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All civil defence units stood\nby their stations until dawn and a\nspell of quiet that indicated the raid\n\u2014or the wont nf (tr*wai ovtr.\nThe raid in Northeast England\nlasted five houri, but no clvialian\ncasualties were reported.\nBombi exploded near a Northeast\ncoastal town, and anti-aircraft and\nfighters battled off other raiders\ntrom Scotland to South of London.\nThe air-raid alarm on the East\ncoast of Scotland was lifted after\nhalt an hour.\nThe first alarms were sounded\nJust before midnight. Wednesday,\nafid a-m*i_f__tft*\u00abter midnight\nthe Bremen and Hamburg radio stations went lilent, probably Indicating British airmen had been detected on their third successive night-\ncovered visit to Germany's busy\nNorthwest Industrial and shipping\nsection.\nThe sound of machine-gun fire\nwent for a considerable time after\nBritish tighter planes took the air,\nand the raiders also encountered\nheavy opposition from ground\nbatteries.\n-A powerful searchlight caught\none raider In' lta beam and the\nplane made off toward tht sea\nwith tighter planes shooting tracer\nbullets ln its wake.\nThe all clear signal was sounded\nifter three hours and a quarter in\none town ln Northeast England\nwere one German raider was\nbrought down.\nHigh flying planes were heard re.\npeatedly in Southeastern England.\nThe thunder of bombs was heard\nagain and again. Searchlight beams\ncriss-crossed ln the sky. The antiaircraft fire was Intense.\nSometimes the searchlight! picked\nout the dark forms of high-flying\nplanes Bursts of shellfire were seen\naround them.\nFLASH\nLONDON, (una 20 (CP) \u2014\nThe Air Mlniitry and Ministry\nof Heme Security announced\ntoday that aix civilians were\nkilled and aome 60 Injured in\nGerman air ralda during the\nnight. At least three Cerman\naircraft* were shet down.\nBritish Soldiers Are\nKidnapped at Belfast\nBBLF,\\ST, Northerh Ireland,\nJune 19 (CP)-Troops armed with\nmachine-guns were stationed at\nall -.treet corners in Belfast tonight after two British soldiers\nhad been disarmed and kidnapped\nThe kidnapper! iplrlted the\nsoldiers away in an automobile.\nOther troopi were stopping all\ncars and a house-to-house search\nwai made for the stolen firearms.\nLate Flashes\nLONDON, June 20 (CP).\u2014The\nRoyal Air Force bombed military objectives and communication! lit the Ruhr, Rhineland and\nWett Germany lait night, the Air\nMinistry announced today.\nTOKYO, fane 20. (Thwraday. \u2022\n(AP). - m,Fgreljn Office an;\nnoupetd 1l\u00abinj>6f the Tientsin\nblockade effective at noon today\n(7 p.m. P.S.T. Wedneiday) following the signing of an agreement with Britain and France.\nBORDEAUX, June 20 - (Thursday) - (AP Via Radio) - An undetermined number of persons were\nkilled and wounded last night as\nlow-flying German planes bombed\nBordeaux, provisional capital of\nbeleaguered France.\nNEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -\nThe Italian radio tonight, In a\nbroadcast heard here, reported\nMussolini's return to Rome and\nHitler's arrival back at his Western Front headquarters from their\nconference in Munich.\nBUCHAREST June 20 - (Thursday) - (AP). \u2014 Government circles\nreceived reports today that a large\nnumber of Russian troops are being\ntransferred from the Bessarabian\nfrontier with Rumania to the German-Russian borfler.\nBLACKMORE BLOCKS FAST PASSAGE\nOF THE COMPULSORY SERVICE BILL\nNelson Visitor\nARNOLD McGRATH, M.L.A.\nof Cranbrook, who Is in Nelson\nln the course of a trip through\nWeit Kootenay, accompanied by\nJ. S. Drummond ol San Leandro,\nCalif.\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP)-John\nBlackmore, leader of fhe New Democracy group, headed off in the\nHouse of Commons todsy what\nlooked like a speedy passage of the\nGovernment's compulsory service\nbill.\nHe delayed passage In spite of\na plea for Immediate action (rom\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King,\nlupported by leaders of the Conservative and Co-operative Commonwealth Federation groups\namid clamorous demands for\nspeed from private members.\nJust before the House adjourned\nat the customary Wednesday hour\ntot rising unless by unanimous\nconsent or dsoption of a resolution\nto the end, It has been decided to\ncontinue the sitting. Mr. Blackmore\nsaid he desired to discuss the measure.\nHe prophesied it would take until 8 p.m. even if the House sat\nthrough the dinner hour by unanimous consent.\nMr. King said the Government\nhad hoped the bill would pass yesterday when it was introduced, or\ntoday it the latest. He could not\nattend tonight because the Cabinet\nwas irteting on essential matters\nand had planned to take action\ntared on powers contained in the\nbill.\nAHhou.h the Conservative leader, Hon. R. B. Hanson, said M. I.\nColdweil. acting leader of the\nC.C.F. group, said they were prepared lo rush the bill thro->h at\nence, sitting pa^*t 4 o'clock for the\nlast formalities, Mr. Blackmore\npersisted. Further discussion went\nover until tomorrow.\nMembers from all sides shouted loudly \"Let's do it now,\" and\nthe Chamber wra in considerable\nuproar when the Committee of\nthe Whole, which had the bill before lt all afternoon, rose to \"report progress and ask leave to\nsit again.\"\n, The House had been enlivened\nearlier by a full dress division,\ncalled by the Prime Minister snd\nhis colleagues to place on record\nthe exposition to the compulsory\nfeatures of the enabling legislation\ngiving the Government wide powers to mobilize manpower and re-\nsc-urces, compulsory manpower to\nte used only In Canada.\nThis resulted In a vote of 202 to\ntwo in support of Committee\nChairman vien's ruling that an\namendment nullifying the com-\nfi'lscry feature of the bill was out\nof order.\nThere was a sharp Interchange\nwhen Mr. Hanson charged that the\nJustice Minister, Hon. Ernest Ls-\ncointe. in a broadcast last night,\nnad given an impression of the\nGovernment's intention! under\nthis till contrary to that he gave\nin the House.\n\"You cannot ride two horses at\nthe srme time,\" Mr. Hanson de-\nclarcd. He s;:d Mr. Lapointe,\nspeaking in French, had given\nthe impression to his radio audience that there was not great\nnecessity of passing the bill.\nThe Air Minister, Hon. C. G.\nPcver, vigorously declared there\nwas no ruCh intention and that a\nproper trfnslatlon of Mr. La-\npointe's speech, delivered on the\nair in English by the Finance Minister, Hon. J. L. Ralston, indicated\nclearly It was an attempt to allay\nany fears that might arise over the\npossibility of immediBte seizure of\nsavings and create a run on banks.\nThe Government! mobilization\nbill drew fire from a handful of\nQuebec Liberals who insisted the\nGovernment had not yet exhausted\npossibilities of voluntary effort.\nAn amendment to the bill proposing a \"free voluntary and moderate\" war effort was ruled out ol\norder for technical inaccuracies.\nThe Justice Minister. Hon. Ernest\nLapointe. and Works Minister Hon\nP J. A. Cardin made impassioned\npleas to Quebec members to support\ntha bill.\nMcLennan Tells\nBrotherhood ol\nBanking, Money\nAn Interesting address on banking and the use of money wu given\nto the St. Paul'i Men'i Brotherhood\nMonday night by J. R. McLennan,\nManager of the Canadian Bank Ot\nCommerce.\nThe function of money offered\na useful means of purchasing good!\nai It wu not the source of purchasing power but rather the source\nof production of purchasable goodi\nor exchangeable goods. Money wai\nthe means of bringing goods to\nmarketable centres; in other words\nit was the facilitating machine.\nMoney could be likened to the ojl\nthat wu put into a machine. The\nmachine needed loti of oil at a\niteady flaw to keep it running\nsmoothly, but it was the ga_s (hat\nwai. the motivating power.-Money\nallowed the machine to run to produce the goods.\nSome gained their money by estate or sweepstake, but ln that way\nnothing was added to the wealth of\nthe community, for it was not new\nmoney, Mr. McLennan explained.\nGermany, France and Italy went\non a self-sufficiency basla in 1920\nand. 1930. Thli meant that they produced much of their own wheat,\nthereby, bringing the price of Canadian wheat from $1.32 a bushel\nto 78 cent! per bushel from the first\nfive years, to the second five years.\nThis resulted In a total loss of export wheat \"from Canada to the extent of 85,000,000 bushels or $250,-\n000,000 per year.\n\"It can be imagined what the loss\nof the wheat trade meant to the Canadian railway system alone, which\nwould not take into consideration\nthe farmers not being able to pur\nchase goods,\" the speaker stated.\nNO MONOPOLY IN\nBANKING\nThere was no monopoly In the\nbanking system, he said, yet the\nBanking Act was rather stringent\nin order to safeguard the Canadian\npeople or depositors. One hundred\ni and seventy directors and 48.000\npeople held the shares of Canadian\nbanks. These shareholders Included\nwidows and trust companies, with\ninsurance companies being the largest shareholders. The largest holder\nhad about 30 shares of $100 each.\nBanks operated on a 10-year charter,\nhe said. There were seven depositors\nfor every borrower, he said.\nA vote of thanks was given Mr.\nMcLennan for his address. President\nLeo S. Gansner was ln the chair.\nLast of Canadian\nTroops Get Home\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nJune 19 (CP Cable)-The last detachment of the spearhead of the\nCanadian 1st Division which reached a point within 25 miles of Paris\nonly to be ordered to start an immediate withdrawal without engaging the enemy arrived in the divisional camp today.\nThey returned without a single\nbattle casualty but minus some\nof their transport and stores\nwhich they had brought a dis\ntance of 330 miles to the port of\nembarkation only to discover\nthere was no available transport\nto take it off. The material was\ndestroyed to prevent It from falling into the hands of the advancing foe.\nFor 12 days the troops had been\non the road, moving toward the\nCanadian assembly area in France\nahead of lhe main body of the division, and then exerting every\nounce of energy and goile In the\ntask of extricating themselves and\ntheir valuable stock of war material.\nThey snatched off moments of\nrest whenever possible, never Uklng off their clothes and subsisting\non iron rations and food they were\nable to purchase from peasants or\nin towns through which they\npassed.\nThe Canucks came into camp itill\nsmiling. Many of them had lost all\notrsonal belongings.\nRUMORSDECLARE\nMAJOR TERNS OF\nNAZIS REJECTED\nIndication Is France\nMay Try to Fight\non to Finish\nBORDEAUX, France, June 19\n(AP). \u2014 Reporti were widely\ncirculated tonight\u2014without official confirmation \u2014 that Germany'! major peace terma are unacceptable to the French and that\nPresident Lebrun and other leaders have gone, or may soon go, to\nAlgiers, to preserve the frame-,\nwork of a fighting Government -\nLebrun, one report said, waa or\n- would be accompanied to Africa\nby the Presidents of the Chamber\nof Deputiei and Senate, respectively, Edouard Harriott and Jules\nJeanneney.\nThe general tenor ot all reports tonight seemed to be that\nFrance may try to tight on.\nAlthough lt was itated officially\nthat the Government ot Premier\nHenri Philippe Petain la still waiting to hear from lta envoys about\nthe German terma, tonight's reports\niaid the main demand! had become\nknown and were Judged to be too\nharsh.\nOfficially lt wu stated the French\nGovernment hu submitted the\nnames of iti negotiator! to the Germans and Is awaiting an aniwer.\n(A Britlih radio broadcut picked\nup tonight by N. B. C. laid three\nFrench representatives, General Ed-\nmond Huntziger, Foreign Minister\nPaul Baudouln and Leon Noel, former French Ambassador at Warsaw, had left for an undisclosed\ndestination).\nLatest German pushes apparently\nwere aimed at a quick cleanup of\nFrance's English Channel cout, and\nthe cutting off ot France's third\ncity, Lyon.\nThe French Government accepted the first German-Italian condition for an Armlatlce\u2014that plenipotentiaries be tent to hear peace\nterms\u2014and rebuked a recent Cabinet member for having urged from\nLondon continuation of resistance.\nThe rebuke wu addressed to General Charles De Gaulle, the Under-\n|^K_\u00bb__-i4^W\u00ab<*hlchf\nresigned Sunday.\nThe Cabinet, with Spanish Ambassador Jose Felix Lequerlca, the\naxil intermediary, reported lifting\nin, appointed plenipotentiaries to\ngo to whatever place is designated\nby Germany and there to learn the\nprice fixed by Hitler and Munollnl\nand to accept or reject it.\nKootenay Recruits Off te Ceast\nWishing luck to Arthur Chimben of Fruitvale, a recruit, Is Bob\nSmales of Rossland, member of the Trail Veterans' Home Guard. At\nlett ls Tom Mathews, of TralL See Today's News Pictures for more\nTrill and Nelaon scene!, page 3.\nFirst Nelson Recruits Leave for\n(oast and Kamloops; \"Fight Good\nFight, Honor King, Trust in God\"\n23 to B. C. Regiment\nand Two Go to\nthe R.M.R.\nRecrulti who left Nelion Wedneiday, 23 of them going to the\nCoast to Join the British Columbia Regiment and two en route to\nKamloopi   to   Join   the   Rocky\nMountain Rangers, were:\nFor B. C. Regiment\u2014R. F. Ball,\nR. O. Bowei, C, B. Browne, E. L.\nChambers, R. M. Clayton, II. Don-\nnolly, Peter Dunn, F. Endsley, T. M.\nHeslop, Konrad Hessler, Nick Jud-\niakoff, H. E. Mayberry, A. V. L. McNicol, H. G. McNicol, John Robb,\nE. D. Rogeri, R. A. Rutherglen, T.\nJ. Rutherglen, Thomu Wallace, E.\nT. Woods, H. S. Elliott, G. R. Framp-\nton, and Edward P. Hogan.\nRocky Mountain Rangen \u2014 A.\nGraves and H. Lisk.\n-    | tWf1\/\" \u2014*_   ,,\nFrost Hits Crops\nWUJN_P_D. June 19 (CP) -\nFrost nipped at the ears of Weitern Canada'i growing crops today, leaving market gardens in\nsome sections slightly damaged\nwheat and coune grain fields\nwere reported unharmed by the\nbelow-freeiing temperature.\nNew Governor General\nSpeeding to Ottawa\nEARL OP ATHLONI\nHALIFAX, June 19 (CP).\u2014The\nEarl of Athlone, his secret voyage\nto Canada completed and hia simple welcoming over, rode swiftly\nby ipecial train toward Ottawa tonight to ba sworn ln u Canada'i\n16th Governor GeneraL\nAfter a reception that had no\nvice-regal parallel ln stark simplicity, the 60-year-old Earl and\nhis lady, the Princess Alice, headed late today toward the national\ncapital for the Installation, little\nmore than an hour after touching\nfoot to Canadian soil at the end of\nan eight-day transatlantic crossing.\nWar's stress had cut the traditional brilliant ceremony to the bare\nmatter of a few handclasps and salutations.\nA few dozen welcomen who were\npermitted to stand at the foot of his\nliner's gangplank managed to transmit some of 'the Dominion's spirit\nof welcome for Its viceroy. A spontaneous burst of applause echoed\nthrough the great, cavernous freight\nshed into which the couple disembarked.\nDr. E H. Coleman, K.C, Undersecretary ot State, met the viceregal pair on behalf of the Federal\nGovernment. Lleut.-Gov. F. F.\nMathers of Nova Scotia sworn in\nonly a few dayi ago. and Highways\nMinister A. S. MacMillan, for the\nabsent Premier Angus L. Macdonald, acted for the Province. All the\nfighting services were represented\nTo the applause of thoM uhore\nwu added that of hundred! of\nUnited states-bound refugeei who\nlammed the rail of the liner. Persons who came off the ship iaid they\nwere residents of Czecho-Slovakia\nPRINCESS  ALICE\nand other countries under the Nul\nheel, seeking new homos on this\ncontinent The Governor General\ngave them a farewell wave of the\nhand as ne debarked.\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP).-For\nthe fint time in Canadiin history\na new Governor General will be\nofficially welcomed and sworn in\nat Ottawa Friday when the Earl\nof Athlone officially takes office.\nCustomarily a Governor General\nIs sworn ln at the port of debarkation.\nState Department and Government House officials here had long\nsince drawn 'up plans for the\nceremony to take place with his\narrival In Ottawa.\nThe Earl of Athlone Is the second Governor General to arrive in\nwartime. The Duke of Devonshire\nwho came to Canada in November,\n1916, was sworn in at Halifax. Canada's last Governor General, the late\nLord Tweedsmuir was sworn in at\nQuebec.\nWhen the vice-regal train reaches Ottawa Union station Friday the\nAdministrator, Sir Lyman P. Duff,\nand Prime Minister Mackenzie King\nwill go aboard to greet his excellency and Princess Alice, Countess\nof Athlone.\nThe wir hai done away with gold\nbraid. Hli excellency will wear\nmorning dreu and her royal highness afternoon dreu with a hat.\nThe Prime Miniiter and Sir Lyman\nalso will be dressed ln morning\nclothes.\nTbe Installation ceremonies will\ntake place In the Senate-with the\noath ot office administered by Sir\nLyman.\nHome Guards Parade\nThem to Train;\nMany Gifts\n\"Fight the good fight\n\"Honor your King.\n\u2022Trust In God.\n\"And may you all come home\nlately.\"\nThli wai the menage given to\na drift of 25 recrulti from Nelion Diitrlct who boarded a Westbound train at Nelson Wednesday morning, two of them going\nto Kamloopi to Join the Reeky\nMountain Rangers and the remainder going to the Cout to\njoin the B. C. Regiment\nThe message was given by Major\nA. C. Sutton, D. S. O., M. C, ot\nRowland, Recruiting Officer for\nKootenay Wut, a few minutei before the recruit! boarded the train.\nThey had marched to the station-^\ntor many of them their tint parade\n\u2014behind a \"vanguard\" of the Veterans Home Guard commanded by\nLieut. M. K. Harrison, and with\nthe Canadian Legion Bugle Band\nleading.\nSTATION JAMMED\nFriends and relativei followed\nthe parade and Jammed the station platform to see the men\nleave. Many of them carried parcels of cigarettes, candy, orangei\nand so on and distributed th|lr\ngifts among the recruits. Prorh-\ninent imong them were Canadian\nLegion officials, Mayor N. C.\nStibbs, representing the City,\nand memben of the lllth Battery Womens Auxiliary. The Joy-\nmaken Club and othen also\npresented cigarettes and so on.\nMajor Sutton told the men they\nwere going to Join one of Britiah\nColumia's famous regiments. They\nmust be prepared to^pRe the good\nand the bad equally with a smile,\"\nand they must remember that \"a\nsmile will take you through a lot\nof difficulties.\"\nA. E. Thain. a Captain ln the\nFirst Great War, now Secretary-\nManager for Nelson Branch of the\nCanadian Legion, declared ex-\nservicemen would understand how\nthe recruits felt\n\"Many of us are congratulating\nyou, but we envy you too,\" he asserted. \"If we could come we'd\nbe with you now.\"\nFINISH IT THIS TIME\nGlorious Britain had given Germans an opportunity to be comrades\nafter the last war,\nNew Line to Make\nDesperate Stand\nin Rhone Valley\nMay Defend Lyon by Fresh Troops From th#-\nMaginot Line; \"New Battle\" Given\nNazis on Middle Loire\nGENEVA, June 20 (Thursday) (AP)\u2014Reports reached the Swiss border early today stating that French planes\nand French troops from North Africa had crossed the Mediterranean under a French-British naval convoy to help check-\nthe Cerman drive in Southeastern France.\nBORDEAUX,   France,   June   19   (AP)\u2014France   an-;\nnounced tonight that her troops had delivered a \"new battle\"\nagainst the enemy on the middle Loire River before withdrawing to \"establish themselves on a more favorable line.\"\nArmies in Lorraine, withdrawing from the Maginot\nLine through German motorized troops and mechanized units,\nwere said to be resorting to the famous square formation used\nin Flanders.\nA French military commentator declared that although\nthe French armies now weref;\nfighting   as   isolated   groups,\n\"eaeh nevertheless has conserved its cohesion of manoeuvre in retreat.\"\nhe said, but\nthey spurned lt.\n'This time,' he declared, let's\nfinish it. We will finish it\"\nAmid shouts of \"No mercy\" from\nwar veterans standing by, Captain\nThaln urged the recruits to take\ntheir toll of the enemy for themselves, for the Empire, for the Canadian Legion, and for him.\nMayor Stibbs wished the mm\n\"Godspeed and a happy return.\"\n\"All honor and glory to you\nboys who are going out to defend\ndemocracy,\" Hu Wonhlp asserted.\nRecalling a similar occasion 29\nyean ago when he left as a recruit,\nJames Spencer, Legion President\ntold the men \"you are starting on\ntheir great adventure, not knowing\nwhere they are going nor when,\nbut adventure will be youn.\" He\nhad spent four years In the army,\nMr. Spencer said, and he was proud\nof it\nSpeaking for the recruits, T. M.\nHeslop voiced thanks and asserted\nthe men would do their bit\nFrench Warplanes\nMove to Africa\nMADRID, June 19 (AP)\u2014A heavy\nmovement of French military planes\nIn llight Irom France to Africa was\nconfirmed late today.\nThe crew of one forced down in\nMallorca said Algeria had been their\ndestination. They were Interned.\nAt Almerla, a cralt of the Leto\ntype landed, Its pilots saying they\nhad left Marseille with 11 other\nnlanes tor Oran, Algeria.\nIn Valencia, two French hydroplanes came down. The crew of one\naet It afire and was interned, the\nother resumed its flight for Africa.\nGENEVA, Switzerland, June 19\n(AP).\u2014German mechanised armies were reported tonight to have\nsent advanced elements down the\nAln Valley to within 20 miles of\nLyon. ,        ,\nReporti brought by refugeei Indicated  the  possibility  that  the\nGerman machine wai io near exhaustion that the French might\nsuccessful   defend   Lyon,   their\nthird largest city, a manufacturing centre with a normal population of about 570,000.\nThe defence ot Lyon fell, ln part\nto comparatively fresh troops from\ntbe Maginot line. The last skeleton\ngarrliQlfr of tbe -greet fortresiei on\nthe Rhine North ot Baiei withdrew\nWeit toward Belfort today.\nThe fort at Belfort guarding the\nBurgundlan gate, apparently still\nwas manned, however, for sounds\nof artillery and machine-gun fire\ncould be heard from that region.\nThe German thrust Into the Rhone\nValley seemed to be a matter of\nlife or death for France, for a German grip on the Rhone would mean\ncutting off France's Alpine army.\nThe Alpine line ls composed ol\nmountain fortl designed only to resist troopi coming from Italy.\nThe Germani approaching Lyon\nforced rectification of the new\nSouthern defence line, facing North\nInside the Jura Mountains.\nThe French held the numerical superiority with land forces at that\npoint and had plenty of small arms.\nThis, combined with a depletion\nof Germany's mechanized strength,\nmight halt the German advance.\nBut the Germans held the whip-\nhand in the air making up for the\nlack* of tanks and armored cars\nwhich were reported worn out and\nabandoned. German bombers dived within a few hundred yards of\nimprovised French barricades,\nsplattering them with bombs and\nmachine-gunning   troops.\nRefugeei ind a few French loldlen who surrendered arms at\nfrontier polnti near Geneva reported German bombing planei\nwere making frequent attacks on\nthe French fort at Bellegarde\u2014\n\"Gibraltar of the Rhone.\"\nGerman land forcei had outflanked the Bellegarde fort to threaten\nLyon. The fort itself, however, was\nstill holding out. There was no indication that armored units had\nbeen able to pierce the line which\nformer Maginot troops were holding\nNorth of Bellegarde and West of\nGeneva.\nApparently small French forces,\nsniping with small arms and using\ndynamite, checked German progress\ndown from St. Claude, 25 miles\nNorthwest of Geneva, toward Belle-\ngrade. Attempts to smash into Bellegarde from the West were stopped\nat NantJa, barely 10 miles away.\nBellegarde Itself is ot great importance if the Germani expect to\nshove down to the Italian border to\nloin Mussolini's troops in the Alps.\nThe town Is a sentinel West of the\nbulge of Switzerland at Geneva into\nFrance Just North of the French-\nItalian border.\nFarther North, German motorized advances cut off more French\nterritory\u2014but left lt far Irom conquered. According to refugees and\nsoldiers. French troops continue iso\nlated operations in the cut-off sec\ntlons, striking repeatedly at German\nunits left behind to guard strategic\npoints.\nThe real Job of policing such sections apparently has been left to\nGerman planes. In twos and threes\nthey patrol the rear guard area,\nbombing and machine-gunning.\nBritain May Buy\nRussian Munitions\nLONDON, June 19 (CP).-The\nGovernment ls studying the possibility of negotiating with Soviet\nRussia for purchase of tanks, guns.\nairplanes and other war weapons.\nRichard Butlei. Under-Secretary for\nForeign Attain, told the House of\nCommoni today.\nBritain Creates j\nBoard to Send\nChildren Overseas\nLONDON, June 19 (CP)-Great\nBritain created today a \"children'! reception board\" to handle\n\"balanced migration\" of Britlih\nchildren to oveneu havens, Including Canada.\nAnnouncing establishment of\nthe new organization in the House\not Commons today, Clement Attlee Lord Privy Seal, told tha\nnation removal of part of Britain's child population is a \"mat*\n.ter of the utmost urgency\". .\n\"'The'Bkard Ii headed by Geoffrey\nShakeiptare, Parliamentary Under*;\nSecretary for the Dominions. It proposes to send\u2014possibly as permanent residents\u2014as many of Brit* ,\nain's 6,000,000 school-age youngsters\na parents will part with for the sake\nof their present safety, as many aa\navailable ships can carry and overseas reception areas would be prepared to take.\nThe phrase \"balanced migration\"\nli used because it is planned to\nselect the children carefully\u2014all\nmust paas physical examination!\u2014\nand place them with due consideration to standards of living, type ot\nschools, climate of reception areaa\nand so on. Each area would get a\ncross-section of British citizenship..\nClothes will be provided through\nmoney granted to the receiving Dominions. Children will be accompanied by experienced escort staffs.\nincluding doctors and nurses\u2014but\nnot by any parents\u2014with the possible exception of mothers who ara\nsoldiers' widows. Migrants will go\nto individual families rather than\ninstitutions.\n62 Blankets Given\nfor Refugees From\nNelson and District\nSixty-two blankets for refugee!\nhave been donated to the Red Croia\nWork Committee from Nelson and\ndistrict in response to an appeal for\nnew or nearly new blankets, Mri.\nC. D. Pearson, Convener of the Commute, reported Wednesday night\nMore blankets are being received,\nshe said.\nBesides these 62 blankets, the Nelson and District Work Committee\nhas forwarded another shipment of\nhospital supplies to Provincial headquarters at Vancouver.\nWeapigr\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     57 89\nTRAIL  _..   65 85\nVictoria     53 64\nNanaimo     _   60 75\nVancouver   \u2014  54 70\nKamloops    58 92\nPrince George -  46 83\nEstevan Point    52 57\nPrince Rupert ,.  48 60\nLangara  48 57\nAtlin  _... -. 35 56\nDawson, YT _ 40 72\nSeattle      53 75\nPortland, Or   60 75\nSan Francisco -. 57 69\nSpokane     65 97\nPenticton  56 \u2014\nVernon       57 \u2014\nKelowna ..._  51 M\nKaslo         56 -\nCranbrook      55 90\nCalgary    46 79\nEdmonton     56 79\nSwift Current  _  44 73\nRegina  37 '5-\nPrince Albert   37 70\nWinnipeg     43 82\nForecast: Kootenay: Fresh Northwest winds, partly cloudy and cooler with light scattered thunder\nshowen.\nNelson water level Wednesday,\n7.90.\n\t\n\t\n \u25a0A*-^\n.,   \u25a0\nlAO.  TWO\n-NILSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON,\nRossland Rector\nLoses His Father\nROSSLAND, B. C, june'lt\u2014Bev.\nNEW\nRoom Rate\nPOLICY\nNOW IN EFFECTI\n2 tor 1\nRATES FROM:\n(Detached\nBath)\n(With\nBath)\n$1.25\n$2.00\nFor Either One or\nTwo Persons!\nTwo In Room for\nSingle Rate at the\nHotel\nSPOKANE, Wn.\n\u25a0Bring  Your Wife\u2014It  Coits\nNo More at the Coeur d'Alene*'\nHome of the Dutch Mill\nD. S. Catchpole, Sector of St.\nGeorge's Church, Rossland. received word ot the paulng of his father\nArthur E. Catchpole, who died at\ntchp.\nNia\nhis borne at Niagara Falls, Ont..\nWednesday morning.    -\nMr. Catchpole reilded with hli\nfamily at Hatiic, B. C, from 1907\nto 1932, later going to Niagara Falli\nto reside. In addition to hit wife,\nhe li wrvived by three ions, Leilie\nat Niagara Falls; Basil, ln England;\nand Rev. D; G. Catchpole of Rosiland.\nDETECTIVE GETS 7\nYEARS FOR PERJURY\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP).\u2014Convicted by an Ontario Supreme Court\njury yesterday of a charge of perjury arising from a divorce case,\nCharlea P. McCarthy, private detective and former Chief Constable\nfor Carleton County was today lentenced by Mr. Justice E. R. E. Chevrler to seven years in Kingston penitentiary.\nTRUSS FITTING\nLIMBS    \u2022    BRACES\nP.F. RIESSEN\nPaulsen M. d I. Bldg.  Spokane\nWeak, Nervous\nin tm  nbjnl  t*  fn-\n4_W\u00a3 \u00abHBl dliu apflli, nerroui\nt_W^ ond eaillr BpietT Chlnst*\nr*V'        Hwfcl    M    nature's     own\nJ0 ^ coirr. c tl. ei. Try then**, \u2014\njVntht.'H  help  yei  bi  ther'**\nJW \u25a0*\u25a0\" he hwl bnirtii \u00abt womb.\nWING WO a\nOfflcs Hours: 10 to I\nN 1261\/s. Wall St. near Main\nSPOKANE,   WASH.\nItalian Asking\nNaturalization\nNeeds Sponsor\nROSSLAND B. C, June 1\u00bb-Kx-\namination for Canadian citizenship,\nof Odilio Dozzi of Trail, by Judge\nW. A. Nisbet ln Rossland County\nCourt Tuesday, was adjourned until the applicant can secure character vouchers from a British subject. This ruling was made by Judge\nNiibet, who, ifter questioning Domi\nitated that under present international conditioni he felt that iuch\nrecommendations were necessary for\nItalian applicants.\nThe applicant wu born in Italy\nIn 1902, and came to Canada in 1923.\nAfter raiding in Alberta for about\ntwo yean he came to Trail and secured work at the Smelter, and has\nremained In Trail since that time\nDozzi claimed to be a member of\nthe Italian Canadian Society, and\ndenied any association with the\nFascist Party. He Is married and\nhas three children.\nApplications of Andrew Walter\nJohnson, of Rouland,  and  Seres\n(Pete)   Mattson,   of  Trail,   were\napproved,\nSWEDES RECOMMENDED\nJohnion, who wsi born in Sweden\nIn 1892, arrived at Montreal with\nhli brother ln 1909. For about 19\nyean he varied hli reiidence between Canada and the United Statei\nand finally came to Trail and then\nto Roisland, and has lived ln thli\ndistrict since 1925. His brother\nserved In the Canadian Forcei during the last war and waa wounded,\nilnce which time Johnion hai not\nheard from him. He is married and\nhas one daughter.\nCoast Plane Fund\nDrive at $30,000\nVANCOUVER, June 19 (CP) -\nVancouver's Air Supremacy drive\nto purchaie 10 training planei for\nuie ln the Empire Air Training pisn\nrose to more than $30,000 today, officlall lh charge of the Campaign\nannounced. Goal has been iet at\n$80,000.\nBeiides three $8000 checks received a $2000 donation came from\nthe Sitka Spruce Company and\nother subscriptions from individual\ngiven, ranging from $500 to nickels and dimes.\nMcKenzie Tells\nRossland Board\nCan't Cut Staff\n.THE CRESCENT\nMsls2M(  WVHUIDE'MAlN'WAa  Sim Heart yJ.'oMO\nA Complete Store for\nMEN\nEverything a man wean, from\nihoes to hat, il to be found at\nThe Creicent... ln dependable, well-known qualities, at\n(ilr pricei. Society Brand\nSuits, Enley Shirts, Johniton\nti Murphy Shoei, Interwoven\nBose .. . theie are but a few\nof the famous names to be\nfound here, in complete assortments.\nBe sure to itop In the Men'i\nSton when you are at The\nCreicent.\nThe Creicent absorbs 6% ef the\ncurrent discount on  Canadian\ncurrency.\nTHE CRESCENT     SPOKANE, Wash.\nJeiftftymMttSetmet\/\n\u2022 Don. form, your \"lll-i\noitly Arm\"* of Kr_K_.m BtlU.\nMiUloanwMrbjit. Ithelpi\nmn ta*. ten\u2014 eau* el\n\u25a0\u25a0PI haftlAn, rhea-\ninitio pans, an ttiwMfti,\nEur to tab tnmornivco-M,\nWjwaih^uSwrtwlltj-\n\u2022Mspmlva \"ttwif eft md 75c\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\nARROW LAKES\nSERVICE\nSPECIAL EARLY\nDEPARTURE\nS.S. MINTO\nFROM NAKUSP JUNE 29\nTO ARROWHEAD\nLeaving    Nakusp    2:15\na.m. Instead of 8:00 a.m.\nFOR THIS TRIP ONLY\nLeave Arrowhead it regular\ntime, 12:M p.m. for return to\nNakuip. Steamer cspselty fer\n\u25a0utos fully taken for tMi trip.\nV. J. Lowei, C.T.A., Nelson.\nG_)AyuJt_U_\n$4c\nROSSLAND, B. Ca, June W-Wei-\nley McKenzle, Principal of the Rossland High School, went on record\nas opposing any further reduction\not Uie preient high ichool staff, at\nthe meeting ot the Rossland School\nBoard, Tueiday night\nPrincipal McKenzie itated that ln\nview of the brief drafted by Trustee\nA. T. Snowball, recommending the\nreduction of the high ichool teaching staff, which had been adopted\nai a ipecial meeting of the Board\nlast week, he wished the Board to\nknow that, ln opposing iuch > reduction, he wu stating hit position\nas principal. It was not poiilble to\nconform with the standards of education let out by the Government\nwith a imall itaff, he iaid. With a\npoislble enrolment of 275 puplli\nnext Fall, he waa entitled to a staff\nof 12 teachen. At present 11 teachen were employed, and, although he\nwai satisfied to continue with that\nnumber, he was opposed to any further reductions.\nHe also reported that the industrial arts room had been broken\ninto last week and a number of\ntools and suppliei taken. Estimated\nloss was less than $5, he aaid, and\nhe expressed the opinion that the\ndeed had been done by a youngster, fueling from the type of material taken. The theft had been\nreported to the Police Department\nand an investigation wai under way.\nMACLEAN GROUNDS SOWN\nTrustee Snowball, as Chairman, ot\nthe School Ground Committee, itated that the puplli of the MacLean\nichool had helped rake over the\nichool groundi, and that a proportion had been town with lawn aeed.\nThe main need now was for lufficient water.\nThe Board agreed to aik the City\nParki Board for the loan of sufficient hose to carry out the work.\nHUME \u2014 B.  C.  Bracewell,  H.\nfive, Ian MacQueen, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Pendray, Victoria; Mr. and\nKn. _ Waeltl, Rev. H. J. Crelg, L.\nI 8. Davidson, T. Renwick, Vancou-\nI ver; Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Day, Prince\ndbert, Sask.; Arnold McGrath, M.\nL. A., Cranbrook; F. C. Wasson,\nKelowna; R. L. Foster, U. B. McCallum, D. J. McAlmon, G. M. Thorn,\nPenticton; J. H. Lewis, R. Steedman,\nMedicine Hat; .C. B. Munson, Illinois; J. H. Drummond, California;\nG. W. Taylor, Catte Rock, Wash.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may en]oy the finest\nrooms In the Interior \u2014 Bath or Shower.\nROOMS (1 UP\u2014SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nOUTLET HOTEL\nJCABINS, BOATING, FISHING\n20 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, B. C.\nRates reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn This Space\nWhen Thousandi Will-Read It\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDuff erin Hotel\n900 Seymour St. Vancouver,  B.C.\nNewly renovated through-\ncut Phones and elevator.\nA. PATTERSON, late ot\nColeman, Alta., Proprietor.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n410 Riverside   \u00ab\u2022 m.A.m__ \\Ti\\t IIVV       Opposite\nAvenue       tlOICl V U_LIjl___ I    Paulsen Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nRELAX\nat the GALAX\nCanadian Money at Par\nRoomi $1.00 to $2.50\nFREE GARAGE\n25. M_ln Ave\nSpokam, Wn\nW. 814\nFlnt\nHOTEL\nRIDPATH\nThe Hotel Canadians Like to\nCall Home.\nIN  SPOKANE\n196 Outside Roomi and\nApartments\nALL AT MODERATE RATES\nJOIN THE\nmm\nSeres (Pete) Mattson who changed\nthe spelling of his nsme to Metson,\nalso came from Sweden, where he\nwai born in 1900. He arrived at Quebec ln 102], and hai lived ln Brltiih Columbia for 10 years, coming\nto Nelson in 1934. While at Nelson\nhe was In the employ of the West\nKootenay Power lc Light Company,\nand was also employed by that company at Creston for a snort while.\nHe ii now employed at the Consolidated Smelter. He Is unmarried.\nTrail Rotarians\nName Committees\nlor 1940-41 Term\nTRAIL, B. C, June l\u00bb-CommW-\ntees of the Trail Rotary Club for\n1940-41 were announced by the directors at Tuesday's meeting.\nGroup Chairmen are R. C. Crowe,\nVocational Service; R. J. G. Richardi, Club Service; Aid. M. L. Brothers, Community Service, and w. J\nRutledge, World Service.\nCommittees follow;   i\nVocstlonal Service\u2014\nRotary Educstion\u2014S. 8. McDIarmld, Chairman; Dr. J. B. Thorn, Donald MacDonald, Rev. L. A. Morrant, W. A. Curran and H. C,\nCaldicott.\nBusiness Ethics\u2014H. R. Laurlente,\nChsirraan; J. H. Toting, W. G. Ternan, A. R. Buchan, H. S. Gamble,\nE. W. Hazlewood, W. E. Marshall;\nR. J. G. Richards, G. G. Rennison\nand R. M. Hoyland.\nPublic Relations\u2014Fred Matthewi,\nChairman; Robert Weir, H. C. Caldicott, R. C. Crowe, E. L. Oroutage,\nJease Kemp, 0. H. Nelson, Rev, L.\nA. Morrant and A. M Gibson.\nClub Service-\nProgram\u2014Fred Edmundi, Chairman; Hayor Herbert Clark, O. O.\nCumming, S. S. McDIarmld. H. R.\nLaurlente, A. J. Ballour. S. G. Bliy-\nlock, Donald MacDonald and Aid.\nM. L. Brothers.\nAttendsnce-J. D. Seuthworth,\nChairman; W. E. Marshall, Fred\nPlester, J.H. Young, Jesse Kemp,\nJ. M. Doughty and Jamie Devlto.\nFellowship-A. J. Balfour, C|\u00bbir-\nman; F. A. Lee, T. J. Mtjir, Jamei\nBuchanan, A. P. Levesque, J. A.\nMiliar, D. S. Moynes and J. D.\nSouthworth.\nMuiic\u2014B. A. Stlmmel, Chilrmin;\nE. L. Hodge, G. G. Rennison and\nFrank Pennoyer.\nCatering-W. E. Manhall, Chairman; D. Dalolie, Fred Plaster, R.\nW. Diamond, A. R. Buchan, w. J.\nRutledge, W. A. Porteoui and J. M.\nDoughty.\nClaasificatlon-F. S, Willis, Chairman; W. A. Curran, L, F. Tyson,\nJamei Buchanan, A. M. Gibson, A.\nH. Hopklm, Frank Penoyer and Aid,\nM. L. Brothers.    \u2022\nSick Vlsltlng-Hev. L. A. Morrant, Chairman; Dr. W. A. Coghlln,\nD. Dalolie, A. P. Leveique, W. A,\nPorteous, M. M. O'Brien and S. G.\nBlaglonl.\nCommunity Servloe\u2014\nCrippled Children\u2014W. E. Newton,\nChairman; W. C. McKensle, Dr. W,\nA. Coghlln, R. W. Diamond, E. W.\nHazlewood, Fred Matthews, Robert\nWeir and A. M. Gibson.\nPlaygrcunds-M. M. O'Brien.\nChairman; H. R. Lauriente, Fred\nEdmunds, James Devlto, T. J. Muir,\nP. F. Mclntyre, F. S. Willis, Mayor\nHerbert Clark, A. J, McDonell and\nS. S. McDiarmid.\nFresh Air Camp\u2014F. A. Lee, Chairman; J. A. Millar, A. R. Buchan, D.\nS. Moynei, W. E. Newton, Fred\nMathewi, A. J. McDonell, J. C. Alexander and Mayor Herbert Clark.\nCarnival\u2014P. F. Mclntyre, Chair-\nman; Mayor Herbert Clark, F. S.\nWillis, A. H. Hopklm, O. H. Nelson, A. J. McDonell, Fred Edmunds,\nG. G. Cumming, Frank Pennoyer.\nWorld Servloe\u2014\nInter-chib and Conference\u2014J. C\nAlexander, Chairman; E. L. Grout-\nage. A- Laurlente, M. M. O'Brien, H.\nS. Gamble, Robert Weir, L. F. Tyion,\nR. M. Hoyland, B. A. Stlmmel and\nFred Edmunds.\nCanadian Adviiory\u2014Donald MacDonald. S. S. McDiarmid, W. O.\nTrnan, R. C. Crowe, W. A. Porteoui,\nW. C. Mackenzie and R. J. G.\nRichardi.\n>0\u00abM\u00ab\u00bbO>S0)MOiO\u00bb>\u00bbt00O>iKtttt\nNew Extra Sunday\nService Between\nNelson and Trail\nEFFECTIVE JUNE 23\nPROVIDING TWO TRIPS\nEACH WAY DAILY\nThli new lervice will allow you\nto ipend Sunday in Trail with\nyour friendi.\nLv. NELSON\n10:05 ajn. 8:80 p.m\nLv. TRAIL\n10:00 a.m. 8:25 p.m.\nN.). LOWES, C.T.A., Nelion\nQjuiyfr\nPleads Guilty to\nCarnal Knowledge;\nSentenced 2 Years\nROSSLAND, B. C, June M \u2014\nGordon Paul, charged with having\ncarnal knowledge of a girl between\n14 and 18 yean, pleaded guilty be\nfore Judge W. A. Niibet in Rossland County Court, Tuesday, and\nwas sentenced to two yun less one\nday, with hard labor. A. G. Csmeron\not Trail, acted for the accused, and\nDonald MacDonald of Trail, represented the Crown. Paul will serve\nhli sentence ln Nelaon Jail.\nOakalla Inmates May\nJoin Canadian Army\nVICTORIA, June 1\u00bb (CP).-6hort\nterm offenders in Oakalla Jail who\nwlih to Join the fighting forcei may\nbe granted mitigation of sentences.\nAttorney-General Winner iaid today the Government wyuld give\nconsideration to leniency for any\nsentenced for Provincial offences.\nOF THI\nIn exquisite Alpine country\nsouthweil of Banff...\nat Egypt Lake,\nAug. 2-5\nft Trie ieveni+1 annual tant camp for\noutdoor lovtrs, wi* dally hikes, b\nat a central point from which radiate\nf nteinating traili gay with Alpine flowen.\nTrout fishing. Nature guides.\n$20 rate Includes tant occomrnoda-\ndon and meals for lh* four days as welt\nas packing of duffle from and to Banff.\nFor further particular, apply Room\n318,   Windsor   Station,   Montreal,  or\nDAN McCOWAN, Banff, Alberta\nor any Canadian Pacific Agent\nTUffiL -ARGAIH.\n^   i to tho. PiailiQS\nRETURN FARES FROM NELSON\nTo Coach      \u2022Tourist 'Standard\nJILT\n4\nto\n7\nfnrli.iir.\nCaljary .....  ... 111.48\nEdmonton  16.85\nSaskatoon   24.70\nMoose Jaw  19.56\nRegina  20.7B\nWinnipeg  80.45\nPort Arthur .... 42.10\n35.95\n49.75\nITCH\n22.85\n33.45\n20.50\n28.05\n41.35\n57.20\n\u2022   Plua regular birth chargii.\nHoliday In the Rockies\nStopovers permitted at all points.   In to ipend \u25a0 few\ndays In the mount.In.. Yor will enjoy the change of icene.\nIt fan h* as Inexpensive as yon wish.\nProportionately lower Fara* from Interior Point*\nChildren 5 Year, and Under IS, HaU Fare.\nInquire about .pedal tarn te Calf ary Exhibition and\nStampede, inly S-U end Idmenton _\u00bbhlM t Ion, J uly ll-M\nLaMoSkm uocijjtc\n.. .\n\"\u25a0: \u00bb.. i ii   i ii   oi a i\nFINK'S\n\u2014\\ \"i..'i\".\n\u25a0.x*e\u00bb\u00bb>wei'MJWi\u00bbHiwiNWi''>\u00bbs*'\n:x*m%i7'i\nTlsiW SummiUL (bhAAMJL\nGUORY PRINTS-TABBY WEAVES - STRIPES \u2014 SHEERS\nFABRICS EASY TO LAUNDER \u2014 FABRICS COOL FOR HOT\n- WEATHER\nEvery new leading style will be found in this Jarge collation.\nSiiet 11 ta 44. A dreu to suit you snd year budget\n$1.95 $2.95 $3.95 $4.95 $6.95\ngkMchmL 0a&_jj___\nCotton   Prints   with\nloads of style and color\nSizes 1 to 14 years.\nFloral prints, border\nprints, new novelty\nSummer dresses. Guaranteed colors. Special\nprice at\n95<\nBetter\nValues\n*, nnu\u00ab\u00ab\"u L\nBurns Block\nNew\nStyles\nWomen Liberals\nPlan lo Buy and\nSellWarSlamps\nNelson Women's Liberal Association will purchase War savings\nitamps with Anoclatlon funds and\nsell them to memben, making iuch\nmoney as ls already ln hand available to the Government and repeating the process ai quickly as stamps\nare sold.\nThis wu the plan arranged by a\nmeeting of the Aiiociation Tuesday\nnight at the home of Mn. E.\nw.\nWiddowion. Organization within the\nAnoclatlon  to  put the plan into\n!iractice was completed. No ob-\nective was let, the plan being to\nuy itampi and sell them as rapidly\nis possibly and then to buy mon\nstampi and sell them.\nThe meeting enjoyed a discussion\nby Mrs. Leo Gansner of the refugee\nproblem, and her description of the\naccomplishments already recorded\nby Europeans who had found homes\nin Cantda. A number of Industries\nwere established, providing employment and new wealth.\nA vote of thunks wu tendered\nthe speaker.\nA social hour, during which refreshments were ierved and teacups\nwere read, concluded the meeting.\nCo-hoitesses with Mn. Widdowion\nwere Mn Nelion Winlaw, Mn. Nel.\nion Murphy and Mn. E. H. Patenon\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLWIAB,  B.p. - Mn.  L.\nBourdon end daughters, l_y tnd\nJune Rote, left tor Onnd Forks to\nvlilt Mn. Bourdon, parenti,\nMn. L Parent vUlted Rowland\nMiu Beatrice McKinnon visited\nNeUon.\nMUl Beatrice Data left to visit\nher grandmother at Sl6can Park.\nMartin Pattinon has returned\nfrom a viiit to Waldo.\nG. Jorgensen li spending the\nweekend at his home th Rossland.\nC Appleton hu returned from\nMerrltt accompanied by hii wife,\nwho will take up reiidence here\nfof th* Summer.\nMr. and Mn. Preorri ot Trail vis\nIted CssUegar.\nSERVE\nBY\nSAVING!\nNow You Can Do Your BU\nThrough the purohue of WAR 8AVINGS OTtT-FICATES\nevery patriotic man, woman and child In Canada, regardless ef\nitation, is afforded an opportunity of making a personal contribution to Canada'i War Effort.\nWhen you buy WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES you i*ve money\nfor the future aod supply \"dollar ammunition\" to back up th*\nmen who are fighting our battle* oveneu.\nWAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES tre sold through all branchei\nof this Bank. Backed by the Dominion of Canada, they ere the\n\u2022afest kind of Investment you can make. Held to maturity, they\nera worth _5SK mora than yoh pay for them. For every M.(K>\nyou invest now, you receive 15.00 leven and one-halt years hince.\nBuy your first certificates to-day \u2014 then add to your investment\nregularly by purchasing at leut one certificate every month.\nWAR SAVINGS ST.AMPS\nc\u00abU   you   ctn  mAAtm\nkMiy.T!1\u00abo\u00bblo\u00ab!,lSo\u00ab_,.Wx^jJU\u00bbp.\n\"tttltm\nII yog cinnOUffofdlo\nUftcaU you cm purd\nSTAMra.TI\u00abrt\u00ab*lo\u00abl\nG8\nttttffluwrasaj\ncu\nPar-\nTHE ROYAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nNELSON BRANCH S. A. Maddocki, Manager\nA___-,_-fj\n I IJiV. II.IUIU ^Jl|.iiip,W*f^l',y^llf ^f^'^ip\n\u25a0 \u25a0\ni^^aui*<i^i|Msi'i4iJ^iifc'i\u00bb*iyiiiy;')i\n-NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B. C.-THUIWDAY MOBNINU. JUNE M.19W-\nYfest Kootenay Recruits leave Nelson and TraU for Coast\nA crowd like that which said farewell to Uie 109th (Rouland-     at Trail ai the train backed out carrying Trail recrulti on their way\nTraU) Field Battery, R.C.A., jammed the itreet! at the CI*JR. itaUon     to join the B. C. Begiment at Vanoouver.\nThere were tears and smiles as the recrulti broke ranks at the\nTrail station before leaving. In the centre of the picture is Jack Pur-\nMr ot Rossland bidding fareweU to a friend.\nLively and cheerful, a quartet of the TraU detachment chats with\nfriends from tho coach window. From left to right Bob Gerace of\nRossland, Ralph McNeil of Trail, Arthur Hlscock, of Rossland and\nLeslie Murdoch ot TraU and Rossland.\nOn parade for the first time since being mobilized, the Trail Pla-      Bay Avenue u it escorted the TraU detachment to Uie railway station,\nicon of the West Kootenay Veterans' Home guard stepped smartly up\nHome Guards Lead NeUon Dist rid Recrulti to Train\nParading for the first time, Nelson Platoon of Uie Veterani Home\nGuard formed Uie \"vanguard\" for the first draft of Nelson District\nfecrulti when they marched from Uie Armory to the C. P. R. itation\nWednesday to leave for the Cout Leading the Home Guards ire\nMajor A. C Sutton, D.S.O., M.C, of Rouland, Recruiting Officer for\nKootenay West in uniform* and Lieut M K Harrison, Officer in\ncharge of the Nelson Platoon,\nR, F Ballot the North Shore, one of the recruits, lost his father Edward P. Hogan, oft to serve his King and Country, had his\nwhen the British aircraft earner Courageous was torpedoed, and        daughter in his arms and his wife by his side when farewell! were\nmnk in the early months of the war. said at the itation. i\u00abewcus were\nAU photo! by Daily News\nGermans Claim Numerous Advances\nCapture of Cherbourg and Nancy\nBERLIN, junt 19 (AP).-The tot\nOt tht German high command's communique followi:\n\"The French armies are dissolving\nmore and more. Fait troopi have\ntaken Cherbourg In Normandy.\n\"Le Mana wai passed through to\nthe South. Between Orleans and\nNevers the Loire was crossed at\nmany points.\n(Last night's French communique\n\u25a0aid Cherbourg had faUen and that\nthe Germani had established bridgehead! on tht Loire.-Thli morning's\ncommunique iaid there were no\nessential changei In the lines overnight)\n\"In Burgundy fait troopi already\nare pushing forward- in the direction of Lyon. Weit of Mulhouse\narmored and motorized divisions,\ncoming from Belfort were about to\nunite with troops which attacked\nacross the Upper Rhine and deeply\nadvanced by way of Munster Into\nthe Vosges. ,\n\"Farther North Nancy was taken\nand the Rhlne-Marne Canal, East of\nNancy, crossed on a broad front. In\nthe Maginot line on both sides ot\nThlonvUle the enemy was stUl resisting. Fighting snd diving bomber\nunits cooperated in breaking the resistance of Uie enemy, encircled in\nLorralni, by attacks' on fortifications\nfield positions, rail linea and troop\nconcentration! and columni.\n(The French tn Alsace and Lorraine wen reported to be \"holding\ntht enemy.\")\n\"Ott Cherbourg ont merchant\nvessel of 10,000 toni wis sunk by\nbombs.\nFIRE OIL TANKS IN\nBRITAIN CLAIM\n\"In England, German fighting\nplane units bombarded numerous\nairports al well as big oU' tank\ncentres on tiie Thames Estuary,-setting tanks afire. Flying units commanded by Major-Gen. Coder es-\nSeclally distinguished themselves ln\nlis action.\n(Thirteen civilian! were killed ln\nthese raids but little damage wai\ncauied to military objectives.)\n\"British airplanes ln the course ot\nthe night of June 18-19 entered\nNorth and Western Germany, as\nusual dropping bombs over non-\nmilitary targets. About 18 dead were\ncounted among the police and civilian population, among them a number who bad not entered air raid\nshelters.\n\"The opponents' total air losses\nyesterday were six planei five Ger-\nmanplane i are milling.\n\"Lieut. Dietz of a iharpihooters\nregiment brought an important\nbridge into our handi by a courageous performance.\"\nChicago Tribune Advocates tl. $.,\nCanada Military Defense Alliance\nCHICAGO, June 19 (CP). - The\nChicago Tribune was revealed today\nas an advocate of a military alliance between Canada and the United States, partly on the grounds\nthey are the only two countries in\nthe Americas which have demonstrated they can fight modern warfare.\nIn an editorial today the Tribune\nsaid ln part: ,\n\"The American people have long\naccepted the proposition that the\nUnited States will resist an invasion of Canada as quickly and vigorously as lt would an attack on\nIti own territory. The time has come\nto Implement that policy by making a former military alliance with\nCanada for common defence of our\ncountrlei. Thli ihould be done at\nonce.\n\"Our maintenance of the Moneroe\nDoctrine demands that we have\ncommon defence arrangement! with\nall the nation! of the Weitern hemisphere, but Canada stands as a special caie. Among other reasons, there\nis the fact that It ls the only American nation besides our own with\na demonstrated capacity for waging\nmodern warfare.\"\n\"Canadian induitry Is further advanced than our own in the change\nover from peacetime to wartime\nproduction.\"\nThe editorial mentioned Canada's\npresent extensive war efforts and\nUnited Statei vital Interests in the\nCaribbean and South America but\nsaid these Independent interests \"are\nnot conflicting and they are lew\nimportant to either of us than the\ndefence of our shore! against invasion.\"\nIt said a defensive aUlance ihould\n\"be allowed Immediately by conferences between the Canadian general\nitaff and our own on the joint operation ot our armed forces.\"\nBeaten Nations\nHave Risen Before\nRecalls Cooper\nLONDON, June 19 (CP)-^Aifred\nDuff Oooper, Minister of Information, declared In a broadcast today\nthat the defeat of the French \"was\nnot the first time a great nation\nhad been defeated\" and returned\nto victory.\nThe rrench defeat wai a great\nblow to Britain, he said, but she retained the good will ot France as\nwell as of other nations that have\nfallen before the Nazi regime.\n\"Bombardment and Invasion of\nthis bland will be the next phase\nof the war,\" he added. The defence\ntask was simpler because the line\nof battle was shorter. On one side\nwas the Atlantic, which he said was\na bulwark for the British Island.\nHe also pointed to Uie Dominions\nIncluding Canada, and referred to\nPresident Roosevelt's promise of\nhelp.\n\"We have therefore, an Inexhaustible source of supply,\" he said.\n\"We must only beat off the invader for two months and British sup-\nlies will increase while Germany's\ndecrease!.\"\nChange In Excess\nProfitsTax Likely\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP) .-Canadians will be asked Friday by the\nFinance Minister, Hon. J. I.. Raliton, to pour their money into the\nwar chest in larger quantities,\nthrough new and old channels of\ntaxation, to meet Uie ever-increasing costs of national defence and the\nwar effort abroad.\nOne feature believed to be a foregone conclusion Involves changes in\nthe excess profits tax Imposed last\nFall to take effect on corporations\nwhose fiscal years ended after\nMarch 31,1940. There was a demand\nIn the House of Commons that this\nbe made 100 per cent as has been\ndone in Great Britain. It now ranges\nfrom 10 to 60 per cent on a graduated scale.\nThe corporation Income tax on all\nprofits ls 18 per cent and the excess profits tax goes on after that\nTroops to Islands\nAll From Canada\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP). - The\nCanadian troops sent to Iceland,\nNewfoundland and the British West\nIndies were all despatched from\nCanada, lt was learned today from\na reliable source.\nThe 1st Canadian Division and Us\nancillary forces remain in England\nwhere they are assigned to home detence.\nCOL. CUNNINCTON NAMID\nCENERAL STAFF OFFICER\nCjUjGARY, June 19 (CP).-Ap-\npointment of Col. D. G. L. Cunning-\nIon, M.C, V.D., as General Staff\nOfficer (2nd grade) for Military\nDistrict 13, was officially announced\ntoday.\nHe succeeds to the vacancy on\nthe heaquarters staff caused by the\ndeparture of Major C. A. Lyndon fbr\noversea! eervice. Col. Cunnington\nwill revert to the rank of Major...\nKenya Troops\nDamage Post\nNAIROBI, Kenya Colony, Africa,\n.Tune 19 (CP).\u2014A raid on Uie Italian\nSomaliland frontier by troopa of the\nKing George's African Rifles, lupported by the Southern Rhodesian\ncontinent ahd the Royal Air Force,\nwai reported today in a military\ncommunique.\nAlthough full detalla were not\navailable, the itatement iaid, an\nItalianpost was considerably damaged. Tne raid was made yesterday.\n\"The enemy was obviously surprised and later counter-attacked\nour troopi who, after completing\ntheir task, withdrew over the border.\nOur reported casualties are two\nAfrican ranks.\n\"On withdrawing, our troops were\nbombed by two Italian Capronl aircraft but so far no damage whatsoever is reported.\n\"On the rest of'the front all was\nquiet on Tuesday.\"\nPapers Acclaim\nChurchill Speech\nLONDON, June 19 (CP). - The\nMorning Press commenting on Prime\nMinister Churchill's speech yesterday, was unanimous today in Its ac\nclaim of his expressed detenpina\ntion to fight on.\n','We fight for the freedom of\nFrance and the freedom of all peoples enslaved by HiUer,\" said The\nTimes.\nThe Daily Herald said: \"The British people will continue to hope that\nthe present French Government or\nany that succeeds it, may even now\nresolve to honor its obligation (to\nBritain) however and wherever it\ncan.\"\nThe Daily Express said: \"After\nreading Mr. Churchill's speech our\nmood will be behind the great\nleader. We will never yield one\nblade of grass of this green Island.''\nThe Daily Telegraph and The\nMorning Post said: \"Our island is\nnow the one armed fortress of freedom. Mr. Churchill gave solid practical grounds for confidence in the\nBattle of Britain now at hand.\"\nThe News Chronicle said: \"Now\ntwo more men are planning to di.\nvide the world. Once again the harvest of their eventual failure seems\ndistant. But we shall reap it.\"\n\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab# T^nti\nTHE \"BAY'S\"\nTHREE.DAY\nBicycle Sale\nThurs., Fri., Sat \u2014 June 20, 21 and 22\n'\u25a0\u25a0 ,\nMEN'S, BOYS', GIRLS' WOMEN'S\nBicycles Now Available\nOn \"Bay\" Budget Plan\nii\nINTERN  FRENCH   FLIERS\nPALMA, Mallorca, June 19 (AP).\n\u2014The crew of a French hydro plane\nwhich landed today at Puerto Cristo\nsaid they were en route to Algeria\nwhen their gasoline became exhausted.\nSpanish military authorities took\npossession of the craft and Interned\nits crew.\n2000 French Cross\nInto Switzerland\nLE LOCLE, on the French-Swiss\nFrontier, June 19 (AP).\u2014Two thousand French soldiers, Including a\nGeneral, two Colonel!, four Lieu-\ntenant-Coloneli and _J other officer! of the aviation staff for the\nDijon region, itumbled ' wearily\nacross Col Dei Roches Ridge Into\nneutral Switzerland today.\nThey surrendered to Swiss army\nborder guards and without a murmur tell exhausted to sleep on the\ngrass.\nThe steady flow of refugees continued acrou thii -part of the Jura\nfrontier \u2014 the old and the young\nIn the dispirited masses.\nThey said many of their number\nwere killed by bombing. In towns\not the Doubs VaUey, Southeast of\nReiancon, France, and that others\nmet death when they were caught\nhelpless between the German and\nFrench lighting forces.\nOne woman brought her dead\nchild across the mountain! with\nher. The child had been kiUed by a\nbomb fragment near Besancon.\nRUPTURED?\nEXPERT  TRUSS   FITTING\nHINDLITR   ARTIFICIAL\nMB   aw   TRUSS   CO\nMANCHESTER (CP) - 31 _\nPriestley, Britlih novelist has gfl\ngested cheaper brands of toba.\nbe exempted from high war ts_t<\nthat poor aged men might not]\ndeprived of their \"last co_iolat_l\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n:  PILLS\nWOOD SAW H\nWORKING        FILING\nReasonable Ratal\nKootenay Saih & Door Worl\n801 Ward St Opp. City I\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding Machln\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fiiher Ltd.\n631 Wird St Phone #\n=\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS and ALTERATIOf\nB. C. Numbing fr Heating\nCompany, Limited.      st\nThli advertisement li not published or diipliyed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of Britlih Columbia.\n\u25a0..___-\u2022\" \"JIBMIBf\n,'        a. a\n\t\n !  FOUR  \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014i-\u2014\noratory Doctors\nimlnation Is\nHecessary lor\nGood Diagnosis\n.OGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\n|w a picture the other day u _\u2022\nj_e Doctor of the Future\", lie\nIn a dark room reading X-r-iy\nk and heart tracings and labur-\nt teste. How close is it to reel-\nMi that a doctor can tell about\n(lent this way without seeing\nwtienlv\nby opinion, It le far from clew.\nHave that 95 per cent ot all\nible in formation that a doctor\nfor purposes of diagnosis nn-i\ninenl comes from talking with\nlatient and examining with tho\nand hands and the stethoscope,\nact, I gave a clinic to some\n\u2022grade doctors not long ago, in\nJl I told them all about the\nratory findings and did not\n1 the patient, and asked tfiem\nNEI SON DAILY NEWS  NILSON. B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE ID. 1940-\nNOW Utider-am\n\u25a0eam Deodorant\nsafely\nops Perspiration\n1. Does not rot dreisei\u2014does\nnot In irate skin.\nt. No waiting to diy. Can be used\nright ifter timing.\nS. Instantly stops perspiration lot\n1 to 3 days. Removes odor\nfrom perspiration.\n4. A pare white, greaseless, itiln-\nless vanish ing cream.\nI. Arrid hu been awarded thl\nApproval Seal of ihe American\nloitimre of Laundering, fot\nI   being harmlest to fabrics.-\nIS MILLION Jen ei Anid\nkm beta sold.Ttya.tr today!\nARRID\nilASAmrnmammUtm..*,\n(ga__j__aBio\n___\u00a3\n_] Aad yoa will never forget\nl.lba wonderful tang and\n^distinctive flavour\n. French's Prepared Mustard brings out In sandwiches and cold meat\nTake it oo yonr next\npicnic.\nto make a dlignoila. There wain't\none diagnosis that waa within a\nthousand par cent of being right.\nWhen the patient walked In lt wai\nperfectly evident that he had a\nform of nervoui dlaeaae called multiple sclerosis.\nPlease give a list of liquid foodi\nwhich would represent a well-balanced diet with adequate caloric\nand vitamin content\nThii lort ot of feeding la often\nnecesiary with people who have to\nuie tubei and for convslscents.\nFrom th efollowlng list the menu\ncan be planned. All food In solid\nform must be pureed and strained:\nAcid milks, albumin fruit iunces,\nalbumin water (1 or 2 whites of\neggs to a glass of water), almond\nmilk, Applesauce, apricots, barley\nwater, lima beans, beef Juice, beets,\nbemax, black coffee, bouillon, butter, buttermilk, carrots, cereal waters, chicken broth, chocolate, clear\nand creim soups, cocoi, cod liver\noil, and cornmeal.\nAlso cream, cream of wheat,\ndextrl-maltose, egge (raw) farina,\nfruit juices, glucose (10 per cont\nsolution), honey, corn syrup, powdered milk lactose (10 to 20 per\ncent solution), maple syrup, malted milk, cow or goat milk, oatmeal gruel, olive oil, orange albumin (1 or 2 whites of eggs with\njuice of an orange in equal parte\nof water), parsnips, peas, peptone\naolution (20 to 40 per cent), peptonized milk, plain milk, potato-\nboiled, sweet or white prunes, pum-\nkin, cereals, breakfast lood. rice,\nsalt, spinach, strained cereals, sugar, strained fruiti, strained vegetables, tea\u2014clear, tomato juice, turnip, vegetable soup, whites of eggs.\nQUESTIONS AND  ANSWERS\nF. H. L.: How may one fumigate\nto rid a room of cancer germa?\n.*_iswer\u2014There  are  no   cancer\ngerms. Cancer ii not contagious.\nC.C: Is trichomona! an infectious dlaeaae? Can it continue over\na period of five years? Is lt a disease of females only?\nAnswer\u2014Trichomonas is an Infectious diieaie due to a small animal parailte. It affects different\nparts of the body\u2014sometimei the\nIntestine, sometimes the female reproductive tract. It may be very\nstubborn and can last as long as\nfive yeans. Intestinal infection occurs both in men and women.\nFriday longest\nDay ol Year\nSUMMER SOLSTICE, 1940\nBy W. O. C. LANSKAIL\nFriday, June 21,' will be the longest day this year, for then the Sun\nwill reach furthest declination\nNorth, will make momentary halt\nat 5:37 a.m'. and at once begin its\njourney South.\nBetween now and the end of June\nthere will be little change in the\nlength of days, and singularly\nenough, the sun will continue to set\na little later each evening unUi\nJune 27, but it has also been rising\nlater eech morning now for some\ndayi.\nThli aomewhat complicated apparent motion of the sun is due\nto the elliptical orbit of the earth,\nand to the inclination of the earth's\nequator to the plane of this orbit,\ntermed \"the obliquity of the ecliptic\".\nIt la Interesting to note that out\nfour seasons are not of equal length.\nWhen it ls Summer in the Northern\nHemisphere the earth ia further\nfrom the iun and ls nwving a little\nslower in its ott.it\u2014as defined by\nKepler's iecond kw of planetary\nmotion\u2014end takes a few days longer to go from the Summer solstice\nto the Autumnal Equinox, than\nfrom the Winter solstice to the Vernal Equinox.\nIn the Northern Hemisphere the\napproximate length! of leasons are\nas follows:\nSpring, 92 days, 21 houn; Sum-\nmer, 93 days, 14 hours; Autumn. 89\ndays, lfl hours; Winter, 89 days, 1\nhour.\nIt will thus be seen thet combined\nlength of Spring and Summer is\nappreciably greater than Autumn\nand Winter. The reverse obtains in\nthe Southern Hemisphere where\nWinters are longer and colder and\nSummers shorter. These conditions\nare made more extreme by the sun\nbeing further from the earth, by\nabout three million miles, when\nWinter begini ln the Southern Hemisphere.\npJfV * Delicious Dr. Jackson's Kofy-S\nDelicious Dr. Jackson's Kofy-Sub\nsupplies the rich satisfying flavour\nand atoms of coffee ... but none\nof the caffeine that upsets nerves,\nand digestion in so many people.\nMake Kofy-Sub exactly as you\nmtke coffee ... ind note the low\ncost per cup! Produced entirely\nfrom Canadian grains, soya beans\nind honey, Kofy-Sub is rich in\nalkaline minerals ind can be\ngiven safely to young children.\nBuy Kofy-Sub today and drink it\nfreely for health as well as\nenjoyment.\n'OVER 500,000 COPIES ALREADY SOLDI\nof Dr. Jackson's famous 458-pige book \"How To\nBe Always Well\". Send $3.00 for this invaluable\nguide-book to vigorous heilth.\nID C C |   Oi- Jackaon'i booklet en Food and Health. Addrw ieq\u00bbesb to\n*-*-*-*        Dr. Jiction Foodi Limited, 382   Vint Avtnu., Toionto\nNothing Left in Life..\nAppreciate Life's\nBeauties lo Gel\nMost of Living\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDEAR MISS CHATFIELD:\nI have reached the point in life\nwhere I agree with a line in the\nbook, \"My Son, My Son\": \"Thoie\nwho try to do right and play fair\nhaven't much chance while others\nbreak all the laws and get what\nthey want, regardless of whom they\nhurt.\" Everything I have ever\nwanted has been snatched away\nfrom me Just as I put my hand out\nto take it. You have frequently\nsaid a woman should look her best,\nkeep fit and be cheerful and she\nwould hold her husband. It isn't\ntrue. A man is like a child with\ntoys. He gets tired of one and wants\nanother. Yet society leems to think\nthat men are goda to be looked up\nto. Now tell me what is the use ol\nmarriage lawa when they aren't\nrespected?\nI am writing because I have no\none to turn.to and it eases my mind\nto write. I know your answer. You\nwill say keep on doing right, re-\n?;ardless of reward which will come\nn the next world. Quit feeling\nsorry for yourself, get interested in\na hobby. Thanks for reading my letter anyway and I will try to hold on\nto my little bit of faith in spite of\nthe fact that there is so little decency in the world.\nLOUISE.\n.ANSWER;\nFar be it from me to recommend\nthat you wait for the reward in the\nworld to come. On the contrary I'd\nrecommend that you begin to collect right now and here's how. Suppose the men are scoundrels and\nunworthy of women's devotion. Forget them and lavish your devotion\non those of your own sex. No use\nto spoil your life by scolding scoundrels. Skip 'em and pretend that\nthey aren't existent. The men won't\nmind; you'll be infinitely happier,\nand you won't have to fret about\nthe marriage laws.\nSecond, maybe there is a small\namount of decency in the world,\nbut you can get immeasurable comfort in the thought that you are contributing your small bit, setting a\ngood example to those who see you\nand going to bed nightly with a clear\nconscience. A tiny candle flame of\nfaith can light a big expanse of territory if it isn't hidden by bitterness and gloom.\nThird, hobbies are good medicine\nfor the unhappy. But I would add\nwhat a distinguished neurologist\ntells his patients. \"Find a hobby and\nbe sure it isn't a-purely selfish\nhobby. You can't get the best results thinking about yourself, acquiring aomethlng for yourself.\"\nIt comes to me with renewed force\nall the while: Life goes on just\nas it has always gone on. There's as\nmuch beauty and interest and hap-\npiifess and thrill in it as there ever\nwas. But it is our awareness ol\nthese things, our ability to appropriate them that count!. The sun\nrises and seta in glory. The grass\nand trees green and grow. Men and\nwomen rise to heroic heights. Little children love and laugh and\nplay. What sort ol lenses do we turn\ntoward this loveliness?\nNot Always Right . . .\nDoctor Amused\nby Movie Errors\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nI am very fond of the movies. I\nattend them about as regularly \u00abs\nI do anything. So my opinion is\noften asked about the authenticity\nol the medical scenes that are portrayed in some ol the production.\nThe movie studios have set themselves a very high standard as to\naccuracy in the portrayal ol details.\nEspecially accuracy in historical\nscenes as to costume and every other\ndetail. It is all the more amusing\nto find them every once in a while\nlapsing into a trivial error.\nAn instance in point was a scene\nIn Gone With the Wind. The Confederate Army had been thrown\nback on Atlanta and the wounded\nwere lying in the streets, in churches\non porches\u2014everywhere. The nurses\nand doctors, as many as could be\nfound,, were moving in and out doing their best to attend to them.\nAnd every Once in a while a nurse\nwould produce a nice little clinical\nthermometer and take a soldier's\ntemperature. The only trouble about\nthat is that the clinical themometer\nhad just been introduced and the\nConfederate Army didn't have any.\nDisputed Passaged is very accurate so far as details of operating\nroom technique are concerned, But\nI have yet to sec a teacher In a\nmedical school act In anything like\nthat sarcastic and smart Aleck way\nto a group of students, It was a little\nstrange also to find the new students sent right into the surgical\namphiheatre to view an operation\ntheir first day in school: they usually are not prepared for that until about the second year.\nAnd for the benefit of the eminent nerve surgeon who operated on\na colleague's skull and was sitting\nby the bedside waiting for consciousness to return, muttering,\n\"The presure is relieved, he should\nbe regaining consciousness,\" I may\nsay that relief of pressure in a\nbrain injury is not the only factor\nin recovery.\nDr. Elrich's Magric Bullet is wholly\ngood\u2014and a thrilling and wholesome drama. It may give a some-\nwhet weird picture of the relations of the superintendent of a\nhospital to the staff, but Its review\nof the life of Paul Ehrlich is true\nand moving\nWhat a wonderful record of accomplishments for one man\u2014stain\ning of blood cells, perfection of dioh\ntheria antitoxin, discovery of the\nmethod of staining tubercle bacilli.\nlhe side-chain theory of immunity,\nthe beginning of specific chemical\ntherapy agaloat infections\u2014and a\nhundred others too technical to\nmention.\nSERIAL STORY . . .\nBy Oren Arnold\nWOMAN REPORTS BELIEF\nHUSBAND IN SPY RINC\nST. LOUIS, June 19 (AP).\u2014Police received what they said wai a\nnew high in tipi on \"Fifth Column\"\nactivities. A woman telephoned to\nreport she suspected her husband is\nconnected with a spy ring for a\nforeign Government\nHAPPINESS, C. O. D.\nSYNOPSIS\nTHE CHARACTERS:\nBENJAMIN MERRIFIELD. aged\ncapitalist, hires\nGAYLE DIXON to make love to\nhis grandson,    -\nJEREMY TUCKER, a ihy itudent\nof archeology, while\nBILL BAILEY and six pretty girls\nare employed to help bring life and\nyouth to the Merrifield mansion.\nCHAPTER 17\nGayle slept but little that night\n. She barely remembered eeeing tbe\nparty break up although she hoped\nshe had shown presence of mind\nenough to iay gracious good nights.\nMost of the last courtesy was directed at Jeremy Tucker, anyway, since\nbe was the honored one.\nShe was awake at dawn and she\ndreesed at once and went downstairs. But she didn't get her hoped-\nfor chance to think alone.\n\"Good morning,\" Mr, Merrifield\nspoke heartily, surprising her from\nbehind a stone column on the porch.\n\"You'll have breakfast with me?\nIn juat a minute or two now.\"\nShe had to agree. And it was\npleasant, really, eating with him\nand enjoying his kindly courtesy.\nHe pulled out her chair for her,\nand said grace for the two Of them,\nand served her from the big bowl\nof cereal that wae placed before\nthem, and poured cream for her,\nand otherwise was courtly. She\ncouldn't help loving the old man.\nShe wished he were her own grandfather. She had neve, haa one,\nand could barely remember her\nown father, in fact.\nShe went to Bill snd the butler\nto pledge them anew to secrecy\nconcerning the robbery.\n\"After all, it was only a thousand dollar loss and there was Insurance,\" she said. \"The Twayi are\nwell to do. Don't upset Mr. Merrifield or dear old Mr. Weems.\"\n\"Right,\" said Bill. \"But I've been\nthinking. I've got some ideee.\"\n\"What, Bill?\"\n\"I think I know something. Maybe not, but I'm going to play my\nhunch, on  my  own.\"\n\"Tell me!\"\n\"Not now. Wait'll I'm sure.\"\n\"Bill Bailey. I hate you! Last\nnight you said you were in love\nand then you \u00abhut up about it. Now\nthis!\"\nHe smiled back at her, toiled\nher hair and ducked to avoid a\n1 low she aimed at him.\nThey hadn't much time for teasing and cutting up, however, because preparations for the play\nhad to be completed fast. First it\nwas neceasEry to prepare the theatre itself. Folding chairs were\nrented, and this Wednesday morning Bill super vised placing them\nin the two big ballrooms even while\nrehearsal was under way.\nBill had arbitrarily re-written\nthe plsy in small measure so as to\ninclude just one main male part\nand two lesser onee. One of the\nlesser he hod forced on Jeremy.\nThe other he would play himself,\ndoubling after playing the male\nlead. And he had written in two\nminor feminine roles so that all\nIlx ot tht girls, ln addition to Gayle\ncould be accommodated.\n\"We've got to keep in mind the\ntact that theie glrli ue hired to\ndo Little Theatre work,\" BiU .told\nGayle privately. \"Mr. Merrifield\nordered me to keep them busy. He\nordered you and me to draw Jeremy out ot hli shall, and a crowd\not girls around htm is the b* '\nway to combat bis shyneli. He'\nget uied to feminine -beauty in\ntime. I hope.\"\n\"Surely, Bill. We're making progress already. He enjoyed the party,\n\"Did you?1'\n\"Yei. Until ther-the-\"\n\"I know. It's a ihame.\"\n\"Where'i Jeremy now?\"\n\"Out on the lawn\u2014guess what\ndoing?\"\n\"Meditating?\"\n\"Wooing!\"   '\nGayle stopped her work\u2014she had\nbeen memorizing the last of htr\nplay script and ihe laid it wide\nhow\u2014to look excitedly at BUI.\n'Tell me!\"\n\"The Tempe person. Four eyei.\nShe likes him.\"\n\"Sol Well, Jeremy's not bad, really, BiU. I can understand how Tempe feels.\"\nBUI didn't aniwer that. He looked\nat hii associate.\n\"Listen Gayle, you\u2014\" But he\nhalted abruptly. After all, a man\ncan't come out and say be loves a\ngirl, but wants her to wait a year\nto diEciui it. He was tied up with\npromises. His promised talk wai, ln\nfact, to make Jeremy fell for Gayle\nherself. He had all but forgotten\nthat!\n\"Surel\" he changed hit tone. \"Jer-\nemy'i swell. Gayle\u2014I think he Ukea\nyou. Don't let thli Hyde girl overdo\nher act. You're supposed to\u2014to\u2014\"\n\"I know. Mtke him woo me. But\nI've been awfuUy busy.\"\n\"Scram right now, and (lve him\nsome _ttr_fction.\"\nThat seemed advisable. She had\nnot talked to Jeremy aU morning,\nand tbe hour wai almoit noon. She\nwent outside and broke Into his\nchat with Tempe.\nGayle threw herself into the\nmood of surface gaiety nnd did\nmanage to edge Jeremy away\u2014 but\nwhen she turned back le stick out\nher tongue at the smaller girl, purely in a gesture of teasing and comradeship, she saw that Teraje's anger was aroused.\nThis foot was startling. Shs had\nnever seen Tempe angry. Tempt\nvoiced no objection now; Indeed,\nshe smiled quickly and her expression changed but there had been a\ntell-tale moment ln which ber eyei\nrevealed much.\n\"I'm jittery trom last night and\nam imagining thingi without real\ncause,\" she told herself. The a) parent flash of meanness ln Tempe's\neyes and face was purely Imaginary, she insisted now. She turned\ndeterminedly to the shy young\nman.\nShe had lunch with Jeromy,\nalone, and they talked pleasantly\nif without excitement They lingered for an hour or more atter lunch.\nIt was cheerful and they were not\ninterrupted untU nearly _ p.m.,\nwhen Bill Bailey drove up In ont\noHoiJULQWWflL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nFruit Juice or Fresh Fruit Cocktail\nSwiss Steak Boiled New Potatoes\nBanana Salad\nSour Cream Pudding\nCoffee\nSWISS STEAK\nTop cut round steak, % green\npepper, 4 green onions. 2 stalks celery, % cup canned tomato soup.\nFlour.\nWipe sleak with damp cloth, rub\nwith salt and pepper and sprinkle\nwith Vt cup flour, pounding it\nin wilh \u00bb blunt instrument or the\nedge of a plate. Treat both sides\nalike, then melt 2 tablespoons bason fat in heavy skillet and brown\nthe steak all over with a rather\nlow fire. While steak browns, prepare vegetables, cut pepper in thin\nslices, ditto onions, dice celery.\nWhen steak is well-browned, pile\nvegetables on top, add tomato soup\nand cook over low heat, covered,\nuntil meat is tender, which will\ntake about 2 hours. Serve with\nvegetables on top of meat. Look at\nmeat rather frequently and add a\nlittle hot water if it is inclined to\nburn.\nSOUR CREAM PUDDING\nThree tablespoons shortening, Vt\ncup sugar, one egg, Vt cup bran,\n1 cup milk, 2 cups flour. 3 teaspns.\nbaking powder. V, teasp. salt, 1\nteasp. vanilla, 2 cups light brown\nsugar, 2 cups thick sour cream.\nBlend shortening and sugar. Add\negg and beat well. Soak bran n\nmilk. Sift flour with baking powder and salt and add to creamed\nmixture alternately with bran and\nmilk; add flavoring. Pour into deep\nbaking pan and spread evenly.\nSprinkle brown sugar over top and\npour on cream. Bake in moderate\noven (350 degrees F.) about 45\nminutes. Serve hot in upside-down\nsquares.\nSummer time is open season\nfor refreshments in most households Summer entertaining, however simple, can be fun.\nIced Coffee is a Summer standby. Prepare coffee as usual and\nchill quickly. Before serving, add\nto each quart six tablepsoons finely powdered sugar and three teaspoons vanilla, all stirred well to\ndissolve   sugar.   Pour   into   glass\nabout quarter filled with cracked\nice. Omit vanilla, and crush fruit\nmint leaves with the sugar, add to\ncoffee snd stir well for another\ncoffee drink.\nFOR NON-DIETERS\nFor those who don't have to diet\na scoop of vanilla ice cream in each\ntall glau of iced coffee add! flavor. A drink mide with two tablespoons of whipped cream placed in\nbottom of a glau and topped with\na scoop of. ice cream, the glasi\nfilled with freshly made coffee that\nhas been chilled quickly, ii a pleasant variation.\nThe successful Summer hostess\nusually has a supply of carbonated\nbeverages on hand to lerve u is,\nor to use at an Ingredient tor iome\nconcoction. She fill! ice-cube trayi\nwith a fruit-flavored loft drink,\nsnd these she uses for color and\nflavor for tall glasses ot Iced tea,\ntastefully garnished with a sprig\nof mint A drink made with a cup\nof grape juice plus four cupi of\nginger lie, well blended and chilled,\nii refreshing. So li raspberry iher-\nbet with lime-flavored cirbonated\nbeverage poured over it\nJust ai potables may bt glorified,\nfood can De given a lift. A canape\nor a cookie or a piece of cake have\nkept company with a cold drink\nfor years, but how about dressing\nthem up a little? A pudding made\nwith 18 graham crackers folded Into\na cup and a halt of applesauce will\nmake a snack to serve six. Pour\nmixture into pudding dish ind\nchill in refrigerator 2 or 3 houri.\nServe with whipped cream. If you\nwant to make an Impresiion, lerve\noriginal tid-bits. Color iweet butter pink with paprika, ipread it on\ncanape diamonds and top with thin\nsmoked salmon. Or main ripe avocado and blend with salt pepper,\nonion salt and chill powder to taste\nwithout any one flavor predominating, for a ipread.\nFor a substantial snack do deviled eggs this wsy;\nCut six hard-boiled eggs Id lengthwise halvei. Remove and mash the\nyolks. Drain oil from can of amdk-\n'er sardines and add sardines to\negg yolks, with two teaspoons prepared mustard, salt and vinegar to\ntaste. Stuff egg whites with thli\nmixture.\nTRY IT THE \"SALADA\" WAY\nInfuse 6 he.ping teaspoons ol Salada Black Tu in I pint el freih, boilinj wlttf.\nAltar 6 minutes strain liquid Into 2-quart contains!\/ while hot, add 1 to 1 )i cups\nof sugar arid juice ol _ lemons, strained\/ stir until sujir ii dissolved\/ All conUlritr\nwilh cold water. Do not allow tea to cool befort adding cold water or liquid\nwill become cloudy. Serve with chipped ict.   Thl abovt mik.s 7 toll glutei.\nSSSsW TEA\n|. i>*i|_i aiV \u25a0>    l    (i   i.l\nFoot Health\nFancy Shoes for\nSpecial Events,\nNot Dally Wear\nBy DONNA GRACE\nFeet art tht moit piUent things\nin tht world. Thty put up wtth til\nour fadi and conUnue to mpport ui\neven though nature hu to pad thtm\n(hem wtth callouses to offset tht\npressure of either tht too-small or\nloose covering, But there wlU come\na time when they wUl rebel against\nabuse, and it'i a good thing, as thli\nli about the only Ume they receive\nthe action they deitrve.\nFancy shoes art a temptation tor\naU of us and Wt UM to Wttr thtm,\nbut fo* toot cdmfprt we muit depend on a ihot that offers good\nsupply and ls correctly fitted. Foot\nspeclaUsts say one mty indulge In\ntny ot tht trivoloui Ityles provided\nUie good sensible kind are worn\nmost of the Ume.\nWear comfortable shoes for day-\ntime walking. This applies to Uie\nwoman who worki In the home and\nto thoie who walk a great deal.\nBusiness girls who stand ihould be\nsure to wear comfortable shoes all\nday. Sven those who sit in an office ihould be kind to their feet by\nwearing the fancy shoes out at the\noffice and having others to put on\nwhile they are at work.\nNtxt ln importance ' to correct\nshoei ii foot exercise. The feet are\n.strapped in one position moat of\nthe ume and need to be relieved\nfrom tht strain. With plenty of\nexercise and bathing there WlU be\nvery lltUe or no toot trouble.\nSensitive teet ire likely to be\nmore Irritated during the war weather, especially if one walk! on hot\nstreets. When possible, one ihould\ntake tbt time to either bathe or\nsponge them weU, then dry, powder, put on freih hoie and change\nshoei.\nWalking on the toes and at the\nlame Ume stretching tal will relax the strain caused by the shoes.\nRotate tht ftet on the anklet, first\nthe circular movement then up and\ndown. With these exercises, use\nresistance at tint then do a let easily. Tha resistance will bring all\nlei and foot muscles Into play.\nWhen the teet are swollen and\nhot, don't plunge tham Into cold\nwater. It will feel good, but tint\nbathe them in hot water, to which\nyou add epsom salts (] heaping\ntablespoonfuls to a toot tub). Hold\nthtrt tor a ftw moments, thtn under\na cool ihower. Do thli several times\nand when dry use plenty ot dusting powder.\nLeopold's Children\nCross Spain Border\nIRUN, Spain (On The French\nBorder), June 19 (AP). \u2014 The three\nchildren of King Leopold of Bel-\nglum entered Spain lut night by\nautomobile en route to Portugal.\nFormer Belgian Premier Paul Van\nZeeland and other Belgian officials\nand diplomatic and consular officer! ot several nations alio creased\ntbe border from France.\nAU said that conditions ln France\nwert chaotic, with refugees jamming Spanish consulates seeking\nvisu.\nFormer Empreii Zlta of Austrii\nand her ion the Archduke Otto, arrived ln Madrid today en route lo\nPortugal. Otto is pretender to tbe\nnon-existent Austrian throne.\nTht Grind Duchess of Luxembourg alio wu expected.\nof the Merrifield cars, left it In\nthe side driveway md came Dinning to her. \\\n\"Kid, every ticket Is sold! he exclaimed. \"Even those at the Jewel-\ntry store. We'll have a full home\nfor tiie play, at a dolltr and a halt\na seat! The whole town's talking\nabout us!\"\nSht could only smile up tt him\nappreciatively. Then ww something fin\u2014something endearing ln\nBill Bailey when he was ln a w liter ot enthusiasm. For the reminder of the day ihe quite forgot to\nworry about the robbery last night\nTo Be Contnlued\nvvotmsomsootMooetMmsosooott\n*\nRED\nCROSS\nNOTES\nHWMeawaaawwawwewsewsgtttg\nWindermere Red\nCrou Neti $108\n.WWDBRMBW!. B. C. - Tht\nbridge-whist-bingo party held at\nthe Legion Hall ln aid of the Windermere Diitrlct Branch ot the Red\nCrou wu the largest gathering of\nltt kind seen for many yean. There\nwu a splendid representation from\nevery ptrt ot the valley trom Edge\nwater to Canal flat!. There were\n20 table! ot bridge, levtral of whist\napd t largo number ot bingo cards\ntn pity. A delicious supper wu\nserved by the Committee near midnight, atter which cskss were sold\nby A. Ritchie. Winners at bridge\nwere Mrs. A. Dobbie and J Peters,\nand at whfit Mn. Blackburn and\nQ. MirplM M\u00bbny of the bingo playen won several prizes during the\nevening Proceed! amounted to\nover $108.\nRed Cross Seeks to\nMake Preserves for\nees in Schools\nRefuge\nEDMONTON, June 19 (CP). - A\ndelegation from the Edmonton\nbranch, Canalan Red Crosi Society,\ntoday will leek Provincial Government approval of a plan to uie\nschool facilities in preserving fruiti\nand vegetablei for war refugees\nThe fruits and vegetables that\notherwise would be destroyed or go\nto waste would be gathered from\nwholesale firms and taken to school\nkitchem where volunteer diet!\ntians would direct tile canning oper\naUoni.\nDistrict Women's\nInstitute Rally\nPlanned, Nelson\nOver 90 representatives ot Nelion\nand district Women's Institutes are\nexpected to gather at Nelion Tueiday for-a district rally at Lakeside\nPark, Mn. F. E. Wheeler, Nelson\nInstitute President stated Wednesday. AU Institutes In the diitrlct\nare to be represented by at leait\ntwo delegate!.\nThe raUy will take the form ot\nan aU day meeting and discussion,\nwtth a basket lunch st the park st\nnoon. It will get under wiy when\nbuses carrying delegates arrive\ntrom district polnti.\nMn V. S. McLachlan of Victoria,\nSuperintendent of British Columbia Institutes, will address the rally.\nSimilar rallies will be held at\nNakusp and Grand Forks for their\nsurrounding diitrlct! late this week\nor early next week.\nTIM! I\nWORK!\nONETS\nMental Ills...\nBy Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.\nIn tht United Statu, than ar*\nmort people mentally lick than tht\nnumber, \"physically\" sick. Mora\nthan <t million children now In our\npublic schools in tht United Statei\nwUl break mentally during their\nlife time, at the present rat*.\nMoat experta -In mental heilth\nbelieve that mental and emotional\nillness could be reduced to in enormous extent If our children grew up\nln a more serene home atmosphere.\nAlio doing thlngi with the hands\nfor pleasure ll being widely recognized for prevenUvt and curative\nmeasures In reipect to mental\nhealth. Both public and private Institutions for the mentally ailing are\noffering Increasing opportunities ,for\ncraftsmanship, especially for mild\ncues.\nSome monthi ago I visited a hospital in Philadelphia to which scores\nof people with worries and anxieties come tor ihort or long periods\nof Ume to ipend one or several\nhoun a day doing thingi with their\nhands for mere pleasure. It may be\nwith a loom, lathe or easel. It may\nbe to uie cutting, shaping or mold*\ning tools, with clay, wood( metal,\nyarn, paint crayon-craftsmanship.\nAnd many get temporary or permanent relief, or cure from such procedure\nIf the mentally ailing can be helped or cured, how many more might\nbe kept mentally well through similar means!\nMO.'8.\nEfu\/ter-Af-r-isA rrctires\n\u25a0Men rfie first spoonful\nmokes you wonffo SING\nThey'll really give you fhe \"lift\" you need\ndSr The busier you are, the more vital Is a breakfast\nthat does three euential thingi; (1) rouiei your\nsleepy appetite; (2) givti you the quick energy\nyon need; (5) help! luittin you through houn of\ndriving work.\nProven firit io flavour, rich In energuing \"carta,\nhydratei,\" Kellogg*! Corn Flakei help keep yoa\ngoing for houn. Timi-tAving, too \u2014 30 lecondi to\nserve... no pots to clean.\nGet Kellogg'i Corn Flakes\u2014ttrertl packages\n\u2014 tomorrow! When yon breakfast out, insist on\ntht wax-wrapped ind'ttidutl package! Madt by\nKeUogg'i in London, Cinada.\n\"KWIom'1 flvt fooni.\"Mj hmiliM across\nCmidi. Vis, wkla honitwlvii in every\npMtiatt laswtrsd this queition: \"Whit\nttldy-to-lltctmlllfaTOurlttl-yourfamllyr\nfiti liOM ii auy Mid \"\u2022KetloggV' u laid\nANY othtr kind of corn laku. Thi iraimd\neilttti of Jnour tip\u00abrtJ, rtiting ill foot\nbrindi of corn tikii, back op tba houiewirci\nTOM. One of miny 16 tiki this ImpirtUI ten,\nM. (Ml Biu|ird, Chef of tbe King Edwird\nHottl, Toronto, styi: \"This coro-tike taiee-\ntut definitely prortd IO IM thai Kellon'i\nui.iujioiwr.\nCOR\ns\nr*M\n\u25a0CONOMKAll A few pennies provide\nthe fimily'i brtsktut or lupner when\nyoa ier-e fresher, criiper Kelloll'l\nCorn Fltkis. Aik your grocer for thi\nnew family-Ill package tomorrow.\ni\"_'.1 n!*.'aa,i\nIH\u00ab|*   H,i I'aitfi    '.   ,if.l    ,   H   li\n__. \u25a0__-_- .      ._....\n For Summer Fun\nMoccasin cut and platform\nI soles will keep you on your\ntoes. Cool, cottony lightweights in gay colors to\ni your pity clothes. Trim fitting\n.-easily washable.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\n[Wealthy Olympia\n.        Man Is a Gunner\n[ VANCOUVER June 19 (CP) -\nGunner George C. Stephenson\nknocked oft his duties with the\n15th Coast Brigade here today long\nenough to pose with his chauffeur\n(beside his custom-built limousine\nlor a photographer.\n. The former Sales Manager of the\nfiiSet Sound Power and Light\nCompany at Olympia, Wash., 6aid\nbe had enlisted in the ranks because \"every little bit helps.\" He\ndcame to Vancouver from Olympla\n|fci December-, He is British by birth.\nNervous Restless\nf|* I    Cranky? Restless?\nlllFICl Can't Bleep? Tire\nllll 10 a easily? Annoyed by fe-\n.^\"\" \"     mala functional dia-\norders and monthly distress? Then take\nI lydia \u2014 Flnkham's Vegetable Com-\nLpound, famous for over JO yean ln\nI helping tuch rundown, weak, nervous\n1 eondltlons. Made especially tor women.\nI wm. WORTH TR.INQI (Advt.)\nSLACK SUITS\nFor Summer Sportswear.\nSizes 12 to 18.\nPrices $3.89 to $6.93\nFashion First Shop\n| 486 Baker St, Nelson, B. C.\nASK FOR 4X\nI Dr. Jackson's\nRoman Meal Bread\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\n[Nelson Electric Co.\n1 674 Baker St Phone 260\nItalians Claim\nJink Sub, Burn\nPlanes In Raids\nHOME, June 19 (API-Today's\nItalian communique:\n\"Our naval reconnaissance planet\nsank an enemy submarine. In the\nNorthern Africa sector tbe situation is unchanged.\"\n(In operations against the Italian North African colony of Libya\nthe British Army in Egypt captured one Italian senior officer, 12\ntanks, six guns and seven trucks.)\n\"In East Africa Brirti.h columns,\nsupported by tanks, which attempted to infiltrate our lines by flying\nthe Italian flag, were effectively\ncounter-attscked and dispersed.\"\n(There was no word of fighting\nhere from the British source.)\n\"Our air force attacked enemy\nbases, burning three planes. Enemy\n& lanes bombed a farm village, kill -\nlg three women and several children. (The R.A.F. In Egypt said\nthat in one riid on Italian Eritrea\na hangar was hit and probably destroyed.)\n\"The enemy carried out air attacks last night, dropping several\nbombs on centres in Ligura and\nPiedmont. There were no victims\nand very little damage.\"\nTrail, (ranbrookr\nNakusp, Kaslo,\nStudents Passed\nVICTORIA. June 19 (CP) -\nTerehing diplomas were awarded to 145 students of the Provincial Normal School whose\nregular session closed June 14,\nit wes announced today by Hon.\nGeorge Weir, Minister of Education.\nAmong those receiving pass\nrating were Harold Francis\nRurks, Kelowna, B.C.; Isabel\nMarian Crowe, Trail, B.C.; Florence Annie Curie, Cranbroek,\nB.C.; Elsie Doreen Curran, Trail;\nEvelyn Ethel Davison, Nakusp,\nB.C.; Joyce MacDonald East,\nKeremeos, B.C.; Kate Doris Riddell, Kaslo, B.C.; Vera Elizabeth\nSchoening, Penticton, B.C.; Robert McClelland, Kelowna, and\nRuth Myrtle Palmer, Trail.\n100 AMBULANCES\nTO GO TO BRITAIN\nTORONTO, |une 19 (CP)- Dr.\nFred W. Routley, National Commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross\nSociety, said today that it is planned to ship more than 100 ambulances to the British Isles Just as\nsoon as transportation can be arranged. Blankets also will be sent.\nThe number of ambulances promised the British Red Cross by individuals, business firms, and clubs all\nover Canada has reached more 'han\n130 and more than 58,000 blankets\nhave been collected.\n--NELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE 20. .1940\u2014\nThe Victims\n\u2014Darling ln New York Herald-Tribune.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nFirearms Belonging\nto B. C. Aliens Seized\nby Provincial Police\nVICTORIA, June 19 (CP). - A\nwholesale roundup of all firearms\nand explosives in the possession of\naliens was launched in British Columbia today.\nAttorney-General Wismer a n-\nnounced that, on authority of an Ottawa order-in-council, instructions\nhave been sent out to all Provincial Police officers to see that weapons are picked up.\nThe Ottawa order covers all aliens\nin the country, and persons of German and Italian origin who have\nben naturalized since Sept. 1, 1929.\nIt is illegal for them to possess\nany sort of firearms, ammunition,\ndynamite, gunpowder or explosive\nof any kind.\nLOWEST PRICE\nIHJHST0\nMr. and Mrs. A. Wigg, 418 Silica'\nStreet announce the engagement ot\ntheir daughter, (Jane) Helen Elvera,\nto Jesse Albert Seaby, ion ot Mr.\nand Mrs. George Seaby of Stettler,\nAlta., the wedding to take place\nshortly.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pruves ot\nCalgary have arrived on an extended visit to the latter's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. J. Donkin of the North\nShore.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Martlndale wu In the\ncity enroute to Fruitvale to visit\nfor a few days prior to leaving\nvia Great Northern for Stewart\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Leigh, who\nhave returned from Cranbrook, left\nyesterday for Vancouver.\ne R. V. KenUsh-Rankin ot Vancouver is spending a tew days in\nNelson.\n\u2022 The home of Mrs. William\nBrown, Victoria Street, presented a\njolly scene Tuesday evening, when\nshe and Mrs. Norman McLeod, Hall\nStreet, were co-hostesset at a bridge\nin honor of Mlu Winnifred Borthwick, whose marriage takes place\nin Vancouver in July to Dai McLeod, former Nelson youth. Peonies,\nfoxglove and roses graced the living rooms, while the table where\ncovers were laid for 20 was centred\nby an oblong white .bowl of orange\nblossoms and roses. The honoree\nwas presented with a book of recipes, the favorite of each guest The\nprizes for the bridge were won by\nMiss Eileen Mackenzie and Miss\nLeona Boss. Other guests included\nMiss Georgia McKeown, Miss\nBlanche Beatty, Miss Dorothea Coles\nMiss Gertrude Hudson, Mrs. Mona\nMeagher, Miss Alma Smillie, Miss\nElizabeth Carrie, Miss Nancy Dunn,\nMn. H. M. Whimster, Miss Doris\nHoskyn, Miss Patricia Campbell,\nMiss Enid Etter, Miss Othelia Olson\nand Miss Edith Lawson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burns,\nCarbonate Street, have returned\nfrom a few days in Spokane.'\n\u2022 Mrs. W. D. Haggart of West-\nbridge returned yesterday atter a\nfew days in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Nelson and Infant\ndaughter left Kootenay Lake General Hospital Tuesday for their\nhome near the Mountain Station.\n\u2022 Mr. ahd Mrs. Vincent Fink,\n424 .Robson Street, have as guesta,\nMrs. Zulu Andrews and daughter\nBetty Jane ot Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. William Marshall and son Frank, Nelson Avenue,\nlett via Great Northern yesterday\nto visit Mr. Marshall's mother in\nChicago.\n\u2022 Commander Burrard A. Smith\nand Mrs. Smith of Longbeach visited \\own yesterday.\n\u2022 George Murchison wae In the\ncity from Trail yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. G. Monro Grant,\nwho spent a few days with Mr.\nGrant's mother and sister, Mrs. J.\nGlen Grant and Mrs. J. H. Long-\nworth, Silica Street left yesterday\ntor their home in Edmonton.\n\u2022 E. E. Beckett of Sheep Creak\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Burdette,\n5820 West 12th Avenue Vancouver, announce the engagement of\ntheir younger daughter, Mildred\nEmily, to John Crofton Hall, elder\nson ot Mr. and Mrt. R. D. Hall of\nNelson. Both parties are ex-graduates of University of British Columbia. The marriage will take place in\nCapetown, South Africa, in the late\nSummer.\n\u2022 Miss Priscilla Gelinas, accom\npanied by her brother Elmer and\nnet slster.in-law, Mrs. George Gelinas, are spending a few days in\nSpokane. They were accompanied\nby Mrs. Gelinas' mother, Mrs. Lolland and her sister, both of Spokane\n\u2022 Miss Eva Wright of Trail visited town Tuesday.\n\u2022 Charles F. McHardy has returned from a few days in Spokane.\n\u2022 In compliment to Miss Florence Hoare, popular bride-elect ot\nthe near future, Miss Eileen Dill\nentertained at her home on Mill\nStreet Tuesday evening at a bridge.\nThe guest of honor received a gift\nfrom those present, who included\nMrs. J. A. Ballantyne, Mrs. R. B.\nMorris, Mrs. Monte Lock, Mrs. A\nE. Murphy, Mrs. Harvey Wallace\nMiss Gladys Ewing, Miss Grace McDonald, Mrs. G. A. C. Walley, Mrs.\nR. H. Dill, Mrs. Alfred MacD. Noxon, Miss Carmen Horton. The prizes\nfor the bridge game were carried\noff by Mrs. A. E. Murphy and Mrs\nJ. A. Ballantyne. A profusion of\nwhite carnations, pink columbine\nand roses were the flowers used\nthroughout\n\u2022 Mrs. L. S. Bradley, Josephine\nStreet who Is a patient ih St. Lukes\nHospital, Spokane, is progressing.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Doelle and\ndaughters Shirley \u00bbnd Dorothy ol\nSheep Creek visited town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. McDougall\nof Bonnington and the former's\nmother shopped In Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Turner-Lee of Bonnington spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 S. A. Williams, who spent a\nfew days in town, has returned to\nVancouver.\n\u2022 Rev. J. G. Holmes, Ward\nStreet, who was operated on for\nappendicitis at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, is progressing\nfavorably.\n\u2022 R. E. Horton, Oak Street, has\nreturned from a few days in\nSpokane.\n\u2022 George Porteous of Queens\nBay spent Tuesday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Lee Phillips has returned to\nCalgary after a couple of weeks in\nNelson and vicinity, Mrs. Phillips\nand baby, who accompanied him\nhere, remaining with Mrs. Phillips'\nmother, Mrs. H. M. Heath, Silica\nStreet, for a few weeks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lakes\nand son Arthur returned to Spokane last night Mike, their youngest son who accompanied them\nhere .remaining with his grandmother, Mrs. George Johnstone,\nKerr Apartments, for a few weeks.\n\u2022 Mrs. Shea was in town from\nCastlegar yesterday.\ne Mrs. Eugenie Petersen of Sandon passed through Nelson en route\nhome atter visiting her daughters.\nMrs. Davey of Kellogg, Idaho, and\nMias Gunly Petersen ot Spokane,\nfor three weeks.\n\u2022 Mrs. O. E. Jorgensen. 808\nMill Street left Monday for a three-\nwek holiday trip to Portland and\nSalem, Ore.\nOpen Scenic Highway\nBecause of Demand\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP)-Tour-\n1st demand tor permission to use\nthe new Banff-Jasper Highway,\nwhich connects Canada's two largest national parks, has been so\nneat that the highway was unofficially opened June 15, in was disclosed here today, by Hon. T. A.\nCrerar, Minister of Mines and Resources.\nOfficial opening ceremonies tor\nJuly 1 have been abandoned because of the wet but the road ts\nnow open for travel and will continue to be open during the balance of the season.\nCreston Women\nPlan to Raise\nRed Cross Funds\nCRESTON, B. C, |une 10 \u2014\nThirty-six per cent of the money\nraised during the national appeal\nin November by the Canadian Red\nCrass has already been spent for\nsupplies, according to a letter read\nat the June meeting Thursday afternoon ot Creston Branch of the\nRed Cross Society. The President,\nMrs. A. J. Gilroy, was in charge,\nand there was a fine turnout of\nmembers.\nThere was a donation of $10 trom\nMr. Orchard of Kitchener.\" Mrs.\nJames Cook had donated dresses\nfor four refugee children and Mrs.\nR. R. Roebuck had made them up.\nMrs. Hills has presented a rug, to\nbe disposed ot to augment the\nsociety funds. Mrs. C. Fransen had\nremembered with a crochetted runner for the same purpose.\nIt was announced that the ladles\nof Porthill, Idaho, have arranged\na Creston Red Cross Society dance\nfor June 29 at Porthill. It is expected there will be a considerable\nattendance from Creston and Valley\npoints.\nOther plans for raising, funds\nwere submitted and will be discussed at the July meeting,- the\nladies accepting the otter of Mrs.\nFrank Celli to give a spaghetti dinner in aid of Red Cross effort. Mrs.\nEdmondson has offered some geranium plants which will be disposed\nof to augment the chapter's funds.\nTo HAVE TAG\nConsent ot the village authorities has been obtained for a tag\nday on July 5. Mrs. H. H. Wilks\nheads the Committee in charge of\nthis effort.\nA letter trom headquarters at\nVancouver asked that all made up\nwork be sent in, and that immediate\nsteps be taken to secure funds for\nthe purchase ot further supplies ot\nmaterial. Money will be sent to\nVancouver each month, as before,\nand each branch will be credited\nwith funds that It sends in for this\npurpose. Mrs. H. K. Legg, who\nheads the Work Committee, re\nported both as to quantity and qual\nity of the work sent in has been\nall that could be desired.\nBefore adjournment a fern don\nated by Mrs. W. K. Brown was sold\nfor $3.20.\nREPUBLICS WAR\nSESSION SOON\nWASHINGTON, June 19 (AP>-\nThe United States has initiated a\nformer move for an early session\nof the Pan American republics to\nconsider Western hemisphere problems growing out of the European\nwar. No date haa been set but the\nsession will be held soon.\nSumner Welles, Under-Secretary\nof State, disclosed at his press conference today that the 20 other American republics were advised on\nMonday that the United States be-\nbelieved present conditions made an\nimmediate session advisable.\nDONT KILL\nYOUR BEAUTY\nBy Suffering Monthly Paint\n . .-___\u2014_ __ JIOa\u00ab_\ndure eech perlod?T_\u00abnthisinee\u00bbeie_tor.'_i.\nPot om 70 mart, ecnmtleee _\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0 et\nwomen who itiflered fontUoBcl monthly p_lo\u00bb\nUe* liken Dr. Pterce'e Frrorito Prescrlptloa\nete*t t period of time md hafe boos Ofor-\ntoyed to tnd tint tut faunoui remedy tas\nhelped them wird ofl ranch of the monthly\n h tin destroy yonr beauty.\nIM s_l_afctl.lt tfioatWo remodr.lonnn-\n\u00bbted by a preeUtlnf phplciu, ia (united\nto coatiln no harmful druse\u2014no narcotics. In\n\u25a0 truly edentISc wit, It tapcorea nntrltlonil\nesslmllstlon; bona build you up end so In-\n___;- ^^AhrtUtiywiatlait\n fooctiooud polos* Lessens\nnerroueness during this trylns period.\nDont alio* yourself to become \" '\nlob* before your time because..\n\u25a0uch BBHf discomfort. Got Dr. Pierce'a\nFeroritt Prescription from your druggist. _4s>\neorer bow it heipe relieie yoa\nrobbing 'te|ulai' pains.\n'iip\nCreston W. I.\nGives $25 for\nRed Cross Work\nCRaESTON, B. C.-Pledged to give\na lull measure of support to Creston Red Cross activities, Creston\nand District Women's Institute\nm_de an initial donation of $20 at\nthe June meeting Friday afternoon. President Mrs. Charles Murrell was in charge. The meeting\nwes at the home of Mrs. J. G. Connell.\nThe correspondence notified that\nMrs. V. S. MacLauchlan, of Victoria, Superintendent of B.C. Institutes' who is on a tour of the Province, will be at Creston June 24,\nwhen an Institute rally will be\nheld.\nThe three-day vocational school\nfeaturing domestic science largely,\nrequested for early in the Fall,\nwas offered for June 24, 25 and 2f3,\nbut due to the entertainment\nplanned for the superintendent and\nother pressing June .business, it\nw\u201es agreed that it would be impossible to have the school this\nyear.\nThe Institute acknowledges with\nfhenks a donation ot $5 from Mr.\nand Mrs. N. Wolfman for Institute\nactivities. Notice was also received\nthat publication had oetsed of a\nmonthly bulletin previously sent\nout dealing with institute work.\nBecause of an unexpected call to\nLethbridge, Mrs. Gordon Thorpe\nWes unable to attend and give a\ntalk on the work of the two-week\nrural vocational school in April,\nwhich the Institute helped sponsor.\nThe meeting concluded arrangements for its annual garden party\nat the home of the Vice-President,\nMrs. C. F. Hayes.\nThere wes a half-hour social at\nthe close, ti which Mrs. Connell\nwas assisted by Mrs. M. Young,\nMrs. Hayes, Mrs. A. S. Partington\nand Mrs. James Compton.\nChildren Tear Phone\nOff Wall Empty House\nCity Police reported Wednesday\nthat   several  young  children   had\nIndo-China Bans\nShipping to China\nHONG KONG, June 1\u00bb (AP).-\nThe Government of French Indo-\nChina was reported today to have\nbanned the transit of goods Into Chinese territory, ruled by the Chungking Government In an effort to\neliminate a source of fraction with\nJapan,\nThe ban applies to the Yunna Railway, one of the main arteries for\nthe supply of war materials to General Chiang Kai-Shek.\nThe highway and rail route\nthrough British Burma remains\nopen.\nKiss Ruth Jones\nHead ol New Red\nCross Auxiliary\nMiss Ruth Jones wu elected\nPresident of the newly organized\nNelson Junior Red Cross Auxiliary\nat a meeting at the home ot Miss\nAnnie Laakso Tuesday night. The\nAuxiliary was organized three\nweeks ago to work In conjunction\nwith the Nelson Branch ot Uie Red\nCross Society. Meetings have bten\nheld at the homes of Miss Annie\nBird and Miss Eileen Collins.\nOther officers elected were Miss\nAnnie Bird, Vice-President; Miss\nKay Anderson, Secretary; and Miss\nFrances Jones, Treasurer. Plans\nwere made for a garden party to\nbe held on the lawn at the home of\nMayor and. Mrs. N. C. Stibbs early\nin July. Others present at the meeting were Miss Beth McKinney, Miss\nPatricia Collins, Miss Eileen Collins\nand Miss Helen Wigg,\nPrisoners, Aliens\nto (ome to Canada\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP)\u2014 Canada\nhas agreed to accept responsibility\nfor Interned aliens and German\nprisoners of war from Great Britain, Prime Minister King, told the\nHouse of Commons today.\nThe British Government he said\nasked that aliens and German prisoners be accepted in Canada as well\nas, but in preference to, evacuated\nBritish children because of their\npotential danger to the United\nKingdom. The Canadian Government was attempting to meet the\nBritish Government's wishes in the\norder of their preference and arrangements were being made for\nthe shipment of the prisoners to\nCanada and their concentration and\ncustody here.\nDefence Regulation\nCommittee Names a\nSteering Committee\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP). \u2014 The\nspecial House ot Commons Committee to study the Detence of Canada\nRegulations for security of the state\nand make suggestions for revision\nappointed a steering committee at\nthe first sitting today.\nRevenue Minister Ilsley, Committee Chairman, was also chosen to\npreside over the steering committee\ncomprising Sam Factor (Lib., To-\nronto-Spadina), J. Gray Turgeon\n(Lib., Cariboo), M. J. Coldweil\ni C.C.F., Rosetown-Biggar) and A. J.\nBrooks (Con., Royal.)\nThe steering committee will meet\ntomorrow to discuss the trend of\npreliminary inquiries of the committee and what witnesses should\nbe called.\nentered the vacant\" house of Mrs\n\"   '              \"\u2022   \"Silica '\nMonday, and had torn the'elephone\nP.\" H\"sheffie_,\"\"924 \"sIYiga \"Street\noff the wall, it was apparently the\nonly moveable object they could\nfind or reach. A neighbor phoned\nthe police when she saw the children entering the house. The police\nresponded and the children were\napprehended.\nThe house has been vacant for\nseveral weeks. Mrs. Sheffield resides in Vancouver.\nOCCUPATION OF FRENCH\nINDO-CHINA IS URGED\nTOKYO, June 19 (AP).-The To-\nhokai, influential political party, today passed a resolution asking the\nGovernment to carry out a \"protective\" occupation of French Indo-\nChino on Uie grounds that collapse\nof the French Government leaves\nthe areai without effective control\nand that it has been an avenue of\nmunitions supply tor China.\nSURVEY OF FARMINC\nAREA TO OPEN SOON\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, June 19\n(CP)\u2014Survey work of possible agricultural production areas In the\nPlneview and Salmon Valley Districts near here will begin soon, It\nwas announced today by C. C.'Kel-\nley. In charge of soil survey work\nfor the Agricultural Departments ot\nthe Dominion and Provincial Governments in British Cqlum^ia.\nPAOI  FIVE\nFord to Manufacture\nfor U. S. Defence Only\nDETROIT, June 19 (AP).\u2014Henry\nFord re-emphasized today that It his\nplants get into the production of\nwar materials it will fee for \"defensive purposes only.\"\nAsked about an announcement\nfrom London yesterday that the\nBritish Government had contracted\nwith his company for 6000 Rolls-\nRoyce Merlin aviation engines, Ford\nsaid:\n\"We are not doing business with\nthe British Government or any\nother foreign government If we\nmake 6000 Rolls-Royce Merlin engines it will be on an* order from\nthe United States Government.''\nHe said no such order had been\nreceived.\nMrs. Penson Tells\nol Church Meeting\nto Three Churches\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Considerable\npractical information ai to what\ntranspired at the annual conference of the United Church in British Columbia, was passed along to\nthe congregations at Creston,\nWynndel ana Canyon by Mrs, R.\nG. Penson, delegate to conference\nat Vancouver in May, snd who was\nSueet speaker at the Churches\nunday.\nMrs. Pen-on advised the conference had to bear and dispose of\ncomprehensive reports from 31 different committees, which took up\nthe morning and afternoon sessions of the eight-day meet The\nevenings were given over to open\nsessions at which various speakers\nwere heard.\nShe was particularly Impressed\nwith the report of the Laymen's\nAssociation of the church, which\nstressed stewardship and the part\nthe ordinary member should have\nin developing church activities and\nusefulness.\nShe emphasized the good work\ndone by the missionaries who serve\npoints along the coasts of B.C. and\nVancouver Island with mission\nboats, of which thty are engineer,\ncaptain and crew. For several years\nRev. George Knox, Pastor of Creston up to 1925, served on one ot\nthese, but poor health forced hla\nretirement. He now has a (Siurch\nat Nanaimo.\nThe value of the Church publication, \"The Observer,\" was stress-\n(id ami tribute was paid to the\nwork of the missionaries in the\nforeign tield. The increase in membership was gratifying, and one\nlady was amongst the class of seven\nstudents ordained into tte ministry. She is to serve temporarily\nin Northern B.C.\nThe conference named Rev, H.\nJ. Armitage, pastor ot Trinity, as\na member of the central executive\nof the denomination which ls the\nbusiness menaging unit of the\nChurch in Canada.\nMrs. Penson reported that Rev. J,\nW. Herdman, Pastor from 1925 to\ni|)'8 at Creston, had joined the\nY.M-CA. for military service. He\nis a veteran of the Great War.\nR.A.F. Bombs Sub,\nItalian Colonies\nCAIRO, June 19 (AP).\u2014An \"extremely successful\" dive-bombing\nattack on an Italian submarine in\nthe Mediterranean was reported today by the Royal Air Force.\nAn R.A.F. communique said, two\nBritish fighters sighted the submar-\nine while on patrol yesterday snd\nsignalled to their base.\nA Blenheim bomber was sent out\nand dived on the submarine while\nthe fighting planes machine-gunned\nthe Conning Tower.\nThe tommunique added that ln a\nBritish attack yesterday at Tessenei,\nItalian Eritrea, a hangar was hit\nand believed to have been destroyed.\nRahelta, also In Eritrea, was twice\nraided and bombed.\nThe Southern Rhodesian air force\ncarried out a \"most successful\" offensive and reconnaissance over\nSouthern Ethiopia, it was said,\nthese airmen bombed a military\npost\nPilot Training to\nStart, Regina School\nWINNIPEG, June 19 (CP)-Train-\ning of pilots will start within one\nmonth at No. 2 initial training\nschool, Regina, second to be established in Canada under the Commonwealth Air Training plan, Wing\nCommander H. J. Burden, R.C.A.,\nwill be in command of the school,\nstated when he passed through Winnipeg today en route to Regina.\nCOOL DRESSES\nA beautiful selection of target\nand half size dresses for the\nwoman who has trouble in getting a good fit. Choose from\nthese Summer cools. Sizes are\n18'A to 24 Vi and 36 to 44.\n$3.95 to $10.95\nj) $*rm-n7lunt (\u00a7)\nPhone 200\nBaker St\nTORONTO DENTIST TO\nHOLIDAY IN ARCTIC-.\nTORONTO,  June  19   (CP).-Dr.^^\nR. J. S. Tickle, Toronto dentist, will.',.I\nspend his Summer vacation ln thes -\nArctic  Circle among Eskimo  and\"'\" '\nIndian   nomads,   in   the  Anglican11,,'\nArctic Diocese. He will fly North-   \\\nfrom Edmonton in July. Miss Mil- 9\ndred Rundle of St Catharines, Ont, \u2022\nand Miss Doroty Chapmen, Tramp-\nton, Ont, both nurses, will travel to\nAklavlk on the same plane to serve\nIn All Saints' Anglican Hospital    v |\nILK\nContributes more to good nutrition than does any other single\nfood.\nPHONE 111\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nFRESH SHEERS. GAY PRINTS\nSo Cool for Hot Weather\nNavy and Black. Sizes 14 to 21*4.\n$4.95 to 912,99\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St\nPhone 174\nWATCH REPAIR\nll a Job for experts. Our work\nassures your satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\nS45 Baker St\nAnnable's Condition\nUnchanged, Hospital\nCondition of J. E. Annable, Nelson pioneer, a patient in Kootenay\nLaake General Hospital, was reported Wednesday as unchanged. He has\nbeen in hospital since June 8. Dr.\nR. B. Shaw is his attending physician.\nUrges Mobilization\nof Medical Resources\nTORONTO, Jne 19 (CP).-Complete mobilization of Canada's medical resources and adequate preparation for urgent future requirements\nshould be effected without delay,\nDr. Frank S. Patch, Montreal, retiring President ot the Canadian\nMedical Association, said today In\nhis valedictory address at the C.\nM. A. convention here.\nThe Association, he said, started\na registration of members after the\noutbreak of war so that doctors\nwould be easily available for emergency work. A questionnaire had\nbeen sent to all members and BS\nper cent had completed the forms.\nOn the basis of that information a\ncomplete register had been\nprepared.\nDELAYED SHIP LOADS\nCARCO FOR RUSSIA\nTACOMA, Wash., June 19 (AP)\n\u2014Ending nine days of mysterious\nidleness, the Swedish motorship\nEcuador began this morning to load\na cargo destined for Vladivostok,\nRussia.\nAn offlcall of Shaffer Termlnil,\nagents for the Johnson Line, said\nthe ship would load two-thirds ot\ntbe 193 carloads awaiting shipment\nhere.\n\"The remaining one-third is being held for the United States\nNavy,\" the official said. \"The entire\ncargo was examined by the Navy.\nIt was separated into two lots, the\nsmaller lot is to be held pending\nfurther orders.\"\nThe dock official said the cargo\nbeing lotded wis known to terminal enyoloyees only as 'machinery.\"\nSHEERS\nPolka dots (Black, blue and white)\nAlso pastels. Come in and He them.\nSizes 14 to 20:\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nOpp. Capitol Theatre     Phone 1047\nf*MARYHADAf\nUTTU IAMBI\n\u2666...It didn't\nAGREE\nwith her...\n. . . net surprising becouse Mary hoi tm\ny ton been a martyr ta 00.1 \"after-eotinc.'*\nilomoch pains. Porlc, veol, rich gravies and\nfancy sauces meant stomach torture la ber.\nShe'd DM It Dial way HI hadn't toM her my\nMcrtt off pffftct traiMih hsolfh \u2022 I \u2022 ImmImb\n.      . sohlihlyrecemmenae.       g\nby leading dodors and stomach specialist!\nlor odd slomoeh, Indigestion *\u00bbt fottrHlsl\n\u2022 e .\nle |eod lo yew thmoch-tole Motloo\nSMmech riwdec end mt w_H yo. like\nMACLEAN lii in\nStomach Powde\nI\npsi.\u00bb\u00bb \u00ab.m.|\u00bb.4H.f e e> .\u00bbf.e e l \u2022\u2666\u25a0 see i\u00bb^\nKOOTENAY PEOPLE f\n&SKW\nafflsiLvi:. c..ii\nQuality\nSupreme\n\"YOU'LL   LIKE\nTHIS   HOTEL\"\nA Cordial Welcome Awaits You\nat the\nSpokane Hotel\nW 509 First Street\nAcross from City Ramp Garage\nMODERATE RATES\nFrom $1.50 with detached bath\nTram $2.00 with  private  bath\nFRED H. ROHWER, Mgr.\n*\n'\u2022\u25a0   I\n PAGE SIX\nMm Battg HtM\nj_rta.llll.ed AprU 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning \u00abSJtfL_.?Hn__!3L_!6?\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COM*ANY UMITED.\n268' Baker   StreeL   Nelson.   British   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATlONa\nTHURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 20, 1940.\nEVERYONE BEHIND THE GOVERNMENT\nIN THESE THINGS\nThe Government of Canada has risen to the emergency\nin which Canada finds itself as a result of the practical\nelimination of France as a major factor in the war, and\nhas announced a large number of war measures, every one\nof which should have the whole-hearted support of the,\nentire citizenry of the Country.\nEven the most skeptical now can realize that invasion\nof Canadian soil Tay an armed and ruthless enemy is im-.\nminent, and in fact, a reasonable certainty, considering\nthat, after the British Isles, Canada Is the member of the\nEmpire most accessible to the enemy. Canada's turn will\nsurely come in some form, even if the enemy has to move\nhis forces by air.\nConscription of man-power, for the defence of Canada,\nis both fair, and necessary, for a force of a large number of\ndivisions must be found, and no delays owing to tardy\nrecruiting can be permitted to endanger the Country's\nsafety.\nBut this system is.also the fair and equitable one, for\nit is not just that the burden of defence should fall upon\nsome and not upon all.\nIt is equally imperative that Canada's Expeditionary\nForce in Britain be effective and be constantly reenforced.\nThere will never be volunteers lacking for that force if\nthe Government will equip the divisions. And without\nquestion it will.\nEverything else that the Government had decided\nupon, and that Parliament is now authorizing, where authorization is necessary\u2014the control of industry for war\npurposes, the national registration, the plans for enlisting\nthe Country's resources and the Nation's capacity in the\nproduction of munitions\u2014should have the siu>port of every\ncitizen.\nLet us hope that the Government will put these various\nactivities into being, and set the feet of each upon the\ncourse it is to run, at the earliest moment possible in each\ncase.\nSpeed of the recent recruiting at Nelson and Trail,\nonce the Government permitted it to be opened, is sufficient\nindication of the feeling of Canadian youth, for no doubt\nevery part of the Country has had the same experience\nsince the Belgian debacle resulted in the scope of Canada's\nwar effort first being enlarged.   .\nAll Canada will be working in one way or another to\nfurther the war, if the Government will show the people\nhow and will organize the national effort.\nCONTRACT..\nCREATING AM ILLUSION\nSOME OP the neatest caprices\nln the game are those whereby an\nopponent ls deliberately coaxed\nInto believing the situation entirely different Irom what lt actually\nIs. An odd characteristic of [playi\nInvolving iuch a principle la that\ntome ot them will work against\na fine player and not against a\nrun*_f-t_e-ml_e one. The truly\nskilled cardsman will make the\nlogical Inferences which cause him\nto build up a picture of the iltuation, thereby causing him to faU\nvictim to a trap prepared by a\nskillful adversary. The non observant, not-thinking, lackadaisical,\ncareless performer, playing his\ncards almost \"any old way,\" may\nthwart the finest play of this kind\nsrithout knowing why.\n4 A Q io 8\nfAKItSI\n\u2666 Q10\n-<,__-._-.,\u2022\u00bb* 1 t t\nIS,\n\u2666 orris 8,\n\u26667f    \u2022 i\n* A'J 10 8.\n\\l -^\u2014\n-*t.\n2\n\u2666 0\u00ab48\n47 E \u00ab\n*_9t\n\u20229*\n\u2666 AK.T8B2\n_,*KQ6 \t\n(Dealer: East North-South vulnerable.)!'\nEast\nPsas\nPass\nPass\nvibls\nSouth\ni*\n-X\n\u00bb\u2666\nWeit\n1\u00bb\n\u00bb\u2666\nPasa\nPass\nNorth\nDbl\n\u00ab\u00bb,\ntt\n\u201e Weit led the club A, then made\na bad switch to the heart Q, when\nhs ahould have led the 6 of the\nepade suit which had been doubled by his partner. Declarer, of\ncourse, won in dummy, then ran\nfour, diamonds, West discarding\nBy Shepard Barclay\ntwo clubs and a heart\nClearly the band depended on\nprevention of a losing trick ln\nspades. Alio the finesse wu\nmarked as virtually certain te\nlose, by East's having doubled\nthat suit. The wily declarer studied a while, then nw a way to\ncreate an Illusion. He led his ipade\nJ to dummy's A and returned the\n8. East thought plenty. Finally hs\ncounted South sa having held a\nsingleton ln spades, two hearts,\nfour clubs and six diamonds, and\nhis partner three spades, four\nhearts, one diamond and five\nclubs. If that was right playing\nhis K on the spade 8 would get lt\nruffed, then the rest of the suit\nwould bt good. So he played low\non the 8. South then put on the 3,\nletting the 8 win, and he now discarded his spade 9 on the heart\nA, clearing his hand of everything\nexcept mt* winners. Had East\nbeen a len skillful card reader, hs\nmight have beaten the contract\nwith a careless play of his\nspade K.\n48764\n\u00abA82\n\u2666 Ail 1.4\n+ Q2\n4>KQ.\nVJ 10\n\u2666 J87B\n4.KJ10 5\nN.\n\u2666 \u2022153\n\u00bb\u00ab5 4\n\u2666 K\n+ A9 87\u00ab\n\u2666 A 10 9\nVKQ978\n\u2666 Q10 8 _\nNorth.  Neither\naide\n(Dealer:\nvulnerable.)\nIf Weit leads  the  spada  4\nagalnit South'! 3-No Trumps,\nwhy should the declarer seek two\nof hli tricki ln dub* Instead of in.\ndiamonds?\nOistrnratcd by King Featoru Syndicate In.\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nTEN YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News of June 20, 1930\nAn official donation of a 17-acre\ntract ol land to the Nelson Boy\nScouts Association across the lake\nup the Vest Arm wes made by P.\nE. Doncaster.\u2014Tenders will shortly\nbe called for the erection of a covered rink at Kimberley\u2014 C. Harford defeated Lawrence Simwon\nin straight sets to win the Nelson men's singles title at the lower\ncourts\u2014 The concrete foundation\nfor a two-story concrete building\nto be erected on Baker Street next\nto the Simpson Block by Thomas\nLawson is   nearing completion.\n25 YEARS AOO\n(From Daily News of June 20,1915)\nChief Savage of the Grand Forks\nCity Police is a Nelson visitor.\u2014The\nbusiness of N. Murphy on Baker\nStreet has been sold to Curtis W,\nLester.\u2014Captain L. E. Borden. M.D.,\nhas been instructed to resume recruiting at Nelson and to forward\nthe men to Vernon in batches.\u2014H.\nK. Cramer of Vancouver, formerly\nof Nelson, is starring in trap shooting at the Coast, in two recent shoots\noutshooting   outstanding   amateurs\nand professionals.\nFORTY YEARS AQO\nFrom Daily Miner of June 30,1900\nA. H. Kelly returned to Nelson\nfrom an inspection trip of a few\nclaims on Forty-Nine Creek.\u2014M. S.\nDavys, former manager of the Silver King mine, and David Bremner\nconnected with the Wakefield mine\nhave relumed from a trip to the Old\nCountry.\u2014A new journal, the Canterbury Outcrop, devoted to mining\nind development of the Windermere and Golden district, hss been\nlaunched at the shoot of the Nelson Gun Club. H.W.F. PoUock and\nClarence Goepel made 12 each.\nWAR\u201425 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Press\nJUNE 20, 1915-Germsny began\nheavy offensive againit the French,\nin Argonne. German-Austrlsn irmy\nstarted battle for _,emberg (Lwow),\nand captured Zolkiew and Rava\nRusska. Germin line bent back\nNorthwest ot gpucher.\nOjfL.JkL (ti)L\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1910\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:00\u20140 Canada\n7*>J-Toait and   Coffee   Club\n(CKLaV)\n8*0\u2014BBC News\n8:30-Al Gilbert'! Trio\n8:45-The Newi\n9:0O-Keybosrd  Capers   (CKLN)\n9:15\u2014It'a Dance Time (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Pelham Rlchardion'! Orcheitra.\n10:00-Blue Network Varletlei\n10:30\u2014United. Statei Marine Band.\n10:45\u2014The Newi\n11:00\u2014Accordian Artistry (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014U. B. C. Muiic Hour\n12:00\u2014Club Matinee.\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Song! from  the  Sagebrush\n(CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The Newi\nl:15-Talk\nl:30-Closing Stocks\n1:45-BBC Newi\n2:15\u2014Concert in Miniature\n2:30\u2014Talent Parade\n3:00\u2014Reflectloni ln Song\n3:30\u2014Southwestern Serenade\n3:45-Talk\n3:57-News Bulletin\n4:00\u2014Piano Recital\n4:30\u2014Leon Buckert's Orch.\n5_K)\u2014Summer Symphony Concert\nEVENINC\n8:00\u2014To be announced\n8:30-Talk by Fire Chief MsDon-\nald (CKLN)\n45\u2014Moodi ln Muiic\n00\u2014The New!\n:13-Talk by Vernon Bartlett\n:30\u2014Dave Dyck in \"Songs oi the\nRange\" (CKLN)\n.tt-Stag Party \u25a0   \u25a0\n57-News Bulletin\n00\u2014Geoffrey Waddlngton\nPresents\n30\u2014Choral Music\n.00\u2014Jack Avison'i' Orcheitra\n30\u2014Talk\n:48-.olnt  Recital\n15\u2014The Newi\n30\u2014Matty Malneck'i Orch.\ntt-^-Ernie Heckther'i Orch,\n;00-aHarry Owena' Orch.\n30\u2014Reverie\n57\u2014News Bulletin\n12:00-God Save the King\nC|AT \u2014 TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Church In the Wildwood\n7:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:30\u2014Wake Up and Sing\n10:00\u2014Voice of Memory\n11:30\u2014Dance Hour\nAFTERNOON\n12:30\u2014Sunny Side Up\n12:4aV-Melody Time\n1:15\u2014Song Recital\n4:00\u2014TheJtre News\n4:15\u2014Organ Reveries.\n4:30\u2014Hits and Encores\n4:45\u2014Ranch Boys\nEVENINC\n\u00ab:0O\u2014The Melodeeri\n6:15\u2014Aloha Land.\n11:30\u2014Midnight Matinee\n12:00-Sign OH\nOther  Periods\u2014CBC  Programmes\n\u2022WMJMMMMiMMM.WMWtWIMMM'i\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nUtters may be publlihed over a nom de plume, but the actual\nname ot the writer muit ba given to the editor ai evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymous letten go In the waste paper baiket\n*\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab$\u00bb$\u00bb\u2022\u00bb*\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\nxsetimtMstessssosesss&szMSsetssio*\nHitler's Appraisal\nof British Nation\nTo the Editor of the\nDaily News.\nSix\u2014It may be a comolition to\nsome in these dark days to learn\nwhat Hitler thinks of the British.\nIn dealing with the matter of alliances, in hit book \"Mein Kampf'\nhe states:\n\u2022TOR AN ALLIANCE IS CONCLUDED NOT WITH WEAPONS BUT WITH MEN. Thus,\nTHE BRITISH NATION WILL\nCONTINUE TO  BE CONSID\nERED AS THE MOST VALU-\nABLE ALLY IN THE WORLD\nAS LONG AS THE WORLD\nLOOKS TO THE LEADERSHIP\nAND SPIRIT OF ITS PEOPLE\nFOR THE RUTHLESSNESS\nAND TENACITY WHICH IS\nDETERMINED TO FIGHT OUT\nA STRUGGLK, ONCE BEGUN,\nBY EVERY MEJVNS AND\nWITHOUT REGARD FOR TIME\nAND SACRIFICE RIGHT ON\nTO THE VICTORIOUS END.\"\nHerr Hitler may find that his\nopinion will be amply justified before the end of thus conflict.\nNELSONITE.\nNelson, B. C, June 18,1940.\nWWSttS$S\u00bbS\u00abS\u00ab3\u00bbMM\u00ab*\u00bb>Stt\u00bbS\u00bb;\nJ? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npenons asking questions will not\nbe,published.\n_M_____\u00ab_____aS___KS5S\u00abSMS54\u00ab\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nootysssosss&os&oso&o&x\n3. V., Rossland\u2014What is the approximate area and population\nof Tunisia, British colony mentioned in recent news stories?\nTunisia is a French colony, 48,300\niquare miles In area, and wilh a\npopulation of about 2,410,692.\nD.F.L., Grand Forks\u2014What ii the\nflag of Naii Germany?\nThe Nsil flag has a swastika in a\nwhite circle on a red background.\nL. T., Bosweil\u2014What ls the best\nwsy to mend a rip in kid gloves?\nButtonhole around the rip with\ncotton thread to match the gloves\nand then draw together the edges\nof the buttonholing.\nR. N., Ymir\u2014May jam tins be used\nin putting up homemade jams or\nmarmalades?\nYes, but care must be taken to\nhsve them absolutely clean and it\nis wise to use some kind of seal\nto close the tin.\nKILL BORER IN\nHOLE ON PLANT\ni jy&K\n,\nwi**HOLrw\n\\ ll    STEM\nCCVUUL\nMot* or\noutsort\nDlMaMlOl\n4.-1T S\nStalking the italk borer\nWhen the top portion, leavei and\ntwigs of columbine show signs cf\nwilting, carefully examine the plant\nfor the stalk borer and then be\nprepared to stalk it to its lair.\nThe whereabouts of the borer will\nbe revealed by a nest hole in the\nstem of the plant. Once the hole\nleading to the borer's lurking place\nhas been discovered the borer itself\ncan easily be killed by sqirting a\nfew drops of carbon disulphide into\nthe hole with a medicine dropper.\nImmediately after the injection\nplug the hole tightly with chewing gum or putty.\nThe columbine borer is.similsr\nto other italk borers. It is about\n1. Inches in length and s salmon\nbrown ln color.\nLuicar Citizens to\nDonate $1200 Month\nLUSOAjt. Alta.. June 19 (CP)-\nCitliens of this mining town, 200\nmiles Southwest of Edmonton, at a\nmass meeting held during the weekend agreed to donate to the Federal Government three per cent of\ntheir wages to further Canada's\nwar effort\nAt the present pay-roll rate this\nwill amount to $1200 a month. The\ntown's population is 500,\n\"Cousin Jim can't appreciate anything unless it costs money. He used\na sun lamp all Winter, but this\nSummer you'll never see him out\nof the shade.\"\nBOMBAY, India (CP)-Mathur-\nadas Tricumje, leader of the Congress Party in the Bombay Municipal Corporation, has been elected\nmayor of the city.\nREJUVENATE\nYour Lawn\nSTIMULATE\nYour Garden\nBy Using\n\"PRESTO\"\nFertilizer\nThe fertiliser with an organic base\nwith added potasji and ammonium\nsulphate.\n4c per Ib. er   50 Ibi.  $1.50\nELLISON MILLING\nCOMPANY\nPhono 238      Nelson, B. C.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nCOWS\nMUST\nHAVE\nGOOD\nWATER\nThe water of some places is\nsuch poor stuff cows can not\nstand it. Not so in British Columbia. Cood water is one of\nthe reasons of the fine dairy\nherds and because there are\nsuch thriving herds here Pacific is really choice milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\nj_2A\u00a3     yOWmmJllfm\n\u00abs)ttttittimtt<>ssmifit^itm)mt\nONI MINUTE TUT\n1. Where is Lapland?\n2. Into how many time belts is\nthe United States divided?\nS. What city is known as 'The\nPearl of the Desert.**\nHINT* ON ITlQUEtrB\nWhen you write a letter In long\nhand be sure to write legibly. It is\nvery Irritating to receive a letter\nwhich you are eager to read but\ncannot do so easily becauie you\nnave to puzzle over many csrelenly\nscribbled words.\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nCourage consists not is hazarding\nwithout fear, but being resolutely\nminded in a Just came.\u2014Plutarch.\nTODAY* HOROSCOPE\nA year of conilderabie good fortune awaits those whose btrthdayi\nare today. A foreigner benefit!\nthem. Tbey should, however, guard\nagainst extravagance A fair measure of success is predictedfor children born on this date Their natures will be reierved. dignified,\neconomical, reliable, patient, persistent and very conventional\nONE MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1.' The northernmost part ot Europe, extending acrou the Arctic\nedges of Norway, Sweden, Finland\nand Russia\n2. Four-Eastern, Central. Mountain and Pacific, not counting Eastern Daylight Saving Time, which\nlasts only from Spring to Autumn.\n3. Damascus, in Asiatic Turkey.\nCOAST CAMPAIGN CONTINUES\nV-JTCOUVEH, JUne 10 (CP).-Al-\nthough it reached its ?200,000 goal\nyesterday, Vancouver's United War\nWork Fund will continue its campaign until Friday, officials announced today.\nSUPERIOR COURTS HAVE    .\nEQUAL JURISDICTION IN\nTERRITORIES DECIDED\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP) \u2014Super*\nIor courts of all the Provinces shall\nhave equal jurisdiction ln civil cases\nthroughout the North Weit Terrl.\nlories at well as surrogate powers,\naccording to an amendment to tha\nNorth West Territories Act adopted\nby the Senate Banking and Commerce Committee today.\nThe Committee also reported \u2022\u2022\nbill to amend the Yukon Act in-re.\nsped of fur sales regulations, and a\nbill to make minor amendments to\nthe Agricultural Products Coopers- ,\ntive Marketing Act so as to provide\nbetter administrative machinery, j\nattf\n\u25a0fces\ntot*\nuotv\nintend v* Go\nc4\nfte*\nJ&\ni So***\nwIVIo<*'^0to^ot\nM *\u00bb   a* v^-m*-*\n\u20220e\u00bb.\n\\&\n?att'\nco*8*\nDr. Cowen\nCredit Dentist\nDon't put off needed dental work\nlimply becauie you cannot pay caih.\nYou ara welcome to avail yourself of\nmy Credit Plan. Coma In and let ma\nexplain how you may arrange to have\nyour work completed RIGHT NOW,\nand pay later, weekly or monthly. Take\nai long ai Five, Ten or Fifteen Monthi\nto pay, whichever ii moit convenient.\n... in other wordi, maka your own\ntermi for payment, within reason, of\ncoune. You ara invited to consult with\nmo regarding your dental problem! by\nwriting, phoning or penonal call.\nNo Discount on\nCanadian Money\nYou will not have to pay\non* oent discount on Canadian Money at Dr. Cow.\nen's and you may exchange Canadian currency\nfof United Statei Currency In reasonable\namounts to help pay expenses while In Spokane.\n'\u2022 The relatiomhip you establish between\nyounelf and your Dentiit ii ona of the\nmoit important In life,\n\u2022 Rare indeed it the penon who can hopt\nto maintain good health without consulting a Dentiit at leait twice i year.\nDentistry ti no longer a luxury, but his\nbecome a downright necessity of modem\nliving, to why not coniider your Dentiit\nat one of your beit friendi? Take pride\nin your teeth not only becauie they\nenhance tho beauty of your facial features, but becauie they ara tha outward\nreflection of good health, your most\nprecious human possession. Unfortunately we ara not all granted tha birth*\nright of beautiful teeth, but practically\neveryone can acquire a pleasant, healthy\nmouth condition through regular visits\nto their Dentiit. Wa ara all primarily\njudged by appearance . \u2022.\nAn appointment with your Dentist\nwill be the first important step toward maintaining lustrous, healthy\nteeth, and a pleasing smile that will\nimpress your personality upon all\nyou meet.\nMl\nCASH\n0\u00a3titaL\npjfokL\nComa in and let ma help you\nulect the stylo of dental platei\nbeit suited for your individual\nrequirements. Enjoy wearing your\nplatei while paying by taking\nadvantage of my Credit Plan. I\nwill gladly ihow you samples, including uppers, lowen, psrtisli\nand roofless dental platei.\nOut of\nTown\nPatients\n.... are Invited\nto un the facilities of either my\nSpokane or Yakima offices. If\nyou desire work\ncan ba arranged\nby appointment:\notherwise come In\nat your own convenience.\nCredit gladly\nextended, no\nmatter\nwhere   you\nlive.\nCREDIT\nON BRIDGEWORK, CROWNS\/\nPLATES, FILLINGS,  INLAYS\nTAKE FIVE, TEN\nOR FIFTEEN\nMONTHS to Pay\nNOTICE!\nPRESENT   DENTAL\nPLATE   WEARERS!\nDr. Cowen will reset\nyour preient teeth in\ntho NEW, BEAUTIFUL\nTRANSPARENT MATERIALS at a fraction\nof tho coit of new\nplatei.\n\\\\\n# t .\nOPEN\nUNTIL\n9PM\nPEERLESS DENTISTS\nJAMIESON BLDG.\nCORKER   WALL  AND   RIVERSIDE   AVENUE\n:.'... ,      -   \u25a0 \u25a0     \u25a0\n\t\n mm\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. JUNI 20, 194.\nPORT\neveland Beats Washington to\nGain on Boston; Yankses Beaten\n\u25a0y The Canadian Praia\nJohnny Allen hurled iteady ball\nuterday for a 4-1 victory over\n'athlngton, helping Cleveland In-\nMl drive within a half game ot\na American League-leading Bos-\nin Red Sox. Cleveland's nine-\nt attack Included Hal Troiky't\nlth heme run of the season.\nlie Browns beat Boston Red Sox\nIn and they did lt the hard\nr, Overcoming a four-run handi-\n, the lighting Brownies scored\nI in bursts of two and passed\nleague-leaders, 6-4, for their\nmd victory over Boston and\nI fourth In a row. They took a\nbleheader from the Yankees be-\ni the Red Sox came to town,\nrtrolt Tigers swept a double\nler with Philadelphia Athletics,\nning the second game 9-4 be-\nLynwood   Rowe's   effective\npitching. The Tigers took tha\nopener 5-4 In 10 innlngi, Louis\n(Buck) Newsom hurling his eighth\nconsecutive victory.\nThornton Lee outlasted Marius\nRusso in a lefthanded pitching duel\nto give Chicago White Sox a 1-0\nvictory over New York Yankees.\nIt was the world champions' fourth\nconsecutive setback and the second\nstraight by a Southpaw.\nHeavy showers interrupted the\nPittsburgh Pirates tor 45 minutes\nas they moved Into sixth place\nin the National Baseball League\nby drubbing Boston Bees 5-1.\nThe surge of the St. Louis Cardinal* collapsed under the strain\nof seven errors in a night game\nat Brooklyn and the Dodgers\nfought their way to an 8-3 victory\nthtt lifted them into a virtual tie\nfor first place in the. National\nLeague.\nA Picture of Open-Mouthed Awe\nirocher,Owen\nCarry on Feud\nJBBTS FIELD, Brooklyn, Juno\n(_P).\u2014The flaming feud between\niklyn Dodgers and St. Louis\nllnals broke out again in their\ne at Ebbets Field tonight when\nDurocher and Mickey Owen\niged In a fist tight,\nwen, Cardinals' catcher, waa\nId at second base In the third\nn| and as he started toward\nugout he and the Brooklyn\nager-shortstop exchanged words\nlb brought them together, fists\nl|, near second base.\nittty player on both teams rush-\n0 separate them and It looked\n1 minute as though a riot might\ni out of the incident, which ob-\nily dated back to the \"beaning\"\nrooklyn's Joe Medwick yeiter-\nq and the hard feelings that rc-\nlen the field was cleared, Ow-\n_ s banished from the game but\ncher returned to his shortstop\nlon. Don Padgett took Owen's\nin the SL Louis lineup.\n>ogman's Down\nSenators 6-2\nSSLAND, B. C, June- 19 -\nman's downed the Senators,\nn a Rossland Softball League\nI at the Rossland ball park,\nlay night The lineups follow:\nragman's \u2014 CUH Clelland, If;\nWUde, cf; John Gidinski, lb;\nNeal, 3b; Clyde Nyman, c;\nMcDonell, _Jb; Jim Georgeson,\nIW Wright, p: Ray Gendle. rf.\nnators\u2014Jack Tongue, 3b; Nor-\nZanussi, 2b; Mike Welycochy,\nlow Sdao, ss; Austin Bathie, rf;\nI Johnson, cf: Don Camozzi, U;\nfreney, p; Harry Beaulieu, lb,\n|Orge Chiga, former Regina\nfinder, has received his debt agriculture from Oklahoma\naraity.\nStejfe\nAMERICAN\nJills. Harry\nUIRICH\nlis v MN AVE. aiv.?....'\u2022>\nipokane, Wash.\n.. .   \u25a0-.'\u2022\n%?_y\nBOOKIET THAT EVERY\n5TH SHOULD HAVE\n> Canadian shooter, young\n)ld, whether interested in\n\u2022 or Shotgun, should hares\n'thisFREE DOMINION\nSMIN Booklet\n\u25a0fUs'ii\nI How to build a rile range,\nI trap or skeet field\nI How to get tbe most out of\nIfour rite or shotgun\n[How to organize and operate\n|a shooting dub\nlow YOU cm join  thii\nunion-wide, 25-year-old\ndy of sportsmen without\n.AND\nBw you can win crth-activ-\nfixes with lh\u00bb rifl* or shot-\ni you now own.\nre Is sbsolurelr ao chsrie, so Ut\n|end mil the coupon TODAY.\n.\u2014 COUPON\u2014-\u2014\n05\n10, Montml, Quelwc.\nW L Pet.\nBoaton       31 18 .833\nCleveland   34 22 .607\nDetroit    \u201e  32 20 .615\nNew York  27 26 .509\nSt. Louil  25 30 .455\nChicago    25 30 .455\nPhiladelphia  20 33 .377\nWashington    21 36 .368\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati   35 18 .660\nBrooklyn  33 17 .660\nNew York - 31 18 .633\nChicago     29 27 .518\nSL LouU  21 30 .412\nPittsburgh   18 30 .375\nBoston .-  \" 30 .362\nPhiladelphia   17 31 354\nTraining for his forthcoming bout with Arturo\n\"klss-me-again\" Godoy, heavyweight champion Joe\nLouis lays a right on the whisker foundation of\nsparring partner Joe 0*GattI\u2014to the very obvious\nchagrin of the latter. Mr. Louis and Senor Godoy\nwill meet in the two-man blitzkrieg at the Yankee\nstadium, New York, tonight.\nFrick Takes No\nAction Yet on\n\"Beaning\" Play\nNEW YORK, June 19 (AP).-An\nearly decision by Ford C. Frick on\ncharges that the \"beaning\" of\nBrooklyn Outfielder Joe Medwick\nby Bob Bowman ot St. Louis Cardinals was deliberate appeared remote tonight as the National League\nPresident declared he would take\nno action until the results of an investigation by District Attorney\nWUliam O'Dwyer. office were\nknown.\nHinting that baseball could keep\nIts own shirts clean, and that he\nC.A.H.A. Donates\n$10,000 lor War\nTORONTO, June 19 (CP).\u2014 A\ngrant of $10,000 to aid the Government in its war effort was approved by the executive of the Canadian\nAmateur Hockey Association today\nand the Individual branches will be\nasked to endorse it. The executive\nalso decided to approach the Government to determine in what way\nthe C. A. H. A. can best play its part\nin the country's prosecution of the\nwar.\nThe Association will operate as\nusual next Winter and every assistance will be extended to any military units that desire to sponsor\nteams.\nThe Allan Cup and Memorial Cup\nplaydowns yielded a net profit of\n$28,000\u2014somewhat less than that realized In previoui years. The reduction was due in part to the lack\nof patronage in the senior finals\nhere which Kirkland Lake won\nfrom Calgary.\nSports Roundup\nNEW YORK, June 19 (AP) -\nEven Arthur Donovan's best friend,,\ncan't see how they can let him work\nLouis-Godoy tomorrow night after\nthat magazine story in which Donovan picked Louis to win. . . .\nUp to yesterday, Dodger hurlers\nhad been nicked  for an even 50\nhomers lack  D_m,p\u00abey and\nMike Jacobs sre supposed to have\nburied the hatchet, but one paper\nreported the first conference Dempsey held in his new offices had to\ndo with plans lo bust the Jacobs\nboxing combine wide open. .. . Edwin Puck, pitching star at Iowa\nState College, ended the season\nwith a stretch of 50 innings without a walk.\nTHE CREPE HANGAR8:\nMike Haslin of Ihe San Diego\n(Coast League) Club, drove t\nhearse last Winter. . . . Paul Greg'\nory of Seattle Rainiers sold tombstones. . . . May combine their talents this FaU.\nMay be a coincidence, but Umpire\nBill Summers' name hasn't appear-\ned on the Comiskey Park scoreboard since he was beaned with a\npop bottle there two years ago. . . .\nWhitey Armstein, one of the tops\nwhen it comes to conditioning boxen, will handle Galento in the Max\nBaer fight. . . . Visiting baseball\nwriters will bet you Curt Davis\nturns out to be more valuable to\nthe Dodgers than Josephus Medwick. . . . Sammy Angott puts his\nN.B.A. lightweight title on the line\nagainst California Jackie Wilson at\nLos Angeles Labor Day\nONE-MINUTE  INTERVIEW:\nJoe McCarthy: \"The owners of\nthe Indians should have packed up\nOscar Vitt with a new two-year\ncontract ... Do you know what's\nwrong? . . .\nCatholics Take\nSoftball Lead;\nMassacre Cycles\nThe Cycles took it on the chin\nfor the sixth consecutive time of\nthe season, and C. Y. O. cllpibed\ninto undisputed possession ot first\nplace in the Nelson Men's Softball\nLeague with a one-iided 36-3 victory at the Recreation Grounds\nWednesday evening.\nThe Cycles had one of their average days in the field, committing\n14 misplays, and to make the rout\ncomplete the Catholics really had\ntheir eye on the ball, smashing out\nsomething like 26 hits, including\nfive doubles, two triples and lour\nhome runs.\nClarence Heighton started the\ngame on the mound for the Cycles\nbut he lasted only one inning as\nthe Catholics landed on him for an\neven dozen runs. John Worthington\ntook up the burden from there ln\nand he met with a bit better success. T. Maglio, A. Selinger, M.\nPrestley, A. Maglio and DeLucrezio\neach belted out two-baggen, T.\nMaglio and DeLucrezio triples and\nDeLucrezio, E. Maglio A. Maglio and\nKuntz round-trippers.\nJoe DeLucrezio, right.fielder for\nthe Catholics, added four singles to\nhis coUection of a homer, a triple\nand a double in seven trips 1\u00b0 the\nplate for a new refidrd for th. Va-\nson. The lofty gardener came to\nbat in the seventh inning with ilx\nstraight hits, and then popped up a\nfly between first and second. Scott\nand Ball pulled one of the Brooklyn\nDodger specialties, both went after\nthe ball and neither came up with\nit after crashing into each other.\nMeanwhile Ernie Beland, making\nhis season's debut on the mound,\nhurled effective ball for the Catholics, permitting the minimum of\n18 batters to face him in the first\nsix innings. Three men got on base\non singles, and one on an error,\nbut they were quickly erased by\na snappy double play, Involving the\nSelinger brothers, two rifle throws\nby Kuntz to first to catch runners\noff the bag, and by the fourth one\nleading off.\nScore by  innings:\nCycles    000 000 300\u2014 3   8 12\nC. Y. 0  1264 004 100-36 26   3\nLineups follow:\nCycles\u2014Gordon Nelaon ss, rf, cf,\n2b, Al Brown cf, If, Bill Brown rf,\nss, \"Corky\" Ball 2b, cf, Jim Tarling\nIf. cf. rf, Dooley Scott lb. Barney\nPreitley. c, Clarence Heighton p, 3b,\nind John Worthington 3b, p.\nC. Y. O.\u2014Pete Kuntz c, Lawrence\nSelinger ss, Andy Selinger lb. Armando Maglio 2b, Joe DeLucrezio\nrf, Mickey Prestley cf. Eugene\nMaglio 3b and Tom Maglio If, Jack\nFisher and Ted Bialkowski\npired and Georgie Eberley\nscore.\nCoaches Redmen\nCECIL PITT\nNewly-appointed coach of the\nRossland Redmen of the West\nKootenay Boxla League, Cecil Pitt\nhas had lots of experience In sport\nfields, having served as manager\nof the Rossland Junior Terriers\nand the Redmen, and having been\nconnected with Rossland hockey.\nTrail Cricketers\nBeaten al Forks\nperls of the case, Frick said:\n\"Even if I do make up my mind,\nI would not make any announcement under the circumstances. Suppose I should suspend Bowman.\nThat would be taken ai proof of\nbis guilt\"\nFrick spent four hours today Interviewing everyone who might\nthrow some light on yesterday's incident, when Medwick was felled\nand suffered a concussion.\nHe said he had asked only Leo Durocher, Brooklyn Manager; Bowman, Johnny Mize, Cardinal fint\nbaseman; Pepper Martin, Cardinal\noutfielder, and Larry MacPhail,\nBrooklyn Club President, to tho\nhearing, but practically the entire\nCardinal team trooped to the league\noffice and before the length testimony was ended many other players, as well as two or three Brooklyn fans, had been called in.\nBowman obviously was nervous.\nHe was called in twice. He later\nreiterated an earlier statement that\nMedwick was his friend and the\nbeaning was unintentlal.\nMacPhail was as emphatic that\nthe beaning was Intentional. ,\nBattirvA\nLeaders\nBy Tha Aisoclated Preia\nBatting  (three leaden in each\nleague):\nO AB & H Pet.\nRaddiffe Browns 52 202 28 74 .366\nMcCosky, Tigers .. 45 186 45 67 .360\nFinney, Red Sox .. 44 202 34 72 .356\nDanning. Giants . 46 181 27 64 354\nMoore, Giants  46 183 37 63 .344\nWalker Dodgen _ 40 146 24 50 .342\nHome runs:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox,\n16; National League\u2014Mize, Cardin\nals, 18.\nRuns batted ln:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox\nwas not Interested ln the civil as-, 56;     National     League\u2014Danning,\nGiants, 44.\n\u2014 PAGE  SEVEN\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nTha House of Furniture Values\n\u25a0agle Blk.     Nelion     Phona 116\nTrad* in Your\nOLD FURNITURE\nAl Pirt Payment on Your\nNEW FURNITURE\nGRAND FORKS, B.C. - Grand\nForks cricketers turned the tables\nrather emphatically on' the Trail\nclub at the Ci^r Park here Sunday\nafternoon when they won with a\nmargin of eight wickets and nine\nruns. This was done in spite of\nthe absence of Captain M H. Ashby,\nan outstanding player, but his place\nwas ably filled by W. J. Pearson as\nskipper.\nTrail went to bat first, making a\nscore of 27, to which the Forks replied with 42, A. J. Cleeton scoring\n19 not out and Jimmy Lawrence\neight not out. In the second innings Trail got 43 runs and the\nhome team took 37 for two wickets.\nFollowing is the score:\nFIRST INNINGS\nBouchier Sr. b Whittaker _  1\nWhitehead c Pearson\nb Whittaker   2\nChambers c McNevin    '\nb Whittaker ._   12\nBalnes b White  , 2\nTaylor P.O.W. b Whittaker  0\nBenson P.O.W. b Whittaker  0\nManson Sr. c Grey b White  0\nColls c Pearson b Whittaker  0\nSantano not out  - \u2014 2\nStiles c Grey b White   3\nManson Jr. c Pearson b White...\u2122 0\nBouchier Jr. P.O.W. b White __. 1\nExtras      I 27\nBlairmore Wins\n13-lnning Game\nNATAL. B. C-After playing\nscoreless baseball for 13 innings the\nBlalrmore Columbus Club came to\nbat in the last of the 13th ahd scored\na run on two errors and a safe hit\nto defeat the Natal-Michel Buffaloes\n1-0 in a tight pitcher's duel at\nBlairmore Stadium June 16.\nBoth starting pitchers went the\nroute, each allowing three safe hits\nfor nine Innings and only six safe\nhits, during the 13 innings. T. Krall\nof the Buffaloes struck out nine\nBlairmore batters while allowing\nnot a single walk while Herman\nof Blairmore struck out three Buffaloes and issued three walks. The\ngame was the tightest seen ln the\nPass for many years.\nThe game was umpired by J.\nJosay of Natal and C. Decoux ot\nBlairmore.\nNatal-Michel   Buffaloes   ...    0   6   3\nBlalrmore Columbus Club   16   2\num-\nkept\nPro Baieball\nWestern International League\nSPOKANE\nvs. Vancouver\nJune 21 it, ]un\u00ab 22.\nDoubleheader |une 23\nFERRIS FIELD PARK\nSPOKANE, Wash.\nRotary (amp al\nRobson lo Open\nEarly in July\nTRAIL. B: C, June 19\u2014Trail Rotary Club's Fresh Air Camp, which\nincreases ln popularity each year,\nwill again open the first week in\nJuly and close Ihe first- week in\nSeptember.\nPersons attending the camp enjoy\na two weeks' outing, the two Summer months thus actually providing four camps. About 35 persons are\naccommodated in each camp and\nalready application for the first\ntwo have been,made and accepted\naccording to Frank Pennoyer, Rotary Club Secretary.\nOwing to the war, the Rotary\nClub did not put on a carnival this\nyear, and therefore had no funds to\ncarry on development at the camp\nwhich has proceeded each year\nHowever, a few weeks ago the en-\ntire Club spent an afternoon at the\ngrounds putting things \"ship-shape\"\nfor the camping teaaon.\nMrs. Herbert Johnson, .who has\nbeen in charge of the camp for the\npast two Summers, again has been\nappointed Supervisor for the 1940\nSeason.\nAMERICAN\nWashington \u201e \u2014   18   1\nCleveland     4   9   0\nChase, Haynes, Krakauskas and\nEarly; Allen and Hemsley.\nBoston  _    4   12  0\nSt. Louis -....'  6   11   1\nHash, Hevlng and Desautels. Peacock; R. Harris, Lawson and Swift\nPhiladelphia    4   10   2\nDetroit     5    9   2\nPotter and Hayes; Newsom and\nSullivan.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia - -  4   10   3\nDetroit    9   12   0\nCaster and Wagner; Rowe, Benton and Tebbetts.\nNew York - -   0   7   1\nChicago ._    1   8   0\nRusso and Rosar; Lee and Tresh.\nNATIONAL\nPittsburgh        5   9  0\nBoston        1   9   2\nBowman and Lopez; Errickson,\nSalvo and Berres, Mast\nSt. Louis  -   3   9   7\nBrooklyn      8   9   2\nMcGee. Lanier and Owen, Padgett; Wyatt and Phelps.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal    9   14   1\nJersey City -    6   13   3\nGrissom, Macon, Lucas and Beck\ner; Henshaw, Cassaway, Harris and\nBlaemlre.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis  -.   1    8  0\nKansas City    4   13   0\nLogan and Pasek; Carnett and De-\nPhillips. \u2022\nToledo     7   12   1\nSt. Paul     10   14   4\nWhitehead. Wirkalla, McDougall\nand Spindel; Taylor, Himsl and\nSchlueter.\neast...u\/est...UDi s best\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nGrand Forks:\nCleeton declared   r  19\nGrey Sr. b Baines  0\nClapp b Baines    4\nWhite, run out  3\nWhittaker, b Chambers  0\nPearson b Chambers  - 0\nMcNevin c Chambers b Balnes . 6\nLawrence not out    8\nSorrell b Chambers  0\nWaters b Balnes   0\nOnions b Benson     0\nScott b Baines  0\nExtras 42\n8ECOND INNINGS\nTrail:\nBouchier Sr. b Whittaker .\nWhitehead run out \t\nChambers not out\t\nBaines b Whittaker \t\nTaylor b Whittaker \t\nBenson b Whittaker .\nManson Sr. b Pearson .\nS\n1\n1\n2\n3\n12\n4\nColls b Whittaker _..:..  0\nSantano run out     9\nStlesl run out    3\nManson Jr. b Pearson  :.    0\nBouchier Jr., b White  _    0\nExtras*      3\n43\nGrand Forks:\nQeeton b Colls ,  9\nGrey Sr. c Santano b Cols  6\nClapp not out   9\nWhite not out   12\nExtras  ....*.    1\n37\nFive Tie for Low\nScore (oasl Goll\nKootenay-Belle\nHumbles Salmo;\nReturns lo Form\nSALMO, B.C., June 19-Koot-\nenay Belle softballers snapped\nout of their three-game slump\nhere tonight by banging out an\n8-2 victory over Salmo, the team\nthat itarted the three-time champions on their losing streak.\nThis verdict toppled Salmo out\nof e first place tie with Second\nRelief into a tie with K.B. for\nthe runnerup spot\nErnie Oliver returned to the\nK.B. lineup to do the twirling and\nhe set the Salmonites down wilh\neight hits. Alfred Cawley doubled\nhome an unearned run ln the\nfourth and Rusty Gibbon homered\n'in the ninth for the last Salmo\ntally. Oliver whiffed three batS'\nmen, compared to the one strikeout\nand one walk by his opponent, Gor.\ndon Moir, who allowed 12 hits.\nLaurie Henderson was the bis\nfun (or the winners with a pair ol\ncue runs, each with a mate on\nbase, in the fourth and fifth\nframes, lt was ln these innings that\nK.B. scored 6even of the eight\nruns. John Nygard, leftflelder,\nsingled and tripled in the same\ninnings.\nThe next game is scheduled for\nFriday night when Second Relief\nwill have to defeat Gold Belt to\nretain sole possession ot first place,\nScore by innings:\nSalmo    000 100 001- 8\nK.a    100 430 OOx\u20141!\nLineups follow:\nSalmo\u2014Gordon Moir p, C. Anderson lb, Rege White of, Nicky\nJohn Zb, Rusty Gibbon ss, Alfred\nCawley 3b, Elmer Gibbon c, Eddie\nHearn If and 3. Bush rf.\nKootenav-Belle\u2014Jack Titsworth\ncf, Cliff Dorey 2b, Jack Hale c,\nErnie Oliver p, Laurie Henderson\nlb, John Nygard If, Frank Postle-\nwhaite ss, Fred Thompson rf, and\nRon McLaren 3b.\nUmpires-C. Sadao and N. Best.\nScorer\u2014Sadie Hamberg.\nLes Mann, organizer for amateur\nbaseball, wants Canada to enter a\nteam in the international tourna-\nment at Havana in September.\nSEATTLE. June 19 (AP).-Five\nplayers \u2014 three amateurs and two\nprofessionals \u2014 tied for low score\ntoday at the end of the opening IB\nholes of play in the 27-hole Pacific\nNorthwest Open Golf Tournament\nbeing played over the Sand Point\nCountry Club course.\nMarvin \"Bud\" Ward, of Spokane,\nUnited States amateur champion\nand defending Northwest open\ntitlist, shot a 67, three under par,\nto pace the opening day round along\nwith Harry Givan, Seattle, former\nU. S. Walker Cup player, Bud Haskell Olympla amateur, and two\nprofessionals, Chuck Congdon, Tacoma, and Ken Tucker, Everett\nWendell Wood, Eugene, Ore., professional had a fine 68.\nAt par were Eddie Hogan, Portland pro; Freddie Wood, Vancouver,\nB. C, pro; Sherman Ellworthy, St\nLouis, Mo., pro; Harry Miller, Seattle amateur; Ralph Whaley, Seattle\namateur, and Al Zimmerman, Portland professional.\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Praas\nCharlie Grimm was released by\nSt. Louis Cardinals ot the National\nLeague to Little Rock of the Southern Leakue 22 years ago today. He\nwas sold to Pittsburgh in 1919 and\nafter six yeara with the Pirates wss\ntraded to Chicago, becoming Manager of the Cubs Aug. 2, 1932, succeeding Rogers Hornsby.\nRossland Goes to\nNorthport Sunday\nROSSLAND, B. C, June 1_-The\nRossland senior baseball team are\nplaying a return game against\nNorthport. at Northport Sunday.\nThe states team wai defeated 4-1\nwhen they played Rossland, at Rossland, on June 9.\nJack Fisher Signs\nas Cycles Pitcher\nDeiperately In need of replacements, the Cycles have signed up\nJack Fisher, a likely pitcher, for\nservices during the rimainder ot\nthe Nelion Men'i Softball League.\nStill without a victory in ilx itarts,\nthe Cycles spotted Fisher, regular\noutfielder oi the Nelson Senior\nBaseball Club, warming up on the\nsidelines Wednesday night before\ntheir game with the Catholics, and\nshowing lots of speed.\nHe was unable to participate in\nthe game because, according to\nleague regulations, he had to be\nsigned up at least 24 hours before a\ntime.\nRams and Bombers\nPlay Boxla Salmo\non Friday Night\nSAXMO. B.C, June 19\u2014The third\ngame of the Salmo Valley box lacrosse season Is billed for Friday\nnight and it will Involve Second\nRelief Rami and the champion\nSheep CTcek Bombers.\nThe Bombers defeated the Rams\n10-6 in the first game, but then bit\nthe dust themselves a week or so\nlater when they met a picked team\nfrom Second Relief and Salmo.\nThis time they ere eager to hit the\nwin column again, and will present\na strong lineup.\nLacrosse officials have had a\ntough row to hoe this season, but\ndespite adverse conditions have\ncome through with entertaining\nlacrosse, and a bumper crowd il\nexpected Friday night Jimmy Allan will guard the hemp for the\nBombdrs and Dick Hambly for\nSecond Relief.\nDoubleheader Church\nSoftball on Tonight\nA doubleheader ls scheduled In\nNelson Church loftball thii evening\nat the Junior High when the Baptists and Senior CY.O. clash in I\nmen's division game and Junior\nC.Y.O. and Baptist girls meet.\nRaptitts  will have\nfor a\nto  pull  out\nthe\nlayoff berth which Senior\nwith a victory to remain in the hunt\npi.\nC.Y.O. has already clinched in the\nmen's lection. Playoff arrangements\nfor the ladies have not been settled.\nGutta Percha Tires\nFor Perfect Grip and Safe Driving\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker Nelion. BO\nLouis Favored lo\nWallop Godoy\nNEW YORK, June  19  (AP).-\nFaclng the most dangerous foreign\nchallenge to the world's heavyweight championship since Max\nSohmellng and Primo Camera won\nit Joe Louis makes the 11th defence\nof Fi-tiana's richest prize tomorrow night in Yankee Stadium\nagainst rough, tough Arturo Godoy\nof Chile.\nSome 30,000 are expected when\nthe shooting starts at 6 p.m. P.S.T.\nThey'll contribute to an anticipated\ngross gate of more than 1150,000..\nOf the net, Louis receives 40 per\ncent. Godoy will get 17 Vs tot tha\ntussle ot 19 rounds or less.\nFrom the \"just before the battle,\nmother\" statements of both men,\nit appeared there would be two\nwinners.\nNevertheless, the Broadway bookmakers and the \"experts wars\nvirtually unanimous in picking\nLouis to turn the trick again. Tha\nBomber was 1 to 5 to do lt any\nway, and 1 to 2 to do it the hard\nway\u2014chilling the Chilean before\nthe 15 rounds were up.\nNatal Plans a\nJuly (Program\nNATAL, B. C-flWal-Miche! W-.\nhold a monster sports celebration\nJuly 1. A total of $1000 will ba\ngiven out ln prizes. This will be\nsponsored by the Michel Local No.\n7292 of the United Mine Workera\not America and will take place ln\nthe Natal sports grounds.\nFinal arrangements were made\nrecently when the officers and\nSports Committee met and drew up\na two day program, commencing\non Sunday, June 30, which as ln the\npast few years hai been a children'*\nsports day. Monday, July 1, the preliminaries and finals of both the\nbaseball and sottibell tournaments\nwill be run off with $125 going to\nthe wlnnen in baseball and $85 to\nthe second place winners. In soft-\nball the winners will receive $35\nand the second place winners $20.\nIt ls expected that the amount of\nentries In both the baseball and\ntwo softbail tournamenta will surpass that of last ytar as already it\nis assured that entries will be in\nthe baseball tournaments from Coleman, Fernie, Cranbrook and Blalrmore.\nMany other events are planned.\nSPOTLIGHT ON\nOGDEN'S\nHume Softball Team\nRegains Bicknell,\nFires Bialkowski\nAftermath of the oft-disputed\nthriller between the Catholics and\nHume Hotel of a week ago, Ted\n(Scrub) Blalkowskl has been handed his release by the Hume team.\nThe outfielder dropped a fly, with\ntwo men on ln the ninth inning and\nthe Catholics behind by two runs,\nto enable the score to be tied up and\npave the way for an eleventh Inning\nvictory for the Catholics.\n\"Any guy that says he doesn't\ncare whether he wins or loses isn't\ngoing to play for my ball cub,\" said\nCoach Bill Freno. Bialkowski demanded his release, so he says, and\nthe management say they fired him,\nbut the fact remains he has been\ncut from the Hume roster. It Is believed that the Savoy Hotel ia angling for his services.\nThe latest development ln the\nHume-Savoy softbail row is the\napparent reconciliation between\nPitcher Len Blcknell and the Hume\nteam. Bicknell threatened to quit\nafter the last game and the Savoy\nClub was hot on his trail.\n\"He's with my club and he's gonna\nstay with my club,\" said Freno.\nBoth clubs are still after Art Ross\nof the Kootenay-Belle nine who returned Wednesday from a trip to\nSpokane.\nRACING CEASES\nLONDON, Juna 19 (CP)-Cei-\n\u2022atlen of hone racing In England\n\"until further notice\" wai announced today.\nAL MORSE\nCLUB AND CYMNASIUM\nSpokane, Wash.\nSpokane's Sporti Headquarters\nBoxen Train Daily\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nADMISSION FREE\nmm ,\t\n_________\n____.\n \u00bbAQE   EIGHT\nR. A. F. Takes Heavy Toll\nOil Supplies, Munitions\nTrains in German Raid\nLONDON, June 19 (CP)\u2014Oil\n\u2022upply centrei, railway marshalling yardi, power stations and\nrail communication! In many\nparts of Northwest Germany and\nthe Rhineland were attacked\nTueiday night by Royal Air Force\nheavy bomber squadrons, the Air\nMinistry announced tonight.\nTargets near Hamburg, Bremen.\nFrankfort, Essen, Caltrop, Sterk-\nrade and Hanover were reported\nheavily bombed. At Bremen more\nthan 250 bombi were dropped\nwith 30 minutei, causing heavy\nexplosions among oil tanki and\nitarting numerous flrei, the announcement said. ^\nBLAZE SEEN 80 MILE8\nThe Ministry's statement follows:\n\"Hamburg was subjected to a\nseries of raids which began shortly\nafter midnight and lasted until near\ndawn. Salvos ot bombs repeatedly\nstraddled a large oil depot near the\ndocks and fires kindled by earlier\nattacks became so widespread that\nthe blaze could be seen by our\nJtotneward bound aircraft as they\ncrossed the German coast 80 miles\ndistant.\n\"At Castrop, to the Northwest ot\nDortmund, high explosive bombs\nfell on a petroleum refinery. Flames\nwere immediately seen to break out\nand after one raider had left the\ntarget, the tail gunner, looking\nback, aaw a high explosion take\nplace.\nMUNITION TRAINS BOMBED\n\"Storage tanks st Mlsburg, close\nto Hanover, also were systematic-\nally bombed. A direct hit on a large\nbuilding in the centre of the target,\nbelieved to have been a power\nhouse, resulted in an explosion\nwhich wes felt by the crew of the\naircraft flying 10,000 feet above.\nHere, too, fierce fires which broke,)\nout could be seen by raiding crews\nlong atter they had left the target\narea.\n\"Another power house ii thought\nte have been destroyed in the j\ncourse of an attack on oil tanks at\nSterkrade, North of Duisberg, I\nwhere   British   bombers    pressed I\nhome their attacks despite Intense\nfire from powerful ground batteries\nround the target. Shell iplintera\npierced the wings and fuselages of\nseveral of our aircraft. One bomber, badly hit and with fabric stripped from the upper surface of both\nwings, nosedived several thousand\nfeet before the release of lta bomb\nload enabled the pilot to regain\ncontrol.\n\"With sections of railway communications in Rhineland and Ruhr\nas their objectives, night raiders\nattacked marshalling yards, railway junctions and supply trains\nDirect hits were registered on railway junctions at Gladbach, Wesel\nand Arsbech, near Rheydt, and fires\nwere started in crowded marshalling yards at Schwerte, South of\nDortound.\nYARDS BURN\n\"At Dusseldorf a. series of attacks\nwas launched against the principal\nrailway yard. Twenty-one separate\nfires were counted wjthin this yard\nby the rear gunner of one of the\nlast aircraft to leave the scene.\n, \"Two goods trains standing in a\nmarshalling yard at soest were both\nhit with heavy calibre bombs and\nthe yards itself was left enveloped\nin a pail of black smoke through\nwhich numerous small explosions\ncould be seen. . . .\n\"Another train, believed to have\nbeen loaded with munitiohs, was\ncaught in a cutting near Cologne\nand struck by three heavy bombs.\nErplosions, accompanied by great\nclouds of smoke, at once broke out\namong wagons. Machine guns,\nmounted on the train, opened fire\non a British bomber which promptly retaliated by coming low and\nmachine-gunning the full length of\nthe wrecked train.\n\"Other military objectives attacked during the night included the\npower station at Schilau in the environs of Hamburg, where direct\nhits resulted in vivid zigzag flashes\nwhich lit up the whole of the target aria, and a large munitions\nworks at Cologne which was set\nalight and left with flames blazing\nseveral hundreds of feet high.\"\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNING. JUNE 20. 1940 \u2014\nBJ|I!_!_IPIP\u00ab1'.1;||1^P;\n1\/ It's Really Wanted....!. Will Sell Fast on This Pag*\n'    . '      \u25a0  '       \u2022 \u25a0     . >.  \u25a0     \u25a0    \u2022.'     ' '      ..     :     '   \u2022    ' .j* ;\u2022-.; ,, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0,\nI. I \u2014mmmm \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 ' I \u25a0 I. ' i i il \u2014___B\n**m*\ne\nTelephone 144\nTrail: CaU A. IX. Joy\nRossland: Call K. Lowdon\nClassified Advertising Rates\nHe per Un* ptr Insertion.\n44c per line per week (6 consecutive insertions (or cost of 4).\n$1.43 per Une a month (26 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, first insertion and\nMe each subsequent insertion.\n.ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\n,_  Non-commercial   Situations\nWinted  for 25c  for  any   required number of lines for six\ndays, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy \t\nBy carrier, per week _\nBy carrier, per year \u2014\nBy Mail:\nOne month\t\nThree months \t\n_$   J>5\n_    _a\n_   13.00\n1.75\n....   2.00\n4.00\nOn* year \u2014....\n8.00\nAbove ratei ipply ln Canada,\nUnited Statei, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas,\nElsewhere snd ln Canada where\nextra postage Is required, one\nmonth $1.90, three months $4.00,\nsix monthi $8.00, one year $15.00.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nC. W. WALTON St SON, BOAT\nBuilders. Boats tor rent Briggs\nSt Stratyon sir-cooled inboard and\nJohnson Outboard \"engine agenti.\nFOR SALE - CABIN CRUISER,\n22 tt 7 tt. beam. Heavy construction. Splendid condiUon. Particulars on appUcation to Box\n2792 Daily News.\nNazi Plot to Seize Uruguay\nShown in Committee Report\nMONTEVIDEO, June 18 (CP.-\nHavas) \u2014 A widespread German\nplot to seize Uruguay waa described ln the first sections of a\nreport by the Congressional Committee investigating Nazi activity\nmade public here today.\nThe committee claimed to have\nproof of the existence of a large\nand powerful military, political\nand economic Nazi network.\nThe German Legation was declared to be directly implicated.\nEvidence produced by the committee was stated to prove that Otto\nLangmann, the German Minister,\nhad engaged in subversive activity.\nThe report charged that Uruguay\nhas become the centre of Nazi organizations throughout South America, excepting Brazil and Argentina.\nCRITICIZE MINISTER\nThe charges came officially to\nlight today with publication of the\nproceedings of the first two secret\nsessions of Congress which heard\nthe report of Julio I. Tur-Ide, Secretary of the Investigating Committee.\nIn his report Itur-Ide criticized\nthe   attitude  of   Interior  Minister\nManul Tiscornia, who for a long\ntime had denied the existence ol\nNazi organizations in the country.\nThe committee came to 51 separate conclusions Irom the facts its\ninvestigators had gathered. Most Important were:\nThat a plan exists for the mill\ntary occupation of the Republic\nwith distribution of troops of the\nactive army and of the reserve,\nplacement of German officials, division of land, repression of attacks by enemies of Nazism, and the\nconversion of Uruguay into a colony of German peasants;\nThat the German Legation ln Uruguay is participating in the political leadership ot all the Nazi organizations in Uruguay, with Julius\nDalldorf, the Nazi leader, functioning in the Legation and enjoying\ndiplomatic immunity;\nThat the German Legation has\nbeen bringing contraband into the\ncountry in the form of abusive posters, propaganda injurious to countries friendly to Uruguay, films and\nradio sets, all in quantities far in\nexcess of the needs of the Legation\npersonnel.\nU. S. Warns Germans, Italians, Will\nNot Permit Interference in West\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., June lg\n(OP)\u2014The Marquess of Lothian,\nBritish Ambassador, today warned\nihe United States not to count uj\u00bbn\nany part of the Royal Navy beitxg\navailable for its defence if Britain\nis defeated.\nHe told the Yale University\nalumni luncheon that he was not\npessimistic because there \"are\nforces fighting on our side of which\nHitler knows little,\" but the facts\nof the naval situation should be\nstated bluntly so that the United\nStates could never say that it had\nnot been warned. He spoke after\nreceiving an honorary degree.\nThe first line of defence of the\nKoyal Navy has to be based on\nEurope itself, to command the exits\nto the Atlantic, through the North\nSea, the English Channel, the\nStraits of Gibraltar, he said.\n\"Only if we are beaten down and\nthe greater part of the fleet has\nbeen sunk in action will the remains of it leave home to assist in\nthe defence of Canada, Australia,\nNow Zealand, South Africa and\nother distant parts of the commonwealth.\"\nBritain Erects\nBlockhouses as a\nDefence Measure\nLONDON, June 19 (CP)\u2014Britain\n,_as adopted early North American\nanti-Indian defence tactics with the\norection of blockhouses over the\ncountryside to combat an expected\nGerman invasion attempt, it was\ndisclosed today.\nWar Secretary Anthony Eden, in\na written answer to a question in\nthe House of Commons said the\nfollowing measures had( \"been\nnoted.\"\n1. Erection of blockhouses or elevated armored machine-gun posts\nin various parts of the country, especially flat areas\n2. Provision of rockets to spread\n\u25a0the alarm of enemy parachute descents 'with a view to possible in-\n\u25a0terruption of telephonic or telegraphic communications.\"\n3. Protection of buses and trucks\nwith bullet-proof armor, arming\nthem with Bren guns and holding\nth.m at strategic points to guard\nnfainst parachute landings, troop-\nc rrying planes \u00a3Tid speedboats.\n4. Supplying arms to railway\nsignal posts, especially In isola-\ntfd areas, and adequate steps for\n<he protection of locomotive shede;\nPius Asks Prayers\nWhile Forces of\nDeception at Work\nVATICAN CITY, June 19 (AP).\n\u2014Pope Pius, addressing an audience of pilgrims today, appealed\nto the Italians to be generous.\nThe Pontiff asked his hearers\nto pray for their country, \"asking\nthat their sons be generous in\nserving Him.\"\nHe also requested them to pray\nfor the church \"which weeps for\nso many of its sons who are no\nmore and for many of its destroyed\ntemples, Its priests prevented from\ncarrying out their ministry, and for\ninnumerable poor souls straying\namong the ruins of their destroyed\nfolds or in exile, while forces of\nerror and deception are seeking to\npush them further from their divine pastor.\"\nCaucus Supports\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP). -\nUnanimous support of the Government's compulsory service legislation was voiced at a Liberal caucus\nof the House of Commons knd Senate members today. Prime Minister\nMackenzie King said there was not\na dissenting voice and that he believed there would be no further\nopposition from any in the Liberal\nranks.\nIRISH MINISTER QUITS\nBECAUSE OF INACTIVITY\nBELFAST, June 19 (CP) .-Colonel Alexander Gordon. Financial\nSecretary to the Northern Ireland\nFinance Ministry, resigned today as\na protest against what he called the\nGovernment's inactivity over war\nefforts. It was the second resignation of a junior minister in a fortnight.\nThis was the first, serious outbreak within the ranks of Lord\nCraigavon's Government since it\ntook office in 1921, A fortnight ago\nE. Warnock, Parliamentary Secretary to lhe Ministry of Home Affairs, relinquished office for reasons\nsimilar to those given by Col. Gordon.\nNeutrals Believe\nPeace Terms May Be\nRejected by France\nBERNE, Switzerland, June 19\n(AP).\u2014Neutral travellers reaching\nhere from France today said there\nwas a conviction in the Southern\npart ot the country that the axis\npeace terms would be hard and a\ngrowing feeling that the French\nGovernment might reject them.\nThU haa been the reaction to Premier Marshal Petain's order to\nFrance's armed forces to continue\nresistance and to the decision of\nGreat Britain to fight on alone.\nU.S. A. Provides\nfor Sale of 20\nShips lo Britain\nWASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-\nThe Navy disclosed today that it\nhad cleared the way for the Electric\nBoat Company of Groton, Conn., to\nsell to Britain 20 high speed submarine chasers and motor torpedo\nboats originally ordered for the\nUnited States fleet.\nThe Navy Department changed\nits contract with the boat company,\nofficials reported, to provide for a\ndelay in delivery of 20 vessels or\ndered by the Navy,\nThe manufacturing company thus\nwill be able to sell that number of\ncraft to Britain.\nSome members of tha Senate Na\nval Affairs Committee, meanwhile\ndemanded an investigation of the\nnavy'B action.\nSenator Harry F. Byrd (Dem.,\nVirginia) announced that he would\nask that the committee be given\nfull details of the transaction.\nNavy spokesmen emphasized to\nreporters that no ships which had\nbeen delivered to the navy and bo-\ncome its property were being released for sale to the Allies.\nThey declared also that deferment of deliveries to the United\nStatea would result in increasing\nthe Electric Boat Company's capacity for production of the high\nsped warships.\nHELP WANTID\nWANTED - CAPABLE WOMAN\nto look alter sick woman. State\nwages. For further particulars\napply to A. Keer, Marysvillc.\nB. C, East Kootenay. .\nWANttSb - eXp . mSBSS cou-\nple for mixed dairy farm, per:\nmanent position if satisfactory.\nAge, nationality Box 88 Cranbrook\nWANTED - RELIABLE HOUSE-\nkeeper. G. Thomas, R. R. 1,\nSummerland, B. C.\nW'AnHSD t BOV TO WORK ON\nFarm. Can milk. Apply to Box\n2784 Dally News\nWANTED - MAN FOR DAIRl\nMust be good milker. Apply Box\n301, Fruitvale, B. C.\nWANTED EXPERIENCED TAILOR\nable to handle steam press. Box\n2722 Dally News.\nWANTED EXPERIENCED Gliiia\nfor housewk*. Box 2773 Daily News\nAGENT8 AND 8ALE8MEN\nA GOOD BUSINESS PAYING\n.good income and with future\npossibilities. Selling Familex\nProducts men and women all over\nCinada have found the secret of\nsuccess. Why don't you get In on\nit too? NO OBLIGATION. Ask\nfor FREE catalogue describing\n200 necessity products and plan.\nFAMILEX PRODUCTS, 570 St\nClement St., MONTREAL.\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 ot required\nlines Payable in advance.\nENGLISH TRADESMAN WANTS\n.'work. Painting, paperhanging.\nkalsomining, signs and show cards\nNo job too small or too large.\nA. Woods, Rm. 11, Annable Blk.\nCAPABLE WOMAN DESIRES PO\nsition as hotel housekeeper or\nchambermaid. C. P. R. Hotel ex-\nperience. Box 2465 Daily News.\nAN ALL ROUND HAND? MAN\nwants work by the hour or job\ncalcimlnlng, painting, carpentry,\nor genl. house repairs. Ph. 1024R.\nWaANTED HOUSE KEEPING PO'\nsition in B. C. Small child. Mrs.\nLacy, Coleman, Alberta.\t\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\nPIPE-FITTINGS, TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co.\n915 Powell St.. Vancouver. 6. C.\nLAWNMOWER, WOOD, YATT. Al\ncond, 14 Inch. H 524 Gore Street\n8 FT. WINDMILL $15; AUTO KNIT-\nter $15. J. Peachey, Ballour, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWRITE TO GEORGE GAME, TRI-\nangle Poultry Farm, Armstrong,\nB.C., for prices on R. I. Red Pullets\nFOR SALE TEAM HORSEsTt YRS,\nweight 3700. Mare 9 yn., weight\n1300. John Ziuchkovski, Erie, EC.\nWANTED \u2014 YOUNG COW FRSsH-\nened this year. C. G. Bowker,\nMirror Lake. B. C.\nPERSONAL\nMURPHY BROS.-.OR D_F!ND\nable work. Wallpapers, and did-\ndens Time Tested Paints.\nHURRYI HURRYI 5 FOR 25c POR-\ntrait special at Vogue Studio now\non. No  appointment  necessary.\n25c - FILMS PRINTED. POSTAUE\npaid. He-prints 3c. Lions Photo.\nP: Q. Box 434, Vancouver B. C,\nBEATTY SHALLOW WELL PRES-\nsufe pump with tank. 3. Chest.\n524 Vernon St, Nelson.\nHOTEL MARTIN-ROOMS >1 AND\nup. Quiet. Central. 1176 Granville.\nVancouver, B, C.\nSALVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear, turai-\nture to spare please Ph. us, 818L\nPURCHASE YOUR FRUITS AND\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Al-\nways fresh in modern refrigeration\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait ot Distinction, Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street,\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES!\nTop prices paid tor antiques at\nThe Home Furniture. 413 Hall St\nCHOQUETTE BROS. **MOTH\"_R*S\nBread\" helpa.build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P, R Depot\n\u2022IN SPOKANE MAKE VOUR HOME\nThe Empire, 108 N. Division St\nThe friendly hotel tor Canadians.\nWHEN THE TOURISTS ASK\nwhere to stay; give them an intelligent answer, say \"Kokanee\nLodge.\"\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEL-\noped and printed 25c The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\nthe West Established over 30 yrs.\nKryslal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.\nMEN'S SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send (1 for 12 samples.\nPlain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist Princeton Distributors. Box\n61, Princeton, B, C\nWRITE FOR FREE PRICE LIST\non. Hygiene and Sanitary Supplies, or send $1.00 for special\nsample assortment of 27 best\nquality latex, postpaid under\nplain sealed cover. Western Slip-\nply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver,\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY, VIG\nor. pep. Try Vitex, 25 tablets 11.00.\n60 tablets $3.00. .Guaranteed. 24\npersonal rubber goods $1.00. Free\nprice list ot drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C,\nMEN PAST 40! RUNDOWN. PEP-\nless feeling? Try Ostrex tablets\nfor stimulants, tonics, oyster elements as aid to recovery normal\nvim, vigor. Get package today. 11\nnot delighted, maker refunds its\nlow price. Call, write Mann,\nRutherford Company and all\nother good drug stores.    \t\nB. C. HAD ONE FURRIER IN THE\nGreat War (on the Allied side);\nMunro, the veteran furrier (1914-\n1918) allows a full 10 per cent\ndiscount to relatives ot Service or\nEx-Service men; this applies to\nremodelling, storage, relining and\ngenuine cold storage as well as\non new furs; furs sent to your\nExpress Office on approval.\nMunro Fur Store, 505 Granville\nStreet, Vancouver, B. C.\t\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE 10 HVY. WK. HORSES,\nsaddle horse. Ellison Millg. Co. Lta\nFOR SALE  14  MOS. OLD AYR-\nshire bull. Eli Slacko, Ymir, B. C.!\nFOR SALE \u2014 PED. LIVER SPAN-\niels, six weeks old, make excellent hunters and companions. Ap-\nply Hirst, Queens Bay, B. C.\nPETLAND - W 241 RIVERSIDE,\nSpokane. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish,\netc. Full line supplies, accessories\nWIRE HAIRED FOX TKKiMEU\npups.  Harding,  Nelson, Ph.  110.\nNiagara Struck\nMine\u2014Fraser\nAUCK_AND, N. Z.. June 19 (AP)\n\u2014Prime Minister Peter Fraser told\nParliament today that an enemy\nmine had sunk the Canadian-Australian liner Niagara, which went\ndown yesterday 20 miles off the\nNew, Zealand coast. This was the\nfirst official indication that German mines had been sown in the\nPaci\/ic waters.\nAs Mr. Fraser spoke, rescue ships\nand planes were, aiding the 146\npassengers and 203 crewmen of the\nvessel who took to their boats following the explosion which sank\nthe-liner. All were declared safe\nand proceeding here.\nMr. Fraser told Parliament that\nminesweepers despatched to the\nscene early today already had found\none mine, removing all doubt as to\nthe cause of the sinking.\nGOVERNMENT TAKES OVER\nTORONTO ITALIANS PLANT\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP).-The\nlarge enterprises of James Franches-\nchini, Toronto contractor, taken Into\ncustody atter Italy entered the war\nhave been taken over by the Dominion Government. These enterprises include the Dufferin Shipbuilding Company of Toronto which\nhas been working on minesweepers\nfor the Government and the Duft-\nerin Construction Company.\nBRITISH \"PERFECT GIRL\"\nGIVES BIRTH TO A SON\nLONDON, June 19 (CP).-Lady\nDavid Douglas-Hamilton, formerly\nBrunella Stack, Britain's \"perfeci\ngirl\" and founder of the Worhen's\nLeague of Health and Beauty, is the\nmother of a nine-pound son. Lord\nDavid, brother of the Duke ot\nHamilton, is a pilot officer in the\nRoyal Air Force.\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE 144\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. \u00a3\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nCORPORATION OT TBE\nOTV OF NELSON\nNOTICE Is hereby liven that\n\"City of Nelaon Barber Shops Regulation By-Law, 1940\" No. 999 comes\ninto torce and effect on the 26th day\not June, next and provides that:\n(Section 2)\n\"All barber shops within the\nMunicipality of the City ot Nelson\nshall be closed and remain closed\non' each and every day of the week\nin every year from and continuously\nafter the commencement of any\nsuch day until thirty minutes after\nthe hour of eight o'clock In tho\nforenoon ot such day and shall be\nclosed and remain closed on each\nand every day ot the week except\nWednesday and Saturday and any\nday immediately preceding a public\nholiday in every year at and cohtin-\nuously \"after thirty minutes after five\no'clock in the aftcrnon ot any such\nday, and on each and every Saturday .and any day immediately preceding a public holiday ln every\nSear at and continuously after the\noul of nine o'clock In the afternoon of any such day, provided that\nthe provisions ot this Section shall\nnot apply in respect to the seven\ndays immediately preceding Christmas Day ln any year.\"\nBy Order,\nW. E. Wasson, City Clerk.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT JULY 1 6-RM. STUCCO\nhouse with furnace and garage.\nComer Nelson Avenue and Chat-\nham Street. Apply 520 Mill Street.\nFOR RENT NOW -.6 RM. HOUSE\nwith furnace and fireplace. 207\nBehnsen Street Apply 109 Kerr\nApts., or Phone 694-L.\nFOR RENT - COTTAGE ON LAKE\nfront at Willow Point, 3 bedrooms,\nApply H, Rosling or Phone 717,\nFOR RENT LARGE COOL FURf.\nhouse. July and Aug. Apply Box\n180 ore all at 617 Carbonate St\nPOR RENT FIVE ROOM COTTAGE\nCement basement. 1011 Hall\nStreet. Phone 495L.\t\nFOR RENT - 4 RM. SUITE WlTTl\nbath and 3 rm. suite with bath, 1\nblk. from Baker St. Ph, 441R\nnewly bfiCORATEC HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms and suites Star\nRooming House, 705 Victoria Alley\nFOR RENT 3 ROOM FURNISHED\nhouse. Mrs. T. Bell, Govt Road.\nfor rejto^T_5_\u00a5r5'5H\"Fi!5n.\nflat. Phone 752R\n2 room'tornMH) WOT FC*\nrent Stirling Hotel\nSMALL I'URNlSttUO B6U__ K*\nrent July, Aug., 614 Kootenay St.\nFOR RENT-_Urt_8'Atffi SlNGI!\nhousekeeplng rooms. K.W.C. Blk.\nFM\"FJ_NT-.tt(tNl_aE_rHOTSE.\nApply 618 Silica St. or Ph. 690R.\n[ _:o._-ia__l*i}Jc_ SMMs\nPrvt home. 804 Stanley, Ph. 158L.\nFOR RENT, 2 ROOM APT., FURN.\n$10 month. 507 Railway Street\nFOR RENT FURN. SUITE. APPLY\n607 Silica Street. Phone 440X.\nWE HAVE SEVERAL HOUSES\nfor rent. C. W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT, JULY AH- AUGUST\nsmall turn, house. 101 Chatham St.\nFor rent, furn. single hskp\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel,\nJOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\t\n\" SEE KERR APARTMENTS\nSUMMER  RESORTS\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS,\nAppledale. Rates by day, week\nor month. Fully furnished. Apply\nAppledale General Store.\t\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nGOOD TRUCR BUYS\n\u202237 G. M. C. %-l ton        $700\n\u202237 Fargo \u00bb4-l ton . $700\n\"37 Chev. %-l ton, 4 speed\ntransmission $700\n\u25a032 Ford V, ton, Al $325\n'34 Heavy Duty 2 ton International long wheel base $700\n'35 International, lt deliv.\nlong wheel base like new $525\nCENTRAL TRUCK te\nEQUIPMENT CO., Nelson, B C.\n'29  DeSOTO SED. THE \"\"FIRST\"\nDeSoto from the famous Chrys.\nfamily of cars. Almost new tires\nand motor is in beautiful shape\nIf you're wanting a car for \"almost nothing\", this is yours for\nonly $225. Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd\nTrailer for sale or rent. Roomy\n(14' 6\" by 6' 6\"). Ideal living or\nbatching quarters. \"Factory custom built  with one double and\none single bed.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nOpp. Post Office lc Hume Hotel\n'29 STUDEBAKER PRES. 8 SED,\nwith trunk. Special 6 wire wheel\njob with only 8000 miles on tive\nHeavy Duty tires. Deep luxurious\nuphlsty. that truly reflects the\npainstaking care it has had. Hurry,\nit won't last long at $225. Nelson\nTransfer Company Ltd.\nBATTERIES - GRTD. $4.50. RE'\ncharging, repairing and servicing\non all makes and types. At Sky\nChief Auto Service, 206 Baker St.\nFOR SALE\u20141939 DE LUXE FORD\nV8 Coupe, heavy duty tires and\nheater. Cost $1123.00, sacrifice for\nless than $800.00. 41m Latimer St.\nTRADE IN .OLD TIRES ON NEW\nNelson Auto Wrecking, 613 Vet\nnon Street, Nelson. Phone\nPUSS MOTH AEROPLANE FOR\naale. In first class condition. Ap-\nply P. O. Box 11, Creston, B. C.\nW OLDSMOBILE, FAIR SHAPE\nCheap tor cash. Box 10, Castlegar\nFOR SALE '29 ESSEX COUPE, GD,\ncond. Cheap tor cash. Ph. 1069-R,\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nRANCH 10 ACRES, 5 MIXED\nfruit, rest timber. Flower garden,\ngood water, near highway and\nlake. Good fishing. Nice 7 room\nhouse, light and phone. Packing\nhouse equipped store shed! A\nsnap for quick sale and get the\nfruit. 2224 Riverside Ave., Trail.\nFAIRVIEW PROPERTIES, IDEAL\nHome sites. Easy terms to suit\nTie-up one of these sites now for\nlater building. R. W. Dawson,\nsole agent, Hipperson Block,\nPhone 197.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms ln Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for lull information to 908. Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P R, Calgary. Alta.\n2 HOUSES FOR SALE, VERY\nclose in, $1800 for the two. Kitchen ranges and some furniture\nincluded. Terms arranged. Phone\nAppleyard, 269.\t\n6 ROOM, FULLY FURNISHED\nhouse, hot and cold water, electric light, garden plot, 2 lots, $750.\nMust sell. Box 411, Cranbrook\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate.\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C,\nFOR SAL? 4 RM. COTTAGE AT\nPilot Bay, partly furnished, $300\nJess Sanders, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE OR RENT-4 ACRES\nof cherry orchard. Kaslo. Apply\nC. Brett 212 High St., Nelson.\nFOR SALE, COUNTRY HOME, 20\nacres land. Apply 1002 Hoover St.\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBand and Orchestra instruments,\nstrings, repairs. Webb's, 806 Baker.\n(Next Scandinavian Church).\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\n\u2022PHONE 144\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC\nLOANS - MORTGAGES WIT\ngood Improved property as yo\nsecurity ln our opinion is 1\nbest Investment you can m\u00ab\ntoday. The comparative yields;\nhigh ana the chance of depreci\ntion Is small. We have seve\nmortgages we can place from w\nto $2000. Better see us and\nparticulars. Robertson Realty\nLtd.. S47 Baker Street\nWE HAVE CONSIDERABl\nmoney available for Mortgai\nrepayments monthly. Yorksb\nPlan. C. W. Appleyard.\nFOR CAR INSURANCE. FIRE I\nsurance or burglary insurer\nPhone Appleyards, 269.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIt you find anything, telephon\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ac\nwill be inserted without cost t\nyou. We will collect trom th\nowner.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTOI\nA88AYER8\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVING\nAnalyst Assayer, Metalluri\nEngineer, Sampling Agent*\nTrail Smelter, 304-305 Josepl\nStreet Nelson. B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWb(fl\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist,\nFall Street P O. Box 9. Net\nB. C. Representing shipt\nInterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSL*\nB. C. Provincial Asstyer, Chat\nIndividual representative tot s\npers at Trail.Smelter. _<\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r McMillan, d. c, neu\ncalometer, X-ray, McCulIoch\nDR.  WILBERT BROClt, bi\n542 Baker Street Phone f\nCORSETIERE8\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V\nCampbell, 870 Baker St Ph,\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEY0\nR W. HAGGEN, Mining te I\nEngineer; B. C. Land Sunn\nRossland and Grand Forks,\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvalt,\nSurveyor and Engineer. Ph\n\"Beaver Falls\".\nINSURANCE AND REAL 1ST\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insuranc\n_every description. Real Est H\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSUR_J\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. .DAWSON, Real Estate,\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipp!\nHardware. Baker St Phone\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and til\nwelding,   motor   rewlndini\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vema\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SI\nPh. B8, Vernon St Nelson, Ij\nfor Renold Chain drives Sc g\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVXI\nForest Lawn Memorial Park\nErice list from Bronze Mem<\ntd.. Box 726 Vancouver, B.\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACT\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baki\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &  EXCHAI\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY M\nTHIS COGUED BEEP AU*\nCABBAGE WIU. TASTE\nGOOD WHEU I GET OW\nTHE TBAN -MOW FOR A\nQUICK SHAVE.\nt HAD THE POGTEB CHECK\nIT AMD PUT IT IM WITH THS\nTRUWKS IKI THE BAGGAGE\nCAU- YOU WON'T  NEED 1T-\nANYWAY-\nTHATS\nWHAT\nM3U\nTWNk_\u00bb\n'WELL, I UeVER,' IKWblUE.\nTVW M&C_.ft 5PURNIMC\"\nTHE CC_1KT1_W. ANb FOR\n5.UCH A FUWSY EXCUSE\/\nHUMPH! v-UST 6ECAUS* HB a\nOOUUWY SU. PORT WW-\/.\n** ^ rd_\u00a3t?Z   r*\nnob_e-\/jBS__. *w .- *-\n_____\n.. -. -    -\u25a0\na_n'_i_iiii  i'   .\"j\".\n\u25a0\n \"'\neavy Amount Preserving Expected\nThis Year as Jar and Sugar Sales\nStrong, Wholesale Dealers Slate\nerries Approaching\nSeason's Peak;\nEggs Advance\n.lth the season about a month\nltd of other years, with sugar\nces continuing at a relatively\nr level, and with strawberries\n1 other small fruits fast ap-\noaching their peak, Nelson\nolesalers said Wednesday they\n.ected an unusual amount ot\nne preserving would be done\nI year. An exceptionally early\nanup of Jars was expected if\nes continued at their present\ne, one dealer said. New pack\nat Jam was on the market last\nek.\n?rocessing of itrawberriei has\nlira for winter Jam making. All\nawberries on the mfrket in the\nit week were local. Heavy ship-\nnts to prairie and other points\nire made from -Wynndel,. Perry\nling and Harrop.\nffltn continued high tempera-\ntats, hot weather foods continue\nsell rapidly, Including all bev-\niges, selad foods and salad drees-\n;s, canned and cooked meats, and\non. Watermelons are somewhat\nm in price because of floods tn\ni California growing district\nnut a month ago.\niULLY BEEF\" SELLING.\nWhile prices of fresh end smoked\neats remain stationery, egg prices\ne up again over last week. This\ndue to a shortage. The lamb\n;uation has eased somewhat with\nppl'ics slightly more, plentiful. A\nItvy run on canned corned beef\nthe well known \"bully beef\" of\n\u25a0 First Great War\u2014is reporteij,\nMost canned goodi In the hands\ncf packen are short, with tha Dominion pack 2,800,000 caiea short of\nlast fear. Dealers said they thought\nthis was because packers under-\nestlmated their requirements.\nMany canned goods will not be\navailable until the new pack arrives on the market Canned peaa\nare nearly cleaned up and the new\npack is not expected until about\nthe middle of July. Some grades\nand sizes of salmon are also nearly\nout of packers' stocks.\nB.C. POTATOES STRONGER\nAU new potatoes on tha mtikct\nnow are British Columbia grown,\nbecause of a dump duty placed on\nAmerican potatoes entering the\nDominion. Most of them are from\nVancouver. Local carroti, beets and\ncabbages are available in larger\nquantities. Hothouse tomatoei, field\ncucumbers and Bing cherries are\narriving from the Okanagan.\nOnions from Washington and cantaloupe and plums trom California\nare also on.\nFeed and grain dealers report\nthe seasonal decrease in business is\nahead of other years. Sales of bulk\ntnd package seeds have almoit\nstopped. Fertilizer sales ara continuing in smaller volume. Poultry feeds continue to sell in good\nquantity, and sales of agricultural\npoisons and insecticides are increasing.\nFlour dropped 10 cents per barrel\nduring the week.\nCarlot arrivEls of tha week Included one of sugar, two of groceries, two of meats, one of salt,\none of soap, one of British Columbia new potatoes, one ot oranges,\none of watermelons, and one of\nflour and feed. *\n.ace Negotiators\no Meet in Madrid\nBORDEAUX, June 19 (AP).-\n'h\u00ab newspaper Figaro aald today\nhat French and Qerman peace\negotlatori would meet In Marti at the reiidence of General-\n\u00bblmo  Franclico  Franco.\nThe \"newspaper did not iay when\nhi meeting would be held but It\nIMarid that Joee Felix Lequer.\ni,    Spanish     Ambassador    to\nranee, wai leaving Bordeaux for\nhdrld Immediately to aiilit.\nLe Petit Parlilen, which, like\nha other principal Parli news-\napers, li publishing here, laid\nsrmi of the peace conditioni pro-\noied by Germany and Italy\nrauld not be dlsoloied until after\nhey had been accepted or reject-\nd by France.\nintrol Zeballos May\nOutput Is $25,059\n_J\u00bbvlng opened up a nice length\nOre on No. S level Central Zebal-\n-'li extending the.wlnre down-\nrd with a view to opening No. i\nel on the vein, reports W. A.\nI on, Secretary-Treasurer of the\niratlng Company, Reno Oold\nles Ltd.\nlentral Zeballoi production in\nj wai $23,058 compared with\n,030 in April.\nilief-Arlington's\nday Output $33,215\nITANCOUVEB, B.C., June 19-Net\ngilt of Relief-Arlington Mines\nd. at Erie in May is officially\nir\u00ab.ed at 84,134 before write-\n-ugainet $1,403 in ApriL Value\ngold output in May from 2,672\nis was $33,215, an average o!\n1.4}. In April, value of gold out-\nt was $30,740 from 2,586 tone, an\nerage of $11.98 per ton.\nYmir Yankee Girl\nCuts Dundee Vein;\nCrosscut 800 Feet\nAfter driving 800 feet of crosscut\nfrom the 1235 level of the Ymir\nYankee Girl Mine at Ymir, the company reports that the Dundee vein,\nwhich was the objective, was cut\nalmost at the precise point it was\nexpected judging trom the itrike of\nthe vein In the Dundee working!\nsome 400 feet lower ln elevation.\nR. B. Lamb, Managing Director,\nstated that where cut the vein is\nnot commercial. Drifting would\nneed to be done before any conclusions could be drawn, he said, in\nreporting he had no confirmation\nof reports printed in Toronto claiming good values.\nDue to the proximity of the Dundee to Ymir Yankee Girl and the\nopportunity of reaching the Dundee\nvein at a new horizon with an 800-\nfoot crosscut from its own wordings, Ymir Yankee Girl took an option on the Dundee property last\nFebruary.\nSheep Creek Up 6\nin Vancouver Gains\nVANCOUVER, June 19 (CP).-\nSmall gain outnumbered losses\nduring fairly active trading on the\nVancouver Stock Exchange today.\nTransactions totalled 27.894 ihares.\nBralorne Gold gained 10 to 8.00\nand Sheep Creek at 88 rose 6 over\nyesterday's closing bid. Hedley Mascot at SlVi and Minto at 1'A each\ngained Vt from Tuesday'! bid. Unchanged were Premier at 80, and\nPrivateer at 44.\nHome Oil dropped 2 to 1.40. Okalta\nat 60 and Calgary tt Edmonton at\n1.05 remained unchanged.\n.Among the base metals Pend\nOreille was up 5 at 1.48 and Grand-\nview was unchanged at 11*A.\nDIVIDENDS\nSteel Company of Canada Ltd.,\ncommon and Pfd. 43% cents.\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nNES\nlermac Copper\nan Gold \t\nglo-Huronian  ..\natfield Gold .\ntoria Rouyn Mines\nnor  \u2014\t\njamac Rouyn\t\nttkfleld Gold \t\nM Metals Mining -\nattie Gold Mines \u2014\nIgood Kirkland .....\n: Missouri\t\nilo Mines\t\nilorne Mines\nHalo Ankerite\t\nnker Hill Ex\t\nnadian Malartlc .\u2014\nriboo Gold Quartz\nItle-Trethewey \t\ngtral Patricia  -\njit Copper  \t\nniaurum Mines \t\nnsolidated M & S ....\nMines \t\nrval-Siicoe  -\t\nMalartic\norado Hold\t\nIcon-ridge Nickel\n\"   il Kirkland  ....\nles Lake \t\n,'s Lake Gold\t\nindoro Mines \t\nmar Gold  \t\n(rd Rock Gold \t\nBlnger\t\nrey Gold \t\nson Bay M It S ....\n.national Nickel..\nConsolidated \t\nWaite .-\t\n>ls Gold \t\n.'Addison \t\nland Lake \t\ni Shore Mines ....\nBh Gold \t\nOro Mines \t\nle Long Lac \t\nisa Mlnea \t\nirl.rnd   Cockshutt\nl!en Red Lake Gold .\njfly\t\n|lntyre-Porcupine   \t\nKenzie Red Lake ...\nIVittle-Graham  \t\n\u25a0Watters Gold \t\nping Corporation \t\nmelt Porcupine \t\nIrris-Kirkland\t\npissing Mining -\ntnda \t\nnetal\t\nbrim Gold  i\u2014\nEega Gold  ~\t\nnour Porcupine \t\nmaster Cons \t\n_i Oreille\t\nj Oold\t\nEkle Crow Gold \t\nmeer Gold \t\nfcmicr Gold\t\n.14\n.01'.\n..    1.55\n.05\n.oil.\n.91\n.05\n.07\n.11\n.85\n.12V4\n.05\n.05\n8.00\n3.05\n.01\n.40\n1.65\n.50\n1.48\n.50\n1.00\n3250\n16.00\n.01\n2.12\n.36\n2.15\n.02\n.03 li\n.26\n.02 i,i\n.30\n.03\n10 00\n,23\n20.40\n32 50\n.01\n.ww\n02 li\n146\n.70\n17 00\n.42\n.OlVi\n1.95\n2 35\n1.05\n.23\n\u25a009\n40 00\n.92\n.05V4\n.20\n.48\n.41\n.02\n.75\n47.50\n.254\n,50\n.10\n.80\n.22\n1.48\n105\n2.25\n1 65\n80\nPowell Rouyn Gold       .74\nPreston East Dome      1.44\nReno Gold Mines       .19\nRoche Long Lac  -      .03\nSan Antonio Gold  -     132\nShawkey Gold -      .01V*\nSheep Creek Gold         .86\nSherritt Gordon  __ _      .60\nSiscoe Gold         62\nSladen Malartlc 20\nSt. Anthony         .08\nSudbury Basin      1.01\nSullivan Consolidated  -      .47\nSylvanite -     1.96\nTeck-Hughes Gold      2.50\nToburn Gold Mines  -    1.10\nTowagmac    -      10\nVentures \u2014     2.00\nWaite Amulet       3.00\nWright-Hargreaves     4.80\nYmir Yankee Girl       .05\nOIL8\nAjax        .1034\nBritish American     1630\nChemical Research  12\nImperial  _    9.75\nInter Petroleum    14.00\nTexas Canadian      1.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbiUbi Power A        -75\nBell Telephone 148\nBrazilian T L tt P -    4Vi\nBrewers & Distillers     314\nB C Power B      2\nBuilding Products  '.    12%\nCanada Bread       3\nCan Bud Malting  \u2014    5\nCan Car    Foundry  _    6*A\nCan Cement        3\u00bb\u00ab\nCan Malting  - -   31 Vi\nCan Pacific Railway     4yt\nCan Ind Alcohol A      1.90\nCan Wineries  3\nCons Bakeries _   13\nCosmos    18V\u00bb\nDominion Bridge     23V*\nDominion Storei       iVt\nDom Tar fc Chem     4\nDistillers Seagrams -   1\\\\\\\nFanny Farmer    21 Vi\nFord of Canada A    1<\nGen Steel Wares  \u201e     4*>i\nGoodyear Tire    60Vi\nGypsum L lc A     3\nHamilton Bridge      3\nHiram Walker    30V.\nInt Metals       5V.\nImperial Tobacco     12%\nLoblaw A     22 V.\nLoblaw B -   21\nKelvinator.        5\nMaple Leaf Milling     2\nMassey Harris      \"Vi\nMontreal Power    *\u2022***\nMoore Corp    35\"i\nNat Steel Car     38H\nPage Hersey    90\nPower Corp  ;      6\nPressed Metals      6\nSteel of Can ...    65\n.Standard Pavine  50\n\u2014NILION DAILY NIWS. NELSON, B. ..-THURSDAY MORNINO, JUNE 20. 1940-\nMETAL MARKITS\nLONDON, Juna lt (AF). - Bar\nsilver 23V.d, off Vt. (Equivalent\n41.93 cents based on the dollar at\n$4.03). Bar gold 168s, unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Bar gold in London\nwu unchanged at $37.54 an ounce\nin Canadian funds; 168s In British,\nrepresenting tha Bank of England's\nbuying price. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $38.50 In\nCanadian,\nSilver futures cloied unchanged\ntoday. No sales. Bid: Juna 37.75.\nNew York \u2014 Copper iteady; elec\ntrolytic ipot, Conn. Valley 11.50;\nexport, fas N, Y. 11.25-50. Tin steadier; spot and nearby 53.35; forward\n51.00. Lead steday, spot, New York\n5.00-5.05; East SL Louis 4.85. Zinc\nsteady; East SL Louis spot and forward 4.25. Quicksilver 19730-200.00.\nBar silver 34%, unchanged.\nLONDON, June 19 (AP). - Tin\nsteadier; spot \u00a3281 10s bid. \u00a3266\n15s asked; future \u00a3268 15s bid,\n\u00a3259 asked.\nMining Shares\nFirm at Toronto\nTORONTO, June 19 (CP).-Mining shares displayed a firm front\nln the dullest trading ot the year\ntoday on Toronto market.\nBrazilian Traction took a dip of a\npoint to 4, a new low for recent\nyears and it then recovered to\nclose around 4Vi. Political disturbances in South America were responsible.\nThe Steel of Canada Issues advanced more than a point. Mclntyre, Hollinger, Lak* Shore and\nBralorne held gains. Improvement\nwis noted for Tick Hughes, Sigma,\nMacassa and Lamaque.\nHome Oil, Vermllata, Dalhousie\nnad Davies ihowed final losses of\n1 to 4.\nOnly Seven Placer\nClaims Recorded in\nPast Seven Months\nOnly seven placer claims have\nbeen recorded at the Nelson Mining Recorder's office since December of 1939. All but one on Goat\nRiver, Creiton area, were in the\nSouth Kootenay, one being at\nSalmo, one on the Salmon River,\nand the remainder en the Pend\nd'Orellle and tributaries.\nThe claims were:\nEcho, on Lovola Creek, on Ooat\nRiver, by Alex Mazeppa, Kitchener,\nKioga, on South side of Salmon\nRiver, recorded by Frank Shels-\nwell, Waneta.\nBear Creek, on Bear Creek, tributary of Pend d'Oraill* River, by\nJoe Starika, Waneta.\nBear Creek No. 2, on Bear Creek,\nby John Thorell, Waneta.\nB. B. B., on Salmon River, by Oscar Hall, Salmo.\nGood Hope, on North bank of the\nPend d'Orellle River, by Kasper\nBaily, Waneta.\nAn unnamed claim, on Pend\nd'Orellle River, by Raymond Lank,\nWaneta.\n19 Mineral Claims\nRecorded in Month\nNineteen mineral' claims have\nbeen recorded at the Nelson Mining Recorder's office in the past\nmonth. Seven of these, seven miles\nNortheast of Castlegar, were recorded by Paul M. Zaltaoff. His\nclaims were the Gibson Creek Gold\nMine Claim Noi. 1 to 7.\nOther claimi were:\nBonanza, 3Vi miles South of Gray\nCreek Whart, recorded by Donald\nBroster. ,     ,\nBonanza No. 2, in the same locality, recorded by A. R. McGregor.\nCap Rock, on the East Fork of\nRover Creek, by Harry Allport.\nHattie Fraction, on the West sid\u00ab\not Sheep Creek, by Vere McDowell.\nKay, on Midge Creek, by G. R.\nThompson.\nTatra, on Young Creek, Tennessee Mountain, by Joe Ferchik.\nWestwar Ho No. 2, near Deer Park\nby Fred G. Hamblin.\nBlue Fraction and Red Fraction,\non Whiskey Creek, noar Erie, by\nH. D. Read.\nSpot, and Whit* Fraction, on\nWhiskey Creek, near Erie, by L.\nMatassa.      \t\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, June 19 (CP). -\nSpot: Butter, Que. (92 score) 21V4\nto 21H; Que. (38 score) 20Vi to\n20S. Eggs, Eastern A Large 24A.\nButter futures: Nov. 22Kto22%.\nBayonne Output\nin May $34,300;\nStart Exploring\nMay was the first complete\nmonth of milling since Bayonne\nConsolidated Mlnea Ltd. resumed\nproduction from Its property tbove\nTye, Kootenay Lake. Outpi* tor\nthe month wai $34,300 trom 1,538\ntons. Heads averaged 0.606 oz. gold\nper ton and recovery was approximately 94 per cent. Stoptag at present li being confined to the 5th and\n\u00bbth levels as the 4th level is inclined to be wet at this time of\nyear. \u2022\nPreliminary work Is proceeding\nIn connection with the next phase\nof the company's explorstion program as recommended by H. Grat-\ntan Lynch, consulting engineer.\nContour lines are being run prior\nto starting work on the surface ot\nthe mountain slope \u00ab<t what will\nbe the horizon of the 8th level, two\nlevels below the present bottom\nlevel.\n8URFACE EXPLORATION\nThe new vein will be sought at\nthis horizon at a point tome 1500\nteet distant from the portal of No.\n8 level of the old worklngi. Thi!\nsurface exploration will be carried\nout by tractor and bulldozer as\nsoon te the snow clears from the\nmountaih slope. This will likely\nbe before the end of June.\nThe Summer program will also\ninclude further work on an Interesting but short oreshoot discovered last season on No. 3 level.\nThis ore shoot averaged 2.49 oz.\ngold per ton across 18 Inches for a\nlength cf ten feet, wh\u00abh it was cut\noff hy a Ault. The vein now being\nworked on the 4th, 5th and 6th\nlevels will break through to the\nsurface at about the elevation of\nthe third level but exploration of\nthe ahort high grade shoot found\nen the third level and other possibilities provide scope for work\non the upper levels. .\nCanada May Issue\n$1 Passports for\nVisitors to U. S.\nOTTAWA, June 19 (CP). - The\nDominion Government is considering the issuing of special passports\nat $1 apiece and good for 12 months\nfor persons desiring to visit the\nUnited States it was learned last\nnight\nThe special passports under consideration would be for travel in\nthe United States only, to meet\nnew regulations there, and would\nnot be renewable.\nVisas to accompany passports tor\ntravel in the United States are to be\nissued free of charge by United\nStates officials.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, June 19 (CP). \u2014\nGrain futures quotations:\nWHEAT Open High Low Close\nJuly . .. 71\"ri 71% 71Vi 71V4\nOctober .. 74% 74% 74% 74V!\nDecember .   75%   75%   75%   75%\nOATS\nJuly      30 .   30%   29%   29%\nOctober .. . 27% 27% 27% 27%\nDecember .   VI      27      26%   26%\nBARLEY\nJuly       33%   34      33%   33%\nOctober 34%   34%   34      34%\nDecember .    35      35%   34%   35\nFLAX\nJuly 131    132    131    132\nOctober   135    135    134    135\nRYE\nJuly         44%   45%   43%   45%\nOctober .. 43% 43% 43% 43%\nDecember'     44%   44%   43%   44%\nCASH PRICES\nWHEAT - No. 1 hard 71%; No.\n1 nor. 71; No. 2 nor. 68; No. 3\nnor. 74%; No. 4 nor. 62%; No. 5,\n58%; No. 6, 56%; feed 52%; No.\n1 garnet 65%; No. 2 garnet 64%;\nNo. 3 garnet 60%; No. 1 durum\n63; No. 4 special 62%; No. 3 special\n56%; No. 6 special 56%; No. 1\nmixed 57%; track 71%; screenings\n50 cents per ton.\nOATS - No. 2 C. W. 30%; ex.\n3 C. W. 29%; No. 3 C. W., ex. 1\nfeed and No. 1 feed 29%; No. 2 feed\n27%; No. 3 feed 24%; track 28%.\nBARLEY \u2014 Malting grades \u2014 fl-\nrow Nos 1 and 2 C. W. 33%; 2-row\nNos. 1 snd 2 C. W. 38%; 6-row\nNo. 3 C. W. 31%. Others: No. 1\nfeed 30%; No. 2 feed 30%; No. 3\nfeed 29%; track 33%.\nFLAX - No. 1 C. W. 131%; No.\n2 C. W. 127%; No. 3 C. W. 120;\nNo. 4 C. W. 107; track 131%.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 45%.\nTha Classified Will Sell  ltl\nFuel Distributors\nWalk When Run Out\nof Own Product\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - The lalei\nsupervisors for East and Weit Kootenay for a well-known oil company\nhad iome doubts last week as to\nthe ultimate efficiency of their efforts and a pair of sore feet apiece.\nReturning from an Inspection trip\nat Fernle late one evening the car\nln which they were driving coughed\n\u00bbt the Fort Steele Junction, eight\nmiles out and quietly died. Suspicions concerning-the gas tank were\nconfirmed.\u2014Empty!\nIt was past midnight and they\nitrpllcd Cranbrookward with their\nthumb! limbered up to go Into\naction. It wai a good Idea, it would\nhave been better, though if there\nhad been any traffic on the road.\nBy four o'clock they had walked all\nthe way into Cranbrook, during\nwhich time they had had plenty of\ntime to ruminate on what their\nproduct meant to the general public.\nA little arch propping and several\nhours oi sleep put the oil distributor! back on their feet the next day.\nReno Drifts on\nMotherlode Vein\nDrifting hai itarted on the new\nlow level on the Motherlode vein\nat Reno Gold Mines Ltd., Sheep\nCreek. This level haa been opened\nfrom an internal shaft from the\n4900 main working level. Production of the Reno Mine in May is reported at $42,000 compared with\n$45,150 in April.\nReno production since milling resumed on October 10,1939, has been\nas follows:\n1939\nOctober   $29,834\nNovember ...\nDecember ...\n1940\nJanuary \t\nFebruary .....\nMarch  \t\nApril\t\nMay \t\n 47,071\n 47,090\n 47,100\n 47,000\n 47,000\n 45,150\n 42,000\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen Cloie\nAmerlcin C\u00abn  97 97\nAm Smelt tt Ref   88% 38%\nAmerican Tobacco  75% 75%\nAnaconda   21% 21%\nBaldwin     15% \u00bb#\nBait lc Ohio   3% 3%\nBendix Aviation -  28% \u00bb*\nBeth Steel   77% 78\nCinada Dry       - 1J% 1}\nCanadian Fwiflc  J \u00bb\nConGaiNY  tlV, 64\nC Wright pM   26% 26\nDuooht          \"% 7,B\nElTm.n Kodak  160% UH*\nFord English  128 127%\nGeneral Foodi   SlVi 32%\nGeneral Motori  41 41%\nGoodrich  m \u00ab**\nGranby -\u2022 *_> \u00ab%\nGreat Nor pfd  _ \u00bb\u00bb\nHowe Sound - 21% 21%\nInter Nickel    23% 2$\nInter Tel fc Tel  JVi J\u00ab\nKenn Copper  ...   29* 28V,\nMontgomery Ward  39 39\nNash Motori .\nNew York Central .\nPackard Motors \t\nPenn R R\t\nPhlllipi Pete \t\nPullman \t\nRadio Corporation .\nRem Rand \t\nSafeway Storei \t\nShell Union\t\nS Cal Edison\t\nStan Oil of N J \t\nStudebaker \t\nTexai Corporation .\nTexai Gulf Sul \t\nUnion Carbide  \t\nUnion Oil of Cal\t\nUnited Aircraft\t\nUnion Pacific \t\nU S Rubber\t\nU S Steel\t\nWarner Brothers ...\nWest Electric \t\nWest Union \t\nWoolworth\t\nYellow Truck\t\n4%    4%\n11%   11%\n3Vi\n18\n3 V.\n18%\n32% 32>,i\n20% 20%\n4% 4%\n7 7%\n40% 40%\n8%     8%\n25% 25%\n34% 33%\n7        7%\n38% 38%\n30% 30%\n68% 68%\n12% 12%\n39% 40%\n78% 78%\n21 21%\n53% 54\n2%\n91\n16%\n2%\n92\n16%\n31%   31%\n12%   12%\nMONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAisoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P & P A\t\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Car fc Fdy Pfd \t\nCan Celanese\t\nCan Celanese Pfd _\t\nCan North Power \t\nCan Steamship  \t\nCon Min fc Smelting\t\nDominion Coll Pfd \t\nDom Steel fc Coal B\t\nDominion Textile\t\nDryden Paper \t\nFoundation C ot C \t\nGatineau Powir \t\nGatineau Power Pfd\t\nQmi Charlti \t\nWard Smith Paper\t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Nickel oi Can\t\nLake of the Woods\t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nNational Brew Ltd \t\nNat Brew Pid \t\nOsilvie Flour New\t\nPrice Bros \t\n\u201e_,__.\u25a0_:._.__:__-____.- ____\u25a0 -^\u25a0\"fjniiitMiilii'iiiU'nt.liiMill\n^--'\u2014\n31\n15\n.     8%\n31\n15\n26\n109\n11%\n,    3\n32\n17%\n7%\n72\n. 6\n.    8%\n12\n80%\n5\n12\n9%\n14%\n33\n16\n5%\nW   \u25a0\n34\n21%\n10%\n13V4\n16%\n2Vi\n11%\nQuebec Power \t\nShawnlgan W fc P \u2014\nSt Lawrnce Corp _\t\nSt Law Corp Pfd\t\nSteel of Can Pfd     68-\nWestern Grocers    55\nBANK8\nCommerce  150\nDominion   \u201e   _ 172\nNova Scotia _  240\nRoyal _ 157\nToronto  220\nCURB\nAbitibi 8 Pfd _\nBeauharnois Corp  _.\t\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packen  \u201e \t\nCan IndUitries B \t\nCan Marconi\t\nCan Vicken      3%\nCom Paper Corp \u201e\u201e       4\nFairchild Aircraft      2%\nFraaer Co Ltd     6%\nInter Utllitiei B 25\nMacLaren P fc P    12\nMcColl Frontenac Pfd    85\nMitchell Robt      6%\nRoyalite Oil    18\nUnited Dift of Can     31%\n.80\n4%\n16%\n10%\n1.88\n80\nTotal   $352,246\nBeaverdell Property\nDistributing $26,317\nQuarterly, Dividends\nDividends at the rate of 2 centi\na stare Quarterly have been continued in 1940 by the Highland Bell\non Wallace Mountain, Beaverdell.\nThe mine ships high-grade silver\nore to the Trail smelter. In 1939\nthis company paid 2 cents a share\nquarterly. Similar payments have\nbeen made this year, on January 5\nand rn Aprill 22. Each 2-csnt distribution amounts to $26,317.\nSecurities Gain in\nResponse to Speech\nLONDON, June 19 (AP) - The\nsecurities market today responded\nwith brotd gains to Prime Minister\nChurchill's speech Tuesday. Demand concentrated on British Government bonds at prices In some\ncases more than a full point above\nminimum levels. Industrials advanced a iew pence throughout al-\nthoufh all g\u00a3iiii were not maintained. Kaffirs tended upward and\nmost oils improved. Coppers and\nother base metals also shifted to\nthe plus side. Japanese and Austrian loans weakened in the foreign bond market.\nF. D. R. Approves Bill\nfor Naval Expansion\nWASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-\nChairman Vinson (Dem., Georgia)\nsaid today that the $4,000,000,000\nNaval Expansion Bill recommended\nby the House of Representatives\nNaval Committee yesterday has\nPresident Roosevelt's approval.\nThe measure would merely authorize the expansion. It would\ncarry no funds although Admiral\nHarold R. Stark, Chief of naval operations who recommended the huge\nseven-year \u2022 program, said that ii\nCongress approved it he would ask\nat this session for $1,175,000,000 to\nstart construction.\nItalian Loans Down\nNEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -\nItalian loans dropped sharply in\nthe bond market today.\nLosses of 3 to 5 appeared for\nItaly 7s, Milan 6%s, Rome 6%s and\nItalisn Public Utility 7s.\nFrench Government stamped 7s\nlost 4. German loans tended downward, a\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, June 19 (AP). - British stock closings, in sterling: Babcock fc Wilcox 33s 9d; Cent Mining\n\u00a310%; Consol Gold Fields 26s 3d;\nCrown \u00a313%; Metal Box 65s; Mex\nEagle 2s 9d; Mining Trust ls 6d;\nRand \u00a37; Springs 18s 9d,\nBONDS - British 2% per cent\nConsols \u00a371%; British 3% per cent\nWar Loan \u00a397%.\nWheal Gains\nin late Rally\nCHICAGO, June 19 (AP). -\nAfter declining as much as 1%\ncents, whest pricei rallied today,\nwiping out all of the early loss and\nsubstituting net gains of almost a\ncant.    \u2022\nSome of the buying on the recovery was attributed to mills and\nto dealers who acted in indications\nof a relatively light movement of\nnew whest in tht Southwest. Mar.\nketing ot the new crop is running\nbehind that of last year, traders\nsaid, not only because of the later\nhsrvest but also becauie the bulk\nof the crop apparently is going\nInto storage. Prices are below Government loan rates.\nStrength in securities also attracted attention here but many\ndealers preferred to go slow pending announcement of peace terms\nto be imposed on France.\nWheat cloied % to % cent higher than yesterday, Julv 78% to 78%;\nSeptember 78%; corn % to % higher, July 82, September 60%; oats\n\u00bb'. to % higher.\nDecision Reserved\nDoukhobor Case\nVANCOUVER, June 19 (CP). -\nDecision has been reserved by the\nCourt ot Appeal on appeal of the\nChristian Community of Universal\nBrotherhood, from a judgment by\nMr. Justice H. B. Robertson's finding that the Doukhobor company\nwas not a fanner and entitled to the\nbenefits of Farmers Creditors'\nAgreement Act.\nThe Judgment was given in an action brought by National Trust Company, Ltd., of Vancouver, with a\nclaim for approximately $170,000\nagainst the Doukhobor holdings.\nEnemy Makes No\nBig Gains, France\nBORDEAUX, June 19 (AP).\u2014The\nFrench High Command announced\ntoday that, despite continued attacks\nin all sectors, the Germans had\nmade no important advances during\nthe night.\nThe text ot the morning commun\nIque:\n\"The enemy continued pressure\nalong the whole front. They have\nachieved no Important advance since\nyesterday evening.\"\nANGLO-JAPANESE\nAGREEMENT MADE\nLONDON, June 19 (AP) .-Signature in Tokyo of an Anglo-Japanese agreement settling several\npoints of their Tientsin controveny\nwas announced today in the House\not Commons by Richard Butler, Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs.\nU. S. Gets Plans\n\u25a0     of French Motor\nWASHINGTON, June 19 (AP).-\nSecretary Morgenthau announced\ntoday the French Government had\nturned over to the United States\nthe designs for the powerful His'\npano-Suiza airplane engine.\nThe French made the patents\navailable to the United States for\nengine production for both United\nStates and the Allies, the Treasury\nChief said.\nBritain recently gave the United\nStates patent rights on their power\nful Rolls-Royce airplane engine.\nLEADERS GAIN\nMONTREAL, June 18 (CP). -\nLeading issues tod\u00aby appeared with\ngaine ranging irom fractions to a\npoint or more.\nAdvances of a point or more\nwere marked up for Steel of Canada Issues while Dominion Bridge\nadded a fraction, B. C. Power A\nmrrked up fractional improvement.\nNational Steel Car added more\nthan a point while fractional advancement was noted for Nickel\nand Hollinger.\nCalgary Listless\nCALGARY, June 19 (CP). - It\nwas another listless session on the\nCalgary Stock Exchange today. Oil\nshares actually traded totalled only\n100.\nBids on C. & E. were up five\nand Home two cents. Okalta bids\nwere off three cents from the previous close.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, June 19 (CP). - Re\nceipts, cattle 250; calves 5; hogs\n180; sheep 4.\nCommon to plain butcher staers\n6 to 7. Good fed calves 7.75 to 8.\nMedium to good cows 4 to 4.50;\ncanners and cutten 2.50 to 3. Medium to good veal calves 6.50 to\n7.50. Plain to medium stockere 550\nto 6. Spring lambs yesterday 9.75.\nLast bacons 7.25 to 7.35.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh .Low Close Change\n30 Industrials _  124.51   122.50 123.86 up    .63\n20 rails -    25.86    25.31 28.73 up    .10\n15 utilities     21.11    20.68 21.02 up    .23\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE\nMINES\nBig Missouri\nBid\n*-^^-^-'\n7.98\nCariboo Gold \t\n1.70\nDentonla \t\n\u2014\nFairview Amal .\t\n.W'\/i\nGeorge Copper \t\njOS\nGold Belt  \t\n\u2014\n.H%\nGrull Wihksne  ....\n.OUi\nHedley Mascot\t\n.31\nInter Coal  _\n\u2014\nIsland Mount \t\n\u2014\nKoot Belle      .\n.25\nLucky Jim  \t\nMV,\nMinto Oold \t\n.01\nNicola M fc M \u2014\n.01\nPend Oreille  ...\n145\nPioneer Gold \t\n1.58\nPorter Idaho  \t\n.01%\nPremier Border  \u201e\naOOH\nPremier  Gold  ..\n.75\nPrivateer   \t\n.42\n.oiv,\nReeves MacDonald\n\u2014\nRelief Arlington ..\n.04'4\nReno Gold \t\n\t\n.02\nSheep Creek \t\n.85\nSilbak Premier ....\n3D\nTaylor Bridge\t\n.02\nVidette Gold\t\n.02\nAik\n.07\n.01%\n.01\n.20\n.12\n.02%\n.83\n.88\n.72\n.35\n.01%\n150\n1.65\n.02%\n.01\n.44\n..10\n.08\n.19\n.03%\nWellington \u2014 -\nWhitewater  \t\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS\nAmalgamated \u201e\nAnaconpa    _.\nAnglo Can  _\t\nA. P. Cons \t\nBrown Corp \t\nCalg &  E<J \t\nCommonwealth   ....\nEast Crest \t\nExtension  _\nFirestone Pete .....\nFour Star Pete .....\nHome   \t\nMadison   \t\nMar   |on   \t\nMercury    \t\nMill City  \t\nMonarch Roy\t\nOkalta   \t\nPacalta _\nPrairie Roy \t\nRoyal Can \t\nRoyil Crest Pete ..\n.05\n,00'i\n.03\n.48\n.07%\n.06\n1.05\n.18\n.03\n.15\n.05\n.07%\n1.40\n.01%\n.00%\n.0,.'j\n.04%\n.OS'S\n.58\n.02\n.11%\n.14\n00\nRoyalite       17.50\nSpooner\nUnited\nVanalta   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates ...\nCoast Breweries\n.02\n.04\n.03\n1.00\non.\n.01%\n.07'-a\n.00%\n012\n.10%\n142\n.02\n.01\n04%\n04%\nUS\n1.20\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, June 19 (CD-British and foreign exchange, nominal\nrates between banks only;\nArgentina, peso, 2488.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, 2498.\nSwitzerland, franc, 2499.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 4.43.\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10, selling LU;\nNEW YORK. June 19 (CP). -\nOpen market price ior the Swiss\nfranc moved up briskly today ui\nthe foreign exchange market wheu\nit was disclosed that available supplies of the currency were ex'\ntremely limited. The franc closed\n.02 cent higher at 22.45 cents.\nThe pound sterling lost 3% cents\nto $3.58% in relation to the United\nStates dollar and tha Canadian dollar % cent to a discount of 19% per\ncent. (Ottawa Foreign Exchange\nControl Board rate 9.09-9.91 per\ncent discount).\nFrench Abandon\nMaginot Forls\nBASEL, Switzerland, June 19\n(AP). \u2014 Great Maginot Line forts\non the Rhine North of Basel were\nabandoned by their skeleton French\ngarrisons this morning.\nPowerful French forts of St. Louis\nHunique, Village Neuf and Rose-\nnau fired their last shells at German positions in Aden at 2:45 a.m.\ntoday and their garrisons retreated\nWest toward Belfort.\nApparently at least one of the\nforts at the Burgundian Gate near\nBelfort atill held out, however, for\nsounds of artillery and machine-\ngun fire from that region reached\nBasel.\nShortly after dawn 20 German\nsoldiers led by a Lieutenant paddled rubber boats across the Rhine\njust North of a buoy marking tho\n''three countries corner\" in the middle of the river where France,\nGermany and Switzerland come\ntogether.\nThey drifted alongside the walls\not the great forts rising to a height\nof 40 feet out ot the river.\nThe soldiers held machine-syns\nready but not a shot came from\nthe deserted fortifications.\nAfter a few minutes the Germans\npaddled back without landing, linging the 'March Against England\"\nsong.\nThey were greeted by hundreds\noi their comrades who rushed to\nthe river bank cheering and\nshouting. i\nGermcm-ltalo Pact\nSettling Economic\nProblems Is Signed\nROME, June 19 (AP)\u2014An agreement settling \"certain problems ot\nwar economy,\" between Germany\nand Italy was announced officially\ntoday. Details were withheld. The\nagreement was signed yesterday. It\nwas negotiated by Dr. Karl Clo-\ndius, German economic ace, and\nAadeo Cianini.\nPAGE  NINI\nRails Lead New\nYork Price Rallies\nMine Shares Firm\nNEW YORK, June 19 (AP). -\nStocka passed through a series ot\nquickly terminated rising and sinking ir.clls todey with a group ot\nfirm rails serving as a rallying\nground.\nMost fluctuations were fractional\ntoward l\\e close, About 600,000\nshares changed hands.\nAlong the leaders exhibiting\nfirmness were Santa Fe, Great\nNorthern preferred, Chesapeake U\nOhio, Boeing, Douglas, Lockheed,\nGlenn .Martin, Caterpillar, Sean\nRoebuck, Youngstown, Republic\nSteel, American Telephone. West.\ninghouse; Osneral Electric, Loft,\nCanada Dry. Mi American Woolen,\nThe last named was assisted by a\nGovernment overcoat order worth\nmore than $4,000,000:\n. Showing weakness were such Issues as Standard Oil of N. J., Western Union, Kennecott and Eastman.\nCanadian Pacific and Distiller!\nSeagram, the only quoted stocks,\nshowed losses. In the bond market\nCanada 4s were unchanged.\nMiens Must Turn\nin Arms by June 20\n. OTTAWA, June 19 (CP)- New\nrestrictions placed on the possession of firetrms by an order-in-\nccuncil just announced are in addition to those authorized during\nthe second month of the war. Thesis\nrequired all enemy aliens to surrender their firearms and other explosives,\nThe amendment to the Defence\nof Canada Regulations, assented\nto June 10, requires all aliens of\nany person of German or Italian\nracial origin who have become naturalized British subjects since the\nfirst day of September, 1929, to\ndeliver to a Justice of the peace\nnil firearms, ammunition, dynamite, gun powder or other-danger-\nous explosives not later than Juna\n20.\nFailure to comply with this regulation renders persons affected\nby the order-in-council liable to\nprceecution and to a fine not exceeding $500 or to imprisonment\nfor three months.\n10 Killed, 3 Die\nof Shock in Raid\nLONDON, June 19 (CP.-Cable)\u2014\nTen persons were killed and three\ndied of shock ln large scale air\nraids on the East coast during the\nnight.\nKilled ln a Cambridgeshire town\nwere Thomas' Beresford, his wife\nand daughter aged two; Gladys\nClarke, 11; Heather Dear, five\nmontha; William Langley and his\nson Sam; and Mollie Palmer, eight\nand her brother, Lennie, six.\nIn a Thames Estuary town Frederick Jolley died in hospital; Mrs.\nJane Edith Wallamn died of shock.\nEdward Milner of Kent and Harry\nWhitehead of Yorkshire died of\nshock.\nBENNETT OF B_NN_TT\nAND WHITE DIES COAST\nVANCOUVER, June 19 (CP). \u2014\nJoseph G. Bennett, President of\nBennett & White Construction Company in Vancouver, died here last\nnight. He came here with his family\nfrom Calgary about a year ago.\nU. S. Warns Dictators\nWill Not Countenance)\nInterference in West\nROME, .Tune 19 (AP).\u2014A sourca\nusually reliable laid today that tha\nUnited States Government has\nwarned Italy that lt would not\ncountenance any German or Italian\ninterference with French or British\npossessions in the Western Hemls\u00ab\nphere.\nThe Informant said ha understood\nthat an American note to the Italian\nGovernment quoted passages from\nPresident Monroe's 1823 message\nwhich proclaimed the Monroe Doctrine, particularly the part opposing\nany extension of the political systems of foreign powers to tha\nAmerican Hemisphere.\nIt was said that a statement ot\nthe United States position was delivered by Ambassador William\nPhillips. to the Italian authorities\nyesterday.\nFrench possessions In the Wetterg\nHemisphere \u2014 the territories molt\nimmediately concerned in view of\nthe French request for an armitUca\n\u2014are French Guiana, Martinique\nand Gaudeloupe in the West Indies\nand St. Pierre and Miquelon off\nNewfoundland.\nBritain, France and exiled Netherlands Government, the nations having possessions in this Hemisphere,\nsimilarly were notified.\nLet Us Chrome Plate Your\nPlumbing Fixtures\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLsurltx Bldg.    704 Nation Ave.\nPrinting\nFrom the\nQround Up\nTKere Is more to printing tfiani\njyst setting type. Quality materials \u2014 ink and paper stock\n-style of type and arrangement\ndetermine the attractiveness\nof the finished job. We know-\nprinting from the ground up.\nTake advantage of the facilities offered by our modern\nprinting plant, large paper,\nand ink stocks.\nPHONE 143\nMsoxx Satly Nnua\nCommercial Printing Department\n266 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\n\u2014___________\n PAGE TIN \u25a0\nmmtstttttmteMotmmosimOiSstommtsttm'^^\nI\nWHOSE LOVE WILL BE FOREVER IN HER HEART,\n-NEUON DAILY NIWI. NILWN. B, C_-THUMOAY MORNINO. JUNI \u00bb W\u00bb '\"\u2022'\u2022[\nCARROLL \u2022 AHERNE- HAYWARD\nnw son, rm. son!\nhom tm iisr stttiNO novu ir howaio sumo\n\u2022M UIA1NI OAT \u2022 NINIT HUH \u25a0\nEXTRA \u2014 DISNEY CARTOON, PARAMOUNT NEWS |\nTODAY TIL SATURDAY\nComplete ihowi 2, 7, 9:01\nSTENOGRAPHERS\nEconomize for your office by\nbuying your supplies  In small\nquantitlei trom ui ii you need\nthem.\nA Complete Una of Office\nSuppliei\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE II NELSON). B. C.\nMany Attend the\nFuneral Services\nof Harold Brown\nRossland Oulchecks and Outpasses\nNelson lor 16-7 Lacrosse Victory\nThere is still no substitute for\nQuality.\nPhone JONELLA 1042\nOnly Filter Cleaning\nIn the Kootenays\nBeach Lott at Creicent Bay\nand Balfour on very eaiy\ntermi.\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCo., Ltd.\nRED INDIAN AVIATION\nMOTOR OIL\n\"Armour Plated\"\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nKM Baker St  SERVICE  Phone 122\nFURNACES\nInitalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655        110 Kootenay\nJ. A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE MS. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nAuction Sale\n302 2nd St., Fairview\nSaturday, June 22nd, 2 p.m.\nActing under instructions from\nMr. John Thomson, I will offer\nthe following: Garden Tools,\nChild's Go-Cart, small Queen\nHeater, Kitchen Table and\nChairs, Child Table, and Chairs,\nGlencoe White Enamel Range,\nKitchen Utensils and Dishes,\nGeneral Electric 8-tube Console\nRadio, long and short waves. 3\nbands, Rockers, Library Table,\nsmall three-way table, Smokers\nCabinet, Table and Floor Lamps,\nRugs, Chesterfield, Cushions,\nChest, Beds, Mattresses and\nSprings, Dolls House, small Cottage Piano, etc., etc.\nGoods on view morning of sale.\nTerms: Cash. G. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer\nLabor Supports\nAustralia Gov't.\nSYDNEY, Australia, June 19 (CP\nCable).\u2014The plight of France hai\nresulted In an increased rush to enlist in Australia's overseas forces\nand the greatest prospect of national\nunity since the outbreak of war.\nThe latter development is a consequence of the Federal Labor conference which, facing realities, withdrew its previous opposition to Australian forces going overseas. The\nparty supported pledging the whole\nof Australia's resources to Britain\nand her Allies, accepted compulsory\nservice for home defence and endorsed full participation in the Empire air scheme.\nQuebec Assembly ,\nRejects Move to\nBeat Mobilization\nQUEBEC, June 19 (CP). \u2014 A\nmoUon opposing the Federal Government's projected general mobilization for the defence of Canada and favoring \"a free and moderate participation In the war\"\nwas rejected today by vote nf\n56-12 in Uie 86-eat Quebec Legislative Assembly.\nTENDER WANTED\nTo load 1000 tons Zinc Concentrates now alongside Durango Mill.\nPower shovel preferred.\nL S. Davidson\u2014Hume Hotel\nBOYS', MISSES' AND\nCHILDREN'S\nSummer Footwear\nGodfreys' Limited\nWHAT HAVE YOU ?\nWe have a Cash Buyer for a\nFive-Room Bungalow, close in\nRELIANCE AGENCIES LTD.\nPhone 530 662 Baker SL\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nWe have wedding or shower\ngifts for your\nchoice for the\nJune Brides\nPyrex Ware \u2014 Crockery\nWare \u2014 Silverware \u2014\nCarving Sets \u2014 Kitchen\nUtensils \u2014 Bread Tins\nEtc.\n\u2014  Toasters \u2014 Coffee\nMakers\u2014 Electric Irons\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nThe Late Harold Brown\nWith Kinsmen Club and the Sons\nof England Lodge attending ln a\nbody, a large number of Nelson\ncitizenry paid laat honors to Harold Brown, 30, ln funeral lervices\nfrom St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral\nWednesday afternoon. Mr. Brown,\nwell-known Nelson pianist, died at\nTranquille Saturday morning after\ntaking HI suddenly three days previously during a trip to Revelstoke.\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nconducted the services in the church\nand at the graveside in the family\nplot in the City Cemetery. The large\ncongregation sang \"All Through the\nWight\" and \"Abide With Me\". Pallbearen were Jack Brown, William\nBrown, Jr., Joseph Sutcliffe, A. H.\nWhitehead, A. Cuthbert and Benny\nSutherland.\nLeafs Unable Carry\nPlays Through;\nClean Game\nROSSLAND, B. C, June lJ-HoH-\nland fani were treated to one ot\nUie flneit gamei witnessed on the\nhome floor Wedneiday night as\nRoisland Redmen trounced Nelion\nMaple Leaf! 16-7 In a West Kootenay Boxla League game.        -\nParticularly noticeable during the\nwhole game wai the clean pleylM\nof both ildei. Apart from a fight\nbetween Joe Laface and Fete Bonneville ln the lait period, there wai\nno exhlbiUon ot temper by either\nteam. Tbe Laface-Bonneville argument itarted on the floor when both\nwere penaUied. They itarted throwing their flit! around in the penalty\nbox and were given game penal-\nties. They mixed lt up again on\nUie other tide of Uie rink near the\ndrealng room. Bob Scott tried to\ncharge into Uie fray but wu he:d\nback by Uie other Redmen, and\n\"Curly\" WheaUey finally took things\nln hand, huatllng Bonneville into\nthe Leaf dreiiing room.\nThe Redmen hid thingi weU in\nhand at Uie outlet and fought the\nLeafs' playi up to Sapronoff'! goal\nwith ateady man-to-man defence\nand clever checking, making it prac\nticaUy impossible tor toe Leaf! to\nbreak through. The visitor! put up\na determined fight but failed to\nclick on teamwork and their defence\nwas erratic, before toe passing playi\nof the Redmen.\nKen McGuire UteraUy icored\nhimself into toe Leafs' citadel in\nthe third period, when he waa tripped by Lapointe and landed behind\nGibbona in the net He lost the ball\nin toe tanlge, and misled the opportunity tor a freak goal\nBOX SCORE\nNELSON G A PtPe\nGibboni, g  -    0\nTotvraend,' d \t\nKuhn, d  -\t\nLapointe, d\t\nStinaker, d \t\nWalmsley, r - ~\nMUler, r     \t\nBonneville, c \t\nBishop, c -\nPaterson, w \t\nMorrow, w  _\nPrice, w  -\t\nDingwall, w \t\nNelson Students\n(leaning Up Work;\nFinish Wednesday\nFinal exams In moit Nelion\nschools have been completed md\nthe students have either swung\nback into regular work channels\nor are cleaning up odds snd endi\nof the l\u00bb3e-40 term.\nAt Uie High School, Grade X and\nmost Grade XI students will be\nthrough for toe term on Friday.\nSenior and Junior Matriculation\nstudents, however, and some Grade\nXI students who take Junior Matriculation subjects, will continue\nto write Government exams unUl\nthe \"bitter end\", on Wednesday, the\nofficial closing date for the term.\nAt the Junior High School, exams\nwere completed Tuesday, and the\nstudents went back to regular work\nand to cleaning up. Wednesday was\ndevoted to campaign speeches for\nthe new students Council officer!,\nand elections will be held today.\nThe election machinery is identical\nwith that used in municipal or national elections. There will be three\npolling booths, one each for Grade\nTO, VIU and IX classes, with the\nreturning officer, his deputy, and\nall the other officials in charge,\nWhen the polls are closed the officers will retire to count toe votes.\nNominations for officers for the\nHouse Councils are to be in by this\nafternoon and elections will be held\nat House meetings Friday after,\nnoon.\nAs part of a special privilege extended them each year, toe Students Council and House Council\nofficers attended a picture show\nWednesday afternoon, using funds\nfrom their respective councils.\nPREPARE FOR OPEN HOUSE\nBeside their regular and cleanup\nwork the students are preparing\nfor their \"open house\" Monday\nwhen their work of the term will\nbe displayed to the public; and for\ntheir graduation exercises Wednesday, which will begin about 9:15\nam. with Uie graduating clasa picture.\nAt the Hume School, tests were\ncompleted Monday and regular\nwork was reverted to. A few pupils\nwho went behind in their tests are\nbeing coached, and other \"odds snd\nends\" are being attended to. There\nwill be no general closing ceremonies in the auditorium, but each\nclass will have its individual pro\ngram.\nNo final tests have been written\nat the Central School, the testa\ngiven throughout Uie year counUng\nas the final result. No ranking list\nwiU be given, and no passing list\nwill be published. The pupils are\ndoing regular and cleanup work,\nand are arranging an auditorium\ngrogram for Tuesday afternoon,\nelides this, each room will have\nits individual program some time\nduring the week.\nFRUITVALE BOY HONORED\nON HIS FIFTH BIRTHDAY\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\u2014Complimenting her small son Frank, on his\nfifth birthday, Mrs. F. Varseveld\n-Ktt hcsless to a number of small\nguests at a birthday party. Games\nwere enjoyed followed by a dainty\ntea, the serving table being centred by a lovely cake, decorated\nin pink and white, and topped with\nfive pink candles. Candies were\nserved during the afternoon. The\nhostess vet assisted in serving by\nMrs. G. Varseveld, Mrs. Lois De-\nbnunyer, and Mrs. A. Endersby.\nThe guesls were Mable Wagner,\nMartin W-gner, Annette Varseveld,\nRosie Matson, Richard Matson,\nEileen Endersby, Stanley Endersby, Jean DeBruyn, Alice Popoff,\nDonald and Bernard Endersby,\nBobby DeBruyn, Polly Popotf. Dor-\neen DeBruyn, Allen Endersby,\nMike Popofl, Mrs. A. Endersby,\nMrs. Lois DeBruyn, Mrs. C Wagner, Mrs. G. Varseveld and son\nGeorge of Trail.\nTotals     1 3 10 24\nROSSLAND\nSapronoff, g _   0 0 0  0\nCarkner, d    8 2 5   0\nBob Scott, d  0 2 2   2\nBailey, d  -  1 0 1   6\nCussicic, d  \u2014 00 0   0\nSsundry, r   0 5 5   }\nRalph Scott, r  2 1 3   ?\nLaface, c  -  2 0 2 12\nAnderson, c \u2014 \u2014 1 0 1   0\nThatcher, w  0 0 9   2\nSittoti, w  1 0 1   0\nJorgenson, w  10 10\nMcGuire, w  5 0 5   2\nTotals -\u25a0\u25a0\u2022- 1\u00ab W 26 26\nReferee\u2014Max Deirisay. Judge of\nplay-^John GlUnskl. Scorekeeper\u2014\nLow Crowe. Timekeeper\u2014George\nNixon. Goal judges-Harold Long\nand Percy Harrli.\t\nMiss Edwards Weds\nC. Baglo, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.-An lmprei-\nsive and lovely wedding took place\nSaturday evening to toe United\nChurch when Elfrida, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Edwards\nof Blarchmont wai united in holy\nmatrimony to Carl Ingwall, eldest\nson ot toe late I. Baglo and Mrs.\nBaglo of Brandon, Man.\nEntering the church on the arm\nof her father, the bride looked\ncharming in a floor-length gown\nof white sbeer with fitted waist\nand tucked sheer bolero. Her floor-\nlength veil was caught coronet style\nwith orsnge blossoms. White gloves\nand shoes completed her attire and\nshe carried a bouquet of sweetheart roses snd tern. Miss Gladys\nBaglo of Trail, sister of the groom,\nwas bridesmaid uid choie a floor-\nlength gown of torquoise blue taffeta with sheered waist and puffed\nsleeves, and a matching hat. Her\nbouquet was of pink and white\ncsrnations and fern. Little Irene\nEdwards, youngest sister of too\nbride, made a charming flower girl\ndressed in pink and blue taffeta\nsnd carrytag snapdragons and colorful iris. Godfrey Edwards, brother of the bride, was best man. Rev.\nGalbraith officiated, while Mrs. J.\nWalker played the wedding march.\nDuring the signing of toe register,\nMrs. J. Glanville 6ang, \"Because.\"\nFollowing the ceremony, a reception was held ln toe I.O.O.F. hall\nwith some 200 friends and relaUves\npresent. The hall wai decorated ln\npink, blue and white and the table\ncentred with a three-tier wedding\ncake. A seven-p*iece orchestra supplied the music tor the dancing.\nThe happy couple will honeymoon\nat Banff and points before returning to Trail to reside where both\nare well-known.\nCrown Point Held to\nLone Run and Ousted\n4-1, Trail Softball\nTRAIL, B.C., June 16 - While.\nCrown Point chalked up the firit\nrun in the second frame of a\nMen's Softball League game at\nVictoria Park Wednesday eve\nning, they were held to it when\nWsrfield Acei defeated them 4-1.\nMartin circled the bases in the\nfirat frame for what would have\nbeen another nin for Crown Point\nhad he touched first base. Both\nteams played heads-up ball, neitiv\ner making a single error.\nScore by innings:\nCrown Point ....   010 000 000   18 0\nAces     001 102 OOx   4 6 0\nFew More Needed\nfor Trail Platoon\nTRAIL, B. C, June It\u2014Six or\nseven more men are needed to\nbring the Veteran's Home Defence\nup to itrength.\nThe Medical Board lat In Trail\nWedneiday, and will again be at\nNelion Thursday.\n89-Degree Heat Here\nA blazing sun Wedneiday, relieved by frequent cloudi, sent the\nmercury in Nelson soaring to within\none degree of the season's record\nof M, set a couple of weeks igo,\nand equalled Tuesday. The day's\nminimum up to 5 p.m. wai 57\ndegrees.\n6 ORGANIZATIONS\nOF WOMEN TO AID\nDISASTER RELIEF\nBesides the Nelion Rotary and\nKinsmen Clubi, toe Gyro Gub and\nlix   women'!   organizations   have\nSledged their support to Uie Disas-\n\u2022r Relief Committee of toe Nelson Branch ot the Canadian Red\nCross Society.\nThe women's organizations are the\nKokanee Chapter, L O. D. E.; Soroptimist Club, Pythian Sisters, Nomads\nof Avrudika, Order of toe Eutern\nStar and the Women's Institute.\n.\nChinese Tailor\nShop at Trail\nGutted by Fire\nTRAIL, B. C, June 16 \u2014 Breaking\nout ln a small room at toe rear whUe\nC. Joe, Chinese proprietor was\nworking ln toe front, fire gutted\nthe interior of a tailor shop at 857\nFarwell Street Wedneiday afternoon despite quick acUon on the\npart of toe Fire Department, which\nhad the blaze under control 18 min\nutes after the alarm was turned in.\nFiremen laid two lines from a\nhydrant and poured water into front\nand back of toe premises.\nDouglas Groutage rushed to the\nicene with a portable fire extinguisher from toe Douglu Hotel,\nacross toe lane, and wu Directing\nchemicals Into toe rear rbom when\nthe firemen arrived.\nThe building adjoined a large\nframe and stucco block occupied by\ntwo businesses on toe ground floor\nsnd rooms up stairs. The tire wai\nconfjned to toe tailor ihop, only a\nlitUe water damage being done to\ntwo   rooms above.\nC. Joe stated he wu working\nat his pressing counter In toe front\npart of ths shop when he noticed\nthe fire In the rear. He ran out\nand phoned in toe alarm from an\nadjoining store.\n\"When I came out trom phoning,\"\nhe said, \"I thought I would be able\nto take out some ot toe clothes, but\nthe whole Interior of my shop was\nablaze and I couldn't get In. \"It was\njust about a minute\" he said. Mr.\nJoe estimated the loss of contents\nto be about $700. The building is\nowned by Mrs. Marie DIPuquale\nand la covered by lniurance.\n25 Kids Throng\nRossland's \"Box\"\nlor Bantam Try\nBy KAY LOWDON\nROSSLAND; B. C, June 16-1\nwu sorry I missed the leap frog\nbusiness, which wu later described\nto me, because the light of a youngster who had juit finlihed leaping\nover 24 of hli companion!, of all\nlizes, would probably have reminded\nme of a neglected salad, but I didn't\nmiu toe light of 29 kids thronging\naround Al Sifton, Johnnie Pollock\nand Bruce Vermiere, in toe Rossland boxla rink, Tuesday night, for\ntheir tint try-out for a place on toe\nRossland bantam lacrosse team.\nThe idea of a bantam lacroase\nteam wu instituted by Johnnie\nPollock, goalie tor toe Rosiland\nJunior Terrlen, who passed the\nword around to toe youngiten to\n\"be there\" Tueiday, persuaded Slt-\nton, a member of the senior team,\nto coach, and roped Bruce Vermiere,\ntrainer for toe Redmen, Into giving\nhis support.\nNOT GETTING.\n8ITTON DOWN\nSltton, allowing himself a com\nplete survey of acUve bodies, dirty\nfaces, and exuberant spirits, presented by the youngsters who turned\nup with their own, borrowed or no\nlacrosse sticks, remarked \"Gosh! Am\nI going to have my hands full!\" but\nthe prospect didn t look u though\nit wu getting him down any.\nIf noise and enthusiasm mean any'\nthing, particularly noise, the env\nbryo bantami are going to live up\nto the name of Redmen. Four teams\nwere picked at random for tryouts,\nand when I left, two teams were\nsteaming up and down the floor,\nwith toe other two teams lined up\nIn the players boxes, looking like\nhorses prancing at the line a iecond\nbefore the starter gives the signal.\nPollock is planning to arrange\ngames with Marcus Smith's bantams at Trail, and some talk ot\nforming a West Kootenay League\nis In the air, but it will take some\nUme to get the kids sorted out and\nsetUed down.\nYoungsters who turned up Tuesday included Jerry Monoghan, Tom\nHam, Bill Finlay, Ray Manning,\nBruce Ham, Buddy Dupperon, Raymond Dominicl, Jack French, Pat\nMartin, Jack Zelner, Arthur Ridgers, Arthur Martin, Steve Yurislcn,\nJohn Dougan, Jack Lloyd, Don La-\nFace, Willie Scott, Archie Scott, Eddie Conroy, Lundy Hamilton, Richard Gibbard, Bob Richardson, Frank\nSpring. Charlie oDugan, George\nHoloboff and David Smith.\nBEAUTY CADDY\nby HARRIET HUBBARD AYER\nIntroducing the new\nBeautifying Make-up\nFilm with Luxuria, Face\nPowder, Skin Tonic\nand Pink Dover Per-\nfume. Avery tSMen '\n__~_.tv_t.il. a>i\u00abiu\nspecial value.\nT\nWe carry a complete stock and are exclusive agents for\nHarriet Hubbard Ayer\nNational Unity\nParty Planned to\nTake Canada, 1940\nMONTREAL, June 19 (CP)\u2014The\nNational Unity Party, Fascist organization smashed by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, had planned to take over Canada \"sometime\nln 1940,\" according to evidence today at the preliminary hearing of\ncharges agalnit Adrlen Arcand.\nFuehrer, and 10 alleged party members.\nGerald Fauteux, Crown Prosecutor told Judge Rodolphe DeSerres\nthe plan went Into minute details\nai to how the financial administration of the Dominion would be\nhandled when the party took over\n\"lometime ln 1640.'' It carried the\ndate, he added, of Feb. 15, 1940.\nLater, Judge DeSerres adjourn*\nthe hearing unUl June 26. The judge\niaid he wished to further study the\nmass of evidence submitted by the\nCrown to establish where there was\na prima facie case against live of\nths accused.\nRossland\nSocial \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nROSSLAND, B. C, June 19-The\nregular meeting of toe Dorcu Circle\nwu held at the home of Mrs. James\nCant, Preiident, Friday evening.\nAfter discussing the general busi-\nness member! were entertained by\ntwo reading! given by Mn. Howard\nFerguion. DeUcioui refreshments\nwere served by the hostess, assistoi\nby Mm. George Craig and Mrs.\nWilliam Blackwell. Other members\npresent were Mrs. Ida Corbett, Mrs\nJohn Roscorla, Mri. Edward Seccombe, Mn. WiUlam Arrowsmith,\nMn. William Blackwell and Mn.\nHoward Hayden. Mn. S. Reid and\nMn. J. Armstrong attended u\nvisiton.\nMr. and Mn. W. S. Clark left\nTuesday for Vancouver after weeki\nviiit ln toe city u gueit of Mn.\nClark'i brother-in-law and liiter,\nMr. and Mrs. R G. Lees.\nMn. Warren Crowe of Waneta Is\na patient at toe Mater Misericordiae\nHospital.\nPeter Clark returned to Rossland\nfrom Moicow, Idaho, where he hu\nbeen itudylng at the Univenity of\nMoscow. He wu accompanied by\nEdmund Cox and Jack Tongue, who\nmotored down to meet him.\nMr. and Mn. Irvln Gurevlteh and\ndaughter Sharon have been ipending a fortnight, holiday at Calgary\nand Edmonton. Mr. Gurevlteh returned Tueaday, while Mn. Gurevlteh and daughter are continuing\ntheir viiit at Edmonton.\nMr. and Mn. Fred Neveroskl have\nas their gueit Mr. Neveroskl'i\nmother, trom Moore Jaw.\nMr. and Mn. F. St John Madeley\nhave gone to Calgary, where Mr.\nMadeley hu joined toe Canadian\nforce!. Mn. Madeley is expected\nback in Rossland in a few days.\nMr. and Hn. Ray Underwood are\nspending a week's holiday at Christina Lake.\nThe Lyceum Club held a welner\nrout at toe Trail ski cabin Monday\nevening.\nW. A. Turner is 111 at the Mater\nMisericordiae Hospital.\nMlu Mary Rogen, who hu been\nviiiting her home here for the put\ntwo weeki, leavei Saturday for Spokane td visit relatives for a few\ndayi before returning to Vancouver to resume her training at toe\nVancouver General Hospital.\nMr. and Mn. Jack Reid, accompanied by Mrs William Reid, motored to Kimberley, having been\ncalled there by toe illness of Mrs.\nJack Reld's father. While at Kimberley Mn. William Reid will be\nthe gueit of Mr. and Mn. George\nWilson, formerly of Rossland.\nSwim Suits\n\u2022 jANTZEN\nt SKINTITE\nt CATALINA\nAll the new styles In the\nnew materials, In all\ncolors.\nf 1.9S, ?2.95 to ?4.95\nEMORY'S LTD.\nSUMMER HOMI SITES\n1V\u00ab acres level nicely wooded loti,\n$250.00.\nA fine wooded landy beach lot\n(500.00.\nH. E. DILL\nAUTO, FIRE, ACCIDENT\nINSURANCE\nThe PERCOLAT OI\nDoughnuts\nARE GOOD Al\nANY MEAL\nLarge Attendance\nMrs. M. J. Benzies'\nFuneral at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, June 19 \u2014 Many\nresidents and pioneen of West Kootenay point!, where Mri. Benzies\nhad resided over a period of 46\nyean, attended the funeral Tuesdiy ot Mn. Marie Jane Benzies,\nheld from Clark'! Funeral Chapel.\nJohn L. Wood of toe Pentecoital\nMission officiated at toe chapel and\nthe graveside. Interment wai in the\nKnighta of Pythiu Columbia River\nView Cemetery.\nThere wu a profusion ot floral\ntribute!.\nPallbearers were E. Mcintosh, E.\nLaarz, I. Tyson, L. Cody, H. D.\nThaln and M. B. McLaren.\nMcDougall Miss\nWeds Fernie Man\nKIMBERLEY, B. C- A pretty\nhome wedding took place on Saturday afternoon at the home of Mr.\nsnd Mrs. Z. N. Spinks of McDougall Townsite when their third\ndaughter, Gladys Elizabeth was\nunited ln marriage to Albert,\nyoungest ion of Mr. and Mn. Jack\nLittler of Fernle. The marriage\ntook place under a beautiful white\nsrch decorated with cedar boughs,\nrosettes, white bells and centred\nwith a large horseshoe. The bride\nwho was given in marriage by her\nfather looked lovely in a floor-\nlength gown ot white chiffon with\na plain bolero. Her shoulder veil\nwas caught coronet style by a\nwreath of orsnge blossoms. A tiny\ngold pendant broke the simplicity\nof her attire. To complete her attire she wore white gloves and slippers and carried a bouquet of\nsweetheart roses and fern. Mrs.\nJack Eckenley, lister of toe bride,\nwas her only attendant snd chose\na floor-length gown of pale blue\nsatin, trimmed with sequins, snd\nwore stiver slippers. Small pink\nflowen adorned her hair and she\ncarried a bouquet of pink and\nwhite csrnatlom. Miss Ida Spinks,\nyoungest sister of the bride, played\nthe wedding march. Rev. Galbraith\nofficiated. The groom wu supported by his brother, Jim Littler\nof Natal. Following toe ceremony a\nreception wai held for immediate\nfriends and relatives. The room\nand tsbles was tastefully decorated\nin pink and white, the table being\ncentred with a four-tier wedding\ncake. The happy couple left for a\nhcnejircon at coast points and on\ntheir return will reside in Natal.\nFor travelling tiie bride changed\nto a navy tailored suit with white\naccessories.\nOut-of-town guests (or the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Littler,\nMiss Ada Littler, Harry Littler, of\nNatal, Mr. and Mn. Tom Littler\nand daughter Brenda of Michel,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Jack LitUer of\nFernle.\nSLOCAN HOSPITAL AID\nGIVES GIFT TO MEMBER\nNEW DENVER, B. C. - At the\nSlocan Community Hospital June\nmeeting, Mn. Greer, Preiident presided. Mrs. Greer on behalf of the\nmemben presented a gift to Mn.\nDewir, who Is leaving thii month\nfor Vancouver.\nTbe hostess Mrs. G. Burkett. assisted by Mri. A. Trickett, ierved\nrefreshment*\nNEWS OFTHE DAY\nmtsttmstootesossteotssmiem\nEaglei Military Whist and Dance\ntonignt, 25 centi.\nHarold A. Fouldi \u2014 Electrician\nContracting, Repain. Phone 644.\nAnnual Qenaral Meeting Nelion\nSenior Hockey Club, City, HaU, on\nTonight, June 20 at 8 o'clock.\n. Ask your Dealer for McDonald\nNu-pack Strawberry Jam. Patronize\nHome Induitry.\nTo AU Dads!\u2014Your youngiter'i\nbig desire Is a bike. Buy a C. C. M.\nfor him and make him happy. \u2014\nHippenon Hardware Company.\nSomething different every Ume\nst St Paul'i Boyi' Choir Concerts.\n72 boys will sing tomorrow night,\n8 p.m., in SL Paul's Church\nAuditorium.\nMay 24th Committee wishes to\nthank all donors of cuh or goodi,\nchildren in ceremonies, May Queen\ncandidates, and all others who\nhelped make toil year'i celebration\nio enjoyable.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nOn and after July 2nd, Lodge\nwill meet on Tuesday nights instead of Thunday nights in the\nEagle HaU.\nAPPLICATIONS WANTED\nApplications will be received up\nuntil 8 o'clock Tuesday, June 25th,\nfor the position of Swimming Instructor or Instructress at Lakeside\nPark during July and August\nApplicant! should state qualifications and experience and be prepared to organize Swimming Classes\nsnd playground activities.\nW> E. Wuson, City Clerk.\nHousehold Appliances and\nSilex Coffee Makers\nStandard Electric\n433 Joiephlne St Phom S38\nCHOCOLATE DAIRY DRINK\nAT YOUR PALM DEALERS\n1937 Dodge\nDe Luxe Sedan\nMany Extrai\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43      Limited      HI Josephine\nHOOD'S\nHot Dog Buns\nFRESH DAILY\nYour Home Bakery\n\u00abS0KSS&SSe&&9M0a0SMXS0S0)S\nNEW COIFFURES\nA STYLE TO SUIT YOU\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBEAUTY SALON\nPhone 327        -Johnstone Blk\n&O!SS\u00abOOiSSSS&SSSS&S8\u00bb#&0\u00bbl\n\"Pick of the Market\nGuaranteed Used Cars\nSowerby-Cuthbert Lt.\nOpp. Poit Office arid Hume Hot)\n2 USED PORTABL\nCOMPRESSORS\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nJACK ANNABLE\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMed Arte Bil\nPHONE 25\nPrescription\nCompounded\nAccurately\nTry\nQrenfell's Cafe\nFamous Fresh Strawberry F\n$j$$$5$O5$09S.\nCUT FLOWERS. WEDDIN\nAND FUNERAL DESIGN!\nPhone   KITCHENE\nxootootsHittstieettMSttttttim\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs i\nalterations.\nVICGRA\nMASTER PLUMBER\npter Mr-\npairs and I\nVES\nKootenay No-Odo\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128    ,\nFOR PROMPT SERVICE\nl^S FORD\nDE LUXE SEDAN\nRadio, heater, tog lights and mm\nextras. Bargain.\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker 8L     Limited     Phone 11\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 81    Hippenon Blk.    Ph. II\nCIVIC\nTONICHT and FRIDAY\nComplete shows 7:00-8:12\n\"THE CISCO KID AND\nTHE LADY\"\nwith\nCESAR   ROMERO\nMARJORIE WEAVCR\nSecond Ace Hit\n\"THE HURRICANE\"\nwith\nJon Hall \u2014 Dorothy Lamour\nW, W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nLumber Lath Shingles\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL '\nTelephone 176 Foot of St.mlcy St.\n'\n,     -       J*, m**      \u25a0_ ......      .1  ... .._._ \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0__,\n_m\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_06_20","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0415233","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1940-06-20 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1940-06-20 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\/1.0415233"}