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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":" '-\t\n^S*sJ*****~*\nEart Africa Une IfcerteneJ li\nItalian Claim.\u2014Paga 8\nBritith Rett Kept it Strength\nby War PriMt.\u2014Page 8\nMan Shortage, Undereatimation ef\nNail! Canted Defeat.\u2014Page S\nH  IIP HMIIU\nJf?!\n'c7o\u00bbV*8f. -^\nNail Pleat Reported In Rtadlneiaa\nfor Invulon.\u2014Paga 8\nPostponement of Evacuation\nPlan Protaited.\u2014Page 10\nQuatttoni for Registration of\nCanadlani Ready.\u2014Page 2\n92R\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-WEDNESDAY .MORNING. JULV 17. 1940.\nfOLUMi t\u00bb rm currtM   '     \"'A  2*\"Ijl _g nelson. British Columbia. cANAPA-w_ON_ipgy.MORi.iNa. julv 17, tm.\t\nDEMOTRA1 j FREE VOTETOR ANY\nNUMBER  74\nRainfall\nFire  Fighters  in\nNelson District\nSome Crews Reduced ahd Many Others May\nBe Reduced Today Although Rain Still\nNeeded; Storm Sets Three New Fires\nApproximately 1500 men waging successful tights against\nI more than 170 forest fires in the Nelson Forest District Tuesday afternoon welcomed rain which was fairly general through\nOut the Southern Interior. The rain was hardly more than\nenough to dampen down the lightning-set fires, but coupled\nwith the efforts of the fire fighters, and with the higher overnight humidity that followed it, the situation was the brightest\nit has been for nearly a week. So much brighter was it that\nsome crews were reduced and Forest Branch officials anticipated reduction of many other crews today\nAn electrical itorm which preceded the rain resulted In three new\nllghtning-tet fires, one at Harrop,\nI One between Sullivan and China\nICreeks In the Castlegar-Trail area,\n[and one at Stirling Creek on the\nKelowna watershed. But to minimize the new fires were generally\n|good conditions and the fact that\nleveral fires, Including all of the 14\nBret ln the Edgewood area, were\n[extinguished.\nIwiND TROUBLESOME\nWinds which preceded the rains\nln this section apparently affected the aituation but little, all the\nfiret being kept well in hand.\nWhile  there  was   \"not  enough\"\nrain it undoubtably helped to\ngreat extent and Forest Branch\nofficlalt were more optimistic\nthan tor several days.\nI With the electric power ott at\ntakusp and radio reception poor,\nhere was little news from the fire\nlghting front in that area. Rain tell\nhere, however. It was reported at\ntrrowhead, where crewi under\ntarry Johnson, M.L.A. for Revel-\ntoke, had brought five fires well\naider control, that a sharp reduc-\nlon in crews wat likely overnight.\nBlazes ln the Invermere, Crow's\n\u2014lest and Boundary, where there\npere no reports Monday, were said\nJ* in good ahape. Fernie reported\na. fires 'controlled. The'WapTC Fall-\nind Bugaboo Creek outbreaks near\nInvermere were under control. The\nStirling Creek fire, reported from\n[he Boundary, was believed to be\n(airly large and a large crew was\nm ll\nBVEST CRESTON FIRE\n'NDER CONTROL\n_ Thi Lumberton fire was \"In very\nHood shape,\" and the Corn Creek\n\"ire which Sunday threatened tho\nisttlement at Wett Creston' was unlet control.\nOfficials at Nelson did not hear\n.\u25a0om the Kettle River crews, but\nme  situation   there   waa   \"pretty\nKuiet,\" Monday rains having hit\nie tires In that ar^a. Crew on the\ntoffee Creek fire above Kootenay\n_ake was reduced. The Fry Creek\nlire has been under control since\nihortly after it was reported Monday.\nIn the Brilliant area the Jordan\nIreek fire waj under control and\nhe crew on it was reduced by half,\n'ire fighters reached the blaze on\nkohman   Mountain,  near  Nelion,\nwith  iome  difficulty but lt was\nsmall and quickly handled.\n30,000 Killed in\nVh Minutes When\nRotterdam Raided\nWASHINGTON, July IS (AP). -\nTerming the bombing of Rotterdam the \"greatest mass destruction\nthe world has ever seen,\" The Netherlands Legation said in a statement today that 30,000 persons were\nkilled \"ln the IVt minutes the planes\nwere over the city.\"\nSeventy thousand others were\nmaimed and injured, the statement\nadded.\n\"When Rotterdam wat bombed.\"\nIt continued, \"the Dutch army capitulation had already been handed\nto the German High Command. The\nGermans say the planes were in\nthe air and could not be called\nback. It Is customary for all military planes to be equipped with radio and to be directed in their operations by radio. It cannot be believed that the Germaiuair fare*, tq\nefficient in other reipectt, wat deficient in this.\n\"The crime against Rotterdam\nwaa a deliberate, fiendish assault\non unarmed, undefended civilians.\nThe world knows Rotterdam it\nbuilt on marshy soil, and that therefore adequate underground'bomb\nshelters could not be constructed.\nOt course, the Germans knew this,\ntoo.\"\nArrest of Indian\nMembers Approved\nLAHORE, July 1\u00ab (CP'Reuters)\n\u2014A secret session of the Punjab\nAssembly approved by a vote of\n91 to 48 the Government's arrest\nof five members of the House under the Defence of India Regulations, lt was reported tonight\nIt was reported Premier Sir\nSlnandar Hyat Khan quoted from\nsecret Communist publications,\nand said they gave a clear indication that the \"lnterprovincial\nmovement\" In India is aimed at\ncreating widespread disorder.to\nbe followed by revolution.\nRoyal Navy Ready\nho Renew War in\nlediterranean Sea\nOVER 2500 NAZI\nPLANES WRECKED\nBV THE BRITISH\n295 Successful Bomb\nAttacks Made pn\nGermany\nLEAFLET RAIDS\nGIVEN CREDIT\nBy DREW MIDDLETON\n(Associated Pren Stiff Writer)\nLONDON, July 18 (AP) -\nWhen war came tome military\nauthorities conceded Britain's\nRoyal Air Force little chance\nagainst Germany's Luftwaffe,\npampered darling of the Nazi\nhigh command and tempered by\nservice In Spain's civil war.\nTen and a halt months later\nthese authorities have changed\ntheir minds. Scanning the British\nrecords, they find tne one-time\nstepchild of the fighting services\nhas destroyed 2548 German aircraft and made 295 successful\nbombing attacks on military objectives in Germany.\nA four-sided area on the map of\nGc.aiiany connecting Aachen, Coblenz, Osnabruck and Emmerich, haa\nbeen pounded and tmashed night\nafter night. In this area are Germany's heavy Industries which feed\nmunitions and material to her\narmies. The third Relch't molt important railways criss-cross it.\nHere are items from R.A.F. score\nsheet against towns ln that area:\n\"Hamm, bombed 14 timet. Direct hit with heavy bomb on Krupp\narms works. Soest (an important\nrailway iunction) bombed teven\ntimet. Cologne bombed 19 times;\ndirect hits on chemical works observed.\"\nThese; are samples culled from\nthe \"Book of Bombings.\" Four\nInches thick, it concerns only\nGermany, there have been perhaps 800 other raids on German\nmilitary objective! ln Norway,\nthe Netherlandi, Belgium and\nFrance.\nWhy have they succeeded?\nWhy do they fly over Germany\nnight after night and return with\nwhat announcement! describe aa\n\"minor losses?\"\nOne officer explained It:\nv\"Ieaflet raid* did It. Everyone\nIfagfeei at _Ma_4_*.Fidl-trat ttey\ntaught pilots rotttk flying conditions and German anti-aircraft\nbattery tactics. Crewi learned Germany until it waa as familiar to\nthem as Britain. When the time\nconn for bombings we usually\ncould find our wty through to objectives.\"\nLate Flashes\nSONMAN, Ft, July IS (AP) -\nGrief stricken kinfolk tonight\nclaimed the bodies of 83 miners killed by an explosion in the Koppers\nCoal Company mine while authorities mapped a four-way inquiry\ninto the tragedy.\nCHICAGO, July 18 (AP). - Thc\nDemocratic convention platform\nratters reached unanimous agreement late tonight on a declaration of\nparty policy, including a foreign\nplank described as \"satisfactory\" by\nthose who demanded a strong antiwar stand.\nThe draft platform will be presented to the full Resolutions Committee tomorrow morning.\nCanadian Prepares for Air Warfare\nAircraftsman H. Lacelle of file R.C.A.F. Station, Ottawa, firing a burst frfam the gunner's\ncockpit of an Army Co-operation aircraft. In 1938,\nLacelle represented Canada in the boxing team at\nthe Olympics at Berlin^ Germany. At that time he\nwas Canadian Bantamweight ChamDion. He has\nbeen fighting since 1930, winning 275 out of 300\n- fights\u2014Royal Canadian Air Force photo.\nUnemployment Insurance Bill May ,\nBe Enacted al Present Session\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP) .-Welcomed by spokesmen for all parties\nan unemployment Insurance bill designed to bring benefits In the event\nof unemployment to more than 4,-\n000,000 Canadians, including workers and their dependents, was introduced in the House of Commons\ntonight by Hon. Norman McLarty,\nMinister of Labor.\nThe bill, similar in many respects\nto that passed ln 1935 and later,\nfound unconstitutional, was given\nfirst reading.\nThe House debated the resolution on  which  the measure  is\n.^\u00ab\"Uu^hoi47.t|t.,^_tSfi_4^!SS\nand part of the evenlnTFritr.?'lur*\nMinister Mackenzie King said it\nwas the Government's hope  to\nenact the measure at the present\nsession.\nThe bill will be considered in\ndetail at a later sitting of the\nHouse but ls not expected to be\nsubmitted to a special committee.\nSpokesmen tor all parties ln the\nCcmmons endorsed the principle of\nan unemployment insurance measure when the resolution, preceding introduction of the bill, was in-\n,n duced by Mr. McLarty.\nBut there was some criticism of\nthe fact the measure was not\nhrou-.ht down until late ln the\nsession.\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\nsaid it was not until this year that\nthere had been in the whole hiatory\not Canada, a unanimity fst agreement among the provinces that the\nBritish North America Act be\namended so as to give the Domin\nion power to enact and administer\nthe scheme.\n\"I think wa are right in not losing thy time in obtaining enactment of this measure,\" Mr. King\nsaid. \"It is the intention to pass it\nat the present session. We cannot\nforesee what wefiay be clled upon\nto deal with next session.\"\nAmple time would be given for\ndiscussion of the measure in parliament but Mr. King said he could\nnot see the necessity, urged by some\nof those who speke before him, cl\nrr'\"fitting the bill to a special committee.\nReason the bill did not appear\nearlier this serifon wee . thatjo much\n[oa-aiaka. _ rtsHBa- ttt-\nheeh, necessary\ntte budget, which had a distinct\nbearing on the unemployment measure Itself.\nCOAST MAYOR SEEKS\nBARREL SWEEPSTAKE\nTO PURCHASE PLANES\nVICTORIA, July 16 (CP)-Mayor\nFred Hume of new Westminster.\n_. C, was seeking support here\ntoday for his \"floating barrel sweepstakes\" which would raise money\nor training planes by floating a\nlarge keg 200 miles dewn the Fraser\nRiver.\nAccording to the Mayor's plan,\nfor which he seeks, the support of\nPremier T. D. Pattullo. the barrel\nwould be floated from Clinton, B.C.,\nto the Pattullo Bridge, and the\npublic would buy chances, at 51\ncents a guess, upon . the time it\nwould take.\nAIR DRIVE IN VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, July 16 (CP)-Vic-\ntoria's air supremacy drive got under way yesterday in the campaign\nto raise 550,000 for purchase of\nplanet. More than $300 was raited\nto which will be added $10,000 from\nthe City Council. On Saturday a\ntag day will be held with icons placed along designated streets malting\na \"silver trail\" and marking the\nhalf-way point of the campaign.\nHunt lor Missing\nBull River Man\nBe Intensified\nA search already under way will\n;.be,.intensified a\/or'Stgattt Wiltn-'n.\n1 \"ii.erly Norwegian prospector living\n*. eer the EastTtootenay Power Co.\nLtd. plant at. Bull River, who .\".as\nbeen'missing from his home since\nJune 30, Provincial Police at Nelson reported Tuesday.\nA police report from Cranbrook\nsaid that the man was last teen\nJune 30 when he left his home to\ngo fishing for one day. Two policemen have been making a thorough\nsearch of the creek banks where\nhe might have gone, but the search\nhed not been extended deep into\nthe bush. It was planned to organize more' entensively so that a\nthorough hunt might be made, covering the entire district.\nWESTMINSTER HA8 IT8 80th\n,     .   A.NNIVER8ARY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., July\n16 fc?>\u2014The City ot New Westminister marked its 80th anniversary today, self-government being\ngranted the, British Columbia Fraser\nRivor port July 16, I860.\n\u2014Roosevelt\nConvention Told\nF.D.R. Does Not\nDesire Nomination\nPresident's Message Greeted With Yells,\n\"We Want Roosevelt\"; Leaders State\nDemonstration Answers Him\nBy RICHARD L. TURNER\nAitociated Presi Staff Writer\nCHICAGO STADIUM, July 16 (AP) .\u2014President Roose.\nvelt dramatically informed the Democratic National Conven*\ntion tonight that he had no \"desire or purpose\" to be renominated, a declaration which decreased not one whit the determination of Roosevelt forces to draft him for an unprecedented\nthird-term campaign.\nThe Chief Executive's message was delivered to a boisterous convention\u2014which previously had cheered the mention\nof his name for a good 25 minutes\u2014by Senator Alben W,\nBarkley, the Convention Chairman, and was punctuated by\nshouts of \"we1 want Roosevelt now.\"   .\nBarkley said he was making the statement by \"specific\nrequest and authorization\" of the President.\nHe then said:\nBy LARRY ALLEN\nAnoclated Preli Staff Writer\nALEXANDRIA Egypt,, July 16\n(AP).\u2014The Eastern Mediterranean iquadron of the Royal Navy\nwas back ln Alexandria tonight,\nitanding by for new orders to\ncarry the fight to the Italian fleet\nwhich the British squadron put\nto hasty flight after an \"accidental\" encounter a week ago today,\nI wat permitted to go aboard\nthe British ships and talk to the\n} men who told at first hand how\nthe Italian  fleet  fled   to  safety\ni through the Straits of Messina\nbetween Sicily and Italy, after\nbriefly exchanging shots at long\nrange upon encountering the\nBritish ships off Calabria, toe of\nthe Italian boot.\nHie Britons said they were con-\neying ships from Malta to Alex-\nndrla on the afternoon of Julv 9\n'hen they got word lhat the Italian\neel was at tea and turned about\nhunt it.\n| The officer of one battlesWp said:\nI -We fint sighted the Italian fleet,\nJattly superior in number to our\n\u25a0nils, at extreme range. The Hal-\n\u25a0ns opened fire first but did not\npt tny of our ships.\n\"Most of  the fire was directed\n|oon this ship which had steamed\nneed of the other units of the Brit-\n|h fleet.\n\"Our destroyers and cruisers also\n\u00bbned fire, driving otf a flotilla of\nfiemy  destroyers  which  waj  at-\nnpting  to  torpedo  ui.\n\"Our ships scored a hit on one\nof the Italian battleships.\n\"Subsequently lhe fire from our\ncruisers struck one Italian cruiser\nand one destroyer. Immediately\nafterward, the Italians retired\nunder a smoke screen laid down\nby their deitroyeri.\n\"We pursued, and were incessantly attacked by Italian bombers\nwho droped close to 200 bombi\nwithout scoring a hit.\n\"We followed the Italian fleet\nalmost to the mainland, then turned back toward Egypt, the Italian\nbombers keeping up their attacki\nuntil we were within radius of our\nfighting planes from Egypt.\n\"The Italians were vastly superior\nin numbers and the operating speed\nof their ships\u2014both of cruisers and\nof battleships\u2014proved to be much\nfastei  than ouri.\"  .\nThe British naval command issued\na statement ridiculing Italian accounts which called the encounter\na \"stupendous victory\" for Italy.\nActually, the itatement taid. the\nItalians quickly retired under the\nprotection of their air forces to\ntheir own coasti, \"where they\nstood for one brief movement to\nengage the British fleet at extreme range.' f-v\nThe British officers to whom I\ntalked said the encounter wai\n'purely accidental\" and expressed\nthe belief the onlw way they ever\nwill get a real chalice to imaah the\nItalian fleet will* to force the\ntight directly Into the Italian ihore\nbases. if\n,       ^\nALEXANDRIA, Egypt, July 18\n(CP). \u2014 Italian bomben made a\nmoonlight raid tonight on the\nBritish Eaitern Mediterranean\nfleet in-this naval bate but failed\nto hit any ihip. Anti-aircraft fire\ndrove (fie raiders off.\nShower oi Rain\nEnds Long Dry\nSpell in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., July IS \u2014 Retpite\nfrom i long Summer dry spell came\nto Trail citlzent Tuesday when a\nshower ot rain fell ln the afternoon.\nIt was preceded by a stiff breeze\nwhich blew much dust about th.\nClty. The maximum temperature\nTueiday wu SB degreei, the minimum being 65 degreei.\nU. S. Pilots Join\nBritish Services\nLONDON, Jul; 16' (CP)-An authoritative London source said today an unlimited number of trained\nUnited States pilots would be welcomed for war service by the Royal\nAir Force but said no official move\nhad been made to get volunteers.\nNo oath of aliegiance would be required, it added.\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP)-Recent-\nly a number of highly-qualified\nUnited States pilots have joined\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force, an\nAir Ministry source said here today. These fliers have outstanding\nflying experience and many have\nmore than 1000 flying houn ln all\ntypei of modern aircraft.\nPARIS BANKS REOPEN\nBERLIN, July 16 (AP)-A German Newi Agency dispatch trom\nParla today stated that banks\nthere reopened yesterday. Limitations on withdrawals were lifted\nand Interest payment on Qovernment war loam wat resumed.\n\t\nAMONG the flnt contingent of\nEnglish children to arrive in\nCanada aa war guests was a group\nof 25 brought to a place of safety\nby Mr. Wallace R. Campbell, president of the Canadian Ford organization. The children were welcomed\nto the home of Mr. and Mra.\nCampbell In Windsor, Ontario,\nwhere they were cared' tor until\n___r\nplaced In their new homes. Some\nof the children posed for a \"family\ngroup\" with their host and hostess,\nleft to right, Tony Hampson and\nPeter Daniels, -in back row;\nHn. Campbell, Lorna Thacker,\nDoreen Fowler, Petar Brister,\nMr. Campbell and four-year old\nPeter Fowler seated, on a toy\nfire truck.  Another 100 children\nwill reach the Campbell's home\nlater on under an arrangement\nmade between Mr. Campbell and\nLord terry, head of the Ford\ncompany ln England. Many of\nthese will be war guests of families\nin the Ford organization in\nWindsor. These children are not\na part of the movement of children\nunder the Government plan.\n\"The President has never had,\nand hat not today, any desire or\npurpoie to continue ln trie office of\npreiident, to be a candidate for that\noffice, or to be nominated by the\nconvention for that office.\n\"He wiihei in all earnestness and\nsincerity to make it clear that all of\nthe delegates to this convention are\ntree to vote for any candidate.\"\nNo sooner had Barkley finished\nthan the tumultuous demonstration\nof an earlier hour wat resumed, confined however to shouting, calla ot\n\"We want Roosevelt,\" whistling,\nbell-ringing, cheering and stamping.\nSenator  Jamet  F,  Byrnes  of\nSouth Carolina, 'floor leader of\nthe   \"draft   Roosevelt\"   forcei,\nSulckly sounded the viewpoint ot\nie pro-third term voices by tell-\n- ing'reportert'that the demonstration on the floor and the cries ot\n\"We want Rootevelt\"  had  an-\ntwered the President\n\"I know that the Preiident'!\nstatement represents his. eincere\nviews,\" Byrnet taid. \"However, it\nil for the delegates to say who shall\nbe the nominee and in thit emergency, the President ctnnot refuse\nto terve th* American people.\"\nBut from Senator Worth Clark of\nIdaho, a supporter ot Senator Burton K. Wheeler'! presidential aspirations, came a different reaction.\n\"The itatement It not definite,\"\nClark taid. \"It leavei the convention, the delegates and the candidates In the lame uncertain condition they were before as far as I am\nconcerned, unleit Senator Wheeler\ndecided otherwise, his name will be\nplaced in nomination before the convention by me.\"\nJamet A. Farley, Chairman of\nthe   national   committee\u2014and   a\ncandidate\u2014iaid:\n\"I hava no comment to make.\nTha itatement tpeakt for Ittelf.\"\nAnother opponent of third termi,\nSenator Millard E. Tydlngt, of\nMaryland, laid \"I admire the Preiident tor the statesmanlike stand ho\nhas takeh.\" He added:\n\"I think he it sincere ln not desiring to continue. There is no\ndoubt that he would have gotten the\nfull support of two-thirds of the\ndelegates had he been a candidate.\"\nThe \"Draft Rooievelt\" interpretation put on the statement by\nByrnes quickly wai echoed by other third term advocatei. Senator\nClaude Pepper of Florida iaid\nRooievelt \"is the people's candidate\nand they will have no other.\"\nUnder the circumstances the delegatei and the milling, noisy gallery\ncrowds were interested only In the\nconclusion of the Kentuckian's address. The rest, a scathing attack\nupon the Republican candidate and\nplatform and a heartily approving\nresume of the New Deal record, presented In the traditional national\nconvention manner, was to them to\nmuch window,trimming.\nBut Barkley had prepared for\nthem a speech bristling with accusations of Republican \"deceit\" and\n\"mls-slatementt.\" calling Wendell L.\nWillkie a \"political chameleon\" because he left the Democratic parly\nto become the Republican presidential nominee, and asserting the Republican platform was \"written in\nmud by the feet of a weasel.\"\ntrail Girl Breaks\nArm at Girl Guide\nat Paterson\nCamp\nTRAIL, B.C., Julv 15 tr Olive\nCampbell. 12-year-old daughter of\nVs\\t. and Mrs. S. T. Campbell, 1804\nFifth Avenue, East Trail, who suffered a broken arm at the Girl\nGuide Camp at Patenon Saturday,\nwat reported aa 'doing nicely' at\nher home.\nThe accident occurred on Olive's\nlast day at camp after an enjoyable\nouting. She tripped over a blanket\nas she was about to leave her cabin.\nbreaking her arm as she fell down\na two-foot stairway from the cabin\nentrance.\nAfter receiving tint aid at the\nhindi of the camp nune, she was\ntiken to Trail-Tadanac Hospital in\nTrail.\nSpain Denounces\nChile Campaign\nAgainst Pro-Nazis\nMADRID, July 16 (AP)-Spaln\nlevered diplomatic relations with\nChile tonight In an unexpected\nmove agalnit an American  Re-\nRubllc now buiy combatting pro*\nail elementi.\nThe Spanish Foreign Mlniitry\nwld ' It  broke  off  relations  be.\ncause   of  the   Chilean   Government, tolerance of an  antl-Na-\n. tional tit   campaign    whleh   hat\n* \"reached Intolerable limits.\"\nThe Chilean Charge d'Atfaln in\nMadrid was handed his passports\ntnd the Spanish diplomatic representatives in Chile were ordered\nhome immediately.   .\nMonday the Chilean Government\ntook tterh action againit subversive elementi, raiding headquarters\nof the Nationalist and Popular Socialist (Nazi) partiei and ordering\ndissolution of \"all apparently political organizations'' ' formed by\n\"Rightists\".\nInterior Minister Humberts Ah\nvarez of Chile announced that documents seized by police in the raid!\ndisclosed \"activities against the public order?'\nHe said street disorders had beet,\nprovoked by \"Rightists\" and members of the Popular Socialist vanguard movements, known former'\nly as the Naclsta (Nazi) party, 65\nmembers of which were killed in an\nunsuccessful putsch Sept. 5, 1036.\n\"Smash Nazi\" Shows\nRaise$55,000, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP). \u2014\nBritish Columbia raised more than\n555,000 in last night's \"Smash tha\nNazi\" shows throughout the Province, according to estimates given\ntoday by Laurence Bearg of Famous Players' Corporation here,\nand co-Chairman of the Vancouver\ncommittee ln charge of the project\nMore than 35,000 Vancouveritel\nJammed into 36 theatres and thousands more were turned away,\nLaurence aaid, to raise 430,000 in\nthe city proper.\nPenticton. British Columbia fruit\ngrowing centre of 4000 people raited\n$3456, to top Provincial lists on a\nper capita basis.\nVictoria turned in $3600 and Nanaimo $1500. Other returns tabulated Included Trail, $970; Rossland, $270; North Vancouver,, $878;\nand Nelson, $916.\nWeaHl\nMin Max.\nNELSON       63      83\nTRAIL    -   65      68\nVictoria  _   52.     61\nNanaimo   \u201e    53      70\nVancouver       52      69\nKamloops       58      83\nPrince George .-    52      78\nEstevan Point     54      61\nPrince Rupert     52      59\nLangara -   54      57\nAtlin    53      75\nDawson, Y. T.    45      84\nSeattle    _   52      71\nPortland    56      76\nSan Francisco    59      69\nSpokane   a......,...:.   67      83\nPenticton    62      \u2014\nVernon       68      \u2014\nKelowna    65      79\nKaslo     64      -\nCranbrook   _    60      83\nCalgary       58      70\nEdmonton       49      67\nRegina           54      83\nMoose Jaw    47     88\nPrince  Albert     52      79\nWinnipeg    57      85\nForecast: Kootenay \u2014 Moderate\nvariable winds, partly cloudy and\ncooler with few scattered showp-s.\nNelson water level Tuesday, 5.13.\n-\n PAGE   TWO\n18 Questions Will Be\nAsked in Registration\nof Canadian Men, Women\nOTTAWA. July 18 (CP) - The\nNitionil   War Services  Department  tonight  made  public  the\n' questionnaire for national regis-\n' traUon to be answered by all Canadian residents.\nIt contains 18 questions to be\nanswered by men. Women must\naniwer the flnt 15 questions directed to the men and an additional four special questions.\nThe Jolht 15 questions follow:\n1. Surname \u2014; given names \u2014;\n2. Permanent postal address (if\n4way from usual residence when\nfilling in card give name of usual\nresidence)  .\n>. Age last birthday ; date of\nbirth' \u2014;\n4. Conjugal conditions: Single\t\nmarried widowed \u2014 divorced\u2014;\n5. Of what dependents (of any)\ntre you the sole support:\n(A) Father \u2014; (B) mother \u2014;\n<C> wife ; (D) Number of chil-\n\u25a0 drep inder 16 years \u2014; (E) Number of other dependents \u00ab\u2014; tl')\ndo you contribute partial support to\n\u00bbny one \u2014.\n6. Country of birth of: (A) your-\n\u25a0llf ; place  ; (B) your father  ;  place   \u2014;   (C)   your\nmother ; place \u2014.\nvl Nationality or country of allegiance:   British  subject   (A3   by\nbirth?  ; (B) by naturalization?\nj\u2014; (C) foreign citizen? ; (Dl\nIf not British subject to what country do you owe allegiance? ; (G)\nCONSTIPATED?\nTata Thli Mod.rn Vwtal\nton, thl liver md get till Bl\nImerovee digestion ind eeee\nwiitM. Aik for the genuine Dr.\nj MM*\u2014at >w druggist's.\nible Lexetlve to\n6110 Juice flowing.\nIgeitlon ind eeeei ewey clogging\nAik for tho genuine Dr. Morse's Indian\nIf in immigrant. In what year did\nyou enter Canada? \u2014.\n8. Racial flrlgliv\u2014r-. .\n9. Language or languages: (A) Do\nyou' speak- English? \u2014; (B)\nFrench? ; (C) What other language can you speak, read and\nwrite? .\n10. Education: (A) Primary only\n*-t\\ (B) primary ind secondary\n\u2014\u2014: (C) vocational tralnlngt business college, technical high Khool)\n\u2014; (D) college or university degree? \u2014.\n11. Ii your general health (A)\ngood? \u2014; (B) fair? \u2014; (C)\nbad? \u2014,-     .\n12. If blind, deaf, dumb, crippled\nor otherwise physically disabled,\nstate nature of disability \u2014j it\npermanently disabled, are you, in\nreceipt of a pension?  i in respect of war service?  ; Workmen's compensation? \u2014; old age\nor blind?  ; other? \u2014-. . \u25a0 -\n13. Class of occupation: (A) Are\nyou an employer of labor other than\ndomestic? ; If so, state business\n\u2014; (B) are you working on own\naccount, but not employing labor?\n\u2014; if so, state business \u2014; (C)\nare you an' employee? (1) working\nat usual occupation \u2014; (2) working at other than usual occupation\n ;   (3)   unemployed    ;   (D)\nothers not working because pensioners, dependents, retired, independent means \u2014-.\n14. Occupation or craft: (answer\ngiving yean of experience) (A)\nPresent occupation?\u2014; (B) what\nis your regular occupation? \u2014;\n(C) what other work can you do\nwell? ; (D) if an employee, who\nis your present employer? Name\n\u2014; address \u2014; nature of business, where employed? ; (E) 1!\nexperienced ln a skilled industrial\noccupation or profession, describe\nspecifically the type or types of\nwork in which ypu are specially\nequipped by training or experience  .\n15. Unemployment: (A) How\nmany weeks did you work ln the\npast 12 months \u2014; (B) if out of\nwork now, state number of weeks\nsince last employed in iny occupation other than work performed in\n' return for direct relief ; (C) are\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS '    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME \u2014 Dr. and Mn. W. J.\nKnox and family, Kelowna; Mr.\nend Mrs. W. Jepson and family,\nWinnipeg; R. Crawford, R. Simp-\nion, Medicine Hat; W. H. Ahier,\nProcter; G. M. Thorn, D. J. Mc-\nAlmon, U. B. McCallum, Penticton;\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Sandberg, Zeballos; E, C. Nevison, H. Doherty,\nand    Misi    Margaret    Middleton,\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms in the Interior \u2014 Bath or Shower.\nROOMS $1 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHING\n20 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, B. C.\nRatei reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn This Space\nWhere Thouiandi Will Read It\nCAMP PARADISE\n4 miles North of Kaslo, B.C.\nModern cabins, electricity,\n'gas, running water. Inner\niprlng mattresses, bedding, linen, cooking utensils furnished, meals\nfurnished.\nCabins for 2 to 6 People: Wk.. $12 to $18\nPhone or Write Camp Paradise, Kaslo, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n(\"YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME1\nDuff er in Hotel\nNewly renovated throughout Phones and elevator.\nA.   PATTERSON,   late  of\nVancouver, B.C. Coleman. Alta,, Proprietor,\n800 8eymour St,\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n410 Rlvenldi   M__ 4.__ \u25a0 *%Ji\\*t mf W V      Opposite\nAvenue       flOld T UL.m_t I    Paulsen Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nRELAX\nat the GALAX\nCanadian Money at Par\nRoomi $1.00 to $2.50\nFREE GARAGE\n254 Main\nSpokane, Wn.\nHOTEL\nW. 614\nFlnt\nRIDPATH\nThe Hotel Canadlani Like to\nCall Home.\nIN  SPOKANE\n196 Outside Roomi arfd\nApirtmenti\nALL AT 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, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n..!\t\nyou totally incapicitated for employment? \u2014r.\nFollowing are. questions to be answered by men only:\n16. (Al) Were you brought up on\na farm? ; (Ai) until whit age?\n\u2014; (Bl) have you worked on >\nfarm? \u2014; (B2) how long? \u2014;\n(B3) in whet province or country\n\u2014j (Cl) can you handle horiei?\n\u2014; (C_> drive > traclor \u2014; (Ct)\nuse firm machinery? \u2014; (C4)\ncan you milk? \u2014; <C8) are you\nable to do other farm work? <\u2014-.\n17. Ia there any particular occupation ln which you would like to\nbe specially trained?\n18. Defence services:\n(1) Have you previously served\nin any naval, military or air forcei?\n\u2014I If io, itate: (A) Forcei of what\ncountry    ;    (B)   approximate\ndates between which services performed \u2014; (C) unit \u2014; (D)\nrank held :\n(1) If retired or discharged, give\nreasons therefor \u2014-\u2022;\n(3) Have you been rejected for\nmilitary service in tbe present\nwar? -r-i (A) why? \u2014; (B)\nwhere? \u2014,\nFollowing questions ire to be answered by women only:\n19. State length of experience (In\nyears) if any in: (X) General farming? \u2014; (B) truck firming \u2014\u2014;\n(C) fruit farming? \u2014; (D) Poultry farming? \u2014; (E) dairy fafm-\nIng?  ; (F) buaineti establishments?  .\n17. Can you (A) handle hones?\n\u2014; (B) drive motor trucki? \u2014',\n(C) drive an automobile -\u2014; (D)\ndrive a tractor?\u2014i (E) use farm\nmachinery? \u2014; (r) milk.cowa?\n\u2014; (G) do plain cooking? -i\u2014...\n18. Indicate here any qualifications or practical experience which\nyou posses, not already described \u2014\u25a0;\n19. Do your circumstances permit\nyou to serve ln the preient national\ncrisis, by changing your present occupation to iome other for which\nyou are qualified? \u2014-; (A) where\nyou can return home dally?  ;\n(B) away from home? kfr<\n'TECHNOCRACY OUT\nBECAUSE ADVOCATED\nGOVT. OVERTHROW\nOTTAWA, July 18 <OP)*-*_ii_e\nMinister Mackenile King told the\nHouse of Commons today that\nTechnocracy Incorporated had been\ndeclared illegal because Its' literature advocated overthrow- of the\nGovernment and conititution by\nforce.\nJehovah's Witnesses, a religious\nsect, wsa outlawed because under\nIts teachings man-made law. wis\nnot recognised If It conflicted wtth\nthe iecl'1 interpretation of Divine\nLaw.\nThii hid the effect of preventing\nfulfillment ot \"the ordinary respon-\nsibillties of citizenship in Ume ot\nwir.\"\nAUSTRALIA MAY\nSLOW DOWN TAKING\nON NEW RECRUITS\nSYDNEY, Australll, July 16 (CP\nCable)\u2014As a consequence of '.he\noverwhelming success of the recruiting drive for the Australian\nImperial Force, it is understood\nthe Government li likely ihortly la.\nslow down temporarily the intake.\nThere are now 80,000 In the A.I.F.\nand 40,000 in militia camps throughout Australia. An additional 100,000\ncompulsory mllltla trainees aged 21\nto 28 ihortly will Be called up for\nfour months' training In camp.\nThe Royal Australian Air Force\nls now 18,000 strong and ii increasing, rapidly.\nOver 16,000 Enemy\nAliens Detained\nLONDON, July 16 (CP Cable)-\nMore than 16,000 enemy aliens are\nnow Interned in the United Kingdom and some 7900 male civilian\ninternees have been sent overseas,\nOsbert Peake, Undersecretary to\nthe Home Office, told the House of\nCommons in reply to a question\ntoday. Australia is receiving them\nas well as Canada.\nAnthony Eden, Secretary for War,\nanswering another question, salt.\n2700 lingle enemy aliens were sent\nto Canada up to July I but added\nthat no more civilian Internees are\nbeing sent to the Dominion.\nEDEN PRESIDENT OF\nBRITISH ARMY COUNCIL\nLONDON (CP) .-Changei In the\npersonnel of the Army Council due\nto army appointments are abown In\nthe London Gaiette. ...\nPresident\" of the council Is Anthony Eden, Secretiry for War. Vice-\nPresident ls Brlg.-Gen. Lord Croft,\na Joint under-iecretary. to the War\nOffice. Other memberi ire: Gen.\nSir John Dill, who- succeeded Sir\nEdmund Ironside as chief of the Imperial Stuff; Gen. Sir Walter K.\nVenning; Lieut-Col. Sir Edward\nGrigg, Joint under-iecretary, Wir\nOffice; Richard Law. Financial Secretary to the War Office: Sir-Percy\nJames Grigg; Lt-Gen. Henry\nWeymss and Lt.-Gen. Robert Haining.\nEARL OF COVENTRY\nWAS KILLED IN ACTION\nLONDON, July 16 (AP). \u2014 The\nEarl of Coventry, previously reported as missing, was killed in\naction in France while serving as a\nlieutenant in a Worcestenhlre regiment, it wai announced today.\nThe 31-year-old earl. 10th holder\nof a title created in 1697, fell during fighting it Glvenchy ihortly\nafter the NMl lnvailon of France\nbegan, an official announcement\nsaid.\nHii five-year-old ion mcceedi to\nthe title.\nNAZIS ARRESTED IN\nNORTHERN ARGENTINE\nBUENOS AIMS, July 16 (AP).\u2014\nReliable reporti from Apostolei ln\nthe Northern Argentine territory of\nFormosa, slid todiy 23 Germin residents hid b\u00aben arrested there and\nthat eight were itill In custody ifter raldi on pouible \"fifth columnist?.\"\nThe nitlonal gendarmerie, raiding\nhomes and Nasi meeting places, seized stores of arms and ammunition\n\u2022nd propaganda pamphlets, theie\nreporti sala.\nINDIAN TO BE EXECUTED\nFOR O'DWYER DEATH\nLONDON, July 16 (A_..-Ud-\nham Singh, alias Mahomed Singh\nAzard, 37-yeir-old Indian engineer, will be executed at Fenton-\nville July 31 tor the murder ot\nSir Michael O'Dwyer. former\nlieutenant governor of the Pun.\nJab, it was announced today.\nSir Michel was shot at a meeting of the East India Association\nhere March 13. The engineer was\nconvictld June 6.\nSILVERTON\nSltVERTON, B. C. - Mm. W\nPhllpott of Loi Angeles, a former\nresident of Silverton, ll a guilt ot\nMrs. M. Emenon.\nBrian Flynn ii visiting Mr. and\nMn. S. Bentley of Perry Siding.\nMlu Mae Monroe of Trail is a\ngueit of her grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. T. Kelly.   ,\nMrs. W. Morrlion md ions Barrie and Wiyne of Trail ipent a tew\ndayi In town. \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. F. Chappell of Calgary ipent \u2022 weekend in Silverton.\nMn. G. Hinna and ion Bobby ot\nCranbrook are guests of Mr. and\nMri. A. Him.\nMill D. Sells spent a few days in\nNakuip.\nMn. P. Harding, Mn. H. George\nof New Denver, Mri. S. Wation,\nand D. Wation were gueiti of Mr.\nand Mn. J. Hirdlng of the Van\nRot Mine,\nJack Keliall left with Father\nMcGuire to spend a week at the\nCatholic Boysf Camp on Kootenay\nLake.\nMlu Dorothy Sella wn in Nelaon.\nRev. and Mn. Frank Brqwn of\nNew Denver were gueiti ot Mri.\nW. Hunter, . \/\u2022     .\nMrs. \u00a3 A. Filrhunt entertained\nmemberi ot the United Woman's\nmemben of the United Woman;\nAssociation. Mri. T. Andenon and\nMrs. T. H. Wllion were hostesses.\nMi\u00bbs R. Holmer is vWtlng relativei In Nelson,\nMri. W. Phllpott, Mn. M. Emerson, Mri. G. T, Ironlide, Mn. H.\nDewis and Mrs. T. H. Wilion motored to the Hewitt Mine.\nMembers of the Anglican Guild\nmet at the home ot Mn._W. Hunter.\nMr. and Mn. Lance pnenon of\nTrail viiited tow_.\nMr. ind Mn. O. Bergman and\nfamily spent i weekend In NeUon.\nAn enioyible picnic was held at\n\"Sandy Beach\" Thursday afternoon\nby members of the Preibyterlan\nChurch. ..,     ._\nSILVERTON, B. C.-MUl Margaret Johnion and D.. Evins of\nTrail were gueiti of Mr. and Mn.\nT. Andenon.\nDr. and Mn. F. P. Snerlu. *ll\u00bb\u00bb\n_nd Mac Notrli of NeUon were\nguesti of Mr. ind Mn. G. T. Ironlide; \u25a0 \t\nR Hambly of the Second Relief\nmine viilted his parents Mr. and\nJin. R. Hambly. .     . .\nMr. end Mrs. J. Willice of Ymir\nvisited Mr. Wallace's mother, Mn.\nA. Wallace\nE. Johnson hai left fot the Bey-\none-Mine.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Mathews and\nMn. S. Wation motored to Three\n-Forki. -   .\nMn. T. Andenon-entertained at\nthe'tea hour.\nRev. and Mri. r. Browne of New\nDenver visited town.\nMn. R. Hambly who was a patient in . the Slocan Community\nHospital, New Denver, hai returned home.\nD'Arcy Wation visited New Denver.\nMrs. L. Shantz hu returned from\nNelson after visiting her ion-in-law\nand daughter Mr. md Mrs. J. Munro. Mn. Munro and smsll daughter\nreturned with Mn. Shantz and\nwill visit here.\nLightning Kills\nIdaho Farm Couple\nTETONIA, Idaho, July 16 (AP).-\nMr. and Mn. Roy Rainey were killed and three Othen were endangered when lightning struck a family farmhouse near here last night.\nOfflcen said the bolt struck Rainey as he-stood on the front porch,\nwith his hand on hii wife's shoulder.\nThe electricity passed through\nRainey's arm and hand, through his\nwife's body and Into the ground.\nMn. Rainey was standing on the\nground.\nTheir son, Elwood, his wife and\nbaby, standing on the porch alio,\nwere knocked down, the baby being torn from iti mother's arms,\nbut they escaped serious Injuries.\nThe lightning damaged the house\nbut did not set it afire.\nItaliani Reiterate\nClaim Hood Wai Hit\nROME. July 16 (AP).-The Italian\nhigh command claimed anew today\nthat the Hood, British battle cruiser,\nwas hit during last week's naval\nskirmish between British arid Italian formations in the Mediterranean, .\n(Previoui claims that the Hood\nwas hit have been denied in London.)\nThe Italians further claimed that\na hit was scored on the Aircraft Carrier Ark Royal (the ship io often\nsunk by the German communiques)\nand that \"a great hole\" wai made\nin the bow of the aircraft carrier\nEagle.\nTEMPERANCE BODY URCES\nSABBATH OBSERVANCE\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP) -\nWomen's Chriitlin Temperance Union memben here urged strict enforcement ot laws banning Sunday\nentertainment today, following a\nletter of proteit igalnst the '.'growing tendency\" of Red Crou and\nother patriotic entertalnmenti on\nthe Sabbath, sent to the City Council yesterday.\nThe letter claimed that the United\nStatei abandoned strict observince\nof Sabbath during Its CM! War,\nand has not regained It.    '\n'The trouble Is that we eant\nget Hitler te lay off on Sundays,\"\naald Mayor Lyle Telford.\n..      NAMES CHATTERBUGS\nLONDON (.CP1.-A London wit\nsuggests a new name for Britain's\nchatterbug\u2014folk who talk out of\nturn about things of national importance \u2014 \"vocil defence volunteen.\"\nVancouver Girl\nWeds Cranbrook Mon\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - The marriage took place at Christ Chui.ii,\nCrinbrook, of Jamei Chester, older\nion of Mayor and Mn, T. M. Robert! to Helen Mary Reid, daughter\nof Mr. and Mri. E. W. Reid ot\nVancouver. A wedding breaktast\nfollowed the ceremony at the home\not the groom, parent!, following\nwhich thev left for Banff and\nJasper Peru.\nBoth bride and groom are graduatei ot the Univenity of B. C.\nThey will make their home In\nKimberley.\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B.C. \u2014 Miss Annie\nMacKinnon has left to visit her\nbrother-in-law and lister, Mr. and\nMra. O. G'froenr In Balcarres, |aik.\nMr. ind Mn. A, Ogden have n\na guest, the latter's cousin, MUs\nJoan Heighton of Nelion.\nMr. ana Mrs. A. MacPhee have\nhad ai gueiti Rev, and Mri. C. A\nC. Story and son, David, of NeUon\nand Mrs. Wilderman and .. Johnstone of Vancouver.\nMr. and Mri. R, C. MacKinnon\nand ions visited Kailo.\nMri. J. P. Bourne bai left for\nVmcouver.\nMLs Alice Bush ot Trail wai a\nguest of Mlu Annie MacKinnon.\nJackie Van Buren of NeUon is\nvisiting Mrs. W. Ogdan.\nMr. and Mri. W. Mulrhead have\nai guests, their ion and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Mulrhead,\nand daughter, Irene, and Mlu Ber.\nnice Petenon, all of Weyburn, Sask\nA. MacPhee and son, Jimmy, have\nreturned from Osoyoos. They were\naccompanied by Mri. MacPhce's\nfather.   '\nMn. S. Creech ot NeUon Is visiting her brother-in-law and lUter,\nMr. and Mn. G. Donaldson.    ,\nMr. and Mn. M. MacKinnon had\nas guests, Mlu Beatrice MacKinnon.\nJ. MacKinon and Bruce Birch of\nCastlegar.\nMr, and Mn, H. Soleckl and\ndaughter, Beverley Roie ot Drewry\nviiited Mn. Soleckl's parenta, Mr.\nand Mn. N. Shkwarok.\nBelle and Bob Cunningham ot\nCrescent Valley were vUlton at the\nMacKinnon home.\nDorothy Carlson and Leona O'-\nToole ot Osoyoos are visiting the\nformer's uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. A. MacPhee.\nMalcolm Greenlee of Kailo vUlted In Procter.\nMlu Mary Ling and Misi Ruby\nJarbeau of NeUon vUlted at the\nformer'i brother-ln-liw and lister,\nMr. ind Mrs. L. Bonacci.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Dyiart and daughter of NeUon visited Mr. and Mrs.\nM. MacKinnon.\nMr. and Mn. M. Kubln and children have taken up reiidence In\nNelson.\nMr. ind Mrs. W. Solei have returned from Rossland.\nWILL CONTROL ANY\nUNDUE INCREASE\nIN LUMBER PRICES\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP) - An attempt will be made to deal with\nmy unreasonable increases In lumber prices, H. R. McMillan, Timber\nController ot the Munition! and\nSupply Department, announced today at a freu conference.\n$104,000 Collected in\nCoast Air Drive\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP). -\nVancouver's air supremacy drive to\npurchaie framing planei wu ell\nover today, with more than $104,000\ncollected, enough to buy 18 Tiger\nMoth trainers.\nThe month-old campaign, flnt designed to purchase only eight planes,\nclosed officially last night, when a\ndance celebrated lta successful finish.\nAttending were Air Marshall W.\nA. Bishop, V.C. D.S.O., M.C, D.F.C,\nAnna Neagle, British film itar from\nHollywood, and prominent military,\nnaval and air force offlcen ln the\ndistrict \u2022\nIt .was expected that all returns\nare In the fund may rUe to $120,000,\nenough (or 18 planes.\nOne Arab Killed\nin Holy Land Raid\nJEItUSALME, July 16 (AP)\u2014Ont\nArab was killed and another In-\niured seriously ln bombing of the\nlalfa area of the Holy Land yesterday by Italian planei, an official\nannouncement disclosed today.\nSeveral other Arabi were wounded slightly, md an American oil\nrefinery worker, J. E. Flannlgan,\nluffered minor cuta from flying\nglass.\nTen planes took part ln the raid,\ndropping more than 50 high, explosive bombs before being driven off\nby anti-aircraft guns.\nMaterial damage wil slight.\n60,000,000 CAS MASKS\nFOR BRITISH POPULATION\nLONDON (CP).\u2014All war equipment It not the type ruined to the\nbittlefltlds, Providing the civilian\npopulation with lifeguards against\nmodem warfare also ls a huge task\nsaid Sir John Anderson.\nThe Minister tor home security\noutlined brtely some of the duties\nof hii department and listed iome\not the tremendous orden that had\nto be filled. At an Instance, be nld\nneirly 60,000,000 gas masks hid been\nIuued. including those tor babies.\nSome 360,000,000 sandbags had been\ngiven out along with 1,800,000 oilskin suits and 3,000,000 steel helmets\nInd numerous pumps, sh.veli and\nall lorU of other air raid precaution material.\nRossland Social* ..\nROSSLAND, 8. C, July 1\u00bb-Mr.\nand Mrs. B. Baker and son Alfred,\nwho have been gueiti ot Mn. Baker's brother and tliter-in-liw, Mr,\nand Mrs. R. G. Turner, bava lett\nfor their home ln Penticton.\nMiu Lena Cerimelll apd 'Rem\nTavaroli of Trail spent Sunday u\ngueiti of Mn. John Camozzi.\nMlu Verne Simpson of Trail is\nvltltlng friendi in Rosiland for two\nweeks, a\nMr. md Mra. Cedrie Cox are holidaying at Banff, Calgary and Vancouver. At Vancouver they will be\nguests of Mn. Cox's parenti, Mr.\nand Mn. Winch.\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard Lins have\nreturned from the Stampede at Calgary. - \u2022.    \u25a0    .    ,\nMr. and Mrs F. Murray, ion Kitto\nand daughter Lmireen, who lor ity\nweeki have been guesW of Mrs.\nMurray'* brother and iliter-ln-law\nMr and Mrs. Willy Hawklni, left\nTueidiy morning by motor for Ontario, where they will proceed to\nNew York md board steamer lor\nBulowiys, Southern Rhodesia.\nMr. 'and Mri. Jamei McCleod md\ninfant daughter areet Vancouver\nvisiting relativei. th*y were accompanied by Mrs. Albert Leei ihd\nMn. Altx McCleod ot Nelion.\nA. Towner of Spokane, a recent\nvisitor here, ii spending a week\nwith friendi in Nelson.\nMiu Pauline Lonio hu returned\nfrom a 'two-week, vacation at her\nhome in Revelstoke.\nMr. and Mrs, John Campbell have\ntaken up residence lft Trail, where\nMf. Campbell il now employed.\nHallett Arrives\nNelson to Join\nGovernment Staff\nGeorge Hallett, Mining Recordei\nat Atlina B.'C, formerly of Green-\nWood, has been transferred to Nelion to aervi ai deputy to J,' A.\nStewart, Provincial Collector. He\ntakei the place vacated by the\ntransfer of K. L. Hedley to the Government Agent's post at Rossland\nln place of Major A. C. Sutton,\nD.S.O., Recruiting Officer for West\nKootenay.\nMn. Hallet, now ln Vancouver,\nwill follow her husband to NeUon.\nJoining the Government lervice\n\u2022t Greenwood ln 1934, Mr. Hallett\nwent to Atlin to become Mining\nRecorder. The Atlin Newa-Miner,\nreporting hli transfer to Nelson, recently iaid \"hia removal at this\ntime wlil be a dUtinct loss to the\ncamp. Not only wai he actively\nInterested in the various social\nactlvitiei of the camp but he was\naUo thea energetic Secetary of the\nBoard of Trade whiUt his charming wife likewise took an active\ninterest ln social work and particularly in regard to the local Red\nCrou Society.\nURGE PROBE OF PENAL\nSYSTEM AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, July 18 <CP)-\"A\ndetailed investigation of our penal\nsystem\" was urged today by a group\nof Vancouver taxpayers who protested In a letter to the City Council yesterday the short-lived release of Joe Celona, convicted Vancouver vice crar serving an 11-ycir\nsentence in the Provincial Penitentiary.\nThe Ward Four Ratepayers' Association asked in a letter t_> the\nCouncil an \"Immediate investigation\nof conditions which allowed such\na release.\"\nWednesday Specials\nUied Moffat Electric Range.\nFrie* TV,:.:**1 ,.,\nOak Extemion Table and 4 Chain.\nPrict\t\n.. $12.95\n.. $14.75\nDavenport with Leather Cover. (PQ AC\nPrice  *9*>\u2022*\"\nSpring filled Mattress,  (uaed). <PQ QC\nPrice      i   ^'W\nFink's FURNITURE\nPhone 553 441 Baker St.   .\nELKO\nELKO, B. C-Mn. W. Walmiley\nJr. of Greenwood is visiting her\nmother, Mrs. W. Swope.\nMiss J. Kelly U visiting Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. Gibson Todhunter\nand children are visiting Nelson.\nMrs. N. Roo. who has been a gueit\nof her brother and sister-in-law at\nSouris, Man., has returned,\nMr. Veitch has left for Michel.\nCOMRADE LAURIE SPEAKS\nAT INVERMERE LEGION\n, LAKE WINDERMERE, B.C.-The\nmeeting of Ihe WindermereDUtrict\nBranch of the Canadian Legion was\nheld in the Club Room, Invermere\nand after the business Comrade\nLaurie, Cranbrook Chairman of the\nEast Kootenay Zone committee addressed the meeting, on the proceedings at the Dominion convention to\nwhich he was\" a delegate.\nBROKEN REST\nUp time and again because ot kidney\nud bladder weakness. Take Gin Pilla\nto soothe and tone tip the kidneyi\u2014\nenjoy a good night's sleep. In the\nUnited States aik (or \"Gino PilU\".\n) dm ta Gunda and the ..S.-Reantae\nud niw, lute Seomnt* ijm.   m\nm\nds\n?_\nM\n\u00bb,__.4e,\u2022\nw\nMM\nttf*\nm\n#\u2666\n5ft\n%_\n,w\u00abr.\n>\\e.\ni __**\n. A*,     Wr-VlOT\ne\u00bb**.<V\nt_\\ n\n\u00abv>\"\n\u00ab\n1*0\n*_\u00a3****     _7\n_m_\u00bbl\nnkbow^\\\n\u00ab*-?_r_i-sr5*\nmmtm\ntt>r&**?zs* -1- -\n^rf^'''68 mill H\n,ct *\u2022 w __m0*_**fTt^_____W*\n___mt0^*_*r_i__\\\\\\\\______i      __i___^^^      '* **\"\u00ab__ 3 _>____\n^Tili \\'X_______B t^**^^^ PI!!       ^PWf_'_l_liMI\nI'nlipfl*^ _______t\\    ''\u2022^\\_\\\\\\A_____B0**i\nstt _\ni f\u00bbts10!i\nFireitone Tirei Sold and Recommended by\nThe Smedley Garage Company\n508 VERNON STREET TELEPHONE 71\nNELSON, B. C.\nWe Carry a Complete Stock of Fireitone Tirei and Tubes in All Siies\nSky Chief Auto Service\n206 Baker St.\nYOUR TEXACO DEALERS\nPhone 122\nWe Carry a Complete Line of Firestone Tlrei and Tubes\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nPhone 77\nDODGE - DESOTO\n563 Vernon Sf.\n\u00bb '-     -\n_j^a__-j-:__ttttfi|faij\n\t\n NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO- JULV 17.. 1M0,\nODAY'S News Pictures\nI.O.D.E. Presents Bomber to Canadian Air Force\nKootenay Boys on\nFatigue Doty\nKootenay recruiti stationed\n\"somewhere on the Coaat\" with\nthe Royal Canadian Artillery,\nmoitly from Trail, writes Joe\nBuckna. Front row\u2014Thomas Irvin, William McArthur, Marvin\nReid, William Robertson, Alex\nMiddlemass and Pat Swing.- Middle row \u2014 William Mann,\n\"Frenchy\" Gendron, Warren Watt,\nJoseph Buckna. Back row\u2014Everett Thomas, William Sharpies,\nWilliam Cant, Roy Middlemass,\nDonald Shorting, John Middlemas,\nW. Sutherland and H. Bartlett.\nTo Spur Air Plan\nRalph P. Bell, of Halifax, was\nrecently appointed to tye executive committee of the Department\nof Munitions and Supply to coordinate and accelerate the aircraft production program of the\nDominion. Mr. Bell Is also President of Federal Aircraft Limited,\nthe company owned by the Government which was formed to administer Anson aircraft production.\nShe's Happy Now\nWatching the presentation ot\nthe Bollngbroke Bomber to the\nAir Force by the I.O.D.E. in top\npicture, are, left to right, Hon.\nAriel Baird, Lady-in-Waitlnf to\nPrincess Alice, Mra. Breadner,\nPrincess Alice, Air Commodore L.\nS. Breadner, the Earl of Athlone,\nGovernor-General of Canada, and\nMra. W. B. Horkins, I.O.D.E. President In the lecond picture, Princess Alice, her Lady-ln-Walting\nand Mrs. Horkins stands In front\nof the bomber. The third picture\nshows the Governor-General receiving the salute from the\nR.C.A.F. Guard of Honor. The\nbomber Is shown at left In flight\n\u2014R.C.A.F. photograph!\nConitable John Henry, B.C. Police Highway Patrol Officer at\nCaitlegar, who made a perfect\n\u2022core on the 50-yard range at the\nVictoria City Police revolver competition\u2014first 'possible\" on record at 50 yards In an official\nmatch -over the national match.\ncourse\u2014 Is pictured beside the tar-*\nget whleh recorded his perfect\nscore. He used an officer's model\n.38 revolver. Below is a clo'seup of\nthe target showing the 10 shots.\ni Claims New Death\nBay\nConstable Henry Achieves Record\n\"Perfect Score\"\nThis little lady wat one of the\nBritish children who arrived in\nCanada in the first shipload to\nreach the Dominion from Britain\n\u2014and this is her method of conveyance. She is six-months-old\nMargaret Ward of Hertfordshire.\nBoosts Willkie\nFamed   Inventor   Dr.   Nichols\n] Tesla, now 84 years of age, claims\nInvention of a death ray which Is\ncapable of completely crippling\nI invading airplanes 250 miles dis-\n{tant. The Yugoslavian  electrical\nSsnius. long a resident of United\ntates, says he will offer the Invention to the U.S. Government\nand that'a doien or to ot the machines capable of producing the\nrayi would completely protect the\ncountry from air attack.\nAssociates and\nFriends Join in\nTributes (rowe\nPAOI THRU\nDEATHS\nraAIL, B. C, July W-Tettlfy-\nIng to the popularity of R. C.\nCrowe, the respect with which he\nwas regarded by his associates and\nthe friendship between them were\nthe tributes peid following the\nsudden death of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelltng Co. of Canada\nexecutive at Christina Lake Sunday:\n\"In the death ot R. C. Crowe the\nwhole community es well as the\nConsolidated- Mining & Smelting\nCo of Canada, Ltd., suffers a great\nloss,\" said Lome A. Campbell,\nPresident of Wett Kootenay Power\nIs Light Co., Ltd. \"His valued work\nfOr the Wett Kootenay Power te\nLight Co. Ltd. was fully appreciated by the officials as well as by\nmyself. A capable lawyer, a man\nof sterling character and of ex\nceptional business ability he will be\nmourned by all.\"\nTRAGIC BLOW\n\"The shock of Mr. Crowe's death\ncomes as a tragic blow to me at I\nam sure it will to every emplovee\not the Coniolldated Company who\nhad the pleasure of bil acquaintance either in business or socially,\"\nstated James Buchanan, General\nManager ot the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co. of Canada Ltd.,\nthiamorning.\n\"During his 20 years or more of\nservice ' with the Company Mr.\nCrowe earned for himself a place\nln the hearts and minds of his colleagues that U going-to be extremely difficult to fill. We are all going\nto miss hit sound judgment ana\nwise counsel. His part In the successful development of the Coniolldated company during the period\nof ita greatest expansion hai been\na nenviable one. It has, I think,\nbrought the Company a reputation\nfor fair dealing ln legal business\nand administrative affairs, and to\nMr Crowe it had brought Dominion-wide recognition throughout tbe\nlegal profession.\n\"By his untimely death Trail and\ndistrict loses a good citizen and the\nConsolidated Company a valuable\nexecutive,\"\nA VALUABLI CITIZEN\n\"tn the untimely death ot Roland\nC. Crowe, we have experience! a\nloss that it is Impossible to put 'nto\nwords. It can only be felt\" taid\nR. W. Diamond, Auiitant General\nManager of the Consolidated Company.\n\"He wat a fine man, a good\nfriend, a valuable citizen and a\nsplendid associate in business. Our\nhearts go out ln sympathy to those\nhe has left behind. The world can\nill afford to lose men like 'Judge'\nCrowe.\"\nA TRUI  FRIEND\n\"I have been an Intimate friend\nof Mr. Crowe for many years and\nassociated with him In business,\ncurling, fishing and In many other\nof the large number ot activities\nIn which he took so active a pert\"\nstated J. K. Cram of the Mines Department of the Consolidated this\nmorning. \"Rollle Crowe was a true\nsportsman .and a true friend In\nevery sense of the word. He was a\nfine family man. My sympathy and\nthe lympathy of the entire community will go out to hit wife and\nchildren In their bereavement\"\nBy The Canadian Prtu\nOTTAWA - John t. White, 80,\ndeputy director ot the contract! taction of tht Brltiih Supply Board la\nCanatlt.\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n-John Oeorge Howird, 87, who Md\nWinston Churchill in a mine pit for\nthree dayi in 1890 atter Brltaln'i\nPrime Minister, then a newspaperman, escaped from a prisoners' camp\nIn the Boer war. He helped Churchill flee by train to Portuguese terrl-\ntory, concealed In bales of wool.\nFirst Raspberry\nCarload Shipped\nFrom Creston\nCRESTON, B.C. - Fruit ihip.\nping history was made Sunday when\nihe tint straight carload of raspberries ever to leave the valley waa\nrolled trom the pre-cooler ot the\nCo-Operative Fruit Growen Association of Wynndel. It wis an\nassembled car In which Long, Allan\nlc Long, Ltd., and Creston Co-Operative Fruit Exchange participated.\nThere was about 1000 crates ln\nthe shipment which was destined\nfor Calgary. Prominent in the load\nwere Lathams, Newburgs, Newman's and some other of the newer\nvarieties, which are rapidly displacing the long time favorite Cuthbert with the Prairie trade. Considering the prolonged heat wave\nraspberries are holding up better\nthan expected but the end of the\nweek will see the last of the 1940\ncrop moved.\nThere Is still a light movement of\nback and red currants, with tha\nformer ln better than average demand. No trouble Is found in disposing of the limited supply of English gooseberries.\nYellow Transparent applet u\ncookers will be coming in some volume by the end ot the week. A\ntew braces have already gone tor-\nward. All apples tre sizing well and\ngive promise ot the predicted 15 per\ncent increaie over the 1939 crop of\n248,282 boxet.\nThe Initial estimate of the tree\nfruit crop ln the Okanagan hu Juat\nbeen issued and it forecasts gains in\napricots, peachei and peart, with'\nleu plums, prunes and apples. The\ndecline in apples is about 200,000\nboxes. The lighter prune crop will\nbe welcomed. A considerable quantity of these had to be dumped last\nseason.\n\u25a0-__-__:._ ,\u201e.   ,.\ny^^^yi\n____________________\nRepresentative Joseph Martin,\not Massachusetts, Republican\nparty leader ln the House of Representatives, has been chosen as\ncampaign manager for Wendell\nL. Willkie, the G.O.P.'i preatfen-\ntial nominee, and here he ii Itarting the job which he hopes will\nplace, Willkie in the White House,\n* _\n-\" iiiliiflKiii\nAirman Sticks to\nPlane to Carry\nGunner to Safety\nLONDON (CP).-The itory of a\nBritlih bomber pilot who brought\nhli flaming plane to earth in order\nto save the life of hla wounded\ngunner it revealed In an official\nRoyal Air Force report The report\nof the bomber squadron-commander\nread:\nOne of my pilots waa leading a\nbombing raid on strong enemy columns. After tbe task had been completed hli aircraft wai attacked by\nseven Messerschmitt 109s. In the\ncourse of the purauit the rear-gunner shot down one Messerschmitt\nin flames and disabled another. After that the British pilot found cover\nin a cloud.\n\"On emerging, however, the\nbomber was again attacked by a\nstray Meserschmitt 110 from a range\nof only 50 yards. The attack wai\nat once returned and once more the\nair-gunner taw hli opponent bunt\ninto flamei and dive headlong to\nthe ground. The German pilot nad,\nhowever, icored a number of hits\nwhich set the port petrol-tank on\nfire. The order was given to abandon aircraft The observer jumped\nand made a safe landing. The pilot\nstood on the wing and was about\nto jump when he saw that hit rear-\ngunner wai still Inilded wounded.\nWithout hesitation the pilot got back\ninto the aircraft and brought the\nflaming masi lately to earth. He\nthen helped hti gunner out. Within\na few minutes of their getting clear,\nthe aircraft blew up.\" .     ,\nNewsmen Must Have\nWaihington O. K.\nOTTAWA, July 11 (CP)-Special\npermission from Washington in. addition to a passport is required of\nevery Canadian newspaper man entering the United States, an official\nof the External Affairs Department\nsaid today.\nApplication should be made to the\nUnited States Coniulatei a few\ndayi in advance of the day on which\nthe newspaper man wlihei to leave\nfor the United States. Such application is referred by tbe Consul to\nWashington, and upon authorization\nthere the applicant is Issued a visa,\nthe official said.\nWASHINGTON, July 11 (AP)-A\nState Department official explained\ntoday that Canadian newspapermen\nwere now affected like those ot\nother countriei by t requirement\nthat apeclal permlsilon be obtained\nfrom Waihington before visas are\ngranted for visits to the United\nStates.\nThis long hss been the practice\nwith newspapermen from most other countries desiring to visit the\nUnited States. The regulation, however, did not apply to Canadians\nuntil new regulations became effective July 1 requiring passports\nand vitas for Canadians seeking entry into the United States.\nThe rule, it wu explained, was\nto enable the State Department to\nkeep a check on foreigners engaging or seeking to engage in newspaper work here.\nParson Pilot\nIs Fine Bomber\nSOMEWHERE IN THE WESTERN DESERT, (CP).-With a roar,\nthe lean bomber came to reit on this\nBritish desert airport Improvised on\nthe red-brown stony flats and a\nbroad-shouldered, mild-faced man\nclimbed out of the cockpit .\n\"That'a The Friar\" back from hli\nSunday service,\" taid a young airman. In a faintly-tired voice reminiscent of a country penon, the returning pilot pronounced the flight\nperfect but doubted whether the\nplcturei he htd taken on the reconnaissance Were good becauie of the\nground mist.\nBrother officeri lav. him tbe\nnickname because he really It a\npenon. He learned flying while at\nunivenity and atter ordination became chaplain to the Biihop of Ny-\nattalend..He joined the Royal Air\nForce at the outbreak of war and\nhis tint job air Cairo wasn't much\nof an introduction to it He performed the marriage of his wing\nleader.\nIn the flnt big bombing rtid on\nLibya after Italy entered the war,\nhe flew ln the centre of the leading\nwing but the commander complained his machine constantly kept bobbing up and down.\nOn landing he explained that he\ntook his hsnds otf the controls once\nor twice\u2014\"I was a bit excited at\nmy flnt raid and wu just clapping\nmy hands and shouting to myself\n'Grand show. Splendid ihow' aa our\nbombi hit the targets.\"\nDEAD PILOT BROUGHT\nOUT OF WILDERNESS\nMISSOULA, Mont, July 18 (AP).\n\u2014A dead pilot and hla injured companion, victims in the crash of their\nplane while flying provisions to wilderness-Isolated forest fire fighters,\nwere carried by pack bone today to\nShearer, Idaho, imall civilization\noutpost Wett ot the Bitter Root\nMountains.\nDr. J. P. Ohlmacher, ot Missoula.\nwho rode horseback to meet the\nreicue force at Cub Point Lookout\nnear tha Idaho-Montana boundary,\nleported that Dell Clabaugh of Missoula, the Injured filer, hid suffered\nfractured ribs tnd pouible Internal\ninjuries.\n\u00abEDNESDAY MORNING\nPECIALS\n9 a.m. to 12 Noon    \t\nPRESERVING KETTLES\n10-quart open enamel kettles with bail handles. You will\nfind many uses for this kettle. AQ\u201e\nEach  JOC\nELECTRIC PANS\nKeep cool and comfortable with a fan! Powerful motor,\nproduces a maximum amount of breeze. No (jJO QQ\nradio Interference. Each o}L. JO\nCHIFFON HOSE\nLadles, here's a real bargain In hosiery. Mock-fashioned,\nno seams to hurt the feet, and a fine guage in super chiffon. Latest Summer shades. Sizes QQ\n8V4 to 10Vi. 2 pairs, for  OJJC\nNOVELTY  APRONS\nMade of print with a wide frill of organdie, nicely bound\nwith bias tape. A wide range of colors. OA-\ntach  __9C\nWOMEN'S WEDGE HEEL SLIPPERS\nNew style wedge heel flowered print slippers. Assorted\ncolors and contrasts. Be sure you get a pair for (M AA\nthe'ir extra.comfort. Sizes 4 to 7 <p l.UU\nMisses' and Children's STRAP SHOES\nMisses' and children's 1-strap shoes. Canvas uppers\nand composition soles. Sanitary insoles for hot weather\nprotection. Sizes 7 to lOVi and 11 to 2. \/JQ\nPLAID LUNCH CLOTH SPECIAL\n30 only easily washed cloths in cotton and rayon. AA-\nSlzes 52x52. Wednesday morning, ea,ch Tiv\nSALE OF BLEACHED SHEETS\nJust In time, this bargain. Cood quality. Size (PI AA\n70x90. Wednesday Morning, each jpI.VW\nSPORTS FROCK \"SPECIAL\"\nCay florals and stripes in expensive slub linenes. Reg.\nvalue $3.95. Sizes 14 to 44. M QQ\nWednesday Morning, each \u00abp__.\u00bbFO\nDRILL SLACKS\nBrown only. Sizes 16 to 20. Reg. value $1.19.        f*A\nWednesday Morning, each  OUC\nGRASS RUGS\nA bed size rug. 4'x7'. Stencilled in beautiful AO -\ndesigns. Wednesday Morning, each   30C\nUNPAINTED WINDSOR CHAIRS\n24 only at a special price. Hardwood frames. tf\u00bb1 iQ\nWell finished. Wednesday Morning, each (Pl.li\/\nMEN'S SPORT SHIRTS\nNovelty knit sport shirts, the coolest in town. Polo collar\nand crew neck styles all have short sleeves. <P1 AA\nSizes small, medium and large \u00bb()1-UU\nMEN'S COMBINATIONS\nMen's balbriggan combinations. Natural shade. No tA.\nsleeves. Athletic style. Sizes 36 to 44  \u00ab\u00abC\nNew Zealand War\nCabinet Has Two\nOpposition Members\nWELLINGTON, July 18 (CP-Rou-\nters)\u2014New Zealand's Labor Government took two members ot the\nNational Party Oppoiltion into the\nfold today to form a War Cabinet\nwhich Prime Minister Peter Fraier\ndescribed as a move \"to ensure unity in counsel and action in prosecuting the war effort to the fullest\nIn support of Greet Britain.\"\nThe Wir Cabinet will have five\nmembers. The Government members\nwill be Mr. Fraser, Finance Minister\nWalter Nash and Defence Minister\nF. Jones. The Opposition will be\nrepresented by Aoam Hamilton, the\nLeader of the Opposition and a\nformer Postmaster-General, and J.\nG. Coates, former Prime Minister.\nMr. Fraser said the War Cabinet\nwould control the Dominion's war\neffort and that Its decisions would\nbe conclusive. The general Cabinet\nwill continue to function with re-\nfnrd to all other matters, the exlit-\nng Ministers retaining their portfolios.\nTry Newiptper Advertising Flrtt\nIt Gets Results!\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS \u2014 ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\nKITCHEN CUPBOARDS\nAND CABINETS\nBuilt u pretty as a picture\nMall orden will receive prompt\nattention.\nKootenay Sash & Doer Works\n801 Ward St.        Ope, City Hall\n\u2022_\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundttrand Adding Machinei\n'   OFFICE 8UPPLIE8\nUnderwood Elliott Fiiher Ltd.\n539 Ward St. Phone 88\n\u2022Thia advt Is' not pubilthed or dlaplayed by the Liquor Couuoi Board or Dy the Govt, ot Brltlth Columbia.\n\u25a0\\JL\u00a3^^j!k*&gr:\n -Btw-\n\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\n\u00ab\"\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb*\"\"     \u25a0VV9pViPfJlli\u00ab!IWW,\u00ab w. iwjiWlUilJPP^iiiiiiii^iipp.WpiWi.W!ii\u00abl\u00bbi\n''\"^'\u25a0^(i\nPAOI   FOUR\n\u2014NILION DAILY NIWI  NELSON. B.-.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO  JULY 17. 1940.\u2014\nCups. . .\nfaking Bottle\nFrom Ihe Baby\n\u2022y OARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nWise is the mother wbo trains\nher infant early to take water and\nfruit juices from a cup, But iome\nparents who easily effect this train-\ni Ing have trouble getting the baby\n: to take milk from a cup instead\n' of a bottle.\nSome  child   doctors  advise let-\n\u2022\u25a0 ting the baby have the night bottle\neven past the age of two. in order\n< to Induce the child to take enough\nl milk. It is doubtful if this procedure is necesary. Nevertheless, the\n' mother should carry out her doctor's Instructions.\nONE  MOTHER'S PROBLEM\nAssuming that you have resolved\nto have your baby abandon the\nbottle, what is a good procedure?\nI answered this question in my\nreoly to the mother who wrote the\nfollowing:\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: I've a prob-\nInn I would like solved. It may be\namall to some but to me it is quite\na task. I have a baby fifteen months\nold. She still takes her milk In a\nbottle. Has done so since two\nmonths old. I have tried every way\nI know of to get her to drink her\nmilk from a cup. She absolutely\nrefuses. I've taken her bottle away\nfrom her at times. She still won't\ndrink from the cup: She doesn't\nmake any fuss about drinking water\nIrom a cup.\n\"Some tell me she will ruin the\njylhaye of her mouth and teeth. Others iay to let her have the bottle\nas long as she wants It, lust so long\nei she gets her milk. I wish you\nwould please advise me.\"\nI answered: \u2022\n\"Since your baby takes water\nfrom a cup, she easily can learn\nto take milk in like manner. The\ntrouble with so many of you mother! is that you don't stick to any\nplin long enough to make it work.\nJust remove the bottle and never\nbring it back. It might be a good\nplan to have a little ceremony in\nwhich you bury the bottle while\nthe baby -watches.\n\"Then as it Ii buried\u2014all other\nbottles put away \u2014 she might\nchoose without resistance to get\nalong without it. A number of\nbabies have under.such conditions.\nOtherwise just let her cry. She\nwon't starve even though she\nmight hoI_ out a day or more. Of\ncourse, you will hasten results if\nall other food is denied her in the\nmeanwhile. In case she develops\nnausea consult your doctor.\"\n80LVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. Do you think a father should\nwhip an adolescent girl?\nA. Certainly not. Any one who\nhas read this column regularly\nmust know that I \u00bbay repeatedly\nthat we should try to get along\nwithout using corporal punishment after the child is four or five.\nOne of the best arguments for\nselective intelligent corporal punishment of the tot is that he might\nbe prepared to escape all corpora!\npunishment before he ls old\nenough to enter school, need very\nlittle of any kind of punishment\nthereafter, and be a happy, likeable citizen.\nWMJt.\nfouMWW&L\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'I MINU\nStuffed Halibut Steak\nButtered Beets     Perfection Salad\nFrozen Custard\nSour Cream Cookies\nCoffee, Iced or Hot\n8TUFED HALIBUT 8TEAK\nTwo thick slices halibut steak,\nsix thin slices salt pork, one cup\nflneb read crumbs, salt, pepper, one\ntablespoon melted butter, one tablespoon chopped onion (optional).\nRemove bones from flih, wash\nand dry lt. Liy one ilice on a buttered baking pan. Mix bread\ncrumbs with melted butter, onion,\nsalt and popper.\nLay this dressing on top of the\nfish and put other slice on top.\nCover with salt pork and bake In\n375 degree oven 40 minutes. Serve\nwith white sauce containing little\nchopped parsley.\nPERFECTION 8ALAD\nOne tablespoon gelatin, one-quarter cup cold Water, one cup boiling\nwater, one-quarter cup mild vinegar, one tablespoon lemon iulce,\none-qUarter cup sugar, one-half cup\nfinely chopped cabbage, one cup\nfinely cut celery, one pimento or\ngreen pepper, one-half teaspoon\nsalt.\nSoften gelatin in cold water, add\nboiling water and stir until gelatin\nis dissolved',then add sugar, vinegar, lemon juice and salt. When\ngelatin   is   dissolved,   strain   and\nwhen mixture begins to thicken\n\u25a0dd vegetables.\nTurn Into mold which hai flnt\nbeen dipped Into cold water, and\nchill. Cut into slices ot bloeks and\nserve on lettuce or.endive. Multiply\nthese ingredients by 4 If you wint\na salad thit will serve 25 people.\nFor a delicioui fruit salad use\ncombination of fruiti Instead ot\nvegetables.\nFROZEN CUSTARD\nOne egg, one-quarter cup sugar\nthree tablespoons lemon juice, grated rind of lemon, one small can\n(three-quarters cup) chilled evap\norated milk or treih cream.\nBeat egg, add sugar. Whip evaporated milk or cream very stiff,\nfold lemon juice ind rind in and\nadd to sugar mixture, folding litter\nln lightly. Pour it once Into cold\nfreezing tray. This makes one pint.\n\u25a0OUR  CREAM  COOKIE!\nOne eup butter, two cupi sugar,\none cup sour cream or milk, one\nteispoon sodi, two eggs, one-quarter teaspoon nutmeg, five or aix\ncupa flour to make a soft dough.\nPut butter In mixing bowl one-\nhalf hour before you make cookies\nto wirm to room temperature.\ncream. Add sugar gradually, creaming thoroughly, then add beaten\neggs.\nSift flour, sift again with baking\nsoda and nutmeg, and add to firit\nmixture alternately with cream.\nRoll out and bake in 375 degree\noven until brown.\nSays Aliens Must Be looked After,\nBut Why Nol Give Women a Chance!\nMANCHESTER, England (CP). -\nIn the wake of many letten to tba\npapen regarding employment of\nGerman and Austrian refugeei, a\nLondon woman writes to The\nGuardian, appealing for British women out of work, end pointing out\nthe \"disadvintage of being over 40.\"\nShe sayi:\n\"Might I put in a word for the\nBritish who, It seemi to me, have\nthe first claim on their own country\nfor the right to serve iti May I\nappeal especially on behalf of my\nage group for whom the prospect is\nso dark?\n\"I wu taken from school .at 16 tn\nIMS, ln the First Great War, to take\nthe place ot a solicitor's clerk who\njoined the army. I have an honon\ndegree in Germin at London University, beitdes years ot experience\nIn clerical work\u2014but In thu greatest war ot all I can get no work\nat all,\n\"I sent up my name tor national\nservice in April, 1939. wai put On\nthe central register and then on two\nother registers: I hava waited\nmonths.\" I am told by ona of the\nbureaux that they ara virtually\nnever asked for women over about\n35; I am told try another that my\naga li so serious a handicap as to\nmake lt almost Impossible for me\never to get work at all unless a\nshortage comei.\n\"Many women like ma loit all\nchance of real happiness through\nsome tragedy of the lait war. We\nhave nothing left but work and the\nwlih to be of service. I will uy\nnothing of the financial hardship\u2014\nfor women alone, homeless, unable\nto get work, with rising pricei and\never-diminishing savings, the financial position li too clear tor it to\nrequire comment.\n'1 know that we are called on\nto endure the preient hardships and\nburdens without complaint But I\nrepeat my plea\u2014think of the alieni,\nby all means, but coniider flnt the\nclaims of the competent, fit, and\nwilling British unemployed, whose\nlives, barred trom work, are a misery.\nSERIAL STORY\nBy Oren Arnold\nHAPPINESS, C. 0. D.\nYoung Peoples Camp\nMay Have Largest\nEnrollment to Date\nPossibility of the largest enrollment for the Young Peoples Camp,\nheld under the West Kootenay Religious Education Council at Koolaree, is indicated in the advance\nregistrations for the camp. An unusual feature is that registration for\nyouths from East and West Kootenay centres .so try outnumber those\nfrom young women.\nDirector for the Y. P. Camp will\nbe Rev. J. Lyn Clerihue of East\nTrail, while among the leaders will\nbe Fred Robins of Trail. Rev. S. T.\nGalbraith of Kimberley. Rev. C.\nThompson of Cranbrook, Rev. Gerald M. Ward of Nelson. Mrs. W. C.\nKettlewell will be Camp Hostess.\nThe Young Peoples Camp opens\nFriday and closes July 30, when the\nintermediate girls go to Koolaree.\nCHAPTER FORTY\nOld Mr. Merrifield learned of the\nplans for the new play and was delighted with them. He had never\nheard of any sort of dramatic presentation in the outdoors; the very\nthought was exciting to him.\n\"Mr. Weems, where are you sir?\"\nhe called to his secretary who had\nhovered near the conference this\nmorning. The secretary came forward respectfully. \"Mr. Weems, how\nlong since our tennis courts have\nbeen reconditioned?\"\n'The tennis courts, sir?\"\n\"Certainly, certainly! The tennis\ncourts!\" The old millionaire glared,\nspoke loudiy. \"We have tennis\ncourts here at The Oaks, Mr.\nWeems, haven't we?\"\n\"Oh, of course, sir. But it has been\n\u2014oh, quite some years\u2014since anyone used them.\"\n\"Regrettable, Mr. Weems. There\nare two courts. I often walk past\nthem. My daughter used them frequently. I have observed that they\nare in poor shape. Holes in them.\nWorn out, no doubt. Mr. Weems,\nsee that they are rebuilt Immediately. Rebuilt, air. You hear?\"\n\"Oh, of course sir.\"\n\"The best of materials, Mr.\nWeems. Whatever is needed. And\n\u2014several hundred seats for guests.\nAs many as Mr. Bailey thinks he\nmay need tor this play, sir. Perhaps,\nah\u2014\" his old eyes sparkled with\ndevilment\u2014\"perhaps I can use my\nInfluence with Mr. Bailey and the\ngirls to get you into the play free,\nMr. Weems.''\n\"Oh. no, sir. I shall, of course,\npurchase admission, I do not wish\nto-\"\n\"Tut, tut. Mr. Weems. When you\ncan get into a theatre free, get in.\nYou hear me?\"\n\"Oh. of course, sir!\" Poor Mr.\nWeems was a literalist. Not until\nhe had observed the othen all\nlaughing at him did he realize they\nhad been teasing, and even then\nhe was slightly confused. He stood\nin perpetual awe of the man who\nwas at the same time his employer\nand friend. But when Gayle\nsaueezed his arm, he smiled hap>\npliy.\n\"Both of you old dears scat out\nof here,\" she ordered. \"You know\ngood and well you'll be in the best\npossible  seats  in  the  front  row.\nI\u2014\" ihe dropped to a itage whisper. \"I'll illp you In myiefl.\"\nThe play hid been written and\nrewritten in \"final\" form, to that\nSarti could be typed and given to\nie various acton. BUI wrote in at\nleast some part, ai before, tor eich\nof the eeven girls now In the Merrifield household, and arringed for\nboth himielf and Jeremy Tucker to\nplay dual roles. Jeremy had to be\na youth in Acts I and II, and a\ncollege professor in Act III. He had\nmore to do than he had had in\nthe first play.\nThe new al freico production,\nhowever, wu only \u25a0 pirt of the\nexcitement planned for The Oaks.\nPreparation of it soon wai going\non apace, but so were preparations\nfor the magnificent reception and\nball scheduled for that same evening.\nThe date wai lets thin a\" month\naway. Society editors from the\nnewspapers, keeping in close touch\nwith The Oaki now, beam early\nto mention the preparations, and\nMrs. Molly Van Orsdale learned\nfirst that the play was to be outdoors, On next Sunday morning\nPage One of her society section\ncarried an eight-column headline:\n\"AL FRESCO DRAMA TO BE\nREVIVED AT THE MERRIFIELD\nESTATE.\"\nThe subheading said thit \"Brilliant Reception Included in Plans\nfor Staging The Wit to Woo'.\"\nMn. Molly knew that they would\nbe of major interest to the high-hat\nstratum of society life, and so worded her article with that In mind.\nThere ll \u2022 subtle difference In io-\nclety newi coverages\u2014things for\nthe elite can be itated one way,\nthings for the mass public another.\nMrs. Molly went quite snooty, with\nher tongue in her cheek; She was\nwell aware that the high hats had\nbeen high-hatted at The Oaki \u25a0\nfew weeks igo. and the wanted to\nsee what would happen next.\nSo apparently did practically everybody else in the city. A great\nmany people telephoned In. Committees trom five different charities called on Mr. Merrifield asking\nthat some of the proceeds from lhe\nplay be diverted to their organizations. He referred them all to Bill\nBailey. More than 100 applications\nfor tickets to the play came to The\nOaks in the mail, and poor Graham, the butler, was so busy with\ntelephone calls about tickets, and\nNibout details of the play In general, that he hired an assistant to\nhelp him.\nBill and Gayle learned of these\nthings promptly, but they were\nmore and more busy with rehearsals again, with costuming, lighting\nof the outdoor stigei, mikeup, acoustics, ill the problems thit issall\ndirectors and managers of any play\no'.us the additional ones that nag at\namateurs.\nCholly Farrlngton's gossipy column in the Chronicle-Post cime\nout wish a llfted-eyebrows paragraph or two concerning the activity at The Oaks.\n\"Draw up a rocker, my dears.\"\nhe chatted. \"Have you heard?\nAbout the Merrifield Oaks?\" The\nmaid to measure, it seems was\nduly measured, and so was the public taste. Whereupon. .The Wit to\nWoo' is being concocted at the\nsame stand.\n\"If this were anything but pure\ncharity, or if Mr. M. were anything\nbut pure generosity, thli might all\nbe open to suspicion. Not io, though.\nIt's a little early to reveal the inside information\u2014but your humble correspondent humbly submits\nthat thert are still seven beautiful\ngirls headquartering In the big\nhouse on Montrose, riot to mention a young dramatic genius and\na millionaire grandson. Anything\ncm happen there. Very probably it\nwill. Stand by for further Initructloni.\"\nMeanwhile, too, some \"outildc\"\nyoung people hid begun to drop in\n\u2022t The Oiki. The first party given\nin Jeremy'i honor hid been largely\nframed up for him by the other\nyouthi there who invited their\nfriends. But Jeremy had chanced\nto meet \u2022 few of the guests later\nin a roadhouse. And Oayle had\ntactfully called a few of the others\nI on the telephone for him.\nOn a Friday afternoon a,fter the\nrehearsals were started, and atter\nthe papers had informed the world\nabout the new play, a carload cf\nyouhg people rolled up the long\ndrive to The Oaks. A detached observer might have slid thit It\ncime up diffidently, almost warily;\nplainly the driver wain't too sure\not himielf. The Oaks wu truly an\nawesome eitate.\nNo one wu ln sight when thl\nyouths stopped near the front porch.\nPre -ntly the car gave a tentative\nhonk.\nGraham, punctilious butler, saw\nthem from, within. \"It appears,\nMiss GayleAhlt aome young guests\nStretching ...\nSubtle Exercises\nto Reduce Hips\nBy DONNA GRACE\nA number of clever business girla\ntell ui they have what they call\nsecretary's hips. These girli are\nobliged to do moit of their work\nwhile sitting. Only the fingen are\nexercised u they pound the keyi\n\u2014not enough exercise for any healthy girl.\nTheie long sitting sessions will\nhelp to idd weight, ind ilnce thli\nmust go on every diy, one must do\nlomething to keep the slender Unci\nu they should be.\nThere li a form ot placid exercise\nthat will reduce hips and it can be\ndone without leaving the chair. The\nsecret of thli form ot exercise ii\ncorrect sitting and stretching.\nWhen sitting, be u tall and\nstretched aa the work will permit\nThe bue ot the spine ihoula touch\nthe back of the chair. Thli will\nflice the body correctly so that the\norward slide will be discouraged.\nThe abdomen must be held flat\nWith this tlitneii md lower back\nagainst the chair, the head Is\nstretched high on the neck, the chin\nwell in but high away trom the\nchest.\nThli straight posture ahould be\nadopted at all time*, even when\nthere is no suggestion of overweight. In the upright position one\nwill breathe deeply with ease ao\nthat there will be less fatigue after\nthe day\"! work.\n28 Registration! in\nfor Scout, Cub Camps\nRegistrations for the Scout and\nCub camps, to be held under the\nNelson md District Scout Association! at Camp Busk, Kokanee Point,\nare coming in. To date 14 registrations for etch cimp hive been received. Further registrations are expected by H. R. Brown, District\nCommissioner, and L. P. Walton,\nCamp Scoutmaster.\nThe Cubi go into camp July 19,\nand the Scouts August 3. Preparatory to the opening of the campi, a\nwork party will clean up tbe camp\nand dining halls Sunday.\nCanadian Red\nCross Hospital\nIs Handed Over\nBy PAT UMHIR\nCanadian Praia Staff Writer\nLONDON, July 16 (CP Cable>-\nThe modern $1,000,000 Canadian Red\nCroat Hospital built by contributions of the people ot the Dominion wu handed over to the Royal\nCanadian Army Medical Corpi at\na formal ceremony today.\nIn   the   quiet   Buckinghamshire\nNelson Red Cross\nCommittee Named\nto Check Rumors\nAi a precautionary move, a committee from the Nelion Red Crosi\nSociety Executive has been appointed to check and investigite rumors and stories derogatory to Red\nCrosi activity should they arise in\nNelson and District. Recently numerous rumors were circulated in\nother B. C. centrei that were,detrimental to tha work of tha Society.\nC. B. Garland, Norman Brown\nand Reeve Huper were appointed\nto the Committee.\nKoolaree Chatter . .\nOjibways Leading\nCabin Standing\nal Halfway Mark\nHappy Day No. 7 hai passed, and\nwith It go a lot of happy momenta.\nFrom the rising gong to the silence\ngong the day ww filled with action.\nFrank WUby, who takei the\nphotgraphy group had to leave for\nhome. We'll lure mlu him. We welcome Jerry Jerome into cnifip to\nfill the gap left by Frank. Martin\nMcLennan li taking over the photography group and Jerry is looking after the belt makers.\nWe held our annual iwimming\ngala today. It wu very successful\nand exciting. The boyi were divided in three claaiei: Seniors, thoie\n13 and over; intermediates, thoie\nwho were more than Utt, and those\nwho were 12 yean; and juniors,\nthose who were 10 yeen old. The\nmeet wun't finished, to the remainder will be run off tomorrow\nmorning In awlm period. The leader\nso tar ii Cabin 2, followed by\nCabin 4.\nTemperature...\nCoolness Needed\nAfter Sunstroke\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nHeat stroke or sunstroke is due\nto an upset of the heat regulating\ncentrei of the body, ind the wont\nsymptoms, the-actual \"stroke\", low\nof consciouinesi md ooUipie, ara\npreceded by a period when the victim becomes very sensitive'to the\noppressive atmospheric condition!,\ngeta pale with clammy skin, feels\nweak, may be nauseated. Shortly\nafter the skin, instead. of being\nclammy, feels hot and dry aad\nmentality is disturbed.\n. Tba Engliih physiologist, Hal-\ndane, has shown that It the temperature of the environment is\ngreater than that ot the body, neat\nitorage may occur md \u25a0 gain ln\nbody temperature of one degree\nan hour la pouible. Humidity, that\nold enemy, tends to Increaie thii\nheat itorage.\nCOOLING  IMPERATIVE\nTreatment tn theie early stage\nwill ward off the serious later\nstages. Cold water on the skin to\nreduce temperature la the indication. Ice ii not io effective u cold\nwater evaporated by a fan. Tba\nevaporation of a quart ot water\nremoves seven times as much heat\nas the melting of two poundi of Ice,\nThe water ihould be thrown on\nthe body with some force; trom a\nhose, if available, or aluiced on\nfrom a bucket Thia Impingement\nof the water on the skin is a stimulant and very valuable because\nthe real danger of heat itroke il\ncirculatory collapse.\nOf course, remove ihe heat exhausted victim to the cooleit place\nthat can be found, away trom tbe\nsun.\n- The ideal treatment la to remove\nall the clothes, wrap the patient in\na sheet and put htm on a cot on\ntoo suddenly, and when tht body\ntemperature fills to  101 degrees\nFahrenheit ba il wrapped in blan- .\nketi.\nOne heat stroke or attack ot heat\nexhaustion makei the victim heat-\nsensitive, end he must be careful\not hot weather ever afterward.       ,\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nMn. K. N. B.\u2014\"Doei smoking by\na nunlng mother In any way affect\nthe child?\"\nAnswer \u2014 In the opinion of most\nphyslelsni, lt does not,\n  .\nAIR INSPECTOR IS\nSENTENCED 6 YEARS\nMANCHESTER, Englind, July 11\n(CP Cable)-W illlam Gaskell Downing, Si, aeronautical Intpector, wei\nsentenced to lix yean penal servitude today on three charges under\nthe Official Secrete Act\nDuring the hearing, which was\nheld ln camera, the prosecutor Hid\nthe accused had \"formed an association with Lucia Strauss, i woman\nof German nationality.''\ncountryside where It la situated, the\n.Idly equippi\t\npresented by Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett\niplendjdljr equipped building wis\nto Hon. Vincent Massey, Canadian\nHigh Commissioner, who accepted\nIt on behalf of the Canadian Gov-\n-        ...      ,    ,     \u201e  , . ernment. Jt was Immediately turned.\n.<?'.\u00b0  ._**.!__-__ Hollywood over toCol.R. M. Luton, Director-\nCABIN STANDINGS\nToday, Freddie got ambitious\nand added up the totals tor each\ncabin. These totali are up to the\nhalf way mark. The leading cabin\nii the Ojibway with 309Vi points.\nThe second cibin Is the Omahas\nwith 302 polnti. In third plice comei\nthe Abanackies with 297 points.\nFinally, in lut place come the Kootenali with 289 points.\nTheie standings don't really mem\nmuch right now becauie we itill\nhave part of our iwimming meet\nto be run off, we itill hive the treasure hunt, and -we itill have the\ntrack meet. You can easily tee\nhow many more points there are to\nbe made. . , .\nIn the dally softbail gamei the\nKootenali and the Omahas both won\nAmes. The former defeated the\nOjibways 15-12 in a close game.\nThe iecond game wu a walkaway\ntor the Omahas. They swamped the\nAbanackles 21-4.\na rubber sheet A hoie is played\non him from a distance of several\nfeet. Every two or three minutei\na stream of cold water ii poured\non hii head from a distance of 6 to\n8 feet. Heat must not be extracted\nstars who is seldom seom Indulging\nin any apeclal exercise has her own\nclever system of keeping slender.\nWe refer to the slender Virginia\nBruce.\nVirginia makes every movement\ncount When she stoops to pick\nup antyhing from the floor she does\nit with straight knees, firm back\nand neck. When the feet are well\napart the stretch will be ot value\nand will keep the muscles supple.\nThe exercise Virginia enjoyi ii a\nlong walk, and ihe never permits\nthe abdomen muscles to relax.\nThese firm abdomen muscles,\nwhen kept under constant control,\nwill insure slendemesi to long as\nthe rest of the body is held well\nstretched ln the ume tall line.\nThe morning should begin with\nvigorous stretches ot ill muscles,\nalso plenty of deep breathing. Follow these subtle exercisea faithfully\nand the secretary hip_ will disappear,\nare waiting in an automob'l out\nfront. Shall I\u2014\" Graham wasn't too\nsure of himself, either. '\n\"Oh! No, Graham, let me go and\n\u2014no, call Mr. Jeremy at once\u2014\nJEREMY1\" She didn't wait for Graham to call; she herself yelled out\nln quite spontaneous manner.\nJeremy heard md came down.\nOut of sheer curiosity some of the\nother girls came into the front\nroom there, too, and even Bill\ncame in.\n\"Jeremy, somebody's honking lor\nyou,\" Gayle reported.\n\"For\u2014me?\"\n\"Go out and see!'1\nHe looked distressed. His eyes\nsought Gayle's In appealing, but\nshe pushed him toward the door,\nsmiling at the others.\nHe went out. Bill and the girli\nquite shamelessly peeked to watch\nhim, but all they taw wai that\nJeremy talked a moment, got in\nthe car and drove away.\nHe's making progress, BUI murmured. Gayle nodded.\nBecause by chance Tempe Hyde\nwas nearest them, they both turned\nand happened to look unexpectedly\nat Tempe\", side view. Tbe expression ihe wore was so startling to\nthem that Bill md Gayle involuntarily looked at each other again,\nqueitlonlngly.\nPresently, when they were alone\nagain, Bill ipoke in low tonei to\nGayle. \"Say, do you know aomethlng? I don't quite get thii Hyde\ngirl. She can be as cute u a paper\ndoll one moment, and darn near\nfrightening the next. Did\u2014did yuu\nnotice? Over there?\"\nGayle nodded, very seriously. \"I\nsuppose It's ill Imagination, BIU.\nProbably w\u00ab're- all a little tired\nfrom studying the play all day.\nCan't we do lomething different\nnow? Let'i dince!\"\nHe twitched on the controls of\nthe magnificent new phonograph,\nand In a moment Gayle wu in hit\narms. The other glrlt heard the\nmusic and came in. So did Mr.\nWeemi and Mr. Merrifield. Thli\nwas a late afternoon hour now,\nwhen people wera naturally anxious to assemble for sociability. Bill\nhid isked the six girls to itay for\ndinner at The Oaki ind a tryout\not the play afterward.\nAll at once Tempe wai \u2022 bubbly\ngirl igaln. She ran to Mr. Merrifield, hugged him and laughingly\nforced him to try to dance a tew\nsteps with her. He enjoyed lt Immensely, connived with her then\nto dince with Mr. Weems.\nTempe Retried out her part io\nadmirably, testing and yet being\nrespectful, creating a mood that\nthe two old gentlemen enjoyed,\nthat Bill smiled In apology to Gayje.\n\"Guess I had the wrong slant,\"\nsaid he. \"Tempe Is i honey, really.\nBut It's you I'm dancing with,\nGayle.\"\n(To Be Oentlnued)\nGeneral of Canadian Medical Services.\nCol C. L. T. Arthur of Winnipeg\nil in command ot the unit, and the\nmatron in charge of the nursing\nslsten la Miss J. Michray of Winnipeg.\nLt-Gen. A. L. McNaughton, the\nCanadian Commander, Sir Edward\nPeacock, Canadian-born Director of\nthe Bank of England, and Viscount\nand Viscountess Astor, on whose\neitate the hoipital hu been built,\nattended the presentation ceremony.\nFifty comely Canadian nurses,\nwearing attractive blue and white\nuniforms, were lined up on both\nsldei of the entrance, with a detachment of the R.C.A.M.C. beyond.\nCol. George Nalsmlth wu Chairman, while Capt J. G. Brown of\nSheridon, Man., Padre of the unit,\noffered a prayer of blessing for\nthe hospital.\nMr. Bennett paid tribute to the\nwork done by memben of the Canadian Red Cross Advisory Committee In connection with the hospital.\nSecrets...\nlove and Giving\nHold Friendships\nBy CAROLINI CHATFIELD\nNot long ago I heard an old lady\ntay she hoped the wu not a greedy\npenon but then are two things the\ncouldn't get enough of: friendi and\nflowen. Incidentally, the is the only\npenon I've ever known who kept up\nnot only with the friendi of her\nyouth, but with their children md\ntheir children's children. If she lives\nto a hundred she will be close to\ntheir children, even down to the\nfourth md fifth generation.\nLooking at her ahd wondering at\nthe marvelous gift she hu for\nfriendship, I uked myself what she\nhad thit othen hadn't; what the\ndid that othen lett otf doing. Here's\nher secret: she's gentle and generous, tolerant end sincere with plenty\nof courage ind i lovely sense ot\nhumor. She exudei sweetness and\nlight ai the moves about her quiet\nway.\nFrom her imall garden In which\nthe hu \u2022 bit of everything worth\ngrowing, there ire few of her friends\nwho haven't hid a root, a bulb, a\ncutting or a bunch of blossoms. The\nflowers which she says she's greedy\nfor are among the thingi she's most\ngenerous with. She not only ihares\nher own but ihe goei a-vliltlng and\nsuggests thit you give youn away\ntoo\u2014always with the humOroui md\nkindly twinkle in her eye thit would\nshame you if you were tempted to\nhold back.\nThere'i much more: whan friends\nor acquaintances have sickness or\nsorrow, she's among the flnt to ring\nthe doorbell carrying her small\npoieyi. Without talking, without\nweeping, she uyi her sympathy like\na benediction. Peace seems to flow\nfrom her. Perhapi thla is her piety.\nAnd mon: she's not afraid to\nspeek her piece. She can iay the\nbuke, a slight suggestion that you\nthink you don't want to hear but\nneed to hear, say It in iuch a way\nthat It leives no itlng. A gentle rebuke, i slight suggestion that you\nmay be wrong, ytt with lt all no\nholler - than - thou attitude. And\nthere'i her courage and her tolerance.\nMARRIAGE OFFICE AT\nCOAST NORMAL AGAIN\nVANCOUVER, Julv 16 (CP). -\nThe Marriage Commissioner's office\nat thelCourt House here wu back\nat normal today after a two-day\n\u25a0purt Siturdiy md Mondiy, when\n260 licencei wen iisued, about 10\ntimet the usual Mimber.\n'KNAVI OF HIARTI\"\nCampfire wu a good one. Jerry\nJerome gave a'humoroui icribe report on oehalf of the Big Chiefs.\nThe Omahas put on a pantomime\ncalled \"The Knave of Hearts.\" Great\nChief Fred Robins led the boyi in\ntheir singing which consisted mostly\nof Negro spirituals. Soon it' wu\ntime for our Friendship Circle, and\nu the boyi strolled away to their\nbeds then wu an air of contentment\nthroughout the whole camp.\nLOWEST PRICE\nISTOI\nGrape=Nuts\nCOSTICSS THJH UM  CEN1 -.' SEKV\/N6 '\nWhy Corf\u00a9\nJams and Jellies arm madm to\nqvickly\u2014tatte to hoth and\nwholesome \u2014cott ie little\nMuch Quicker\u2014Um Work\nJim and Jelly it made io much mon quickly with\nCerto. For jun you need give only a one-minute to\ntwo-minute full rolling boil\u2014fot jelly, only a half-\nminute to a minute. Mrs. Curtis Sawyer, Prizewinner\n\u2022t Shetfaroolm Exhibition (Que.), writes: \"I fmithe\nCert* method much taller as ll sates se much lime\nmiftel.-\nMore Jam or Jelly\nIo this short boil very little juice has time to boil\nawiy. So you get up to half again more jars from the\nlime amount ot fruit. \"I find Certo gives me nearly\nagain as mmy jars ef \\am er jetty,'' writes Mri. II. L.\nJohnion. Priuwlooer at Oxford Exhibition (N.S.).\nFroth Taste\u2014Bright Colour\nIn thii very short boil, you retain all the fresh,\nnatural taste ud colour of tha fruit itself. Mis.\nP. Milligan, Prizewinner at Shannonville Fair\n(Opt), uyi: \"I get mere jam er jelly still bit\n* better flavour mi colour.\"\nSure Results\nIt you follow exactly the eaiy-to-follow tedpei\ngiven free with Certo, you ctn be sure of iplendid\nresults. VPrltei Miss L. Miller, Prittwinnar at\nVerailioc Fair (Alta.), \"I follow directions and\nban fer feci results.\"\nORDER   CERTO   FROM YOUR GROCER TODAY\nFREE BOOK Of 73 RECIPES\nCMa ** l\u00abM ef meet MU \u2022\u00bb Cart.\ntba\u2122 U a book of 72 taaaa* Mfca He\nlaaaa aad {alOaa.   Dif \u00abaM Mn .mi\ndi\u00bbat\u00ab\u00abt kaagUaf, \u00bb Cam irtaa j\u2014 1\naapacata ndpa for mHi fruit. ... fc\ntm. m Misa tut* laaiB oeecuf.\n:    \u25a0\u25a0.'',\u25a0...                   i\nl^^^^.rV       \u25a0     ...jjlij^. '     ^^\n\t\n.iW__f___m\n\u25a0\n ___\n'. c \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nHHIHi|Ji|_J\"I.JW\u00bb.ii\u00ab.Mii|\nfar Savings Sales\nIrlve Is Proving\n4osl Satisfactory'\n.elson's drive to sell War Savings\nmps and certificatei It proving\nost satisfactory\" and a aurprii-\nI number have pledged them-\nves to regular purchases of the\nmps.\nThe large number of people buy-\nI regularly, even in imall\nlountt, and those who have pledg-\nthemselvea to buy regularly are\ni ones who will count,\" laid E\nMann, Chairman' of the War\nvings Committee. He iaid defin-\ni figures on the results ol the\nive would be announced ahortly.\nI_te majority of the etamp-pur-\naaen .favored a plan whereby\nrangementi were made with e.n-\njyers to make a regular deduc-\nin from pay checks for the pur-\nate of itampa, Mr. Mann said\nOther district centres are taking\nl the promotion of War Saving\nimp and certificate sales. Kaalo\namong the latest to form a com-\nittee.\t\nTILLIE WASH FROCKS\nValues to $2.95\nDDAY frl QO\nNLY $1.30\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nPhone 1047\nHortwill's\nGROCERIES\ntht beit lervice In town.\nPHONE 235\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nSPECIALS\nWedneiday Morning\nBORN FLAKES: *)\u00a3\nJuaker, 4 for  -*\u00bbC\nMIRACLE WHIF,      AA\nHot. far Ttt\nSUCAR!\n10 Ibt. .\n75c\nSALT: 01\n7 1b. tack \u00a31C\nI pkt. Oxydol and 2   OP .\n..frC.Soap ^JC\nSOUP: Aylmer, Tomato and\nfr*....:.... 23cj\nIICNIC SHOULDERS:\net 17c\n3 Natria't Milk, and 1 Py-\ni*x Pie Plate, tf-\n59e value for .... 4\u00abJC\nSRTO:\nI bottlei\n47c\nFree Delivery    Phone 707\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.(.\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING., JULY 17. 1910.--\nBrlde and Bridesmaid\nMn. Joh_ Hodgson Edmondson, right, of Nelson, and her bridesmaid, Misa Ethel Darr ot Trait, left;\u2014Photo by McGregor.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J  VIGNEUX\ne W. F. Stewart, 509 Latimer\nStreet, announces the engagement\not hit eldest daughter, Margaret\nEllen, B. Sc, R.N., to Arthur Edward Gordon, eldest son of Mr. and\nMra. W. J. Gordon of Cranbrook.\nThe marriage will take place ln\nCranbrook shortly.\ne W. B. Bamford, Vernon Street,\nhas at guests hit ton and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrt. B. S. Bamford\nand ton BUly of Vancouver.\ne Mrt. W. Stoket of Salmo wai\na city shopper yesterday.\ne Claire Jewett, Rosemont, hat\nleft to ipend hit vacation at the\nCout\n.e Mr. and Mrs. l*e Phillips and\nbaby Barrie, who have visited Mri.\nH. M. Heath, Silica Street, returned\nto Calgary yesterday. They were\naccompanied by Miss Jessie Heath.\ne J. H. Dunn, merchant ot Ymir,\nvleited town yesterday.\n\u2022 C. E. Barber ot Slocan City\nshopped in town yeiterday.\ne Harold Long, Latimer Street,\nlett Monday to ipend hit vacation at\nthe Coatt.\ne Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Fair of\nSalmo apent yeiterday in the city.\ne S. G. Bladsworth, Hume Hotel,\nleft yeiterday morning for Victoria.\ne Mra. Hugh Greenwood of Willow Point tpent yesterday ln town.\na Mr, and Mn. Harry Heise\nand ton Donald, who ipent two\nweeki ln Nelion with Mn. Heiae'i\nparenti, Mr. and Mn. Henri Gagnon, Carbonate Street, lett yeiter\nSAFEWAY\nEFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nShredded Wheat: Pkt 10c\nCfrto: Pectin, 2 bottles 45c\nMemba Seals: 2 pkts. 17c\nJello Ice Cream Powders: 2 pkts. 17c\nQuaker Corn Flakes: 4 for 25e\nVinegar: White or   OQ Ginger Snaps: *_C-\nM.lt, 33m. bottle   LSZ 2 Ibi. LOQ\nPure Lard: O Sugar: *]C\nCartont.lb    OC 10 lbl  IJt\nTomatoei: Sun*       0*1 Goldenloaf Cheeie:   ir\nbeam, 2V_'a, 2 for . LIC y_ ft. pkt 10C\nCorn Starch: in Marmalade) QC.\nCanada: Pkt. IUC 32 os. jar Ldl\nLifebuoy SOAP, 3 Bars 15c\nWith Your Coupon\n(Coffee: Chase & Sanborn, 1 lb. tin_ 48c\nFlour: Kitchen Craft, 24 Ib. sack 79c\n(Empress Jelly Powders: 5 for 25c\nj Rite Wafers: 2 pkts  _ 27c\nLux Flakes, Oxydol, Rinso, lge. pkt..... 21 c\nWalnut Pieces: Lb 29c\nFRUITS\nLemenii OQA\nDot t*tJh\nnr: 49c\nWatermelon: C-\nWhole or half, Ib.     OC\nCucumberi: IA.\n4 for  IUC\nCarroti: IA\n3 bunehe IUC\nNew Spudi: OO\n10 Ibi. *MC\nMEATS\nTender Picnic:       10\nBacon: Sliced,       OC\nSri..!.!.... i7c\nT\": 22c\nt\u00a3-?..... 20c\nLean Beef and        1 C\nKidney: Lb IOC\n\u2022afiway rronia limited\nday for their home ln Vancouver.\ne F. Munch of Vallican wai a\ncity visitor Monday,\ne Mrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite of\nWillow Point viiited in Nelion\nyeiterday.\ne Mra. H. Aylmer Coates and\ninfant ton Jamet Barrie, who apent\na week with Mr. and Mri, J. F.\nCoates, Victoria Street, have returned to Bonnington.\ne Mr. and Mn. H. Svoboda and\nfamily ot Spokane, ex-residents of\nNelson, are viiiting Nelion and\nTrail.\ne Mn. J. J, Fingland of Trail,\nwho with her family li ipending\nthe Summer in the Ledlngham place\non the North Shore, wai a city\nshopper yeiterday.\ne C. B. Garland, Mill Street, has\nreturned from a trip to the Coaat.\ne Mr. and Mn. J. Neill, 911\nSilica Street, have ai gueiti their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMn. T. J. Huckell of Innisfail, Alta.\n\u00ab Mn. C. W. Webster of Kaalo\nwat a city shopper Monday.\ne Mr. and Mn. J. W. S. Clowes\nand children, who have been viiiting Nelion friendi have returned to\nC&lXATV *\ne william Kinahan of Trail was\na city viiitor Monday.\ne Mn. Eric Patenon of Kailo\nviiited her mother, Mrs. M. Houie,\nMill Street.\ne Miss. Grace Laughton, Edge-\nwood Avenue, hai returned from a\nmotor trip to Calgary.\ne Mr. and Mrs. B. Flynn were\nin town from Silverton yeiterday.\ne Mn. Leslie Bond and baby\nboy have left Kootenay Lake General Hotpltal for their home in Ymir.\ne Mr. end Mn. Marc Dumont of\nRosebery vitited NeUon Monday.\ne John McCallum, who wai operated on at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, il \"progressing\nfavorably.\"\ne Mr. and Mra. J. P. Hoogerwerf\nand sons Bobby and Jack, Nelson\nAvenue, Fairview, have returned\nfrom two weeka at Christina Lake.\ne Luden Perreaux ot Sheep\nCreek left yeiterday via Arrow\nLakei for Vancouver.\ne Mr.'and Mn. J. DeVito and\ndaughter of. Trail viiited Nelion.\nThey were accompanied by their\nfuest,  Miu  Eleanora Pontlrea  of\npokane.\ne At the home of her uncle, J.\nFerguson, 3744 Point Grey Road,\nVancouver, July 5, Velma Kathleen,\nyoungest daughter ot Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Greenlee! of Stranraer, Sask.\nwai united ln marriage to Cecil\nAlexander, youngeit ion of Mr.\nand Mn. W. Muirhead of Procter,\nB. C. The bride waa charmingly attired In a dresi of soft cloudy beige\nwith corsage of harmonizing shade\nand accessories to match, and was\nattended by Milt Ma Bruce. The\nfroom wai attended by Glen H.\nerguion. The ceremony wai performed by Rev. George Pringle\nof Vancouver. After a buffet supper\nthe happy couple Journeyed to Victoria for a honeymoon, after which\nthey will take up residence in Trail.\nCRESTON WILD ROSE\nLODGE ELECTS OFFICERS\nCRESTON, B. C. - Wild Rose\nLodge Knights of Pythias had the\nsemi-annual installation of officers\nat a meeting Thunday with W. J.\nCraig, deputy installing officer, in\ncharge. Officers were elected in\nMay, since when recruiting has attracted Douglas Butterfield of\nWynndel, who had been chosen vice\nchancellor, and thli office for the\nbalance of 1040 will be filled by\nW. J. Craig, a pait chancellor commander.\nOfficeri of the lodie for the present term are: C. C, William Ferguion; V. C, William J. Craig; Prelate, Percy R. Trulcott; K. of R.S.,\nJoe Romano; M.W., J. E. Scanlan.;\nM of F., M. Seneiael; M.E., Vic\nMawson; Howard Biccum; I.G., S.\nE. Nobllti.\nFRENCH SHIP. INC HUD\nTO WORK WITH DE GAULLE\nLONDON, July It (CP Cable) .-\nP. Demalglalve; Managing Director\not the French Line In London, has\nbecome associated with Gen. Charles\nde Gaulle, head of the French National Committee, and will take\ncharge ot all French mercantile shipping ln Britain, lt waa disclosed today.\nHe will work ln cooperation with\nthe British Mlniitry of Shipping.\nAlterations and\nRepairs Schools\nAre Going Ahead\nPainting and kalsomlnlng of teveral roomi and hallways at the\nNelion Junior High and Central\nSchools it under way. Repain at\nother schools will itart shortly.\nRepairs to ichools have been\ncurtailed to necessltiei thia year to\nconserve funds, stated R. B. (Jack)\nMorris. Chairman.\nAt the High School a partition\nbetween the science and chemistry\nlaboratoriea will be taken out to\nmake one big room. Metal tank!\nand sink!, water taps, cupboaras,\nihelvei and so on will all be rearranged more efficiently.\nA cement \"wash\" will be put on\nthe floors of the boys' and girls'\nbasements at the Central School to\nsmooth them otf. In recent years\nthe floors have become chipped and\nroughened.\nPanic bolts will be Installed on\nall doors at the Central School. At\npresent it Is the only school in the\ncity lacking them.\nA number of desks will be sanded\nand repolished to give them a\nsmooth writing surface. Some are\ndone each year.\nA number of other minor alterations and repairs are being made at\nthe schools. .\nHAY-FEVER DAYS\nON WAY AGAIN\nOTTAWA (CP).\u2014Hay-fever days\nare on their way again, and Agriculture Department scientists warn\nsufferers to be on the lookout for\nragweed, a coarse, branching plant\nwhich, along with related species,\ncauses 70 per cent of the sniffles\nmalady.\nFifth column of the plant world,\nthe ragweed lurks inconspicuously\nin vacant lots and friends and annually sends out its hordes of light\npollen. Carried by the wind like\nparachute troops, these are inhaled\nby human beings and their proteins\ncause disturbances in the human\nsystem.\nOther weedi that cause the ailment are the lamb's quarters, pigweed, cocklebur, hemp and English\nplantain.\n\"Goat\" In the hay fever situation\nIs the goldenrod. The tall weed with\nthe golden yellow flowers ls in its\ngreatest profusion in the hay-fever\nseason and thus gets most of thc\nblame. Actually it has little to do\nwith it say the scientists.\nTrees, too, cause hay-fever, but\nthey bring It on in Spring, when\nthey shed pollen profusely. Common\noffenders are the maple, elm, poplar,\nwillow, oak, ask, birch and butternut\nQueens Boy Alien in\nJail\/ Charge Having\nGun Without Permit\nPleading guilty to a charge of\nbeing an alien in possession of a\nfirearm without having 1 permit,\nAlbert Merz of Queens Bay was\nsentenced to 30 days in the Provincial Jail at Nelson when he appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate\nJohn Cartmel.\nThe sentence Is to run concurrently with another sentence of 30 days\nimposed on him earlier on a charge\nof assaulting his wife.\nB. C. Fall Session\nIs Being Prepared\nVICTORIA, July 16 (CP). -\nPreparations for the Fall session of\nBritish Columbia's legislature are\nalready under way in Government\ncircles.\nPremier Pattullo indicated today\nInstructions have gone out that the\nannual estimates be drawn up well\nln advance so that the Government can know its requirements by\nthe time the House meets.\nThe Premier 'indicated that consideration is now being given to\nvarious special measures of legislation that may be needed to adjust\ncivilian life to the war economy.\nAmong these proposals is a moratorium on mortgages and land sale\nagreements contracted for by memben ot the armed services. Adjustments may be required In a number of Provincial laws to reduce\nhardship imposed by wartime conditions and these will be given\nclose perusal.\nKhadikin Pays Court\nCosts for Assault\nNick Khadikin of Taghum was ordered to pay court costs of $10.10\nwhen he was found guilty by Stipendiary Magistrate John CarUnel\nTuesday on a charge of common\nassault. The charge was laid by\nMrs. Rosa Srczerba of Sproule\nCreek, who said Khadikin assaulted\nher July 8. Khadikin pleaded not\nguilty, denying any of the charge,\nbut he was convioted on Mrs.\nSzczerba's evidence.\nConstable G. A, Brabazon prosecuted.\nBritain Sends Gold\nShipment to U. S.\nWASHINGTON, July 16 (AP)-A\nlarge shipment from Britain boosted gold imports to $154,212,780 in\nthe week ended July 10, the United\nStates Commerce Department said\ntoday. The week'i gold cargoes included $119,165,938 from,Bntain.\nOther shipment! last week Included $24,457,683 from Canada,\nSilver imports slumped in the\nweek to $667,600, Including $135,782\nfrom Canada.\nFRENCH TO FOLLOW NAZIS\nIN TRAINING YOUTH\nVICHY, July 16 (.W.-The Fascist France of Manhall Petain will\ntrain Its youth from Infancy along\nthe lines used ln Nazi Germany,\nJean Ybarnegary, Minister ot Family and Health, announced today.\n\"If the Germani defeated us on\nthe battlefield, it was due to their\npractical, rational education ot\nyouth,\" he said.\nSUGGEST PRINCETON AS\nNEW LEAGUE HOME\nPRINCETON, N.J., July 16 (CP).\n\u2014Three Princeton institution! feeling the League of Nations' scientific\nprogram has been curtailed by the\nwar, have invited the League lo\ntransfer the work ot three of Its\nnon-political departments from Geneva tp Princeton.  .\nCBC Mobile Unit\nThis Is one of the two Mobile Units used by the Special Events\nDepartment of the Canadian Broadcasting \u2022 Corporation. It was\nspecially designed by CBC engineers to provide facilities for broadcasting from places where it would not ordinarily be possible\u2014sports\nevents, ceremonials, news happenings, and any number of things in\nwhich listeners are interested. Shown standing beside the trailer are\nT. O. Wlkluod, ot the CBC Special Events Department, C. W. Speer,\nand Marcel Henry, engineers.\nJunior Red Cross\nAuxiliary Drive\nLifts Membership\nA membership drive launched by\nthe Junior Auxiliary to the Nelsun\nRed Cross Society has boosted the\nmembership to 12. A considerable\nincrease in membership is expeoted\nin the Fall, when the younger folk\nreturn from holidays.\nActivities designed to stimulate\nyoung peoples' interest in the Auxiliary's work, as well as to the Red\nCross, are planned. First of the=e\nwill be an outdoor dance to be\nstaged shortly.\n,32 Inch of Rain\nClears Smoke From\nAir; Mercury at 83\nRain that fell in showers, totalling .32 inch from 10 o'clock Monday night to 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, cleared the atmosphere of\nsmoke to a large extent and made\na break in the prolonged district\nheat wave. Before the rain began\nto fall Tuesday morning, clouds ol\nsmoke from district forest fires\nblended with clouds and filled the\nWest Arm valley.\nDuring the morning when the sun\nshone for a time, the mercury went\nup to 83 degrees, only three points\nunder Monday's >peak. The day's\nminimum was 68 degrees, compared\nto Monday's 55 degrees.\nThe rain was ths first to fall In\nNelson since last Friday when .03\ninch fell. Before that In July tn .re\nwas .07 inch on the 5th, and .04\ninch on the 6th.\nA short storm with thunder,\nlightning and a strong wind, which\nit was feared would whip up district fires, preceded the afternoon's\nrain.\nCharges Anti-Nazis\nAboard Fatal Ship\nLONDON, July 16 (CP Cable). -\nCharges that anti-Nazi and anto-\nFascist refugees were put on board\nthe liner Aranlora Star with Nazis\nand Fascist were made in the House\not Commons today. The ship was\ntorpedoed by a German submarine\nJuly 3 while on its way to Canada\nwith ihe internees, with a loss of\n968 lives.\nAnthony Eden, War Minister, said\nhis department understood that the\nliner carried only category \"A\"\naliens and did not include any relugees.\nGeorge Strauss, Labor, asked Mr.\nEden if he was aware that \"some\nmen who had been sentenced to\nterms of imprisonment by the Nazis\nand had been beaten by the Nazis\nand had been accepted in this country by the Czech Refugee Committee\" were on board.\nMr. Eden said that War Office\nwould make further inquiries into\nthe matter.\n25 R.C.N. Officers\nArrive in England\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP).-Arrival\nin England for training in Royal\nNavy establishments of two more\ndrafts of 25 officers from the Royal\nCanadian Naval Volunteer Reserve,\nwas announced today at naval service headquarters here. Other drafts\nalready selected will proceed overseas in the near future.\nCommander Eustace A. Brock of\nNaval Service hcadouarters is thc\nliaison officer with the British Admiralty assisting the Royal Navy\nauthorities to administer these officers In accordance with R.C.N.V.R.\nregulations.\nOfficers from Western Canada o(\nthe first of the two drafts mentioned to arrive in England include\nSub-Lt. G. M. Greenwood, Duncan. B.C.; Sub-Lt. P. Bradford, Victoria.\nFollowing are in the second draft:\nSub-Lt. J. D. Maitland and Sub-\nLt. F. H. Leigh-Spencer. Vancouver.\nSpecial Courts to\nHave Death Powers\nLONDON, July 16 (CP). \u2014 Special war zone courts proposed under the Emergency Powers Act\nwould have power to impose the\ndeath penalty for looting or for\nforcing way past a military sentry\nHome Secretary Sir John Anderson\ntold the House ol Commons today.\nThere would be no juries and no\nappeal from the decision of these\ncourts.\nThe courts are authorized under\nthe Special Powers Act introduced\nJuly 10. Sir John said the reason\nwas to provide, a simpler, faster procedure than the normal 'processes\nof justice, he said the government\nhad no intention of using the courts\nUntil a critical situation arose and\nthat this might never come.\nNANAIMO THEATRES\nRAISE $1500 IN STAMP\nOUT HITLER SHOW\nNANAIMO, B.C., July 16 (CP).-\nNearly four times Nanalmo's allotment ot $400 was raised at the\n\"Stamp Out Hitler\" show hero last\nnight, according to Mel Gow. local\n\u2022theatre manager, who reported $1500\nwas taken.\nMany were turned away trom the\ntheatre which was packed soon after\ndoors opened.\nYonal Cabinet\nResigns, Japan\nTOKYO, July 16 (AP) .-Premier\nMitsumasa Yonai handed his cabinet's resignation to Emperor Hiro-\nhito tonight, apparently under army\npressure for stronger enforcement\nof Japan's \"new order in East Asia\"\npolicy.\nMost Japanese newspapers expected that former Premier Fumimaro\nKonoye would be asked to form a\nnew cabinet.\nEither he or War Minister Shun-\nroku Mata, whose resignation hastened the end of the six-months old\nYonai' cabinet, presumably would\npoint a new government toward\nconsolidation of Japan's \u00a7ains in the\nOrient and take a strong stand\negainst the Western powers in-the\nEast.\n\"Army circles,\" commented Domei,, Japanese News Agency, \"have\ncome to the conclusion that it is the\nurgent task of Japan to establish\nthe so-called new national political\nstructure which forms the only way\nfor Japan, in view of ttie stress of\nthe home and foreign situation, to\ncarry out rearmament effectively,\ntighten state control of economy\nand renovate foreign policy with\nconstruction of a new order in East\nAsia as the ultimate object\nThe decision of Yonai to submit\nthe resignation of his government\nfollowed the individual resignation\nof Gen. Hata.\nThe chief secretary of the cabinet\nexplained merely, \"The War Minister having tendered his resignation,\nPremier Yonai decided to resign and\ntender the resignations of his cabinet members to the throne.\"\nAttention centred on Yonal and\nhis Foreign Minister, Hachiro Arita,\nffhile   political'leaders   conferred\nIf either is retained, observers be-\nover formation of a new. cabinet\nlleve, it can be taken as a sign that\nJapan has no intention of making\nany formal alliance with Italy and\nGermany, since there two men were\nlargely responsible for thwarting\nmoves toward a military pact with\nthe axis powers last year.\nNew Curtains for\nCreston Hospital\nCRESTON. B. C.-Creston Hospital had a light month's business\nin June, according to reports submitted the directors at the session\nFriday, with President Donald K.\nArchibald in charge. Frank V.\nStaples, who has recently bc;n\nnamed Government representative\n, on the executive was present.\nThe House Committee reported\ncompletion of Installation of curtains in the public wards, the material for which has been donated by\nCreston Hospital Women's Auxiliary. During the past month the\nhospital laundry building and shed,\nas well as the fire escape, have\nbeen painted.\nThe report of Miss M. Dixon, matron, showed only 247 patient days.\nThere had been seven births at the\nhospital, and one death.\nPatient days for the first six\nmonths of 1940 total 2202. This is a\nfalling off of 130 days as compared\nwith the initial six months ol 1939,\nwhen the total was 2332.\nMAN DROWNED AS FIRE\nBREAKS ON SCHOONER\nGRAND MARAIS. Man., July 16\n'CP)\u2014One man was drowned and\nfour others were rescued when a\nlushing schooner burst into flames\nafter an explosion about half a\nmile off shore here last night. Gran.\nMarais is on Lake Winnipeg, about\n55 miles North of Winnipeg.\nEdgar Anderson. 30, of Balsam\nBay, Man., was drowned. Four\nGrand Marais residents rescued are\nCalvin Webb, Benson Orbis, Alex\nSinclair and Johnny Solster.\n?..... f.?_3B_____\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Baker St.\nWhen Sutherland repairs your\nwatch, it's on time, all the time\nirTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTI\nASK FOR\n4X Hot Dog and\nHamburger Buns\nFOR YOUR PICNIC\nmiimiiiuiiininin\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Daker St.\nPhone 860\nSUPER SILK HOSE: Crepe and\nChiffon\n89c ,\u201e\u00ab, $1.15\nFashion First Shop\n136 Baker St Nelson, B. C.\nRegistration of\nAliens Is Going\nSatisfactorily\nRegistration ot German and Italian persona who have become British subjects by naturalization ainco\nSeptember 1, 1929, ia progressing\nsatisfactorily in the West Kootenay, stated Inspector John Mac-\nodnald, Registrar ot Aliens for West\nKootenay, Tuesday. GoOd cooperation is being enjoyed by the Provincial Police in the registrations,\nwhich are being made at the Police\nDivisional Headquarters office for\nthe Nelson district. Constable R. B.\nMcKay of Trail is Registrar lor\nTrail-Rossland district.\nA notice sent out by S. T. Wood,\nRegistrar-General of Enemy Aliens,\nfollows: ' '\n\"All persons over the aga of 16\nyears, coming within the. category\nescribed hereunder are. by virtue ot\nRegulations 24, 25, 28 (a) and (b) of\nthe Defence ot Canada Regulations,\nrequired to report for registration\nat the office of the Registrar of\nEnemy Aliens nearest to which they\nreside, accompanied, where necessary, by an interpreter. That is to\nsay:\n\"(1) All Aliens ot German or\nItalian nationality or racial origin.\n\"(2) All Aliens born in territories\nwhich were under the sovereignty\nor control of the German Reich on\nSeptember 3, 1930.\n\"(3) All Aliens born ln territories which were under the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Italy on\nJune 10, 1940.\n\"(4) All persons of German or\nItalian racial origin who have become British subjects by naturalization since the first day of September,\n1929.\"\nMai rm\nWool 15c ox.\nYour opportunity to purchase\nquality wool at a saving. Patonj\ntweed, effect fancy wool. Good\ntor sweaters, and 1 Ejj\nsuits. Oz   **\u00bbfi\nScotch doon fingering In fancy\nheather mixture. Airforce blue\nand khaki. A guaranteed 1 P\nquality. Or   -<-'-'\nj) ^rmanThm |$)\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nRefugee Committee to\nDecide on Future, Now\nEvacuation Suspended\nWith the temporary r;ispension ol\nplans for the evacuation of children\nfrom Great Britain, the Nelson and\nDistrict Refugee Committee will\nhold an executive meeting this\nweek to define the organization's\npolicy and whether it will continue\nor suspend its work. Information\nfrom Vancouver is awaited before\nholding the meeting.\nThe Committee was organized lo\narrange the reception of children\nand other details ot this District's\npart in the plan.\nCreston Institute\nSews for Red Cross\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014Creston and\nDistrict Women's Institute met at\nthe home of Mrs. C. F. Hayes, who,\nas Vice-President, was in charge of\nthe meeting in the absence of the\nPresident, Mrs. Charles Murrell,\nwho is visiting at Vancouver.\nThe attendance was small, and\ninstead of a demonstration or guest\nspeaker and committee reports the\nladies busied themselves with the\nhemming ot a supply of handkerchiefs for the local Red Cross.\nThere was a letter from Mrs. A. R.\nWebb, a former resident of Camp\nLister, now in Vancouver, urging\nthat the lead of a group of ladies\nin that city be well served in the\nway ol organizing a circle or circles\nol workers to do sewing on articles\nof clothing for evacuee children.\nThe idea was approved but further\ninformation will be sought.\nWith prospect of a B. C. Women's\nInstitute convention at Vancouver\nnext month the meeting named Mrs.\nR. Hopwood as delegate from the\nCreston organization.\nThe treasurer announced that'\n$22.50 was realized at the afternoon\ntea and sale of cooking at the home\nof Mrs. Hayes late in June.\nServing lunch the hostess was\nassisted by Mrs. James Compton,\nMrs. J. G. Connell and Mrs. A. B.\nNess.\nWOULD BAN FOREIGNERS\nFROM VOTERS' LIST\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP) -\nVancouver's City Council moved\nyesterday to ban all foreigners from\ncivic voters' lists, when it author-\nided Alderman John Bennett lo\npresent the matter before the Executive of the Union of British Co.\nlumbia Municipalities meeting here\nFriday.\nAlderman Bennett said the resolution to be presented the Union\nfor approval would ask that where\nregistration of property is made,\nregistration of nationality be required.\nEXPECT SALES TAX\nIN NEW WAR BUDGET\nLONDON, July 16 (CP)--Clement\nAttlee, Deputy Leader of the House\nof Commons, announced today that\na special war budget will be introduced next Tuesday. It is expected\nto include a sales tax.\nLocal Egg Prices\nGo Up Two Cents\nEffective Tuesday, the wholesale\nprices of eggs in Nelson advanced\ntwo cents a dozen\u2014from 23 to 25\ncents for Grade A Medium and\nfrom 25 to 27 cents for Grade A\nLarge. Producers' prices will go\nup two cents today.\nDespite these advance!, prices\nwill still be three cents per dozen\nunder what they were last year\nat this time, producers and wholesalers stated.\nA Nelson wholesaler said that\nthe wholesale price advance had\nbeen based on Coast and Edmonton prices, where much of Nelson's\nsupplies were being obtained at\nthis time.\nSeasonal reduction in supplies i\u00bb\nresponsible for the advances.\nJapanese Move\nto Close Ningpo\nSHANGHAI, July 16 (AP).\u2014War.\nships, aircraft and marines hava\ngone into action, the Japanese Navy\nannounced today, to close Hang-\nchow and the important treaty Port\nof Ningpo. through the Chiang Kai-\nShek government has been maintaining trade relations with the outside world.\nAction has not been taken against\nNingpo previously, it was explained,\nbecause, while the port served tha\nChinese, it also provided a valuabl*\noutlet for Japanese merchandise.\nThe Hangchow Bay area is about\n100 miles Southwest of Shanghai. It\nis one of the places listed in a Japanese proclamation yesterday bar- .\nring the coasts of Chekian and Fukien provinces to all ship traffic.\nTha\nButcherteria\nBetter Meats for Less\nPHONE 527  FREE DELIVERY\nAT ITS BEST\nRaw and Pasteurized\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nPHONE 110\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home of Better Fooda\nQUALITY  GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Delivery\nWednesday Morning Speical\nVEAL STEAKS: QC .\n2 lbs. \u00abWC\nBRADLEY'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONE 831    S32\nNEW STRIPED\nSILK DRESSES\n14 to 44. Special\u2014$3.95\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n149 Baker St Phone 874\n'MODERN\nPHONE 1009 Diiirmr\nORANGES:3dox  39*\nRASPBERRIES: 3 boxes   22*\nBANANAS: 3 lbs  26*\nCREEN BEANS: 3 lbs.  28*\nCUCUMBERS: Urge, 3 for       10*\nPurexTissue: Limit 3 3 rolls 19c\nLard: Limit 2 lbs  ____ 2 lbs. 15c\nROSY MORN COFFEE: Lb. tin  39*\nCHATEAU CHEESE: Lb 29*\nTOMATO JUICE: 14% ox.. 2 tins      15*\nQUALITY MEATS\nSHOULDER VEAL STEAK: 2 lbs  35*\nBEEF SAUSACE: 2 lbs  25*\nPORK SAUSAGE: 2 lbs 35*\nWEINERS: Lb      24*\nROUND, T-BONE and SIRLOIN STEAK: Lb 25*\nMINCED BEEF: 2 lbs  25*\n.____\n \u25a0V~*~ti~faa^\n\u25a0\n*******************e\n!\u00abff^I|lipiti|PUp| ll UJ\n\u00bbAOI |IX\n,\nEstablished April 21, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Mott Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\nJ66  Baiter  Street,  Nelion   BrltUh  Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THI CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE  AUDIT  BUREAU   OF  CIRCULATIONS.\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 17,1940.\nINDIA A SUPPLY HOUSE FOR THE WAR\n\"\u25a0'. This war is vastly different from any of ita pre-\ndecessors in technique, including the Great War, but apparently the worthy sandbag has not been outmoded. India is\nstated to be nearing completion of orderi for a billion\nsandbags for Britain, and Canadian troops in Britain presumably find facility with pick and shovel and t*in*i-\none pick to two shovels in trench digging,' two shovels to\none bag holder in filling sandbags\u2014as useful ai ever.\nJute, the raw material of sandbags, the jute manufactures head the list of India's exports at the preient time,\nand even in peace time they constitute a quarter of that\ncountry's exports. In the Great War India supplied jute, and\njute sacks and cloth, valuccTB. \u00a3137,000,000, to the Allies.\nIndia practically produces the world's jute, and Kootenay\nwar veterans will remember the German sandbags, made\nof finely twisted paper cord, which was Germany's substitute for the jute article.\nOther leading raw materials being exported by India\nare cotton, wool, hides and skins, coir or cocoanut fibre,\nhemp, lac or dye-resin, and timber and other forest products.\nIndia is one of the world's greatest producers and exporters of the oil seeds, mostly groundnuts and linseed,\nirom which oils and fats for essential war purposes are\nextracted. Approximately a million tons of groundnuts are\nexported annually. Another great raw material that India\nprovides is rubber\u201418,000,000 pounds she exported in the\nlast peace year, when restriction still applied. A million\ntons of manganese headed her mineral exports. India ls\nalso one of the great wheat producing countries.\nWith agriculture, lumbering and raining gear\u00abd up to\nwar-time demands, India will exceed all records for supplying raw materials needed for the Empire's part in the\nwar-\nA tremendous expansion of industry that has taken\nplace in recent years is being accentuated, and special industries are coming into being, to further India's production of manufactured goods. It is stated that the Indian\nGovernment is giving assurances that post-war tariffs will\nbe adjusted so as to give promise of continuance to the\nipecial industries how arising.\nIt is stated that within the first six months of the\ncurrent war, the Supply Department dealt with orders\ntwo-and-a-half times greater in value than were placed\n\u2022 with India during the first year of. the Great War.\nWhile India is making military and other service contributions to the war against Nazi Germany, its economic\ncontribution will be its outstanding one, for industry and\ncommerce are the fields in which it can give distinguished\nhelp.\nHer geographical position, having regard to strategic\nconsiderations, makes it clear hjr most important function\nis to act as a supply centre for all the countries bordering\non the Indian Ocean and adjacent sea, from Egypt to the\nMalay Archipelago. So far as lies in her power, India is\nsupplying raw materials and manufactured articles alike,\nwherever they are needed, throughout the Red Sea littorals,\nthe Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean, Indo-China, and\nelsewhere, and is thus setting free Britain's resources,\nspecially shipping, for use in other important and indeed\nvital directions.\n\\ PLEASING VISITOR\nDarting by on airy pinion over the Water, at times\nbeading downward to display a forked tail that seems to\nmd in needlepoints, and performing evolutions over the\nsurface, is _ streamlined white bird, that is the very pinnacle of airy grace. The distinguished visitor, which\nsnatches its food from the shallows in the vicinity of the\nold C.P.R, freight trestle, and at times drops its catch, only\nto retrieve it before it has fallen two feet, is a tern.\nIts generally white body, with pearl-grey wings,\nforked tail, black-tipped red bill, long black cap, and red\nlegs, would'suit any of four species of Canadian tern, which\ndiffer mainly in the depth of the tail forking. No one is\nlikely to get a yardstick on this beautiful creature, to discover whether it is the 21-Inch Caspian tern, or is in the\n15-inch class where the Common, Forster's and Arctic belong, or to discover whether its tail shading is on the outer\nor inner webs of the feathers. At a casual view as it dives,\nseems to have the shallow forking of the Caspian, but it\nhardly seems to measure up in size to that species. The Common tern and Forster's are the species given by Taverner as\nmore likely to be met with away from the sea coasts.\nDid this graceful \"sea swallow\"\u2014all the terns are sea\nswallows\u2014accompany the gulls back from wherever they\nspent the breeding season? Or did it, like the white swan\nseen in the Spring here for two days\u2014drop off here for a\nstop-over while on migration?\nYes, the first gulls are back, the adult Herring Gulls,\nwith white bodies, grey mantles, black-tipped wings, and\nyellow bills. For nearly two months Kootenay Lake and the\nWest Arm were nearly gull-less, the only ones to be seen,\nand those at rare intervals, being the creamy or brownish\nimmatures of the 1939 hatch. In a recent number of Game\nTrails of Canada, Migratory Bird Officer Munro mentions\na rocky island in Cariboo Lake as the only Herring Gull\nnesting site known in British Columbia, his theory, apparently, being that the Herring Gulls go to the Prairie to\nnest. At a Rod and Gun Club lecture in Nelson some years\nago, Mr. Munro was told by Dr. H. B. Morriion that he\nhad encountered a gull sitting on eggs, in the Kootenay,\nbut apparently the worthy official did not accept that as an\nexpert observation.\nWherever the Herring Gulls of this district do their\nbrooding, soon their black offspring will be showing up,\nNELSON DAILY NIWI NILION. _,C.-WIONIIOAY MORNtNft JULY 17. 1W.~-\nWEDNE5DAY JULY 17, 1940.\nCKLN AND.\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:00-0 Canada\n7:0J-Toist - CoHee Club\n8:0O-BBC Newi\n8:30\u2014Joyce Trio\n8:45-The Niwi\n0:00-Tln Pin Alley Goei to Town\n.:J_-Jlilnbow trio (CXLN)\n.:WV-Addrisi  by  the  Governor.\nGeneral ot Canada\n10:00-Our Halt Hour\n10.30-Fivorite WalUai\n10.tt-The Newi\n11:00\u2014The Cornhuikera (CULM)\n11:15\u2014Operatic Gems (CKLN)\nll:30-Concert Hall\n12:0O-Club Matinee\nAFTIRNOON\nl-.tt-OypiT Strings (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The Newi\nlUS-Talk\n1:30\u2014Cloiing Stocki\n1.45-BBC News\n2:15\u2014NBC Concert Orcheitra\n2:30\u2014Mirror For Women\n2:45\u2014Organ  Recltil\u2014Joy  Redden\n3:0C\u2014Muslc You Like to Hear\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\n3:tt-T\u00bbIk\n3:57-Newi BulleUn\n4:00\u2014To Be Announced\n4:W-Tp Be Announced\n5:00\u2014The Queition Box\n5:30\u2014Serenade tor Strings\nIVININC\nSrtP-iAchlevementi of Simmuel\nCunard\n\u00ab;SO-Thi Waa In Parliament\naltie PandUe (CXLN)\nil Newi\nlnnl._eg.Sumn.er Symphony\nr-WlnnlpegSummer\n'-Newijulletlp    .\n\u25ba-BBC Newi Baal\nHAtcerdlai ft yioii\nccordiin ft Violin (CKLN)\n'     Ensemble (CKLN)\nMusic (CKLN)\nat\nary Nottingham'! Orch.\newi   Roundup   and  Ti\n.wi11\nRoundup\nSave tha.King\nalki\nCJAT-TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00-Church In tha Wlldwood\n7:15-Breakfait Club\n8:30-On the Mill\n11:30-On with tha dance     '\nAFTERNOON\n12:45-Dance Orch.\n.:3C\u2014Home Folks Frolic\n4HX>-T_eetre Newa\n4:U\u2014Dance Muiic\n4:\u00bb-Milody Time\nEVENINC\n8:15\u2014Happiness Revue\nl.:0O-Slgn Otf\nOther. Periods\u2014CBC Prognmmai.\nCONTRACT...\nSMARTNESS GONE AWM\nPLAIN itupldlty la nowhere\nHear aa coiUy u mladlreoted\namartnew, which generally goei\nund.r the UUe ot \"emert Aleek-\naaaa.\" Onee tn a while wa enooun-\ntar a plafsr who 11ralni every effort to perpetrate -right Naming\nplayi and bldi, copying what ba\nhai leen iomi Sne player do, but\nwithout realising that ba la doing\nIt at tha WTong time or tn the\nwmg way. Uiually thoie efforti\nprove a boomerang that cruihie\nthe thrower.\n\u2666 Q10B\nVA.q.4\n\u2666\"\ni 10784\ne)AI        j-g-t   4KIT4J\n\u2666 qio\u00bb\u00abK    -A \u2666 \u00ab\u00bb\n4JII\n*JM\n4AM\n\u2666 AKJ\u00bb\n.Dealer: South. Neither _Me\nvulnerable.)\nSouth     Weit    North        Beat\nli       i\u00ab      lv        Paaa\nINT       Pan      3NT\nEait \"played imirf even dur-\nilng tha bidding by paulng when\nhe ahould h&vi bid l-Spade. reek-\n|onlng that ba might thus trap tha\nopponent! Into a contract they\ncouldn't make, and ba itayed\n\u2022 .mart\" by not doubling tba oee-\ntricL\nSouth wm a rtally keen player,\n|Lee Hazen, runner-up la tha laat\n{national Individual maatera' championihip and Just u good a rubber player. He aaw that tha de-\nBy Shepard Barclay\n\/ fenden could Ht Wm. They aettM\nIlly could get Ave trlcka In dia-'\nmondi, two in ipadaa and ona In\nhearta. But ba hoped ter tht beat,\nincluding help from laat, aadl\ngot It.\nHe let two diamond trlcka go Hy;\nand teak third, aa which Eae.\ndlicardid tba heart 3. Than bl'\nled a heart, played the Q end, Ju*t\nas But waa about to main tba,\n\"bright\" play of the 8, blanking'\nhli K, Wut reached for the trick,,\nexpecting the K to be played. Seeing thli, Mr. Huen then laid down\ntha heart A, dropping tba K. On\nthe club 10 then Eait falae-earted\ntha I. Mr. Baaaa read that as ai\nfalie-card and abandoned Ua plan;\nto flneue. Hli K, followed by tha\nA, dropped the Q. The haait J.\nclub J, club 3 to tha 7 Ind heart T\nproduced Ua ninth trick, and he\ngave up two ipadaa at tha aad\n\u2666 QJS\n\u00bbA 1054\n\u2666 Q\n\u2666 QJ1074\n4II>    I  M\n\u2022 Ml     5f     tt)\n\u2666 AK73   * m\n*K|l      L_Jl_J\n\u2666 Aioa\nVJTS\n:JMM\nlit\n4KIT4\n\u2022_.\u00ab\u2022\n41III\n\u2666 Al\ntVtamf*. tttt Neither e)de vtf.\nnerible.)\nIf South (ata Into i-Spadea ca\nthii deal, Wait takei hlidlamond\nK, lndi aipide to the A and a\niecond apada la returned, can declarer make Ma contrast agalnit\nperfect defanaa tha reft of the\nwayf\nSWrtbutad by Bag Itotune toaOeate, ___\nLOOKING BACKWARD..\nTIN YEARS AOO\nFrom Daily Newa ot July 17, 1930\nIn a $30,000 fire attributed to\nfknatlcal Doukhobon, tba community mill at Crestova burned to\ntha ground\u2014Rossland ratepayers\nyeiterdiy voted ln favor ot a $13,-\n000 waterworki authorization and\ndebenture bylaw to make extensions and repairs to the waterworki iyites_.-Trlnlty and 8L\nPaul's United Churohei held a Joint\nbaiket picnic it Procter.\u2014Mrs. C.\nWolfram wei Initalled u Noble\nGrand and Mn. A. Scott Vice\nGrand Forka Rebekahs.\nTWINTY-FIVI YIARI AOO\nFrom Dally Newi of July 17, IMS\nBorn to Mr. and Mri- John Berg\nit Rowland a son.\u2014Ciplaln Gilbert\nAndenon, commander of \"A\" com-\npeny ot the Mth Battalion, ll at Ottawa talcing a coune ln gunnery.-\nJ. D. McDonald wu elected Chairman of the finance committee and\nSam Potter Chairman at the relief\ncommittee ot the Rouland Patriotic\nFund Society.\u2014Noble Blnna wu\nelected Preiident for the fifth in.\nnull Trail Fair, with G. R. Thompson Vlce-Preildent and F. W.\nBrown Secretary and General Man-\nagar.\nRemoving Pot\nBound Plants\nBy DIAN HALLIOAY\nPolnteri about notted olanto\nDo not iet houie planti out of\ndoon In a pot-bound condition. Do\nnot ahlft a root-bound plant from\na amall container to one that is\nconsldenbly larger. One size larger\nli the general rule,\nAa shown In tha Garden-Graph,\nwhen you find tha roots of \u25a0 plant\nhave worked thalr way through the\nbottom hole of the pot be lureto\nrepot tht plant Immedjetely. The\nrooti ihould not be cut off or broken when removing tha plant trom\nthe pot Scmetimea It la necessary\nto break the pot (providing lt ii\nin inexpensive one) to prevent\ntearing the roots ln an effort to pun\nthem hack through the hole in the\nbottom ot the container through\nwhich they hava escaped.\nAUNT HIT\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It drives ma  frantic  whin\nmismanages   thlngi-   Sometime!   .\nwith I'd naan born a man or flat\nborn a tool so 1 wouldn't csr*\"\ncheckered black plumage and dark legs and bills, identifiable by thi company thty keep.\nAlthough the term, unlike the gulls, which ire with ui\nall Winter, hie to the Antarctic for the.Winter monthi, they\nare supposed to breed wherever found in Summer. It ii to\nbe hoped that nothing untoward happens to any of these\ngraceful creatures that may visit this lake, for they would\nadd to the attractiveness of our Kootenay picture,\n^^W      y^tmy^mj^\n\"We're raff Un' this billet-five francs a ticket \"-Humorist.\n\"I\"'\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u2022\u00bb *^\u2014\u2014e**--*--**\u2014m*1*A-\u2014mmmm-     '   \u00bbu.'ilMWaiaMi'\u00bbWw| um   \u25a0\n*%\nHUMAN SIDE\n| - OFTHE     J\nVnews\/\nBY   EDWIN C.HILL \u00ab\nft\u00bb>\/\u00bbh. iw, \u00bbr email hm brf> i\nmi i.i      \u25a0 ,       H i ww\nGermans Won't Be First to Try Invasion of\nEngland but Only Army That Landed\nWas Repulsed.by Women\nPART OF HITLER'S \"MOSQUITO\" FLEET\nOnce again \u2022 fleet bent on Invasion ia being assembled at the\nFrench cout Channel porti now\noccupied by the Germani. For Hitler U putting together i \"mosquito\nfleet\"\u2014hundred! and hundred! of\nsmill vessels, motor boats, yachti,\nfishing triwlers, anything and everything which can carry soldiers\n\u2014and preparing tor the day when\nha can launch them across the\nChannel at Dover and Folkestone.\nOver ttfem, tha Germani declare,\nwill roar not hundred, but thouiandi Ot bomben prepared to blast\n(British navy out of existence,\nand German fighting planei, prepared to protect the Germin bombert agalnit tha Royal Air Force\nfighters. We have gone far enough\nalong with thli war to comprehend\nthat meat of tbe old conceptions\nhive gone by tha board. Mechanized artillery and troop transports\nand huge bombers have changed\nthe rulei. Perhaps In a few weeka\nwe shall iee If Hitler can tucceed\nin what Napoleon dared not tackle.\nOnly the complete rout and ruin\not the French fleet at Trafalgar\nlaved England from Invulon 135\nyean ago. But u a suggestion of\nwhat might have occurred tf the\nEmperor nad been able to land his\nveteran legions under the protection\nof VlUeneuve'i fleet, we can go back\nto i comic opera Invulon of England which actually did take place\nin 1717, concerning which history li\noddly uncommunicative.\nWomen laved England ln that\nlong-ago, u Indeed they might do\nagain. On the 22nd of February in\nthat year, IW, an Irish-American\nidventurer named Colonel Tate,\ncommanding a torce ot a few hundred mixed rapscallions, along with\n1500 French soldiers, lent to him by,\nI think, the French General Hook,\nactually made a landing in Cardigan\nBay, walei. They met with pric-\nticilly no opposition, even though\nthey had to scale a high and difficult dltt and haul their guns up\n\u2022nd over it\nTheir reception by the natives\nwu even cordial, although there\nwu a flurry ot astonishment when\nthe French flag wu broken out.\nThe Fishguard Fenciblei were mut\ntered out\u2014can't you iee HI A gal\nlant ipectacle that muit have been!\n\u2014but there wu little need to call\nupon their gallantry. The invaders\nhad made themselves sick from\neating too much half-cooked mutton and drinking too much port\nwine out of a wrecked ship on the\ncout\nThere ii a atory that the lnvaderi\nwere frightened by \u2022 distant view\not the stalwart women of that region ot Cardigan, Walu, wearing\nred cloaks, ana took to their French\nheeli. At my rate, they were euy\nvictims when the Britlih loldlery, i\nlittle Ute-but not too late with too\nlittle-came on the field and met\nthem. According ot the esteemed\nNew York Sun.lt you go to Brett-\ngarn todiy ind hind over alxpenee,\nyou cin ut the bullet-hole made by\none of these filibustering rascals in\nI grandfather'i clock.\nThe famous French Foreign Le\n|ion \u2014 or, rather, eertaln detachments of that tough, hard-boiled\nservice\u2014did iome fighting In Norway, but they muit nave got there\ntoo lite: \"too lite ind too little,\" ai\nLloyd George put lt. For they ire\ntighten, those fellows. Whatever\nhappens now to that corps ot men\nwho turned their backs on the\nworld and buried themielvei alive\nIn tha loneliness ot the African\ndesert, they hive been Page Ona\naewi,\nThe Foreign Legion li romance,\nadventure ind tragedy, hird and\nbitter. If you went by ship from\nMarseilles to' Oran, In Algeria, and\nthan travel 50 milei down through\nthe grovei of ollvei and vivid wild-\nflowen of Northern Africa, you\nwould come, through a travail of\ndust and files, to Sldl-bel-Abbei, \u2022\ntown ot parks, barracks, shops, ci-\nnemu\u2014ind the headquirten of Le\nLeirlon Etrangere Infanterler\nHera, In 1844. the old Arab town\n.. a.i,.- \u201e\u201e., \u201e fo hMitniiirtan\ntor Uie famous Flnt Regiment. It\nremains today u the depot and\ntraining ichool of tha recruits. The\nenlistments are for five yean, and\ndespite the iron discipline, the dan-\nSen and the banishment from all\nlat moit men hold dear, lt is \u2022\ncommon thing tor men to reenllst\nunder new namu. Who art these\nmen who go swinging out over the\ndesert against the wild trlbei of the\nAtlas, theie men in tided khibl,\nwith the green patch of tbe Legion\non their collars, the blue-bordered\nred capi, and the wide blue woolen\nsishei? Miny are men who would\nforget tha world and have the world\nforget them.\nAdventurers and wanderers gravitate to the corpi from ill parti ot\ntha world. They seek peace by\n\u2022taking their Uvea on the hazards\nof war.\nKipling knew the breed. Read his\n\"Gentlemen Bankers\":\n\"If tha homa we never write to\nand the oaths we never keen, and\nall we know moit distant ana moit\ndear, acrou the snoring barrack-\nroom return to bruk our ileep, can\nyou blame ui If we soak ounelvet\nIn beer? When the drunken comrade mutters and the great guard-\nlantern gutten md the horror ot\nour till ii written plain, every\nlecret, self-revealing, on the iching,\nwhite-wished ceiling\u2014do you won-\nder that wa drug ounelvet from\npiin?\"\n?? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen la any reader. Namee ot\nperioni aiking question! will not\nb\u00ab published.\nxo*o*iMtmoe)m*m'>(e<otcui)):i\nH. T.. Natapn-In what Mar oacur-\nfad the wreit tire which bunwd\nover a paat area on the face ot\ntba mountain opposite Nation?\n1934.\nCuddles, Trail-Could you tall me\nwhy canned beam, corn and spinach won't keep? Iiterllie jars\nand cook tha vegetablei belore\ncooking again in the Jars.\nTha cold pack methdd is recom.\nmended tor canning vegetables. The\nuie at i food acid (lemon Juice ur\nvinegar) with toodi processed In\nhot water bath increase! the car*\ntil uty et eucceii in canning corn,\npeu, beena and greens. For each\nplat use one tablespoon ot acid and\none teupoon ef Mil A general rule\nfor canning vegetablei ii to make\nsura that only clean, freih vegetable* ara used and do not attempt\nto handle too large a quantity at\nonce, especially ln hot weather. Can\nvegetable! u soon u pouible atter they have been picked, this is\nespecially necesiary with beans and\ncorn. Dean vegetables, than blanch,\nchill and pack in clean teited Jars\nto within one-half inch ot the top\n(corn to within one inch). Fill lavs\nto within one-quarter inch ot the\ntop with boiling water. Place a new\nrubber on each Jar, adjust the\ncover and pertly seal by adjusting\nonly the upper clamp or partly\nscrewing the lid. Place Jan on a\nrack In a container and add water,\nwhich ihould cover the Jan to the\ndepth of an Inch. Do not begin to\ntime.until the water boils ovir the\ntopi of the Jan. It li Important to\nkeep water boiling the entire time\n(to minutei for most vegetables).\nWhen Jan are removed from the\ncooker seal them and invert while\ncooking. Avoid draft* but cool Jan\nU quickly ai possible and store in\na cool place. In the canning ot\ngreens, beans and corn, flat tour\nseems to ba raaponiible more than\nany one factor for spoiling. Thii\ncondition seems to develop in different stages along the route from\nth* garden to the canner and lt li\ntherefore very important to uie\nonly fresh iound vegetablei.\nCan any Dally News reader lupply the wordi to the songs \"Beer\nBarrel Polka\" and \"Way Down In\ntha Little Green VaUey?\nAmbltloui, Trail\u2014How much money mtat a Canadian possess before entering the United Statei?\nAmount ot cuh ia not the only\nconsideration. There il the question\nof quota and io on. We might suggest you consult Vlce-Contui Corey,\nwho hu in office In Trail, with\nregard to the United Statei reguli-\ntlons. You will alio have to coniider\nCanadian Board et Exchange Control Regulation! governing the Uklng of money out of Canida. Al to\nthese, your bank can Inform you.\nW. A. H\u201e Trail-In ballet dancing\nwhat li the word which describes\nthe movement where a ballerina\nleaps Into the air about three\nfeet and with legi apparently\nstiff crosses the feet \/lva or six\nmore timet very rapidly before\nlanding back on her teet on tne\nstage. At a motion picture I heard\nthe word which describes thl\nabove movement and it aounded\nU. J. MINISTER\nIN AUSTRALIA!\nSYDNEY, Auitralia, July 18 (AP)\n-Robert Giuss irrived here lata\ntoday to take over hli dutlu as tha\nflnt United Statu Minister to Auitralia,   Informally   welcomed   by\ngovernment repnatntetivca, be toll\ninterviewers   Americans   and   Au-L\nitraliani have much ln common andl\nshould more thoroughly undentand!\nona another, J^\nHe will preient hli credential! 1\nLord Gowrte, Governor-Generil IM\nmorrow and on Thunday will bal\ngueit at a government reception.' *\nCommonwealth nowipapen greetj\ned Mr. Gauss' arrival u an event t\nfirst-rate importance. The Hal\nbourne Herald editorially acknow*\nledged the value ot American mate*\nrial ild to Britain, enabling the Brit J\nIsh Isles to fice confidently !*\u25a0\nthreatened Nlal Invulon. Continue*\nextension ot iuch aid. the papa*]\nadded, guarantees a final victory fo*\nBritain.\nClaim Hitler to\nMake \"Last Offer'\nROME, July'W (AP)-Dlplal\nmatic circles heard today  thaB\nHitler ii preparing to mak*  ~\n\"lut offer\" to Great Britain M\na war lettlement.- \u2022 \u25a0 _\\\nDiplomatic reports from Berth\nIndicated that Hitler might ad\ndreu the Reichstag within thi\nnext few dayi.\nForeign Mlniiter Geleeno Ci\nano li planning tentatively te\nto Berlin before Hitler ipeaki\nconfer with the German* u Mi\nlollni'i representative, diplomat\u2122\nsources said.   .. ^\nPrivate advices from Berlin Infl\ndlcated that Hitler probably wlfl\nsuggest:\n1.  \"A European settlement\nContinental affairs.\"\n2. Return to Germany ot colonic\ntaken from her after the Fir\nGreat War.\n3. \"Economic  rehabilitation\"\nEurope.\n'\u25a0-i- i.l.naa,i\u00bb .... ..i_.*.m.mmm.\nai though it were spelled \"Autel\nchassea\".\nThe word to which you refer\nautochaueuie.\nGOOD\nIs the backbone of the\nhome of today. Inspect a\nhome with \u2022 happy interior and you will find a\nhome with convenient\nplumbing. Whether you\nwint complete new\nplumbing.Installed or |ust'\nordinary repairs you will\nfind our service Satisfactory from every stind- I\n' point; .;\u2022\u2022:.\nCall ua at Ml\nKootenay- Plumbing!\nfir Hatting Co., Ltd]\n\u25a0 '   ttr Bakar IV   ;\nmepttteetoxottesttttttttttststo*.\njut yowurff.\nmttsttestetttttttiteseometeosesti\nONE-MINUTE  TUT\n1. Who, according to the Bible,\nare two character! who sever saw\ndeath?\n2. What Chinese city Is the capital of the Cbling Kii Shek Gov-\nernment, which ll still fighting Japan?\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nNone so little enjoy themselves,\nand in iuch burdens to themselves,\nas those who have nothing to do-\nOnly the active have the true relish\nof llfe.-Jay.\nHINTI ON ITIQUITTI\nWhen   a   woman   acquaintance\nstops at a reetaurant table where\nfriendi of hers are Mated, the men\npresent rise and remain standing\nuntil ihe departs.\nTODAY'I  HOROSCOPE\nAn eventful year la In itore for\nthoie ot you who have birthdays\non thli data. It will bring important\nfains ind One severe lou, unless I\nendency to rash and Impetuous\nconduct li controlled, It Is foreseen.\nEnergy, ambition and magnetism\nan three useful characteristics of\nthe child born on thii data. Ha or\nihe will have many friend*, and\nvaluable ones, rf bom ln the latter\npart of the day the birth promises\nmuch good fortune end very hippy\nmarriage.\nONI-MINUTI  TUT   ANSWERS\n1. Elijah ind Enoch..\n2. Chungking.\ni. Erli.\nWAR \u2014 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Prtu\nJuly 17, 1915-2nd Canadian Dlviilon reviewed at Beachborough\nPark, Kent, by Sir Robert Borden\n\u2022nd Sir Sim Hughei. Treaty of alliance between Austria-Hungary,\nBulgaria, Germany and Turkey,\nilgned. German drive endangered\nRujslin hold on Warsaw; evacuation of civilians began.\nDEATH ACC1DINTAL\nMISSION, B.C., July IS (CP). -\nA coroner's Jury here found yeiter-\ndey thit Ernest E. Cide, killed Friday night when crushed between\ntwo can near here, met hit deith\naccidental!*\n____________\nI\n\u25a0w^Zt,\nAsk the Lady\nWeVe Moved\nShe Is probably one of the best advertisements we hive.\nShe will tell you how we handled her Bone Chim her\nWinthrop Desk, her Kroehler Chesterfield Suite with !\nspecial care so that everything was taken care of without\na scratch of any kind. Phone 33. We have the men and\nthe equipment to do the same for yoa\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED IN 1899\nI\nA Message for\nAU NELSON NEWS\nCorrespondents\nYou are keeping your district in the news with your\nreports of doings in your community.\nKeep your district in the BIGGEST TRAGE ANQ TOURIST\nBOOSTER pf the Kootenays \u2014 the 1941 Pictorial Edition\nof The Nelson Daily News.\nThink NOW of next year's pictorial and send in that]\nsnapshot your friend shows you.\nPICTURE EDITOR\nrr*:\nI\n-._,.._..,._i____.t^^'^\n(fe^&ffefei\n. mtt_\t\nEMM\n \u25a0al. II. I-I\n\"\u25a0-\u25a0 \u25a0,'\"\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n. ..iWIWJJtlllllllUllll^liJIIJM HJI .\n-NELION DAILY NIWI. NILION. I. C.-WIDNESOAV MORNINO JULV 17. 1540.\u2014\n.\nWI    \u25a0MINJ.UII.i .1\n9^\nPAOI IIVIN\nSTARTS\nTomorrow\nIt Saves\nMONEY\nfor You\nand You\nand Yo\nfL_ -\nYes We've Taken Ow Prices and Chopped and Hacked on Them Until Now\nThere Are Prices That Will Startle and Amaze Every Shrewd Buyer\u2014\nWith Shoe Prices Rising it's an Opportunity ol a Lifetime That You\nCannot Afford to Miss\n\u2014\u2014\nALL SALE\nITEMS\nSTRICTLY\nCASH\n- \u00bb\nAny Lady Who Resists\nSuch Prices Is a Marvel\n400 pair Women'i Tie*, Pumpi and Gores.\nRegular pricei $3.50 to $6.00\nNOW *J*95 and *2,9S\nISO pair women'i whites, Has, straps, pumps, (ores.\nValuei up to $7.00. Now priced at\n'2*6S *3'*5 *3'95 *4*95\n300 pair women'i high grade shoes. Such\nlinei ai Wi Ikies, St riders, a A (%_*\nTreadeqiy, Lam. RegularV ^k^^^\npricei to $7.00. Reduced\nEntire stock of Locke Shoes,\nGeorgina and Arch Crip,\nreduced to\n.ff.85   **J\n.85\nMEN-IT MAY BE YEARS 'TIL YOU\nAGAIN SEE BARGAINS SUCH AS\nTHESE - ACT NOW - BUY\n ^ ______.,._. ....l.\u25a0>:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,:. . _'  .- \u25a0     .. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 .. .  '\nMen's Dress\nBlack and brown. Valuei from $5.00 to $11.00. Now\n7.-7 .,\"., 7..7\".7.7\"'   \u2022\u25a0'   \u25a0\n*\u00a335   *\u00a3.9S   *A*S  *^35\n\u25a0iw_iin________i\nMen's Arch Preserver, Dr. Locke Oxfords\nnow on tale at $8.95\nAstoria Custom Grade,\nPair\t\n$9-95\nMen's Work Boots\n' **** \u2022\u00bb J . .\nOur entire itock of Work Boots ii marked\ndown.\n$2-95'\u00a335 $3.65 $j|.95\nand up.\nMen's Sport and Campers Shoes\nCrepe Soles and Rubber Soles\n\u00bb|.65<J.9S*245'2''*\n and up.\nBOYS' SCAMPERS\n$1.45 $2.20 $2.65\nSim I to SVi\nBOYS' BOOTS\n$2.45 $2.85 $3.65\nSixes 1 to 5 Vi\nMen's White Shoes\nAND WHITE AND TAN COMBINATIONS\nSeveral hundred pair now priced from\n'X95 TO 94*95\n\u00a3.95 TO 9j|\nNo Approvals\nTerms\nStrictly\nCash\n^'.tfajpjti&ffi6*\nStupendous\nBargains\nKiddies Footwear at Slashed Prices\nNO QUESTION ABOUT IT-HERE IS A CHANCE TO STOCK UP ON CHILDREN'S FOOTWEAR AT\nTREMENDOUS SAVINGS\nMisses* and Children's Shoes. Hurlbut, Pled Piper and Many Other Lines. Straps\nand Oxfords, Black. Brown and White.\nOUR TERNS - Strictly Cash\nNo Goods on Approval\nR. Andrew & Company\nt A*\n-LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\"\nBAKER ST.\nNELSON, B. C.\n_a.\\....-L;;...:';_,^,._fe.i_l-:a_\u00bb_1_a_,.,...^,.    .   ....   ,.\n -\nPAOI  IIOHT\n . \u2014 ,\ni NILION DAILY NIW*. NILION. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JULY 17. 1M0.-*\nWI*WlWi******^^\nWar Prizes Keep British\nFleet at Full Strength\nBy JOHN FERRIS  ,\n.    Anoclated Press Staff Writer\nI NEW YORK, July 16 (AP.-The\nBritish merchant fleet, swelled by\nnew construction and ships of other\nnations gained through the for-\n.'tunes of war; probably ls stronger\nnow than it was when the war start-\n'ed, a study of available verelied\nfigures indicated today.\nGermany claimed last week lhat\nUeilliaaaj    a.a.aaaaa...    aa_a.    a,-a...    -\u2014-\nto to July 1 she had destroyed 4,-\n329,213 tons of British shipping, f\nfigure which an authoritative Brit\nIsh source said was more than four\nlimes the real losses.\nAssociated Press figures showed\n'that the British had lost 243 ships\nof 932,158 gross tons up to July 14.\n. At the start of the war, according to Lloyd's Register of Maritime\nShipping, the British Empire nad\n21,001,925 tons of shipping comprising 8977 ships\u2014steam and motor\u2014of\n100 gross tons and upward.\nJ The loss of 243 ships would leave\nthe British 8734 ships totalling 20,-\n069.767 tons.\nI But this would not take into account Britain's production of new\nahips since the start of the war and\nher acquisition or control of an un\ndisclosed amount of shipping gained\nwhen Germany invaded Norway,\nDenmark, Belgium and Holland and\nwhen the French ilgned Hitler's\narmistice terms.\nNorway, for example, had 1987\nships of 4,833813 tons at the outbreak of war\u2014the fourth largest\nmerchant marine In the world, outranked only by the British Empire,\nthe United States and Japan,\nNorway's losses, tabulated by the\nAssociated Press, have amounted to\n66 ships of 146,866 tons, leaving 1.-\n921 ships of 4,686,957 tons.\nOf these, Britain today controls\nan undisclosed number, as she does\nparts of the fleets of the other\ncountries.\nBelgium had 200 ships of 408,418\ntons, and has lost eight ships of\n40.854 tons, leaving 192 ships of\n367,564 tons.\nDenmark had 603 ships of 1,174,-\n944 tons, and lost 30 ships of 65,830\ntons, leaving 675 ships ot 1,19,114\ntons.\nHolland had 1,423 ships of 2,969,-\n578 tons, and lost 34 ships of 149,793\ntons, leaving 1489 ships of 2,8101785\ntons.\nFrance had 1231 ships of 2,933,933\ntons, and lost 25 ships of 131,846\ntons, leaving 1206 ships of 2,802,087\ntons.\nPoland had a much smaller merchant fleet. Two of her biggest\nships, the Pilsudski and the aBtory.\ncame under British control, but the\n14,294-ton Pilsudski was sunk last\nNovember 26. The 14,187-ton Batory\nstill is in British hands.\nSome of the vessels of these\ncountries are in American ports,\nothers in ports more distant from\nBritain.\nThree weeks ago there were 32\nships flying the Norwegian flag tied\nup in New York harbor alone, besides nine Danish ships, six Netherlands, including the Nleum Amsterdam, flagship of the Holland-\nAmerica Line, four Belgian, 28 British and five French, Including the\ngiant liner Normandie.\nBritain has not released figures\non the output of their shipyards,\nbut it Is presumed to be large.\nIn the 51 months of the last war,\nthe British lost 7,830,765 tons of\ncommercial shipping, including fishing craft. Submarines accounted for\nnearly 90 per cent.\nA British Admiralty statement\nbroadcast by the British Broadcasting Croporation today and heard\nhere by N.B.C., said the British\nNavy had escorted nearly 100,000,-\n000 gross tons of shipping since the\nwar started.\nThis, the announcement said, represents a cargo-carrying capacity\nof about 150,000,000 tons. It reported 47 British and neutral ships\nwere lost while being thus convoyed.\nALDBRSHOT (CP)-A soldier,\nreturning to camp after being evacuated from Dunkirk, found 30 letters awaiting him. All the letters\nhad been to France or Belgium and\nhad followed him around.\nItaly Claims Right\nto Protect Holy Land\nROMI. July 18 (Al\u00bb)-The first\n. uelit claim that Italy Is entitled\nto held I protectorate over Palestine appeared In the Rome newspaper La Tribune today.\nIt argued that Britain, holding\na mandate ever Palestine from\nthe League of Nations, Is losing\nsupremacy In the Mediterranean\nand that protection of the Holy\nLand henceforth Is Italy's right\nis the strongest Mediterranean\npower.\nPearkes Named lo\nLead Canadians\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP)-Major.\nGeneral G. R, Pearkes, V.C, has\nbeen appointed to command the\n1st Oversell Division, succeeding\nLleut.-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,\nDefence Minister Raliton announ\nced todiy In the House of Com\nmom.\nUp to now General Pearkes has\nbeen In command of the 2nd Infantry brigade of the division under\nGeneralMcNaughton. In this post he\nhas been succeeded by Lt. Col. A. E.\nPotts, of Saskatoon, who went overseas as commander of the Saskatoon\nLight Infantry in the 2nd Brigade.\nGeneral Pearkes ls from Calgary.\nAs a Brigadier Commander, General Pearkes went overseas with the\nrank of Brigadier and he has now\nbeen promoted to Major-General,\nthe usual rank accorded a divisional\ncommander.\nDuring the past Winter General\nPearkes spent some time ln hospital\nsuffering from a serious illness but\nmade a complete recovery.\nHe has had a long military career\nand started his service in the First\nGreat War as a private.\nGeneral Pearkes was born at Watford, Eng., In 1888, and came to Canada ln 1906, after having served In\nthe ranks of Bedfordshire Regiment.\nHe spent three years with the Royal\nNorth West Mounted Police before\nenlisting as a private in the second\nregiment, Canadian Mounted Rifles,\nin March, 1915.\nSeven months later he was with\nhis unit in France. After having\nserved as bombing sergeant he received his commission in the field\nin April, 1916, and in January, 1918,\nhe was anointed officer commanding, the 116th Battalion, C.E.F.\nDuring this period he was wounded five times. He was mentioned in\ndespatches, awarded the Military\nCross, the Distinguished Service\nOrder, the Victoria Cross and the\nFrench Croix de Guerre. The Victoria Crtss was won at Passchen-\ndaele and the citation announced\nthat \"he showed throughout a supreme contempt of danger and won-\nderful powers of control and leading.\"\nAfter the last war he served for\na time as District Officer Commanding Military District No. 13, with\nheadquarters at Calgary.\nGENEVA, (CP)\u2014A Swiss newspaper figures out that of the last\n600 years In France's history, 371\nwere war years.\nItalians Claim  East\nAfrica Line Shortened\nROMJt, July  16   CAP). - The\ntext of the communique Issued today by the Italian High Command\nfollows:\n\"One of our air formations bombed the base of Haifa. Various depots, oil refineries and other plants\nwere hit, causing huge fires which\nour filers \u2014 all of whom relumed\nsafely to their base \u2014 could o.-\nserve on their return flight from\n200 kilometres (about 120 miles)\niway.\n(An official announcement ln\nJerusalem said damage wai slight.)\n1 \"During an unsuccessful, air raid\non Tobruk (Libya) an English plane\nwas shot down and two of the\ncrew were taken prisoner.\n(An R.A.F. communique in Cairo\nSlid direct hits were scored on two\nlarge naval oil tanks in this raid.)\n\"In brilliant action in East Af'\nrice, our troops occupied the lo'\ncalities of Sukeila, Terkale, Tagg\nabe, Kokalyadula and Denisa, cut\nting oft the salient which projected into Somaliland toward Dolo\nfrom Kenys and shortening the\nfront toward that colony by about\n300 kilometres (about 190 miles.)\n20 ITALIAN PLANII DOWNED\nALEXANDRIA, July 16 (AP). -\nAt least 20 Italian bombing planes\nwere shot down in the British-\nItalian naval clash otf Southern\nItaly lut Tuesday) according, to a\ncommunique issued today by the\nComander-in-Chief of the British\nMediterranean fleet\nThe statement listed again five\nbombers destroyed by fighter aircraft of the fleet, destruction of\nwhich previously had been an\nnounced, and revealed for the first\ntime that at least 15 were shot\ndown by anti-aircraft guns.\nQUIET ON NORTHERN\nFRONTIER\nNAIROBI, -Kenya Colony, July\n16 (AP). \u2014.\"Yesterday was quiet in\nthe Northern frontier district,\" the\nBritish daily war communique si\\i\ntoday.\n\"Our troops ln Turkana( in the\nNorthwestern corner of Kenya Colony), having completed tlje task of\nwrecking the. enemy post at Nam-\nsraputh, withdrew.\nActress Detained\non Return to 0. S.\ni SEATTLE. July 16 (AP)-United\nStates Immigration officers today\ndetained, temporarily, Anna Neagle,\nBritish film star, and her Manager-\nDirector, Herbert Wilcox, when\nthey landed at Boeing Field en\nroute back to Hollywood after appearing at \"Win t|ie War\" campaign\ntheatre attractions in Vancouver, B.\nC\u201e last night\nJust as R. P. Bonham, District\nImmigration Director, was opening\na hearing on charges ot improper\nentry, telegraphic instructions from\nWashington, DC, ordered the hearing cancelled and Instructed the officers to disregard technicalities on\nthe ground the couple had gone to\nVancouver on a \"patriotic and humane mission.\"\n\"Lack of Men and Underestimation\nNazi Strength Caused French Defeat\"\nMONTREAL, July 16 (CP)-An-\ndre Maurois, noted author who Was\nFrench official eyewitness with the\nBritish Expeditionary Force in\nFrance, said today that lack of\nmen and a \"foolish\" underestimation of Germany's striking power\nled to the French collapse.\n\"We should have realized that\nwhat we wanted was men and more\nmen, but we didn't ask for them,\"\nthe tanned, dapper writer said in\nan interview. \"That was a grave\nmistake.\"\nMaurois, commissioned as Captain, had been attached to B. E. F.\nheadquarters at Arras as liaison\nofficer, a Job he held in the First\nGreat War. He arrived here last\nweekend to join his wife, who previously fled France.\n\"We were so optimistic, we didn't\nrealize how fast and how much the\nGermans worked and we stuck to\nthe old Idea that defence was better than offence,\" said Maurois.\n'The last few months have taught\nus one lesson\u2014that the time factor\nis the most important thing. Ten\ndivisions today are better than 200\ndivisions In a year's time.\nMaurois said that as the Germans\nmarched into Belgium May 10, the\nB. E. F. moved forward to Louvain.\nFour days later the B. E. F. started\nto retreat. \"We couldn't understand\nit then, but later we realized it was\nbecause the Germans had broken\nthe Frencn line at Sedan.\"\nBack the B. E. F. went to Brussels,  and  then   the   real   trouble\nstarted. \"It was about this time the\ncivilian population began to panic.\nThe Germans knew how to cause\none, too. Just one bomb In each\nlittle village and hamlet, and within\nan hour the places were deserted\nand the roads were choked with\nfleeing, terrified evacuees. We could\nnot move.\n\"I don't think the British army\nhas ever fought better,\" Maurois\nsaid, \"but they were terribly handicapped by refugees. Everywhere\nthere were refugees along the slow\nretreat through Arras to Aliens.\"\nThe author aaid he thougnt the\nthreatened German Invasion of Britain would be beaten off because\n\"the British spirit never had reached a higher level\u2014and that is a big\nthing.\"\nSwedish Move Is *\nConsidered High\nNeutrality Breach\nLONDON, July 16 (CP) .-Great\nBritain has informed Sweden that'\nshe considers the permission granted\nGerman troops to cross Swedish\nterritory to and from Norway \"a\nserious breach of neutrality,\" Richard Butler, I'nder-Secretary for\nForeign Affairs, told the House of\nCommons today.\nNorwegian circles disclosed that\nthe Norwegian Government there\nalso has protested to Stockholm.\nMay Resume Flying\nBoat Service From\nCanada to England\nLONDON, July 16 (CP Cable).-\nWeekly flying boat service begun\nlast Summer between Canada and\nEngland is likely to be resumed before the end of July, it was learned\nunofficially today.\nTwo craft, the Clare and the\nClayde, \"very much\" like the Cabot\nand the Caribou which were used\nto establish the initial service, will\nfly from a base on the South Coast\nof Engiahd via Foynes and Botwood\nto Montreal and New York.\nThe ships will carry mall and\n\"official\" passengers, meaning 'diplomats and others with Important\ngovernment business.\nOne of the new ships probably\nwill be in charge of Capt. Kelly\nRogers, who commanded the Caribou on the first flight ln August,\n1939.\nNazi Fleet in Readine.\nfor Attack on\nGRENOBLE, France July 16 (CP)\n\u2014Let Petit Daughnois, French pro-\nvncial paper through the Petain\ngovernment has been making its\nannouncements, said today that Germany was reported in foreign diplomatic quarters of Switzerland to\nhave  assembled  an  expeditionary\nWindsors lo Slop\nOver in New York\nLONDON, July 16 (AP>.-A Reuters News Agency dispatch from\nLisbon tonight said the Duke and\nDuchess of Windsor had booked passage by clipper to New York and\nare expected to fly from New York\nto the Bahamas where the Duke will\nbe Governor General.\nIt was reported that they would\nleave the Portuguese capital this\nweek. Their transfer to another\nplane to continue tp the Bahamas\nwould be quick, the dispatch said,\nindicating there would be little stopover at New York.\nThe next clipper leaves Lisbon\nThursday.\nWIN THE WAR' SHOWS\nNET $3456 AT PENTICTON\nPENTICTON, B.C., July 16 (CP).\n\u2014Theatre owners here announced\ntoday that $3,456 had been raised by\nlast night's \"win the war\" show.\nforce of 600,000 men and hundreds\nof ships for the attack on Greal\nBritain.\nThe ships, according to the newspapers are lying along the coast from\nBrest, France, to Bergen, Norway,\nThe paper continued that a planned attack by these forces on the\nnight of July 9-10 was delayed because of a disagreemnt between\nHitler's generals. .\nThe fleet's escort of light gunboats,\nsubmarines and fighting planes, to\nbe preceded by minesweepers and\nwaves of bombers were ready when\none group ot generals headed by\nGenl Walther von Bauchitsch, commander ln chief of the German\narmy, protested that it was too dangerous, the paper said.\nA modified plan of the attack may\nbe launched Friday night, the paper\ndeclared.\nThe dispatch said that Gen. Wilhelm Keitel, chief of the general\nstaff, defended the original plan, but\nthat Hitler nevertheless delayed the\nattack to consider the objections\nThe Von Brauchitsch group, the\ndispatch continued, argued that\nminesweepers could not clear lanei\nwell enough for such a fleet and\nthat two thirds of the force might\nbe lost, leaving 200,000 men to risk\ndestruction.\nThe Italian command, the paper\nalso said, was reported to be opposed to the plan.\nThe dispatch concluded With the\nreport that Hitler had decided on a\nmodified Keitel plan which may be\nlaunched Friday night if weather\npermits.\n^D-eeTluty r+z, cz yf(?t?.\n..   UNTIL IRIUM REVEALS\nBRILLIANT LUSTRE OF TEETH\nONCE DULL AND DINGY!\nOf all Tooth Pastee md Powd.r.\n\\OHLYPmmHASIMM\nIf you want your teeth to sparkle and gleam\nwith their full natural radiance ... insist\non IRIUM I\nRemember, it's what's in your dentifrice\nthat makes the bis difference! So be sure\nvou get PEPSODENT containing IRIUM\nfor extra effectiveness \u2014> greater. cUdttsmg\npower} See ior yourself the way IRIUM in\nPepsodent flashes into instant, safe action!\nUelt. surface-stains disappear from teeth\u2014\ntayely\u2014quickly.\nPepsodent contains No Grit, No Pumice,\nNo Bleach . . . PROVED SAFE FOR\nTOOTH ENAMEL!\nftPSODENfl\nL Wit fcwfcrj\nENTAL  PROFESSION AS\nMKYL SULFATE\nimtm\nThe Average Kootenay Resident\n\"This year the Jones are going to have a real vacation and it isn't going to cost much\n\u2014were going to Nelspn\u2014There's every facility in that city for a grand time for all\nof us\u2014the kids will have the best swimming facilities in the world \u2014 Mother will\nhave the time of her life in Nelson's smart shops and I've always wanted to try that\nsporty nine hole golf course. Hotel accommodations are good and rates for rooms\nand meals in Nelson are very moderate\u2014besides, the people in Nelson are most hospitable and do their damdest to show you a good time\u2014so\u2014the Jones are going to\nsee them.\"\nA. H. GREEN\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nCONTRACTORS\nWard St.    Nelion, B.C.\nSCORE CARDS\nFor vacation bridges\n$1.00 per dot. padi\nNELSON DAILY   NEWS\nCall Us First for Coal, Wood,\nCoke, Moving or Transfer\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone 33\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry and\nNo-Odor Dry\nCleaning Co.\nFor Exquisite\nLadies'\nReady-to-Wear\nEdith A.\nCarrothers\nFink Blk. Nelson\nQUEEN CITY\nMOTORS  LTD.\nFORD DEALERS\nSatisfaction Is Our Aim\nBUY-\n\"NELSON BRAND\"\nJAMS AND JELLIES\nProducts of the\nMcDonald Jam\nCompany,  Limited\nSee us FIRST for your Heating, Plumbing and Ventilation\nRequirements\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nand HEATINC CO., LTD.\nSTAR\nGROCERY\nfor\nQUALITY\nGROCERIES\nAND SERVICE\nMother's Bread\nPhone 210 for Delivery\nChoquette   Bros.\nBAKERS\nR. W. DAWSON\nReal Estate\u2014Insurance\nPhone 197       Baker St.\nNelton, B.C.\nWhen   in   Nelseyi   dine\nwhere  meals  are   really\ngood and prices are\nmoderate.\nREX\nCAFE\nBAKER ST.\nKootenay Lake\nSalmon Derby\nSponsored by Nelion Gyro Club'\nWin an\nOutboard Motor\n19 Other Cood Prizei\nWEIGH VOUR CATCH AT ONE\nOF Tf,E S DEPOTS\nTHE MAYOR\nand\nALDERMEN\nof the\nCity of\nNelson\nInvite You to Do\nYour Shopping\nin Nelson\nTHE\nLDo\nNelson'i Most Popular\nRESTAURANT\nCOOD FOODS\nCOOD SERVICE\nMODERATE PRICES\nv\nyowL\n{j)sda>msL,\nlo WritofL\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Limited\nFor real garage service\nand body work.\nPhone 117\nMacdonalds\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholesale Grocers\nPhone 28\nFRONT ST. NEL80N\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPHONE 35\nAUTO PARTS-TIRES\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelson's Popular\nRestaurant\"\nThe Best for Leu\nPHONE 22 for\nLetterheads,   Envelopes   and\nall kinds of Business Forms.\nH. M. Whimster\njob Printing\n_inrnMTti_r__1lllt*_iiirr_flrif_irf___r_tiir_ttl \u2022|iileif>Tii__ll__T_ril'_il__llliiit___l'H___iltirn____\u00bb!_\nI\n.. t:\n Hffi-V--! \u2122:V\"\\\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B,C.-W_DN_S_AY MORNINO, JULY 17.\n1940.\u2014\nORTS\nThe Dayi of Rial Sport\"\nDanning Hilling\nThem \"Where Hie\nFielders Ain't\"\n3e_ttii\\$\nLeaders\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Hank Danning ii hitting it and they don't\ncatch lt. That, from Harry the\nHorse himielf, ll why he led major\nleague batters into the July itretch\nwith a .380 average.\nThe matter thus simply explained,\nthe big Giant catcher tore Into a\nplate of bacon and eggs. Between\nbites, though, he amplified hli explanation.\n\"It'i mottly luck. A guy never\n'knowi. One Ume you hit a icorch-\n\u00abr\u2014and It's a blngle. Next time up,\nanother scorcher\u2014but aome guys\nright there to pull it in.\n\"I'm not hittin' any harder than\nlut year (.313). The fielder! just\naren't there when they fall.\"\nMore bacon and eggs, then; \"Tell\nyou though, I am waltin' longer.\nGettin' a better eye on the ball De-\nlore I let go. And I'm trying to\nehorteh by ittide it the bat. You\nknow, itepplng Into the ball with\nthat left foot I been stridln' too\n,iar.\"\nWIFE HELP! SOME\nNow coffee. A satisfying gulp and\nan appreciative glance across the\ntable toward beautiful, blonde Mrs.\nHarry Danning, a bride of six\nmonthi. -\n\"Being married has helped more\nthan you'd realise. You know, a\nregular life, meals like thii at the\nsame hour, food as you want tt.\nUsed to eat dinner at aeven one\nBight, 10 the next. That'i bad.\nHank. 28, and the former Dlan\nMlgford\u2014they're both from Los\nAngele_>~iay their romance itarted\n;lait December (\"but I'd known her\na long tune before\"). T|iey were\nmarried\" in January. Big Harry\nthlnks-^-and eo doei she\u2014that it\nwas the lucky atart of a lucky year.\nDanning broke in with Bridgeport\not the Eaaterh Leigue in 1931. The\nNew York Gianti called the big\nawkward youngster In from Buffalo ln 1933 but he caught only\nthree games after hli arrival In\nJuly. In 1934 he played aecond fiddle to Mancuso, a more experienced\ncatcher, but hit .330 In pinch assignments and during the few\ngames he caught. Despite that good\nmark the only chance he got In 1933\nwaa during a 12-gamc period when\nMancuso was out with an Injured\nami. A foul tin broke hia hand In\n1936 and he got into only 32 games.\nWhen a broken finger stopped Man-\nCUio in 1937 Hank stepped into the\nbreach, caught 93 games, batted\nnear .300\u2014but bad to step out when\nhis hand waa rebroken just es he\nwu going hottest. He caught 97 of\nthe firet 60 games in 1938\u2014when he\nwas laid low for three weeks by\nIllness. But he worked 130 games\nthat.year, batted .306.\nLAYI PERFORMANCE\nHa handled the catching Job in\nUS of the Giants' 152 contests in\n1939 and batted .313. Hut the old bad\nluck wai there. A leg infection kept\nhim benched tor three weeks and\nthe Giants lott nine in \u25a0 row.\nDanning figures he'll do better\nthan the 74 runs be batted ln last\nyear. He's batting farther back in\nthe order than the second or third\nplace shots he occupied in 1939, hat\nmora chance to send runt across.\nHarry the Horie (he doesn't\nknow where the name started)\nthinks it's improbable hell win the\nbatting championship. A catcher\nworks too hard. Cool weather has\nhelped him to date. When It gett\nhot, he sayi, he may tire more easily, have lesi heft in his awing.\nBut he'i aiming for the title. After all\u2014who knows?\njChallcdon Expected\nto Win $50,000 Race\nat Suffolk Today\nBOSTON. July 16 (AP). - AI.\nthough he hu made only one itart\nthU season, W. L. Brann's Challedon appears destined to pliy the\nfavorite's role tomorrow In the $50,-\n000-added Massachusetts Handicap\nat Suffolk Downs. He wu even\nmoney favorite latt year when\nFighting Fox won and ran fourth.\nTha $reat four-year-old will carry\ntop weight of 130 pounds when he\nmatches speed with 12 other rivals,\nIncluding most of the other handicap stars now campaigning in the\nEast, over the mile and eighth\ndistance.\nThe Brann star, hailed ai the\nchampion of 1939, probably will\nparade postward with Aethelwold,\nJi itablemate. His most threaten-\nng rivals appear to be George D.\nWidener's light Thirty, at 128\nppunds, the Belair stud's Isolator,\nWhich drew a 122-pOund impost,\nand the Brindywine stable's Masked General, with 115 pounds.\nBy Thi Anoclated Preu\nBatting (three leaden In each\nleague)\nPlayer Club usiIH Pet\nWright, W. Sox . 74 295 47 106 .359\nAppling, W. Sox 71 269 41 96 .357\nRadcliff, Browns 78 298 45 106 .356\nDanning, Giants .. 72 277 42 96 347\nWalker, Dodgers 67 263 37 87 .331\nMay, Phillies  66 234 32   76 .325\nHome runs:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox\n20.\nNational League\u2014Mlie, Cardinals,\n24.\nRuns batted in:\nAmerican League \u2014 Greenberg,\nTigers, 77.\nNational   League \u2014 Danning,\nGiants, 60.\nFORMER HEAD OF\nCANADIENS DIES\nArt Godfrey, left, and \"Bud\" Greenwood ot the Nelion Sowing Club in a double on the West Arm.\n\u2014Dally Newi Photo.\nCECIL HART\nM. Hart', former Manager of Mon'\ntreat Canadiens In the National\nHockey League, died at his home\nhere tonight. He had been 111 lor\nthree months. Mr. Hart wu 57\nyeari of age.\nHart led the Canadiens to iuc'\ncessive Stanley Cup triumphs in\n1930 and 1931. He worked with Canadiens from that time until lhe\nmiddle of the 1938-39 season, when\nhe was relieved of his duties.\nHe ie survived by five brothers,\nincluding V. S. Hart of New York\nand R. E. Hart of Los Angelei.\nMclntyre Takes\nRossland-Trail\nOpen Golf Title\nTRAIL. B. C July 16-P. F. Mclntyre, veteran of many tournaments, won the Directors' Cup in\nthe men's open championship of the\nRossland-Trall Golf end Country\nClub by defeating Roy Stone in the\n36-hole final.\nMr. Mclntyre wu runner-up in\nthe Kootenay men's open tournament at Nelson recently.\nThe Rossland-Trail Club championship was won last year by R.\nW. Nesbitt, who did not defend hii\ntitle.\nThe first three trips over the\nnine-hole course were fought\npretty much on even terms, but in\nthe final round Mclntyre made a\ndetermined bid for the silverware.\nIn the semi-finals ot the second\nflight, Douglas Wetmore beat Dr.\nE. A. Ellis and Pat Morris downed\nEd Jandrell. Wetmore and Ellis\nmeet in the finals this week.\nMike Welykochy beat L. Landucci and Ernie Mitchell beat Lloyd\nWilliams in semi-final matches of\nthe third flight, finals to be played\nthis week.\nCubs Meet Giants in\nBantams Ball League\nGame at Trail Today\nC.  July  15-Second\nHAGEN GOLFERS\nLEAD FIRST DAY\nDETROIT. July 16 (AP)-Walter\nHagen's Ryder Cuppers won three\not the four Scotch foursomes over\nGene Sarazen's team today to lead\nat the end ot the tint day's play\nwith the challengers at Oakland\nHills.\nByron Nelson md Harold (Jug)\nMcSpaden, 1939 Canadian champion,\nrouted T_mmy Armour and Jimmy\nThomson, 8 and 7, for one of the\ncuppers' victories. Dick Metz and\nHenry Picard won from Harry\nCooper and Ed Oliver, 5 and 4, and\nHorton Smith and Paul Runyan defeated Craig Wood and BUly Burke,\n2 up, for the other two.\nBen Hogan and Jimmy Demaret\nsalvaged one match tor the challengers with a oneup triumph over\nRalph Guldahl and Sam Snead.\nEight singlei matchei will be\nplayed tomorrow.\nStamps Continue\nWith Rebuilding\nCALGARY, Alta.-yiini tot Calgary, next hockey season ire going ahead. Coach Marty Burke having now signed Jack MiUord after\nthe blond, crinkly-thatched hockey\nItar had secured his release from\nTurner Valley Oileri.\nSo far, Stampeders hive signed\nfour new playen to strengthen the\nlineup that won the Western Can\nada championihip latt Spring.\nJohnny Godfrey, Dan Sprout and\nBiff Smith were added and when\nMilford signed, the makeup of Calgary's next hockey machine took\nanother boost.\nMAKEUP DOUBTFUL\nOlds Bits have withdrawn from\nthe seven-team Alberta Senior\nHockey League and there is talk\nDrumheller Club la raising money\nto continue hookey, but the club\nhai alto announced that if there\nIs no hockey the amount relied\nwill be turned over to aid Canada's\nwar effort. The Oldi hockey executive Is keeping together to raise\nmoney for the Red Cross.\nThe position of the Turner Valley Club isn't quite clear at the\nmoment, but from lut reports\nseemed likely to continue along\nwith Lethbridge and Edmonton.\nAfter signing with Marty Burke\nearlier this year, Bifi Smith his\nreturned to the city ind il working\nfor Bill Ronn. Smith played detence tor Yorkton Terrlen last\nWinter ind is a big, capable player.\nMilford's work on the' wing for\nLethbridge Leafs and the Oilers,\nafter returning from the English\nNational League, apeaki for Itself.\nDan Sprout was a standout with\nColemin, and Godfrey played on\nthe defence of the New York\nRovers.\nBRAKE RELINING\nWe have the proper machinery\nfor regrindlng brake shoei.\nj Shorty's Repair Shop\n1714 BAKER ST.     NELBON, B. C.\nTRAIL,\ngame  of\nMildred \"Babe\" Didrickson,\nthe one-woman track and field\nteam of past Olympic! and now\nthe wife ot wrestler George\nZaharlas, cut one more notch In\nher aport career when the won\nthe U. S. Weitern ladies' open\nagainst a crack field. Eight years\nago the Babe didn't know which\nend ot a golt club to hold but\nshe vowed the would mister the\nsport just as she mastered every\nother form of athletic endeavor.\nShe did. Not many men playen\ncan outihoot the Babe. now.\nDodgers Pushed\nDown by Pirates;\nGiants Shut Out\nAthletics Again Beat\nTigers; Chicago\nHalts Yanks\nBy The Canadian Press\nPiratei ipotted Brooklyn Dodgen three runs yesterday and then\nbattled back to beat them 9-3.\nTha loss dropped the Dodgers to\n3% games behind the Idle Cincinnati Reds at the top ot thc\nNational League.\nNew York Gianti outhit thc\nCuba again but were shut out 2-0\nby Lefty Vern Olsen for their\nfifth defeat in seven gamei on\nthe current Western swing.\nHarry Gumbert held Chicago to\n(our hits but a single by Phil Cava-\nretta with the basea: filled brought\ntwo Cub runi.\n-Enos Slaughter's 10th home run\not the year tn the sixth inning\nbroke a tie and gave St. Louis\nCardinals a 4-3 victory over Boston\nBees. It was the sixth consecutive\ntriumph tor the Cards and also\ngave them a sweep of tbe lour-\ngime series with the Beei.\nPaced by George Caster's six-hit\npitching, Athletics dampened Detroit Tigen' American League pennant hopes with a 3-1 victory for\ntheir third triumph ln the four-\ngame series.\nCleveland pitchen presented Sen\nators with tour basea on belli, filling the sicks for them twice, all in\nthe tlxth Inning as Washington won\nan 11-8 victory and swept the three\ngame series.\nChicigo White Sox took the deciding game of their series with\nNew York Yankees, 5-1, on Johnny\nRignty's six-hit hurling and a 12<\nhit offensive topped by Joe Kuhel'i\n15th home run.\nFROM ICE TO STEAM\nSummer sporti are now at their\nzenith but Into one of them will\ntoon be infused the nemei of great\nWinter sport champions, the Trail\nSmoke Eaten, the laat Canadian\nteam to win the world'i amateur\nhockey championship.\nHarry Rothery, entwhlle hockey\nmd baseball player, conceived the\nIdea that a softbail game between\nthe Smokies and an all-star baseball\naggregate would be a big drawing\ncard tor a benefit game for the\nTrail Red Cross fund. He worked\non the idea and the boyi uid:\n\"Sure!\"\nThe game will be staged Monday\nat Victoria Park,\nTHE TEAMS\nThe Smokiet, who have been\nplaying bang-up softbail as long as\nthey have been dishing out that\nkind of hockey, number six, and\nthey have mustered a few othen\nprominent in hockey and toftball,\n, PAGE NINE\nto make up a team. There'i Ab\nCronie, Bunny Dame, Joe Benoit,\nJimmy Morrli, Duke Scodellaro\nand Bob Manhall. They have dratted Doug Norrjjj, Gerry Wanlesi,\nCal Parkhurst and Lei Christensen, who also are prominent In\nsoftbail and hockey. .\nOn the all-itar baieball lineup\nwill be George Petrunlt, Casey\nJonea, Tick HaU, Cliff Wanless,\nJulie Bilesky, Mike Wolfe, Tommy\nHarrison, Russell Graham, Ken\nStanton \"Stlven\" Decembrini, Rico\nMartin and \"Red\" Tulloch.\n\"SUVIM\" RETURNS\nThere they are, folks. They ought\nto put up a great game. Personally I'm going to the game Just to\niee \"Slivers\" back In action after\ntwo or thrtt seasons' layoff from\nthe baseball diamond.\nOh, yei, there'll be iome umpires\nnecessary at that game too. And\nthey'll have to be good. Al Hall\nIs one and Nell McArthur the other.\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nThe Houie of Furniture Valuei\nEagle Blk.     Nelson     Phone 111\nBEFORE YOU BUY\nANYWHERE\nSee Our Stock\nCompare Prices\nYour Dollars\nBuy Moro at\nOur Store\nExperts Stumped\non Tonight's Bout\nBy SID FEDER\n(Anoclated Preu Sporti Writer)\nNEW YORK, July 1\u00ab (AP) \u2014\nIn a tussle thit hit the expert!\n\u25a0tumped on everything except\nthat a knockout It a dead-eyed\ncinch to happen, Henry Armstrong\nand Lew Jenkini collide tomorrow night In the Polo Ground!\nring.\nNo one could see how either the\nwelterweight champion or the lightweight boss could miss belting the\nother guy out somewhere along th:\n12-round non-title route they will\nbegin at 5:\u00ab p.m. PST.\nJuit who is Riling lb do lt to\nwhom ls the big question, and the\nestimates tonight were that some\n30,000 or 40,000 will, be sitting In on\nthe proceedings to find out.\nThe charitable bookmaking men.\nnarrowing their odds still further\ntonight, would give you iVt to 9 if\nyou liked Texas Lew to win and,\njust to hold their edge, make you\niay 10 to their S if you wanted Ham-\nmerln' Hank. Armstrong was even\nmoney to wear the Texan down\nand knock him out The Sweetwater swatter, now riding along on an\neight-knockout streak, including his\none over Lew Ambers which wpn\nhim the lightweight crown, was 4\nto 1 to stiffen the dark destroyer for\nthe first time in hit career.\nAMERICAN\nW\nPet.\n.003\n.600\n.577\n.532\n.180\n.415\n.405\n_98\nDetroit   47\nCleveland  48\nBoiton  -\nNew York  41\nChicago     38   39\nWashington  34   48\nPhiladelphia   32   47\nSt. Louil  33   50\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati   51 24\nBrooklyn   48 28\nNew York  42 33\nChicago  43 40\nPittiburgh  33 42\nSt. Louia -  32 41\nBoston  27 44\nPhiladelphia   25 48\nWESTERN  INTERNATIONAL\nW l, Pet\nSpokane     81 38 .593\nSalem       44 41 .518\nTacoma       43 41 .512\nYakima    44 42 .512\nVancouver    88 48 .458\nWenatchee    38 5\u00bb .409\n.560\n.518\n.440\n438\n.380\n.338\nBOXER DIES IN RING\nNEW YORK, July 16 (AP)-Pete\nAsero, a local welterweight boxer,\ndied in the ring tonight after he\nhad been technically knocked out\nby Pete Muscarnera of Brooklyn\nin a bout at the Queensboro Arena.\nAsero collapsed after the fight' was\nstopped In the fourth round and\ndied before he could be carried\nfrom the ring\nFIGHT RESULTS    !\nBy the Anoclated Pren\nYOUNGSTOWN, (Wack Tram-*\nmell, 188, Youngstown, outpointed \u25a0\nEddie Blunt, 218, New York (10).\nCHICAGO-Mlke Gamier.., 13714.1\nCleveland, and Gene Ward, 132,1\nChicago, drew (8). .     fl\nNEW YORK \u2014 Tommy Spiegel.,!\n133Hi, Unlontown, Pa., and Irving!\nEldrldge, 133V\u00ab, New York, drew.!\n(10). f\nST. PAUIr-Lee SavoM, MO,JDaiL   i\nMoines,   la.,   knocked   out   Billy\nMiske, St Paul (3), v\nSIOUX CITY, Ia.-Paul Hartnek\n197, Minneapolis knocked out \"Tt-1\nger\" Miller, 200, St Cloudi Minn-\n(3).\nMetaline juniors to\nPlay Ball in Nelson\nMetaline Falls Junion will como\nto Nelson July 28 to play a return !\ngame with the Nelson team which\nplayed in the American town last I\nmonth, \"Slim\" Porter, Nelaon Manager, said Tuesday. The return gama\nwas originally scheduled for two\nweeka ago, but was postponed owing to the Americans' inability to\nmake the trip that day.\nA game In Nelion, the fourth Ot\nthe seaion between Salmo and Nel- .\nson Junior squads, Is slated early in\nAugust.\nSlow Burning\nI CIGARETTE PAPERS\nHONE riNIC MADE\nDOUBLE   Au\"   MMU,\nB.   .    -_,\n\u201e    _ the Trail Bantam Bate\nball League will be staged at Butler\nPark Wednesday afternoon. Beavers downed the Cubs by a big score\nin the opener last week, and the\nvanquished will have their opportunity to tie the standing when they\nmeet Giants Wednesday.\nNelson at Rossland\nBoxla Tonight Off\nTonight's scheduled Weit Kootenay Lacrosse League game at Ron-\nland between the Maple Leafs and\nthe Redmen has been postponed to\nthe end of the schedule.\nOfficials decided that two games\nin ai many nights between the two\nteams would be too much, let alone\nthree games In four nights for the\nRosslanden, who play Friday it\nTrail.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\nMUCH BETTER'\nhis advertisement I\u00ab not publlihed or displayed by the Liquor Oontrol\nBoard 0} by tbe Government ot British Columbia.\nNelson Softball\nRep Team to Be\nChosen Tonight\nThis evening is zero hour for aspirants tor tbe Nelson men's rep\nsoftball team. Playen who will\nrepresent Nelion in Weit Kootenay playoffs against Rossland,\nSalmo, Castlegar and Trail will\nbe chosen at thli evening's practice by Coach Louli Aurelio, and\nno other playen will be idded\nfrom then on.\n\"If Ujey dont turn out to prac\ntlce tomorrow, It's goinf to be their\nown tough luck.\" Aurelio iaid Tueiday. \"I'm picking my team trom\nthe playen on band at tha workout\"\nJimmy Allan, one of the trustees\nfor the Rowling Memorial Trophy, is\nworking out playoff arrangements,\nbut he isn't sure of the starting\ndates yet The semi-finals will probably start on the last Sunday of the\nmonth.\nNATIONAL\nR H E\nBrooklyn    _    3   8  0\nPittsburgh    5   8   2\nCarleton, Pressnell md Phelps;\nLanning and Lopez.\nNew York   0  6   1\nChicago       2   4   2\nGumbert and Danning; Olsen and\nHartnett\nBoiton      3 12   0\nSt Louil    4  9   1\nPosedel end Berres, Masi; Shoun\nand Owen.\n(Philadelphia-Cincinnati, p o s t-\nponed by rain).\nAMERICAN\nDetroit       1   8  2\nPhiladelphia      3  8  3\nHutchinson and Tebbetts; Caster\nind Wagner.\nCleveland    8 11  2\nWaihington    11 12   4\nEitenatat Dobson, Allen, Humphries, Zumber and Hemsley; Kra-\nkaiutkas, Carrasquel, Monteagudo\nand Ferrell.\nChicago       5 12   1\nNew York    18  0\nRigney and Treih; Russo ind\nDickey.\nASSOCIATION\nSL Paul 3. Indianapolis 2.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal 8, Toronto 1.\nJersey City 0, Newirk 8.\nBaltimore 1, Syncuie 2.\nBuffalo 0, Rocheiter 2.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nSavoy, Salmo to Play\nRed Cross Softball\nA loftball game at Salmo with\nproceeds going to the Red Crou li\nbeing lined up between the Salmo\nand Savoy Hotel, Nelaon, softball\nteams for the near future, probably the first available Sunday.\nLate in June the two teama played\na game in Nelson for the urne cause,\nSoftball Playoffs\nStart at Weekend\nSince the Rookiei would be without the servicei of Hazel Splen,\ntheir ace chucker, if the tint game\nof the Nelson ladiei' toftball playoffs with C. Y. 0. wu played Friday, the belt ot five title series will\nprobably open next Mondiy, according to Lawrence Selinger, Nelion Anoclatlon Secretary.\nThe men'i playoffi will open on\nSunday after the senior buebill\ngame with a sudden-death game\nbetween C. Y. O. and Savoy Hotel\nto determine which team will gain\nthe bye Into the final seriei. The\nloser will start i but of three aerlea with Hume Hotel the following\nFrldiy.\nHurl, No-Hitter\nSPRINGFIELD, Mo, July 16 -\n(AP)-Sylvester (Bllx) Donnelly of\ntbe St Louli Cards' Springfield\nfarm pitched a no-hlt game last\nnight He itruck out 13 ind walked\nfive In hli 14-0 victory over Joplin\nIn the Western Anoclatlon.\nThe Waterloo club In the Three-I\nLeegue Is now a farm for the White\nSox. Last yeer it wu a member of\nthe Red chain.\nBy The Canadian Pren\nJimmy Wilde, one of the greatest\n\"little men\" the flitic profession\nhai known, outpointed Pal Moore\nin a furious 20-round bout at London 21 years ago today to retain\nflyweight lupremacy. The Welshman overcame a big lead with a\ngreat two-fisted display In late\nroundi to gain the uninlmoui verdict\nLake Shore Out\nfor Rest of War\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont, July 16\n(CP)\u2014Manager C. C. (Doc) Ames\nof the Lake Shore Blue Devils, 1940\nAllan Cup hockey champions, announced today the Lake Shore\nMinei will not enter a team in\norganised hockey tor tbe duration\not the'war.\nMoit of the 18 playen carried\nby the club have received often\ntrom other teams for their services\nnext seuon, It wu reported.\nCoach Lax Cook and Forward Joe\nBrown left the North iome weeki\nago and returned to the Weat both\nlocating it Edmonton. Cook was\none of the sparks thit led to the\nBlue Devils' triumph over Calgary\nStampeders in tne.Allan Cup final.\nDallas Southpaw\nSold ta Detroit\nDALLAS, Jubr IS (AP) - Bob\nUhle, itar lefthander for Dallai\nRebels, wai told todiy to Detroit\nTigers tor \"a sum of money greater\nthen the (7500\" Major League draft\nSrlce for Clan A-I playen, Present George Scheppt ot the Dallai\nBaseball Club Mid.\nUhle, who leads the Texai Leegue\nIn itrikeouti, will remain with the\nDallasJJClub during the remainder\nof the seuon.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, July 16 - Fight\nspecial\u2014Henry Armstrong to heat\nJenkins by a technical K.O. tomorrow night. Jenkins is a good\nhitter, but Henry'i superior infighting should stop Lew from winding\nup.,.. The U. S. is about ready to\nclamp down on a powerful Eastern\nshort wave station which hu been\nrelaying race info. . . . Ky Laffoon,\nwho has been taking the rest cure\nat his Miami (Okla.) home, returns\nto the golf wars in the Chicago\nOpen, starting Friday. . . . Billy\nConn has been ordered to sacrifice\nsome of his speed to get more dynamite into his puncXj for Bob Pastor. Well, he'll need it.\nSPEED IS COSTLY\nSpeed costs money. George Case,\nthe American League tprint champ,\nwean out aix pain of bueball\nshoes per season at $17.50 a pair.\n. . . Eddie Mead Is trying to buy\nBUI Faratworth's piece of the 20th\nCentury Sporting Club, the Idea\nbeing to extend Mike Jacobs' boxing empire to the Cout . . . Luke\nHamlin won't talk about his recent\ndeparture from the Dodgers excipt\nto iay: \"I didn't run out on the\nClub; I wai ordered out.\"\nBen Hogan is looking forward to\nthe P. G. A. championship at Hershey, Pa., for it wu over that course\nthat he won his first major tournament. . . . Jimmy Phelan of U. of\nWuhlngton ii uylng plenty (that\ncan't be printed) at our navy for\nappointing Bob Wooten, hli star\nfresh end, to the Naval Academy.\n. . . For the first time this seuon\nJoe DiMaggio Is looking like the\nDIMag of 1939 Johnny Kilbane,\nthe, old featherweight champ, is\nrunning for the State Senate out in\nClevelend, and here's a vote for\nJohnny.\nNatal Takes Sole\nLead in Baseball\nNATAL. B. C.-Behind the three-\nhit pitching of Tom Krall, the\nNatal-Michel Buffaloes took undisputed leadership in the Crow's Nest\nPau Bueball League by scoring a\ndecisive 5-1 win over tnelr closest\nrivals, the Blalrmore Columbus\nClub Cardinals, at the Natal Ball\nPark July 10.\nThe Buffaloes took a three run\nlead In the first inning when Gia-\ncammuzzi was nicked for four of\nthe nine hits that he allowed, Peten of the Buffaloes poling out a\ntimely double to clean the hues.\nIn the fifth Inning, the remaining\nBuffalo runa were acored on three\nhits and a walk.\nBlairmore scored Its only run in\ntbe fifth Inning on a hit and un\nerror to rob Krall of a shutout. Vey\nprava scoring trom third on \u2022 close\nplay at home atter an outfield fly\nwu caught.\nKrall atruck out six Blalrmore\nbatten while Glacummuizl of Blalrmore itruck out nine. G. Peten\nled the Buffalo attack with three\nlusty, hlti that brought ln four of\ntbe five runi. *  -\n' Tbe lou tent the Blairmore team\nInto a second piece tie with the\nColeman Pucksters. wtlh eich having four defeats to Natal-Michel's\ntwo defeats. The Natal-Michel Buffaloes need but two more wins out\nof their remaining four games to\nbe certain of at leut a tie for top\nplace.\nScore by Innlngi:\nBlairmore 000 010 000   1   8  3\nNatal-Michel .. 300 020 OOx   5   9   1\nI SHOULD THINK\nMOTORISTS WOULD\nREALIZE THAT A SKID\nIS THE MOST DANGEROUS\nTHING ON THE ROAD\nJD&IT AGREE! I'VE SEEN\nPLENTY OF ACCIDENTS\nAND I THINK A\nW\/K'^IS.MUCH.WORSE\nWiy Argue? New Goodrich\nTtVePrnterts Against BOTH\nSkids and Blow outs!       |\n\u2022 SKIDS! BLOW-OUTS!\u2014both an dangtroua\u2014both\npick dynamite! Tint's why \"hilf-way\" protection can be\nu dangerous u none It all.\nqUICKEST NON-SKID STOPS\n'Wiy up the list of safety (enures In thli new Silvertown is\ntha Life-Saver Tread\u2014chat la specially designed to aa on\nwet roads like a Whole rapid-lire bittery of windshield\nwipers; Il sweeps thl water right and left\u2014forces it ont\nthrough the deep drainage grooves\u2014leaves a trick so dry\nyoa aa actually light a match on iti And when a paterae n t\nii swept thit dry,It'i euy to undentand wby thii Un will\nnop you quicker, safer tain you're evar itopped before!\nAnd, adding one tifcty feature to another, thli new Silver-\ntown gives you the famous Golden Ply. By resisting i nter ml\ntire beat, thii exclusive Golden Ply provides scientific\nprotection against high-speed blow-outs.\nDONT TAKE CHANCES\nDon't take chincei with either a skid or a blow-out; See\nyour neirest Goodrich Dealer now about putting\nSilvertown! on your ctr\u2014the tire that dou \"double duty\"\nis a life-saver!\nIPW&_SL*S\u00ab ot\n* \u2022 vnifl P____a -*V*. 111(5,\nm.*_J&>*\u2122 \u25a0*\"\"\u00bb\u00ab.\n\"\u25a0r\u00bbi8__r_fiBT,\u00bb\n^Goodrich ttFUT Silvertown\nlift   . .VIK\nPROUCIION   \u2666$\u00a3)\u2666   C.OIDEN   PLY  BlUW  OUT  PH01ECIION\nGOODRICH DEALERS\nRIVERSIDE MOTORS\t\nHUNTER BROS. LTD. ___.\u25a0\nGRAND .FORKS GARAGE\t\n'4\n Troll, B. C.\n.... Rossland, B. C.\nGrand Forks, B. C.\n.\n____________________\n-i'\u00bb.,I_.\n^t__\n Labor Members Protest\nPostponement of Plan\nto   Evacuate  Children\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\n(Canadian Pren Staff Writer).\nLONDON, July 16 (CP Cable).-\n. storm of protest and indignation\n_eveloped in the House of Commons\ntoday when Clement Attlee, Lord\nPrivy Seal and Deputy Leader of\nthe House, announced that the Government scheme to evacuate children to Canada and the United\nStates has been postponed.\nLabor members protested at the\nthousands of children from wealthy\nhomes, some of them titled children\nand children of members of the Government, already sent overseas\nwhen poor children were forced to\natay in the United Kingdom under\nwar conditions.\nOne Labor member, C. G. Ammon,\nlaid he was convinced that the\nwhole scheme was -just a camouflage to get children with wealthy\nparents out of the country.\nMr. Attlee said the scheme was\nmspended because the navy found\n.t impossible to provide the necesiary escort vesels for the Atlantic\ncrossing but that the Government\nfcoped that at some future date the\nlituation at sea would permit it being resurrected.\nMr. Attlee disclosed that a eer-\nthin number\" of children would be\nevacuated in a few cases where it\nmight be possible to provide proper\nE\nConvoy.\n\"There ls a limited number,\"\nho\ntontlnued referring to convoys, and\n'to that extent the scheme will go\nforward and will be giving some\nopportunity to children from state-\ntided schools.\"\nHe said that the private evacuation of children would not be stopped but that the risks involved must\nfce shouldered by parents.\nLabor members gave notice that\nthey intended to debate the full\nouestion in the House later.\nMeanwhile, the registration of\n-ehildren under the evacuation\n\u25a0cheme has not' been stopped. Already 80,000 have applied to go to\nCanada and 30,000 to the United\nKtates. Altogether some 200,000 applications have been made, apparently applying for unspecific destin-\n{tions or from Australia, South Ai-\nica or New Zealand.\nG. A. Griffiths, Labor, said there\nfc \"considerable feeling\" in areaB\ntvhich have been bombed because\n}vell-to-do children are able to leave\nor havens of safety while others\nmust remain.\nGeoffrey Shakespeare, Dominions\nUnder-Secretary, made no reply\nwhen a Labor member asked If he\nWas .\"aware that there Is great Indignation at the number of children\nof cabinet ministers who have left\nthe country.\"\nMr. Shakespeare disclosed that the\nnumber of children between five\nand 15 years who left tho United\nKingdom in June for the Dominions\ntnd the United States were 1572 and\n806, respectively. Of these 1752 had\nnormal residences In the United\nKingdom.\n\"That is so,\" Mr. Shakespeare replied when asked if it were correct\nthat there are roughly 200,000 applications of children for evacuation\nand about 20,000 offers from the\nDominions.\nWhen the lack of shipping was\nbeing discussed. Col, Joalah Wedgwood, Independent, asked If it were\nnot a fact'that 8000 Frenchmefi were\ntransported home with arms and\nmachine guns.\n\"That ls quite another question,\"\nAnthony Eden, War Secretary, Interjected.\nIn his statement Mr. Attlee said\nunfortunately a radical change in\nthe lituation since the evacuation\napplications were first Invited occurred as a result of the loss of the\nservices of a large part of the French\nnavy.\n\"In the present circumstances It\nIs essential to concentrate our whole\nnaval forces on the task of meeting\nthe overriding demands of national\nsecurity,\" he said. \"It ls this consideration alone that forced the government reluctantly to the conclusion they must postpone operation\nof the scheme.\"\nHe said similarly there) must be a\npostponement of the special arrangements for transferring certain\nschools to Canada.\nMr. Attlee denied a statement by\nWilliam Lunn, Labor, that \"Now you\nhave got some thousands of rich\npeople's children overseas there will\nbe no opportunity for the children\nof elementary schools.\"\nHe declared the purpose of the\ngovernment scheme was that there\nmust be a proper proportion of\nchildren from elementary schools\nand added that \"there will be a\ncertain number of children going in\nthe future in convoyed vessels.\"\n\"Some 3000 or 4000 of these children will be going from grant-aided\nschools under various private\nschemes that have been put by the\nauthorities and bodies In the United\nStates and the Dominions,\" he continued. \"But it is hoped to resume\nthis scheme whenever the military\nsituation will allow convoys.\"\nANNOUNCED IN CANADIAN\nHOUSE\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP)-Decision of the British Government to\nsuspend transfer of Britain children\nto Canada or the United States, as\nexplained in the British Parliament,\nwas announced in the House of Commons here today by Hon. T. A. Crerar, Minister of Mines and Resources.\nMr. Crerar read answers made !n\nthe British House to a question asked today. These indicated that because British naval units were needed for purposes of national security\nit was impossible to provide adequate escort for 'convoys bringing\nchildren to America.\nIt was also explained that because\nof the need for all money available\nfor war purposes it would be impossible to permit transfer of funds\nto Canada or the United States for\nsupport of schools transferred from\nthe British Isles.\nAnnouncement in the House ol\nCommons in London today that the\ndominions were prepared to take\nnot more than 20.000, was received\nwith some surprise here where it\nwas understood the province of Ontario alone estimated its eventual\ncapacity as running toward that figure.\nU.S. Opposes the\n(losing of Burma\nRoad to China\nWASHINGTON, July 18 (API-\nfhe State Department announced\nUnited States opposition today to\nHie closing of world trade arteries\nluch as the Burma Road and the\nFrench Indo-China Railway, over\nwhich China receives most of its\nWar Supplies.\nJapan had demanded that Great\nBritain close the Burma route.\nA statement from Secretary Hull\ntaid:\n'The Secretary ot State in reply\nto Inquiries by Press correspondents\nlor comment in regard to reports\nthat at the instance of the Japanese\nGovernment, the British Government would prohibit temporarily\nthe movement of certain commodities through Burma into China over\nwhat is known as the Burma Route,\nlaid that this Government has a\nlegitimate interest in the keeping\nopen of arteries of commerce in\nevery part of the world and colliders that -action such as this, if\ntaken, and such as was taken recently in relation to the Indo-China\nRailway, would constitute unwarranted interpositions of obstacles to\nWorld trade.\"\nChilean Minister\nStudies U.S. Note\nSANTIAGO. Chile. July 18 (AP).\n\u2014Foreign Minister Cristobal Saenz\nlaid today that he has receive^ and\nis studying a note from the United\nStates on establishment of a pro-\ntertorate over European possession in Central and South America.\nDetails of the communication\nwere not immediately forthcoming\n(It is probable that the note relates to Latin-American proposals\nfor a protectorate over European\npossessions in South and Central\nAmerica \u2014 already advanced \u2014\nrather than anv proposal originating with the United States.)\nOTHER COUNTRIES SOUNDED\nWASHINGTON, July 16 (AP). -\nInformed persons said today the\nUnited States is sounding out other\nAmerican countries on their attitude toward establishment of a\nprotectorate over European possessions in the Western Hemisphere.\nThis sounding, they said, was part\nof the preliminaries on several\nquestions likely to come before the\nInter-American conference opening\nat Havana Saturday.\nState Department officials said\nthey had no knowledge of a formal\nnote to the Chilean Government\nproposing such a protectorate but\nIt was not denied thst Ambassador\nClaude Bowers may have presented\nt memorandum on the subject.\n\t\nEnemy Sinks 22\nShrips During Week\nLONDON, July 16 (CD-Enemy action caused the loss of 22\nBritish, Allied and neutral merchant ships totalling 114,137 tons\nduring the week ended July 7,\nthe Admiralty announced today.\nAn authoritative source acknowledged that the losses were\nabove the average for the 44\nweeks so far accounted for, and\nwarned:\n\"We must expect more violent\nand more frequent air, attacks\nwith the coast of France occupied.\"\nBritish losses totalled 13 ships\nof 75,833 tons. Three Allied ships\nof a total of 9635 tons were sunk,\nand six neutral ships of 28,669\ntons.\nMrs. J. Menard,\nNelsonr Formerly\nAinsworth, Dies\nMrs. Josephine Menard, resident\nof Nelson for about two and one-\nhalf years, formerly of Ainswonh,\ndied in the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Tuesday. She had been ill\nabout a week.        \u2022\nAged 64, she was born In France\nin 1876. Surviving are a son, R. J.\nMenard of Nelson; a daughter, Mrs.\nEdward Wilson of Cramnserburg,\nSask.; and a niece. Mrs. Maurice\nThompson of Hazlett, Sask.\nTRAINING IN SCHOOLS\nONLY IN ACCORD OF\nCOV'T. REGULATIONS\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP) \u2014\nMilitary training will be given In\nVancouver schools only according\nto Dominion Government regulations, if such a policy is adopted,\nthe School Board declared last night.\nThe announcement was made in\nreply to a proposal from Crowe-\nSwords, of Vancouver, prominent\nVeterans' Group leader, for a .\\a-\ntional Cadet Corps.\n\u25a0*a^m&mmmo^^\n-NELSON-DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING  JULY 17. 1940.\u2014\nIt Pays to Buy and Sell the Classified Ad Way. Phone 144\nHeliutt Btrtuj -toss\nTelephone 144\nTr_fl: CA- tK. 8. Jby\nRossland: Call K. Lowdon\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per lu. per lniertion.\n44c per line per week (6 consecutive insertions for cost of 4)\n$1.43 per line \u25a0 month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 linei per Insertion)\nBox numban lie extra, Thli\ncoven any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c ptr line, flnt insertion and\n14c each' subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT '\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon-commercial  Situation!\nWanted  for 25c  fer any  required number of linn for ilx\ndayi, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  \u2014 $  .05\nBy carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month  ~\u00bb $ .75\nThree months     2.00\nSix months     4.00\nOne year      8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to lubicrlben living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity Top pricea\nSaid. Active Trading Company.\n16 Powell St.. Vancouver, B. C.\nWANTED  TO  RENT  GIRLS Bicycle for July, phone 311.\nHONG KONG EVACUEES\nWILL CO TO AUSTRALIA\nHONG KONG, July 16 (AP). -\nThe Hong Kong Colonial Government announced today that several\nvesels would arrive at Manila In a\nfew days tu pick up nearly 4000 British women and children taken there\ntwo weeks ago in a compulsory\nevacuation from Hong Kong.\nThey will be taken to Australia.\nPOWELL RIVER AIR\nDRIVE REACHES $4200\nPOWELL RIVER, B.C., July 16\n(CP).\u2014Powell River's drive to purchase a training plane, patterned after Vancouver's air supremacy campaign totalled more than $4200 today, past the half way mark toward\nits $8000 objective.\nThe plane will be used In Vancouvtr under the Empire Air Training Plan there.\nGovernor-General\nIs \"Regular Guy\"\nlo Air Force Men\nBy R08S MUNRO\nCanadian Presi Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP) - The\nEarl of Athlone has paid formal\ncalls here on the chiefs of the\nCanadian fighting forces, but Ts\nthe Air Force men at Rockcliffe\nAir Station who really know him.\nAs one flying man there put it,\nthe Governor-General is \"a regular\nguy.\"\nAt the air station the best itory\ntold in the mess is the one about\nHis Excellency and bis riding privileges at Rockcliffe; how he broke\nAir Force rules by an authorized\ncanter over air station grounds and\nsubmitted good naturedly when\ntaken to task by a young flying\nofficer.\nThe Earl is ah enthusiastic horseman, and he found a good bridle\nSath from Rideau Hall grounds to\nockcliffe Airdrome, where surrounding fields are splendid for his\nmorning canter.\nBut it is an important air base,\nclosely guarded. When the Governor-General galloped acrou the\nfields fbr the first time the flying\nofficer ordered him to' stop and in\nformed him such Incursions nere\nwere not permitted unless authorized.\nHis Excellency,'somewhat taken\nabaift by this young man, leaned\ndown from his horse and said: \"But\nI'm Athlone.\"\n\"I know, sir,\" replied the officer,\n\"but you still are not allowed to\nride in this area without permiS'\nsion.\"\nLord Athlone cordially Inquired\nabout getting permission and wai\ntold to ride around to the main\ngate. So the Commander-nl-Chlef\nol the Canadian forces rode to tne\nairport entrance.\nIn the meantime the flying officer\nexcitedly telephoned a wing commander of the incident. The wing\ncommander bundled into his un;-\nform and rushed to greet Hia Ex\ncellency.\nThen in the small guard house\nfull authority was written out for\nthe Earl to take his daily ride over\nthe air station grounds, and, laugh,\ning heartily at the episode, he ac\n'cepted the wing commander's invitation to breakfast in the officeri1\nmess.\nNow the Governor-General gallops his horse through the area every morning, and he's one of the\nmost welcome visitors at the a.r\nfield. \t\nGermans Claim\nHeavy Toll at Sea\nBERLIN, July 16 (AP).-Today's\nGerman high command communique;\n\"One submarine reported sinking\n23,600 tons of enemy merchant shipping space. Another U-boat shot one\nenemy tanker of 9000 registered tons\nfrom a strongly protected convoy.\nDuring repeated raids on July 15\non British shipping in the Channel\nwe succeeded in sinking three merchant ships totalling 18,000 registered tons and damaging by bomb\nhits additional merchantmen,\n(The claims were not confirmed\nin London.)\n\"In the coune of the day, the air\nforce, furthermore, raided British\nairports at Pembroke. St Athan.\nPlymouth and Bicester, and port\nfacilities at Cardiff and Brighton as\nwell as an air-plane factory at Yeovil. The bombs cause numerous fires\nand explosions.\n(German air activity over Britain\nwas light yesterday. The few bombs\ndropped caused minor damage.)\n\"Last night British planes again\ndropped bombi on some places in\nNorthern and Western Germany\nwithout damage.\"\nAUSTRIAN ROYALTY\nLEAVES FOR NEW YORK\nLISBON, Portugal, July 18 CAP)\n-William C. Bullitt, United States\nAmbassador to France, former Empress Zlta of Austria-Hungary and\nher daughter, Princess Elizabeth,\ntook off for New York aboard a\nclipper plane today.\nHELP WANTED\nEXP GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE\nwork, Sleep out at Willow Point\nPhone 401R3.     '\nmrm rsngr, write _,ox\n454, Roisland, B. C.\nAGENTS AND SALESMEN-\nWANTED - WIDOWS AND MAR-\nrled women for part or full time\ntaking orderi for our lovely Avon\nCoametica, splendid cash commissions. It interested call on Mri\nStevenion at the Noble Hotel,\n_A__!SM\u00abN WAlffiflb _(. COVER\nKootenayi for Country Guide and\nNor-West Farmer. Apply to Box\n3115 Daily Newi.\nTEACHER8\nWANTED SUPERIOR SCHOOL\nteacher, willing to teach Grade 12\nif required. Apply Secretary Robson School Board, Robson, B. C.\nEXPERIENCED TEACHER, WIL\nlow Point School. Apply to Mn.\nC. Shannon, R. R. No. 1.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (6 dayi)\ncoven and number of required\nlines. Payable ln advance.\nREFINED MIDDLE AGED Woman (no encumbrances) wants\nhousework; good plain cook Nelaon or district Local references.\nBox 3109 Ddlly Newi\nEXP.' TRUCK DRIVER WANTS\nwork, construction and boiler fire\nman. Rm 26 Stirling Hotel, Nelson\nWANTED - EMPLOYMENT AS\ntimekeeper or bookkeeper ahy-\nwhere. Box 3141 Daily News,\nRELIABLE GI RTT^WANTSTO\nlook after children afternoons and\nevenings. Phone 231X1.\t\nEXP. TRUCK DRIVER WANTS\nwork anywhere In district Box\n118, Trail, B. C,\ntl\nEXPERIENCED   GIRL   WANTS\npart time work. Phone 752R.\nSCHOOLS\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.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE TWO MILCH COWS,\nheavy milkera. J. Tremblay,\nRoss Spur, B. C.\t\nFOR SALE 6 \"HEAVY WORK\nhorses.  Ellison Milling Co. Ltd.\nRABBITS FOR SALf\"^ YOUNS\ndoes. Mrs. Marshall, Blueberry.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, etc.\nSPRINGER. MALE, WINNERS, RE-\nlerve winners, first, Vancouver\nshow. Puppy female. Pedigree,\nphotos. Ed Sparrow. Enderby, BU.\nPETLAND \u2014 W.\" 241 RIVERSIDE,\nSpokane. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish,\netc. Full line supplies, accessories.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nPURSE LOST AT PARK MONDAY\nnight Please return 718 Nelson Ave\nSPRINGER SPANIEL, ABOUT A\nyr. old, red, white in City Pound.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel Opp. CPR Depot\nMURPHY\" BRt__.-_t.& bftWD-\nable work. Wallpapers, and Glid-\ndena Time Teited Pamtt.\nHURRYI HURRYl 6 FOR 45o POR-\ntrait ipecial at Vogue Studio sow\n, on.  No  appointment  necessary.\nWE BUY TOi CA__C't!__D TOOLS\n' sinks, trunks, etc. Chess. 2nd Hand\nStore, 524 Vernon Street\nSALVATION ARMY - if YOTJ\nhave old clothing, footwear, furni-\nture to spare pleaie Ph. ui, 618L.\npubchAse VdtftT ftWtTS AND\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Al-\nways fresh In modern refrigeration\nA'PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait ot Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop pricei paid for antiques it\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St.\nCHOQUETTE ta'OS'.' \"MO-SHI'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry\nIN SPOKANE MAKE YOUR HOME\nThe Empire. 103 N. Diviiion St\nThe friendly hotel for Canadians.\nLONELY GENTLEMAN WISHES\nto correspond with lonely lady between 60 and 75 years of age. Address P. O. Box 182, Creston, B. C,\nHAIRGOODS\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees \u2014 fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue,\nHanson Company, P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B, C.\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 PlNTFINEST VANILLA 25c\nRegularly 35c. Equals five 25c\nbottlei. Real bargain. Worth $1.25\nretail. Agents, trial dozen $1.75.\nPrepaid. Reply to Concentrates,\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,\nDON'T LET YOUR RHEUMATIC\nor arthritic complaints pain you\nany longer. Your condition can\nbe relieved by a long proven fornt'\nula which is now available to\nyou, Ray's Rheumatic Rub. At\nall good Drug Stores,\nWRITE FOR FREE\" PRICE LIST\non Hygiene and Sanitary Sup'\nplies, or send $1.00 for special\nsample assortment of 27 best\nquality latex, postpaid under\nplain sealed cover. Western Sup-\nply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver\nAMBITIOUS MEN, SEVENTEEN\nand over wanted immediately for\nsecret-service and detective work.\nComplete training course by correspondence. Free information,\nwrite to M. L. Jullen, Box 25,\n_ Station T. Montreal, Quebec.\nMEN - HEALTH - REGAIN VIG-\nor \u2014 Pep, try Dupree-Wheat-\nPer les, 25 for $1.00, postpaid.\nSend $1.00 for 30 samples of drug\nspecialties. Tested, guaranteed 5\nyears against deterioration, Paris\nNovelty Co., Dept. \"N\", 24 Aikini\nBldg., Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nMEN PAST 40! RUNDOWN, PEP-\nless feeling? Try Ostrex tablets\nfor stimulants, tonics, oyster elements ai aid to recovery normal\nvim, vigor. Get package today. If\nnot delighted, maker refunda ltl\nlow price. Call, write Mann,\nRutherford Company and all\nother good drug stores.\nANY   SIZE  6  OR 8  EXPOSURE\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlarge-\nment, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\ntacking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie,\naskatchewan.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nUSED CARS PRICED\nTO CLEAR\n\u25a029 Special Chev. Sedan $100\n\"29 Dodge Coupe  $150\n'29 Special Stude. Sedan  $223\n'38 Standard Chev. Coupe _.._. $223\nDeal with a reputable Dealer\nfor safety.\nNelson Transfer\nCo., Ltd.\n1839  LAFAYETTE  BUSINESS\nCOUPE\nRadio,   air   conditioning,   seat\ncovers, 6 ply tirei and other accessories. Low mileage. \"A Pedigree Car\" at no price increase\n$1050.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nOpp. Post Office & Hume Hotel\nFOR SALE - ONE G. M. C. 24\npassenger school bus, operated\nfor one year only. Too imall for\npreient owner. Apply Purchaaing\nOffice, Consolidated Mining tc\nSmelting Co., Trail, B. C.\nREPOSSESSED CARS - '37 TER-\nraplane Coupe, excellent motor\nand good tires. You can save considerably on thli car. Interior Mo-\ntor Finance Corp. Ltd 554 Ward St.\n'32 Ford Light Delivery $300\n'35 International Light Delivery, Long w. b. like new     $500\nCENTRAL TRUCK tt\nEQUIPMENT CO., Nelion, B. C.\nSAVE ON A NEW FORD-CMET.\nnote $275 for sale. Owner leaving\ntown. What often. Apply to Box\n3137 Daily Newi,\nPARTY ABOUT TO BUY A NEW\ncar with no trade-In, can make $50\nby answering thii advt Box 8122\nDally Newi,\nFORD \"A\" COUPE MOTOR HE-\nbored, V8 tires, licensed, $185\nNelsqn Auto Wrecking, Ph. 946.\nFORD 2 TON TRUCK, 1935. JUST\noverhauled. Make offers. No\ntrade. Bx 3138 Daily News.\nMODEL \"A\" FORD COUPE GOOD\ncondition. City Auto Wreckers.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nUrge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue end Main St\nVancouver, B. C\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE, Cff-\ndar chest, dresser. Oak heater,\ndesk, Ktchn, utensils, etc. Ph. 619R\nPIPE-FITTINGS TUBES -  SPE-\ncial low pricei Active Trading Co\n'   Powell St, Vancouver, 6. C.\nANGLO CANADIAN WIRE ROPE.\nStevenson's Machine Shop, 708\nVernon St\u201e Nelson. Phone 98.\nUSED COFFIELD WASHER, LGE\nCopper Tub, new rollers good con\ndition $35, McKay tt Stretton.\nGENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGER-\nator, excellent condition. Reason\nable. Box 3157 Dally Newi.\nCHESTRFLD. SUITE, GOOD CON\ndition. Apply 916 Edgewood Ave.\nUSED 5 CU. FT. ELECTRIC RE\nfrigentor, $95. Yr. grntee. Ph. 260.\niii(_iaiui|   fwu.    _. _ \u25a0   fruni...  mtat nw\nFOR CASH MASON le RISCH Piano. Excellent condition. Ph. T42Y\nSTAVE PIPES MANUFACTURED\nat Caitlegar by W. W, O_eroff.\nRANGE,   CAMP   COTS,   DISHES\nicreenlng, R. H. Dill,\t\nEXCHANCE\n'33 FORD LIGHT DELIVERY WILL\ntrade for team. Apply to L. M\nLangill, Creicent Valley, B. C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nIF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A\nreal home for younelf and family or a home as a good investment, call me at 980 or write and\nlet me give you an idea aa to tbe\ngreatly reduced price and general advantages on the house located on Vernon Street owned by\nMr. Kerr. F. A. Stuart, the Real\nEstate Expert, Nelion, B. C.\nCENTRED IN TWO LOTS WffB\nfruit trees and garden, located in\nFairview, four nice fooma in\ngood repair. How much did you\nsay? Only $1000 cash or terms.\nPhone 980, Frank A. Stuart for\nreal estate buys and rentals.\nFAIRVIEW PROPERTIES. IDEAL\nHome sites. Euy terms to suit.\nTie-up one of these sites now for\nlater buildyig. R. W. Dawson,\nsole agent Hipperson Block.\nPhone 197.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908. Dept ot Natural\nResources. C. P R., Calgary. Alia\nHOUSES FOR SALE, BEST BUYS\nln town, easy terms. Car. Life\nand Fire Insurance. C. W, Applc-\nyard. Established 28 years.\nTWO CLEARED LOTST'ANY REA-\nsonable offer accepted. Apply 307\nMorgan St. between 5:30 and 7:30.\nFOR SALE 2 ACRES WELL IM-\nproved, good buildings; close to\ncity. For particulars P. O. Box 24.\nAT AINSWORTH, 4 RM. BUNGA-\nlow, lge. vrnda., plmbg., elecrcty.\n1920 Daniel St., Trail, B, C.\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\n. Nelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate,\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE 4 RM. COTTAOe AT\nPilot Bay, partly furnished. $300\nJess Sanders, Nelson, B. C.\nWILL SELL MY EQUITY IN 5 SSI.\nmodem bungalow. Ph. 57 or 522Y.\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT\nHOUSES FOR RENT. MONEY ON\nhand for Mortgages, Yorkshire\nPlan or private funds.    C. W.\nAppleyard.\t\nHOUSE-\nNEWLY    DECORATED\nkeeping rooms and suites   Star\nRooming House, 705 Victoria Alley\n5 ROOM MODERN HOUSE, HALF\nblock from Baker Street for rent.\n514 Henaricks St., Phone 691-L.\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM FURNISH-\ned suite, very close ln. $20 month.\nC, W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT \u2014 PARTLY FURN-\nished 2 room cottage. 63 Govt. Rd,\n4 ROOM BUNGALOW, FURNACE,\nfireplace, electric range. Ph. 619R,\nFOR RENT. JULY AND AUGUST\nsmall furn. house. 101 Chatham St\nHOTEL ROOMS FOR LEASE, FUR<\nnlshed. Box 3152 Daily News.\nFOR RENT, FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\t\nJOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\n2 FURNISHED HOUSE KEEPING\nrooms for rent 711 Vernon St,\nTERRACE APTS.. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR RENT-A SMALL SUITE\nPhone 628X,\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nC. W. W.ALTON lc SON, BOAT\nBuilders. Boats for rent Briggs\nlc Stratton air-cooled inboard and\nJohnson Outboard engine agents.\nWANTED TO BUY. LAUNCH IN\n?ood condition, cabin cruiser pre\nerred. Box 3163 Pail? News.\nWant to Sell Something? A\nDaily News Classified Ad will\ndo it. PHONE 144.\nSUMMER RESORTS\nC.LENAIRLEY LODGE, EAST\nSooke, V. I, 23 miles Southwest\nof Victoria. Ideal resort fot restful holiday. Lodge and cabin accommodation\u2014new spring mattresses throughout Home cooking,\nJeney cream, treih fruit tnd\nvegetables. Riding, iwimming,\nboating, tennii, indoor badminton. Riding only extra, phone or\nwrite David Gray, R. R. 1.\nVictoria, B. C.\nSPEND YOUR HOLIDAY AT\n\"The Holme,\" Gibion'i Ldg., on\nbeautiful Howe Sound, $12.50\nweek.  3 roomed apartment for\nrent. Furnished.\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABIN^\nAppledale. Ratei by day. week\nor month. Fully furniihed. Apply\nAppledale General Store.\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC\nHOW TO ENJOY YOUR HOLI-\ndaya\u2014Forget the pontbility ot\nloss or damage to your Car and\nHome by protection provided\nthrough our Insurance Policiei.\nH. E. Dill, 532 Ward Street\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agenti for\nTrail Smelter, 304-305 Josephine\nStreet, Nelson, B. C.         .\nGRENVILLE H. GR__fW50_>\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 429\nFall Street P. 0. Box 9, Nelion.\nB. C. Representing ihipperr\ninterest at Trail, B. C. .\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSS-SUB,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual representative for ship-\npen at Trail Smelter,\t\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCilloch Blk.\nDR. WILBERT BROCK, D.^Ci\n542 Baker Street, Phone 969,\nCORSETlERES\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V. M,\nCampbell, 370 Baker St, Ph, t\"\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN, Minlrig lc Civil\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand ForW.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C.\nSurveyor and Engineer. Phons\n\"Beaver Falli\".\nIN8URANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance ot\nevery description. Real Elt. Ph.S9,\n\"CHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE*\nReal Estate, Phone 138.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 1ST.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine ahop, acetylene and electria\nwelding,  motor  rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration   i\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES At\nForest Lawn Memorial Park. Gel\nprice list from Brome Memoritll\nLtd. Box 726 Vancouver, B, C. \u25a0\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant, 273 Bfoer St\n8EC0ND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,   SELL  tt  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 534,\nWnjTOS I HAVE.IT HAPPENS THAT I PICKEgj\nIT OUT FOB HIM\nBUT-MAfiSlS-\n1UAVEA\ntor oe vvQWer\nTO CO-\nDON1.  ST\u00bbND THEBE TELLING\nME WHAT VOL) WAVE TO DO-\nSET OUT OP THIS BOOM- I'M\nMAV1NG IT Q4.INTED TOOAy-\nWELL-lU. 60 UPSTAIRS AN' WOBK'\nl'VE&OrT06IT\nTHIS JOB RNSHED-\nF.\nNOW-LETS\nSEE -I'LLDO\nTHE HAHDWORv;\nFiBST-iLfnyy\nTO BALANCE\nMAGGIE'S BANIC\n-ACCOUNT-\n1\nGREAT HEAVENS -SET\nOUT OP THIS BOOM-\nVOU ABE SITTING ON\nMV PINE ANTIQUE CHAIft\nAND MOW MANY\nTIMES HAVE I TOLD XDU\n\u2022NOT TO DOT VOUR\nHANDS ON THAT      f\nbeautiful table-\ncover?\n ,\t\n\t\n\t\n feather Helps\nCanadian Crops\nOTTAWA. July 16 (CP)-Moder-\n\u2022tely warmer weather ln the Eastern Provinces and good rains, cou-\n5led with cooler temperaturei in\nit Prairies, have resulted in favorable crop progress during ihe\npast week, tbe Dominion Bureau\nof Statistics reported today ln the\neighth of a series of weekly telegraphic news reports covering crop\nconditions throughout Canada.\nIn the Maritime Provinces crop\neondltions are now promising, on\nthe whole.\nThe warmer weather hu helped\nCrops In Ontario and Quebec.\nFavorable weather conditioni in\nthe Prairie Provinces lut week\nbrought improvident to general\ncrop prospects. Good rains fell at\nmany points in Southern Manitoba, In Central and Northern Saskatchewan and ln Central and Northern Alberta. Cooler weather hat\nbrought relief to crop* ln tectiont\nWhere moiiture reiervet have bacn\nheavily drawn upon.\nSome damage from hail wai reported at teveral points. Grasshoppers are still active, but are causing\nrelatively Ilttle damage. Drought\nconditions have adversely affected\ngrowing field crops In British Columbia although tree fruit prospects\nare very favorable.\nVANCOUVER BUYS\nDAMAGED SHOES\nVANCOUVER, July 18 <CP)-The\nCity of Vancouver wu the rueful\nowner today of several hundred\npairs of badly damaged shoes, not\nobtained at bargain prices.\nThe City Council yesterday agreed\nte pay $1890 for the shoes, ruined\nwhen a City water pipe broke,\nflooding the basement ot a local\nshop where the shoes were stored.\nEXCHANCI MARKETS\nMONTREAL, July 18 (CP. .-Brit,\nish and foreign exchange, nominal\nratet Between banka only:\nArgentina, peso, .2417.\nChina, Hong Kong dollar, MM.\nSwitzerland, banc, .2M2.\n(Compiled by The'Royal Bank ot\nCanada).\nCloiing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10, telling 1,11.\nAt New York-Pound 3.84; Ca-\nnadian dollar  .87%.\nNEW YORK, My 16 <CP).-Thl\nfree pound starling fell ott two\ncents to $3.34 againit United Statei\nfunds on the foreign exchange market today foUowlng Monday's 15-\ncent rise.\nThe Canadian dollar struck out\ntor itself gaining V, centa to 87j6_U\ncents. (Ottawa Foreign Exchange\nControl Board rate 9.06-8.91 per\ncent discount). The Swlu franc was\nunchanged at 23.71 cents.\nWinnipeg Dull\nWINNIPEG, July 16 (CP)-Wln.\nnlpeg Grain Exchange recorded another dull session today In wheat\nfutures trading with all futurei\nremaining at their Government-fixed leveli of 71% centi per bushel\nfor July, 73% for October, and 74%\nfor December.\nThe July and December futurei\ntailed to open, and only a few early\ntradei were made In October wheat.\nThe early tradu were largely\ncommission house buying, and had\nno influence on traden, who itood\nby presumably awaiting further indication! from Ottawa on Government wheat policiei.\nCaih wheat spreads were unchanged and orders confined to odd\ncarloads.\nThe' coarse grain pit followed a\nroutine and uninteresting trade in\na narrow price range.   <\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nW industrials .....\n18 rails \t\nU utilities \t\nHigh Low Close Change\n123.73 121.82 123.12\u2014up 1.40\n26.42 26.12 26.33-up   .23\n22.77 23.40 23.64-up   .12\nQUOTATIONS  ON  WALL\nClose\nKenn  Cop\nOpen\nAmer Can  9814\nAm Smelt & Ref  89\nAmer Tel    160%\nAnaconda  ..... 19%\nBaldwin      14%\nBait tt Ohio ....      3%\nISdlX Avi  __.\u2014 28\nBeth Steel  76y\u00ab\nBorden \u201e 19\nChn Pao     2%\nChryiler   \u2014~\u2014 84\nOm Gu N V   28%\nC Wright Pfd       7%\nDuponf  :   WtVt\ntut Kod     119\nGen  Elec    30%\nOen Foods  42%\nGen Mot    \u00ab%\nOft Nor Pfd  28\nHowe   Sound     29\nInter Nickel    23%\nInter Tel lc Tel      2%\n95y<\n38%\n160%\n19%\n15%\n3.\u00bb\n28\n77%\n19%\nVie\n66\n28 V*\n7%\n169\n119\n31%\n42%\n44%\n24\n29\n23*\n2%\nMont Ward \t\nN Y Central \t\nPack Mot  \u201e.\nPenn R R \t\nPullman\t\nRadio Corp  \u201e\nSafeway Stores ',\nShell  Un  \t\nS Cal Ed\t\nStan OU of N J .\nStudebaker  \u201e\nUn Carbide  ,.\nUn OU ot Cel ...\nUnited Aircraft\nUn Pac \t\nU S Rubber _\nU S Steel   \t\nWarner Bros\t\nWest Un _,\nWoolworth   \u201e\t\nYel Truck  ..\t\nSTREET\nOpen\n34%\n39%\n11%\n4\n18%\n19%\n5\n42\n8\n27%\n34%\n6%\n67%\n12%\n34%\n82%\n19\n31%\n2%\n17%\n32%\n11%\nClose\n25%\n39%\n-X\n20\n19%\n5\n42%\n8\n27%\n35\n6%\n68\n12%\n35%\n82%\n19%\n62%\n2%\n17%\n31\n11%\nMONTREAL\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nBathurat P fc P A\t\nCan Car fc Fdy Pfd\t\nCan Celaneie  \t\nCan Steamihip \t\nCan Steamihip Pfd\t\nCoekihutt Plow \t\nCon Min fc Srhelting \t\nDominion Coal Pfd ...___\nDom Steel fc Coal B\t\nDominion Textile\t\nDryden Paper \u201e_\nFoundation C of C\t\nOatineeu  Power  \t\nGtird Charlei   \t\nHoward Smith Piper\t\nImperial OU  '\t\nInter Petroleum \u2014\u2014__,\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nLake of the Woodt J...\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nNational Brew Ltd\t\nNational Brew Pid \t\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\nl\n9%\n14\n29\n3\n10%\n5\n31%\n19\n77%\n5\n8%\n12\n4%\n14%\n9%\n14%\n32\n16\n5%\n26\n36\nPrice Brot\t\nQuebec Power\t\nShawnigan W fc P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd .\nSteel of Can Pld \t\nWeitern Groceri \t\nBANKI:\nMontreil  \t\nNova Scotia .... \t\nRoyal   ___\u201e.\nCURB:\nAbiUbi 6 Pfd \t\nBathunt P b. P B ......\nBeauharnois   Corp   .\t\nBritish American OU ..\nB C Packen \t\nCan Industries B \t\nCan Vicken  \t\nCons Piper Corp \t\nFairchlld Aircraft 7.\t\nFraser Co Ltd  \t\nInter UtUitiet B\t\nMitchell Robt  _...\nWalker Good Pfd\t\n11\n14\n18%\n13%\n65\n175\n276\n202\n.78\n2%\n4%\n17%\n10%\n1.80\n3'\n3%\n2%\n9\n.25\n7\n17%\nTravel the \u2014\nAll Canadian Route\nTO VANCOUVER\nDAILY SERVICE\u2014CHOICE OF ROUTfS\nLv- Nelson   5:15 p.m.\nAr. Trail    7:15 p.m.\nLv'  I \">'l     8:00 p.m.\nAr. Kaleden    6:10 a.m.\nLv. Kaleden     7:20 a.m.\nAr. Princeton    9:50 a.m.\nLv. Princeton   -  10:15 a.m.\nLv. Spenee's Bridge   3:00 p.m.\nAr. Vancouver    10:35 p.m.\nLv. Nelson     9:00 a m.\nAr. Nakusp     1:35 p,m,\nLv. Nakusp     2:00 p.m.\nAr. Vernon    7:10 p.m.\nLv. Vernon     7:45 a.m.\nAr. Kamloops    10:45 a.m\nLv. Kamloops  11:15 a.m.\nAr. Spenee's Bridge   2:50 p.m.\nLv. Spenee's Bridge   3:00 p.m.\nAr. Vancouver     10:35 p.m.\nConnectloni for Okanagan and Cariboo Polnti\nNelson to Vancouver\nReturn $19.80     One way $11.00\nCircle tours at no additional cost.\u2014Return limit 180 days.\nFates and schedules subject to change without notice\nGREYHOUND\n-NILION DAILY NEWS. NILION. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO JULY 17, IM.\nPrices Stronger\non Toronto Exchg.\nTORONTO, July W (CP) -\nStronger pricei and better trading\naction marked today's operations\non the Toronto Exchange,\nGains predominated tn tbe senior\nOil, utility, iteel, paper and food\ngroups. Page-Hersay firmed 2 pointa\nto 84 and Steel bf Cantdt preferred\nadvanced a point\nSenior bate metal issues were led\nby Noranda with an advance of\nIVi to 44V\u00ab. Smelten and Hudson\nBay were Vi up. Nickel added ><i.\nSteep Rock advanced to IM to\nihow a net gain of 11 centt, while\nFalconbridge firmed IS centt.\nStrong issues of the gold group\nIncluded Buffalo-Ankerlte, Macassa,\nPioneer, Preiton, Sin Antonio, Malartlc Oold Fields, Macleod-Cock-\nslmtl, Uchi and Hard Rock. Kerr-\nAddison eased down about 4 cents\nan Mclntyre lott tt.\nHome Oil finned 5 centt to 1.80\nand smaller gaina camp through lor\nAnglo-Canadian and Dalhousie. Calmont weakened 2 cents.\nSmall Gains on\nMontreal Stocks\nMONTREAL, July U (CP). -\nBuying came Into the market tn\nlate trade today and Bell Telephone gained more than a point\nwhile fractional advances were\nchalked up tor Montreel Power,\nShawlnigan and Brazilian. Papers\nalto found support at Bathurst,\nPrice Brothers and Dryden displayed moderate advancei.\nIn bate metali, Hudson Bay advanced a sizeable fraction.\nNewsprints met light buying on\nthe curb and fractional advances\nwere boarded by Abitibi issues.\nMlnet were mostly iteady.\nDEPT. STORE SALES\nHIGH IN JUNE\nOTTAWA, July M (CP)-Tho Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported\ntoday sales of Canadian department\nstores ln June dropped 4 per cent\nfrom May, but were 8 per cent\nhigher than ln June, 1939.\nWEEKLY REVENUE OP\nC.N.R. UP $1,900,000\nMONTREAL, July 1\u00ab (CP).-In-\ncreate of $1,938,071 wat reported\ntoday by the Canadian National\nRallwaya in gross revenues of $5,-\n494,501 for the week ended July 14,\ncompired with $3,996,430 ln the corresponding period ot 1939.\nBLACKPOOL, July 16 (CP).-A\nresolution demanding the retirement\nof Neville Chamberlain and hit Con-\ntervative Colletguei from the Government wat defeated by the British\nMine Worken Federation today. The\ncard vote wai 430,000 to 161,000.\nRulei on Margins\nAmended at Toronto\nTORONTO, July 16 (CP). - The\nManaging Committee ot the Toronto\nStock Exchange hai amended the\nregulations governing margin requirements to permit memben to\ncarry 24 specified mining stocks.\nnow around or below (1 on a N\nper cent marginal bull. Heretofore\nfull cath payment was required lor\nitocki selling below Jl.\nThe ruling alto lowers tha margin\nrequired on itocki telling between\n$1 and ti trom 60 ptr cent to 40\nper oent and eliminates the 68 centt\na there minimum margin\nrequirement.\nThe itocks are:       _\nAunor, Beattie, Ctstlt-Trethewey,\nChesterville, Coniaurum, Delmlte,\nHard Rock, Klrkland Lake, Maeleod, Cockshutt, Malartlc Gold\nFields, McKenzle Red Like, Nipia\nling, O'Brien, Pamour, Perron, Pre\nmier, Sheep Creek, Shtrritt-Qor.\non, Siscoe, Sudbury Buln. Sullivan,\nToourn and Upper Canada.\nC.N.R. Revenue Gains\n$5,573,302 in June\nMONTREAL, July 16 ((^-Increase of $5,673,302 wu reported today by Canadian National Railway!\nln June net revenuei of $5,561,206,\ncompared with net deficit of $12,-\n006 for the corresponding period\nin 1039.\nIncrease of $16,709,000 wat reported in net revenues ot $16,200,083\nlor the six monthi ended JJunt 30,\ncompared with a net deficit of $808,-\n417 in the corresponding period\nOf 1839.               '\nWHOLESALE COMMODITY\nPRICE INDEX OROPS\nOTTAWA, JlBy 16 (CP). - The\ngeneral wholesale commodity price\nIndex for Canada dropped to 81.7\nthe week ended July 12 trom 82.2\nthe previoui week, the Dominion\nBureau of Statistics reported today.\nThe corresponding week a year ago\ntt waa 72.8,\nThe  index  tor Canadian  farm\nSroductt declined to 66.0 from 65.8\nie previoui week. It wu 63.1 latt\nyear.\nTORONTO EXCHANCE\nSEAT SELLS FOR SI 2,000\nTORONTO, July 16 (CP)-A*teat\non the Toronto Stock Exchange\nwat told thit week for $12,000, a\nrecord low price ilnce the merger\nof the Exchanges.\nLONDON  CLOSE\nLONDON, July 16 (AP.-Brltlth\nitock closings in iterling: Cent\nMining. \u00a310; Como). Gold Fields,\n25s De Been, did, \u00a33: H. B. C,\n23s; Mining Trust, lt 3d.\nBonds\u2014British 2Vi per cent Con-\ntola, \u00a372yt; Brltiih Stt per cent\nWar Loan, \u00a390%; British Funding\nll, 1960-90, \u00a3110%.\nVANCOUVER\nBid\nMINES:\nBig  Missouri   .09\nBralorne     8.00\nBrige Riv Con _ \u2014\nCariboo Gold   1.88\nDentonla  _ \u2014\nFairview Amal  jOOVd\nGolconda   - \u2014\nGold Belt ;_:....,..... 33'\nGrandview  .09V.\nGrull Wihksne .... .02\nHedley Mucot ..... .30\nHome Gold   \u2014\nIndian Minea .\u2014 * \u2014\u25a0\nIsland Mount   ltl\nKoet Belle  JU\nMlnto  Gold   Al\nMcGillivray  ..\u201e 18\nNicola M * M \u2014 -\nPend Oreille .  1J0\nPioneer  Oold  .... 188\nPorter Idaho  .Oltt\nPremier Border ... .OOtt\nPremier Gold ..... .79\nPrivateer  \u2014 -80\nReeves MacD \u2014 \u2014\nRelief   Art    MVi\nReno Gold Wtt\nSalmon Gold  .02\nSheep Creek - .80\nSilver Crest\t\nTaylor Bridge .\u2014 .02\nWellington     MVi\nWhitewater   - -01\nYmir Yank Girl .. .08tt\nSTOCK   QUOTATIONS\nAsk\n.07\n8.05\n.01\n1.90\n.00>,i\n.00%\n.04\n-.24\n.12\n.OOtt\nill\n.64\n.32\n.02\n130\n190\n.02,1\nm\n.25\n.05,,\n.03..\n- .01\n.01...\n.05\nOILS:\nAmalgamated \u2014 \u2014\nAnglo Can  .68\nBrown Corp   .07\nCalgary lc Edm . 1.21\nCalmont    33\nComoll - .21\nDalhousie   20\nEast Creat  .MVi\nExtension  17tt\nFireitone  Pete  .... At\nTout Star Pete .... .OOtt\nHighwood Strcee .. .08\nHome    1.97\nMaditon    .OW\nMar Jon  - Ol\nMcDoug Seg   .06\nMercury  - -03tt\nMill City   j(Mtt\nMonarch Roy ....... D9tt\nNational Pete  \u2014\nPacalta     j08'\nPac Pete - a\nPrairie Roy,  \u201e .12\nRoyal Can      , .14\nRoyal Creit Pete .. .07tt\nRoyalite     18.00\n.00%\n.87\n.09\n1.25\n.lltt\n.09tt\n1.98\n.OlVi\n.07\n.04\n.05\n.27\n.14\n.19V4\nSpqoner\nSuniet \u201e\t\nUnited  _.\t\nVanalta\t\nVulcan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital Eat       \u2014\nCoaat  Brew       1.10\nFord  A\n.02\n.22\n.04\n.03\n_5\n1.25\n1.13\n.14*       -\nTORONTO\nMINI!\nAldermac Copper \t\nAmm Gild\t\nAnglo-Hurenlin  -..,....\nArntfield Gold ....\t\nAatorla Rouyn Mlnet\t\nAunor\t\nBagamac Rouyn\t\nBankfleld Oold .....\nBeattie Gold Minei\t\nBidgood Klrkland\t\nBig Mlttourl \t\nBobio Mihet\t\nBralorne Minei\t\nBuffalo Ankerite\t\nBunker Hill Ex -\t\nCan Malartlc \t\nCariboo Gold Quarti\t\nCentral Patricia  _..\nChromium M. lc S\t\nCout Copper _.\t\nConiaurum Minu _\nCom M It S -\t\nDome Mlnet\t\nDorvtl-Siaeoe -\nEait MaiarUc \u2014\nEldorado Gold \t\nFalconbridge Nickel \t\nFederal Klrkland \t\nFrancoeur Gold \t\nOllllei Uke  \t\nGod's Lake Gold  \t\nGold Belt \t\nGrandoro Mlnet \u2014\nGunnar Gold    \u2014\t\nHard Rock Gold -._..\nHarker Oold\t\nHollinger  \t\nSowey Gold  _ \nudson Bsy M ft S\t\nInter Nickel  ..,\t\nJ.-M. Cona\t\nJack Waite  \t\nJacola Gold  -~_^-\nKerr-Addlion ~~\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLake Shore Minei ....\nLeitch Gold   \u2014\nLabel Oro Mlnet\t\nLittle Long Lie \t\nMacuia Mines  \t\nMacLeod Coekihutt \t\nMadsen Red Lake Gold\t\nMindy   '. \u2014\nM-Mtyre-Porcupine  ;.,.,\nMcKenzie Red Lake .........\nMeWaiteri Gold   .......\t\nMining COrp  . .., 1_\nMoneta Porcupine _~\u2014\t\nMorrii-Klrkland ..._._..\u2014\nNipitsing Mining ..._-.\u2014\nNortnda ... - -.\u2014\t\nNorrrtetal \t\nO'Brien Oold  --__\nOmega Geld\t\nPamour Porcupine ^\t\nPaymaster Cont .. _ _\t\nPend Ortine...:....:.....;...:.-...\nPerron Gold ....\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\n.utt\n.Oltt\n1.90\n.04\n.02\n1.05\n.03\n.09%\n.73\n.lltt\n.05\n.04 Vi\n8.00\n2.99\n.01\n.32\n1.83\n1.55\n.20\n.50\n1.00\n32.00\n17.90\nDm\n1.30\n.31\n2.13\n.Oltt\n.18\nSt%\njn\n.19\n.04 tt\nit\n.64\n.03%\n9 90\n.21\n22.00\n31.00\n.00%\n.18\n.01%\n1.83\n.77\n16.00\n.48\nDltt\n1.89\n2.75\n1.19\nM\n.07\n37.29\n.88\n.24\nit\nit\n.03\n44 JS\n.18\nit\n.12\n.88\n.21V,\n1.23\n1.23\nPickle Crow Gold ...\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Gold \t\nPowell Rouyn Gold .\nPreston East Dome .\nReno Gold Mlnet\t\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold ...\nShawkey Gold \t\nSheep Creek Gold ...\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSiscoe Oold   \t\nSladen Malartic\t\nSt. Anthony \t\nSudbury Buln \t\nSullivan Corn \t\nSylvanite\t\nTeck-Hughet Gold .\nToburn Gold Minei.\nTowagmac  ..\nVenturei   _\t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWright Hargreavu ..\nYmir Yankee Girl .\u201e\nOILS\nAjax\t\nBrltlth American\t\nChemical Research....\nImperial\t\nInter Petroleum\t\nTexu Can\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A\t\nBell Telephone \u2014\nBrit TL_F ..........\nBreweri St Dltt\t\nBrewing Corp \t\nB C Power ''B\"\t\nBuilding Prodi ........\nCanada Btead \t\nCan Bud Malting .\t\nCan Car tc Fdy\t\nCan Cement \t\nCan Dredge\t\nCan Pacific Rly \t\nCan Ind Alcohol A ...\nCom Bakeries \t\nDom Stores  \t\nDom Tar tt Chem\t\nDltt Seagrams _,\nFanny Farmer  \u201e.\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Warei\t\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGypsum L it A ..\t\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHiram' Witter\t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw \"A\" \u201e\t\nUMew \"B\"\t\nMaple Lea! Milling .\nMauey. Harris \t\nMoore Corp ..\u00bb_\u201e._.\nNat Steel Car\t\nPage Heraey ...\t\nPower Corp- ..\u25a0.._\t\nPressed Metali\t\nSteel of Gtt)\t\nStand^d Paving\t\n2.18\n1.90\n.75\n.55\n1.32\n.OOVi\n.03\n1.99\n.Oltt\n.77\n.58\n.63\n.26\n.08\nM\n.53\n1.97\n2.80\n1.01\n.10\n2.05\n2.90\n8.00\n.Ottt\n.10tt\n17.40\n.19\n0.50\n14.40\n.95\n.70\n.   141%\n4tt\n4\n.     Hi\n.     ltt\n.     12tt\n.      2\n.      4%\n6tt\n8%\n8tt\n4%\n'.    Utt\n3tt\n3\n.    24\n.    22V.\n.    IB\n.      4*\n.    62\n2%\n!    34'$\n.    UVt\n.    21\n.    20tt\n2\n2%\n. 36%\n. 37%\n. 99%\n6%\n6%\n. 61 tt\n.       .40\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, July, 18   (OP).  -\nGrain cloae:\nWHEAT    Open High Low Close\nJuly     -    -    -     71%\nOct 73%   -     -     73%\nDeo      -     -     74%\nMinimum pricu: July 71%; Oct.\n73%: Dec. 74%.\nOATS\nJuly     83%  -     -     38%\nOcL    28tt   J8%   I8tt   28%\nDec.   36%   26%   24%   26%\nBARLEY\n34%  34%\n5* a\n- 128\n- IH\nmm\nJuly   14% M%\nOct. 36%   86%\n128     -\n131     -\n...  44%   48%   \u00bb>'.\n    44%   49%   44V4   48%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT   .No. 1 hard 71%; No.\n1 Nor. 71%; No. 3 Nor. 63%; No. 3\nNor. \u00ab3%; No. 4 Nor. 60tt; No.\n8 wheat 87%; No. 6 wheat 56%;\nteed 81%; No. 1 garnet 63%; No.\n2 gamet 61%; No. 1 durum 62%:\nNo. 4 ipecial 61%; No. 6 ipecial\n87%; No. 6 apeclal 66%; track\n71%; screenings IS centi per ton.\nOATS - No. 3 C. W. 33%; No.\nEx. 3 C. W. 31%; No. 8 C. W. 80%;\nEX. 1 leed 30%; No. 1 feed 28%;\nNo 2 feed 39%; No. 3 feed 33%;\ntrack 39%.\nBARLEY - No. 1 teed 83%; No.\n2 leed 31%; No. 3 leed 30%; track\n34%.\nFLAX - No. 1 C. W. 128; No. 2\nC. W. 134; NO. 3 C. W. 116; No. 4\nC. W. 103; track 128.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 45%.\nGolds Gain and Oils\nSteady a. Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP). -\nGolds took an upward alant while\noils held steady during fairly active\ntrading on Vancouver Stock Exchange today. Transactions totalled\n39,085 shares.\nAmong the golds Pioneer at lit\nwaa up 19 trom yesterday, cloiing\nbid and Gold Belt gained 4 at 24.\nIiland Mountain at 63 and Privateer\nat 83 both firmed a cent Irom\nMonday's bids. Bralorne dropped\n6 to 8.08.\nHome Oil gained 3 to 1.57.\nNew York Steady\nNEW YORK. July 18 (AP)-In-\nvestment demand helped sustain an\neven price trend in the bond market\ntoday.\nA majority of gains ranging to\naround a point or more dotted the\nlist by noon but enough minus\nilgni cropped out to give tiie market a spotty appearance.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, July 16 (CP) - The\ncattle market at Calgary today wat\nateady tor quality offered.\nYetterdty's receipts\u2014Cattle, 102;\ncalvel, 27; hogs, 148; iheep. 311.\nToday'a receipts\u2014Cattle, 97; hogt,\n37; calvel, 6.\nThli morning good weighty heif-\neri aold trom 8.79 to 6; common to\nlight, 5.25.\nOne lot ot choice ted calvel told\nat 8.90 and the occasional medium\nto good, $7 and $8.\nMedium to good cowl, 3.75 to\n4.25; canners, 2  to 2.90.\nTwo good built brought 4.79 and\n4.85, and canners 4 to 4.29.\nWar Slocks Shew\nLife on Wall SI.\nMEW YORK, July 16 (AP). -\nThe etock market shook off a portion of ltt gloom today and selected\nsteels, motori, aircrafts and ipecl-\nalties rallied 1 to more than 2\noolnu.\nVolume picked up on the comeback around midday, but reverted\nto sluggishness ln subsequent proceedings. Extreme gains were reduced at the close. Transfers were\naround 400\/100 shares for the first\ntime ln about two weeki.\nBrokers attributed the revival\npartly to the thought the market,\nwhich hit a 31-year-old turnover\nyesterday, may have been \"told\nout\" and wat due at least for a\ntemporary upawlng despite possible\nadvdrse news developments.\nBonds tteadled.\nChicago Wheat Price\nShows Strength\nCHICAGO, July 16 (AP). -\nWheat futures prices exhibited a\nthow of itrength today, advancing\nas much as 2tt centt a bushel over\nMonday' final figures. All deliveries retained most ol the gain and\nthe close was near the highest\nleveli of the day. Corn pricea held\ntteady to slightly higher.\nWheat closed ltt to 2 centt higher than Monday's final prices, July\n74%, September 79V4 to 75%; Corn\nwaa % otf to % up, July 62% to\n62%, September 56% to 88%, and\noats were Vt to % higher.\nLondon Stocks Firm\nLONDON, July 16 (AP) - The\nstock market held ls ground today\ndespite the levere check on new\nbusiness cauied by concern over\nwar development! and pending an\nannouncement on budget details.\nBritish Goverment bonds tended\nupward and most stocki in the industrial list found a iteady footing.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nLONDON, July 16 (AP) - Bar\nillver 223-Ud up % (equiva.ent\nto 40.23 centi bated on dollar 4.03).\nBar gold lSBa. unchanged (equivalent $33.85).\nTin-Steady; ipot, \u00a3269 bid, \u00a3269\n6a aiked; future, \u00a3264 bid, \u00a3264\n5s asked.\nMONTREAL-Bar gold ln London wat unchanged at $37.94 an\nounce in Canadian fundi; 168s m\nBrltiih, representing the Bank of\nEngland's buying price, tbe fixed\n$88 Wuhlngton price amounting to\n$38.50 in Canadian.\nSpot\u2014Copper, electrolytic, 13.78;\ntin, 62; lead, 9.90; zinc, 9.69; antimony, 19.29.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid, July, 87.75.\nNEW YORK-Copper - Barely\nsteady,, electrolytic, ipot. Conn. Valley, 10.75-11.99; export, l.a.i. N. Y.,\n10.29.\nTin\u2014Steady; ipot and nearby,\n61.29; forward, 90.09.\nLead\u2014Steady; tpot, New York,\n5-5.90; Eait St. Louli, 4.88.\nZinc\u2014Steady; Eait St, Louis, spot\nand forward, 6.25.\nQuicksilver-198-200.\nPig iron, aluminum, antimony,\n\u00a7 Lithium, Chinese wolframite and\nomettlc icheellte unchanged.\nBar tilver\u201434%, unchanged.\nCalgary Oils in\nDull Session\nCALGARY, July 16 (CP)-For\nthe iecond successive day dealings\non the Calgary Oil Erchange were\nnegligible with total sales amounting to 2300 iharet for the session.\nOne hundred Anglo-Canadian sold\nat 57, up 3 from the last bid; 1000\nDavit Pete went at 13; 200 McDougall Ex. at 7 centa and Sundance\nat 13.\t\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July 16 (CP)-Ca-\nnadlan commodity exchange. Spot,\nButter, Que., 23-23%; Que., 23-2.V4;\nSue., 22B, Cheeie, unquoted. Eggs,\nastern  A-large,   26W;   A-pullets,\n19%A.\nButter luturea\u2014Nov., 84-24%.\nPAOI  ELEVEN\nMan lo Assist in\nPlane Production\nTORONTO, July 16 (CP).\u2014J. P.\nBickell, Toronto mining executive,\nli on hit way to London to assist\nLord Beaverbrook ln the wartime\nspeedup of airplane production,\nBlckells office announced today.\nAlso associated In the work are two\nother Canadians, RL Hon. R. B.\nBennett, former Conservative Prime\nMinister, and Beverley Baxter, Canadian-born member ol the British\nParliament.\nThe four \"B.'.wlll contact one\nof Britain's most Important war efforts', the attainment ot supremacy\nover Germany ln aircraft production. Lord Beaverbrook himself la\na native of New Brunswick.\nBicknell, friend of Premier'\nMitchell Hepburn ot Ontario, lt an\naviation enthusiast and hai hit own\nprivate plane. In 1938 he flew with\nPremier Hepburn on a tour of the\nCanadian Northwest He ia President of the rich Mclntyre \u2022 Porcupine Mines Ltd., and hit other financial lntereiti embrace minei,\nbanks, life Insurance, nickel. He la\na native of Mount Forest, Ont.\nLord Beaverbrook cabled: \"II you\nwill come here and assist me we\nwould welcome you.\" Bickell replied\nImmediately and left by plane lor\nLondon within a few days.\nDIVIDENDS\nDominion Bridge Company 30\ncents.\nBeautify Your\nDOOR HARDWARE\nWith Glistening Chrome Flat*\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLauritx Bldg. 704 Nelton Ave.\nAMHERST\nimif\u201eSTOllKVj!<'V.~.\u2122>\n16o_\u00bb\u00bb-'\u00b0   25\u00ab.$\u00bb\"   40OI.**\n\u00abm\u00abBST\u00bbUOME(Syr\u00ab*\nDfflHERST awn wim\n12oz.$l-*\u00b0   25oz.$*w   woz.*\nB.C. J\n.       .  ^^tiMHn.,^^'\"^\nIhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquot Control Board or by,\nthe Government of British Columbia.\nF \/ i 4\n*%mW\nPEERLESS DENTISTS\nJAMIESON BLDG.\nCORNER   WALL  AND   RIVERSIDE    AVENUE\nTO THE EDITOR. SPOKANE, W.ASH.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, JULY 13,\nNELSON, B. C.\nDEAR SIR:\nIt is gratifying to receive so many letters from our friends ln Canada\nasking for further information concerning Passports, which are now necessary on account of regulations put into effect July 1 by the Government at\nWashington. We are glad to cooperate in any way which will smooth out\nany difficulties that may arise.\nFrom a gentleman in Sheep Creek we have a letter asking!\nHow long does it take to get a Canadian Passport which will enable\nme to visit Spokane?\nWe know of cases in which Passports have been obtained from Ottawa very quickly but we understand that at the present time there is\ncongestion in the Passport Office, so that delays are unavoidable. To lessen\nthis pressure and to facilitate the issuance of Passports to British Columbians,\na Passport Office has been opened at Vancouver. It is in the Canadian Immigration Office. From this office you can obtain a Passport within a few\ndays of the arrival of your application.\nAnother question which arrived In Monday's mail Is from a friend\nat Trail. It is:\nDoes a Passport Photograph have to be especially taken or will a\ngood snapshot of myself be sufficient?\nIt Is better to have the Passport Photograph specially taken. Commercial photographers have a special rate in most instances for these pictures. Commercial photographers know the exact size required and the\ncorrect style of photo. The cest is small for the five prints required, two for\nthe Canadian Passport and three for the United States Visa.\nI remain, Yours Sincerely,\nii I\n,'\n\u25a0i\n_.......-._ -n-aa-n^,finHinHMfimi[iiiitfai\\_________M\n-   \u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\u00bb \u25a0 \u25a0\u2014     -i\n_m\n Lut Tlmei TODAY\nComplete Shows 2, 7, 8:00\nICROSSTheBAY\nAt 2:30, 7:30, .at\nMuit   Comedy\u2014News\nStarti Thunday\n'EDISON THE MAN\"\nyss&ossssstosssssssioss&ii&ssitx\nDrastic War Zone\nBIN is Delayed\nLONDON, July \u00ab (CP.-Cable)-\nAn attempt by Sir John Anderson,\nHome Secretary, to rush a drutic\nWar Zone Courts Bill through all\nstages at one sitting provoked such\n\u00ab itorm tonight In the Home of\nCommons that the Government had\nto be content with second reading.\n\" The bill provides for the establishment ln war rones of special\ncourts with power to pass on civilians the death sentence for such\n. offences u looting and forcing a\nway past a sentry. There would be\neo Jury, no appeaL\n.. While the House wu lympa-\n.\" thetic to the need of stern mea-\n,. aures tc safeguard the State, it\n\u25a0 - refused to be hurried into one\nj. of the greatest revolutions ln the\n. law that Britain has ever known.\nHearing how a man of judicial\nrank or one qualified to exercise high judicial office could lit\nI with two local justices without a\n_ Jury, the memben told Sir John\nI that he must proceed more slowly.\n-In response to criticism by H. B.\nleei-Smlth, Labor Leader ln the\nt\u00a3ou_e, that the bill is \"too vague\"\n!\u00bbnd a demand by Leslie Hore-Be-\n-\u00bbs_a, Liberal-National, for iafe-\n.guarda when such extreme powers\nwere handed to the Executive, Sir\nJohn Indicated he would be latia-\njled with second reading,\n\"DUNLOPILLOW\"\n;    AUTO AND OFFICE CHAIR\nCUSHIONS\n. PEEBLES MOTORS\n\u25a0 Baker St     Limited     Phona 119\nDunlop Distributor!\nfmsltttetosotmtsostsooosmssseetttt\ncut flowers. weddinc\nAnd funeral designs\nPhone  KITCHENER\nttotttetoeesesesssesssessteessmso\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needi In plumbing   repain,   alteration!,   and\nInstallations.\nPh. 119 301 Victoria St\nCHOCOLATE DAIRY DRINK\nAT YOUR PALM DEALERS\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nNow li the time to fumlgtte\nWith SMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugi\nIf you want results\nSmythe\nPreicriptlon Drualit Phoni 1\nVhe PERCOLATOR\nDoughnuts\nARE GOOD AT\nANY MEAL\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly 8avlngi Plan\nR. W.DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 61    Hippenon Blk.    Ph. 197\nWHIN WALKING\nIS TORTURE-1\nCRESS CORN I\n\u25a0union sum\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON, B. C.\n-NILION DAILY NIWI NILION. 1. C-WIBNIIBAY MORNINO JULV IT. WM. \u2022\nSLOCAN CITY\nBRITISH RAIDERS\nPOUND AT NAZIS\nLONDON, July 16 (API\u2014Thru\nenemy bomben were ihot down\nby British fighters during raid!\non the coait thli afternoon, the\nAir  Mlniitry innounced tonight.\nIt alio uid:\n\"Royal Air Force bomben yei-\nterday attacked enemy airdromes\nat Lisieux and Evreux In Normandy. During the night they again\nattacked the ilrdromei ot Norrler-\nney and De Kooy in Holland, where\nhangars, petrol dumps and aircraft\non the ground were aet on fire.\n\"Last night other forcei of bomben repeated their attacki on' the\noil refinery it Hanover and the\naircraft park at Paderborn.\n\"Hamm and Osnabruck were\nagain visited and fires and explosions in the goodi yards were ob-\nserved by our bomber crewi. A\nblast furnace at Hamborn ln the\nRuhr and a munition factory at\nDortmund fcere also bombed.\n\"Aircraft of the coastal command\ncarried out an attack on Willem-\nsoor harbor on the coait of Holland,\ncausing a large fire among the\nwarehouses. AU our aircraft returned safely.\n\"Today ln ipite of bad weather\nconditions our bombers attacked\nenemy occupied ilrdromei in\nNorthern France. They alio attacked a concentration of barges near\nArmentieres. One of our aircraft ls\nmissing.\"\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B.C.-C. Fonlln, a\nformer resident viiited here.\nR. Martello md Miss Lorraine\nSantosi of Rossland vslited Mr. and\nMn. F. Martello.\nL. E. Davis of Trail wai a guest\nof hli parenti Mr. md Mn. L. A.\nDavis.\nMn. Simlnlck ind daughter, Carrie, returned to Creston,\nM. Olson visited Christina Lake.\nMill H. Andestad is viiiting it\nNelson.\nMr. and Mn. Nabholtz and family\nvisited Cranbrook.\nMri. 0. McMahon ind family and\nMrs. Young of Lethbridge were\nguesti of Mr. md MM. Hackett.\nMn. Herron Sr. and Mr. and Mrs.\nHerron Jr. of Calgary ire guesti\nof Mr. md Mn. Hickett.\nMr. and Mn. Rutledge have left\nto spend the Summer at Jaffray.\nMiss D. Walker will ipend her\nvacation at Creston.\nMrs. Harcus and son Norman have\nreturned to Vancouver after viiiting the former's parents, Mr. and\nMra. R. Eakin Sr.\nMin Annie Hook visited Nelson.\nMrs. Gainei, G. Gaines and Mr.\nBeech of Creiton were gueiti ot\nthe former'i son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mather Jr.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Tlorentlno of\nCranbrook and Mr. and Mrs. G.\nLacey of Trail are guesti of Mr,\nand Mrs. J. Bennedetti.\nSLOCAN CITY, & C.-The Alter\nSociety of SL Mary's Church met\nat the home of Mri. John M irchL\nMn. J. Baillargeon, Mrs. J. Life, Jr.,\nMh. M. Blnnlih, Mn. John Greenwood, Mn. McGuire md Mn. Mar-\nchi attended*\nMr. and Mn. T. Weltan of New\nDenver and Mr. md Mn. D. Marshall of Drumheller, Alta., ware\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. J. March.\nmd family.\nMr. and Mn, F. Pagura, who\nwere visiting here, hava retained\nto TralL\nMin Linda 3. Reynold! left on\nThunday .for Trail.\nK. Popoff li on a trip to Cardston, Alta.\nMiu Thelma ls ipending part of\nher holldayi ln New Denver.\nThe Ladiei' Aid of St. Andrew'!\nPresbyterian Church met at tbe\nhome of Mn. E. Russell. Mn. J.\nHoward, Mn. A. Y. Rae, Mrs. W.\nMiddleton, Mn. HlU and Mn. Rue-\nsell attended.\nW. H. Pinchbeck, Mr. ud Mn.\nJohn Waldon and Mr. md Mri.\nPlapton, who viiited friend! and\nrelative! here, left for their borne\nIn Tranicom, Man. They were\nhouie guesti of Mr. md Mn. H. L.\nHey. H. W. Grove of Kimberley\narrived a few dayi ago to exchange\npulplti with Rev. S. Lookman in\nthe Preibytertan Minion Field here\nfor a month. ,      ,  \u2022   '\nMn. A. Phare of Nelion la viiiting her parents, Mr. and Mn. H. C.\nNye, md. her brother-in-law and\nlister, Mr. md Mri. E. Hlcki md\nfamily, for a few weeki.\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C.-A. Hargreavei of Nelson waa a jfueit of\nMri. E. Reynoldi and family.\nScotty Lund of Nelion viilted\ntown.\nMrs. B. E. O'Neill vUlted her\nparents, Mr. and Mn. H. H. Hulli,\nat Nelion.\nMn. Howard Parker is viiiting\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mri. William Newton, at Flih-\nbourn, Alta. .     _\nWatson Middleton of the Canar\ndim Home Guarda visited here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Pinchbeck\nand ion, ind Mr. and Mn. John\nWaldon are visiting Mr. md Mn.\nH C Nye.\nMr. end Mn. J. Foiter of Nelion\nwere guesti of Mr. md Mri. 3.\nMirchi. , i _ _\nL Trinki of Nelion viilted hero.\nMlai Ellen McCandllih ot Nelion\nviiited here. .      \u2022   \u2022\u2022\nMri. A. E. Clough and little ion\nhive left to viiit at Vancouver,\nBALFOUR\nBALFOUR B. C.-Mn. Brenllion\nind Morris Wellwood motored to\nKamloops to spend a few days.\nIda Busk wai a guest of MUs\nMabel Conrad.\nMargaret McDonald hai returned\nto apend  the Summer holldayi.\nMri. Maloney and ion Teddy ire\nspending a month in Balfour with\nMrs. Brenilson.\nMn. B. J. Irving hai left for\nThrums.\nMn. G. Conrad wai a city visitor.\n620 ot Win-the-War\nShow at Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., July 16-Ap-\nproximately 620 ittended the \"Win-\nthe-Wir Campaign\" ihow when the\nCapitol Theatre wai crowded to\ncapacity lait night.\nKASLO\nQUO Guaranteed for Regatta But\nNettling Decided at Heeling; May\nGive Proceeds lo Ihe War Effort\n\u25a0 A water regatta for Nelaon,\n\u2022ponwred by the Nation Klnimen Club and backed by tha Kootemy Liunch Club ind City of\nNelaon, wai 6200 closer attar \u2022\nmeeting Tueaday night, but nothing waa definitely tettled.\nA meeting at the Launch Club\nheadquarters attended by membera\nof the Launch Club, Klnimen Club\nmd Nelaon Rowing Club beard\nthat tba Launch Club would donate\n$100 outright to tbe Klnimen Club,\nmatching an offer ot tbe City Council, to stage the regatta. An original\noffer of tbe Launch Club wai to\nlend the Kinsmen flOO It the City\nwould donate $100, but T. C (Buck)\nLambert, Regatta Committee hCair-\nman of the Klnimen, iaid that thU\noffer could not be accepted by tbe\nKlnimen In caie the proposed te-\nSitta ihould not be a success. The\nlub could'not make up tha lon.\nH. A. D. (Bud) Greenwood, laying\nhe was .sure the plan would attract mmy people to the regatta,\nsuggested that all proceed! ihould\nbe given to the Cmadlm war effort. Kelowna wai operating lta\n1940 regatta on this basis and tho\ncity and district were keen over the\nidea, he aaid. It wai proposed to\nitage a drive limllar to that by tba\nmotion picture induitry In Cinada\nMondiy night, idmUiion being by\nSurchate of war savings itamps. No\necislon wu made.\nLABOR PAY\nPROP08ED\nLabor Day, September 3, wu\nput forward u the logical day for\nthe proposed regatta, but no definite data wu let\nMr. Lambert, In explaining lut\nyear's 'setup\", Mid at* City nad\ngiven a check for $190 to match a\n$190 donation of the Launch Club.\nThii year the City could give only\n$100, md the Launch Club had\nagreed to match the City's offer.\nIti fint proposal however, wu to\nlend the $100, and it wai thli offer\nthat the Klnimen could not accept. However, when the Launch\nClub itated lt would donate the $100,\ntba picture wu changed, Mr. Lambert iaid. He itated he would call\nanother Committee meeting to again\ndiscuss the matter.\nL. F. Gilbert, Commodore of the\nLaunch Club, wu Chairman. He\nsaid he had already ipent $1500 on\nrepain and alteration, to his boat,\nthe Ladybird, and would like to lee\na regatta to teit her ipeed.\nFuneral Services for R.(. (rowe\nAt Trail Wednesday; Blaylock\nPays Tribute in Wire From East\n1935 FORD\nTUDOR SEDAN\nBeautiful black color.\nWhite ilde-wall tlrei.\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43      Limited      661 Joiephlne\nBUDA DIESEL POWER UNIT\nAND SCHRAMM\nCOMPRESSOR\nSEE\nJACK ANNABLE\nLOOK YOUR BEST IN\nCLEAN CLOTHES\njjoruiUa. fcbumhJL\nOpp Palm Dairies Ph. 1042\nFURNACES\nInitalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665        610 Kootenay\nSPECIAL New Crockery\nNon'Drip Tea Pots\n3 cup.\n5 cup.\n7 cup.\n70e\n80c\nIn\nAssorted\n95c      Colors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nKASLO, B.C.-K. D. McBean ol\nTrail ll viiiting in town.\nMn. T. C. Holland., ot Powell\nHiver, ii visiting her huiband and\nher ion, Lyle Hollands.\nMr. and Mn. D. Wetmore and\nchildren ot Trail are viiiting here.\nJ. R. Tinkesi li viiiting Vancou\nver, \u2014\nMn. M. Riddell ot Toronto ll visiting her couiins Mn. Mary White\nand Mri. S. J. Reuter.   \u2022 .\nR. V. Maynard of Lethbridge li\nvisiting here. __\nDr. and Mn. W. Leonard ot Trail\nvisited here.\nMn. J. SJonbey of Nelion wera\ncity visitor.\nA. K. MacPhenon of New Denver was a city visitor.\nMike Pictin of Wlnlaw wu a city\nvisitor.\nK. Scitchird of New Denver viiited town.\nE. Palmer of Zlncton viilted town.\nC. J. Gerrett of Retallack viilted\ntown.\nMr. and Mn. A. M. Cheiser ind\nson, John, of Trail ire holidaying\nin town.\nGeorge Soukoroff of Gerrard viilted town.\nMr. md Mn. McConnell, who have\nbeen gueiti of Mr. and Mn. A. B.\nRobertion, have left for Vancouver\nMr. and Mn. Robertion, their daughter, Betty, md Mrs. Beattie accompanied the McConnells as far as\nNelson.\nR. McLeod and M Gavrilik of\nTrail viiited town.\nE. Star of Nelion viiited Kailo.\nR. G. McLeod wai down from the\nKokanee Chief mine.\nArchie Reuter of TraU will vlilt\nhis parenti, Mr. ind Mn. S. J. Reuter, for two weeks.\nMr. and Mn. H. C. Giegerich, who\nhave been visiting the former'i ill-\nten, Miss Eliiabeth md Mill Laura\nGiegerich, have left for Vancouver\n?rior to returning to their home in\n.llowknife.\nEric Bacchui and Arthur Morton\nhave returned from a vlilt to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mn. T. S. Rouleau viaited\nNelion.\nMrs. Charles Middleton of Trail\nls visiting her father, John MacPhenon.\nMn. John Keen and her sister,\nMiss Mildred Twits, hive returned\nfrom a visit at the Coast and ill the\nOkanagan.\nWINLAW\nWINLAW, B. C-Mr. and Mn.\nW. Sutherland had their son-in-law,\nL.-Bdr. Claude Fordyce, as a guest.\nMiss Mayme Dellecor of Nelson\nvisited her parenti, Mr. and Mn. P.\nDellecor.\nRobert Kennedy of Nelaon viilted\nMr. and Mrs. P. Dellecor.\nMisi Annie McKeen hu lett for\nVictoria.\nMill Edna Swanion hu returned\nfrom Kitchener, after viiiting her\nlister, Mri. J. Strand.\nMill Betty Strand ii viiiting her\ngrandparents. Mr. and Mrt. G\nSwanson.\nMrs. G. Swanson hu returned\nfrom Kootemy Lake General Hoi\npltal.\nTony Doherty, accompanied by\nMr. md Mrs. Helgeson, visited the\nlatter'i parents, Mr, md Mn. W.\nSutherland.\nMiss Clara Sutherland md her\nsister, Mn. A. Helgeson, are visiting at Trail.\nAllan and Donald Ball ot Nelson\nhave been visiting their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Day.\nMrs. II. Thompson and son Bobby\nof Trail visited J. Doherty Sunday.\nPercy Cutler ot Retallack visited\nhis parents. Mr. and Mra. W. Cutler.\nMr. and Mn. M. Dowes of South\nSlocin viilted the latter'i mother,\nMn. Herry Cutler.\nRobson Institute Is\nOpposed to Sending\nDelegates to Coast\nROBSON, B.C.\u2014Robion Women'i\nInitltute hu decided agalnit lend\nIng a delegate to tbe forthcoming\nprovincial conference at Vancouver. It wu Incorrectly reported the\ninitltute would lend a delegate.\nTRAIL, B.C, July M-Funeral\nservices for R. C. Crowe, K.C, who\ndied it Christina Lake Sunday, will\nbe held in Trail Wednesday afternoon.\nThe body will lie In itate from\n12:30 to 2 p.m. In the Masonic\nTemple, after which the service of\nFidelity Lodge No- 32. A.F. te A.M.,\nwill be hell Tiie public service will\nfollow with Rev. L. A. Morrant of-\nficiiting. Interment will take place\nIn Mountain View Cemetery.   '\nIn respect to Mr, Crowe, Vice-\nPresident and General Couniel of\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada Ltd* the gen-\neraLbfflces at Tadanac will be closed\nafter 12 o'clock noon, Wednesday.\nBLAYLOCK WIRES\nTRIBUTE\nS. G. Blaylock, President and\nManaging Director of the Consolidated, ln a wire from Eastern Canada where he wu called recently,\npatd tribute to Mr. Crowe.\nHe said: \"The Consolidated Company throughout its wide ramifica\ntions, his friendi, the Kootenays,\nand particularly, Trail and Rowland,\nhave luftered a terrible end irreparable lon in the death ot Mr. R.\nC. Crowe.\n\"I had been Intimately auoclated\nin business with Mr. Crowe for\nmmy yean md to me hla advice\nand guidance had been invaluable,\nespecially of late ilnce he had taken on new duties and responsibilities\nIn hli capacity of Vice-President\nand General Couniel for the company,\n\"'Judge' Crowe took an active\npart ln public affairs, being willing\nat all tlmea to assist ln any undertaking tor the benefit of -the community. He was an ardent sporti\nman md will be sadly missed on\nthe golt cburie and at the Curling\nClub.\n\"My sympathy and that ot the\nexecutive and employeei of the\nConsolidated company will go out\nto Mrs. Crowe, hu ion, daughters\nand the other memben of the fam\nIly in their untimely bereavement.'\nRedmen Advance Within Game of\nBears, Trimming Leafs 19-11, Nelson\nTownsend Leads Game\nScorers With 8\nPoints\nRowland, fait-stepping Redmen.\nwith their lasorted collection of\nScotu uid Lafacei crept within\ntwo polnti of the Weit Kootenay\nLacrosse League-leading Trail Golden Bean in the Civic Arena Tuesday night by running off in the\nfourth period for 10-11 victory over\nthe Nelson Maple Leafs.\nThe game, although lt had Its lagging spots, wu u good u any seen\nhere thli season despite the fact\nthat the Leafi preiented a crippled\nlineup.' They were mlnm their\ncoach, goalie and tint-string cen-\ntreman. Jock Walmsley and Dave\nGibbons left the prevloui night for\nVancouver and Pete Bonneville wai\nout ot town, but Stewy Paterion\nmide i good Job of the pivot poiltion.\nThe mooth-functlonlng Redmen,\nwho hive power thii seuon In\nevery department, backed by a sensational rookie goaltender In Sammy Sapronotf, spotted the Leafs\nan early 1-0 margin on a goal by\nDingwall, but they quickly hauled\nthat down and went into a lead\nthey never relinquished. The Leafs,\nwith Bing Miller In goal md virtually a stranger to the position,\nand Manager Jack Reid handling\nthem from the bench, clung doggedly within striking distance of\nthe Redmen right up to three-quarter time. Then they faded badly\n\u25a0despite the fact that the fam uw\nan exciting last period.\nTOWNSEND STARS\nWhile the visitors kept pounding\n\u25a0way relentlessly it the Leitian\ndefence, Bill Towniend, husky Nelson itar, made a tine ihowing.\nMoved up to a rover position from\ndefence, Towniend had hii powerful  shots  wheeling   In   dangerous\nfashion it the Rossland goal, chalking up halt a dozen goals. He also\nwu credited wtth two assists to\nlead the night's polntgetters.\nFor the flnt half, the penalty\nbench wu unusually clear of penance-doers, but a penalty parade\nitarted In the third period when\ntemperi became a trifle frayed.\n'Over the 60 minutei the Leafi\nserved lesa than half the number\nof minutei u the Redmen did, but\nthey didn't take advantage ot Ross.\nland's penalties.\nBOX SCORE\nROSSLAND:\nG A PtPn\nSapronoff,   g    0 0 0    0\nSimcock, d  j  1 0 1   11\nCarkner, d  0 5 5    0\nSltton,  d   _ 0 0 0    5\nRalph Scott, d .~ 3 0 3 . 0\nSaundry,  r  \u2014 3 03    0\nScott,  r  2 0 2    1\nJoe Laface, c   2 3 5    0\nAnderson,  c  0 0 0\nJim Scott, w  _ 10 10\nJack Laface, w   3 0 3\nMcGuire. w   4 0 4\nMcDonald, w   0 0 0    0\nTotale    IB    8   27   27\nNELSON:\nMiller,   g    _. 0    0 0    0\nKuhn, d    0    0 0    2\nMorris, d    0    0 0    5\nLapoint,   d     0    0 0    0\nStiraaker,  0    0 0    0\nTowniend, r  8    2 8    4\nMorrow,   r    _.. 10 10\nPaterson, c - 0    0 0    0\nBishop,   c  13 4    0\nDingwall, w   2    13    0\nTapanila, w  0    4 4    0\nMayo, w  10 10\nPrice, w  _  0    110\nTotali   11   II   M   IJ\nReferee \u2014 Johnny Ollnikl. Judge\nof Play \u2014 Mac DeiBrliay. Timekeeper! \u2014 T. R. Wilson and R. E. Crerar.\nScorer \u2014 \"Slim\" Porter.\nDon't Worry About That\nGift\u2014\nA Waterman\nFountain Pen and\nPencil \u00a76t\nWith name engraved free ia\nbound to be appreciated.\nFrom |5.00 set up\nCity Drug Go.\nBox 450\nPhone 34\nfugitive With\nSecret Plans of\nTank Is Sought\nTORONTO,  3_j   17   \u00ab3P..-An\nunnamed fugitive from a foreign\nland with its secret plans of a\nmonster tank was sought todiy by\na group working on behalf of Canada at war. For hii technical aid,\nthey offer him a Government guarantee of freedom ln Canada, which\nhe entered illegally.\nThli group doei not know the\nname of the elusive technician\u2014\nbut they have hii history ln brief,\ntold In two letten lut April to\nGordon Sinclair of the Toronto\nStar, who he met eight yean ago\nln Hong Kong.\nThey believe he haa the plans\nfor a super land-dreadnought because he mailed to Sinclair i roughly-pencilled sketch wtth enough information to indicate he had the\nfacts. The tank he sketched wu a\nheavily-gunned battleihlp - on -\nwheels\u2014far more powerful than the\n80-ton German tanki which ploughed across France two months after\nhe milled hli plans.\nThrough newipaper columni md\npenonal advertisements, advances\nhave been made to the mystery letter writer\u2014with the result only that\nhe wrote he \"liked fresh air\" too\nwell to make himself known. Meantime, he stated, he has a \"small Job\"\nmd willj hli flnt money is buying\ndrifting Instruments to prepare i\ndetailed plan of the foreign country'i tank.\nAPPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C-Mn. H. Cur\nrle ot Trail is ipending a few dayi\nwith Mr. wd Mra. Lansdown.\nMn. Northway hu returned to\nPenticton, leaving her children, Hazel, Ena and Mima, to ipend a few\ndays' holiday with her mother, Mn.\nV. .Sawtelle.\nMisa B. Moran visited her home\nhere. .\nE. Trouo hu returned, his Job\nhaving finlihed at Rouland.\nJorn Smith Is ipending a few\ndayi with her grandparents, Mr.\nand Mn. 1, Brooki,     \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Cox, Miss V. Cox,\nMlu B. Cox md Arthur Cox of Calgary were gueiti of Mn. F. Brooki.\nMr, and Mrs. E. McLean are viiiting the latter'i parenti, Mr. and\nMn. T.' Wynne.\nF. Brooki ipent the weekend with\nhli family.\nMr. and Mn. 3. Smith ire ipending a tew dayi with Mr. md Mri,\nHoneyiett,\nWSSWWtWBWWWBWMMPIIPMWW\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFor quick md reliable ambulance\nservice, Phona 93 or 881.\nElectrical Contracting, F. H\nSMITH, 361 Baker St. PHONI 666.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C. - Mr.\nmd Mn. Troggo, who hive been\nvisiting Mn. Troggo. parenti, Mr.\nand Mn. Devenon, hive returned\nto Trail\nCaptain and Mn. Htnck'i daughter Kathleen and ion Henry, who\nhave been vltltlng their grandmother, Mn. Trail of Kailo, have returned.\nD. Devenon hu returned from\nTrill.\nJohn Palmer of Winnipeg ii viiiting hli mother, Mrs. E. Palmer. He\nwu iceompanied by Gordon Aahe.\nMn. Tinllne of Blalrmore. who\nhai been viiiting her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mn. A. Derbyshire, left for New Weitmlniter\nwhere ihe will viiit her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mn. Farquh-\naon.\nBruce King hu returned from\na vlilt to Trail.\nBob Francis, who hai been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. T.\nFrancli. hu returned to Vmcouver.\nMr. and Mn. George Derbyshire\nof Coleman, Alta., ire gueiti ot\nMr. and Mn. Jamei Derbyshire.\nMis, L. Lytle visited Nelson Friday\nMlu J. Barbara Heath, Mlis Doreen Manahan and Mlai Katherlne\nPearce of Nelion were Siturday\nguests ot Mr. and Mn. William\nTruer.\nSEVEN RECRUITS\nENTRAIN, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C July 18-Eacorted to\nthe rallwiy itation by the Veterani\"\nHome Guard and the Trail Pipe\nBand, mother draft of seven recruiti left the city Tueiday morning.\nThey were! Fred Clarence Barker\nof Waneta; Ernest Frederick Black-\nwell, Jamei Kelly, Erling John 01-\nlon and Gordon Elgin Rlchardion of\nTrail; William Henry Harry of\nRouland; and John Joieph McDonell of Grtenwood.\nRENATA\nRENATA, B. C, - Mra. Our and\ndaughten Edith ind Clara left for\nTrail after viiiting Mr. and Mn,\nF. Wendiih.\nJick Burch of Trail li visiting\nMr and Mrs. F. Koch.\nMr. and Mn. David Dyck, and\nMr. md Mrs Neufeld ot Rosemary,\nAlta., are viiiting Mr. and Mn.\nPeter P. Dyck.   .\nDonald Cooper, who apent a\nweek with Mr. and Mn. A. Hamm\nleft for Alberta.\nMiu Hedwig Klein left for her\nhome at Edgewood after two weeki\nhere.\nMuses Susie md Laura Klein\nplan to visit Nelion.\nEarl Schwartzenhauer ot Deer\nPark viilted here. ' ,\nMr. ind Mn. G. Briggiman viilted Mr. ud Mn. J. Hubki.\nBaptist Sunday School picnic at\nLakeside Park, 2 pjn., today.\nJUNIOR C.Y.O. MEETS TONIGHT.\nIMPORTANT.   PLEASE   ATTEND.\nHarold Foulda \u2014 Guar. Seryice.\nEverything Electrical Phone 544.\nReserve July 25 Eutern Star tea\nat the home of Mn. J. Draper, 416\nRobson Street\nFor sale \u2014 Outboard runabout\nwith 12 h.p. Evinrude, boat house\nincluded. Phone 1021-R.\nHave you tried Valapar varnlah\nlc enamel? For uie on boats, floors,\nfurniture, etc., Valipar is unexcel\nled. Hippenon Hardware.\nBIO DANCE, JULY 19, PROCTER\nIn aid of lllth. Muiic, Trail Rhythm\nKing!. Sponsored by Procter Grocery. Free Ferry, refreshments.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 203. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed. Aru Blk\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccuntr\nIM acre lota at Balfour 100 feet\nreal aind beach, and trees for ihade.\n(250 each Eaiy termi.\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCo., Ltd.\nVour mirror will ihow the difference ln your appearance before\nmd after you've been to the\n' Hai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327 Johnstone Blk,\n1939 LAFAYETTE BUSINESS\nCOUPE\nRadio, ilr.conditioning, teat coven,\n6-ply tires and other acceisories.\nLow mileage. \"A Pedigree Car,\" at\n.   no price increue.\n11030\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Office and Hume Hotel\nFashion\nMADE-TO-MEASURE\nCLOTHES\nMr. Herb Doherty, factory\nrepreientative here on\nWednesday and Thunday\nWith clothing prices rising steadily we would advise ordering that new\nsuit now. See this fine\nshowing of woolens and\nmodels for Immediate or\nFall delivery.\nEMORY'S LTD.\nPublic May Join\nIn Defence Corps\nForming at Trail\nTRAIL,, B. C. July 1\u00bb-The Canadian Legion Detence Corpi being\nformed ln Trail, in conjunction with\nlimllar units being organized by 54\nLegion Branches in British Columbia, will be open to the public subject to the approval of a ipecial\ncommittee, W. F. Truswell, Secretary of Trail Branch No. 11, announced Tueaday.\nApplication forms may ba obtained from Legion memben and\nafter names of applicants have gone\nbefore, a special committee, those\nrejected will be notified by mail.\nUnless an applicant receives a rejection notice, it will be taken for\ngranted that he will turn out tor\nthe next drill, Mr. Truswell laid.\nHerbert L. Jackson hai been appointed Officer Commanding the\nTrail Corpi.\nTraining will be given ln the Memorial Hall gymnasium Tuesdays\nand Fridays commencing July 10.\nAbout 65 men who already have\njoined will commence training then.\nKINGSGATE\nKINGSGATE, B. C.-Mn. Loti-\npelch md Ruth viilted Mn. Loti-\npeich'i mother, Mn. Wation, ot\nSpokane.\nAllan Steeves and Hollii Trltt\nviilted Bantf and Jasper.\nHelen Fonteuo ot Moicow viilted\nhere.\nMn. Hugh Hannah hu left tor\nHood River, where Mr. Hannah will\njoin her before going to Seaside,\nOre.\nTha -Unified Will Sill ltl\nThere'i a Big Difference\nBetween a Crease Job and a\nGuaranteed Lubrication\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nM Baker St  SERVICE   Phone 122\n150,000 HUTS TO BE\nREADY FOR SOLDIERS\nOTTAWA, July 1\u00bb (CP)-Accommodation for approximately 150,000\nloldlen In buildlngi will be available before Winter sets in, Hon. J.\nL. Raliton, Defence Minister, told\nthe Common! today.\nASK FOR HOOD'S\nCottage Bread\ni IN 1\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\nHouiehold Appliancoi  and\nSilex Coffee Makers\nStandard Electric\n453 Joiephlne St Phone SSS\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nSUPERIOR SERVICE\nPHONE 1-2-8\nFor a Cool, Appetizing Meal!\nLarger Cold Dutch Plate\nQrenfell's Cafe\nAn emergent communication of Fidelity Lodge No. 32\nA.F. A A.M. will be held in\nthe Maeonle Temple, Trail,\nB.C. at 2 p.m. Wednesday\nJuly 17, 1(40 for the purpoie\nof conducting the funerel of\nour lete Wor. Brc R. C.\nCrowe.\nThe body will He In itate\nIn the Mnionl. Temple from\n12:30 to 2 p.m.\nVltltlng brethren will pleaie\naccept thli Intimation.\nBy order ef the Worshipful\nMatter.\nJ. L. WEBSTER,\nSecretary.\nCIVIC\nTonight, Thur. Only\nComplete  8howi 7:00-9;08\nToo truel\" you'll\nagree . . . aa you\nalt ipellboundl\nToovoangl\"\ntaid the\nUwl'Too\nterrible!\"\ncried their\nparenti!\nJEAN   PARKER\nJOHNNY DOWNS\nAdded: \"The Saints\nDouble Trouble\" with\nGeorge Sanders .\nA Friend Returning\nFrom His Vacation\nRemarked . . .   '\n\"I tried several brands of beer\nin several other B. C. and Alberta cities, but I still definitely prefer\nColumbia\nLager Beer\nThanks\nFriend\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nITiis advertisement ll not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by  the Qovernment et\nBrltlth Columbia.\n-'\u2014- '-fn- ii    n____nii  I n\n_______ --\n___MA-___*\ni\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_17","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\/1.0415212","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":"1940-07-17 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":"1940-07-17 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":""}]}