{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414233":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2022-06-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1941-02-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414233\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" . ' '      ' ***    *     \u2022\"\u2022 * II    ia     I       I .-- \u2014a-l    , ..... ,,,\n\u2666 A. Fa Sweeps Nazi\nar Industry, Bases\nGERMANS STAGE\nSHORT ATTACK\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP).\u2014A hotel\nhit by Incendiary bombs bunt Into\nflames 'and a number of housei\nwere demolished by Nazi expletives tonight during a short but\nbitterly-contested air raid on the\nLondon area.\nThe hotel fire was controlled\nquickly without casualties. There\nwere some casualties, however, in\nhouses on the city's outskirts because many persons had not gone\nto the shelters.\nAfter losing four bombers In day\nlight clashes over the Channel and\n' at the\nthe early night hou\n\u25a0ayligh\nchiefly to shipping off the East and\n.Inland, Uie raiders stabbed\nal in the early night hours,\nylight attacks were' confined\nSoutheast coasts. Fighter planes sent\ntwo of the attackers plunging into\nthe Channel and coastal observers\nwatched a third flutter down after\na 20-minute fight.\nI Of Uie few Nazi craft venturing\nInland, over Northeast Scotland.and\nKent, one was knocked down by\nR.A.F. fighters to'account for the\n. fourth bag of the day.\nShips Bombed\nand Torpedoed\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP) .-Maritime circles reported tonight the torpedoing of two ships, plane attacks\non two others, a raider attack on a\nBritish freighter and Uie mining ot\n8 Norwegian freighter.\nThey reported that the 8279-ton\nNorwegian motc_-hip tanker Thel-\n, ma, sailing under British control,\nhad been torpedoed and sunk about\n675 mUes West of Land's End, England.\nThe 5407-ton British freighter\nOakcrest formerly in the Chile-\nMediterranean trade as the Yugoslav freighter Horana. was rjs.one.\ntorpedoed and sunk-off-Ofe'<l__fl)n\nCoast, these sources said.\nI Axis planes, apparently raiding a\nconvoy 350 miles West of Foynes,\nEire, were reported to have made\ndirect hits on the 6516-ton Netherlands passenger liner Meemskerk\nind the BriUsh freighter the King\nEdgar, 4536 tons, setting both ships\nafire. Nothing further was heard\nfrom them.\n> The BriUsh freighter Eurylochus,\n8723 tons, was \"reported gunned\"\nby a raider 750 miles West of Freetown, Sierra Leone, Africa, last\nWednesday nnd her radio went silent after her first alarm.\nThe 1326-ton Norwegian freighter\nSyng was reported to have struck\na mine near Haugesund, Norway,\n\u25a0nd sank. Her crew was rescued.\nBelgians Seek\nGold Possession\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (AP). - A\nfight by the Belgian Government\nin exile to get possession ot about\n$280,000,000 in gold shipped to\nFrance for safekeeping ln the Nazi\ninvasion of Belgium was disclosed\ntonight through announcement of a\ncourt move to tie up French funds\nin New York as security for the\ntreasure.\nGeorges Theunls, one-time Prime\nMinister of Belgium, now a representative in the United States oi\nthe exiled Government at London,\ntold the story of the struggle for tho\nmissing gold ln announcing litigation over French funds frozen in\nthe United States since the faU of\nFrance.\nAsserting the Belgian Government at London had been informed the gold was being shipped\nby airplane from Africa to France\nfor delivery to the German masters\nof Belgium, Theunls revealed a legal\naction to attach Bank of France\nfunds at the Federal Reserve Bank\nof New York up to $280,000,000 in\ncompensaUon for the metal sent to\nFrance last May.\nTrail Organizes\nfor War Savings\nCARRIER CAINED PORT\n. AFTER HIT DESPITE\n'      LACK OF PROTECTION\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (AP). -\nSecretary of the Navy' Frank Knox\nsaid today that the British aircraft\ncarrier Illustrious recently had been\nable to reach Malta and then Alexandria, Egypt under her own powei\nafter receiving a direct hit by a\n1000-pound Nazi bomb.\nThe German hit. on the British\nvessel, Knox said, killed about 80\nmen and destroyed about 20 bombing airplanes.\nAn aircraft carrier, he noted, was\nmuch less heavily armored than a\nbattleship, and in addition he said\n' Ihe Illustrious was lacking the protection of Its usual complement of\nfighter planes. It was \"stocked\" wiUi\nbombers, and Its relatively lew\nfighters were already aloft when\nShe was bombed.\nItaly Is Through\non Greek Front\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (AP)-Unless\nItaly gets strong aid from Germany\nihe is through as far as the Greek\nwar is concerned, Leland Stowe,\nChicago Daily News war correspondent, said today on his arrival\naboard the Atlantic Clipper after\nseveral months at the Greek-Albanian front.\nBritish air support and the Greek\ntroops- have combined to \"defeat the\nItalians completely,\" he said, adding\nthat it is doubtful if the Italians\nwill be able to stage a comeback.\nMussolini's only chance is to have\nHitler send troops or 500 bombers\nto the front he said.\nLate Flashes\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP). - The\nBritish Mediterranean fleet hss been\ncruising for four days \"well within\nthe range of enemy shore-base air-\n\u25a0craft\" but has not been molested, the\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation reported tonight, quoting a correspondent aboard one of the ships.\nBITOLJ, Yugoslavia, Feb. 5 (AP)\n\u2014Italy was reported in dispatches\nto this border town tonight to be\nRushing reinforcements  by air to\nelp the hard-pressed defenders of\nTeoeleni. \\\nThe Greeks, nevertheless, were\nlaid to be expecting the fall of the\n\u2022town at any nour and are moving\nevery available soldier and gun into\nbatUe.\nBritish Pasters Apply to Canada Today\nBombers Roar to Attack in Day and Night\nRaids; Heavy Smoke Seen Rising Near\nCalais; British Lose Nine Planes\nLONDON, Fib. 5 (AP) \u2014 After sweeping offensive\nactions than ran twice around the clock, the Air Ministry\ntabulated tonight a series of aerial blows at Germany's war\nindustries, transport, airfields, potential invasion bases and\nfacilities for the counter-blockade of Britain.\t\nIt was the Royal Air Force's first major action in recent\nweeks. Through darkness and daylight, heavily-laden Wellingtons and Blenheims criss-crossed the English Channel, the\nso-called invasion coast of France and Belgium, the Northern\nFrench interior and a vital industrial section of Western\n1'Germany, emptying their\nbomb racks and then ground-\nstrafing with their guns.\nShore watchers In Kent saw a\nthick column of black smoke rising\nnear Calais some time after a strong\nforce ot bombers, protected by\nheavy formations of fighUng planes,\nsoared Eastward across the strait\nof Dover\nThe Air Ministry said that five\nfighter planes were missing from\nthis afternoon's sweep against Northern France which, combined with\nthe acknowledged loss of four planes\nIn last night's actions, put the total\ncost of the 24-hour offensive at\nnine planes,\nSt. Omer airdrome, 20 miles beyond Calais In Northernmost\nFrance, was successfully attacked\nby daylight Two German planei\nwere shot down In afternoon combat\nThe following tabulation of the\nRA.F.'s activities  was  pieced together trom official and unofficial\nreports:\nBY NIGHT:\nA 90-minute raid in which bombs\nof heaviest type and numerous incendiaries fell on the German industrial area of Duesseldorf.\nA two-hour raid on the old\nFrench naval base at Brest, now a\ncentre for Nazi U-boats raiding British shipping. Docks were bombed\nand flashing explosions and fire\ngeysered 9000 feet into the air.\nA double raid on Cherbourg, another French pert now in German\nhands, ln which dock targets, including repair yards, were straddled by high expolsives.\nHits on a principal ship basin\nat Bordeaux, causing a fire that\nlooked like burning oil. Merignac\nairdrome, near Bordeaux, was attacked for more than an hour.\nThis airdrome Is the base for big,\nfour-engined Focke-Wulf bombers which raid British convoys.\nDirect hits on docks at Dunkerque\nand Dieppe, France, and Ostend,\nBelgium.\nAttacks on airdromes at Vannes\nand other places in occupied France.\nBY DAY:\nA \"successful sweep over Northern France.\" f\nA new assault on the \"invasion\ncoast\" ln the Calais region.\nThe heaviest of the R.A.F.'s blows\napparenUy fell on Duesseldorf, German Inland oort, railway centre and\nindustrial city on the Rhine.\nOne of the attackers sought out\nan airdrome, swooped down to Just\nover 1000 feet and \"started dropping bombs among buildings and\nspraying the whole area with machine-gun fire,\" the Air Ministry\nsaid.\nThen the plane levelled off at 100\nfeet, It said, to machine gun a military truck, whereupon troops\n\"rushed out of a large building to\nsee what was happening and were\nreeted with a hail of machine-gun\nMm METAL\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP).-Rags, bones, bottles\nand other materials and articles wUl be collected\nall across Canada when the National Salvage Campaign gets under way.\nBones, other than fish bones, are needed for\nproduction of glycerine for explosives, glues and\nfertilizers. ' \u2022\nMagazines can be salvaged anywhere and distributed as reading material to military camps,\nhostels, hospitals and other places.\nNon-ferrous metals such as aluminum, brass,\ncopper, bronze lead and zinc find amarket throughout Canada. Textiles, including carpets, rugs, mixed rugs and woolens, can also be marketed across\nthe country.\nPower Second Only to Petain\nExpected to Be Given Laval\nBritish Advance!\nAll Fronts Arel\nicking Up Speei\nPush to Point 60 Miles From Libyan Bas\nof Bengasi; 24 Italian Planes Downed\nin South Area; Big Air Push\nCAIRO, Feb. 5 (AP)\u2014The main body of Italian troops I\nLibya, falling back upon Bengasi just ahead of pursuing Britidl\narmored battalions, tonight had been pushed to a point 60 M\n70 miles from that strongly fortified base in a retreat proceed|\ning at the rate of 30 miles a day.\nElsewhere over the vast area of the African struggle ne*\nsuccesses were announced for British arms and a militajj\nspokesman thus summed up:\n\"The tempo of our advances on both fronts (in Libya i\nin   Italian   East  Africa)   hasf*\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 8\u2014Under the\nChairmanship ot A. D. Turnbull, a\nwar savings campaign committee\nis being organized to obtain pledges\nfor the purchase of war savings\ncertificates, as a gesture of cooperation toward the naUonal campaign\nfor 2,000,000 subscribers, started this\nmonth. The Dominion objective ls\n$120,000,000.\nMr. TurnbuU, who ls being assisted by G. ,G. Cumming, states that\nthe object of the drive is to obtain\nrnore regular monthly subscribers.\nThe city has been divided into 10\ndistricts, coinciding with postal de-\nlivery routes, and canvassing will\nstart next week, as soon as the\ncomplete list of canvassers is made\nout.\nThe maximum monthly amount\nwhich may be invested in war savings certificates ls $40, other investors' being urged to buy war bonds.\nThe War savings Committee, lt\nwas decided at the executive meeting of the Trail. PatrioUc Society\nwill operate apart from the Society\nobtaining pledges which would be\nturned over to the correct payroll\nsource of the pledgee for deduc\ntion. Decision to disassociate the\nwar saving? activities from the\ncharitable work carried on by the\nPatriotic Society was also approved.\nBODIES OF BOMBER\nCREW BROUCHT OUT\nMORTON, Wash., Feb. 5 (AP).-\nAn army mountain party remained\nat the upper end of a bleak, steep\n\"Little Rockies\" trail today to seek\nfurther evidence in the explosion-\nshattered wreckage of the bomber\nwhich carried seven men to death\nJanuary 16.\nBy manpower ond pack horse\ntrain, the remains of the victims\nwere brought late yesterday down\nthe tortuous trail.\nDoctor Improves\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP)-Canadian Airways Ltd., officials said\ntonight they learned through private sources that Dr. S. M. Miller\ncritically ill with pneumonia al\nSewell Inlet, Queen Charlotte Island-, was much Improved under the\ncare of Dr. C E. Gould of Vancouver, who reached his side yesterday\nafter a stormy mercy trip by plane\nand boat.\nSEND FORD DEMAND-\nDETROIT, Feb. 5 (AP) - The\nUnited Automobile Workers (Congress of Industrial Organizations),\nholding out the threat of a strike,\ntoday forwarded to the Ford Motor\nCompany a series of demands which\nincluded an Immediate collective\nbargaining conference and a minimum hourly wage increase of 10\ncents for all production employees\nR. C. N. MAN KILLED\nSTEVESTON, B. C, Feb. 5 (CP)\n\u2014Chief Motor Mechanic Thomai\nWinfield Shaffer, about 55, member of the Roval Canadian Naval\nService, was killed here today when\nhe fell 25 feet from a budding to\nthe ground below.\nGreeks Capture\nNew Positions\nATHENS, Feb. \u00bb (AP)-Greek\nsoldiers fighting brillianUy under\n\"very unfavorable weather conditions\" drove the Italians from positions of \"great strategic importance\" and captured a village by a\nbayonet charge and hand-to-hand\nfighting, the Greek spokesman said\ntonight.\nItalian prisoners told their Greek\ncaptors that the Fascists no longer\nare using the Port of Valona as a\nbase because of rep-a-e_U_Mt-Aga\nbut-are __oa*ne supplies at Krlo-\nnero, South ot Valona.\nDespite three days of torrenUal\nrain in the Tepeleni secUon, Greek\ntroops continued mopping-up operations and launched new attacks\nwith success, It was reported.\nMany prisoners were taken in\nthe Tepeleni sector. In one fight\nalone 146 prisoners, Including officers,  were seized.\ntire.'\nWillkie Flying\nOver New Route\nLISBON, Feb. 5 (AP).-Wen-\nwell L. Willkie left here tonighi\naboard a Pan American Clipper\nfor the United States by way ol\nBolama. Portuguese Guinea, Trinidad and Puerto Rico. ,\nWillkie thus made the pioneer\nflight over the alternate route of\nPan American Airways from Europe to the United States. The\ncourse was adopted to avoid\nground swells and other bad landing conditions sometimes prevalent at the Azores.\nNAZI8 WORK PRI80NERS\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (AP) -\nOfficials of the United States Commerce Department ssid today that\nreports from Germany indicated\nthat more than 2,000,000 prisoners\nand civilians from Nazi-ridden European countries are working in\nGerman industries.\nNEW WAV- FOJND\nTP-PttODUCE\ny METHANE\nLONDON, Feb. 6 - (Thursday)\n(CPXable) - The Dally Mail\nsaid fyday that three British\nchemists have discovered jt-iew\nand better method of making\nmethanet a substitute tor gasoline, frorn coal-gas.\nThe Mail said It was long\nknown that methane ls present\nIn cotl gas, but the new production method Is known only\ntn Britain. The processes and\nother details nre a closely-\nguarded secret, the newspaper\nuld.\nU. S. to Increase\nIts Zinc Capacity\nby 100,000 Tons\nSPOKANE, Wash. - It is stated\nbefore Washington officials that zinc\nproducing capacity of the United\nStates wUl have been increased by\n100,000 tons by the middle of the\nyear, the main question being\nwhether this step is keeping pace\nwith the rapid expansion in brass\nmaking facilities. Zinc and brass\nproducts are being used in armaments as never before, it is pointed\nout\nOne item which seems trivial on\nthe surface proves formidable in\nthe aggregate. That is the widespread use ot zippers in the equipment of soldiers, their uniforms, kits,\nbags and other equipment, requiring\nboth brass and its component, zinc.\nReinforcing White\nFlour Is Opposed\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP). \u2014 Pro-\nposals to fortify white flour by adding thiamin to increase the vitamin\nB-l content met opposition today\nfrom the Canadian Council on Nutrition and Its Advisory Committee\nto the Dominion Council of Health.\nAt a meeting in December these\nbodies discussed the whole situation, officials said today, \"and were\nof the opinion that no such policy\nof reinforcing flour should be countenanced in this country.\"\n\"They are of the opinion,\" one official said, \"that all of the essential\nhelpful Ingredients of whole wheat\ncan now be milled Into a white flour\nthat will bake a white loaf containing, in the required quanUtles. vitamins and other nutritional necessities.\"\nExcitement Reigns as\nHe Turns In Strong\nDemands\nVICHY, France Feb. 5 (AP).~\nThe return of Pierre Laval, Uie\n''man who wants thorough \"collaboration\" with Nazi Gennany, to\na position of power second only to\nthat of the Chief of State, Marshal Petain, in the Vichy Government, appeared likely tonight,\nofficial circles reported.\nAfter a stormy two.hour meeting of the Council of Ministers\nlt was reported a proposed Cabinet has been evolved in which\nLaval would be President of the\nCouncU ot Ministers and Minis.\nLaval, suddenly shorn ol his duties\nas Vice-Premier and Foreign Minister December 13, in a drastic\nshakeup by Petain, was said to\nhave created excitement in the Cab\n'.net when his demands proved moro\nsweeping than had been anticipated\nAdmiral Jean Darlan, Navy Minister, who went to Paris to negotiate with Laval, opened the meeUng\nwith a request for the collective\nresignation of the Cabinet so Petain might form a new Government.\nIn the end, the Ministers were\nreported by official circles to have\nrejected the demand, and decided\nthat Admiral Darlan must first return to Paris for negotiaUons witli\nLaval on the composition of a new\nCabinet\nTwo others of a triumvirate, who\nwith Laval would wield most of the\npower under Marshal Petain in the,\nreconstituted Cabinet, it was reported, would be Admiral Darlan, who\nwould head the Foreign Affairs and\nNavy Ministries, and Gen. Charles\nHuntzlger, who would take over the\nMinistry for Youth and remain head\nof the War Ministry.\nA communique Issued after the\nMinisters met was the first of\nficlal report here of Dsrlan't return from Parla where he confer\nred with Laval, Otto Abetz, Hit\nler's Envoy to Paris, and Per-\nnand de Brlnon, tho Vichy representative in the German-occupied\nzone.\nForeign Minister Pierre-EUenne\nFlandin was reported to have re\nfused an offer of the portfolio ol\nNational Economics in the proposed\nnew Government.      '\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (CP)-The\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\nsaid tonight that reporti from\nVichy said Admiral Darlan, Vichy\nGovernment Naval Minister, may\nsucceed Marshal Petain as Pre\nmler and take the portfolio of\nForeign  Affairs.\nThis report, as recorded by Co\nlumbia Broadcasting Company, added that Pierre Laval may become\nVice-Premier in the new set-up and\nMinister ot the Interior, which\nwould give him control of the po\nlice and make him virtually Hitler's\n\"Gauleiter\"\u2014District Governor, in\nFrance.\nR.U.F. Men May\nBe in War Soon\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP). - Some\nof the 25 Canadian squadrons which\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King an:\nnounced Sunday would be formed\nfrom graduate pupils of the British\nCommonwealth Air Training plan\nmay be taking part in the defence\nof Britain within a few months, it\nwas authoritatively learned tonight.\nAlthough the Prime Minister gave\nno definite word when the new\nsquadrons would be ready to leave\n\"Or Sv'tjHeas, the output ot'pilots\nand air crews has been accelerated\nso sharply, it was said, that forma,\ntion of the initial units may be ex\npected at on early date.\nBefore any of these squadrons are\nsent Into action, they will be required to undergo a spell of advanced training in the United Kingdom on super-speed fighters and\nlong-range bombers.\n37 Births in Nelson\nDistrict in January\nCompared 24 in 1940\nVital statistics for Nelson and\nDistrict showed 37 births, 12 deaths\nand nine marriages in the district\nwere registered in January. This\ncompared to 24 births, 12 deaths\nand six marriages in January last\nyear.\nIn Nelson alone 25 births were\nregistered compared with t19 in\nJanuary 1940. There were 12*d.aths\nand five marriages registered compared with nine deaths and six marriages a year ago.\nTwelve births, four deaths, four\nmarriages ahd one stillbirth were\nregistered in the District during\nthe month, while in January of\nlast year there were five births,\nthree deaths and no marriages.\nNelson Number 1(50, Trail's 610\nWhen Radio Frequencies Change\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP)\u2014Changes\nln the operating frequencies Of 60\nCanadian radio stations which use\nthe Standard Broadcasting Band\nwere announced tonight by Munitions Minister Howe, effecUve\nMarch 29.   '\n\"Most of the changes In frequencies were made ln the higher\nbracket of kilocycles,\" said the announcement. \"PracUcally no changes\nwere made In the operaUng power\nof the different stations.\"\nLast Monday the Minister said\n69 of the 85 stations ln Canada\nwould operate on new frequencies\nstarting March 29. At that time he\nlisted nine stations which would\nhave new frequencies and two\nwhich would retain their present\nfrequencies.\nThe revised frequencies snnounc\ned tonight (with the present fre\nquencles in brackets) Include:\nAlberta \u2014 C-CA, Edmonton, 930\n(730); CFHN, Edmonton, 1280 (960);\nCFAC, Calgary, 960 (930); CJCJ.\nCalgary, 1230 (690); CFPG, Grande\nPrairie, 1340 (1310); CJOC, Lethbridge, 1400 (1370).\nBritish Columbla-CKWX, Vancouver, 980 (950); CJAT, TraU, 610\n(910); CFJC, Kamloops, 910 (880)\nCFPR. Prince Rupert, 1240 (580)\nCHWK, Chilliwack. 1340 (780);\nCKLN, Nelson, 1450 (1420); CFCT.\nVictoria, 1480 (1450).\nThe frequencies allocated Mon<\nday include: CFCN. Calgary, 1010\n(1030); CKY. Winnipeg. 990 (910);\nCBR. Vancouver, 1130 (1100).\nNorwegians Go to\nFight for Germany\nSTOCKHOLM, Feb. 5 (AP).-Oi:e\nhundred Norwegian volunteers for\na regiment being raised in Norway\nto fight for Germany left Oslo by\nplane today for Germany, it was\nreported tonight in dispatches from\nthe German-held Norwegian capital.\nThe Nazi-dominated Norwegian\nGovernment ordered the registration of all Norwegians of more than\n15. This step was taken to strengthen the Government's control, especially in Western Norway, where\nstreet fighting has been reported in\nrecent days.\nTwo Vichy Members\nReported Resigned\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (CP). - Resignation of Pierre-Etienne Flandin,\nFrench Foreign Minister, nnd Marcel Peyrouton, Minister of the Interior, from the Vichy Government,\nwas reported tonight by the British Broadcasting Corporation in a\nbroadcast heard here by the National Broadcasting Company.\nThe London radio based its reports on \"messages from a German\nsource in Vichy, quoted by Madrid,\nPlane Wreck Found\nCAMP BORDEN, Ont., Feb.\n(CP).\u2014Royal Canadian Air Forco\nofficials said tonight they had discovered the wreckage of an air\nplane near the mouth of the Not.\ntawasaga River hut had not been\nable to identify it as any particular\nplane.\nThe wreckage was discovered by\nairmen searching for the R.CA.F\ntraining, plane which disappeared\nwith two Australian fliers.\nBURBANK. Calif., Feb. 5 (AP)\nJames J. Jeffries, former world's\nheavyweight boxing champion, was\nreported near collapse today, follow\nIng the death ol his wife, 60, in an\nautomobUe accident last hight.\nshown a marked speeding-up.\"\nIn the running rear guard Italian\naction along the Libyan coast, the\nBritish High Command announced,\n400 Fascist stragglers already have\nfallen captive, and there were indications the full striking power of\nthe British forces soon would be\nturned upon Bengasi itself\u2014an important port lying 325 miles from\nthe Egyptian frontier.\nFar to the South, in Italian Eritrea, Italian Ethiopia and Italian\nSomaliland, the British land offensive went on in cooperation with a\nbombing offensive over thousands\nof miles in which 24 Italians planes\nwere destroyed, aside from the\ndamage wrought to many a Fascist\nbase.\nIn Ethiopia, British and Imperial troops went forward on two\nfronts\u2014Eastward on the Gondar\nRoad on the main front, and to\nthe South, where South African\ntroops were consolidating Italian\npositions which recently fell to\nthem.\nAll this activity afield - the\nbroadcast reported in weeks-raid\nnot overshadow the British offensive ln the skies.\nThis was the summary of the Royal Air Force:\nAll Northern Libya assaulted by\nbombers; retreating Italian troop\ncolumns attacked on the roads; airdromes, railroad stations and tracks\nand lines of communication serving\nBengasi hit heavily, much damage\nwrought to Fascist motor transports; four Italian planes destroyed.\nItalian bases and landing grounds\nin Eritrea and Ethiopia attacked\nand a total of 20 Fascist planes shot\ndown, destroyed aground or captured; Italian motor transport vehicles set afire on the Gondar Road\nin Ethiopia; a complete motor convoy attacked in Eritrea on the As-\nmara-Cheren Highway.\nAll this cost two British planes\u2014\na bomber and a fighter.\nTrail Trustees Take\nOath of Allegiance;\nInformed of Grants\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5 \u2014 Members\nof the Trail-Tadanac School Board\ntook oath of allegiance at their\nWednesday night meeting. The oath\nwas administered by Stipendiary\nMagistrate E. L. Hodge.\nSpecial school salary grant of\n$58.50 to each teacher, nurse, and\ndental surgeon listed on B. C. school\nstaffs as at March, 1941, will be\npaid by the Provincial Government\nin May, according to information\nreceived.\nThe use of the High School Auditorium for Tuesday evening, February 11, for a concert to raise\nfunds for cadet uniforms, was granted Trail Canadian Legion.\nC.C.F. NATIONAL COUNCIL\nTO MEET AT REGINA\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nFour C. C. F. delegates will leave\nVancouver Thursday to attend a\nmeeting of the C.C.F. National\nCouncil Saturday and Sunday at\nRegina. The delegates will be Mr.\nand Mrs. Angus Maclnnis, Harold\nE. Winch, M.L.A., and W. W. Le-\nfea'ux. ,\nSOLDIERS IN BATTLE\nQUEBEC, Feb. 5 (CP). - A\ndozen soldien from English-speaking regiments stationed here were\nplaced under arrest last night by\nMilitary Police after a fist-fight that\nstarted in a central upper-town restaurant and continued some time\noutside while 300 spectators, including 76 other soldiers, looked on.\nREASSURES FARMERS\nQUEBEC, Feb. 3 (CP)\u2014Farmers\nin Quebec Provinces can rest assured of the help of the present\nGovernment \"because we shall continue to furnish \"the money necessary for them to carry on,\" Premier\nGodbout told the Legislative Assembly today. The Premier, who\nholds the portfolio of Agriculture,\nsaid the farmers of Quebec \"will not\nbe neglected.\"\nCHICAGO WINNING WAR ON\nSYPHILIS\nCHICAGO Feb. 5 (AP). - City\nhealth officials reported today\u2014the\nfifth observance of Social Hygiene\nDay\u2014they were gaining-the upper\nhand in the fight to conlrol syphilis.\nthe \"red plague,\" in Chicago.\nTrail Is Hil by\nMeasles Epidemi\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 9 -\nfrom an isolated case in the :\ndie  of  December,  and  spread\nfrom sporadic cases throughout\ncity since then, a wide spread ep:\ndemic of measles was reported r\nCity Health Officer Dr. N. D.\nMcKinnon   to   the   Trail-Tada!\nSchool Board Wednesday.\nThe epidemic was at its hell\nin East Trail, and could be ex\ned to reach more serious pn\ntions in the central .part of the\nBecause the incubation period\nabout two weeks, during which I\npatient appeared be quite well,j\nwas difficult to control the spret\nof this disease. Dr. McKinnon sail\nAlthough Dr. \"McKinnon admit!\nthe possibility that Uie epiden\nwould spread through the Cent}\nSchool, he thought the effects of tl\ndisease at Uie High School would 1\nnullified on account of a sin\nepidemic in 1931.\nNEED NURSE\nSeventy three eases of heu\nheart disease, 35 in the High Si\n24 at Central School, 9 at the 1 _\nTrail school, 3 at the Annable scho\nand 2 at Uie Tadanac school,\nalso cited, as evidencing the neca.\nsity for a Public Health Nurse .'\nTrail City.\n\"This disease, traced to micro a\nganism, is very serious, irrepaxat^\ndamaging the heart, and is gen'\nally found in children who ara I\nder-nourished, poorly Clad,\nliving under poor housing COD\nUons.\" Dr. McKinnon stated.\nH. G. Palmer, Chairman, ask\nthese cases were not treated\nthe C. S Williams Clinic, to whlcH\nDr. McKinnon replied that he did\nnot supervise medical treatment,\nand he presumed that betweeB\nand 90 per cent were under hospi-\ntal insurance, and that they reported to the clinic after being advised\nof their condition.\nChinese Rush to\nWaichow Defence\nHONG KONG, Feb. 6 - (Thmj\nday) - (CP). \u2014 Chinese despatch*\nearly today said crack units o\nChina's 35th Army, which dis\ntinguished itself against the Jan.\nnese in Kwangsi Province, are be\ning rushed to the defence of Wat\nchow against the new JapanaM\ndrive Northeast of Hong Kong,\nWINSTON, FRANKLIN NOW\nLONDON, Feb. 6 (Thursdey)-\n(CP).\u2014The Daily Mall said todaj\nthat Prime Minister Churchil\nand President Roosevelt have be\ncome \"Winston\" and \"Frank-to1\nto each other in Transatlanti\ntelephone conservaUons since th\narrival here of Harry L. HopklBl\nWea|th-gr\nMin. Maxt\nNELSON - -  14 42\nTRAIL   29 37\nVictoria   45 55\nNanaimo   -  38 50\nVancouver     34 5-\nKamloops     36 49\nPrince George   33 48\nEstevan Point   50 58\nPrince Rupert    39 42\nLangara   37 45\nAtlin     25 34\nDawson, Y. T  13 31\nSeattle    33 69\nPortland     40 56\nSan Francisco   42 64\nSpokane     26 SO\nPenticton     22 \u2014\nVernon      21 \"\"\nKelowna          24 \u2014\nGrand Forks   29 \u2014\nKaslo          21 \u2014\nCranbrook     8 33\nCalgary     34 60\nEdmonton     12 ' 3J\nSwift Current   24 3)\nPrince Albert     0 39\nWinnipeg                  7 15\nForecast - Kootenay: Light val\nable winds, fair and mild.\nLevel of the West Arm at Nelsi\nWednesday was 3.05 feet above tl\nlow water mark.\nI : .-_____faj__|______,\ni______\ni _-,_-_-'\"\nmiiwk\t\n_- W___&___._-. 'M^jiaofo,... ,i..i_.M_'. _.\n \u2014\n\t\n\t\n!\u2022  TWO-\nWARMEST SEATTLE DAY\nB-ATTLE, Feb. 6 (AP). - Th*\nnperature jumped to 93 degrees\n2:30 p.m. today, Uie warmest\nf of the Winter here and the\nirmest for the date in 31 years'\naether Bureau hlitory.\nMANCHESTER (CP)-The coun-\nof the Manchester Rotary Club\nI formed * war services fund\nHn which to make grants to vari-\n\u25a0 ciuses connected with the war.\nMEW\noom Rate\nOLICY\nNOW IN EFFECT!\nRATES FROM:\n(Detached\nBath)\nI With\nBath)\n\u2022 For Either One or\nTwo Persons!\n\u2022 Two In Room for\nSingle Rate at the\nAQkm\nHotel\nSPOKANE, Wit.\n\u25a0Bring  Vour Wife\u2014It  Costs\nNo More at the Coeur d'Alene\"\nHome oi the Dutch Mill\nFined $5 Upon\nAssault Charge\nTRAIL, B. C-. Feb. 5-John Eldon\nGalbraith, formerly of Vancouver,\nwas convicted on an assault charge\nby Magistrate Parker Williams ln\nCity Police Court Tuesday afternoon, and was fined $5 and coati.\nThe charge wai laid by Clnnaman\nBarr, Meaken Hotel, Trail, who told\nthe court that Galbraith had itruck\nhim Monday evening during an\nargument over money.\nREADING, England (CP)-Alfred\nEdwards, Labor MP., sayi \"If we\ndestroy Nazism and Fascism that\nwill satisfy 90 per cent of the world,\nso do not let us distrust the people\nwho can achieve this great end to\ncarry through the reconstruction.\"\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nii. PILLS\nSOONER OR LATER\n<$\nsome one will tell you how\nmuch good Chinese Herbs\nhave done for him or her.\nThen you'll wonder why\nyou did not try Chinese\nHerbs long ago.\n=WING WO\nChines. Medicine Company\nOFFICE H0UR8; 10 to J\nN126>\/_ Wall, Near Main\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nyou Hardof Hearing?\nSUFFERING HEADN0ISE8, CATARRH, 8INUS PAINS.\nWt Invite you to TE8T FREE these new 1941 London tnd\nCleartoni Hearing Devices.\nMany models to chooie from. Priced from $20.00 to $75.00,\nAIM tht newest American-made Ear pieces, very small and\nlight, by Trlmm Ridlo Corp., Chicago, at \u25a0 great saving. We\nguarantee to uve you 40% on these new 1941 hearing devices\n\u2022ver pricei quoted  by agents. All  are  guaranteed for ten\nyetn' lervioe tnd serviced at Nelson,\nAlio test tht massage Initrument for head-noises and the\nail-electric Vtporlier, for Catarrh, Sinus  Pains, Bronchitis\n(utt It tvery dty tt home, consistent treatment brings the\nresult!).\nCALL FOR FREE PRIVATE TE8T, EXPERT IN CHARGE\n(Houri: 10 a.m. till 8 p.m.)\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY, FEB. 7 ind 8 ONLY\nti THE HUM! HOTEU-NELSON\nInquire at Desk for H. T. DALE.\n(Note:\u2014Liberal Allowance for Your Present Instrument)\nThe Oldest Name in\nScotch Whisky\nHaig\n0*1\no^UnJodici^.llXulj\n-,..,\u00ab._.,\u201e..,\n_- KAIG .HAIG ,\n>V   mSTmrn.    &*J-\nt\"tr*ii6 *\u2022 teen-\"*\n'\u25a0 ''  . '\u25a0.-\nOBTAINABLE AT\n26J.OZ.\nhit idvertisement is Dot published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard cr by the Government ot British Columbia.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nels6n, B.C.\nGEORGE  BENWELL,  Proprietor,\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ellis,\nOTo Mine: W. L. McGillivray, S.\nCrackwell,   Vancouver;   H.   F.\n\"filrnot, Gray Creek; L. Laurient,\nP. Leveque, Trail; Miss Eileen Macdonald. Rossland; T. A. Burns, Medicine Hat.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK Propi. PHONE\n*t%X In our new wing you may enjoy the lines! OJ_l\n**3t    roomi In the Interior - Bath or Shower      A.*.**\nSPECIAL  RATES BY  THE WEEK OR  MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nNewly renovated throughout  Phones  and  tltvltor\n\u25a0T\nVOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nuiicrin Hotel h pattehson hu oi\nSeymour St   _ Vmcouver, B. C.    Coleman, Aim., Proprietor\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-THU\/tSDAY MORNING.. FEB. \u00ab. 1941\u2014- \u25a0\nNo. 3 Platoon of Veterans Guard,\nTrail, Receives Rifle Trophy From\nDonor, Colonel Green of Cranbrook\nPte. Leggatt Leading\nMarksman; Nelson\nPatoon Attends\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. S\u2014Preient*-\ntion of the Colonel Green Trophy\nfor rifle proficiency was mtde to\nNo. 3 Platoon, No. UC Company,\nVeterans' Guard of Canada, at an\nImpressive ceremony at tht Trill\nArmory Wednesdiy afternoon.\nNo. 8 li one of tht two Trill\nPlatoon!. No. 2 Platoon of Nelion\nparaded with the Trail men.\nThe presentation wu madt by\nU.-Col. T. W, Graen of Cranbrook.\ndonor of the trophy, who ipoke of\nthe duties expected of forcei lerv-\nIng the Motherland.\nLt-Col. David Philpot, D.S.O, O\nB.E., Commanding (.nicer of the\nNo. UC Company, wai in charge. In\nhis brief opening addreu ho pointed\nout the fact that the fate of war\nultimately rested on tht men tnd\ntheir marksmanship.\nS. G Blaylock, Preiident of tht\nConiolidated Mining A Smelting\nCompany, ipoke of the possibility\nof sabotage ln the district. He congratulated the men on thtir smart\nappearance.\nMayor Herbert Clark congratulated the winning platoon on behalf of the City of Trail.\nR. R. Burns, M.L.A., conveyed the\ncongratulations   of   tht   Provincial\nGovernment and voiced appreciation to men who, having served\ntheir country in the last war, itood\nready to serve again.\nMARKSMAN'S   BADGE\nMarksmanship badge tor highest Individual points was presented\nto Private Leggatt of the winning\nplatoon by Colonel Philpot. who explained thai the badge was to be\nheld for t year, unlesa won In a\nprevouily designated shoot.\n\"You hold thli until you either\nsurrender It or t better man beats\nyou, and Judging trom your record\nne will nave to put up a good\nfight,\" the Colonel commented,\nLt. R. R. McOregor of Cranbrook\nond Capt W. Calvert of the Dental\nCorps, of Victoria, alio attended tht\nceremony.\nH. E. Thain, Secretary of the Nel\nion Branch of the Canidiin Lt-\nglon, conveyed to Colonel Philpot\nthe regrets ot Miyor N. C. Stibbi\not Nelion, who wai unable to attend the presentation.\nRobert Portman, Preiident of the\nRosslmd Branch of the Canadian\nLegion. G. F. Reimann, Preiident of\nthe Trail Branch No. 11; other Le-\nglon memberi; and James Buchanan, General Manager ot the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company, attended.\nThe Trail Pipe Band led the Veterans' Guard parade from and to\nthe Tadanac Barracks.\nEngineers Hear\nB.C. President\nal Trail Banquet\nWhen t foreign engineer came\ninto British Columbia, the Provin-\nical Association of Professional Engineers was more concerned with\nhli ability as an engineer than\nWhether he held British citinnihip,\nsaid W. F. MacNeill of Vancouver,\nPresident of the Association, addressing district members at Trail\nTuesday night. This attitude, he\nsaid, contrasted with two or three\nProvinces which inclined to the belief that only engineer! holding\nBritish citizenship, or intending to\nobtain it, should be permitted to\npractice.\nThe meeting generally lupported\nhis viewpoint.\nMr. MacNeill, returning from a\nmeeting of the Dominion Council in\nToronto, was gueat speaker at an\nengineers' banquet held at the Ma-\nionic Hall at Trail.\nThirty-nine district members of\nthe Association attended, B. A.\nStlmmel of Trail preiided. Arrangements were in the hands of R. w.\nHaggen, and H. S. Fowler, both of\nRossland and J, K. Cram of Trail.\nReporting on the business qf the\nDominion Council, Mr. MacNeill\nreported progress had been made\ntoward a long-standing objective-\nconsolidation of Provincial associations with voluntary locleties such\nas the Engineering Institute of Canada and the Canadian Institute of\nMining and Metallurgy.\nThomas Brown of Nelson, Eastern\nDistrict Chairman, spoke on the responsibilities of young engineers.\nAdvance $500 lo\nTrail Red Cross\nlo Buy Material\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5 - An advance up to $500 to the Women'i\nWork Committee of the Trail Red\nCross -Society, to be used for the\npurchase of more materials In order\nto assure that the Red Cross work\nrooms jnay be kept up to capacity\nproduction, was authorized by the\nTrail Patriotic Society Tuesday.\nOn It being learned that the voluntary fund being sponsored by the\nTrail Rotary Club for the victims\nin the bombed areas ot Britain and\nGreece would be administered\nthrough the machinery of the Patrir\notic Society, It wai alio decided to\nsupport the fund, ond to enhance\nconsiderably the final amount obtained before it il closed.\nProgress was reported ln the\npreparation of bylaws and constitution and the President was authorized to appoint a special committee to consider wayi and means,\nand to recommend the best time\nto take steps toward increasing the\nSociety's membership.\nTrail Schools\nSavings Drive\nal $1607 Now\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014War Savings Stamps and Certificate aales\nmade by the Trail schools up to\nthe end of January amounted to\n$1607.78, contributed as follows:\nHigh School, J1155.25; Central\nSchool, $224.03; East Trail School,\n$118.65; Tadanac School, $77.83; An\nnable School, $12,\nHigh School students began buying stamps during the Fall term,\nwhile the war livings drive originated ln the Public Schooli In\nJanuary. High School sales for\nJanuary were $420.\nPays $25 Fin*\nUnder Protest\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Feb. 5 - Charlei\nGhirardosi, convicted by Magistrate\nE, __ Hodge in Provincial Police\nCourt, Saturday morning,' of the\ntheft of $3 worth of gasoline from\nAndrew Nelson, Fruitvale and fined\n$25 and costs, paid the tine under\nprotest Wednesday morning.\nLONDON (CP). - Two IlilOM\nwere killed and another injured In\na rifle accident in an Eastern country. It Is believed a round of live\nammunition was among a batch of\ndummie^ used in rifle instruction.\nConstruction of\nTramway at Sanca\nMines Progresses\nSIRDAR, B. C. \u2014 Sanca Mines\nLtd. Is making progress in construction of a tramway from the mine to\nthe road over which it will haul\nores to the C. P. R. lines. It is expected the tram will be completed\nwithin the next two weeks tnd that\nmining will itart immediately after.\nA new loading chute will be installed at the quarry liding.\nThe present crew will be sufficient for all needs at present, it is\nunderstood. A number of local men\nhave been engaged by W. Johnston,\nManager.\nEdmonton Takes\nLethbridge Leafs\n- LETHBRIDGE, Alta., Feb. 5 (CP)\n\u2014Edmonton Flyers made it four\nstraight in their race for first place\nIn Alberta Senior Hockey League\nby downing Lethbridge Maple Leats\n4-2 here tonight.\nThe loss broke Leafs' three previous consecutive victories and the\nwin sent Flyers to within one point\nof the league-leading Lethbridge\nsquad with 27 points.\nEddie O'Keefe, the league'e lead\ning point-getter thil season, and\nJoe Brown each icored two for Edmonton. Playing-Coach Ken Stewart and Walter Rlmstad counted for\nLeafs.\nKISS YOUR\nTIRED FEELING\nGOODRYE!\nPtpUw Many Suffer Low Blood\nCount-Antl Don't Know It.\nThe btfflln-r thing about low blood eonnt\nU thtt you can w\u00ablf h about aa mueh aa r*n\n\u2022ver did-evan look healthy and strong, yet\n-you ean feel aa If you had lead In your\nltn, dopey, Ured and pvplesa.\nLow blood count means yon haven't got\nenough red blood corpuscles. It ta their vital\niob to carry life-giving oxygen from your\njnga throughout your body. And juit aa It\nakea oxygen to explode gasoline In your\near and make the power to turn tha whaaJa,\n\u2022o you muat have plenty of oxygea to ex-\nplode the energy in your body and give you\ngoing power.\nGet br. Willfame Pink Pilla today. The?\nare world-noted for the help they give In\nIncreasing tha number and atrangth of red\neorptiBcIee. Then with your blood count up,\nyou II feel like bounding up th\u00ab italre aa if\nyou were floating on air. Aak your druggiat\ntor Dr. WUIIama Pink Pilla today. , i..hVi\n'1.00 tends 300\n\u2022 SWEET CAPORAL or\nWINCHESTER elgar.tl.iajr $1.00\nwill aend either 1 Ib. ol OLD\nVIRGINIA pipe tobacco or 1 Ib.\nol SWEET CAPORAL cigorett.\ntobacco (wilh Vogu. papors) to\nCanadians serving In C.A.S.F. over-\n\u2022eas only. Alto lo Canadiani\nserving In th. Britiih Forcei In th.\nUnite. Kingdom.\nOur responsibility c.ai.l when\nparcels are delivered to Postal\nAuthoritiei or other carriers.\nIf parcels addressed to Canadiani\nin th. C.A.S.F. ov.ri.ai cannot b.\ndelivered or forwarded to address...\nd.liv.ry will b. made to O.C. ol\n( addressee's unit.\nIf parceli addressed to Canadiani\nin tha Britiih Form in ihe United\nKingdom cannot bl delivered or\nforwarded lo addreu.., delivery\nwill be mad. ta Headquarten ef\nCanadian Auxiliary Services, Lon.\ndon, for distribution to Canadian\nTroopi,\n'2.50 sends 1,000\nclgareltei lo an Individual or unit.\nSend your remittance, with number,\nrank and name, and unit of the\nsoldier overseas to\nSWEET CAPS,\nP.O. Box 6000, Montreal, P.O.\nFebruary Furnitur;\nBargains\nFink's Furnitui^\nKroehler 2-pc. Suite, blue silk tapestry, tub-shaped\nchannel back, reg. $195.00, sale  $129.50\nKroehler 2-pc. Suite, silk tapestry In green,\nreg. $179.50, sale   1119.50\nKroehler Figured Silk Velour Suites, reg. $155.00,\nsale     $139.50\n2 well made Tapestry Suites, reg. $85.00, sale .. $69.50\n1 Silk Velour Suite, rust, reg. $129.50, sale ... $99.50\nCreen Rep Suite, modern, roomy, reg. $99.50,\nsale   $79.50\nSimmons Chrome Star Convertible Lounge and Chair with\nhigh grade silk velour cover in raisin shade, reg. $98.50,\nsale   $89.50\nDRAPERY\n48-inch Shadow Cretonnes, yard  95t*\n40-ineh _Rayon Drapery, yard   78af\nCold, Blue, Rust, Creen.\n50-inch Monks Cloth, yard  $1.19\nRayon Silk Nets, special, yard   39*?\nColored Marquisettes, yard  \u2022. 25<\u00a3\n.Special Clean-Up Sale of Bedroom Curtains and\nCottage Sets, pair  79<>\n111 \u25a0   **\nI    \u25a0      I\nSALE OF REMNANTS\nNursing Classes\nin Trail Opened\nTRAIL, B. C., Feb. S - Home\nnursing classes opened at the K. P.\nHall, Trail Monday evening. In\ncharge of the classes this season il\nMrs, A. M. Chesser, assisted by Mri.\nGeorge Dunaway, Mri, J. H. Mao-\nLean, Mri. Jack Thorber, Mrs. J.\nOwen and Mri. S. Oavrlllk.\nClasses are being held every Monday evening and enrolments are\nstill being taken by Miss Berva McLeod, class lecretary.\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Thomai Connor, 68, killed tils l.-year-0'd -liter\nbecauie the was in pain, threw himself from a window and died en\nroute to hoipltal, an Inquest here\ndisclosed. ,\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\n8. C. Plumbing W* Heating\nCompany   Limited\nep Out in Style\nand Selection of Smart New\n\/\/\nand\nIn all the array of Spring freshness.\n\u2022 REPTILE TRIMS\n\u2022 GABARDINE\n\u2022 OPEN-TOES\n\u2022 SQUARE TOES\n\u2022 Many other new patterns to choose from.\nFink's Footwear\nPhone 73 Burns Block\nUSE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING FIRST\nAnd Cjpt the Most for Your Advertising Dollar\nAre Yoo a Sufferer\nFrom Rheumatic Pains?\nThese pains come from an Inflammation In the\nmuscles and are generally caused by * deposit of poison\nin the blood called urio add which producea the Irritating and painful effect that cause, many dayi and\nnights heavy with pain.\nDuring the past 60 yean Canadian people have found that by punfying\nthe blood abeam, Burdock Blood Bitten aide them to enjoy freer body\nmovement with lew rheumatic pain, aa B. B. B. help- to ten* m> the system\nand clear up tho urio acid in tho blood, and probably help fortify the lyitem\nagainst future attacks.\n-'rice |1.00 a bottle at nil drag countcra.\nTUT.__abi-naa.-i_dtaal.Tl-M-a.Oai\n(oecb in tne bed ttoditlm!\nCanterbury brings you time-honored tea flavor\n... saves you money, too!\nCATHERINE, queen em-ort of Charles II, was England's\nfint tea-drinking queen. Her liking for the brew did much\nto popu-ariae it, and tea became the-favorite beverage wherever\ndiscriminating people gathered.\nCanterbury is loyal to this fine old tradition,\nIt'i a noble tea, this Canterbury. High in quality... friendly\nin spirit. A italwart blend of rich-bodied young tea leaves,\npicked in their prime,\nWe think you'll like everything about Canterbury. Its hearty\nflavor, its keen fresh bouquet, its splendid invigoration. Best of\nall, you'll appreciate ha low price. By otdering direct from the\nimporter, your grocer avoids m-between expenaea, and paasea\nthe saving along to you!\nAnother thing! You'U like Canterbury'i new rigid carton.\nIt's easier to open and cloae. Handier to use. The sturdy inner\nlining keepe out moisture, protect- Canterbury'i loyal flavor.\nTry your first pound tomorrow with the assurance that unless\nyou like everything about this tea, it costs you nothing!\nranterbiirv tea\n^^    J IOLD IT *W\nSAFEWAY STORES, LTD.\n_-\u25a0\u00bb_   ... ... J,'.,,. __\u2022\u25a0,-. A-*--*\u2014--...*---^^\n -NELSON DAILY NEW*.\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nNELSON  M--THUMDAY MORNINO, ntt, 9. 1M1\u2014\t\n\t\n-PUBS' -THM\nA view of the Rue de Luce, Tours, showing the ghastly destruction wrought by the German Luftwaffe in the final stages of the\nBattle of France. Toun was the temporary capital after the French\nBovernrnent fled from Paris. Until this photo and others like it reach\ned this continent lt wu believed that Coventry, England, was the tint\nmodern city to be subjected to an all-out bombing. Because Tours is\nin that part of France occupied by the Germans it is next to impossible\nto get pictures trom there.\nIndians Against Italians      Loading Supplies for France and Spain\nMajor-General Beresford Peine, commander of the Indian division whose exploits sgainst the Italians in Africa are gaining them\nwide fame is shown with two of his officers leaning against a captured\nItalian lorry.\nMore Training Planes\n\\      ... .   *   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022*\u00ab\u2022\u25a0.\u25a0-\n!\n**,    |   , > *w m\n.*%',\u25a0> ml*\\\\\nCanadian factories hum u they turn out increasing numbers of\ntraining planes ln which thousands of students will be instructed\nunder the Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Workers are shown as-\n\u2022embling an Avro Anson machine for training bomber crews.\nThe Red Cross ship Cold Harbor, chartered from the United States\nlines, takes on supplies at Baltimore, Md., for Spain and unoccupied\nFrance. She'll sail for Cadiz, Spain. This will be the first relief shipment to those countries which have appealed for much more assistance. The ship will pass through the blockade under s special arrangement wi* the British Government.\n1918\u2014Then and Sow\u20141941\nBoy Sniper\n:J.\u00a5m\nTwenty-three yesn of aeronautical development is pictured here. In the upper picture you see\ntn airplane of 1918\u2014the original Vought Ve-7 advanced trainer. In the lower picture is the Vought\nXF4U-1, heralded u one of the fastest airplanes in\nthe United States today. In 1918, the 1850-horse-\npower Pratt and Whitney engine, which drives the\nXF4U-1 through the air at a maxmium ipeed of\nmore than 400 milei per hour, would htve been considered Incredible.\nThousands of Ethiopians, motivated by t hatred of their Italian\nconqueron, htve Joined the Brl-t\nIsh torces ln Libya and Eritrea.\nThis 14-year-old Ethiopian boy\nbu been waging war against the\nItalians for five years. He Is wearing the cap of an Italian officer\nsniped during one of his encounters with the enemy.\nSpring Promotion '^5\nKnitting Wool\nA \"Bay\" Feature Event\nHere, thrifty women, knit for the boys at the Front! The \"Bay\" carries a large selection t,\nof knitting wool of all kinds.\nCoronation\n4 Ply Fingering\n400 balls In a varied assortment of colors. Suitable\nfor socks, sweater, bed throws, etc.\n2 for 25c\nSweater Wool, per ball   7*5.+\nAndaluslan, per ball    3<ty\nBriar, per balj    20*\nHBC Knitting Worsted, 2 balls  35f \u2022\nDunkirk Wool, sufficient to knit a pair of socks, per ball 75^\nPurple Heather\nQuality 4-ply Scotch fingering, knits up io soft, t really\nfine wool for knitting swelters, socks tnd mitts for the\nboys it the Front Colon of\nheather mixture, khaki, air-\nforce blue tnd 2fl___\nblacks. Per ox. *\"**\nBeehive. Baby Wool\n-\u25a0ply fIne \u25a0 nonihrlnktble\npure wool, the_ Ideal ytrn for\ntil klndi of baby garments.\nPink, white tnd\nblue. Bill \t\n351\nHBC Superior\nFingering\nPut up In attractive up-to-\ndate shades tnd guaranteed\nto give every satisfaction,\nHudson's Bty quality yirm\ntre being mtdt In i_____\nCtntda. Bill ******\nMist Canada Crochet\nKnitting Wool\n100 per eent pun virgin\nwool. A new twist so Ideal\nfor tny garment A good selection of spring M__>\nshades. Bill ****\nHBC QUALITY GROCERY SPECIALS\nON SALE TODAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\n\u25a0 RINSO: Qltnt lire,        AtjA         PORK   tnd   BEANS:    Hed-\nPork Shoulders, Union, Ib. 20c | orI'.* .;... ^    ^\\~  \u2122\n4St\nEQQS: Qrtde A-large, 2Q(*\nDoi.       **\nCOFFEE: Country\nClub, freih, Ib\t\nBACON: Premium,\nillced In cello, Ib..\nHONEY: Linden,\n4 Ib. tin  -\nTOMATO   or   VEGETABLE\nSOUP: Aylmer, 2 _*}\n3 tlm     **r\nCORN: Golden Bantam, Aylmer, 16 oz., 2 _d\n2 tlm         -*r\n49<\n391\n591\nMarmalade 4 Ib. tin 41c\nA8PARAQU8 CUTTINGS:\nAylmer, 12d\n10 oz. tin   \"*-\nPEA8: Size 5, Aylmer, <*,t*al\n18 oz. tlm, 2 for.     .. *****\nPekoe, Ib.\n80CKEYE\nBlue Sell, i_'i, tin\nBUTTER: Hudio\nFirst grtde, 2 Ibi,\n80CKEYE SALMON:   |g#J\nBUTTER: Hudionli,   ***\\a\\\nMilk, All Brands... 3 for 25c\nfr   \u25a0    '       \u2014ii.;':''.   \\{*stiaL\"iti    * ' jkL''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"; \u2022   \u25a0'.\":'\"\"!\n-\u2014_ !I^RMRATEP*e??M^jg7a       ',      \u201e,\nCASUALTIES\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP).\u2014The 36th\ncasualty list of the Canadian (Active) Army, issued late today, reported five deaths, bringing the total number of dead and missing re-\npoted by the army since the start\nof the war to 172.\nThe latest casualty list, with regimental numbers and next-of-kin:\nDIED:\nRoyal Canadian Corps of Slgnals-\nSlgmn. Samuel Gordon Lewis, Ottawa.\nCentral Ontario Regimentr-Act-\ning Sgt Arthur Stanley Porter, Syd\nenham, Ont\nRegiment de Quebec\u2014Pte. Alfred\nPerron, Montreal East.\nSaskatchewan Regiment \u2014 Pte.\nWilfred Dorward HiUert, Saskatoon.\nRoyal Canadian Army Service\nCorps\u2014Gnr. Henry Gariepy, K-\n98452, Mrs. Mable Jean Strut-\n(mother), Victoria, B. C\nDEATHS\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Thomas l\"ohn\nSmith, 73. Educated in Winnipeg he\ntaught school on the Prairies before  coming  to  Vancouver.\nNEW WESTMINSTER - Captain\nJohn Thomson, 80-yesr-old Scottish-born msster mariner and former Dominion Government wharfinger here.\nVICHY, France. \u2014 Sir Thomas\nBarclay, 87, Scottish barrister who\nlived In France for 65 years tnd\nbecame prominent in French law\npractice. Funeral services were\nheld at Versailles Jan. 20, it was\nlearned here today.\nPROTESTS CHINESE\nPROPERTY BAN\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nChunhow H. Pao, Chinese Consul-\nGeneral ot Vancouver, yesterday\nprotested to Mayor J. W. Cornett\nagainst proposed action of the City\nCouncil to ban Chinese residents\nfrom owning or occupying homes\nin residential districts.\nMUSIC SOCIETY IS\nFORMALLY CHARGED\nMILWAUKEE, Feb. 5 (AP).-The\nFederal Government today formally\ncharged the American Society of\nComposers, Authors snd publishers,\n19 corporations snd 28 Individuals\nwith violation of the Sherman Anti-\nTrust Act.\nNEW SHIPS TO COST\n$1,800,000 EACH\nVANCOUVER, B. C, F\u00abb. 5 (CP).\n\u2014Clarence Wallace, Managing Director, announced today actual cost\nof the steel cargo ships to be built\nby Burrtrd Drydock will be $1,800,-\n000 etch. Orders for two additional\nships were received by the firm on\nMondsy, to bring the total to eight\nFLOOD DANCER OVER\nCOURTENAY, B. C, Feb. 3 (CP).\n- Possibility of i flood ln the\nCourtenay District vanished today\nis trse Courtensy River subsided to\nits normal level. Heavy rains Monday night had swelled the river,\nflooding Lewis Park tnd the Island\nHighway it one point. Trajfic wu\nnot interrupted.\nTwo Leave Natal\nfor Coast Units\nTwo more Michel men were called\nup and have gone to Vancouver\nwhere they are ln training. They\nare Ricky Harrison, son oi Mr and\nMrs. R. Harrison, and Roddy Linn,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. J. Linn.\nEDGEWATER MAN FINED\nON ASSAULT CHARCE\nINVERMERE. B. C. - A sitting\nof the County Court was held in\nInvermere on Monday, presided\nover by Judge G. H Thompson. A.\nThompson, Edgewater, was arraigned on an assault charge, and\nbeing convicted, was sentenced to\npay a fine of $50.\nSoldiers Guard\nShanghai Taxpayers\nSHANGHAI, Feb. 5 (AP). -\nGuarded by several hundred soldiers and police, taxpayers of the\nShanghai International Settlement\nvoted today to increase taxes 40\nper cent to meet the Settlement's\ndeficit.\nTURKEY TRADES NUTS FOR\nCERMAN LOCOMOTIVES\nBERLIN, Feb. 5 (AP). - In a\ncurious barter _rar_raction, Germany gets 17,640 tons of hazel\nnuts from Turkey In exchange for\nlocomotives. A deal for 4000 tons\nof Turkish wheat for more locomotives is under way.\nSURAT, India (CP). - Wettfj\nof three sons of'Sardar Taher i\nhib, High Priest of Daudl Bob)\ntook place in the same weeky\nBBW FOR HANG-ON\nW COUGHS\n?.- COLDS\nASTHMA, BRONCHITIS\nend ertW Ataptafory\nAilment, rah frr.\nOld MM.    j\nUCKLEY\nMIXTURC\nJtiooeering with TRANSPORTATION, the Bank\nof Montretl hu teim-worked with this industry ill\nthe wiy\u2014from stage coach to stretmlined train; from\nsailing ship to modem ocun liner; from plodding\ncanal-boat to swift-flying aircraft.\nHundreds of great snd small carry i ng companies rely on\nthe Bink of Montretl for the specialized services they\nneed, while tensof thousands of the peoplewho work for\nthem tre among our welcome customers who hive livings or chequing tccounts,or borrow for person-! needl.\nSer dug Canadiani aud iheir industries in mry lltiita of the community,\ntin iniHi you te discus, YOUR banking requirements with to.\nBANK   OF  MONTREAL\nWAR\nSAVINGS\nCERTIFICATES\n'*  BAN-   WBI1I  IMJIIL   ACCOUNTS   AIE  WELCOME\"\nNtlson Branch: H. RADC ihl-fc. Manager\nTrail Brand. W  II. RAIKES, Manager\nRosalind Branchi J   N  (RAN Manager\nNan Denvm Branch:      J   BURMAN Manager\nKail.. Bram-hr      A   B   ROBFRTSON Manager\nMODERN,   B-PBRIBNCBD   BANKING   SBRV1CB ts. Outceme .\/ll, Year,'S*c,e\u201eful Oyeratleaj\ni__t_>__a_.-._*-\u00aba_^_.y__> ...\u25a0',  M.n'_!-..\u25a0-.,'--.\u25a0_.->-\u25a0,. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0... .,..j__j______________a__i_\n\t\nm*t\\mk\n I\t\n_\n \/e General...\njw Fads About\nfpolhalamus\nOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nJ a year or more now 1 have\n. hearing my friends who de-\ni their interest to the functions\nhe nervous system, refer to a\nterious region in the brsin call-\nBe \"hypothalamus.\" i gathered\nRs a sort of regulator. It has\nI to do with all those normally\nluscious activities of the body,\ni as the movements and secre-\nI of the digestive tract, th* tem-\niture of the body, sleep\u2014as well\ngoods, emotions, personality re-\nons. It perhaps even regulated\nregulators   of   the   body\u2014the\ntless   glands,   the   hypophysis\nch lies near it ln the Brain, the\njoid and adrenial glands.\n>1 was profoundly ignorance of\nregion, I  was happy to find\nweek that I could purchaie a\n_ on the subject, it is a very\nI book for such a very small\nbet. But I have'found it most\nresting and as far as a man can\nHiaa just read 970 folio pages,\n)W know about the hypolhala-\nIll piece of\nIsVOUS TISSUE\nis, as I say, a very imall bit\nnervous tissue\u2014this hypothal-\nis. lt is a very old part of the\nrous syitem\u2014preient in animals\nSewn in the scale of life before\nr hav* acquired a brain. It lies\nhe very base pf the brain, near\nhypophysis or pituitary gland,\nlas nervo connections with the\nophysis and with many parts of\nsympathetic nervous system\nch controls blood supply, itom-\nand intestinal movements, tem-\ntture regulation, blood pressure\n, througn them, emotional re-\n\u00abe.\nlere,\" said the late great Dr.\nVey Cushing \"in this well-coned spot lies the very msin-\nng of primitive existence\u2014vege\nie, emotional and reproductive.'\nnd to quote another great nerve\nBiologist, Dr. Foster Kennedy, it\nin instrument in command of\nI rhythm.\"\nHPTOMS OF\n\u25a0TURBANCE\n. put Into ordinary language\nit the neurologists say about it.\n:e (re five definite forms of\niptoms that are associated with\nurbances here: (1) increased\npiness when lt ls depressed, snd\nimnia when it is itimulated; (2)\nden heating or cooling ol the\ni; (3) unnatural weight increase,\nfclally in childern (Frohlich's\nIrome); (4) water imbalance in\n\"body\u2014great thirst for no obit cause; (5) motor irritability,\nIk convulsions.\nIt temperature responses pre-\nI * condition that must be fair to many.\nhe clinical picture Is dramtlc.\nIt striking is the rapid rise of\nperature, the relative warmth\nthe trunk and the icy dryness\nthe extremities. Venous blotch-\nOften appears in non-dependent\ntions ot the skin of the extrem-\nI tnd less frequently in the\nHt, The small hairs stand on\nBind there is complete absence\nsweating (anhydrous). Thus it\nvident that heat loss is reduced\nf minimum as there is no sweat-\nI tnd blood flow ln the skin of\n.extremities Is greatly reduced.\nE8TION8 AND\n8WERS\n6.M.:\u2014\"I would like to know\nF fhany pounds a week a per-\ntwould lose by having only 300\niries a day. (2) Could a person\nI weight by drinking only a\n\u25a0Of milk a day?\"\nrW\u00bbr\u2014(1) On 300 calories a\na person should lose about\npounds a week. This calcu-\n\u00bbn ls based on the assumption\nj the body will use its own\npp replace energy needs. (2)\njlnt ot milk a day is certainly\n\u25a0eduction diet but not a well\npeed one. It should not be con-\nEd for more than a week.\nWindermere Woman\nKnits 156 Pairs\nof Socks\nINVERMERE, B. C. - Mrs.\nLloyd Tegart of Windermere\nhas completed 156 pain of socks\ntor the Red Cross ln on* year.\nMn. Tegart started on February\n1. 1940, and has turned in that\nnumber of pairs to the Windermere District Branch. She haa\nhad no assistance with the knitting and ll an active person in\nmany other ways so that she is\nto be Commended for thli valuable contribution.\nCASTLEGAR\nCAST__GAR, B. C.-A meeting of\nrepresentative! from the Women's\nInstitute of Robson and the I.O.D.E.\nof Castlegar was held Monday night\nat the home of Mrs. D. A. Shea.\nPlans were completed for catering\nto the Board of Trade banquet Mon-\nday next Those present were Mrs.\nR. T. Waldie, Mrs. H. Foxlee, Mrs.\nR. Berry, Mrs. Marvin Quance, Mrs.\nS. Humphries, Mrs. R. H. Devitt,\nMrs. D. A. Shea, Mrs. N. Miller,\nMn, C. Tench, Mrs. L. McArthur,\nand Mri W. H. Houston.\nMrs. N. J. Donesley visited Trali\nMonday afternoon.\nMrs. A. Larson was a visitor to\nTrail Tuesday.\nFriends of Mr. and Mrs. J. Finch\nsurprised them with a party In the\nCoronation Hall last Friday. Numerous gifts were presented to the new\nbride and groom, during the evening.\nWynndel Institute\nNames Committees\nWYNNDEL, B. C.-The Wynndel\nWomen'i Institute meeting was held\nin the high school. Standing committees were named as follows: Sick\nVisiting, Mrs. Eakin; Community\nNeeds, Mrs. Davidge; Hospital Committee, Mrs. Wigen and Mrs. Keller;\nChild Welfare and School, Mrs.'\nR. Andestad.\nTwo quilts for London bomb shel-,, ,       ,, ,    ,   .\nten are to be started soon by the low the pupil of thi eye back to-\nmembers. ward the ear. Rouge lightly along\nThe condition of roads and the jawline so that that squarenesi is\npossible danger to school children lost in shadows.\nBlend.\nSpare Heavy Hand\nIn Using Rouge\nBy ALICE WADE ROBINSON\nRouge Is back .. .In favor. Some\not you may never have discarded\nIL But It's back to itay it you roug-\nen spare \"heavy hand.\" We are all\nfor applied color If used with a\ndeft touch. So practice thete tips\nfor rouge skill---\nMAQIC IN BLENDING\nMany salons prefer the effect\ngiven by cream rouge deftly blended over the foundation while the\nface is itlll moist from foundation. But dry rouge ll to be blended between two powderi: blended\nover the tirst powdering, t second\npowdering applied over the range,\nNotice how many times the word\n\"blend\" has been used. It was done\nwith intent: to remind you that\ndaubing and swishing rouge across\ncheekbones or directly under the\neyes is bad rouge form. It'i blending that makei tor rouged good\nlooks. Without careful skill at that,\nkeep your fingertips away from tha\nrouge spot,\nFLATTER THE FEATURES . . .\nYou sre painting your portrait,\nremember, when you use rouge.\nSpare the heavy hand. Suggest color\u2014rather than go full swing on\nthe palette,\nWant to give your full face an\noval \"look\"? Do this: Blend rouge\nclose to the nose and carry it down\nalong cheeks in a lengthened line\nto a point Juit above nostrils.\nThe thin, rectangular face will\nshow age much too soon unless\nrouge lends a hand. The task here\nis to make the face appear shorter\nand fuller. Color is therefore blended Sway from the nose in broad,\nsweeping strokes. Remember never\nto blend rouge downward or face\nwill seem narrower than ever.\nAvoid rouge with a purple cast. Ose\na light a red ai your complexion\nwill take.\nFace too square? Blend rouge\nfrom a point on cheek direcUy be-\n\u2014NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION. I.C--THURIDAY MORNING. FEB, I. M41.\nLovely In Lynx\ntravelling in buses was discussed\nand the secretary was insrtucted to\nwrite the Public Works Department.\nA Valentine tea in aid of the hospital is to be held soon. Mrs. Wigen\nMrs. Keller and Miss F. Wood will\nact as conveners for the affair. It\nwas noted the sale table was sue\ncessful in netting $2.30.\nA cake was drawn for and wai\nwon by Mrs. Abbott. The commun\nity assisted in adding to the treasury by donating through the miniature apron system, each person placing a donation ln the pocket of the\napron, and a priie Was given to the\none who guessed the correct or\nnearest amount collected, which\nwas 113.58. It was reoorted a new\npair of curtains and a pair of wool\nblankets were purchased for the\nInititute room in the hospital.\nFernie Rotarians\nHold Ladies Night\nFERNIE. B. C\u2014The Fernie Rotary Club held ladles night Monday\nwhen a banquet took place at the\nKing Edward Hotel. The chair was\noccupied by the President, D. M.\nMitchell. Don Brewster welcomed\nthe ladies. A varied and interesting program wu given, the directed singing by E. Edgar and a quit\ncontest was conducted by Orlando\nKay. Ted Spelsberg then gave an\nexcellent exhibition of club swinging. The Fernie High School students contributed to the entertainment by presenting two dialogues.\nIn the first dialogue, the parts were\ntaken by Etta Larrabee and George\nZenovitch, the second, a blackface\nact. was ably handled by Edward\nRatkowikl and Victor Carolei. These\nwere under the direction of Mlsi\nK. Yondall of the local High School\nstaff. Miss E. Barton delivered a\nmonologue, \"The Country Bumpkin\". Little Miss Kathleen Can-\nfield gave two songs.\ndUr&LefytL\nIWIWWQ&\naHo\n*y BETtY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S  MENU\nossted Mushroom Sandwiches\nOlives\nties Green Tossed Salad\n, Steamed Prune Pudding\nCoffee or Tea\nI TOA8TED  MUSHROOM\nSANDWICHES\nbox fresh mushrooms, 2 table-\nmt butter, 2 tablespoons flour,\nfcthin cream or milk, salt, pep-\n:or paprika.\nlean mushrooms and chop them\ni. Fry in butter. When cooked\nfc flour, mixing In thoroughly,\nn tdd milk or cream. If you use\nk you may add about V, table-\nIB more butter. Cook until thick,\ns makes a thick gravy the right\nconsistency to spread. Spread between unbutkred slices of bread\nand wrap ln damp cloth. Keep in\ncool place an hour or more, until\nready to toast, then toast in sandwich toaster, first spreading outside of bread with melted butter.\nToast and serve hot.\n8TEAMED PRUNE PUDDING\n1 cup cooked, chopped prunes, 1\ncup prune juice, 1 teaspoon soda,\n1 -tablespoon butter, 1 egg, 1 cup\nbrown sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, IV,\ncups sifted flour.\nCream butter, sugar and beaten\negg, add salt and flour sifted together alternately with the prunes\nand juice, to which soda has been\nadded. Pour into buttered mold and\nsteam 2 hours. Serve with the following sauce:\n8AUCE\n1 cup sugar, V, cup milk, V, cup\nbutter, 1 egg yolk, V, teaspoon vanilla, 1 egg white.-\nCream butter, sugar and egg yolk,\nadd milk, heated, and cook in the\ndouble boiler until thickened. Remove from fire, add flavoring and\nstiffly beaten egg white and serve\nover pudding.\nThe heart-shaped face requires\nart ln the blending\u2014that Is, If that\nso-dcslrable delicate modelling is\nto be kept. So, rouge over a large\narea of the cheeks, carrying the\ncolor well downward. \"Point up\"\nthe flush directly under eyei and\nclose to the nose.\nTry these rouge trick*\u2014all of\nthem. That way you will win an\n\"after\" face much more comely than\nthe one you had \"before.\"\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B. C. \u2014 P. Lacket, G.\nStelner and U. Ofner have returned\nhome trom the Creiton Hoipltal.\nMrs. W. Vankoughnutt of Boiwell\nwas a gueit of Mra. P. Hagen.\nPte. J. Wood returned to nil unit\nat the Coast following two weeks\nfurlough here.\nMn. Rollag, who haa been visiting\nat Prairie points, returned Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Payne and family were guests of Mr, and Mn. E.\nPayne,  Alice  Siding.\nMn. Tomlln left for Salmo where\nshe was called due to an accident\nin which Mr. Tomlin was injured.\nBy AUCE ALDEN\nThis model ls of full skins mounted on crepe.   The neckline ls\ncollarless and closes snugly at the throat.   This ls the perfect coat\nfor day or evening wear.\nRobson Institutes\nStage Joint Whist\nROBSON,. B. C. - A military\nwhist drive under the auspices of\nthe Women's and Farmers' Institutes\nwas held in tha hall Feb. 1.\nL. M. Quance was master of ceremonies. There were lix tables in\nplsy. The winning table was Wales,\nthoie at the table being Mrs. William Waldie, Mrs. R. waldie, Mr.\nSutherland and R. Waldie. The table\nwith the lowest score wis U. S. A.\nThoie at the tablt were Mrs. L.\nOborne, Mrs. E. Ostrum, Mrs. 3.\nWalker and Mr. R. Thorpe.\nJ. Cairns received ipeclal prize\nfor a quiz contest.\nRefreshments were lerved by the\nhoitesses, Mn. R. Waldie, Mrs. A,\nF. Mitchell, Mn. Sutherland, Mn.\nF. E. Oborne, Miu R. McDiarmid,\nMn. J. Kissel, Mn. R. Devitt.\nC.W.L. MEETING IN JUNE\nWINN-PBG, Ftb. 8 (CP).-Mrs. 3.\nA. MacCabe, National Pruident ot\nthe Catholic Women'i League of\nCanada, today announced that the\n.1st national convention of tha\nleague will be held In Toronto next\nJune 1-i,\nLYNDHTJRST. England (CP).-\nJFor a day and a night an eight-\nyear-old girl evacuee stayed alone\nin a house with the bodies of her\nhosts\u2014an aged man and his landlady, killed by fumes from a gas\noven.\nSERIAL STORY By ELLIOTT PILLION\nMurder Makes a Hero\nCHAPTER THIRTY\nOf all the things which I had feared and expected Misi Althea's appearance and words had not entered\nmy mind. I sprang from my chair,\nat the sound ot her voice, and whirled toward the door. Never had sho\nlooked more witch-like than then.\nOne distorted hand supported her\nagainst the door casing, the other\nwas pointing at the desk, long bony\nforefinger stabbing the air. A soar-\nlet dressing gown, long overdue at\nthe cleaners, was belted around her.\nHer head, with its streaming locks,\ncraned forward, and for the moment\nI really believe the old devil was\nglad that her prophesy had come\ntrue.\nThe men working over Mark all\nwere turned in surprise toward her,\nand Chlet Crane in taking a step\nnearer, moved out of line and revealed Mark's face, now resting\nagainst the doctor's arm.\nTo Miss Althea the shock of seeing that dead face was, for the\nmoment, paralyzing. Her gloating\nfeatures fell into lutes of complete\nsurprise and horror; her outstretched hand clutched at the casing beside the other. She swallowed convulsively; a strangled scream broke\nfrom her lips.\n'It's Markl It's Mark!\" She seemed to fight for air to enable her\nto go on. A horrible gurgling arose\nin her throat. I thought she was going to have a fit; I think the chief\nthought so, too, for he hastened to\nher.\n\"He's dead\u2014dead!\"\nHer words were not a question,\nbut the chief answered as though\nthey were.\n\"Yes,\" he said soothingly, \"he Is\ndead.\"\nShe flew into the most violent\nrage I had yet seen. Words poured\ntrom her lip* as a river in flood\npours over a dam. Over and over\nshe repeated the words which laid\nanother terror upon me.\n\"Cary did It! He killed him! I\nknow ne did, I heard them quarreling! He did it! Cary did it!\"\nOver and over the same words\nfell upon my defenseless esn until\nJanet appeared in the doorway behind her aunt and, with Chief\nCrane's help, forcibly removed her.\nThe men glanced meaningly at\neach other, as the was removed\nfrom view. We heard her voice for\na time longer; then, they turned\nback to the desk.\nI sank back into the chair the\nstranger had given me. I was more\nheartsick and terrified than before.\nWould they believe Mils Althea's\nwords? How had she overheard the\nquarrel between the cousins? I wai\nin the alcove all during it, and there\nwas no bookcase door open there.\nI turned in my chair and craned\nmy head to see the last bookcase\non the alcove side ot the library.\nMy heart sank. Its door wts open!\nShe certainly had heard every word\nas had I, but while I could, and\nwould if necessary, repeat it approximately, she could De depended upon to distort lt out of all\nsemblance to truth,\nJanet returned to Hie library\nand coming to mo retted one hand\nupon my shoulder, I moved over on\nthe seat and whispered to her to\nsit down with me, but she would\nnot. Through the thick house coat I\nwore, I could feel her hand trembling against my shoulder, and I\nwas certain she was suffering the\nsame terror which tortured me.\n\"Where Is she?\" I whispered.\n\"In her sitting room. I sent Alice\nto stay with her.\" Janet's voice,\nlow, held the same quality of hardness it had trom the beginning.\n\"They won't pay any attention to\nwhat she sayi, I whispered again,\nas much to comfort myself aa her\n\"Nobody knowi what they'll do,\"\nshe murmured back. \"If Cary were\nonly here. He isn't ln the house;\nI've been to his room. Do you know\nwhere he is?\"\n\"I heard him say he was going\nto see Horace Rand. What time is\nit?\"\nJanet stepped back and glanced\nInto the hall.\n\"It's twenty minutes of eleven. I\ndo hope that's wher* he ls. Nancy,\nIf ih* sticks to what iha laid in\nhere, ihe can make terrible trouble\ntor ui.\" Her eyei were wide and\ntormented. I didn't know what more\nto iay to her; but the didn't wait\ntor me to ipeak.\n\"I know what she said is not\npossible\u2014but\u2014\" She sighed and wai\nsilent.\n(To Be Continued)\nNATAL\nNATAL, B. C. - Oliver Winstan-\nley, who ,is a member ol the Rocky\nMountain Rangers In training at\nPrince Rupert is spending his furlough at Michel visiting with his\nmother.\nKenneth Oweni has left for Dawson City where he is employed. He\nhas vltlted his pirtnti, Mr. tnd\nMrt T. Owens for ilx weeks.\nGeorge Mannlon, who It t mam-\nher of the Home Guard itatloned\nat Fernie visited hil family.\nDEER PARK\nDEER PARK, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMn. H. C. Coleman entertained on\ntheir fifteenth wedding annlver-\nssry when guests were Mn. H.\nBaker and daughter Shirley, and\nCarl Schwartzenhauer.\nHelman Knabe ot Trail li visiting here.\nV. C. Worley Is home trom Trail\nfor in extended itay.\nMrs. S. O'Brien and daughter of\nVancouver, are visiting here.\nMn, 0. Worley it visiting up\nthe Gulch.\nNo Apron.Strings..\nTeach Child to\nBe Independent\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nDont keep your children tied to\nyour apron strings.\nBetween parents and children\ngoes on a continuous itruggle which\nfew ot ui ever recognize. On* one\ntide ar* th* children striving to\ngrow up, to have the power and\nfreedom of adults; on the other are\nthe parents struggling ho less valiantly, perhaps, to keep these children little and dependent On them\nfor help, guidance and restraint.\nOf the two contesting groupi, parenta are the least conscious ot the\nprompting   motives.   Indeed,   few\nSarents ever would admit that they\no not want their children to grow\nIndependent As a matter ol fact\nthey do, theoretically; but actually\nthey do not.\nDon't they call the child \"Baby\nLamb\" or \"Dearie,\" long past the\ntime when he wishes to be so addressed? Hai not almost every parent felt a pang not eaiily described,\non observing the baby's curls tall\ntrom the barber's scissors? And\nthen, when on that tint day ol\n\u25a0chool the child forth on hit great\nadventure, how frequently have\ncome the words, \"I don't have a\nbaby any more?\"\nWe are creatures of habit; wu\nare more; we ara creatures of emotions, too\u2014of emotions that are tied\nup with the child. Besides, we dread\nto face suggestion that we are no\nlonger needed as we uied to be.\nThll same blind urge'also prompt!\nloving grandparents often to do\nharm to children.\nOur children need us at twelve\nor 16 as certainly as they need us\nat three: only their needs are different. As soon as they can toddle\nthey need us to help them to more\nopportunities to find new experiences and more opportunities to\nlearn how to wait upon themselves\nand solve their own problems. They\nnted us for companionship, and for\nguidance and advice at times when\nthey can profit most from such\nhelp. They need us for lympathy\nana affection, and sharing their\npleasures.\nTht better we succeed in helping our children wait upon themselves, think for themselvei and\nspeak tor themielvei, the more\nready they will be to seek our guidance in essential matters; and,\ntherefore, the more worthwhile and\nnecessary as parents we will feel\nourselves to be.\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. Pleaie offer a tew suggestions\nfor preventing and correcting eating problems ln the child, trom 1\nto S.\nA. Serve a very small portion,\none food at a lime. As soon ai one\nfood is refuied let the meal tnd.\nDon't feed the child; let him feed\nhimself or go unfed. Show no emotions; don't even have any, over his\neating.\nFuneral Services for\nMrs. B. Beech, Natal\nNATAL B. C.\u2014The funeral of\nMrs. B. Beech, who died ln the\nMichel HOJDilal took place at Natal\nand ,*srviee> were held at the United Cn-reltwjlh Rev. Addyman officiating. Mrs. Beech was SI yean\nof age, and had lived ln the community for is nan. She leavei to\nmourn a tuinbd, * son tnd two\ndaughter*,*Mr*t*f1 Duncan of Michel and Mn. V. Leilya of Coleman.\nThe pallbearers were R, Truran,\nR. Ball, J. Lyne, H. Hughei, Sr., R.\nHarrison and A. Huntley.\nROBSON .\nROBSON, B. C-Sergeant Pilot I\nW. Foxlee hai arrived from Saskatoon where he graduated from the\nNo. 4 Flying School receiving his\nwings February 28. He will spend\nhis leave with his parents, Mr. and\nMn. H. R. Foxlee.\nMn. J. Kissel and daughter vltlted Trill Monday.\nMrs. E. Oitrum returned to Nelson Sunday.\nMisi A. Thompson viiited Nelson\nSaturday.\nMr. and Mrs. I. Wyllie of Trail\nvisited Mrs. Wyllie's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. B. Ballard.\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Quance entertained a few young friends at a\nbuffet supper Sunday In honor of\nMiss Meda Ho'igen and Frank Webster, who are to be married soon\nThe table was untied with a beautiful bouquet of pink carnations and\nmaiden hair fern and white candies\nln sliver holders.\nSIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B. C.-Alfred Bysouth ot\nKuskanook went to Creston Saturday.\nJames Mannarino is still confined\nto bed with flu, but Is much better.\nMr. and Mrs. Shkwarok and family motored to Creston Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Colombo were\namong those at Creston Saturday\nalng with Sam Lombardo, Vito Car-\nnevelli and Carl Lavezello.\nJ. S. Wilson returned Saturday\nfrom a trip to Cranbrook and Kimberley.\nCharles wilion wu a visitor to\nCreiton Wedneiday.\nSam Bysouth of Kuskanook wai\nln town Wedneiday.\n_ ,\t\nLove.\nHard lor Girls to\nRealize Man May\nNoi Be Serious\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nNone io blind ai those who will\nnot see. As for instance, the girls\nwho want to know how to know\nlt the boy friends really care. Not\na chance In a mlllon that a boy\nfriend does care and the girj doesn t\nknow lt. Love is the one thing that\ncarries conviction with it.\nJohnny's coming frequently and\nitaylng long doesn't prove anything,\nnecessarily. His conversation doesn't\nprove much unless it leads to full\nconfiding and heads, up with cate-\ngorical statements and questions.\n[is expectations, hil entreaties, hia\ndemands for kisses emphatically do\nnot ipell out LOVE. His efforts to\nput her in escrow and his Jealous\nfits when ihe breaks bounds and\ndates other boys may Just ts well\nmean that he's a dog-in-the-manger\nas that he's dead in love.\nSo long as there's one mutual\nfriend to assist the love-lorn lassie\nthat Johnny loves her she'll take a\nnew lease on love.\nJohnny will come often for kisses,\nremain for comfort, eat free meals\nwith the family Just for the\" fun\nof it\nHe will be very sentimental on\noccasions, discuss love, romance and\nmarriage in general terms, always\navoidin the specific statements that\ncommit him.\nThen what can a girl fall back\non? What can she believe in? What\ncan she build her hopes upon?\nStrange to say\u2014little straws and\nbig ones; little words and little\ndeeds. And finally a little question\nand a little ring.\nSIX MENINGITIS CASES\nREPORTED AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). \u2014\nCity medical health authorities revealed today that another case ot\nspinal meningitis has been confined to isolation hospital here and\na five-year-old girl Is being examined as a suspect. There are now\nilx definite case* ot meningitis here\nand one suspect. \/\nPROTECT PRICELESS\nOLD FAMILY RECIPES\nWITH MAGIC\nas\nS ALWAYS DEPENDAl\niuden^ej^r\n\u25a0HUTCHED FLAVOR\nkelpl ymniak\ngood (k?Uee emylmef\nCRESTON Social.. *\nCRESTON, B. C. - Pte. George\nDodd, who Is with the Canadian\nScottish Regiment at Victoria, has\nreturned to the capital after visiting hli parents, Mr. and Mn. H. A.\nDodd tor three weeks.\nEd Clark returned Tueiday from\na visit at Lethbridge.\nJock Osborne of Sanca, was a\nCreston visitor Tuesday. He is planning to resume residence here after several yean at Sanca.\nJohn Stephens and A. Hurry of\nWest Creston visited ln town at the\nflnt of the week.\nFred Payne ot Cranbrook is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mn. E.\nW. Payne.\nFrank V. Staples hat left on a\ntrip to Vancouver.\nHarold Rhodes of Sheep Creek Is\nvisiting his parents, Mr., and Mrs.\nIra Rhodes.\nMrs. Tom Marshall hu moved to\nWillow Point where she will reside ln future.\nMn. Ingham ot Elko visited her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. R. Long, Jr.\nMiss D. McMillan has returned\ntrom an extended visit at Rossland\nMr. and Mn. G. Plumb have returned to Kitchener alter t two\nweeks' vtslt with the formers' parents. Mr. and Mn. L. C. Plumb.\nRoy Dewar left for Vsncouver,\nand Is now ln training with the\nCA.F.\nMr.\" and Mrs. T. Trevelyan have\nreturned from Twin Bays.\n,:..\nIf you like to save, so much the better I\nLuxurious Edwards costs you lessl\nYes I We promise a lot... but you won't be disappointed\nIn every sparkling cupful you get makhtd. flavor... the\nguaranteed goodness of several luxury coffees!\nEdwards is matched for even roast, too. So accurately\ntimed that every batch has identical flavor and color.\nBefore packing, it's matched again. Cup-tested before it\nleaves the plant.\nA big Job, but it help! you make better\ncoffee every time.\nStill this luxury blend coits snxr-l crntl los\nthan most vacuum-packed brands beciuse\nyour grocer orders direct from the roasterl\nTry Edwards tomorrow. For J5 years\nthll fine coffee has been in demand by\ncoffee lovers ... now more than ever. But\nunlesi yen enjoy Its superb m-tctx. \/-nor,\nEdwards costs you nothing.\n* Special Note \u2014 Edwards' drip frind\nis exactly rirbt for flats cojftt makers.\n'it i\/mfi* and\neOUJRROS\nSOLD BT\nSAFEWAY STORES, LTD.\n-'n^flrtjuiii ii\n____________\nJifaiVaif \"liia.*--.' ,i^'''_li_)_i_ma_h_M_l.\n Hjll.^1     .MU-lflfHW\nmm\ni .** l-J.ua j.\u00ab\u00abnptW\u00bb\"J H'mfjnaf!\"\"\nSAVE NOW\nAll this week the bargains continue at\nour sale. New footwear now In our Sales\nRacks   offer   you   exceptional   values.\nR, Andrew & Co*\nLeaden in Footfashion\nOver 80,000 Canadians Take\nAdvantage of Tax Instalment Plan\n\u25a0NILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. -.C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. PH. t. 1M1-\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP). - More\nthan 80,000 Canadians took advantage of the instalment plan system\n' of paying their 1940 income tax\nand more than 20,000 others paid\ntheir ttix In full In January, Revenue Minister Colin Gibson announced today at a press conference.\nLast year January Income tax\npayments amounted to $5,000,000\nwhile In January, 1941, the collections amounted to $35,000,000 with\nmany bags of mail still unopened,\nthe Minister said.\nSome 500 taxpayers made their\nremittances in January, 1940, while\nlast month there were remittances\nfrom 109,063 at the latest count.\nMany have yet to be recorded.\nBecause the tax on 1940 Incomes\nwas made much heavier by the war\nbudget, and because the Government wanted the money as quickly\nas possible for war purposes, arrangements were made that the tax\ncould be paid in eight monthly instalments starting with January,\nwithout interest charge on amounts\noverdue after April 30 when the\nfull tax normally falls due.\nJan. 31 was the deadline for starting Instalment payments but letters\ncontaining instalment payments and\nposted on that day are accepted as\nbeing within the time limit.\nI LIKE SCOTT'S!\n\u2022 Of coune you do.,. everybody\ndoes 1 Because, unlike plain cod liver\noil, Scott's Emulsion is easy to\ntake and four times easier to digest.\n' And it's so good for every person\n... Scott's EmiuioN helps children\nbuild strong bones and teeth; builds\nresistance to colds and infection in\npeople of all ages.\n835*\nSCOTTS\nEMULSION\n1.j<Uf1\nALL-YEAR-ROUND\nWATCHES, DIAMONDS,\nWEDDING RINGS\nH. H. Sutherland\n_g___3__gn_J\n34S Baksr St\n_______B___Bg_B___Bi__-t_fl__.\nASK FOR\n4X\nCAKES\nAt Your\nGrocers\nFresh Daily\nB__B________a____B_H__aaa\nTry KOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nThe Health Drink\nPhone 116\nMONTHEND SALE\nSweaters\u2014Values to tf 1 AC\n$3.50  ipl.a\/J\nFashion First Shop\n436 Baker St Nelson, B. C.\nS\u00abSW_KS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$i\u00ab$j\u00abM\u00abj$_ssS\u00a3\ntbt* * month will put a\n\" General Electric\nWasher In your home.\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO\n574 Biker 8t. Phone _0.\nFINAL CLEARANCE SALE\nNOW ON\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St. Phone 874\nWith a great deal of mall still\nunopened the collectors have received $35,000,000 in Federal Income\ntax alone from 109,063 taxpayers\ndistributed as follows:\nPrince Edward Island 291, Nova\nScotia 4000, New Brunswick 2000,\nQuebec 29,821, Ontario 52,695, Manitoba 55O0 Saskatchewan 3O00, Alberta 5266, British Columbia 6500.\nFor the first 10 months of the\nlast fiscal year income tax collections from all sources amounted to\n$124,000,000, the Minister said. During the same period this fiscal year,\ncollections by the income tax branch\namount to $208,000,000.\nMr. Gibson estimated earlier in\nthe year that total income tax\nbranch collections would amount to\n$225,000,000 in the fiscal year ending\nMarch 31.\n\"Now we know it will be much\nmoro than that,\" he said. \"The response has been much greater than\nwe expected, thanks to the great\npublicity that has been given the\ninstalment plan of payments, and\nto the wisdom of the people who\nsee in this plan an easier way of\nhandling heavy taxation, and a\nmeans of helping the war effort.\"\nUsually about 90 per cent of the\ntaxpayers have made their remittances in the last few days of April,\njust in time to escape the interest\ncharge levied on amounts overdue\nafter April 30, the Minister said.\nThis year nearly one third of the\ntotal number that paid taxes on 1939\nincomes have started \u25a0 payments or\npaid in full. This year there are\nabout 1,500,000 people paying income\ntaxes of one kind or another, including the National Defence tax, as\ncompared with about 267,000 a year\nago.\nLowering of the exemption figures for married and single persons\nand levy of the National Defence\ntax started last July, has brought\nInto the tax-paying group those\nearning as little as $600 a year.\nThe Minister said he estimated\nrevenue at the rate ot $365,000,000\na year from the income, national\ndefence and excess profits taxes at\ntheir present level.\nThere has been little return so\nfar from the excess profits tax but\nthe National Defence tax, largely\ncollected by employers, Is bringing\na revenue of approximately $3,000:\n000 a month, the Minister said.\nC. Fraser Elliott, Commissioner\nof Income Tax who assisted the\nMinister at the conference, said\ncollectors had been instructed pot\nto accept any post-dated cheques for\nincome tax payments.\nThere had been several Instances\nIn which tax-payers had sent in\neight cheques dated to cover the\neight monthly instalments as they\nfall due, but all except those for\nJanuary were returned.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP) .\u2014Revenue\nMinister Gibson released figures today showing a net revenue of $72,-\n305,130 collected by the Revenue\nDepartment during January compared with $35,781,400 collected during January, 1940.\nIncome   tax  collections   totalled\n$29,057,595, an Increase of $23,175,-\n379; customs-excise collections were\n$43,247,536, an Increase of $13,348\n351.\n(The Income tax figures released\nby Mr. Gibson covered reports received up to Jan. 31 but at a press\nconference the Minister said considerable January mail had still to\nbe opened and indicated collections\nwould total $35,000,000 for the entire month.)\nCustoms-excise revenue was made\nup as follows: Excise taxes $26,938,\n383, an increase of $11,757,292; customs duties $9,591,947, an increase of\n$588,898; excise duties $8,665,963, an\nincrease of $1,004,973; and sundry\ncollections $51,242, a decrease of\n$2811.\nNet revenue received from April\n1, 1940, to Jan. 31, 1941, totalled\n$597,396406 compared with $391,611,-\n678 collected in the corresponding\nperiod of the previous fiscal year.\nRobson Bride-Elect\nHonored at Shower\nROBSON, B.C. - Mrs. William\nWaldie entertained with a tea and\na kitchen and pantry shelf shower\nFriday in honor of Miss Meda Hougen, bride-elect, who received many\ngifts.\nThe table was attractively decorated with miniature umbrellas. Mrs.\nM. 0. Hougen and Mrs. J. T. Web-\nsty presided at the urns. Those\nhelping to serve were Miss Phyllis\nHumphries and Miss Lillian Waldie.\nThose invited were Mrs. M. 0,\nHougen Mrs. J. T. Webster, Mrs. R.\nWaldie, Mrs. s. Humphries, Miss B.\nHumphries, Mrs. C. Smith, Mrs. L.\nOborne, Mrs. L. M. Quance, Miss A.\nThorpe Mrs. J. Kissel, Mrs. Speir-\nlng, Mrs. R. Moat Mrs. E. Ostrum.\nMrs. WilHam Campbell, Miss M.\nMlllier, Miss Freda Hougen and Miss\nThelma Hougen.\nWomen's Hospital\nAuxiliary Bridge\nDrives Raise $40\nApproximately $40 \"wis railed for\nthe work of the Women'i Auxiliary\nto Kootenay Lake General. Hospital\nat bridge socials held at the Nurses'\nHome Tuesday night and Wednesday afternoon.\nWar savings Stampi were offered\nas prizes, E. S. Planta winning Tuesday night, and Mrs. G. R. Abey\nWednesday afternoon.\nThe committee In charge consisted\nof Mrs. F. P. Sparks, President; Mrs.\nC. F. Brett, Secretary; Mri. J. H.\nM. McNaughton, Mrs. Gordon Burns\nand Miss Gladys Ewings,\nServiteurs included Mrs, Alec\nTulloch, Mm. Thomas German, Mrs.\nR. B. Morris, Mrs. W. Jeffs, Mrs.\nJames Fraser, Mrs. Sparks, Mrs.\nMcNaughton, Mrs. Burns and Miss\nEwings.\nsrewsssss-^ressws-ss-ssg-swsj-t*\niiVddsL &* Out!\nOF NELSON HIGH SCHOOL\nJ$tt\u00ab$$8S$$$M$&tt$&9$&$-3&$$tt\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed In th-\nMorning R-rin' to Go\nTh* livar ahould pour mrt two pounrla of\nliquid bile Into jour boweli dill-. If thli bill\nla not flowln. freely, your food doean'tdi. eat.\nIt Juat deearra In the boweli. Gu bloata np\nyour itotn.cn. You get constipated. Hirm fut\npolaone so into th* body ind yoa foal lour.\naunk ina tho world look! punk.\nA mere bowel movewentdoetn'tilwiyi set\nIt the ctrjee. Yon need somethlns thit worka\non the liver ia weU. It takea thoai good, old\nCarter a Little Liver Pilla to (it then two\npounda of bile flowing freely tnd make you\nfeel \"up ind up\". Htmla-a ind gen Ui, they\nmike thi bile flow freely. They do the wont\notVilome) but hive no calomel or mercury In\nthem. Aak for Carter's Lrttl* Liver Pilla by\nname 1 Stubbornly ref uae inythlng elae. 2le.\n(Advtl\nArne Henrickson has been elected\nPrime Minister, succeeding Helen\nAlexander. Former Minister of Finance, he has been actively interested in all phases of school activity.\nHe was a member of the Blue\nBombers for 2V, years. As a scholar\nhe is outstanding. As yet no onu\nhas been named Minister of Finance, since there is little work in\nthat department at present\nThis Friday the Interhouse debates\nbegin when House A meets House\nD. Next Friday B meets C and thts\nfollowing Friday the winnen will\ndebate on a subject concerning the\nJews.\nOn the weekend of February 14\nthe Bombers and Bomberettes will\nmake a trip to Rossland to play return games with Rossland High\nteams. On February 28 the Creston\nbasketballers, fully recovered from\ntheir measles, we hope, will meet\nour teams.\n, It seems that In the near future\nan intercity badminton tournament\nis to be held with entries from\nabout 12 schools.\nA six-page Hi-Ways came out\nlast week under the Editorship ol\nMike Lakes. The covers entered In\nthe contest to obtain a permanent\ncover design for the annual were\njudged Monday and the winner is\nto be announced at Monday morning's flag exercises.\nHERE AND THERE\nSheila Dunwoody raving about\nher corsage\u2014Dawn Sharp bawling\nout Isabelle Young for having an\nevening dress the same as hers\u2014\nGladys Fleming hobbling about\u2014a\nbeautiful creature wandering about\nthe school\u2014Einar ready to blow up\nat the officials of the Junior Badminton Club\u2014Jean Spencer taking\na holiday\u2014Dick Attress expostulating\u2014Boyi of Division IV wearing a\ndifferent tie every day of the week\n\u2014Everybody wondering who ls\nIan Carne's beautiful \"Judy\"\u2014\nHouses A and D worrying about\nwhat they are going to debate\u2014\nCRESTON UNITED\nCHURCH REPORTS\nGOOD PROGRESS\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Progress in\nall departments of the congregational effort of the Trinity United\nChurch was shown in the various\nreports submitted at the annual congregational meeting Tuesday. There\nwas a representative attendance witn\nthe pastor, Rev. H. J. Armitage\npresiding. The charge includes congregations at Wynndel, which has\na morning service each Sunday, and\nCinyon, which has afternoon worship.\nVic Mawson reported on finances,\nwhich showed that when a few\npromises of subscriptions have been\nmet the Creston charge will have\nattained the status of self-support\nfor 1940. Wynndel and Canyon have\nmet their allocations ln full.\nMiss Edith Cook and Mrs. W. J\nAvery reported for the Missionary\nand Maintenance Fund, and the Women's Missionary Society. Both these\ndepartments reported contributions\nin excess of the previous year.\nMrs. M. R. Joyce presented the\nreport of the Ladles' Aid, which Indicated another successful year,\nand the same satisfactory reports\ncame from the Ladies' Aids at\nWynndel and Canyon.\nW. J. Scott repoted for the Trustees, Mrs. Howard for the Mission\nBand. Miss Irene Pridham, Secretary\npresented the report of the Sunday School. The attendance had\nbeen well maintained. W. S. Weir\ngave the Bible Class report\nThe report of the session showed\na slight Increase in membership\nThe pastor had conducted 158 Sunday sevlces. He officiated at seven\nfunerals, 10 baptisms, and 15 marriages. Over 300 pastoral calls had\nbeen made, including the hospital\nW. S. Weir and Bob Currie were\nelected Stewards for two years.\nEXPECT DELIVERIES OF\nNEWNESS CAS FEB. 28\nMELBOURNE, Feb. 6 (AP). -\nOfficials today expressed the hope\nthat deliveries of gasoline extracted from the oil shales at Newness,\nNew South Wales, would begin\nabout Feb. 28. Refineries now are\nproducing 100,000 galloni of crude\noil from, the shales weekly and\n1,000,000 gallons Of gasoline hit\nbeen placed in storage.\nCAYDA BLAMES JEWS\nIN U.S. FOR WAR POLICY\nROME, Feb. 6* (AP). - Virginio\nGayda, writing ln II Giornale d'ltalia. asserted todty thtt Jews tre\ntrying \"to drag\" the United States\ninto wtr ln an attempt \"it supreme\nrecovery of the Semitic Internationale.\"\nAlfred, aged four and Loretta, two, children of Mr. and Mri.\nFred Orlando, 237 Railway Avenue, Trail\u2014Photo by Nelson at Hughes\nStudio. '\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nt Miss Vera B. Eidt has is guest\nher cousin, Miss Eileen Stowe of\nthe staff of the Toronto Western\nHospital, who has been in Trail on\nthe Trail-Tadanac Hospital staff and\nis now en route to Coast cities where\nshe will visit before returning to\nToronto..\ne Mrs. A. J. Dunnett, Carbinate\nStreet, entertained members of Mrs.\nFred H. Graham's Circle. Those\npresent were Mrs. F. R. Pritchard,\nMrs. A. L. Creech, Mrs. A. T. Horswill, Mrs. Mabel Rockliff, Mrs. A.\nJ. Cornish, Mrs. C. F. McHardy,\nMri. George Horstead, Mrs. H. B.\nGore, Mrs. H. J. Haylock, Mrs. H. R.\nTownsend, Mrs. J. H. Edmondson,\nMiss Margaret Taylor of South Slocan and Mrs. Stanley Bostock.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Everett Brasch\nand little daughter returned to\nTrail yesterday after a couple ot\nweeks in Nelson and Procter.\n\u2022 Malcolm Cameron was ln town\nfrom Slocan City yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Stanley Livingston snd\nInfant son have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for their home\nat 414 Silica Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. W, A. Ward was ln town\nfrom Procter yesterday.\nI \u2022 Pte. W. R. Perry tnd Mrs.\nPerry of Passmore spent yesterday\nin the city.\n\u2022 J. Mucha of Procter visited\nNelson Monday.\n' e J. D. Foggo is a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\n\u2022 Miss Helen Stubbs, Nelson\nAvenue, and her aunt, Mrs. Ruby\nClayton of Los Angeles, who Is vis.\niting relatives, spent yesterday at\nSalmo with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert\nGrutchfield,\n\u2022 Mrs. John Murray of South\nSlocan spent yesterday In town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Bird, Victoria\nStreet, have as guest Mrs. D. W\nWilkinson, of Gold Hill ln the Lardeau. who Is en route to the Coast.\n\u2022 Harry Clark of Winlaw visit\ned town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded John Tawse of Willow\nPoint.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jack Boyce has returned\nfrom visiting her parents in Green*-\nwood.\n\u2022 J. Graham of Slocan City vis\nIted Nelson yesterday.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS FLORENCE E4RD\nAHYLING ISLAND, England\n(CP)\u2014A fishermen end hli son,\nwho rescued t British airman from\nthe sea, returned the National Lifeboat reward money as a _'-t to the\nlifeboat service.\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5-East Trail\nWA. of St. Andrew's Anglican\nChurch met Tuesday evening at the\nhome of Mn. J. T- Wilkinson. Plans\nwere discussed for a bake sale\nwhich will be held at the end of\nApril. At the close ot the meeting\ndainty refreshments were served by\nthe hostess assisted by Mrs. J. G.\nBest and Mrs. Stalnton. Other members present were*Mrs, C. T. Conroy, Mrs. A. Dawion, Mrs. R. H-\nScott Mrs. A. H. Yates, Mrs. T.\nHinton, Mrs. W. P. Robertson, Mrs.\nW. Barber, Mrs. F, Findlow, Mn.\nW. E. Marshall, Mrs. B. Lawley and\nMrs. James May. .\nThe catholic Women's League of\nSt Anthony's Church met in the\nChurch Hall Sunday evening, the\nPresident, Mrs. Bertuzzi, in the\nchair. The Secretary and Treasurer\nreports for tho month were read.\nFurther plans were discussed for\nthe Valentine tea to be held February 12. It was decided to change the\nnight of the meeting to the first\nTuesday of every month. It was also\ndecided that refreshments will be\nserved at every meeting. There was\na large attendance.\nThe engagement ls announced of\nAgnes Young, eldest daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. James Deans, 408\nBuckna Street, to James E. L. Grou\ntage, only son of Mr. and Mri. E. E.\nGroutage of victoria. The wedding\nwill take place quietly on March 11\nThe Excelsior Club of Knox Unit\ned Church met Monday evening in\nthe Odd Felilow's Hall with Robert\nMusk as guest speaker. His topic\nwas \"Cairo to Cape Town\". Gordon\nEllison presided. A ping-pong competition will be held February 12\nin the K-P. flail, 'he club 1*1*1'^%\nthe Tuxls group of the United\nChurch. Devotional exercises were\nsupervised by Misses Joan Austad,\nMarian Harrison and Blanche Hall.\nRefreshments were served at the\nclose.\nBridge was enjoyed Monday evening by the Daly Club of Knox\nUnited Church when lt met in the\nChurch Hall. Mrs. A. Bradwell won\nfirstJJrize and Mrs. T. Reid received\nthe consolation. Dainty refreshments\nwere served at the close. Members\npresent were 28.\nMrs. W. R. Thompson entertained\nthe Women's Service Club of Knox\nUnited Church at her home Monday evening. After a short business\nsession the hostess served dainty\nrefreshments. She was asslted by\nMrs. James Downing and Mrs. W. E.\nPage.\nDr. and Mrs. C. A. Mittun of\nBeaver Falls are visiting in Vancouver for about 10 days.\nNew War Stamp\nCampaign for\nNelson Planned\nPlans tor t new Wtr Savings\nStamp drive In Nelson It* being\nformulated.\nE. A. Minn. Chairman of the\nNelson General Committee, itated\nWedneiday that the , Executive of\nthe Committee wu drawing up its\npltni tnd hoped ihortly to enlist\nthe active assistance ot t ltrge\nnumber ot organizations ln staging\na campaign.\n\"A number of firms have slready\nreported that 100 per cent ot their\nemployees are subscribing regularly, but coverage could be more\ncomplete,\" said Mr. Mann. \"It is\nSrobable that the Nelson subscripts could be brought up comlderably by wider uie ot the payroll\ndeduction plan.\"\nShort Forms Make\nDelivery Soldiers'\nMall Much Harder\nAbbreviated addresses on letten\ntnd parcels for soldiers make it\ndifficult and at times 'Impossible\nfor postal authorities to decide tor\nwhich military unit the item of mail\nmatter is intended. Hon. WlUlam P.\nMulock, Postmaster General, is\nagain requesting the public to write\nout in full the addresses on all military mall intended for troops overseas or in Canada,\nThe use of initials may be confusing in the extreme.\nFor example, S.L.I.\u2014May be the\ninitials for the Saskatchewan Light\nInfantry of the Canadian Army or\nSomerset Light Infantry or Shropshire Light Infantry, both regiments\nin the British Army. Similarly, the\ninitials R.R.C. might be taken to\nIndicate the Royal Rifles of Canada, a Quebec Regiment or the\nRoyal Regiment of Canada from Toronto. There is also a Royal Canadian Regiment (R.C.H.)\nDelay is inevitable when such\nabbreviated forms of address are\nused, as a considerable volume of\nextra work is placed on the Canadian Postal Corps in its endeavor to\nkeep a smooth flow of mall to the\ntroops.\nThe public are again reminded of\nthe importance of correctly addressing soldiers' mail. Always give the\nregimental number, rank and name\nof the soldier, the battery, squadron\nor company he is In, and then the\nname of the unit in full; and if the\nsolider is overseas, address C.A.S.F.\nc-o Base Post Office, Canada. If the\nsoldier is still in Canada the letter\nshould be addressed with full particulars to the place Ln Canada\nwhere the soldier is located. Letters\nmust be properly prepaid. A return\naddress should be given in the upper left-hand corner.\nKuskanook Looks to\nGood Tourist Season\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014In an Interview\nwith Alfred Bysouth of Kuskanook\nit was learned that during the past\nseason a most encouraging increase\nin business took place over the previous season. Its closeness to Creston and Kuskanook's situation on\nthe Bay make it an ideal place for\ncommuters from the Creston district as well as appealing to transi-\nent tourist traffic. Many parties\nhave returned each year. This year\nthe Lodge will be modernized, into\na cafe and rooming place and the\noutlook looks bright for another\nsuccessful season. Some work is expected to be done on the foreshore\nto ensure good boating and bathing.\n-\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP Cable). -\nTotalitarian war was declared\nagainst Britain's wild rabbits by\nthe Ministry of Apiculture today.\nA departmental official estimated\nthey rob the country of upwards\nof \u00a340,000,000 ($1,780,000,000) produce yearly.\nNATAL LODGES\nINSTAL OFFICERS\nNATAL, B.C.-The Joint installation of the Natal-Michel Oddfellow's Lodge, No. 51, and the Cas-\nssndra Rebekah Lodge, No. 31, took\nplace at the I.O.O.F. Hall. The following memberi of the Oddfellows\nLodge were Installed: Past Noble\nGrsnd, Bro. L. Krall; Noble Grand,\nBro. H. Hughes, Sr.; Vice-Grand,\nBro. F. Shorrocks; Recording-Secretary, Bro. R. Ball, P.G.; Financial-\nSecretary, Bro. R. Truran, .P.G.;\nTreasurer, Bro. A. Huntley, P.C.;\nWarden, Bro. W. Talbot; Conducter,\nBro. P. Zoratti, jr., R.S.N.G.; Bro.\nH. Lyne, P.G.; LS.N.G.; Bro. L.\nLowe, P.G.; R.S.V.G.; Bro, E. Shorrocks; L.S.V.G.; Bro. J. Beswick,\nP.G.; inside Guard, Bro. J. Lowe;\nChaplain, Bro. E. Whalley, P.G.\nThe following members of the\nCassandra Rebekah Lodge that were\nduly Installed were: Junior Past\nNoble Grand, Sis. Mrs. J. Beswick,\nSr.; Noble Grand, Sis. Mrs. Whalley; Vice-Grand, Sis. Lowe' Recording-Secretary, Sis. Mri. J. Atkinson; Financial-Secretary, Sis. Mrs.\nL. Gallo; Treasurer, Sis. Mrs. S.\nBoulstrldge; Warden, Sis. Mn. R.\nMcFegan; Conductor, Sis. Miss De-\nLuca; Inside Guard, Sis, Mrs, R.\nWinstanley; Outside Guard, Sis. A.\nDeLuca; R.S.N.G., Sis. Mn. J. Rol-\nllson; L.S.N.G.. Sis. Mn. G. Man-\nnion; R.S.V.O., Sis- Mn. J. Lyne;\nLS.V.G., Sll. Mn. R. Ball; Chaplain,\nSis. Mrs. R. Harrison. The Installing\nofficers tor both the Oddfellows and\nthe members of the Cassandra Rebekah Lodge were Bro. E. Whalley, the Grand Marshall and Sis.\nMrs. J. Lyne of Michel, District Deputy President. After the installation\nthe joint members enjoyed a social\nevening which consisted of a turkey banquet followed by games'of\ncarpetball and bingo.\nNatal Ladies' Club\nHolds Whist Drive\nNATAL, B. C. - The Natal-Michel ladies of the 107th Club held a\nsuccessful whist drive in the Legion Hall at Michel when some 20\ntables were in play. The winners\nwere: Ladies' fint, Mrs. J. McLean;\nsecond, Mrs. J. Mitchell; third, Mrs.\nA. Krall. Gents, first, Jock Mitchell;\nsecond, Jack Jones; third, Vince\nMadevlc,\nThe ladles' travelling prize was\nwon by Mrs. A. Pugliese, while the\nmen's travelling prize was won by\nJ. McLean. Tap raffle of the silk\ncomforter was won by Mn. T. Lawes\nSAYS COMMUNISTS AT\nWORK IN VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nCharges that the Communist party is\nplanning to \"pull out another group\"\nof Vancouver workers next July in\nhopes of bringing on a general\nstrike were made by Vice-President\nBirt Showier of the Vancouver\nTrades and Labor Council during\ndiscussion of the recent waiters'\nstrike at Hotel Vsncouver.\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. .-Arrangements were mtde to serve refreshments at the bonspiel being\nheld Frldty tnd Stturdiy, when\nGovernment Squire Circle met\nTuesday evening tt the home of\nMrs. W. Swanson. An Interesting\ndevotional period wu conducted\nby Mn. W. M. Ctmeron. Refreshment! were served by tht hostess,\nwho wu assisted by Mn. C. H.\nClegg. Those present were Mrs. A.\nH. Freemen, Mn. R. Morin, Mrs.\nG. Joss, Mn. J. Hendenon. Mrs. H.\nBtthle. Mrs. H. Lefevre, Mrs. M.\nGrihaffl Mn. C. H. Cleg*, Mn. W\nM. Ctmeron, Mn. R. T. Fraser and\nMrt. F. Ehtrldge.\n.Work wu conUnued on the Bed\nCrosi quilt when Union Avenue\nCircle wai entertained on Tuesdiy\n.evening at the home of Mrs. G.\nSpilker. Refreshmenta were served\nby the hostess it the conclusion of\nthe work period. Members attending were Mn. J. Longitatf, Mn. L.\nKamm, Mn. G. Duckworth, Mn. E.\nDaly. Mn. J. porter, Mn. H. Evans,\ntnd Mn. Thomu Shaw ot Moose\nJtw.\nMn. J. Butcher wu hostess Tuesday tfternoon to the Women'i Auxiliary of St Georgt'l Anglican\nChurch. Mn. R. Berry assisted the\nhostess to serve tea. Those present\nwere Mrs. F. Newell, Mrs. S. E.\nThomas, Mrs. M. Storie, Mn. D. S.\nCatchpole, Mrs. R. Berry and Vsrs.\n3. H. Beley.\nwimw***9**!**\nas.'      . '      Sll. ','\n\\M\nJerman Hunt's\nAll Day\nBARGAINS\nBalance of Wools\nSkein or Ball\nKOTEX\n2 for..,.\n30-Year-Old Picture\nStarts Reminiscences\nof Procter Church Aid\nPROCTER, B.C.-The Ladies' Aid\nof St Andrew's United Church met\nFriday at the home of Mrs. G. Donaldson. An interesting photograph\ntaken 90 years ago when the Ladles'\nAid wu first organized, was ihown.\nThose who joined the Aid at that\ntime were the late Mrs. A. Gallup,\nand the late Mrs. E. Russell, Mrs.\nJ. Walker of Nelion, Mn. Wilson,\nt sister of the late Captain F. L.\nOtt, Mlsi Lottie Walton, now Mn.\nW. S. McAlplhe of Creston, Miss\nDaisy Walton, now Mrs. T. Weston\nof White Rock, B.C., Miss Hilda\nWalton, now Mrs. P. Bennett of\nProcter, Miss Johnson, school teacher here then.\nAt that time the church services\nand meetings were held ln a one-\nroom school house. The Aid has\nbeen very progressive, having as\nmany as 25 members at times.\nThe Aid was active ln helping\nto raise funds to build snd furnish\nboth church and manse and helped\na great deal in the up-keep.\nLEAFLET RAID TODAY\n\u25a0 VArTCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nVancouver will have an air raid\ntomorrow but leaflets \u2014 not bombs\n\u2014 will be dropped. The \"raid\" will\nbe staged as part of the \"Apple\nWeek\" program and some of the\nleaflets will bear lucky numbers,,\nentitling the finder to a box ofi\napples.\nKASLO\nKASLO,   B.C.\u2014Jim\nMacNIcol of Johnson's Ltnd\ncity visitors Monday.\nJ. R Bailey, who is pall..\nH. D. Dawson house, ipent I\nend at his home in Nelson.\nMrs. William Bowman\nion's Landing wu I Mond\nin Kaslo.\nH. J. Coles left Mondiy I\nseveral days ln New Denv\nA. R. Barrow of Johnsc\ning is spending t few days li\nOB.ECTORS NOT AFFI\nBY B.C. LICIK\"\nVICTORIA, Feb. 5 (OPh\nProvincial Licence Forfel\nCancellation  Aot doea n\nconscientious objectors to ts\nservice,  Attorney-General\nsaid today, adding that tht\nin its relation to the Natl,\nsources  Mobilization  Act\nonly to National Heglstrati\nHELP FRI\nCOLDS -nek\nTHIS QUICK, At flnt i\nHANDYWAY \"JBftg\nnoi up each nostril. Ita i\nictlon tlds Nature'! defens-H_\nthe cold. Keep lt handy. Uw A]\nVICKS VATRO-I\nP\/ccfye for War Savings*\nSALAM\nTEA\noooooqooo\nOOOOOOOQ-QTro-\nlo'Vin*'\/i-n w^-7efr')n\\\\*!> '\u2122&* ,t\\f^*Jt!cf'iitiif'\/*<s* -*?r!V',.._*\u2122 \u00ab\/**\nNOW\n__Vl   itif, x\\.ttJi,liVt\\\\tl,\u00bb.JIib try*\/.   \u00a3>#., atla   A,,,   ^' aliaaV.y aiif.w. \u00bb>r<-\\. UyllillM.^\nO   ''\/iii't,\\i e\"inn\\\\* z?ft*V{t*   '-f'Ji'n-'    \u2666jn^'iM li'1'  '''\/'ii*   ''1%*'!\" \u00bb'*,,,*'v_r\\*JwW\n90000000000000000000000!\nHollywood Beauty Care for __\nat a Real Saving!\n,\nDown goes the price of Lux Toilet Soap.\nAnd up goes the number of attractive\ngirls who will now enjoy Lux TolM\nSotp Whipped Cream Lather beeuft\ncare daily I\n9 out of 10 famous screen iter, a*\nLux Toilet Soap. Follow their lead ...\nuse Lux Toilet Soap tlways for your\ncomplexion. For daintiness' sake, mak*\nIt your regulir bath eoao, tool Begio\nyour Lux Toilet Sotp beauty care today.\nreen Stars\nlet Soap\n*?\nI\n Hriam Baihj Jforoa\nEstablished April 22. 1602.\nnOsh Columbia'! Most Interetting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sundayby\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n'266 Baker Street. Nelson, British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS^\t\nTHURSDAY, FEB. 6, 1941\n|YOU HAVE NOT YET PAID YOUR\nDOMINION INCOME TAX. . .\nwho paid not less than one-twelfth of their\nincome ty. by Jan. 31 could pay the balance in\nnts up to August without interest.\nlose of us who did not make a January payment may\nLvoid any interest charges by paying by April 30, but\n.will assist Canada's war financing and in cases in\nh the sum is fairly large make the liquidation of their\nnedness comparatively painless by paying in two or\ni instalments between now and April 30. The tax\n[be split in three instalments and, providing that the\n[instalment goes in before April 30, without involving\nInterest costs. Those who can pay the whole amount\njjnonth will not only have the matter off their minds\n|iey will aid the country's war financing.\nHITLER SEEKS TO RAISE A\nNORWEGIAN FORCE\n'ari Germany is tempting young Norwegians to join\nirman armed forces and thus oppose their brothers\nJiwe fighting for Norwegian liberation, according to\npent dispatch from Oslo.\nVidkun Quisling, occupied Norway's Little Fuehrer,\ntins in a decree that during his visit to Berlin, Hitler\nself offered him and his young Nazis at home the\nilege of joining the German armed \"S. S.\" forces,\nng men from 17 to 23 would \"have the opportunity\"\nfirming a special regiment called \"Nordland\" to be\ned under German command. They would thus feel\nletelves members of \"the great Germanic race\" and be\ntto take part in the glorious struggle against the\nICnies of the world\" and share in the \"delivery of the\nm race.\"\no_e decree then promises rewards ranging from gov-\nlent jobs after one year of service to completely built-\nirms for those who actually fight for two years. As\n\u25a0jdltional recompense, German citizenship is also offer-\nind it is promised that these volunteers will be sent to\nMB resembling the Norwegian countryside\"!\nAs a violation of intertiational law, this action of the\nnans is perhaps the most far-reaching of the present\nJ.For since Norway is still a belligerent country with\n\u25a0\u25a0Germany as her enemy, all Norwegians in the occupied\nland are technically prisoners of war, and as such-\nding to rules accepted among civilized nations for\niries\u2014they should never be asked to take up arms on\ntlf of the enemy.   At the beginning of the invasion of\n(ray, nine months ago, the Nazis solemnly declared\nfcthey would never try to make Norway a fighting\nBer against Great Britain and the other democracies\n[\u25a0more promise, and one more canon of international\nHave been broken.\nThis fresh evidence supports the assumption that Ger-\nliaced with eventual uprisings in all occupied terri-\n*-., will try to preserve her conquests by turning brother\ninst brother, and reach out for new conquests with\nslave-soldiers.\nially\nQuestionsI 1\nLnswers\nto tny reader, Namet of\nni aiking question! will not\nbe published.\n, Rossland\u2014I am 20 years of\nI have worked for the C. M.\n(.\u2022 a little better than five\n(ha In 1940, the income from\n|h amounted to $089. I am\nbrting my parents (my fa-\nEw-ls unable to secure work).\nteen January 1, 1940 till I\nM to work for the C. M. & S.,\nHo.ed $160, partly in trade, for\njhree of us- My father earned\nft $130 during the summer!\nId I have to pay Dominion\nme Tt.-, and would I get\nping back on the Provincial,\n:h the C. M. __ S. deducts 1\n[cent monthly? If so, how\nb? Are my parents depond-\n. if I am supporting them,\n. my father is unable to ob-\njwork? If I pay tax, what is\nmount I pay on?\nI far as the Dominion Nation-\nfence Tax is concerned your\n| are not dependents unless\nng from physical or mental\nMy, but if you are maintain-\nSelf-contained domestic esurient containing at least two\nims and supporting your par-\nou are not liable for this tax.\nhave paid it you can apply\n'Department of National De-\nIt Vancouver for a rebate as\nlaming for 1940 are below\nfor 1941 if your income con-\ntt the present rate of over\n|l year  you  will be subject\ntax in 1942. If so qualified\nbtaining a separate domestic\nihment you are not subject to\nion Income Tax for 1940. Un-\nI provincial income tax law\nhre an exemption as a single\nI $600, but you could claim\ntotal exemption as a\nbolder who \"maintains a\nStained domestic eitablish-\ngfid who actually supports\nfc one or more individuals\"\nbd with you by blood rela-\nk providing that you do\nIn such an establishment. If\nI not, your provincial income\n(Uld be $2 49, but as you have\nlore than this sum. prosum-\nB.Bft in 1 per cent deductions\nfluid have coming a rebate,\n'Would be anon. $4.40. If you\n(lor the exemption of $1000\nre entitled to the return of\ntal deductions for the 1  per\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C\nG\/L JhfL QJjl\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1941\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:97\u20140 Canada\n8:00-BBC News\n8:15\u2014Clark Dennis, Tenor\n8:30\u2014Muiical Varieties\n8:45\u2014Lyle Henderson, Pianist\n9:00\u2014Th* News\n9:15\u2014Sweet-Hour ol Prayer\n9:30\u2014B, C. Schooli Broadcast\n10:00\u2014Muiical Interlude (CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Our Family (CKLN)\n10:48\u2014The Newi\n11:00\u2014Women'i Comer (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014TJ. S. Marine Band\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B. C Firm Broadcast\n12:30\u2014The Newi\n12:49\u2014Muiical Melodies (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014School   ot  the   Air  ol   the\nAmericas\nl:30-Vocal Varletiei (CKLN)\n1:45-Talk\n2:00\u2014Closing Stocki\n2:15\u2014Columbia Concert Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Popular Songi\n2:15-BBC Newi\n3:00\u2014Questions ot the Hour\n3:15\u2014Message trom Sandy McPher-\nson\n3:30-Becltal\n3*45\u2014Talk\n4:00\u2014CBC String Orcheitrt\n4:30\u2014Clyde Side Concert\n4:55\u2014Commentary on the Newt\n5:00\u2014Mid-Week Service of Inter-\nceulon.\n5:30\u2014On Parade\nEVENINC\n\u00ab:00-Rad-o, Birthday  Ptrty\n(CKLN)\n6:30\u2014South American Serenade\n6:45\u2014Supper Melodies (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014The News\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30-BBC Radio Newi Reel\n8:00\u2014Choristers & Strings\n8:30\u2014Stag Party\n8:00\u2014Glen Gray's Orch.\n9:30\u2014John Aviaon's Orch.\n10:00\u2014Generally Speaking\n10:15-The Newi\n10:30\u2014Music by Woodbury\n11:00\u2014God Save The King\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nJoe acts like he was forty and\ndresses like he was twenty, but he\ndon't fool anybody. When a mature man prefers girls in their\nteens, he's got grey hairs in his\nears.\"\njut yoiiA&jrffc\n1. To whom was Walt Whitman\nreferring to his poem, \"0 Captain\nMy Captain\"?\n2. What two English sovereigns\ngave their names to eras?\n3. What famous painter ls called\n\"the master of shadows\"?\nONE-MINUTE  TE8T  ANSWERS\n1. Abraham Lincoln.\n2. Queen Elizabeth and Queen\nVictoria.\n3. Rembrandt.\nWAR\u201425 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Pren\nFeb. 6, 1916\u2014Russians reported\nheavy German casualties in fighting on the Dniester River. King\nGeorge V made first public appearance since falling from his horse\nwhile reviewing troops on the Western Front, Oct. 28, 1915.\nL\nB.J., Nelson\u2014Where would I write\nto obtain Information on Joining\nthe Air Force at Calgary?\nWrite Recruiting Officer, R.C.A.F.,\nCalgary.\nDomestic, Trail \u2014 What are the\ngrounds for a divorce in B.C.?\nAdultery.\nCan you secure a divorce in any\ncourt  where  a   Supreme  Court\njudge presides?\nYea.\nHas where you live or where you\nwere   married   any   bearing   on\nwhere you secure a decree?\nYou must be domiciled in BC.\nbut any Supreme Court judge in the\nprovince may hear your application.\nMust you appear in person?\nThe applicant must appear ln\nperson.\nIf the defendant fails to appear and\ndoesn't offer any  rebuttal testimony, what happens?\nWhether  the defendant  appears\nor not, the applicant must prove his\nor her case,\nA.N., Nelson\u2014Is there a branch of\nthe Federal Union in Nelson?\nWe do not know of any such body\nin Nelson.\nF.A., Michel-Could you tell me If\nthe.shares of Nesikep Placer Ltd.,\nN.P.L.O., have any market value?\nWe cannot find that this company\nis quoted on any of the stock exchanges but you may be able to\nobtain information from P. E. Poulin, Stockbroker, Nelson.\nM.W, Kimberley\u2014During the war\nof 1914-18 I became a life member of the Red Cross. I had my\ncertificate which 1 have not been\nable to find since I went away.\nWould a record of this be kept,\nand where would I write for\nsame?\nWrite Canadian Red Cross Society, 95 Wellesley Street, Toronto.\nIn reference to the Inouiry re age\nof dependents from J.E.C., South\nSlocan, we have been reminded that\nour answer pertained to the Dominion Income Tax exemptions. A\ndependent as classed by the provincial form \"means a child or relative of the taxpayer under the age\nof 18 years who resides as t member of the taxpayer's household\nwithin the Province and who U\nwholly dependent upon the taxpay-\ner for support, or a child or relative of the taxpayer over that age\nwho resides within the Province\nand Is wholly dependent upon the\ntaxpayer (or support on account ol\nphysical or mental incapacity.\"\nIf your birthday ls today, look\nfor a year of ups and downs. You\nare threatened with sudden upheavals, Imposition or disappointment.\nYou should be discreet to your conduct. Gain will come to you through\nan elder. The child born on this\ndate will possess an inventive,\nquiring mind, and will be very\noriginal and eager for reforms. He\nor she will, however, be somewhat\neccentric, and liable to unexpected\nreversals.\nDust of Gold\nNazism Cannot Be\nAllowed to Win\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\n(Cinadian Preu Stiff Writer)\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (CP).\u2014The\nultimate defeat of Germany is a\ncertainty, Seymour Jacklin, Treasurer of the League of Nations,\naaid today in an interview.\n\"In regard this as significant: Nazism Just cannot be allowed to win.\nIf it did, it would not be long before every nation, small or great,\nwould become its vassal and the\nstandard of civilization would revert to that of the ninth century.\nJacklin who arrived in New York\nfrom Geneva by a roundabout route\nthrough unoccupied France and\nNorth Africa, based his belief in\nthe ultimate defeat of Germany on\nobservations and contacts ln Britain,\nFrance, Belgium and the Netherlands.\nJacklin declared some form of an\nInternational organization with\npower to apply military as well as\neconomic sanctions against aggros-\nsor nations, will be established, af'\nter the war.\nIt might take the form of a re-\nconstructed league or lt might be\nlimited at first to an English-speaking union but, to any event, it must\nhave military force at its disposal\n'to impose its will. -\nJacklin does not believe Hitler\nwill make a lerlous attempt to invade Britain because of its certainty\nto fail. \"The Germans are too clever\nto be so mad,\" he said.\nSimilarly, he doei not believe the\nGermans will make a drive through\nthe Balkans or through Spain to\nGibraltar. It Is his opinion the Nazis\nwill attempt to organzie Europe economically and politically, meanwhile proposing varioui peace\nterms.\nThis stalemate, Jacklin suggested,\nwill continue until Britain is strong\nenough to land troops on the continent.\n-THURSDAY MORNINO. FEB. 6. 1941-\nCONTRACT\nCOUNTING IS THE K__\nW MANY a hand, counting the\n\u25a0opponents' distribution Is the key\nto success. Watching the drop of\ntbt cards as varioui tricks are\nplayed, tnd occasionally referring\nbtck to the \"bidding for information, It It frequently 'possible to\ndetermine that \u00bb certain Une of\nplay cannot work, because tome\ntuit Is unhappily bunched against\n, yon. Ttxtt gives you the office to\n\u25a0eek tome other method, which\nwill St the circumstances you deduce.\n\u2666 T4\nfAJ\u00bb$-\n\u2666 J 10 5 4\n\u2666QO\nI\n85-\nKQ84\nih7\njr.\n.1.\n\u2666 Q J 10 9\n910 7\n\u2666 63\nA, J 10 8 6\n\u2666-__.\u00ab\u00bb\n\u2022\u25a0_\n:<\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb\nAKT4I\n(Dttltr:!! 8out_.1[Mor\u00abh-9o_th\nvataerable.) _\nBin      West    Worth       East\nIV      DtY Fan\nSouth's Jtrrnp harto 3 No Trumps\n\u2022ms thoroughly tound because of\nthe vulnerability situation. His\nBtutner. doable for penalties\nmade the game teem quite likely,\n\u25a0nd Hie job of setting a not-vulnerable declarer at 1-Heart doubled for at many pointi seemed\nunlikely. With different vulnerability, South would have passed.\nWut led the diamond K, then\ntwitched to the tpade 8, East\nplaying the 8 and South deciding\n|*o dock this. He wed hit tpade\nK to take tht Q. whleh wts returned, then led the d-swad Q to\n*n A. West ret-rned the soode\nBy Shepard Barclay\n2 to tne a ana south thtn overtook Mi diamond 9 with dummy'i\n10, East dlscardirtg a heart Wett\nwat now marked aa having htd\nthree spades, four diamonds and\nenough hearts to bid them, either\nfour or five, ao lt was clear the\nclubs could not break. Hence only\neight tricks teemed In tight-\nthree In clubs, two tn diamonds,\ntwo ln spades and ene In hearts.\nBut a lead-throwing tad-play ln\nhearts could do the trick.\nSo South raked ln tht diamond\nJ and three high clubt, leaving\nWest nothing but hearts. To the\neleventh trick then ht led his\nhetrt 5. When West played the 8,\nhe took with dummy's 3, and tht\nA was the winning trick. If West\nhad played hit heart Q or K on\nthe 8, South would have ducked In\ndummy and made Weit lead to\nthe A-J. Note thtt If West had\nearlier led toward the heart honors and West played the Q, the\ncontract could not have been\nmade, at then the hearts would\nfinally have had to be led from\nthe dummy to West\n'We German-Americans Hate\nTyranny' States Willkie's\nMessage to German People\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (AP). - Wendell Willkie left a message in Great\nBritain for the German people declaring \"We German-Americans reject and hate the aggression and\nlust for power ot the present German Government.\"     '\nThe Willkie message, released by\nthe. Ministry of Information, said\nhis convictions were \"shared to th*\nfull by the overwhelming majority\nof my fellow countrymen of German descent.\"\nMr. Willkie had already started\nback to the United States from London when the Ministry of Information released his statement.\n\"I am of purely German descent,\"\nbis  message  began.  \"My  family\nname is not Willkie, but Willicke.\nMy grandparents left Germany 90\nyears ago because they were Prot\nestants against autocracy and demanded the right to live as fret\nmen, I, too, claim that right.\n\"I am proud of my German blood.\nBut I hate aggression and tyranny.\n\"Tell the German people that my\nconvictions are shared to the full by\nthe overwhelming majority of my\nfellow countrymen of German descent. They, too, believe in freedom\nand ln human rights.\nTell the Germaa people that w*\nGerman-Amerlcansf reject and hat*\nthe aggression and lust for power\nof the present German Government\"\n\u2666 10653\n3\n\u00bb97_\n\u2666 Q9I\n\u2666 J\n\u00bbAKJJ\n\u2666 10 8 2\n+ AQ1085\naV.\nM\n__\n\u2666 KQT4\n\u2666 A J53\n\u00ab9482  .\n\u2666 A 9 8 '\n*) Q 10 8 \u00ab I\n4VK7-\n\u25a0*-.\u2022>\ntaj******. south.' North-South]\nvulneraWe.)\nAfter South's 1-Heart on this!\ndeal and West's pass, whst Is\nNorth's best call?\nGov'. Wishes to Make\nBest Use of League in\nCanada and the U.S.\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP Cable).-\nThe Government desires to make\nthe best use ot League of Nations\norganizations in Canada and the\nUnited Statei, Richard Butler, Foreign Under-Secretary, said to the\nHouse \/of Commons today in reply-\ntog to a question about the League's\noverseas activities.\nMr. Butler iald he understood the\nwork of the League's economic and\nfinancial section to the United\nStates Is proceeding satisfactorily\nwhile the International labor organization's staff ta Canada ls carrying\non its work as far as possible on\nnormal lines.\n\"Simon ... shall tell thee words,\nwhereby thou and all thy house\nshall   be   saved.\"-Acts   11:14.\n\"Jesus finally won. His whole\nfamily to His cause. There was a\ntime when \"his brethren did not\nbelieve in Him.\" But at Pentecost\nthey were all there\u2014\"His Mother\nand His brethren\", waiting for the\ngift of the Spirit Apparently, they\nhad all been won. But Jesus did not\nwin His family by compromising\nwith them. He won them by making sacrifices that cost both Him\nand them to make. Many are willing to sacrifice for the Kingdom,\nbut not if lt costs suffering to their\nloved ones. A mistake. Our decisions will involve our loved ones\nin common suffering with us. But\nit works both ways, for as sacrifice\nwill lift us, so it will lift them. We\nbreak with them on a lower level\nin order to meet them on a higher.\"\n\u2014_. Stanley Jones.\n(jLtoJidtL oft. iOidJoitt\nMusic Is a discipline, and a mistress of order and good manners,\nshe makes people milder and gentler, more moral and more reasonable.\u2014Luther.\nA bride ihould never exchange\nthe gifts from her family or the\ngroom's family unless she Is especially told to do so. It is permissible,\nhowever, to exchange other gifts\nwhen she has several articles of the\nsame kind.\nLEADER OF HOUSE PAYS\nTRIBUTE TO LORD LLOYD\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP Cable). -\nLord Snell, Acting Leader of the\nHouse of Lords, paying tribute to\nLord Lloyd in the Upper House today said the country had lost \"a\ndistinguished servant and one of\nits dynamic personalities.\"\nLords Addison, Samuel, Croft and\nSimon spoke movingly of Lord\nLloyd, whose death prevented him\nassuming the leadership of the\nHouse of Lords, to which he had\nbeen appointed in succession to\nViscount Halifax\n\\\nWeir to Speak on\nRejection of Sirois\nVICTORIA, Feb. 5 \u2014 Hon* G.\nM. Weir, Provincial Secretary announced today he will deliver three\nradio addresses over CJOR, Vancouver, giving reasons for rejection\nof the Sirois Report by the British\nColumbia Government. The first\naddress will be given Feb. 13 from\n6:30 to 7; the second Feb. 20, from\n7:30 to 8 and the third Feb. 27 also\nfrom 7:30 to 8 pjn. Dr. Weir will\ndeal with various phases of the Report\nU.S. LEGION MISSION\nLEAVES FOR BRITAIN\nNEW YORK, Fen. 5 (AP). \u2014 A\nfour-man American Legion mission\nheaded by National Commander\nMilo J. Warner, started for Lon\ndon by. Clipper plane today to\n\"look, listen and learn\" about civilian defence methods in Great\nBritain. Warner said the mission\nhad the approval of President Roosevelt and the State Department\nbut emphasized It was \"purely non-\npolitical.\" He said the group, if\npossible, would spend a few days in\nUnoccupied France.\nShotgun Death\nRevives Legend of\nLambton \"Gurse\"\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (OP). \u2014 A legendary story of a titled family's\n\"curse\" dating back to the 12th century \u2014 the curse of the Lambton\nworm \u2014 was revived today by the\nshotgun death of the 20-year-old\nLord Lambton.\nThe body of the young son and\nheir of the Earl of Durham was\nfound yesterday slumped over a\nfountain on the front lawn of his\ncountry estate near Woolder, to\nNorthumberland.\nA coroner garve a verdict that\nLord Lambton died of a \"self-inflicted\" wound while of \"unsound\nmind.\"\nThe origin, circumstances and\nhistory of the ancient \"curse\" are\nvague, and accounts fall to thow\nhow frequently the family suffered\ntragedy from the L.th century, to\nmodern times, but several members have met untimely deaths in\nrecent years.\nThe legend says one of the earliest Lambtons slew a worm so huge\nit could wind itself around a hfil\nnear the family castle. The price of\nhis victory was a pledge that he\nshould kill the next living creature\nhe met He saw his father next\u2014\nand did not kill him. For this, the\nLords Lambton for nine generations\nwere ' \"doomed\" to suffer.\nGervasse Lambton, 25-year-old\ncousin of the preient Earl, disappeared from a Red Sea liner in\n1937.\nAnother cousin wss killed and hli\nwife seriously injured in a traffic\ncollision in England a year later.\nBeatrix, wife of the fourth'Earl,\nfell while shopping for a granddaughter's wedding present In 1937\nand died a week later \u2014 on the\nwedding day. Eight yean earlier\nher husband had died four months\nafter succeeding to the title.\n___.___, :\nNAZIS COMPLAIN OF\nLARGE-SCALE FOOD\nSABOTAGE IN PRAGUE\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP). \u2014 German agricultural agents in Prague\nare complaining of \"large-scale sabotage\" of food supplies intended\nfor Germany, the British Broadcasting Corporation reported today.\n\"Accordingto news reaching London,\" the HBC said \"many thousands of pigs, calves and other cattle\nhave been secretly slaughtered. Last\nyear 13,000 wagon loads of grain\nand at least 300,000 tons of meat\nwere successfully hidden and prevented from reaching Germany.\"\nAlthough the agents have asked\nfor more rigid German control of\nCzechoslovakian markets, no order\nfor house inspections has been issued, ilnce the Germans fear such\na move would result to more supplies being destroyed, BBC said.\nROOSEVELT .ASSISTANT\nWELCOMED IN CHINA\nHONG KONG, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nLaughlin Currie, Administrative\nAssistant to President Roosevelt-\narrived here in a Clipper plane today and prepared to fly tomorrow\nto Chungking, seat of the Chiang\nKai-Shek Government\nChinese newspapers warmly welcomed Currie, whose mission at\nChungking, they believed, would\ndetermine the extent of future American aid to China.\nHOPES BULGARIA WILL\nRESIST AXIS PRESSURE\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (OP). - Authoritative circles said today reports had been received of \"a good\ndeal of Infiltration of so-called tourists\" into Bulgaria and declared\nthe Balkan cation faces \"the same\nfate as Rumania unless, she takes\ntne necessary steps.\"\nBritons hope Bulgaria can take\na cue from Greece and resist Axis\npressure with the backing of Britain and Turkey, it was said here,\ndespite the fact Germans controlled\nabout 90 per cent of Bulgaria's foreign trade l *\nthe war.\nbefore th* outbreak of\nMerchant Ships\nHead British List\nof Needed Material\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (AP). -\nBritish sources said today merchant\nships, bombing planes, tanks and\ninfantry rifles \u2014 in that order \u2014\nheaded the list of war materials\nBritain hopes to get from United\nStates under the ''Lease-Lend\" Bill\nnow being debated in the House of\nRepresentatives.\nThey declined to estimate the cost\nof that equipment or to give more\ndefinite information about types\nand auantlties, but recurrent rumors here have placed total cost of\nthe program in excess of $3,000,000.\nLORD LLOYD DIES\nLORD LLOYD\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (OP), \u2014 Lord\nLloyd, 81, British Colonial Secretary and Government Leader ln the\nHouse of Lords, died last midnight.\nLord Lloyd sandwiched five yean\nof service from 1918 to 1923, as Governor of Bombay between terms In\nthe House of Commons and then\nwas High Commissioner for Eg\nand the Sudan from 1928 to 192\nIt was not until Prime Minister\nChurchill called him to the Colonial Secretaryship last May that he\nheld a Ministerial post. Later he\nbecame Government Leader in the\nHouse of Lords when Viscount Halifax was appointed Ambassador to\nthe United States.\nHe was elevated to the peerage\nin 1925 as the first Baron Lloyd.\nHis son, 28-year-old Alexander David Frederick Lloyd, succeeds to the\ntitle.\nCanada lo Start\nSalvage Drive\nOTTAWA, Feb. J (CP). - In.\nauguration of a nationwide salvage\ncampaign was announced today by\nHon. J. Q. Gardiner, Minister of\nNational War Services.\nThe object will be to collect and\nsave iuch wast* articles and materials as may be sold at a profit or\nused in current war production.\nThe campaign will be under th*\ndirection of Mr. Justice T. C. Dawli,\nAssociated Deputy Minister of National War Services, who has written to all members of the House of\nCommons asking them to organize\nthe movement in their constituencies.\nFORMER ACTOR AT SEA\nON R.CN. VESSEL\nAN EAST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT, Feb. 5 (CP).-Lleut John\nFarrow, husband of Screen Stex\nMaureen O'Sullivan and former\nHollywood film director, now is at\nsea aboard a Royal Canadian navy\nvessel.\nTHIRD CLASS FOR SKI\nINSTRUCTORS OPENS FEB. 7\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (OP). - A\nthird class for ski instructors for\nthe Canadian (Active) Army will\nopen here Feb. 7, the Defence Department announced today.\nHALIFAX CONFERS WITH\nU.S. STATE SECRETARY\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (AP). -\nViscount Halifax, British Ambassador to the United States, conferred\nwith the U. S. State Secretary, Cordell Hull, for an hour today on\nwhat he described as \"the general\nsituation.\"\nLord Halifax told reporters he had\nnot discussed questions of economic\nwarfare or any other specific problems, but had confined himself to\na general discussion of matters of\ncommon interest to the United\nStates and Great Britain.\nBAN EXPORT OF FRENCH\nFRUIT AND BREAD\nVICHY, France, Feb. 5 (AP). -\nExportation of fruit, fresh vegetables and bread except to parts\nof the French Empire was prohibited today by a Vichy Governmental\ndecree. A newspaper at Bordeaux\nsaid yesterday Southern France\nhad sent all available fruit to Germany.\nCALLS ON SYRIANS\nTO FOLLOW PETAIN\nDAMASCUS, Syria, Feb. 5 (AP).\n\u2014 Gen. Henri Dentz, French High\nCommissioner to Syria, called on\nall civilians and members of the\narmed forces in a broadcast address\nyesterday to follow without reservation orders from Marshal Philippe Petain.\nTrainee Awaits R.C.A.F. Call\n\"Jeff\" Hartrldge of Nelson was awaiting a call from the Royal\ninfantry training at Vernon.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\nCanadian Air Force while he received Infantry training at Vernon.\n--'\u25a0_iai\nCompulsory Wool\nGrading Starts April 1\nTORONTO, Feb. 5 (CP). - Under\na new ruling to become effective\nApril 1, grading of wool in Canada\nwill become compulsory, A. A. McMillan of the Dominion Department\nof Agriculture, Ottawa, told the Ontario Sheep Breeders' Association\ntoday.\nHe said stations for grading will\nbe located to all wool growing\nareas. These stations, under the Dominion Department, would be housed to all wool warehouses and\nwould be operated at a minimum\ncost.\nDr. W. G. Hopper of the Dominion Department of Agriculture\nsaid that if sheep breeders want to\nincrease consumption of Iambi they\nmust get the low-income groups to\neat it\nHe said educating consumers to\nprepare and cook lamb ihould result in increased consumption.\nSCORES WORK OF FIFTH\nCOLUMNISTS IN CHURCH\nEDMONTON, Feb. 5 (CP).-Work\nof \"Fifth Columnists in the Church\"\nwas assailed here Tuesday at opening sessions of the annual meeting\nof the Board of Home Missions ol\nthe Lutheran Church's Alberta and\nBritish Columbia District (Missouri\nSynod).\nThose attending Included: Rev. C.\nC Janzow, Vernon, B. C; Rev. E.\nA. Biberdorf, Fruitvale, B. C; Rev.\nA. H. Haake, New Westminster, B.C.\nCOAST JAPANESE URGE\nWAR EFFORT SUPPORT\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). - A\nresolution urging full support for\nCanada's war effort and recommend its members buy more war\nsavings certificates, has been endorsed by the Japanese Camp and\nMill Workers' Union, the Vancouver\nTrades and Labor council was told\nlast night by T. Umezukl, delegate,\nMISSING BOYS FOUND\nDEAD IN RIVER\nCALGARY, Feb. 5 (CP). - The\nbodies of three small boys, missing\nsince yesterday, were recovered today from the ley waters of the Elbow River a short distance below\nthe Canadian National Railway\nbridge here. The children were\nJackie Henderson, 5; Bobby McAndrew, 9; and Jackie Campt, 5.\nIAPANESE TRANSPORT\nCARRIES DIPLOMATS\nLISBON, Feb. 5 (AP).-A Japanese transport Is scheduled to arrive here Feb. 18 to \"land In Europe\nnew naval and air military attaches\nand other diplomatic personnel,\" it\nIs announced. The ship will return\nto Tokyo with Japanese diplomats\non leave from Europe and civilians,\nlt was said. ,\nKINC RECEIVES\nNEW NAVAL CHIEF\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP Cable). -\nCommodore L. W. Murray, who ar\nrived here Monday ai senior Canadian naval officer in the United\nKingdom, formally presented his\ncredentials today when he was received in audience by the King.\nSUGGESTS TAX ON TIPS\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP). - A suggestion the Government legislate\nagainst personal \"tipping\" and permit a 10 per cent service charge on\nhotel and dining room cheques, the\nextra amount to be distributed\namong the staff, has been receive^\nfrom a Toronto waiter as a means\nof taxing gratuities, it was revealed\ntoday by C. Fraser Elliott, Commissioner of Income Tax.\nGerman Plane\n(rashes In Eire\nDUBLIN, Feb. 5 (CP). - The Bin\nGovernment announced today that\n\"this morning a German aircraft\ncrashed in the vicinity of SohuU,\nCounty Work.\" Five, ot til* crew\nwere killed and th* sixth man\nbadly injured, fhe announcement\nsaid.\nPersoni In ih* vicinity said lh*\nplane wai seen moving over the bay\nemitting smoke. It blazed furiously\nafter the crash.\nSchull Is a Uttle coaital town In\nSouthwestern Ireland. Nazi long-\nrange bomberi from French bases\nhave been operating off Western\nIreland against shipping to the Atlantic,\nrinMMiiiiiimiiiim\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nEating\nApples\nEverybody around the Pacific\nMilk premises is eating apples.\nThis is Apple Week and interest in the Okanagan apple \u00bb'\nkeen. Apples are rather ideal\nwhen you wish a light meal.\nBaked, boiled, stewed; made\ninto apple dumplings, apple\nsauce or apple pie; any way\nyou enjoy them you can\nheighten trie pleasure by adding Pacific Milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated  and  Vacuum   Packed\nVITAMINS\n_ifr#>*v\nGive kirn his daily\nHALIBORANGE\nrhaNlta,lWarofr\u00ab.lr,gHollbulll\u00bb\u00abOr|\nChildren need more vitamins A and\nD In winter to make up for lack of\nsummer sunshine. Give your kiddles a dally dose of natural vitamins In the form of Hallborange.\nThat will help to keep them strong\nond healthy. Haliboronge provides the essential vitamins A and\nD contained In Halibut Liver OII\nand also vitamin C found In th*\nfresh orange juice. It Is delicious\nto take. Hallborange Is twice ai\nrich In vitamins A and D oi Cad\nLiver Oil.\nAdults, too, find Haliboronge bene-\nficlal In warding off winter's Mil\nand In restoring vitality. Try It.\nHaliboronge Is a real health restorer.\nALIEN 4 1IANBURY8 CO. LIMITED\nL1nde-y, Ontario\nh-d to __-\u00bb--__ 0\n\u00bb\ni \u25a0\"\u00bb--*-;__ __[';_*_-___:\u25a0__!.\n; . .      . : \u201ei i__.r_fari.ft-Battatf\nMjyras|hMJjk4\u00a3\nI   ilJatf-ftWii lltri-tl     I\n ppp\nw*\u2014mm**m*m**i**^ \\ ' \u25a0^\"\"^\u25a0i\"\n  \u25a0\u25a0NIHON DAILY NIW*. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. PI*. 9. 1M1\u2014\u2014\n\u00ab*J*.I'._ ,lm.*mVm!,!li,r***i- | |   \"i\"-.\nY0\/\/ w\/7\/ fo g\/_W 0\/ \/fo\/\/z tor.\nCanada's 2,000,000 wage and salary earners are asked to save\u2014every week and every\nmonth\u2014to help provide arms and equipment for our fighting forces.\nIn .Total War, civilians must fight, too. Their weapon is their money. You can fight\nwith your money, as it provides the sinews of war.\nThe bound en duty of every civilian, therefore, is to save to the limit of his or her ability\nand loan the savings to Canada by investing in War Savings Certificates.\nRemember, you are not asked to give your money, but to loan it For every $4 you loan\nnow, you will get back $5 in 7J_ years. Your savings will earn 3% interest.\nTens of thousands 'of men and women have already pledged themselves to invest in\nWar Savings Certificates by means of the Payroll Savings Plan which is now in operation,\nor which is being organized by every employer. But tens of thousands are not enough.\nThere are two million wage and salary earners in Canada, and every one is expected to\ndo his or her share.\nIf you have not already done so, pledge yourself and invest by means of the Payroll\nSavings Plan. Canada asks no more of you. Your conscience should demand no less\nof you.\nJust how much you can invest will depend upon your circumstances. Do all that you caiu *\nThe following table is suggested as an average basis for saving:\nMaturity Values of\nEarning! per Week Savingi per Week Annual Purchase!\nUp to $20 25c to $1 $15   to $65\nOver $20 to $30 $1.25 to $2 $80   to $130\nOver $30 to $40 $2.25 to $3.50 $145 to $225\nOver $40 $3.75 to $9.25 $245 to $600\nTo Employers\nTake the initiative. Urge your employees to save. Give them\nleadership. If you haven't already done to, organize a Payroll\nSavings Plan at once. See that everyone participates in it. The\nPayroll Savings Plan has proven to be the most satisfactory\nmethod for getting employees to save and invest regularly.\nWAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES\nPu blltbicl by Ths War Samntt Com m il tee, Ottawa\n-\u25a0_\u25a0*-*\u25a0\nDynamiters Turn in\na Stellar Display;\nDown Calgary 5-4\n_ Horn f.nln\nKimberley Skiers Htrt\nen Route to Western.\n, Con. Championships\nTom Anderson, President, and\nSam Wormlngton of the Kimberley\nSki Club pasted through Nelspn\nWednesday en route to Princeton to\ncompete in the Western Canada Ski\nchampionships. The tournament is\nslated for Friday, Saturday and\nSunday*.\nTrail Spitfires\nTie Thistles.-.\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 5\u2014Thistles and\nSpitfires tied 3-8 in a Juvenile\nHockey League game Tuesday\nnight. Each team scored one goal\nduring each period. Harold Hodge,\nBilly Dimock and Ian McLeod\nscored for the Thistles, and Andy\nglimovich   scored   one,   and   Keg\nevlln two, for the Spitfires.\nCity Skiers Go fo\nRossland Sunday\nA number of Nelaon skiers plan\nto Journey to the Rossland ikl hills\nSunday to attend the Rossland-Trail\nMen's Ski Tournament. If the representation is sufficiently large a\nbus will be chartered, otherwise\nthe Queen City planksters will\ntravel by private car.\nThe tourney will schedule men'i\nevents only, and include slalom\nand A and B class Jumping competition. Trail and Rossland skiers only\nwill be eligible as prize winners,\nthe tourney being regarded as a\nClub event, but an invitation haa\nbeen extended Nelson skiers to\nenter events.\nA ladies tournament ls planned\nby the Trail and Rossland Clubs for\nFebruary 16.\n-PKtt -IV-n\nFREEMAW\nFURNITURE COMPANY   J\u00bb^\nTh* 'House ol Furnitur* Values\nEagle Block     Nelion     Phoni 11S\nYour Dollars\nBuy More\nAt Our Store\nHockey Playoff\nDates Are Set\nPORT ARTHUR, Feb. S (CP)-\nWcstern Canada hockey playoff\ndates were announced here today\nby Frank Sargent, First ViceJPreei-\ndent of the Canadian Amateur\nHockey Association.\nSargent said that if the playoff\nimes are poorly supported anywhere, the CA&A. reserves the\nright to make last-minute revision\nin the schedule.\nThe schedule Includes:\n8ENIOR\nB-2\u2014Alberta vs. -British Columbia, three-of-five series. First game\nat B.C. March 18: balance ait Alberta\nMarch 22, 24, X -and 29.\nC\u2014Western finals, three-of-five\ngames. If Saskatchewan enters the\nfinal, first two games ln Alberta:\nbalance in Saskatchewan, If final\nbetween B.C. and Thunder Bay or\nManitoba, first two gamei in Alberta or Saskatchewan; balance ln\nThunder Bay or Manitoba, If final\nbetween Alberta and Thunder Bay\nor. Manitoba, first; two games In\nAlberta: balance at Thunder Bay\nor Manitoba.\nJUNIOR\nB\u2014Albert* vs. Saskatchewan,\nthree-of-five series. March 22 and\n24 at Alberta, March 21, 28 aud 31\nat Saskatchewan,\nC\u2014Western finals, three-of-five\nseries. April 3,'S, 7, 9 and 11.\nHockey Schedule\nNATIONAL\nDetroit at Canadiens.\nChicago at Rangers.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nVancouver at Portland.\nOKANAGAN\nKelowna at Lumby.\nIce schedule of the Nelson Amateur Hockey Association for the balance of the week is as follows:\nFRIDAY-\n4K\u00bb-5:30 pjn\u2014F_*-.C. vs. Panther\nMidge's (first round of cup play).\nSATURDAY\u2014\n8:00-10:00 am.\u2014Juvenile Reps.\n10:00-11:00 a.m.-M.RJt practice.\n11:00-12:00 m\u2014 Bantam PooL\nCalgary Goalie Plays\na Brilliant Game;\nWilson Gets 3\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Feb. t \u2014\nKimberley Dynamiters scored\nthtir sixth straight victory when\nthey took tha measure of the Calgary Stampeden 5-4 here tonight\nTt wa* th* first defeat of the\nseaion for the Stampeders al far\nas Interprovincial games wers\nconcerned.\nPERFECT ICE\nWhlla a capacity crowd, th*\nlargest of th* season, looked on,\nthe Dynamiters oarrled thi play\nto the Calgary club all night, and\ntha  Kootenay  League team  enjoyed a wld* edge of territorial\nplay. Contrary to Calgary radio\nreporti, th* game wai played on\na perfect sheet of Ice, pouibly the\nbest of th* seaion.\nRalph Redding and Gordle Wilson\nwere the big noises in the Dynamiter attack, Wilson sniping three\ngoals and Redding coming through\nwith a pair. Dewar with two and\nDuchak and shannon with one each\nwere the Calgary marksmen,\nSam Timmins was ln the Calgary\nnet and turned ln a brilliant game,\nespecially ln the. first period when\nthe Dynamiters fired rubber at him\nfrom every direction but were able\nto click for only one goal. Although\nthe Dynamiters carried the play\nthroughout the opener, Calgary\nscored the tlrst goal ot the game\nwith Shannon picking up Burke's\nrebound to give the Albertana the\nlead. The Dynamiters blazed right\nback and Wilson icored on a double\nrelay from Redding and Sullivan\nat the 19:09 mark.\nTWICE TIED\nPlay had no sooner been resumed\nin the second period when Wilion\nlifted the puck off Burke's stick\nand passed ahead to Redding, who\ntore In on Timmins to give the Calgary netmlnder no chance. Within\na minute the Stampeders deadlocked the score when Dewar went the\nlength of the rink to fire a low shot\npast Campbell. Shortly after the\nhalfway mark Wilson snagged a\npass from Redding to put the J__na-\nmitrei in front once again. At 8:10\nDewar tied the game up for the\nsecond -time when he icored the\nthird Calgary goal with Thirlwell\ngetting the assist. Dynamiters lost\nno time in regaining the lead with\na pair of goals in less than two minutes. Wilion hoisted the fint one\nin on a pass from Redding, and then\nRedding came back fast to pack another one ln the Calgary net after\nPatrick set up the play. From then\non the Dynamiters were content to\nprotect their lead and relax their\noffensive for the first time during\nthe night  \u2022\nThe Kootenay League Club turned in a smart defensive game even\nthough the Stampeden managed to\npick up a goal during the balance\nof the period. Duchak scored this\non a three-way play with Sprout\nand Thirlwell to wind up the night's\nicoring.\nLINEUPS\nCalgary \u2014 Timmins, goal: Mclntyre, Dewar, defence; Duchak,\nBurke, Shannon, Smith, Sprout, Desmarais Thirlwell, Jempson.\nKimberley\u2014Campbell, goal; Almack, Swaney, defence; Redisky,\nHunt, Patrick, Sorensen, Calles,\nRedding, Wilson, Sullivan.\nOfficials\u2014Reddick and Mackie.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Calgary, Shannon\n(Burke), 18:10; 2. Kimberley, Wilson (Redding and Sullivan), 19:03.\nPenalties\u2014Almack, Jempson,\nSecond period \u2014 3, ICJrnlber.ey,\nRedding (Wilson), 1:45; 4, Calgary,\nDewar, 2:30; 5, Kimberley, Wilson,\n7:20.\nPenalties\u2014Mclntyre, Redding.\nThird period\u20146, Calgary  Dewar\n(Thirlwell), 9:10; 7, Kirriberley, Wilson (Redding), 10:48; 8, KLimberley,\nBedding (Patrick), 12:20; 9, Calgary,\nDuchak   (Sprout   and  Thirlwell),\n14:40.\nPenalties\u2014Mclntyr*, Burke.\nTadanac Bantams\nBeat (allies (-3\nTRAIL, B.C.-The Tadanac Terrors defeated the Caledoniani 8-8\nTuesday night tn a Bantam Hockey\nLeague game at the Trail rink. Jim\nO'Brien and Jim Mailey led the\nTadanac boys with two goals each-\nArt LePage and Jack Raine scored\nthe other two goals.\nLouis Secco icored two, and Bruno Fasqualotto the third, for the :\nCaledonians.\nA second Bantam game bracketed\nthe Odd Fellows and KP.'s, who\nfought to a 2-2 tie. Koehle and\nBouhillier scored for the Odd Fel-\nldwa, and Haas and Walker for\nthe K_?,'i.\nFernie Curling\nNow Under Way\nFEKNIE, B. C\u2014Fernie Curling\nClub started its local bonspiel today, the Grand Challenge and the\nFernie Club competitions being first\nplayed.\nIn the Grand Challenge, L. Hersh-\nmer defeated H. Neldig, D. Irwin\ndefeated J. Wallace, and J, McPhee\ndefeated T. Dicks.\nIn the Fernie Club playoffi, :\nHunter defeated G. Winters and\nUphill defeated W. Browne.\nAll games were close and tht ice\nwas in fair condition considering the\nmild weather Fernie has experienced the last tew days.\nCreston Curling\nEvents Completed\nCRESTON, \u2022& C, F*b. \u00bb-By confining play to a 9:90 pjn. draw to\ngive the early evening free-e\nchance to improve the Ice surfac\nCreston Curling Club was able\ncomplete its 1841 trophy play at tl\nend of the week, Just ahead of i\nreal mild spell that iet ln Monday.\nThe best showing of the season |\nwas mad* by the T. W. Bundy\nrink, which annexed two of the\nfive trophies, and wu runner up\nin a third. The rink captured the\nImperial Bank and' Fernle-Fort\nSteele Brewing Company cups (the\nlatter a third-man-skip competition), and was runner up in the\nGrand Challenge, which carries\nwith it the Fraser cup.\nIn the Imperial Bank competition\nSkin Bundy won from Skip Frank\nNadon, and for the Fernle-Fort\nSteele silverware the A. W. Dickinson quartet was runner-up. Skip\nA. s. Reed trimmed Bundy in tha\nGrand Challenge, which carries\nwith it the Fraser tankard. Skip \u2022\n_. E. Cartwright nosed out Skip\nM. J. Boyd for Cranbrook Brewing\nCompany Cup, and the Dr. Henderson' trophy, for th* winner of th*\nPresident vs Vice-President opening competition, went to the rinks\nACE PARKER SIGNS\nON FOOTBALL\nTEAM\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (AP).-Cn*r-\nence (Ace) Parker, voted the outstanding player in the National\nFootball League last year, today\nsigned a two-year contract with the\nBrooklyn football Dodgen.\nTerms of the contract were not\ndisclosed but Parker apparently hai\ngiven up any idea of playing baseball with Pittsburgh Pirates. The\ncontract does not prevent him from\nplaying baseball but lt says he must\nreport for football training Aug. 19,\nPUSIE BACK TO LIONS\nVAN-CITVER, Feb. 3 (OP)\u2014Jean\nBaptiste Pusie, French-Canadian defenceman whose fiery temperament\nhas caused many a lurid incident ln\nthe P-clflc Coast Hockey League,\nreturned today to the lineup of Vancouver Lions, his arguments with\nManager Guy Patrick apparently\nburied in the past.\nPusie obtained a release from the\nSeatUe Olympics Last weekend, ostensibly to return to Montreal and\nseek reinstatement as an amateur,\nbut Patrick who held his contract\nand had loaned him to Seattle with\nan option to buy, brought him back\nto Vancouver.\nSEEK TEXAS HOCKEY\nST. LOUIS, Feb. 8 (AP). - An\napplication for a franchise ln the\nAmerican Hockey Association was\nreceived by the Board of Governors\ntoday trom a roup of Fort Worth,\nTexas, sportsmen. No action was\ntaken.\nCurling Competitions\nDisrupted, Invermere\nJNV-BMER-!, B. C\u2014Curling enthusiasts have had ample opportunity to enjoy their iport until the\nmild weekend temporarily ruined\nthe ice. Three competitions sre itill\nin play, the Grand Challenge Cup,\nCanadian Legion Cup and the C.\nV.I. Cup. Owing to keen competition resulting in a number of ties,\nno final games have yet been\nplayed. ^^\nMEDICINE HAT TEAM\nTO PLAY B.C. TEAMS\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Feb. 5\n(CP). \u2014 Medicine Hat Intermediate\nSky Chleti leave tomorrow on\nthree-day exhibition hockey tri\ninto British Columbia. They wi!\nplay in Fernie Thursday, Cranbrook\nFriday and Kimberley Saturday.\nPossibly a game will be arranged\nIn Trail Sunday.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy th* Canadian Press\nBaltimore Orioles announced release ot Bill Urbaniki, veteran major and minor Infielder, three yean\nago today. Urbanski had previously\nplayed with Boston of the National\nLeague and Toronto of the International.\nsuppr\nbald.\norting President D. K. Arch--\nThe season has been one ot the\nshortest since curling was introduced. It ia likely a couple of rinks\nwill go to Kimberley for the Selkirk bonspiel later in the month.\nThe local club is now affiliated with\nthis well known Eut Kootenay\ncurlers' meet\nVOGUE\n.    PURE WHITE-FR-I BURNING   .\nBRAKE RELINING\nWe hav* th* proptr machinery\nfor regrlndlng brake shoes.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 BAKER ST.     NELSON, B. C\nSee Our Pricei\nBefore you buy or exchang* any\nfurniture.\nHomt Furniture Exchange\n413 Hall 81 Phone 103.\nPLAN BOAT RACI\nOXFORD, England (CP). \u2014 Cambridge and Oxford are planning to\nrenew boat race rivalry next Spring.\nOxford's challenge for a race was\naccepted and Cambridge, who won\nlast year by five lengths, will hold\nfour practices weekly. Th* race\nprobably will be held in March over\na Short coune at Henley. No blues\nwill be awarded and the result\nwon't go into the official records.\nMarius Russo, lett handed pitcher\ntor the New York Yankees, wore\nNo. H on his High School uniform.\nkept lt through four yean of college life and atlll has lt with the\nYankees.\nAL MORSE\nPromoter and\nMatchmaker\nAl Morse\nClub \u00bbd Gym\nSPOKANE,\nWASH.\nCAFE\u2014BAR\nTOBACCOS\nCARD ROOM\nW. 425 Main Av*.    .\nWelcomt,\nCanadian Boys!   j\nBllL&HARRY\nULRICH\nMN  .\"WF-. HIV..'!..'-!\nSpokane, Wash*\n________\n...   UH\u2014_\u25a0\n.-.J____\n. \". .\".V   .\n,.:*.,        .-(. -.-\u25a0-. \u00bb.    \u25a0\u25a0\u2022.',.**.\u25a0      ...-       \u25a0..'\n *m*****mw*^*mr'\nPte,*    H\u00abNt\n*\nAsk if Britain Has Made\nDefinite Commitments\n'\u25a0\u25a0''.'\non Use of British Fleet\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (AP)a-\nThe United Stites Foreign Relations Commute decided today to\naik the State Department whether\nGreat Britain had mr.de \"definite\ncommitments'- to th* United\nStatei on th* Ult of the British\nfleet In return for American aid\nto Britain.\nActing on a request by Senator\nArthur Vandenberg (Rep.-Michi-\ngan), Chairman Waiter George\n(Dem.-Georgia) instructed committee aides to transmit to the department an inquiry on the truth or\nlack of truth In publlihed reports\nof such commitments.\n(The State Department said Sept.\n1,1940, that it had received a pledge\nthat in no event would the British\nfleet be sunk or surrendered to\nGermany. If driven out of European waters, it was aald, the fleet\nwould be sent sbroad for the \"defence ot other parts of the Empire.\")\nThit action came as President\nAlan Valentine of Rochester University, testifying ln opposition to\nthe pending \"lease-lend'1 bill, urged\nCongress to retain control of the\nAmerican defence program while\nextending financial assistance to\nBritain.\nVandenberg \"put in the.record of\nthe committee an excerpt from ani\narticle written by Dorothy Thompson, newspaper .columnist, which\naaid:\n\"Our all-out aid to Britain ls accompanied by definite commitments\not Britain to ut, regarding the British fleet It presupposes a community ot interests.\"\n\"That ls interesting, if true,\" Vandenberg said, \"and I think the committee should have some information on it from official sources.\"\nTha day'i second witness, James\nS. Kemper, President of the United\nStates Chamber of Commerce, also\nopposed the administration bill.\nValentine testified at a hearing of\nthe Senate Foreign Relations Committee shortly before the' Houie\nopened Its second dsy of debate on\ntbe measure ln an atmosphere\ncharged with the tension created by\na clash of opinion between President Roosevelt and Senator Burton\nwheeler, a leading opponent of the\nbill\nValentine told the Senate committee he objected to the bill because lt \"delegates to one man full\npower to control completely the\nindustrial life of America down to\nthe smallest factory.. . .\"\nValentine, who received part of\nbis education as a Rhodes scholar\nin England, said the legislation defined defence materials so broadly\n\"that they include everything that\nfloats or flies or could be used to\ninjure an enemy or anything that\ncould contribute to the manufacture of any of these.\"\n\"This amounts to abnegation of\nCongress, the nullification of prop-\n.. erty right, the centring of complete\neconomic power in one man. Is the\nemergency so great that the President deeds all this power? If he intends to use it, he kills the fundamentals of democratic procedure.\nIf he does not Intend to use it, why\nshould he have it?\"\nDeclaring he wai not an isolationist nor an appeaser. the 39-year-\nold university head said he wanted\nforces opposing Germany to win the\nwar.\nBut, he said, \"strong as we are,\nstronger as we will become, we are\nnot and will not be strong enough\nto determine the future history of\nevery nation ln the world, and we\nhave no moral mandate to do so it\nwe could.\n\"If we put the defence of our own\nnation first ... we should be able\nto defend our nation if and when\nattacked, whether the attack be military, economic or Ideological. But\nwe are not and will not be strong\nenough to dissipate our torces, military, economic or spiritual.\nHe said supporters of the bill\n\"have done their utmost, by every\nform of propaganda, to convince you\nand the American people that, at\nwhatever cost to America. Britain\nmust be aided to whatever extent\nis necessary to insure British victory.\n\"No matter what many of these\n\"aid short of war\" supporters of thil\nbill may say, we know that they\nwould have us go to war.\"\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (API-\nHouse debate on the British-aid\nbill was interrupted today when\na woman in a black cape and\nhood, her face covered with the\nmask of a skeleton arose In a gallery and started muttering.\nA doorkeeper quickly snatched\noff the mask and led her out of\nthe gallery to the office of the\nsergeant at arms.\nAn attractive brunette, the gave\nher name limply at \"Andra,\" her\nhome as \"New York\" and occupation as \"pamphleteer.\".\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (AP)  -\nNew limitations to powers proposed\nfor President Roosevelt in the British-aid bill were considered by congressional leaders today while the\nUnited States Chamber of Commerce recorded its opposition to the\ncontroverrial measure \"in its present form.\"\nDemocrats of the House of Representatives Forelen Affairs, Committee met with Speaker Ravburn\nto discuss further possible changes\ndesigned to conciliate optwUlon to\nthe lend-lease proposal. A'terward\nRayburn sa'd no final decisions\nwere reached.\nDiscussing proposals to out a money ceiling on amounts to be spent to\naid Brlt.in, Rayburn said:\n\"Even if we put a $5,000,000,900\nlimitation in the bill, same people\nwould say we were giving the President a blank check and that Congress had been given an order to\nappropriate that amount.\"\nFormer Nazi Ship\nLoadinq for Trip\ni\nA WEST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT, Feb. 5 (CP). - The former\nOrman car-o vessel Weser, now\nflying the flag of the Canadian\nGovernment Merchant Marine,\n-began loading cargo here today\nfor her tint voyage since she was\ncaptured by the Canadian armed\nmerchant cruiser Prince, Robert\noff Mexico four months ego.\nThe Weser ls a modern freighter capable of carrying some 12,000\ntons of cargo. When captured by\nthe Robert shipping men said she\nwat worth $2,000,000 on the present wartime market.\nW\nJapanese Report\nHeadway in Drive\nHONG KONG, Feb. 5 (AP) .-Japanese reported today their new\ndrive from the Kwangtung coast\nwas making good headway, with Japanese army planes supporting\nground forces by bombing and machine-gunning Chinese positions.\nThe Japanese landed at dawn yesterday North of Hong Kong for an\niffensive they said was aimed at\nutting the route over which large\nquantities of Chinese war supplies\nallegedly had been flowing into the\nInterior from the colony.\nRome Radio Praises\nBritish in Africa\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (CP). - The\nRome Rad;o paid hi\"h tribute today to the strength of British\nforces in Africa, the British\nBro?dcas'ing Corporation reported. The Rome announcer said:\n\"It is doubtful whether a young\nna\"on like Itilv ever had *o face\nsuch stron? f-rces as the British\nhave mustered in a dis'ant territory.\"\n-NILION DAILY NIWS. N-l SON   B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING   FEB. 8, 1M1\u2014\u2014\n',\nTen Die in Pu.lt\nFactory Blaze\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb. 8 (AP)\n\u2014 Ten employees of the New Haven QuI't and ?;* Comnany died\nearly today in a fire which swept\na room filled wi:h baled cotton.\nThree others saved themselves by\nlumping from a third floor window. They were injured.\nHalf an hour after the fint alarm\nsounded spectatora compared the\nflaming scene with an opened blast\nfurnace as fire belched from the\nupper storey of the brick factory.\nN. SCOTIA l.r-CISUTIIRE\nWILL OPEN FEB. 25\nHALIFAX, Feb. 8 (CP). - Premier A. S. MacMillan announced\ntoday the fourth session of the\n41st Nova Scotia Legislature will\nopen Feb. 25.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n(.\"Maid of\nAstolat\"\nT. Gorg*\n8. Wander\n10. Water lily\n11. Move gently 29. Seeks\n13. Canvaa        30. Coven\nshelter\n17. To deluge\n18. Courtyard\nACROSS\n1. Brilliance\n\u00ab. Geographical line\n,8. A curved\nUne (mus.)\n(\u2022.Precious\nstone\n11. Conserva-\ntlv*\n12. Fixed point 19. Ascend\n14. Stumble       23. Month\n15. Quote (abbr.)\nIB. Man's name 24. Music note\n17. Mineral\nspring\n20. Mouth of\nNiger River\n21. Cereal\n22. Most heated\n24. Proportion\n25. Greek\ngoddeas\n28. Illinois dty\n(abbr.)\nJl. Narrow Inlet\n32 American\npoet\n33 A vandal\n34. Unoccupied\n38. Ring of chain\n37. Postpone\n39. Stops\n40. A flower\n41. Nocturnal\nbirds\n42. Arms\n44. liquid\nglobules\nDOWN\n1. Furnish\n2 Coagulated\nptrt of milk\n3 Music note\n4. On top\n8 Subject\nmatter\n2B.Dry\n26. Added\nclause\n27. Fat of sheep\n28. Makes cool\nwith ink\n35. Relieved\n36. Grass plots\n38. Period ot\nUme\n$9. A wicket\n(croquet)\n' i \" ia\nagiHB\nmm\nrli|[*rSir*5_l\n\u25a0~m*\n[\u2022\"fJU*\naon*.\nsix    uy.\n-W,-mi mis :\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb>;\ndm\nEBH *\\ -tii\ni\nWWSB\n_[\"-\u25a0!_\u25a0-\n_i.il     Mf[i\nsfflni.\n.'   fflWHrtl-l\nam\n\u25a0i gi-igiis! *__*\nm&a\nBl-l   !--,_tii\nmst\nII     SH@\n1\n'SIIT-ill'.l\ni_._f->,\nClaim German Motor\nUnit Driven Back\nWith Italian Forces\nNIW yqjtK, Feb. 8 (AP). - The\nBrltith Broadcasting Corporation\nreported in a broadcast heard today\nby National Broadcuting Company\nthat a German motorized company\nwai with Uie Italian forcei pushed\n.back by the British Into Eritrea.\nThe broadcast said the company was\nformed by a German commander\nlast tall.\nNorwegians Come\nto Vancouver for\nTheir Air Training\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5 (CP). -\nTwo of their number accompanied\nby brides tbey met in Toronto, a\ngroup of Norwegians of the Norwegian Naval \u25a0 Air Force reached\nVancouver today to train at the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force Jericho\nStation.\nMet at the depot by Capt. O.\nRimlapp, of the Royal Norwegian\nNavy, tney marched from the train\nto a bus which took them to their\nquarters.\nNo interviews were permitted but\nin a prepared statement Capt. Rimlapp described the Norwegians'\npleasure at training In Canada but\nadded \"we will do our utmost to\nurge on the day for our return to\nthe country that we think ls the\nbest In the world.\"\nCapt. Rimlapp said the airmen\nwere transferred here trom Toronto\nbecause of \"the ice situation\" 'In\nthe East which made lt necessary\nto move to a milder climate.\nMost ot the instructors with the\nTroup are veterans of the Nail invasion. Their companions Include\nrefugees, whalers and seamen. When\nhey left Norway Capt. Rimlapp\ncomm'n'ed. few of them thought\nthey would end up ln a training\nunit ln Vancouver thousands of\nmiles from home.\nWhile itstioned in Toronto, 'several members of the group married\nbut only two of fhe .rldei accompanied the unit\nfananese Press\nCharqes U.S. \"Does\nNot Understand\"\nTOKYO. Feb. 5 (AP).'- The Ja*\npanese Press is increasing its attention to the situation In the Pacific\nbetween the United States and Ja.\npan, with the preponderant reaction one of alarm over what even\nconservative periodicals call \"the\ncr'sis.\"\n\"American Int!m'da\"on,\" \"Ameri\nca's 'challenge.' are phrases used\nfrequently in the press. Many articles strike an alarmist note in\ncharges, on the basic theme of Foreign Mln'ster Yosuke Matsuoka,\nthat the United States does not\nunderstand Japans \"real purpose\"\n>n her program for \"greater East\nAs!?.\"\nWide attention has been attracted\nto a discussion of Japan-United\nStates friction dating back to the\nManchurian conquest of 1991, written for the magazine, \"Contemporary Japan\" by a leading scholar\nDr. Kiyose Inul.\nThe newspaper Keijo Nippo says\neditorially the United States attitude on Southward expansion\n\"brings Japan to the truly grave\noos'tlon of deciding whether to\nyield to American in'inrdstion or\nproceed undaunted to face any possible consequence.\"\nThai Delegates\nArrive in Tokyo\nTOKYO. Feb. 5 (AP) .-Thailand's\ndelegation to a conference which,\nunder Japanese mediation, Is to fix\npeace terms to end the four months\nof border warfare between Thailand and French Indo-China,' arrived here today aboard a Japanese\nplane.\nThe Japanese Government announced Foreign Minister Yosuke\nMatsuoka and Ambassador-Hajime\nMatsumiya will be Japanese delegate's to the conference, scheduled\nto open Feb. 8. An armistice signed\naboard a Japanese oruiser at Saigon\nJan. 31 paved the way.\n t\t\nTWO NEW MILITARY\nHOSPITALS OPENED\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5 (CP). - With\nthe opening of two new military\nconvalescent hospitals, chorley Park\nin Toronto and Rideau hospital in\nOttawa, some 40 military hospitals\nwith approximately 4995 beds now\nserve the Canadian army In training and on duty in Canada and\nNewfoundland, the Defence Department said in a statement today.\nChorley Park was formerly the\nresidence of the Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario.\nCOMIC   AND   ADVENTURE   STRIPS..\nVtatf rda) 'a Anatr-r ,\n43. Italian rtv*r\nFLECK HEADS CANADIAN\nLUMBERMEN'S ASSOC.\nMONTREAL, Feb., 5 (CP). - J.\nG. Fleck of Ottawa was elected as\nPresident of the Canadian Lumbermen's Association here today, succeeding J. E. Sayre of Saint John,\nN. B.\nMembers attending the annuel\nconvention of the Association devoted themselves to business sessions today as reports were heard\nfrom the White Pine, Hardwoods\nand Spruce Groups ot the Association.\nCANADIANS WITH R.A.F.\nTO RETAIN IDENTITY\nOTTAWA. Feb. 5 (CP).-Cana-\ndlan airmen who will serve with the\nRoyal Air Force on completion of\ntheir training under the Empire\nTraining Plan will retain their Identity as Canadians and at the same\ntime will receive Royal Canadian\nAir Force rates of pay. This is provided for in the training plan agreement\nPROPERTY OF BRITISH\nIN FRANCE SEIZED\nVICHY, France, Feb. 8 (AP). \u2014\nGerman authorities in Paris, lt was\nreported todsy, have announced a\ndecree seising the property ot subjects of the British Empire, Egypt,\nthe Sudan and Iraq ln the Occupied\nZone.\nThe report iald the property, In\nventory of which wa* taken with\nthe help of the Chamber ot Commerce, would be conf'scated outright If owned by Jews, Otherwlie\nthe properties would be placed under German administration pending t final decision.\nTHE GUMPS\nx ,    \u25a0*\u25a0\nByGusEdson\n\/ AH.tW-ntAMWWS         \u25a0%\n\/ (.HANbED-l CAN t-tEWSWreR   1\n\\    THE _OODO_t>WKJ.)MH---) J\"\n_JV MMW\/_J_lf\n' \u2014\n1\nHn'SL\n1   1\n\/_Li\u00bb\\\n*\"^_1\/#__r_   '      ?P*v\n^^_-K-,\\*t- Js \/\n)\nJ^*\\% W^\/K\\\n<*<*C^\\     ila-M\n-\n^ymjm\nJ M-\n^<\\m 1\nBRICK BRADFORD\u2014On the Throne of Titania\nage\n'A___\\    1\n'\"'o\"*_''[ OH. NO, OFFICER.'WE HAD\n\u25a0fc-CXf A U_T.- 'ARGUMENT -\n.^\/ f   BUT NOW WE'RE FRIENDS\ngSP    T ***> -yf*s J T\t\n___________________ -,\/-'   :Vk\"\n*W*^'t\\tiH\nV\n*WfK I\nmi v\n;\n\u2022**JP' \\*A\n^^_rT'-3^Sa.\/''\n\u2022Jf\n\\a\\\\W -'\\s . O^\n&\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zone Gr*\n. t-jTsTNO\nHIMSELF AND\nDBfTBTJIW\n66 TAKEN\nOPP THE\nJXWTON\n5TO-TCHB _\nASTHOW5H\nDEAD,*\nOfflCRTO\nP0&.60CU\nTV90N,\nKIN\u00a9.\nOI9C0VEBS\nTHAT WD\nAND SHEILA\nH-VE\n-taVPEAOED.'\n-____.\nI'LL SEND MY MAN ID TRACK THEM.\n\"* -BUT fSOiOOC\n\u25a0nscwwiU-HNi\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Youn\nii iMiiiiii(iiiaBHifeAifc-\u2014 - \u25a0---\n mmitmi ii \u00bbinp\n<-_*-\n\u25a0jgewwpiPSiwijii 1,1 i i' uH.ay-pinmu\n\t\nIP^^pspipm\nIty\nClassified Advertising\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELION. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO, PH. I, 1941\nIsntt BaUi| Stoma\nI  .       Telephone 144\n\u2022 Trail: K. Lowdon, 716-Y\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per Insertion,\n44c per line per weak (9 consecutive Insertions for cost of 4).\n$1.43 per line a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers lie extra This\n(overs any  number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, first Insertion and\nUd each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial Situations\nWanted for 25c for any required\nnumber,of lines for six days\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBlngle copy   \u00bb .05\nBy carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nBy Mail:\nOpe month  * .75\nThree months    2.00\nSix months    4.00\ntm year _ \u2014  8.00\nAbove rates apply ln Canada,\nUnited States and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areaa.\n-Elsewhere and In Canada where\nextra postage la required one\nmonth $1.50, three months 84.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $19.00.\nBIRTHS\nESCHE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Cyril\ntscbe, Ymir, at Kootenay Lake Gen.\n1 Hospital February 1, a daughter.\nLWOOD \u2014 To Mr. and'Tta.\nnee Stallwood, R. R. No. 1.\non, at Kootenay Lake General\nlital, February 4, a daughter.\n\"6LSEN - To Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nJlsen, Granite Road, at Kootenay\nAke General Hospital, February 3,\n________\nDe-UNDER - To Mr. and Mrs,\nd DeKlnder, 324 Richards Street.\n[Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nnuary 31,1 son.\t\n\".VEN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs\nid Craven, 579 Baker Street,\nKootenay Lake General Hospi-\n' >toiary tj * daughtw.\n[IK -To Mi. and Mrs.\nk, Ymir ROad, at Koo-\nGeneral Hospital, Fcb-\ni daughter.\nI \u2014 To Mr. and tir-. Henry\nRenata, at Kootenay Lake\nal  Hospital,  February  9,  a\nHELP WANTED\nplications will not be con-\nered (rom persons engaged in\ni producUon of war supplies.\nMEN WANTED\nil-deslgners, toolmakers, ma-\n\"I on Lathes, Milling Ma-\nbenchworkers, forgers, etc.\nlent work, good conditloni.\nto apply If actually work-\nfor War Industry.\nJ)REL INDUSTRIES LIMITED\nSorel, P. Qua.\nf \"\u2022 -\u25a0\u2014\u2014 \t\nIANTED - MAN FOR DAIRY\nand fruit farm. Must be good milk-\njfc Bamcockbum Dairy, Creston.\n\"TEACHER8\nWANTED, TEACHER FOR RURAL\nichool' beginning Feb. 10, Apply\n_tp W. R. Dunwoody, Official\nI Truitee, Ntlson, B. C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates tor non-\neommercial advertisements un-\n\" this dassificaUon to assist\nso pie seeking employment\nly 25c (or ona week (6 days)\ners any number ot required\nlines. Payable in advance. Add\n10c if box number desired.\nA THOROUGHLY EXPERIENCED\nhousekeeper wishes position immediately. Good plain cook, cap-\nable, non-smoker, can take full\ncharge if necessary. Apply Box\n__!___________\n(CPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER\nwants full or part time work. Hat\nown typewriter and can work at\nhome  If  necessary.  Apply  Box\n.6.89 Daily News.\t\nB^MRAPHER, EXPIRIENCED\ngeneral office work, bookkeeping,\n(fceks position part or whole time.\n.jBox 1113 Dally Newi,\nJRaj-\n.w-IRIE GIRL WANTS JOB -M\nmediately; also B. C. girl. Experienced tnd references. Box 5941\nDaily .News\nIANTED IMMTOIATBLY WORK\n, of any kind. Non-smoker. Apply\n. Box 6540 Daily News.\nSALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FnTING8\nNEW AND USED\nstock for Immediate ihipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C,\ntH* VACUUM CUP WASHER\n_ate model, porcelain tub. Condi-\nHon guarantd. McKay A Stretton\n._PE-FnTINGS, TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\nB16 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\nSTOLE BED, SPRING AN _\nmattress. Complete $7, a bargain\nPhone 7431,2.\n, cm waitsB SABY\nriage. In _\n._S_W6r And a\nfuller. Excellent cond. Ph. 260.\nHI...\nrriagt. In good cond, Ph, 400L1\nREFRIGn\nler. Excelle:\nr\u00bb SALE-BABY, OHAND PIANO*\nhone 542R.\t\nJl SALE - PRAM, IN GOOD\n[condition. Phone 672Y.\nWM. CARDEN \u00bb NURSERY\nRODUCTS.   FERTILIZER\nRDER HEDGE PLANTS. EVER-\neons  and  Ornamentals,  early;\nEmit trees and small fruits. At\nI reasonable prices, T. Roynon,\nttfent Lsvrlts Nurseries, Nelson\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F.)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCERTIFICATE OF\nIMPROVEMENTS\nPeggy Fraction, Leslie, Risk Fraction, Mike, Madelon Fraction, Apex\nFraction and Polly Fraction Mineral Claims situate to the Nelaon\nMining Division,\nWhere located:\u2014At the Rellef-Ar-\nlihgton Mine, Erie, B, C.\nLawful holder:\u2014Relief-Arlington\nMines Ltd., (N.P.L.)\nNumber of holder's free miner's\ncertificate:-5-531-E.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. H. Green,\nacting as Agent for tbe Relief-\nArlington Mines Ltd., (N.P.L.) Free\nMiner's Certificate No, 53531-E, intends, at the end ot sixty days trom\nthe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder tor certificates ol\nimprovements tor the purpose at\nobtaining Crown grants ot the abov.\nclaims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 o{ the \"Mineral Act\", must be commenced before the issuance of such certificates\nof improvements.\nDated this 6th day ot February,\n1941.\nA- H. GREEN,\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nA free \"Room For Rent\" card\nwill be provided it The Dally\nNews office to persons advertising Rooms for Rant in this\ncolumn.\nBUENA VISTA APARTMENTS -\nHoover and Stanley Sts. Ph, 542R\nLarge 4 room suite, lower, Fire-\nplace, electrically equipped\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse keeping rooms to Annable\nBlock for rent.. R. W. Dawion,\nAgent, 557 Ward Street       _\nFOR RENT - 6 ROOM HOUSl.\nModern. Electric stove. Reasonable\nrent. Nelson Grocery, Ph, 89,\nWANTED TO RENT - FOUR OH\nfive room house. Reliable tenant\nBox 8979 Dally News.\nmsas ''kpkmiam, tn\nJosephine St. Furn. Hskpg. Rooms.\n$8 per month.\nFOR RENT OR SALE 4 RM. UN-\nfurn house on 1st Street. Apply\n807, 1st Street. Phone 350L8.\nLARGE APARTMENT. S BID\nrooms, electric range and refrigerator Johnstone Block.\nfEllRX-fe'AWS Be-tfl-nl mii,Th\nfrigidaire\ngldalre equipped lultei\t\nrea -ft_w: i fawttft 'raw.\nFor r2nt,'\"4 fiW. A**, 1_6&_n:,\nfurn. or Unfurn. 504 Mill. Ph. 285X.\nHOUSE*  FOR  mi.  419 8H1CX\nStreet. Phone 218L.\nfor mrrt mi. ntvut win\ngarage, near schools. Ph. 806R.\nFORM-NT 5 ROOM BUNGALOW.\nOarage. Mil) Street Phone 3861a.\nFOR RfcNT -2 C6W bWft6_4l9\ntor men. 811 Mill Street\nirar - 3 UW.S B66M\nfurn. suite for rent, 311 Vernon St\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\n0\n\"The Chicfe\nWhich Give\nResults\"\nWill make 1941 your banner year.\nTbe results obtained from these\nchicks by thousands of customers\nhave been the means of building\nUie largest chick business and\nhatchery to British Columbia,\nUniexed  Pullet)\n100 1000   100 500\nR. & S. Lfgho'n. $13 1130   337 $125\nS. Legbo.nl .     $19 #140   $30 $143\nRocks, Reds and\nN. Hamps       . $14 $130  $24 $118\nL. Sussex and ,\nJer.  W.  Giants $16 $28\nFree book to customers \"Railing\nChicks for Profit\". Write for our\n\"Banner Year\" Book.\nREMEMBER\u2014It'i results that\ncount!.\nRump fcSta-ill\nBox N       Langley Prairie, B. C.\nBABY CHICKS, RHODE ISLAND\nReds and New Hampihlrei. Good\nutility stock. Approved and blood-\ntested, $10 per 100. John Goodman.\n1655 Gilley Ave., New Weitmlniter\nFOR SALE, REGISTERED -ORK-\nshire Boar, two years, fine type\nColony Farm strain. Apply Box\n127, Nakuip, B. Q\nFOR SALE - 20 YEARLING LE_-\nhorns,  laying.  90c each.  Phone\n794R3. 709, 7th Street\nFOR SALE - 1 YR. OLD JERSEY\nheifer. Tom Dalrymple, R. R. No.\n1, Nelson, B. C.     \t\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n'35 FORD FORDOR WITH TRUNK.\nRadlo, Heater, 41 licence. Excellent tirei and paint Clean upholstery, Wlnterfred. $575.00 1928\nChevrolet 4 door Sedan. (Joed\ntires, licensed. Priced to clear at\n$67.50. Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd,\nOpp. Post Office and Hume got*-.\nfoR tru_ v a Hit ft in Used\ncars see our stock of. guaranteed\nuied cari. Det! with t reliable\ndealer (or safety. Nelson Transfer\nCompany Ltd\n\u202237  pMttiAc   ajBAN.  RADIO\nWinterized. New appearance. Must\nsell. Private. Box Mil Dally News\nSWAPS\n,.\u00bbAP 3 CLEAR LOTS, 30 x 120\n-for lumber. Phone , 229R. Box\nI 6857 Daily News.      fc\nSAVE HALF dN U_Jtt~Mt**f8\nCity Auto Wrecking Garage\nacross from Peeblei.\t\nDELUXE PONT.A*. -OWE. RU-l-\nble seat. New tires. Central Truck\nand Equipment Company.\n1935 CHEVROLET 1 TON 1....\nreconditioned. $480  Interior Mo-\ntor Finance Corp Ltd 854 Wird St\nVARIOUS KINDS OF -\"-\"\"CONDI-\ntloned moton. Nelson Auto\nWrecking Garage, Vernon Street.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n25 FT. BOAT AND BOATHOUSE,\nFor $400. worth $600. Owner leaving town. 305 Nelson Avenue.\n|\nSINfSSAND\nDIRECTORY\nASSAYERS and MINE AGENTS\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB, C. Provlnolal Allayer, Chemist\nIndividual repreientative tor ihip-\npera at; Trail SnwltW,\na. j. Me, iNWENb-OT mWe\nrepreientative. Full time attention given shippers' interests.\nBox 84, Trail, B. C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. R, MCMILLAN, D. C, NEURO-\n'\"fePj8.*8- J_ry \u2022_ _ - __y*>_?_i'\n\u25a0ray.\nDiLW'r'LBl.HrillfiCK.b.e.\n542 Baker Street, Phone 968.\n11   '   \u25a0     \u2014\nCOR3ETIERE8\nSPENCER CORSETIERE. MRS. L\nJohnitone, 103 Kerr Apts. Ph. 668.\nfUlua*may*t*m***mmmmmytM iiaaiaaana   in,\nENGINEERS and SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. P. 0, BOX 104\nTraU, B. C. Surveyor and En-\n;lneer. Phone \"Beaver Falls\".\nglne\nR. W. HA-(_torMININ(_ As CtVlL\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor.\nRowland and Grand forks, B, C,\nINSURANCE and REAL ESTATE\nB. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Iniurance, Rentals. 557 Ward Street.\nAnnable Block. Phone 197,\n\/.inmuit;   -_.iui.r-,  -. u*-*--v   *,nt.\nCD. tttAci.W66b ktiMCm.\nInsurance, Real Eitate, Phone OO.\n-\u25a0\u25a0&0. McHARDY. INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\t\nH. Ei Big. FIRE, AUTO, ACCl-\ndent Insurance. 532 Ward Street.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor  rewinding\ncommercial -refrigeration\nphone 999 .IM,r\u201e_r,\"'''n st\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES AT\nForest Lawn Memorial Park Get\nprice Hit from Bronie Memorials\nLtd.  Box 729, ya-^uvar, B. C.\nOPTOMETRI8TS\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptoimtriit\nI486 Bay Ave,. TraU  Phone ITI\n8AIH FACTORIES\nLAWBON'B SASH FACTORY\nhardwood merchant 878 Baker St.\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,  SELL & EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 884\nPERSONAL\nSHEET MUSIC, RECORDS, PHO-\nnographs, books at Red Crou Shop\nWHWIrf VANCWV-A STOP AT\nAimer Hotel, Opp. G. P. R, Depot\nA RHS-ffl. IS'J-cfiftW-Oft IS\n* Portrait of Distinction. Phona\n224, 577 Ward Street\n,n..,.-,r,|-'A1M:\n5A_VAti6WAttM..gYflU\nhave 2nd band clothes, footwear,\nfurniture to ipare tijMljSa Bffi\nSn tins sUAll modSrn pi\nano. Cheap. Chess 2nd Hand Store.\n824 Vernon Street\ntfA-lffe Cl-UHiff) kbit BtOcytD\nCleaning, pranlng, repairing and\nalterations. H. J. WUton, Josephine\nStreet. Phone 107.\nWArtfflB.-<-0(5l.C_,l-Arl(.OT-\nton rags not leu than 12 Inchei\niquare, 9c lb. F. 0. B. Nelson\nDaily News.\nuuiy news.\nTHE DECAMERON, COMPL-Tl'li;\nedition, 528 pages, thrilling reading, $1.00. Free tatalogue, art,\nunusual nooks. Toronto Book\nShop, WttY\u00b0___f''' T\u00b0_nt\u00b0:\nntitt mm km mi\ntables daUy, groceries, confectionery, tobaccos We deliver\nStanley Confectionery, 952 Baker\nStreet. Phone 585\nMARRIED? OR ABOUT TO -\nThen you Must read the revealing\nbook \"Fact! of Life\", 25c, postpaid. Guaranteed. Medical Health\nBureau, Station F, Toronto, Ont\n(J_W 6M6k.NG, CHEWING t4-\nbacco, muff easily, Quickly. Special otter $1.00 full trMtment Re\nsuits guaranteed- Reliable Products, Box 251 N. W., Begtoa^!Saik\nUU_1|   UUA   tiUA   A*.    ** ,|   a,w*,0****m,   \u2014\"\"\nWttta'S STOWAfla. pow!.fk\ngivei prompt relief from Indigestion, Excess Acid, Sour Stomach, Belching, etc.. to 60. and\n$1.00 size Blue-checkered cans at\nyour Drugglit\nLON_lV FOlKSI JOIN RELIABLE\nconfidential mitrimoniil club\nMsny memben with meani. Particular! ind deicripiioni 10c. Ladies free. Box 121 N. W\u201e Regma,\nSaskatchewan.\nALL OUR FILMS ARE NOW FINE\ngrain developed. This ensures a\nbetter printing negative and enlargements do not show the grain\nof the film Any lire 6 or J exposure roll film developed and\nprinted with one free enlargement\nfee. Krystal Photoi, WUlt's. Saik\nwe \"fbaturis m umj\ncoolest and moit comfortable\nmethod of permanent waving, Trv\nit once-Youll be convtoced\nMilady's Beauty Parlor, Ph. 2$4\nMen - RfiflA\u2122 vWAUW. V10-\nor, pep. Try Vitex 25 tablets $100\n90 tableti $2.00. Guiranteed. 24\np t riona 1 \"Drug Sundries\" $100\nFree price Hit of drug sundrlei J\nJensen, Box 824 Vineouver, B C\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non eaiy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewin Write tor full In-\ntormition to 908 Dept ol Natural\nResources, C. P R., Calgary, Alta\nwari.-,.*-1, -.\u25a0 *    .... ____\u25a0)__I*    \t\nWATiTED - 8 ACRES OF'LAND\nIn Kooteniy Valley. Improved or\nnot. Half cuh and hilf working\nout if possible. Apply Box 994$\nDally Newi\nWILL SELL 40 ACRES OR LESS\nmixed farm with Irrigation.. Creiton Valley. E. Nouquier, Canyon,\nFOR SALE - HOUSE, 4 ROOMS.\nTerms Apply Rueckert'i Apliry\nMill St. Box 126. Nelson, B. C\nLAKE FRONTAGte dpiS6,..n\nNelion. Termi. Johnitone Estate,\nBox 198. Nelson, B, C\n\u25a0\u00bb-\u2014Bg-s-a-na n \u25a0\u25a0,!!\u25a0\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM IN COM-\nfortable home one block front\nBaker Street. Phone 467R.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\n**(,,   \"Ut\nB.C. Car Purchases\nin December 100 Per\nCent Over Year Ago\nIncreue of nearly 100 per cent, to\npurchases of new passenger autos\nIn December compared with December 1939 carried totals (or 1940\nwell above those of 1939, according\nto llcencec figures for British Columbia. New passenger autos purchased ln December numbered 926\nagainst 483 to December of 1839.\nBusiness in new commercial autos\nalso advanced sharply, new registrations being 174 compared with 199\nto the last month ot 1839.\nFor tlje licence year to Dec. 31,\nthere were '6556 passenger autos\nregistered to B.C. compared with\n6982 in the like period of the previous year. In the same comparison\nnew commercial autos were 1911\ncompared with 1995. At'the end of\n1840 there were 123,658 can and\ntrucks licenced in B.C. compared\nwith 177,892 at the and of 1889.\nWinnipeg Wheal\nShowsSteadyTone\nWINN-PEO, Feb. 8 (CP).'-Comparative firmness at Chicago, good\nmill support and lack of selling\npressure gave wheat futurei pricei\na iteady tone on Winnipeg Grain\nExchange today. While trading was\nnot brisk, volume Ot business was\nincreased over recent-sessions and\nat the cloie values were Va\u2014% cent\nhigher, May wheat at 77H and July\n70',. cents a bushel.\nBoth Canadian and United Statei\nmills were credited with making\nfair purchases in the pit but it wu\nbelieved their buying involved only\ndomeiUc consumption as no export\nsales of wheat or (lour could be\nconfirmed.\nIn the coune grain pit speculative buying in rye and flax, maltster tupport to barley and snipper\npurchasing in oats boosted pricei,\nRye, oats and barley quotations\ngained only small amounts but (lax\nvalues Jumped (our cents at on*\nUme.\nCuh wheat operations wer* confined to minor buying to No, A\nNorthern for shipment at the opening of navigation on the Great\nLakes.\nCoast Pricei Gain\nVANCOUVBR, Feb,-J (CP) -\nPrices were generidly higher during Ught trading on Vancouver\nStock Exchange today. Transactions\ntotalled 9108 shares.\nCariboo Gold Quartz1 advanced\n10 to 2.80 and Sheep Creek at 83\ngained 3. Premier Border clojed\nfractionally higher at 2V\u00ab while Bralorne dropped 15 to 889.\nAmong the oU lssuu Anglo Canadian climbed 4 to 99 and Home\ngained 3 to 2.15.\nBETHLEHEM STEEL\nOUTPUT IS RECORD\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5 (AP) .-Bethlehem Steel Corporation produced\n1,017,46 net tons of iteel ingots in\nJanuary, largest tor any month in\nthe company's history. Thii wai\nequivalent to 100.5 per cent of the\ncompany'i capacity. Previous high\nwu touched lut October, when 1,-\n014,961 tons wera produced,\nROCERS-MA.ESTIC TO\nCONSIDER SALE AT MEET\nTORONTO, Feb. 5 (CP),-A meeting of shareholders of Rogers-Ma-\niestie Corp. Ltd. hu been called\nfor Feb. 14 to consider ul* ot all\nits assets, except the shares and\nbonds of Rogers Radio Broadcuting Ltd., to the Small Electric Motors (Canada) Ltd.\nNORWEGIAN TANKER\nTORPEDOED AND SUNK\nNEW YORK, Feb, 5 (AP),\u2014Marine source! uid today thit the 8297-\nton Norwegian tanker Thelma, believed to have been tailing under\nBritiih oontrol,. recently wu torpedoed and sunk about 675 miles\nWeit of Land's End, England.\n(There has been no word (rom\nLondon on the reported sinking.)\nHEAD OF REUTERS FOR\n25 YEARS RESIGNS\n\u25a0 LONDON, Feb. 9 (CP). - Sir\nRoderick Jones resigned todsy u\nChairman and Managing Director\nof Reuters News Agency, a poit he\nhad held for 25 yean. Sir Roderick\nhad been with the Agency for 40\nyean. He succeeded Baron de Reuter to 1913.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Feb. 5 (AP)-Britllh\nstock closings, ln Sterling: Austin\nA 14a: Babcock & Wilcox 42s 6d;\nCent Mining \u00a31IH: Courtaulds 31a\n6d; H.B.C. 23s 3d; Rand \u00a36tt.\nSprings 211 \"OVid.\nBonds\u2014Britiih 2\". per cent Contois tlTri; Britiih bV, per cent War\nLoan \u00a3103 13-82; British Funding\n4| 1990-90 \u00a3113%, -\n* EXCHANGE MARKETS\nBy The Canadian Preu\nCloiing exchange ratei;\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: buying 4.4S,\nselling 4.47; U.S. dollar, buying 1.10,\nselling 1.11.\nAt New York-Pound 4.03H; Canadian dollar .82H-\nIn gold-Pound 10s, Id; VS. dollar 61.06 centi; Canadian dollar\n55.09 cents.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top price*\npaid Active Trading Company,\n919 Powell St. Vmcouver, B. C.\nWANTEb, DlStfSlIfi OR BrOKBM\nchairs for Scout Hall. Phone 928L\nThey will be oiled for.\t\nWAWfi) - 9 fWfi toti _HnWO\ncan. P. O. Box 191, Nelton,\nWANTf i^f IR* 'KUN FOR CUV\nmoulding. Box 9886 DiUy Nlwl\nWAriTlD TO BUY - BOATHOUSE\nfor cuh. Box 7041 Dally Newi,\nU. V6UR Hffik J. P\nMoi\norgan. Nelson, B. C.\nLOANS. INSURANCE. ETC.\nFUNDS ON HAND FOR FIRST\nMortgages Housei (or uie tnd\nrent Insurance C W Appltryird\nwArffflC f6 _6rr_W 6N 1_RR\nMortgage  on   business  proptrty\n81000, Box 6995 Dally News.\nPETS. CANARIES. BEES. ETC.\nSCOTCH COLLIE PUPS, MALE\nPurebred. Trl-color. $4. H. E.\nParkyn, Burton, B. C\nGold Belt's New\nthe Lower Grade\nStoptog operations on th* excellent oreihoot recently opened by\nGold Belt Mints, Ltd., Sheen Crtek\ncamp, on th* 1400 level of tht 1300\nvein, art now to progreu. Ore from\nthis itopt, which Judging from u-\ntayi along tht drift WUl average\n0.8 ounce or bttttr across thret\nfeet, will be employed to iweeten\nlowtr grade ore from the lower\nworking!, Officiali estimate that\nthert is on on tht lowtr levels Ior\nthree or four monthi operation io\nthat it wiU be tome time, before\nmilling reflects the full value of tht\nhigher grade ort from tht 1400 level\nttopt. Tnt proportion o( tht higher\nKadt (rom thii ltvel, however, m\u00aby\nexpected to maintain production\nat a higher level thin the 1940 iver-\nBg\u00ab. ' .\nA total Ot approximately 800 feet\nof or* hu been opened on the 14th\nlevel of th* $900 veto, advisei A,\nE. Jukes, Pruident Thii or* average! 0.81 across better than tore*\nfeet Recently wbtn * new rail*\nwai completed (rom th* 1900 to\nthe 1400 level and it wu possible\nto start itoptog, drifting wu dii-\ncontinued (or the preient The (act\nwas reported in argillltei but at a\nlater ditt it it planned to extend\nthe drift to explore tbe veto In\nquartzite expected beyond this band\nof argillltei.\n' The completion of the, raise has\nmade it possible also to start drifting on the 1500 level.\nIn December mlllieed at Gold\nBelt included 600 tons of development ore from the Mth level drift.\nAlthough, thli wu * smal proportion of the 9273 tons mlUed to tht\nmonth, it had the effect of raising\nthe month's production well above\nthe average fer the year.\nWall St. Ms\nStage Comeback\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP). - A\nturn towird higher pricei today Interrupted the decline which had\ncarried the stock market near last\nSummer's low!.\nLeading steels, moton, aircraft!,\ncoppers and rails raUled tractions\nto more than 2 pointi,\nThe reversals appeared to grow\nmainly out ot ihort-covering and\nbuying on the' assumption tht decline had gone far tnough to warrant it leut a technical comeback,\nCanadian Pacific and Lakt Shore\nMines, among camdian Issues, made\nsmall advances. Dome Mines dipped\nft point while Distillers Seagram\nruted unchanged;\nModerate Gains\nMarked at Toronto\nTORONTO, Feb 8 (CP).-Toronto\nitock market registered a moderate\nadvance today to Induitrlal and\nmining groupi.\nTaek-Hughu. Pickle Crow, Sylvanite and Aunor Golds added 10\ncents or better. Galm of about 9\nwere netted by Wrlght-Hargreaves,\nMacLeod-Cockshutt, Pimour and\nBeattie. Lake Shore gained _.\nSmelten, Nickel, steep Rock and\nSherritt posted gains.\nWeitern oils were to duU tradt\nand price adjustments were of\nminor Importance. Home OU firmed\na cent or two and McDougall-Segur\ndropped a cent.\nSenior oUi, utilitiei, itetli and liquors posted more gains than losses,\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Ftb. 9 (CP). - Receipts: Cattle 70; calves 10; t few\nearly hogs.\nMedium to good butcher iteers\n7.50\u20148.25; common down to 6.50.\nGood heifers 7.50; plain to medium 9\u20147. Good to choice fed calves\n8\u20148.75. Good cowi 5\u20148.50; common\nto medium 3.25\u20144.75. Good bulls\n5.50. Medium to good vealers 9,10;\nA top it 10.50; common 8-8- Medium to good stocker and feeder\n\u25a0teen 6.75\u20147,50. Good lambs yes\nterdiy 8.25-8.35.\nLut print 10.15-a-10.35.\nMETAL MARKETS\nLONOOS. F*b. 3 (AW. - Bar\nillver 23 5-16d, unchanged. (Equivalent 1331 ants). Bu gold 168s,\nunchanged. (Equivilent $18.65.)\nTin iteidy; ipot \u00a3889 bid, \u00a3256\nSi uked; future \u00a3297 191 bid, #298\nasked.\nMONTREAL\nBar (old to London WM unchmged at $37.54 in ounce to Camdian\nfundi; 1981 to British rtprtitnt'ng\nth* Bank of England's buying price.\nTh* fixed $38 Wuhlngton price\namounted to $38.50 to Canadian.\nSpot:  Copper electrolytic 12.75;\ntin 59.65; lead 5.50; line 5.65; antimony 15.25. ^\nNEW YORK\nCopper iteidy; electrolytic not\nConn. VtUey 12; export f.aj. N. Y-\n10.50\u201412. Tin iteidy: not ud nearby 50.35; forwird 163b.\nLead itetdyp ipot N\u00abw York\n5.50-5.55; East St. Louis 5.35.\nZinc iteady; Eut St Louis ipot\nIttd forward 7.25.\nC.P.R. Shops af\nNelson Increase\nStaff by 14 Men\nPlant ior manufacturing wtr material! at the Ogden ihops of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway will mean\nmore extensive locomotive repair\nwork at iuch divisional points at\nNelson, with consequent increases\nln the number of men employed,\nbut the movement ls not an extensive one, C. P. R. officials at Nelson\nstate.\nIn the can of Nelson 1. additional\nmen art employed. These include\nseveral experienced tradesmen from\nshops at Calgary, Revelstoke ahd\nother points, ana a few local men.\nThe officials pointed out that no\nmajor development wu under way,\nand there wu no heavy demand for\nadditional men.\nGov't Bonds Reviva\nat London Close\nLONDON, _tb. 5 (AP). - Tbt\nsecurities market levelled ott lit*\ntoday after drifting downward\nthroughout the session.\nChief check to buying wu the uncertainty surrounding negotiation!\nbttwten BerUn md Vichy.   .\nDemand (or .British Govtrnment\nbonds revived near the finlih uid\npricu finished unchanged. The National Defence 2'\/.s evtn managed\nto gain fractionally.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINN-PEO, I-eh, $ (CP..-<\u00bbr-_,\ncloie:\nOpen High Low Close\nWHEAT:\nMay    11%    77_    TH.    TI*\nJuly    78t    78%    78%    78V.\nOATS:\nMay.   84%    $5      $4%    U\nJuly ,   88%    -      -      88%\nOct    -      -      -      ti*\nBARLEY:\nMay-    45%    46%    45%    49%\nJuly   48      48%    48      43%\nI*_AX:\nMty 155%   159     154     157%\nJuly ..... 153% -156%   182%   156%\nOct  148     148      148     148\nBYE:\nMay    49      50   \u2022   48       49'\nJuly    50       50%    49%    48'\nCASHPKICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 hard 74%; No. 1\nNor. 74%; No. 1 Nor. 72%; No, 8\nNor. 69%; No. 4 Nor. 67%; No. 8\nwheat 65%; No. 6 wheat 64%; feed\nwheat 62fl.; No. 1 Amber Durum\n06H; No. 4 Special 67%; No. 5 Special 65K; No. 6 Special 64%; No. 1\nmixed wheat 62%; track, bull No,\n1 Nor. 75%; screenings, per ton 7.50.\nOATS-No. 3 C. W, 83%; Ex. 9\nC. W. 33; No. 3 C. W. 31%; Ex. 1\nfeed 31%; No. 1 teed 31%; No, 8\nfeed 30%; No. 3 feed 29%; track\n88%.\nBABLEY-Noi. 1 and > C. W. 8-\nrow 44q\u00bb; Noi. 1 and 2-row 46%,\nNo. 3 C. W. 6-rpw 44%; No. 1 feed\n44%; No. 2 teed 43%; No. 9 feed\n42%; trick 44%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 155; No, I\nC. W. 152; No. 3 C. W. 142%; No, '\nC. W. 137%; tfack 154%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 47%.\nAUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP)-Wood-\nen frame and iteel hatchet Umber\njtckl of in exclusive Ntw Zealand\ndesign are being ihipped to England\nln large quantities to assist to reicue work and demolition work wltb\nbombed buildings.\nMONTREAL   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc Brew of Can ....\nBathurst P A P \"A\" .\nCanadian Bronze\t\nCan Car it Fdy ptd -\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship ptd ....\nCon Min _ Smelting\nDom Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel St Coal \"B\" \u201e-\u2014\nDryden Paper \u2014\nGatineau Powtr \t\nGatineau Power p(d ...\nHoward Smith Paper\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Nickel of Can ...\nNationil Brow Ltd ..._\nOgllvlt Flour ntw \u2014\nPrict Broi  __.\nShiwnlgtn W & P _-\nSt. Lawrtnce Corp ..._,.\nSt Law Corp ptd -..\n14%\nli\n35>.\n^\n18\n36!.\n19\n8\n5\n8%\n84\n12\nw,\n13%\n34\n36\n20%\n10\n16V4\n2\n15%\n\"south Can Power\t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nWestern Groceri\t\nBANKS\nCommeroe\t\nDominion \t\nImperial\t\nMontreal \t\nNova ScoUa \t\nRoyal \t\nToronto  \t\nCURB\nAbitibi 8 pfd \t\nBeauharnois Corp\t\nBriUsh American Oil .\nCan Industries \"B\" ....\nCons Ptper Cory \t\nDonnacona Paper \"A\"\nFalrchlld Aircraft ......\nFraier Co Ltd \t\nMacLaren P A P  .\t\nWalker Good it W\t\nWalker Good ptd .\t\nT\n48\n158\n192%\n200\n181\n283\n150\n240\n\u00bb\n11Vt\n1.86\n3%\n4%\n3%\n8\n14%\ni\nVANCOUVER  STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nBid\nMINES\n.04\n9.75\nBridge River Con ..\nCirlboo Gold -\n\u2014\n3.80\nDentonia  \t\n\u2014\nFilrvlew Amtl _\nXII\n.03%\nGold Belt  \u00bb\n' SbV,\n.13%\nGrull-Wlhkjnt _\n.02%\nHedley Mucot \u2014\n.49\n\u2014\nIndian Mlnu\t\n.01\nInter C ic'C ,\n3b\nIiland Mount _\u201e__\n.77\nKoot Bellt \t\n.19%\nNlcoli M _ M \u2014\n*\u00a5\nPend Oreille ._\u2014\nPioneer Gold ...\n3.10\nPorter Idaho ___\nDI\nPremier Oold ....\u2014.\n\u2014\nQuatilno  \t\nx>i%\nReevei-MicD  ......_\n.12\nRelief  Art  \t\n1\nReno Oold .\nSalmon Gold ....---\n\u2014\nSheep Creek\nSilbak Premier\t\n.88\n.66\nSurf Inlet    \t\n.11\nTaylor B. R. ...j\t\nJ02%\nWellington .....__\n.00%\nWeiko Minu __-.\n,   \u2014\nAak\n.08\n10.00\nDI\n2.85\n.00%\n.OlVi\nD9\n.28\n.18\nf\n.00 %\n.38\n.85\n.25\n1.80\n3.19\n.03\n\u2022\u00bb_\n.8$\n.18\nD3\n.01%\n.85\n.75\n.15\nWhitewater  _\nYmir Yank Girl _\nOILS\nA. P. Coni ___.\nAmalgamated \t\nAnaconda  ___\nAnglo Can ......_\nCalg it Ed \u2014\nCalmont  ___.\nCommonwealth   ...\nCommoU ...,..______.\nDavies pett\t\nExtension  ....\u201e._\nFirutone Pett \u2014\nFopr Star Pett .._\nHigh Strew\t\nHomt\t\nMadison .......___._\nMtr-Jon  --..._\nMcDougtU-Segur -\nMercury  -.-_-,\nMiU City Ptt* __\nPaetlta \t\nRoytl Can \t\nRoyillti ,\t\nSpdontr ....__\u2014___\nUnited  \t\nVantlta  __\u201e\nVulcan\nDI\nD3%\n.08\n.00%\n.66\n1-37\nJO\n30\n30\nJ8%\n.10\n3.15\ni\n.06%\ni\nD4\n30\nINDUSTRIALS\nCaplatl Estates   1.05\n\u2014     Cout Brew     - 1,25\n.01     Pacific Coyle  _ JO\n.00% United Distillers.... .73\nD2\n.00%\n.07\n.98\n1.30\nii\n.17\nD.%\n.13\n2.18\nD2%\nD3\n.07%\n.04%\n.12\nD9\n.40\n1.25\n1.35\nPork, Veal. Shortening Wholesale\nPrices Up; Egg Market Is In Slump\nChlcsgo Whtat Takes\nOne-Cent Increase\nCHICAGO, Ftb. 5 (AP). - Wheat\npricei advanced almost t cant a\nbushel todty, tht but upturn (or\ntny teuton in recent weeki.\nThe market WU tentenced by I\nrally in securities tnd reporti of\nImproved (lour ictlvity and decreased country cuh whttt itles.\nWhett doted %-% cent higher\nthtn yuterdiy, Mty 82%, July\nWH-%. May what, which wu\nstrongest reflected purchasing\ncredit to mllli and \"ihorts\" who had\ntold th* contract recenUy in view\nof Its sharp premium ovtr deferred\ndeliveries.\nCorn closed % off to % up, May\n93, July 61%; otto %-% hlghtr.\nGains Outnumber\nLosses at Montreal\nMONTREAL. Feb. | (CP).-Gilns\nwon againit losses on tht itock\nmarket today for th* firit Urn* lo\nmore thin a week,\nSmeltert topped the gilns in\nmetals with I rise ot 1% followed\nby Noranda, Hudion Bay Mining\nand Nickel with fractional boosts.\nCement and Musty-Harris (limed\nfractions. C. P. R, and Dosco \"B\"\nboth ihowtd increases,\nPrice tnd Btthunt Papers rota\nand Howard Smith held iteady.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONT-U-M* M>. I (CP).HJ>o.t:\nButter, Que. 33-33%. Eggi, Eastern\nA-larg* 3S%-38.\nButter futurei: Feb. 3S%-33%;\nMarch 38%-S8%,\nPrice facreuu In Mm* ntttfa sal\nshortcningi, trrlval of hot houl*\nrhubirb tnd a price ilump In tht\negg mirket were hlghllghti of tht\nreports on the weeki ictlvlUu by\nNtlson wholesilert.\nPork pricet were Incruied, tnt\nIttd and shortening pricei were cor-\nretpondlngly high. Veil contlnutd\n\u2022caret tnd pricei wtrt holding\nwell up.\nApparently prompted by tht\nwarm Springlik* wdthw tMrt MB\nbten enquiriti midt tlrtidy oa.\nwholesaler! (or fertilizers Md eirly\nseed potitoes. The weather had itt\neffect too OB the egg market tnd'\nu laying lncreued pricu decreued,\nCm.-N VEGETABLES\nIMPORTED\nAlong with hot house rhubarb\ntrom the Cout Mexican ftlld tomatoei, tnd considerable imported\ngreen vuettblu (rom ClaUtotiim\nwere on tht mirket Head lettuct,\nctuliflowtr, ctlery, broccoU and *n__J\ndive were among greens being\nbrought in from tht south. Locil\nvegetable supplies, except turnipt\ntnd cabbages, were plentiful.\nOrange sales were reported steady\ntnd the demud improved. Pricei\nwere reasonable, With loctliui \"\nlimited the onion mirket wu i\nitrong.\nTrade journals reported good <\nmand and sales had resulted in\ngrlce reduction ot on* w*U-l~~\nrand of tho* polish; tnd b ..\nof the heavy demand for Canadian\ncooking peas and beciuse Imports\nwere cut off. it wu doubtful it\nstocks were sufficient to lut until\ntbe new crop.\nTen carlot imports were among\nthe receipt! (or the week. Thty In-\neluded two cart of (loul and (e*d,\ntwo of groceries, ona of soapi, on*\nof corn, on* of sugar, on* of frulti,\noh* of vegetables, and one ot meat*.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 induitri*-j.\n30 rails \u201e...._\u201e_\n15 utUitlet ..-.\u201e.._,\nQUOTATIONS\nAmer Can \u25a0\nArnar T\u00abl -.  Ml\nAnaconda . StTf,\nBendix Avi _.\u201e_ 88\u00ab\nB\u00bbth Stetl  ~-    m\nBorden  \u2014_\u2014    IM\nCtn Dty _ \u2014   m\nChrytl*r ____ 98\nCon.Ou 1\u00ab Y _\u2014 33%\nC Wright PM \u2014     8%\nDupont   14S\nltst Rod __ 138\nG*n WC _.- 88*\nGen rood* \u201e,  39V\nGen Mot .__   43V\nGrt Nor PM  39jl\nHowe Sound  \u2014 34%\nInter Nlcktl   34%\nKenn Cop ..___    33\nMont Wird ,  8%\nN Y Central ,\nWALL  STREET\nPack Mot \u00bb I\nPenn R R    13%\nPhillip* Pat* \u201e\u201e--. 37\nPullnfin  _\u201e 24%\nRadio Corp  4%\nRem Rand  ,  8%\nShell  Un    _. 10%\nStan Oil of N J  84%\nStudebaker    1\nTex Corp    fl%\nTex G_i Sul  36\nUn Carbide  88%\nUn OU o( Cal._.\u2014 14\nUnited Air  38\nUn Pac _:  80%\nUS-Wbb\u00ab  30\nU S Steel   63%\nWarner Bros  S\nWtrt Elec _  83%\nW\u00ab*t Un _... \u2014 m\nWoorworth   IS\nV\u00abl Truok  14%\nTORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nMINIS!\nAldermac Copptr\nAmm Gold ...\nAnglo Huron-la.\nA-S-Md (\"'\nAunor GoW\nBagamtc Rouyn\t\nBankfield Gold  ...........\nBut Metali Mining\t\nBeattie Gold Mme*  ,.\nBidgood Kirklind\t\nBig Miawuri \u2014.\t\nBobjo Mintt... \t\nBralorne Mines \t\nBufftlo Ankeritt  \t\nBunker HiU Extenilon\t\nCanadian Malartic  _\nCariboo Qolb Quart*\t\nCutlt Tr*thtw*y \t\nCentral P-Wcla -_...\nChromium M A S .\t\nCout ajoppw _ \u2014,\u2014\nConlaurum Minu \t\nConsolidated M _ S\t\nDom* Mint* ,\t\nDorvtl Siscoe .\u201e......_......\nEast Malartic \u00ab_.\t\nEldorado Oold \u2014\nFalconbridgt Nlck-1 \u2014\nFederal -UrBand ......\nFrancoeur  Gold  .,\u2014,\u2014\nGillies Lake  .._.\t\nGod'i Lakt Gold   _\nGold Belt\t\nGrandoro Mint.  \u25a0 -\nGunnar Gold .....__\t\nHard Rock, Oold .\nMarker Gold \u201e\u2014\nHollinger  \t\nHowey Gold ,\nHudson Biy M _ S\nInternational Nickel\nJ-M Consolidated ..\nJack Wait*\t\nJacola Gold .\nKerr Addison ...........\nKirklind Lake .\u2014\nLake Shore Minet ....\nLelteh (Md.\t\nLebel Oro Minu -\nLittle Long La* ._.\nMacasia  Hint!\nJl\njOI\n3.48\n-08%\n1.00\nj07%\n.05%\n-08%\nIM\n.09%\nMV,\nsnv,\n9.70\n4.50\n.01%\n.54\n1.86\nJl\n1.77\nii\n1,00\n1.49\n36.50\n23.50\nA3\ntm\n39\n3_W\n.04%\n.43\n.03%\nJl\n31\nat\n33\n.85\n.04\n13.80\n.35%\n34.50\n83.80\n2}\n.18\n.01%\n3.45\n30\n18.50\n.47\nAl\n1.80\nMacLeod Cockshutt'\"\nMadsen Red Ltkt Gold .\nMandy i \t\nMclntyr* Porcunlrt*\nMcK-n-l* Bad Lakt\t\nMcVittle Gratis\nMcWatters Gold\nMining Corporation ,\nMoneta Porcupine\nMorris Kirkland ..\nNipisslng Mining\nNoranda _\t\nNormetal\nO'Brien Gold\nOmega Gold\nPimour Port\nPaymaster C\nPend Oreille\nPerron Gold ,\nPickle Crow (\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Gold\nPoweU Rouyn Gold\nPreston East Dome\nReeves MacDonald\nReno Gold Minei ....\nRoche Long Lie \t\nSan Antonio Gold ..\nShawkey Gold\t\nSheep Creek Gold ..\nSherrltt Gordon .\u2014\nSltco* OoU ....\nSladen Malartic\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Buin' - -\nSulllvin ConsoUdated\nSylvanite \t\nTeck Hughti Oold   ..\nToburn Oold Minet ..\nTowagmac    _\nVenturt* .. ..\nWtite Amulet\nYmir Y.nk*Tflirt\nOI-.8:\n\/-li-: -\nBritish American\nChemicil   Reseirch\nImperial\nInter Petroleum\nTexu Canadian\nINDUSTRIALS)\nAbitibi Power .\u201e\u201e _\t\nBeU Telephon* \u2014.__.._\nBrazilian Tit? \u2014..__\nBrewers A Distillers\t\nBrewing Corporation\t\nB C Power A . .\u201e\u201e\u25a0\u25a0,\u2014.\u201e\u25a0\nB C Power B .\nBuilding Product*\t\nCanada Bread \t\nCan Bud Malting \u2014,\u2014.\nCan Car & Poundry\t\nCan C\u00abment _._ .\nCan  Dredg*    \u201e.,...\nCan Malting  _,-.\nCan Pac Railway\t\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nCom Bakeries\t\nDominion  Bridge\t\nDom Tar & Chem _____\nDistillers Seagrams \u2014.......\nFanny Parmer  \t\nFord of Canada A _____\u2014\nGen Steel Ware* ______.._\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGypsum L A A\t\nHamilton Bridg* _.\u201e..\u201e..___\nHiram Walker\t\nImperial Tobacco\t\nLoblaw  A _-\u2014 \u2014.\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator\nMaple Leaf MUling.\nMassey Hartii\nMontreal Power\t\nMoor* C*orp ...-_____\nNat Steel Car\t\nPage Heney ,\nPower Corp \t\nPressed Metali .\t\nStandard  Paving\nLet Us Chroma PUts Your\nPlumbing Fixtures\nL.C.M.  Electroplating\nUurlt. Bldg.       704 Ntlton Avt.\n -NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B.C-THUR8DAY MORNINO. FIB. S, 1941\t\nCIVIC\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nComplete Showi 7:00-8:29\n\u25a0Plus \"GALLANT SONS\"\nFRI.-SAT.\n\"CITY FOR CONQUEST\"\n\"WORLD IN FLAMES\"\nLET   US   REFRESH\nYour Dance Duds\nPhone 1042\n|W\u00ab\u00bb9t^Wfia\u00bbW\u00ab\u00abrWiM\u00ab*W\u00bbW\u00abi'\u00bb\nHOOD'S\nHOME\nMADE\nBREAD\nValentine\nDecorations\nStilt, Cutout-, Table  Coven,\n8ervlettei.\nEverything far * gay party\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON. B. C\nSlocan Board Heads\nFOR RENT\nSTEAM HEATED SUITE\nAnnable Block\nR.W.Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\n'hone 197 Annable Block\n.CO CLEANERS\nWe' Call and Deliver\n'-   Free ot Charge\nUker Phone 288\nI\nHeated Storage\nat Reasonable Ratei.\nCHIEF AUTO\nI Baker St.   SERVICE   Phone 122\nAre  You   Protected\nAgainst Fire Loss?\nIf Not, See\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\n~ Baker 8t Phone 68\nMemorials Speak\nof Famous Deeds\nOTTAWA, (CP).-Statoimen, Ml-\ndiers, historians, fur-traders and\nfox-breederl had their labors for\nCanada honored In historic sites recently marked by the National\nParks Bureau. Sites are marked on\nrecommendation of -Be Historic\nSites and Monuments Board ol Canada.\n' On the Alberton-Hamsdale Highway in Prince Edward Island, a cut-\nstone monument commemorates tie\nwork ot Robert T. Oulton and ol\nCharles Dalton, pioneers in breeding and raising silver black foxes\nin captivity and ol James Gordon\nand Robert Tuplln who later assisted in developing the industry.\nIn the Law Courts Building, Hall-\nfax, a tablet was Installed ln memory of William Alexander Henry,\none of the Fathers of Confederation;\nand in the Public Archives Building ol the same city is a tablet ln\nmemory ol William Henry Chase\nwho gave his native province the\nbuilding where the tablet Is placed.\nTablets in memory ol Samuel\nGeorge William Archibald, member\not the Nova Scotia Assembly Irom\n1808 to 1841, and Sir Adams George\nArchibald, another Father of Confederation, have been placed In the\ncourt house at Truro, N. S.\nCommemorating the service of\nSir John Joieph Calddwell Abbot,\nfirst Canadian-bom Prime Minister,\nthere is a tablet in the Post Office\nbuilding at St. Andrews East, Que.\nA boulder and tablet were erected\nat the house of St. Lin des Lauren-\ntides, Que., where Sir Wilfrid Laurier was bom. The house and surrounding, property were acquired\npreviously, restoration work was\nundertaken and suitable furnishings\nobtained.\nAt Kingston, Ont, a tablet was\naffixed to the Mumey Tower, built\nin 1840 by the British Government\ntor the defence of Kingston Harbor. At Merrickville, Ont, a tablet\nwas placed on a stone blockhouse\nbuilt in 1882 for defence of the\nRideau Canal.\nThe names of those who fell In\nthe engagement at Queenston\nHeights Oct. 13, 1812, appear on a\ntablet attached to the General Brock\nMonument Those who gave their\nlives In another battle of the war\nof 1812\u2014at Stoney Creek, June 6,\n1813\u2014ere honored by a tablet placed\non the Stoney Creek monument.   .\nA tablet honoring Douglas Brym-\nner, first Dominion archivist, has\nbeen placed in the Dominion Archives building at Ottawa.\nSite of the fur-trading post at\nRocky Mountain House, Alta., was\nacquired and a tablet affixed to\nwhat is left ol one ol the original\nchimneys. A tablet in memory ol\nSir Richard McBride, British Columbia Premier from 1903 until 1915,\nwas placed in the Sir Richard Mc-\n\u25a0Brlde public school at New Westminster, B.C.\nHockey Standings\nLeafs Flog Trail\nSmokies by 13-3\nDr. A. Francis, left Secretary, and A. M. Ham,' right, President, ol\nthe Slocan Board ol Trade.\u2014Photo by J. Burman, New Denver.\nParisians Plague Life Out of\nConquerors With Sharp Humor\n, A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nt 288 MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nleury's   Pharmacy\nan a Prescription!\n, (>   tlj * Accurately\nJ laHyfTwi Compounded\nly\/Aj PHONE 25\n_~ \\ ML. Med. Arts Blk.\n11  '        7   *\nEVROLET TOURING CAR\nid transportation,      MP\nlicensed  V\u00ab)J\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nI Opp. Post Office and Hume Hotel\nSASKATCHEWAN\nW\nRegina ..... 15\nYorkton , 12\nFlin Flon .. 11\nSaskat'n.... 11\nMoose Jaw   8\nD     P\n2   113\nA Pts\n76   32\n107   26\n120   100   23\n120   100   22\n90  107   19\n94\nVernon ..\nLumby ..\nKelowna\nOKANAGAN\nW L D Pts\n  5   2   1   11\n -.  4   3   0    8\n 15   13\nLambert's\nSHINGLES llllllllllllllllllllli\nBUILDING PAPER llllllllll\nLATH lllllllllllllllllllllllllir\nROOFING      lllllllllllllllllllin\n1929 Ford Coupe\nMew Tirei, Mechanically Perfect\nSave on thli one.\nCity Motors\nJoiephine Si    Limited    Ph. 43\nTrail Curling\nAllison Winner\nof Patron's Cup\nTRAIL, B. C., Feb. 3\u2014A. C. Allison won the Patron's Cup ol the\nTrail Curling Club Wednesday night,\nbeating W. J, Stevenson 9-8 in the\nlinal, played at the Trail rink.\nResults ot play in the President's\nCup follow:\nG. F. Reimann 7, Walter Brady 8.\nP. F. Mclntyre 9, J. A. Wadsworth\n7.\nWilliam McLeary 10, David For-\nrest 8.\nE. W. Hailewood 9, W. J. Stevenson 7.\nWilliam Rae 8, W. P. Doubt\u00ab.\nA. C. Allison 8, Charles Hoefer 9.\nL. F. Tyson 10, W. B. Hunter 9.\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 3\u2014Draws lor\nthe President's Cup play at the\nTrail Curling Rink Thursday, follow:\n6:30-hP. R. McDonald vs. W. G\nCarrie; E. J. Provost vs. Dave JTal-\nflour; Frank Straohan vs. H. L.\nLeckie; W. H. Sheppard vs. George\nWalsh.\n8:30-E. J. Plester vs. H, C. Caldicott; R. C. McGerrigle vs. H. A\nMcLaren; William Baldrey vs. Donald MacDonald; William McLeary\nvi. _.- A. Calvert\nMarjorie Howard, reildsnt of Parii\nfor 30 yean, In an article In 'Life.'\nThe Parsiians have no milk, no\neggs, very jittle butter, no stockings, little coal, no soap, but they\nitill have a sense of humor and this\nis no mean weapon against the Germans. By a word here and a Joke\nthere, the subtle Parisians are bedeviling the life out ol their stolid\nconquerors.\nOne thing the Germans can't stand\nis being Ignored. They are Just like\nKipling's Bandarlog, always trying\nto get the other animals to notice\nthem. The Parisians know this and\ndelight in regarding them as 11 their\nmilitary band struts up the Champs\nElysees between 12 and one.\nMen ln the itreet don't even turn\ntheir heads. Women feign intense interest in windows full of dull automobile accessories. Sometimes in\norder to force an audience the Germans halt every car that passes but\nthe drivers snatch up av paper and\npretend to be deeply absorbed by it.\nWe have learned that the ordinary soldier is very apprehensive\nabout the expected attempt at invasion of England. The Germans\nare not a searfaring people and\nhave an unholy dread of the water. One of the last days I was\nthere I saw three trucks loaded\nwith lifebelts, driven by German\nsoldiers. Every man, woman and\nchild ln the street called out, 'Glug\nglug, glug,\" and the soldiers turned purple.\nSHOWS ROWDY\nThey are much concerned because\nthey cannot keep the population\nfrom demonstrating their feelings\nat the movies. Films may be French\nbut newsreels are invariably German. When the screen shows a picture of Hitler, we all hiss and then\ngroan; Mussolini calls forth ironical\nlaughter'; the bomSardment of England a chorus ot glug, glug, glug.\nOne night the manifestations passed\nall bounds. The lights, were turned\na German mounted the stage\nand said that the newsreel would\nbe run over again, and at the slightest demonstration one Frenchman\nwould be taken from each row and\nhe would\u2014disappear. The lights\nwere lowered, the film re-run and\nwhen they put the lights on again,\nthere was not a French person left\nin the house.\nA friend told us of an old woman\nshopkeeper who discovered some\nstockings and announced a sale.\nImmediately the women of the quarter queued up to take advantage\nol lt. A German soldier shoved them\naside and entered the shop first.\n\"Yes, Monsler, what can I do for\nyou?\" \"Stockings,\" came the reply.\n\"Certainly, Monsieur, please take\nthe end of the line.\" \"No. Me, German,\" he said, thumping his chest.\n\"Ah, we are all Germans now. So\nplease take the end of the line.\" she\nsaid. He did.\nA growing menace Is the Jewish\npersecution, which was Just starting\nwhen we left. The best Jew story I\nheard was this: Two German officers were sitting in a cafe, and right\nbeside them two men of evident\nJewish aspect. The Germans called\nthe manager and insisted on his tell\ning the two men to leave. In great\nembarrassment he went to their\ntable and said: \"Gentlemen, I am\nforced to ask you to go. These of-\nAre You Prepared for\nPruning Time\nWe Have in Stock\nTree Pfuneri, 6, 7 and 8 ft., from  f 2.10\ntree Pruncrs, 30-in., from    $3.45\nPruning Shears, from   $0.90\nPruning Sawi, from  f2.75\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nfleers object to your presence.\" One\nof the men said very loud ln English: \"Tell them to go to hell.\" One\nOf the Germans understood.\nHe Jumped up and came storming over to their table. \"What did\nyou say?\" he demanded. The man\ncoolly answered: \"I said you can\ngo to hell.\" \"Your papers,\" demanded the German. The man\nreached into his pockets and withdrew a diplomatic passport from\nthe Russian embassy. The Germans had to click their heels and\napologize and left amid the loud\nlaughter of the whole place.\nAnd now for my favorite story of\nthe occupation. This came to mo\nthrough a young French engineer,\nemployed in one of the big factories now making airplanes for the\nGermans, with French wprkmen.\nThe sabotage was terrific until the\nGermans said that instead of using\nGerman pilots to test the plapes\nthey would use French. The grape\nvine got busy and word went about,\n\"No more sabotage. We will kill our\nown men.\" When enough planes\nwere ready Ior testing, the French\npilots were called. Tney took off\nand flew straight for England.\nI cannot help thinking that Hitler has made a great mistake in letting so many of his troops stay In\nParis, even for a brief time. In\nspite of food restrictions, blackouts,\ncurfews they cannot fail to notice\nhow different life can be In a country\" that, until recently, was free.\n.peaking German as I do, I have\nfrequently offered my services as\ninterpreter to soldiers in trouble\nwith the language. Often, my help\nhas led to conversation between\nus, and invariably they have told\nme how beautiful the country seemed to them, how elegant the city,\nhow free the people, even under defeat, how tired they personally were\nof war and how they longed to be\nat home again.\nTrail and Rossland\nStarr Intermediate\nPuck Series Tonight\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014First game\nof the West Kpotenay Intermediate\nhockey finals between Trail and\nRossland will be held at Rossland\nThursday night. The finals will be\na best of five series, the winners to\nmeet the East Kootenay winners for\nthe right to play in the British Columbia playdowns.\nThe second game of the serlei is\nscheduled for Trail Saturday night.\nBill Weddell will be in the Trail\ngoal, and Trail defencemen are\nChuck Casey, Marcus Smith and\nCasey Jones. George Appleton,\nCleve Cowland, -ind John Hughes\nare on the first string, and second\nstring men are \"Pills\" Purcello,\nRalph Scott, and Gerry Wanless.\nJim Kendall and Walter \"Swede\"\nPetrosky will probably appear on\nthe Ice Saturday. Frank Petrosky,\nat present at Vergon military training camp, ls expected back next\nweek, and will play on the team\nIn the latter games.\nCULLERCOATS, England (CP)-\nThe Royal National Lifeboat Institution has awarded \u00a394 ($239) to\na crew here for going, in one day,\nto the aid of three vessels in distress and rescuing 21 persons.\nKilpatrick, Mann Get\nSix Points Each,\nMason Stars\n> It's really getting io that a body\nli really up agalnit a.itone wall\n' If he triei to dopa. out. what'i\ngoing to happen In the Weit Kootenay Hockey League-\nOn paper, te all logic reiion-\nIng, th* Nelion Mapi* Leafi were\ndue fer another trimming when\nthey met up with Trail'i league-\nleading Smoke Eaters at th* Civic\nAena Wedneiday night But the\nLeafs, hustling all the wty and\nputting plenty of emphaili\ntight oheoklng, came back from\nthree itraight one-sided defeats\nto romp through the Smokiei for\na 13-3 victory \u2014 the worst wai\nloping for any team thli leuon.\nMASON IS GOOD\nThe Leafs did what lt was up to\nthem to accomplish. With \"Junior\"\nMason, who made a sensational de\nbut belore his home-folk in the\nNelson net, being on a tough spot In\nrelieving the injured Jesse Seaby,\nthe forwards and defencemen had to\nge out there and stick like igltie to\ntheir checks all' night, to give the\nyouthful netminder all possible support. It was a tough assignment for a\nkid to fill, but whenever Smokies\ndid break through on him, the colorful citstodian was Johnny-on-the-\nspot to rise to the occasion. An idea\nof the calibre of his work was evidenced from the lact that he twice\nbeat Bunny Dame when last year'i\nscoring champ was right through on\nhim, and once he robbed Mike\nBuckna ol a sure one.\nWhile they put on a superlative\ndefensive exhibition, Leafs capitalized, smartly on all the breaks that\ncame their way and riddled Trail's\ndefence with pretty passing plays.\nWith Jack Kilpatrick and Jakie\nMahn In full gear, they even outdid\nthe 9-3 victory they rang up on Trail\nhere a week and a half ago.\nThe season's smallest crowd wai\non hand to see Leafs perform in a\nmanner that made it difficult to\nrealize how they can play so\nand-out. Perhapi having Cowboy\nBob Gilmour back in the box had a\nlot to do with It, and besides that,\nthe Leafs were \"fighting mad\" and\nhad to perlorm with a make-shllt\nlineup.\nREVAMP LINE\nNelson showed a new front line\nln Algar on right wing along with\nKilpatrlck and Mann. Haire\nplayed on right wing on the alternate string with Proulx and\nSturk. The move proved to advantage with Kilpatrick marching way out in front in the points'\nparade and Mann climbing into\nsecond place ahead of Cnmle. Kilpatrick, with one goal and -five\nassists, now has 39 points against\n35 for Mann, who inlped five\ngoals and got an assist, and 34 for\nCronie, who was held to one goal.\nOn the second line Proulx picked\nup three counters, Al Euerby, who\nwas alternate forward, saw a good\ndeal of work and played a fine\ngame both ways.\nThe Smoke Eaters used Dave\nBuchanan in goal, and while he led\nan unhappy life between the pipes,\nhe wasn t given much protection by\nhis defence. All but, one or two\ngoals were close,-in plays with only\nBuck to beat. And with the Leafs\nsailing along the way they were,\nthey didn't miss many opportunities.\nREADY FOR BREAKS\nAlthough they went out to check\nclosely right from the start, the\nLeafs were all set to pounce on any\nbreaks that came their way. And the\nfirst came after 1:38 of play when\nBicknell started a play at centre\nIce, Kilpatrlck carried in on left\nwing, and passed ahead to Mann\nwho sniped the far comer on a lightning play.\nPlay swung from one end to the\nother for most of the period with\nneither club'holding any great advantage at any time, and then with\nJust over a minute to go Leafs got\nanother chance to put on the power.\nWith Morris and Wade in the penalty box for Trail along with Bicknell, Nelson capitalized on Its man-\nadvantage to score two goals nine\nseconds apart. Mann got the first\nwhen he backhanded a rebound off\nBuchanan's pads, and then Kilpatrick built Boothman up on a\nscoring play nicely, passing across\nthe forward line for Boothman to\nbeat the defence and shoot from an\nangle at the red spot on right wing.\nDAME TO CRONIE\nMason was beaten by a pretty\npassing bout by Trail's first string\n40 seconds after the start of the second, but he had little chance. Dame\npassed back to Cronie who drilled\nin a hard one from the penalty shot\nline through a maze of players.\nNelson got that one back quickly\nwhen Mann took Algar's pass Settle pair neared the Trail blue, and\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Nelson, Mann\n(Kilpatrick-Bicknell) 1:38; 2,\nNelson, Mann 19:01; 3, Nelion,\nBoothman (Kilpatrick) 19:10.\nPenalties \u2014 Dame, Morrli,\nBicknell, Wade.\nSecond period \u2014 4, Trail,\nCronie (Dame) :40; 5, Nelaon,\nMahn (Algar) 1:46; 8, Trail, Duffy 3:34; 7, Nelson, proulx 4:02; 8,\nNelion, Kilpatrick (Mann-Al-\ngar) 7:03; 9. Nelson Algar 14:15;\n10, Trail, Wade (Bob Marshall)\n14:59; 11, Nelson, Maim (Kilpatrick) 15:48.\u25a0\nPenalties\u2014fledley Marshall.\nThird' period - 12, Nelson,\nProulx 3:05; 13, Nelson, Proulx\n14:18; 14, Nelson, Haire, 14:32;\n15, Nelion, Pettigrew (Kilpatrlck) 16:30; 18, Nelion, Mann\n(Kilpatrick-Pettlgrew) 17:26.\nPenaltiei - Pettigrew, Hedley\nMarshall.\n' Stops by goalies:\nBuchanan       8 10 12\u201430\nMason It 10 14\u201483\nLineups:\nTrail \u2014 \u2022 Buchanan; Halght,\nMorris, Wade and Christensen;\nCronie, Buckna and Dame; Hedley Marshal, Bob Marshall, and\nDuffy; Saprunoff.\nNelson\u2014Mason; Bicknell, Pettlgrew and Boothman; Kilpatrick, Algar and Mann; Proulx,\nSturk and Haire; Euerby.\nReferees\u2014TV Culley and Curly\nWheatley. Tlmekeepers-T. R.\nWilson and D. G. Chamberlain.\nScorer\u2014P. C. Richards. .\nWINCARNIS\nA tonic,  restorative, ind\nblood \u2022 enrieher.    Recommended for anaemia,\n. nervoumeii and\nconvalescence.\n91.25 par bottlo\nCity Drug Co.\nBOX 480\nPHONE  34\nSteamboat Men an Kootenay Lake\nMemben of the crewi of SS. Naiookin, Kootenay Lake ferry, and 88. Moyie, C.P.R. iteamer\u2014left to right:\nMate J. McLeod, Procter; M. McKay, R. R. 1; J. McMulJin, R. R. 1; Purier A, S. Ritchie, Procter; C. Emky,\nFrocter; and Capt M. MacKinnon, B. R. 1,\u2014Photo by Fred Wllmot, Gray Creek-\ngot past Haight enough to drill a\nlow backhand shot past Buchanan.\nDuffy siloed1 the margin to two\ngoali again loop after when he\n\u2022hot home a rebound after Maion\nhad mad* two quick stopi. Laafi\nretaliated quickly again when\nProulx drilled In one of hli extra\nspecials. He wai faced by Wade\naa he crossed th* Trail blue, and\nthan crossed up everybody by\nrifling It\u2014pait a startled Buchanan who wai caught flat-footed.\nAlger started a play at centre for\nhis new forward mates, Mann taking the passacroSs the blue line\nand feeding up to Kilpatrick on the\nsame left wing. \"K-lly\" illpped in\na low whistling drive. Algar scored\nhimself about seven minute* later\nwhen he went through alone and\nbeat Buchanan eaiily on a' clever\nplay. Soon afterward Wade icored\nhis second goal ot the season on a\npass from Bob Marshall for Trail's\nthird and final goal.\nWith Hedley Marshall off for Interfering with Proulx at centre, Nelson cashed in on its power plan\nagain, Mann taking Kilpatrlck's\nwell-laid pass for a tally that made\nthe score 8-3 for Nelson,\nThree minutes after the opening\nof the third session Proulx picked\nup the rubber right in front ol Buchanan and shoved Nelson up six\ngoals. Al Euerby set up the play,\nbut he didnt get an assist lor his\npaas was touched by a Trail stick\nduring transit\nProulx' line clicked tor two quick\nones 14 seconds apart \u2014 with\nless than aix minutes to go, Proulx\nscored the first one all alone, and\nthen Haire banged In Bob's rebound lor the Leafs' eleventh goal.\n, Kilpatrick added to his mounting\npoints when he set up Pettigrew\nin fine fashion through a buffaloed\nTrail defence for another goal to go\nup on the scoreboard.\nThen came the prettiest passing\nplay of the night which rewarded\nNelson with a goal that made it\n13-3. Nelson had held the play\ndeep in Trail's zone for several\nseconds running, and 'finally Pettlgrew centred in front of the net\nfrom right wing. Kilpatrick took\nthe pass at the right-hand side ot\nthe crease, flipped a short relay\nacross the goal-mouth to Mann\nwho fired lt into the open aide.\nCHIPPED ICE\nIn   flashing   to   their   aecond\nitraight one-sided win over Trail,\nLeafi Improved their icason'i record with the Smokies. They now\nhave four wins In seven gamei,\nand In doing to have icored 88\ngoali to Trail'i 20.\nThe two teams resume their feud\nnext week with three games \u2014 in\nTrail, Monday, in Nelson Wednes-\n\u25a0_y ahd back in Trail Thunday.\n\"Junior\" Maion made a big hit\nwith the crowd and he drew continual applause. The peppery little fellow kept kicking out shots\nthat came hli way In great style,\nand hit antics In pouncing on loose\npucki amuied hli supporters.\nUnited Young People\nRearrange Groups; to\nStage a Play Shortly\nGroups of the United Young Peoplei Society were rearranged Wednesday night on the following basis:\nMusical and dramatic\u2014Miss Hazel\nStout Leader.\nLiterary\u2014Harvey Moir, Leader.\nScience and handicraft \u2014 Miss\nPhyllis Cornfield, Leader,\nArrangements for a dance'were\ncompleted and steps were taken toward presentation of a play.\nThe devotional period was directed by Miss Hazel Stout, with Miu\nLorna Moir and Rev. Foster Hilliard assisting.\nJamei Leduc described bow to\nrnakc a ukelele.\nTRAIL TORIES\nDOWN JIMMIES\nTRAIL, B. C., Feb. B\u2014The Toriei\ndefeated the Jimmies 25-20 ln the\ngirls' basketball fixture at the Memorial Hall Wednesday night. Half\ntime count read 12-10 for the Tories\nLlneupi and scores:\nJimmie.\u2014L. Saprunoff 6, P. Wallace 6, S. Langlands, F. Zuk 4, M\nMcGregor, E. Daviei, I. Johannson 4.\nTorleir-D. Edwardi 8, M. Cronie\n8, B. Edwards, M. Kwasnie 2, M.\nWhite 7,' L. Thor.\nLen Wilson refereed.\nEgypt Presents\nTrade Prospect\nOTTAWA, (CP).\u2014Possibility of\n\"substantial business\" with Egypt\ntor certain Canadian industries was\nreported by Henri Turcot, Canadian\nTrade Commissioner at Cairo, ln\na report published in the current\nIssue of Ihe Commercial Intelligence Journal.\n\"With most ot ner sources of supply In Europe cut off by the war\nEgypt Is looking to other continents to meet her requirements In\nImports, and, since stocki of many\nclasses of merchandise are low, im\nporters are keenly interested ln establishing, contact* with exporters\nin other countries,\" Turcot said.\nHe added that Canada could take\nadvantage of the services extended\nby ships now plying between United\nStates and Red Sea ports, and \"share\nin the new business offered in this\ncountry, provided, of course, Canadian goods are available to this\npart of the world.\"\nAmong commodities sought by\nEgyptian importers are newsprint,\ntimber, -railway equipment Iron\nand steel products, rubber, automobile, equipment, agricultural machinery and foodstuffs in general.\nWhile exchange control has been\nln effect in Egypt for some time,\nsterling Is readily available for ordinary Dullness transactions with\nCanada, Turcot said. The Canadian\nForeign Exchange Control Board\npermits acceptance of payment In\nsterling for goods shipped to thll\ncountry.\nElsewhere ln the Middle East\nhowever, war has dimmed prospects tor Canadian trade, due largely to communication difficulties\nand foreign exchange details, the\nTrade Commissioner reported.\nLONDON (CP)-The Minister of\nTransport says highway damage by\nenemy action Is being repaired as\nspeedily as possible and he ls constantly exploring steps to expedite\nrepaln.\nTHE MAKING\nof a\nSTETSON HAT\nSee our window for ths\ncomplete \"story of ths\nmanufacturing of a Stetson Hat, showing the\ncomplete procedure from,\nthe raw material to the!\nfinished product.\nEMORY'S Ltd.\nTrail Aces Whip\nMaple Leafs 45-1 j\nTRAIL. B. C, Feb. 5^-The Mania i\nLeafs went down 45-7 before the]\nAces ln the Men'i intermediate bai-1\nketball serlei Wednesday night I\nHalf time score waa 19-4 for Ihe'i\nAcei.\nLineups and scores:\nMaple Leafs\u2014S. Sammartino, J.j\nUnderwood. T. Barsotto 8, M. Bar* I\nsotto 3, Ted Fowler, John Fanlnl 1, j\nA. MacAulay, L. Murdoch..\nAces\u2014E. Gri 12 P. Buna 8, Lai\nTognotti 12, Tony Merlo 4, Archie!\nMartin, A. Tognotti 12, A. Balani. 2. j\nLen Wilion refereed. .      ,,. \u2022.,,_}\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The.Canadian Praia\nO. H. A. SENIOR \"A\"\nOshawa 1, Toronto Marlboros I\nSt Catharines 2. Hamilton 8.\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nRoyals 5, Concordia 2.\nCanadiens 12, Verdun 4.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nProvidence 2, Philadelphia 1.\nSpringfield 4, Hershey 2.\nNew Haven 2, Pittsburgh 8.\nBuffalo 3, Indianapolis 3.\nCet the\nFURNACE\nPut ln working order NOW1\nR. H. Maber I\nPhone 658      510 Kootenay St\n^\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Widdowson\n301-306 Josephine St.   Nelson, I\n-T1-\"T\"-ln-t--t-a_a-t-ta--a-t_sa-a.au-sale\nHave the Job Dons Right  j\nVIC GRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE  815\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANIT-D-FULLY -XPERIENCED\nmald. Apply with references to\nMrs. Donald MacDonald, War-\nfield. TraU, B. C.\nFOR SALE - YORKSHIRE SOWS.\nBred, proved mothers. Cheap for\ncash. Trade sheep, beef stock or\nwhat. Taylor, Kaslo, B. C.\nHORSE FOR SALE, GOOD WORK-\ner. Apply F. Pictin, Salmo, B. C.\nIMMEDIATE SALE - 2 COWS, 3\ncalves. Chp. V. M. Hoskin, Balfour\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nJoymakers' Progressive Whist and\nDance tonight. MpmbJi. and friends.\nGRAY'S Valentine boxed chocolates say lt best. 560 Baker Street\nPrompt, efficient typewriter\npairs. Underwood Agency. Ph.\nAT THE RINK TOOAY\n' Parent and children 1:30 to,3\nSweet Caporal Fine Cut 75c\nlb. tin at VALENTINE'S.\nFleury's  Pharmacy\nevening. Phone 25.\nis  open  this\nCatholics Hold a\nSuccessful Whist\nA successful whiit drive wai held\nWednesday evening at the Catholic\nParish Hall ln Fairview, when Mrs\nCassios and Frank Rossland won\nthe first prizes, and Mrs. A. Ioanin\nand J.. B. Vecchio the consolations.\nEight tables were in play.\nVemon Mon Killed\nVERNON, B.C, Feb. 5 (CP)-One\nman wai killed and four others Injured, two lerlously, when a British\nColumbia Public Worka Department truck carrying a road crew\nleft the highway five milei South\not here late today and rolled down\na sharp incline.\nJacob Schelthelm, middle \u2022 aged\nlaborer, wai killed.\nTool Sale. Wood levels 99c. French\nSets from 89c. Block planes 69c\nHipperson Hardware Company.\n\"SYLVAPLY\" FIR VENEER\nVi\" 4 x 8 sheet $1.84\nrixt sheet        $4.08\n>.',\" 4x8 sheet        $5.56\nBURNS LUMBER AND COAL CO\nDo you need anything in office\nequipment? We have it. D. W. Mc-\nDerby, \"The Typewriter Man,\" 654\nBaker Street Nelson, B. C.\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nNow Located In\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\njP*\nEarly to bed\nEarly to rise,\nDrink Pasteurized milk\nAnd you'll be wise,\nHousehold   Appliances\nSi lex Coffee Makeri\nStondord\n483 Joiephine St.\nThe PERCOLATOR\nDoughnuts\nARE COOD AT\nANY MEAL\nAUCTION\nContinues Today, Z p.m.\n408 Vernon Street\nDesk, Good Cheer Heater, Carpet, Philco Radio, Books, Lounge,\nCentre Table, Dishes, Linen, Bedding, Curtains, Settee and Chairs,\nOak Rocker.\n0a. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer\nRobin Hood Flour Presents\n\"ON PARADE\"\nThursdays 5:30 to 6:00 p.m.\n$400 IN CASH PRIZES\nWEEKLY\nSend your Robin Hood Coupons to\nCKLN\u2014You may be a winner! <\nbiitMxa&itoihem\n___\na\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1941_02_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414233","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}