nMrs. Shafonski visited TralL\nMn. Henry and son, Daryl, are\nvisiting at Cranbrook.\nJ. Waldle visited Nelson.\nMlu L. Lampard entertained at a\nmiscellaneous shower, complementing Mr. and Mn. E. Jacques, recent\nnewlyweds. Mn. Jacques was presented with many lovely glftt.\nDancing was enjoyed, atter which\nrefreshments were served. Guests\nwere Miss Ruth Sommen, Miss Ruth\nFoss, Miss L. Morossoff, Miss B.\nDams, Miss P. Dams, S. Dams, Miss\nV. Alexnder, Mis M. Alexander, Miss\nM. Alexander, Miss N, Petenon,\nMiss E. Peterson, Mlu J. Lawson,\nMiu J. Stainton, Mist P. Watson,\nMiss M. Houston, Miss B. MacKinnon, Miss M. Finch, Mlu C. Dafoe,\nMrs. C. N. Askew, J. Lamphear, Lyman Morrison, Bob Morrison, Jack\nMcKinnon, Tom and Bill MacGau-\nley, Donald West, A. Richards, R\nDesaulniers, Tom Davidson.\nBilly Waldie of Nelson is visiting\nhis father J. Waldie.\nThe United Church Ladles' Aid\nmet at the home of Mrs. Huddleston.\nThe Red Cross sewing meeting\nwas held at the Coronation Hall.\nsxsosesoteeseeoseieetoeesaestetoti\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nos&tsiossossiosotssose&tsssxtsi\nBABY CLINIC AT NURSES'\nHOME TODAY AT 2:30 P. M.\nStrawberry Jamboree, Floor Show,\nGyro Park\u2014Tonight\nRoll your own with Ottoman tine\ncut, 50c tin at Valentine's,\nHarold Foulds - Electrician\nAppliances repaired. Phone 044.\nEAGLES   MEET  TONIGHT\nAT 8 P. M.\nFor quick and reliable ambulance\nservice, Phone 93 or 361.\nElectrical Contracting, F. H\nSMITH, 3S1 Baktr St. PHONE M4.\nSpring chicken 25c per lb. Black\ncurrants and gooseberries 4 lbs. 25c.\nT. Roynon.\nC. P. R. Fint Aid classes to commence Friday, July 12 at 9:00 p.m.\nat tbe C. P. R. Depot.\nOur stock of canning requirements it complete. Canners, scales,\nfunnels, etc., at pricei to suit. Hippenon Hardware Company.\nBritish Israel lecture by W. J. D.\nVickers of Vancouver. \"The World's\nGreatest Conflict\", ln the Baptist\nChurch Thunday evening, July 11\nat 8 p.m. Everybody welcome.\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nMn. Dora A. Carle paued away\nMonday. Service from Somers Funeral Home, 2:00 p.m. Thunday. No\nflowen by requeit.\nYahk, Nine-Mile and\nSlocan Scenes of\nNew Blazes\nThree new forest firet were listed\nin the Southern Interior Tuesday,\nnone of them large. The extreme\nfire hazard continued, though cloudi\nand a ipatter of rain here and there\ngave a higher humidity.\nThe new outbreaks wera on the\nYahk River in Eait Kootenay; on\nNine-Mile Creek, East ot Nelson:\nand on Goose Creek, a tributary of\nthe Slocan River at Crescent Valley.\nTwo men had tha Goose Creek\nfire under control. A imall crew\ntrom Willow Point went out'to the\nNine-Mile tire but no report had\nbeen received from them up to 10:30\npm. and a full report on the fire\nwu lacking. Twenty men left Cranbrook for the Yahk River lire.\nSUCCESSFUL  FIGHT\nMeanwhile the Foreit Branch continued a successful tight against\nother blazes. Two flrei in the Big\nBend country were under control.\nThe Lumberton fire wat still being\nfought by a large crew and the fire\nguard wu extended.\nAt Selous Creek, about five miles\nSouth ot Nelson, the fire reported\nMonday wu wone than originally\nreported but it wu expected the\ncrew would gain control Tueiday\nnight\nTwo fires ln Nakusp district and\ntwo in Trout Lake district were\nunder control.\nThe fire at Cascade, near Grand\nForks, fought Monday by railway-\nmen, wu out\nPROMISE OF RAIN\nCRANBROOK, B.C., July 9 (CP)\n\u2014Overcast sklea gave promise ot\nrain today to check a serious forest\nfire situation throughout this area.\nLatest reporti said the fire In the\nLumberton diitrlct coven about 70\nsquare miles and Is working Northwest toward Perry Creek. About\n265 men are fighting the outbreak\nalong a 14-mile front.\nA group ot fire tighten hai been\nsent to combat a new outbreak in\nthe Yahk hills. Crewi have ex\ntinguished firet over the Wardner\ngolf coune and at Meadow Brook.\nThe Meadow Brook tire started\nfrom lightning. Anothe. blaze at St\nEugene Mission hu been extinguished.\nIn the Fernle lection, tire ls burn\nIng along the Tanglefoot Creek.\nTerriers Win Boxla\nFrom Trail Colombos\nROSSLAND, B.C.. July 9 \u2014 The\nRossland Terrlen defeated the Trail\nSons of Colombo at the local box\nlut night by a 90-11 icore. Thc\n\"pups\" led all the way, using ihort,\nfut-passing plays and keeping their\nopponents disorganized throughout\nThe feature of the game wu a\nfight which was on the verge of a\nfree-for-all and resulted ln a full\npenalty box of aix playen. Jack\nLaface, Jim Scott, and Austin Bathie\nwere highest point-getters for the\nlocals netting 12,11 and 10 pointi reipectlvely, while Nlni Fortl wai top\nman for Trail with five points.\nLineups follow:\nRossland \u2014 Pollack g, Bathie d,\nCox d, Clark d, Camozzi d, R. Scott\nr, Page c, J. Scott c, J. Laface w,\nHoneyman w, Hutton r, Gach w,\nand Kiway w.\nTrail\u2014Ius g, Matteuccl d, Fortl d,\nPlttao d, Cutenzo d, Turik r, Tognotti r, Brownlee c, Battlstella w,\nPagnan w, Biagtonl w.\nJohnson's Promotions\nJOHNSON'S LANDING, B. C. -\nThe following is the report of the\nschool promotions:\nGrade 1 to 2\u2014Martin Stenberg.\nRoy Lake, Douglu McNicol.\nGrade 3 toT-Patrlcia McNicol,\nDoreen Lake.\nGrade 4 to 5\u2014Pat Dinney.\nGrade 7 to 8\u2014Alvin Lake.\nGrade 8\u2014Larry McNicoL John\nStenberg (not promoted).\nGrade 9 to 10\u2014Florence McNicol,\nRonald Dinney,\nPrizes were awarded by the\nteacher, Mist Joyce Sutherland, tor\nteam work, the girli proving the\nwinners- including Florence McNicol, Lilliam Stenberg,( Jean and Patricia McNicol.\nPrize for writing and good work\nwent to Lillian Stenberg.\nPrizes awarded tor hobbies\u2014John\nStenberg, Lary McNicol and Jean\nMcNicol, tie, Patrician and Douglas\nMcNicol.\nLoad Your Camera on\nYour Half Holiday\nTAKE  PHOTOS\nWe supply all your\nrequirements.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 4(0\nPhona 84\nTrail Rotary\nClub Hears ol\nBig Bend Act\nTRAIL, B. C, July 9-George\nRennison, club member who at\ntended the ceremonies at the re\ncent opening of the Big Bend High'\nway near Revelstoke and who was\na committee of one ot tha Trail\nBoard of Trade which headed the\ndelegation trom the Trail district\ndescribed the interesting trip to\nand the opening ceremonies, at the\nTrail Rotary Club Tuesday.\nMr. Rennison also spoke on the\nilx NaUonal Parks ln British Columbia, Glacier, Kootenay, Banff,\nYoho and Jasper, pointing out that\ntheir distinctive splendor made a\nvisit to them well worth while.\nKootenay Tennis\nMen at Kelowna\nKHLOWNA, B. C, July 8 (CP).\n\u2014Seeded playen advanced in the\nInterior of British Columbia tennii\nchampionships here todty, at the\niecond day'i pity went by without\nan upset being icored.\nJack Brawn, Jimmy Bardiley,\nJack Hitchle and Tommy Berto, all\nof Vancouver, teeded ln the first\nfour of the men's singles, swept\nthrough their matches u did other\nfavorites.\nWomen's  tingles  play  wat  ex\nCd to  be dominated  by two\nouver  glrli, Caroline Deacon\nand Jean Eckhart, favored to meet\nin the finals.\nResults included:\nMen's slnglea-S. Angus, Trail,\nbeat N. Izowiky, Kelowna, 8-2, 8-1;\nD. Williami, Vancouvtr, beat D. A.\nFreeman, Ttall; J. Neal, Rossland,\nbeat H. Pcttman, Kelowna.\nNine Tourist Parties\nat Camp During Week\nNine tourist parties utilized accommodations at the City of Nelson\ntourist park during the tint week\nof July, bringing the Camp registration since it opened in late April to\n21. Two parties from Edmonton and\none each from Enderby, Cranbrook,\nVernon and Vancouver ln British\nColumbia, Millet and Leduc in Al\nberta and Spokane ln Wuhlngton\nregistered ln the week.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 208. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\n*+-\u2666\u2666\u2666-\nCream-0 Milk\nReally Delicious u a Table Cream\nfor Any Meal.\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\n\"Pick of the Market\"\nGuaranteed Used Cars\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Pott Olfice and Hume Hotel\nASK FOR HOOD'S\nCottage Bread\nj is i\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\nBUDA DIESEL POWER UNIT\nAND SCHRAMM\nCOMPRESSOR\nSEE\nJACK ANNABLE\nSport Shirts\nKeep cool and comfortable In one of the sport\nshirrs. All shades and materials. Long or short\nsleeve-styles.\n91.28 to 98.75\nEMORY'S LTD.\nThe Claulfled Will tell ltl\n\u25a0________________________-___\u25a0\nthere'i a Big Dlfefrenee\nBetween a Crease job and a]\nGuaranteed Lubrication\nSKY CHIEF AUTOJ\nKM Baker St   SERVICE   Phone IO]\nNEW COIFFURES\nA STOLE TO SUIT YOU\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBEAUTY SALON\nPhona 327 Johnstone Blk. I\n&s&osxmoesose\u00abeot$e&9xeee!t4\nThe PERCOLATOR\nDoughnut! [\nARE COOD ATI\nANY MEAL\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor ill your needi In plumbing   repairs,   alteration!,   and\nImtallatlom.\nPh. 815 301 Victorlt St\nNow it the time to fumigate\nWith SMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugt\nIf you want reaulta\nSmythe\nPrescription Druggist Phont 1\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone I\n610 Kootenay\nCIVIC\nTonight, Thurs., Fri.\nComplete shews at 7, 8:21\nTHE \"OTHER WOMAN\" IN HIS LIFE Hod\nthe Okay of Hit Wife... See Why for\ntht Laugh of a Life\/.mo!\n!!\u00bbLL'\"\"ElllSOU\nADDED HIT\n\"Miracle of\nMain Street\"\nWith Walter Abel, Lyle\nTalbot and Margo\nI\nNow's tl\nTime to\nBUY\nUSED\nCARS\nSAVE AT OUR\nPRE BUDGET\nPRICE\nSALES\n1937 DeSOTO 4-DOOR\n.     SEDAN\nBuilt In trunk. This beautiful\nspotless   car,   finished   in\npleasing blue enamel, with al\nchrome trim, will make yoi\nproud to own this car. Ho\nwater heater, Unisteel top-\nChrysler's   famous   hydraull\nbrakes and floating power me\ntor makes this car an   flJOCI\noutstanding buy at .   vOtH\n1935   INTERNATIONAL\nTRUCK\nThe pride of International'\nfleet of sturdy trucks. IV\ntons, built to haul all types c\nloads. A truck that can mak\n*ood money for you. fftfCj\nOnly      ipJJi\n1935 STUDEBAKER\nCOMMANDER SEDAN\nThis sleek looking car, wit\nbuilt-in trunk, finished i\noleasing Mentone Brow\nEnamel, will make you pro'i\nto own this car. Very low milt\n4ge and mechanically CjCQI\nA-l. Only    tfOVi\n1935 CHEVROLET MAPLE\nLEAF 2-TON TRUCK\nDual wheel and hydrauli\nsingle lift steel dump ba\nIdeal for ore haulin^ and' ro?\nconstruction work. Chevrolet\noowerful valve-ln-head Bli\nFlame motor. Hydraul\nbrakes, all in A-l conditioi\nReally a true value      _Q(\\\\\n1938 PONTIAC SEDAN\nWith the ori\"in'l Seagull Crt\nfinish and Pontic's chro-\nSilver Streak, will reallv mri\nyou proud to own this car Mi\ntor thoroughly recondition*\nEnjoy the Summer's hlghw*\nby owning and driving th\npowerful, trouble free, ffOO\ncomfortable car. Only  \u00abJk)__\nNelson Transfer\nCompany Limited\n35 Phones 36\nifi iiriiiitfiiiliiiiiiiiihi\n.\n_______\n11 __\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_1940_07_10","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\/1.0415127","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":"1940-07-10 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":"1940-07-10 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":""}]}