{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414243":{"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":"1941-04-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414243\/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":" \\\nR.A.F. T*ifs New Explosive      t \/\nBomb In Raid.\u2014Page. 3.\nBritish Capture Asmara, Tike\n800 Men on Way.\u2014Page 3.\nBritain Negotiating With U.S.\nto Tighten Embargo.\u2014Page 3.\nNUMBER!\nCIO. CALLS\nYugoslav Thousands\nFlock to Join Army\nAustrian Action\nFormed to Fight\nAgainst Nazism\nNEW YORK, April 1 (CP). -\nFormation ol Austrian Action, a\n\"militant, non-partisan organization of free and Independent Austrians in the Americas\" to aid\nthe fight against Nazism, was announced here today. Count Ferdinand Czernin, Austrian writer,\nIs Chairman.\nAustrian Action proposes to\nprovide ways for Austrians aged\n18 to 44 to \"take part actively\nIn the fight for freedom, consistent with the laws of the countries\nin which they live.\" Those who\ncannot enlist for military service\nwill be given opportunity to work\nfor the freedom of their people\nin other ways.\nSimilar to the Free French organization of Gen. Charles De Gaulle\nAustrian Action's \"ope great aim is\nto regain for the Austrian people\ntheir freedom of decision and their\nright of self-determination,\" Count\nCzernin told a Press conference. He\nsaid the group \"enthusiastically\nalign themselves with the forces of\nGreat Britain, of Free France and\nof other democracies in their common struggle.\"\nThe following program of action\nwu announced:\n1. To reach and to keep In touch\nwith the people of Austria now\nunder Nazi rule to tell them \"of\nthis fight for freedom.\"\n2. \"To expose the Austrian Quislings of all sizes\u2014the Seyss-In-\nquarts, Guido Schmidts and all others who have sold the Austrian*\ninto slavery.\"\n8. To uncover and to counteract\n\"all Nazi propaganda and activities\nln the economic as well as in the\npolitical sphere,, wherever encountered.\"\n4. Te assist and relieve Austrian\nvictims of Nazi oppression.\n5. To rally Austrians throughout\nthe world In the common struggle for freedom.\nUnder the slogan of \"Oesterreich\u2014\nEinig and Frei\" (Austria\u2014United\nand Free), Austrian Action will seek\nrecruit* in North and South America. Branch units in 16 cities of the\nWestern Hemisphere are to be established with headquarters in New\nYork. Location of the Canadian unit\nhas not yet been determined.\nMacDonald Takes\nUpCanadaWork\nOTTAWA, April 1 (\"CPl-Rt. Hon,\nMalcolm MacDonald, a famous son\nof a famous father, prepared tonight\nto take up the office of Britain's\nHigh Commissioner in a country\nwhose \"comradeship\" has \"powerfully sustained\" his people in their\nfight for democracy.\nThe successor to Sir Gerald Campbell at Ottawa told shortly after\nhis arrival in Canada from England\nof his belief that the \"spontaneous\ncooperation of the free peoples of\nthe British Commonwealth . . . will\ngain, a glorious victory,\" and said\nCanada's contribution has \"tremendously Impressed everybody over\nthere.1'\nThe Press found Mr. MacDonald, s\nshort, dark courteous man in sombre (fart) who sidestepped ticklish\nquestions with the explanation \"I'm\na Commissioner now, not a politician.\"\nLate Flashes\nDUBLIN, April 1 (AP).-A German plane crashed tonight in County\nWexford and its crew was interned\nthe Eire Government Information\nBureau announced.\nCANBERRA, April 1 (AP) -\nThe Australian House of Representatives tonight passed a bill\nImposing a payroll tax which will\nprovide the greater portion of\nfinances required for a Government-sponsored child endowment\nplan which is scheduled to begin\noperation July 1.\nSHANGHAI, April 2 (Wednesday)\n(AP)\u2014-Japanese authorities virtually closed the Yangtze River today\nwhen reliable sources reported permits for travel on the waterway\nwould not be issued for at least\nfour weeks.\nIt was understood, too, that Italian,\nGerman and Chinese river steamers\nwould be prohibited from stopping\nat Yangtze Delta ports.\nWASHINGTON, April 1 (CP)-\nPresident Roosevelt announced today that orders totalling $1,080,000,-\n000 had been authorized under the\nLeas-e-Lend Act for military equipment to be supplied to Britain and\nother .d-emocracles combatting aggressors.\nLONDON, April 1 (CP) - Lt.-\nCmdr. Reginald Fletcher, Parliamentary Private Secretary to A. V,\nAlexander, First Lord of the Admiralty, said tonight in a talk quoted by the Britis-h Broadcasting Corporation that the present scale of\nAllied shippin? losses is \"not high\nenough for Hitler to achieve victory in 1041.\"\nThumbs Vp at New York's Ctty Hall\nNeutrality Declaration With Turkey, Russia\nConsidered; German Press and Radio\nCampaign Turns On Heat\nDEMONSTRATIONS IN BULGARIA\nBELGRADE, April 1 (AP) \u2014 Additional thousands of\nSerbs, Croats, Bosnians and Montenegrans poured into the\ncities of Yugoslavia tonight to join the Army as popular indignation flared in response to a German Press and radio campaign\nagainst this kingdom.\nWith Yugoslav-German relations in a precarious condition\nGovernment circles reported that Yugoslavia, Turkey and Soviet\nRussia were seriously considering a joint neutrality declaration\naimed at producing the strongest possible psychological effect.\nRailway stations throughout the country, however, were\njammed with foreigners of a dozen nationalities, all frantic to\n*be on their way. Troops with\nfixed bayonets stood guard to\nenforce a Government order\nagainst panicky evacuation by\nYugoslav citizens.\nMost Yugoslavs heeded Premier\nDusan Simovic's stern warning to\nstay at home and prepare to defend\nthe country with their lives if need\nbe, but trains to the South have\nbeen jammed during the last few\ndays with both refugees and soldiers.\nThe Government issued a restrained denial of German charges\nthat terrorism had been unleashed\nagainst German   residents.\nDiplomats, Government officials\nand plain citizens alike expressed\ngrave concern over the implications of the Nazi word-barrage.\nYugoslav aircraft circled over the\ncapital all day, and young King\nPeter moved to consolidate his hold\nby abolishing the Senate\u2014composed\nmainly of allies of the old Cvetkovic Government of capitulation\u2014\nand by promoting to high ranks the\nArmy men who engineered last\nThursday's overthrow of the \"Axis\"\nGovernment,\nNew Yugoslav troop trains headed\nSoutheast and North to the frontiers.\nThe movement gained momentum\nwhen travelers from Bulgaria told\nof mass troop movements in thai\nAxis-occupied country.\nA passenger on the famed Simpion Express, one of the best train-\nin Europe, said it was delayed 16\nhours en route to Istanbul by the\nmovement of German and Bulgarian\ntroops toward the Turkish and\nYugoslav frontier.\nHe iald thousands of German\n\u2022nd Bulgarian soldleri were on\nthe same troop trains and that\nall of Bulgaria wai seething with\nmilitary activity.\nThe Nazi expeditionary force, he\nsaid, is now heading most of its\nstrength toward Yugoslavia and\naway from the Bulgarian-Greek\nborder.\nThere were diplomatic reports\nfrom Bucharest that a vast wedge\nof fast tanks was being driven into\nthe corner of Rumania which juts\ninto Northeastern Yugoslavia.\nSOFIA, Bulgaria, April 1 (AP)\n\u2014Bulgarian students belonging to\nNationalist clubs held patriotic\ndemonstrations today in the\nstreets around the Royal palace,\nsinging songs and distributing\nleaflets.\nBELGRADE, April 1 (API-Two\nneutral legations here tonight received diplomatic messages reporting that police charged a -rowd of\nseveral hundred students and made\nmany arrests today in Sofia, Bulgaria .to break up demonstrations\nin front of the Royal palace in protest against German occupation of\nBulgaria.\nThe police seized pamphlets de\nscribed as \"inflammatory\".\nThe handbills were described as\ndenouncing the Axis for lowering\nBulgaria's living standards and imposing \"heavy burdens\" on the\npeople. One set of leaflets appealed\nfor closer cooperation with Soviet\nRussia.\nBERLIN, April 1 (API-Germany officially pursued \u2022 waiting\npolicy today on developments In\nYugoslavia, but front-page chargei\nIn the Press of abuses againit Germani prepared the publio for\nwhatever action Hitler may plan.\nOne of the latest atrocity itorlei\n\u2014and It was repeated by the commentary Dienst Aui Deutichland\n\u2014wai a claim that a Yugoilav citizen-of German birth had been\nbranded on the face with a fiery\niw-itlki.\nFlour Gift for\nBritain Urged in\nHouse by Hanson\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).-Con-\nservative Leader Hanson urged in\nthe House ot Commons today that\nCanada make a gift of flour to\n\"the beleaguered people of Great\nBritain.'' The flour suggestion\ncame a few days after Mr. Hanson had advocated a gift of 100,-\n000.000 bushels of wheat.\nMr Hanson proposed that 100,-\n000,000 bushels of wheat be milled\ninto flour with Canada retaining\nthe mill feeds where they were\nneeded for livestock.\nThe flour gift would bring Canadian flour directly to the notice of\nthe British consumers, he said.\nAt present wheat prices, the cost\nof flour from 100,000,000 bushels al\nseaboard would be about $100,000,000.\nBritish authorities could be relied\non to bear the cost of transatlantic\nshipment.\nMr. \"Hanson' said It had hten estimated 30 per cent of British flour-\nmillinjj! capacity had been put out\nof business by actual bombing while\nproduction was reduced another 20\nper cent by the necessity of shutting\ndown operations during air raids\nand because of other war conditions. Canadian mills, en the other\nhand, were free to operate at full\ncapacity.\n\"We have a tremendous surplus\nof grain in Canada, and with anything like a normal crop in 1941\nthere will not be sufficient storage\nspace. Much will have to be kept on\nfarms and some will deteriorate.\"\nA gift to Britain would not relieve Ihe storage situation as it\nwould remove only wheat Great\nBritain would have bought in any\ncase.\nBus Strike at\nCoast Deadlocked\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP). -\nStrike of 44 maintenance men\nfrom the garage of the B. C. Motor Transportation Company here\nwhich tied up the company's bus\nservices to Seattle, Fraser Valley\nand other points and halted service on five city feeder bus lines\noperated by the B. C. Electric\nRailway Company, remained deadlocked tonight.\nBoth sides said there had been\nno overtures for a settlement and\nthere was little hope of reaching\none in the immediate future.\nThe B. C. Electric bus drivers refused lo drive when the buses could\nno longer be serviced at the strikebound garage where the maintenance men struck Sunday demanding\na five-cent wage increase.\nPickets, paraded up and down\noutside the garage.\nEarly today Vancouver's hundreds\nof street railway men gave full approval to the stand of the bus\ndrivers. Street railwaymen themselves are not affected by the strike\nand the City's street car service is\noperating as usual.\nAuto Insurance\nPremiums Gain\n,000 in B.C.\nVICTORIA, April I (CP)-Net\nlosses paid by automobile.insurance\nfirms in British Columbia last year\nwere slightly lower than the previous year but companies ihowed\nan increase of WSO.OOO In the net\npremiums written, according to the\nannual returns to the Superintendent of Iniursiice, made public today\nThe losses paid were down from\n$1,225,703 to $1,219,192 and premiums\nup from $2,458,718 to $2,708,195.\nOn fire Insurance the losses paid\ndropped from $1,154,283 to $1,018,-\n070. but premiums were up from\n$3,886,168 to $3,879,740.\nThe report showed premium collections on life Insurance as $14.-\n948,321, an increase of $60,000 for the'\nyear.\nPayments for deaths or maturity\nof policies totalled $5,828,060, an\nincrease of $170,000, and other disbursements on policies were $7,339.-\n897.\n$250,\nHIBBING, Minn. (CP)-Twenty\nfive thousand logs sunk In the lake\nhere 50 years ago were raised and\nsawn into usable and valuable lum'\nber.\nTypifying American and British unity of purpose, Lord Halifax, British Ambassador to Wash\nington and Mayor La Guardia of New York, turn\nthumbs up in New York's city hall during the\nvisit of the British Ambassador to New York.\nDearborn Worker:\nOrdered to Read1\n(or Picket Dutie.\nAt Milwaukee Allis-Chalmers Plant to Hai\nProduction Today \"in Order to Prevent   j\nBloodshed\"; \"In Hands of Gov't\"\nPOLICE UNABLE TO CONTROL MOB\nDETROIT, April 2 (Wednesday) (AP) \u2014 The Unifl\nAutomobile Workers (Congress of Industrial Organization^\nearly today declared a strike had been authorized at the Fofl\nMotor Company's giant Rouge plant at suburban Dearborn..\nThe announcement was made at 12:15 a.m. by R. \u25a0\nThomas, President of the United Automobile Workers, follw\ning a partial work stoppage at the Rouge plant which had tit\nup production last night.\n\"The   international   union   of   the   United   Automobil\nLatin Americans Take Over\n15 Ships; 9 Burned, Scuttled\nCOLLECTION OF TAX\nARREARS UP AT COAST\nVANCOUVER. April 1 (CP). -\nVancouver's collection of arrears of\ntaxes in 1940 totalled $1,384,669,\nhighest percentage of collections\nsince the depression, the annual report of City Comptr\u00bbl)er Frank\nJones submitted, ta courii] shows.\nThe collections are 42.0ffi5\u00bber cent\nof the.total outstanding, fftllection\nof current taxes was slighik above\nthe previous year, 91.78 pettkent.\nLARCE AIR CLASS        $\nAWARDED WINC5\nOTTAWA, Aprll'l (CP). - The\nlargest cla\u00bb\"\u00abT airmen to graduate\nfrom mri service flying training\nschool, operated under the British\nCommonwealth Air Training plan\nat suburban Uplands received their\nwings today in a ceremony conducted by Group Capt. Frank McGill, officer commanding.\nOne Scuttled and 12\nSeized in Ports\nof Mexico\nPERUVIANS CHASE\n2 FLEEING SHIPS\nBy The Canadian Pren ,\nNine Axis merchantmen totalling 44,463 tons were burned or\nscuttled by their crews in Latin\nAmerican ports Tuesday while 15\nothers, aggregating 88,432 tons,\nwere taken in protective custody\nto forestall sabotage.\nTne 24-hour toll thus was\nbrought to 11 ships destroyed\nand 16 seized as Latin American\nGovernments followed suit on\nthe lead of the United States in\nseizing Axis and Danish ships\nlast weekend.\nAs Mexican naval detachments\nclosed in to seize 12 Axis ships harbored at Tampico and Vera Cruz,\ntotalling 71,687 tons, the captain of\nthe 2005-ton Italian tanker Atlas,\nLelio Sazzi, had his crews open the\nseacocks and the vessel was slowly\nsinking in the Panuco River at\nTampico. He explained his action\nthus: \"I have fulfilled my duty and\nthe instructions from the Government not to let the ship fall into\nforeign hands, -possibly English.\"\nThree Italian tankers and a German cargo-passenger ship were\nburned in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela.\nand the Government took over three\nundamaged Italian vessels and one\nsmall German  passenger ship and\narrested 335 Axis sailors. Two German ships were burned at Callao,\nPeru, after a Peruvian cruiser prevented their escape; and another\nGerman vessel was scuttled in Paita,\nPeru.\nFlames burst from the German\nnaval  detachments  under orders\nto prevent sabotage.\nThe crew of the 2005-ton Atlas not\nonly succeeded in opening the seacocks at the approach of the boarding party but defied Mexican appeals to come ashore as their ship\nsteamship Cerigo in the Guayas' slowly settled In the Panuco River\nRiver at Guayaquil, Ecuador, oft Th. .would-be Mexican rescuers\n. Tuesday. A swastika f]1\u00bbi,'^-\u00bbldisa>ui--\u00ab__.^l>_-.a_r)*s_. _t.v\u00able\nfroftt the sttrn of the lOT-lon vessel as a fire-fighting boat approached but no sign of activity\ncould be observed aboard.\nTwo others which fled from Cal-\n'io Monday night were located 110\niiiles at sea by Peruvian Navy\n. nes Peruvian warships were rented speeding to the scene.\nPeruvian troopi meanwhile\nseized the hangar, workihop and\ntwo tramport planei of the Ger.\nman airline, Lufthansa, at a Lima\nairport, and operation of the line\nIn Peru wai reported forbidden.\nTwo Axis vessels were burned by\ntheir crews Monday in Punta Arenas, Costa Rica, shortly after that\ncountry took the ships into custody.\nThe Costa Rican Government last\nnight considered seizing German\nfunds on deposit at San Jose to\ncompensate for the fires. The crews\nwere charged with arson.\nCuba took over an Italian ship in\nHavana Harbor Monday night, and\nyesterday.\nTAMPICO. Mexico, April 1 (AP)\n\u2014Crew members operating secretly below decks scuttled the small\nItalian tanker Atlas a Jump ahead\nof a Mexican boarding party here\ntonight while the 11 other Ax,is\nmerchant ships refuged here and\nat   Vera   Cruz   were   seized   by\nWorkers has authorized a<\nstrike of all workers at the\nRiver Rouge plant of the Ford\nMotor Co.,\" Thomas said.\n\"The strike is to take effect\nat once.\"\nThomas said all workers had been\nnotified to leave the Rouge plant\nand report to the union's Ford office to prepare for picket duty.\nMeanwhile,   at   \u2022   downtown\nhotel Gov. Murray D. van Wagoner Mid he hsd received '-Murines\" from  Michael  F. WWman,\nJr., chairman  of  the  UAW-CIO\nFord   organizational   drive,   that\n\"the men will be out of the plant\nwithin the next hour.\"\nThe  Governor  said  he  did not\nknow  whether  it was \"physically\npossible\"   for   the   men-estimated\nby union officials at 20,000-to leave\nthe various divisions of the Ford\nplants within an hour's time, but\nadded \"that's the way it was put to\nme.\"\nand expected the scuttlers would\neventually come ashore or be taken\noff,\nNEW YORK, April 1 (AP). -\nThe New York Poit tayi In\ncopyright article that Italian Consular officials and other Govern\nment agenti have been Initructed\nto prepare to quit the United\nStates on ihort notice.\nOrders from Rome to this effect,\nThe Post says, were relayed to the\nItalian subjects at meetings recently\nin New York, Detroit, San Francisco and New Orleans. Many were\ntold they probably would go to\nSouth America.\nOfficials at the Italian Embassy\nin Washington denied the report.\nLIMA, Peru, April 1 (AP).\u2014Peru\ntonight barred the German news\nagency \"Transocean\" from operation\nin this country on the ground that\nits dispatches are \"spreading news\nthat may disturb the good international relations of Peru.\"\nWASHINGTON. April 1 (AP).-\nIn the face of Axis demands for the\nrelease of 30 ships and their crews\nseized by the United States, the\nJustice Department late today ordered immediate criminal prosecutions in all cases of sabotage.\nMen Under 19 Not\nfor Mobile Units\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).- Men\nunder 19 years of age being enlisted at Vancouver are for coastal defence units and not for mobile units,\nDefence Minister Ralston told the\nHouse of Commons tonight.\nThe men were for service in Canada only but might be given an opportunity to volunteer for overseas\nservice when they reach 19, the\nMinister said. In the meantime they\nwould replace men in the Coast defence units who were over 19 and\nhad volunteered to go overseas.\nFRED PERRY WEDS\nMEXICO CITY, April 1 (AP) -\nFriends of Fred Perry, 31, former\nworld tennis champion, reported today he had married Sandra Breaux,\n25. of Santa Anna. Calif. It was the\nsecond marriage for each.\nCOMMITTED FOR TRIAL\nABBOTSFORD, B. C\u201e April 1 -\n(CP).\u2014Jack Pachenko, 30-year-old\ntransient charged with the armed\nrobbery of Reeve Alex Hougen of\nSumas in his home near here in\nFebruary, was committed for trial\ntoday when he appeared in Sumas\npolice court before Magistrate J. W.\nWinson.\nComplete Harmony Between British\nand (anadian Heads Says Ralston\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).\u2014Com-'may \"serve together with the horn'\nplete harmony exliti between the\ncommandi of Canadian forcei In\nEngland and thoie of the United\nKingdom forcei, Defence Mlniiter Ralston told the House of\nCommoni today.\nHe laid the Canadian Corpi had\nbeen acting for aome time \"In\ncombination\" with the United\nKingdom home forcei under their\nCommander-in-Chief, Sir Aim\nBrooke.\nBut any decision to move Canadians out of Britain to a new scene\nof war operations would require the\napproval of the Canadian Government.\nSuch approval had been sought\nend g.ven in the case of the proposed move to Norway last Spring\nand the move to France last Summer, the Minister said.\nCanadian troops are in the United\nKingdom under provisions of the\nVisiting Forces British Commonwealth Act a Canadian statute which\nis also in the United Kingdom\nstatutes.\nThe Minister said the Act provides  two  things:  that Canadians\nforces of the country in which they\nare visiting\" and that they may acl\nin \"combination\" with home forces\nThe status of serving together\nwas more applicable to visiting\ntroops in training, while the \"combination\" status applied generally\nwhen visiting troops .were called\nup to act in cooperation with the\nhome forces in actual operations.\nEsch force It autonomoui until\nIt enteri Into combination with\nthe home forces when the King,\nthrough the Government, may ap\npoint one officer to command the\ncombined forcei,\nAn order-in-council passed last\nAprjl 3 provides that Canadian military and air forces in the United\nKingdom may be detailed by an officer so authorized by the Government to serve in combination with\nIhe home forces, and thereby come\nunder combined command.    \u2022\nLt.-Gen. A.G.L. McNaughton. Commander of the Canadian Corps, was\none of the officers so designated and\nhe detailed the Canadian Corp to\nact ln combinalion with the home\nfarces.\nR.A.F. Pilots, Seamen\nArrive at New York\nNEW YORK, April I (AP)-Some\n22 Royal Air Force bomber pilots,\nwho will ferry planes to Britain,\nand 16 Britisn seamen, who will\nman a British freighter in a United\nStates port, arrived today on the\nNetherlands steamship Bodegraven,\noperating under the British Ministry\nof Shipping.\nThe Westward crossing in a convoy was \"terribly exciting\", said one\nof the 44 passengers who added that\none-fourth of the way across, the\nconvoy was attacked by long-range\nGerman bombers, and one ship was\nsunk.\nEDEN IN ATHENS, NOT\nBELGRADE, SAYS BBC\nLONDON, April 1 (CP).-The\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\ntonight quoted reports from\nAthens received today that King\nGeorge of the Hellenes \"would receive Foreign Minister Anthony\nEden of Great Britain today.\"\n\"This effectively answers German reports (circulated today)\nthat Mr Eden is in Belgrade,\" the\nBBC said.\nbloodshed, I am directing the Con\npany to cease all productive op\u00ab '\ntions.\"\nThe order closing the plant i\nwhich had been reopened Friday L\nthe request of Government official\nto speed production on $45,000,000 |\ndefence orders\u2014came following I\nsecond outbreak of violence in '\n70-day strike of a CIO local.\nNEW YORK. April 2  (WednJ\nday) \u2014(AP).\u2014A work stoppage J\nUnited States bituminous coal mini\nbecame  fully  effective   last  nlf\nafter labor and management falli\nto reach a contract agreement tn_L\nFederal conciliator said he belleJ\ned continuous  negotiations duriq\nthe next 48 hours would bring i\ntemporary arrangement for resu\ntion of operations.\"\nSenator Answers\nVANCOUVER MAN DIES\nVANCOUVER. April 1 (CP) -\nFuneral services will be held here\ntomorrow for Ruyter Stinson Sherman, 76, Vancouver school principal\nand naturalist and former civil engineer and surveyor. Mr. Sherman\ndied Sunday. He was a brother of\nE. B. Sherman, Vancouver weatherman.\nCREEK NAVY THANKED\nLONDON. April 1 (CP).-Admlr-\nal Sir Andrew Cunningham. Commander-in-Chief of the British fleet\nin the Mediterranean, has expressed\ned his thanks to the Greek navy for\n\"the precision and speed with which\nit moved to participate in Ihe recent\nnaval battle,\" the British Broadcasting Corporation reported tonight.\n~*'m*.'^KW**tohe'i'-'\u00bb-r_riitM\nearly lasTflight by Dearborn city\nofficials    who   requested    State\nTroopers  to  evacuate  from   the\nplant   between   7000   and   8000\nworkers, whom they described as\n\"sit-down strikers\".\nAt the time of the strike order,\nonly the foundry and part of the\ndye shop were operating.\nThomas' statement said in part:\n\"Declaration of the strike at this\ntime was forced on the union by\nthe Ford Motor Co. which has for\nmonths, up until yesterday engaged in deliberate and continuous effort to prevent adjustment of the\nFord  workers'  grievances  through\nmeans of conference and conciliation.\n\"The Company has placed every\nobstacle in the way ot an immediate labor election, although it is\nobvious that the UAWA'CIO speaks\nfor the overwhelming majority ot\nits employees.\n\"On Tuesday the Ford Motor Co.\ndeliberately discharged the chosen\nspokesmen of the Rouge workers\nIt falsely ascribed to the Rouge\nworkers the attempt to carry on a\nsit-down strike, It flouted the request of the Federal Government.\nState and County governments, as\nwell as of the union that leaders ol\nthe UAW-CIO be permitted to enter the Rouge plant to request the\nworkers to leave.\"\nThomas' statement was followed by an announcement by Wid-\nman that some workers had left\nthe plant and a number of others\nwere being held inside by \"service men armed with hammers\nand other weapons stationed at\ndoors.\"\nInformed sources said the pro-\nductiqn tieup would have little\neffect on the Company's national\ndefence orders, except for work\non army trucks. The trucks are\nbeing built at the tractor plants\nand orders for bomber parts arc\nto be produced at a new plant at\nYpsilanti, Mich, for which ground\nis now being cleared.\nWASHINGTON, April 1 (AP).-\nThe conciliation service received\nword tonight that the Ford Motor\nCompany had agreed to negotiate\ngrievances of the C.I.O. United\nAuto Workers Union if its members\nleft the Company's River Rouge\nplant tonight.\nMILWAUKEE, April 1 (AP).-\nThe Allis-Chalmers manufacturing\nplant, scene of a three hour battle\nbetween police and strikers in\nwhich 22 were Injured today, will\ncease production tomorrow at the\nrequest of Governor Julius Heil.\nMax W. Babb, President of the\nhuge West All's firm, said he had\nordered the plant closed at the urgent request of Sheriff Joseph\nShinners and of Governor Heil.\nThe situation now is \"in the hands\nof the Federal Government for action,\" Babb stated.\nGovernor Hell simultaneously\nannounced that he had wired\nPresident Roosevelt that a \"mob\nhad-created disorders beyond the\ncontrol of all peace officers which\ncan be assembled by the combined forces of the State, county and\ncity.\"\n\"The situation Is absolutely out\nof control of all the peace officers\navailable,\" Heil wired.\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP)-Gover\nment Leader Dandurand said in tl\nSenate tonight that \"the high pries\nof jingoism in this country\" cou\naid the war effort by lending ayt\npathy and commendation to t\nGovernment, but, he said, if th\nhappened \"the president of theljS\ntreal Gazette would no more bl\njingo\u2014this would indeed be a mi\nacle.\"\nSenator Dandurand was speakll\non question of privilege in conne\ntion with a Gazette editorial\nMarch 29 urging that he be \"(U\nciplined\" by his colleagues in tl\nGovernment for a statement he BUI\nlast week on British-Canadian'!\ndustrial relations.\nAnother Gazette editorial, he nl\n\"eulogized\" an article in the TJnl\ned States magazine Fortune. He st\nhe had read in Fortune thestateme\nthai Britain had \"no intention\"\nbuilding up industry in Canil\nwhich might compete with Its ovt\n\"The inconsistency of the Montre\nGazette is quite apparent,\" Senat\nDandurand said. \"It tries to mal\na mountain out of a molehill.\"  \u25a0\nNo Canada-U.S.\nAgreement on\nForeign Exchang\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP)-Finam\nMinister Ilsley told the Canadll\nPress today that as far as he kne\nno negotiations are in progress I\nplanned for an exchange agreemei\nwith the United States whereby tl\nUnited States would accept the 0\nnadian dollar at par ln purchases :\nthat country.\nTrade between the two countri\nis almost entirely based on the t\nficial exchange rate of approximat\nly 10 per cent discount on Canadll\ndollars in United States fut\nmaintained by the Foreign Exchl\nControl Board of Canada.\nMin. Ma;\nNELSON   34 \u00ab\nTRAIL    42 M\nVictoria    48 52\nNanaimo     48 5c\nVancouver  50 91\nKamloops     59 71\nPrince George  52 * 8.\nEstevan   Point     47 5f\nPrince  Rupert   45 5\"\nLangara   45 5i\nAtlin   \" At\nDawson, Y. T  9 3!\nSeattle       49 s;\nPortland          47 N\nSan Francisco    50 51\nSpokane     59 \"H\nPenticton  - 39 (ii\nVemon      3* i\nKelowna     34\nGrand Forks  36\nKaslo          32\nCranbrook   32\nCalgary     -  M\nEdmonton    *\"\"*\n\"I am notifying you of this action\nIn order that you may direct such\naction  as you deem advisable.  In Tuesday was\nthe meantime ln order to prevent water mark.\nSwift Current    20\nPrince Albert     24\nWinnipeg     30\nForecast: Kootenay: Light Sou\nerlv winds, cloudy and mild wlfl\nfew light showers.\nLevel of the West Arm at Neb\nfoot above the 1\n pi(.^^PWi  P..J\"\n\u25a0..-.. .\"\u25a0\u25a0\nI TWO-\nrmer Trailile\nKilled Aircraft\n4ishapr England\nUUL, B. C\u201e April 1\u2014Flight\ngar A. E. Smith 25, of an RA.F.\ndeane iquadron, composed of\nidlans, has been reported killed\nn aircraft accident in England.\n\"0 Smith, brother of Mrs. J. M.\nier and Mrs. Charles Pritchard\nSail, joined the R.A.F. in the\nimer of 1938. Prior to leaving\nEngland he worked for a few\nths for the Consolidated Min-\nSt Smelting Company at Tad-\nf\n( wu married last Christmas\nIcotland to Miss Disa Elizabeth\nBridge of South Africa. Besides\nwife, he is survived by his par-\n, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Smith\na lister Mrs. G. Booth, all of\nt Summerland; a sister. Mrs. J.\nbison, of Youbou, B. C, two\nhers, R. E. Smith of St. Huberts,\n, and J. J. Smith of Vancouver\nhis two sisters in Trail.\nn Dance to Feature\nmed Orchestra Here\nelson Kinsmen Club Tuesday\nIt made arrangements to spon-\ni I dance featuring Mart Ken-\n'l Orchestra later this month\nangements as to admission\nrges, advertising, and other de-\nl were discussed.\nn previous occassions the Club\nipohsored dances here featur-\nthe noted Canadian orchestra.\nACKACHE ?\nggish kidneys of ten cause lame back.\nI PUtt\u2014the old reliable kidney\nlady\u2014will help\nI condition. Sold\na money back\n\u2022\u25a0-NELION DAILY NEWS, NELION. B.C-r-WEDNESOAY MORNINO. APRIL t 1941-\nTrall Business Section\nTrail City from \"Smelter Hill\", looking toward Columbia River Bridge.\u2014Photo by Robtrt Bull, Trail.\nTells Epic Story of British\nNaval Attack on Richelieu\n\u25a0\u25a0Iir iii\u00ab, 40 Pills\nUrg. tin, 10 Will\n(In the U.S. .Ik lor \"Glno mii\")\nIW FARES\n'        FOR    x        <j\nAll Stationi In Canada\nSINGLE FARE AND 1\/4\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n(Minimum Fire. 25c)\nOOOD GOING:    APRIL 10\nto 2 p.m., APRIL 14\nMTURNlNG: Leavt destination up\nU Midnight, April 15.\n. Sleeping and parlor cir privileges It\nI Ml.-ID HOMT ll the perfect\nEnter |lft On lilt it ill ititlom.\nFull Information Irom Any Agent.\nAMaJuaM UO&|tC\nThere was painful necessity in the\nsinking ot the French battleship\nRichelieu in the harbor of Dakar,\nAfrica, in July, 1940. The British,\nbecause ot the defection of France\nand the possibility that the Nazis\nmight turn its fleet against us, had\nwrecked most of the French fleet\nat Oran, Algeria. But the Richelieu,\nnewest and most powerful battleship in the French navy, was at\nlarge.\nINSIDE STORY\nAt Dakar, on the African coast,\nthe Richelieu was put out of com'\nmission. The manner of her demise\nwas the occasion for newspaper\nheadlines at the time, but the real\ninside story can be told much better\nby one who wis there. It is contained in a section of the recent\npublication, \"War Letters from Britain,\" published by Thomas Allen\nLimited, Toronto. It goes like this:\nFrom a Young Naval Officer to a\nFriend.\nAboard H M.S. Hermes, July, 1940\n\u2014Well, at last I am allowed to write\nand tell you something of what we\nhave been doing. H.M.S. Hermes\nhas been in action against the\nworld's newest, fastest and most\nheavily armored battleship, the\nRichelieu. We succeeded in so severely damaging the Richelieu thai\nshe is now supposed to be, at the\nmoment, resting on the bottom of\nDakar Harbor, and she was supposed, by all the experts, to be virtually unslnkable!\nA TOUCH JOB\nNow, of course, this couldn't have\nbeen done by a stand-up fight, so\nwe had to resort to the unexpected\nand so successfully that, in the\nwords of the First Sea Lord: 'This\naction will take its place alongside\nthe Battle of Narvik, the boarding\nof the Altmark and the action off\ntime ai friendly territory. That\nnight were were on patrol outside ai\nthough It were an enemy port (very\nqueer lt Kerned, too). Another week\nlater we were back on patrol when\nthe shattering news came through\u2014\nour captain wai promoted temporary rear-admiral, and so we became\na flagship. You can't Imagine what\nthai meant \u2014 our dear, silly, old\nHermes, who li so old and io ridiculous ln many ways, steaming\nalong as the flagship of a imall\nsquadron about to deliver an ultimatum to a hostile French admiral\nwho had more ships and more guns\nthan we had, and was protected by\nshore batteries. If our terms were\nrefused Ithe same as at Oran), we\nwere instructed to use force.\nOFFENSIVE PROBLEM\nBut what force could we use?\nOur gum were no use and our\nbombs were no use against the\narmor of the Richelieu. We had one\neffective attack, by torpedo-carrying aircraft, and this is one of the\ntrickiest operations possible to carry\nout. Anyway we were doubtful if six\ntorpedoes would make any impression on the Richelieu. So heads were\npu\". tog.ther and one of the boldest,\nmaddest plans In the history of the\nsea was devised.\nVOLUNTEERS GO\nBobby Bristow volunteered to\ntake the crash boat (an ordinary\n25-foot motorboat) and four depth\nchargea into harbor in the middle of\nthe night, and drop the depth\ncharges under the Richelieu's stern.\nIt seemed possible that he might\nreech his objective, but impossible,\nif he dion't blow himself up, that\nthe French would not either kill\nhim or capture him (and the *r_w\nof seven).\nThis attack was to be followed by\na torpedo attack three-quarters of\nLess Than 20,000 Boxes\nRemain Unsold K\nlet had\nie Okan-\novincc 1.418,402\namounted to 337,808\nLen than 10,000 boxei of tha appleHpckei\ngrowers in 1940 remained unsold at Maieh jll\nfruit Board's analyili of crop movement^\n18,081 boxei In stock, Nelion District 2557 am\nagan had 1,399,008 boxes unsold, making tha ti\nboxes. At the same tine a year ago tht Itock oi\nbona,\nDelicious comprised tha bulk of tha Kootenay's unsold apples, Creiton having 12,898 boxes and Nelson 1000.\nThe Fruit Board's analyili for the Kootenay-Boundary, aa at March\n22, followi:\nDomestic Export      Total Balance\nEstimate   Shlp'nti Ship'nts   Shlp'nts Unsold\nCRESTON AND DISTRICT\nCooktri \t\nDuchesi \t\nWtalthy \t\nMcintosh \t\nJonathan \t\nWagtntr \t\nBanana  \t\nSpy \t\nE. Sundrlei .\nSpltzenberg\nDellcloui\nRomes \t\nStayman  \t\nL. Sundrlei.\nWlnelap ....\nNewtown   ...\n2,194\n2,839\n28,198\n107,304\n19,979\n3,489\n2,810\n,    8,037\n.    7.823\n.    1,928\n83.376\n.   11,140\n.    1,741\n1,118\n1,213\n33\n260,884\n2,194\n2,839\n28,198\n104,431\n9,943\n3,459\n2,810\n6.037\n7,523\n1923\n35,492\n11,140\n1,741\n1,116\n908\n33\n219,781\n10,036\n14,986\n25,022\nNELSON AND DISTRICT\nWilli   HIVI!   St.If*\nthe River Plate.\" When you realize' an hour before dawn. I clon't know\n\" ' if you can Imagine what flying off\nsu;h a small carrier as the Hermes\nIs like in the dark, carrying a 1500-\npound torpedo\u2014it is enough to give\nths most experienced pilot the litters, but when you have to, and\nlaunch it at a ship, you can hardly\nfail to see it becomes no mean feat.\nWell, that wa\u00ab our plan, and we\nreckoned it waa the best we could\ndo. though we were not very sure\nof our explosives making any impression on a ship of the Richelieu's\nstrength (she is a much tougher\nproposition than either the Nelson\nor  Rodney).\nthat the Richelieu had 8-inch deck\narmor, a 16-inch belt, a double bottom, you will have some idea of the\nsort of ship she was. Her displace*\nment was 35,000 tons.\nWe first saw the Richelieu when\nwe were in harbor at Dakar. She\ncame into port unexpectedly two\ndays before the Fascist coup d'etat\nin France. Up to then Dakar had\nbeen depressed but fairly friendly with us. Fight hours later we\nwere almost spat upon in the street\nDRIVEN FROM HARBOR\nRichelieu, on that first day. was\nclearly unfriendly to us though as\nyet there was no open breach, and\nit was not until one week later that\nwe were driven nut of the harbor\nand saw Goree Island for the last\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S HADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nItUMB-J. A. Ingram, H. W. Gould,\n|i_Ioop_; Mrs. D. Fisher, G. H.\n[rden. Port Crawford; Mr. and\nA. 3. Watson. Kootenay Bay;\n%t. Smith.^Gray Creek; Mrs. A. E.\nFowler. Nakusp; Mrs. R. Ring, Cran*\nbrook; Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Oliver,\nRadium Hot Springs; C. St Denis.\nW. E. G. Thomson, Vsncouver; J\nH. Lewis, Medicine Hat; F. H. B\nLyon, Toronto.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE       MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, Propi.       PHONE\n73J,   'n 0l,ir new wmg y0ii may enJ\u00b0ylhe finesi   7_tii\n-\u00a3\u25a0\u00bb\"     rooms  in   the  Interior\u2014Bath  or  Shower     X3T\nSPECIAL RATE8 BY THE WEEK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n\" \"VAUR  VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDuf Serin Ho tei\n\u25a0 WO 8eymour St. Vancouver, B.C.\nNewly renovated through\nout.  Phones and  elevator,\nA. PATTERSON, late ot\nColeman, Alta., Proprietor\na\nptANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sundiy\nI Trail Livery Co.\nM   H   MclVOR   Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nULTIMATUM\nThen, last Sunday morning our\nadmiral detached a sloop under his\ncommand and sent Rodney Flynn\non board, as he could speak a little\nFrench, to take our ultimatum to\nthe French Admiral ashore, Rodney\nwent off looking a little pale, ln full\nwhite with a sword, etc., very smart.\nTney didn't get far, however, for\nwhen the sloop got within signalling\ndistance of tne harbor she asked\npermission to come in and give the\nFrench Admiral a message, which\nwas refused, the French Admiral\nadding that he would open fire on\nh;r if she didn't retire.\nWell, that wasn't very encouraging, and we finally got the terms\nthrough at about 6 p.m. by signalling, and gave them till 8 p.m. to\ng ve an answer. None came, so at\n8:50 p.m Bobby and his party began to climb into the crash boat. It\nhad been painted black all over,\nthey were dressed in dark clothes\nand had blacked their faces with\nburnt cork. At 9:30 they went away\namid vociferous cheers. I watched\nthem vanish into the darkness and\nthought we should never see them\nagain. Then a signal came through\nfrom the Governor-General at Dakar ordering the Frencv Jto resist\nour English enemies with all our\nmight.\" Two hours or perhaps three\nlater, a laconic message from Bobby\nithey had taken a small portable\ntransmitter), \"Exploded four depth\ncharges under Richelieu's stern one\nhour ago.\" Really, it was a .night!\n|Then at 4:30 the aircraft fleto off.\nWe didn't think we would see many\ncf them again, either.\nSilence for an hour. S. Straford\nand I were sitting in the Medical\nSitation when we heard the arrester\nsear go \"Boomphy\"\nOne on at any rate. Then another and another, and another, and\nanother, and another\u2014six were\nback. All our little steam pigeons\nsafely home. Their reports were not\nparticularly encouraging: They had\ncarried out a copy-book attack under intense AA fire from the Richelieu, destroyers, armed merchant\ncruiiera and merchantmen armed\nwith machine guns, together with\nthe shore batteries.\nTorpedo tracks had been seen\nrunning straight, but there had been\nso much row that they hadn't heard\nany explosions. They were rather\ndepressed about thia and most of\nIhem had been sick after passing\nthrough the Inferno of AA. fire.\nThen one of our squadron reported\nhearing five loud explosions. She\nwas standing five mllei from tha\nharbor and felt. \"Well, anyway, they\nhave gone off.\nBOMBED BY FRENCH\nThen the French bombera arrived and our little party started;\nlittle McLochlan\u2014more Scotch than\never\u2014pumping shells Into the gun\nhe   was m charge of: It wai so ex\nciting. We wen at action stations\nfrom 13:30 hours (1:30 p,m. Sunday\n'til 06,30 (8:30 a.m. on Tuesday\nmorning. Meanwhile more of our\nplanes went oil to take photographs\nol the Richelieu and reported what\nthey could see. Then we picked up\nthe craah boat about midday. I've\nnever seen a tougher looking crowd\nTheir stories were u follows:\nThey had left the ship at 9:30 p.m.\non Sunday night and proceded to\nthe sloop from which they picked\nup two or more depth chargea. It\nwas difficult transferring these to\nthe crash boat in the open tea. Th\u00ab\nfirst knocked out the commisaioned\ngunner, Mr. Grant, a charming person, for an hour. The second nearly\nholed the cash boat and put one ot\nher engines out of actlonby cracking the cylinder head.1\nHowever, there was no going back\nand off they went with one engine.\nInside the harbor and booms they\nfirst of all ran alongside a French\nsloop and when hailed from the\nquarter deck promptly said \"Pas-\nsons\" (meaning passing in, going\nto another ship, the usual reply in\nharbor to a challenge from another\nship which you are not visiting;)\nApparently this satisfied Froggie,\nwho shut jp. A hundred yards from\nthe Richelieu they were again\nhailed but did not reply.\nDROPPED CHARGES\nRight alongside her stern they\nwent, and over went four depth\ncharges in 10 seconds. This was\nwatched ty an excited crowd on the\nRichelieu', deck, who, when they\nsaw the depth charges go over, just\ncovered tlieir faces with their arms\nor shoved their fingers in their ears\nMeanwhile the crash boat fled for\ndear life, the crew holding on for\ndear life, as Bobbie said he would\nnot wait to pick anybody up if they\nwere blown overboard by the explosion. Eight minutes went by and\nnothing happened, and then, when\nthey were clear by about a mile,\nthere was a deep hollow rumble\nwhich shook the whole harbor,\nAt thi- point their one engine\nbroke down and while they were\ndrifting about trying to repair it,\na merchantman spotted them. A\nsloop nearby weighed anchor and\nsteamed toward them. When they\nwere beg.nning to think seriously of\nconcentration camps and things,\nthey got Ihe engine going again and\nshot off on a zig-zag course. They\nthen led ihe sloop towards the boom\ndefence, which they got over. The\nsloop followed, getting caught\nher own nets! Well, she signalled a\ndestroyer their position, but they\ndoubled back and drifted for the\nopen sea. Shortly after this our\nattack came over. They were two\nmiles off the Richelieu by this time,\nand they heard and felt the explosions, and saw a great column of\nsmoke arise from the port side.\nThen they put out to sea, where\ntheir first vicissitude was that their\nchart blew overboard. A sailor dived\nin to rescue it and came back with\nit in his mouth, being chased by two\nsharks.\nBOAT  ATTACKED\nThe French bombers then came\nover. Eight times they came over\nthe crash boat and each time the\ncrew's hearts went into their\nmouths. They went to action stations each time, the routine for\nwhich was the issue of a tot of\nwhiskey all around. At last, tired\nof everything, they started fishing\nand caught four very nice snappers\nby the time we met them again at\n12:00 (12 noon) on Monday. I have\nonly heard the two marine's comments. The older one said gruffly\nat the beginning, \"Well one's got to\ndie some time.\" On return he said,\n\"Well, I destroyer is bad enough,\nbut a crash boat at sea is worse.\"\nThe other, only a boy, said, \"When\nwe got alongside Richelieu and I\nlooked up and saw her towering\nabove us, my heart stopped beating\nfor a quarter of an hour.\"\nWell, that's about all the story. It\ndidn't seem very much at the time,\nbut everyone seems very pleased\nwith Hermes.\nCookerj \t\nWealthy   \t\nMcintosh \t\nJonathan \t\nWagener  \t\nBanana  ....,\nSpy\t\nGrimes\t\nE. Sundries \t\nSpltzenberg \t\nDellcloui \t\nRomei   \t\nStayman\nL. \"Sundrlei  -\t\nNewtown  \t\n1,231\n1,M6\n4,503\n3,958\n6,415\n256\n8,735\n210\n2,310\n1,483\n1,560\n4,063\n129\n64\n642\n1.231\n1,986\n4,113\n2,525\n6,415\n256\n8,231\n210\n2,230\n1,483\n493\n3,857\n84\n64\n370\n1,433\n37,605   33,548\n1,500\nGRAND FORKS  DISTRICT\nCooken \t\nWealthy   \t\nMclntoih \t\nJonathan \t\nWagener \t\nGrimes\n  1,042\n  3,074\n  36,805\n  n\n  225\n224\nE. Sundries  2,113\nDelicious  -  1,342\nRomes     927\nL. Sundries   199\nWinesap     \u00ab2\nNewtown     128\n46.668\n1,042\n8\/174\n36,049\n97\n229\n224\n2,113\n592\n927\n199\n492\n126\n46,162\n750\n750\n2,194\n2,839\n28,195\n104.431\n19,979\n3,459\n2,810\n6,037\n7.523\n1,923\n50,478\n11,140\n1,741\n1,116\n905\n33\n244,803\n1,231\n1,1)86\n4,113\n3,958\n6,415\n256\n8,231\n210\n2,230\n1,483\n560\n3,857\n84\n64\n370\n35,048\n1,042\n3,074\n36,049\n97\n225\n224\n2,113\n1,342\n927\n199\n492\n128\n46,912\n2,873\n12,893\n310\n16,081\n450\n504\n1,000\n20G\n45\n272\n2,557\n756\n756\n\t\nMarch Lucky\nDraw\n8209\n3160\n8242\n7837\n7921\n8110\nNew Methods of Construction\nSpeed Building of (argo Ships\nBy BERT H. DAVIS\nCentral Press Canadian\nCorrespondent\nPHILADELPHIA - All around\nthe rim of the United States ships\nfor democracy are being hammered\ninto shape.\nBy 1944, American navy yardi\nand private shipyards between them\nare scheduled to complete 370 major ships of war and also 300 to 400\nsmaller vessels used as auxiliaries\nin defence.\nBut the emergency of the democracies now is ln tha class of merchant ships, cargo carriers.\nThe building of sleek, high-speed\nmerchants for the U.S. maritime\ncommission has been stepped up.\nSince 1938 modern U. S. trading fleet\nhas been growing by the addition\nof four fine new ships a month, in\nthe over-10,000-ton class. This year\nthe rate of production is twice as\nhigh. More likely is the replacement\nof British ships now ln long-haul\ncargo work by our new and speedy\nboats, concentrating Britain's own\nvessels closer to the blitz-threatened homeland.\nSTANDARDIZED SHIPS\nThis Spring America is proceeding in big way with the 200 emergency 7450-ton cargo carriers that\nare supposed to be trump cards in\nthe battle of the Atlantic. The first\nshipments of fabricated steel now\nare being delivered to seven shipbuilding planta ot tht South and\nthe Pacific coast, and the standardized models are so planned that the\nyards have less to do to complete\neach boat after the material cornea\nin. Shipping men surmise that these\nparticular ships already are ticketed to be sold, leased or loaned to\nEngland. Furthermore, it'i not impossible that tha U.S. shall lend\nsome ships already fitted for cargo-\ncarrying and replace them with the\nnew models when the 200 emergency vessels are completed.\nTo build these special ships new\nways and other facilities have been\nconstructed at seven ports at a cost\nof $33,374,500, according to the mag\nazine \"Iron Age.\"\nThis type of rush-order ahlp-\nbuilding of small merchant vesseli\nis all the more important because\nthe project represents a fair test of\nsome new methods ln ihlp assembly. In spite of a certain amount of\n\"hush, hush,\" it's realized here that\nthe maritime commission wants\nshipbuilders to take to heart many\nof the lessons learned ln assembly-\nline production.\nNEW METHODS\nNot that ships for defence of\ndemocracy's trade routes will ilide\ndown the ways like a line of automobiles or refrigerators emerging\nfrom an assembly unitl But ships\nbeing built for the navy are using\nproduction methods representing\nthe most important innovation in\nthis trade ilnce steel replaced wood.\nPower machinery ana navigating\nequipment are built and assembled\nmany miles from salt water and\nthese big units arrive at shlpslde on\nthe same sort of schedule that an\nautomobile production manager sets\nup.\nOne o' the ships built at Tampa\nreceived its complete diesel engine\nfrom Milwaukee. Entire boilers are\nbuilt outside the shipyard. Auxiliary machinery, like pumps and derricks, comes assembled and has\nbeen added to the ship after a few\nhours of well planned work.\nSpreading out the shipbuilding\nJobs In this way gives war work to\nmany well-eaulpped and well-manned inland plants and it alio saves\na lot of congestion and delay in the\n\u25a0hlpyards.\n5,000,000 TONS LOST\nShipping specialists have been\ncombing tne ports for unused bottoms, as they call a cargo vessel.\nThe United States has transferred to\nBritish registry or to friendly neutrals about 1,250,000 tons.\nFrom now on, lt Is an unending\nstream of new freighters, comparatively small but rugged, that American yards and Britain's must\nsupply to keep democracy's cargoes\nafloat. In sight, as the enlarged\nyards begin standardized construction, are about 1,500,000 tons, mostly\nfinished and at sea within 15 to 18\nmonths. A possible addition is some\nof the 85 to 100 maritime commission's 10,000-tonners that will be\nfinished this year. Perhaps Britain\nhopes for the lending or leasing of\n500,000 tons of such vessels\u2014and\nthere ia reason to believe they can\nbe so provided for emergency war\noargoei if needed.\nIn the meantime, under a rain of\nbombs, Britain too ls building ships\nto keep democracy in control of the\nlarger portion ot the high seas.\nCanadian Corps\nStages Realistic\nMimic Warfare\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nApril 1 (CP).\u2014Operating under\na \"bomber moon,\" an Eastern\nCanada brigade of the 1st Oi'\nvision went through Its night\nfighting bag of tricks to lead I\nmimic attack of Canadian Corps In\nan anti-invasion manoeuvre.\nThe brigade moved on foot for\nmiles to open up a corridor\nthrough which the main attack\nsurged next morning.\nMaj. John Hebb ot Bridge water,\nN. S., commanded the leading company from a Nova Scotia regiment\non the night's operations. The \"attack\" waa realistically carried out\nwhile Nazi night raiden prowled\nthe skies, anti-aircraft guns boomed\nand Royal Air Force night tighten\nwhined overhead.\nThe troops moved first by lorrlea\nand Bren gun carriers, with scarcely\na light (bowing. They \"debusied\"\nin a valley to advance by foot, car\nrying rifles, Bren guns and antitank rifles.\nA hill-top position was consolidated but the men stayed on the alert,\nlying in ditches, by hedges and under trees with their weapons by\ntheir side. Breakfast waa bully beet\nsandwiches from haversacks and tea\nmade over open fires at dawn.\nThen the rest of the brigade swept\nup the hills behind the Marltimcrs to\nrelieve them and push ahead Into\nnew territory. Infantry cam*\nthrough in waves and a French-\nCanadian regiment wu headed by\ncarriers.\nTrail Permits\n$20,250 March\nTRAIL, B.C., April 1-Bulldlng\nactivity showed considerable increase in March, permits Issued\nfrom the City Engineer's department\nrepresenting $20,250, which bring!\nthe building permits fo? the tint\nthree months of 1941 to $27,400.\nBuilding permit total for January,\nFebruary, and March, 1940, amounted to 83245.\nPermits issued tor March Included one Issued to J. M. Paulsen, BOO\nBlock Helena Street for a $6000\napartment house, and permits given\nout for residences, totalling 810,100,\nAlterations and repair permits totalled $3650, and one permit, valued at\n$500, was Issued to J. E. Bryan, 1542\nThird Avenue, to move his building\nacross the street.\nThe largest repair permit, $1480,\nwas issued to the C. M. A S. Company at 839 Eldorado Street for alterations of the building to be made\nsuitable for a stenographers' residence.\nPermits were lilted u follows:\nBusiness buildings\u2014J. M. Paulsen,\nHelena Street, apartment house.\n$6000.\nResidences\u2014F. Mage, 833 Rossland\nAvenue, $5400; L. Hubner, 1414 Aah\nStreet, $1200; N. Whrynowlck, 1659\nColumbia Avenue, $2500; D. Pioat,\n1747 Main Street $1000.\nAlterations and Repairs\u2014J. Maiei,\n776 Rossland Avenue, $200; H. Smith,\n1438 Second Avenuer$150; M. P. Wilcox. 1506 Columbia Avenue, $500;\nP. Jeffery, 1102 Second Avenue,\n$250; P. DeVito, 324 Binns Street,\n$500; William Thomson Jr., 578 Binns\nStreet, $500; Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Company, 839 Eldorado\nStreet, $1450; T. J. Sadler, 2157\nDaniel Street $100.\nOther permlts-J. E. Bryan, 1542\nThird Avenue, $300, moving building.\n(Jonnk.\nWaiuAaL Pom.\nImported American\nFootwear\nwill bs the style leaders In\nmany Easter Parades In\nNelson and District.\nWeVe tht grandest array ol\nitylei to rait every Batter ensemble and in a range of sizes\nthat assure perfect comfort and\nfit\nWIDTHS AAAA to C\nSIZES 3V4 to 10\nPriced From\n$5.95 to $10.00\nNo need now to tend *vr*j tat\nAmerican Shoes.\nFINK'S\nReady-to-Wear\nPays Fin* for\nMaking U-Turn\nTRAIL, B. C April _-Iam_el MacDonald of Trail appeared before\nMagistrate Parker WiUlamt in City\nPolice Court on Monday afternoon,\ncharged with driving in a manner\ndangeroui to the public. He pleaded guilty and wat fined $12.50 and\ncosts.\nThe caae retulted from tn incident latt Tuesdty morning when\nMacDonald tttWjrtfJ to make a U-\ntura 6n Ro-alani Awnne In Iront\nof another car.\nSlow Burninq\nCIGARETTE PAPERS\nKMSHHUHADI\nDISTRICT CUSTOM\nRECEIPTS $9655.32\nCustoms and inland revenue re-\nceipts for Nelson and collection stations reporting to Nelson in March\ntotalled $9655.32. Only Nelson, Wa-\nnetaiand Cascade reported collection\nduring the month.\nThis total compared to $11,442.82\nreceipts in March, 1940, when Nelson and five stations, Waneta, Cascade, Midway, Nelway and Carson,\n'eporteil collections.\nNeLsoa's receipts In March were\n$776954 compared to receipts of\n$10.951.M ln March, 1940; while Wa-\nneta's was $1874.58 compared to\n$251.33, and Cascade's $11.20 compared to $49.18.\n31 New Cases\nMeasles, Trpil\nTRAIL. B.C April .-Thirty-one\ncases ot measles were reported to\nDr. N. I), c. MacKinnon. Trail Medical Heslth Officer, during the past\nweek..No other Infectious diseases\nwere reported. This brings the approximate measles cases since the\nbeginning of the epidemic to 560.\nHUGO, Col. (CP)-After 20 years\nin the saddle, developing a knee-\nspread of seven inches Kid Fletcher\nhas been awarded the title of \"bow-\nleggedest cowboy\" In several states.\nFailed to Honor\nthe \"Stop\" Sign\nTRAIL, B. C April 1\u2014Lester H.\nCarver, Trail, was fined $3 without coste by Magistrate Parker Williams in City Police Court Tuesday\nmorning for falling to stop at the\nstop sign at the corner of Spokane\nStreet and Bay Avenue. Ha pleaded\nguilty.\nNANAIMO MAYOR IS\nLEARY OF BLACKOUT\nNANAIMO, B. C. April 1 (CP).-\nPosslbllity of a blackout In this\nIsland coal-mining city similar to\nthat held at Prince Rupert is a matter for military authorities and the\npolice, in the opinion of Mayor V.\nB. Harrison. He maintained that\ncivic authorities cannot take the responsibility for possible liability for\nany accident occurring during a\ntrial blackout.\nTrail Sugar Is\nUnaffected Yet\nTRAIL, B. C, April 1\u2014Leading\ncity merchants, Monday, reported\nno Jump ln the retail price ot sugar\nfollowing the Increase of 1 cent in\nthe excise .tax, effective Monday.\nThe tax boost has affected wholesalers.\nOne city wholesaler had advanced\nthe price 1 cent a pound with tha\nexpectation of being taxed on present stocks, while another refused to\nsell until instructions had been received from headquarten.\nOne large department store set a\n10-pound limit on Individual sales to\nforestall a run on the commodity\nMerchants were not ture whether\nthey would be taxed on existing\nstocks.   \u2022'\nIN APPRECIATION\nI wish to take thll opportunity of expressing thanks, on\nbehalf of myself and my wife, to our many Chiropractic patlenta\nand friendi for their cooperation and kindnesses during our\nstay hete.\nI take pleasure tn personally recommending Dr. A. B. McDonald, who hu taken over my practice, and feel confident that\nyou will receive splendid lervice.\nC. A. MITTUN, D.C.\nRoom 4, Strand Block. Trail. B. C.\nBOMBAY (CP.-Enforcement of\nprohibition In Bombay has led to\n\"extensive spreading of Illicit manufactured liquor\" says the Timet of\nIndia.\nBis ttetUmmm h m miAAmi et AmUym\nby An Ikiw Control Boird <\u2022 ly tl\u00ab\nmammal tl tM CXJUe.\nAcross the Street\nor\nAcross the Continent\nWe Will Move You\nEfficiently and\nAt a Moderate Cost\nWe've had 42 years' experience\nin knowing how to do the job.\nWest Transfer Co.\nEitabllihed In 1899\n*\u2014*\u25a0-*^\u2022\"\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0iii ii Mimr hi iiiiiifii-fmniiii\n,\t\n^u^^gl^\n, \u25a0\u25a0-,'\u25a0\n-'- v.' .\n \u2022*.iA*i>ii!m w, wily.' i _y!*p*'ww - \u25a0' j\nTake 800 Men on Way\nCAIRO, Egypt, April 1 (AP). -\nAsmara, capital of Eritrea, capitulated to the British today. It wai\nannounced officially tonight\nThe announcement of Asmara's\nCapitulation came swiftly after the\nMarch 26 capture of Cheren, 42\nmiles to the Northwest, a mountain\nstronghold which 35,000 Italian defenders made a major obstacle in\nthe British path.\nOnly Massaua, on the Red Sea,\nEritrea's sole good port, remains\nnow aa a major goal of the British\nforces in their sweep across the\nEast-African colony from the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan frontier to the\ntea.\nThe city of Asmara had been in\nItalian hands since 1889 and had\ncome to resemble a city of Southern Italy - even to sidewalk cafes.\nIt became the Eritrean capital in\n1900, when the seat of Government\nwas transferred from Massaua, 40\nmiles to the Northeast.\nOf Asmara's last recorded population of approximately 98,000 peraons, more than 50,000 were Italians\n\u2014 the largest concentration of Italians in the entire colony.\nThe city was well fortified and\nFort Baldissera, on. a hill overlooking the town, once had the reputation of being impregnable. A new\nairport recently was constructed\nSouth of the City and before the\nwar regular service was maintained\nto Bengasi, LLbya, to Rome, to\nAssab. Eritrea, and to Addis Ababa.\nIt was linked by rail with Cheren'\nend Agordat, already in British\nhands, and to Massaua. The rail distance to the latter cily Is 75 miles\nMotor roads radiate in all directions\n' from the town.\nCAIRO, Egypt, April 1 (AP). -\nExtensive advances into Eritrea and\nEthiopia' were announced today by\nBritish General. Headquarters.\nHundreds of miles to the North,\nwest,, In Libya. British advanced\nelements were reported yesterday\nto have been in contact with enemy\ninfantry and mechanized units ln\nthe Mersa Verega area, which Is\non the Gulf of Sidrt, about 30 miles\nNortheast of El Agheila. British\nforces captured El Agheila from the\nItalians in patrols beyond Bengasi\nbut later yielded it to the Germans.\nThe first report In several days\nof movements in the North African\nphase of the campaign against\nItaly's African  Empire.\nAdvancing on Asmara, capital of\nEritrea, British forces captured a\nBrigade Commander among 800\nprisoners taken in the past 48 nours\nThe Ethiopian campaign was rapidly nearing Addis Ababa, capital\nof that part of Italian East Africa,\nwith British forces astride both the\nAddis Ababa-Jtbuti Railway and\nhighway.\nNAIROBI, Kenya Colony, April 1\n(AP).\u2014An official communique-reported tonight that British force;\nentering Diredawa had discovered\nthe Ethiopian City's Italian inhib'\nHants \"being injured\" by a large\nband of deserters from the retreating Italian Colonial Army.\n(The British forces entered Dire^\ndawa last Saturday. The Italians\nsaid they had abandoned the city )\nAdvancing British troops the\ncommunique said, quickly restored\norder, but were unable to prevent\nsome Italian casualties.\nSays Canadian\nSupplies Going\nOverseas'Good'\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).-Canadian war supplies being sent over-\nleas are called \"extraordinarily\ngood\" by those who check them In\nthe United Kingdom, Gen. R. F.\nLock, Chairman of the Canadian\nUnited Kingdom Joint Inspection\nBoard, told the House Committee on\nWar Expenditures today.\nIn all his experience with Canadian contractors, Gen. Lock had encountered only one case of attempted dishonest practice and this had\noccurred on a small contract. He did\nnot think the management was to\nblame but some employee.\nThe Munitions and Supply Department had backed Gen. Lock's\nprotest and he did not expect there\never would be trouble with that\nlirm again.\nGen. Lock said a shell made ln\nAustralia with a fuse made in Can-\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\n'^nx-.i^\n,. *TM l *\u25a0* ,|\nYOUR MONEY\ngoes farther. You.want to\nspend your money today in\nthe way that will get you\nthe most for it.\u2014A modern\nheating plant in the home\nwill save you money and\nwork. We will gladly estimate your requirements.\nPhone 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\n357 Baker St.\nRenting...\nA house, room or store,\nthe best way to tell the\nmost people . . . and the\neconomical way too, is to\nuse the\nDaily News\nClass * Ads\nFor an Ad-Taker\nJust Phone 144\nada might be fired from a gun made\nin England. It was essential such\nmaterials manufacture be exact. As\nexamples of errors in the past, he\ntold of women's boots being sent for\nsoldiers in the Crimea and arm\nament muddles during bygone cam\npaigns ifi Egypt. In 1887 armament\ninspection was set up by the United\nKingdom with duty of seeing arms\nwere fit for his Majesty's service.\nIn early days of the present war,\nGen, Lock's inspectors cooperated\nwith those of the Department of\nNational Defence to avoid overlapping of activity. In August, 1940,\nthe combined Canadian and United\nKingdom organization was set up\nwith Gen. Lock as chairman but\nmaking the reservation he should\nbe independent.\nU.S. and Mexico\nAgree lo Joint\nUse of Airfields\nWASHINGTON, April 1 (AP),\nThe United States and Mexico today signed a convention providing\nfor reciprocal use of air fields which\nwill ptrmit American military\nplanes to speed to Panama in the\nshortest possible time.\nThe convention will now be sent\nto the Senate for ratification and\nthe Mexican Congress for appropriate action.\nThe agreement, qualified authorities stated, would greatly strengthen aerial defences of the Panama\nCanal by making it possible for\nUnited States to shift air force reinforcements rapidly Southward\nover the Rio Grande if danger\nthreatened the Canal Zone.\nUnder its terms, United States\narmy and navy planes would be\npermitted to fly the length of Mexico, utilizing Mexican air fields en\nroute for refuelling and repairs, and\nthus would be able to reach Panama in the shortest possible time.\nCommunist Press\nProises Yugoslavia\nMOSCOW, April 1 (AP).\u2014Pravda,\nCommunist party organ, said today\nthat Soviet Russia had not sent congratulations to Yugoslavia, but explained that \"perhaps the Soviet\nGovernment forgot to do so or did\nnot think of it.\"\n\"Undoubtedly the Yugoslav people have a glorious past,\" it said.\n'A people worthy of their glorious\npast deserve congratulations and if\nsuch congratulations occurred there\nwould be nothing unusual.\" \u2022\nSYRIAN INDEPENDENCE\nHOPES RECOGNIZED\nLONDON, April l (CP)-A Reuters News Agency dispatch from Damascus, Syria, said today that Syrian\naspirations for independence had\nbeen recognized by Gen. Henri\nDentz. commander of French troops\nin the Levant states.\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNINO. APRIL 2. 1941-\n'rittiammi\nNewfoundland Army and Airforce\nConstantly Watch East Approaches\n*y BOB DALD'OR-ft.,\n. C.n.dlan Pre.. Staff Writer\n\u25a0 SOMEWHERE IN NEWFOUNDLAND, April 1 (CP)-Keeping ever\nvigilant guard against dangers that\nin one form or another, may approach the airport strategically situated in Newfoundland are members\nof the Canadian Army.\nMainly their duties are confined to\npatrolling the land approaches to\nthe air base. On active service, these\nmen from a Quebec regiment are\nunder command of Lt-Col. W. J.\nHome, a veteran of the First Great\nWar.\nRelays of guard, constantly pfttrol\nthe approaches and boundaries of\nthe flying field on 24-hour duty.\nDrills and other practices are part\nof the men's dally routine which\nkeeps them at a high point of efficiency.\nMeantime work on the airport ls\nbeing rushed as lt Is enlarged for\nmilitary and defence purposes. The\nfirst sod was turned la IBM.\nTwo doctor! look after health of\nthe men stationed here but a Royal\nCanadian Air Force hospital is being\npushed to completion and when finished lt will m manned by a coni-\nplete staff capable of handling 'anything from a cold to a major operation.\nRecreational facilities available\nrange frbm ping-pong to hockey and\nmovies, Members of the R.C.A.F.\nand the Army Uve apart but mix\nfreely when off duty.\nThe Canadian Legion has penetrated with the armed forces to this defence post set in the rugged inland\ncountry of Newfoundl%pd and a legion hut, such as those thai serve\nthe forces throughout Canada and\noverseas, has been In operation here\nfor some time.\nChurchill Backs\nHalifax Speech\nLONDON,' April 1 (CP).\u2014Prime\nMinister Churchill told the House\nof Commons today that the speech\nof Viscount Halifax. British Ambassador to the United States, in New\nYork March 25 advocating world\nwide economic collaboration after\nthe war 'is in full accord with the\ngeneral outlook\" of the government.\nMr. Churchill announced he would\nmake a statement on the war situation the day the House adjourns\nfor the Easter holidays, which be^\ngin April 11, and also would offer\na resolution of thanks to the Navy,\nthe Army, and the Air Force for\ntheir succession of victories in the\nMediterranean and the Middle East.\nVichy Protests\nThrough Ihe U.S.\nWASHINGTON, April 1 (AP) -\nGaston Henry-Haye, Vichy Ambassador to the United States, today delivered to the State Department\u2014\nfor transmittal to the Briish Government\u2014a protest from the Vichy\nGovernment against the interception\nby British warships of a convoy of\nFrench merchantmen off the coast\nof Algiers.\nThe Ambassador told newspapermen that since there was no direct\ndiplomatic intercourse between the\nBritish and Vichy, the Vichy Government was asking the cooperation\nof the United States in transmitting\nthe note.\nHenry-Haye also said he would\nexplain to State Department officials\nthe details of a barter arangement\nunder which foodstuffs have been\nexchanged between the occupied\nand unoccupied rones in France.\nHe added that he would also seek\nInformation concerning any possible\naction by the United States involving French merchantmen now tied\nup in American harbors.\nHenry-Haye said he had seen report- the French vessels might be\ntaken over by the United States in\na manner similar to the action taken\nin seizing Italian, German and Danish ships.\nU.S. Legation in\nRome Is Guarded\nROME, April 1 (AP)-Steel-hel-\nmeted troops were stationed around\nthe United States embassy today,\npresumably as protection against\npossible demonstrations.\nSimilar action was taken at the\nYugoslav legation where, in addition, some streets were blocked off.\nWhile there was a considerable\nnumber of troops in the vicinity of\nthe U.S. Embassy, they were less\nconspicuous than at the Yugoslav\nlegation, being drawn up mostly\nalong side streets.\nShortly before noon, scores of\nschoolboys paraded through streets\nwith big Japanese, German and Italian flags in honor of Foreign Minister Matsuoka of Japan, who arrived\nhere yesterday\/rom Berlin.\nThe Foreign Minister was received by King Victor Emmanuel and\nwas the King's guest at luncheon.\nBRITAITiMARKS RECORD\nYEAR IN SPENDING\nLONDON. April 1 (CP).\u2014Britain\nspent a record total of \u00a33,867,245,670\n(about $17,538,000,000) in the fiscal\nyear ended last night. Chancellor\nof the Exchequer Sir Kingsley Wood\nsaid this compared with \u00a33,317.972,-\n855 )in the year before. Total ordinary revenue was \u00a31,403,867,097\nleaving a deficit of \u00a32,458,378,573.\nBritain Negotiating With U.S. to\nTighten Embargo on French Ports\nLONDON. April 1 (CP), - Th.\nGovernment today charged that Uie\nGermans \"take their Dick\" of cargoes entering Marseille, Mediterranean port in Unoccupied France,\nand disclosed it is negotiating with\nUnited States on the delicate question of tightening the embargo on\nits former French ally.\nHugh Dalton. Minister of Economic Warfare, told the House of\nCommons that figures \"purporting\nbe official\" show that in December and Januar; alone 450 vessels with cargoes of about 500,000\ntons   entered   Marseille,\n\"Large numbers of reports from\na variety of sources leave no doubt\nthat the Germans take their pick\nof all incoming cargoes while the\nItalians are permitted to take\nsmaller picks,\" he said.\n\"Nearly all these reports indicate\nthat more thay half of such imports are Uken by the Nazis. Many\nquote the proportion as high as\n80 per cent.\"\nMr. Dalton told the House the\nBritish Government is in communication with the U. S. Government\non a reported deal under which an\n\"alleged gift of wheat by Germany\nto Vichy was part of a barter arrangement.''\nGeoffrey Mander, Liberal, had\ncharged some goods which \"the\nVichy Government was to supply\nunder the arrangement were to be\nImported through Marseille.\"\nThen he asked whether Britain\nwould revoke navicerts an two\nU. S. ships carrying medical'supplies, vitamins and children's clothing lo France.\nMr Dalton said th$ Goverpment\nhad decided against withdrawing\nthe navicerts but added the decision did not Imply navicerts would\nbe issued for the \"import into\nFrance of other supplies.\nQuestioners were able to. obtain\nlittle information on interception of\nFrench ships and the incident on\nSunday in which French shore batteries fired on British warships.\nAsked, whether he was taking\nsteps to stop the importation of\nfood into France, Mr. Dalton said:\n\"I am constantly in touch with, the\nFirst Lord of the Admiralty in ihis\nmatter and he is very helpful.\"\nMr, Mander: \"Is it the case that\nFrench ships coming from the\nFrench Empire overseas are now\nallowed to pass unmolested through\nthe Straits of Gibraltar and is it\nnot about time that this was\nstopped?\"\nMr. Dalton; \"1 informed the House\nthat a number of interceptions had\nin fact taken place of snips seeking to enter the Straits. As the\nHouse is aware, a certain incident\nwas reported only yesterday. It Is\nnot the case that the ships are\nallowed to pass freely through the\nStraits all tne time.\"\nTurkey Believes\nBalkan Situation\nWill End Nazi War\nISTANBUL, April 1 (AP)\u2014Turkish newspapers expressed belief today Germany would lose the war\nbecause of the Balkan situation.\nThe newspaper Vatan declared ln\nan editorial: \"Germany will lose the\nsecond Great War sooner than expected, not by reason of American\naid and the British Navy but chiefly\nbecause of her great error in miscalculating the will to independence\nof some small Balkan nations.\nThe newspaper, Yeni Sabah, said:\n\"Hitler promised that by early\nSpring he would conquer the British\nThe air attack on England failed.\nThe attempt to conquer the Balkans\nhas failed ... it begins to look as\nif England this Spring will destroy\nGermany, not Germany who will\ndestroy England.\"\nIkdam said: \"The Germans will\nnot fight in the Balkans until they\nhave exhausted every diplomatic\nmeans to gain their end.\"\nThe newspaper Tan declared: Desperate German attempts have been\nmade to play on Serb and Croat\nenmity, but Vice-Premier Vladimir\nMacek was too wise and good a man\nto be fooled by this manoeuvre. In\nany event the Serbs control the\nArmy and wil! resist German interference with Yugoslav liberty.\"\nArmored Tank at\nTrail Ready for\nInstant Action\nWINNIPEG, April 1 (CP).-8.\nG. Blaylock, President and Managing Director of Coniolidated\nMining and 8meltlng Company,\n\u25a0aid In an Interview hert last\nnight that an armored tank, carrying four machine guni and aix\nriflei, li ready for Instant action\nat hit company'i smelting plant\nat Trail, B.C.\nIn addition to the huge armored\ntank, which Mr. Blaylock deicrlbed ai \"a daily,\" every part of the\nplant li carefully guarded night\nand day by armed guardi, iald\nthe company Preiident. He added\nthat no sabotage attempt had been\nmade on the plant \"for almoit *\nyear.\"\nRAF. Use New Bomb\nin\nLONDON, April 1 (CP)\u2014A new\ntype of high exploilve bomb produced reiulti whloh appeared to\nbe devaitatlng In a raid on tho\nGerman port and Induitrlal olty\nof Emdon lait night, tha Air Mln-\n. Iitry tnnouncod today.\nBremen alto wat heavily hit,\nwith shipbuilding yardi the principal targets, but tha Mlnlitry\nmentioned tht new bombi\u2014their\nnature not announced\u2014only In\nthe raid on Emden.\n\"Masses of debris flyinfe through\nthe air were outlined agalnit the\nglow of fires,\" a communique said\nin describing the effects,.\"and the\nresults appeared to be devastating.\"\nThe Ministry of Information quoted a pilot as saying he saw \"houses\ntake to the air\" when the bombs\nburst.\nSmaller scale raids also were made\noh Bremerhaven and Oldenberg and\nthe Nazi-held Netherlands harbor\nof Rotterdam.\nAlthough London was bomb-free\nfor the Hth successive night, German bombers caused \"considerable\ndamage\" in sharp stabs at a Northeast town.\nFlares, incendiaries, and heavy\nbombs hit a newspaper office and\nair raid precautions centre and public buildings ln the Northeast coast\ntown.\nA British scored two bomb hits-\non a German destroyer off the\nFrisian Islands yesterday, causing\nthe vessel to come to a standstill\nwith a heavy list, the Air Ministry said.\nOther RAF units bombed German\nsupply ships, gun emplacements and\ntroops in a busy and successful series of offensive action.\nTwo tanker wtre set afire and left\nsinking oft Le Havre, and a supply\nship, one of convoy of eight protected by German warships and fighter\nplanes was damaged.\nThe sorties cott the RAF two war\nplanet.\nTha Frisian Islands are off the\nNorthern coast of the Netherlands.\nThe German destroyer damaged\nwas said by the Air Ministry News\nService to have been escorting a\nsmall convoy. When last seen it was\nlisting heavily and \"black smoke\nwas seen pouring from the stern.\"\nthe Service said.\nLater yesterday afternoon another\nGerman convoy was sighted and a\ndirect hit clouded one of the ships\nIn quantities ot black smoke, th\nService said.\nGun emplacements and camouflaged buildings among the sand\ndunes on one of the Frisian islands\nalso were, attacked.\n\"German troops were on parade In\nfront of one of the buildings as our\naircraft roared, over *only 80 feet\nabove the ground,\" the Service said.\n, \"They ran for cover but our aircraft came t_ck again to see many\nof the troops lying on the ground\nand the othera Immediately scattered. An army cook in white scuttled\ninto some bushes near at hand.\"\n\"On another of tht islands our aircraft found a long ,gray army hut\nwith many German troops standing\naround it. A direct hit on the hut\nproduced volumes of black smoke.\nDuring this attack our aircraft cam\ndown to 10 feet.\nA German bomber crashed Into\nflames in Southwestern England today and three bodies were recovered. The Information Ministry said\nanother bomber was destroyed in\nthe Midlands.\nItalian Hospital\nShip Picks Up Naval\nBattle Survivors\nROME. April 1 (AP)\u2014A Fascist\nspokesman said today an Italian\nhospital ship was picking up survivors pf Italian warships sunk in\nthe weekend battle with the British\nMediterranean fleet.\nHe denied a British statement a\nbattleship of the Littorio class had\nbeen damaged so that her speed was\nhalved, asking: \"If that were so,\nwhy didn't the British destroy it?\"\nThe engagement, the spokesman\nsaid, followed several days of \"offensive action\" by Italian naval\nunits. He added that Italian destroyers had pursued the British bat-\ntie fleet by night and attacked it\nwith torpedoes which he said indicated \"readiness to carry the fight\ninto dangerous waters.\"\nIAPANESE RELEASE\nBRITISH MISSIONARY\nPEIPING, April 1 CAP) .-The Japanese Embassy announced today\nthe release of Allen Benson, British\nmissionary arrested last Aug. 27 on\nsuspicion of organizing an anti-Ja-\npanese secret society among Chinese\nchurchgoers. Benson is an employee\nof the British Assembly of God Mission at Kalgan, Northwest of Pei-\nping. Twenty Chinese were arrested\nwith him.\nILSLEY TO NAME BUDGET\nDAY IN SPEECH\nOTTAWA, April 1 (AP).\u2014Finance\nMinister Ilsley today said in the\nCommons he hoped to make a statement \"tomorrow or the next day\"\non the dale he will bring down the\nbudget. It has been reported unofficially Mr. Ilsley would present\nthe budget before the House ad-,\njourns April 9 until April 28. Next\nTuesday has been suggested as a\npossible dale. \u2022\nBOTTLES TO CARRY\nMARINE INFORMATION\nSAN FkANCISCO. April 1 (AP).\n\u2014Glass bottles will be one of the\nimportant items on the cargo list\nof the liner Mariposa when it clears\nport today for Sydney. Australia.\nThe bottles,. 200 of them, will be\ndropped at intervals to aid the U. S.\nnavy hydrographlc office in compiling- marine information on the\nPacific.\nB. C. AIRMAN KILLED\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP). -\nLac. Russel Horie.19, of the Royal\nAir Force, was killed in a crasn\nsomewhere ln England Monday, according to a cable received by his\nfather Roy L. Horie, Vanoouver.\nIn a letter to his father, who is a\nsurveyor ln Vancouver, Hone said\nthat when he joined the R.A.F. he\nwas the youngest airman on active\nservice in the British Empire.\nManitoba Maps\nEarly Polling\nof Servicemen\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Manltoba soldiers, sailors and airmen stationed within the Province may vote\nfor candidates running in their home\nconstituencies in .the April 22 provincial election.\nIt is not intended to record'the\nvotes of Mantioba men in Canada's\narmed forces overseas or at military\ncentres outside the province but a\nspecial returning officer, Lieut. J,\nKelly of Winnipeg has been appointed to supervise the military vote\nwithin Manitoba boundaries.\nSpecial enumerators are listing\nthe military voters and special deputy returning officers will have\ncharge of ballotting April 18 and 19\nat polling stations located where\nsoldiers, sailors and airmen are concentrated.\nIt was explained that the use of\nadvance polling booths in military\ncentres make it possible for (he armed forces' vote to be in the hands\nof returning officers by the day\nof general voting.\nPREFERENCE VOTING\nManitoba voters will mark their\nballots with numbers, selecting the\ncandidates of their choice in order\nof preference. In Winipeg's 10-seat\nconstituency, the proportional representation system of counting will\nbe used and elsewhere the single\ntransferable count.\nUnder proportional representation\nthe quota a candidate must obtain\nto be elected is determined by dividing the total of first choices polled by the number of seats plus one\nand adding one to the result. All\nballots of an elected candidate are\nre-examined for second choices.\nIf a candidate received 10,000 votes and the quota were 0000, he would\nhave a surplus of 4000 votes for his\ntotal. Because of this the other candidates would be credited with only\nfour-tenths of the ballots on which\nthey received second preference. If\nsecond choices placed any candidate over the quota, he would be declared elected and his surplus distributed.\nSecond preference marked on a\nballot paper in favor of a candidate already declared elected would\ngo to the next preferred candidate.\nThis procedure would be followed\nuntil all seats were filled.\nOutside Winnipeg only one member is elected in each constituency\nso that the quota is obtained by dividing the total number of first\nchoices by two and adding one to\nthe result, No vote-transfer is necessary where only two candidates\nare in the field.\nWhen there are three or more\ncandidates and none reaches the\nquota on the first count, the low\nman is counted out and his second\nchoice surplus distributed. This process is repeated until one candidate obtains the required qtoota or\nmore.\nPERTH, Australia (CP)-For the\n104th day in succession the temper-\nature at Marble Bar, in Northwest\nAustralia was over 100.\nArrests in Marseille\nFollow Communist\nApril Fool Day Plot\nVICHY, France, April 1 (AP).-\nPolice held 13 persons today on\nchargea of participating ln what was\ndescribed as a Communist April fool\nday plot to \"rename\" Marseille\nstreets after Maurice Thorez, exiled\nLeftist leader.\nPolice found a quantity of signs\nreading \"Maurice Thorez Street,\"\nevidently designed to be placed\nover regular street signs in Marseille last night.\nSix young girls also were arrested and charged with distributing\nleaflets \"of Communist inspiration.\nIn addition, some 60 Communist\ndeputies and leaders were escorted\naboard ships by police at Marseille\nto be removed from France to Algeria.\nPolish Chief in\nCanada lo Lead\nLegion Recruit\nOTTAWA, April 1 CP).-General\nWladyslaw Sikorski, Commander-\nin-Chief of Polish fighting forces\nand Prime Minister of the Polish\nGovernment in exile, reached Canada from England today to take a\nleading role in the recruiting of a\nPolish legion in this British Dominion.\nA stocky, blond man in civilian\nclothes, the General will visit flie\nUnited States as one of the first acts\nof his trip to North America, a\nmember of his party said.\nSikorski, 60, will possibly open\nrecruiting of the force of Poles in\nCanada, a Polish official said here\nrecently.\nScotland Yard\nHunts   Missing\nQuebec Soldiers\nLONDON, April 1 (CP Cable) .-\nSix members of a Quebec Regiment\nwere reported today to have disappeared from their barracks in the\nhome counties this morning with a\ncamouflaged army lorry, a tommy\ngun find several hundred rounds of\nammunition.\nScotland Yard is searching for\nthe soldiers, btlieved headed for\nLondon.\nThe disappearance was confirmed\nat Canadian military headquarters\nhere, where it was said the Canadians were still at large at mid-\nafternoon and the truck unlocated.\nFurther details were not disclosed.\nCERMANS SAY HULL\nSUCCESSFULLY ATTACKED\nBERLIN, April 1 (CP).-The German High Command today claimed\nthe port facilities of Hull and Great\nYarmouth were \"successfully attacked\" during the night.\n\"Extensive fires caused heavy destruction,\" the daily communique\nsaid. \"One ship was set afire in\nGreat Yarmouth port.\"\nProposal lo (ul Pensions Committee\nIs Met Wilh Objections From Members\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).-The Canadian Legion suggested to the commons pensions committee today Canadians hy birth or naturalization,\nserving in Imperial or allied forces,\nif they were resident in Canada at\nthe beginning of the war, should\nreceive the same pension provision\nbenefits as those serving in Canadian forces.\nAt the same time the Legion said\nthat while the present appeal boards\nof three are working satisfactorily,\nthere was no strenuous objection\nfrom the Legion to a proposed\nchange that wou\\d cut personnel of\nappeal boards to two.\nRichard Hale, Chief Pensions Officer, of the Legion, presented that\norganization's case to the committee.\nThe proposed reduction in\nstrength of the Appeal Board, as\ncontained ln the bill to amend the\nPension Act, came In for strenuous\nobjection from corhmittee members,\nparticularly H. C. Green (Con.-Van-\ncouver South) and G. A. Cruickshank (Lib. Fraser Valley.)\n\"I personally would not want any\ncase of mine heard by two rather\nthan three men\u2014nor would ahy\nother lawyer and 1 believe the sold-\ndlers feel the same way about it,\"\nMr. Green said.\nMr. Cruickshank said he not only\nopposed such a change but asked\nBrig.-Gen. H. F. McDonald, Chairman of the Pensions Commission, if\nthe Commission was prepared to put\nout more appeal boards.\n\"There are 600 cases pending at\nthis moment\u2014and this war will give\nyears of work to do,\" said Mr.\nCruickshank. \"There should be 20\nor 30 boards.\"\nGen. McDonald said the Commission was prepared to provide extra\nboards when the number of cases to\nbe heard in one district warrant it.\nThe Legion recommended Section\n21 of the Act dealing with disability\nof less than five per cent be abolished. .    .\n\"Either a man has five per cent\ndisability or he hasn't any,\" J. R.\nBowler, Legion General Secretary,\nsaid. \"No doctor ahould be asked to\ndecide whether a man has two or\nthree per cent disability. If he has\nany at all It should be cpnsidered\nfive.\"\nGen. McDonald said that In practice this has prevailed and that the\ncommission had realized such small\ndistinctions were ridiculous.\ni1\"1.      ' '\u25a0*'\n-t\u00bbAaiT>.\nl)tttott#l^ (hmfii\nIMCOttEOWATlO  *<** M4Y 1670.\n3 Hours of Thrift Selling\nLadies' Wear\nCotton knit bloomers, also rayon bloomers and vesta, i\nOne price\t\n, Bargain table clearance of odd ltnes house dresses,\n,  vests, girdles, hats, etc. each\t\nMen's Wear\nMen's work shirts. Hard wearing chambrajr work\nshirts. Price _.\t\nBoys' sweat shirts. Boy's novelty sweat shirts.       (\u00bb\u25a0*  f\nPrice    J61.il\nSmallwares\nPerfect crepe hose. Favorite Spring shades. Sires\n8Vt to 10... PalV\t\nSilk Scarves. Ladles' silk scarves. Assortment of\ncolorful floral patterns :\t\n50c\n59(\nFootwear\n100 pairs women's shoes, all types and sizes ln the An (\ngroup. Reg. value $3.88. Price    u. _\u00a3.l\n45 pair women's novelty slippers. Black or red with (f-f   IQ\nfancy trims. All sizes    \u00abDX\u00ab _rtfi\nHomewares\nEnamel kltchenware. Real values at this price.\nEach \t\nDinnerware oddments. Reg. to 29c. Replace at this\nsaving. Each \t\nStaples\nNovelty marquisette millends. Values to 38c yard.\nPrice\t\nBrocaded rayon drapery. All colors. Reg. 79c.\nYard \t\n87c\n15c\n13c\n49c\nHome Furnishings\nUnpainted Windsor chairs. Sandpapered, ready to (pi  \u25a0* I\npaint. Each   3)1.1\u00bb\nEmpire carpet sweepers. You need one of these, (jn (*f,\nSpecial  \u00ab!)_j.___t\nGROCERY SPECIAL\nCOCOA: Fry'\u00ab, ni\n1-lb. tin  JlC\nFrench Envoy Warns U.J. Against\nDeceptions Which War May Brl\nPARIS (via Berlin) March 19 (delayed) (AP)\u2014 Fernand deBrinon, the\nFrench ambassador to the German\nauthorities in Paris, told foreign correspondents today that the United\nStates is engaging in a war \"which\nmay bring very heavy deceptions.\"\nHis statement was a comment on\nthe March 15 speech by President\nRoosevelt promising unstinted aid\nto Great Britain.\n\"We have ourselves spoken for a\nlong time of democracy,\" he said.\n\"That is a word which has cost us\na lot. And I believe that the French\nsoldiers who were sent to fight\nagainst Germans when told that\nthey were defending democracy did\nnot understand very well why they\nwere defending the word.\n\"England Is a democracy, but\nGreece is not. So to make war for a\nword that everybody interprets his\nown way is a very terrible thing.\"\nTurning to American correspondents directly he added: \"You are\nengaging yourselves in a world war\nwhich may bring you very heavy\ndeceptions.\"\nHe made the statement in an interview in which he reviewed the condition of the occupied zone and the\npossibility of France convoying food\nships.\nHe said it was true German troops\nin France were using quantities of\nfine wines, but that it was impos\nsible to get any others from tht (\ncupled zone.\nBordeaux ls especially sulfa,\nhe said, because raw materials,I\ncame from the colonies for hei\ndustries are diverted to Mane:\nBordeaux oil refineries, choi\nfactories, canning plants and cool\noil industries,are short ol matl\nhe said.\nThe Northern mines have 1\nenough timber, he added, and lt\nImpossible to transport th*T^\ntimber needed by rail because o]\nshortage of 80,000 freight cars, I\nThe return by Germany of *M\nfreighi cars taken after the occuj\ntlon, he said \"would be too go*\nNegotiations are underway\nWiesbaden, the seat of the arm\ntice commission he disclosed, to I\nduce the costs of maintaining I\noccupation forces. He claimed Pit)\nLaval, before his dismissal as Vb\nPremier last year, had obtained\nagreement for the reduction ot {\n2* i \u2022-J\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS-ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORKi\nB. C. Plumbing & Heatim\nCompany, Limited\nPepsodent Removes Surface-Stains...Reveals\nall the tull Natural Radiance ot Your Smile I\nSee how Pepsodent with IRIUM takes off the filmy\ncoating that clings to teeth... the dull, dingy coating\nlhat your toiiRU- can\/.t\/\u2014yourfriends can te e! IltlllM,\nthe extra effective, super-cleansing agent in Pepsodent\nflashes into' instant, safe action... flushes away sticky\nfood particles! Ugly surface stains disappear\u2014safely,\nquickly I And remember, Pepsodent contains No Grit\u2014\nNo Pumice-No Bleach... PROVED SAFE FOR\nTOOTH ENAMEL I\nFlash! Recent independent laboratory test, prem\npeMtely that Pepsodent Toeth Plunder predate, 32%\nmon luster on teelh.\nOF ALL TOOIHF'A_TES AND .'OWDERS\nONLY PEPSODEkTHAS IRIUM I\nfPSODH\n\u25a0both Paw*\n.SOWN IO  I Hi   UtN.AL\nP-ROF-SSION AS\nURIFIED AlKVl SULfAI.\n\"\u00abE_S\u00a3_1\n  '- ._. _*--.'. ___'.___-._.\n ,\t\n-------- I\t\n\u2022    ' \u25a0\u25a0'- \u2014\n t    POUR     .       \u25a0_,,'-  \u25a0\nanges...\nlies Success in\nIng Ihe Blood\nmure at Home\nLOGAN CLENDENING,' M. D.\n>t long ago 1 told ot the reporti\nDr. David Aymao of Boiton,\nda high plood preseure patients\njecamo convinced that when he\n;'the blood pressure of a patient\nitf office, it was higher than It\nild be. The mere fact of the\nince of the doctor taking the\nd pressure caused the patient to\nune nervous and jump the read-\nlip. He found that he could teach\nInts to take their blood pressure\n-pelves at home, and when they\nfe a record of this, it was en-\nI different from the record of\nJ blood pressure made in the\nsr's office.\nIts certainly is sound sense. In\njitals we can teach a previously\nMined technician or nurse to\n> the blood pressure In five\nlites. There is no reason why the\nent cannot be taught to do it.\nI a very simple procedure and\ne ii also no doubt that a blood\nWire taken under circumstanoes\n\u25a0n the patient is nervous ls high-\nban it actually should be. All\nInsurance examiners and agents\nW this to be the fact.\nIECIDED DROP\nhtve taken blood pressure read-\nl on  life  insurance  applicants\ndreds of times and found them\nhigh for acceptance by the medi-\ndepartment of the home com-\ny. At a second reading when\napplicants were not so appre-\nalve, they were 20 to 30 points\nm.\nbt jmysiology of this is also\nIt understandable on the basis\nmr knowledge of the mechanism\nthe blood vessels. The blood\nIture is not a stable thing; it\nnges as often and for the same\nKm aa the pulse. Blushing ii\nl*ly a form eyt change in the\nliiure, made by the muscular\ntl of the blood vessels. When\nI Mush, the vessels in your face\n...ir. i'\"'\n\u2014\n\"Pm Ready\"\nDaughter of Mr. and Mn. C.\nClark, Trail.\u2014Photo by Nelson at\nHughes Studio, Trail.\nare relaxed and everybody acknowledges that this ls due to nervousness.\nDoctor Ayman haa followed up\nhis very valuable observations allowing his patient to take the blood\npressure at home, and ln this way\nhas tried out a great many different treatments and drugs. His con.\nelusion are hopeful. He saya \"The\nfindings bf this study indicate that\nmany drugs that in the past have\nbeen regarded as without effect,\nmust be restudied.\"\nIn other words, our ideas about\nthe treatment of blood pressure\nhave depended upon observing\ntreatment when the patient's blood\npressure is taken ln the physician's\noffice. When we adopt a different\nstandard and depend upon records\nmade by the patient himself, taking\nhis own blood pressure at home, the\neffect of treatment may be entirely\ndifferent.\nI realize that many physicians\nwill have a prejudice against allowing their patients to take ttie blood\npressure at horae, but Doctor Ay-\nman's experience should lead the\nway to show that this is a feasible\nand much more accurate way of get-\nting at the actual condition of the\nblood pressure in those people over\n40.\nTODAY'S MENU\nHamburg Supreme\nButtered Cabbage\n,   Mixed Vegetable Salad\njldenglow Marshmallow Sponge\nCoffee or Tea\nHAMBURG SUPREME\ntablespoons fat, 1 can mushrooms,\nli pound fresh mushrooms, water,\nan chow mein noodles, 1 pound\nnburg, 1 large onion, 1 1-ourjce\ni tomato soup.\nilelt fat in frying pan. add meat\nI chopped onion and fry together\nlil partly cooked and brown, ^dd\nuto soup, fill can with water\n1 add, then put in mushrooms cut\n0 small pieces. Season to taste\nm be cooked ln casserole in oven\nOver low fire on top of state for\npurs. When serving sprinkle each\nying with the chow mein noodles\ntjoix bake in the oven, add noodles\n'top of meat and vegetables a\n\u2022.minutes before removing from\nMinJU.fo'L\nMduaswwqa.\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nMIXED VEGETABLE SALAD\nCelery cabbage, carrots, onion,\ncelery, green pepper.\nSlice celery cabbage, chop carrots and a tiny bit of onion, dice\ncelery and green pepper. Mix together well with your favorite dressing or toss with French dressing.\nGOLDENGLOW  MARSHMALLOW\nSPONGE\nOne package orange flavored gelatin, one cup canned apricots, one\ncup apricot juice, one pint water,\n16 marshmallows cut ln pieces, %\npint whipping cream.\nDissolve gelatin in boiling water, cool until it begins to thicken,\nthen whip with egg beater until\nthick and fluffy. Add cut-up marshmallows, apricots and apricot Juice,\nand whip 2 or 3 minutes longer. Foi\nin whipped cream and pour into\nmold or sherbet glasses. Chill in refrigerator and serve with whipped\ncream. Serves 5 or 0 .\nOn Jh. GJjl\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1941\n:bc programmes\nBftNINC\nfo-BBC Newi\ntt\u2014Questions of the H<mr\nSO\u2014The Balladeer\n-Wife Saver\n_.BC News\n-Recital\n\u25a0Schools Broadcast\n\u25a0Time Signal\n-Frankie Masters' Oreh.\n-CBC News\n\u25a0U.S. Navy Band\nFTERNOON\nBO-B. C. Farm Broadcast\n\u25a0CBC News\n\u25a0Katherine Hamilton, soprano\n\u2022Talk\n:lub Matinee\n-Recital\nIlosing Stock Quotations\njlirror for Women\n\u25a0Virginia Faire Entertains\n\u2022BBC News i\n-The Western Elve\n-Sandy McPherson\n\u25a0Recital\n'aik\n-Juardsmen's pctet\n\u25a0Serenade for Strings\n\u25a0News Commentary\nNew Under-arm\ntream Deodorant\nsafety\nops Perspiration\n1. Docs not Kit drcucs, does\nnot irritate'skin.\n[ 2. i-owaitingtodry.Catibeiistt-\nright after shaving.\n3. Instantly stops perspiration\nfor 1 to 3 days. Remove! odor\nfrom perspiration.\n4. Apurc,wh-te,grcasc.css,5Uia-\nless vanishing cream.\nS- Arrid has been awarded tbe\nApproval Sea 1 of the Amer ican\nInstitute of Laundering for\nbeing harmless to fabrics.\n38 MILLION jars of Arrid\nhave been sold. Try a Jar today I\nARRID\nLi Al .11 .ton. wiling toilet good)\n*******.** I* f.l-nlll   1\u00bb .-*! fl 9\/).-*)\n5:00\u2014Tunes In Three-Four Time\n5:30\u2014Quiz for the Forcei\nEVENINC\n6:30\u2014Canadians All\n7:<M\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014BBC Radio News Reel\n8:00\u2014To Be Announced\n8:1*--Allan Cup Hockey\n10:00\u2014Talk\u2014\"Canada Moves North'\n10.15-CBC Newa\n10:30\u2014Pacific Coast Command, Re\nbroadcait\n11:00\u2014Dance Music\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWINCi\nMORNINC\n7:50\u2014<D Canada\n10:00\u2014Tin Pan Alley\n10:15\u2014 Rainbow Trio\n11:00\u2014Women's Corner\nAFTERNOON\n12:21\u2014Programme    Summary   and\nAnnouncement!\n1:30\u2014Quarter Hour of Contentment\n5:15\u2014Superman\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014Radio Birthday Party\n11:00\u2014God Save The King\nOther periods\u2014CBC programmes.\nu. s. neFs' best\nNBC\u2014RED\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of America\n7:00\u2014Kay Kyser's Orchestra\n9:00\u2014Eddie Cantor, Dinah Shore\n9:30\u2014Mr. District Attorney\nNBC\u2014BLUE\n7:30\u2014Doctors at Work\n8:00\u2014Quiz Kidi\n8:30\u2014Horace Heidi's Orchestra\nCOLUMBIA\n8:30-Dr. Christian\n9:00\u2014Fred Allen, Kenny Baker and\nPortland Hoffa\n10:15-Nlghtcap Yarns\nMUTUAL\n6:.*-Answer Man\n10i45\u2014Phil Harris Orchestra\nU:15-Ted Fiorlta'i Orcheitra\nNEW FREQUENCIES\nNBC-RED\nKFI-640.   KHQ-590,   KOA-BSO,\nKPO-80\nNBC-BLUE\nKGA-1510, KGO-810, KJR-1000\nCOLUMBIA\nKNX-1070,   KSL-1160,   KFPY-\n920\nMUTUAL-DON LEE\nKOL-1300, KFRC-610\n--NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. APRIL 2. 1941\u2014\n^mmm^w^K^^\n$31 Is Raised by\nAppledale Social\nAPPLEDALE, B. C\u2014A successful\nsocial evening sponsored by the Appledale Red Crosi Society was held\nat the Hall Saturday evening. It\nwu well attended from local pointi\nand by visitors from Slocan City.\nWhist prlzei went to Mn. D. F.\nPeten. and J. Brown, consolation to\nMn. V. Sawtelle and Frank Trozzo.\nDancing was then In order and Mr.\nand Mrs. Nye of Slocan City provided the music. J. Fordyce gave a\nsong of tli own composition.\nAn embroidered table cloth, donated by Mrs. B. Shaw of Appledale\nwaa won by Mrs. George Crawford of Trail.\nMrs. B. Lansdown, Preiident, itated that a total of $31.75 wai wady\nto be turned over to the Red Cross.\nt. Graham, President of the Slocan Branch, spoke a lev; words ln\nappreciation ot the local efforti\nand stressed the need ot keeping\nright on with the good work.\nJOHNSON'S\nLANDING\nJOHNSON'S LANDING, B.'C, -\nMr. and Mrs. McNicol, who has Men\nvisiting friends In Saskatchewan for\nthe past month,'returned Saturday\nwith her daughter Jean who has\nbeen in Kaslo with her for a few\ndays.\nBilly Bowman made a business\ntrip to Kaslo.\nSteve Sawzuck and C. Tare visited the Landing Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley Lake viiited Kaslo Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. Ole Stenberg and\nDorothy and Bobby were Kaslo\nvisitors Friday.\nFriday night a dance was held ln\nthe school house. Visitors were Archie Greenlaw, Ed Emil, King Green\nGeorge and Steve Sawzuck, Dorothy\nBrown, Dorothy and Lloyd Tare.\nMusic was provided by Raymond\nRaper, Archie Greenlaw, Mr. and\nMrs. Stenberg and Steve Sawzuck.\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LISTER, B. C. \u2014 Misi\nMelva Huscroft returned from Alice\nSiding where she was a guest of\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. W Miller.\nMr. and Mrs. Herbert Yerbury\nwere visitors at Creston.\nCharles Huscroft spent a few\ndays on Nicka Island.\nNorman Phillips of Rlverview wai\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Montgomery.\nMrs. J. Donaldson who have been\nvisiting A. H. Donaldson left Tuesday for Eriekson where she will\nspend a few days, enroute to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. George Mermet and\ndaughter Maxlne of Creston were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Mercier.\nMrs. W. Miller and daughter\nPearl of Alice Siding are visiting\nthe former's father Jamei Huscroft\nElmer Huscroft wai a visitor to\nCranbrook.\nMiss E. Ackiman of Arrow Creek\nspent a few days visiting Mr. and\nMrs. E. Steele.\nMr. and Mn. F. C. Yerbury and\ntwo daughters of Chapman Camp\nand Mr. and Mrs. E. Sweeny and\nson of Kimberley were Sunday\nguests ot Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Yerbury.\nMr. and Mrs. James Handley and\nson Alan of Kimberley visited the\nDemchuk family and Mr. and Mrs.\nBert Hobden of Huscroft.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-R. G. Warner of Trail and his son Tom Freemont spent a few days at their hopie\nhere.\nLance Corporal R. W. Middleton\nof the Trail Guards and Mrs. Middleton arrived home after spending\ntwo weeks in Alberta and Sukatchewsn. Mr. Middleton left immediately 'for Trail.\nMiss June Graham who was operated on in New Denver, for aopen-\ndicitis two weeks ago is home.\nMr. and Mrs. J. McGuire and three\nchildren of Trail spent the weekend\nhere with relatives.\nMiss A. Curtis of the Creston\nteaching staff was a visitor at her\nhome here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. lfl. Rae and Mr.\nand Mrs. Hufty were visitor! to\nNew Denver Saturday.\nMiss Beth Hicks, who was operated on for appendicitis, two weeks\nago ln Slocan Community Hospital\nNew Denver, came home Saturday.\nMisi M. Morrison R. N., who Yis-\nited her mother Mrs. D. McKay,\nhas returned to continue her duties\nat Penticton.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Popoff left Monday on a business trip to Spokane.\nWynndel Institute\nMarks Anniversary\nWYNNDEL, B. C. - The Wynn\ndel Women's Institute celebrated\nits 13th anniversary Thursday in the\nHigh School.\nInvitations had previously been\nsent to all ladies of Uie community.\nand there was a splendid attendance\nAfter the business sessibn and a talk\nbv the President, Mrs. Abbott, a\npleasant social time was\" enjoyed.\nTea was served by memben.\nA table of home cooking, novelties and miscellaneous articles were\nadded features and about $15 waa\nrealized from the sale. This amount\nwas donated to the Red Cross.\nA dressed chicken, donated by\nMn. Crane was won by Mn. W\nGreig.\nWYNNDEL JUNIOR\nRED CROSS MEETS\nWYNNDEL, B.C.\u2014A meeting of\nthe Junior Red Cross was held in\nthe school Friday with Bobby Wigen\nin the chair.\nThe meeting was informed that\nthe oak tree given to Institutes to\ncommemorate the \"Coronation\" was\nready to transplant to a permanent\nplace. Members agreed to look after\nthe tree, If planted In school grounds.\nBOSWELL SOLDIER\nAPPRECIATES SOCKS\nBOSWELL. B. C.-ln a letter to hli\nmother, Mrs. Edwin Bainbridge, Private Wilfred Baingrldge, says that\nhii unit has been Issued Red Cross\nsocks, and that the men thoroughly appreciate the comfort of the\nhand made footwear. Private Bainbridge is stationed in the Queen\nCharlotte Islands.\n.PATRICIA AND DOREEN,\ndaughters of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Steele, 1739 Third Avenue, Trail. Mr.\nSteele ls Acting Chief of the Trail City Police Force\u2014Daily News\nPhoto,\nSERIAL STORY,\nBy Allen Eppes\nEVELESS EDEN\nCHAPTER FIVE\n(Continued).\nRita looked around wildly.\n\"Somebody's got to go and tell\nthem!\" she said. \"You go, Joel. You\nknow how to handle such things.\nPlease, Joel, for Bill's sake, if not\nfor mine.\"\nJoel shook his head. \"Sorry, Rita,\nbut I'm through explaining things\nfor Bill. It's high time he started\ndoing his own explaining.\"   ^_^\nAunt Sallie wrung her hands. \"I\nknew that lost ring was an omen\nor something!\" she wailed.\nRita snatched open the door, and\nbefore anyone could stop her she\nhad slipped out and was gone.\n\"Rita! Rita!\" said Bill, dashing out\nafter her.\nAunt Sallie looked at Joel. Joel\nlooked at Aunt Sallie.\n\"WeU,\" he said, \"there goes out\nwedding.\"\n\"Oh, this Is awful, Joel\u2014awful!\"\nsaid Aunt Sallie, on the verge of\ntears.\nThe minister came bustling in just\nthen, nervous, excited.\n\"W-w-what's the matter?\" he asked. \"The organist has been playing\nthe march on and on. Where's-the\ngroom? What's happened?\"\n\"Tht groom's flown,\" said JoeL\n.\"The groom'i what?\"\n\"There Isn't going to be any wedding, said JoeL \"Rita changed her\nmind.\"\n\"But\u2014but\u2014\" The minister sputtered, apti then turned to Aunt\nSallie as if for confirmation.\n\"It's true. Doctor MacQueen,\" said\nAunt Sallie. \"The granddaughter\nof that old harridan, Lizzie Linwood\nhas run off with another man.\"\nJoel patted the minister's arm.\n\"I think you're the logical one,\nDoctor,\" he said, \"to break the news\nto the waiting guests, since somebody's got to do it. Just step out\nthere and make any sort of explanation you think best. Tell them anything that will get them out of the\nchurch and send them home. Aunt\nSallie nad I will certainly be everlastingly grateful to you.\"\n\"We certainly will,\" said Aunt\nSallie weakly. \"To think that my\nnephew, a Randall, would be Jilted\nby a Linwood.\"\n\"Bill's not a Randall, Aunt Sallie,\"\nJoel reminded. \"He's a Latham.\"\n\"Oh, bother!\" said Aui}t Sallie.\n\"Come along now, Joel, and take\nme home. I've stood just about all\nany woman my age could stand ln\none short day.\"\n\"Yes, Aunt Sallie,\" said Joel. \"I\nsuppose we'll have to pick up Bill\nsome place. Gosh knows where he's\ngone now. Goodby,' Doctor Mac-\nQueen, and thanks a lot.\"\nHe took his aunt'a arm. They went\nout together.\nThe minister watched them go. He\nstood staring after them, looking\nrather like Lot might have looked\nhad he been turned into salt instead\nof Mrs. Lot. Then when he realized\nthat the wedding msrch was still\ngoing on, over and over and over\nand over, he said a little prayer-\nasking God to give liim the necessary strength to carry through\u2014and\nwent into the church.\n\"Ladies and gentlemen,\" he was\nsaying a moment later, \"I am sorry\nto have to announce that there isn't\ngoing to be a wedding. Miss Linwood has changed her mind, and\u2014'\nHe got through with the an'\nnouncement somehow, and hurried\nback into his study. He didn't wait\nto see the stampede in the aisles,\nhe didn't pause to hear the mad\nmurmur of many voices. He didn't\nknow until later that one of the\nbridesmaids had fainted, that one of\nthe, ushers had swallowed a half\npint of moonshine, and that Rita's\ngrandmother had said, \"WeU, I'll be\ndamned!\" right out loud.\nThankful f6r the comparative\npeace of his study, he sank into the\nnearest chair. He found a handkerchief and began to wipe the\nbeads of nervous perspiration from\nhis brow.\n(To be continued).\nNATAL\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 Mrs. M. Wavre-\ncan and daughter of Coleman spent\na week as guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nGergel.\nJoe Zboya of Hillcrest wai a\nvisitor at Natal Sunday.\nJohn Press of Natal is a patient\nat the Michel Hospital.\nMrs. C. BUly and family of Fernie\nare visiting Mrs. S. Chala for a few\ndays.\nAlex \"Tookie\" Mashuk has left\nMichel for Esquimalt, B. C, where\nhe is in training.\nMiss Vivian Walsh who is leaving\nMichel for Lundbreck was a guest\nof the Natal-MIchel High School\nstudents at a dance and party in the\nMichel Legion Hall. She was the recipient of a handsome travelling\nbag from the students.\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B. C. - Mrs.' R. Uri\nand Mrs. Mosley returned from the\nCoast Monday.\nMrs. McFarlane of Cranbrook was\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. Haines.\nMr. and Mrs. Burch and Garry\nwere auto visitors to Cranbrook.\nMrs. W. Cooper Is a patient ln\nCreston Hospital.\nMildred Stevens was a patient ln\nCreston for a few days.\nE. Marriott of Creston visited the\nschool last week.\nE. Uri was a visitor at Bonners\nFerry.\nMr, and Mrs. Burch Sr. of Cran\nbrook have taken up residence in\ntheir new home.\nM. Hagen is a patient in Creston\nHospital.\nDainty Nelson Lass\nMargaret Sylvia Co>t, 17-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. Cox, 618 Latimer Street\u2014Photo by Vogue.\nSupplew6s\u00bb>yj. .\nKeep Moving\u2014or\nYouTt Get Rusty\nBy ALICE WADE ROBINSON \"\nThere are words that pair otf\ntogether becauie of their natural\nassociation, such as young and supple, old and stiff.\nBut I have seen young people who\nwere not supple, and some older\nones who were. I know a woman of\n60 who has always kept active and\nwho is more supple than many a\nwoman ln her thirties. A Spartan\nwho Is well past 60, scorns the elevator and trots up and down five\nflights of stain several times a\nday. She claims lt ls good exercise\nand that It keeps her young. She is\ncertainly more agile than a woman of about 401 saw trying to hoist\nherself up on one of those high\nchairs at a lunch counter in Pennsylvania Station. She was stiff, overweight and pufMnrf\u2014and she couldn't make it by henelf. She had to\nbe helped up.\nEXERCI8E IS RECOMMENDED\nIt seems to be'true that people\nrust out more than they wear out\nAnd the pity of it Is that just a\nlittle exercise will keep anyone from\ngrowing stiff and creaky. And il\nyou object violently to exercise,\nyou can skip the calisthenics and\nkeep flexible simply by putting\nyour joints through their full range\nof motion every day. Because of\nthe stimulation to the nerve endings\nin the joints, this also gives you an\ninflntely increased sense of well-\nbeing.\nHere Is a tip-to-toe program that\nwill keep you flexible.\nBegin with the neck. Tip the head\nbackward until it rests between the\nshoulders, then circle around until\nit rests o none shoulder, down in\nfront, and over to the other shoulder. Do this very slowly, or lt will\nmake you dizzy.\nNow for the shoulders. Let the\narms hank limply at the sides and\nmove the shoulder tips In backward circles. Hunch the shoulder\ntips close to the ears, then move\nthem backward \u2014 drawing shoulder\nblades together, then releasing as\nshoulders move in the downward\narc. Perform very slowly. You will\nfind that shoulder-circling helps to\nuntie nerve knots at the base of\nthe neck. After you have finished\nthat, swing alternate arms freely\nfrom shoulders in wide backward\ncircles. Then swing arms ln front\nsimultaneously, crossing them and\nflinging them out at sides.\nHIP JOINTS\nNow for the hip Joints. Place\none hand on a chair or table for\nsupport, and swing opposite leg\nlooiely from the hip joint, up ln\nfront and out in back. Don't make\nan exercise of it Just swing loosely\nand easily. Then swing other leg.\nThat brings you to your knees-\nsit on a table and swing alternate\nlegs back and forth in a loose-jointed rhythm.\nFinish by circling feet at the\nankles, an dhands at the wrists, and\nflexing fingers and toes.\nThat pull your Joints through\ntheir paces\u2014and it will keep you\nyoung.\nCRESTON    '\nCRESTON, B.C.-W. S. Dale of\nVancouver has arrived to look after\nhis land operations on the Reclamation farm.\nAlex Ritchie of Nelson visited\nCreston at the frist of the week.\nPte. Aubrey Kemp with the\nD. C. O. R., New Westminster, is\nspending ten days' leave with Mrs.\nKemp and family at Creston, the\nfamily having moved into town\nfrom the ranch on the East side of\nthe village.\nJack Fraser, who has been with\nthe CA.-S.F., at Victoria, has returned.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Mather (nee\nWilliams) were guests at a dance,\nfeatured by a shower of gifts for\nthe new home, tendered them by\nthe social club at Lakeview.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Gay and son,\nCharles, were weekend guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Nedelec et Yahk.\nMiss Alice Bohan of Kitchener\nwas a Creston visitor.\nMiss June Wilton, who has been\nvisiting her parents at Cranbrook,\nreturned at tne end of the week.\nRonald Cooper, Stanley Hendren\nJr., and Will Macdonald have left\nfor Vancouver, where they are taking a course ln aircraft mechanics.\nMr, and Mrs. A. B. Ness returned\nfrom a visit at Cranbrook.\nG. Thornycroft of Kalispel, Mont,\nis a Creston visitor this week.\nJ. W. Currie has returned from\nVancouver, where he was called by\nthe death of his mother.\nuSurelCan\nDressMysetf\nROBERT KENWORTH,\n13-mohths-uld son of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. R. White, 1908 Topping Street\nTrail. \u2014 Photo by Nelson at\nHughes Studio.\nSeed Germination\nTests Made at Home\nAll ieed ln Canada to be sold _n-\nder grade must be teited and graded ln the laboratories of the Plant\nProducts Division, Dominion Department of Agriculture. As free\ntesting in these laboratories has\nbeen discontinued, it Is likely that\nmore seed will be tested at home,\nparticularly for germination when\nthe object is simply to determine, if\nthe seed will grow satisfactorily.\nWhether the seed is tested at home\nor not if It is to sold by grade, it\nmust ot course be tested and graded\nby the Plant Products Division'at\nthe respective rates of fees for those\nservices as laid down in the provisions of the Seeds Act.\nIt is quite practicable, states the\nPlant Products Division, to test at\nhome most kinds of seeds for germination, especially those that germinate easily and quickly, such as\ncereals, corn, peas, beans and many\nothen. In fact with the exception\nof some of the grasses, there are few\nleedi which cannot be tested at\nhome for germination satisfactorily\nfor all practical purposes without\nspecial equipment.\nAll that is required is a.'four or\nfive-inch flower pot or other container of similar size with a hole\nIn the bottom to allow drainage,\nsome loamy earth, planting ln it at\nproper depth of say 50 to 100 seeds,\nwatering sufficiently to keep moist,\nand counting the sprouts whan they\nemerge. The percentage of germination mav be figured by multiplying\nthe total number of normal ana\nhealthy sprouts by 100 and dividing\nby the number of seeds planted\nMost seeds germinate well at ordinary house temperatures, but they\nshould not be put near a stove or\nradiator to become over-heated, nor\nshould they be put on the window\nsill to be chilled at night.\nKARACHI. India (CP) - Twelve\nperaons lost their lives ln the burning of a cotton warehouse.\nBoswell Soldiers\nAre Entertained\nBOSWELL, B.C.-A Jolly party\nwas held at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. W. Lawson Hepher, when with\nMr. and Mra. Harold Spence and\nMrs. Clarence Holder they entertained in honor of Lance- Corporal\nC. Holden and Private P. L. Hepher,'\nwho were home from Victoria on\nfurlough.\nProgressive whist was played,\nwith prizes for high score going to\nMrs. R. C. Yager and B. H. Smith.\nConsolation prizes were won by\nMr. and Mrs. C. Holden.\nAt supper time Mrs. A. Hepher\nan_ Mrs. C. Chauto assisted in serving.\nvery popular was the quiz contest which followed, with n ladies'\nteam lined up by Mrs. W. L. Hepher,\nthe men's team by W. L. Hepher.\nThe ladies' team members were\nMrs. A. Mackie, Mrs. F. D. Cummings, Mrs. M. McGregor, Mrs. C.\nH. Bebbington, Mrs. A. Kennedy,\nMra. R. C. Yager, Mrs. K. Wallace,\nMrs. D. V. West and Mrs. J. H.\nSmith. On the men's team were J.\nH. Smith, A. Hepher, H. Spence, B.\nH. Smith, C. Holden, H. Boyd, D.\nV. West, Arnold Cummings and\nJack Smith.\nAfter a keen struggle the men\nemerged victon by 10 points. Highest individual scores were made by\nMrs. J. H. Smith and A. Hepher.\nA picture guessing contest was\nwon by Mrs. Eric Bainbridge.\nA sing-song, with Mrs. W. L.\nHepher as accompanist wound up\nthe evening.\nOther guests were Mr. Yager, Mr,\nand Mrs. A. Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.\nP. L. Sullivan, Mrs. Hepher, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. Chaub, Mr. Bebbington,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Boyd. Mra. P. H.\nRichardson. Mrs. F. Shell, Mrs. J.\nHall, Rev, C. Lancaster and J. Wilson.\nUnderstanding*, i...'\nHow Young Wile\nMade a Friend of\nMother-in-law\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nA young matron, wise, beyond\nher years, was saying the other day\nthat she adored her mother-in-law\nand her mother-in-law adored her.\n\"What's the recipe?\" asked a hew\nbride who had got off to a bad start\nwith her husband's mother.\n\"Respect the traditions and ties ot\nthe family you are entering,\" laid\nths wise one. \"Little customs, sentiments that seem awfully silly when\nyou first observe them are sacred\nto the family and they resent your\nridiculing them. Same thing with\nthe family friends and relatives.\nThey may appear to be impossible\nto you; but the in-laws expect you\nto take them at their valuation.\n\"Second, I think a mother-in-law\nappreciates, above, everything, her\ndaughter's confidence, You don't\ndiscuss your small affairs with peo-\npie unless you like them very much.\nYou don't tell them what you are\nthinking, planning, doing unless\nyou want to be intimate with them,\nwhen you sit down and tell your\nmother-in-law the chatty details of\nyour daily existence she knows you\nlike her and are including her in\nyour life with her son. ,\n\"Third, I think a mother-in-law is\nflattered at being consulted. Even\n1f you can't invariably take the\nadvice she gives you, you've paid\nthe compliment in asking it and\nshown that you value her opinion.\nFor instance, whether to buy* this\npiece of furniture or that, whether \u25a0\nto take a trip or put the money in\nthe house. These things bring her\nin on the ground floor of your lite.\n\"You see marriage sort of separates a son from his mother. He\nrelies on his wife to settle the small\nmattera that come up. It doesn't occur to him that his mother cares\nwhether or not she's consulted. But\nshe does care. And if she Isn't she\nputs the blame on son's wife and\nthinks her boy is being deliberately\nweaned from her. The wife has tp\nact as go-between and see that the\nmother and son are kept close.\n\"Fourth, a mother likes to fed\nshe's needed. I always save up little\njobs for my mother-in-law to do\nfor me: darning socks, sewing on\nbuttons, mending linen. When the\ndrawer is full of things that need\nattention I write and te'l her to\ncome at once, we can't wait any\nlonger. And when she comes I always take her Into the kitchen to\nmake one of their family desserts\nthat nobody can make to suit them.\"\nSmall wonder that this mother\nand daughter-in-law are a mutual'\nadmiration societyl\nProblems of general Interest submitted by readen will be discussed\nin this column. Letters unsuitable\nfor publication will be answered\npersonally provided they contain\nstamped, self-addressed envelopes.\nAll names are held In confidence.\nWrite Miss Chatfield, ln care of\nthe Nelson Daily News.\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B. C.-Mrs. H. Spence,\nvisited friends at Sirdar.\nRev. C. M. Lancaster motojed to\nCreston for a brief visit\nMr. and Mrs. P. L. Sullivan and\nTerry spent a weekend in Nelson.\nMrs. Kenneth Wallace and children Muriel and Boyd, were weekend visitors to Nelson.\nLance Corporal C. Holden and Pte.\nP. L. Hepher who have been home\non furlough, left Friday for Victoria. Mrs. Holden and children ic-\ncompanied them to Nelson, returning Sunday.\nH. Bingham formerly of Boswell,\nnow of Nelson, spent a weekend\nin Boswell.\nAPPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C.-Mrs. C. Harmon and daughter Gwen of Trail\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. B. Lansdown.\nPte Sawtelle of the Trail Veterans' Guard, Mrs. Sawtelle and daugh\nter Winnie, were weekend guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. Fordyce.\nThe Winlaw Farmers' Institute\nmet at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Fordyce, Winlaw and Appledale\nmembers  attending.\nSALMON LOAF\nCAN BE MADE WITH\nCHEAPER GRADES\nif you add a rich sauce\nTAKE a UD tin of pink or cohoe\nsalmon. Mash it and add a little\nbrowned onion. Blend In well, a\ntablespoonful of H. P. Sauce. Add\n1J_ cups mashed potatoes, 1 teaspoon chopped parsley, 1 teaspoons\nbutter, \u25a0_ cup milk. Mix thoroughly\nand press Into a baking dish. Cover\nwith buttered crumbs; bake for JO\nminutes in moderate oven. Serves\n4 persons.\nCheaper grades of salmon are Just\nas nutritious as best sockeye and\nthe addition of H. P. Sauce rounds\nout the flavour so delidously that\neveryone i(lll remark on the ina\ntaste of your loaf. You can tufc\nH. P. Sauce for many othar foods.\nIt greatly improves soup, stew,\nbeans, macaroni, fried meats and\nfish, also salads snd sandwiches.\nLET A  WANT-AD SEHVB YOO\nGREATLY MAGNIFIED\nMoney Spent for Printing at the\nA dollar looks a lot bigger when\nit's spent for a Daily News printing job \u2014 and it accomplishes a\nlot more. It goes further and buys\nbetter work when the Nelson Daily\nNews does your Commercial Printing work. We know how!\nYour Newipaper Printing\nPlant Can Do a Better Job\n5M0ott latlg\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n266 Baker St.      Nelaon, B. C.\n._____:.\n*Vr\n\u25a0 i .'\u25a0_.._._._\u25a0 'j\n,   ,.      rf', ._     -ftt\n1 \u25a0*     ''_.\u25a0'   '      '.'\u25a0 .\n^^fa^jfaflfflkJ^y.^*.' 11\n^^JijM^t^mjM\n 1:\nEveryone's Wearing\nLtt your feet relax ln baby\ncrushetta! Suave and sleek, it\ndresses up your new outfit,\nexclusive to Treadeasy Shoes.\nModels also In black, brown,\nblue, and wine suede.\nGet yours  at Andrew's.\nfor Easy Treading,\nWear Treadeaiy Sheet\nI. Andrew &. Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\nWar Savings for\nBridge Winners\nWinners of the first prize draw in\nie bridge tournament sponsored by\nIrs. Vincent Fink's Circle of St.\n\u2022viour's Church, Mrs. E. G. Smyth\nnd John Cartmel, received a $5 War\naving Certificate each as their\nfite.\nIn the consolation draw the Winers, Mr. and Mrs. R. StDenis, re-\n_lved eight War Saving Stamp*\nIch.\nIn announcing the winners Mrs.\nInk said the members of her Circle\nEere delighted with the cooperation\nven by all those who took part in\nie tournament. ,\nRENCH CASUALTIES IN\nNORTH AFRICAN FIRING\nVICfiY, 1-ance, April 1 (AP). -\n. Vichy Government spokesman\naid today that the French suffered\nour dead and seven wounded in\nhe exchange of fire Sunday be-\nween British warships and French\n\u2022tteriea on the North African coast.\nte aald there were no casualties\nboard the convoy of four French\nlerchantmen which the British\nwarships ordered to halt. It fled in-\no the Algerian port of Nemours.\nQUAKE RECORDED\nSASKATOON, April 1 (CP). -\n'he seismograph at the University\nf Saskatchewan registered an\narthquake today. A spokesman for\nje Physics Department said the\ntuake was about 7100 miles from\ntre but he would not hazard any\nIrection,\nSEATTLE. April 1 (CP). - The\n'Diversity of Washington selsmo-\nr\u00bbph recorded an earth shock to-\nsy, apparently about 1800 miles\niistant in an undetermined direc-\nlon.\nHas a Cold\nRtlitve Misery\nImproved Vicks Wty   ,\nMothers, you Will welcome tha\nrelief from misery that cornea\nwith a \"VapoRub Massage.\"\nWith this mort thorough treatment, the poultlce-and-vapor\naction ot vicks VapoRub more\neffectively rUKlMTairrltated iir\npassages with sootldng medicinal\nvapors...SINUUTU chest and\nback like a warming poultice or\nplastv... tTWTJ KUIYIK8 misery\nright (way! Results delight even\nold friends of VapoRub.\nto GET a \"VapoRub Massage\"\nwith all Its benefits - massage\nVapoRub for 3 minutes on IMPORTANT RIB-AREA OP BACK\nas well aa throat and cheat -\nspread a thick layer on chest,\n\u00a3\ncover with a warmed cloth. BE\nSUM to use genuine, tune-tested\nVICKS VAPORUB.\nHorswilli\nCROCERIES\nThe beit service in town.\nPHONE 235\nY!S \u2014 We Sell\nRAW AND PASTEURIZED\nMILK\ntOOTBNAY\nVallky I\/airy\n\u25a0MB.\nVhen Sutherland repairs your\n.atch. it's on time, all the time\nH. H. Sutherland\n348 Baktr St\nUI I.l-lI IJ-Ett-tlXJ-ULtr.\nTht\nButcherteria\nSeller   Meals for  Unt\nHONE S27  FREE DELIVERY\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. APRIL J. 1941-\nMunicipalities Pay More, Nol Less,\nSays Love, Refuting Hart Claim;\n$1,500,000 More; Grand Forks Case\nGRAND FO-tKS. B. C, AprU 1-\n\"Statements made by the Hon. John\nHart, Minister ot Finance, to Vancouver Board ot Trade Wednesday\nhave set most municipal officials\ngasping; those familiar with municipal figures and the impositions of\nthe Government are astounded that\na man of Mr. Hart's standing should\nthrow doubt on his own integrity by\nusing such misleading statements\nwhen he surely should know they\ndo not reflect the facts,\" said T. A.\nLove, former President of the Union\nof B. C. Municipalities and Mayor\nof Grand Forks for many years,\ntoday.\n\"Mr. Hart gave the impression ot\ngenerosity toward municipalities anu\nexplained that his Government 'by\nassuming 80 per cent of relief costs.\nMunicipal* Governments were paying less now than was the case when\nthe indigents were their sole burden', to quote his words. The intent\nof such remark can hardly be other\nthan to suggest to the public that\nas result of this Government generosity the financial advantage is\nnow with the municipalities when\ncompared with the period When indigents were their sole burden.\nCONTINUAL SAPPING\n'The facts are vastly different.\nMr. Hart's financing of the Provincial Government since 1933 hu included a continual sapping of usual\nmunicipal revenues, and has worked\nto the serious disadvantage of every\ncity and municipality in British\nColumbia, Using the City of Grand\nForks as an illustration, there lias\nbeen a disadvantage under the Pattullo Government of about S80O0 a\nyear, and this is one of the smallest\nIn   large   cities   this   disadvantage\nmust have run to tens ot thousands\nannually.\n'\"To use concrete figures: The total grants to Grand Forks trom the\nGovernment in 1927 (first yesr prior\nto depression effects) were $7482.61,\nas compared with $1421.28 In 1940,\nmaking a disadvantage to Grand\nForks of $6061.33. To this disadvantage should be added $427.92,\nwhich was the additional cost of\ncharity and relief in 1940, $1301.51, as\ncompared with charity only, $873.50,\nin 1927. To this should also be\nadded $272.80 for Tranquille in, 1940,\nwhich was not chargeable tn 1927.\nThus we have a. total net disadvantage to Grand Forks, and in\ntavor of the Government, of $6762.05\nin 1940, as compared with 1927.\n'There were other financial disadvantages to municipalities imposed by the Government during the\nperiod such as mental hospital costs,\nmothers' pensions, and children's\nhome assessments, which had not\nbeen imposed prior to 1928. Some\nof these have been corrected. But\nto illustrate how generous they\nwere it might be cited that in 1934\nmothers' pensions cost Grand Forks\n$1144 and mental hospital $1193.\nor a total additional burden of\n$2337.\n\"While these figures for Grand\nForks may not accurately reflect\nthe position in every municipality,\nthe ratio as to population will not\nbe far wrong.\n\"In round figures, it Is costing\nthe municipalities $1,500,000 annually more now than it did 'when\nindigents were the sole burden'\u2014\nnot less, as suggested by Mr, Hart,\"\ndeclared the former Grand Forks\nMayor.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Marion Waldie of Toronto, who spent a couple of weeks\nwith her sister-in-law, Mrs. William\nWaldie, Terrace Apartments, has\nleft to visit the Coast before returning East.\n\u2022 Mrs. Norman Roscoe, Victoria\nStreet, entertained members of Mrs.\nVincent Fink's Circle of St. Saviour's Church Helpers when those\npresent were Mrs. E. S. Briard, Mrs.\nG. N. Colville, Miss Greta Curwen,\nMrs. W. M. Toone, Mrs. F. P. Sparks,\nMrs. A. J. F. Peel. Mrs. Arthur\nLakes, Mrs. W. J. Leigh and Mrs.\nVincent Fink.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Robertson\nof Rossland visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Oscar H. Burden of .Port\nCrawford shopped in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Victor Bamberg of Salmo visited Ihe City yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Fowler\nwere in town from Castlegar Monday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Burkholder, who has been\na guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Rev. and Mrs. Foster Hilliard. Silica Street, for several\nweeks, has returned to Ottawa.\n\u2022 Miss N. Munn was a shopper\nfrom Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 Clark Dalrymple has returned\nlo Spokane after visiting Mr. and\nMrs. Norman Brown, Gore Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. A. Mills of Willow\nPoint spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Joseph. Maglio and infant son left Kootenay Lake General Hospital yesterday for their\nhome on Cedar Street.\ni Mr. Fowler was in town from\nTrail yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Clarence Garrett of\nKaslo visited Nelson recently.\ne Miss Rosie Kapak, who has\nbeen on furlough and vUited her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Kapak,\nVernon Street, has returned to Seattle, where she is taking up Public Health studies at the Unwersity\nof Washington.\n\u2022 John Fraser, Carbonate Street,\nhas left on a holiday to Vancouver\nand Victoria.\ne Norman Denny was in town\nfrom Willow Point yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harry Heise, Silica Street,\nentertained members ot the Junior\nC.W.L. Monday evening, when those\nattending included Miss Kay McDougall, Mrs. G. M. Benwell Miss\nMargaret Meyer, Mrs. W. Winkelaar, Miss Helen Scanlan, Mrs. Freddie Romano, Mrs. J. DeGirolamo,\nand Miss Helen Stubbs.\ne Mrs. Fred H. Graham's Circle\nof members of St. Saviour's Church\nHelpers met at the home on Rosemont of Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson,\nwhen those attending were Mrs, A.\nL. Creech, Mrs. F. R. Pritchard,\nMrs. G. R. Bone, Mrs. A. J. Cornish, Mrs. H. B. Gore, Mrs. A. T.\nHorswill, Mrs H. R. Townsend, Mrs.\nW. O. Rose, Miss Margaret Taylor\nof South Slocan, Mrs. J. H. Edmond-\nsond, Mrs. Stanley Bostock, Mrs. A.\nJ. Dunnett ahd Mrs. Mabel Rockliff.\n\u2022 Major Turner Lee of Bonning-\nLon was a visitor to town.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. N. Murphy of Kaslo\nwas a City, visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Colonel Cholmondley of Crawford Bay spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Hans Edwardson and\nbaby daughter left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital yesterday for their\nhome at Sheep Creek.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gretchen Gibson and\nMrs. J. A. Curran were co-hostesses\nat a tea at the North Shore home\nof the former Monday afternoon,\nbenefitting the Order of the Eastern Star. Mrs. T. F. McKechnle and\nMrs. J. Armstrong presided at the\ntea table covered with a beautiful\nhand-made lace cloth and centered\nby a basket of Easter e,gs and\nSpring flowers. Serviteurs included\nMiss Beatrice French, Miss Mae Mc-\nFarlane, Mrs. Colin Baker and Mrs.\nTed Baker. Others present included\nMrs. F. Nicholls, Mrs. J. Draper,\nMrs. M. E. Maloney, Mrs. J. F.\nRobinson, Mrs. IV. G. Mills, Mrs. J.\nLundie, Mrs, C. H. Stark, Mrs. David Macfarlane, Miss Ethel Smith,\nMiss Agnes Luscombe, Mrs. Joseph\nHolland, Mrs. R. D. Hall, Mrs. 0.\nSchupe. Mrs. J. J. French, Mrs. H. E.\nDill, Mrs. A, Wood, Mrs. C. F. Hunter. Mrs. Lawrence George, Mrs. R.\nD. Wallace. Mrs. W. Carruther, Mrs.\nJ. H. Lemmon, Miss Annie Smith,\nMrs. Russell Winifield, Mrs. George\nClerihew, Mrs. F. E. Wheeler, Mrs,\nB. Lowery, Mrs. J. H. Argyle. Mrs.\nE. H. Paterson, Mrs. S. C. Latornell\nand Mrs. W. M. Young.\nThe Lindbergh Psychological Mystery\nDp These Pictures Tell the Story\nof This Complex Character?\nWhat Type of Character Does This Depict?\nAnd This?\nREPORT ITALIANS\nSEEKING PEACE\nLONDON, April 1 (CP Cable).\n.\u2014 Under the heading \"They Say\"\nthe Evening Standard today reports in its gossip column that\n\"Italy is putting out feelers for\npeace via Madrid.\"\n\"Her African Empire is in\nruins, her Albanian Protectorate\nis slipping away, and ahe can\nnot defend her own coasts . . .'\nthe Standard added.\nGREEKS MAKE SURPRISE\ni    ATTACK ON ITALIANS\nATHENS, At>ril 1 (AP). - Dispatches from the Albanian front\nsaid today a Greek surprise attack\nhad pinched off the centre of Italian resistance on a dominating\nheight in the central sector and two\nItalian companies were wiped out.\nTwo hundred prisoners were\nclaimed. The reports said the Greeks\nattacked on both flanks as artillery\nfire was concentrated on trenches\nand barbed wire entanglements.\nPRANKSTERS MESS\nVANCOUVER STATUE\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP). -\nApril fool pranksters decked out the\nstatue of Captain George Vancouver, discoverer of the Inlet on which\nthe city stands, in front of the City\nHall here In a grey fedora, a string\not sausages around his neck, a broom\nIn his outstretched arm and a home,\nmade apron around his waist. But\nthe joke failed, for city hall caretakers stripped tlie statue before\nmidnight.\nCASUALTIES\nOTTAWA,, April 1 (CP).-Death\nof two members of the Canadian\n(Active) Army was reported today\nin the Army's 42nd casualty list of\nthe war, raising to 205 the total\nnumber of dead and missing reported by the Army since war began.\nFollowing is the latest list of\ncasualties, with regimental number\nand next of kin:\nPreviously missing, believed killed,\nnow killed:\nAlberta Regiment-Stewart, Donald Alexander, Pte., 11663, Mrs. Abigail Bertha Ross (mother), mv, N.\nMartel Avenue, Hollywood, Calif.\nDead:\nInfantry\u2014Rowe. George Harry, L.\nCpl.. A3785, Aylmer, Ont.\nDangerously ill*.\nInfantry\u2014Saunders,    John,    Pte.,\nK85299,  Sidney  Saunders   (father),\nNotch Hill, B. C.\nSeriously III:\nRoyal Canadian Artillery\u2014Myhre,\nWilfred Earl, Bdr., M1062, Calgary.\nRoycl Canadian Engineers\u2014Barlow. Arthur. Spr., C2141. Ottawa.\nInfantry-Lindholm, Charles, Pte.,\nH16159. Port Arthur, ,Ont.\nSlightly wounded:\nCentral Ontario Regiment\u2014Welch.\nJames Isaac, Pte, B76244, Peterborough, Ont.\nRoyal Canadian Army Medical\nCorps\u2014Cooke, George Gilbert, Pte.,\nB80911. Dunvilie, Ont.\nMELBOURNE, (CP)-Beer and\nswing music may be needed to make\nSydney, N.S.W., are palatable, says\nThe Argus, but Melbourne artists\nsay they are not needed in the cultured precincts of the galleries here.\nCRAWFORD BAY TIN FOIL DOOR STOP A\nNOVEL CONTRIBUTION TO WAR EFFORT\nThe NeUon Red Crou Work Committee was pleased to receive a\nparcel of \"tin foil collected by tlie\nCubs and Brownies of Gray Creek\nand Crawford Bay. The children\nhave worked enthusiastically st the\nproject and a good sized bundle was\nobtained which ls to be included in\nthe next shipment of goods leaving\nNelson.\nA large ball of (oil, Included In\nthe collection but looking curiously\ndifferent frnni Ihe sheets and small\nbundles of new \"iilver\" paper attracted the laditi' attention. Surely i\nno childish hands pressed this mass\ninto its present weight and hardness, it was thought Scarred and\ndented, it looked as if it might.have\na story. It had. For yeara it had\nbeen the door-stop of Mrs. Richardson of Crawford Bay. When the\nCubs and Brownies arrived asking\nfor donations ot tin foil, she remembered her own ball of foil and decided she could well find a substitute\ndoor-stop noi needed by her country Ana so ths door-stop goes on a\ntourney-who knows where it may\nend?\nItalians Refer to\nU. S. Ship Seizures\nas \"Act of Piracy\"\nROME, April 1 (AP)\u2014Charac^r-\nizing^the seizure of Italian merchant\nships in American harbors as \"an\nact of piracy'' the newspaper II\nPopolo di Roma declared today the\nUnited States was planning to turn\nthe vessels over to Britain.\nThe paper asserted attempts to\njustify the seizures were entirely\nsuspicious and that the sole purpose\n.was to replace British shipping losses.\"\n\"Here, then, is the solution, topically British-American\u2014the seizure\nof property belonging to others,'1\nthe newspaper said.\nFive Recruits Leave\nNatal to Join Army\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Four recruits from\nNatal-Michel have left for the Coast\nto join units of the Canadian Army.\nThey were Harold Travis of Natal\nand Harry Lowe, Donald McFar-\nlane and Harry MacKay of Michel.\nThe latter who was still attending\nschool was guest of honor at a High\nSchool party held in the Michel\nLegion Hall. He was the recipient of\na military set from his school\nchums while the Catholic Youth Organization presented a wallet.\nWilliam Young ot Michel plans\nto leave for the East where he has\nbeen accepted in the R.C.A.F.\nFred Venzi of Michel and Pete\nLazaruk and Dave Stevenson of\nNatal have returned home after\nreceiving honorable discharge from\nthe army.\nVernon May Be\nin Bomber Path\nVERNON, B. C . April 1-The'very\nreal danger of air raid- over this\ncity was brought home to members\nof the Vernon Rotary Club by Sergt.\nR. S. Nelson, Chief Air Raid Warden for the city. His subject was air\nraid precautions, familiarly called\nA. R. P., and the dangers of gas and\nbombing attacks on this city.\nSergt. Nelson emphasised that\nVernon is in a direct line between\nthe Coast and Trail. Any possible\nair raids on this Province would\nundoubtedly be launched from the\nCoast and as Trail is one of the\nmajor military objectives in Western Canada, raiding planes would\npass over this city or very close\nto it. With a large military camp\nhere there seems little doubt that\nattempts would be made to destroy\nit if enemy bombers were anywhere\nwithin striking distance.\nIf the camp was raided there\nseems little doubt that the city,\nwould suffer also. That is the reason for the organization of A. R. P.\nin Vernon.\nCHILLIWACK AIRMAN\nREPORTED KILLED\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., April 1 -\n(CP).\u2014Mr. and Mrs. George W.\nGreen of Sardis were informed by\nthe British Air Ministry last night\nthat their son, Po. George Green, officially reported missing March 26,\nwas killed in action with the Royal\nAir Force.\n\"Arid This Is How You Toss a Bashet\"\nMichael John, 4.4 years, and Richard, two, children of Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Fraser, 615 Carbonate Street,' Nelson.\n\u2014Photo by Vogue.\nH. R. Kitto Is Making\nFine Progress After\nOperation   at   Coast\nH. R_ Kitto, Nelson merchant of\nmany years standing, who was operated upon at the Coast recently,\nwas reported Tuesday to be making\nexcellent progress. He will be convalescent for some time, it is expected.\nDISMISS APPLICATION\nFOR PRISON RELEASE\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP).-An\napplication for release of Peter\nMike Swisschook, 28, from Oakalla\nprison farm, where he is awaiting\nsentence on a drugstore holdup\ncharge, was dismissed in Assize\nCourt today by Mr. Justice A. I.\nFisher, who declared he had no power to interfere once a a jury had\nreturned a verdict of guilty.\nThe application was made after\narrest of two youths Sunday and\ntheir alleged confessions to the hold\nup Jan 3 of the drug store, for\nwhich Swisschook was convicted.\nG. R. Annable, Counsel for Swisschook, said he would apply to a\nCourt of Appeal judge tomorrow for\nrelease of his client on bail.\nALEXANDER PRAISES\nWAR AID AGENCIES\nVANCOUVER. April 1 (CP). -\nWork of the war aid agencies operating through the coordinating\ncouncil for war work and civilian\nservice by Maj.-Gen. R. O. Alexander, G.O.C., Pacific Coast Command,\nin a letter read at the annual meeting of the council here last night.\nFrench Students\nCall for U. S. Flag\nLYON, France, April 1 (API-\nFive hundred persons, Including\nmany students, demonstrated to.\nday before the United States consulate, cheering Yugoslavia and\nPresident Roosevelt, singing the\nMarseillaise and calling for the\nAmerican flag.\nThe crowd saluted tha flag\nwhen consular officials hung It\noui. Police stood by without Interfering.\nSYDNEY, N.S.W. (CP)- Claiming\ncopyright, L. Louise Haskins wu\ngiven an injunction restraining New\nVentures Property. Ltd., from publishing the words quoted by King\nGeorge in his Christmas, 1939, ipea\nsage. * \t\nSot tha Ntw 1941\nRefrigerators\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n574 Baker St. Phone 260\nHaigh lo Jail\nlorYear;Wile\nPleads Guilty\n, Henry Haigh ot Nelson, appearing in Nelson City PoUce Court for\nsentence Tuesday morning atter I\ntwo-day trial on a charge of contributing to the delinquency ot a Juvenile, wis found guilty and was len*\nfenced by Magistrate William\nBrown to serve a year in the Provincial Jail at Nelson.\nThe defendant's wife, Mrs. Tliora\nHaigh, facing a similar charge,\npleaded guilty Tuesday morning and\nwu reminded until today for sentence. Mrs. Haigh wu charged Saturday morning and remanded until\nMonday and then on Monday remanded a lecond time until Tuesday morning.\nConstable R. R. House laid Information tor both charges. Haigh\nconducted his own defence, while\nChief of Police G. R. Bone prosecuted.\nSoldier's Baby\nSon Is Buried\nFuneral service for James Richard\nBlundun, three-month-old son of\nMr. and Mrs. David Phillip Blundun\nof Nelson, was held Tuesday afternoon from Somers Funeral Chanel.\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson conducted\nservices at the Chapel and at the\ngraveside in Nelson Memorial Park.\nThe hymns \"God Sees the Little\nSparrow Fall\" and \"Safe In the\nArms of Jesus\" were sung al the\nChapel service.\nThe baby, whose father is serving\noverseas with the Canadian Active\nService Force, died Saturday.\nShipping Losses\nLess During Week\nLONDON, April 1 (CP)-Brltish,\nallied and neutral merchant shipping\nlosses for the week ended March 23\nwere 17 ships totalling 59,141 tons,\nthe Admiralty' announced today.\nThe total was 10 ships and 35,261\ntons under revised figures for the\npreceding week.\nThe losses for the week ended\nMarch 23 were 10 British merchantmen ot 24,000 tons; six allied of 27,-\n528 tons and one neutral ship of\n6673 tons.\nThe amended total losses for the\nprevious week were 27 ships totalling 94,402 tons.\n(The losses given a week ago in\nthe Admiralty report for the week\nended March 16 were 23 British and\nallied merchantmen totalling 71.773\ntons.)\nPointing out losses in the lat^t\nweek were less than Ahe previous\nthree weeks, an authoritative source\nnevertheless said:\n\"It would be unwise to deduce\nthat our troubles are nearly over or\nthat we \"have mastered this great\nmenace to our ultimate victory.\n\"We must still be prepared for\nlosses, sometimes exceptionally high\nsnd sometimes lower than this week\nfigures. It is too early to jump lo\nany conclusions but there is no\nneed for alarm or despondency.\"\nThe average weekly loss since\nthe war began is 65.000 tons, excluding ships sunk in the army evacuation from Dunkerque.\nMERCURY AT NEW\nHIGH OF 66 HERE\nA new high temperature for the\nSear, 66 degrees, was recorded at\n[elson Tuesdiy in another day o(\nSpring sunshine. A high wind swept\nthe city in the morning and continued, though abated somewhat?\nthroughout the remainder of the\nday so that the warmth was not es\nnoticeable as on previous days. The\nminimum temperature was 34 degrees.\nFascist Forces\n\"Resist Heroically\"\nROME, April 1 (AP)-The Italian\nHigh Command reported today the\nBritish were hurling additional men\nand mechanized troops into a bitter\nbattle between Cheren and Asmara\nin Eritrea, but claimed the Fascist\nforces were heroically resisting.\nElsewhere on th eAfrican front,\nthe communique reported only aerial activity.\nThe Italians acknowledged a British air raid on Misurata Fascist\nNorth African base 125 miles East o\nTripoli.'\nIllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllll\nOld Fashioned English    OA\nPOUND CAKES, each . >\u00abC\nFOUREX BAKERIES\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nSWEATERS\nIn pastel shades. Sizes 14-20.\n$1.95   $2.95\nFashion First Ltd.\nWatch for Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET-Phone 832\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home of Better Foods\nQUALITY GROCERIES Al\nSAVING PRICES\nPhoni 161   Free Delivery\nOverwaitea Ltd.\nWeek End Specials\nSavt You Money\n-PAGE PIVI\nPREENAN\n~      ruRNtruRI  COMPANY   *^.\nThe House ot Furniture Valuei\nEagle Block    Nelion    Phone 111\nTrad* In Your       - -,.\nOLD FURNITURE\nat Part Payment on\nNEW FURNITURE*\nNelson League Is\nto Ask Publkily I\non Malvern Talks\nNelson Branch of the League ot >\nNations Society in Canada will forward a resolution to the headquar- f.\nters of the Society urging it to pre-; I\npare for, and distribute to the news- j\npapers of Canada, a resume of reso- ?\nIuUor_- passed at the Malvern Con-.;\nference m England, a conference in-1\nstlgated by the Archbishop of York ;\nana attended by over 200 church J;\nleaders. Many  resolutions adopted,\nat the conference were of inter-;\nnational aspect.\nThe Nelson resolution urging dis- \u25a0\ntribution  of  the  resume to Canadian newspapers was adopted at a   .\nmeeting of  the  Branch Thursday,   ,'\nafter Rev   W. J. Silverwood spoke\non the subject' \"The Archbishop ol\nYork  and   the  New  World  Order\nas Discussed at the Malvern Con-\nference\". Tuesday afternoon the Executive  Committee  completed  tho\nresolution and instructed Mrs. R. L.   I\nOliver, Secretary, to send it to the  I\nhead office at Ottawa.\nThe Executive received a letter\nof condolence from the head office\nexpressing sympathy in the death ol I\nA. G. Thompson, President.\nPreparations were completed for\nthe annual meeting and election ot   I\nofficers this month.\nCommunications from Ottawa\nurged the appointment of delegates\nfor the national convention to bo\nheld in May, and advised that if it .\nwas not possible to be represented\nby a delegate, the Branch might\nhave an observer at the convention\nto report on the deliberations. Last\nyear Rev. Dr. Stephenson, then of\nNelson, represented the Branch at\nthe convention.\nCANVASS FOR WAR\nSERVICES FORGES\nAHEAD AT NELSON\nNelson's campaign (or contributions to War Services continues in\nfull swing.\n\"The entire city is being covered,\"\nMayor N. C. Stibbs, Chairman, stated Tuesday. \"Our results so far are\nnot what we would like, but the Nelson District has always responded\nto worthy appeals, and certainly\nthis one is worthy.\"\nFEMALE PAIN\nWomen who suffer painful, Irregular periods with nervous, moody\nspells due to functional causeshould\nfind Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable\nCompound very effective to relieve\nsuch distress. Plnkham's Compound\nla made especially to help euch weak,\ntired women during difficult dsys.\nThousands of women hava reported\nremarkable benefits. Made ln Canada. WORTH TBYDJOI Any drugstore.\nNow Is the Time\nto   Select    Your\nNew Easter Bonnet\nMilady's 'Fashion Shoppe \u25a0\n449 Baker St.\nPhone 874\nButcherteria\nPhono   Novirc   Phone\n527    WBW'    528\nWedneiday Thursday\nWHITEFISH: Real      OQ\ngood value, each ... LJ\\j\nECCS: Crade OP\nA-Large, doz LoK,\nVEAL STEAKS: Lean, OC\nper Ib *WC\nVEAL STEWINC:       lCp\nSHOULDER MUT-     OA\nTON CHOPS: Lb. ... \u00a3UC\nSHOULDER MUT-      IP\nTON STEW: lb IdC\nCALF HEARTS: .      1ft\nFresh, Ib IUC\nHEADCHEESE: OA\nDelicious, Ib &UC\nFREE  DELIVERY\nLetters From\nGreat Britain\nReaders of the Nelson Daily\nNews are Invited to send in\nletters they receive trom the\nwar zones so that other\nreaders can share this news\nLetters will be copied and\ncarefully returned Only news\nof general Interest will be\npublished Other items ln the\nletters will, of course be kept\nconfidential Please send or\nbring such letters to:\nWAR ZONE EDITOR.\nJMantt\nlathj 5to0\n.... i    .... ...... . .......-,_.,,,,, :.,,-   _,   . \u201e-.- B   ,, ,  ,, ]fniht^^^lmmaogl[iljg^j^^ltm\nf__k_\u00ab____\n\u25a0-----________\u25a0\u25a0\nj\n pao; six-\nNfterm Batlg Nttus ? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-WEDNE8DAY MORNING, APRIL 8. 1941--\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED. 266 Baker St., Nelson, British Columbia.\nI  MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n\"-\u2022\"THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 2,1941.\nPetty Tyranny in Edmonton\nEdmonton municipal electrical department employees are right in pro-\nI testing against their City Council's\nattempt to enforce a compulsory con-\nI tribution to war services and other\napproved charities.\nThe Edmonton City Council's idea\nis to make deductions from civic employees' paychecks, and then patriotically to hand over the money to war\nservices and charities.\nNo doubt the Edmonton Council\n'   had the best of intentions, but how\n| would the Mayor and Aldermen of Edmonton like a similar compulsory deduction from their incomes?\nYouth Vindicates Itself of\nCharge of Radicalism\nSince the war began Canadian\nyouth has vindicated itself. Canada is\nproud of its young men, of their patriotism, of their sound common sense,\nof their prompt response to the Empire's needs. They have proved by\ndeeds far more convincing than words\nthat the radicalism which had been\nwidely attributed to Canadian youth\nwas mere froth.\nIt would be a sorry state of affairs,\nhowever, as the Windsor Star remarks,\nif we had to depend on a war to turn\nyoung thoughts into proper channels.\nWe do not have to do this, but the fact\nremains that, until war broke out,\nthere was entirely too much of radicalism infecting our young men and wo-;\nmen, particularly in our educational\ninstitutions.\nThis did not presage ruin, of\ncourse. There were few of these young\npeople who did not pass safely through\nthis period in their lives, but tie sad\nfact remains that, during that time,\ntheir usefulness as citizens was largely\nobscured.\nWe cannot afford to let our youth\ngo into eclipse even thus temporarily.\nIn war or peace, we need to exert an\ninfluence which will keep them thinking along proper lines. The same spirit\nthat impelled them to flock into the\nfighting forces can be engendered even\nin times of peace. The older generation\ncan do it, mainly by example. What\nthey must do is to show their children\nthat this democracy of ours is a living,\nfine thing that works better than any\nother system on eatth.\nRight now, we do not need to \"sell\"\ndemocracy to the young. The healthy\nherd instinct is taking care of that.\nBut, the time is coming when tflere will\nnot be the exciting appeal of war and\nuniforms, and we should resolve now\nthat never again will we allow any\nconsiderable portion of our youth to\ndrift back into crooked thinking which\nis due almost entirely to the wrong\ngiant being given by those who should\nbe pointing the way.\nToday's Horoscope\nThere is only one (ly in the ointment of the\npersons who are celebrating birthdays today.\nThe next year will be a happy and fortunate\none for them, Their projects will prosper, and\ngood fortune comes to them in various ways.\nThe \"fly\" is some annoyance that will be experienced through correspondence or a journey, it is forseen. The prophecy for the child\nwho is born on this date is that he or she will\nearly meet with the goodwill and cooperation\nof superiors and elders; and that a long, happy\nand successful life is ahead. Occasional nervous\netrain must be guarded against.\nTest Yourself\n1 Where is the Bear Mountain bridge?\n2. Why won't water burn when it contains\nhydrogen, a orr.-.*..-tible gas?\n3. What kind of wood is deal?\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1. Over the Hudson River at West Point.\n2 noraiisp it has nlrradv burned. Water\nts hydfiigeu d:nx:de resulting from the combustion of hydrogen and oxygen.\n3. Fir or pine.\nVitamin Pills\nConfronted with long, severe Winters that\npreviously had taken an extremely heavy toll\nfrom its productive man-hours, Continental\nMachines. Inc. of Minneapolis, recently inaugurated a unique project designed to keep\nIts skilled men \"on the Job\". Having found\nthat vitamin capsules build up effective resistance to colds the management has begun\nlo ration these capsules lo the workers,\nAt 10'..n each morning the capsules are\ndistributed in paper cups on which is imprinted the caption, \"Your Health\". Under this\nheading appears a short, snappy paragraph on\naome important phase of health preservation\nThe cost of Pie project will run around\n$,.(10 for a period i.f 90 days for a force of ^-\nmen. but it is expected to pay for itself several    limes   n\\rr\nOpen lo any reader. Namei ot penoni aiking\nqueitlona will not ba publlihed.\nA. G., Kimberley \u2014 To settle an argument\namong some of our would be gardeners,\ncould you tell us the best way of applying\nsoot to an onion bed, the onions to be\ngrown from seed?\nThe soot should be dusted over the earth\nand raked into the ground a few days before\nplanting The soot is better if not used when\ntoo fresh. Another good method is to put the\nsoot into a bag and immerse in a tub of water,\nusing this liquid on the garden.\nCurious. Nelsqn\u2014How many telephones are\nthere in Canada? '\nFigures for January 1, 1939 shows 1,359,417\ntelephones in Canada. ,\nG. H., Rossland\u2014How long is the Connaught\nTunnel and when was it built?\nThe Connaught Tunnel, five miles long,\nwas completed in 1916.\nM. L. H., Creston\u2014In playing a hand of cribbage, will a run count if a card not in the\nrun interferes?\nA card which does not belong In the run\nblocks it and the run can not be counted beyond such a card\nT. W\u201e Trail\u2014What do the words \"Pom-Pom\"\nand \"Skua\" mean when used in stories on\nthe war news?\nPom-Pom\u2014Vickers-Maxim automatic machine cannon, firing one-pound shells irom\nlooped belt, or any similar weapon. Sometimes multiple-barrelled. The name comes\nfrom the drumming sound of its fast fire.\nSkua\u2014One British version of dive bomber. It takes its name from a gull found in European coastal waters. It is designed for over-sea\nflying from an aircraft carrier and is a two-\nseat monoplane, single-engined, with controllable-pitch three-bladed propellor. Details of\narmament are a secret. The maximum speed at\nlevel flight is 225 miles per .hour.\nPress Comeieot\nKNIGHT3 AND WEAKLINGS\n(\"Narodnia   Gazeta\"   (People's   Gazette),\nUkrainian weekly, Winnipeg).\nThe war has shaken the world. Our house\nis afire. Should it burn down, we shall be\nstripped of everything, because all our possessions will be gone. Canada is our house, our\nhome, Great Britain our estate. We came to\nCanada not for a day or two, but for the rest\nof our lives and to leave our children here.\nWe cannot roam all our life from one r#\"ner\nof the world to another like the fictitious Wandering Jew because we found here something\nwe could not find anywhere else: freedom,\nland, work and appreciation. And we must now\ndefend our new home in order not to lose\nall those things.\nWe are doing it indeed but there are\nwhispers and borers in our midst who are of a\ndifferent opinion. Their number is very small\nbut they are doing detrimental work, Like little beetles eating into a large tree, they undermine the peace of mind and the civic faith\nof good, toiling Ukrainian Canadians. It is true\nthese beetles think very much of themselves,\nimagining they are also weakening the British\nstrength, but in fact they are only harming\nthemselves and the good name of loyal Ukrainian Canadians. They are much too insignificant\ninsects to bite iron.\nSHERLOCK REENTERS RU88IA\nFor a loni time Russian children, not to\nsay adults, have been deprived of the pleasure\nof rapt contemplation of the Adventures of\nSherlock Holmes, Detective fiction was som**\nhow considered beneath the dignity of Marxist mentality, and those who wanted to regale\nthemselves with the mysterious goings-on of\nlate 19th century London had to do it by patronizing the inevitable bootleggers, who appear to have sprung up no less readily under\nsocialism than under other systems. Now the\nSoviet Union is once more allowing across\nits borders those tales of Sherlock Holmes and\nothers of the detective and ghostly cliques.\nPossibly the thrillers provided by the public\ntreason trials, and the exploits of the GPU\nagents in foreign lands were expected to provide all the necessary thrills to Soviet you'h.\nIf so, it will be a relief to have them given\nan opportunity to turn to pulp-paper thrillers\ninstead of the genuine article.\u2014Victoria Times.\nNEW INSPIRATION\nNow France needs a new Poincare and\nnew statesmen, leaders of high principle and\nof devotion to their country, such as she has\nnever failed eventually to produce in the past.\nTlie destruction of the republic has begun.\nLorraine is being incorporated in the Saar\ndistrict of Germany as the Westmark. Alsace\nwill follow. Territory in Southeastern France\nremains under the feeble paw of Mussolini.\nThese things are plain for all Frenchmen and\nFrenchwomen to see. They are recoiling from\nthem. They look for a new inspiration. Their\nanswer may come from the seeds sown by the\nFree French movement. Whatever it is, it\nmust be based upon French confidence in our\nultimate victory. That is where the duty of\nour government becomes plain. It is to supply\nthat confidence by deeds and by words, and\nto offer the strong arm of a friend. The French\npeople are hating the leaders who betrayed\nthem. So are we, and with as great a reason. But against the French people we have\nno recriminations, and we must show them so.\nTell the French the things they want ln their\nhearts to know and believe. Do that now with\nall our energy. Results will quickly follow.\n\u2014London'Dally MSil,\nINSPIRATION\nWell, we can all stop sticking pins intq\nwax images of our enemies now, because a Department store in New York has a more up-\nto-date method for working off a rage. They're\nselling a chalk figure called a Wackeroo (with\nhands coming out of its ears and feet growing\nfrom its neck) whose only purpose is to be\nsmashed on the floor when you're sore. 50c.\n\u2014Business Week.\nWords of Wisdom\nThe fountain of beauty is the heart, and\nevery generous thought illustrates the walls of\nyour chamber.\nInvisible Ink.\nCompanies engaged in fulfilling national\ndefence contracts may be interested in a\nunique system of employee Identification developed by the Hall Laboratories for Lighting\nResearch, Boston. This new method eliminates\nthe necessity of using badges or pass cards.\nIt consists of stamping the identification\non the back of the hand or forehead with a\nrubber stamp that makes use of an Invisible\nmarking ink which becomes visible only when\nexposed to ultraviolet or \"black\" light. There\nis no visible mark that can be copied or otherwise counterfeited. Inks of a permanent nature, or Inks that can be quickly eradicated,\ncan be used if desired. These special inks are\nnot only invisible but are non-transferable,\nperspiration-proof, and will resist ordinary\nwashing, according to the Hall Laboratories.\nBy the combination of invisible \"black\"\nlight and invisible marking inks, assurance is\nIhus   provided   that   persons  seeking   Illegal\nentry to the premises will be quickly detected.\n\u2014Industry.\nBest Spies Too\nDumb to Cheat\nBy CHARLES 8. FOLTZ, jr.\nIn the Wuhlngton Star\n\"Wanted: Men and women lacking personality, oomph, Imagination, charm and\nambition, for dangerous work at little\npay. Intelligent persons need not apply.\"\nThat want ad never appeared In Europe,\nbut it's just about what would appear if European military intelligence services were to\nadvertise for the spies they need now..\nMany a smart spy does good work for\nhis government, but most such spies were at\ntheir jobs long before the war began or at\nleast in the first few months of wax.\nBig espionage jobs and important secret\nmissions go to these veterans. The most successful new operatives, officials say, are those\nwith little imagination and a low I. Q., who\nsimply report what they hear or see.\nMen who do the hiring and firing for\nintelligence services on the continent say intelligent paid spies eventually find it's hard\nto earn a living and resort to one of two\ntricks\u2014padding their reports with Imaginative inside stuff or working for the other\nside.\nThe best field for new agents Is In minor\ncensorship positions' in enemy country. Imperial Germany's ace spy in England was\nJules Sllber, who, by a combination of official\ndullness and his own good luck, sat in a London office throughout the World War firmly\nintrenched in a key censorship post.\nBoth Britain and Germany need thousands of censors. Among them, perhaps, are\na few valuable agents with both the information and the means of communication at their\nfingertips.\nThe great mass of field spies, howjver,\nare either not bright or downright dangerous\nto their employers.\nA dull-witted Swiss youth arrested for\nespionage early in the war supplied Important\ninformation to the Germans for some time un-\ntli he was called to do military service. Then\nhis usefulness came to an end, because he\nthought his letters to the German consulate\ncould be carried post-free in the military mail.\nSoldiers' letters go free only to relatives\nin the Swiss army. So when the youth marked\nhis personal note to the German consulate\n\"Post-free, soldier's mail\" it was examined and\nthe contents sent him to jail.\nPrize double agent story la the tale of a\nMoravian tried before a military court in\nZurich. His name was Trebov, and his distinguished appearance won him the title of ''the\nbaron\".\nThe baron led a comfortable cafe life in\nVienna, where his small family fortune, Invested in a Jewish firm, vanished when the Nazis\nabsorbed Austria. The baron needed money,\nso he started work as an agent for the Vienna\nbranch of the German \"office for the prevention of espionage\".\nBy September, 1939, the baron rated high\nas a German agent in Vienna and about the\nsame date he met a Jewish horse dealer who\nhad abandoned his calling to spy in Vienna for\na British agent in Budapest. The pair became\ngreat friends, and a partnership was born.\nSoon the ex-horse dealer was also on the\npayroll of the German office for the prevention of espionage, while the baron was increasing his income with money from the British agent in Budapest.\nThe new partnership established headquarters in Zurich. There they made the great\nmistake of underrating the Swiss who know\nmuch of spies and spying. They sent a telegram to a London cable address making a rendezvous with a certain \"Maj. Palmer\".\nThe Swiss recognized the cable address as\none then used by the British secret service,\nso when \"Maj. Palmer\" called at the Zurich\nhotel there was a Swiss agent behind the\npotted palms.\nFor a month the Swiss watched the baron\nbuild up his ring. Finally things got too complex for the Swiss to follow without a few\nheart-to-heart talks, so they arrested the baron\nand his aides.\nBy that time the baron and the horse dealer had been joined by a beauteous Hungarian\nmilliner traveling on a stolen Iranian diplomatic passport and a Viennese waiter with a\nbogus Bulgarian passport.\nWhile all four were in jail awaiting trial,\nthree money orders arrived at the hotel of the\npotted palms addressed to the baron. All three\nwere sums for past services. They came from\nLondon  Rome and Berlin.\nWords of Challenge\n\"Democracy can only be measured in the\nsort of men and women it produces, and unless it does so it will collapse. In Fascism they\nteach that fraud is better than truth; violence\nis better than reason; ignorance is better than\nknowledge; and hate is to be desired rather\nthan love.\"\u2014Rev. R. R. Latimer, rector of Holy\nTrinity  Anglican  Church,  Chatham.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nApril 2, 1916\u2014British forces extended\nfront in the Arras sector and made a slight\ngain near St. Eloi. Ten persons killed in\nZeppelin raid on Southeast Scottish coast.\nEtiquette Hints\nThe bright young man or woman notices\nhow educated persons speak and tries to correct his own mistakes in speech. Correct\nspeech is a definite asset when applying for a\njob.\nVerse\nAID TO BRITAIN\nThe Royal Oak of England stands alone storm\ntossed upon the Empire's arliant heart\nDeeply her roots encircle half the world, and\nbridge the distant seas to lands apart.\nThe bulwarks of her Freedom flaunt tha\nfoe.\nHer fiery leaves ride out the huiTlcane,\nFor one which falling, flutters to the earth, a\nthousand Soar in fury up again.\nHer roaring dragons ride the frosty night,\nStout hearts wing outward from her island\nahoea with thunder bolts for those who\nmake men slaves, whose Creed is Slaughter\nand whose God is War.\nThe Royal Oak of England stil linvlnctble\nthrough din of battle and the earthquake\nshock, standing triumphant In the tempest's teeth\u2014gripping a little tighter still\nher island rock.\n0 Men of Britain hold her torch on high.\nHold steadfast in the Righteous Holy Cause.\nWe come nn wings across the seen seas to give\nthe flaming dragon\u2014claws.\n-B. W. McDOUGALL, M.D.\n\u2014Detroit Medical News.\nFreedom\nIt is a strange fact, writes Thomai Mann In\nDecision, that the two basic ideas of democracy, freedom and equality, form a contrail, a\nlogical contradiction. For logically and absolutely considered, freedom and equality ara\nmutually exclusive, just as the Individual and\nsociety are mutually exclusive. Freedom ii the\nneed of the individual, but equality ii a social\nneed, and social equality, obviously, limits the\nfreedom of the individual.\nBut logic has not a final nor the highest\nvalidity of life, and in ethic requirements of\nman. freedom and equality are not a real con-\nsolved in lhat which transcends and relates\ntradition. The contrast between them Is re-\nboth of them, namely, in Christianity.\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nFigures\nes of Yugoslavian Anti-Nazi Revolt\nAt left ls Former Premier Dragisa Cvetkovltch, who took Yugo- of Yugoslavia in the will of the slain King Alexander of Yugoslavia,\n,,,.,_., ._,_._, _ \u2022 ._ \u00bb _,._* \u00a3.1 shown taking the r oaths of allegiance to King Peter u, at the Yugoslavia Into the Axli camp, reported imprisoned in the revolt that foi- \u2122\u2122ariiament. Left to right are: Dr. Stankovich, Dr. Perovic, and\nlowed signing of the treaty with Germany. The men appointed regenti prince Paul, the senior regent. They are reported to have fled.\n\"\"\"\">'   vv''  WW':   _\nThe royal palace of Yugoslavia is pictured at the\/right of the \"Capital Hill\" of Belgrade.\nGeneral Dusan Slmov-ch, nen\nPremier of Yugoslavia, led Hia\nrevolt.\nStrikers and Police Clash\nat V. S. Steel Plant\nYouthful King Peter n ascended the throne with the support\nof the army. The boy-king is pictured here in a recent photograph.\nOnly 17, he was scheduled to ascend to the throne on his eighteenth\nbirthday.\nNew Streamlined Gas Mash\nThese gas masks are for the TJ. S army. Notice ipace provided\nfor the nose, the mug fit around the chin, and the proximity of the\nchemical can, minus the long hose,\nStriker Andrew Pavelicki, top, gingerly feels his battered head al\na fellow striker at the Bethlehem Steel Company lends him som\u00bb'\nsympathy. Pavelicki got in the way of a club when State Police, bottom, smashed the Bethlehem Steel picket line to permit non-strikeri\nto enter the plant.\n..-.\u25a0,,.il_-li_._Tni____l_____*_l_\n11 ii i to limn\n toston Comes From Behind to\nBeat Toronto and Even Series\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. APRIL t. .1941\u2014'\nhree Goals Follow 50\nMinutes Without\nScore\nBy WILLIAM H. DUMSDAY\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nTORONTO, April 1 (CP) - Defying threatened elimination from\nthe Stanley Cup hunt, Boston's\ngreat Bruins came from behind in\nthe third period here tonight to\ndefeat Toronto Maple Leafs 2-1.\nThe teams meet in Boston again\nThursday in the seventh and deciding game of the series to earn\nChe right to face the Detroit Red\nWings in the cup final.\nAfter almost 50 minutes of score-\na hockey, a crowd of 14,890 fans\nw three goals scored within two\ntautes and 13 seconds. Herbie Cain,\niro of the last series game here\nhen the Bruins won 2-1, played\n* same role tonight. He allowed\nMile Turk Broda to move and\nen fired the winning goal oast\nm.\nThe Leafs entered the game with\nan advantage of three wins to two\nand the large crowd thought the\nseries was clinched when Gordle\nDrillon scored a brilliant goal after\ncircling the Boston net midway\nthrough the final period.\nMilt Schmidt and Reg Hamilton\nwere in the penalty box for fighting when Drillon ended the scoring\ndrought. They were still cooling\nthei. heels when the Bruins struck\nback in less than a minute to even\nthe score. Little Bobby Bauer was\nthe marksman turning to fire the\npuck past Broda after he had stop,\nped Hollett's shot himself.\nWhen the teams returned to\nfull strength the Bruins kept press.\nIng and Dit Clapper started the\nplay that gave them victory. He\npassed ahead to Terry Reardon\nand the young winger hardly\nmaintained his balance as he\ncrossed the Toronto .blue line.\nStraightening up he lifted the puck\nacross to Cain who feinted Broda\nout of position and then picked\na corner of the net.\nThe Bruins .won the hard way,\ntaking nine minutes in penalties to\nthe five minutes the Leafs spent\nshorthanded. While Roy Conacher\nwas serving time in the first period\nand while Art Jackson wai In the\ncooler just after the winning goal,\nthe Leafs failed to direct a shot at\nGoalie Frank Brimsek.\nLineups:\nBoston\u2014Brimsek; Clapper, Smith;\nSchmidt: Bauer, Dumart., Subs \u2014\nJackson, Wiseman, Conacher, Reardon, McReavy, Cain, Hill! Crawford,\nHollett.\nToronto\u2014Broda; Hamilton, McDonald; Langeile; Marker, Heron.\nSubs\u2014Apps, Drillon, N. Metz, Taylor, Chisholm, Schriner, D. Metz,\nStanowski, Kampman.\nOfficials\u2014King Clancy, referee;\nCharlie McVeigh, linesman.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalty\u2014Conacher.\nSecond period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20141, Toronto. Drillon\n(N. Metz) 9:47; 2, Boston, Bauer\n(Hollett) 10:39; 3, Boston, Cain\n(Reardon, Clapper) 12:00.\nPenalties\u2014Schmidt (major), Hamilton (major.). Jackson.\nNd Fight Returns to Lethbridge to\nEnd Koolenay's Playoff Superiority\nWhen Trail Smoke Eaters lost to\nBthbridge Maple Leafs last Satur-\n,*} night, it was the first victory for\nie Leafs in nine playoff battles\n1th Kootenay hockey teams. In\niet, that 4-3 Lethbridge win ended\niree sequences\u2014the fourteen-game\n.beaten string of the Smokies in\nmsecutive League and playoff\nimes, the domination of the Koot-\nlay teams over Lethbridge in play-\nEfs, and the five-game unbeaten\nreak of the Smokies over the Leafs\nlis season.\nTb make matters worse for the\nmoke Eaters, Maple Leafs were\nring one of their best licks of the\nsaaon when they beat them 6-3 for\nte second straight time and squar-\ni the series. And In that game the\n[jury jinx finally caught up with\nle Trailites. and forced Mike Buck-\nl, the man who turned In one of\nle' greatest comebacks in the annals\nI Kootenay sport this season, to\nie sidelines with an injured ankle.\nAs for that playoff superiority of\nle Kootenay teams, it dated back\n)\u2022 1937-38 when Lethbridge first\ntttered Senior hockey and the West\nKootenay League, Lethbridge finished third in the league standings,\nand clashed in a best-of-three series\nwith Kimberley in the Eastern section of the League while Trail battled Nelson. Lethbridge, who had a\nbig edge in league games, was polished off in two straight by the\nDynamiters.\nNext year Lethbridge performed\nin the Alberta Senior Seven, and\ntook the provincial title with series\nvictories over Olds Elks and Drumheller Miners.\nThen they squared off against\nKimberley, B.C. champions, but it\nwas the same story, with the same\nending. Dynamiters walked off with\nthe series in three straight games.\nLast season Calgary Stampeders\ntook the Alberta title, so Lethbridge\nwas spared any further tests with\nthe Kootenay Leaguers. This.Spring\nit looked that Smokies were going\nto continue the string, when they\ntied the first game and won the next\ntwo. but the Leafs, showing the fight\nthat characterized their play during the League schedule, stormed\nback to even the series.\niaskaloon Takes\nE.&.C. Juniors M\nSASKATOON, Sask., April 1 (CP)\n-Saskatoon Quakers defeated Ed-\nDOnton Athletic Club 2-1 here to-\ndght to win the best-of-five West-\nrri Canada junior hockey semifinal\neries 3-2 and will travel to Winni-\nleg for the opener of tho Western\nteals against Winnipeg Rangers\nfcursday night.\nTaylor Stands on\nPlayoff \"Strike\"\nDecision at Coast\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP) -\nPred (Cyclone) Taylor, President of\nhe Pacific Coast Hockey League,\nitlll Irfflrm ln his demand that those\n^sponsible for refusal of Spokane\nBombers and Vancouver Lions to\n)lay the second game of the league\nSnals at Spokane, Wash., admit their\nliare in the \"strike\" before he will\nland over the playoff money.\nI \"I think they are just about ready\n\u00bb come to me,\" Taylor said tonight,\nWit if they don't they will not get\ni cent of the playoff proceeds. Just\nIOW the situation is at a stand-\ntill.\"\n\" Three games of the best-of-five\nInal series have already been play-\nid, Vancouver taking the first two\nOd Spokane winning the third, with\nhe fourth game scheduled for Fri-\nlay night.\nTaylor said players share in the\nIrst three gamea only with the win-\nBng team receiving the bulk of the\n[ate \"when the present situation has\n>*en cleared up.\" Proceeds from re-\nnaining games go to the league\nteasury,\nLo Presti Marries\nCHICAGO, April 1 (AP) .-Sammy\nLo Presti, rookie goalie of Chicago\nBlack Hawks, and Carol Larson of\nNashwauk, Minn., were married today at St. Mel's Catholic Church.\nExhibition Ball\nR  H  E\nNew YoTk (N)         3 12   1\nCleveland (A)     1   3   1\nSchumacher, Lohrman (7), and\nOdea; Harder, Andrews (8|, Heving (8) and Desautels.\nBrooklyn N)         3   8   2\nKnoxville (SAI .5   8   2\nMills. Wicker and Franks; Baker,\nAnderson (0) and Epps, Jackson\n(7).\nLouisville (AA)     6   7   1\nDetroit (A)            7 11   2\nButland. Shaffer 6), Lefebvre (9)\nand Walters; Gibell, White (6) and\nParsons.\nNew York  (A)      5 12   1\nDallas (TL)      ...       2   5   1\nRusso, Washburn (8) and Dickey,\nRosar (81; Demoran, Gliatto 6) and\nCronin, Haworth.\nSt. Louis (N)        8 12   0\nWashington (A) 17   1\nCooper, Shoun (6) and Padgett,\nW. Cooper (6); Sundra, Beck 7)\nand Evans.\nColumbus (A)        .    8 10   3\nPhiladelphia (NL)     9 13   6\nSunkel, Frantz (5), Dixon (8) and\nPoland, Niedson 81; Hughes. Blan-\nton (7), Masterson 10), and Warren\nCincinnati (N)     4   9   3\nBoston   (A)       10 14   1\nPearson, Thompson (2). Guise' (71,\nLogan (8) and Lombardi; Baker (7);\nWilson, Fleming (7) and Pytlak.\nBrooklyn (N>     9 110\nShreveport (Tex) 3   6   2\nHead, Flowers (8). and Owen;\nKlaerner, Hamner (4), Vartslate (7)\nand Frair.\nKen Lindsay to Fight\nOlivera at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP) -\nTony Olivers, recognized in New\nYork and California as world'sban-\ntamweight champion has agreed to\nrisk his title-in a bout with Kenny\nLindsay here April 15, it was revealed by Lindsay's manager, Arnold\nBertram.\nUnder regulations of the British\nColumbia Boxing Commission, Bertram, as Lindsay's manager, is not\neligible to promote the fight. He is\nnow negotiating for a promoter.\nLindsay is a former Golden Gloves\nbantam champion who recently toured California as a professional.\nEnglish Girl Expects to Hold World's\nAmateur Skating Crown Till After War\nBy SAM JACKSON\n(Asioclated Preu Staff Writer)\nSAN FRANCISCO  (AP)-Megan\nFaylor, English girl, who is heiress\no Sonja Henie's ice skating crown\negally,  artistically  and   (rom   the\ntandpoint of good looks, has every\n\u25a0Ight  to   feel   that  she   has  been\nhort-changed.\nMegan Taylor is English but very\niearly a Canadian. Her father, Phil\nBaylor,    spent   his    boyhood    in\nSaskatoon,  Sask.,  and   learned   to\nTkate there. He served In the First\ntreat War with the 53rd  (Winni-\nig) Infantry and was wounded in\nW>tb legs at Vimy Ridge. Never-\nheless Phil regained the regional\nind barrel jumping championships\nriien he returned to Saskatoon for\nwhile after the war.   t\nIh   times   like   these   the   world\nsomen's figure skating  title does\nkit pay off in either gold or glory\nhe  way  it  paid  the  blond   Nor-\njrogian. But Miss Taylor realizes the\nhas caused much greater tra-\n[edies  than  the  upset  in skating\nCompetition The only complaint she\nices is that she could not go on\nwin the 1940 Olympic champion-\nBhlp^the games,  of course, being\npineelled by the war.\nT_ie tall shapely English lass\ntived in the United States\nOtn Australia where she was\nffformiiig for 18 months. At the\nend of her tour she turned\nprofessional and was booked for\n.(neriran and Canadian appearances through March. Then she\n,y juin an ice show.\n11UL THE CHAMP\nHowever, Miss Taylor points out\nat she is still the world 'amateur\"\nampion, by virtue of having won\nbe title in Stockholm in 1938 and\nhaving defended it in 1939. She says\nshe will continue as such until the\nwar ends and another worldwide\ncompetition is held.\nPhil Taylor, himself, holder of\nseveral world records, had his\ndaughter on skates at the age of\nfour. At 11 she placed seventh in\nthe 1932 Olympic figure skating\ncompetition held at Lake Placid.\nN.Y., and at 13 she was runnor-up\nto Sonja Henie for the world championship.\nShe and Sonja tangled time and\nagain and skating enthusiasts speculate what might have happened if\nMegan\u2014who is past 20-**-had been\nmore mature.\nHer worldwide travels have\nbrought her to America four times,\nand for three years she attended\nschool at Cincinnati, where her\nfather was in business.\nNOT SO SERIOUS\n\"I believe more people skate in\nAmerica than in England, but they\ndon't do it so seriously,\" Megan\nsays, \"The girls in particular seem\nto like what we call 'free skating.'\nThis consists of such things as\njumps, spins and spirals instead o_\nfigure skating proper, or tracing designs on ice like a human compass.\n\"The free skating is spectacular,\nand when a girl gets good at it she\ncan join an ice show. But she would\nhave a hard time winning a championship, because in the judging\nfigures count two-thirds, and free\nskating only one-third. In England\na good trainer won't teach free skating until his pupil has a good\ngrounding in figures.\"\nWhen in training, Megan practices eight hours a day and also goes\nthrough ballet and gym routines.\nr \"Skating alone is not enough exer-\ni cise,\" she explains.\nFrisch (lamps\nDown on Bucs\nBy the Associated Press\nLOS ANGELES - Still boiling\nover about the Pittsburgh Pirates'\nlosing streak Manager Frankie\nFrisch has ordered his boys to be\nup at 8 a.m. daily and report at the\npark at 9:30 for workouts. Frisch\nwas so peeved about Sunday's loss\nto the Chicago Cubs that he left\nthe bench and went to right field,\nwhere he could say what he was\nthinking without being overheard.\nHOLLYWOOD, Calif.\u2014Manager\nJimmy Dykes of the Chicago\nWhite Sox is trying to pry Benny\nMcCoy from the Philadelphia\nAthletics. \"The guy can hit,\" saya\nDykes, \"and I'd like to have him.\nHe can't play second base, as Connie Mack has found out, but he\ncan play the outfield.\" The Sox\nneed an outfielder badly becauie\nof tha ehowlngs of Harry Rosenthal and Mike Kreevich.\nDECATUR, Ala.\u2014In spite of a\ndefeat yesterday, Ace Adams, 1940\nSouthern Association strikeout king,\nlooks as if he'll be a mainstay of\nthe New York Giants' relief pitching corps this year. He had allowed\nonly seven hits and one unearned\nrun in nine innings before yesterday's appearance. The Cleveland\nIndians touched him for three hits\nin as many frames to score three\ntimes yesterday, but one mn was\ndue to a fielding error he made, and\nAce marked up two strikeouts.\nRaymond Hoopsters\nWill Play Winnipeg\nRAYMOND. Alta,, April 1 (CP)-\nRaymond Union Jacks will entertain Winnipeg St. Andrews here\nSaturday in the opening game of a\nbest of five series.\nWinners will advance to the\nWestern final against University of\nBritish Columbia Thunderbirds.\nSecond and third games of the series\nare scheduled for Monday and Tuesday, April 7 and 8.\nSt. Andrews were originally\nscheduled to play Regina Wares in\nthe first round of inter-provincial\nplayoffs, but the Saskatchewan\nchamps withdrew from competition.\nJoe Gordon's only trouble in\nchanging from a second to a first\nbaseman is that he instinctively\nwants to go for a ball hit to his\nright. As a second baseman he\ncould go as far as he liked in that\ndirection, but it's not sound baseball\npolicy for a first baseman to gallop\noff toward second and leave his base\nunprotected.\nSPORTS\nmeet..\nMS?\nLOU NOVIKOFF\nA big batting average in the Pacific Coast League, plenty of color\nArid natural ability \u2014 that's the\nmakeup of the most famous rookie\nin many'a year, Lou Novikoff, of\nthe Chicago Cubs.\nNovikoff, a Glendale, Ariz., native, blasted .363 for Los Angeles\nlast year to lead the league. He\nclouted 41 home runs besides.\nOff the field, Novikoff has more\ncolor than Dizzy Dean had at his\nheight. Lou sings, yodels, plays\nthe harmonica, and is known as\nthe \"Mad Russian\".\nNovikoff began his career with\nPonca City, Okla., in 1937, and\nmoved up to Moline and then to\nthe Texas League. He hit for\namazing totals in all leagues.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n(Associated Press Sports Writer)\nNEW YORK, April 1 (API-Some\nof the Cubs are a bit piqued because the midnight curfew doesn>\napply to Dizzy Dean. Note to Van\nMungo: One of the more reliable\nBroadway gossip columns says you'll\nbe back with the Brooks, if you\ndon't hoist another stein during\nthe rest of the training season. . . .\nBilly Conn turned down a $10,000\nflicker offer from M-G-M because\nit would interfere with his tune-ups\nfor Joe Louis.\nTODAY'8 GUEST STAR:\nGordon Cobbledick, Cleveland\nPlain-Dealer: \"Johnny Allen may\nregret the Interview In which he\ncommented on the Indians' pennant chances, . . . The boys are\ngetting their tonsils and adenoids\nin shape to ask John how It happened he always had a sore arm\nwhen the Yankees or Red Sox\nwere In town last Summer.\"\nLooks like the fight writers muffed one when they said Joe Louis was\nthe first man to put Abe Simon on\nthe deck. Big Jim Thompson did it\nin Pittsburgh.\nGrade Down Ice\nat Trail Rink\nTRAIL, B. C April 1-The Winter season is definitely \"out\" at the\nTrail rink. A busy crew commenced, cutting the ice with a tractor-\npowered shaver Sunday. The boxla\nfloor will be laid down as soon as\nthe surface has dried out.\nNEW YORK  (CP)\u2014Sport has a\nlot of handsome Dans, observes the\nAssociated Press Feature Service,\nnominating Harvey Jackson of New\nYork Americans as the ice hockey\nAdonis.\nGirls'Softball\nEntry From High\nSchool Is Hoped\n\"I guess the only solution for our\nsoftball league this year is that the\nHigh School enter a team\u2014and how\nI hope they do,\" Isabel (Red) Donovan said Tuesday as she tried to\nget the Nelson Girls' Softball\nLeague lined up.\nLast year the league struggled\nthrough a dismal season with only\ntwo teams, Rookies and C.Y.O., and\nwhile Nelson girls took the district\ntitle they're not resting on their\nlaurels, for they showed definite\nsigns of slipping.\nRev. Edward Doyle recently announced that he would enter his Junior C. Y. 0. team of last year in senior competition this Summer, and\nMiss Donovan is confident that the\nAces will be able to return to action. The Rookies, having lost several players, don't seem particularly\nanxious to play again, but she feels\nthat they could still operate, in any\ncase Isabel is sure that the Bomberettes from the High School could\nget together a team measuring up\nto the calibre of the other teams.\n\u2022The pitching staffs in the League\nwill likely be the weak end of the\nplay this year, for with Hazel\n(Spiers) Johnson's retirement, there\nisn't a single top-flight chucker left.\nHowever, this would be a good year\nto start all over again, and build foi\nfuture years. The Church Leagui\nplans to reorganize on an improv\ned scale, and develop into a farm\nsystem for the Senior League.\nIK\nOnce Again Bright\nPitching Prospect\n\"Back in 1937 Lou (Chick) Stefani\nstarted out to carve a name for himself in professional basefall after a\nbrilliant season with Crane Tech,\nwhere he was recognized as one of\nthe greatest pitchers ever developed\nin the Chicago High School League,'\"\nwrites Howard Roberts in the Chi\ncago Daily News. \"In '39 that strong\nright arm went dead but today\nChick is starting out once more, the j\narm apparently recovered.\n\"Stefani launched his career with\nMoline and in '39 was in the Texas\nLeague, apparently headed for stardom. Then came the blow.\n'\"I was pitching against Houston,'\nhe recalls, 'and turned in a two-\nhitter but lost a 2-1 decision. The\narm felt fine and I had no notion\nI had injured it. But the next morning when I started to comb my hair\nI couldn't raise my arm.'\n\"Last Spring he reported to the\nSpring camp of the Los Angeles\nclub but again he couldn't throw.\n'I sort of shoved the ball' he says,\n'I couldn't get my arm to swing in\na normal pitching arc' So for the\nsecond straight year Stefani gave\nup baseball and returned to Phoenix, Ariz., where he is employed at\na resort hotel.\n\"This Spring General Manager\nJim Gallagher of the Cubs, recalling\nthe lad's once great promise, brought\nhim to the Catalina camp as a batting-practice pitcher. Lo! Stefani\ncould throw without pain.\nFEELS OKAY NOW\n\"I wasn't sure until the second\ntime I worked in a camp intra-\nsquad game,\" Lou revealed later.\nThe arm felt alright but I was only\nafraid to hope that the miracle had\nhappened. But when I worked three\ninnings and gave up only three hits\nI was convinced, I threw hard, and\noften enough so that the ar-m should\nhurt if it was going to. It felt fine\nat ttie time and still does.\"\n\"The kid has something,\" declared\nAl Todd, the veteran catcher. \"I\nwarmed him up on the sidelines\nand he was putting something on the\nball.\"\nAnd so you can't blame Stefani\nfor walking around with a grin. Manager Jigger Statz of the Angels was\ntalking to him later after his fine\nshowing and it seems safe to say\nthat Chick will get anrither chance\nat the baseball career on which he\nhas set his heart.\nBowling in United States Is\nInto $5,000,000 Industry; Game\nBegan as a Religious Ceremony\nBy WALTER JOHNS\nCentral Preu Canadian Wrlttr\nCHICAGO\u2014Many years ago, perhaps, one of our prehistoric ancestors quit chasing the brontosauri or\nother huge dinosaurs out of his\nback yard and decided he needed\nsome relaxation.\nHe found that relaxation in throwing and rolling tkulls at shin bones.\nHe unknowingly \"invented\" a sport\nwhich today has been built into a\n$500,000,000 industry. The sport?\u2014\nBowling.\nAccording to some bowling historians the game of lawn bowls, as\nit was first known had a hectic\ntime in the early days of Edward\nIII of England who tried to curb the\ngame in the 14th century. A century\nlater Henry VIII made it unlawful\nfor anyone to maintain a bowling\nestablishment for gain.\nA RELIGIOUS CEREMONY\nEven in the United States the\ngame of nine-pins as it was called,\nwas banned. But today, government\nofficials, sports celebrites, and little\nJohnny can be found in bowling alleys, making their strikes and their\nspares.\nFrank Menke takes his notes\nfrom a book written on bowling by\nWilhelm Pehle, a German, more\nthan 40 years ago. His story goes\nlike this:\nIn ancient Germany it was the\ncustom to carry a pin shaped like\nthe modern Indian club, to be used\nfor several purposes, including the\nexercising of the wrists.\nThe German word for the pin was\nkeil, meaning wedge and is from\nthe same derivation as kegel which\nmeans bowl, the Germans always\nreferring to a bowler as a kegler.\nHUTCH INTRODUCED IT\nFirst bowling, according to the\nchronicler, was done in the cloisters\nof cathedrals, it being the custom of\nthe canons to have parishioners, in\nturn, place their pins at one end of\nthe cloister. This represented the\n\"heide.\" meaning heathen. The parishioner was given a ball and asked to throw it at the heide. If a hit\nwas scored- it indicated that the\nthrower was leading a clean and\npure life and was capable of slaying\nthe heathen.\nAll this, according to the historians, had its origin as far back as\nthe third or fourth century.\nThe Dutch introduced bowling to\nthe United States. Bowling gained\nin popularity until along about 1840\nin New York when gamblers took\nhold and the game was barred.\nIn September, 1695, the American\nBowling Congress was organized for\nthe prime purpose of reviving the\ngame as a 10-pin sport. In 1901 the\nAmerican Bowling Congress conducted its first national tournament. The entries totalled 41 five-\nman teams and 116 individuals.\nWHY IT 13 POPULAR\nIt is clean, competitive sport and\none and all have equal chance. You\nneed not be a 210-pounder to play\nthe line.\nIt is a sport for all. It is democratic. It Is exercise. It makes friends.\nIt is social. It improves good fellowship and inspires good will.\nAbove all it gives the fellow who\nalways is the sports spectator and\nnever the player the chance to be a\nplayer himself.\nNEW ALLEYS OPENED\nThe number of new bowling alley establishments opened up all\nthrough the United States this year |\nis staggering. At the same time new\nfaces are being counted among bow\nling proprietors.\nAll of this adds up to big business.  *\nIt means thousands of workers and\njobs. It means a stimulus in  the ,\nbuilding trades as new recreational\ncentres spring up all over the country.\nABC SANCTION\nThe ABC boasts of 14,913 sanctioned leagues, made up of 1-2,116\nteams. The Women's International\nBowling congress embraces 100,000\nwomen bowlers. There are 33,419\nABC alleys.\nPerhaps a few figures on bowling material costs will interest you.\nBowling pins cost from $5 to $13\na set of 10. Bowling alleys cost\nabout $3000 a pair installed. Bowling\nballs cost from $15 to $20 depending\non color, etc.\nCleaner-polisher, floor machines\nfor the alleys range from $165 to\n$300. Pin setters, new type, cost from\n$200 up. Pit and loul lights, $19.\n10,000 KNOCKDOWNS\nBest bowling pins come from treei\n200 years old and are duly seasoned.\nThe bowling pin is 15 inches high.\nThe best pin has an average life of\n10,000 knockdowns. The surface of\nthe bowling alley is extremely\nsmooth and level. The ball is 99.78\nper cent round, according to scientists. It weighs 16 pounds.\nRelinquishes Cup\nMajor league chibs this season\nmay try to end the lost ball evil by\noffering spectators a ticket to the\nnext game in return for the ball that\nwent into the grandstand or bleachers. The old system costs them thousands of dollars each year.\nCatnap on the Canvas?\nJimmy Hatton is the amateur fighter pictured\nseemingly enjoying a quiet snooze on the canvas of\na Cleveland fight arena.   Truth to tell, Jimmy has\nbeen lulled to \"sleep\" by a boxing opponent and just\nhappened to fold into this pose. Note the referee\ncounting the 147-pounder out of the tournament.\nMrs. William Simpson of Trail,\nwho held the Blaylock Cup, Ladies' Curling -Club trophy, for\nfour out of five years, surrendered it this year to Mrs, C. C. Jones.\nMrs. Simpson held the cup during\n1936, 1937, 1939, 1940.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy the Associated Prest\nCHICAGO\u2014Ossle (Bulldog) Har-\nris, 15614, Pittsburgh, outpointed\nNate Bolden, 16014, Chicago (10).\nWASHINGON-fLouis (Kid) Co-\ncoa, 14714, New Haven, Conn., outpointed Andre Jesserun, 183.4, New\nYork  (10).\nDETROIT-Andy (Kayo) Morgan,\nDetroit featherweight, outpointed\nJackie Taylor, Columbus, 0. (6).\nPITTSBURGH\u2014Harry Bobo, 203,\nPittsburgh, stopped Paul Hartnek,\n194, Minneapolis (8).\nCINCINNATI \u2014 Ejzard Charles,\n164, Cincinnati, outpointed Joe Sut-\nka, 161, Detroit (10).\nLANCASTER, Pa\u2014Ken Overlin,\n165, middleweight champion, New\nYork, outpointed Harvey Massey,\n162_, Brooklyn (10).\nSAN FRANCISCO-Vern  Bybee,\n129, Ogden, Utah, and Petev Scalzo,\n130, N.B.A. featherweight champion,\nNew York, drew (10 non-title).\nNEW YORK\u2014Charles (Lulu) Cos-\ntantino, 12514, New York, technically knocked out Sammy Garcia,\n128, Boston (6).\nNEWARK, N.J.Woey Zodda, 136,\nNew York, and George Zengaras,\n136, New York, drew (10).\nMORE SANCTUARY\nFOR WILD BIRDS\nOTTAWA, (CP).-With the establishment of a new bird sanctuary\non remote Akimiski Island in James\nBay, a system of sanctuary areas for\nprotection of great flocks of wild\ngeose and ducks which frequent the\nWestern part of the bay is completed.\nThe Akimiski sanctuary, established by ' ordeVin-council is the\nfourth of a group consisting of the\nHannah Bay and Boatswain Bay\nBird sanctuaries and the Twin Islands game sanctuary. They are laid\nout to protect the requirements of\nthe native population of the area\nand to maintain stock of wild life,\nThe Department of Mines and Resources announcing completion of\nthe chain, said the wild life thus\npreserved is of \"great potential value to Canada as a whole.\"\nIn the James Bay area are found\nvast flocks of snow geese, blue geese,\nCanada geese, wild ducks, and many\nbeaver and other fur-bearing animals.\nThe St. Louis American League\nteam reveals it hired a long-range\nweather forecaster before naming\nthe dates of its last season's night\ngames. They were rained out only\nonce in 14 tries.\nStates in which horse race wagering is legal increased from five\nin 1920 to 18 in 1940. In the same period the number of races -Jumped\nfrom 3640 to ^3,568.\nWally Borrevick, University of\nOregon basketball centre, is three\ninches short of seven fee*\nTrail Minus Injured Buckna Tonight;\nWheatley and Overand Will Referee\nSeries Against Regina\nOpens at Saskatoon\nSaturday\nPLAY TONIGHT'S\nGAME TO FINISH\nLETHBRIDGE, April 1 (CP) -\nWhien Trail Smoke Eaters and the\nLethbridge Maple Leafs clash in the\nsixth and deciding game of their\nseries here tomorrow, new officials\nwill be referceing the game and the\nBritish Columbia champions will\nbe minus tho services of Mike Buckna, starry right winger.\nBuckna was Injured just after\nlast night's game ended and has an\nankle so badly bruised that it is\nimpossible for him to skate. X-rays\nthis morninij revealed that no bones\nare fractured.\nBuckna .lashed at Dick Gray,\nLeaf forward, with his stick just\nafter the bell rang ending the game.\nGray dropped his stick and felled\nthe Trail man with a blow to the\nchin. In the resulting melee, with\nplayers milling around the belligerents, it is believed Buckna's ankle\nwas stepped on.\nLes Christensen, who has been\ndressed for all the Smokies' playoff games but who has failed to\nsee action, will likely be played in\na forward spot, or he may play\ndefence while Playing Coach Jimmy Morris, former right winger,\nmoves up to play in Buckna's lane\nwith Cronie and Dame.\nNEW  REFEREES\nAfter Saturday's game in Calgary\nLethbridge Leafs asked for a change\nof officials. Last night Trail complained about the officiating of\nClaude Small of Saskatoon and Ike\nMorrison of Moose Jaw, Officials\nappointed for tomorrow's game are\nEarl Overand of Calgary and Curly\nWheatley of Trail, who refereed the\nopening game, a scoreless stalemate,   in  Trail.\nThe game will have to be played\nto a finish, according to a C.A.H.A.\nannouncement today. Ordinarily 10-\nminute overtime sessions are played\nif the score is tied at the end of\nregulation time, and if the teams\nare still deadlocked after 10 minutes, the game goes into the records\nas a tie. Bat tonight's contest must\nbe fought to a decision, since the\nWestern  final seriea  between Re-\n\u2666\ngina Rangers and tonight's winner\nmust start in Saskatoon Saturday.\nIncidentally, if Lethbridge wini\ntonight, and they have been installed favorites to do so, the Leafs\nwill face a team coached by their\nmastermind of the previous two\nseasons, Freddy Metcalfe.\nSERIE8 OPENS SATURDAY\nREGINA, April 1 (OP) - First\ngame of the Western senior hockey\nfinals between Regina Rangers and\nwinner of Lethbridge-Trail series\nwill be played at Saskatoon Saturday night,\nSecond game will be at Regina\nMonday night but no dates or venues have been set for the remainder\nof the best-of-five series.\nHOCKEY SCORES  I\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nHershey   3,   Cleveland  4   (overtime).\n(Cleveland wins first ol best-of-\nfive series).\nTonight's Hockey\n(By The Canadian Prew)\nALLAN CUP\nWestern semi-final\u2014Trail Smoke\nEaters vs Lethbridge Maple Leafs at\nLethbridge   (sixth   of   best-of-five\nseries, tied 2-2, one game tied).\nMEMORIAL. CUP\nEastern semi-final\u2014Oshawa Generals vs Toronto Marlboros at Toronto (seventh of beat-of-seven\nseries, tied 3-3).\nEastern semi-final \u2014 Montreal\nRoyals vs Ottawa Canadiens at Ottawa (second of best-of-three seriea,\nRoyals lead 1-0).\nJock Sutherland's first yetr aa\nCoach of the Brooklyn Dodgers produced the tig-test defence in pro\nfootball. The Dodgers yielded only\n120 points.\nSHORTY'S\nREPAIR SHOP\nFor Reliable Car Service\nPHONE 171\nGREYHOUnD og***)\nRound Trip Excursions\nFROM NELSON TO PRAIRIE POINTS\nTickets on Sale April 4th to April 12th .\nReturn Limit 30 Dayi\nSample Round Trip Fares From NELSON to:\nCalgary $11.20 Mooie Jaw  $18.25\nEdmonton   17.85 Regina      19.25\nMacleod       8.60 Saskatoon   20.55\nLethbridge        9.35 Red Deer      13.70\nMedicine Hat   12.05 Winnipeg   24.95\nFares and Schadulei subject to change without notice.\n-..W,-...!.,..,^!,-^-,,.,--..^.^^;^^^.!^!!!;        \t\n.iom-m^jUJma^a^-^o.\n PAD*   tlQHT-\nDress Has\nScalloped Yofces\nPATTERN 9597\nAny big afternoon or little evening event is more fun if you\nknow you look yW very best.\nAnd Marian Martin has designed\nPattern 9597 with such deft understanding of mature figure\nproblems that it will be your most\nflattering frock. The skirt is\nstraight-hanging but with ample\nsitting and walking room given by\ntwo front panels. The bodice is\nwonderfully soft-cut and enhancing to a heavy busttine. See how\nthe soft lines are smoothed above\nthe waist by darts and held in by\ngathers below gayly scalloped\nyokes. Take your choice between\nlong and three-quarter sleeves,\nand you might give a color \"lift\"\nto the whole style by having the\nstitched-on tie-ends of the belt in\nvivid contrast.\nPattern 9597 may be ordered\nonly in women's sizes 34. 36, 38, 40,\n42, 44, 48 and 48. Size 36 requires\n3 1-8 yards 39 inch fabric and Vi\nyard, contrast.\nSend twenty cents for this Marian Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your size, name, address, and style number.\nSend your order to The Daily\nN_ws, Pattern Department, Nelson.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\n\"We wouldn't have a stove\nif Pa hadn't quit chewin'. There\nis nothin' more miserable than\na tobacco chewer in a house\nwithout open fire places\"\nProper Care of\nYoung Seedlings\nBy  DEAN  HALLIDAY\nJust as soon as the vegetable\nseeds begin to germinate in the seed\nflats indoors, remove any covering\nand place them in full light\nTo avoid trouble, do not over-\nwater the seedlings nor allow them\nto become too dry. Watering should\nbe   done   in   the  morning  so   the\nAS ROWS LOOK AFTER.\nCAREFUL  WEEDING\n1 3-12\nplants can go through the nifiht dry.\nIf they arc watered on the surface.\nUse a syringe which will spray the\nplants wilh a fine mist. Care must\nbe taken with seedlings not to wash\nthem out, or to wash the soil away\nfrom their roots.\nAs   illustrated   in   the   Garden-\nLaura Wheeler Squares Done in\nScraps Form Useful Accessories\nCOW. iw, N-ED-tCRAFT SCHVICI, INC\nCROCHETED ACCESSORIES     PATTERN   2818\nThis warm fichu, a scarf, a cap, and a cover, are all crocheted of\nthe same simple square, using yarn scraps. Useful for war relief\nwork. Pattern 2818 contains directions for accessories; illustrations\nof them and stitches; materials required.\nSend twenty cents for this pattern to The Daily News, Needle-\ncraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly pattern number, your name'aud\naddress.\n31. Pendants\nof lea\n82. Firm\n33. Contain\n35. To come to\npais\n41. Skin\nopening\n41 Breezy\nIT\n . __\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS 3. Owing 25. Part of Shos\nL Father  \u00a9 4. Goawayt 26. Type\n4. Morsel 5. Mohamme-       measure\n7. Eskimo cut-      dan priest 2T. Oceans\nting tool 8. Protective 28. Merita\n8. Ostrich- 9. Deck of a 29. Followed\nlike bird           warship\n9. Voided 11. Marsh\nescutcheon       bird\n10. Guns 12. A flsh\n(slang) 13. Bulkily\n12. Cry of 14. Placed on\nan ass a tee\n13. An Instant 16. Replete\n15. Ecclesiastic 22. Behold\nvestment\n16. Winnow\n17. Falsehood\n18. Peruvian\ncoin\n19. Employ\n20. Mimic\n21. FIU, as of\nIllness\n23. Anarchist\n24. Source of oil\n27. Place\n30. Disappear\n34. Organ of\nhearing\n35. Surround\n36. Cry of a\ndove\n37. Constellation\n38. Lofty\nmountain\n39. Sick\n40. Fragmentary\n42. Tart\n43. Spillover\n44. Gentle\n45. Before\n46. Anger\n47. Lair\n48. French river\nDOWN\n1. Lasting\n2. Unite by\nalliance\n'\u00bb=*!\u2022!  .-i.i_.__\nMlllfl SIMS\naSIas SSBel\nmasa |_.5_|i\naian mam ___\nBfflB\nbum HIBfl _**__\u25a0_\n\u25a0..'\u2022\u25a0mr._ u'_.i-_i_:i\n__..*<. aaa\nfinais ________\nHIIilH WHSU3\nHBW i7ii.il**\nY-_t_rf\u00aby'i Am vt a\n44. Wire measuro\nDistributed by King features Syndicate, tm, ^-2.\nCONTRACT\nDONT GO IT ALON1\nBRIDGE IS a team game. Why\nforget you have a partner and\nthat ho Is trying to win Just as\nmuch as you are? Let him make\nsome of the decisions which you\nare unable to make yourself.\nMany a time he knows, from having seen his own cards, what ls\nbest for the side. You, not having\nseen his cards, should pass on occasion to see if he wishes to double the opponents. Maybe they are\noffering your side a big gift, about\nwhich lie knows and you do not.\n4A732\n\u00bbAKQ42\n\u2666 \u00bb\n+ 742\n\u2666 10\n*} J 10 9 7\n5\n\u2666 10 7\n+ KQ1 8\n6\nN.\ns.\n\u2666 K Q J 9\n54\n<\u00bb\u00ab\n\u2666 A .164\n+ 10 3\n486\nf 83\n+ KQ863.\n+ A.J6\n(Dealer: North. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nNorth      East     South      West\nl\u00bb 1+      'Jt* Pass\n2 *) '.'. t,      :i + pass\n3 *) 3 _.      Pass       Pass\nDbl\nSouth led the diamond K to the\nA, and declarer sent the spade K\nto the A. North put South ln with\nthe club 2 to the A, for a lead of\nthe diamond Q and the 3, which\nNorth ruffed. The heart K won\nthen, setting the contract.\nEast was one of those positive\nfellows who likes to take definite\naction at nearly all stages. He just\nBy Shepard Barclay\ncan't pass and see what somebody\nelse wants to do, especially his\nown partner. If he had listened to\nthe bidding, he would have heard\nSouth deny a good heart fit with\nhis first diamond bid, and his second bid.of diamonds, after North's\nsecond heart call, showed that he\ndidn't have even enough of them\nto support a rebid major. Hence\nhe couldn't possibly have more\nthan two, and West therefore\nmust have had at least four qr\nfive.\nIf East had reasoned thus, he\nwould have passed North's 3-\nHearts, and West would have doubled It. Perfect defense would\nhave enabled East and West then\nto score 800 points for a three-\ntrick set, instead of being beater\nat their own contract.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTomorrow's Prob-em\n4 J 10 4\nVAQ43\n474\n+ Q-0.2\n4AKQ9\n6\n\u00a510 R 6\n\u2666 Q 10 3\n+ 76\nA\/.\ns.\n4873\n\u00bb.is .\n4K.I8 5\n+ AK93\n452\n*K972\n4A962\n+ J84\n(Dealer: West. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nPlaying against West's 4-\nSpades, if North leads the club 2\nto the K and then wins the heart\nJ with his Q, why should he not\nreturn a trump now 7 What should\nhe return?\nGraph, if the seedlings have been\nplanted in straight rows it will be\neasy to detect the weeds. Keep the\nseedlings cultivated, as the weeds\nwill steal moisture and food needed\nby the seedlings. The weeds also\nwill compele with the seedlings for\nspace and light. The result is the\nseedlings suffer and are not able to\ndevelop properly..\nU. S. NAVY UNIT AT SUVA\nSUVA, (Fiji Islands). April 1 (AP)\n\u2014Two United States cruisers and\n(ive destroyers arrived here today\non a training cruise, nnd varied en-\ntortainnjents were arranged for the\nofficers and men.\nB. C. POLICE DONATE\nTO SPITFIRE FUND\nVICTORIA, April 1 (CP). - The\nBritish Columbia Provincial Policfe\nforce yesterday donated $414 to the\nCanadian Police Spitfire fund.\nObjective of the fund, started by\na police organization in Ontario, is\n$25,000 with which to build a Spitfire plane for the Air Force. The\ncontribution is 50 cents each from\nthe 50.000 police officers in Canada,\nPORT OFFICIAL RETIRES\nVICTORIA. April 1 (CP).-After\n30 yerfrs service with the Dominion\nCustoms Department, Capt. Hugh B.\nAndrews, port accountant, has retired on suDeran'nuation.\nCOMIC  AND   ADVENTURE   STRIPS..\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Gus Edsc\nBRICK BRADFORD\u2014On the Throne of Tifania\nBy William Ritt Ond Clarence Gray\nVOU COULDN'T HAVE HEARD BUT I DID.' AND\nANOTHER VOICErBRICK \/    J* WHOEVER IT WAS,\nONLY JUNE AND BUCKO T KHEW MY\nARE OUT THERE.'    r-\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nWILL VOU STOP THKT\n6N001NG? HOW 00\nVOU EXPECT UAE TO\nTAKE A WAP  WITH\nNOU ROARING\nLIKE A LION?\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\n^\nm.\nI I n   V7\n1-6.\nte\nVj *\u2022-!_?\nfj\nMO    ..\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zone Grey\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Young\n --_ i __\n ___\t\niMtiaiMMi\n mmmmmm.\n1 |l1^\"\n\\ I 0\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nNKLSON DAILY NEWS. NELION, B.C.-WEDNE8DAY MORNINO. APRIL t 1M1-      .         \u25a0\nMontreal Power ' --*1\"-\u2122*\n-PAGH NINE\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nIrhwu Satlii Nrma\nTelephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon, 716-Y\nClassified Advertising Kates\nUc per line per .insertion.\nUe per Une per week <6 consecutive Insertions tor cost ol 4).\nII43 per Una a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion!\nBox numbers Uc extra. This\ncovers  any  number  of  times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nUc per line, first Insertion and\n14c each subsequent  Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial Situations\nWanted for 25 for any required\nnumber ol llnea for six days\npayable in advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSimile copy     ,  .05\nBy carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\n\u00a71 Mall:\nne month % .75\nThree montha 2.00\nSix months      4.0O\nOne year     8.00\nAbove rates apply ln Canada,\nI united States and United Kmg-\ni dom, to subscribers living out-\nfide regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth (1.50, three months $4.00,\nI \u00abix months 18.00, one year $15.00.\nHELP WANTED\nApplications will not be conaldered from persons eugagea in\nthe producUon of war supplies.\nRANTED - YOUNG MAN TO\ntake care of up-to-date mens\nfurnishing store. Must have several years of experience in this\nline, alao must be experienced In\nladies' hosiery, lingerie, gloves,\netc. Box 8127 Daily News,\nJHOW IS T__E TIME TO\" 6ET A\nGovernment Job as Clerk, Postman Customs Clerk, Steno., etc.\nFive Dominion-wide exams held\nsihee war began. Free Booklet.\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest In Canada. No A\u00abcntt.\nhLACKSMITH - STEADY WORK\nMust be steady man and a worker, not a time killer. Box 8193\n.Dally Newa.\n\u25a0pteg wira-ffl. cocas\npapen for fireman and extra engineer. Box 8192 Daily Newa,\nPLANTED - RELIABLE MAN\nBIRTHS\nTOMLDJ\u2014To Mr. and MM. Harry\nTomlln of Wynndel, at Creston Val-\nley Hospital, March 20, a son.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel Opp C P R Depot\nMOKE AT ELEC. RANGE flK RT25\nCross Shop. Donations urgently\nneeded.\nFOR SALE - URGE TAYLOR\nSafe in good condition. See J\nChess, 524 Vernon St., Nelaon.\nFOR FEMININE HYGIENE. LAC-\ntogell. sold at Mann, Rutherford\nDrug Company. Nelson, B. C,\nS A L V A T ION ARMY IF~YOT-\nhave 2nd hand clothes, footwear.\nfurniture to spare please Ph. 618L\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR LS\na Portrait ot Distinction. Pbone\n224, 577 Ward Street\nHATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED\nCleaning, pressing, repairing and\nalterations. H J. Wilton. Josephine\nStreet. Phone 107.\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags not less than 12 Inches\nsquare 9c lb. F. O. B. Nelson\nDaily News.\t\nYOUR FUft COAT IS VALUABLE.\nExpert remodelling; low rates, no\ndepoeit, free storage. Polar Furs\nLtd., 548 Granville St, Vancouver\nHAIR DRAB AFTER FLU? LET US\nhelp you. It won't cost you very\nmuch. Milady's Beauty Parlor\nPhone 244\nLEATHERCRAFT SUPPLIES\nGlove leathers. Instructions. Bedford Fine Leathers, 321 Water\nStreet. Vancouver, B. C.\nATTENTION! YOU MAY ASK 8\nquestions. I have helped many. I\ncan help you. Send 25 cents with\nname ana birth date to Gretta.\n1012 Haro, Vancouver, B. C.\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees - Fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue\nHanson Co., P. O. Box 601, Van-\ncouver1_B1 C.\n25c - The Photo Mill - 25c\nP. O Box 835, Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed, 25c\n5x7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 3x7 enlargement, 85c\nMEN'S*\" DRUG SUNDRIES SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrap-\nped. Tested. Guaranteed and pre.\npaid. Free Novelty price lut.\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O Box\n81, Princeton. B. C.\nON\nApply\nemail ranch, good milker,\nBox 8187 Dally Newi.\t\nExperienced maid for gen-\n_  eral hswk, 18 Ritchie Ave,, Trail.\nBpraStSfCfB GIRL FOR G'fiT\njaral housework. Phone 1018X.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratei for noncommercial advertisements under thll classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (8 days)\ncovers any number of required\nUrns. Payable In advance. Add\n10c if box number desired.\nIcoo!\nK EXPERIENCED CAMP, HO-\nttl,   restaurant.   Available   after\nApril first. Work guaranteed. Ap-\nBox 7965 Dally News.\nllfiftfcTilAH WITH 6 YEARS\nitore exp. desires employment In\nItore, warehouse, etc. Alex Hry-\ncluk, Salmo, B. C.\n|fr_CK HORSES. hAWKINS AND\nMcGinnis licensed guides and\npicken, Crawford Bay.\t\n|FOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nA tree \"Room For Rent\" card\nwill be provided at Tbe Daily\nNews office to persons advertising Rooms for Rent in this\ncolumn.\nIErr.\nt APARTMENTS. QUIET AND\nrefinement, unexcelled appointments Including new ranges, refrigerators and vacuum cleaners.\nFurnished and unfurnished suites,\ncourteous   service,   ideally   titu-\n(ated, well kept lawns. Weekly\n* end monthly tenancy at most reasonable prices.\nJ*OR RENT OR SALE-IMMED1-\nate occupancy, cottage, newly\ndecorated, three bedrooms, sleeping porch, garage. Vegetable gar-\nden. Ph. 9, P. O. Box 17.\t\ntoMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse keeping rooms in Annable\nBlock  (or rent  a  W.  Dawson.\nAgent 657 Ward Street\t\n|*ffANTED TO RENT ABOUT APRIL\nTL, furnished house, 2 or 8 bedrooms. Apply A. V. Morris, Koo\ntenay Motors.\nICARGE APARTMENT, 3 BED\nroomi, electric range and refrig\nerator. Johnstone Block.\nllMALL STORE OR OFFTCl\napace tc rtnt. Opposite Telephone\nOffice. Apply Maco Cleaners.\nIApartment for rent - on\nground floor with bath. Available\nfirst of month. Apply Petty_Apts.\n|#URN. HSKPG. ROOM_TT\"KIT-\nchen and bedroom, 1 single room\n711 Vemon Street.\t\nIR RENT - 8 ROOM HOUSE,\nwith garden. Apply D. Maglio\nPhone 808L.\t\nIfrOR RENT -  STUCCO HOUSE\nMEN - REGAIN VIGOR. PEP\ntry Vitex, 25 tablets $1.00. Personal\nDrug Sundries, 24 for $1.00 Supreme Razor Blade Sharpener 35c\nsharpens blades perfectly. Blue\nBlades 50 for 49c J. Jensen, Box\n324 Vancouver, B. C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC,\nmjr\n\"The Chicks\nWhich Give\nResults\"\nWill make 1941 your banner year\nThe results obtained (roo then\nchicks by thousands of customers\nbave been the meant ot building\nthe largeit chick business ind\nhatchery ln British Columbia.\nUnsexed   Pullets\n100  1000   100 500\nIt A S. Legho'n. $13 $120   $27 $123\nS. Leghorns  .     $15 $140   $30 $143\nRocks, Redi and\nN  Hamps $14 $130  $24 $115\nL. Sussex and\nJer. W.  Giants $18 $28\nFret book to customers \"Railing\nChicki tor Profit\" Write for our\n\"Banner Year\" Book.\nREMEMBER\u2014It'i results that\ncount)\nBox N Langley Prairie, B. C\nRUSH DELIVERY. HAMBLEY\nElectric Chicks. Thousands hatching each week for immediate delivery. Write, wire, phone or call.\nHigh Quality Govt. Approved\nChicks at competitive prices. J. J\nHambley Hatcheries, 6071st Street\nCalgary, Alberta,\n-., V--\u00bb-.-j,  ,_.\u2014.....\t\nFOR BETTER AND HEALTHIER\nLeghorn chicks and pullets place\nyour order with us. All tht chicks\nwe sell are a product of our own\nfarm Send for catalogue and find\nout the facta. New Siberia Farm,\nChilliwack, B. C,\nLIlllUWil-l-,   J_i.   w\nA. HJ-B-'S BAbV CHICK-, ffflw\nHampshires, R, I. Reds, R. O. P.\nSired W'.ite Leghorns. Write lor\nprice list. Proven information oti\nthe control of laying house mortality. Appleby's Poultry Farm\nMission City, B. C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASIAYERI and MINE AQENTI\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND.\nB C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual representative (or shippers at Trail Smelter.\n*--*-\u25a0 INDEPENDENT MlNft\nA. J. BUIE, -\nrepresentative.  Full  time  attention   given   shippers'   '\u00ab'\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab_\nBox 84, Trail, B. C.\ninterest!\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. r. McMillan, d. c. neuro\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch Blk\nDR;wtL6_!ftTii\u00bb,6ffiit1_).e;\n542 Baker Street Phone 969.\nENGINEERS and IURVEYORI\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. 0. BOX 104,\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En-\ngineer. Phone \"Beaver Falls\".\nR. W. HAGGEN, MINING A CIVIL\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B, C.\nINSURANCE and REAL ESTATE\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate Insurance, Rentals. 1(37 Ward Street\nAnnable Block. Phone 197.\t\nC. D. BLACKWOOD AGENCIES.\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone 99.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nff\"E.\"biLL.'_.RE,\"AUT<_, KCCT-\ndent Insurance, 532 Ward Street\nLeads Upswing In\nQuebet Utilities\nMOWnUtAU April 1 CCP).-\nInltlated by Montreal Power, a rising move permeated moit ol tlie\nQuebec utility lilt tn the final hour\non the stock market today.\nMontreal Power left lla now low\nto advance fractionally. Montreal\nTramways, which lost 26 points Saturday, got back 5% ot them, whilt\nBell Telephone Improved V,.\nC. P. R. and Canada Steamship!\ncommon were both out ln front and.\nIn oils, Imperial held a fractional\naddition.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nOPTOMETRI8T8\nBABY CHICKS. RHODE ISLAND\nRedi and Ntw Hampshires Good\nutility stock. Approved and blood-\ntested, $10 per 100. John Goodman\n1655 Gilley Ave., New Westminate-\nFOR- SALE - 12 YOUNG HEAVY\nhorses well brk. G. Nickel, Creiton\n\"GOOD LUCK\" RHODE tSUHli\nRED chicks, 25, $4; 50, $8; 100 $15\nTRIANGLE CHICKERY. ARMSTRONG. B. C.\nSPECIAL1 - MEN7S 'PERSONAL\nDrug Sundries. Finest quality,\ntested, guaranteed, 12 for 50c assorted, including world's funnies!\njoke novelty free and catalogue o[\nSundries and Novelties. Western\nDistributors, Box 24, Dept. NC.\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\t\nALL OUR FILMS ARE NOW FINE\ngrain developed. Thli ensures a\nbetter printing negative and enlargement! do not ihow tht grain\nof the film. Any size 6 or 8 exposure roll film developed and\nSirinted with one free enlargement\n0c. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask\nFOR SALE - 2\nshire-Jersey bull. E, Slaco, Ymir.\n\"VA. OLD Aim-\n7 WEEK'S OLD YORKSHIRE PIG\nat $3 50. John Egloff. Edgewood.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nFOR SALE, RENT OR TRADE FOR\nhouse Ln town. 160 acres, 50 acres\nalfalfa, orchard, good creek, water\nright, 8 room hewn log house. 6\nmiles South of Creston, B. C. Ad-\nloins International Boundary. W\nH. Smith, Box 88, Porthill, Idaho\nef.\nFOR SALE-90 AC. DAIRY RANCH\nFlowing well. River at bottom.\nGood buildings. 36 acres cultivated. 10 ac. cleared. Well fenced\n$3000 caah and terms. Box 8110\nDaily News.\t\nFOR SALE - 8 ROOM HOUSE.\nHot and cold water, bathroom, 8\nlots, orchard. Good location in\nSalmo. Applv Mrs. Sarah Jane\nGrutchfield, Salmo, B. C.\nFOR SALE - 3 RM. FURN. HOUSE\nat Sheep Creek, Easily heated\nmod. plumbing, Includes '40 radio\nfrig., washing machine. Garage\nBox 7675 Daily News.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non eisy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for tull Information to 908 Dept. ol Natural\nResources, C P R., Calgary, Alta\nLOTS FOR SALE ON WEST AR5J\nof Kootenay Lake. 9 miles from\nNelson. Lovely sandy beach. Ap-\nPly Box 135, Nelson, B. C,\nFOR SALE - HOUSE. 4 ROOMS\nTerms Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nMill St Box 126 Nelson, B C\nFOR SALE-A LOVELY BUNGA-\nlow. Cement foundation, oak floor\n$3150. Appleyard.\nFOR SALE -2 DESIRABLE LOTS,\n?d. location Nelson Ave, Ph. 441R\nFARM, CARDEN fr NURSERY\nPRODUCTS,   FERTILIZER\nCose In\nB   HOME\n404 Silica StreeL\nAWAY\nFOR   THOSE\nfrom home Strathcona Hotel Apts\nH\u00a5Er5_CCE APTS Beautiful modern\n^1   frigidaire equipped sultei\nHRm KEN!'-_'UK**TSHEi5TRO<5M\n    lulte Adults. 411 Silica Street.\nmmW RENT - 3 room SouSE\n1945 Falls Street.\n\u25a0TOR RENT - FURNISHED SUTTE\nPhone 316\nI ROOM FURNTSHETrsUTTE FOR\n'rent  Stirling Hotel.\t\n| WANTED MISCELLANEOUS\n^pHIPuF YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity  Top pricei\nJ aid Active Trading Company\n16 Powell St. Vancouver   B  C\npANfED  -   FOLDING\" GOf ART\nwith  hood  and   Rood  tires. Wm\n^Burhrlrlse. 1008 3rd St.. Nelson.\nIP   US   YOUR*\nMorron. Nelson.\n' HIDES\nB  C\nJ.   P\nHWant  to  Sell   Something  e*\n)aily News Classifierl Ad wil\ndo it. PHONE -144.\n____-__Y_i__< __\u25a0, i ia, ._]_\u25a0\nSOW\nBROWN BROS. SEEDS\nNOW\nSPECIAL introductory offer\nto readers of\nNelson Daily News\nSEND this AD. and SOc for\nBROWN'S JUBILEE\nCOLLECTION\nSWEET PEAS\n8 packets, 8 different colors, and\n1    FREE    packet    NtTRAGIN,\nNEW inoculation for Sweet Peas,\nPeu, Beans, etc.\nValue If bought separately $100\nWrite for this offer and our 1941\nSpring Garden Guide and Seed\nCatalogue.\nBROWN BROS.\n665 Granville St., Vancouver\nFARMERS CHECK  YOUR  FAlM\nimplements now and order early\nWe   carry   Cockshutt,   Frost and\nWood   Farm  Machinery  and  repairs  Nelson A District Farmers'\nSupply  Company.  P.  O.  Box 6\nNelson. B C\u201e or Phone 174.\nLOVELY GLADIOLI. MIXED COL-\nors. Bulbs $1 a hundred, postpaid\nWebster A Sons, Robson, B. u_\nNETTED OEM POTATOES 0-3-\nnuallty. S P Pond, Nelson.\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE - 35-FOOT CRUISER\ncabin. Good for launch parties or\ntowing. Name \"Eleanor\". Boal\nand boat house Price reasonable\nMrs W A. Ward  Procter, BC\nFOR SALE-ONE ECLIPSE STEAM\nBnller, 32 H. P. and one 10 x 13\nside crank engine Enquire Lambert Lumber Ltd., Nelson. B. C.\nDRIVE A BARGAIN!\nLow priced transportation -\nreduced to clear.\n1941 LICENCE INCLUDED\n'80 Pontiac Sedan. 417 K\nMotor overhauled     u) JL I u\n'31 Erskine Sedan. (_9AA\nGood shape     \u00abD-.vU\n'31 Pontiac Sedan. (COOK\n4 new tires.      wttuO\n'30 Chev. Sedan. Good rubber,\nmotor CK. New paint. d>1 P A\nPrict    \u00abHOU\n'30 Chev flJQD\nAs is    \u00abDi\/0\n\u25a080 Hudion RS. Coupe.       (JCC\nPrice    \u00abM)v\n'27 Olds Sedan. Jfir\nPrice   WIU\n'31 Chev Sport Roadster with\nrumble seat. fl>1 FA\nPrice     \u00abI.L.)U\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrist\n1438 Bay Ave., Trail     Phone 177\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\nSECOND  HAND 8TORES\nWE   BUY,   SELL   A  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph. 534\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-CAFE. GOOD LOCA\ntion and steady business. For fur\nther particulars apply Mrs. E\nWolma. Rossland\n~i%\nWOE^SBSi MfiAA fRAIL*\nFOR\nCash  and   terms.\n8233 Daily News.\nWrite  to  Box\nAlso many other attractive buys\nln all price classes.\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS LIMITED\n1930 CHRYSLER SIX SEDAN. Motor rebored. Hydraulic brakes\nNew paint, excellent six-ply tires.\nKarry-Keen trunk. Good upholstery. 1941 licence. Price $295.\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd., Nelson.\n1935 FORD COUPE, HEATER AND\ngood tires, looks like new. Licensed and ready to go at $495\nInterior Motor Finance Corp.\n\u202237 KTO5OTH \"8-D\/-N\" RMW-\nished in  pleasing green enamel.\nMechanically Al. A perfect buy\nat $725. Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\nSPECIAL  '86 CHEV. LIGHT DE-\nllvery. Looks and runs like new.\n$425   Central Truck and Equip-\nment Company, Nelson, B, C.\t\nFOR SALE - PRIVATELlT-W-\ned ^l Ford Coach, Excellent cond.\nA. H McKlnley, Salmo, B. C.\nPARTS FOR SPRING REPAIRS\nat City Auto Wreckers, 180 Baker\nSt., across from Peeblei.\t\nSIXTEEN PASSmJ-EO'uOU.-\"-\nable for movable Summer home\nNelson Auto Wrecking, Ph, 946.\nBARGAIN! '30 WHIPPET F<5TJ_.\ncoupe. Od mechcl. cond. Ph. 388R\n~Xt NASH SEDAN. PRIVATfTY\nowned $75 cash. 709, 7th Street.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue ind Main St\n Vancouver B C.\t\nFOR SALE - WATTS MfiflNS\nTransit, Auxiliary Telescope and\nDumpy Level. Perfect condition,\n$275. Box H71 Dally News,\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES - SPE*.\ncial tew prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St., Vsncouver  B  C\nNEW WHITE PORCELAIN GAS\nRange, automatic oven control.\n$84.50. McKay and Stretton.\nFIRST CLASS WOOL SENDTEtf\naddressed stamped envelope for\nsample, price  Sldrtall, Edgewood\nONE SirwBEAM BICYCLE 2TTN\nframe Good shape. 513 Victoria St\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE IM\n___! *\nEXTEND STERLINC\nAREA TO INCLUDE\nFRENCH POSSESSIONS\nLONDON, April 1 (CP). - Th.\ntreasury announced today the extension of the sterling area, trading with the pound as the medium\n\u00bbt exchange, to embrace wider-defence regulations French Equatorial\nAfrica, the French Cameroon!,\nFrench Oceania and French possessions ln India, all ruled oy the\nFrench Council of Defence. Iceland\nand 'he Faroe Islands likewise were\nincluded in the extension, effective\ntomorrow.\nOil Stocks Activt\nin Vancouver Trade\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP). -\nOil stocks came in for more active\ntrading and accounted for the majority of transactions on Vancouver\nStock Exchange today. Few price\nchanges were registered as transfers totalled 13,590 shares.\nHome Oil at 1.91 firmed a cent\nwhile Pacific Petroleum was down\n2 at 24. McDougall-Segur Exploration at 5*4 and Mar Jon at 1 were\nunchanged.\nAmong the golds Silbak Premier\nat 75 advanced 5 while Premier at\n90, Privateer at 46, Hedley Mascot at\n58 and Sheep Creek at 80 remained\nunchanged.\nBase metals were inactive.\nNew High Record for\nCustoms Revenue\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP).-A\nnew high record of collections for\nDominion customs revenue at Vancouver was set when books were\nclosed.\nTotal collected at thla port was\n$21,683,891, an incrase of $5,086,096\nover the preceding fiscal year. The\ntotal was even higher than during\nthose years when the Customs Department collected Dominion income taxes.\nDuring February, 1941, $2,010,985\nwas paid in, \u2022\nBusiness Index Up\nFrom Last Tear\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CIP).-The\nindex of Canada's physical volume\nof business maintained by the Dominion Bureau ot Statistics showed\ng \"considerable gain\" in February\ncompared with the same month last\nyear but was lower than ln January thia year, the Bureau reported\ntoday.\nThe index stood at 126.1 against\n130.5 ihe previous month and 108.6\nin February, 1940.\nWheat Clearances Up\nOTTAWA, April 1 (CP).-Exriort\noverseas clearances of Canadian\nwheat totalled 3,566,907 bushels In\nthe week ended March 28 compared\nwith 3,161.034 in the corresponding\nweek laat year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today ln\nits weekly survey.\nAccumulated total In the 34 weeks\nended March 28 was 81.826,316 bushels compared with 100,325,472 ln\nthe corresponding period a year ago,\nthe report said.\nWholesale Index Up\nOTTAWA, April l (CP). - The\nDominion Bureau of Statistics reported today Its general wholesale\ncommodity prices index was 88.0 In\nthe week endet March 28 compared\nwith 832 in the corresponding week\nlast year\nIndex of Canadian farm producti\nstood at 69.1 against 7L8.        \t\nSpecialties Push\nUp at New York\nNEW YORK, April 1 (AP).-The\nstock market today took another\nshort step on the rallying trail.\nWhile gains for leaders wtre confined to small fractions and minor\ndeclines were well distributed at\ntht close, a number of specialties, Including Canadian securities, were\npushed up 1 to more than 4 points.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 Issues held a net advance of .1\nof a point at 41.6. Transfers of 433,-\n730 sharei compared with 435,610\nthe day belore.\nCanadian stocks and bonds were\ngiven a lift in the wake ot reports\nthe Dominion was considering an\nexchange agreement that would put\nthe Northern currency at parity with\nthe dollar.\nSale of a Stock Exchange seat tor\n\u00a322,000, otf $3000 from a previous\ntransaction at a new bottom since\n1898, was far trom pleasing to the\nfinancial district.\nAnnouncement the British had\nliquidated further large blocks of\nAmerican securities In March was\nviewed as encouraging.\nAmerican Car A Foundry preferred was up 4% at 65% as Directors\nvoted a dividend of $1.75 a share on\nthis non-cumulative issue, first payment since April, 1930. The common\ngained IV,.\nEasier Trend In\nWinnipeg Pit\nWINNIPEG, April 1 (CP). - In-'\ncreased hedging following an easier\ntrend at Chicago pushed wheat\nfutures prices lower during a dull\nsession on Winnipeg Grain Exchange today. Final quotations were\nH to Vi lower, May wheat at 76V4\nand July 78V4 to 78Vi cents a bushel.\nScattered purchases were made\nby domestic Interests snd mills but\notherwise support was lacking and\nhedging sales maintained the upper\nhand. There was\" indications of a\nmoderate export business in No. 1\nNorthern wheat\nCoarse grain prices lost ground\nln hesitant operations, flax slipping\ntwo cents and oats, barley and rye\nabout Vs .cent each.\nWestern farmers delivered 1,190,-\n000 bushels of wheat to country elevators yesterday compared with\n215,000 unloaded on the same day a\nyear ago. Inspectors checked 813\ncan of grain yesterday against 156\nInspected on the same day last year.\nCAI\/JARY. April 1 (CP). - Re-\ncelpts, cattle 265; calvei 22; hogs\n216; sheep 314. Sheep and part ot\nother receipts through-billed.\nBarely sufficient early salt! to\nmake quotations.\nMedium to good fed calves I to\n8.75. Plain to good vealers 7 to 10.10.\nStocker steers 6 to 7.50.\nLaat hog price B-l 1028 to 10.33\nBritain Exports\nDandelions to U.S.\nBritain ls growing dandelions tor\nexport.\nIt is oot of tht herbal drugs\nwhich the country uied to Import\ntrom France, Germany, Belgium and\nItaly. Chief ln war-time importance among them are aconite, bella-\ndona, digitalis, henbane, stramonium and valerian.\nAll are now being frown ln sufficient quantities to meat British\nwar-timen eeds atter existing big\nstocks are done, and British drug\ngrowers are even Increasing their\naverage to supply the foreign\nmarket.\nThe United States Is a big buyer.\nThe plants are exotic and fastidious\nin regard to climate and soil, yet\nalthough North America has many\nclimates and many soil types, the\nplants do not thrive there and they\nare therefore being imported from\nGreat Britain.\nAmong the chlet herbal drugs\nnow being grown in Britain for\nthe home and export markets are\ndigitalis, stramonium, aconite, valerian, pyrethrum, broom, dandelion, tarragon and calendula.\nBritain's most Important drug\nfarms are ln the South of England.\nThere is also one ln Scotland. Indeed, the oldest of them all, the\nPhysic Garden, was founded in\nEdinburgh by a hospital in 1661\nHeavy Withdrawals Threaten Oil\nand Gas Supply in Turner Valley\nCAI\/JARY, April 1 (CP) .-Heavy\nwithdrawals <xl oil and gu frwn\nttit Turner Valley Field beyond the\nnormal efficient rate o\u00ab production\nare creating a terioui iltuatlon according to R. B. Allen, Chairman of\nthe Petroleum and Natural Qai\nConservation Board.\nIn a letter to crude ott producers\nyeaterday, Mr. Allen Indicated that\nunlet! something Is don* to restore or maintain energy In tha\nField, lt may not be able to keep un\nits present production ot 26,000\nbarrels daily for the duration of\ntht war.\n\"The oontinuoua heavy withdrawals of oil and gas in quantitlti far\nIn excess of tht optimum rate (efficient production rata) have resulted ln a tremendous expenditure\nof reservoir energy.\" Mr. Allen said.\nHa declared that without reier-\nvoir energy oil wells could neither\ncommence nor continue flowing.\nThe maintenance or restoration ot\nthis energy muat bt accomplished\nI fthe Turner Valley Field wai ta\nbe expected to maintain Ita present\nsustained rate of production tor tha\nduration of the war.\nThe Board fixed tht crude oil\nproduction allocation for tha Valley\nfield at 26.000 barrels daily ln April,\nunchanged from February and from\nMarch. This Includes the extra war\nemergency allocation of 143,700 bar.\nrels for April requested by G. R,\nCottrelle, Dominion Oil Controller,\n\"The Board Is glad to note that\nthe three-month lull In new well\ncompletions will be broken in April\nwhen as many as six new wells may\nbe expected to contribute substantially to the production of the Tu'n\u00ab\ner Valley Field,\" Mr. Allen said.\n\"It ls hoped that these new wells ,|\ntogether with othen to be completed\nduring the early Summer will make\npossible the continuance ot the OU\nController's production stabilization I\nprogram for the balance ot the year\naa planned.\"\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nW1NNIPHJ, April 1 (CP) .-Grain\nfuturei quotations:\nOpen  High  Low Clote\nWHEAT:\nMay  ._...\n'7\u00abH\n\u2022m\n78%\n76%\n78%\n76%\nJuly\nttVt\n78%\nOATS:\nMay\nXVt\nS6%\n34%\n8h\n35%\nJuly\nS4'A\n34%\nOct\n33*4\n33_\n33\n33\nBARLEY:\nMay\ntm\n51%\n60 V,\n60%\nJuly\nOct.   . ..\n48\n48%\n47%\n47%\n4V-V-\n4514\n45\n45\nFLAX:\nMay    ...\n181 Vt\n182%\n178%\n176%\nJuly   .\n180\n180%\nmy,\n176%\nOct\t\nTim\n171%\n-Mil\n168%\nRYE:\nMay\n66%\n57\n56%\n56%\nJuly\n57%\n,  57\"\n57\n57\nSOVIET FISHERMEN   .\nGET JAPANESE SITES\nTOKYO, April 1 (AP). - Five\nNorthern fishing sites formerly used\nby the Japanese Nechiro Marine\nIndustry Company were reported\nhere today to have gone to Soviet\nfishermen at an auction at Vladivostok yesterday. The Tokyo newspaper Hochi termed results of the\nbidding \"unbearable'' and said It\nwas expected \"the Japanese will\nconduct negotiations with the Soviet\nIn some appropriate manner.\"\nTECK-HUGHES PROFIT OFF\nTORONTO, April 1 (CP). - Teck-\nHughei Gold Mlnee reported net\nprofit for the six-month period ending February 28 at $894,952, equal to\n18.8 cents a share, compared with\n$1,107,883, or 23 cents a share in\nthe comparable period of the previous year.\nFood Import Oii,\nWar Material Up\nOTTAWA \u2014 Affording a striking\nreflection of the rationing and other\nrestrictions imposed during 1940,\nimports into the United Kingdom\ntinder the category of food, drink\nand tobacco were down no less than\n41 per cent In value ln December\nlast as compared with December\n1939, notes Fred Hudd, Chief Canadian Trade Commissioner in the\nUnited Kingdom in a report to the\nDepartment of Trade and Commerce.\nGrain and flour Imports at \u00a35,706,\n281 fell by 10 per cent, imports of\nmeat and of dairy produce were\ndown as much as 44 per cent, while\nthose of fresh fruits and vegetable!\nwere only a fraction of the previous December.\nOn the other hand, there was a\nsubstantial growth In imports of\nfully manufactured goods, which\nwere 47 per cent greater at \u00a329,410,-\n415. The categories contributing to\nthis advance comprised in the main\nwar equipment and materials for\nconversion into munitions. Landings\nof iron and steel were more than\nthree times as much as in December 1939, those of non-ferrous metals and fanufactures increased by 26\nper cent, machinery Imports doubled in value and arrivals of vehicles\nships and aircraft amounted to \u00a35,-\n371,035 as against only \u00a3210,73Q a\nyear earlier,\nMETAL MARKETS\nMONTREAL, AprU 1 (CP). -\nBar gold in London waa unchanged\nat $-*\".M an ounce ln Canadian\nfunds, 168s in British representing\nthe Bank of England's buying price.\nThe fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $36.50 in Canadian.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 12.75;\ntin 60.37%; lead 5.50; zinc 5.68; antimony 16.26; per 100 lb. fob Montreal, five ton lots,\nNEW YORK - Copper steady;\nelectrolytic spot, Conn, Valley at\n12.00; export f.a.s. N. Y\u201e 10.92V. to\n12.00.\nTin weak, spot and nearby M.78;\nforward 51.12%.\nLead steady; spot, New York at\n5.85 to 5.90; East St. Louis 5.70.\nZinc steady, East St. Louis spot\nand forward 7.25.\n  prices, basis in itore Fort\nWilliam and Port Arthur:\nWHEAT\u2014Nos. 1 hsrd and 1 Nor.\n75%; .No. 2 Nor. 78%; No. 2 Nor,\n71; No. 4 Nor. and No. b wheat 60;\nNo, 6, 65%; feed 63%; No. 1 Garnet\nand No, 1 Durum 71; No. 2 Garnet\n70; No. 3 Garnet 69%; No. 4 special\n68%; No. 5 special 68;No. 6 special\n64%.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 36%; Ex. \u00bb\nC. W. 35%; No. 3 C. W. 35%; Ex. 1\nfeed 36%; No. 1 feed 34%; No. 2\nfeed 33%; No. 3 feed 31%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 C. W. M%; 2-row Nos\n1 and 2 C. W. 86%; \u00ab-row No. t\nC. W. 52. Others: No. 1 feed 51%;\nNo. 2 feed 49%; No. 3 teed 48%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 175%; No. 2\nC. W. 173%; No. 3 C. W. 161%; No.\nC. W. 156%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 86%,\nDOW  JONES AVERAGES\nHigh   Low Close Change\n30 industrials    123.57   122.87 123.26 up     .64\n20 rails      __     28.86    28.86 28.78 up     .11\n15 utilities       19.77    19.55 19.59 oft    .10\nQUOTATIONS    ON\nOpen Close\n     87%    87%\n    161      161%\nAmer Can\t\nAmer Tel \t\nAmer Tob \t\nAnaconda   \t\nBait A Ohio ._.\nBendix Avi ...\nBeth   Steel   _\nBorden \t\nCan Pac \t\nChrysler   \t\nC Wright Pfd .\nDupont \t\nEast Kod\t\nGen  Elec \t\nGen Foods ....\nGen   Mot\nGrt Nor Pfd \t\nInter   Nickel   \t\nKenn Cop       84\n24%\n3%\n36-\n77\n19%\n4%\n63\n9\n146%\n135\n32%\n35%\n42%\n25%\n26%\n24%\n3'i\n36 V,\n77\n19%\n4%\n63%\n8%\n146%\n135\n32%\n35%\n42%\n25%\n28%\n33%\nWALL   STREET\nMont Ward  36% 88%\nN  Y Central \u201e 13% 13%\nPack Mot    2%      2%\nPenn R R    24% 24%\nPhillips  Pett  3\u00ab% 38%\nPullman       26% 28%\nRadio Corp    4 A\nRem Rand    9 9\nShell Un  _ 11% 11%\nS  Cal   Ed    _ 25% 25%\nStan Oil of N J  _ 35% 35\nTex Corp    __ 36% 36%\nUn Carbide    66 66%\nUnited  Air     33 38\nU S Rubber   22% 23%\nU S Steel    57 67\nWest   Elec - 94% 94%\nWest Un  -  21% 21%\nWoolworth   30 30\nYei Tmck   13% 13%\nVANCOUVER   STOCK\nMINES\nBig Missouri ......\nBralome -\nB R Con  \u2014\nCariboo Gold\t\nDentonia \u2014.\nFairview Amal ..._\nGolconda\t\nGold Belt  _.\nGrandview  \t\nHaida Gold\t\nHedley Sterling ....\nIndian Minei\t\nInter Coal A Coke\nIslsnd Mountain ...\nKootenay Belle\t\nKoot Florence\t\nMlnto Gold   \t\nNicola M A M\t\nPioneer Oold\t\nPorter Idaho   _\nPremier Border\t\nPremier Gold\t\nReeves-Mac     \t\nRelief Arlington ....\nReno Gold    \t\nSheep Creek  \t\nSilbak Premier ....\nSurf Inlet\t\nTaylor B.R\t\nWellington\t\nWesko Mines\t\nWhitewater\t\nBid\n-03\n10.00\n2.35\n.00%\n.01\n.06\n-25\n.12%\n.01%\nJtb\n.00%\n.00%\n.30\n.90\nJib\n.01%\n.00%\n2.05\n.02%\n.87\n.10\n.02%\n.10\nM\n.70\n.10\n.02 V.\n.00%\n.00%\nAtk\n.05\n10 35\n.01\n.00%\n.01%\n.09\n.02\n.60\n.00%\n.01\n1.00\n.28\n.02\n2.25\n.01\n.03\n.95\n02%\n.01\n.00%\nQUOTATIONS\n.04%\nYmir Yankee Olrl\nOILS\nA P Con\t\nAmalgamated .........\nAnaconda -\nAnglo Can _.\nBrtish Dom \t\nBrown Corp\n.07%\n.00%\n.05%\n.60\n.06%\n.06%\n.09\n.00%\n.06\n.67\n.09\n120\nCalgary & Ed     1.18\nCalmont       .18\nCommonwealth ....-      _*0\nCommoil          .19\nDalhousie _      Jot\nExtension     \u2014       \u2014\nFirestone Pete -       \u2014\nFreehold Corp     1.91\nHargal  .  -      .01\nHighwood Sar .....      .01\nHome   05%\nMar-Jon  04%\nMill City Pete -.      .04%\nModel       14 \u2014\nMonarch Royal       \u2014 -03\nOkalta com              J!3\nPrairie Royalties ..      \u2014\nRoyalite           17.50\nRoyal Can 09\nSpooner   :       .03%\nUnited          OS\nVanalta      03%\nVulcan            27\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates        1.00\nCoast Breweries ...    L30\n.22\n.15\n.03%\n1.95\n.01%\n.01%\n.06\n.05\n.06\n,1.15\n1.35\nLONDON CLOSI\nLONDON, AprU 1 (AP). - Brit\nish stock closings, ln sterling:\nBrit Celanese 3s 10%d; Courtaulds\n30s 6d; De Beers dfd. \u00a33%; HBC\n23s 10%; Imp Chem 30s.\nBonds \u2014 BritUh 2% per cent\nConsols \u00a378; British 8% per cent\nWar Loan \u00a3104%; British Funding\n4s 1960-90 \u00a3113.\nDIVIDENDS\nSilbak Premier Mlnea, tour cents\nStronger Trend\non Toronto Mkt.\nTORONTO, April 1 (CP). - The\nToronto  Stock  Market began tha\nnew month on a itronger price nott .\nand a taster trading tempo.\nAmong gainers of 10 to 16 cent!\nwere Preston, Lamaque, Pamour,\nEast Malartic, Coniaurum, Upper\nCanada, Wright-Hargreavei and\nPickle Crow.\nNickel, Steep Rock and SJierritt\nwere among the base metal gainers\nand in Western oils the tone wai a\nbit stronger for Anglo-Canadian\nwhile Calgary and Edmonton waa\ndown a cent or two.\nDemand for C.P.R. picked up and ,\nthe price firmed %. to 5%. Rogers-\nMa]estic also traded in volume with\nthe price firm.\nLiquor stocks were weak, Distillers-Seagrams dropped 1% and\nWalkers common %. The Abitibi\nIssues weakened narrowly. Utility,\nfood, bank and miscellaneous industrial stocks boarded more galna'\nthan losses,\nEXCHANCI MARKETS\nBy Tht Canadian Prtu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: buying 4 4S,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: buying 1.1*\nselling 1.11.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.08%; Cf\nnadlan dollar .87 7-16.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 10s Id; U. S. doi.\nlar 61.06 cents; Canadian dollar 55.08\ncents.\nNEW YORK, AprU 1 (AP).-Th\u00ab\nCanadian dollar took one of th*\nbiggest stops forward in monthi in\ntht free foreign exchange market\ntoday and landed at 1941's peak\nprice with a gain of 2% cents.\nDemand, according to Canadian\nbanking quarters, was based on un\u00ab\nconfirmed reports trom Ottawa that\na foreign exchange agreement between the United States and Canada was under consideration.\nMONTREAL   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nINDUSTRIALS!\nCan Celanese \u2014\nCan Celanese Pfd\t\nCan Steamship .-_...\u2014\nCan Steamship Pfd \u2014\nDryden Paper  \t\nImperial   OU    \t\nInter Petroleum  \u2014\nInter Nickel of Can ......\nNational Brew Ltd \u2014\nQuebec  Power   .._..._\nShawnlgan W a. P\t\nBANK8:\nCommerce \u2014-~\n23\n113%\n4\n18\n5\n9%\n13%\n34%\n25%\n12%\n16\n149\nImperial  19\u00ab\nMontreal   175\nNova Scotia   377\nRoyal   _  150%\nToronto    247\nCURB:\nAbitibi 6 Pfd  6%\nBeauharnois Corp  7%\nBritish Amercan Oil ._  17%\nCons Paper Corp  3%\nDonnacona Paper A  - 4%\nDonnacona Paper B ..._  3%\nFalrchild  Aircraft  2%\nFraser Co Ltd  8%\nTORONTO    STOCK      QUOTATIONS\nMINES\nAldermac Copper       Jl\nAmi Gold        .01\nAnglo-Huronlan     225\nArntfield Gold       M\nAunor      t.10\nBagamac Rouyn        .08\nBankfield Gold       .06\nBase Metals Mining        .07%\nBeattie Gold Mines -     1.14\nBidgood Kirkland 10\nBig Missouri       AA\nBobjo Mines  01\nBralome Mines  -    10.00\nBuffalo Ankerite     3,75\nBunker HiU Ex       .01%\nCanadian Malartic  55\nCarihoo Gold Quartz \u201e    1.55\nCastle-Trethewey 60\nCentral Patricia  _    1.70,\nChromium M It S -     .16\nCoast Copper        .75\nConiaurum Mines -    1.40\nConsolidated M A S \u2014   35.50\nDome Mlnea  -   23.50\nDorval-Siscot  - 0.1%\nEast Malartic  \u2014    2.75\nEldorado Gold  -      .38\nFalconbrldge Nick -    1.45\nFederal Kirkland _ \u2014      .04\nFrancoeur Gold      .42\nGillies Uke \u2022.... - 03%\nGod's Lake Gold _       29\nGold Belt  _ -      25\nGrandoro Minea ......       *4\nGunnar Gold \u2014     28\nHard Rock Oold 82\nHarker Gold       .03%\nHollinger     13.00\nHowey Gold        27\nHudson Bay M & S    25.00\nInter Nickel     34.50\nJ.-M. Con  00%\nJack Wait* 18\nJacola Gold 01%\nKerr-Addlaon      3.95\nKirkland Lake        51\nLake Shore Minei     19.75\nLeitch Gold      60\nLebel Oro Mines 01%\nLittle Long Uc      1.85\nMacassa Mines       4.00\nMacLeod Cockshutt          1.90\nMadsen Red Uke Gold 65\nMandy    06\nMclntyre-Porcuplne    46.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.15\nMcVittle-Oraham  05%\nMcWatters Gold       22\nMining Corporation 80\nMoneta Porcupine  47\nMorris-Klrkland  02%\nNiplssing Mining      1.0J\nNoranda          84.00\nO'Brien Gold  68\nOmega Gold  17\nPamour Porcupine     1.35\nPaymaster Cons       .23\nPend OreUle       1.50\nPerron Oold      1.55\nPickle Crow Gold     2.70\nPioneer Gold         2.40\nPremier Gold     85\nPowell Rouyn Gold 72\nPreston East Dome     3.30\nReno Gold Mlnta 11\nRoche Ung Uc  03%\nSan Antonio Gold     1.52\nShawkey Gold .\u201e.       .01%\nSheep Creek Gold       .78\nSherritt Gordon _      .70\nSiscoe Gold      J_6\nSladen Malartic      .-J\nSt Anthony _      .12\nSudbury Basin  _     120\nSullivan Con 65\nSylvanite      2.7*>\nTeck-Hughes Gold      J._D\nToburn Gold Mines     1.65\nTowagmac  10\nVentures     SAO\nWaite Amulet     3.46\nWright Hargreaves     6.80\nYmir Yankee Girl      .04*\nOILS\nAjax  _      .12%\nBritish American    17.75\nChemical Research       .15\nImperial       _     9.50\nInter Petroleum    12.00\nTexas Canadian -    1.0J\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power 63\nBell Telephone   155\nBrazilian T L & P     6%\nBrewing Corp   70\nB C Power \"A\"    23%\nB C Power \"B\"    \u201e    1%\nBuilding Products     13%\nCan Car it Fdy     6%\nCan Cement      6%\nCan Dredge  _   19\nCan Malting       35%\nCan Pacific Rly     5%\nCan Ind Alcohol A     2%\nCons Bakeries     9\nCosmos    -   11 .\nDom Tar A Chem     4%\nDistillers Seagrams    21\nFanny Farmer     36\nFord of Canada A - -   16*\nGen Steel Wares  -    Alb\nGoodyear Tire     68\nGypsum L & A      3\nHamilton Bridge      3%\nHiram Walker        39%\nImperial Tobacco    12\nLoblaw \"A\"  -    25\nUblaw \"B\"            22%\nMaple Leaf Milling     1%\nMassey Harris           2%\nMontreal Power     22%\nMoore Corp      -   45\nNat Steel Car     32\nPage Hersey    ..._ _    99\nPressed Metals      814\nSteel ot Can    6314\nLet Us Chrome Plate Your\nPlumbing Fixtures\nL.C.M.  Electroplating\nLaurlti Bldg.        704 Nelson Avt,\nGrenv-llc H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL  CHEMISTS\nPHONI 618\n189 Baker St.     Nelion, B. C.\n'l'\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab*'l\"l\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbT-i-a-\u00bb\u00bbH4\u00bbH^M\n^^^^\n Today,   Thursday\nGONE\nWITH THE\nWIND\nTWICE DAILY\n2:00 \u2014 8:00\nDoors open 1:30-7:30\nPapular Prleei:\nMatlnea  40c\nEvening .\u25a0...._ 60-\nChlldren   -J.        26c\nit Matlneo only.\nCIVIC\nNelson Kin to Stage\nShow in Trail Also\nKin Koons musical show, to be\nItaged by the Nelson Kinsmen\nClub ln mid-April, will also be\nihown at Trail, it was reported\nTuesday evening at the Club meeting. Arrangements have been\nmade with the Trail Gyro Club to\niponsor the Trail showing.\nProceeds of the program, which\nhis been under rehearsal for some\ntime now, will go to a patriotic\nfund.\nCct the\nFURNACE\nPut ln working order NOWI\nR.H. Maber\nI Phono (SS      S10 Kooteniy St\n,\nGuaranteed\nMechanical Work\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILION. B.C.-WEONE8DAY MORNING. APRIL 2 1941\u2014\n:\n$1.00\nL-t Ui VACUUM\nCLEAN your car\nNow Electrolux Equipment\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Hume'Hotel and Post Office\nCIVIC\nAPRIL    BOOKINGS\nApril 4-S\n\"Ariie, My Love\"\nApril 7-8\n\"Ramparts We Watch\"\n\"British Intelligence\"\nApril 9-10\n\"Chad Hanna\"\n\"Public Debutante No. 1\"\nApril 11-12\n\"Flight Command\"\nApril  14-18\n\"No Time for Comedy\"\n\"Fugitive From Justice\"\nApril 18-17\n\"No, No, Nanette\"\n\"Tear Cat Squad\"\nApril 18-19\n\"Kit Carson\"\n\"Queen of the Mob\"\nApril 21-22\n\"Night Train to Munich\"\n'Romance of the Rio Grande\"\nApril 23-24\n\"Trial of Mary Dugan\"\n\"Dulcy\"\nApril 25-28\n\"South of Pago Pago\"\n\"Girl From Avenue A\"\nApril  28-29-30\n\"Thit Thing Called Love\"\n\"Parole Fixer\"\nMay 1-2-3\n\"Comrade X\"\nFor Early Spring Onions\nDUTCH SETS\nMULTIPLIERS\n15* ptr Ib.\nMann,, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON. B. O.\nSBBBBBSBBS\nNelson Transfer\nOpens Attractive\nUsed Car Lot\nJohn A. Ferguson, manager ol\nthe Nelson Transfer Company, announced yesterday the opening of\nthe Company's Used Car Lqt on\nVernon Street, opposite their garage\nThe New Lot Is 70x100 feet, large\nenough to display over 29 Used\nCars. It is attractively finished with\na green and white picket fence,\nwith gravel runways throughout.\nLarge signs announcing their OK\nUsed Cars are prominent and the\nentire lot will he well Illuminated\nwith 2 500 watt spot lights.   (Advt.)\nSiren Sounds\nfor Hot Pipe\nTRAIL, B. C., April 1\u2014An overheated stove pipe at the home of\nB. E. Smith, 1357 Fourth Avenue\nFast Trail, was the cause of the\nfire siren being sounded at 8.10\nMonday morning. The pipe cooled\ndown without causing any damage,\nwhile the Trail firemen stood by in\ncase of an outbreak.\nSix Recruits Are\nOff to the Coast\nTRAIL, B.. C, April 1-Six C. A\nS. F. recruits left Trail Monday\nmorning for the Coast. They were\nK. M. Smith, Ferguson; B. C. J. Es.\nselmont, Nakusp; A. W. Hutton,\nRossland and A. G. Cottrell, S. J.\nClark and D. J. Paterson, Trail,\nNATCHEZ, Miss. (CP)-As a me.\nmorial to 900 Frenchmen and other\nwhites massacred by the Indians in\ndefence of this French area in 1729,\nFort. Rasale with stockade and towers has been fully restored.\n11; rrn nrnrrm iiaasaa\nHOOD'S\nYOUR HOME  BAKERY\nSUPREME MILK BREAD\nFor Crowing Children\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\n'JNWSJ       PHONE 25\n: S 1_K-        Ued. Arts Blk\nSPECIAL\n4-pc Walnut Bedroom\nSuite for \t\nHome Furniture Exchange,\n413 Hall St. Phone 1032\n$66\nLAMBERT'S\nPHONE\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\n1932 CHEV\nSPECIAL SEDAN\n2 spare wheels, fender wells.\nLooks and runs like new.\nQueen City Motors\n661 Josephine St.    Limited    Ph. 43\nGrenfell's Cafe\nOpening' Soon\nWatch for announcement.\nSatin Glo\nSALE\nContinues\nAll This Week\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nTrail \"Bomb\" lo\nTraverse Canada\nas Money Raiser\nTRAIL, B.C., March 31 - Trail's\nfirst \"bomb\", made and donated\nby the Interior Motors St Interior\nStages Ltd., and destined to travel\nliterally from here to Halifax, will\nmake Its debut on the TraU itreeti\nSaturday.\nTbe bomb, made from an ordinary kitchen water tank boiler, is\npalnted aluminum with red flanges,\nwith a slot in the centre to receive\ncontributions toward the Canadian\nWar Services fund.\nProviding arrangements can be\nmade with the Canadian Pacific\nRailway Company to ship the bomb\nexpress along the main line, lt is intended to send lt right across Can\nada where it will be posted ln various cities. Collections will be taken\ncare of by the city banks and. will\nbe turned over to the fund.\nIt will remain in Trail until April\n8. when it will be in Rossland for\none day. From Rossland it will be\nshipped to Nelson for several days,\nand by that time lt is hoped to have\narrangements for further Journeys\ncompleted.    .\nIndex Buildings\nAgainst Damages\nBy L0UI8 V. HUNTER\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nLONOON, (CP).\u2014To the new National .Buildings Record has been\nallotted the important wartime task\nof recording bomb damage to famous buildings.\nThe record is a centre for making,\ncollating and Indexing records of\nbuildings of all kind, included medieval churches, Georgian squares\nand palaces, Victorian banks and\nclubs and, in some cases, modern\nbuildings.\n\"The National Buildings Record is\nexpected to become a national institution of considerable Importance,\" a spokesman said.\n\"It will play Its part, after the\nwar, in matters of reconstruction\nand re-development by helping to\nsettle vexed questions of.what to\npreserve, what to rebuild and what\nnot to rebuild. .\n\"It will be of vital importance\nwhere the decision to reinstate an\nold building has been taken. And\nit will provide for practicing architects, students, artists, war historians, historians of architecture and\nthe general public a body of easily\naccessible information on the architecture of Britain.\"\nA committee drew up a detailed\nscheme for the establishment of the\nrecord and approached Lord Relth,\nMinister of Works nad Buildings.\nLord Reith approved the scheme\nand on his representations the Treasury made a grant sufficient for the\nNaUonal Buildings Record to come\ninto being and tackle some of its\nmore urgent objectives.\nWalter Hindes Godfrey, who was\nresponsible for the restoration of\nmany famous buildings, Is director\nof the record. For more than 40\nyears he has been engaged in a\nmonumental survey of London. He\nis chairman of the London Survey\nCommittee. ,\n32 March-Births\nRegistered, Trail\nTRAIL. B.C, April 1-Thirty-two\nbirths, eight deaths, and 13 marriages were registered at the Trail\nProvincial Police Office, for the\nTrail Registration District, during\nMarch.\nC. M. & S. Offices\non Summer Basis\nTRAIL B.C, April 1-Office hours\nfor the Consolidated Mining A\nSmelting Company employees started on Summer schedule today. Hours\nfor men employees will be from\n7 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, and from\n8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturdays. Women\nemployees will work from 8 a.m.\nto 4 p.m. weekdays, and from 8:30\na.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturdays.\nAre  You  Protected\nAgainit Fire Loss?\nIf Not, See\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\n347 Baker St. Phona 68\nTRAIL SOCIAL twm*mr\nTells Progress\nof Clubs lo Kin\nBy MISS KAY LOWDON\nTRAIL, B.C., April 1\u2014Tlie home\nof Mr. and Mri. J, H. Young, 170\nBinns Street, wai tha letting for\nthe Sunday morning wedding of\ntheir eldest daughter, Laura Agnes,\nto WiUiam McNaughton of Trail,\nsm of Dr. and Mrs. C. M. McNaughton of Victoria, formerly of Trail\nThe rooms were beautifully decorated with Spring flowers, and Rev\n3. L. Clerihue of Bast Trail United\nChurch performed the marriage at\n9. The bride, given in marriage by\nher father, was becomingly dressed\nin'an afternoon frock of blue and\nwhite printed silk with a gathered\nneckline and waistline. She wore a\nmatching turban and a corsage of\nSweetheart roses. Miss Patricia\nYoung was her lister', only attendant Soe wore an afternoon frock of\nrose and white printed silk with\nmatching turban and a corsage ot\nwhite carnations. Fred Pearson,\ncousin of the groom, was best man.\nA reception was held following the\nceremony. The bride's table was\ncovered with a lace cloth and centred with a tiered wedding cake\nflanked with vases of Spring flowers. Mrs. Young and Mrs. McNaughton assisted the young couple to\nreceive the guests. Later Mr. and\nMrs. McNaughton left on a wedding trip to the Coast. For travelling\nthe bride wore a dressmaker suit of\npoudre blue crepe with a navy\nwool topcoat and matching hat and\naccessories. On their return they\nwill take up residence in East Trail.\nA quiet wedding took place at\nnoon Saturday at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. N. M. Qowans, 1445 Second\nAvenue, when Irene, daughter of\nthe late Mr. and Mrs. P. Collins,\nwas united In marriage with Alfred\nW. Ward of Trail. Rev. A. W. Mayse\nofficiated. The bride wore a smart\nnavy blue pencil stripe suit with\nmatching accessories. She was attended by her sister, Mrs. Gowans,\nwho wore a dove gray tailored suit\nwith matching accessories. Mr. Gowans attended the groom. After the\nceremony a wedding breakfast was\nserved. The bride's table was centred with a two-tier wedding cake.\nFollowing a short wedding trip Mr.\nand Mrs. Ward will reside at 1501\nThird Avenue.\nCorporal and Mrs. Joker Tonelll,\nwhose marriage took place at North-\nfield, near Nanaimo, Wednesday,\nwere guests of honor at a reception\nheld Friday evening at the home of\nthe groom's uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. P. Lauriente, 167 Rossland\nAvenue. The rooms were beautifully\ndecorated with Spring flowers. The\nla_e-covered bride's table was centred with a wedding cake flanked\nby tall candles in silver holders.\nMrs. V. Tonelll and Mrs. A. Tonelll\nTonelll, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas\nLauriente, Mn. Arnold Lauriente,\nMr. and Mri. R. R. Burns, Mr. and\nMra. 0. H. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nW. Raikes, Mr. and Mrs. H. Smith,\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. Clark, Mr. and\nMrt. A. DeRosa, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nIrvine, Mr, and Mn. Parker Williami, Mr. and Mn. C. A. Mittun,\nMr. and Mrs. M. Agoitlnelll, Mr. and\nMn. 3. M. Spowart, Mr. and Mn.\nRoy Burch and Mlu Gloria Cac-\nchlone, and Walter Weir, Phillip\nMery, Nevy Baldaisi, A. Gri and\nC. Jorgenson.\nThe marriage of Constance May.\nelder daughter of Mayor and Mrs.\nHerbert Clark, of Trill, to Capt\nJohn Robert McPhillips, of a Brit-\nish Columbia military unit, only\nion of the late Dr. and Mn. F. X\nMcPhillips, of Vancouver, was held\nitt Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver, at 7:15 o'clock Saturday eve\nning. Capt Rev. Cyril Stone, chap\nlain, performed the ceremony. Giv\nen in marriage by her father, the\nbride looked lovely ln an ensemble\nof Churchill blue, with beige accessories and a corsage of gardenias.\nMiss Jean Clark, the bride's sister,\nwho wore a dainty frock of dully\nrose with blue accessories and corsage of pink roses, wai attendant.\nGroomsman was Lieut. Stewart Blrrell, of the same unit Miss Barbara\nBrooks sang \"All Joy be Thine\" during the signing of the register. A\nreception was held at the Devonshire Hotel, fhe bride's mother, attired in a blue floral crepe gown\nwith navy accessories, assisted the\nprlncbals In receiving their guests.\nMrs. A. Cameron and Miss E. Pipes\npresided at the urns, and Miss E.\nDunne. Miss Barbara Brooks, and\nMiss P. Boyd were servlteurs. Capt\nand Mrs. McPhillips left on a wedding trip to Victoria and other\npoints, and will make their home in\nVancouver on their return. The bride\nis a graduate in household economic! from the University of Alberta,\nand is affiliated with Pi Beta Phi\nsorority. Prior to her marriage she\nwas dietician at the Nanaimo General Hospital.\nMn. K. Butorac, 1144 Cedar Avenue, announces the engagement of\nher daughter Jeanne, to Frederick Charles Fodor of Kimberley\neldest son ot Mr. and Mn. Charles\nFodor of Plunkett, Sask. The wedding will take place ln Trail on\nApril 15.\nMrs. Walter Douglas and Mrs. J.\nForrest entertained at a miscellaneous shower, recently, in honor\nof Mrs. William McNaughten, formerly Mlsi Laura Young.\nMrs. A. R. Mackle and son, and\nMrs. A. Segro, all of Kimberley, are\nhouse guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. H.\nassisted the young couple to receive Hopkins, 91 Aldridge Avenue.\nthe guests. Those who called were\nMrs. F. Lauriente, Mr. and Mrs. A\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nEagles bowl tonight at 8 p.m.\nEaster Afternoon Tea, April 16,\n704 Fourth St. by C. W. L.\nFor perfect snaps leave your roll!\nat or mail them to Vogue Studio.\nTag Day \u2014 Soroptimist Welfare\nWork. Saturday, April 5.\nSPECIAL-Gladioli bulbs 50c doi.\npost paid. MAC'S GREENHOUSES,\n\"Cosmopolitan\" and \"Red Book\"\nfor May now on sale at Valentine's\nCold \"storage space for rent. McDonald Jam Company Ltd. Ph. 1055\nNew and rebuilt typewriters. Underwood Agency. 536 Ward St. Ph. 99\nLawn mowers and garden tools\nsharpened and repaired at Kltto's.\nElectrical  Contracting.  F.  H.\nSMITH, 351 Baker St PHONE 668\nThis clipping\ncredit on $10\nFurniture.\nentitles you to $10\ni   purchase.   Fink's\nSale Ends Today\nJACK BOYCE MEN'8 WEAR\nFlower and Vegetable Seeds, best\nselection, best varieties. Kootenay\nFlower Shop.\nWELTERWEIGHT WALLBOARD\n4x8 sheet (1.16\nBURNS LUMBER AND COAL CO.\nHave the Job Done Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\nDont worry.\nPHONE 1042\nj}onsdla,\nCkan&M,\nCKLN\nTODAY\nSWEET\nCAPORAL\nPrcjcnti\nAllan Cup\nHockey\nTRAIL Versus\nLETHBRIDGE\n8:15 p.m.\nFor sale. Piano Books of Knowledge, and other books. Mrs. W. M.\nWalker, Phone 610X.\nRemember date, April 7, for\nPythian Sisten Tea and Bake Sale\nand Sale of Work at K. P. Hall.\nSTANLEY'S CONFECTIONERY\nFRESH FRUITS, VEGETABLES\n652 Baker St. Phone 585-We Deliver\nOwing to the various communicable diseases prevalent In Nelson\nthe Easter Bunny Ball has been\ncancelled.\nDance on Easter Monday at the\nCivic Centre. D. O. K. K. annual\nEaster Ball, with Margaret Graham's Orchestra.\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Coates visited\nMrs. Coates' mother and father,\nMr. and Mn. George Hontead of\nNelson, last weekend.\nR. F. Hine and F. Parson of Grand\nForks returned to that city Saturday after attending a teacher's\nmeeting here during the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Kelman, of\nNelson, were guests of Mrs. J. Williamson, 1525 Bay Avenue during\nthe weekend.\nMrs. George Foster and small\nson are visiting at Ymir.\n.Misi Daisy-Jean Matthewi returned Monday from Seattle, where\nshe took part in skating competitions.\nMiss Irene Willis, R.N., ipent the\nweekend with her lister at Grand\nForks.\nMrs, Norman McKay and Mn.\nBelle Mackwith of Grand Forks viiited Trail last weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Stoby of Kelowna were weekend visitors in\nTrail.\nRev. Dr. W. W. McPherson, of\nKelowna, ls visiting TraiL\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Haynes left\nTuesday morning to reside at Victoria.\nH. Logan of Nelson was a Trail\nvisitor last weekend.\nD. Agostinelli and M. Agostinelll\nreturned Sunday from a vacation\nat the Coast.\nMrs. Joseph (Joker) Tonelll was\nentertained at .a china ihower,\ngiven in her honor by Mn. A. Tonelll, 434 Rosiland Avenue, Sunday\nafternoon. The hostess was assisted\nby her sister, Mrs. Thomas Lauriente, Jr., and by Miss Emily'Agostinelll. Guests numbered 10.\nMn. W. Ward, of Vallican visited\nTrail last weekend to attend the\nwedding of her son, Alfred Ward,\nand Miss Irene C&llins, which took\nplace Saturday.\nDr. and Mn. C. A. Mittun leave\ntonight to take up residence in\nSeattle.\nTrail Boxla Will\nOrganize Thursday\nTRAIL, B.C., March 31\u2014Trail'*\nlacrosse season will start Thursday\nnight with the annual meeting of\nthe Trail Lacrosse Club.\nA brief report on the progress of\nthe 14 Clubs In lOttrlct t wu given\nto Nelson Kinsmen Club Tueiday\nnight by Deputy District Governor\nRege W. Gould of Kamloopi. Most\ngroups had shown marked progress.\ne said, and moat were active In\nwar work.\nHe urged cooperation of the Nelaon Club and all Diitrict t Clubi tn\nthe national war efforts of the Association of Kinsmen Club of Can,\nada.\nJohn A. Ingram ot Kamloopi, who\nwas alio a gueit at the supper meeting, congratulated the Kin on their\nvarious contributions to tbe war effort. He aaked the Club's support of\nKamloops' bid tor the 1942 District\nconvention.\nANGLICAN YOUNG\nPEOPLE TO HIKE\nTO TROUP SUNDAY\nAnglican Young Peoples Association Monday night made plans for\na hike to Troup Junction Sunday.\nThey will gather\" at.Lakeiide Park\nIn the morning and hike along the\nC.P.R. tracki to Troup, Where they\nwill have eats and play softball. A\nscavenger hunt to be held shortly\nwas also planned.\nSome 400 Invitations for the annual program dance tn May were\naddressed, and other arrangements\nmade for the event. William Affleck.\nPresident was In the Chair, while\nMiss Shirley Hunter, ln the absence\nof Miss Lois Mansfield, was Acting\nSecretary.\nAnother Come-Back\nfor \"Windjammers'\nSAN FRANCISCO (CP)- War\nhas turned back the pages of mart\nUme practice. They're putting old\ntime sailing veueli back Into ser\nvice.\nThe Sallor'i Union of the Pacific has received requests for crewi\nto man windjammers which Include\nthe former gambling ships Rex and\nTango.\nOne of the last stands of the sailing ships, was the Alaska salmon\nfisheries, and as late ai 1925 San\nFranciico Bay was dotted with picturesque three and four masters\nready to sail North. Now, with a\nworld shipping shortage, many Interests wish the old hulks bad been\npreserved.\nJ. A. C.Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuits 205\nMedical Arti Building\nFOR RENT\nTWO or THREE ROOM SUITE\nAnnable Block\nn. W. Dawson\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nn\t\nSMELTER REPRESENTATIVES\nat Trail, B. C. and other Western\nSmelten. Write to haad ottloe:\nE. W. Widdowson\nA Co.\n301 -SOS Josephine St   Nelion, B. C.\n--\"-\u25a0*\u25a0 -.--.-.-.-.-f _______ _-___>\nCIVIC Friday\nMike Hamai, brother of Steve Hamas, who was once a boxer, holds\nthe basketball record with 100 consecutive foul tosses.\nSELECT YOUR\nEASTER CARPS NOW\nReal good selection te ohoou\nfrom.\nAlio ChocolitM, Novel.iei\nYour Rexall Store.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nR.A.F. Groundmen\nUie Adventurous\ny\nLONDON (CP)-Royal Air Joyce\npersonnel serving In the Middle East\ndesert are rendering valuable assistance to Britain's victorious forces\nunder General Wavell.\nSome of the moit dramatic details\nof their life will never be entirely disclosed. pie Air Ministry newi\nlervice from RAF headquarter! of\nthe Middle East command describes\nthe work of the little known RAF\narmoured car units.\nThey work together In groupi of\nthree and are often away from their\nbase for lengthy periods, often they\nrun short of water, Gazelle and buzzard are dally tare. Frequently they\nhave to tight their way out of a\ncircle of troopi.\nOne armored car while on patrol\nhad mechanical trouble, 100 milei\nfrom their nearest BritUh comrades.\nThe crew cut their ration to one cup\nof water a day each figuring they\ncould last four dayi this way.\nAt the risk of disclosing their poa\nitlon to the nedrby enemy they lit\na fire and a RAF plane landed by\nthem after seeing the SOS signal.\nA minor battle was entailed In\nthe get away as Italians had spotted them. The enemy was put to\nflight and prisoners were taken. The\nmachine suffered damage and the\npilot and car crew worked feverishly repairing the plane to make it\nair worthy, before fresh Italians\ncould arrive. In an hour they had\ntaken to the air and the situation\nwas saved.\nCALCUTTA (CP) - Walter Hal-\nlenstein, 41, an unmarried engineer\nwai filled by a wounded elephant\nhe was hunting ln the jungles.\nMILK\nDelivered to Your\nHome Every Day\nPHONE 900\nPercolator\nDoughnuts\nAT YOUR\nGROCERY\nE. W. KOPECKI      509 BAKER ST.\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nThe Most Modern Plant\nIn the District\n327 Baker\nPhona 288\nI\nI  wanted  my hair\nfixed right io I\nviiited the\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhone 327\nYour East*\nHat\nBiltmore\n4lw1tl_iiir1.\u00abttf C\nThere's a real -touch of\nSpring in the cheerful\ncolor blends of these new\nSpring hats. The crowns\nare higher and brims are\nwider. (M Q|J\nEach   -|t).\"O\nOthers $5.00 to $8.50\nEMORY'S Ltd.\nThe Man's Stow\nSYDNEY, NSW. (CP)-Auitni\nHans ihould substitute Auitralia\nlight wines for whisky, and pin*\napple Juice for tea, to help conserv\nexchange and shipping, iald Com\nmerce Minister Sir Earle Page.\nLET A WANT.AD 8EBVT_  YOt\nDRESS UP THE OLD CAR\nMake It look like new.\nRamp Body * Fender Worki\nPhone 111 A. Farenholti.\nAUCTION\nTODAY, APRIL 2nd\n1:30 P.M.\nAt Nlok Denglert, South Slocan,\nat Junction of Creiton Valley and\nTrail Road, on* milt Wert of\nSouth Slocan.\nOn Instruction from th* owner\nI will offer: 10 kitchen chairs,\nrockers, withstand, ilngle and\ndeublt beds, cimp stove, couches,\nBrunswick gramophone, Columbil table gramophone, 5 tube\nSparton battery radio, White\nsewing machine, Singer sewing\nmachine, cook stove, cupboards,\ndressen, ccal ol) and git lamps\nand lanterns, 20 Ib. scales, sealers, Jugi, Jtn, crocks, butcher\nblocks, barber chair, powtr feed\nr'lndtr, 48 whltt leghorn hens,\ngoiti from I to 4 yeari (4 frtth)'\netc., etc., etc\nGoods en view morning of sale.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTerms: Cash. Auctioneer.\nA Qreat Spring Tonic\nKootenay Rainbow\nBEER\nDrink a glass each night before you go to bed. It stops\ninsomnia and aids digesion.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis idvertisement ll not publlihed or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTennis playersl Every piece of\nour tennis equipment is 1M1 stock.\nLet us supply your needs. Hipper-\nion Hardware Company.\nWe carry in stock\nmake of itapllng n\nMcDerby, \"The Typewriter\n654 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\nitaplei for any\nmachine. D. W.\nMan\",\nOrder your chocolate noveltlei\nand eggi for Easter, made on the\npremises from pure chocolate.\nGrays, 580 Baker Street.\nYou can help, enjoy and profit by\nattending the Jr. High Red Crosi\nTEA Fri., April 4,2:30 pjn. Program,\nexhibits, sale o(Biand made articles\nThere ire many different mtkea\nof refrigerator!, but FRIGIDAIRE\nis made only by GENERAL MOTORS and sold in Nelaon only\nthrough HIPPERSON HARDWARE\nFlrst one's hair must be In good condition. Then the permanent wave,\nsmooth, even and natural looking.\nLast, a cleverly adaptable coiffure.\nMake your appointment now at\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\nMaude I. Dolphin. L.R.S.M.. presents her violin and piano pupils In\nrecital in St. Paul's Church Friday,\nApril 4 at 8 p.m.; also in Instrumental trio by Mrs. Jamei Fraser.\npianiste; Mr. R. E. Stratton, 'cellist,\nud Miu Dolphin, viollniit\nOUT THEY GO!\nAn Opportunity That Comes Once a Year\nSedans\n'38 Chev. Heater.\nPrice \t\n'37 Plymouth.\nHeater. Price\t\n'37 Pontiac.\nHeater. Price\t\n'40 Ford Deluxe.\nHeater. Price ..\n'32 Chevrolet.\nPrice\t\nCoaches\n$825\n$650\nLLYS\n$450\n\"0. K. USED CARS\"\n$850\n$725\n$850\n$1060\n$325\n'39 FORD: With\nheater   ....\n\u202237 TERRA-\nPLANE ....\nSPECIAL: '38 WILLY.\nLight Delivery,\npriced at\t\nCoupes\n$795\n$1350\n$695\n$200\n1941\nLICENCE\nSupplied\ntt Chevrolet\nPrice \t\n'40 Oldsmobile.\nPrice   \t\n'38 Ford.\nPrice\t\n'30 Chevrolet.\nPrice   \t\nFor Your\nConvenience\nWe have Just completed\nour new Used Car Lot\nOne of tht moit modern\nin Canada - Buy Okay\nUied can here. We guarantee 'em. Buy with confidence.\nSee Us Today\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n323 Vtrnon Street\nPhona 3J\nComplete\nSatisfaction\nUtata^oatUo.s.\n\u25a0 ,__\u25a0.__\u25a0__.__.,\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\u201e\n\t\n\t\n.-^-_l__._J,.a.-^-4..M^,\n'11-_____-*\u25a0.'_ fft-i\n.^^A-k^V-J.^-^^^^i^j'^v-j.^j^:\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_04_02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414243","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"}]}}