{"@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":"2022-06-15","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1941-05-26","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414555\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Slocan School Wlm Sporti\nat Big ColtbriHon. Paga 3.\nMotorcyclists Thrill Crowds at\nFruitvale Catering. Page 12.\nSalmo Defeats Ymlr to Win Ymlr\nSoftbill Tourney. Page 9.\n'   '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'>\u25a0'.\u00ab*'\u25a0 i \u25a0\u25a0\u2014f>i\nNotion CIHmm Pltdg* Loyilty\nand Allegiance. Page II.\nSigrid Nord Ymlr Celebration\nQueen; Fine Sports. Page 5.\nKailo Hli Torch Ceremony it Pirk;\nBig Sporti Program. Page 11.\ntoC\nignty Hood, Pride\nI Britain, Smashed\nl CRASHES TUE\n.IVCSOFIIOHT\nthree Civilians  Lost\n: in B. C; 6 of Dead\nAre of R.C.A.F.\nCOAST MEN DIE\n. WINNIPEG, May 25 (CP). \u2014\nCrashes of four airplanes of British Commonwealth Air Training\nPlan schools in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba took the\nlives of 8 airmen over the holiday\nweekend and two civilians died\ntil a plane mishap near Chilliwack in British Columbia. Three\nother pesons were overdue on a\nflight from Chilliwack to Princeton, B. C.\nThe dead:\nSgt Pilot Bonn C. Smith, 25,\nloyal .Canadian Air. Force, Van-\nOttver.\nLac. Roger Williamson, 22, Royal\n3an\u00bbdian Air Force, Edmonton.\nL\u00bbc. L. H; Bolton, Royal,Canadian\nUr Force, R72304, Toronto,\nLac. H. J. Rowe, Royal Austral-\nRn Air Force, 400489, Victoria,\ntutralia.\nPo.   Robert   Edward  Sears,   25,\nloyal Air Force, London, Eng.\nX\u00bbc. Higson Wilde, 25, Royal Air\nPoree. Manchester, Eng.\nLeslie Whyte, 28. Vancouver.\nLewis B. 'McMullen, 26, Vancou-\nAnother airman, Earl Brett of\nSUllwack, B. C, and his two pa\u00bb-\nengers, Josh snd William Simpson\nIsfChllliwack, was several hours\n(vardue. Brett, a civilian flier, was\nin route from Chilliwack to\n'rlnceton, B. C.\nPe, Sear* and Lac, Wild*, Instructor and ttudent pilot respectively, wer* killed during ,Psl*j\u00aby\nnight flying *x\u00abrels*s when.VfMt\nHarvard training plan, crashed\nnear No: \u00ab Roysl Air Force 8er-\nlee Flying Training School *t\nMedicine Hat, Alt*.\nlac. Bolton of the No. 10 Service\nflying Training School at Dauphin,\nforthwestern Manitoba, was engaged In night routine flying wherr\nit 3 a.m. today his Harvard plane\nipparently spiralled Into the ground\nWo miles Northwest of the Dauphin\nellef landing field, said officials\nrt the No. 2 Air Command. Cause\nit the accident was not determined\nnanediately.\nThe No. 2 Air Command also\nmnounced that Lac. Rowe was fa-\n\u00ablly injured in a similar accident\n0 miles Northwest of the No. 4\nlervice Fylng Training School at\nsaskatoon. Lac. Rowe's machine\nlew Into the ground two miles\nJorthwest of the Vanscoy, Sask.,\nPlief landing field late Saturday\nThe fourth accident Involved a\nttivate plane which crashed near\nJhilliwack in the Fraser Valley\nJtetrlct of British Columbia.\nThe two men aboard the plane\nwere Identified at Whyte and McMullen, both of Vancouver. Detail! of the accident which occurred shortly after the imall biplane had taken off from Chilllwack Were not known Immediately, but Whyte wat rtporttd to\nhsve been at the controls.\nLac. Rowe ot the Saskatoon school\nflying a Cessna twin-motored\n.jhine on a night solo flight, R. C.\n_ F. officials sai.d The pilot's next\nif kin was given as Mrs. E. H. Rowe\nIt 41 Tennyson St., Victoria, Aus-\nralia.\nSgt. Pilot Smith and Uc. Wil-\n\"   ion crashed in a Tiger Moth\nlamsi\n1J miles South of Lethbridge.\nPilot Smith was an instructor\n'the R.CA.F. Elementary Flying\nraining School at Lethbridge and\nWilliamson a student since\nay 10.\nf-BOULEAU, Sask,. Mav 25 (CP).\n\u2022 One person was' killed snd seven\n'lers were injured, one seriously,\nen the truck in which they were\nng ran off the edge of a high-\ntravelled along for some ais-\nin a ditch and then crashed\na telephone pole four miles\njst of here, late Saturday,\n\"Archie Ross, 34, of Milestone,\n, was killed and Noreen Gates\noffered severe internal injuries\nInd shock.\n.ate Flashes\nBLACKIE, Alta,, May 2\u00ab (CP).-\nJFlre which started in a vacant\nbuilding on Main Street here Sun-\nBay morning wiped out a block of\nnine business houses and caused\nHtmage to other buildings. The loss\nj* estimated at between $40,000 and\n10,000, Blackle is 50 miles South-\nof Calgary.\nCHUNGKING, May 25 (AP). -\nJapanese transports have landed a\nlarge number of troops at Foochow,\nTfukien Province, to replenish\nBeavy losses, the Chinese Central\nNews Agency said tonight.\nHONG KONG. May\nChinese  Central Daily\n26 (AP). -\nlily Newi\nNported today that 40.000 Japanese\nnad been killed or wounded In\nPerce figMllns between lsrge Japanese and Chinese forces during\nIhe last two weeks ln the Chung-\nI'to mountain range in Southern\nhsnsi Province.\n\"Unlucky Hit\" by New Nazi Battleship Sends\nHood to Doom; Fleet Still Chasing Fleeing\nEnemy; Air Torpedoes Do Damage\nBy DOUGLAS AMARON\u2014Canadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON. May 25 (CP Cable). \u2014 Britain's 42,100-\nton battle cruiser H.M.S. Hood, largest warship in the world,\nwas blown to bits in the waters between Greenland ahd Iceland\nSaturday by an \"unlucky hit\" from the new German battleship\nBismark and today the Britsh Fleet furrowed the North Atlantic\nin pursuit of the Nazi craft.\nThe Admiralty announced the Fleet was' seeking to\nbring the fleeing Nazis to \"close action.\"\nWith aerial torpedoes, the Fleet Air Arm already had\nblasted into the Germans, scoring at least one hit, \"Operations\nare still proceeding,\" the Ad\nmiralty said briefly,\nThe Admiralty, in announcing\nloss of the Hood\u2014largest tingle naval loss suffered by the Royal Navy\nsince war began\u2014said the Bismarck\nscored sn \"unlucky hit\" in a munitions magazines. Fear was expressed that more than 1300 lives had\nbeen lost.\nThe S5,0O0-ton Bisoisrck received damage, but lt was not known\nto what extent\nSaturday evening Brltlth torpedo planu, combining reconnalt-\nanee with action, attacked the\nGerman units, of unspecified\nitrength. These planei operate\neither from ttw broad .decks of\naircraft carriers or ean be catapulted from warthlpi. Th*y sre\none cf the most threatening weapons of * modern navy.\nThe Admiralty said that after the\nfatal hit on the Hood the German\nforces \"made every effort to shake\noff pursuit.\" But the Brill* warships apparently were close at heel,\ncounting *omewh\u00bbt on damage to\nthe Bismarck to slow her flight\nThere wai wide speculstlon lhat\nmore powerful units of the fleet\nwere speeding to the scene of action following the brief engagement\nof the Hood and  Bismarck.\nThe German High Command\nplaced the scene off Iceland and\nclaimed th\u00bb Bismarck and aU the\nbt^S\u00ab^4\u00abee\u00bb<\u00abi\u00abi\u00bb^*\u00bb #&\u2022\nthe battle virtually unscathed and\ncontinued their Atlantic operations.\nA British battleship was forced to\nwithdraw, the Qermans claim.\nGreenland, protection of, which\nhas been assumed by the U. S\u201e\nand Iceland, now under Bri,tlsh\noccupation are separated by a\n250-mile stretch \"of water, the\nStrait of Denmark. It may have\nbeen somewhere near the mouth\nof this strait on the edge of the\nWestern hemisphere, that the battle oocurred.\nThe brief Admiralty communique\nshocked the Empire during celebration of the 122nd anniversary of\nQueen Victoria's birth. It said:\n\"British naval forces intercepted\nearly this morning off the coast of\nGreenland German navtl forces, Including the battleship Bismarck.\nThe enemy were attacked and\nduring the ensuing action H.M.S.\nHood (Capt. R. Kerr, C.B., R.N.)\nwearing the flag of Vice-Admiral L.\nE. Holland, received an unlucky hit\nin a magaiine and blew up.\n\"The Bismarck has received damage and the pursuit of the enemy\ncontinues.\"\n\"It is feared there will be few survivors   from  H.M.S. Hood.'\nThat was all.\nSpeculation immediately arose of\nwhether the Tirpitz, lister ship of\nthe Bismarck and known to have\nbeen completed about the same time\nthis vear, also was in the Western\nAtlantic batle.\nIt was assumed that probably botn\nthese battleships and other German\nvessels\u2014two more battleships may\nhave been completed recently\u2014slipped past the British blockade along\nthe Norwegian coast on a raiding\nmission.\nApparently they went at once\nto the Greenland Iceland area, for\nauthoritative      British     quarters\nhinted Friday that German raiders were near American shores.\nThe  Hood's  loss  was  tragically\nironic  in that her completion  in\n1920 was delayed for the installation\not special armor to protect her vitals as a result of the lessons learned in the 1916 battle of Jutland.\nIn that battle, at least two British capital ships were destroyed\nby exploded magazines\nBuilt at an original cost of more\nthan \u00a36,000,000 (normally $30,000,-\n000), the Hood was heavily reinforced in a two-year overhaul in\n1929-30.\nShe \"was rated a battle cruiser-\none of three in the Royal Navy\u2014\nbecause she was of battleship size\nand armament but was more lightly armored in the interests of speed.\nIn trials she turned up 32 knots,\ncompared with an eselmated 30-\nknot speed for the Bismarck. The\n1930 additions to her armour however, undoubtedly cut the Hood\ndown a few knots. Her armour\nweighed 13,800 tons, or about one\nthird the total displacement but\nttlll was regarded as having less\nprotection than modern battleships\nwear.\nIn gun power, the Hood and the\nBltmarck were almoit equal, each\nhaving eight 15-Inch rifle* and\nbristling with  imaller armi.\nThe Hood carrltd torpedoei and\none plant, the Blimarck wti fitted for four planei; whether torpedoei tre carried is not known\nhere.\nThe Hood is Britain'i second cap-\nital ship lost since the war, the old\nbattleship Royal Oak having been\ndestroyed by a submarine torpedo at\nScapa Flow Oct 4,1939.\nThere was speculation in London as to whether the damaged\nBismarck would be able to gel home,\nthe nearest German naval bases fit\nto handle such a ship being 1400\nmiles or more distant\nEven assuming no loss whatever\nin speed, this would give the British fleet two or three days ln\nwhich to run down the Bismarck.\nBritain still has 15 capital ships,\n13 battleships and two battle cruisers, having commissioned two, the\nKing George V and the Prince of\nWales, since war began.\nGermany lost one of her three\npocket-batleshlps, the Admiral Graf\nSpee, In the December 1939 battle\nof Montevideo, and the Nazi battleships Gneisenau and Scharnhorst\nlie crippled by Royal Air Force\nbombs at Brest. But she still has\nat least two other battleships, Uie\nBismarck and Tirpitz, and two pocket battleships presumably ln service.\n(The Nazi propaganda claims having at lsst come true, the German\nPress and radio leaped upon it with\ncries of joy, jubiliantly calling this\none of the proudest days in the\nhistory of the German Navy. Admiral Guonther Leut Jens was named as\nCommander ol ths) Germaa squa-\n-\"\u25a0Mfc-V ..%.   \u2022\u2022\u25a0Ul*.,,' '.\"-'.-.7.\" ( ', \"\u25a0\nDestruction of the Hood sppar-\nently leave* Japan as principal\nclaimant to the largest warship title\nHer Nissin and Takametu of something more than 40,000 tons having\nbeen either recently. commissioned\nor scheduled to be soon.\nIt generally was deemed unlikely that the Germans had sallied\nforth deliberately challenging the\nRoyal Navy. Instead, the British\nsources expressed belief they had\none of four missions:\n1. To raid shipping.\n2. To seize Dakar or other French\nAfrican ports.\n3. To wrest Iceland from its British garrison.\n4. To challenge the United Stati s\npolicy by establishing a Greenland\nbase.\nPride ofthe British Navy Sunk\nOfficer Comes Out\nof Fray to Predict\nCrete Will Be Held\nDefenders Take New Heart as British Send\nFighter and Bomber Planes Back to\nBattle; Nazi Bombers Blast Isle\nBy ERIC BICIO\u2014Associated Preu Staff Correipondent\nCAIRO, May 26 (Monday) (AP). \u2014 Allied soldien\nwaging bitter hand-to-hand fights are slowly closing in on the\nCerman parachute and air invaders of Crete, British headquarters indicated today, and a British military observer predicted it\nwould be possible to hold the island on'which the war in tha\nMiddle East hinges.\nGeneral headquarters here announced late last night\nthe first break in the eerie sky parade of Cerman troops to the\nfull\/\"\nH. M. S. Hood Saturday was blown to Mts when hit by the guns-of the new German battleship Bismarck,\n10,000\nPro-Axis\ns Riot in\nraq Qov't\nBasra;\nFalling\nReforming Money\nSystem Will Lead\nlo Win-Blackmore\nOTTAWA, May 25 (OP).-Scl-\nentiflc reform of the monetary\nsystem as a means of strengthening Canada's war effort was advocated by J. H. Blackmore, New\nDemocracy Leader In the House\nof Commons, in a broadcast address Saturday night.\nMr. Blackmore's speech was one\nof a weekly series of opposition\nleaders' talks broadcast over the\nnational network of the Canadian\nBroadcasting   Corporation.\n\"Peacetime conditions prove the\nhopeless Inadequacy of tne monetary system,\" said Mr. Blackmore.\n\"We must not, and I submit, we\ndare not, leave undone anything we\ncan do to increase the effectiveness\nof our war effort and one thing we\ncan do is to tackle the task of\nscientifically reforming our monetary system so that it will function\nwith maximum efficiency.\n\"In doing that we shall be showing ourselves true to the principles\nof Democracy which we cherish.\"\nMr. Blackmore said he welcomed the opportunity to state tha\nloyalty of Social Crcdlteri and\ntheir support of the war effort\nbecause ''many people across Canada, because of false propaganda,\nhad been given a very distorted\nIdea of our actual position on this\nmost Important matter.\"\n(The New Democracy Party led\nby Mr. Blaokmore contains the Social Credit members of the House\nof Commons.)\nThe New Democracy Leader said\nhis Party was favorable to all-out\nsupport of the Mother Country. It\nwas recognized the present Federal\nGovernment had been elected for\nthe purpose _.\ning Canada's supreme war effort to\nthe purpose of successfully supply\n_ Canada's supreme war effort M\nthe Empire. His party had no desire\nto interfere with the fulfilment of\nthe Government's obligation in respect to the war and sought to cooperate In every way.\n\"Long before the war. we of the\nSocial Credit Party, together with\nmany other advocates of Democray.\ndeclared ourselves emohatically as\nacainsl Fascism, Nazism and all\nother form; of dictatorship.\" he\nsaid. \"We recognized as early as\n1935 the threat of alien totalitarian\ndoctrines to our Democratic way\nof We.\"\nGreek King Safe\nAfter Thrilling\nDash From Crete\nBy  EDWARD   KENNEDY\nCAIRO, May Z8 (AP), - King\nGeorge of Greece and hli emigre\nGovernment found a temporary\nhaven In Egypt today en route\nfrom embattled Crete to BritUh\nsoil and the king himself told the\nstirring story of how the flnt\niwarmi of Nazi parachutists con-!\ncentrated on an area abc.it hii\nhouie.\nHe reached Cairo after a hair-\nraising withdrawal from the besieged Greek island and, besides\nescaping the clouds of air-born\ntroops, his party had to dodge bullets of his own solditfrs who thought\nthey wefe 'chutists disguised in\nilritish and Greek uniforms.\nIn a proclamation issued immediately on his arrival he said Greece\nwould continue the fight.\nIt was one of the most remarkable journeys ever made, by a king.\nMany times he hurled himself into\nCrete ditcnes to escape Nazi fire.\nHe crossed a 7000-foot mountain;\nslept in the open with peasant shepherds, ate their food, and finally\nreached the Southern shore of Crete\nastride a mule.\n'Ihe monarch and his party ii.\ntheir 72-hour trek were mistaken\nior German parachutists dressed in\ndritish and GreeK uniforms, and\none or two Greek patrols fired at\nthem. No one was wounded.\nSo narrow was the escape of\nthe King irom tho Germans that\nwhen it was decided to ilee the\nisland and men were sent back to\nthe royal residence to obtain :he\nKings baggage, the house was\nfilled with German soldiers.\nSo many planes were in the air\nthat memDers of the party said it\nwas a wonder the reiugees were\nnot spotted. On several occasions\nthe rearguard of New Zealand\ntroops and Greek gendarmes\nopened fire on the parachutists\nto turn them back.\nThe monarch, wearing a steel helmet, jumped into trenches ofteh but\nwas in tne hignest spirits througn-\nout the journey, those who accompanied him said. He lett at Uie \"last\npossible moment only because remaining would have required\ntroops lo guard him and thus deplete the lighting lorces.\"\nGaining on Fires\nPORT AHTHUR, May 25 (CP). -\nForest fire situation in the Thunder\nday area was reported \"slightly\noetter\" tonight after a weekend of\nstrenuous battle by hundreds of\nweary fire-fighters.\nFires are still burning ih the Nip-\nigon and Red Rock districts, 70\nmiles Northeast of the lakehead,\nbut Forestry officials here said\nmeagre reports indicated the situation well-in-hand.\nImprovement also was reported in\nthree townships 30 miles West of\nPort Arthur where a number of\nfires are burning, while fires in\nthe Geraldton area, 175 miles Norm-\neast of here, wefe brought under\nComplete control during the weekend.\nALBERTA BUSH ElftES\n\\ , RECEIVE DAMPENING\nEDMONTON, May 25 (OP). -\nFirefighters reported tonight that\neither rain or snow fell over the\nweekend in all areas where bush\nlires raged out of control last\nweek and the situstion now looks\nCause of Rioting  Is\nVague; Situation\nConfused\nBy WITT HANCOCK*\nAuoclated  Presi  Staff Writer\nANKARA, May 25 (AP) .-Ten-\nthousand Aratjs rioted and looted\nin Basra Saturday, a telegram to\nthe Turkish Agricultural Bank\nsaid today amid report* .that the\n5 pro-Axis Government of Iraq is\nbreaking up.\nFirst dispatches gave no indication as to whether the riot was\nfor or Sgainst the Iraq Government fighting Britain, nor did\nthey say whether the British authorities, who announced possession ot the port early in the warfare with Iraq, took steps to restore order.\nInformed sources In London ssid\nthere Was no confirmation of rioting in Basra but pointed out that\ncommunications were poor and the\nsituation in Iraq wss confused.\nRashid Ali A! Gailani, anti-British Premier, and his Defence Minister, Nadji Shefket, were reported\nto have requested and received a\nvisa to enter Turkey and that they\nare expected by plane tomorrow.\nThese were rumors that several\nof Rashid All's Generals had started\na counter-revolution.\nThe wife, son and daughter of\nRashid Ali who a few short days\nago was calling on Germany for\naid against British troop movement\nacross Iraq, arrived here at the\nTurkish capital along with the family of Rashid Ali's Defence Minister, Nedji Shefket..\nNajl Suwaldl, Rashid All'* Finance Mlnliter, sent to Iraq en\n\"official builness,\" took his family with him and Communication!\nMlnliter All Mahmud alio wai\nunderstood to have reached Iran\nwith hli'family.\nRaihid All, according to unconfirmed advances, nad fled\nBaghdad, hli capital, going to Mo-\nlul where he planned to let up a\nreorganized Government\nBritish sources said that German\nparticipation in the fight against\nBritish forces in Iraq is almost negligible and that the British troops\nhave gained control of dykes on the\nUpper    Euphrates,    thus    holding\ngower to flood low-lying areas of\nouthern Iraq if they wish.\nFloods in Northern Iraq were said\nto be holding up the British advance against Rashid Ali's scattered\nforce.\nThe Turkish National Railroad\nhas transported across Anatolia\na test shipment of German-made\nmilitary supplies consigned to\nIraq, well-informed quarters here\nclaimed.\nThe shipment, although small,\nwas considered an Important precedent for heavy traffic should\nIraq resistance remain uncrushed.\nIraq persuaded the Turkish Government to grant railroad favors in\nreturn for assurances that Turkish\nimports, now halted at Basra and\nBaghdad, would be forwarded as\nquickly as possible.\nBritish displeasure has been\nstrongly evidenced In Ankara over\nTurkey's Inability to choke off the\nstream of French surplus army\nequipment reported sent to Iraq by\nthe Turko-Syrlan rail line running\nmostly through Turkiih territory.\nWell Known Sopwith\nRacing Yacht Sunk\nLONDON,* May 25 (CP) - The\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\nsaid tonight the British Admiralty\nhas announced Ihe sinking of His\nMajesty's yacht Beaver II, formerly owned by T. O. M. Sopwith.\ninternationally-known British\nsportsman.\nThe BBC said that before the\nwar the Beaver II was \"well-\nknown In yachting circles oil boih\nsides of the Atlantic.\"\nU.S. Sea Actions\nlo Bring Serious\nResults\u2014Raeder\nBERLIN, May 25 (AP)- Grand\n> Adrairal.Erich Raedes-, in a special\ninterview' with Domei, Japanese\nNews Agency, claims that \"the\naggressive character\" of the United States naval patrol activities\nalready has been established. '\nIn the interview Issued here by\nD. N. B\u201e German news agency under a Tokyo date, Admiral Raeder\nsaid the German Navy regards\npossible results of American efforts to see that war materials\nreach Britain as \"very serious.\"\n\"Not only the th-ess but also responsible members of the North\nAmerican Government have expressed themselves in a way so that\nno doubt can exist over the aggressive character and conflict with\ninternational law of measures already taken and, above all, o'f those\nfurther proposed,\" Raeder said.\nThe grand admiral claimed no expert could regard an attack on America over the ocean as possible\nand that whoever imputes aggressive Intentions of Germany does it\nagainst their better knowledge and\nwith the intention of justifying their\nown aggressive plans and own will\nto interefere.'\n\"The worry of the war agitators\nis not a German attack but that\nthey have not succeeded in creating\nthe desired incident.\"\nRaeder uld that' ai far ai con-\nvoyi are concerned he could only\nconfirm the view of President\nRooievelt: \"Convoyi mean ihooting.\"\n\"Since the nature of the cargoes\nof convoyed ships according to American admission was established\n(rom the very beginning as contraband,\" he said, \"the resort to this\ntype of convoy system would not\nbe a neutral convoy in the sense of\ninternational law or American\ntreaties, but an dpen war act and\nbare, unprovoked attack,\" Raeder\nargued.\nGovernment Wins\nAustralian Seat\nADELAIDE, South Australia,\nMay 25 (AAP)\u2014The Boothby seat\nin the House of Representatives\nwas today conceded to the Government- candidate, Dr. Grenfell\nPrice, after a byelection which\nattracted nation-wide interest because it determined whether the\ngovernment would retain its majority hi the House.\nThe count so far has given Dr.\nPrice a majority of more than 7000\nover his opponent, Thomas Edgar\nLawton, the Labor candidate. Of\nthe 63.380 votes already counted,\n35,340 were marked in Dr. Price's\nname. Another 28,050 were for Law-\nton, Only about 5000 remain to be\ncounted.\nThe byelection took place yesterdsy, coinciding with the return of\nPrime Minister Robert Menzies\nfrom a world-girdling tour which\ntook him lo nearly every British\ncountry and to the United States.\nA slight majority for the Government is assured but It Is expected\nthat it will continue Its efforts to\nform \u00ab National Government, particularly In view of Mr. Menzies'\ndeclaration in a broadcast speech\ntijday.\nIsland,  which  began\nforce seven days ago.\nTroop landings by the Germans, a communique said, continued Saturday \"but on a substantially reduced scale as\ncompared with the previous\ntwo days.\"\nThus the hint that German troop\nreinforcement through the air was\nslackening coincided with the renewed activity of the R.A.F., which\nsent long-range fighters and bombers back to the battle Friday and in\nwhich 30 Nazi troop-bearing planes\nwere knocked out in two days.\nOut of the surging Battle cams\nMaj.-Gen. T. Q. Heywood, t chief\nof the British military miwion to\nthe Greeki, with a word of encouragement tor the Empire. He\nreached Cairo with King George\nII of Greece and the Greek Government aboard a deitroyer.\n\"I think It will be possible to hold\nCrete,\" Maj-Gen. Heywood declared.\n\"The British and Dominion troops\nand marines fight well in this type\nof fighting, that is man to man.\n-Thestarpest fighting was reported between Melemi, wtiere the Go.'-\nman* have obtained a hold on the\nimportant   airdrome,   and   Canea,\ncapital of Crete which was one of\nthree cities bombed indiscriminately and destructively by massed German fighters Saturday.\nIntensive dive-bombing attacks\nwert made in the Maleml-Canea\narea, the general headquarters said.\n\"As on previous days, our forces\nIn this area have inflicted very\nheavy losses on the enemy, including continued destruction by shell-\nfire of his aircraft on the ground,\nthe communique added.\nMaj.-Gen. Heywood declared that  VI\"\nthe  withdrawal torn Greece  an(T \u00bb\u2022\nthe fighting in Crete \"are part of\none action. ' ,\n\"I hope that we have reached\nthe last stage and will hold out in\nview of the nature of the fighting\nin the island and the Germans\ndifficulty In obtaining reinforcements for the troops they succeeded in landing,\" he said.\nThe Germans dumped explosives on Canea, Retimo and Candia\nfrom 2 pm. to 8 p.m. Saturday in\nmethodical raids comparable- to\nthe Nazi destruction of large sections of Rotterdam last May, British source* said.\nThey said casualties were light in\nthe three cities because of Crete a\ndeep cave shelters and the removal\nof many civilians before the bombardments.\nThe defenders of Crete\u2014made up\nof a-itish, Greek, Australian, New\nZealand soldiers and Cretan civilians\u2014were vastly encouraged by the\nre-entrance of British fighter and\nbomber planes into the fray.\nThe R.A.F, withdrew temporarily\nbecause of the lack ot adequate\nlanding facilities in Crete but went\nback into the fight Friday sjid\ndestroyed   14   German\npromptly\nBombers poured explosives on the\nGerman toe-hold on Malemi airport,\nwhere the hottest fighting of the\nwhole disorganized island battle is\nbeing waged.\nIt is at Malemi that the Germans\nBritish reports said, have achieved\ntheir only measure of success in the\nInvasion attempt.\nA Royal Air Force communique\n\u00bbaid at least two German planes\nwere destroyed Friday night and\nSaturday in R.A.F. raids on Malemi   airdrome   and   many   othere\nwi. c di naged. These were in addition to the 14 planes Friday.\nThe fighters\u2014some of them specially-equipped bombers flying from\nEgyptian bases \u2014 attacked German\ntransport aircraft which were landing troops in the Malemi area, the\ncommunique added.\nOne British fighter was lost during an engagement with Messerschmitt planes escorting the transports.\nAction continued in the other\nmiddle Eastern and African theatres\nof war, the communique indicated.\nR.A.F. bombers attacked \u2022\nnumber of Germ\u00abn aircraft on an\n\u2022Irdrome \u00abt Aleppo, 8yrla, destroying one' plane and damaging\nmany othen.\n\"One bomb ewhlch made a\nllrect hit on the hangar cauied\nI number of exploiloni,\" the\ntjmmunlque said.\nIn Iraq, the R.A.F. said its planes\nbombed \"insurgent\" positions at\nTurmetvall, obtaining direct hits on\nroad* and trenches. A motor trans\nport also was attacked on roads lo\nthe Habbaniyah acea.\nFree French planes, the communique said, bombed troops and\nt fort at Going in th* Gondar\narea of Ethiopia, where * rem-\nnknt of the Italian Army whloh\nonce held Ethiopia Is still resist*\nIng.\nWhile there wss no official In-\nformation as to the type of British\nplanes operating ova.- Crete, in*\nformed sources' hinted they might\nbe Blenheim Mk. IV's.\nBuilt as bombers with a forward\nfiring gun and another ln a retractable turret, the Blenheim could\nbe changed to a fighter by increasing the \u2022as.-mament with tour gun*\nmounted in the nose of the fuselage. Additional tanks ln the wing*\nwould increase the range from lOuQ\nto 1900 miles.\nIn one days these make-shift\nfighters, plus regular bombers, accounted lor 14 big troop transports.\nEquipping some of the bombers as ngniecs was necessary De-\ncause Crete is out of range of\nordinary iighieri operating irom\nsuch distant, bast*, 4oO ot m\u00abr\u00bb.\nmiles from Malemi.\nIn'iddition to American*\nmade crAft, the Briiiih Middle\nEast laces also are undert.ood\nto have Blenheim IV models\nwhich have a 1900-mile range and\nare usable as day bombers or\nfighters.\nThe R.A.F. said large numbers ol\nJunkers 52 troop transports were attacked Saturday on tne beach and\nairdrome at Malemi; 10 being destroyed and many others \"burned\nout\" and long-range British lighter* -\nv ere credited with destroying four\nadditional large German troop\nlanes, raising the two-day toll to\nNearest British land base* fo\u00bb\nthis long-range warfare would oe\nAlexandria, Egypt, and the island\nof Cypress, each more than 450 mile*\nLom the scene of battle.)\nQueen Mary al\n74 Still Active\nLONDON, May 28 (CP). -\nQueen Mary comes to her 74th\nbirthday tomorrow with heart\nsaddened by war and older\nwounds but with the certainty\nshe is more than ever firmly enthroned in the affections ol her.\npeople, .....\nHer   austere   manner   readily\nknows how to give way to smile*\nof human sympathy.\nHer   birthday   will   be   passed\nquietly in the country where many\nof her other days are devoted to.\nrallying her fellow countrymen.\nIn dove grey coat and her familiar hats of the Victorian tradition, Queen Mary visits raided\ncities, rest centres and relief stations. She frequently sees the\ntroops and follows all the movements of war. She is among the\nfirst to send is-.essages ot sympathy\nand cheer to those who have suffered  bombings.\nShe comej rarely to London now,\nand when she does it is to have\nluncheon with her son and his\nQueen and to leave again almoit\nimmediately for the country\u2014wher*\nshe carries on anew the work she\ncarried on during 1914-18.\nMin.\nNELSON   51\nVictoria      47\nVancouver    46\nKamloopi   48\nPrince George  40\nEstevan Point  50\nPrince Rupert - 41\nLangara  46\nDawson   41\nSeattle  - 43\nPortland    48\nSan Francisco  _  54\nSpokane    -  M\nLos Angeles  58\nPenticton  47\nVernon   46\nGrand   Forks   49\nCranbrook     47\nCalgary       32\nEdmonton  40\nSwift  Current    49\nMoose Jiw    58\nPrince, Albert   44\nWinnipeg     58\nMax.\n76\n61\n64\n69\n51\n64\n72\n72\n64\n75\n81\n75\n75\n87\n77\n46\n45\n65\n78\n59\n82\n_m___________m_m___m\n_______A.-_.i\n\u25a0\n ^'yp^fj^'-'i^wpfA'\" J\"V'''\nKlPU'i liUHJUiJMIipjI^Umiilli. .fl..||||pi\naoi TWO-\nKnights of Columbus Army Huh Are\nDoing Fine Work for Soldiers Stales\nNeary of Victoria af Nelson Banouet\n\u2022     t\nBishop Johnson Urges\nLove Fellow Men,\nSupport Church \u2022\nKnights of Columbus Army\nHuts were doing a vital work and\naccomplishing a great deal fer\nthe men In uniform declared J. A.\nNeary of Victoria, State Deputy\nfor the Order In British Columbia,\nIn the future addreu at a ban-\nSuet given by the Nelson Council\nunday night at the Catholic Parish Hall. The banquet marked the\n30th anniversary of the Nelson\nCouncil. P. E. Poulin, Past Grand\nKnight, wai Chairman.\nOverseu the work of tte Knights'\norganization was carried out on\nthree lines: Spiritual, recreational\nand educational. Secretaries apart\nfrom their ordinary duties assisted\nchaplains. The recreational nhase\nwas of great importance, for it\n\"keeps the mind clean and the body\nphysically fit.\" Education services\nwere of outstanding nature, he said,\nfor their value to men who dropped\nout of schood or university to enlist,\nand were able to these services to\ncarry  on.  Mobile  tea wagons  on\n\"Thii Ifadf\nSee\n&ittik<2oLml>i<t\nlet ffx Coast-cfwerier takt \u2022\n\u2666rip Into the Interior; let the\n.people of the Interior visit the\nfCoast; they will both find plenty\nto surprise and delight them.\nCritish Columbia presents\n\u2022ooett of different aspects. Ms\n.highways ere entrancing\n<ra*el6gue*, colourful pageants\n\u2022f picturesque activities and\nmatchless scenery.\nTHIS ttt*\n,111  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\n' \u2022 The Vacationland that has\nEven\/thing.\"\nTM\nMmm eotuMBu govirnmint\nTRAVEL  BUREAU,\n\\ tt Trisle onsj Indystsss,\nmanoeuvres provided a cup of tee\nand a cigarette for men often weary\nand wet.\nCARRY ON AT HOME\nAt home the Knighti of Columbus\nwere carrying on, in camp canteens\nor In hits organized in cities near\ncamps, at more than 90 points, jta\"-\nNeary spoke of the great success of\nthis work at Victoria, where in addition to the ordinary hut facilities\nthe Knights organized Sunday evening entertainments, Wednesday\nnight dances and Thursday night\nmovies. The ladles gave invaluable\nhelp, he said.\nHoly Communion breakfasts had\ngrown from vet attendance of 20 to\n200, he stated.\nMr. Neary emphasized thst \"it\ncosts the troops nothing. We don't\nwant a dime from them?'\nThe State Deputy described his\ntalk as \"an accounting of our stewardship\" to\" the men and women\nwho raised the money for Knights\nof Columbus Huts.\nCARRY HIGH THE TORCH\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nBishop of Nelson, paid tribute\n\"from tte depths of a grateful\nheart\" for the work accomplished\nby tte men who formed tte charter\nmembership of the Nelson Council\nand by Father Ferland, who buUt\nthe Church of Mary Immaculate,\nBev. John Althoff and Rt. Rev. Monsignor J. C. McKenzie.\n\"We have reason to be proud of\nthe men of yesteryear,\" he said,\n\"and it is for us to follow in their\nfootsteps and to hold high tte larch\nttey passed on.\"\nHis Excellency urged Knights of\nColumbus to base their Uves upon\njustice and charity, loving their fellow men and \"rendering to God the\nthings that are God's.\"\nThe new members had received\nspecial lessons in nobility, and he\ncaUeu upon them \"through life,\nwith your principles and your nobility, sail on,\"\nEdward Fornelli, Graiid Knight\nof the Nelson Council, welcomed\nthe visitors.\nFINE CLASS\n\"If the Order of Knights of Columbus throughout tte Province\ncan produce candidates of the calibre in that class neither the order,\nnor the Church, nor the members\nof tte Church have anything to\nfear from those against us,\" asserted H. W. Colgan of Vancouver, Past\nState Deputy. \"I have never seen\na class of candidates that could\nhold a candle to this one.\"\nThe Knights of \/Columbus was\noften called \"the strong right arm\nof the Holy Motter Church,\" and\nthis was true because the Knights\nwere wholeheartedly engaged in\nevery major effort of the Church.\nAmong these effort! were provision of playgrounds for children in\nRome who were being taken away\nfrom tte Church; aiding in disaster;\nfighting for separate schools in\nOregon; raising money for war services ln the last war and using the\nsurplus to educate veterans and\nveterans' children afterward; setting up scholarships and so on.\nMU8TLIVI IN FUTURE\nBut tte Knights of Columbus\n\"can't live in the past, this order\nmust live in the future,\" he said\nand declared its members could do\nnothing better than to live up to the\nobligations they took when they\nwere initiated. Each man was 'a\nyardstick by which the Knights\nof Columbus are measured.\"\nThis was tte more important, Mr.\nColgan continued, because of the\nattempt to \"materialize the world\"\nnow being fought. The materialists'\nmethod was \"to attempt to break\ndown Christianity, because Christianity is tte only bulwark against\nmaterialism.\"\nThe British were a free people.\nFrom Runnymede until today\n\"the greatest protector of that freedom has been our church\".\n\"If the people really have fra*>-\ndom in their hearts it can't be tatfen\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME-M. Farr, Mr. and Mrs. i Mrs. N. G. RandaU, J. M. Warren,\nC. H. Dennis, Vancouver; W. G Kimberley; Dr. C. E. Cook, Michel;\nMoll, Penticton; C. J. Adamson. J. J. P. Bell, Park Siding; R. Simp-\nP.   MacDonald,   Creston;   Mr.  and'son, Medicine Hat.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE       MR. AND MRS, PETER KAPAK, Props.       PHONE\n\u25a0Ml     rooms  ln  the   Interior-Bath  or  Shower     \u2022' \u25a0\nSPECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n[\nDuf ierin Hotel\ntOO Seymour St\nVancouver,\nNewly renovated through\nout  Phones snd  elevator\nA   PATTERSON   late at\nC. Coleman, Alta., Proprietor\nthrough- I\nelevator I\nlate at I\nroprletor I\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sundsy\nTrail Livery Co.\nM.  Hi MclVOR  Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\naway from them. Tou have tt tn\nyour hearts; keep it there,\" he\nurged.\nCATHOLICS DOING ORAND\nWORK\n.Out of St members initiated jjO\nyears ago 1! remained on the rolls\nof the Nelson CouncU, stated Uoug-\nslid' As McPherson of Grand Fo'ks,\nspeaking on \"A Charter Member\",\n\"Catholics of this pariah and 'his\ncountry have been doing a grand\nwork,\" Mr. McPherson continued\nThe cornerstone of tba Order, he\nasserted, wu ln the declaration\nmade at mass: \"I stand up to declare in the face of heaven nnd\nearth that 1 will walk faithfully in\nthe way which .He has marked ou'.\ntor me. He tells me that it will\navail a man nothing to gain the\nwhole world if he lose nis own\nsoul.\"\nIn the first Great War right of\nthe charter members of the Nelson\nCouncU joined his Majesty's forces.\nSix members of (the Council were\nserving ln this war\nTo the new members Mr. McPherson gave this advice: \"Dont trust\nhuman nature too much; it can't always be depended upon.\"\nRt. Rev. Monsignor A. K. Mclntyre, V.C., of Rossland paid tribute to \"men of sterling worth and\nmerit\" who have passed on since\nthe institution of the Nelson Council, and to \"the men who have stood\nthe test of Ume and are still holding\naloft the banner of Knighthoo J\" He\nhoped the new generation would be\ninspired by their spirit, nnd asked\nthat they strive to emulate there\npredecessors in being always dependable.\nL. H. Choquette in humorous vein\nexplained the origin of the item\n\"Sister Councils\" on Uie toast list.\nTribute to the ladles via- paid by\nH. J. WltcheU, Past Grand Knight of\nthe Nelson Council, as he spoke\nof the high standard being set by\nwomen of the British Empire in not\nonly giving their men to the\nstruggle for democratic freedom,\nbut in joining the struggle themselves and \"standing every test\nwithout flinching.\"\nHe expressed thanks to Nelson\nladies for their splendid cooperation with the Knights.\nLeo MacKinnon, formerly of Nelson and now of Vancouver,, spoke\nof the initiation 30 years ago when\nhe was the \"baby candidate\", and\nRev. Edward Doyle spoke for the\ncandidates of the newest class.\nMiss Shirley Herron, viaUnisi,\nMichael Prestley, vocal soloist, tnd\nthe Boys' Bugle Band of St. Joseph's provided musical entertainment\nKELSON DAILY NEWS  NILtON  B. C-MONDAY MORNING WAY M.\nIn Same League\nfor 25 Seasons\nNorris Proposes\nU.S. Warships Be\nUsed by Britain\nWASHINGTON, May 25 (AP)-\nSenator George Norris propoied\ntoday that the United States\ntranifer Immediately a substantial\nnumber of warshlpi to the British\nor Canadian Navlei for use In\nthe North Atlantic convoy service.\nAsserting that this might solve\nthe problem of getting war supplies\nto Great Britain, the Nebraska-Independent told reporters he felt\nthe time had come for the United\nStates to take whatever risk might\nbe involved in reducing its fleet's\nstriking power to make the ships\navailable to Britain.\nThe necessity of giving further\nnaval assistance to Great Britain\nwas emphasized, Norris said, by\nthe sinking of the battle cruiser\nHood by Uie Gernian batUeshtp\nBismarck.\n\"I think It would be much better\nto use some of our fleet now, if we\ncan turn the Ude with it, than to\nkeep it Intact and have to fight\nHitler by ourselves il Great Britain\nfalls,\" he said.\nThe loss of the Hood appeared\nlikely to figure increasingly in the\ncontroversy over the question of\nextending further naval aid to Britain.\nThe ssa engagement alio- gave\nfreih Impetui to speculation as to\nwhether President Roosevelt, In\nhli forthcoming Tuesday night\nspeech, would propose uie of the\nNavy for convoy duty or would\nadvance some other suggestion\nfor getting the goodi delivered to\nBritain.\nTorch Dedicated\nby (oast Bishop\nVANCOUVER, May 28 <CP).-\nA Royal Canadian Air Force\nbomber today roared away from\nVancouver's airport bearing to\nAlberta Canada's victory torch,\n\"part of the tools\" for Prime Minister Winston Churchill, dedicated\nSaturday in ceremonies at Victoria and Vancouver.\nPiloted by Squadron Leader D.\nE. Galloway, the bomber left here\nthis morning, bound for the next\nof 27 cities it will stop at on its way\nto the Atlantic Coast and Britain.\nIt took off from here for Calgary\nand Lethbridge.\nThe torch is being carried across\nCanada to Prime Minister Churchill\nin Great Britain in conjunction with\nCanada's $800,000,000 Victory Loan\ndrive opening June 2. It will symbolize Canada's provision of the\nmechanical equipment for British\nand Canadian forces.\nSaturday it was dedicated here\nby Bishop Sir Francis Heathcote, of\nNew Westminster, in an impressive\nceremony ln front of the City Hall\nand at ceremonies in three adjoining Municipalities.\nBOY KILLED BY TRAIN\nVANCOUVER, May 25 (CP). -\nMike Boyko, 14, died-In hospital tonight a few hours after he was\ncrushed under the wheels of a Great\nNorthern railway freight in a railway yard here. Both his legs, badly\ncrushed In the sccldent, were amputated at hoepital in an effort to\nsave his life.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Of 819 men ap-\npolnted officera ln the reorganization of Britain's Home Guard there\nare many peers, baronets and generals but also 19 plain \"misters.\"\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING. FISHING\n20 miles from Nelaon.\nvia Harrop Kerry\nKootenay'i   Best  Fishing  et\nTwenty Minute Pt\nPROCTER.   B C.\nt     Rates  reasonable\nGERMANS DIE IN\nMANY WAYS IN\nCRETE FIGHTING\nShot From Trees, Die\n.   in Sea, Caught |\nin Snowdrifts,- ' .\nCRETANS ACTIVE\n\u25a0y EDWARD KENNEDY       '\nAnoolsted Press Staff Writer\nWITH THE BRITISH DESERT\nFORCES IN NORTH AFRICA,\nMay 25 (AP)-A filter pilot who\nquit Crete at the start of the Nazi\ninvasion said today some German parachutists were shot by\nBritish-Greek defenders trom .the\nbranches of trees while others\ndied in the sea or hogged down\nin the mountain snowdrifts, !*\nFierce Cretans, determined, to\npreserve their freedom, are armed with rusty guns, knives and\nshepherd's, crooks and some' of\nthese crude weapons Inherited\nfrom Turks generations ago have\ntaken a toll among modem warriors from the sky, he reported.\nHe and other pilots, taken from\nCrete because of lack of tenable\nair bases, now are carrying on the\nfight from Western desert airfields\nof Egypt,\nThe airman took off ln a slightly\ndamaged fighter from Crete'after\nhis airfield had been bombed and\nmachine gunned by German planes,\nwhUe New Zealanders were battling German parachutists at the very\nedge of the field.\nOnce off' the ground he circled\nover the batUe and machine gunned\nthe German*, several times and then\nmade off for Egypt according to his\nInstructions.\nIn his last glimpse of the field, he\nsaid, he saw several Germans dead\nas a result of his task. The New\nZealanders, he said, appeared t<fbe\ngetting the situation in hand.\n'The plane haa a few chips in it\nas you see, and I had barely enough\npetrol,' said the flyer.\nHis machine was one of the last\ntwo to leave Crete. Because the invasion had been anUcipated and the\nvulnerability of Crete's airdromes\nwas recognized, the R.A.F. had\nonly a skeleton force there.\n\"The Germans are landing men\nfrom the air with cynical disregard of their lives,' he said. \"Some\nhave fallen Into the iea, others\nwere tangled in the trees, and\niome of them were ihot ai they\nstruggled like apes among the\nbranchei.'\n\"Somt of the parachutists broke\ntheir legs ai they dropped Into\ncraggy ravines. Otheri were\nblown Into inowbanki on the\nmountain sides.\n\"Attempts to land planes and gliders on the beaches have been disastrous, because all the island's\nbeaches were well-guarded by Am\nlUt*\nNASHVILLE,   Tenn.   (AP). -\nTwenty-four yean ago today,\nGilbert smacked a game-wi\ntwo-run triple for New Orlei\nthe Southern Association.    \"<\nHe's been m the circuit ever .\nmanaging Ute New Orleans club\nmany years, and How serving\nManager and Club ExecuUve\nNashville*\nHis teams have won six SouL\nAssociatlon pennants and he'i ni\nacquired a nodding acquaintance\nwith second division. Last year his\nNashville teaih won the Southern\nand Dixie championships, and Gilbert received a trophy as the out'\nstanding minor league Manager o\u00bb\nthe country.\nAir News Service\nFamiliar Caption\nin British Press\nLONDON (CP)- \"By The Air\nMinUtry News Service.\" Thla credit\nline at the start of a story is as\nfamiliar to newspaper readers of\nthe United Kingdom as \"By The\nCanadian Petit* is to readers of\nCanada's daily papers .\nIt operates like an of the big\nnews, agencies and differs in that\nit concentrates exclusively on the\nR.A.F., and.-as a Government agency, 'probably Uie most unique of its\nkind in the world\u2014Its output is\navailable for the asking to news associations and publishers of daily\nand weekly newspapers in Uie United   Kingdom. '\nMany of the stories published In\nCanadian papers relating the activities of the R.A.F. originated with\nthe Air Ministry News Service.\nOther stories, particularly ln connection with the R.A.F.'s Canadian\nsquadron, were obtained by CP\nstaff writers during periodic visits\nto the stations.\nUNIQUE NEWS SERVICE\nAs a news service, the Ministry\norganization la \"just a baby\". But\nits development has been phenomenal. Offspring of the comparatively\nlong established Air Ministry Press\nSection, it is a unique source of\nnews. No such organization had ever\nbeen attempted in Britain.\nThe manner and methods by\nwhich complete stories became avail\nable is a story In Itself. The task\nwas twofold: How best to p.ovide\nnews from the operational and the\nother commands stationed at home\nand how to do likewise in respect\nto overseas commands which may\nbe actively engaged in a major war.\nBesides being a fertile source of\nnews, the Air Ministry News Service is a vital link In the British\npromotion chain,. As well as its\nnews stodes, the service provides\nmaterial for recruiting campaigns,\nprepares radio. scripts and now is\nworking on a motion picture which\nwill take the movie fan on a bombing trip against enemy objectives.\nA   weekly   news   letter   primarily\nCompensation Board Deductions\n~ Losses fo Most District\nIs Regional Meeting Told\ntralian patrols  which  made' short' 'a:, <*\u00ab fr w\u00abkly newspapers is\nwork  of  them.  It is  doubtful   ,;.PuWished._\nhalf the total  dropped or landed\never got Into combat.\"\nNAVAL ROOKIES\nIN LAND SHIPS\nHALIFAX, (CP). - Notes about\nthe navy gathered by a reporter in\na visit to the two Stadaconas, land\nbases where they train the men\nwho go down to the sea in warships-\nYoungest applicant for a commission was a 12-year-old American\nwho sent along sketches of a few\nof his inventions in a fruitless effort at persuasion. Every man who\ngoes to sea is given a full day's gas\nmask drill ashore. They still chortle\nabout the luckless chap who went\ninto the chamber with a hangover.\nIt wasn't deadly but this victim\nwished it was.\nThe silence and speed of hundreds of the blue boys at the Stada-\nconda to dinner table is a constant\nsurprise to Chief Cook William\nNuttall of Saskatoon and Victoria-\nSome rush through their heaping\nmeals in eight minutes.\u2014Substantial food with little fried stuff is\non the menus.\nChief Yeoman Edward W. Stub-\nblngton, Winnipeg, of Uie signalling school has turned his office\ninto a hangar for plane models he\nclips out of funny papers. In the\nsame office is CPO. C. E. Hawes\nof Toronto who won the D. S. M.\nat Zeebrugge in the last war.\nRegulating Petty Officer at Stadacona Two, Samuel Kennard\nthought he had settled down for\nlife on a farm near Edmonton until*\nthe war brought him back into the\nblue. He left the R. N. in 1923. Edward Kennedy, chief yeoman of\nsignals, was an R. N, man with\nFrench light naval forces until\nFrance capitulated.\nThe future sailors learn to recognize enemy and friendly war-\nplanes before going to sea. The bell\nwhich tolls each passing hour bears\nthe words \"H.M.S. Niobe\u20141898\".\nThe Nlobe was the first Canadian\nwarship, a transfer from the R, N.\nManning Pools\nAre High Mark\nof Organizing\nTORONTO (OP) - An integral\npart of the vast British Commonwealth Air Training Plan are the\nManning Depots, at Toronto, Brandon and Quobfic City, where the\nfuture pilots, observers, air gunners and mechanics receive their\nfirst contact with the Royal Canadian Air Foroe.\nHere in Toronto, in a huge building of the Canadian National Exhibition on\"e devoted 'o livestock\nshows, thousands of young men\npass through the depot each moith.\nArriving from various recruiting\nstations across the country they receive their Air Force clothing, they\nare innoculatcd and, as important as\nanything else, they leam their first\nlessons ln Air Force discipline. The\naverage stay for a man at a Manning Depot is 30 days.\nThe personnel of No. 1 Manning\nDepot here, both in administrative\nslaff and trainees, is as varied and\ncosmopolitan as one will find in.\nany of His Majesty's services. Wing\nCommander G. N. Irwin is officer\ncommanding. Second In command\nis Sqdn. Ldr. Gerry Najh, one of the\nCanadian aces nf the Royal Flyin?\nCorps in the First Great War. He\nserved with the famous Collishaw\n'and had a healthy bag to h's credit\nbefore he was captured and imprisoned for 18 months.\nFit. Lt. Sterling C. Campbell Is\nthird in command, a sort of personnel manager at the deoot. He\nbroke a contract with a Hollywood\nstudio where he was a technical\ndirector on aviation films to join\nthe R.CA.F. at the war's s'art.\nA tour o< the depot can take all\nday. There are vast dormitories,\nmess halls and kitchens. With a staff\nof less than 100 the Tjusiness of feeding thousands of healthy, hun\u00bbry\nyening men at each meal goes like\nclockwork.\n5r to, Take Data to Joint Meeting\nand Hospital Association; 300-Day\nClause Also Causes Losses\nLET  A  WANT-AD  SERVE  YOU\nB.C. Knights of Columbus Meeting\naf Nelson Reeled State Officers\nNext Convention Is to\nBe   Held   at\nVancouver\nAll officers were returned to\ntheir chairs when the convention\nof Knlghti of Columbui of Hrit-\nlih Columbia wai held in Nelson\nover the weekend They were:\nH. W. Colgan, Vancouver, Past\nSUte Deputy, J. A. Neary, Victoria, State Deputy; J. C. Connlck, Fernie, Secretary, Henry\nLomdals, Vancouver, Treasurer;\nOeorge Mara, Rosiland, Advocate\nand T. J. MoCloskey, New Westminster, Warden.\nReports on Ule order's war work,\ncarried on by the Knights of Columbus Army Huts, featured business\nsession. Among resolutions was\none reaffirming the loyalty and allegiance of B. C. Knights to King\nand Country.\nAll Councils lo British Columbia\nwere healthy  and  thriving,   with\nfinances sound, reporU showed,\nNEXT CONVENTION\nAT VANCOUVER\nTwo bids for next year's convention were received, o:ie from Fernie and the Other from Vancouver.\nThe Coast invitation was accepted.\nDelegates were: E. L. St. Martin\nand Frank Doherty, Victoria; G\nBruce and F. McKinnon, Vancouver; Thomas Enright and T. Prime\nFraser Valley; C. .Cyr, New West\nminster; J Harris, Kelowna. R. McCauley and .leorge Mara. Rossland;\nT. Lennan, Trail; Edward Fror.Jlli\nand H. J. WitcheU, Nelson; T.\nSweeney and \u00bbA. Bouchard, Cranbrook; T. Caufield and M, Bollecky.\nFernie.\nSecond day of the convenUon waB\nfeatured by tne inlUation of 24\nTrail, Rossland and Nelson candidates. The degree team consisted of\nGeorge Colgan, Cuigury; Frank Doherty and E. L. St. Martin, Victoria;\nHenry Lonsdale Thomas Walsh olid\nMark Regan, Vanefuvo'.' and\nThomas Enright.  Langley rtairie.\nDeductions made by the Workmen's Compensation Board f(om\nhospital charges were meaning\nlosses to almost all'hospitals in\nthe district reporta of delegates\nat the fourth West Kootenay Hos-\nSltal Regional meeting at Nelson\nunday showed. Five of the six\nhoipital boards presenting reports\nitated they had sufered losses\nbecause of the Board's deductions.\nKimberley hospital alone was little affected by this practice, most\nof Its patients being covered under the CM. 4 8. Company'i employees' plan.\nOTHER LOSSES\nThe \"300-day olause\" a new regulation embodied In the Hoipital\nAct, wai also causing losses to\nthe hospitals.\nUnder this regulation no government grant Is given for patients\nreceiving hospitalization over 300\ndays. The Kootenay Lake General\nHospital since the regulation came\ninto effect January 1, 1938, had lost\n$1196.05, while the St. Eugene Hospital, Cranbrook had olst $348 Uis\nthe uast year.\nThe meeUng was called for Uie\npurpose of providing date to be\nbrought before the meeUng of B. C.\nHospital Associations and the Minister of Labor' as Chairman, at Vancouver shortly. H: M. Whimster,\nChairman est the Regional and a\nmeiriber of the Hospital Association\nCommittee, WiU attend Uie meeting.\nTREATMENT UNFAIR\nBecause of the Compensation\nBoard's practice of deducting from\nthe hospital charges, maintaining\nthat patients received hospitalization\nover an unnecessarily long period,\nNelson hospital had lost $400 ln tbe\npast six Vnontiis, Mr. Whimster stated. H. A. Powell of Creston stated\nthe Creston VaUey Hospital's loss\nhad been only $7.25 in the last six\nmonthj, but previously had been\nhigher, Cranbrook's loss had been\n$98 ln six months. Dr. C. F. Cook of\nMichel although giving no figures,\ncited one Instance when charges\nfor 13 days were deducted from\nan account of a patient receiving\nhospitalization for 30 days. New\nDenver hospital had also suffered\nloss, although the reductions had\nbeen fewer latterly.\nMr. Whlmster pointed out Uie\n\"utter unfairness\" of Uie Board's\npractice of deducting from accounts\nclaiming that paUenta were kept\nIn hospital unnecessarily. Full re-\nsponsiblUty of admitting and discharging patienta was the doctor's\nhe said, and yet the hospitals were\npenalized. It was unanimously\nagreed that-patients were receiving\nonly the necessary hospitalization.\nNegotiations, largely brought on\nby Mr. Whimster's efforts, previously resulted in. the ConmsjnsaUon\nBoard agreeing to pay the increased\n$3 public ward rate to hospitals\nInstead of the previous $2.50 rate,\ncommencing January 1, 1941.\nMEDICAL,   HOSPITAL\nINSURANCE FOR B. C.\nEstablishing of a scheme on the\nprinciple of insurance to defray the\ncost of medical and hospital services\non a Province-wide basis was being\nplanned in B. C, Dr. F. M. Auld said\nin an address \"Hospitalization Contracts and the AU-Inclusive Medical\nService Plan.\" Such a scheme under\nthe Medical Service Association was\nalready in successful operation at\nVancouver.\nDr. Auld reviewed the growth of\nsuch plans from the establishment\nof the first in Dallas, Texas, in 1930,\nto the present day, when it was\napproved in principle throughout\nUnited States and Canada, and was\nin wide operation. In Ontario a\nplan was ln operation on a Province-wide basis. The membership in\nthat Province had grown from 3310\nin 1637, when it was established,\nto ISAM in midsummer, 1940.\nThroughout the United States it\nwas functioning on a sound financial basis, and it was estimated\nmore than five mUUon people were\nenrolled.\nCosts In the United States averaged between $5 and $8 per person\nper year, while in Ontario a graduated family rate wss charged. Cost\nfor the first person was $2, for the\nsecond under the family policy,\n$1.75, for a third $1.50. and $1 each\nfor the fourth and any in excess\nof four.\nCOA8T PLAN PROGRESSES\nIn (Jritish Columbia s similar\nscheme providing for hospitalization\nonly was in wide operation. Many\nsmaller centres, Kamloops, Kelowna, and Nelson, had such a plan\nestabUshed on a sound financial\nbasis.\nThe all-inclusive plan at Vancouver providing for both medical and\nhospital service was launched only\na month sgo, but was showing every\nsign of success. Benefits to contract holders were numerous, the\nplan embodying all the advantages\nand none of the disadvantages of\nsimilar American schemes, after\nwhich it was patterned.\nMr. Whlmster, Chairman, thanked\nDr. Auld for his Informative address. Inauguration of a hospital\nInsurance plan was being investi-\n?;ated at Creston, he said. He of-\nered the Creston Board any assistance in founding the plan. He gave\na brief explanation of the organization here.\nURGE FULL RATE\nFOR INDIAN PATIENTS\nStand of the Creston Valley Hospital that the basic ptfblic ward rate\nof hospitals treating Indian patients\nshould be paid by the Indian Department was approved.\nThis approval was given In a de-\nsolution following tne report of\nH. A. Powell of Creston that Creston Valley Hospital was sustaining\nlosses on treating Indian patients\nbecause the Department deducted\nfrom the Hospital's bills in making\npayment He cited one Instance in\nwhich only $51.50 was paid on a\nbill of $66, the $14.50 balance being deducted by the Department\nObjection to this \"outside dictating\non charges\" wu taken in several\nletters to the Department by the\nCreston Board, and it was protested\nthat Indian patients were being\ntreated at below cost when deductions were made. Mr. Owell read\ncopies of the letters and replies\nURGES STANDARD\nWORKING CONDITIONS\nSome 20 B, C. Hospitals had adop\nted the approved 8-hour working\ndav and sue- day week for general\nduty nurses, Miss Eidt stated, reporting for the special committee\nappointed jointly by the Minister\nof Health and Minister of Labor on\nHours of work and wages for\nnurses\" in the absence of Miss Lois\nHumber of the Trail-Tadanac Hospital. AU hospital boards were shortly to receive letters from this body\nurging their cooperation in Ule establishment of standard working\nconditions for nurses.\nThis committee was appointed after attention was drawn to the prevalence of tuberculosis and frequent\nhealth breakdowns, especially among\nstudent nurses. The changes advocated would mean Increased staffs\nand larger payrolls. Miss Eidt said,\nbut would undoubtedly result in\nimproved health among nurses and\nimproved nursing service.\nA summary of discussions on stabilization of nursing to present demands as given at the recent B. C.\nNurses' Asociation meeting, was also given by Miss Eidt. Hospitals\nwere experiencing turnovers of\ngeneral duty nursing staffs of up to\n70 per cent, she said. This condition could be improved, It was\npointed out by the standardization\not wages, hours of work, and inauguration of pension plans, a system\nof exchange, and contracts for nurses.\nA resolution sent ln by the Arrow\nLakes Hospital Board was discussed\nand tabled. The resoluUon read\n\"that this organization is of the\nopinion that tne present method of\nassisting hospitals with grants from\nProvincial and Municipal funds,\nresults in an inequitable distribution of those funds among hospitals, and requests the Provincial\nGovernment to amend the Hospital\nAct that public funds wiU be distributed among the hospitals so\nthat each hospital's share will be\ngoverned by the cost of the servlcei\neach gives to indigent patients.\"\nIt was pointed out that should\nsuch a change be made, it would\nmean loss to hospitals not doing as\nmuch philanthropic work as others,\nwhile there was every likelihood of\nthe grants to those; serving the Indigent being Uttle changed by the\nmove. i\nReports of other regionals ln B. C.\nthe Lower Mainland, Nicola Valley, and Fraser VaUey, were read\nby Miss Eidt. She also gave a review of previous meetings of tbe\nWest Kootenay Regional.\nTime and place of the next regional meeting were left to the\nchair, and will Ukely be shorUy\nafter the return of Mr. Whlmster to\nhear a report on the joint meeting.\nMessages of regret at their inability fo be represented were received from the Hospital Boards of\nRossland, Trail-Tadanc, Kaslo, New\nDenver and Nakusp.\nThose attending were Dr. C. E,\nCook of Michel, J. M. Warren and\nN. G. Randall of Kimberley, Mrs.\nJames Cherrington, H, A. Powell,\nand James Cook of Creston, H. M.\nWhimster, Chairman, Miss Vera B.\nEidt. J. R. McLennan and Dr. I.\nM. Auld of Nelaon.\nRefreshments were sered by the\nHospital staff.\nBeaseley Area\nClosed for Five\nHours Tuesday\nClosing of the stretch of highway\nbetween Taghum and Pop Inn Tuesday from noon until 5 p.m., tn aU\ntraffic, Is announced by tte Provincial Public Works Department,\nduring which period hlasUng operations wUl be carried out at Beasley\nBluff.\nThis means that tor a period of\nfive hours, highway traffic between\nNelson and TraU will be restricted\nto the Salmo-Frultvale route.\nTHE WORlb'S FINEST\nCHESTERFIELDS\nNew York Trade\nContinues Light\nNEW YORK, May 28 (AP). \u2014\u2022>\nWhile the stock market registered a\nsmall net advance on the week,\nminus and plus signs were about\nevenly split ln today's brief session.\nA few aircrafts, steels, utilities,\ncoppers, motors and specialties had\nmanaged to attract a fair amount\nof bidding but many leaders were\nleft to slumber on a lower shelf.\nA handful of Isolated stocks lost 1\nto more than 2 points.\nThe usual weekend apathy prevailed in boardrooms as many customers again took a lengthy holiday. Transfers of 180,260 shares\ncompared with 140,540 last Saturday, both turnovers being tht\nsmallest since last August. The Associated Press average of N stocks\nwas unchanged but up .2 ot a point\nnet on Uie six-day stretch.\nIce Possible Cause\nof Failure of Plane\nto Circle at Nelson\nResponding to a telegram from\nR. B. Morris, Chairman ol the Nelson Victory Loan Executive Committee, protesUng Uiat Uie R. C.\nA. F. bomber carrying Canada's\ntorch of freedom had failed to ilrcle\nover Nelson, A. E. Jukes of Vancouver, PubUcity Chairman for\nBritish Columbia, replied:\n\"Squadron Leader Galloway advised me wben leaving this morning that unless icing conditions occurred he would be able to circle\nboth Trail and Nelson around noon\ntoday. Very sorry but plane entirely ln command of Squadron Leader, who was more than eager tr\ncooperate.\"\nGermans Claim King\nGeorge Class Warship\nDamaged, Forced Out\nBERLIN, May 25 (AP)-Tho\nGerman High Command claimed today a battleship of the new\nKing George V class was damaged\nand forced to retire In the North\nAtlantic battle In whloh the battle\ncruiser Hood was sunk Saturday.\nLIVERPOOL (CP)-Fta\u00abt Importation of tomatoes from abroad this\nseason, 2,000,000 poundi, were landed here trom one ship.\nBERN (CP)\u2014Cut off by war from\noil and other fuels several mountain\nvillages In Switzerland have returned to torches for their lighting.\nDR. MORSE'S\nINDIAN BOOT PILLS\nfor LAZY LIVERS\nCou your liver to healOiy\n\u2022ctlonl Help It hoop the\nBile juice Hewing nit*\n\"D,. MostoV - Ihe Improved vegetable laxative.\nAsk lor this reliable\nremedy by rime \u2014 el\nyour strugglofe. si\nIMPORTANT CHANGE\nNelson-Trail Sunday Service Only\n\u2022\nEffective Sunday, June 1, and each Sunday\nthereafter te and Including (unday, August\n31, Train No. 43 will leave Nelton 6:45 p.m.\nand arrive Trail 8:50 p.m.\nOn week days, Train 41 will leave Nelson at\nregular time, 5:30 p.m., and arrive Trail\n7:30 p.m.\nPHONE 33\nMoving\u2014Storage\nCoal\u2014Wood\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished In 1809\n__.-___e__..,;_.*s  \u25a0__.    __\\_\u00bb\n\t\n w^\nSouth Slocan School Wins Sports\nCompetitions in Biq Victoria Day\nCelebrations at South Slocan Field\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-South\nSlocan   School   pupils   with   77\nRilnts were winners of the Dally\news Inter-ichool aggregate cup\nIn the sports competition at the\nVictoria Day celebration here on\n-    Saturday. Bonnington was second\n' with 32 points and Crescent Valley third with 11 polnta.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. May 25\n-The sports field gay with flags\nand bunting was the scene of an\nanimated crowd waiting for the\nopening ceremonies of \"the great\ncelebration of the year\" for the\nDistrict children. Promptly at 10\no'clock the raising of the flag was\niollowed by the singing of 0 Canada.\nW. J. Tindale save a hearty\nwelcome to the crowds and spoke\nof the torch flying from Victoria\nto England in the R. C. A. F. bomber\nplane. Mr. Tindale asked those attending to sign the scrole which\nwould be forwatded with thos\u201e\nfrom across Canada to Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The singing of the National Anthem and\nthe waving of flags, concluded the\nopening ceremonies.\n> The opening of the new pavillion\nwas one of special importance. This\nwas the home ot the Bonnington\nand South Slooan Women's Institute\nlor the day where luncheons and\nrefreshments were served.\nAmongst the members taking an\nactive part in the serving were\nMrs. J.' D. Yeatman, President, and\nMrs. W. Nixon, SecreUry, who were\nthe conveners of arrangements;\nMrs. Nixon acting as cashiesr; Mrs.\nDownie, Mrs. W. C. Motley, Mrs.\nE. Olson, Mrs. W. A. MacCabe, Mrs.\nE. Anderson, Mrs. B. I. Baker, serving ice cream,pop and candies.\nMrs. W. T. Jones, convener of\nthe luncheon tent, had, as her assistants, Mrs. H. James, Mrs. W.\nP. Rogers and Mrs. D. J. Davis.\nThe races were eagerly contested.\nA. MacCrowe was the starter and\nH. James and W. A- MacCabe help-\nM. Walker of the Bonnington\nachool, R. T. Edwards and Miss Ivy\nWalker, South Slocan school and\nMiss R. Palmer of the Ccescjnt\nValley School looked after the interests of their various schools. Miss\nI. Walker, clerk of the races, was\nassisted by Miss Lily Edward6 and\nMiss Molly Murray.     ,\nClowns impersonated by Norman\nRoberts and John O'Ginski created\nJots of fun amongst the children.\nA shooting gallery in charge of\nX. Jacobson was well patronized.\nMrs. John Murray in charge of\n, the First Aid tent had children's\ntuts and bruises to attend to.\nThe winners of gate prizes were\n' N. Lewkowich, H- Metzgar and E.\nMarshall. C. B. Sharpe won the\nlafety razor donated by R. J. Ken-\n. nedy.Ivor Jones assisted Harold\nMetigair, the President, in drawing\nthe tickets. Mrs. F. H. Russel, Secretary, who was kept busy with attending to the prize giving with\nMrs. Murray were also very active\nmembers of the sports committee.\nWinning competitors with names\nof their respective schools are listed\nIn order of first, second and third:\nRACES\nUnder S\u2014Everyone a winner.\nGirls 0 and 7\u2014Joyce Bland, South\nSlocan; Bernice Langill, Crescent\nValley; Bertha Jerome, Crescent\nVaUey.\nBoys, 8 and 7\u2014Charlie Simonds,\nBonnington; Ronnie O'Genski, South\nSlocan; Johnny Golik, South Slocan.\nGirls, 8 and *-Lily Golik, South\nSlocan; Maggie Mabove, South Slocan;  Jean  Gilker,  Bonnington.\nBoys, 8 and D\u2014Johnny O'Genski,\nSouth Slocan; Roy James, South\nSlocan.\nGirls, 10 and 11\u2014Marion Nixon,\nSouth Slocan; Ldrraine Gilker, Bonnington; D. Kennedy, South Slocan.\nBoys, 10 and 11\u2014Bill Woiken,\nCrescent Valley; Mathew Dunsmore.\nSouth Slocan; Cyril Rogers, South\nSlocan.\nGirls, 12 and 13\u2014Florence Nixon,\nSouth Slocan; Nora Tomich, South\nSlocan; Lilian Hawkins, Bonnington.\nBoys, 12 and 13\u2014Doug James,\nSouth Slocan; Fred Tarasoff, Crescent Valley; Harold Ridge, Bonnington.\nGirls 14\/ and under\u2014Bertha Ridge,\nBonnington; Florence Nixon, South\nSlocan; Nora Tomich, South Slocan.\nBoys, 14 and under\u2014Doug James,\nSlocan; John Mabove, South Slocan.\nHigh School girls\u2014Bertha Ridge,\nDorothy James.\nHigh School boys\u2014Sandy Gordon\nEd MacGregor.\nRelay, under 11\u2014South Slocan,\nfirst; Bonnington, second.\nThree-legged race, 11 and under\u2014\nMarion Nixon and Bernice Lister,\nSouth Slocan; Mary Clark and Lorraine GUker, Bonnington.\nThree-legged race, girls 10 ani\nover \u2014 Florence Larson and Ann\nVerigln, Cresent VaUey; Marlon\nNixon and Bernice Lister, South\nSlocan.\nBoys, sack race\u2014Eddie MacGregor, Bonninton; Sandy Gordon, Bonnington.\nBoys, wheelbarrow race\u2014Arthur\nNixon and Bobbie Bland, South\nSlocan; Harold Ridge and Donald\nSimonds, Bonnington.\nFIELD EVENTS\nBoys' high jump, 11 and under\u2014\nSteve Yurisich, South Slocan; Cyril\nRogers, South  Slocan.\nBoys' high jump, over 11\u2014John\nNabaulich, South Slocan; Doug.\nJames, South Slocan.\nGirls' high jump, 11 and under\u2014\nMary Clark, Bonnington; Marlon\nNixon, South Slocan.\nGirls' high jump, over 11\u2014Beatrice\nSharp, Bonnington; Florence Nixon,\nSouth Slocan.\nBoys' broad jump, 11 and under\u2014\nBobby Bland, South Slocan; Steve\nYurisich, South Slocan.\nGirls' broad jump, 11 and under\u2014\nMary Clark, Bonnington; Lorraine\nGilker, Bomiington.\nGirls' broad jump, over 11 \u2014\nNora Tomich, South Slocan; Bertha\nRidge, Bonnington,\nRelay race, under 15, mixed\nteam\u2014South Slocan, first; Bonnington, second.\nGirls' baseball throw, open\u2014Edna Edwards.\nSlow bicycle race, open, boys\nand girls\u2014May Bowkett, girls; fid-\ndie MacGregor, boys.\nHigh and Junior High girls' high\njump \u2014Agnes Pennington, Nelson;\nDawn MacGregor, Bonnington.\nHigh and Junior High boys' high\njump\u2014Lawrence Baker, Bonnington; Ed MacGregor, Bonnington.\nHigh and Junior High girls' broad\njump\u2014Bertha Ridge, first; Beatrice\nSharp, second.\nHigh and Junior High boys' broad\njump\u2014Ed MacGregor, first; Sandy\nMcGregor, second.\nNOVELTY RACES\nNovelty race, under 16\u2014Gordon\nMcDonald. Over 18 \u2014Eddie MacGregor.\nPotato and spoon race\u2014Mrs. Ostlin, Bonnington;. Mrs. Bland, South\nSlocan.\nThread and needle\u2014Steve Metcalfe and Mrs. S. O'Genski.\nMarried women's 50-yard dash-\nMrs. Bland, South Slocan; Mrs.\nBaker, Bonnington.\nPosition of Canadian\nNaval Officer Given\nAdmiralty Safeguard\nDONDON, (CP). - Position of\nCommodore L W. Murray as head\nof the Canadian navy in British\nwate\/s has' been safeguarded by a\nspecial admiralty order clarifying a\ncommodore's status. Holders of this\nrank, given temporarily for special\nduties, will in future rank above\nall captains and below Rear-Ad-\nmii-'als.\nFormerly it was found that\ncaptain, given rank of commodore\nfor special work, was required when\nconsulting with captains outside his\ncommand to take his place according to relative seniority In the\ncaptains' list.\nIn wartime, due to rapid transfer\nof ships from one station to another,\nthe officer chosen to command\ncertain sphere of operations and\ngiven commodore's rank sometimes\nfound himself superseded in com\nmand by arrival of another ship\nwith a senior captain whose participation had not been foreseen\nat the time of the commodore's\nappointment.\nTo prevent this situation and en\nsure command remains in the hands\nof the officer originally chosen, the\nclarifying order was passed.\nLIVERPOOL (CP) - Seven mil\nlion  oranges  were   unloaded  here\nfrom   recently   arrived  ships  and\nwere allocated to vai ious cities and\nSouth Slocan; Peter Popoff, South  towns throughout Britain.\n-NELSON DAILY NIWI. NELSON. B. C.-MO\nKootenay Lake Ferry\nBeauties of Kootenay Lake provide a new thrill for tourists\nwhen they cross from Gray Creek to .Fraser's Landing on the Steamer\nNasookin, above. The steamer is seen as it turned to return to Grey\nCreek.\u2014Photo by Miss Isa MacKinnon.\n\"We Prefer to Die on Our Feel Than\nto Live on Our Knees,\" (. B. Garland\nSays at Ymir's May 24 Celebration\nYMIR, B. C, May 25\u2014\"We are\nfighting because we prefer to die\non our feet than live on our\nknees,\" declared Ot B. Garland of\nNelson to a large Empire Day\ngathering of Salmo Valley citizens and visitors here Saturdiy\nOLD CHUM\nThe Tobacco of Quality\nCUT COARSE FOR  THE PIPE\nCUT FINE FOR  ROLLING YOUR OWN\nIn  a  stirring  appeal  tc  support\nthe Victory Loan tc the utmost.\nMr. Garland delivered his moving\naddress just after the crowning ol\ncharming Miss Sigrld Nord as the\nQueen of Ymir's 1941 May 24th\ncelebration early In the afternoon\non the platform in the sports park,\nThe Nelson speaker reminded his\nlisteners that in the days of Queen\nVictoria, whom they were comem-\norating Saturday, the British Empire attained its greatest power in\nits history. And as yet, no invader\nVeteran Guards\nat TraU\nmm&7m\u00a7\nLance Cpl. George Manion.\nPte. L. J. Gooding.\nH. L. Carter.\n\u2014Daily News Photos.\nhad set foot on any part of the\nvast reaches of the Empire, Mr,\nGarland said amid a burst of enthusiastic applause.\n\"We belong to a great people\nwith a great tradition,\" he stated.\n\"And we are naked to lend our\nsupport to those little islands, the\nbulwark of the things for which we\nlive and the rights that we enjoy\nthat our forefathers have given us.\n\"We are fighting for equal justice\nbetween men, so that everyday differences may be settled not by the\nconcentration camp or by the whip,\nbut by righteous law. We are fighting tolerance and respect in a\nworld in which there Is mercy and\nregard for the unfortunate.\"\nMr. Garland said that there were\nmen and women from all over the\nworld today in Canada. There were\nItalians, and who of them could\nforget Garibaldi, \"who fought for\nmuch the same things as we are\ntoday.\" The same applied to the\nPoles, and the Danes and the Dutch,\nas he spoke of their fights in the\npast for freedom.\n\"8UPPORT YOUR MEN\"\nSome could do their part for the\nEmpire in uniform, while others\ncould work and lend to bear oui\nChurchill's plea, \"Give us the tools,\"\nMr. Garland explained that \"the\nGovernment asks you to help your\nmen, to show that you are behind\nthem. For them let us give our\nwhole-hearted support, ana be happy and proud that we have given\nfrom the depths of our hearts.\nHe was given a terlflc ovation\nwhen In conclusion he spoke of\nthe time when the Allies would\nbo \"In Germany on the march to\nBerlin.\"\nProminent Salmo Valley citizens\nand workers in the war effort were\nasked to sign a scroll pledging support, which will be sent to ChurchlU\nBy airplane.\nPLEDGE\nThe pledge addressed to Churchill\nfollows:\n\"Canada with other nations of the\nBritish Commonwealth and with\ntheir Allies, will fight on to victory\nno matter how long and toilsome\nthe road.\n\"Given the tools we shall finish\nthe job. Canada's Victory Loan, 1941,\nis part of the tools. This scroll represents the pledge of our people,\nsigned, sealed and delivered, that\nwe shall iighfron to the end, \u00bbnd\nthat end shall be victory.\"\nDan McKay, Chairman of the\nCelebrations Committee, stated that\nthe Committee was glad of the opportunity to boost The drive, and\non behalf of Ymir he wished it\nsucess.\nGerman Flak Is\nSight, Jay Pilots\nLONDON (CP). - 'The 'flak' was\nintense and fairly accurate.\" This\nphrase has become almost hackneyed in the Royal Air Force pilots\nreports of bombing attacks on targets in Germany and occupied\nFrance. But there is nothing hack\nneyed about 'flak'. Any of the\npilots or observers or other mem\nbers of a bomber crew will tell you\nthat.\n\"No one who has not really seen\nIt bursting around can quite understand what 'intense' and 'fairly accurate' means,\" one pilot said after\nhis return from a raid on Brest\nHarbor and airport.\n\"The 'flak' started before we came\nciver our target, but reached its\npeak as we dropped our bombs on\nthe dockyard, the railway alongside\nand the aerodrome beyond.\n\"A searchlight stabbed at us. Then\none gun flashed, In a few seconds\nthe ground seemed alive with muzzle flarhes.\n\"At such times the upcoming\ntracers look like great Roman candles. Balls of fire, gold and rosy\ntinted, curve over as they reach\nthe end of their trajectory and start\ndropping, just likea lily stem bowed\nover by the weight of the flower.\nThey seem to drift sideways as they\ncurl upwards. Then they snuff out,\none by one.\n\" 'Flaming onions' are slightly different. They are bigger and brighter\nfire balLs which spiral up instead\nof rising in a line. It is hard, at first,\nto realize just how dangerous this\n'flak' is.\n\"Jerry seems to be trying out new\ncolored varieties of searchlights\nwhich probe the dancing shellbursts\n\"There is quite a galaxy of color\nover Brest apd the other 'invasion'\nports these nights\u2014much more spectacular than at any previous stage\nof the air war.\n\"But this kind of show is besi\nappreciated on the way home. When\nthe final run over the target has\nbeen made and the bombs released\nand you can turn around and watch\nit all\u2014then it really looks lovely.\"\nKootenay Members of\nAssociated Growers\nNominate Directors\nWhen West Kootenay members of\nthe Associated Growers of British\nColumbia Ltd. held their annual\nmeeting they nominated directors as\nfollows: For the Kootenay Lake\narea, 3.3. Campbell of Willow Point,\nwith 3. D. Macdonell of Wlliow\nPoint as alternate; for the Arrow\nLakes area. W. 3. Claridge of Burton, with H- W. Herridge of Nakusp\nas alternate.\nThese names will be placed before\nthe annual meeting of the Associated Growers at Vernon shortly as\nnominees from this district.\nWinston Churchill dictated most\nof his books.\nWmWmWmm-WUttWm-t--y--Wmmm\\\nmmwmsmwmwsmmwmm\n\u2014\nBABY DAY\nMonday at the \"Bay\"\nComplete stocks of clothes\nand other needed articles\nfor the young arrivals.\nBaby\nBlankets\nNursery rhyme\npatterns. Reversible, pink or blue\nground, each ...\nVoile Dresses\nDainty dressei. So cool and fresh\nlooking.\nEasy to\nlaunder.\nSizes 1-2\n-I j_. rawing.\n59c \u00a3si$L0Q\nSturdinap Crib Sheets\n$L00\nIn pink or blue. Waterproof sheets with napped\nsurface. Size 27\"x36\".\nEach    ..'\t\nDiapers\nHemmed and ready to use. Fine\nquality flannelette. Package of\none dozen. 27x27 in. tljl AA\nPer package    ipl.UU\nShawls\nLarge size. Silk and\nwool or wool. Each .\n$2.25\nBaby Pants\nSilk \"Softex.\" Non-heating, non-\nirritating. Dome QI%\/\u00bb\nfastening. Each  ttdb\nBaby Socks\nRayon and lisle socks in assorted\ncolors with the favorite turned\ndown cuff. OC\u00ab\nPair    ..ZjC\nGift\nSuggestions\nFor Baby\nHot water bottle*. \u00ab7Q\nShape of bunny\u00bb 15\/C\nEnamelled Toys. Non-ohlp, OQ\nstring on elastic LVQ\nMadeira Pillow Slips. iA.\nEach    WC\nK\";.\u201e. 19c 29c 39c\nBrush and Comb Sets.        QQ.\nEach   OVQ\n_}ttb^\/b$% (tflttqwtqi.l\nINCORPORATED   2*? MAfV l\u00ab70.\nMost Arrivals\nMystery Ships\nin East Ports\nAN EAST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT (CP). \u2014 Humanity her cargo,\na liner comes in off the Atlantic\nhorizon and tugs snuggle her into\na Canadian pier. It is wartime and\nher rails are probably lined with\nuniformed fighting men or with\nrefugees from a crestfallen continent.\nA voyage across an ocean fraught\nwith perils is over. Hundreds of\nhuman beings and thousands of tons\nof shipping space have thwarted\ndoom. In the tace of wartime measures, of posters which preach silence and-the danger of gossip from\ntheatres, restaurants and store windows, it would be interesting to\nknow just how many people knew\nthis vessel was on the higli seas and\nhow long they had the information.\nIt tne ship brings military men\nthere will be army or navy or air\nforce officials there to bid them welcome. Telegraph companies will\nhave 'heir men on hand and there\nwill probably be delegates from\nfood firms seeking to replenish the\npantries.\nThree classes of inevitables are\nthe'Press, the dock-workers and representatives of the shipping concern\nthat operate the ship. There may be\na few relatives of arrivals and a\nnewsboy who never fails to do a\nprosperous business even with Saturday's paper on Sundays. There\nwill be immigration and customs officiaU, and, nearby, railwaymen\nready to continue the passengers\njourney overland, usually aboard\nspecial trains.\nDANOEROUS NEWS\nThere may be others \u2014 say a taxi-\nman - but, roughly speaking, these\nare the regulars allowed on the pier\nafter satisfying officials they have\nconformed with wartime red tape.\nThey all knew a ship was coming in\nbecause they wouldn't be there if\nthey had not. But, the point is how\nmany knew this when the vessel\nwas far enough out in the Atlantic to\nmake such information dangerous?\nChances are there were few, if\nany. The military undoubtedly is\nin as good position as any to know,\nyet it is douhtful If they are aware\nof the approach of the ship until it\nis well within Canadian waters. Sailings of passenger ships from Britain are irregular to say the least\nand once they are on the high seas\nwireless is out.\nShipping companies literally are in\nthe sake boat and chances are tht\ntelegraphs companies, the food firms.\nthe relatives and the others aro\nfar from as well off.\nReporters know a boat is coming\nas long as four or five days before\nit arrives \u2014 occasionally. Just as\noften, they learn of the arrival as\nshe comes up the harbor.\nSometimes ships come straight\nacross; not infrequently, they veer\ntheir course to avoid a brush with\nthe enemy at times pushing as far\nNorth as Greenland or Iceland Such\nshifts are probably the cause of any\ndelay\nWell known in the Kootenays\nis Joseph Dunn of Ymir, long a\nresident of the district.\n\u2014Daily News Photo.\n\"Soul and Body\"\nIs Church Theme\n\"Soul and Body\" wae the subject\nof the Lesson - Sermon in all\nChurches of Christ, Scientist, on\nSunday. *\nThe Golden Text was: \"I pray\nGod your whole spirit and soul and\nbod;' be preserved blameless unto\nthe coming of our Lord Jesus\nChrist\" (1 Thess. 5: 23).\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"This I\nsay then. Walk in the Spirit, and ye\nshall not fulfil the lust of the flesh\"\n(Galatians 5: 16).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChcistian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"We\nmust destroy the false belief that\nlife and intelligence are in matter,\nanci plant ourselves upon what is\npure and perfect. Paul said, 'Walk\nin the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.' Sooner or\nlater we shall leam that the fetters\nof man's finite capacity are forged\nby the illusion that he lives in body\ninstead of in Soul, in matter instead\nof in Spirit.\"\nIraq's revenue from oil concessions has paid for extensive irn\ngation works in the country.\nAn inquiry from London for Boy\nScout textbooks in French has been\nreceived at Dominion Scout Headquarters, Ottawa. The books are desired for Free French and Belgian\nScouts now in England. Such books\nare no longer procurable from\nFrance. -The appeal was passed on\nto Provincial Commissioner Jean-\nMarie Bureau of the Federation of\nCatholic ScouU of Quebec, and a\nquantity of the desired literature\nwas at oner made available.\nHold Fast to Freedom and Justice\nMajor Hammond's (all al Ceremony\nBetter  to   Die  Than\nto Live On in\nSlavery\n\"Neither life, nor death, nor\nprincipalities, nor things present,\nnor things to come, nor any creature \u2014 Hitler, Mussolini nor any\nother \u2014 shall keep us from our\ncrown of freedom and Justice. Let\nus hold fait that which we have.\"\nThis was the call to duty given\nto Nelson citizens Saturday morning by Major David Hammond as\nhe spoke at the Empire Day torch\nceremony at the Recreation\nGrounds. The principles of freedom\nand justice were at stake and there\ncould be -no drawing back, asserted\nthe Salvation Army officer.\n\"When a soldier entered the\nranks of the old Roman army he\ntook an oath called 'Sacramentissi,'\nfrom which we have our church\nword 'sacrament',\" said Major Hammond. The Roman's oath meant\nthat in whatever place or condition\nit was his lot to serve, whether by\nthe Emperor's side or the most remote corner of the earth, his pledge\nof devotion was the same.\nPROBLEM  IN SELVES\n\"We are free from the bombs\nand shells, but if we are what we\nsay we are, British, our problem is\nnot thousands of miles away but in\nour hearts and lives of everyday\nconduct,\" -he asserted.\n\"Freedom and justice are the first\nprinciples in the law of God, the\nfirst principles in the law of life,\nthe first principles in the law of\nreligion. Our forefathers did not\nstop to count the cost in life or dollars and cents. They determined\nthat they must have freedom and\nJustice and they obtained them.\nFreedom and justice are ours by\nnatural birthright,\" he declared.\n\"Livingstone in commenting on\nthe slave traffic in Africa said the\ncaptive who died on the way to\nseaport were more fortunate than\nthe ones who survived to Uve a life\nof slavery. We might well say the\nmen, women and children of conquered Europe who died ln the\nconflict are more fortunate than\nthose who lived to serve in slavery. ., .\n\"I feel confident I voice the feelings of our community when I say\nthat neither life nor death nor principalities, nor things present nor\nHitler or Mussolini or any other-\nshall keep up from rur crown of\nthings to come, nor any creature-\nfreedom and Justice. Let us holl\nfast that which we have,\" he charged.\nNew York Pricei\nWere Unavailable\nDue to curtailed holiday wir*'\nservices the New York Exchange\nprices and the Dow Jones Averages were unavailable at tht\nweekend.\nHOW MANY TRAINHS\nHAVE ENLISTED?\u2014ESLING\nOTTAWA, May 26 \u2014 Seeking in-\nformation concerncing the 30-day\ntrainees, W. K. Esling, M. P., lor\nKootenay West has given notice ot\nthe following questions in Parliament:\n1,   How many men were given 90 \u25a0\ndays training under the previa-   i\nions of the National Resourcea\nMobilization Act?\nJ.   How many of these hav* volunteered and been accepted for\nservice in the Canadian Army\n(Active Force)?\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS\u2014ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\n8. C. Plumbing tr Heating\nCompany, Limited\nDigestion \u2014 pr6oce\"aof ute\nliodi\nAcute indigestion may arise from over. \u2022\neating or the use of food which is difficult\nto digest.\nBut chronic indigestion, which stays with\n, causing sleepless nights, headaches,\nily paina ana depressed spirits, is\nusually the result of torpid liver and constipation. The process of digestion is held\nup and the body is poisoned by accumulated\nwaste matter.\nThe use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-liver\nPills helps to arouse the torpid liver to\naction, the bile flows lively to tne intestines,\nstimulating these organs and soon everything is going fine. What a pleasure it is to\nenjoy your meals and feel that there will be\nno discomfort afterwards. ,\nDr. Chase's TO\n*\n\u00ab\n\u25a0^:_.;. __*_.;.. ,_,__S___t_m._____l\n_.  3mt___,*m-.._<___!-.\n__m*_____\n*-w__m_______\n\u25a0    '\n_m____m___m\n;\n ^^^^^^^\nPAOr POUB\n______ _\t\n-NILSON DAILV NIWI  NELSON   B. C-MONDAY MORNINO   MAY M  1M1-\nPROCEEDS FROM GOVT EMPLOYEES' MEALS GO TO THE NAVY]\n:ivil Service Staff Work and Eat In\nIhe Country but live in Ihe (ily\nOTTAWA (CP)-Seven hundred\nunploy ees of Um Dominion Treasury\nand Dependents' Allowance Board\nnow doing their work for the duration hi the Records at the Dominion\nExperimental Farm have had their\nlunch problems solved by the newly\nopened \"Eight Bells\" cafeteria Ut\nthe country.\nA land office business is the way\nMra. Donald Gordon, famous for her\nwork ln organizing th eOttawa Red\nCross tearoom, describes tbe daily\naervice of which she ia ln charge.\nIt la suggested similar projects may\nbe worked out in other Canadian\ncentres where mass luncheon facilities are needed for war workers\nand where large groups of women\nare organized to handle some phase\nof war services.\nWhen it was decided to move the\noffice ataff and workers of the\nTreasury and the dependents' allowance Board out to the farm lt\nwaa realized that so large a staff\nwould need some provision made\n' lor a midday meal.\nEmployees are mosUy single young\nmen and women from all parts of\nCanada. Many were not enthusiastic about the Idea of going to the\noffice at the farm until they discovered it lay within a few minutes\nbus ride ot the centre of Ottawa and\nthey could etill live in the city.\nNow they ate delighted with the\ngardens and lawns, they told The\nCanadian Press. \"Like working in\nfile country and living In town.'\"\nTWO-WAY BENEFIT\nA model scheme designed not\nonly to provide money to carry on\nWar services but to fill this urgent\ncommunity need was Mrs. Gordon's\nIdea to open the cafeteria. The proceeds are earmarked for the sailors.\nMrs. Gordon ofered to operate the\ncafeteria voluntarily, providing the\nmeals at advantageous prices for the\ngovernment employees and at the\naome time realize a profit for war\nwork. I\nNaval services minister Angus L,\nMacdonald, accompanied by Deputy\nMinister CoL K. S. Maclachlan, Rear\nAdmiral and Mrs. Percy Nelles\nvisited the cafeteria, praising its\nattractive appearance .and congratulating the women in charge on the\nrapidity of its organization.\nMeals were already being served\nbefore the dining room was finished so great were the needs of the\nstall. A small experienced staff of\nvolunteer workers was provided by\nMrs. Gordon, but they were fairly\nswamped by the demands. Immediately a number ot girls employed\nIn the records office volunteered a\npart of their lunch hour to help\nout\nAll except the kitchen staff give\nservices voluntarily. Owing to the\nefficiency of this staff a high degree\nof economy is possible and wastage\nof perishable supplies and other\nfoodstuffs almost is non-existent\n\"This permits the very low prices\nto the purchaser and still leaves a\nmargin of prifit for the Navy,\" Mrs.\nGordon said. At prevailing prices\na good midday meal is obtainable\nat about 20 cents. Prices examples\nare; beverages and soup, 9 cents,\ndesserts, pie cake, Ice cream, 5 cents,\na special dish such as beef stew or\nbaked beans with bread and but\nter. 10 cents. Salad 10 cents, or a cold\nplate with salad 25 cents.\nOpposition ...\nParents Object\nto Widower as\nTheir Son-in-law\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear' Miss Chatfield:\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B, C. - D. Chadwlck\nof the Veterans Guard, Trail, Is\nhome on leave following an opera\nHon for appendicitis.\nMiss Ruih Aylwin and Miss Annie\nMcKeen of New Denver were\nvisitors to Nakusp.\nCaptain A. H. Hugill, Recruiting\nOfficer, Trail, Captain Koye, M.D.,\nand Mrs. Koye were visitors to\nNakusp.\nMr. Naylor, Mr. Boothby and 0.\nJowett of Edgewood spent several\ndays in Nakusp.\n\u2014          , ...     .,\u201e i    Mrs. P. McLean and Mra. Reid\nWhat on earth can a girl do wnen  ^  Graham5  riding .hopped  in\n.she's in this fix:  \u2122_Par.!!:_..f\u2122 i Nakusp.\nYoung People at Rossland\n\u2022\n,\n1  %\nlh            Sr. \u25a0   \u25a0    l     fc,     >   S\nt*t_rls\nfc*     %.'\n_\\m %\/_$$\n'.;' \u25a0\ni I   t&^' '\nT             '   t__i % #v'.\nf\/'|\n\u25a0\u25a0       '\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\nft i\n1      \u25a0  jV a\n**\u2022\nr\n1  j\nf || v t tlp^\nwn    wrSB\nm r \u25a0 \u00ab___\n'i  _m    M' \u25a0   __W\\\n[|\n&m 2                      kf\nm_t        _.     l__j,_\u00a5-       mt\nWW    \"\u25a0                           \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0'                                  \"   '\n^'\u25a0A-                      '     f   _?     ;.'.,.,                      \u25a0.              . \u25a0>:. ,,\n...    .\u00ab:\u25a0-\u25a0   0\n\u25a0\u25a0t\nGroup of young people at the recent West Kootenay Young Peoples Conference at .Rossland.\n\u2014Photo by Jim Doughty.\nDefinite Acts\nviolently opposed to my marrying\nmy fiance because he has been\nmarried betore and has a litUe girl.\nHis wife died several years ago\nand he is a fine person. Because he\nla a widower with a child and because he is nine years older than I,\nmy parents are raising Cain about\nhim. We are in love. His family is\nall in favor of our being married\nbut I cannot convince my parents\nthat all will be well.\nAnswer:\nFirat a girl ln this fix can look at\nthe silver lining to her cloud: she's\na free agent, her parents cannot\nkeep her 'rom marrying the man\nahe loves. If he can support her\nand If his past record indicates that\nhe will be a good husband there's\nno reason,why she shouldn't marry\nhim after she has taken time to\nmake her parents see with her\neyes.\nSecond, she should realize that\nthere never were parents who did\nnot prefer to have their daughter\nmarry a man who hadn't been\nmarried belore. They are invarialby\nopposed to their young and inexperienced daughter taking on the\nresponslbilty of rearing another\nwoman's child. They know how\nfrequently It happens that step\nrelationships are fraught with un-\nhappiness, that the husband's affection for his child diverts his\nattention from bis wife; or that the\nwife resents the child and can't be\n\u25a0 good mother to her.\nThird, a girl planning to marry\n\u2022 widower with a child should be\nvery sure that she can love tbe child\nand the child her. If they cannot\nmake friends on short acquaintance\nthey aren't likely to make friends\non longer and more  intimate ac-\nSiialntance. She should abo have a\near understanding with the father\nsu to what he expects of her concerning the little one.\nFRUITVALE CLUB FETES\nMEMBER FOR BIRTHDAY\nFRUITVALE, B. C. \u2014 A pleasant\naurprise was staged by the Indies'\nFriendly Club, at the home of Miss\nB. V. Blomfield. Games and con\nteats were followed  by\nMr. Masson of Trout Lake was a\nNakusp visitor.\nMrs. R. Brodie has returned from\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Rollins were\nvisitors to Nakusp.\nMrs. Keffer and two daughters\nof Burton spent Thursday In Nakusp\nwith Mr. and Mrs. H. Suntsrom.\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B. C. A very enjoy\nable afternoon was spent at the1\nhome of Mrs. J. HaU, when a number of neighbors and friends\ngathered in honor of Mrs. Mortimer\nof Nanaimo, who is spending a\ncouple of months at the home of\nMr, and Mrs. Hall. A lovely tea\nwas served by Mrs. Hall, assisted\nby Mrs. E. Bainbridge and Mrs. A.\nBold. Those present were Mrs. S. J.\nCummings, Mrs, Edwin Bainbridge,\nMrs. Norman Balnoridge, Mrs. J.\nKirkpatrick; Mrs. M. MacGregor,\nMrs. H. Spence, Mrs. C. Holden,\nMrs. P. Sullivan, Mrs. Eric Bainbridge, Mrs. H. Boyd, Mrs. B.C.\nYager end Doreen Spence,\nMrs. J. Hall and her guest Mrs.\nMortimer of Nanaimo, spent a few\ndays in Nelson with Mrs, Hall's\ndaughter, Miss Joyce Hall.\nPte. Kenneth Wallace has returned to Nelson after spending a\nbrief leave at his home here. tits.\nWallace went back to Nelson with\nhim for a short visit.\nMiss Margaret Plenderlelth end\nMiss Iris Taylor of Creston were\nweekend guests ot Mr. and Mrs,\nA. Hepher.\nMr. and Mrs. S. J. Cummings\nof Silver Birch Ranch, Goat Creek,\nhave as guest, their daughter, Mrs.\nA. Woods ot Rossland, with her\ntwo little daughters, Betty Jane\nand Judy.\nMrs. Sylvester Spence and baby\nson have returned from Creston\nValley Hospital. Doreen Spence,\nDoreen Spence, who had been visiting her aunt, Mrs, C. Holden, has\nreturned to her home at Sanca.\nBeing Obedient\nBy Garry Cleveland  Myers, Ph.D.\nWe considered the problem of\nthe mother, with domestic help,\nwhose tot of 19 months kept her\nbusy all day amusing him. We had\nonly part of her story. Here is more\nof it.:\n\"He will not play with his toys.\nAll during the day attempts sre\nmade to interest him in his playthings, but these attempts are constantly interrupted with his climbing of the chaiars and tables, opening cupboard drawers, turning the\nlamps on and off, puUing out electric cords, turning on and off the\nstove control switches and dozens\nof similar antics. He has been scolded and spanked repeatedly for all of\nthese things and has received explanations for most of them. With\nthis going on sftX day I find it impossible to correct every misdoing. As\nit is the little fellow never goes to\nbed with the memory of a happy\nday. My husband comes home to find\nme with my self-control shattered\nand in a very unhappy state of\nmind.\"\nMU8T UNDERSTAND \"NO\"\nIn offering a constructive program\nfor training this child to amusenim-\nsclf with playthings, we cautioned\nthat for this program to work he\nwould first have to learn permanently to avoid certain forbidden acts\nand objects\u2014to learn the meaning\nof the precious word NO. This\ntraining would seem to be even\nmore essential to the mother who\nmust do all the housework than to\nthe mother who has abundant do-\nmestic help.\nTherefore, I advised the mother to\nLilac Time\nDiet and Exercise ...\nReducer's Success\nStories All True\n7,\nBy ALICE WADE  ROBINSON\nIt seems we have a skeptic In\nour slimming circles. A young lady\nwho did not reduce diet and exercise to the contrary \u2014 writes\nsomewhat huffily that she belieyes\nI make up those letters from the\nshining examples.\nElsie Harkness and Nellie Powers carry great bouquets of lilac to\nbrighten up their school room.\n\u2014Daily News Photo.\nICROSS\nWARDNER RED CROSS\nRECEIVES DONATIONS\nWARDNER, B.C.-Members of the\nrted Cross met at the home of Mrs,\nJ. Lawson, when Mrs. P. Kyandwy\npresided. A wool scarf was donated\nby Mrs. Hughes ot Mayook and will\ndecide on two or three things the be sent to Cranbrook later.\nchild must never do and then con-1 A pat ot pillow slips were don\nsistently give him instant pain (by ated by Mrs. Flesberg and were\nspanking) without a single excep-1 raffled and won by Mrs. Josetta\ntion until these specific things were  Anderson. Tea was served and $2.90\ntupper,  the  tables  being  centred\n' by a birthday cake.\nThe members of the Club presented the guest of honor witt) a\ngift Mrs. Mclnnes won the table\ncontest Mrs. A. Endersby, Mrs. W.\nVettchi and Mrs. F. W. Cole, were\nhostesses. Others present were Mrs.\nW. T, Cole, Mrs. L, Ayres, Mrs.\nHarold Anderson, Mrs. B. E. John-\nBon, Mrs. F. M. Barrett, snd Mrs.\nW. Williams.\n. , ,  ,    BELFAST  (CP)-Maj.-Gen.  Sic\n.!\u2022 James Cooke-Collis who had two\nNOW Vnderttrm\n\\ Cream Deodorant\nsafely\nStops Perspiration\n1. Does not rot dresses, does\nnot irritate skin,\n2. NowaitiDgtodry.Csnbeused\nright after shaving.\n3. ius unl ly stops perspiration\nfor 1 to 3 <!>)>\u25a0 Removes odor\nfrom perspiration.\n4. Apsve,white,gresseless,stain-\nless vanishing cream.\n8. Arrid bus been swarded the\nApproval leal of the American\nInstitute of Liunderinp for\nbeing harmless to fabrics.\n25 MILLION Jara of Arid\nhovob\u00aben sold. Try ojor todayl\nARRID\n-VH-I-*\nAt ssn stores Klllssi tssflsst gssssS\n(sslssoba IsV Mt\/M___\n2U:\nnarrow escapes when London was\nbombed and had a fine record in\nthe South African and First Great\nWar died quietly at his home here,\naged 65.\navoided. In the meantime shf should\nmerely intercept him in other things\naiming eventually to have trained\nhim to avoid aU the definite acts\nthat are dangerous and destructive.\nHELP CHILD\nFIND PLEASURES\nIt was explained to her that punishment for a forbidden act would\nbe most effective when the child\nfound pleasure in doing something\nacceptable, and  that the more of\nwas taken for collection.\nFruitvale Enjoys\nComedy Staged by\nTrail Y.P. Players\nFRUITVALE, B. C. - A successful entertainment was presented\nin the Fruitvale Community Hall\n_..by the Excelsior Young. People's\nsuch'desirable activity he enjoyed j Society of Trail, under the auspicies\nthe less often and persistently would I of the Fruitvale Boy Scouts Ashe do the forbidden act. j sociation. The large hall was filled\nShe was urged to read to him, say\nnursery rhymes to him, sing lullabies to him, answer all his questions\nand express enjoyment over his creations, however crude.\nAnd so with a few definite things\nhe can never do without immediate\ndiscomfort, hundreds of others he\nwill do with great pleasure, and\nwith the mother keeping herself\nbusy for definite brief periods, leaving the child to make for himself,\nthis child can learn to be happy. 1\nsafe and self-reliant.\nLucky for me, I am in the habit I\not saving the good letters. Any-'\none who has her doubts as to their\nauthenticity can drop around any\ntime and see the originals. But I\nwill admit that some of them do\nsound almost too good to be true.\nHere's one that man:\n\"This is to inform you that under\nthe guidance of your column I have\nlost 64 pounds. Last June my weight\nwas 214 pounds and today it Is 150\npounds, which seems to be about\nright for a person of my build. I\nam five feet, six and one-half inches\ntall, and have a rather large frame.\n\"I used to wear a size 44 and am\ndown to an 18. My husband is so\nthrilled because I have lost weight\nand so happy because I look better,\nthat he wants to buy me all kinds\nof clothes and even insisted on my\npurchasing a slack suit. So far, I\nhave lacked the courage to wear\nit befoce anyone but maybe I'll\nget over that in time.\"\nShe said several nice things, most\nof which I am leaving out, but\njust to keep the note of authenticity,\nI'll put this in: \"Keep up Uie good\nwork of helping women to overcome physical faults. I, for one,\nwill be grateful to you for the\nrest of my life.\"\nThere are so many letters from\nwomen who have lost weight that\nI wonder whether the few who\ncan't lose really give their diets a\nfair trial. It sometimes happens that\nth.-re is no reduction in weight for\nthe first week or two, just when\ndieting is hardest. So perhaps they\nbecome discouraged and give up\ntoo soon. In spite of such delays,\nanyone can average a welghj loss\nof 10 pounds per month bv assiduously following the proper diet.\n_ \u201e__- ; ;\nAccident*...\nAutomobiles Add\nNew Fractures\nBy LOGAN CLENDINQ, M.D.\nModern civilization hu added a\nnumber ot characterisitc traumatic\ndiseases to the text books. In the\nold days about the only common\nfractures were those from slipping\non the sidewalk or street, or being\nthrown from a horse or buggy.\nThe automobUe has added a number of characteristic Injuries. We\nhave \"bumper fractures\" also \"dashboard\" knees and hips and also\n\"windshield faces.\"\nThe modern trend of widening\ncars, plus the habit of many drivers of resting the lett arm on the\nwindow ledge, has now added another injury which is extremely\nmultilating and serious, to-wit:\n\"car window elbows.\" These are\nbecoming increasingly common and\nthey are quite serious because Uie\nresults, even under ideal treatment,\noften leave a severely disabled\narm.\n8EVERE FRACTURE\nThe car window elbow Is a severe compound explosive type ot\nfracture which breaks the bones ot\nthe forearm several inches below\nthe elbow. Injury to nerves, blood\nvessels and muscles is common.\nThe usual history is that of a man\nabout 30 years old, driving with his\nleft arm resting on the window\nframe. As he passes a wide truck\nor another: car too closely, he experiences a severe stinging pain\nin the elbow. He'is stunned to lind\nthat he is seriously mutilated, with\nfrom one to several wounds, from\nwhich broken parts of bone pro-\nturde. The arm is useless and he is\nsoon ln profound shock unless medical treatment is immediately avail\nable.\nSometimes the bones of the hand\nare fractured also due to jerking\nthe hand from the wheel and striking it against the side of the car.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nFRUITVALE SEWING\nCIRCLE  IS QUILTING\nFRUITVALE, B. C. - The Fnjlt-\nvale Community Sewing Circle held\nthe weekly meeting ln the W. I.\nHall on Tuesday evening. Nineteen ladies were present. Quilting\nwas done. Refreshments were served by a committee.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014From Honolulu\nto Chefoo and from Tientsin to\nCawnpore, Pacific and Astatic centres are sending gifts to bombed\nBritain, 55,009 having arrived from\nthese areas in a fortnight.\n^YTHIS\n4St#\ncert*1\nto.\nS0*#J\n1\n\u2022  Glorious, palate-tickling flavour of sun-\nripened wheat and barley.\n\u2022mr  Nourishing goodness of \/ wo grains which\n~    supply carbohydrates, proteins, iron,\nphosphorus and other food essentials.\n\u2022  Easy to digest because they are double-\nbaked\n\u2022  All the goodness of famous Grape-Nuts\ncereal, in easy to serve and assy to eat\nfakes. GFI3I\nMMMSFLAKES\n1\nJ. W. H.\n\"A manufacturer ot\nto capacity.\n\"Safety First\", farce comedy in\nthree acts was a scream. Artists\nwft'e as follows:\nGordon Ellison, Rudolph Hartman,\nJohn .Doughty, Ernie Robinson,\nHenry Erickson, Margaret Santano,\nConnie Green, Winnie Hughes Gertie Hollett and  Molly Sutherland.\nMOYIE\nMOYIE,, B.C.-V. H. Sanders left\nYou may have a graded list oj '\u2022 for Fernie. He has enl'sted with the\nYMIR\nplaythings by wriling me in care of\nthis paper and enclosing a self-addressed envelope with a three-cent\nstamp on it.\nSERIAL STORY ...\nBy Allen Eppes\nEYELESS EDEN\nCHAPTER   TWENTY-EIQHT\n(Continued)\nHe went out and stood under Uie\nhomemade shower which his uncle\nJohn had rigged up many Summers\nbefore.\nBiU went back to his work. But\nhe couldn't concentrate on it He\nkept thinking about Joel What in\nthe devil had come over the man?\nWhen he wasn't morose, he wm\nsarcastic. And when he wasn't morose or sarcastic he was so cockeyed cheerful. Walking around and\nsinging otf key or whistling the\nsame way. It was darned annoying\n\"If I hadn't made up my mind to\nshow that publisher I can write\nabout something besides Park Ave\nnue and Miami,' he mused, \"I'd\npack up and go somewhere else.'\nThen, remembering Eve, the kiss,\nand the way she had looked with\nthe great armful of ferns, he found\nit necessary to admit to himself\nthat showing his publisher that he\ncould write a mountain story wasnt\nbis chief reason for staying up ln\nUie cabin atter all.\nHe frowned, and a sense of restlessness began to take hold of him.\nHe pictured Joel and Eve dancing\ndoiivn in Ashville, enjoying a delightful dinner together, talking,\nlaughing, and presently the sense\nof restlessness gsve place to one ot\nannoyance and something like resentment.\nJoel came in glowing trom Uie\ncold showeT.\nHe got into his clothes, humming\nsomething about somebody coming\naround the mountain and looking\ndownright smug.\n\"Darnltall, if you must hum, or\nsing, or whistle,\" Bill said, \"keep\nthe right key!\"\n\"Sorry!\" said Joel. And that was\nall.\u2014nothing more.\nThen when he was fully dressed\nhe picked up some letters to be\nmailed and crossed the room.\n\"Well,\" he called out, \"I'm off.\"\n\"You needn't tell me,\" said BUI.\n\"I've suspected it for a long time.\"\n\"Funny,\" said Joel. \"Very funny!\"\nHe hurled out, and presenUy\nBill heard the sound of the departing car.\n\"Oh. hell!\" Bill said with considerable vehemence.\nHe shoved a piece of paper into\nthe typewriter and began to write.\nuninspired but devilishly determined.\nHe kept it up for an hour, two\nand three hours.\nThen there was Ute startling\nsound of breaking glass and something hit the machine with a noisy\ncutter.\n\"What the\u2014I\" Bill cried.\nHe pushed back his chair and\njumped to bis feet.\nIt was then that he saw the rock\nupon the floor. He picked it up and\ndiscovered that it had been wrapped in a piece of cheap brown paper, a piece of paper which had\ncome loose and lay under Uie edge\nof the table.\nsTo Be Continued\nVeterans Guard. Mr. Sanders has\nthree son's and a son-in-law in the\nservice of the Empire.\nMrs. E. Danielson and little son\nPaul of Kimberley spent several\ndays at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. E. Andrews, Mrs. Danielson'6\nparents.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and\nson of Kimberley wece guests of\nMr. and Mrs. T. Wills..\nMr. Jones and Jimmy Burrows,\nwho were in charge uf taking down\nthe smoke stack on the C. M. le S.\nCompany property here, returned to\nTLail.\nMrs. N. P. Conrad returned after\nspending several months in Kellogg,\nIdaho, with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. L. A. Home, owing to her\nmother's illness.\nMl-j. Mary Conrad'spent Friday In\nCranbrook.\nMrs. R. A. Smith reports that she\nforwarded to the Red Cross in\nCranbrook 13 pairs of socks for the\nmonth of April.\nAndy Gcant and Jock McLeland\nof Chapman Camp are in Moyie for\na few days taking machinery from\nthe crusher at the St. Eugene mill.\nVincent Conrade. son of Mr. and\nMrs. P. N. Conrad of Moyie who\nleft a couple months ago, is now at\nTucson, Ariz., where he is on airport work.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Carlson and their\ngrandson and Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nNelson and children of Cranbrook\nmotored to Sunnyside Ranch to visit\nMr. and Mts. Algot Johnson.\nMr. and Mrs. George Whitehead\nand children of Kimberley spent a\nweekend In Moyie at the home of\nMrs. Whitehead's parents; Mr. and\nMrs. W. E. Andrews.\nMrs V. H. Sanders reutrned to\nher home Saturday after spending\na few days in Grand Forks, where\nher daughter, Mrs. Rex Muise, is\nconfined to hospitsl with iUness.\nSiamese cultivate a \"toddy-palm\"\nfor Us wine-like sap.\nYMIR. B. C. - Mrs. Black and\nthree children of New Deliver are\nvisiting Mrs. Black's parents, Mr-\nand Mrs. Tarran.\nMrs. Forsloff and daughter of\nSpokane are visiting relatives here.\nMr. and Mrs. Tarres left on am\nextended visit to their sons and\ndaughters on the Prairies.\nM-s. Peterson of Kellogg, Idaho,\nis visiting her sisters here.\nMrs. Bodeau and children of\nSandon are visiting Mrs. Bodeau's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. BirUes.\nMrs. Christian and son John are\nvisiting Trail for a couple of weeks,\nMrs. Haines has returned to her\nhome here after spending the Winter\nwith relatives in Trail and Nelson.\nMrs. Dan McKay and Mrs. Christensen were cohostesses at a bridge\npairty at the home of Mrs. Dan\nMcKay. Prizes were won by Mrs.\nLykegard and Mrs. Monteith. proceeds went towards the furnace\nfund for the church.\nFree R.A.F. Aeroplane Photos!\ntrusses sends me circular letters,\nand ln one of Uie letters was the\nfollowing statement: \u2014 'Hernia recurs ln seven out of ten cases\ntreated by surgery.' Will you please\nanswer in your column if this\nstatement is true?\"\nAnswer \u2014 Three per cent of oblique hernias and 15 per cent of\ndirect hernias is the rate of recurrence with good surgical technique.\nSeventy-five per cent of all inguinal hernias are oblique and 25\nper cent are direct, so not more\nthan 1 in 10 of all hernias ahould\nrecur.\nM. S. \u2014 \"Oan cancer be determined by a blood test?\"\nAnswer \u2014 No. In surface cancer,\nthe diagnosis should be made bv\nremoving a part of growth and\nexamining it under the microscope\n(biopsy). In internal cancers the\ndiagnosis is made by the X-ray,\nhistory and physical examination.\nD. M. K. \u2014 \"Do you get a backache with mumps and what causes\nit? Can you get mumps on both\nsides more than once.\"\nAnswer \u2014 You can get a backache with any infectious disease.\nRecurrence of mumps is rare but\nthere is no reason why they should\nnot recur on both sides.\nFRUITVALE\nFRUITVALE, B. C. Mrs. E. Ba^lo\nof Brandon, Man., is a vacation\nguest ot Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Johnson.\nMiss Jean Grieve was a visitor\nto Trail Thursday.\nMrs. D. Murray who bas been\nvisiting Nelson has returned.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - Mike Patrick has left'for Vernon to undergo\nmilitary training.\nMr. and Mrs. McLeUan, accompanied by their son and daughter,\nleft Friday to spend a few days\nat Ainsworth.\nMr. and Mrs. John Littler and\nMr. and Mrs. Jim Littler of Natal\nare guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert\nLittler\nMr. and Mrs. Tom Sweeny motored to Nelson where Mr. Sweeny\nwill attend the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Knights of Columbus.\nMrs F. Marleau Is visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Latham of Kaslo.\nEmily, have .returned from Nakusp\nMrs. Mason Is the guest of her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Cooper of Wynnde.\nJ. McKim spent the week at\nTrail as a delegate to the K. ot P.\nconvention.\nTo get photoi of the following\nplanes . . , Spitfire , '. , Defiant\n, . . Hawker Hurricane .'. , Bell\nAiracobra ... Fairey Battle Plane\n... Lockheed Hudson .., Bristol\nBlenheim ... Vickers Wellington\n. . . Blackburn Skim-Dive Bomber\n,.. Fairey Swordfish . . . Boeing\nFlying Fortress . . . Sunderland\nFlying Boat and 15 other modern\nplanet (all are the latest official\nin full detail) HERB\nALL'YOU HAVE TO DOt     ]\nFor each areoplane photo you wish\nsend one Bee Hive Syrup label, or\ntwo Durham Com Starch labels.\nSpecify plane or planes wanted,\nyour name ind address, enclose\nneceiiary   labels\nand mail requeiti\nto the St. Lawrence\nStarch Co. Limited,\nPort Credit, Ont.\n(Hdu&qw'wq&l\nBy BET8Y NEWMAN\nBee Hive Syrup\nADVERTISEMENT NO. t\nPopular\nPattern Service\nNelson Daily News readers, hundreds of them\nevery month, are taking advantage of the Daily\nPattern Service.. Here is a sample of the high\nquality   patterns   which   are   being   offered:\nTODAY'S MEN\nMock Chicken Casserole\nButtered Carrots\nLettuce Salad Lemon Mousse\nGraham Crackers\nCoffee\nMOCK CHICKEN CASSEROLE\nPork chops, rice, tomatoes, onion,\ncelery, green pepper, salt, pepper,\nhot water.\nSelect large, lean pork chops, Vt\nInches thick. Brown In skillet and\nremove to casserole. On top of each\nchop put 1 tablespoon uncooked\nrice, 1 slice of onion, Vt tomato,\nfresh or canned, and a ring of green\npepper.\nFor each chop used now add 1-J\ncup chopped celery, Vt teaspoon\nsalt and a dash of pepper, Vt cup\nwater. Bake 3 hours in 360 degree\noven, adding a litUe more water\nor tomato juice if absorbed loo\nquickly.\nLEMON MOUSSE\nVt cud sugar, cinch salt. 2 small\neggs, It cup evaporated milk or\nwhipping cream, 1 1-3 teaspoons\ngrated lemon rind, 2 2-3 tablespoons\nlemon juice, 1 tablespoon orange\njuice, 1 cup boiling water.\nPut sugar, salt and watar ln top\npart of double boiler and cook directly over flame to Vt cup syrup\u2014\nabout i minutes. Pour bot syrup\nover weU beaten eggs, stirring vigorously. Return to double boiler\nand cook over hot water for 9 snin\nntes. Stirring constantly. Scrape\ndown sides of pan and beat until\nmass Is smooth, then cool. ChiU\nmilk or cream in bowl surrounded\nwith Ice and salt. Whip unUl stiff.\nadd lemon rind and then lemon and\norange juices. Combine milk end\negg mitures, cutting and folding to\nblend thoroughly. Turn Into cold\nfreeing pan and put in refrigerator.\nServes 6. Will require from 3 to 8\nhours to freeze.\nCURRIED FRIED TOMATOES\nTo prepare tbe friend tomatoei\nwith curry sauce, select firm tomatoes cut Into inch thick slices; season with salt, pepper and a dash ot\nsugar. Let stand a few minutes,\nthen dredge with Hour. Put into a\nskillet a generous amount of fat so\ntomatoes will stand about Vt Inch\nbi fat. Beat fat and try the tomatoes unUl brown. To make the\nsauce, remove aU but about IVi\ntablespoons flour. Blend with IVi\nteaspoon curry powder then add a\ncup of rich milk. Cook and stir untU\nsmooth. Pour over friend tomatoes.\nWHAT THE WELL DRE8SED BED IS WEARING\nThe nice thing about this handsome crocheted sarcad Is the way\nlt harmonizes with bulb modern and period furniture. Out of such\ndesigns heirlooms grow. The medallion is truly lovely whether\ncrocheted full-size to make a bedspread or a cloth,'or in smaller\nsize tor scarves, dollies and chair sets. Laura Wheeler Pattern 2840\ncontains complete direcUons for making these accessories. Price of\npatterns 20c each.\nJJplsmt Sath} Neuia\nNelion, B.C.\nt\u2014\u2014*tm\n \u25a0\u2014\n\u25a0\nstona\nSHOES\nTHE SMARTEST SHOES\nFOR WELL DRESSED MEN\nL Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfaehion\n4r$. T. Penney\nLoses a Sister\nCalgary Pioneer\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Penney re-\nelved a wire Saturday informing\nhem of the death of Mrs. Penney's\nlater, Mrs. R. W. Tate, of 4)318 Burn\nind Avenue, Calgary.\nMrs. Tate, who had resided in\nJalgary for 33 years, was born in\nforkshire, England. Her husband,\nI. W. Tate, is a machinist on the\nJgden C. P. R. shops, Calgary. He\nI a veteran of the last war.\nBesides her husband, Mra. Tate\neaves five sons, all in the services\n-two in Calgary, one at Halifax in\nhe Navy, and two in London, En-\nland; and three brothers\u2014George\n'enney in Calgary, William Pen\ney in Los Angeles, and Thomas\n'enney in Nelson.\nMt. and Mrs. Tate have visited\nielson a number of times.\nMr. and Mrs. Penney have left\na Calgary to attend Mrs. Tate's\nmeraL\nTrail \"Soldier\"\nRICHARD,\nt Mr. and Mrs. Vasel Mo-\n;   1701   Third  Ave,  Trail\n\u2014Photo by Better Photos.\nfOMEN WANTED\nI M to B jean old. Women who am\nrestl\u00ab\u00ab, moody, MRTOtm\u2014who\nBar hot Bashes, dinar? spells-to take\n1 Isydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\nI pound. Pinkham's Compound Is ef-\nI fectlve to help women during then\nI \"trying times\" due to functional\nI Irregularities. Made ln Canada.\nI WORTH TRYING I\nRY CLEANING SUITS. OC\n\u25a0diet' and Men's .... OJC\n| NEUON CITY LAUNDRY\ntnd Dry Cleaners\nhen Sutherland repairs your\natch, it's on time, all the time\nH. H. Sutherland\nTry Our\n[CHOCOLATE MILK\nfor meals, between meals,\nand before retiring.\nValley U\nWOTENAY   f ALLEY\nPHONE 116\nAIRY\n4X BAKERIES\nHot Dog Buns\n10c Pkg.\nWhite Felt Hats\nIdeal for Summer.\n?2.49 to $3.95\niilady's Fashion Shoppe\nI Baker SL Phone 674\n| Bring your kitchen\nup-to-date with a\nCeneral Electric\nRange\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n1674 Baker St Phone 260\nSLIPS\nIn   crepe   or   satin.   Colors\nwhite,   tearose,   black    and\nnavy. Sizes 32 to 44.\n$1.25 to $1.95\nFashion First Ltd.\n476 Baker St, Phone 962\nSigrid Nord Is Crowned\nQueen Ymir Celebration;\nFine Sport Program Held\nAlbright of Salmo Wins Decisively in the\nLog Chopping; N. Burgess and Flagel\nCapture Sawing' in Close Finish\ne\nYMIR, B. C. May 25\u2014Another of the West Koote\nnay's colqrful Victoria Day celebrations went into history on\nSaturday at Ymir, and although present days of stress took a\nnatural effect, the program was comparably successful with\nOther years.\nFrom 9 a.m. up till a monster dance concluded at mid\nnight, there was interesting action a-plenty\u2014what with children's sports, a softball tournament, May Queen crowning, a\nspecial speaker from Nelson on the war effort, and such events\nas log chopping and sawing.\nThe crowning of the May Queen, a pretty ceremony,\ntook place on the sports field platform early in the afternoon.\nLovely brunette Evelyn Emilsonr'\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON. B. C-MONOAY MORNINO.\nturned over her crown to smi\ning Sigrid Nord, winner of the\n1941 queen contest with Florence Mclntyre of Sheep Creek.\nMiss Nord drew 12,325 votes,\nagainst 4575 for the runnerup.\nThe crowning was preceded by a\nparade into the park, led by the regal party and directly followed by\nthe Ymir men's senior softball team\ncarrying a banner boosting tlie\nVictory Loan campaign.\nPET PARADE\nAlso included in the parade was\nan exhibition of pets and decorated\nbicycles. Creating an amusing spectacle with his goat drawing a decorated carriage with a baby in it,\nWally Fresue won fiset prize in the\npets' competition. A special prize\nwas awarded to Miss Noreen Tow\nriss for pushing a baby in a decorated buggy. Bruce McKay was judged\nwinner of the prize for best decorated bicycle.\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo presided at the crowning. The new queen\nthanked her supporters for winning\nher the contest. This was followed\nby an address by C. B. Garland\nof Nelson on behalf of the forthcoming Victory Loan.\nThe day dawned bright and hot.\nbut at around noon the skies clouded up and shortly after the crowning ceremony there was a short rain\nshower. Later in the afternoon the\nclouds moved away, and the weather became fine again.\nThe absence of- the rock drilling\nevent removed some of the color\nfrom the program but the Committee decided not to hold it this year\nbecause of the \u25a0expense of running\nlt and since the money was needed\nin war work. Prize money in this\ncontest ordinarily comes to at least\n$160, necessary because of the hard\nwork of the competitors and of\nthe expense of their equipment\nCHOPPING AND SAWING\nHowever, the log chopping and\nsawing competitions gave the crowd\nlots of opportunity to watch real\nhe-man sport. Clarence Albright ol\nSalmo chopped his way through the\n14-A-irnch thick log in 3 minutes,\nover three minutes faster than his\nclosest competitor. Norman Burgess and Gus Flagel, both of Ymir,\nproved the class of the log sawing\nevent, going through a log 17 inche*\nthick in 33>4 seconds, half .a second better than the record of William Jones of Ymir and Mike Drevenak of Salmo.\nCarl NystTom of Ymlr waa second to Albright in the chopping, and\nhis time was 6:03:30. William Jones\nof Ymir required 6 minutes 43 seconds and Mike Drevanak of Salmo\nchose to chop down from the top\nof the log instead of standing on\ntop of the log and chopping on each\nside in turn aa did the others, took\n7 minutes rtVt seconds.\nBurgess and Flagel had a lucky\nbreak in winning the sawing class.\nThey started very badly but before\nthey were far advanced. Burgess\nbroke tha handle on his side of the\nsaw. After repairs, they started in\nagain, and this time they really did\nearn the prize money. Jones and\nDrevenak finished in 34 seconds and\nAndrew (Sonny) Burgess, member\nof last year's winning team, and\nFrank Tinney, both of Ymir, were\ntwo seconds further behind.\nJohnny Clarke, a competitor ln\nthe past, performed the duties of\ntimekeeper.\nYMIR WINS\nTUG OF WAR\nNo less lacking In spectator Interest was the tug of war competition\nbetween Salmo and Ymir. Ymir\nwon in a sudden-death pull, which\nwas accomplished alowly but surely.\n\"Sonny\" Burgess captained the\nwinning team of nine, and helping\nhim out were his brother, Norman\nBurgess, Einar Lefold, Matt Olson,\nEverett Gill Steve Masura, Louis\nMasura, Doffner Frank and Leo\nMadden,\nDan McKay was Starter, and C.\nA. Cawley of Salmo, Judge.\nThe Senior Softball tournament\nwas won by the yellow-shorted\nSalmo iquad, defeating Ymir Pirates In the final game. In the\nQueen Mine and Salmo had blasted Gold Belt Chlefi out of the\nrunning.\nIn a peppy school softball game\nbetween Ymir and Salmo the visiting Salmoites had a seven-run second inning for a 15-9 victory. Sherman McDonald was the big hitter\nfor Use winners, with two doubles\nand a single. Gordon Gibbon and\nMervyn McDonald each had three\nhits. Outstanding for Ymir was P.\nVerigin, first baseman, who had a\ntriple, a double and two singles in\nfour times up.\nScore by innings:\nSalmo    070   44-15\nYmir     131 04-9\nLineups follow:\nSalmo\u2014Pete John rt, Buster Davis U, rt, Schuyler Peters cf, If, Howard Hearn p, Sidney Roach c, Wesley Peters ss, Gordon Gibbon 2b,\nSherman McDonald 3b, Mervyn McDonald lb and Allan Hamberg cf\nYmir\u2014A. Blaine 2b, Bruce McKay\n3b, P, Verigin lb, J. Allan c, If, R\nFresue rf, Lawrence Bond ss, B\nJones cf, A. Norberg p, T. Speck U,\nand A. Brown.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Clark of Ymir\nwon the honors as the oldest\ncouple on the grounds. They are\nreal old timers, having been Ymir\nresidents  since   1897. Mr. Clark\nwent to Rossland from Ontario ln\n'96, then Mrs. Clark came soon af\u25a0\nter. After living in Trail a short\ntime,'they came to Ymir.\nWith seven children, Mr. and\nMrs. Harry Brown of Ymir took\nthe prize for the largest family\npartaking in the celebratioh.\nTOPS KID 8PORTS\nRuth Olsen of Sheep Creek was\nthe high winner in the children's\nsports. She had four firsts, barely\nshading Marjorie Cawley of Salmo\nwho had three firsts and a second.\nAmong the boys, Bob Morrow and\nEddie Vulcano, two lads who hitchhiked out from Nelson, placed first\ntwice each and had one second\nplace.\nThe busiest man on the pounds\nwas genial Daft McKay, President ot\nthe Celebrations Committee. Roll,\ning up his sleeves, he got the children's events away to a start before\nmany of the adults showed up in\nthe morning. Through the rest of\nthe day, he kept things moving\nalong on schedule.\nThe Secretary of the Committee\nwas James Campbell.\nIn charge of the May Queen contest were Cede Esche, Chairman;\nJake Haines, Mrs. Gwen Jones, Mrs.\nFrank Tinney and Rev. W. J. Selder. The Colections Committee con-\nslsted of James Bremner, Chairman\nC. Lykegaard, Cede Esche and Dan\nMcKay In charge of the sports were\nRon Nash, Chairman; V. Neilson,\nA. Macdonald, Samuel Verigen, J.\nClarke, Mrs. O. Christianson, Gordon Moir and A. W. Walsh.\nDetailed results of the sport events\nfollow:\nTRACK EVENTS\nBoys 4 and under, 25 yards-\nJohn Brown of Ymir, first; Ross\nSpivey of Ymir, second.\nGirls 4 and under, 25 yards\u2014Ruby\nJohnson of Ymir, first; Dolly Anderson of Ymir, second.\nBoys, 6 and under, 25 yards\u2014Cecil Brown of Ymir, first; Jimmy\nAnderson, second.\nGirls, 6 and under, 23 yards-\nCarol Shrum of Ymir, first; Ruby\nGould of Ymlr, second.\nBoys, 8 and under, SO yards\u2014Ray\nNorberg of Ymlr, first; Alvin Tow\nrlss of Ymir, second.\nGirls, 8 and under, 50 yards-\nMary Lou Gill of Ymir, first; Jackie\nTinney of Ymir, Nattallna Fresue of\nYmir, tied for second.\nBoys, 10 and under, 50 yards-\nCharlie Christianson of Ymlr, first;\nWesley Peters of Salmo, second.\nGirls, 10 and under, 50 yards\u2014\nBeverley Fors of Sheep Creek, first;\nMary Bing of Willow Point, second.\nBoys, 12 and under, 75 yards-\nLawrence Bond of Ymir, firat;\nSchuyler Peters of Salmo, second.\nGirls, 12 and under, 75 yards-\nFlorence 9hrum of Ymir, first;\nLucy Zarchukoff of Salmo, second.\nGirls, 14 and under, 75 yards\u2014\nMona McDonald of Salmo, first;\nDoreen Gibbon and Edith Davis of\nSalmo, tied for second.\nBoys, 16 and under, 75 yards-\nBob Morrow of Nelson, first; Pete\nKlovance of Salmo, second.\nGirls, 16 and under, 75 yards-\nAudrey Peters of Salmo, first; Marjorie Cawley of Salmo, second.\nMen's open, 100 yards \u2014 Nicky\nJohn of Salmo, first; Bob Morrow\nof Nelson, second.\nLadies' open, 100 yards\u2014Audrey\nPeters of Salmo, first; Edith Davis\nof Salmo, second.\nOld Timers,-75 yards\u2014T. J. Nellly\nof Sheep Creek, first; Bill Stewart\nof Ymlr, second.\nMarried ladies, 75 yards \u2014 Mrs.\nEthel Shrum, Ymir, first; Mrs. M.\nDrevenak of Salmo, second.\nMarried men, 75 yards \u2014 Mike\nDrevenak of Salmo, first; Gordon\nMoir of Salmo, second.\nRelay, boys 15 and under, 440\nyards\u2014Sherman McDonald and Sidney Roach of Salmo, Jack Hanson\nand Gordon Crulckshank of Erie,\nfirst.\nRelay, girls 13 and under\u2014Shirley\nHall, Beverley Fors, Ruth Olsen\nand Bertha Boyar of Sheep Creek,\nfirst.\nFIELD EVENTS\nRunning broad Jump, girls, 11\nand under\u2014Ruth Olsen of Sheep\nCreek, first; Beverley Fors of Sheep\nCreek, second. 13 ft. 1 in.\nRunning broad .jump, boys, 11\nand under\u2014Bobby Shrum, of Ymir,\nfirst; Mike Rosinkin of Salmo, second. 11 ft. 10 in.\nStanding broad Jump, girls 11\nand under\u2014Ruth Olsen of Sheep\nCreek, first; Elizabeth Shuitoff,\nsecond. 6 ft. 7 ln.\nStanding broad Jump, boys, 11\nand under\u2014Bruce McKay of Ymir,\nfirst; Robert Mbright of Salmo,\nsecond. 6 ft. 6 ln.\nRunning broad jump, boys, 15\nand under\u2014Eddie vulcano ol Nelson, first; Lawrence Bond of Ymir,\nsecond. 13 ft 11 in.\nStanding broad Jump, girls, 15\nand under-Ruth Olsen of Sheep\nCreek, first; Shirley Hall, second.\n6 ft, 10 tn. <\nStanding broad lump, boys, 15\nand under\u2014Leonard Appel of Nelson, first; Eddie Vulcano of Nelson,\nsecond. 11 ft 10 In.\nHigh Jump, glrla, 15 and under\u2014\nMarjorie Cawley of Salmo, first;\nDoreen Gibbon of Salmo, second.\n. ft. ll In.\nHigh jump, boys 15 and under\u2014\nEddie Vulcano of Nelson, first; Jim\nMelatini of Salmo, second. 4 ft. 6 in.\nHigh jump, girls, over 15\u2014Pat\nGuy of Nelson, first; Audrey Peters\nof Salmo, second. Competition end\ned at 4 ft.\nHigh jump, boys, over IS\u2014Bob\nTo Speak In\nKootenays\nHAROLD BROWN\nof Victoria, one of Canada's outstanding orators, will speak at\nKimberley, Cranbrook, Nelson\nand Trail In the period May 31-\nJune 3, as the Victory Loan campaign opens in this district. Now\nretired, he is the former General\nManager of Union Steamship\nLines and a former President of\nthe Vancouver Board of Trade.\nMorrow of Nelson, first; Merlin\n(Nicky) John of Salmo, second. 4 ft.\n11 in.\nNOVELTY EVENTS\nPotato race, boys, 10 and under\u2014\nCharlie Christianson of Ymir, first;\nHarold Gould of Ymir and Bobby\nShrum of Ymir, tied for second.\nPotato race, boys 14 and under\u2014\nJack Hanson of Erie; Bruce McKay\nof Ymir, second.\nSack race, boys, 10 and under\u2014\nAllan Hamberg of Salmo and\nCharles Christianson of Ymir, tied\nfor first; Harold Gould of Ymir,\nsecond.\nSack race, girls, 10 and under\u2014\nDawn McKay of Ymir, first; Lelha\nRowlandson of Erie, second.\nSack race, boys, 14 and under\u2014\nJack Hanson of Erie, first; Sidney\nRoach of Salmo, second.\nSack race, girls, 14 and under\u2014\nEdith Davis of Salmo, first; Ann\nHamberg of Salmo, second.\nThree-legged race, boys, 10 and\nunder \u2014 Charlie Christianson and\nBobby Shram of Ymir, first; Billy\nVoikin of Porto Rico and Harvey\nNeilsen of Nelson, second.\nThree-legged race, girls, 10 and\nunder \u2014 Dawn McKay and Mona\nLykegard of Ymir, first; Lily Nord\nof Ymir and Joan Neilsen of Nelson, second.\nThree-legged race, boys, 14 and\nunder\u2014Nick Soukoroff and Henry\nMoberg of Nelson, first; Jack Hanson of Erie and Sherman McDon^\naid of Salmo, second.\nThree-legged race, girls, 14 and\nunder\u2014Naomi Lindstrom and Mar-\norie Cawley of Salmo, first; Audrey\nPeters and Edith Davis of Salmo,\nand Doreen Gibbon and Mona McDonald of Salmo, tied for second.\nEgg and spoon race, girls, 10 and\nunder\u2014Letha Rowlandson of Erie,\nfirst; Marion Hanson of Erie, second.\nEgg and spoon race, girls, 14 and\nunder\u2014Marjorie Cawley of Salmo,\nfirst; Mona McDonald of Salmo,\nsecond.\nWheelbarrow race, mixed children\u2014Mary Lou Gill and Chester\nChristianson of Ymir, first; Dawn\nMcKay and George Bond of Ymir,\nsecond.\nFEATURE EVENTS\nLog chopping\u2014Clarence Albright\nof Salmo, first; Carl Nystrom of\nYmir, second; William Jones of\nYmir, third; Mike Drevenak of\nSalmo, fourth. 3 min. 36'A sec.\nLog sawing\u2014Norman Burgess and\nGus Flagel of Ymir, first; William\nJones of Ymir and Mike Drevenak\nof Salmo, second; Sonny Burgess\nand Frank Tinney of Ymir, third.\nNail driving, ladies\u2014Mrs. O.\nChristianson of Ymir, first; Mrs. D.\nGibbon of Salmo, second.\nTug-of-war \u2014 Ymir, first; Salmo,\nsecond.\n \",\"\"\" lii'T^ZZ\nNELSON\nBy MRS. M. 3. VIGNEUX\ne Complimenting Mra. Frank\nClaridge, nee Miss Augusta Kahle, a\nrecent bride, and Miss Virginia Day.\nwhose marriage to Frank Wilson\ntakes place this month, residents of\nthe Community gathered Tuesday\nevening at Shirley Hall,, Granite\nRoad. Spring bosaoms gaily decorated the hall, also the dainty bride's\ngift table. Mrs. Claridge was presented with an electric iron, the\nSresentation being made by Mrs,\ni. Cameron on behalf' of Shirley\nfriends, Gifta for the bride-elect\ntook> the form of a miscellaneous\nshower., Presiding at the daintily\narranged tea table were Min. B.\nNorcross and Mrs. D. Cameron.\nThose assisting in serving included\nMrs. F. Ruppel, Mrs, A. Spiers, Mn.\nRobert Pickering, Mrs. C. Anderson,\nMrs. C. Stewart, Mrs. H. Clive, Mi\"\nM. Ruppel, Miss G. Day, Miss. A.\nStewart, Miss J. Andenon and Miss\nM, Spien. Other guests were Mrs.\nR. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. R. Liver-\nsidgc, Mr. and Mrs. W. Calbick, Mr,\nand Mrs. F. Hoedt, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nDuff, Mr. and Mrs. H. Erickson, Mir.\nand, Mrs. J. Rogers Jr., Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. L. Renwick,\nMr. ahd Mn. Rogers St., Robert\nPickering, C A. Andenon, E. Ironmonger, Mr. and Mrs. J. Blazina,\nMias E. Bergstrom, Miss Rose Norcross, Mr.,and Mrs. George Pickering, Mr. and Mrs. \u00a3\u2022 Bergstrom, M\"-\nJ. Wilson, Mrs. J. Muraro, Mr. and\nMrs. Harold Dixon, Mr, and MW. O.\nMcKenzie, Miss H. Irvine, Mr. and\nMrs. R. McKay, Mrs. (1 Irvine, Mn.\nKilberg, Mrs. Smith'^r\u201e Mr. and\nMrs. J. Day.\" Mi*, and Mrs. R. Young,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Spence, Mr. und\nMrs. H. Farenholtz, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nWallach, Mrs, Hendrickson, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Avis, Mr. and Mrs. A. Kahle,\nMr', and Mrs. G. Farenholtz, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nRobinson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Spence,\nSr\u201e George Spence, F. Claridge, F.\nWilson, D. Cameron, C. Stewart, H.\nClive, F. Ruppel and A. Spiers.\nGeorge Spence rendered two vocal\nsolos. Little Miss Madorie Dunstan\nalso entertained with vocal solos\nand dancing.\ne Mrs. W. Walkley of South Slocan visited Nelson Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022 R. H. Harrison of Cranbrook,\nwho with Mrs. Harrison waa in Trail\nSaturday attending the marriage ol\nhis son, spent yestemiay in Nelson\nattending the Knights of Columbus\ninitiation. He was accompanied by\nhis son. Rev. W. Harrison of Our\nLady of Perpetual Help Parish,\nTrail.\ne Honoring Mrs. Lerlgers' 76\nbirthday anniversary, Mn. J. E.\nDobbie enta-tained Friday afternoon at a small tea at her home on\nCarbonate Street when the guests\nincluded Mrs. D. A. Graham, Miss\nIda Graham, Mrs. E. Y. Brake, Mrs.\nJohn Speer, Mrs. J. A. Ewing and\nMrs. H. Emery.\ne Mrs. W. Wlnstanley returned\nto her home at Crescent Valley Saturday. She was accompanied by her\nson, Peter, who is on holiday from\nthe Prairie.\nand sifter, Mr. and Mn. Max Desbrisay of Trail Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall was a\nweekend visitor ln town.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Herman were in town Irom Ainsworth\nFriday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Errol Wright, Baker\nStreet, spent the weekend in Grand\nForks with her brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and Mn. Norman McKay.\n\u2022 Henry Hayes of Crescent Bay\nvisited town at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mn. J. Nichol of Procter (pent\nFriday in the City.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Burkinshaw, who\nteaches at Erie, was in town Friday.\n\u2022 Ma. B. I. Baker of Bonnington\nvisited Nelaon at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. McGawy of Hall\nvisited Nelson at the weekend.\ne T. Caufield of Fernie attended\nthe Knights ol Columbus initiation\nyesterday.\n\u2022 J. A. McDonald, MiU Street,\nreturned Friday after a week at the\nCoast.\n\u2022 Miss Edna McKenzie, who\nteaches at Sheep Creek, spent the\nweekend In town at the nome of\nher parnts, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McKenzie, Victoria Street.\n\u2022 Mn. Walker of. Balfour visited Nelson Friday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Medwid, Rosemont, were weekend visitors In It-ail.\n\u2022 Mn. Sinclair, who teaches in\nYmir, visited Nelson at the weekend.\ne R. G. Elliott oi South Slocan\nspent Friday ln town.\ne Mrs. Helmerson of Sheep\nCreek was among City shoppers\nFriday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. George Mara of\nRossland spent the weekend in Nelson, the former a delegate to Ihe\nKnights of Columbus initiation yes\nterday.\ne W. Posetoluk of the Alpine\nmine at Sitkum Creek visited Nelson at the weekend.\ne Mrs. D. Bruce and Miss Phyllis\nAthey spent the holiday with friends\nin Grand Forks.\ne Mr. and Mra. J. Jerome of\nCrescent Valley visited Nelson Friday.\ne Miss Rose Norcross, Granite\nRoad, had as weekend guest Miss\nIvy Ellis of Oliver.\ne Mn. J. Ferguson was in town\nfrom Sunshine Bay Friday.\ne T. Stephens left Saturday far\nthe Coast after a couple of weeks\nspent in Nelson and District.\ne Mrs. A. Wiley of Bonnington\nvisited Nelson at the weekend.\ne Mr. and Mn. W. R. Dunwoody\nhad as guest at their Cresoent Bay\nhome Mrs. R. H. Hassard of Creston, who has returned.\ne Miss Ruby Palmer, who\nteaches at Crescent Valley, spent\nthe weekend in town.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the City Friday\nincluded Mrs. Chandler of Kaslo\nand her son Billy.\nMrs. C. I. Archibald, Stanley\nEDMONTON MAN  DIES\nEDMONTON, May 25 (CP). -\nOrville Severson, 34 plumber at\nthe Royal Alexandra Hospital here,\ndied in the Institution half an hour\nafter he either fell or jumped from\nthe rear box of a moving truck.\nKimberley were weekend visitors\nin Nelson, the faimer a delegate to\nthe Knights of Columbus convention.\ne Miss Margaret (Babs) Madden\nand Miss Vedia Smith spent the\nweekend in Trail at the home of the\nlatter's parents.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Blackburn of Weyburn, Sask., who have\nbeen guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas\nGerman, Hoover Street, for a few\ndays, left Friday for the Coast.\n\u2022 Harry Lonsdale, Great Northern Freight agent, Vancouver, spent\nthe weekend in Nelson. He was accompanied by Mrs. Lonsdale.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Philip Rahal,\nJosephine Street, have as guests,\nMr. and Mrs. William Turner of\nFernie, who will be spending the\nnext fortnight in Nelson and Trail.\nMr. Turner attending the Knights\nof Columbus Initiation here yesterday while he and Mrs. Turner\nwill attend the Eucharistic Congress\nin Trail this weekend and the marriage of their son, William Joseph\nTurner, and Miss Helen Scanlan of\nNelson, Monday next, June 2, at\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate.\ne C. J. Hughes, Vernon Street,\nleft yesterday to attend a convention\nin Vancouver.\ne R. A. Aldersmith, Observatory\nStreet, leaves today to relieve in the\nCustoms at Midway and Carlson for\nthe next six weeks.\ne D. McNaughton has returned\nfrom a visit to the Coast.\ne Rev. Cattone of Trail attended\nthe Knights of Columbus initiation\nin Nelson yesterday.\ne Miss Nellie Dawes spent the\nweekend with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Dawes of South Slocan.\ne A. M. Noxon, Kerr Apartments,   visited  his  brother-in-law\nSalmo Mother and Son\nStreet, had as weekend guest her\nMr. and Mrs. T. J. Sweeney ot <.\"#\u25a0\u00ab. Mrs. Worley and her baby\nof Trail.\ne Recent visitors ln town Included Mr. and Mrs. W. Gibson of Kaslo.\ne M. Gormlfy was in Nelion\nfrom Sheep Creek at the weekend.\ne Mr. and Mns. J. C. Gilker sjnd\nfamily of Bonnington visited town\nFriday.\ne Shoppers in Nelson included\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr of Longbeach.\ne Mn. 3. Marsaand ot South\nSlocan viiited town Friday.\ne Recent shoppers in the CJ'y\nincluded Mrs. Shrum of Ymir.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Cummins, Terrace Apartments, spent\nyesterday in Trail at the home of\nthe latter's brother-in-law and slater, Mr. and Mrs. Max Desbrisay.\ne Mrs. Harry Johnson and young\ndaughter, Vancouver Street, Rosemont, have returned from Caitlegar\nwhere they spent a week with Mn.\nEverett Brasch.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Lennon of\nTrail attended the Knights of Columbus convention yesterday.\ne Mrs. E. J. McGregor of Bonnington shopped in the City Friday.\ne H. W. Colgan was ln town as\na delegate to the Knights of Columbus initiation yesterday.\ne A. Stard was in town from\nSheep Greek at the weekend.\ne Shoppers in the City Friday\nIncluded Mrs. M. J. Baker of Ainsworth.\ne s, Mrs. O. M. Smith of Salmo visited Nelson Friday.\ne Visitors-in town at the weekend included J. Willis of Farron.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Walley McPhail\nof Corra,Linn and their children\nvisited Nelion Friday.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. J. Rowley of Harrop\nspent Friday in Nelson.\ne 5, T. Qldham of Vernon Is a\nCity visitor.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town Friday Included Mr. and Mn. Servoldt of\nBonnington.\ne Miss Doris Weaver entertained last week at the home of her\nsister, Mrs. A. B. McLeod, 624 Latimer Street, Winners of games and\ncontests were Mrs. C. Dunstall, Miss\nAlice Sellln, Miss Junice Kraft and\nMiss Mona Graham. Other guests\nwere Miss Margaret Bingham, Mill\nHilda Irvine, Miss Edith Goldsmith,\nMiss Iris Kraft, Miss Gwen Dunstall,\nMiss Alice Ek, Mrs. Charles Leggett,\nMiss Betty Hardy, Mrs. F. Kellogg,\nMiss Jean Fisher, Mrs. A. Bradshaw,\nMiss Satenig Papazian, Miss Mary\nTalbot and Miss Margaret Lang.\ne Mr. and Mn. Cameron StDenis\nof Spokane visited Mr. and Mn. D.\nStDenis, Kerr Apartments, Saturday.\nWoman Works\nfor After-War Life\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Social environment must be the basis on which\nreconstruction is carried out after\nthe war. according to Mrs. Her-\nmione Hichens, only woman member of Lord Keith's consultative panel on reconstruction.\nLessons of the last war must be\nremembered when the new England is built, said Mn. Hichens, 46-\nyear-old mother of six children\nwhose husband was killed ln a London air raid.\n\"Houses then were thrown up\nwithout consideration ot how people were to live in them,\" she said.\n''Now that we have time to plan for\nthe future, a definite policy can be\nworked out on the basis of health,\ncomfort and space. I should like\nto see small towns spring up In the\nbombed areas with their own club,\nhall, cinema and other social buildings.\"\nA nurse ln the last war. Mn.\nHichens was mentioned ln dispatches and received the Royal Red Cross.\nThe famoui bazaars of Baghdad\narc conducted much the same as In\nBiblical days.\nMRS. H. WILSON AND SON DICK.\n\u2014DaUy News Photo.\ns May Have\nCaused Bomber lo\nCancel (lty Dip\nClouds which, though they did\nnot block out the sun may have\nlooked dangerous to the pilot, were\nbelieved to be responsible for the\nfailure of the torch-carrying R. C.\nA. F. bomber to dip and circle over\nTrail and Nelson on Sunday. The\nbomber was scheduled to arrive\nover Trail at 11:43 and circle over\nthe City until 12, and to arrive\nover Nelaon at 12:10, circling until\n12:23.\nA large plane which flew over\nNelson about 11:40, following the\ncoune of T.C.A. planei, was believed to be the bomber. It was\nbelow the clouds part of the time,\nand in them part of the time, particularly toward the Eastern limits\nof the valley In which Nelson is\nsituated. Trail saw no plane, not\nbeing on the T.C.A. course.\nInquiries by the Nelson Dally\nNews at the Coast as to why the\nplane failed to circle over this City\nbrought the reply that: 'Torch flight\nofficials say the pilot of the bomber\nwas to decide whether to circle the\ntowns or not. Cannot say why not\ncircled unless weather or other circumstances unfavonble.\"\nFainting Students\nOnly \"Casualties\"\nat Torch Ceremony\nExcitement and the strain oi\nstanding still during hot, close\nweather at Nelson's parade and\ntorch ceremony Saturday caused\nseveral cases of fainting, but there\nwere no serious casualties, and no\nserious illness.\nDr. F. P. Sparks, Medical Health\nOfficer, and a number of St. John\nAmbulance Association first aiders\nhad a busy time of it toward the\nend of the ceremony as some of\nthe students, both boys and girls\nkeeled over.\"\nFRUITVALE LADIES DO\nWORK FOR WAR VICTIMS\nFRUITVALE, B. C. - Mrs. F.\nW. Cole was hostess to the Ladles'\nFriendly Club, at her home Thursday evening. The evening was spent\nin quilting and' other sewing for\nair raid victims. Mrs. W. Veitchl\nwon the weekly conteit. Miss Blomfleld assisted the hostess in serving refreshments.\nThose present were Mrs. W. T.\nCole, Mrs. F. M. Barrett, Mrs. W.\nVeitchi, Mrs. L. Ayces, Mrs. W.\nWilliams, Miss B. V, Blomfleld,\nMn. Harold Andenon and Mrs. B.\nE. Johnson.\n7000 AT CELEBRATION\nKELOWNA, B.C., May 25 (CP)\u2014\nSeven thousand people crowded\nKelowna Athletic Park here last\nnight for a torch ceremony which\nmarked the opening of the Victory\nLoan campaign and climaxed a\ndawn to dark Empire Day celebration.\nW-\nPAGE   FIVE\nVREENAM\n\u2022    FURNITUMC0.   *^\nThe House of Furniture Values\nPhene 115 Eagle Block\nSave on\nSummer\nFurniture\nSee Our Window\nNaval Band Will\nPlay In Nelson,\nTrail Next Week\nOpening of the Victory Loan\ncampaign in Nelson and Trail witt\nbe signalled by a naval band.\nNelson headquarters for the campaign have been advised that the\nband will arrive at Nelson Sunday\nnight, travelling in a special car\nattached to the train from the\nCoast. It is hoped to arrange a\nconcert Sunday night.\nThe band will play in Nelson on\nMonday morning when the torch\nflag is unfurled at a campaign-\nopening ceremony.\nIt Is expected to go to Trail the\nseme day to assist in the opening\nof the campaign in that city.\nThe oil wells of Iraq and Iran together can produce 20,000,000 tona\nof oil or more annually.\nHappy Rossland\nRaby\nTo mark the day that he was\nsix months old, this young man\nhad this photo taken. He is\nthe son of Mr. and Mrs. Lindgren, Columbia Avenue, Rossland.\nI wonder why you were satisfied\nwith anything else when you\nsee Rinso whiteness\n0 If you want to see real whiteness, take a look at Rinso-\nwashed clothes, and compare them with the results you get\nfrom any other washing method. You'll realize at once that\nRinso gives more than a white wash, it gives the whitest wash!\nWhatever your washing experience\nhas been, you'll be amazed at the\ndazzling whiteness you get with      lej\nRinso. And, once you've seen how      \u25a0    '\nbeautiful Rinso makes your wash,\nyou'll never again be satisfied with\nanything but Rinso forvowclothes!\nSo don't forget Rinso for your next\nwashday.   For greater economy.\nask for the new Giant package.\nA le-it, proCriKl\n\"^\u2022*-^ \u25a0%\u25a0___!$\n PAOI SIX\n\u2014NILION DAILY NIW* NILION. K. C-MONDAY MORNINQ. MAY tt. 1M1\nMam Batlg Nmbh ? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nEstablished AprU 23,1802.\nBritish Colum-ia'i\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished even morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED 266 Baker St. Nelion. British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMONDAY, MAY 26, 1941.\nNorwegians Revive Hair\nBobbing\n\"The Nazis have found It necessary\nto order the arrest of anyone cutting\nthe hair of a Norwegian girl 'of friendly disposition towards German',\" says\na London cable describing the boycott\nwhich the Norwegian people are carrying out systematically toward all\nthings connected with the German\n\"occupation.\"\nThe forcible hair bobbing Is of\ncourse one minor manifestation of the\nboycott, which the Germans receive\nwith naive surprise. It Is the universal testimony of all observers, ln all\nthe steam-rollered countries, that the\nGermans are amazed that the temporarily subjugated peoples do not love\nthem.\n\"Darling, why 4o you hate me?\"\nthe villain in the old melodrama u;ied\nto expostulate to the trembling heroine, whom he had thrown from a cliff,\noverturned from a boat, bound in a\nburning house, tried to saw in two\nwith a bandsaw, and attempted to\nannihilate in other unpleasant ways.\nHer failure to reciprocate his burning\npasBion was ever a mystery to him.\nThe Germans seem equally psychic.\nHowever, what inspired this disquisition was the item about protecting Norwegian girls who were \"of\nfriendly disposition to the Germans.\"\nMany Canadian wa? veterans can\nremember how, after the Armistice,\nBelgian girls could be seen in Brussels\nfleeing mobs, who were after their\nhair. Most such girls had been walking out with German officers or otherwise been conspicuous, and when the\nArmistice came they made a volte face.\nIn many instances girls who welcomed the Canadian troops had a few days\nearlier been dangling around the Germans. A good many budding romances\nwere chilled when observant and contemptuous neighbors passed along the\nfacts to the men concerned.  .\nFairweather Norwegian'girls'will\nprobably continue to walk out with\nGerman soldiers or with members of\nthe Norwegian Nazi party, but if they\ndo they will be taking the risk of shortened tresses, despite the measures employed against those accused of presenting these testimonials of the community's contempt.\nBut the great majority of Norwegians do not seem to be of the fair-\nweather type of character. They \"are\nin the front line\" to help defeat the\nnation that in the pursuit of its mega-\nlomaniacal ambition, repudiated without a moment's notice its solemn treaties and rolled its war chariot in conquest of a peaceful country it was\npledged to protect.\nToo Much of a Good Thing\nOne place where the recent abnormal rainfall helped out was the Spokane Water Works.\n\"Due to continued showers,\" read\nan item in the Spokesman-Review of\nMay 18, \"city water pumpage Friday\ndropped to 19,603,100 gallons, the lowest for one day in a year, it was reported by Water Superintendent Lindsay. This was about 10,000,000 gallons under the normal Winter usage.\nThis discrepancy in total pumpage was\nsaid to be due to the fact that all\nreservoirs were full, and the pumps\nhad to shut down to keep things from\nrunning over.\"\nIn the Kootenay the large majority of the communities have gravity\nwater supplies and so have no pumping costs to consider. Exceptions in\nthis District include Trail, Tadanac\nand Castlegar,\nJust now what this district appreciates is the sunshine normal to thia\ntime of year, to bring on the strawberry and other crops in an orderly\nmanner.\nWords of Challenge\n\"Each person in tlie state must be interested, upright, intelligent if democracy is to\nsurvive and flourish. The greatness of the\nstate cannot in the long run be greater than\nthe charucler of the average citizen.\"\u2014Dr.\nII, J Cody, President of the University ol\nToiono,\nOpen to any reader. Names of parsons asking,\nquestions will not bo published.\nJ. A. C, Slocan City\u2014Could a person taka\ncourt action agalnit a perion receiving Uit\nDependent'! Allowance, on a bill which ll\nbeing paid when money is available?\nYei, court action may ba taken, but no\npayment trom the Dominion Government can\nbe garnisheed.\nB. P., Trail\u2014Ii it possible tor a Canadian born\ncouple to be married ln the United Statu,\nand lt io, what credentials ara neceiiary\nto croii the line?\nUnder the American regulations tt would\nbe neceiiary tor both to have panports. Under\nthe rulei ol the Canadian Foreign Exchange\nControl Board it would be necessary to obtain\na permit to pau the Canadian Cuitomi outward. As to obtaining U. S. fundi ur a visit\nto the U. S., tor thli purpoie It would necessary to consult your bank which Is an agent\nof the Foreign Exchange Control Board, ahd\nexplain  all  the   circumstances.\nB.G., Nelson\u2014If possible pleaie tell me where\nI can get a physical ihowlng ln reasonable detail the mountains and valleys ln\nE C?\nGeological Branch, Department of Mines\nand Natural Ruourcu, Ottawa.\nM. S., Rossland\u2014To settle an argument, pleue\ntell me what la conildered a real Canadian? My parenti were both born In Canada, also my grandparents on my mother'i\ntide. My father'! people were born In Ireland. Could I be classed u a Canadian?\nMy husband was bom in Canada, but hli\nparenti were both born In the old country\n(Germany). Bow would he be classed?\nBoth of you are very definitely real Canadians. But. for census purpoiei you both\nhave the nationality ot your father!, which\ngoes by race, not by country of birth, though\nof course the two usually coincide,\nReader, Trail\u2014Will you pleaie tell me what\nthe salaries are for Premier MacKenzie\nKing and the Provincial Premiers and Sir\nEdward Beatty?\nPremier Mackenzie King recelvu *1S,000\na year; Premier ot Britiah Columbia, Hon. T.\nD. Pattullo, $9,000; Premier ot Alberta, Hon.\nWilliam Aberhart, $8,500; Premier of Sukatchewan, Hon. W. J. Patterion, $7,500; Premier of Manitoba, Hon. John Bracken, $7,050;\nPremier of Ontario, Hon. M. F. Hepburn, $10\u00b0,-\n575; Premier of Quebec, Hon. A Godbout,\n$14,000; Premier cf Nova Scotia, Hon. A. S.\nMacMillan, $7,000. Sessional indemnities are\nalso allowed, each legislature setting ltl own\namounts. Thui Premier King hu $4000 u\nM.P. for Prince Albert, and Premier Pattullo,\n$200 as M.LA. for Prince Rupert.\nThe salary paid to Sir Edward Beatty Is\na matter of private concern between the Canadian Pacific Hallway and Sir Edward Beatty.\nDust of Gold\n\"I will go down NOW and iee.\"\nGen. 18:21.\nProcrastination Is a sin that molt of fli\nare familiar witt. To do the thingi NOW\nthat need doing, not only brings Joy but\noften saves us a sorrow.\nSomeday we will speak, we uy,\nLittle words we left unsaid\nThat might brighten someone's way\u2014\nSomeone's way that's dark initead,\nSome kind word to help the weak.\nSomeday\u2014someday\u2014we will speak.\nSomeday we will ipeak, we lay,\nOpportunity hM fled,\nGone the friendl of long ago-\nNeedless are the words unsaid,\nFor as Time computes her sums,\nSomeday, someday never coimsl\nPress Comment\nTROUSER CUFFS\nA report from London states that man'i\ntrousers are to be made without cuffi u a\nmatter of wartime economy.\nMen's clothes are almost strictly utilitarian, and the cuff around the bottom of the\nlegs has always seemed to us a useless gesture to fashion. Some Beau Brummel must\nhave started the idea and the maises followed\nsuit, although wc never saw any advantage\nln having suits made that way. In fact, we\nrecall a particularly disagreeable experience\nwhich befell us one blustery, wintry night\nowing to the unnecessary cuff. We dropped\nthe key of the front door and u it could not\npossibly have skilled more than a few feet\nfrom our feet we spent an unconscionable\nlength of time trying to find lt on the floor.\nBaffled, and puzzled, we gave up the search,\nand a neighbor got us ln via an upper window\nwhich was fortunately unfutened. A week\nlater the clean and press man returned the\nkey; it had dropped into the cuff.\nThe cuffs of one pair of pants do not require much cloth, but If there are about 20,-\n000,000 men and boys ln the United Kingdom\nwith an average of three pairs of pants each,\nwhich is probably an under-estlmate, 00,000,000\npairs of cuffs should be equivalent to several\nmillion yards of cloth. Elimination would also\nget rid of an accumulation of dust Inside them,\ntoo.\nAnd If reform is made to avoid wute, what\nabout doing away with those useless buttons\non the coat sleeves?\u2014St. Thomas, Ont, Tlmu\nJournal.\nWASTI FROM WEEDS\nIn their haste to produce, Canadian farmen\nshould not lose sight of one Important factor\nwhich, neglected, can mean serious economic\nloss both now nnd in the post-war period.\nThey should not relax their efforti to keep\ndown noxious weeds.\nWeed control Is something that takes time.\nIt Is an activity which might be pasied over\nbecause of the urge to use every available\nminute to grow crops. Such neglect, however,\nis poor economy. The last war, when weeds\nwere largely allowed to run riot, proved this.\nThe Dominion did not recover from the effects ot this carelessness until years after the\nwar ended.\nThe Ontario Department of Agriculture ii\nconcentrating on this phase of farming, and\nis stressing on farmeri In all districts the need\nfor energetic weed control measures. Tb*\nagriculturists themselves must co-operate by\ndoing their utmost to keep the pests out et\nthe fields and otf the roadsides\u2014Windsor.\nOnt, Daily Star.\nWar - 25 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Press\nMAY 26, 1918.\u2014Bulgarian troopi, lupported by German cavalry, seized Fort Rupel\nand other Greek frontier posti. French repulsed German attack before Fort Douaumont\non the right bank ot River Mouse.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetten may be publlihtd over \u25a0 Rem de\nplume, birt the eetual name of the wtlter\nmuit fee Myen to the Editor is evldenes ef\ngood faith.  Anonymous letters go In Ul*\nLetters miy be published over a nom de\n'the\nivlde\n\u2014t-r_-    (\u2022    \u25a0\nwaste paper baiktt\nGets Mennonite to Admit a\nRighteous War Is Scriptural\nTo the Editor oi th* Dally Newi:\nSir\u2014In theie trying daya ot cbaoe ud\nthroei, many conscientious Christians ask; \"Is\n1! lawful for Christians to pay' tribute to\nCaesar even to th* taking ot lite upon the\nbattle field?\" Ih* aniwer back, by cogent\nscriptural proof, determine their decision and\ncourse ot action. For, say they, if \"Joining up\"\nhu scriptural unction, I'l) join at one*.\nThis recalls ta mind a discussion I had\nwith a pious Mennonite, whose aversion for\nviolence and bloodshed, under a)l circumstances, la well known. Even tt wit* and\nchildren, father and mother are attacked by\nunscrupulous brutes with death dialing weapons, he itlll consider! himself bound to desist from violent Interference, for all war is\nmurder u he understands it.\nThen I uked him If all law officers, who\nresort to force, and even dispatch ferocious\nrobbers for the safety of people, homu ond\nproperty, are alio they murderen ot deepest\ndie?\"\n\"O nol All government Is of God for the\nvery purpou ot enforcing law and order and\nto suppress the lawless criminals and gangsters,\" he replied,\n\"Then, according to four theology, It la\nscrlpturally lawful to suppress criminal!,\ngangsters and rioters by force ot armi, but\nnot to arrest and suppress a lawless nation\nthat gave gangotering. Il lt becauie the former\nare comparatively tew and tbe nation many,\nthat makei you think nations have the right\nto violate lawi of righteousness and Justice,\nthat Individuals and imall groupi have not?\"\nI uked.\nHe did not think lt wu the number; but\ntheir motives, that counted betore God.\nThli view ii alio in keeping with God'i\ncharge to the Israelite nation ln the Old Testament, charging them not to wer for conquest,\nbut to enforce juitlce and righteousness, tint\nin their own lend, and then on lawless neighbors. It need be. Violation ot thla law caused\nIsrael's defeat at Kadesh Barnea on Canaan's\nborder. The Canaanltet' iniquity had ruched\nlti highest point There wu not en unoccupied room in their heard that wu not\nfull ot lawlessness and sin, u the Sodonites\nwere. Therefore they were under Judgment\nto be destroyed by a righteous army under\nJoshua, but Uie \"righteous army\" wu defeated\nfor the Israelites sought to poueu their land\nby a iplrlt of greed and grab, Initead of\nrighteousness.\nTo that he made no reply, but added:\n\"If armed force hu scriptural sanctions under\ncertain circumstances, then why did Jesus\nforbid Peter to use hla sword on the night of\nHis betrayal? It seems to me, Jesus'. cause\nwu Just if ever there wu one, but Jesus not\nonly forbade Peter to fight, but added the\npenalty for doing so, laying, \"He that taketh\nthe iword ahall perish by the iword.\" To my\nmind that comei very near forbidding the\nuse ot force, and if it doesn't, I don't see way,\"\nhe Insisted.\n\"For the very reasons Jesus pointed out,\nthat If ha frustrated arrest how could (he\nscriptures concerning Him be fulfilled that\nforetold Hii sacrificial death upon the cross\nto uve mankind tram the ruin and perdition\nthat sin had plunged them Into? Second,\nhad Juus opposed arrest, 12 legions of angels\nwould have slain all Hli enemies. Then how\nwould the scriptures have been fulfilled?\"\nI uked, and added: \"Surely, you know many\nold soldiers, who fought bravely on many\nhard fought battle fieldi, who didn't die by\nthe iword, conclusive proof that you have\nyour subjects mixed. You overlook that the\nJewish Sanhedrln, which unt the officers and\nsoldiers to arrest Jesus and bring Him to\ntrial before It had then become a Roman\nCourt with authoriUu to impose aU sentences abort of tbe death sentence. Therefore, had Jesus and Hli followers resisted\nJesus' arrest, Jesus thereby would have violated tbe law. He enjoined upon ell men,\nto be subject to the powers that be, for they\nare of God.' Therefore Jesus wu, by Hli own\nenjoined law, obligated to submit to arrest and\ntrial before that tribunal. Peter, had he persisted in fighting them, would thereby Incriminate himielf, by opposing a Roman court\norder, whoie iword ot itate would pursue him\nuntil lt got him.\n\"WeU, that sounds convincing,\" he admitted\n\"but what wU you do with Luke S: 14, 'And\nhe (John) uld unto them (toldien), \"Do\nviolence to no man, neither accuse any falsely,\nand be content with your wagei'? Seems to\nme that passage comes dole to forbidding\nviolence In every form,\" he added with a\nsmile.\n\"Yei, ln a way, I answered, \"but lt also\nenjoins on soldiers to be satisfied with their\n(Government paid) wagu. In saying that,\nJohn thereby recognized soldien' right to\ntake their wages for servlcei rendered. Thue,\nthey would not be entiUed to, nor could conscientiously take, according to scripture, unleu they did their duty.\n\"Therefore I can come to no otter conclusion that the Interpretation that the martyrs and reformers ot the pait ages put upon\nlt. Namely, that the violence John referred\nto wu the toldien' way ot extorting money\nand means from the clvU population of the\ncountries they held ln subjection, and wu\nthe practice John referred to, and forbad\nthem to do,\" I replied.\nAnyhow that explanation uemed to satisfy my friend, that Joining up ia scrlpturally\nall right\nP. P. GRUNNET.\nNelson, B.C, Hay 22, 1M1.\nPRONUNCIATION\nDictionary makers have changed their\nminds on the pronunciation of. a word tbat\nIs coming Into more and more common use.\nIt li sadism.\n\"Twenty yean ago,\" aayi The Baltimore\nSun, \"when lt wu a term restricted to psycho-\npathology, Webster gave lt no other pronunciation than with tbe long 'a' u ln 'made'; Funk\nand Wagnalls also preferred that pronunciation, but permitted the short 'a' u a secondary\nchoice. Today, however, Webiter hu turned\ncompletely around, and allows no other pronunciation than the ihort \"; u early u 1930\nFunk and Wagnalls had abandoned Uie long\n'a', giving preference to the ihort but allowing alio the broad 'a' u In 'art'.\"\nTHI WORST NOISE\nAccording to scientists who have been\nmeasuring noises to discover which U hsrdeit\non th* human ear, top plac* li shared by artificial lightning and tte blut of a locomotive\nwhistle, each registering IU decibels. Tb* roar\nof e lion measured at a distance of two fut\nscored 115 decibels, but this wu equalled by a\nsea-lion and a cockatoo. The bellowing of a\nbull at the nme distance and tte trumpeting ot an elephant icored 110 decibels. The\nloudest human tound wu the voice of e profeuionil berker (109), but a band of girl pipen blowing full blast could only register 87\ndecibels.\nWI^II\u00abIIWMW:ltflWii,.\u00abil]|illW.I-i1l,li\n'    ll     ll I      I H\nTODAY'S News Pictures\n). .manMil,*'.\"\nNelsonites Mast\n'\u00bbi';ti ll^,i\"fl,01i^W\u00bbIIWUi>jlill.*stT'\u00bbl, i '-.'Iii ',\">\u25a0;'\u25a0<'\n'Ml \". '    ',\nSi-\nCeremony to Hedge Loyalty ond Allegiance\nMassed at Recreation Grounds. Cadets, Veterani Guard and ichool children formed three sides of square around platform, whil* crowd\ni Jammed Into grandstand or took up places On banks.\n, Griffith* carrying Union Jack at head of parade, followed o_\norch party consisting ot Corp. T. Langford, carrying torch, Pte. C.\nDuff and Pte. G. Talbot. C. B. Garland, Parade Marshal, immediately\nbehind torch party.\nParade at East End of Baker Street. City Council Immediately behind\ntorch party and Mr, Garland\u2014DaUy News Photoi.\n74 Today\nGolf Winner\nParade along Baker Street, Union Jack and torch leading, en route\nto ceremony.\nCrete Bottle Rages on\n<V '^\n\\\u00bb   \/h|\n_m\\_m_W'\nii\n!_____\u00a3&\nt'9\nW\"r''\nH^*s\/\"<\/\n;1 \u25a0\u25a0mmWrni'tt:..:.-..,.....,\u25a0.:\n\u00a3\u00a32:1\nPaul Runyan, U. S. golf profer\nsional, who yesterday won th*\nGoodall round-robin golf tournament at New York.\nEconomic Adviser\nFollowing days of air oombardment German\nparachute troops were dropped on tte Island of\nCrete in an attempt to gain a footing oo tbe Greek\nstronghold where parts of the Greek armies, alrfcd\nby Empire troops are continuing the fight against\nthe invaders. This was announced by British nead-\n, quarten ln Cairo, who also asserted that the parachutists had \"been-accounted for\". The town and\nharbor of Canea u seen from tte air are shown at\ntop. Below German 'chutists are pictured being\ndropped from big transports. The Crete attack is\nconsidered a possible rehearsal for parachute attacks against Britain.\nIsadore Lubln, U. S. Commits\nsloner of labor statistics, who hli\nbeen called In by President\nFranklin D. Roosevelt as his eco-\nnomic adviser on the $7,000,000,*\n000 lease-lend program. Whilt\nLubln'd appointment was not announced officially, it was learned\nhe will head a division of eco-\nnomic defences, designed It\ncheck and counter the Axis bajjei\ndrive for world trade.\n\u2014-- .\t\n\u2014\u2014\n wt     \"t.-a^T\n(lasses Here Are\nCarrying on Well\nInspector Slates\nNelson High School metal work\nclass and the war emergency evening class at the Junior High were\n\"carrying on weU,\" H. A. Jonei of\nVancouver, Department of Technical Education Inspector, told the\nSchool Board Friday night Mr.\nJones has been Inspecting such\nclasses throughout the Interior ln\nthe past few weeks.\nGraduates of the three-month\nemergency training courses at Kelowna, Penticton and Vernon ace\nnow being trained as metal experts\nin a producUon ichool at Vancouver,\nhe said, and eventually they will be\nplaced in war industries.\nPurchase of a precision drill at s\ncost of about $75, half of which\nwould be paid by the Department,\nwas recommended.\n-*\u25a0*** \u2014tr-*.* Mirvr mrw* **u\u00abo*. t, Stjuoww wmm_, may ft \u00ab*.\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\"\u25a0\"*.\nNelson Cadet Corps\nAre Rehearsing for\nInspection June 2\nNelson's two Cadet Corps, the\nHigh School and the Junior High\n\u25a0School, are holding daily rehearsals\nat the Recreation Grounds in preparation for inspection scheduled\nJune 2. In that Inspection they will\nbe competing for the Governor-\nGeneral's award.\nResignation junior\nHigh School Teacher\nAccepted by Board\nResignation of Miss Ruth McAlpine, senior home economics teacher on the Junior High School staff,\nFriday night was accepted with regret M the School Board. A letter\nof appreciation for her fine service\nduring her four years on the staff\nWill be sent the teacher.\nMias McAlpine is to be married.\nNakusp Recreation\nAssociation Lines Up\nJuly 1 st Celebration\nNAKUSP, B. C. - At the annual\nmeeting of the Nakusp Recreation\nAssociation held In Nakusp, D. Hum-\nmon was elected President, G. Mcintosh Vice-President, W. Jupp\nSecretary, A. Stanley Treasurer and\nR. McCulloch Gcoundiman.\nPlans for the July 1st celebration,\ntn mnual event in Nakusp were\ndiscussed it length, Conveners of\ntbe various committees for the day\nwere named as follows:\nFinance, A. Stanley; Advertising,\nJ. Ruihton; Parade, Misi N. John-\nton; Sports (children's) Rev. F. W-\npigllsh; Sporst, (adult) J. Dolman;\nBaseball, R. White; Aquatic sports,\nG. W. M. Hakeman; Gates. J.\nMotherwell; Booth and concessions,\nR. Islip; Prizes, G. Mcintosh; Dance\nG. W. M Hakeman.\nSTUDENTS HEALTH\nGOOD BOARD TOLD\nHealth of Nelson students general\nb was \"good.\" Dr. F. P. Sparks,\nMedical Health Officer, told the\nSchool Board Friday night. There\n(till remained a few cases of mumps\nand measles, he utd, but these\nwould be cleared up when the contacts became known.\nGrader Added\nto Creston Fruit\nj. Warehouse\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 Another three\niecUon CuUer rotary grader is being added to the warehouse equipment of Creston Co-operative Fruit\nExchange. It will be ot Uke capacity to the machine at present In\nuse and with it in operation the\nExchange will be able to pack 3300\nboxes in the. eight hour day.\nDecision to make this quite considerable investment came after a\nsurvey of the past season's operations had disclosed that apples going into cold storage with the minimum of waiting in the orchard and\npacking shed were very much better keepers than apples that were\nslow in getting Into refrigeration.\nThis is particularly true of the Mcintosh Red which constitutes more\nthan 50. per cent of the (Jreston Valley crop.\nImmediate cold storage proved\nequally beneficial with the Delicious, as well as pears,\nThere is ample room ln the Ex-\nthange warehouse for the grades:\nInstaUation, which la proceeding.\nThe 1940 payroll at the Exchange\nfor packers, grader help, and warehouse workers In receiving the fruit\nas well as car loading was $14,947.\nC. M. Gr S. Experts\nView Mayflower\nTRAIL, B.C., May 25\u2014Diamond\ndrilling at the Mayflower Mine,\nRossland, is proving very satisfac\ntory.\nWith permission of L. R. Smith,\nPenticton, owner of the mine group,\nJeologists from the Consolidated\nlining & Smelting Company of\nCanada are now inspecting the property.\t\nSmith to Be Boswell\nDelegate to Robson\nBOSWELL, B. C. - At a general meeting of Uie Boswell and\nDUtrict Farmers Institute, President\nA. Mackie was in the chair. A\nconsiderable amount of correspondence was dclt with,\nB. H. Smith was appointed delegate to the meeting of the West\nKootenay Farmers' Institute at Rob-\ncon June 5,\nExchg.\nDr. Kania Will\nSpeak, Greenwood\nTRAIL, B.C., May 25-Dr. Joseph\nKinia. Diitrict Organiser of the\nDominion War Loan Committee,\nwill address the Greenwood Board\nof Trade Wednesday evening.\nTRUSTEES TO BE DINNER\nGUESTS OF CIRLS' CLASS\nInvitation to the Board members\nand thei\u00abr wives to be dinner guests\not the Grade XI Home Economics\nClass at the Junior High School\nTuesday at 6:00 p.m. was accepted\nby the Nelson School Board Friday\nevening. This dinner is an annual\nevent\nr\n'\nt&jtb\nM\nDOMINION OF CANADA\nVICTORY BONDS\nME BETTER THAN CASH\n\u00ab\nIt will be far better to invest money in the forthcoming issue\nof Victory Bonds than to keep it in cask Buyers of Victory\nBonds during the last war will tell you that. The security\nfor both principal and interest is Canada's unconditional\npromise to pay.\nCANADA IS IN THIS WAR TO WIN. Without Victory\nour Freedom cannot survive. Money, possessions, even life\nitself would be imperilled. Right Honourable A.V. Alexander,\nFirst Lord of the Admiralty, said recently:\n\"Make no mistake about it; if we -won defeated, we should\nperish. Lot no ono think that any compromise or peace\nterms oould bo possible with Hitler in tuoh a oan.\"\nYou see, therefore, how imperative it is for Canada to\nmarshal all resources in men, materials and money to\ninsure victory. We have the men, we must have the\nmaterials, and our people have tlie money.\nMoney must be placed at the service of Canada with the\nsame degree of spirit that actuates our soldiers, sailors and\nairmen.\nfa VICTORY BOMS\nNATIONAL COMMITTEE, VICTORY LOAN 1941, OTTAWA) CANADA\ni i -j\nB\n-Mt id   _*&\n\u2022mggmmtmtm\nA I \/M\nWill\/If,,,\n11 ilii iiii i a\nWm*l:\nttw    '\u25a0 S   ll        |H s.. \u25a0  ISSSKsW    IM\"   i. ' 'Ul s. SIMI.l s..l .       I\" SSS I SSS. I lnl. IS     Sll ^ si s I\n...  -. \u25a0-'\u25a0'\u25a0-^'\u25a0\u25a0i^-^\u00bb^A^\n^'\u25a0\"^^liftwlfli\n\t\nI   .fea      I\n\u25a0''Af '\u25a0\u25a0:.   A\n\t\n 1\nCanada!\nYpres, April 22-24, I91.5\nTHE\nTORCH\nTHROWN\nA generation ago, from Flanders Fields,\nonr soldier dead threw ns their torch to\nhold It high, as they had held It from\nSecond Ypres to Mons, from Somme to\nPasschendaele.\nFor fonr years they kept their rendezvous\nwith death. They knew no peers bnt the\nliving who served with them, and their\nspirit so animated the Canadian Corps\nthat lt became the spearhead of victory*\nThat same spirit animates\nour troops toddy.\nWe hold the torch. We\ncannot do less than pour\nont onr dollars as they\npour   ont  their all\n- FOR FREEDOM.\nIn this famous drawing from Punch, Sir Bernard Partridge commemorated for\nall time the heroic stand of Canada's First Division against poison gas and overwhelming odds. As our soldiers held the line then, so Canada must hold it now.\nTHIS  ADVERTISEMENT  IS  PUBLISHED  BY  GENERAL  MOTORS  OF  CANADA,  LIMITED,\nON   BEHALF  OF  THE  VICTORY   LOAN,  1941\n      ' \u25a0'- ' - iiiiiiiniafiiiiiaiMiiifnitii ^immtiitimd.^^\n \u25a0\n\t\n\u25a0    \t\nm*i,,vu.mm!it*wtl*,vi,vmv\u201e,,l,\nK.B. Meet Championship\nIs Retained by Creston\nfor Fourth Straight Year\nArmstrong and Rota\nSet Two New\nRecords\nFERNIE, B. C\u201e May 25\u2014The\n\u25a0 thirteenth annual Kootenay-Boundary Track Meet was held in Fernie\nMay 24th, with athletes competing\ntrom Michel, Kimberley, Rossland,\nCreston, Cranbrook, Salmo and\nFetnie, Schools. The weather was\nexcellent, and the officials handled\nthe meet in an efficient manner\nto make it one of the most successful track meets yet held.\nThe Nelson Daily News Shield tor\nthe grand aggregate was won by\nCreston District with 87.5 points (or\nthe fourth successive year. The\n'girls' aggregate, and the Wilson\nCup, was also taken by Creston\nwith 37.5 points. The Trail Ehthus-\nlasts Cup junior boys' aggregate\n\u2022was captured by Creston also with\n81 points. The Kimberley Gyro Cup\nfor the junior girls' aggregate was\nwon by Cranbrook with nine points.\nThe Senior Boys' Aggregate and the\n, Trail Amateur Athletic Association\nCup was taken by Kimberley with\n35 points. The Native Sons of Canada Cup for the senior boys relay\nwas won by Kimberley. The Nelson\nGyro Cup and the senior girls relay\nand the F. H. S. Willis Cup for -he\nJunior boys' relay were won by\nCreston.\nThe tabulation of points for all\nthe schools follows: Creston 37.5\npoints, Kimberley 47.5 points, Cran\nbrook 37 points, Fernie 22 points,\nMichel 13 points, Salmo 8 points and\nRossland 4 points.\nNext year the meet will be held\nln Creston, but the date has not\nyet been set.\nNEW RECORDS\nTwo new records were hung\nUp.\nIn the senior boys' 440, W.\nArmstrong ef Kimberley flashed\nto the tape In 53.8 seconds, a fifth\nof a seoond better than the previous mark set by E. Heaven of\nGrand Forks In 1934.\nA record of six years' standing\nwas cracked In the Junior boys'\npole vault when Frank Rota of\nCranbrook vaulted 9 feet 5'\/4\nInches. He beat the old record ot\n9 feet 4'i, Inches, held by Albert\nBonner of Kimberley.\nDetailed results follow:\n. Senior boys, 100 yards \u2014 Jim\nI leith, Kimberley, first; W. Arm-\nI strong, Kimberley, second; Allan\n[ MdDonald, Creston, third, 10.8 jec-\nI ends,\nI Senior boys, 220 yards \u2014 Jim\nLeith, Kimberley, first; C. Colledge,\nCranbrook, second: W. Armstrong,\nKimberley, third, z5.2 seconds.\nSenior bovs, 440 yards\u2014W. Armitrong, Kimberley, first; A. Topllff,\nRossland, second; Bill Dlcken and\nG. Zenovitch, Fernie, tied for third,\n53.8 seconds.\nSenior  boys,  880  yards \u2014 Alex\nStewart, Fernie, first; Len Hystead\nof Kimberley, second; G. Zenovitch,\nbernie, third, 2 minutes, 17.2 seconds.\nSenior boys, mile-Alex Stewart,\n, Fernie,  first;   Len Hystead, Kim-\n. berley, second; G. LeSargent, Eoss-\ni land, third, 5 minutes, 2 seconds.\nSenior   boys,   high   Jump\u2014Aldo\nBorsato, Michel, first; Max Turyk,\nMichel, second; S. Riba, Kimberley, third, 5 ft. 4% in.\nSenior boys, broad Jump\u2014 Aldo\nBorsato, Michel, first; Carl Lindow.\nSalmo, second; A. McDonald, Creston, third, 20 ft. Vs in.\nSenior- boys, pole vault\u2014Gordon\nSherik, Creston, first; D. Cole, Creston, second; Jim Leith, Kimberley,\nthird. 10 ft. 4 in.\nsecond; n-\nSenior boys, shot put\u2014L. Bell,\nCreston, first; J. Minton, Fernie,\nsecond; D. Washburn, Fernie, third.\n38 ft. 4 in.\nSenior boys, relay, 880 yards\u2014\nKimberley first; Creston, second;\nFernie, third. 1 min. 42.8 seconds.\nJunior boys, 100 yards\u2014D. Malcolm, Cranbrook, first; K, Maartman, Kimberley, second; R. Sabl,\nFernie. third. 11.3 seconds.\nJunior boys, 220 yards\u2014D. Malcolm, Cranbrook, first; T. Browell,\nCreston, second; C. Christina, Fernie, third. 26.4 seconds.\nJunior boys, 880 yards\u2014F. Rota,\nCreston, first; K. Maartman, Kimberley, second; D. Aldridge, Creston, third. 2 minutes, 29 seconds.\nJunior boys, high Jump\u2014B. Ford,\nKimberley, first; Albin Larsen, Salmo, second; Robert McAskill, Salmo, third. 4 ft. 10% in.\nJunior boys, broad Jump \u2014 G.\nBrowell, Creston, first; J. Frasina,\nCranbrook, second; J. Smith, Creston, third. 17 ft. 2 in.\nJunior boys, pole vault\u2014F. Rota,\nCreston, first; J. Harris, Creston; D.\nCoulter and T. Turner, both of Kimberley, tied for third. 9 ft. iVt in.\nJunior boys, relay, 440 yards\u2014\nCreston, first; Cranbrook, second.\nKimberley, third. 52.6 seconds.\nSenior girls, 100 yards\u2014S. McNeil, Creston, first; M. Imhoss,\nCreston, second; E. Rowse, Cranbrook, third. 12.3 seconds.\nSenior girls, high jump\u2014M. Imhoss, Creston, first; E. Rowse, Cranbrook, second; Louise Snow, Fernie,\nthird. 4 ft. 6V4 in.\nSenior girls, broad Jump\u2014M. Imhoss, Creston, first; S. McNeil,\nCranbrook, Creeton; Maine Lindow\nSalmo, third. 15 ft. 3 in.\nSenior girls, relay, 440 yards\u2014\nCreston, first; Cranbrook, second;\nKimberley, third. 55 seconds.\nJunior girls, 75 yards\u2014J. Alward,\nCranbrook, first; Z, Blackey, Fernie,\nsecond; I. Wanuk, Kimberley, and\nV. Smith, Creston, tied for third.\n9.6 seconds.\nJunior girls, relay, 440 yards\u2014\nCreston, first; Cranbrook, second;\nFernie, third. 52.6 seconds.\n1\nCAR8 RUN BETTER WITH\nAMALIEOIL\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker Nelson. B. C.\nRichmond Defeats\nWestminster 20-7\nNANAIMO,,B. C\u201e May 25 (CP)-\nRichmond Farmers today lead the\ninter city b\u00ab lacrosse league standings with a full game advantage\nover New Westminster Adanacs\nwhom they defeated 20-7 in a regular schedule game here Saturday\nnight.\nThe game, first of a terlei to be\nplayed In this Vaneouver toland\ncity during the Summer, wu witnessed by about 1000 Empire Day\ncelebrants here. ,\nSchedule -Second\nHalf of Trail's\nSenior Softball\nTRAIL, B. C May 25-fichedule\n(or the second half of the Men's\nSoftball League, Issued Sunday, is\nlisted below:\nMay 36 \u2014 Aces vs. Annable,\nMay 28 \u2014 Mercos vs. Castlegar,\nMay 30 \u2014 Mercos vs. Aces.\nJune 1 \u2014 Castlegar vs. Aces at\nCasUegar.\nJune 1 \u2014 Annable vs. Sasks.\nJune 2 -V Sasks. vs, Castlegar.\nJune 4 \u2014 Mercos vs. Annable,\nJune 6 \u2014 Aces vs. Mercos.\nJune 8 \u2014 Open at Castlegar.\nJune 8 \u2014 Annable vs. CasUegar.\nJune 9 \u2014 Aces vs. Sasks.\nJune 11 \u2014 Annable vs. Mercos.\nJune 13 \u2014 Mercos vs. Sasks.\nJune 15 \u2014 Castlegar vs, Sasks. at\nCastlegar.\nJune 15 \u2014 Mercos va. Aces.\nJune 16 \u2014 Annable vs. Aces.\nJune 18 \u2014 Mercos vs. Castlegar.\nJune 20 \u2014 Sasks. vs. Mercos.\nJune 22 \u2014 Castlegar vs. Annable\nat Castlegar.\nJune 22 \u2014 'Aces Vs. Sasks.\nJune 23 \u2014 Mercos vs. Annable.\nJune 25 \u2014 Aces vs. Castlegar.\nJune 27 \u2014 Annable vs. Sasks.\nJune 29 \u2014 Open at Castlegar.\nJune 29 \u2014 Sasks. vs. Castlegar.\nJune 30 \u2014 Aces vs. Mercos.\nJuly 2 \u2014 Sasks vs. Annable.\nJuly 4 \u2014 Annable'vs. Castlegar.\nJuly 6 \u2014 Castlegar vs. Mercos at\nCastlegar.\nJuly 7 \u2014 Sasks. vs. Aces.\nJuly 9 \u2014 Aces vs. Annable.\nJuly 11 \u2014 Open.\nJuly 13 \u2014 Castlegar vs. Aces at\nCastlegar.\nPaul Runyan Wins\nRound-Robin Golf\n\u25a0neL\u00bbON DAILY NEWS  NIUON. B. C\u2014MONDAY MORNINO  MAV M. H41-\nBomberettes to Play\nC.Y.O. This Evening\nin Girls' Softball\nBatting Leaders\n(By The Associated Preii)\nBatting\u2014three leaders in each\nleague:\nG AB R H Pet.\nWilliams, Red Sox 29 99 24 40 .404\nCronin, Red Sox .. 31 114 26 44 .387\nCullenbine, Brns. 30 88 20 34 .386\nSlaughter, Cards .. 35 114 27 52 .364\nVaughan, Pirates .. 28 110 19 40 .364\nMize, Cards ...   35 134 20 48 .358\nHome runs: American League-\nYork, Detroit, Heath, Cleveland, 9;\nNational League\u2014Ott, Giants, 10,\nRuns batted in: American League\n-Keller, Yankees, 37; National\nLeague\u2014Nicholson, Cubs, 34.\nTrail Vogues Win\nFrom Newcastles\nTRAIL, B. C, May 25 - The\nVogues defeated the Newcastles\n20-12 in a Girls Softball League\ngame at Victoria Park Friday afternoon.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\n12* MO- 25oi $2.30. 40oi $3.i\nJUST THAT MUCH BETTER\" JS\nI Thia advertisement is not published or displayed by the Uquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNEW YORK, May 23 (AP) -\nPaul Runyan came trom behind\nwith a sub-par 69 on the seventh\nand final round to win tbe $5000\nGoodall round-robin goit tournament today. It was his first triumph of any kind since the Argentine open in the Fall ot the\nsame year. The victory was worth\n$1000 to Runyan.\n\"Little Poison,\" who tossed ta his\ntwo best rounds when it would do\nhim the most good, finished the 126\nholes of the fourth annual Goodall\ncircus 23 shots ova- par. In spite of\nthat poor medal showing, he had a\ntotal of 26 plus points, representing\nthe net number of holes he won In\nhis 14 matches.\nRunyan finished 10 points ahead\nof Ghezzl and Gene Sarazen, who\ntied for second and drew down $650\neach.\nIn fourth place at plus eight was\nBen Hogan, last year s winner, followed by Smith, Little, McSpaden\nand Tommy Hines, Penna and Goggin, Jimmy Demaret, Dick Metz, Ed\n(Porky) Oliver, Clayton Heafne.-\nand Jimmy Thomson.\nGhezzi returned the best medal\nscore, 502, to Smith's 507 and Sara-\nzen's 509. Runyan, winner with 513,\nfinished fifth last year with 511.\nBritish Champion\nOutpoints Canadian\nLIVERPOOL, May 25 (CP Cable)\n\u2014 Ernie Roderick, British and Empire welterweight boxing champion, tonight outpointed Ray Mclntyre, of Canada in a 10-round\nmatch.\nThe Canadian, now serving ln the\narms, appeared off form and Roderick was an easy winner.\nThe fight was dull until the last\ntwo round when both boxers opened up.\nMEET CANCELLED\nTORONTO, May 25 (CP)\u2014Dlrec-\ntors of Thorncliffe racing and breed\ning Association announced that the\nannual Spring meet^ at Thorncliffe\nPark, which was to open tomorrow,\nhas been cancelled because of the\ncurrent dispute between the Thor'\noughbred Breeders Association and\nthe Incorporated Canadian Racing\nAssociation, governing body ol rae.\ning in Ontario.\nBob Feller Hurls\nCleveland to 6-0\nWin Over Browns\nCLEVELAND, May 25 (AP). -\nBob Feller pitched Cleveland, pacesetters ot the American League to\na 1-0 ihutout over the Browns today, getting 13 itrlkeouti.\nSt. boull .\".  0  7  S\nCleveland -_ 8 9  1\n- Allen, Nlggeling (7) and Ferrel,\nGrube; Feller and Deaautels.\nSOX BEAT DETROIT\nDETROIT, May 25 (AP) .-Young\nPitcher Hal Newhouser weakened\nin the seventh Inning today and\nitarted -Chicago White Sox on a\nspree that gave them seven runs\nin one inning and a 7-3 victory over\nDetroit Tigers.\nChicago .\nDetroit \t\nLee and Tresh; Newhouser, Benton (7) and Bridges (7) and Glebell\n(8) and Tebbetti.\nYANKS BIATEN 10-\u00bb\nNEW YOBK, May 25 (AP). -\nLefty Grove had an easy time scoring his 296th lifetime victory today\nas Boston Red Sox whaled three\nYankee pitchers for a 10-3 Ameri'\ncan League decision.\nBoston    10 14  4\nNew York \u201er    3  7   1\nGrove and Peacock; Russo, Stan-\nceu (7), Bonham (I) and Hoaar,\nA's WIN SERIES\nPHILADELPHIA, May 28 (AP),-\nThe Athletics knocked Dutch\nLeonard out of the box with a\nfive-run rally in the eighth Inning\ntoday and icored a 7-3 victory to\nsweep their three-game American\nLeague series with Washington\nSenators.\nWashington      3 10  0\nPhiladelphia       7 13   1\nLeonard and Early; Bablch, Fer-\nrlck (8) and Carreaquel (8) and\nHayes.\nWINS CALCARY COLF\nCALGARY, May 25 (CF)-Kandl'\ncapped by inclement weather that\nvaried from wind to a blinding\nsnowstorm, Kemp Richardson of\nthe Municipal Club won the city\namateur goit championship for the\nsecond time when nt) defeated Fired\nHergert, of Inglewood Club, 8 and 5\nin the final match this afternoon,\nRIOHT  RULED  DRAW\nMILWAUKEE, May 29 (AP). -\nThe Wisconsin State Athletic Commission has ruled the NBA. featherweight championship fight here\nlast Monday between Petey Scalzo,\ntitle holder, and Phil Zwick, of\nKaukauna, Wis., a draw.\nHigh School Bomberettei' make,\ntheir debut in the Nelson Girls Softball League this evening when they\nmeet the C.Y.O, team at 1:80 at the\nRecreation Grounds this evening.\nC.Y.O. had ita tint game last weekt\nagainst the Acei, the latter tean)\nwinning.\n\"Slim\" Porter, Secretary-Treasurer of the Nelson Softball Association,\nhas named Jesse Seaby and Jimmy\nAllan to umpire tonight's game,      ,\nBig Inning Gives\nMercos a Victory\nTRAIL, B.C., May 25-The Mercos\nromped away Irom the Sasks in I\nMens Softball League game Sunday\nafternoon, defeating them 15-3.\nLeading 1-2 at the beginning of the\nfifth, the Mercos- then staged a big\nscoring ipree, and ln spite of Jan-\ncola, Basso and Lawn all going to\nthe mound, 11 runs came in.\nPitching records for the three\nSasks' pitchers were, Jancolu, one\nstrikeout and two walks, Basso, no\nstrikeouts and four walks, and\nLawn, no strikeouts and three\nwalks. Brunerman of the Mercos retired 14 by the strikeout route and\nwalked two.\nTony Merlo hit a home run, Tick\nHall a three-bagger, and Rico Martin and Brunerman each e double.\nScore by innings:\nMercoi     013  0110  00\u201415 10   2\nSasks        200  0 OO   01\u2014 3   5   3\nLineups:\nMercos\u2014Nick Turik rf and cf,\nLouis Demore c and cf, Tick Hall\nss, Rico Martin 3b, Harold Brunerman p, Ab Cronie lb, F. Pagnan 2b,\nS. Decembrinl c and rf, E. Toffolo\nIf, Tony Merlo rf.\n-Sasks\u2014Ken Stanton If and lb,\nJulie Bilesky ss, Bill Waddell cf,\nRoy Scheppert 2b, Ken Lawn p and\n8b, Bob Smith rf, Lance Hudson c,\nFred Petrosky lb, Steve Jancola p,\nBrick Edmunds c, O. Basso, If.\nWidener Horse Wins\nMetropolitan Mile\nNEW YORK, May 25 (AP). -\nGeorge D. Widener1! Eight Thirty\nwon the Metropolitan Mile and its\npurse of $10,260 at Belmont* Park\nSaturday.\nComing from behind, Eight Thirtj\nshot between horses in the stretel\nto win by two lengths in 1:37 1-5.\nE. R. Bradley's Bold and Bad\ntook runner-up honors, a length in\nfront of Mrs. Payne Whitney's Hash\nIbis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board Qt by tba\nGovernment of British Columbia,\nSa'mo Defeats Ymir in Big lft Frame\nlo Win Ymir Senior Softball Tourney\n\u2666\nGold Belt and Queen\nMine Teams Beaten\nin Semi-Finals\nYMIR, B. C, May 25-Smash-\nIng across 10 runs In the last two\nInnlngi to break a >\u2022\u00ab deadlock,\nSalmo walloped Ymlr Pirates 15-7\nIn the final game of a senior toftball tournament that wat a main\nattraction ot Ymlrt May 24th\ncelebration Saturday.\nIn the teml-flnait, Salmo had\nlittle difficulty In eliminating a\nOold Belt Chiefs 20-7, and Ymlr\ndoubled the score 12-6 on the\nQueen Mine.\nThe championship game, played\nin the evening\/started out like a\ngreat pitcher's duel, the score at\nthe end ot three innings standing at\n2-2. Then Salmo began to get to\nFrank Tinney, Ymir chucker who\nwas pretty wild all day, for hits\nand walks, and moved out in tront\n6-2 ln the fourth.\nGeorge Murray, Ymlr catcher,\ndoubled wtth one out in the lut of\nthe fifth to start a rally by the home\nteam which produced three runs.\nMurray slammed out another double\nin the seventh and scored soon afterward on a field's choice to tie up\nthe game.\nTHINGS BEGIN TO POP\n\u2022But the.complexion of the game\nquickly changed again. John and\nHearn, two of Salmo's \"kids\", beat\nout bunts to open the eighth. Then\nth\\veteran work-horse Elmer Gibbon, Salmo, Manager-catcher, slammed out a two-bagger after\nfouling several bot drives, to send\nin the first run. Earl Rickard, Salmo's chucker, then rifled a long\nhome run into left field to drive in\nthree more runs. Altogether 13 men\nfaced Tinney in that inning, which\nended with aeven runs in and bases\nloaded.\nThree more runs in the ninth otf\nthe weakening Tinney served to\nwind up the game beyond a question of a doubt.\nBox score of the championship\ngame follows:\nSalmo: AbRHPOAE\nN. John, 2b    4   3   2  14  0\nE. Hearn, ct    4  2  3  4 0   0\nE. Gibbon, c    \u00ab   2   2   8   0   0\nE. Rickard, p     5   12   0   4   0\nG. Cawley, ss .....    5   0   12  2   0\nJ. C. Anderson, lb 8   2   2   8  0   1\nG. Moir, II        4   2   2   0   0   0\nP. Klovance, rf ....   8   2   2   0  0  0\nA. Cawley, 3b    6   2   4   12  4\nTotals   46 16 20 27 12 5\nYmlr:\nC. McNeil, ct   5 0 0  10 0\nG. Murray, c  4 3  2  4  3 0\nD. Jones, lb  4 1   1 10  0 0\nC. Esche, 2b   4 2  3  3  2 U\nR. Nash, ss  4 0  0  3   2 0\nS. McNeil, 11  5 0   2   10 0\nF. Chrlstopherson,\n3b       4 10  3  7 0\nF. Tinney, p    4  0  0   2   11\nJ. Grant, rf    4   0  0   10  0\nTotals   38  7  8 27 15   1\nScore by innings:\nSalmo    200 400 073\u201416\nYmlr  . 110 030 101- 7\nRunt batted in: Rickard 5, Gibbons 2, John 2, Hearn 2, S. McNeil\n2, G. Cawley, Klovance, A. Cawley,\nNash, Murray, two-base hits\u2014Gibbon, Hearn, Murray. Three-base\nhitt-G. Cawley, Anderson, A. Caw-\nley. Double pliy\u2014Naih to Ische to\nJones. Lett on bases\u2014Salmo 14\nYmlr 8. Stolen bases\u2014John, Hearn.\nJones, Esche. Struck out\u2014by Rickard 8, by Tinney 8. Bases on balls-\nOff Rickard 5, off Tinney 9. Um-\nElree-D. C. Aldis and Anthony\ncanlan.\nTIGHT IN PINCHES\nIn the Ymlr-Queen semi-final,\nFrank Tinney was ln trouble at\nvarious   intervals   through   eight\nwalks in the seven innings, but he\nallowed only five hits, all singles,\nand was hard to score on in the\npinches.\nOne of his toughest innings was\nthe filth when Hal Bergstrom. hit\na home run with two men on.\nErnie Oliver started on the\nmound for the losers, but he began to slip in the fourth and fifth\nframes, and was finally lifted in\nfavor of Bergstrom.\nScore by innings:\nYmir         201 441   0-12\nQueen    020 030   1\u2014 8\nStrikeouts\u2014Oliver 2,   Tinney   2.\nBases on balls\u2014Oliver 1, Bergstrom\n2, Tinney 8.\nLineups follow:\nYmir\u2014Carl McNeil cf, George\nMurray c, Dick Jones lb, Cede\nEsche 2b, Ron Nash ss, Stu McNeil\n3b, F. ChTistopherson if, Frank\nTinney p and Jack Grant rf.\nQueen: Mickey Prestley c, Joe\nPasacreta 3b, Ray Rowe lb, Ernie\nOliver p, ss, B. Mitchell 2b, Hal\nBergstrom ss, p, Louis Anderson\ncf, Cliff Hearn U and Ted Hall-\nbauer rf.\nSALMO'S FIRST WIN\nTaking a 7-0 lead in the first two\ninnings, and scoring In every inning thereafter except the last,\nSalmo found Gold Belt Chiefs easy\npickings in the other semi-final\nbracket. The final score was 20-7,\nand at no time did the Chiefs seriously  threaten Salmo's advantage.\nSalmo got 17 hits off A. Fitzpatrlck, the Chiefs' hurler. The heavy\nhitting included doubles by G.\nCawley, Hearn and Klovance,\ntriples by Klovance, Rickard and\nG. Cawley and home runs by (^\nCawley and Moir. The combinea\nhurling of Rickard and Klovance\not the winners gave up only five\nhits, three of them off Rickard in\nsix Innings.\nScore by innings:\nSalmo     341   111   720-20\nGold Belt   000   202   030- 7\nLineups follow:\nSalmo \u2014 Nicky John 2b, Eddie\nHearn lb, Elmer Gibbon c, Earl\nRickard p, rf, Guy Cawley ss, Pete\nKlovance rf, p, Arvid Hamberg If,\nGordon Moir cf and Alfred Cawley 3b.\nGold Belt\u2014Rusty Gibbon a, Joe\nGallicano 2b, Pete Kuntz c, Ernie\nElliot 3b, George Frocklage lt, Fred\nThompson cf, Howie Breeze rf,\nNorm Best lb, A. Fitzpatrlck p and\n\"Donka\" Scott rf.\nUmpires \u2014 Aldis and Scanlan.\nScorer\u2014Sadie Hamberg.\nAlleasflTeams\nfor (lty Bantam\nBaseball League\nBantam baseball players turted\nout ln sufficient numbers to lut\nThursday's practice to warrant at\nlast two teams for a City kid\nleague, stated \"Slim\" Porter Sunday\nnigh'. Some of the kids are really\nrfiites as tar as size goes, with Jimmy Todd being the youngest, a>\nwell as the smallest.\nThere'll be another practice Tuesday at 4:30, a few more are expected out. Porter it also counting;\non Alex Ioanin to come out and help\nhim. Alex was father ot kid ball\nfor years when local baseball talent was a dependable source for\nSenior Clubs. ''You can understand\nwhat a boost lt will ba to the game\nto have him back,\" Porter laid.\nThose who were out to last Thursday's practice included Stan Fisher,\nDoug and Jack Morris, Richie Wassick, Denis Coleman, John Holmes,\nBill Postlethwaite, Arthur Mills,\nDonny Ross, Dominic Magllo, Ar-\nthur DeGuglielmo, Jim Valentine,\nBob Dick, Jim Todd, Larcy Grimwood and Nels Sinnerud.\nBaseball\nScores\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL\nPittsburgh 7, St. Louis 10.\nPhiladelphia 3, Brooklyn 7.\nCincinnati 2-4, Chicago 4-1.\nAMERICAN\nSt. Louis 2, Cleveland 4.\nBoston 6, New York 7.\nChicago 0; Detroit 1.\nWashington 5-5, Philadelphia 13-6\nPACIFIC  COA8T\nSacramento 3, Los Angeles 7.\nSan Diego 8, San Francisco 6.\nHollywood 2, Portland 4.\nOakland 8, Seattle 2.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 5, Columbus 6.\nMilwaukee 4, Minneapolis ll.\nKansas City 8, St. Paul 8.\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nYakima 1-5, Vancouver 4-2.\nSalem 3, Tacoma 5.\nSpokane 8, Wenatchee 12.\nINTERNATIONAL\nRochester 2-3, Montreal 0-4.\nBuffalo 6-1, Toronto 1-10.\nNewark 3, Baltimore 5.\nSyracuse 2, Jersey City 5.\nSUNDAY\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 2-0, Rochester 0-1.\nSyracuse 0-0, Jersey City 4-7.\nToronto 8-1, Montreal 13-4.\nNewark 9-4, Baltimore 1-5.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nKansas City 11-3, Minenapolis 7-8.\nLouisville 2-6, Columbus 10-12.\nMilwaukee 6-0, St. Paul 7-2.\nIndianapolis 3-5, Toledo 13-6.\n. PACIFIC COA8T\nSacramento 12-4, Los Angeles 6-3\nHollywood 8-5, Portland 7-7.\nSan Diego 2-8, San Francisco 3-4\nOakland 3-3, Seattle 0-12.\nWESTERN  INTERNATIONAL\nSpokane 6, Wenatchee 0.\nSalem 4-2, Tacoma 0-6.\nDtlon-ty Retains His\nHeavyweight Crown\nQLACI BAY, N.S, May 38 <CF)-\nAl Delaney oi Windsor, Ont, ani\nNew York retained hli Canadian\nheavyweight boxing title Saturday\nnight ai he earned a decision over\nTerry (Tiger) Warrington of Liverpool, NA, in a 10-round match.\nBill Mooney, 145, of Moncton, N.B,,\nknocked out Wing Kay ot Vancouver, Chinese soldier ot a Highland\nregiment, ln the second round of a\nscheduled five-rounder. Kay weight\n134.\nCardinal Double\nWin Gives Them\nSweep of Series\nST. LOUIS, May 25 (AP) - Thi\nCardinals lost another rookie star\nto the injury list today but went\non to take a double-header from\nPittsburgh, 6-4 and 4-3, and sweep\na tour-game National League seriei\nwith the Pirates.\nFrank Crespi, sparky young seo\nond baseman whose sensational play\nhas highlighted the Cards present\nhome stand suffered a fractured fin.\nger attempting to stop a hot ground,\ner and probably Will be out at least\ntwo weeks.\nFirst:\nPittsburgh   4 15  0\nSt. Louis     6 10   2\nWilkie. Sewell (8) and Lopez;\nGumbert, Lanier (9), Hutchinson\n(9) White and Mancuso.\nSecond:\nPittsburgh    S 12   1\nSt. LouU    4 11   1\nKlinger, Bauer (6) Helntzelman\n(8) and Baker; Krlst, Lanier (9)\nand Mancuso.\nDODQERS BEAT PHILS\nNEW YORK, May 25 (AP)\u2014Five\nbig runs ln the sixth Inning gave\nBrooklyn Dodgers an 8-4 victory\nover Philadelphia today.\nPete Reiser, Dodger centrefleld\ner, homered with the basei full.\nPhiladelphia       4 10  2\nBrooklyn      8   5  0\nGrissom, Pearson (8) and Warren;\nWyatt, Swift (4), Davii (7) and\nOwen.\nGIANTS TAKE BRAVES\nBOSTON, May 25 (AP) \u2014 New\nYork Giants tied together three\nruns in the third inning todaji,\nenough to win the ball game although Boston Braves used 22 players in a frantic effort to avoid the\nultimate 6-2 defeat.\nNew York    6 14  1\nBoston  ..     IM\nMelton, Lohrman (8) and Danning; Sullivan, Erickson (4), Jolta.\nson (6), Posedel (8), Javery (9) and\nBenres, Mase (6), Gremp (9).\nROOT WINS CL08E ONI\nCHICAGO, May 25 AP)\u2014Charley\nRoot, Chicago Cubs' 42-year-old\nright-hander, won a 3-2 ninth-Inning decision over Paul Derringer\nand Cincinnati Reds today.\nCincinnati     '  ! ?\nChicago     3   6  0\nDerringer and Lombardl; Root\nand George.\nBALL STANDINGS\nAMERICAN\nW L Pet.\nCleveland     28 12 .700\nChicago    -    21 14 .600\nNew York    20 18 .526\nBoston     16 16 .500\nDetroit    18 19 .486\nPhiladelphia     17 19 .472\nWashington    14 24 .388\nSt Louis    11 23 .324\nNATIONAL\nSt. Louis     26 9 .743\nBrooklyn       24 12 .667\nNew York         18 14 .563\nChicago       16 17 .485\nCincinnati .\u2014   16 20 .444\nPittsburgh  _?.  -12 19 .387\nBoston     12 20 .375\nPhiladelphia     10 23 JOS\nHaley to Make First\nAppearance in Big\nPacific Coast Meet\nPULLMAN, Wash., May 25 (AP)\n\u2014Eight Washington SUte College\ntrack stars, headed by Capt. Bill\nDale, of Victoria, B. C\u201e arid the\nsophomore express, Pat Haley of\nTrail, B. C. will compete In the Pacific Coast Conference track meet\nnext weekend at Berkeley, Calif.,\nCoach Jack Weiershauser said today,\nDale will seek his third consecutive coast conference championship in the half-miler, at which\ndistance he holds the Northern division record of 1:51.5.\nFor the Trail star it will be the\nfirst competition in the big meet.\nThe Canadian speed merchant won\nboth short sprints and the low\nhurdles in the recent Northern Division climax.\nAUt NtNk\nLouis Demore on\nCarpel; Assaults\nCatcher Wilh Bat\nTRAIL, B.C., May 25-Louls be-\nmore, Coach of the Trail Mevcos\nSoftball Team, is lined up lor a\ncarpet session Monday night before\nthe softball executive following a\nfracas with Lawn Hudson, catcher\not the Saskatchewan Lite team,\nwhich occurred in the last halt ot\nthe third inning Sunday atternoon\nDemore, at bat, started to dispuie\na strike decision by the umpire, not\nmincing hit language, Hudson told\nthe -Umpire not to take lt trom him\nDemore, in a rag , swung around\nand hit Hudson across the face with\nhli bit, Hudson's muk cutting a\ngash In hia chin.\nThe crowd became highly 'Incensed, and a free-for-all threaten'\ned, but the twp players were put\nout of the game, Hudson for repairs,\nand Demore for temporary suspension.\nRochester has won 10 flags In the\nInternational League-more than,\nany other .club. \u25a0,,   t\nHov\/ To Ge\nQuickest, Easiest Shavi\nMoney Con Boy!\nGffl*\u00ab0\ni\u00bb . ~\u00abja\nOHl\nI Ask Your Dealer ]\nI Fer Special Tack-  I\negeWMiKeeftM\n\u25a0tfi*P\u00bb\nA\\\nm\ne One of the lourees of Vancouver's Inexhaustible\nsupplies of pure non-alkaline water, from which\nUDL's world-famed rye whlskiei ara distilled.\nThe water IN XL\ncount* most!\n0\u00bb quality of the whisky.\n,.  \u2022     vv UDL ryes, distilled in Vancouver,\nVancouver s snow-pure, \"ol m       u\nwaler, Ideal tor distilling pu*o\u00bb\u00ab-\u2122J THE\nWflTER-and the waters IN ITI\nSpecial RYE\n16-og. \u2014   $1.65\n25-oj.  ~ .    2.60\ntt-ra.     4.00\nUNITED DISTILLERS LIMITED\nVancouver Canada\nwun*3\nii\n\\4\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia!\n\"\u25a0 *\"'\"\"\n\t\n\t\n PAQt TEN\nSmart One-Piece\nSlack-Suit\nTJtcUutvt  TllaJmtin-\nPATTXRN 9723\nSlacks are back in the spotlight\n(or sportswear! This Marian Martin style, Pattern p723, is especially welcome, for it brings a new\nnote to the outdoor scene in a\n\"slack-suit\"! It's a one-piece style\nthat gives the effect of a shirt and\nslacks outfit but that has the advantage of \"staying put\" at the\nwaist. The plunging neckline of\nthe bloused top is very much in\nstyle find looks so feminine and\nyoung. You may choose either\nshort, simple sleeves or long full\nones. Notice the nice cut of the\ntrousers, darted just below the\nneat, smooth-fitting waistband\nand buttoning conveniently at the\nleft side. Though not sketched,\nthis style can be used to make\na short playsuit too. If you want\nto be especially dashing, let the\ntop be in a vivid tropical print.\nPattern 9723 may be ordered\nonly in misses' sizes 12, 14, 16, 18\nand 20. Size 16, 4    yards 35-inch.\nSend twenty cents for this Marian Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your size, name, address and style number,\nSend your order to The Daily\nNews, Pattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be sent to your\nhome within 10 days.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLTN\n*Tf H\u00abaven raises up big men\nto help us in a crisis, the kind\no* statesmen we've got now\nmake it look like we've got no\nserkna trouble comin'.\"\nKeep Waldi for\nthe Wire Worm\nBy  DEAN  HALLIDAY\nWire   worms   are   a   particular\nmenace   to   the   vegetable   garden\nsince they are difficult insects to\ncontrol.\nPlants which have been attacked\nby wire worms have a dejected appearance. They are wilted, yellowish in color or stunted; when such\nplants are dug up, it will be found\nthat the wire worms have eaten\npractically all the roots from each\nplant\nmmMmm^.\nlili\u00bb-: .\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0\n\u25a0 \u2022 'il P\n\u25a0'A}f--'iW_^%V V_fA:A7A7\n\u25a0 -tft-Vti'M  .JBIl fotsAYu\/uuuu.i\nTU!  WIRE WORM\nFlEDS OM  TsTNDERN\nRoots of plants\nMBoot\nTWICE\n\/4CTU4L Site\ni-t-u\nKeep watch (or the wire\nworm\nShown m tin' Garden-Graph Is a\nficture ot the wire worm, about\nwicc life size. The worm is the\nlarva ot the click beetle. The worm\n|s slim, and cither orange brown\nor yellow in color. As these worms\n_\nBible Story inspires Laura Wheeler\nHeirloom Panel In Crochet\n-r.iL.tJlt  DAILY  NeWtl   NsSLUlM   U.   _\nCOMIC\n:*\n\u25a0\nCOM. -_*!, NtctUCMFT stums, tic\nCHRIST AMONG THE DOCTORS\nPATTERN   2865\nThe familiar bible story of Christ among the Wise Men is beautifully shown in this filet crochet panel. The picture, faithfully translated from the famous painting, makes an heirloom piece. Pattern\n2865 contains directions and chart for panel; materials required;\nillustrations of stitches.\nSend twenty cents for this pattern to The Nelson Daily News,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly pattern number, your name\nand address. Pattern will be mailed to your home within 10 days.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n(.American\npoet\n9. Type\nmeasure*\n10. To color\n16. Pain\nIT. Short-\nnapped\nfabric\n18. Island In\na river\n19. Commerce\n21. Citizen of\nSparta\n22. Ever\n(poet)\n23. Sea eagle\n25. CondlUon\n27. Slightest\n29. Note ta\nGuldo's scale\n32. Greek letter\n33. Existed\n34. Mimic\n38. Prison compartment\n36. Metallic\nrock\n37. Cut, as\ngrass\n39. Rout*\n43. Evil spirit\n48. Food\n46. Without\n(Latin)\n47. Short sleep\n46. Epoch\n49. Force (Latin)\nWJClllll   EIHrj\nui-vjun nou\nHirlMssll   HI:TJ211.1\nSSho asiiHnn\nISUHUiQ      1313\nij'ii.r.i  ju v;i\n\u2022j'.uii.i Pinna\nliULlU   Jilil'.l\nau    ulu iuijli:-]\nauntinnci    ian\nnanuari wuun\nUJfliJl\")    !JiIlJ>lll\nDUU   I IMIUi ll:l\nemu iji.ii.li nt\nfs.tssrdssy'i SBssSIPSe\n81. Wood-cutting tool\n52. Undivided\n63. Reserve\n(abbr.)\nACROSS\n1. Noblemen\n6. Druggred\n11.Icy rain '\n12. Hard black\nwood\n13. Weapon\n14. Web-footed\nbirds\n18. Daily\nrecord\nIT. Rodent\n20. Highest\ncard\n21. Look\n24. Ventilates\n26. Assistant\n28. Sculptured\nlikeness\n80. Merit\n31. Obese\n32. Disfigure\n88. Guat\n35. Usage\n38. Each\n40. Edible\nrootstock\n41. Dry, as wine\n42. Ancient\n44.Fresh\n45. Slippers\n47. Not ever\n60. Front of a\ncap\n84. Melodic*\n65. Silly\n66. Adhesive\nmixture\n67. Canadian\nriver\nDOWN\n1. Large worm\n2. Lofty\nmountain\n3. Female of\nthe nut\n4. Conduct\n6, Minute\ngroove\n6. A step\n7, Comply\nOTYPTOQtOTE\u2014A cryptogram quotation 0'2$\ncr ixzwrtiz  wl  allg  stbslzf  ocl\nWQEFZ    ULWF \u2014GQUWF.\nSaturday's   Cryptoquote:   THE   FINEST  ART,   THE   MOST\nDIFFICULT TO LEARN, IS THE ART OF LIVING\u2014MACT.\nHOW TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTE8\nCryptoquotes are quotations of tamous persons written ln cipher.\nA substitute character has replaced the original letter For instance,\nan \"R\" may substitute (or the-original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote, or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\". Find the key and follow\nthrough to the solution.\nOn Jhn di)t\nMONDAY, MAY 26, 1941\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n8:00\u2014BBC News\n8:15\u2014Questions of the Hour\n8:30-Balladeer\n8:45\u2014CBC News\n9:00\u2014Time Signal\n9:30\u2014Pclham Richardson's Orch.\n10:00\u2014Prelude to a Happy Day\n10:30\u2014CBC News\n11:30\u2014A Friend In Deed\n11:45\u2014Composers' Corner\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:30\u2014CBC News\n12:45\u2014Club Matinee\n1:00\u2014Talk\n1:15\u2014Wishart Campbell Sings\n1:30\u2014Richard Crooks\n1:45\u2014Presenting\n2:00\u2014Moments of Melody\n2:15\u2014Mirror for Women\n2:30\u2014Popular Songs\n2:45\u2014BBC News\n3:00\u2014Salon Music\n3:30\u2014Back from the Blitz\n3:45\u2014Recital Series\n4:00\u2014 Marching in Swingtime\n4:30\u2014Harpsichords and Strings\n4:55\u2014 Willson Woodside\nEVENINC\n6-no\u2014Gordon Jenkins' Music\n6:30\u2014 With the Troops in England\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014 Britain  Speaks\n7:30\u2014Dances of the Nations\nlive to the age of five years, they\nprovide a perennial problem for\nthe gardener.\nWire worms can be trapped by\nappealing to tbeir greediness: Place\none-Inch square pieces of carrot two\nInches deep ln the soil, a foot apart.\nHave the pieces of carrot spitted\nwith' a small stick so they can easily be pulled up. The wire worms\nwhich will be found clinging to\nthe pieces of carrot can then be\ndropped into a can. Pieces of potato\nhurried in the soil will also trap\nthe wire worms in similar fashion.\n8:00\u2014Songs of Empire\n8:3\u00a9-Talk\n,!:45\u2014 Sophisticated   Strings\n9:00\u2014Sydney Kelland   Organist\n9:15\u2014Hilliard's Orchestra\n9:30\u2014BBC News-reel\n10:00\u2014Vagabond's Road\n10:15-CBC News\n10:30\u2014Dance Music\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWING;\nMORNINC\n7:50\u20140 Canada\n9:00\u2014Musical Round-Up\n10:45\u2014Our Family\n11:00\u2014Women's Cornec-\nAFTERNOON\n12:25\u2014The Notice Board\n5:00-To Be Announced\nEVENINC\n6:15\u2014Library Programme\n8:30\u2014Victory Ixian Program\nMrs. Tyler's Group\nll:00-God Save the King\nOther   Periods - CBC   Programmes\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC\u2014RED\n6:00\u2014Contented Hour\n6:30\u2014\"Cavalcade of America\"   (\nNBC\u2014BLUE\n7:00\u2014Voice of Hawaii\n7:30\u20141 Love a Mystery\nCOLUMBIA\n7:3ft-\"Gay Nineties Revue\"\n8:00\u2014\"Those We Love\"\nADVENTURE   STRIPS...\nFRUITVALE DEFEATS\nSALMO GIRLS' TEAM\nFRUITVALE, B. C. - Salmo girls\nsoftball team were Visitors here\nTuesday and,played Fruitvals girls\nteam. Fruitvale winning with a\nscore of 18 to 17.\nTHE GUMPS\n...\nBy Gus Edson\n.JSP\n.Vs^, IPANYBKMN\nbWSU.*,INTWW.\nNMOMMIKONaP\n\u00ab*UK\u00bb,\\TrAU\u00bbT\ntt AWFULLV\nCRMMDCO-\nJANEARDEN\nBy Monte Barrett and Russell Ross\nswta-\nf-a*\niM-klKKSr\nJOO 16 TO\nTRAINED\nMECHANICS\n\u25a01J-.C.\nSHE'S IN\nTHE HOME OF\nGeorge stowe -\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManui\nBW-THAT WUZ A\nL0N6WM_K RACK\nFEOM TH' DOCTORS\nOFFICE ANP IT'S\nHOT-TOO-GEE-I'M\nTHiesTV-\nffv eouy-rr issrr\nVERvaXP-BLnr\nIT'S BETTER THAN\nNOT! \"\n_&&Gte*-i-.____c3!Z\nHENRY\nBy Corl Anderson\nDONALD DUCK\nBv Walt Disney\n\u00a73    8\n1''\n-MOT'\n       -\nrCfJvjJL\n^tfLra\nn    VI\n\/tWSTo\/      \u25a0'\n\u25a0 HS\nfeM\n;$\u00a3\u00a3\n!m riftxv\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zane Grey\nrTHEBB.'\")CUR BOW'S I\n7T\u2014\n$__\u2122&-__Jg&_A\n, \u00ab.ji\n1\nAjNii\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Young\n^^^^_^^____\n jMnm^m^\t\n\t\n \u00ab *\u25a0\nm.\nF.w\n\u2022NILSON DAILY NEWS NILSON. B. &-MONDAV MORNINO MAY H. J941.\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTISING\n.\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nMmn Satlti Nruifl\nTelephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon 71J-Y\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per insertion,.\n44t per line per week (8 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. This\ncovers any  number of Umes.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, first insertion and\n14c each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\n8PECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial Situations\nWanted for 26c for any required\nnumber of  lines for six  days\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy $   .05\nBy carrier, per week       .25\nBy carrier, per year     13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month       $ .15\nThree months      2.00\nSix months      _ ,   4.00\nOne year     8,00\nAbove ratei apply In Canada,\nUnited States and United Kingdom, to subscribers living out-\nSide regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nlix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nBIRTHS\nBRASCH\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Everett Brasch of Castlegar, at Trail-\nTadanac Hospital, May 24, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nApplicaUons will not be considered from persons engaged in\nthe production of war supplies\nWanted - stenographer\nMust be able to meet public and\nhave a knowledge of bookkeeping. Permanent position if satisfactory. Apply stating experience\nBox 443 Daily News.\t\nsittECHANIC WANTED. MUST BE\nBrtt class, able to take full charge\nof shop. Top wages. Motor Inn Ga.\nrage. Kimberley, B. C,\t\nWanted immedia'M,V - *W6~-\nman to work on fruit farm and\nin garden. A.S. Joy, Wynndel, B.C.\nWANTED  -  MAN   FOR   FARM\nwork. $30 mo. with board & room.\nBox 463. Daily News.\t\nk>LE   MAKERS,   EXPERIENCED\nmen only need apply. Cady Lum-\nbetr and Pole Co, 560 Baker St,\niMART    BOY    WANTED    FOR\nstore work. Box 401 Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines Payable in advance. Add\n10c it box number desired.\nJtESPBCTABLE WIDOW, MIDDLE\naged (good cook and baker) with\nson 10 yrs., wants charge of motherless home. Available end June.\nAddress Mrs. C. E. BeU, Box 376.\nRossland, B. C. \t\nRESPECTABLE WOMAN WISHES\n\u2022work. Will care for elderly lady\nor genUemen. Good housekeeper\nor cook. Box 469 Daily News,\nMAN   34   YEA.RS   OF   AGE   UR-\nf\u00bbntly neesds a job in city or on\narm.  Box  474.  Daily  News.\nRELIABLE   GIRL    WILL    CARE\nfor children evenings. Phone 938L\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nA free \"Room For Rent\" card\nwill be provided at The Daily\nNews office to persons advertising Rooms for Rent ln this\ncolumn.\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse keeping rooms in Annable\nBlock for rent R W Dawson\nAgent. 557 Ward Street\nWANTED. SMALL FURN. COT-\ntage. Fruit preferred. Fairview or\nnr. city. Small rent. M.H. Ph. 712R\nLARGE APARTMENT, 3 BED\nrooms, electric range and refrig\nerator Johnstone Block,\t\nJOR RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE\nwith garden. Apply D. Maglio,\nPhone 808L.\t\nFOR   RENT-FURN.   HSKP.   RM\npriv. home. iW4 Stanley. Ph. 158L.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED OR\n.unfurn. home. Mrs C. Becker\nf ROOM FURN SUITE FOR RENT\nClose In $18 Appleyard\t\nTOR RENT - APT, ON GROUND\nfloor  Private bath  Petty Apts.\nStuCCO HOUSE FOR RENT FUR-\ntace, close in. 406 Silica Street.\n~TW_\nA    HOME   FOR   THOSE\nfrom home Strathcona Hotel Apts\nfcERRACE APTS Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites\t\nTO RENT-2-ROOMED FURNISH-\ned suite. Stirling Hotel.\nSee Kerr Apartments First\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nTOR SALE: 20-ACRE LAND LAR-\ngest part wood, other part cleared\nand partly cleared., ijge. 3-room\nhse. at 49 Creek. $1100 or $800\ncash  Apply 1002 Hoover St.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources C P R, Calgary. Alta\nFOR RENT OR SALE-BUNGA-\nlow. 3 bedrooms, furnace, stone\nfoundation, garage. Five lots, fruit\ntrees. Ph. 9 or call 532 Baker St.\nWANTED-SMALL FARM KASLO\ndistrict. Full particulars, price.\nfirst letter, Box 1083, Daily News\nVOR SALE: ROSEMONT, BUILD-\nIng lots, on easy terms nnd offer-\ned cheap. Robertson Realty.\nEXCELLENT BUY ON STANLEY\nStreet, $1750 2 bedrooms Corner\nnrorsprtv  C  W   Annleyard\t\ntOTl SALE - THOR'S 5-ACRE\nranch. Silver King Rd. City light\nand water. Apply Club Hotel,\nlOR SALE - HOUSE * ROOW5\nTerms Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nMiU St Box 126. Nelson. B. C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 28)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION, FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nOF BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY OIVKN\nthat on the 23rd day of June next,\nthe Undersigned intends to apply\nto the Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer ot Beer Licence No.\n5335, Issued ln respect of premises\nbeing part of a building known as\nCosmopolitan Hotel, situate at Ymir\nBn'ish Columbia, upon the lands\nknown and described as Lot two (2)\nBlock twenty-six (26), Map 640, NeK\nson Land ReglstraUon District, ln\nthe Province of British Columbia.\nfrom Carl Evald Lykkegaard to\nByron'Clarence Mclsaac, of Ymir,\nBritish Columbia, the Transferee.\nDATED at Ymir, British Columbia, this 23rd day of May, A.D. 1941.\nB. C. McISAAC,\n Applicant and Transferee.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\nWILL MAKE 194) .YOUR\n\"BANNER YEAR\"\nTHOUSANDS of poultry keepers\nin Western Canada will vouch for\nUie vigor and productivity of these\nchicks Whether you raise 25 or 5000\nchicks, you must get RESULTS\nThis year decide to get chicks from\nlamous British Columbia flocks Expert breeding and management is\nyour guarantee of a healthy flock\nPer 100 chicks: Unsexed Pullets\nR le S Leghorns $ 9.00   $19.00\nR le S Super Leg'ns. 11.00 23.00\nRocks. Reds and\nN. Hamps 10.00    20.00\nSup. Reds, N. Hamps    12.00    22.00\nLight Sussex 12.00    22.00\nLower prices on 500 and over.\nFree books: \"Banner Year\" Book\nand \"Raising Chicks tor Profit\"\nRemember\u2014It's results that count.\nRuittDftSetXUII\nBOX N, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C\nRUSH DELIVERY - HAMBLEY\nElectric Chicks. Thousands hatching each week for prompt delivery\nmost breeds. Write, wire, phone\nor call. High quality Govt Approved Chicks at compeUtive\nprices. J. J. Hambley Hatcheries.\n607, 1st St. E\u201e Calgary. Alta.\nRHODE ISLAND RED CHlCKS\nFinest stock. Mixed sexes, 25-13\n50-$6, 100-$12. Pullets 20c. Cockerels 7c. Also started chicks, a\nmonth old upwards. George Game.\nArmstrong, B. C.\nR.OP. SIRED B. T. PULLETS,\nHampshlres\u20146 wks., 75c; J wks\n70c. R. I. Reds six Wks., 70c Leghorns 6 wks., June 10th,\u201465c. T.\nNeale, R, R.I., Nelson.\nBABY CHICKS, RHODE ISLAND\nReds and New Hampshlres. Good\nutility stock. Approved and blood-\ntested, $8 per 100. John Goodman\n1655 Gilley Ave., New Westminster\nFOR SALE: GOOD YOUNG JER-\nsey cow. Phone 667L3.\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nBEDDING PLANTS\nAsters, mixed; Alysum; African\n(tall), French (dwarf) Marigold;\nCosmo; Portulaca; Stock, Tagetes,\nViscara, Drumondl Phlox (darwf)\nNasturtiums.\nPer Dor\u201425c\nLobelia, trailing and dwarf, blue\nand white: Giant and dwarf Zin-,\nnlas,   Snapdragon, Nierembergia.\nPer Dor.\u201435c.\nPetunias, California Giant, Rosy\nMorn, dwarf, mixed; annual\nCarnations.\nPer Doz\u201450c\nDouble Petunias\nPer Dor\u201475c\nCreeners: Morning Glory Heavenly Blue, Giant Cornel and Scarlet\nO'Hara; Canary Bird Vine, Cardinal Climber. Out of pots.\nEach\u20145c\nGeranium, red, white and pink.\nOut of pots.\nDoi.\u2014$1.50 to $2.50.\nHardy Mums, Dwarf Dahlia, Marguerites, Vinca, Nepeta, Fuchsia.\nOuts of pots,\nDoz.\u2014$1.50.\nCannas and Dracens. Out of pots.\nEach\u201425c\nBrussels Sprouts, Cabbage, early,\nlate,  savoy and  red.\nDoz\u201415c $1,00 per 100\nCauliflower,  Snowball.\nDoz.-20c- $1.50 per 100\nCelery, Golden. Plume or Utah\nDoz\u201425c $1.75 per 100\nTomatoes, all varieties.\nDoz\u201435c. Out of pots $1.00 doz.\nPeppers\u201425c doz.\nCucumbers\u20145c each out of pots.\nNEW:   Bedding  Begonias\n60c and $1.50 doz.\nDwarf   Lobelia,   yellow   foliage,\nblue flower\u201435c doz.\nOpen evenings.\nMac's Greenhouses\nNelson, B. C.\nFARMERS CHECK YOUR FARM\nImplements now and order early\nWe carry Cockshutt. Frost and\nWood Farm Machinery and repairs. Nelson k District Farmers\nSuoplv Company P O. Box 6\nNelson. B   C. or Phone 174.\nFOR WAN1 AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\n'\"\"I    f-M-'T\"\" \u2014-,\u25a0   i -,,    _       ,i   '  it     si      ijii.   ,\nPERSONAL BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp, C. P. R. Depot\nSALVATION'ARMV. *'VoU\nhave 2nd hand clothes, footwear\nfurniture to spare please Ph. 618L\nfor a imp seal ttftm\n\u2022rood! ot aU kinds\nSee CHESS first\n*\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0- FM ' coats\" mmo)\nGlazed, minor repairs Free storage Polar Furs Ltd.. 548 GranvUle\nSt, Vancouver.\nWXHfffl - goOB ___ <5<W-\nton rags, not less than 12 Inches\nsquare, 9c lb. F. 0. B. Nelson\n, Dally Hews.       \t\nSTAMMERING\nSCIENTttlCALLY    CORRECTED\nBooklet   gives   full   information\nWrite   William   Dennison,  543-N\nJarvis Street, Toronto, Ont\nMEN -' RH\u00bbA)|N ttflOft. m -\ntry Vltex. 25 tablets $1.00. Personal drug sundries 24 for $1.00 Supreme Razor Blade Sharpener 35c.\nSharpens blades perfectly. J. Jensen, Box 324. Vancouver, B.C.\nATTENTION! YOU MAY ASK 3\nquestions. I have helped many. I\ncan help vou Send 25 cents with\nname and birth date to Gretta.\n1012 Haro, Vanc6uvef, B. C,\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES. SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples\/plain wrapped. Tested. Guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price list.\nPrinceton Distributor!, P. O Box\n61. Princeton, B, C.\n2Se - The Photo Mill - 25c\nM O Box 385. Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed, 28o\nJ x 7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement, 35c\nSPECIALI-MEN'S PERSONAL\nDrug Sundrito. Finest Quality.\nTested. Guaranteed. 12 for SOc assorted. Including world's funniest\njoke novelty and catalogue of\nSundries and Novelties. Western\nDistributors, Box 24, Dept. NC,\nRegina, Saskatchewan\nMEN! WANT NORMAL PEP, VIM?\nTry Ostrex Tonic Tablets Stimulants and oyster concentrates aids\nto normal pep. Results with first\npackage or maker returns low\nprice. Call, write Mann-Rutherford Co., and all good drug stores,\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned. any size 6 or 8 exposure, roll\n25c. With 5x7 enlargement 30c.\nWe have hundreds of regular,\nsatisfied customers all over the\nWest. One day service done ln a\nreally modem, air conditioned\nPhoto Finishing Plant established over 30 years. One trial will\nconvince you of our superior\nworkmanship. Krystal Photos,\nWUkle. Saskatchewan.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAEROMATIC METER FOR AUTO-\nmlble, truck, tractor, bus and marine engines. More Powerl More\nSpeed; 25 per cent More Mileage!\nSend for informaUon. Agents. Exclusive territory open. Write Box\n163, Vancouver, Canada,\n1930   STUDEBAKER.   REGAL   4-\ndoor sedan. 6 wheel job. Good tires\n(3 new). LICENSED. A real fishing car. $225. Sowerby Cuthben\nLtd. Opp- Hume Hotel and Post\nOffice.\t\n\u202237 TERRAPLANE COACH. FIN-\nlshed ln the pleasing emerald\ngreen enameL Hudson features\nthroughout A real buy at $650.00\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n193JS F6RD SEDAN IN GOOD\nshape. $465, Interior Motor Fin-\nance Corporation, 554 Ward St\nFOR SALk - '29 CHEV. SEDAN\nOverhauled. City Auto Wreckers.\nBaker Street, Nelson. B. C,\nFOR SALE - 1936 DODGE SE-\ndan Delivery Truck. Perfect con-\ndltion. Anolv 711 Baker Street\n1936 V-8 FORD ENGINE. NELSON\nAutc Wrecking, Phone 946.\t\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B  C\nPORTABLE GRAMOPHONE - 70\nrecords. Price $12.50. Apply 1002\nHoover St.\t\nPIPE-FITT1NG. TUBES - SPE-\nclal low prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell <!t    Vancouver   B   C\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner\nLOST\u2014KEY CASE CONTAINING\nkeys and chauffeur's licence on\nThurs. eve. Phone 588R. Reward\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nWANTED - LAUNCH OR HULL\nState type, age. engine and n-ice\nfirst reply   Box 368. Dailv News\nJUST ARRIVED. SHIPMENT OF\nDiesel Engines. Central Truck &\nEquipment. 702 Front St., Nelson\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor tron Any quantity. Top prices\npa d Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St.. Vaneouver, B   C\nWANTED DUPLEX STEAM PUMP\nif possible with-3-inch ouUet. Du-\nmont, Galloway, B.C.\nSHIP   US   YOUR   HIDES.\nTi\/lnrprtn. NeUnn  ,B, C.\nJTP\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nFUNDS AVAILABLE ON YORK\nshire plan 1st mortgages Nelson\nproperty, monthly reductions. C\nW Appleyard\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nNEW YORK, May 25 (AP) - A\nfair amount of activity was displayed during the week and the British\npound closed at $4.04, a new high\nsince Jan 2.\nThe Canadian dollar ended at\n87.18% U.S. cents, a shade higher\nthan lt etarted Monday.\nGreat Britain open market cable\n4.04.\nEvery male resident of Thafland\nmust serve three years as a priest\nbetore he is 23.\nASSAYERS and MINE AGENTS\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB.C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual representative tor ship\npers at Trail Smelter.\nA. J. BTO tlit.__lbWl MME\nrepresentative. Full time attention given shippen' interest.\nBox 54, Trail, B, C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. a MCMILLAN. D. Ct NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch Blk.\nbK wos&eM1 met, d. c mj\nBaker Street. Phone 969.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEY0RS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P.O. BOX 104\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En-\ngineer, Phone \"Beaver Falls,\"\nR. W. HAGGEN, MtiHNfl Se CtVtL\nEngineer; BC. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B.C\nINSURANCE and  REAL ESTATE\nR. W- DAWSON. Real Estate, In-\nsurance. Rentals. 557 Ward Street\nAnnable Block, Phone 187.\nC. D. blackw06d AtitadES\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone -99.\nCHAS. F. McHARbY, INSlfltANCS\nReal Estate. Phone'136.\t\nH. E. DILL, FIRE, AUTO, ACCI-\ndent Insurance, 532 Ward Street\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED i\nMachine Shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nCOR3ETIERE8\nSPENCER-   CORSET1ERE,    MISS\nShirley Boomer, 217 Gore, Ph. 669L\nOPTOMETRI8T8\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrist\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail       Phone 177\nSASH   FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S      SASH ,  FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\n8ECOND HAND 8TORES\n--*-_   HkVtv\nKaslo Has Torch Ceremony at Park,\nSawing Contest, Tug-ol-War, Softball\nand Full Program Children's Sports\nKASLO,  B.C., Mar\nwas celebrated tn Kaslo'as usual,\nwith many visitors frorr aU over the\ndistrict giving added gaiety' to the\nlively scene. The day was an Ideal\none for the aports, which began at\n9 a.m., with those for the younger\nchildren, the older children getting their share of fun at 10 o'clock.\nSPORTS  RESULTS\nEvents and their results follow,\nwinners-being named in order, first\nsecond and third.\nFlat Races\u2014      <\nOirla under 4 years\u2014Mary Jane\nAbey, Cecile Panifburn, Betty Al-\ndous.\nBoys under 4\u2014Jimmy Mclnnis,\nClarke Bowker, David Jardine.\nGirls under 6 \u2014 Anne Carney,\nMaureen Sydall, Catherine Abey,\nBoys under 6\u2014Billy Price, Larry\nMcHardy, Douglas Wone.\nGirls under 8\u2014Heather Abey,\nPatsy SuJUvan, Evelyn Pangburn.\nBoyj under 8\u2014Philip Holmes, Ian\nMcCartney, Larry MdHardy.\nGirls under 10\u2014(Phyllis Morphet\nHeather Albey, Evelyn Pangburn.\nBoys under 10\u2014Billy Carrett,\nGordon Perkins, Harvey Speirs.\nGirls under 12\u2014Jean McQuarrle,\nJoan Tinkess, Betty Pangburn and\nPatsy Abey Ued.\nBoys under 12 \u2014 Alan Speirs,\nCharlie Sutherland, Stanley Morphet.\nBoys under 14\u2014Dan McQuarrle,\nBert Webber, Gilbert Hartin and\nWilliam Chun tied.   \u25a0\nGirls under 15\u2014Doris Fletcher,\nNaomi Allsebrooke, Carol Davis.\nBoys under 15\u2014Sing Chun, Dan\nMcQuarrie, Bert Webber.\nNovelty Races-\nGirls' sack race, under 12\u2014Carol\nDavis, Jean McQuarrie.\nBoys' sack race, under 12 \u2014\nGeorge McQuarrie, Charlie Suthe-\nerland, Douglas Singel.\nGirts' sack race, under 14\u2014Doris\nFletcher, Jean McQuarrie, Winnie\nPalmer.\n' Boys' sack race, under 14\u2014Dan\nMcQuarrie, Charley Sutherland, Orval RUey.\nGirls' three-legged race, under 12\n\u2014Joan Tinkess and Mildred Augustine, Betty Pangburn and Patsy\nAbey, Evelyn Pangburn and Heather  Abey.-\nBoys' saok race, under 12\u2014Alan\nSpeirs and Charlie Sutherland,\nGeorge McQuarrie and Keith Gibson, Keith Sullivan and Ydin Helgren.\n       , Girls' sack race, under 14\u2014Sonja\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE. Augustine and Naomi Allsebrooke,\nWhat have you? Ph. 534, Ark Store Joan Hild and Doris Fletcher. Mil-\nTorch Ceremony Provides \"Inspired\nOpportunity\" for Dedication Rees\nDeclares; Britain Points the Way\nHolding the Pass for\nCivilization and\nChristianity\nSeeing In Empire Day torch\nceremonlei \"an Inspired opportu-\n- nity to Individualize this ceremony fo dedication,\" Gerald 8.\nRees urged a great gathering of\nNelson citizens at the Recreation\nGrounds Saturday morning to\nfollow the example of Britons,\nwhere \"King and commoner,\nduke and dustman, highborn and\nhumble, soldier and civilian alike,\nare all helping to hold the pass for\ncllllzatlon and for Christianity.\"\nBritain, falling back upon the\nrook of her national character, today \"has become the last outpost of\nfreedom and sanctuary of civilization in a storm-lashed hemisphere,\"\nhe arrested.\n\"Early in the last war, one of\nEngland's \"national poets warned his\npeople in these words:\n\"No easy hones or lies\nShall lead us to our goal,\nBut iron sacrifice,\nOf body, will and soul.'\n\"We are coming to realize and\nfeel that these solemn words have\nan equal, if not an added meaning,\nin the conflict in which we as a\nnation and as an Empire are now\nengaged.\nREDEDICATION\n\"We humbly confess that during\nall the years of the long armistice\n... we have not held high enough\nthe torch that was flung to us from\n'the falling hands of those who yielded up their lives in the cause of\nfreedom on the Jar-flung battlefields of the First Great War. We\nhave hardly ked faith with those\nwho sleep in Flanders Fields. We\nhave not, as Individual^ and therefore not as a nation, lived up to\nour known highest Ideals. We have\nnot perhaps even endeavored to\nlive up to our good intentions,\" he\nsaid.\n\"But we have come here as a\ncommunity of free people to re-\ndedicate all that we have and are\nas a personal pledge to the tremendous task that still lies ahead\nof us before we come to journey's\nend, and walk once more 'along\nthe sunlit paths, of peace.\n\"The symbolic torch . . - winging\nits loftr passage across our wide\nDominion from Pacific to Atlantic\ntidewater will be further- borne on\nIts Eastward flight . . . Into the\nvery heart of the Empire's bomb-\nblasted but unconquerable capital\ncity. It will be Canada's token of\nher unswerving loyalty to, and\nunited faith in, the common cause\nwhich concerns every last man,\nwoman and child in this community,\nand in every village, town and city\nin Canada.\n\"It could not ln this hour of destiny be delivered into more worthy\nhands. Winston Churchill has become for all Britons a national\nsymbol, the pattern John Bull of\nthe century; he is the Empire's\nstaunchest and humblest warrior,\"\nsaid Mr. Rees. and the crowd echoed\nhis assertion in its applause.\nBEACONS BURN BRIGHTLY\n\"Over yonder in the little Island\nunder the North Star, behind her\nramparts of the seas and beneath\nher soft misty skies, the beacon\nlights are burning clearly and\ncleanly: there has been no steadier,\nor more constant, or more lovely\nflame la all of the thousand years\nof her recorded history.\" he de-\ncleared as applause resounded\nagain\n\"Over yonder In the armed camp\nthat is England. King and commoner,  duke  and   dustman,  highborn\nand humble, soldier and civilian\nalike, are all helping to hold the\npass for civilization and for Christianity. , 4 ,\n\"Opposing the most violent and\nvicious hazards that have ear\ncome to her In her dough Island\ndred Augustine and Joan Tinkess.\nBoys' sack race, under 14~Dan\nMcQuarrle and Sing Chun, Charlie\nSutherland and WilUam Chun, Alan\nSpeirs and Harvey Speirs.\nGlris' apple race\u2014Doris Fletcher,\nMildred Augustine, Joan Tinkess.\nBoys' apple race\u2014Raymond Gopp.\nJohh Holmes, Ralph MdPhersdh and\nJimmy Riddell Ued for third.\nGirls' shoe race\u2014Doris Fletcher,\nCarol Davis, Betty Pangburn.\nBoys' crab race\u2014Dan McQuarrle\nand Orval Riley, John Holmes and\nPhilip Holmes, Douglas Singel and\nGeorge McQuarrie.\nOlrls' skipping race\u2014Melga Augustine, Carol Davis, Phyllis Morphet.\nBoys' wheelbarrow race \u2014 Dan\nMcQuarrie and Orval Riley, CharUe\nChun and George McQuarrie, Gilbert Hartln and Victor Webber.\nGirls' obstacle race, driving nail,\ncarrying egg In spoon while In sack,\nwhistling after eating crackers-\nHeather Abey, Kathleen Cooper,\nCarol Davis.\n\u2022 Boys' obstacle race \u2014 Douglas\nAlbey, Ydin Helgren, Dan McQuarrie.\nBoys' bicycle race, under IB-\nAlan Speirs, Charlie Sutherland,\nDouglas Sindel.\nBoys open bicycle race \u2014 Larry\nFitzsimmons, Dan McQuarrie, Alan\nSpeirs.\nBoys' 100-yard dash\u2014Raymond\nLoekhard, Kenneth Abey, Harold\nAbey.\nGirls' IB-yard dash\u2014Mary Morton, Helga AugusUne, Betty Sutcllffe.\nMixed relay teams of four\u2014Helga\nAugustine, Kenneth Abey, Mary\nMorton and Harold Abey; Betty\nSutcliffe, Jack Dryden, Marlon Leveque and Raymond Lockard.\nGirls' softball throw\u2014Mary Morton, Bernice Shaw.\nBoys' softball throw\u2014Jack Dryden, Kenneth Abey, Raymond Lockard.\nGirls' championship, grand aggregate\u2014Three for a first, two for a\nsecond, one for a third \u2014 'Doris\nFletcher, 17; Carol Davis 10.\nBoys' chamoionship, grand aggregate\u2014Dan McQuarrie 17; Charlie\nSutherland 13.\nA Scout knot race, won by Gilbert HarUn, with Charlie Sutherland second, and a \"Johnson's Landing race\" with Jean MacNicol, Larry\nMacNicol and Pat Dinney first,\nsecond and third respectively, were\nspecially arranged.\nHOME TEAMS\nWIN SOFTBALL\nln the afternoon two softball\ngames with the Nelson C.Y.O. teams\nwere scheduled. The first was between girls' teams, a decisive win\nfor the Kaslo girls. Lineups were:\nNelson-^M. Stangherlin, V. De\nLucrezio, P. Payie, I. Payie, E. Ben-\nr\/ert. M. Ryan, M. Kuhn, M. McDougaU, K. MacDougall, Clara Horner.\nKaslo\u2014Irene Garrett Mary Morton, Bernice Shaw, Helga Augustine. Lorna Speirs. S, Bendis, June\nGilker, Gladys Gopp, B. Mears,\nMarion Tinkess John Hild, M. McHardy.\nThe Nelson boys' team failed to\naopear, and'to represent them were\nF Doyle, J. Bengert, R. Strachan,\nA. Her, J. De Lucrezio, William\nChandler. W. Baar, B. MacNicol\nand   R.   Dinney.   Kaslo's   winning\n_. team was made up of Harold Abey,\nstory, the has at long last fallen I H. BraathaTn, D. de'Wolff. J. Furiak,\nback upon the rock of her na-  Kenneth\ntlonal  character.  Surely we can' Freeman,\ndo  no  less than  follow  her example, . . ,\n\"Let us, each after his own manner and according to the light that\nis in him, endeaor to become more\nworthy of our kith and kin who\nthus far in this war\u2014and no less in\nthe last war\u2014have dared all and\nsuffered all things, and who in the\ncourse of their simple and chosen\nduty, have now passed beyond the\nsight of man, and for whom all the\na new birth of freedom, and that\nside.\"\nLINCOLN'8 CHALLENGE\nMr. Rees repeated Abraham Lincoln's words at Gettysburg:\n\"It is rather for us to be here\ndedicated to the important task remaining before us. That from these\nhonored dead, we accept an increased devotion to that cause Tor\nwhich they offered the last full\nmeasure of sacrifice. That -we heje\nfirmly determine that these dead\nshall not have died in vain. That\nthis nation\u2014under God\u2014shall have\na new birth of freedom, and that\nthe government of the ne*\"!*\nAbey,   Ted   Horner,   F.\nRaymond Lockard,   and\nKenneth  MacPherson,\nFirst to enter the log-sawing contest was James Speirs, nearly 84\nyears \"young\" and Cecil Pangburn,\nwho made the cut in one minute 8\nseconds, only to lose to Howard Perkins and Bruce MacNicol. who cut\nthrough the 18-inch log in 46 seconds. ,\nThe local tug-of-war teams were\norganized and captained by A. L.\nMacPhee and Cecil Paneburn, the\nlatter's team being the winners.\nROS8LAND MAYOR\nTAKES PART\nA. L. MacPhee organized the\n'Torch Ceremony\" held In Vimy\nPark. With him on the platform\nwere Mayor John E. Gordon ot\nRossland, Mayor F. E. Archer of\nKaslo and the other members of\nthe Kaslo City Council. Mr. Archer\nspoke briefly and introduced Rev.\nJ. Fielding Shaw, who gave the\nprescribed address.\nMayor Gordon also made a few\nbrief, pertinent remarks, \"O Canada'' was sung, followed by the\nrecital of the pledge of allegiance,\nthe ceremony ending with the sing-\nNelson Citizens Pledty\nLoyalty and Allegiance\nin Fine Torch Ceremony\nf  \u25a0--\u25a0\nGiOIlt    Parade    Leads Uirion; Nelson Civilian Voluntary\nTraining Corps; Girl Guidei  and\n'%\nHundreds to the\nCeremony\nNelson dedicated ltaelf to the\nEmpire's crusade for freedom Saturday,\nAn lighted torch wu lifted\nagainst a Union Jack background\nhundred! af citizens gathered at\nthe Recreation Groundi plaoed\ntheir hands over their hearn, and\nwith Mayor N. C. itlbbi leading\nrepeated this pledge:\n\"I hereby declare my belief In\nAlmighty Ood, and reaffirm my\nloyalty and allegiance to Hla Maj-\neety the King, and further declare my support for. British Institutions.\n\"I pledge myself and my all to\nhold the Torch on high and to\nmaroh shoulder ta shoulder with\nthe Motherland and the Empire\nIn our righteous cause through\nvictory and enduring peaoe.\"\nThat there rose in swelling volume the strains of \"God Save the\nKing.\" sung with a dignity and\nfervor that renewed the pledge the\ngathering had Just given.\nNelson s torch ceremony was over,\nbut it had built up the fire of devotion to the Empire's cause unUl\nit burned brighUy and cleanly and\nwith an increasing flame.\nINSPIRING DEDICATION\nThe ceremony waa a colorful and\nInspiring dedication. Preceding lt a\nparade the length of Baker Street\nmarched through the flag-decked\nsection to the Recreation Grounds.\nAt its head the Union Jack and a\nlighted torch, Nelson's replica of\nCanada's torch of freedom, were\ncarried, escorted by an armed guard.\nThe Fi-e Department cars leading\nthe parade at the start broke away\nat the end of Baker Street to return to the Fire Hall.\nIn the parade, led by the City\nBand, maTched the City Council,\nthe Nelson Platoon of the Veterans\nGuard of Canada; the Nelson Detainment of Uie Canadian Women's\nTraining Corps; members of the\nNelson  Branch   of   the  Canadian\n- pe; -\nBrownies; High School, Junior High\nand SL Joseph's Academy Cadet\nCorps; students of all Nelson\nschools. In addition to tha City\nBand the parade marched to tbt\nmusic ot the Kotenay Kilties tha\nJunior High School Cadet Band\nand St. Joseph's' Academy Cadet\nBand. SL Joseph's Band member*\nwore new green and gold caper.\nFORM SQUARE\nAt the Recreation Groundi tht\nparade units formed three sides\nof a square around a platform facing the grandstand. Complementing\nthe Union Jack which lormed tht\nbackground for the platform wert\nthe flags carried by the varioui\nuniti.\nOn the platform were City Council members; Mayor Stibbs, Major\nHammond and G. S. Rees, speakers;\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nBishop ot Nelson; R. B. Morrii,\nChairman of the Nelson Victory\nLoan Executive Committee and song\nleader; G. A. Hoover and C. B.\nGarland, ot the Victory Loan Com*\nmlttee; Mrs. H. H. Currie, Preiident\not the Nelson Women's Auxiliary\nthe Nelson Women's Institute; and\nMrs. F. F.. Wheeler, President ot\nto Canadian Active Service Forcei;\nthe torch party. Kokanee Chantt*\nI. O. D. E. was grouped in at\ngrandstand.\nCorporal T. Langford of tht\nVeteran's Guard carried tht torch,\nand flanking him were Pte.- C\nDuff and Pte. Q. Talbot Tht\ntorch party was completed by Mln\nConstance Manahan ai Britannia,\nDesmond Mayne and Stanlty\nTrigga at sailors, and Jack Glover\nas an airman. Mra. Harold Lakes\nwaa responsible for th* tort*\npatty arrangement!\nLed by the City Band, tht gath.\nering sang \"O Canada\" at the optn*\ning, \"The Maple Leat Forever\",\n\"There'll Always Be an England\",\nOnward Christian Soldien\" and\nfinally \"God Save the King.\"\nThe parade was organized by HL\nE. Thain and the Ceremony br\nMayor N. C. Stibbs.\nweU attended.\nAnd so ended another happy Mth\nof May tor citizens and visitors\nalike.\nthe people and for the people shaU   \\ng of the National Anthem\nnot perish from the earth,\n\"Lincoln was a man of peace, if\never there was one, but he believed\nthat, the price of freedom was worth\nits cost in blood, and therefore\nsancUoned a war in order to set\nhis country free.\n\"Our English soil, even as Gettysburg, is hallowed by stubborn men\nwho would not yield their souls, that year after year on each Armi-\nbelieving that the bodies of dead, stice morning\u2014in peace and in war\nmen live on as barricades of Lib-  \u2014causes to be placed at the base of\nAll Kaslo Service Clubs participated 1*1 this impressive ceremony,\nand a number of prominent citizens Inscribed their names on the\nscroll.\nA dance, sponsored by the Canadian Legion, was held in the Legion\nHall in the evening, and was very\nerty,\" Mr. Rees asserted\n\"Let us therefore enter lt)to the\nspirit of the Gettysburg of yester-\nthe cenotaph in Whitehall in Lon\ndon City a large wreath of Flanders\npoppies bearing these  words:   15o\nday, and of the Motherland today  they did not die ln vain after all\nSoybean Valuable\nto Dairy Farmer\nThe soybean crop tuffers advantages to many farmers, but moitly\nto the dairy farmer.\nThe greatest value ot soybeans Ues\nIn high protein content of the mature seed, says C. W. Owen, Dominion Evperimental Station, Harrow\nOnt. No other commonly grown\ncrop compares with soybean! ln this\nrespect, as cereals are comparatively\nlow hi protein. From this standpoint,\nsoybean seed Is often considered\nas equal, pound for pound, to Unseed meal. This feature alone should\nappeal to all dairy fat-mere.\nSoybeans may be harvested either\nfor hay or seed. For a hay crop\nUie seed should be drilled hi solid\nsimilar to oats, but whtrt \u2022 seed\ncrop ii required, wldet-spaoed rows\nto permit cultivation art prefer-\nable. Where alfalfa ctn bt grou\nsoybean hay may be consldei\nmainly as an emergency cro\ndinary farm machinery will I\nsoybeans satisfactorily. While tht\nseed may be harvested with a grain\nbinder, a combine ia mort satisfactory.\nTht soybean crop ll a legumt\nsimilar to clover and alfalfa; there.\ntore, lt possesses the ability of fixing ln the soil free atmoaphorit\nnitrogen. Seed ahould be inoculated\nwith the proper bacteria befort\nplanting. The introduction of t legume such as the soybean in tht\nrotation is favorable to tht maintenance of soil fertility. When such\nadvantages as high protein feed\nvalue, soli improvement, and simple\ncultural requirementi are conslered,\nthe soybean should merit a place\non most dairy farms.\nChina and the United Statei art\nUie only countries ahead of BrazU\nin hog raising.\n\"Are We Doing Enough!\" Stibbs Asks\nas He Leads Nelson Torch Ceremony\nCanada Is Calling for\nMoney for Tools to\nFinish the Job\n\"We supply the money, Canadian workmen will finish the\ntools, snd the Empire feeeei w\u00bbl\nmarch to victory and peace.\nRinging applause  greetecI  thii\ndeclaration by Mayor N. C. Etlbbi\nas he opened Nelson's torch ceremony it the Recreation Grounds\nSaturday morning.\n\"At a most critical time In our\nEmpire history we  are asked to\nfurnish Canada with money, to help\nfight our battle for freedom,   Mis\nWorship said.  The  Victory  Loan\ncampaign was \"a caU to us to do\nmore.\"\nARE WE DOINQ ENOUGH\n\"Compare us with the ordinary\npeople of Britain. Are we doing?\nCompare us with Uie airmen, sailors\nand soldiers. Are we doing enough?\nCompare with all we stand to lose.\nAre we doing enough? Our answer\nMayflower May Revive Rossland Mining\nEntrance to the Mayflower mine, the property\nIn the \"South Belt\" of the Rossland mining camp\nnow under development by L. R. Smith of Pen-\n.,\u201e:. .,.^_^_^X^_.--m_.e-.^s_m:i___.\nticton and associates. So far 220 feet of commercial\nore averaging six feet ln width has been opened.\nMr Smltti. left, Is talking to R. W. Haggen qf Rossland, consulting engnieer\u2014Dally Newi Photo.\n_\nln the light of these comptriionf\nmust be 'No!' There Is more wt\noan do. We must buy tU tht Victory Bonds we can. That if what\nCanada expects of us,\" Mayor StibM\ndeclared as the crowd again bunt\ninto applause.\nAs the ceremony drew to a clott\nthe lighted torch wae held high.\nRepeating Churchill's clarion can,\n\"Give us the tools and we will\nfinish the lob\", and staUng the\noriginal torch was going to Britain\nas a symbolic pledge that \"Canada\nwill keep the fires burning in an\n'all out' defence against tyranny\nand slavery,\" Mayor sUbbi led ttt\nconcourse In the repltion of tht\nEmpire Day pledge.\n 1\nBeautify Your\nDOOR HARDWARE\nWith Glistening Chrome Plate\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLsurltx Bldg. Nelson, B.C\nTIIttlMIIIlIIIIIIIIIIII\nGrenvifle H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 618\n189 Baker St.      Nelson, B. C.\nIiitiiiiitiiiiiitiitiin\nLetters From\nGreat Britain\nReaden ot the Nelion Dally\nNews are Invited to send In\nletters they receive from tht\nwar tones so that other\nreaders can <ihare this news\nLetters wlU be copied ud\ncarefully returned Only newa\nof   general   interest   wtU   bt\nfiublished Other Itemi In tht\neHers will if coune be kept\nconfidential Please send of\nbring iuch letters to:\nWAR ZONE EDITOR.\nSMamt\nlaily News\n I\"   AU.nm,.L-\nH0W TO WOO AN UNKISSED BRIDE!\nloin heavenly Hedy and romantic Jimmy\nia th* exciting modern lor* story of a\nbeauty who had 24 hours to gel married...\naad wanted to remain an unkissed bridei\nJt't all love and laughter as Jimmy find*\nthe surprising answer I\nAt 3:28, 7:00, 9:53\n\"The Man Who Talked Too Much\"\nWith George Brent\u2014Virginia Bruce\u2014Brenda Marshal\nEven gangland's terror couldn't seal his lips\u2014his story is the\nmost thrilling ever told.\nCIVIC\nToday-Tues.\nMATINEE  AT 2:00\nComplete  Shows 2:00-7:00-8:25\nINDIANAPOLIS (CP) - Strawberries have just as much iron as\naplnach\u2014that's the report of dietician-scientists here, anyway, and *\nlot of,, folk will be glad to hear it.\nGrenfell's\nCafe\nTender juicy Steak\nCooked Just Right\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nMed. Arts Blk.\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nLAMBERT'S\nPHONE\n|for hter fittetW      X\/\nArmour-Plato MOTOR OIL\nIs not the same as ordinary oil.\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nV. Ii.sl.-r SI.   SEHVICt   Phone 122\nGET THE\n.FURNACE\nPut ln working order NOWI\nR. H. Maber\nPhone S6(      610 Kootenay St\nEASY\nWAY TO\nIRON\nWITH A\nrole man\nSELF-HEATING IRON\nLIGHTS INSTANTLY\nITS eur and pleaunt to bon with a\n1 Colemin. It itva youi itrength.\nYou do better ironing euler and quicker st leu coit. ThU modern Colemin\nbon llghti tnstintlT ... no genentlni\nwith match or torch ... no waiting\nSaves vou mon time ind wotk thin \u25a0\n$100 wuhing machine. Do a wholi\nironing with one iron.\nTh* evt nit heated double pointed bm\nIrons garments with fewer itrokei. Ironing time ll reduced one-third. Heals\nItself. use It anywhere. Mikes and\nbum Its own gu.\nCods In end iee It demonstrated\nWood. Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nA Car and Taxi\nMeet on Corner\nNear Birchbank\nTRAU., B. C, May 26 \u2014 A car,\ndriven by Ernest Morrison of Rossland, with Mrs. Morrison and Miss\nJean Morrison as passengers, came\nInto collision with a No. 0 taxi,\ndriven by Kenneth Dawson, oi\nTrail, at Birchbank, Sunday afternoon.\nMrs. Morrison was badly bruised\nand shaken up, and Is in the Mater\nMisericordiae Hospital. Rossland,\nbut is not believed to be seriously\ninjured.\nOther passengers who were In\nDawson's car, were shaken up, but\nnot very badly hurt.\nThe accident happened when the\nMorrison car, travelling towards\nTrail, met the taxi, which was\nheaded toward Castlegar. According\nto Mr. Dawson, he had swerved\nwide from the corner to avoid the\ncar in front of the Morrison car,\nand temporarily lost control as the\nback wheels of his car skidded in\nthe gravel at the side of the road,\nand swerved in front of the Morrison car.\nThe cars were damaged to the\napproximate extent of $150 each.\nRookie Tex Hughson with the\nBoston Bed Sox shared Ihe spotlight as club interps-eter with Coach\nMoe Berg when the club visited\nCuba late in March. Hughson was\nreared near Mexican territory and\nas a ranch owner at Kyle, Tex.,\nhe has obtained a good working\nknowledge of Spanish from Mexican sharecroppers. Berg is the Sox'\nlinguistic expert.\nNew Maple Syrup\nand Hot Cakes\nThe PERCOLATOR\nE. W. Kopeckl 509 Baker St\nFOR RENT\nTWO or THREE ROOM SUITE\nAnnable Rlnck\nR. W. Dawson\nPhORI 19\/ Annable Block\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nHOOD'S\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\nSOMETHINC NEW\nWheat Cerm Bread\nliiiiitiiiiimimimt\nFAMILY WASH\n7e PER La\nWe call and Deliver\nPhone 1042\njonella. QkawtL.\nWELDING\nn   A &f 1)   Phone\nnAnr mi\nBody and Fender Wrks\nOpposite Queen City Motors\nPhone\n195\nChocolate\nMilk\nFor Pickup and Pep\niniiiiiniiiiiiiitmii\nASSAY OFFICES\nE. W. Widdowson\nand Company\n301-305 Joiephlne St   Nelion, B. C.\nI I I I 1 I 11 I 111 111 11 11 I 11 11\nAllersol\nUsed successfully for hay-\nfever in adults. CI Afl\nPer bottle 0l.UU\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81        NELSON, B. C.\n.ON DAILY NEWS  NELSON   ..^\nArmy Officers Are in\nTroll on Inspection\nTRAIL, B. C, Mav 25 - Brigadier\nR. V. Alexander, Officer Commanding Military District No. Il7 and\nMajor C. T. Batten arrived from\nVictoria Sunday night on in inspection visit throughout the district. They will remain in Trail\nuntil Tuesday.\nLIMA, Ohio (CP)\u2014Duty bound to\nattend. public luncheons, James V.\nSkoates, Association of Commerce\nsecretary,'reported ham every day\nbut Saturday, When somebody tendered a beefsteak.\nTrail Dedicates Torch in Colorful\nOutdoor Ceremony Sunday Afternoon\nTRAIL, B. C, May 25-Trail's\nTorch Dedication, held at the Memorial Hall Sunday atternoon at 4\no'clock, was a particularly impressive and colorful ceremony.\nA- large concourse ot citizens,\ndressed In Summer attire, thronged around the square formed by\nthe Trail Canadian Legion, tbe Legion Band, the High School Cadets,\nthe Veterans' Guard Company, the\nBoy Scouts and Guides and the Civilian Defence Corps\/\nThe dedication of the torch, made\nby Rev. L. A. C. Smith, Vice-President of the Trail Ministerial Association, took place on the outside\nplatform of the hall, grouped upon\nwhich there Mayor Herbert Clark;\nLieut.- F. Sutherland of the Veterans' Guard, Rev. M. W. Lees, President of the Trail Ministerial Association, G. F. Reimann, President\nof Branch 11 of the Canadian Legion, and R. R. Burns, M.L.A.\nOpening the program, the Legion\nband played \"O Canada', invocation was made by Dr. Lees and the\nhymns,   \"Onward   Christian   Soldiers\", was sung.\nREIMANN SPEAKS\nRev. Mr. Smith delivered a short\naddress, and offered a prayer, which\nwas followed by a stirring address\nby Mr. Reimann as Legion President.\nThe torch was presented by Mayor\nClark, to Lieut. Sutherland, arid\nthen dedicated by Rev. Mr\/ Smith.\nLighting of the torch was done\nby Mr. Burns, and this was followed by the singing of the hymn\n\"Lead on O King Eternal\".\nStanding at attention, handi over\ntheir hearts, oblivious to the chatter and disturbance made Dy the\nyoung children threading their way\nthroughout the crowd, the entire\ngathering pledged allegiance and\nloyalty to the King,\nThe National Anthem, and a Benediction by Rev. Mr. Lee concluded\nthe dedication which had lasted\nabout 45 minutes.\nMission Society\nUrges Abstinence\nDelegate Shows\nA written report, outlining the\nactiities and progress of the Women's Missionary Society throughout B. C. in 1940, on the recent Provincial Conference at Vancouver,\nwas read at the recent United Women's Missionary Society meetfng.\nMrs. F. C. Johnson of Nakusp was\nthe District delegate to the conference, but as she was unable to attend the Nelson meeting, her written report was given,\nTwo resolutions passed at the\nConference, one protesting against\nlicensing of cabarets in Vancouver,\nand urging all members to take an\nactive part in the \"total abstinence\ncampaign\"; and a second that the\nConference \"go on record as deeply\ndeploring any movement that will\ntend to foster racial antagonism,\"\nwere emphasized in the report.\nMEMBERSHIP UP\nW. M. S. membership in B. C. increased to 165 organizations in 1940.\nThere was also a marked increast\nin the number of affiliated societies. Increases in the membershin\nin both Kootenay Presbyterial and\nCariboo District were shown. The\nyear was also marked by a keen interest shown by members in missionary stydy and in closer cooperation with younger groups.\nThe B. C. societies raised $29,133\nfor missions, an increase of $519\nover their contribution in 1939, >he\nreport showed.\n172 APRIL VISITS\nMrs. C. M. Young's visiting committee reported 160 visits to Koo-1\ntenay Lake General Hospital and 12\nvisits in horfies during April.\nMrs, J R. McLennan and Miss I\nIda Graham, it was decided, will\ntake over the various offices of Mrs. |\nJ. A. Donnell and Mrs. E. Meggs for I\nthe rest of the year. Mrs. Donnell\nis leaving Nelson in July.\nA reading, \"The Creed of Kind-'\nness to Those Who Pass Along l\/.e'i\nRoad\", was given by Mrs. W. A.\nBennett, while Miss Graham rend\nthe Scripture lesson from Corinthians, and gave a short article on\n\"Facing the Facts With Courage\"\nPrayers were led by Dr. Annie\nSmith.\nDelighting the members, Miss\nShirley Goodwin sang a solo, md\nMiss Joyce Elder and Miss Beverley Maddin presented a bright mission band dialogue.\nDuchess Given\nPrivate Showing\nof Export Fashions\nLONDON (CP)-Britain's bid for\na pla^e in the overseas clothing market will be given tesh impetus\nby shipment of 2000 dresses, ranging in price from $4.50 to $90 to Canada and the U. S. in the biggest\nexport effort in women's clothes\nyet made by this country.\nThe Women's Fashions Expert\nGroup hope the clothes will be on\nshow in New York by May.15. Except for the Duchess of Kent, no one\nwill see them until they reach America.\nThey were designed in secrecy\nby 80 manufacturers and have been\nkept under lock and key. After a\nprivate showing for the Duchess\nthey will be sent to Scotland and\nlocked in a safe place until until\nsailing day.\nThe models, dresses, suits, dinner\ngowns and one wedding dress, all\nare of wool.\n?r to Shoulder\n4 A\u00abtiM R*8tf frMi Dij\u00abtttM lit\nBISMA-REX\nANTACID STOMACH\nPOWDER\nSold Only it\nYOUR REXALL STORE\nCity Drug Co.\nPhoni 34\nBox 460\nShousfer to shoulder these United \"S.aies anu canaa.an pilots\nleave the vessel that brought them to England to augment the Royal\nAir Force. The men were given their last, final training in Canada\nunder the Empire Air Training Scheme.\nMotorcyclists Give Thrills lo Crowd\nal FruilvaSe's Gala and Sports Day\nCondition of Lad\nInjured in Fall\nIs Little Changed\nCondition ot Gerald Berg, seven-\nyoar-old who was critically injured\nriday in a tell down the face of\nHospital Bluff in Gyro Park, whs\n\"very little changed\" Sunday evening. The lad suffered a badly fractured skull and other injuries, the\nfull extent of which have not ye.\nbeen ascertained as it has not been\npossible to X-ray him.\nThe boy, tfho is a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital, is the\nson of Pte. Walter A. Berg of tne\nCanadian Army and Mrs. Berg. Tne\nfather reached Britain a few weeks\nago.\nObservers reported the kiddie was\nwalking along the rock wall at\nLookout Point when slipped and\nfell.\nFRUITVALE; B. C, May 25\u2014All i\nroads led to Fruitvale, Saturday\nmorning, as Trailites started out\nearly on their journey baok into\nthe hills to participate in the Fruitvale Gala and Sports Day. Weather\nat the outset looked uncertain and\ncloudy with a storm feeling making\nthe atmosphere oppressive.\nChildren's . sports started at 10\no'clock, and,the main races and\nsports eents were finished shortly\nafter 12 o'clock, when a heavy rainstorm descended. It lashed the park\narea for about 15 minutes, with\neveryone huddled in shelters and\nwondering if it would spoil the\nday, and then subsided, and the\nremainder of the afternoon was\nbrilliant. Although the rain had\nmade the playground area wet for\nthe motorcycle exhibition, it served\nto dampen the roads and had cleared away the dusty atmosphere.\nBICYCLE RACE FROM TRAIL\nOne of the most surprising eveots\nof the program was the- speedy arrival of the boy cyclists from Trail.\nStartinj out a few minutes after\n10:20, the winner, Malcolm Serres,\nof Trail, crossed the finishing line\nat Fruitvale at 11:15. Peter Jensen,\nof Rossland, came in about two\nminutes behind Serres, and Mono\nFerro, of Trail, third man, also\nspaced about two minutes behind\nJensen. Th's was the first Trail-\nFruitvale bicycle race to be held in\nconjunction with the Sports Day.\nand the general impression was that\nthe first arrivals would be speeding\ndown the alley about 12 noon. No'\nexact times were kept, but the boys\nwere started from the Crown Point\nHotel by Palmer Rutledge about\n10:32. Sixteen'boys started, including two from Nelson.\nThe exhibition given by the Trail\nMotorcycle Club was clearly the\nmost thrilling spectacle of the whole\nday. The centre grounds were very\ndamp after the rainfall, and the\nmotorcycle balloon tag, with eight\nmotorcycle carrying two riders, literally provided thrills and spills.\nA motorcycle drill was also carried\nout, and then motorcycle jumps.\nClimaxing the exhibition was Arnold Laarz's wall crash, the spectators collecting splinter souvenirs\nafter the rider had torn through a\nwall erected at the side of the\nfield.\nTHREE INTER-CITY\nSOFTBALL GAME8\nThree softball games, girls. Junior\nboys, and men's, occupied the afternoon. A general Trail girls team defeated,the Fruitvale girls 14-9 in a\nseven-inning game, which was interrupted half way through by\nshowers.\nThe junior boys game saw Fruitvale defeat Meadows, 9-2. Annable\ndefeated Fruitvale 14-2 in the men's\ncontest,\nDuring the entire day a midway\nwas going in full swing, with bingo\nand sever other chance games, keep.\ning the area crowded.\nConstable Hugh Lindsay, of the\nProvincial Police, had a busy day\ndirecting traffic along the main\nthoroughfare, and cars were lined\nup on each side for about two\nblocks along.\nCars Collide\nAces Practise Today\nCoach Carl Locatelli has called a\npractice for the Aces of the Nelson\nGirls' Softball League at the Recreation Grounds  this evening.\nTrail Street\nTRAIL, B C, May 25\u2014A car \"collision, involving cars by Stanley V,\nRoberts of Trail and Leo Johnson\nof Crocketville .occurred on Columbia Avenue at the corner of McB?th\nSt< eet in Trail at about 8:50 Saturday night.\nRoberts was travelling toward\nFruitvale, and Johnson was returning to Trail.\nOliver Pagura, passenger in ^Roberts' car. received a badly braised\naun. Other passengers were unhyrt.\nThe cars were damaged about $50\neach.\nNew Yorkers Try Air-Raid Shelters\nThis new air raid shelter In the sub-basement of the Allerton\nHouse Is given a tryout by, left \u2022 i right Marguerite Timmel. Betty\nLine, Krya Deakin and Molly Appleford who play cards unconcernedly while \"deadly bombs fall on New York city,'1 The shelter is\nabout 45 feet under ground.' In the event that the general lighting\nsystem and the hotel's own light plant should be put out of operation,\nadequate lighting would be provided by batteries.\nNewspapers Tell\nGrim Story of\nWelsh City Raid\nSWANSEA (CP)-A city's record\nof rehabilitation after bombing is\nwritten in the columns of its daily\nnewspapas.\nGerman bombers struck savagely\nat Swansea on three successive\nnights in March. Ruined houses and\nstores were evidence enough of\nthis, but even without them it was\npossible to visualize the extent of\nthe attacks simply by studying the\nnewspapers. Advertisements and\nhews stories with tell-tale .phrases\nappeared in every edition. Behind\nthem was a story of bombing and\nfire.-of damaged premises and stock\nand of determination to carry on,\ndespite odds.\nUnion Jacks and business as usual\nsigns appeared on every street.,\n\"Through blast and blitz we carry\non.\" a bakery poster said, while a\nhardware store boasted \"we've no\nwindows'but plenty of stock.\"\nBusinesses that were bombed out\ncarried on at new sites and notices\nadvised people they could have free\ntransportation to their favorite store\nor furniture establishment, temporarily forced to move to the outskirts.\nHotels, beaver-board covering the\nshattered windows, were filling up\nafter losing most of their guests in\nthe days Immediately following the\nraids. There was no glass in the window of my hotel room, but the inconvenience was slight compared\nwith what it had been a week earlier.\nCOURAGE  IN  PAPERS\nAnd here is pact of the newspaper\npicture of Swansea after one of its\nworst air raids.\nPage One: Royal visit for South\nWales. . . . Letter received from\nBuckingham Palace states that King\nand Queen have learned with much\nregret of indiscriminate attacks. . . .\nletter intimates hope to pav visit to\nstricken areas. Tenby plans to aid\nSwansea distressed. Mayor organizing dance and whist drive. To our\nadvertisers, we ask indulgence in\npresent difficult circumstances. . . .\nMany trader peoples' advertisements\nhave had to be held over, every effort will be made to accommodate\nthese as early as possible.\nPage Four: Editorial. . . . JusUce\nfor traders, people will welcome not\nonly the government's provision for\nre-stocking local supplies, but some\nmethod by which a family tradition\ncan be continued and the old links\nrepaired until the day of victory\nand reconstruction arrives. . , .\nPost-Bag . . . Swansea's lost pets.\nIf you have lost your dog do not\ngive up hope until you have phoned\nvisited The Dog's Home. . . .\nSigned, Honorary Secretary, R.S. P.\nCA\t\nPage Five: Fashion store advertisement, sorry the old home can\nnot welcome you, but take a trip at\nour expense to do your shopping at\nLlanelly, . . . News item, welfare\nchief visits Swansea. . .. makes tour\nof devastated area. Mayor to call\nspecial council meeting, head officials to report on war damage, food\nofficials extremely busy dealing\nj with ration cards . . . demand for\nI clothing and bedding being met. ...\nWomen's Service\nto Gain Benefit\nof Ideas Woman\nLONDON, (CP1. \u2014 Senior Commandant Jean Knox, appointed to\nthe new post of \"ideas woman\" of\nthe Auxiliary Territorial Service, is\ntouring Britain to see whether any\nchanges should be made to improve\nconditions of service and make the\nA.T.S. more useful.\nThe War Office announcement\nthat the pretty, 30-year-old brunette\nhad been appointed inspector said\nthe post was created because of\nthe increasing size of the A.T.S.\nand the new duties which it may be\nrequired to undertake.\nInspector Knox, whose husband\nis a Royal Air Force squadron leader, is visiting units in all commands.\nShe will advise and suggest improvements and \"now developments.\nAs a member of the A.T.S. directorate, she will have a seat on the\nA.T.S. Council. Her rank will be\ntha#of a controller and, as inspector, she will have direct access to\nthe, Joint Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State who is a member of\nthe Army Council responsible for\nall auest'ons of policy relating to\nthe A.T.S.\n\"My job may perhaps be best\nexpressed as that of personnel inspector,\" said Mrs. Knox, who has\nbeen with the A.T.S, since It was\norganized. \"In a large body of women like the A.T.S. there are always a number of things which\nsuggest themselves to members as\ncapable of being improved.\n\"I shall listen to everything which\ngroup commandants bring to my\nnotice and look out for suggestions\nI can make myself. The object will\nbe to bring the A.T.S. up to what\nit ought to be and wants to be\u2014in\ncases where it is not up to standard.\"\nMrs. Knox will Inquire Into administration, training, health and\ngeneral well-being. Any proposals\nshe thinks fit to make will be placed\ndirectly before the War Office.\nFeeding arrangements will come\nunder her notice. In the matter of\nuniform and other clothing. If she\nfinds that a camp is not receiving\nall it needs this will be noted and\nreported.\nIf Mrs Knox finds that any\ngroups of women and girls are not\nhappy in their work through causes\nwhich could be remedied by com-\nmon-sense adjustment, the will see\nabout il\n(lose Rossland\nChurches Early\nbut No Bomber\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 29 - UjJ\nto 5:30 p.m. this afternoon no sign\nhad been seen of the \"Victory\nTorch Bomber\" \u2014 as it haa' been\ndubbed \u2014 which, on its way East\nfrom Vancouver today was expected to be over Trail and Rossland\nfrom 11:45 a.m, to 12 noon.\nArrangements were made at a\nlate hour Saturday evening by the\nlocal Victory Loan Committee to\nhave church congregations dismissed at 11:45 Sunday morning in order\nthat as many persons as possible\nmight have an opportunity to witness the plane on the second lap\nof a flight which will eventually\nconvey the Victory Torch to Prime\nMinister Winston Churchill in England, but the kindness of the City's\nministers has been totally unrewarded.\nWinnipeg Bombers\nDefeated by Dakor.\nWINNIPEG, May 25 (CP)-Winni-\npeg Blue Bombers, Western Canada\nfootball champions, fielding a bunch\nof rookies with a few of the veterans, were soundly trounced 25-5\nby university of North Dakota Saturday night in an exhibition tilt.\nBombers played without the services ot Fritz Hanson, Greg Kabat,\nBill Cerreti, Jeff Nicklln, Herb Pes-\nchel and Bill Nairn. Most spectacular of the new crop was young\nHarry Johnson, who played larf\nyear in the high school league.\nJohnson who looks and runs like\nHanson, sjave the crowd numerous\nthrills with his broken field running.\nMichigan's football attendance for\n1940 was 449.75*. The old record,\n413,674 was set ln 1927.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nPublic notice is herirby given that\nby regulation dated May 26, pursuant to Section 33 of the Highway\nAct, the Nelson-Castlejar Highway\nbetween Taghum and Pop Inn will\nbe closed to all traffic Tuesday,\nMay 27 between the hours of 12\nnoon and 5 p.m., because of blasting\noperations at Beasley Bluff,\nO.G. GALLAHER,\nAsst. Dist. Engineer.\nNelson, B. C.\nMay 26, 1941.\nBy authority of the Minister of\nPublic Works.\nWANTED-GOOD SOUND GBN-\ntle horse for ranch. 1500 pounds\nor over. C. A. Amundson, Mirror\nLake, B. C.\nWANTED: EXPERIENCED RE-\ntail hardware man. Give full par-\nticulars in first letter. McLennan\nMcFeely St Prior (Penticton) Ltd\nPenticton, B, C.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n2SSSSSS\nSS\u00ab\u00abS$\u00abS\u00ab*K*K\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab\nFor prices on bedding plants see\nPage 9. Mac's Greenhouses.\nNew and rebuilt typewriters. Un\nderwood Agency, 536 Ward St Ph 99\nTry \"Comfort Fine Cut\" 65c\u2014impound at VALENTINE'S.\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH,\n666. F. H. Smith, 351 Baker Street.\nWanted\u2014Transportation 27th to\nVancouver or Penticton. Box 1084,\nDaily News.\nD. O. K. K.\nRegular meeting Tuesday, May 27\nEagle Hall, 9 p. m. Very important\nPythian Sisters & K. P.'s are invited to a birthday Banquet and\nSocial evening at Eagle Hall, TONIGHT, May 26, at 6:30 p.m.\nBrown flower pots in all sizes 5c\nand up. Also highly-glazed colored\npots with attached saucers in all\nsizes. HIPPERSON'S.\nModernize your home with SYL-\nVATILE and SYLVACRAJT Wall-\nboards.   Write   us   for   literature.\nBURNS LUMBER le COAL CO.\nDon't forget the St. John Ambulance Association whist drive and\norpsentations Tonight at 8. Legion\nHall. Everybody welcome. Adm. 25c.\nAre wash days tiresome? Try a\nnew Connor for a real thrill ln\nspeedy and efficient washing. McKay & Stretton.   '\nPostal scales, wastebaskets. filing\ncabinets, cash boxes, desk blotters,\neverything you might need in your\noffice. D. W. McDerby, 'The Typewriter Man\", 654 Baker St., Nelson.\nB. C.\nTruly \u2022 brilliant forecast ot\nthe most popular styles fot\nsport this season...superb\nmaterials and distinctive colours, available ia tbe ever-\npopular la-and-Outer tod\nmany other fashion-sponsored\nmodels... ia regular or half\nlength sleeves.\nDon't mis, (his out.tinsltnsj\nprcscnution. Su tu today.\n%miw ragrtfftsj bvyfcf Qmlirf*!\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nFrogs have no breathing muscle\nand hence must swallow air.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 HI \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nWhen away from home.\nBE AT HOME\nwhere you are at home.\nButler's Gafe;\nOpposite Dally Newi\nShe has so many admirers since she had\na permanent at\nHai$h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhone 327\ni\n1937 FORD COUPE\nJust like new. ftXAK\nPrice        W5\nQueen City Motora\n561 Josephine St,    Limited    Ph. 41\nHava the job Dona Right\nSee (\nVIC GRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\n1928 DODCE 4-DOOR SEDAN\nVictory Six, One owner. Licenced,\n4-wheel hydraulic brakes. Excellent 6 ply tires. $22!\nSowerby-Cuthbert L,td.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Port Office\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nCleaning.  Pressing\nand   Dyeing\nS27 Baker Phona 288\nI\nSpring li here again and to If\nHouie Cleaning Time so get your\n\"Black Death to Bed Bugs\" it\nSMYTHE'S DRUG STORE\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Building\nBARGAINS\nIn Used BABY PRAMS and\nCOOK STOVES\nHome Furniture Exchange\n413 Hall St Phoni 1032\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nLumber   Lath   Shingles\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\n.._\u25a0*.  .:......_,-.  .\u25a0',.\u25a0    ._.J \u25a0,_^,^_^t.a_^__t__^____^^\n^_.^_^________-.,_-\n_\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1941_05_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414555","@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":"1941-05-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1941-05-26 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\/1.0414555"}