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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" . ;:'!'\u2022'\n,1 \u25a0\u25a0\nAllies Blast Out\nNew Successes\non Tunisian Fronts\nBy WES CALLACHER\nAssociated Prest Staff Writer\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March 9\n(AP)\u2014Allied forces In Tunisia seized the initiative on land\n\u2022nd in the air today as Field Marshal Erwin Rommel dragged his\npanzer column out of the clutches of the British 8th Army,\nleaving 50 wrecked tanks on the battlefield.\nAmerican heavy bombers and fighters smashed a powerful\nCerman air formation over the<j>.\t\nStrong R.A.F. Fare* Blasts Nasi War\nPlants at Nurtmburf.\u2014Page 3.\n' Allied Strength In Paelfie Crowing\nFireworkt Anytime.\u2014Page 4.\nCurtin Says More Bombers Would Mak*\n|ob Easier.\u2014Pag* 3.\nj\nNUMBER 178\nNAZIS RETAKE 8 KEY RUSS CITIES\nSicilian Strait, accounting for\n19 out of an esimated flight ot\n50 German warplanes. ,\nIn Northern Tunisia small Ger\nman attacks resulted in the end 1.1\ngains'for the British 1st army which\ncounter-attacked and forced the\nAxil troops back on their heels.\nRommel's retreat in the South was\ncarried out under attack ot Allied\n(ighter-bombers.\nHaving suffered far heavier loss\nes than earlier reports indicated-\nun Allied communique revised up>\nwards from 33 the total number of\nGerman tanks- left on the field-\nRommel apparently was withdrawing his forces int* the protective\nterrain Southwest of the Mare'.h\nline.\n60 TANKS CAPTURED\n\"The total of enemy tanks definitely ln our hands following tho\nbattle of March 6 is now 50,\" the\nAllied Command announced.\n' \"This high number is made up of\nthree Mark II's; two Mark Ill's;\neight new-type Mirk Ill's with 75-\nmillimeter guns; 19 Mark III specials, and 18 Mark IV specials.\"\nIn previously reporting Rommel's\nlost of 33 tanks the Allied Command\nspecifically stated that not a British tank had been lost. While this\nobiervatlon was not repeated, nothing was said of any Allied tank loss.\nIn yet another Southern Tuniilan tector the Allied line moved\nsteadily Eastward, with the freih\noccupation of the town of Tozeur,\n60 mllti Southweit of Gafia, and\nAllied pitroli reported operating\non the outiklrti of the laUer point\nAllied successes also were hammered out in Northern Tunisia.\nEnemy attacks near Tamera, ieven\nmilei West of Sedjenane, .were\nthrovm back in heavy fighting yesterday in which nearly 200 Axis\ntroopi were taken prisoner.\nThe German Col.-Gen. Jurgen von\nArnlm threw in two small attacks\nNorth and West ot-Sedjenane to-\niajr, but they were repulsed.\nThe Tamera fighting In the\nNorth of Tunisia, where Brltith\nforcei brokt a two-column ittacK\nan* th* poiltlom along the aMttur.\nTlbtrkt Roid, wai uld by At-\nrelated Prttt correspondent Wlllltm B. King to havt been at\ntht range of 30 to 40 yardi in tome\nplacet.\nIn a delayed dispitch from the\n\u25a0 front, King reported that the enemy'i cuuilties were eatimated it\nfive times those of the British\ntroopi.\nThe Southernmott enemy column,\nhe tdded, achieved a considerable\ninitial advance before a British\ncounter attack threw it back. The\nyipper enemy column, meanwhile,\nwas allowed to rdvance without opposition until it reached a dip in\nthe terrain. There, British troops\nopened fire from both enemy flanks\nat cloie range ind the Germans,\nfleeing the ambush, were then\ncaught up in heavy fire from Briti-h\nmichine-guns placed on a commanding ridge.\nGIRAUD ADVANCES\nLONDON. March \u2022) (CP)- The\nMorocco radio reported tonight that\nGen. Henri Girtud'i French forces,\nunder the command of General de\nLi), occupied the whole area North-\nWeit of Chott DJerid in Southwestern Tunlsli after capturing tho\ntoivnt of Nefta and Tozeur.\nDe Lay's forces consist of motorized detachments and camul\ntroopi.\nMores to Block Spy\nWork Along\nEast Af ricon Coast\nNEW YORK, March 9 (AP)-The\nLondon ndio yesterday quoted H.\nG. Lawrence, Minister of the Interior for the Union of South Africa,\nns laying his Government is creating i \"prohibited area along the bor,\nder with Portuguese East Africa to\n\u2022top villi information ibout All ed\nconvoyi leaking through to Axil\nipiel in Lnurcnco Marques.\"\n\"Ht laid Portugal has always ;cru.\npulously observed her neutral policy,* the broadcast added, \"but that\nIn ,-Lourfnco Marques there was I\nnett of Nazi and Fascist spies,\"\nCAPE TOWN. March 9 (AP)\nStriking at Axis espionage rings operating in Por'.uguese East African\nterritory, liie Government of the\nUnion of South Africa today closed\na portion of the border with Mozambique\nThe ,|ep was regarded as a special safeguard for convoys, movements of which have been reported\nlay AxU spies laid to be operating al\nlhe East Portuguese port of Lour-\nenco Marques.\nAmerican Bombers\nBlast Kiska\nWASHINGTON. March 9 (AP)-\nAmericin bombers blasted Japan-\nfit poiltlons nn Kl<ka Iiland In the\nAleutians, the United Statei Navy\ninnounred today, and delivered minor rtids igaimt four Jlpane\u00bbo\nbuei In the Solornnm irei of the\nSouth Pacific Sunday nifht.\nSPEEDY R.A.F.\nPLANES\nSWEEP FRANCE\nShoot Down Two Hun\nPlanes; Nazis\nHit Back Weakly\nRAID COAST CITY\nBy GORDON TAIT\nAuoclited Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Mirch 9 (AP.) \u2014\nFollowing up tait nlght'i .scourge\nof Nuremberg, the Royal Air\nForce tent squadroni of Spitfires\n\u2022 nd ipeedy Mosquito bomben out\ntp attack Northern France thii\nafternoon and there were Indlea-\ntlont that other Brltith' planei\nwere on the prowl over Axlt-held\nEurope again tonight\nLarge forcei of R.A.F. bomberi\nitarted acrou the Southeait coait\nihortly after dusk. The eonitant\ndrone of englnet wit heard for\n90 minutei at they headed Southeait In non-ttop formation.\nThe Spitfires made several sweeps\nand destroyed two enemy lighten\nat dusk. The Mosqultos attacked a\nrailway centre near Le Mans where\nbursts on the main building! were\nseen. One bomber failed to return.\nEnemy bombers also continued\ntheir spasmodic activity tonight,\nappearing over coast towni in Eastern and Nortneast England and\ndropping bombs in one rural area.\nAn authoritative announcement\nsaid pne enemy raider wai ihot\ndown into the sea tonight.\nAt 10 p.m\u201e the Parii radio went\noff the air, the usual sign that Allied raiders are at work over the\ncontinent.\nAlerti were lounded ln Berne\nand Zurich ihorHy afta-r 11 p.m.\nand Berlin, Munich, Leipzig,\nKonlgiberg and Luxembourg radio station! left (he. air. Swiss\nalerti usually Indicate that the\nR.A.F, Is bombing Southern Germany or Italy,\nR.A.F. and R.C.A.F. heavy bombers struck nearly 504 miles Inside\noccupied Europe for the blockbuster and fire attack on Nuremberg last night. The Nazis conceded\nthat \"major damage was done, especially in residential \u2022quarters\u2014aome\nplaces of cultural and historic interest were destroyed\u2014the populations suffered losses.\"\nThe German radio said bombs fell\non a theatre as well as the famous\nGermanic Museum and the \"Maut\nHall\" which was built in the 15th\ncentury. The Berlin broadcast also\nclaimed three hospitals and two\nold age asylums were hit In Nuremberg.\nThis afternoon the Germans hit\nback weakly. Two planes heading\ninland from the South coast put\nlandon under alert briefly, but\nthere were no reports of bombs\ndropped or of any damage. A lone\nraider sweeping over a South coast\ntown, however, caused some destruction and casualties.\nA communiqui later tonight\n\u2022aid enemy ilrcrift dropped\nbombi on two placei on the South\ncotit of Englind. It reported dimige ind caiualtiei Including \u2022\n\u25a0mill number of perioni killed.\nRUSS GAIN IN NORTH, LOSE IN SOUTH\nWhile the Russian lines have wavered under a violent Hun attack in the Donets Basin, the eighth Russian\noffensive launched in the North under Timoshenko\ndrives ahead. The map shows the Northern front.\nScores of Germans\nDie in Clashes\nith French Patriots\nFraser Is Chief of\nMutual Aid Plan\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP) - Carl\nFraser, an executive with the Britiih Supply Council at Washington,\nIs to take charge of the administration of Canada' new \"mutual aid\"\nplan, It is underitood In official\ncircles.\nUnder the \"mutual aid\" program\nfor 1943-44, the Canadian Government It providing $1,000,000,000 to\nensure distribution among tho\nUnited Nations of Canadian war\nnroduction, regardless of ability to\npay.\nBy EDWARD D. BALL\nAnoclated Prett Staff Writer\nLONDON, March 9 (AP.) -\nScorei of' German loldlen and\nGettapo agenti have been slain\nIn Fnnce In the lait three dayt\nat a reiult of the campaign of\nLaval and Hitler to round up 400,-\n000 Frenchmen fer forced labor in\nGermin war lnduitr|u, a Fighting\nFrench ipokeimin reported tonight |\nFlgurei on the number of\nFrenchmen and Germani killed In\nthe lait 72 houn win lacking\nhert but the ipokeimin laid the\ntotal of Nul dead alone might\nexceed 200.\nReuteri Neam Agency .reported\nfrom the French .frontier that extreme teniion prevailed ln Parii\ntonight.\nThe dl^>atch iald German troops\nhad built barricades ln many streets\nand that all hitherto unprotected\nbarracks and officer!* canteens were\nbeing barb-wired and land-bagged.\nDlwrden were laid to have\nbroken out all over France with the\nmost serious claihet in Paris, Lyon,\nMarseille, Brest and Industrial\ncentres in Normandy, Brltanny and\nAlsace-Lorraine.\nWhile the advertised purpose of\nthe roundup li to provide labor for\nthe German war plants, some quarters saw in the German campaign\nan effort to denude the country of\nsail men, fit or unfit.\nThese sources said such a drive,\nbesides providing needed labor,\ncould be aimed at removing all\nFrench manpower possible in order\nto decrease French resistance when\nthe Allies launch the anticipated\ncontinental invasion.\nMeanwhile, the Belgian Hews\nAgency disclosed a rising tide of\nanti-German sabotage in Belgium.\nNorwegian lourcei reported\nthtt four Serbian prlioneri of war\nPilot Reported\nAs Missinq\nCets to Gibraltar\nVICTORIA, March 9 (CP.)-Flt.\nSgt. J. Barry Chaster, young Canadian pilot of an RAF. Lancaiter\nbomber who wat lilted ai missing\npresumed killed after a raid on Essen has survived hardships that\ncan only be guessed at tnd reached\nGibraltar.\nWord of his safe arrival at the\nBritish base wai cabled by Sgt.\nChaster himself to his parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. Josroh W. Chaster of Dun-\nran. 40 miles North of here. He gave\nno detaili but apparently he nirvlv-\ned the crash of hli aircraft In Germany or France and during the\npast eight weeki made hli way.\nperhaps through Spain, to Gibraltar.\nThere were no other Cinadlam\non the crew of the Lancaiter he piloted.\nwere executed at Trondheim after\nthe discovery of a plot to dynamite army barracki. The four\nwere choien at random from\nimong ISO ind their comridei\nwere forced to witch thl execution.\nIn Pari! and other French cltlei,\npatriot! battled ln tbt. streets u the\ncollaboratidniit government shipped\n50 contingent! of French workers\nfrom Marseille to Germany in partial fulfillment of Laval's promise\nto Hitler.\nGuerilla tighten at Lille killed 23\nGerman officer! and made four\nother attacka on German-occupied\nbuildings In the paat three dayi.\nSmall but sharp itreet battles\nbroke out at Brest among German\ntroops and French patriot!,\" following attacks by guerilla flghten\nagainst Nazi' personnel md property.\nIn one Incident, patriot! were\nreported to have made a daylight\nhand grenade attack on a theatre\nreserved for German aoldien. The\nFighting French laid thli ittick\nwai made at a moment when\nHitler'i picture appeared on the\nscreen and ^suited In the killing\nof two Germans and Injuries to\nmany otheri.\nTwo rSore Germani wert iald to\nhave been killed in anothe hand\ngrenade attack on Brest*! Hotel de\nla Poste and others Injured In the\nbombing of troops in' their quirten, Hand-to-hand fighting followed these attacks, and the guerilla\nfighters suffered slight losses.\nOther recent anti-German activity, th* Fighting French said, included a grenade attack by patriots on a naval canteen ln Lorient\nwhere a German sentry wai killed\nand several officer! wounded; the\ndynamiting of a 13-car train loaded\nwith military suppliei at Rochefort\nand the sabotage of railway locomotives at La Rochelle.\nCertificate Issue\nSold to Banks\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP) - The\nBank of Canada announced today\non b:half of Finance Minister Ilsley that an lasue of Dominion of\nCanada deposit certificatei in the\namount of $00,000,000, date3 March\n9 and due next Sept. 7, has been\nsold to the chartered banks at par.\nTht certificates will benr Interest\nat the rate of three quartan of one\nper cent pv annum.\nOnly part of the lsaue represents\nnew cash since $46,000,000 worth of\ncertificates bearing the same rate of\ninterest mature!  today.\nU. S. Fighters Use\nAmphibian Cars\nDETROIT, March.9 UP)-The\nFord Motor Compiny disclosed todsy lhat Hi new .quarter-ton four-\nwheel drive amphibian car already\nIs being used by united States forcei\nin the war xones.\nSQUADRON KNOWN AS\n\"NIGHT MURDERS INC.\"\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS,\nNorth Africa. March 9 (AP)-\"Night\nMurders. Inc., it the name adopted\nby an R.A.F. iquadron of night\nBeau-fighters which hit shot down\n11 Germin ruder! over North Af-\nrici.\nF.D.R. ASKS LEGISLATION\nTO LfT PUERTO\nRICA ELECT GOVERNOR\nWASHINGTON, March 9 (API-\nPresident Rooievelt liked the United Statei Congreu today to consider \"as iopn ii possible\" legislation to permit the people of Puerto\nRico to elect their own Governor.\nWAR LORDS TO HAY\nWITH THE REAL THING\nN*3W YORK, Mareh 9 (API-Tokyo and Yokohama ire hnvini: \u2022 large\nscale iir raid drill Wedneidiy ind\nto make the exerciw mort reillitlc\ncaptured Brrtlsh and Americin\nplanes will be flown over the cltlei,\nthe Germin Radio reported today.\nRUSS BROADCAST\nSTATEMENT.\nON U.S. HELP\nGive Stettinius'\nReport; Welles\nChecks Standley\nDID NOT CONSULT\nLONDON, Mtrch 9 (CP)-The\nRuultn Radio broadcait In full\ntonight tht moit recent itatement\nby the United SUtei Lend-Leate\nAdminiitritor, Edward R. Stettlnlui, on aid to both Ruttla and\nBritain, t Reuten Newt Agency\nreport uld.\nThe reading on the domestic Rus-\nlian Radio followed by only 24 houri\nthe objection voiced by Admiral\nWilliam H. Standley, United Statei\nAmbassador to Russia, that the Russian people are Hot being told the\nfull extent of lend-lease aid to Russia.\nThe broadcait recited Stettinlui'\nstatement of lait Saturday ln which\nhe listed the planei, tanks and^\ntrucks lent to Russia and Britain\nunder lend-lease, and enumerating\nthe amounti ot many other articles\nai well.\nThui the Kremlin apparently\nacted iwiftly to mee* the Admiral*!\ncomplaint. The broadcait was made\nnot only directly to the Ruiilin\npeople, abut wai llkewlie given U\ndictation speed\u2014a usual indication\nthat lt waa' to be printed ln the\nProvincial Pren.\nStettinius In his itatement last\nSaturday iald the United States had\nlent more than 3,200 tanks and almost 3900 airplane! to Russia as of\nJan. 1, and huge tmounti of other\nsupplies Including; 81,000 trucki,\nJeepe and other military vehicles.\nHe also detailed the amounti of\niuch articles ai boots, field tele-\nphones and other equipment lor\nwar.\n' WASHINGTON, March 9 (AP)\n\u2014Undentcrtttry of State Sumner\nWellei uia todty thit Ambuudor William H. Standlty't itatement In Moicow thtt tht Ruultn\npeoplt were not completely Informed of American lend-ltaie\ntld to the Sovliti wit mide with-\nout prior contultitlon with the\nOovernment In Wuhlngton.\nWelles mide thli itatement it his\nPren conference and added that\nhe hid cabled Standley for \u2022 text\nof whitever remarki he may have\nmade to tbe Press.\nThe Undersecretary uid that the\nunderstanding which existed between the United Nationi In the\ngreat enterprise in which they were\nJoined fpr the purpose of deflating\nutterly the Axis tyrannies and securing the security and libertiei of\nthe people! of the United Nitions\nwould not be worth very much if\nit were not based on complete trust\nand understanding between ill of\nthem.\nIn hii opinion, Wellei Mid such\nunderstanding and trust exists. He\nuid he wai iure that Admiril\nStandley'! remarki could not hive\nbeen Intended to and did not cut\nmy doubt on thit truit and understanding.\nAt the Capitol, Chairman Sol\nBloom (Dem.-N.Y.) of the House\nof Representative! Foreign Affaln\nCommittee Mid in i itatement that\nRustlan newspapers \"carried in full\nthe statement of Lend-Lease Adminiitritor StKtlniui of Jm. 23\nrevealing our ild to Rusiia ind It\nreceived wide publicity in the Soviet Press.\"\nboar'd\nAPPROVED FUa\nINCREASE ON\nACCOUNT Of SHORTACE\nOTTAWA, Mirch 9 (CP.) - Finance Minister Ilsley told the\nHome ot Commoni today the price\nof fuel wood in Vancouver wu not\nrailed from W to $13 i cord on Instruction! of the Prices Boird but\nthit the Board had approved the\naction beciuse of a shortage of fuel.\nMr. Ililey wu iniwerlng i queitlon from An,jui Maclnnls (CCF.\nVmcouver Eatt). He alio uld it was\nnot lllegil to tell wood for leu than\n113 \u2022 cord.\nMme. Chiang's Trip\nPostponed\nBecause -of Health\nNEW'YORK, March 9 (AP.) \u2014\nThl trinicontlnentil trip ef Madame Chiang Ktl-ihek, icheduled\nto tttrt Thundiy, wu pottponed\ntonight for tbout t week becauie\nof her phyilctl condition.\nA member of her entourtge\nuld the deolilon wu reiched tfter t contultitlon with her phytl-\nclim earlier todty. It wu purely\nt precautionary meuure, the\nipokeimin iald, In coniideration\nof the itraln Mme. Chiang hai\nbeen under ilnce the underwent\nan operation loon tfter her arrival\nIn the United Statei Nov. 27.\nMme. Chiang will tpend the\nnext week here retting.\nJAPS HIT ALLIED\nBASE HEAVILY\nIN NEW GUINEA\nEmphasizes Warning\nJap Aerial\nStrength Crowing\nDAMAGE LIGHT\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nAUSTRALIA, Mirch 10 (Wedneiday) \u2014 (CP.) - Forty-ieven\nJapaneie planu hive raided Wau,\nNew Gulnei, tbt Allied bue iome\n35 milu Southweit of Salamaua,\nthe High Command innounced today.\nThli heivy raid on an Allied base\nwhere in February the Japanese\nsuffered one of their biggest aerial\ndtfeata of the war added emphasla\nto a warning by a ipokesman for\nGen. Douglai MacArthur. He uld\nJapanese aerial strength ln the\nSouthweit Picific li growing and\nthat recent Allied victoriei, iuch as\nthe sinking oi the 22,.*ip convoy\nIn the Bismarck Sea, ihould not be\nallowed to becloud thit fact.\nOnly yesterdiy, another communique had told of the sinking of\nan Allied merchant ship by Japanese bombers In Oro Bay South of\nBuna. New Guinea:\n\"Twenty-ilx inemy bomberi\nucotfed by 21 tighten bombed\nthe (Wtu) ilrdrome. Dimige tnd\ncaiualtiei wire light.\"\nWau ii ln the area where Allied\nadvance patrols have b^rr throwing\nthe Jap^cse back toward Salamaua.\nAn Allied heavy bomber on re-\nconniliiance In the vicinity of Gas-\nmata, Niw Britain, lite of a Japanese airdrome, was attacked by nine\nJapanese fighters, of which four\nwere shot down and another probably destroyed. The Allied plane returned home ufely.\nOn Feb. 6 a large force of Japanese planes ittempted to raid the\nWau ilrdrome. In one of the biggest\nsingle day's flghti ot the war. 41\nJapanese bombers ind fighters were\nshot down or seriously damaged.\nThe raid on Wau yesterday occurred shortly afternoon, with tha\nplanei coming in from the Northwest, \"nie bombers, in \u25a0 tight \"V\"\ntheir customary pittern of bombing.\nMUSHAWAKA. Ind. Mirch 9\n(AP)-A M-hour itrike it the bill\nbend plmt of the United Stitei\nRubber Compiny ended todiy ifter\n\u2022 conference last night of Ihe txems-\ntla\/e .Boird of Local 188, United\nRubber Worker! (C.I.O.)\nPublic Works Voles Give $194,000\nlo Kootenay-Boundary District\nVICTORIA, March 9 (CP.) - Foi-\nlowing are votei for milntemnce of\nroadi, bridgei, ferries ind whirvei\nIn various constituencies for 1943-44\nas brought down by Worki Mlniiter\nAnscomb In estimates for hli Department pused In the Leglsliturc\ntodiy:\nCnnbrook \u00bb27.000; Ftrnle 137,000;\nGrind Forki-Ortenwood 137,000;\nKamloopi    $43,000:    Kislo-Slocin.\n438.000; Nelson-Creston $46,000;\nRevelitoke $30,000; Roulind-Trill\n$20,000; v.al.- $36,000.\nTotals roadi votei were for $1,-\n083.000.\nSupervlilon 00.\nFerries $290,000; bridgei 4300.000;\nlocitlon of roads $30,00; mow re\nmovtl $90,000; michlnery $90,000;\nPriore Rupert whirl $3000: contin-\ngeuclei $99,570.  total 42.H4.370.\nMRS. CLASSFORD,\n89, DIES\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C., March 9 (CP)\n-F.lliabeth Burnt White Glissford,\n89. died In hospital here today following a long Illness. She his been\nliving here with her |On-ln-ltw and\ndaughter, Mayor ind Mn. A. J.\nBilment.\nShe was born in Thorah Township,\nOntario. Prior to coming here she\nhad lived most of her life at Beiv-\nerton. Ont. She wis i lifelong mem-\nb-. of the Presbyteriin Church ind\ni tireless worker in the Women's\nMissionary Society ot the Church\nhere until last Autumn. In the early\nWinter she suffered \u2022 broken hip\nli a fall, and ilnce then hu been\nin  hospital.\nFuneral tervlcei will be held\nThursdiy.\nSENATE CROUP APPROVES\nHUCI SHIP BILL\nWASHINGTON, Mirch 9 (AP.) -\nA $6,280,000,000 bill carrying $4.-\n000.000.000 In cuh ind $2,173,000,000\nIn contnet authority for'the Maritime Commiuion to flnince the conitruction of 2181 iddltlonil cirgo\nihipi wu ipproved today by the\nUnited Stitei Senite Appropriation! Committee.\nESTIMATE OTTAWA FIM\nDAMAGE AT $20,000\nOTTAWA. March 9 (OP.) - Fire\nwhich iwept a Bank Street apartment block today *drove 16 people\nto Ihe itreet, culled dimige eitlmated it .410.000 md resulted In\nalight injury la Iwo Hitmen.\n25 Divisions Hurl\nRuss Back to\nNorth Donets Bank\nLONDON, March 9 (CP)\u2014The Cermans, after withdraw- *,\ning Westward across Southern Russia through most of tha\nWinter, have launched a great counter-offensive in the Donets\nBasin and in a 100-mile march have recaptured eight key cities i\nSouth and Southeast of the big fortress city of Kharkov, the\nRussians reported tonight.\nThe Cerman offensive was launched late in February with'\n25 strong divisions, or approximate^ 375,000 men, including .\n13 divisions which had been replenished after previous action\nand 12 fresh ones rushed from;>\nthe West to this vital sector of\nthe long German-Russian battlefront.\nThe Russians reported their evacuation of eight key Donets citlet\nand admitted falling back to the\nNorthern bank of the Northern Don-\neta River unoer the impact of the\nNazi offensive but said they took a\nheavy toll among the enemy with\nthe German deaths alone mounting\nto 20,000 officers and men. Russian\nlosses were not mentioned.\nThe Ruulani reported . giving\nup the citlet of Kramograd, Lo-\nlovaya, Pavlograd, Kratnoirme-\nlik, KrimitoVtk, Barvenkovo, Slavyansk and Llilchantk.\nAll of th ie hid been tiken in\nthe great Soviet Winter offenilve.\nLozovaya, about 88 milu thort of\nthe Dnieper River wu the high-\nwater mirk of the Weitwird puih.\nIt ls just 100 miles from Lozovaya Eastward back'to Lisichanks,\nand, as nearly as such things can\nbe measured on such an active front\nthis represented in general terms\nthe extent of the Soviet retreat.\nThe towni lie in an area from 50\nto 150 milea from Kharkov, the\nclosest being Kramograd, 50 miles\nto the Southwest.\nThe. inference could be made\nfrom the communique that the\nGerman advance had been checked\nat this point, but it was not so\nstated and it was made clear that\nthe battle still is raging at full fury,\n\"Fierce battles ln which the German Fascist troops are suffering\ntremendous losses in men and material, especially in tanks, are continuing in the district to the South\nand West of Kharkov,\" aaid the\nMoscow communique.\n\"Further attempts of the enemy to\ndevelop his offensive and force a\ncrossing of the Northern Donots\nRiver and take Kharkov were met\nby firm resistance of our troops ani\nthe enemy did not meet any suc-\neesi.\"\nIn the period covered by this great\naction in the South, now disclosed\nin detail by the Russians ,for the\nfirst time although the Germans had\ngiven glimpses of lt, the Russians\nwere opening new fronts Northwest\nand West of Moscow.\n\"The German command had Intended by means of deep encircling\nblows to surround and destroy our\nadvanced troops .und recapture the\nDistrict of Kharkov.\"\nThe 25 divisions taking part in\nthe offensive included eight tank\nand five infantry divisions which\nwere replenished after being battered previously, and 12 fresh divisions rushed from Western Europe, including four tank, one motorized and seven infantry.\nThe latest claims by the Berlin\nradio have put German forces within 12 miles of Kharkov from the\nWest\nA Reuters\npatch from\nquoted the\nScandinavian\nNews Agency dis-\nStockholm tonight\nGerman-controlled\nTelegraph Bureau\nin a dispatch from Berlin as saying that the Russians had halted\nthe German counter-attack toward Kharkov.\n'The counter-attack was stopped on an unnamed river outside\nKharkov,\" the dispatch said. \"The\nRussian position outside the city\nhas been reinforced by heavy artillery.\"\nADVANCE   ELSEWHERE\nThe Russians announced advances\nin general over the remainder of\nthe front, particularly in the area\nof Vyazma West of Moscow, where\nthe Germans have been falling back\nunder  i  thrre-coiumned  attack.\nWest of Gihatik the Russians\n\"continued their offensive and captured several dozen populated\nplaces,\" the midnight communique\nsaid, while Eait of Vyazma \"our\nunits broken stubborn German resistance\" md captured the railway\nstation and district centre of Tem-\nkino, to the Southeast on the railway to Kaluga from Vyazma.\nANGUS SHOPS TO BE\nKEPT IUSY\nMONTREAL, March 9 (CP)-La-\nbor Minister Humphrey Mitchell today idvlsed Mircel Franco, Quebec\nLabor redentlon Secretary, that\nenough work wil] be tllocaled tn\nthe Cimdian Pacific Montreal Angus ihopi to prevent any lay-off\ni'I ueu llli'ii.\nHerritlge, Love\nTell of\nVictory Highway\nVICTORIA, March g (CP)-When\nestimates for the public worki de.\npartment were under discussion in\nthe Legislature today, Work! Mini!-'\nter Anscomb told the hbuie prospects for the completion of tht\nHope-Princeton highway link during\nthe war were remote.\n\"I want to see the road completed\nfor the part it will play in the eco\u00bb\nnomic development of British CO* \u2022\nlumbia and I support it more strong*\nly than ever for military reasonr,\nnow that the war li on,\" he ttld,'\nadding that the estimated coit ot\ncompletion   was   $2,000,000.\n\"I am not going to say tht loan\nbill of $10,000,000 will cover tha*\nroad but hope part of it will be applied to its conitruction,\nI see no possibility that we will\ndo much for the road while the waf\nis on. The Federal Government is '\nusing Japanese labor and may continue to do to although lt la moit\nunsatisfactory. The Japanett tit-\nbusy most of the time cutting wood\nto keep their familiei war.\"\nH. W. Herridge (CCF Ronlind-\nTrail) told of a route called th\u00bb\nVictory Highwiy from Cucide tt\nRouland running five milea detp\nIn United Statet territory. It wtt\n175 feet lower thtn the highlit '\npoint on tht preient Roultnd\nhighway, hi uld, tUd cut fivt\nmilei off the preient Rouland-\nGrand ?orki route. There wtt\nleu than a quarter mile Of rock\nto be cut and lett than a milt of\nclay.\nAmericans, he said, needed a thort '\ncut to enter Canada Weit of Grind\nForks through Laurier. Mr. Het-\nridge believed a reciprocal arrangement could be made whereby Canada would grant concessions in the\nlatter instance for privileges In the\nformer.\nThomas A. Love (Cons Coalition\nGrand Forks-Greenwood) told of\na new route from Cascade to Rouland which would eliminate the two\"\nsummits on the present road. Part\nof it went through United Statei\nterritory, was of easy grade with\nno rock and could be put through.\nwith bulldozers. He believed an arrangement could be made with American authorities.\nRED CROSS DRIVE\nREACHES TOTAL\nOF $2,005,696\nTORONTO, March 9 (CP)-TBt\nCanadian Red Cross Society announced today that subscriber! in\nIts national appeal for $10,000,000 htd\nreached a total of $2,005,696 lait,\nnight\nOn'ario, whoso quota of $5,000,000\nis the largest of any of the provinces, reported collections of $691,866\non the basis of reports from only 29\nof its 460 branches.\nThe Society's Nova Scotia Headquarters in Halifax reported that\n$10.1.558 had been collected of the.\nprovincial total ot $350,000. This figure does not Uiclude results of the\ncanvas in industrial plants or con-\ntribu'.ions from the armed forces.  .\n0:her   provincial   totals   so   far:\nQuebec,    $852,892;    Manitoba,    $80-\n760; British Columbia, $239,168; a***.\nkatchewan. $85,000; Alberta. $80,000;-\nPrnce Edward Island, $50,000; New \u25a0\nBrunswick, $41,932.\nSAYS ACCIDENT DEATHS '\nCRIPPLE WAR EFFORT\nCAMBRIDGE Mats., March t\n(AP)\u2014Declaring that \"home caiu-\nalties far exceed our battle loses.\"\nProf. Edward R. Schwsrz of th*\nMassachusetts Institute of Technology, said today accidental deatht.\nand Injuries were crippling tht\nUnited States war effort. The loit\nof manpower from non-fiftal injuries\nilone in 1942 wu equivalent to ihut?\nting down the country's unplnuo\nand shipbuilding plants for 54 daV(.\nhe said, and added: \"lhe home-fftaaV\ncasualty list for what amounti tat\nour first year of war totalled tilt*\n000 dead aud 9.300,000 injured \" \u00abV\n'\u2022; ''*'\nV (1\nv.\n -NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10,1943\n\t\n_.__\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\"\"\nlamillon Is New President ol the\n)spilal; Days Per Patient and\n(ost in Nelson Below B.C. Average\n\u00bb C. H. Hamilton la Preiident ot\n'Kootenay Lake Oeneral Hospital\n! Society tot IMS, the Soclety'i fif-\njtleth year of operation, lucceedlng\niH.M. Whimiter, President for the\n{put ilx yeari. D. D. Townsend ii\n\u2022Vice President ia P'ace \u00b0* Mr- Ham-a\n{Uton Uii Harry Burni it Honorary\n.Treaiurer, having been reelected^\n(TSiey were placed In office Tuesday\nnight by the Board of Director!\n'following the annual general meet-\nt,lng of the Society at the City Hall.\nf Director! elected by the general\n) meeting, to lerve for two yean,\n\u2022*]w*re R-, D. Barnei, Aid. Oeorge\nI Turner, C. B. Garland, K. E. L.\n, I Dewdney, R. L., McBride and J. R.\n(McLennan. All were reelected ex-\n{ca*pt Mr. Garland. Dlrecton elected last year and continuing In of-\nitfice until 1944 are Mr. Whimster,\n\u2022ltt. Hamilton, Mr. Burns, Mr. Town-\n\u25a0jtend, C. F. McHardy and Westman\n'Motion. The Directorate ls com-\ntpleted by Mayor N. C. Stibbs, City\nRepresentative; John Cartmel, Government Representative; and Mils\n'dladya Ewing, Women'i Auxiliary\n\"\"Representative.\nCharles F. Hunter  was  elected\n- Auditor.\n>, H1ALTHY CONDITION ,\n... W. M. Miller, Provincial' Hospitals Accountant, who was in attendance, told the general meeting\n,' that the Nelson Hospital'\/ financial\nstatement \"reflects a healthy condition ai far as the hospital Is concerned.\" He luggested that If it\nI was found possible to install a physiotherapy department the financial\ncondition could probably be improved. Min Honor Tregear, Superintendent, stated such a department\nt would give electrical treatment,\n? massage and other treatments In\n[addition to medical. It would help\npatienti and reduce their day's stay\nIn hospital.\nAverage .days itay of patients ln\nKooenay Lake General Hoapital\n\u25a0was nine, whereas the average or\n,fce Province wii 12.7; and the\naverage cott per patient here, avas\n\u20221*1.38 compered with the average\nof $51 for the Province, the meet\nIng wu Informed.\n\u2022Recalling associations with the\nhoipltal over 38 yean of iti SO\nyean, Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\n-Qriham expreued \"appreciation of\nthe lervlce the Hoipital has .given\nit Uh* community\" ln the past 50\n:7<ears, and voiced the hope and\npriyer that It would continue \"to\n\u00abow ud prosper ... and continue\n,m an expensive way,\" md to hold\nits place ln the pride of citizens.\nLOSS IN YEAR (234\nA  loat  in  the year'i operations\nof 32J4.98 wu ihown in the annual\nitatement Total revenue waa Jill\n407.86 and total expenditures were\n\u266611I.242.S7.\nThi revenue breakdown thows\ntl2.nt.tl received from Inpatients\nand $4800 frem outpatients. Government franti amounted to $18,-\n137.20, and municipal granta \u2014 of\nwhich $10,570 wu from the City of\nNelaon-toUfled $10,884.80.\nOther revenue, which Included i\nProvincial Govtrnment grant for\nthe laboratory and a ipeclal grant\nat tax fundi from tlie Government\n\u25a0for new buildings and equipment,\nbrought the grind iggregite of revenue to $111,007 89.\nSalariei and wages comprised the\nblggeit expenditure item, the net\nftr thia item being $5\u00a3.2d0.31. .Suppliei required 134,276*2. Deprecit-\n(tton of $3,705.00  was  allowed  on\nMn. Manning, Mrs,\nJ. Harding Win\nC.C.F. Whist Drive-\nWlnneri at the C.CJ*. Partner\nWhiit at the Bagle Hall Monday\nnight were Mri. Manning and Mn.\nJ. Harding. Consolation! want to\nJ. England and Mn. Casemord.\nbuilding; and groundi, and $5,823.54\non  equipment    .*\nIn the balance iheet accounti receivable were given as $44,906.08,\nlen the current yeari reserve of\n$24,000 for doubtful accounts, making tite net $20,906.06. Cash was\nshown as $9,122,06. Liabilities Included $6,435.83 In accounti payable and $7000 ln notes payable,\nMr. Whimiter reported hospitalization receipts wer,e $24,337.27 and\nexpenditurei were $22,974.88, leaving a balance of $1362.42.\nMEETINGS CHANGED\nDirectors' meetings were changed\nfrom the second to the third Tueiday of each month.\nWarm tribute waa paid to Mr,\nWhlmster for hla work ln the ,pait\nsix years. Mn. R. Todd, replying\nto appreciation voiced for the work\nof the Hospital Auxiliary ln the\npast year, stated \"we are anxious\nto help all we can and hope to do\nas well thla year.\"\nThe Women'i Auxiliary financial\nstatement ihowed $893.05 raised in\nthe year, of which .$510 wat the balance from the previoui year. Tlie\nannual tag day produced $315.11,\nThe Auxiliary apent $632.68 on\nfurnishings for the Hospital and,\nafter meeting expenses, had a balance of $280.27.\nMr. Whimster and Mr. McHardy\nJoined in paying tribute to the Medical Staff ot the Hospital. Assistance during the year of the Rotary,\nGyro, Kinsmen, and Soroptimist\nClubs and the I.O.DX, and of\nLorpe A. CatrqAell of Roisland, vrat\nacknowledged. Dr. F. M. Auld\nstated the Medical Staff aimed at\nIncreasingly better service year by\nyear.\n\"I feel that many have not appreciated the work done by Mr.\nMcHardy and Mr. Whlmster\" during the six yeari eaoh served as\nPresident, taid Mr. Hamilton. Both\ndevoted exceptional energy and\nability and time to the Hospital.\n'.\nOne-Man Committee Finds Sheriff\nHarper Has Precedence Over\nInspector Macdonald ai Functions\n'ai\nPanther Midgels\nBeat All-Stars\nSeabys 7-1 and\nWin the \"Cup\"\nRitchies, Commercial Hockey\nLeague tallenden, who have, been\nburning up the \"Cup\" playdowni,\nTuesday night capped (heir elimination, of the Heuitoni in straight\ngames, by doing the iame thing to\nthe League-winning Seabyi, com<\npletlng the playdown In four\ngames to take the thus-far imaginary \"Cup\".\nThere wu imall doubt of which\nteem wai luperlbr on the nlght'i\nplay, ai the score was 7-1. At the\nstart Buddy Hammond more or\nless assumed charge ot the scoring,\nand jvhen the game wai over he\nhad tallied four times.   '\nAfter the game the queitlon arose\nof the Ritchlei playing the All-\nStars from their combined opponents Thuinday night, but the \u00bbu-\nelusion wai against lt.\nSummary:\nFlnt period: 1, Ritchlei, Hammond; 2, Ritchies, Whitehead.\nSecond period: S, Ritchie!, Hammond; 4, Seabys, Morrison (DeGirolamo, Benwell); 5, Ritchles,\nFrench; 8, Ritchles, Hammond\n(Bowles, Wait).\nThird period: 7, Ritchlei, Hammond; 8, Ritchlei, Stilwell (Whitehead).\nPenaltlei: Ritchles, Walt, Hammond.      ,\nTeams:\nRitchles: J. Ritchie, W. Walt, R.\nFrench, B. Hammond, J. Bowles, W.\nStilwell, W. Anderson, J. Leejnlng,\nJ. Whitehead.\nSeabys: J. Seaby, G. Benwell, S.\nHill, J. Morrison, S. Lelnweber, R.\nNash, S. Verigin, X. DeGirolamo, D.\nBall.\nRefereei: W. Brown, Red Waulck;\nScorekeeper: J. Wyllie; Timekeeper, G. DeGirolamo.     *\nVICTORIA, March 9 (CP.) - Tha\nBritiah Columbia Legislature became Involved today In the question\nof whether a sheriff takei rank and\nprecedence over a police official.\nThe unadopted report of a special\ncommittee of one found the sheriff\ntakei precedence. Debate on the report waa adjourned and lt ll unlike*\nly it will be returned. . .\nH. W. Herridge (CCF Rouland-\nTrall) brought up the queitlon during discussion of the Attorney-Gen-\neal'i estimate}, laying there was a\ndifference of opinion.between Sheriff M. E. Harper of South' Kootenay\nand Inspector John Macdonald, In\ncharge of Division B of the British\nColumlba Police at Nelson, as to\nwho takes precedence at public\nfunctions. Mr. Herridge asked Attorney-General Maitland for a ruling. l\nWhen the Attorney-General gave\nkOUC-H-\nMYBACK\/,\ni\nStiff, achey back may\nlte cauied by tlugguh\nkidneys.   Oin   Pille\nhelp the kidneys to\ndo a full time jobi\nMoney back if not\n\u2022satisfied.\n(\u2022laalaaar tin, ,40 rill.\nlafttUa,     to rill.\nPanther Midgets, winners of the\nMldgeit Hockey Cup, had no difficulty In distancing the Midget All-\nStars, composed of M.R.K. and\nTAC. players, Monday evening,\nwinning 9-2.\nSummary:\n\u2022 First perio<_--l, Panthen, Appel\n2, Panthen, Preetley.\nSecond period\u20148, Pinthen, Prestley; 7, Panthers, Preitley; 8, All-\nStars, Crayford.\nThird period\u20146, All-Stan, Waldie; 7, Panthers, Appel; 8, Panthers.\nPrerfley; 9, Panthers, Boyer (Appel); 10, Panthen, Preitley; 11,\nPanthers, Appel.\nPenalties: Panthers, Preitley; All-\nStirs, Wildle 4, Buchanan 2.\nTeams:\nPanthers\u2014R. Lindblad, J. Prestley, L. aChoquette, F. Boyer, J.\nPerrier, R. MaoDonald, J. Chambers,\nL Appel, J. Corbett.\nAll-Stars\u2014B. Shields, D. Loqg-\nden, F. Maglio, J. Bone, J. Waldie,\nD, Ross, D. Buchanan, R. Lawrence,\nR. Crayford.\nReierecs, A. Townsend, J. Gallicano; Scorekeeper, L. Chaluck,\nTimekeeper, Bob Wassick.\n(WITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nScores Tuesday night iri the Plugs\nand Colts Competition of the Nelson\n\u2022darling Club were:'\nDr. N. R. Jennejohn 11, J. A. C.\nLaughton 8.\nT. A. Wallace 11, F. D. Cummini 7.\nWilliam DeFoe 12, W. G. Harold 12.\nJ. E. Youog 11, B. Townshend 8.\nE. A. Murphy 10, Al Jeffi 8.\nLen Peerleet 9, Archie Neill 5.\nA. H. Noakes 12, Mayor N. C.\nStibbs 6.\nM. Mlchelson defaulted to A. R.\nMoore. \/\nno ruling, Premier Hart ippolnted\nThomas Uphill (Lab.', ramie) a\nspecial committee ot one to investigate. Reporting later, tha Labor\nmember quoted White in \"The Making of tile Engllih Conititution\"\nthat the sheriff hai precedence and\nthat in Scotland the sheriff hai precedence within hil own Jurisdiction\nsecond only to tha Ring ind that in\nCanada precedence of the sheriff\nwai recognized ln assize courts and\nat criminal executions.\n\"Long before night watchmen\nwere elected to the dignity of police\nofficer!,.the sheriff wai a recognized dignitary of the crown,\" Mr. Uphill iald. He thep recommended that\nSheriff Harper be acknowledged as\nhaving rank and precedence above\nInspector Macdonald. Mr. Herridge\nseconded the report. Attorney-Sen'\neral adjourned debate and lt ls not\nexpected the subject will be taken\nup again.\nBoard Housing Survey Shows Nelson\nHas Accommodation to\nRelieve Extreme Condition at (oast\nSurvey of vacant homing accommodation In Nelton undertaken by the Board of Trade, in re-\ntponti .to a luggeitlon from a\nVanoouver newipaper that homing might be found here to relieve extreme conditloni at the1\nCoait, hat proven an Indonatlon\nof the prediction by real eitate\ndealen that comparatively little\naccommodation  would  be found.\n, \u2022\nReporta by agent!, and by individual! having houses or apartments\nnot listen with agents, revealed a\ntotal of 28 houses and apartments\nwithin the City and ilx on the outskirts for rent. Seven Houses were\nreported as for sale, and two ranch\nproperties in, the dittrict were listed ai for rent or sale.\nSubdivision of the reports showed\nthree furnished and 11 Unfurnished\nhouses, four furnished and 10 un-\nfurinshed' houses, four furnished\nand 10 unfurnished apartmenti\nwithin the City. There were one\nfurnished and five unfurnished\nhouses on the outskirts of the City.\nFive of the seven houses for sale\nwere within the city.\nRentals ranged from $10 to $50, a\nlarge percentage being in the $10,\n$12 and $15 class. The $50 house\nwas a nine-room residence. There\nwere two furnished houiei at $40\na month.\nDealers reported a keen demand\nlocally for good houses.in the medium rental class. One dealer had\nno vacant houses to list for rental.\n\"Wren\" Officer\nSays Girls Here\nAre \"Fine Group\"\nPlight of Farmer\nPictured in House\nVICTORIA, March 9 (CP)\u2014The\nspectacle of the Brltith Columbia\nfirmer, betet on all sides with wartime problems and pressed for\n[.\u2022eater production under conditions\nthit grow dally more trying, ind\nof the public facing an imminent\nand serious food shortage wn described by speikert In the Legislature today.\nRequests that something more be\ndone for thete primary produceri,\nand demandi that Hon. K. C. MacDonald. Minister of Agriculture,\ntake the entire houte Into Is confidence concerning his program lo\nsupply food during the coming Winter were heard.\nSOMEWHERE IN EUROPE CCP)\n-Reports from Italy tay Benito\nMussolini Is suffering from eye-trouble, for which he hat been under\ntreatment tor a year. It ls iald his\nabsence from i recent German-Ittl\nian war-planning conference wat\ndue to thii ailment.\nGuide for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, .HOTELS\nSlocan (Ity to\nPlay Saturday\nSlocan City Intermediate hockey\nteam will come to Nelson Saturday\nevening, to tangle with a team selected from the Commercial Hockey\nLeague which wound up itstpregular\nplay with the cup final Tueiday\nnight.\nWalter Wait, who has been negotiating at the Nelton end, hat received confirmation of (he arrangements, and the game has been included in the week's hockey schedule for the Civic Arena. It will\nstart at 8:80 jun.\nSayi Gov't Leading\nCanada Toward\nRepudiation of Debt\nOTTAWA, March g (CP)\u2014John\nBlackmore, leader of the New Democracy group, said today in the\nHouse of Commoni that the Government was \"leading Canada in an accelerating headlong rush toward repudiation of debt, Fascism and scar\ncity, if not actual famine.\"\nHe moved an amendment to'the\nbuget motion expressing regret that\nthe Government \"still disregards\nthe possible utes of Government-\ncrcata_d national money\" to relieve\nthe debt situatipp, compensate farmers, provide purchasing power and\nhelp awld Inflation.\nI       \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufIerin Hotel\ntsymour 8L Vancouvtr, B. C.\nNewly renovated throughout  Phonet  ind  alivttor.\nA.   PATTERSON,   Itir   of\nColemm. Alti., Proprietor.\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\n. LEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m Ixttpt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM.   \"   MclVOn  Prop\n1 Troil-Phone 135\nNelson\u2014Phonf 35\n*\nFormer Nelson\nGirl Is\nToronto Pianist\nToronto paperi ire prilling i piano recital given by Mill Daphne\nSandercock, formerly of Nelson.\nShe Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. C. Sandercock, who resided here\nfor aome yeiri.\n\u2022\"Recruiting in Nelson for the\nWomen's Royal Canadian Naval\nService hu been definitely success-,\nful,\" Tuesday laid Third Officer\nGrace A. Brodie who with Surgeon\nLieutenant Grant A. Gould, and\nSick Bay Attendant Fulton, are in\nNelson recruiting for the \"Wrens,\"\n\"The girls ln Nelson have shown\nthe keenest interest,\" the laid, \"and\nthere hat been a thoroughly fine\ngroup of girls coming in to see ui.\nThey have had a lot of things to\nask about, and that's the kind of\ngirls we want.\n\"We hsrve received a very fine\nreception in Nelson; the townspeople have been extraordinarily, kind\nand helpful in every shape apd\nform.\"\nThird Officer Brddie aaid that\nthe present recruiting is a \"clean-up'\nof old applications, but from now\non, new applications will be dealt\nwith more rapidly than previously.\"\nThe \"Wren\" recruiting party is\nat the Hume Hotel where applicants,\nand any Interested are interviewed\nby .appointment. They will be here\nuntil Thursday.\nRegistration Date\nfor Single\nMen Is Extended\n'OTTAWA, March 9 (CP)-^Labor\nMinister Mitchell announced tonight\n-| that, by Order-ln-Council, the date\nfor registration of single men under\nthe military call-up has been extended to March 19. The final date\nfor registration previously had been\nfixed for March 1.\nJail for 14 Days\nPleading guilty to vagrancy\ncharge^ Joseph Charlei' Huchala\nand Joseph Lycka, transients, were\nsentenced Tuesdiy by Stipendiary\nMagistrate William Irvine to serve\n14 dayi Ifi JalL w jM\nMrs. Whitehead's\nRlnk Wins\nCollinson Cap\nMn. w. H. Whitehcid's rink won\nthe Collinion Cup competition in\nthe Nelion Ladles Curling Club\nMonday, On Thuriday Mn. T. E,\nHomersham will play against Mrs.\nT. A. Wallace In the playoffi for\nsecond place.\nMondays retulti are; Mrt. Horn\nertham lott to Mrs. whitehead; Mrs.\nH. M. Whimiter lost t\u00bb Mrs. W,\nSimpson.\nTueiday Mri. C. Norris lost to\nMn. S. N. May and Mri. T. S- Jem-\nton lost to Mrs. Homersham.\nThursday Mrs. Wallace wll) pla*y\nMn. Homersham, apd Mri. Jemson\nwill play Mrs. May.    \u201e .\nFriday Mrs. Whlmster playi Mn.\nNorris, and Mn. Whitehead playi\nMn. Wallace.\nA new \"knockouT competition\nwill be played by teven rinki Thursday. The rinks, with. skip, third,\nsecond and lead mentioned consecutively are:\nMrt. H. M. Whlmster, Mrt. A.\nHamson, Miss E. Workman, -Mn.\nD. Valentine,\nMrt, W. H. Whitehead, Mri. A.\nSmith, Mrs. 3. R. Bailey, Mrs. M.\nCathcart.\nMrs. S. N. May, M\u00ab. N. C Stibbs,\nMrs T, C. Robinson, Mrs. M. Kubin.\nMrs. T, S. Jemson, .Mrs. B. B.\nStallwood, Mrs. H. Hughes, Miss\nMerle Bradley.\nMrs. T. A. Wallace, Mri. J. Hooker, Mri. J. M DeGirolamo, Mrs\nH. S. Forbei.\nMri, W. Simpson, Mrt. J. H.\nArgyle, Mrt. E. M. Mannings, Mn\nA. Olsen.\nMrs. Charles Norris, Mrt. A. Lane,\nMn. W. Jonei, Mlu Ruth Stevenson.\nThe spares will be Mrs. Homer-\nshgm, Mrt. A. Leigh, Mrs. Mary\nWilson, Mrs. P. G. Plante and Mri.\nC. F. Grant.\nJust Received\n.\nPIQUES\nl*4\u00bbw Shipment of:\n\u2022 STRIPED SEERSUCKERS     t )ERSEYS\n\u2022 SLUBS      \u2022 TRANSPARENT BLACK VELVETS\n.' '   ' \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u00ab \u25a0'  '     ti- . >.   ;\u2022    \u25a0 i \u25a0\u2022   ,\nIn all tha lateit, new gay colors and patterns for Spring.'\n\\ \u25a0      \u25a0:     < ,- .\nPriced from: \u25a0 . -\n85c'to $3.95\nTHE PRINT SHOP\nJaps Take Four\nTowns in Hupeh\nCHUNGKING, March 9 (AP) -\nThe Japanese operating from five\npoints West of Shast on the North\nBank of the Yangtse River in Hupeh Province, have thrown three\ncolumns across the River and captured four towns on the South side,\nthe Chinese High Command announced today.\nHeavy fighting was taid to be\ncontinuing although one of the columns was beaten back with severe\nlosses soon after the initiaUattack\nlast night.\nKaslo Hospital   .\nW. A. Plans Dance\nKASLO, B.C. - At the monthly\nmeeting ot the Kaslo Hospital W.A.\nMrt. F. Chindler wat in the chair.\nThe Secretary, Mn. J. R. Tlnken\nreid the mlnutei and lhe Treaiurer't\nreport wat given by Mlsa E. Giegerich In the abience of Mn. J. Papworth. Mn. F. Hebna reportad for\nthe buying committee. The hoipltal\nboard report wat given by the rPet-\nIdcnt.\nArrangementi for the Hoipital\n.Easter dmce were made, I'nmmll-\nteet were named to take charge ot\nall departmenti.\nHockey Schedule\nIce schedule of the Nelson Amateur Hockey Association for the\nbalance of the week Is as follows:\nWednesday;\n6-7 p.m.\u2014Midget pick-up game.\nThunday:\n4:30-4:30 pjn\u2014Bantam Pool.\n9-10:30 p.m.\u2014Commercial game or\nlubitltuti.\nFridiy:\n8-6 p.m.\u2014High School girls.\n6-7 pjn.\u2014M.R.K. vi Dodger Bantams, exhibition.\nSaturdiy:\n9-10:30 a.m\u2014Bantam Pool.\n10:80-12 noon-F.A.C. vs Salmo\nBantams,\n7-6:30 p.m\u2014Pantheri vt M.R.K.\nJuveniles.\n8:30-10 p.m.\u2014Commercials vt Slocin City Intermediate!.\nF.A.C Bantami\nBeat M.R.K.\nF.A.C. Bantami took in 8-1 exhibition hotkey gpme from the M.R.K.\nBantams Tuesday evening.\nSummary:\nFirst period - 1, FA.C.,' Brett\n(Holmes); 2, FAC, S. Dufly; 3,\nFAX;., S. Duffy (Brett).\n\u2022Second period\u20144, FA.C, Brett\n(E. Duffy): 5, F.A.C, S. Duffy\n(Brett)-6, F.A.C, E. Duffy (S. Duffy; 7, F.A.C, Brett (S. Duffy); 8.\nM.RK., Jones.\nThird period-*), F.A.C, Brett (S.\nDuffy, E. Duffy).\nPenalties\u2014FA.C, I. Duffy, Colman 1; M.R.K., Pitts.\nTeams:\nFAC\u2014A. Silverwood, J. Holmes,\nD. Colman, G^ Hrrtt, S. Duffy. E\nDuffy, A. Hood, Bob Brooks. Jim\nTodd, Jack Todd, A. Clark* G. Af-\nleck, J. Sturgeon, B. Johnston, T.\nShrieves, W. Carleson,.J. Woodall,\nRoy Brooks, J. Hughes, A. McDonald. , '\nMJt.K.-r-R. Pickering, R. Jones,\nH. Pitts, R. Maclntyre, D. Speirs.\nG. Pickering, E. Anderion, J. Valentine, i. Meagher, R. Pitts, M. Renwick, F. Smith.\nReferees, W. Freno and Slim Porter; Scorekeeper, J. Creech; Timekeeper, J. Staples.\n\"Cheering to Know You Are Thinking\nof Us So Often\" Writes Officer\nof Gifts Sent Overseas by I.O.D.E.\n'Tarn writing to thank you on\nbehalf of \"C\" Coy. Auxiliary Terrl-\ntttrlal Service, for the magnificent\nassortment of bundles we have received from you and other friendi\nin \u2022Canada*' wrltei Noah A Piatt,\n'Junior Oommaivder, \"C \u2022Coy. A.T.S.\nin Englind, in a letter to Mrs. F. T.\nGriffiths, for perional property\nbagi tent by Kokanee Chapter,\nI.O.D.E.\nMn. Griffiths read the letter to\nthe memberi of the Chapter it\ntheir meeting Tueiday.\n\"We have been very buiy sorting\nSays Depreciation\nConcessions\nGiven Big Companies\nOTTAWA, Mirch 9 (CP)-Prolest\nover the government'i deprecntlon\nconcessions to large industrial companies, Including nickel and aluminum corporations, wat mtde In the\nHouse of Commoni tonight by M. J\nColdwell. C.C.F. leader.\nHe said the Aluminum Company\nof Canada was associated in 1931\nwith an international association\nwhose agreement permitted Germany to accumulate, a great reserve\nof aluminum while Canadi ind the\nUnited Statea had to utilize poti\nand pans to make up the ihortage,\nHe contended that thete companies were being directly aided by\ngeneroui. government illowancet ln\nthe form of depreciation for tax\npurposes on plant extension! and\noperationi arising directly from wir\nproduction requirements.\nthem,\" he laid, \"and making imaller parcels so that each Auxiliary ln\nthe Company hi I Chrlstmbai parcel, and owing to the number we\nhave received, there is dat very\nhandsome preient or. everybody. I\nknow the Auxiliaries wis be delighted with then, especially tince\nso many of the gifts are rationed\nover here-, and lo not obtainable\nln any quantity. . <\n\"It li so cheering to know you\nare thinking ot us io often, the\nAuxiliaries are 10 Impressed by\nyour though tfulness aad kindness in\nsending over theie lovely gifts.     ,-\nWar Hits Hospital; Staff Changes,\nScarcity of Drups, Rationing\nBring Burdens Reports Miss Tregear\nDr. R. J. Hawkey,\nEarly Nelsonite,\nDies, Hamilton\nDr. Richard John Hawkey, vfho\nprwtlsed medicine at Nelson for\nsome 12 years or so, leaving here\nfor Hamilton, Ont., about 1\u00bb14, died\nTuesday ln Hamilton General Hoipltal.   Burial will be at Hamilton\nThroughout hit period of practice here, Dr. Hawkey operated\nwithout a partner. He resided on\nSilica Street ta the 300 Block.\nMrs. Hatvkey, a former Mrs.\nBrotvn, was very aotlv\u00ab ln Nelson\nmuiical circlet, and the had two\nsons and a diughter from her lormer mart-iage. One of the tont\nmarried a Miss Flewelltng\u2014lister\nof Mrs. S. J. Towgood, of Sandon\u2014\nand later became in charge o the\nHamilton branch of the Canadian\nWestlnghouse  Company.\nDr. Hawkey continued In medical\npractice for a number of yean after\nmoving to Hamilton. Then he retired, and he and Mrt. Hawkey\nmoved to Burlington Bench. Mrt.\nHawkey died a few yeara ago.\nAlcan or Alaska\nHighway!\nWASHINGTON, March 9 (AP)-.\nA row by my other name would\nsmell as iweet, Shakespeare contended.\nBut \"Alcan\" as the name for the\nnew highway to Alaska doesn't\nseem iweet to the Alaskans.\nThe Territorial chamber of Commerce has written Delegate Antony\nDlmond of Alaska that the name\nlackt dignity\u2014and it thort and has\nno redeeming feature.\nCommented Dlmond: \"It sounds\ntoo much like 'Athcan'. I think it\nought to be chmged.\"\n     I\nfcDMONTON, Mirch 9 (CP)-It\nwill probably be called thl Alas.'d\nHighway regardleu of whit Government, authoritiei decide for tho\nofficii! name of the military tupply\nroad running from Dawson Creek,\nB.C., to Fairbanks, AJaska.\nIn lift wlht the cuitom In Western Canida ol calling a road by\nthe naini of thi plice <o whlcn\nIt It going, \"Al.iki\" . the road\nwed by the man on the itreet\nIn Northtrn Albert, md Britiah\nColumbia aa well w olvlllint\nworking on the highwiy.\nTheie civilians workers.. In let-\nten to friendi and relatives invariably say they are employed on\nthe \"Alaika\" road. In beer parlor\nand street conversations it It usu\nally \"Alaska\".       >\nLONDON (CPl-'Thf European\niNatl) Forces have today overcome\none of tho latt Baitloht of Ruuian\nDefence\" tcream.i I copy of Ihe Walloon Quisling newspaper \"I.a Logli\"\nprepired in aullclpatlon of the (ill\nof Slallng.-ud.\nEight End, Perfect Curling Score,\nIs Chalked Up by Ronmark\nThat theoretically poulble icore\nwhich happen! once In a long while,\nan eight end, was chalked on the\nscoreboard at the Nation Curling\nClub rlnk Monday night. Aft Ron-\nmark was the skip responsible. He\nscored It, while skipping E. C.\nHunt's rlnk against John Teague,\nwho was skipping the Fred Ewing\nrlnk. The game wat In the Plngi\nand Colls competition, ln which\nplayeri rotate position! after playing two ends.\nI\nRonmark made a double nisi on\none of Teegue'i rocki, ind knocked\nTeague't rock out of the houte, miking the count eight.\nThe icore meint thit the Ron-\nmark four had all rocki In the houte\nand that Tengue't Quartet had none\nThe last perfect tcore ln Nelton\nwai scored ln 1933 by H M. Whlmster against R. D. Wallace. Thty\nwere playing the , City Schedule\ncompetition,\nBacks Claim 30 Ships\nSunk in Gulf Area\nQUEBHC, March 9 (CP)-Hormis-\ndas Langltls (Un Mtgdilen Islands)\nrepeated in the Legltlttlve Assembly today a itatement of Oneslme\nGagnon (Un Matane) thtt upwards\nof 30 ihipi were lunk In the St\nLawrence lait Summer. '\nMr. UngUis iald \"we lott more\nthin JO commercial venelt in tor-\npatdolnp In the ettuary of the rlv-\ne\u2022 despite the boutlngt \u2022 U Goebbeli ol the Hononble Mlnltten for\nair and ol the navy who uld 'nut\na ilngle enemy lubmarlne can remain more than 24 houri ln th*\neituary of Ihe St. Uwrenct River\nwithout being damiged or\nHospital administration \" ll becoming, today, Intensely more d tfl-\ncult\" ai the wir continues, itated\nMlu Honor Tregear, Superintendent, In her report Tuesday nlgkt\nto the annual meeting of the Kootenay Uke Hospital Society.\n\"Nuning an|l other personnel are\nrequired for war tervlcei .tad Industry ind to replace iuch penonnel is Indeed a problem. More than\never do we requin highly trained\npersons In ill departments because\nof the ever Increasing demands\nmade upon ui. However we here\nta Nelaon ire moat fortunate and I\nfeel thit our preient itaff il worthy\nof great praise,\" the laid.\nMise Tregear urged an eight-hour\nInstead of * nine-hour day to reduce fatigue apd probably Illness\nIn iome Instances.\nStaff, turnover was 39 per cent\nIn 1942 compared with 70 per cent\nthe previous year. Five nurses\nleft to be married, one wis called\nto the Army, apd the remainder of\nthe 35 per cent left to work elsewhere. Married nurses residing In\nthe CltyTielptafl to ease the burden\nin busy period!.\nMATERNITY INCREASI\n\"Maternity has shown a moderate Increase over IMl,\" bringing\na greiter need for additional sotce\nand cotl for newborn babes.\" Mia\nTregear continued. Soundproofing\nthe case room wai an ar\/precltted\nimprovement.\nOperating room activity, ll reported by Mist Helen Tomkins,\nSupervisor, \"seems to be on I pir\nwiyh other yean,\" the Superintendent continued. The Isolation Dr-\npartment had been very busy\nsince reconstruction\" of the buld\nIng, which provided \"a great improvement on the former building.\"\nTottl cost of food consumed ln\n1943, reported by Miss Olgi Lesiuk\nDietician, wu $15,87290 compired\nwith J15.878.22 in 1941. Per capitt\ncost per meil rose to .127 compered\nwith 123 the prev out yeir. \"Thli\nslight Increase was due to the rise\nIn price of certain foods such it\nmeat, flih, eggs and cheeie.\"\nRATIONING BRINGS NEW\nDUTIES\nWv conditions neceultated lub-\nititutei for some foods. Ritlonlng\nreduced consumption of tea, coffee,\niugir and butter.. Dutiei of the\nDietician had br\u00bbn increttfd by the\nresponsibility of look'ng after rationed commodities and col'ectli g\ncoupons Help was another, problem, there being frequent changes\nin the mild itaff.\nThe new X-ray, Miss Tregeir reported, had greitly Improved the\nquality of work, assisting the doctor! in diagnosis and c\u00abYe of pi-\ntlents.\nThe Uboritory report by Mlts\nBetty Johnson md Miss Miude McKenzie ihowed an Increue of 184]\nIn the number of testi. The technicians expressed hope a new centrifuge could be ob't'ned. In 1943 Dr.\nR. B. Brummitt served u Laboratory Director.\nShe urged tint the Boird keep In\nmind the establishment of t physiotherapy depirtment.\nThe super,ntendent itated \"during the put yetr purchaiing has\ndeveloped into tn extremefy .difficult problem. Price It no longer\ntht Ant consideration, but the\nability to obtain certlin very etsen-\n'Uldrugt and articles.\" Sulphathiazole wat tcirce Linens were limited md of Inferior quality compired\nlo pre-wir goodi.\n2W5 PATIENTS IN VEAR\nThe statistical itatement ihowed\n* total ot 2809 patienti were admitted during the yeu compared with\n2400 ln 1941.\nOutpatients u distinct from patlenta numbered 9688 compared\nwith 4088. aqd patienti In and out\nof hospital within 24 houn numbered 319 compared with 306. Of\nthe outpatients 889 received general treatment, 361 had X-ray examinations, and 4403 attended In connection with the pathological laboratory.\nTlie laboratory report showed a\ntotal of 11,162 examination!, dl\nwhich 4408 wera ln connection with\npublic health and 67M were clinical.\nOperations in the yeu totalled\nBirths numbered 961 There were\nilx multiple blrthi. There wer* 80\ndeathi t -\nA total of 124,901 meali wert\nserved and the cott of food purchased wu 113,688.11. The humber\nof meali wai down illghtly compared with 1941, and coit of food purchased wu up (77.44.\nThe \"per diem coit per patient per\nday\" was $462. Thla compared with\n$4.35 ln 1941; $3.48 In 1940; and $3,70\nin 193S, an increase ln five yean ot\n91 cent!.\nHive You Read the ClaiilfledT\nWKW\u00bbMU) stuffs up the note,\ncautea mouth breathing, throat\ntickle and night ooughing, uie\ntbl! time-twted Vicks treatment\nthat goea to work Inttintlj. ,\\\na amt* at oaacti\nAt bedtime rub good old Vlcki\nVapoRub on throat, oheit and\nback. Then witch Its niaTIMTaa.\nitimuutinq action bing relief\nfrom diitxen.\nIt MMI to upper breathing passages with soothing\nmedicinal vapors. It ITHIUUIO\nchest aad baok turtaoee Ilk* a\nwarming, comforting poultloe,,.\nand tt ketpa eu mrUog f qr hoint\n\u2022\u00bb\u00abrt wftile yea eleei-to eaa*\nooughing spasms, relieve ml\nyea aleei\n__. _pasms, rella1\t\nlar ioreneia ant tlghtne\u00ab-and\nand comforti Try \"\n.Vlcki VapoRub.\nWng grand comforti Try It tonight...'\" *\nWHAT IS\nROCKCAS?\nRockgat It nituril gu condeni   !\ned In handy iteel containers that\ncan be taken anywhere\u2014In the\ncity or In the country.\nIt providei gu convenience\ninywhere Jutt it though you\nwere, connected to city gu malna\nPhon* 6(6\nKootenay \/ Plumbing\nfr Heating Co., Ltd.\n187 Baker It\n \u2014\nStrong R. A. F. Force\nBlasts Nazi War\nants at\nLONDON, Mtrch 9 (CP). - A\nItrong force of R.A.F, bomberi at\ntacked Nuremberg and targets In\nSouthern Germany lltt night, the\nAir Mlnlitry announced todty.\nAt lent two squadroni of the\nCanadian bomber group took part\nIn the raid md the Dominion wu\nfurther represented' by men fly\nIng with the R.A.F. In Lancaiter\nbomber formatloni.\nSeven bom\/ben are\n\u25a0war bulletin iald.\nmissing, the\nBAD BREATH\nBREAKS DATES!\nPlay, Safe-vn\nCOLGATE'S TOOTH POWDER\nIf it'i kiiiin' you're mliiin',\nremember thil\u201476% of ill idulti\nhive bid breath. And unfortaan-\nitely, OTHERS ilwiyi detect it\nbefore YOU do. Tike no chioceil\nUit aColgiM'i Tooth Powder.\nScientific teili prove cenclw-\ntively that in 7 out of 10 COM!\nCol gate'i Tooth Powder In-\nilantly ilopi oral bad breath.\nSAVES YOU MONEYI\nCompired to other Idding brudi,\ni large tin of Colette's gives you\nnp io jo eur, brushing,, i ttiot tin\nup to 41 trior e ttmsbi.gt\u2014for oot \u25a0\npenny more!\nTIP TO SMOKERS!\nColgate's Tooth Powder il oo* of\nthe quickest, easiest wayi to guard\n\u2022 gainst tobicco ilain lod tobicco\nbrealhi   Get Colgate'i today.\nCOLGATE'S\nTOOTH POWDER\n121Ac25c\u00abc\nNuremberg wai lait hit by Allied\nplanei Iti a heavy raid Feb. 25.\nOne German plane'which attempted to Intercept the Brltith bomberi\nwai ahot down.\nA Berlin broadcait recorded by\nThe Auoclited Preis laid large firei\nwere itarted, and that eight of the\nraiden were ihot down.\nNuremberg is one of the chief German centrei for production of the\ndieiel englnei which power lubmarlnei and factorial there alio produce armored vehlclei, aircraft en-'\nginei, electric motori, searchlight!\nand firing device! for minei. There\nIi alto a Meuenchmltt factory at\nFurth ln the Nuremberg irea.\nThere were no loiiei among Canadian aircraft The R.C.A.F. iquad-\nroni which took part in the raid\nflew ln Halifax bomberi.\nLighter R.A.F. bomber forces last\nnight also attacked unspecified targets ln Western Germany.\nThe raid, which came as Britain\nenjoyed another night free from attack by enemy planei, wai a swift\nfollow-up to a smashing assault yesterday by American heavy bombers,\nescorted by Canadian and British\nflghten on the Important railway\ncentrei of Rouen and Rennei ln\nFrance.\nMore than a score of enemy planei\nwhich iwarmed about the bombers\nin a futile attempt to break up the\nraid were ahot down.\nTwo of the five plinei deitroyed\nby the fighter esdort were ihot\ndown by Toronto piloti, Fit. Ltl.\nGodefroy and C. M. MacDonald. Fit.\nLt. C. M. Hagwood, alio of Toronto\ndamaged another German, the R. C\nA. F. laid.   .\nFour bomben and two fighteri\nwere loit. No Canadian aircraft wai\nmiuing.\nSandwiched in between the daylight attack on France and last\nnight's assault on Southern Germany was a duik raid by R.A.F.\nMosquito bomben on rsilwiy tir-\ngeti at Lingen in Northweit Germany and Ailnoye near Valencl-\nennei in Northern Fnnce. One\nbomber wat loit ln 'this fony.\n\"No Slicing\" Rule\nto Stay Here\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP.) - p.\nCecil Morriion ol Ottawa, Director\nof Bread and Bakery Products for\ntht Pricei Board, uys the \"no-slicing\" rule li going to continue for\nCanadian bakeries, no matter what\nhappens ln the United States,\n\"It effects a saving In baker? costs\nand la one way to,keep bread under\nthe price ceiling,\" he iald. \"Thert li\nno chance of Die rule btlng eliminated in Canada.\" \u2022\nWorkers Ask Dance\nHours on Sunday\nVANCOUVER, March 9 (CP).\u2014A\npropoial by a labor delegation that\nwar worken be permitted to hold\n\"iwlng-ihift\" dances between 1 i.m.\nand I a.m., Sundayi brought trom\nCity Council a promlie to lurvey\nmethodi ot handling entertainment\nfor iuch workeri in Eastern Canada; but no pledge to permit the\ndances here. The delegation iald today their suggestions had got a cool\nreception and charged the civic\nlicensing committee lscked i \"wln-\n' the-wir-spirit.\"\nMerchant Seaman\nAsks Help\nlo Find Parents\nTORONTO, March 9 (OP).\nHenry Stafford of .the British merchant marine would like help in\nfinding his parents in Canada and\nquickly\u2014Just In case.\n\"If either of them should be\naround I would be very grateful if\nyou would Inform me or if I should\nget bumped going acroii (the Atlantic) you might tell them I was\naiking for them.\"\nHenry knowi his father, also\nHenry Stafford, was a private with\nthe Canadian Mounted Riflei in the\nFirit Great War and that hti mother'! name ia Maud Elizabeth. He\nknowi, too, that ihe later became\nMri. Steele and lived for a time in\nToronto. But Henry, was adopted in\nEngland when he was six months\nold and hasn't seen hi! folki ilnce\nthey came to Canada.\nNow Henry has written to Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police from a\nCanadian port asking help in locating them. He apologized thus for his\nown lack of success: **I joined the\nRoyal Navy eight years ago with\nhopes of getting to Canada iome day\nbut was unlucky. I got a bit wet at\nDunkerque and wai invalided io 1\nmanaged to Join the merchant service and got here flnt trip.\"\nThe Canadian Presi il publicizing\nHenry'i story in hopes someone can\nhelp him.\nocnool^lomplexion\n\u2022S'siy... you're iuper!\"s\u00ab he. \"You\niure an eaiy on the eyei. What tn\nyou doing tonight?\nhi\nYes, Good-Looklo*. You've got\nkirn withyour come-hither compll\nion. And eaiy doet it\u2014with daily\nPALMOUVB BEAUTY MASSAGE.\nPALMOLIVE\nWhy not itirt todiy on ymr\nPalmolive way to beauty. Here', til\nyeu del llaeh time you u-ash, mattsgi\nPtelmoliie't beauty-rich lather intoyeur\nskin . .. liki a cream ...fit* full SO\n\u2022ettndt\u2014lhtn rime, lttfi till\nRemember, becauie New, Improved Palmol i ve ii made with 0 li vi\nind Palm Oils\u2014Niture's finest ikin-\nconditioners\u2014it toolkit lentilite ikin\nil it clafintei tnd beau tides.\nYOU'LL WIN HIS AFFECTION\nwith a PALMOLIVE COMPLEXION\nGUERILLAS ROUT\nITALIANS\nIN FIERCE FICHT\nLONDON. March 9 (CP) - Tho\nMoscow radio ln a broadcait recorded by the Soviet Monitor taid today\nthat Yugoilav Guerilla flghten captured 17 tanki and routed an ehtlre\nItalian division in a fierce battle\nnear Mostar in Southern Yugoilavia.\nSeveral hundred Italians were\nkilled In the engagement and other\nbooty captured included .2,000,000\nrounds of rifle ammunition, 16 guns,\nBo machine-guns and 8000 shells, the\nbroadcait added.\nIt Hid the Yugoslavs also wiped\nout or captured many German officen and men in another battle\nSouth of Banjaluka, 93 miles South\nof Zagreb, and were itlll fighting\nfor a mountain peak Weit of San-\nJevo where the position hid changed hands levenl timet.\nAlberta Leads in\nCoal Production\nEDMONTON, March 9 (CP)-Al-\nberta led all other provlncei in coal\nproduction during 1942, when 7,754,-\n279 toni valued at $22,562,352 were\nproduced, A. A. Millar, Chief In-\nipaictor for the Department of Lands\nand Minet, made known today.\nLatt year'i production wai an lrf-\ncreaae of 794,215 tont over the output ln 1941 ind 420,100 tont higher\nthin the previoui record in 1928.\nThe Drumheller field wai the biggest producing trea in the province\nwhere 1,785,021 tont were mined.\nAn embargo waa placed on ahip-\nmenti to Ontario ip the Fall of last\nyear but Alberta continued to supply coal to the Weitern provinces.\nBritish Columbil took (02,222 tons.\n1st Army Smashes\nTwo Prong Attack\nin Close Fiohtlng\nON THE NORTHERN TUNISIAN\nFRONT, March 8 (Delayed) (AP).\n-The British lit Army miaihed a\ntwo-pronged attack againit . itt\nNorthern poiltlom on the Mateur-\nTabarka road near Tamera today In\nflaghtlng where only 30' to 40 yards\nteparated the battling unlti at iome\nplaces. >     ,\nThe Britiih troopi holding dense\nly wooded position! in the rolling\nhllli Inflicted caiualtiei estimated\nat five timea their own and lent the\nenemy icurrylng Eaitward. Approximately 200 priaonen, including five officers, were captured.\nDeipite the heavy loises Inflicted\non the Germani tn heavy fighting In\nthli ^ector ln the paat week, they\nrenewed the asiault at dawn Monday. This was the only point at\nwhich the Nazis were still active after opening a general offenilve al!\nalong the Northern Tuniilan front\nweekt ago.\nThe attacking enemy sent two\nstrong forces into the thifk woods\nSouth of Tamera In an effort to get\nbehind the British defences and\nmake a daih for the Important crossroads village of Djebel Ablod and\nthereby cut off the defending torces.\nKino Not Working\nin War Planl\nLONDON, March 9 (CP Cable).-\nRecurring reports that the Royal\nFamily ls finding time to don over\nalls or imocki and turn out war ma\nterial for the nation are not true, lt\nwas learned authoritatively today.\nA\" week ago it wai reported the\nKing had become ,a part time worker ln a war factory, helping make\nprecision parts for an R.A.F. gun,\nAn Investigation showed the itory\nwas started when His Majesty visited a factory and tinkered about.\nSometime later he made another\nofficial call at the same place and\nasked how the work was progressing, but did not Join In lt.\nThe latest report on the subject\nhad the King and Queen, and Princes! Elizabeth, fashioning camou-'\nflage nets for six-pound breechlocks\nln the Windsor Cast)e workshop.\nThis also is untrue.\n\"They are juit somebody's bright\nidea,\" said the Buckingham Palace\npress officer. \"The Royal Family is\nfoo buiy with official duties to engage in iuch activities\"\nReport Hun Cargo\nShips Scuttled\nBOMBAY, IndU, March 9 (CP.) -\nMessage! received here today ttld\nGerman cargo shins sheltering In\nMormugao, a Portuguese pouesiion\non the Weit coaat ot India, had been\nscuttled atter a disagreement among\nthe .crews on the queitlon of making in attempted dash for -Singapore.\nThe messages did not give the\nnumber ot ships Involved* or their\ntonnage. ,\nTURCEON IS'HEAD\nRECONSTRUCTION CROUP\n, OTTAWA, March 9 (CP)*-Gray\nTurgeon, Liberal member for Cariboo, thday wai chosen chairman\nof th* Houie of Commons Committee on reconitruction and reeitab-\nllihment, \u2022 post he held when the\noommitte* functioned last year.\nWillkie Critical\nof Statements\non Russ Relations\nNEW TCfflK, March 9 (KP). -*-\nWendell L. Willkie today characterized ai \"drastic and lH-considered\"\nrecent statements by Government\nofficials concerning United States\nrelations with Soviet Russia.\n\"One Government representative\nImpliej we may double-cross the\nRussians tfter the war It over,\"\nWillkie said In a statement. \"Another Indicates that the Russian\nGovernment today ls playing us\ntwo ways. Neither itatement is wise,\nnor in my Judgment is correct.\"\nWillkie added:\n\"Drastic and ill-considered statements are not the basis for the sort\nof discussion we need. They will\nonly do harm. I know no one in\nAmerica who wants to double-cross\nRussia now or in the future. I likewise know no Russian who ls ignorant of the fact that we are helping\nher with materials and by our fighting on other fronts.\"\nTax Collections\nShow Gain\nofSBUWD\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP>.-Cui.\ntomi, excite and Income tax collections during the first ll monthi of\nthe current fijeal year\u2014up to Feb.\n28\u2014amounted to (1,904,528,816, a\ngain of $734,288,397 over the \u00bb1,-\n170,232,458 collected in the iame period of 1941-42. Revenue MinUter\nGibion announced today.   '%%\nIncome tax collectioni more 'than\ndoubled, totalling $1,243,038,773\nagainit $538,017,002, a net Increase\nof $705,021,735, and customs-excise\nrevenue totalled $681,480,078 compared with $632,215,457, a net in\ncreaie of $29,274,61)2. -     .\nAU income-tax dlitricti ihowed\nincreaie!. Montreal Diitrlot held\nfirst place with a revenue for the\n11 month! of $3T2,587,272, Up $213,-\n827,558, while Toronto in second\nplace .collected $334(580,887, an Increaie of $192,224,875,\nIncome tax collectioni from\nother districti (with increaie in\nbracket!) Included: Vancouver\n$103,008,579 ($58,608,888); Yukon\n$807,534 ($253,091).\nCustoms, excise and Income-tax\ncollectioni for the month of February'amounted to $154,978,425,\nagainit $97,169,702 collected in February, 1942, a net increaie ot $57,-\n808,728. l  \u25a0\nFORBID PRISONERS\nTO SPEAK OVER\nENEMY RADIOS\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP)-Orden\nhave been issued to forbid Canadian\nsoldien who may be taken prisoner\nfrom delivering any meisagei over\nenemy radio facilitiei, it wai itated\nat Defence Headquarteri.\nThe itandard instructions given\nto all troopi are that when taken\nprisoner the only Information they\nshould give to the enemy is \"name,\nrank and regimental number.\"\n, A ipecific army order on broad-\ncaati, aa recently revlied, reads:\n\"Officen and other ranks when in\nenemy hands as prisoners of war\nare expressly forbidden to transmit\nmessagei or make announcement!\nof any kind whatsover, including\ngramophone records, by means of\nthe enemy'i broadcasting or wireless lyitem.\"\nIssuance of a similar order to th:\nUnited Statei Army was announced\nat Washington yeiterday.\nCurtin Says More\nBombers Would\nMake Job Easier\nCANBERRA, Auitralia, March 9\n(OP). \u2014 Dislodging the Japanese\nfrom their ring qf Iiland bales\nNorth tod Northeast of Australia\nwould become an immeasurably\neasier talk, Prime Mlniiter John\nCurtin iald today if the Alllei IA\nthis area were equipped with sufficient bombing planei.\nWith iuch forcei at ita' disposal,\ntnt Premier declared \u00abh am interview, Qen. Douglai MacArthur'i\nSouthweit Pacific Command could\nmount air attacks equivalent in\nstrength and effectiveness to that\nlevelled by the Royal Air Force\nagalnat Essen, Germany, lait Friday.\nMr. Curtin took luue with the\nopinion expressed by some British\nand American Preu commentator!\nthat latt week'i deitructlon of in\nenemy troopi convoy in the Bii-\nmark Sea meant the Alllei have eitabllihed overwhelming air iupe-\nrlority ln the battle zone North of\nAuitralia.\nThe fact ll, he laid, that victory\nwai achieved by brilliant concentration ot avtlable aerial forcea\nrather than by any peat numerical\nmargin in airpower.\nBritain Has Lost\n435 Ships\nLONDON, March 9 (OP Cable).-\nBritain has lott 435 warships in the\nwar to the end of February, Lord\nBruntiifield, Parliamentary Secretary tcthe Admiralty, said today in\na statement.\nOn March 4 he told the House of\nLordi Britain'i wanhip loises totalled 41,8. Today'! statement ex\nplained that figure covered the\nlosses tip to the end of last September,\nTo bring the losses up* to the end\nof February, Lord Bruntisfield said\nit was necessary to add four destroyen, four corvettes, four submarines, one minesweeper and six\ntrawlers to tht total announced last\nweek.\nA breakdown of the 435 wanhip\nlosses at reported by Lord Bruntisfield on March 4 and today follows:\n48 submarines, five capital ships,\nseven aircraft carriers, 25 cruisers,\n14 armed merchant cruisers, 98 destroyers, 18 corvettes, one monitor,\neight slodpi, 23 minesweepers, 162\ntrawlers, 14 drifters, one minelayer,\nthree yachts, five gunboats and\nthree cutters.\naw\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 10, 1943-3\n4\nClearance\nSPECIALS\nRAYON KNIT PYJAMAS AND GOWNS\u2014Sub- ffl \u00a3\u00a3\n'   standards of our regular $1.98 line. Teardse,*tPl\u00abDU\nKID CLOVES\u2014Specially priced for quick 'clearance-^\nBlack, Navy colors\u2014Broken size range. Reg. tf 1  4Q*\n$2.50 and $2.98 values. To clear ...': <|1.49,\nWOMEN'S STYLE SHOES\u2014Clearance of higher priced\nWomen's Style Shoes. All sizes in the lot. tfl 09\nPair     yl.LJ\nCLEARANCE OF MEN'S TWO-TONE SPORT    tfl AC\nIACKETS          \u25a0fl-?'*':\nSAMPLE SQUARES\u2014For cushion tops.  Big'variety OQ\nEach  . .*   WC\nPLATE GLASS MIRRORS\u20142 shapes 10\"x20\"   $0 Eft\nEach   *}L.iJ\\J\n\"FIRE KING\" ROUND CASSEROLES\u20148-inch size *1f\\\nEach        v ;.;..:.:..   13C\n\u2022Ua*' ..cfflwullt **n MAV laaiTft\nSuggests Jamaica\nBecome a\nPart of Canada\nLONDON, March 9 (CP Cable)\u2014\nA suggestion by R. W. Youngman\nof the Kingston, Jamaica, Chamber of Commerce that the colony\nmuit beconie in iptegral part of\nCanada, even a province, has been\npassed on to Colonial Secretary Oliver Stanley but the colonial office\nspokesman said today there was no\ncomment from Mr. Stanley.\nStressing the unofficial character\nof the suggestion, the spokesman\nadded, \"obviously, official comment\ncould not be expected.\"\nSnow Removal Cost lo Date $7245r\nDawson Reports to Council\nWOMEN TOO ...\nthat men may fly\nSnow removal from the beginning\nof the year to the end of February\ncost, the City approximately J7M5,\nCity Engineer H. D. Dawson stated\nin a report to the City Council\nMonday night. Mt. Dawson's report followi:\nPUBLIC WORKS\nThe major work of the month\nhis been in connection with the\nheavy mow itorms of January and\nthe early part of February. The\n\u2022vork of snow removal, clearing and\ncleaning of crossings, plowing, and\n1 comparatively small; amount of\nsanding has been costly. The\namount of direct wage distribution\non these itemi hks been $2644 for\nthe month and the cost of equipment operating was $1206. The\ntotal from the beginning of the year\nfor labor and equipment now\namounti to $7246. During the month\na total of approximately 5100 yards\nof mow and Ice has been removed\nfrom BakcT Street ind the adjoining side streeti.\nThe presence of so much snow\nThe  R. C. A. F\nneed! women volunteers, age IB to\n40, with at least\nHigh School entrance. Wide variety of interesting tradei for immediate enliit-\nment. No wilting\nand excellent op-\nportunltiei for\npromotion. Apply\nbringing    birth1 has laved expenses in other main\nfor\ncertificate New ultra smart uniforms, pleasant living conditions,\nand congenial companionship makes\nthit popular lervice most enjoyable. Enquire while the unit Women's Division Officer li conveniently in your diitrict\nWOMEN'S   DIVISION\nR.CA.F.\nThli Mobile Unit operate!\nfrom NO. 2 RC.A.F. Recruiting Centre, Calgary,\nAltt.\nROYAL CA\nAIR FORCE\nFuture B.C. Datei: -TRAIL. Mar. 17-18-19\u2014CRESTON. Mar. 22\u2014KIMBERLEY, Mar. 24-25\n-     \u25a0        -    - \u2014-\n\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0--\u2022-\n-^\t\ntenance departments, such for Instance as street cleaning, against\nwhich $52 is charged, and plank\nsidewalk maintenace, against which\nonly $6 hai been charged.\nROCK WALLS\nThe rock wall lupporting the\nline In Block 33, Lot 95. lying South\nof Carbonate Streei, and Eatt of\nWird Street, which was commenced\nat the end of last year, hn been\ncompleted.\nRED CROSS SALVAGE\nSome imall amount of hiulige\nof salvage paper weekly on behalf\nof the Red Crosi hai been made.\nDuring teveral weeks of extremely\nheavy mow falls, it was impossible\nto spare the equipment for thii\nwork.\n\u2022STREET RAILWAY\nDuring   Un   first   week   of   tht\n\u25a0\n'mt\nmonth two extra men isslsted the\nregular outside men of .this Department in removing ice from the\ntracka.\nWEIGH SCALES\nSome npall amount of repair\nwork has been carried ,out at the\nWeigh Scale: to eliminate binding\ncaused by frost and mow.\nWATER   DEPARTMENT\nIce began to build up in the Five\nMile iptake during the dayi immediately following the extremely\ncold apell and we went to some\ntrouble to endtavor to keep the\nwater flowing Into our system. A\ngreat deal of extra water was drawn\nby citizens during that period, but\nby careful watching we were enabled to keep up the supply without changing our overflow valves\nIn the diitriibutlon syrtem three\nleak! oocurred, all of which have\nbeen itopped.\nPARK8\nAs toon ii the weather modented\nwe commenced the work of clearing\nsnow and excavating for the new\ngreenhouse at Lakeside Pork. Before doing this a number of trees\nwhich would hive pi-oven a hazard\nwere removed and are being cut up\nfor uie in the picnic water heater\natove. Formi weTe comtmcted and\nconcrete has been poured for the\nbate wall.       ,\nIt li deilred, from the viewpoint\nof future working economy, to\nhave the floor of the greenhouse\nsunk below the ground level. Before determining the floor level, information and data concerning probable high water leveli wat kindly\ngiven by the Wett f'ootenay Power\nSi Light Company'i engineeri and\nby the Dominion Government Public Work'i observer.\nBYLAWS\nSix building permits were taken\nout during the mmith. the value ol\nthete amounting to $270,\nBritish Raid laps\nin Western Burma\nNEW DELHI, India, March 9 (CP)\n\u2014R.A.F. bomberi raided Japanese\nposition! on a wooded ridge near\nKanzauk, about 20 milei Northeast\nof Rathedaung, in Western Burma,\nyuterday and inflicted casualties on\nenemy troops who had established\nthemselves there by infiltration tac-\ntics7\u00ab British communique announced today.\nThe bombers saw their missiles\nburst on the targets and fighters\nfollowed with low-level machine-\ngun attacks that caused casualties\nto the enemy.\nU.S. fighter planei struck at enemy installation! in Northern Burma\nyesterday with machine-gun fire\nand light bombs.\nAllied fliers struck again at the\nGoteik Railway viaduct between\nMandalay and Lashio, railhead of\nthe Burma road, on Sunday, scoring\nthree hits on the base of the bridge\nstructure.'\nNEARLY 700,000\nMORE GALLONS\nOF BEER IN YEAR '\nVICTORIA, March 9 (CP).\u2014In 10\nmonths from April 1, 1942, to Jan\n31, 1943, British Columbiani consumed nearly 7000,00\/1 more gallons\nof beer than they did in the entire\nfiscal year immediately preceding\nAttorney-General R. L. Maitland informed Mrs. Grace Maclnnii (C. C.\nF., Vancouver-Burrard) in answer\nto a question on the Legislative order paper.\nMr. Maitland gives the following\nfigures: Beer sold for the fiscal year\nending March 30. 1940. 4,229,283 gallons, valued at $5,827,527; for fiscal\nyear ending March 31, 1941. 4.816,-\n013 gallons, valued at $6,612,540: for\nfiscal year ending March 31,1942, 5,-\n607,183 gallons, valued at $8,400,-\n270; from April 1. 1942 to Jan. 31,\n1943. 6,288,945 gallons, valued at\n$10,541,198.\nMr. Maitland quoted Canadian\nbeer consumption at 1.3 pints per\ncapita per week; United States, 2\npints per capita per week; Britain\n2.3 pints per capita per week. If the\npopulation of British Columbia is\n817,861, B.C. is in line in beer consumption with the rest of Canada,\nthe Attorney-General said.\nSoldier Miners to\nGet Leave to\nWork in Coalfields\nVANCOUVER, March S (CU-*?.\nMore than 50 soldier-miners now on\nactive duty with army unlti ln British Columbia are expected to be\ngranted leave to work in coalfield!\nthli Summer, a Selective Service\nspokesman said today .\nThere are prospects about 17S men\neventually will be free from army\nduty for mine work. They are given\nsix months leave of absence but\n-muit return to the army if they\nquit Iheir mine Jdtw.\nCol. Brown Chosen\nSpeaker of\nHouse of Commons\nLONDON. March 9 (CPl\u2014Col.\nDouglai Clifton Brown, 64, Deputy\nSpeaker of the House of Commons\nsince 1938, was chosen speaker today to succeed the late Capt. Edward Algernon Fitzroy who died\nMarch 3.\nCol, Brown was made, a privy\ncouncillor in the last King's honors\nlist at New Year's. A Umoniit Party\nmember from Northumberland, he\nhad served as Deputy Chairman of\nthe\" Ways and Means Committee.\nHis choice ends a parliamentary\nimpaise in commons. Capt. Fitzroy\nwai the first ipeaker ot Parliament\ntq die in office since 1789 and the\nconstitution rules that commons cannot , assemble legally, without a\nspeaker, and also provides that there\ncan be no deputy speaker if the\nholder ot the speakership is dekd.\nCanadians Not\nAllowed to Work\nfor US. Firms\nEDMONTON, Mafch 9 (CIP).-A '\nban has been placed on employment\nof   Canadians   by   American   contractors and United Statei tervlcei\nin this territory by the Unemployment Insurance office which haa li-\nsued  instructions no further helpi-\nis to \\>e supplied here to U.S. firms,\nit was learned today.\n' The report was confirmed by U.S.\nauthorities who said Canadians now\nln their employ will not be disturbed. Several hundred are employed'\nby various American firmi either\nhere or in the North.\nF. J. White qf Winnipeg, Select-'\nive Service officers for the Weitern Provinces, conferred laat week-\nwith Chamber of Commerce officials after the Chamber had wired\nLabor Minister Mitchell asking him\nto ease the labor situation here. *\nEmployers complained they were\nhaving difficulty holding their.\nstaff! becauie other concern!, particularly conitruction flrmi working on Northern projects, were rXjle I\nto offer employees more money.\nQueen Pays Informal\nVisit to Canadian\nRed Cross Overseas\nLONDON, March 9 (OP Cable).-\nThe Queen today paid an lnfonmal\nviiit to Camdian Red Crou Over-\nlea! Headquarteri, during which\nshe met and chatted with many of\nth'e lUff. MaJ-Gen. C. B. Price of\nQuebec, head-of the Canadian Red\nCrou in Britain, wai holt it tea\nThe Queen met 18 girli comprising the first detachment of the Canadian Red Crou Corps, commanded by Mrt. Erneit Lee of Toronto,\nhead of the oveneai itaff. Committee memberi of the Canadian Women'i Club were ilio presented.\nDEATHS\nNEW Y<)RK-aAllce Nielsen, 68,\nformer loprano ttar of the Metropolitan Opera who tang with the\nlate Enrico Caruio.\n\/\u2022YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFERS,\nHOT FlASHEr\nIf you luffer hot flaihw, d'ulnni,\ndUtreB of -lmculuiUta\", blut\nipella, ate mak, ntrrout or irritable\n\u2014due to the \"middle-aft\" pirlod In\na woman'i Ufi-Uke Lydla I. l'lnk-\nham'i Vegetable Compound, ni\nhelped thouundi upon thousand!\nof sromen to Mlm iuch lymptomi.\n.Hade In Oanuu. Pinkhun'i Compound la vortA frytns;\nREHABILITATION CROUP\nTO GET $10 A DAY\nVICTORIA, March 9 (aCPJ - The\nRehabilitation Council Act't amendment, granting travelling expenses\nand $10 a day living allowance to\nmembers of the British Columbia\nPostwar Rehabilitation Council wai\ngiven final reading In the Legislature Monday night without 1 dli-\nsenting vote.\nMembers of the Council will receive the $10 1 day only on dayi\nwhen the Council actually meeti.\nBETTER SEEDS\nFOR  BETTER GARDENS\nPlan A Victory Garden Now!\nV\nECETABLES\nfor '\nVITALITY\nfor    .\nVICTORY\nA imalr garden Well planned now\nwill reap rich dividendi in comery-'\nIng family food expenditurei, 11 well\nas enriching the genersl health, id\nnecessary during wartime.\nOUR\n1943 CATALOGUE\nand Garden Guide NOW READ?\nIs FREE for the asking. Write or\ncall for your copy,\n\/\nJames Brand & Co. Ltd.\n782-788 Howe Street\nVmcouver, B. C.\n\u25a0&<ww\nIf You Are Going to Need More Coal\nThis Winter Please Cooperate by\nOrdering Early\nWith the Present Derpand for Fuel\nTaxing Transportation to the Limit, It Is\nImperative That You Order Your Supply\nof Coal Before You Are Entirely Without.\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED IN 1B99\n k_\n \u25a0Mem Batltf Nnmi ? ? Questipns-.? ?       A Britisfi\nANSWERS     Filling Plairt\nEstabliihed April $2 1902\nBritish Columbla'i\nMott IntirnHna Newipaper   \u25a0'\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED 166 Btkei St Nelson. British Columbia.\n.'MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n; TBI AUDIT BUREAU OT CIRCULATIONS.\n| WEDNESDAY, JUARCH10, 1943.\n\"\nHow Would They Do It?\n. Hon. F. G.'Perry, Minister of Education for British Columbia, hag ask-\nthe C.C.F. some pertinent questions\nto how they would take over many\n. lustries   and   utilities   that   some\nt'Of them 'mention in their program.\n[ ..Would they confiscate, or steal, them?\nWould they use public funds for their\nmrehase? If they used public funds,\nthen bonds would have to be sold, and\nthe public wpuH pay plenty in interest\n,use of the increased bonded indebtedness.\nHe also asked, and this is even \"more\n\u00a3 pertinent, how they would operate\nthese industries once they had taken\nthem over. There have been Cases of\nsuccessful government operation, but\nf they are less numerous than have-been\nthe failures, if efficiency and economy\nand public service are the yardstick.\nMr. Perry sees no merit in replacing\ntbe \"bosses of capitalism\" with the\n\"bosses of the CCF.\" He calls that\nthe \"Nazi method\". Certainly it is the\ndictatorship method. There he touches\nupon the fundamental weakness of\n1 government operation of industry\u2014experienced-management is replaced by\nf. management by politicians, who may\nbe first class vote getters but do not\nnecessarily shine as sugar manufacturers, or railway operators or mining\nor metallurgical engineers.\nI        British Money Laid a\nFoundation\nBritish Government expenditures on\nmunitions plants in the United, States\nprior to Pearl Harbour had much to do\nwith the tremendously rapid expansion\n_of war factories. Staggering sums are\nnow being expended by the United\nStates and are producing staggering\ntotals in production of munitions, but\nearly expenditures of more than 3 billion by the British laid the groundwork, which has proved immensely valuable to the United States in its own\nW\\r effort, and to the United Nations\nwhich are benefitting.\nLord Halifax, British Ambassador\nat Washington, states in the American\nMagazine that British expenditures in\n{he American aircraft industry total a\nbillion and three quarters. British orders to the machine tooj industry boost-\n\u25a0 ed the output from a quarter \u00abf a billion to three times that figure in 1941.\nTwo of the American shipyards which\nare so rapidly producing merchant\nships were constructed with British\ncapital. They are at Richmond, Calif.,\nand Portland, Ore. It was British capital Which introduced Henry Kaiser to\nthe shipbuilding industry.\n' Lord Halifax throws an interesting\nlight on difficulties in the early production of tanks. He asserts that while\nwe think of \"the finest tank in the\n. world, the 28-ton General SHerman\u2014\"\nas an American product, it is in one\n\u00bbense \"a joint Anglo-American enterprise.\" After finding their tanks almost useless in the Battle of France,\nBritish purchased quantities of American General Lee tanks. \"Perhaps you\ncan imagine our dismay, in those dark\ndays after Dunkirk,\" Lord Halifax\nI says, \"to discover that the General Lee\nllad all the faults and weaknesses of\nour own tank.\"\nThe result was that British and\nAmerican experts worked together\nand subsequently prsdticed the General Grant and then the General Sher-1\nOpen to iny reader. Nimei et perioni\naiking queitlom will nal be publlihed,\nThirt li no oharge tpr thit itrvlce Queatloni will not bl iniwered by mill except\nwhen there li obvloui motility 'or prlv-\nInquirer, Slocan Park\u2014Ii it permistlble to\nlend a wool tweater or other garment!\nto a friend In England ai a gift without\nthat friend having to paly duty on iame?\nClothing articles ieat to civilian.** in England are dutiable although, ln many cases the\nduty li not being levied.\nB. R., Slocan City\u2014Where would one writ*\nto obtain information regarding income\ntax?\nWrite Inspector of Income Tax, Winch\nBuilding, 739 Welt Hastings Street, Vancouver.\nC. P. I.,.Nelson\u2014Could you please tell me wbo\nwon the Grand National Horse race at\nAtntree, Liverpool, ln the tint year of the\npresent war? I would like the name of the\nhone and alio the owner.\nGrand National winners: IM*-Workman,\nowner Sir Alex Maguire; 1140\u2014Bogikar, owner Lord Stalbrldge.\nM .E. M., Kimberley\u2014Would you pleaie glva\n.   me a report on Gandhi's life lince 1931?\nGandhi hai led the India Movement for\nindependence for the pait quarter century.\nDuring that time he hai carried out nine hunger strikes, some directed against the British\nGovernment and otheri againit Indian parties,\nIncluding his own foUowen. Gandhi wai flrit\narrested by the British ai leader of t civil\ndisobedience campaign on March 11, 1922,\nwhen he was sentenced to six yean imprisonment. He was released ln 1924. He itarted\nanother campaign ln December, 1929 which\nresulted in hli arrest on May I, 1930, when\nhe wai held by British authorities until January 26, 1931. After a Bound Table conference\nin London, Gandhi agreed to end the campaign, which wai effected 'March' 4, 1931.\nLaunching a mass disobedience campaign\nagain on June 13, 1942, Gandhi itated that\nnon-violent reiiitance would be offered to the\nJaps ln event of an Invasion of India. Public\ndemonstrations and outbreaks followed, rioting flared Into the open during the latter part\nof July and early August, when the British\nGovernment stepped ln and arretted Gandhi\nand all other important Indian Congreu leaders on August 9, 1942. Gandhi was placed ln\ncustody in the Aga Khan's caitle. In referring\nto Gandhi's imprisonment at'this time, L. S.\nAmery said ln the British House of Commons\nthat he was \"put In-Jail as it wat the only alternative to anarchy to which Mr. Gandhi\nteemi to look forwird t<j with iuch complacency.\"\nIn proteit against hli Internment by the\nGovernment the 73 year old leader completed\non March 3, a 21-day hunger itrike.\nR. H. K\u201e Slocan City\u2014Would you pleite let\nme know the address of the Government\nOffice wlfere a person would write to\nreceive InstrucUons on securing a Diesel\nengineer's papers?\nHemphill Diesel Engineering Schools Ltd.,\n1190 West Pender Street, Vancouver give a\ncommerclft course ln Dleiel engineering. Tor\nInformation on Induitrlal and service classes\nunder the Wartime Emergency Training Program write Lt.-Col. T. T. Fairey, Director of\nTechnical Education, Department of Education,\nVictoria.\nQuiz, Trail\u2014What is (he minimum wage paid\nto an apprenticed barber, alio I professional barber working under a bou?\nThere it no minimum wage for batter\napprenticei. Barbers' wages are $18 per week\nfor a 40 to 46 hour week (maximum 48 hourt)\nor 4S centi in hour for leu than a'40 hour\nweek.\nTest  Yourself\n1. What ore the cardinal numbers? Which\nare ordinal numben?\n2. Who wat the flnt person to mention\n. the presence of two different gtiet lo the atmosphere? , |\n3. Tor what wat the pendulum flrit Uied?\ntrom tha outiide, the factory li put*\nDlsney^-a delicate tale of flower-Kattered,\ngrass-covered knolls, with Inviting llttla doom\nMarlon Slater write! ln the magazine Britain.\nThere are narrow twisty lanes spanned by\narched i bridges. A faun might iklp around\none ot those knolla A dwarf, delldloudy amused, might come cut of one of those hillside\ndoon.^ ' - ' *\nBut those knoll! ar* anil-blast walls, tha\nbridgei art monstrous black pipes, hot with\n\u25a0team. Outside lt may be a symphony of\nDisney; Inilde lt ls a symphony of death.\nBritish women, forsaking their kltcheni\nand their careful homely cooking, are here\npreparing the Ingredients of deadly concoctions. For this ls a British filling factory,\nwhere high exploilve Is packed into bombs,\nshells, anti-tank mines, hand grenades, demolition oharget and detonator!.\nI walk tint down a long narrow room\nwith shining brown linoleum on the floor and\nrows of coat pegs on the walls. Halfway down\nil a brilliant red, knee-high barrier. On one\nside li written,,In?letten, white, large and\nclear, \"Dirty\", tlie other ilde says \"Clean\".\nThis ll the barrier that separates the normil\nfrom the abnormal world. Here I must take oft\nmy outdoor shoes, whose nails might cauie a\n\u2022park and an explosion, and substitute special\nshoes with smooth leather .soles and no naili.\nI muit remove my Jewelry, and put away\nall metal lighten, lipsticks, compacts, matchei, tobacco and cigarettei. Any of these might\nbring death.\nHaving done thli, I am \"clean,\" free to\nwalk into the danger area, where millions of\nprojectiles, many of them itlll on the secret\nlilt, an filled each week; along glass-smooth\npath! that obviate friction, through doon\nwhose metal handles are grounded agalnat\nthe accumulation of static electricity. I am ln\nthe midst of iome of the moat courageoui\nwomen ln Britain'i vait lnduitry of war.   ,\nLooking  Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dilly News, Maroh 10, 1833)\nViolent earthquakes apread deith, Injury\nand destruction over a path some 200 mllti\nlong and 30 mllet wide ln Southern California last night. Eighty were known deid and\nmore than 2900 Injured.\nHon. J. W. Bowier, K.C., formar CoMtrv-\native premier announced lait night that ht\nwill lead non-partisan forces mtde up of Coniervitlve!, Liberal and Labor elements, ln tht\nProvinclil general election ot next Summer.\nMatthew Tulley Is the new Preildint of\nthe Fernie Rod ind Oun Club, ripliclng Tom\nPrentice.\nWhen the Government puftheted tht\nitetmer Nttookln from the CJ>Jt thl price\npaid wat 117,000 according to Hon. R. W.\nBruhn, Minister of Public Worki.\n21   YEARS  AQO\n(From Dilly Ntwi, March 10, 1111)\nBritish aviators bombed the Daimler motor works it Stuttgart yeittrdty. Til announcement uyi thit the raid wai carried out\nIn broad daylight.\nAs a result of tha tall through A D. Nt*\nof A. J. Curie's manganese property mar\nKaiio there are possibilities of tht development of electro-imelttng of- the ore it wmt\npoint In thli district By putting lt through\nan electric furtuce it ctn bl reduced to ferro-\nmingintte tnd M per ctnt of thl wtlght of tht\norlglnil ort.\nA chapter of the I.O.D.E. hai been opened\nIn Kaslo. Officen elected wtrt: Regent. Mrt.\nF. H. Latham; flnt Vice-Regent, Min Mibel\nTimms; tecond Vict-Rtgtnt, Mia Helen English; Treaiurer, Jetilt Clark; Stcritary, Gwen-\ndolyn Calvert; Echo tnd .Educational Secretary. Evelyn Vallanct; Standard Bttrtr, Sophia Bird. a\nPress Comment\nTHIS KIND OF  FOLLY SHOULD\nBE SUPPRESSED\nThe Hamilton Spectator reporti that tht\nchain letter pest has reappeared ln that city.\nTnli letter ll of the usual type with the accustomed Jargon of promises' and threats. The\nclaim Is made lhat the present chain was started by an American officer and that It has already gone around the world three tlmea\nIn order to terrorize the superstitious and\nthe weak-minded, dire misfortune It threatened all who \"break the chain,\" and there will\nb* t lot of good luck for thoie who make\nfour extra copies of the letter and send them\nwithin 24 hours, to \"people you wish good\nluck to.\" Names are given of recipients who\nfollowed the Instruction and were mysteriously\nrewarded with sudden wealth.\nThere were chain letten, several of thtm,\nduring the Great War, and there have been\niome between the two win. No one hai ever\ndiscovered the reaion for them and no sensible perion ever triei to Justify them. They\ncoit a lot of time, worry, paper and postage,\nand many friendships have been broken because of the Impudent supposition that hli or\nher friendi may be it gullible and simple ai\nthe' tender. ,        ,\nTh* only my to break up the nulianct Is\nto \"break the chain\" .and rave othen innoy-\nanct an dtven affront. The whole success of\nthe system ls based on cowardice, credulity\nand superstition. The Spectator offers the excellent luggeitlon that Instead of throwing\naway money on iuch t futile enterprise lt bt\napplied to the purchaie of Wii Savingi Stampi\ntnd Ortlflcitei.-Calg\u00abry Herald.\nOTTAWA'S RESPONSIBILITY\nThe Prime Minister told the Houie of\nCommoni thit unlesi the Government gets\nlupoprt for wage itabllizatlon and price control tt will be unable to continue successfully\nIta battle igainst inflation. In that event, ha\nwent on, the consequences will not be the re-\niponilbillty of the Government but of Its crlt-\nlcs who, by falling to tupport the policy, wtll\nhavt compelled the Government to change It\nA government with a late majority ln the\nCommons ii ln the saddle. Pressure of publio\nopinion may luggett t chinge of policy but\ncannot compel IL It lui been uld and reiterated thit Inflation it a national danger and\nmust be resisted to the last. If Mr. King be-\nllevei thla, ind there ii every reaion to lup-\npoit ht doei, he hu no right to change the\npolicy undtr preuure.\u2014New WeitmlhttCT Co-\nlumblan .\nAXIS ATMOSPHERE\nHitler md Muuollni takt tlmt off ln\nBorne to expliln that thtir new order will enable thl ptoplt of Europe to live ln \"in it-\nmotphere of Juitlct ind cooperation.\" Aren't\nthey what Artemua Ward uied to ctll \"imoot-\nln' cuuei?\"\u2014Vancouver Province.\nToday's Horoscope\nIf your birthday ll todty you trt generoui, lntplrt listing friendships and rarely\nIncuri tht enmity of othen. You iron thrawd\nJudge of othen, tod your quick perception!\ninspire thl confidence of Mendl. Traveling\nclaimi much of your time and attention. On\nthis birthday do your belt, even If your Job\nteems unimportant and payi little It miy\nIttd to grtitatr opportunities Or, If you irt\nbuying thingi todiy, you ihould get good\n\u2022 vtlut for your monty.\nWar-25 Years Ago\nBy Tht Cinidiin Pre ii\nMarch 10, 1911. - Britiih hoipital ship\n\u2022Guildford Caitlt wilh 410 wounded men from\nEtit Africa torpedoed In Bristol Chinnel but\nreached port. Oermtn troopi tntertd Britiih\ntrtnchtt ovtr t 200-mile front ntir Potldtr-\nhotk In tht Yprei tallmt\nCouncil Grants\nBoard $500\nfor Publicity\nGrant of $900 to tht Nelion Board\nof Tradt for publicity purpoiei wll\nauthorized by tht City Council Monday night The application wti preiented by Lt.-Col. George A. Hoover,\nPreiident, John Learmont, Publicity\nChairman, and Alex H. Allan, Paet\nPreiident.       ,\nAid. George Turner opposed lt on\ntha ground that lut year tbe Council established a policy of refuting\nto decide on iuch appllcatloni ln\nthe presence of the body maaking\ntht application. He felt this wai *\nwlie policy and ihould bt continued.\nOther memben of the Council\nargued it wai not new builneu but\nrattier an annual grant, and lhat it\nwaa not neceuary to take it into\ncommittee for discussion. They held\nalso that it wai good builneu for\nthe city to make the grant.\nColonel Hoover read letteri to tha\nBosrd from a man ln Colombia,\nSouth America, who propoied to locate in Canada and to buy a imall\nfruit ranch; from a soldier's wife\nproposing to move from Langley\nPrairie to Nelion; and another asking for a supply of booklets.\nMr. Learmonth detailed $780 tpent\non publicity latt year, of which the\ncity supplied .(200, and stated Information vyas now being compiled for\na Coast newipaper to assist in a\ncampaign to relieve housing conditions at Vancouver by promoting\nremoval of families to Ntlson.\nAssurance that the money would\nbe well administered wu given by\nMr. Allan, who declared the Board\nconsisted of \"a. level-headed bunch\nof citizens, ali trying to keep Nelson\nto the fore.\"\n\"Bert\" Ramiden in\nNelson After\nWinning His Wings\nSergeant-Pilot H. W. R. (Bert)\nRamsden, who received hit R.C.A.l\".\nwlngt at Claretholm Thunday, wat\nln Nelson Monday on a brief leave\nbefore travelling to the Atlantic\nCoast to take an additional course.\nHe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R.\nRamsden of willow Point.\nOnt. and Alberta\nGrowers Make Bid\nfor Jap Worker*\nSASKATOON, March 9 (CF). -\nCompetition between Ontario and\nAlberta tugar btat growers to obtain Japanese labor ll so \"terrific\"\nSaikatchewm farmers have llttlt\nhopt of gtttlng workers from thli\nsource, T. B. Flcktrtglll ot tbe Federal Laboi; Department's agricultural diviiion told a conference of\nfarm representatives discussing production needs.\nThe delegates nid Saskatchewan\nfarmeri would welcome the importation of Japaneie workeri and\nItalian prisoners-of-war to meet the\nlabor ihortage.\nWinter Snowfall\nHere 12 Inches;\nFalls on U Days\nThe Winter'! tnowfail, from the\ntint fall en Oct. si to the lait on\nFeb. 6, at Nelion totalled 82.08\nInches. Snow fell on 44 days during\nthat period.\nThe snowfall in inches for each\nmonth waa:\nOctober ._ 7\nNovember ..._      10.13\nDwemfoer   .      10,70\nJanuary    ,_..\u201e      4S.30\nFebruary       11.25\nTotal    :...    82.08\nSnow fell on a ilngle day in October, on 12 dayi In November, on\n12 dayi ln December, on 15 dayi In\nJanuary and on four daya in February.\nAllied Strength In Pacific Growing\nBut Fireworks May Start Anytime\nTWO KIMBERLEY WOMEN\nARE NAMED\nELECTION COMMISSIONERS\nAppointment of Elizabeth Margaret Anderson and Sarah Burns,\nboth of Kimberley, as Provincial\nElections Commissioners ls gazetted.\nDuty of such a commissioner ls to\ntake affadatdts concerning the Provincial voters list.\nFire Damage in\nFebruary $115\nNelson fire lott In February was\nWIS, of which $100 was In the W.\nByen barn-garage on Hall Mines\nRoad, and $15 was roof damage\nln a fire at the residence of 'A. E.\nStewart, 221 Mill Street, in the\nthird of three alarms In the month,\nthere was no loss, this being a chimney fire.\nFire Chief O. A. McDonald in hit\nreport to the City Council Monday\nnight stated that during the month\n\"various parts of the City were in-\nepwted,\" under heatry mow conditions, from the viewpoint of response to fire alarms and to fire\nfighting under auch condit'oni.\nBuilding Inspection! in February\nnumbered 38.\nWASHINGTON, Mirch 9**(AP).\n\u2014Allied strength In thl Pacific ll\ngrowing, and tht Jtptntit trt\nhiving difficulty tupplying their\nbatei, Navy Secretary Prink\nKnox uld today. But ht warned\nthtrt mty bt mort flrtworki any\ntlmt.\n\"A state of luiptndid tnlmt-\ntlon\" wtt hit tppraliil of tht Pacific tltuitlort In t Pren conference dlioutilon of relative powtr\nfollowing tht Eltmtrk ltt victory.\nLosses inflicted on the Japaneae\nln the Blimark Sea by land-baaed\nairplanes, and the havoc wrought on\nenemy shipping by submarine,\nKnox said, all are part of the process of attrition which he called \"a\nmost serious factor\" ln Japan's military future.\nIn line with Knox's anything-can-\nhappen thought, observers here recalled a report yesterday trom New\nGuinea by C. Yatei McDaniel of the\nAssociated Press that authoritative\npersons there fear there may be too\nmuch optimism over the extent of\nthe Blsmark Sea victory.\nMcDaniel told of seeing official\nphotographs of at least 80 Japanese\nwarships and merchant vessels at\nRabaul ln New Britain and said\nthere is a lack of support for any\nbelief that the Japanese threat has\nfaded ln the New Guinea area or\nthat the enemy may have to aban\ndon much of his bases in the islands\nNorth of Australia.\nKnox said American forcei ire\nstronger now in the Solomon Island\narea than ever before.\nWithout adequate shipping, Komi\nsaid, tht Japanese cannot maintain\ntheir South Pacific bases ln many\ninstances and ht added ln thll connection that \"our submarine campaign continues to bt vtry successful.\"\nHe idded that tht Unlttd Statei\nll \"not a bit\" worried about tha\nJapaneie airbase at Mundt on Ntw\nGeorgia Iiland ln tht ctntnl Sail*\nomons..\nCheese Rouladet\nIn Prance they art called\n\"roulades\" .. . Here they\nare known *\u00bb \"cheete and\nmeat balls\". But anywhere,\nwhen made according to thli\nnew wartime recipe, they're\ndelicious.\nBlind 1 man ntekigi of plain\ncream cheese with 1 teMpoon of\nli. P. Sauce, 1 teaipoon of mlnoed\nonion, H teupoon of ialt ud a\nsprinkle of pepper. Spread tblt\nmixture on u thin illoit of\nbologna. RoU tub allce tightly I\nby Itself and tecurt with a\ntoothpick.\nBuy a bottle of H.P. today\nand try thll new economy\ndinner. Thnt It ntvtr \"flat\ntaste\" when H.P. Stan ls\nused. Serve H.P., that grand\nold British thick nuoe\u2014tin\nwith toup, itew, salad, .sandwiches, flih and fowl\n\u2014 \u25a0*\u25a0   , - *-> -aw\nGJ1J\nSo malty-sweet\nTHIY SAVE OH SUGAR I\"\nt Sweet-ita-nut fltvor...energy-\ngiving ... easy-to-digest nourishment ... that'i crisp, crunchy\nGrape-Nuts I Serve them at a\nbreakfast ceretl often \u2014and try\nthem In. custards, cookies, etc.\nRecipes on the packages. Your\ngrocer hit them.\n14 to 16 SRVMOf IN IWT PACUN\nrape-Nuts\nA Product vf General raoev\nTEST AN8WERI\n1. The cardinal numben are 1. 1, 3, I, !;\nthe ordinal numben ire lit, 2nd, Srd, 4th, Uth.\n2. Leonardo da Vinci.\n3. To measure the humin pulie.\nWonjs of Wisdom     Eti     tte Hints\nThe mind li lis own place, and In Itself\n'Hir mind Is IU own plice, and In Itielf\ncan make a heaven of hill, and a hell of\nheaven \u2014 Milton.\nDon't bite your flngtmilli In public or Indulge ln iny other dUigreeibli perional habit\n\u25a0 *****\u2014. \u25a0  ...\u25a0;\u25a0. 'if.\"Tj!\";-;;i\nlptsa3stL_Es\u00a3_f\u00bb    :\nBRITAIN'S BOMB VICTIMS Otfft&t,'Mmdtf\nneed your RED CROSS help!\nTHE PROBLEM of civilians injured In bombing\nraids on British cities Bait or preient, ii a\npitiable one. Women, children have lost armi,\nlegi, the tight of their eyea. Many will require\nhospital care for yean. Scores will be crippled,\nhelpless for life. Hundredi \/re homeless\u2014alone\nio the world.\nThese people upon whom the cruel fury of war\nhu been unloosed, look to vou whose sacrifice\nii u nothing compared to theln. The 8)7,000\nmemben of che Junior Red Cron have done\nmruit to relieve this suffering. They maintain\n14 War Nurseries in England. But io much\nremains to be done. Will you help them in the\ndark houn of pain, suffering and hardship.\nThe Red Crou must have your support on their\nbehalf\u2014on behalf, too, of suffering humanity in\nGreen, Ruuia, China and other peoples of the\nUnited Nationi; of teamen rescued from the\ncruel Atlantic, of Canadian and Britiih boyi in\nenemy prison campi. Tbl rued is gnat and growing greater, Givt gtnmusly.\n'10,000,000\nNeeded NOW\nGIVE!\nhuman suffering It\ngreater than aver\nRed Cross Shop        ^_ Baker Street\nCANADIAN + RED CROSS\n .\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb!\t\n,,,,,'f**\nThe Patriot\n$4.95 to\nDESIGNED for walk-\nIng, yet smart enough\nfor a furlough date, is\nthis new shoe style. It's\nJust one of many in our\nbeautiful collection ...\nSee them here today!\nBluejacket blue, <\ntown brown, black\nRt Andrew\n& Co,\nLeaders In Footfashion\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. 4. VIGNEUX\nliie pupili ot the eye dilate when\npenon Is afraid, but become stnall-\ni When he ls angry.       '\nRADIO AND ELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES SERVICE\nPHONI 260\na\nNelson Electric Co.\nBLOUSES\nTOR YOUR SPRINO SUIT\n\u2022 lingerie Type Sheten\n\u2022 Long Sleeve Sheen\n\u2022 Ttllored Crepei\n\u2022 Gay Colored Stripes\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nThl\nButcherteria\nBetter Meats for Len\nMONE527  FREE DELIVERY\nt Mrs. Joieph Janni tnd her Infant ton Peter of Wenatchee, With.,\nwho ipent tht past ten dayi at the\nhome of her parenti, Mr. tnd Mn.\nJullui Riesterer, Robion Street,\nleavei today tor Northport, Waih,\nwhert ihe will vliit her huftand'i\nptrentt ior a week.\nHOME FROM EAST\nt Signalman Danny McKay li\nhtrt trom the Eait vlilting the home\nof Mr. tnd Mn. W. Dei'ardlna,\nRobion Street, where hli wife re-\nsldee.\nt J. H. Argyle, who haa been a\npatient ln Kootenay Lake Oeneral\nHoapital, returned to hii home Monday.\nt Mn. H. J. Armitage of Kaslo\nleft at the weekend for Vancouver\nto attend the Conference Branch ol\nthe United W.M.S. meeting held ln\nSt. Andrew'i Wesley Church.\nt Recent ihoppen in the city\nincluded Mrs. Gordon L. Thompson\nof Bonnington.\nt Mri. Rowley of Harrop apent\nMonday ln Nelson.\nt Mn. T. H. Rustel of South\nSlocan is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospltil following an\naccident when the broke a leg.\nt Mn. Nord of Ymir visited\nNelton yeiterday.\nt John Hughes ls i patient ln\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\n\u2022 Mn. Utile Piekard of Trail\nll apending a few dayt with Nel-\nson friends.\nt Mn. Robert Barrett and her\nbaby have lett Kootenay Lake General Hospital tor their home ln\nSalmo.\nt MM. M. Roberts of Willow\nPoint spent Monday in the city.\nt Shoppen ln town yesterday\nincluded Mrs. Roy Graham of South\nSlocan.\nt Recent visitors in Nelson Included Mrt. Manahan of Crescent\nValley.\nt , Mra. Roy MacKay li a patient\nln Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nt Mn. Stanley Boitock, Latimer\nStreet, entertained Mn. Fred H.\nGraham'i Circle of St. Saviour'i\nChurch Helperi at her home Monday afternoon when those attending were Mn. Hugh\u00abW. Retortion,\nMri. H. H. Townsend, Mrs. Fred H,\nGraham, Mrl. A. J Cornish, Mrs,\nGeorge Horitead, Mn. H. J. Hay-\nlock. Mist Margaret Taylor, Mn,\nA. J. Dunnett, Mn. R. A. Grimes,\nMn. F. R. Pritchard, Mrs Stirling,\nMrs. Mabel Rockllfl and Mrs A. L.\nCreech. '\nLEAVES TOR OOAST\nt  Linus   Morrison,   Cartxmate\nStreet, left yesterday for, Victoria\nwhere he will .spend a lew days at\nthe home af his sister, Mrs. John'\nIn Spite of Problems\nThe Quality Remains Unchanged\nNONE of tho circumstance! of\ntoday have been allowed to\nInterfere with the quality of\nJcll-0 and Jell-O Paddingtk\nWar's necessities have limited\nthe supply of Jell-O and Jell-O\nPuddings\u2014to, if there are timet\n\u25a0when yonr grocer it\nout of stock, we are\nsorry, and hope that\nyon will be patient\ntill a farther rapply\nil available.\nPwdudt \u00abt Owd fee*\nion, prior to Joining tht Army ln\nVtncouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and, Mti. T. Mansell ot\nBrilliant were recent ihoppen ln\ntown.\nt Pilot Officer Hugh Lunn, who\nipent hli furlough at the home of\nhii mother, Mn. Ruth Lunn, Stanley Street, has returned to hli post.\n\u2022 E. Shunter wu ln town from\nWillow Point Monday.\n\u2022 Mn. Treat at Gray Creek left\nKootenay Lake General Hoipital\nTueiday after being a patient there\nfor a few dayi.\nt Mr. and Mn. Henri Gagnon,\nCarbonate Street, bave aa gueit\nMn. Gagnon'i siiter, Mn. Joieph\nDumont of Bridesville, who li enroute home trom Greenwood and\nOliver.\nt Mn. D. D. .Townsend, Stanley Street, is at the Coast attending\na Conference Branch ol the United\nW.M.S. meeting being held In Van\ncouver.\nControl...\nFavors Wartime\nCurfew in Home\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D,\nOn various occasions In thla column and from platformi through'\nout the country I have urged par\nents to establish ln the home a\nstrictly enlorced curfew law, to the\nend that every child up to fourteen\ndr fifteen shall make a bee-line for\nhome as soon as the street lighti\nappear.\nDELINQUENCY INCREASING\nI doubt however whether many\nparents have taken this propoial\nseriously. In- the meanwhile, Juvenile delinquency is sky-rocketing.\nOur country Is at war. Something\nmust be done at once to save the\nyoung brotheri and sisters, sons and\ndaughters of our men who are offer\ning their lives ln all parts of the\nworld to defend our homes, our\nliberties, and our democracy.\nESTABLISH A CURFEW\nTherefore, I believe the time ls\nat hand for stern measure!.' Let\nevery hamlet, every town, every\ncity In our land establish and rigidly enforce a curfew law to the end\nthat any youngster under fifteen\nfound on the street after dark unaccompanied by an adult must\nhave\" an excuse from his parents.\nNo use, of course, to have a curfew law until there is sufficient\nsentiment ln the community for its\nenforcement.\nWe parents ihould consider ourselves unpatriotic unless we make\nthis contribution to the character\nand citlzenahip of our children,\ncommunity and nation right now.\nFurthermore, we parenta might\nproperly impow iome curfew regulation! on ounelvei. Our country ls\nat war. What do you think about it?\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. My little girl three years old\nwon't sit'itill long enough tor me to\nread to her.\nA. Keep trying. Show heV the\nbeautiful pagei of a well-llltstrat-\ned story book. While she looks at\ntfiem, read about'what the pictures\nsay. As soon as she loses Interest,\nclose the book and put it away but\nbring it back later. Keep patiently\nat this. You may have a selected list\nof books to read to the baby or\nyoung child by writing me in care\nof this paper enclosing a self-addressed enveloape with a three-cent\nstamp on lt.\nStanding,..\nWarns Women In\nWarJobsol\nVaricose Veins\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nThli article is written by requeit\nbut at a matter ot fact lt ls probably\nvery timely because ln war work,\nwith womeh ud othen who art not\naccustomed to standing for long periods, thtre ii undoubtedly a higher\nIncidence ot varicose veins than ln\nnormal timet,\nVaricoie velnt mty theoretically\noccur anywhere, but over W paw\ncent occur in the veini of the legi.\nThe veins\" normally have little\nvalves on the Inilde, Thete valval\nare thin membranet occurring ln\nthree cuipt attached to the wall of\nthe vein. They allow flow of blood\nforward, but not backward.\nCAU8E '\nVaricosities In the veins are dUa\nto tht breakdown ot theie valves.\nThe blood then accumulates ln tht\nveins, which become engorged and\nitand out in tortuosities. Naturally,\noccupations or activities which require long periods of standing on the\nfeet tend to put a itraln on the\nvalvej io that ln theie occupations\nvaricose veins are a definite hazard\nNaturally alio, time li an element\nand varicose veliu do not occur In\nchildren or young adults, but only In\nthoie who have lived long enough\nto create itraln on the valvej.\nIf ilugglshnen of tile circulation\nand stasis of the circulation ln the\nveins were the only Consequence!\nof varicoie veini, they would not\nconstitute a very serloui or trouble,\nsome condition. All ot the valves In\nevery vein do not break down and\nthe push of blood from'behind keeps\nthe circulation going. But the nu\ntrl'.ion of the skin suffers markedly\nfrom the duggishnesi of the clrcula.\ntlpn ond ulcen appear. Even with'\nout ulceration the skin takes on \u25a0\ncolli, mottled appearance whtth de-\nnotet bid clrchlatlon and nutrition.\nTREATMENT\nThe treatment ol varicoie veins ln\nmodern conditloni is fairly ilmple\ncompared to the difficult operation*\nwhich were tn vogue 23 yean ago,\nPalliative treatmasnt, elastic itock-\nings or bandages, li logical but\ntroublesome and requlret continuous\ncare. Even eo, it li not entirely satisfactory. The ' modern treatment\nconsists In injection! of the veins\nwith a sclerosing solution. This so.\nlution roughens and makes raw the\nlnsldei ot the walli of the veini\nso that they grow together and the\nvein is entirely obliterated.\nI said above that never do HI\nthe valvei of all the velnt break\ndown. In the majority of cases the\noutside veins of the legs are the ieat\nof the varicosities, while the veins\nof the middle of the legi remain intact. The surgeon will make sure\nby tests which are well known that\nthe middle veins are competent to\nhandle the load of blood before he\nstarts the Injection treatment ol the\nsuperficial veini.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nA.D.:\u2014What li the cause of a\nperson's finding it difficult to take\na long breath? Is thli from the heart?\nAniwer; The feeling thit you have\nnot got your breath to the tiottom\nof your lungi Ls due to nervousness.\nNo heart disease il ever found in\nsuch patients.\nOn Jim. Ctbt\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 10\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:55\u20140 Canada\n8:00-CBC New\n8:15\u2014Front Line Family\n8:S0\u2014Yankee H5uie Party\n9:00\u2014BBC Newi\n9:15-Organ Music (CKLN)\n9:*tt-The Concert Matter (CKLN)\n9:\u00bb-The Record Cabinet\n\u00ab:6B-Tlihe Signal\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Mutlo for Everyone (CKLN)\n10:45-\"They Tell Me\"\n11:00\u2014Sonw by Nincy Martin\n11:15\u2014Variety Time (CKLN)\nlt:30-Soldier'i Wife\n11:\u00ab\u2014Hollywood Newi Girl\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. farm Broadcast\nll:30-CaBC News\n12:\u00ab-iMld.day Matinee\n1:00\u2014The Btlladeer\n1:15\u2014Interlude\n1:18\u2014Talk '   '\n1:30\u2014Musical Programme\n1:15\u2014Ten  Minutei  From  Broadway.\n2:00\u2014B.C. School! Broadcait\n2:30-Columbla School ot tht Air\n8:00\u2014Mewer'i Islanden '    ,\n3:15\u2014Hornemakec_\u00bb Programme\n3:30\u2014Joseph Galllclo's Orchestra\n3-,45-BBC Newi\n4:00\u2014Petit* Muilcale (CKLN)\n4:15-Piano Recital\n4:30\u2014Jute Bethencou-t's Orcheitra\n4:45-Talk, \"Behind the Battlei.\"\n5:00\u2014News Comment\n5:05\u2014The Show Is On.\n5:30\u2014aChirlei Dant'i Orcheitra\n5:45\u2014Son,gs lor You\nEVENINC\n8:00\u2014CBC String Orchestra\n6:30-Songi at Twilight (CKLN)\n7:00-i-CBC Newt\n7:llV-Red Crow Variety Show-\n8:00\u2014BBC Newi Reel\n8:30\u2014The Chorister!\n9:00\u2014National Labor Forum\n11:30\u2014From the News World\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Your Favorite Oahoiti.\n10:30\u2014Interlude\n10:35\u2014Benny Goodman'i Orcheitra\n1^00-Cod Save the King\t\nFathers, Sons\nFill Cathedral\nlo Attend Mass\nThe .Cathedral of Mary Immaculate wai filled to overflowing Sunday morning when 166 fatheri and\nsons of the Parish gathered in a\nbody to attend the early Man and\nreceive Holy Communion, the first\nFather and Son .gathering held ln\nthe Parlth.\nMoit Rev. Martin M Johnson,\nD.D., Bishop of Nelson, celebrated\nMass and gave the sermon.\nA Communion Breakfait ln the\nCathedral Hall wat held after Mats\nthe boyi and their fathers, and boya\nsponsored by men of the Parish and\nKnights of Columbui, also attending in a body. Bishop Johnson presided at grace, and offered introductory remarks.\n\"It Is a gratifying sight,\" he said,\n\"to see iuch a gathering of young\nboys and men.\"\nSeveral of the men were called\non to give a one-minute comment\non the Communion Breakfast dmong\nwhom were L. H. Choquette, Grand\nKnight H. F. Heise, D, Cummins,\nand Dr. Joseph Vingo.\nEach expressed the hopes that\nsuch gatheritjgs would be held reg\nularly in future, tnd many commended the commltteei in charge\nNELSON DAUY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10,1943-5 ; .-\u25a0\nPossessiveness...\nHusband Seems\nfor the great success of the Initial\nFather and Son Communion Breakfast.\nMemben of the Sodality ot the\nBlessed Virgin were in charge of\narrangements,\nJealous oi Baby\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nDear Mist Fairfax.\nMy husband and I have been married about two yean and our Uttle\ndaughter Ii 11 monthi old. My hut-\nband ll very selfisb-when he comes\nhome trom work ht expecti me to\nhave the baby aileep and have nothing to do but be with him. Some-\ntlmei I belle\u2122 he la Jealout of the\nbaby.\nI do want to be with my huiband\nand want to make him happy but\nwhen he Is home I muit do only\nwhat ho wanti, not even read newt'\npaper or play with the baby unlesi\nhe O.K.'i lt. How can I make him\nhappy and still retain my Individ\nuallty?\nS.M.R.\nIt's amazing how many letteri ol\nthii type come to me. Husband!,\nespecially very young ones, art to\npossessive, they actually want that\npoor little rival, the baby, out of\nthe way when they are around. After a while, the patient Grlaelda\ntype of wife who has given in to\nthem on every occaaion begini to\nFREEMAN\n*    HJRNITURI CO.\nTht House of Furnlturt Valuet\nPhont 115 NeUon\nTRADE IN YOUR\nOld furnlturt\non NEW\npall. And they're apt to think bow\ncharming is the laucy Mist So and\nSo, they meet every day at the office.\nKeeping a huiband's likes and\ndislikes in view ii an excellent thing\nbut it's too bad for the girl to lose\nher Individuality with marriage.\nShe becomei a pale carbon copy ot\nthe girl her husband fell in love\nwith.\nAbout the 11th Century, splinters\nof wood dipped ln tallow were first\nuaed in England for lighting.\n111 m 111 iti 11 \u25a0 11 ri i m 11 \u25a0 ii ii ii 1111 in 11 ii i Mini miiri I nifi I [ i ill in iiii i \u25a0 ii 11 ii iii \u25a0 t\nJfc\n(HoUMWWfLL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\n111 11 !     lllllllllllllllllllin  lllllllllllllillllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLiver sausage, liver, tongue, heart,\nkidneys, tripe, brains and iweet-\nbreads are on.the list ot non-restricted meati. Cook and serve them attractively, the family will enjoy\nthem. Liver ll a general favorite\nalso,\nTODAY'S MENU\nSavory Liver or\nBaked Stuffed Pork Heart\nBaked Sweet Potatoei\nMathed Squash\nCranberry Jelly or Sauce\nCelery Raw Apples\nCheeie Oncken        Coffee\n8AVORY LIVER\nTwo pounds beef liver In one\npiece, 3 large peeled onioni, 6 tablespoons lard, V4 cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon paprika, 1\ncup tour cream, V, cup water\nCut liver in one Inch thick slices.\nSlice onions thin, and brown in skillet wltli 4 tablespoons lard. Remove\nonions from skillet, rub flour Into\nliver and brown In iame skillet with\nthe remaining lard. Add salt, paprika, and browned onioni, tour\ncream and water; cover, plaaje over\nlow heat, and limmer gently about\niy. houn or until tender, turning\nont*. Servei 4.\nBAKED STUFFED PORK HEART8\nThree or 4 pork hearts (1 for each\npenon), 8 illces bacon, 1 cup fine\nbread crumbs, 1 small onion, ialt,\npepper, flour for dredging, lard for\nbrowning.\nWash hearts and remove enough\nof centre portion to permit addition of dressing or stuffing. Dice bacon and try until crisp. Combine\nwith bread crumbi, season with\nfinely minced onion. Season cavity\nwith hearts, fill with stuffing, and\nfasten with skewers. Roll in flour\nand broawn quickly ln hot lard\nin a heavy kettle. Cover and cook\nslowly in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until they are done\u2014 2\nto 2 Vi hours. Thicken liquid for\ngravy if desired.\nWATCH REPAIR\nIs \u25a0 Job for experti. Our work\natiuret your tttlifietlon.\nH. H. Sutherland\n491 Btktr St        Ntlion, B O.\nNEW SPRING STYLES\nJUST ARRIVED!\nCOATS AND DRESSES\nMilady's Fashion Shop\nFOR MILK-TRY\nK. V. D.\nPHONE 118\nWATCH FOR OUR\nCROCERY SPECIALS\nIn FRIDAY'8 PAPER\nOverwaitea Ltd.\nPhont 707\nWitch tor Our\nWeekend Specialt\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET-Phont SU\n'-'\u25a0\nThe culture of India datei back\nnearly 6000 years; lt has been modified by many invaden.\nhow YOUNG CANADIANS\nCAN HELP  TO  WIN   THE   WAR\nMrs. Meier, I3r\nBuried at Boswell\nBOSWELL, B.C.-The funeral of\nMrs. C. Meir, aged 73 years, took\nplace here last week, Rev. C. Partington of Creston conducting the\nservices;\nA service wn held in the Memorial Hall, when the hymni lung were\n\"Rock of Ages\" and \"Abide With\nMe.\"\nSurvlvon are C. Meier, her hut-\nband, Mrt. R. Shell, daughter, W,\nC. Meier of Blairmore, ion, Mr. ind\nMn. F. Cheiton of Natal, ion-ln-law\nand daughter, and Rolph Shell,\ngrandson.\nA large number ot Boiwell reildenti attended the tervice, and the\nInterment in the Boiwell cemetery.\nPallbearen were A Maekie, J.\nH. Smith, F. D. Cummlnp, C. H.\nBebbington, B. H. Smith, W. L. Hepher, J. Hall, A. Hepher, H. Boyd,\nJ. Kirkpatrick.\nMn. Meier, had lived ln Boswell\nfor about 10 yeari. She came to\nCanada with her family 20 yeari\nago, from St. GaU, Switzerland,\nher native land.\nShe had been an Invalid lor al\nmoit three yeirs. Two weeki before\nher death, the entered Creiton Hospital.\nThough ill-health prevented Mrs\nMeier from taking an active part in\ncommunity life, her cheertulneu\ntnd kindliness endeared htr to all\nwho knew her.\nHappy? You\nChrisfties Biscuits\n\" There's a wartime duty for\nAlbert Shaw Found\n3d in Hotel;\nWidow'at Wynndel\nEDMONTON, March 9 (CP)-AI-\nbert Shaw, about 55, packing plmt\nitleimtn whole widow livet ln\nWynndel, B.C., wai found deid to-\niaj in his hotel room. He had been\n111 for three dayt with a severe cold.\nThere it 1 ton it Trail, B.C.. and\ntwo brothers, both In Ifcimonton.\nDIEPPE PRISONER\nGIVES PAY\nTO THE RED CROSS\nWINDSOR, Ont., March I) (CP.) -\nSo grateful It Private Harry Odetl\nMcifee of Baltimore, Md., an Iitex\nScottish prisoner of war, for what\nthe Red Crou U doing for him and\nother prlioneri, he hit written hit\nparenti from hli German prison\ncamp to give hli next month'i toldien' pay check Jo that organization, Private Mcafee wat captured\nat Dieppe.\nRomance Complexion\n\"It takes soft, adorable skin to put\nany girl across. Try this gentle Lux\nToilet Soap care\/' she says\n9 out of 10 Screen Star* use Lux Toilet Soap. Try WHIPPED CREAM LATHER FACIALS for 30 day*\n ' \"' \u25a0'.\nfl\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH\n10. 1\u00bb*\u00bb\nfyJeuualllicAci.\nNOVELTY LUNCH SET*\nSet \u2022 lovely table and tave\nlaundry at the same time with the\n8 luncheon sets given In these\ninstructions. Most of the sets can\nbe wiped off with a damp cloth.\nEach ls made in a different way of\ndifferent materials. Instructions\n534 contain complete directions\nfor 8 sets; pattern of actual size\ndesigns where needed.\nSend 20 oentt for thli pattern to\nThe Nelton Dilly Newt, Needle-\ncraft Dept., Nelion. Write plainly\npattern number; your name and\naddrett. Pittern will be mailed to\nyour home within 10 dayt.\nMAKE  TWO   VERSIONS\nClean-cut lines and plenty of\nverve in a frock you'll want ih\ntwo imart versions. It'i Pattern\n9M-8 by Marian Martin, and looks\nKay In plain or border print, with\na round or square neckline.\nTTiere'i softness in Rathering below the deep yoke and in smart\nimpressed pleats at either side-\nfront skirt.\nPattern 93*4-8 may be ordered\nonly ln misses' sires 12, 14, lfl, 18,\n20. Size 16 reqiures 2** yards 35-\nInch.\nSend twenty cent* for thla pittern to The Nelson Daily News,\nNeedlecraft Dept- Nelson. Write\nplainly pattern number, your\nname end address. Pittern will\nbe milted to your home within\n10 diys.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I don't see why Emily pays two\nservants About all thry dn Is stand\nand watrh hrr dn the work, ind\nene could do that.\"\n(jQtuJlCUdL... By Shepard Barclay\nIT 18 NOT AUTOMATIC\nGIVING a high-low signal,\nwhenevir you hold a doubleton of\nthi iult ln which your partner hai\nled the king from ace-king,\nagainit a trump contract, ia by no\nmeani automatic. In fact, It can\nbt the very worst possible thing\nto do in some situations. One of\nthese Is when you hold a natural\ntrump trick anyway, and In some\nother suit possess an honor which\ncannot take a trick unless lt Is established by an e\/trly lead. In such\na case, your desire should be to\ndiscourage a repeat of the suit\noriginally opened, and so you\nshould put a low card on the first\ntrick.\n\u2666 Q765\n\u00bbQ9\n4 A9T\n*AK6J\n* AK84\n\u2666 10 8 4 2\n+ J7 12\nN\nW  E\nS\n493\n\u00ab J 10 8 T\n\u2666 K J 85\n\u2022+Q10 9\n4 J 10 2\nV AK6-132\n\u2666 Q3\n483\n(Dealer: North. Both tldei vulnerable.!\nNorth      East     South        West\n14 Pass      1V Pan\n14 Past      2 V Pass\n3 NT       Past      3 f Pass\nI*\nWhen West led his spade K\nsgalnst this contract, Eaat played\nhis 9 out of plain old-fashioned\nforce of habit. So when the A was\ncashed, his 3 completed a high-\nlow signal. West had no option\nnow but to lead a third round of\nthe suit, his 4, which East ruffed\nwith the heart 7.\nNow can you figure out any re\nturn by Eut which would enable\nhli ilde to icon the letting trick ?\nOf courie not. Neither could ht.\nThe club 10 waa selected as t\nchoice among evils, but it really\nmade no difference. With East'i\ntrumpa cut down to three by thtt\nruff of a ipade, thi declarer waa\nable to drop the hostile onea In\nthree rounds, discard a diamond\non the spade Q, and io make hit\ncontract.\nIf Eaat had leen the necessity\non an early diamond lead, In order\nto get a trick with his K. and that\na apade ruff would not produce t\ntrick which could not te made\nanyway aa a regular trump trick,\nhe would have played low on the\nlead. Weat then could easily aee\nthat the mott desirable switch waa\nto a diamond. If he had done that\nto the' aecond trick, the defense\nwould.have beaten the contract\nwith two trlcki In spadea, one ln\nhearti tnd one In dlamondi.\n\u2022   \u2022 ..\nTomorrow's Problem\n4 10 8 7 5 3\n.  en\n4AQS3\n+ AQ\n\u2666 \u00ab\n1Q853\n\u2666 K JO\n+ J 10 9 7\n3\n4AKQ4\ns\u00bb10 0 2\n4 10 9 8 3\n432\n4J92\nf AK Jl\n474\n4K884\n(Dealer: East. North-South vulnerable.)\nIf, when he finally hears North\nbid diamonds, South bid 3-No\nTrumps, wins the club J lead with\ndummy's A and leads the apade 3,\nhow should East figure out the\nway to beat the contract T\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nw.\nDOWN\n1. Shabby\n2. Cuckoo\n3. Writing\ninstrument\n4.B*abrfc\n5. Verbal es-\naminatlona\n\u20228. nutter\n7. Italian coin\n8. Lucid\n10. Multitudes\n11. Heavy\nhammeri\n15. Eager\n17. Go awayl\n22. Pole\n23. Legislature\n24. Fleece\n25. Languish ,\n20. Rolls of\nparchment\n27. Native of\nArabia\n28. June bug\n30. Shore\nreceeaee\n32. Bottles\n33. Angry\n34. Flowers\n38. Near (poet.)\n38. Extreme\n40 Region\nanar*.  \t\nnanna\naHQHnin an.?\nEiKfi nnnnncE\nmm HnnH\nBBtanKfl*.! aaa\nnOGQD\nntsnn      aauci\nGHEHE  BDEDG\niiDHt'iH ntnunn\nEaaua aauuc\nV'.Irrd.y't Aauwer\n43. Any split\npulse\n44. Froten water\nACROSS\n1. Juice of\npl.anta\nI .Part of boat\n7. Stage\nletting;\n9. Mountains\nof Rueaia\n11. Fat\n13. Fray\n14. Guided\n15. State\npositively\n16. Period! of\nUmt\n18. Fuel\n19. Fish\n30. Conjunction\n21. Harvest\n23. Canine\n24. Leaping\namphibian\nX. To eat\n26. A dinner\nooune\n28. Garment\n29. Stuff\nSO. Article of\napparel\n11. Beam\n32. Game of\nchance\nS3. Exliti\n\u00bb5. Siberian\ngulf\n36. Like alt\n37. UnmUajd\n38. Climbing\nplanta\n41. Loiter\n42. Roman goda\n43. The afore,\n\u2022aid thing\n48. Lurk\n46. Land\n47. Metric\nmtaaun\n(pi)\n46. Meadow\naCBTFTOQCaOTB--A cryptogram (Wtaltoa\n\u25a0 MH   JMDHT   LRI   ATHLEHNB   WPRDN-\nMVHRE   BT   NDRRHTN   DN   IMH   TLJI\nBT   MLODRA   N D R R H I \u2014 N H R H J L.\nTett*rday*i Cryptoquote:   IT IS HARD TO TALK SENSE, BUT\nMA*DER TO FIND LISTENERS IF TOU DO\u2014C H. 8PUROEOK\nniitilt\"Jl~1 br Klaiar Feitairn ImdlaU. lae.\n\u2022Cryptoquotei ate quotation! of famoui penoni written cipher.\nA tubttltuti character hai replieed the original letter For Instance.\nan \"It' may tubttltutt for the original \"K\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote. or t \"BB\" may replact an \"1.1.\" Find tht key aod follow through to tbt Mlulloa\nCOMIC AND ADVENTURE STRIPS ..3\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\n...       -   \u2022 . \u2022\nfl WILL.' G'BVE\n\/\u00a3 VOUR.HELf?*\n\u20224   ^- at\n  ,';'\u25a0,\nBy Zone Gray\nMOM AMI, KINS-\nBE aCAREFUL OF\nSUSHSWRLING.'\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Gus Edson\nf WHAT?UNCLE WIAHAS^\nATWINBI?OTHER?FOa7\nHSAVeWaSSAKR-WMY\nHASHBKBPTaJUCHA\nWai\"-* SECRET ALL 0\n-rue-SB vbar\u00ab r\nWELL, PEAK, UNCLE 1\nBUMLEV SIMPLY 16\nTW6 RAWLY BLACK\n\u25a0weep-HE*\u00abF>ewr I\n>T OP MIS TIME\n*\"     IN JAIL'S- I\nV BUT AND\/-    >\nTHERE WAS NO\nNEED TD KEEP IT\nPTOMME-tOlSOf\nFAMILIES HAVE\nBLACK SHEEP-\n7 NOT TUB HUMP*.' SINCE       ^1\nTHE PAWN OP TIME THERE'S\nBEEN NO BAP APPLE ON\nOUR-W.MILYTREE- TlLl\nBUMLEV CAUB Mouth\nHF   TWE DISGRACE OF IT.*, lft     R&\nHS TO THINK OF MY SWEET,  SS W&&E;\nMS* INNOCENT PAllGHTER          WgmSMk\nI   MARRIEP INTO A FAMILY   Wmmfr*\nKL        OF JAILBIRPS       ^J8\u00a3\u00a7gz%\u00a7^\nD. \u00bb. frf. Wi\nuk, lin, li\nMean Tr*Wt.\n\u25a0KtiH\nppwsj^r \u25a0*f\u00ae$ti&z\nM\n^\nLI'L ABNER\n' By Al Copp\nI\nAFTER HER SWEETHEART\nWOULDNT LET HER INTO\nHIS HOUSE., HENRIETTA\ntSNIFF*\u2022SNIFF.'.') WENT\nBACK INTO THIS CHEAP\nBAR-ROOM ft \u2014 HIS\nINDiFT'FIUNCC. DONE.\nDROVE HER T'DRIHK,\nMPl tVHIRT.T .    .\n*HE STAVED IN THAR TO'\nQUITE A SPELL-f.'  WtTT\nshe musta lapped up\n' lotsa likker-on account\nwhen she come out-\nSHE JUMPED CLE.AR\nACROSS TH'STREETS\nrj__\u25a0\u201e\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb,_\u00bb\u00bb,> mm.,.\n.(SNIFFr-SNIFFt) DID\nNOT LET HER IN AG'I>>\nTH'TRAIL JEST IJNGEF\nHOPELESSLY AT TH'DOOR,\nFO' AWHILE.- AN'THEN (GULP!)\n-GOES A-STAGGEWN'AW\/W-\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nWHAT D'VA MEAU, LOTS   OF\nCOMPANY'S   COMHI'?   SCRAM\/J\n\"^iftA^\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Young\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.-Mn. J. Jensen is \u25a0 patient in the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital.\nMrt. L. Priori tnd son were ihoppen in Trill.\nElmer Patenon and Otto Walker\nwere Saturday visitors to Trail.\nLac. Tom Lampard of Calgary\narrived home Saturday to visit nis\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Lam-\n\u2022pard for a week.\nMartin Peterson wat a Nelson viiltor on Saturday.\nMrs. N. Martini and children visited Nelson oh Saturday.\nMr. ind Mrt. Al Richard of Rossland spent the weekend at the home\nof the. former'i parenti, Mr. and\nMrs. A. E. .Lampard.\nA. C Rigby of Calgary arrived\nhome Saturday.\nVerner Nelton of Pend d'Oreille\nlt spending the weekend at nis\nhome in Castlegar.\nD. Kurg and Harry Holoboff of\nTrtil were Friday visitors to Cutlegar.\nMrt. E. Lampard held \u2022 bridge\n\u2022nd whiit card party on Saturdiy.\nHigh scores were won by I. Peter-\nton ind 3. Htfltead.. Ouestt were\nMr. and Mrt. P. Bruce, Mr. and\nMrs. 1. Petenon, Mn. A. Schiivon, Mn A. E. Lampird, J. Haf-\nttead ind Misses Normt Petenon\nand Florence Lampard.\nMist Lorna Romano of Nelton\ntpent the weekend it her horn eln\nCtttlegir.\nTommy Davidson wn \u2022 Trail viiltor Saturdiy.\nMore than 100 million toni of\ncoil will be used to provide chem'\nIcali In IMS. \u00ab\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\nBRINGINC UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\n\u25a0>,   '\n '   .     \u25a0'\u25a0  ..'\nClassified\n#\nPHONE 144\nLook Down These Wont Ad Columns fer Bargains\n-\nHELP WANTED\nADUATE NURSES: OPEHAT-\n)g Room Supervisor Sc Aisntant\nlight Supervltor tor 120 bed ni.nd-\nrn Weitern Hoipital with train-\n>g ichool. Apply, Box 3347. Newi.\nOTED: A RELIABLE. PARTY\n>, dismantle commercial build-\nig for the lumber and material\nontained. Box 2226 Dally Newi.\nPABLE GIRL FOR HOUSEW'K\nl Trail boardlhg house. Ph. 488-K,\nKm.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\npecial Low Ratei for non-\nnmmercial advertisements un-\ner thii classification to assist\ntople seeking employment\ninly 29c tor one week (6 dayt)\noven any number of required\nMi Payable in advance. Add\n10c if box number desired.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN. IN VANCOUVER STOP A'l\nAimer Hotel, opp CPR  Depot\n1 PAY  CASH fOR HIDES, j. f\nMorgan. Ntlion. B.C.\nHIGHEST    PRICE8    PAID\ngood.uied ranges-\nSee J  Chess tint\nTOR\nROLLS D\u00abVBL01\u00bb8I>. VAlNTED.\n25c Reprinti ie or 40 for1 $1.00.\nFilm Exchange, Cutlegar,\nTOP fTOSTRID f*iR\"\"0SKD\nfurniture, stoves, heatera, Moll\nmuiical Instrumenti Ph 534 Ark\nNDY MAN. 56 Y*IS. OLD, DE-\nres work u janitor, gardener,\nttetaker, or work on chicken\nirm. Can milk. Can do houie-\n\u2022ork; fint aid. Apply National\nelective Service,\n25* THE PHOTO MILL25f\nP.O Boi SJ8. Vanoouver\nRolls developed and printed 25c\n12 reprinti 5x7 enlargement Uc\n21clI0NS PHOTCK25c\n\\        P O   Box 434. Vancouver\nI Any 8-exp, roll developed tnd pnnt-\n! ed 28c Beprlntl 8c, Free 6x7 Coupon\ntlNG WOMAN DESIRES HSfc-\nrook, sleep In. Apply Box 2281\nlelson Daily Newi.\ntiWd wbMAN DtSlMfe -Use-\nWtk by the hr., rate 40c per hr.\nIpply Box 205, Nelson,\nLONELY FOLltsi JOIN REttABLE\nconfldentttl matrimonial club\nMany Memben with meant. Particulars and descriptions lOe. Ladiei free  Box 121, Regina,\n\u25a0a\/aw   W *\u2122\u00ab.   ..-.--.-.\nDOW, WANTS &OUSEWORK\nmmedlately. 35c an hour. Apply\nIr.'. H. S., 807 Third Strtet,\nlUNQ WOMAN DESIRES HSE-\n\u2022Vork. Oood wagei. Box 2198, Net-\non Dally Newi.\n,1>ER.IENCED WOMAN DESIRES\nrork ai chambermaid. Apply Nt-\nional Selective Service.\nVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE WHICH nrtlim\nCHICKS give RWUITJ\n[.1943 \"ACTION YEAR\"\nSPBCIAL NOTICE\n|e demand for \"The Chicki Which\nve Resulti\" hai been to itrong\n\u2022at only \u2022 limited number ire now\n\" bit before the end of May.\nDER late May and June chicki\nfOW and avoid disappointment\ntite for your copy of the 1848\nICTION YEAR\" Book giving full\ntlculars and pricei and, remem-\nPS RESULTS THAT COUNT*\nhorni-R.t Redt-TJarrtd Rocki\nNew Hampshires\u2014Light Sussex\nI Langley Prairie, B.C.\nBABY   CHICK   BUYERS\nREAD THIS FIRST\nIflth 25 yean experience In breed-\n|_| ind producing high clau\ntiultry, we comlder our cnicki\nnual to the beit on the market.\nfie Offer - Birred Rocki and\nhew Hampihlrei unsexea at $14\nLer 100. Pullet chicki at |2i\nCockerels It $8.\nVo.P. Sired White Leghorns Minted at $12 per 100. Pullet chicki\nJ7%) at (28  Cockerels it ti.\nWritt for descriptive Mating lltt\nI APPLEBY POULTRY FARM.\nMillion City, B.C\nt)OK YOUR ORDERS FOR DAV\npld chicki now. New Hampshire.\nB.C.W. Leghorni  W.  Wyand.alte\n|(Summerlind aExperlmenul Farm\nBtrtinl.Mit Crosiei Leghorn-New\nHampshire ind Leghorn-Rhode\nJlland Red. Approved  Haichery.\niBlood-tetted itock  Bomford Hal-\n|ehtry, Penticton, B.C.\n,VBV CHICKS NEW HAMPSHIRE\nand Rhode Island Red Approved\nnd blood-tested. Ready to thip\nlevery Tueidiy. 812 per 100 Jbhn\nICoodmin, Gilley Avenue Hatrh-\nl\u00abrj, 1855 Gilley Avenue, New\n[Westminiter. BC\n\u2022TO HUNDRED AND \"\u00a7EV?ffiT-\n[egg oil burn'ng incubator, nearly\nInew. Price $30. Appleton Broi.\nI UK 1, Nelson\nEAM OF HORSES, 3000 LfiS AOfc\n17 tnd 9. Good shape. Good walken.\nI Priced Tight. Can be teen it Weit\nI Transfer bern.\n*>R SALE, JERSEY COWS, f.B.\nI teited. Mn. I. M. Cunningham,\n| Creicenf Valley.\n\u25a0Ml SALE, 6 Hf AM W light;\n[work and aaddle hones. D. O'Neil\nlEll'ion'i.\nIust in, \u00bb head alberta\nI horses, young, iound, gentle. 1100-\n11800 lbt. F. N. Davidotf, Tarryt.\n\/ANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nTRAPPERS\n[Top prices paid for your Beaver,\nlliutkrat and  other   line   tun.\nE.   H.   HIRD\nSLOCAN CTTY, B  C.\nHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nlor Iron. Any quantity Top pricei\n[paid Activi Tndlng Compiny\n1015  Powell  St.   Vincouvtr.  BC\njfXNffDrsacTA** 6R0NXE *m\n(brill  for  wtr  purposes   Ntlton\n[Machinery md Equipment,\nofcibfc Ar wTNtfifioTOOCB\nItoe Hoovtr SU Nelion, Ph. 673-K\n|lTS. CANARIM. BUS. ITC\nlooir^fliiZjauBM\"malb\nHOME    FUNITURE   EXCHANUE\nWt Alwtyi Sell for Lesi\nTop pricei naid (or Uied furniture\nSES US before you BUY, SELL\nOR EXCHANUE\n418 HALL ST.     PHONE 1032\nBUSINESS ANO\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAISAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nHAROlfi\"fe elMSS.\" ROSSLAND\nBC, Provlncitl  Assayer. Chetnitt\nIndividual   rtprettntttivt   tor\nthlppers at Trail Smelter\nA. J. Buit. Independent Mine Rep-\nreitnlttivt. Box 84 TraU B.C\ne. w\" WibDpWsbN. PhovmCiAL\nAtsayer. 301 Josephine St Nelson\nTllE west kb6t8NAV aSSAV\nOffice 650 Stanley SU Nelion, B.C\nCHIROPRACTORS\nMcDOMALtt,  :6.C\u201e   Etlmtr\nStrang Blk., Trail,\nm\nGrid  X-ray.\nENGINEERS  AND SURVEYOR*\nK W ECpmr HIHWB I, CIVIL\nEngineer, B.C. Land Surveyor.\nRouland and Grand Forks, B.C\n60YD C AFFLECK. 218 Gort fit,\nNelion. BC. Surveyor .and Engineer. Phone 6G9-R.\nRENTALS\nTERRACE' APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire  equipped  lultes.   .\nPARTLY FURNISHED BUNGA-\nlow, apply 800 Silica St. -\nFor RtWDTMOMRN AW. MIDI-\ncal Arts Block: Ph. McHardy 135\nf-RM. FUOp. BATH. AlSoT-RH,\nunfurn. Ph. 4N-R. SOS Cedar St,\n?URN*D SUfflSS. WftHOffiVftH.\nsuite vacant Apt. 1. Kerr Apts.\n2-RM. APT. WITH BATH, APPLY\nStrathcona Hotel.      \\\nFOR RENT: UNFURN. APART. VA.\ncant 27th. Johnstone Building.\nFARM, GARDEN fr NURSERY\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large itock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper and can till any ordtr immediately Daily Newi Printing\nDept. Nelion, B. C.\nMENI WANT NORMAL PEP, VIMt\nT.ry Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Stimulants, tonics; aids to normal pep.\nvim. vigor. Trial lixe 85c Savt\nreal money\u2014get Jl. size or special\n\"Economy\" size ind save trom\n18c to SOc. At ill druggists.\n\u2022WE COLLECT YOUR DEBTS\" IF\npeople In British Columblt owe\nyou money, wt will collect It\nStandard Rates; Highest references. Commercial Service Corp-\norttion. LU 850 Weit Hntti'ngi\nStrtet Vancouver, BC.\nvio6iti\u00abg-F6R Loweim*1 VT-\ntai ity tnd phyiical exhaustion. Re.\ngain your vigor, idm aod energy. Month treatment $1.00 t box,\nDrug Sundrlei. Write for prlc*\nlin Western Supply Agency. Box\nOS. Vanoouver.\nma DEVrcOPSb'AJW PRINT-\ned (8 or 8 exposure roll) 25c Reprints Se etch. For your vacation\n.mapihoti. choose Kryital Fmun\nGuaranteed non-fade printi\nKryital Photoi. Wilkie, Saskatcne.\nwan   Eitabllihed over SO yeari.\nMENI REGAIN NORMAL MANLY\nPEP and vigor. Try Vitamin *K\"\ncapsules-50 for 1178; 100 tor\n83 OO. WORLD'S FUNNIEST JOKE\nNOVELTY 10c Including catalogue of Penonil Hygienic Suppliei. Booki on .Al) Subjects. Novelties, Ect.\nWESTERN  DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 14,   Dept. KNC,   Regina, Saik.\n\u2022OR  SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nJfSOO^oOO^\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nVjltmij ri->rt<*riAiJ-'J\"i*i~'~*-**-^\nWedding\nAnnouncements\naftd...\nInvitations\nCorrectly Printed tnd\non the Finest Stationery. It pay* to buy\nQuality In Printing\u2014\nWe will be glad to\nsubmit samples and\nprices . . .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinting Dept.\nMILLWORK\nWe manufacture\u2014S11 h. Windows, Doon, Scrreni. Kitchen\n\u201eCupboardi, Ironing Boardi.\nMedicine Ciblniti. Stort. Offlct and Restaurant Fixtures,\n\u2022ud tny detail mill-work.\nEstimates gladly given.\nNELSON SASH & DOOR\nWORKS, Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 530 B07 Front St\nFOR SALE: PRACVCALLY NEW\nFrtgidtire combination ihow eatt\n\u25a0nd Ice cttatm cibinet. It W\" long,\njr high and 31\" wide. Cipaoty\nfor 10 galloni; 5 ft. of glati Oil-\nplay ind 15 cu. tt. itorage tptce.\nExcellent condition. Alto Diyion\nComputing Grocery Scilet. For\npath or termi to reliable buyer.\nAptily Box 9675, Dilly Newi.\nPlpt \u2022   IffllNdS'-'fUHalS      SPat-\ncial low print Activi Trtding Co\n\u202218   Powill  91   Vtnrouvir    in\nOJCVCLOPlBtA &06K - UK*\nnew   will exchingi for radio in\ngood condiUon. Apply \u20227-.U.\n\u2022imooth MACTtrarw oood\ncondition. Apply Ranch 14 Robion,\nBEAD THE CLASSIFIED   DAILV\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nCHAS F McHARDV INSURANCE.\nReal Estate, Phont 138.\nORDER NOW FOR EARLY DEL1V\ntry peachei, apricota, applet,\nplumi and pean, l and 2 yn, blk,\nand red currants, raip, Engllih\ngooseberry and blk. berries. T.\nRoynon, Box 827, Nelion. Agt.\nLayrltz Nunerlei. Ph, after 8 P.M.\nFOR YOUR REQUIREMENTS IN\nSeeds. Feed and Poultry Suppliei,\ncall and see ul. Ask for our prioe\nlist Ellison Milling It Elevator\nCompany, \"Ltd., Neljon, B.C. \u2014\nThone 238,\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMichlne ihop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone S99 824 Vernon St.\nORDER YOUR NEW FARM EQUIP-\nlrient and repain now at Central\nTruck Si Equip. McCormich, Deer-\ning agenti, Central Truck St Equipment Co. 702 Front St., Nelion.\nSTEVENSON'S   MACHINE  SHOP\nSpecitlists in mine and mill work.\nMachine work, light ind heavy.\nElectric and Acetylene welding.\n708 Vernon St., Nelion,  Ph. 93\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW. E MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave. Tnil.        Phone 177\nBASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S      SXSH      FACTORY\nHatdwood merchint 273 Baktr St\n8ECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhit.have you? Ph 684 Ark Stort\n PETS y\nARDEE KENNELS, Waldhelm, S*ik\nSptcltllxlng  In  Irish  Setter!\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nModern Bungalow\nFor Sale\nHas living room, dining room\ncombination, kitchen with\npantry, two bedroojns and\nmodern bathroom. Part basement, concrete foundation,\ncement floor, hot-air furnace. One lot, convenient\ncorner location with garage\nattached. Close to Nelson\nAvenue. Price $3,000.00.\nT. D. Rosling\n888 Wird Street       Phoni 717\nOOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non  easy   termi  ln  Albert!  tnd\nStikitchewin. Write for tull Informitlon to 908 Dept of _4iturtl\nRetourctat CPR., Ctlgtry, Alta.\nFOR SALE: 4 loi. 5-room ttucco\nhome, turnice and garage, comer\nNelton Ave. tnd Chithtm St Appi*. 520 Mill St. \t\n3  SMALL   fttWSBS  F6R   iiAlE:\n11250 tnd 81350. Oood lots. C. W.\nAppleyard.           \u2022__  .    '\nF. A. WHITFIELD REAL ESTATE\n\u2022nd Iniurance. 417 Hall St. Nllton\nBEFORE BUYING  YOUR HbME,\nStt C. W. Appleytrd St Co\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nHeavy\nTrailers\nBuilt to Order.\nPrepare for Spring and\nSummer w6rk\nSEE US NOW.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS, LIMITED\nNELSON, B. C,\nROOM AND BOARD\nGOOD HOME OFFERED YOUTH\nof 15-16 (British extraction) on a\nfarm for a year. No milking, only\ntight chores. Companionship main\nobject Delightful life for \"outdoor\" boy. Fiihing, hunting, camping. Referencei and photoi to parenti or guardian. Apply Box 2284\nNelion Daily Newi\nWANTED: COMtfOftTAhLE HOME\nand peraonal care for leml-lnva-\nlid.old lady, Nelion or TnU Diitrlct. Reply to Box 9873 Newi,\nNrlaou Saily Sfoma\nTelephone 144\nTrail Circulation: Pbone 1378-R\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per lint per Insertion\n44c per'line per week (6 coniec.\nutivh insertion! for cost of 4)\n$143 a line a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox number lie extra. Thil\ncovert any number of timet.\nPUBLIC NOTICES, TENDERS.\nETC.\n18c |}er lipe, fint iniertlon and\n14c each  subsequent tniertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial  SHuitloni\nWinted, for 25c for any required\nnumber ot  Unit for ilx dayt\npiytbli In tdvtnct.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATE3\nSingle  copy \u201e ..8   .03\nBy carrier, ner week      2i\nBy carrier, per year   ISM\nBy mall:\nOne  month     8   -73\n\u25a0Three monthi     2.00\nSix   monthi       4.00\nOne vrar \u2014    -   8.00 a\nAbove ratei apply ln Canada,\nUnited Stites and United Kingdom to lubicrlben living out-\nside rexulir carrier areai.\nEltewhere and to Canada whert\nextra postage tt required one\nmonth 8150: three monthi 84 00:\ntix montht 88 00: one veir 315\nCentral School Glrlt\nWin Basketball\nFrom Hume School\nCentral School girls woo .the tint\npublic ichool basketball game of the\nWinter Monday when they defeated\nHume School glrlt 82-12 at Central\nSchooL The teami plan to stage in-\nother game at Hume School. In the\nnear future.\"\nHigh scorers Monday wire Betty\nGermain, with eight pointi, and Pat\nEdward and Gladyi Davis wtth tix\npolnta each,\nCowley Regains\nlow **toi\nin N.HI Race\nMONTREAL, March \u00bb (OP)\u2014Bill\nCowley, Boston's play-making centre, It back atop tht National\nLeague icorlng race, official statistics ihowed today, ind hli chancei\nof winning top honon for the tecond time ln three yeari appeared\nbright..\nCowley picked up three polntt\nduring the week to move out ahead\nof Chlca^'t Bentley Brotheri, Max\nand Doug, by two points. Cowley\nhu amassed 67 polntt and the Bent-\nleys 68 each. '\nThe leaden: >\nPen. ln\nG  A Pta min\nCovdey, Boiton  X  16  VI    8\nD. Bentley, Chi 30   35   66   13\nM. Bentley, Chi 25   40   95    2\nCarr, Toronto  \u201e\u201e 26   30   St   U\nPatrick, Rangeri .... M   36. 56   28\nTaylor, Toronto   17  38  55    2\nHextall, Rangers ....'.. 24   29   53   28\nBoll, Boiton  25   27   S2  20\nBlake, Canadiem .... 21   31   52   16\nHowe, Detroit  18   32   M   10\nBenoit Canadiem .... 25 26 50 23\nO'Connor, Canad'i ..14 36 50 , S\nLach, Canadleni ..:... 16 34 40 -4\nA. Jackion, Boston ..21 26 47 10\nG. Stewart, Toronto  22 tl   43   18\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES                        Bid, .   Aik\nBralorne       8j88 0.00\nCariboo Gold     1.25 1.28\nGolconda      .06 MVt\nGold Belt  15 .17\nGrull Wlhktne   ' M .06*4\nIsland Mountain 75 .00\nKoot Belle   23*4 J8\nMcGIllivray    _.    .17.4 -23\nPacific Nickel  09*4 .13\nPend Oreille      1.51 1.57\nPioneer Gold     1.82 1.65\nPremier Gold  76 M\nPrivateer    30 .40\nSheep Creek     .98 M\nWhitewater                  MV, fl3vt\nYmir Yankee Girl ,08V* M*i\nOILS\nAnaconda   04% MV,\nAnglo Canadian  60 .63\nBaltac       27 59\nCal Sc Ed     1.50 1.55\nCommonwealth        .26 30\nDalhousle          33 38\nDavies Pete   .20 .22\nHome      3.30 8.40\nMcDougall Segur ..    .0814 .10\nMill City          07 .07\u00ab4\nNational Pete     .07*4 \u2014\nOkalta Com  54 .60\nPacalta     Ml, .07\nRoyalite      22.50 26.00\nSunset       MV, \u2014\nUnited     IH .08\nVanalta   07 .08*4\nField Marshal Sir Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief, India,\nsince July, 1941, haa been awarded\nIhe Grand Crosi of the Order of\nOrange Nassau by the Queen of\nthe Netherlandi.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nFOR SALE: SMALL MARINE\nboiler ind engine, lul'able for 25\nto 28 ft boat or for wood tawing\noutM Boiler and engine ready to\nInstall. 3200. R. A. Fowler, 1866\nBty Ave., Trill, BC.\nH9 DeLUXE FOhD S\u00bbT5AN. WITH\ntmtll mileage. No tnde-in. Buer-\nge'i Qaragi, Nakuip, B.C,\t\nr*jR\"^Anfr3rBKot6,Tusrii\"xi5\nWU overhtrul job on motor, 3200.\nPhone 985-L. \t\na-TAtiiAfdhs ANBTrarsror.\nIngi C.ty Auto WrecKtrt\t\nfi'potffiAC ZSm. *S6o5Tltn\nIU Cath. Nelion Auto Wrecking\nIPK, IKIll.iK COUI'K IIF.ATt-lt, l.l-\nMiice, |850, Apply Box 2248 Ntwi.\nMINES\nAnglo-Huronlan   Ja. 3.50\nBeattie Gold Minet  82\nBidgood Kirkland   ' .17\nBuffalo Ankerite  2.15\nCastle-Trethewey        .70\nCentral Patrlcii 1.14\nChromium M. Jt S 2.30\nConlaurum Mlnea 1.10\nConsol;dated M. Jt S _. 412.50\nDome Mines  5150\nEast Malartc    LIS\nFWorado Gold    ...\"     .90\nFalconbrldge Nickel  8.60\nGodt Uke Gold     .24\nHird Rock Gold _-._   30*4\nHollinger  \u00ab35\nHudion Bay M. A S. .._'... 26.00\nInternitlonil Nickel  ,\u201487.60\nKerr-Addlwn      5.95\nKirklmd Lake    68\nUke Shore Minet  ....13.63\nLtmaque Contict  \u2014 4.10\nLittle Long tic  _ \u2014   .70\nMtoUod Cockshut*   108\nMidien Red Uke    118\nMilirtlc Oold    178\nMrfntyre-Potcuplne   ; 5085\nMcKenrle, Red Luke     .92\nMining Corpontlon  1.60\nNlpl\u00ablng Mining ... \u201e 1.10\nNorindi  4S.no\nNormetal     36\nOmegt Gold \u2014\u2022   .18\nPamour   Porcupine       .62 ,\nPcrrota   Gold    - \u2014   .00\nPickle Crow Oold  1 80\nPretton Eait Domt  _. 2 20\nSin Antonio'Gold  145\nSherrltt Gordon      .86\nSliden Milirtlc     ,39\nSudbury Bailn   1.92\nSylvinlte \u2014 _ 1.50\nTeck-Hutrhei Gold  223\nToburn Gold Minei   64\nVenturei  8.78\nWright Hargreavei   8.28\nOILS\nBritiih Amirlcin  ..  19.68\nBritiih Dominion   21\nImperiil 13.00\nInter etroleum    ...._ 17.75\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbHlbl Power A     .78\nBell Telephone   .....'..... 147Vt\nBrewert S, Dlitll)ert     l*A\nB. C. Powtr A    28\\4\nCm. Cir Ji Foundry     8*4\nCan. Oment  ...:.\nCan. Malting    \t\nCan. Pacific Rly. ..\nCan. Ind. Alcohol \/\nDom.  Bridge  \t\nDlstlleri Seagrams\nFord of Canada A\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypeum L. Se A. ....\nHamilton Bridge ....\nImperial   Tobacco\nMontreal Power ....\nNat Steel Car .......\nPower Corp -\nSteel of Can\t\n4V4\n38\n8**4\n4*4\n26 V,\n27 \"i\n21%\n7*2\n5H\n8\n10H\nUV,\n46**\n6V4\n64\nBulls, Vernon\nAgree on Series\nVERNON, B.C., Mtrch ( (CP)\n\u2014Ctlgtry Buffllen and Vernon\nMllltiry Austin today raachid\nin agreement on the meant tf de\nterm In Ing the Weitern Canada In\nttrmtdlttt hockey flnili ntxt\nWedneiday night If Buffllotl trt\nnot leading it tht tnd of reguli-\ntlon'tlmt.       ...\nButfaloet had protested the failure to play overtime laat night when\nthe icore itood 4-4 at the end ot the\ngame. The Calgary team took tbe\nflnt game of the best-of-three terlei 4-3 latt Saturday night .\nCalgary can win with a tie on\nWedneiday night, but if the All-\nStan are ahead, three extra 10-\nminute periods wil) be played, with\nthe team ahead at the end of the\novertime sessions being declared\nthe winner, Leh Wood, Vice-Preii-\ndent of the British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association, turned\ndawn Buffaloes' request for a fourth\ngame on neutral Ice if Vernon wins\non the ground no iuch ice it available. ,\nOBJECT TO CULLEY\nCalgary alio objected to the ..refereelng of Ty Culley of Nelson, B.C.,\nand George Sparrow of Vernon,\nand aiked that Pete Sands of Calgary be brought ln. Their request li\nbeing considered. Butfaloet claimed\nthat last night os soon as regulation\nplay was over both refereei left\nthe Ice and would not rule whether\nthe game should go into overtime.\nAi a result Buffaloes, threatened to\nwithdraw from* the ieriei.\nSoftball \"Takes\"\nin England\nBy ALLAN NICKLESON\nCanadian Preu Stilt Writer\nLONDON, March 9 (OP.) -'The\nCanadian game of softball shows\nadvance signs of taking Englmd by\nstorm. *Anyway, It's headed for ltt\n\u2022greateit oveneai seaion.\nHeart of the sport last season waa\nLondon'! Hyde Park where thouiand! were entertained and oft-\ntimes bewildered ai teami from the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force, Canadian Army and United Statast Army\nihowed their wares.\nAn International set-up li ln the\nmaking. A preient propoial li to\ncarry on with Hyde Park Houte\nUaguet In all three tervlcei, with\nthe league! to contribute all-itar\nteami.\nKey flgurei ln the planl are Fit.\nLt Frank Doughty of R. C. A.' F.\nheadquarten and David Strain of\nthe Y.M.CA\u201e both of Toronto, and\nCapt. A. V. Walker of the U. S.\nArmy.\n'Thoie exhibition gamei we held\nlast year with the Amerlcani tottered plenty of good iplrit and the\ncompetition wai keen\", uld\nDoughty.\nA total of 2650 toftballs havi been\ndistributed to Canadian airmen,\nalong with 672 bats.\nDividends\nBrewers and Dlitlllen, 30 centi\nplui 10 cents per ihare.\nMONTREAL    STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAasoc Brew of Can          W,\nCanadian Bfowte      \u2014    33*4\nCan Car A Fdy Pfd  JM4\nCan Mantie Pfd  \u2022\u2014 135*4\nCan Steamship Pfd \u2014    35\nCon Min 81 Smelt    \u00ab*4\nDom Steel Ji Coal \u2014    M\nGatineau Power Pfd       \u2014   85\nMcColl Frontenac       8V4\nNational Brew LtdL    Mv*\nShawnlgan W. \u2022\u00a3 P     17\nSouth Can Power _.   1\nSteel of Can Pfd     W\nBANKS '    .\nP.ank of Commerce  138\nDominion Bank  \u2014 155\nImperial Bank  186\nBank of Montreal  187*4\nNova Scotia -- la\nRoyal Bank    134'4\nTnwJuiL JwuLl\nLONDON, March 9 (dP)-The\nStock Market held a generally\niteady undertone in quiet trading.\nIndustrials were for the meat\npart higher, Home Rail! encountered iome profit-taking tnd Olli were\nquiet. Ktfflri were in demind both\nit home ind from Cipe Toivn and\nlharp gains, were the rule. Diamonds eased.\nMEW YCaRK-Stocka tuffered one\nof the'iharpeit relapiei of the put\nyear but liquidation dried up near\ntht cloie of the mirket and extreme\ndeclinei running to three or more\npoints wero reduced In the majority af Instances.\nIt'ajras debeteable whether much\ntelling wat touched off by the Moi-\ncow-Standley Incident although\nbroken generally were In agreement regarding tubitantltl profit\ncashing on the vlrtuilly uninterrupted 10-monthi' upturn.\nTQROaNTO\u2014Buylng iteim wu at\na little lower level ind offerings\nwere taken at lower bids, giving\nthe market a weak tone through\nmoit of the leitlon,\nNeir thl close pricei perked up\na bit ind In lome of the Goldi the\nloiiei were reduced. All four In-\ndiets were down.\nMONTREAL\u2014Pa|\u00abri fat*d 10ft-\nir Inuei In tndlng.\nDOW |ONES AVFRACES\nClots   Chtngt\n30 Induitriili \u201e    129,80   otf    .7*\n20 rails      \u2014 -   ..33.06   off     .23\nU'oUl  :  .  -    17.40 oft   .10\nm\nIVTNNIPTCI-iMUlt, ihlppen, Bait-\nem buyen and Southern Interests\nabsorbed til offering! ln the wheat\npit. The May futurei price cloied\ntil cent higher it 96W centi 1 bushel.\nThe volume of whut to change\nhandi wu estimated at 2,000,000\nbuiheli, mott of which lold during\nthe early part of the lestlon when\nthe May future reiched I high point\nof BOH cents. \t\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, March 9 (CP)-Cat-\ntie 19; calvei 2; hogi 244; theep 5.\nOood butcher tteen 11.23-11.75.\nOood butcher helfert 10.75-11. Good\ncows 9.50-10. Good itocker ind feeder itee'rf 10-10.73; common-medium\n8.75-9.75.\nGood limbi 12.75-13.23; good ewet\n7-8.\nHogi yeiterdiy 18.70 yardi tnd\nplants; iowi 12.00 livi weight yirdi\n13-13.50 dressed ytrdi tnd plants.\nNBW   YORK  STOCKS\nAmerican Can .\u2014\t\nAm Smelt t, Re  \t\nAmerican Tobacco \t\nAnicondt    \u2014t\nBeth Steel \t\nCtn Pacific \t\nEutmm Kodik .._\t\nOeneral Electric\t\nOeneral Moton \t\nHowe  Sound    ,. \u2014\nInter Nickel  \t\nKenn Copper  -\t\nStan Oil of N 3\nUnion Carbide\t\nUnion  Pacific \t\nU S Rubber \t\nU S Steel \t\n76 V,\n42\n54 V,\n28\n63\n8\n153\n33 Vi\n4844\n18*4\n33*\nnvi\n60\nim\nSIVi\n5:1..\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 10,1943\u20147\n1.1- 1 \u2022\nReinforced Boston Bruins Battle\nToronto Leah to   Tie\n\u25a0\"\u2022:.f\nBOSTON, Mar\u00abi 9 (OP)\u2014Boiton\nBruins and Toronto Maple Leafi\npltyed to a 5-5 tie lh a National\nHockey' League game here tonight\nAfter getting off to t ilow itart,\nLeafs came from behind twice, A\ncrowd* of 13,112 saw the game.\nMaple Leafi, now engaged In a\nfurious itruggle with Chicago for\nthe third-place berth,, ipotted the\nBruini the flnt two goalrand were\ntrailing by a goal with lest than\nfive minute! to play vrtien Sweeney\nSchrlner rifled them bee), 0n even\ntermi with the Bruini, who have\nvirtually clinched the runnen-up\nposition.\nSchriner'! tying counter came at\n18:32, on a puck that was deflected\nback to him by * rival who had\nblocked a clcae-up wiorirtg try by\nBilly Taylor,\nTiie Bruini, their riddled Tank!\nfilled by Ab Demarco, Oicer Aubu-\nchon arid Norman Calladlne, pur-\nchaied yesterday from the Providence American Hockey League\nClub, pulled Into a 2-0 lead after\nthe first seven minutei on goals by\nDefenceman Jack Crawford and\nArt Jackson. Gaye Stewart then\nregisteced the first Toronto counter\nbut before the opening session ended, Dit Clajiper ciged a 13-footer\nto give the Bruini. a 3-1 lead.\nFORSEY SCORES TWO\nMaple Leafi icored three timei\nduring the' tint 16 minutes of second period play, when Schrlner got\nhii first goal of the game and Jack\nForeey succeeded  In  batting  two\n*    '\nFranklt\npucki.   through   Goalie\nBrlmiek from clote-up.\nDemtrco, while struggling In lh\u00bb\nmiddle of a l\u00bbm In fropt of thi\nToronto cage, managed to scoop thl\npuck through Goalie Turk Brodt \u25a0\nto pull the Bruins into a 4-4 tie latt\nIrf the tecond aenlon and tbout lrH\nway through the final, fierb Call\nreturned the lead to the Bruins bj\ncaging a Bill Cowley assist.\nLlneupi:\nBoston\u2014Brimsek; Clapper, Hoi\nlett; Cowley; Cain, A. Jackion. Sut(\n\u2014Galllnger, Guidolin, Joyd, Cnwa\nford, H. Jackion, Demarco, Calla\ndine, AubUchon.\nToronto \u2014 Broda; R. Hamilton\nPntt; Taylor; Carr. Schrlner. Sub!\n\u2014Hill, Davidson, Poile, Foriey, Kena\nnedy, Jones, McDonald, Stewart.\nReferee\u2014Norman Lamport; Llnea\nmen\u2014A. G. Smith and Bill Clear*\nSummary;\nFirst period\u20141, Boston, Cnwfora)\n(Gallinger) 4:12: 2, Boston, A. Jacka\nion (Clapper, Cain) 7:00; 3, Torontq\nStewart (Pratt) 10:14; 4, Boston\nClapper  (Galllnger, Boyd)  10:44.\nPenalties\u2014Jones, Oalllnget1, Gut\ndolin.\nSecond period\u20145, Toronto,.Schrli\nner (Carr, Taylor) 0:17; 6, Toronto,\nFoney (McDonald, Hill) 7:18; 7,\nToronto, Forsey (Hill) 14:40; 6, Bolton, Demarco (unassisted) 17:27,\nPenalties\u2014Hamilton, Pratt, Qa_<\nlinger, Davidson.\nThird period \u2014 8, Boston, Cain,\n(Cowley, A. Jackson) 9:17; 10, Toronto, Schrlner (Taylor) 16:32.\nPenaltiei\u2014none.\nOrtiz to Defend\nBantam Title\nAgainst Salica Tonight\nOAKLAND, Calif., March 9 (AP.)\n\u2014World's bantamweight champion\n(National Boxing Association version) Manuel Ortii defends the titlo\nover 13 rounds \u25a0 here tomorrow\nnight against the man he won it\nfrom, Lou Salica of Brooklyn.\nThe El Centro, Calif., Mexican, a\ntwotflsted slugger, llftedthe crown\nIrom Salica laat year ln Hollywood\nand hai been eitabllathed 1 2 to 1\nfavdrite to re's'11 \"\u2022 0nl5* 'ne New\nYork Athletic Commission filled to\nrecognize Ortli' title claimi, on the\ngroundi he won lt ln 1 12-round\nmatch, instead of 15.\nF.A.C. Bantams\nDefeat Dodgers\nF.A.C. Bantami won in txhlbl-\ntlon hockey game from Dodgen\nBantams 8-3 Monday afternoon, the\ngame being the first In which recruits for the next hockey seaion\nplayed on the teami concerned.\nSummary:\nFint period: 1, F.A.C., S. Duffy\n(\u25a0Colman); 2, Dodgers, Maglio\n(Staples); 3, F.A.C. S. Duffy.\nSecond period: 4, F.A.C., E. Duffy (Brett); 5, Dodgeri, Migllo; 6,\nF.A.C, E. Duffy (Brett); 7, FA.C,\nBrett; 8, TAiC. Holmei.\nThird period: 9, Dodgeri, Maglio;\n10, F.A.C,  S.   Duffy   (E.   Duffy);\n11, FA.C. Brett.\nPenalties; F.AC: Affleck; Dodgeri, Maglio,' Kennedy, Chiluck,\nFreno 3.\nTeams:\nF.A.C.: C. Maglio, D. Colman, J.\nHolmes, S. Duffy. E. Duffy, G.\nBrett. Jim Todd, A. Hood, J. Wilson, B. Johnitort, G. Johnston, T.\nShrieves, A. Silverwood. G. Affleck, D. Honsberge'r, W. Langrldge,\nJ. Woodall.\nDodgers: J. Bachynikl, W. Freno,\nL. Chaluck, D. Maglio, J. Staplei, D.\nStalnton, A. Kennedy. L. Hopiey,\nG. Turner, W. Goggin, J. Wallach.\nReferees: R. Jonei, J. Valentine;\nScorekeeper. R. Maclntyre; Timekeeper, H. Pitts.\nPhillies Make Trade\nfor Dahlgren\nPHILADELPHIA, March 9 (AP)\n-The Phillies In their firtt \"big\ndeal\" jinder the new regime of Bill\nCox and Bucky Harris today traded Infielder Al Glostop and \"Outfielder Lloyd Waner to the Brooklyn Dodgers for Flnt Bateman Ellsworth (Babe) Dahlgren.\n\"It wat 1 itraight trade, with no\ncaah Involved,\" declared Cox,\nyouthful 33-year-old Pruident\nOn Playdown\nTrail Tonight\nBy Thi Ctntdltn Pren\nALLAN  CUP\nEA8T\nQuebee Senior Hockey Letgui\nteml-flnal\u2014Montreal Air Force Vl\nMontreal Royali it MorrtreiL fourtlt.\ngime of icheduled best-of-three series, tied 1-1, one gime tied. , '\nWEST\nAlberta Provinclil flntl\u2014Cilgiry\nR.C.A.F. Muitangi vi Calgary Currie Army at Calgiry, fint garni ol\nbeit-of-flve ieriei.\nMEMORIAL CUP\nEA8T\nQuebec Junior Hockey Ltigue teml-flnal\u2014Town of Mount Royal Tt\nLachlne at Lachlne, third game o|\nbest-of-thre terlei, tied 1-1.\nOttawa Junior A Ltigut final\u2014\nNew Edinburghi vs University ol\nOttawa ln third game ot bttt-of-\nthree serlei, tied 1-1, -\nWEST\nThunder Bay leml-flnal \u2014 port\nArthur West vs Port Arthur Junlori\nat Port Arthur, third game of beit.\nof-three terlei, tied 1-1.\nSaskatchewan South flntl \u2014 Regina Commandos va Regina Abbott\nat Regini, fourth gime of beit-of-\nfive ieriei, Commandoi leid j-l.\nHockey Results\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nCornwall 3, Ottawa I.\n(Ottawa leadi best of seven semifinals 3-2).\nMontreal Army 6, Quebec 5.\n(Montreal   tikes   beat   of   thret\nquarter finali 2-1).\nMARITIME SENIOR\nPlctou 8, Saint John 6.\n(First game of bett of five tern),\nfinals).\nNEW BRUNSWICK-PRINCE\nEDWARD ISLAND JUNIOR\n\u2022Chirlottetown 1, Moncton 0.\n(Charlottetoaivn   takei   totil   ajotl\nflnili 7-6).\nMANITOBA SENIOR\n8C.A.F.   Bomben   3,   H.M.CJa\nChlppawat 2.\n(Bomberi win belt of flvi finali\n3-1).\nHockey Standings\nNATIONAL LEAQUE\nWLD\nDetroit\nBoston  \t\nToronto  .\nChicago\nCanadiem\nRangeri    ,\nT   APIs.\n23 12 11 157 110 67\n23 17 8 190 167 54\n20 18 9 189 1.V1 49\n17 16 IS 159 157 47\n16 19 9 161 174 45\n10 29 8 146 231 28\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy Thi Auoclited Prett\nPhllidelphii \u2014 Johnny Rutchln.\nion, 131 \u2022Vi. Philtdelphla. ind Maxle\nShapiro, 133H, Na*w York, drew,\n(10).\n\u25a0Chicago \u2014 Jimmy Joyc* 130*4,\nGary, Ind., outpointed Al Reawner.\n136*4, Hlnet, 111.. (12).\nREPORT TURKISH\nCABINET RESICNS\nLONDON. Mirch I (OP.) \u2014 Tht\nTurklth ridlo uld todiy thit thl\nTurkish Oablnet \"hid rtilgntd tnd\nthat Premier Sukru Saracoglu hid\nbeep charged by President limit\nInonu with forming \u2022 new government\nThe Ciblnet't retlgnition, called\nfor by ttatute. fololwasd the uninl^\nmoui reelection of Inonu yeiterdiy\nto \u2022 tecond pretldentlil term.\n '\n-\u2014--^\u2014\n8-NELSON DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10,1941\nCIVIC\n4 MMOUS rUYIM THIATU\nLAST TIMES TONICHT\nShow!  at 7:00-8:42\nGEORGE FORMBY lit\n\"SOUTH   AMERICAN '\nGEORGE-\nPI lis:-March of Time\nCirtoon - Lateit Newi -\n__ ', \u2014\nTHURSDAY ONLY\n$160.00 Bank Nite\n\"a I,    U\n\"DR. GILLESPIE'S NEW\nASSISTANT\"\nam*,   i =\nTor relief of ior* throat and\nthroat Irrltatloni.\nIodized\nThroat Tablets\n.     35e\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nRed Cross Hits\n$5100 Mark\n\"Nelson li $5833 on iti way to the\n$10,000 qouth for thli diitrict, but\nthil ii only the<beglnnlng, and we\nare looking forward to good returni\nfrom the canvassers that are out,\nbut they cannot accomplish thli\nwithout the cooperation of the citizen!,\" itated L. W. Sella, Chairman,\nyeiterday.\nTo date Miss H. Keating topa the\ncanva'yeri Hit with a total of $87.50.\nMri. G. A. Hoover ii second with\n$78.     \u25a0\t\nSecurities Sales\nTotal $161,000,000\nOTTAWA, Mareh 9 (CP)-Salet\not securities by Canada to other\ncountries In 1942 totalled $167,000,-\n000; the Dominion Bureau of Sta-\ntlatlci reported today, while purchase! totaled $61,500,000.\n\u25a0Rill repreiented a larger net Inflow of capital to Canada ln International trade In lecurltiei than ln\n\u2022ny of the nine previoui yean for\nwhich itatiattics are available, the\nBureau said. Excess of sales over\npurchaiei waa $108,500,000.\nIn 1941 ulee of leouritles totalled\n$108,300,000 and purchaiei $75,300,-\n000.\nTransactions with the United\nStates constituted more than 95\n\u25a0per cent of 'the total volume. Sales\nOaf securities to that country amounted to $165,100,000 and purchases\n*\u00bbre $56,000,000. Trading in bond!\nrepresented the major part of the\ntransactions.\n. Of, the total net tales of $108,100,-\n000 to the United States, net sale!\nof Canadian bonds accounted for\n$96,000,000. '\nNet purchases of tecurltlei by\nCanada from the United Kingdom\namounted to $1,200,000, sales amounting to $100,000 and purchases $4,300,.\n000. Canadian securities represented most of this balance, net sales of\nCanadian bonds being $2,500,000 and\n-Canadian stocks $1500,000.\nR.A.F. Airmen\nGef Kick Out\nOf Western Show\nPHOENIX, Arh, March 9 (AP.)-\nCowboy Jargon ts flavored with\nPiccadilly since the RAJ. came to\ntown for it! flrit rodeo.\nCritten in the corral are \"blight-\neri ln the ity\" to cadets from the\ntraining bate at nearby Falcon\nField who cheered a world'i championship show here and dubbed lt\n\"a bit of a blistering contest.\"\nRange railblrdi were more than\nslightly confused when a \"buffalo\nbuffed a bloke over the rail.\" But\nthey got the drift by the time a bull\nrider landed on his pants' seat outside the arena.\nThe cadets doffed overseas caps\nwith true British grace ai the cowgirl! galloped by, remarking ln Oxford accent!, \"they're a capital lot\nof Judyi.\"\nA \"Saverloy-Vender\" did a thriving trade and paused with the mustard pot long enough to observe It a\npretty regal title for a plain hot dog\nman.\n\"Murderoui mubking\" (dangeroui\nplaying), agreed the English ladi\nwho whooped It up for the bronc-\nbusters. Many a oonteatant \"flung\nhli titfor\" and got \"chucked on the\nnoggin\", Britiah veriion of the old\nrodeo cuitom ot losing your hat and\nlanding top-ilde-up.\nCadeti hobnobbing with cowhand! gave the ihow a United Na\ntloni touch. It wat reciprocal enter\ntalnment for the aeriei of rugby\ngamei the R.A.F. itaged this Winter\nhere.\nShirley V Bundle\nGroup Complete\nSuccessful Year\n\u2022 The Shirley group of th* \"V\"\nBundlei for Britain working In cooperation with' die Nelaon Branch\nheld their annual nieeting ln the\nShirley HaU March 4.    '\nThe Secretary reported a tatli-\nfactory effort had been made and\nthat the members had turned out\n233 articlei which Included 66 handmade ill wool patchwork quilts,\nJackets, dresses, babies' clothes,\nsweaters, socks, etc.\nSpecial mention wai made of the\nefforts of Mrt. 3. Hoedt, aged 80\nyears, who among many other articles, hu knitted 49 pairs of wool\nmittens. ,' \u25a0\nDuring the year a tucceiiful tea\nand bake aale wai held which realized $40,\nA handmade wool quilt ahd 11\nimaller articles were raffled which\nhelped to swell the fundi. Two hundred poundi of scrap* wool wai sent\nto Vancouver to be made Into wool\nbats. The sum of $5 was donated to\nthe Christmas Cheer Fund.\nThe'Treasurer reported that a\ntota lot $157.06 was collected with\nexpenditures of $123.1) leaving a\nbalance on hand of $33.84.        .\nThe entire committee was returned by acclamation, with the exception of Mrs. V7. Allah, who elected\nVice-President. Officers reelected\nwere Mrs. G..Anderson, President;\nMn. F. Rupple, Treasurer; Mrs.\nRobert Pickering, Secretary.\nWork Committee: Mrs. A. C.\nSpin, Mrs. L Renwick, Mri. H.\nClive and Mrt. Norcron.\nInterpreting .\nThe War News\nPenny Carnival\nNets $50 for\nInvermere Red Cross\n. INVERMERE, B.' C\u2014The lum of\n$50 was turned ln this week to the\nWindermere District Branch of the\nRed Cron, the net proceeds of the\nPenny Carnival put on by the Junior Red Cross, of the Athalmer-In-\nvermere School. The organization\nll now planning another activity to\nraiae fundi for the Crippled Chil-\nflren.\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, BC.-Rev. M. C. T.\nPercival of Kaslo wai a weekend\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. W. Lawson\nHepher.\n*\u25a0 Mn. D. Bawlf and Mn. P. L. Sullivan ipent two dayi in Creston.\nI Grenfell's Cafe\nWHERE YOU GET THE BIG\nVICTORY SANDWICH\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii\n'SUPPORT THE\nRED CROSS DRIVE\n$10,000,000 Needed\nPAllM DAIRIES, LTD.\niiiiiliililiiiiiiliiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\n\u2022ISKSiSWSJSMSSSSSSWSSSSSSMiit^iSa\nHave the Job Dona Right\n,       See\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nVeto Compulsory\nCollective\nBargaining Now\nTORONTO, March \u00bb (CP.)\na brief presented today to the Ontario Legislature's Select Committee\non collective bargaining, the Ontario division of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association declared:\n\"We submit that to make collective\nbargaining compulsory at the present time would have a disturbing\neffect on employer-employee re-\nlatloni and on war production efficiency.\"\nThe Manufacture\u2122* brief suggested Ontario ihould follow the example ot Oreat Britain, rather than\nthat of the United SUtei.\nBelgians Sabotage\nNazi Buildings\nLONDON, March 9 (OP)-The\nrising tide of anti-German sabotage\nin Belgium wait marked in a tingle recent night by the dynamiting\naf \u25a0 locomotive workihop, i chateau med by the German Army, an\nelectric power station, railway Installation! and a mineshaft, the Belgian Newi Agency reported today.\nAlPfMUWTIFS\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP.)- The\nR.C.A.F.  lnued iti 518th caiualty\nHit of the war today, Following in\nthe Hit:\nOVERSEAS\nMining, believed killed during\ncir operationi: Lawrence, Edward\nCharlei, Sgt, Toronto.\nMining after air operation!: Lawrence, Jack, Fit. Sgt.. Toronto; Pat-\ntrick, Michael, Sgt, Edion, Alta.\nPreviously reported missing, now\nfor official purposes Dresumed dead:\nLinwood, William, Fit. Sgt. Saska-\natoon; Maxim, William Leonard, Fit\nSgt., Niagara Falls, Ont.; Pearee,\nBasil Vincent, Fit. Sgt., Toronto;\nPeebles, Francis Garfield, Fit. Set.,\nDauphin, Man.; Hough Franklin\n.    Walea, Sgt., Winnipeg; Meyer, John\n\"I*     CM     W    r\u201ert\u201e\u201e.(nM.   Onl\nBy GLENN  BABB\nAiiociated Pren Staff Writer\n* The Japaneie army ia observing\nIta annual festival today by hold-.\nIng big air raid drills ln Tokyo\nand Yokohama, Axli broadcasts\nray the exercises \"will be made\nmore realistic by the flying of\ncaptured American and British\nplanes\" over the capital of the\nempire and Its seaport. This emphasis on defence and on the United Statei and Britain ai the chief\nenemies is Indicative of the army'i\ncurrent conception ot what llei\nahead. .\nThe \"day of ttie army\" In Japart\nia the annlveriary of the 1909 battle of Mukden, the climatic land\nVictory of the Russian-Japanese war\nwhich gave Japan her place among\nthe great powers. Before the present\nwar the day was dedicated to keeping alive th,e traditional enmity to,\nward Russia.\n. A year ago, when most of the\nworld was speculating on Japan's\nnext move, there was widespread\nbelief that before many months or\nweeks the would attack the Soviet\nUnion. -At that time the Mikado's\narmies stood at the pinnacle of triumph.\nThe Japanese war machine had\napparently only to choose one ol\nthree roaJs to follow in order to\ndouble the daizling riches already\ngathered in: The Northern way into\nSiberia, the Southern route to setae\nthe British Dominions of the Antipodes or the Westward road to Iqdfa.\nThe Southern adventure was chosen.\nIt came to grief on New Guinea ihd\nin the Solomoni,        a\nLait year It wu If conceivable\nto many that the Japaneae army\noould long withstand the temptation to itab Rusila ln the back\nyhile Hitler held most of the\nRed Army far to the West. It wai\nnot realized then how completely\nJapaneie military leadenhip had\nshifted its objectives, how the\nRussian queitlon had been lubor-\ndinated to the purpoie of expelling the white man from Asia aad\nwelding hil possessions Into Japan'i own greater East Asia.\nBut aayear hai gone by with no\nchange In the correct if not cordi.\nal neutrality that mark! Japanese-'\nRussian relations. The prospect ot\na Japanese attack on Russia never\nappeared more remote. Both countries, fighting tor their Uvea on. other fronts, teem entirely willing to\nleave well enough along on their\nAmur and Ussurl River boundaries\nFrom Moscow comet no encouragement for hopes that sooner or later\nwc shall have Siberian air bases\nfrom which to level Tokyo and Osaka.\nThe other change ln outlook since\nthe army day of 1942 ls no less significant. Then it appeared that Japan was all set for theconquest of\nhalf a world. But today the Japanese\narmy realizes that the best it can\nhope for li to hold a respectable\nportion of what It has overrun.\nFrom the highwatej marks on\nGuadalcanal and the approaches to\nPort Moresby the tide of Japanese\nexpansion has begun to ebb.\nNo. 1r No. 9 and\nNo. tWin\nLadles'Bowling\nTeams No. 1, No. 9 and No. 4 won\ntheir Ladlet* five Pin Bowling League matchei it the Gelinai alleyi\nMonday night. Scorei were,\nNO t\nC. FornellT... -\t\nB. McKinney ..._.\nL.   S.   ....  ....a\t\nt-   S U~*\nM Steiner ..._\t\n 11? 47- 159\n.. 133 MS- 378\n....   54 84- 138\n.....   54 84- 138\n  108 153- 281\n\\ *~t\n..... 481 513- 974\nTotal  L\u201e\nNO.       1 a\nM Fehner _ .a    54  \u00ab4- 138\nL. Bartholomew 130 164- 294\nM. Brewer ...... _.... 192 123- 315\nM. Ron  .  182 llb-r 277\nL. S i.     M   47- 101\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nNEWS OF THE MY\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\nEAQLE8MEETTONIQHT\nAT 8 P.M.\nCosmo. Red Book, Sit. Eve. Poit\non iale today at Valentine!,\nReserve April 17 for Rebekah tea\nand apron iale.\n20 ic. farm. 3-rm. hie. Edgewooa\nJ500 d'n piym't. Blackwood Agency\nI.0D.E. Plans Fashion Show and\nVariety Program;\nTo Give Support to Salvage Drive\nA fashion ihow and program of\nvarious entertainment! such as quiz\nconteiti, and skits, was the main\nactivity for March planned by Kokanee Chapter, I.O.D.E., at its\nmonthly meeting Tuesday.\nMrt. Harold Lakei is convener of\nthe show, which ls scheduled for\nMarch 31 at the Capitol Theatre,\nMrs. J. S. McGregor is in charge of\nproperties and the tableau; Mrs.\nA. L. Creech costumes; Mrs. K.\nGrenfell, variety costumes; Mrs. G.\nLambert, quiz contest; Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd, skits; L. A. McPhail, G.\ni:orstead and Percy Young, staging, and A. L. Creech, electrical\nEmerson, Sgt., St. Catharines, Ont  ,ix'ures'    T   \u201e_ ,.    ,\n\" Mrs. R. L. MoBride is converter\nCANADA of tickets, and she will be assisted\nKilled   on   active   tervice:   Dean  by Mri. P. G. Morey, Mrs.  S. P.\nLloyd   Henry,   WO.   2,   Hamilton.   Bostock, Mrs. McLeod, Mrs. Hunter\nPaterson,   John   Alfred,  Fit,   Sgt., and Mrs. N. R. Freeman\nMarkham. Ont. TO SUPPORT 8ALVAGE DRIVE\nDied from natural causes: Barer,     Full t and coope*ratlon were\nHerman Ac J. Vancouver. offered ,0 J  H  A lwi    chairman\nCanadian in the RA.F overseas:   u lhe m Cross Salvage Campaign\nPreviously reported missing, now  in NeUoIlp by mcmber_.\nfor official purposes presumed dead:,    A committee composed of Mrs. W.\nArchibald. Ronald Earle, FO., Rose-, 0 Ro!l! Mr, charle\u201e Kelman> Mr;\ndale, B. C.\nKaslo Auxiliary\nto Legion Hears\nFrom Men Overseas\nK.ASLO, B. C. \u2014 The monthly\nmeeting of the Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion at Kaslo was held in\nthe Drill Hall. The new President,\nMrs. Driver, wai installed by the\nretiring President, Mrl. Carney.\nTie Treasurer's report was received and application for two rfew\nmembers was accepted.\nMrs. Horner and Mrs. Sutherland\nagreed to take charge of the pack>\nIng and ihipping of magazines. The\nRed Crou affiliation tee of $1 was\n\u2022.greed pild. Extracts of letteri received by Mrs. Whittaker and Mrs.\nArmitage from their ioni oversell were read. A Book of Friendship wai itarted for Mn. Price, a\nmember who hai left to mike her\nhome in High River. Neirly i do?-,\nen letteri from JCiilo boyi In the\nServicei were read.\nD. D. Townsend, Mrs. P. G. Morey\nand Mri. A. Dolphin wai appointed to cooperate with a salvage committee of R. B. Morrif, A. B. Gilker, Ha B. Gore, W. A. Harrison and\nW. R. Grubbe, under the chairmanship of Mr. Aylwin.\nMr. Aylwin addressed the ladies\non \"What to Salvage, and How to\ni'ack It\". On the long list of articles\nhe mentioned paper, rags, burlap,\nsacking, old rugs, aluminum, bras;,\nlea_, all Iron and steel, tinfoil, act-\nsup bottles, liquor bottles and beer\nbottles, rubber and fats.\nPACKING 18 IMPORTANT\n\"The Individual can help a great\ndeal\", he said, \"by packing the ial-\nvage correctly. In the matter of\npaper, there are several kinds to\nbe piled up separately. Magazines,\nmixed paper a^id such as old office\nscrap, old letters etc., newspapers,\nbrown paper and paper bags, and\ncardboard cartons ihould all De\npacked separately ilnce different\npricei are paid for the various\nqualities.\n\"Tinfoil should be packed flat and\nnot rolled up In a ball\" hc laid.\nTotal  5b2 538-1123\nHigh Individual M. Brewer, 192,\nhigh aggregate M. Brewer 313.\nNO. 9\nV. Phlllipi     93 112-205\nA. Byrnei 134 140- 274\nW. Stern    99-82-181\nB. Pattenon 236   77--312\nGrace Smith  138 269- 407\nTotal   699 680\u20141379\nNO. 7\nL. Manifleld    89 150- 239\nRuth  Ronmark    103 97- 200\nL. S    93 77- 170\nKay Berge  182 119\u2014 301\nBetty Simpson ..'.  143 233\u2014 378\nTime to Start Taking Vour\nHALIVIR OIL\nCAPSULES\nEich captuli equal to 4\nteatpoonfuli Cod Liver OII,\nProtect yourtelf againit sought\nand coldt.\n50 cap 95c\u2014100 cap $1.50\n8old it Your Rexall Stort.\nCity Drug Go.\nPhone 34\nBox 480\nTotal  610 676-1286\nHigh individual Grace Smith, 269,\nhigff aggregate Grace Smith, 407.\nNO. 8\nM. Murray   113 103- 218\nM- Hamion    78 121\u2014 197\nJ. Colei     150 100\u2014 250\nM. Patenon 209 133- 342\nM. Hardy  279 158- 437\n829 615-1444\nThe joint committee! are to decide the method ot collection, and\nthe dates of the salvage. It ls hoped\nthat the campaign will be held\nearly in April. ,\nMrs. W. A. Gordon and Mrs. E. J,\nMcGregor were welcomed as new\nmemberi.\nMrs. L. S. Gansner, cbnvener of\nwelware work, reported' that 29\npupils in Central School, 31 In\nHume and 15 in St. Joseph's Academy were being supplied with milk\nMrs. Gansner also laid that four\nNelson homes were receiving milk\nprovided by the I.O.D.E. .\nThe ladies decided that $15 should\nbe set aside for other welfare work\nbesides the provilslon of milk, and\nit was agreed that Mrs.' Gansner\nshould be free to call on the'chapter for more funds if and when the\nneed arises. \/\nMrs. Louis Choquette, secretary,\nMrs. G. S. Mcintosh, treasurer, .Mrs.\nE. C. Wragge, war work convener,\nMrs. G. Lambert, educational secretary, Mrs. L. E. Hamson, Echo\nsecretary, Mn. W. R. Smythe, raffle convener, Mrs. F. T. Griffith, immigration secretary, and Mrs. H. E.\nThain, film secretary, gave monthly\nreports.\nThe tea committee for the afternoon was convened by Mrs. H. Chester, assisted by Mrs. F. M. Auld.\nMrs. L. H. Choquette, Mrs. L. E.\nHamson, Mrs. T. A Carew, Mrs J.\nA. Curran, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd,\nMrs S. E. Briard, Mrs. George Hon-\ntead, Mrs. A. G. Cuthbert, and Mrs.\nLouis Choquette. \u2022\nMrs. John Cartmel, regent, was in\nthe chair.\nTotal \t\nNO. 4\nC. Williamson  131 135\u2014 266\nN. Olson  Ill   42- 153\nE. Hume    97 142- 239\nL. S.  :..   76 100- 178\nM. DingweU 132 178- 310\nHall of Fame\nfor Hockey!\nBy CHARLES EDWARDS\nCanadian Prest Staff Writer\nTORONTO, March 9 (CP.)- A\nsuggestion emanating from the\nUnited States is for establishment\nof a hockey hall of fame. Baseball\nhat iuch a shrine and the conten<\ntlon li that the immortal! of hockey\nshould be honored similarly. There'i\na lot to be iald for iuch a proposition but war-time does not seem a\nprlpltloui moment for itartlng t.\nAnd, if the propoial ever doei become tact, lt ihould be implemented by Canadians. Hockey aa\u00ab major\nsport ls less than 20 years old South\nof the border. The game Is Canada's\nand any hockey shrine should be In\nthis Dominion. Halifax, Montreal\nand Kingston, Ont., could make\nwell-founded bids to house- the\nshrine for lt was ln these three cities, the records show, that hockey\nfirst was played.\nOne of the greatest hockey players In history, Fred (Cyclone) Taylor of Vancouver, was at one time\nan enthusiastic advocate of a hockey hall of fame. Although Taylor\nhimself would be an outstanding\ncandidate for a niche ln such a\nshrine, personal considerations did\nnot Influence the Cyclone. He really loves the game and wants to see\nits great names preserved for posterity.\n3\nSPRING\nCLOTHES\nMade-to-Meaiure\nLadiei or Men   .\nLet us make that new\nsuit or topcoat to measure, Fit and satisfaction guaranteed.\nEMORY'S I\n'       The Man's Stort\n\u2014\nPI\nAbout 200 Greek merchant shlj\nand 6000 seamen are now in\nservice of the Alllei.\nTotal   547 597-1144\nHigh  individual  M.  Hardy, 279,\nhigh aggregate M. Hardy, 437.\nJ. P. MORGAN ILL\nNEW Y0RK, March 9 (AP.) \u20143.\nP. Morgan has suffered a retur\/i of\nhit former heart trouble while at\nBoca Grande, Fla., and the directors\nof his banking house today expressed anxiety over his condition.\nCRERAR IN HOSPITAL\nOTTAWA, March 9 (CP.) \u2014 Re\nsources Minister Crerar went into a\nlocal hospital today, for a minor op'\neration. He is expected to remain in\nthe hospital about 10 days.\n\u2022 \u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab* WW WW WWW 9*,\nWhen  your  hair   is\ndrested   nicely,   you\n.feel confident.\nHaigh  Tru-Art\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nWholesale tnd Retail\nTelephone 176 '\nFoot of Stanley Street\nHospital Auxiliary meeting, nursei Home, Friday afternoon.\nRepair work done by the Beatty\nrepair shop it guirinteed. .\nMany buyera waiting for houie!\nSe farmi. Miy we hive your lilting?\nC. W. Appleyard.\nBeekeepers! We pay caih for beei-\nwax. 30c per pound. Sell ut your\nturplui. HIPPERSON'S.\nInquiriee ire coming in dilly for\nhouiei ind firms. Get your listing!\nIn. Phone or write it once. Robert-\nton Reilly,\nAT THE RINK TODAY\n2:00-4:00 Oeneril Skating\n6:00-7:00 Junior Hockey\n8:00-10:00 Skiting Club\nSPECIAL SALE\nMAGLIO PLUM TREES\nOne yeir old treei eich $1\nTwo and 3 yr old treea eich 12\nSpeciil Pricei tor lirger orden.\nC. Maglio, 620 Robion, St.. Ntlton\nYour mm in uniform would appreciate a Junior Kit Bag filled with\nstationery. Whtn the contents an\ndllpoied of he will ute It for imall\narticle! and hit toilet requlillei. We\nhive them. D. W. McDerby, \"The\nStationer Se Typewriter Man\", 654\nBaker St., Nelion. B.C.\nDIATH NOTICI\nHAWKEY A: the Hamilton pen\neral Hoipltal on Tu<eiday, March\n9. 1043, Rlchtrd John Hawkey, M U\nof Hamilton. Ontario. Funeral and\ninterment in Hamilton,\nMEN FROM MARSt\nThey look like bogey men, but actually these are three Royal Canadian Air\nForce fighter pilots demonstrating what\nto wear at 40,000 feet. The increasing\nnecessity for high-altitude flying in\nfighter squadrons was emphasized recently by the experience of a pilot In the\nMiddle East who climbed to 50,000 feet-\nnine miles above the earth\u2014to bring\ndown * specially-equipped German Messerschmitt. The trio shown here are\nFlight Sgt. R. Fuller of Hortonvllle, N. S.;\nFlight Lieut. J, G. Keltle of Edmonton,\nand Pilot Officer J. Johnson of'Selkirk,\nSask.\u2014RC.A.F. Photo.   ,\nBenjamin Hicks\nBuried al Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C. \u2014 Funeral aervices\nfor Benjamin Hicks of Gerrard were\nheld from Somen Funeral Parlors\nMonday afternoon. Rev. H. J. Armitage Conducted the service.\nHymnj lung were \"Nearer My\nGod to Thee\"; and \"In the Sweet\nBye and Bye\".\nPallbearen were Fred Spiers, A.\nL. McPhee, Mac Murphy, Bud\nThompson, Cecil Pangburn and E.\nW, Somen.\nTry.\nQUICK LUNCH\nMELON DEW\nTODAY\nJ. P. Walgren\nGeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.!\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii\nYou Can Alwayi Depend on a\nWILLARD BATTER\nBuy Now at\nCuthbert Motors Lt<\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Poit Offic\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillll\nSalmo Institute\nHeart From\nMen Overseas\nliie monthly meeting of Salmo\nWomen's Inititute wai held at the\nhome of Mrs. Jack Stirling of Salmo\nwith 17 members and three new\nmentbers present. Mrs. E. Lund,\npresent, was in the chair.\n- Seven letteri of thanks for Christmas parcels were read from the following oveneas soldien:\nMurell Bush,\u00bbGlen Messinger,\n\u25a0Bert Steenoff, Leslie Lund, J.\nCruikshanks, Leonard Wood and\nWm. Kalmikoff. Some of the parcels\nhad apparently been through the\nmail fire at Halifax as the boyi iald\nthe chocolate bars tasted of exting--\nuishing fluid. Nevertheless they\nwere eaten.\nNo baby clinic was held In February. Five cards were mailed to\nthe sick. Mrs. E. H. Cosnett and Mrs.\nJ. Stirling won' the War Savings\nStamps,\nThe Secretary reported 814 new\nNo. 2 Ration Books were Issued. The\nwork was carried out by Mrs. E.\nLunrl, Mrs. R. Clare, Mrs. J. W.\nHearn, Mrs. E. Tannas, Mrs. J. Stirling, Mrs. J. J Sutherland, Mrs. G.\nH. Cockburn, Mrs. J. Dehnke, Mrs.\nAlex Shank, Mrs. C. Hearn and\nMrs. E. \"J. Avery.\nMrs. E. Paloka, a non-member also assisted.\nFinal arrangements were made\nfor the St. Patricks Dance. A linen\ntable cloth and serviettes will oe\nraffled, to raise fundi for cigarets\nfor overseas soldiers.\n!o Continue\nGray (reek (link\nGRAY aCREEK, B.C.-The annual\nmeeting of the Porcupine Club was\nheld at Mrs. John Wolfhard's. It\ntook the form of a surprise Bouse-\nwarming tea. Sandwiches and cakes\nwere provided by the members.\nThe financial report of the club's\nactivities were given, A refund ot\n$18 .for 12 children came from the\nGovernment for the dental clinic.\nAfter some discussion it was decided\nto continue the dental work which\nhas amounted to about $60 per annum. The meeting decided tnat the\nGovernment should provide tdrmi\nfor the dentist's reports.\nMn. George Oliver wai given i\nvote of thanks for her work and waa\nunanimously reelected. Mrl. Wolfhard offered to help with the dent-jl\nbusiness with which she it familiar.\nIt was decided to sponsor the Red\nCross Drive and Mrs. McGregor and\nMrs. Clark will canvas. Mn. Lymbery offered to ask for more Red\nCross supplies If members could con.\ntinue the work. Several ottered to\nknit and machine-sew.\nA lcter from Mrs. T. W. Brewer,\nNelson, was discussed. It was decided to start a box for V Bundles\nand tn also collect toys, books and\nChristmas cards for scrapbook,\nMiss Margaret Clark gave a report on the Club Library and turned\nin the proceeds. There are now over\n100 books.\nIt   was  decided   to   have   book\nshelves built to increase the season's\ncharge for books to 50 cents per\nhousehold. Miss Clark was given\nvote of thanks for her work.\nLetters of thanks for Christmas\nparcels were read. Mrs. Wolfhard\nthen opened the Individual gifts that\nhad been brought by members and \"a\nnumber of charming and useful\nthings for her new house were discovered. Tea was then terved.\nBecause they grow in thick Jungles mahogany trees are often located by means of airplane.\nF. H. SMITH\nIf It's Electric\nPhon. 666       351 Baker |\nLifeut. Elsdon Gives\nTalk to Scouts\nat Bonnington\nBONNINGTON, B. C.-An interesting talk was given to the Boy\nScouts and Cubs of the Bonnington\nand South slocan troupt in the Par-\niih Hall on Friday evening, by Lt.\nD. Elsdon, of the Royal Canadian\nArtillery.\nLt. Elsdon was | Introduced by\nC. H. Bland and W. A. MacCabe of\nthe Scout Group Committee. The\nScouts were In charge of Norman\nSweet, Assistant Scout Master, and\nthe Cubs were in charge of Mrs. L.\nHimmoi>d, Cubmatter.\nLt. Elsdon described his various\ntraining counei and how his previoui Scout training under W. C.\nMotley, had helped him ln the different courses. He stressed the importance of Scouti work and its\nbenefits to everyday life. He mentioned how courteiy was one of tho\nScouti' qualities and that they are\nrecognized by that quality.\nMr. Hammond, Cubmaiter, then\ntook over the meeting, giving a\nthort iddrtsi on the training of\nCubi,\nBREWERIES PROFIT UP\nMONTREAL, Mirch 9 (OP) -\nNational Breweries Limited todiy\nreported pet profit In 1942 at $2,.\n180.848, equil lo $2,61 on the common stock, compared with $2,028,-\n3K or $2.M In IMl.\nFOR HEALTH\nEAT LOTS OF\nHOOD'S\nWHOLE  WHEAT  BREAD\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOMEI\nW. L THOMPSON, Prop.\nDay and Night Service. I\n24 Hour Ambulance Service\n618 Kootenay St        Phone Hli\nANNABLE\nBLOCK\nStates heated, furnished roomi.'\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed   Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nWSSmaSSwSSSSaSawaaSm\nFOR\nCROCERY\nSUPPLIES\nRemember the\nLAKESIDE SERVICE\nOppoilte the Park      Phone 488|\nJ. A. C. Laughton'\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arti Building\nBuilding Materials\nWALLBOARDS\nACETEX INSULATING BOARD,\n4x6, 4x7, 4x8, 4x9, 4x10, tnd 18\"x48\" Lath, '\nPer 100 iquare feet tf7.25\nGYPROC PLASTER BOARD,'\n4x6, 4x7, 4x8, 4x9, 4x10. Per 100 iquare feet .^6.00\nVAPOR STOP LAYER BOARD,\n4x8 SheeH Only. Per sheet $2.16\nGREEN TINTED WALLBOARD;\n4x8 Sheets Only. Per sheet jl.78\nWELTERWEIGHT WALLBOARD,\n4x6 Sheet 96*; 4x8 Sheet tf I .US\nINSULATION\nCYPROC WOOL BATTS, 2 Inchei thick,\nSiics 15\"x24\" and 15\"x48\". Per 100 iq. ft. .. ,97.00\nMOSS TEX LOOSE INSULATION,\nBale coveri 33 iq. ft., 3 Inchei thick $1.10\nRoofing, Aiphalt Shinglci, Wall Felt, Tar Paper, Building\nPaper, Fibreen Roof Cement, Roof Coatings, Lino Cement\nPlint, Varnith and Enamelt, Platter, Wlndowi, Sath, Doora\nBURNS\nLUMBER a 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_03_10","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0415575","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1943-03-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1943-03-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}