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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":" Three-Way Pounding Handed Munda\niq Pacific\u2014Pigt 2.\nAsk Canadlani ta Sand Picturei of Enemy\nLands ta Naval Board.\u2014Paga 5.\nBritain, U.S., Canada Ready to Meat\nProduction Needi.-J'aga 8.\n%0%ii\nClraud Pledgei Frtnch Will Fight japa\nAfter European Victory.\u2014Paga 3.\n$200,000,000 Highway Program Prepared\nfor Poet War B.C.\u2014Paga 3.\nCanadian Wellington Bomber Squadrons\nCo to North Africa.\u2014Page 3.\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CAN ADA-SATURDAY MORNING. JULY 10. 1943\nNUMBER SS\nCanadians in\nForefront of\nOffensive\nOTTAWA, Jtlly 10 (Saturday) (CP)\n\u2014Armed forces of Canada are \"in tho\nforefront of on attack which has as its ultimate obective the unconditional surrender\nof Italy and Germany,\" Prime Minister\nMackenzie King taid in a statement confirming that Canadians are in the Allied\nforce which attacked Sicily early this\nmorning.\n\"All Canada will be justifiably proud to know that units\nof the Canadian Army are a part of the Allied force engaged in\nthis attack,\" the Prime Minister said.\n\"The soldiers of Canada have gone into battle exceptionally well-trained, superbly equipped, keen and full of\nspirit, ready for offensive warfare.\"\nMr. King, who had received the news somewhat In advance of th* announcement to the public, had prepared his\nstatement for use when the information was released generally.\nThe Prime Minister had sat through a day and evening\nlession of the House and hadf\njust left for his home when the\nINVADE SICILY\nFrench Told\nTheir Turn\nIs Coming\nPremier's Speech at\n9:15 a.m. Today\non Western Hookup\nThi ipeech of Prlmt Miniittr\nMackenzie King to Eaitern Ctntdt early thli morning wlll bt\nrebroadcait tor tht benefit of\nWeitern Hitmen ovir thl CBC It\n9:15 t.m. todiy. Hli lubjict wil\n' not innounced.\nThll  broadcait wlll  bt carried\nby CKLN.\n, CKLN itayed on tht tlr lltt\nFrldiy night In vitw of newi of\ntht Invulon of Sicily, ind wlll bt\non the tlr tgtln tt 7:45 t.m. unleu tht ntwi wtrrtnti t chinge\nfrom tho uiual tlmt.\nRuss Beat Off\nFurious Blows\nAll Along Front\nnews was flashed\nWhen the Houm adjourned at 111\no'clock list \"high, the Prima Min-'\nliter, discussing tht subject for con-\n\u25a0ldtrttlon when tht Houie resumes\nMondty, uld ht could not foretell\nwhtt would hippen ln 24 houri but\nhoptd to be ible to proceed with hli\nExternal Affairs eitimatei.\nTo ipectatori In the galleries his\nwordi leemed to indicate that he\nexpected iome important war development!.\nDefence Miniater Raliton wai ln\nthe Prlmt Minister's office In the\nPirliament Building with Mr. King's i _v__   ,.    \u201e      ..      , .    .\nSecretary, Waller Turnbull,  when iTl^Z.. ____]   _\\\nCanadian Army haa htd ftw op\nportunltltt fbr tctivt combat with\ntht enemy. Thli hu not bttn\nthrough tny (wilt ef I tf .own enkt*\ncauie of any policy of tht Canadlm' Government.\nFrom the ouKbreik of wtr, tht\nGovernment of Cantdt has adhered\nto the poiition (hat Cinadian forcei\nin whole or ln part, should be uied\nwhere and when they cm mike the\nbeit contribution to the winning of\nthe war.\nWhen French reslitfnce eollipied\nin June, 1M0, Canadian troopi were\nln France on the point of entering\nbattle. I have mentioned the vital\ntht   flash   came   announcing   the\nlanding.\nMr. Turnbull laid the Prime Minister would go on the ilr it the\ntime of the first newi broadcast\nthll morning\u20148 a.m.  E.D.T.\nOTTAWA, July 10 (Stturdiy)-\n(CP.)\u2014Following li the tex, t of\nPrlmt Miniittr Mackemie King'i\nitatement on the Canadlm -participation In tht ittack on Sicily\nwhich begin urly thit morning:\nTht war for the liberation of the\nconquered and enslaved countries\nof Europe hai just entered upon a\nnew and vital phase.\nArmed forces of Britain, the United States and Canada now are in\nthe forefront ot an attack which\nhai, as iti ultimate objective, the\nunconditional surrender of Italy and\nGermany.\nAll Canada wlll be Justifiably\nproud to know that unlti of the\nCtntdlm Army ire i pirt of the\nAllltd forct engaged In thii it.\nUck.\nA communique just received reports that early ln the morning of\nJuly 10\u2014which has already dawned\nIn Europe\u2014Allied forcei under the\ncommand of Gen. (Dwight D.) Eiienhower begin landing operations\nIn Sicily. Tbe landing were preceded by Allied air attack. Allied naval\nforces escorted the assault forces\n\u2022nd bombarded tbe coast defences\nduring the assault.\nAfler Dunkerque the Canidlan\nArmy became a living shield of defence agalnit the threatened lnva-\nsiort of Britain, When the British\nExpeditionary Force which lurvived Dunkerque reached England'i\nshorei, It had lost large numbers\nof men, and practically all IU weap.\nom, munitioni and equipment. Almost the only land force In the\nUnited Kingdom, at that time,\nequipped to meet an invader, was\nIhe 1st Canadian Division.\nThe role 'of defenders of Britain\nwas thruit ln this way upon the\nCanadlani As successive divisions\nand reinforcements crossed the Atlantic from Canada, they were fitted Into that role.\nFor the three yean since, the Ca-\nnadian Army in Britain has helped\nto maintain the aenirltv nf *>>\u00ab\u2022\nworld's citadel of freedom. Thll\nhas be\u00bbn In iccordance with the\nstrategy planned by those who have\nhad the supreme direction* of the\nwir\nTht ntwi we hivt reeilvid\nmarks for Cinida the biglnnlna\nof \u2022 new phut of tht wtr, Tht\nnibsequent three years, During that\nlong period, as months grew Into\nyears, Canada'i irmy In Britain\ngrew In number!, in efficiency, in\nmobility tnd in armament.\nIts presence In Britain wai the\nmeans of holding ln Weitern Europe\nGermans forces many timei id size.\nMeanwhile, by a arrange turn of\nthe wheel of fortune in this global war, It fell to other units of\nCanada's Army, at the other lide\nof the world, to see the first action ln which Canadian soldien\ntook part. When, In overwhelming\nforce Japan struck her treacherous blow, Canadian troops at Hong\nKong fought heroically agamst\nhopeless odds.\nIt was not until many months liter, at Dieppe, that units of the army\nIn Britain first went Into action\nagain!', the enemy. That gallant\nthough costly operation wai a preparation for further operations, some\nof which have already developed.\nBoth at Dieppe and at Hong Kong\nthe courage and the daring of Canadian soldiers reflected undying\nhonor upon themielvei intj upon\nour country.\nMore recently, ln order to gtln\nexperience In leadership under fire,\nofficeri and non-commlaaioned officers from our army In Britain went\nInto battle with the British 1st Army\nIn Tunisia. That experience was alio a part of the preparation for the\ncoming days.\nIn this new phise of tht wir for\nCanadi, the irmy wlll ihare with\ntha nivy and the air force, the\nheat of combat, ind, alio, Inevitable   sufferings   md   lossu.\nWe cm expect no euy victories\nind no quick luccesses. Rather\nmust we be prepared for fierce\nfighting and for a long struggle.\nWe shall need firmneia ind steadiness In the individual cltlitn. We\nshall need calm and fortitude In\nthe homes of Canada.\nThe soldiers of Canida hive gone\nInto biltle exceptionally well-trained, superbly equipped, keen and\nfull of spirit, ready for offensive\nwarfare\nThe fighting men of Cinada\u2014on\nland, at sea. and In the ilr\u2014are\nrisking their lives to preserve everything that all of us hold dear<-They\nare Joined logelher, in the cause of\nfreedom, In the service of their fellowmen, ind by in tolding attachment to their homeland.\nAll Canadi will share the pride of\nthatr loved onei In their courage and\nIn their achievements.\nOf one thing we may be assured.  They  wUl   not  fill   us.  We\nmust not fall them.\nThey will  fight bttttr ftr thl\nSON-IN-LAW OF\nHARRY OAKES\nUNDER ARREST\nPolice Find Sir\nHarry Was\nBludgeoned to Death\nNASSAU, Bahamas, July 9 (AP)\n\u2014Alfred dt Marigny, 31, wu\nbookld at tht pellet station htrt\ntonight on t ohtrgt of killing hli\nfather-in-law, tht multl-mllllon-\ntlrt Birontt tlr Hirry Oakei.\nA formtl charge of murder wu\nplaced tgtinit thl bearded Dt\nMarigny, who denied tny connection with thl death.\nSr Hirry wu known to havt\nbetn unhippy over the.mirrlige of\nhii oldeit diughter, Nmcy, then\n17 years old, to Dt Marigny tt New\nYork ln litr, IMS. It wu the\nlecond mirrlige lor Dt Marigny,\nwho had been ^Ivorced ln Miami.\nfit wti I'rrSted at 8 p.m. tonight\nby Lt.-Col. R. A. I. ind op and Maj\nEmbert Pemberton of the Nassau\nConstabulary.\nCipt E. W. Mechen of the Miami\nPolict Depirtment, lummoned by\nalrplme to lid in the Investigation\ntfter Sir Htrry'i body wu found\non i bed which htd been set afire\nThuriday morning, uld the arrest\ntnd chargu were based on \"hiir\nantlyiis, fingerprint! ind interrogation.\"\nAttornty-Qtmrtl Eric Htlllnin\nrtporttd Sir Hirry hid bun blud-\n.geSned to duth. Then wert four\nuvert hetd woundi, he uld, ti\nwell ti burnt on the body,\nOfflcen believed tn electric fin\nhad blown out the flames before\nthey could destroy the bed.\nThe charge againit De Marigny\ncame u a sensational climax to the\ndeath of Sir Harry, one of the\nworld's richest men with a fortune\nunofficially estimated to be u great\nai 1200,000,000.\nSir Harry made hil fortune In\nCanadian gold mining, having been\nauociated with Lake Shore Mines\nat Kirkland Lake, Ont\nUntil the innouncement cime, details of the ilaylng had been withheld, and the case hid become 1\nmystery which puzzled outsiders.\nDe Marigny had the title, of Count\nin his native colony of Mauritius,\nin Indian Ocean island.\nHe came to Nassau leveral yean\nago with the Marquii Georges De-\nvisdelou Gulmbesu, also of Mauritius.\nbringing to about 40,000 the\ntotal German casualties for.five\ndays of violent action.\nNo Canadian Naval\nShipi in\nLanding on Sicily\nOTTAWA, July 10 (Saturday).\n(CP)\u2014Canadian Nival Heidquirten uld tarly today no Royil Cinidlin Naval shlpi pirticlptted In\nthl lindlng of Allied forcet on\nSicily but tdded thtt did not preclude the possibility thit Cinidiini serving In Royil Nivy unlti\nwere pliylng a pirt\nSevan R.A.F. Studenti\nKilled in Accidents\nCALCJARY, July g (CP)\u2014Seven\nR A.F. itudenti were killed ind one\nR.C.A F itudent Injured in three ilr-\nforce tnining ichool iccidenti during the past 24 houn.\nFive RA F. itudenta it the No. 32\nS F.T.S., Moose Jiw, ichool were\nkilled Thuridiy, in i cruh detail!\ncf which ire not yet ivillible\nTwo otheri were killed it the\nNo. S5 SFTS. it North Bittleford.\nThe Cinadian itudent wis Injured at Ihe No. 18 S.F.T.S, Reglni.\n\u2022Nurmci   of  tht   support   of   t\nUnltid Canada. Wl, too, shall need\n\u2022II thi strlngth thit comu from\n\u2022 deep filling of unity.\nI repeit, wt muit not fill our\nfighting mtn. In tht ntmt of Cinidi, I givi to thtm tht ttiurlfict\nthat Cintdt wlll not fill hir\nfighting mtn.\nBy LYNN HEINZERLING\nAuociated Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, July 10 (Saturday) (AP)\u2014The Russian armies\nof the centre beat off savage Cerman attacks all along the Orel\nand Kursk Fronts yesterday, held their own in the Belgorod\nsector to the South, and destroyed 193 Nazi tanks and 94\nplanes in the great battle of attrition, the Soviet Command an-\nannounced early today.\nThe Cerman dead, In two battle areas specifically mentioned, were nearly 5000 fori\t\nthe day, Moscow declared, thus tratt their lines, they aid, tnd then\n _ ..    I were lubjected to concentric fire ol\ntank-busters, mortars, and cannon\nwithin tht fire bag. Oat unit wit\n.,\u2014   __ iald to have wrecked 74 tanki in 20\nOermin losses In materiel alio : days; inother burntd DO Tigeri ln \u2022\nwere riling to tremendoui propor- j ilngle engagement, Moacow report-\ntloni: Yeiterday'i deitructlon railed | ed.\nto 2038 the number of enemy tanki\nthui far lilted u knocked out, and\nto 904 the number of Nazi planei\nimuhed ilnct the beginning of the\noffensive.\nIn tht Orel-Kursk Motor, tht\nNull tfter four dtyt of httvy\nlouu hid \"gained no success\" and\nhad been forced to shift the weight   ... llAllvlir\nof ittick to other areai, relnforc-1 IU IQ M||l|TU\\\nIng their \"battered troopi\" by nine  Hi   17 MvlllllJ\nInfantry dlvlilom and one tank\ndlvlilon.\nA icort'or mort of Oermin ittacki were betten off\u2014IS of them\nln t single trea (-faction\u2014and fighting at timet wai hand-to-hand,\nFifteen hundred Nails wire wiped out in then actioni; ttld the Soviet Command, as was molt of a\nGerman baftalldd in f_eM!>r_ee\"\u00bb\ntion.\nAbout Belgorod\u2014acene of four\nof the previoui Gtrmtn penetration! tgainst which the Russians\nbattered all diy\u2014no further Nul\nprogress wm reported, ilthough It\nwu declared the invaders were\n\"bringing into battle all their re-\ntervei, itrlvlng it any cost to achieve\ntucceu.\" In thii tector, 2000 Germani were killed during the day;\nln \u2022 ntarby action 1000 more fell.\nBut lt wu In the Kursk-Orel tector where the Supreme Nail effort!\nwere being made.\nQAIN INCH BY INCH\nThe Germini themselvei, ln a\nbroadcast propaganda report, ipoke\nof \"ferocious fighting\" South ot\nOrel where Nitl troopi \"could giln\nground only Inch by inch.\"\nFurther Germin tdvancei\u2014 these,\ntoo, without conflrmttlon\u2014were reported about Belgorod.\nThis German propaganda report\nput total Rusiian tank lossei at\nmore thm 1100 and Soviet plane\nlossei at 1000.\nSoviet  bomben  pounded  Qirmin troop, tank and convoy con*\ncentratlom  ill  along  the  whole\ntront In day and night ittacki.\nOne  Moicow  brotdcut  declired\nthit In Thundiy night'i itttcki\nthe enemy \"iuffered huvy cisual\nties\" and thl Rid Air Forct tmtrg\ned  without  lou of iny  ilrcnft\nfor thi second  night In  luccet-\nsion,\nRussian dispatchei uid thit, ibt\nNazi divliioni were lunging it i\nnarrow lector South of Orel, but\nthit \"the Hitlerite! failed to achieve\nlucceu.\" Three of the ittacking\ndivision! were Infantry; three were\nUnk.\nThe Germani igreed with Rua-\nlim account! thrt the five-day\nstruggle wu growing In lntemity,\nbut even the Nul Command could\ncliim no major lucceu. Both ildei\nemployed miiiet of.reiervu,\nWhlli   it  no   point  ilong  thi\nIK-mlll   ictlvi   front  wu   thin\ni lull. It wu it Onl thit Nul\nField     Minhil    Oumther    von\nKlugt  persisted  In hurling  bit\ntiring  rami  of  steel   it  nirrow\nteeters In hopu of i mijor bmk\nthrough.\nRed Star pointed up the violence\nof battle it the Northern end of the\nbulge by uying certain Soviet formations held their lilies igaimt 13\nsuccessive atticki of Germin tanks\nillowlng not t one to pan through.\nTIGERS  8PIARHEADS\nThe Army Newiptper detcrfbed\nhew the Gtrmini ittacked. The\n20 to 30 Tiger link*, followid by\nipeirhetdj frequentiy comprised\n40 to 90 telf-propelled cmnon. The\u00bb\nfollowed the Inftntry with oldtf\nmodel Mirk-m ind Mirk-Vl link!\nprotecting their flank.. The Ruulini\nparried thett fhrutti milnly with\nstttloniry ctnnon, though Col. Gen.\nFillp Goltkov wu sending lncreulng numbers of mtchiniitd forcei\nInto the friy.\nAt the Belgorod ind of thi 7800\n\u2022quirt mlit bulge In the flit. Kunk\nSteppe, the Ruulini uld they were\ncountering Oermin Uctlci with '\"flrt\nbtgi\"..Tht htidi nf Ihi battering\n'Invasion of Europe\nHat Begun\"\nSays BBC Broadcast\nNEW YORK, July 10 (Siturday)\u2014(AP.) \u2014 \"Tht Invailon of\nEuropi hu begun,\" Robtrt Btnnett, of tht British Broidcutlng\nCorpontlon, uld tonight In t\nbroadcast from Allltd headquarten in Alglen.\n\"Thli li no hit and run affair,\"\nBennett oontinued,\n\"Fighting li going on now, Thi\nmost difficult mlllttry opentlon\nof thli wir hit begun.\"\nALLIED SHIP\nLOSSES LOWEST\nHunt for Submarines\nHas Turned to\nAxis Home Waters\nWASfONGTON, July t-(AP) -\nIn the. war*i ^tjip^fc-iArwoa\non tha battle against U-boats, fhe\nBritiih ind American Governmenti\nJointly innounced tonight Allied\nihip louei In June were the lowest\nin 18 monthi md U-boati io icarce\non convoy routet that the hunt for\nthem wu turned to Axis home waten.\n\"Sinking of Axil submarines were\nlubstantiil ind satisfactory,\" it was\nadded,\n\"\u2014i* lossei from all forms of enemy action were the second lowest\nrecorded since the war between Britain md Germany began.\"\nTht itatement wld the huvy\ntoll Uken of tht U-boits In Miy\nshowed lti tffect In Juna In thtt\nthi miin trini-Atlmtlo convoyi\nwen practically unmolested, ind\nthi U-boat ittacks on our shipping wire In widely separated\nareu. However, every opportunity wai taken of attacking\nU-boats leaving and returning to\ntheir bates on the Weit Cout of\nFnnce.\"\nThe innouncement refrained from\nlaying, even by implication, that\nthe anti-submarine war is won, but\nit observed \"anti-submarine vessels and aircraft ire coming Into\nservice  ln  considerable   numbers.\"\nThe communique wu releued\nhere by the Office of Wir Informition. Director Elmer Divls\nuld It wu tht Intention hereafter to Inut i monthly report of\nthli phut of thi wir, heretofore\nlirgely shrouded In secrecy. Othir offlciili uld thi decliion to\ngive out iuch reports wu reiched\nit thi Int Churchlll-Roouvelt\nConfennce hen.\nSevenl ficton enter into the ln-\ncrapilng Allied luccesi ln opentioni igiinst thli major GeVman\nweapon of the sou:\n1. All typei of inti-iubmtrlne\nrhlpi, deitroyer-etcorts, corvettei\nmd frlgttei ire becoming available\nto the Alllea ln Increasing numben.\n1. New md lecret anti-submarine\nWeaponi hive been Introduced.\n3. Air pitroli hive been Increued\n4. Finally, there Ls the lmmuiur-\nible effect of the bombing itticks\ncirrled out on Axis lubamine bases.\nrem columni wtrt illowed to ptnt-' btavy Umbtri.\nFIVE FIREMEN\nKILLED IN\nCHICAGO FIRE\nCHICAGO. July * (AP) - Five\nfiremen were known deed md two\nothen remilned trapped under tons\nof debrii from i fire thit iwept\nthrough \u25a0 four.itory office ind fictory building on the neir North\nSide todif.\n\u2022 Four other firemen were In hotpl-\nUli.\nMore thin eight houn after tht\ntoof tnd floon of tht building collipied. dropping it lent 19 firemen\nto the buement tnd flnt floor, the\ntwo tripped mm wert itlll illve\nbut luffering igonlilng pain u\nrucuen ilrove (o ruch them. They\nwtrt pinned under steel girden tnd\n.YEARS Of HARD\nWORK BEHIND\nCANADIAN PUSH\nSicilian Offensive\nOne of Biggest\nVentures for Allies\nBy FRANK FLAHERTY\nCinidlin Press SUff Wrlttr\nOTTAWA, July 10 (Saturday).\n(CP)\u2014Nearly four yean of hard\nwork, study, accumulation Of weapons, training and patient waiting ii\nbehind the Canadian Army u lt\nmovej Into Sicily with Britiih and\nUnited Statet forcei on one of the\nbiggest venturei yet undertaken by\nthe Armed Forcei of the United Nttlom in the preient war.\nWhile tht role of tht Ctntditn\nArmy In thli venture mty not be\nfully discovered for iome tlmt It\nli t itlf-iufflclent, httvlly-meoh-\ntnlztd tnd fully-trained force\nready for any typt of opentlon,\ncapable of hitting hard and trivel-\nWhilt tht clrcumitancti of wtr\nfavored the building of the Cantdian\nArmy to its present ilie and state of\nefficiency, Ita creation .out of the\nyouth of % practically demilitarized\nnation has been the full-time job\nof thousands ot the keenest and\nboldest men of the country for upwards of three years \u2014 from the\nArmy Commander, Lt.-Gen. A. G. L.\nMcNaughton, down.\nWhen war broke out In September, 1938, Canada had a permanent\narmy of 4800 men with a non-permanent mllltla organized in unit!\nacross the country and endowed\nwith .more willingness than military training or experience.\nThe growth of the fighting force\noverseas to proportions otf some 200.-\n000 men proceeded from the beginning, along with the growth In\nCanada of facilities for enlisting,\ntraining and equipping loldiert.\nThe 1st division was organized on\nthe outbreak of war md wai drawn\nfrom both the militia and the permanent force. With unlta 'selected\nfrom military districts across Canada, lt has representative ot the\nwhole country.\nSetting to work with t wlll the\nmllltla  unlti which  were cilled\nout recruited up to war itrength\nand embarked upon Individual and\nunit training; but when the tlmi\ncame to bring them all togetner\nfor divisional training there was\nnot a Winter camp In Canada big\nenough to accommodate them all.\nThat wai one of the reasoni it\nwent oversea! when It did\u2014in December, 1939. The unit! of the division   were  brought  together  for\nlhe flrtt thne when they reached\nEngland.\nAfter the 1st Diviiion moved off\nbick in Canada the 2nd wu ln process of organization. At scores of\npoint! acron Canada carpenters\nwere hammering and uwlng u\ntnining centrei took ihipe to ic-\ncommodate the thouiandi of would-\nbe soldien who donned uniforms.\nThe big Job of army-building ln\nthe early period of tht war wu to\nget trilnlng facllltlei, equipment,\nind penonnel for initruetion and\nadmlniitration. -Men had to be\ntnined to triln otheri.\nAfter the establishment of a system of basic, advanced and ipeclil-\nIst tnining centrei cime creation\nof offlcen' training centres, fint\noverieu end later concentrated ln\nCinida along with provision for\nthe training of itaff officeri.\nThrough part of tht long, grim\nSummer of 1940 thi 1st Cinidlin\nDivision wu thi only fully-iquip-\npeil dlvlilon In Englind tnd itood\nIn I itrategic tru reidy to counter-attack tny Invidlng force.\nBut tht expected Invulon did not\ncome ind in the later Summer Otn.\nMcNiughton itepped up to commind I corpi formed of the 1st Division, wlth'Brltlih md New Zealand\nformations. In the mme yetr -the\n2nd Dlvlilon irrived oveneu, com-\npltttd lti mining ind ln Dtcember Joined the corps, repliclng the\nBritith ind New Zealand formitlon! and making lt an ill-Canadian\noutfit\n. WASHINGTON, July 10 (Saturday)]\n(AP)\u2014Allied forces\u2014Canadian, British1\nand United States \u2014 leaped across tht\nMediterranean from Africa bases today\nand climaxed weeks of aerial pounding\nwith a mdjor invasion of Italian soil\u2014thf\nIsland of Sicily off the Italian boot.\nPowerful air forces, aided by naval bombardments, pr\u00ab\u00ab\nceded the landing of soldiers on the big Island which had been\nsoftened up by precision and area bombings mounting In inten\u00ab\nsity over weeks,\nthe United States War Department Issued a 50-word\ncommunique to dramatically disclose first details of the drivt\nby forces under Gen. Dwight David Eisenhower. The announce. ,\nment coincided with a radio^ *\nbroadcast from Algiers which\ngave the bare announcement\nof the momentous step.\nCanadian, British md American\ntfoops comprised the Invasion forcei.\nGen. Elsenhower timed the bold\nthrust with an announcement to the\npeoplt of Axil-dominated France\nrhallhefr hrfn 1\u00ab ._&_. Ht. uld\nthis was the flrit stage in the \"liberation of the European Continent\"\nbut emphasized in a broadcast that\nthe down-trodden French would be\nwise to lay low and not expose\nthemselvei to reprisals.\nThia Jump-off to the big Italian\nIsland w\u00abnt a long way toward\nclemjng up the Mediterranean.\nWith Africa in the hands of the\nAllies, Sicily undergoing a man-toman attack, and Sardinia 10 cloie\nit scarcely could escape I blow\n\u25a0ioon, t large area of the \"soft underbelly\" of Axia-held Europe was\nunder direct fire.\nNevertheless,   the  poulbility  If\nnot probability of ipirited reilit-\ntnce by Sicily's defenden existed.\nGerman-Italian forcea hid been\nreinforced In 8outhem Italy and\nIta   outpoiti   recently,   with   in\nantl-lnvulon trmy of perhips Is\nhigh is 300,000 highly-trained men\npoised for the teit.\nThe text of the announcement:\n\"Anglo \u2022 American \u2022 Canadian\nforcet, under command of Gen.\nEiienhower, began landing operatloni In Sicily early thit morning\n(July   10,   North   Afrlcin   time).\nLandings   were   preceded  by  in\n\u2022 Ir ittick,  Naval  forcei eicorted\nthe uuult forcet and bombirded\nthe cout defencei during the is-\nuult\"\nIn connection with the landings ln\nSicily Eisenhower broadcast an announcement to the people of France\ntelling them the invasion of the islmd off the toe ot the Italian boot\nwas \"the first stage in the liberation\nof the European continent,\" but\nwarning them not to expose themselves to reprisals by premature action based on any\u00bb assumption that\nan Invasion of France was Imminent.\nThe translation of thll broadcast\nfrom North Africa, supplied by the\nWar Department, follows:\n\"Announcement to Frenchmen of\nFrance:\n\"Anglo-American-Canadian armed forcei have today launched an offensive igainit Sicily. It Is the first\nstage In the liberation of the European continent. . There will be\nothers.\nURGES  CALMNESS\n\"I call on the French people to\nremain calm, not to allow themselves to be deceived by Ihe fnlse\nrumors which the enemy might cir-\nculale. The Allied radio will keep\nyou Informed on military development!. I count on your sang-froid\nind on your sense of discipline. Do\nnot be rash, far the enemy is watching. Keep on listening and never\nheed rumors. Verify carefully the\nnews you receive.\n\"By remaining calm and by not\nexpoilng yourselfi to reprisals\nthrough premiture ictlon, you will\nbt helping ui tffectlvely.\n\"Whin the hour of ictlon strlkei\nwi wlll let you know. Till then,\nhelp ut by following our Inttruc-\ntloni. Thit li to uy: keep calm,\noontervi your -ttringth. We rt\nput: whtn thi hour of ictlon\n\u2022trlku, wt wlll let you know.\"\nAt Least 12 Die\nas Nazi Bomb\nHih Theatre\nLONDON, July t (CW -     . .\nlent 12 penoni wert feired tt\nhtvt been killed todty In tht\nthtttrt of a Southeut Engllid\ntown whert t bomb from a German ilr-ralder exploded during t\nmovie  ihowlng,\nSoldier md civiliin rucut wort*\nen quickly brought tht victimi ot4\nof the theatre wreckage whilt Horn*\nGuardi and polici controlled trtfi\nflee.\nTha raiders ilso swept netr Ion*\ndon, dropping some bombt la tht\nsuburbs. Four men ind t btby wart\nkilled and worken leaving factors\nies and offices dived for cover um\nder a spray of machine gun \"bul\u00bb\nlets.\nFive men were reported mining\nin the wreckage of t workshop li\none factory.\nTwo  of   the  raiders   crashed  14\nflames.\nFILLED WITH CHILDREN\nThe theatre In the Southeaitert\ntown was filled mostly with chili\ndren for an after-school show when\nit was bombed. The roof collapsed\nunder a direct hit. Many were bur*\nied in the debris but emerged,\nbringing wounded with them. Othef\npersons were injured and killed la\nadjacent shops.\nOne plane circled the town twice,\ncoming low over the buildings before loosing its explosives ln streett\ncrowded with shoppers.\nOther raiders came up the Thamel\nEstuary and one woman was killed\nwhen an unexploded shell crashed\ninto the kitchen where she wai\nmakin gtea.\nArrest Fifth Man\nin Selective\nService Round Up\nTORONTO, July 0 (CD-Robert.\nDouglas of Torontn was arrested today by Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolice on a chVge of \"conspiring\nto impede the operation of Natlonfl\nSelective Service Mobilization Regulations,\"\nHe ts the fifth man to be arrested\non  a  conspiracy charge this week.\nFurther arrests _t_ forecast by officials who say that the police in*\nvestigation hns extended to pointj\noutside  Toronto.\nRossland, S. Slocan\nMen Graduate\nFrom B. and G. School\nMaoDONAI.D, Man , July II (Cp)\n-Air gunners gradunting from No.\n,. Bombing and Gunnery School,\nRCAF.. here today included two\nB.C men\u2014J. Alton. Itnssland, tnd\nG   F. Tindale, South  Slocm.\nR.A.F. ROARS\nOVER GERMANY\nLONDON, July 10 iRaturdiv)\n(CP)~For the second iuceei.lv*\nnight, Roynl Air Force bombirt\nroared out over Germiny Imt\nnioht. It wn innouncii* todty.\n \t\n.\n\u2022\n... :\n\u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1941\n^WAY\nlanes, Warships\nand Artillery\nSmash Air Base\nBy MURLIN SPENCER\nAuoclated Preii Staff Writer\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS, SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, July\n[ 10 (Saturday)   (AP)\u2014More than 100 Allied bombers teamed\nwith destroyers and artillery Friday In giving the Japanese air\nbase of Munda and its perimeter of defences on New Georgia\nIsland a three-way pounding.\n\u25a0 The heavy attacks were intended to soften up that key\nbase in the Central Solomons for Allied ground forces which\n'already have landed on Mundas '\nTimor, 400 miles Northwest oi Auitralia, this time striking on the\nNorth coast at Dlla. A large fire\nwas started ln the dispersal area ol\nthe airdrome. The previous raid wai\nion the ilrdrome at Kupang, Dutch\ngiven mm,\non two sides and now are con\n_folidating   positions   prior   to\napplying a pincers.\nTorpedo bombers and divebomb-\ntri In great force loosed  over 70\ntons of bombs ranging up to 2000 j Timor,\npounders on Japanese bivouacs and\nlupp.y dumps.\nITie destroyers manoeuvred In\ntreacherous waters jilst off Munda\nbale before dawn yesterday, subjecting the Japanese to an Intensive\nshelling.\nOn the ground Allied patrols\nfiltering through the Jungle frequently  made  contact  with   the\nOthtr Allied unlti continued to\ndeil blows In the Northern Solomons it Jipmese bases which\nmight aid Mundi. In a night nld,\nAllied four-englned bomberi attacked the Kahili ilrdromt on the\nSouthern tip of Bougtlnvllle tnd\nalso raided Buin tnd Poporang,\nIn the raid near Salamaua, \"our\n3iiwneM,7n\"*r,iirund.\"'tTdtTfjmrilu\u2122 \"nlt*1 '\u00bb d!reJct \"iPPOrt of\nit Island and to the North near 8r\u00abu\"a *\u21220?' bomb*;d and \u00bb \" u.\not tnchorage where one of our C*.\u2122*** P0-!'\"0,1*,? B,\u00b0,n\u00ab Bobdubl\n10 lindlng. were made. \\m*'!'* *\"'\">'' *\"\"-   th<* commun-\n1 ique said. Bobdubi ls a jungle village only five miles South of Salamaua.\nThe enemy village of Malolo,\nwhich Is North of Salamaua, also\nwas strafed as was Busame.\nThe enemy divebomber attack on\nNassau Bay was made after dawn.\nU. S. troops landed on Nassau Bay\nat the outbreak of the new Pacific\noffensive June 30 and since have\nbeen Joined by Australians fighting\ntoward the coast from the \"Mubo\narea.\nTorpedo bombers and dive-bombers shortly after dawn concentrated\n70 tons of bombs on Japanese bivouacs, supply dumps and anti-aircraft positions between Munda point\nand Lembetl.\nArtillery, presumably, from Rendova, ilso poured shells on the antiaircraft position! \u2014 thus subjecting\nIndlngs have been made on New\nIrgla both above and to the East\nrtunda and advanced American\n_ln have fought off the Japanese'within three miles of the air\nise\nOver Rendova Island, which is a\nort distance below Munda, Allied\ntighter  planes  dispersed  45  Zeros\n*king to raid American positions,\ndestroying four enemy planes.\nAt the other end of a 700-mile\ntttle   arc   on   Northeastern   New\nSuinea, the Japanese made an Inflective attempt to divebomb the\nlllied landing base at Nassau Bay,\nIQ miles down the coast from Sala-\nDtUt.\nJapanese  positions  before  Sala-\ntua 'were pounded for the third\nitrilght diy by medium bombers.\nTor the second straight diy, Allied   planes   raided   the   Island   of\nHit Munda lector to \u2022  thret-wiy\npulverizing: tlr, sea and land.\nDivebombers also attacked tntmy bases at Knognl Inlet and at\nBilroko which Is above Munda.\nTht isfttnlng-up prootii tgtinit\ntht Mundt trtt started ihortly\nifter dtwn yeiterdiy. Flight tft-\ntr flight of bomberi iwept ovtr\ngrttn Jungle poiitioni to drop\ntil types of bombs. *\nTht irtillery shelling came from\nRendova Island which li ibout\nflva mllei across wtter from Mundt. Tht ihelli wert limed it\nmtl-tlrcrtft poiitioni.\nMeanwhile, other dlve-bomberi\nroared down on targets at Balrofy\nand Enogia Inlet to the North of\nMunda.        ,\nkJJSSSftttSS\nflUjurrij? 0,\ntXjS&irSftsrOZ-j**^***\n\u00a7t. Paul's\nanii\n(flrtatta\nUnttri- (Tlutrrhrfl\nWorshipping in St.  Paul's\nChurch,   Stanley   and\nSilica Streets.\nThe Preacher will be\nREV. H. STEWART FORBES\nB.A, BD.\nSUBJECTS:\n11  a.m.\u2014The Sorrow of\ntht World.\n8   p.m.\u2014St.   Paul\u2014in\nJerusalem.\n_\\xst Qlljurri} of\n(El)rtat $rfrnttBt\n208 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church\n, The First Church of Christ\nScientist In Boston. Mass.\nSunday School 0:45 am.\nSunday Service 11 i.m.\nSubject Leuon Sermon\nSACRAMENT\nWednesdsy Testimonial-Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE  READING  ROOM   IN\nCHURCH BUILDINQ-\nOpen Dllly 3-8\nAll  Cordially Welcome.\nEtiattgrltr.il f*Hti*_ln..\n(Cnunmiit ffljurrl)\nBaker and Hcndrvx Strerts\nl.REV. D.N ERICSON. Pastor\nj 11  o'clock,  Sunday   School   and\nmorning   worship   combined\n7:30\u2014Evening worship.\nJlrnl\nPrpBliytrrtan\nffljurrlj\nVictoria and Kootensy\nArchlbsld Stewsrt, Mlnliter.\nII am.\u2014\"Tht Background of\nLife\"\n7:30  -  Service   in   tlie  Baptiit\nChurch, 'Two Men at Prayer\"\ni     flrtiirl\ni  (Eahcnutrk\nRev. ('   A   ('   Story\n701 Baker St.\nSERVICES:\n9 4.1 s m \u2014Sunday School\nRegular Services\n11:00   am    ami   7 30   p m.\nTuesday and Friday, 8 p m.\nBaptist (Eljurrlj\nRev 11. R  Stovell, pA , BD\nUniting with Fint Presbyterian\n11:00 im -At First Presbyterian\nrhurrh \"The narkgroiind of\nUfe\".\n7:30 pm.-it the Baptist Church\nTwo Men at Prayer\"\nMr Siewart [.reaching it both\nlervicei during month nf July\nNEW YORK, July 0 iAP)-Fred-\nkick   Hei.ler   Wright,   40-year-.ild\nfcppy ed Iur ol lhe New  York  Dally j\nIfews, pleaded innocent  in  Federal ,\nfour! today to sn indictment charg- I\nD| he  served  ni   ,  paid  agent  ot\nbt  Japanese   ..overnment   f\"r   in\ntin pr;nr In Pearl Ilartnir wlthoui ,\natlfying the Stale  Department\nlixltr John W  Clancy fixed SVXK1\nIblil and ft the r.i.t- d..'wi for 'ual ,\n|Ai'g  94Wrigu'. .'i-nnocred vhrn-\n\u25a0Ully today. '   I\nUalitattrnt\nAntui\nVictorii  SL\nRegulsr Servlcts\nIlam  snd 7:10 p m\nSunday School -   10 a m\nRAIDS SPREAD\nDEEP IN\nSICILY INTERIOR\n21 Planes Downed\nand Many\nDestroyed on Ground\nDAMAGE HEAVY\n\u2022 By RELMAN MORIN\nAuociited Pfeii Staff Writer\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nNORTH AFRICA, July 9 (AP)-\nThe crushing Allltfd aerial aiiault\non Sicily, Italy's Iiland defence\nline, neared the end of a full week\ntoday without letup and ipread\nfrom primary targeti to lecondary objectives deep In (he Interior of the Uland.\nAllied planes ot all types'from\nthe three bases in the Mediterranean\ntheatre\u2014Northwest Africa, Middle\nEast and Malta\u2014roared out in the\nhundreds yesterday against Sicilian\nairdromes, ports, communications\nand war plants, shooting down 21\nenemy fighters and destroying a\nconsiderable number on the ground.\nIn all these vast operations 11 Allied planes were lost.\nThe GerbinI network of airdromes\nwas blasted from two directions,\nBritish and American heavy bombers In separate raids covered Cat-\nania with fire and steel. The long-\nbombed air centers of Comiso and\nSciacca were hit again, as was a less\nfamiliar target\u2014Cap  Passero,\nCATANIA HARD HIT\nCatania was particularly hard hit.\nHeavy bombers from the Cairo Command threw 250,000 pounds of bombs\ndown on the city, going in over the\nfiery destruction left a few hours\nbefore by RA .F. bomb***, and\nknocked d\u00b0wn eight enemy fighters\nfor certain and probably five othen,\nThe damage was enormous\u2014the\nrailroad yards were sprayed with\nbombs, the main railroad station hit\nand set aflame, freight yards and\nwarehouses smashed, \"'an enormous\n'fire\" set off among oil storage tanks\nand the entire industrial area covered with bomb bursts.\nThree From Vancouver Receive Fines\nand Jail Terms al Nelson\non Charges of Possessing Morphine\nROY STONE WINS\nFIRST FLIGHT\nKOOTENAY COLF\nRoy 8tone of Trail won the flnt\nflight of the Kootenty Amiteur\nGolf Champlonihlp when he be^t\nhli fellpw towniman, Jim Atwell,\nIn a poitponed final pliyed at the\nTraM-Roiiland golf courie. 8tone,\nwho wai holder of *he Kootenay\nchampiomhip In 1942, won the\nfinal match on the 16th hole 3 up\nand 2 to play.\nU.S. Bearing Cost\nof Pipeline\nin Canadian North\nOTTAWA, July 0 (CP)\u2014Prime\nMinis-ter Mackenzie King said in the\nHouse of Commons tonight that under an agretmrnt, the text of which\ncannot yet be revealed for security\nrt.a_.onr, the United States ts bearing the cost of a pipeline from the\nFort Norman. N.W.T. oil wells to\nWhitehorse, Y.T.\nCanada was granting the right of\nway and securing jites required.\nAlready Canada had agreed to facilitate the entry Into the Dominion of labor and equipment required'\nfor such projects.\nRoyalties on the oil produced had\nhern waived by Canada for the duration,, the Prime Minister said.\nFLETCHER REPLACES\nMcCORMICK\nON ALL-STAR TEAM\nNflW YORK, July 0 'APi-Elbie\nFletcher, Pittsburgh first baseman,\ntodiy was named by Manager Billy\nSouthworth to replace Frank Mc-\nrormirk of Cincinnati on the National League All-Star team which\nwill clash with the pirk of thr\nAmerican League in Philadelphia\nnext Tuesday night. McCormlck\nwas removed from the squad he-\ncause of an Injured bnrk.\nFRISCH FINED $75 FOR\nRUN-IN WITH REARDON\nNBW YORK. July 9 (AP)---Min.\nitgcr Fr.nkie Fr;ich\" of ifllt,burgh\nPiratfj wn fined $75 today by President Ford Frirk of the Nitlonil\n.\/.ague for hi* run-in with Umpire\nBeans Reardon in yeiterday'. twilight game wilh Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbeti Field.\nFri... h ignored the Umpire's\nwarning not tn come to lhe plate\nto protect a cilled itrike on Elbic\nFletcher.\nGcorga KldrlVjge \u2014 $900 flnt,\nplus one year ln Oakalla with\nhard labor, and ln default of payment of fine one year additional.\nLillian Eldridge\u2014$200 fine plui\niix months ln Oakalla; in default\nof payment six months additional.\nClyde Anvoots\u2014$200 fine plus\nsix months.ln Oakalla; and in default of payment ilx monthi additional.\nThese were the sentences handed\ndown Friday afternoon by Stipendiary Magistrate Willlarp Irvine at\nthe trial of these three' Vancouver\nresidents who were charged with\npossession of morphine. The three\nwere arrested June 30 In Nelson\nwhile here between trains _en route\nfrom New Westminster to Winnipeg.\nAlmost at the same time two similar cases, possession of drugs, were\ncompleted at Penticton. Margaret\nEpf-zolato was sentenced to serve 12\nmonths ln prison; and Sam Phillips,\nalias Pooley, was sentenced to pay\na fine of $200 and serve six months,\nwith three months additional ln default of payment of the fine.\nOn July i two drug suspects were\narrested at Kamloops as they peered through a window of Royal Inland Hospital.\nANALY8E8 SHOW MORPHINE\nThe three tried here Friday appear before Mr. Irvine a week ago\nand were remanded. In the interval\nanalyses made at the Coast of powder and tablets eitabliihed that\nthey were morphine and indicated\na' hypodermic needle, eye dropper\nand spoon had traces of morphine\non them.\nThese powders, tablets and articles were found, evidence revealed,\nin two p8per towel parcels, hidden behind the wash stand ln the\nmen's wash room of the air-conditioned coach on the passenger train\nwhich arrived ln Nelson from the\nCoast June 30. There was no trace\nof morphine on a spoon found in\nAnvoots' evercoat. A bottle, apparently of lighter fluid arid containing\na glass rod, subsequently claimed\nby Mrs. Eldridge, was found on the\nrack over one of the train seats\noccupied by the party.\nSeven witnesses appeared for the\nprosecution. The three accused took\nthe stand to give defence testimony,\neach denying any knowledge of the\nmorphine, needle, spoon and dropper. Each of the three admitted\nprevious convictions on a variety of\ncharges.\nCorporal John White conducted\nthe prosecution, and H. Clifford Irving the defence.\nCrown witnesses were Dr. F. M.\nAuld, Dr .L. E. Borden, Charles\nKelman, H. M. Prout, Charles King,\nConstable Douglas Rogers and Corporal White. The three accused\nwere the only defence witnessei.\nDOCTORS TESTIFY\nDr. Auld, Jail physician at Nelson,\ntestified he administered doses of\nmorphine to Eldridge, Mrs. Eldridge and Anvoots at the Jail, and\nhad Mrs. Eldridge removed to hospital for treatment. Anvoots could\n\"tolerate\" 2v, grains of morphine,\nMrs. Eldridge IH and Eldridge IH,\ndoses which would be \"very large\nif not fatal\" to a normal person, he\nstated.\nDescribing his examination ol\nthe three when they were placed\nin custody, Dr. Borden stated .both\nEldridge and Mrs. Eldridge had two\nmarks on their left arm, in his\nopinion caused by a hypodermic\nneedle within the 24 hours preceding. On Anvoots he law \"only old\nicars\". Shown the ipoon, dropper\nand needle, he said \"I've seen many\nof those outfits.\" The light fluid\nbottle might contain sterile water or\nlighter fluid, and might be used fo:\nswabbing the skin, he testified.\nMr. Kelman stated the three accused were passengers on the train\nfrom Penticton to Nelson June 31)\nEldridge   had   the   tickets   for   all\nthree, th* tlcketi having been Iiiued in New Westminster June 28.\nTOGETHER IN WASH ROOM\nMr. Prout testified Mr. and Mn.\nEldridge had spent about 20 minutes together In the men's toilet of\nthe coach between Rock Creek and\nKettle Valley. Before ihe went in\nMn. Eldridge appeared Jumpy and\nnervous, but afterward ihe wai\ncalm.\nA guard at the Provincial Jail, Mr.\nKing told the court he had overheard Anvooti lay to Eldridge that\n\"the girl broke down pretty fast\";\nand subsequently Anvoots told Eldridge: \"I had one when I came ln\nhere,\" Eldridge replying, \"Me too.\"\nCorporal White described the\nsearch, In company with Constable\nRogers and CP.R. Investigator Guy\nS. Mayo, which located the morphine, ipoon, needle and eye dropper. He also testified he took these\nto Vancouver for examination by\nH. O. Tomlinson, Dominion Analyst,\nand entered the analysts' reporti\nas exhibits.\nConstable Rogere confirmed the\nfinding of the parcels in the washroom, and told how, ln plain clothes,\nhe had ridden the train from Castlegar to Nelson with the three.\nIn his own defence Eldridge declared he know \"nothing whatever\"\nof the morphine or other artlclei.\nHis wife went Into the men's toilet\nwhen'she became sick while smoking a cigarette, and he accompanied her, he said. The three left New\nWestminster June 28, stopped over\nat Penticton on the 29th, and continued their Journey on the 30th,\nhe said.\nDENY KNOWLEDGE OF\nPARCEL8\nAnvoots declared he knew \"absolutely nothlnfc\" of the parcels. He\ncarried the ipoon in his pocket, he\nstated, because he wai In the habit\nof taking salts before meals.\nMrs. Eldridge testified she \"never\nsaw\" the articles found ln the washroom and saw no one put them\nthere.\nMr. Irving claimed \"no case whatsoever\" had been made out by police so far as possession of drugs\nwas concerned, and asserted the major crown, evidence was Irrelevant\nand inadmissible.\nThe three accused \"might be drug\naddicts, but they are not being tried\nfor that,\" he argued. Nor were they\nbeing tried on their record. There\nwere a large number of passengers\non the train and many, If not all of\nthem, would have gone into the\nwashroom during the trip, so \"these\npeople did not have exclusive pos-\n! session of that place\".\nCorporal Whije described \"possession\" as defined by the Criminal\nCode md the Narcotic Drugs Act,\nHe stated the evidence of the three\nconflicted. He reviewed points in\nthe evidence of Crown witnesses\nand declared \"the Crown has built\nup a strong circumstantial case\nwhich hasn't been answered\".\nCanadian Wellin\nBombers\nin Raid on Sicily\nOTTAWA, July 10 (8iturdty)\n(OP)\u2014Fit Lt Leslie C. Powell\nof the R.C.A.F. Publlo Relation!\nataff In Alglen reported early to.\nday In a broadcait that R.C-A.F.\nWellingtons, \"several iquadroni\",\nparticipated In the bombardment\nof Sicily \"tonight.\"\nPresumably thli wai a reference\nto the preliminary bombardment\nfrom the air before the landing on.\nSicily early today by Britiih, American and Canadian forcei.\nBelieve Force\nof Canadians\nConsiderable One\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Pren SUff Writer\nLONDON, July 10 (Saturday)\n(CP Cable)\u2014With dramatic suddenness, it was announced early today\nthat the Canadian forces are at last\nin full-scale action, assailing the\nshores of Sicily in company with\nBritish and American forces.\nThere was no Indication in London of the actual size bf the Canadian force sent Into battle, but there\nare plenty of Indications on this island that the Canadian numbers may\nbe considerable.\nPreparation! for  movement of\nthe Canadlani from  Britain had\nbeen known to be going forward\nfor  weeki.  Naturally all  efforts\nwere made to protect the troop!\nand detalli were not known, but\nwar correipondent! \"disappeared\"\nfrom  London a good while ago.\nJust who are with the Canadian\nassault force can not be said as it\nis too early for word of such details\nto come back from the beaches ot\nSicily, but lt can he taken for granted that Ross Munro, Canadian Press\nWar Correspondent, is right ln the\nvan.\nMunro quietly packed his kit and\nleft London without saying where\nhe was going.\nClosely following him went CP.\nWar Correspondents Louis Hunter,\nWilliam Stirwart Snd Maurice Des-\nJardins.\nThey have not been heard from\nsince, which is only natural in such\na closely-guarded operation as the\nmovement of troops from Britain to\nSicily.\nSATURDAY MORNING\n-SPECIAL-\nCY BROOMSTICK SKIRTS\nRegular $2.25\nSPECIAL    .   .    .    $1.79\n3 DOZEN ALPINE AND ALPACA SKIRTS\u2014Colon of\nlight blut, rote, gold, beige, red, green. (TO QC\nReg. to $4.25 \u25a0_ Special \u00abP*..J\u00abJ\nFINKS Ladies Wear\nBoard of Trade Offers Aid Mayor\non Boeing Inquiry Regarding\nPossible Assembly Plant at Nelson\nB. C. Poulsen, Chairman of the\nIndustrial Committee of the Nelson\nBoard of Trade was Instructed by\nthe Board Council Friday to offer\ncooperation to Mayor N. C. Stibbs\nIn dealing with an Inquiry by Boeing Aircraft as to the possibility of\nan assembly plant ln Nelson.\nAnswering. queries by Board\nmembers, Lleut.-Col George A.\nHoover, President, stated he had\nseen a letter addressed to Mayor\nStibbs relative to a subsidiary\nplant for Boeing.\n\"My interpretation was that Boeing was asking business men to get\ntogether and start the business,\" he\nexplained. \"On the basis ot figures\ngiven in the letter regarding the\nsize of building, we did not have\nanything to meet the requirements.\nThe arena floor at Hi* Civic Centre\nwas about half what was required.\"\nThe letter also asked, he said,\nwhether sufficient women would tit\navailable to provide the labor for\nsuch a plant.\nH. B. Gore said Mayor Stibbs wai\n\"most enthusiastic* 'and was \"working on\" the Inquiry.\nR. D. Barnei felt \"anything of\nthat kind* should be given \"good\npublicity*1 because \"something\nmight grow out of lt.\" He felt the\nbuilt-up ground around the incinerator near the City Wharf, with its\nrailway trackage, might be a possible building site. ,\n\"If any coooeratlon or assistance\nis needed we'd be glad to help out,1\nhe declared.\nB. C. Interested in\nQue. judgment\non Bank Deposits\nVICTORIA, July 9 (CP)\u2014British\nColumbia may officially Interest\nItself in the Quebec Appeal Court's\nrecent Judgment that Quebec Province ls entitled to Quebec Bank deposits, unclaimed for 30 years or\nmore\nIn the past the Dominion Government has claimed iuch deposits\nfrom all Provinces.\nAttorney-General H L Maitland\nseid today he Is studying the matter,\n\"We will probably Intervene it\nthis case go-s before the Supreme\nCourt of Canada.\" Mr. Maitland\nsaid. \"It is a vrry far reaching case,\nIn my opinion and may mean a\ngreat deal of revenue for the various\nProvinces of Can.da \"\n\"Pro\" Dingwall\nArrives Overseas\n! night-Sgt. Wireless Air Gunner\nJohn (Pro) Dingwall has arrived\noverseas, according to a cable re-\nIcelved Thursday by his father, J.\nDingwall of Nelson. Flight-Sgt.\nDingwall began training in the R C\nI A.F. in July, 1941, and received hi;\nwtreless air gunner's wing when he\n! graduated from No. 8 Bombing and\nj Gunnery School at Lcthbridgj in\ni July, 1942, Since that time he has\nbeen taking advanced training at\n-prairie etatlons.\nPopularly known as \"Pro\" Dingwall, he waa well known in West\nKootenay lacrosse, and during tho\n1939-40 season was Judged the most\nvaluable player in the South Kootenay Hockey League.\nLively Interest\nin R.C.A.F.\nEvident Nelson\nLively interest ev'dent so far In\nthe Kootenay recruiting tour of the\nMobile Party from No. 2 Recruiting\nCentre of the R.C.A.F. at Calgary\ncontinued ln Nelson Friday, first\nday of the party's stopover in Nelson. The recruiting ataff will be\nat the Canadian Legion again today\nIn addition to candidates for enlistment Flying Officer Archie Mut\nand Assistant Section Officer A. K.\nLyons reported a large number of\ninquiries about the Air Force. The\nnumber of young women inquiring\nabout the Women's Division wai especially larfce.\nNext week the Mobile Party will\nbe at Trail.\nPermanent United Nations Setup\nUrged by Premier King\nOTTAWA, July 9  (CP) - Tht\nbondi of wartime -uioclitlon linking thf  United   Natloni muit bo\ndeveloped Into a \"working model\nof cooperation\" for even flreattr\nuie In the yeari of peace, Prime\nMlnliter Mackemie King told the\nHouie of Commoni today.\nTtm Prime Minister, reviewing the\nworld situaUon m debate on external   Affaln   Department   estimates\n.\u25a0prnrd, -.aid thc time Li approaching\nwhen, \"even before victory Lj won\".\nthe mncfpt of the United Nations\nwill have to be embodied in some\nform of  International  orgaiuiation\nHe  marked  the changing tide In\nfavor,of Lhe United Nations, and observed that the new German often-\nlive on the Russian front. In iho-\nriatlon with intensified Allied bombings of European targeU. \"marki a\nplao of new beginning In, the war\nIn  Europe.\"\nHe spoke of C-anid.i'i growing\nstature in the company of n\u00bbMon\u00bb\nand of her world-wide diplomatic\nrepresentalton.\nHe ipoke of the difficult proWem\nof refugees and the international\naction which muit be taken to deal\nwith it. Canada waa prepared to participate in iuch action, but ht could\nnot i\u00bby how many refugeei. In addition tn those alrendy here, might tje\naccented In Canada for the duration\nTbe Frir.ie MinUter Mid thc Umt-\n_\nI ed Nations had no formal organlia-\n\u25a0 tion and. in prosecution of the war,\nj acted together by constant coniulta-\nI tion through the usuil channels, sup.\n| plrmented by international advisory\nbo-Men.\nDiscussing tht United Natloni' organiiatlon which he iald would have\n.to bt eitabllihed. Mr. King commented that on ont hand authority\nIn International affairs must not be\nj concentrated exclusively In the larg-\n: est powers, but on tht other hand\nI it could not be divided equally\ni among nil the 30 or more sovereign\nStates that comprUe the United Natloni \"or all effective authority will\ndisappear.\"\nThe world had more than 80 sov-\ne|elgn statea. If they all had a nominally eqyal voice In International\ndtcliloni. no affective decisions were\nlikely to be taken. Some compromise had to be found between tht\ntheoretical equality of states and\nthe practical necessity of limiting\nrepresentation on International bodies to a workable number.\nThat oo m pro mite can ba <it\u00bb\ncovered, tapeolally In tconomic\nmatters by tha adoption of tht\nfunotlorV prlnelplt of representation. That principle, in turn, li\nlikely to find many ntw exprtt-\ntlom In tht gigantir talk of liberation, restoration and reconitruo-\n_\nROBERT THAIN\nOF NELSON\nIS OVERSEAS\nLac. Robert S. Thain hi.s arrived\nsafely in Great Britain, his parenb\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Th-iin, were\nInformed by cable Friday.\nLac. Thain. well known Nelson\nyouth and a s!uden'. of Nelson High\nSchool before enlistment, Joined the\nR.C.A.F. July 1, 1942, He trained\nin radio at the University of Saskatchewan at Saskatoon.\nMakes Scorching\nCriticism of I.R.A.\nDUBLIN, July 9 (AP)-The _ ry\nof a plan, presumably German, to\ninvade F.ire in 1W0 was told to the\nDail to-day by Justice Minister Gerry Bollind in a scorching critic 5m\nof the outlawed Irish Republican\nArmy.\n\"In 1W0, when things were looking ve-ry bad,\" he said. \"It became\nknown that a parachutist had land-\ni ed here.   He was not cap*ured him-\n1 self,  but   In   his  paraphernalia   we\nj found   plans  which,  as   far  as   Wf\n! could see. were plans for Invasion\nof this country.\n'Tt took up to Ifl months to enp-\n1 ture   that   man,  and   during   that\nI time,   he   was   harbored   hy. 1 R A\n! people.\"\nBnllmd iald s second pararhu.ist\n| landed,   and   was   captured   almost\n' immediately, but asserted:  \"He es-\n! raped and It took us three monthi\n; to get him, and during  that time,\nhe     was  in  touch   with  the  lame\ngroup of people   Is that no Indication   nf  the   wish   of   thr.'e   people\nto Involve this country In war?\"\nAt the end of World War I. American forcei had only 241 tanks in\nFranee.\nTAKE^MEKA\nON HOLIDAYS\nIWi M Mm, Wlrwftorn, T<_-n Tm\nMiwjulto ind Insrct Blln ip-nfl your MU\n-., U__, CXntmnt i\u00ab sIdm\u00abi mwkal l\u00bb\n\u2022ootkla-i ud fciiltai ikla ttrlUUooa.   tl\nBoard Congratulates\nEsling on House\nTalk on Doukhobors\nW. K. Esling, M.P., had made \"an\nexcellent presentation' 'in the House\nof Commons of public opinion in\nthis district regarding Doukhobors\nand military service or alternative\nservice, said Ven. Archdeacon Fred\nII. Graham at Friday's meeting of\nthe Nelson Board of Trade Council.\nThe Council directed that a letter\nof congratulation should be aent to\nMr. Esling, with a request to \"keep\nup the good work.\"\nB. C. Poulsen suggested other organizations in the City and District should he urged to wriie to\nMr. Esling ana \"persons in authority\" at Ottawa Indorsing this view,\nMIKOLAICYK RESIGNS\nAFTER POLICY SPLIT\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)\u2014Differences over future Polish policy were\nreliably reported today to have resulted in the resig.iat.on of Stan-\nislaw Mikolajczyk, who has been\nActing Premier of thc Polish Government in London pending selection of a successor to the late Gen.\nWladayslaw Sikorski. killed In an\nairplane accident at Gibraltar lait\nSunday.\nCarloadinqs\nShow Decline\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP) - Car-\nloadings In Canada for the week\nen.ed July 3 dropped to 82,3(19 cara\nfrom 07,734 cara In the previoui\nweek, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today with the ex-\nolanation that \"the holiday on July\n1 undoubtedly was the main factor\nin the decline.\"\nCompared with loadings of 80,-\n386 cars for the corresponding week\nlast year, the Increase waa 2011\ncars.\nGrain accounted for 1830 ctn of\nthis Increase and livestock, coal,\ncoke, pulpwood, pulp and paper,\nother forest products and merchandise also showed Increases. Lumber\nwas down 834 cars, ore 219 md miscellaneous 103 cars.\n*    New 48 Hour Treitment\nGreat for Rheumatic\nPains and Backache\nOver the Week End Goei Pain,\nAgony and Swcl'ing or Money\nBack.\nThey call It the ALLENRU weekend treatment for the pains of Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuritis. Backache, because you can go to bed on\nFriday night\u2014stay there till Monday\nmorning and while there drive tha\ne__ces\u00bb acids from your ailing syitem.\nDuring that time you must takt\nAllenru as direct.d--for Allenru\nacts faster when the body Is relaxed\nand resttd.\nYou can purchase A!'_*.ru from\nMann, Rutherford Co.. or any progressive druggist In Canada-it isn't\nexpensive and money back If it\ndoesn't give you full and complete\nsatisfaction and blessed relief from\nthe pain and suffering.\nG.   H.  JONG\n27 Years' Experience\nHerbl for Ulcerated Stomach, Gall,\nAppendlcltli, Bladder and Prostate\nGland Troubles.\n817a lit Street Eait. CaUarv\nOpp. Poit Odlce Phone M1600\nSALT -\ntor\n-HAY\nPacked in\n50 and 125 lb. sacks\nTh.\nBrackman-Ker Milling\nComptny   Limited\nA. 1.  Tmrrrr, ttxtt* Mm. ft*\n\u25a0Mione  126, Nelson, P.O. Bot 420\nGuic1e for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI      \"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nSjymour  8t\nN\u00abwly  renovited  through\nout    Phonea   md   -alAvntor\nA    PATTERSON    lilt   ol\nVancouver   B   C.       Coleman   AUa. Proprietor\nl\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\n|.C. MUIR\nPhonei: Nelion 77: Rouland 213L; Trail 1180\nConnection! For:\u2014\nSALMO   \u2014   KASLO   -   CRESTON   \u2014   NAKUSP\n__.___>\n \u2014\u2014\nVast Public Works\nPlan for B.C.\nHas Been Prepared\nVICTORIA. July 9 (CP). - A\npublic worki program of vast proportions covering nearly 6000 miles\ntnd eitlmated to coat in the neighborhood ot $210,000,000 hai been\nprepired by the Provincial Public\nWorki Department, and has been\nlubmitted tor approval to the Do-\nSinion Government for inclusion in\ni post-war reconstruction program,\nWorka Miniiter Anscomb announced\ntoday.\nThe program, briefly summarized,\ncovers nine major projects, each In\nItself possible of being divided into\nmany leiser undertakings. The nine\nprojects, together with their e.tim-\ntted costs are as followi: \u25a0\n1\u2014Trtni-Ctntda Highway, $44,-\n1.7,000.\n2 \u2014 Southern Trtm-Provlnclil\nHighwiy, }53,_08,000.\n3\u2014Ialand Highway, 118,623,300.\n4 \u2014 Northirn Tnm-Provlnelil\nHighway, $24,661,100.\nt\u2014B.C., Peace River; Yukon,\nAluka Highway connection, $23,\n709,300.\n6-Carlboo Highway, $15,468,800.\n7\u2014North Thompton Highway.\n$7,034,300.\nS\u2014Vancouver-Niw Wutmlniter\nExpreu Highway, $11,237,000.\n9\u2014Parki highway!. $11358,900.\nIn outlining his program for proposed road construction Mr. Anscomb iald that the plan had been\nworked out in conjunction with\nmemberi of the Highway Board on a\nbails of first class main highways\nlast and West, North and South,\nwith direct feeders to the United\nStatea  at  10 specific pointa  along\nGENERAL\nPLUMBING\nand\nHEATING\nREPAIRS AND\nINSTALLATIONS\nPhont 666\nKootenay Plumbing\nfr Heating Co., Ltd.\n573 Baker SL\nthe American border. The plan Is\npredicated on the assumption that\nthe Federal Government will appropriate huge sums for t period of\nyeari ifter the war. for poit-war\nrecomtructlon, $1,000,000,000 already\nhaving been luggeited in the first\nyear for thii purpose.\nCoit of the program ii placed at\napproximately $210,257,000. Expen-,\nditures on labor alone would provide an annual income of $1800 for\neach of 9000 men for many years,\nexclusive of the labor created by the\npdrehase of materials, which in itself involves enormous expenditures.\nThe undertakings presented total\n5864 miles of highway. This mileage\ndivided Into the total estimated cost,\nmakes an average cost of $35,852\nper mile.\nA breakdown divides the cost of\nthis work as follows: For the purchase of land, $3,260,000; labor, $113,-\n882,200; materials, $83,770,000; and\nadministration, $9,845,500.\nMr. Anscomb explained that the\nreport had been discussed with the\nFederal authorities by Premier John\nHart in Ottawa recently.\nThe submission was-\u00bbmade by Mr.\nAnscomb to the Federal authorities\nwith the recommendation that the\nprojects be embodied in plans being\ndevhed by the Dominion in cooperation with the Provinces for the rehabilitation of those in the fighting\nforces and war industries.\nThe development of the highway\nsystem ts deiigned to open up vast\nnew resources, encourage settlement\nand rhake various communities to\nsome degree self-sustained.\nThe report also points out that In\norder that post-war programs instituted by the Government may succeed in rehabilitating fairly large\nnumbers of men, the view is expressed that the following should be\ndone:\nProvide real worthwhile steady\nremunerative work, for large numbers! have plans for an immediate\nstart; limit programs to those fitting\ninto the provincial economy; adjust\nwork so that men will not be with-\ndrawn from industry or be prevented from being reabsorbed into industry; establish a wage-scile commensurate with the service rendered; provide an outlet for ikilled\nmen; use machines up to, but not\nbeyond economic limits md pro.\nmote and maintain the whole enterprise a great national undertaking\nof first-cla.\"! quality. In some cases,\ndetailed surveys; ipecifications and\neitimatei are already well in hand.\nChinese Threateii\nStrike Over\nIncome Tax Policy\nVANCOUVER, 'July B (Ct>) - A\nthrettened wilkout ot Chinese employees tt two lowtr mainland\nshingle milli In proteit against\nwhat they termed discrimination\nin tht application of tbe Federtl inoomt tax wai averted todty ifter\nofficials of the International Woodworker! of America interviewed\nthe men.\nChlnete workeri it the Boundary\nRoad Shingle Mill of Bloedel, Stewart and Welch Ltd., and the day\niiift at Fraier Mills igreed to withdraw their \"quit work\" slips on the\ncondition the Union take up the\nincome tax question with all other\ntrade unions In an effort to have\nit straightened out.\nGiraud Pledge...\nppmn^vppmwvwiiiuivi in in\u00bbi\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, |ULY 10, 1943 it 3\nVictory in Europe\nTfofrtf-ty (Eduqumij\nIHCOIVOHATIP   art MAY l\u00ab70\nCarelessness Costs More\nCarelessness with your furs during the Summer mpnthj is harmful to the furs and to our\nwar economy. See that your (urs htve good\nprotection\u2014they'll last longer and save you\nmoney. Store them safely in the Bay'i\nscientific cold storage vaults.\nYonr Furs Are ...\nSummer Safe at (lie Hay\nGreen Suggests\nProgram for\nPost War Policy\nOTTAWA, July 9 (OP-Howard\nGreen (Prog Con. Vancouver Southl\nspokesman for the Progressive Conservative Party in the foreign affairs debate launched today in the\nHouse ot Commons by Prime Minister Mackenzie King, suggested the\nfollowing six-point foreign policy as\none Canada should adopt to achieve\na position as a world power:\n1. A declaration that Canada has\nfinished forever with the policy of\nno-commitments\u2014in effect, a policy\nof isolation \u2014 but is prepared to\nstand with all the nations to make\na better world;\n2. That Canada accepts full responsibility for maintaining law and\norder beyond her own boundaries\nand is prepared to maintain an air\nforce and naval force for that purpose:\n3. That Canada intends to stay\nin the British family of nations ahd\nto develop within the British Commonwealth of Nations:\n4. That the British Commonwealth of Nations and the United\nStates are indispensable to one another and must be in alliance for\nall time:\n5. That Canada should be an active member of the Pan-American\nUnion with the understanding that\nshe was, thereby, not weakening\nher connections with the Britisn\nCommonwealth:\nft. That Canada Is prepared to\nenter into the closest oo-operation\nwith Russia and China and all the\nUnited' Nations, and hopes to -see\nestablished a world organization of\nall nationi.\nBy RICHARD O. MASSOCK\nAuoelittd Pren Stiff Writer\nWASHINGTON, July 9 (AP). -\nGen. Henri Honort Giraud,\" dlicloi-\ning that Pruldent Rooievelt htd\npromised to equip a French North\nAfrican army ot 300,000 men,\npledged today that French forcei\nwill help fight the Japaneie atter\ndefeat of the Axis powers in Europe.\nGiraud told a room-full of correspondents:\n\"I give you the followihg pledge:\n\"France will be at your side to\nliberate the Pacific from Japanese\ndomination, even as she will remain\nwith you to build a peace that will\nbe lasting and just but alsp realistic.\"\nGen. Giraud spoke in French to\nthe Press conference. He avoided\ndiscussion of the political situation\nin North Africa, where he shares the\nchairmanship of the French Committee of National Liberation with\nGen. Charles de Gaulle.\nThe conference was held under\nWar Department auspices, and at its\nbeginning the Department handed\ncorrespondents the following itatement::\n' \"The member of the French Committee for National Liberation (General Giraud) does not wish to take\na political position that might involve the whole Committee.\"\nGeneral Giraud opened the con\nferenct by reading t prepared\nstatement, followed by tn informal\nluminary of hli impressions on t\nvlilt thli morning to Mount Vtrnon,\nOen, Glriud promised thit when\nhli forcei havt been given pltnei,\ntanki, trucki and other equipment,\n^\"they will know how to use them\neffectively.\"\nAiked about reports of t weakening morale in the French Army he\nanswered vigorously:\n\"The morale of the French Army\nof tomorrow will be that ol the\narmy of yesterday. When an army\nhas loit 15,000 out of a total of 70,000\nmen, one can be sure tomorrow that\n\u2022army will be tble to carry on tbe\nfight.\"\nHe previously had explained tht\nFrench forcei in Tunisia had lost a\ntotal of 15,000 men, 2500 of'them\nkilled, in helping rout the Germani\nand Italians from North Africa, although the French were poorly\narmed\u2014fighting, ai he expressed it,\n\"with wooden sabrei and gum of\nitraw.\"\nGiraud itld he now has 75,000\nadequately armed men. He estimated that the equipment promised\nby Mr. Roosevelt will put' into the\nfield a French expeditionary corns\nfor the invasion of Europe totalling\n300,000 men \"not Including other\neffectives for the protection of the\ncolonial areas.\"\nGermans Claim Tank\nOutput Increased\nLONDON, July 9 (CP)-A German production rerport, widely at\nvariance with Allied declarations\nthat heavy bombings have cut down\nReich factory operations, asserted\ntoday that both tank and ammunition output have'increased.\nProduction of heavy tanki, iald a\nBerlin broadcast, Increased 200 per\ncent In the six monthi ended with\nMay while ammunition turned out\nduring that month more than equal!,\ned the output for a six-month period in 194-1.\nBig Bombers Out\nto Blast Cologne\nDEATHS\nBOGOTA, Colombia,\u2014Guillermo\nValencia, 99, leading Colombianipoet\nand public figure.\nMONTRIEAI^-E. P. Mallory, 94.\nExecutive Assistant to (he Chairman and President of Canadian National Railways,\nLONDON, July 9 (CP). \u2014 Thi\nR. A. F\u201e returning to the autult\non Germany tfttr t four-night\nlull .in the Allied tlr offenilve,\nmide \u2022 heavy attack on tha Rhine-\nland Industrial centre of Colognt\nlut night, thi Air Miniitry in-\nnounced todiy.\nEight bomberi \"were lost In tht\nraid, the announcement said.\n' Mines also were laid in enemy\nwaters during the night and British\nfighters on intruder patrols simultaneously attacked enemy airfields\nand railway targets in France and\nNorthwest Germany. Three German\nminesweepers were reported damaged in sweeps tlong the French\ncotst.\nThe heavy British bomberi had\nscarcely returned trom their night\nforay over Germany when formations of Allied fighters iwept out\nacross the Channel in the direction\nof Northern France to continue the\noffensive by daylight.\nBritain, meanwhile, passed \u2022 raid-\nfree night.\nThe attack on Cologne wii the\n119th on that bomb battered city,\ntarget of the first great 1000-bomber\nraid a year ago. The big Rhineland\nindustrial centre had been attacked\ntwice before within the pist two\nweeks\u2014once on June 28 md igain\nlast Saturday night. Both assaults\nwere highly concentrated.\nCanadian Squadrons\nGo to North Africa\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP). - Air\nMarshal L. S. Breadner, Chief of Air\nStaff, announced today that \"a number of Canadian Wellington bomber\nsquadrons\" have arrived in North\nAfrica and have had \"many exciting\nexperiences\" already.\nCanadian airmen have been serving for many months in North Ar-\nrici but, except for one fighter\nsquadron, they have been attached\nto R. A. F. squadrons. The squadrons\nto which the Air Marshal referred\nare R. C. A. F. squadrons, commanded by Canadiin...\nAir Mirshal Breadner made his\nannouncement in addressing a Wings\nParade it nearby Uplandi Air Stttion, home of No. J Servict Flying\nTraining School.\nThe exact number of squadrons\nwhich have joined R. A. F. and\nUnited States units in North Africa\nwas not given.\nIt was indicated in other quarters,\nhowever, that all parts of Canada\nare represented ln the new force.\nThe Air Marshel'i statement that\nthe Canadian squadrons have had\n\"many exciting experiences\" in the\nshort time they have been in North\nAfrica was taken ai in indication\nthat thi squadrons have been taking\npart in the recent heavy attacki in\nthe Mediterrnean area.\nThe R. A. F.'s big bombers had\nnot been out since last Saturday\nnight'i raid, when In cooperation\nwith R. C. A. F. tircraft they also\nstruck at Hamburg and targets in\nthe Ruhr. Operations iince then\nhive been limited to comparatively\nminor operations igainit communication! and airfield! in occupied\nterritory by Intruder patroli.\nA Berlin broidcut, following the\nusual line taken by Naii propagandists, described\" last night'i asuult\non Cologne ti t \"terror raid\" directed againit residential areas. The\nbfoadcut Indicated that other tirgeti in tht Rhineland wen hit in\naddition to Cologne, however.\nTht R. A. T. night raiden wtre\nfavpred by. good weather, the ikiei\nclearing lait tvening after t day of\nthunderstorms.\nDespite the unfavorable conditions yesterday R. A. F. Typhoon,\nand Mustangs carried out offensive\npatrols ovsr Northern France and\nthe Low Countriei. The planei were\nreported to hive deitroyed one Germm ilrcraft md damaged leveral\nlocomotive!. One R. A. F. plane was\nlisted at loit in theft sallies.\nYeiterday R. C. A. F. iquadroni\nalio prowled over Northern France\non offensive patroli, destroying \u2022\nmunber of enemy aircraft and damaging locomotivei.\nR. C. A. F. Hetdquirten reported\nthat all planei returned safely from\ntheir missions.\nLONDON, July 9 (CP Cable).-\nR. C. A F. fighters attacked airfield! in German-occupied France\nlast night md Wellington bombers\nlaid mlnei in tnemy waters, R. C.\nA. F. Headquarten mnounced todty.\nFlying Officen Frank Edwtrd\nHorton of Kenora, Ont., ind John\nMalcolm Robb of Toronto deitroyed\n\u2022 Tleieler Storch Germm type\nthree-tetter ctbln monoplme over\nBrltanny, Northern Frmce, It wu\nlearned.\nFirst they forced lt to land then\nblew it up with gunfire as it touched\nthe ground.\nThe plane li of wooden construction with folding wings.\nHorton md Robb were flying In\nan R. C. A. F. Mustang Squadron\nwhich went on to damage eight locomotives during i iweep over\nNorthern Trince.\nParsons Elected to\nConstables Board\nTORONTO, Jtlly t (CP)-H. A.\nCadloux of Montreal, Acting Chief\nof the Department of Investigation,\nCanadian Paetfic Railway, todiy\nwai elected Preildent of the Chief\nConstables Association of Ctnidt.\nCharlei E. Watkini, Chief Con-\nstable of Fort William, Ont, wti\nelected Flnt Vice-President, tnd\nFnnk Leslie, Chief Constable of\nPrinct Albert, Saik, Second Vlct-\nPreildenL\nThose elected to the Board Included: C. Mclver, Deputy Chief Winnipeg Police Deptrtment; Chief R.\nWalker, Swift Currtnt. Sask.; Chief\nS. J. Pattenon, Calgtry, md Com-\nmiuloner T. W. S. Pinom of the\nBritiih Columbit Pollct, Victorii,\nB.C.\nU. S. Com Estimate\n2,706,552,000 Bushels\nWASHINGTON, July 9 (AP) -\nTlie Agriculture Dtptrtmtnt rtporttd todty thtt t com crop of\n2,708.568,000 buihtll md totil whett\nproduction of TBOJBB.OOO. buihtll\nirt indicited from July 1 condltioni.\nWinter whttt production ttili\nyear li forecut it 519.K0.000 buiheli The Spring wheit orop !\u2022 fore-\ncut it 171.833.000 buihtll.\nHistory nf the city of Catanli la\nSicily t-ln btck to   -V B.U\nSpecially Selected Items to Make \"Pay Day\" Shopping a Saving\nEvent...\nColored\nHandbags i\nChoose your Summer i\ncostume bag from this,\ngroup of stripei and\nnovelty homespuns\u2014\nEach:\n$2.15 ;\nSport\nKerchiefs\nColorful squares art\na \"must\" in your\/\nSummer wardrobe \u2014\nSelect one now from\nthis wide variety wt,,_^\nhave on hand.   Each:\n'Slack Suits\nFor \"Best\":\u2014 Cucumber-cool,\nhard-to-wrinkle Gabardine makes\nthis slick slack suit. Rose, Navy,\nBlue, Cold and Brown , . .\n14 to 20.\n$9.95\nSwim Suits\nBy Jantzen and Skintite.\nSleek as a mermaid . . .\nsmooth uplift bra' that\nworkes wonders .for your\nfigure. Brighten up that\ntan with one of these\nlovely shades of Cold,\nCreen, Blue, Aqua, Red\nor Brown. Sizes 14 to 44.\n$2.95\n39c\nWomen's, Girls' Shoes\n. .They're bright .'. . they're light . . . theyre easy. And\nwhat a lot of dash they lend to your Summer outfit . . .\nMade of excellent quality shoe fabrics, with the leatheri\nsoles you like.  Loafers, Sandals, Spectators and Ties \u2014|\na style to suit everyone. Sizes 4 to 8'\/z.\n1               1\n_W_-^~ *\n^fcVsjtSl.\n~3H\nFT \\M.\n*V _ t_m\nIMCV7 $\\\nt\u00a3fil\n1 V^fc^,J\\\\ Mkc\n\u25a0 '\u25a0^.\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0Y-NBI   __f_'_jT   \u25a0-T     *\"\\\n____^g \u25a0 \u25a0_____\\\n\u2022m         __Wm Ww\nMen's Sport Shirts\nDesigned right for all kinds of sports.   Knitted from\nstrong cotton yarns in a jersey stitch and finished with\na polo collar, button and loop neck ancf quarter-length\ni   sleeves. Small, Medium and Large. 7Qi\u00bb\nSaturday Pay-Day Value   I \u00ab\/v\nMen's Summer Pants\nCool, clean looking cotton drill outing trousers. Hard\nto beat for gcod value and all round ffi QC\npractical wear. Pair y 1.3[\u00ab\/\nChildren's Cribs\nStandard size Wood Cribs in ivory or natural color. Strongly\nmade and decorated in nursery designs. C1Q QC\nSize27\"x51\". Each <JllJ\/.iJJ\nSafety Cushions\nWeather-proof - non sinkable -washable.\nYour margin of safety' in* canoes, boats.\nA comfort and necessity for camps, picnics, verandahs, automobiles, etc. All\nstriped, assorted bright colors.\nSingle Cushion ffi FQ ffi QC\nEach tpl.Jt\/and ipl.JJ\n4>J.Zj and <PJ.Jl)\nDouble Cushion\nEach\t\nBlankets\nSoft Silver Grey Wool Blanket\nthat can be used in the home\nor lake cottage. They come in\n2 sizes.\n60\" x 80\"\n$7.95\n70\" x 84\"\n$9.95\nLawn Chairs\nReclining Chairs, eomplett with leg rest.\nColorful double awning seats and backi.\nSpecial, each:\n\u2022 $4.50\n'Convoy' Suiting\nA beautiful cloth of good weight for Slack\nSuits, Skirts, Shorts, etc. New colors: Glass\nBlue, Frosty Tan, Alice Kelly Green, and Dusty\nRose. 54 inches wide. Yard:\n$1.69\nYou May Win\na Home\nTickets on completely furnished home,\navailable from members of Local Kinsmen\nClub on Saturday at the \"Bay\". Proceed*\nMilk for Britain Fund.\n\u00ae I}tttwn'*J l.ati \u25a0liimptutfi.\ntm mm n'o\n_-_\u2022__\u00bb\u00ab-____-__\u25a0\n \\_Um Batly t.m*\n'Established April 22. 1901\nBritiih Columbia'!\nMott Interetting Niwspaper\nPublished every mornlni except Sunday by\nB\u00bb NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIM.\nITED 209 Baker St.. Nelson, British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTOE AUDIT BUHEAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY,\" JULY 10,1948]\nI _ :\t\nAn Old Age Pensions\nSituation That Does\nNot Make Sense\nOttawa haa turned thumbs down on\nftritish Columbia Government's re-\nIjuest that old age pensioners be allow-\n\u25a0 to eara more than $125 a year by\n\u25a0ork on farms without suffering any\ndeduction from their pensions.\nL An old age pensioner gets a maxl-\nrjnum of $300 a year and he can earn\nEg additional $125 without penalty. If\nmt should earn $200 he does the ad-\n\\ditiona. $75 in work for nothing as\n^that sum will be deducted from his\n[pension.\nAll of which simply does not make\n.flense at a time when farmers are short\ni bf labor and the country is short of\nfood..\nThe trouble goes back to the wrong\nprinciple upon which our old age pen-\nlions are based. They are paid as a\neort of compassionate allowance to\n.those in need, rather .than as a right\n-t all irrespective of need. The situa-\n[\u2022tton under our old age pensions plan\nis that if a person by hard work and\nWhrift saves sufficient money to bring\nIn an income upon which he can live\n,jie gets no pension. If he saves nothing\nijie gets the full pension. Unless a Canadian can save sufficient to bring in\n\u2022tB Income of more than the amount\nWf an old age pension, why save anything? That is the position at which\nW. have arrived.\nNow, with the country crying for\n._\\ the labor it can get, In war indus-\n;tr.es, on the farms and in non-essen-\nftlal Industries from which others\n(might be released for essential work we\n;\u00abay to old age pensioners: \"If you earn\n;taore ttian $125 a year you will donate\n:'Jt to the Government In the form of a\n|)teduction of your pension up to the\n'\u2022mount of $300.\"\nDuring wartime we cannot perhaps\nHfevise our whole Oltl Age Pensions pol-\n.iey, but through administrative practice we could at least show enough common sense to encourage old age pensioners to do all the work they can.\nAfter the war there must be a new\nneal eft. Old Age Tensions. The basis\nShould be more akin to that of annuities. Through taxation all Canadians\n[pay for old age pensions\/all should get\n(them. The revised plan should also\n(\"provide for larger pensions for those\n|%ho by their own direct contributions\n?*wish to make greater savings and ob-\n[lain larger Incomes than the minimum\nprovided by the State.\nduced by mor* than $14,000 by these\nbond redemption!.\nOf the total, $120,000 is being paid\noff during July and August.\nNelson now has a gross bonded indebtedness of about one mi!\\ion dollars, but against that It has a sinking\nfund of approximately half. A net debt\nof leas than half a million dollars fpr a\ncity of Nelson's stability and commercial importance, and with its profitable\npublic utilities, Is small. About half of\nit is represented by the last unit that\nwas constructed at the city power\nplant.\nNelson's high financial standing ls\nIllustrated by prices which investors\nare paying for our city bonds. Nelson\nbonds are so highly regarded that investors are purchasing them to yield\nonly fractionally more than Dominion\nGovernment securities.\nMunicipal improvement plans are\nbeing cramped by war conditions, but\nthis year, free sprinkling and free scavenging service are to be added to the\nmeans by which Nelson continues to\nenhance its reputation for being one of\nthe cleanest and most beautiful cities\nin Canada.\nTraffic Safety Slogans'\nFrom the Young\nBritish school children are being\n(Blade conscious of traffic dangers by\nan interesting slogan contest which\nhas just been conducted by the Royal\nSociety for the Prevention of Acci-\nMents. The competition called for a set\npf six \"Safety Slogans\" from children\nBinder 14 years of age. The youngsters\n[produced some that are worth remem-\nbering.\nSlogans submitted included the use\niflrf two-line rhymes such as \"Across the\n-tO-A, just a chance; finished in an ambulance\"; \"Ball and marbles are fav-\njjBrite games, but shouldn't l>c played on\nIroads or lanes\".\nShorter and snappier slogans include\nfthe following; \"Curb yourself at the\nilterb\", \"I\/ook all ways\u2014always\". \"I\/ook\noul or be knocked out\", \"I stopped, I\nlooked, 1 lived\", \"A child a day is too\n[much to pny\", nnd \"ABC of the road\u2014\n[Always Be Careful\".\nA  competition  fnr  those  over  11\n[called for twelve slogans. Srtme of tbe\nnappiest were, \"Don't drive like hell\ni heaven\", \"When in doubt, don't step\nInt.\"\nSound Finances\nNelson will bv Aug. 1 have in two\n[years  redeemed  $151,000  of  its  out-\n\u25a0Unding bonds and Mured its indebtedness by thut amount. Its annual cost\nIn Interest snd sinklntr fund will be re-\nOn the Side\nBy E. V. DURLINO\nHe who trods the rose strewn trail\nTo where his treasure lies,\nFinds lt easy to assail\nBut worships less the priia.\nBut he whose feet in brambles caught,\nWhose path one ol despair,\nHe treasures that for which he'i tought;\nThe brave deserve the fair.\n\u2014Victory Qraharo-\nIn winning the hand and heart of the girl\nhe loved, the author of above faced terrific\ncompetition. This Inspired the thought voiced\nIn the poem that the harder you have to fight\nfor a girl, the more you appreciate her. \"My\ngirl was a terrific beauty,\" states Mr. Graham. \"And 17 years after I won her she still\nie.\" How was the competition when you were\ncourting your girl friend? How large was the\nfield you defeated for her hand?\nGirls named Dorothy have not been totally\nIgnored by the song writers. In the Earl Carroll Vanities of 1926 there was a song titled\n\"Dorothy\". A man I know of took a girl named\nDorothy to see this show. Later he married\nher and the aforementioned song was played\nat the marriage ceremony. A.few days ago\nthis much-loved Dorothy died. Hie song \"Dorothy\" was played at the funeral service!. Juit\nanother of the innumerable examples of a\npopular song having an Important plaee in\nthe lives of two people.\nASIDES\nHenry Ford, who never thought much\nabout making trt\u2014ef. Is the world's only billionaire\u2014Irene Hornby of Montreal had eight\nhusbands before she was 30. However, Irene\nmade the mistake of having three of these\nhusbands at the aame time and now lhe is In\nJ_.il.\u2014\"My husband talks in his sleep. Doei\nyours?\" said one young matron to another,\nwho answered: \"No, my huaband doesn't talk\nln his sleep. He's worse. He Just chuckles.\"\n8AY8 SHE\n\"Brilliant idea No. 273D of your horses and\nwomen department calling for women to wear\nhats of different colors to Indicate their mood\nhas merit but is not without its defects,\" writes\na young woman. \"The green hat indicating a\nmood for love is all right but the suggestion\nthat a large black hat be a 'stay-away' hat Indicating the wearer ls not feeling romantic Is\ndefinitely wrong. Large black hats are distinctly 'come-hither' jobs From the standpoint of inspiring male admiration and interest I, as well as most of my friends, get the\nbest results Vom large black hats.\"\nALMOST CONFIDENTIAL\nA man of much hospital experience lays\nthe best nurses are those of Scandinavian and\nNorwegian birth or descent. He says 50 per\ncent ot the American nurses ihould never\nhave taken up the profession et they are not\nfitted for It\u2014In Bloomington, Ind., llvei a\nyoung woman named Mary Ever Daring.\u2014A\nBrooklyn couple, finding it Impossible to get\na taxi, went from the church to the wedding\nreception ln the subway The young woman\nwas wearing her bridal gown and the young\nman was formally attired. The passengen in\nthe snbway car hummed the wedding march\nin concert and quickly took up a collection for\na wedding present.'That's Brooklyn for you.\nGood old Brooklyn!\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to Wiy reader. Namei of personi\nasking quoollona will not bo published.\nThoro la _t charge for thll service. Question! wlll not bo answered by null except\nwhen thoro la obvioui neceulty tir prlv-\nJ. \u2014, Kitchener\u2014Could you please toll me\nhow old I havo to be to receive the old age\npension? I tm i veteran of the flrit Great\n,War. I mtde application for the pension\nbut wu told thtt I could not apply until\nI waa St yetn tnd nine monthi. It thla\ncorrect? I wlll be 08 years of tge next October. I htve always understood that SS\nyeari wti tht right age to apply. I aent\n' my discharge papera tor Identification.\nA perion must be 70 yean of aga before\ntbey are eligible for the Old Age Pension, Application mty be made three monthi before the\n70th blrthdty.    '\nB. W., Creaton\u2014Whtt is the coit ef feeding t\nsoldier ln Canada?\nIt averages 58 centa a day.\nH. 0\u201e Nelaon\u2014Would you please publish ^t\ngood recipe for orange marmalade?\nTwelve thin skinned oranges, three lemont. Waah tnd allce the trult ai thin ai paper\ner grind lt tine. TV) every quart of fruit tdd\none and a half quarts of water and let the mixture itand overnight. In the morning oook lt\nalowly until tender, about three hours, leaving Ud otf. Measure the cooked fruit and add\nan equal amount of hot sugar. Oook the mixtura until t drop or two will Jell on ff cold\nplate, about 10 minutei. If bitter marmalade\nla deilred, use about six bitter oranges and six,\niweet orangei.\n0. _., Sheep Creek\u2014I would like to know how\nfar lt Is from Nelson to Vancouver through\nthe  States.  I would alao like to know\nwhat   procedure   I   would   have   to   go '\nthrough to ttt * permit or passport or\nwhatever is needed now.\nVia Spokane, Rltxvllle and Seattle, which\nIs the easiest route for driving, the distance\nIs 598 miles. There is a aaving of 43 milei going\nby way ot Wenatchee and Stevens Paw. A\nborder crossing  card obtained  by  applying\nIn person to the American Vlce-Coniul at\nVancouver or Calgary ls needed. Probably the\nmoit ilmple method is to write direct to Ottawa for passport which enables you to obtain a border crossing card at the point at\nwhich you crosi into the U. S.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nJuly 10, 1618-Prlme Mlnliter Sir Robert\nBorden attended a meeting of the W\u00bbr Cabinet. London The FrcrKh attacked at Courcy,\nNorth of the Ourcq. nn the Weitern front.\nCunard liner \"Carp*thla\" wai torpedoed ln the\nAtlantic with the losi of five.\nJuly 11, 1018\u2014Italians and French eeptur-\n\u25a0 ed Bcrat, Albania. United SUtei tupply ihip,\nWes to ver, torpedoed, 10 killed. Australian!\nmart*, n daring raid near Merrii on the Weitern front. French troops took possession of\nth*\" village of Courcy.\nEtiquette   Hints\nDon't try to tearh a youngster tn iwim by\nthrowing him ln the water You will not gain\nyour object and will most likely make him\nhate and fear the  water.\nTest  Yourself\n1  Who wrote \"Sw1m Family Roblnion *?\n2. Ii a Brahman a Hindu of a lowtr cast*?\n3   What famous musician wai lupported\nfor many years by 'Mme. von Meek?\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Newi, July 10, 1933)\nR. McGhie and P. Partridge defeated H..\nJohnston and R. Welf ln a cloie game to win\nthe East and West Kootenay lawn bowling\ndoubles championship 22-21 entitling the winners to the J. J. Warren trophy.\nMiss Belle McGauley of the teaching staff '\nof the Junior High School has left on a holiday to be ipent at coait cities, California, Havana, New York and Quebec. WWle away\nMlsa McGauley wlll viiit the world'i fair at\nChicago.\nAveraging a good width since lt was encountered, East drift of No. 1 level at the\nKootenay Belle gold property on Sheep Creek,\nSouth of Salmo, has been in primary ore\nfor leveral dayi^Frank Phillips, Superintendent, stated In Nelson Monday.\n2S YEARS AGO\n(From Dally News, July 10, 1918)\nA. Cuthbert of Invermere won tho-annual\ncompetition for the best acre of alfalfa ln the\ndistrict. R. Randolph Bruce was second. Judge*\nwas G. E. Parham, Superintendent of the Dominion Government Experimental station.\nOne of the most Important addresses yet to\nbe heard at the International Mining Convention at Revelstoke was that of Hon. John\nHart, Minister of Finance.\nE ,R. Heddle has trapped another bear on\nhli goat ranch near the mountain station. This\nis the third bear Mr. Heddle has caught this\nseason.\n40 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally News, July 10, 1903)\nM. S. Davys Is down from the Silver King\nmine.  He  has 26  men  on   the  payroll   and\nships 220 tons of ore every ten days to the\nHall Mines smelter.\nJamea Grler of New Denver has changed\nhli reiidence to Nelson, and will have charge\nof R. T. Lowry'i printing office.\nMayor John Dean, A. C. McArthur and\nSecretary Villeneuve of the Rossland Miners'\nUnion met a committee of the C.P.R. employee's at Nelaon yesterday and arranged for the\nholding of the C.P.R. picnic and Miners' Union\ncelebration at Rossland on August IB.\nToday's Horoscope\nIf this is the date of your birth, you hava\na warm affectionate nature that wins you\nmany friends. You are very capable but ara\ninclined to underestimate vour talenti. Develop confidence and poise. Your love ia sincere and lasting. Just after 12 noon lomeone\nmay try to Impose on you. Don't borrow money\nor equipment. About 5:30 thii afternoon finish something you itarted and which haa been\ndragging along tlretomely. You should get excellent reiulti from the decisions you make.\nLate this evening haste and carelessness may\nlead to an accident or loss. Don't boost about\nyour money or possessions.\nHOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY\nThe person who hai i birthday today Is enthusiastic and energetic. Your dynamic personality attraeti many loyal frlendi. You hava a\nsharp mind. Your Interests are In the Intellectual field. You are generous and forgiving.\nYou are likely to be right in objecting to thl\nopinions of a friend or relative thli afternoon,\nbut do not try to prove your luperior knowledge; no ona would believe you. Attend a\nchurch feitlvil early thll evening; you ihould\nhive i good time. Or' Invite wme frlendi for\nan evening ot music and pleasant conversation.\n\\ \/       .'   today's\nVICTORY GARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nTie BAG\nHERS.\nADULT LEAFHOPPER\n(ENLARED)\nCUT cornerFto let\nRAlK DRAIN OUT\nLOOK   OUT  FOR   LEAFHOPPER\nON VICTORY QARDEN QRAPE8\ntf you are carefully tending a\nfew selected grape vines in your\nVictory garden, keep a look out\nfor the leafhopper. If grape leaves\nturn a light greenish-yellow, If the\nvines seem to -lack vigor you can\nsuspect the presence of the leafhopper.\nThe grape leafhopper, enlarged,\nis illustrated ln the accompanying\nGarden-Graph. Although small, thts\nInsect is very active. It can be\nrecognized because ot Its pale yellow coloring with red spots.   It _\ntot table om, retort to \"begging**1\nthem, as illustrated. Covering each\nfull bunoh ol grapes with a paper\nbag. tied at the top, will protect\nthi trult from birds tnd insects and\npermit lt to develop without * blemish. The bottom corners of the\npaper bag should be snipped off to\nallow any rain water that may seep\nInto the bag to drain away.\nColdwell Favon\nJoing Pan-\nAmerican Union\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-M. J.\nColdwell. CCF. Leader, today told\nthe House of Commons he believes\nCanada should Join the Pan-American Union and that ahe could de ao\nwithout breaking connections with\nthe British Commonwealth. He sug.\ngested, however, that there might\nbe a barrier in the union itself.\nusually found on the underside of\nthe grape leaves.\nThis pelt ls difficult to control,\nslncj it feeds byyucklng the sap\nfrom the foliage and not by eating\nthe leaf itself. The best control\nmethod is to spray or dust with\nnicotine. If Bordeaux mixture is\nbeing used on the grape vines for\nother diseases, then add nicotine\nsulphate to it at the rate of one\npint to 100 gallons of spray. The\nspray should be applied about the\ntime the newly forming grapes begin to touch one another.\nIf you would have deluxe grapes\nDamage done to Malta up to tha\nend of 1942 Includes 9000 houses\ncompletely destroyed, 5000 ruined\nand awaiting demolition, a similar\nnumber unfit for habitation until\nrepaired, and 13,000 houses dam\naged by blast.\nSHANAHAN'S\nKieelit\nUse a tin each month to\nlupirimck.rlt sanitary\nCanadian MiHf\nAik$6oJon\nNewsprint Increase\nNEW YORK. July t (AP)-Cm-\n\u2022dlan newsprint mills a* asking\nt prlct Increue of *\u00bb6 a ton, It ni\nreported today. Tha demandi wart\noutlined at a meeting yesterdty attended by office of Price Admlniitration offlclils, and a group ol\nnewiptper publishers.\nNo announcement ctmt from th*\nmeeting, but It understood thtt tho\npublishers argued that the Increase\nin celling price, it any, should be\nconsiderably smaller than the (8\nasked.\nTho army, navy, RA.F. lifeboat-\nmen, coast guards and civil defence\nworkers Joined forces to rescue t\nsoldier who fell over t cliff whilt\nsunbathing near St. Ann's Head,\nPrembrokeshlre.\nFiery, Itching\nToes and Feel\nHere ls'a clean, stainless antiseptic\noil that will do more to help you get\nrid of your trouble than anything\nyou've ever used.\nIts action Is so powerfully penetrating that the Itching ls quickly\nstopped; and ln a ahort time you\nare rid of that bothersome, fiery\nItching. The same ls true of Bar- \u2022 , _\nbert Itch, Salt Rheum, Edema-\nother irritating unsightly skirt\ntroubles,\nYou can obtain Moone's Emerald\nOU in the original bottle at Mann,\nRutherford Co., or any modern drug\nstore. It Is safe to use\u2014and failure\nln any of the ailment! noted abov*\nis rare indeed.\nTIST ANSWIRS\n1 Johann D. Wyss\n2 No. ha Is of sacred or priestly caste.\nS TVtislkowsky\nWords of Wisdom\n.Joyi in our wlngi; .sorrows our n>ur s.\u2014\nRlchter.\nNATIONAL     SELECTIVE     SERVICE\nThird Compulsory Employment\nTransfer Order\n\u00bb\nNotice to Certain Employers and Employees\nNotice ig hereby given that men now employed in certain\nspecified lines of civilian employment must report for Interview not later than July 15 th, 1943, to an Employment and\nSelective Service Office. This refers to men who are in age\nand marital classes already designated tinder National Selective\nService Mobilization Regulations, and also to men who are ,\n16 to 18 years old (both ages inclusive).\nA. Objective!\nThis Third Order makes available for essential employments\nthe services of men in age and marital classes designated is\ncallable for Military Training nnder National Selective Service\nMobilization Regulations and also all men from 16 to 18 yean\nof age (both ages inclusive) who are presently employed in the\nnon-essential employments now specified.\nB. EMPLOYMENTS COVERED BY THIS ORDERi\nMen, of the specified categories, are covered lt now\nemployed in tny of the following!\n(1) Any wholesale activity not here listed: farm producta,\nother than tobicco; food products; hardware, lumber and\nbuilding materials; plumbing, heating tnd ventilating supplies; electrical equipment for Industrial use; machinery\napd equipment; gasoline, oils and greases; fuel and ice;\nfirm supplies; metals, minerals and chemicals; piper and\nits products; booki, newspapers, magaiinet tnd sheet\nmusic; witches, clocks ind timing instruments; leither\n\u25a0nd leather goods; ecrap metal, junk and waste. (2) Raising\nof special livestock, such as rtce horses, tnd dogs, cats tnd\nother pets. (3) Flower growing. (4) Hortlculturtl services,\nexcept tree surgery. (5) Leather eniTylng, finishing, embossing and japanning. (6) Brewing. (7) Manufacturing In\nany of these llnei! (a) fur goods; (b) robea and dressing\ngowns; (c) neckties and scarves; (d) curtains tnd draperies;\n(e) metal household furniture; (O household furniture\n(exeepl mattresses tnd bedsprings); (g) metli office furniture; fli) rttttn tnd wlllow-wiree; (I) cigar ind fincy\nboxea (wood); (J) mirror tnd picture frimes; (k> perfume*, cosmetics tnd other toilet preparations; (1) hand\nbtga ind amtll leather gooda.\nC AGE AND MARITAL CUSSES OF MEN COVERED BY\nTHIS ORDERi\n(a) Every man born In any year from 1917 to 1927\n(Inclusive) who haa reached 16 years of tge.\n(b) Every mm bora from 1902 to 1916 (Inclusive)\nwho, it July 15th, 1940, win (I) unmarried; or (II) divorced\nor judicially separated! or (ill) t widower without child or\nchildren..\n(e) Every mtn bora (rom 1902 to 1916 (inclusive)\nwho his, since July IS, 1940, become i widower without\nchild or children now living.\n(d) Every mm bora from 1902 to 1916 (Inclusive)\nwho, since July IS, 1940, hti been divorced or judicially\nseparated.\nNotei Attention Is called to the Inclusion In this Order\nof men 16, 17 tnd 18 years old.\nD. Procedure to be Followed!\nAll men is defined above must report to an Employment and\nSelective Service Office not later ihan July 15th, 1941. Men\nresident outside a city or town having an Employment and\nSelective Service Office, who are too far removed to all j*_f-\nsonally, may write to the nearest office in the first instance, and\nawait further directions.\nE. OBLIGATIONS OF EMPLOYEES!\nWhen directed to accept employment, subsequent 'to\nthe interview referred to, men described in Paragraphs B\nand C above are required by the Regulations to follow the\ndirection given.\nF. OBLIGATIONS OF EMPLOYERS!\nIt will be illegal for in employer to retain bl Us employ\nifter July 15th, 1943, tny men referred to In Paragraph C\nabove, at any of the employments let forth bl Ptrtgnph B\ntbove, unleaa t specltl permit hit been obtained from \u25a0\nNational Selective Service Officer, permitting such action.\nG. Transportation!\nSpecial provisions will be made for the transportation of men\nmoved to work at a new place of residence,\nH. Appeals!\nIf directed to transfer to employment subsequent to Interview, a man may, if he objects, enter appeal with a Court of\nReferees within 7 days of receiving such direction.\nI. Penalties ln Case of Employers!\nPenalties are provided for any employer who reta.ru In, ct\ntakes inio, his employ after July 15th, 1941, iny man covered\nby thc Order, except under special permit.\nJ. Penaltlea In Case of Employees!\nPenalties are provided for failure on the part of any employed\nman affected to register under this Order, or to follow a subsequent direction to employment, and in addition to other penalties, refusal to comply renders a man liable to compulsory\nlabour service in sn Alternative Service Work Camp.\nK. Special Requeit to Employers!\nF_\u00bbch Employer with three or more men covered by thb\nOrder in his employ Ls requested to co-operate by getting in\nmuch with the Employment ind Selective Service Office, to\narrange a time for the interviews of his employee*.\nL. Authority!\nThis Order is issued under authority conferred on the\nMinister of Labour by Nitional Selective Service Gvilian Regulations (P.O 24(5 of Jinuiry 19th, 194), and amending Orden\nin Council).\nM. This Third Order la Additional to First and Second\nOrders!\nEmployment] listed in Paragraph B above, to be reviewed\nunder this Third Order, are additional to the employments listed\nin the First ind Second Orders. Ibe First Ordrr required com-\npliince by May 19th, and the Second Order by June 15th, 1941.\nHen re\/erred Us aimer muat pniant documenti at tht employment ofjict*,\nIn-lrntlnn compliance \u2014th Mobilisation  Re*uUlliont.\nAny employer or employ** In tloiibt in regard to the application of tha\nFlrit, Second or Third Compuliory Employment Trant\/tr Orders, ehoulA\ncommunicate xilh tha n.-nr.-.t Employment and Seleetlre Service Olflce.\n{mtim-BmtWBSR'Ws __M_m\nHUMPHREY MITCHELL,\nMini.lrr of UbO-\nk. MocNAMARA,\ntHrettor, \\atlonal Sal\u2014ltt* Sirri\u2014\n __-\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\n*\u2014\u2022**\u2022\n*\nQabardine\nPumps\nIn Black and Brown\ni\nAll Sizes\nl   $4.35\nRo Andrew\n& Co, \u2022\nLeaders In Footfashion\nnsks Doukhobors\ne Warned\nVICTORIA, July 9 (CP)-Attor-\ny-General R. L. Maitland today\nItructed Provincial Police to warn\nouMvibnrs that nothing be done at\ne parade in Brilliant Aug. 1 that\niuld be prejudicial to recruiting\nmen and women for Hil Majesty's\nmed Forces.\nHe took thli action following re\n1st of i letter from the Caitlegar-\nibson Branch of the Canadian Le-\nprotesting    a    Doukhobon'\nnet de-k\u00abUon\" and burning of\nceleantion Aug. 1. The Legion\nId the Attorney-General It feeli\nla no time for a peace celebra-\nof any kind and asked that the\nrude be cancelled.\nUr. Maitland pointed out there li\nB.C. itatute that would permit\nI to itop a parade.\nof\nEnemy Lands lo Naval Board\nOTTAWA, July \u00bb )CP) - Tht\nIntelligence Directorates of tho\nArmtd Forou appealed todty to\nCanidlmi for plcturei ihowlng\nviews of tntmy oountry, pirtlculirly coaitil or Inlind photo-\ngnphi, of roids, railwayi, until,\nbrldgei, power Itatloni, htrbon,\nbeiches, hllli, v.illeyi, Industries\nand utilities of ill kindi,\nTht Joint announcement laid\nCanadlani oould give \"untold tld\"\nby lubmlttlng picturei or postcards collected In thtlr prt-wtr\ntrtveli, or ient to them by frlendi,\nto the Secretary of the Ntvtl\nBoard, (for photographic library),\nNaval Service Headquarters, Otttwt.\nThe Naval Photographi Library\nIs a pool for the Intelligence Branchei of the Services, and coplei of\nworthwhile pictures of enemy terrain are lubmitted to the Intelligence heada of the BritUh Armed\nServices, as well as to the United\nStatei.\nAny iuch pictures, the announce\nment iald, ihould be In tht form of\nsnaps,.postcarda, scenic stripi, level\nfolders, scenic calendar! or accurate drawings tnd etchings. Persons tending In iuch Itemi tre uktd to write t covering note explaining when they were token ot when\nthey were possessed, and Incorporating tny additional knowledge\nthey have concerning tht scenes depleted.\nFuturt campaigns, the itatement\nadded, depends on \"good photographi of targets, landing places\nond  communications.\"\n\"By such picture*, camouflaged\npositions ln enemy or enemy-held\ncountriei could often be detected by\ncomparing earlier photographi or\npictures with those taken by .recon*\nnalssance parties,\" lt stld.\nAll Items sent to. Naval Service\nHeadquarten bearing addresses bf\nthe lenders will be returned Immediately after being photo-copied\nPictures taken before 192S should\nnot be submitted, the announce:\nment said.\nMiss V. Gallo Laid\nto Rest at Michel\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Funeral services\nfor Miss Virginia (Babe) Gallo, who\ndied suddenly at her home, took\nplace July 5, at Michel St. Michael's\nChurch where services were conducted by Father Brophy of Michel. Miu Gallo, who was 15 years\nof age, was born at Natal. She\nleaves to mourn, her mother and\nfathtr and sister Gloria. Relativei\nfrom different points present at\nthe funeral were Mra. R. Caravetta\nand Mrs, B. De Julius of Vancouver; Pte. Joe Caravetta from the\nCoast; Gnr, Orlando Caravetta from\nSheffield, Alta.; Ac. 2 Mario Caravetta from Medicine Hat and Mr.\nand Mrs. Stm Port from Kimberley. The pallbearen were D. Romano, B. D'Angelo, R, Marchi, G.\nBasato, J. Altomare and J. Pugliese.\nhe BBC has opened a full-scale\ndio offensive against Italy. Thlr-\nm times dally the Italians hear\nila Londre*1\u2014London speaks.\nLICHT SUMMER SUITS\nDRESSES and HATS\nit-lady's Fashion Shop\nlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii\n\"BUILO B. C. PAYROLLS'\nSoldier\nake) a\near\nOur Canadian Army needs\nvolunteers. Reinforcements\nare necessary, and trained\n'reinforcements must be\n| ready. The only way, at\npresent, Is by volunteers,\n(Recruited the army must be,\nIthe recruits must be trained\nlind It takes a year to make\nla soldier.\n'acific Milk\ntrrtdlited ind Vicuum Picked\niHiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiimiii'iiiiiiiiii ii\nLethbridge Storm\nTears Up Wires\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., July 9 (CP)\n\u2014Weary linemen continued to\nmake repairs today to the city'i\nelectric power distribution system\nafter working all night throutfi the\nworst' electrical storm to strike\nLethbridge In it least three decades.\nRaging for 10 houn, the itorm\nknocked out about K transformer!,\ntort out oni power line tnd left\nlarge aectloni of the city ln darkness. Thret lnduitrial planti lost\ntheir power during the storm but\nworkmen completed repalri thia\nmoming to restore lervict,\nTve never known a more wicked\nelectrical storm to strike Lethbridge\nto the 71 yean I'vt been' here,\"\n\u2022aid. City Manager J  T. Wation.\nShortly after the itorm itarted\nlybout 8 p.m, linemen were called\nback to work-^work which wai\nmade highly dangeroui by terrific\nflashei of lightning ihooting ebout.\nThey worked ill through the night\nand continued Into the day.\n.In most casea service wai halted\nby fuses being blown In transform-\n'en though some damige to the\ntransformers may also have been\ncaused, explained Mr. Watson. When\nthe lightning blew fuses tn iome\ntransformer, the heavy iron caies\nwere so hot that workmen could\nnot touch them.\nNELSON DELEGATES\nTO ATTEND\nROTARY ASSEMBLY\nR. A- Peeblei, newly-elected President of Nelson Rotiry Club. J. H\nCoventry, Secretary, and A. B. GUker, Treasurer, will attend the President and Secretariea Assembly it\nSpokine July IJ. They wtll leave\nNelaon Sundiy.\nRoUry Clubi of Eastern B. C,\nEastern Washington, Northern Idaho and Northeastern Oregon will be\nrepresented at the gathering.\nGolden Wedding\nCelebrated\nat Prairie Home\nSOUTH .SLOCAN, B.C.-Mr. and\nMrs. Peter Dempsey, who came from\nthe Prairie two yeari ago to make\ntheir home at South Slocan, returned to their old home at Gainsboro,\nSask., for the celebration of their\nGolden wedding.\nMr. and Mrs. Dempsey'i marriage\ntook place at Pierson, Man., June 5,\n1893. They later took up their home,\nstead North of Galrufooro, where\nthey lived until coming out West.\nTh$ Galnabpro News In the report\nof the Gqlden celebration tells how\nthe community of Fern bloisomed,\nbearing teitimony to the good deeds\nwhich spread from the home of\nsuch as Mr. and Mrs. Dempiey. They\nhelped to build Fern Church. Mri.\nDempsey had been an active member of the Ladies Aid and is itlll\ndoing wonderful work In that field\nalso ln the Red Crosi, which Is being\ncontinued at South Slocan. Mr.\nDempsey ierved for several yeari on\nthe Shorthoeks Council\nThey now make their home with\ntheir eldest son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Rae Dempiey.\nThere were six children. Mrs. Wm\nPackard, who died in 1624; Rae of\nSouth Slocan; Mrs. Allan Muir of\nYellow Grass; Mrs. Cecil Steveni,\nWinnipeg, md Frederick and Clarence ln the Fern district.\nMrs. Clarence Dempiey, who with\nher husband spent the Winter at\nSouth Slocan, wts the hosteu it\nthe Golden Wedding celebration,\nfour of the children and five grandchildren being present. The bride'i\ntable wai centred with \u2022 three-titr-\ned wedding cake.\n_fr. and Mrs. Dempsey are ipending a few weeks on the Prairies\nprior to their return to South Slocan the latter part cf August\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD, Bay, B.C.-Plam for\na garden party in August and for a.\nbee to do work in the cemetery were\nplanned at the July meeting of the\nChurch-Helpers' Guild at the home\nof Mrs. McLachlin. A call for volun.\ntee-rs to clean the Church was made\nA letter from Mrs. Gooche regarding the transfer of the Church title\nto the Diocese was read.\nJames and David Brosler tnd\nGordon Walsh of Trail are visiting\nthe Bay.\nKen Palmer of Winnipeg ts visiting his grandmother, Mrs. M. Palmer.\nR_lf Jacobson of Trail wts a week,\nend visitor here.\nphone 1\"\nOur offiet li optn 8 a.m. to\n11 p.m. weekdays, and\nnoon to 10 p.m. Sundayi.\nPlease phone all messages\nand enquiries direct to the\nStation.\nFlax can grow it altitudes ring\ning from 50 feet btlow set level to\n8000 feet ibove.\nNJELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX \\\nChirje for Ingtgtmtnt Announcement! In Thli Column li $1.60\nMn. Edwin Cartmel and children irrived Fridty night from Atlln to vliit Mrl. Cartmel's ptrenti\nMr. ind Mil. Georgt Horstead. and\nlir. Cartmell ptrenti, Mr. tnd Mri.\nJohn Cartmel. En route they viilted relitlvei ln Vtncouvtr for a few\ndtyi. '\nt .John Tawse tnd daughter Suran of Cedw Point ipent Frldiy ln\nNelion.\nt Rev. and Mri. D. N. Brlcion\nreturned from a two-week holldiy\nin their former parish at Wetaskl^\nwin, Alta. They were accompanied\nby their daughters, Ruth and Evangeline, who have been teaching\nschool ln Wetasklwln District, and\ntheir son David, who hai been serving a pastorate ln Norquay, Sask.\n| Mrs. Burrard A. Smith of\nLongbeach vlalted town yeiterday.\nt H. E. Cooptr of Balfour visited tht city yeiterday.\ni Urt. Albert Buih of Trail li\nvisiting her parenti, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. R. Dunwoody, Silica Street.\nt Mr. and Mrs. A. Read, who\nhave ipent a holiday In Nelson,\nhave returned to Trail.\n' Elmer Freisen of Renata and\nhis sister, Misi Freisen, ipent yesterday In Nelion.\nVISITOR FROM COAST\nt Mrs. H. Saare of Vancouver li\nvisiting Mr. and Mri. George Chaluck, Robson Street, and friends ln\nNelson. She leaves Monday for Ottawa to visit her daughter.\nt Mrs. Tarras of Ymir visited\nNelson Thursday.\nt WilllaVti Men, who li ln the\nNavy, is visiting hli parents, Mr.\nand Mri. A. Merz at Queen'i Bay.\nt Miss Leona Larson, Baker\nStreet, hai returned from Balfour\nwhere ihe spent a week at the home\not Mr. tnd Mrs. R. H Pueschel.\nt Misi Jessie Byers, Hall Mines\nRoad plans to leave tomorrow morn.\nIng for Calgary, where the will\nspend her vacation visiting friendi\nand relativei.\nt L. R. Clubine of Salmo visited town yesterday.\nt Ronald McLaren of Vancouver, formerly of Ymlr, wai ln the\ncity enroute to Kimberley.\nt Mra. Islip of Nakusp li a city\nvisitor.\nt Mrt J. J. FlnglamJ of Trail,\nwho with her husband, li summering it Willow Point, accompanied\nby her granddaughter, Wendy\nWoodford, spent yesterday ihopping\nIn Nelson.\nt Mrs. Carl Nord and son Allan\nof Ymlr \u00abpent Thursday ln town.\nHOME ON LEAVE\nt   Miss Mary Philpot of the C. W.\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1941 - 5\nTrooper Charged\nWith Murder\nSASKATOON, July 9 (CP) -\nJamet Angui Clark, 20-year-old\ntrooper attached to A-27.reconnala-\nance training centre, Dundurn Military Camp, waa charged ln R.C.M.\nP. court this morning with the murder of Arthur Ernest Clifford, 17-\nyear-old trooper attached to the\nsame unit, who died ln military\ncamp Wednesday night after being\nstabbed. He was remanded until 10\no'clock Saturday morning, July 17,\nat Dundum.\nWearing khaki overalls and black\nand white iport shoes. Clark was\nbrought before Magistrate J. T.\nLeger ihortly before noon today and\nheard himself charged \"that on July\n7 he did unlawfully murder Arthur\nErnest Clifford.\" The whole procedure lasted but a few momenta, and\nthe accused exhibited no\" emotions\nof any kind while he rat on a wooden bench and listened to the Magistrate and R. F. Hogarth, KC. Crown\nProsecutor, discuss trie adjourned\ndate of the capital charge.\nA. C. arrived from the Co^it en\nroute to Btlfour to spend a leave\nwith her parenti, Lleut.-Col. and\nMri. D. Philpot at Balfour Beach\nInn.\nt Mn. J. H. S. Winter and her\nyoung wn Graham of Kimberley,\nare spending tha Summer at Willow Point. ,\n\u25a0 t J; H. Dunn wai ln town from\nYmlr yesterday. *\nt J. J, Ctmpbell of Wlliow Point\nvisited Nelion yeiterday.\nt Ltc. Jtmei Spencer, who ls\nhome on leave from Winnipeg, Mrs.\nSpencer tnd family ara ipending a\nholiday at Procter.\nt Miss Louise Santor and Miss\nVera DeGirolamo' have returned\nfrom Sirdar where they visited for a\nweek.\nt -Mr. and Mri. Jack Morkln and\ndaghter of Claresholm, Alta., Mrs.\nLambert of Windsor and her aon,\nRev. J. J. Lambert of Claresholm,\nspent yesterday at AlnsworUj,\nguesti of Mrs. Sarah King.\nt Edward Bacynskl of the Koo\ntenay Florence mjne vlslttd his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Wirstiuk, Sll\nver King Road, yesterday.\nt Circle No. 4 of Trinity .United\nChurch met tt Lakeside Park\nThursday afternoon for a potluck\nsupper. Those attending were Mrs.\nWilfrid Allan, Mrs. W. A. Weatherhead, Mrs. J. Long, Mrs. T. S. Jemson and Billy, Miss A. Smith, Miss\nEthel Smith, Mrs. Aston, Mrs. J,\nLundie, Mrs. W. M. Buchanan and\nMrs. Charles F. Hunter.\nt Mrs. Alex Millan and son of\nYmir visited Nelson Thursday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Jack Morkln and\ndaughters, Mary Rita and Josephine, who are holidaying in Nelson and Rev. J. J. Lambert and Mrs.\nLambert, were guests of Frank Norris at the Gold Belt mine Thursday.\nt. Mr\u00ab. B. D. Frank, 923 Carbonate Street, plans to spend the weekend in TrilL\nt Mr. and Mrs. Leo Madden\nwere ln the city from Ymlr Thursday.\nRETURNING TO SPOKANE\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Zugel plans to leave at\nthe weekend for Spokane after a\nmonths holiday at the home of her\nmother and sister, Mrs. Baillargon\nand Mrs. William Wylie, 803 Cedar\nStreet.\n\u2022 Mrs. Tarron and son of Ymir\nwere city shoppers yesterday.\nt Miss Nancy Pond, who teaches\nat Walla Walla, has arrived to spend\nthe vacation at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Pond, Hall\nMines Road. She visited en route at\nBenan, V. I., with Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry Cox.\nSunshine Bay Red\nCross Croup\nReport on Work\nSUNSHINE BAY, B.C.-The Sunshine Bay Group of Red Cross\nworkers met at the home of Mrs.\nOscar Appleton with Mrs. Abe Dosenberger as tea hostess, Mrs. Sewell won the raffle donated by Mrs.\nRobert Hong. List of articles finished during the last two weeks\nwere:\ni pain socks, 7 steel helmet caps.\nM surgical towels, 1 pair knickers.\nThe sum of $2.35 was realized\nfrom the tea and raffle\nCanada Ready to Plan lor (are ol\nRefugees, Jays Mackenzie King\nOTTAWA. July t (CP).-Prlmt\nMlnliter Mackenzie King uld todty\nln the Houu of Commons that tht\nCanadian Government wtll be glad\nto play tta full part ln plam for tht\ncare of refugees until peace ll restored.\n\"I cannot itate how many additional refugees Ctntdt will* be prepared to receive,\" nld Mr. lung.\n\"Thli depends on mtny factors not\nwithin tht control of tht Canidltn\nGovernment.\"\nDispersion of refugeei now In neutral European countriei tnd tht reaction of those who mty hereafter\nescape from .Axil territorlei had to\nbe conducted under Internttlonal\nauspices, with coniideration glvtn\nto the possibilities of triniport, of\nrepatriation at the end of the war, of\nuniting familiei .and of useful employment in war Industrie!.\nConsiderations of lecurity alio had\nto be carefully weighed.\n\"A declaration iuch ai tht Government hai been urged fb make\u2014\nlhat Canada would receive all refugees from Axis territories who could\nreach her shore*\u2014would bt an Invitation to the German Governmtnt\nto distribute In this mtnner their\nspies and secret agents.\"\nMr. King said there |vai outatanding an offer of the Canadian Government, split last Autumn, to receive for the duration up to 1000\nJewish children then In Unoccupied\nFrance tnd separated from their\nparenti. Befort effect oould bt\nglvtn to tht offer, tha Germani had\noccupied tht whole of France.\n'The offer, howtvtr, It itlll valid.\n\"If arrangementi can bt madt\nthrough neutral countriu or tht\nIntergovernmental Committet tor\ntht departure of theu children trom\nFrance, wt ihall gladly accord thtm\nadmission to Canada.\"\nHt uld that those who tccused tht\nGovernment of inertia and Inhumanity wtrt often not fully cognizant of\ntht facts.\n\"In tht yetn 1933-42, MOO penoni\nwtre tdmltted ti immigrant! tb\nCanada by ipeclal Orders-ln-Coun-\ncll, tnd moit of them were Europetn\nrefugees,\" ht nld.\nShortly before the war, 300 families and a substantial number ot\nlingle men from the Sudeten trea\nhtd been tdmltted for igricultural\nsettlement ln the West, tnd hundreds of other igricultural refugeei\nwere tdmltted trom Central Europe\nduring that period.\nThe tottl immigration from Europe, between April 1, 1933, tnd\nMarch 31, 1942, wti 39,000, tht bulk\nof whom wera refugeei. All these\ntntered Canada for permanent reildence.\nThoie tdmltted temporarily numbered several thousand not Including netrly 9000 women, and children\nevacuated from the British Isles\nsince the Spring of 1940.\nOn, Jhn imbt\nSATURDAY, JULY\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\nButcherteria News\nPICS FEET, 6 Ibs 25c\nFRESH HERRING, Ib.       \u00bb 15c\nROLL VEAL ROASTS, Ib 35c\nCOOD POT ROASTS, lb  29c\nPORK OVEN ROASTS, Ib. 32c\nBOILING BEEF, Ib. 17c\nBREAKFAST SAUSACE, COOD\nHAMBURGER, 2 Ibs. 45c\nPHONES 527 - 528 FREE DELIVERY\nI\n______Ai__ \u25a0-   - -.\n7:50\u2014Musical Clock (CKLN.\n'8:00-CBC  News\nB:15\u2014Novelty Tlmi\n8:30\u2014Songs From thi Showi CKLN\nj>:0O-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Peter Dawion. Barltoni\n9:30-Mirth and '.tdnesi\n9:_9-Timi Signil\n10:00\u2014Pipe Dreaml\n10:19\u2014Rnlllnl Trin\n10:3O\u2014To Be Announced\n!0:._.-On the March\nlino-Roy Sh:eldi and Comptny\n11^5\u2014Muj.cil Progrimmt\nAFTERNOON\n11:00\u2014 VS  Army Air Fo-ce Bard\n12:30\u2014 flic Newi\n15:45\u2014 Visiting Nurse of thi Air\nI no -Vitl-ee in Rhythm\n115\u2014Dick Todd'i Songi\n1 30   Minstrel Melodlei\n1:00\u2014Horace Heidt'i Muiical Crtw\n2:45\u2014 Musical Programme\n3:00\u2014Debny Sommen' Band\nS:15\u2014CBC Newi\n3:30\u2014Richard Crook'i Recordi\n3:43-BBC Newi\n4:00\u2014Sports Review\n4:15\u2014Chick Henderson Slnp\n4:30\u2014Songi of Eventide.\n4:45\u2014Wimlngton Commentary\u2014\nJama M. Minlfle\n5:00\u2014Musicil Memorlei\n3:lS~_._j.on Popi Orch.\nEVENINC\n):I5\u2014Nocturne In Swing\n6:30\u2014To Be Announced\n7:00-CBC News\n7:15-Till\u00aby Time\n7:44\u2014Dixieland  Caperi\n9 do-NBC News Reel\n11:30\u2014To De tnnounced.\n(.TO-Melody in the Night\n930-Adventurej of thi Talconi\n10:00\u2014CBC  News\n10:l.V-Dance   Orrh\n10:30\u2014Stan Kenton'i Orch\nll:00-God Save tht King\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE BAY, B.C.-Petty Officer Fred Ferguson arrived from\nEsquimalt on Sunday to spend his\nfurlough with his parents, Captain\nand Mrs. Jamea Ferguson,\nA Stubbs of Nelson visited hli\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs,  Oscar Appleton.\nM. Wolfe returned to his home in\nTrail on Saturday after visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. D. Smart for two weeks.\nMrs. A. Fletcher and her two children have been visiting the former's\nmother, Mrs. J. Sewell.\nMrs. J. Stevenson has returned to\nher ranch accompanied by her\ngrandson, Wayne Levick of Trail.\nMri. J. Sewell has left to visit\nher son Jack at Trail.\nMr. snd Mn. A. Batchelor and\nchildren spent Wednesday in Nelson.\nMrs. C. Cannhn and her grind-\ndmghter, Helen Reeves of Winnipeg, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. O.\nP. Appleton for the Summer,\nNeed Boys, Girls\nfor Okanagan,\nFraser Farms\n\"Young glrli and boyi of IJ yttn\nand over are urgently required for\nvegetable and fruit picking ln the\nOkanagan and Fraser Valleys,\" J. S.\nLivingstone, Manager of the National Selective Service Branch at Nelson, said Friday.\n\"The plan to lend thtit young\npeople there to help in the fruit and\nvegetable picking li a Dominion md\nProvincial Government plan, tnd\nIhe wages ire good,\" he iald. \"Theft\nis plenty of work for them to do,\nand the season lasts until freezeup\ntime', which ii about tht first of\nDecember.\"\nMr. Livingstone asked that anyone interested contact the National\nSelective Service Office as ioon as\npossible.\nFINAL DRAWING OF\n\"600 CLUB\"\nMADE, CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C. July 9-Fln-\nal drawing of the \"600 Club\" ,\nmade here this week and thui tndi\nits three year history.\nFounded by E. S. Jonei during\nthe early war finance campaigns to\nencourage war savings, the basis of\nthe Club was contribution af 28 cents\nendi month. At the conclusion of\nthe month a drawing ot namet of\nall members was held, and the win-\nning names were awarded tht certificates of various denominations.\nAll \"fee\" money went into the\nawards, and administration wu\ndone without charge through the\nBeale and Elwell office.\nDuVlng its existence the Club iccounted for the Investment of H-\n519.75 ln wtr savings ln 20 cent\nfees. ,i hi\nCLAIMS TEACHER\nFREEZING ORDER\nIS INJUSTICE\nVANOOUVER, July 9 (CP)-Har-\nry Chtrlesworth, Oeneral Secretary\nof tht Britiih Columbit Teachen'\nFederation, declared today that the\nFederal freezing order'which makes\nIt Impossible for teacheri to Improve their aUtdard of living by\naccepting Jobs In higher-paid Industry was an Injustice to teachers\nunless It Is coupled with efforts to\nimprove conditioni within the profession.\n\"Hie freezing order makes\nmore Imperative than ever that\nsomething should be done whereby\ntheie teacheri can lecure lncreaies\nln salary to provide for the added\ncost of liflng,\" he said ln an interview.\nASK MUSIC TEACHING\nBf MADE PROFESSION\nVICTORIA, July 9 (CP)-B.C,\nMusic Teachers' Association has asked Attorney-General R. L. Maitland\nto bring In an tet letting up the\nteaching of muiic aa a profession.\nMr. MalUand iald today ht would\ngive the matter his consideration\nbut doubted If It was wartime legislation.\nFREEMA11\n*    FURNITURE CO.\nTht Houm of furniturt Valuti\nPhont IU NeUon\nTRADE IN YOUR\nOld Furniture\non NEW\nGunnar Swanson,\nWell Known\nHotel Man, Dies\nCRANBROOK, B. C, July 9 -\nNewi of tht detth of Gunntr Swan- ,\nson, tge 43, it Canary, hat retched\nhere.   The funeral service will bt\nln Cranbrook at the weekend.\nMr. Swtnion wu ont of Cran.\nbrook's best-known cltlzeni. Ht\ncime htre from Sweden as t young\nman. For mahy yetn he wis owner and proprietor of the Queen'i\nHotel on Baker Strett About two\nyeart ago ht iold hli lntereit In\nthe Queen'i tnd bought tht hottl\nat Moyie 20 mllu South of here,\nwhert has hai been living ilnct\nthen.\nHe was t long-time mtmbtr of tht\nScandinavian Brotherhood and ierved for levertl yetrs on tht Btecu-\ntive of the Cranbrook Liberal Association.\nMounted mill carrlen gavt Amsterdam a sort of pony express n\nearly ti J400.\nCOTTON\nPULLOVER SWEATERS\n$1.25 and $1.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nMturtl your ntlifictlon.\nH. H. Sutherland\n491 Btktr St.\nNtlion. \u25a0 O.\n____m-_\nllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllll\nConsider ths\nFood Valut In\nK.V.MILK\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\nHARROP\nHARROP, B.C.-Mn. B. Htrrop\nwas hostess to the Red Croia group\nTuesday afternoon. The tea receipts\nbrought $2 S6. Owing to the buiy\nfruit season, meetings will bt discontinued for the Summer.\nRev, and Mn. G. G. Boothroyd\nand small daughter of Nelson are\nspending their holiday hert it thl\nFairbank cottage.\nMrs. Salsico.ll and two children of\nTrail are spending the Summer at\nthe cottage of H. Holmei, Mn. Sal-\naico'.li'i father.\nMrs. May and ion, Henry, have\nreturned from a trip to the Coait\nMrs. T. Sargeant of Trail viilted\nher brother-in-law and iliter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Bert Fitchett, tt the wtekend.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiijiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiMiii 1111111111111111.1 mn\ndUnhgoh\ndtoUMWWJ-i.\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII\n111111111111(111.milium\n\\_aXU.\nSUNDAY, JULY .11\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n11:45-0 Cinidi\n\\FT_RNOON\n12 no-New York Philharmonic Ore\n1:40\u2014Church of Iht Air\nMO-CBC News Bulletin\n2:M\u2014DlKiuulon club\n2T-o-tji.en.ln Mirlein. orginlit\n.Vim-Can Orenidltr Ouirdi' Bind\n3.JO   Talk:    A Canadian in\nBritain\"\nI.ti-UBC Niwi ind Ana ly ill\n4*0\u2014Stanley Ptrk Oonctrtl\n5:00\u2014Feature   \"Somtwhllt   Before\nthe  Uiwn\"\nS;JO-Weckend Review\n5:44\u2014Our special Speiker\nEVENINC\nHOO\u2014The Army Show\n\u00ab:\u00bb\u2014 Bick to tht Bible Broidcut\n(CKLN)\n7:O0\u2014CBC Niwf\n7:15\u2014Sundiy Night Show\n1:00   BBC Newireel\nI -   Dinrei of the Ni'loni\nHon -Orgin  Recital\nISO-Veiper Hour\n10 00\u2014CBC Niwi\n10 1>\u2014GOd Sivt tht King\nTime wu when we could leave\nl cm of baked beana, spaghetti or\nmacironl fgr the older children or\nother people In the house to eit\nfor lurjeh when we weren't going\nto be home to get thc meal. Thit\ntime Is past, and we must make\nlome dish to lake their place\nTODAY'S   MENU\nMaramnl   and   Cheese.   Eggs   with\nCheeie  or  Swedish  Pntsloei\nRaw Vegetable Stlid     Cup Cakes\nMilk . Tea\nEOQS   WITH   CHEESE\n2 eggs lor each person, pinch sail,\ngrated cheese, dash paprika.\nHreik 2 eggs into e.^h ramekin,\nrover with Ihi grated rtieese, add n\npinch of ult ind dish of popriki\nind cook In broiling oven until\ncheeie Is delicately browned. The\nchew, emit cm be gently lifted\nwilh \u25a0 fork to ltt If eggi ire perfectly cooktd. Serve it once. Eight\neggi rtqulru ibout 1 cup of grjled\ncheese,\nSWEDISH   POTATOES\n4 hard-cooked eggs. \"It and pepper  or  paprika,  bread  or  crackrv\ncrumbi or crumbled corn fliku, 61 ind bake 20 to 25 mlnutas.\nsmill potatoei, creim tauce. J cupi,\nCook potatoes ln iklni, peel lnd\nslice. Shell hird-cooked egp ind\nslice. Put sliced potatoei In-bottom of greased baklng\"dlsh, add layer of sliced eggs, alternating until\nall are used. Season lightly and\npour cream uuce ovir ill. Top\nwith bread crumbs, cracker crumbs\nor crumbled corn flakes, ind btke\nuntil top is brown\u2014about 18 minutei, In SSO degree oven. Cheeit\ntnly be grited over top before\nbrowning.\nLEMON CU? CAKI8\n14 cupt cake flbur, 2 teaipoom\nb.iking powder. Vt teaspoon silt, 5\nUbleipooni soft ihort-njng, _ cup\ncoincly chopped nut metis, 44 cup\nsugar, 1 teispoon grited lemon rind,\n1 egg, 4 cup milk.\nCrease 12 cup ciki ptni. or ltni\nwith piper cupi Ugnt oven ind\nheit to 378 dlgrm T. \u25a0 SIR flour,\nmeaiure ind lift tartrtl timet with\nbaking powdtr, nit ind iugir\nCreim fit with lemon rind, idd\nflour mixturt, egg and milk: itlr\nuntil flour ll dimpened, then btit\nvigorously   1   mlnule     Turn   Into\nrehired ptni, tilling them 1-Srdi\nfi\n*fT  TKIt yiir pvt Bowm dt your\n\"pUc\u00ab te to\" liii. Htrt yoa\nwill ltd mt 0* ficrs-Hon to your\nIrhlnj. Rtfnih llrsd mlndi led\n- -iclti lid find llmwtd vitality\n\u2022 I thl. (mid Howl Sound b\u00ab.wty\n'nol,  only in  hour iwiy  from\nIhi   City.    Dllly   ullln|l   Irons\nUnion  Pitt.   Rilum  fin  Om\nDollar . . . Childnn hill fin.    \\\\r~~\nfISHINO \u2022 POAT1NG < RIDING \u2022 DANCING \u2022 SWIMMING '\nWrit! 791 Gr.n.illi St., Vincouvif, for foldi! md Infosnutlon       \/\/\nirepareci\nuii   Syiri\nkle topi with nut metti\n' f \\\\\nBRADLEY S\nMEAT MARKET\nBOUXNA. 00.\nP\u00abT - Ldl\nNot ntloned\n-T\u00b0.     30c\nNot  rationed\nMINCIO BEEF. OP\nPer lb JJC\n< i Ib. per coupon\nVIAL SHOULDER      OA\nSTEAK, Ib JVC\n1 lb, par coupon\nCOOD POT ROASTS, OQ^\ntw- LMC\nV i Ibt. per coupon\nIT\u2122 35c\nV\/t lbi. ptr ooupon\nFRESH HAMIUHC,     JC\n\\ lb. per coupon\nSAUSACE, Brttkftif, iC\nV\/t lbi. per coupon\nPORK SHOULDER\nROAST, Ib\t\nt lb. pir ooupon\n32c\nPORK LEC ROASTS, 00\n1 lb. per coupon \u00bb\n __________\t\n\u2022I*- NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY,JULY 10, 1943\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nHEIRESS NOW AN ARMY GIRL\nAuxiliary Muriel McCormick Hubbard, granddaughter of the late John D. Rockefeller, who is learning to repair, operate and overhaul all wheeled vehicles from a\n\"jeep\" to a 11\/2-ton truck, in the six-weeks course at the\nmotor transport school, 4th W.A.A.C. training centre,\nFort Devens, Mass.\nSALLYVSALUES\n**i_\\.raA U ft. P.i\u00abt OOm.\nGIVES  JEWELS  TO  WAR\nMae West, who will break up\nher celebrated rolled.on of diamonds, worth $VK),00fl, nnd turn\nover part of them to the U S\nWht Producti n Board for use In\ndefer..\"v plan's Diamond* are essential In the pvimif.'rt'ire of precision Instruments and ait ting\ntojlr\nm_wn.   %*-___.\nCUT OUT FOR SUMMER\nBy all means have thii imart,\nquickly made fro-* for Summer!\nThe all-one yoke and sleeve\ntreatment of Marian Martin Pattern M34 li flattering, cool\u2014and\nnote this: may be cut from a\n_acrap-bag remnant. The neat sun-\ntan version it another Summer\nindispensable.\nPattern M34 may be ordered\nonly tn misses' sizes 12, 14, 16, 1\u00a7\nand 30. Size 16 requires 2V* yardi\n35-inch fabric and *k yards contrast\nBend 20 cents ror this pattern to\nTha Nelson Dally News, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelson. Write plllnly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Pattern will ba mailed\nto your home In about 16 days-\nThere may ba some further delay\nIn delivery because of ths large\nIncrease In orders dur l no tha\npreaent season.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nSIZE OF SPOTS VITAL\nWATCHING tht ..lie of the little spot-ctrds can decide the fate\nof plenty of hands Even the difference between a 2 tnd t 3 or t\n3 and a 4 tells the careful observer\nwhat to do to mike or defeat particular contracts. .On the defense,\nIf you can count on your partner\nto use orthodox methodi tn all\nfairly normtl situation!, you ctn\nread plenty of his holdings because\nof the denomination of a little\ncard he uses on some apparently\nunimportant occasion, and consequently make winning decision\n4 <3 10 8 \u00ab 2\n*\u00bb**\n\u00ab10 8 5\n+ K872\n\u2666 K 8\n.11\n\u2666 A K\n4Q J 10 8\n64 3\n_    *\nW  E\nS\n4 A 7 B\nfKQM\nS\n49 7 1\n__, A It\n(Dealer\nnerable.)\nWest\n1 +\n\u00bb\u2666\nSNT\nDbl\n4 J4 s\na) a J 10 \u00ab 1\n4QJ 64 2\nX None\nWest. Eut-West *r_-\nNorth\nFaat.\nPass\nPin\nPut\nCut\nI.\nSf\nPisi\n\u00bb*\nSouth\nPau\nPan\n\u00ab\u2666\n\"Give   An.y   i-nnugli   money   snd\nshe'd   need   a   4fl-room   hnu_.,   ll\nlakes a new room every two years j\nto stort the junk she accumulate!.\" '\nEut gueued thtt South would\nhtve got tway with t cheap tacrine! at hla 4-Dlamonde doubled,\nand did not want his side to be\nbeaten out of Ihe gthie which\nwould complete t 700 rubber, so\ntook out the double. He wound up\nglid that he did for the contract\ngot made, though It could have\nbeen let.\nNorth opened the diimond 10.\nthe A winning and the club Q going through it once to reveil the\nbtd trump sltuttion. West  took\ntht etub A. rtturntd to hti hind\nwith the iptde K and led the club\nJ, which North took Thla left\nNorth tht trump 8, so he tried to\nput South In by leading the heart\n3. which he feared to lead at the\nbeginning becauie It might have\naet up the iuit fortuitously for tht\ndeclirer. and also becauie with\nhli own long trumpi, hi winttd to\npump out iome of Weit'i by making him n_T diamonds.\nSouth won the htart Q with\ntht A tnd then\u2014love'i libor lost\n\u2014returned \u25a0 diamond Weat took\nthii. dropped the final trump md,\nof courie. icored the reit of th!\ntrlcki to maki hli contract.\n\"I didn't know your heart t\nwai a alngleton.\" pleaded South\nafterward. But, when Weit pliyed\nthe 7 on it, tnd the i wu out of\nlight. It ihould have been cryital\nclear If North had held the 4. hit\northodox le\u00bb. would htve been\nthe .top of the doubleton. Hid_\nSouth returned the heart ifter\nwinning the 3. the contract would\nhave been iet. of course\n...\nTomorrow'! Problem\n4732\n\u00bbKQ4\n4K84\n4A783\n4 A K \u00ab4   -\n._33\n4Q.84\nN\nW  E\nS\n4Q85\n1 J 8 7 8 5\n3 7\n4 A 7 2\n4 None\n4j lot\n\u00bbA\n4 10 I 8 5\n4 K J 10 8.\ni Dealer Wtit North-South\nvi ilner a Ne I\nIf South lead., the diamond 10\nto tht J, K tnd A, wini thi heirt\nreturn and thin leads the diamond\n5. whtt ii Etit't soundest plin to\ntry for 4-Hetrta on thli deal T '\nth.lnr.ulr. ky Klin Future. truHcati. Im.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Son of Adam\n9. Sandarac\ntret\n9. Skin disordei\n10. Soft palates\n11. Harangue\n12. Jackets\n14 Skin\n15. Wrinkle\n18. Endure\n18. Gave over\n19. Portugueie\ncoin\n31. God of earth\n24. Assembly\n28. Shield\n29. Coniti.lt-\nUon\n30. Cry of a\ndove\n31. Australian\nsoldiers\n33. Subside\n34. Come ln\n36.8hoe part\n(pi.) i\u00bb\n39. Leaf of\ncorolla\n43. Egreai\n44. Prleit of\nTibet\n45. Country\nutate\n47. Plunged\n4_. Acron\n49. Baking\nchamber\n50 Refuse of\ni-rapi!       ,\n51. Blrdt tbodi\nDOWN\n1. Weight unit\n2. A fiih\n3. Plirpo. e\n4 Born\n5. Hall! 25. Frozen\n6. Withdrawal      water\n7. Loudly 26. Head\n8. Scope (ilang)\n11. Goddeu of 27. Sailor\nharveita 32. Colonist\n13. Mournful 35. To live\n17, Unded again\nestates 36. Bulgarian\n18. Marki frotn       coin\nfoldi 37. Maxim\n20. Cap 38. Trtu oft\n21. Body of region\nnnercn onn_i\nnanni. r_n.fi.j_i\nsi.*.******-!\nrannn BD aon\nfinrii.mil\n___ BE\nannuil\n\u00a3Q2SiXJE^U\u00a3_3-Ufi\n\u00ab.toot_l   -. gy\n40. Covert with    46. Portions* I\ncurvedlBkl\nt il\nI ,-,-   ,._*___.,.,,   ,   ..     \u2022_     \u25a0!.- , ,_____a___i__m__.. ,. .J-.., \u25a0_ ........  _^ .,._,,.,\n ___________________\n_____\u2014\u2014\u2014___\n\u2014\u2014-\n ,\t\n'       \u25a0 \u25a0 ' \u2022\n-\n'\nPHONI 144\nLook Down Those Wont Ad Columns for Bargains\nPHONI 144\nBIRTHS\nTHOMAS-To Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nThomas of Calgary, formerly ot\nRossland, July 4, twin girls.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED; FEMALE BOOKKEEP-\ner. Must have business course.\nState age, education and office\nexperience when making application to National Selective Ser-\nvice, Nelson, B.C. ^^\nTURN VOUR SPARE TIME INTO\nmoney\u2014sell >ALCOSEEL, proven\nproducts, stops punctures, saves\ntires. Card brings proof. Agency\nproposition. Victory Mfg. Company, Cornwall, Ont.\t\nWANTED; 2 PICKERS FOR RASP-\nberriea, cherries and blackberries.\nMcConnell,   Harrop.\nWANTED:  CHERRY  PICKERST.   YOU   CAN   ORDER   CLASSI-\nYOU CAN\nTELEPHONE REPLIES\nTO\nADVERTISEMENTS\nWITH\nBOX NUMBERS '\nFor the accommodation of readers who find lt inconvenient to\nwrite an answer to Classified\nAdvertisements which carry\nDaily News Box Numbers, rather than a name or tddress of advertisers and to aerve advertisers better we will accept replies by telephone.\nPHONE 144\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP A*l\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot.\n25* THE PHOTO MILL 3.K*\nP.O. Box1 333, Vancouver.\nRolls developed tnd printed 25c\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement Wt\nHAVE CLIENTS WITH  PRAIRIE\nproperty and businesses who wish\nto sell or trade for local or B.C.\nWrite Swap Servict Ltd.. ti Sixth\nSt.. New Westminster. \u25a0\t\n25c lI0NS PHOTO\"25c\nP. O. Box 434. Vancouver\nAny 8-exp. roll developed and printe\ned Mc. Raprlnta 3c. Free 5x7 \"'\"P0\"\nPackers. L. Clark, Gray Creek.\nTEACHERB\nFIED ADVERTISEMENTS BY\nPHONE ALSO\nTEACHER FOR JUNIOR GRADES\nIn  Castlegar  Elementary  School\nMinimum salary $1050 per annum |\nApplications   received   by   S   C. I\n'Walson. Secretary. Castlegar Unit-1\ned Rural School District. Cas ;e-,\n,.'\"\u25a0 BC- _\u2122_ 'HAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nWANTED:    TEACHER,    CASINO BC    Provinclal  Assayer, Chemist.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nSchool. Female preferred. Salary\ndepends on experience, not less\nthan 3900 Grades 1 to 8.18 pupils.\nSec.-Treas., A H. Sinclair, P.O.\n'.Box 46, Trail. B.C.\nIndividual  representative  for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nA. J. Buie, Independent Mine Representative. Box 54. Trail, B.C.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON PROVINCIAL\n\u25a0fc ;\u2014\u2014    \u2014 W. YtlUUVri\u2014J- J.-UJVUS^m-\nIWANTED: TEACHER FOR BAL-  As!aye(i m j08ephlne St., Nelson,\n\" four Elementary School and Grade \\ irom'.'N.Av  AS.AT.\n,K. Salaiy $1000 per annum  Ap-|\u2122E  WfST KOOT^AY ASSAY\nply Frank Seal, s.cretary School! \u00bb\u00ab\u2022\u00ab. 55\u00b0 stanl<*7 St., Nelson, B.U\nBoard. Balfour, B.C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nSCHOOLS  AND-INSTRUCTION  j FAE McDONALD, DC, PaLmkH\n_i     \u00abr  -m..     oi.a__l   nil\/'   Trail\nSTENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS\nneeded badly by Government tor\nI' war work, you can train at home\nJor Job as Stenographer, Typis;,\nOffice Clerk, Letter Carrier, Man\n' Clerk,   Customs   Exam ner,   etc.\nTree advice and record  of ap-\nSo.ntment of our students from\n[.C.C. Civil Service Sohool Ltd..\nWinnipeg. The oldest in Canada\nGrad. X-ray, Strand Blk.: Trail.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates fo; noncommercial advertisements under his classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (8 days)\n(overs any number of required\nUnei. Payable ln advance. Add\n10c If Dox number desired.\nENGINEER8 AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN. MINING 4 CIVIL\nEng neer; B.C., Land Surveyor.\nRo sland and Grand Forks, B.C\n\u00a7OYD C. AFFLECK, 218 60Ri_ _>T\nNelson, B.C.. Surveyor and\nEngineer, Phone 889-R.\n1-6 HP. ELECTRIC MOTOR AND\nuaed goods of all kinds see CHESS\nSECOND   HAND   STORE.\nLONELY LADIES, GENTLEMEN,\nget acquainted. Join friendship\nclub. Letter Introduction. Free\nparticulars. P.O. Box 383, Van-\ncouver, B.C.\t\nLONELY FOLKS! JOIN RELIABLE\nconfidential matrimonial club,\nMany Members with means. Particulars and descriptions 10c. Ladles free. Box 121, Regina.\nFOR ADULTS ONLY! SEND 10c\nfor World's Funniest Joke Novelty and catalog of feminine hygelne\n. products, druggists sundries, books\non all subjects, medical preparations, etc.- Western Distributors,\nBox 24FNC, Regina, Sask.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\nBUY OF THE\nYEAR.\n'38 DODGE DELUXE SEDAN\nLow mileage, good tires, like new\ninside and out\nWANTED\nSeveral  good  late  model  cars,\nCash ln on yours today.\nFUN FOR PARTIES\nHorse racing with cards. Play your\nfavorites. Let the cards decide\nthe winners on the World's smallest race track. 80 horses, 8 races,\ntaole size 98c, pc -ket size 25c. Box\n881, Vaneouver, B.C.\t\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND FRINT-\ned (8 or 8 exposure roll) 23c. Reprints 3c each. For your vacation\nsnapshots, choose Krystal Finish\nGuaranteed non-fade prmts, Krystal Photos, Wilkie. Saskatchewan.\nEstablished over 30 years\n\"ftHRAT\"    RAT    AND    MOUSE\nV Killer, 50c; harmless to humans,\nanimals, fowl.\n\"DFRPO\" Bug Killer, 85c.\n.SOLD   BY   Eaton's.    Woodwards,\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE! .p.-,,.!.-^ leading drug, feed, hard-\nCHAS. F. McHARDY UfeURANCg \\ \u00bb'ff_, P0\u2122** \u00b0r D\u00abP\u00b0 Product8'\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nKPERIENCED     HOUSEKEEPER\n(widow with boy 11 years). Must\nbe close to Jun'or High School.\nBox 4303 Daily News.\n\u00bb -      i \u2014\nLOST AND FOUND\n| LOOT:   PAIR   OF_GLASSES In\ncase  P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70.\nBeMET-*!. LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, mo.or rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nSTEVENSON'S   MACHINE   SHOP\nSpecialists in mine and mill work.\nMachine work   light and heavy\nEkctr'c  and  Acetylene  welding.\n70S Vernon St., Kelson - Ph. 98.\nOPTOMETR18T8\nTRANSPORTATION\n.NSPORT ATION    WANTED\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail.      Phona 177\nSA8H FACTORIES\nLAWSPN'S      SA\u00a7H      FACTORY\ntor one man to Reglna on or about Hardwood merchani. 273 Baker SL\ntte 16th of July. Write Box I\"\nCastlegar,  B.C.\n-Ison Satlij Nppb\nTelephone  144\nTnD Circulation: Phone 1325-L\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUc per line per Insertion\n44c per line per week 16 consecutive insertions for cost ot 4)\n1143 s line a month 126 times]\n(Minimum 2 lines Der insertion)\nBox number lie extra This\nCovers any number of times\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, ETC.\n18c per line, first insertion and\n14c   each  subsequent  insertion\nALL    ABOVE    RAT&S    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial   Situations\nWanted for 28c (or any required\nnumbtr  ot   lines  for  ilx  dayt\npaytblt in advance,\nSUBSCRIPTION RATEo\nSmile eopy  . $   03\nBy carrier oer week _ 25\n8) carrier per year \u2014 13 00\nBy mall!\nOne   month I   73\nThree months     2 00\nfin   months         4 00\nOnt year ......    6 00\nAbove rates apply In Cansda.\nUnited States and Unled Kng-\ndem to subscribers living oui-\nlida rerular carrier areai\nElsewhere and to Canadi where\nmonth (1 SO: three months $4 00:\nextra \u2022Datum is required ona\nalx months $8 00: one int 115\nSECOND  HAND 8TORES\nWE buyTISlandexchanoe\nWhat have you? Ph. 534 Ark Store\nPETS\nARDEE   KENNELS,   WALDHZ1M.\nSask, Specializing In Irish Setters.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top pr ees\npad Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B  C.\nWANTED TO BUY - SEVERAL\ncarloadi of split cedar pusts, sizt\n15\" to IB\". 7 ft. long Write Royal\nLumber Yards Ltd., Cfgary, Alta.\nWANTED: 1940, '41 OR '42 CAR.\nGood condition. Pay Ctah Particulars to Box 4261, Daily News.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTORS\nBuy   Your  Fur  Coat  Now\u2014Pay\nall   Summer\u2014Free   Storage-\nAttractive  Prices\nExpen Restyling - Repairing\n\u2014Low Rates\u2014\nSAFE POLAR STORACE\nPolar Furs Ltd. \u2014 Vancouver, B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n'36 DODGE COUPE\nSuitable tor light delivery\nconversion.\n'32 fORD COUPE\nV8 motor, suitable for light\ndelivery.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS LIMITED\nKelson, b. c.\n153 Baker SL Phone 119\n\u2014Genuine International Parts\u2014\nAlso special logging truck brake\nfluid and  brake lining\nCENTRAL TRUCK It EQUIP  CO\n.02 Front St.      -      Nelson, B.C.\nF5R SALE: STUDEBAKER D-U-\ntator, 1934. Five passenger sedan,\ntires and everything in first class\ncondition. Has not run over 17,000\nmiles. Apply F. K. Stortts, Boswell\nPOWER PLANT MOUNTED ON\nframe, engine completely overhauled. NELSON AUTO WRECK-\nING AND GARAGE,\t\nFOR SALE: EXTRA ESPECIAL '29\nChrysler Sedan, licensed, mechanically good. $119. Enquire 71 High.\nFOR SALE: MAPLE LEAF 2-TON\ntruck, In good running shape.\nShorty's Repair Shop.\t\nFOR SALE: '36 GRAHAM-PAIGE\nsedan. Gooq rubber. Ph. **86-RL\nRadiators and ball bear-\nIngs  City Auto Wreckers\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nDEPARTMENT OF LANDS\n(Forest Branch)\nTIMBER SALE X33273\nS.aled tenders will tip received\nby the Minister of Lands at Victoria, B.C., rot later than 11 o'clock\nin the forenoon on the 16th day of\nJuly. 1943, for the purchase of Licence X33275, to cut 420.000 feet\nof White Pine, Spruce, Fir, Hemlock, Cedar and Larch, 100,210 lineal feet of Cedar Poles and Piling.\n400 Fence Posta and 100 Hewn Ties\non .Lots 8282 and 8263 about 2V,\nmiles Southwest from the head of\nSlocan Lake, Kootenay Land District.   ,\nThree (3) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief\nForester, Victoria, B.C., or District\nForester, Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE: SERVICE STATION\nand confectionery store In Salmo\nas a going concern. All fixtures\nincudlng ice cream, cold drink\nand domestic refrigerators, show\ncases, booths, vulcanizing equipment, air pump and electric motor\ntwo gas pumps and a 1938 International-H-ton truek. rNet pro\nfit for one year will pay for Ihe\nbusiness. Price $2250 excluding\nstock which will be sold at cost.\nTerms arranged. T. D. Rosling.\nPh. 717. 568 Ward St.\nTy Cobb Thinks\nBaseball\nWill Survive War\nDCTBOIT, July 9 (AP) - Tyrus\nRaymond Cobb declared todty thtt\nbaseball by til means should continue ln wtrtimt tnd furthermore\nthat'he itw no ntion why it couldn't lurvivt.\nWithout mentioning his old rival\nspecifically, the 58-year-old former\nGeorgia-Pitch thus took mother\nshot it Babe Ruth, who was quoted\nreeently as saying thit Mijor League\nbaseball wu loiing money .fast md\nwould surely have to. close shop.\n\"I think baseball ihould continue\nby ill means,\" asserted Cobb, miking i -business trip to Detroit where\nht served two decades ii pltyer\nind manager. \"1 was sorry to iee\ntha Texas Ltague and tome othert\nfold up without putting up a stronger\nfight to keep going.\"\nNEW   yOBK  STOCKS\nAm. Smelt te Bel 42\u00abi\nAmer, Telephone ....\u2014\u2014\u2014 lMfc\nAmericin Tobacco    84 ,\nAeth. Steel      Mtt\nCanadian Pacific    10H\nDupont     187\nEastman  Kodak l&u.\nGen. Electric      30%\nGen. Motori  K.\nInternational   Nickel 82%\nUnion  Pacific    100%\nUnion  Pacific     _   43%\nU. S. Steel      57%\nCalgary Livestock\nRe.\nCAt-GARY, July 9 'CP)\ncelpts: 88 cattle, 318 hogs.\nOood to choice butcher steers\n11.50-12-28; common to medium 10-\n11; common to medium butcher het-\nfers 10.80-11.23; good cowl 8.75-1-25;\ncommon to medium 7-8.50; canneri\ntnd cutters 4.50:6.80; food bulls\n6.75-9.25; common to medluip 7.50-\n8.50; good stocker ind feeder steers\n10.28-11; common to medium 8-10.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nRENTALS\nWANTED. SMALL PIGS, ANY\nnumber. Between now snd November. 'Write pries snd when\nready to ahlp. Wo Lee, 704 Davis\nSt. Nelson. ,\n&EST QUALITY RHODE ISLAND\nRed Chicki, July shipment, 25 lor\n83: 50 for \u00bb6; 100 for $12. G. Game,\nTr lange Poultry Farm, Armitrong\nFOR SALE: ~__ HAMPSHIRE\ncockereli, II weeki old 90c each.\nPhone 794-R2\t\nNEW HAMPSHIRE COCKERE--.\n4 weeks, 40c; 6 weeks, SOc. Tom\nNeale, R.R. No. 1,, Nelson.\nCryptoquotes\nHQSr GJK JKDYO MNQJHIO D I <_ D N Q\nWQHMI   LKYCKVO   KDIK-iHKOJK.\nVeaterdty*! Cryptoquote: ANOPPORTUNTTY WILL TAKIN\nIS THK ONLY WEAPON *OF ADVANTAGE-UDALa.\nCryptoquotei ire quotatloni of fimruis personi written cipher.\nA lubstitute chsracter hat replaced the original leiter  For initanrc,\nan \"R\" may substlliite tnr th* original \"\u00a5.'\ncryptoqumc. or t'\"RB\" may replace an ' LL'\nlow through to tha lolution.\nBRIGHT, FURNISHED SUITE FOR\nrent. Apply evenings, 918 Koote-\nnsy St.\t\nSEVERAL HOUSES POR RENT. 112\n\u2014$20 a month C W. Appleyard.\nPhone 269.\nTERRACE    A?f5    BEAUTIFUL\nmodern Frlgldalre equipped tultei\nFOR RENT: 5 HM. STUCCO HSE.\n4 loti. A. Hall, 816 Gordon Rd\n3-ROOMS *f--. WITH GARDEN\nApply upstairs, 311 Vernon St.\nFOR RENT: SMALL faOUSI PAHT-\nIt furnished. Phone 130.\nLARGE. HOUSEKEEPTNO  ROOST\nIdeal (or business girl. 171 Baker.\nHOUSE. _-t-___k__~_7-\nso Suite. PH. 316.\nPIPE - FnTlNGS - TUBES SPE-\nclal low prices, Active Trsding Co\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE: NO.  10 REMINGTON\ntypewriter,   completely   recondi-\ntloned. Ap. Box 4264 Dally News.\nMcLARY  COOK _-*_, WATHt\njacket, $35. Ex. cond. 911 Gordon\nRoad\t\nFORREST.CROSSLEY     CABINET\nradio cheap for cash. A-l shape.\nApply OK.  Bakery, Stanley St.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES                         Bid Aak\nBayonne      .04% .06\nBralornt       980 9,99\nCariboo Oold     1.02 1.10\nGold Belt      8.16 8.18\nHedley Mascot     .42 .48\nIsland Mount      \u2014 .78\nKoot Belle _    .25 21\nPend Oreille     1.88 \u2014\nPioneer Gold     1.99 2.00\nPremier Gold      .89 .92\nPrlvatee \u201e\u2022    SI _Vt\nReeves MacDonald      .28 .35\nReno Gold      03 .03%\nSheep Creek  92 . \u2014\nWhitewater   .               .03% .01\nYmlr Yankee Girl      .06 \u2014\nOILS\nAnaconda   J 04% \u2014\nAngli Can      .71. -\nA P Con _     .13 .13\nCal 8c Ed      1.57 1.60\nCommoil  _.... - .17 JO\nCommonwealth      33 .27\nHomi      8.65 J.70\nMcDougall Segur ..    .07% .09\nOkalU too.     ttt .88\nPacific Pete 42 .44\nRoyaliti  __... 28.00 \u2014\nUnited        j07% -08\nVanalta  .       .07% .07%\nVulcan  __     .22 \u2014\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital  Est      2.50 2.78\nCoast Brew ....'..    1.35 \u2014\nUnited Dlst       - 3.19\nRookies in Ball\nLineup lo\nFace Trail Girls\nNilson Ladles' Rip ftsBiall outfit is all set to Ukt on tht Trill\nComets, Ont of Talbot Negus' Trill\nCity Letgut sqoads.\nThe locals havj juit flnlihed I\nseries of gimes Igiinst mtn'i teams\nof the Nelson Ltigue md ire confident of giving tht visitors stiff com-'\npetition. Slim Porter, President and\nCoach of tht Lsdles' Rips, said Friday; \"Wt htven't tht Club yt* used\nto hive, as many of tht older girls\nare gone, ihd we UN several of the\nyounger players, who though thty\nlack pliyoff experience, irt ntvtr-\ntheless up tnd coming bill pliyen.\"\nGeorgina Procter, veteran back\nitop, fill be ln ber usual position.\nAmelia Trouo, t new-comer to local fani, will look ifter tht first\nbase ind will likely chuck the stcond gtmt. Louise Coletti, ilso i\nveterart, will play second. Marie\nStangherlin, who was batboy for\nthe Reps two years ago, is looking\nafter the shortstop position. Alice\nGillett, apeed, merAant of the, team,\nwill hold down the hot ipot at third.\nBetty Moran, i rookie, will bt oh\nthe monnd. Tht outfield will bt\nchosen from Irmi Arlt, Mary Kubin, Betty St. Germain, Dot Wallace and Gladys Davis, the litter\nfour all youngsters making their\nfirst appearance against outside\ncompetition. The first game will be\nseven Innings, with the second nine\nIf tlmt permiU.\" Scotty Mitchell\nand Sam Brown will umpire.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY,\nfarm lands, partially improved and\nunimproved, also grazing land In\nthe Provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Desirable terms. For\nparticulars apply to Asst Supt.\nStlet, 908 Dopt Natural Reiourcei,\nCalgary.\t\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY:\nSmall houie or bungalow, prefer\nbungalow Would like garage.\nPleue give tull particular! and\nterms In first letter. P.O. Box 758.\nCranbrook, B.C.\nWHY NOT RE-FINANCE YOTfR\nmortgage at t_. We have fundi\navailable. Monthly reduction plan,\nAPPLEYARD\nF.A, WHITFIELD'REAL ESTATE\nand Insurance. 417 Hall St., Nelson\nBEFORE\" BUYTNO~Y6UR~H<5Mt\nSEE C, W. Appleyard le Co.\n\u25a0_lf\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, IULY 10, 1941 \u2014 7\nPearce, Gaudaur,\nFitxpatrick\nin Feature Race\nTRENTON, Ont, July 9 (OP.)-\nR.C.A.F. offlciili it tht Trenton ilr\nitation innounced todiy thit i regatta would bt held htrt July 19\nwith prominent Canadian scullers\npirtlclpitlng. Tltt mtln net will\nfuture LieuL Bobby Pearce of tht\nRoyal Canadian Navy, PO. Jack\nGaudaur, Canadian on'e-mlle chtmpion and Ac. 2 Johnny Fitzpatrlck\nof tht R.C.A.F., Canaditn Henley\nchampion. i\nBatting Leaders\nBy Thi Associated Prist\nBatting (thret leaden in etch\nleague).\n0 AB R H Pet.\nCurtwright, W. Sx 57 180 30 91 .339\nStephens, Browns 80 228 31 75 .337\nWakefield, Tigtrs 70 308 39 100 .330\n\"Muslal, Cardlnala 72 282 47 93 .330\nHack, Cubt 72 273 37   89 SX\nHerman, Dodgtrs 78 290 39  93 .321\nDahlgren, Phillies 72 271 28  87 321\nRuns betted ln:\nNational Leigue-Hinnin, Dodgers 51; American League\u2014Etten,\nYankees 52.\nHome runs:\nNational League\u2014Ott, Giants 12;\nAmerican League\u2014Keller, Yankees,\nLaabs, Browns, Stephen., Browns,\nYork, Tigers.    \u25a0\nMaior League Leaderi\nBy The Auoclated Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBatting\u2014Curtrlght, Chicago  .339.\nRuns\u2014Vernon, Washington 47.\nHlts-Wakefleld, Detroit 99.\nDoubles\u2014Keltner, Cleveland 21.\nTrjples-York, Detroit 7.\nStolen bases \u2014 Cast, Washington\n24.\nPitching \u2014 Grove,   Chicago   ind\nCandlnl, Washington 7-0.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nbatting Muslal, SL Louis _\u00bb.\nRuns\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn 82.\nHits\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn 93.\nDoubles\u2014Hermsn, Brooklyn 22.\nTrlplet-Musls! St. Louis 11.\nStolen bases\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn\n9.\nPitching\u2014Sewell, PltUbvffgh 13-1.\nTigers (ul\nYankee Lead\nDETROIT, July 9 (AP.-Detrolt\nTigeri out thl New York Yank-\nttl' Ltigui lud to two gamei by\n\u2022hutting out Phlltdilphli Athletici, 4-0, behind tht four-hit hurling of little Hil Whlti In i twilight gtmt tonight It Wit White's\niecond win agalnit leven defeats.\nPhllidelphii   \u201e \u2022 0   4   2\nDetroit      4 11   1\n\u2022 Christopher, Pagan (7) pease (8)\nand Swift; H. White and Richards.\n8ENATOR8 BEAT INDIANS\nCLEVELAND, July 9 (AP) -\nWashington's squeeze play ln the\n13th Inning scored Bob Johnson\nfrom third and the Nationals triumphed 1-0 over Cleveland Indians\nat Municipal Stadium tonight.\nWashington      1   9  0\nCleveland      0   3  0\nLeonard, Scarborough (11), Haefner (13) and Early; Bagby and Rosar.\nST. LOUIS, July 9 (AP) -\nMlki' Chartak poked I nlnth-ln-\nnlng homi run to thi roof of\nthi right field itindi tonight to\nglva St Louli Browni a 6-4 decliion ovar Boiton Red Sox.\nBoston   _ 4 11   1\nSt. Louit  8 11   0\nHughion tnd Peacock; Muncrief\nand Hayet.\n17la___L J-Q-uh. . . .\nLONDON, July 9 (CP.) - Indut-\nttlals moved selectively higher ln\nthe stock msrket today and tht close\ngenerally was firm.\nNEW YORK-Rallylng rails provided specialized buying Incentives\nfor other sections oj today's stock\nmarket and favorites rote frictions\nto a point or mort, \u2022 numbir to\nnew highi for the yttr or longer.\nTransfers exceeded 1,000,000\nsharei for the flrit time ln \u25a0 week.\nMACHINERY\nMACHINERY FOR 8ALK: ONE 60\nh p. locomotive boiler with 33 (t\nitack, 135 lbs. WP; one 60x16\nreturn tubulir boiler with Dutch\noven tellings, no stack, 130 lbs.\nWP.; one 13x18 self contalnefl\ntteim engine; 1 let of livt rolli;\n1 heavy log haul chain with tproc*\nkit and drum; 4 conveyor chaini.\nvar oin ilzes; 1 model 94 6x9 Berlin plainer top cylinder. 6 knife;\n1 csble log hsul. Tor full plrllc-\nulan apoly, Thoi. Alton It Sons,\nParion, BC.\nPETS. CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nMOMTACAL     STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc. Brew, ot Can \u2022 18H\nCanadian  Bion.e    32,i\nCan, Car fc-Foundry Pld    29H\nDom. Steel It Coal    -.    \u00bbV_\nGatineau Power Pfd. _ _   10H\nMcColl   Frontenac    _        tv,\nNational Brew L'.d. ...       ISVt\nQuebec Power           15\nShawnlgin W. fc P     11\nSou'.h  Csn. Power     ........   10H\nSted of Can.. Pfd.    88\nBANKS\nCommerce   .\nDominion   ....\nImperial\nMontr, al    .\nNovt Scotli\nRoytl\nTCmONTO-Induitrlal and Weitern oil itocks firmed moderately\nand the mining groups were mainly\nsteady. Turnover was around 450.-\n000 shares.\nHeavy trading again appeared In\nthe Abitibi itocki and thay firmed about a halt-point. Othtr newiprint issues moved ahead,\nMONTREAL \u2014 Paper securltlei\nmoved up iharply ln trading. Tha\nstimulant which ihot up pricei wn\nthe  unpfficlsl snnouncement from\nNew York thst Canidlin newsprint\nmills sn asking tht Unittd Statei\nPrict Administration Board for an\nIncrease of $8 per ton.\nAbltlbl issues, which got a lift\nyestirday through tha Privy Council decision affecting tht orgmiz\nttlon of the Company, led firmer\npapers.\"\nVANCOUVER-Vancou^er Stock\nExchange allowed a firm trend today-\nWINNIPEO \u2014 Wheat futures eat\ned illghtly today to dote % higher\nto Vt lower. July flnlihed it 81.06.4\nSteady buying wai credited to\nAmerican account Trading wai on\na lighter scale thin yeiterday and\nofferings were not heavy.\nCHICAGO\u2014Silling pressuri Initiated by failure of sntl-tubildy and\ncorn celling revision legislation to\npau Congress brought about fairly\nsubstantial declines ln all graini todty.\nSports Roundup\nBy  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR.\nAuoclated Prm Sport Writer\nNBW YORK, July 9 (AP)r-Thi\nSouthern California Public Links\nGolf Association Is undertaking in\nambitious program this Summer\nwith a war workers division, which\nfunctions through recreation directors of about 100 war plints, md I\nJunior golf Instruction program,\nwhich helps to look tfter the kids\nwhose psrents have war Jobi . . .\nPresident Alfred H. Mauer reporti\nthat the professionals, Including\nsuch big-name players ai OUn Dutra, Willie Hunter, Joe Novak, Harry\nBaisler ind Stan KertM, are especially enthusiastic about thl Junior work ... tin coursu tround\nLos Angeles, Pasadena ind Long\nBuch ire holding classes ind they\nplm to wind up thi counts with i\ntourniment.\nPLENTY OF PUNCH\nSpeaking of golf, Sgt. Joe Louis,\nwho Is visiting here, reports thst\nhit current imbltlon Is to reduce hli\nhandicap from iix to scritch . . .\n\"I don't know whether 111 still hive\nthe old zing In the ring ifter the\nwar,\" Joi confesm, \"but I still\nhive zing ln thst golf club.\"\nONE MINUTE SPORTS PAGE\nAs soon is he heird of SI Johnson's \"retlgnstlon\" from the Nitlonil Leigue All-Star team, old Bobo\nNewsom phoned Ford Frlck to ask\nfor the batting practice assignment.\nThat would have made him the first\nplayer to make the All-stir squads\nIn both leagues, but the call was\ntoo latt and Ace Adams slready\nhad been given the Job . . . Judge\nLandis\" 738-page book, \"Baseball\",\nwhtoh subi for the old official\nguides, finally Is off the press. At\na glance It teems fo contain everything except the name of J. G\nTaylor Spink . . .\nSERVICE   DEPT.\nGarvey Young, the Marine who\nbeat Sailor Freddie Cochrane, the\nwelterweight champ, In a non-title\nbout last year, has been transferred\nfrom U'..['in to the Southwest Pacific war zone . .. Jacksonville, Fla.,\nfight fans sre excited about Louis\nNerou of the Nival Air Station, who\nformerly was in the French Navy.\nGeorgle Abrams tayi: \"He's got the\nbeit left hook I ever taw an amateur On.\"\nCards Blank\nBraves;\nBrooklyn Wins.\nBOSTON, Jul\/ \u2022 (AP.) - Mort\nCooptr deed only 28 mtn*tnd .\npitched three-hit bill M hi ltd\nSt Louis Cirdintli to t 7-0 vlotory over Boiton Bravei todiy. It\nwu Cooper'i 11th win of thi iea-\nIon.\nSt Loull     7   11   0   .t\nBoston    0    3   1\nM. Cooper and W. Cooper, Barrett, Farrell (4) and Poland.\nBEAT PIRATES 8-7\nBROOKLYN, July 9 (AP.) - A\nsurprise squeeze ,bunt by Billy Ger.\nman with the score tied, bases loaded and two out, climaxed a four,\nrun 10th Inning rally to give Brook.\nlyn an 8-7 victory over \"Pittsburgh\ntoday,\nPittsburgh    7   12   3\nBrooklyn  ...     .   8   13   I\nHebert,   Resclgno   (7)   Gornicki\n(8)  Kllnger  (10)  Brandt (10)  and\nLopez;   Newsom,  Head   (6)   Hlgbt    i\n(10) and Bragan.\n.\nCUBS BEAT G.IANT8\nNEW YORK, July 9 (AP.)-Al.\nthough Ernie Lombard! socked out\nfive hits in five times at bat Including a two-run homer ln the\nninth to tie the score at 3-3, Chi-\ncago Cubs beat the Giants today for\nthe first time in six games this year.\nThe score was 5-3 with the Cubi\ngetting the winning two runs in the\n12th inning on Phil Cavarretta'i\nslngle,\"Blll Nicholson'i triple ind t\nwild pitch.\nChicago    8   11   J   ,\nNew York  j    8   10   J\n' Wyse   and   McCuUough;   Wittig,\nAdams (9) and Lombardi.\nREDS 8WAMP PHILS\nPHILADELPHIA, July 9 (API-\nCincinnati Reds hammered out an\n11-4 victory over the PhiUlei btfore 8286 fans at Shibe Park tonight\nClyde Shoun, taking over after Xi\nHeusser wis pounded out in the\nthird Inning, held the Phillies score-,\nles thereafter, while hts teammates\nacored six runs ln i big sixth inning.\nCinclnniti    _.ll 18   1 \/\nPhllidelphii  4 IS  1\nHeusser, Shoun (3) ind Mueller;\nKimball, Diet. (6) Fuchs (8) md\nFinley.\nDOW (ONES AVFRAGES\n30 Induitriill\n20 ralli   \t\n13 utiltlei\t\nHigh\n144.32\n37 24\ntut\nLow Clou Chinge\nH334 14418 up     54\n3843 3703 up     .54\n21W 3181 up     18\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nPriston Eitt Domi \t\n3 13\nAngb-Huronltn          \t\n3 75\nSen Antonio Oold\t\n200\nBeattie Gold Mlnei \t\n10*\nShirrltt Oordon _  _...\n-\nBidgood Kirkland .,   \t\nMV.\nSltden Malartlc .:...__\t\n\u25a0_\nBuffalo Ankerlti .. ._\t\nJ IKI\nSudbury Baiin ..\t\n7 on\nCistle-Trethewey . \t\n83\nSullivan Cons   \t\n.72\nCentral Patrlcli    \t\n117\nSylvtnltt  ..         ..X\t\n163\nChromium M fc S  .\n2.,3\nT\u00abck-Hulhei Oold     .._\t\n2*1\nConlaurupi  Mlnei       \t\n101\nTotmm Gold Mines \t\nBt\nComolldated M fc S ..\n4400\nVenturei                  \t\n8.08\nDome* Mlnea                \t\n23.15\nWright Hirgreiv.1 _\n. ...\nlast Milirtlc ..   ...\"  \t\n131\nOILS\nEldorldo Oold         \t\nFilconbrldge Nldtil\t\n98\n440\nBritish Amtrlcin  _ _\nImperiil\nIrrfir Pitrolium \t\nJIM\nH 00\nu_\nHird Rock Oold \t\n50\n1013\nHudion BtyM fc S\t\n30 28\nINDUSTRIALS\nIntimit Nlekil   ...-\u2022\n3680\nBill Ttltphont \u2014..\n.. ISO*\n880\nHnwen _\\_ Trl.\\    , \u201e\n..    6V.\nLiki Short Minei\t\n1428\nB C Powtr A :.\n.   37\nLamaqoi Contar\t\n480\nCtn Cir fc rdy \t\n_,    8H\nLittle Long Lie     \t\n.73  \u2022\nCm Cement Pfd  ._\t\n-    1%\nMscLeod Coekihutt\t\n1.78\nCm Milting           \t\n_   it\nMadien Red Uki .\n1.11\nCm Pacific Rly\t\n_   12\nMilartic Oold t      \t\nits '\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\n.    6\nMcIntyri-Por-upIni   \t\n88.80\nDlitillen giegnma\nTurn ot Ctr*\u2014fi   \u2014 _    .\n..  MH\nMcKenzli Rid Uki\t\n164\na\nMining Coroontlon .\t\n188\nOoodyear Trt\n90\nNlptaing Mining..\t\n128\nHamilton Brldgi         .  _\n<\u00ab\nNorindi .\n4818\nImptrlil Tobtcco  ,\nll*\nNormitil               ..._...\nJ\u00bb\nMontrul Powtr\t\n_  M\n80\nNtt gutl Ctr - \t\n.    !\u2022*,\nPerron Oold            ...  ..\n73\nPowir Corp \t\n-      \u25a0**\n1'icklt Crow Gold .\nno\nStttl of Cm\n-  MH\nPASSES ARMY TESTS\nCHICAGO, July 9 (AP)-Don Kol-\nlowty, 24-year-old iecond baieman\nfor Chicago White Sox, paised his\nUnited'States Army phyilcal test!\ntodsy lnd wn notified to report to\nCimp Grmt 111., on July 30.\nSays Dodds lo\nGive Haegg Race\nLOS ANGELES, JulyJ (AP) -\nBtfdrt you bet til your plunder on\nGunder tht Wonder, listen to t\nword trom t track coach who is one\nof thi veterans of them all; Dean\nCromwell says Gil Dodds of Boston is re_fdy to run tha two-miles in\nless than nine minutes tomorrow.\nWith practlcslly everybody tpec-\nulatlng on the probable outcome of\nthe benefit carnival of championi\nfeature event pitting Gunder Haegg.\nthe Swedish champ, against Dodds,\nthe Divinity student and Bobby\nMadrid,'stellar California distance\ngalloper, the views of the University of Southern California cinder\nmentor stand out    \u2022\n\"I've been watching Dodds and\nhe'a ln top shape,\" reported Crom-\nwelL \"Dodds ran six laps faster\nthan Haegg ran the same distanct\nln their recent Chicago race, md\nhe teemed to have plenty left So\nthe Swede may be getting more than\nhe bargains for tomorrow.\n\"Dodds ran through a mile on Bo-\nvard Field (at U.S.C.) in 4:29, then\nadded two 70-second laps to finish\na mile and one-half in 6:49. This ls\ntwo seconds faster than Haegg's\nmark for the distance ln the Midwest\nThe possibilities of the pair cutting well below nine minutes an\nobvious.\"\nBaseball Scores\nINTERNATIONAL\nToronto 2, Buffalo 1.\nBaltimore I. Newark 2.\nJeraey City 0, Syracuse 1.\nToronto 5, Buffalo 3\nMontreal 3, Rochester 6\nASSOCIATION\nKansas City 2. Toledo 3.\nMilwaukee 0-1, Columbus 2-0.\nEXHIBITION\nAt Greak Ukei, 111.\nNew York     8   11   2\nOreat Lakes .891\nByrne and Hemsley. Sears (61;\nOlsen, Hailett (4) Ferrick (7)\nSchmitz (8) Harrii (9) and G. Dickey, Robinson  (7).\nBUY BONDS\nWo own and offer rh\u00ab following\nCITY OF NELSON BONDS\n5%'t     ol August ltl, 1947 _ 106.41\n5%'t     i. (un* JO, 1948 @ 108.01\n5%'t     \u00bbf July l.tft, 1949 @ 109.47\n5%'t      - Mty lit, 195(0 @ 109.89\n_-.'* o\u00ab )uni 30th, 1955 . 110.70\nind accruing intcrtit \u2014 Ntlion delivery\nMcDermid, Miller & McDermid Ltd.\n202 10 Yotkthirt Building, Vancouver, B. C.\n 8 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY. JULY 10, 1941\nCIVIC\nA r*MOUl MitU IHIAIU\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nShowi it 2:00-7:00-9;0\u00bb\nTHE HALL 0_\nFAME PICTURE!\nAb outergittiMi lm dnat...\nmother triumph from tbi producer! of \"Mri. Miniv-r.\"\nRONALD\nCOLMAN\nCHUK\nGARSON\nla JAMES HILTON'S\nRANDOM\nHARVEST\nMricntf ly MERVYN UROT\ntl\u2014uettt It SIDNEY FRANKLIN\nwltt, PHILIP DOUN\nSUSAN li.TI.HS\nFeature at\n2:41 -7:00-9:26\nKlddiei\u2014Don't mlu our rftw\n\u2022trill \"Ciptaln ^ Midnight\";\nShowing tt the mitlnee only.\nMondiy\n\"THIS LAND IS MINE\"\nSUN\nGLASSES\n25c to $1.95 pair\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG co.\nBritain, U. S. and Canada Ready fo\nMeet Production Needs of Offensive\nU.S. Cannot Give\nRecognition to\nFrench Under Axis\nMilcolm Campbell, 4_-yetr-.ld\nahip's carpenter, ol Campletown,\nArgyllshire, can tell children that\nht llept in the room in \u25a0a'hlch Napoleon died. It happened at St. He-\nlent where he spent four montha\ntfter being torpedoed.\nFOR SUNDAY\nSPECIAL DINNER\nFOR THE FAMILY\nMelon Dew\nWASHINGTON, July 8 (AP>-\nAa long ai the French peoplt tre\nunder German domination, President Roosevelt Indicated today, the\nUnited States cannot recogniie the\nFrench Commlttfee for National Liberation nor any other organization\nai fhe gqverning power of France.\nMr. Roosevelt told a Press Conference he did not think the questv\nion of recognizing the Committee for\nNational liberation had come. He\nobserved tntt currently there ia no\nFrance except about five per cent\nWhich Is outside of the occupied\nFrance in Europe.\nTo a request for comment on reports in the press that the American\nattitude toward Gen. Henri Giraud\nand General Charles de Gaulle, co-\nChairman of the Committee, was\n\"unduly Interfering with French\npolitical affairs,\" Mr. Roosevelt said\nhe could assert only that he sup\nposed 95 pur cent of France was un\nder the heel of the Germain In\nFrance.\nAs for his talks here with Gen\nGiraud, the President said he and\nthe General had talked at lunch\nyesterday about various military\nproblems. He offered no elabora\ntion.\nAMBULANCE\nSERVICE\nTHOMPSON FUNERAL HOME\nIIS Koottniy St Phont 361\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCUSH \u25a0 0 \u25a0 LINER\nIncreuei the life of old tlrei.\nLtt ui tell you ibout them.\nCuthbert Motors, Ltd.\ni.!.iii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiii\nA perminent\nMay concern your\nfuture.\nHai_h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhont 327\nBy JACK WILLIAMS\nCtntditn Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, July 9 (CP)-Mtmbtn\not tht Combined Production ind\nResources Board todty glvt assurance it a Prtu eonttrtnet thtt BrlUin, the united Statei and Canida\nart \"ready to meet\" tht production\nneeds of in all-out offensive.\n\"From our standpoint I ctn wy we\nwlU bt ready\u2014wetre ready,\" itld\nDonald Nelion, Chairman of the\nUnited Stitei Wu Production\nBoard.\nI thing wa can til say that,\" added Munltloni Miniittr Howt, Ctntdi'i representative on the Combined Board.\nI thoroughly agree,\" uld Sir\nHenry Self, Unittd Kingdom deputy\nmember on tbe Board.\nThe Preu eonttrtnet followed t\nmeeting of tht Board htld in the\nSenate Railway Committee room\u2014\nthe first meeting held in Cauda.\nMr. Howe laid at the opening ot\nthe Press conference that general\nCanadian production problemi had\nbeen the major topic ot discusiion.\nMr. Nelson described the, major\nFrigates, the Royal Navy's latest\nwarships, carry 125 to 140 men, compared with 78 to 85 In a Corvette.\nMany of the new ships are being\nbuilt in Canada.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist   '\nSuit* 205\nMedicil Arti Building\n$P\nPasteurized\nMilk Makei\nChildren\nHealthy\nYOUR PROBLEMS\nSOLVED\nCanada's Favorite Reader\nBy psychic ability md prac-\nticil idvlce, helps you in affiln of Hulth. Business. Love,\nLawsuits. Moves, Changes,\nTravel and Desires. Special\nReadings with Ice Cream and\nRefreshments. Tea Cups with\nDinner and Lunch.\nStaJLCafa\nAfternoons - Evenings\nYour Watch Is\nPrecious . . .\nFor fine repairing\nSee . . .\nHARVEY\nThe Jeweller. 684 Baker St.\nWalgi\nJ. P. waigren\nGeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.\nproblems faced at tha. moment is\nlupply ot coil from, tht Unittd\nStttei to Ctntdt tnd supply of\nwood- pulp trom Ctnidi to tht\nUnited Statu.\nWe wlll go back tnd itt whttwc\ncm do tbout it,\" Mr. Nelion Hid.\nTht probltm li to gtt mort coil to\nthe porti to uit navigation WhUt\ntht Lakes are optn.''\nDetermining which Of Cinada's\nsupplies to the Unittd Stttu. htd\nproven moit valuable was \"likt uying which of your chlldrtn you Uka\nbeit,1' but nickel, ln greit nttd tor\nthc minuficturt ot alloy iteel,\nnnked \"ti Important as anything\nwt get.\"\nIn meeting civilian nttdi wood-\npulp, timber tnd newsprint itood\nhigh.\nMr. Nelion deicribed the guoline\niltuition ti \"vtry serious\" tnd\nwarned thtt not until tht wtr erjd-\ned would there be lufficient petro\nleum producti to meet ill needs.\nWarning that he wai\" mtking a\nprediction and not ipeaking of present conditions, he iald \"(he rubber\nsituation will ease markedly trom\ntht end of the year on.\"\nReglna Youth\nDrowning\nVictim al Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., July 8\u2014The Columbia River claimed its first victim\nin Trail this yetr Thursday night\nwhen George William McNeill, 18,\nlost his life while swimming near\nSandy Island. McNeill, son of Mr.\nand Mra. G. H. McNeill of Regina,\ncame to Trail in March of thii year\nto work for the Consolidated Mining te Smelting Co. ot Canada Ltd.\nHe was with a small party of friends\nat the river and apparently got into\ndifficulties while in the water at\nthe rocki up river from the sand\nbeach. He waa unable to iwim.\nMisa Joyce Bishop, i companion,\niaw that McNeill was. in trouble,\nand tried to' rescue him. She apparently had hold of him at one\npoint but was unable to get help\nand he was pulled into deep water.\nCity police -were notified Immediately. Fire Chlet H. H. Miller reached the acene first and attempted to\nget a boat. This was finally secured\nby Bert Calvert and Jim Marks.\nSgt. Roland Hill of the City Police\nDepartment went into the river and\nlocated the youth's body put was\nunable to raise lt. Gino Pagnan,\nhome on leave from the R.CA..F.,\nalso went into the water and managed to raise the body.\nDr. M, E. Krause had followed\nthe city police car to the river and\nwaa on hand when the youth wai\nbrought ashore. Both C. M. te S. and\nARP first air squads reached the\naccident and gave help. Dr. W. C.\nLeonard and Dr. J. S. I-Jly also\nwent to the acene. \u2022\nDoctors and first aid crews worked from 8:30 p.m. when the youth\nwas brought to the shore until\npast 11 p.m. in a vain attempt to restore life. Nine tanks of gas were\nuied in the inhalator.\nNo Inquest will be held but Coroner J. S. Daly will hold an inquiry. The body was ient to Reglna\nlast night for burial.\nYoung McNeill lived at 975 Portland Street He was employed In\nthc smelter treaters.\nCanada Developing\nEdible Oil\nFrom Sunflowers\nVANCOUVIR, July \u00bb-How Canada li developing an edible oil tupply trom lunflowers .wti told in\nVincouvtr by Mri. Phyllli Turntr,\nAdministrator ot Oilt tnd Fita tor\ntht Wartlmt Prices and Trade Botrd\nMn. Turntr, t native of Bouland,\nB.C., tnd graduate ot Univenlty\nof Brlttih Columbli, Bryn Mtwr\ntnd tht London School of Economics viilted tht Coist to discuss fish\noil production tnd othtr matters\ncoming under htr jurisdiction.\nShe uyi thtt thtrt' are now\n100,000 acres under cultivttlon- for\nsunflowers from which valuable\noil tnd byproduct! trt obtained. The\nsunflower ls not tht glint affair\nfamiliar to moit people but a ipeclal\nvtritty dtvtloptd on experimental\nfarmi ^hlch grows \"whett high\"\ntnd mty bt harvested by ordiniry\nmachinery.\nNecessities of wir htvt forced\nCantdt to look Into htr own resources tnd encouraging progress\nli being -made In the production of\nflax and soya beam to replace supplies cut off by enemy action. Rape\nieed oil for marine purposes ls another product previously Imported\nnow obtained in tht Dominion.\nFish liver oil production In BritUh Columbia set a itew high lait\nyear, reported the Administrator,\nand so tar this year's catches are\nkeeping up to standard.\nBURY ST. EDMUNDS, England,\n(CP)\u2014Capt. William __arry Coombs,\nPresident of the Merchant Navy\nOfficers' Federation, aayi that because Germany has abused the chivalry of the sea twice ln a generation\nshe should be barred from it until\nshe learns better. \u25a0\nWater Level\nJuit to Ihow there Is nothing\nsmall about it and its July peak,\nthe lake started to pick up again\nFriday, following Thursday's slight\ndrop and gained .04 foot during the\n24 hours ending at 8 p.m., pushing\nup the season's peak to 10.59 feet\nby the Launch Club gauge, or .02\nfoot over Wednesday's mark. This\nIs probably tfhe lateit date on which\nthe Kootenay high water has occurred ln recorded history.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBritish Bombers\nBlast Jap\nTargets In Burma\nNEW DELHI, July t (CP)-Bfi-\nlish bombers drive-bombers ind\nflghteri attacked Japanese troop\nand supply targeti ln Western Burma yesterday, ihooting up the objectivei with machine-guns immediately tfttr bombs hid betn dropped.\nAn RAJ*, communiqut nld ont\nformation ot dive-bombers raided\ntnemy itoragt buildings at Buthedaung tnd tnothtr ttttcked trmy\nhutments it Tgaungdtrt, icoring\nmany hiti on the targeti. In both\nraldi, escorting tighten followed up\nthe bombardment! by strafing the\ntargeti.\nIn other atticki on Arakan Province; R.A.F. medium bomben it-\nttcked objectives at Akyab and\nfighter planu sank or damaged 33\nriver craft along the South coait\nof Akyab Island.\nAnother formation of bombers attacked Japanese positions at Kalewa, In the Chin Hills area, where\nseveral bulldlngi were destroyed\nby direct hits.\nOne fighter was reported missing\nTor Your Dally Oood Health\nUM\nWAMPOLE'S\nGRAPE SALTS\nThe morning refresher.\nYour Rexill Store.\nCity Drug Co.\nPhtnt 34\nBox 460\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRates: 220 lint, 27c lint black fict I\ntypt, lirger typt rttei on requut\nMinimum   two   llnu.   10%   dlicount for prompt piyment\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nGRENFELL'S CAFE\nRoist Turkey-Freih Strtwberry Pie\nDancing every Saturday Nlghi\nEAGLES\u2014Popular Pricei\nKOKANEE LODGE AND CABINS\nCrou Ferry, thence l_ milei\nSmoke t Buckingham Cigarette\nfrom VALENTINE'S.\nLawn mowen iharpened, overhauled. F. Dietrich, 015 Innes St.\n99 acres rear Blewett for $10t)0.\nGood wood lot. Robertson Realty,\nSave food with ict\nPh.  108 Williams'  Transfer\nBombs Dropped\nSoutheast Town;\nLondon Has Alert\nLONDON, July 9 (CP) .-German\nraiders dropped high explosives on\na town ln Southeist England and a\nSoutheast coait resort today while\nothers gave London Its first daylight\nalert since June 27.\nCasualties were'expected to prove\nheavy at the Southeait town, where\na large theatre was hit and three\nadjoining business  buildings, with\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiimiiiiii\nJantzen\nSwim Trunks\nSee these r.ew Jantzen\ncreations in. Swim Trunks.\nWool, Wool arid Lastex,\nSatins and Gabardines. All\nsizes and colors..\n$2.95 to $4.95\nEMORY'S\n*^        LIMITED *\"\nTHE MAN'S STORE\ni.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiii.\nfrom the day's widespread, opera-1apartments above, burned.\ntions\nMedium. bomben of the United\nStates 10th Air Force blasted rolling stock at Thai! Junction, 80 miles\nSouth of Mandalay, yesterday, continuing their attacks against Japanese rail installations in Burma.\nRAF Flare Bombs\nLight Targets\nSTOCKHOLM, July 9 (AP) -\nR.A.F. hetvy bomber pilots are having so much success in locating targets by the light of \"flare bombs\"\nthat German authorities have ordered air raid precaution forces to concentrate on extinguishing flares, the\nBerlin correspondent of the Stockholm Tidlngen said today.\nFirst the Germans thought the\nflares were Incendiaries. Now they\nhave found that there are 00 flares\nIn each of these \"bombs\" which\nare dropped during night raids.\nThe \"bombs\" explode 400 to 800\nyards above the ground, scattering\nthe flares, each of which illuminates an area of more than 100 yards\nln diameter with such brilliance\nthat the glow can be seen by pilots\nthrough thick clouds, the Germans\nsaid.\nNo appliance must be scrapped\nnow. Beatty Man can fix it Ph. 91.\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\nAssociated Press Wir Analyst\nAssuming that significant National holidays have psychological\nvalues even in the eyes of hard-\nheaded military folk\u2014and they\nhave\u2014Axis invasion nerves should\nbe on edge next week.\nWedneiday next, July 14, Is Bastille Day. For 154 years that has\nbeen the date symbol of the birth\nof the Republic in France; the day\nFrenchmen have saluted as Canadians do the First of July,\nFITTING INVASION  DATE\nNo day ln all tbe yeaf could be\nmore fitting for a beginning to be\nmade from within and without upon\nthe grim business ol liberating\nFrance again from tyranny and oppression. No day could so appeal\nto French hearts is sanctified by\n'their faith in Popular Government.\nWithin sight almost of Washington where new plans for French\nliberation are being brewed* in conferences with Gep. Henri Giraud,\nthe grca^key of the Bastille is en-\nRotary   luncheon,   Mondty\n12th, 12:15 p.m. Humt Hotel,\nJuly\nSmall cottage for stle, Silica St.\n$1800.  Blackwood Agency.\nDeveloping, printing enlarging\nand copying done by experts at\nRenwtck'i Studio, 652 Baker St\nBIG DANCE\nPLAYMOR TONIGHT\nshrined among the mementos of the\nfirst American President at Mount\nVernon. It was presented to Washington by the liberty-loving people\nof France.\nThey had smashed open fiat dark\nfortress prison of raonarchial rule\nin France, the Bastille, the same\nyear, 1789, that had seen Washington reject a crown to accept the office of President at the call of his\ncountrymen. Nothing within the\ngift of the people of France so testified to their faith in-the experiment\nin Free Democracy a-borning across\nthe Atlantic as their pissing on of\nthat token of their own yearning\nfor Liberty, Equality ahd Fraternity.\nAxis invaden are well aware\nof that. Next week as the people\nof France, stirred to high hope by\nthe dull, distant thunder of bat-,KAlinrBLL.g FAmWAY f^u\nle in the Mediterranean and   he     4 Bak(r ^ *    '\ndevastating    rumble    of    A lied We h\u201e,e Lanib  Pork   Vea-   \u201e\u201e,\nCHURCH  OF THE  REDEEMER\n(Fairview)\nSunday next:\u201411:00 a.m., 7:30 p.m.\nThe Vicar\nVacation at Christina Lake, Fishing, Boating, Swimming, Dancing\netc. Write Klngsley's Resort for\nrates on cabins, meals and rooms.\nbombs   Dialling over  the   Island\noutposts of tfl-omened Italy, keep\ntryst  anew  with  brave memories,\nIheir  Axis  warders  will  be  alert\neverywhere for uprisings.\nYOUR HOME IS A COSTLY INVESTMENT\nBeautify and Protect It\nWith...\nBAPCO\nPaint Products. f*.\n1 &  *,**>*\ntlr-'\n\"MAKES A SMART HOME SMARTER\"\nBAPCO PURE PAINT\nPaint your homt with BAPCO PURE PAINT and\nIt will havt (II the glistening trcihneis and beauty ir\nhid when it left the builders handt. BAPCO PURE\nPAINT li guaranteed fint quality\u2014thi kind to uit\nfor Listing protection ind utmoit satisfaction.\nSATIN-CLO     .\nNow you cm havi roomi you'll lovi to live in.\nBright, cheery colon in ENAMEL, Hia beiutlful soft\nhirmonioui ihidei in SATIN FINISH ind rich lustrous\nquick-drying VARNISH makes interior deconHng \u2022\npleasure. You cin change the appearance of your\nwalls, floors, furniture ind woodwork, ind create I\nnew attractiveness In your homi with SATIN-GLO.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPhonei 26,27,151\nNtlion, B. C.\nAll the Axli have it feet\nGIRLS FA8TBALL_8UN'DAV\nNelson Ladles Rep -vs Trail Comets\nFirst game it 1:15 ihirp\nSecond game at 3:30 p.m.\nYour  support  will  be  appreciated\nCa.h booki, Journala, ledgen, columnar books, receipt books etc. D.\nW. McDerby. \"The Stationer and\nTypewriter Man,\" 6M Baker St.,\nNelson, BC.\nRugi and carpeti need cleming\ntoo. Phone 75 to hive the Cryital\nLaundry clem yours. Most kinds\n5c sq. ft., heavy orientals 7c plus\ncartage.\nDon't risk a canning failure with\nIts waste of iugir! Get \u25a0 cooking\nthermometer and be issured of perfect canning results.\n\u2014K_FPI_RSON'S-\nC.P.R. First Aid\nClasses Start Here\nC. P. R. First Aid classes com\nmerited in Nelson Friday night for\nemployees and their families, under lnstructorthip of Fred Blakeman. '\nMr. Blakeman instructs at Crinbrook, Crow'i Nest and Nelson on\nTuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays,\nrespectively, for the next six weeks.\nOne raiding plane crashed ln\nflames South of Croydon. The two\noccupants wete killed.\nThe London-bound raiders were\nheaded off short of the metropolitan\narea, the British reported.\nAnti-aircraft guns were ln action\nin two districts of the home counties\nsurrounding London and planes\nwere heard overhead, diving and\ntwisting out of the field of fire and\nthen heading back toward the coast.\nThe London all-clear came 18\nminutes after the warning. The alert\nwas London's 650th of the war.\nTO DIRECT MANPOWER\nFROM ARMY TO FARMS\nMONTREAL, July 9 (OP)\u2014Labor\nMlnliter Mitchell has notified the\nProvincial Corporation of Agronomists that special National Selective\nService offices will be set up to direct all man-power which can be\nspared from the armed forces to\nfarms, lt wai innounced lait night\nby officials of the Corporation.\nHave the Job Don* Right\nSea\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nX55SSJJJKKK5J5B555WKK5JKS51\nCET YOUR\nFAVORITE SANDWICH     |\nat the\nSTAR CAFE I\n3|\nMURPHY BROS.\nCan supply paint\nfor every purpose.\nONE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM]\non Ground Floor. CooL Furnished. |\nReasonable. Annable Block.\nPhone 358-R\nF. H. SMITH!\nI* It'i Electric\nPhone 666        351 Baker St.]\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiillllllllilllllj\nSpecial Fire Insurance Rites for |\nPreferred Rliki\nSTUART AGENCIES\n577-Biker St\nNtlion, B. C. Phone M0 I\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllll'!\nThursday Lightning\nCauses No Fires\nLltfhtninl! storm In the district\nThuriday caused no forest fires.\nRain accompanying the lightning\napparently extinguished any strikes,\nsaid Forest Branch officials at Nelson who were In touch Friday with\nlookouts through the district.\nWhether Friday's lightning storm\ncaused any fires will probably not\nbe known until today or Sunday.\nSOMERS' FUNERAl.\nSERVICE\n703 Biker SL Phone 253\nOpen Day and Night\nCrematorium Ambulance\n- PAINTS ~\nEXTERIOR AND STUCCO PAINTS,\nENAMELS, VARNISHES, AND\nWALL FINISHES\nA Paint for Eyery Purpose ...\nPAINT TO PRESERVE\nBURNS\n^LUMBER \u00a3, COAL CO,'\n\u00a3_mhi1mhjiuj <Z&i tk ftuiMfy\nWe do printing thtt hn the eir-\nmtrki of quility md the cost is no\ngreiteT. Write the Nelson Diily\nNewi Corrrmerciil Printing Dept.\nfor quotations.\nProtect the lidewills of your tires\nwith Flexoid. One bottle Is lufficient for i iet of S paaenger tlrei.\n$1 .per bottle. Wood, Vallince Hird-\nwart Col Ltd.\nGIRLS FASTBALL\u2014SUNDAY\nNelson Ladiei Rep vi Trail Cometi\nFirst gime it 1:15 ihirp\nSecond gtme it 3:30 pm\nYour support will be ippreclited\nTRUCK OWNERS\nWt rttreid ind vulcinlzt truck tlrei\nfrom lllll 32x8 to 10.00x20. Write\nor Phone\u2014\nRIVERSIDE MOTORS' \u2022\n1903 Columbli Ave. Trill - Ph. M0\nJUNERAL NOTICI\nJOHNSON-pliied twty it OUvtr. BO, July ft, Mrt. Aimi Sofli\nJohnion In her 60th yetr. Funenl\nlervicei wlU bt htld In -United\nChurch. RouUnd, Mondiy it 2 pm.,\nRtv. W. M. Ctmeron offlcliting.\nJonu Funtril Homt In charge of\narringements. >\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTO.: BOYS OOOD BICYCLI\nPhont JM-1U.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nCorner Mill and Josephine St.\nTHE  8T0RE  OF  QUALITY.\nPHONE UO\nFree Dillvery.\n10(5\n25*\n20<\nlty\n35*\n85<\n55<\nio?\n95<\n25<\n35<\n45<\n25<\n2W\n27*\n25<\nFr\"h Frulti md VijtUblii\nFruh  Brud ind  Cikn.\ntlll.lllll.ll.lM.III..II.IHUI.I..III.I..IIIIli\nGREEN UNIONS:\n3 for \t\nHEAD LETTUCE:\n2 for      ......\nCAULIFLOWER:\nLocil, freih, Ib _\nOREEN CABBAGE:\nLocal,  Ib -\t\nHOT HOUSE\nTOMATOES: Lb\t\nEGGS: Locil, (ruh\nlirge, 2 dox.      ._ -...\nBACON: Fruh\niliced, Ib.\nBUNCH BEETS:\nLocil, bunch  _\t\nRHUBARB:\nLocil, 3 lbi.      ...  \t\nCUCUMBERS: Freih,\n3 for        -      .\nORANQES: Good lilt,\nSunklit, 3 doz.\t\nGRAPEFRUIT:\n1 lor \t\nLARD: 1 Ib. cirtom,\n2 for\nBAKEASY\nSHORTENING: 2 lbi.\nBOLOGNA: Fruh iliced,\nLb.   .    - **..    .........\nDOG MASH: Buckir-\nflild'i, 7 lbi.\t\nCORN FLAKES:\nKillogg'i, I for\nALL WHIAT FLAKES:\nwith tumblir, 2 tor\nBREAD:\nJ for   !\nTHIS BEAUTIFUL FULLY-FURNISHED HOME\nIM  VANCOl'VKH\nMAY BE YOURS TOR A CONTRIBUTION OF $1.00\nTO THE\n'MILK FOR BRITAIN FUND\"\nKtgiiitrtd I'ntl.r wir, Chimin Act\nTICKETS MAY BE PROCURED\nFROM ALL\nNELSON KINSMEN\nando.\n\"THE BAY'\nToday, where a Milk for Britain display\nhai kindly been donatad by tht\n\"Bay\" Management\n'-\u25a0     \"\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0-*-\u25a0 '\t\n-\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_07_10","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0416774","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":"1943-07-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1943-07-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}