{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2022-06-22","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1943-02-23","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415467\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" Gradual* Nurtti of Canadi Must\nRtjiittr.\u2014Pagt 8.\nButttr Producin Mllli Regiitar With\nRation Board.\u2014Pigt 8.\n(apinni Heidquirten In North Burma\nBltittd From Air.\u2014Pago 8.\nVOLUME 41\nFIVE CENTS'.\nROMMEL\n\u25a0i i,\n\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. F*m5AWj|*plWt\nOvtr 190 Loot In Torpodolng of        J^tA 1\nPaiitnger Ships,\u2014Page !.'.'\u25a0\ntitat Started In Paltrmo Harbor; Axli\nShips Dtitrtrytd.\u2014Pigt I.\n100 Two-Ton Bombi Rained on Bremen\nby Britiih Planet.\u2014Ptge. 1.\nNUMBER ltt*\nBS DANGEROUSLY INTO PASS\nRuss Alone Bear\nWhale Weight\nof War\u2014Stalin\n9,000,000 Casualties Suffered by Huns,\n4,000,000 Killed; 7000 Tanks, 4000\nPlanes Lost; Initiative in Russ Hands\nI ' LONDON, Feb. 23 (Tuesday) (CP) \u2014 Premier Joseph\nStalin said today that the \"Red Army alone Is bearing the\n\\whole weight of the war\" in the \"absence of a second front\nIn Europe,\" but declared his Red Army has inflicted 9,000,000\n.casualties on the Cermans and that time now is running\nagainst Hitler's Germany.\nThe start of the \"massed drive of the enemy from Soviet\nlands has begun,\" Stalin declared in a momentous, confident\norder of the day commemorating the 25th anniversary of the\nRed Anny. He said Hitlers initial advantages in manpower,\nand   experience   havef\narms, and experience\nbeen wJped out, with the Sov-\niaft Union becoming ever\nstronger\" and with the Initiative in Russia's hands.\nStalin in hia order called on hli\ntroopa to give th\u00ab Germani \"no reit\nbr diy or by night,\" to \"annihilate\nthem It they refuie to lay down\nthtir armi,\" and lounded the rallying cry ot 'Death to the German\nlnvaderi!\"\n\"Time la working againit Fucist\nGermany\" ind ihe ii \"becoming\nmott exhauited and weaker while\nIhe aSoviet Union Ii more and more\ndeveloping iti reserves and becoming even itronger,\" the Warrior-\nLtader of Ruuia declared in\nbroadcast recorded by the Soviet\nMonitor.\nBut, hi warntd, Germiny ll\nnot ytt conquered\" and tht Sev\nlet victorlu ovtr tht Nul Army\n\"do Mt mean thtt It cannot rs-\nttVa**,*\nStalin Mttrttd But tht Rtd Army\nHnct tht fawtioB In June; KM', \"hai\n| put out of commiuion about 9,000,-\n000  German   Fascist   officer!   and\n\u25a0MB, of which no less than 4,000,000\nWtrt killed on tht field of battle.\"\nIn the lut three monthi alone,\nsince the launching ot the Soviet\nWinter offeniive, \"111 enemy divi-\nI lioni have been routed by the Red\nI Army, 700,000 men hive been killed,\nind over 900,000 have been taken\nprlioner,\" while in that iame period,\nI thaGawmani lott \"over 7000 tanki,\n4000 planei, 17,000 gum\" and tre-\n| mendoui other vrar miterltl.\nStalin   bluntly   rtated   that   'In\n| view of the absence of a lecond\nfront In Europe, the Red Army alone\nll bearing the whole weight of the\nwar.\n\"Naa\/trthtleu, tht Red Army\nhu not only itood firm igaimt\ntht onslaught ot the Oermin Fuclit hcrdci, but ilio In the courie\nef tht wir become \u2022 menace to\nthi Fuclit Army.\"\nTht Red Army, he uld, wu \"not\nretted for the purpoie of conqueit\n' of foreign countrlei, but to defend\n1 tht frontiers of Soviet land\" and ii\nwarring tgilnat the Kail enemy to\n1 \"drive him from the borders of our\ncountry.\"\nStalin wid thit Russians ihould\nnot now become over-confident ind\nusume thtt the Red Army now hu\nonly to  pursue  the  Germani  \"to\n| thi Weitern trontlen of our coun-\nj try\"\u2014but on the other hind he re-\ni. ftrred  to  the  Red  Army  u  \"an-\narmy of tvengeri.\"\nlilt Supreme Commander ln\nChief oi thetRuiilmi declared that\n\"In tht most dint cult Winter con-\nI dltioni the Red Army now li advancing along a front of 1600 kilo-\nmetrt! (about 900 milei) ind everywhere li ichievlng lucceu.\"\nAxil satellite armlei from Rumania. Italy and Hungary have been\ncompletely smashed, he itated.\nThe Red Army, Stalin iald, comes\nto ltl inniversary \"at \u2022 decliive\nmoment in i patriotic war igainst\nHitlerite Germany ind ita iccom-\npllcei, the Itallani, Hungirlani, Ru-\nmtnlini. ind Finns.\"\n\"The Red Army hai always rejected the rights and Independence\nof ill peoplei.\n\"But In June, IMl, Hitlerite Germiny perfidiously atticked our\ncountry, rudely and foully violating\n. tht non-iggression agreement, and\nthe Red Army found itself compelled to launch i campiign to defend\niti native lind agalnit the Germin\nInvaders ind to drive him from the\nborder! of our country.\n\"Slnct thit time ths Rid Army\nhli become in Irmy of deadly\n\u2022truggli igilnit thi Hitlerite\ntroopi, in Army ef ivingtn of\nviolation ind debtiemint perpetrated by the German Fuclit\n\u2022ooundrili tgalntt our brothirs\ntnd .later. In occupied dlitrlcti\nof cur nitlvi lind.\"\nThe Russian leader recalled the\nhard ind itubborn battles in the\nSummer and Autumn of 1042, it\nSevaitaapol md Odessa, before Moscow ind the ilege of Leningrid, ind\nIn tht Ciucuui.\nTht Red Army, Stalin declared,\n\"wu created for itruggle agiinst\nforeign invideri striving to enclave\nour country,\" and ln \"1916 to 1921\nIn the itubborn itruggle iga'nst\nforeign invaden the Red Army defended the honor, freedom tnd independence of our Soviet Motherland, defended the right of the people of our country to build their\nlives as our great Lenin taught.\n\"For two decades the Red Army\nguarded the peaceful, constructive\nlabor of the Soviet pajople.\n'Tht   ptoplt   cf  cur   country\nhivt   never   forgotten   thl   encroachment en cur Und tnd htvt\ncomtantly cared for tht itrength\nenlng  of tht might of tht  Rtd\nArmy tnd hivt provided It with\nflrit clan mllltiry tnd technical\nequipment,  tnd   lovingly   reared\nctdrei of Soviet flghten ,,.\n\"Hitlerite Germiny, which forcei\ntht war lnduitry of Europe to work\nlor it, until rtcently had tuperior-\nity agalnit the Soviet union tn technicil .equipment, tnd flrit tnd toy**\nmost lh tanki ind planu. It wai\nhere that ihe had tht advantage.\nBut during the 20 monthi of wat the\nlituation hai changed.\n'Thanki to the lelf-iacrlfldng labor of working men and women, engineeri and technical experts, in\nthe war induitry of the U.S.S.R., production ot tanki tnd guni hu .n-\ncreaied during the period of war.'\n\"Of courie, tht Germin command will adopt all mtuuru to\ncover iti colotial lonei. But flrit-\nly the wttk ipot In thi Germin\nArmy li thl ihortage of manpower reierve In view of which It ll\nUnknown from whtt lourcei thli\nIon will bt made up.\n\"Secondly, even luppoilng that the\nGermani scraped together by hook\nor by crook the neceuary number\nof men, it would require no ihort\nperiod of time to train them.\nThe Germani not only had an Initial advantige ln numerlctl superiority of troopi\u2014in a\/Wantage\nthat now hai been changed\u2014but\nalso at the outlet of the Invaiion ot\nRuuia had \"almost two yean experience in conducting large-icalt\nmilitary operationi In Europe, utilizing (or the purpoie the nioit modern meant of wir.\"\n\"The Red Army ln the flrit period of war naturally had not yet nor\ncould have had iuch military experience. It wu here that the German Army hid ain advantage.\"\nBut thl iltuatlon hu change!\nIn thll reipect alio, tht Warrior-\nLeider cf thl U.S.S.R. itated, tnd\nthe Red Army new li \"t ieai-\nened army.\" Hundredi cf thouundi cf troopi hivt become muteri cf thllr weiponi, and \"teni\ncf thouundi\" of Rid Army com-\nmanderi hive become mltttrt In\nleading troopi on thi field cf bittle,\" \"revoking itupld linear tactics and adopting tht firm tictlct\nof manoeuvring.\"\n\"It ihould not be conildered in\niccident,\" uld Stalin, \"that the\ncommand of the Red Army ii not\nonly liberating Soviet toll from thi\nenemy, but li ilio not illowlng the\nenemy to leive our lOll'allVt, by\ncarrying out operationi to lurround\nand wipe out the enemy which can\nwell serve u in example of military skill.\n\"There li not the illghteit doubt,\"\nhe uld, \"thit only the correct itrit-\negy of commind ot the Red Army\nind tht flexible tactics of our commander! who executed It could\nlead to iuch outstanding action tl\nthe lurroundlng ind wiping out ot\nthe enormoui 8th Army ot Germini.\nmiking up the 330,000 men of Stalingrad.\"\n' He contrnted thli lituitlon with\nthat ot the Germini.\n\"In thii reipect,\" ht uid, \"everything li not well with the Germini,\nTheir itritegy li detective, ilnct ll\n\u2022 genenl ruli it under-eitlmitei tht\nitrength ind poulbllitlei of tht enemy and ovlr-Mtlmatei Iti own\nitrength.\n\"They ipply their tactlci ln \u00bbc-\ncordince with textbooks, tndttv-\norlng to fit eventi it the front Into\npirignphi of their regulitloni Tht\nMISS WITHIN 25\nMILES OF\nNOVOROSSISK\nViolent Attacks by\nNazis in Donets\nArea Taken in Stride\nPUSH TO DNIEPER\nLONDON, Ftb. 22 (CP)\u2014Rtd\nArmy troopi htvt drlvtn to within 25 milu cf Ncvcroulik, whtrt\ntht iMt German rtmntnti In tnt\nCiucuui trt caught In t tightening pocket by capture o. Akhtir-\nikayt, tht Ruultn midnight communique ti rtporttd by tht Soviet\nMonitor innounced tonight.\nThli meant an advance ot 27\nmilea Southweit of Krasnodar ln a\nrelatively ilow drive against tht\nGermani at Novorossisk.\nAkhtirikaya ta 29 milei Northeast\nof that lut' Germin Caucasian\nitronghold, wnert the Null, hive\nbeen backed up to the Kerch Straits.\nIt lies along the main railroad from\nKrasnodar to Novorossisk.\nBy IDOY GILMORE\nAnoclated Prtu War Antlytt\nMOSCOW, Ftb, 22 (AP)-Thl\nRuislan itekmrolltr cruihtd re-\nlentlesily to tht Wttt todty envel-\noping numircui towni on tht 600-\nmile front from Orel to Kruno-\ndar and imaihlng violent German\ncounter attacki mounted by rt-\nlervei, frontline  diipatchei ttld.\nThe Germini reacted itrongly ln\nthe Doneti Buin South of Voroshilovgrad and Krunoarmtiak ln in\neffort to save their armies threatened with encirclement but tht Rui'\nilam uld theie counter-strokes\nwere absorbed by the advancing\nSoviets.\nTht Monday-noon communique\nuld two towni were captured Weit\nof Roitov. Several otheri fell Southweit of Voroahilovgrtd, Jforth of\nKursk tnd In tht Caucasus Welt of\nKrasnodar.\nFor tht flnt tlmt tht German\n. communtiiM miatloned fighting\nin the Dnieper Rim region. Thty\nclaimed Russian formationi had\nbten widely encircled between\nthe Doneti and Dnieper and ihit\n- tered with the lou of 25 Ruuian\ntanki. Ruuian attacki were claimed to have been beaten back ln\nthe region and Weit tnd Northweit of Kharkov.\nThe Russlani who idvinced ln\nthe Ukraine beyond Krasnodar and\nPavlograd to 'within 34 mllei of tha\nGerman bue of Dnleperoptrovsk\nand Poltava wert fighting againit\ntime u well u tile Germini to\nreach the Dnieper river befort the\nlex becomei too thin to betr mechanized equipment They ilready trt\nin tht buin of tht Dnieper tlong\nwhich miny believe the Germtm\nIntend to itand.,\nMldwiy between Khirkov tnd\nMoicow, the Russians wtre approaching Orel from three direction!. <\nSoviet tanki wera declired belting their wty Wett from Kharkov,\nshattering resistance of German\nforcu including S. S. detachments.\nRooievelt Warm    '\nReverses,\nMisfortunes Ahead\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 12 (AP.)\n\u2014Pruldtnt Rooievelt warned\nAmericini tonight thtt thty \"itlll\nftot rtvintl tnd mlifortunu.\"\nIn I Waihlngton'i, blrthdiy id-\ndreu, hi compired the reaction\nta \"thi grttt tueciiMt en tht\nRuultn front\" to thtt fallowing\ntht Amtrlcin vlotory evtr Genenl Burgoyne'i irmy at Strttogt\nIn 1777 which \"ltd thouundi tf\nAmerlcani to throw thllr hlta In\nthe ilr, proclilmlng thtt thl war\nwu practically won and thtt thty\ncould go btck to their peacetime\noocupttlont\u2014tnd  'normilclei.'\"\nTht Preiident'i forum wll I terlei cf democratic dlnnerl celebrating thi completion of I fund-\nrtlilng drlvt for tht ptrty, to\nwhleh Mr. Rcoitvtlt't wordi\nwert broidcut'\nGANDHI BLAMED\nFOR VIOLENCE\nBY WHITE BOOK\nHad Agreed Power\nLines Could Be\nCut, Riots Started\nLEADER WEAKER\nHOUSE WARNED\nHARD PAYS\nFACING CANADA\nArmed Forces May\nBe in Thick\nof Fighting In 1943\nPRIORITY ASKED\nLabor AsksChango\nin Policy for\nLow Wage Worker\nOTTAWA, Tab. 21   (CP)-\nThe\nTradei and Labor Congress of Cinadi, ln \u2022 brief presented to the\nGovernment uked todty for intendment of wige-control leglilttlon\nto illow \"more liberal Interpreti-\ntlom.\" by Wir Libor Boirdi tnd\npirticulirly to remove Iny legislative reitoritlom on wigt negotiation!, by workeri who ttrn leu\nthin $25 \u2022 week or 50 cents tn hour.\nThe Congreu renewaid requeifi\nfor equtl repreuntttlon for libor\nind-employen on ill Government\nwir boirdi.\nThe brief uld\u2014\n\"We urge the goirrnmnt to con-\nilder the advisability cf letting up\n\u2022 botrd ilmllir to thi Wir production Boird In the U. 8. for thi\npurpose of itlmulitlng and developing Joint production commltteei\nln tht mijor Induitrlu on which\nlabor and managasment havt repre-\n\u2022entitlon.\"\nThe Congrey expreued ipprOa\/il\nof ricent legillition allowing collective btrgiinlng In crown com-\npinlei but uld It regret! txcluilon\not the Nitlonil harbon board and\nCimdltn Broadcuting Corpontlon.\nNEW DELHI, Fib, 22 (AP) \u2014\nMchindll K. Gandhi became\n\"progruilvtly wttktr* tonight\non tht 13th dty of hli fut after\nliving through t ihirp crltis yu.\nterday that left hli old'heart feebler for thl remaining tight dayt\nCf hit greateit trial of endunnce.\nTo miny It becemi Increulngly\nevident thit the Hindu spiritual\nleader of millions might die If he\ndid not break the fut undertaken\nto force the Brltith to release him\nunconditionally from Wl luxurloui\n'prison Igatfia AgaKhttfi fUut it\nPbona.\nAt the crlali deepened, the Govtrnment of India piibllshed an 86-\npagt white book which amounted to\n1 proipective brief to f'x the blame\nfor in outbreik of violence which\nstarted after Gandhi had initiated\n\u2022 \"no violence\" campaign to force\nthe British to grint Indli immediite Independence. Gandhi wu arrested Aug. t.\nThe Whltt Bock offered Gin\ndhl'i own wrltlngi tc lupport Iti\ncontention thtt tht 73-year-old\nleader ind hli AH-lndli Congreu\npolitical ptrty intended tnd tx\npected violence to ruult from Iti\nmovement\u2014thli it 1 tlmt whtn\nthi Jipinut Army htd overrun\nBurmi to thl Eutern frontier of\nIndit.   .\nThe book accused Gandhi of\nagreeing that telegraph, telephone\nind riilwty linei could be deitroy-\nel In the iplrit of non-violence provided safeguards were taken to pre-\n\\ra>nt losi of life.\nGandhi wu rasported ln the White\nBook u writing: \"I don't want rioting u 1 direct reiult (of mill tctlon). I ln spite of 111 precaution!\nrioting doe* tike plact lt cannot\nbt helped.\"\nA Goirtmment bulletin ligned by\nilx doctors uid GindhI hid \u2022 crliii\nit I p.m. Sundiy In which \"ht wu\nseized with levere niuiei ind ilmost fainted and hli pulie became\nnearly imperceptible.\"\nHe rallied ind lipped water and\nlime Juice and then ilept well into\nthe night.\nGindhI obierved hli weekly\nday oaf lilence todiy u mull, except,that he wu too feeble to\n\u25a0ertbele convention on \u2022 acrip\nof paper ai he ordinarily doei. A\n\u25a0mill circle ot relative! ind clou\nfriendi visited him u usuil.\nThe Government itood firm tn Iti\nreiolvi to hold GindhI, who hid\nbeen ottered hli freedom for the\nduntlon ot the fut\nGermini in wxuriti tnd txtct\nIn their operttloni whtn tht lituitlon allows the requirement! of thl\nregulitloni to be cirried out Thli 11\nwhere their itrength llei.\n\"Tht Ormani become hilpleu\nwhtn the lituitlon becomei complicated and doei not corrtipond\nwith thli or thtt ptrignph In thtir\nregulitloni, but requires the tdop-\nil'in of in Indipendent dtclilon not\nprovided for In thi ngulttion.\n\"It li hen thil thtir mtln weik-\nnui llei, Thue in tht cium that\ndetermined tht dtfttt of tht Oct-\nmm troopi ind thi iticctuti of the\nOTTAWA, Fib. tt (CP)-Prlmt\nMlnlittr Mackenzie King todty repeated In tht Houie of Commoni\na warning thtt Cinidiin irmed\nforcei might expect to bt In tht\nthick cf tht fighting In 1143.\nHi WU replying to prctlitl\n' which trow btfort tht Houu pin-\ntd hli resolution giving government builneu precedence for tht\nduration of tht prtitnt union.\nOnly 1 rttllzttion of tht \"lerlous-\nneu ot tht lituation\" prompted tht\nGovernment to seek thla priority,\nhe wld, In reply to chargei that\nthe Government waa depriving\nParliament of ita proper functions.\nTht Government deilred to have\nGovernment wtr mttiurti, iuch\nU wtr flninclng md tht budget,\ndlipoied of btfort tht tlmt came\nwhin \"our mlndi ind our htirtt\"\nmight bt full of tht luffirlng tnd\nucrlflce he foreuw.\n\"I doubt If tny of vt hive begun\nto. appreciate tht ordeal that thll\ncountry and our armfd forcu miy\nhave to pass through before this\nytar la out\" uld Mr. King.\nThe reiolutlon takei away from\nprivate memberi their traditional\npriority for ad\\rancing rtiolutloni\non certain dayi and at certain\nhoun.\nM. 3. (\"oldwell, OCT leader, John\nDlefenbaker (Prog. Con. Lake Centre) and John Blackmore, New De\nmocracy leader, ipoke againit the\ncontinued curtailment ot private\nmember prerogatives and generally\ncharged that Uit government la in\nvading the traditional [unctions ot\nParliament by order-in-council leg-\nillation arid regulations mtdt by\ncontrollers ind administrators.\nMr. King said no member li mort\ndesirous thin himielt that tn end\nbe made of \"SO pef- cent of the boards\nand 100 per cent of their restrictions,\" but no ba?tter method of wartime administration had been found\nThe Houie alio passed a reiolutlon\nreferring to the standing commit-\nteer on privileges tnd election the\nqueitlon ot issuing a new wrjj for\nin election in Standttead where the\nelection in 1940 of R. G. Davidson,\na Liberal, wu annulled by the Supreme Court of Canada for illegal\npracticea by hit agents. -\nMr King reminded memben\nthit virtually everything (hey\ncould bring forward during pri\nvate member periods could be\ndiscussed when the House ii in\ncommittee on the estimates or on\nthe budget resolutions.\nMr. Coldwell iald he fully realized thit under war conditions pn-\nvatt memben could not enjoy their\ntraditional rlghti but he believed\ndayi could bt let uide occasionally\nwhin they could hive priority.\nMr. Dtlfenbtker said that thli wll\n\"in unfilr Invulon\" of the rights ot\nthe private member.\nItalian Air Chief\nKilled in Ruuia\nLONDON, Ftb. 22 (CP)-Brlg.-\nGen. Enrico Pml, Commindir-ln-\nChltf cf tht Italian ilr forct In\nRuuli, his btin killed In action during \u2022 flight ovtr tntmy\ntirrltorV, thi Romi ridlo mnounced todiy In \u25a0 broidcut recorded\nby thi Auoclited Prttt,\nOiniril Pent **, wtt tppolnt-\n\u2022d tc thli poit tbout 1 yur tgo.\nRuuian Army Paid\nLeft-Handed\nTributt by Nazi\nLONDON,   Ftb.   12   (AP.) -\nLieut Gen. Kurt Dietmar, ont of\ntht top Nazi mllltiry commentator!, wti quottd by Btrlin radio\ntodiy In. 1 left-handed tributt\nto tht Soviet Rtd Army, 28 yeari\nold tomorrow. Tht Aiiociated\nPrtu heard tht broadcut.\n' Wirning thl German ptoplt of\n\u2022truggltl itlll to comt, ht uld:\n\"Tht Ruuiin wir michlnt It tht\nmott perfect Initrument cf deitructlon there li. Whtt itrength\nIt poututi wt htvt leirned In\ntheie put weeki.\"\nFive Jap Centrei\nBlasted by\nAllied War Planes\nALLIED HEADUARTERS IN\nAUSTRALIA, Ftb. 23 (API-Allied wtr plinei, In 1 wldt iweep\ncf Ntw Guinea and Ntw Brlttln,\ndropped bombi On It lult five\nJipineie ctntnl yeiterdiy, tht tl\nMed high commind reported to\ndiy.\nGen. MacArthur'i headquirten\nlilted Lit, Buin, Rabaul, Qiima-\nt tt, tnd Lertngru, ti hiving bun\nhit by thi bomberi.\nJaps Claim French\nPermit Landings\nInto Kwangchow\nN*SW YORK, feb. 22 (AP)-Jip-\ninrie heidquirten innounced todiy\nthit Jtpinrie irmy ind nivy forcei\nmoved into tht French concemon\nIn Kwingchow Biy yeiterdiy \"with\nthe full undenttndlng of the French\nGovtrnment.\"\nKmngchow Bay li on tht Eut\ncout of-tht ptnlniuli of Ul-Chow\nwhich projecti Southward from the\nChlneu Province of Kwangtung toward the Iiland of Hainan\nPlan No Further\nCut in Newsprint\nTORotyTO. r\u00bbb. n (eg-), - \u00abNo\nfurther curtailment of print ptper\nli contempUUd for tht itcond qutrter ot IMS.\" uyi \u2022 statement of\nJohn Atklni, Adminiitritor of\nPrintini. Publ'ihlng md Allied Induitrlu under thl Ctnidlkn Pr re,\nBoird. Mr. Atklni. it prtunt tn\nWuhlngton luthoriied tht Cimdlin Dilly Nmnaptptn Anoclition\nRaid Army, In tht lut thrtt montht.\" to to Inform Itt memberi.\nBroadcast Indicates\nBergonzoli in U. S.\nNIW YORK, Feb. 11 (AP)-A\nihnrt-wive broadcut to Italy by\nMayor F. H. la Guardia appeiri lo\nIndicate thit Gen. Annlbilt (Elec.\ntrie Whlaken) Bwgonioli, Italian\ngenenl ciptured by BrltUh forcu\nIn IMl, ind eight other formerly\nhigh Italian military leader,, in In\nthe Unlttd Stittt.\nTht Miyor dlicloied In \u2022 broadcut\nto tht Italian people yeiterdiy that\nhe hid talked with tht officer., ind\nuld thit to hli tyti they \"preiented\n\u2022 group of frtutrited tnd hopeleu\nmen who wert once ltidtn In thtir\nREGULAR BUTTER\nRATION MAY\nRESUME SOON\nNext 2 Weeks, Not\nLater Than\nMarch 15\u2014Unwin\nTO HONOR No. 9\nOTTAWA, Ftb. 22 (CP.)\u2014L. B.\nUnwin, Adminiitritor of Coniumer Ritlonlng for tht Pricu Botrd,\ninnounced tonight thit, birring\nbid weather or other unforeieen\ncircumstances, tht Botrd will be\ntblt to reiume thi regular butter\nration allowance of htlf I pound\nper perion per week by tbout\ntht middle cf Mtrch.\nDonald Gordon, Chairman of the\nPricei Board, told Tht Canadian\n\u25a0Prest that \"wt hopt to be able to\ndo lomethlng in the couru of the\nnext two weeka\u2014or not later than\nMareh 15.\"\nPreaent butter ration, iccompll**-\ned by Uie elimination of two cou>\npom which normally would fall due\nIn February, amount! to 8 2-3 ouncei\nfat perion p\u00ab .week. The reduction was put Into ellect Jan. Ig lut.\nMr. Unwin uld tht temporary re\nductlon ln the butttr ration allow<\nance announced Jan. 20 ii producing\nthe deilred resulti. \"The conservation of luppllei with hai results\nwill enable retalleri ln all areai to\nhonor butter coupon No. 8 which\nbecomei due next week.\"\nHe uld itorei now are accumulating itocki for thii purpoie.\n\"Current reports of production\nire encouraging, but ai this ii the\nperiod of loweit butter produc\ntlon, luppllei have had to be con-\nlerved In order to avoid a serious\nihortage. The cancellation of twp\ncoupom in February hai assured\nsufficient reserve! will be avail\nable March 1 to permit every perion to obtain the regular eight-\nounce allowance for coupon No. C\n\"The mowi ind itormi of the pait\nfew weeki have added to the prob\nlems of dlitrlbution, md ihipraents\nIn iome lectloni have been delayed\nby blocked roidi and rails.\" The\nBoard'i announcement uld the iltuatlon ll under eonitant itudy, and\ntht original eight-ounce ritlon will\nbe reitored \"at the earliest poulble\nmoment.\"\nTea, coffee ind iugir eouponi ln\nthe new ration book ire dated, and\nthe first onei become negotiable\nMarch'B. Datei on which the butter\ncoupom become valid and expire\nwll lbt innounced ihortly.\n&t|\ni <\nHurls Everything\nInto Menacing\n3-Headed Drive\nBy WES GALLAGHER*\nAssociated Press Staff Writer *\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 22\n(AP) \u2014 Tank - supports Cerman Infantry stabbed arww\nthrough Kasserine Pass late today toward the,American bast\nof Tebessa in Algeria after being beaten back earlier while]\nanother arm of Marshal Rommels armor advanced 16 miles to\".\nwithin four miles of Thala,-* important road junction on thai,'\nright flank of the British 1 st Army.\nYet  a   third  column  was menacing   Sbiba  where   a\nFrench communique disclosed1?*-^\n-   A\nReport Big Nazi\nTroop Movements\nGoing I nto* Spain\nLONDON. Feb. J2 (CP)\nReuteri nevri dlipitch from Zurich\ntodiy uld traini crowded with\nGermin troopi, most of them Masoned vetenni, were reported pouring night ind day through the\nFrench Pyreneei district toward\nthe Spaniih -frontier.\nClaim Nazi Subs\nSink 15 Ships\nNEW YOHX. Feb. 22 (API-A ipeclil report from Hitler'i headquarteri broidcut todiy by the Berlin\nridlo isserted thit Germin lUabmar-\nlnei hid sunk 19 ihipi totalling\n103,000 gross register tons plui one\ncorvette, one eicort veuel, one patrol boat and four uillng triniporti In the Atlantic and off North\nAfrican ind Medlterrinun ports.\nThere wai no conflrmttlon.\nMiners Ask More\nBuffer and Beer\nNANAIMO, B.C., Teb. 13 <CP>-\nUnited Mine Workeri of Amerlci,\nNinilmo Loctl. hive decided to\nippeil to authorities (or liberalised\nbutter and beer ratloni for coil\nminers The men contend the preient butter ritlon li Insufficient for\nmen who muit pick their lunches\nto work and thit men In iuch heavy\nInduitriei li coal mining ihould be\ncorpi\" he did not uy whtrt ht h\u00bbd Iintltled  to  mort  betr  thin  now\nmtt them. available.\nthat thrusts six miles to the\nEast had been parried.\nRommel wai throwing moit of hli\narmor Into the three-beaded drive\nWeit oi Kaiserine Pan with menacing reiulti in a iwlft effort to w-\nploit hli gaini of last week in which\nht overran 4000 square miles of\nleml-deiert between Fald Pau, Gafsa and iht proximity of the Algerian\nfrontier.\nAmerican and French Infantry\nguarding the approachei to Tebesw,\n35 miles Northwest of Kasserine, successfully countered the flrit itania\nof the renewed drive.\nOf the Thala region, an Allied\nspokesman declared:\nGERMANS TIRING,\n\"The Germans are now about four\nmilei from Thala but they are\nshowing ligm of exhauition.\"\nHe declared the Britiih and American force! \"appear to have the iltuatlon in hand.\"\nField reporti tonight ihowed tht\nKuierlnt Gap wai being \"vtry\nhotvlly htid by tht Qtrmim,\"\nwho wert bringing up heavier\ngum\u2014in action regarded u an Indication thtt Rommel mty bl\ngambling ill on throwing everything Into in attempt to cripple\nthi BrltUh lit irmy.\nThe Alllei were faced with a difficult defenilve task to prevent their,\nwhole Southern line from being\nshattered after the serious blow that\nresulted in the lou of the vital pan.\nReports from field headquarteri\nsaid the Germans had hurled \u00ab\ntanks toward Thala, Arab town ol\nabout 50 white clay building!,- 20\ntoward Tebeua, and 14 at Sbiba.\nThe Morocco radio in a broadcast heard in London Monday night\nlaid: \"A strong enemy attack North-\nwest ot Kasserine has been stemmed by the Allies. South of Sbiba\nenemy infantry was repelled. In the\nNorthern sector, a push toward Med\nJei el Bab also was stejnmed.\"\nShould tht Germin vetenni\nbreik out Into tht grett Kremtm\nu Plateau, tht 1lt army In tht\nmuddy plilni to the North would\nbt   threatened.\nA compelent source at headquarten uid the Germans thrust toward\nThala made \"a ilight Infiltration\"\nIn lhe mountain! toward Tebessa\nNorth of Feriana.\n\"They met an American combat\nteam which had plenty of battle ex\nperience and were knocked back toward Kauerine Gap ln Iheir Tebessa\nattack,\" the source said.\nIn the attacka near Thall, key to\na vut itretch of high level terrain\nextending Northweit to Le Ket, the\nGermani ujed several of their huge\nMark VI Tiger tanks which mount\n88-mm cannon and have aevenWhcs\nof armor.\nThe AlKtt met the enemy with\nfield gum, anti-tank gum and Infantry.\nThe Amerlcani withdrew from\nKuurlne pia undtr t heivy hill\nof ihelli tnd they loit t lirgt\nimount of equipment. Tht enemy\nemployed 106-mm tnd 88-mm guni\nliberally.\nThli lateit ln the enemy'i teriea\not savage thrusts waa thrown in this\nmorning by Marihal Rommel Northwestward through Kasserine Gap toward Thala, soon after hii effort to\nbreak through to the Weit of Kaiserine toward the town of Tebessa ln\nAlgeria had been beaten down by\nAmerican  troops.\nIn this action, two of Rommel'i\narmored columni, totalling about 50\ntanki, were thrown back almost 10\nmiles to Ihe mouth of the Gap and\nat leait 14 Axis tanks were smashed.\nEarlier, Axli attacki well to the\nNorth of the miln fighting anni\n\u2014about MedJez-el-Bab In Northern Tunlila\u2014hid been repulud,\n\u2022\u2022 hid otheri South of the Town\nof Sbiba, Itielf 25 milu Eut ot\nThill.\nThe thruit for Thala brought the\nmoat critical iltuatlon yet to irlie\nin the bittle for Tuniiia\u2014a position\nmore serloui even than lhat createa\nby thi enemy'i Initial breakthrough\nat Faid Pan or even Ihe breach ot\nthe Kasserine Gap Itielf.\nThill itandi at the edge ot a\npeat plateau from which Rommel\ncould und bis armored forces out\nIn a dozen dlrectioni over perfect\ntink country.\nGambling heavily for a decliive\nvictory igaimt the British 1st irmy\nbefore lubitantlal weight cm be\nthrown agalnit him by tht Britain\n8th army of Gen. Sir Bernard Mont-,\ngomery, Rommel wu, howtvtr, him.\nsell risking disaster. Observeri htrt\nagreed that lt the American forcei\nthat hurled him back to tht West,\nof the Kasserine were tble to clou\nand hold that gap hla powerful columns tbat had broken through to.\nthe Northwest would then bt |M'\nlated inside a ring ot mountaini ind\nin great peril\nTht 8th irmy wit uld In unofficial reporti from Cilro to bt\ngoing forwird Northweitwird tt-\nwird tht town of Minth, hiving\noverrun Medtnlnt tlong tht outir\nworki of thl fortified Mtrtth Hni\nIn Southeaitern Tunlilt,\nFour Killed, 10\nMissing\nClipper (rash\nLISBON, Ftb. it (AP)-A tllp-\npir flying boat arriving htrt tit\na flight from tht Unlttd Statu\ncraihtd lindlng on tht TigiA Riv*\ntr todty. Four wtrt kllitd ind\n21 are milling of thi 40\niboird. Tht rtmtlnlng 16 i\ngin tnd crew* memben wirt\nbrought ashore alive but mtny\nwere Injured.\nTht tcore of penoni milling wtrt\nbelieved burled at tht bottom et\nthe river.\nThere wert four women passengers aboard. All were uved.\nThe Traniatlanic flying boat wu\nthe Yankee Clipper, under eom\u00ab\nmand of Capt. Sullivan, and hti\ncome here by way of -the Azores. It\ncarried 27 passengers and lt crew\nmembera.\nCapt. Sullivan, an experienced M>\nnior pilot, la among the injured la\nhospital. He wai unable to explain\nthe cause of the mishap,\nWilliam Butterworth, Flnt ta*.\nnotary ot tht Americin Ligttlon,\nmtntged to wtlk from thl reicu-\nIng bott to in ambulance anti\neven helped tht other Injured\npenoni, ilthough ht wn lufftr.\n\u2022 Ing from ihock. '\nYvet Silver, the leut Mrloutty\ninjured of the women, wu cirrinl\nashore with her clothing in titters.\nAnother woman victim wai Jew\nFroman, ndio linger, who wu in.\nJured and whose husbind wu rtporttd mining.\nlaps Jailed After\nTrouble\nOver Registration\nKXAMATH TWLIS, Ore., Feb. M\n(AP)-\u00abeveral diyi ol igltition\nover registration for Job clearance\nand selectiw lervice it the Tula-\nlake, Calif., war relocation ctntrt\nended today with 27 Japanese from\nthe project ln Klamath Falli ind\nAlturas Jails.\nHarvey M. Coverley, Director ot\nthe Tule Lake project, uld thert\nwu no violence.\nThe evacueei brought out lut\nnight, Coverley uid. had lent ln \u2022\nprotest against reglitratlon. Ht\ndctcribed them as \"ill-advised boyi*,\"\nwho had been, agitated by t **fe%\nsubversive people.\"\nLifting of Communist'\nBan Would Mean\nAdvftcatina Doctrine.\nOTTAWA, .F.*. 22 (CPWuitlce\nMinister St. Laurent uid In thl\nHouse of Commons tonight thit for\nthe overnmetrt to lift the bin oh\nthe aCommunlit Pirty In Cinidi\nwould be Interpreted in aome quirten u establishing the legality of t\ndoctrine that advocates the overthrow of the Government by foxct.\nHe was closing \u2022 debite on hli\nmotion to set up i ipeclil Commons Committee on Defence of a\u00a3in-\n\u25a0da Regulitloni which wu adopted\nwithout question.\nMore than \u25a0 doi^n Memberi\nspoke in the debiti ind in.niy bf\nthem urged adoption of the reoonta-\nmendatlon of list yetr'i commltttt\non thli subject, thit the ban on\nCommunists, Jehovah'i Wltnqisei\nmd Technocriti, bt lifted\n t\u2014 NELSON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY, FIBRUARY It, 1943\nOttawa Advises C. P. R. Nelson City\nWater Needs to Be Chlorinated;\nUnsuitable lor Passenger Irains\n. Nelson City Water should be chlorinated to latlsfy requirement! for\ninterprovincial traffic iuch aa on\nC.P.R. trains running through Nel-\n\u00abdn. the Railway Company hae been\nWormed by the Department of\nPpniloni and National Health, Ot-\nfowi. W. J. McLean, Superintendent\nof the Kootenay Dlviiion, pined\nthii Information on to tbe City Council Monday night. The Council referred the letter to the Fire and\nWater Committee.\n\u2022i No direct word haa been received\nby tha city from Ottavra, Mayor N.\nC. Stibbi laid.\nThe luperintendent quoted part of\na letter from the Federal Department, as followi:\nWOULD ABANDON\nOtD RESERVOIR1\n\"One undesirable feature of this\n\u2022Upply could be eliminated by abandoning the old puddles-clay reier-\nvoir, which doei not appear to be\nrequired for itorage aince the completion of the new concrete reservoir, and lervei only aa a break-\npressure tank. The concrete reservoir should be connected directly to\nthe mains through an additional\npressure-reducing valve if neces-\n\u2022ary.\n\"Sinoe the lource of water at Five-\nMile-Creek Is not free from bacterial\npollution at all times, it ll advisable\nto safeguard the supply to the city\nby conllnuoui chlorlnation.\"\nMr. McLean added:\n\"Their Inspector terms the supply\nai doubtful and not satisfactory for\nuae aboard common carrleri engaged\nln international and Interprovincial\ntraffic which, In our elie, Is the\nwater uied for watering jrassenger\nequipment. ,\n\"Please advise If my steps will\nbe taken to correct this condition.\"\nDunwoody Entertains\nGyros With Tales\nof Policeman Carter\nHumorous reminiscences from i\nlong career u a police officer, both\nIn Ireland and British Columbia, by\nW. R. Dunwoody, entertained tbe\nGyro Club at its supper milting\nMondiy. Mr. Dunwoody is \u2022 retlr-\ned Provincial Police inspector.\nHe joined tha Royil Irish Constabulary, a force of 14,000 men,\nln 1898, and served over eight yeari\nwith that force. In 1910, he Joined\nthe B. C. Police force, and wrved\nvariously throughout the Province\nuntil hii retirement.\nJohn Thorn wai Program Chllrmin.\nDuckworth and\nGreenwood in\nAll-Comers Final\n\"W. A. Duckworth'i and H. A. D.\nGreenwood's rinks tonight will\nmatch ihots it the Civic Centre\nCurling Club to decide the winner\ntt the All-Come'rs Tournament. Both\nwon aemi-final matchei Monday\nbight to win their wiy into the final\n\u2022lated for 7 p.m.\niiH. A. D. Greenwood'i four, scor-\nIng three points on the last end,\ntvon their way to the final past\nE. A. Murphy. Greenwood wae one\ndown going home in the semi-final\n, at 7 p.m., but the three-ender gave\nhim a victory 8-d. In a quarter\nthai, also played at 7 pm., W. A.\nDuckworth took out P. E. Poulin\nlt-2, lo win a plice in the lemi\nIgilnit Syd Haydon\n^Duckworth In his semi-final with\ni*(iydon it 9 p.m. triumphed  10-4.\nManpower Position at\nZincton Improved\n('VANCOUVER, B. C.-At Zinc-\nfan Mine of Sheep Creek Gold\nMines Ltd., here was further im-\naarovement in the manpower situation ln January, Shifts worked in\nJanuary totalled 2300 againit 2200\na Dafcember. Since January of 1942\nfieri hli been a gain of 43 per\nCL In the ume annual period\ncompany'i gold mine hai ihown\naVaM per cent decline ln number cf\nibifts worked. There was a smsll\nkurrease ln ihilts worked it the\nfold mini in January, the total beini ISM againit 1997 in December.\nLOANS\nPte. June Morgan\non Furlough Here\nPte. June Morgan of the Canadian\nWomen's Army Corpi is visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Morgan, 520\nThird Street, while on furlough. She\nhas Been itationed at Little Moun-\ntain.'Pte. Morgan arrived here Saturday and will return to her itation\nMarch 6.\nTwo Axis Supply\nShips Sunk\nLONDON, Feb. 22 (CP)-Britlsh\nsubmarines operating ln the Mediterranean have destroyed two medium-sized Axii supply shlpi, probably destroyed a large tanker and\ndamaged three other vessels In recent operations, the Admiralty an'\nnounced today.\nIn addition, a small vessel wai reported to have been torpedoed and\nsunk at anchor.\nI\non Diamonds, Jewelry,\nRadioi Silverware, Furi,\nGum ind All Valuables\nI. C. COLLATERAL\nLOAN BROKERS LTD.\n77 E. Hastings, Vancouver.\nCONSTIPATION\nQuickly Yields to Exln-Gentli\n4-Wiy Vegetable Treatment\nIt often doei mora harm than good to\ntrrat constipation by using harsh purg-\n\u25a0tivce which only aggravate the trouble\nf*or dayi after-ward. Especially when a\nmild, extra-gentle way has proven eo\nsuccessful fn -coaxing the system into\nhealthy regularity.\nThis mors modatrn wsy will be truly an\namsxfng diecovery for you, because you\nwill be deliihted at the gentle yet effective\nway tbe 10 purely vegetable extracts in\nBile Beans do their work. Bile Beans are\n\u25a0mall, purely vegetable laxative pills\nwhich havt a 4-way action\u2014on Uvct bile,\nstomach, upper and Iowa* bowels. Be\n\u25a0* -convinced\u2014grt Bile Beans from your\ndniggist today and Irarn how their gentle\n4-wav vegetable action -coaxes the system\ninto healthy regularity.   50c at druggists.\nBile Beans sre a household word In\nEngland. Over 7 million boiw sold lsst\nfear, proof of senntional popularity.    3\nVICTORIA ARMY\nADVANCES\nTO B.C. FINALS\nVICTORIA, Feb. X (OP)-*VIc\ntoria Army advanced to the Britiih\nColumbia Senior Hockey finals by\ndefeating Esquimalt Navy 8-5 here\ntonight. The loldieri swept through\nthe Vancouver Iiland League belt\nof five finals with three itraight\nvictories. They won the first game\n8-4 and liie lecond 5-3.\nThe lailors now are forced to the\nliielines snd Army will meet the\nwinner of the Mainland League \u2014\neither Vancouver St. Regis or Vancouver R.C.A.F.\u2014in the Provincial\nfinals.\nPROLON FINALS\nNEW WflTSTMIiNSTBR, B. C, Feb.\n22 (CP)\u2014Vancouver St. Regis prolonged the Mainland Senior Hockey\nLeague finals by edging out a 3-2\novertime victory over Vancouver\nR.CA.F. here tonight. Air Force\nwon the first game 8-5 and the lecond 8-4. The fourth game of the\nbest of five ieriei will be played\nWednesdiy.\nIlsley Dismisses\nHepburn Charges\nas Simply Absurd\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CP).-In a\nitatement In reply to chargei of\nMitchell Hepburn, Ontario Provincial Treaiurer, concerning provincial revenues surrendered to the\nFederal Government, Finance Minister Ilsley last night jald the \"itate-\nment that we are despollen Ii limply absurd.\"\nMr. Hepburn made the charges\nIn a speech In the Ontario Legislature Friday ln the course of which\nhe labelled Ottawa authorities as\n\"men without honor.\"\nThis accusation Mr. Ilsley said\nhe dismissed \"without comment and\nwith contempt.\"\nHe added: \"From any other public\nman in Canada, these words would\nbe an Insult From Mr. Hepburn, ill\nthey mean is that he was In a fit of\ntemper when he uttered them.\"\nThe Finance Minister said the\nDominion's deficit ln the current\nfiscal year, ending March 31, would\nbe more than $2,000,000,000. Be added Ontario had a surplui on ordinary account last year of more than\n$15,000,000.\nAfter answering Mr. Hepburn's\ncharges concerning liquor revenuei\nand those derived from the tax on\nIncome of mining corporations, Mr.\nIlsley concluded with theie words:\n\"The war haa made the financial\ntask of the Dominion Government\ndifficult beyond wordi. At the iame\ntime It hai bade that of the Treaiury of Ontario far eaiier thin lt\nwould otherwise have been.\n\"I am anxioui that the finances of\nthe Provincea ihould be maintained\nln a itrong and healthy poiltion.\nHowever, I im confident that the\npublic, which ii the ume public that\npayi taxes to both the Dominion\nand the provlncei, would find It\ndifficult to approve the maintenance of provincial revenuei at iuch\na level as to provide unduly large\nsurpluses.\"\nLiquor Supplies\nHeld to\nUniform Flow\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CP)-Sup-\npiles of beer, wine, and spirits,\nreleaied to thl Canadian public\nare being regulated by thl Commluloner of Excite io thit thi\nflow will be fairly uniform from\nmonth to month, Thl Canadian\nPrill wai Informed today.\nOn Dec. 18 laat, Prime Mlniiter\nKing announced that for the 12\nmonths beginning Nov. 1, 1942, the\nbeer made available for Canadian\nconsumers would be reduced 10\nper cent below what was sold ln tne\npreceding 12 months, Tha volume Of\nwine would be reduced 10 per cent\nand of spirits 30 per cent. *\nAs the announcement wai retroactive the breweries, wineries md\ndistilleries found themselvei con-\naiderably oversold ln November and\nDecember. This surplus selling hn\nto be wiped out in the remaining 10\nmonthi.\nAccordingly the imount of bw\nnow being released, while it varies\nln the various provlncei dependent\non the oversold position at the end\nof the year, Is around 85 per cent\nof what was released at this time a\nyear ago. The amount of wine released is less than 80 per cent and of\nspirits under 70 per cent.\nCCF. District\nCouncil Wants\nProvince Run All\nPolice Fores Picket\nLines to Break\nUp at Glass Plant\nWALLACEBURG, Ont. Feb. 71\n(CP)\u2014Provincial Police using riot\nsticks ind at leut oni tear gai\nbomb lata today forced striking\nplcketi to disperse from tha Dominion Glm Company plant hen,\nwhere a number of employeei, memberi of the united Automobile Workeri Union (C.I.O.) have been on\nitrike.\ntt was the second clash of the day\nEarlier, police we're engiged ln \u25a0\nmelee with the plcketi who were\naccused of preventing entrance to\nthe plant ot workeri not on itrike.\nBill Proposes to\nAuthorize Kaslo\n(ut Interest Rate\nVICTORIA, Feb. 22 (CP)-Fiv*\nbills were introduced In .the Legislature today and given firit reading.\nOne, affecting the City of Kaiio\nis entitled \"The City of Kulo Reduction of Intereit Act,\" md per-\nmiti that community to pass a bylaw\nauthorizing the city to raise $1800\nannually for eight years by a special\nrate on all the rateable land or\nrateable land and Improvements\nwithin the municipality in payment\nof debentures of the City of Kaalo\nelectric light and power project.\n' The interest rate is reduced to\nfour per cent and meani a saving\nto rate pajeri of $800 a year. The\nbylaw may be passed without assent\nof the electors.\nAnother bill providei thet the\nchief engineer of the public worki\npartment shall act ex officio as Acting Deputy .Minister of that department during the absence of the Deputy Minister.\nAmendment to the Factories Act\nprovides for a sufficient number of\nsanitary conveniences for employees, one sanitary convenience ind\none urinal for every 25 malei or\nfraction of that number and one san-\nSocial Insurance lor B.C Might\nMean New Taxes, Says Pearson\nVICTORIA,  Fib.  12\nLabor Mlniiter Peinon told tha\nLiglilatur* today a coordinated\nplan of iocIiI Iniurance for BrltUh Columbil In thl next few\nyeara might mun the* Impoiltlon\nOf further tixei.\nSpeiklng on I aoclal Iniurance\nresolution, the Minister nid social\nlervicei are costing the Province\nbetween $6,000,000 and $7,000,000 a\nyear and the Government li getting\ncloie to Its limit especially if revenuei go down.\n\"In the next few yein we ihould\nhave a coordinated plan of social Iniurance for Britiih Columbia,\" Mr.\nPearson stated \"It might mean the\nimposition of further taxes but so\nmuch li being taken from our pay\ncheeki now that we would hardly\nnotice the difference.\"\nThe throne ipeech debate was\ncompleted Friday. The budget will\nbe brought down tomorrow by Premier Hart. Today the Legislature.\ngave second reading to 15 bills, introduced five more, passed one reiolutlon and began debate on the\nsocial Iniurance reiolutlon.. H. E.\nWinch, Oppoiition Leader, adjourned debate on the motion after Mr.\nPearaon spoke.\nMr. Pearion iald the social Iniurance plan for Britiah Columbia\nshould be all-embracing and prove\nof much assistance.to those people\nnow burdened with care of Indigent relatives Pending Inauguration of the icheme he aiked for\nlupport of a Federal health iniurance plan which would permit British Columbia to lupptanent bene-\nflti of the Federil plan.\n(CP.)   \u2014I    Bills given aecond reading\nTRAIL. B.C., Feb. 22\u2014At the meeting of the CCF Diitrict Council here,\nwith Trail, Warfield and Rossland\nCCF Clubs represented, a resolution\nfrom the Rossland CCF Club, originated by R. W. Haggen of Ron-\nland, was endorsed, as follows:\n\"In view of the shortage of food | nary convenience for every 20 le-\nsuppliei which Is being allowM to j males or fraction thereof. Hours of\nIncluded the Curlew BUI giving tha Government power to proclaim a curfew In unorganized districts, designating houn, agu of either boyi\nor girli md small penaltlei agalnit\nparenti who refused to coopente in\niti enforcement.\nOppoiition Leader Winch opposed the measure as carrying an Indictment againit pirenti.\nMrs. D. a. Sleeve. (CCF-North\nVmcouver) uld tha meaiure wu\nbrought In with pirtloulir refer\nence to the town of Kimberley. If\nthit oentre wantid a curfew law\nIt ihould organise ai a municipiiity and pui Iti own lawi, ihe iald.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF-Roiihlnd-\nTrall) uw great difficulty In in-\nforcing the act.\nAn amendment to tbe Old Age\nPemioni Act letting up \u2022 three-\nman board under tha Provincial\nSecretary to administer that statute.\nInstead of having the Workmen's\nCompensation Board, received see-\non dreading without opposition.\nOther amendments to existing\nstatutes Included:\nBills of Me Act providing that\nwhere I chattel mortgage hai been\npaid in full, notice of iuch piyment\nshall be given the Registrar of Companies.\nHighway Act, prohibiting three\ncyclists from riding abreast on a\nhighway.\nDeserted Wives Maintenance Act\nnow gives a wife the right, to garn<\nlihee her husband's salary ln hil\ndomicile. Previouily thit right was\nonly within hn domicile.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nComa In end see our large\nstock of\nLINOLEUM\nAll tha latest patterns Including Inlaid, Pabco's and\nBattleship.\n.\nFINK'S\n,,*f;\nFURNITURE\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll,\nAdana Meeting to\nBear Fruit Says\nTurkish Premier\nANKARA, Turkey,' Feb. 11 (delayed) (AP)\u2014Premier Sukru Saracoglu declared In a broadoast addreu\nto the country tonight thit the re-\ntoent Adana conference between\nPresident InonO and Prime Minister\nChurchill would \"bear the most uio-\n(ul fruits\" for both countriei.\nThe talki, the Premier iald, re-\nlulted in a reaffirmation of mutual\nconfidence and recognition by Britain of the necesilty of arming Turkey fully.\nHe added that Churchill'i arrival in Turkey coincided with the arrival of an Important shipment of\nwar materiils constructed In allied\nfactories. ,\nThin Girls Learn\nThe way to better health\nThin girls are learning that\nthey can sharpen their appetites\nand improve digestion -by the\nuse of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food \u2014\nthe vitamin tonic.\nTo be sure of not missing the\nusual altar-meal  treatment  they\nbuy the' new, economy liae bottle\nof Dr. Chase'i Nerve Food and\nkeep it on the dining table along\nnilti the ialt and pepper ihaken.\nThe increased lupply of vitamin\n,*. Bi and food minerals helps them\nto get relief from tired feelings.\nj nervous spells and Irritability ana\n\u25a0  to know again the joy of healthful\nI' living.\nWhether in war work or other\noccupations they find that tbey\nhave the pep and energy which is\nessential for efficiency and iucom*.\nAik for the new, economy aiie bottle of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nGrants Divorce to\nWoman Whoso\nHusband Is Overseas\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 22 (CP) -\nSoldiers In the Canadian Army it\nhome or oveneas are not immune\nto divorce process, according to a\nJudgment In lupreme court today\nby Chief Justice Ferris.     '\nThe question was raised by a\ncontrary view expressed by Mr.\nJustice Taylor of tbe Saskatchewan\nKing's Bench court who held that\nno action for divorce would lte\nagainst i member of Hii Majesty's\nCanadian Forcei when on ictive\nservice oveneas.\nChief Justice Ferris today granted a decree absolute to Clodagh\nAileen Lawson dissolving her marriage to John B. Lawson, now with\nthe Canadian Army in England.\nGeorge Lunn of\nCJAT joins\nCanadian Army\nGeorge Lunn, radio announcer\nfor CJAT at Trail and formerly of\nCKLN, Nelson, has enlisted in the\nCanadian Army, the third member\nof his family to Join the Canadian\nforcei. A brother, Hugh, ls In the nr\nforce, and another brother, David, Is\nIn the Navy. All are ioni of Mri. R.\nLunn of Nelson.\ndevelop in Canada, one of the\nworld's greateit agricultural areas!\n\"And in view\" of the shortage of\nfuel, foreseen over a year ago, which\nwas allowed to develop unchecked,\nand has resulted In ill health, loss\nof time in essential war Industry,\nand closing of schools ln Western\nCanada, the location of some of the,\nworld's largest coalfields and timber\nlands;\nAnd in view of the utter failure\nof the Dominion Government to lake\nany steps to bring production into\nficcord with requirements;\nThe Rossland Club of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation\nurges all loyal citlrem of this Province to bring pressure to bear on\nthe B.C. Government to take the initiative within Its own Jurisdiction\nby planning and arranging for ihe\nproduction or aqulsitlon of such food\nand fuel supplies aa are required to\nsupport Its own people:\u2014\n\"(a) By having estimates prepared from available data of the amount\nof staple foods required to supply the\npopulation and arranging with farmers and manufacturers for supply\nto the Government ot prearranged\nprice \"of the requisite amount of\nsuch essential foods as can be produced here, for distribution at various centrei.\n\"(b) By arranging for Ihe production of coal, wood and sawdust in the\namounts required in all sections of\nthe Province and where necessary\nfor storage at convenient points.\n\"And It is further urged that, on\naccount of the existing emergency,\nprivate ownership privileges be an-\nnulled to the extent that idle farm\nlands, sawmills, machinery, distributing facilities, timber lands, and\ncoal deposits be worked by the Provincial Government to the extent\nnecessary to fulfil requirements,\nusing such labor md equipment u\nmay be available.\n\"It is realized that the time to plan\nfor food supplies from farms ls before (Spring planting, so farmers may\nplant crops for an assured market\nat an assured price.\n\"Be It resolved that copies of this\nresolution be sent to the Hon. the\nPremier of British Columbil, the\nLeader of the Opposition, the member for Rowland-Trail and the\npress.\"\nCouncil Complete\nWith Water's Return\nA full Council, the first In several\nweeks, attended Monday night'a City\nwork for women In canning fac\nlories during aalmon runi and during the fruit or vegetable seasons\nalso are, suspended, as In past years\nWITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nResults of Jeffc Cup Competition\nmatches played Monday night by\nNelson Curling Club rinki were:\nRotiert Hickey 10, A. G. Harvey 8.\nG. S. Godfrey 12, J. P. McLaren 9.\nR. A. Peebles 7, R. D. Wallace 5.\nLeo Desireau defaulted to I. A,\nMurphy.\nA. H. Whitehead defaulted to\nJ. B. Gray.\nRoy Sharp defaulted to __. E. L.\nDewdney.\nT. R. Wilson 12, J. A. Smith \u00ab.\nHowe Sound Reports\nGood Results\non Britannia Levels\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 22 (CD-Annual report of Home Sound Company announces continued favorable\nresults on the new low levels at\nBritannia mine.\nAlthough operating revenue from\nall sources was lower by nearly $4,-\n000,000, expenses were cut enough lo\npermit the company to report per\nhare profit after depreciation at\n$3.75 per share, compared with $385\nin 1941.\nWorking capital exclusive of government securities was 6.327,900 at\nend of 1942. Holdingi of fjominion\nof Canada bonds and treuury bills\nwere Increased by more than $500,-\n000 to $2,105,220.\nGarbaoe Being\nStudied\nby Committee\n\"What ictlon li being taken on\ngirbige service thll year?\" Aid.\nT. H. Waten poied this\u2014hli annual\nquestion preceding an argument for\ncity-wide garbage lervice\u2014to the\nCity Council Monday night, and\nwai advlied by Mayor N. C. Stibbs\nthat the Health Committee had\nbeen asked to study it ind bring in\nrecommendations to be discussed\nwhen estimates wera, being prepared.\nAlderman Waten suggested \u2022 contnet buis was the only feasible\none; ind Aid. H. H. Hinitt, Heilth\nCommittee Chairman, iccept it u\n\"a flrorthy luggeitlon.\"'\nAmend Lease Order\nin Certain Areas\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22  (CP)-Revii\nIon of i certain type of lease in\nCouncil meeting.   The Council was Ontario, the Western Provlncei tne\ncomplete with  the return of Aid. Yukon and the Northweit Territor-,\nDr.Chases Nerve Food\nFOR NEW PEP\nAND ENIRGY\nGuide for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\n\u2022jymour SL Vancouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated throughout.   Phonei   and   elevator.\nA    PATTERSON,   late   of\nColemm, Alta., Proprietor.\nT. H. Wateri, recently a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital for\nan operation. Other memberi ol\nthe fiouncil who hive been on the\nlick list briefly were ill \"on the\nJob.\"\nAldermin Wateri wu welcomed\n\u2014with dissertation! anent'hli operation\u2014and expressed appreciation for expressions of sympathy\nreceived while he wu in hospital.\nQuake Recorded\nSALT LAKE CITY, Fet. 22 (AP)\n\u2014Northern Utah was jarred by i\nlight earth quake this morning.\nBingham, location of the famed\nUtah open-cut copp\" mines, was\nreported shaken by sharp movements of the earth but no damage\nwas reported immedistely.\nSalt Lake City ind lurroundlng\ncities and towns felt the tremon.\nWBSTON, Mass., Feb. 2! (AP) -\nA \"very strong\" rirthquake. believed Ut have originated near Mexl.\nco City, was recorded today.\nFIVE KILLED\nMEXICO CTTY, Feb. 22 (AP) -\nA heivy earthquike ihock before\ndiwn today collapied \u25a0 rooming\nhouie In \u2022 densely populated district of Mexico City, killing five\npersoni\nThe epicentre of the quake wis\neitlmated at 240 mills Southwest\nof Mexico CHy In Ihe Pacific Oceiai\nSo greit wu the Ihock that its\nmoglngical instruments were knock,\ned out of action.\nles. so that landlords cm occupy\nproperty within 12 months of giving notice to their tenints was announced by the Prices Board today.\nThe amending 'order, which Is\neffective today, refers only to \"term\ncertain\" leaies In those provinces\nand districts.\nUnder the terms of the unrevlsed\norder the purchaser of property\noccupied by a tenint hiving i 'term\ncertiln' leale was required to give\nnotice to vacate of at leait 12 month\nexpiring at the end of Aprll or\nSeptember, whichever day cime\nfirst ifter the receipt of tha notice.\nNow the notice miy be effective it\nthe end of iny leiie month which\nends the 13-month period.\n38 Hospital Articles\nMade by\nNakuso Auxiliary\n\u25a0NAKUSP, B.C-The February\nmeeting of the Women'i Hoipltal\nAuxiliary wai held ln the Hoipltal\n*Board rooms.\nThe sewing committee reported 3\npatient's gowni, 4 pneumonia Jackets, 13 draw sheeti and 18 bed iheeti\nhad been made during the month.\nThe Auxiliary had loaned $M to\nthe hospital board to help pay for\nthe new hoipital bed.\nArrangements were made to hold\na Si. Patrick's day tea and bike\nsale March 20. Mrl. J. Motherwell\nind Mrs. A. Watson were 'appointed\nto the buying committee; Wl. R.\nCuiloch.visiting committee.\nTei hostesses for the diy were\nMrs. McQualr and Mra M. Cuiloch.\n1234 Ration Books\nIssued Monday\nBring Total to 3611\nNelson women volunteers Issued\n1234 No. 2 ration books Monday, a\ntotal to date of 3511. The distribution will continue until the end of\nthe week.\nTonight, Thursday and Saturday\nthe distributing office, 347 Baker\nStreet, will be open until 9 p.m. On\nother dayi lt will be open until 0\np.m. The daily opening hour ii 10\na.m.\nNine workeri were on hand Monday morning and 14 in the afternoon\nfor an \"exceptionally busy day\".\nCLAIM BRITISH\nPORTS HUM\nWITH ACTIVITY\nBERNE, Switzerland, Feb. 22 (AP)\n-A Lc Havre diipitch to the Tribune de Geneve reported today that\nNazi aerial reconnaissance over England led tcCthe belief \"we are on the\nevo of an English atempt of unsuspected audacity.\"\n, (Just what the attempt might be\nwas not Indicated in this dispatch,\nbut the quotation may have been\nintended to refer to i posilble Invasion thrust icross the English channel or North Sei).\nThe dispatch said Nail filers were]\n\"singulirly Intrigued by enormoui\npreparations it certain ports\" and\nIntensive road traffic, along with\nunusual activity In induitrlil areai.\nIt wai because of these preparation! that' Oerman luthoritlea recently decided to renew iir raidi\nupon Britain, the dispatch reported.\nHedley Mascot Mine\nOperations\nPractically Normal\nVANCOUVER, B. C.-Operitiom\nat Hedley Mascot Gold Mines, curtailed recently beciuse of acute\nlabor shortage, in now pnctlcally\nnormal again, iccordlng to the re-\nftrt ,0v,r 92 v,U?h 5_.rTtW ls'ucVth\u00abc.Pi. itation was placed before\n%\u00a3\u00bbTrbnlri0T D\u00b0 gE' U'\"- \"\u00bb> CHy Council Monday night by\n\"&gT*.ober I to Decern- ^,^t^^-'f-t The\nber \u201e p.** , tota, o, 15.2,7 tons | $\u00a3?^XTttSSi\nNelson Civic\nCentre Wins\nCurlers'Plaudits\nTribute to the Executive ol tb*\nB.C. Curling Association for the\nimooth operation of .the recent bonspiel ln Nelaon wu paid by Mayor\nN. C. Stibbs it Monday nlght'i Council meeting. The City of Nelson, ha\nadded, had received many compliments for the bonapiel accommodation provided by the Civic Centre,\nha added.\nAid. H. H. Hinitt, who played ln\nthe bonspiel, itated he had heard\nmany congratulatory comments, and'\nvisitors said the 'spiel wae the moit\nsuccessful they had ever attended.\nFrank Avery, iklp of the Van.\ncouver rlnk which won the British\nConsols, told him nothing would\nsatisfy him, with the facilitiei ex- I\nlating here, more than to come to'\/\nNelion'to curl and coach young\ncurtera,\n\"We should feel proud o( our Clvt*\nCentre\", he asserted.\nTheae comments were evoked by\na letter ffom George Horstead, Bontplel Secretary, expressing the appreciation of the B.C, Curling Association for assistance rendered by\ntbe city.\nRay Young, Cleland\nTaylor\nLeave for R.C.A.F.\nKay Young of Nelion, and Clelana*.\nTaylor of Procter, planned to leavt\nby train Tuesday morning for Cal-j\ngary to enter training with the R.C.-I\nA.F. Young for a number of yeara\nwu employed in the Charles Mor-f\nr!e Men'i Furnishing! Itore here.  I\nTaylor wu \u25a0 itudent at Nelson)\nHigh SchooL\nRECORD 2 NEW\nMINERAL CLAIMS\nTwo mlnenl claimi. both In the\nNelson Mining Division, were recorded recently it the Mining Recorder's Office, here. They were\nthe Lucky Strike, Northeut of Erlckson School, locited by E. W.\nKlingemmith, ind the Midnight on\nToad Mountiln, locited by Theodore\nA. Tencza.\nRetail Milk Price\nin Vancouver\nto Be Increased\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CP)- The\nPrices Board announced tonight\nthat, effective March 1. the retail\nprice of milk, in Vancouver will be\nincreased , one cent per quart ao\nbring the price into line with other\nlarge centrei throughout Canadi.\nThe Board laid the Increue wu\nauthorized to enable producers to\nreceive an additional 33 centa per\n100 poundi of itandard milk. The\nnew retail price to Vancouver consumer! will be 10 cents per quart\nafter allowance hu been made for\nthe coniumer subsidy of two cent!\nper quirt now ln effect.\n3ozsMKtS20ois.\nMcLean Asks City to\nComplete Paving\nat the C.P.R. Station\nRequest that the City should thli\nyear complete hird surfacing iround\nof  ore  wire  milled, ind   the  net\nnot cirry it out owing to lick of\nincome  after  provision   for   taxes i      tetaL   Th. request wai referred\nHpvolnnna.nl    .nr!    .Ynlnrat'nn    was _   . ..           .       -_\ndevelopment ind exploration was\n$51,518. Net urningi per share\nwere 2.24 cents before depreciation\nind depletion.\n7000 More Passengers\nCarried on Street\nRailway During |an.\nNelson Street Railway revenue In\nJmuiry imounted to $1764 45, an\nInoreeee rt $309.83 over January o(\n1942. Passengers carried numbered\n37.309 compared with 30,477 a year\nago. Revenue from school chiH-\nren'i tickets wis up ipproxlmately\n$30.\nSoys Aberhart Gov't\nShould Be Replaced\n' EDMONTON, Feb. 22 (OP) -\nJ. H. Mahaffey of Calgiry, miking\nhis milden ipeech as Leader ot the\nOppoiition, told the Alberta Legli-\nlatun todiy thil Premier Aber-\nhirt'i Social Credit overnment hu\nstripped itielf of the ability to carry on post-war planning ind \"ihould\nbe replaced is loon \u2022\u25a0 the elcctori\nof thi Province ire given an opportunity Io do io.\"\nRuing lo miki the flnt OOpoil-\ntlon iddresi In the Throne Speech\nDebit*, Mr. Mahaffey uld Indipam-\ndent memberi favored poit-ir planning. rew\u201eniaed i\u00b0e:al Insuranre is\n, neeiisary part of tftc posl-wir p c-\nture and favored the basic plan outlined by Sir William Beveridge.\nPeyrouton Plans\nNew Wage Policy\nALGIERS, Feb. 23 (AP)-MirCel\nPeyrouton, Governor-Oeniril of Algeria 'and former Vichy Cibinet\nMember, outlined today a broid program looking tn wage nisei ind Improvement of iocIiI urvlcu in Al-\navi a and declired that BrltUh ind\nUnited Stitei troopi ire In North\nAfrica \"beciuie they fell Ihey ire\nworking for freedom of Ihi world \"\nPeyrouton promised nitlvt* \u2022\nchine! to bicoma public offlcuti\n\u2022nd auured them the ovrrttmeni\nwill provide lomi to firmen. butur\nirrigation facilities ind lncreued\npublic heilth urvlce.\nTo the French populillon he ip-\npealed  for \u2022 ceiullon of \"fimily\nquarrels\", ind uked that thiy unit*\n\"lo   mike   France\nagain.\"\n\"Mind\" Is Subject\nof Lesson-Sermon\nThe subject of the lenon-aermon\nIn ill Churchei of Chriit, Scientut,\non Sunday wu \"MIND\".\nThe Oolden Text wu: The Lcrd\nof hotti hith iwom, uying. Surely\nI hive thought, io shall it come to\npan-  ind ii I hive purposed,  so\nshall It laand.\" (Isaiah 14: 24).\nAmong the cltitlonf which com-\nprijed the leison-iermon was the\nfollowing   from   the   Bible:   \"And\nto th* Public Wonks Committee\nBob Smith of Nelson\nCoes to Air Force\nBob Smith, son of Mr. md Mrs.\nR. B. Smith, 012 Third Street, left\nNelson lilt week ai an R.C.A.F.\nretrult. A brother, Gordon, hu been\nln the ilr force for some time.\nSmith, during the put yeir, wu\nactive ir_ Pro Rec here, and was a\nleading performer in the clau display team. He il one of Nelion'i\nleidlng iwimmeri, i comlitent winner in innuil contests it Lakeside\nPark.\nWynndel Donate* $116.30\nto Russian Relief\nWYNNDEL, B.C.-Donatloni mide\nto the Russian Relief Fund in the\ndistrict hive-advanced $7 50, making a total of $116JO.\nHOSMER CHILD\nBADLY BURNED\nHOSMER, BC.-Receiving severe\nburns on  his  face  when a  frying\npan conainlng hot grease was up-\n- , set over him, little Tummy Huichin-\nMoiei iald unto thi people. Feir ye,^^ thr\u201e.y(!ir.\u201eld ,on 0, Mr ond\nnot. stmd itill, ind iee the salvation I Mrl rred Hutchinson of Hoimer\nof the Lord, which he will rhow to  w\u201e ukpn   l0  lhe  Fern|e Ho5piul\nPINT OPINE\nT\/lt    PK'OVFIV   OIOTIMF\nFAMILY COUCH SYRUP\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nA New\nShipment of\nMcGregor\nHOSE FOR MEN    .\nAll  lateit shades and itylei.\nGodfreys' Ltd.\nPhone 270     387 Baker St.\nThe  Home  of Guaranteed\nWork Clothing.\nHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nyou to day: for the Egyptlani-whom\nye have seen today, ye shall iee\nthem again no more for ever. Tbe\nLord shill fight for you, and ye shall\nhold your peace.\" (F.xodui 14: U, 14).\nThe leiion-iermon ilio included\nthe following puuge from Ihe\nChrlithm Science textbook, \"Science\n\u2022nd Heilth wltb Key to Ihe Scripture*\" by Miry Biker Eddy, 'The\nliw of the divine Mind muit end\nhumin bondigi, or morula will continue uniwiri ot min'i Inallamioli\nright* ind In jubjectlon to hop*-\nl*u 'lavery. beciuu iome public\nteachen permit in Ignonnc* of \u00abi-\nvln* power,\u2014an ifnorinc* thit ll\nme foundation of continued bondage and ot humin luffcrlng. Dn-\ncernlng the rlghti of mm, we can-\ngrcit nation i not fall lo foresee Ihe doom of ail\nopprculon.\"\nfor treatment\nTHE TRADE MARK\nB&K\nIs your assurance of Quality\nat the Right Price\nWhen buying Feedi, Cereal*\nSeedi, etc.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co. Ltd.\nLYLE TURVEY: Local Mgr.\nPhone 126, Nelson:   Box 420\nThl Danger of Coughs\nAmong tbe Children\nIn young children a oold or cough Is not a thing to\nbe disn^arded. u it li oflen of a grave matter, ud\nunlrai attended to immediately may, eventually, cause\n\u2022rrious trouble.\nOn th* tint signtot a cough or onld the mother\nwill find in Dr. Wood'i Norway Pine Syrap a remedy\nto help gut rid of tba trouble.\nIt* prianiptnea* and effectlTencai In Innunlni the phlegm, and ithmv\nUtina the bronchial organ* ia mob that the cough miy be checked Wor*\n\u25a0uiyttiing of a serioui luture nets in. '\nFrie* St* a bottl*; th* large family siie, alxiut *l lime, as much, OOc, al\nill dm OOuntaMl.\nTbl T. M\u00bb\u2014 (V, Umltaad, Toronto, OoL\n \"WORK OUT\"\nMl WORRIED\ntViftW irawiid uth\nd\u00abj umbli to *a\\\niMMimk \u2014 crinkj\n\u2022Wi tin diHdiMi-\n(\u2022\u2022linf ailiribll.\nBll\u00bbiaji|it_ii\"nemi*'\nawfaain Um kidneji my\nU wtll order. Whan\nkid\u00abjifulllieijil.m\n(Up with impuritiei,\nHiidicU. - bickiclw, fnatntj Mbw.\nDodd'i Kidne, Pilli help dm th. iv.lem,\n|ivin| mature a chue* to niton health\nEiijtotike.  Sale.       ||<,\nDoddsKidneyPills\nFires Started in\n\u25a0\n\u2022    in i\nip Wrecked\nCAIHO, Feb. 22 (AP).-Allied\neerial squadrons iet fires In the\nSicilian harbor of Pilerrno Saturday night, blew up one.Axis mer\nchint vessel  and  damaged three\notheri ln a scries of Mediterranean\niweepi.\nWeather conditloni were again re-\nis. Jennings\nproudly goes\nto school!\nMRS. JENNINGS had been just\nmanaging to keep her family going.\nBut things were looking brighter\nat last Now with the children able\nto help with the housework, she\nhad applied for the post of school\nteacher... and had been accepted.\nBut that meant she needed\nsuitable clothes and clothes cost\nstrength of her ability and character, he arranged a loan of $80;\nAnd so it was that she was able to\ntake the position and greet her\nfirst class proudly. She paid off\nthe loan after six months at a\ncost in interest of only $2.40.\nThis is a true story. Only the\nname has been altered. It is typical\nmoney. , of hundreds of human dramas in\nShe took her problem to the    which the bank manager hu been\nmanager of her bank. On the     privileged to play a helping role;\nWar'i requiremenli havo increased immemely thl work of\nbanki and bank staffs. Al thi tami Hm* men than one-\nthird of our experienced mm havi enliited. Bank early.\nPay imall bills by caih.   It helpi.\nTHE   CHARTERED  BANKS  OF CANADA\nported to hive hirapered aerial operationi over thi forwird inn\nWhere the British 8th Army faces\nparti ot Field Mirshal Rommel'i\nAfrlci Corpi along the Mareth Une.\nOni of the Mediterranean iweeps\nwu Igilnit I destroyer-escorted\nconvoy.\n\"Dwplte very bad visibility,\n\u25a0moke wu seen riling trom i large\nmerchant vessel ifter the attacks,,\"\nthe communique said.\nAnother West-bound Ihlp wu attacked by torpedo planei and bomberi and a hit wai scored on the\nstern of the vessel, It wu announced. The vessel was last teen\nstationary on the sea.\nMeloi Harbor on the Iiland halfway between Crete and the Greek\nmainland wai successfully attacked\nand one medium merchant vessel\nwu blown up and a imaller ihip set\non fire.\nThe communique iald that from\ntheae and other operationi, \"four of\nour aircraft failed to return.\"\nIn addition to Palermo, varioui\nlocalities in Sicily were bombed.\n.Night tighten ihot down a Junk-\ners-88 Weit of Tobruk, and antiaircraft defencei accounted for a\nlecond JU-88 md mobibly a third.\nBritish Rush lo\nAid Americans\nHold Off Nazis\nBy ROSS MUNRO\nCanadian Pren War Correipondent\nWITH ALLIED. F0RCE8 IN\nSOUTHERN TUNISIA, Fib. 18\n(Delayed) (CP Cable). \u2014 British\ntroopi, ruihid Into a lector of tne\nSouthern front to help the American! hold German irmored attack!, todiy blocked a atrong\nNaxl. tank advance from Sbeitla\nlimed at the key towni of Martar\nand Le Kef.\nThe Germani veered off from thi\nattack and withdrew beyond Sbeitla.\nArmored patrols have gone into\nSbeitla and found it empty but the\narea Northwest towardi Sbiba and\nRohce and the Maktar road is still\na battle ground.\nI went fo the Southern front with\nthe Britiih troopi.\nHour' after hour the troopi drove\nforward and in the early morning\nitarted to arrive ln the danger zone.\nWhen daylight came the troops\nwere itill moving to the front. The\ngaping line had been filled with\ntough little BritUh Tommiei who\nOver 850 Lost ih\n. - \u2022\nomg\ner\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (AP)\u2014\nThe United Stitei Navy reported\ntoday that more than SOO perioni,\nmottly urvlce penonnel, were\ndead or milling ai a reiult of\nlubmarlne torpedoing! of twe\nAmerican paiienger-cargo ihlpi\nIn the North Atlantic early thll\nmonth.\nA statement said:\n, \"Two medium-sized United Statei\npassenger cargo veueli were torpedoed and lunk by enemy lubmarlnei within four daya of each other\nearly In February ln the North Atlantic Both attacki occurred it\nnight, and both ihipi tank within\n30 mlnutei.\n\"Loss of life among the merchint\ncrewmen and passengers, the latter\ncomprising civilians and personnel\nof the Army, Navy, Marine Corra\nand Coast Guard, was heavy in both\nsinkings.\n\u2022'More than 800 from the total\ncomplement of over 800 of the flrit\nvessel, and more than half of the\napproximately 500 perioni aboard\nthe second ship, are either known\ndead or missing.\"\nA Navy spokesman, who uid thit\nno details of the attacki have reached here yet, described the more thin\n850 persons dead or missing as mostly members of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps or Coast Guard. The civ-\nlllam wen illumed to be technl-\nclani or other wir worken,\nAll thou on board except the\ncrewmen were travelling u passengers, the spokesman iald, and the\nships wers not Army or Navy transports ln thi strict sense of the Term\ntn that they wtre not actually being operated by either of the services.\nThl Navy ipokesman said he wai\nunable to say whither the veueli\nwere travelling in convoy, although\nit leemed probable thit they were\nsince moit North Atlantic ihlpping\nis now organized on a convoy bull.\nThe fact that the casualties were\ndeicrlbed ai either \"deid or mitt\ning,\" left iome hope that a few sur\nvivon other than thoie known to\nhave eicaped the twin marine dli'\nasters might eventually (urn up\nand reduce the total of milling but\nno hops wai expressed here that the\nlou would be substantially cut\ndown.\nThe sinkings of thi two ships\nwithin four days of each other con\nstltuted one of the \u25a0 moit levere\nblowi yet dealt North Atlantic\nihlpping by U-boat raiders, at leait\nInsofar u lou of valuable personnel\nU concerned. Previouily no Ameri\ncan ihlp linking! hid involved my\nsuch heavy loss of life ln the At'\nIan tic.\ncurse and complain and fight like\nthe devil. This Impressive muster\nof strength so suddenly collected\nand shot into the path of the German advance .-.pparently unsteadled\nthe enemy. During the morning all\nthe enemy tanks Northweit of\nSbeitla faded away Southward and\nEastward. The British and American troops consolidated their positions during the day and lent out\narmored patrols onto the plam\nand through to Sbeitla.\nTwo Canadians, Ma). T. E. White\nof Winnipeg and Capt. H. A. Smith\nof Dauphin. Man.,' were with the\nBritish tanks which cruised around\nfor two days and a night ln no-\n100 Two-Ton Bombs\nRained on Bremen\nLONDON, Feb. 22 (CP)\u2014The\nOerman port of Bremen wu heavily attacked by R.A.F. bomberi\nlast night In a raid from which\nall bomberi returned. Canadian\npenonnel flew In iome of the\nBritish bombers,\nThe Air Mlnlitry'i newi urvlce Mid moro thm 100 two-ton\nbombi were rained on the target The city'i defencei were Uken\nby lurprlu md German ground\ngunners were reported to hive\nfailed to open fire until after the\nfirst bomb exploded.\nIt waa the first raid on Bremen\n\u25a0ince lait Oct. 20.\nThe promptness of the Air Min\nistry's announcement today indicated the great harbor city had been\nattacked with unusual succeu.\nGermany's second largest port and\nan Important aircraft manufacturing centre, Bremen previously had\nundergone more than 100 raids.\nThe German radio said British\nbombers dropped high explosive and\nincendiary bombs on a northwestern\nGerman coastal area, but claimed\nthat damage was \"slight.\"\nCanadians in R.A.F. bomberi included Sgt. Harry Ivatte of Vancouver who saw a night fighter.\nSgt. \u00a3dgar Anderson of Burnaby,\nB.C., reported plenty of searchlights but said they were not too\neffective on account of clouds.\nLong-distanco telephone operatori use that phrase more frequently\nnowadays as they strive to handle the record-breaking load of call\nbrought about by the war.\nRegular users of the long-distance service will remember how, year\nby year, the service increased in speed until finally most of their\ncalls were put through while they stayed on the line. Now between\ncertain points the traffic has increased to such an extent that at\nthe busiest hours calls sometimes hava to be held up until circuit*\nare available. \"Why not provide more circuits?\" you may say.\nUnfortunately the wartime regulations won't let us do that because\nof the material and manpower required. In some cases we have even\nfewer circuits than before for civilian use as some circuits hava been\nset aside for the exclusive use of the armed forces.\nWe make this explanation so that if you experience delay on \u2022 call\nyou will understand that it is due to wartime conditions over which\nwe hav* no control.\nBRITISH    C  0  I U M   B  I   i\nTELEPHONE    COMPANY\nman'i land, helping to get the Allied\nline straightened.\nDespite the withdrawal to higher\npound which iweeps Southwast\nfrom Oussellia towardi Feriana and\nthe deiert, the Alllei seem to be in\na itrong poiltion ney They ire\nholding a formidable natural de-\nfence line and their forcei, including Britiih troopi In position North'\nweit of Sbeitla, hangs like a dagger\nover' the German bulge to the\nSouth.\nReport Failure\nfo Note Rules\nCaused Wreck\n\u25a0OTTAWA, Feb. 21 (CP)- The\nBotrd of Transport Commissioners,\nln a report issued todiy, uld the\nDec. 27 railway cruh it Almonte,\nOnt., which caused 38 deathi would\nnot have occurred had railway rulei\nbeen observed.\nThe Board listed departure from\nthe rules ai follows:\n1. Failure of the crew of i Cinadian Pacific Railway troop train\u2014\nin particular Ihe engineer and'eon-\nductor\u2014to obierve the provliloni\nof CPR. rulei by exceeding the\n'scheduled ipeed of i passenger train\nInto which lt cruhed it Almonte\nitation.\nThe report iald further:\n\"The engineer of puenger extra\nNo. 2802 (the troop .train) did not\nhave his triin under control and\nprepared to itop ii he approached\nAlmonte itation.\n\"It la ilso felt thit the compmy'i\nofficiil who wai riding thli train at\nthe time erred inarmuch u he filled to take iuch necessary action as\nwould ensure compliance with the\nrules.\n2. Neglect of the crew of the standing passenger train to provide protection by wiy of \u2022 red-or yellow\n\"fusee\", u required by the nllwsy\nrules, for the reir end of their train\nNILSON DAILY NIWS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23T\nHBC FOOD VALUES\nHEALTH FOR VICTORY-VITAMIN-RICH FOODS\nTuesday, Wedneiday, Thuriday   \u2014   Phonn 193 - 194i\n\"My Mother ind Father wtt* strong healthy people and they .\nnever worried about vitamins. Why ara they M Important today?\" .\nThat's puzzling a lot ot people\u2014and here's tha aniwer.\u2014Tbl\nilmple foods our forefathers ate, contained the eisentlal vltainins\n.., but unfortunately, these vitamins are often not present ln the\nhighly refined, prepared foodl we find so handy today. Vltamim\nare aubitancei which the body must bave for health and growth.\nVITAMIN A FOODS\nBUTTER: Hudsonia,\nwith coupom, S Ibi. ..\nEGGS: Grade A larga,\nDei\t\nNEW CARROTS:\n2 bunches \t\nGREEN CELERY:\nFresh, pir Ib\t\n$1.23\n23<\nm\nVITAMIN Bl FOODS\nROLLED OATS: Quick    27l_\ncooking, t Ib uek  _ *\"\u00bb r\nWHEAT GERM: With      *%i*\nBran, 1 Ib. pkt   m+\\*\nSMALL WHITE NAVY     1 **A\nBEANS: 2 lbl.  _ *\/T**'\nFLOUR: Vitamin B1,   <|  *c\nElllion'i, 49 Ib. uck ..   \"*\"\u00ab\u25a0\nVITAMIN C FOODS\nORANGES: Sweet and Juicy,\nt iet. - - .'. -\nGRAPEFRUIT:\nt for ._\t\ntHCOttrORAttt, *\u2022** MAY 187a '\nBoys' School\nOxfords\nStrong Elk uppers with\nsturdy nailed and sewn soles.\nLeather heels with iron heel\nplates.  Price:\n$3.50\n.^.r^onooi.a an may isra\nweoava-aMiai ea mw lira\nwhen It wai known It wai not making the ipeed required by ichedule.\n(Lome R. Richardson and the late ]\nJohn C. Howard, both of Smiths |\nFalls, Ont., were engineer and conductor respectively of the iroop\ntrain. Mr. Howard's body was found\nIn the Rideau river the day before\nthe inquest opened at Almonte Jan.\n7, and police said he had commit*\nted suicide.\n'(Eng neer of the standing passenger train wis Joseph Sauve, Ottawi.\nand M. P. O'Connell, Ottawa, was\nconductor).\nThe report Hid that the West approach to Almonte station ii on i\ncurve md that under certain wel-\nether conditions a milt arises from\nthe Mis near this approach.\n\"The combinition of theie ficu\nhive been disclosed, it appears thit\nthl erection of \u2022 itation protection\nsignal West of Almonte would be an\nadditional safeguard to a train standing In Almonte station,\" said the report. .'\n\"A direction of thli effect will\ngo to the Canadian Pacific Rallwl).\nCompany accordingly.\"\n\/-How to relieve MONTHLY\nnerroua fe-elings.dlitreM of \"l\/r<wu-\nUritlM\"\u2014due to function*! monthly\ndisturbances \u2014 thould try Lydla K.\nPlnkh&m'fi VegeUblfl Compound. It\nhu ft .nothing effect on one 0\/\nwoman's moit important organ*.\nMao a Ann.tonic for tho Btom&ch]\nMade In Canada.\nLYDWLPWKHJUI'S^*1\n'\u25a0,\"\nNATIONAL\ni\nSELECTIVE\nSERVICE\n&mm\nOf SINGLE MEN\nAncorr Proclamation, lined lay Iiii\nExcellency the Governor General in\nCouncil, providei that certain lingle mm\nmuit regiiter (or the M ililiry Cill-qp under\nNational Selective Service Mobilisation\nItrgulilinm, bf March 1st, IMS.\nSingle Men who must now regiiter in\nthose who were bom in sny year mim 1904\nto IMS bieluiiv>e, snd who did not prerl-\nmi.lv undergo medical eiiminition under\nthe Military Call-up.\nMen actuifly ip the Armed Services are\nexempt under thii order, but men discharged\nfrom tlie .Servicei, not previously medically\nexamined under the Military Caill-up, must\nnow regiiter.\n\"Single Mam,\" referred lo, now required to register Include any man\u2014\n.W \u00bb eny em. el (In yian nmUe-i, tit kt, not pntWr !*\u2022\nmediemtty emeueud for tit mUtary mU-uji, and duenbed a, letllow,!\u2014\n\"whe, mm oh Iha ISth dey el Jaly, 1940, enmerrled or a wliomtr\nKlthvmt child or children at hai elrtro the ,eU tty te*** dlmrerd\ntr lUMMr upended er btome a  uliowrr  without  thlli or\ncMtW*\nH U peMtd ea* Oct ay M \u2014married el Ua Uth. IW, tern if\nswarM aw Oml ajar* i> rtaE dum* u t \"mfU ana.\" >\nRegistration Is to he made on farms avaDahle with Postmasters,\nNational .Selective Senrios Offloea, or Atfiitrm of Mobiliistioo\nBoards.\nPeneitUa are prodded for fdlure to rr fitter\nby Menk Jit, 1943.\nDEPARTMENT OF LABOUR\nHuilFHUT Mm Mi n ,\nMaa-ttr if talsar\nA. MacNamara,\ntattler, IttUawtl aaabrilM B*reiet\n..Mi,\n \u2014' ~ : H\u2014-       \u25a0\"''\u2022\u2022\u25a0*ir'TW\"W-\u00bb-\u00bb'|t\"pi\"   ' \u25a0'\u2014-v    \u2022'--\u25a0:      -\nUriamt Saihf NrwB ?? Questions ? ? Letters to the\nEstabluhrd April 21   1902\nBritish Colitmbia'i\nMost IntereiHng Newipaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sunday by\nlh* NEWS PUBLISHING) COMPANV LIMITED 2H Biker St.. Ntlion. Brttlih Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n***H> AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS,\nTUESDAY, FEB. 23, 1943.\nCootenay Can Accommodate\nSome of Them\nVancouver newspapers almost daily\nmbllsh stories of families which are\nlable to find housing accommodation,\nlome of the stories are heart-rending.\nAs Frank Putnam, M.L.A. for Nel-\nlon-Creston has suggested in the Legislature, some relief to the situation\nmight be given if it were more realized\nat the Coast that in some parts of Kootenay good housing accommodation is\navailable.\nFamilies of munitions workers employed at the Coast would naturally\nwish to remain with their breadwinners, but dependents of members of the\nactive armed forces and people on pensions would make housing available for\nothers if they moved to Kootenay.\nKootenay can offer them plenty of\nhealthful attractions, too.\nVictory Gardeners Can\nProfitably Cooperate\nFrom one of Nelson's most experienced operators of a vegetable garden,\nThe Daily News has received a valuable suggestion.\nIt is that much precious seed might\nbe savasd and considerable waste of energy and plants avoided if neighborhood groups of Victory gardeners were\norganized. The average person, in the\nease of tomatoes for example, plants\nenough seed to supply several of his\n\u2022neighbors as well as himself. The same\nthing applies to onions, to carrots and\nother food plants.\nNelson Victory gardens can serve\nwell in the war effort. They can produce much food and relieve the demand\nUpon the larger commercial producers,\nwhose output is needed in the large\ncentres.\nEveryone knows how well a Nelson\ngarden will produce. We have cases\nsuch as that of a Nelson gardener who\nwith 5 cents worth of seed potatoes\nlast year produced 124 pounds of potatoes. This same gardener with 10 cents\nworth of pea seed produced more than\na.bushel of shelled peas\nAid Coss Far and Wide\nCanadian Red Cross assistance\ngoes not only to Canadians, but large\nsums and vast quantities of supplies.\nhave gone to Great Britain, to Russia'\nto China, and to t'-e suffering in the\noccupied countries.\nAid for Russia irdiirVs value of\ngoods and services up to K 001.000. ,i\nsum which i< enorTinu ly incc-.std by\nthe rec?nt special wipi'.ign of Ai 1 hr\nRu'si'a.\nTo Chi a l\"'i gone a quarter of a\nmil'ion dollars in sup'tlic.\nSunp'ies have r ife lo !'\u2022 laid,\nGreece. IM'.'iir-. .ln-o-'av'-i. f'.-.to-\nslovaWa, th\" Fi ! I '\": Fr it'll. Norway\nand HnM\"-d.\nNr*\"l for ass'it-nce t\" the suffer-\ninv in lh\" c'uiii'rVs which have been\noverrun bv I'\"' N.\"\";s is \"rowing at a\nfcprfi'I rate. II i- ono of t**e reasons\nfor I'e l'\"d Cross canv ai|jn ne\\t\nmonth.\nANSWERS\nOpin te My reider. N*m*l of penoni\n\u2022iking quiitloni will not b* publlihed,\nThtn li no chirge for thll nrvlo* Queitlom will nat be iniwered by mall except\nwhen there li obvloui nicenlty 'or privacy. .-.'\nT. C, Nelion\u2014Can you teU me If th* Border,\nline Budget of Loverna, Saik., ii still publishing?\nNo,\nK. M. h; Nelson\u2014Could you pleaii print*\nrecipe for mince melt cake?\nMlncemeit Cookies\u2014Oii* half cup butter\n(half butter ind half shortening, bicon dripping being good) one half cup augar, on* egg,\none cup mlncemeit, two and a half teaspoons\nbaking powdor, on* and half cupi flour. Mix\ntogether and drop oft a spoon Into pan and\nbake ln a hot oven about 10 minutei.\nTo make mincemeat oak*, tike any fruit\ncake recipe and substitute mincemeat In pile*\nof the fruit. The following fruit mine* li excellent In making thli type of cake.\nFruit Mince\u2014On* pound each of rilalni,\ncurrants, and sugar, one pound met, chopped\nvery fine, two-thlrdi of in ounc* oj both ltmon and orange peel, two larga jpples, grited,\non* teaspoon (imall) of clnnimon ind nutmeg,\nJuice of one lemon idded to grated rind, three\ntablespoons of brandy Of hard elder.\nB. W., Silverton\u2014Doei a mldler'a wife lose\nher allowance If ihe accepts \u2022 Job In a war\nplant?\nNo. Under an order-ln-councll pasied by\nth* Oovernment lait October, * wile ot I\nmember of the irmed forcei who Ii employed in the public service miy receive both iep-\naration allowanc* and salary, providing the\ntwo together do not exceed $3000 annually.\nReader, Nelion\u2014Can you pleiie teU me how\nI can get rid of fleas from my cat?\nThey are best got rid of by ipraylng with\nspirit of camphor from tall to neck. Cire muit\nbe taken to iee that none geti Into the eyei.\n\"'The.animal ihould afterwards be combed over\na vessel of hot water.\nEditor\nWar-25 Years Ago\nBy Thl Canadian Prm\nF*b. 23, 1918\u2014Red Crosi liner Florlzel\nwrecked neir Cape Race, Newfoundlind; 92\nlive! loit. German troopi in Portugueie Nyau-\nland forced Southward to the upper Lurlo\nRiver. Spanish steamer Marcasplo sunk by\nGerman submarine.\nWords of Wisdom\n\"There is certainly no defence against id-\nverse fortune which Is. on the whole, io effectual ai in habitual tenie of humor.\u2014T. W.\nHlgglnson.\nEtiquette  Hints\nDon't lit with your chair tlpp-ed back. It\nis not good manners, it is dangerous and hard\non the chair.\nGems of Thought\nHSLPFUL COUNSEL\n'Keep  always with you, wherever your\ncourse may lie, the company of great thought*\n-H. H. Asquith.\n*'W\u00ab must not let go manlfiyt truths because wc cannot answer all questions about\nthem.\"\u2014Jeremy Collier.\n\"Of this we may be sure: thtt thought!\nwlrvged with peace and love breathe I silent\nbenediction over all the earth, cooperate with\nthe divine power, and brood uncontciouily\no'er the work of His hand.\"\u2014Mary Baker\nEddy.\n\"The truf\u00bb way to live is to bring to each\nduty that comes to our hand our wisest\nthought and our be.it skill.\"\u2014J. R. Miller.\n\"We can never learn the lesson too deeply\nthat our action in the common places of life\nis   deciding   our   destiny.\"\u2014F.   B.   Meyer.\nVerse\nToday's  Horoscope\nIf ths is y ut birthday, wc.ilth. a happy\nhome ard many friends ;irr your birthright\nYou pos-so\" an nler! mind, aro tolerant of others\" fault**!, and -should prosper in business\nbecause of ynu;* will to accomplish fine things.\nA strong, healthy body suggests that you wtll\nhive n long Veful life. Todav a practical solution nf a problem may come to you in a dreim.\nDo fiot Wri^te time and effort, likewise mon\u00aby,\nin doing something thint you kn >w is uiflfss.\nJust to keep busy. Wait until the situation\nitraightor.s   Itself rut  nutnmatirnlly\nTest  Yourself\nI   Whose arrow pierced Achilles' vulner*\nible heel and killed hinr\n2. What  Greek   goddess sprang  fraam  thl\nlea?\n3. Who wis the Greek god of war*\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1   Paris'\n2. Aphrodite.\n8 Ar\u00ab\nPICTURI gUPREMg\nAs I ilt by my window\nThe long Winter diy\nAdmiring the people\nThat pais by this way.\nSome are dressed cosy\nSimple and neat.\nOthers In bright clothes\nFrom head to the feel.\nMany wear thick coats,\nBrowni. blues ind blacks;\nA number In short Jickets,\nOthers In slacks.\nThen there ire those\nWith overshoe! too\nA fell hit, wool glovei\nAr.d a scarf of bright blue.\nGirls weiring ankle iox\nLegs hare to the knee. \u2022\nNo hit it lll-bajt\nWith hurti filled with glee-\nThe children are hiving\nA wonderful time\nWith their ilelghi ind ikli\nAnd loboggini In line\nThey march to their plice\nAt the lop of the hill\nComing d'awn at great speed\nTo end In \u2022 spill.\nThe treei with (heir branches\nAll covered In white\nShine Just like Jewels\nIn the clear froily light.\nOf all the fine picturei,\nThit e'er I hive seen\nWinler Is surely\nA jairlure supreme\nJEAN M riCKAM.\nNelion, B. C\nLetten maty be publlihid over \u2022 nom dl\nplumi, but tha nctuii nimi ef tha writer\nmuit bi given te the Editor \u2022\u2022 evldenee ef\nte*i faith. Anonymoui letteri go ht the\nwute paper buket.'\nProstitution o Result\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Where there h a We-time oj whole-\niome work (or ill; where wagei Include good\nhoming, heilth, recreation and educational\ncare it all itigii of development! where young\npeople marry and nise children without wilting ten or fifteen yeari beyond miturlty, or\nIncurring prohibitive costs; where there ii e\nreal spiritual bond between old and young;\nprostitution only survives to serve uneducited\nvisitors. Mark well the meani. Results take\nciri of themselvei. Such hai been the experience of Soviet Russia.\nO. A. BUTLING.\nNelion, B. C\u201e Feb. It, IMS.\nSees Need for Protection\nFrom Labor Unions and\nFrom the Big Interests\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014In hli irtlclei In Saturday Night,\nheided \"The Ever Widening Dlitrlbutlon of\nOur Wealth\", Don Stain falli completely to\nprove hli pointi.\nIn the flnt,place he glvei our economic\nlyitem credit for having iurvlved win and\ndeprewloni, yet it doei not seem even to occur to him to blame the system for thoie disasters. It may be only In imall degree responsible for wars, but how can he deny Its\nresponsibility for poverty and destitution\nwhen there ls no security?\nIn the second place: By showing that a\nlarger portion of the national Income now\nconsists of wagei and salariei than wai the\ncue 50 yeari ago he doei not prove it to be\nmore widely or Juitly dlitrlbuted. Some ial-\narlei now run into millions, some to hundreds of thousands\u2014hundreds of times the\naverage wige.\nThli plin to reduce wagei during i depression more thin hu been previouily done\ncould not help recovery beciuse It would further reduce buying power.\nBut we need protection from labor unions,\nas much as from big business md financial interests, In some American cities farmers cannot deliver their own milk, but have to hind\nit over to the Teamsters Union or be subjected\nto unliwful violence which the police, or\nthoie who control them are afraid to lurpresa.\nThe actloni of the Muiicimi' Unioni are well\nknown.\nThe icarclty of a commodity does not add\none cent to Its real value so ther eis no defence\nfor raising Its price unless It has cost more\nthan usual to produce, like farm produce In\nan unfavorable reason. To do so li to illow tho\nrich to have plenty while the poor do without. If it was pot for price control thit would\nbe happening now. The given reuon for price\ncontrol ln war time li to prevent inflation. But the reaion It meets with approval of the public, who think little\nabout inflation, ii that they iee the juitice of\nIt. Why should the iame Juitice be conildered\nevil ln time of peace? Ii not the iniwer greed;\nthat a man likea to see others get their iharo\nprovided It does not prevent him from getting\nmore than his share?\nMass production, whether by the free enterprise of the few or by a cooperative society,\ncm only exlit it the expenie of free enterprise of the many. It puti the vast majority\nin the poiltion of paid lervants.\nPrevious articles in Saturday Night have\nshown that those who run a one-man enterprise receive on the average a far lower income than the industrial worken. But who\nwants to iet the clock back? Mass production\nlins come to stay. What regulations are needed\nto maintain Justice should be the duty of the\ngovernment.\nIs It not better to take the middle course\nof true democracy and be governed by the\nelected representatives of all the people than\nto be controlled by groups ind cliques md\nunions who have no right to govern ind iro\nconstantly at strife, in which all the people\nsuffer\u2014organizations there would hive been\nno need for if government! of former tlmu\nhad realized the extent of their respomlblll-\nlies? Better than turning to the extreme right\nor led, which inevitably leadi to dictatorship,\nand belter than laissez-fiire, which Is mother\nname for a \"free-for-all\".\nH. B. W,\nLooking   Backward\n10   YEARS   AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Fib, 23, 1131)\nA pathological laboratory wn liunched\nIn Nelson Thursday and will be in opention\nshortly for Nelson and district under chirge\nof Dr. E. G. Simmonds of Edmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Goodwin who hive\nbeen In Kaiio for 40 years, celebnted their\nsixtieth wedding anniversary yesterdsy.\nA last period burst of icorlng thit netted\nthem four goals gave Trill Junlon i (-2 victory over Ex-King George lextette of Vmcouver last night and landed the British Columbia Junior hockey chimplonshlp bick In\nthe Smelter City for mother yeir. The gime\nwas played at Vmcouver.\nLeo Ganmer, Preiident of St. Piul'i\nYoung People'i Club, reviewed the book, \"Depression and the Wiy Out\" it the meeting lait\nnight.\na YEARS AOO\n(Trom Dilly Niwi, Fib. tl, 1111)\nThe Britiah forcei ln Pilntlne hive ciptured lhe city of Jericho, Auitnliin troops entering the city on Thursdiy. The capture of\nthe city gives Generil AUenby control of \u2022\nnumber of itriteglc roidi.\n1. I. Larsen won flrit prlie it I ikl Jumping conteit held recently it Revelitoke.\nHarold E. Mlnten, member of the Royil\nFlying Corpi. Im been glutted \u2022 lleutenint,\nhis parents al Firnle hive learned.\nOwing to Ihe Ice blockade on the Arrow\nIjkes. through lervlce from Arrowhiid to\nWeit Robion avlll be ttmnorlrllv meeenrl.tl\n'S News Pictures\nADMIRAL  MISSING\nAdmlril Sir Studholme Brown,\nrigg, 11, a hero ot the Battle of\nJutland In the lait war, and a\nconvoy commodore in this war, li\nreported mining.\nBRITISH DOWN 17 NAZI BOMBERS AT BOU ARADA\nFRENCH  LEADER\nA recent photograph of Oen.\nCharles de Gaulle taken when he\nreviewed unlti of the French\nfighting fleet during manoeuvres\nat sea.\nA surprise raid made by the Nazis on\npositions at Bou Arada, North Africa,\nwas warded off by the British. The Germans lost 17 of their dive bombers in the\nbattle and the British suffered only a\nslight damage to one of their tanks. A\nNazi dive bomber swoops down to un-\nleash a bomb, top. An enemy plane is\nbrought dov\/n by accurate British fire,\ncantre. Nazi bomb explodes near a British tank, only casualty of the battle, bottom.\nCHINESE MILITARY MISSION IN OTTAWA FOR DISCUSSIONS\nThe Chinese military mission in Ottawa for discussions with the Canadian Government, included these military leaders: Dr. Ho Feng Shan, Capt. Lee Ming Hsien,\nMaj .-General T. H. Shen, representing China's air force,\nGeneral Hsiung Shih-Fei, leader of the Chinese military\nmission to the United States, and Major-General Chu\nShih-Ming.\n' GENERALISSIMO IN U. S.\nMadame Chiang Kai-shek, wife of the Chinese Gen-\n, eralissimo, who has arrived in Washington, D. C, is pictured with President Roosevelt ir. an automobile.\n. i \u2022,.\nVERONICA LAKE NOW USES TWO EYES\nSince the U. S. Government has claimed that too\nmany women airplane workers imitating Veronica Lake's\npeek-a-boo hair bob, have endangered themselves by\neffecting the same long, flowing hairdos, Veronica herself has confessed it was mighty hard for her to see out\nof one eye, and she, and her movie bosses, have reformed. Hw new hairdo is shown, right.\nSTALINGRAD GENERAL HONORED\nMikhail Kalinin, chairman of Ihe presidium of the\nSupreme Sovief (corresponding to President), presenting insignia of Order of Surorov, first degree to Col.\nGeneral K. Rokossovsky, commander of forces that raised siege of Stalingrad and pushed Germans back to Ros-\ntny.\nQUEEN'S BROTHER VISITS U. S. SHIPYARD\nHon. David Bowes-Lyon, left, younger brother of\nQueen Elizabeth, Is shown with K, Bechte), right, President of Marine Ship Corp. The disitnguished visitor Inspected one of the new Liberty ships at Sausalito, Calif.\n_L\n -f-r\nimniiiiiimiiiiiiiimmtiiimmmii\nFor Real Comfort\nTry'a pair of,.. '\ni \u201e  bLachford's\nARCH CRIP\nl    SHOES\nFor th\u00a7 Wonriin who\nCaret.\nRe Andrew\n& Co..\nLeaders In Footfaihlon\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nDEATHS\nLONDON-Slr Wilfred King, tl,\nDhalrmin md MMiglog Director of\nhe Britiih Nowi Agency, Exchange\nlelegraph. \u2022\nSchluesselburg, tbe famoui Rus<\nltn fortreu neir Leningrad, occti-\nills ah laland on Lak  Ladoga.\nArchie Bishop\nPromoted\nFlying Officer A. W. (Archie) Biihop haa been promoted to Flight\nLieutenant, hli mother, Mn. II. I.\nBishop, Nelson Avinue, hu been\nadvlied. Flt-Lt. Biihop li a flying\ninitructor et Upl\u00abndi, Ottawa.\nHe ww graduated, third In tit\nclass, from tne ilr ichoo) at Dimville,\nOnt., In Miy. 1)41, after training it\nToronto, Ottiwa, Oo<lerlch and Dun.\nvilli, end was- eommiiiloned ei a\nPilot Officer. Thin he went to Trenton to take another courie ind qualify ai in initructor.\nFlt.-Lt. Biihop latt Nelion In Bep.\ntember, 1917 to work with the Oa.\nminion Chlln Company at Niagara\nFalli, Ont. He Joined the cXCAV.\nin July, 1040. Active In hockey, rugby and basketball it Nelson, he con.\ntlnued hla hockey ictlvity at Niagara and wu goalie for tne 19S8-3J\nNiigiri Filli teim which' won the\naSenlor B ehimplknihlp of Ontirlo.\nTwo other brothers are In the\nair force, Jack, aerial mechanic, at\ntho Coast; and George, training for\npilot at Souris, Man. The latter joined the air force laat December.\nMrs. P. Gansner ind her\ndiughter, Mlu Paula Gansner, lift\nMondiy morning for Vancouver\nwhen Mlu Gimner'i mirriigi tikn\nSleci'on Fridiy. Mn, Oininer will\n\u2022 a guest el Dr. end Mn. John\nOininer tor a eoupli of wMki, liter\ngoing on to Portland, Ore., to viilt\nEar son-ln-liw ind daughter. Mr.\nind Mn. Jamei Orr.\ne Second Lieut. Blake Allen re.\nturned to his home Sundiy iftir being t 'pitlent In Kootenay Ukt\nGemnl Hoipltal tor t ttw dtyi.\nTO EASE MISERY\n{F CHILD'S COLD\n\"\"MSB\niliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiii\nrVHEN\nIUYINC\n\u25a0AClFIC\nIrllLK. ..\nBUY\nWar Savings\nStampi From\nYour Regular\nFood Dealer\nPacific Milk\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNOW undtr-arm\nCrtam Deodorant\nStops Perspiration\n1. Don not rot dmitt or men'i\n\u2022hires. Don not irriutt ikin. ,\n2. No willing to dry. Ciobenied\nrijht ifccr ihiving.\n3. Initially stop a ptr spin tion for\n1 to J iliyi. Prmnu odor.\nIn A pure, whin, gruicleii,\nmfnless vanishing creim.\n5. Awarded Approval Seal of\nAmerican Institute of Launder*\nin\u00ab for being harmlesi to\nfabric\nL deodoron)\n3 FERNIE PEOPLE\nHURT IN\nCAR COLLISION\nFIRNIE, B. C\u201e Tib. 23 (CP) -\nJames Himllton, timekeeper for\nBennett ind White Conitruction\nCompany, hli wife and John Ernat\nare ln hospital today with injurioi\nsuffered when their automobile wn\nin a colliilon on the Coal Creek\nHighway lait, night with one driven\nby Rev. E. G. Munn.\nMr. Munn was unhurt, but hil\nmother, who was riding with him,\nreceived minor heal injurlei. Mr.\nind Mrs, Bennett suffered fractured\nlimbs ind severe lacerations and\nErnst Injured hii knee and luffered a leg cut which required severul\nstitches.\nThomas Walker of\nCranbrook, Dies\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Fib, U (CP)\n\u2014Thomai Walker, 85, died In hoipltal here recently. An expert bricklayer, much of hli work on'elty\nbulldlngi li ln evidence today. Born\nIn Yorkshire, Englind, he came to\nCimda In IBM. Surviving him ire\nhli wife, a daughter, Edith, in Van\ncouver, and a ion Williim now with\nthe R.C.A.F. it Macleod, Alta.\n\u25a0y MRI. M.J. vigneux\nCharlie Ron Iii patient lh\nKootenay  Lake General Hejplt.il.\nYuterdiy afternoon, Mrs. A.\nT. Horswill. Silici Strttt, enter-\nMined Mrt, Red H. Grahim'i circle o| St. Sivlour-i Church Helperi,\nwhen thoie ittendlng were Mn.\nGrahim, Mrl. H, B. Gore, Mn. Er*\nhept Smith, Mn. F. R, \"Pritchard,\nMiw Margaret Tiylor, Mri. Stirling,\nMra. Stanley Boitock, Mn. A. J.\nCornish. Mri. R. A. Grlmu, Mn.\nHERE FROM WEYBURN\ne Mr and Mri. Comllhln Ot Weyburn, Sask., are visiting thtir ion-\nIn-ltw ind daughter, Mr. ind Mri.\nTed Ennls. (24 Third Street, alio\ntheir ether two daughten, Mlu H\u00bb>\ntalis and Monica Comllhln, Johnitone Block.\ne Mn, Obieioff left' Kootenay\nLakt General Hoipltal Saturday after being a patient there for nveral\nmonthi.\ni William Pratt of Thrums vUited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Fred Nichols left Kootenay\nLiie Genenl Hoipltal Sunday *.o\nnturn to hil home, Nelson Avenue\ne Mr. md Mri, S. G. Blaylock\nof Trill ware ihoppen In the city\nyuterday,\na Viiiton in town yeiterday In.\neluded Ciptiln Ferguson of Sunshine Biy,\ne Oeorge Platte of Brilliant <a\ne pitlent In Kooteniy Lake General Hoipltal.\ne Mn, John DeVoin of Castlegar\nvisited Nelion it the weekend.\ne Mri. H- Neilson is I patient In\nKootiniy Lake Generil  Hoipltal.\ne Mr. ind Mn. A*uguitlne and\nthllr two daughter! of Kaslo' ipent\nyeiterdiy In Nelaon.\ne Mn. M. Veregin li i patient\nIn Kootiniy Lake General Hoipitil.\ne Mra, H, I. Doelle ind her\ndaughteri Mn. J. Mclntoih ind Dorothy Doelle ot Sheep Creek villted\nNelion yeiterday.\n\u2022 Peter Clark Ii a patient ln\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\n' LEAVES FOR NAVY\n' e Douglu winliw, lon'of Mr. ttft\nMri. A. N. Winlaw, Carbonate Street,\nleft it the weekend for the Coait\nwhore hi Jointl the nivy.\ne Mri. A. Hryculk li a pitlent in\nKooteniy  Lake  General  Hospital.\ne Mr. end Mn. George Palethorpe of New Denver and Mri.\nPalethorpe'i father, W, R. Blan-\nchirr], were elty vliltori yeiterday.\ne Mri. Kilberg li i patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\ne Mr. ind Mn. Wilter Madaslci\nof Salmo spent yuterday In town.\nH. R. Towniend, Mri. Hugh W. Robertion, Mrs. Mabel Rockliff, Mri, A\nJ. Dunnett, Mri. Oeorge Horstead\nend Mri. A.' L. Creech.\ne Mn. E. Bonicci of Procter ll\nl patient in Kooteniy Lake Generil Hoipitil.\ne  While here ettmdlng the Wo.\nTJnlted Chureh, Mn. J-UMg Tnvte\nof Grand Forki wu a gueit of Rev.\nend Mn. H. Stewirt'Forbei, Silica\nStreei\nt   H. Wood ll I patient In Kootenay Lake Generil HoipltaL\ne   Mr. and Mn, R. Himlln Planned  to letve early Tueiday for\nLethbridge for an indefinite itay.\nJ, Deck returned to hit home\nSaturday after being a\nKootenay Like Gmenl\nntlent in\n(oipitil.\nThree Million Women\nSubject'to Draft\nCONDON. Feb. \u00bb <CP)~ Thrie\nmillion more BrltUh women between the tin of SI ind to cime\nunder the Wirtlme Authority of\nLabor Mlniiter Erneit Bevin todiy, subject te draft (or (ull or\npirt time work If they have no children under 14 living at home.\nA majority of the new group have\nmen'i  MUilomry  Preabylerlil  of never adorn outildi work. Women\nbetweam 18 tnd M previouily hid\nbeen drifted lor wir work.\nOne of every three wir workeri\nIn Great Britain now ii \u2022 womin.\ntnd their number tl wpeeted to, bl\ndoubled within a few monthi,\nNILMN DAILY NIWI, TUISDAY, FIIRUAIY 21.1941-8\nIndian corn U grovm luccewfully\nbelow iee level oe the Cuplan\npliiru md it in altitude of 13,000\nteit In lahe Peruvian Andes.\nFREEMAN\n*    FUKNITMI CO. *f$\nTbt Housi ot Fuwitwe ,t$*r^J^\nPhone IM Nelion\nTRADE IN YOUR\nOM Furnlturt\non NIW\nDRESS STYLES\nAND HATS TO MATCH\nMilady's Fashion Shop\nOre Jhi OJjl\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23\nselling\n39*. j\u00ab\nAlKhUalaaallWiaan\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n.7:55\u2014O.Cinadi .\nJ-00-CBC Newi\n8:15\u2014Front Une Fimlly\n8:50\u2014Yankee House Pirty\n9:00-BBC Newi\nDUfi-ColrlJtreim Guardi  (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014The Concert Master (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014The Record Cabinet\n8:59\u2014Time Slgnil\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014South Americin Wiy CKLN\n10:\u00ab-\"They Tell Me\"\nWASH DRESSES\n$4.50\nSIZES 14-20\nFashion First Ltd.\niiinaniaiinaeiaM\nFOR   MILK-TRY\nK. V. D.\nPHONE 116\nPosti\n^\nIII\nYOU'LL LOVE THEM\nFOR BREAKFAS]\nIII\n11:00-Hink Lawion's Knighti\nll:15-Viriity Timi (CKLN)\nll:30-\"Soldlir\"i Wile\"\nU:it\u2014Your Bollywood Newi Olrl\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u20140. C. Farm Brotdcut\n12:2.-1\u2014Tho Notice Boird (CKLN)\n1I:30-CBC Newi\nl!:45-Mld-dey Mitinee\n1:00-Kitherlne Himllton\n1:15\u2014Interlude\n1:18\u2014Tilk \"Perlli ot Junior\"\n1:30\u2014Pelham Rlcherdion'i Orch.\n2:00\u2014B.C. Schoobj\n2:30\u2014Tei Time\n2:48\u2014 Listener! Fivorlti\n3:00\u2014The Wutirn Five\n3:15\u2014 Muiic by Lou Bring\n8:30\u2014Deep in Melody\n3:45-BBC Newi\n4:00-Music end Verse  (CKLN)\n4:15\u2014Piano Recital\n4:30\u2014Talk \"Dehydrating Farm Pro.\nducta\"\n4:45\u2014Tilk: \"Booki md Shows\"\n5:00\u2014Newi Commentary\n5-05\u2014R.CA.F, Quit Progrimmt\n5:30\u2014Aim Young'i Variety Show\n!VESINC\n8:00\u2014Supper Melodiei (CKLN)\n8:30-Hlwt!lin Piradlw (CKLNI\n6:45-Meit the Bind (CKLN)\n7.00-CBC Newi\nTilJ-Onidlin  Chen Federition\n7:30\u2014Red Army Diy Programme\n\u25a0 7:45-Boy Scout Week\n8:00\u2014 BBC Newireel\n8:30\u2014To   Be   Announced\n?;00-Nilion LitUe Theitre\n9:30\u2014Latin Americini\n10:0O-CBC News\nI0:15-Tilk\n10:30\u2014Intirludi\n10:35\u2014Benny Cirter'j Orch.\ntl:0O-God Save the King.\nThey Glva You      \\v\n3 Benefits:\n1. Help prevent constipation\ndoe to lack of bulk.\n2. Supply uieful quantitiei of\niron and phosphorus.\n3. Wholesome, nourishing end\nfull of delicious fltvor.\nISl\nGET THE\nGIANT ECONOMY size\nDGILVIE\nYour Headquarter (or\nOgilvie's Wheat Hearts,\nPkt 18c\nOgilvie's Rolled Oats, pkt. 23c\nOgilvie's Tonic Wheat Hearts,\nPkt 47c\nOverwaitea Ltd.\nPhone 707\n471 Baker St.\n\"\u25a0-*\"\u25a0 \u25a0\t\nWATCH REPAIR\nll \u2022 Job fir uoiru. Our work\ninuni your utlifietlon.\nH. H, Sutherland\n491 Blklr St\nNilien. I C.\nRADIO AND ELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES SERVICE\n, PHONI MQ\nNelson Electric Co.\nPATRONS\nPLEASE NOTE\nOwing to urgent out-of-\ntown  bujlness,  the\nFAIRVIEW\nBEAUTY SHOPPE\nwill be closed for t few dayi.\nPleue Wltth thll ipice tor\nfurther  innouncimenti.\nMrs. I. Dunster\nFresh Produce\nCABBAGE\nCalifornia new   2 IDS. 1?C\nCELERY: ut,h Lb. 18c\n[TURNIPS: Kosiancic 9 Ibs. 25c\nLETTUCE: \"\u2022\"\u2022 \u25a0>      Lb. 25c\nORANGES: 8 lbs. ... 75c\n(Medium Sixe, Packed In Shopping Bagi)\nS^*''\nMATCHES, Canada, 3 boxes 25c\nDRIED APRICOTS, lb 25c\nPRUNES, 60-70's, \\ Ibs 23c\nCOCOA, Neilson's, Vi Ib. tin 17c\nTISSUE, Westminster, 5 rolls 25c\n*  Safeway Meats  *\nBOLOGNA: by piece Ib. .. 21c\nPORK SAUSACE, Small Link, lb 23c\nPOT ROAST, Round Bone, Ib 24c\nSTEAK, SIRLOIN, T-BONE, Ib .....37c\nCOD STEAKS, Ib 27c\nRUMP ROAST BEEF: Ib... 30c\nEdwards\nCOFFEE\nRegular or Drip Grind\nLb. tin 41c\n \u25a0\nAirway Coffee\nLb. 30c\nPalmolive\nSUPER SUDS\nLarge pkt 20c\nCiant pkt 39e\nQuaker Oats\n48 oz. pkt 19c\nFLOUR\nKITCHEN CRAFT   '\n24 Ib. iack 75-1\n49 Ib. iack  fl.39\n98 Ib. uck 92.75\ni NUTRITION\n!     IN A NUT SHELL    \\\nGit* UtU am\/**** ted***\n* !\u25a0 **,\n|   Julia In WrlfaSl <\n\u25a0 11m 519 ;\nI Vioooow, B.C \u2022\nI  I wut to brin| better nutrition to aajj J\n! fimily. Pltan tnroll m b \"KileaSan i\n\u2022 Courw in Nutrition,\" \u2022 MiraMpoodetae* J\nJ eounoodOeij.lejioni.KraekaMaliiMcin a\n\u25a0 coin, covering tiat coit of the entire coum. J\n! stm* 3;\ni Qty PrtMnw i\\\nFEBRUARY\nFOOD STAMP SALE\nTAKE PART OF\nYOUR CHANGE\nin   .\nWAR SAYINGS\nSTAMPS\nPrices Effective Tueedey, Friruiry 23rd, to Seturdey, February\n27th, Inclusive\niillRUARY\nFOOD STAMP SAIE\nSAVE FOR\nTOMORROW\nINVEST IN\nWAR SAVINGS\nSTAMPS\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 194S\n\u25a0\n'\n{',\n^fJautSTHtcdctil\nA NEW COMBINATION\nGive \"flower ihower\" towels to\nmat engaged friend\u2014or brighten\nup your own linens\u2014with these\nvivid designs. Part ol each flower\nIs embroidered; the center is ap-\npllqued ln a color that's repeated\nIn an applique on the edge. Pattern 551 contains a transfer pattern of 6 motifs averaging tVtxtl,\ninchei; applique pattern pieces;\nititchei.\nSend your order to Tha Dally\nNewi. Ptttern Department, Nelton. Ptttern will bt tent to your\nhome within 10 days.\nyftaMDn.   WxVtlht\nA CHARMING  BASQUE\nYou'll look young and captivating in this Marian Martin frock.\nPattren 9273. It's in the favorite\nbasque style that's so pertly becoming. J\"Wear your heart\" right\non your pockets\u2014and make them\nof gay print, with banding to\nmatch!\nPattern 9273 may be ordered\nonly In misses' and women's sizes\n12. 14. 18. 18, 20, 30, 32, 34. 36. 38\n40. Size 16 requires 3Ta\u00bb yards 35-\ninch and H yard contrast.\n8end twenty centi lor thll Mir-\nIan Mirtin plttlrn. Be lure to\nwrite plainly your 8IZE, mme,\naddreu and style number.\n' Send your order to The Daily\nNewt. Pattern will be lent to your\nhome within 10 diyi.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"1 know most women mirry (or\nLive, but I hale to think how, mmy\nwould itlll be smgle If they had felt  C.P.  ExprCSS\nlife ind well-fixed for life.\"\n\u25a0*.\nSALJYS SALLIES j\n\u25a0       \u25a0\n(fofiiiwdL...\nBy Shepard Barclay\nSOME PLATS CLEAR-CUT\nMANY A FINISHING play of\none kind or another depend! for\nits success on what might be\ncalled probable card reading. That\nia, the chances are that thi mining cards, on whioh Its effectiveness la baaed, an very likely to be\nIn a certain poiltion. On other occasions, the reading is ao clear-cut\nthat there is practically no chance\nat all of your play not operating\nsuccessfully.\n4 A K 10 2\nf AQ65\n4>A4\n+ 7(5\n4878\n11(1\n\u2666 K Q 10 9\n8\n+ K J 10\nN\nW E\nS\n\u2666 \u20221(14 3\n\u00bb3\n47653\n49432\n\u2666 Q5\n\u00bb J10 9 8 4 2\n4J2\n+ AQ8\n(Dealer: a Norih. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nNorth      Eut    South       West\n14        Pau     2f 34\n4 4        Pau     SA        Pau\n\u00ab*\nWeit naturally expected to profit by that 3-Dlamond bid, or he\nwould not have made It. But Iti\nchief effect wu to ilmplify the\nbidding of the ilam by hli opponent!, and then make South care\nful to iee that he played It tuo\ncessfully.\nAfter the' diamond K was leaf.\nSouth would have \"been pretty\nsimple If he had not read the situation correctly. Flnt of all.\nWest's bid had made It a virtual\ncertainty ht had the club K and\nthat finesse was marked aa a loaer. Then the diamond K lead\nplaced the Q ln his hand.\nAnchoring to those two facta,\nplus the likelihood of West having\nthe heart K for his high Interrupting bid, South won the lead with\nthe diamond A, came to his own\nhand with thi ipade Q, flneued\nthe heart J, dropped the K with\nthe A, took two more high ipades,\ndiscarding the club 8 from his\nown hand, niifed the fourth ipa-uii\nand Ihpi led tht diamond J to\nWeit'i marked Q. The poor defender could do nothing but return\na club into the A-Q, or a diamond,\non which the club Q could be discarded while dummy trumped,\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTour Week-End Lesion\nIf you have an evenly distributed hand so strong you feel sure\nyour ilde can make game, even\nthough your partner's hand be a\nblank, what action do you take\nover an opponent's opening suit\nbid If your side Is vulnerable and\nthey are not? What action If they\nare vulnerable and you are notf\nDistributed by Klnt Futures Syndicate. Inc.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Ra^cil\n5. Tart\n9. Trust\n10. Unadorned\n11. Piece of\nlean meat\n13. A float\n15.Indians\n16. Obtuse\n18. Perch  .\n19. To please\n3. Building\nadditions\n4. To color\n5. Jewish\nmonth\n6. Unit of\nweight\n22. Kind of\npoem\n23. Electrified\nparticle\n26. Sod\n27. Brawl\n28. Uncleflled\n7. A kingdom   29. A metal\n8. Dead\n11. Friction\nmatch\n12. Feel\n20. Notary pub-14. Conical\ntent\n17. Makea\nmess of\n19. Exclusive\nperson\n30. Theft\n31. Explode\n32. Any ketone\n33. Length\nmeasure\n(pi)    \u25a0\n35 Feminine\nname\n36. Odors\n\u25a1\u25a1pan nnaaa\n\u25a1HHQD   \u25a1\u25a1BOI.]\nnun     ana\nQDaCsLl\njimcj nr-:**) aaa\nmoHB aaaaa\nOH hog ana\n\u25a1nEun\nmrara     aaa\ntiSaaaa Kaann\nA\nD\n0\nL\n\u00a3\u25a0\u00ab\nI\nS\n1\nN\nIt\nU\n5\nS\n|-\nR\n0\nM\nA\nYesterday's Altwer\n41. Oreat Lake\n42 A fish\n45. To free of\n38. Short fishing line   47.The(Sp.)\nlie (abbr.)\n21. Perfume\n23. A denert\n24. Exclamation\n25. Expression\n' of dligust\n26. Carry\n27. Vein of leaf\n28. A play on\nwordi\n29. Combinition\n31. Prickly fruit\nenvelope\n32. Part of day\nI abbr.)\n34. Uncooked\n35. Exterior\n37. Land\nmeasure\n38. Certain\n39. Soak flax\n40. Settlngi\n42. Enclosure\nfor dovei\n43. Withered\n44. A ihaklng\n46. African\nriver\n48. Perala\n49. Scream\n50. Quantity of\nmedicine\nDOWN\n1. People of\nGreat Britain\n2. Lets again\nJSU   RNNLJLEP   EA   GQLNU   O E P J R F L-\nPRJUT JSU  WUTJ   FRPPUQT-OHRMNLMT.\nYeiterday'i Cryptoquote:    EVERY AGE. THROUCH BEINO\nBEHELD TOO CLOSE, IS ILL DISCERNED-E. B. BROWNING.\nDistributed by Kim TtiturM 8ynallc|ti, lae. \u25a0\nCryptoquotei ire quotations of famous penoni written cipher.\nA lubitltuti character hu repliced the original letter. For Instance.\nin \"R\" miy lubitltuti for thi original \"F.\" throushout thi entire\ncryptoquote, or 1 \"BB\" miy replica in \"LL'. Find thi key ind follow through to thl lolutlon.\nDuncan Man Named\nLondon  icri-i-nrd  wooitnn.\nMinl'ler of Fniad, has asked cater-1\nmff establishments tn murk\nvic.orv\ne'ahles\nAgent at Trail\nR. R. Taylor, of Duncan. V.I., forth .,   merly of Revelstoke has been pro-\nV\" sign pnlatoei, fresh vcR-   mnled  to the post of agent for the\ndried ruga,  nnd cheese, dish-! Canadian Pacific F.xprrss Company\n    j    _     .I 1_,  ... ..     1      I     Tr\u201eil\nes wh'c'a It- consider, should lae con\nlumed in tlie ualional interests\nnt Trail.\nOn   their departure lor  Duncan,\nthe Cowlchin Leider uld:\n\"During Iheir ihort itay here they\nbecimo well md fivoribly known\nind will leive many friendi here.\nBoth have been memberi of the\nCowichan Golf Club and Mr. Taylor\nhas been 1 member of the Rotary\nClub. Their son 'Bob', who Is in\nthe R C NV R . recently went to\na new past iti the Eait liter being\nbome on furlough.\"\nCOMIC AND ADVENTUR\nSTRIPS\n\u2666    44\nTHE GUMPS\n\u2014\n* '.     ';\n_\u2014\n-*-t-\nBy Cm Edsoii\n' EVERVBODY MaJOWS '\n\u2666HOUSEWIFE' IS MARINE\nLIKlcoO FORA*5EvJlW<b KlT-\nHM- WHAT'S WRONCb, BIM T\n-tUl'RE NOT LISTEUIU6\nER-HAVE\njRw-\n\u2022SOMeTOlNa-j,\nAKPY?\nLI'LABNER\nBy Al Copp\nITS EITHER YIGULP.'.')\nVOU ORONat IG-QIVE.\nOF U8--WHAT ME TILL\nVOU j TMORKV\nHA.VNIN'\nTTHINK IT\nOVER, BOYS.\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zane Grey\nv ta\/ism vou cam see\nMV K-SSS S LAME AND\nKID AND TAMMIE\nARE C\u20acADTlf?ED.\n\u25a0TOMORROW SLASH SWUNG'LL\nSTART LOGGING THAT DISPUTED\nSECTION AND TV.' PEUD 'TWEEN\nHIM AND TAMMIES UNCLElL\nMV INSPECTOR SAO WERS PROVING\nTOPPER'S OWNERSHIP WOULD REACH\nSPRUCE LANDING BY MESS&HGER <\nTDMORROW--THAT9HOULD END J\n-r  THE AR3UMENT\/\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Younq\n aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^i\n .\t\n\"\u25a0^'T'\"\"\n5^\nPHONE 144\nLook Down These Wont Ad Columni for Bargains\nPHONI 144\nBIRTHS\nMCGOVERN-To Mr. and Mrs\nThomas McGovern, 816 Nelion Avenue, at Kootenay Lake General n\u201e.,.\npital, Kelson, Feb. 21, a daughter\nLAMBERT-To Mr. and Mrs. Lu-\n:len Lambert of Salmo, at Koole-\niny Lake General Hospital, Nelaon,\nFeb. 22, a daughter.\nNIKKEL-To Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nNikkei, Rosemont, at Kootenay Lake\nieneral Hospital, Nelson, Feb. 22,\nI daughter.\nHELP WANTED\n\"APABLE HOUSEKEEPER IS RE-\nquired by working couple wilh 2\ngirls, age 1 and 11 yrs. $25 per mo.\nBox 20, Kei-emeoi, B.C.\nIXPERIENCED WOMAN OR GIRL\nfot general housework. No chilli He.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP At\nAimer Hotel, opp CPR Depot.\n\u25a0f pay UM FOR TfiBEs.TT1.\nMorgan, Nelsun. B.C.\t\nHIGHEST    PRICES    PAID    FOR\ngood used ranges-\nSee J   Chess tirst.\nROLLS   DEVELOPED.   fRINTED\n25c.  Reprints 3c or 40 tor $100\nFilm Exchinge, Caitlegar.\nTOP   PRICES   PAID   FOR   USED\nfurniture,   stoves,   heateri,   tooli,\nmuiical Instruments. Ph. 934 Ark\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\ndren. Apply 207 Silica Ph. 654-L.\nWANTED: GIRL OR WOMAN FOR\nhousework. Phone 809-L.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ritei tor noncommercial advertisements un-.\nder this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week 16 dayi)\ncovers any number of required\nlines Payable In advance Add\n10c It box number desired\nZ5<THE PHOTO MILL-25<\nP.O Box 335, Vancouver\nRolls developed snd printed Ue\n12 reprints 6x7 enlargement 35c\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVFYORI\n25cTONS PHOTt>-25c\nP O. Box 434, Vancouver\nI Any 8-exp. roll developed and print-\nI ed 25c. Reprints 3c. Free 5x7 Coupon.\nLONELY FOLKS! JOIN RELIABLE\nconfidential    matrimonial    club\nMany Members with means Pir-\n1    txulan and deicrlptions 10c. Ls-\nI    dies free. Box 121, Re\u00bbin\u00bb.\t\n'HOME    FTJNITURE    EXCHANUE| INSURANCE AND REAL E8TATE\nWe Alwayi Sell for Lesi\nTop pricei paid for used furniture\nASSAYERS AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nHAR6LDS.\"ELMlS.\"BOSSLAND\nBC.  Provincial  Asiayer,  Chemist.\nIndividual    representative    tor\n\u25a0hippen it Trail Smelter,\nA. J. Bute. Independent Mine Rep-\nrcsentative, Box 54 TnU  B.C\nE W WIDDOWSON.' PROVINCIAL\nAllayer. 301 Joiephine St.. NeUon\nTHE  WEST  KfcotBMAY   ASSAY\nOffice 550 Stanley St., Nelson. B i\nCHIROPRACTORS\nFAS    McDONALD.    DC.   Pilmer\nGrad. X-ray, String Blk.. Trail\nR. W HAGGEN, MINING St CIVIL\nEngineer; B.C. Land Surveyer.\nRosiland and Grand Forks, BC\nBOYD C AFFLECK. 218 Gore St..\nNelson. BC, Surveyor and Engineer. Phone 669-R.\n\u25a0OUNG MAN MILITARY ET-\nempt desires position, bookkeeping Se typing. Apply National Selective Service.\n.IVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n'chick* give MWM\n3\nW\n1943 \"ACVION YEAR\"\ntore Eggs and Poultry \"aro needed.\nu  are asked  to produce  them.\niure that you raise  profitable\n'   - \"THE   CHICKS   WHICH\ni RE8ULT8\" have proven their\n|alue throughout Western Canada.\naise them and get action Irom your\n{Md try.\nI per 100: Unsexed Pullets\n(Thite Leghorns $14 00   $29 00\nack, Brown and Buff\nhorns 10.00    32.00\nks, Reds, Ntw\nnpshires ....    15.00    28 00\nht Sussex 17.00    30 00\nPER CHICK8 Sired by R. O. P.\nMiles\n[horns $16.00   $3200\nReds, New\nnpshires 17.00    30.00\niorn Ckls $3-100; Heavy Ckli\n$10-100.\noantlty discounts.   LIvi  delivery\nguaranteed.\nIK, sexing accuracy in Leghorni\n|%   lexing   accuracy    ln    Heavy\nBreeds.\nbnd  for your  copy   of  lhe   1943\nAction Year\" Book and remember:\nITS RB8ULT8 THAT COUNTI\nRumoCSend^U\nN Langley Prairie. B. C.\nBABY   CHICK   BUYERS\nREAD THIS FIRST\naTlth 25 years experience In brecd-\nind producing high cla;*\noyltry, we consider our chicks\nqual to the best on the market\niri offer - Barred Rocks and\nSew Hampshires uniexea at $14\n|per 100, Pullet chick! at $24\nCockerels it $8.\n10.P. S.red White Leghorni undid at $12 per 100. Pullet chicki\n|S7%) at $26   Cockerel! at $2.\n\"rite for descriptive Mating lilt.\nAPPLEBY POULTRY FARM,\nMinion _City._B:C\t\nATCHING EGGS WANTED. FULL\n||a\u00bbason supply or surplus from\nEOovt-Approved Blood Teatefl\nIrioeki only. Pick-up-;ervice it\nHour firm. Phone, write, or M'P\n\u25a0without notice anytime atter\niMarch 1, Spol cash, top prirei\nIguarantecd, plus expreu chartres\nIon Incoming eggi. J. J. Hambley\nWitcheries, Abbotsford, B.C.\n_>K YOUR ORDERS FOR DAY\nlold chicki now. New Hampshire,\nl&C.W. Leghorni. W. Wyindnlte\nIfjummcrlmd Experimenul Farm\nIStri'n). 1st Crosiei Leghorn-New\n[Himpihlre md Leghorn-Rhode\nlliland Red. Approved Hitchery.\niBlood-teited itock   Bomford Hat-\nJchcry,  Penticton,  B.C.\t\n\u25a0ABY CHICKS NEW' HAMPSHIRE\nlud Rhodn Iilind Red Approved\nlind blood-leited Ready to snip\nlivery Tueidiy $13 per 100 John\nlaOoodmin Gilley Avenue Hatch-\nliry. 1655 Gilley Avenue. New\nIWeitmmiier. BC\nllODE ISLAND  RED CHICKS-\nSEE US before you BUY, SELL\nOR EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. PHONE 1032\nif IS PATRIOTIC TO SELL THAT\nunneeded article to someone who\ncan use it It represents raw material and valuable labor Sell it with\nan advertisement ln the Daily\nNewa  Classified   Columns\n\u2022WE COLLECT YOUR DEBTS\" IF\npeople ln_. British Columbil owe\nyou money, we will collect It\nStandard Ratei; Higheit references Commercial Service Corpontlon Lt. 850 Weit Hasi'ngi\nStreet   Vancouver. BC.\nVIGORINE^FOR \"LOWERED *fT-\ntallty and physical exhaustion Re.\ngain your vigor, vim and energy. Month treatment $1.00 i box.\nDrug Sundries Write for price\nlist Weitern Supply Agency. Bus\n883. Vancouver.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned (6 or 8 exposure roll) 35c. Reprints 3c each For your vicition\nsnapshots, choose Krystal Finish\nGuaranteed non-fade printi\nKrystal Photos. Wilkie. Saskatchewan   Established over 30 years\nLONELY? JOIN~A aSfOXBCE\nclub Hundreds of Western members. Many with means City md\ncountry girls Widows housekeepers, business girls, waitresses.\ncooks Particulars 10c; ladies free.\nCanadian Correspondence Cluh\nPO  Box 128 Calgary. Alii\nCHAS F McHARDY  INSURANCE.\nReal Eitate. Phone 133.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMichlne ihop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,    motor    rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nSTEVENSON'S   MACHINE   SHOP\nSpecialists in mine and mill work.\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nElectric and Acetylene welding.\n701  Vernon  St,  Nelson,  Ph.  98\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW. E  MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail.        Phone 177\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S      STS\"H      FACTORY\nHatdwood merchant 273 Baker St\nAecond hand stores\nwe buy. sell and exchange\nWhit hive you? Ph 534 Ark Store\nMEN! REGAIN NORMAL MATJC?\nPEP and vigor. Try Vitamin \"E\"\ncapsules-50 for $1.73; 100 tor\n$3 00. WORLD'S FUNNIEST JOKE\nNOVELTY 10c, Including catalogue of Personal Hygienic Supplies. Books on All Subjects, Novelties, Eel\nWESTERN   DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 24.   Dept. KNC,   Regina, Sask.\nFOR   SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nDone Here...\nLETTERHEADS\nENVELOPES\nBILLHEADS\nINVITATIONS\nAre Your Personal Representatives. It Pays You to\nHave QualiW Work Done\n. . . and at No Extra Cost.\nPHONE 144\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinting Dept.\nIrineil quillty.  25-1100.  50-18 00\n100-11300.     5O0$70.00      George\nIGime. R.O.P Breeder. Armstrong\nJB  C\t\nIfEAM I.OGOlrW HORSES. PER\nllcam weight. 3200. Apply R. A\n[Comfort. Creston. DC.\nRTT.OAD OF llOIt.SF.S   WELL\nIfcrnkrn. 12110 \u25a0\u201e 1800 lbs   Apply  *\u25a0'.\nDavirintl. Tarry... nC\nT.X   COW    FOR   SAl,E.\"TO\n**^rr.\u00ab!irn amn   fl-ix 25(1 Nrlnon.\nRANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nYOUR SCRAP METALS\non  Any quint ly  Top price!\nIld    Active   Trtding   Company\nPowell  St.   Vancouver   B<-\nrUTPORTABU DRAGS*1*\ni engine complete. In good con-\nBox 132, Nakuip. BC\nWALK-IN REFRIGERATOR UNIT\nIn stock Central Truck h Equipment Co.   702  Front St.. Nelson\nPipi FITTINGS TUBES SP*t-\ncial low pricei Active Tnding Co\n918   Powell   SI    Vartrouver    8 *-\nFOR SALE: LINOLEUM\". COAL\nheater, oil heiter, galvanized tubs.\nApply 3Q2 Third St.\n1930 CHEV ROADSTER A-l SHAPE,\ngood lires Snap lor cash. Electric\nWasher likejnewJ*h_731-R.\nMAN;S BICYCLE. 28\" TReKfUi.\nCord T res 923 Gordon Road\nHOO^EFvArtriiHTTHOR'\" VAOW*\ner Ph. 520-Y  1104 McQuarrie Avt.\nPETS\nARDEE KENNELS, Waldhelm, Sask.\nSpecializing  In  Irish   Saftten\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\n1929   DODGE SEDAN\nNE.LSON AUTO WRBCK1HQ\nRADIATORS   AND  BALL BEA'R-\nIngi. City Auto Wrecken.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non eaiy termi in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept of Natural\nReiourcei. C.P.R., Cilgary, Alta\nFOR SALE; S-ltM. HOUSE, STONE\nfoundation, newly decorated,.new\nfloon, 2 lots, fruit treei, bargain.\nApply P. I. Poulin.\nFOR SALE; 4 lots, 5-room stucco\nhouse, furnace and garage, corner\nNelson Ave. and Chatbam St. Apply, 520 Mill SI.     '\n3 STOREY BUSINESS BLOCK IN\nVernon. 4 stores with apartments\nabove. Owner leaving town. Write\nBox 412, Vernon, B.C.\nF. A. WHITFIELD RIAL ESTATE\nand Insurance. 417 Hail St.. Nelsnn\nBEFORE  BUYING  YOUR  HOME,\nSee C. W. Appleyard It Co\nINSURANCE\nASK US ABOUT\nFLOATER INSURANCE\nThis givei you theuiuil fire\ninsurance plus theft md many\nother covers, for very little\nmore than you are paying now\nfor fire Insurance only.\nC.W. APPLEYARD & Co. Ltd.\nNplanit Satly Nptua\nTelephone 144\nTrail Circulation: Phone 1378-R\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per tine per Iniertlon\n44c per line per week (8 coniec-\nutlve Insmloni for cost of 4)\n$1.43 \u2022 line a month (28 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox number lie extra. Thil\ncovers any number of times\nPUBLIC NOTICES. TENDERS.\nETC.\n18c per line, flrit iniertlon end\n14c  each  lubsequent  insertion.\nALL   ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commerclil  Situation!\nWanted for 25c for iny required\nnumber  ol   llnea tor ilx  dayi\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATE3\nSingle copy  .. ..I   St\nBy carrier, per week      .25\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nBy mall:\nOne   month     _  $   .73\nThree monthi     2.00\nSix   monthi         4.00\nOne vear . .    - .   8.00\nAbove ratei apply In Canada,\nUnited Statea and United Kingdom to subscriberi living outside regular carrier areas\nElsewhere and to Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth $1 50: three months $4.00;\nsix monthi $800: one veir $15\nTIUviksL Jhsmbu .\nLONDON, Feb. 22 (CP)-Brltlsh\nfundi were lelectlvely higher In an\nIrregular itock market.\nHome Rails and Copper! were\neasier md Diamond sharei were\nsteadier. Kaffirs were inactive. International securities tended a llf.li\nlower.\nTORONTO\u2014Stocki maintained a\nfirm price tone. Lacking leadership\nfrom Wall Street where the market wai cloied for Washington's\nbirth:ay, the Toronto, market bad\nfewer buyers.\nThe golds posted a margin of losses oyer gains but the base metals\nmade up for the gold losses.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Selected issues\nmade'iteep climbs In trading.\nAlberta Grain pfd tacked on 3 ln\nlnduittlals and was at a new high.\nPrice changes In Industrials on\nthe curb mirket were mostly upward.\nVANCOUVER\u2014Mlnan rested easily, oils ihowed little life.\nWINNIPEG - \u00abDeallngs In the\nwheit pit of Winnipeg Grain Exchange today were down to a minimum with millin making llghtpur-\nchisei In the Miy position which\nclosed unchanged at 91% cents a\nbushel.\nThe market was featured by the\nsale of more than 1,000,000 bushels\nof No, 1 Northern wheat to the\nUnited Kingdom.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. ttt. (CT)-Week-\nend cattle 728; calvei 5; hogs 1(7;\nsheep 983.   Today, three hogs.\nGood butcher steers 11.50-11.75:\ncommon-medium 10.25-11.25. Good\nbutcher heifers 10.75-11; common-\nmedium 9.50-10.50. Good cowi 9.50-\n10; common to medium 825-9.25;\ncanneTs and cutters 5.50-7.50. Good\nbulls 8 50-9.25; common to medium\n7-8. .\nHogs Saturday 15.80 for Bl yards\nand plants; iowts 1235 Uve weight\nyards; 13.50 dressed yardi and\nplaints.\nGood lair\/be 12.50-13.\nRegistration Cords\nto Be Stamped\nin Liquor Storei\n\u2022 VICTORIA. . Feb.   21    (CP) \u2014\nPermission his been received\nfrom Ottawi to stamp Nitlonal Reglitratlon Cards of Liquor\" Permit\nholden, W. T. Kennedy, Liquor\nCommluloner, slid today and soon\nall purchaseri of liquor will be required to ihow their Reglstntion\nCardi il well is their permlti.\nA stamp li being mide tor all\nVendor itorei. It will ihow the\nnumber of the itore, yeir, ind have\nthe letteri \"B.CL.\" on it.\nIn thli way Liquor Control Board\nAuthorities hope to keep cloier\ncheck on suspected bootleggers ind\nthole purchsilng liquor wilh more\nthan one permit.\nMinesweeper\nCapsizes\nOff Ore. (oast\nMARSHFIELD, Ore., Feb. 22 (AP)\n-A United tates Navy mlneaweeper\ncapilied In heavy leai off Cool Bay\nSaturday with a lois ot live dead md\n13 mining, the 13th Naval DUtrict\nannounced today.\nOnly 11 of 20 aboard reached ihore\nalive, ilxteen were picked out of the\ntoising Pacific by * Cout Guard\nsurf boat and a fishing craft, but\nseas were running io high they were\nunable to land for about 24 tours.\nFive of the rescued, injured in the\ncapsirlng and suffering from exposure In the open cout guard boat,\ndied during the night.\nThe minesweeper'i commander,\nLieut Carl F. Leitz, wai among the\nsurvlvon.\nNamei of the dead md mining\nwere withheld, the Navy iald, until\nnext of kin have been notified\nThe minesweeper was returning\nfrom patrol off the Oregon coast\nto Ita base at Cool Bay it 4:45 p.m.,\nwltneiw from ihore said It wallowed through mountalnoUi wavei to\nwithin a quarter-mile of Ihe hirbor\nentrance. There a huge comber\ncaught the ihlp and flipped It over.\nGov't Probes Reports\nSoldiers Getting\nLittle Pay in Mines\nVICTORIA, Feb. 28 (CP) - The\nBritish Columbia Mines Depatt-\nment li looking Into reporti that\nmen released from the Army to\nwork in coal mines are now quitting the mines and returning to the\nArmy, because they can make more\nmoney as soldien.\nA Mines Department official said\ntoday there Is nothing much Britiih\nColumbia can do about the matter.\nexcept learn details ind ascertain\nfor what reason the men were not\nable to make adequate money ln\nthe mines\nThe Province his no powir to\norder soldiers into the minei or\neven make iure, thit onei there,\nthey work so es to earn more thm\nArmy pay.\n'Torch,\" Army piper in Chilli-\nwack, reported In s recent issue soldien ire leaving the mines snd\ngoing back to the Army.\nMemorial (up\nHockey al\nTrail March 6,8\nTOAI-L. 8. C\u201e Feb. 22-Tri!*-i\nJunior hockey machine ii being\ngeared for Its bid In the Memorial\nCup pliydowni against the Alberta\nProvincial tltllsti. The Dominion\nchampionship ieriei will be run off\non Trail ice March 8 ind 8, the\nSmelter City iquad facing the winner of the Bdmonton Canadiani-\nCalgary Royals serlei, which openi.\nSaturday.\nThe team to represent B.C. ln the\nMemorial Cup scries will sport Jim\nHeuston, an 'Import from Nelson,\nbetween the ptpei; Dunton, Tof-\n\u2022 folo, DePaolis, and either Twiddle\nor Ioanin on defence; Turik, Cavallin, Magliani, Jake McDonald, Mo.\nLeod, Milne, Harrison, and Sammartino ai forwardi.\nAdvanced ticket Mies it Trill\nIndicate a possible sell-out for the\nDominion title leries. Service\nClubs have tiken i large block of\n\u25a0eata to assure a good attendance.\n\"liltle Spiel\"\nal Nelson\nIn Mid-March\nNelion Curling Club'i innual \"little bomplel\" winding up the curling\nleaion locally hai been iet for March\n13 md 14, Secretary S. T. McCulloch\nitated Sunday. Fairly wide diitrlct\nrepresentition ii anticipated.\nThii year the innual \"Minen\nNight\" will be pasied up. Thli ictlon has been taken largely at lhe\nsuggestion of the minen thenuelves,\nwho uid that gasoline rationing\ntravelling conditloni ind io on\nwould mike it difficult to get In.\nThe wether had been iuch, they\nadded, that the minen hive hid\nconsiderable curling on natural ice\nat home this Winter.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nBANKS\nCommerce     134\nDominion    .,  Iff)\nImperial     1S3\nMontreal   149\nNova Scotia   241\nRoyal   _  136Vi\nToronto    240\nWar needs have greatly accelerated the use of coal as a chemical\nraw material.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nRENTALS\nTOU RENT: AFTER APR. 1 TO Reliable party, lurniihrd bungalow\nApply 432 Hamilton Ave.\nWanted- in april by \"adult\nfamily fu Ily mod, fl-rm. bungalow\nor home to rent. Box 2004 News\nTerrace apts Beiutum modem\nfrigidaire   equipped   luitn\ns'.rm. sfeAM''T.iATtD~rcnm:\nI    suite   Apply Stirling Hotel,\nEETN& BATJY \"MJCOy TN ooOD; i~ifou|ES~w^H^(raWATED\nndilon Phone 243-R. i    land. Ph. 364-Y2,\t\nmtn\u25a0mCs\"51TBi*)Y'sT?iia |FUKN'D SUITES. KERR APT5.\nHfMoniablc  (or caih   Ph   1011 L \t\nJaPtHir   STOVE    WANT! IJ.i CLASSIFIED  ADS  BR1NO GOOD\n\u25a0Oven St 3 <ar I rlonaenU Pb. 21)3. a RESULTS\nMINE8\nNormetil\t\n _..   JK\nAnglo-Huronlin  \t\n  3 2S\nOmega Gold  \u00bb\n    .16\nBaie Metals Mining.\t\n 00\n     .66\nBeattie Oold M nes .. _\n.80\n...._.   .14\n 98\nBidgood K rkland  _..\nPickli Oow Gold \t\n  1 83\nBobjo M.nei  .,\t\n 11\nPowell Rouyn Gold .,\n    X\nBuffalo Ankerite\t\n _ 1.80\n  2.10\nCutle-Trelhewey   \t\n 63\nSudbury Basin \t\n  198\nCentril Patricia     \t\n  1.03\nTeck-Huehes Gold  ....\n _ 2.'>0\nChromium M. Si S\t\n_  220\nToburn Gold Minei ..\n    .70\n102\n.... 4270\n  8 00\n 3 10\nDrame M'nei \t\n 19.83\nOIL8\n  1 14\n  19 23\nF.ldorarln Gold \t\n     84\nBritish Dominion\n 26V.\nFalconbridge Nickel \t\n360\nHome\t\n  3.10\nG?d's Like Gold  _\t\n 18\nImperial \t\n    13.13\nHard Rock Gold  \t\n    MV,\nInter, Petroleum ..___.\n  18.50\nHolliniter \t\n  9.13\nINDUSTRIALS\n  27 13\nAbitibi Power A ..   .\n 70\nInternitlonil  Nickel\n 37 60\n  143*4\nKerr-Addison   \t\n_  3 73\nBrewers .\u2022   Diitlllen .\n     3V4\nKirklind Like \t\n    70\nB C. Power \"A\"     \t\n  ts\nLake Shore M nes \t\n....    11.00\np. C. Power \"B\" \t\n    tv,\nLeitch Gold    \u2014\n  4.00\n     7%\n     73\nCan. Malting \t\n    S8H\nMicLeod Cocklhutt  \t\n  1.63\nCanidlin Pacific Rly. .\n_  w\nMidsen Red Like \t\n     99\nDominion Brldgi \t\n _  M\nMilirtlc Oold-\t\n  1 89\nD .illllera Seagrams ...\n  nv,\nMcTntyre-Poreuplne   \t\n 46.73\nFord of Canidi A\n    21\nMa-Kenile Red ..ake\n 98\nMauey Hirril  \t\n     BH\nMining Corporation \t\n   1.63\nMontrial Powir \t\n     ISH\nNln'nlng Min ng \t\n.......  1.14\n     7Vi\nNorinda  \u201e\t\n...4323\n -..    \u00ab3ti\nAppoint Committee\nto Protect\nCoast Fishing Fleet\nOTTAWA, Feb. J2 (CP)-Protee-\ntion for Weit Cout flihing fleet!\n\u2022giinit depletion through requiii-\ntlonlng of bolts by the Armed Forcei ls to be provided by \u2022 Speclil\nField Committee which hu been\nset up by the Government, lt wu\nlearned today.\nApgwlntment of the Committee\nfollowing protest! by fishermen thit\ntheir opentlons were being hindi-\ncipped through the requisitioning\nof essential  vessels.\nCoast Sikhs Ask\nGandhi Release\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 22 (CP) -\nTelejfi'ims urging the unconditional\nrelease of Mohindu K. GindhI, fut-\ning Indlin Nillomliit Leeder, hive\nbeen icnl by the Khalsa Dlwan Society, a Sikh organisation to leaden\nof the United Nationi Including\nPrime Minister Churchill. Preiident\nRooievelt md Puemler Stalin. The\nmessages Were sent u the Sikh\ncommunity ended i 48-hour priyer\nvigil for Gandhi's heiUh.\nDOW |ONES AVFRACES\nDow-Jtmei Avcrtgei unavailable; New York Exchange clued for holldiy.' Vulcin\nVANCOUVER\nSTOCKS\nMINES\nBralorne   \t\n8.90\n\u00bb00\nCariboo Gold  -\n1,22\n1.25\nGeorge Copper \t\n.15\n\u2014\nGolconda\nMVi\n\u2022 \u2014\nGold Belt   \t\nJS\n.11\nGrandview      \t\n.13\n\u2014\nGrull Wihkme ..\n.03 \u00bbi\n.04\nIiland  Mtn  \t\nin\n.Fll\nKoot  Belle      \t\n.10\n,23\nPacific  Nickel  \t\n09 Vi\n.14\nPend  Oreille\n134\n180\nPioneer   Gold    \t\n] 3(1\n1.40\nPremier Gold\n74\n.79\nPriviteer     ....   .....\n.37'.\nin\nSheep Creek \t\nii\n1.00\nSilbak Prem    \t\n.70\n\u2014\nWeiko Minei\n03\n031.\nWhllewiter  \t\n03\nMH\nOILS\nAmilgimitaid   \t\nos i.\nm\nAnicoi\u00bbii  ....   \t\nN\nm\nAnglo Cdn  _..\n,i:u.\n11\nBritish Dom\n11V4\n148\n12\nCilgary ft Ed    ....\n1 3(1\nCommonwealth\n.2314\n30\nDilhousle\nJU\nto\nDivli! Pet*    ..\nIP'.\n31\n.104\n12\nHome  \t\n300\n3,23\nMcDougiU Segur\n.09\n.11\nMill  City\n.(UV.\n.0.3\nModel\t\n>4\n2(1\nOkilta Com\t\nv,\n(fl\nPieilli\t\nM\n07'i\nPic Pete\n30\n\u2014\nRoyilite \t\n22 30\n\u2014\nSpooner\n.09\n.10\nSuniet   \t\nJOU\n12\nVinalta\n07',\nin\nVulcin  ,\t\n.\",()\nJl\nPanthers Midgets\nSwamp M.R.K.\nPanther Mldgeta took thi opening\ngame of the Midget Hockey Cup\nelimination leries Mondiy night,\noverwhelming the M.R.K. Midgeti\n8-1. Preitley got ieven of the Pinthen' goili. The ieriei is belt two\nout of three.\nSummery:\nFint period\u20141, Panthen, preitley.\nSecond period\u20142, Pinthen, Chim-\nben; 3 M.R.K., Ron; 4, Pinthen,\nPreitley; 5, Panthen, Preitley; 8,\nPanthen, Prestley.\nThird period\u20147, Panthen, Preitley; 8, Panthen, Preitley; 9, Pinthen, Preitley.\nPenaltlei \u2014 Panthen, Appel (10\nminutei for fighting), Perrier (8\nminutei for fighting), M.R.K.: Maglio 2 (one of them 10 minutei for\nfighting), Rich Wassick.\nTeami:\nPanthen\u2014 R. Lindblad, J. Preitley, J. Charnben, J. Jerrier, T. Boyer, R. MacDonald, L. Choquette, J.\nCorbett\nM.R.K.:\u2014Bob Wwlek, Rich Wu-\n\u2022ick, R. Cnyford, B. Shleldi, D.\nRon, O. Avis, W. Opa-nihaw, F.\nMigllo,\nRefereei\u2014Slim Porter ind Bill\nLudlow; Scorekeeper ind Timekeeper, Jimei ,\\vi..\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23,1943\u20147*\nSPORT\nIndoor Meet for\nJuvenile\nGirls Is Planned\nIndoor track meet for Juvenile\ngirls will be held Wednesday afternoon at the Civic Centre Recreation Hall, it Is planned. The meet\nwill be held along similar lines as\nthose for Junior and ienlor men's\nclasses lait'Week.\nThe Juvenile girls class numbers\nbetween 60 and 70 memberi.\nSavoys Drop Five\nPins lo Soulh\nSlocan Hostesses\nSavoyi bowling quintette returned\nto Nelaon Sunday evening, the vanquished in a five-pin engagement\nwith the South Slocan ladiei team.\nDespite their loss, the Nelson girls\nwere loud in, the praise of the hoa-\npltality shown them by their Slocan hostesses\nThe Lakesiders took the first\ngame 689-682, but dropped the next\ntwo 636-812 and 762-808, the South\nSlocan ladles taking the match 2293-\n2107.\nTeams and icores were:\n8. SLOCAN\nlit\nM. Lambert  136\nM. Bland  137\nE. Jamei  136\nM. Bowkett  141\nT. Dempsey   112\n2nd\n122\n3rd\u2014Tot.\n134-412\n196\u2014 920\n14a3\u2014 421\n178- 449\n134\u2014 491\nTotal   ..\n8AVOY8\nF. Norrii _.... 141\nV. Wilker ....... 131\nO. Procter   198\nB. Jirrett   143\nA. Stewirt.    88\n882   812   808-221)3\n11&-387\n176- 518\n143- 440\n223- 436\n101- 304\nM.R.K. Bantams\nTake Dodgers\nM.R.K. Bintima eame from behind to beat the Dodger Bantami\n6-3 In the flnt game of thi Bantam Hockey Cup elimination ieriei, Mondiy afternoon. Tbe ieriei\nis beat two out of three.\nSummiry:\nFirst period\u20141, Dodgers,'Migllo;\n2, Dodgers, Maglio (Staples, Nelson.)\nSecond period\u20143, M.RK., Speirs;\n4 M.R.K., Irwin; 5, Dodgeri, Migllo;\nS, M.RK, Speirs (G. Pickering); 7,\nM.R.K., Speiri (G. Pickering.)\nThird period\u20148, M.R.K., Pitts; 9.\nM.R.K, Irwin.\nPenaltlei-M.R.K.,   R.   Pickering. I Zmuul. Judges  were O. Kalhovd\nPltU, Jones, Dodgers: Chiluck, Mig-  >nd R' Melville\nlin. Nielsen.\nTeems:\nM.R.K.-R. Miclntyre. H. Pitti, R.\nPickering. 0. Pickering., D. Speln.\nJ. Vilentlne, J. Meigher, N. Hood,\nL Irwin, R. Jonei.\nDodgers\u2014A. Kennedy, L. Chiluck\nJ. Willach, D. Stilnton, A. Nelion,\nH. Nielsen. J. Bichynskl, J. Staples,\nD. Maglio, w, Goggin,\nReferee\u2014Slim Porter, icorekeep-\ner. Chirley Maglio; Timekeeper.\nIirl Duffy,\nTotal    680   656   762-2107\nHigh Individuil, F. Dempsey 227.\nHigh iggregate, M. Bland, 520.\nHouse (TopsIn\nRossland High\nSki Competition\nROSSLAND, B.C., Fasb. 22\u2014Running up 70 points, House C Siturdiy copped top honori in the Ski\ntournament of 4.he Rowland Junior\nand Senior High School. Houie A\nwu tecond ajdth 53 pointi md Houie\nB followed with 51 pointi. There urai\ncompetition In crosi-country and\ndownhill racing, Jumping and slalom.\nStanding! follpw:\nHouse competition\u2014\nHouie C, 70 points flnt; House A,\n5J poind, lecond; ind House B, 51\npoints, third.\nIndividual winners\u2014\nGirls, J. Ridgen, 10 pointi.\nSenior Boyi, F. Hincock, 16 points.\nJunior Boyi, D. Smith, O. Smith,\n9 points.\nRciults ln order of finlih, flnt,\nsecond ind third were:\nCrois country\u2014\nGirls, M. Wright; L. Swift; V.\nMiros\nSenior boys L. Corndo; F. Han'\ncock; N. Hoyte.\nJunior Boyi, D. Smith, O. Smith,\nC. Mclntoih.\nJumping:\u2014\nSr. Boyi, L. Corndo, F. Hincock,\nR. Johnson.\nJr. Boys, B. Ham, J, Foil, J. Cooper.\nDownhill\u2014\nGirli, J. Rldgtn, J. Polonikoff, J.\nPalmer.\nSr. Boyi, F. Hincock, J. Bryin, L.\nCorndo.\nJr. Boyi, J, Cooper. D. Davii, I.\nLavarato md D. Smith.\nSlilom\u2014\nGirls. J. Ridgen, J. Polonikoff, ind\nK. Montgomery.\nSr. Boys, F. Hancock, L. Corndo, J   Bryin.\nJr. Boyi, O. Smith, S. Lingmin,\nB, Ham.\nTournament committee was L.\nCorrado, F. Hancock, D. Smith. A\nSluggers Blank\nTrippers lo\nTake Rubber\nHigh School Girli played out\ntheir hockey rubber Saturday eve\"\nning, and the Sluggen were victors over the Trlppen by the odd\ngame, which they took 8-0. Thl\ngame, which was keenly contested\nIn spite of the one-aided icore, did\nnot have the large audience of. the\nprevioui rmei.\nSummary:\nFlnt period: 1, Sluggen, Boyes;\n2, Sluggers, Wigg; I, Sluggers,\nBoyes; 4, Sluggen, OpenshaW\n(Wigg, Boyes).\nSecond period: 3, Sluggen, Rob\u00ab\ninson; 6, Sluggers, Openihaw.\n* Third period: 7. Sluggers, Wig!\n(Boyes); 8, Sluggen, Boyei.\nPenaltlei: None.\nTeams:\nSluggers: Jean Hammer. Rowena\nColeman, Jean Duck, Biddy Wigg,\nFrancis Boyes, Fern Opensjiaw,\nShirley Robinson, Betty Brown.\nTrippers: Bessie MacLeod, Isabel\nGoggin, Sylvia Morgan, H. Jeen\nYoung, Jcan,le Young, Beryle Cal>\nbick.\nReferee: Ian Currie; Scorekeepet\nand Timekeeper, Jim Valentine.\nM.R.K., Panther\nMidgets lo Meet;\nFit. Win Draw\nMRK and Panther Midgeti WUl\nmeet in the Midget Cup elimination\nseriei of best two out of three games,\nstarting with Monday'i game.\nThis was decided by a drawing ol\nlots between the three teams affected, after the FAC Midgeti de.\nfeated the MRK Midgets 4-3 Saturday forenoon, to again put thl Midget Hockey League in a triple tie.'\nThe FAC repreientative drew the\nbye out of Ihe hat. The League title\nwill be held jointly by the three\nteams.\nPurely accidental Injurlei mined\nSaturday'! concluding League contest. In the firit four or five minutes Bob Waulck, MRK net-minder,\ncrouched low as Stan Fiiher, FAC\nruihed up. Fisher scooped the puck\nai Wassick stooped, md the goalie\nrccelared It In the face below the eye.\nHe dropped to the ice and remained\nthere, but before lt wai reiliied ha\nwas out of the game, Bill Ludlow,\nFAC, secured the puck md netted\nit, the goil counting.\nTime waa called while Waulck received treatment, before being taken\nhome, Barry Shleldi donning the\npad! ln his place.\nIn the third period In \u00bb\nscramble, in the neutral rone, Larry Grimwood, FAC, received the\npuck In the pit of the itomach and\nfell to the ice badly hurt. He alio\nretired from the game.\nSUMMARY\nFlrit period\u20141, FAC, Ludlow.\nSecond period\u20142, FAC, Fisher\n(Ludlow); 3, Roil, MRK; 4, FAC,\nLudlow   (Grimwood).\nThird period\u20145, FAC, Buchman;\n6, MRK, Crayford (Longden); 7,\nMRK, Crayford.\nPenaltiea\u2014FAC; Waldie, Buchanan.\nTeams:\nFA-C-H. Miller, J. Waldie, D. Bu-\nchanan, W. Ludlow, S. Fiiher, L.\nGrimwood, R. Lawrence, D. Morrli,\nT. Shrievel, A. Clirk.\nMRK\u2014Bob Wasilck, Rich Wiaick,\nR_ Crayford, D. Roll, B. Shields, U.\nAvis, D. Longden, W. Openshsw, F.\nMigllo.\nReferee, Slim Porter; Scorekeeper, H. H. Currie; Timekeeper, Dennis\nKrsft.\nBelloise Wins Bout\nNBW YORK, Feb. 22 (AP) -\nSteve Bellolie, New York middleweight now In the U. 8. Niary, itopped Joe (Butch) Lynch. 161. Plain-\nfield. N. J., in the fifth round ot I\nicheduled eight-round fnme bout at\nSt. Nicholu irrin tonight.\nBellolie weighed 153\\l.\nGOALIE MOWERS OKAY\nDetroit, Feb. 22 (AP) - Ooille\nJohnny Mowen pf Dartrolt Red\nWings learned totliy lhat iny \u2022>-\nimlnitlnn at a wtIK Injury dliclosed no fracture ind he will be\nivallable for his cluii'i next Niton-\n\u20221 Hockey League game Thuridiy\n\u25a0t Montreil.\nGunnarson, Edwards\nWin Kimberley\nSki |ump Tourney\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Feb. 22 (CP)\nPlenty of mow midi i fist trick it\nthe ikl Jump here for the innual\ntournament Jumping competition!. A\nclass winners were H. Gunnarson\nwith lumpi of 176 ind 191 feet for\n290 points md B. Edwards with\nJumps of 172 feet twice for 238\npoints In \"B\" Clau George Cheitiam\ncime through with 227 pointi ind\nH. Lundqulit tecond with 225.\nHockey Results\nBy Tbe Cimdlin  Pren\nO.H.A. SENIOR \"A\"\nSeries A:\nToronto Navy 5, Hamilton Majori\n2. *\n(Navy leide beit of ieven ieriei\n3-2).\nSeml-finil:\nToronto Air Force 7, Toronto Army 6 (overtime).\n(Air  Force leads belt of  three\naeries 1-0).\nDurocher Ordered\nto Reoort March 1\nNTW YORK. Fa*. 22 (APl-The\nmatter of i Manager for Brooklyn\nDodgen wis throavn wide open\nigiin today as Leo (the Lip) Duro-\ncher. their swuhlbuckllng leader\nfor four season!, wis ordered to report fnr induction fnr United Statei\nmlllliry lervlce Mirch 1.\nFORMtR TENNIS STAR\nDIES IN VICTORIA\nVICTORIA.   Feb.   22   (CP)-Mri\nR. V. Hocking. 28. Ihe former Peggy\nKO'i TORONTO MAN Home. Victoria tennli (tar and rls-\nHpLYOKE. Mm. Feh. 23 (API ln\u00bb tournament gnlfer, died in hoj-\n-TVry Young, Jr. 135\\t, ion of in piul Sunday morn ng following a\noutitindlng New York lightweight brief llmets complicittd by double\nof thi early *20'i. knocked out Joey pneumonii She leave' tier hu>-\nBignito. 133. Toronto. In the lecond | bind. Rom (Bud) Hocking .nd i\nround of \u2022 icheduled eight-round i threeninnths-old daughter, Wendy\nii ,_j  b' .ii  ;\u25a0 \u201e.\u00bb<\u2022' \u25a0;<-  <\u201e\"i\nMontgomery Wins\nFrom Costantino\nPHILADELPHIA, Feb. 22 (API-\nBob Montgomery, Phlladf Jihli,\nJumped bick into the lightweight\npicture tonight by punching out \u2022\nunanlmoui 10-round decision over\nLulu Cmtintlno, New York, before\n9041 pild -t convention hill.\nBoaitlng \u25a0 weight advantage ot\n5V< poundi, at 134. Montgomery,\na 6-5 favorite, wore down the \"finey Dan\" New Yorker with a lavage body attack.\nKilrea Still Heads\nA.H.L. League\nNEW HAVEN. Conn, Fi*. 22\n(API - Wally Kiirei of Hershiy\nstayed out ln front of the Americin\nHockey Leigui icorer! this week,\nthree mists boosing hli point! to\n77 while Les Cuatinlnghim of Cleveland stayed at lait week'i 71.\nThird and fourth places continued\nin tlir same hands also, Adam\nBrown ol Indianipolli icorlng one\ngoal ind five assist! for \u2022 67 to\n,{sy aha-ad of Norm M-nn of Plt'l-\nburgh who rolleet'd three goali\nicJ i^o a.suits Ior i 61\n g-NEtSON DAILY NEWS, TUISDAY, FIBRUARY ii, 1941\nCIVIC\n4IAM0UirlAYmWMT\u00abl\nLAST TIMES TONICHT\nComplete ihowi 7:00-\u00ab;12\nMuter of myitery\nDashlell   Himmett'i\n\"THE CLASS KEY\"\nwith\nAllan Lidd, Veronica Ukl\nPlui\u2014\n\"HENRY ALDRICH,\nEDITOR\"\nWith JIMMY LYDON\nWedneidiy Only\n$120.00 BANK NITE\n\"BORN TO SINC\"\n\"A FINGER AT THE\nWINDOW\"\naffMpWPfVi\nA nloa way of takln< Vitamins.\nHALIBORANGE\n$1.50 and $2.75\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nMandalay Blasted\nin Follow Up Raid\nNEW DELHI, Feb. **** (CP) -\nR.A.F. bomberi, continuing their\nattacki on Japanese communication! ln Central Btrrma, blasted tar-\ngeti near Mandalay and Myingan en\nthe Irrawaddy river lait night ln i\nquick follow-up to a ieriei of diy-\nlight raldi along the valley,\nIs McDonald Jam Co.r Manufacturer!\nGarland Again Moves for\nDismissal of (eiling Charge\nJap Headquarters\nin North Burma\nBlasted From Air\nBOMBAY, Feb. U (CP) .-Fighter\nplanea of tbe 10th United SUtei Air\nForce carried out a destructive raid\non Japaneie headquarters at Sah\nmaw ln Northern Burma on Sat\nurday, itartlng more than 90 firei.\nA lecond formation of fighteri\nconcentrated on a railroad defile\nnear Meia ln Burma, where a land'\nslide had been catiMd by bombing\nthe previous day. Tools and equipment assembled to clear the tracki\nwere machine-gunned and hlti\nmade on a locomotive.\nNear Kamalng the ralden iwoop-\ned to strafe \u25a0 Japanese cavalry nation, lending 100 enemy ralden daih-\nIng for cow and atampasdlng their\nmounts.\nOn the previoui day, the communique laid, American bomberi\nicored direct hlti on rolling itock\nand railroad installations at Sagaing\nIn Central Burma. Not a-plane wai\nreported mining from the two-day\nopertlom.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nC. B. Garland, counsel for MacDonald Jam Company, charged by\nthe Wartime Prices and Trade\nBoard with violating ceiling pricea,\naiked Magistrate William Brown In\nCjty Police Court Monday, for a\ndismissal of the case on (he grounds\nthat the Prices Board did not have\nthe power to change the basic period in which ceiling prices were\nfixed.\nThe magistrate adjourned the caie\nuntil Wednesday to itudy the document! submitted, Including procli-\nmatlons in the Canada Gaiette, before giving his ruling on Mr. Gar-\nland'i motion.\nA dlimisial wai asked by the\ndefence lait week, on the groundi\nthit the proiecutlon hid failed to\nprove that the McDonald Jam Com-\nGrenfell's Cafe\nPHONE 504\nTo make arrangement! for Private\nPartiei, Banquet!, Weddings, etc.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSulfa 205\nMedical Arti Building\npany were manufacturer! within the\nmeaning of Order 118 of the Pricei\nBoard regulations under which the\ncharge wai laid. At the requeit of\nCrown Coumel W. W. Ferguion\nthe Magistrate granted him an opportunity to reopen hii caie to deal\nwith thli point, and an adjournment\nwaa taken to Monday morning.\nLICENCE EVIDENCE\nW. M. Ydung, Customs Collector,\ntestified that upon the application\nof the McDonald Jam Company he\nhad lnued a manufacturer*! iale!\ntax licence for the period ending\nMarch 31, 1942, and that to hli\nknowledge lt had not been revoked\nor cancelled.\nCrosi-examined by Mr. Garland,\nthe witness teitifled that he did not\nmail the licence penonally, and\ncould not itate if the company ever\nreceived lt, but It was never returned to him undelivered.\nF. Goucher, salesman and warehouseman for McDonald Jam Company was also called on as a prosecution witnesi, and testified that for\nthe eight yean he had been on the\nstaff of the McDonald Jam Company\nIhey had been manufacturer! of\nJami, Jellies, marmalade!, soft drinks\netc., and that, roughly estimating\nabout 5000 cases of Jams, Jellies and\nmarmaladei were manufactured ln\nIMl.\nIn the croB-examlnatlon by Mr.\nGarland, Mr. Goucher said that the\nmanuficture was regular when fruits\nin season arrived regularly.\nButler Producers\nMust Register\nWith Ratloni\n\u25a0Y KIRKI L. SIMPION\nAnoclated Pren War Analyst\nFurther Axil penetration of American defence llnea ln Central Tunlila is producing a grimly critical\niltuatlon for Allied arms.\nReporti from Allied Headquirten now define the, Axli purpoii\nsn to deliver a \"knockout blow\"\nat the Britiih lit army In thi\nNorth before the Mh army can\nbreak through or by-paaa the\nMareth line In the South.\nAmerican lost of Kasserine pan\nlaat Sunday seems a damaging\nblow. It opened the way for an enemy itroke toward Thala, Indicated\nJunction area of the British lit army\nln the North and the American\nand French forcei ln the centre.\nThala Is some 40 mllei Eait of\nTebeiu on the Tebeaia-Sousse road.\nThe Tebasss railhead ls a critical\nfeeder point for the British right\nflank, already folded back deeply\nto meet the forced American retirement to the South.\nAllied alarm over the growing\nmenace to the Tebessa li sharply\nIndicated. British armor, diverted\nfrom 1st army concentrations to the\nNorth and East, was thrown tn to\nhelp Americsn troopa item the Axli\nsurge through Kasserine pasi.\nIt ll obvloui that If the British\nto thi North were preparing to\nitrike hird toward Blxerti or\nTunli, the project may well hava\nbeen seriously Impaired by the\nAxli strike to the South.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAecuntely\n, Med   Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThi Home of Good Lumbir\nWholesale ind Retail\nTclcphono 17$\nFoot of Stanley Strett\nQuality Groceries\nWe Hivi a Complete Line\nLAKESIDE SERVICE\nPh. 488\nOpp.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CF). \u2014 The\nPrices Boird lsiued a reminder today to farmers who make dairy butter either for use at home or for\nsale that they muit regliter with\ntheir local ration board as produc-\neri ot butter.\nIt also reminded them that they\nare not allowed to uw their butter\nration coupon! to buy butter from\ninyone except to the extent that\nthe butter they produce il lew than\nthe ration for their family.\nIt laid farmen producing more\nbutter than they can uie at home\nand wishing to iell iome to neighbors must collect ration coupons\nfrom them.\nThe announcement added: \"If you\nsell your excess butter- to a grocer,\nor trade lt with him for other merchandise, you must collect from\nhim the proper coupons or butter\nrequisition!. (Two douponi per\npound of butter, or butter replacement certitlcates, or ipeclal purchase permlti to the extent of the\nbutter aold or traded.)\nThese documents must be mailed\nonce a month to the local ration\nboard along with the coupons (or\nthe butter the producer markes and\nusei it home.\nThe announcement today laid:\n\"The Government li counting on\nevery firm family to live up to the\nspirit of the rationing law by limiting Iti home consumption of home-\nproduced butter to the national\nstandard butter ration.\"\nFree Delivery\nLakeside Park\naMltwiwajlwuwi\nTake Your\nChange ln\nWar Savingi\nStampi\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nW  L THOMPSON, Prop.\nDay and Night Service.\n24 Hour Ambulance Service\n815 Kootenay St Phoni 381\nlot aside trom lb feeder Importance for th* whole Junction coveri\nSouk Ahrai, a main roid and rail\nJunction lsn thm 100 mllei to thi\nNorth. Like Tebeisi, it lies Weit\nof tha Tunisian border In Algeria\nand ii on the miln Interior red\nand highway routei to Tunli. Souk\nAhras alio ll connected by road\nand rail with bone, British coastal\nsupply baie in Algeria, and by road\nto the Southeait with the whole\nBritiah front In Northern Tuniiia\nSouth ot Medjei-El-Bab .\nThere ls no question that Axil\ncipture of Tebessa from now-joined Anglo-American defenderi would\nexpose Britiih lit irmy communication! to flanking and rear attack.\nAny further Nazi advances in the\nThala-Tebeisa area must necessarily force Gen. Elsenhower to decide\nwhether prdcipttate retreat of thit\narmy may not be called for. It\ncould reiult in Allied evacuation\nof virtually all Northern Tunisia,\nindefinitely postponing the day\nwhen the Tunisian tip can be cleared and the Mediterranean waiitline\nreopened to Allied use.\nSeveral facton tend to relieve\nthii lombre Allied outlook, however. While official confirmation\nwai lacking, pren reporti from Africa laid the Britiah 8th army is\non the move agalnat and around\nthe Mareth line. If that is true, Axis\nforcei now badly extended Westward could soon find themielvei\nattacked from the rear.\nAmericans Turn\nTables on\nHail Baiters\nBy NOLAND NORQAARD\nAuoclited Ami Stiff Writer\nWITH U.St-'JpRCIS AT THI\nTUNISIAN FROST, Feb. 31 (Delayed) (AP)-United Statu armored forces evaded a carefully prepired tank ambush ln tha broad\nvalley of the Hatob River late today, smashed at least six German\ntanki and drove back crack Nail\nuniti which bad puihed 10 mllei up\nthe valley from Kasserine pan.\"\nThe bait for tha ambush wai five\nMark IV tanki, which were placed\nmotionless and exposed on an elevation of the gently rolling valley\nfloor. Carefully concealed batteriei\not 88-mlllimetre gum were emplac-\ned to open fire when American\ntanki itruck.\nThe Americini Ignored the belt.\nInstead the commander tent a reconnaissance force toward the head\nof the valley, where ltl light tanks\nand armored half-tracki created a\ndiversion. Twenty German tanki\ncharged in that direction. Mobile\nGerman artillery Ind mortar uniti\nfollowed.\nThat wai the moment for which\nthe Amerlcani had waited.\nYou msy itill Mt s\nWaterman or WlM\nFOUNTAIN PIN SIT\nPricei $2,50 up\nName   engraved   free   on   setl\nbought from ua\nYour Rexall Store.\nCity Drug Co.\nPhona M\nBox 480\nMountaini and places where green\nplants can be grown exiit In the\nSahara Desert.\nNEW SPRINC\nSAMPLES\nAM HIM\nYes, ws hsve our new\n.samples. .Let us make\nup thst Topcoat or Suit\nto-measure.\n\u25a0EMORY'S\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022*        LIMITED *T\nTba Man'i Store\nGraduate Nurses\nMust Register\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CP) .-Compulsory registration of graduate\nnursei In Canada wai announced\ntoday by Labor Minister Mitchell.\nThe regiitration, arranged at the\nrequest of the Canadian Nuries'\nAssociation, is to take place March\n17, 18 and 19.\nIt la; estimated that there are\nabout 45,000 civilian graduate nurses\nin Canada, many ol whom are not\nnow actively practising, fer. Mitchell's statement said. The registration is to be all incluslva.\u2014taking in\nall graduates whether now practising or not.\nIt will Include nunei who left the\nprofession through marriage or to\ntake other employment, but nunei\nserving with the armed forces, practical nurses and nurses ln training\nare not to be registered.\nPut Ceiling on\nPotatoes in East\nOTTAWA, Feb. 22 (CP)\u2014 The\nPrices Board Sunday night announced the establishment ot maximum\nprices on potatoes in carload lots.\nIn Eastern Canada (from Halifax\nto Fort William) these prices, basis\nMontreal, will be as follows, per\n75-pound bag:\nUp to moV Including March 7,\n$1.80; March 8 to Aprll I $1.85, April\n5 to May 2, $1.90; May 3 to May 31,\n$1.95; on and after June 1, $2.05.\nThe Board laid equivalent adjustment! letting car lot price! for Ontario points West of Fort William,\nthe Pralriei and B. C, have also\nbeen made.\nBritish Columbia figurei are not\nyet available, however, Prices\nBoard officlali said.\nWARTIME ECONOMY\nTRANSPORTATION\nThe reglitratlon will provide in\n\"up-to-date list of all nurses to meet\nvarious wartime heeds,\" iald Mr.\nMitchell.\nThe Miniiter*! announcement said\nan inquiry wai recently received\nfrom Great Britain as to whether\nany Canadian nurses were available\n(or civilian nursing outiide Canada\nInformation on thii point will be\nsupplied In the lurvey.\nNurses will be rasquired to register at an employment and Selective Service office or, if more than\nfive miles ffom a city having iuch\nan office, to register at a poit office.\nThe Minister of Labor may authorize registrations to be taken elsewhere, and It Ii ponible thet nurses\nwill be allowed to regliter at hoi-\npltali, the statement said.\nTrail Church,\nRazed by Fire,\nBeing Rebuilt\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 22-Rebuild-\nIng of the St. Anthony'i Church,\ndeitroyed by fire three weeki ago,\nhat begun. The rebuilt church will\nbe much the same as the former\nstructure in general plan, although\na number of Improvements will be\nembodied In It.\nRev. Father Balo, Pastor, viiited\nNelson recently to confer with Most\nRev. M. M. Johnion, D.D.,' Biihop\nof Nelson, on plam for the reconduction.\nCatholic tervlcei In the meantime\nare being held in Colombo Hall.\nMissionary Society in Presbyterial\nHere Elects Mrs. Armitage to\nHead; Hears Reports Missionary Work\nLarge supplies of food and warm\nclothing\u2014sheepskin coati for Instance\u2014are reaching Ruuia from\nAustralia. Before the war Australia\nexported to Germany as much ss\n37,000,000 pounds of wool a year,\nwhil another 71,000,000 poundi of\nwool went to Japan.\nNelson Rotary Comes oi Age;\nFive Charter Members Honored\n1936 WILLYS\nLIGHT DELIVERY\nTRUCK\nDetachable Canopy Top \u2014 This unit has\nbeen  thoroughly reconditioned and  its\nVERY HICH GAS MILEAGE makes it a'\nvery desirable unit.\nLOOK  AT ONE  OF  THE   FOLLOWINC\nFOR WAR INDUSTRY TRANSPORTATION\n1939\nFord Tudor\nDe Lull\n1935\nChevrolet Sedan\n1934\nFord Tudor\n]\nRotariam celebrated the 21lt annlveriary of the founding of Rotary\nin Nelson at the luncheon Monday.\nFive charter memberi, I. G. Nelson,\nDr. L. E. Borden, H. W. Robertson,\nC. F. Hunter and A. B. Gilker., were\npresented with bouquet! in honor of\ntheir association with th'e Club lince\nits origin in Nelson.\nDr. Borden retraced the hlitory of\nthe Nelson Rotary Club, Instituted\nhere Feb. 20, 21 yeari ago with 19\ncharter memberi.\n\"Rotary in Nelson has passed\nthrough two phases,\" he said. \"During its Initial years, the Club wai\nconcerned mainly with expansion\nand organization, and in all projecti\nit demonitrated the Ideal! of _Rotary.\n\"Thirty-eight yean ago, 'Rotary\nwas organized in Chicago on Feb.\n23, and thereafter It advanced rapidly in Australia and New Zealand.\n\"It did not advante so rapidly in\nEurope, and when Hitler and Mussolini arrived on the European icene\nit died. It ii still alive, however, in\nFinland, Denmark, and Is active ln\nSweien, Portugal, Spain and Iceland.\n\"After the great lou of member.\nship since the occupation and overrunning of the countries ln Europe,\nRotary advanced In South America,\nand has done a great deal in cementing friendship between the Latin-\nAmerican republics ind the United\nStatei.\n\"The Crippled Children Fund wai\ntaken up by the Nelson Club si\nits speciil work\/ind money was\nrailed by various entertainments and\ntag dayi.\n\"The second phase came at the\noutbreak of war, and the Club has\ndevoted its activities almost entirely to war work \u2014 it has donated\nto the various war charities, entertained visiting servicemen, and our\nlateit effort hai been to aid Russia.\n\"The third phaie,\" the Doctor\nsaid, \"is yet to come. It is tile postwar rehabilitation stage, ahd will oe\nby far the most important phase for\nRotary. Our task is beit lummed up\nin the wordi of Paul Harris, Founder\nand Preiident Emeritus of the Rotary Club:\n\" To heal the wound! of a war-\nravlihed \"world, to lubititute (or\nhate, mutual understanding and\ntolerance; to create affection where\nrancor exists; to change enemies\ninto friends and replace excited\npassion and armed itruggle by good\nwill and international peace this\nia the superhuman task we must\nundertake. This is a task in which\nRotary will labor with all its\nstrength, Iri ipite ot the fact that to\nhelp in iti achievement we have no\ninstruments other than our principles, nor more strength thap our\nenthusiasm; we are sure of victory\nbecause of the great faith that all ol\nus Rotarians have ln the destiny of\nhumanity.' \"\nSecond Lleutenint Blake Allan\nwho graduated recently at Gordon\nHead, V. I., ind Lac. G. Chlpplndall\nof Jamaica, now itationed at Medicine Hat, were gueits it the luncheon. E. Couniell, New Weitminstir\nRotarlan, wai also a guest.\nK. C. McCannell, President, was\nIn the chair.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nillllllllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n' For Safe Furniture Moving\nPh.  108 WILLIAMS TRANSFER\nRsd Crow urgently needi knitten\nfor bed iox. Pleaie call at the rooms.\nMERMAID8 are still popular at\nWait'i Newi. 5c each.\nFully equipped lervlce ind repair\nshop. Beatty Repair Service, Ph. 91.\nLarge  house  for rent.  Close  to\ntown. ISO. mo. Blackwood Agency.\nWhist St Dance Calbedral Hall tonight. Cash prizes. Refreshment!.\nDixie plug tobacco 22c a plug at\nVALENTINE'S.\nNOTICE\nSt. John Ambulance Asi'n Spring\nclass itart! Tueiday, Feb. 23, 8 p.m.,\nCity Hall. Clan fee $1.25.\nAll With Cood Rubber and First - Clau Mechanically\nQueen City Motors Ltd.\nNELSON\nPhont 43\nB.C.\nHalifax Harbor\nWas Frozen\nHALIFAX, Feb. 22 (CP).-Halifax\nharbor froze over briefly list week\n(or the tint time ln several decades\nai temperatures dropped to 10 de-\ngreei below zero, the coldest weither experienced ln thli port for yean.\nCenion permitted the dlicloiure of\nthe cold imp todiy.\nTrilns from the West were delayed 10 hours and more by heavy\nmow In New Brunswick North of\nMoncton. Coil itocks In the city\ndropped rapidly is firei were itoked\nlivishly, and the Robie Street rei-\nervolr fell to a dangeroui 30-foot\nlevel as hoJieholaden were forced lo\nleive witer taps running to prevent plpan freezing and bunting.\nReildenti said the hirbor had not\n\"caught\" frbm ihore to ihore, ln the\npast 40 or 60 yeiri, but accurate\nrecordi ire not available. A lower\ntemperature wn recorded ln 1935,\nbut the hirbor did not freeze it thil\ntime.\nAt one time In the four-day cold\nimp thi: itarted lait Mondiy, heivy\ncakA of Ice were Jammed Irom\nihore to ihore ot the hirbor tor a\ncomldenble dlitince from lind-\nlocked Bedford Bailn, hindering\n\u25a0hipping ind tlelng up smill crut.\nTb* Northweit irm  wu frozen\nover Mild, ind tmry lervice wu not\nresumed until Friday.\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Feb. 22 (CP).\n\u2014 New Brunswick ihivered list\nweek In the col.ic-.st weather in\nyean. Loweit tempenture reported\nin the province wai M below it\nCentrevllle, carleton County. The\nmercury unk to 25 md 30 below\nat Fredericton, Moncton and Saint\nJohn.\nDRESS CUTTING, A FITTINQ-\ndone by experts\u2014reasonable hourly\ncharge\u2014Singer Sewing Machine Co.\nPhone 41.\nAT THE RINK TODAY\n4:00- 5:45 Children's Skating\n7:00-10:00 Junior and Commercial\nHockey\nFinal Silver Slipper Club dmce.\nWed, March 3, Margaret Graham'a\nOrcheitra. Couple $1.75, ilngle $1.\nHall proceeds to Red Cross.\nUnited Church Women'i Mlislon-\nery Society it iti two-day Preiby-\nterial at Nelson Friday and Saturday elected Mn. H. J. Armitage\nto the Presidency for 1943; heird\nreporti of a luccessful year In iti\nvarioui actlvltlei, and heard brie!\ntalk! by miiiionariei of their work\namong the evacuated Japanese tt\nKaiio, New Denver, Greenwood and\nSlocan City.\nThe organizations, Including aux-\nillariei, Minion Binds, C.G.I.T. and\naffiliated societies raise! $1552.74\nduring 1942, the financial report of\nMrs. H. D. Wilson, Treasurer, of\nFernie, ihowed. The wide activities\nof the organization were carried on\nprogressively the various reports revealed.\nSLATE OF OFFICERS\nThe entire slate of officers electee' was Mrs, Morris, Mrs. Smith and\nMrs. W. C. Kettlewell, Honorary\nPresidents; Mrs; D. Maloney, Nelion, Pait Preiident; Mrs. H. J. Armitage, Kaslo, President; Mrs. J. L.\nClerihue, Trail, First Vice-President; Mrs. H. Ratcliffe. Nelson, Second Vice Preiident; Mn- H. S.\nForbei, Nelson, Third Vice President; and Mrs. Keyes of Nakusp,\nFourth Vice President; Mrs. W. C.\nAston of Traill, Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. J. N. Armstrong, Nelson, Recording Secretary; Mrs. H. D.\nWilson, Fernie, Treasurer; Mrs. McLennan, Nelson, Christian Stewardship and Finance; Mrs. W. J. Avery,\nCreston, World Friends and Missionary Monthly; Mrs. G. A. Burton,\nTrail, Temperance; Mrs. W. C. McKenzie, Trail, Literature; Mrs. A.\nManners, Cranbrook, Press; Mrs.\nTravii, Grand Forks, Mission Band\nand Baby Band; Mrs. D. Maloney,\nNelson, Mission Circle; and Mrs.\nPeter Gordon, Fernie, Supply Circle.\nThe newly-elected officers were\nInitalled by Rev. H. Stewart Forbes\nof St. Paul's United Church. Delegates to the Conference Branch, that\nmeets in Vancouver, March 9, 10\nand 11, were Mrs. rf. J. Armitage of\nKaiio, Mn. James Armstrong ol\nNelson, Mn. Bunt of Creston and\nMn. Keyei ot Nakusp, with alternates as Mrs. D. Maloney of Nelson,\nMrs. D. D. Townsend of Nelson and\nMrs. J. L. Clerihue o! Trail.\nA memorial service for the late\nMrs. D. W. Forteath of Trail and\nMn. Sutherland ol Grand Forks,\nwas held at the opening session on\nFriday.\nReports (or the various departments were presented by Mrs. Aston of Trail as Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. G. A. Burton. Litera-\ntare; Mrs. Bale, Missionary Monthly ahd World Friends; Mn. Maidment, Christian Stewardship and\nFinance; Mrs. Manners, Press; and\nMrs. D. Maloney, Special Objects.\nCommittees appointed for the\nPresbyterial were Mrs. McKenzie,\nMrs .Ratcliffe, and Mrs. Keyei, nom-\nIniting; Mrs. McKenzie,-Mn. Burton\nof Trail and Mrs. Bunt of Creston,\nResolutions; Mrs. Clerihue of Trail.\nMrs. Travis ol Grand Forks, and\nMrs. Maidment of Cranbrook.\nA welcome on behalf of the\nChurch at Nelson and of the Kootenay Presbytery was extended by\nRev. H. Stewirt Forbei.\nEntertiinment during the Pr\u00ab*\nbyterlal Included a pleasing vocal\nduet by Mlu Flora Johnson, a vioa\nlin solo by Miss Helen Wilion, accompanied by Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguion\na vocal solo By Donald Brown; al\nanthem by St. Paul'i Choristers;\nand a vocal duet by Mn. D. D\nTownsend and Mrs. S. C. Couch ac\ncompinied by Mn. D. Maloney.\nThe Saturday morning devotions\nservice wai conducted by Mlu Ger\ntrude Hamilton, her topic beings\n\"Seeing, Serving and Following.'\nAt the close of the Friday\nslon the Nelson Auxiliary of thi\nWomen'a Missionary Society enter\ntalned the vlilting delegatei it I\ndinner; while Saturday Mn. Forte\nand Mn. TownsVnd entertained\na tea ln the Manse.\nMunda Raided\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (AP>-\nAmerican bomberi itarted flrei I\nthe Japanese airbase at Munda oi\nNew Georgia Island ln a raid Sun\ndav.\nTry I\nQUICK LUNCH\nMELON DEW\nTODAY\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nYou Can Always Depend on t'\nWILLARD BATTERS\nBuy Now at\nCuthbert Motors Lte\nOpp. Hume Hotel md Post Offlct\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nANNABLE\nBLOCK\nSteam heated, furnished roomi.\nHandi that\ntrained will aii\nbeauty to   youj\nhair.\nHaigh TVu-Arl\nJ. P. Walgren\nGeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.\nVapor Stop Layer Board\nAn ideal insulating Wallboard and\nVapor Barrier\n4x8 Sheets only $208\nBURNS LUMBER le COAL CO.\nSweat padi, curry combi, hone\nbruihes, itable forki ind broomi.\nThese and other itable requirements\navailable it WOOD, VALLANCE\nHDWE.\u2014See  our  window  display.\nAdding machine rolls snd ribbons\nfor ill makei of idding machines.\nD: W. McDerby. \"The Stationer and\nTypewriter Man\", 654 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nThe CRYSTAL LAUNDRY will\nsave you money. No fun\u2014No bother\nmd i reil living In lini'-- Phone 75\nfor Cuthbert Mftori Delivery Service, their repreientative, ln Nelion.\nVeteran Prospector\nDies at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Feb. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Chirlei G. Evans, 79, well-known\nproipector of the Kootenayi died In\nhospital here recently. Coming to\nCanada from England u a youth, ne\nfollowed the Western development\nof the Dominion. At one time he\nworked wilh the famoui St. Eugene\nSilver-LeadiZinc Mine it Moyle. He\nwrote a quintlty of poetry, much of\nwhich hu been publlihed.\nLet Mureico wive your redecorating problems Economical, Sanitary, and easily applied. Will not\nrub off or show lap streaks. 75c per\n5 lb. pkt. Sold only at\u2014\nHIPPERSON'S\nPENTICTON DOCTOR DIES\nPENTJCTON. B. C, Feb. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Dr. Herbert McOregor, 81, well-\nknoa*m Penticton doctor ind Second Vice-President of the B. C\nMedical Association, died here yeiterdiy. He hid prictlied ih Penticton ilnce 1908 md for the put\nthree yean had been Preiident of\nthe Okanian Medical Assoclitlon.\nSPBICIAL SALE\nMAGLIO PLUM TREES\nOne yeir old treu eich $1\nTwo md 3 yr old treet eich $2\nSpeclil Pricei for Urger orden.\nC. Maglio, 520 Robion, St., Nelson\nWANTED IN FAIRVIEW\nWe h\u00abve inqulriei coming In tor\nsmall houiei In Fiirview. If you\nwint to sell let us hive particular, u\nloon \u2022\u2022 poulble. Phone 88, we will\ncall - Robertion Realty.\nWORK IN CHINA,\nJAPAN TOLD\nAn address on her work In China\nwu given by Mrs. H. Stewart\nForbes of Nelson; while in address\n\"Tokio to Kootenay\". concerning\nher work in Japan, was preiented\nby Miss Gertrude Hamilton.\nReports of the C.G.I.T. were reid\nby Mri. Clerihue of Trail and of the\nMission Binds by Mrs. Travii of\nGrand Forks, while t Ihe Mission\nCircle Report was presented by Mrs.\nMaloney. Mrs. Travis also spoke on\nthe dedication to the weKare o(\nchildren.\nF. H. SMITH\nIf It's Electric\nPhon* 666 351 Baker\nHavt the |ob Dona Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nBaKS:\nNourishment   In\n\u2022viry illci of\nHOOD'S\nBREAD\nBKinni. UJRI.HTH\n-HOUSE WANTED-\nWe hive \u25a0 client looking (or i\nmodern 5-room bungilow In the\nJunior High School Diitrict Will\npiy reuonable price If you. hivt\nwhat he wants ind CASH too.\u2014\nROBERTSON REALTY\n- PAINTS ~\nEXTERIOR AND STUCCO PAINTS,\nENAMELS, VARNISHES, AND\nWALL FINISHES\nA Paint for Every Purpose . . .\nPAINT TO PRESERVE\nBURNS\nJ LUMBER & COAL CO*\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_1943_02_23","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\/1.0415467","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. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1943-02-23 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]. 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