{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-03-09","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1940-03-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0407343\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2014\nTrail Skating Club Ends Season\nWith Magnificent Show\nPage Two\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRA]\n\u2014[\u2014    ' a\nVOLUME   38\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nmi\nBoston Puts on Power to Beat\nDetroit Red Wings 7-2\nPage Nine\n*\u00abH COLUMBIA, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 8, 1t40.\nNUMBER 274\nEXCITEMENT PROMISED BY CENSURE MOVE\n50 Killed. Scores\nInjured in Worst\nRussian  Bombing\nFive Hits Scored on Hospital in an Unnamed\nTown; 25 Die in Shelter; Three Hospitals\nBombed in Day; Passenger Train Hit\nFURIOUS  VIIPURI   BATTLE  CONTINUES\nHELSINKI, March 5 (CP).\u2014A Finnlih communique said tonight\nthat at leait 50 penom were killed and scorei wounded In a amall\ncentral Finnish town today In the moit dliaitroui bombardment of the\nRutilan-Flnniah war.\nThe communique did not identify the town.\nEarlier In the day Finnish planei bombed and machine-gunned\nRed army forces crawling across the frozen Gulf of Finland In their\nattempt to encircle Vllpurl.\nFive direct hits were scored on a hospital during the Rutslan\nraid on the town and one bomb dropped on an air raid shelter.\nThe raiders, diving out of the cloudi to 1400 or 1700 feet, swept\novtr In two flights 60 minutes apart.\nNEW NAZI TROOP\nAND TANK UNITS\nSEEN BY DUTCH\nNew Tension Aroused\non Frontier\nRegion\nAIR   RAIDS  ANGER\nAM8TERDAM, March 5 (CP\nHavaa)\u2014Fresh Gorman troop and\ntank units were reported massing\nIn border territory faoing the\nNetherlands tonight w an angered\npublic demanded vigorous gov-\nei*nmtnt action In protest against\nNail air attacks on defenceless\nDutch ships.\nDtapatchw from frontier towns\n* ^mtti en' entire German armored\ndivision had arrived at Wesel,\nWestphalia, on the Rhine about\n27 mlloe from the Southern border of the Dutch province of\nGelderland, Such a division usually oomprlses between 400 and\n475 tanks, 3000 other war vehicles\nand 11,000 men.\nNumerous additional tank units\nwere reported to have arrived at\nother points In this zone.\nFear that the coming ot Spring\nivill be marked by a German drive\nacross the Lowland Countries and\nNazi activities beyond the frontier\nhave increased tension throughout\nthe Dutch frontier regions during\nrecent days.\nThe German frontier wa5 closed\nyesterday between Borken snd\nWinterswijk, where the railway\ncresses the border. Wimtrswijk is\nabout 40 miles North ot Wesel.\nThe bombing and machine-gunning cf at least eight Dutch snips\nin two days by Nazi waiplanes has\nprovoked wioespread anger\n'iflJYV\/rvtva      ra iua.^uaa.aiu      ....... ,\nIn   violent   attacks   against   the I '\"\"^ 'hru,stf\n* Fifteen of the bombs atruck ln the\nvicinity of a military hospital and\none big explosive missile went directly down tile stairway from the\ntop ot the four-storey building to\nthe bottom.\nTwenty-five persons, nearly all\nof them women, were killed when\na bomb hit the top of the air raid\nshelter.\nSome Russian troops were\ndrowned and several tanks sunk in\nhuge fissures of the ice of Viipuri\nBay, opened up when artillery fired\non the attackers coming West in an\nattempt to encircle the City, unofficial Finnish reports sajd.\nThe Finnish High Command said\nfighting still was in progress among\nthe rugged inlets at the mouth of the\nbay and the Finnish flag still waved\nfrom Viipuri's historic castle.\nThe communique on the Russian\nbombing attacks said \"the enemy\npilots' brutal bombing of hospitals\nand helpless patients continues.\"\n\"On Tuesday, bombing was, If\npossible, more raw and brutal\nthan ever before, Altogether three\nhospitals were bombed during\nthe day. In one hospital more\nthan 10 patients were killed and\nin another at leaat four,\" It stated.\n\"Many patients were wounded\nduring these raids.\n\"Also the bombing of civilians\ncaused many casualties. Bombs were\ndropped among other places, on Mik-\nkeli, where many people were killed\nand wounded; also Kuopio and\nLahti. In both of these towns, according to reports so far, four people were killed and many wounded.\nIn Southwestern Finland bombs\nwere dropped on Forssa. Enemy\npilots opened machine-gun fire\nagainst a passenger train.\"\nImmediate objectives of the\nRussian attacks outside Vllpurl\nappeared to be Virolahtl and Ha-\napassaarl Islands, for the purpose\nof starting general operations\nalong   Finland's   Southern   coast\nThough Finns unofficially admitted that fall of Viipuri was inevitable, the defenders said they had\nfought off attacks from the Southeast, where the Russians had approached   closest,   as   well   as   the\ninformation Please!\n*\"\n[T~; j i \u25a0 \"\u25a0'*;--\nTwo Canadian soldiers, wearing fur Winter capi,\nstop to ask a London bobby for some directions\nwhile on leave in the Empire's capital. Many of the\nCanadian troops apend their leaves by exploring historic London and other large cities ln England and\nScotland..\nPoles Accuse Nazis of Mass\nKillings of Boys, Men, Women\nNew York Hangar\nSwept by Blaze\nNEW YORK, March 5 (AP).\u2014A\nmillion-dollar fire late today swept\nan incompleted block-long hangar\nat LaGuardia Field, the city's new\n$40,000,000   municipal  airport.\nThe hangar, valued at $1,250,000.\nwas under lease to Transcontinental\nand Western Air and was to have\nbeen put in operation late this\nmonth. It waa the centre one of a\nbank of thrae. . -, ,\n' While red-hot steal slabs from\nthe roof and aides of the vast\nsprawling building still were\ncrashing heavily to earth in showers of sparks It appeared the two\nadjoining hangars, of similar size\nand cost, were in no danger.\nWhile an official statement as to\nthe cause of the fire was delayed\npending investigation, William H.\nPeters, a WPA laborer, said it had\nsprung up as a \"small blaze\" In a\npaint locker. Police Inspector John\nLa Garenne said it appeared accidental.\nNew Brunswick\nGovernor Named\nReich, the Press charged ihe attacks\nwere the opening phase of a German campaign to stop all seagoing\ntraffic between thc Netherlands and\nGreat Britain.\nTwo seamen were killed and\nmany were wounded in the series cf\nattacks in the North Sea, The vessels raided were the Limbuig, Wasa,\nAmazone, Hockelo, Eruyter, Sint\nAnnaland, Schieland and the Elziena. The latter was sunk, while\nwreckage of another Dutch ship, ihe\n855-ton Rijnstroom, which left thu\nDowns Sundiy for Rotterdam, was\nfound by two vessels yesterday.\nNortheast of Lake Ladoga fighting eased up, but the Finnish High\nCommand said 500 Russians had\nbeen killed in the Kuhmo area,\nmidway along the Russian-Finnish\nfrontier.\nWISMER ON WAY\nTO B. C. INTERIOR\nVICTORIA,  March   5   (CP).\u2014At-1\ntorney General G. S.  Wismer left\ntonight for Vancouver and the i\njtart of a two-weeks speaking tour!\nin which he will support Liberal1\ncandidates in a scries of eight ad-:\ndrtsaea to be given at coast and interior points.\nMr. Wismer's itinerary calls for!\nipeeches at Vancouver Centre on\nMarch 7, Cranbrook nn March 9.]\nNakusp on March II, Penticton on\nMarch 12, Keremens on March 13,\nVernon on March 14, at a main Van-1\ncouver rally on March 16, and at\nHope on March 20.\nMOSCOW, March 6 - (Wedneiday) - (AP). \u2014 The Red army\ncontinued today to close Ita grip\non Viipuri, Its commandera reported, with the capture of the\ntown of Neetela, nine mllei North-\neait of the besieged city.\nNeetela is just East of Karisalmi,\na station on the Viipuri-Sortavaia\nRailway.\nThe capture of two islands In\nViipuri Bay, one of them Ravan-\nsaari,  just   North  of  the   Koivisto t\nOTTAWA, March 5 (CP)\u2014William George Clark of Fredericton\nhas been appointed Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King announced tcnight.\nHe succeeds Hon. Murray MacLaren whose five-year term expired\nlast Feb. 8. The new Lieutenant-\nGovernor was Liberal member of\nthe last Parliament for Y*;rk-Sud-\nbury, NB.\n| A prominent New Brunswick\nbusinessman, he is President of J.\nI Clark & Sons, a motor car and\nI farm implement sales enterprise\nFor about 10 years, Mr. Clark was\nmayor of Fr-edencton and in 1930\nmade a bid for a seat in the provincial legislature but was defeated\nafter campaigning against introduction of liqu:r control in New\nBrunswick.\nIn 1935 he successfully contested\nAtrocities Worthy of\nWorst Tyrants Says\nData Advance\nGUNS INSTALLED\nIN CHOIR LOFTS\nPARIS, March S tKP). \u2014 The\nPolish Emigr* Government, in an\nadvance resume ol data which is\nto go into a \"White Book,*\" tonight accused the German conquerors of executing schoolboys,\nmen and women en masse as part\nof a deliberate campaign to exterminate the native population\not Poland. .       ',\nThe  German  Government   pre-\n..jualy had uenieu Ponsn crua.ges\nui mass executions in the occupied\nregions.\nrhe official communique cited\na long lisi ol allegeu airocmes ana\ncalled them \"wonhy of the worst\ntyrants oi antiquity.'\nAmong the crimes the Emigre\nGovernment said had Deen com-\nmiled were:\nlhe shooting at Bydgoiicz of 136\nPolish schoolboys, U ana 13 years\nold.\n\"Massacre\" at the same place up\nto the end ot D-'cemDer ul <K),0Uu\ni-olisn men and women.\nDeportation lrom Gayhia ol 350\nPolisn  hostages   and   men*   execu-|\nuon, after they were forced to dig Union of Mine. Mill and  Smelter\ntheir   own   graves.   Among   most | Workers lor union recognition. In-\nexecuted   were   listed   the   Burgo-1 creased   wages   and   a   \"chcckol!\nmaster,   the   Port   Superintendent, I system\"  lor  union  employee!.\nChief Judge of the District (Jour.!\nand the Manager ol the Local Uank\nui Poianu branch.\nThe communique told ol machine-\nguns installed oy the Germans in\ncnoir lolls in some cnurches lo terrorize- congregations.\nino atrocities were called \"'worthy\nol the worst tyrants of antiquity\nin the communique.\nCiting alleged instances of interference with religious services and\nthe closing of churclies, me Pales\ncharged a statue ol Christ in one\ncase was taken (rom a churcn ana\ncast  into a bonlire.\nWhyslde crosses and chapels have\nbeen removed in many places\nthroughout Western Poland, il was\nalleged.\nPioneer Mine to\nOpen Wednesday\nPIONEER MINES, B. C, March\n5 (CP).\u2014Notice that Pioneer Gold\nMine would resume operations\nafter being closed five months\nby a strike was given today foi\nlowing the arrival of additional\nProvincial Police in thii Bridge\nRiver mining town.\nPolice reinforcements, flrat lent\nhere when 41 striken conducted\na 80-hour sitdown demonstration\nunderground last week, were\n\u2022welled to 40 by the arrival oi\nmore conatablea la*rt night.\nThis afternoon a notice posted on\nthe bulletin board of the company\noffice said the mine would re-open\nWednesday, taking on only former\nemployees. The notice was signed\nby Dr. Howard T. James, Managing\nDirector of the company.\nPolice would not state' whether\nany trouble wai expected when the\nmen resumed work alter the long\nlayoff, but they were authorized\nlast week by Premier T. D. Pattullo to give the mine protection.\nCompany officials did not say\nwhether any iteps had been taken\ntoward demands ot the International\nPropaganda Also\nSold al Nazi Fair\nJOBLESS FIGURES IN\nBRITAIN OFF 40\nPER CENT\nLONDON, March S (CP) -\nEarl Stanhope, Lord President\nof the Council, told the House\nof Lords tonight that permanent\nunemployment in GreaT Britain had decreased 40*per cent\nsince the outbreak ol war and\nsoon would be eliminated.\nReplying to criticism from\nLord Strabolgi, Labor, Earl\nStanhope pointed out that the\ntransition period between peace\nand war is not yet over. He said\nsteel production in 1940 would\nbe superior to production in\n1914 and that the upswing in\nother industries automatically\nwould solve the unemployment\nproblem.\nDISTRICT ROADS\nIN POOR SHAPE\nFrost Coming Out of\nGround; Blacktop\nHolding Up\nAnyone Who can avoid travelling\nover Nelson district roads for thc\nnext few days should certainly do\nso. This ls the advice of O. G.\nGallaher, Public Works Engineer\nfor Nelson-Creston, following an\ninspection of roads ln this Riding\nTuesday.\n\"The frost really began to come\nout of the ground Monday with\nthe rain,\" Mr. Gallaher said, and\nwith the warm sun Tuesday all un-\nsurfaced roads became soft. Black\ntop is holding up well in nearly all\ncases. The unsurfaced sections between Nelson and Castlegar and\nfrom Nelson to Balfour are not bad,\nfor they are beginning to dry out.\nbut the other roads are certainly\nnot lit for traffic and will not be\nfor a few days.\"\nThe Nelson-Nelway and the Slocan Valley roads are described as\n\"bad\", and the Balfour-Kaslo road\nas \"not good.\"\nBritish Troops\n(lash With Nazis\nLabor to Ask Vote\non Restrictions\non Palestine Land\nPaper Says Jewish Demonstrations Against\nLand Laws Much More Serious Than\nReported; Had to Call Troops\nLONDON, March 6 (Wednesday) (CP).-The Labor\nParty will move a vote of censure today against the Government \u2014 the first of the war \u2014 for its recently-announced\nrestrictions in Palestine.\nThe motion will be proposed by Philip Noel Baker who\nwill ask the House of Commons to vote that the Government\nacted without authority, of the League of Nations in banning\nsale of lands by Arabs to Jews in the Holy Land.\nThe debate promised considerable exctiement. It was\nrecalled that the Government majority dropped to  88  last\nMay 17 when a vote was taken?\non adoption of a white paper D Q I T i 111    f C|7Et\n5 ITALIAN SHIPS\nAND HUNTS MORE\nItalian Press Assume**\nMilder Tone in\nComments\nPOINTS  WAY   OUT\nfortresses taken some days ago, also j the Federal riding ot York-Sud\nwas reported as the Red contin- bury. Mr. Clark is a leader in the\ngents continued mopping up in the [Baptist Church in FrederK'on and\nRay area. his hobby is farming.\nGovernment Nol Aggressive One\nNeeded by Canada Says Maitland\nTORONTO. March 5 (CP)-R. L.\nMaitland, KC, of Vancouver, leader of the Conservative Party in\nBritish C lumbia, declared in a\nradio address over a national network (\u25a0 night th.it fium 1935 un;ll\nthe present nothing lias been done\nby the \u25a0.\u2022overnment of Canada that\nmarks it a.s a strong, aggressive\ngovernment such as Canada needs\nMACDONALD TO CALL FOR\nLOYALTY   REAFFIRMATION\nHALIFAX.    March   5    (CP).   -\nPremier Angus I,, Macdonald  gavt;\nnotice  of  a  resolution   calling   the\nNova Scotia Legislature to reaffirm\nIti   loyalty   to   the   Crown   and\ndevotion   to   the   principles   b\ndefended by the Allies in  the  \u25a0\nts the Legislature opened today,    j said Mr   Maitland\nBefore the 2'j-hour .sitting \"had \"Dr. Mant n proposes protection\ntnded, 10 bills wrre introduced anri'frr agriculture. He proposes the\nthe House was in the midst of the | further development of Canadian\ndebate on the reply to the Speech i industry within Canada. He propos\nits  \u00bbt the present moment.\n\u25a0 ing j    Or. Manion, Leader\nSeattle\nSan Francisco\ngovernment   from   1930   to   1933,\nand   of  the  Liberal  government\nfrom 1935 to the present. He said j y.\nthat the first five-year peri' d was; pjjnlicton\nduring  the worst depression   -h-Mvernnn\nworld     has    ever    known    \"and : Krlowna\nlhanks  to  the activities and  the\ngreat    fforts ot the Conservative\nParty the aecond five years were\nyears of recovery.\"\nNELSON \t\nTrail\nVictoria  \t\nNanaimo  \t\nVancouver \t\nKamloops   \t\nPrince George \t\ntstcvan Point \t\nPrince Rupert \t\nLangara     38\nAtlm     \t\nDawson        9\"\nf the Con-\nwar,  scrvative   Party,   promises   action, I\nfrom   the Throne.\nDRIVER IS SUSPENDED\nVANCOUVER. March 5 (CP). -\nArthur Pearson, who pleaded guilty\nto a charge of dangerous driving\nbefore Magistrate Mackenzie Matheson In Police* Court today, was sentenced to IS days in jail and his\nright to drive un automobile suspended for two years\nConstable Allen Baynes told the\ncourt he chased Pearson's car across\nthe South end of town at flo miles\nin  hour.\ned a department of youth so that\nthis problem will be ever-present\nm the planning of affairs by the\nDominion  government.\nHe promises Dominion Jurisdiction over unemployment as a national responsibility. He seeks to\nform a cabinet irrespective of party,\nand in this direction he hns shown\nhis good faith in years gone by. He\nbrings his war service to aid him\nin returnnd soldiers' problems.\"\nMr. Maitland devoted the bulk\nnf lus address to a comparison\nof the record of Ihe Conservative\nGrand Fork.s\nKaslo\nCranbrook   \t\nCalgary\t\nEdmonton\nSwift Current\nMoose Jaw\nPrince Albert\nNow  Canada is at war and  th\"?\npeople are called upon to detetmine\nwhat course is to be taken Ir Lhe\nnext four years. \"Ia it to be a gov- (\nernment such as we had from 193.11 Winnipeg\nto 1&40?  Is it to he a government^    '--Below zero.\nthat cannot stand before the bir of i    Forecast:   Kootenay  \u2014\nthe  House  of Commons?   Is  it  to  shifting   winds,   mostly\nbe a government that in order to  much change in temperature,\nstay in power and control patronage I\nin Canada  would  make  war  wilh'    Water   level   at  Kelson  Tueaday\nQuebec and war with Ontario   ;ii'i noon \u2014 1.37 feet above zero\nbring ah-Mit  in  C.inad\u00ab  dissolu\nMin. Max.\n,H\n51\n33\n85\n43\n52\n33\n53\nM\n53\n33\n58\n31\n46\n38\n51\n39\n49\n38\n56\n10\nJ!\n9*\n16\n40\n51\n51\n68\n36\n52\n34\n\u2014\n22\n\u2014\n33\n41\nM\n52\n33\n\u2014\n33\nV,\n33\n39\n31\nin\n29\n1<i\n29\n44\n13\n38\n:t\n32\nMod\nrn tr\nfair,\nnot\nBy ALVIN 8TEINKOPF\nLEIPZIG, March 5 (AP)-Tha\nLeipzig Spring Fair, with vait\nquantities of German manufactured goodi on uie to foreigner! but\nnot to Germane, le aimed at selling propaganda along with the\nReich's Industrial  products.\nTo foreign\u00a9*-* visiting the exposition Germany le reiterating\nthe Nail theme thet Germany will\nwin the war. Visitors, particularly\nfrom Southeastern Europe, are\nbeing told the Reich le better to\ndoal with than tha Alllee, whom\nthe Germans accuse of making\n\"tenoatlonel tnade deals for passing  political effect\"\nIn 24 large exhibition buildings\nare displayed great quantities of\nindustrial products. They are dis-\nI plays whwh cost German buyers\nmany a heartbreak, for here arc\nproduct* which could be sold readily in the Reich except for war regulatlona permitting only limited\n| domestic sales.\nj Not one visitor from the United\n! States, much less s buyer, had reg-\n, istered In the first three days of the\n] fair.\nPARIS, March 5 (CP Havas). .-\nA clash between British and German troop*, in which one German\nand two Britons were killed and\nBritish prisoners were Uken was\nannounced tonight in the first communique on Western Front action\nto be issued by the British Expeditionary Force headquarters in\nFrance.\nGerman troops this morning attacked a British front line post,\ntaking a number of prisoners, the\ncommunique said. The Britons re-1\ncaptured the post and forced the\nenemy to withdraw. In addition to\nthose killed, one Briton was\nwounded1.\nA lull, apparently due to weather,\nwas reflected in the brief communiques of the Trench Command.\nTrench fliers concentrated on\nsecondary enemy positions behind\nthe Westwall. Royal Air Force\nplanes again were sent out over\nNorthwest Germany yesterday\nwhile two or three Nar.i planes appeared over  Eastern  France.\nOn the home front, 14 more Communists were arrested in the Government's drive against subversive\nactivities. Torty-three arrests have\nbeen made during the last two\ndays.\nConscription Only\nInside South Africa\nCAPE TOWN, March 5 (CP\nCable) - Prime Minister Jan!\nSmuts announced in the South;\nAfrican Assembly today that\ncompulsory military service\nwould be applicable only inside!\nSouth Africa.\nHe said lhat the government\npolicy was to use volunteers if it\nbecame necessary to defend British African territories North of\nthe Union.\nwhich said it was not part of\nBritish policy that mandated\nPalestine \"should become a\nJewish state.\"\nThe Daily Herald said todav Jewish demonstrations against the land\nlaws in Palestine March 2 wert\n\"much more serious than first reported\" and that 18.000 persons participated at Tel Aviv alone.\nInjured Included 150 dimonstra'.-\nors   and   a   score   ofa  police   who\ncharged into the crowds with flailing batons and opened fire in an\nensuing melee in which the officers\nwere stoned, the newspaper said.\n\"Finally mounted troopa entered the city with Mbrea drawn,\" It\nadded.\n\"At Haifa the crowds tried to\nburn tha law oourt. Another demonstration by workmen was broken up by troops In full battle kit\nand polloe who made baton\ncharoet,.\"\nThe land aale regulations, announced Feb. 28 ana made retroactive to May 18, 1938, were explained by Colonial Secretary Malcolm MacDonald as \"urgently''\nnecessary to maintain peace in Palestine.\nLast May's white paper, wh';:h included a basis for the present land\nrestrictions, has not been approved\nby the League of Nations and has\nbeen frowned upon by a majority\nof the league's permanent mandates\ncommission.\nClement R. Attlee, leader of Labor opposition, accused the government of \"flouting the authority of\nthe league and international law\"\nby presenting the league with a\nfait accompli.\nMr. MacDonald countered with\nthe statement that Britain had informed the league it would be ready\nto attend a meeting of thi league\ncouncil Ho discuss the restrictions if\none were called.\nReporter Stymied by\nChinese Girl When\nQueried oh Confucius\nST. PAUL, Minn.. March 5 'AP)\n--When a Chinese miss, June D -vc\nWonft, 19, passed thrju^h here today en route to Havana, Cuba, wi':i\nrive other girls awarded the trip\nas princesses of the 194<J Oregon\nWinter Carnival, a reporter, acting\non instructions from his city editor,\ninquired;\n\"What did Confucius say''\"\nMim Wong say:\n\"I have nothing to say. Cmfucius\nsaid  everything.\"\nReporter wy: \"Do Chinese resent\nConfucius gags'1\"\nMiss Wong say: \"We respect irm\nHr was a very wise man \"\nReporter also wise man. He\nshut up.\nand   racial   feeling   and   Internal\nstrife?\n\"Or is it to be a government with\na grim determination to forpet\nitirs and party strife\nitself   to   carrying nn   *r,i*   war  ,<%\nCennda's   big   > h   a!   .ne   present\nlime1\"\nTiie present election is <me of the\nmost important elections in the history of Canada, he said.\nTRAIL. B. (', March 5\u2014After\nseveral days of rain Trail had i\nclear sky Tuesday, nnd the temperature from 3*8 degrees Monday\nnd dedicate j to .V) degrees, the maximum. Minimum  temperature  was 33  degrees\nRULING  PEDESTRIANS\nMUS\"*\" WALK ON LIFT\nSIDE MADE EFFECTIVE\nVICTORIA, March 5 (CPV - An\nofficial proclamation was issued at\nthe Legislative Buildings today\nbringing into effect March IS a\nnew highway ruling that pedestrians must walk on the lert side\nof the road when there are no sidewalks.\nThe regulation, approved al the.\nlait session of the legislature is\ndesigned to reduce accidents hv\nrequiring pedeitrians to walk\nagainst oncoming traffic where they\ncan be leen more easilr and can\nthemselves tee the traffic better.\nAt the aama time a rule will come\ninto force providing that two persons may not ride on a bicycle that\nIs not eapeclally built for the purpose.\nCharges of Violent Disturbances\nat Ontario R.C.A.F. School Denied\nLONDON, March 5 (CP)\u2014Britain today seized five Italian ships,\nat least two of them laden with\nGerman coal, in emphatic application of its ban on exports from\nthe Reich to Italy.\nThe Italian ships were escorted\nInto the contraband control bas*\noff Deal, Southeastern England,\n\u25a0while a search was under way\nfcr other coal-b-aring ships which\nslipped out of Rotterdam.\nItaly yesterday pro teste-!\nagainst the British enforcement\nof its blockade and warned that\na severe strain on political and- <\neconomic relations between tha\ntwo countries might result.\nDiplomatic circles said the British government is attempting to\nseparate the question of German\ncoal shipments to Italy from the\ngeneral subject of trade negotiations between London and Rome.\nThey said that London has emphasized that seizure of the colliers was a move directed solely\nagainst Germany.\nBritish diplomats said that as\nevidence of her gocd faith. Britain\nI had offered to supply Italy with\nI whatever coal it might need during\nMarch to replace the contraband\nshipments from the Reich.\nIt was pointed out here that in\nsubmitting this proposal to Italy,\nLondon has eliminated the possibility of an Italian charge that Gre:.t\nBritain is bringing pressure on\nRcme to force it to resume general\ntrade negotiations under conditions\nfavorable to the Allies.\nThc embargo Italy recently placed on arms shipments to the Allies\nwas explained as due to Italian\nEmpire requirements rather than\nGerman pressure. Diplomatic\nsources said, however, that even\nif the Italian explanation was true,\nthe measure worked in Germany's\nfavor.\nROME, March 5  (CP  Havas)\u2014\nAuthoritative Fascist newipapera\ntonight r,uggwted that a Mtiifac-\ntory agreement could  be reached\nin the dispute between   Italy and\nGreat Britain over coal shipmentt\nto Italy from Germany.\nThe    authoritative    G i o r n a 1 e\nD'ltal.a plated particular emphasis\non Great Britain's desire to find a\nsatisfactory settlement  of  the  dis- j\npute.\nLa Stampa of Turin said that\nFrance might be willing to supply\ncoal to Italy under advantageoul\ncenditi ns.\nFORMER   C.P.R.   HEAD  DIES\nWINNIPEG. M\u00abrch S (CD-Rob-\nDuring thr 24 hour period rndln( | rrt Armstrong, 7S. form\u00abr divijioml\nal ft (am. Monday 65 Inch of run jiuprrintrndrnt of thr Ctnfidltn Pi-\n[ell. jrlfir Railwijr. died herr jfMlrrdiy\nWrdnr.adtjr   forrrajt -- Southerly i Hr wu born it Orovr, Ont . \u00bbnd had\nwinds, fair \u00abnd mlldrr. bren with thr C.P.R. for 45 jtein.\nOTTAWA. March 5 (CP) -|\nDenying chargrt of Prrmlrr Hepburn of Ontirlo that there have\nbeen \"violent disturbances\" at th>\nRoyal Canadian Air Force School\nat St Thomaa. Ont., Hon. Nor-\nman Rogc:\u00bb, Mlnlatrr of National\nDefence, aaid tonight that each\ntime the Premier \"indulge* his\nflair for abuse and Ir groundless\nstatement, for loorr and violent\naprrch. he La a pirty to the be- \\\ntrayal of Canada.\"\nThe Defence Minlatrr urged Pr\u00bb-\nmier Hrpburn In viiit the air ichool\nIn company with nrwnaprrmrn to\nInquirr Into thr situation so \"thr\nentirr lubjrcl may thm or given\nfull public discussion .rtd the con-j\nditlona at the schvol -cportcd as\nIhr Press sect them\"\n\"It Is high tlmt that a halt br\ncallrd to thr wild and (an'.asi c ut-\ntrrancrs bring made bv Dr. Man.\nkin (Hon Dr. R. J Manion, National Conservative Lraden. Prr-\nmier Hrpburn. Col Drr*v 'Lieut.-\nCol C.rorgr Drrw. Ontar:) Cor.-\nsrrvatlvr Trader*, and ol'ieri\n\"I do not know if these men real-\niir what thry arr doing I cannot\nbring mysrlf tn brlleve lhat ataman Avho calls hlmsrlf a Caomiini.\nwould vent this constant stre-.ni \"f\nrecklrsi groundless charges, realiz\ning thr implications, as any responsible citizen must.\n\"Premier Hepburn charces there\nhave been not.s among ;iirme-i at\nSt Thomas  There have* been none.\n\"He lays *00 men nir-ud into\ntown and thit it took military\npolice three days to r und :i.,**n up\nThat is absolutely untrue\n\"He says Ihe St. Thomas paper\nwanted to publish the*story but\nthat the censors retijsed tn let them\ndo so That alsn Is untrue.\"\nOTTAWA, March B (CP1-A\ngovernment ipoknman tonight\ndrnlad charges made by Premier\nHepbuen of Ontario that a nev*s\nitory ooncorning \"violent dliturb\nnnoei\" at tha Royal Canadian\nAir Foece cantee near St. Thomai,\nOnt. had bean lupprewed by the\noonnori. Tha Preii cemori here\nnonflerrced the spokMman'i statement\nThr statement read: \"Thr crnsors\nnrver at any time supprrssed anv\nstory of such a disturbance a: SI\nThomas and no such stcry ever was\nsubmitted lo them Inquiries were\nmade at the main censorship office\nhere and at the 1- <*a) crnsors rise-\nwhrrr end no rrcord avai fomi I\nthat surh a matter had come bcfjrc\nIhe Press censors.'\n1939 Is Record Year\nfor Coast Terminals\nC. M. & S. Subsidiary\nNEW WESTMINSTER. P. C.\nMarch  '   'CP' W.   H   I.anigan,\nPresident \"I Pacific (\"oast Terminals, told the annual meeting here\ntoday 19.19 was a rrcord year tor\nIhe company de-pile the adverse\nelfoct of lhc war nn shipments of\nore concentrates, fruit and general\ncargo.\nGross income last voir increased\n$92 1.1: to $4MM.r, and net profit\nclimbed $.19 517 lo $\u00ab5.920. Mr. I-ani-\ngan said in presenting the rrporl of\nIhe terminals, a subsidiary of Consolidated Mining fc Smelling Company Nel profit in 1917 was $12,471\nand' in 19.111 was $26 181\nFor'.v  more  ships  were   handled,\nat the Terminal decks las' year and\ntonnage incl eased by H1.R81 tons.\nSURREY MANACER DIES\nN*FW WESTMINSTER tl C.\nMatch a iCPi - Gordon Allen, 59,\nManagir and Secreiarv-Treasurit\nat lhe Surrey Farmers Cooperalivi\nAs.a^cia!ion 17 years, died loday it\nhis home in nearbv Clovrrdilt. \"\nis survived hy his widow, fourj\nand six daughters, all at hom|\nIr, Haay\n m* Tm*^^**m*w*vmmm\nPAGI   TWO   \t\nJoe Benoit Almost (ertain to Move\nUp to Canadiens Next Season-Haynes\n\"Tha chancai ef Joe Benolt of\nmaking the grade next season\nwith the Canadians were very\ngood,\" Paul Haynes, Chief Scout\nof the Montreal Canadiens, stated\nIn Nelson between trains Tuesday\nnight\nLAME BACK\nmay result from faulty kidney action.\nGin Pills help kidneys dispose of waste\nmatter that causes congestion. In the\nUnited States ask for \"Gino Pills\".\n% Dam la Cuada and tha V.S.\u2014ksfnlar\nud nam, latt,e Economy ilit.    m\nThe former N. H. L. star, who retired early ln January after five\nyears with the Canadiens and previous service with their now-defunct fellow-townsmen the Maroons,\nmanaged to fit in a trip to Trail\nduring his tour of the Prairies,\nwhere he is witnessing playoff series at as many points as possible\nHe went to the Smelter City primarily to see what Benolt's intentions for next Winter were, rather\nthan to do any further scouting regarding the Smokie right winger's\ncalibre.\nWANT8 TO GO UP\nBenolt apparently is anxious to\nmake the Jump to N. H. L. ranks,\nand although he didn't know thc\ninside dope, Haynes believed that\nthe real reason Benoit did not stay\nin Montreal last Fall was because\nhe did not want to be farmed out\nto the amateur Verdun Maple Leafs,\nwho are connected with the Canadiens. If he was going to play amateur hockey at all, he wanted to go\nback to old haunts.\nAn innovation thl? year is the\nproposed Spring School ot the Canadiens, Haynes reported. It will\nprobably be held in Montreal in\nApril, and whether Benolt will attend it will depend largely on how\nfar the Smoke Eaters go In the Allan  Cup   playdowns.  Naturally   if\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 6, 1M0,-*\u2014\nGLASSES ON 10 DAY TRIAL FREE!\nDONT SEND A PENNY - JUST MAIL COUPON\nJuit try them. Prove at our risk how greatly our fine glasses will Improve your appearance, enable you to see far or near, read\nthe smallest print or thread the finest needle. Perfect satisfaction guaranteed, or the 10 day trial costs you nothing.\nDIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU-When you get glassej\nfrom us, you are dealing direct with one of the largest optical\nlaboratories in Canada. You save the middleman's profit.\nGlasses ln latest styles for as little as\t\nPay Nothing  Unless Satisfied 7,Z^\u2122\"\"\"P0\",\t\n1 VICTORIA OPTICAL CO,\nTry  our   glasses   10   days   and     Dept. M-151, 273 Yonge St.,\nnights at our risk. If not amazed     Toronto, Ont.\nand   delighted,   they   cost   you |I would like a pair of your stylish\nnothing. Mail  the FREE COU-1 glasses on 10 day Free Trial. It not\nthey   cost   me\nPON today!\nVICTORIA OPTICAL CO.\nDept M-151\n278 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont.\nI perfectly   satisfied,\nI nothing.\n, Name \t\nAddress \u201e_.\nI P. 0\t\nAge\t\n. Prov.\nDoctor DAVID C. COWEN\nOf the Jamieson Building, Spokane, Wash,\nWishes to tell his Canadian friends about his\nRADIO PROGRAMS\nThere are programs each week ot\/ Station\nKHQ \u2014 (590 Kilocycles)!\nSpokane, Washington\nAnd . . . Doctor Cowen snnounces his new Evening Program.\nSTATION KGA\u2014 (1470 Kilocycles);\n\"People and Places\"\nWith CAPTAIN ROBIN FLYNN\nCaptain Flynn tells you the latest war\nnews each evening, and as a former Imperial Veteran of the first World War, and\nas a newspaperman, and a traveler into\nthe odd places of the world, he is well\nable to give you vivid pictures of the\nplaces in the news and the people involved\nListen In\nEvery Evening Monday Through Friday\n7:30 p.m. \u2014 KGA (1470 Kilocycles)\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DININC ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME - J. B. Hammond. N. J, i Hat:   L.   Roberts.   Calgary;   S.   H.\nHeath.   Vancouver;   w.   K    Filing. I Spooner, Winnipeg.\nRossland;   A.   Anderson,   Medicine I\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI       \"YOUR  VANCOUVER   HOME\" Newly renovated throuoh-\nn      mama m mm      -      \\t out.   Phones  and   elevator.\nuutterin Hotel A patterson, ial, of\nM0 Seymour St.        Vancouver, B. C. Coleman, Alia, Proprietor.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014FREIGHT LINES\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 i.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM    H    MclVOn.  Pioo.\nFfroil\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nthey win their way to tha finals\nBenolt will be busy playing hockey\nat the time that tha school is going\non. The purpose ot this ichool ii to\nsee the Canadiens' amateur stars in\naction while they are still hot and\nIn condition. In the Tall aeveral\ndays are wasted while the rookies\nare finding their feet, and sometimes fail to get a fair ihow.\nHaynes covers the whole of Canada in his travels, planning to move\nEast now. He saw Monday night's\ngame at Lethbridge with Turner\nValley Oilers, the first of the Alberta semi-finals, and will see tonight's game between the tame two\nteams at Calgary. He wai far from\nImpressed with Lethbridge, even\nwith Bob Klrkpatrlck, highly-touted\namateur, but he thought highly ot\nthe others, coached by Elmer Piper.\nAlso high ln his estimation are\nCalgary Stampeders, who are battling it out with Edmonton Flyers\nand are masterminded by Marty\nBurke, a former teammate of\nHaynes'. Haynes remarked both\nteami were well-drilled, particularly in the defensive department.\nHe ts doubtful of getting back\nto the Kootenays to see a Kootenay playoff game, although he\ndid say it was \"possible\". He arrived ln Nelson by bus at 3:30\np.m. and left an hour later for1\nTrail, returning to Nelson at 10:15\nto spend three hours.\nThree amateurs have already gone\nup to the Montrealers this season,\nand next season they will be really\nbuilt upon \"youth\".\n(ily Hauls Rock\nlo Cover Mud on\nNelson Streets\nFrost Coming Out of\nGround; Sewer Work\nProgresses\nTwo trucks have been engaged\nsteadily hauling crushed rock to\ncope with mud on city streets as\nthe frost comes* out ol the ground\nand cars churn unsurfaced roads\ninto mud. Describing the efforts of\nthe City Public Works Department\nto meet the situation H. D. Dawson, City Engineer, in his report to\nthe City Council Tuesday night for\nthe two weeks ending March 5,\nstated:\n\"Streets:\nJ,We are in the middle of the\nSpring breakup and the frost slowly coming out of the ground and\nthe ever increasing number of citizens using their cars has caused\nmuddy conditions over almost the\nwhole city where the streets have\nnot been paved. Over most of the\nperiod two trucks have been continuously engaged hauling crushed\nrock from the Gravel Pit to, in some\nmeasure, alleviate the difficulties.\nIn addition to hauling crushed rock,\nwe have the shovel in the Gravel\nPit loading rock that was crushed\nand stored last Fall.\n\"A considerable amount of street\nsand has been removed, and we\nhave crews on street cleaning, opening and cleaning ditches and catch\nbasins, and -seme tree pruning has\nalso been carried out,\n' Rock wall:\n\"Good progress has been made on\nthe dry stone rock wall to support\nthe grade on Hall Street Norln of\nLatimer. The rock for this wall has\nbeen quarried partly from behind\nthe warehouse and partly from\nrock on Observatory S'.reet near\nHall Mines Road.\nDRAINAGE\n'The Radio Avenue sewer project was completed last Friday.\n\"The Douglas Road sewer project\nis also progressing satisfactorily and\nhas now reached Hume Creek, situated half way between Union and\nMorgan  Streets.\nWATER WORKS\n'There is 3ty feet of srvow at the\nFive-Mile Intake with some 2 inches\nof water flowing over the spillway.\n\"Some leaks on Park Street South\nof Vernon have been stopped.\n\"The work of renewing the main\non Hendryx Street between Latimer\nand Mill with six inch cast iron\npipe has been continued. The\nground is partly composed of quicK-\nsand, causing some trouble by caving.\nPERMITS\n\"Four plumbing permits have\nbeen Issued during the period and\nseven building permits, the value\nof the latter  totalling $1090.\nLADIES' CURLING\nResults o( Tuesday afternoons\ngames in thc Nelson Ladies' Curling Club Cats and Kittens competition follow:\nMrs.'T. A. Wallace 10. Mrs. A. H.\nWhitehead 6; Mrs. Charles Norris\n13. Mrs, H. M. Whimster 10; Mrs. A.\nLees 15, Mrs. A. G. Lane 10.\nThursday aflernoon'3 draw follows: Mrs. J. C. Hooker vs. Mrs.\nCharles Norris, Mrs. R, T. Tiffin\nvs. Mrs. Charles Deltner, Mrs. G. W.\nMorris vs. Mrs. A. G. Lane.\nnOVfl-KELP\n\u2022*-**'' ^trnJlwu Scutm\nS**\nSTRENGTH\ni#p\nSTAMINA\nnn\nWORK\nPtmyc,\nStudy\nNK!\nfrom lhe Set It Ihe Family Table\nNOVA-KELP spoilt, lha minerals\nellential to iobu,t nnlth . . . cofrtcti\nfftlk, ntrvoui, rundown condition .  .  .\nauildi itiiiunct . . . KEEPS you FIT.\nG\u00abl it thr ciuie of mimifll dfficicncy\nnlminti with NOVA-KELP . . . NOT\n( mtdicinf but t pure mincll-rlch dttp\nifl< Iflflp in tjbict form\n\u2022 On Salt \u00abt aN Dru| Stor\u00abi\nTRAIL SKATING\nCLUB'S FINALE\nFINE PROGRAM\n\"Ferdinand the Bull,\"\nPicadors Provide\nthe Climax\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e, March 5 - Attracting a crowd that was greater tha.n\nmany of those at Kootenay Hockey\nLeague games, Ihe Trail Skating\nClub concluded Its season with a\nmagnificent display of fancy skating at the Trail rink Wednesday\nnight. For the past few years the\nlocal club has conducted semi-\nweekly skating programs. The ef-\nfortj of club members throughout\nthe season culminated in a scintillating performance.\nWhile ovations approved the\npoetry of motion demonstrated in\nthe solo, pair and group renditions,\nin which the performers were\ndressed in most elaborate costumes,\nthe climax of the evening's program\nwas \"Ferdinand the Bulr Inside ol\nwhich Ron Beattie and Nick Zuk\nwent through the most hilarious\nantics to provide a crowd pleasing\nattraction. 9\nThe program follows:\nJunior grand march, all juniors\nin costume under 14 years of- age\nto the music of \"Whirl of the\nWaltz,\" led by Miss Carol Wright\nand Miss Isabel Ross; junior club\nscene, entire junior division, to the\nmusic of \"Tavern Waltz,\" assisted\nby E. Moody and Ron Beattie; pair\nperformance by Mrs. Gavrilik and\nN. Zuk, to \"The Blue Danube''\nwaltz; solo, Mlas Daisy Jean Mathews, to \"Gina Gavotte;\" Club 14-\njtep, 11 couples, to the \"Beer Barrel Polka;\" aolo, Miss Carol,Wright,\nto \"El Capltan;\" tango, Miss Baldrey\nand E. Moody to \"Night on the\nVolga;\" fox trot, Mrs. Gavrilik and\nR. Beattie, to \"Lonely Troubador;\"\nClub waltz and exhibition, five\ncouples to \"Whirl of the Waltz;\"\npair, Miss D. J. Mathews and E.\nMoody; pair, Miss Brown and Mr.\nFrere to \"Colonel Bogey;\" \"Ferdinand the Bull,\" Ron Beattie and\nNick Zuk, with William Thomson,\nStan Angus and Ed Catalano, as\npicadors; grand marche, entire\nFigure Skating Club in costume to\n\"Whirl of the Waltz\" led by Miss\nCarol Wright and Miss Isabel\nWright; 10-minute costume skating\nperiod, all seniors and juniors in\ncostume; general skating.\nIn charge were:\nDr. C. H. Wright, Master of Ceremonies; Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre, convener of committees; Mrs, C. H.\nWright and Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre,\nmusic conveners; Mrs. W. R. Williamson, Mrs. S. E. Anjus and Mrs.\nF. Willis, assistants to master of\nceremonies; Mrs. D. II. Bayley,\ncostumes and makeup for juniors;\nMrs. James Curtis, costumes and\nmakeup for seniors; P. F. Mclntyre, announcer; Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre, E. Moody and R. Beattie,\njunior displays and \"Ferdinand the\nBull;\" Mrs. Turnbull, Miss S. Brown\nand Miss J. Butorac, Children's\nCommittee; A. H. W. Busby and F.\nS. Willis, lighting effects.\nMISS TOMPKINS TO\nREPRESENT NELSON\nNURSES,   VICTORIA\nMiss Helen Tompkins was named\ndelegate of the Nelson Graduate\nNurses' Association to the Provincial convention of the Registered\nNurses at Victoria March 29 and 3Q\nat a meeting of the Association at\nthe Nurses Home Tuesday night.\nMiss Vera Eidt discussed the division of the Provincial Registered\nNurses Association into districts\nand chapters. It was decided to sponsor a Springtime dance in April.\nMiss Tompkins was In the chair.\nCity Clerk to Attend\nConference City and\nGovernment Officials\nAuthority for the NeUon City\nClerk to attend a conference ol\nMunicipal Officials and Government officials at Victoria May It\nand 17 was given by the Nelson\nCity Council Tuesdav night. Mayor\nN. C. Stibbs stated the first conference of this nature last year\nwas of great value.\nThe conference will be under\nauspices of the Municipal Oftlcers\nAssociation and Hon. A. Wells\nGray, Minister of Municipalities.\nU. S. Offers War\nMaterials lo\nNon-Belligerenls\nBy EDWARD E. BOMAR\nAnoclated Pren Staff Wrlttr\nWASHINGTON, March 5 (AP).\n-The United States War Depart-\nment offered today to sell, to Latin\nAmerican and other non-belligerent nations, artillery, rifles and\n. other surplus war material which\ncost originally several hundred\nmillion dollars.\nA list of such surplus weapons,\ndescribed as \"usable though they\ndate from the first Great War, was\ndisclosed following an announcement that 90 long-range six-inch\nfield pieces had already been sold\nso Brazil.\nFinland was barred from the offer because it is at present engaged in hostilities.\nSome 2500 rifles were reported\nreliably to have been transferred\nrecently to Haiti, and the Philippine\nGovernment was supplied with\nrifles and mountain guns for its\nnew army after the commonwealth\nwas set up in 1935 to prepare for\nindependence.\nSeveral Latin American Governments, including Chile, have inquired since the war started whether\nAmerican munitions in storage for\nmore than two decades were for\nsale. Sweden also has made such\ninquiries.\nOfficials explained the surplus\nmunitions had all been displaced by\nlater models. Included were some\n100,000 Enfield rifles out of some 1,-\n800,000 models of this shoulder weapon now in storage.\nOther weapons listed included\nmore than 70,000 machine guns,\nmostly for use in war planes.\nCify Will Check\non Radio Noises\nWhen Aid. T. H. Waters stated\nradio interference noise in Nelson\nhad been bad lately, and Aid. Roy\nSharp added he had received complaints, the City Council directed\nTuesday night that the City Electrical department make > checkup\nansfflmlnite such noises, as it could\nAldermah Sharp said he had been\ninformed that in one case noise suppressors on a street car had been\nremoved and had never been replaced; and the Council ruled that\n] in future suppressors must not be\nremoved without the department\ntesponsible notifying the Council.\nNelson Milk Well\nWithin Limit on\nBacterial Count\nHighest !Z0 Per Cent\nUnder; One Dairy\nLow, Butterfat\nExamination oT milk samples from\ndairies supplying the City of Nelson\nshowed that in all instances the bacterial count was well below the\nProvincial allowance for raw milk,\nthe hlfhest count obtained being\n20 per cent below the limit.\nThe report of Dr. T. P. Sparks,\nMedical Health Officer, to the City\nCouncil Tuesday night showed not\nonly that milk ln use ln Nelson\nwas well within the limits, but that\nIn a number of cases the bacterial\ncount was low enough to place a\nnumber of the samples In the \"preferred raw\" class.\nButterfat content tests made at\nthe same time showed that one dairy\nat S.2, was just below the Provincial\nstandard of 3.23. One of the remainder tested 3.B, and the balance were\nfrom 4 to 4.6.\nPanther Juves\nTrim M.R.K. IW\nin Elimination\nMrs. Renwick's Offer\nof $50 for Two Lots\non Sixth Is Accepted\nOffer of Mrs. George Renwick of\n$25 each for two lots in Block 11,\nSixth Street, upon which it was\nproposed to begin building immediately, was accepted by the City\nCouncil Tuesday night.\nEsling Meeting Is\nto Be Held Friday\nA public meeting in the interests\nof W, K. Esling, National Government candidate for Kootenay West,\nwhich he has represented for the\n.tour past Parliaments, will be held\nin Eagle Hall Friday night at 8\no'clock, with the speakers Mr. Idling himself, Lyle Jestley and Aid.\nWilliam Thomson of Trail, and\nCharles Daly of Rossland.\nThis will be Mr. Esling's meeting\nin Nelson, as his campaign will be\nsuspended for a period later in\ndeference to those observing Holy\nWeek.\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL, B. C, March 5-Results of\nTrail Curling Club games in the\nPresident's Compel i tion Tuesday\nnight follow: A. E. Calvert B, David\nBalfour 8; Donald MacDonald 8,\nCharles Hoefer 9; P. R. McDonald\n9. David Forrest 10; L. F. Tyson fl,\nRobert Somerville 10; F. J. Glover\nfl, W. F. Doubt If); J. A. Wadsworth\n10, G F. Reimnn 8; S. R. Walley fi.\nJack Campbell 9; F. J. Plcster 8,\nB. J. Walsh fi.\nResults of Lauener Cup games nf\nthe Trail Ladies' Curling Club Tuesday follow; Mr.s. S, J. Meredith 10,\nMrs. George Hicks 1; Mrs. A. McMillan 7. Mrs. Carroll Kendall 7;\nMrs. E. A. Temple fi, Mrs. Oonnltl\nMacDonald 7; Mrs. W. J. Wagstaff G,\nMrs, J. A, Millar 5.\nJohn Schobinges\nPasses, Aged 75;\nNelson 12 Years\nJohn Schobinger, resident of Nelson for the past 12 years, died in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMonday, at about 75 years of age.\nMr. Schobinger was born in\nSwitzerland of German parents, After he came to Nelson, ne was employed for a few years as a cook. In\nlater years he did not work. For the\npast five years he roomed on Victoria Street. About a month ago\nhe was removed to the hospital for\ntreatment.\nHe is not known to have had any\nrelatives   in   this   Province,   but\nsister resides at Hanley. Sask., and\nhe is also survived by a niece, Mrs.\nL. Brown, in the vicinity of Tacomi.\nCity Garbage Service\nIs to Be Considered\nWith 1940 Estimates\nRevision of the garbage collection\nsystem in Nelson would be considered in preparing estimates for 1940\nstated Mayur N: C. Stibbs at Tuesday night's City Council meeting.\nHe was replying to the assertion\nby Aid. A. G. Ritchie that \"it's\nabout time we did something ffbout\ngarbage collection.\"\nDr. F P. Sparks, Cily Medical\nHealth Officer, in a report to the\nCouncil urg*.*d that the Council give\nits attention to a romprehensive\nsystem nf garbage disposal.\nNelson Swimmers\nTake Initial Dip\nGib Gaucher, who is usually the\nfirst man in the lake each year,\nand Itrnin Horstead took their initial\ndip Friday evening, in the bracing\nwaters of the West Arm. at George\nHorstead's Summer home on the\nNorth Shore.\nThey had Iheir plunge at 7:30 In\nthe evening. Thry found the water\nchilly.\nM. R. K. Juveniles, while doinj\ntheir share of puck-carrying In the\nfirst Juvenile Cup elimination game\nTuesday, gave one of the most complete exhibitions in Nelson's hockey\nhistory of being unable to find Ihe\nnet, and went down to the season's\nrecord defeat of IVI, at the hands\nof the Panther Juveniles.\nThe M. R. K.'s, while unquestionably outplayed, tore in repeatedly\nto bombard the Panther goal, and\nassail it from every angle. But\nwhether GoBlie Earl Jorganson \u2014\nwho played a remarkable game-\nwas In the net, or up the Ice, or lying\nIn a heap, did not matter\u2014the puck\nwould either go wide or high, or\nhit him and be deflected. Toward\nthe end of the 79 minute game, the\nwonderment of spectators and players alike grew \u00bbt the complete success of the red-and-blue shlrted warriors In missing the net, even when\nganging up on the goal, with no\nPanther except the goalie In the\nsame zone wilh them.\nMeanwhile no inhibitions at all\nbothered the Panthers, who every\nlittle while gave their score a boost,\nas the defence offered little opposition to their getting ln on the net,\nand Goalie Jim Ritchie wu far\nfrom his usual form. The Panthers\nearnM' most of their 14 goals, but\non a number of others were distinctly helped by Lady Luck, who\npresented only a frozen countenance\nto their opponents.\nThe Prestley Brothers and Bud\nEmery netted 12 ol .the 14 Panther\ncoals, each' getting four, while\nBarney Prestley ana Mickey Prestley each had two assists, and Emery\none. Don Gibbon and jack Argyle\nnetled Ihe other Panther goals, Gibbon also getting an assist, while\nErnie Wllion got two assists, and\nJack Young one.\nDavid Slader netted the only\nM. R. K. goal, on Joe Hllllard'J pass,\nshortly before the game ended. It\nwas the last goal of the game.\nEmery was ln the coop twice\nand Gibbon once for the Panthers,\nwhile Dong Winlaw was benched\nthree times for the M. R. K.'s, and\nTed Huyck, Joe Hilliard once each.\nSlim Porter was Referee, wilh D.\nG Chamberlain Judge of Play,\nGeorge Idanln and A. N. Wlnlaw\nScorekeepers, and Tom Homersham\nTimekeeper.\nVANCOUVER HOOP\nSERIES TIED UP\nVANCOUVER, March S (CP>-\nVancouver Maple Leafs tied up the\nIntercity Basketball League finals\nhere tonight when they led all the\nway to beat Tookes 40-38,\nMaking up for the surprise 37-31\nbeating Tookes handed them in lhe\nfirst game of the best-of-five series\nfor the League title and the right\nto meet Victoria Arrows, Leafs displayed excellent team work throughout.\nNicholson Heads\nRossland Junior\nBoard of Trade\nROSSLAND, B. C, March f~U\nG. Nicholson wu elected President\nof thi Junior section of the Rouland Board ol Trade Tuesday night.\nOther members elected to the Executive were Bernard Ferrey, Vice-\nPresident; H. W. Buyley, Secretary;\nJ, N. Purser, Treasurer; ahd Gllbort\nHunt, David Calder, S. R. Davles,\nRobert Crane, A. t. Snowball, Stanley Bowcock and V. M. Van.\nAttendance al\nSchools Cut by\nEpidemic (olds\nAa many as 110 pupils hava been\nabsent from Nelson schools at one\ntime, attendance at Centra! School\non one occasion being down 20 per\ncent, due to an epidemic of severe\ncolds and Illness resembling the influenza of 1918, stated Dr. F. P.\nSparks, Medical Health Officer, In a\nreport received by the City Council Tuesday night\nDr. Sparks listed notifiable disease during the plat two months\nas follows:\nWithin In the TU\nCity District\nCancer       1 1 2\nSeptic sore throat   1\u20141\n8carlet fever    3       \u2014        >\nVincent's angina ....   1        \u2014 1\nPneumonia     1 3 4\nTuberculosis       1\u20141\nErysipelas        1 1 2\nCerebrospinal   fvr.   1\u20141\nTotala     10        \u2014       15\n3 Parlies Seek\nNova Scotia Seals\nHALIFAX, March 5 (CP)-One of\nthe two provinces that rent solid\nblocs of Liberals to Parliament in\n1935, Nova Scotia finds three parties battling for her 12 seats this\ntime, with the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation making its\nfirst bid here in a Dominion general election.\nWith 29 candidates In the running\nto date, the field Is six short of the\nnumber that contested tne last election.\nA dozen official Liberal candidates have' been named along with\n11 Conservatives, five CCF men\nand one member of the last Parliament who wu not renominated\nbut ls running u a Liberal.\nIn 1935, the same number of Liberals and Conservatives were on\nthe ballots, but there also were 11\nReconstruction candidates and a\nCommunist.\nAll members ot the last Parliament are entered again exesnt Donald MacLennan ot Inverness-Richmond, who has gone to Ihe Senate.\nDr. M. E. McGarry, speaker of the\nLiberal Nova Scotia Legislature\nhas resigned from tha provincial\nBouse to seek this seat.\nBen Scgall Was Not\nDriving Truck When\nLicense Charge Laid\nBen Segall, whose name appeared\non Police Court Information and\nin Tuesday's Daily News as Segall\nBen, and who wu fined 112.50 in\nPolice Court Saturday for being in\ncharge of a light delivery truck not\nbearing 1940 licence plates, said\nTuesday he was not driving the\ntruck, as Tuesday's paper stated.\nThe charge against him read that he\nwu in charge of a motor-vehicle,\nbut not that he was driving It He\nstated the car was standing on\nJosephine Street but had not been\ndriven for several days.\nCouncil Will Study\nTenders on Trucks\nTenders for supplying a truck to\nthe City were referred by the City\nCouncil Tuesday night to committee\nof the whole for study.\nRichards Conducts\nQuiz for Kinsmen\nP. C.  Richards conducted a qui*\nprogram at the Kinsmen Club nipper meeting at the Hume Tuesday,\nHOCKEY SCORES\nHershey 7. Springfield 3,\nIndianapolis 1, Pittsburgh 0.\nEastern U. 8. Amateur\nRiver Vale 3. Baltimore 1.\nWashington 7. Ncw York 4.\nSaskatchewan Senior\nMoose Jaw 4, Saskatoon I.\n(Firit of best of five series).\nAmerican Association\nSt. Louis 6, Tulsa 5 (overtime).\nSt.  Paul 4,  Wichita 3.\nSafety Signs to Be\nPurchased by City\nPurchase of four reflector signs\n1 to be placed at stop Intersections\n| was authorized by the City Council\n(Tuesday night. They will replace\n\u25a0street signs at the following interactions: Vernon to Cedar, ward to\nI Vernon, Ward to Baker and Stanley\n| to Baker.\nThe Council also authorized purchase of a dozen transmission line\nprotector buttons to be placed on\nlight poles for the protection of\nmotorists, and a reflector to be placed in the concrete of the new curb\nplanned at the intersection of Edge-\nwood Avenue and Park Stretts.\nStreet Signs Miy Bo\nPlaced on Light Poles;\nPosts Not Satisfactory\nFeeling that street signs on four-\ninch posts were not substantial\nenough, the City Council Tuesday\nnight instructed the Public Works\ncommittee to study the poisibility\nof placing street signs on light pole*\nwhere practical, and to recommend\nsubstitutes for the poles where possible.\nLEGION BOWLING\nDave Muir's bowling team drew\nfirst blood in the Collinson Cup\ncompetition of the Canadian Legion Bowling Club on the Legion\nAlley Tuesday nlfht with a victory over Frank Sims' team.\nTACOMA YARDS ACTIVE\nTACOMA, Wash., March S (AP).\n\u2014Ending 16 years of shipbuilding\nInactivity in the V, S. Pacific Northwest, thr keel for Iho first of five\nMaritime Commission freighters was\nofficially laid nt the: Seattle-Ta-\ncoma Shipbuilding Corporation\nyards here today.\nFive 12,775-ton vessels, coating $2,-\n127.000 each, will br constructed\nhere. They are scheduled to be\nfinished In Seattle.\nMADE SENIOR CHEMIST\nVANCOUVER. March 5 (CP>,-\nF, R. Davies of Nnnnimo hni been\nappointed senior chemist in the Department nf Fisheries here and will\nasiumr his new duties March IJ\nMe will have charge of research nnd\nInspection of fish foods, canning\nand by-products\nINVESTMENT COMPANY\nNET PROFIT $392,784\nTORONTO. March S (CP)-Cana-\ndian General Investments Limited\nreported net profit fnr 1039 after\nprovision for Dominion and Provincial taxes of $392,784 compared with\nJ387.249 in 1938 The Company de-\nebrcd $300,290 dividends and added\n$92,494 to the surplus account.\nKokanee Chapter I.O.D.E.\nGiven   Permission  tor Tag\nPermission for Kokanee Chapter\nI.ODE. tn hold its annual Alexandria Rn.T Tag Day June 8 was\ngranted by the City Council Tuesday   night.\nNelion Street Railway\nReceipts  Up $19,  Month\nNelson street raiJway receipts\nwrre $1276.20 in February, an Increase of $1985 over the same month\nof 1939 A total of 25.918 adults and\n3446 children, aggregating 30.262,\nwere carried, compared with 29,865\nlast  year,\nN\nKolaih Aski City for\nPrice on Railway Ties\nSteve Kolash'i inquiry for the\nprice paid by the Cily for ties for\nIhe street railway was referred by\nthe Council Tuesday night to the\nStreet  Railway   Committee.\nBOMB EXPLODES\n.    BRITISH BANK\nLONDON. March fl - (Wednesday) - iCPl.\u2014A bomb believed by\npolice to have been laid by the\noutlawed Irish Republican Army\nshattered the windows of a bank\nIn fashionable Park iJine today. No\none was Injured\nDHOLnUR. India (CP) - A\nswarm of bees killed an elephant\nhrre, which was tearing down a\ntrre branch when it disturbed the\ninsects. Terrified hy Ihflr ittarx.\nthe elephant ran wildly until it coi-\nl.n* e(J  and died.\n16 KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK\nTOKYO, March 5 (AP). - A\nsnowslide which destroyed a\nbridge across a canyon caused thc\nwreck of a passenger train today.\nSixteen persons were killed and\n29 injured, whep the train, with\n130 passengers, plunged Into the\ncanyon in Yamagat* Prefecture,\nIn North Central Japan.\nEarlier advices from the region\nhad said more than 100 lives were\nfeared lost.\nNEW    WESTMINSTER.    B.    C,\nMarch 5 'CP). - British Columbia\nPolice heir were told today safecrackers had looted $106 from the\nsafe of the Consumers Cooperative\nAssociation at nearby Webster's\nCorners last n'jht.\nSTOP   f Hp-flU\nTHAT I * VII\nPRURITUS, ITCHING OF ANUS,\ni RECTUM, ele. Mt treatment his\nIprovid sucnuful. Ineapaiulva. Particular!, W. Ulcas, 325 Runclajih\n' Avenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nHOSIERY\ncrepe, era aa\nCHIFFON  9*\u00bbVW\nLadiei' Weir        Burnt Block\nCummins Head of\nGyros for 19(0\nF. Douglas Cummings wu elected President of the NeUon Gyro\nClub (or 1940 at the Club's meeting\nat the Hume Hotel Monday evening. He succeeds J. B. Gray.\nOther officers included Daniel\nMcNaughton, First Vice-President;\nN. R. Freeman, Second Vice-President; Leonard E. Hamson, Secretary;\nF. H. Smith, Sergeant-at-Arma; B.\nC. Paulsen, Treasurer; V. C. Owen,\nN. J. Lowes, D. G. Beatty and E. A.\nMann, Directors. Mr. Poulsen and\nthe firs', three Directors named were\nreelected.\nThe officers will be Installed next\nMonday by D. C. Manly of Grand\nForks, Lieutenant-Governor of Gyro\nDistrict 8. Delegations of Gyros will\nattend from Grand Forks and Trail.\nR. B. Morris and D. D. Townsend\nwere appointed a committee in\ncharge of a delegation to attend\nthe Trail Club's Installation of officers March 19.\nMayor Gordon Is\nRossland Reviser\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 5 -\nMayor J. E. Gordon haa been appointed Revisory Officer for Rowland. The Court of Revision tor the\ncorrection of the recently compiled\nDomlnloii vlters list will be held n\nRossland on March 11. 12 and 13 at\nthe Rossland Court House.\nPublic Works Asks\nfor Price on Two\nLots Owned by City\nRequest that the City put a pric?\non two lots adjoining the present\nyards of the B. C. Department of\nPublic Works, Front Street, wr.s\nreceived by the City Council Tuesday night and referred to the Finance Committee.\nA le'.ter from 0. G. Gallaher,\nPublic Works Engineer for Nelson-\nCreston, stated these lots, the only\ntwo remaining in the block occupied by the Public Works yards,\nwould be most convenient for a\nwarehouse.\nJAPANESE SHELL\nCHINESE SHORES\nHONG KONG, March 5 (AP). -\nJapanese warships shelled shoreline positions 20 miles North of Portuguese Macao throughout the\nmorning and then landed a force for\na new penetration of South China\u2014\nthis one just across tho mouth of\nlhe Pearl River from Hong Kong,\nBritish Crown colony.\nAt the fame time, Japanese v\u00bbar-\nplanes swooped in to break up any\nattempts by Chinese forces to concentrate for reinforcement of their\npoaitions above Macao and about 50\nmiles South of Canton.\nInhabitants of Chinese villages in\nthe scope of the Japanese operations\nflacked into Macao,\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n; PILLS\nBreakfast Nooks\nBUILT TO ORDER\nKootenay Sash Cr Door Works\nM. E. OBAL Opp. City Hall\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\n9unditrand Adding Machinal\nOFFICE 8UPPLIE8\nUnderwood  Elliott Fliher Ltd.\n536 Ward St Phone 99\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS and ALTERATIONS\nB. C. Plumbing & Hciting Co.\n  : *m\nIlijUIHPiiIMp\nmm\n--NELSON DAILY NIW8. NELSON. D. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. MARCH I. 1940.\u2014\n\u00ab#<\u25a0$\nPAQI  THRU\nTODAYS News Pictures\nAllied Air Chiefs of Award Ceremony\nThis Was Once a Home\nGeneral Victor Vulllemln, left, Commander of the French Air\nForce, Is pictured ln conversation with Air Marshal A. S. Barratt, right,\nChief of the British Air Forces ln France, when General Vuillemin\ndecorated a British aviator at the same time 27 French Air Force officers were honored. The British flyer, Flight-Lieutenant Robert Voase\nJeff, was decorated with the Croix de Guerre, the first R. A, F.\naviator to be so honored.\nA Finnish soldier, back from the front on leave, ruefully surveys\nthe site where once stood the apartment house where he made his\nhome. All that remains is a gaunt chimney.\nSunny California Swept by Floods\nLook, Mr. Lewis!!\na    <*\n**\"\"; \"fy C^-jry. a    \u2022\n\u2022   --r\n,.  em _   \u2022-* .  *\n\u25a0e -'tr  m\\ *  \" \u25a0\n*\\Z    t* <9\nam   \\  ;\n'*-\u25a0\u00ab.\u201e   \u2022 *\nare^ - -   \u2022\ns?Ns\n.,    \u2022\u25a0**\n***\\ .*** *a\n'\u00a3.* *\u00a3\u00a3.\nSunny California wu not so sunny as torrential Is inundated as a result ot the severe floods which\nrains caused rivers to break their banks and inun- caused Governor Olson to summon National Guards\ndata wide sections of the State. The above is an to evacuate hundreds of persons whose homes in\nair-view of the city of Napa, a good part of which Northern and Central California were flooded.\nCanadian Tests Reconnaissance Training Bombers\nP|P**P*-**\u00bb*roiii**tii\"\u00abwt*.**^^ '-mn\nJohn L. Lewis, President of the\nC.I.O., ahould get a big kick out of\nthis photo showing U. S. Vice-\nPresident John Nance Garner\ndrinking \u00bb glass of milk. Yes,\nmilk, for wasn't it Mr. Lewis who\nreferred to Mr. Garner u a\n\"whiakey drinking old man\" several months back?\nOn' Northern\nFrontier\nL*.\u00abs than t week after they arrived from Eng- of more than  1600 Anson bombers which will be\nland   two   Avro   Anson   reconnaissance   train ing used  in connection  with ihe Commonwealth  Air\nbombers were assembled at the De Havilland Air- Training .Scheme. Two views  of the big bombers\ncraft Company's (llant near Torontn and put through ire  shown   here  a*  they  were  put  thruugh   their\nther test flight*  These ue just the advance guard pica, by Test Pilot G. R. Spradbrow.\nCrown Prince Gustaf Adolf, heir\nto the Swedish throne, is shown,\nright, with an army staff officer\nduring recent Swedish army exercises on the Northern frontier,\nIt was in this area that Russian\nbomben bombed the Swedish\ntown of Pajala,\nAlberla Legislation Ads on Interest\nReductions Ruled Unconstitutional\nLONDON, Much I (CP Cable)-\nTht Judicial Committee ot tbt\nPrivy Council today upheld dicta-\nlone of Alberta courts declaring ultra vires of the Provincial Leila-\nlature two acts passed in 1937 that\nreduced Interest rates on Alberta\nGovernment securities and bonds\nguaranteed by the Provincial Government.\nTheir lordships dismissed two appeals brought by the Attorney General of Alberta and ordered that the\nProvincial Government pay the\ncosts of the respondents in both\ncases, the Independent Order of\nForesters, .which as the holder of\nprovincial securities had sued for\nthe payment of full Interest.\nThe Attornt- General of Canada, who Intervened ln the appeals\nsince the question of interest was\nheld to be within the Jurisdiction\nof the Dominion Government, must\npay his own costs, the judicial committee ruled.\nThe first appeal was made by the\nAlberta Government in the name\nof the Board of Trustees of the\nLethbridge Irrigation District and\ndealt with the Provincial Guaranteed Securities Interest Act which\nreduced Interest on securities guaranteed by the Provincial Government by 50 per cent. The second\ndealt with the Provincial Securities\nDiterest Act, which made a similar\nreduction In the Interest of government bonds.\nThe Provincial Securities Interest\nAct flrat wu declared unconstitutional by Mr. Justice Ewing of the\nSupreme Court of Alberta. Thli\njudgment was upheld In a majority\nopinion of the Appellate Division\noi the Supreme Court May 23, 1938,\nand an appeal by the Alberta Government waa dismissed April 5,\n1939, In a judgment handed down\nby Mr. Justice Shepherd in the Appellate Division of the Supreme\nCourt of Alberta.\nThe Foresters' Order, with headquarters at Toronto, had sued for\nthe full Interest rate. The Appellate\nDivision judgment declared the\nCourt waa bound by previous judgments holding the question of Interest to be within the jurisdiction\nof the Dominion Government.\nThe Judicial Committee of the\nPrivy Council'heard the two ap*\npeals similtaneously in December,\nwith the following judges present:\nViscount Caldccote, the Lord Chancellor, Viscount Sankey, Lord Mau-\nghan, Lord Roche and Lord Porter.\nBONDS LIFTED\nTORONTO, March 5 (CP)- The\nruling of the Judicial Committee of\nthe Privy Council ln London that\nAlberta legislation reducing interest\nrate on the Government's Bond obligations ls unconstitutional gave\nthe local.market for Alberta bonds\na general lift today.\nAlberta issues improved from Vt\nto H of a point. The market was\nmore active and offerings appeared\nto be more meagre than usual.\nLady Glasgow\nIs Interested in\nChild Welfare\nSYDNEY, Australia, March 5 CCP)\n\u2014Lady Glasgow, wife of Australia's\nfirst High Commissioner to Canada,\nis a keen patron of Australian art\nand also is interested in child welfare and library methods with those\nof Auatralia. She will Uke a number of pictures with her to hang\nin her new Canadian home.\nIn her home estate, Queensland,\nLady Glasgow ls actively associated with the Bush League Club, that\ndistributed books and magazines to\nlonely settlers ln far outposts and\nthe work of creches and kindergartens.\nActivities Salvation\nArmy Are Revealed in\nAnnual Balance Sheet\nGoverning council of the Salvation Army in Canada has issued its\n57th annual balance sheet for the\nfinancial year ending September\n1939, givii^g a concise view of the\nDominion-wide activities of the organization.\nIn addition to an exacting internal audit of all aceount by their\nown travelling auditor, the books\nand accounts are audited regularly\nby a leading firm of chartered accountants. All records of income\nand vouchers covering expenditure\nare carefully scrutinized and\nchecked.\nThe report shows that accomodation for 4000 men, women and\nchildren Is being provided through\ntheir various activities, which include: Three children's homes; 38\nhomes and hospitals for women; 17\nhostels and food depots for home*\nless men; six homes for aged men\nand women.\nThe balance sheet, covering the\nArmy's financial year which ends\nin September, does not record the\nextensive wartime operations since\nthat date among the Canadian\ntroops throughout the Dominion,\nnor with the overseas forces now\nin England.\nCONSERVATIVE AND\nFASCIST TO CONTEST\nLEEDS BY-ELECTION\nLEEDS, England, March 5 (CP\nCable).\u2014J. J. Craik Henderson,\nConservative, and Sydney Allen,\nFascist, were nominated today to\ncontest the by-election in Northeast Leeds to fill the vacancy In\nthe House of Commons caused by\nthe retirement of Sir John Birchall.\nJonservative. member for the constituency for 22 years.\nHOSPITAL COMMITTEES\nAPPOINTED AT CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014Vice-President\nD. K. Archibald and H. A. Powell,\nwho represented Creston Valley\nHospital at the West Kootenay Hospitals' Association conference at\nNebon, are preparing a report tor\nthe March meeting of the Directors.\nIt is expected Creiton will get\nbehind the movement to revise rates\nhaving in mind the schedule adopted\nby the B.C. Hospital Association.\nCreston will also be likely to join\nup with the Province-wide organization with assurance expenses in\nconnection with travel to the annual meeting will be pooled.\nPresident Gib Sinclair has drafted the hospital standing committees\nfor 1940. as follows: Finance\u2014S, A,\nSpeers, C. F. Hayes, Frank Putnam,\nM.L.A.: House-H. K. Legg, Mrs.\nChas. Murrell, Mrs. H. J. Armil , e;\nGrounds-D. K. Archibald, W. J.\nCraig, J. G, Connell: Membership\u2014\nH. K. Legg, D. K. Archibald, J. G.\nConnell.\nFirst named in each case to be\nCommittee Chairman. No leap year\nbabies are reported at the maternity\nward, but report has it that botn\nlocal doctors have February 29 babies to record with the vital statistics officials.\nB.C. REPLANTING\nBIG FOREST AREAS\nVANCOUVER (CP)-More than\n6,500,000 new trees sre to be given\nroot en Vancouver Island by the\nSpring of next year in a reforestation nlan designed to renew the\nvast forest wealth of the Province\nAlready the program being carried out by the B.C. Forestry Branch\nis well under way. One hundred\nthousand acres of forest land burned barren in the great Vancouver\nIsland fire ot 1938. are being replanted. About 350,000 fir seedlings\nfrom the beds of the forestry\nbranch's \"nursery\" at nearby Green\nTimbers, have already been shipped. By the end of the year. It is\nexpected that about 1,250.000 seedlings will have been  transplanted.\nThe Green Timbers nursery\u2014ac-\n. irding to Superintendent Thomas\nWells\u2014will reach full seedling production in 1942. In that yesr the\nnursery beds will hMd about 12.-\n000.000 fir. spruce, and cedar seedlings ready to form a new limber\ncycle.\nCanadian Fliers\nAwarded D. F. (.\nLONDON, March 5 (CP Cable).-\nFlight-Lieut. Lawrence Wilton Skey.\n28, of Toronto, and Pilot-Officer\nRobert Howard Harper, 24, of Bas-\nsano, Alta., who showed \"gallantry\nand devotion to duty in the execution ot air operations,\" received the\nDistinguished Flying Cross from the\nhands of the King in an Investiture\nat Buckingham Palace.\nThree heroes of the Waltham Abbey explosion Jan. 18 and officers\nof the Navy, Army and Air Force\nalso were decorated. Eighteen officers of the Royal Air Force were\ndecorated with the D.F.C. by His\nMajesty, who wore R.A.F. uniform.\nA number of young R.A.F. officers\nlost their nerve on leaving the Palace and fled from the huge crowd\nof citizens and photographers.\nThe Waltham Araey munition\nworkers who were decorated knew\nthat to have stopped work during\nthe blast would have doomed the\nwhole plant.\nFor continuing their processing\nof nitroglycerine in the Royal Gunpowder Factory blast that killed five\nmen and injured many others the\ntrio received the Order of the British Empire.\nHad their operations with their\nhighly volatile material been interrupted, the entire batch of nitroglycerine would have exploded.\nitfaon^lW^ (Eamjwitj.\nINCflKPOWATEO   2W MAY l\u00ab70i -\nMen! See the New Spring;\nGabardine Windbreakers\nThe all-season jacket, with full zipper front, two slant\npockets as well as a breast zipper pocket. Newest\nshades of wine, blue and brown with ^ ^ _,am\ncontrasting trim. Rain and wind proof. $^|Ov\nSizes 36 to 44. Priced at\t\n4\nM\nBritish Papers Differ in Opinions as\nlo What Aid Should Be Given Finland\nLONDON, March 5 (CP) - The\nTimes said editorially Jo-day that\n\"whole sentiment of trV.s country\ndemands that Finland should not be\nallowed to fall.\"\nBut Lord Beaverbrook's newspapers, the Standard and Daily Express urged the Government not to\nintervene in a military way in the\nfight between Finland and her invader, Soviet Russia. Thc Standard\nsuggested a parliamentary debate.\nKermit Roosevelt, son of the late\nTheodore Roosevelt, in a broadcast\nlast night said his international volunteers are \"going to fight for the\nwhole civilized world against Russia\u2014the modern infidel.\"\n\"It 15 my honor and privilege to\nlead this modern crusade,\" he said.\nMeanwhile the King received an\naudience Thomas Maitland Snow,\nformer Minister to Finland. Snow\nwas succeeded Feb. 7 by George\nGordon Vereker.\nThe Times said that failure lo\ngive adequate aid to Finland may\nbe revealed in the future ts another\none of those \"opportunities which\nhave been missed through a policy\nof faUe econcmy, of the failure to\nappreciate the comparative unimportance of secondary risks.\"\nThe Standard asked that former\nWar Secretary Leslie Hore-Belisha\nan advocate of intervention in Finland, explain \"on what grounds he\nbelieves Britain's resources and\nmanpower are such that she can\nsend  a  new  force  to  thc    Arctic,\nmaintain large numbers In the Neal\nEast and at the same time fulfill\nthe call which our French AllJ\nmakes upon us for aid in protection\nof her frontier,\"\nThe Times editorial observed:\n\"Finland is demanding with Insistence that her sacrifice should\nnot be made in vain and she is be*\nginning to display anxiety lest thi\ntrue nature of her situation should\nbe misunderstood.\n\"It is becoming clearer every day\nthat this war is no side issue. Finland is defending more than tha\ncause of liberty and more than hei\nown soil.\n\"The whole North is in peril of\nthe aggression directed against her\nand not perhaps against her alone,\nOur own cause is being buttressed\nby her assistance to the evil of\ntyranny. Finnish resistance has already weakened Russia, the colossus though she be, appreciably\nand has eaten up great stores of oil\nwhich might otherwise have reached Germany against us.\n\"For that, if no other reason, Finland Is entitled to expect gratitude\nand recompense. But there Is now\nno time to waste in debate.\n\"Our interest is clear and there\nis now a moral issue involved as\nwell as material.\"\n\"We have enough to do,\" the Daily\nExpress said, \"We cannot police tha\nworld. If we are to fight for Finland why net for China? Why not\ndeclare war on Japan and send an\nexpeditionary force agaipst Tokyo?\"\nOIL PLANT BURNED\nLFTHBRIDGE, Alta., March 5\n(CPI\u2014The bulk storage plant ot the\nGreat West OU Distributors two\nmiles South ot here was destroyed\nby tire of unknown origin last\nnight. Plant and contents wore valued at approximately $20,000.\nBEER BOTTLE AND\nLIGHT CLOBE FOUND\nIN OLD MOYIE MINE\nMOYIE, B.C. \u2014 Three shifts are\noperating at the diamond drill work\nat the St. Eugene Extension, |\nwith two men on each shift. Dur- j\ning the operations at the Lake I\nShore shaft a good light globe was!\nfound in the depth of this shaft'\nwater,. On reaching bedrock the I\ndriller located an ancient beer bottle \\\nbearing the label \"Moyie Brewery.\"]\nAt one time Moyie boasted of the \\\nbest beer on the market. The late\nMr. Neiderstadt was the famous\nbrewer.\nPOLICE FIRES AT BURGLAR\nEDMONTON, March 5 (CD -\nThree shots were fired by Constable\nG. L. McPeake of the City Police\nForce at a burglar who fled after\nbeing spied while allegedly attempting to steal an automobile\n[rom a service station early today\nThe burglar escaped.\nRobertson Addition\nGets Water Service\nFrom City of Trail.\nTRAIL, B. C, March 4 \u2014 The City\nof Trail will supply water service\nto Hugh W. Robertson's subdivision adjoining East Trail as and\nwhen it is required. Mayor Herbert\nClark reported to the City Council\nMonday night.\nHe said that in a meeting with\nMr. Robertson last Thursday, the\nFire, Water and Light Committee\nhad definitely agreed to supply tha\nservice.\nMILITARY FUNERAL FOR\nAUSTRALIAN GENERAL\nMELBOURNE, March 5 (CP Reuters).\u2014A military funeral was held\nhere today for Lieut,-General Ernest Squires, Acting Chief of the\nAustralian General Staff, who died\nSunday.\nTAKE A TIP FROM\nJUDGE HARDY and SON\nLET YOUR SON BE A\nCREDIT TO HIS FATHER\nSet your mind at ease\n\u2014secure his education\nthe Imperial Life way\nWHEN he is ready to plunge into the\nhurly-burly of competitive business or\nprofessional life, you may not be here. But\neven now, through Imperial Life, you can\nmake certain that whatever happens, your\nson will be equipped to be a credit to you\n\u2014educated to compete. And never his\neducation been more essential to success.\nYou, alone, can decide whether your\nson's education will be haphazard and\nincomplete, or systematic and thorough.\nMany provident fathers, remembering the\nhandicaps they had to overcome, have made\ncertain that their children will have every\nadvantage that education can give them, by\ntaking out an Imperial Child's Thrift Policy.\nThis provides that a sum of money, the\namount you decide upon, will be paid\nyour son at a given date.\nThe Imperial Child's Thrift Policy has\nthis striking advantage\u2014should you pass\naway prematurely the Imperial Life will pjy\nthe premiums until the child is 21 and able\nto continue the payments if any are still\ndue. See an Imperial Life representative\nat your irst convenience.\nSet MICKEY ROONEY md LEWIS\nSTONE In \"|UDCE HARDY AND\nSON\" at the CAPITOL THEATRE\nIMPERIAL\nLET US SEND YOU THIS BOOKLET\nThe title III \"Monty hr Them.\" You'll find ii very\nhelpful,  ll il free. Write Imperiil life Aaiurinct\nCo., 20 Victoria Street, Toronto, Ont.\nLIFE\n mmmmmmmm\nipiijiinijiiHipt\nMOl woua\n-NHL80N DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B. C-WBDNHDAY MOBNINO, MARCH I, lam\u2014\nFRANCE\nEmotions,..\nSays Women Nol\nCivilized Where\nI   Men Concerned\n\u25a0y CAROLINE CHATFIELD\n\"Thin wouldn't bi tnjr dvlllM-\nUon In the world today If it weren't\ntor the men,\" uld om ot them.\n\"Civilization dill on > ferrule's\nbade u water on a duck'i bick: lt\nmns right oil\" Before the women\npresent had time to scratch his\neyej out, be continued: \"We have\na neighbor who's noted In the community for her good works. She's\nkindly, hu more common sense\nthan thi average woman and if\nanybody had aaked me to pick out\na civilized woman I would hive\nnamed her. But not now.,\n\"Thi other night it \u25a0 friend's\nhome thl subject of stepping out\nhusbands cime up for discussion.\nSuch conversations are, of course,\nlargely facetious but as far ai thi\nwomen ari concerned they ire very\nrevealing. The women heave to ind\ntill their middle names without\nrealizing what they are doing. On\nthii particular occasion they were\ntaking turns at saying what they\nwould do if their husbands offended. I waited expectantly for this\nrarticular lady to speak her piece.\nwas sun ahe would state a mode\nof procedure that would be practical and a bit subtle too. I mfssed.\n\"I know exactly what I'd do If\nmy husband were lured away from\ntn*. I'd get a pistol and shoot the\nwoman in the back the first time\n! caught sight of her.\"\n\" \"You're joking, aren't you?\" I\n\u2022ikid.\n\" 'Indeed I'm not I wu never\nsnore serious in my Ufa.\"\n\"In view of the fact that the end\nand aim of civilization is to tame\nprimitive emotions and mike human beings obey the laws of society\nthit win madi for the individual's\nprotection, I maintain that civilization won't take on thi female of\nthe species where her nun is con-\ncernid. She fights the primitive\n(tim with fire and if tin mon\ncivilized man hadn't invented the\npistol, she would use sticks, stones,\ntones and do a good job with these\nweapons for she's a killer.\"\nAt question bilging you can't\nbelt a man when hea miking a\npoint against the women. What, I\nwonder, does the gentleman think\nof stepping out husbands? If civilization aims to tame primitive emotions, how comes it that the poli-\nfimoils husband who steps out on\nfill wife isn't quite as uncivilized\nas thi wife who shoots to kill the\nwoman who beckoned him? I say\nthat's mother cue of pot calling\nkettle black.\nLONDON (CP)-OetUng up and\nfeolng to mass every morning it\n\u2022even, Mary Fern, ft, had sevenl\nfalls. One day she collapsed and\ndied in church, snd a coroner found\n\u2022hc died on concussion caused by\nthe falls. r\nBaptist Girls Plan\nfor Supper Meeting\nAt t anting ot the Baptist Oirls\nClub Monday night, at the Church,\nafter reading from the study book,\na devotional period on \"The In-\nDwelling Christ\" waa lid by Mlas\nEllin McCandllsh, based on Saint\nPaul's statement to the Galatlani,\n\"Christ llvith In me.\" Mlas Evely.i\nPerdue completed the program with\na reading entitled ''A Young\nMIsslonw**;.\"\nPlans wen audi for a supper\nmeeting. after Easter. The evening\nclosed with refreshments.\nExercise...\nSleeplessness Is\nUsually a Habll\n\u25a0y DONNA ORACE\nSleep and rest Is necessary for\nthose who care about their beauty.\nThe majority of us have little trouble ln going to sleep when we get lo\nbed. We have med up the strength\nfor the time we have been ictive\nand need to sleep, so no pills or\nsheep counting are needed.\nNormal healthy persons leldom\nworry ibout aleep but rather plan\nto go to bed to have enough sleep\nbefore the time they expect to get\nup. Then are others, alas, to whom\na good restful sleep is a luxury.\nThey are nervous and envy those\nwho can go to bed and get up refreshed. Everyone has had at least\none or two wakeful nights, and wt*\ncan sympathize with those who\ncannot relax.\nMany of the wakeful ones would\nfind relief if they would make a\nfew changes in the daily routine,\nMost of them lack sufficient phys-\nieal exercise, or do all their work\nwithout going out for fresh air.\nThey do all their heavy worrying\nas soon aa they lie down and have\na fixed idea that thay just can't\nposeibly jleep-and they can't poor\nWith the exception of those who\nmay be suffering trom Illness and\nneed medical attention, sleeplessness usually Is a habit. Nature will\nnot demand rest for the muscles if\nthe body has been Inactive. While\nheavy meals will sometimes cause\na stuporous sleep, this Indulgence\nwill not insure a night's rest. Continuous smoking and frequent nibbling of food or drinks prevents\nrelaxation.\nOne should take the time to write\nout a record of just how the time\nis spent during the day, accounting for all of the time. The schedule should include early rising, no\nmatter whether the hour for retiring was late or not. A brisk shower\nfollowed by quick dressing and\nplenty of deep breathing, a light\nbreakfast followed by a good walk\n\u2014thla Is a must and should be long\nenough to stimulate circulation.\nExercise at home will do for\nthose who can't go out. Be conscious of keeping the muscles active during the dsy. Don't think\nof taking a nap and sit aa little as\npossible.   Do   some  mental   work,\nMnh.t(oi\n\u25a0y IITIY NEWMAN\nTODAY'i MENU\nCreimed Salmon and Spaghetti or\nMacaroni\nButtered or Harvard Beets\nMolded Tomato Salad\nApple Rloe Pudding\nTn or Coffee\n-CREAMED SALMON, MACARONI\nCook a sutticlent amount of macaroni in boiling, silted water until\ntender, about 20 minutes; blanch\nby rirolnE in hot water end drain.\nMelt one tablespoon butter ln saucepan, add om tablespoon flour, mix\namooth, then gradually add one cup\nor mora of tweet milk. Bring to\nboil, stirring constantly until It ll\nthickened and amooth, season with\nom half teaspoon salt and a little\npepper or paprika (you may med\na little mora salt; taste to see.)\nThen add a can of pink salmon,\nflaked and freed from bonea and\nbits of skin. You csn use the oil\non the salmon too, as lt contains\nvaluable food elements, unless there\nla too much or the family taste forbid*.\nButter biking dish, put In macaroni or spaghetti, add creimed salmon and mix thoroughly, or put Ln\nlayir of macaroni, then a layer\nof fish, alternating until all ara\nused. Top with crumbs snd brown\ntn oven for about 19 minutes.\nHARVARD BEETS\nTwelve small beets or two cups\ncooked beets, cubed; two tablespoons butter, one half tablespoon\ncornstarch, one fourth cup augar,\nona halt cup mild vinegar one-\nfourth teaapoi n sslt are needed.\nMelt butter in ssucepen, add cornstarch and mix smooth. Stir In su-\nSir;   idd  vinegar slowly,  stirring\nIn carefully until smooth, then\nChemistry...\nThe Brain (annol\nFunction Without\nWaler and Oxygen\nBy LOOAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nAre then any chemical or physical changea ln the brain during\nactive function? In other words, is\nthere a chemistry of Intelligence?\nThere is a great deal of data but\nwe would noF like to come lo any\ndefinite conclusions. 'The bnln re-\naulres oxygen, sugar and water.\n'Isturbance in the water balance of\nthe brain is disastrous, resulting in\ndecreased mental efficiency, and,\nwhen the balance is profoundly upset, coma and delirium.\nThe water balance of the brain is\nintimately bound up with the acid-\nbase equilibrium. The epileptic\nbrain is an alkaline brain. Tne diabetic brain Is an acid brain and, if\nnot balanced by proper treatment,\nresults in retarded mentation and\nsutpor.\nThe brain cannot function at all\nwithout oxygen. Balloenlsts at\n25,000 feet or more find their mental reaction so impaired that tbey\ncannot make observations.\n\"Are our thoughts also at the\nbottom electrical? asks Dr. Albert\nP. Mathews, professor of biochemistry. \"Whenever a nerve impulse\nsweeps over a nerve it is accompanied by an electrical disturbance.\nWhen the nerve impulses play back\nand forth over the commissures ot\nthe brain, they are accompanied by\nthis pale lightning o( the negative\nvariation. Is that pale lightning\nwhat we recognizee as consciousness?\"\nQUE8TI0N8 AND ANSWERS\nL. C: \"Will you please tell mo\nif powder blown into the nose could\ngel into the cars and Injure them?\"\nAnswer: It Is a possibility but a\nvery faint one. I never heard of a\ncase.\nLENTEN REDUCING DIET\nFOR WEDNESDAY\n(Adhere to the amounts of food\nordered.)\nBreakfast:' One slice of pineapple, one soft-boiled egg, one slice\nof toast with butter: coffee with one\npiece of augar and teaspoonful of\ncream.\nLunch: Two tablespoonfuls of\nchicken salad, one glass ot milk,\ntablespoonful of ice cream, coffee\nor tea with lemon.\nDinner: Cup ot cream of tomato\nsoup, average helping meat and\ntwo vegetables; one slice bread and\nbutter; small slice nt apple pie,\ncoffee or tea with lemon.\nDay's Calories \u2014 1200.\n'i.i    t   ai fl\"\nstyle Harmony\nMade-for-eicli-other is i catch\nphrase we've blip using frequently\nto describe thi color ind fabric tie-\nups In new fashions. A tailored ault\nhu ill matching sailor, I loft wool\nfrock ii shown with hat, gloves, big\nand shoes ill in one shade. It Isn't\nnecessary, these days, to depend on\na made-to-order source to look well\nturned out, so exacting are the\nmatches in the shops. Evening will\nbring forth as many harmonizing\naccessories, including thl glamorous\ngloves shown today, of clectra-me\ntalllc kidakin exactly like thi trim*\nming on thl slippers. Absinthe green\nis the shade of the stiff, jewel-like\nkid, with fiurchettei ind palm ot\nblack suede. Petals on thl black\nsatin shoe ire mi-colored.\nSerial Story\nBy Alma Sioux Scarberry\nParadise Is Here\nLearn a verse if nothing else. Avoid\nheavy meals. Associate with agree-1\nable  persons.\nSet a time for going to bed and!\ngive yourselfjime  (or a soothingijn\nThe characters:\nRomany Haile, who wants to be\na radio star.\nCholly O'Neil, her pal, who plays\nin a music store.\nBrent Nelson, successful young\nannouncer, in love with Romany.\nDover Hayworth. wealthy sciun,\nwith Cholly.\nwarm   bath.   Don't feel  you   must;    Myra  Noyes,   famous radio  star\nsleep in a cold room. Have some j and ox-fiancee of Brent.\nfrc.ah air, but keep wirm. A warm I    Terry O'Rourke. a singer who had\ndrink ol milk, malted milk or hot; been engaged to Chollv\nlemonade may be satisfying and a\ncracker or two will krep the stomach satisfied.  Go to bed  knowing\nyou will sleep and get up at  the\nI1\nTr\nBaxter Tree, a continuity writer\nwithout a job.\nYesterday: Romany finds that\nBaxter   Tree   Ls   a  staunch   friend,\nearly hour you set. Be sure to keep I helping   her   frequently   with\nIt takes up half the page.\" Rom\n1 sat up in bed.\n\"Gimme,  quick!\"\nShe read:\n\"Farm Implement Heiress Makes\nRadio Bow Tomorrow. As Celeste,\nthe new menace in Myra Novel' hii\nTwilight of Love, this new beauty,\nRomany Halle, comes to the airwaves. Miss Haile also ls ln the race\n(or the title of Miss Television.\nThe contest takes place during the\nholidays by fan voting.\"\nThc picture showed Romany in\nAunt Clssie's most seductive gown,\nher lovely back bared and her held\nturned so that her clear-cut, sun*\nadd beets and let stand in warm\nplace until beets are heated through\nand well flavored. Season with salt\nand pepper and add more sugar it\nnot sweat enough to suit taste. This\nserves four.\nAPPLE RICE PUDDING\nThree cupe milk, ons fourth cup\nrice, one egg, one fourth cup sugar,\nom half teaspoon vanilla, four\natewed apples. Wash rice, add to\nmilk and boll in double boiler until rice is tender, stirring from time\nto time to prevent rice from stick-1\ntni.\nCooking time will be from thne-\nquarters of an hour to one hour.\nRemove from fire, add sugar, beat-!\n\u2022n egg, and vanilla, beaten together!\nand mix well Arrange in biking!\ndish sliced, stewed apples, then;\nfill dish nearly full with rice. SeN\npudding in a pin of hot water and I\nDike In 400 F. oven until a light |\nbrown. Sirvi plain or with cream.\n\u2022inana Wh\u00bb*ewM\u00abt iaoon Muffins\nTo maki 28 or lo lsrge muffins,\nuse two ind one half cups wholewheat flour, two and one half teaspoons biking powder, one half teaspoon soda, teaspoon salt, one third\ncup augar, one well-beaten egg, una\nand one half cups mashed bananas.\nona half cup sour milk or buttermilk\nom fourth cup melted shortening.\nand one fourth cup diced cooked\nbacon.\nMix together thoroughly flour,\nbaking powder, salt, ind sugar und\nbacon. Combine egg, bananas, milk\nand shortening Add to flour mixture, mixing only enough U> dampen all flour. Turn into well-greased\nmuffin tins and bake In 410 T. oven\n30 to 28 minutes, or until muffins\nan done.\nFLORIDA  LOAF\nTwo tablespoons shortening, four\ntablespoons sugar, one egg, two nips\nsifted flour, three teaspoons baking\npowder, teaspoon salt, one cup or-\n\u2022 ngt Juice. teaspo*n grated orange\nrind, three fourths cup chopped nu'.-\nmeats.\nCream shortening and sugar, add\nbeaten egg. Mix and sift flour, bk-\nIng powder and salt; add alternately with orange juice to first mixture. Add orange rind and nutmrat,\npour Into oiled loaf pan Rake ri\n.u*. T. oven for one hour Serve hot\nNice with butter and jrlly\nDATE  MUFFINS\nFor 12 medium sired muffins un\ntwo cupi (lour, one half cup corn\nmeal, four taaapoons phosphate baking powder, teaspoon salt, two tablespoons sugar; one cup sliced pai*\ntaurlred dates, one egg, ona and I\none fourth cups milk, two table-\nspoons melted butter.\nSift dry ingredients together Cut\ndltes Into six or eight pieces with\nwet scissors, and and to first mix-\nturf. Beat egg slightly, add milk j\nand melted butter Stir into dry in-.\ngndlenU. Avoid over-beating, that;\nproduces coarse muffins Bake in j\nwell-oiled muffin pans in 400 M\noven 23 lo 30 minutes.\nregular  schedule  and  you\ntrain yourself out ot these dreary\nwakeful nights.\nWATFORD, England ICP>\u2014Because his father, in ex-soldier, asked on his deathbed that he should\nnever serve in the army, a 20-year-\nold grocer of Wstford was unconditionally registered as a conscientious objector.\nradio scripts.\nCHAPTER 22\nCholly held thc radii page of the\n.Sunday  Globe nut  to Kumanv\n:'a\nti\"; tanned profile stood out beautifully,\nIt was framed by her jet black\nhair, sleeked over her ears, with I\nsoft roll low on the neck\nYou look like royalty ought to\nk,\" Cholly sighed enviously. \"I\nhi* awakened. Romany asked sleep- don't blame  them for layin\nily\n'What next?''\n'There's hardly room led for Uie\nprograms.   Look   al   your   picture'\nthat\nRo<\nFor Dancing Divinely\nIly PRUNFJAA WOOD\nAll of us are jubilant over the new chiffons. There never will be\na lovelier material or one more to be depended on year after year.\nI.imr, lemon, grey and, in 'hr r.ui* of today's gown, fuchsia, an* some\ni>( the leading .^linclm in both resort and Northern night sixits. A great\nmany of the ilrrs-ea are topped by wool jackets, others defy anyone\nlo conceal pretty shoulder draping and graceful decolletages.\nThe chiffon. Ie(t, i. ni.a.a-,-roMed high In front and cut into a low\nV In beck. The elongated waistline is one to watch in both day and\nevening styles. A cnisa-t to go along ia Just around the corner.\nRight, a gown, as light in the hand, perhaps, as chiffon, Is fashioned\nof Imported sUrched rrenr. which keeps its crlapness regardless of\nmany dry cleanings Purple and fuchsia daisies me printed on a white\nground, arid green velvet ribbon brings in a third shade on the fitted\nbodiee A quaint-looking riresa nn the hanger, it is extremely chic on\nthe figuie  It has a double bustle-bow.\nheiress business on thick. O\nmey, aren't you lucky?\"\n\"So will you be some of these\ndays,\" Romany predicted brightly,\nwishing again there were something* she could do to help Cholly\nin radio. \"If I could help you get a\nstart!\"\n\"As If living here chaperoning\nyou Isn't saving my life. Cholly\ntried to sound cheerful. \"You atop\nworrying about me and enjoy your\nsuccess! I'm just as happy as you\nabout the breaks you're getting.\"\n\"I know you are darlin'.\" Romany slipped into her house coat.\n\"But I'd be terribly jeaUus if you\nwere in my shoes and I In yours\"\n\"Ves. you would,\" scoffed Cholly\n\"You're just the type!\"\nBrent and Romany were on the\nbeach that afternoon when Dover\narrived for the promised Sunday\ndinner. Cholly met him at the door\nin a big white apron she'd found\nhanging in the kitchen. It was twice\nher size. Her face was flushed and\nthere was a smudge of flour on ner\ncheek. Dover brushed the imudge\nawav.\n\"Woman!\" He stood back, holding\nher at arms' length. \"If you weren't\nyou, I'd almost s\u00bby you'd spent\nnours picking out a costume to dss-\nzle me with,\"\n\"Just for that,\" threatened Cholly,\n\"I'll put arsenic ln your fried chicken. I was going to change before\nyou* got here. But you're fiftean\nminutes early.\"\n\"I couldn't wait,\" grinned Dovet\n\"Ynu look like an angel costumed\nby Omar the Tentmaker.\"\nCholly started for the kitchen.\n\"Do you want to come out here?\nI'm right in the middle of things.\"\nDove sniffed st thc pots and pain.\n'Fried chicken, mashed potatoes,\ngreen beans, celery! Homemade apple pic! I came early Just to make\nsure you really were going to cook\nthese.\"\nThc doer bell rang. Cholly wss\nrolling chicken In flour.\n\"I'll get it,\" said Dover.\nHc came back loaded down with\npackages.\n'These seem to be for you.\"\nCholly looked perplexed. She\nwiped her hands on her apron.\n\"I didn't order anything sent. Perhaps Romany did,\"\n\"No. they're fcr you,\" Dover could\nbarely see over the load In his arms.\n'Take them into the living room.\"\nCholly followed him out of the\nkitchen. 'There must be some mis-\nlake.\"\nDover put the packages down\non the table unsmllingly. Cholly\nopened the long box first. Two dozen American beauty rosesl In another box were two bottles of champagne. Three pound box of candy,\nseveral magazines.\nShe looked al Dove acverely.\nThen she threw her arms around\nhis neck happily.\n\u2022Thanks. Santa Claus! But don't\nlet il happen again or I'll never invite you to dinner.\"\nDuver said blandly:\n\"1 didn't do it. They're probably\nfrom soi e old guy with whiskers\nwho likes red hair and freckles. I\ngo for blondes myself.\"\nDover waa scrubbing vegetables\nfor the salad when Brent and Romany arrived from lift beach.\n\"Well,\" Brint grinned, \"11 thii\nIsn't ii touching a little domestic\nscene as these old eyes evir lit\nupon. Blow me down, if I don't\nsmell orange blossoms iround\nhere!\"\n\"We calls lt home,\" grinned Choi\nly. \"And shut up before I put you\nto work. Come to think ot it, I\nguess you ind Romany hid better\nset the table.\"\n'I was afraid of that,\" sighed\nRomsny. \"But walt'll I take a shower. Thl guest shower Is down thl\nhall, Brent. I'll meet you it the ill*\nver cabinet in five minutes.\"\nIt was \u25a0 gay dinnir and i dell*\ncioui one. Dover ate is though it\nwen hia lilt meal.\n\"Charlotte!\" He got up finally\nand dropped to one knee In front\nof her,   will you marry me?\"\nChollv atudfid prettily.\n\"Well!\" Her eyes dinced. I'm\nafraid not I don't think we could\never live on your measly Incomel\"\nBrent broke ln.\n\"Yeah!\" he nodded iidly. \"It's\ntoo bid, too. And both of you so\nyoung ind ln love ind fond of fried\nchicken.\"\nMaybe,\" sighed Romsny, \"if you\nspoki to your father, Dover, he'd\nincreise your allowinoe a little.\"\n\"Hi won't' Dove shook his held\nforlornly. \"He says I'll not get ons\ncent over twenty-five thousand i\nyear.\"\nThe old ikin flint!\" Cholly sob,\nbed. \"It would servi him right &\nwc got mirrled ind went on re*\nlief.,p\nLater, the boys wslked down to\nthe besch while Romany ind Cholly\ndressed to go out.\n\"Dove is mad ibout you,\" Romany told Cholly from the bathroom\n\"I'll bet a million bucks he really\nwill ask you to marry him.\"\n'You're craiyl' Cholly yelled.\n\"Okay! Im crazy! But I know\nlove when I see it. He's adorable,\nCholly. Don't you think you could\nlove him?\"\n\"And what,\" Cholly aaid tape\ntiently, \"if I did fall in love with\nhim? Dont you think I'd havi too\nmuch sensi to ever let him knvw\nIt? I tell you no one hu ever found\nhappiness marrying out of his own\nclass.\"\nRomany sighed.\n\"Hsve you been reading dime\nnovels again? Well, go ahead and\nspoil your life if you wiot to. But\nif you ilk me, Dover Hayworth is\none of the nloeit men I've ivjr met\nin my life. I approve of him in\nevery wiy.\"\n\"Thinks,\" Cholly smiled uncertainly. \"You don't always ipprove\nof my boy friends.\"\n\"You could mean Terry,\" Romany\nstudied her face. 'Tell me, Cholly,\nyou've gotten over all your foolishness shout him, haven't you? You\ndon't love him any more?\nCholly turned away.\nThat,' she said very low, \"Is .\nclosed chapter in my life. I\u2014let's\nnot talk about it. I've never heard\nfrom him alnce the afternoon he\ncame Into the store. I guess\u2014he's\nthrough too.\"\nDover seemed to bow to almost\neveryone In Landau's where the\nfoursome danced later. Cholly felt\nuncomfortable because they seemed\nto be In the centre of attrition. Brant\nand Romany were partly respon\nsible for the interest, of course, but\nCholly knew Dover's friends were\nwondering who she might be. He\nwas so obviously attentive that\nCholly felt doubly conspicuous.\nFortunately, Pee Wee Tyler did\nnot put In an appearance. At least\nthat wss a great consolation lo\nCholly.\nBut they were leaving Landau\nat one o'clock, walking through\nthe foyer, when Cholly looked up\nand straight Into the eyes of Terry\nO'Rourke. At his side, sophisticated\nand dazzling In black tulle, was\nMyra Noyes. Romany glanced aide\nwise at Cholly quickly and saw her\nface whiten.\nCholly could never quite know\nhow her weik knees carried her out\nIhe door of Landau's and to Dover\nHayworth's waiting car. It was the\nfirst time that she had ever seen\nTerry with another girl. And he\ndidn t look at all down and out or\nheart broken. He looked gay\u2014snd I\nindifferent!\nHer Terry!\nTo  Be Continued\nWomen Will Serve al Social Centres\nand Canteens Behind the Front Lines\nLONDON CP), \u2014 Thru hundred\nwomen will shortly leave England\nfor Franci to take a fresh, cheer,\ning Influence of home to thl men\nof the Brltlih forces. They will\nserve at thl many social centres ind\ncanteens which an rapidly being\nestablished behind thl line throughout thl British wir zona.\nSome will be middle-aged woman\nwho served with thl Salvation Army\nin the lut wir ind will be going\nout with their husbands to help\nthem with their work. Large number! will be girls in their JO'i who\nare giving up work it home to go tu\nFrance \"for thi duritlon.\"\nA \"full speed ahead\" order to\nsocial organizations wis issued re\ncently from General Heidquirters.\nNot only the Salvitlon Army, but\nall thl Y. M. C. A, thl Church\nArmy, the Church of Scotland ind\nthi Catholic Womin'i Leigue will\nhelp In this new drive for the welfare of thl fighting forces.\nAccording to thi General Secretary. Z. F. Willis, thin an heavy\ndemands from ill commaYids tor\nmobile canteens. They bring tea,\ncigarettes, chocolates ind other\nsnacks.\nA number of canteens will be established for Brltlah troopi right\nup ln the Maginot Line when tea,\nhot milk md \"snacks\" will be obtainable. Canteens In such advanced position will be run by men\nworkers only.\nRelaxation .. .\nHelp In Curing\nChild's Insomnia\n\u25a0y GARRY C. MYERE, Ph.D.\nI receive a good many lettera\nabout chlldnn over six who lie\nawake for hours after going to bed.\nA nuisance in adults, insomnia is a\nstill greater nuisance ln children.\nSuch \u2022 child should first be\nchecked carefully by a doctor to determine If there la an organic disorder. The child might be overweary or over-excited at bedtime,\nin which event he ahould be helped\nto have a quieter day, and to relax\nfor brief periods each day. Reading\nto him then might help quiet him.\nSome very bright, Imaginative\nchildren have so much to think\nabout that they will lie awake inventing, creating and planning after\ngoing to bed. Some of these laggards\nat falling asleep also have the habit\nof calling \u25a0 parent to them to ask\na questlcn or minister to them in\nsome way; some will often get out\nof bed and go about the house. Such\nhabits cm easily persist ln delaying\nsleep. Let the mother of the younger child not allow such nuisances\nto develop.\nJEALOUSY COMMON\nThen some chlldnn, is well si\nidults, have worries on their mind\nat bedtime. The most serious worries, perhaps, center around thi\nfur oi not being loved so well u i\nbrother or alater \u2014 jealousy. Thi\nfollowing case seems to indicate\nJealousy as a source of Insomnia.\n\"We have two girls, one ten and\nthe other 16 months,\" a mother\nwritw. \"The younger la i good\nsleeper while the other seems to\nhive to much difficulty getting to\nsleep. Shi will lie awake hours\naftir going to bed, sometimes morning or cqlng softly.,.. Or she will\nsleep i few hours, then wike up\nind lie awake for hours,\n\"All her life her habits hive been\nregular. ... She ind Baby share\nthe same room, but have different\nbeda . , . room dirk, no light on.\n\"I hivi tried everything\u2014Ignoring the matter, spanking, punishing by denying \u25a0 pleisure, closing\nthe door\u2014but to no avail . . .\n\"I have had her to a doctor, but\nthis makea the trouble so much\nstronger in her mind thit she worries more ibout It. , .. Is she lying\niwske Intentionally, do you think,\nor can't she reilly help lt?\"\nNOT ON PURPOSE\nI tried to inure this mother that\nher diughter did net lie swake on\npurpose and urged her never to rebuke the child for lying awake, or\nto talk about It as unusual, but to\nfind ways to make her feel more secure emotionally, more worthwhile\n\u2022nd feel sure she Is loved ss much\nll the baby. I advised:\n\"Show her more affection, y:u\nand Dad; spend more time with her.\nShow more interest in what she\ndoes and play up her successes\nHave her go to bed much later than\nthe baby, since she is so much older.\nRead and play quiet games with her\nbefore bedtime. Help her win more\nfriends and attract her playmalu\nto your home, seeing that the baby\ndoes net interfere with their fun\nand mess up big sister's things.\nTry to create a serene but joyous\nfamily atmosphere.\"\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. Our pastor brsgs about tha\nway his son save* money by hitchhiking from college. I also know a\ncollege profesnr whose sen hitchhikes with his approval. We have a\nboy entering college and our funds\nare greatly limited. Should we encourage him lo hitch-hike?\nA. In my humble Judgment, h:\\Y\nhiking, except ln cases of dislrti!.\nIs morally snd economically wrong.\nIn many states it Is Illegal. I'd rather have a child of mine begging fur\nbread than for a ride. He would\nbe \\tif of a public nuisance.\nWASHINGTON (CP)-A nation-\nwide five-year survey conducted by\nthe American association of Un,\nverslty Women shows 57 per cent\nof rutal husbsnds willing to assume\n\"some domestic responsibility to\nfree their wives for outside interests\" ss against 40 per cent of the\ncity husbands.\nCOSTUMES FEATURE\nLEAP YEAR DANCE\nOF NAKUSP AUXILIARY\nNAKUSP, B. C.-On February 2)\nthe Nlkuip Women's Hospital Auxiliary sponsored a Leap Year Dance\nin the Nlkuap Opera Home.. The\nHall wu decorated with nd md.\nwhlti streamers. The affair to)k\nthe form of I Masquerade. Misi\nMary Rushton. aa Scarlett O'Hara,\nwas awarded the ladies first prize,\nand Miss Marlon Bair, as Miss 1IM0\nwu second. Special prizes were\ngiven to Miss Betty Mahoiluk, as\na Hula, Hula Girl, and to Miss\nIrene Buerge as Midnight. Men'i\nfirst prize went to George Dodds\n\u2022s in absent-minded professor,\nwhile second prize went to Mrs.\nM. Balrd as a negro. A thermos\nbottle was won by Paul Bjorkland.\nJudges were Miss A. Brown, G. W.\nM. Hakeman md G. Smith.\nMrs. H. Thurgood waa In chirgi\nof the door, and refreshment conveners were Mrs. W. Maxwell and\nMrs. J. Parent Sr. Doughnuts were\nmide by Mri. A. Watson and Mrs.\nM. Kerr.\nNOVELTY PARTY AT\nKASLO IS ENJOYED\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Tueidiy afternoon\nMrs. Leona Lockard wai hostess of\n\u25a0 \"novelty\" pirty when guests were\nbidden to go dressed to represent\nvarious popular songs. The consequent guessing contest resulted in\nMrs. Paterson being successful In\ncorrectly naming the greatest number of song titles md winning i\nprize. Other contests md games\nwere played. Mrs. Lockard's guests\nwere Mesdames J. Fielding Shaw,\nS. H. Oreen, A. McQueen, Eric Johnaon, John Paterson, John Aim, H.\nSullivan, Mack Murphy md Mrs.\nBrenilson of Balfour, the latter being i guest ot Mrs. McQueen.\nSLOCAN CITY REBEKAHS\nHOLD SUCCESSFUL DANCE\nSLOCAN CITY! B.C\u2014A luccess-\nful Leap Year .Dance wu held in\nthe I.O.O.F. Hill, under thl auspices\nof Floral Rebekah Lodge. The Committee ln charge were Mrs. G.\nStrong, Mrs. Henry Horn md Miss\nIrene Terry.\nMOTHERS!\nDon't   Let Your\nChildren   Suffer\nDon't let them auBer from\nroughs, colda, weakneu or Ill-\nhealth that may be due to a\nlack of the vital Vltamina A\nand D and C, Give them theie\nvital Vltamina by a ateady\ntreatment with Hallborange.\nHallborange ia a splendid vitamin tonic; and la the nicest\nway of taking Halibut Liver Oil\n(Vltamina A and D) and freah\norange Juice (Vitamin C).\nHallborange li safe for vary\nyoung babies, and all children\nand adulta. Hallbonnti la prescribed by doctors In many\nhospitals In Gnat Britain ai\nwell as In Canada.\nGet a Ave or tin ounci bottle ol\nHallborange from your drug*\n|lst and trv It. See how quickly\nyour chlldnn will respond to\nIta treatment. Remember the\nname Hallborange Tha nicest\nway of taking Halibut Llfir OIL\nALIEN AND HANBUKY'S CO.\nLIMITTD, UNDSAY, ONT.\nTEA BISCUITS\nFHaaa aflwnanl.a\n1 Naaasaai aaJt 1 laNaaamnlMlaa\ntl.\u00abara\u00abna ', r.j ni  I .-1 -it*\nsales smalm        i Wl 1 m\u00bbl\nMETHOD: Silt flour with salt\nand baking powder 3 Umea. Cut\nlard or shortening and butter into\nflour mixture. Add liquid gradually,\n~ together and tum out on floured\nrat dough out with palm of hand\nnch thickofM. Cut with cutter.\non oiled l\u00bbk-\nsht-et and hike\nminutes in hot I\n\u2022**'\u2022\u25a0*\u00bb* M'ffBy COS\nPURITO FLOUR\nBest for all yourlidkinq\n \"*\u2022 \u2122'*\u21225!^effi1^WnafW7F''^ If^fW^^^,\n-\u2014\nc&i\nNew Spring Styles of\nTreadeasy\nSHOES\nAwait Your Approval\nR. Andrew & Co.\n\"Leaders in Footfashion\"\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C-WEONESPAY MOJININO. M.**\"***H 8, tt'.tle\t\nTrail Mother and Daughter Third and\nFourth Generations In This Family\nSIRDAR\nSIRDAH, B. C\u2014Among visitors\nlo Creston were Mr. >nd Mrs.\nSqworak and family, Mr. and Mrs\nDobinUi and Joe Mannarlno.\nMrs. J. S. WiUon and Mrs. Charles\nNelson were at Creston to sttend\nthe Chapter ct the Eastern Star.\nHarvey Gobbett of Creston has\nbeen appointed representative of\nthe Red and Gun Club for this\ndistrict.\nJ. S. Wilson was at Creston for\nS K.P, Lodge session.\nCharles J. Wilson was a visitor\nto Creston,\nWhen Mrs. Ormond Pasquill, 1866 Fourth Avenue Trail, standing,\nvisited her mother, Mrs. Charles Glover, right, in North Vancouver\nrecently, her grandmother, Mrs. John Kines of Roblin, Man., left was\nthere also, and Beth Pasquill being with her mother, the gathering\nbrought together four generations.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MISS PRISCILLA GELINAS\n\u2022 Mrs. Fanny Marapodi, Fair-\nview, had as weekend guests. Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Banks of Cranbrook.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. Frederick Niven\nof Willow Pcint visited Nelson yes-\nterdcy.\n\u2022 Mrs. Marie Fuchs of Sunshine\nBay spent Tuesday in town.\n\u2022 Ed Amell of Lardo visited\nNelson Monday,\n\u2022 James Aitken, who has been\nvisiting in Nelson, hts returned to\nthe Second Relief Mine.\n\u2022 Lieutenant G. C. Wallach, who\nis with the First Anti-Aircratt Regiment at Vancouver, is home on\nleave for two weeks.\n\u2022 E. HickB, Sr., ot Slocan City\nvisited Nelson Tuesday.\n\u2022 Dirk DeJong of Birchbank\nshopped in Nelson yesterday.\nJames  Donaldson   of   Salmo, I son yesterday.\nwho has been a patient In Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, has returned to his home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Angus McLeod.\n802 Mill Street, left Tuesday for\nRochester, Minn., where they will\nvisit for a month.\n\u2022 Mrs. A, Downey of Perry Siding spent Tuesday in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Johns Jr., of\nYmir were city visitors yesterday\n\u2022 Mrs. McEwan of Salmo was a\ncity shopper Tuesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kline of\nSlocan City visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Marapodi has left for\nKimberley, where she was called\nthrough the death of her nephew,\nJack Brunner,\nP. J. Sullivan visited in Nel-\nKASLO Social...\nTreatment at night. Relief in the morning.\nThat's th\u00ab world-wid-t reputation of\nMentholitum In r*\u00bbli<ving h\u00bbad colds and\n\u25a0Mil catarrh. Gat a 30c Jar or tuba today.\nWftntholatum htlpa fight colds. It quickly\npanatrataa Infactad \u25a0mnl areai\u2014dean\n\u25a0taffy head and note and promote** tit*\nbaalthy breath in* again.\nBuy It at your dru-Mtat today\u2014G uaran-\ntaad to brlnj reiki or money back.\nMENTHOLATUMIH\nOlvri   COMFORT  Dally\nEASTER DRESSES\nlovely Spring shades. All sizes.\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nOpp. Capitol Theatre\n\u25a0 4\"a>\u00bb* \u00bb*\u25a0\u2666\u25a0\u00bb \u00bb\u2666 \u25a0\nPhone 1047\nHOUSE FOR RENT\nNice location. White plumbing.\nFireplace\u2014 $23.00  per month.\nSTUART'S REAL ESTATE\nINSURANCE OFFICE\nAberdeen Block Phone 880\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St.\nPhone 260\nSmart Spring Coats\nIn pastels or navy.\nWool cloths and tweed.\nFashion First Shop\n439 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\n\u25a0.\u2666\u2666\u2666-<{.\u2014aM\nKASLO, B. C.-Wednesday evening Mrs. A. W. Bavington entertained at an enjoyable bridge party.\nGuests were Dr. and Mrs. D. J.\nBarclay, Mr. and Mrs. F, S. Rouleau,\nMesdames John Paterson, Lowerie-\nson. E. J. Thoroberg, B. F. Palmer,\nEric Paterson, Carl Hild, Perry\nAmas, P. M. Elder, Eric Aldous, C.\nW. Webster, G. S. Baker. C. E. Wilson, C. J. White, Fred Moulton and\nthe Misses Jennie Clarcy and Iris\nClarke. Mrs. John Paterson and\nMrs.  Barclay were winners.\nA delightful birthday party was\ntendered Mrs. C. Lundberg hy a\nnumber of her friends and neigh-\nors when guests were Mesdames\nButler, H. E. Price, C. Roberts,\n.. McHardy. F. Price, T. H. Horner,\nthe Misses Eleanor Horner and June\nPrice and Master Billy Price.\n\"Bud\"   Thompson   and   Gordon\nHaskell left recently for Gerrard to\nput the fish hatchery buildings, etc.\nin good condition.\nH. Stewart and H. Woods have\nleft for Crawford Bay where they\nhave taken over the Manwill ranch\nand will also have charge of the\npost office, Mr. Manwill has joined\nthe army.\nMrs. W. H. Driver visited her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. Glen Smith of Oak Bay, Wn.,\nwhile away at the Red Cross convention at Vancouver.\nCapt. M. K Harrison of Howser\nvisited town.\nMrs. E. C. Cherry and daughter\nConnie left to join Mr. Cherry in\nNelscn. where they will make their\nfuture home. Bobby, who is a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. L. Riley, will remain in Kaslo until the Easier holidays.\nAPPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C\u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. A. Watson visited Winlaw.\nMiss E. Bush was a visitor to\ntown.\nMrs. W. Innes of Vallican visited\nMr. and Mrs. F. Brooks.\nMr. Bereton of Nelson visited T.\nWynne.\nF. Day visited Slocan City.\nCLOSE TO HUNDRED\nSWANS NEAR SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. C.-The swans which\narrived at Duck Lake last week\nincreased and close to a hundred\nare now counted. This would appear to indicate these are part vi\nthe large number of swans known\nto have frequented the South shorts\nof Kootenay Lake as their number\non Duck Lake vary frcm hour to\nhour. The birds are reported to be\nin   excellent  condition.\nHorswill s\nCROCERIES\nThe best tervice in town.\nPHONE   235\nStirzaker, Jcffery\nAre Whist Winners,\nOdd Fellow Social\nNelson Odd Fellows Lodge entertained at a highly successful\nwhist drive and dance at the lodge\nhall Monday night, 19 tables being\nin play for the whist drive and the\ncrowd swelling for the dance following.\nHarry Stirzaker and Percy Jeffrey scored 44 to win first prize\nat whist, and second was taken\nby Mrs. T. E. Salo and K. Spencer\nwith a score of 39.\nA. S. Read was master of ceremonies for cards, and Albert Smith\nfor dancing The general committee\nincluded Glenn Morris, W. Wills\nand Walter Fisher, assisted by Mrs\nRead.\nMrs. Gallagher, in\nNelson 33 Years,\nPasses, Aged 75\nMrs. Elizabeth Gallagher, a rest-\ndent of NeUon for 33 years, died at\nher home. 411 Silica Street, shortly\nafter midnight Monday. Seventy-\nfive years of age, she had been ailing nearly 10 years.\nBom ln St. Joseph's Village, just\noutside of Ottawa, she spent the\npast half century in Britiih Columbia, coming to Kamloops In\nthe early days. With her husband.\nPatrick J. Gallagher, a C. P. B.\nman, she had lived 'In several\nBritish Columbia towns before\ncoming to Nelson. She was an active\nworker in Catholic Church circles.\nBesides her husband, she Is survived by a brother, Jack Kenney, in\nPortland, Ore., and two sisters in\nWinnipeg.\nPASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B. C.-Miss Helen\nFlynn has returned to Lethbridge\nafter visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Flynn for a month. She\nwas accompanied to Nelson by her\nbrothers L'arry and Bob.\nW. R. Perry was a guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. E. H. Hlrd at Slocan.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Hopland of Castle-\ntar visited here snd her daughter\nllizabeth who has been staying\nwith her Aunt, Mrs. M. Hopland,\nreturned to Castlegar with her.\nMrs. S. Held and Mrs. F. Soucey\nvisited Mrs. W. Young and Mrs.\nF. Flynn.\nMrs. K. Straloff visited at Brilliant.\nMiss B. Perry, Mrs. W. R. Perry,\nR. Flynn, J. Forbes visited at Val-\nlican.\n\"Gone With the Wind\" Best Picture of 1939\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C, - E. McGill, J.\nMcGill and D. McGill of Arrow\nPark visited town.\nD. Bourgoyne, foreman of the\nC. P. R. shipyard here, returned\nfrom a trip to Eastern Canada,\nwhere his family reside.\nA. Kent, W. Rogers, B. Robins,\nand G. Hardy were in town from\nArrow Park for the Leap Year\nDance.\nVisitors from Burton for the dance\nwere Miss Thelma Johnson, Miss E.\nMUculin, J. Walker, s. Walker, I,\nGuidon, B. Gesetski.\nMrs. F. Horrey. and Misses Edith\nand Stella Horrey left for Vancouver to make their home.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOGAN   CITY,  B. C.-Mr.  and\nMrs. R. Cook entertained the High\nSchool students at a party. Games\nand dancing were enjoyed.\nMrs. J. H. Pinchbeck visited Nel-\nio rv\nJohn Graham of Perrys Siding\nvisited here.\nW. Farenholtz visited Nelson,\nMrs. John Greenwood has returned from Tranquille.\nMrs. A. Y. Rae Is a patient in the\nSlocan Community Hospital, New\nDenver.\nMr. and Mrs. T M. Hufty and\nfamily visited Nelson.\nMrs. Charles Russell visited New\nDenver.\nMrs. J. Baillargeon and son, Andrew, visited at New Denver,\nMrs. A. Hurst ii visiting at Trail.\nSouth Slocan\n\"Gone With the Wind\" won the Academy of\nMotion Picture Arts and Sciences annual award for\nthe best picture of the past year and Vivien Leigh,\nleft, who played Scarlett O'Hara in the picture was\nadjudged best actress of 1939, Robert Donat, centre\nwas adjudged best actor for 1939 for his performance in \"Good-bye Mr. Chips,\" Judy Garland, right,\nwas given a special award for her work as a screen\nJuvenile. Miss Garland scored a success in the\n\"Wizard of Oz.\"\nC.N.I.B. Request for\nGrant Tabled, Trail\nUntil Budget Ready\nTRAIL, B. C.. March 5 \u2014 Request\nof the Canadian National Institute\nfor the Blind for the City to make\na grant ot $30 to offset the trade\nlicence for its kiosk in Trail, as\nmade in 1939, was tabled by the\nCity Council Monday night until\nthe 1940 budget was brought down.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B'. C-Rev. J.\nDewar attended the Kootenay Presbytery in Nelson.\nMrs. Charles Kennett and infant\ndaughter have returned from Community Hospital.\nDr, A. Francis visited Nakusp.\nT.  G.  Smith of  Wlnlaw  visited | Cranbrook^ dele,\nin  town\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Bob Webb\nof the staff of the Royal Bank has\nleft for a holiday.\nMrs. M, A. Beale has left to visit\nher son, Myles Beale, and her sister,\nat Victoria, She was accompanied\nto Vancouver by Mrs. F. W. Green\n.who will visit there for the next\nfortnight, and Miss Eleanor Green\nwho will remain there Indefinitely.\nMr. and Mrs. Ira McNaughtan Jr,\nof Calgary are visiting Mr. Mc-\nNaughtan's parents.\nMiss Hughina McCreath of Creston is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. O.\nScott.\nMrs. Marshall F. MacPherson has\nreturned from Vancouver where\nshe visited Mr. and Mrs. Allan MacPherson,\nMrs. H. A. McKowan has returned from Vancouver, where she was\nto the Provincial meeting of the Red Cross So-\n!-|CiHonaR. L. Maitland, K.C., was'\na visitor here before leaving for Toronto.\nited here\nJ. Taylcr and J. W. Butlin visited Nakusp.\nMrs, J. Jones has returned trom\nMartin Kennedy of Silverton is a| FreemOn   1$  Head OT\npatient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMrs. E. Angrignon entertained thc ......\nFive    Hundred   Club   with   three     ROSSLAND, B. C, March 5-Of\ntables in play. Those present were. ficers elected by the Rossland Oper-\n' atic   Society  recently   were  A.  H\nChester Roberts of Kimberley visited his parents here.\nMiss Betty Moscovich has returned from Fernie.\nArnold McGrath, M.L.A., has returned from Regina. While there he\nattended a session of the Saskatchewan Legislature and was presented\nfrom the floor of the house by\nPremier Patterson. Mr. McGrath left\nSunday for Vancouver.\nConstable Malcolm Macdonald and\nMrs. Macdonald have transferred\ntheir residence from an apartment\nln the Hanson Block to the house\non Armstrong Avenue, formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Richard\nLarge.\nE. K. Stewart of Fernie, Liberal\ncandidate for East Kootenay, is a\nvisitor here.\nMiss Florence Johnston of Jaffray\nvisited her parents.\nJack Millican of Kimberley was\na guest ot Mr. and Mrs, E. S. Home\nW. O. Scott has left for Grand\nForks, and the Boundary country.\n\u2022 an*  flvl\nI 1\nBrassieres\nA smart collection of new satin\nand lace brassieres have just arrived from the manufacturers.\nAll perfectly made and (I\u00bb-| AA\nstyled    JdI.UU\nj) fcrmonTlunt |$]\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nGREENWOOD\nGREENWOOD, B. C.-Mrs. J. M.\nBurnett and her daughter left to\nspend a few weeks in Vancouver.\nDon Hamilton left for Vancouver\nafter spending the Winter with Mr.\nand  Mrs.  J.  Kuppenbender.\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C. - Mrs.\nRemi Petit and Infant son returned\nhome.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Neale were\nNelson shoppers.\nCyril Fitchelt of Bonnington\nspent the weekend with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Fitchett.\nAt the meeting ot the Sunshine\nBay Group of the West Arm Auxiliary of Nelson Red Cross at Mrs,\nNick Dosenberger's home, Mrs. Lan\nAppleton was co-hostess. Mrs. J.\nSewell won a prize donated by Mrs,\nG. Barwis.\nNERVOUS RESTLESS\nU\/fltlEUi    MlaE.rinkham'e\nHUItIERi     Vegetable   Compound helps calm\njumpy nerves due to female functional distress. Made npsnotlg \/or\nwomen. T>\u00bb ill (Advt)\nRossland Operatic\nMrs. M. A. Cropp. Mrs. F. M. Camp\nbell, Mrs A. Greenlaw, Mrs. M. J\nNesmith, Mrs. A. Kirkwood, Mrs J\nB. Smith, Mrs. H. H. Pendry, Mrs\nR. W. Crellin, Mrs. T. Avison and\nMrs. D. Shannon.\nMOYIE\nFreeman, President; W. L. Grey,\nVice-President; F. M. Ethridge, Sec-\niclary; and Mrs, H. Mellor-Langdale. Treasurer. The music for the\nopera, \"Trial by Jury\", has arrived,\nand the second rehearsal was held\nin the United Church Annex Monday evening. Membership fees were\nset at 50 cents. It is planned to\nhave taken up  Rive thc op[,ra in the Capjtol t^.\natre during the latter part of April,\nMr.   and   Mrs,\nring  to:\ne:ch co\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrr. P. O, Bird entertained at their\nhome at an anniversary party. Hollywood, bridge. Chines* checkers,\ntoss, and a musical contest,\nounting points, was a novel\npastime.\nMrs. Grant Hall and W. A Bennett won the prizes for the highest\npoints and Mrs. R. K. McFadden\nand W. McPhail for the lowest. The\nrooms were fragrant with Spring\nblcFsomj, the supptr table centred\nwith a large bouquet of red tulips\nflanked by red candles in silver\nsconces.\nThe invited guests  included Mr,\nand Mrs. J. P. Cavell, Mr. and Mr?.\nmembers cf the Blewett and City I W. L, Neiley, Mr. and Mrs. W, A\nPlant  Auxiliary   held   two  lewingj Bennett. Mr. and  Mrs.  R. K. M\nMOYIE, B.C. -\nJohnson, Vanrnuvei\nresidence in Moyie\nMrs. Mark Nicholson has returned\nfrom a visit at Vancouver.\nMrs.  Louis  Desaulniers  and wn,   *p( Y       J   TJ\nNiel, of_Chapman Camp were guests j VavFclWIOrG   DclV\nt the Braiden home\nMr, and Mrs. Joe Rollheiser and\nfamily of Marysville were guests\nof Mr,  and  Mr.s.  Alec  StDenis.\nMrs. R. A. Smith entertained at\nbridge in honor of Mrs. Herman\nPeterson of Yank. M#.s. H. M, Pearson poured tea\nLONGBEACH\nLONGBEACH, B. C.-The Longbeach women held a successful tea\nin aid of the Red Cross at the home\nof Mrs. Burrard A. Smith.\nMrs. E. D. Rutherglen of Nelson\nwas a guest of Mr. and Mrs. H.\nLeggatt.\nJ. G. Whiteside of Traiil visited\nMr. and Mrs. Leggatt.\nMiss G. Houghton-Brown visited Nelson. *\nMrs. H. N. Major and children\nvisited Nelson.\nMiss Daphne Leggatt visited Nelson.\nFOR HEALTH \u2014 USE\nPASTEURIZED MILK\nCRAWFORD   BAY.   B.   C\u2014Miss\nNellie McGregor of Trail is visiting: |\/__j,. \\#   |l,_     f*\\    '\nher parens, Mr. and Mrs   George! KOOtenOV Valley UOiry\nMcGregor. PHONE 118\nMrs. Fox of Nelson spent a few [ muMM mmm ^-p\u2014 wmmw ___ ___\ndays at the Bay.\nMr.  Stewart of Nelson  and  Mr,\nExtra Special\nDuring Our 25th\nAnniversary\nSale\nB. C. Sugar\n10 \u00ab\u00a3\u25a0 69c\nMANY OTHER\nANNIVERSARY\nSPECIALS\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nPhone 707\nBill Newhouse and Mr, Parker o! j Woods of Kaslo, who has been ap-\nCanyon v:s;lcd Mr. and Mrs\nter Andrews\nWa\nDR.\nBlewett Busy on\nRed Cross Work\nBLEWETT, B. C.-The City Plant\nSAFEWAY\nEFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY MORNINC\nTendered PICNICS.. Lb. 15c\n25c\n15c\n15c\nBLACK FICS: or\n3 lbi \u00a3dC\nAPPLE JUICE: or\n10 ox., 3 tint  LtdC\nPORK AND BEANS: IA\nLibby'i 20 oi., tin ..  IUC\nECCS: Crade A large,\ndoz\t\n25c\nGRAPEFRUIT:\nArizona, 10 for\nHEAD LETTUCE:\n2 for  \t\nLEMONS: Medium\nlize, doz\t\nTURNIPS: or\nFine  cookers,   10 lbs. ^JC\nPEANUT BUTTER.... Lb. 9t\nPlease bring container\nSTEAKS: T-Bone, Sirloin or\nS\": 25c\nSHOULDER VEAL\nSTEAKS: 2 lbi. . .\n35c\nBACON: Back or       OA\nSide, iliccd. Ib OUC\nPORK KNUCKLES:\nLb\t\n10c\nLEAN HAMBURCER or\nSTEAK: 2 lbi <\u00a33C\nBREAKFAST\nSAUSACE: 2 lbi.\nSALT HERRINC\nLb\t\nPICS FEET:\nLb\t\nBACON ENDS:\n2 lbi\t\n25c\n18c\n5c\n25c\nCorn Flakes Quaker 4 pkts. 25c\nWI    RltKRVC    THI    niOHT    TO\nLIMIT    QUANTITII9\nmeetings recently at the homes cl\nMrs. J. E. Riley and Mrs. F. J. Hawkins, respectively, while the monthly meeting was held at the joint\nhomes of Mrs. P. M. Balding and\nMrs, G, J. Talbot of Blewett. Owing to the absence of both the President and Secretary-Treasurer, Mr*\nA. Nelson and Mrs. J. E. Riley, the\nchair wa.s taken by the Vlce-Pm-\ni-dent. Mrs. A. J. R.-binson. Follow-\nj ing a report on the sewing and knit*\nI ting,   the  members   then  dlscu.ss-.-d\nthe   sponsoring  of  gome event  to\n1 raise funds for the Red Cross. While\n'\u25a0 several suggestions were made, lhe\n] one mostly favored was the \u00bbpn*v\ni soring of a  bean supper, and the\nmatter was left in the hands cf th\"\ni Ways and Moans Committee, under\nj the ennvenership of Mrs. R. Grcy-\n\u25a0 son, to decide,\n\\ At the conclusion of the meetinc,\n1 dainty refreshments were served hy\nI the hostesses,\nFadden, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hull\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. Bland, Mr, mJ\nMrs, W. McPhail, M. Byrne and\nM   Walker.\nMr. and Mrs, J. P. Fink cf Nelson were guests of Mr. and Mrs\nG  C. Cobb\nMr. and Mri H. Friizelle of Nelson were guests of Mr. and Mrs. O\nW. Humphry, Mrs. Frizielle's parents,\nLieut.-Col Murray, who is a patient in the Kootenay Lake Gencr-jl\nHospital, Nelson, is reported improving.\nAULD AND NELSON\nFIRE CHIEF SPEAK\nTO SOUTH SLOCAN CLASS\nSOUTH SLOCAN, BC - The\nnursing classes held during the\nWinter closed Wednesday, with Mrs.\nW. A. Bennett presiding.\nDr. F. M. Auld i f Nelson gave an\naddress on accidents in the horn*-.*-*-\nfainting, t convulsions, burns, collapses and poisoning\u2014ruming simple remedies for each, and how tc\npointed Postmaster for Crawfcrd\nBay have taken up residence at A. j\nManuill's ranch.\nMr, and Mrs. Fisher and daughter)\nSheila and Mrs, Watson left for Nel-\nson, Mrs, Watson and Mrs, Fisher j\nen route for Vancouver. Mr. Fisher I\nand Sheila returned to Crawford !\nBay on Thursday.\nO. Burden is a patient in Victorian  Hospital,  Kaslo.\nColonel Cholmley left for Vancouver.\nMrs. Stanley Stevenson and\ndaughter of Trail visited, Mr. and\nMrs   Nelson.\nAn enjoyable Leap Year dance J\nwas  held in the Community  Hall.'\nSpring Bouquets\nand Pot Pl.ints\n50* and 75*\nMac's Greenhouses\nTelephone Night and Day-\u2014010\nNEW BLOUSES\n$2.95\nWhite and pa.atel shears\nSizes 14-20. Special\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker SI. Phont 874\nLOWERY'8\nFOOD MARKET\nQUALITY  AND SERVICE\nALWAYS  RELIABLE\nLauriti Bldg., Ftlrvltw-Ph. 406\nSilverton Institute\nHos Entertainment\nSILVERTON. B C-The Silver-1\nton Women's Institute met in Ihe!\nMunicipal Hall with 19 members'\npresent,\nA donation of $3 was made to-1\nward prizes for w odcraft and sew-J\ning, when they are exhibited by:\nthe school children in June.\nIt was decided to pay half lh*'\ninsurance due on Uie Municipal!\nHall in April,\nMrs E. A. Fairhurst, convener for\nthc Red Cross Committee, report-i\ned   the  following  work   as  having\n| b\u00aben   completed   and   returned   to\nj Slocan City Branch:\nI     ftfl    pillcw    canes,    7    pneumonia'\n, jackets. 7 pairs cf Micks. I iwea'.er\nI (donated )\nAfter Ihe meeting the men irrlv-\n; ed and all were seated to a baniy.ut\ntable, tastefully decorated with\nPussy Willows and green, while\nand gold centre pieces The bless- j\ning was asked by Mrs. W E. Marshall. Mrs. 1. Traill, President, gave |\nan address of welcome to the new !\nmembers and the men, which was\nreplied to by J. Moir.\nGames were plsyed and the evening came to a cUis** with community ilnging, wilh Mrs. R, Hamblv.\nIt the organ. Members respinsiblo\nfor lhe evening were Mesdames W\nt Marshall, E. A. Falrhurst, and R\nFairhunt.\nstep hemorrhages.\nDr. Auld told how to distinguish ' Refreshments were served by Mrs\nbetween sprains, dislocations and; Rov McGregor, Mrs. C. Millar and\nfractures and  the  necessary treat-, Mrs. Richardson.\nmer.t   f r  each  and   the  preparing '\u25a0 -\t\nof sterilized dressings, the making\nnf temporary splints and bandaging,\nalso how lo treat foreign bodies *n\nthe ear and eye.\nG. A McDonald, chief of the Nelson fire department, gave a demonstration of artificial respiration\nwith R. StDenis as thc patient.\nTh,\nButcherteria\nBetter  Meata  for  Lest\nPHONE 527   FREE DELIVERY\nKASLO DISTRICT W.I.\nHONORS THE FOUNDER\nKASLO. BC. - The Kaslo and'\nDistrict Women's Institute met :\\t'\nthe home if the Secretary, Mrj.j\nA. MacGillivrav honoring the mem- j\nory of Adelaide Hoodlcu, founder\nof Women's Institutes. Members j\nstood in a minutes sjlence in re- ;\nspect to the memory of the late \u25a0\nLord Tweedsmuir.\nLetters from Hon. C S. Learv and\nRoderick Butler, thanking the ladies\nfor their good wishes, and pani-1\ngraphs from the Red Cross paper I\nwere read. A radio \"qui;.' program I\nwns enjoyed. Mrs MacGillivrav \\\ndemonstrated a rug making device,;\nMany gifts were hr ught by men*- ,\nbers, these to be seat to a sister Institute in England. Mrs. Chester I\nSpeirs pleased with a piano selection Tea wss served by Mrs. Mar-\nGlllivray and hrr daughter, Mrs. C.\nSpeirs.\nROBSON FARMERS\nHOLD WHIST DRIVE\n1 ROBSON. B. C.-A court whist |\ndrive was given in the Robson Hall j\nby the Farmers' Institute. Six tables |\n] were playing and the high .score\nI went to Mrs. Hougen and Edgar\n| Webster. The consolation prize win- \\\ni ners were Mrs. 0. B. Ballard and\ni Mrs. D. Magee.\nRefreshments were served by the l\ni Committee consisting of Mrs. A. F. [\n' Mitchell, Mrs.  D, Magee  and Mr.s.\n: R.   H.  Devitt.  Duncan  Carter  was i\ni Master of Ceremonies.\nTry \"4X\nOLD ENGLISH\nMEAL BREAD\n11\n\u2022 MODERN\n'   MArK\/J\nPRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY ONLY \u2014 MARCH 6\nEGGS, A-Large... Doz. 27c\n1 cant extra for cartons\nGrapefruit\nWink they  lait\n8 for 17c\nCarrots\nLarge bunches\n3 bchs. 20c\n1C\u00ab  TEA: Maximum,\nlDCiib\t\nKASLO LADY STACES\nFAREWELL FOR BROTHER\nKASLO, B. C - Recently at the\nhome of hia mster, Mrs. Htlgren,\nMr. Green was tendered a farewell\nparty prior to his denture for Turner\nvalley, where he Vim secured an\nengineering position. Mr. Green had\nnot seen his sister for 1!S years prior\nto hla recent viiit of leveral weeks.\nC. McNAY, FERNIE, HEADS\nST. JOHN'S AMBULANCE\nFERNIE,   B,   C.   -   The   Fernie\nbranch of St. John's Ambulance Society held its annual meeting in the\nIiCgmn Hall U'ctures which will\nbe given by Dr. George Leroux will\nbe held Sunday afternoons with\npractices scheduled for Tuesdays\nand Fridays Officers elected were:\nHon. President, H. P. Wilson: Hon\nVice-Presidents. T H. Cox, Dr. Ar,-\nselstine, Tom Uphill, M, L A.. H F,\nMlard nnd G. Flkuiglon. President.\nCanmchHcl McNny; Vice-President,\nJoseph H.im-f-r; Secretary-Treasurer.\nJ T. Ptickrv: Executive Committee,\nHamld Wheeler. Harry Green. Mif\nI! F, Miaid. Mrs Fttn MrNav, Mrs\nH. Snow. Clifford Uphill. William\nPaton and Howard  Uphill.\nHOUSE DRESSES\nSmart new Spring cottons.\nJiul in.\nGINGHAM SHOPPE\nPhone 953 Opp. Dally News\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home ol Better food.\nQUALITY  GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Delivery\nWATCH FOR OUR\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONE  8.11   M2\n\u00bb\nLETTUCE, Large Heads, Ea.8c\n54c\n51c\n12c\n22c\nCELERY:\n2 lbi\t\nCATSUP:\n16  oi.  tin   \t\nSOAP: Fell Ntptha\n3 ban\t\nQUAKER OATS:\nPkt\n9c\n22c\n19c\nV\/i't,\nCOFFEE: Nabob,\n|lb\t\nTOMATOES\nHn   \t\nLUX: Large,\nPk\u00bb\t\nBran Flakes\n3 pkts. 26c\nTomato Juice ,4Vm 3 tins 22c\nQUALITY MEATS\nVi Ib. SIDE BACON, sliced: alio 1 Ib. of SLICED 00\nLIVER: B0H1 for  oLZ\nLean Stewing Beef: Boneless Lb. 15c\nMinced Beef: Lean Lb. 15c\nBreakfast Sausage        2 lbs. 25c\nFresh Pork Spareribs  2 Ibt. 35c\nSirloin and T-Bone Steak Lb. 25c\n PAGE   SIX\n\u2014NILSON DAILY NIW\u00bb, NELSON. \u00bb, O-WIDNESDAY MOHN1NO. MABCH \u00ab, 1J40.\u2014\nNriarni lailij NctM\nEstablished April 22, 1002.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n206   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1940.\nWE MIGHT HAVE IT THE BRITISH WAY\nFrom the first day of the War, there has been the greatest possible contrast between the National Government way\nof doing things, as exemplified in Britain, and the party way\nof doing things, as exemplified in Canada under Mackenzie\nKing, the Apostle of Unity.\nIn Britain the First Minister immediately rearranged\nhis cabinet, taking in the ablest men to be found for spe-\n, cific big jobs.\nThe Government has operated as a National Government, having the support of all parties.\nParliament has been in session almost continuously.\nWhen recessing for a few days at a time, it is on call.\nInformation that cannot be given to Parliament safely\nin public is given to it in private.\nAs the Christian Science Monitor of Boston sees it,\nParliament is practically a large committee of the Nation,\npooling its knowledge for the prosecution of the common\nobject.\nIt is hardly necessary to show in what respects the Canadian picture differs from this. For one thing, the King\nGovernment has got along for six months without Parliament.\nIt has given no information to Parliament. It has not permitted Parliament to ask a question. It has acted as if one\npolitical party constituted the whole Country. It has proceeded on partizan and patronage lines. It is now asking the\nCountry to give it a new Parliament that will ask no questions.\nHowever, let us dwell, not on this unpleasant scene,\nbut on the way they do things in Britain, as sketched by the\nChristian Science Monitor, a picture we may hope Canada\nwill be able to emulate in the not distant future. Says the\nBoston paper:\n\"Parliament's New Technique\n\"The British House of Commons today presents a\nstrangely different aspect from that of a year or two ago.\nThen it was deeply divided on major questions of foreign\npolicy, some of which could not be raised without fierce de-\nsate. Now its temper is completely altered. It is more like a\nlarge committee of persons assembled to deal with a matter\nof common interest and to pool their knowledge with a\nview to attaining results.\n\"The parties under their leaders sit in their accustomed\nplaces, and the spokesmen of Labor and the Liberals duly\nrise to make their comments on ministerial utterances. But\napart from occasional echoes of old social controversies,\nparty feeling is largely in abeyance. All groups\u2014or at least\nall the more important groups\u2014are in agreement about the\nmain requirements for war. about conscription, and the need\nof making everything else secondary to the efficient prosecution of war. If it is true that the party system is of the\nessence of Parliamentary government, then it might be supposed that Parliamentary government had ceased.\n\"But, on the contrary, Parliament has by no means\nceased to function. It is extremely active, although the form\nof its activity is not that to which politicians are accustomed.\nCriticism is ceaseless, but in the main it is the criticism of\nindividuals listening to the voice of the man-ln-the-street\nrather than that of a political party. It is heard just as often\nfrom Conservative members as from the Opposition.\n\"The House of Commons has become a sort of watchdog for the public, ceaselessly reminding an Executive that\nit has to reckon with public opinion and must march in\nstep with it.\n\"Many members regard it as one of their most important functions to extract information from the Government,\nnot for handing it on Jo the public, but that their own criticism may be informed. Hence the demand for occasional\nsecret sessions At a secret session it is expected that information will be imparted to Members for their own use\nso that they can more effectively discharge their critical\nduties.\n\"Parliament is playing a democratic role effectively,\nbut not in the least in the usual Parliamentary way. or\naccording to the tradition. Is it possible that a House of\nCommons which can so change its procedure in this war\nmay evolve a new technique which in time may fundamentally modify the party system'\"\n<^$\u00bbW$S\u00ab\u00bbCi\u00bb5g\u00ab\u00abi5\u00bbi\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbSW!*\u00bbM^\u00ab^K^',^^^-^^^\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\n.Letters may bo published over a nom de plume, but tha actual\nnam* of tht writer mutt be glvtn to the editor at evidence of\ngood  faith.  Anonymout  letten go  In tht waite  paper  batktt\nYouth Looks for Guidance and Has to\nDodge Election Bricks \u2014 Jean Burgess\nThe Editor of\nThe Nelson Daily News:\nSir; With the country in tho\nthroes ol a general election, lhe\nrealization of its significance is\nborne upon tho-sc of us who have\nsuddenly awakened to the fact thai,\nhaving attained our majority (I did\nnot say 'Just attained'), we are, in\npart, responsible for the outcome of\nit all. So, with some bewilderment\nand some regret, and more than a\nlittle over-confidence, we leave the\nhalcyon days of our youth and step\nforward into the light of the world.\nAnd immediately acquire a punch\non the nose and a conviction of\nthe blackest Intentions of the world\nLi general.\nHaving been stripped of the faith\nand high ideals engendered in our\nchildhood and youth, we cast about\nfor straws on which to build a more\npractical world. And the radio, with\nIts universal appeal, that hitherto\nbleated its timid raptures, roars at\nus with speeches intended for the\nsole purpose of condemning lhe\nother fellow. The voices of each\nparty in solemn, cross-their-heart\nrevelations of the truth, paint such\na picture of the other side that its\nlikeness can only be equaled by a\nLondon night in the blackout.\nAnd there we stand our thumbs\nakimbo, hoping for a light in lhe\ndarkness of our perplexity to cant\nits welcoming beam upon us, and so\nattract some good Samaritan to help\nus in our dilemna. Having no fish\nto fry nor axe to grind, we merely\nwant to make sure that our belief\nin democracy is a practiced thing\nand not just an answer to the big\nwind that blows so often across our\nSouthern border.\nIn a recent effort one of the opponents accused the other of being\na bachelor in comparison to their\nparagon's idyllic married state, inferring the preferential desirabilities of a family man. Does it not\nmake one think of that admirable\nfamily spirit exemplified in the cur\nrent news as the \"loneliest toldier\".\nPerhaps it is an Isolated exception\nof incompatible family life, that\nwould go to such extremes as abandoning a son who is only trying\nto do his duty as he sees It. But\nwhat, ln higher places, would such\na one-track mina do to a country?\nPLATO'S LOGIC\nAll these speeches have for the\nordinary, non-partisan citizen, the\nprofound obscurity of the philosophical logic ascribed to that eminent ancient, Plato, who propounded\nthat all men are liars, but since he\nwas a man, what he said wat not\ntrue, therefore all men are not liars.\nWe ask, for whom shall we vote,\nand one side says, \"Us. De uder\nguy's a bum.\" (Or was that some\nother fight Anyway\u2014). The other\nside replies, \"So we don't wear\nhalos. So what? Ever noticed anything funny about de uder guy's\nears. Horns. Yeah. It's de goods.\"\nWhich makes things a bit difficult\nif one hasn't already taken exception to one of the faces, or received\nthe promise of a job if such and\nsuch is the case.\nConsidering our problem, those\npeople who cannot decide whose\nside they are on in the war should\nbe ashamed of themselves.\nWe are the youth, tomorrow's\nhope. We look to our elders for\nguidance\u2014and have to duck the\nbricks that sizzle back and forth,\nrather like Alice-in-Wonderland\nwhen she ventures into the culinary\ndomain of the DUchess.\nI wculd suggest giving each opponent a battle axe, and whichever\none konked the other would be in,\nwhile the other would be \"out\";\nunless thc konk happened to be mutual, when things would fall rather\nflat. In any case, it should prove\nmore diverting than a lot of speeches whose \"Love thy Neighbor\" complex is astounding.\nJean Davenport Burgess\nNelson, B.C., March 3, 1940.\nBritain's Flag Girdles Earth, but Its\nBible Teaching Has Done More Than Arms\nTo The Editor Nelson Daily News:\nSir:\nTHE FLAG THAT G1RDLE8\nTHE EARTH\nIsland, just islands, on  Europe's\ncoast,\nSmall on the map, but what deeds\nthey boast,\nTheir flag unfurled,  has   girdled\nthe world,\nAnd marshals a mighty host.\nTo a fourfold race they have given\nbirth,\nEach with its pride, and each with\nits worth,\nTheir common tongue as spoken\nor sung\nIs heard all over the Earth.\nIt may be the brogue'of an Irish\nlad\nIn a song that's gay or a song that's\nsad\nOr Scotch as broad as a salted\ncod,\nOr Cockney with accent bad.\nfox hunting rather than preaching.\nThen out of Oxford came John\nWesley and he and his brother\nCharles, and Whitefield, preached\nthe Word with such power that\nthroughout the English speaking\nworld  there  was a  great  revi fi\nCONTRACT...\nIS IT THE LOWEST\nEVEN IF your partner'a card\non your opening lead la an eight\nor nine ipot, you ahould not necessarily read lt aa encouraging,\nsuggesting that you repeat the\nault. The paramount question la\nwhether or not you read lt aa the\nlowest he holds. If you decide that\nhe probably haa a lower card or\ncards, then you can reckon that\nhe played a hlgher-than-neceaaary\ncard seeking another lead of the\nault. But, no matter how high it\nla, if you figure him to hold no\nlower onei, then you may treat lt\nai discouraging, luggeatlng that\nyou shift suits.\n4 Q 10 9 7 2\nVQ63\n\u2666 AI\n*K68\n\u2666 \u00bb\n\u00bbA K86\n4\n4> K 10 fi 4\n4,982\n\u25a0V.\ns.\n\u2666 \u00bb\nf J 10 D 7\n\u2666 Q 6 3 2\n+ QJ7G\naAKJ8M\n\u00bb3\n\u2666 J87\na>A10\u00ab\n(Dealer: Weat. Neither tide\nvulnerable.)\nWeat     North      Eaat      South\nIV       Pail        2f'      2 4\n3 a 3 4        Pass       44\nIn the Weat during thla deal aat\na young player of promise who\nhad not been at the game very\nlong. She had Just about arrived\nat the stage In her Instruction at\nwhich she knew the conventional\nleada and had been taught the\nmain fundamentals about teamwork between partners. Among\nBy Shepard Barclay\nthese wu that a high card (rom\nyour partner indicated a desire\nfor repeat of the ault led and a\nlow one betokened a shirt.\nShe properly led her heart K to\ntake the opening trick. When she\naaw Eaat'a 7, a fairly high card,\nahe repeated, laying down the A,\nwhich declarer ruffed. The declar- -\ner promptly dropped the trumpi,\ndiscarded a club on the aet-up\nheart Q and conceded a diamond\ntrick, ruffing her othea diamond\nand io making an overtrlck. Weit\nlearned her Important lesson\ncheaply, at the mere coat ot an\novertrlck, not of a game. Since\nthe 7 wai the loweit heart out\nof light, after declarer played tha\n3, It waa a discouraging card and\nWeat ahould have shifted. Had\nahe realize^ that, ahe would have\nahlfted to a club and the heart Q\nnever would have been let up for\nthe declarer.\n1 -.       \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow1! Problem\n4K66\n\u25a0*J*AQJ9\u00ab\n\u2666 J\n+ KQB2\n4QM2\n48 7\nV K 10 7 5\n2\n4AK06\n483\nS    \"'\n\u00a3\n*#83\n4 10 0 8 5\n+ A8f\n4 X J 10 3\n\u00bb\u00ab\n47432\n*J1074\n(Dealer: East. East-West vulnerable.)\nIf West leada the apade*9 to\nSouth's  10,  what ahould  South\nthen lead In striving to make 3-\nSpades on this deal 7\nDistributed by Klna Features Syndicate. Inc.\nJ? Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot\npersons asking questions will not\nbe   published.\nN. T. 0., Trail\u2014Would you give mc\nfull information on how to make\nmirrors out of plain glass at home?\nThe   following   is   a   successful\nmethod for the inexperienced and\nproduces a fixed, hard film of good\ndensity. Get three open glass jars\nor tumblers, and chemically cleanse\nthem with nitric acid. Dissolve 180\ngrains of nitrate of silver in three\na turning again to the open Bible, ounces of distilled water in one of\nthe\nthi*\nBut go where you  will  o'er\nbriney foam,\nChoose   where   you   will   o'er\nearth to roam,\nSome  of   that  race  have   led\nthe chase,\nAnd the Briton is at home.\nHe did not go with a mailed fist,\nTo strike   to  the  earth   all   who\nresist.\nBut with tact too rare, they sough'\nto he fair\nAnd the love of the subject enlist\nLOOKING BACKWARD . . .\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News of March 6, 1!0)\nVancouver Juniors captured the\nB C. hockev title when thry defeated Trail 6-3 \\as\\ night nt Trail to\ntake the series by --.n 11-3 sc re-\nThere nrr approximately 250 unemployed  men  in  Nelson at  prcs-\n\"It Bounds mean, hut I'm always glad when my oldest\nrtmiphtrr's rook i\u00ab sick That's\n\\he onlv time she ever mines to\nlyVnd the day with mr \"\nrnt \u2014 Ralph Scott. 10-year-old Rossland youngster, narrowly escaped\ndeath when he fell from the gallery to the ice of the Rossi and skating rink-\u2014Mr.s. G. L. Landon was\nthe recipient < f a shower given by\nthe Excelsior Club.\n25 YEAR8 AGO\nFr in Daily News of March fi, 191!)\nRev E. Bull and J. Boydell of\nCreston are Nelson visitors\u2014 ,1. R.\nRutherford, Manager of the Mother\nxle mine at Sheep Creek, is visiting Nelson.\u2014John Cowan, n Nelson painter, narrowly escaped\ndrowning in the West Arm when\nhi* can e capsized, the crew of the\nKufkanntk saving his life.\u2014Dr.\nW H Clayton, formerly of Nelson,\nleft Prince Rupert for Victoria in\ncharge of the third contingent from\nthat point.\u2014Brilliant Doukhobors\nhave just completed construction <*f\na plant to manufacture wooden\npipe.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Paily Tribune. Mareh fi, 1900\nThe Registry Office was formally\nturned over yestrrdav lo the pro-\nvincin] Government by the Nrlson\nSaw k Planing Mills, limited, who\nad the contract for $12,000 -Rev,\nJohn R' bson, Pastor of the Methodist Church, yesterday married\nMiss Mnry Isabel Smith, daughter\nof William V Smith, and J. hn R.\nWhile * On the conclusion of his\nterm i s the general hospital house\nphysician, Di W. O Rose will heroine a nartner of Dr. Hall.\nAnd now as gathernig\nbreak,\nAnd Britain perforce her part must\ntake\nThey come from far to share in\nthe war.\nTo fight for freedom's sake.\nYe  who are British bv  right  of\nbirth:\nHold it and prize il above all worth,\nOn  free   man's land,  united   we\nstand,\nWith the flag that girdles thc earth\nThe above jingling poem may be\noffensive to many readers. I wrote\nii during the first World War. but\nit fits the present outbreak and I\nuse it us an introduction to what\nfollows:\nIt cannot be denied that the race\nthat sprang from those small islands\non Europe's fringe has been more\ninfluential and powerful in the\nWorld's affairs, during modern\ntimes, than any other of the nationalities, and I hope to point out the\nsource of their influence and\npower. Let me miole a few lines\nfrom the Encyclopedia Britanica.\nIn thc article on England and her\nrulers with reference lo Henry\nVIII,  I  re:.d:\n\"Henry first gave his people the\nScriptures in their own tongue.\"\nand then a little further on this\nstatement is made: \"From that day\nto this the English Bible has been\nthe only literary as well as the\nonly religious food of millions of\nEnglishmen.\" Thus for about 400\nyears, while the Bible was a closed\nand banned book over most of\nEurope, it was an open and much\ndiscussed volume in the British\nIsles. But during the 17th century\nthe Bible passed under a cloud\nthere because  the clergy   turned  tn\nwith results  which  I  try  to  point\nout in what follows:\nSPREADING THE WORD\nEarly ir, the 18th century the\nBritish and Foreign Bible Society\nwas organized to print and translate the Bible into the varied\nworld languages, and many millions\nof the Scriptures in whole and in\npart were scattered over the v\/orld\nby their colporteneurs; and from\nScotland came David Livingston to\nopen the vast Continent of Africa\nto the missionaries; and then the\nBible Society sent W. G. W. Boom\nto Africa to gather information ol\nlhe tribes ana thcir languages, and\nMr. Boom travelled thousands of\nmiles all through Central Africa\namong its wild beasts a,nd wilder\nmen. \"Big game\" hunters asked Mr.\nBoom what guns he carried and\nhe answered, \"I have never carried any and never felt the need\nof them.\" His faith in thc Word\nwas his trust and it never failed\nhim.\nThen another Englishman. Hand-\nson Taylor, rose up and founded the\n\"China Inlandi Mission\" to send the\nBible to \"China's millions,\" and now\nfor over seventy years that society,\nrelying alone on faith and prayer,\nhas sent and supported thousands\nj of men and women in China to call\nclouds I that vast nation to Bible study. And\nGod   has   marvellously 'supported\nthe tumblers. tWhen dissolved, take\none-half ounce of this solution and\nput it aside in another jar or bottle this also being chemically clean).\nIn another of thc tumblers dissolve\n150 grains of caustic potash  (pure\nby   alcohol)   in   two   and   a   half\nounces  of  distilled  water.  In   the\nthird tumbler dissolve 75 grains ot\nchemically   pure   glucose   in   IVi\nounces of water. Now take the first\ntumbler, with the silver solution in\nit ind drop some mire ammonia into\nit   until   the   solution   becomes   a\nmuddy thrown color. Continue dropping the ammonia until the solution\nbecomes clear again and looks as it\nwas before thc ammonia was added.\nNow   take   the   separate   one-half\nounce of silver solution and drop\nsome  of   this   in   thc  ammoniated\nsolution, drop by drop, the same a*\nthe ammonia was added. This will\nmake the solution muddy again-\nmore yellow than brown. Use care\nj with the silver solution, as any\nI-spilled on  the hands  will  rcrhove\nthe skin. Now add the potash solution, and the mixture will go blackish.  After  this  continue  dropping\nthe  ammonia   in,  stirring   with   a\nglass rod all the time, until the solution begins to clear again. It will\nnot get as clear as before, as there\nwill be numberless black particles.\nFilter  the  solution  by  pouring   it\nthrough  a   funnel   in   which   is  a\nplug of cotton wool or a filter paper.\nNow add more of the spare silver\nsolution, drop by drop, stirring ail\nthe time, until a very faint precipi-\n^sUv^V'Ush,. sot it. level, 'and | tttrfJt'^ have\"\" \u00a3t\"i-* Ja,.\nThe E&otist\nParliament is call to meet '\nAU the men is on their seat;\nMackenzie King he say to them\nYou can just go home again.\nNow I wsnt you fellers to listen\nI won't stand for criticism\nOf what I've been done las' year\nAnd that is why I brot you here.\nI dissolve this parliament\nYcu go right back home and wait\nI don't want no argument\nAnd the policy I dictate.\nHe say on my radio\nWe mus' have National Unity;\nBut this b how it look lo me\nMakenzie King say he mus' be\nThe unit in the unity.\nManion say for Union government\nWhere he going to get his cabinet\nI  wen't  let a  Liberal  in  it.\nIt will be Tory, CCF. and Social\nCredit.\nFrom tne rank and file of Englishmen came William Booth to build\nup the Salvation Army to c.irry by\nword of mouth and deed of hand,\nthe Bible, all over the World; and\nthey are doing it.\nLARGELY   BIBLE   PRODUCT\nOut of little Wales came that\ndynamic Welshman, Lloyd George,\nwho was such a force in the first\nWorld War He was largely a Bible\nproduct.\nFrom Northern Ireland, that\nyoung Ulsterman. J. Edwin Orr.\nrose up m call the churches back\nto the Bible and with an empty\nnuckct   he   travelled  aU   over   the ,\nEnglish   speaking  world   preaching  8llver, Wl11 soon cnme* and will be\nrevival ! complete in from 10 tn 20 minutes.\nI am proud of the race from Wash the mirror well with water,\nwhich I am sprung, nnt because of' antl P!acc on edge to dry. The film\nIhe jingling boast that heads this' <-an b<\" polished with fine wasn\nletter, bu: because '.hose small is- leather over a pad of cotton wool\nland.', on Europe's fringe have been j fnr about fifteen minutes. Note:\u2014\nthe source and headquarters of j Always add ammonia slowly ani\nmost of the mission and philanthro- j protect the eyes with goggles as ex-\nhie work carried on all over the plosions occasionally occur even in\nWorld today. I the hands of expert chemists,\nat the great  German\nHc don't know how countre run\nOr what My government has done;\nHe be sure to mak' conscription\nQuebec  people  can't make  obj2c-\ntion;\nIf you all will vote fcr me;\nYou don't have go oversea.\nWhat he think Quebeckers are\nThat we scare to go to war\nWe went last war the Huns to shoot\nWe go again you bet your boot.\nManion he went overseas\nTo cure the soldier ot disease.\nKing went to that institoot\nWhere he learn to be asstute\nAnd learn all the little trick\nOf the regular politick,\nWhile   plenty   men   was   ten\nolder\nWent to France to be the soldier;\nAnd be alongside of their sons\nWhile they fight the bloody Huns.\n\"Look what we don for unemployed\nAU the leisure they enjoyed.\nThey have got no right to kick;\nTheir ingratude make me sick.\nWe have borro hundred million\nFor to feed them and their children\n\"Seme of them when put to work\nJust   stand   around   and   loaf   and\nshirk;\nWhile some run round on the street,\ne^nopi&iwt&u\nof Canada's Statesmen\nImpetououa but judicial, a member ol the Mackenzie King cabinet\nbut one who haa never held a scat\nIn the House of Commons, la Hon.\nRaoul Dandurand.\nOne ot the aix (oremoat Canadian\npoliticians of hia time, he la almost\nbetter known in the capitala of\nEurope than he la In Canada.\nFew higher honors have come\nto a Canadian than have come to\nhim. Few Canadians have been\nmore deserving.\nBefore either Wolfe or Montcalm\nwere born, Raoul Dandurand's\npeople lived In Canada, For two\ncenturies they have been one of\nMcntreal'a  leading families.\nRaoul waa brought up ln an atmosphere of Liberalism, free\nthought and free spirit. Aa a boy\nhe built a raft, and three times\nsailed forth upon the St. Lawrence\nto gain his fortune. True, they\nweren't long voyages, not more\nthan a day.\nAt 13 he waa through public\nschool and planning a career. At\n18 he was a lawyer, and an instant\nsuccess. At 24 he was president ed\nthe Club National. When Sir Wilfrid Laurier became prime minister,\nDandurand, at 36, became a senator,\nthe youngest member of the upper\nHouse.\nHe entered the senate as a reformer\u2014and a reformer he remained.\nFrom 1905 to 1909 he was Speaker and in 1922 became its leader.\nAi Canada's delegate to the\nLeague of Nations he was elected\npresident of the sixth assembly in\n1926. In the voting he received 41\nballots, the representative from\nDenmark who place second received two votes.\nAs president of the league he\nprofoundly impressed Geneva.\nKnowing something of the fear\nof minorities, he was a patient and\nsympathetic listener to the representatives of small people who came\nbefore him time after time to submit their grievances.\nHe was the first Canadian minister to visit Poland, Rumania,\nSerbia. Austria, Hungary and other\nEuropean capitals.\nOne of his rrmst coveted possessions  is  the  Legion of Honor  of\n8ENAT0R  RAOUL  DANDURAND\nFrance. When, in 1890, the head of\nthe House of Bourbon, the Count\nof Paris, heir apparent to tha\nthrone of France, announced hii\nIntention of visiting Montreal, then\nwaa a great stir. The mayor suggested a civic reception. A meeting\nwas called to discuss the proposal\nOn the day of the meeting Dandurand, on his way to the law\ncourts, stopped to listen to tht\ndiscussion. Some one asked. \"How\n.would you vote, Dandurand?\" He\nreplied immediately, \"against*\nThen he took the floor to challenge the entire plan. It waa aU\nright for French royalists to entertain the count, he said, but tha\ntaxpayers mony should not be spent\nin this manner. As a result of hia\nchallenge the meeting was disbanded. A few months later he wat\nvested with the ribbon of the Region of Honor for having \"befriended the French Republic.\nDuring the first World War,\nRaoul Dandurand was chairman of\nthe French Canadian recruiting\ncampaign.\nOn. J ha OJjl\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1940\nyear\npour the solution in; add sufficieit \u25a0\u25a0\nwater to make it the right height\nin thc dish. Pour the glucose solution in, and stir together. Immerse\nthe surface of the mirror glas*>\ngently, holding it slanting as lowered\nin. so that air bubbles will not be\nheld under. Dy the time the glass\nis in position the solution will be a\npale reddish purple color, and will\ngrow   darker.   A   fine   deposit   of\n\"Now Saskats you vote for me\nWhen it comes election day;\nor if 1 don't get all the seats\nYou won't get one of dem five cent\npiece.\"\nNitwit Pete.\nONE-MINUTE   TEST\n1    Whose   \"honor rocted   in   dis\nhonor stood''\n2. What\n\"ricochet\"?\n3. What is the fontanel\nmeant   by   the   verb\nLook now\nnation: 400 years ago Luther gave\nthem thc open Bible, but pride of\nscholarship led them to criticize it\nrather than believe it. nnd from\ntheir renowned universities came\nthe \"Higher Criticism.\" so called,\nthat undermined faith over much\nnf the civili\/ed world, and e-fen in\nFilmland What awful world conditions have followed, especially in\nGermany itself.\n\"Blessed  are  thev  lhat hear\nWord   of   Cod   and   keen   it\"   An\nopen   unadulterated   Bible   is   the\ngreatest need of the World todav.\nF   W.   Nash.\nMarch 2, 1940. Renata. B   V\nN. B.  P,  Nelson-Is  there such\nperson as Premier Bergin; if so, I\nWORDS  OF WISDOM\nnation's greatness resides not\nnf what country  is he Premier'' I -n \u25a0\u25a0cr material resources, but in her\n\u201e ...         . '    \u25a0l**ll tcitU illlialllHiaa.M       et n e>       \u201e-    ,.-ll\nLeslie Burgin is the Minister of\nSupply    in    the   Chamberlain\nGovernment.\nG.   A.   M,   Nelson-Are   the   Bel\ngians a Latin or Semitic people1\nThe   Belgians  arc   neither   La'in\n..    I nor Semitic  people.  They  are   the\ndependents of German and Celtic\ntribes with an admixture of Lali.i.\nfaith,   intclliser.ce\nforces\u2014J. M. Iloppin.\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nH' stesscs should keep their Sunday entertaining simple .md informal, as, strictly speaking, it never\nis correct to dress formally on the\nSibbath.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nAn eventful year lies . ahead of\nthose whose birthdays are today\nFortunes will be varied. Avoid\nchanges and cultivate the friendship\nof suneri is who will befriend you.\nA child born rn this date will be of\na reserved nature, but unconventional. He or she will be inclined\nf\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:00\u20140 Canada\n7:03-Toast and Coffee (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014The News\n8:15\u2014Singers and Songs\n8:30\u2014Wayne Van Dyne, Tenor\n8:45\u2014Rakov's Orchestra\n9:00\u2014 Katherine  Hamilton\n9:15\u2014Thc Southernairea\n9:30\u2014B.C.   Radio   Schools   Broadcast\n10:00\u2014Betty Brown Radio Kitchen\n(CKLN)\n10:15\u2014Hit  Revue   (CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Cavalcade of Drama (CKLN)\n10:45\u2014To Be Announced\n11:00\u2014Music for Young Listeners\n11:15\u2014Songs for You\n11:30\u2014Favorite Waltzes\n12:00-Luncheon Music (CKLN)\nAFTERNOON\n1:00\u2014The News\n1:15\u2014Dominion Election Broadcast\n-Hon. J. L. Ilslcy    *\n1:30\u2014Club Matinee\n1:45\u2014Thc BBC. News\n2:15\u2014Irving  Aaronson's  Orchestra\n(CKLN)\n2:30\u2014Curling Finals\n2:45\u2014Closing Stocks\n3:00\u2014Recital Series\n3:30\u2014The Song Busters\n3:45\u2014Lucio's Ensemble\n4:00\u2014Melodies of Yesterday\n4:30\u2014Clyde Lucas' Orch.\n4:45\u2014Talk\n5:00\u2014Canadian Snapshots\n5:30\u2014Serenade for Strings\n\u25a0VENINC\n6:00\u2014Election   Broadcast\n6:3()-Music by Faith\n7:00\u2014Fairview Wranglers\n7:15\u2014Canterbury Pilgrims\n7:30\u2014Midweek Commentary\n7:45\u2014Address by Col. George Drew\n8:00-The News\n8:15\u2014Pictures in Word and Song\n8:30\u2014Cathedral Singers\n9:00\u2014Adventures in Rhythm\n9:30\u2014 Vancouver Theatre Time\n10:00\u2014Garwood Van's Orchestra\n10:30\u2014Guy Lombardo's Orchestra\n11:00\u2014The News\n11:15\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orchestra\n11:30\u2014Paul Carson\n1200-God Save the King\nCJAT \u2014 TRAIL\nMORNINC\n7:00\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:15\u2014Home Folks Frolic\n9:00\u2014Stars of the Week\n10:30\u2014Betty Brown\n10:45\u2014Symphony of Melody\n11:00\u2014Woman's Radio Journal\n11:30\u2014Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra\nAFTERNOON\n1:30\u2014Today's Music\n3:45\u2014In Town Tonight\n4:30\u2014Theatre News\n5:30\u2014Carson Robison\n5:45\u2014Master Singers\nEVENINC\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\nOther Periods,  C.B.C. Programme*\nU.S. NETS' BEST\n8:00\u2014Star Theatre\n6:30\u2014Hollywood Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Avalon Time\n9:00-Al Pcarcc's Gang\n10:15\u2014Garwood Van's Orchestra\n11:00\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orchestra\nGas Service\nANYWHERE\nNo matter where you are\nwe can provide you with\ngas convenience just as\nthough you were connected  to city gas mains,\nRockgas goes where city\ngas does not and it gives\nits users the same convenience f o r cookinp,\nlighting or water heating.\nConsult us about this\nwonder fuel.\nKootenay  Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\n357  Baker 8t.\n\"Oh. dash il nil, sergeant! Here I've been Hirer months trying lo get\nknow her. and new you lelt me I've got to go on leave.\"\n\u2014Humorlat\nWAR - 25 Years\nAnn Today\nBy The  Canadian  Pren\nMARCH fi. 1915-Eleuthcnoi Ven\nI IxeloB,    Greek    Premier,    residue.\nover country's neutrality policy  A1- *\nI lies Rained ground on the Wrste-n \\ ,0 Pre'rr RoUHicie and thc study\nFrent in the Aime and Champignc'nalure to \u00abwiety. In nature -studies\nsectors and in the V sges Mountain*!  hf ^ ***{ opportunity fora sue-\npushed forward in drive on Cplm-ir\nMISJUDGED CANADIANS\nMr. King's worship of constitutional niceties and hoary precedents\nhas stood him in Rood stead politically in peace time--but it li n\nweakness in days nf emergency\nlike those through which the democracies nro now pawing. It still seems\nto us that Mr. King mlsjudjird Ihe\nfeelings of most Canadian.* in lui\npre-war attitude toward Immediate,\nwhole-hearted partnership wilh\nHrilain. If there is today anv lack\nof confidence in the Federal Government's conduct of Canada's war\nefforts, it can be traced hack lo that\nfailure to give leadership before lhe\nitorm wa* upon us.\u2014Stratford Bea-\ncon-Herald.\ncessful career for such a rhild,\nONE    MINUTE   TEST   ANSWERS\n1. Launce). I'i in \"Idylls of the\nKing,\" by  Alfred Tenn-ysnii.\n2. To glance from a surface, .is\na cannon ball or bullet; to skip.\n3. A membranous spice at the too\nof an infant's head, al ndjncent an\ngles nf lhe parietal bones, whirh\narr the bones that form much of\nDie skull\nA TEXAS VIEW\nTo a vast percentage of Americans already tne question of whether we cm keep out of the war resolves itself into whether England\nand France can destroy \"Ihe cne-\nmi?* of our faith\" without our help.\n-Texai Weekly.\nTONIGHT Across Canada\n7:45-8:00 P.M.\nGEORGE DREW\nWill Deliver\nAn Uncensored Message\nto Mackenzie King\nTune in to\nStation CKLN\n1420 Kc.\nn^MBBsmnaesEBaes\n T\u2014\n-NILION DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, MARCH I.  940.-\nBritish-Trained\nChild Refugees\nGoto Palestine\nBy FRED BACKHOUSE\nLONDON, March 5 (CP). \u2014 A\u00ab\nSpring comes to the quiet village\nof Pine Trees, deep In the heart of\nthe I'.i-.iii* li Willi a handful ot\nyoungsters there are preparing to\npass through the shadow of warring Europe to a new land and a\nnew life hundreds of miles away.\nThe children bear strange names\nfor the inhabitants of Kent's typical\nEnglish countryside and they speak\na little English with a guttural accent that makes the local children\nlaugh.\nBut when Llselotte (hair like\ncorn) and Hans (darkly handsome)\ntnd Siegfried, Erna. Boris and the\nothers go away, the natives will\nbe sorry, until a new bunch of\n\"they refugees\" looking just like\nLlselotte and Hans come to Pine\nTrees.\nEvery so often they arrive at\nthe great estate, these strangely\ndressed little children; part of\nEurope's human flotsam thrown up\nby the Nazi terror. They have been\nrescued by the Youth Aliyah and\nbrought to this country to be trained\nfor a new life as free and self-\nsupporting citizens  in   Palestine.\nSome 7500 of these tragic children have been taken from Germany and other Nazi-ficd countries\nin the past six years. Even in wartime the work goes on with increasing vigor.\nSin thousand young refugees already in Palestine are fitting themselves, in vocational schools and\nagricultural settlements for a pioneer life under the blazing sun.\nMany hundreds of others are in\nGestapoland, Or How Nails \"Freed\" Poland\n^:||M_\nSecretly made at great risk to the photographer and smuggled out\nof Germany, these photos present scenes in German-conquered Warsaw, Poland. Buildings in the once beautiful capital, wrecked by German bombs and shells, remain tn ruins. Inset, Jews are forced to\nwear a yellow triangle sewn to the back of their clothes and walk on\nthe road.\ntraining centres in hospital \"transit\" countries, like England, awaiting emigration. They come to Pine\nTrees, cr another of the six train-\nins centres here, bewildered and\nsubdued.\nIn the 13-year-old minds of Use-\nlotte and Hans was a kaleidescope\nof poverty, expulsion from school;\nof father or brother \"disappearing,\"\nnever to return; of bein^ herded\ninto [he ghettos; of beatings and\nof flight; and then, miraculously,\nof escape to this haven in England.\nAt first they could not understand the kindly and sympathetic\ntreatment they received at the\nhands of the villagers among whom\nthey lived. But through the months\nof work and play here the sheer\nImpact of kindness made them believe that they were not different,\nnot outcasts.\nKILBARCHAN, Scotland (CP>-\nGraveside mourners here waited in\nvain for the hearse containing the\nbody of John Stevenson, 82. They\nfound later he had been buried\nelsewhere under a wrong name.\nNegro Communist\nScores Jolin Garner\nWASHINGTON, March 5 (AP)-\nA husky Negro Communist, Benjamin Davis of New York City,\nthrew a Senate hearing on anti-\nlynching legislation into turmoil today by terming Southern Senators\n\"stooges\" and Vice-President John\nGarner an \"evil old Labor baiter.\"\nSenator Van Nuys, Indiana Democrat, Chairman of the Judiciary sub-\nCommittee conducting the hearing\nand co-sponsor of the lynching bill,\nshouted at the Negro witness at\none point. \"That's an insult,\" and\nstruck from the committee records\nDavis' description of the vice president and members of congress.\n\"You crashed the gates of this\ncommitte-e^ust to try and send out\nCommunist propaganda,\" Van Nuys\nsaid. \"You nave done more harm\nto prevent passage of this bill than\nanyone who has ever appeared.\"\nDavis testified he was on the editorial board of the Daily Worker,\nCommunist newspaper.\nPOLICE AND )EWS\nINJURED   IN   FRACAS\nLONDON. March 5 (CP)\u2014Fourteen British police and a number\nof Jews were reported today to\nhave been injured Saturday\nJewish demonstrations in Palestine\nagainst the new land laws, restricting the transfer of land from Arabs\nto Jews.\nOne report said an 18-year-old\nuniversity student injured in a disturbance in Tel Aviv Saturday died\ntoday.\nROME, March 5 (AP)\u2014Scores of\nJews and British police were injured in demonstrations in Palestine last month against the new\nland laws, a* reliable informant Just\ncome from Jerusalem disclosed on\npassing through Rome today. Largest demonstration was at the Jewish\ncity of Tel Aviv, with more than\n15,000 Jews taking part.\nSome erected barricades across\nTel Aviv's majn thoroughfare, Ben\nSTehuda.\nUnhealed Wounds\nIn France Where\nR.A.F. Quartered\nBy PAT U88HER\nCanadian   Pran  Staff Writer\nSOMEWHERE IN FRANCE, (CP)\n\u2014War ls casting Its shadow anew\nover this countryside which still\nbears the marks of the last war.\nA atone wall In one French town\nretains the shell holes of the First\nGreat War. Nearby Is the operations headquarters of a Royal Air\nForce command.\nAlong the roads of Eastern\nFrance at frequent Intervals are\ncamouflaged airdromes with trees\nskillfully arranged to conceal the\nplrnes stationed there.\nAt frequent Intervals, too, are\nmilitary cemeteries with row upon\nrow of stone crosses, recalling the\nmillions who died between 1914 and\n1918. One of those cemeteries contains a section devoted to the graves\nof Polish soldiers who fought under\nthe French tricolor. It reminds the\npasserby that two decades later\nan Invasion of Poland was the spark\nthat set alight the new conflagration.\nTha tr\u00abe\u00ab \u00bbr\u00ab moatly imall\nthrough this part of tha oountry.\nThey have had only 22 yean In\nwhich to grow. Old tranche* itill\nremain In some wooded areas and\noocaalonolly sections ara fenced\noff. Thay are old ammunition\ndumps with ao much explosive\nremaining that people ara forbidden to go there.\nA hilltop commanding the surrounding countryside has been a\nmecca for visitors since 1918. Here\nwas a French fort which never\nyielded to the German invaders\neven though for a time the enemy\noccupied all the territory in that\nregion.\nOn the edge of the road running\npast the remains of the fort is a\nGerman tank\u2014left exactly where\nft was halted more than 20 years\nago. In a nearby field ls another.\nBoth led vain attempts to capture\nthe fort.\nAlong that same road today rumble modern French army tanks,\nsteel monsters symbolic of the ugliness of the mechaniied warfare of\ntbe 1940s.\nRUSSIAN ECONOMIC\nMISSION WILL LEAVE\nFOR BERLIN SOON\nMOSCOW, March 5 (AP)-A new\nRussian economic mission will leave\nfor Berlin at the earliest possible\nmoment to place orders in accordance with the Soviet-German trade\nagreement.\nAlarmed by declining production\nIn the Galician oil fields, Moscow\nwas reported by lEvestia, government newspaper, to be allotting\nabout $13,000,000 for expansion\nthere. Tonnage for 1938 was 330,000\ncompared with 1,500,000 in 1913.\nTHE\nAUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY\nIS CO-OPERATING IN\nCANADA'S WAR EFFORT\nNow, more than ntr othte, our plants ind highly\nspecialist*! equipment are Dominion uteti; our skilled\nworkmen, vital cogs in the wartime Industrial setup\nin which the production of units of transport looms\nmore important than ever. A busy Automotive Industry\nis truly t National War Enterprise So remember,\nwhen you buy i Canadian-Built cir, you ire helping support in industry (hit distributes more than\n$2 J ,000,000.OO in wages ind salaries to miny thousand\nfamilies dependent on the industry. Add tn these (he\nfamilies thai art employed hy industries supphing\nfiw and finished materials m automobile manufacturer!, ind you ice wbit this activity means to Canada.\nTh\u00ab Hon. ADELARD GODBOUT\nPftmitr o\\ Qutbtc\n\"QUEBEC IS PREPARED TO\nCO-OPERATE IH ALL FRIENDLINESS\"\nFollowing ia Premier Godbout's statement:\n\"Quebec with her vast natural resources is ready to support\nfaithfully the Canadian Government in its duty, incumbent\nupon it for the protection of our territory and our Christian\ncivilization.\n\"Quebec's immense activities make a contribution that round\nout the offerings of her sister provinces.\n\"Ranging frotp the products of farm, mine and forest, to\nthose of manufacturing plants, Quebec's share in Canada's\neffort is as diversified as it is large.\n\"Quebec is prepared to co-operate in all friendliness with the\nother provinces of Canada to assure the triumph of our\nNational Unity.\" (Signed) A. GODBOUT, Premier.\n*      *      *\nTHE SAME QUALITIES of intrepidity, perseverance, roungr, and leadership\nilut characterized her explorer ions, are alive in Quebec (inlay.  Her present\npioneers are Mill exploring, developing, cultivating her vast Ironricr with itt\nnatural wealth waiting to tie uncovered: with its water powers, developed and\nundeveloped, thc greatest in the world; and immense (orests yet untrotl.\n77'ii people by industry and enterprise produced in J9l(i titer a billion\njttd a quarter dollars of wealth; exported over two and a half million\nfont of iheir products.   Quebec's mines of gold, sitter, copper, le,ul,\nradium,   her   fur   trapping,   and   her   fur   culture,   her  fitberiet,   her\nnewsprint  ,md her forestry are  constant  producer! of wealth.     She\nhai   IS.IXMI miles of roads, and in  1917 entertained oOO\/KO'lenrsits,\nbeing herself one oj Canada's greatest and most compelling attractions.\nAUTOMOTIVE  INDUSTRIES  OF  CANADA\n1006   LUMSDFN   BUILDING   \u2014   TORONTO,   ONTARIO.\nMk m for Vatttt <m*l Vigurtt toMtrnimg tht Amomotitt Indmtrirt \u2022\"\"4 tht work thty trt doing in ( jiij-Ij, tnd wt wilt ttnd them.\nCanadians Serve\nR.A.F. in France\nSOMEWHERE IN FRANCE ICP)\n\u2014Quietly and efficiently Canadians\nare taking their part on active service with the Royal Air Force. One\nof them ia Group Captain H. S.\nKerby fr^m Toronto, stationed at\nthe R. A. F. headquarters in France.\nHis office is situated in a small\nbuilding on the edge of an important airdrome, where the roar of\nairplane engines beats out a con-\nitant accompaniment to the days\nwork.\nGroup Captain Kerby was graduated from the University of Toronto in engineering in 1914. He has\nbeen too busy to go back home\nsince. He took part in the First\nGreat War in 1917 and was an instructor at Cranwell College in\nEngland. There he taught the King,\nthen Duke of York, to fly.\nIn 1938 Kerby was air attache to\nthe British embassy in China. He\nwas with Sir Hughe Knatchbull-\nHugesson, then ambassador in\nChina, when the latter's car was\nmachine-gunned from the air by\nthe Japanese. The ambassador was\nseriously injured but Kerby was\nunhurt. He was with one of the\nfirst squadrons of RAJ. planes\nwhich flew to France when the\npresent war began.\nFINNISH PARENTS HEAR\nSONS ARE KILLED\nVANCOUVER, March 5 (CP) -\nThe Finnish consulate said today\nseveral Finnish parents living in\nVancouver had received cables advising them their sons had been\nkilled or wounded in action In Finland. Latest to receive such news\nwas Emil Skog, whose son was\nkilled.\n^OD\nPAQI  SIVIN\nBROTHERS PAIR\nFOR B.C. UNIT\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014The Westminster Regiment for\nthe Canadian Active Service Force\nhas given a real meaning to the\nphrase \"Brothers in Arms\", The\nmachine-gun unit boasts no less\nthan 22 sets of brothers within Its\nranks\u2014believed to be one of the\nlargest such lists in any Canadian\noutfit.\nThe brothers range all the way\nfrom the rank of captain down to\nbuck private and they come from\nall walks of life. Some of them have\nbeen in lhe militia tintt for years\nwhile others have joined for the\nwar.\nAs one former logger who came\nout of the British Columbia woods\nto Join up explained*. \"1 wanted to\nbe with my brother and look after\nhim.\"\nCat Jump Costly\nfor Young Bride\nLONDON. March 5 (CP)-It was\nan expensive afternoon for fl newly\nwed young woman when she went\ninto a Kensington restaurant for a\ncup of coffee A cat jumped nn her\nlap. mused her to spill the liquid\non her new frock, and when she\ntried to collect damages from the\nrestaurant. Flic failed In court.\nThe registrar said he was not satisfied thai n'iowing a cnl to escape\ninto a restaurant was an act of negligence. He did not think any reas-\nn.ihle perron could former that a\nrat all* wed In a restaurant would\nause the damage rnmplainrd of\nThen he ordered the plaintiff to\npay the costs of the action.\nShe hnd tald equivalent of J30 M)\nfor Ihe froi-K, but Incidental expenses like cleaning and taxi fares\nhronaht har claim uo to U4.U.\nONCE again the bugles call and\nthe Salvation Army goes to the\nfront on active service with the troops\n\u2014not to kill and destroy but to comfort\nand save ... to help men to keep a\ngrip on themselves and their own\nsouls. Will you help to make the\nsoldiers say what they said in the\nlast war, \"God Bless the Salvation\nArmy.\"\nTHE RED SHIELD PROGRAMME\nThe complete Red Shield Programme of the Salvation Army is\nalready operating in the principal\ntraining camps of Canada and with\nthe First Division overseas. It will\naccompany our soldiers to France and\nfollow as close up to the front line as\nthe military authorities permit.\nIN THE NAME OF THE PRINCE OF\nPEACE\nFor the sake of Canada's soldiers\nfighting our battles overseas ... for\nthe sake of their loved ones at home\n... for the sake of the Salvation Army's\nwork for the poor and oppressed we\nask you to help in word and. deed.\nThe Red Shield Programme\nIncludes:\nChaplain Service\nHospital Visitation\nRecreation Centres (\"Huts\")\n\"Dry\" Canteens\nHostels  (Beds  and  Meals   in\nLondon and elsewhere)\nLibraries and Reading Rooms\nWriting Rooms\nSocks and Knitted Wear\nDarning, Mending, Clothes\nPressing\nClothes and Shelter for\nDischarged Men\nContact with Soldiers' Families\nEducational and Recreational\nDepartments\nAnd many other services, including\nfriendly counsel aod advice when\nasked or needed.\nWe owe a responsibility also to the\nmothers, wives and children the enlisted men have left behind. And\nalways there is the regular work of\nthe Salvation Army, which will be\nheavier because of the war. Will\nyou help?\nVolunteer workers will call upon you. Receive\nthem kindly and give as your heart dictates.\nTHE SALVATION ARMY NEEDS...\ntlMlllfc***\nHonorary President, Notional Advisory Board\nHis Excellency, tbe Late Right Honourable Lord Tweedsmuir of Elsfield,\nPC, G.C.M.G., C.H., LL.D., Governor General of Canada\n*r# dHth ntnt tat |MiM| .ftar Honorary Prrndrtl m F.k tlti)\nChairman Vice-Chairmen\nRt. Hoo; Senator Arthur Meighen, Si' Edward Wentworth Beattr,\nK.G.P.C, B.A. G.B.E., K.C., LL.D.\n(Also Qilrata Notions! Ci\u00bbp.i\u00ab\u00ab InmJ's BomJ) Hon. Charles A. Dunning\nNational Campaign Executive Board\nTilt Hoo. S.nilor W. H. Drntiii\nl'ni.nn nl Oiirmin, Not, Scotlt\nTlsi Hoo. OM JoKict J. B M. Burst, PC\nPro.incifll Coiinnm, Nrw Rmatwlck.\n\u2022 ii.l Princi liUir.l lilin.i\nTli Kt Hoo Sit Tn. Muliiii.. KC. M G,\nPro.iocul Oitlrmtn, Oott\/lo\nGocdoe t. l',crr. Esq . I'ronnnil Vlrt-t tisirmin. Ootttlo\nBRIGADIER H. CHAS. TUTTl. Nstloool (Umpolao Dtttctot\nMr. C. B. Gsrlund, General Chairman, Nelson District Committee\nTHE RED SHIELD WAR ... HOME SERVICE CAMPAIGN   Mar. IV tO 20\"\nTha Hoo. V. J. Tipp\u00abf. Uaut-Go\u00bb\u00abn\u00ab\nFroiinciil Chtlraun, Manitoba\nTha Hon. A. P. McNab, UftiL-GoTtraor\nProtiocul (tmrmin, S-ukftttfetwU\nThe Hon   Stnimr Huchinin\nProfiadtl Uulrmin. Alt**\u00bbm\nThi Hoe. Fflc W. Mim htr, lifJl-GoTtrnnr\nP-tmodil Patron, Britiih Cokcabl*\nNelson District Leaders in the\nSalvation Army Campaign\nMr. C. B. Garland, C\u00abn. Chairman, Nelion Mr. C. F. Nelion   N\u00abw Denver\nMi. M. C.   Donildion       Salmo        Mr. W. E. Mclnnii       Ymir\nMr. VV. |. Motley      Nakuip Mr.   H. T.  Hartin       Klilo\nThis is our initial announcement of what we consider to be the most important\nfinancial campaign the Salvation Army has ever launched, and ask for your\nsincere consideration of our problems in the interest of humanity\nW.  A.   Harrison\nT. A. Temple\nPublicity Committee\nL\n \u2014-^~^~\u25a0\n\t\n\t\nPAGE   EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH \u00ab. 1940.\u2014\nSir John Simon Announces\nNew War Loan 300 Million\nLONDON, March B (CP).\u2014A new\n\u00a3300,000,000 ($1,335,000,000) war loan\nwaa announced In the House of\nCommons today by Sir John Simon,\nChancellor of the Exchequer.\nThe loan la to be for a period\nof 15 to 19 years, to yield three\nper cent Interest and to be issued\nat par, Sir John said.\nLists will be opened next Tuesday nd closed the following day.\nThe loan will be redeemable at\npar Oct. 15, 1959, with the Treasury reserving the right to redeem the issue in whole or in\npart at any time after Oct. 15, 1955.\nTen per cent of all subscriptions\njj\u00bbIU be payable on application and\nthe balance on April 15, the Chancellor continued. The minimum subscription is \u00a310 and the maximum\n\u00a31,000.\n\"The Government's appeal for subscriptions to a large loan had necessarily to be delayed until it was\nfelt the market was ripe for the\nissue,\" Sir John said.\n\"I am taking the somewhat unusual step of announcing the terms\nof the loan a week in advance of\nthe opening of the lists in order of\ninvestors may have ample time to\nmake any arrangements which may\nbe necessary to enable them lo subscribe the fullest possible amounts.\n\"I hope that as many small in\nvestors as possible will take advantage of this opportunity of lending\ntheir savings to the state for a\nlonger period than that of national\nsavings certificates or defence\nbonds.\"\nEarlier Sir John had said ln reply\nto a question regarding the possible\nintroduction of forced savings: \"I\ncannot give any final undertaking\nas to how the war will be financed\nthroughout the duration.\"\nThe Chancellor said that nonresidents subscribing to the loan\nwould be offered, subject to certain safeguards, exemptions from\ntaxation along the lines of some\nloans in the first Great War.\nStorm Water in\nTrail Cause for\nMuch City Work\nTRAIL. B. C, March 5 \u2014 While\ntwo residents of Buckna Street\ncomplained to the City Council on\nMonday night of trouble they were\nhaving with storm water running\nthrough their's and others' property, the report ot City Engineer J.\n?. Coates, covering lhe period Jan.\n1 to Feb. 29, and read later at the\naame meeting, advised that action\nahould be taken to prevent the condition, as soon as possible.\nMr. Coates' report in part follows:\nOwing to the mild Winter, very\nlittle snow plowing or removal has\nbeen necessary, but for the first\nfour weeks of the period a small\ncrew of men and one truck were\nemployed at night sanding streets\nThe almost continuous run-off of\natorm water has caused a great deal\nof work and attention in order to\nkeep drains, ditches and storm\naewers open; the amount of silt and\n\u25a0and carried down has been heavy,\nand the expense has been correspondingly heavy. Owing lo the wet\nacason it has been impossible to\n(keep the unimproved streets in good\ncondition.\n\"Storm water running off the\nhillside behind Buckna Street and\nfrom Shaver's Bench at Fifth Ave-\nenue and Main Street has given continuous trouble, and action should\nbe taken to prevent this as soon as\npossible.\nROCK WALL\n\"The construction of a dry masonry wall to replace the old crib\n;at   the  junction   ot  Topping   and\nMaple Streets has been continued,\n.and is now 80 per cent completed.\nFour catch basins and connections\nto sewer have been installed at the\nJunction of Fifth Avenue and Mr-\nQuarrie Street and Fifth Avenue\nand Main Street, East Trail.\"\nThe average number of men employed per day in January was 24;\nIn February 25. In January, 15 were\nemployed on regular City work and\n.nine on emergency work; m Fcb-\n\u2022ruary, 12 on regular work and 13\non emergency work. The number of\nmen on employment relief was 46.\nComplaint of Arthur Johnston\nand James Deans, Buckna Street,\nthat water was endangering thc\nfoundations of homes on that street,\nwas referred to the Board of Works\nto report back.\nAUSTRALIAN MINISTER\nPRESENTS CREDENTIALS\nTO U.S. PRESIDENT\nWASHINGTON, Mareh 5 (AP1-\nAustralia opened formal diplomatic\nrelations with the United States to-\nday when the Australian minister,\nRichard Casey, presented lis credentials to President Roosevelt\nThe presentation of credentials\nestablished relations with the third\nBritish Dominion to be presented\nin Washington, the others being\nCanada and South Afrie.i.\nYoungest Soldier\nMarks 15th Birthday\nTORONTO, March 5 (CP). \u2014\nMaybe this will end the argument\nabout who Is the youngest member of the Canadian Active Service Force. Private Alex C. Berwick of the Toronto Scottlih Regiment, now In England, celebrated\nhli 15th birthday with his regiment at Aldershot last January.\nBerwick's family here explained today that the boy Joined up\na few weeks before war broke\nout and the youngster, big for\nhis age, received permission to\ngo Overseas when the unit left\nCanada.\nPlan of Gliding\nAttack by Nazi\nBombers Told\nLONDON, March 5 (CP)- Dispatches from Rotterdam, saying that\na plan has been revealed by which\nGerman bombers would make a\ngliding attack on Great Britain,\nwere published in several London\nmorning papers today.\nThe plan is that the bombers\nwould climb to a height of 30.000\nfeet in Germany, cut their motors\nand glide across the Netherlands\nto the vicinity of Utrecht where\nthey would riimb again to 30,000\nfeet, -again cut thcir motors and\nglide across the North Sea at one\nof its narrowest points.\nThus they would be able to approach Britain without being detected by s und devices.\nThe dispatches said that bombers\nwere already rehearsing, as evidenced by mysterious lights seen\nover various parts of Holland recently. It was charged that these\nlights are sent up by Nazi sympathizers for the benefit of Nazi pilots\nin training,\nAnnable-Warfield\nAgrees to Garbage\nDisposal Charge\nTRAIL, B, C, March 5 \u2014 The\nAnnable-Warfield Waterworks and\nSewerage District forwarded to the\nCity Council Monday night agreement to the charge of a minimum\nof $10 per month or at th* rate of | Lewis Millin; girls' doubles-Patsy\ner house if over that .Forbes and I^uise Hare; girls'\nuse of the City dump I singles\u2014Patsy_Forbes; boys' singles\nISO Compete in\n(reslon Valley\nBird Tournament\nCRESTON. B. C. - Shuttle talent\nfrom Boswell, Sirdar, Wynndel and\nCreston, accounting for 150 entries,\nwas on hand for the sixth annual\ntournament of Creston Valley Badminton Association, at Park Pavilion, Saturday, with play starting\nat 9 a.m. and continuing with afternoon and evening sessions, lo\nconclude shortly before midnight.\nEntries from Crawford Bay were\nunable to make an appearance due\nto the poor shape the lake highway\nis in at present.\nAs usual the entry in the mixed\ndoubles was prominent in the eight\nmain features, but the others were\nwell filled.\nIn the open events Clayton Sinclair took the men's singles for thc\nsecond time in succession, and there\nwas a repeat in Ihe open mixed\ndoubles where Ruby Palmer and\nSinclair were again winners. A new\nchampion was produced in the ladies' singles in which Miss Jean\nHenderson lost the honors to Ruby\nPalmer.\nThe play in the midget division\nwas watched with keen interest by\na large gallery and produced two\nnew champions. They are Hawk-\nshaw Powell in the boys' class, and\nPatsy Forbes in the girls' play. A\nnotable feature of the engagement\nwas in the consolations, all three\nof whirh went out of town. Wynndel and Sirdar took one each and a\nSirdar-Wynndel combination annexed the third.\nWINNERS\nTournament winners are:\nOpen Events:\nMen's singles\u2014Clayton Sinclair;\nmen's doubles\u2014R. Jackson and C.\nSinclair; mixed doubles\u2014C. Sinclair\nand Ruby Palmer; ladies' doubles-\nJean Henderson and Hazel Hobdcn;\nladies' singles\u2014Ruby Palmer.\nConsolation Events:\nMen's doubles\u2014Gwedo and Louis\nBenedetti, Wynndel; mixed doubles\n\u2014Art Rutledge, Wynndel, and Nofa\nPascuzzo. Sirdar: ladies' doubles-\nIrene and Nora Pascuzzo, Sirdar.\nMidget Events:\nMixed doubles\u2014Louise Hare and\nBrltaWs Mine-Sweepers Have Wop's Most Dangerous Job\nNo Need for Expeditionary Force\nSays MacNeil; an Empire Gesture\nCCF. Would Render\nBritain Economic\nHelp Only\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 4\u2014\"I\nhave reason to believe that the\nBritish Government did not need the\nExpeditionary Forces sent Overseas. These men, sent over Improperly trained and poorly equipped,\nwere sent as a gesture of Empire\nsolidarity,\" stated Grant MacNeil,\nC C. F. member for* Vancouver\nNorth, speaking at the Rossland Committee Rooms on\nMonday afternoon.\n\"What the British Government\nwant Is striking power. Men are being returned from the Maginot Line\nto the French factories right at thc\npresent moment.\"\nQuestioned as to the C. C. F. attitude toward the war the speaker\nstated that if the party were in\npower they would have no alternative but to carry on. \"The people\nthemselves should have been given\nthe right to make their own decision as to whether Canada should\nhave gone to war or not,\" he said.\nThe mine-sweeping patrol Is without a doubt\none of the present war's most dangerous Jobs and\nhere are some of the men who hunt Nazi mines in\nthe North Sea. This sweeper is putting in at an\nunnamed port, and the crew is swinging aboard\nthe paravane, mine-cable cutting device which snips\nthe mine cable, sending the deadly weapon bobbing to the surface, where they're exploded by rifle\nfire.\nfive cent\namount, f\nfor garbage disposal.\nFebruary Snow in\nRossland 3 Ft. 6V2\nHOSSLAND, B. C. March 5 -\nHeaviest snowfall of the season fell\nin Rossland during February, when\nthree feet 7*j inches were recorded.\nbringing the total for the season t.i\n(even feet IO1? inches. Highest maximum temperature occurred on Feb\n13 and 19 with .19 degrees. Low\nminimum was recorded at 17 de-\nfrees on Feb. 23.\nVOLUNTEERS FROM\nNEWFOUNDLAND TO\nBE WITH ROYAL ARTILLERY\nI\/>XDOV. March 5 (CD-Dominions Secretary Anthony Eden announced that upward of 1300 Newfoundland volunteers would be\ntrained for the Royal Artillery.\nAsked by William Ga\u00bb-ch**r.\nonly Communist member of the\nMouse of Commons, whether II.,.-\nain intended to restore dem >eracy\nin Newfoundland before bringing\nh'*r men t > fight. Mr. Eden rcn.ieu\nthat the economic position of Newfoundland .*> improving steadily\n\"and we shall do our best to foster\nthai.\"\nHawkshaw Powell.\nW. A. Marchbank, President o!\nthe local club, assisted by Mrs. J. P.\nMacDonald, Miss Jean Henderson\nand Miss Marjorie Hamilton, and J.\nP. MacDonald. W. A. Millin, C. H.\nHare nnd Arthur Cmiling were tbe\nGeneral Committee in charge of the\nday's  play.\nth\u00ab trophies and prizes were all\nTrail Fire Loss\n$250 in February\nTRAIL, B. C, March 5\u2014Loss by\nfire in Trail during February was\n$250, by the report submitted by\nFire Chief A. A. MacDonald to thc\nCity Council Monday night.\nValue of buildings involved by\nfire was $6500, insurance on which\nwas $4000, loss being $250. Value of\ncontents involved by fire was $2500,\ninsurance on which wa.s $1000. There\nwas no loss of contents.\nDuring the month 169 inspections\nwere made, six orders being served under Uie Fire Marshall Act. One\nappeal was made, resulting in a\nmodification of the original order,\ninstructing certain alterations, which\nChief MacDonald reported were\nnow being carried out.\nOn recommendation of Aid. William Thomson. Chairman of the Fire,\nWater and Light Committee, the\nCouncil approved the promotion of\nFrank Bantnn to the position of\nFirst Captain and H. H. Miller to\nSecond Captain of the Fire Department.\nNETHERLANDS TO\nSTIFFEN  PENALTIES\nAGAINST SPIES\nnOTTERDAM, March 5 (CP-Ha-\nvasl\u2014The Netherlands Government\nwill strengthen its anti-\u00abspionage\nservice and stiffen penalties against\nforeign spies. Justice Minister P. S.\nGerbrandy told Parliament today as\na spy trial ended here.\nP. Bakkcr, 47-year-old Netherlands subject, told the court he had\nbroadcast weather reports to Ger-\n! many with a portable transmitter\nI given him by Nazi agents. Hc also\n! admitted receiving 310 florins ($81)\n'a month frcm Germany and having\nJack Stout Joins\nHighlanders\ndonated by Creston business firms I served as a German spy in France\nand were presented by M. R  Joyce, [during the last war.\nPresident\nTrade.\nif thc Creston Board of\nSNOW SLOWS TRAFFIC\nDangerous Condition\nBirch Avenue Lane\nTold Trail Council\nTRAIL. B. C. March 4 - The\ndangerous condition of the lane be-\nFDMONTON. March 5 (CI'i - mTc.n Green and Birch Avenues in\nAppr* ximately three inches ..I sog- Block Mi reports bv Alderman\ngy snow tell throughout Northern Charles Catalano to the Citv Coun-\nAlberta today, slowing traffic to C1| M\u201en(j,v nisht, waJ referred to\nhalf its normal sneeel and crippling  ,^Q Board 'nf Works.\nbus s<\n, virons\nrviccs\nSlush\n1 5P\nn Edmonton and\n\u2022 vercd   Edmonton\n\u25a0uiQcrature    kept\nTwo Kings and a Queen\nOne king, ihll on his throne, one former queen, and a former\nking. nmiprUe thi.*. uilerrsling picture made while King Carol 11 of\nRumania addressed member*; of hi* court during the frie o( the\nu.iinn celebration. AU-> in thf picture are Prin<-\u00abs Fli\/abeth. younger\nllttrr of Carol, ard divoned \\+:U if King George \"1 Greece, at d\nCrown Prr,ir Mi. ha ' V- :\u25a0 .*.<* Rumanian throne, win wai king\nin thf abtenci oi h.* fatnei several years ago,\nNazis Lose 271,000\nTons Merch. Shipping\nI-ONDON. March 5  (CP). - An\nauthoritative British naval sourer\nsaid lhat in the first six months of\nwar Germany last about 271.000 tons\nof merchant shipping out of a total\nof 4 4(12,708.\nThe law j, he aaid. Included 22\nships captured, totalling 94.500 tons,\n2.*) scuttled totalling 154.000 tons and\nan undisclosed number of sinkings\nby Allird act; in ar.d from marine\ncauses,\nBritish losses to date as. a result\nof enemy action, he said, approximate -620-000 tons, of which two\nthirds has been replaced by new\nconstruction nnd captures. Thu was\ncompared w.th a loss of more than\n2.0nnooo tons in the first six months\nof 1917. when Germany's war on\nshipping reached its Great War\npeak.\nSPIN CABLES ON TACOMA\nNARROWS   BRIDCE\nTACOMA, Wash . March 5 (AP>-\nAnother major step m construction\nBridge was\npinning   of\nOn trial with him was Hinrich\nDrewer. Editor of the Westdeuscher\nPress* Dienst of Essen, a German\nnews service. Police testified they\nfound d'euments containing instructions for Bakker in Drewer's\nbaggage,\nThe Prosecutor asked a four-year\nsentence for both defer.dant.s. Judgment will be handed down March\n18.\nCoast Train Arrives\nin Nelson at 10:15\nCoast train from Vancouver, due\nin Nelson at 8:45 p.m. is arriving\nat 10:15, being routed by Spencc's\nBridge instead of coming through\nthe Coquahalla Pass.\nJack Stout, 24-year-old son of\nMr. and Mrs. James Stout, 810 Stanley Street, has enlisted with the\nCalgary Highlanders, he states in\na letter to his parents.\nJack took up pipe band work at\nthe age of nine. He played in the\nKootenay Kilties Band of Nelson\nand was among the pipers at many\nCaledonian Day and Highland\nGames celebrations in the Kootenay.\nTwo years ago he went to Kimberley and became a member of thc\nKimberley Pipe Band. Now he is in\nthe Calgary regiment's band, He enlisted March 1.\nPiping runs in the Stout family's\nblood. Jack's grandmother's uncle\nwho won the Victoria Cross, was a\npiper in the Crimean War, and two\nof his grandmother's cousins were\npipers during the South African\nWar, Jack's younger brother, James\ni.s also an up-and-coming young\npiper.\nJack was born in Carmen, Man\nand came to Nelson in 1920 at thc\nage of four\/ receiving all his school*\ning in Nelson schools.\nHouse A Skiers Far Out in Front Over\nB in Rossland High School Ski Tourney\n(ily Basketball\nUnless Isobel Donovan ls closely\nlooked after, the High School Bomberettes aren't going to stand much\nof a show tonight at the Civic\nCentre when they meet the Aces in\nthe second game ot a total-point\nsemi-final series in the Nelson\nLadies Basketball League for lhe\nright to meet the Rookies.\nWhen the Aces took an 11-point\nlead Monday night. Miss Donovan\nscored all but four of her team's 23\npoints.\nThe Hornets and Falcons, who led\nthe men's league in that order, have\ntheir backs to the wall tonight as\nthey go into their second games nf\na semi-final round in which each\nteam plays the other once, the two\ntop teams meeting in the finals for\nthe championship at present held\nby the Hornets. Both Falcons and\nHornets lost their opening games,\nand now will have quite a fight\non their hands to get back on top\nTonight the Bombers play the\nHornets and the Red Wings meet\nthe Falcons.\nour face when Parliament wu dissolved by Mr. King.\n\"The Conservative Party are not\nprepared to say they will Uke thl\nprofits out of war\u2014but w\u00ab are.\nThe C. C. F. atanda to abolish profitable patriotism.\n\"The war budget la a direct Invitation to the profiteer. The people of Canada started paying for\nthe war from the minute Canada\nbecame a belligerent, by the increased cost of living. The big Industries do not have to pay until\n1941. It ls about time we did away\nwith the dual system\u2014one type *jf\nregulations for the soldier and the\nworker, and another for the fresh\ncrop of millionaires!\n\"We have no reason to trust the\nstatements of the older parties that\nthere will be no conscription. Sir\nRobert Borden turned his back on\nhis own statements during the last\nwar, and brought in Uie Military\nAct of 1917. At that time 80 per\ncent of the members in Ontario applied for exemption, and all but 8\nper cent were released.\n\"Today the Government ls planning to cut down on the public\nwork schemes, and relief work, and\nyoung men are being forced to\nenlist.\nNEW TYPE COPPER\nBETTER FOR PLANES\nNEW YORK, March 5 (AP). \u2014\nProduction of a new type of copper\ndesigned, according to a spokesman\n\"to eliminate the cause of at least\n75 per cent of all electrical failures.\"\nwas announced today by Phelps\nDodge Copper Products Corporation.\nThe new type, said to be almost\nas malleable as gold, was described\nas particularly applicable for use in\nairplane, submarine and electric locomotive power plants where extreme vibration sometimes \"splinters\" even insulated copper wires,\nresulting in short circuits.\n\"The improved metal,\" the Company said, \"is made without melting\nfrom electrolytic 'cathode copper,\nwhich is plastically converted by\ntremendous pressure in a reducing\natmosphere at elevated temperature\nin smooth, dense copper bar, rod,\nstrip or other desired commercial\nshapes.\n\"Basically of the oxygen free type,\nit is the only solid copper in the\nWorld which is not -melted subsequently to the electrolytic purification process. . . . The new method\neliminates not only the casting process, but also hot-rolling\"\nBRITAIN STARVED\nGERMANY\n\"The C. C. F. Party ls standing\nfor decided peace aims. In Great\nBritain they are already discussing\npeace aims, and I can see no reasonable end to the war unless w*\nare prepared to declare on what\nbasis hostilities may end. We must\nremember that it is a generation\nhumiliated by us, and starved by the\nBritish blockade, that have made\nHitler's aggression possible.\n\"All nations must make an equal\ncontribution toward building peace,\nand the principles on which wt\nwould base our peace alms are fivefold: That we should have a negotiated, and not a dictated peace;\nthat greater and smaller nationi\nshould accept international luthor-\nity as superior to individual states;\nthat aggression and national armaments should be abandoned by\nagreement; and that all people\nshould have the right to develop\ntheir own civilization.\n\"Imperialism is the other face of\ncapitalism, which has brought on\nthe conditions which exist today in\nCanada,\" Mr. MacNeil concluded.\nH, W. Herridge of Nakusp, C. C. f.\ncandidate for Kootenay West, wai\nintroduced by E. L. Walker, Chairman of the Rossland C. C. F,\nCommittee.\nWOULD DEFEND\nCANADA\nThe C. C. F. party is prepared\nto render economic assistance, thc\nspeaker asserted. He stated the protection of public interests against\nprofiteering, the drawing up of\nproper peace terms, and the prepara\ntioh for actual defence of Canada itself against an attack, was the attitude of the party toward war conditions at the present moment.\n\"There is no call for large expeditionary forces to be sent Overseas,\"\nhe stated. \"We are undermining the\nindustries of our own country, and\nwe may have to face a war of our\nown in the unpredictable future.'\nThe last war was a military victory. Eleven million people gave\ntheir lives, but what was won by\nthe troops was lost by the profiteers,\nthe speaker said.\n\"No scandals ever exposed have\nbeen more lerrible than those ex\nposed concerning the Conservative\nParty which were in power during\nthe last war,\" he claimed.\n\"The Liberal Government has\nfailed to end unemployment, to\ngive youth opportunities, or to give\nthe worker security,\" Mr. MacNe.l\nstated. \"Now, in 1940, during an\nother campaign, they promise that\nthey might do something toward\nunemployment.\n\"People have fostered and protected the law of monopoly in Canada. Instead of having a group of\nabout 260 men in Canada operate\nthe main industries, these industries should be put under public\ncontrol for the public interest. This\nwould assuredly guard against unemployment and insecurity. The\nprofit motive has brought a sorry\nposition of inequality in Canada,'\nhe stated.\nAlthough production had been\nincreasing on the farm as well as in\nthe factories, the average wage of\nthe worker had not shown a cor-\nresponding increase. Industries\nshould be brought under control by\nmeans of production and distribution. The older parties at present\nallowed power to be exercised without responsibility to the people,\nwhile the C. C. F. Party maintained that this power should no\nlonger be exercised. \"The C. C. F.\nrppearance in the election campaign is a step forward toward defeating unnecessary poverty in Canada,\" he said.\n\"To win the war is not the only\nobjective. It has been said that\n'War is a cowardly escape from the\nproblems of peace,' and a country\nthat neglects its youth and its unemployed is not fit to champion thc\ncause for democracy.\nSEES  PRIVILEGED\nINTERESTS\n\"Despite a statement made by Mr.\nKing, himself, to the effect that!\nanyone found profiteering from th?\nwar should be treated as a member |\nof the underworld, we still find tiie.\nbig businesses being protected. Not\none war contract on a five per cent' ..|,Dn.D r(Jin\/,.\nprofit basis was accepted. These j MUKUtK CHARGE LAID\nterms were flatly turned down. In AC*lvS'r '\"HI\nthe case of the Bren gun contract,!    rn\u201eAWIV.\u201e   .,     ,   ,   ,__.\nthe   John   Inghs   Company   is   as- '\u25a0 \u201e EDMONTON.   March  3   (CP)   -\nsured of a clear profit of $450,000,1 !\\oya! L,3?ad-a.n ;\nand the people of Canada are pay-j\ning for the cost of production.\"\nTHRONE SPEECH\nTELLS OF NOVA\nSCOTIA'S EFFORTS\nHALIFAX, March 5 (CP). - The\nspeech from the throne read at the\nopening of the Nova -Scotia Legislature today revealed the Provincial Government has taken steps to\nmake the Province's mineral resources more readily available for\nCanada's war effort.\n\"Following consultations with the\nFederal authorities, the Executive\nCouncil approved of the policy of\nforfeiting under the Mines Act,\nwhenever the need might arise, areaa\ncontaining manganese, tungsten,\nmolybdenum, antimony and such\nother essential minerals as might\nbe required for war purposes,\" the\nspeech said.\n\"Notification was thereupon given\nto all those holding tracts where\noccurrences of these minerals existed that every effort should be made\nto energize the exploration and development of these deposits,\"\nThe speech was read by the Province's Chief Justice, Sir Joseph\nChisholm.\nThe speech failed to forecast introduction of major legislation other\nthan a measure \"respecting the prevention and suppression of fires.\"\nThe measure was forecast last year\nby the legislators after the Queen\nHotel fire here March 2 took a\ntoll of 28 lives.\nMuch of the speech was devoted\nto Nova Scotia's part in the nation's\nwar effort.\n(if Ihe Tac\u00abma Nair\nfinished   today   wh\nrflblr*!   from   whirl\nstructure   \u25a0* ill   be\ncompleted\nSpinning \u2022 f the 17-inch cablrs b\ngan lust Jnn. I.V\nW IKK).000\nus ponded   was\nFIRST CZECH CASUALTY\nON   FRENCH   FRONT\nPARIS. March 3 <CV Ha vis)-The\nfirst ,\u00aboldiPr nf C\/cch nationality\nIn die nn the French front wa< Jar-\noslav n.r.l. tV War Ministry today\ninfnrmrrl the Csc-rho-Slovak National Conmntlre 3asl, a member\nnf the French Foreign I-cgmn, was\nkilled   in  action   .lan   fl\nDEATHS\nST    CATHARINES,   (hit.-J.   W,\nI McKinnon, puimneut industrialist.\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 4 -\nHouse A again proved itself victorious, this time with a score of 108\npoints, compared to 47 points garnered by House B, in the second\nannual high school ski tournament.\nheld in the Rossland ski fields Sa'.-\nurday.\nCLAIRE JAMIESON,\nAGGREGATE\nHighest point winner for the day\nwas Claire Jamieson, who copped\nfour firsts in lhe senior girls events.\ntotalling 20 punts Hob Irvin and\nEger Jensen tied, with five points\neach, in the senii r boys events.\nJark Lees had 18 points, to head the\nintermediate boy.**, and Peter Jensen won Hi points, coming first in\nthc junior boys events. Margurot\nWright headed thc intermediate\ngirls with lfl points, nnd Joan Bacon the junior girls with 13 points.\nRace results follow;\nRACE RESULTS\nBoys' cr ss country races-\nIntermediate \u2014 Jack Lees, 13 53\nmin.\nJunior -- Morden Hoyle, 14.27\nmins; Irwin Palmer, 1632 mins,\nGirls' cross country raceR\u2014\nSenior\u2014Claire Jamieson, 12.42\nmins.\nIntermediate \u2014Margaret Wright,\n1.141  mins.\nJunior\u2014Joan Bamn, 14 15 mins ;\nViolet Miros, 15.03 nuns; Mary Vetere, 15.0*6 mins\nBoys' downhill  rarrs -\nIntermediate - Eugene Topliff, 30\nsec ;  Jack   Lees.\nJunicr- Peter Jensen. 24 75 lees ;\n.Sidney Paul, 2.ri 25 *ec; Tommy\nHam, 26 ser\nGirls' downhill races \u2014\nSenior- Claire Jamieson. 2*6 75 sec\nIntermediate-Margaret Wrig.it,\n62 sec.\nJunior\u2014Julia Polonikoff 25.75\nsec ; Mary Vetere 40 sec; Lucienne\nHertig, 54.5  sec.\nBeys' slalom-\nSenior\u2014Hob Irvin, 37.5 sec; Earl\nCoulter 50.5 sec.\nIntermediate-*Jack  Lees  57  sec.\nJunior\u2014Alfred Zanussi, 39.5 bee;\nSidncv Paul 50 sec.; Mordon H.yte,\n51 5 sec.\nGirls' slalom\u2014\nSenior\u2014Claire Jamieson R8 sec,\nLorraine Berg 72 sec; Florence\nCorrado 97 sec.\nIntermediate- -Ormi Joy Butorac\n55.5 sec; Margaret Wright, 68 5 sec\nJunior-M;.rv Vetere 92 sec; Joan\nBacon. 92 5 sec\nBoys jumping\u2014\nSenior\u2014Eger Jensen 74 points.\nIntermediate - Jack Lees, 64\npoints,\nJunior- Peter   Jensen  73   points'\nRov   Johnson   70 6   punt\nPaul  70 3 points.\nGirls' obstacle-\nSenior  \u2014   Claire  Jami\nNew Irish Party\nOpposes De Valera\nDUBLIN, March 5 (CP).-A new\npolitical party, opposed to Prime\nMinister Eamon de Valera, was\nadded to Irish politics today,\nIt is the Constitutional Republican Partv aimed al establishment\nof a republic to include al! Ireland\nand composed of dissident former\nmembers nf Mr. De Valera's Fianna\nFail.\nSamuel Fitzpatrick, a former Irish\nRepublican Army officer, said the\norganization was formed because\n\"De Valera has no definite policy\non partition and has instituted repressive measures against Republicans.\"\nThc illegal Irish Republican Army\nis one of the principal groups agitating for inclusion of the six Northern\ncounties in an All-I re land state.\nNorthern Ireland now is part of\nthe United Kingdom.\nPrivileged interests are making\nmoney through our sacrifices,\" thc\nspeaker charqed. \"sacrifices made\nby every family in Canada. The first\nshell con'ract issued at the declaration of war was awarded to a\nLiberal.\n\"We were prepared lo make enquiries at the last session nf parliament, but the door was closed in\nnounced here today that a charge of\nmurder has been laid against Mn.\nS-phie Calder. half-breed of tht\nMarlborough District near Edsnn,\nfollowing the death of her six-\nmonths-old daughter in Ed son hospital  Friday.\nThe babv died from multiple\nbruises, allegedly received \u2022\" a\nbcatmi; ad'r n\nMrs, Calder has been Uken  t*\nFnrt    Saskatcnev-..,!,\nOh, for the Life of a Boxer\n\/\nn, 1 U5\nmi ns.\nIntermediate \u2014Margaret Wright.\n1 OH mins; Ormi J< y Butorac 1.10\nmins.\nJunior -Joan Baci n 1.25 mins.:\nRoberta Bryan, 130 mins,\nREFRESHMENTS AT CABIN\nOfficials were George Johnsto.i,\nScorekeeper; Winston Churchill.\nTimekeeper, Trygve Nora, Judge\nfor jumping com pet it ion. Winston\nChurchill laid oul the course (or\nthe en ss country race, Frank\nBlackwell was the Starter for the\nslalom races, and Frank Blackwell\nStarter for the downhill races.\n\"Hot dogs' and coffee were served in the Rossland cabin, whicli\nhad been lent for Ihe dav. Mis-\nHclrn Pa 11 ison and Mini Dorothy\nBuchanun being in chargt.\nMenzies to Discuss\nCoalition Gov't.\nSYDNFY. Australia. March 5 -\n(CP-Reuter.si. Prime Munster R\nG. Menzies will discuss the possi-,\nbility of formation of a coalition\ngovernment with leaders of thr\nCountry Part on Thursday, it was\nannounced today.\nSIX HICH U.S. PUBLIC\nOFFICIALS   INDICTED\nDETROIT, March 5 (AP)- Six\nhifjh public officials of Wayne\nCounty, Detroit, including Sheriff\nThomas E, Wile x and Prosecutor\nDuncan C. McCrea, were indicted\nloday by Judge Homer Ferguson,\nsitting as a one - man grand Jury\nInvestigating gambling and Kraft\nThe Indictments rharced conspiracy to operate er permit the nt\\ration of disorderly houses, jumbling\nhouses, handboi ks and policy\ngames,\nForty-five othei persons weir\nnamed in the Indictment, ilx vi\nI them \"John Doei-\"\nIf all training grinds were as easy easy to take as this one, tha\npugilists profession would be overcrowded. The stag at bay here is\nGils Lesnevltch. who is training in the Florida sunshine for his attempt\nto wrest the light heavyweight crown from the Hibernian head oj\nPilt-sburgh's Billy Conn The girls helping Gui train are Miami Beach\nbelles.\n \t\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\t\nwemmmnma\nWMWMIRI\nSPORTS\nMay and Grodski Return From Ban!I\nki Championships lo Improve Nelson\nlalom and Downhill Ski Conditions\n[orakos Decides to\nPlay Minor Hockey\nCHICAGO, March 8 (APl-doal-\nMike Karakas finally has decid-\nto play minor league hockey with\novidence Reds ot the Internalion-\n\u25a0American League rather than sit\nhome in Eveleth, Minn,\nChicago Black Hawks sent Kara-\ns to Providence last Dee. 2*8 when\nwaa replaced by Paul Goodman.\n!ter a few games there Karakas\nit and said he didn't want to play\n* a minor league salary.\ned Wings Upset\nHornets in First\nBasketball Semi\nThe Red Wings, who finished in\nit place of the four-team Nelson\nen's Buketball League, upset the\nampion Hornets for the third time\nit season when they took the first\nime of the semi-final playoffs\n\u25a023 it the Civic Centre Monday\nght. In the next game of the\nund,* the Wings meet the Fair-\new Falcone tonight.\nThe Hornets played with the ler-\nces of only three men, Gray, Mil-\nr tnd Maxwell, the playoff hockey\nme apparently drawing the sup-\nirt of the rest ot the team. The\njrnets played well three men to\nn, but couldn't withstand the\neady power of the Wings.\nScore by periods:\nid Wings       9   8 10 12-39\norneta 7  7   5   4-23\nLineups with scorers follow:\n|Red Wings\u2014Charles Lindsay  14,\nlick Apostoliuk 2, Joe DeLucrezio\n1 Armando  Maglio 10,  Lawrence\nlelimger, and Eugene Maglio 11.\n[Hornets\u2014Jack Gray 9, Glen Mil-\nIr 6 and Albert Maxwell 8.\n[Phyllis Wallace and Megs Henry\nIfereed,   Geraldme   Wallace   was\nlorer and Marjory Todd waa time-\nreper.   \u2022\ntasie, Manager\nRowe Are Fined\nIVANCOUVER, March 5 (CP)\nred 'Cyclone) Taylor, President\n{the Pacific Coaet Hockey League,\nJapped $100 fines today on fiery\nfcati Baptiste Pusie of Vancouver\npons and Manager Bobby rV>we of\nPortland Buckaroos as the relit of a brawl here last night while\n\u25a0ona were trimming the Bucs 4-3.\n\u25a0Taylor said Pusie also would be\nIspended for one game and pre-\n\u25a0cted that Guy Patrick, Vancouver\nanager, would take additional ac-\njon against the French-Canadian\nbfenceman. Patrick could not be\nlached immediately for comment\niPusie drew his second fine of\nfie season\u2014he was nicked $50 a\ntuple of months ago\u2014for striking\nIree persons, including the referee,\nlid capping the demonstration by\nreaking his stick in two and throw*\nIg the pieces at Rowe.\nPennsylvania Oil at Its But\nQUAKER STATE\nWholejali Distributor!\nLcme Automotive\nII Baker St Supply Ph   1040\nHave Great Ideas to\nLocalize Skiing\nYmir Rood\n\"We certainly had our eyes opened as far as the sli'lom and downhill events went,\" slated Danny\nMcKay, Chairman of the Kootenay\nSki Zone, on his return with Art\nGrodski, anoth - Nelson competitor,\non Tuesday morning's train trom\nthe Dominion championships at\nBanff.\n\"Their courses are much steeper\nand longer than ours,\" Danny went\non, as he began to formulate plans\nfor the improvement ot Nelson skiing facilities so that crack slalom\nand downhill skiers could be produced. \"The downhill course at\nMount Norquay was over l'.i miles\nlong and a lot of it was ovct a 45-\ndegrec angle.\"\nAt Banff the slalom, downhill and\njumping are all in the same valley,\nand it la possible to produce the\nsame setup out the Ymlr road where\nonly the jump Is at present situated. McKay said. Here it is a smaller\nvalley, but it will be finer. The\nslalom course at the Golf Links was\nfine for beginners, he pointed out,\nbut it was well-nigh impossible to\nbring on Juniors and improve the\nseniors. Some work out at thc Jump,\nhe stated, and thc Nelson Jumping\nwould be equal, if nol better, to\nthat at Banff.\nMcKAY BEATS EAST\nIn the \"A\" class jumping, there\nwere 48 entrants and Danny was\nfourteenth, with jumps of 142 and\nIM. He beat all the Eastern Jumpers but it was the Western plank-\nmen that he had to contend with,\nHowever that was a fine showing,\nand Grodski also made two nice\njumps, but <n his last one hc fell\nand broke a ski.\n\"If we had have had jumping\npractice on those big hills, we\ncould have easily held our own,\"\nthe Nelson competitor*! aaid. You\ncould have oounted their jumps\nthis eeaaon on one hand for the\nweatherman absolutely refuted to\nblest the skiing fraternity with\nany snow, whereas their opponents had beon Jumping for weeks.\nMcKay was particularly amazed\nst the skill of the Juniors at Banff.\nTwo 13-year-old girls, he said, were\nas good as the senior girls. The kids\nthere are apparently on skis all thc\ntime, fcr at school they even go\nwithout their recess period so that\nthey can get out of schr.ol early to\ndon the planks They have the best\nequipment available too.\nSam Warmington of Kimberley\nwas thirly-second in the slalom and\nnot second r   erroneously reported.\n\u2014NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, I.C-WIDNISDAY MORNINOu MARCH S, 1M0.-\nCUNNARSEN WINS\nON REVELSTOKE HILL\nREVELSTOKB, B. C, March 8 -\n(CP),\u2014In a iki meet hert today\nwhich ended aeven yeari of inactivity for the Mount Revelatoke National Park Ski hill. Hana Ounnar-\nsen look first place with Jumps of\n205 and 188 feet. Art Johnson. Revelstoke, was second with Jumps of\n205 and 186 feet; Emil Gunnarsen\njumped 175 ind 155 feet; and Bill\nCopeley, Banff, Alta., reached 175\nfeet and 176 feet although he touched on the latter. ..\nLeafs Are After\nOpening Series\nGame on Friday\n\"We're looking forward to that\nplayoff game Friday night at Trail\nwith the Idea that It is a sudden-\ndealh game,\u2014and we're gonna get\nit,\" emphasized Rene Morin, Coann\nof the Nelson Maple Leafs, Tuesday\nnight, after he had put his boys\nthrough a workout in which hc\nfor the most part brushed up the\ndefensive plays of the team.\n\"Thc boys figure that they overcame a great obstacle when thty\nhurdled Kimberley,\" Rene went on,\n\"and having got past the Dynamiters, they are confident of also\ntaking thc Smoke Eaters Into camp.\"\nAnd Mr. Morin certainly feels the\nsame way. for Kimberley played\nfar improved hockey in the playoffs, compared with in the league.\nIf the Leafs should defeat thc\nSmoke Eaters Friday, that would\ngive them a big jump in the best of\nfive series for the league championship and right to represent the\nProvince in Allan Cup playdowns\n\"And I know that over in Trail they\ncan't helo feeling a bit leary of us.\nfor they can't help remembering\nwhat happened back in 1937,\" Rene\nsaid as he thought of that series\nin which Nelson defeated Trail\nthree straight after Trail had been\nheavily favored by thc experts.\nThe second game of the series will\nbe played in Nelson Tuesday, with\nthe scene reverting back to Trail\nThursday. If more games arc necessary, they will be back in Nelson\nSaturday, and at either Nelson or\nTrail the following Wednesday.\nHockey Standings\nHockey Scores\nQuibtc Provincial Senior\nValleyfield 1, Sherbrooke 2.\n(First of best of five games semifinal  series).\nNew Bruniwick Senior\nMoncton 1, Chatham 3.\n(.First   of   two-game   total   goals\nfinal series).\nInternational -American\nProvidence 5, Syracuse 4.\nDiMAGGIO SIGNS\nST. PETERSBURG, Fla. March 5\n(APi\u2014Joe DiMaggio, No. 1 star\nof the world baseball champion\nNew York Yankees, accepted the\nclub's terms today, ending the\nYanks' last holdout problem.\nNo announcement was made of\nthe salary terms but it is believed\nhere DiMaggio accepted the club'i\noffer nf $30,000. a $5000 raise over\nhis   1939   salary.\nNATIONAL\n\u2022\nP W L D   F\nA Pt\nRangers\n45 26 10 9 131\n73 Bl\nBoston   \t\n.   43 28 11 4 157\n90 00\nToronto\n43 22 15 fl 110\n91 50\nChicago\n... 4.1 19 18 6   95\n109 44\nDetroit\n44 15 23 6   81\n114 36\nAmericans\n43 13 26 4   88\n122 30\nCanadiens\n.43   9 29 5   78\n141 23\nResult of\nlast night's game\nDetroit 2\nBoston 7.\nGIANTS THOUGHT\nAN IF TEAM, BUT\nNOT BY TERRY\nBy WHITNEY MARTIN\nWINTIRHAVIN, Pit, Mareh 6\n(AP).\u2014There li > fairly genenl\nIdea that New York Giants ef the\nNational Baseball League are an\n\"If\" club thla year, with aome of\nthe more skeptical bunching all\ntha little \"Ifa\" together under ona\nbig It to the effect that \"If that's a\nwinning ball club I'm the Fourth\nof July.\"\nThe opinion is based on memory\nof the 1839 season when Bill Terry a\nClub wound up a badly deflated\nfifth.\nBut Just tune in a minute on the\nTerry hour.\n\"Frankly,\" he says, \"I'd rather\nhave this club than the one I started\nwith last year\u2014knowing what I do\nnow.\n\"There's nothing wrong with our\npitching staff. Hubbell and Schumacher are like a couple of kids\nout there. Vandenberg Is looking\ngood, Castleman is working hard,\nand Gumbert and Melton are okay.\nRoy Joiner is going to be a big\nhelp.\n\"Babe Young will be our firit\nbaseman. If Zeke Bonura aigns I'll\ncarry him but he doesn't figure in\nmy plans.\"\nTerry's voice crackled with enthusiasm as he spoke of Mickey\nWitek, second baseman from New-\n\"There's a ball player,\" he enthused. \"You only have to look at him\ntwo minutes to know that. He'll\nmake our double play combination.\"\nNelson May Get\nRoller-Skating\nStill another sport will be added\nto Nelson's growing ,and already\nimpressive list according to plans\nof a Vancouver roller-skating promoter, Denis StDenis, Manager of\nlhc Nelson Civic Centre, stated on\nTuesday.\n\"It Is probable that after April\n1 roller skating will be conducted\nin thc Amusement Hall until the\nlacrosse floor is installed in the\nArena.\" Mr. StDenis said. Rubber\nrollers will be uaeij so that the\ndance floor will not be injured, and\nif the Arena floor does not prove\nsatisfactory, they will probably go\nback to the Amusement Hall.\nIt Is believed that thc same partv\nmight conduct roller skating at\nvarious points in thc Interior,\nnotably Trail.\nIt is interesting to note that lo\noutfit the hall with roller skalcs\nwould come to about $2000, each\npair running at approximately $7.\nThere would be about 300 pairs for\nthe public to rent for each session.\nFANS BOO BUT STAY\nTO APPLAUD FIGHTER\nLOUISVILLE, Ky., March 9 (APi\n\u2014For four rounds last night specta-\ntora booed the performance of Ronnie Hampton ot Louisville In a\nboxing match with Joey Palmo of\nCincinnati.\nThen it dlacovered he had been\nfighting since the first with a broken\nleft arm. Palmo waa awarded a technical knpekout victory.\nThe boos turned to applause.\nBoston Turns on\nPower lo Blast\nDetroit Red Wings\n' BOSTON, March 5 (Al*).\u2014Needing every possible point In the\nbattle for the National Hockey\nLeague leadership with the New\nYork Rangers, Boston Bruins\nthrew tremendous sower against\nthe weakened Detroit Red Wings\nand gained a 7-2 victory tonight\nbefore 12,000 at the Boston Garden\nThe triumph, which wiped out\nSunday's setback in Detroit, moved\nthe Bruins to within a point of Lester Patrick's pace-maker, who have\nbut three more games to play against\nfive for the Stanley Cup titlists.\nBobby Bauer topped thc Bruins'\nscorers with two unassisted tallica\nand Milt Schmidt, the league's leading scorer, celebrated his 22nd birthday by annexing a goal and an assist that boosted his total to 47\npoints. The other Boston goal-makers were Roy Conacher. Herb Cain.\nDit Clapper and Red Hamill.\nGoalie Frankie Bi'imsek's hopes\nof chalking up his sixth shutout\ndied during the second minute of\nhe final session when Syd Abel\naimed a shot that struck Clapper\non the chest and dropped between\nhis legs. Clapper lost sight ot the\nSuck and before he could clear it.\nien  Kilrea  jabbed  it free  and\nflipped it Into thc Boston net.\nLate in the game, Alex Motter\ngot loose on a breakaway play and\nset up the second Detroit acore for\nthe trailing Syd Howe.\nFirst period: 1, Boston, Bauer,\n9:42.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period: 2. Boston, Conacher (Cowley, Smilh) 5:52; 3, Boston, Schmidt (Hamill. Hill) 10:44; 4,\nBoston, Cain (Crawford. Wiseman)\n15:07; 5, Boston, Clapper (Schmidt)\n17:17.\nPenalties: None.\nThird period: 6, Detroit, Kilrea\n(Abel) 1:55; 7, Boston, Hamill\n(Bauer) 2:39; 8, Detroit, Howe (Motter) 18:41; 9. Boston, Bauer, 19:16.\nPenalties: None.\nCubs Decide to\nPlay Vernonlles\nAfter Argument\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nMarch 5 (CP),\u2014New Westminster\nCubs tonight began collecting the\nhockey goer they put away lor the\nseason last night after defeating\nKimberley in the Provincial Intermediate semi-finals, and prepared\nto travel to Vernon, B. C, to contest the Provincial title with Vernon Bluc-and-Whltei.\nFollowing last night'a game Manager Bill Mott said the Cubs would\ndefault the final series, allowing\nKimberley to take their place, bul\nlate today ho said they would\ntravel to Vernon after all.\nMott said the situation arose from\nthe request of the British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association\nthat tho Cubs, it victorious, remain\nin Vernon to meet the Alberta Intermediate champions In a series\nbeginning March 13.\nHe said the Cubs could not accede to this request because it\nwould require the players being\naway from their jobs too long. He\nsaid their plans were indefinite\nafter the Provincial series.\nJakie Mann Leads Semi-Final Scoring\nSmith and Runyan\nFade Out of $5000\nFour-Ball Tourney\nCORAL CABLES, Fla, March 5\n(API.\u2014Horton Smith, one of the\nworld's great putters, missed a wee\none of less than three feet today\nas he and Paul Runyan. last of_thr\nseeded teams, faded out of the $5000\nInternational four-ball golf tournament. Dick Me!r. and Ky Laffoon\nplay Billy Burks and Craig Wood\nin the finals tomorrow.\nMetr. and Laffoon both scored\nbirdie fours to beat Runyan and j\nSmith one up. after 36 holes. Wood '\nand Burke won from Clayton Heafner and E. J. (Dutch i Harrison, 4\nand 3.\nHolds Big Lead With\nFive Goals, Two\nAssists\nTeen-Age Readers!\nWin One of These\nCash Prizes\nFirst Prize $2.50\nSecond Prize $1.50     Third Prize $1.00\nFOR  SOLVING THIS PROBLEM\nThree neighbors buy a circular grindstone and agree to share it\nequally, it being granted that the central part, six inches in\ndiameter, is of no value, so the remainder only is to be divided\nIf the area of a cirrle is found by multiplying the square of hall\nthe diameter by 3 1416, what will be the diameter of the stonr\nafter two equal shares have been worn away, if the original\ndiameter was thirty inches? (Answer to the nearest tenth of\nan inch).\nThe prizes will be awarded to the three youngest contestants submitting the simplest correct solutions. Thc\nprizes will be awarded by the judge and donor in thc\norder of their ages, the first prize going to the youngest\nClosing dale of the contest is March 15 The solution\nmust be fully given.\nAttach your solution to this coupon, and mail to the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS 'TEENAGE PROBLEM CONTEST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nThe solution attached has been done by me. unaided hy any\nperson.\nName \t\nDale of Birth .\nAdclrfM   \t\nAge\nAces Lead Lady\nHoop Semi-Finals\nDefending champion* of the Nrl-\n1 son Ladies   Basketball League, th*1\n\\ Acn waltzed off to a 23-12 victory\nover thc High School Bomberettes\nat the Civic Centre Monday night\nin  the  first  game  of a  two-game\n; total-goal scries in tho playoff scm:-\ni final jieries. Aces will carry an 11-\n! point lead into the second game to\n| t>e  played   tonight,  the   winner   to\ni advance to a best of five j-mes for\n1 the title with the Rookies who finished  in   first  place  in  the league\ni schedule\nWith Isobel Donovan piling in a\ntolal of 19 points for a new girls'\nrecord this t-eason. the Aces jumped\noff to an early lead, the score standing at 7-2 at th-e end of thc first\nquarter. Isobel. who led the league\nwith plenty t<i spare in scoring,\npicked up all her team'.*** points in\nthe first, find altogether had all\nbut four pumts of her team's tot il.\nFrances Mc Mullen anil Irene\nBourdon <*f thc Bomberettes and\nAces respectively were each given\nthc gate in the las', half v\npersonal foul mute.\nScore b\\ period*:\nAces 7   6   fl\nBomberettes 2   0   7\nLineup* with scorers folio\nAees\u2014 Isobel   Donovan   19,\nHenry   2,   Almeda   (J raves,\nStanghrrlin, Elvera Matheson. Irene\nBourdon  2 nnd Marv IVU'upp\nBomberettes Isabelle Knv 7, Rn-\nmame Bentz I. France McMullcn\n1, Di rem Mnnahm . IM V,\\\\\\ 2\nMargaret Thain. Neenn McClemei**;\n1 and Kay Manahan\nAl Maxwell refereed. nnd Stuart\nMacintosh nnd Phyllis Wallace\nlooked after the score shed and\ntime\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nHarringay Stars\nSwamp Canadians\nLONDON, March 5 (CP Cable)--\nHarringay All-Stars swamped a\nrepresentative First Canadian Division Hockey team 11-2 tonight in\na challenge game for the benefit\nof the Beaver Club, recreation\nc\u00abntre for Canadian soldiers in\nLondon.\nAnthony Eden, Dominions Secretary, faced off the puck. The\nCountess and Earl of Athlone headed a distinguished group of spectators which included thc Canadian,\nSouth African, Australian and New\nZealand High Commissioners and\nBrig.-General A- C. Crlchley, Major-\nGeneral H. D. G. Crerar and Brigadier J. S to wart.\nSpeedy Groh of St. Catharines,\nOnt., worked like a Trojan for the\nsoldiers. W. F. A, Robinson of Owen\nSound. Ont., and Jack Belwa, Kingston, Ont., were the gcal getters.\nThe All-SUr scorers were Rill\nKlem. Kenora, Ont., f.ur; Dune\nCheyne, Winnipeg, and Joe Beaton.\nNew Glasgow. N.S, two each, and\nDuke Campbell, Winnipeg, Lindsay\nMcDougall. Portage La rrairic,\nMan., and Rene Trudel, Winnipeg.\nBombers Surprise\nFalcons 27-16 in\n1st Hoop Playoff\nThe High School Bombers surprised the Nelson basketball fraternity when they took a 27-16 victory\nfrom tho Fairview Falcons ln thc\nfirst semi-final playoff game of thc\nNelson Men's Basketball League.\nThe Bombers next opposition U the\nHornets  whom they meet tonight.\nThe Bombers took the lead right\nfrom the start, and once they got\ngoing they were never to danger.\nThe Falcons played with only four\nmen to the Bombers' five, and\ncouldn't keep up to the youngsters'\npace.\nScore by periods:\nBombers     10   8   2   7\u201427\nFalcons       3   6   4   3\u201416\nLineups with scorers follow:\nBlue Bombers\u2014John Huyck, Arne\nHenrickson 4, Cecil Maloncy 2,\nEinar Domeij 2, Harry MacKenzie,\nDelbert Smiley 3, Gl(**n Price 2, Roy\nMann 6. Elmer Tattrie 6 and Ted\nHuyck 2.\nFalcons\u2014Jack Winlaw 9, Gordon\nStirzaker 2, Albert Daynard 4 and\nJim Cherrington 1.\nAl Maxwell and Glen Miller refereed. with Stuart Macintosh scorer\nand Phyllis Wallace timekeeper.\nGreenwood Takes\nCascade Swampers\nGREENWOOD. B. C\u2014To wind up\nIhe season's hockey, unless a cold\nspell sets in, Greenwood Juniors\nbeat Cascade Swampers 9-5.\nLineups:\nCa-scadc\u2014L. Saunders, Doug Mil\nler. F. Fcrnelli. Hume Kitchin, 0.\nTedcsco, Roy Holmes, G. Tambelini.\nJ. Klinosky, Einer Skands, Harold\nSkands.\nGreenwood\u2014Corry Wright P.\nForshaw, W. Brown. R. Dodd. K.\nMcLean, M. Cox, H. MacDonald,\njr.: Bomblni, W. Graser, E. Klin\nosky.\nFirst period \u2014 McDonald from\nBambini; Cox from Forshaw; Jr\nBombini; H. McDonald.\nPenalties\u2014E. Klinosky.\nSecond period\u2014McDonald from\nBombini, I. Skands, Cascade; F,\nFreneli, Cascade.\nPenalties\u2014E. Klinosky, McDonald. E. Klinosky i5 min.i\nThird nerido\u2014M. Cox; M. Cox; H.\nMcDonald, P. Forshaw; H. Skands.\nCascade; J. Klinosky, Cascade; I\nSkands, Cascade.\nPenalties\u2014E. Klinosky; P. Forshaw; K. McLean; M. Cox, B. Dodd,\nTedesco.\n(assios (up Bowling for Ladies\nOpens on Legion Alleys Tonighl\nMcCreedy Scores as\nBlue Devils Qualify\nSUDBURY, Ont, Mirch i (CP).\n\u2014Kirkland Lake Blue Devils qualified for the Northern Ontario\nHockey Association lentor finals\nhere tonight when they defeated\nSudbury Mlnen 4-3. It wu the\nthird straight victor; tor the Blue\nDevils ln the belt of five semifinal scries. They won the tint two\ngamea 2-1 tnd 5-3 on Kirkland Lake\nice, end now await the winner ot\nthe Dome-Holllnger series.\nSmith, Jo-Jo Rabowaki, Dollinger\nand Johnny McCreedy were the\nmarksmen tor the Devlli.\nPAGE  NINI\nC-REEMAN & LEE-U\/\n\u2022        FURNITUM COMPANY *\nThe Boon et rurnltur* Styles\nlegle Ilk.     N.imn     Phone 118\nConn In ind ne our\nFURNITURE\nVALUES\nYour Dollars buy mere tt\nOur Store\nKraut Kids Better Than Cook\nBrothers and Boucher Says Ross\ntht\n2-2,1\n3\u201412\nMrg\nBetty\n(Street)\n(Town i\nI declare lhc above information lo be crm-l\nBy The Canadian Pren\nThr mile bicycle rrcord held by\nTorchy Pcden of Victoria ,*'\"*s he\ntrrcd nt Lot Anitclrs five year.-; if\ntoday by Frnnk Hnrlcll, hcwtii:k\nered Cieclio-Slovak ian. who skim\nmed around the truck at -BU-MI4 milcf\nan hour, four mile:- nn hour be tier\nthan thc Canadian tcdhead's mark\nFOR GAS, OIL,\nLUBRICATION\nShorty's\n711 Baker Si\nRepair  Shop\nJAKIC MANN\nJakie Mann, who would rank high\nas the outstanding rookie of the\nWeft Kootenay Hockey league 193B-\n40 season, easily led the scoring\nparade In the Klmberley-Nelson\nsemi-final playoffs just completed.\nMann compiled seven points on five\ngoals and two insists, four ahead ot\nhis nearest rivals, Gordie Wilson of\nKimberley who had three points on\nas many goals and Buddy Hammond\nof Nebon who scored once and assisted twice.\nTho 155.pound Nelson left winger,\none of tin* smartest siickhandlers in\nthe circuit, was well up in thc\nstandings in thr regular league\nschedule with 29 points, 20 of them\ngoals\nTommy Almack and Red Carr of\nKimberley and Nelson respectively\nincurred the most penalties In a\nparticularly clean series, with three\nminors each.\nJesse Seaby in the NeUon net allowed seven goaU by him in thr\nthree games for a game average of\n2.1. while Ken Campbell was heat-\nrn by nine shots for an average of\nthree it  game.\nIndividual  fl'.alidings  follow:\n(',   A 1\" Pe\nMann   Nel.-i.n 'i    -\nWil.-on. Kinibciley *l    \"\nHammond. Nelson      1    2\nNick Smith. Nelson -   \"\nKilpatrick.  Nelson 1    i\nC   Sorenson.  Klmbrrlc)*    1    1\nCalles. Kimberlev II\nBurnett. Kimberley 1   (1\nAlmnck. Kimberlev I   0\nRedding. Kimberlev 0   1\nSneider. Nelson (I    1\nAlgar. Nelson 1    1\n| Carr,  Nelson n   I\nStrong, Kimberley       .   0\nDesreux. Nelson (1\nll'nrbett. Kimberley       .   (1\nBicknell. Nelson n\nJohnny Smilh. Nelson      n\nF.uerbv, Nelson     0\nBonneville. Nelson     0\nForrest. Kimberley fl\nKemp. Kirnbrrley 0\nCarl Sorenson. Kimb. II\nArmstrong. Kimberlev      0\nMarine. Kimberley (I\nTeams' standings follow:\nr w i, n t\nNelson 3    I    II    2   (I\nKimberlev   ..30127\nThe high light of the ladies'\nbowling season, play for the Cassios Cup and the Larson individual\ncupi, will open at the Canadian\nI-egion Alleys tonight when all four\nteams got  into action.\nA schedule of 12 matches, extending to April 10 with games to be\nplayed each Wednesday, has been\narranged by J, H. Chapman, President ol thc\"Canadian Legion Bowling Club.\nThre<- ladies will form each team,\nwith the skips being Mrs. J. H.\nChapman, Mrs. Jack Annable. Mrs\nH. Edwards and Mrs. Ben Whiteside. Not to handicap a team with\nan absentee player, the following\nscores will be allowed: skip 110.\nsecond 100 and lead 90. A playerj\nabsent after thr fifth frame must!\ntake the score allowed in her class\nfor that string.\nTwo strings onlv will be played ,\nin each match, ana two rounds will\nbe played, which means that each\nteam will meet each of the other\nthree twice. Tolal pins, not total\ngames, won will decide the championship, and to tho winner will go\nlhe Cassios Clip. The l^rson cups\nfor high aggregate and high single\nhonors must go to two bowlers: if\none player has the highest scores\nin both she can take her pick, the\nrunnerup taking the other prize.\nTEAMS AND SCHEDULE\nThc composition of the teams, in\ndie order of skips, seconds and\nIcadF. follows:\nMrs. J. H Chapman, Mrs. Vir\nGraves and Mrs. Robert Kirkland.\nMrs. Jack Annable. Mrs. Williams\nand Mrs. Robert Leonard.\nMrs. H. Edwards, Mrs. Con Cummins and Mis. Dick  Halhed.\nMrs. Ben Whiteside. Miss Josif\nRiley and Mrs. W. H. Jones\nAfter this competition is completed there will be the Brewery\nChip and this tournament will carry\nplay into the first week of May.\nPRAIRIE RINKS STEP AHEAD IN\nBRIER; B.C. DROPS TWO GAMES\nBy CHARLES EDWARDS\nCanadian   Pren   Stiff   Writer\nWINNITEG.   March   .'>   iCI'i.\nWestern    rinks   stepped    ahi'ad    of\nlhe field in Ihe Macdunald'i Brier\nCanadian  curling championships\ntoday.\nManitoba remained unbeaten\nwith four wins while Alberta and\nSaskatchewan occupied second\nplace with three victories and a\nsinglr loss racli.\nNorthern Ontario, co-leader with\nManilobn Bftcr yesterday's firs!\ntwo rounds, was beaten twice to-\ndav hy thc major surprise wits\nthe 15-9 victory scored by 70-\nvi ar-old Col, Archie Hell of Quebec Citv on the aftcrnon draw\nover ihe 1939 Brier champions.\nBert Hall's Ontario four from\nKitchener\nBell, wltlmul a victory \u00bbh*:i\nthe day began, nosed oul thi* win-\nless Prince Edward Island iiua.*-\ntcl in thc morning but was given\nlittle chance* to subdue lhc grcal\nKitchener uuarlel, playing in Mn\nBrier fnr a  lined cnnsreutin   vear\nHalls   link   downed   their   intta-\n[ Province rivals from Kirkland Lake,\nskipped by Jim Devis, 11-9 In the\nmorning and Davis bowed 8-6 to the\nsuperlative knock-out game of Bill\nDunbnr's Saskatchewan boys from\nKinley In thc afternoon.\nThe veteran Nick Thlbodcau, New\nBrunswick skip, gave Howard\nWood's Manitobans a real scare in\nthe morning round but the 1930\nBrier winner counted a four on Uie\nlast end for a 13-10 derision when\nThlbodcau missed wilh his last\nrock. Wood's 17-4 rout of the S. S.\nUnfile rink from Biidgcwaler. N. S..\nthis afternoon wus the Maritime\u2122'\nthird loss.\nIn thc morning Nova Scotia lost\n] la-8 to Alberla. skipped by the redoubtable Cliff Manahan. 1933-37\nrational champion, and Saskatchewan walloped British Columbia,\nrepresented by the Billy Einlay rink\nof Vancouver, 13-4.\nIn the fourth round Thlbodcau\nscored n pair on thc last end as\nBrunswick downed the Finlay four\nI0-!) Manahan foiled Prince Edward\nIsland's dcspolnlc bid for an initial\nwin lo break n ninlh-cild Uc and\nIriuiiiuh 10-0.\nSomething in the w\u00bby Art Ross,\nBoston Bruins Manager, aaid it.\ncommanded attention. Even allowing for the natural Inclination of a\nhockey Manager to glory ln the\nperformances of hU own men.\n\"Thote Kraut kldi of mine make\nup the best forward Una I have\never seen,\" aaid the dour battler.\n\"They're better than the Cook\nbrotheri and Frankle Boucher\nwere In their hey-day with the\nRangere.\"\nThat's what Ross declared thc\nother day of Milt Schmidt, Woody\nDumart and Bobby Bauer\u2014his Kraut\nkids \u2014 as he watched them go\nthrough their paces at a practice.\n\"I don't say that they'll score\nmore points while they're in the\nNational Hockey League than the\nCooks and Boucher did,\" Ross added.\n\"I don't know Just how many those\nBy The Canadian Preei\nfellows had when they finished\nbut it must have been an awful\nlot. But the KrauU are still a better combination, both as Individual\nplayers and as a line.\n\"I think they're faster, better\npuck carriers and better scorers.\nThey might not run In at man\/\ngoali ai the Cooks and Boucher\ndid becauie when the Cooke and\nBoucher played they got en tha\nIce for a lot longer stretches. They\nhad more playing time than the\nIndividual lines do ncw.\"\nWhen plaudiU are dished out to\nthe Krauta, most ot them go to tha\ntwo big fellows on the line\u2014Schmidt\nand Dumart. But Ross still has a\nsoft spot in his heart for little\nBobby Bauer.\n\"I'll take Bauer as the best right\nwinger in the league. No matter how\nhard you hit him he itill cornea\nback at you.\"\nAll-Star Hockey Lineups\nFollowing are the sixth and seventh of a Canadian Press aeries of Na.\ntional Hockey League all-star selections by hockey writera in N. H. L.\ncities. A consensus will be prepared later.\nBy PHIL 8EGUIN-MONTRIAL LE CANADA\nFirst team Position Altornate team\nCOAL\nKerr (Rangers) _.. \u2014 Brimaek (Boiton)\nR. DEFENCE\nClapper (Boston  Selbert (Chkigo)\nL. DEFENCE\nGoodfellow (Detroit)    Coulter (Rangera)\nCENTRE\nSchmidt (Boston) _  N. ColvIUe (Rangen)\nR. WINO\nHextall (Rangers) \u2014      Bauer (Boiton)\nL. WING\nBlake (Canadiem)  \u2014  Dumart (B\u00abton)\nCOACH\nThompion (Chicago) _....  Boucher (Rangen)\nBy DOUG VAUGHAN-WINDSOR DAILY STAR\nFirst team Poiitlon Alternate team\nGOAL\nKerr (Rangers) _ Brlmsek (Boiton)\nR. DEFENCE\nCoulter (Rangera)  _ _ Seibert (Chicago)\nL. DEFENCE\nGoodfellow (Detroit) Clapper (Boston)\nCENTRE\nSchmidt (Boston)  N. Colville (Rangers)\nR. WING\nHextall (Rangers)    Bauer (Boston)\nL, WING\nBlake (Canadiens)     Dumart (Boiton)\nCOACH\nThompson (Chicago) _ _ _ _ - \u2014 Adanu (Detroit)\nDIRECT TO OGDEN S!\n. . . for better rolling\nCount on Ogden's Fine\nCut to direct you to greater\nenjoyment in rolling your\nown. This mellow, fragrant\ncigarette tobacco gets four\nstar rating in any company.\nThere is no \"stand-in\" for\na cigarette you roll yourself with Ogden's. Particularly when you use the\nbest papers\u2014\"Chantecler\"\nor \"Vogue\".\nOGDEN'S\nFINE   CUT\nt>lPl-SMOKERS!   ASK (\"OR QGDtN'i COI PtU-j\n \t\nPAGE   TEN\nBrilish Throw Homes Open to Active\nService Men From Across the Sea\nWritten for The Canadian Preii by\nMARY  GOLDIE\nLONDON, March 00 (CP)-Cana-\ndian soldiers are learning that the\nwarmth of English hospitality is a\niine antidote to the raw bitterness\nof the Island's damp Winter climate.\nThe boys who crossed the Atlantic to help in the Empire's defence\nof freedom are finding the reserved\nEnglish actually can teach them\nsomething about  hospitality.\nInto thc office of the Victoria\nLeague Club where I work, invitations pour daily from people who\nare eager to take these men into\ntheir homes without question and\nprovide them with good meals, a\nwarm bath\u2014 in fact, everything\nfrom tea parties, luncheon parties\nand sherry parties to chatty evenings by the fire, or visits to the\ntheatre or movies after dinner.\nThe groups invited number anywhere from one or two, to 20 or 50.\nAt our club the men are selected,\ngiven directions and sent to their\ndestinations. Even the blackout\ndoes not r:em to hinder them seriously and they nearly always find\ntheir way successfully.\nIt has been a pleasing surprise\nlor some of thc Canadian boys who\ndidn't think the English would open\ntheir homes to strangers. They had\nnot been in London long before\nthey learned their mistake. They\nare amused by their accents. But\nmost important* of all they admire\nthem for having come over to fight.\nGUIDING IN LONDON\nIf a man wants to see the sights\nof London it can be arranged. It\nisn't easy for one, by himself, to\nget about London even in peacetime, and a soldier on leave naturally wants to see as much as he can\n\u2022while his spot of leisure lasts. Many\nLondoners have taken parties sightseeing and one man brought his\ncar\u2014this in the days of petrol rationing\u2014to the Club and took three\nCanadians to Windsor, Hampton\nCourt ond Ascot race track, where\nthey sat in the King's chair en the\nrtand. They told me about it with\ngreat excitement, and said they\nwere given a thundering good dinner into thc bargain.\nThe consideration of the hosts and\nhostesses is sometimes overpowering and amusing. We are asked all\nsorts of questions: \"What do the\nboys like best to do?\" \"What do\nthey like to eat'\" \"Do they like\neating at home or should I take\nthem to a restaurant*'\" The last\nquestion is the easiest to answer\nbecause the young Canadian away\nfrom heme shows a great prefer\nence for private entertaining and\nasks us for lnvitatlone to private\nhouses.\nThey feel the need of this home\natmosphere. They enjoy sitting\nabout the fire, smoking, chatting.\nAnd there is absolutely no end to\nthe amount of trouble the English\nare taking to make them feel at\nhome.\nWEEKEND HOSPITALITY\nSuch a varied assortment of invitations comes into the office that\nit is sometimes difficult to sort\nthem out. There are several \"standing orders\" for Saturdays or Sundays, fcr lunch or tea. One man at\nRichmond has two boys each Sunday for lunch and then takes them\nsightseeing.\nAnd if they have to ask what\nRichmond is before they go. they\nknow it is an eye-filling Park district on the Thames when they return.\nPeople of all types are entertaining the men. Poor people, rich\npeople, people with only small flats,\npeople with large houses. Acceptance of one invitation usually mean\nothers will follow, for thc hosts\nhave other people in to meet the\nmen and so the ball of hospitality\nkeeps rolling.\nThey haven't time to be lonely,\nthese Canadian soldiers. If they do\nfeci that way, they are partly to\nblame. One boy told me ne didn't\nwant to go to any parties because\nhe feared they would get roped\ninto something dull. It was his ill\nluck. I think now he is lonely \u2014\nbut he needn't be.\nSOME THINGS FREE\nThere are free theatre tickets,\nfree concert tickets, free zoo tickets,\nfree dance tickets\u2014 all provided\nthrough the kindness of the English\npeople. A Canadian en leave came\ninto the office for writing paper to\nrefuse invitations; he had so many\nhe couldn't cope with them all.\n\"It's wonderful the way the people here are doing these things\nfor us.\" he told me.\nThe English hospitality means a\ngreat deal to the men and it means\na great deal to the hosts. It is of\nvital importance in drawing Canada and England closer together and\ngetting the two peoples better acquainted.\nThe men never miss saying how\nmuch they appreciate it. And they\nare doubly thankful for the fact\nthat when they come on their next\nleave they have friends to see.\nYes, thc \"old country\" English arc\nshowing the overseas Canadians\nscmcthing about hospitality.\nWide Range Talent\nLined Up, Finnish\nRed Cross Program\nEntertainers of Rossland, Trail and\nNelson will appear on a program in\nSt. Paul's United Church March 13\nin aid of the Finnish Red Cross,\nsaid Mrs. Helga Saare, organizer\nof the program, Tuesday.\n\"Something different\" will be offered in the way of Scandinavian\nsongs sung by Nelson Scandinavians,\nin addition to other presentations.\nThe Scandinavian trio will consist\nof Miss Annie Busk. Mrs. Sylvia\nLaakso and Mrs Knute Franklin\nThe trio, with Rev*. Earl E. Lindgren. who will act as Chairman\npresent Scandinavian Melodies over\nCKLN Radio Nelson.\nArthur Stringer, well known Nelson baritone; Mrs. James Johnston,\ncontralto: Miss Maude Dolphin, violinist; Mrs C. W. Tyler's Happy\nCrew Quartette consisting of Mr\nStringer. Edward Baker, Miss Rn-\nberta Patterson and Miss Becla\nMoen. who sing over CKLN; and\nMrs. Gordon Allan, reciting, w.ll\nalso  contribute.\nFrom Rossland will come C M\u00b0l-\nlor-Langdale, noted organist; Miss\nBna Irvin, young soprano soloist\nwho will sing in French and English: and from Trail wil] come Louis\nParisotto, Ilajian tenor. Other items\nare still to be added to thc program.\nMrs. Saare said.\nPOCKET GUNBOATS '\nARRIVE IN PARIS\nPARIS. March 5 (AP)-Three\n\"pocket gunboats\" on their way\nlrom England to the Black Sea\nfor service with the Rumanian\nnavy arrived at Paris today, taking the usual course of France's\ninland canal system to get to the\nMediterranean. The three little\nboats, built in England, are of 35\ntons each.\nMay Ban Explosive\nStorage at Coast\nVANCOUVER. March 5 (CP) -\nPo<Lsib:hty ihe city might ban transportation or storage of explosives\nin the downtown business and industrial section was seen todav following a meeting of the Civic Fire\nCommittee Monday\n\"Explosives are being stored all\nthrough 'he hf-art of the city,\" de-\nrlared Alderm.m George Busombe.\nChairman \"It would need onlv one\nexDlnainn to cause a big fire.\"\nFire Warden H. G Rowcnng recommended that handling of such\nmaterials he restricted to outside\ndistricts, as he said was d-mc in\nSeaCle\nMorley Shier. Manager of Canadian Industries Limited, said that\nlast year 6f*l nOfl.OOf) pounds of explosive materials were handled in\nNorth America without an accident.\nIn New York such materials were\ndelivered  in  evrry sector, he said.\nAnglican Young Folk\nSpeak of Church and\nIts Component Parts\n\\ Addresses on the church, its his-\nj tory and its makeup were given\nI by members of the society at Mon-\nI d.iy night's meeting of St. Saviour's\nj Young People's Society at the Mt-\ni monal Hall.\nj Speakers were William Ramsay,\ni \"The History of the Church\"; Hiss\nI Isabel Dawson, \"Composition of thc\nPrayerbook\"; Basil Matthews. \"Ar-\n1 chitecture of Churches\"; Miss Dor\n' olhy Bowker, \"The Significance cf\n! the Altar\"; Allan Bennett, the \"Sis-\n! nificance of the Font, Pulpit. l>c-\nI tern and Seats\"; and Miss Maud*?\n; Dolphin. \"Music of the Church and\nI thc Different Crosses\", Miss Dol-\ni phin's   group   had   charge   of   the\nprogram. Following the addresses\n, Rev. J. G. Holmes conducted a quiz\ni on the prayerbook.\nj Discussions were held on bad-\nI minton, a dance committee, a rum-\nj mage sale committee, and a youth\n! conference to be held in Nelson this\ni Spring.\n--NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNE3DAY MORNING. MARCH 8. 1940**-'\nSome of the Opportunities Here Are Just What You Neec\nLord Granville\nMentioned as New\nGovernor General\nLONDON, March S (CP Cable)-\n\"Peterborough's\" column in the\nDaily Telegraph, \"London Day by\nDay,\" today says the Duke of\nDevonshire, Undersecrtary for the\nDominions, has expressed unwillingness to take up the Governor\nGeneralship ot Canada, and adds\nthat Lord Granville, Lord Airlle or\nthe Earl of Athlone now are mentioned for appointment to succeed\nthe late Lord Tweedsmuir.\nEarl Granville, better known as\nAdmiral William Leveson Gower,\nsucceeded his brother to the earldom in 1939. He has retired from\nthe sea and has been Governor ot\nthe Isle of Man since 1937.\nHe is 59. Lady Granville is an older sister of Queen Elizabeth, both\nbeing daughters ot the 14th Earl ot\nStrathmore.\nThe Earl of Alrlie, aged 46, is a\nLord Chamberlain to the Queen, a\nwealthy Scottish landowner, and a\nveteran of the last war.\nThe Earl of Athlone is the 65-year-\nold brother of Queen Mary. He was\nGovernor General of the Union of\nSouth Africa from 1923 to 1931.\nSECRET COURT\nTRIES COLONEL\nLONDON, March 5 (CP).\u2014Assembly of the War Office Secret Court\nwas announced today as London\nnewspapers continued to express\nconcern over the Supply Ministry's\nconduct of Its vast purchasing.\nThe court met to question an unnamed War Office colonel reported\nto have recommended a discharged\nconvict to the Supply Office as a\ncontractors' agent. There were reports Scotland Yard had completed\nan investigation of the entire wartime contracting system, Other developments included the dismissal\nof three Supply Ministry employees.\nReports persisted that Prime Minister Chamberlain planned to make\nhis third wartime cabinet reorganization in the near future, Anthony\nEden, Member of the Government\nbut not of the War Cabinet as Dominions Secretary, is rumored as in\nline for advancement.\nMr. Chamberlain's first Cabinet reorganization of the war came on the\nday it broke out. He brought Winston Churchill into the Government\nas First Lord of the Admiralty and\nreduced the cabinet from 20 members to nine. Now there is some agitation for an even smaller cabinet,\nThe next reorganization came Jan.\n5 when Leslie Hore-Belisha was\ndisplaced as War Secretary and\nchanges were made at the Information and Board of Trade posts.\nTomorrow, the former convict. 38-\nyear-old Charles Kingsley Scott, is\nexpected to tell the Secret Court\nabout allegations that the colonel\nintroduced him as a responsible\nagent for contractors seeking wat\norders.\nNrlfiun Eaily Npwb\nTelephone IM       '\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per Insertion.\n44c per line per week (9 consecutive insertions for cost of 4).\n$1.43 per line a month (26 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers lie extra. Thla\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICE\n18c per line, first insertion and\n14c  each subsequent  insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\n8PECIAL LOW RAT-E8\nSituations Wanted 25c for any\nrequired   number  of  llnei  for'\nsix  dayi,  payable  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month   $ .75\nThree months    2.00\nSix months     4.00\nOne year     8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nHELP WANTED\nSALESMAN-A WELL RATED,\nhonest, manufacturing corporation\nis hiring county representatives.\nMerchandise sold direct to farmers, mill and factory owners, public institutions, and all other largo\nproperty owners. Very liberal\ncompensation. Requirements:\nGood reputation, car owner, age\nover 30. Give sales experience.\n9915 Harvard Ave., Cleveland,\nOhio, U. S. A._\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY FOR\nCreston Valley Hospital, cook-\nhousekeeper. Apply in writing to\nH. A. Powell, Secretary.\nOPPORTUNITIES\nHOW TO GET A GOVERNMENT\njob as Letter Carrier. Postal Clerk.\nCustoms Examiner. Clerk, etc\nFree Booklet. The M.C.C. Schools\nLtd., Winnipeg. Oldest in Canada. No Agents.\nEDUCATIONAL\nENGINEERS, MARINE, STATION-\nary prepared for exams, day, eve.\ncorrespondence. E. Hopkins. 407\nW. Hastings, Vancouver, B. C.\nBIRTHS\nJOHNSTONE - To Mr. and Mra.\nWilliam Johnstone, HIT Hall Mines\nRoad, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Nelson March 4, a daughter.\nWARNER - To Mr. and'Mrs\".\nDavid Warner, 913 MIU. Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nNelson, March 9, a daughter.\nWEBBER - fo Mr. and Mra.\nErnest Webber ot Salmo, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson,\nMarch 5, a daughter.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for advertisements under this classification\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c for one week\n(8 days) covers any number\nof required lines. Payable in\nadvance.\nMIDDLE AGED WOMAN, GOOD\ncook and housekeeper, must nave\nwork at once for bachelor or widower, at camp or hotel. Willing\nto go anywhere in B. C. Good\nworker, clean and neat. Will take\n_ Ml charge. Box 888_Daily News.\nEXP. DRESS MAKER WILL DO\ndesigning, dress making, alterations, millinery, etc. at home or in\n_your_own home, Phone 346R1.\nEXPERIENCED EDGERMAN AND\ntruck driver wants work. Will go\nanywhere. Apply Room 29, Noble\nJlqtel.JJelson, B. C._\nYOUNG CHRISTIAN WOMAN\nwith good references desires position, Country or town. Good\nmilker. Phone 871.\nPERSONAL\nAsk Inquiry of\nWinnipeg Police\ni WINNIPEG. March 5 (CP)-City\n. Council last night unanimously re-\n'quested the Attorney-General's of-\nI fice to institute an immediate inquiry into lhe operation of the Winnipeg Police Department. The res-\noluti n calling for the inquiry was\npresented by Alderman John Fet-\n, ley.\nAlderman Petlry charged his attack on the Police* Department that\nConstable Norman Stewart's testimony before the coroner's inquest\n( into the death of Constable John\n' McDonald had not been in accordance wilh the facts. Constable McDonald was shot and killed when\nhe accosted gunmen attempting to\nrob the Mani I obi Motor t-eagur office Feb. ID, and Constable Stewart\nwas slightly wounded.\n27 Births, 9 Deaths,\n8 Marriages During\nFebruary in Nelson\nTwenty-seven births, nine deaths\nand eight marriages were recorded\nin Nelson during February as compared with 19 births, nine deaths\nand six marriages in January, the\nVital Statistics Registry at the Court\nHouse shows. In the district there\nwere five births, two deaths and\none marriage in February as compared with five births, three deaths\nand no marriages in January,\nSCHOOL INDIANS\nfOR VOCATIONS\nOTTAWA, March 5 (CP)-Educa-\ntion of Canada's Indian pipulatiun\nis making pr.-gress with enrolment!\nat Indian Schools in the 1936-30 fiscal vear totalling 18.752 pupils.\n\"The percentage of attendance\nmaintained by the children, totalling to 77.36, indicates the favorable\nmanner in which Indians are responding to efforts being made to\nadvance them to a position of independence and self-support,\" the Department states.\nDuring the vear a number of pupils who would ordinarily proceed\nwith high school studies were encouraged to take up vocations!\ncourses such as agriculture, auto\nmechanics and domestic science.\nCINCER ROGERS FILES\nDIVORCE  SUIT\nT.OS ANGELES. March 5 IAP>-\nCinjer Rogers of the movies has\nfiled suit f r divorce from Lew\nAyres. it was revealed todav when\na Superior Court set March lit as the\n'.rial date.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFOR SALE BUICK \u2022*, TON TRUCK ;\nin trade for heavy horse, fresh j\ncow or portable cordwood saw. i\nBox_917  Daily News.\nTIRES, GLASS, PARTS\"FOR ALT.\ncars, trucks. City Auto Wreckers,\n180 Baker Street, Phone 447.\nFOR SALE. MODEL A' 1929 FORD\n_coupe. Cheap. 706, 6th St, Nelson.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Companv.\n916 Powell St, Vancouver. B   C\nWANTED-GIRLS BIKE IN GOOD\ncondition. Phnne 697L between\n5:30 and 7 p m.\nLONDON (CP)-The R. yal Air\nForce Equipment Branch, wh.ch\nsupplies the flying fighters with\neverything from planes to soap,\nturned down thc requisiti n nf a\nWomen's Auxiliary Air Force se--\ngeants' mess for a cocktail shake*.\nDRESS MAKING AT REASON-\nable prices. For aptmts. Ph. 520R.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOPAT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot,\nSANITARY \" PERSONAL \"RUBBER\nGoods, 24 latex (1. Free price list\n_J. Jensen, Box 324, Vancouver.\nFOR ANY \"SECOND HAND GOODS\nbe sure to see J. Chess, Second\nHand Stoix, Vernon Street.\nCOLD IN THE HEAD? KELLOGG\\S\nnose drops with atomizer, immediately efctlve. $1. Mann Rutherford\nCLARESHOLM BUTTERlst GRD.\non bread is delicious. Fresh. Direct  from  Creamery.  Star Gru*\\\nSALVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear or furniture to spare please Ph. us 618L.\nA\" PORTRAIT BY McGREGORJS\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224. 577 Ward Street.\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES'\nTop prices paid for antiques al\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St.\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry.\nMEN'S SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples.\nPlain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist. Princeton Distributors, Box\n81, Princeton, B   C.\nANY\" SIZE ROLL FILM DEVIL-\noped and printed 25c. The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\nthe West. Established over 30 yrs.\nKrystal Photos. Wilkie. Sask.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY IN-\nventor. list of wanted inventions\nand full information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. Wnrld Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa.\nTWO FREE PltOFESSIONAtTsiL\"-\nvertone enlargements with every\nfilm d-veloped and printed for\n25r. or with eight super-gloss reprints fnr 25c. Personal skilled\nattention to every order. Cut Rate\nnualtty would cost you more\nelsewhere. Cut Rate Photo Ser-\nvice. Department FZ2, Box\n236. Region. Saskatchewan.\nCLASSIFIED MAIL 0RDER8    ,\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nBuilders' Hardware\n\"Yale\" Door, window and cabinet hardware, ln many attractive designs and prices. Galvanized, corrHgated and reinforcing iron. Nails by the keg or\npound.\nNELSON SASH Cr DOOR\nCO., LTD.\n701 Front Street\nPhone 292\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nCHESTFLD.; RADIO,\" KITCHEN\nset, stove, heater, sell cheap. Also\n1939 Beach iV2  cu.  ft.  refrig.  4\nEasthope    Boat    Engine.   Apply\n_10\u00bb Stanley Street.\nNEARLY NEW  ELECTROLUX\nVacuum Cleaner complete. Apply\n_R._C. Mackinnon, Crescent Valley.\nFOR \"SALE PLAYER PIANO VERY\ngood tone $85. Phone 806R.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\n*WM\nThia year-Raise\n\"The Chicks\nWhich   Give\nResults\"\nUnsexed   Pullets\n100 1000   100 500\nLeghorns   $13 $120   $27 $125\nRocks. Reds\nand N. Hampj ... $15 $140   $28 $120\nL. Sussex   $18 \u2014   $28 \u2014\nPullet Chicks Guaranteed\n97% Accurate.\nWrite for our special anniversary\nbook.\u2014Free on request.\nRump 6 Send-all\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B. C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE 13:19 ACRES, LOT i.\nSubdivision of Lot 7453, and Lot\n7465-G. L. West Arm ot Kootenay Lake. Fine gravel lake frontage 616 ft. Highway joining back.\nRunning stream of clear water\nthrough highest point. Ideal lo\nsubdivide into family homes. Covered with standing timber. Alice\nR. Hart, N  3934 Division Street,\n Spokane, Washington.\nTO CLEAR iJFAN ESTATE, TWO\nlarge fully modern apartment\nhouses furnished, at sacrifice price\nwill be sold separately or together.\nApply S. Smythe, Box 118, Nelson\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberla and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908, Dept. of Nalural\nResources, C. P. R., Calgary, Alta.\n135. AC. WELL\" IMPROVED, CON-\nsider house or small ranch part\n_pay. John Graham, Perry Siding.\nWOULD BUY 4 OR 5 ROOM BUN-\ngalow   if   price   and   terms   ar^i\n right. Box 927 Daily News.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nWANTED   TO   RENT   A   RANCH\nwith option of buying or will care\nfor place for a responsible party.\nA^R. Johnston, Procter, B. C.\nFURNISHED  HOUSE  KEEPING\nrooms. Marsden A p t s. $10 per\nmonth. Redecorated throughout.\nFOR \"RENT   COTTAGE.   NORTH\nShore,    close    to    ferry.    Phone\n559R2 or Box 179.\nWANTED \"TO  RENT  MODERN\n_ house, would lease. Phone 795R\nFURNISHED  HOUSE  KEEPING\n_rooms for rent. Annable Block.\nTERRACEAPTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nTWO ROOM  FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. Stirling Hotel.\nFOR\"RENT LIGHT HOUSEKEEP\ning rooms. Phone 716L.\nFURNISHED \"HOUSE \"KEEPING\n_rooms. K. W. C. Block.\nFURNISHED COTTAGE FOR COU-\n ple._Phone 377X.\nROOm\" FOR RENT.\"a\"PPLY 41C\nVictoria Street.\nSEE~KERR APARTMENTS-\"\nHAMBLEY ELECTRIC CHICKS-\nFrom Pure Bred-to-lay Government Approved Slock. White Lei-\nhorns $11.75, Pullets $24. Barred\nRocks $13, Pullets $21.00. W. Wyandottes $15,00, Black Minorcas\n$13.50; Black Minorca Pullets\n$21.00. Prompt Delivery, F. O. B.\nCalgary Place your order direct\nor ask for 32-page Colored Catalogue. J. J. Hambley Hatcheries,\n809 Burns Bldg., Calgary, Alberla,\nBABY CHICKS\nWHITE LEGHORNS, PER 100,\n$11.75, White Leghorn Pullets\n$25. Rocks, Reds and Hampshires.\n$13.75. Pullets $21. Leghorn cockerels $3. Heavy breed Cockerels\n$11. While Wyandottes. Bulf\nOrpingtons, $15. Pullets 97% accuracy. Write for catalogue,\nPringle Electric Hatcheries. 223.\n17th Ave. E\u201e Calgary, Alberla. _\n10 FREE CHICKS PER 100 ADDED\nto all early orders with 25% deposit. Unsexed Leghorns $11.75.\nRocks, Reds, Hampshires, $1375\n97% pullets $21, Leghorns $23\nper 100 March delivery. Write\nfor FREE catalogue and reduced\nrate on large orders. Alberta\nElectric Hatcheries. 2417E-1A St.,\nS. E\u201e Calgary, Alberta.\nBABY CHICKS FROM VIGOROUS\nnew blood Leghorn breeding stock\nUnsexed- $10, Pullets (97%) $25\nper 100. Also Rocks and Reds $12\nper 100. Express prepaid. Appleby\nPoultry Farm. Mission City. B. C\nTWO \"CHARTERS 540 EGG INCU-\nbators, nearly new. Can be used\nfor double decking, $30 each. Also\n1 Queen 450 egg incubator $20\nWm. S. McAlpine, Creston. B. C.\nBUY R. O. P. SIRED CHICKS,\nR. I. R., B. R., W. L., N. Hamps.,\nHatching Eggs, R. I. R., N. Hamps.,\n$1 for 15 Laving Pullets $14 doz.\nTom Neale, R. R. No. 1, Nelson.\nRHODE ISLAND REDS, CHOICE\nbreeding stock. Hens and Pullets\n$1.50, $175 each. Rooster $200.\nMrs.   Crack.   1909   Falls   Street.\nBABY CHICKS. RHODE ISLAND\nReds, bloodtested approved stock\n$10 per 100. John Goodman, 1635\nGilley Ave.. New Westminster.\nGOATS FOR SALE. THREE NAN\"\nnies. milking. Two billies. Apply\nto E. S. Elliott or Ph. 326Y2.\nFOR SALE. HORSE, 6 YRS.\"WT.\n1460. F. Anderson. South Slocan.\nFOR SALE 20 TONS LOOSE HAY.\nJohn Graham. Perry Siding, B. C\nFARM. CARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND  -   FOX   TERRIER   PUP,\nApprox. 8 wks. White with blacK\n_markings. apply 1017 Hoover St.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nFRUIT TREES, 1 YR\u201e 50c. CLIMB-\ning roses, grape vines, flowering\nshrubs, 3 for $1. Tree roses, flow-\nering cherry. Eugene Hammerer,\nTaghum, B, C._ \t\nFRUIT TREES, ORNAMENTALS\nflowering shrubs. Climbers and\nsmall fruits. T. Roynon, Agent\nLayrltz Nurseries, Nelson, B. C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD RESIDENCE. COMFCHl\nable home, good table. Ph. ill\nBUSINESS AND .\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTOR\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVTNCU\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgy\nEngineer, Sampling Agenti I\nTrail  Smelter, 304-309 Joseph!\n_S*Teet,_Nelson, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H.\" ORIMWOSD\nProvincial Asaayer and Chemist, I\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9, Nein\nB. C. Representing shippe\nInterest at Trail, B._C.\nHAROLD S. ECMES, ROSSLATJ\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemi\nIndividual representatives I\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIR0PRACTOR8\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neur\ncalometer. X-ray, McCullock B\nDR. WIL B E R T BROCK,\" D.\n542 Baker Street. Phone 969.\nCORSETIERE8\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St, Ph. I\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEY0R\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Frultvale, -.\nSurveyor and Engineer. Pho\n\"Beaver Falls.\"\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE SIS T E1\nof the Love of Jesus for elde\nladies. The Priory Guest House\nnew residence with every m<\nern comfort. St. Anthony's Gu\nHouse, a lovely home with vt\nmoderate rates. St. Raphael's Wl\nfor i n v a 11 d s and convalescei\nSt. Jude's House of Rest (or e\nerly couples. For prospectus apj\nMother Superior, 949 W. 1\nAvenue, Vancouver, B, C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTA\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance\nevery description. Real Est Ph.\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTA1\nRentals, Insurance. Annable. B\nCHAS. F. McHARDY,~INSURANC\n_Real_Estate. Phone_135.\t\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate,\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipper*\nHardware, Baker St. Phone ll\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and elect!\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon !\nMEMORIAL8\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES \/\nForest Lawn Memorial Park. G\nprice list from Bronze Memorli\nLtd.  Box 726,  Vancouver, B.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER. A. M. E. I. (\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Ca\nada and U. S. A. 703-2nd St. K\nCalgary. Advice free, conlidenUi\nSASH   FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTOR\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker!\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE   BUY,   SELL   k   EXCHANC\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph. 9!\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs yot\nwatch it Is on time all the tim\n 345 Baker Street. Nelson, B. C\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nWELL-DOWT- I KflvlOW\nMDU ***WT TO OO TO\nTHAT HORPlO COCMED\nBEEC AMD CABBAGE\nCAPE- I WAWT WU TO\nVISIT Vice-PRESIPEWT\nGACflgeOr,*\/_ r^ .\nA Minor Worry In the Kootenays\nMUMSY Tilt- NEW OFFICE BOY IS IH THE\nOTHER ROOM AND ME SURELY THOUGHT\nYOU MEANT X WAS A CRADLE ROBBER\nI'LLTRY TO EXPLAIN\nG-.LCNNY DON'T GET MUMSY WRONCj^\nSHE WAS TALKINfl ABOUT SOMETHING\nSHE READ IN THE NEWSPAPER\n invid Company\nfor Advertising\nShares lo Public\nANCOUVER, March 3 (CP) -\nI flrat known conviction of a\nlate company on a charge of Inng the public to subscribe for\npreferred shares stood today af-\nJudge C. J. Lennox ln County\nirt yesterday dismissed the ap-\n1 of Empire Dock Limited.\nhe company was fined $28 by\njlltrat* H. S. Wood In police\nrt after issuing circulars sdver-\nm: the sale cf preferred shares.\nI cofnpany contended the circu-\nI were sent only to \"friends, cus-\nleri or connections,\" but Judge\ninox said the distribution was\nrely an invitation to the public,\ntrary to the Companies Act.\n1 confirming the Magistrate's dean, Judge Lennox remarked the\ne was the first of its kind in Ca-\na.\nrices Remain\nFirm al Winnipeg\nOTFEG, March 5 (CP)Trad-\non Winnipeg Grain Exchange\ni listless today but a few buying\nlii;:.   prompted   by   strength   at\n|cago   established a  firm trend\nwheat futures prices.\nQuotations remained on the up-\nIng after a lapse al the opening\nli at the close were -Va\u2014Vt higher.\nly at 89**t\u00bb. July 904 and October\nv\u00bb.\nReports of frost damage In Kan-\nJ and forecast of colder weather\n(other parts of the United States\nliter wheat belt reflected gains\n[Southern markets.\nxport sales of Canadian wheat\nIre reported at a few odd loads\nll to neutral European countries.\nTash grain sales were under par\nIth odd transactions recorded In\nI 1 hard and No. 2 durum from\nIstern stocks for movement as the\n(ening of navigation.\nAction was at a minimum In the\nfee grain futures pit with small\nSport from mills and commission\nRues In oats and rye. Flax repined in the doldrums after three\nJi of hectic trading. Resting or-\n[fl Just below the market price\npt the trend fairly even and un-\nngea.\n|. M, & S. Workmen's\nCommittee Protests\nWeighing Fee Rise\n[\"RAIL. B. C, March 5\u2014A resolu-\nn of the C. M. U S. Company\nirkmen's Committee, protesting\nlinst the increase in weighing\nirse*. was filed by the City Coun-\nMonday night.\n1 don't think the five-cent in-\nsase is anything to get worried\nout.\" said Mayor Herbert Clark\nwenty cents a load is the same\narge as in Nelson and lower than\nnr places.\"\nId War Loan in\nStrong Demand\nLONDON, March 3 (AP)-The\n\u00abk market seemed to give full\nproval to the announcement of\nnew war loan issue today. The\n1 war loan 3%s was in strong\nmand. quoted at \u00a3100 in Inter-\nfice dealings after the official\nKaffirs  also started  to pull\n|tead. Most Industrial leaders were\narked down, along with domestic\nIlls. Coppers held iheir own.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, March 5 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange, nominal rates between banks only:\nBelgium, belga, .1878.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .2888\nDenmark, krone, .2148\nFrance, franc, .02*1531\nItaly, lire, .0581\nJapan, yen, .2809\nNorway, krone, .2323\nSweden, krone, .2848\nSwitzerland, franc, .2480\n(Compiled by thc Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rates:\nMontreal: Pound buying 4.43, selling 4.47; U.S. dlr buying 1.10, jelling 1.11; franc 2.43 5-18.\nNew York: Pound 3.90H; Cdn\ndlr .85%; franc 2.21 y,.\nIn gold: Pound 10s ld; U.S. dlr\n61.06 cents: Cdn dlr 35.06 cents.\nNEW YORK, March 3 (CPI. -\nPound sterling sold at ita lowest\nrate of the new year ln terms of the\nUnited States dollar in the foreign\nexchange market today.\nExtreme losses of nearly 2tt cents\nwere more than halved, however,\nand the British unit closed with a\nnet decline of one cent to $3.90%.\nThe Canadian dollar also tumbled\nto a new 1940 low with a loss of\nnearly tt cent to a discount of 14H\nper cent. (Ottawa Foreign Exchange\nControl Board rate 8.09-9.91 per\ncent discount). The French franc\nlost .00% cent to 2.21Va. Neutral\ncurrencies, however, were unchanged to a trifle higher.\nClosing rates -follow (Grtat Britain in dollars, others in cents):\nOfficial Canadian Control Board\nbuying rate for U. S. dollars 110.00,\nselling rate 111.00. Open market\nrates, Montreal in New York 85.82-4,\nNew York in Montreal H6.62V4.\nQreat Britain, demand 3.80%; cables,\n3.90%, 60 day bills 3.87%; 90 day\nbills 3.864. Belgium 16.91, Denmark\n10.33. Finland 1.65N, France 2.21V\/\nGermany 40.20 (benevolent) 16.90,\nGreece .72V4, Hungary 17.65N, Italy\n5.05, Netherlands 53.15, Norway 22.73,\nPortugal 3.68, Rumania, .55N, Sweden, 2383. Switzerland 22.43, Yugoslavia 2.35N. Argentine official 29.77,\nfree 23.59, Brazil official 6.05, free\n510; Mexico 16.73N. Japan 23.49,\nHong Kong 24.22, Shanghai 6.85.\n(Rate in spot cables unless otherwise indicated, N\u2014nominal).\nU. S. Steel Plant\nDecides Against\nMunitions Boost\nNEW YORK, March 5 (AP). -\nThe B-ethlehem Steel Corp., a leading armament builder, turned a\nskeptical eye today on chances of a\nwar munitions boom in the United\nStates.\nEugene G. Grace, President, said\nIn his annual report to stockholders:\n\"Your management believes that\nunder present conditions it is not\nwise to invest the capital of your\ncorporation in additional facilities\nfor the production of munitions or\nto use its present facilities for thai\npurpose at the expense of its commercial business,\"\nIndustrial observers have noted a\nsimilar reluctance among other important comDanies to expand plan's\nfor war orders. Except in aircraft,\norders in the present conflict relatively have been moderate.\n-NILSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH 0, 1940.\u2014\nStrong Rally in\nWill SI. Stocks\nNEW YORK, March 5 <AP) -\nBuyers put their shoulders to the\nstcck market today and lave selected steels, aircrafts, and specialties the strongest rallying push of\nthe past three weeks or so.\nA better tone was* ln evidence\nthroughout the session, but a late\nrun-up in \u25a0. heat futures apparently\nbuoyed sentiment for stocks and\nput prices generally at best levels\nof the day at the start of the final\nhour.\nVolume broadened a trifle on the\nupward reversal, with transfers approximating 530,000 shares.\nGains cf fractions to a point were\nwell distributed at the close, with\na few wider advances turned In on\nmeager turnovers. Scattered issues\nmanaged to edge into new high\nground for the year. Among these\nwere Canadian Pacific, Brooklyn-\nManhattan Transit, Dow Chemical\nand Glenn Martin.\nAmong shares flaunting plus\nsigns at one time or another were\nU. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Youngs-\ntown, Douglas Aircraft, Bendix*,\nChrysler, General Motors, Great\nNorthern, Ansconda, U. S. Rubber,\nAllied Chemical, Eastman Kodak,\nWestern Union and American Telephone.\nVANCOUVER FIRM\nVANCOUVER, March 5 (CP) -\nPrices for the most part held steady\non Vancouver Stcck Exchange today although a few small losses and\nfains were posted at the close,\nrading was light and scattered as\ntransfers totalled 41,991 shares.\nOkalta led more active trading In\nthe oil section and gained two cents\nat 1.20 while Pacific Petroleum finished at 30, four cents above Monday's closing bid. Mar Jon was\nfractionally higher at 2% and Calgary te Edmonton was unchanged\nat 1.98. Anglo Canadian eased 1 to\n88.\nSheep Creek Gold dropped three\ncents to 1.03 and Relief Arlington\nwas down % of a cent at 9%. Privateer at 85 and Reno at 37 were unchanged while UI other senior issues were inactive,\nBase metals were quiet and unchanged.\nSheep Creek Gold\nProduction $85,000\nVANCOUVER. March 5 (CP)-\nProduction at Sheep Creek Gold\nMinos Limited. Scuth of Nelson,\nB.C., for the month of February\nwas valued at $85,591 compared w'-*h\n$76,2*58 in the previous month, the\ncompany office here reported today.\nThe company milled 4,448 tons of\nore averaging $19.25 per ton as\nagainst average of $16.40 per ton\nin January.\nDOW\nJONES AVERAGES\nHigh   Low    Close\nChange\n    147.15   148.41    148.86\nup    .46\nraiLi  \u201e\t\n      30 71     30.47     30.68\nup    .22\n.     .     24.29    24.09     24.15\noff    .04\ni          TORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\n[IN \u00a38\nPremier Gold            \t\n.     130\nIton Mines            ,\n.01\nPowell Rouyn Gold     \t\n148\nlderm:c Copper\n.29\nPreston East D me     .\n.     2.03\nbun Gold\n.03\nQuebec Gold             \t\n.       .31\npglo-Hurnnian\n2 37\nReeves MacDonald\t\n.20\nk-ntfield Grid           \t\n.07%\n.02-i\n.36^\nIloria Rouyn Mines\nRoche Long Lac     \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\n.       .04%\nunor\n2 10\n.     2.24\n\u25a0garnac Rouyn\n.011\nShawkcy Gold\n03\nknktirld Gold\n.20\nSheep Creek Gold \t\n1 10\nase Metals Mining\n,22\nSherritt Gordon      \t\n.95\ntittic Gold Mines\t\n108\nSiscoe Gold       \t\n.75\n[dg od Kirkland   \t\n.16\nSladen Malartic\n.43\nf Missouri\t\npbjo Mines\t\nrilorne Mines   . ..    _\t\n.094\nSt. Anthony     \t\n.13%\n.08\nSudbury Basin          \t\n185\n10.75\nSullivan Cons-lidated \t\n81\nrett Trethewey\t\n.01%\nSylvanite\n3 15\nuffalo Ankerite\n675\nTeck-Hughes Gold\n385\nbnkcr Hill Ex\n02\nToburn Gnld Mines\n1 70\nSnadian Malartic . .\n66\nTuw.igmac\n.21\n[iriboo Gold Quartz\n215\nVentures                     \t\n40\nistlc-Tre ihewey\n.85\nWaite Amulet\n5 55\nentral Patricia\n225\nWng.it Hargreaves \t\n72.5\nnibougamau\n.12\nYmir Yankee Girl\t\n.01%\naromium M Sc S\n.53\nOIL8\npast Copper\n17J\nAjax\n.16\npniaurum Mines\n189\nFlr1115h American\n23 00\nbruolidaVd M tc S\n44 25\nChemical Research\t\n30\nkrkcr Grid\n05 ii\nImperial                          . . ..\n14.75\nBHinger\n14 50\nInter Petroleum\n25.00\nbwev Grid\n55\nINDUSTRIALS\nbdion Bay M Sc S\n3100\nAbitibi   Power\n..     1%\niternational Nickel\n43 .5\nBell Telephone         \t\nUraflilun T I, Sc P  \t\n..... 167\nM. Con  ..\n02'-,\n.     \u00bbVi\nirk Waite\n.25\n04 Va\n5\n[cola Gold\nHrew,tig   Corp               \t\n.     195\nfrr-Addtson\n2 32\nI! C Power \"A\"      \t\n.   .    28%\nIrklind Lake\n128\n11 C Power \"B\"\n.. .     2**,\nIke Snore Mines\n25 60\nBuilding  Products      \t\nJ\u00ab\nfitch Gold\n72\nCanada  Bread\n5\nIbel Oro Mmrs\n01%\nCan Bud Malting\n. ..     4%\nitlle Dong I.ac\nsos\nCan Car Sc Foundry\n13%\n\\>me   Minc.a\n2.5 00\nCan  Cement\n....     7\njrv.il-S;sa;op\n03\n('.in  Dredge\n24%\n|lt Malartic\n3\u00ab5\n(\"in   Malting\n3D\ndorado Gold\n'Kl\nCan Panlir Rlv\n7%\nklconbrilige  Nlrkrl\n4r\u201e\nCan Ind Alroh*1 A\n3\nideral Kirkland\n0.1*.\nCan  Wineries\n4\nlane cur Gold\n41\nCnns  Bakeries\n.    17 51\nlllrs Lake\n05\nCosmos                  \t\n28\nMil Lake Gold\n51\nDominion  Bridge\n38\nId Pelt\n24\nDominion stores     \t\n4%\nfandoro  Minn\n05%\nDom Tar St Chem        \t\n7%\nInnar Guid\n\u00ab',\nDistillers Seagrams  .\n23**\n[rd R.*ck Oo'.d\n105\nFannv  Farmer\n27\nlca.ua Mlnet\nMO\nFord of Canada A\n21%\nSct.eod Cockshutt\n195\nGen Steel Wares\n9%\nIdsen Red Lake Gold\n101*,\nGo. dvear Tire\n84\n[ndy\n09\nGypsum L 8a A\n4%\nHntyrfl*-I'orcupina\nJKenrie Red I.alar\n57 oo\nHamilton Bridge\n7%\n1 2.5\nHlnde   Dmirhe\n15%\nIViltir-Graham\n00\nHitam   Walker\n42\nWattrra Grid\n(1\nInll Melal.a\n11%\n[ning Corporation\n104\nImnrrial Tobacco\n...    16%\nmet* Porcupine\n70\nI\/iblaw  \"A\"\n26%\nIrrla-Klrkland\nOS 4\nLoblaw \"If*\n25%\nbiasing Mining\n1 25\nKelvinat r\n8%\npanda\n65 50\nMaplr Lea' Milling\n5%\nrmttal\ntr,\nMassey   Hirria\n3%\n\u25a0rien Cold            \t\n! 35\nMontreal Power\n30 V,\nIrga Gold\n2\u00ab\nMoore Corn\n45%\n\u25a0lour Porcupine\n1 711\nNil Steel Car\n62%\n.master Cona\n.*\u00ab.\nPan-  Heriev\nf07%\nId   Oreille\n', l'*\nPower   Corp\n10%\nIron Gold\n1 B5\nPr-'ard  Metals\n11',\nDale Crow (;\u201e*,d\n.1 00\nS'**el   of  Can\n7,1\".\nIncer V, Id\n2 16\nStrndard  Pavins\n1 .10\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, March 5 (CP) -\nGrain futures quotations:\nWHEAT:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nMay       88%     80%     88%     89%\nJuly       89%     90%     89%     90%\nOct. 90%     90%     90%    91%\nOATS:\nMay   ... .   40%     40%     40%     40%\nJuly       39%     39%     39%    39%\nOct 34%    39%    34%    35\nBARLEY:\nMay       54       34%     54       34%\nJuly       52%    \u2014       \u2014       32%\nOct.        .   50%     50%     50       50%\nFLAX:\nMay   .202        \u2014        \u2014      202\nJuly 200%   200%   200%   200%\nOct    \u2014       \u2014       \u2014      198\nRYE:\nMay   .. ..   72%     73%     72%     73%\nJuly   .. ..   72%     73       72%    73\nOct.     ....   \u2014        \u2014        \u2014        72%\nCash prices:\nWheat-No. 1 hard 87%; No. 1\nNor. 86%; No. 2 Nor. 84%; No. 3\nNor. 82%; No. 4 Nor. 80%; No. 5,\n74%; No. 6, 72%; feed 68%; No. 1\nGarnet 80%; No. 2 Garnet 79%; No.\n3 Garnet 77%; No. 1 Durum 84%; No.\n4 special 79%; No. 5 special 71%; No. i\n6 special 89%; No. 1 mixed 74%;\ntrack 87%; screenings $3.25 per\nton.\nOats-No. 2 C. W. 39%: ex. 3\nC. W. 37%; No. 3 C. W. and ex. 1\nfeed 38%; No. 1 feed 35%; No. 2\nfeed 34%; No. 3 feed 31%; track\n39%.\nBarley\u2014'Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 C, W. 54%; 2-row Nos.\n1 and 2 C. W. 55%; 6-row No. 3\nC. W. 52%. Others: No. 1 feed 48%:\nNo. 2 feed 48%; No. 3 feed 47%;\ntrack 34%.\nFlax-No. 1 C. W. 198%: No. 2\nC. W. 194%; No. 3 C. W. 182; No\n4 C. W. 177; track 199.\nRye-No. 2 C. W. 71%.\nMETAL MARKETS\nLONDON, March 5 (AP)- Bar\nsilver 20 15-16d, off 5-18. (Equiva\nlent 37.97 eenta on dollar basis\n$4.03.)\nBar gold 168s unchanged.\nTin spot \u00a3234 5s bid, \u00a3234 10s\nasked; future \u00a3253 10s bid, \u00a3233\n15s asked.\nMONTREAL\u2014 Gold In London\nwas unchanged at $37.54 an ounce\nin Canadian funds; 188s In British,\nrepresenting the Bank of England's\nbuying price. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $38.50 in\nCanadian.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 12.75;\ntin 57.73; lead 3.30; line 3.63; antimony 15.75.\nSilver futurei closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid: March 37.75.\nNEW YORK-Copper steady; Electrolytic spot 11.503; Export fas NY\n11.65.\nTin steady; spot New York 5.25-\n30; East St. Louis 5.10. Zinc steady;\nEast St. Louis spot and forward 5.-\n75. Quicksilver 183.00-185.00.\nWar Slocks Gain\non Toronlo Mkt.\nTORONTO, March 5 (CP)-Tor-\nonto afternoon market Tuesday developed definite strength in some\nindustrials, particularly the so- called war stocks. Mining shares closed\nunchanged to narrowly lower and\nWestern Oils weakened slightly.\nTurnover was around 235,000 shares.\nCub Aircraft was a heavy trader\nin the final hour with the price up\nthe minimum fraction. C. P. R. advanced % to 7%.\nStrong spots in the steels Included Hamilton Bridge, Dominion\nFoundries, Steel of Canada, Canadian Car and Canadian Locomotive.\nImplements were firmer generally.\nHome Oil, Calgary and Edmonton\nCommoil and Calmont all weakened\nnarrow while Okalta gained % lo\n5%.\n24 Certificates for\nWork on Mine Claims\nAre Issued in Month\nTwenty-four certificates of work\nupon mining claims, leading to\nCrown Grant, were Issued at the\nNeLson Mining Recorder's office in\nthe past month. Eight were Issued\nto G. G. Sullivan, five to Oscar\nAnderson and four to Sarkis Ter-\nzian, besides a number ot others.\nCertificates were issued to:\nG. G. Sullivan for the Damaris-\ncotta, Little Nell, Protection, Protection Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, all on\nWild Horse Creek.\n03car Anderson for the Apex,\nConrad, Gold Hill, New Discovery\nand Snowslide all on Porcupine\nCreek.\nSarkis Tertian for the Nickel\nPlate Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4, near Hall\nSiding.\nSteve Kohac for the Addie Grace\nFraction and Enos, on Eagle Creek.\nJames Fisher for the Fern No, 1\nand Fern No. 2, on Hall Creek.\nE. P. Hankedahl for the Silver\nMountain, on Porcupine Creek.\nO. Arrowsmith for the May-Bee,\nnear Kitchener.\nJohn Dcsireau for the Alfred, near\nSirdar.\nOkalta Active\nCALGARY, March 5 (CP)-Oil\nissues were practically unchanged\nin light trading on Calgary Stock\nExchange today. Transfers 4100\nshares.\nOkalta was active, trading 1100\nshares, but remained steady. Royal\nCanadian added % to 18% in odd-\nlot transactions.\nPAGE\nELEVEN\n\u2022fUTlONAl-UoWINC'\n\u2022Act-\n\u2022i)t3iCN*No*333-C'\n\u2022 f cow t \u2022\u2022 r.LVlvJ-iiT.i^o Mi-\n11150 Ca,fT El    B*D\u00bbI\n** *y tt\u2014 i       x     1 r\nt IVI HO   ll\nivi kg Soou\n\u2014>r~\n^UTt\u00bbNaTlVt.\u00bbl*.H>*iT\u00ab'o\u00abT*J\n  . \u2022 ,-\u2014*       '\n:\u00bb*atKtMTj\u00ab\nA 31MPU NOMW TWO MWOOM WMMO*W Of OOMMU.\nDW3N. FUXME TO M WILT AT A MOOBATE LOST. Mill\nSPACIOUS UYIK3 a*OOM. MffU OOnB CUXWTS. LWW\nCL03ITS  AUO mCHW   STOMOl      OtOSS VmnLATlOK B\nptoviWD k ir\u00abY aooM.   nmmos mat m nxisHB) wmi\nBSKX StUOOOi WOOD OS OtHB MATBULS J#f\u00bb\u00abrB)\nN WMJUi\nCum, or*-'\n; l\u00bbloeC.fi\nsc o\"o \u00bbntf fj7a?^>ir\u00bbr**i\n'Icitt-aafl-tWl;\nyr?*\nWoltlNG   DI*t*IKC5 Ol- THIS UOUit  IMVt MkH lllllltl bt 1UI- UOUSIHG ADWIkl STB AT IOH  aa \u00bb COMHttt StT\nCONSISTING  Of  i 3HS Of blut HUNTS   &   4 NlTIONAt   HOUSING   MtHOJ INDUU   SPtCIHClTlOW (TO U flUl\nMiy ownu Moiuawi) may \u00bb\u00bblutcim** ihtm tow of.*ie\u00bb---~\n\u2022a k\u00bb>.^\u00bb\u201eV' \u00bb fa\u00bb,>.,aaJ*<aWl>Wt *W-a\"Sl      \t\nOabta t>*r Hixma'fiofn** Homing \u00bb6WiNi5TanioK - Dtn\u00abTM*)(T ef tlt*At\u00bbc\u00bbT*-fOTT\u00bbW(aT'Ol\u00abrT>fc\u00bbo'^:v\n\u25a0I\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, March 5 (AP)-British\nst.ck -closings in sterling:\nAustin A 15s 10%d, Babcock Sc\nWilcox 47s 6d. Celanese Corp of Am\n\u00a37. Cent Mining \u00a313%, Consol\nOld Fields 50s, Courtaulds 36s, 10\n%d, Crown \u00a313%, East Gcduld \u00a311,\nHBC 26s 7%d, Ldn Midland \u00a319%\n(x), Metal Box 80s, Mex Eigle 6s\n10%d. Mining Trust 2s 3d, Rand \u00a37\n%. Springs 28s 10%d.\nBonds: Brit 2% pc Consols \u00a373%.\nBrit 3% pc war loan \u00a399 9-16, Brit\nfunding 4s 1960-90  \u00a3113%.\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen\nClose\nOpen\nClose\nAmer For Power \t\n. 114%\n-     1%\n115\n1%\nInter Tel & Tel \t\n3%\n37 V4\n3'a\nKcnn Copper \t\n-17-%\nAm Smelt k Ref\t\n.   46\n49 \"4\nMack Truck  \t\n25 V.\n25*\nAmer Telephone \t\nAmerican Tobacco\t\n. 172%\n172%\nMontgomery Ward\t\n54\nM'a\n.   88%\n88\nNash Motors  \t\n6-H\n6>i\nAnaconda\t\n.    29%\n29%\n161,\n16H\nBaldwin \t\nBait it Ohio\n15%\n.     5%\n15%\n5'\u00bb\n3V-\n221*,\n3 V,\nPonn R R \t\n::'.*.\nBendix Aviation \t\n.   32%\n33%\nPhillips Pete \t\n36 N,\n36-Vi\nB\u20acth   Steel        \t\n.   76%\n77',\nPullman \t\n\u25a0264\n26%\n.   23%\n23%\nRadio Corporation\n'*'\u25a0\n10\nCanada Drv \t\n.   21\n21%\n10\nCanadian   Pacific   \t\n5%\n6%\nSafeway Stores \t\n49 H\n49S\nCerro de Pasco ...\n.   37%\n37%\nShell Union \t\n11\nHVa\nChrysler \t\n.   84\n85\nS Cal Edison \t\n294\n29 *a\nComm Invest\t\n.    54\n53%\nStan Oil of N J\t\n43*4.\n4.;',\nCon Gas New York ..\n.   30%\n31\nTexas Corporation  \t\n44:\",\n444\nC   Wright  pfd\n10%\n10%\nTexas Gulf Sul \t\n34\n34\nDupont \t\n. 184%\n184%\nTimken Roller  _\n48V(\n48\nEastman Kodak \t\n. 150%\n150%\nUnion Carbide \t\n84 >i\n844\nFrecport  Texas  \t\n.   34%\n34%\nUnion Oil of Cal  _\n16',\n164\nGeneral Electric \t\n.   38%\n38%\nUnited Aircraft \t\n47\u00abi,\n474\nGeneral Ffrtids  \t\n.   47%\n48\nUnion Pacific \t\n93 V,\n934\nGeneral Motors \t\n.   52%\n53%\nU S Rubber\t\n354,\n354\nGoodrich \t\n.     191;\n19%\nU S Steel\n584\n58**Ha\nGranby\n8',\n8%\nWarner   Brothers   \t\n3S\n3\u00bbi\nGreat Nor pfd .\nHowe Sound\t\n.   23%\n24\nWest  Electric \t\n1134\n1134\n\u2014\n48\nWest Union \t\n24\n24H\nHudson Motors\t\n.     5%\n5%\nWoolworth     \t\nlo\n404\nInternational Nickel ..\n.   36%\n36%\nsic\nYellow Truck      17%\nICK EXCHANGE\n17M,\nMONTI\nLEAL\nINDUSTRIALS\n13\\\nAlta Pac Grain \t\nIVi\n764\n554\nAssoc Brew of Can\nBathurst P Sc P A\n18%\n14%\n44\nBANKS\nCanadian   Bronze\n177\nCanadian Bronze pfd\n100%\nDominion\t\n208\nCan Car Sc Fdy pfd\n24%\nImperial\n216\n35\nCan Celanese pfd\n125%\nNova Scotia \t\n310\nCan North Power\n111%\nRoval            \t\n188\nCan Steamship\n8'.\nToronto   \t\n280 4\nCan Steamship pfd\n21\nCURB\nCockshutt Plow \t\n7%\n44\n::i\nAbitibi 6 Pfd\nWt\nCon Min & Smelting\nDominion Coal Pfd\nBathurst I'JPB\na\nBeauhamois Corp\n54\nDnm Sleel Sc Coal B\n14%\nBritish American Oil\n23\nDominion Textile\n90%\n11  C   Parkers\nIB\nDryden Papa*r\nII\nCan Industries 11\n2 31\nFoundation C of C\nGatineau Power\n14%\n15%\n14\nCan Vickers\n7\nGatineau Power Pfd\nGurd Charles \t\n95%\n9%\n7\nDounaconn Paper A ...\nItt\nHoward Smith Paper\n20\nDonnacona Paprr B .\n6 4\n11 Smith Paper Pfd .\nImperial Oil\n103\n1*1%\nFairrhlld Aircraft . ..\n6\nFraser Co Ltd\t\n*\u2022>\nInter Petroleum\n23\nInter Utilities A\n10\nInler Nirkel of Can   ..\n43%\nInter Utilities B  .\n45\nLake of Ihe Woods ..\n25\nI.ikr Sulphite\n14\nMcColl Frontenac\n9%\nMacLaren P Sc P\n21\nNational Brew Ltd\nNat Brew pfd\n36%\n38\nMrColl Frontenac Pfd\nMitchell Robt\n984\n144\nOgillve Flour New\n31%\nPower Corp Pfd\n110\nPrice Braa\n20%\nPrice  Bros Pfd\n24\nQuebec Power\nHI\nllovnlilo  0,1\n32 >a\nPhiwnigan W Sc P\n21',\nUnited Dial of Can\n.50\nS'  I.awiTticr Corp\n\u2022T*.\nWalker Coed Sc W\n41'.\nSt Low Corp pfd ...\n19%\nWalker Good Pfd\t\n \t\n19V\nLatin-Americas to\nSeek U.S. Credits\nWASHINGTON, March 5 (API-\nReliable reports have reached United States administration that a number of Latin-American visitors may\nbe expected soon to seek part of\nthe $100,000,000 credits authorized\nfor the Exoprt-Import Bank.\nThe first visitor probably will be\nthe President-elect of Costa Rica,\nSenor Rafael Calder6n Guardia.\nSince Costa Rica occupies a strategic position for defence of the\nPanama Canal, she stands a good\nchance of getting a portion of the\ncredits.\nA representative of Chile may\ncome to the United States to take\nup a 85,000.000 credit allocated to\nhis country but not handed over. Hc\nwill submit a list ot the projects\nfor which the credit is to be expended.\nColombia ls reported seeking from\n$6,000,000 to $8,000,000 for railroad\nand public road developments.\nPanama wanui payment of a credit granted to construct a trans-Isthmian highway.\nBrazil is reported considering asking for payment of credits granted\nher last year during the visit of\nOswaldo Aranha, Brazilian Foreign\nMinister.\nFinland, it Is thought, will receive\n$20,000,000 of the credit, China $20,-\n000,000, Norway $10,000,000, and\nSwfeden $15,000,000.\nThat will leave only $35,000,000 of\nIhe addition $100,000,000 voted by\nCongress last week.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, March 5 (CP)-But-\nter, Que. 27-H-*; Western regrad-\ned 27%\u2014%. Eggs, Western A-large\nbuyers\u2014inspection  244A.\nTo arrive: eggs (mixed lots), Eastern A-large buyers-inspection 2v,j ,\nButter futures: March 274-%.\nWheat Price Soars\nCHICACO, March 5 (AP)\u2014AU\ndeliveries of wheat soared over the\ndollar mark today after the futures\nmarket had opened hesitantly.\nA late rally in prices which\ntouched off many standing orders\nto buy and stop losses boomed\nquotations as much as 3}. cents a\nbushel.\nWheat closed 24\u20143 cents higher\nthan Monday with Mav leading the\nadvance. May 1.034-4. July 100%\n\u2014%, corn 14-% higher, May 564\n\u2014 %; July y\u00ab\u2014%; oats unchanged\nto % up.\nWar Risk Insurance\nRate to Continue\nLONDON, March 5 (CP) \u2014 Sir\nAndrew Rae Duncan, President of\nthe Board of Trade, informed thc\nHouse of Commons today that thc\nwar risks insurance premium would\nremain one-quarter of one per cent\na month due to \"the increased risk:\nof serious air raids\" during the j\nSpring.\nHe said a reduction was considered inadvisable although no claims\nhad been made on the government's\ninsurance fund now totalling \u00a318,-\n620,000 ($82,850,000)\nCommercial representatives ln sll\nimportant overseas markets are reporting on ways and means of stimulating British exports, Sir Andrew\nsaid during the question period in\nthe House.\nGeoffrey Lloyd, Secretary for\nMines, told the House that storage\nof coal would be encouraged as\nsoon as possible to prevent recurrence of a shortage due to a transportation failure such as the nation\nsuffered this Winter,\nMontreal Stocks\nShow Firmer Trend\nMONTREAL, March 5 (CP) -\nStock market continued to show a\nstronger price trend in late dealings Tuesday.\nC.P.R. and Canadian Car were\nfirm rail Issues while Nickel, Smelters, and Hudson Bay Mining were\nstrengthened in the metal section.\nCanada Steamships issues showed\nimprovement and Brazilian and\nShawinigan scored fractional advances in utilities.\nAsbestos and Dominion Bridge\neased in constructions and others\nto show lower price trends including National Steel Car, Montreal\nPower and Howard Smith and\nGurd.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, March 5 (CP)-Re-\nceipts, cattle 140; calves 8*. hogs nil;\nsheep 208 on through billing.\nMedium to good lightweight steers\n8\u20146 50; choice 1200 pound steers\n6.60\u20146.75. Medium to good heifers\n575-825. good fed calves 6.50-7;\ngood cows 425\u20144.50: common to\nmedium 3.50\u20144; good bulls 4 35\u2014\n4.50. Veal calves 550-9 50 for common to choice,   a\nLast bacons 835.\nGold Belt Mining\nProduction $51,000\nVANCOUVER, March S (CP)-\nValue of production at Gold Belt\nMining Company Limited, Sheep\nCreek area, B.C., for the month of\nFebruary amounted to $51,887 for\n4478 tons of ore milled, compapad\nto $52,468 from 5375 tons in tha\nprevious month, the company reported today.\nU.S. Gov'ts Lead Bond\nRecovery, New York\nNEW YORK, March 5 (AP)\u2014Tha\nbond market made a start at recovery today under leadership of U.\nS. Government, medium priced rails\nand a selected group of foreign dollar obligations. Transactions wer\u00bb\nlight.\nRUSTPROOFING\nSCREWS, NAILS, BOLTS, Etc.\nAt Low Cost\nL.C.M.  Electroplating\nLaurltx Bldg. 704 Nelion Ave.\nThe Classified Will Sell  Itl\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE\nTMl\n,VUTI\nBid\nMINES:\nBig Missouri \t\n09%\nBralorne\n10.60\nBridge Rlv Con ..\n.014\nCariboo Gold\n2 44\nDentonia\n.014\nFairview   Amal   ...\n.on,\nFederal   Gold   .....\n.00%\nGeorge Copper\t\n.16\n.044\nGold   Belt  \t\n.25\nGrandview  \t\n.H4\nHedley Maicot \t\n.48\nHome   Gold\t\n.004\nIndian Mines  \t\n.01\nInter Coal\n.30\nIsland   Mount   .\n105\nKoot   Belle\n.60\nLucky  Jim\n.01%\nMetallne Metals\n.06\nMinto   Gold\n.01 (a\nMcGillivray\n\u2014\nNicola M Ji M\n02%\nNoble Five\n.014\nPac   Nickel     -\n.10\nPend   Oreille   \t\n1 83\nPilot   Gold\n.004\nPloneeT   Gold\n2 10\nPorter   Idaho\n.014\nPremier Border\nol\nPremier  Gold\n129\nPrivateer\n.83\nQuatsino\n.024\nRed Hawk Oold\n\u2014\nReeves MacD\n20 Vi\nRelief  Arl\n11:14\nRrnn Gold\n1*\nRufus Arg        . .\n00%\nSnllv   Mines\n'\u00ab\nSalmon Gold\n.0.1\nSheep Creek\n1 III\nSilbak   Premier\n102\nSilver Crest\n00%\nSurf Inlet\n.10\nTnvlor Bridge\nVldetle Oold\n.02 tt\n0J%\nWellington\n01\nWeako  Mines\n1)04\nWhitewater\n03\nVmir  Yank  Girl\nnl  .\nAsk\n.10\n10.75\n: tn\n.00 V,\n.14tt\n.00 It\n108\n-    I\n.02     1\n.014\n.24\n03 tt\n*    I\n1 90\n2 20\n02\n014\n1 34\n.65\n01\n.09%\n.38\n.111\n034\n1 08\nI OS\n.01\n11\nn\nEdm\nOIL8\nAmalgamated\nAnaconda\nAnglo   Can   ...\nA P Con     .....\nAssociated   .\nBnltac\nBrit   Dom\nCalgary &\nCalmont   .. ... ,\t\nComoll\t\nCommonwealth   ..\nEast  Crait  \t\nExtension\nFirestone* Pel*  ..\nFour Star Pete .\nFreehold Corp ,\nHargal\nHlghwood Sarcee\nHome\nMadison\nMar Jon\nMcUnug Seg\nMercury\nMid-West   Pele   ..\n1 Mill   City   .\nI Model\nMonarch   Rov\nNational Pete\nOkalta   com\nI Pacalta\nPac   Pete\nPrairie   Roy\nRoyal   Can\nRoyal Crest Pete\nRoyalite\nSouth End Pete\nSouthwest  Pele\nUnited\nVanalla\nVulcan\nWeal   Flank\nINDUSTRIALS:\nB C Power A\nCan  Pac\nCapital   Est\nCoast   Brew\nGrower. Wine\nNeon   Prods\n,. Pac   Covle\n014 I United   Dist\n05'11 Westmtr   Pur\n.00 tt\n.054\n.154\n.01%\n.01')\n.10\n1 'IS\n.35\nXI\n.264\n.05%\n24\n,06\n.10\n.02\n.13\n258\n.024\n024\n.104\n.06\n\"24\n.08\n10%\nI 17\n.27\n.174\nill\n.00-Vi\n.08\n90\n.02\n.12\n198\n.38\n.02%\n02%\n06\n21\nnl\n04\n28 so\n7 25\n1.25\n128\n125\n9 15\n18'\n08\n,33\n18\n.184\n084\n3(00\n044\n.53\n074\n05',\n51\n03\nPhi\n1 1\"\nI \u25a0' 25'\nSpdnq.....\nIs Just Around the Corner\nAND WITH SPRING COMES\nGARDENING, PAINTING,\nSPRING-CLEANING.\nGARDENING for Instance...\nMEANS SPADES, RAKES,\nHOES, LAWN MOWERS,\nFERTILIZER, SEEDS, SHRUBS\nAND PLANTS. ARE YOU\nSELLING ANY OF THESE\nTHINGS, OR ARE YOU PLANNING ON PURCHASING\nSOME GARDEN  SUPPLIES?\nBuying or Selling You'll Ot Best Results by Using\nThe \"Farm, Garden and Nursery Products\nand Supplies\" Column\nIn the\nJfetemi My Nnua\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nRead More\nUsed  More\n ^r\u2014 \u2014\t\nmwm.\nHOI TWKLVM\n5**\u00ab\u00bbM\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab*\u00ab\u00abi^}\nJ.| Tf J.I  I    TODAY TIL\nill Jll'l 1    SATURDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 9:00\nMAN TO MAN.\nSMeMtpl\nAndy'a a fugitive\nfrom a dame gang now 1\n. .. and hli only way ont\na. leomi to bo to join tht Navy I\n*   Howll ond lieart-achei trom ,\nthe Judge, Mom and Marion\n...In their NEWEST hltl\nJUDCE\nAT\n2:42,\n7:32,\n9:42\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILION, B.C.-WIDNESDAY MORNINQ, MARCH I WO,\naU STONE ^ROONEY\n^PARKER % HOLDEN,\n\u2014plus-\nDISNEY\nCARTOON\nNewi of the\nWorld\n\u2014EXTRA-\nMARCH OF TIME'S SENSATIONAL FEATURE\n\"CANADA at WAR\"\nSEE . . . how the Dominion and iti people are united in ;;\ntheir war effort!. SEE ... the Active Service Forcei: \u00ab\nThe work on the Home  Front.  How Canada mobilizes |\nitl resources.\nNEW *% gi Finance\n= 37\u00b0  PLAN\nFor 12-Month Contracts\n0%\nSelect USED CARS\nFor Short Term\n(3-Month Contracts)\non the Following\n\u25a0 572500\n1937 Chevrolet\nMilter Coach. Spot llflht, heater,  looki\n\u25a0 nd rum like new. _\t\n1936 Chevrolet   J\/yinnn\n\u25a0Standard   Coich.  Good   rubber,   perfect Ofclll\ncondItion.    _   mmW^u W\n1937 LaFayette J7OC00\nCoupe. Low mileage. Beautiful blue. A-1\nihipe.   .  _ _\n1938 Nash LaFayette\nClub Sedan\nEquipped    with    air   conditioning    unit,\ngood tlrei. New cir condition, ,\n$95500\nALL CARS FULLY GUARANTEED\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nPhone  117\n213  Baker St.\nBOYS AND GIRLS\nWhy Stop Skating?\nWhen you can Ret a pair of\nDunne's Famous\nDouble Ball Bearing\nROLLER SKATES\nAt |2.60, $3.30, JV1.2K\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nEaster Cards\nNow Showing\n5c, 10c and 15c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON, B. C.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nGeneral ikatlnj today, 2 to 4\nCIVIC CENTRE\nElectrical  Contractlna,  F.   H.\nSMITH, 351 Baker 8t PHONE MB.\nTalk of the town\u2014Men't Tea,\nWed. afternoon, March 13th.\nEAGLES   MEET   TONIGHT\nAT 8 P. M.\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH.\n666, F. H. Smith, 351 Baker 8treet.\nSki   Club  Meeting\nThunday, 8 p.m., Savoy Hotel\nROLL YOUR OWN WITH \"SWEET\nCAP\" FINE CUT at VALENTINE'S.\nBamboo Lawn Raket, 20c each.\nLawn Grail 8eed, 40c pound.\u2014At\nHIPPERSON'8.\nTickets on sale at Mann, Rutherford for the Finnish Red Cross concert, St. Paul's Church, March 15.\nAdults 35c, children 15c.\nTwo waihable Oil Palntlngi for\nonly 98 centi at the NELSON\nHARDWARE. They're painted right\nIn our window. Hurryl\nAn apple a day keepi the doctor\naway, but your donatloni to 8cout\nApple Day, March 16, will help to\ntend a boy to camp not to the doctor.\nI will not be respiansible for any\ndebts contracted by any one other\nthan myself from this date, March\n6th, 1940.\nEDWIN VALMAR HORNBY,\nFernie, B. C\nDANCE on EASTER MONDAY\nat CIVIC CENTRE to mullc\u2014clear\nai a bell throughout the entire hall\ndue to the new P. A. System.\nD.O.K.K. ANNUAL EASTER BALL\nwith   Margaret  Graham'i Orcheitra\nIt ll time for Weit Kootenay to\nreturn a Liberal member to the\nFederal Houie. and give our lupport\nto a United Liberal Government,\nOne Canada, One Leader, One Purpose. Vote for Donald MacDonald,\nthe Liberal  Candidate.\nKOOTENAY   LAKE\nGENERAL   HOSPITAL   SOCIETY\nNOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING\nAnnual General Meeting of Tho\nKoo'.enav Lake General Hospital\nSociety will be held In the City\nHall on March 12th. 1940 at 8 p m\nAll members of Society are requested to attend.\nJAS. C. FORBF.S.\nSecretary\nChild Hygiene\nExpounded lo\nTrail Rotary\nTRAIL, B. C, March S-Outlln-\ntnt the work of paediatrics, that\nbranch of medical aclenee which\ntreats of the hygiene and diseases\nof children, Dr. W. J. Endicott, who\nhas been conducting the \"Well Baby\nClinics\" In Trail for the past three\nyears, told the Trail Rotary Club,\nwhen ha was Ita guest speaker on\nTuesday, of the work carried out\nfor the betterment of future Trail\ncitizens.\nWhile the care of babies who\nwere well, perhaps was a little\noverdone, In the larger centres, the\nspeaker remarked, many adjustments during a baby's first year of\nlife were of great Importance to its\nfuture.\n\"Well Baby Clinics\" were held\neach week, at the City Hall, the East\nTrail United Church, St. Anthony of\nPadua Church, Rossland Avenue,\nand at private homes ln Warfield.\nPurpose of the clinics waa to\nmake stronger children physically,\nthe basis on which other things\ndevelop.\nPresident Herbert Clark announced that next Tuesday the Rotarians would meet with Rotary\nAnnes at a special banquet in the\nTadanac Community Hall at 6 p.m\ninstead of the noon hour.\nA letter from the Nelson Rotary\nClub, expressing heartfelt sympathy\nover the loss of the late George J.\nKinnis, Charter member of the club,\nwas read by Secretary Frank\nPennoyer.\nB. A. Stimmel was appointed\nChairman of an \"On to Portland\"\nCommittee, where a Rotary convention will be held in the near\nfuture.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS\nTRAIL, B. C, Much 5\u2014Drawl of\ntha Trill Curling Club President's\nCup Competition for Wednesday\nfollow: 6:30 p.m.\u2014W. 0. Carrie va.\nWilliam McLeary, H. C. Caldlcott\nvi. J. H. Woodburn, George Bumfrey\nvi. Walter Brady, Andy Crlchton\nvs. W. H. Baldrey. 8:30 p.m.-T. H,\nWeldon vi. L. G. Mowat, R. C. McGerrigle vs. E. W. Hazlewood, A. M.\nChesser vi. W. L Wood, P. t.\nMclntyre vi. Frank Strachan.\nJacobs Changes\nDates of Fights\nNEW YORK, March 9 (AP). -\nPromoter Mike Jacobs today\nchanged the dates for two forthcoming fights ln Madison Square\nGarden.\nTho heavyweight fight between\nBuddy Baer, Max's brother, and,\nValentin Campolo, recent Argentine importation, was moved back\nfrom March 19 to March 20. Campolo suffered a slight cut on his\nforehead while sparring yesterday.\nThe middleweight title fight between Champion Ceferino Garcia\nand Ken Overlln, was switched from\nApril 3 to May 24. Garcia Is suffer-\ning from boils.\nCRESTON CAMPAICN\nSLOW TO CET GOING\nCRESTON, B.C.-Thls ls one of the\nquietest Federal election campaigns\nCreston haa ever know. So far there\nhave been no public meetings and\nthe Conservatives are the only party\nto date to open a committee room.\nThe Liberal organizer. J. H. Cameron was here from Cranbrook last\nweek, and completed arrangements\nfor a supply of literature. Voters\nlists are here and will be carefully\nscanned to make sure any missing\nnames are recorded at the final revision March 12.\nFrank Putnam, M.L.A., is away\nthis week lending a hand to Donald\nMcDonald, Libera! nominee in Kootenay West, with meetings scheduled for Crawford Bay, Procter and\nother Kootenay Lake points, along\nwith a big 'ally at Nelson.\nT. H. WATERS & CO\nLIMITED\nWe specialize In glass for buildings,  automobiles,  boats  and\nfurniture\nWINDOWS REGLAZED\nDry Slab Wood\n12\" ?4.O0; 16\" ?3.75 Load\n4 Feet 93.00 Cord\nPhone 163 or434R1\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nGALLAGHER. Elizabeth-Passed\naway March 5 Prayers will be offered nn Wednesday at R:3U pm. at\nClark's Funeral Chapel*. Funeral\nservice will be held on Thursday,\nMarch 7. from the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate at 9 a.m. Clark's Funeral Chapel in charge of the\narrangements.\nBURGLARY INSURANCE\nDoesn't cost much\u2014You may be\nnext.\u2014We write iL\nRobertson  Realty Co., Ltd.\n347 Baker St.\nSouthern Belle Frocks\nS'.vled for a smarter <w   mm\nYOU S.zes 12 to 20 9W3\nKootenay No-Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT 8ERVICE\nGodfreys' Limited    1937 Plymouth\n$745\nI.a.at year Fire Insurance Companies paid pillcyholders in Canada 117,766 229 of the loss suffered.\nOthers who suffered loss must\nhave rued, ton late, their failure\nto Insure. Insure with us now.\nH. E. DILL\nInsurance   ind   Real   Eitata\n1 De luxe iedan, 1940 licence.\nGuaranteed.\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBiker SL      Limited      Phone 119\nFinals, Consolation\nBridge Tourney Today\nInterest ls running high ln the\nSpring bridge 'tournament sponsored by Mrs. Vincent Fink's Circle\nof St. Saviour's Church. Finals have\nbeen reached with mixed couples\nin both events, draws for today\nbeing as follows*.\nFirst prize draw\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nE. C. Wragge vs. Miss C. G. Smith\nand J. A. Ferguson.\nConsolation draw\u2014Mrs. A. E.\nMurphy and R. L. McBride vs. Mrs.\nH. F. Wallace and D. G. Beatty,\nGoofers Cut Hews'\nEdge In Bowling\nFinal Playoffs\nRegaining their old form to pick\nup aggregate scores of over 500, the\nGas House Goofers sliced The Dally\nNews' edge in the best of aeven\nCity bowling championship series\nto one game on Gellnas Bowling Alleys Tuesday night. The Paper boys\nhave won two matches to the Goofers' one.\nThe Goofers again took Len Bicknell's average as his score, so his\naggregate was tha only one below\n900. Blcknell had to attend senior\nhockey practice. The Goofers still\nhad a 37-pln lead after they had\novercome the 185-pln spot to The\nNews.\nScores follow:\nGAS HOUSE GOOFERS:\n1    2\nS   Ttls\nL. Aurello      181 177 169\nL Blcknell    157 157 157\nL. Mydansky  169 168 167\nJ. Hamson   198 169 194\nT. Romano    186 177 173\nWHITE PAPER PROMISES\nGREAT EXPORT EFFORT\nLONDON, March 5 (CP)-A Government White Paper Issued tonight promised efforts to obtain\n\"the greatest volume of export\ntrade possible\" for Britain and indicated that the United States and\nSouth American markets were considered fields to be developed.\nThe White Paper was presented to\nthe House of Commons by Sir Andrew Rae Duncan, President of the\nBoard of Trade.\nWE PROTECT YOUR SALARY\nUp to $60.00 a  Month  for\nONLY 6c A DAY\nRELIANCE   AGENCIES   LTD.\n642 Bakar SL Phona 630\nBreakfast\nIS ALWAYS\nCOOD AT\nThe PERCOLATOR\nVIC\nSEE\nGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing   repairs,   alteration,   and\nInstallations.\nPh. 819 301 Victoria 81\nEEEa\nBookings for\nMARCH\nMarch 8-9\n\"Judge Hardy and Sen\"\nMarch 11-13\n\"Invisible Stripes\"\nMarch  14-19\n\"Detrry Ridei Again\"\nMarch 18-20\n\"Intermeixe\"\nMarch 21-23\n\"Balalaika\"\nMarch 25-27\n\"His Cirl Friday\"\nMarch 28-30\n'Charlie McCarthy Detective'\nTotala   871 848 890 2579\nDAILY NEWS:\nA.  Brown     180 113 154\nC.   French     179 164 170\nW. Gallicano   161 148 169\nJ.  Reld     132 161 162\nS.   Brown     161 149 157\nGait your larttr Novaltlta Early.\nEaster Cards\nEaster Novelties\nA full line to choose from.\nLadiesl Have you tried\n\"Blue Grass\" Perfume?\nThe best on the market. Sold\nonly by the\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 480\nPhone 34\n1930 Essex Sedan\nReconditioned  Good  looking.\nQood tires, CITE\nPrice     *>**\/5\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n209 Baker     SERVICE     Phona 122\nSpring\nClothing\nStep out in one of oui\nnew Spring suits and topcoats. New models, new\npatterns.\nEmory s Ltd.\nRent That Room With a Want\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Naber\nPhone 955 510 Kootenay\nTotala     ...\nHandicap\n813 732 812 2357\n    185\nGrand total   \t\nHigh individual, J, Hamson,\nHigh aggregate, J. Hamson, 561\nScorer, C. D. Pearson.\nThe Classified Will 8ell  Itl\n2542\n1939 DODGE\nDE   LUXE   SPECIAL\n4-door Touring Sedan,     C*>0*E\nAs is      9in\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Offloa and Hume Hotel\nKOOTENAY\nRAINBOW\nBEER\nA NATURAL SPRING\nBEVERAGE\nWhy Not Have\nSome  on   Ice?\nClothes Cleaned Riqht\nLOOK RIGHT-STAY BRIGHT\nPHONE 1042\nffatudLcL ^buxmhJL\n\"Distinctive Dry Cleaning\"\nKootenty\nBreweries\nLimited\nrhls advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard  or   by   the  Government  ol\nBritish Columbia.\nFleury's\nPhormacy\nMed. Arts nik.\nPHONE 25\nPreicripriom\nCompounded\nAccurately\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE .\"05. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nHOOD'S\nBREAD\n\"Your Horn* Rakery**\nCement \u2014 Brick\nPlaster \u2014 Lime\nBURNS\n\u25a0   LUMBER lCOAL CO   -\nFuel Economy\nI n order to clear out surplus Coke, the City of Nelson\nis offering Coke during the month of March for cash\nat $7.00 per ton at the Gas Works and $8.50 per\nton delivered within the City Limits. Phone 37.\n\u2014Acting City Clerk\nA Qreat Liberal Rally\nHEAR\nG. G. (Gerry) McGeer, k.c.\nFrank Putnam, M.L.A.; Donald MacDonald, Liberal Candidate\nAt the\nCivic Theatre, Thurs., Mar. 7,8:151 m*\nGOOD MUSIC\nMr, M. Orr ind Mr, MacDonild will alio iptak at South Slocan tha urn* tvanlng at 7:00 p.m.\nOne Canada\u2014One Leader\u2014One Purpose\nDrink It at\nEvery Meal\nSTEAKS\nTENDER, JUICY\nQrenfelVs Cafe\nLook years younger and be\nmore   beautiful   with   a\npermanent (rom\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327      Johnstone Blk.\nBuy Canadian INSURANCE\nWe represent the Halifax Insurance Company, Canada's Oldest\nCompany.\nT. D. ROSLING\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.      Phone 717\n\"Insure With Rosling and Save\"\nFor Quality and Economy\nBuy\nSTUDEBAKER\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelion) Ltd. Phona 117\nFINANCIAL   SECURITY\nINVESTORS 8YNDICATI\nMonthly  Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 61       Hipperson Blk,      Ph.\nDON'T COUCH - Uh\nMother's Syrup\nOF WHITE PINE\nat\nSmythe's\nPrescription Druggist Phor\n1939 MERCUR1\nTown Sedan. 8mall mileage, ra\nheater, de luxe equipment, six-\ntlrei A fine car at a lubitan\nliving,\nQueen City Moto\nPh. 43    Limited    Ml Joiaph\nf\nIVIC\nTonight and Friday\nComplete at 7:00-8:33\nISA MIRANDA\nRAY MILLANDu.\nHOTEL IMPERIAL\nReginald Owen \u25a0 Gene Lockhart\nIMmHa a. \u00ab.a.,i fll.,.,\n\u2014Added-\n\"Bulldo? Drummond'i\nBride\"\nPublic Meeting\nEagle Hall\nFriday, March 8th\n8 P.M.\nSpeakers \u2022\nW.K. Esling mp.\nLyle Jestley\nWm. Thomson\nCharles Daly\nThii will be the only meeting of Mr. Eilina* In Nelion,\nai in deference to those observing Holy Week, Mr.\nEaling or hii Committee will do no campaigning during\nthat week.\nDOLL UP    f)\nYOUR CAR  u\nFOR SPRING DRIVING\nTo Havp ymir car looking \\\\s hr.it for whrn \\he\nroad.* open thu Spring, havr the Winter\"! 5011m\nremoved hy having a genuine\nSIMONIZ\nPOLISH JOB\ndone on  lhe  finish  of tout car.\nMake your rar look  Its b\u00abt.\nNELSON TRANSFER IT\nCompany, Limited\n35 - PHONES - 36\n\/ft\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_03_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0407343","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1940-03-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1940-03-06 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0407343"}