{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-06-29","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1943-07-08","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0417081\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" lear Munda Base\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, July 8\n(Thursday) (AP) \u2014American troops have landed at two points\nnear the Japanese air base ate\"\t\n4aval Forct Bombardi Klika.  ^\nCruiser Sunk.\u2014Pagt 3.\nins Sacrificing Comumer Goods for\nrVeapom.\u2014Page ). <x   -\neel Works Smashed In Bombing\n: Dutueldorf. Page 3.\nNUMBIKffl\n30,000 HUNS DIE ON RUSS FRON\nMunda on New Georgia Island,\nthe High Command said today.\nTht noon communique In an elaboration of tht naval battle ln the\nKult Gulf above Ntw Georgia also\nannounced that nine Japanese destroyers and cruisers were sunk\nthere.\nThe landlngi near Mundi, which\nIs the immediate objective of the\nCentral Solomons offensive, were\nit Rice Anchorage, four miles Northeast of Boiroko, and at Zanzna, six\nmilu Eut of Munda.\nThla tccount was given to the new\nlanding operations:\n\"Our forcei landed at Rice Anchorage four miles Northeast of\nBalroko Harbor before dawn on\nthe fifth. Operations were preceded by the bombardment of the en-\nemy bese In the Kula Gulf by our\nsurface unite (it was in this bombardment that the U. S. destroyer\nStrong waa lost).\n\"During the ume night, elements\nof our ground forces from Rendova\nSecured a beachhead at Zanana six\nmiles East of the Munda airdrome.\nPatrols made contact along the Ba-\nrike River.\"\nAt the other end of the 700-mlle\nbtttlt ire whert Auitrtllin tnd\nAmtrietn troopi hold poiitioni\nnttr Salamaua, Ntw Guinea, Allltd plinu dropptd mora thin 100\ntoni of bombi on Jiptneu positions netr Mubo.\nTht communiqut announcement thtt tht Jipineu definitely\nloit nlnt ships In tht Kult Qulf\nbittle, which occurred the night\nof July 8 thd In tht predrawn of\nJuly 8, Increued the extent of the\nAllied triumph.\nYeiterday'i communique had reported iix enemy ships probably\nwere iunk md four damaged as\nigalnst thl lou of one cruiser, since\ndisclosed to be the U.S.S. Helent.\nTilt progress of the Americin offensive in the Solomoni wu admitted Wednudiy by the Tokyo\nladio in a broadcast to Italy. \"Their\nefforti ire limply desperate,\" the\nbroidcast nld. \"Let ns admit with\ncomplete frankness the surprising\nstubbornness of the enemy.\"\nAU88IE8 TAKE HILL\nIn addition to reporting the terlal\nbombardment it Mubo which li 12\nmllei South of Salamaua, the communiqut also announced tht capture by Auitrallans of an Importaht\nhill there.\nThe Japaneu continued to und\nmore plmu tgtinit Rendova Island, uiud In tht central Solomons Junt SO within artillery\nthelllng distance of Mundt. In tht\nlltut rtld, they loit 12 bomben\ntnd flghteri, the communique\nuld.\nJapaneu losses ln thli lector\nilone now approxlmite 180.\nThe Munda ilr base, on which\nthe Allies now have Increased their\npreuure with the new landings, was\nfirst developed by the Japanese last\nDecember but they have been unable to make much out of It because of repeated poundings It has\nbeen given frpm the tlr.\nIn Allied hands, it would provide\nair airdrome within fighter plane\nrange of the big Japanese air and\nshipping fortress of Rabaul, New\nBritain.\nThree hundred miles North of\nAustralia ln the Tanimbar Islands,\ntwo-engined Allied raiders bombed\n\u2022nd itrafed the enemy airdrome on\nthe island of Selaru, attacked nearby vlllagei occupied by the Japanese, itarted a fire In a fuel dump\nand silenced an anti-aircraft posi-\nItlon.\nIn in amplification of the raid\nef tntmy planet on Dirwln, reporttd In yeiterday'i commun.\nIque, It wu announced that 10\nbomberi and two fighters were\ndutroyed out of t force of 58\nraiden and three bomberi and a\nfighter were damaged. Seven de\nfending Spltflrei were lost but\nthru piloti were uved end three\nothers were obierved balling out\nTlie fighting and air action ln\ntht tret of Salamaua. Northeastern\nNew Guinea, was the most exten-\nilve reported ilnce the Allies landed it Nassau Bay on the coast below\nSalamaua June 30.\n\u25a0LAIT JAP POSITIONS\n\"In direct lupport of our ground\nforcea, itrong formation of attack\nplanu, medium ind heavy bomberi\nexecuted coordlnited bombing ind\nstrafing itttcki on enemy positions\non Observation Hill and ln Kitchen\nand Gulgap Creeks (In the Mubo\nvicinity),\" the communique said.\n\"One hundred and six tons of high\nexplosive and fragmentation bombs\nwere concentrated on tht target In\nless than 49 minutes. ResulU were\nreported to be excellent. Our\nground forces attacked and captured OburvVlon Hill and are consolidating\"\nAt Bobdubi. a village within five\nmiles of Salamaua, Allied attack\nplanes bombed and strafed enemy\npositions on \u2022 ridge.\nAbove the ground fighting scene\nIn the central Solomons, a heavy\nrtld on Japaneu air baui at Kahili wai reported. In in elaboration\nof the ittack. previously announced\nby thl Nivy Depirtment In Wast,.\nIngton, thi* communique said 43 tons\nof high explosives were dropped by\nhuvy bomberi, ciuslng ltrge fires\ndespite    Intense   intl-alrcraft   tire\n\t\nALLIED OFFENSIVE GAINS AGAINST JAPS IN PACIFIC\nNew offensive by the Alliei\nagainst the Japanese in the South\nPacific is believed to be preliminary to the big drive to oust the\nenemy from his possessions that\nwill come If the pruent attacks\nare successful. Dark arrows on\nmap above ahow the present offensives and the broken arrowi\nindicate possible later movei\ntgainst the large Jap bases tt\nRabaul, New Britain, and on Bougainville Island in the Northern\nSolomons. Allied forcu might\nthen move against the Japi' most\npowerful Pacific bastion, Truk Island, shown right.\nExpect (oal Sale\nRestrictions to Be\nAnnounced Soon\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP)-Rt-\nitrlctlom on thl ult of cotl aimed\nat tnaurlng equitable dlitributlon\n^tr^_Tn\u00bb\nmolt Immedlitely, It wu learned\n'  htn todty.\nThe rutrictloni wlll not be \"rt-\ntioning,\" it wu uid in authoritative quarters. Tiere was some belief that coal buyeri might be limited, however, to a percentage of\ntheir normal suppliu, so at to\nspreid the ivailable coal over ai\nwide a section of the population u\npouible.\nCoal Control authorities have\nbeen working for weeks on the details of the plan for restricting cOal\nsales, it wu said. Early in June in\nan address to the Canadian Retail\nCoal Dealers' Association in Toronto one Coal Controller predicted\nsome action would have to be taken.\n\"The fact there are going to be\nrestrictions Isn't very newsy,\" one\nofficial uid. 'The Coal Control\nauthorities have been saying all\nalong, ln public addresses, that\nsomething would have to be done.\"\nWhile there wu no official indication what wu to be done to spread\nout coal supplies, it Was recalled\nthat at Its June meeting, the Retail\nCoal Dealers' Auoclation adored\nthrown up by Japanese warships\nand shore batteries.\nTwo American planes are missing\nfrom the operation.\nFour large., fires which sent imoke\n4000 feet skyward were started ln a\nraid by four-engined bombers on\nBallale airdrome, on the Shortland\nIslands.\nIn the latest attempt of the Japanese to challenge control of the\nair over Rendova, an unspecified\nnumber of bombers with an escort of 56 Zeros was Intercepted\nand dispersed by Allied fighter\npatrols ln a daylight action.\nThree of the bombers and nine\nfighters were shot down agalnit\nthe loss of one Allied plane, the\ncommunique said.\nAbove the Kula Gulf on Kolom-\nbangara Island, M tons of heavy\nbombs were dropped on Vila by\ntorpedo planes and dive-bombers\nwith a fighter escort, itarting fires\nin the supply dump and bivouac\nareas. Medium bombers struck at\nlhe Japanese airdrome there. All\nAllied planes returned.\nThe communique announcement on\namplification of the Kula Gulf naval\nengagement said the \"enemy naval\nforce wu decisively defeated with\nthe loss of at leut nine warships.\"\n\"In the first phue of tht in-\ngigementa, four or five hostile\ndestroyen wire struck by smashing brotdildis thtt within five\nminutu deitroyed or ut afire the\nentire group,\" It uld,\n\"Three or pouibly .four enemy\nlight cruisers were then taken under fire All were either iunk or\nafire within 19 minutes. One wu\nbeached.\n\"Later during rucue of survivors\nfrom the light cruiser Helent our\ndestroyers Intercepted and unk\ntwo of thret enemy ships attempting\nto tscipt from the Gulf tnd damaged tht third.\"\nMustangs, Spits\nBatter\nNorthern France\nLONDON, July 7 (CP Ctblt)-\nR.C.A.F. Muitingi ind Spltflru\ntook pirt In offenilve patroli\nwith thl R.A.F. ovtr Northern I\nFrtnct todty, following lut]\nnight's ictlon by tht R.A.F.-Can\nGiraud Arrives\nin Washington\nlor Conferences\nWASHINGTON, July 7 (Af.) -\nGeneral   Henri   Honon   Giraud,\nWiten off tht French Cout\nNo Canadian tlrcrtft wu mining In todiy'l patrols, in R.CA.F.\ncommuniqut aald, but tht Air\nMiniitry innounctd Ion of two\nBritish plinu In iweepi over\nNorthern Frtnct md tht Low\nCountriu.\nTwo tnemy flghten mtde t\nbrief appearance ovtr tn Eut\nAngllin Coutal Dlitrict ttrly tonight, cauilng only ilight dimtgt\nwith mtchlne-gun fire, the Air\nMiniitry mnounced. No one wts\nInjured during the rtld ind one\nof the Nul pltnei wu thot down.\ni ruolutlon that the Government\nshould make It tn offense for my\nperson to buy more than Tfl. per\ncent of their hard coal at one time.\nThe resolution also urged that\ndealers be forbidden to sell more\nthan TO per cent of a cusrtomer's an-\nual supply until all other orderi ot\ntheir booka were filled.\nSenate Passes\nB.N.A. Act\nAmendment Move\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP) - The\nSenate, on a division of 39 to 8, today paued a resolution seeking\namendment to, the British North\nAmerica Act to allow postponement\nof redistribution of the House of\nCommons membership on the basts\nof Ihe 1841 census.\nThe vote ended a two-day debate\nIn the Upper House following pas-\nuge of the resolution In the Commons.\nFollowing adoption of the resolution the Senate adjourned to\nJuly 13.\nLabor Dispute Hits\nProcessing\nof U.S. Copper\nBINGHAM, Utah, July 7 (AP.) -\nProcessing of approximately one-\nthird of the United Statu copper\nproduction ceaud today when the\nUtah Copper Company's mills were\nclosed bectuu of i libor dlipute.\nD. D. Moffit, Compiny President,\nuld operations at the neartjy Arthur\nand Magna Mills had ceased becauie\ntransportation of ore from the huge\nBingham open pit mine to the plants\nended with the walkout of 128 railroad men, members of the Order\nof Railway Conductora Union\n(ATL),\nGreek Relief Fund\nTotalled $733,905\nMONTREAL, July 7 (CP,)-\nSubicrlptloni to thl Greek Wtr\nRelief Fund cimpilgn which ttr-\nmlntted Juni 2. totalltd $733,906\nor ilmost 60 pir cent tbovt tht\n$600,000 ebjtctlve It wu tnnounced todiy. Tht statement1 uld Ull\nflguru wirt tubjtct to iome\nchtnge whin tht final audit hid\nbttn oompleted.\nCommittee ftr Nitioni\ntl Liberation, trrlvtd by plint it\nBoiling Field, Army ilr but In\nWuhlngton, todiy.\nGiraud ctme here to confer with\nPresident Roosevelt ind the Brltlsh-\nAmerlcan leaders on the war against\nthe Axli.\nA 17-gun ulute as Glraud'i plane\ntouched the field marked the full\nmilitary honon accorded the French\nGeneraL He was welcomed by a reception committee headed by Admiral William D. Leahy, Chief of\nStaff to the President, and including high ranking officers of the\nUnited Statu armed forces as well\nas rrlemben of the French Army\nmd Navy.\nAccompanying Giraud wert the\nGenerala' three personal aides, Ma).\nAndrew Beaufre and Maj. Andre\nPoniatowskl of the French Army\nand LieuL Georges Vlret of the\nFrench Navy, all of whom escaped\nfrom France with Giraud in. an Allied submarine last Nov. 6, two daya\nbefore Allied trooopi landed ln\nFrench North Africa.\nGiraud also was accompanied by\nLt Col. Leon E. Dostert of the\nUnited States Army.\nChinese in Mourning\nat Coast on\nWar Anniversary\nVANCOUVER, July 7 (CP)-The\nseventh anniversary of the Japanese invasion of Ohint found local\nChinese In mourning md while business ln Chlnitown carried On u\nusual there were no celebrations or\nspecial events.\nTonight members of the Chinese\nBenevolent Association and delegates from kindred groupi held t\nconsultation regarding condltioni In\ntheir homelind and made further\nplani for the drive for fundi to alleviate dlitreu of vletlmi of Japaneu tggreislon.\n\"Wt do not conilder thli t mutable\ntime to mark the annivenary,\" Foon\nSeln, prominent Chlneu declared.\n\"When victory cornel we ahall celebrate. We hope to hold thtt celebntion soon.\"\nHUN OPPOSITION\nDWINDLES\nIN SICILY AREA\nAllies Report Five\n\u2022 Airfields\nNear Extinction\nBUSTS CONTINUE\nBy DANIEL DE LUCE\nAuoelittd Prtu Staff Wrlttr\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\n, NORTH AFRICA, July 7 (AP)\u2014\n. Qtrmin fighter opposition dwindled precipitately en Sicily yetterdty undtr thi violent diy tnd\nnight hammering by Allied plinu,\nIndicating thi tnemy hid loit mott\nof hit land-baied tircraft on thl\nIiland tnd wu bidly In need of\nreinforcementi.\nHeavj four-motored, medium and\nlight bombers all Joined ln the\nround-the-clock effort to sweep the\nenemy entirely from above the\nMediterranean Island flanking\nSouthern Italy\nTtl* main target wu the bomb-\npooked GerWni airport and Its four\nsubsidiary fields In Southern Sicily.\ni filly bombers attacked from Mid-\ndie F-ast bases, dumping more than\n;_J6,O0O pounds of bomba on runways and dispersal areas, setting\nJlrge flrei. From French Africa,\nbombers hit ammunition dumps, administration buildings, hangars md\nfive landing strips.\nR-AJ\". Wellington! bombed Gerblnl Mondiy night.\nExperti tt Htidqutrtera, poring\novir reconnaiuance photoi which\npictured tht trtmendoue deitructlon, uld the tuk of rubbing Ger.\nbind flvt tlr fieldi from thi mip\nwu nearing completion.\nFive Allied plmu were loit yuterdty; they ahot down three. The\nicore for the Northwut Afrlct Air\nForce alnce the fall of Pantelleria\nthus rose to 275 Axil craft deitroyed\nat an expenditure of 83 pltnei. A\nHeadquirteri Informant uld experience showed ..that more planes\nwere dutroyed tground; thtn tloft\nIn ittacki roch u the current ones\nin Sicily, meaning that the rate of\nattrition waa ilx or ieven to one\nin f*vor of the Allies.\nOther targets were scittered alr-\ndromu in Sicily, including the\nBlscarl a^d Milo fields, ind railway\ninstallations at the East Sicilian\nport of Catania. The Italian Radio\nsaid that Palermo, Trapani, Porto\nEmpedocle and Marsala also were\natUcked and thet 19 Allied planes\nwere destroyed.\n08TIA PORT CL08ED\nThe Algiers Radio u_ the twice-\nbombed port of Ostla, near Rome\nat the mouth of the Tiber, had betn\nclosed to the public ss a result ol\nthe raid Saturday night.\nHeadquarten wu cautious not\nto claim air supremacy over Sicily,\na prerequisite for Invasion. But a\nthirp drop In enemy opposition,\nwhich for two days previously had\nbeeh designated officially as vigorous and determined, meant the Allied blows were hitting where they\nhurt most and that the Britiah and\nAmerican flien were In a iwiN\naicendtncy.\nScots' 2800-Mile\nTrek to Tunisia\nRevealed by Officials\nLONDON, July 8 (Thirtdiy).\n(CP)-A greet 28-day 2800-mile trek\nby i battalion of Scoti Guardi from\nSyria to the Marerh Line wai disclosed today by the War Office.\nThe Guards travelled by motor\ntraniport v\/ith other units and lost\nonly seven or eight of their hundreds\nof vehicles en route. They arrived\nln Tunisia in time to play a leading role In the successful Medenlne\nbtttie on March t, the War Office\nuld.\nFint authentic Intimation that\nsome of Britain's army ln Iran Md\nmoved Into Tunisia was given July\nI ln i letter publiihed by the London Dally Telegraph. The letter deicribed 1 move of the Royil Fusl-\nllen, t London btttallon, tnd wis\ntccompmied by in editor's note\nuying \"mtny such letten have been\nretching friendi from the men of\nvarioui unlta.\nReport Kiel Disturbances Bring\nElite Guards to U-Boat Base\nSTOCKHOLM, July 7 (AP.) - A\nGoteborg newipiper releyed t report todiy from \"Gtrmtn opposition\nquirten\" thit Nul Elite Guirdi\nhid occupied wharves it the Germin lubmirini btu of Kiel for\ntwo dtyi lut week bectuu of disturbances.\nThe newipiper .the Hindeli-Och\nSJofintldnlng, uld leafleU were\ncirculated at Kiel reading: \"The\nU-boat war la alio lost. Don't go\ntbotrd these flouting coffins. Ind\nthi wtrl Down with Hitler! -\nAnothir rtport brotdcut by tht\nMoicow ridlo uld thit dliturb-\ntncei htve broken out tmong tht\nm\nutmen it tht Itallin nivtl bues of\nBrindlsi ind Lt Specli whirl the\nmen demanded thit the Ntvy be\nrid of Germin control. Numerous\ntrrtiti were reported to have been\nmade.\n__ YORK. July 7 (AP.) - Rear\nAdmiral Luttiow, German naval\nexpert, broadcast from Berlin to\nnight that the Allies now have the\nupper hind la tht U-bott wtr.\nTht bittle the German U-botti\nhivt to wtgt hu become very, very\nhird ind thl tntmy it preient hu\nthi upper hind.\" tht BBC quoted\nLuetiow u uying.\n16 Nazis Executed\nby Belgians\nin Reprisal Move\n' NEW YORK, July 7 (AP.)-Thi\nBBC, quoting I Belglin underground newiptper, rtporttd todty\nthtt Belglin pttrlots hid txteuF*\n\u2022d 18 Germans In nprlul for thi\nstaying of tight Bilgltm by Nul\noccupation official..\nTht broidcut quoted tht ptptr\ntl uying: \"Eight Belgian hoitagei wtrt murdtrtd In Chtrlirol\nIn Februtry In retaliation for tht\ntxtoutlon of tht Faiclit mtyor\nTuefel. Then the Null were Informed thtt tht crlmt would bt\ntvenged.\n\"Now tht promlie hu bun fulfilled. For each of the murdered\nBelglin hoitagei, two Qermini\nwen executed.\"\nNAZIS TOLD OF\nBIG AUIED\nCONCENTRATIONS\nAllied Planes Drop\nSupplies to\nGuerilla Fighters\nUNREST SWELLS\nLONDON, July 7 (CP)\u2014Tht\nQermin rldlo told \u2022 bidlyemiih-\n\u2022d homelind thit tht Allltd Afrlcin Chieftain, Gen. Dwight D.\nEiienhower hid concentnted\nmort thin 1,000,000 ton of ihlpping on thi African cout for I\nleap tcrou the Mediterranean Into\nEuropt.\nThli brotdcist wu tempered by\nan assertion that the Allies \"cmnot launch t real inyasion\" becauM\nof tht so-called resolute defences\nln Southern France and Italy.\nTo Allied observers thue propaganda Nundingi foUowed the familiar pattern of touching both endi\nof tt.e-_uybou4.lMt not,.thejnJddli..\u25a0**-* taunted In ibU.confident Moi-\nThe Axli still had not mentioned tbe\nBritish Commmdo attack on Crete,\nI successful Invasion feeler carried\nout Sunday night on that important\nGreek outpost.\nIn other words, Berlin wu warning all Germans and the occupied\ncountries that something was going to happen\u2014an obvious fact from\nAllied itatementi\u20144>ut was strewing reporta of Axis ability to combat any stab along the thouunds\nof miles of exposed coastline.\nDROP FOOD, ARMS, CASH\nGreek and Yugoslav guerlllai itill\nire battling in the mountalni of\nthose two countries, and the ipreed\nof these operations was evident in\nVichy ditpatches to Madrid laying\nR.A.F. and United Statu planu\nhave been supplying French patriots for some time with parachuted arms, food, munitions, and money.\nSwiss dispatches from Budapest\nalio quoted Axis preas reporta u\nlaying a wave of unrest, directed\nagainst Bulgarian occupation armies\nu well u those of Germmy ind\nItaly, hid Increued throughout Yugoslavia, and the dlipatchu to Madrid that paued Vichy censorship\nnld \"planes of the Reich's enemies\ncontinue to supply their French Allies.\"\nOne ciptured pmchute cargo in\nFnnce was nld to contain 900,000\nAmerican dollan. Stacks of French\nfranc notes also were dropped, the\nnewspaper Ya reported, with a resulting rise ln the value of the franc.\nAllied observers were cautious In\nususlng the value of all theie reports.\nCairo dispatches quoted the Hellenic News Service ai reporting\ni btttie raging between the Itil-\nllans tnd Oreek guerlllu In the\nTrlkkili tret on tht slopes of the\nvital put on the miin Eut-Wut\nroid from Ytnnlnt to Lirlsia.\nThis ictlon followed the burning\not two villages, the dispatch said\nidding that the guerillas had killed\nan Italian unit commander and captured 80 men as a result of which\nthe Itallana were reported to have\nburned 10 villages.\nReliable reporti filtering Into Istanbul across tht border from Nazi-\ndominated Bulgaria uld' a contingent of 200 German aviators had arrived ln Sofia. The group wis believed equipped with the tales,\nfighter plines tnd WU expected- to\ntake up defensive itttiont ln the\ncentre of Bulgarlt wilh the Intention\nof defending the country'i commun.\nIcitlom lystem from Allied ilr it-\ntick.\nGreat Push Fai\nto Make\nMajor Advance\n30 Divisions Torn Apart by Russian\nArtillery-Infantry Strategy;\n1539 Tanks Battered, 649 Planes Downec\nBy LYNN Hf INZERUNG\nAuociated Preii Staff Writer\nLONDON, July 8 (Thursday) (CP)\u2014The Cerman Arm)\nin three days has suffered the most staggering losses In It\nhistory\u201430,000 dead, 1539 tanks destroyed or damaged, am\n649 airplanes shot down\u2014and has failed to achieve a majo\nbreakthrough in its gigantic gamble in Russia, it was announce\nearly today in Moscow.\nThe Axis hurled 30 divisions, or approximately 450.00C\nmen, against the Russians on the Orel-Kursk-Belgorod sector\nbut \"did not catch our troops'\nunawares,\" said a special Soviet announcement broadcast by\nMoscow.\n\"Only In i few sections of the\nBelgorod area haa the enemy, tt the\ncost of enormous loses, succeeded\nln driving insignificant wedges into\nour  defencei.\"\nTht rtgulir midnight bulletin\nhtd tnnounced tht Qirmin capture of in idditlonil \"few villages\" Wednudiy In tht BtlgorV\nuctor it tht tnd of tht filming\n200-mllt front when two villas\"\nalready Hid bttn taken by tht\ntntmy during Tuudiy'i fighting.\nIhe later Soviet tnnouncement\nmade no attempt to minimize the\npower of the German threat, but\nnld flatly that \"ln the first three\ndays the Germani, despite the size\nof their offensive had met with no\nsucceu.\"\n\"Hitler Headquirteri* Ltan\" il\u00abo\n\"How Can Babies\nDo Without Diapers?\"\nWASHINOTON, July 7 (AP.)-A\nihortage of dltpen tnd uftty pins\nwu pictured for the Houu of Representatives todiy by Rep. Trstices\nr. Bolton, mother of thrtt idult\n\u25a0oni\n\"Whit do the Ntw Dtiltn expect\nui to do with our babies without\ndiapers ind plm with which to listen ume?' 'uked Hn. Bolton (Rep-\nOhlo). \"We cm do without i lot\nof thlngi but how cm t btby do\nwithout dltpen!\"\ncow broadcast for thtir original assertion that the Red Army, and not\nthe Germans, had launched an offensive.\nADMIT OFFEN8IVE\nBerlin broadcast! heard here lut\nnight made it clear the Germani\nnow were admitting their troops\nwere engaged in a major offensive.\n\"Hitler could not afford to wait\nuntil Summer wu over without\nany action on the pert of the German Army,\" said the Moscow announcement.\nThe German aim ln starting the\nhuge drive lut Monday was the\nquick encirclement and annihilation\nof Russian forcu holding the Kunk\nulient above Belgorod, the statement added, but lt said that plm\nhas been frustnted by the Red\nArmy.\n\"It ll eleir thit tht Germtni\nhoped to crush the Soviet defences\ntnd tchleve big operational tuc-\nceuei In the flnt diyi of the offensive,\" uld the announcer In\ncommenting   on   Germany's   ill-\nmet it the outlet of the drive.\nTwo speciil bomber forces and a\nipeclal fighter force were transfer-\nred from Western Europe to the\nEastern front between June 8 and\n29 to aid In.the puih, It was said.\nAxli plme strength elsewhere on\nthe Ruulen front ilso wu stripped\nto make possible the great concentration between Belgorod and Orel,\nthe Moscow radio said,\nFifteen tank divisions, one motorlied division, and 14 Infantry divisions are being used In the offensive, It added.\nFront line dispatches uld the Germans were striking again and again\nln an effort lo find weak tpots ln the\nRussian defences. Tank divisions\nand Infantry struck, then recoiled\nto be regrouped for a tfirust again\non the same front but in a different\nsector.\nGUNS HAMMER TANKS\nPrincipal factor In the succesa ot\nthe Soviet defence teemed to be\nthe Red Army heavy artillery which\nrolled back the constant onrush ot\nthe heavy German tanks. As the\narmored divisions faltered and turn.\ned tall. Red Army Infantry dashed\nfrom dugouts ind silt trenches to\nengage lhe enemy ln hand-to-hand\ncombtt.\nThe German idvinee wis made\nIn great bettle fury during which\nlines and trenchu and even entire\nvillages changed hands time and\nagkln. The Russiaru stld their troops\nwere counter-attacking late last\nnight and \"are now fighting to reiton  the position\"\nThe Ruulani said that elsewhert\nilong the fiery front the Germins\nwere stopped.\nEarlier, \u2022 tpeciil communique hid\ntold of tht Oertnins' rushing up\nvut reservei tnd listed huge new\nNul tank tnd pltne louei.\nWednetdty't Ntil tank toll Included 40 of the crick 60-ton Tiger\"\nttnki, tht Germini' litest ltnd btt-\ntlesh-ps.\nThis wu Oiitntny's lupretne effort to crurti tilt Red Army\u2014Hltler'i third tnd perhips finil fling\nbefort in Allltd Invulon hits him\nfrom ttit West. Dltpthhu from both\nBerlin t'nd Moscow mide It dur\ntht Oennini were miking \u2022 mijor\nrted t\n1\nce_M\nd _m\npaign.1\nattempt, drawing upon their ilr tt\nserves f<om the remainder of Europe\n\"For the third time tt tht EUt\nem front,\" aald Lieut. Kurt Jt\nserlch, Military Commentator for\nTransocean Newi Agency, \"Ttl\nGermans have launched in os\nfenslve out of originally defensive\npositioni.\"\n\"The battle of Kunk ll on,\" Mti\nthis commentator at another point,\nperhaps indicating the Naaii' fint\nobjectives for a possible wheeling movement toward Moacow IM\nself.\nThe Germans claimed their troopt\nhad made \"deep penetrations\" ln\nthe Orel sector as well u it Bel\"\ngorod despite the resistance of \"400,*\n000 crack Soviet troopi support*\nby very strong tank ind irtllltry\nforcei.\"\nA German broadcut asserted\n\"very large airforce\" had I\ncentrated igtlntt tht Ruulini |\nthat \"air forct battles now\non over fhe Kunk region art l\npassing ln extent ind violence\nerythlng hitherto experienced\nIng the whole Eastern campaign.*\n\"The Germans,\" said the Trinfe\nocean report, \"are throwing m<m\naircraft Into action than the Anglo-\nSaxons ever did in the fight for\nTunisia.\"\n\"Never before were Germm toW\u00ab\nlers better trained or better equip\"\nped with the latest arms than thott\ntroops now fighting the battlt of\nKursk,\" said the Berlin brotdcut\nwhich finally acknowledged that\nthe Germans were going over to\nthe offensive.\nThis confident German commit*\nment on the strength of ltt forcei\nwas threaded with notes of caution, however.\nNEW WEAPON CLASH\n\"The Soviets, on thefr pert, IM\nalso sending Into action tanki tft a\nnew type,\" the Nazi war repotttl\nsaid. \"The battle hf Kursk therefore\nmeans the first clash of new Oerman and new Soviet weaponi. Thl\nefficiency of these new weeponi wU(\nshow itself In due coune.\"\nAn example of the ferocity ol\nthe battle was given in t Moseose\nbroadcast which said thit In 1 iln<\ngle attack near Belgorod the Gtn\nmans hurled more than 100 ttnki\nagainst the Red Army. Seventy-fow\nof thue were knocked out\n\"The  Red  Army has before  II\nthe  largeit tnd  moit powerfully\nirmed  enemy tny country tver\nhas faced,\" the Moicow innouno.\ner declired. In view of Ult en-\nemy'i prodigal outpouring of men\nend    machinei,   he   tdded   thtl\n\"thert ihould bt no undertttlma.\ntion of tht weight tnd deipenti\ndetermlnttion of the ttttck.*'\nThe announcer Indirectly suggeited the need of i \"second front\" In\nEurope, saying Uiit Hitler \"ii throw,\ning   everything   Into   the   Ruollt\nfront, leaving only skeleton tnnlH\nto defend Western Europe.\"\nWhen the Germin ittack btgtH\netrly Mondiy morning, the Rd\nArmy line wss believed standlnl\n40 miles Weit of Kunk, ctpital d\nthe rich black farming region d\nthe tame name. Then wu no hlnl\nIn either Berlin or MoKow report)\nof the present diipoiltlon of tht \u25a0\nposing forcu.\nReport 3000 Lort\nLivet When\nMohne Dam Smashet\nSTOCKHOLM, July 7 (AP)-JtO^\nwegltn sources, quoting in unctn\nsored letter from Germiny lo No*\nwty, sild todiy thtt 3000 ptnoB\nlott their lives tnd three commun!\nlies \u2014 Niedereniet, Hlmmelpfortq\nand Hschen\u2014were \"wiped off tM\nmnp\" by flood wileri which rus*stl\ntrom the Mohne reservoir after tM\nR.A.F. bretched It Mty 11\nIt wts uld that 850 of thou kllltj\nwere Ruulin prisoners of wir.J\nThe leiter wni quoted is saying I\n80-yBrd - stretch of the dim *.\nblown out by the R A. F.'s mllH\n\u2022nd within nine minutes wtter ImM\ndntrd Nchrim about jrven mill\nfrom lhe dum Tlie rc.rrvolr ttttm\nled within 20 minutes, It wis idd*\n2\n \u00bb\n-\nI\ni- NILSON DAILY NIWS. THUMDAY, JULY I, 1943\nn\nling Tells llsley of Koolenay\nirm's Loss in Orange Deals;\nsley Defends Living Cosl Index\nI OTTAWA, July 7 (CP.) - Fl-\nknee Mlnliter Ililey told the\nlouu of Commoni tonight thi\njovernment wu tnxloul to iee\nptt thl coit-of-llvlnrf Index wis\ntound tnd accurate tnd had the\nsonfldence of the public\nSir. Ililey iald tha Government\n0iied the Importance of the index\nall Canadiani, whose coat-of-Uv-\nI bonus wu determined by lt\nHe gave a detailed explanation ot\nI method of compiling tha index\nd the measures to ensure It would\ndlcate correctly the month-to-\n'uilli changes in the cost of living\nI the average Canadian lamily.\nChanges such as those brought\nmut by the limitation in the iup-\njf ot cfrtain goods and the dlsap-\nMance of others from the market\nere taken into account in the in-\n>x, which does not, however, re-\ntt_ higher living expenses due to\nRter living made possible by en-\nIfged income.\nMr. llsley said the Dominion Bu-\n>au of Statistics, which prepares\n_ index, keeps a close watch on\nBiality. A reduction in quality ln\nfticles such as clothing might\nUlan the cost of living had to-\nBiased because the garment would\njt last as long as In the past. In\niCh cases an adjustment of the\nidex was made.\nMr. llsley said many persons wound how it could be said the cost\nI living had risen only 17 per cent\nhen the prices ot foods had risen\ni much.\nIt was true that many food prices\nid risen more than 17 per cent\nnee August, 1039, and the Minter mentioned stewing beef as\nling up 78 per cent, lard 73 per\nmt and round steak 66 .per cent,\nhe food index in general had risen\n..8 per cent.\n, But food represented only tbout\none-third of the cost of living ai\nreckoned by the Index. In prod.\nbeta iuch it breid end iugir, the\nIndex hid remilned iteidy whil\nIt ictuilly hid declined In reipect\nto milk.\nThe housewife noted the increas-\n1 food prices in particular and did\not so readily note that bills usually\nlid by the husband such as rent,\nome furnishings, clothing and mis-\niHaneous items did not show per-\nsntage gains as larfie as for food.\nhe index took account of the av-\n$2 08 or leu. Therefore, Uie Bureau\nhad selected a comparatively small\nHit ot 29 clothing Items of itandard\nconstruction and with no pronounced seasonal price movements. The\nchange in the cost of these items\ngave \u2022 correct record ot the rlie or\nfall to aU clothing pricei. '\nMr. Ililey iald that to include\ndirect taxei as ptrt ot tht coit-of-\nUvirfg index would dtfett the wholt\npurpose of tht warUme financial\nprogram.\nThe index measured the changei\nin the living coiti of the average\nfamily. Direct taxei did not affect\nprices but income and reduced the\namount available for apending. It it\nwere true that taxes affected the\ncost of living, it would follow the\nrich man'i living costs hid increued many time! more rapidly than\nthose ot the man with a low or\nmoderate Income.\nMr. llsley uld ht had held there\nshould be equality in sacrifice on\nthe) basis ot ability to pay taxes. If\nincome taxes were Included ln the\nIndex, this principle would be nullified. The cost-of-living bonus was\ndetermined by the cost-of-living index and the bonus would be increas-\nthe increase ln the Income tax\nthe Inrcease to the Income tax\nThus people receiving the bonus\nwould pay Uttle or no Income tax\nW. K. Esling (Prog. Con. Kootenay West) uld a firm In his\ndistrict had iuffered a lou because It was unable to bring In\norangei In carload loti ind therefore benefit under I lubildy arrangement which held down ormge prlcet.\nMr. Ililey uld the subsidy wu\npiyible on ctrloid ihlpmenti ind\nhe would bring Mr.-Eallng'i cut\nto the tttention of official!.\nMr, Eillng said a Pricea Board\nofficial In the district'had tried\nIn vain to have in idjuitment\nmide for the firm.\nSoya Attacks on\nJap Hold Islandi\nWould Bo Foolish\nLEEDS, Englind, July 7 (CP.) \u2014\nH. V. Evatt, Australian Attorney-\nGeneril tnd Mlnliter of Externil\nAffiirs, iald today, a nparate attack on every Japanese-held iiland\nto tbe Pacific -would be \"prepoiter-\nous\" tnd unnecessary.\nEvatt, who arrived to Britain\nthree weeks igo, declired, however,\nit li euential to attack and reoccupy\n\"some iilandi of crucial Importance\" and then apply preuure on\nJapan from all directions, including\nChina and tha Pacific.\nPrice Control\nMust Remain\nin Board Hands\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP)-rinance\nlige family's rent, clothing, ligM' Minister IUley said In the House of\nId heit, life insurance _d rther j fT\u2122,n?   \u00ab\u00a3 *fL52? nfE.\nE^ ,,      .    . i trol must remain centralized ln tne\n\u2014Mi wen as food. (Prices Board and that to give the\nllsley said the Bureau did not' AgrinlIt1Jre Department the right to\n'entirely on  stores   reports  Mt  the  prlcM  ,or  farm  products\nibUsh prices being charged.   wouid be. i \"grave mistake\",\nill offices also made checka I    Answering Mark Senn (Prog. Con.\nPrice! being charged. \u2022 Haldimand), Mr. llsley uid that if\nie Items included in the list control of far prices were transfer-\nfered by the index did not cover red to the Agriculture Department,\nI   those   required   by   a   family,  there would arise a case tor asking\nhose omitted represented goods on j the Fisheries Department (0 control j of clothei towhlch they hope to \u00ab\nhlch it was not practicable lo get | \"?h Prlc\" aid the Resources Department  to  control the prices of\nCRETE ATTACK\nMAY BE START\nOF OFFENSIVE\nIsland Must Be\nFinished Before\nStrike at Balkans '\nBy WILLIAM B. KINO\nAssociated  Preu Staff Writer\nANKARA, Turkey, July 7 <AP)-\nThe bayonet-like Jab of British fore,\nes agalnit the Island of Crete which\nlies u a heavily-fortified bastion\nguirding the imaller Island stepping stones to the Balkan Peninsula\nhas heart-ned Allied and neutral\nobserver! here.\nThe Germans appear to have centred their defence on Crete, lupported by a crescent ot outer islands\nfrom Rhodes to the Greek mainland\nand making n continuing defence\nline with fortifications along the\nAdriatic coast.\nThe Inner Iilandi of the Aegean\ntrt lightly garrisoned by troopi\nwhloh In iome cuei ire ihowlng\nunmlsttkible tlont of ihattered\nmorale. For the Brltlth delivery\non the flnt blow, In whit many\nhere believe may be the opening\nof \u25a0 major cimpilgn igainit the\nheart of Germin defences, wu a\nmrprlie.\nUnofficial itrateglsta pictured the\ndrive aa beginning with an attack on\nRhodes with a quick mop-up of the\nDodecanese and the Inner Aegean\nwhich initially would by-pass Crete\nbut open It for a many-sided attack.\nOnly after that island's defences\nhave been neutralized can the Allies sweep on into the valleys of\nthe Vardar and Strouana to itrlke\nat the heart of the Germm-tnfeit\ned Balkans.\nRhodes Is less heavily defended\nthan Crete and even larger proportions of the defenderi are Italians, but reports say much defence\nwork has been done recently on\nthe island which ls close to neutral Turkey.\nTne rest of Uie Dodecinese are\nfor the most part poorly garrisoned\nby troops sickened of long assignments to small island posts.\nOn other Inner islands Italian\nsoldiers have been reported trading their rations to Impoverished\nGreek  populations  for  odd scraps\nleet   price   quotations.   The   Bu\nau obtained reports on what were i 'orc,t 3nd mlne P*\"\u00b0**cti.\nlarded as typical items in these  , Groups asked that price control\nfcgories and by \"weighting\" these ' **\" **,,!ewher,e *an \"Uh the Pricei\ntees  sufficiently   h.ghly   covered ! B,\u00b0\"d \u00ab'TOly I****\"*\" they bel.ev-\nL\u00b0?i   ,m   \u25a0 m d ** '    . pathetic   authority   \"but   we   hive\nfeed In the index. ; \u00a3 ^ fim,,, ^  >m    mW\nAs crops varied .the consumption I    The Htmw cont|nued discuulon ot\nIt prices of various foods chang-   Finance Department war approprla-\nproblem in obtaining comparable | tion Items, with $14,300,000 for Prices\nI from season to season. There was  Board  Administntion In  the pre-\ntfC-s. sent fiscal year under review.\nThe Burf.u therefor, picked out i  .^ H\u00b0U5\u00ab ,Pprov^.' moU\u00b0n '\"\"!\nRod Item, on which . repreient- i .\\\\m<l l.\u00b0?\u2122 '?_\" *\"\" ,Ur\n\u2022\u2022 ,. , , . '    ', '*\u2022\"'\u2014\"*    at 11 a m. instead of 3 p.m. approval\n\u00abU_e price could be obtained from o( such , moUon J, ,-\u00a3\u201e.\u201e,,,\n\u25a0Mth to month. The foodi on thc wroacll \u201e, ft, end o( a ,\u201e.\n-Which i price could not be ob- I sjon\nttlned were conildered to hive1 Discussing sugar rationing, New\n-risen by the lame proportion. \u2022 Democracy Leider Blsckmore slid\nI A check hid been made to see ; he believed the Canadian people\nihow reliable wu the Index In thought sugar difficulties arose be-\n[fl(lit of the fict only a reitrlcted j ciuse \"of the sheer itupidlty of the\nnumber of foods were tiken Into rr\"'n ***h\u00b0 have been In chirge of this\n\u25a0omlderation In aitabllihlng It. country for the last six years\" Ac-\n[Thla check had Indicated the ac- Ition 'hould have been taken to in-\nWUraey of the regular Index. , crease sugar beet production. Then\nCanada could produce all the sugar\nit reeded.\nMr. llsley said he did not think\nI! hid ever been suggeited that Can\nSeason,.! price changes In rloth-\n| also had   to  be  taken  into\nUnt, Mr. llsley said.\nwoman's hat might sell In iea- ada should supply ill her requirements from sugar beet production\nbecause the economic ucrifice involved would be too greit. Home\nproduction now represented about\n18 per cent of Cinidlin requirement!.\nEven If sugir production In Cinada were doubled, the ration would\nnot be affected because the amount\nnade available to Cinidi under the\nUnited Nations' pooling lyitem\nwould be based on tbe supplies\navailable al home and the totil In\nCanada would not be Increased.\nI it MM and be cleared Inter at\nlen,Women0ver40\nfeel Weak, Worn, Old ?\n[Wmt Normal Pep, Vim, Vitality?\ni*.-   1W.K*.   \u2022tlmulMU.    _t-_   (:r*ltd\nrw.  *\u00a9     Hrlp rn*i f\u00bbl H\"-fTT.\u00bbl rwn   Tim  fl.\ni|,  Tru in. _U   MVK rui, rtOK\u00abT\u2014\nI)    iii*  nr  .;_*.-_1     (V'-norny\"   Hi'  trvl  hti\nI lk   I\"  '\"*     Al Ul  \u2022\u2022.:\u25a0\u25a0,lfi-1*     Man  l-.'.ty.\n(Guide for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u2022YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nfciymour  81- Vancouver. B.  C\nNewly rfnovitcd throughout   Phonti  ind   flovafor.\nA    PATTERSON.   Ut\u00ab   of\nColemin. AlU, Proprlttor\nrRANSPORTATION-Pa.scngc. ond Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\n|.C. MUIR\nPhone,: Nelion 77; Roultnd Z13L; Trill 1180\nConntctioni For:\nSALMO   -   KASLO   -   CRESTON   -   NAKUSP\ncape is civilians in case of an Allied invasion.\nThe key defence* are itlll tightly controlled by the Germans and\nthere have been few reports of collapsing morale among them.\nSouth African Vote\nResult Won't Be\nKnown for Some Time\nJOHANNESBURG, July 7 (CP\nCiblel-South Afrlca'i 1,250.000 civilian voten went to the polli here\ntoday to help settle one big issue\u2014\nwhether to continue the war ai they\nhave been lighting It tor the last\nfour months, or whether to return\nto opposition-pledged neutrality.\nThe Opposition ts advocating a Republican form ot Oovernment and\nan end of the British connection.\nFormation of long queques at Johannesburg polling placet Indicated\nthe number voting may reach record\nleveli.\nThe resulti will not be known\nfor it least two or three weeks, n\nthe mail balloti of 150,000 loldlen\nind sailors, who cast absentee votes\nmust be assembled and taken to\nPretoria for counting before the\ncivilian boxei can bt opened.\nCrowds Forced\nMartinique\nGov't's Action\n\/\nPORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad.\nJuly; 7 (AP.l-iCrowdi 15,000\n\u2022trong took poueuion ot thi\nitreeti of Fort-de-France, Martinique, for two daya reeently In\ndemomtrttloni favoring tha\nFighting French leader, Oan.\nCharlea de Gaulle, It wai reported\nhere today, and the demonitra-\ntlom were uld to hava foroed the\naotlon of the Government of the\nFrench Itlind colony In leaking\nan ' agreement with tha United\nSUtei ind a break with Vlchy.\nA report ot the demonitratloni received by the Trinidad Guardian\n\u25a0aid the public manifestations broke\nout June M with crowdi shouting\n\"Vive de Gaulle\" and ilnglng the\nFrench anthem \"Marielllalie.\" They\nwere unmolested by the gendarmerie sent to disperse them, the report added.\nThree leaderi of the demomtri-\ntors, Including the former Deputy\nfor Martinique and mayor of Fort-\nde-France, were reported arrested\nbut released shortly afterward when\nthe crowd made it plain they intended to continue their demonstrations unlesi the leaderi were freed.\nA disagreement between Admiral\nGeorges Robert, Vlchy High Com\nmlssioner of Martinique, and the\ncolonel commanding the Island's\ntroop garrison favored the demon\nitrations ,the report added, because\nRobert refused to allow the aoldlers\nto put down the uprising.\nHuns Say Spain\nPunishing\nMonarchists\nLONDON, July 7 (CP) - The\nGerman Radio said today that disciplinary measures had been taken\nagainst members of the Spanish\nCortes (Parliament) who last month\nwrote Gen. Franco asking that the\nMonarchy be restored In Spain.\nAll the 25 signers of the mea-\nsage to Franco were understood to\nhave been members of the Spanish\nCortea, whoie duty It Is to advise\nthe Cabinet and Chlet-of-State and\nwho enjoy Parliamentary immunity\nSome, at least, were members of\nthe National Council of Falange,\nSpain'a only party.\nThe Berlin broadcast continued:\n\"Political circles state that other\nmembers of the Cortes who signed\nthe letter to Franco have voluntarily resigned.\n\"The proceedings are not only\ncondemned by the Falange but also\nby most of the Monarchists and\nSpanish public opinion.\n\"It ls also pointed out that Gen\nFranco has repeatedly asserted that\nthe question of monarchy cannot\nbe debated at the present moment\nand its solution must be postponed\nto a later date.\" \u2022\nThe petition to Franco asked that\nPrince Juan, the son to whom King\nAlfonso assigned the throne before\nhis death in Italy, be returned from\nexile in Switzerland.\nTo Pay Damage?,\nDestroy Dog\nfor Biting Woman\nNick Derakoff of Winlaw pleaded guilty to a charge ot keeping a\ndog without a licence and paid a fini\nof $10 and costs in Provincial Police Court Wedneidiy. He appeared\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine Derakoff alio pleaded\nguilty to a iecond charga of having\nin hli possession a mongrel that had\nbitten Miss Mary Laktln on June\n16 He agreed to pay damages, and\ndestroy the dog.\nBoth charges were laid by Constable D, G. Rogen of the Provincial Police at Nelaon.\n-_y_m__-\u00abmiiiimii-i--\u00ab**t**mmm\n\u25a0     _\n V __+Am_,__*__+m^\nKeep C\nItalians Fear Allies\nPreparing to\nland at Ostia\nALGIERS. July? (AP)\u2014European\nreporta ot thc French preu ln North\nAIM OF RAIDS\nTO DISARM\nNAZI MACHINE\nForce Alone Concern\nof Bomber\nSays \"Aeroplane\"\nLONDON, July 7 (CP)-The constant hammering and gradual reduction of armament-producing\ntowns in the great Ruhr Valley and\nRhineland of Germany throwi the\nwork of the R.A.F. Bomber Command with Its thousand! of Canadian airmen and the Canadian group\nInto new perspective.\nThis effort\u2014the crumbling of Cologne, Wuppertal, Bochum, Eiien,\nDusseldorf and other Industrial cen-\ntrei\u2014brings forth the true aim of\nwihit only recently haa come to be\ngenerally known ai \"itrategic bombing\"\nWithout further dlgreslon, that\naim Is to disarm the enemy. Thii\nis the aim of the bombing offensive\nas discerned by the exeprts of the\nauthoritative magazine \"Aeroplane\".\nThe offensive has not been directed agalnit the Germin people\nto frjghten orpersuade them into\nlubmlssion. We Germans tried\nthat on Britain early ln the war\nand failed. Britain's aerial strategists have been much more coldblooded and calculating in building up their bomber attack.\nThey have left to the handlers of,\npolitical warfare (helping only ln\nthe matter nf dropping leaflets) the\nbusiness of attempting to persuade\nthe enemy to cill a halt to the war,\nto surrender. 1\"he bomber men have\nbeen concerned sol\u00a3ely with force.\n\u2022Force and force alone is the\nconcern of the bomber,\" said Aeroplane. \"It's function la to itop thi\nenemy from miking, distributing\nand using the things he needi in\nwar. The aim is not to take away\nthe will but the power to go on\nfighting.\n'That makei It the moit ruthlaii\nof ill aspects of modern wir.\nRuthleia though It ll, the wir\nwaged by the bomber hit proved\nto be the moat eeonomlcil In humin life.\"\nAt least two-flfthi of the power\nof Germany to make what it needs\nin war has been destroyed by Allied bombers ln the Ruhr and the\nRhineland according to conserve,\ntive estimates. Prime Minister\nChurchill has said the bomberi will\nrange farther afield, to any centre\nthat harbors German war industry,\nIn the course of this 'disarming ol\nthe Axis:\nTells Chinese Allied\nPower Will\nOverwhelm lapan\nLONDON, July 7  (CP)-Forelgn\nAfrica today Yald\" Italian authoritiei I SecreUry Eden declared todiy the\nare alarmed at the possibility of an\nAllied landing at Ostia, seaport only\n10 miles from Rome.\nAs a result, the reports aald.iall\ncommuters traini between Rome\nand Oitia have been ordered to return each night to the cipital insteid\nof remaining overnight it Ostia,\nand the number of such trains reduced from 40 to two dally.\nEmployment Shows\nLargest Monthly\nDecline During May\nOT1AWA, July 7 (CP)-A contra-seasonal decline of 1.3 per cent\nin employment at May I\u2014The largest decline In any month since the\noutbreak of war aside from seasonal\ndeclines al Jan l--was reported today by the Dominion Bureiu of Btl-\ntiltlci, with the eirplinitlon thit In\npart It \"no doubt\" reflected the\nreturn to the firms of \"mutually\nlarge numberi of workeri,\" In thl\nlogging Industry.\nBased on the 192(1 avenge is 100,\nthe general index of employment\nwis 178 2 it May 1 compired with\n180 9 for April 1. There wai \u25a0 giln\nof J! 5 per cent from the Index figure\nof 1(17.4 it Miy I. 1942. \"the smallest Increase In the 12 months' com-\npariion In \u2022 lengthy period.\"\nThe seaionally adjusted Index fell\nfrom 191.1 at April I to 18J.0.\nBERLIN CLAIMS NINE\nALLIED SHIPS SUNK \/\nLONDON. July 7 (CP) - The\nBerlin radio clalmid todiy that German lubmarlnes hid sunk nine AlUed ships totalling M.000 tons \"In\nrecgnt diyi\" but filled lo uy where\nthe alleged linking! look plice.\nSORE FEET\nItin.fi, ru...\nlw ru, MM*, ChtfW Htf*-.** thla mw, '\u2022\u25a0**\u2666\u25a0\n\u2022**\u25a0*\u25a0 Im,,  MWWfc \u2022wtelemelHng\nKeep \u2022 lift \\*r_r_y\n^m ne ewefjewtiefc\nXjXQ___-\nHEALING SALVE\nday will come when the iccumulat\ned weight of the Allied power\nwould \"flow* Eastwards snd overwhelm the Empire of Japan.\"\nSpeiking it i \"salute-to-Chlni\"\nmeeting in the Royal Albert Hall.\nMr. Eden said, \"then Is ln our\nhearts a fixed and grim resolve to\nteach Japan once and for all the\nlesson that co-pro\u00bbperity ls not a-\nOstia, at the mouth of the Tiber, chlevcd by cruelty and oppression\nhas been bombed twice by the Al-' and that he who draws the sword\nlies, the mrst recent attack having [shall perish by It.\"\nbeen last Saturday night. On an | At the same meeting. Dr. V. K.\nearlier raid Ostia'i airfield and sea- j Wellington Koo, Chinese Ambiw-\nplane base were heavily damaged, dor to Great Britain, iald, \"thire\nFashion\nSummer Dresses\nGet yourself outfitted in cool Summer\nDresses while we still have a choice of Kool-\nShans in prints or stripe.  Sizes 12 to 20.\n<P\u00ablw0 and 4>lU.yb\n\/\nTropicals\nTropical Broadcloth\u2014Lovely bright\nprints. Sizes 15 to 24 Vi MAC\nPrice   4\u00bbI.JJ\nSeersuckers\nSeersucker tailored stripe one and two-piece\nDresses. Sizes'! 2 to 20.\nWash Dresses\nSlub Wash Dresses... Just\nthe thing for camp. Sizes 12\nto 44. Price:\n$3.95 ,o $5.95   lil**.\nMillinery Clearance\nHats to clear\u2014Peanut Strawg ... Five\ndifferent styles. 189 DreSs Hats in\nBlack, Navy, Brown, Blue Rose. Price:\n4-Z.jU to iJ>j-\"D\nFINK'S Ladies' Wear\nThe Cmdian Army and the Royal Canadian\nAir Fore*, cooperating with other United Nationn Air\nForcea, have forged a mighty link in the war-time bomber route which joins the rugged I-abrador coast to embattled Britain. The Canadian-boilt outpost at Goose Bay\nIs one of the world's largest and most important air bases.\nThe combined air forces operate the air line taking vital\nships to battle zones, Canadian army unitn guard the tret\nand Canadian construction gangs enlarge and maintain\nthe outpogt facilities. Gunner Eddie Therlault of Montreal, sl.nwn above, wu a physical training instructor\nand artiste' model In civilian life. He brought along\nweight* to keep up hia weight-lifting technique. Theriault\nwas the Canadan feather-weight (1S2 pounds) weight-\nlifting champion, lifting 250 pounda in a clean jerk Uft\nil ground tor hope that It will not\nba very long before a large-scale\nplan ot dealing deadly blows to\nJapan wlll unfold ltaelf.\"\nLeonard W. Brockington, K.C, Canadian adviier to the British Ministry of Informition, ipoke of the\ntruit and reipect China enjoyi everywhere.\nCanadians Help\nSink U-Boals\nI.ONDON, July 7 (CP Cable).-\nStories of the sinking of two U-\nboats In which three Canadians\nplayed active parti were disclosed\ntoday by the Air Ministry Newi\nServic*.\nThe Cinadiani are TO. Erneit\nHimlll, J3, of Toronto; Sgt Vincent\nMorrow, 22, of Moncton, N. B, both\nwireleu operator air gunners in the\nMediterranean Coastal Command,\nand PO. W. F. Emery of Edmonton, navigator aboard an Atlantic\nCoastal Command long-range heavy\nkmber.\nThe Scottiih pilot of the plane in\nwhich Hammill and Morrow were\n(lying (ound a U-boat on tha surface\nand ittacked lt almost at deck level. The Canadian gunners nked the\ndecki ind conning tower and alter\na (ew minutes the bow rou frotn\nthe water ilthough the submarines\ncontinued to fight back without\neffect The Canadians saw the crew\nleap from the tubmersible before\nlt illd to the bottom.'\nBmiry'i plini was (lying to Jotn\nthe eicort (or i large convoy when\nI lubmirine surdced three mllei\nawiy.'obvlouily planning to liunch\nin ittick on the ahipa under cover\nof dirknesa. From \u25a0 height of SO\n(eet depth charges were planted\niround thl U-boat which disappeared, but timber and metal cyl-\nlnderi ihot up to the surface imld i\nspreading pitch of oil.\nCanadians Overseas Lose \"Zest\" lor\nLife but Broaden Viewpoint\nFind Temporary\nHorn* for\nEvicted Familiei\nBDMOffTON. July 7 (CP)-Ed-\nmonton'i City Relief Depirtment\nfound i temporiry home tonight for\nIhi fimillei of Gunner Mlchiel rill-\npow and Mn. Nettle Pirfeniuk liter\nthey had been tvlcted by court order from their dtiplei homt and\ncould (Ind no place to go.\nFillpow, in irtillery gunner itatloned In Novi Scotia, who obtained\nleave to com* to Edmonton to move\nhla wif* ind two diughtin, r*-\nvetled h* had Mnt \u25a0 penonal wire\nto Prim* Minliter King liking lid\nH* Mnt the wire afler Sheriffi\ndiputld rcmirvi-l lh* turnltur* ind\npersonal belonging! of th* Fillpow.\nand Pirfniiuki Into Uw (treet In\n(ront of the duplet which hu been\nsold. Th* ictlon wu taken liter\ntwo eviction notlcu (ailed to move\nUw familiei. They pleldrd tbey\ncould find ae plic* to more.\nTh* youngir giniritlon probibly\nwon't knew much ibout Uu B*\u00abr.\nwho dl*d la London, but to those\nold In tha .goclillit filth ht wai\nranked imong thi greateit hlslorl-\naru ever produced by thl movement Among hli worki ll \"Hiitory\not Brlttih Sociillim \"\nWritten for The Cinidlin Pm*\nBy SGT. JACK LEE\nCilgary  Highlander*,\nCanidlan Army In England\nSOMrWHJ_RE IN ENGLAND,\nJuly 7 (CP.) - We have been in\nEngland a long time\u2014three yeara\nand more (or molt of the Canadian\nArmy oversell.\nWe hive gone through I process of ih idjuitment to i different\ncountry and we hive lived i new\nmode of life. Time has brought\nchangei In thought, in ideas aid in\nviewpoint ,\nFrankly, this hai lelt ui pualed.\nFor we are Canadians and Canada la our homeland. We have had\nto settle down in a itrange country\nand yet we know we are not o( It\nAlmost we evolved 1 world of our\nown amongst ourselvea. Yet eventually we know we will have to readjust ourselves to lite In Canada;\nand we ire aware that lite ln Canidi, is we knew It hu chmged.\nSometime! wi think we ire even\nmor* Canadian than the Canadians\nback home. We note the vigorous\nyoung manhood arriving Iresh (rom\nCanada and we know we are different. They have what we have\nloit ind we hive lomething they\nhivi not\nFor we know most 6*1 the angles\nhere and we know them in Canida\nwe hive sized up the good ind bid\no( both sides o( the ocean; and our\nviewpoints   have   broadened.\nWhat have we loit?\nMost apparent ls the enthusiasm\nand zest o( a \"new land\"; the keen-\nness to be doing things; the Incentive to battle with circumitancei\nand environment and gleefully triumph- and a sincerity of purpose!\n, Perhapi It ls the climite here or\nperhaps It Is the prevailing tempo\nAt aty rate our rcactloni have moderated. Time no longer seems a matter of concern.\nThe struggle agalnit elementa ind\n\u2022 competitive environment we no\nlonger know (or this climite Is com-\n(ortable ind the Army ls ill-pro-\nvldlng. So what to ua wu once the\nseit ln life has lost its points.\nUle (or us hai ilowed down; and\nwe like It At timei we citch ourselves admitting that If England\nhas taught us nothing elie lt has\ntaught ua how to live But It li the\nway of an \"old land\" and we return\nto a \"new\".\nSo we wonder win Canada be\nkind to us. England haa been kind.\nIs Canada still \u2022 place for tha \"little\nman*\"'\nWe don't really ask for much, for\nour ambitions have been dulled. In\nfact it is quite simple. A small home\nand the opportunity to eirn a modest living. We have met the \"Uttle\nman\" of this Island and ht appear!\ncontent. We know that ther* ar*\nmany o( him here and that Canada ls a vast land with few people.\nWe '.ell ourselves that It is within\nreaion that the \"little man\" ln Canada should lind contentment. Yet\nwill we De understood?\nThe war'li living money for \u2022\nman ln Southwest Englind who\nhu high blood pressure, He used\nto piy $50 to \u2022 surgeon to be bled,\nbut nowidayi he follows th* mobile\nblood collecting teama ot the Army\nBlood Supply Depot and hai lt\ndone for nothing.\nSore. Sunburned\nLips Relieved\n\/Wu\/ Cricking Pr.Ytnttd\nJtouiti, cricked, tu_b_r_\u00ab_ Up* in pal*.\nlull. Mn ud ur.ilt_.tlj \u2014lhe critked\n-urla..l niil; Infected bf dUflrni\nttrsu, Oat nliif tki Quick, ns* way with\nLypiyl I Iti woadarfvl \u2022moment action\nIt-iti-i-ly tooths! tha woa.odcil-M_ib._ocl\nud if ill thin ililnit lermi ud Impuri-\ntin. It ioft.ni thi painful, crackid tai*\nllCW, hut. ni nitunl hralini. Lypiyl\nuti ii i ptoUct-T* Uo b*tw*\u00aba tb* d\u00abU-\ncati llp-ikln aid tb* burning rayi of tb*\nna. On Lj pi. I u jour iton toda). tin\nIt nfa-trt; to loothe  Ud  protect you\nUp*. Sold intyvhtr* ta hand j nick (ora.\nLYPSYL \u00ab\u00a3r\nParticular Homes\n**\u2022?*$*?*\u00a3 y\n\"Sovereipi\"\nrum\nHighest\nQuality\nBleached\nSoft-tough\nCrepe!-\nor Jtr nowl\n fmmmmm\nll. S. Naval Force\nWASHINGTON, July 7 (AP)-\nAn Amtrietn Nival Ulk force\nbombirded tht Jtptnut but on\nKltkt Itlind lut night, tht Ntvy\ninnounctd todty, In in itttck\napparently co-ordinated with thl\nUnittd Stttei offensive against\nJapinese defencei In thl South\nPiclfle.\n,\nm&\nIS THE ANSWER\nIt'i the chtnge of food tnd wtter\nthtt often upsets you Inwardly\nand ipoili your holldiyi. Wise\nvacationists Uke Bno'l 'Fruit Salt'\nalong for a regular dath in a glasl\nof water before breakfait. Eno\neniurei inner deanl.net! and helpi\navoid itomich upiet Then too,\nEno helps overcome in exceu tdd\ncondition that often cautet thete\nthrobbing headachea and a dull,\nllltlets feeling. Alwayi keep Eno\nhandy this summer.\nENO'S\nTRUIT SALT'\nFIRST THING EVERY MORNING\nA Navy Communiqut reporting\nthe iction in tht North Ptcific\nalso disclosed that the American\ncruiser lost in btttie with Japanese\nforces ln Kulka Gulf'on the mowing of July I wu the 9,700-ton\nlight cruiser Helena.\nThe Helena wu under command\nof Captain Charles PurceU ^\u2022eci'\nof Louisville, Ky. Neither the flit\nof the skipper nor the ufety of lndlvlduil crew memben wu reported.      \u2022\nThe cruiser, which hid been damaged it Pearl Harbor and wai re-\natored to icnvice during the first\n12 months of war ln the Pacific\nwu the only announced American\nlosi in the battle, in which alx\nJapanese ships were^ \"probably\niunk,\" md seversl others, preiumibly four or more, were damaged\nA communique from Allied headquarters last night had numbered\nthe damaged ships as four but today's Navy Communique said only\nthat there were \"several.\"\nUsing the headquarters figure,\nJapanese naval ship casualties of\nall types, including sunk or damaged, now total 315 and the enemy\nhas suffered an'additional loss of\n336 non-combatant ships. The comparable American figure for combatant ships, including the Helena,\nis 103 vessels overdue and presumed lost, destroyed to prevent\ncapture or sunk. Figures on American ships damaged are not available\nin their entirety.\nThe report of the attack on Kiska\nwas very brief. It said only that\nthe enemy was bombarded there\nand that his shore batteries \"did not\nreturn the fire.\"\nKieka has been under aerial bombardment whenever weather permitted recently but has not been\nattacked by surface ships In a long\nwhile.\nNavy men on a quick check of\nprevious war bulletins found no record of a surface attack later than\nlast August 7.\nToday's communique made clear\nthat Allied planes were pounding\nout a steady rain of destruction\nover Japan's South Pacific bases\nas part of the. general offensive\nwhich began a week ago today.\nIncrease Police\nForce in North\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP)-Pro-\nvincial Police. Force in Dawson\nCreek area has been increased to\na sergeant, a corporal and eight\nmen, Attomey-Generel R. L. Maitland said today following the return of Assistant B. C. Police Commissioner John Shirras who looked\nI into the whole police set-up in the\nI North.'\nVitil elementi supplied by cinned ulmon\ninclude calcium and phoiphorui, euential\nto found bonet and good teeth ... alio more\niodine than it found in any food of land\norigin.\nAnd today, in thli moment of supreme trial,\nwhen every quality of nerve, bone and\nmuiele li steeled to the breaking point, thii\nvital aeafood if iclected to nourish and sustain the Emplre't fighting millions.\n... a fact worth remembering in timet of\npeace.\nCLOVER\nLEAF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA PACKERS LTD.\nVaneouver, Canada\n_w\nl&M^J\n*\".* *\u2022\u2022\u25a0 -\nBig Steel Works\nSmashed In\nDusseldorf Raid\nLONDON, July 7 (AP).-Two-\nthirdi of the central areas of Duesseldorf containing the chief buslneu buildingi htve been burned\nand smashed by R. A. F. raids, the\nAir Ministry News Service announced1 today.\nPhotographs Uken after the great\nraid of June 11 showed that among\nthi buildings deitroyed was the\nStklhtua, the administrative headquirteri of t large part of the German iteel industry. The newi tervice wid iti deitructlon would interfere lerlouily with the opentlon\nof plants throughout Germany.\nDuesseldorf also ranks with Essen\nand Dulsburg in the production of\narmaments, and 42 of ita factories\nwere severely damaged including\nfive plants \"of the greatest importance,\" the news service said.\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, JULY\nMORE CANADIAN WHEAT FOR GREECE\nCanada has sent five million bushels\nof wheat to feed starving Greeks suffer-\ning'under the Nazi occupation. The grain\nis sent on neutral Swedish ships and the\nshipment is arranged by the Greek War\nRelief Organization. Grouped around the\nfive millionth .bushel of grain are Cap\ntain Nilsson of the Swedish ship Tamara,\nGreek Minister to Canada Hon. G. S. De-\npasta, Director of the Greek War Relief\nOrganization, Thomas Papas and Canadian Minister of Trade and Commerce\nHon. James A. McKinnon.\nNazis Sacrifice\nConsumer Goods\nfor War Weapons\nLONDON, July 7 (AP).-A Ministry of Economic Warfare spokesman said today that German production in the first six months of\n1943 had been cut -by Allied bombings and difficulty of obtaining raw\nmaterials and labor but that the output of war goods lud been fairly\nwell maintained.\nHe said the flow (of war goods,\nparticularly defensive weapons such\nas fighter planes, anti-aircraft guns\nand anti-tank guns, had been maintained by drawing oa reserves, concentrating on a few basic types of\nweapons and sacrificing consumer\ngoods.\nThe spokesman declined to estimate the percentage of the over-all\nproduction decline until full reports\non the damage to the Ruhr have\nbeen received.\nSumming up German Industrial\nactivity for the first half of 1943,\nthe ipokesman slid the Germans had\nsucceeded in \"hardening the crust\"\nof their defensive strength, but only\nat the expense of their interior reiourcei.\nThe Nasi armament Industry has\nbeen under a heavy strain in trying\nto replace equipment lost at Stalingrad and in North Africa, he added,\nand \"probably ll not keeping up\nwith iti losiei in locomotives.\"\nLABOR GROUP ASK\nASSURANCE OF\nPOST WAR WORK\nOTTAWA. July 7 (CP) - The\nTrades end Labor Congress of Can\nada said today in a brief prepared\nfor submission to the Commons\nPost-War Reconstruction Commit\ntee .that its combined membership\nof 364,375 looks for \"some assur\nance\" that when this war is won\nthere will not be another depres\nsion In   \"a country of plenty.\"\nThere is only one solution to\nunemployment and that is employment, the brief said. There are lots\nof urgently-needed public works\nfrom one end of tbe country to the\nother. Inhere is hardly a city, town\nor village which does not need local\nImprovements.\nPrince Smiles as\nHe Returns From\nHurricane Flight\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP)-Prince\nBerhard of the Netherlands flew\na Canadian-built Hurricane over\nthe Gatineau Hills for half an hour\ntoday.\nThe Prince smiled broadly u he\nclimbed from the Hurricane at\nnearby Rockcliffe Air Station.\n\"It's a lovely aircraft,\" he said.\n'It's much nicer even than the old\nHurricane, which I'd flown a great\ndeal in England.\"\nExpect lo Double\n(parse Grain\nMovements East\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP)-Movement of coarse grains to Eastern\nProvinces for feeding purposes is\nexpected to be doubled this year as\ncompared with 1942, Agriculture\nMinister Gardiner said today at a\nmeeting of the Senate Finance Committee.\nMr. Gardiner said from 40,000,000\nto 90,000,000 bushels of coarse grain\nwas moved East under the freight\nassistance plan last year and it was\nexpected the movement would reach\n100.000,000 bushels this year.\nMr. Gardiner said that although\nhalting of exports of beef and cattle had not resulted in an Increase\nof supplies in the Canadian market,\nit was not anticipated that there\nwould be a subsequent flood of\nbeef. Farmers now were feeding\ncattle rather than selling them Immediately. It was expected they\nwould gradually find their way to\nthe rnarket.\nBritain now was prepared to take\nany frozen beef Canada had available and it was proposed that when\nsufficinet beef was offered purchases would be made for Great Britain.\nCheese exports for this year to\nJuly 1 were higher than last year\nalthough there was some* reduction\nin production, partially due to a\nlate season, the Minister said.\nReport Germans\nSend Troops\nlo Dodecanese\nLONDON, July 7 (AP). \u2014 The\nGermans were reported by the Algiers radio today to have sent fresh\ntroops to the Dodecanese Islands-\npotential Allied stepping stones to\nany invasion of the Balkani\u2014and\nBerlin declared that Yugoslav and\nGreek guerillas were being wiped\nout ln another step to itrengthen\nAxis defences.\nGen. Draja Mihailovic's forces \"for\nthe most part have been wiped out\"\nin Yugoslavia, the Berlin broadcait\nasserted and \"mopping up opera\ntions also made good progress in\nGreece in the last few days.\"\nThe Yugoslav and Greek Governments in London acknowledged\nheavier Axis oppositoin against\nguerillas, but seid the claims that\nthey were wiped out were fantastic.\nA DNB (German news agency)\ndispatch recorded by the Associated\nPress said the Alliei \"cannot launch\na real invasion\" in the Mediterranean, that Southern France and\nItaly are so well protected \"that\neven an invasion under cover of\nbattleships or other heavy units\nmust be considered an absolutely\ndeadly risk.\"\nFile Suit Agpinst\nInvestment Croup\nPHILADELPHIA, July 7 (CP).-\nThe United States Securities and\nExchange Commission announced ,t\nhas filed suit against one of the\nUnited Statei largest Investment\ngroupi\u2014Investors Syndicate. Investors Mutual, Inc., and Investors\nSyndicate of America \u2014 charging\nthat it \"perpetrated fraudulent practices\" during a 15-year period In\nwhich It Issued more than $1,900,-\n000,000 in certificates and securities\nto more thin 400,000 Investors.\nSENATE APPROVES\nCORN INCREASE\nWASHINGTON. July 7 (AP) -\nLegislition to raise the ceiling price\nof corn from $1.07 a bushel. Chicago bills, to $1.40 wis approved\nby the United States Senate today\nind tent to the House.\n(   FH inc..mm\nViiit iiimiiiutij\nm\nREPORT DISCOVERY\nOf IMPORTANT OIL\nFIELDS IN AZERBAIJAN\nMOSCOW, July 7 (AP).\u2014The\nGovernment newspaper Izvestia announced today that new oilfields\nhad been discovered in Azerbaijan\nwhich were expected to become\nsecond in Importance only to those\nat Baku, capital of that republic.\nAik Provincial Governments\nto Discuss,\nNational Youth Program\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP). - War\nServices Minister LaFleche said today In a statement that Provincial\nGovernments have been invited to\nhave repreientativei at a conference\nhere Thursday and Friday of this\nweek to discuss the need of a national youth program.\nLarge Jap Sub Sunk\nWELLINGTON, New Zealand\nJuly \u00ab (Delayed) (CP).-Prlme Minister Peter Fraser announced todiy\nthat i Hudson bomber manned by a\nNew Zealand crew operating from\nGuadalcanal in the Solomons had\nsunk a large Japanese submarine.\nThere ls reason to believe that an\nair attack on another enemy submarine also was successful, Fraser\nsaid.\nCEN. CHIANC DECORATED\nCHUNGKING. July 7 (AP). -\nGeneralissimo Chiang Kai-shek was\ndecorated today as Chief Commander, Letlon of Merit, by Lieut. Gen.\nJoieph W. Stllwell. U.S. commending generil for Chlni, Indii tnd\nB u r m t, representing President\nRooievelt.\nWOOD TO REPORT\nON SURVEY OF\nJUVENILE CASES\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP) - An\nother move toward setting-up (\nfamily court in British Columbia-\nwill be completed when Attorney-\nGeneral Maitland recei\/vea a detailed report on Juvenile counts from\nMagistrate Herbert Wood.\n'Magiitrate Wood has been touring the Province with a view to\nhaving uniformity of treatment in\njuvenile cases when they appear\nfor the first time,\" Mr. Maitland\nsaid. \"There has been discrepancy\nthroughout the Province in this\nregard. My own opinion is that,\nwhen a boy appears for the first\ntime, he should be given another\nchance. It was with a view to meeting this situation and hnving juvenile courts better informed that I\nasked Mr. Wood to make the sur\nvey.\"\nSuch a survey, the Attorney-Gen\neral said, was necesiary before\nfamily courti could properly be\nSet up.\nRoosevelt Sends\nSpecial Message\nlo Chinese People\nWASHINGTON, July 7 (AP). -\nPresident Roosevelt sent a special\nshort wave radio greeting to the\npeople of China today on the sixth\nanniversary of their resistance to\nJapanese aggression.\nThe message, read for the President in a transmission from San\nFrancisco to Chungking, was followed by excerpts from former addresses by Mr. Roosevelt in his own\nvoice.\n\"Our friends have, long known\nwhat our enemies are learning today,,\" the message declared, \"that\nthe promises of the United States\nare always kept and our pledges are\nalwaya redeemed.\n\"The statements which follow\nhave been made by me at various\ntimes since we joined hands with\nyou in this war. It is good to know\nthat the hopes and the promises I\nexpressed on these former occasions\nare all being borne out today.\nI send you, the people of China,\nthe heartfelt greetings of our partners, the people of the United\nStates.\"\n. There followed these reproductions of past addresses by the President:\n\"We are fighting on the same side\nas the brave people of China, those\nmillions who for . , . years have\nwithstood bombs and starvation and\nhave whipped \u25a0 invaders time and\nagain ln spite of the superior Japanese equipment and arms.\n\"Chungking has been almost\nwiped out of existence\u2014yet it re-\nmaini the capital of an unbeatable\nChina. That is the conquering spirit\nwhich prevails throughout the United Nations in this war.\nNo matter what advances the\nJapanese may make, ways will be\nfound to deliver airplanes and munitions of war to the armies of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.\nThe common needs of all humanity are joining the culture of Asia\nwilh the culture of Europe and the\nculture of the Americas to form, for\nthe first time, a real world civilization.\"\n69\nTHRIFT\nVALUES\n. \u00bbi\nin the\nHosiery Department\n\u2022 Thursday     \u2022 Friday     \u2022 Saturday\nNazi Desertions\nin Norway\nTermed \"Shameful\"\nLONDON, July 7 (CP)^Norweg-\nian sources In London reported today that Gen. Nikalaus von Falk-\nenhorst, German Commander in\nNorway, had posted notices in military camps taking cognizance of .the\n\"shameful and disgraceful\" increase\nin desertions among the Nazi occupation forces.\nThe deserting soldiers were reported  to  have  fled  to Sweden.\nPERFECT CREPE\nHOSE\nHere they are again!\u2014Tho\npopular all perfect mock-\nfashioned crepe stocking\u2014\u25a0-\nShades that are right for\nSummer in all sizes CQ-\n&Vi \u25a0 lO'\/i. Pair....U\u00ab\/C\nWOMEN'S\nCOTTON HOSE\nIdeal for wearing in the\ngarden or at the .Summer\ncamp! Fawn or gray shades.\nAll sizes.\nPair  \t\n29c\nFULL FASHIONED RAYON HOSE\nImperfects of better hosiery lines\u2014but some real good\nvalues at that! Replenish your hosiery supply at thia\nsaving. Good shades in all sizes. CA-\nFINE MERCERIZED LISLE HOSE\nThey are just right for morning wear!   Save your finer\nhose for more \"dressy\" occasions!  Your choice of beige\ntones\u2014All sizes in this mock-fashioned lisle.\nIrregulars of our 59c line. Pair\t\n49c\nMOCK FASHIONED RAYON HOSE\nAll perfect rayons\u2014a sturdy hose with a \"silky\" appearand. You'll be wise to select several pairs of these at this\nprice, Summer shades in all sizet. fl'l AA\n3 pain for   \u00abPl.UU\nMCS-QH-SS tst mat mm.\n-\nAldermin Hubert Jenkins, former\nChairman of Glamorgan County\nCouncil, a leading Socialist, who be-\ngan work In a mine at 13, died. He\nwas 77,\nA thrush at Leighton BuuaM if.\nnot taking jny chances with'Brit*\nain's new anti-aircraft defencei. Sht\nbuilt a nest in a steel helmet left\nat a tennis court.\nBergeret Relieved\nof Air Duties\nALGIERS. July 7 (AP). - Gen.\nJean Marie Bergeret, who has been\nattached to the French air forces in\nWeit Africi, has been relieved of his\nduties by the French Committee of\nNational Liberation,^ decree published In the official gazette disclosed today.\nMore than 2000 worn-out tires had\nto be replaced dally during the\nEighth Army's advance in North Africa, it was disclosed at a salvage\nexhibition In London.\nRape Slayer Hanged\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, July T\n(AP)\u2014Harry Souaa, 2S, convicted\nrape-ilayer who enjoyed a brief\nperiod of liberty yesterday when\nhe escaped from the Himllton Jail\ntwo hours before he wes to have\nbeen hanged,' was dropped through\nUle trap thli moming.\nSouaa, \u2022 Bermudi-born Portugueie, wai convicted of raping aad\nmurdering . Margaret Stapleton,\ndaughter of an English clergyman,\ntwo yetn tfo.\nAfter hli escape yetterdty, s\nclothing merchmt discovered |ilm\nhiding in t waterfront cave and\nbecime eligible for i 11.000 rejvard\npoited by police. '\nNary Takes Over\nthe Dugout\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP). - The\nDugout, popular hostelry on the\nwater'i edge it Esquimalt Lagoon,\nand the spit on which it stands, will\nbe taken over by the Department of\nNational Defence for naval purposes, F. S. Buxton, proprietor, said\ntoday.\nHe said the Navy had bought the\nwhole spit and he had orders to vacate by July 31. The spit, approximately a mile of foreshore located\nSouth of Hatley Park, has In addition to the tavern and a store fev-\neral Summer cottages, some of them\nbuilt by squatters more than 20\nyears ago.\nStraw hats can be traced back lo\nthe Romans.\nDADS;\n6-*<\/-_e-.(\nCookies\nOUllVB\nN.\\NUT\u00a3\nA  DtllCIOUS\n4 (CONOMICAl\nWHOU GRAIN\n1 CANADA'I OFFICIAL FOOD RULES\nI CEREALS .__.! BREAD-a,. _m,\nn\" _,_-UtKtm -*-l *-**-, i\nfetiSB* Alw\"-J B~^\nWlLx_A(|ota_HH\u201e,a,{,ilr<Hi_\n-^:n:,p\"\"'a\"j,\u2122~chbk,\u00bb.\n!__,_        j     \u25a0*\u2022 \" \"' \"\"\"\u2022\u2022\" \"\u00bb 'I'\u2014 \"rail\na_z_\\?_-\"*\"\u2022 \u25a0*'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022' \"*'\"\u25a0\u2022\"+\u2022\nVFGrrABU., nn ____**_. fc wl<-.\n\u2022Ml,  rm,  _,*J \u201e\u201e, \u201e\u201e,       u |r>__7\u00bb\u201e\n\"-*\u2022- \"Uo-. _\u201e,( (,^\u201e\u201e,|. \u201e__       \"*\"\nmm. *-h. \u201e, m\u201e, ...k.,,,,,,^ u     h  _; *\n\u00ab\"~T inc. . w,.t. \"*\"\" \u2014\n'-^-AlU,,-,.^,.\nw\u00ab-*-'\u00ab*_*_\u00abl4|A,l_Jll|\ntorn. MM rf Vl\u00ab__|\u201e D ,\u201e_ \u201e fcj, ,._\n^t^***^*-^:\nDOZCN\nOGILVIE FLOUR MILLS\nt__i at.-Jtm\n\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'-\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022-  --'\"*\u25a0     \u2022   ' Jaa_____\n .\t\n 4 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, JULY I, 1941\nHelping ...\nActing Sensibly\nToward Ihe\nPoor Report Card\nBy Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.\nfc- At no other time ln all the year\nare there so many children over five\nwith heartaches u when the achool\n' resort is carried home at the end of\n[ithe term. Hundredi of children,\n..while welcoming vacation, dread We\n, ordeal of faclrjg their parenti with\nthe final report card.\ni -Theae luffering children and\nI youthi have lagged at ichool or fail-\nI ed to make promotion or graduation. Of course iome of theie \u2022will\nI uy they don't care or act aa if\nI they don't. Yet they do\u2014iome with\nimmeasurable agony.\nSCOLDINGS FOR SOME\nI  \"(Some children with falling gradei,\n_\u00bb*__. ttt*^n 'ow*r 'han a neighbor\nchild or cousin's, or lower than their\n; KgFM\nQUAKER\nf\n.HI\nfr\n*s^r\nCRUNCHY\nI...CRI5P\nparenti expected of them, will be\nscolded unmercifully. Soma otheri\nwill be ihimtd ud told thay ua\nlazy or good-for-nothing.\nAbout th* moit ignominloui sul-\n[erlng hu to be endured by the\nchild with low or falling, ft---*\nwhose brother or sister's gradei are\nexcellent. Juit Imagine yourself ln\nthe place of thli parent-bullied boy\nor girl whoie gradei are compared\nwith a imarter brother or inter*!,\nwith \"You could have done as well\nIf you had tried. You Juit don't\ncare, you laiy loafer! What will my\nfrienda lay? What will Aunt Maria\niay? and Grandma? You have disgraced all of uii\"\nSuch abusive, brutal treatment ot\nthe lagging child often comei from\nparents who, otherwise, are intelligent and highly educated (in book\nlearning).\nNevertheleu, any parent who acta\nso toward a child la not acting Intelligently. If only he used the lense\nhe was born with, he would not al-\nlow himself to act so stupidly and\nso brutally. However deep hii disappointment with the child'i low\nschool achievement or actual failure,\nhe ihould exerciie enough Intelligence to put himself ln his imagination in the child's place, to iee a little at he sees and feel a little as\nhe feels.\nSHOULD USE\nCOMMON SENSE\nIf, moreover, the pirent were to\nuse Just a little common lenie he\nwould realize that the damage hai\nbeen done, that nothing he and the\nchild can do right then apd there\ncan change that report card. What\nls written on lt wai being determined over weeks, monthi, even\nyem earlier. By no magic can the\nyoungiter be taken back and\nbrought forward again over iuch\nperiods of time.\nThe problem now concerns the\nfuture. What is the best thing to do\nto guarantee better ichool progreu\nby the child in May or June a year\nfrom now? A number of lUggestioni\nmay be found ln my bulletin, \"Helping Child Get Along at School,\" to\nbe had without cost by writing me\nin care of this paper enclosing a\nthree-cent stamp on a self-addressed\nenvelope.\nInches...\nMatter ol\nRight Exercise\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nIf you think your hlpi are hopelessly out of line, It ihould encourage you to hear about a lady who\ntook exactly 30 lnchei off this measurement.\nIt'i true that ihe reduced a lot\nof weight, too, but the thing that\nmade the big change In her proportions was tbe exerclie ihe took\nevery diy. She didn't try to do very\nmany exercliei but the onei ihe did\ncan't be beaten for toning those\nmassive muiclei on the back and\nsides of the hlpi.\nHere ls the program that let her\ntrim down at the rate of an inch a\nmonth.\nFirst, a lying down \u25a0 exercise that\nis juat about the best you can do;\nLie on one side on the floor, legs\nstraight down, one on top of the\nother. Raise the upper leg 12 Inches\nfrom the floor and swing lt away\nout in tront, then back and up. Hold\nfor a lecond, and iwing forwird\nigiin. Ten counti will be enough\nfor \u2022 starter but later on you can\ndo 20. Reit, then roll over on the\nother side and repeat.\nAnother fast-working itreamllner\nfor the hips and midriff Is taken lying face downward on the floor,\nm\ni - -_\n____.\n-_.\nYour ftmily will lov \u00ab\nQuaker Cora Flikes,\nbecause they're\ntciEisty-crisp ... malt\nflavoured . . , extra\ndelicious. A real\ntempting breakfast\ncereal. Order a package or two from\nyour grocer  todayl\nTb* Quaker OaU Company\nGETALflRGE\nTHRIFTY\nPACKAGE\nI RIGHT AW AY!]\nBegin with ligi straight lown and\ntry to keep one leg relayed u you\nrail* thi other leg from the hip,\nknee itnlght. There ihould be I\nstrong contraction ln the muiclei\non the back of ttie hlpi. Alternate\nlegi tor 20 counti.\nRelax for \u25a0 minute but itay In the\nsame position for thla one: Flex\nboth knees bickwird, io that heels\nare above the buttocks, and raise\nalternate thighs oft the floor. Do\nthla ilowly and make the hip muiclei work hird. In railing the thigh\noft the floor, keep the reit of the\nbody relaxed to centre all the action on the hip muiclei. Continue for\n10 counti. Besides toning the hip\nmuscles, thli exerclie gives you a\nthorough itretch through the midriff.\nNow, over on your back again,\nlegi itrilght down, for a roll. Juit\nroll aerou Uie back of the hlpi and\nover on that fat hump on the aide\nof the hip, then over to the other\nside. You can roll for 20 counts,\nNo hip- slimming program would\nbe complete without iome kicking.\nStand up and kick backward from\nthe hip, knee itralght. For momen\ntum, itart with a forward swing and\nfling the leg high up ln back. You\nwlll do better if you itand with one\nhand on a chalrback for support.\nKeep kicking for 20 counts, reat,\nand repeat with the other leg. Rest\nand finish with a ihort, staccatic\nkick backward. Stand in good posture with legs absolutely stiff, hip\nmusclei tensed, and thrust the leg\nbackward from the hip. Do this 10\ntimes with one leg, then the other.\nAfter you have gone through the\nexercises, shake each leg loosely\nfrom the hip to get rid of the tension.\nReason.,.\nr\n>\u2022\nMuch of War\nWorker Husband\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nDear Mlii Fairfax:\nI've been married ieven yeari and\nhave a baby girl of two. My hui\nband wai 19 and I wai 18 when we\nmarried. We now own our own\nhome. Everyone telli me thli is\nenough to make me hippy, but I'm\nnot. My huiband works ln a war\nplant ieven dayi a week and we\nhave not been out together ln over\na year and a half. He alwayi says\nhe li tired.\nMlu Fairfax. I am young and feel\nai it I need iome fun once In a\nwhile. When I aak him to go to a\nmovie once a week, he layi I'm alwayi wanting to go out. He thinks\nthat I should stay ln just because\nhe does. If I don't get out once ln\na while I'd go mad. When I aak\nhim If he lovei me he saya he hai\nsomething elie to do besides making\nlove to me. He thinks because he\nDr., Mn. Francis\nof N. Denver\nFeted at Anniversary\nNEW DENVER, B. C\u2014On the\nafternoon of July 4, friends gathered\nto celebrate the 2Jth wedding anniversary of Dr. and Mts. A- Francis\nAt the buffet supper on the lawn\nthey were presented with a beauti\n(ul chest o( silver after which lawn\nbowling was enjoyed, followed by a\nsing song. Among the invited\nguests wm Mr; and Mrs. J. Draper,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Taylor, Mt. and\nMrs. L. R. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. L. Harris, Mr._ and Mrs. Alex\nTrickett, Mr. and 'Mrs. J. Ironside\nof Silverton, Mr. and Mrs. Swain.\nL. Boultbee, Miss Howard of Nakusp, Capt an* Mrs. C. S. Leary,\nNakusp, J. Butlin, L. Boyd, Miss G.\nReynolds, M. D. P. Morgan, Miss\nI Stott, N. Tattrie, Mr. Saunder^,\nGeorge Walker and Mr. Booth.\nThere are now five trade unions\non the Gold Coast, four of'which\nare transport unions; the (ifth ls the\nPost Odice Technical Workers' Union. All have the same constitution\nand the method o( government o(\nthe model Trade union Congress\nRules.\nBe Comfortable ...\nWear\nSLACKS\nFor all-out activity or just plain re-\naxing\u2014you will find a Slack Suit\njust the thing . . .\nChoose yours today from our\nstock   of   Poplin,   Gabardine\nSlacks and Slack Suits.   Sizes\n2 to 20.\n$5.95 to\n$14.95\nMillinery Special\nCLEARANCE OF SPRING MILLINERY\nV. PRICE\nDress Special\nPRINTED SILK DRESSES, CLEARING AT\n25% DISCOUNT\nmovement: Raise right leg to right angles, swing across\nbody and touch right toes to outstretched left hand. Repeat ten times with alternate legs. Later perform twenty\ntimes. It is important always to bring the leg first to\nright angles, for by so doing this exercise also tones the\nabdominal muscles.\nworks and aupporta ma that ought\nto prove ha loves me. But money\ndoesn't mean everything.\nThere are other man like this;\nwhen other people ara around toey\noan be pleasant, but alone with their\nwives they'ra no company.\n(Mrs.) A.B.\nWhan a huaband works hard ln a\ndefense plant aavan dayi a week,\nit's no wonder that he la uiually\ntired evenlngi, Bi)t lt may be that\nImproper diet and reat alao has\nsomething to do with hli weariness.\nHave you acquainted yourself with\nthe proper feeding ot a man doing\ntot kind of work he Is? Thli li a\nmore Important nutter than many\nwives seem to reallie. A lot of\nworker absenteeism and inefficiency\nls the result of Incorrect diet.\nYou at least have your husband\nat home, while thouundi of other\nwives must get along while hus\nbandi are away ln the armed service. There are plenty of them who'd\nchange places with you, it lt meant\nseeing their husbands Just a few\nhours a day.\nI'm sure your huiband li reasonable enough to not object to your\ngoing out of an evening to a movie\nwith a woman friend. Don't damage his morale and his usefulness to\nhis country as producer by nagging\nhim about his unwillingness to give\nup his precious hours ot rest to\namusing you.\nKASLO\nKaslo, B. C.-Mra. J. Daem and\nher two children have loft (Or\nRevelstftke to visit her husband's\nparents.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Augustine and\nJackie Adams ara camping at Boulder Creek for a couple of weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. Taylor of Trail have\npurchased a house ln Kaslo and\nhave taken up residence there.\nMr. and Mrs. W. P. Dunbar and\ndaughter Jerup are spending their\nvacation ln Kaslo.\nMisses Marlon and Joan Tinkess\nare visiting In Trail.\nMiss H. Stephenson, R.N., has returned, to Nelson alter spending a\nfew days with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Stephenson.\nMrs. J. Paterson visited her son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs\nEric Paterson. at Nelson.\nErnest Augustine was In Nelson\nMonday to meet his sister, Miss\nAlice   Augustine,   who   has   been\nteaching Khool at Pinchi Lak*, B.C.\"\nShe   will spend  her  vacation  In\nKaslo.\nPte. Dorothy Hamilton ot. the\nC.WA.C, stationed at the Coast, li\nvisiting her mother, Mrs. R. Hamilton. '   *\u00ab      '\nAfter several days with aW parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Steptenson,\nMrs. R. G. Stevenson of Drumheller, ,\nAlta., has left to visit Rouland and\nTrail.\nR. L. Gardner motored to Trail\nMrs. Gardner and daughter Geraldine, who have been visiting friends\nfor the past week, returned with\nhim, I\nFred Aydon of New Denver spent\nthe weekend at his home in Kaslo.\nBob Ludlow is spending, a few\ndays in Nelson.\nBritain's untuneful air raid ilrem\nare^o remain, the Government hav-\ning turned down suggestions that\nsome sound a. little easier on the\near than the present unmelodic notei\nbe used.\nblood pressure was 190 or over as\nfollows: Trom age 40 to SO ln 13\nper cent; ages 50 to 60 ln 30 per\ncent; ages 60 to 70 in 4U per cent;\nages 70 to 79 ln 58 per cent and\nfrom 80 to 89 ln 61 per cent.\nThis averages pretty well my own\nfindings of the group of insurance\ncases (in good health) and the group\nwho were under medical care.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\ndUnhfoh\n-ioMSWWSA\nBy BETSY  NEWMAN\nInn mini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini i i mn mium i\nTODAY'S  MINU I Sift flour, add baking powder and\nSmoked Fish Baked Potatoes salt,   and  sift   together,   then   sift\nButtered Beets\nCake\nSliced Tomatoes\nIce Coffea\nSMOKED  FISH\n2 smoked herring or whitetish.\nThese smoked fish are good eaten\ncold, but I prefer to cook them\nslightly. They may be put In the\noven without any liquid, and warmed through for 5 or 10 minutes, or\nwith Just Vt of a cup of water. They\nmay be heated on top of the itove\nin the same way, in a frying pan,\nor with a very little water until they\nare heated through. Two o( the herring will serve four well, or two or\nthree generously,\nMASTER BUTTkR\nCAKE   RECIPE\n1-J cup butler or other shortening, 1 cup granulated sugar, 3 eggs,\nl'i cups sifted flour. a tsps. baking\npowder, Vt tsp. salt, St cup milk, 1\ntsp. vanilla or other flavoring.\nPut butter or other shortening in\nlarge bowl and stir with a large\nspoon until creamy; add sugar gradually, stirring continually, then sdd\negg yolks that have been beaten until thick and creamy. Save out 1 egg\nwhite from the others for frosting.\ngradually Into other mixture alternately with milk, beating in well after each addition. Add flavoring\nwith last o! milk. Beat 2 egg whites\nuntil stiff and add, cutting and folding in until they have disappeared.\nDo not beat after egg whites are\nadded. Bake in two 9-inch layer\ncake pans and bake 25 minutes at\n375 degrees F.\nMARSHMALLOW FROSTING\nVt cup sugar, 1 egg white, Vi cup\nwater, pinch salt, 6 marshmallows.\nBoll sugar and water until they\nspin a (ine thread, beat egg white\nstiff and gradually pour hot syrup\nInto eg white, beating continuously. Drop marshmallows ln hot mixture one at a time and beat until\nmelted and frosting ls stiff enough\nto stand up. Spread Jelly between\nlayars of cooled cake, then ipread\nfrosting on top and sidei.\nFigures...\nBlood Pressure\nStill a Mystery\nBy   LOQAN   CLENDENINQ,   M.D.\nPhysicians have been taking the\nblood pressure regularly ln every\npatient they see for over 40 years.\nOne would think that by this time\neverything about blood pressure had\nbeen settled. I used to collect literature on blood pressure. I started to put lt ln a book case ln a\nfiling system at my office and then\nI carried it home and put lt ln the\ncellar and lt accumulated so that\nlt ran up the walls like an erysipelas and finally reached the attic.\nAnd I had made only a partial collection.\nDOESNT RECALL MUCH\nOne would think also that from\nthis accumulation of literature that\neverything about Wood pressure had\nbeen written. But it is not ao. I\ndoubt whether when even an accomplished practitioner of medicine\ntakes a blood pressure and looks at\na result he has the slightest idea how\nlittle information he has obtained.\nThis was brought forcefully to\nmy attention about a year ago when\nI was trying to find out how many\npeople,at a certain age had a blood\npressure over and a blood pressure\nunder 150 systolic. I knew perfectly\nwell what the average blood pressure of a men at the age of 50 lathe life insurance companies have\ntold us that\u2014-but I did not want the\naverage blood pressure. I wanted\nto know what the Incidence of a\nblood pressure over 150 ls\u2014 how\nmany people have lt.\nI went to the directors of two\nlife insurance companies in my\nneighborhood and found out not only that they did not know, but\nthat all the literature they had on\nactuarial tables did not tell them. I\nthen wrote to the medical directors\nof six life insurance companies and\nfound that they did not know, but\ntwo of them very kindly consented\nto go over their figures and give\nme the results. These showed\u2014to\nstick to one age ln order to simplify this discussion\u2014that at the age\nof 50 about 10 per cent of people\nhad a systolic Wood pressure of 150\nor over.\nThis Is supposed to be toe upper\nlimit of normal, but obviously the\nlife insurance statistics deal with\na selected group. A man at th* age\nof 50 does not submit himself to a\n\u25a0life Insurance examination If he\nknows he has high blood pressure or\nit he is being treated for low blood\npressure or If he had high blood\npressure in toe past.\nDATA COLLECTED\nI therefore sent out questionnaires\nto a number of my professional\ncolleagues and asked them to give\nme the figurea on consecutive patients that they saw ln the office\nond ln the hospital. I also collected a number of my own on consecutive unselected patients. The results of this Investigation o( those\nwho were confessedly ilck showed\nthat about 50 per cent of people\nat the age ol 50 had a blood pressure over 150. TWi would indicate\nthst high blood pressure at the age\nof 50 was more normal than abnormal because more people had It.\nThese ligures of mine are substantiated by a study Just completed\nwhich shows that on. taking the\nblood pressures of about 15,000 people over 40 years of age the systolic\nffitX BOY*'\n1        'J.        r* n       ...\/.Lit\ntOf\nfhat is\n' either\nQUESTIONS AND\nANSWERS\nM. M.: What is a fistula? '\na fissure? Is there danger o:\nturning to cancer?\nAnswer: A fistula is a tract which\nextends from one opening In the\nbody to another. It ls almost always caused by infection and therefore discharges pus and other material. A fissure is nothing more\nthan a longitudinal craok in the\nskin or mucous membrane, In answer to your third question, I presume you are referring to rectal\nfissure and rectal fistula ln which\ncase I would say there la no danger\nof either of them turning to cancer.\n\\\nHam and French's\nMustard . . . unbeatable. And any cold\nmeat, egg or cheese\nsandwich goes way\nup in goodness when\nyou use this famous\nmustard. ,_,\nIkelkptpetkm\nmth\nM AIM MS WHITE LABE1\nfinest 0mm- \"HheTea.\nTO ASK DONATIONS IN\nPLACE OF ANNUAL\nSALE AT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C. - The\nmonthly meeting of the St Stephens WA. wu a garden party at\nthe home of Mrs. O'Reilly and Miss\nMelnardus. Mrs. F. Browne, Presi\ndent, presided.\nReport for the Visiting Committee\nwu given. Mrs. Browne and Mri.\nD. Powell wlll Ml (or July. Miss\nM. H. Butlin ls to attend to Church\ncleaning.\nIt wu decided that owing to various activities tha August meeting\nwould not be held, but Church\nmembers and WA. members be nuked for donations to replace the annual Summer tea and sale.\nRev. H. W. Janlsch o( Northampton, criticising disruptive Influent.es In home life, told the Baptist\nUnion Assembly that birth control\nwu \"rank selfishness.\" He ssid\nthere were (ew truly Christlin\nhomei In Britain snd the Immediate\nhopa ot an tncreaa* was remote.\n\"I HAVE TO BE KEEN AND QUICK!\n\"TMAGINE my surprise to find that \u2022 food as delicious u\n\u2022*\u25a0 Grape-Nuti gives me so much in nourishment, too! Yes, my\nmorning bowlful of malty-rich, iweet-as-a-nut Grape-Nuts supplies carbohydrates for energy, phosphorus for teeth and bones\nand iron lot the blood.\"\nAnd no wonder! For Grape-Nuts are a two-grain cereal.\nMade of iun-ripened wheat and malted barley. Specially blended,\nbaked and toasted for grand flavor and easy digestion.\nStart eating delicious Grape-Nuts tttergy breakfasts tomorrow.\nThey need less wgar. And Grape-Nuts make tempting cookies,\ncustards, etc Recipei on the packages. '\nIAT RIGHT-PEEL RIGHT-canada num tou ition*\n_,,.......\u2014 -t _, fr \u201e\u25a0 ,,,     ,y , fltih^^^iiad,,\n______________\n V\n\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014 \"\t\nQabardine\nPumps\nIn Black and Brown\nAll Sires\n.\n$435\nR. Andrew\n\u2022  & Co.\nleaders In Footfashion\n1\nCARDIFF (CP ) A boost for the\nWelsh. David Kirkwood, a Supply\nMinister Deputy Controller, told a\nSouth Wales audience \"industrlalisls\nIn the Midlands say tlrat Welsh peo-\nple are the best workers they get\n[rom any part of the country.\"\nt__*i\nWATCH REPAIR\nll I |ob for experti. Our work\nluurei your ittliftctlon.\nH. H. Sutherland\nUt Biktr St.        Ntlun. B C.\nttttttltlUtttU\u00bbttl--U\nCOTTON\nPULLOVER SWEATERS\n$1.25 and $1.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nWATCH TOMORROW'S\nPAPER for our  GROCERY\nSPECIALS\nR. fr R. CROCERY\nMr.'R, R. Horner\nR.CA.F. Mobile\nParly In\nNelson Friday\nMobllt recruiting pirty ot tht\nRoyil Cmidim Air Forct wil) bt in\nNtlson Friday and Saturday, seeking recruita for all branches of tht\nAir Force, tnd particularly seeking\nrecruits for air- crew,\nFlying Officer Archil Muir ls the\nofficer In charge of the party.\nNext *reek the recruiting party\nwill be in Trail.\nSalmo School Works\nHard for Rid\nCross During Year\nSalmo Public School joined the\nJunior Red Cross 100 per cent during 1042. ,S.me 98 piecu of knitting were completed tnd turned\nover to the Senior Branch. In addition, $25, the proceeds of a tag day,\nwu given to the Red Crou. A\nbazaar and a dance sponsored by\nthe teachers netted over $70; md\n$10 of this was sent to Junior Red\nCross HeadqWters and the balance\nwas used to buy books and softball\nequipment for the school. Another\ndonation of $14.50 wu sent to the\nJunior Red Cross as the final effort of the year. It represented thp\nbalance of money In the School\nTreasury and penny jars.\nNewlyweds to\nLive at Wilmer\nINVERMERE, B. C.-A quiet\nwedding was solemnised at the\nChurch of the Canadian Martyrs,\nAthalmer, June 30, when Alice Jean\nEdmonds of Cranbrook and George\nArthur Futa, formerly of Cranbrook now of Invermere, were\nunited in marriage by Rev. Bernard Holland of Canmore, Alta. The\nbride had chosen for the occulon\na navy blue pin-stripe suit and\nwhite accessories. She wore'a corsage bouquet of red roses. Mr. asd\nMrs. 0. A. McGuinness were best\nman and matron of honor. A reception at the home of the groom'i\nparents followed the ceremony. The\nbride and groom left later in the day,\ntor a honeymoon at Banff and Calgary, the bride travelling in a brown\ncrepe ensemble with beige hat and\nacceuories. On their return they\nwill reside at Wi)mer,\nBombs in general use by the R.\nA.F. in 1940 weighed 500 poundi. By\nMarch, 1M2, bombs weighing 4000\npounds were used, and by September, 1942, bombs weighing 8000\npdunds were dropped.\nLINGERIE FRIPPERIES\nCora Smith's tiny sailor is almost completely camouflaged by rose pleated organza spiced with bright red\ndots. Lisle mitta are cuffed with rosette_M>f.. the same\npleating.\nSchool Purchases\nof War Stamps\n$554, Two Months\nNtlion public schools \u2014 Humt,\nCentral, Junior High tnd High-\npurchased I total of $594.75 ln Wtr*\nSaving Stamps during the lut two\nmonthi of tht Khool term. Mri. G.\nS. Mclntoih, Stcrttiry ot tha Ntt\n\u25a0on Wir Finance Committee ,stited\nWednudiy thtt thli imount htd\nbien rtporttd, to htr.\nSalts of Stamps ind Certificates\nby Nelson banki tnd poit officii\nduring May ind Junt totalled $5793,\nti followi:\nPost office  \u2022-,.:\u201e.. $2251.25.\nSub poit offlct * 124.7J\nBanks     3417.00\n-|\n451\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy M_. M.J. VIGNEUX\nChirge for, Engagement Announcements In Thli Column Is $140\nTottl   I87SS.00\nTht tottl of $5793 brought thi\naggregate iold by these agencies to\nditt thli yeir to $20,950.50, ind their\ntotil iince stamps were pliced on\nsale to $184,478.50. These figures do\nnot Include payroll sivlngi,\nFigure* for the four ichooli for\nMay and June follow:  \u00ab\n. May    June     Tot.\nHume $ 87.50   $ 41.00   $128.(0\nCentral    .    $65.50     69.25    134.75\nJunior  High   78.50    151.75    230.25\nHigh. ,61.23 61.23\nToUls $292.75 $262.00 $394.76\n\"Miss Canada\" girls contlnut to\ndo yeoman servict in maintaining\nsales of War Stamps. In their last\ndrive their sales totalled $49, the\n\"Miss Canada's\" being Jean Erskine, Aileen MacDonald, Mary Lou\nDonaldson, Iris Musfelt, Eleanor\nSimpson,. Beryl Calbick, Gladys\nFleming, Mavis Quigley, Hilda Barbour, Joyce Riley and Francei Aldersmith.\nThree Queen's Boy   -\nGirls Ate Sergeants\nAll three Scott-Liuder girls of\nQueen's Bay in sergeants In tht\nCanadian-Armed Forces. Miss Esme\nil in the C.W.A.C, thl Misses Jou\ntnd Sybllln Jlii R.CAT.\nSgt. Sybil lett for tht Cout yesterday ind Sgt' Join on Sundiy\n.after thru wttki* leive. They are\nitttlontd it Jericho. Sgt Esme U\nwith tht the Army tn tht North.\nAQ three .were employed ln Nelion befort enlisting.\nNIW DENVER AID\nDISCUSSES WORK SALE\nNBW BBNVITR, B.C.\u2014Tht. Prei-\nbyterlin Ltdlts Aid met it tht homt\nof Mn. J. B. Smith, the President,\nMUs Dora Clever, In tht chtlr.\nDiscussion centred on I nil of\nwork Md supper.\nRefreshments wtre nrved.   .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1943 \u2014 5\n1320 Pounds\nt Mn. H. McDougill, who hu\napent the past three weeks at fhe\nhome of her mother, Mri. M. Hep-\npell, Silica Street, returni todty to\nher home in Spokane.\nt Signalman' Louis Gagnon ls\nhere from the Eut, visiting hla parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon,\nCarbonate Street.\nt Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Wood of\nToronto, wb\u00bb hive vitlted Vancouver, were gnesti of Mr. tnd Mri.\nCharles Kelman, Ward Strtet, en\nroute East.\ne Mrs. Lanen ot Castlegar vlalted town yeaterday..\nRETURNS TO PEARCE\ni Acl Leslie L. Laithwaite has\nreturned to Pearce, ;Alta^ after a\nfew days apent at flit home of\nhis mother and sister, Mn. Laithwaite and Mrs. A. O. Grty of the\nNorth Shore.\ne Mn. W. R. Dunwoody, sijica\nStreet, has left on a couple of weeks\nholiday to the Coast. \u25a0 .\ni Mr. and Mn. T. A. Willice,\nCedar Street, have hid ai gueit for\nthe past two weeki, Tdr. lnd Mn.\nG. F. Lunn of Critrbropk.\nt Mrs. G. 0. Stretton of Vancou.\nver, formerly of Nelson, is visiting\nNelson.\nt Sgt. Sybil Scott-Liuder, who\nwith her sliter, Sgt Join Scott-\nLauder, who hai visited her parenta,\nR. A. Scott-Lauder and Hon. Mrs.\nScott-Lauder at Queen's Bay for the\nput few weeks, was a guest tt\nthe Livenidge home, Granite Road,\nyesterday.\nt Rev. J. J. Lambert of Clarei-\nholm, who recently met with m accident ls In the city. He is accompanied by his mother, Mn. Lambert\nof Windsor, Ont.\nLIGHT SUMMER SUITS\nDRESSES and HATS\nMilady's Fashion Shop\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\n-BUILD B. C. PAYROLLS'\nMrs. D. of Vernon, B. C\nsends us a letter from which\nwe taka the following:\n\u2022 \"I always buy Pacific Milk\nI like it for its richness in\ncooking, especially puddings\n\u2022 and gelatines. It is superior\nto cow's milk, particularly in\ncoffee.\"\n_\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Picked\nilUlllllllllll.lflllllllilillillllmilium\nHERE FROM COAST\nt Mrs. Fred Aro ind little\ndaughter, Mary-Ruth, of Vancouver,\narrived in Nelson Monday night to\nspend a few weeks vacation at the\nhome of Mrs. Aro'i parents, Mr. and\nMn. F. W. Hawei, Silver King Road,\nt Mrs. K. Christiansen of Bonnington wai in town Wednesday visiting her. parents, Mr. and Mn. F.\nW. Hawes.\n* Mr. and Mri. George Griffiths, formerly of Bralorne and Vancouver, have taken up residence\nin the Kerr Apartments.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ralph Hale has u guest\nher brother and aister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mri. G. R. Pelton of Revelstoke,\nho are spending a few days here.\n_\u25a0\nTney will also visit Mr, Pelton's sister, Mrs. H. McCarthy, at Sunshine\nBay.\nt Mn. W, ,D. Dow of Cranbrook\nand her baby are guests ot Mrs.\nDow'i parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R.\nCampion, Latimer Street.\nt Mr. tnd Mrs. W. S. (Duke)\nHarris have returned to the Alpine\nMine.\ni Mn. D. A. McDonald haa returned to Vincouver afler a month's\nvisit to her mother, Mrs. Ralph Hale,\n75 High Street Mn. McDonald was\naccompanied home by her husfoand,\nwho Joined her in Nelson a fortnight ago.\nt R. A. Aldersmith, Miss Betty\nAldenmith and Miss Evelyn Ball\nhave returned from five days at\nAinsworth. Miss Frances Aider-\nsmith also spent the weekend there\nJohn Flodin, Long\nTime Kootenay\nResident, Dies\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-John Olaf\nFlodin, who has been a lumber\nworker in East Kootenay for 30\nyears, died at the age of 69 years.\nHe waa born in Sweden and came\nto Canada in 1909. During his long\nresidence ln East Kbotenay he was\nemployed in the lumber operations\nof th. Canadian Pacific Railway tie\nand timber branch at Bull River\nand Canal Flats. '\nSurviving him are his wife at\nBull River, a son, William and a\ndaughter, Mrs. Chris Bylander,\nCranbrook, a granddaughter, a\ngrandson in the Canadian Army\noverseas and two great grandchildren.\nCRANBROOK\nFewer Cars Pass\nThrough Kingsgate\nKINGSGATE, B. C. - Traffic\nIhrough lha Port for June showed\na considerable falling off, compared\nto May. The freight and railroad\nbusiness continued lobe high but\neven that was lower thsn May. Detailed figures are Canadian cars\nNorth 130, Canadian cars South HI.\nU.S. cars North 181, U.S. can South\n101. Pusengen North 1711, South\n1709. Export shipments by rill 1169.\nShipments cleared at Kingsgite 169.\nShlpmenti bonded on other Canadian* ports 980. More than 1500\npieces of baggage were examined.\nTwenty-five horses and 10* purebred cattle with _ calves were exported to the U.S.A.\nThe King a nd Queen sent congratulations to John Frsncklo* when\nhe celebrated his 108th birthday at\nWolverton, Buckinghamshire.\nuality counts most\u2014for that\nrich, satisfying flavour which\nonly a fine quality tea yields, use**\nSALADA\nTEA\nCRANBROOK, B. C.^Jtck Henderson is visiting his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. William Hendenon here,\nprior to leaving next week to Join\nthe Dental Corps of the Canadim\nArmy. He has been doing tssay\nwork at Ocean Falls until recently.\nMrs. G. B. Willis left Monday to\nvisit at Vancouver.\nMrs. Angui L. McPherson has\nbeen spending this week at Cal.\nga'y.\nMri. J. M. Wlndaor. has left for\na holiday tt Bilfour Betch Inn.\nDuring her tbsence her two diughters, Elizabeth Anne md Jme, ire\nguesti of Mr. md Mrs. C. V.-Ed-\nwarda.\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Scott have returned to their home here after\nholiday In Vancouver. Their ion.\nJack Scott, accompanied them to\nCranbrook to spend the Summer\nholidays.\nMr, md Mn. Richard Large md\nchildren, Barry ind Wendy, have\narrived here from Fernie to vialt\nDr. H. L. Large.\nMrs. A. J. Schell has left for her\nhome at the Cout after a month's\nholiday here.\nWord has been received here of\nthe safe arrival overseas in t recent\ncontingent of the Canadian Army of\nPte. Douglas Cilchrlst of Cranbrook,\nmd Trp. Mack Schell of Crmbrook\"\nand Vancouver.\nAc. 1 Mack Sanderson, who ls at\nService Flying School at Macleod\nspent the weekend ln Cranbrook.\nMn. Leonard Gtddes ind diughter have left for Gnnd Forks to\nJoin Mr. Gaddes md make their new\nhome. They formerly resided at\nEdgewater'and Cranbrook.\nMiis Florence Best of Kamloops\nis a guest of Miss Muriel Balder.\nShe is a former Central School staff\nmember,\nMisi Alice Romanick of Crinbrook, who has been employed at\nKimberley, is visiting here for \u2022\nfew days. She leaves Thursday fbr\nEdmonton where she expecti to remain for iome time.\nLac. Douglas Kerr, who ls stationed at Centralia, Ont, has arrived here to tpend his furlough.\n'.Miss Ills Dickenson of the Meteorology Bureau itaff at the Lethbridge Department of Transport\nstation spent a few daya here visiting her mother.\nMiss Georgina Beattie hts left\nfor Vancouver ifter t short fortnight's hoUday here, guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. R. B. Flett.\nMrs. David Hunden of Vancouver Island is visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. James Norgrove\nMiss Mary Joy Hsm of Silverton\nIs visiting her cousin, Mrs. Gordon\nHanna.\nMrs. Ellen Joule has left to visit\nfor the next month at Pender Ii\u00bb\nland.\nMr. and Mrs. Lomt Pockett tnd\nchildren are spending a holiday at\nBull River, guesti of Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Garbutt.\nMr. and Mrs. George Roberta md\ndaughter, Join, hive irrived here\nfrom Rossland.\nMiss Betty Carnihm, R_N.. gridu-\nite md for the past yeir, stiff\nmember of St. Eugene Hoipltil, left\nSunday to visit her parenU at Blalrmore prior to taking' pott-graduate\nwork In anaesthesia in the United\nStates.\nMr.  and  Mrs. Lester Plnneo  of\nNew Westminster have been visiting here, gueita of Mrs. Pinneo's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J, Bar-\nber. ,\nKINGSGATE\nKIWjSGATE, B, C-Tommy BaU\nleft on lut Thursdiy's tnln for\nSweetgrtis, Montana, it which port\nhe will be stationed ii Customi Officer to future. Mr. Balf has been In\nthe nrvice of the U.S. Cuitomi it\nEastport for 17 years. Mn. Balf\nll remaining ln Eastport for the\npreaent.\nW. E. Hall wai home for the\nholiday week from Prleit River.\nBrick Chapman wti home over\nthe week end.\nPiul Thom, Chief of the Immigration Patrol here, retjirned home.\nWednesday after aevenl months\nduty In ind around New York.\nJohn.Mauldin, of the U.S. Immigration Service,, left this week for\nPhiladelphit. 'He expecti to be\ngone for leveral weeks.\nMrs. W. R. Baakervllle is viiiting\nwith her mother Mrs. Lawson In\nWinnipeg for a month.\nMlsa Mary Rogentlne, who has\nbeen visiting Mn. W. E. Hall for\na month left on \"Tuesday for Cloquet, Minn.\nMr. and. Mn. Carlson, Mr. and\nMra. Pope, and Mr. md Mn. Jimmie Bonner were ill Kimberley vliltori on Wednesdiy.\nMr. and Mn. Bill Dunbar hid a\ntrip to Crinbrook on Mondiy,\nThe last meeting of the Ltdiei\nContnet. Club for the leislon wis\nheld list week it the home of Mrs.\nW. E. Hall. Prizes were won by\nMrs. A_drldfle, md Mri. Harry\nHogg.\nlo V-Bin.tl.es\nOvtr t period of three monthi the\nRefugee Workeri it the Refugee\nRoomi have shipped 1320 poundi of\nclothing to V-Bundles of B. C.\nThe shipment contains 1477 articles consisting of MS irtlclei ldr\nchildren, 822 for women, 118 for\nmen, 8] quilts, two afghans and five\ndolls. Then irtlclei, which were\nmtdt tnd contributed by workers\nIn Nelion and outlying diitrict,\nwert wnt in two separate ihlpmenti of 770 and SSO poundi each.\nA ihipment of 170 poundi of rigi\nwu also', made..\nTht trtlclu ire ihipped to Coast\nheadquarters and diitributed from\nVtncouver. Suitable trtlclu ire\nttken out md lent toTtussia.\n\"Workers are itlll needed at the\nroomi,\"' Mn. T. W. Brewer said\nWednesday. \"The rooms are to be\nkept open Indefinitely during the\nSummer.\"\n1111111m1.iHi.m1111iM.1111t111111111.1111\nConsider the\nFood Value In'\nK.V.MILK\niiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii.i\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nVREEMAW\n*     FURNITURE CO.\nThe House tf Furniturt V.lqei\nPhont 115 ' Ntlton\nTRADE IN YOUR  X *\nOld Furniture\non NEW\n.\nI\nBeeti may be attacked by some\nof the webworms. These pests web\nthe leaves together and eat the. foliage. They can be controlled by\nspraying with arsenate of lead. Any.\npigweed growing nearby should be\neradicated, as the webworms live\non the weed.\n' One of the mpst daring young offlcen ln Britain's \"Little Navy,\"\nLieut Philip Gould, 26, has been\nkilled In action. Gould, skipper of\na motor torpedo boat, once found\nhimself ilone between two enemy\nconvoys, escorted by E-boats. He\ncalmly decided to throw In hla lot\nwith the E-boats, which failed to\nrecognize him ln the darkness.\nSeventy-five of the houses in Va-\nletta, the capital of Malta, have been\ndestroyed by tlr raids.\nIN  THE  QUALITY TRADITION\nHUDSON'S BAY\nSO DEPENDABLE\nSO POLL FLAVOURED\n- SO DOWNRIGHT\nGOOD\nKINGSGATE CUBS PASS\nFIRST TESTS\nKINGSOATE, B. C-The Ntlgh-\nborhood Den of Wolf Cubs which\nrecently sltrled to function under\nIhe leiderihlp of Hollli Aldridge\nLs going ihetd nicely.\nThe boyi hive built Ihemitlvts\ni hot.In tht woodi ind on Stturdty\nnight pused thtlr first tula tnd reeled their certltlcttu u full-\nblooded Wolf Cubs.\nMtke lucctnlvt plantlngi, about\nevery two Weeks, of bttnt, peas.\nradishes, betts, cirroti, ltttuct, ipln\n\u25a0ch ind sweet torn thit you mty\nenjoy i longer gtuoo of thue fivorite t\nShe thought Mary's blouse was white\n... until she saw her with *\u00ab3 \u00b0t'D\u2122% \u2122\u00ab Eft-\nthe neighbor's boy in his \u25a0Mehioogticiothawiuiuti  -\n-RINSO-WASHED  Shirt print dresses, children's nliy clothes,\ncolored shirts! keep their fresh colors.\n\u2022 Don't bltme yourself U your wuh rjmo il gentle to wuhible colors\u2014\nil not it whitt it yonr neighbor's, gentlt to yoor hinds, too.\nJust change io whst she wishes with _,..-__,.\u2014\u00ab\u00ab\u2022__> _._._.. _.__\n-buy Riniol DISHWASHINO MADE EASY\n.,,              '        .iii __.ii Gtl Rlmo'i big htlp in diihwi.ti.ng.\n\/\/1 It ttty to gtt clothei dialing Ju\u201e ^ ,-ri,h7rinse ind driinl Rin.o\nwhite. Riniomikii rich, long-ltlting mlkM  Kickln\u00abi  ind  greist \u00bbini_h.\ntudi even in birdeit witer.   They Diihei dry ihlning-clem without wip-\nfl\u2014t out dirt without rubbing, scrub-    ingi Gtl tht GIANT boi nl Iti today.\nIN WARTIME\nOK ANYTIME\nComet In Iht\nSam* Familiar\nPackage\ntt-VUt\n\u2022 MORE WASHING POWER\n\u2022 LONGER LASTING SUDS\n\u2022 GREATER ECONOMY\n\u2022 EASIER ON HANDS\n*\u25a0*\u2022*>\n.._._-._. ...m._.\ni i   I in uii in lir- -' \u25a0\"-\u2022'-\"\u2022 ~..i~*\n\t\ns _.\n.\n__-\n Mmx Batttj tim*\nEsUbllshed April 22. 1003.\n\"^   Britith Columbia'*\nMot* Interesting Newspaper\nd every mon\nublish:\nnjng txctpt Sundiy by\n_fJNG  COMPANY UM-\n. JM Baktr St. Nelion, British Columbit\nr)ER OF THS CANADIAN PRESS AND\nAUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\n- aE THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1943.\nIR\u2014' '\t\nGood News for\ni   Silicosis Sufferers\nProm the Banting Institute comes\nnews of importance to sufferers in\nBritish Columbia from silicosis and to\nthose who are exposed to the danger\nof this insidious disease.\nDrs. Crombie and Blaisdell of the\nBanting Institute have completed a series of tests ln the Porcupine Clinic\nfor Silicosis Research and have reported favorably on the use of aluminum powder to treat or prevent the\nmalady.\nThe treatment Is to be made available to miners of Northern Ontario.\n\u2022 Silicosis ls a matter of concern in\nBritish Columbia, so much so that it\nhas been found necessary to include it\nas a hazard for which compensation\nIs paid under the Workmen's Compenaation Act. Mines in Kootenay and\n\u2022lsewhere in the Province, are paying\nassessments to provide for measures to\nfight the disease or to compensate sufferers from it.\n' It is a disease which has baffled\n\u25a0dentists and has claimed many, lives.\nIt Is caused chiefly by inhalation of\nquartz-dust. \u2022\nThe report from the. Banting Institute offers solid ground for hope\nthat we are on the way to conquering\nthe disease.\nThe Over-All Sugar\nSituatipn\n. Canada's beet sugar production is\nshowing the effects of shortage of la-\nIjor. Alberta estimates for 1943 30,000\nacres, an increase of more than 2000\nacres over 1942, to which Imported\nJapanese labor is contributing. Ontario nVay not exceed 9000 acres, compared to 20,000 acres in 1942, the decrease apparently being due to the demands for labor from nearby munitions factories.\nIn total, plantings in Canada will\nprobably run to about 56,000 acres, a\ndrop of about 11 per cent compared to\n1942.\n, Most of Canada's sugar has to be\nImported. Domestic production in 1942\nwas 184,495,000 pounds out of a total\nef 683,962,000 pounds, or about one-\nthird less than in 1941. Rationing by\nreduction in quotas to manufacturers\nof candy, soft drinks and other prod-\nnets containing sugar, and by direct\nrationing of the public for part of the\nyear, brought this striking reduction\nin consumption. Reduction is necessary\nbecause of the pressure of war conditions on shipping needed to bring in\nthe raw sugar.\nThey compel them __ live under the\nmost unfavorable housing conditions.\nTheir attitude is stated in an official circular which gives instructions\nfor dealing with foreign workers: It\nsays:  <\n\"Be very standoffish to foreign\nworkers, Sensitiveness is wrong.\nThough it is difficult for the German\npeople, they must learn that the too\nsoft German heart must be second to\ncommon sense. Only-iron hearts can\nbring victory. We shall try to mako\nthe foreigners accustomed to German\nhabits. They do not know about social\ninsurance, people's service, and the\nStrength through Joy organiiatlon.\nThey do not know our German qualities such as honesty, cleanliness and\nsense of duty and responsibility- We\nmust teach them these things and severely punish Infringements.\"\nThe \"too soft German heart\" is\npriceless.\nHolland Under the\nLooters\nHolland, like Norway, is cut to\nabout half rations by the Geimans,\nand seizure of food supplies for shipment to Germany continues on a huge\nscale.\n\u2022 In 1942 more than 330,000 tons of\nvegetables and fruite were confiscated\nand sent to Germany.\ns Germans are also seizing coal and\ncoke, so that the tonnage left is only\nabout half of normal requirements.\nDutch underground newspspers are\nurging farmers to hamper the enemy\nby cutting down production of foods\nwhich can be sent to Germany and by\nconcealing produce whenever possible.\nThe \"Too Soft Cerman\nHeart!\"\nThe Nazis are behaving characteristically in their treatment nf those\nwhom they delude or force into leaving\nFrance or Italy or Holland, or other occupied or friendly country, to work In\nGermany. They promise them high\nWages snd then take away most of the\nmoney by various impositions. They\npromise them reasonable hours and\nforce them to work long periods of\novertime without profit to the worker.\nLakeside\nBy 0. 8. REES\nA fourth wir Summer vith tides ot Armigeddon in savage ebb tnd ilow in t wtr\nlike none other known to mtn tnd the victory\nil ti uniquely Important. Hlstpry may repeat\nind Jour Summon of the Orett Wtr find\nparallel to thli Greiter Wir, as the martial\nMyitlc eohoei guilty cry of MacBeth with\nMacDuff tt tht gate, \"I hear a knocking at\nthe South entry\"!\nThis Introduction poses reflective poul-\nMillies of an uncuihloned bench beneath tha\nlace-boughed cottonwoods and the tailing\ncotton-tails all on a Summer'! eve that unmasks tomorrow's worrlei ind bids tham\nitand to line tnd ttke their turni |t looks like\nt flnt Summtr after ill\u2014weather permitting!\nCitizens of all shapes ind sires cheerily .disport themielvei with genial Mil by the tranquil lapis of the lake, lending vivacity and variety to familiar scene. We mln trim-limbed\nand berry-brow*nad boyi now to dlitant camp,\non the high wu or on far fieldi of wtr,\n\"Where ire tha ladi we used to know,\nIn {ha city, town and countryside.\nSoma hava gone where great ships go.\nSome tor Freedom and Faith have died.\nWe Md them Godspeed with duty well\ndone ind the full fruiti of victory.\u2014\"When\nthey shall come again from tht ltnd of tht\nenemy ... come igain to their own border.\"\nPerchance they recall happy hourt here on'\nemerald sward and lUver sand with companion Aqua-belles\u2014the bathing girl ln many\nshades of tan, ll changeless to a changing\nworldl .   '\nNOW AND THEN\nThe sun-hatted guardian of ParklanrLand\nhis garden-aides cherish their domain, aty ltl\nfreedom from fragments bespeaks a civic tidiness of mind. The muilc of human actlvltlei\naround our public playground li not to monotone, and i benign peacefulneia induces t\nproper perspective of aU our ^ain.\u2014Tiny\nwaves\u2014undulations devoid of impetus\u2014reflect\nthe cosmic rhythm ai they caress the edge-\nfirm beach, pulsations that hava beaten out\ntha march of time for many mlllenlumi, and\nthe seamless slow-moving stream slips quietly\nseaward ilong iti tree-fringed channel; even\nti to earth's dim diwn when Nature wai writing har own cryptic itory on thli terrestrial\n.ball. Doubtless thit very villey wu thtn a\nsteaming swamp with rtnk tnd luxuriant vegetation\u2014forage for spike-toothed dinosaur,\nwide-winged pterodactyl and what-have-you!\nLong later came the paddled birch canoes of\nthe brown-men, Indiini In friendly or fratricidal foray; thereafter, tha white man, Nordics to question of adventure or gain with\nclumsy craft to carry them adown Uit green-\nblue glaclil itreanu. Witer-borne traffic, ilr\nconditioned along the dustiest trackless routes,\ncrystal clear ind clean, wixed with the coming of the double-decked, yellow-stacked item-\nwheelers, waned when ilim iteel ralli and\nblack-topped highways snaked sinuous passage\nthrough the mountain pisiei. Trilling smoke-\nriband and reionant whistle ire pissing hence\nilong the Inland horizons, but let thii grey-\nbearded Old-Timer voice \u2022 Drive Bon Voy-\ntge to the few remtinlng river-boats!\nTht deep drone of i sllver-irrowed Trins-\nCanadi winging Westward ll pissing reminder\nof the Big Bltft on btck kitchen tnd front parlor of John Bull's Island home, whose garden\ngltt the glorious RA.F. hive slammed, bolted\ntnd barred for ever igilnit tbt berserk legions ot tht self-destroying Frankenstein the\nKultur-creted Teutons htvt nised up for their\nown undoing. The onetime Auitritn postcard\npilnter md piperbingtr, ln \u25a0 brighter moment\nsome time ifter \"The Germin Btnd\" with brtsi\nhomi ind leither lungs hid blared- \"Deutsch-\nlind, Deutachlind Uber Alles\" idown the\ncandied-chestnut boulevards of the Chimps\nElys.n, realized thtt \"He will hive to break\nui on thit Island or lose the war\" (ChurchlU)!\nIt Is poetic Justice thit our ilr armadas should\nnow be heeding for the roofless citadel of\nFestyng Europt ln their Tirgit for Tonight*\nfrom thit ltrnt little Uland of HMS Unslnk-\niblt fortver moortd off tht cout of t continent ln Uve silvery Chinntl \"Ai cold wtttn to\nt thirsty soul, so It good niwi from I ftr country\"! Twin towen of CKLN nurby rectll tht\nbitter broidcuti thit cime to Britom everywhere through miny dirk houn ilnct fir\nTill ol 'SS, but In tht lmmedlicy of theit litter\ndiys, heirtenlng newi from tht btttlefronts\nleems rlghteour reward.\nNOW DAY IS OVIR\nAnd to, homt-tlong to placid tool beneath a duik-darkenid sky. Flowtn htvt fold-\nid with the fading sun. whose last lateral rays\nthrow greying shadows ithwirt tht grttn carpet tnd tum lakewater knift-ttttl ln color.\nTht illver of the sand tsiumti t coppery\n\u25a0heen In the ilchtmy of duik. Lttt lingering\ngroupi leisurely collect their tripping! tnd set\nfices homewird (Bring the btiktt, Bert\u2014md\nyour loeka. Sammy!) towardi thalr Victory\ngirdem Uut hive everything ln them txctpt\nsomeone to weed them! The klddiei' whirligig\nitopi 111 whirl ind Ute checker-ging hu chicked out. the ire-saw cunt uwlng, ind even\nthe errint bow-wows have Ktmptrtd off, bit\nIht birds ire busy wilh thtir veipert u githerlng dirk ovtrbripu Uit verdinl villey, md\ni? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOptn ta tny reider, N|m\u00ab\u00bb, et personi\nliking questions wlll not bt publlihtd.\nThtrt ll ne chirge for thli service. Quae,\ntloni will lttt bt answered by mill except\nwhan there la obvious niceislty tor prlv- .\nMiner,   Retilltck-To   little   sn   irgument\nt    would you please ttll int If thtrt is or\nwu i mine to tht United States mining\n- 160,000 tone of ore dtily, that li 24 hours\n,  tUHy. '\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0'\u25a0\nWe do not know of any ilnglt mint producing thtt tmount dtily but whole mineral\nUtM iuch is the Iron ore regloni ot Minnesota\nwould have production approximately thli\nfigure.\nTMn. Renl\u00abd\u2014r htvt taken my driven test\nin 1840. Do I hive to takt it igiin thli\n- 9-JUfii    \u25a0':\nA new driver ttit li not rtqulrtd with ttch\nrenewal of licence.. \"\nHow does a perion go about getting gasoline\nration coupons? *\nApply it the Provlrfclal Motor Vehicles\nBranch Office. \u2022\nJ. B-, Balfour\u2014WUl you please  advise me\nwhtt dty July 12, 1898 occurred on?\nWtdnetdiy.\nJ. M. Marysville\u2014Is Fruit Kept t lift and\nreliable substance to use to preserving\nfruit? Il lt to tny wty Injurious to the\nhealth?\nIt is regarded is safe if directions ire\nstrictly followed. It is not injurious to the\nhealth.\nM. A. R., Nelson\u2014Whit bodiei of water ara\nknown ai \"The Seven Seas\" to the common expression \"to sail the Seven Seas\"?\nUsually referred to ai \"The Seven Seal\"\nare the Pacific Ocean, AUanUc Ocean, Indian\nOcean, ArcUc Ocean, Mediterranean Sea, Eait\nChina Sea, BalUc Sea.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AOO\n.   (From Dllly Newi, July 8, 1*88)\nGirl Guldei who paised first-aid exami\nln recent examinations are Huel Tallyn, Winifred Smith, Edna Nelion, Eileen Eperson, Dorothy Eperson, Mirgiret Croy, Iiobel Graham.\n\" Mrs. T. Norman, G, Miller and C. E. Tutt\not Robton were Inducted at Deaconess and\nDeaconi of the United Church Sunday. Rev.\nC. E. Mott of Trail officiated.\nOnly 15 of 80'unemployed bunking at the\nArmory who were asked to be on hand Friday\nto be transported to Dominion Government\nreUef campi, ilgned up when James Dronsfield, employment agent, called tor them.\nSB YEARS AOO\n(From Dally News,-July 8, 1918)\nEdwird Ferguion, for many yean one of\nthe moit active Liberal workeri to the city,\nli to be ippolnted to succeed S. S. Jirvli, Acting Government Agent, Mining Recorder, Collector of Tixes, Registrar of Voters, etc., it\nNtlion.\nHalcyon Hot Springi Hotel last wttk was\nlerlouily threttened by t forest firt which\ngot iway from a ilish burning eperatlon. Tha *\nfire burned to within 500 feet of the hotel,\nbut wai under control yesterdiy.\nC. Minkln ot the Mankln Lumber and\nPole Co. li ln Kootenay Lake General Hospital wtth bullet woundi In both arms md\nSteve Ctrlion is to Jail at Salmo aa a result .\nof a ihooting affair it Tamarack, 18 milea\nSouth of Nelion yeiterday.\nToday'* Horoscope\nThe penon whoie birthday Is today hai the\ntalent for following a career in music or art.\nYou ,hava refined taitei ind' chooie your\nfrlendi cirefully. You have \u25a0 level held md\nyour Judgment' is sound. Your mirrled life\nwlll be or li happy. Let intuition md experience guide you this morning If you are confronted with a worTlsome difficulty about a\nneighbor or relative whom you have to help\nagalnit your wish.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nSy Tht Cinidlin Preu\nJuly 8, 1918.\u2014Strong offenilve opened by \u2022\nItalians and French near Berat, Albania, Itallini, lupported by BrlUih monitors, won Ute\npassage of VoUum, Albania. Czecho-Slovaks\noccupied Irkutsk, East Siberia. Australian offenilve astride the Somme idvinced slightly.\nWords of Wisdom\nWho makes quick use of the moment, Is t\ngeniui of prudence.\u2014Laviter.\nEtiquette  Hints\nThe fond parent who drags a smill child\ninto the like or ocean, ducks his heid under\nthe water-three or four times to mike him\n\"like the witer\" ought to hive hii or her own\nhead examined.\nTest Yourself\nI, Where did Uie modern clrcua originate?\n1. During what Unittd Statu President's\nterm of office did tht newsreel become i diily\nfuture ot motion picture houses?\n3. In whtt muslctl producUon wu the \"Pirade of Ult Woodin Soldiers\" t feiture?\nTEST ANSWERS\n1. In 17lh ctntury English Fain\nI. Woodrow Wilson's.\n>. In \"Chiuvi Sourli.\"\nont lott argosy of cumulus cloud, rosily lucent.\nnukes the port o' Hetvtn In regal ctlm. In tht\nCut. mowfCtpetd Kokintt rti^ln iharp il}-\nhoutttt tbovt thi purplKjhtdewid ravlnis,\nind Westward, the *n__t \u00bbur- neon-like,\nshines ln an ipplf-grtvWt tbMugh nirrow\nportal of the rlvir-plerW villey.\nALL'S WELL!\nTbe dty U ftr epint. Comet the witch-\nmm'i indent cry\u2014\"Who goei homt?\"\nCANADIAN WORKERS MAKE SHIPBUILDING HISTORY\n' Launching of two 10,000-tcpi *cargo\nvessels in the same yard, on the same day,\nset a new record for Canadian shipbuilding. An arnyof workers immediately\nswarmed ojito the ships to equip them for\ntheir roles in the Battle of Supplies for\nthe United Nations. Named after a French\nfort which stood on the present site of the\ncity of Toronto, the S.S. Fort Rouille is\nshown being tugged to its outfitting\nwharf. In the foreground is the starboard propeller of the S.S. Rideau Park,\nsecond merchantman launched, It went\ndown the ways a few hours later. Both\nBhips were built in Montreal by the Government-owner Dominion Bridge-operated United Shipyards Limited, which employs 6000 men. .\nftt Jk_ CWl\nTHURSDAY, JULY 8\nCKLN AND     ,\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:57 O Caaada\n8:00\u2014CBC Newi\n8:15\u2014Front Line FamUy\nB:30-Mualcal Merry-go-Round\nB:00-BBC Newa\n9:15-The Women*! Corner. (CKLN)\n>:30-Vocal VarleUea (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Dance Time in England\n9:59\u2014Time Signal '\n10:00\u2014Sketches ln Melody\n10:30\u2014Songi by Dick Todd\n10:15\u2014Clair*  WaUace,  \"They Tell\nMe\"\n11:00\u2014Muilcil Amtrlctni\nU:1J\u2014Moodi of tht Moment CKLN\n11:30\u2014\"Soldier'a WUe\"\nll;48-JDtndng TU Noon\nAFTIRNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcut\nU:25-The NoUce Board (CKLN)\nI2:30-CBC Newi\n12:45\u2014Land  of  the  Maple Leaf\n(CKLN)\n1:00\u2014Stanley Hoban, Baritone\nl:15-Interlude\n1:18\u2014Talk: \"A City Mother Ploneen.\"\n1:30\u2014Joint Recital\n3:00\u2014The Adventuret of Riffles\n2:15\u2014Gems of Rhythm\n2:30-Tet Time\n2:4S\u2014Llitenen' Ftvorltti\nSiOO^-Western Flvt\n3:15\u2014Mutlctl Programme\n3:30\u2014Indianna Indigo\n3:45-BBC Nawi\n-.00-Cruiadejjj to Brittany\n4:15\u2014Jean Dean, ptanlit\n4:30\u2014Ctrl Kilash te Orch.\n4:45\u2014In the Newi\u2014'Calgary Stampede*'\n5:00\u2014Newi Commentiry\n5:05-6wing for the Services\n5:30-Muiic In the Air\nEVENINC\nt_\u2014Evening Serentdt\n8:30-$ongi of tfae.Sovieti\n7:00-CBC Newi\n7:lS-Bromenade Symphony Oreh.\n8:00\u2014Addreas by Donald Nelaon to\nOanadian Club\n8:80-We ShaU Have Muaic\n8.O0\u2014Drama it,\nB:30-ClMiici for Today\n10:0O-CBC Newi\n10:1S\u2014Talk \"Poit-War Pacific\"\n10:30\u2014Stan Kenton's Orch.\n10:45\u2014Dance Orchestra\nll:00-God Save tha King\nSELECTIVE SERVICE\nOFFICER OUT\nON $20,000 BAIL\nTORONTO, July 7 (0...-R. A.\nIrwin, Toronto DMiton Regiitrar of\ntrie Mobilization SecUon of National\nSelective Servlee, appeared to Police Court today on a charge of conspiracy in connection with military\ncall-ups and wai'remanded to July\n14 without plea on bail of $20,000,\nThree other men charged with\nIrwln-Robert A. Alltn, former Liberal MP.P. for Toronto Rlverdale,\nNalffe M Stephen! and Normm\nStepheni, brothen\u2014wert ilso reminded to July 14 without plea on\nball ot $20,000 each.\nThree other men alio appeared on\nchirgei of breaches of Selective\nService regulations and lt was\nlearned their cases were linked with\nthe four chirged with conspiracy.\nThey also wera reminded to July 14.\nTheywere: Epiphany Kocha,\nGeorge A. Corey md Moses Shim-\n\u2022ndy. Bill for Kocha wai fixed it\n81000 md biU for Corey md Sham-\nandy at $500 each.\nLONDON (CP)- Endeavor, a scientific quarterly, predicts thit atill\nbetter compoundi of the drug sul-\nphanllimlde, living miny llvei by\ncuring infection md dlseise, will\nbe found md kept ln mmy houie-\nholds..     >\n\\ \/ Today's\nVICTORY GARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN h^LLIDAY\nniA BtETLl\nDAMAGE OM YOUNG\nTOMATO UAF\nFLEA SHUE.\nDAMAGE ON\nPOTATO LEXF\nFIQHT FLEA BEETLES\nIN VICTORY QARDEN\nFill beeUes mty havt made their\nippeirenee In your Victory Garden,\nand lt so ba prepared to light tham\nbefort they cause crop failures. Fit*\nbeetles do t grtlt dtil of dimigi\nby titing Uit folligt of vegetable\nplints tnd ilio cirry dlieue from\noni plint to another ai thty move\nabout feeding.\nThe potato flat beeUe, for example, iprttdi the urly potato blight,\nwhlli tht corn flat beetle cirrles\nthe bicterlil wUt of corn through I\nplanting\nThi tltt bettle Is mill bnt very\nactive and aa It faedi It eata small,\nround holei In the leavei until thay\nlook ai though they had been peppered with tint ihot Unless tht bee-\nUtt trt chicked tht foliage turns\nyellow, wilts, \u00bbnd, when the dim-\nigt U serious, Uw ifflicted pltnt\nFlu betUtt irt very deitruc\nUve to potitoei lnd tomatoet, ti\nwill is to eggplmt, ipinich, peppen, cabbage, cucumben and mint.\nThe beetles begin to feed late In\nMay, and there are uiually two gen-\neritlona of thtm \u2022 yaar.\nDusting or spraying Ull plants\nwith rotenone wlll gtn oontrol if\nthoroughly applied. TM btttlaa in\nquick to dtted uwprtjtd or un\nduittd folltgi inn and tranifer\ntheir fttding activities to thtm. An\nOthtr control method cills for\nipriying ttit planta at aeven to 10-\nday Interval! with a lima, arienate\nof lead aid Bordeaux mixture. Uit\nseven to nine ttblespoouful to each\ngallon of water.\nDon't Crucify\nJohn Bracken\nSays Minister\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP). - The\nConierveUve Party hai \"crucified\"\nleveral outstanding leaden, Hon.\nIriek WiUU, Minister of Publio\nWorka to Manltoba'i Coalition Oovernment, declared in an addreu. to\na Progreulve Coniervative meeflng\nhere lait night, and added: \"Don't\ncrucify John Bracken,\" present\nparty leader. '\n\"Once we thought we had to have\na itatesman,\" Mr. Willis laid, \"ln\nMr. Meighen (Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen) we got one of the best\nthtt Canada has tver known, but he\nwam't good enough, jo we let him\nget away.\n\"Then we felt the need of a bus-\ninesiman, a man big enough to deal\neffectively with great busineu prob-\nlemi. WeU, we got one but you aU\nknow that-Mr. Bennett (now Lord\nBennett) was largely\" crucified by\nthe ConservaUves.\n\"Next we wanted a man who had\nthe common touch. We got Dr. Manion (the late R. J. Manion) and he\nwai kicked out. He was crucified\ntoo\u2014crucified by the Conservative\nParty.\n\"today wa hava John Bracken\nwho moye than my ot the rest li i\nman who Speaks the language of the\nconjmon people and io I eiy: 'Now\npleaie don't crucify John Bracken'.\"\nMr. Willia said Mr. Bracken, for.\nmer Premier of Manitoba, \"wiU be\nPrime Minister if we choose to make\nhim such\" and said If the party \"gets\ndbwn to buslneu and deal! with Uve\nlnues, we are bound to win.\"\n^\"Hive-no feir of his (Mr. Bracken's) ability to take care of himself,\"\nMr. Willis said. \"When, as we used\nto say ln rugby, the play really\nstarts, Mr. King (Prime Minister\nKing) won't even know who's got\nthe ball.\"\nBrlfaln Studies\nPay As\nYou Go Tax I\nLONDON, July T (CPl-Report- I\nIng that the avtragt Briton last]\nyear paid aboift one-third 4<*jWW\nIncome to support the wir,\nKingiley Wood, Chancellor ot thtl\nExchequer, told the House ot Com\u00ab.|\nmona today that ha hoped a\nes-you-go tax plan could be devb j\nfor Britain.\nSir Kingsley, replying to demanl\nInspired by the Canadian ar-1\nUnited SUtei examples ot pay-i.,\nyou-go' taxation, prontlied a ititement by early Autumn.\nHe disclosed these tax facti it J\nthe end ot a debate on a fininci\nbill.\nThe budget expenditure thli yei\nwill be eight times that of 1933-34.1\nTaxes last year tool; 40 per cent J\nof all private Income.\nTaxes now are paid by 12,500,000\nBritons, ot whom 10,000,000 at*\nimill taxpiyers.\nThe war expenditure already haa\ndoubled that ot 1914-18.\nBritain already haa borrowed I\nium more than double the size oi;\nthe national debt betore the war\nbegan.\nThe nation muit borrow halt the\nmoney lt ipends ttit yttr. \u25a0\nRalph Aiaherton, Financial Secretary to the Treuury, reported\nBr-tain'i public debt now tottli\n\u00a317,700,000,000 ($78,000,000,000)\ncompared with \u00a38,168,000,000 ($35\/\n920,000,000) at-the outbreek of ttM\nwar.\n\"Despite the size of Uie debt than\nli no reason why \u2022 our fininctl\nshould not remain u ittlsfactot]\nin the fifth year ot war and if necessary In further yean of war i\nthey have been, provided the peoplt\ncontinue ready to make the itcrf\nflcei they now1 tit mtking,\" li\nstld.\nSir Kingiley said the BrlUih Got\nernment thus fu had tdvtnc*\n\u00a3195,000,000 ($966,000,000) to Alliei\nGovernmenti excluaWt of the lend\nlease aid it had provided.\nBritish Endorse\nGreek Plans\nLONDON, July 7 (AP).-Forele\nSecretary Anthony Eden told th\nHouae of Commons todty that th\nBritish Government endoned 111\npoitwir aims of the Greek Govern\nrrgnt outlined by King George II e\nGreece in \u2022 broadcast from.Catr\nSunday.\nThe monarch told the Greek peo\npie that as soon ai it wai possibl\nfor the Government ln London\nreturn to Greek soil all member)\nwould resign ln order that i\nrepresentative governmtnt could I\nchoien which would  guiranti\n\"freedom md orderliness of elei\ntions.\"\nLONDON (CP) ,- \"Who's your\nlady friendl\" policy uked George\nLyndon when he stopped his car at\nHackney to drop a woman passenger. He was summoned for misusing\ngaioline, luued for business purpoiei, ind wu fined the equivalent\nof $00.\nNew undtr-rm\nCream Deodorar\nStops Perspiration\n1, Does not rot dresses or men'i-\nshirts. Does not irriute skua.\nJt, No-.iiimg.odry. Cinbeusd\nright ifter ihsving.\nJ. Instantly stops petspintion fot\n1 to 3 days. Prtventi odor.\n4, A pute, white, gteueleii,\nstainless vanishing creim,\n5. Awarded Approval Set] of\nAm.ticit) Institute of laundering fot being humless to\nAlula 15. ai 59.1m\nARRID\nX REQUIRES ONLY\nONE RATION C0UP0N...MAKE5\nTHE SAME NUMBER OF CUPS AS\nONE POUND PACKAGE OF C0FFEI\n,5-:\t\nHALF\n-\n  \u25a0\u2014\n\u2014\n\t\n>wm\ntm.mwm.mi-.\nS P 0 R T S\nM Laabs in\niome Run\nwove Again\ns.\nT. LOUIS, July 7 (AP)-Chet\nibi, tht little guy who swings a\nigon-longue for i bat, ti on anoth-\nhome  run   hitting  itreik like\nit sensational splurge last season\n(rhen   he  smaciujd   seven   circuit\nloota In tight gimet.\nThe Browni' outfielder hu wai-\n, loped five over the wtll In ilx\n: gimei, ont of them the longeit\nJ fine drive he ever hit In tporti-\n' rhan'i Ptrk\u2014426 feet Into the cen-\nVefleld bleachers.\nThere'i no pirticulir reason for\nbs sudden surge, Laabs aaid to-\n|\u00bby, except that. \"1 feel fine at the\nitate.\"\nI develop confidence ai I go\nhe added, \"and I almost\npitcher to throw one paat\n,'*l de\nlong\",\nm t\n\u25a0 Everyone knows, for eximple, that\nB Williams of the Boston Red\ny>x led the American League In\n.942 but even experta muff the\n[uestlon of who wai runner-up.\nIt'i not Charley Keller of the New\nfork Yankees, even though the\n'\u25a0\u2022ague's Red Book, which lists rost-\nIII and recordi, says so.\n\u25a0 Laabs li the heir-apparent to Wll-\nlams, now that lanky Ted Is In\nnillttry tervlce,. Williami hit 36\n{lit season, Laabs 27 and Keller 26.\ni Chefs current crashing has. car-\n|led him 'nto a tie for the home\nlead   with  teammate  Vernon\nItephens, Keller apd Rudy York of\n-ttolt at 10-all.\nNew jeriey Track\nOpens the Hard Way\nCAMDEN, N. J, July 7 (AP>-\nGardin Stttt Rtce Trick, the hard-\nluck \"baby\" of tht turf, opened\nIts itcond yetr todty with tht htlp\nof horni on ind oft the trick tnd\nthe traniportitlon provided by the\nstrangest collection of conveyancer\never teen away from the farm.\nAnd tor the ncond itrtight year,\nthe plant, which ran Into war-time\nclnstructlon heidichei in 1942 ind\ntangled with tough traniportitlon\ntroubles today, did lt the hard way,\nluring a storm-coated and umbrella\ncarrying crowd of 6-21 ind i bet\nting handle .of some $408,871, compared to $331,761! bet on the first\nWednesday of the 1M2 meeting.\nlaior League Leaders\nBy Tht Auodated Presi\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nBattlng-Curtwrlght, Chicigo JBT.\nSunt\u2014Vemon, Waihington 44.\nHiti-Wakefleld, Detroit 93.\nDoublet\u2014Keltner.  Cleveland   20\nTriplet-York, Detroit and Lln-\nlell, New York \u00ab.\nStolen  basei-Ceae   Waahlngton\nIATIONAL LEAQUE\n-Bettlng-Muslal, St Louis .S.9.\nHunt\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn 82.\nHlti\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn 92.\nDoublet\u2014Herman, Brooklyn _.\nTriples\u2014Muslal, 'St. Louis  11.\n| Stolen basei\u2014Vaughan, Brooklyn\nHtchtng-Kriit, St Louis T-1.\n\u2022 Blue Gillette Bladet\nloom through tough-\n\u2022at bearde easily,\nquickly and amoothljrt\nThat'i becaute they're\nwind* of glut-hard\nateel, with the sKarp-\neit edgea ever honed.\nAnd Blue Gillette\nBladei laat longer. Try\nthem I\nprecision.\nnunU io at r~\u00bb\nr.lll.lt. R..-r\n\u2022\u25a0.-tlr tnt\n_v,,l,l     *rr.|,.\n\u2022 tld  lr.lt.tlr>,.\nRules Spoil\nModern Hockey\nBy CHARLES IOWARD8\nCinidlin Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, July 7 (OP.) \u2014 The\nfirst Professional Hockey League ln\nhistory, the old International\nLeague, was recalled during the\nweekend when Roy Brown visited\nSault Ste. Marie, Ont, for the first\ntime ln 36 years. He has lived ln\nBrantford, Ont, alnce that time.\nRoss MacKay of the Saulte Ste.\nMarie Star says Brown was \"perhaps the most popular Individual\nhockey player ln the history of this\ncommunity, not even excepting the\nstars of the Greyhounds who won\nthe Allan Cup 19 years ago.\" Brown\nwas a star point player (defence)\nin 190S and In 1907 was captain and\ncoach of the Sault team.\nThe League, which preceded the\nold National Hockey Assoclttion,\nforerunner of the N.H.L., by four\nyeirs, comprised the Canadian Sault\nMlchigin Sault, Pittsburgh and the\nMichigan centres of Houghton and\nCalumet    .\nHAD PLAYER QREAT8\nFew modern tans remember the\nleague but Its players Included iome\not the greatest ln history. There\nwere, for Instance, Cyclone Taylor\nand Hoddle Stuart whose name always are mentioned ln discussion\nof all-time stars.\nOther players whose namei have\ngone down In hockey history were\nnumerous. They Included Newsy\nLalonde, Dldler Pltre and Jack La-\nvlollette, all of whom were later\nwith Montreal Canadlens; Con Cor-\nbeau, later with Toronto; RUey\nHern of Montreal Wanderers; Joe\nMarki of Quebec Bulldogs; Marty\nWalsh of Ottawa. There was Oliver\nSeibert, father of Earl Seibert star\ndefenceman of the present Chicago\nBlack Hawks.\nThose were the dayi of aeven-\nman, 80-mlnute hockey (two periods\not 30 minutei each) when the regular playeri went through without\nsubstitution unleu seriously injured. But Brown told MacKay that the\nold game had certain advantages\nover the present game. \"Hockey,\nwith the teams each carrying three\nforward lines, should be a faster\ngame now. But the too frequent\nshifting of the lines and of Individ'\nual players hu the effect of slowing\nit down from the point of yiew of\nthe spectator while numerous regulation! connected with the Unei that\n*nark the Ice up Uke a checker\nboard these days have something\nof the aame effect\"\nBrown thinks itlckhindllng now\nIs ilmost i lost irt He recilled\nthe wlnrdry of Lorne Cimpbell,\nwho pliyed centre for Pittsburgh\nIn the old Intermtlonil. \"He oould\nnune the puck down the Ice without ever moving hit itick more\nthin ilx lnchei.\nAnd In Browns' opinion, Tommy\nPhillips, captain of the \/Kenora\nThistles who won the Stanley Cup\nIn 1906, was the greatest player ot\nall time at his wing.\nYankees Sweep\nSeries; Tigers\nGain Second Spot\nST. LOUIS, July 7 (APJ-Ntw\nYork Yankees completed t clean\niweep of their four-game series\nwith St. Louli Browni todty by\ncapturing 12-0 ihutout on Spurgeon\n(Spud) Chandler's slx-hlt hurling.\nIt wai Chandler's ninth victory\nagainst two defeats. The triumph\ngave the Yankeei a 3Vi-game lead\nover Detroit Tigeri initead of s\nthree-game margin over Washington Senators, who dropped out of\nsecond place.\nNew York  _   i  8   1\nSt Loull     0   J   2\nChandler and Dickey, Sean (2);\nPotter, HoUlngiworth (9) tnd\nHayes.\nBEAT SENATORS 9-1\nDETROIT, July 7 (AP.) - Detroit Tigers, winning their ninth decision in 11 starts, seized the American League'! second place today by\ndowning Washington Senators, 9-1,\nfor a 3 to^l seriei edge. It wai Waihington'! seventh defeat against\nthree victories in the West\nWashington     \u2022 1    8  2\nDetroit       9   11   0\nCarrasquel, Mertz (9) and Giuliani; Newhouser and Richards.\nSTEAL WINS QAME\nCHICAGO, July 7 (AP.) - Wally\nMoses' steal home with the bases\nfilled ln the 14th Inning gave Chicago White Sox a 3-2 decision over\nBoston Red Sox today for their\neighth triumph In their last 10\ngames. The White Sox won the series, two game to one.\nBoston   _    2    8  0\nChicago    3   12   2\nJudd, Ryba (8) Brown (14) and\nPartee; Humphries and Tresh.\nPhiladelphia at Cleveland postponed.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n1\n.\n;.\n\u25a0__.        J\nw\n\u25a0 i^^-^|' '\n\u25a0\n\u25a0 *\nm\\j.\nH                      \\.    .7-\n1 \u2022*!\nf\nCANADIAN GROUND CREW SPEEDY\nGround crews are Important everywhere, and nowhere more than ln Fighter\nCommand, where there is special need for\nspeed. This crew with the R.C.A.F. Wolf\nSquadron can refuel and rearm a Spitfire\nin four minutes. Left to right: Laa. Hugh\nBobblngton of Winnipeg; Opl. John Buxton of Moncton, N. B,; CpL Jim Cleaver,\nWinnipeg; Lac. Frank Byrne, Bristol,\nP.E.I.; Pilot Officer Willie Lane of Sudbury, Ont., and Lac. Pete Morley of Peter-\nboro, Ont.\u2014R.C.A.F. Photo.\nHockey Out\nfor Cornwall\nBatting Leaders\nBy Tht Auociited Prist\nBitting (three leaders in each\nleague):\nO AB R H Pet.\nCurtrlght, White S 56 177 30 80 330\nStephens, Browns 50 220 31 73 .332\nMuslal, Cards 71 277 46 91 .329\nHockett, Indians 59 251 34 82 .327\nHerman, Dodgers 78 280 39 91 .323\nHack,  Cubs 71 280 36   87 _J24\nRuns batted In:\nNational League\u2014Herman, Dodgers 50; American League\u2014Etten,\nYankees 92.\nHome runs:\nNational League\u2014Ott, Giants 12;\nAmerican League\u2014Keller, Yankees,\nYork, Tigers, Stephens, Browns,\nLaabs, Browns 10.\nDEMPSEY GETS DIVORCE\nWHITE PLAINS, N.Y, July 7\n(AP).-Lt. Cmdr. William Harrison\n(Jack) Dempsey. United Sta'es\nCoast Guard Reserve, former world's\nheivyweight boxing champion, was\nawarded an Interlocutory decree of\ndivorce today from Hannah William\nDemjisry, former musical comedy\nactress.\nJOINS U.S. ARMY\nWINNIPEO, July 7 (CP)-Wayne\nSheley, quarterback for Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers when they won the\nCinidlin Rugby Foothill crown tn\n1941, left here todiy to join the\nUnited Stilts Army.\nA wine gliss. the Rivencross goblet made In 1673, fciched the equ v-\nalont of )3000 at in auction sale n\nLondon. It was believed to be lhe\nhighest price paid for a glau at\nan auction.\n' CORNWALL, Ont, July 7 (CP)\n\u2014Suspension of organized Service\nhockey ln thli city next leaion wil\nannounced today by Lt-Col. Ro-\ndolphe Laroie, Officer Commanding\nNo. 31 Canadian Army Basic Training Centre.\n\"We may as well let the people\nknow now that there will be no\nhockey here next Winter,\" Col. La-\nrose said. \"There is no use waiting\nuntil October or November to make\nsuch an announcement.\"\nThe Cornwall Club, which played\nin the Quebec Senior Hockey Leigue\nlast Winter, ls beUeved to be the\nfirst to abandon hockey.\nCol. Ltroae iald the gravity of\nthe war iHuatlon and the possibility\nof Important military operatloni before next Winter, prompted him\nto announce hts policy now.\nHe uld further that there la no\npossibility that his policy would be\nchanged.\nOTTAWA, July 7 (CP)-A Defence Department tpokennan, commenting on the announcement by\nLt-Col. Rodoiphe' Ltrote, Officer\nCommanding No. 31 Canadian Army\nBaiic Training Centra at Cornwall\nthat there wiU be no organized lervice hockey In that city next Melon,\nsaid today that no such policy hai\nbeen ordered to far by Defence\nHeadquarters.\n\"Cornwall miy bt suspending\ntheir lervioe hoekey for vtrioui\nreasons of their own, but, tl fir M\nwe know, there hn been no ittempt officlilly to otnctl urvlot\nhockey throughout the country.\"\nBaseball Scores\nASSOCIATION\nFlrit gime:\nSt. Piul\nAdditional Baby\nTrout Are\nBeing Released\nYoung trout raised ln No. 1 nursery pond it the Provincial Fish\nHatchery, Sportsman Park, tre now\nbeing released. A number of them\nwere placed in the West Arm Wedneidiy afternoon, ind the remainder wlU be aet tree today.\nThese trout are'being transported\nto the North lide of tht Weit Arm\nat Nelson, being ctrried by truck\nind boit to the point ot release,\nFiihery Officer E. Hunter stated\nWednesday night that a few of the\nyoung trout released were between\nsix and seven Inches ln length. Most\nof them wen from three to five\nInchei long.\n.1   8\n2\nIndianipolli ...18 IB   1\nWeiland,   Belknap   (2)   Hewette\n(6) and Blaemire; Jeffcoat and Hotferth. Schlueter (4).\nFIRST GAME\nMinneapolis    _    4   4   3\nLouisville  ..   .. 8   8   3\nClark, LeFebvre (3) Scheetz (8)\nand Blaro; Bowman and Milliei.\nSecond:\nSt. Paul     4   11   1\nIndianapolis   .     6   11   2\nSmith, Welland (7) and Andrews;\nTrexler,   Hutchings   (8)   and   Hotferth.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMontreal ..    0   6   1\nToronto         ..   3 10   0\nSherer, Spaulding (8) and Castro;\nJarlett and Williams.\nBaltimore  _    8 17   2\nSyracuse      4 11   0\nKlieiman, and Pare; Carter, Kon-\nstanty (4) Schultz (7) Blackburn (9)\nand West.\nRochester      I   11   2\nBuffalo    _    9   13   0\nTrotter, Sakns (4) Naylor (7) Mirtln (8) and Burmelster; Olebell and\nDenning.\nPACIFIC COAST\nHollywood 6-1, San Francisco 4-4.\nPortland 7-2, Sacramento 8-6.\nOakland 2-1, Los Angeles 5-10.\nSeattle 13, San Diego 2.\nSuspends Hurler\nCHICAGO, July 7 (API-Manager Jimmy Dykes of Chicago White\nSox announced today he had suspended Pitcher Edgar (Lefty) Smith\nIndefinitely for being out of condition. Smith has won four and\nlost six games thla year.\nWEATHER HALTS TROT\nCLEVELAND, July 7 (AP) -\nAfler the favored Attorney, from\nthe WUko Farm of Logansport, Ind,\nhad won the first heit of tht (2,828\nNational Stake for two-year-old\npacers at North Randall today, weather brought an end to the Qrand\nCircuit program and plans were\nmade to complete the event and the\nremainder of the card tomorroiiv.\nCramer Having\nGreat Season\nBy WATSON 8P0EL8TRA\nAuociited Pren Sporti Writer\nDETROIT, July 7 (AP) \u2014 The\nItinerant Roger (Doc) Cramer Is\ntwo weeks from his 38th blrthdey\nand not so lively as he used to be,\nbut neither la the baseball the Ma\njor Leagues are using.\nConsequently, the veterin Crt\nmer, who wis often ottt tilde by\nmtnigtrt \u25a0\u2022 a btnjo hitter, Is\nhiving t r-mirkibly good season,\ntnd Detroit Tigen trt benefit\nting no end from hit bitting it\nwell ti defensive play.\nCnmer, pliylng hli 13th leason\nln the American League and with\nhla fourth club, hasn't belted a home\nrun ilnce IMl. But ittying cloie\nto the .300 mtrk, Crimer is among\nthe League batting leaders.\nCramer's batting fell off nearly 80\npoints under his Ufetlme average\nthe last two yean, but the Tigers\nkept him ln the lineup ln 1942 for\nhis defensive abilities. He possesses\none of the game'i moit accurate\nthrowt\/lg arms and he itUl has\ngood range in centrefield.\nLett year Cramer Joined the ex\nelusive club whose membership Is\nlimited to those with 2000 hits.\nSports Roundup\nBy HUQH FULLERTON,'JR,\nAssociated Preu Sport Writer\nNE* YORK, July 7 (AP)-Ame\nAnderson, Sweden's newest mUe record-breaker, li due to try tor in-\nother of Gunder Haegg1! records\ntomorrow md thli time the track\nfans hereabouts will be ready . . .\nSlnct Ame'i 4:02.6 milt list week\nthey've heird i lot tbout varloui\nSwedish steppers, Including Anderion. who his run 1500 meten In\n3:48.6, a halt mile in 1:50.8, 3000\nmetera in 8:11.4 and 5000 In 16:18.2\n. . . Then there' 22-year-old Rune\nGustafson, runner-up to Anderson\nlast week in 4:04.6\u2014He's the boy\nHaegg's handlen consider the real\nprospect In Sweden \u2014 20-year-old\nArne Ahlsen, Oke and Arthur Johnson and Harold Kalame, who have\nall done 1500 ln tbout 3:49 . . .\nGil Dodds, America1! best mller,\nset hti own record for 1900 it 3:50.2\nIn winning this year's National title.\nEASY PICKINGS\nOld Johnny Rlsko, discharged\nfrom the Army because of a game\nleg and advanced age, hts pared\nhis weight down to 200 pounds but\nsays he Isn't thinking of t comeback unless they want to toss him\nIn with Tony Galento. \"He's one guy\nI could sUU trim,\" lays John.\nSPLINTER  OFF THE\nOLD  BOARDS\nGerard DeBaets, veteran Belgian\nbike rider, will team up with his\nson, Michel, ln ttie six-day race\nacheduled at Montreal In October\nand Promoter Harry Mendel figures\ntht kid hu tht ituff to win though\nhi hu competed only it in imiteur. ... t ftw yttn tgo DeBiets\nfinished ilxth in I rice it Chtcafo\ntnd whtn ht nturned homt \"Mlki\"\nsuggeited: \"Next time you'd better\nltiy it home ind TU ride. V could-\nn't do iny wone.\"\nMacPHAIL, |R\u201e ADDED\nTO DODGER STAFF\nBROOKLYN, July 7 (AP) -\nBrooklyn Dodgeri tnnounced tonight that L. S. (Lie) MacFhall, Jr.,\nion of the Club'i former Preildent,\nhai been added to their minor league\nand icouting itaft.\nMacPhail resigned u Oeneral\nManager of the Toronto Club of the\nInternational League at the close of\nlast season to iccept t commission\nln the United Statei Navy, but failed\nto pels hla phyilctl examination.\nLeo Choquette\nWins Lourdes\nTable Tennis\nLOURDES CAMP\nIn the table tennli tournament\nthe winner of the flnali wu Leo\nChoquette. Wlnneri of the first\nround were, Gerald Garossino who\ndefeated Robert Fontaine, Jack Mac-\nDougal over Joe Camey, Earl Duffy\nover Jamea McMahon, Elmer Mil-\nbum over Joe Perrier by default\nSt Clair Duffy over Donald Bond,\nDonald Ross over Bob MicDonild,\nJick Ttrling over Don Mclnnei tnd\nLeo Choquette over Jtck Preatly.\nThe iecond round: Giroaiino defeated MacDougal, Earl Buffy defeited Milburn, St, Clair Duffy defeated Ross, Leo Choquette defeated Tarling.\nTht quarter. flnali were won by\nChoquette over St. Clair Duffy and\nGarossino over Earl Duffy. Then ln\nthe finale Choquette wai victorious,\nwith Geroulno second. Third plice\nwis played for by the two Duffys,\nSt. Clair carrying off the honon.\nAnd now we're on the third round\nIn the Horseshoe Tournament which\nwill be played off today.\nBraves, Reds\nSpill Twin Bill\nBOSTON, July 7 (AP.) -Boston\nBravei and Cincinnati Redt spin i\ndoubleheider it Brivei Field today\nai Elmer Riddle pitched a three-hit\n8-1 victory for the Redi in the opener and Manny Salvo squared thl\nBrivei In the nightcap with \u2022 five-\nhit 4-2 victory.\nFlnt:\nCinclnniti  _..._   I  10   1\nBoiton    1    8  3\nRiddle ind Mueller; Andrewi ind\nPolind.\nSecond:\nClnclnniU     18   1\nBoiton    4   U   0\nWilten tnd Mueller tnd DePhil-\nllpi (8); Silvomd Kluttz.\nSt. Louis it PhlUdelphia, Ohicago\nat Brooklyn, Pittiburgh at New\nYork, postponed.\nCelebrate Holidays\nat Kingsgate\nKINGSOATE, B.C.-It has been\ncustomary in past yean for the\nCanadian and U.S. reildenti of the\ncommunity to combint the July 1\nind July 4 celebntlom with t picnic ind fire worki, sometimes I\ndmce, but ilwiyi i full diy of\niportt fbr the children ind games\nfor the grown ups. Thla yttr ot\ncourse matten wert t Uttlt different with the war rationing etc. Nevertheleu it wis felt thtt tht oeci-\nilom should not pui unmirked\nso toe uiuii hard working committee got buiy ind 1 mott lucceisful\npicnic wis held ln Hilli Grove.\nMn. Bonner, Mn. Reuter Mn.\nBilf, Mra. Chapman tnd Mrs. Brogan wert tht ltdiei in Chirge of\nthe commliirlite.\nDuring the ifternoon Hirry Hogg\non behalf of the Community, took\nopportunity to make t presentation\nof I bed ipreid ind blanket to Mrs.\nT. Balf.\nSUNBURN\nINSECT BITES\nPOISON [VV\nCliff Palace In Colorado is the\nlargest known cliff dwelling In the\nworld, numbering 200 rooms.\ntheAmtiseptic Limimeht\nSwim (lasses\nPopular;\nFloat Redecked\nBoth children tnd adulti ire re-\nr.ondlng enthusiastically to tht\nswimming tnd diving classes thli\nyear at Lakeside Parte under the Instruction of Bd Kelter,- Secrtttry-\nManagtr of tht 'Civic Centre.\nClasses trt htld In tht 'mornings,\nafternoons tnd tvening flvt days t\nweek, for beglnnen, Improvers tnd\nadvanced In iwlmmlng tnd diving.\nChildren eipecltlly ire turning out\nin big numben.\nWith tht completion of tht new\ndeck on the float tht diving boirdi\nhave been repliced ind tht diving\nclassei tre under wiy. \"nit kiddles'\nslide hu also been put up and is ln\nuse.\nUjiji With Richardi\nUp Wint Cold Cup\nNEWMARKET, Englind, July 7\n(CP Ctble) - UJIJI, owned by A. E.\nAllnatt tnd ridden by Gordon Richards, England's ace Jockey, won the\nGold Cup rtce todey over t 2*4\nmile count tt Newmarket with\nLord Detby*i High Table iecond,\neight lengthi behind, tnd AUnatt'a\nShahpoor fhlrd.\nThe race, the longeit of the tea-\nson's important events, wis worth\n\u00a31000 (approximately $4800). The\nwinner'i time wai three minutei Bl\nlecondi.\nlifHfiJ.i'in Jii.i)ipmw*w     \u25a0mi\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, IULY I, IMS \u2014 7\nOpens In Eastern Canada\n\u25a0y A. D. MERKEL\nCintdlm Prttt Stiff Writer\nH.M.C.S. CORNWALLIS, Deep\nBrook, N.8., July 7 (CP)-Cini-\ndt'i grttrt $12,000,000 ntvtl training bnt, reputed tht largest tnd\nmort modernly equipped of ltl\nkind In tht Implrt, hu begun\nto function tt ltl ntw moorlngi\nen tht thortt of Anntpelli Bnln.\nGrouped Ibout the quirter-mllllon\ndolltr estate ot tha lttt - V. Morse,\nwhich the Ntvy purchased for \u00bb28,-\n000, txe tomt tO bulldlngi, homing\ntilt vtrioui schools of seamanship,\ngunnery, navigation ind engineering, U wtU u living quarters, hospitals, itorei, recreation tnd admlniitration buildings.\nLttt ln Junt, the establishment\nhid t complement of MOO, Including 3444 under trilnlng, of whom\n147 were officer candidates and 00\nWreni taking specialized coursei.\nIn iddition 1400 civilians were engaged ln construction within the\ntrtt. v\nWUh drafts of 100 arriving ttch\nwttk from recruiting ichooli icrou\nCanada, and additional bul.dl_.gi\nundtr construction, tht plant wu\nrapidly tpproichlng fuU producUon.\nWhen thii ti reached Cornwallis\nwill have t complement of 10,000\ntnd with HJM.C.S. Nadan, on Uie\nPtcific Coast, wUl bt turning out,\nlt ll tttlmtted, a sufficient number\not thoroughly trained leamen, gun\nnen tnd stokers to meet thl evergrowing needs of Cmidi'i Navy.\nLtu than two ytan ago, whtn\ntt wai dtcldtd Ctnidi ihould takt\novar a largt share of the North Atlantic convoy work, Ult Department of Naval Servicei ficed tbt\nproviding In i ilnglt year as many\ntrained penonnel u could be procured In three yttn with thl facilitiet existing It tht tlmt. To thli\ntuk the Department, undtr the\nleaderahlp of Navy Mlnliter Micdonald lummoned tha best advice\navailable ln Britain and Uie United\nStatea and Deep Brook wu selected\nu Uie lite of the new development.\nCtpt J. C, I. Edwards, R C.N., the\nCommanding Officer, was recalled\nfrom ut when Cornwallis waa established. He li t Novi Scotian, \u2022\ngrtduite of the old Royil Nival\nCoUege ot Ctnidt, Halifax, with\nmany yean ot seagoing experience.\nHit Executive Officer It Cmdr. Geoffrey McCUntock, R.C.N., who received hli training at tht Royal\nNaval CoUege, Dartmouth, fought\nln Uie Battle ot Jutland u a midshipman and subsequently qualified\nai a fighter pUot ln the Royal Air\nForce.\nFor the key'pott of Training Commander the choice fell to Commander E. A. Mount-Haes, R.N. He\nwu a ntember ot the Brltlth Military Mlislon to Germiny, foUowing\nHiUer'i rise to power, md lor many\nyeara wu with training establishments of tht Royal Navy.\nEastern Boxer Beats\nVancouver Mon\nin All-Service Card\nVICTORIA, July 7 (CP)-Ordl-\nnary Seaman Harvey Dubt of Wind-\nior, Ont., now wtth the Royal Canadian Navy itatloned here, punched\nout a clean-cut 10-round decliion\nover Pte. Tommy Burni lut night\nln tht 10-round mtln event of an\nall-service boxing card. Dubi received the unanimous call ot the two\nJudges and referee.\nBurnt, Cinidlin Army bttUar\nfrom Vancouver, and a 8-to-5 pre-\nfight favorite, gave Dubt iome\ntroublt ln Uit etrly roundi,\nIn the ilx-round leml-flnal bout\nSgt Norman Dawion, R.CA., md\nSgt Hmk EgU of the R.CA.F., drew.\nIn other bouti Sapper Berry, R.CA.\nicored t lecond-round technical\nknockout over Oa. Purnell ol the\nR.C.N., Pte Bobby Parker, Army,\nand Ot. Jick Turner, R.C.N., drew\nIn four fait roundi, Pte. Fred Ko-\nDik, Army, won the call over\nGunner Partridge, Army, and Gunner Tony Bugoiki, Army, punched\nout a four-round decliion over Ot.\nSeaman Johnny Smith.\nNOTTINGHAM (CP) - Sir Bernard Montgomery carriei a Bible in\nhli kit the famous general wrote\nIn a letter to 13-year-old Derek Sawyer. Derek won five ihllllngi for\nbeing the firet boy in hli Scout troop\nto find out for sure. He ilrgraphed\nhii query direct to 'Monty\" in Africi.\nCrew at Work\nat Paradise Mine\nINVERMBRE, B. C\u2014Work on ttw\nParadise mine, silver-lead producer\nowned by Sheep Creek Qold Mint!\nLtd., md locited near Invermere,\nhai itirted with t crtw of IS men\nand a diamond drill outfit Deep\nsnow, unusual at thli time ot year,\nhampered engineen ln their preliminary examinations ot tha mint,\nwhich Uei at 7800 feat above tt*\nlevtL\nThe mint hu not betn In opentlon since 1928.\nBELFAST (CP) - An Iriih Reel\nCrou Society delegation, itudying\nrefugee problems ln Spain, hu\nient word to the Central Executive\nthat anything ln the way ot food\nwould be moit acceptable,\nAmerican farmen produced more\nthan 4,000,000 acres of flaxseed la\n1843.\nMY POOR FEET!\nDta. it\/ffte tit\u2014ir tay wen\nWmlnf, Kkiat iwiSm Hal.\ntu.kliy'1 IMnlili WhHi (tk\n| csoli ntd ti-Urn   latum\nswelling  olmo.l tl **** at\nafeptit*.  ntt, ttiiiy. mm\nI paatlretlai\u2014tit lonlghi\u2014havt\nI hippy .\u2022\u2022Momorrow. Kk, JOc\u2014rt all\nww.1-\nWHEN THE LIGHTS\nGO ON AGAIN\nWill the Smoke STILL Be\nRising Above Your Place of\nBusiness?\nOnly the far-sighted, aggressive business It going\nto survive this war. Due to manufacturers who\nhave stopped making peace-time goods and have\nturned to the more Important task of full production for the armed forces, It Is the belief of\nsome of these manufacturers ... yes . . .and\nretailers, too, that they have nothing to sell.\nBut . . . many of them have forgotten the last\nwar business casualties ... the plants and\nbusinesses that were actually dying when they\nwere busiest . . . killed In action as surely as\nany battlefield casualty ... because they neglected to keep In touch with the people ... and the\nmarkets that would enable them to prosper when\npeacetime competition began . . .\nPlan now'tq be itlll In business when the\ntrials of war are at an end . . . tell your\nstory to BRITISH COLUMBIA'S THIRD\nMAJOR MARKET through the columns'of\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n .\n,\t\n \t\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, |ULY 8, 1941\nTODAY'S -lews Pictures\nTransport Tows Glider From Canada to England\nTop: Glider and transport that made\nfirst dual trans-Atlantic flight from Canada to England. Tow rope ie made of 100\nyards of nylon, coat $400. Lower: Glider\n' being loaded prior to flight with war ma\nterial and a ton of vaccine for Soviet\nRussia. R.A.F. Transport Command\nmade record-setting flight.\u2014National\nFilm Board Photos).\nGENERAL VISITS HIS MEN\nGen. Montgomery, Commander of the British Eighth\n.Army, recently visited a hospital in Cairo to see some of\nhis wounded men. He is shown here talking to one of his\nwounded men.\nSALLY'S SALLIES\n*.,,-.-i u s r.-... or..\nSky Ir.iin crew, top to hotlom:\nR-Uir R 0 Seys, 0 r.C.. S-Ldr.\nr M Onbeil H.CAr. rlt-I\/t\nW S I\/ipgtiurst snd nt \u25a0_! C W\nV. Thomson.\n7 _*\u25a0 ion wan<\nl-t*_i_ilHt\\ IK  _n]\nOFFICE IH&URtD\nA^Alkt-f  -\\Vr_7l\nIfyJeunaTt'liceL-\nBLUEBIRDS  AND  ROSES\nLet the bluebird, the symbol of\nhappiness wing its way into your\nhome in this filet crochet. Besides adding beauty to delight you\nit will protect your chairs\u2014and\nthat delights any housewife! You\ncan make lt at little cost. Pattern\nMl contains charts and directions\nfor making set; materials required; stitches; illustration of chair\nset.\nSend 20 centi for thli pattern to\nThe Nelion Dally Newi, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelson, Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\niddresi. Pittemi wlll be mailed\nto your home In about 15 days.\nThert may be some further deity\nIn delivery because of the ltrge\nincretse in orders during the preient tenon.\n7__-OA-     7___-_\nYOUNG EASY-TO-MAKE\nCool cap sleeves, high waistline slashes are smart fratures nt\nthii delightfully simple (rock,\nMarian Martin Pattern M37.\nChoose a sheer, cool print, add\ntiny bows, lace edging. The diagram shows how even a beginner can make this dress.\nPattern \\H31 may be ordered\nonly tn misses' and -women's sizes\n14, 16, 18, 20! 32. 34, 36. 38. 40. 42.\nSiie 16 requires 3 1-8 yards 35-\nlnch fabric and 2\\ yards lace-\n\u2022\u25a0d-ging.\nStnd 20 ctnti for this pattern to\nTht Nalion Daily Newi. Needle-\neraft Dept., Nelion. Wrlta plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddreu. Pattern will ba mailed\nto your home In about 15 dayi.\nThere may ba some further delay\nIn delivery becauie of tha large\nIncreaie In orderi during tha\npreterit iea ion.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Brothers ind listers might divide\nin estate without fightln' If they\ndidn't hive husbands ind wives to\nen 'tm on to let their shire.\"\noet orr or the wat\nCONTRACT upon contrtct geti\nmide bectuie one defender falls\nto unblock the suit of hit ptrtnir.\nMmy t ftlr pliyer hitet to\nthrow twty t pretty good looking\nIntermediate cird, under t higher\none which la already on the Uble,\ntnd to windi up play of tht iuit\nholding tht hlghett outatanding\ncird of It. With thtt he hu to wtn\nthe lut trick In the eult, whereu\nif he had towed hli Intermediate\niwiy, hli partner would hive\nbeen tble to tike thtt trick tnd\nthen score in tdditlontl smill\nctrd.\n*ltS\n\u00bbAK7I8\ntKHl\n4\u00b0\ntQte.i\n9 10 4\n4KQJ7\nI\nN\nW  E\nS\n.1\n..J*.\n4 J 1011\n4 J 10 4 2\n4 A K J 10\n. IB\n\u2666 AQT4\nf All\n(Detler: South. Both ildei \u00ab_-\nnerible.)\nSoutk     Wait    North       tut\n14        Put     1* Put\n14 I'll! I. PW\nJNT\nOn 1 hind juit ihortly prtvloui,\nt defender hid filled to throw hit\nHocking cird under hil pirtner'!\nwinner, to It wu I reil pleuure\nto ttt Ull tound thing done on\nthli dttl by CUrtnct Budlngton\nKellind, noted tuthor tnd Republlcin lttdtr Tht dut f wur ltd\nby Wut tnd Mr Kelltnd uted hti\n10 to forct tht A. .'outh dtcldtd\nUkt 1 hold-up would do no good.\nDtatrlMd ky Big\nilnct he reckoned the tult wu dl.\nvlded on 1 W bull.\nWith tight poiltive tricks tn\nlight, tht declirer Snt lought thl\nninth In ditmondi, taking tht A\ntnd leidlng towird the K. West's\nsptde discard ihowtd thtt thli\nwould not work, \u00ab. tht only remaining chtnct wu In winning t\nspi<I\u00ab Uncut. Wett took thli wtth\nhil *\\ ind icored the dub K, followed by the . On thott trtcki\nMr Kellind put flnt his I ind\nthen his J. though he ilso htd tht\nI left.\nConsequently, thi I wu hlgb\nenough to win the fourth dub\ntrick, tnd tht I wt thi contnet.\nIf Mr. Kellind htd pliyed tht 1\non tht third dub md kept the J,\nhe would htve hid to win tht\nfourth club trick, tnd consequently the declirer would htvt\nmtdt hti contract\n...\nTomorrow'! ProUesn\n4111\nVilli\n4 None\n4AKJI.11\n\u2666 KQI-\nV None\n4 10 i I I\nI\n4 quit\n4JTI\n. k q j io\ntit\n\u2666 Tit\n4 Nont\nN\n-   E\nS\n4 A 10 I\nfAT\n4AKQJ4\n4IT4\n(Dttltr   Eut. Both Udet vulnerable 1\nIt Wut bids hurti twlct, South\ndlimondi twice, < North dubt\ntwlre. Uld thin the hetrt K I. led\nigtlntt South'i J-No Trumpt.\nwhtt ihould Eut dlsctrd la trying\ntt but Iht contractT\nTMturM lri>4k-U. Im.\nACROSS\n1. Compiny\nI. Young\noyiter\n9. Coral\nIslind\n11. Weighing\nmachine\n11. Skin\ndistill\n13. Big\n14. Exhausted\n15. Regloni\n16. Form\n18. Cod of\npleuure\n11. Typt\nmeuure\n11. Fellow\n1\u00ab. Dlitllllng\nveuel\nIS. City In\nNevldl\nN. Fettera\n50. Gittwty\n(Jip)\n51. Bog\nSI. Sttlrwiy\npoiti\nSS. Prophet\n34. Erbium\n(iym )\nS3. Olmerve\nSI. Propoet\nII. Follow\n42. lirerd of\nCtttlt\ni. Long-necked\nMrd\n47. Frull of\ni'l\"1\"\n41. Young\nwomen\n41. Trtnuctlont\nSO. Kill\n11. Longtngt\nDOWN\nl.Ount littng)\n1 Aim\nNot iny\nNirrow\nvalleya\nObject to\nfrighten\nblrda\nSkin\nSeaweed\nGolf ball\nelevations\nCover with\nfoam\nStrike\nInsect\nEdges of\nlull\nWeird\n10. Shop\n23. Queen of\nheaven\n(poit.)\n14. Old-\nwomanish\n15. Balance\n17. Burden-\n\u2022omely\n30. Shlpwormi\n33. Medieval\nveuel\n37. Chirgu for\nservicu\n38. Kind of net\n39. Ova\n40. Wute illk\n'js.'.hi *i__\ni__>ffi.\u00ab\". i_i:.ni.t\n___*$,_   _-M>\nam i    '__i _\nMaa-iuna mar.\nMMi:ir.H! in us*\n_a iH-it* aou\n___ ___\nanu '.-\u2022\u25a0*\u25a0 _\u2022\n\\I3_ *.\u00ab._*.ll ..\n...TH  B..BHHB-*\n41. Rail\n43. Bait   '\n44. Biking\nchamber\n45. Headland\n Look Down Those Want Ad Columns for Bargains\n|\nPHONE 144\nDQUIST-To   Mr.   and   Mrs.\nLindqultt of Rowland, at the\n\u2022 Misertfordiae Hospital, Roes-\nJuly'3, a ion, .\nHILP WANTED\nTto FEMALE BOOKKEEP-\nMust have business course,\nte ige, education tnd offiet\ntrl\/nce when making appll-\nliWto National Selective Ser-\nKJMton, B.C. '\nMD; 2 PICKERS FOR RASP-\nrfesi cherries and blackbeMiei.\nannell,   Harrop.\t\n?ED: CHERRY PICKERS tt\nitn. L. Clark, Gray Creek\nJ3LE GIRL OR WOMAN FOR\nItwork. Phone 708-X\nTEACHERS\nHER FOR JUNIOR GRADES\nCtatlegar Elementary School\nimum salary (1050 per annum\nlocations received by S C.\n\u2022on, Secretary, Castlegar Unit-\nRural School District. Cas le-\nB.C.\t\nfitD. TEACHER, CXS-HO\nOOL Female preferred. Salary\ntods on experience, not less\n1|900 Grades 1 to 8, 18 pupils.\n,.Treas\u201e A.  H. Sinclair, P.O.\n46, Trail, B.C.\nTEACHER FOR BAL-\nI Eementary School and Grade\n.Salary $1000 per annum. Ap-\nFrank Seal, Secretary School\nrd, Balfour, B.C.\nTUATIONS WANTED\ncial Low Rates for non-\nmerclpil advertisements un-\nhis classification to assist\n?le seeking employment.\nf 23c tor one week (6 days)\nrrs any number of required\nI. Payable in advance. Add\nI If dox number desired.\nW-Cto   Hmtmpm\nUnt with boy 11 yetri). Must\ndose to Junior High School.\n4303 Dally Newi. i\nMACHINERY\nilNERY FOR SALE: ONE 00\nlocomotive boiler with 85 lt.\n., 135 lbs. WP.; ont 60x16\ntn tubular boiler with Dutch\ni letting!, no stack, 130 lbs.\ni one 13x18 ielf contained\n_ engine; 1 let of Uve rolls;\nivy log haul chain with iproc\nand drum; 4 conveyor chains,\nOtU sizes; 1 model 04 6x0 Ber-\nnltlner top cylinder, 6 knife;\nble log haul. For full partic-\nI tpoly. Thos. Alton tt Sons,\nion, B.C.\nOATS AND ENCINi-L\n__ FAIRLY NEW IN-\nrd motor boat with or without\nor. Box 4220 Dally Newt.\nf     i i  \t\nROOM AND BOARD\nPHD BY COUPLE. RM. & BD.\nI mo. sear lake Box 4222 News\nYOU CAN\nTELEPHONE REPLIES\nTO     '\nADVERTISEMENTS\nWITH\nBOX NUMBERS\nFor the accommodation ott readers who find It Inconvenient to\nwrite an answer to Classified\nAdvertisements which carry\nDally News Box Numbers, rath- '\ner than a name or address of advertisers and to serve advertisers better we will accept replies by telephone.\nPHONE 144\nYOU CAN ORDER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS BY\nPHONE ALSO\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP A'l\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n1-6 H.P. ELECTRIC MOTOR AND\nused goodi of ill kinds iet CHESS\nSECOND  HAND  STORE.\n38? IHE PHOTO Mill SB?\n.    P.O. Box 335, Vancouver.\nRolls dtvtloptd tnd printtd ito\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargemcni 38c\n_sVt'_il-_ \\tflfH WRA-RII\nproperty tnd businesses who wlih\nto sell or trtdt for loetl or B.C.\nWrite Swap Service Ltd., 38 Sixth\nSt, New Westminster.\t\n25c ll0NS PHOTt^25c\nP. O. Box 434, Vancouver\nAny 8-exp. roll developed tnd print-\ned -Be, Reprlnti 3c, Fret 3x7 coupon\n_-W-~_--_Tl--f_-*-__',\nget acquainted. Join friendship\nclub. Letter Introduction. Free\nparticulars. P.O. Box 863, Vancouver, B.C\nLONELY FOLKSl j6D\u00bb ttfl-UBlE\nconfidential matrimonial club.\nMany Members with meant Particulars tnd descriptions 10c. Ladies free. Box 121, Regina,\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB.C., Provincial Asaayer, Chemist.\nIndividual  representative  for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nA. J. Buie, Independent Mine Representative, Box 54. Trail, B.C.\n15. W. WIDDOWSON PROVINCUL\nAssayer, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nTHE WEST KOOTENAY ASSAY\nOffice, 550 Stanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nCHIROPRACTOR8\ntkt McDOMALb, OC, 'PALMER\nGrad X-ray, Strand Blk., Trtll.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN, MINING tr CIVIL\nEng.neer; B.C., Land Surveyor.\nRo aland and Grand Forki, B.C\nSbYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST\nNelson, B.C.. Surveyor end\nEngineer, Phone 660-R.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nCHAS. F. McHARDY INSURANCE,\nReal Estate, Pholje 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 503 324 Vernon St.\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP\nSpecialists in mine and mill work.\nMachine work, light tnd heavy\nElectric 'and Acetylene welding.\n708 Vernon St., Nelson. \u2014 Ph. 08.\noptometrists\nTTOiXHSh\nsmt tlaihj iWtm.\nTelephone 144\n1 Circulation: Phont 1323-L\nSified Advertising Rates\njer lint per Insertion\nler line per week (6 comec-\nH lniertloni for cost of 4)\nI line t month (26 times)\nImum 2 lines per Insertion)\nnumber lie extra. Thli\ntl tny number of timet\nILIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTINDERS, ETC.\nper Ime, first insertion and\nttch   subsequent   insertion.\n,   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nIPECIAL LOW RATES\ncommercial SI tutt I ont\ntid for 25c for my required\n~ lr ot  lines for ilx  dtyi\npiyible In tdvtnct.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATEO\nJt copy  . _$   08\nctrrier. oer week       28\nCirrler per yeir 13.00\n\u25a0Mill\nmonth\nN  months\nmonthi   ...\nyetr\nI   -75\n. 200\n. 4.00\n.   BOO\nvt rates tpply In Cinadi.\nttd Statei and United Kng-\nto subscribers living out-\nregular carrier areas\n\u25bawhere and to Canada where\nith ll.SO: three months 34 00:\n1 portage is required one\nmonths $8 00: ont vear IIS\nTffilL\nOptometrist!\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail.      Phone 177\nSA8H FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S      SASH      FACTORY\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\n8ECOND  HAND STORES\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhat have youl Ph. 634 Ark Store\nPETS\nARDEE   KENNELS,   WALDHE1M.\nSask. Specializing ln Irish Setters.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top pricei\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n016 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nWANTED: POST CARD KODAK,\nbicycle, portable typewriter. Will\nsell cabinet radio at map. Postmaster, Brilliant, B.C.\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not leu then 12 lnchei\nsquare. Oc lb. F.O.B. Nelion Dally\nNewi.\nWANTED: 1040, '41 OR '42 CAR.\nGood condition. Pay Ctsh. Particulars to Box 4261, Dally Newt,\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ndal low prices, Active Trading Co.\n016 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE: NO. 10 REMINGTON\ntypewriter, completely reconditioned. Ap. Box 4264 Daily Newi.\nF0RREST-CR0S3LEY     CABINET\nradio chesp for cash, A-l shlpi.\nFOR ADULTS ONLY1 SEND 10c\nfor World'i Funnleit Joke Novelty ind catalog of feminine hygelne\nproducts, druggliti sundries, books\non ill subjects, medical preparations, etc. Weitern Distributors,\nBox 24FNC, Reglni, Saik,\nFUN FOR PARTIES\nHone racing with carda. Play your\nfavorites. Let the cards, decide\nthe winners, on the World'i imall-\nest race track. 80 horsei, 8 races,\ntable size 88c, pc.ket aize 23c. Box\n881, Vancouver, B.C.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRlflT-\ned (6 or 6 exposure roll) 25c. He-\nprints 3c each. For your vacation\nsnapshots, chooie Kryital Finish\nGuaranteed non-ftde prints, Kryital Photoi, Wilkie, Saskatchewan.\nEstablished over 90 years.\ntort\nBuy  Your  Fur Coat Now\u2014Pay\nill Summer\u2014Free  Storage\u2014\nAttractive Pricei\nExpert Restyling \u2014 Repairing\n-.Low Ratet\u2014\nSAFE POLAR STORAGE\nPolar Fun Ltd. \u2014 Vancouver, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBABY CHICKS, NEW HAMPSHIRE\nand Rhode Island Red. Approved\nand blood-teited. Reidy to ship\nevery Tuesday $12 per 100. John\nGoodman, Gilley Avenue .Hatchery, 1.655 Oilley Avenue, New\nWestminster, B.C.\nWANTED:    SMALL   PIGS,   ANY\nnumber, Between now and No- .\nveenber.  Write' price tnd  when-f*\nready to ihip. Wo Lee, 704 Davis\nSt. Nelson.\nBEST QUALITY RHODE ISLAND\nRed Chlckft July shipment, 23 for\n|3; 50 for (6; 100 for $12. 0. Game,\nTrlange Poultry Farm; Armstrong\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nUSED CARS\n1929 DeSoto Sedan-\nHydraulic brakes $195\n1929 Pontiac Coach\u2014\nWith trunk ?75\n1929 Model A Sedan-\nIn good shape f 175\n1929 Ford Roadster\u2014\n\u2014Priced at $175\n(NELSON) LTD.\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON) LIMITED\n213 Baker St. Nelson\n\u2014Genuine International Parts\u2014\nAlso special logging truck brakt\nfluid and brake lining\nCENTRAL TRUCK tt EQUIP  CO\n702 Front St. *\" -      Nelion, B.C.\nFOR SALE: STUDEBAKER Dictator, 1934. Five passenger sedan,\ntlrea and everything In first class\ncondition. Has not run over 17,000\nmiles. Apply F. K. Stortts, Boswell\nPOWER PLANT MOUNTED ON\nframe, engine completely overhauled. NELSON AUTO WRECKING AND GARAGE.\nFOR SALE: 1942 FORD COUPE,\nlike new, licensed, only gone 800\nmiles. Good tires. Apply 1945 Falls\nSt. mornings.\nFOR SALE: MAPLE LEAF 2-TON\ntruck, in good running ihape.\nShorty's Repair Shop.\t\nRADIATORS AND BALL BEATT-\nIngs   City Auto Wrecken\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE: SERVICE STATION\nand confectionery store in Salmo\nas a going concern. All fixtures\nincuding ice cream, cold drink\nand domestic refrigerators, show\ncases, booths, vulcanizing equipment, air pump and electric motor,\ntwo gas pumps and a 1938 International \"Mon truck. Net profit for one year will pay for the\nbusiness. Price $2250 excluding\nstook which will be sold at cost.\nTerms arranged. T. D. Rosling,\nPh. 717, 566 Ward St.\nMONTflEAl\nINDUSTRIALS\nAaioc Brtw of Can\nCanadian Bronze ...\nCan Car & Fdy Pfd .\nCm Celanese Pfd\nCan Stetmihlp\t\nCon Mln te Smelting\nDom Steel jt Cotl B\nGatlneau Powtr Pfd ,\nH Smith Ptper Pfd ...\nMcColl Frintenac \t\nNttiontl Brew Ltd\t\nQuebec Power\nShawnigan W le V .\nSt. Lawrence Corp\nBANKS\nBank of Commerce .\nDominion Bmk \t\nImperiil Bank \t\nBank ot Montretl. .-\nNova Scotli \u201e, \t\nRoyal Bank \t\nBank of Toronto\nMEW   YORK   STOCKS\nAmtrietn Ctn \t\nAm Smelt te Re _\nAmerican Tobacco\t\nBeth Steel\t\nCanadian Pacific\t\nDupont ..   \t\nEastman Kodak\t\nden Electric, _\t\nGen Motori.'. __._\nHowe Sound ..   . _.\t\nInternational Nickel ..\nStan OU of N J _\t\nUnion Pacific \t\nU S Steel _\t\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEO, Jiily 7  (CP)-Grain\n104 Vi\n105-4\n106*4\n109V.\n104%\n106**\n109%\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High\nWHEAT\nJuly    \t\nOct.  \t\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nOATS\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nDec.\nBARLEY\nJuly   ....\nOct\t\nDec\t\nRYE\nJuly   \t\nOct.   ....\nDec\t\nLow   Cloie\n104 Vi\n105%\n106%\n108%\n104V\u00bb\n105%\n106%\n108 %\n51%\n51%\n51%\n64'i\n64%\n64%\n-*) Vt\n101%\n101\n99%     90       90%\n101%    99%   100\n101        98%     09\nWheit: No. 1 hard It No. 1 Nor.\n105%; No. 2 Nor. 101%; No. 3 Nor\nNo. 4 Nor. 94%; No. 5 wheat\n91, No. 6 wheat 88%; feed 87%; No.\n1 Garnet 98*%; No. 2 Garnet 97%;\nNo. 3 Garnet 96%; No. 1 Ambur\nDurum 111%; No. 1 & 2 A.RW,\n104%; No. 3 A.R.W. 102%.\nOats: No 2 CW., Ex. S C.W., No.\nS C.W., Ex 1 feed, No. 1 feed and\nNo. 2 feed 51%; No. 3 feed 50%.\nBerley: Malting grades: No. 1 and\n2 C.W.. 6-row, No. 1 and 2 C, W.\n2-row and No. 3 C.W., 6-row all\n84\u00bb_; other gradei\u2014Nos. 1, 2 and 3\nfeed 64%.\nVYlahhL J-Q-ii-L . . .\nLONDON, July 7 (AP)-The stock\nmirket was quiet and firm today.\nIndustrials were selectively higher\nand oils Irregular. Dividend-paying\naflirs were.iteady.\nBritish fiyids were helped by investment demand.\nFOR SALE: AYRSHIRE COW,\nnewly freshened, 3rd calf, ilso\nHerford Bull, l-yr.-old, Avli, Perry Siding.\nFOR SALE; 40 BARRED ROCK\npullets, 4%monthi old. $1.50 eich.\nWrite Box 0703, Dllly Newi.\nNEW HAMPSHIRE COCKERELS\n4 weeks, 40c; 6 weeka, SOc Tom\nNeile, R.R. No. 1, Nelson.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY:\nSmill house or bungalow, prefer\nbungtlow. Would like girige.\nPleaie give tull pirtlculin and\nterms in flnt letter. P.O. Box 758,\nCrarsbrook, B.C.\nFOR  SALE:  TWO  LOTS  IN 700\nblock, Baker St Size 100x120 feet, change\nPrice $1300 which li one-third of\nuiessed vilue. T. D. Roiling, 566\nWtrd Street.\nNEW YORK\u2014The stock market\nretreated mildly today In a session\nmarked more by the absence of buyers (than by any Increase offerings.\nSteels and rails were among the\nmore backward Shares. Transactions\namounted  to about 850.000 shares.\nUncertainty over two major factors\u2014war news and domestic developments In the anti-inflation fight\n\u2014weighed on sentiment, keeping a\ngood many investors on the sidelines.\nTORONTO - Industrial stocks\nmaintained a firm to strong tone but\nthe mining groups and the Western\noils displayed mild weakness ln\ntoday's trading. Volume wai about\n375000 shares. *\nAmong tHe stronger Industrial\ngroups weTe the senior oils, utilities,\nfoods, steels and papers. Miscellaneous Issues posted some wide\ngains\nMONTREAL\u2014Stock exchange and\ncurb market trading today was without particular significance. Trends\nwere slightly irregular.        -   \u2022\nIn Weatern oils, Bast Crest and\nDalhousie picked up gains. Winnipeg Electric was ahead in utilities.\nWINNIPEG\u2014Wheat futures moved narrowly today and at the close\nvalues were % to % cent a bushel\nhigher. July finished at $1.04%.\nAmerican houses, shippers and\nmills were credited with good buying ln the pit. Offerings were fairly heavy with selling attributed to\nlocol Interests.\nRve futures eased In sympathy\nwith declines at Ohicago. Commission House buying and some intermarket soreadlng was reported. Oats\nand barley futures remained at\ncelling leveli.\nCHICAGO-Graln prices turned\ndownward throughout most of the\nsession today, but losses were mainly of a fractional nature and some\nstn-oort came Into the wheat pit on\nmill buying. Hedging pressure Increased. Transactions In all pita were\nITALIAN DVC- HUNTING\u2014BEST 1948 STYLE\nThey wouldn't shoot real ducks on a\npond but the R.A.F. Beaufighters who\nsurprised these Italian seaplanes were under no obligation to hold their fire. That\nis, not for the two ships on the right which\nare being straddled with cannon fire.\nShells kick up spray and leave smoke\naround the vi.tims. The two white hospital planes at left are not being touched\nby the attackers.\nCommunity (Iub\nof N. Denver\nReelects Officers\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-The innual\nmeeting of the New Denver Community Club was held in the Bosun\nHall with 18 memberi present, representing 18 orgeniiatlons of the\nt-rwn. In the absence of the President, T. Flint, Vice-President James\nDraper presided.\nJames Butlin was thanked for his\nwork in preparing the financial\nstatement lnd all other officers\nwere thanked for their work In conducting the business of the Club.\nF. H. Angrignon was appointed\nto look after changing the Insurance policy to include the contents\nof the hall.\nJ Taylor was appointed to see\nabout getting a stove for the dress-\nig room.\nA letter from the Slocan Community Hospital Society, thanking\nthe Club for a donation of $140.81,\nwas filed. It was decided to change\nthe hall doors to comply with fire\nigulations; also that the South side\nfthe hall be Jacked up and repaired. These repairs are to be conducted by the Building Committee.\nIt was unanimously passed that\nthe balance owing on Jhe Hall be\npaid off and that purchase of a new\npiano be made for the hall. The\nold one Is to be given to the New\nDenver Brass Band for use in the\nBand Hall.\nA motion was passed to Incorporate the Club under the Societies\nAct as the \"New Denver Community Club\", subject to lanction of the\nvarious organizations represented\nand that each organization sign\nthe declaration form. Officers were\nre-elected as follows:\nPresident, T. R. Flint; Vice-President, J\u00bbmes Draper; Sscretery-\nTreasurer, Miss Florence A. Moss;\nExecutive Committee, J. Taylor, A.\nD Trickett, Mrs. George Burkett,\nN Tattrie and J. Huntley. This\ncommittee is also to art as Building Committee.\nA letter ot thanks Is to go to New\n4-RM. COTTAGE, LEAN-TO-SHED,\n2 lots at Procter. Will dispose of\nlime cheap for cash. Apply Haig-\nSmeUle, 807 3rd St.\nSenior base metals showed little : on a much smaller sctle than yester\n'day.\nDOW JONES AVFRACES\nWHY NOf RE-FINANCE YOUR\nmortgage it 6%. We hive funds\n\u2022vallible. Monthly reduction plm.\nAPPLEYARD.\nFOR\nHigh Low Close\n_0  industrials    143.82 142 83 143.41\n20 rails      36.39 88.02 38.20\n15 utilities      21.55 21.23 21.48\nChange\noff .35\noff .08\noff    .12\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\n-__T_-~-_l__\\.\nLarge   or  small,  iee   Robertson! Anglo-Huronlan\nRealty, 532 Ward St., NeUon.        I Base MetaU Mining\nBeattie Gold iMlnes ..\nF. A. WHITFIELD REAL _*....\n........        ind Insunnce, 417 Hill St., NeUon , Bidgood^ Kirkland\nApply O.K.  Bakery, Stmley  St. BEFORE   BUYING   YOUR  HOMI  Bufhlo Ank'erlle\"\nCSstle-Trethewey   _       .85\nJ.75\nat*.\n1.01\n31\n10\nFOR SALE  8-PCE. WALNUT DIN-\nIng rm. suite. 515 Behnsen St,\nyptoquotes\n'DM   CDA   DSJ   PRTNU   AEJQFLNPM   SIU\n.FRNVPM   DSJ   PRTNU   CNPP-ATRU.\nfahsraty*!   Cryptoquotei     PERHEVERB   AND   PRESERVE\n'0UR8ELVES FOR BETTER CIRCUM8TANCES-VERGIL.\nCryptoquotes ire nuotitlons of fimoui persons written cipher.\nuhslitute character nis replaced Ihe original letter For Instinct,\n\"R\" miy lubstitute for the orlginil \"E' throughout the entlrt\nptoquote. or a \"BB\" miy rtplace an \"LL\" Find the key and fol-\nthrougb to tht solution.\nSEE C W. Appleyard tt Co.\nRENTALS\nBRIGHT, FURNISHED SUITE FOR\nrent. Apply evenings, 818 Kootenay St.\nSEVERAL HOUSES FOR RENT. 113\n\u2014820 i month. C. W. Appleyard,\nPhone *_\u25a0\nt-_k(_   km.   6tAuTTfW_\nmodem Frlgldalre equipped lultei\ntC_ R__NT: 5 itiH. STUCCO Hm.\n4 loll. A. Hall, 816 Gordon Rd\n3\"-ROOMS FURN. WITH GARfiB.\nApply upstaln, 811 Vernon Bt.\ntO- RENT: SMALL HbUSfc PART-\nW furnished. Phone 130.\t\nLARGE   HOUSEKEEPING  ROOM.\nideal for buslneu girl. 171 Baker.\nCentral Patricia      1.15\nChromium M le 3 _ _    2.35\nConiaurum Mines      1.02\nConsolldsted M le S     43.80\nDome Mlnei    J42S\nEast  Malartlc _     1.30\nEldorado Gold       .98\nFalconbridge  Nickel       4.50\nGod's Lake Oold U\nHard Rock Gold  _ 50\nHollinger        _    10.00\nHudson Bay M 6c S    30.00\nInternal Nickel _.   36.50\nKerr-AddUon   ..           6.45\nKirkland Lake  .., 61\nLake Shore Mines     14.66\nLamaque Contkc       4.86\nLeitch Gold  _       _\nLittle Long Uc 71\nMacLeod Cockshutt .._     1.75\nWHAT'S\nGONE,\n\/CUTTER\nOR THOUGHT VOU OD\/-.\na\/TTER, GET THIS CTR4-3KT-\nMERPf\/SOKAVAND\nSHAR6S IN OUR\nr-v* rr wbrsnt for m,_ wwe\nHAy; TME QREAT ROGUE DIAMOND !*_\nMadsen Rtd Lakt   1.10\nMalirtlc Oold F  1.84\nMclntyre-Porcuplne      51.25\nMcKenzie Red Like  90\nMining Oorporitlon   1.68\nNlplsilng Mining  _  1.31\nNorindi  46.15\nNormetal _.  .98\nOmegi Oold   ,  24\nPamour Porcuplnt  _ _. .93\nPerron Gold  77\nPickle Crow Oold  1.61\nPowell Rouyn Oold _ 78\nPreston Eut Dom\u00ab _  2.14\nSen Antonio Gold  _ 2.95\nSherrltt Oordon _   X\nSiscoe Oold           .41\nSliden Milirtlo  _  \u25a0*\u00bb\nSudbury Buin    Ui\nSulllvin Com  .70\nSylvtnltt  1\u00bb3\nTeck-HutSies Oold  2.81\nToburn Gold Minei .._. 67\nVenturei       6.96\nWilte Amulet          4.60\nWright Hargreaves _ _. 8.30\nOILS\nBritish  Amerlcm     MJ0\nrmperlil               16.26\nInttr Petroleum  22.68\nTexu Cimjllin    1.83\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl Power A \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrewers & DUt \t\nBraz Tract\t\nB C Power A       ,\t\nCan Car le Fdy\t\nCan Malting  \t\nCsn Pac Rly         _\nCan Ind Alcohol A ...._.\nDominion .-Bridge   \t\nDistillers Stigrtmi\t\nFord of Omidi A    \t\nOoodyeir Tire    \t\nHim'llon Bridge\t\nImoerjil Tobiceo  \u2014\nMontreil Powtr    Jl**\nNit Sttel Cir     80\nPowtr Corp        **.\nStul of Ctn _...._.._..   88\n1.60\n151H\n\u00bbVt\nan\n27 V,\n\u00bb**\n-l\nim\n5\".\nJR\n35\nu\n90\n\u00bb\u2022_\n11\nDenver Young Peoples Society\nthanking them for their time enjl\ncire given the hall and their cooperation ln all matten. Another letter to the B.C, Security Commluion\nthinked them for generous cooperation and help In making the Victoria\nCelebration a success.\nSpecial thanks were given to Joe\nMlzuhara, the-Women'i Institute\nand tht other committeei for help\ntblt day.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CTTY, B. C.-Mlit Irene\nBudd, who ittended High School\nin Nelion during the past year, has\nreturned home.\nMelville Long of Kimberley is\nguest of hU parents, Mr. and Mri.\nG. A. Fortxs.\nMn. B. Ltndadown of Appledale\nand her sUter, Mrs. H. Currie of\nTrail, were vUitors here.\nMr. and Mrs. T, McNeish spent\nthe weekend with members of their\nfamily at Rosebery.\nMrs. E. V. Graham and tw\u00bbi children are visiting in Silverton.\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. Forbs were\nvisitors to NeUon during the weekend.\nMiss Jean McDonald has returned\nfrom Nelson.\nWilliam (Billy) Ewing left on\nFriday for Calgary, where he will\nbe the guest of his uncle and aunt,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ewing. He was\naccompanied to NeUon by his mother, Mrs. David Ewing.\nMrs. F. E. Robinson, R.N., of the\nstaff of tbe Japanese hospital here,\nis spending a holiday at Grand\nForks.\nInnis Cooper left on Saturday for\nKoolaree boys carpp tm a couple\nof weeks.\nMUa EMe Life left on Monday\nfor Koolaree Camp.\nMiss Gladyi L. Reynolds, Matron\nof the Japaneie hospital here, spenl\nSunday at New Denver, the guest\nof Dr. and Mrs. A. Francis.\nJulius Caesar presented 6000 mo-\nray fishes to friends In celebration\nof one of hU victories.\nSongs, Comedy\nEnjoyed at\nLourdes Campfire\nLOURiDES, B. C.-A rollicking\ngame of \"Fruit Basket\" attrted ofthe activities of one of the most\nluccessful campfires so far thia\nseason.\nThe Marine Hymn wm choien fof\nthe community sing ind then requests were called for. A story from\nMr. Magllo seemed to be the general request. Cabin One wu represented by Robert Fontain when\nhe sang \"Dad's Little Texai Lad.\"\nGabln T h r e e' i presentttlon\nbrought 'Tvan the Terrible\" (Joe\nCarney) and \"Guti Duffy\" (Earl\nDuffy) on to the icene In i comlo\nboxing match.\nCabin Five's leader, Jack Prestley, sang \"As Time Goea By.\"\nDonny Roes and Leo Choquette\nwere singing \"Don't'G*et Around\nMuch Anymore\" Just as Uie train\nwent by. Bven though we couldn't\nhear them, It must have been good\njudging from Denny's expression\nand Leo's posture.\nA dedication to the Camp Cook,\nMrs. Plante, was \"The Molecule on\nthe flea, on the feather, on the\nhat, on the girl, on the seat, on the\nfloor of the train which the wheels\nwent round.\" ThU was aUo sdng\nby Donny Ross and Leo Choquette\nand by the time they were finished\neveryone was out of breath from\nlaughing, so lunch wu served and\nonce again we closed with the hymn\n\"Holy God We Praise Thy Name\"\nechoing across the lake.\nSide-arms, rifles tnd bayonets\nwere carried into Westminster Abbey by 1000 Home Guards during\na parade service. The Dean of Weitminster could not recall a previoui\noccasion when arms were born into\nthe Abbey.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, July 7 (CP)-Today's\nreceipts: 77 oattle; five calves; 04\n' Cattle market steady for quality\noffered. <\nSpring lambs 14-14.50.\nMedium to good  butcher steers\n11.25-12;  medium  to  good butoher i\nheifers 10.50-11.25; good cows 8.75-1\n9.25;   cofnmon   to   medium   7-8.50;\ncanners and  cutters 4,50-6.50;  medium to good fed calves 11.50-11 85; I\ngood cowi 9-9.50; common to medium   7.50-8.50;   good   stocker   and\nfeeder  steers  10.25-11;  common  to\nmedium 9-10.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES\nBayonne   ._\t\nBralorne   \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nGolconda \t\nGold Belt   \t\nGrandview  \t\nGrull Wihksne ..   .\nHedley Mascot\t\nIsland Mountain\nKooteniy Belle \t\nPiclflc Nickel \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold\t\nPriviteer\nReeves  MacDonald\nReno Gold \t\nSheep Creek      \t\nSilbak Premier ....\nWhitewater\nYmlr Yinkee Girl\nOILS\nAntcondt  \t\nAnglo Cinidlin \t\nA P Con      \t\nBrown Corp\t\nCilg & Bd \t\nCommoil      . \t\nCommonwealth \t\nDalhoqsle   \t\nFoothills   \t\nHome    \t\nMcDougall Segur I\nModel        \t\nOkalta Com\nPacific Pete\nRoyal Canadian \t\nRoyallte \t\nSouthwest Pete\nUnited   \t\nVinilta\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Eitates \t\nCout Breweriei\nUnited DiitUl\t\nBid\n.04 V4\n9.70\n1.01\n.04 Vi\n.14\n.13\n.02%\n.02 Vi\n.85\n.24\n.08\n1.98\n.90\n.37 Vt\n.28\n02 U\n.90\n.72\n.02*4\n.08\n.04*4\n.71\n.19\n,0BH\n1.56\n.17\n.2.1\n.35\n1.45\n3.50\n.07%\nM\n.63\nM\n.03 Vt\n24.00\n.23\n.(].\".\n.il iH\nISO\n1.39\nAik\n,05 V*\n9 95\n1.10\n.05 Vi\n.15\n88\n,43\n75\n.25\n.11\n2 05\n.93\nJ7Vi\n.35\n.03 li\n.96\n.0?i\n,084\n.05\n.75\n.15\n,11\n1.60\nX\n.27\n360\n.09\n.30\n.85\n.40\n.04\n2.76\n125\n$28,195,000 a Year\nTO READ\nCANADIAN DAILIES\nThe People of Canada pay more\nthan 28 million dollars a year for\ncopies of the daily newspapers of\nthe country to satisfy their desire\nto read and be informed by\nNews and Advertising\nFrom no other source can they\nget thesame'reliable, accurate and\ncomplete service of information on\nworld, local and district events and\non what trade and commerce have\nto offer, what industry is accomplishing and what new steps the\nGovernment is taking to aid in\nachieving Victory in the war.\nThe Nelson Daily News\nBritish Columbia'* Most Intcrcttinji Dailij\nTHE HOME PAPER OF THE PEOPLE OF KOOTENAY\n mm-mmm\n10 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, JULY 8. 1943\nSONAID\nCOLMAN GARSON\nIn JAMBS HILTON'S\nRANDOM HARVEST\nDirectedh Mirtyt UBOY\u2022 h-{**i-**Wttr PRANIUN\n.tt PHILIP DORN \u2022 SUSAN PETERS\nFeature at 7:00 and 9:26\n-Ourtooi-\u2014\nTHI CAM Of TM\nMISSING HARE\"\nLateit World News\ncmc\nA FAMOUS PlAYHS tHEATU\nDURATION LEG-DO\nA new sensational\nLeg Tint\n50c\nMa\nnn, KUtherford\nDRUG co.\nLightning Boosts\nForest Fires;\nNone Now Burning\nLightning storms booited the\nnumber of foreit flrei in Kootenay-\nBoundary ln tbe put week, but all\nof the tlrei were email and none\nwu burning it the clote of the report week Wedneiday, Forest\nBranch officials reported.\nFifteen new fires were listed dur.\nIng the week, 12 of them being\nln East Kootenay, two in West Kootenay, and one ln the Boundary,\nSo far this season there have been\n59 forest fires in the Kootenay\nBoundary cauied chiefly by light\nnlng. Of these 42 were in East Kootenay, nine in West Kootenay, and\neight ln the Boundary. There have\nbeen no large fires.\nMrs. Jordan, Formerly oi Trail and\nKimberley, Advised oi Husband's\nDeath. Months Alter Son Killed\n'Spud\" Clark\nThree monthi to the diy tfttr htr\noldeit ion loit hli life In ilr operttions over Germtny, Mn. Frtnk\nJordm of Copptr Cliff, Ont., formerly of Trail tnd Kimbtrley, received word that her husband bad\nbeen fatally Injured ln t car accident\nMri. Jordan waa visiting her parents, Mr. tnd Mrt Frank Rossman.\n416 Nelion Avenue. She had been\nhere t month. Previouily the had\nbeen advlied that her son WUliam,\nt wireless tlr gunner ln the Royal\nCanadian Air Force, wu missing\natter operation! over the Kiel Canal,\nand subsequently received word\nthrough the International Red Cross\nthtt he. loit hii lift April 9.\nLite Mondiy night, July 9, lhe\nreceived i long distance telephone\ncall advising her that her husband\nhad died u a result of a car accident.' The Eastbound C.P.R. train,\ndue out of Nelson at 1:30 a.m. Tueidiy, wu held up for \u2022 few minutei\nto enible her to citch lt tnd return\nborne.\nMri. Jordan, u t member of the\nRossman fimlly tnd liter as a young\nmarried woman, wai well known\nln Trail tnd Kimberley. The iort\nkilled ln tction, \"Billy\", wu born ln\nTralL\nBer 17-year-old ion Wilter is ln\nCopper Cliff and her youngeit ion,\nBobby, who accompanied her to\nNelson, ll remaining with hil grandparent, in Nelaon for the time being.\nMr, Jordan whlli in Trail wai\nemployed ih the concentrator ti\nthe Consolidated Mining te Smelting\nCompany plant. Subsequently he\nwaa transferred by the Company to\nKimberley, where he remained for\nsome time. Of late yean he hu\nbeen ln the employ Uf International\nNickel at Copper Cliff.\nand daughter Judith returned to\ntheir home .In Trail aftv two weeks\nholidays here.\nPat LanderviUe of the Standard\nMine spent a few dayi here with\nhis parenti.\nE. Dovey sr. of the Victor Mine,\nSandon, spent\nhome ln town.\na few days at his\nCanadian Airmen Right In Thick\nof North Africa Battles\nBy DOUG HOW\nCanadian Prew Stiff Writer\nLONDON, July 7 (CF.-Where-\ntvtr Britiih fighters fought tnd\nbomben ttttcked in North Africa,\nthtre were Canadlani there as memben of Boyal Air Force crew.\nInto the two mata'ive aerial arms\nBritain conceived to cruih the Axis\n\u2014the Wettern deiert tnd the Northweit Afrlct Air Forcet\u2014The Dominion poured her avittors In liberal wpply. Official figures place\ntheir number in the vicinity of 2000.\nOnly one R.CA.F. fighter iquadron operated ts in entity but few\nR.A.F. iqutdroni were without Canadian members and in iome fighter squidrons as high as alx of the\n12 operational piloti were Canadian.\nDominion airmen fought from El\nAlamein  to Tunis. They acourged\nthe retreating enemy, bombed his\n, bases, Joined battle with his lighten, ctrried ttie wir out to iea and\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nDELIGHTFUL FOUNTAIN\nREFRESHMENTS\nit tht\n\u2666Melon Dew#\n-niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nFLEURY'S\nPharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nJ. P. Walgren\nCeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.\nWhy pty more when you can\ncover for leu cash outlay Fire,\nAutomobile, Casualty Insurance.\nSTUART AGENCIES\n677 Biker 8treet     Nelion, B. C.\nPhone 980\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCUSH - O - LINER\nIncreases the lift of old tlrei.\nLet ui tell you tbout them.\n\u2022\nCuthbert Motors, Ltd.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nAMBULANCE\n.SERVICE\nTHOMPSON FUNERAL HOME\n611 Kooteniy 8t Phone 861\nharrttsed hit ihlpping tnd there\nemerged the Inevitable greats, two\nof them leaderi of R-AJ. Spitfire\nsquadrons in the Tunisian fighting.\nThese were Sqdn. Ldra. Jimmie\nWalker, t 24-year-old bank clerk\nfrom Edmonton, and George Hill\nfrom Pictou, N.S., two youngiten\nwho learned how to fly In the Commonwealth Air Training Scheme and\nnow hold the DJ.C. and Bar.\nWalker went to Africi with two\nplanes to his credit, ihot down 6Vj\nmore. Hill had 9*4 whea Africa\nfell.\nSupporting the 8th Army, the one\nR.C.A.F. iquadron to see action was\nthe City of Windior Squadron, which\nfinished the campaign in a crack,\nfront-line fighter wing. In this Weitern desert force wts Fit. Lt. Jamei\nFrancii Edwardi, D.F.C., DJJU.,\nNorth Battleford, Saik., who nn hii\nscore of destroyed lircraft to 10.\nFit. Sgt. Michael Askey of Winnipeg, ion 6f tn trmy padre, ran\nwild one day and shot down three\nItalian Macchis. Fo. !*rank Regan\nof Vancouver deitroyed the German ace. Kurt Helmann.\nCanadian! in this Weatern desert\nforce, exclusive of those In the\nRA.F. proper won 36 D.F.C.'i md\n5 Bari and 21 DJM.'i. At the climax of the fight, about 1000 Cana'\ndlans were in the air and 600 were\nlerving in ground crewi or on technical or administrative work.\nThe toll Canada paid has not been\nfinally computed but 132 were reported killed and missing in the\nWestern deiert force and the figure\nin the Northweit Africa group igain\nwould probably coincide roughly.\nC.C.F. in Lead\nin Preparing .\nfor Ont. Election\nBy Tht Cinidlin Prm\nThe C.C.F. party, with 40 candldatei in tht field, today led the Liberal and Progressive Conservative\npartiei In preparations for the Aug.\n4 Ontario general election. An announcement from the CCF. headquarters Indicated the party would\nplace another 20 candidates within the next few days.\nThe Progressive Conservatives\nhave 28 candidates lined up while\nthe Liberals have 26 in the field.\nBoth these organisations are rushing\nplans for nomlnatloni and additional names are expected In the\nnear future.\nPremier Nixon has been nominated by his constituency ln Brant,\nbut Lt.-Col. George A. Drew, Progressive Conservative leader, has\nyet to be named ln Simcoe East.\nE. B. Jolllffe, C.C.F. leader, will\nstand for election York South.\nThere are 90 constituencies in the\nProvince.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Wil Tattrie left Saturday for Vancouver,\nwhere he will spend hli holidays.\nMias Patricia McDonald, teacher\ntt Fruitvale, is the gueat of Miss\nJoyce Butlin for a few days.\nThe weekly Red Crou Bee wai\nheld in the Legion HtU Friday with\nMrs. L. Beggi and Mrs. E. F. Angrignon u hostesses.\nMn. J. Zugle and ion Raymond\nof Spokane, who have been gueits\nof Mr. tnd Mrs. S. A. Chrlttopher-\nson, left to visit Nelson.\nBtrney Johnson left Saturday for\nVtncouver.\nA. Erickson of Silverton, who has\nbeen t pttient in the Slocin Community Hospital, left Sunday for his\nhome.\nMlu Myrtle Motherwell of Nakutp il ipending t holiday tt the\nhome of Mr. tnd Mn. D. Powell of\nNew Denver,\nMiss A. Gallie left for Vancouver,\nwhere she will spend her holidays.\nMiss Erna Melnardus of Graven-\nhurst, OnL, arrived on Saturday to\nspend the holidays with her two\nailten and brother.\nDr. tnd Mrs. Henry Frankfort and\nson John of Chicago are guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Levy,\nMisi Mary Caffelle of Calgary is\nthe guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mn. Arthur Levy.\nMr. and Mn. M. Dumont, accompanied by Mrs. S. A. Christopherson, visited Nelson Monday.\nSister Baptlste and Sister Catherine of St. Joseph's Academy at Nelson were guests of Mr. and Mrs, H.\nKelsall Sunday en route to Burton.\nMost. Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nD.D., and Elmer Gelinas of Nelson\nwere visitors here.\nMr. and Mrs. Denver Shannon of\nTrail are here for a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. Cagnon of Victoria\nvisited New Denver for a few days.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs.\nPeterson of Nelson.\nMlsa Alice Powell spent a week\nin Nakusp with friends.\nRobert Crellin was a visitor to\nNakusp Thursday.\nD. Powell was a visitor from\nZincton to his home here for a few\ndayi.\nJ. Depretto of the Standard Mine\nspent a few days at his home here.\nJ. LanderviUe of the Van Rol was\na weekend visitor at his home here.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Gforeii ind children of Hedley are guesti of the latter's ptrents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Dumont of Hunter's Siding.\nMr: and Mrs. T. H. Wilson of Silverton were visitors here.\nMr.  and Mrs.\nYOUR PROBLEMS\n\u2022 SOLVED\nCanada's Favorite Reader\n7__danvL Sylvia.\nBy psychic ability and practical advice, helps you In affairs of Health. Business. Love,\nLawsuits, Moves, Changes,\nTravel and Desire... Special\nRepilings wilh Ice Cream tdd\nRefreshments. Ten Cups with\nDinner and Lunch.\nAfternoons - Evenings\nPraises Canada for\nGenerous Gifts\nLONDON, July 7 (CP Cable)-\nCanada was praised In the Houie of\nCommons today for her \"unprecedented generosity\" In connection\nwith financial and other gifts to the\nUnited Kingdom which Rt. Hon. F.\nW. Pofhlck-Lawrence, Labor Member for Edinburgh, said had made It\npossible for Britain substantially to\nreduce her total outlay.\nSir Arnold Grldley, Conservative\nMember for Stockport, said \"we\nowe a great debt of gratitude to the\nCanadian people whoie generosity\nls unprecedented on the part of a\nDominion  lo the Motherland.\"\nSecret Government documents In\nGreat Britain are now not burned,\nbut shredded in machines, and the\nshreds are passed itnlght to the\npulping mills to be used in miking\nnew paper.\n\u25a0\nNelson Reps to\nWorkout Friday\nNelson Ladles' Rep fastball squad\nwill have Its final practice Friday\nevening before taking on the Trail\nComets, in a double header Sunday\nafternoon. The practice ls called for\nsix o'clock sharp,\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Mr. and Mn.\nDumont of Hunters Siding were in\nNakuip Stturday.\nMrs. W. Mole of Arrow Park wai\na Nakusp visitor Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. Harrison Vrooman\nof Edgewood were in Nausp Monday enroute to Nelson.\nCorporal Ralph McPhee, R.C.E,\ntpent hli furlough In Nakusp with\nhis parents, j_r. and Mrs. A. Dunn.\nConst ond Mrs. David MdWhlrter\nand young son Bobble of Chilllwack\nare guests of Mr. McWhirter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McWhirter.\nW. F. Wilson of Edgewood visited\nNakusp Saturday.\nMrs. D. Pool and Infant daughter\nof Vernon visited tl\\e former's aunt,\nMrs. M. Ion, for several days.\nByron Thomjson of Trail, who has\nvisited Nakusp aeveral dayi, left\nfor Kelowna Saturday.\nMiss June Gardner was a weekend\nguest of her grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. G. H. Gardner, Glenbenk.\nMrs. J. Klein of Edgewood and\nEugene Klein visited Nakusp Saturday.\nEugene Klein of Edgewood ls a\npatient in Arrow Lakes Hospital.\nHe cut hii left hand quite badly\nSaturday while cutting wood.\nMrs. Fred Johnson left for Vancouver Saturday,\nMiss Sheila Leary, who hu visited\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. C S.\nLeary, for a few days, left Sunday\nfor Nelson where she attends Business College.\nIMS\", and- Mn. J. H. Clements of\nTrail were weekend visiton to Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Gilbert Fowler of\nCastlegar were guests of Mr. Fowler'l parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\nFowler, enroute to Trout Lake.\nMn. Fred Fowler and children\nMerne and Denny returned to Edge-\nwood Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Oram left\nSunday for Merrltt, B. C, where\nthey will ma4te their home.\nPte. George Hohenleltner left\nSaturday, having spent his furlough\nwith his father, A. Hohenleitner of\nBrouse.\nThe Nakuip Junior boys leiving\nfor Camp Koolaree Monday were\nBruce  Motherwell,  Douglai Hike-\nErnest Dovey Jr.' nun, Billy Barrow and Arden Gran.\nU.S. Officials\nin Trail on\nWafer Storage\nSPOKANE, Wash., July 7 (AP)-\nOffidali of the BonnevlUe Power\nAdministration and United Statei\nArmy engineers conferred today at\nTrail, B. C, with representatives of\nthe West'Kootenay Light le Power\nCompany on the possibility of In\ncreasing water storage for Columbia\nRiver power plants. ,\nThe local Bonneville office raid\nthe meeting wai to conilder the Obtaining of approximately 500,000\nacre-feet of atorage water ln Koot-\neinay Lake by a \"draw-down\" or\ndeepened procesi.\nBonneville hai been seeking 3,000,-\n000 acre-feet of storage and hai held\nhearing! at Sandpoint and Priest\nRiver, Idaho, on the poulbility of\nbuilding t dam it nearby Albeni\nFalls to get 2,000,000 of the desired\ntotal. A plan to obtain 1,000,000\nacre-feet in Flathead Lake, Montana, wat shelved!\nD. L. Marlett, Executive Assistant\nto the Bonneville Administration,\niald before he left for the meeting\nany developmenti probably would\nbe preiented to the International\nJoint Commission for consideration.\nWE RECOMMEND\nWAMPOLE'S\nPHOSPHO-LECITIN\nThe Ideal Ntrvt Tood tnd\nOtntnl Tonic.\nYour Rtxtll Stort.\nCity Drag Co.\nPhont 14\nBox 480\nCEMENT WALK ON\nCARBONATE\nON CITY PROGRAM\nConstruction of i cement ildewtlk on the North side of the 900\nblock, Carbonate Street, li on the\nprogram of the City Public Worki\nDepartment, Aid. J. E. McKenile,\nChairman, stated Wednesday.\nThe petition was received by the\nCity Council Monday \"night. The\nsidewalk will cost the property\nowners 1H4 cents per iquare foot on\nthe local Improvement basis, the\nCity paying the remainder of the\ncost-\nRelkoff Fined\n$10 for Failure\nto Register\nFred Relkoff of Villlcan paid a\nfine of $10 and costs when he pleaded guilty to a charge of failing to\nregister under the National Registration regulations. He appeared\nbefore Magistrate William Irvine in\nProvincial Police Court Wednesday.\nConstable D. G. Rogers prosecuted.\nIt was ln Mein Kampf (p. 288,\nMurphy translation) that Hitler\nstated: \"All the symptoms of decline\u2014are at bottom caused by a\nlack of consideration for the intereiti of the race to which one's own\nnation belongs or by failure to recognize the danger that comes from\nallowing a foreign race to exist\nwithin the national body.\"\nEASTWARD FARM-EXCURSION REVEtiSES PEACE-TIME HARVEST PLAN\nHaving completed their Spring seed-\nin the West, Prairie farmers left to help\nout Ontario farmers in a number of districts. They will complete work in this\nEastern area in time to provide a bountiful crop here and return to the West to\nreap their own harvests. In Ottawa they\nwere welcomed by Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, Minister of Labor; W. M. Croskery,\nOntario Department of Agriculture representative for Carleton County. About\n1000 men are going to Toronto and Ottawa, where they will be assigned to\nfarms. An interesting sidelight on the\nmovement is that it reverses the harvest\nexcursions of the 1920's, when thousands\nof men journey from the East to help the\nPrairie farmers bring in their crops.\nA. L. (SPUD) CLARK, NELSON\nFour \u00a3ean igo Sgt. A. L. (Spud)\nClark, one of the young sergemts\nof the With (Nelson) Field Bittery,\nRCA., left Nelson u N.CO. ln\nchirge of the first contingent to\nletve West Kooteniy ifter the outbreak of war. He led a group of\nsignallers of the 111th who were\nsent East for training before any of\nthe Kootenay Batteries moved away\nfrom home. Shortly afterward he\nwaa tent to England.\nWedneiday night he arrived home\nagain. He hai been returned from\nEngland owing to i wrist Injury\nbut io fir il not iure .whether or\nnot he il to be discharged.\nFORMER TELEGRAPH\nMESSENGER\nIn the picture above he li wearing\nthe uniform of an artilleryman of\nthe Non-Permanent Militia, of which\nhe wai a member for iome time\nprior to the war, while employed\nas t C.P.R. messenger md later as a\nclerk. He long ilnce lurrendered\nthe militiaman'! uniform above for\nthe now universal battle dress. In\naddition to the three stripei of \u2022\nsergeant he now wears t number\nof insignia denoting the various\ncourses he has taken.\nClark hai seen comparatively\nlittle of other Nelson men ilnce he\nwent overseas. After leaving with\nthe first contingent he,became separated from the 111th, and afterward was separated from the small\ngroup with which he left Nelson\nFor the most part his encounters\nwith men from this District have\nbeen chance meetings on the streets\nof Old Country towns while on\nleave.\nMrs. D. E. Clark, his moiher, travelled West Wednesday to meet him\nand travel with him on the last part\nof his Journey home, and other mem\nben of the family met him at the\nstation.\n\"Gee, it'i grand,\" he exclaimed as\nhis mother whisked him off home\nfor a real reunion. \"All day I've\nbeen meeting people I know and\nremembering names and faces. It's\nsure great to be home.\"\nTrail Patriotic\nDisburses\n$(500 In June\nTRAIL, B. C, July 7-Trall Dll\ntfict Patriotic and Welfare Society'i\nfinancial ititement for June ihowed t balanct on hand ot $4,212.80\nit June 30. Balance on hand at June\n1 wai $3725.51 which with June subscriptions and donationi totalled\n$8738.96.\nDisbursements made during the\nmonth toUlled \u00bb4828.1J. Aueti In-\ncludb-f caih tnd $9000 Dominion of\nCinada bonds were $921? 80. Of thli\nimount $4500 had been allocated to\nthe Red Crou tnd $5 to the Greek\nWtr Relief Fund.\nprincipal itemi under dlsbune\nment were $1000 to the Canadian\nRed Crou Society, $500 to the Community ChesL \u00bb1M to the Arthur\nChapman Chapter IODE, $300 to\nthe Arthur Chapman Chapter IODE\nin lieu of Alexander Rose Day, $50\nto the J. H. Schofield Chapter IODE.\n$100 to the J. H. Schofield Chapter\nIODE ln lieu of Alexander Rose\nDay; $150 to the Victorian Order\nof Nunei, $250 to the Silvation\nArmy, $1000 to the Greek War Relief Fund, $200 to the Knighti of\nColumbui re Citholic cimp, $200\nto Camp Koolaree, $500 to Canadian\nLegion. B.E.S.L. No. 11, $18 to Klnimen Club of Nelson re Milk for\nBritain, $28.79 Cinadian Aid to\nRussia Fund.\niiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\nJantzen\nSwim Trunks\n___ t\nSea theirnew latitat\ncreations liCfcwn Trunk\nWool, Wool and Laste:\nSatins and Gabardines. A\nsizes and colors. *,\n$2.95 tom\nEMORlM\nmm        UIMTTBD   '   _-^m-\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiii\niiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiuii.il\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRatei: 22c lint, Pc lint blick ftet\ntype, lirger type rttei on rtquttt\nMinimum ,two llntt. 10% dlicount .for prompt payment.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimi\nKOKANEE LODGE AND CABINS\nCrou Ferry, thence IH milet\nWt reptir vacuum cleinen too.\nBeatty Repair Service. Ph. tt.\nFor rale: 7 room house on itreet\nctr line. Box 4302 Daily Newi.\nFor rent or ule, Summer cottage,\nBalfour, close t beach, Blackwood.\nOttoman' fine cut tobacco, 28c t\ntin at VALENTINE'S.\nWanted: cabin on like, either lut\n2 wki. July or flnt 2 wki. Auguit\nBox 4301 Daily Newi.\nCHURCH   OF THE  REDEEMER\n(Fairview)\nSunday next:-ll:00 a.m., 7:30 ft-.\nThe Vicar\nWater Level\nPractically at a itandstlU at the\nseason's peak, the lake showed a\ngain of .01 foot ln level for the 24\nhours ending Wednesday at 8 p.m.,\nwhen the Launch Club gauge reading was 10.57 feet.\nThe Poles and Scots have reverted\na long tradition of friendship since\nthe war started. In 1640 there were\n30,000 Scots ln Poland, but ln 1940\nthere were 30,000 Poles In Scotland,\nsaid Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the Council.\nEaglei Whist Drive tnd Dtnct\nTONIQHT it Etglt Hill,\nCards 8:15 Shirp, Dtnclng 10:30\nEagle's Orchutra\nHay   Forka   and   Rakes,   Scythe\nBlades and Snathi  Scythe Stones\netc. Get your  requirementi from\n-HIPPERSON'S-\nOn Latimer Street, 4 room bunga\nIqw and bath. Concrete foundations\nand cellar. Large workshed. Fruit\ntreei. 4)1800. Robertson Realty.\nFiling cards. All sizes and ruling!\nD. W. McDerby, \"The Stationer and\nTypewriter Man\", 854 Baker St,\nNelson, B.C.   .\nSave Time, and Savt Montyl You\ncan make your Spring cleaning\nchores lighter by sending your rugs,\n7c sq. ft. and up to the Cryital\n'Liundry. Cill 75.\nGIRLS   FASTBALL\u20148UNDAY\nNelson Ladles Rep vs Trail Cometi\nFirst game at 1:15 sharp\nSecond game at 3:30 p.m.\nYour support will be apprecleted\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\nAuociited Preu Wir Analyst\nConflicting Moscow ind Berlin\nversions of the origin of the three-\ndty-old battle on the Orel-Belgorod Front In Russii make wholly clear only one espect of whit\nmiy be the most crucial conflict\nof the war In Europe.\nIf It Is \u00bbtiit Moscow lays It is\u2014\nthe beginning of i long-awaited\nthird Nazi attempt to blitzkrelg\nRussia out of the war\u2014It has been\nlaunched under a significant change\nln German propaganda technique.\nIt ll being pictured to the German\npublic ai a defensive fight, not \u2022\nNail offensive.\nPREPARES HOME FRONT\nThat hai one distinct advantage.\nIf Moicow Is correct ind the Nuls\nhive itirted i new power drive\nbut ire checked ihort of iny declilve reiulti igiin, the result still\ncut bt Niil-hcralded it home ai a\nvictory.\nYet It also must reflect grave ap-\nprehenslon on the part of the German High Command ai to how the\nwar-weary German public might\nttke another military defeat plied\nOn the top of the SUllngnd diiai-\nteratht Tunis im debacle tnd the\nfict that Italy and Germany Itself\nare being ripped by Anglo-American bombing attacks day and night\non an ever rising scale with no more\nthan feeble token reprisals by Axis\nair power.\nSo far n developments on the\nOrel-Belgorod Frdht tre yet recorded by either side, they lend\nfull color to Russian Insistence thst\ninother Nizl attempt to imash\nthrough to the Don or beyond is In\nprogress.\nThe attack seems a three-pronged\ndrive. Its left flank appears based\non the Orel salient, Its centre pressing against the Kuruk sector and\nIts right surging Eastward in the\nBelgorod area. Some progreu ln\neach trea ls Russian-admitted or\nGerman-claimed.\nBy tny reckoning, there rtmtin\nnot mort thtn'12 weeks of certiln\ngood fighting wuther ftr Ult\nGtrmant In thtt notion of (outh\nCentral Ruult. Thit llmlti rigidly\nthe tlmt on which Nul gtntrils\ncm count to giln iny finil reiulti In Ruult.\nFor tntt reison If no other, the\nOrel-Belgorod drive cinnot yet be\niet down it t full-sctle Nul offensive, nor lti reil ilgnlflcinct be\nipprilsed.\nNew Potatoes\nSell Fast but\nAre Scarce\nWholeulen reported Wedni\nthtt new potatoes htve been m(\nfreely ill.week, but supplies\nsomewhat scarce tt the preient\nHothouse tomttoei ire itll'\nriving from the Okanagan and\ncucumben tnd ntw onloni i\ntrrivt thii weekend. Local 41\nbeeti, cibbage and head lcttuc\navailable new.\nApricoti tre expected from 1\nIngton next week. Tbt icard\nwatermelon! ls due to the la\nshipping facilities, Lemom art\nIng freely now owing to th\nweither.\nCar arrivals wera ont of\nand pain producti, one of fe\ner, one of B.C mixed vegetabl<\none of meats.\nCar Stolen From\nBaker Street\nFound Near Nakui\nTht ctr which wu itolen\nBaker Street Sundty night\nfound ibindoned netr Nakusp\ndiy morning. Conittbit T. A.\nley of the Provincial Police\nreported the discovery.\nThe ctr was the property 1\nnest Yehnke of Nelton, City\n\u2022t NtUon reported thtt the ea\nbeen left parked ln mud ibo\nmUei South ot Nakuip, and oil\nwu badly worn down u a\nof driving on tht rim of tht .\nHAVE DID\nTODA!\n\u2022ttlii\nSTAR CAF\nJ. A. C. LaughU\nOptometrist\nSuit* 205\nMedical Arti Building\nY_r WaUh It\nPrecioui . . .\nFor fine repairing   j\nSee... I\nHARVEY\nThe Jeweller. M4 Btker SL\nPaifeurli\nMilk Mi\nChildn\nHealth\nMURPHY BROS.\nCan lupply paint\nfor every purpoie.\nONE HOUSEKEEPING R(\non Ground Floor. CooL Fun_\nReasonable. Annable Blocl\nPhone 358-R\n\u25a0\nF. R SMIT\nIf It's Electric\nPhone 666        351 Bake\n\u2022*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb W'W \u00bb*\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb<\u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0 .MM\nSOMERS* FUNERAL\nSERVICE\n702 Baker St Phone\nOpen Day and Night\nCrematorium Ambula\ni_s_*_--s__r-T- \u2014*....\u2014-_t\n^\nSurprise tht |\nwith a rcrmt\nHtiifil 1 Tru*\nBeiuty Sak\nPhon* 327\nJohnstone Bl\n\u2022?$>\u00a3SS5555S5S535SyS52555>55v38l\nHave Hie |eb Oene Rl|\nVIC GRAVE!\nMASTER   PLUMBER\n.PHONE 815\n'        4 _tVt_* ___\u00bb \u25a0_'\n______________________________\n\u2022,'\n'       __\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1943_07_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0417081","@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":"1943-07-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1943-07-08 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\/1.0417081"}