{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414891":{"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":"1941-04-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414891\/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":" ungarian Army\nOrdered to March\nInto Yugoslavia\n\"Protection\" Measure; Germans Are Reported\nRolling in Zagreb; Claim Yugoslavia\nSliced; Report Belgrade Entry\nBERNE, April 11 (Friday) (AP). \u2014 The Hungarian\nArmy has been ordered by Regent Admiral Nicholas Horthy\nto enter Yugoslav territory separated from Hungary in 1918,\nthe Hungarian News Agency reported early today.\nAdmiral Horthy in an address to the Hungarian nation\nclaimed the action was taken to protect the former Hungarian\nterritory against anarchy and was not directed against the Serb\nnation with which, he contended, Hungary wants to live in\npeace in the future.\nGENEVA, April 10  (AP).\u2014A Berlin dispatch to the\nnewspaper La Tribune de Geneve claimed tonight that the\n\"f Germans had entered Belgrade,\nZagreb and Ljubljana in Yugoslavia.\nCanadian Navy\nGains Strength\nto Meet Enemy\nBy DOUG HOW\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nAN BAST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT, AprU 10 (CP).-The Royal\nCanadian Navy, its gathering\nStrength yet unchallenged in Do-\nminion waters, today Is better prepared than ever to Jace any issue\nin Ita tjsghl on two fronts, at home\nand in the theatre ot war.\nWhat the seagoing defenders\ncould dp in event ot an enemy attack would depend tor thfe most\npart on the power behind that attack. It is no secret that Canada's\nmost potent battlecraft is a destroyer but it is also no aecret that\nthe doesn't stand alone in defence of\nher shores. Standing on guard with\nCanadian ships are hard-hitting\nfighting ships of several nations.\nMore than any other, this Atlantic\nport knows thia expanding navy\nand its work.\nIt knows the sight of a Canadian warship mothering an En-\nland-bound convoy, it has seen the\nminesweepers come and go in\ntheir tedious tasks, the corvettes\npushing out beyond the horizon to\nstand their guard..\nIt knows that there hai beer,\nmore drudgery than daring in their\nlabors, that men of the minesweeper! come in day. after day with\nnothing to report atter their s_ro_-\nlng effort, that the corvettes go out\nInto the Atlantic for undisclosed distances - and come back each time\nwith the same story.\nIt i\u00ab far different off these rugged shores than it is off Britain.\nOver there there is action. Over\n. here there is none.\nBut this port knows better than\nany other that when and if action\ncomes it won't find the Navy napping.\nRUHR AND BREST\nBOMBED BY R.A.F.\nLONDON, April 11 . (Friday) \u25a0\n(AP). \u2014 The Ministry of Informs-\ntion announced today that British\nbombers had attacked Industrial\ntargets In the Ruhr and the German naval bue at Brest during\nthe night\nCranbrook Lady Is\nMissionary Officer\nVICTORIA, April 10 (CP).-Mri.\nW. H. Maclnnes, Vancouver, .was\nreelected President of the British\nColumbia Provincial Women's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian\nChurch in Canada at the.closing\nsession of the annual meeting today.\nElected Third Vice-President was\nMn. W. E. Worden, Cranbrook.   .\nLate Flashes\nHOME, April 11 (Frlday)-\n(AP).\u2014The official Italian news\nagency in a Washington dispatch\ncommenting on the United Statr.\nIntentlon to establish air bases In\nQreeland said today that \"by the\nsame reasoning Japan should ac\nquire Hawaii to protect Asia and\nEurope, and Alaska to protect the\nEastern hemisphere.\"\nMOSCOW, April 10 (AP).-Soviet\nRussia tonight signed an agreement\nwith German-occupied Norway for\nan exchange of goods.\nTOKYO, April 11 (Friday)-\n(AP).\u2014Japan is taking a \"very\nwatchful\" attitude toward discus-\n' sions among Sir Robert Brooke-\nPopham, British commander-in-\nchief in the Far East, and Onited\nStates and Dutch officials in Manila, the Cabinet Board of Information said today.\nLONDON, April 10 (CP).-For-\nsign Secretary Anthony Eden and\nGeneral Sir John G. Dill, Chief of\nthe British Imperial General Staff,\nhave returned to England.\nBERNE, April 10 (API\u2014German motor troops were reported\nto have rolled tonight Into Zagreb, capital of old Croatia, and\nGerman News Agency dispatches\nclaimed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia had been ripped asunder hy\nthe formation of a separate Croat\nState.\nThe Croats, long a large and\nrestless element of the Kingdom\nof the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes,\nwere reported to have established\ntheir own nation under Dr. Anle\nPavelic and an Extremist named\nKvaternik, both on\u00bb sentenced to\ndeath for complicity in the assassination of King Alexander' in 1934\nDr. Vladimir Macek, Croat peasant leader who only, last week accepted Vip\u00bb-Premiership of the\nYugoslav Government, waa portrayed as one of the prime movers\nin the new Zagreb Government. If\ntrue, thil would be a sensational\naboutface, for Macek long has been\nknown as an enemy of Pavelic and\nan outspoken critic of the many\nassassinations and terroristic plots\nlaid to Pavelic in his campaign\nagainit Yugoslav unity.\nIt was Macek. however, to whom\nthe German News and Propaganda\nAgency attributed announcement of\nthe new Croat state in a radio address from Zagrbe.\nThe German High Command\nclaimed merely that Zagreb wai\noccupied and that the Croat population greeted ths Nazi troops\n\"joyously.\"\n(Authoritative  circlet   In   Lon\ndon\nold Germin game ot icttin\na supposedly lr.___ ..__..'\nterritories   their  armlet\nCanadian at,Sea\nProtected by hli slicker and warm woollen\ngloves against icy sprays and cutting winds of the\nAtlantic, thli officer of tbe Royal Canadian Navy\nls using a \"voice gear\" to direct fire of gum aboard\na Canadian warship.\nBritish Night Fighters Shoot\nDown Nine More Nazi Planes\nTwo Elevators\nBurn In Alberta\nSTAVELY, Alta., April 10 (CP)-\nThe most disastrous tire since\nflames wiped out half Stavcly in\n1024 last night destroyed two grain\nelevators and four grain annexes, as\nwell as three other outbuildings,\nand for a time threatened the main\nbusiness section of the town.\nThe elevators destroyed were the\nUnited Grain Growers' and the\nSearle Grain Elevator, together with\nthe U.G>G. Company annexea ahd\ntwo gearle Grain Company annexes.\nMore   than .250,000   bushels   of\nwheat were, stored in the buildings\n, destroyed: Value o,f the elevators\ncalled the news \"the ume and innexei was said to be $200,000.\n\"l'l    Fire brigadei from Lethbridge to\nCalgary were notified of the fire,\nand the tire engine from Claresholm\nand the chemical engine from Nan\n\".dependent itate Ih\nare  at\ntempting to subjugate.\")\nAccording to the German story.\nMacek announced Pavelic would\nhead the Government, that he himself would participate, and that \"at\nthis very moment a Croat politician\nnamed Kvaternik had been appointed Vice-Premier and was \"taking\nthe administration in hand.\"\n(D.N.B.. German News and Propaganda Agency, carried in Berlin\na slightly different account from\nBratislava, Slovakia, to the effect\nthat the Zagreb radio announced\n\"Gen. Sladko Kvaternik,\" as Chief\nof State, had proclaimed Croatia an\nindependent nation.)\nThis apparently is the same mysterious individual, known variously\nas Dr. KvaWrnik and Egon Kramer,\nwho with Pavelic was sentenced to\ndeath in absentia by French courts\nfor the Marseille killing of King\nAlexander. Yugoslavia's present\nKing Peter II is Alexander's oldest\nson.\nBoth Pavelic and Kvaternik\nfound sanctuary in Italy, which\nrefused to extradite them.\nOnly three days ago Pavelic,\nstill in Italy, telegraphed Mussolini a pledge of support.\nMacek, chief of 3,500,000 Croats,\nhas been with the fugitive Yugoslav\nGovernment of Kin? Peter and\nPremier Gen. Dusan Simovic at an\nundisclosed place in Central Yugoslavia, but reports here said he returned to Zagreb two days ago\n\"to spend these decisive hours with\nmy  people.\"\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP). -\nThe Berlin radio tonight claimed\nthe Zagreb, Yugoslavia, radio announced Croat sailors and crews\naboard a number of large Yugoslav\nvessels along the Dalmatian coast\nhad mutinied, overpowered their\nSerb superiors and placed the vessels at the disposal of the new\nCroat regime in Zagreb. The Berlin\nbroadcast was heard by NBC.\nForeign Banks to Be\nBanned From Brazil\nRIO DE JANEIRO. April 10 (A?)\n\u2014A ban on operations of all foreign\nbanks of deposit in Brazil, effective\nJune 30. 1940 was ordered by President Getulio Vargas in a decree published today. Among banks affected\nby the ruling Is the Royal Bank of\nCanada. There are 10 foreign banks\nso classifiable operating here. Including the National City Bank of\nNew York and the South America\nBank. With the Royal Bank of Canada the three's total deposits amo\nlo nearly $57,000,000.\nmini\nof deposit permitted to function ln\nBrazil after the effective date would\nbe thise whose capital \"belongs entirely to Individuals of Brazilian nationality.\"\nton responded. The local volunteer\nfire brigade was assisted by hundreds of townspeople, saving the\nAlberta Wheat Poole elevator and\nother business buildings nearby.\nPower Project\nScheme Pushed\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)-Whlle\nthe Government is almost exclusively occupied with war and its\nincreasing problems, particularly\nthe provision of cargo ships, the\nGreat Lakes-St. Lawrence Basin\nWaterway and Power Project also\ndemands attention.\nDetails associated with the gigantic construction prograrh envisioned\nin the agreement signed in Ottawa\nlast March 19 may be one subject\nof discussion between Prime Minister Mackenzie King and President Roosevelt when they meet in\nthe next week or two.\nIt was learned today at the Prime\nMinister's office that no definite\ndate has been fixed for Mr. King's\nvisit to President Roosevelt but\nhe will go probably early next\nweek.\nYesterday, because of the gravity\nof news from the Balkans, Mr.\nKing made a last-minute postponement of plans to learve on the afternoon train for the South.\nMeanwhile both Governmenti are\npreparing what may prove to be\none of the most voluminous and\ncomplicated briefs in Canada-\nUnited States relations to assist\nproponents of the Waterway and\nPower Project to present it in\nCongress and Parliament.\nTo Arbitrate Street\nRailway Grief, Coast\nVANCOUVER. April 10 (CP). -\nW. R Trotter, former Director of\nthe Bureau of Statistics of the International Typographical Union and\npresent member of Local 228 I. T. U .\nVancouver, has been named representative of the Street Railway-\nmen's Association *^on, a board to\narbitrate a disputXbetween the\nmen and the British Columbia Electro Railway ConroanyA.,   .\nW. R. Dowrey, formerWanaouver\nbusiness man, is the corrilan? representative, and Chairmad\"' ot the\nBoard it to be named by the Government Sittings of the' Board ire\n\u2022expected to open a^out the end of\nthe month,\nUnder the decree the only bank*) \u25a0.. The  men  ar;- demanding a flat\nge Increase'of six cents \"an hour\nJ .that New Westminster. Point\nGfly, garage  employees and  Victoria bus operators be covered in\nthe agreement.\nPromised Nazi Raids\nof Revenge Fail\ntb Come\nFlying School\nBritish and Greeks Prepa\nto Give Grim Fight on Soli\nBarrier in New Battle Phase\n\"SHAVING STICK\"\nBOMBS NEW\nWRINKLE\nATHENS, April 10 (AP). -\nBritish soldiers in Greece have\nbeen warned against \"shaving\nstick\" bombs, the Athens radio\nsaid tonight.\n\"Small bombi resembling\n\u2022having sticks have been found\nlying about,\" a special army order said. \"These exploded on being lifted.\"\nTurkey Planning\nWithdrawal of\nPeople In Capital\nReflects   Fears   War\nMay Roll to\nTurkey\nISTANBUL, April 10 (AP)-The\nTurkish Government announced\ntoday that It \"found it advisable\"\nto withdraw a considerable por\ntion of Istanbul's population.\nThe Government offered to\ntransport the people free into\nthe interior.\nThe action was regarded as an indication of how leriously Turkey\nconsiders the threat of war to Istanbul, on the European side ot the Bos.\nparous, less than 100 milei from the\nrn\"nY\"*\"\u00bbwI\u00bbH'^Vuin\u00abTvlSniw\u00bbl'rontler \u2022*' Bu1*-\"*''1 \u00bbnd about 150\nEr\u00bb!TW,LS*iil\u00ab torn the lutem lection ol\nSchool No. IS r one of the largest r hn)h \u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e,,,, Kv r,,-manv\nBOUNDARY BAY^B.C, April 10\nLONDON, April 11 (Frlday)-\n(AP). \u2014 Royal Air fore* night\nfighters were reported today to\nhive shot down nine of lhe German bombers which blasted London and other parts of Britain last, ____.__i_ _ _ \u00ab_ _, _\nniKht                                            centres established in Canada under\nThe Nazi Press published \u00a3\u2022,\u201e&'_&\u201e C\u00b0T?*!S\u00a3iiuv ^'r\nthreat, yesterday the German air' \u2122\u2122aU*\u00ab'- tg^S^'tS**\nforce would \"avenge a hundred-1g\u00ab>\u00a3gg ,\\t?K.t. ' '\nThere was no ceremony, no parade or review to mark the opening. Only the arrival of an undis-\navenge a hundred\nfold\" the heavy raid by the British on Berlin, but early today\nthere  had   been  no  reports  of\n\"Sonta.^nd-.^'alarm for l^\"1 \"\"\">\u00bb\u00ab o( ^Iti**, tram all\n_,.\u00bb\u00a3\"flwVnK, tLXL \u00abE? .n \\**tt* \"\u25a0 Canada signalled the start\n?w_o, Zo* \u2122_.rfiwn \u00b0f operations at thi new school,\nclear sounded near dawn. ^ schoo, is c-mp0sed o( ,ome\nAre wardens ln one Midland town 10 buildings, with the hangar alone\ntaking up 9-10 of an acre. There are\nfour barrack blocks, two mess halls,\nan office, a big workshop and a 25-\nwatched a night battle between\nfighter and a riader, their tracer\nbullets   criss-crossing   the  moonlit\nsky,\nAn Intense attack developed on a\nyard machine-gun range.\nAssistant. Manager w. V,\nWalm-\nWeat  Midlands  town.  The  police \u00ab'\u00bb wld.,that for a time  the new\n.  r ... n__(r_   will   K_   _   eivlna   mi.l.e.i.1   \u201e,,th-\nstatlon, police court and post office\nwere damaged and people were believed trapped by hiti on two public\nshelters.\nEleven German planu were\nbrought down during Wedneiday\nnight's heavy assaults on a North-\neastern town and the Wait Midlands. Ten of Wedneidiy nlght'i\nscore were said to have been\nmade by night fighters,\nThree more were bagged Thursday night, two in Southern England\nand one in the West Midlands.\nThe Air Ministry announced two\nGerman aircraft were downed in\nlhe daylight hours Thursday, one\na fighter in Kent, the other a bomber shot down into the sea off Northumberland *by British fighters just\nbefore dusk. One British fighter\nwas reported missing on patrol.\nThirty-four persons were reported killed and 90 Injured In\nthe raid on the Northeast town,\nwhile Birmingham, much attacked Midlands town was said to\nhave suffered considerable damage.\nA' number of housei were damaged and five people were taken\nto a hospital when a London district was bombed Thursday before the alert was sounded.\nBritain renewed her daylight attacks on the German-occupied\nChannel coast Thursday as a swarm\nof bombers was seen to Ily over\nDover ln the direction of occupied\nFrance.\nNo details were available concerning the foray over the Channel\ncoast but observers said they saw\nevidence of large fires across ihe\nChannel after many bomberi had\nbeen seen to return.\nAuthors to Meet at\nVancouver in August\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP)-\nWell-known writers, editors- and,\nada are expected to attend lite\n20th anniversary convention of\nthe Canadian Authors' Association\nto be held in Vancouver ghd Victoria, Aug. 21 to Aug. 26.\n 1 \u2014,\nGold Bar Claimed\nSEATTLE April 10 (CP_.-Warren Brown, Jr., Attorney representing the Gold Mines of Panua,\nLtd.. New Guinea, the Arahura Gold\nDredging, Ltd., New Zealand, and\nGold Mines of New Zealand, Ltd.,\ntoday filed claims ln U. S. Diitrict\nCourt to $58,000 worth of gold ban\nseized by U. S. Cuitoms authoritiei\nfrom Leo E. Morland, New Zealand\nmining engineer, juit Inside tbe\nInternational Border.\ncentre will be a flying ichool with\nout a field. He explained- that the\ncentre's field is not yet completed\nand for a time only ground lectures\nwould be given. Meanwhile flying\nInstruction is being carried out at\nother training centres in the Province.\nMore than 100 Instructor! will\nteach the trainees in the various\nphases of modern air warfare. When\na trainee completes his course at\nthe new school, he will go to another centre for advanced training.\nGreece, both occupied by Germany.\nThe city is feared particularly\nvulnerable to air attack, Its norma,\npopulation is about 750,000.\nThe Government's announcement\nsaid:\n\"It is found advisable that per\nsons of the following categories living in Istanbul should be evacuated;\nOrphans, aged persons receiving\ncivil or military pensions and who\nare not engaged in defence industry\npersons without occupatidn.\n\"These persons, with their families, will be sent by Government\ntrains and boats to any part ot the\nnation.with the followingexceptions:\nThrace, Izmar, Ankara, Erzeroum\n\"One hundred pounds of baggage\nper person may be carried\n\"Those people living In Istanbul\nwho wish to join relatives in Ana\ntolia, with the exceptions of Umir,\nAnkara and ErzCroum, will be allowed to do so on Government trains\nand boats\nApril 15.\"\nby   application\" up   to\nOrdered to Bomb\nBelgrade Palace\nBefore. War Opened\nLONDON, April 11 . (Triday) '-\n(AP). \u2014 A Reuters News Agency\ndispatch dated \"Somewhere in\nYugoslavia\", said today that German airmen captured by the Yugoslavs stated they already were in\nthe air with orders to bomb the\nBelgrade Palace when Germany\ndeclared war on Yugoslavia.\nThey heard Hitler's war proclamation by radio, they said.\nIt was added that these fliers\ncame from bases in Vienna, having reached there from France two\ndays previously.\nAsselstine to Fly\nto Oil Drilling Area\nVICTORIA, April 10 (CP..-H011\nW. J. Asselstine, MinUter of Mines\nwill fly North to Commotion Creeit\nin the Peace River next Wednesday\nto make an inspection at the seem\nof the Government's oil drilling\nproject.\nDrilling operations at Commotion\nGreek have been suspended for the\nlast four months while the contractors were \"fishing\" for a bit and\nabout 800 feet of rods which be-\n|-ame stuck at the bottom of the\nWen-Known   writers, euu-i_  auuj*--\"\"-  \"***, *\"\u25a0 ,\"\"*   *\u2122\u00bb-\u00ab\"\u00bb   \"*   \u00ab\u00bb-\npublishers from all parts of CijiJ] 5000-foot hole. Difficulties haye been\nencountered In recovering the bit.\nGovernor-General to\nBe at Vancouver Mon*\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nVancouver will put Its best foot forward when it tenders an official\nwelcome to the Earl of Athlone,\nCanada'i Governor-General, and\nher Royal Highness, the Prlnceu\nAlice, on Eaiter Monday.\nAt a colorful ceremony at the\nCity Hall, the vice-regal oarty will\nbe met by Mayor J. W. Cornett, In\nhli robei ind golden chain of office, and Mn. Cornett. accompanied\nby Sergetnt-at-Armi Alex McKay,\ncarrying the mace.\nEaster Greetings\nSent lo Children\nNEW YORK, April 0 (CP). -\nMrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Viscount Halifax, British Ambassador\nto the United States, sent Easter\ngreetings to the children of Great\nBritain in a short-wave broadcast\ntoday\nLord Halifax said \"the long sad\nWinter is over and the help against\nHitler that is being sent to us from\nAmerica is like the warm sun that\nturns Winter into Spring.\"    \u2022\nHe concluded with \"Happy Easter\nto you all. and keep your chins\nup.\" His address was read by Mrs.\nClark Williams of New York, President of Friends of Children, Incorporated, an organization operating for the benefit of children\nthroughout the world.\n\"Thil is a hard time to live\nthrough,\" Mrs. Roosevelt told the\nchildren overseas. \"It is hard for\ngrownups and hard for little children. But aome day the dream of\none of the great English poets, Alfred Lord Tennyson, may come true\nand we will find again peace and\norder In the world under some kind\nof a Parliament of man.\"\nGreeks Holding Out on Bulgarian Frontier irii\n\"Unique Example of Heroism;\"\nNext Nazi Move Is Waited\nBy EDWARD KENNEDY\u2014Associated Press Staff Writer\nATHENS, April 11 (Friday) (AP).\u2014Creek, soldier*\nand their British allies dug in grimly on a solid mountain.barriwj\nin Northern Greece today in preparation for what may be a\ntitanic battle to hold the Creek Peninsula against Germartj\ntroops who reported cleaning up Western Thrace and tha\nSalonika region.      t *\nCreek officials declared the overwhelming superiority\nof the Cefman men and weapons outweighed the Creeks in till\nborder regions but that they resisted to the last bullet.\nThe Creeks reported fighting between the Nazis anti\nisolated Creek forces was confined to the Bulgarian border\nand a spattering of German air raids on the Athens port wi\nPiraeus and Kozane. 4\nOfficial sources here said the\nwar in Greece definitely had\nBritish Occupation\nStopped Massacre in\nEthiopian Capital\nLONDON, April 10 (CP).\u2014Oc-\ncupat'in of Addis Ababa by Imperial troopi last Sunday \"undoubtedly prevented a massacre in the\ncapital,\" a British correspondent\nwith the troops said tonight in a\nreport broadcast by the British\nBroadcasting Corporation.\nThe correspondent said that a few\ndays before the occupation, Abyssinian patriots had blown up a railway bridge near the city and sent a\nlocomotive crashing over an embankment.\n\"After that Incident a fierce fight\nwent on tor 1] hours,\" he added.\nDescribing the entry of Imperial\nforces into the city, the correspondent said: \"The whole city cheered\nwhen the Abyssinian flag, emblazoned with \u2022 the Lion of Judah, was\nhoisted to the top of the mast on the\nold Parliament House.\"\nentered a new phase\nIn the first stage, they said, the\ngeographical features of the border\nregions favored the German mechanized invaders.   -\nNow they added, the defenders\nhave a mountain barrier on which\nto base themselves\u2014and it ls there\nthat the forces are making ready for\nthe battle for the Greek Peninsula.\nThe Greeks itill holding out on\nthe Bulgarian frontier are \"giving\na unique example of heroism and\nabnegation,\" said the Athena\nRadio, but elsewhere contact with\nthe Germans\u2014which was broken\noff before the capture of Salonika\non Wednesday\u2014has not been reestablished.\n(A National Broadcasting Company representative in London quoted the -Greek- Radip ir aayioi .the\ntrapped Greek forcei in the East-had\ncut their way through the German\nlines to freedom and taken up new\npositions West of Salonika);\nA Greek Government spokesman\nlaid the forces that sacrificed themselves in Macedonia ind Thrace\nwere \"very few\" in numbers and\nwere holding up assaults of vastly\nsuperior and better-equipped Germans. He added that the \"bulk of\nour forces are elsewhere, fighting\nthe Italian aggressor.\"\nGerman planes dropped magnetic mines In Piraeus harbor\nagain Thursday, tha Greek Home\nSecurity Ministry innounced, and\nleveral of them exploded on land,\ncausing casualties and damage.\nOne fell near an Insane asylum,\ncausing aome casualties there.\nParti of destroyed German aircraft were found in one district of\nthe town.\nPlanes which bombed Kozane, 40\nmiles South of the Yugoslav border\nand 70 miles Southeast of Salonika,\ncaused only five deaths, the Greetts\n.said.\nOn the Albanian front with the\nItalians, the Greek Command said\nthere was patrol and artillery activity. \"Farther East there is nothing\nof importance to report,\" the communique said.\nThe Greeks said they were determined to smash Hitler's invaders\nwith British help \"at the right time\nand in the right place.\"\nAll British residents of Salonika\nwera reported safely removed before the city's capitulation.   \u25a0\nGreek military men indicated\nthat the Germans would be challenged in the lofty Northern\nmountains where British and\nGreek forces have established\ntheir main lines following the\nNazi drive to the Aegean port of\nSalonika, cutting the country in\ntwo.\n'The battle for Greek independence, fipt won on Mount Pindus,\" they asserted, \"will be repeated again on Greek mountains\nwhere In past centuries invaders\nhave been stopped.\"\nIt was in these same mountains\nthat stalwart Greek warriors iast\nNovember hurled Mussolini's Fascist invaders back into Albania.\nRoyal Air Force bombers ond\nfighters, despite bad weather, kept\nup waves of assaults on the Nazis in\nthe Kilkis and Polhcastron are*.\nNorth of Salonika and inflicted\nheavy casualties on Nazi troop-lad\nden transports.\nAmong the oil facilities destroyed by the Greeks quitting Salonlki\nwere some $1,500,000 worth of Installations belonging to the Steaua-\nRomana Company, in wnich Standard Oil of New Jersey had an interest.\nAthens had an air raid alarm in\nmid-morning following two night\nalerts, but no bomb fell in the city\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\nAnoclated Press Staff Writer\nThe line on which the British-\nGreek Allies still hope to halt tho\nGerman Balkan blitzkrieg is be\ncoming more apparent. It i.1\nroughly defined in Press dispatches as forming an enormous\nInverted \"V\" from the Western\nshores of the Gulf of Salonika on\nthe Aegean coast of Greece to\nChlmara in Albania, on the Adri\natlc.\nThat Is too vast a defence line to\nman blow will fall. It ls virtually\ncertain, however, that German hopea\nof a quick and decisive victory in\nthe Balkans call for an attack on\nthe British-held segment of the line,\nwherever it actually rum. Defeit (.\nth British force is essential to tJhtB\nGermans to confirm victories _a\nready won.against Greeks or Yugo_|\nslavians.\nThe British troops probably hotfl\nthe right flank ot whatever line la|\nbeing set up. Thus they would retain the closest possible touch'witftl\nthe sea and the navy with theu_|\nbases of debarkation and supply in|\nGreece, farther South.\nThree Generals\nLeslie British\nin North Africa\nLONDON, April 10 (CP).-Tha\nWar Office acknowledged today a\nsevere blow at is strategy ip\nNorth Africa in the probable lost\nof three key generals and 2000\ntroops believed captured by German-Italian columns moving\nacross the sands of Eastern Libya*\n\"We are without news of three\nsenior officers. Lt.Gen. P. Neame,\nV.C, Lt.-Gen. Sir Nugent O'Connor,\nand Maj.-Gen. M. D. Gambler-\nParry,\" said a War Office communique (the Germans claimed six generals and two colonels were among\nthe 2000 prisoners at El Mechlll, 50\nmiles Southwest of Derna).\nGen. O'Connor was the right hand\nman of Gen. Sir Archibald Wavgjg\ncommander in chief of the Middle\nEast, and was regarded as one ol\nthe best tacticians in the British\narmy.\nHe and Lt.-Gen. Sir Maitland\nWilson were praised by Prime Minister Churchill last February foi\ncarrying out Gen. Wavell'a ofttn\nsive which shoved the Italians fronj\nEgypt and back beyond Bengali,\nEach was made a Knight Commander of the Bath.\nGen. Gambler-Parry ii ona ef\nthe foremost tank and tank-gunnery specialists of the army. He\nwas a member of a British military mission which visited Greece\nwhen she was drawn Into the war\nwith  Italy last Fall.\nGen. Neame formerly wai commanding officer in Palestine and\nbefore the fall of France was Vi|-\ncount Gort's deputy chief of staff\nin Flanders.\nHOTEL MAN DIES\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., April U\n(CP)\u2014Tom Berry, 59, pwner of thi\nRoyal Hotel here who was known\nup and down the Pacific Coast, died\ntoday.\nMin. Mak. |\nNELSON    42 M .\nTRAIL      40 62 I\nVictoria      45 59 *\nNanaimo      44 63 \"\nVancouver    43 56 .\nKamloops          45 80\nPrince George     37 .   53\nEstevan   Point      36 55\nPrince Rupert     37 55\nLangara    37 55\nAtlin    31 63\nDawson. Y. T    26 57 \u201ej\nSeattle             45 57\nPortland              43 61\nSan   Francisco       43 51-\nSpokane     44 58\nPenticton       48 62\nVernon         41 \u2014\nKelowna    39 \u2014\nGrand  Forks       44 \u2014 A\nKaslo               37 -n{\nCranbrook    29 64\nCalgary             25 57\nEdmonton            28 59 :\nSwift  Current      29 68\nPrince Albert     35 48\nWinnipeg                  41 56\nForecast: Kootenay: Light North,\nwest to West winds, mostly cloudgj\nand mild with a little rain.\nLevel of the West Arm at NellOB\nIndicate with any certainty where1 Thursday was .16 footibove the loj|\nthe next and perhaps cruoial Ger-  water mark.\n1\nrtiliihii -_rt_tfc)i_iiiilliil li'tUmm 11 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0* \u25a0^^,_^.-i.^._-_--u--^ji_fl_u\n!_-__. _.____-ijii\n Ml TWO-\nI. \u25a0\u25a0\n:.\nSnum (EommmtUm\nft*ntfr*\nTrinity, Friday 11 a.m.\n1st Presbyterian Church, 8 p.m.\nTrinity \u2014 1st Presbyterian \u2014 St. Paul's \u2014 Baptist\nSalvatlbn Army\n&t. Jiitpt'a\nCutljpratt QHjurrl]\nStanley and Silica Sts.\nE. Hopka, Pastor.\nCOOD FRIDAY\n,11:00 i.m\u2014\"The Three Crucified\nOn Calvary\". Holy Communion,\nIritish and Aussies\nAided in Evacuation\nand in Rescue Work\n\u25a0 ATHENS. April 10 (AP). - Bril-\nih ind Australian sappers and\nransport drivers assisted in the\nVlcuation of Salonika although the\nIrltiih Expeditionary Force has not\nEl gone into action against the\nlermans, lt was disclosed tonight.\n\u2022Transport drivers also participate\nd in rucue work for the Greek\nlilitary. In the retreat from the\nalonika area one heavy British\ntuck was said to have deliberately\nimmed, and wrecked a German\n:ght tank.\n\u25a0 The sappers blew up strategic\nridges, sabotaged oil dumps and\nHt communications.\nFuneral for Wife of\nR. Winter, Trail,\nIs Held at Coast\nBody of Mrs. Maisle Jessica Winter, wile of Ralph Winter of Trail,\nwas laid at rest in Mountain View\nCemetery, Vancouver, Wednesday\nmorning. Funeral service were conducted by Rev. IJeut.-Col. C. C,\nOwens, D.D.\nMrs. Winter died Sunday at Vancouver in her 59th year. She also\nleaves three sons, Guy at Powell\nRiver, Norman with the R.C.A.F. at\nSaskatoon, and Roger at Deroche,\nB.C.: and\u201ea brother and two sisters\nin England.\nVerkerk Enlists; to\nLeave This Morning\nG. J. Verkerk of Nelson hu enlisted and is scheduled to leave this\nmorning for the District Depot at\nVictoria.\nCHILLIWACK, B. C, April 10\n(CP)\u2014A hospital insurance plan\nsubmitted by the Chilliwack branch\nof the Canadian Legion to the Chilliwack Hospital Board was approved this week by the board of directors.\nStrike lsnrl Over Yef Says Union;\nOrders Ford Strikers Back lo Lines\nBy The Anoclated Preu\n';. A Union official ordered Ford\nstrikers \"back on the picket lines\"\nlut night saying \"the strike' isn't\n.over yet\" although a settlement\nfplan advanced by Gov. Murray D.\nvan Wagoner appeared promising.\nUnion leaders accepted the set-\nlement plan and the Ford manage-\nDent declared the proposals \"fund-\nunentally acceptable with modlfica-\n;ion\" A Union miss meeting later\ntccepted the original plan and referred the Company .modification\n*opos_ls back to iti negotiating\nlommittee.\n; In brief, Van Wagoner's proposal\nMl (1) that all employees be re-\nurned to their jobs except three\nnen whose cases would be arbitrated; (2) that grievance procedure\nBtablished before the strike be relumed, and (3) that both parties\ntgree to expedite the holding of a\nLabor Board election.\ni . Harry Bennett, Ford personnel\ndirector,  said  the  Company  accepted the third point, but that\nj lt wu  Impossible to  return  all\nI men to their jobs at once, and\n. that  the  Company  would   insist\nthat certain  complaints  be held\nin abeyance until after a Labor\nBoard election.\nEven before the Ford develop\nments, the general labor situation\nin tlie United States has been pronounced \"greatly Improved\" by\nRobert Patterson, Undersecretary of\nWar who said that, exclusive of the\nFord strike 15 strikes were in pro\ngress, involving 0000 men. This compared, he added, with a peak of 40,\n000 affected by strikes.\nPatterson's tabulation left out of\naccount the work stoppage in bi'\ntumlnous coal mining since April 1\nwhen the contract of the United\nMine Workers (C.I.p.) with Appalachian district operators expired\nThe protracted negotiations in New\nYork for a new contract continued\nyesterday.\nAnother Washington development\nwas a conference of President\nRoosevelt with officials of the Unit,\ned States Steel Corporation, now\nengaged in contract negotiations\nwith the C.I.O.'s Steel Workers Or\nganizing Committee which ll ask\ning a wage increase of 10 cents an\nhour. Neither the Steel executives\nnor the White House gave any hint\nas to what was said at the confer'\nence.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHutne Hotel Nelson, B.C..\nGEORGE BENWELL. Proprietor.\n5AMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME\u2014W.   M.   Lcuthold,    Deer i Victoria; Mrs. M. Burkinshaw, Erie,\n'irk;   W.   G,   Moll,   Penticton;   C. A. Anderson, Medicine Hat\nSiffe,  Vancouver;  T.  S.  Harrison, I\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE        MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, Props.        PHONE\n<**IA     I\" our \"cw wlnS you may enjoy the finest     \u2022**>\u00bb\nmmi^   'rooms  in   the   Interior-Bath   or   Shower     \u00bb* i\nSPECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH\nWar Savings at\n$154,0.6 Mark\nfor Trail Area\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10\u2014War Sav-\nings Certificate purchases to date ln\nthe Trail, Fruitvale and Castlegar\narea have reached the $154,048 mark,\nreporti A. D, Tun-bull, Trail War\nSaving! Chairman.\nPurchases are classified u follows: TraU Post Oflice, 117,14a; Cas-\ntlegar Post Office, $1748.25; Fruitvale Post Office, $1375.75; banks,\n$65,312; payroll deductions, $68,462.\nPayroll deductions Include deductions for the Coniolidated Mining &\nSmelting Company employees ol\nboth Trail and Rossland, u well u\nthe main business concerns of Trail\nOwing to the fact that the Rossland and Trail Consolidated employees' subscriptions are Intermingled, it wu not possible to obtain\non accurate figure for Trail alone.\nDeductions tor Trail's civic employees have been included In the\nMarch payroll deduction report, due\nto the changed policy of sending\ncontributions to the Government direct. Previously, purchases of stampi\nand certificates from theie employees had been made through the Post\nOffice, and had been included in the\nPost Office total.\nSeparate reports for February and\nMarch show a $2873.25 decreue ln\nthe two months' figures, February's\ntotal being $25,310.25 and March's\n$22,637. This, according to Mr. Turn-\nbull, is probably due to the fact\nthat some contributions made at the\noutset were lump contributions cov\nering a stated period of time, rather\nthan monthly contributions. Mr.\nTurnbull expects that April's figures will further evidence this fact.\nDetailed reporti for February and\nMarch follow:\nFebruary \u2014 Post Offices: Trail,\n$2810; Castlegar, $168.25; Fruitvale\n$182. Banks: $12,360. Payroll deductions, $10,272.\nMarch \u2014 Post GfSces: Trail,\n$1934; Castlegar, $134.75; Fruitvale,\n$88.25. Banks, $7988. Payroll deductions, (12,492.\nN|LSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON\nNAZIS ASSURE TURKEY\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n.\"mm *7Sfre<5uveR nmr\u2014\nDuf Serin Hotel\nJB0 Seymour St.   -      Vineouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated through\nout.  Phones ind  -levator\nA. PATTERSON, late ot\nColeman. Alta., Proprietor.\ni\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM   H   MclVOR  Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nVancouver $118,000\nShort of Quota; It's\nDisgraceful\u2014McRae\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nThe fact Vancouver is $118,000 short\nof its $300,000 in the War Services\ncampaign is \"nothing short of disgraceful,\" Senator A. D. McRae,\nChairman of the National War Services Fund campaign, declared in a\nluncheon address here today.\n\"I am amazed,\" he said, \"that the\nbusiness interests of the City are\nso apathetic. What Is the matter?\nVancouver has never failed before.\nHaven't you got the ginger? Every\nother Province is reaching Its\nquota.\"\nEarlier, at a meeting with the\nProvincial Committee, Senator Mc\nRae was told that outside Greater\nVancouver, the rest of the Province\nhad already reported $238,000 of its\n$275,000 quota in sight. Of 40 Provincial points reporting, 28 are al\nready over quota and Vancouver\nIsland reports its quota of $110,000\nln sight,\nROOSEVELT'S NIECE\nTO MARRY TOMORROW\nDEDHAM, Mass.. April 10 (AP) \u2022\nThe President's family will hail\nbridegroom Saturday in the wedding\nhere of Eleanor Roosevelt, niece of\nMrs Franklin Roosevelt, and Ed\nward P. Elliott, son of Mrs. Arthur\nSpencer Elliott of Brierly, Yorkshire, England.\nTHEY WILL NOT ATTACK\nNEW YORK, AprU 10 <AP)*-The\nRome Radio broadcast today a report \"from well Informed sources\"\nthat Germany's ace diplomat, Franz\nvon Papen, Ambassador to Turkey,\nhad reiterated to Turkish Foreign\nMinister Sukru Saracoglu \"the assurance that Germany has no intention Ot attacking Turkey.\" Tho\nbroadcast was picked up by the Columbia Broadcasting System.\nFlag Presented\nto Trail School\ntation of a' Union Jack for the auditorium of the Trail Central School.\nmade by the James H. Schofield\nChagter, I.O.D.E., was the occasion\nof an Impressive .ceremony ln the\nSchool Auditorium Wednesday forenoon.\nPresentation wai made by Miss\nEmily Millar, Regent of the Chapter, and the flag was accepted by\nAndrew Matovlch, pupil of Division\nI, on behalf of the school. Other\nrepresentatives of the Chapter at\ntending \"were Mrs. Ian Humphries.\nSecretary, Miss Therza Rossman.\nEducational Secretary, and Miu\nElizabeth Kerr and Mill Jeanne\nButorac\nMrs. J. W. Dougan, Regent, and\nMrs. H. P. Klngwell, Secretary, of\nthe Arthur Chapman Chapter, I. O.\nD. E. were also present.\nI. H. R. Jeffrey, Principal of Central School, was Chairman.\nTrail Police Car\nto Have Aid Kit\nof a small .first aid kit for the City\nPolice car was authorized by the\nPolice Commission Wednesda;\nActing Chief of Police F. H. Steele\nstated that although memberi of the\nforce had already taken first aid, it\nwas his lnterrtion to have the force\ntake s refresher course.\nAnnual holidays for the force will\ncommence in July, and last until the\nmiddle of September.\nThe Acting Chief was given permission to employ a relief man two\nweeks before the start of the holt\nday sequence in order to have him\nsufficiently trained for relieving\npurposes.\nSTUDENTS CLOSE\nBOOKS FOR TEN\nDAYS' HOLIDAY\nNelson and District schools closed\nThursday afternoon for Easter holidays, and school doors will not be\nopen again to the students until\nMonday, March 21.\nThursday afternoon at Nelson ele\nmentary schools regular discipline\nwas slackened and pupils in the\nlower grades enjoyed Easter parties.\nMinesweeper Downs\nGerman Aircraft\nLONDON, April 10 (CP) - The\nAdmiralty issued this communique\nThursday:\n\"A Heinkel 111 was almost cer\ntainly destroyed by H. M. Minesweeper Princess Elizabeth (temporary Lieut, F. A. Smyth, R.N.R.)\nthe early hours of yesterday morning. The German aircraft was hotly\nengaged and when last seen wis on\nfire, losing height and out of control\n\"No casualty or damage was sustained by H. M. Minesweeper Princess Elizabeth.\"\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nTrail Ministers\nRap Sunday Sport;\nEye Feme Askance\nTRAIL, B. C, April t- A welcome was extended to Rev. Eric\nLarsen, new pastor of the First\nPresbyterian Church at the Trail\nMinisterial Association, meeting\nTuesday evening.\nIt was decided to continue the\nnoon-day prayer meetings being\nconducted at St. Andrews Anglican Church, -as it wai felt thit the\nneed for intercession was becoming\neven greater.\nThe Association unanimously\nwent on record as being strongly\nopposed to organized Sunday sport.\n\"Shoulder the proposed fencing ot\nButler Park bring about any Increase of such organized Sunday\nsport, such as Sunday, evening\ngames, we would register our opposition to the said proposal,\" the\nAssociation also stated.     '\n1M1-\nFRENCH ISLANDS VOTE\nON LOYALTY QUES]\nST.  BONIFACE,  Mai\n(OP). - Ed. Poulj\nCity of St.\nROSSLAND, B.C., April 10-Ar-\nrangements for a tea and bake sale\nto be held shortly were discussed by\nthe e Women's Auxiliary of St.\nGeorge's Church Tuesday afternoon\nat the home of Mrs. S. E. Thomas.\nFollowing the business period, tea\nwas served by the hostess. Those\npresent were Mrs. J. Butcher, Mrs.\nR. Berry, Mrs. T. Tongue, Mrs. B. G.\nLees and Mri. M. Storie.\nMri, Robert Anderson and small\nson, Robert Irvin, of Ladner are\nexpected to arrive st the end of\nthe week, to be the, guests of Mrs.\nAnderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nIrvin.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Supple will leave\nshortly after Easter for Vancouver,\nwhere they will reside. Previous to\nleaving for the Coast Mrs. Supple\nwill visit her mother at Needles.\nMiss Elsie McRae wil! spend the\nEaster holidays with her family in\nAgassi-.\nMiss Betty Gilmour plans to visit\nthe Coait during the Easter vacation.   \u25a0\nRoutine business was discussed by\nthe Women's Association of St. Andrew's United church Tuesday afternoon in the Annex. A letter was\nread from Rev. T, W. Reed, formw\nminister, congratulating the members on their circle work and informing them of the recovery of\nMrs. Reed'i mother, Mrs. Harrison,\nwho has been seriously 111. Those attending were Mrs. A. H. Freeman,\nMrs. J. Shearer, Mrs. A. Coombes,.\nMrs. C. Troset, Mrs. H. Bosworth,\nMrs. S. H. Hayden, Mrs. J. Porter,\nMrs C. Friberg, Mrs. H. Lowes, Mrs.\nW. Blackwell and Mrs. G. Craig.\nMrs. R. Ranklne left today for\nVancouver, where she will spend\nthe next two weeks visiting her\nfamily.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Thomas and son\nare visiting in Victoria,\nMiss P. Bryden will spend the\nweekend as the guest of friends in\nFernie.\nMrs. T. P. Rogers, accompanied\nby her daughter Ruby, left today for\nVancouver where she will visit for\nseveral weeks and attend the graduation ot her daughter, Mary, who il\nin training at the Vancouver General Hospital.\n-Mias Lillian Barton will spend the\nEaster vacation at her home in\nFernie.\nMrs. t. S. Topliff was hostess\nWednesday afternoon to the members of the Anglican Church lea\nGroup. The table was centred with\na crystal bowl of dainty yellow violets. Thoie present were Mrs. A. C\nRidgers, Mrs. F. Ransom, Mrs. S C.\nMontgomery. Mrs. E. Batt, Mrs.\nD. S. Catchpole, Mrs. J. Ayres. Mrs.\nL. M. DeLong and Mrs. R. Ayres.\nBasil Macalister expects to leave\nthis week for the Coast.\nMiss Eunice Goodenough will be\nthe cues} of her parents in Kaslo\ntor the Enster holidays.\nD. Rice has as hii guesti for the\n_. _i._:____,^.-_-\nEaster vacation his mother and sister from Duncan.\nJ. Langman is vacationing at\nWoodrow, Sask. He was accompanied on the trip by Miss Elsie\nHale and Rege Langman.\nR. Melville and G. Johnston of\nthe High School staff will spend the\nEaster holidays at the Coast.\nMiss G. Martin will be the guest\nof her sister in Spokane for the\nEaster vacation.\nSquares for the Red Cross quilt\nand stamps to make up a War Savings Certificate were turned In by\nmembers of the Martha Circle Wednesday afternoon at the home ot\nMrs. H. Bosworth. The report of tho\nrecent Women's Association meeting was given by the hostess. Members present were Mr_. G. Frederiksen, Mrs. S. A. Jensen, Mrs. G.\nUrquhart, Mrs. E. Morris, Mrs. A.\nKeating, Mrs. F. Mitchell, Miss G\nMartin and Mrs. k. Morrison.\nMrs. Bert Fulton, accompanied by\nher son, left today for Victoria,\nwhere she will visit her husband,\nwho is ititioned there with the navy.\nShe expects to spend 10 days at the\nCoast.\nMiss Betty Ball and Miss Betty\nJackson of the high school staff will\nspend the holidays at the Coast.\nBarry Cleeton and Eugene Topliff\nexpect to vacation at the Coast.\nMr. and Mrs. L. V. McLeod are\nvisiting In Lethbridge where they\nwill ipend the next two weeks as\nthe guests ot Mrs. McLeod's parents, Mr. and Mri. J. Gibson.\nFinal.plans for a bake sale were\nmade by the Women's Auxiliary of\nthe Canadaian Legion Wednesday\nevehing at the Armory. Those attending were Mrs. J. Bradley, Mrs.\nW. Buick. Mrs. R. Donaldson, Mrs.\nJ. Phillips, Mrs. R. Richardson, Mir.\nT. Wood, Mrs. H. Bathie. Mrs. H.\nConroy, Mrs. P. McLellan, Mrs. L.\nGooding, Mrs. E. Walker, Mrs. G.\nTownsend, Mrs. R. Symons, Mrs. W.\nMrs. E. Turner, Mrs. A. Powell. Mrs.\nGresley Jones, Mrs. W Butorac,\nJ. McCullough, Mrs. B. Ferguson\nand Mrs. W. Inglis.\nEdward Cullinane has gone to\nHamilton, where he has obtained a\nposition with the Canadian West-\nlnghouse Company.\nW. McKenzie, Principal of the\nHigh School, will attend the Teachers' convention to be held at Vancouver during the Easter vacation.\nMiss C. Tilson will be the guest\nof her family In Vancouver for the\nEaster holidays.\nMiss D. K. Johnston will ipend the\nholiday period,in Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams and\nfamily leave shortly for a 10 dayi\nvisit to the Coast.\nA discussion of the Rowell-Sirois\nreport led by R. W. Haggen was the\nmain feature of the business meeting of the CCF club held Wednesday evening in the upper parlor ot\nthe Irvin Hotel. A social evening\nwill be held at the end of the month\nin the I.O&-F. Hall\nInsurance Gains\nReported in B.C.\nVICTORIA, AprI 10 (CP)-Num-\nber of Insurance policies ind losses\nln British Columbia were generally\nup during the year 1940 as compared\nwith the previous year, it wa. shown\ntoday ln reports issued here by H,\nG. Garrett, Provincial Superintendent of Insurance.\n'Nine typei of Insurance showed\nmore premiums written in 1940 than\nin 1939 and 11 types showed bigger\nlosses collected from Insurance companies last year than during ths\nprevious 12 months. Five types of\ninsurance premiums dropped, while\nthree types. of insurance showed\ndrops In losses collected from the\nInsurance companies in 1940 as compared with 1939.\nFire insurance continued to lead\nthe field as the largest Insurance\nbusiness, with a total of $3,903,071.92\npaid outirn premiums In the Province ln 1940 as compared with $3,-\n933,091.73 ln premiums the previous\nyear.\nFire losses covered by Insurance\nIn the Province totalled $1,133,339.92\nlast year, compared with $1,134,-\n353 46 in 1939.\nAutomobile insurance during 1940\ntotalled $2,638,453.75 last year compared with $2,447,692.14 in 1939.\nAutomobile insurance losses paid\nout totalled $1,375,898.13 In 19M,\ncompared with $1,150,773.19 during\nthe previous year.\nCanada Advised of\nU. S. Negotiations on\nGreenland Action\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP) - The\nCanadian Government was kept\nconstantly informed of the progress\nof the United States negotiations\nwith Denmark which resulted in an\nagreement giving the American\nGovernment power to build air and\nnaval bases in Greenland, it was\nlearned tonight.\nQovwnment spokesmen were re\ntleent *h discuss the possible bane-\nfits to Canada accruing to the Dominion, but one spokesman confirmed Washington Reports that Canada\nwould have access to any bases the\nUnited states might build.\nThere was no comment from members of the Canadian section of the\nCanada-United States Joint Permanent Defence Board but it was generally believed the board had already\nconsidered the agreement ln Its re\nlatlon to defence of this continent\nfrom possible trans-Atlantic attack.\n*\nMarx Brothers to\nRetire From Screen\nHOLLYWOOD, April 10 (AP>-\nGroucho Marx, bespectacled ringleader of the Marx Brothers, announced today that they are about\nto retire from the screen.\n\"We're sick of the movies,\" he declared, \"by that I mean movie fans\nare about to get sick of us. By getting out now. we're just anticipating\npublic demand, and by a very short\nmargin. Our stuff is getting stale.\nSo are we.\"\nGroucho will become a gag writer\nand radio performer, he said, Chico\nwill become leader of a swing band\nand Harpo will enter legitimate\ndrama.\nTrail Sportsmen\nReport Fishing\nRules Fractured\nTRAIL, B.C., April 10-A letter\nprotesting against the practice of\ntishing for trout out ol season in\nthe Columbia River, ls being sent\nto J. H. Robinson, Fisheries Inspector, at Nelson, as well as to the\nTrail Provincial Police, as result\nof action by the Trail Rod and Gun\nClub. The motion was Instigated by\nseveral memberi who reported that\nthey had seen persons lishing for\ntrout\" on the river.\nA letter from the Creston Rod\nand Gun Club suggesting regulations for the shooting ol migratory\nbirds more prevalent in the Creston\nDistrict, met with the approval of\nthe meeting.\nIt wu agreed to concede to the\n(request of the Grand Forks Rod and\nGun Club to have pheasants, alloted\nby the Provincial Government for\nTrail, released In the Grand Forks\nvalley, as being a more satisfactory\narea for pheasant hunting.\nAn invitation received from J. J.\nMcEwen, President of the Nelson\nDistrict Rod and Gun Club, to attend the Nelson Club's annual dinner on April 18, to hear J. G. Cunningham, Provincial Game Commissioner, was also received. Trail\nmembers expected to attend are\nAid P. R. McDonald, President; W\nH. Baldrey, Secretary; EU Peterson,\nAl Farnum, Don Barrett, and W. G.\n(Curly) Wheatley.\nKaslo Recruits\nLeave to Train\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10 \u2014 Two\nKaslo recruits, A. W. Bennett, and\nA. H. Dryden, left Trail Wednesday\nmorning for the Coast\nTrail \"Bomb\" Is\nSource ol $49;\nto Travel Soon\nTRAIL.- B.C., April 10 - Trail's\n\"bomb\", made and donated by the\nInterior Motors, Limited, was opened for the tlrst time last night after\nbeing on display for a week, and\nyellded $49 in nickels and dimes\nfor the bomb fund.\nIt was originally planned to ship\nthe bomb to Rossland on April 8,\nbut arrangements have been changed and the bomb will be on the Rossland streets all next weekend. Arrangements are being made with\nMayor J. E. Gordon ef Rossland to\nhave the bomb sent up. After being\nin Rossland it will be sent to Nelson, although the exact date has\nnot yet been arrived it\nThe Canadian Pacific has agreed\nto ship the \"bomb\" through, expresi\nchargei tree, along the main line to\nHalifax, as requested, and the Canadian Legion is sponsoring the project in the various cities en route.\nTrail Stores to\nKeep Good Friday\nTRAIL, B. C. April 10 \u2014 Trail\nstores closed Wednesday afternoon\nas usual, and will be closed on\nGood Friday. They will be open,\nusual on Eastern Monday.\nMail dispatch will not be affected\nby the Easter holiday weekend, although no letter carrier service will\nbe in effect on Good Friday, and\ncarrier service will on\\y consist of\na morning delivery Monday morning.\nOn Good Friday the wlcketa will\nbe open from 8 to 10 a.m., and the\nlobby will remain open from 7\na.m. to 6 p.m. . ,  .      ...\nEaster Monday, the wickets will\nremain open from 8 ajn. to 12 pm.,\nand the lobby will be open from\n7 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nBanks will observe their official\nholidays on both Good Friday and\n\u25a0Easter Monday.\t\nVATICAN CITY, April 10 (API-\nPope Pius XII will deliver his Easter message Sunday at 1 pm. (3 ajn.\nP.S.T.) and his words, in Italian,\nwill be broadcast on short wavelengths of 31.06 and 19.84 metres, it\nwas announced today.\nMonarch\nKnitting Yarn\nA Complete Selection at*\nFINK'S\nLADIES' WEAR\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS KAY LOWDON\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10\u2014Mr. and i marked by a wide girdle accented\nWarfield Motorist\nIgnored Stop Sign\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10 - William\nStanley Hewgill. of Warfield,\nbrought before Stipendiary Magistrate E. L. Hodge in Provincial\nPolice Court Tuesday afternoon on\na charge of driving through the\nstop sign at the corner of Schofield\nHighway and Monument Road,\npleaded guilty and was fined $5 and\ncosts. Constable D. C. Georgeson of\nthe Provincial Highway Patrol\nprosecuted.\nUnion Service\nin Trail Today\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10-Under the\nauspices of the Trail Ministerial Association, an inter-denominational\nGood Friday service will be held\nin Trail Baptist Church at 11 a.m\nRev. L. A. C. Smith, of St. Andrew's Anglican Church, will conduct the services.\nExceeded Limit\nWarfield Flats\nTRAIL, B C, April 8-Theodore\nMazurchyk of Rossland appeared\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate E. L.\nHodge ln Provincial Police Court\nWednesday afternoon, charged with\nexceeding the 25 mile an hour speed\nlimit along the Warfield Flats on\nthe Schofield Highway. He pleaded\nguilty and was fined $5 and costs.\nDenmark Is Theme\nof Trail Address\nTRAIL, B. C. April 10 - Mrs\nGordon Downes, of Victoria, addressed the Trail Canadian Club\nTuesday evening, describing the\ncustoms, languag, and history of\nDenmark before the Nari invasion.\nLieut. Parsonage\nOff to Penticton\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10 - Lieut\nE. Parsonage, ot Victoria, who has\nbeen in Trail Tuesday and Wednesday, recruiting for the Sigtlfl Corps,\nleft Thursday morning for Penticton.\nMrs. R. Ellison have moved from\nthe Riverside Apartments to take up\nresidence at Beaver Bend.\nMrs. P. J. Krumenacker announces\nthe engagement of her sister, Madeline Massong, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. N. Massong of Regina, Sask., to\nAnthony Peterson of Fruitvale, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. F. Peterson of\nChilliwack. The marriage will take\nplace in May.\nMiss Denise DeLespee is spending Easter with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry DeLespee, 117\nRitchie Avenue. Miss DeLespee attends Washington State College at\nPullman.\nMiss Wilma Campion leaves Friday evening to spend Easter at Nelson.\nAmong menAers of the Trail\nteaching staff who are spending the\nEaster holidays at Vancouver are\nMiss Mariorie Goringe, Miss Irene\nSavard, Stuart Gibson and Moir\nMcLaggen.\nMiss Dorothy Mead leaves this\nweekend to spend the Easter holidays at her home in Revelstoke.\nMiss Ruth Cameron will spend\nthe Easter holidays at Chilliwack.\nMiss Marjorie McLure Is going\nto spend Easter at Kimberley.\nMiss Ann Gray leaves this weekend to spend the Easter holidays at\nMedicine Hat.\nMiss Kay Matheson will spend\nEaster at Kelowna.\nMiss Ruth Bryson is spending the\nEaster holidays at her home at\nAshcroft.\nMiss Jane Tyson arrives from\nKimberley over the weekend to\nspend Easter with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. F. Tyson, 1520 Bay\nAvenue.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Downie, of\nVancouver, are visiting in the city.\nThey attended the wedding of their\nniece, Miss Jean Downie, and\nGeorge Brown, which took place\nyesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. McDonald,\n1345 Birch Avenue, will have Mrs.\nMcDonald's sister, Mrs. G. C. Mc-\nMynn and children, Johan and James\nof Midway, as guests for the Easter\nweek.\nMrs. W. A. Brown and Stuart\nBrown of'Kimberley attended the\nBrown-Downie nuptials at Trail.\nMiss Margaret Barclay left on\nThunday to spend the Easter, holi-\ndavs at her home in Nelson.\nAttending the Brown-Downie wedding was Mrs. Arthur Bromley of\nVancouver, aunt of the bride. Mrs.\nBromley is guest of her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John\nBalfour, 1151 Cedar Avenve.\nMrs. W. H. Munroe is a patient\nin Trail-Tadanac Hospital.\nMiss Margaret McDonald will\nspend Easter with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. McDonald, Kaslo.\nRev. W. J. Harrison is in Nelson, attending the Tenebrile services at the Cathedral ot Mary Immaculate.\nMiss Winnifred Flett Is visiting in\nVancouver and Victoria.\nInteresting discussions on current\nevents took place Tuesday when the\nEsling Club met at the home ol\nMrs. M. R. Landucci, 1109 Nelson\nAvenue. Mrs. Alan Merry presided.\nAlter the .business meeting bridge\nwas played. Refreshments were\nserved at the close.\nFirst Presbyterian Church was\nbeautifully decorated with pottea\nplants, lilies, tulips, carnations and\nwhite heather, emblematic of the\npride's Scottish parentage, for the\nlovely Eaiter wedding at 6 o'clock\nWednesda\/ evening of Jean Fraser,\nelder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D.\nF. Downie, 1183 Nelson Avenue, and\nGeorge Brown, youngest son of Mrs.\nW. A. Brown and the late Mr. Brown\nof Fernie. Rev. Eric Larsen read the'\nmarriage lines. Preceded by two\ndainty attendants in pastel-snaded\ndresses, the bride entered the church\non the arm of her father. She wore a\nfloor-length white chiffon gown\nfeaturing a simple bodice with low\nsweetheart neckline and tull bishop\nsleeves finished with narrow cuffs\nThe skirt was fully flared and gathered Into the waistline which was\nwith lovers' knots In sequins. This\nsame trimming was repeated around\nthe neckline and culls. Her long\nflowing viil of embroidered net was\nheld in place by a coronet of chiffon trimmed with sequins. Silver\nsandals and white lace nsittens completed her attire and she carried\na beautiful shower bouquet of Hollywood roses and white heather. Her\nohly jewellery was a locket the gift\nof the groom. Miss Janet Brown,\nsister of the groom, was maid of\nhonor. She chose an embroidered\norganza frock ol deep pink wilh\nshirred bodice, full flared skirt and\nbolero jacket featuring short sleevei\nand tailored collar. She wore mittens to match her frock, and a cor.\nonet of Madame Finch roses and\npale pink carnations. Her bouquet\nwas Wedgewood blue iris, pale pink\ncarnations and white heather. The\nbridesmaid, Miss Betty Balfour,\ncousin ot the bride, wore a dainty\nfrock of apple green point d'esprit.\nThe full bodice was gathered ln to\na wide band in a girdle effect from\nwhich fell the folds- of her fuil\nflared skirt.- Rows of niching trimmed the skirt and puffed sleeve6\nwhile brilliant clips accented the\nsweetheart neckline. Matching mitts\ncompleted her costume and her coronet was ol Sweetheart roses and\nwhite carnations. She carried I\ncolonial bouquet of white carnations, Madame Finch roses, lavender\nstocks and white heather. The groom\nwas supported by Martin Bale of\nTrail, and his brother, Stuart Brown\nof Kimberley. Ushers were Norman\nHinton and Alex Balfour. Wedding\nmusic was supplied by Herbert Watson, organist. During the signing ot\nthe register little Sheila Downie,\nsister of the bride, sang \"O Promise\nMe\" and \"I Love You Truly.\" White\nstreamers and bells decorated the\nKnights of Pythias Hall where a\nreception was held fot about 100\nguests. The bride's taible was centred\nwith a three-tier wedding cake\nflanked by yellow candles in silver\nholders and daffodils in bud vases.\nBaskets of tulips and daffodils and\npotted plants decorated the tables\nThe principals were assisted tn receiving by their mothers. Mrs.\nDownie wore a navy jacket ^Iress\nwith accents of eyelet emb-o_de-_d\npique and old rose and navy straw\nsailor. Mrs. Brown chose British\nblue simply styled with accessories en tone. Both wore corsages\nof Premier roses. Later Mr. and\nMrs. Brown left on a two weeks'\nwedding trip to Vancouver Island,\nthe bride travelling in a rose blege\nafternoon frock with platinum wolf\njacket, navy hat and accessories\nThey will reside at 1960 Daniel\nStreet.\ntl Prosecutions\nby Trail Police\nDuring March\nTRAIL, B. C, April 10 \u2014 Report\nof F. H. Steele, Acting Chief of\nPolice, for March, to the Police\nCommission Wednesday, showed\n$235.50 collected in fines and costs.\nForty-one personi were prosecuted\nduring the month, 28 under the City\nBylaws, five under the Provincial\nStatutes, and eight under the Criminal Code. One Juvenile was committed to the BOy's Industrial\nSchool, and one person was sent to\nNelson Jail for seven months.\nChief Steel's report states further:\n\"Thirty-nine complaints were received and investigated by Officers\nof the Department. Eighteen were\noffences committed. Two cars and\nthree bicycles were stolen but were\nquickly recovered. One of the cars\nwas driven only a few blocks and\nthen left but the other car wss recovered in Rossland the driver apprehended. Other cases arose from\ntraffic offences.\n\"There were seven minor accidents, and four business premises\nwere found Insecure. Two lqst children were returned to their homei.\n\"Considerable time was spent in\nserving over 90 letten for the City\nEngineer's Department ln Its efforts\nto clean up tne City.\n\"One prosecution was entered for\nthe licence collector, and one for\nthe electrical inspector.\n\"A checkup was made, and a\nlist compiled, of signs In need of\nrepair and renovation. Thli wu\nsubmitted to Uie City Engineer's\nDepartment and will be attended to\nas soon as possible.\n\"Constable D. C. Georgeson of\nthe B. C. Police Highway Patrol,\nand Sgt. J. McMillan, of the City\nPolice Force, made a checkup for\nlights, brakes, and driven' licences\nIt was found that out of over 280\nmotorists checked, only three were\nwithout licences. These checkups\nwill be made periodically In the future.\"\t\nKAMLOOPS, April 10 <CP)-\u00abgt.\nHoward Whitfield ot Chase, 24, killed ln a crash of a Royal Canadian Air\nForce training plane last Saturday\nnear Cardinal, Ont., was burled today at Chase Cemetery 28 miles\nEast of here with military honors.\nRites were held In Chase United\nChurch, Rev. A. C Pound officiating.\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS-ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing b Heating\nCompiny, Limited\nCHANGE IN\nSERVICE\nArrow Lakes\nEffective\nMONDAY APRIL 14\nS. 8. Mlnto will resume\nthrough service on Arrow\nLakes on thi following\nichedule.\nt\nMon.-Thun.\nLv. Nakusp 7:00 i.m.\nMon.-Thun.\nAr. Robson Weit..... 5:80 pjn.\nTues.-Frl\nLv. Robson West 7:00 a.m\nTues.-Frt\nAr. Nakusp 8:00 pjn.\nWed.-Sit\nLv. Nakusp 8:00 am\nWed.-Sat\nAr. Arrowhead    ... 11:16 ajn.\nWed.-Sat\nLv. Arrowhead  12:39 p.m.\nWed.-Sat\nAr. Nakusp 8:38 p.m.\nJ. C. WATSON, C.T.A.\nNelson, B. C.\nPauaJjamQiAL\nFULLER SPECIALS\nENDS APRIL 19th\nTAKE ADVANTAGE OP THESE LOW PRICES.\nFnrr I ONE REG. 12-OZ. CAN OP\nIt El Ef . FULLER FURNITURE POLISH\nWith the purchase of a\nFuller Dry Mop, without handle     \u00bb9o\nWith handle  $1.41\nFuller Brlstlecomb: with white handle $2.98\nFuller Dental Pl8te Brush    ,_   \u201e,  49o\nFuller Tooth Brushes: Packaged, 3 for - \u2014\u201e\u201e ... \u00bb9e\n6 for          ; $1.98\nFuller Flesh Brush ...     $1.78\nFuller House Broom _..__._  99o\nFULLER BATHROOM SET: .>,\u00ab,., k ,,\nBowl  Bruih, reg. $1.36 SPECIAL\u2014All\nBathtub Brush, reg,    $1.36\n8,ir.!l.Mop_\"':..:::::::.. U        for $1.99\nFuller Wet Mop, without handle  ,    69c\n-     With handle    -\u2022\u2022 ~ ,. 99c\nMAIL YOUR ORDER TODAY TO YOUR\nFULLER BRUSH DEALER\nWm. GACH\nAnd We Will Deliver Your Order to Your Home.\n528 Vernon St. Ntlion, B. C.\n______________________________\n Fii.VI_-.*HJ iHW-iiiiMi! Jiiijpjiii up si^i'JWi <iPii^fwii\u00bbs,i-i\u00bb yainii.'W\"\nlitler's Favorite Theatre\nCompletely Destroyed as\nR.A.F. Smashes at Berlin\nBERLIN, April 10 (AP)-The gay\nState Opera House on Unter Den\nLinden, Berlin's downtown broad-\nway, was viewed as a complete loss\ntoday by firemen as a result of an\nattack on the German capital last\nnight by BritUh air raiders.\nBellevue Castle, where Foreign\n.tatesmen are entertained when visiting Berlin, was also hil by bombs\nA dense cloud of smoke hung over\nthe centre of the city this morning,\nattracting hundreds of curious spectators but the scene was roped off\nand hundreds of yards of big fire\nhoses criss-crossed the broad avenue.\nIt still was not established how\nmany incendiaries had hit the place\nwhich is one of Hitler's lavorite\ntheatres.\nThe incendiaries apparently coming down in bundles fell on numerous other buildings along the avenue\nIncluding the historic Prussian State\nLibrary, where the attic was burned\nout\nSimilarly burned out was the top\nfloor of the Emperor William I Palace opposite the State Opera, and\nthe right wing of the diversity\nacross the street.\nA number of office buildings toward the Brandenburg Gate suffered minor damage from incendiaries.\nIt was not learned immediately\nwhether any of the State Library's\napproximately 3,000,000 volumes had\nbeen lost or damaged in the fire,\nwhich was said to have been brought\nquickly under control.\nThe State Opera building offered\na sad sight however. The fire there\napparently started at the rear end of\nthe stage house, whence the flames\nblew through the roof and ate their\nway into the proscenium through the\nfront\nMasses of spectators could see\nthrough the building from Unter\nDen Linden to unscarred St. Hed-\nwig's Cathedral immediately back\nof the opera.\nThirteen British bombers were\nclaimed to have been shot down by\nnight fighters and anti-aircraft guns\non their approach and the Germans\nlaid they believed more were accounted for on their way back.\nThe radio informed Berlin that\nperformances at the State Opera\nwould be temporarily suspended.\nLONDON, April 10 (CP) - The\nRoyal Air Force dropped \"powerful\nhigh explosives\" in the centre of\nBerlin last night and started large\nfires, the Air Ministry announced\ntoday\nOvernight attacks also were made\non an aluminum plant ln German-\noccupied Norway and a radio station\nin Denmark.\nEight Dimes were lost ir. these operations and in daylight assaults\nyesterday on Brest ana other targets.\nBut 11 German bombers were _ast\nnight downed in attacks on English\nMidlands and Nortryjait.\nThe centre of the Midlands attack\nwas Birmingham where the damage was described as considerable.\nThe 11 Nail bombers shot down\nin moonlight raids last night brought\nto 24 the number destroyed in the\nlast three nights.\nThe main German nocturnal attack was directed at a West Midlands town (perhaps Coventry again\nor Birmingham) and the Northeastern coastal area.\nA shelter in which a large number of persons was believed vs have\ntaken refuge was said to have taken\na direct hit in the West Midlands\ntown.\nRescue workers in the West Midlands town toiled amid a nail of\nbombs dropped by waves of .'aiders\nwhich kept up the assault for several hours. One Nazi plane shot\ndown, fell on a house, causing' casualties.\nA NORTHEAST TOWN IN ENGLAND, April 10 (CP)-Thirty four\npersons were killed and 90 injured\nlast night in the worst Nazi air raid\nthis area has had since the war began.\n(The Germans said this town was\nNewcastle.)\nGerman planes, kept at great\nheight by the heaviest ack-ack barrage ever flung up here, roared\nover in waves at intervals of a fe,v\nmoments.\nBIRMINGHAM, April 10 (CP) -\nGerman planes bombed this important midlands industrial town\nlast night causing what was officially described as \"considerable\ndamage.\"\nNELION DAILY NEW*. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING  APRIL 11. 1941\nBELLS OF ROME\nMARK HOLY DAY\nVATICAN CITY, April \u00bb <AP)-\nThe belli of Rome's 420 churches\nsounded in reverberating chorui\nthii morning, as they have for tjun-\ndreds of yeari, ln commemoration\nof Holy Thunday, tb. day upon\nwhich Chriit instituted the Holy\nEucharist.\n. In the Siitlne Chapel Granito\nCardinal Pignatelli di Belmonte,\ndean of the college of cardinals,\nwhoa* Wth birthday was today,\ncelebrated mala in the pretence of\nPope Pius.\nGermans Claim\n80,000 Greeks\nTaken In Thrace\nBERLIN, April 10 (AP)-A German military spokesman claimed\ntoday Greek prisoners captured in\nThrace numbered more than 80,000,\nbut that the \"final number will be\nmuch greater\" since the count ls\nnot yet finished.\n(Greek military sourcei declared\nIn Atheni that the Greek Army remains intact despite the trapping of\nsome forces ln Northeastern\nGreece.)\nA commentary service declared\nthe Germans are ready for preliminary aerial thrusts against the\nBritish Expeditionary Force on the\nBalkan front.\nApparently Goering'i air force\nwill try to \"soften\" the British\nforces before German ground troops\ntackle them at close quarters.\nDienst Aus Deutschland, commentary close to the foreign office, declared \"It is self-evident that the\nrail line on the East coait of Greece\nwill be one of principle objectives\nof German bombers.\"\nThis line runs from Piraeus, port\nof Athens, to the Notrhern area\nwhere the British-Greek troops are\nconcentrated.\nGermany Extends Vast Pincer Move,\nGoal May Be Rich Iran and Iraq Lands\nBy PAUL K. LEE\nAnoclated Pre.. Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP)-The\nIteel arms of Germany are reaching\nout on two continents today in the\nlongest projected pincers movement\nin military history.\nOne arm extends from Germany\n.cross Central and Southeast Europe\nto the Aegean Sea; the other across\nthe Desert of North Africa.\nBoth are pointed generally Eastward, apparently intent on snapping\ntogether in a third continent\u2014Asia.\nCompared with this gigantic mai:\noeuvre the geographical proportions\nof the sensational war in Western\nEurope last Spring become trifling.\nWhether the German plan will\n\u25a0ucceed can be determined only by\nthe future and by the forces of the\nBritish Empire and its allies, but the\nmassive outlines begin to come clear.\nSuggestions already have been ad-\nTanced that the German goal is the\noil-rich region of the Middle East,\nthe classical lands of Iran and Iraq.\nLast Friday's coup d'etat at Baghdad, the Iraq capital, has been laid\nby Britain to Axis machinations. The\nGermans themselves proclaim that\nthev intended to close the Suez Can-\n,al\u2014if they can\u2014but are silent on later objectives.\nThe weaker of the German pincers\nis clearly the Southern arm which\nin effect rests on air, having no firm\nconnection with the pivot in Berlin.\nThis weakness was emphasized\nonly yesterday when Britain announced the torpedoing in the Mediterranean Sea of two ships in the\nservice of the Nazi African corps,\nand in Prime Minister Churchill's\ndeclaration that a regular and heavy\ntoll is being taken by the navy on\nthis most tenuous of the Nazi lines\nof supply and reinforcement.\nYet the German Army in Africa\nalready is of such proportions that\nMr. Churchill warned of stern fighting to be expected in defence of\nEgypt.\nThe pincer arm on the European\ncontinent is much more firmly placed. Its link with the German homeland is da'ly more distantly extended, but it is vulnerable from the\nside only to enigmatic Russia, though\nthe Britons, Greeks Yugoslavs and\npossibly later the Turks may blunt\nor break its point.\nAnd even should the German pincers sr.ap shut, the ultimate decision st'll depends on whether the\nNazis can cross 20 scant miles of water in lhe West\u2014the Straits of Dover\n\u2014a feat they have not yet accomplished.\nASK PRESIDENT'S WIFE\nTO SPEAK AT COAST CLUB\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nMrs. Franklin Roosevelt has been\ninvited to address the Vancouver\nRotary Club April 29.\nYugoslav Army'\nHammers Nazi Front\nLONDON, April 10 (CP).\u2014The\nYugoilav army I. making a \"supreme effort\" to break the Gar-\nman front, the Yugoilav Legation\n.aid today. The spoke-man declined to give further detail., iuch\na. the direction of the Yugoilav\ndrive. -\nIW> ld\u00bbl*\u2014 h not publlihed \u00ab dupl.yo\nkr it*. Uquw Com.-I Bond m br tha\nI af Brhlik CoUt>l_.\nHazlewood Member\nof Board of Trade\nApplication of J. H. Hazlewood\nfor membership in the Nelson Board\nof Trade was accepted without ballot of the Board luncheon Thursday.\nDIPLOMATS LEAVE\nTO VISIT MOSCOW\nLONDON, April 10 (CP) - A\nBudapest News Agency message\nquoted by the British Bradcastig\nCorporation said members of the\nBritish. Belgian and Netherlands\nlegations in Hungary left there today for Moscow. There were no\nother details.\nCANADIAN NAVAL MAN\nDECORATED BY KINC\nLONDON April 10 (CP)\u2014Lieut.\nRobert Welland, Royal Canadian\nNavy, was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross at a recent in-\nvesture in Buckingham Palace \u2014\nthe last of a series of 16 investures\nthe King had held in past weeks\nin which more than 3000 men and\nwomen heroes were decorated.\nSalonika Fired\nas Greeks Leave\nATHENS, April 10 (AP) - With\ntorch and explosives the Greeks destroyed everything of military value\nin the port of Salonika before abandoning the city to German forces,\nEmmanuel Spanakis, Associated\nPress correspondent, declared on\nhis arrival here today.\nSpanakis, the last newspaperman\nto leave the city before the Germans\nentered, declared:\n\"I left Salonika on the last ship\nto leave the port\n\"Flames were roaring hundreds of\nfeet into the air from blazing ware*\nhouses, oil tanks and airport facilities.\n\"Blasts from exploding dynamite\nroared across the deserted' harbor\nas cranes and everything of military\nvalue were blown up.\n\"Hours later, the flames still could\nbe seen from a distance of more\nthan 00 miles.\"\nCraig Hopes Nelson\nBoaf Builders May\nBid on Lifeboats\nAdvice thit he had placed before\nthe Department of Munitions and\nSupply the name of C. W. Walton\ntt Sons ot Nelson as builders of\nsmaller wooden boats, In the hope\nthis firm might be able to tender\non boats of lifeboat size was received by the Nelson Board of\nTrade from W. Lloyd Craig, Director of the B.C. Department of\nTrade and Industrial Extension, now\nat Ottawa.\nHe also advised that Interior\nwoodworking firms had been invited to tender on 4300 folding\ntables.\nBritish Bomb Nazis\nNorth of Salonika\nATHENS, April 10 (AP)-Britjih\nairplanes, operating from Greek\nbases, systematically machine-gunned German motorized columns ln\nthe Kilkis-Polykastron area North\nof Salonika? yesterday despite adverse conditions, Royal Air Force\nHeadquarters said today.\nTwo bombing attacks also were\nmade against German motor transport concentrations and bridges near\nAxioupolls in Northern Greece.\nU.S. Experiments to\nProduce Gas From\nCoal Successful\nWASHINGTON. April 10. (API-\nSuccess of experiments in the United States to develop gasoline and\noil from America's virtually Inexhaustible coal reserves was announced today by the Federal Bureau of Mines.\nThe Bureau declared that known\nUnited States coal reserves were\nsufficient to supply the nation's oil\nneeds through the new process for\nabout 3000 years, at the present rate\nof consumption.\nThe hydrogenatlon process of synthesizing oil from coal already is in\nuse commercially in Europe, especially in Germany, and the technique was applied to United States\ncoals in the Bureau's Pittsburgh\nlaboratories.\nFrom experience in Germany and\nEngland, lt has been indicated that\nthe cost of producing gasoline from\ncoal would be considerably greater\nthan through use of crude petroleum.\nPhone 33\nMoving-Storage\n. .. Satisfaction\nWest Transfer Go.\nU.S. to Build Airbases\nto\nWASHINGTON, AprU 10 <AP)-\nThe United States extended its hemisphere defence system to Greenland today under an agreement per-\nmitting establishment of air bases\nin the Danish colony, which will\nretain its loverelgnty.\nPresident Rooievelt nid ln a formal itatement that the present letup, which ln effect brings Greenland under the protection of thii\nGovernment, \"ii a new proof of out\ncontinuing friendliness to Denmark.\"\nAn agreement to place the iiland\nwithin the scope of U.S. plans for\ncooperative defence of the Western\nHemisphere was signed yesterday\nby the President and by the Danish\nMiniated, Hendrlk de Kauffman,\nwho, Mr. Roosevelt said, acted on\nbehalf of the Danish King.\nIn handing the President's statement to reporters, Presidential Secretary Stephen Early said the agree\nmen had been consummated after\nthe United States \"had received information that German planes have\nbeen flying over Greenland.\"      \u25a0\nGreenland, he said, has been\nplaced In exactly the same category\nas any other Atlantic islands owned\nby on-American powers. The agreement, the Secretary asserted, is in\ncomplete accordance with terms of\nthe Monroe Doctrine and with a\ndeclaration signed by the 21 American republics at Havana.\nIn that latter declaration, the republics agreed that no foreign possession in the Western Hemisphere\nihould be transferred to the fug of\nanother foreign country.\nReferring to Mr. Roosevelt's statement that the United States Intended\nto insure that Greenland would remain a Danish colony after the\nGerman invasion of Denmark had\nended, Early declared:\n\"That refers to Greenland or to\nany of the other possessions, Including Canada, It will be defended\nif attacked.\" ,\nWASHINGTON, April 10 (CP)-\nCanadian warships and Army planes\nwill have full access to naval and\nair bases to be constructed by the\nUnited Statei Government in Greenland under the termi of an agreement with the Danish Minister announced here today by State Secretary Cordell Hull.\nThe Canadian Press was assured\nthe agreement was drafted In such\na way that Canada will gain access\nto the bases, although a belligerent.\nAlthough official Government circles declined comment, lt was considered possible the agreement eventually might be used in connection\nwith the ferrying, of Canadian and\nUnited States-made fighting planes\nto Britain by providing an intermediate stop in the trans-Atlantic\nroute.\nAirmen's Paper\nIs Growing Fast\nBy ROSS MUNRO\nCanadian Preu War Correipondent\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\n(AP)\u2014In \"Wings Abroad,\" fast-\ngrowing newspaper of the Canadian\nArmy Cooperation Squadron in England, Air Minister Power contributed an encouraging message to pilots and airmen and said, \"we face\nthe future with confidence.\"\n\"While you have not had an opportunity of actually coming to\ngrips with the enemy and while I\nappreciate that the period of waiting is a long one, the reports I have\nreceived of the work you are doing show you are fulfulling your\nfunction in the broad campaign\nwhich has been mapped out, said\nMajor Power.\n\"The operations you have already\ncarried out will show their true\nvalue when the time comes. By midsummer you will have been Joined\nby hundreds of other Canadiani\ntrained to play their part in achieving the victory which we all know\nlies ahead.\"\nIn recent issues other messages\nfrom prominent Canadians were carried. Defence Minister Ralston has\nwritten: \"The fact that your squadron produces a publication of its\nown is fine evidence of the morale\nand comradeship of your unit. I congratulate you most heartily.\"\nTraining Centre\nlo Goto Nanaimo\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)\u2014Defence\nheadquarters said today the Canadian small arms training centre of\nWestern Canada will be moved from\nLethbridge, Alta., to Nanaimo, B. C,\nas soon as the move is authorized\nby Maj.-Gen. R. O. Alexander, General Officer commanding the Pacific\ncommand.\nThe centre, based at Lethbridge\nunder command of Lt.-Col. M. F. Mcintosh for several months, will move\nto Nanaimo as soon as Gen. Alexander decides the camp there is ready.\nDefence Spokesmen said.\nBrigadier F. M. Harvey of Calgary, Officer Commanding Military\nDistrict No. 13, said the camp would\nbe moved to the Paclic Coast in the\nnear future because conditions there\nwere \"more suitable for the year-\nround operations' of the school.\nKeel for New Ferry\nLaid at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (OP) -\nKeel for the new eOO-passenfter ferry to be Used in the cross-harbor\nlervice between here and North Van\ncouver has been laid at a False\nCreek shipyard.\nDelivery of the new craft will depend on the speed of construction\nof the engine, being built by a San\nFrancisco company.\nThe new ferry will cost $140,000.\nJAPANESE ENVOY ON\nSIGHTSEEING TOUR\nLENINGRAD, April 10 (AP) -\nYosuke Matsuoka, Japanese Foreign Minister, made a sightseeing\nvisit today to htsi city where he\nstarted his diplomatic career 30\nyears ago.\nU.S. TRAINING PLANE\nCRASHES IN SWAMP\nLAKEHURST, N.J., April 10 (AP)\n\u2014The L-2, a U.S. .naval training\nblimp, crashed in a cedar swamp\n300 feet south of the Lakehurst\nnaval air itation at noon today.\nNone of its crew of four was injured.\nCanada Makes\nTrade Agreement\nWith Venezuela\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)\u2014Provisional trade agreement between Canada and Venezuela, signed March\n26, was announced today from the\noffice of Trade Minister MacKinnon\nThe agreement, signed at Caracas\nand ln force April 9, insured the continuance of reciprocal exchange between Canada and Venezuela of\nmost favored nation treatment in\ntarif matters during the life of the\nagreement.\nItaly Announces\nCasually List\nROME, April 10 (AP) - Italian\ncasualties on all fronts during\nMarch, plus those not previously announced, were listed today as 43,-\n245 dead, wounded and missing,\nbringing total losses since the first\nof the year to 94,734.\nNew losses on the various fronts\nwere broken down as follows:\nGreek front - 3102 killed, 6031\nwoun'ded. 7463 missing.\nNorth Africa - 56 killed, 126\nwounded, 24,086 missing.\nEast Africa - 150 killed, 383\nwounded, 645 missing.\nNaval\u201446 killed, 104 wounded,\nMl missing.\nI nthe air\u201433 killed. 44 wounded,\n296 missing.\nAn official British statement April\n8 put Italian casualties in Africa\nalone at 191,195 since the campaign\nbegan in December. Italian losses\nin Albania up to Feb. 3 were put\nat 92,000. while in the Mediterra\nnean naval battles of Cape Mata\npan two weeks ago upwards of 3000\nItalians were drowned in addition\nto several hundred rescued by British warships and made prisoners.\nCanada Studies\nMaking Diplomatic\nMove to Mexico\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP) - Some\nstudy has been given to the possibility of establishing diplomatic relations with Mexico it was said at\nthe Department of External Affairs\ntoday.\n\"However,' said one high-placed\nsource, \"it is too early to make any\ndefinite statement.'\nAt present Canadian interests in\nMexico are cared for by a trade\ncommissioner at Mexico City but.\nlike all trade commissioners he does\nnot enjoy diplomatic status.\nSalmo Valley Board\nof Trade Invitation\nDinner Is Advanced\nDinner of the Salmo Valley Board\nof Trade to which Trail and Nelson\nBoards have been invited would be\nheld April 21, the Nelson Board\nwas advised Thursday by E. Barlow Tait of Sheep Creek. A large\ndelegation from Nelson was indicated.\nMacMILLAN SPEAKS\nOF BIC JOB AHEAD\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)-H. R.\nMacMillan, head of War Shipping\nLimited, the new Government organization set up to direct the\nbuilding of cargo steamships, today\nwas busy winding up his affairs\nas chairman of the Wartime Requirements Board.\nThe new company will have its\nheadquarters in Montreal where the\noffice will open next Tuesday.\n\"We are in a state of preparation,\" he said, \"and .we have a big\njob ahead of us.\"\nStream of Supplies Between Spain,\nGermany Pass Through Border (ily\nBy  PRESTON   QROVER\nAnoclated Pren Staff Writer\nHENDAYE, France (via Berlin),\nApril 4 (delayed) (AP)\u2014A iteady\nstream of goods is being exchanged\nbetween Germany and Spain\nthrough this small border city on the\nGerman-occupied French coait.\nAs reported yesterday by Fernand\nde Brinon, Vichy Government representative in Paris, the substantial\ntrade carried by rail between Spain\nand Germany was made possible by\nGerman occupation of a belt of the\nseacoast touching the Spanish border.\nLast week from 60 to 70 carloads\nof Spanish oranges were shipped\nacro-s the border to be consumed\ncither by German soldiers in France\nor sent directly to Germany.\nIn addition to oranges, large quantities of iron ore. nuts, dried fish,\nhides, cork and mercury are being\nmoved across the border. It was estimated that the dally Spaniih ship\nments to Germany total about 500\ntons.\nIn return Germany has been sending dyes, paper pulp and medical\nsupplies to Spain. Since the Civil\nWar Spain has been desperately\nshort of medical materials and has\nindicated it welcomed German medicines to combat a reported increase\nin disease, notably of tuberculosis.\nRecently, Germany lent Spain 750\ncarloads of seed potatoes for Spring\nplanting of a crop which haa been\nscarce since the Civil War. Reports\nat Hendaye said potatoes have been\nunavailable in a number of Spanish\nProvinces for six months.\nDirect shipment of goods from\nSpain is impossible due toadlfferenc-\nea in the gauges of the railway\ntracks. All goods must be transferred\nfrom freight cars of one system to\nthose of the other at Hendaye. At\npresent French colonial troops are\nproviding much of the transfer labor.\nU.S. 'HAVOC TAKES\nPART IN FIGHT\nLONDON, April 10 (CP).-The\nMinistry of Information announced today that the United States-\nbuilt Douglai CB-7, known u the\n\"Havoc,\" was among the fighter\nplanei taking, part ln lait nlght'i\noperations.\nA number of the DB-7i, alio\nknown  aa  the  Boiton   twin-en-\nSlned fighter-bomber, were or-\nered originally by the French\nRepublic but later were taken\nover by Britain. TTiey are reported\nto have a top ipeed of 320 miles\nan hour, with a range of 1200\nmiles,\nRoosevelt Asks\nfor Power lo Take\nForeign Vessels\nWASHINGTON, April 10 (API-\nPresident Roosevelt asked Congress\ntoday for broad statutory authority\nto take over any \"foreign-owned\nvessels lying idle in our ports\".\nThis authority, he aaid in a message to the legislators, ihould be\nsubject to the payment of just compensation.\nAlthough the President had asserted Tuesday that he would recommend legislation to permit the\npurchase or charter of 39 Danish vessels which have been taken into\n\"protective custody\" by the Coast\nGuard, the language of his message\ntoday was not limited to the Danish\nships.\nThe President cited a provision of\nthe Merchant Marine Act of 1936\nwhich authorizes him to requisition\nor purchase any Amercan-owned\nvessels In time of national emergency or when the national defence\nmakes It advisable. The Section provides for a method of compensation.\n\"There does not appear,\" Mr.\nRoosevelt asserted \"to be any comparable provision with respect to\nforeign-owned vessels lying idle in\nour ports.\n'Tt is obvious that our ultimate\ndefence will be rendered futile if\nthe growing shortage of shipping\nfacilities is not arrested.\"\nShips in American porta include\ntwo German and 26 Italian vessels\nwhich have been taken into custody\non grounds of sabotage or attempted\nsabotage. Berlin and Rome have\nprotested the seizures.\nItalians Admit\nBritish Victory\nat Red Sea Port\nROME. April 10 (AP)\u2014The Italian\nHigh Command acknowledged today\nthe loss to Britain of Massaua, chief\nItalian Red Sea port, but claimed the\nItalians had put the harbor out of\nservice by obstructioni.\nThe daily communique asserted\nthat the Fascist troops who took\nKranj continued their advance down\nthe Sava Valley toward Zagreb, in\nNorthern Yugoslavia, while those on\nthe Eastern Albanian front- were\npushing Eastward to meet the Germans from Skoplje.\nThe Italians also claimed that one\nof their submarines had torpedoed\na British cruiser of the Liverpool\nclass in the Eastern Mediterranean.\nWOORPORATID  t* MAY 1670.\n-\u2014-\u2014 \u25a0    \u25a0'\u2014-      \u2014\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0!\u2014 i   mm \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 mim* *mC\nStore Closed\nToday\nWATCH THIS SPACE TOMORRO\nMAUNDY MONEY\nGIVEN AS USUAL\nLONDON, April 10 (CP Cable)-\nThe centuriei-old ceremony of the\nthe distribution of Maunday money\nwas observed in bomb-icarred\nWestminster Abbey today.\nThe King and Queen were unable to attend the traditional royal\nHoly Thursday service but Prlnceu\nHelena Victoria and Princess Marie\nLouise sat in the choir and watched\nthe Archbishop of Canterbury distribute green, white and red purses\nto 46 men and 46 women.\nThe aged recipients sat in rows\nof chairs in front of the choir stalls.\nEach was given 45 pence ln Maundy\nmoney \u2014 one peny for each year\nof the King's life\u2014and additional\nmoney for food and clothing which\nformerly wai given in kind.\nBritain lo Lend\nSpain \u00a32,500,000\nLONDON, April 10 (CP Cable)-\nA British \u00a32,500,000 (\u00bb11,125,000)\nloan to Spain was announced in the\nHouse of Commons before Parliament tose for its Easter recess today.\nThe announcement was made by\nRichard Butler, Under-Secretary\nfor Foreign Affairs.\nThe loan was described authoritatively as a humanitarian gesture\nwithout much political significance.\nThe source said it is a plain fact that\nSpain is starving \"in the original\nsense of the word.\"\nThe Informant said the money will\nbe used mostly to buy food. A typhus outbreak is reported in Spain,\nmainly due to malnutrition, and the\ndeath rate is said to be considerable.\nInformed sources said it is British\npolicy that neutral countries should\nnot merely be allowed to import\nadequate supplies for their own consumption, provided there is no risk\nof their falling into enemy hands,\nbut should actually be granted assistance In obtaining them.\nSUSPEND DANUBE\nRIVER TRAFFIC\nLONDON, April 10 (CP)\u2014Suspension of traffic on the Danube\nRiver for 300 miles downstream\nfrom the Rumanian-Yugoslav\nfrontier\" was announced officially at Bucharest today, the British Broadcasting Corporation reported.\nItalian Crew and\nOfficers Charged\nWith Sabolal\nNEWARK, N. J\u201e April 10 (AP)\nThe Federal Grand Jury today\ndieted 97 crew memben and ott'\nof eight Italian freighters do\nat New Jeney porta on Chargt\nsabotage. The eight Indlctmenti\nnamed Rinaldo Negri, identii\nthe U.S. Attoney's office as 1\nSuperintendent of the Italian 1\nROOSEVELT'S SON\nPUNS TO MARR\nLOS ANGELES, AprU 10 (AP)\nJames Roosevelt, eldest son of tl\nPresident, and Romelle SchnaMi\nwho nursed him through an illna\nin 1938, applied today for tl\ncence to wed. He gave hli age\n33 and Miss Schnieder said tha vt,\n25.\nRoosevelt    said    the    man\nwould take place next week,\nit would be a quiet, home\nmony, and that the date, po_.<t\nnext Tuesday, was dependent up\nhis mother's arrival here.    - -Z\nRoosevelt Is scheduled to fl*|\nMexico City tomorrow with a SI\nparty and return Monday.\nHOTKAPS are waxed\npaper cones, easily let out\nover seed or growing\nplants. A \"miniature Hothouse.\"\nWrite for full information\nand descriptive catalogue.\nSMITH, DAVIDSON fr-\nWRICHT, LTD.\nVancouver,   B. C.\nPESTERED BY HIGH PRESSURE,?\n...TRY THT UNION MINUTE MEN\nHIGH SPEED BUT NO HIOH PRESSUREI\nThe only \"high pressure\" the Minute Men\nuse is the pressure they put into polish ing\nglut. Their service is adjusted to fit each\ncustomer's schedule.\nIf you're in a hurry, they rush you through\nin nothing flat! If you hire mote time\nthey check your car carefully from stem\nlo stern. In either caae, yoa get bigb speed\nhit n* high pressure. Try them.\nOUI\n\u2022*\u00abOl\nIHt\n.01\nran\nUNION OIL \/^0U(7e\/mm SERVICE\n'\n,  _w\u00ab.._.___\u00bb__-\u00bb___\n\t\n^mmiilimmmMmiai^i-A , ^.__,^,..-.._.-\n NILSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON  B. C.-FR1DAY MORNINO  APRIL 11 1941\nX)LOR AND VARIETY OF SILK STOCKINGS MAY BE LIMITED\n-\nFort...\n)ys Make Money\nom Own Garden\nGarry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.\n'hile Mrs. Meyer and I were lcc-\nng some while ago, Mrs. Eliza-\ni Hart Huffer, wile oi a Pro-\nor ol Astronomy, told me how\ntnd her husband have been cdu-\nng their boys ln the use of\ni\u00aby \u25a0 I prevailed upon her to writ.\niut tor me and let me us. her\n_e. To quote;\n|b husband and I worked out\ntallowing plan (our years ago:\nagreed to furnish lood and\nhing, pay doctor bills, and pros', musical instruments and mu-\nlessons. But any other wants\nIt be satisfied, by the money\nch th. boyi make through their\nl efforts. These Include shows,\nlento, hobbies, all kind ot sports\nipment from baseballs, footballs,\ntei and swimming suits, to sail-\nlesions. Our aim was to set up\nIan wherein money is definitely\nnectcd with effort. ,. .\nB>*y earn their money by mow-\nlawns and performing certain\nisehold tasks. Lait year we hit\ntoother source of income which\nf proved successful from many\nilei. We rented a garden plot at\nedge of town. I agreed to help,\n; til. boyi, whoie ages were six\nI ten years, staked out the rows,\nup pole, for th. beans, lowed\nUt. sted, and did the heavy cul-\nitlng. I worked along at the less\nCtacular pobs like weeding by\nIt and hoeing. They did some\niding, too, but the results were\n; io good. Before Summer vaca-\n1 began we worked in the gar-\nI cither after ichool or after\nmer, which meant that the neigh-\n\u25a0hood wai minui two ball play-\nput of the time.\nOFITABLE GARDEN\nWhen the vegetable! were ready\nDM, I bought them, paying about\n-\u2022half to two-thirdi of the cur-\nIt market price. The older boy\njt Ml account of every item in\ntown notebook, which I check-\nBt courie. He made about $14.00.\nfit. news of our garden project\n\u2022ead, and a few neighbori asked\nbuy our 'surplus commoditiei.'\n: courie we had the pleasure ot\ngiving everyone on our aid. of the\nlock something trom our garden.\ntoo, W. bad disappointments. Rabbits nibbled otf every on* of our\nyoung beet leaves. But on the whole,\nour garden was a success.\nYOUNG BUSINES8 MEN\n\"In selling the vegetables, I ln<\n\u25a0toted on the children offering th.\nvery best, .nd they could not annoy people by going trom door to\ndoor. W. tried to build up our number of cuitomen as . professional\nman builds up his clientele... .\n\"The project has been io successful, however, that we are making\nmore ambitious plana for our garden next ynt.\"\nBALFOUR\nBALFOUR. B. C-Mr. \u00abjid Mrs.\nE. Maloney and ion Ted are spending a few days with Mrs. Brenilson.\nJ. Abbott left for Vancouver to\nspend Easter.\nMr. and Mrs. Maynard, Mn, Cyril\nJoyce and son Ted have left to visit Clyde  Alta.    .\nMra. Puechell and family hav.\ntaken up residence ln Balfour.\nDavid Peachey of Nelson vtolted\nhis home Sunday.\nGeorge Conrad wa. a city visitor.\nMr. and Mn. V. Hoskin were city\nvisitors.\nROBSON\nROBSON, B. C.-A. F. Mitchell\nleft Wednesday for Vancouver to\nvisit hit son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. R. Skelton.\nMiss E. Parker of Burton Is staying with J. Walker.\nMiaa R. McDiarmid to visiting Mr.\nahd Mrs. Goghlin of Trail.\nMrs. L. Spearing ls visiting her\nparents at Edmonton.\nNAKUSP AUXILIARY TO\nHAVE NOVELTY SALE\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014Mn. J. Olsdn en-\ntertalned memben of the Young\nWomen'i Evening Auxiliary Monday evening. Mrs. R. S. LaRue chose\nas the topic for the devotional period, \"The garden of Gethsemane.\"\nThe allocation of the year'i work\nwas read by the Secretary, Mri. R.\nMcCulloch. It wai decided to have a\nspecial novelty sale at the June\nmeeting to raise funds for the supply work. The prize for contest arranged by Miss M. Kirk was won\nby Miss N. Johnson. Mrs. Olson was\nassisted by Mrs. J. Motherwell in\nserving refreshments.\nQy BETSY NEWMAN\nEASTER BRIDGE LUNCHEON\nJroiled Chicken on Toast Points\n'   Tips of Fresh Asparagus\ntt*tsl Jelly      Butterscotch Rolls\nStrawberry Parfait\nTea or Coffee\nIASTER HAM WITH HONEY\nCRUST\nScrub well a ten-pound ham, rinse\nCold water and place in a kettle\n'Simmering water to which have\nen added a tablespoonful of whole\nlyes, a teaspoonful of allspice ber-\na, one-half a teaspoon of pepper-\nrns, the leaves from a bunch of\nfey, one-iourth a cup of honey\nd one-fourth a cup of vinegar. Al-\n\u00bb the ham to simmer, allowing\n.minutes to the pound. Cool the\nm in the water in which it was\nRed.\nTake the ham from the kettle and\nmove the skin, beat two eggs and\nith them mix one-fourth a cup of\nBey. Brush this glaze over tho\nrfacc of the ham. Stick whoie\n>ves into the surface of the ham\n.regular intervals and return to a\nloven to brown. Serve with Rals-\nSauce made by cooking to a syrup\n\u2022\u2022fourth a cup of vinegar, one cup\nB one-half of water, one-half cup\nmoney, one half a cup of seedless\nlins.\n\"MA88A 80VADA \"\n(EASTER BREAD) '\ntod-cook six eggs, cool and fe-\n*n the shells. Prepare a bread\ngh by scalding two cups of milk;\nillghtly cool add one fourth\nund of butter (one half cup,)\none cup of sugar, and one teaspoonful of salt. Dissolve one yeast cake\nin one-fourth a cup of lukewarm water. Add to the first mixture when\nit is lukewarm. Add enough flour to\nmake a dough (it will require about\nseven  cups).\nCover and let rise overnight. In\nthe morning toss on a lightly flourjd\nboard, knead and shape into six\nequal parts. Shape each part into\na small loaf, placing one of the hard\ncooked eggs in the centre. Place each\nloaf into a well-greased tin and let\nrise. Bake in a hot oven, starting\nat 400 deg. Fah., and reducing to 350\ndeg. Fah., after the first ten minutes.\nBake about 40 minutes. Remove the\nloaves from pan and cool.\nSURREALIST NESTS\nBeat 4 egg yolks until light. Add\nVt cup sugar gradually and continue\nbeating. Fold in y. cup cocoa, teaspoon phosphate baking powder, V,\ncup sifted flour and Vi teaspoon sail.\nAdd a teaspoon of vanilla. Beat 4\negg whites until stiff and fold into\nmixture. Pour into a shallow pan\n(9x13 inches) which has been lined\nwith wax paper. Bake in 350 degree F oven for 16 minutes.\nTurn out on brown paper which\nhas been covered with confectioner's\nsugar. Remove waxed paper, roll\nand let Hand until cold. Carefully\nunroll cake, spread with coffee\ncream and roll again. Cut into slices.\nTo make coffee cream flavor a cup\nof heavy cream with coffee extract\nor very strong coffee. Chill and\nwhip. Add 2 tablespoons of powdered sugar and a teaspoon of vanilla.\nSpread on cake as directed above.\nTreatment...\n(old as Remedy\nlor Alcoholic\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\n, Both hea. and cold are recognized\nremedies for many different conditions. Up to within recent times\nthey were uied almost entirely locally, as by the use ot an'ice bag\nor hot water bottl., or electric pad,\nplaced \"where it hurts.\" Ot recent\nyean, however, both also are used\nin luch a way that the whole body\nto either raised or lowered ln temperature.\nThe fever treatment, whloh was\nused at tint for paresis, to now\nemployed in a large number of\ndiseases and to very successful.\nCOLD CURE\nA report from this month reviews the use of cold of various\nkinds in an interesting way. Doctors are inclined to overlook the\nuae of ice caps and hot water, bags,\nin spite of the faith which patients\nhave in them. Doctors feel that the\neffects are manifested only on the\nsuperficial skin and cannot touch\ninflammatory or diaease prcesies\ndeep under the surface. Al a matter\nof fact, both cold and heat applied\nto the surface penetrate several\ninches into the tissues underneath\nand undoubtedly have a decided\neffect in making such changes in\nthe circulation ai to improve inflammatory conditions.\nThe local use of cold hai been\nfound beneficial in things more\nserious than inflammation and there\nare reports of a number of cases of\ncancer where local freezing has\nbeen a great benefit. The use of\nlow temperatures in cases of inoperable cancer also is receiving attention to many clinics. The results\nsometimes are astonishingly good.\nRelief of pain is one of the great\nbenefits of the treatment.\nThe induction of general lowering of the body temperature also is\nused in such conditions as morphine addiction and the mental\ndisease called \"schizophrenia,\" or\ndementia praecox. It is used in\nalcoholic addiction and has been\nfound to be very beneficial. But\nthis is an old story for we have\nthe report of Currie in 1803, who\nsays:\nOLD 8T0RY\n\"A Gentleman of this Island,\nwhose name was Weeks, a great\nvotary of Bacchus, was In the\npractice, from fifteen to twenty\nyears, of plunging into cold water\nwhen he rose from his bottle, and\nof actually going to sleep in a\ntrough full of water. ... The effect\nof this practice was that instead\nof experiencing debility, lassitude,\nheadache, and nausea, he found himself on awakening cheerful and refreshed, and free from all the effects\nof intoxication. In the year 1789,\ndining one day abroad, he got alternately drunk and sober three times\nbefore midnight, each time recovering his sobriety by immersing\nhimself, and sleeping in cold water;\nand on awakening returning to the\ncompany.\"\nQUESTION8 AND ANSWERS\nSubscriber\u2014\"Please tell about the\nuse of calomel. How large a dose\nshould be taken? And should it be\nfollowed by a dose of milk of magnesia?\"\nAnswer\u2014Calomel is a mercury\npurge, which can be depended upon\nto clean out the entire upper part\nof the intestines. The dose for an\nadult is Vi to Vi grain. It is advisable to follow calomel after several\nhours with a dose of salts which\nwill clean out the large intestine and\nalso clean out the residual calomel.\nMilk of magnesia is not generally\nconsidered strong enough and ep-\nsom salts probably are better.\nNAKUSP AID PUNNING\nCHURCH CLEANINC\nNAKUSP. B. C\u2014Sixteen memben and visitors attended a meeting\nof the United Church Ladies Aid on\nTuesday afternoon at the home of\nMrt. G. P. Horsley at Crescent Bay.\nThe quilting committee reported on\nwork accomplished. Plans for Spring\ncleaning of the Church were discussed. It was decided to complete the\npayment on the stove for the Manse.\nMrs. Horsley served tea, assisted by\nher daughter, Miss Anita Horsley.\nVallican Cord Seriei\nWinds Up Season\nVAUJCAN, B. C-The VaUIcan\nImprovement Society held the card\nparty and social concluding the series held thll Winter. Prlzei were\nwon by Mra. J. Forbes, T. Hunter.\nMn. W. Cutler and Lloyd Rolland.\nFor the tournament prizes were\nwon by Mrs. T. D. Edgar, Mrs. G.\nWard, Mra. W. A. Beaton, and Lloyd\nPolland, On behalf of the Improvement Society Mra. G. Strong thanked everyone for their attendance\nat the series.\nfeeurfU$, tfetAtto voaa,\nLongbeach to Send\n$100 to Headquarters\nLONGBEACH, B. C.-The executive committee of West Arm Red\nCross Auxiliary, met on Tuesday,\nwith Mrs. J. Berry, President, in the\nchair, Group leaders gave their reports and handed' in proceeds of\nmeetings and teas. In view of the\ngratifying financial report given by\nthe treasurer it was decided to\nsend $100 to Nelson for the Canadian\nRed Cross War Fund. Tentative\nplans were discussed for Summer\nactivities, garden parties, etc., to\nraise further funds and it was decided that at the next meeting the\nsubject would be taken up more\ndefinitely.\nAll groups are doing a splendid\namount of Red Cross work as well\nas making quilts and garments to\nbe sent to England for air raid victims and refugees.\nWeight.\nConserve Energy\nBy ALICE WADE ROBINSON\nThere are two infallible ways to\ngain weight\u2014end if you are as\nthin as a glass of skim milk, perhaps you'd better resort to both.\nOne, of course, is to take more\nfood. But the other\u2014\u00abnd It may\nbe more important \u2014 to to out down\non your energy expenditure.\nStop to think about lt and you'll\nrealize that you scarcely ever ee.\na fat person tearing along.\nSince ilow movements take fewer\ncalories than fait onei, you can\nsave youraelf by taking your time.\nJust cast your eye over ttie difference In the number of calorlei\nyou can use in walking. Walk leli-\nurely, say at the rate of two and\none'-half miles an hour, and you\nburn only about 1.10 calories per\npound of body weight per hour.\nBut when you Increase your\nwalking rate to three and three-\nquarters miles an hour, the number\nof calories per pound per hour are\nstepped up io 1.801 And if you speed\nalong at the rate of five miles an\nhour you bum almost four calories\nper pound In an hour.\nAny given piece of work requlrei\niust so many calories per pound per\nhour, with a calorie variation for\nthe speed at which the work is\ndone. But there is still another\nangle; The person who rushes from\none job to the next may do more\nwork. This sounds like the height of\nefficiency, but when the extra work\nis performed at great nervous expense, it is inefficient.\nNobody can do two days' work ln\nBeige With a Dash of Cinnamon\nBy AUCE ALDEN\nThe smart suit and full-length, broad shouldered cape are of tich\nwool gabardine in beige with insets of cinnamon brown wool surving\non the suit jacket and banding the shoulders ot the cape. The longer\ntorso jacket is collarless, the skirt slightly flared. Beige off-the-face\nhat, brown doeskin bag, gloves and pumps complete the outfit.\nSERIAL STORY ,\nBy Allen Eppes\nEVELESS EDEN\nCHAPTER NINE\n(Continued)\n\"Imagine a fellow wanting to see\na movie, when he can sit on our\nporch and see a view like this one!\"\nsaid Uncle John. \"I'm afraid our\nWilliam is just too darned civilized\nfor us, Joel boy.\"\n\"Yes, sir, I reckon he is, all right,\"\nsaid Joel.\nAnd now here he was once rgain\namong his beloved mountains.\nBut he wasn't very happy about\nbeing there. It was all Bill's fault,\nof course. If Bill were the sort ot\nfellow who liked to rough it. go un-\nshaved for days, tramp the trails,\nand tumble in'to bed at nine, all\ntuckered out, being in the wilds\nwith him would be fun; but Bill\nwasn't like that. He wasn't that\nsort of fellow at all. As Uncle John\nhad said, Bill was far too civilized.\nAnd the fact that he was pretty\nwell upset over what Rita Linwood\nhad done to him didn't make him\nany more companionable, certainly\nnot any more cheerful.\n\"This place never changes,\" Bill\nsaid. \"It looks exactly like it did\nwhen I was six years old and Unile\nJohn brought me up here. I don't\nthink it's made the slightest progress.\"\n\"Thank God for that!\" said Joel.\n\"I hope it never changes. There\nought to be a few completely primitive spots left\u2014places where leo-\nple can go to forget all the rush\nand worry of the world.\" He drew\na deep breath. \"Gosh, Bill, I love\nthis spot.\"\n\"Well, I can't say that I do,\" said\nBill, \"although it'll come in handy\nfor a while.\"\n\"No newspaper reporters can\nreach you here, if that's what you're\nafter.\"     ,\n\"That's what I'm after. Just how\nmuch further is it to the cabin?\"\n\"Oh, a couple of miles,\" said Joel.\n'This Ls the last long climb. Soon\nwe'll reach the clearing, and there'll\nbe the cabin waiting to welcome\nus.\" \u25a0\n\"Darned If you don't go sentimental as the dickens  when you'\nspeak of the cabin,\" said Bill.\n\"Maybe. Say, I wish Uncle John\nwere here to enjoy it with ua.\"\nThe lavender was deepening over\nthe mountains. They now looked almost purple. The Blue Ridges had\nbecome another color \u2014 preparing\nfor a deep and soundless sleep. The\nboughs of the treei which bordered\nthe narrow road brushed the top of\nthe car. Once Joel stopped to lift\na bough upon which was built a\nbird's nest. The bird fluttered off to\nlight upon a nearby limb, watching, alert, nervous.\n\"Good Lord, Joel,\" Bill iald impatiently, \"what's the idea doing\nthat?\"\n\"The nest would have been\nknocked down,\" Joel said, as he got\nback into the car.\n\"You mean you'd hold us up just\nto\u2014\"\n\"There were eggs In It,\" Joel went\non. \"I saw them. A greenish blue,\nwith small brown spots.\"\n\"Well, step on It,\" Bill urged.\n\"It'll be dark soon, and we ought\nto get our stuff moved into the\ncabin before all the daylight Is\ngone.\"\n\"We've got kerosene,\" said Joel,\n\"And there are lamps in the cabin.\nWe don't have to worry about the\ndarkness catching us.\"\n\"Okay,\" said Bill. He slid down\ninto the teat and lit a cigaret. \"We\nwould have been here a lot looner\nif you hadn't taken io much time\nin Asheville buying groceries Why\ncouldn't we have waited and driven\nin for them tomorrow?\"\n\"Because I'm not going to be\nmaking trips down to Asheville,\"\nsaid Joel. \"We came up here to b.\nprimitive, and we're going to be\nprimitive.\"\n\"But. listen, Joel\u2014\"\n\"And don't get the Idea you are\ngoing,to be using my oar for excursions down to see movies, or get\nhotel meals.\"\n\"Good Lord, you don't mean you\nintend making hermits of both of\n\"I do.\"\n(To Be Continued) =\non*. It you push yourself too hard,\nyou overdraw on your reierve energy uid it take, more than normal\nrest to make you feel fresh and\nanxioui to go. The net result to:\nYou don't work u well th. next\nday. It ia mor. efficient to call a\nhalt before you are overly tired.\nProbably the wont future of\nconstant hurrying, however, to the\ntension it builds up. You know bow\nlt to when you rush from one thing\nto another \u2014 your mind races\nahead and you drive younelf to\nkeep up wltb it. This feeling ot\nbeing pressed for time to almost as\nfatiguing as the actual work involved. Plan your appointments so\nthat there to plenty of time between. Don't try to get quite so\nmuch done \u2014 there's always another\ndty. ^_^__^_____\nFairness...\nDaughter's Wages\nHer Own Properly\nB).  CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Miss Chatfield:\nI would like your opinion on my\ncase. I am nineteen, have been\nworking for three yean and now\nearn fourteen dollan a week. My\nfamily politely takei my envelope\nand hands me back four dollars.\nThey think I can live on nothing. I\nrealize the family has to live as well\nas I but with three othera working\nand all of them making more thati\nI make it doesn't seem fair for me\nto pay ten dollan a week and keep\nonly four.\nL. N. C.\nANSWER:\nI don't think the money arrangement is fair and I think the principle of the thing la wone. You\nwho earn that money ihould lay\nwhere lt goes and ilnce you are\nplainly conscientious about your\nduty to help run the home and are\nnot trying to lidestep your obliga-\ntion there's every reason why you\nshould be the one to say what your\ncontribution shall be.\nI'd tuggeit that you lit down with\nthe other wage eamera ln your family, figure what lt costs to run the\nhome and agree to pay your pro rata\n5art of that amount\u2014no mort. Let\nlino rock along this way and the\nwhole crowd will assume the right\nto garnishee your earnings. Perhaps\nyour parents will argue that you\ncouldn't find room and board for\nless than you pay them. Perhaps not\nas good as you are getting. But the\nboarding houie keepen are in to\nmake money off boarden and parents are aurely not up to iuch a\ntrick with a nineteen-year-old\ndaughter who ha* been working\nthree yean.\nTrue, poverty changei a lot of the\nrules that govern ordinary households. Most parents are loathe to\ntake any living expense money from\ntheir working daughten. Moat mothers find ready exouiei for letting\nsons live at home without paying\nanything for keep\u2014that is, when\nthey can make enda meet without\ntheir children's help. Nothing to\ncriticise ln parenti requiring children to pay their part when necessary.\nProblems of general interest, submitted by readen will be discussed\nIn thli column. Letten uraultable\nfor publication will be answered\npersonally provided they contain\nstamped, lelf-addreaied envelopes.\nAll names are held In confidence.\nWrite Miss Chatfield, in care ol this\nnewspaper.\nSouth Slocan C.W.L.\nHonors Parting Lady\nSOOTH SLOCAN, B. C.-Mn. R.\nG. Elliott entertained the Catholic\nWomen's League Tuesday at a farewell tea for Mrs. N. Dengler who,\nwith her husband and daughter,\nleavei soon for Vanoouver.\nA parting gift from the members\nof the League wai presented to\nMn. Dengler.\nThe guesta were Mn. N. Roberts,\nMn. H. Hiltz, Mn. Broadaway, Mrs\nJ. Roberto, Mn. N. Brown. Mrs. M.\nPanderaon and Mra. N. Dengler.\nStockings to Have Less Silk Soon,\nBright Colored Cottons Are Shown\nBir GLADYS ARNOLD\nCan.dl.n Pre.. Staff Writer\nOTTAWA. April 10 (CP) -Widespread changeover from all-silk\nstocking, to a variety of combinations and artificial silk ls expected\nto be made by manufacturen within the next few months bringing a\npinch ot war to Canadian women.\nReports from the Canadian Manufacturers' Association, textile journals, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics and retail distributors indi\ncate that for a time at least the\nquantity, color afld variety of stockings may be limited.\n\"There will be some kind of\nstockings, but we cannot be sure\njust what kind,\" one stocking buyer\nsaid.\nDistributors here said their\nstocks of all-silk hose are beginning to run low and that new shipment! from some manufacturer!\nwere bringing in stockings which\nshow the limitations imposed by\nthe Exchange Conservation Act\npassed by Parliament last December.\nUnder the act silk Imports-were\nreduced to 75 per cent of normal\nMarch 1 this year, and will be reduced to 60 per cent June 1. The\nnew stockings have lisle or other\nsubstitutes for silk in feet and tops,\nbut have a good stretch of silk remaining in the leg.\nBut an official of the C.M.A. laid:\n\"Tops and bottoms are getting\ncloser together\u2014in fact, they will\nbe squeezing the silk; right off the\ngirls' legs.\"\nHe said the limitation on silk imports does not mean that only that\nproportion may be used in a pair\nof stockings. It means only that the\nmanufacturer gets only 80 per cent\nof hli usual requirements and must\nmake up the rest out of substitutes.\nHe may produce all-silk stocking!\nfor export, and whatever mixture\nhe likes for Canadian consumption.\nMost factories, officials said, are\ntrying combinations of real silk\nwith artificial fabrics. The use of\na viscose yarn which can be entirely produced from Canadian\nwood-pulp is being tried. Similar\nexperiments have been tried in the\nUnited States but so far in Canada such processes have not reached\na market stage in finer stockings,\nthey said.\nColored stockings made of fine\ncotton now ar. being shown in\nshopi throughout Canada. They ar.\nof all-Canadian  manufacture.\nSaleswomen in Ottawa said th.\nfint times buyers bought them tor\nsporti wear. They predicted plenty\nof bright-colored stockings will be\nseen on the golf-courses thil summer.\nVALLICAN\nVALLICAN, B. C\u2014Miss K. Cutler of Winlaw visited Mr. and Mrs,\nW. Innes.\nJ. Patterson visited town.\nMr. and Mn. G. Forbes and J.\nForbes of Passmore visited here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Cutler of Winlaw visited here.\nMra. S. Reid of Slocan Park visited\nMrs. G. S. Strong.\nMrs. W. Young of Pasamore visited\nMrs. G. Ward.\nP. Cutler of Passmore visited here.\nG. Hunter of Trail was a guest of\nMrs. E. T. Coleman and Miss E. Coleman.\nRoy Strong visited Norman Hop-\nland of Passmore.\nMr. and Mrs. Dick Smith of Appledale visited Mra. G. S. Strong.\nMoyie Sends Red\nCross Shipment\nMOYIE, B.C. - The Red Cross\nmet at the home of Mrs. G. Smith.\nMrs. Alex St.Denls and her brother,\nDouglas Fink, entertained with\npiano accordion and mouthorgan\nselections.\nSent to headquarten, Mrs. Kershaw reports, were 4 pairs dark\ngrey socks, 8 pairs light grey socks,\n1 blue sweater, 1 grey sweater,, 7\npairs mitts, 2 body belts, 4 pain\nof two way mitts, 2 babies two\npieces sets, 3 ladles' gowns, 24\ndrapers, 1 helmet.\nDainty refreshments were served.\nThe next meeting will be held at\nthe home of Mrs. H. Pearson.\nfou'H Enjoy the Finer Flavour\nBRODER'S\nBEST   BRAND\nGolden Sweet Corn\nA\nWestern\nProduct\nCUTS\nRight Through\nCLOGGING\nDIRT\nrsT uie Gillett'i Pore Flake\nLye regularly ... and you'll\nkeep sink drains dean and running freely. It will not hann\nenamel* or f lumbing. Banishes\nunpleasant odors as it deans.\nGillett's Lye makes light work\nof dozens of hard cleaning tasks\n... saves you hours of drudgery-\nKeep a tin always oh handi\nnn bookut - t_\u00ab want; ty*\nBooklet Mill how __U powerful <___\u00bb\ndan cloiirf dr\u00ablni . .. Imp. out.\nhouie. _ta-_..ndodor!ei. by deitioytaa\nthe content, el the elect .. .how tt\nperform, doieni of tun. Sola for .\nfree copy to St_n<__rd Brad. Ltd.,\nrw At. ud Mwtir Btrwt.\nTofc-ito, (tat.\n\u2022JVmr -Hijoh'\u00ab ly tn hot \u00ab\u00ab. Th.\nnciion af the ly luell boat, tht waMr.\nSAME\nQUALITY\nFLEECV SOFT\n_--__..- -___ _\u25a0--.._ -  m    \t\n_-^__-._-'^a___k_.^-_J..-___\u25a0\n_--________l___ll\n\u25a0  *  :\n\u00ab,\u25a0 a.''tol \u25a0_&... \u2022,-____ \u25a0-^-^\u25a0V-auij-g^\n Brogues  and  Semi-\nBrogues in tans and\nBrowns.\n$5.50\nto\n$12.00\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLtaderi in Footfashion\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO, APRIL 11. 1541\nITCHENER\nITCHENER, B. C\u2014Mr. Ind Mrs.\nBUT of Trail are visiting Mr.\n, Mn. A. Simpion, en route to\n-Leod, Alta.\nIrs. F. Molander and children of\nWon hive token up residence\n_ tor the Summer. <_\n:r. and Mn. C. Botterill wi\nbend' visiton it Creiton it the\nne of Mr. ind Mn. F. Crawford.\ntr. end Mn. W. Lees, Mn. A H.\nnn and N. K. Devlin motored\nCrinbrook on Wedneidiy.\nIrs. W. Mulllni, G. Newby and\nlfrld  Ginter  returned  Mondiy\n0 EASE MISERY\n>F CHIID'S COLD\nEEDS\nTHAT BRING RESULTS\nI beciuse they're scientifically\nI produced. These seeds have\nIter yein been recognized\nI among the belt sn the market\nELSON fir DISTRICT\nFARMERS' SUPPLY\nCOMPANY\nNi. 174 Bex 8\nNelion, B. 0.\nfrom a vacation at Pincher Creek,\nAlta., and Maple Creek, Saik.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Molander and\ndaughter, Lorraine, were visitors to\nCranbrook.\nMra. H. Bohan Is visiting Trail.\nThe Mlller-Dodds mill Tt closed\ndown temporarily.\nMill Mary Bohan returned home\nfrom Salmo.\nMiss, Louise Collier returned to\nCreston on Sunday.\nMra. J. Renzie entertained small\nchildren and mothen at her son,\nDean'i, third blrthdiy Wednesday\nifternoon. An t-tractive birthday\ncake centred the table around which\n12 children were seated.\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SI\/OCAN, B. C.-Mn. Elite M Long of Nelsoh wai a weekend gueit of Mn. R. G. Elliott.\nMrs. N. Brown hai returned to\nWinlaw after spending a few days\nwith Mrs. N. Dengler.\nMri. J. McFadden whoae young\nion his been a patient ln hospital\nreturned with him Saturday.\nMrs. John Millar of Cranbrook\nls a guest of Mra. G. C. Cobb.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry McDougall\nwere Nelson visitors Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Dengler md her\ndaughter Margaret, have left for\nCampbell River, Vancouver Island,\nto make their home.\nMr. and Mra. O. W. Humphrey had\nas weekend guesta Mr. and Mrs. H.\nH. Trizzell of Nelion.\nMrs. A. MdDougall and little\ndaughter Sallie were Nelaon vLsltors.\nt. and Mrs. H. Horn and fam\nly ljave left to make their home in\nIrescent Valley.\nFirst Aid Club Is\nFormed ot Jaffray\nJAITRAY, B. C.- A lint Aid\nin* been formed under the auspices\nof the Jaffray Athletic Association\nThe first lecture wis given by Dr.\nWorkman of Coal Creek Milted by\nMr. Pucky of Fernie and J. Caufield\nof Coil Creek.\nA class ot 16 wu ln attendance.\nKimberley lo Be\nHost to Kootenay\nBoards ol Trade\nAnnual meeting of thi Auoclited\nBoardi of Trade ot Eutern Brltith\nColumbia will be held at Kimberley\nprobably May 27 and 28. Nelson\nBoard ot Trade wu advised of the\nprobable dates In a letter from J, R.\nHunter, Secretary, at the Board'i\nluncheon meeting at the Hume cm\nThunday. He uked for early tub-\nmission of resolutions and namei ol\ndelegates.\nC. H. Hamilton, H. B. Gore, E. E.\nL. Dewdney, B. C. Poulaon and Morrli Bercov were appointed the Nel-\nson Board's Resolution Committee,\nDelegates named were H. M.\nWhtaiter and W. M Cunliffe. President A. H. Allan wai automatically\na member of the Anoclated Executive, It wu pointed out.\nKASLO\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Mn. M. Jesty hu\nreturned to Shutty Bench following\na vliit In Nelson.\nThomu Shelly of Johnson's Landing villted Kaslo Saturday.\nC, W. Webster was a visitor to\nNelson.\nMia Lorna Speirs is ipending a\nfew days ln Trail with her brother-\nin-law and sitter, Mr, and Mra. Fred\nBurrows.\nMr. and Mn. C. J. Garrett of Retallack were Nelson and Kaslo visitor!.\nMri. C. J. White was a vliitor to\nNelion.\nMr. md Mn. Dive Powell and\nparty from Nelson viiited Kaalo\nSunday.\nNoel Baochui ol the Cranbrook\nVeterans Guards arrived Saturday\nwith Mra. Bacchus. They left Sunday to spend a few days at their\nhome in Birchdale.\nH. J. Colee has returned from\nGolden to spend a few days with\nMrs. Coles.\nMr. and Mra. D. Carson of Marblehead were Saturday visitors in the\nCte.\nE. H. Latham hu received word\nof .the death of his brother-in-law,\nW. D. Mclntyre, at hli home in\nMoose Jaw.\nFred Moulton wu a visitor to\nNelion.\nMr. and Mn. C. Cummini and\nchildren of Nelson spent Sunday in\ntown.\nKASLO, B. C-Mr. and Mn. W\nM Gibson and son Keith were week,\nend visitors to Nelson.\nGeorge Palmer of the Trail Veteran's Guard unit is apending a few\ndayi here with his family.\nMr. and Mra. F. T. Abey have re<\nturned to Mirror Lake after a visit\nto Nelson.\nJohn Matipfcenon wu ln New\nDenver Wednesday for the funeral\nof M. McLean.\nMr. and Mn. W. H. Dunn were\nSaturday visiton ln Nelion.\nOscar Tapanila of Nelion visited\nhis mother nere.\nArchie Greenlaw of Lardeau visited the city.\nFrank Peter wu a recent visitor\nto Nelson.\nK. Scatchard of New Denver was\na Tuesday visitor in town.\nMr. and Mra. George Abey and\nsons of Nelion apent a weekend ln\nMirror Lake with Mn. Abey's sister. Miss Olive Link.\nJ. A. LaBelle of Creston, formerly\nof Kulo was a weekend visitor to\ntown.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIQNIUX\n\u2022   Mrs. F. F. Payne entertained\nRapid free delivery urvlee\u2014\nTelephone 25\nI    I    !    !     !     !     !\nWhat is\npharmacognosy?\nPharmacognosy Is the science of\ndrugs treating of the characteristics of crude drug! and simples.\nIt ll one of the many branches\nof study your Fleury'i pharmacist undertook to prepare himself\ntor the important work of compounding prMcrlptloni. Tnil\nknowledge is your issurance of\naccuracy ind dependability in\nour prescription work.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Aril Block\nSTAND EM ON THEIR HEADS\nWITH FORMS PRINTED BY\nMmn lathj\nPeople hivt beea known to fit\necitatic over commercial printing\ndone by the Nelson Dally News.\nYou'll feel thit way when you im\nhow quickly, how well, ind how\neconomically we can handle your\nprinting needi.\nYour Newspaper Printing\nPlant Cm De a Bttttr Job\nJtom Batig\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n266 Baker St., Nelion, I. C.\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B.C.- Pte. Silver\nShaw returned from Quebec last\nweek, having been discharged.\nA. Fantad hu left for Lethbridge\nfor medical attention.\nMn. Curtis of Creston was a\nvisitor on Sunday, guest of her\ndaughter and son-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Andestad.\nMrs. Van Koughnett of Boiwell\nIs a guest of Mrs. P. Hagen.\nMrs. W. Cooper who has been a\npatient ln Creiton Hospital has returned home.\nMr. and Mra. E. Kidder and\nfamily, arrived from Alberta and\nare guesti of Mr. and Mrs. H. Mclnnis.\n0. Ofner ind H. Ofner and family\nhave moved to Boswell, where they\nwill operate i shingle mill during\nthe Summer months.\nMr, and Mrs. F. West and family have moved in the house belonging to Mr. and Mrs. H. Ofner.\nMn. Hook hu returned from\nOreiton Hospital.\nMri. Dunseath ii a patient ln\nCreston Hospital.\nMn. A. Rutledge and daughter\nAnne left on Saturday for Jaf\nIray for the Easter holidays.\nThe Ladies Aid monthly meet\ning wu held at the home ot Mn.\nP. Hagen on Thursday.\nCRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C. - Mill Shirley\nWilton it visiting her parents at\nCranbrook.\nMrs. E. Drlffil of Kitchener wu\na weekend guest of her mother\nMri. John Arrowsmith.\nMrs. T. Dunseath ot Wynndel is\na patient at Creston Hoipltal.\nMiss D. McMillan hu returned\nfrom Rossland where ihe visited\nMn. D. McMillan for a few weeks.\nMiss Stella Tompkins is visiting\nat Nakusp.\nMn. Miller of Nelson visited with\nMrs. M. Dodds.\nRev. Forbei Robertson of Nelson\nwu a visitor at the weekend and\noccupied the pulpit of St. Stephen's\nPreibyterian Church Sunday morning and evening.\nPte. Sid Scotfof the D.C.O.R. hu\nreturned to Victoria. He w_s a\nguest ot Mr. and Mn. L. T. he.\nveoue.\nW. H. Cartwright ipent a couple\nof days In Nelson at the first of the\nArt Leu hu arrived from Trail\nand li relieving it the Camdian\nBank of Commerce.\nMn. Jim Bateman and younger\nboys have left for Burnaby, where\nthey plan to make their some for\nI bridge and tea Wednesday In\nhonor of Mft. W. M. Walker who\nit leaving next week to reside at\nVancouver. Guests were, Mn. W.\nM. Walker, Mra. L. E. Borden, Mn.\nHarold Lakes, Mn. C. W. Apple-\nyard, Mrs. H. J. Reed, Mn. W. M.\nCunliffe, Mn. S. P. McMordie, Mrs.\nWilliam Fotherlngham, Mn. E. E.\nL. Dewdney, Miss M. H. Cameron,\nMn. John Cartmel, Mn. E. G.\nSmyth. Mn. R. L. McBride, Mn. H.\nH. MacKenzle.'Mn. A. G. MacKay,\nMn. H. Reeling, Mrs, Harry Burn;,\nMisi Maybelle Smith, Mn. P. Q.\nMorey, Mra. J. G. Bunyan, Mrs. L.\nV. Rogen, Mra. E. C. Wn_fge. Mri.\nKingiley Terry and JU\". \u00ab\u2022 H.\nHallett .    .     \u201e_\ne S. A. Maddocks, Manager of\nthe Nelson Branch of The Royal\nBank ot Canada, left Thursday\nmorning to spend the Easter weekend at Vancouver. Mn. Maddocks,\nwho hu. been visiting Vmcouver\nfor a couple of weeki, will accompany Mr. Maddocks on hli return\nTuesday.\nMr. utd Mrs. Gary H. Carter,\nwho have been staying ln Nelion\nfor two weeks, left Tuesday on their\nreturn to Toronto. Mn. Certer, who\nbecame ill enroute to Nelson, wu\na patient in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, where iha underwent an\noperation tor appendkitii.\ne Miss Barbara Bajlock, popular\nbride-eject, wu guest of honor at\na shower given by Miss Betty MacDonald, Hoover Street, latt week\nand atalt-Wednesday evening when\nMrs. William Ramsay and Mrs. John\nMorey entertained et a kitchen\nshower at the home of Mn. Ramsay, High Street. Guests were Mrs.\nJ. K. Kilpatrlck, Miss Hilda Tal-\nberg, Mrs. G. Stewart, Mn. A. Wllley, Miss Betty MacDonald, Miss\nBetty Freeman, Miss Maizie Grimes,\nMiss Rita Jones, Miss Monica Brewer, Miss Jill Wigg, Miss Maude\nDolphin, Misi Evelyn\nMies Peggy Gibbon, Mra. J.\nof Trail and Mra. P. Duffy of Fruit\nvale.\nMiss Heather Herridge has left\nfor Nakusp to visit her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. W. Herridge, for the\nEuter weekend.\nMiss Julie Marapodi, Miss Sadie Smith and Min Dorothy Smith\nleft Thursdiy morning to visit at\nVancouver.\ne Mrs. Hugh Greenwood, Willow\nPoint, was a Thursday visitor ln\ntown. .\n* Ray Hunt a! the Nelton Bank\nof Montreal staff left Wednesday\nmorning for Vancouver where hit\nmarriage to Miss Phyllis Blain of\nNorth Vancouver will take place\nSaturday. Mr. and Mn. Hunt will\nreside in Fairview on their return\nto Nelson.\nThompson,\nWyllie\na Carl MdDonou*h of Sheep\nCreek wis a Thursday vliitor in\ntown.\n\u2022 H, A. Ronmark, Granite Bead,\nhu left to ipend I tew monthi ln\nVancouver.\ne Mn. A a Gracey, Mlu M. H.\nCameron and Mra*. A. G. MacKay\nmotored to Rosalind Sunday to visit\nMri. Gordon Hallett,\ne Mr. tnd Mrs. William Cameron of Trail are guuts ot Mr, and\nMrs. Louis Choquette, Silica Street,\nfor the Easter holiday.\n. e Mn. Leo Winters and infant\ndaughter left Kootenay Uke General Hospital Thunday for their\nhome at 304 Victoria Street.\ne Mlu Frances Horrocks, student at St. Joseph's Academy, lift\nThuraday night for Michel where\nshe will visit her mother. Mrs. A\nHorrocks, tor toe Euter holidayi.\nI Mrs. 0. Deverson of Crawford Bay wu a shopper in Nelson\n\u2022 WM Velma Mclntyre lilt lut\nnight to ipend the Euter holiday at\nKamloops.\n\u2022 Mn. J. I*. Gamble, Latimer\nStreet, hu returned from Van.\ncouver where ibi vlalted ber son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mn\nA. E. Campbell, for two months.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brown ind\ntwo children of Trill viiited the\nCity during tbe week.\ne A. R. Moore of Willow Point\nvisited Nelion Thursday.\ne Miu Jean Logan, who it-\ntends St Joseph's Academy, left\nThunday to visit her mother, Mrs.\nBarry Logan, it Grand Forki for\nthe Euter holiday.\nMn. Robert Gray ton et Upper\nBonnington viiited town Thursday.\ne Constable T. Youngberg left\nlast night to spend Euter weekend\nln Kamloops.\ne Gordon Buchanan of the Nelson Branch of The Royal Bank ol\nCanada hat left tor Grand Forks\nwhere he will relieve ln the bank\nfor three weeki.\nCharlei Holt of'Balfour wu a\nvisitor to town,\ne Graeme Steed, who attends the\nUniversity of Alberta, ii visiting his\nrents, Dr. and Mn. W. B. Steed,\n.timer Street for the Easter holl\ndaya.\ne   Mn. 3. C. McCallum hu left\nto visit her husband at Nanaimo.\nMlsi_Join   Petersen,   Kelson\nONLY TWICE IN THIS CENTURY\nDOES EASTER FALL ON APRIL 13\n-PAOB PIVI\nBusiness College itudent hu lett\nto ipend the Easter holiday at her\nhome In Grand Forks. Min Eileen\nTeague accompanied Miu Petersen\nand will be her guest over the holl\nday,\ni Mr. and Mn. A. J. Johnion of\nErie wen Nelion visiton Thursday.\n1 Mr. and Mrt J. J. Haley of\nTrail visited town Wednesday.\nOn. JIvl QjJl\n-TAINER'S \"CRUCIFIXION\" ON CKLN\nAmong special Easter programmes to be presented trom CKLN is the\nmusic of Sir John Stainer's sacred cantata, \"The Crucifixion\", which will\nbe heard this afternoon from 3:30 to 4 p.m. A special set of recordings wai\nsecured for this programme last year, and listener response was so favorable the programme will be repeated this year.-Aololsts are Richard\nCrooks and Lawrence Tlbbett the organist Is Mark Andrewi, and the\nTrinity Choir of New York lings the choruses. The Bible narrative is\nto be interpolated throughout\n\"8UPERMAN\" AT LATER TIME TODAY\nIncluded in special network features today is 'Xa Puslon\", by Hadyn,\nto be lung by a Montreal Choir from 5 to 6 p.m., necessitating the postponement ol the children'i feature \"Superman\" to 8 o'clock. The popular\nBirthday Party\" will be broadcast by CKLN from 6:15 to 6:44 tonight\nBIOGRAPHY OP OHURCHILL OFFERED BY RADIO STATIONS\nCanadian radio stations have made available to the listening public a\nbiography of Britain's Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, which Is being\nsold for a nominal sum to aid the Churchill British War Vlctlmi' Fund.\nCopies are obtainable through CKLN. Frequent announcements from the\nstation give full particulari. The edition is limited, consequently orden\nshould be sent in Immediately.\nKBEP A QUART OF\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nON HAND.\nRich ln bone an dtooth building\ncalcium.\nIXootenay Valley Uairy\nNow Is the Time\nto   Select   Your\nNew Easter Bonnet\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n\u00ab9 Baker St Pbone 874\nFRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n8:00\u2014BBC Newi\n8:1_-fluestlons of the Hour\n8:30\u2014The Balladeer\n8:4S-The Wife Saver-\n9:00-CBC News\n9:15\u2014Recital\n9:30\u2014Morning Serenade\n9:46\u2014Lyle Henderson\n10:00\u2014Time Signal\n10:30\u2014Frankie Master's Orchestra\n10:45\u2014CBC News\nH:30-Brah-ns' \"Requiem\"\nAFTERNOON\nlBKXHMusic by Handel\n12:30\u2014CBC News\n12:4*-Mu_Ical Programme\n1:00\u2014The Music Guild\n1:45\u2014Presenting\n2:00\u2014To Be Announced\n2:15\u2014Talk\u2014\"Gardening\"\n2:30-Popular Songs\n2:45-BBC News\n4:55\u2014News Commentary\n8:00\u2014\"L\u00ab Pusion\" by Haydn\nEVENINC\n7:00-CBC Newi\n7:15\u2014Britain  Speaks\n7:30\u2014BBC Radio Newi Reel\n8:00\u2014The Northern Messenger\n8:30\u2014The Cavaliers\n8:4o-TSlk\n9:00\u2014Hugh Bancroft and riora\nGoulden __ ,    ,\n9:30\u2014Drama-'Thli England\"\n10:00\u2014Piano Rambllngs\n10:15-CBC Newi\n10:30\u2014Songi of the Yein\n11:00\u2014Dmce Muilc\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWING!\nMORNING\n7:50-0 Canida\n10:00\u2014Melodiu in Rhythm\n10:15\u2014Songi from Memory Lane\n11:00\u2014To Be Announced\nAFTERNOON\n12:25\u2014Programme Summary and\nAnnouncement!\n1:80\u2014Quarter Hour of\nContentment   \u25a0\n3:00\u2014To Be Announced\n8:30\u2014\"The Crucifixion\" by Ilr ;\nStainer\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014flupennan\n6:15-Radio Birthday Party\n6:45\u2014South American Way\nOther Periods: CBC Programmei\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RID     '\n.1:30\u2014Information Pleue\n6:00-Waltz Time with Frank Munn\n7:00\u2014Wlngi of Destiny\n7:30\u2014Alec Templeton Time\nNBC-BLUB\n8:30\u2014Ben Bernie Variety Ihow\nCOLUMBIA\n7:80\u2014Al Pearee aad His Gsng\n8:15\u2014Lanny  Row,  Songi\n8:_0-*Great Hays\"\n9:00\u2014Kate Smith Prognmmi\n10:15\u2014I-ight-Cap Yarns\nMUTUAL\n8:00-einfonietta\n8:30-1 Want a Divorce\nOne of the sites which attracts pilgrims who go to thi Holy City\nto attend the Easter services. It is a view of the Bare Rock ln front\nof the main altar in the Basilica church of Gethsemane, believed to\nbe that on which Jesus Christ and His disciplei rested. Above the\naltar is a beautiful mosaic of Christ praying, \"Let This Cup Pui\nTram Me.\"\nNIW FREQUENCIES\nNBC-RID\nKFI .40,   KHQ-500,   KOA-850,\nKPO-680\nNBC-BLUE\nKGA-1510, KGO-810, KJR-1000\nCOLUMBIA\nKNX-1070.  K8L-11W, XJTY-\n920\nMUTUAL-DON LBB\nKOL-1300, KFRC-610\nthe preient\nAdam Cruickshank of Nelson wu\na visitor at Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Speen returned frem Lethbridge Monday,\nwhere thev had been vlilting their\nion md daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMn. H. J. Speeri.\nCRESTON, B. C.-iMra. Ronald\nGibbs of Penticton viiited Tueiday\nMr. md Mn. F. W. Aah. She wu returning from Brandon, Mm, to her\nhome, in the Okanagan.\nMn. C. J. Adamaon viiited Nelion\nthli week, leaving on Tueiday.\nMn. J. Neale and A G. Ford of\nButte, Alta., villted Mn. B. Calkin\nand Mr. Courtney. They were on a\nmotor visit to Vancouver arid Cout\npoints.\nMn. John Murrell of Vsncouver\narrived Wednuday on a viilt witn\nher parenti, Mr. and Mri. W. H.\nHilton, md Mr. and Mn. Charles\nMurrall.\nR. B. Staples ot Kelowjia is spending the week In Creiton, a guest ol\nhis brother, Fnnk V. Staples.\nMn. B. G. Hendenon and Mn.\nJohn W. Dow are at Victoria thu\nweek where tbey arc representing\nKootenay Presbyterial at the annual conference of Preibyterian Women's Missionary Societies ot British Columbia.\nTed Staplei of Kelowna ii on a\nvisit to old friendi and ll a guest of\nMr. md Mn. A. L. Palmer.\nR. W. McMillan ot Lethbridge la\nspending tbe week In Creiton .\nLloyd Couling, Williim Fruer.\nS. G. Clark, D. K. Archibald md\nA. E. Fowlle were viiiton at Cranbrook Tuesday.\nG. L. Finch of Kelowna spent the\nweekend, with Creiton friendi\nE. Uri of Wynndel wu a vliitor\nto Creston, Tuudiy evening tor the\nmeeting oi the Board of Trade.\nScott Moncrelff, M. D.. wu here\nSaturday examining recruiti or thi\nC.A.S.F. Two qualified ind lift immediately for Vlctorli. They wers\nDavid Fut ind Ed Merritt\nBy THOMAB WAYLINQ\nCentral Presi Canadian Writer\nEuter: \"a Christian festival in\ncommemoration of the Resurrection\nof Christ\" will be observed throughout the Christian world on April\n13.\nIt Is not an annlvenary, for the\ndate of Easter jumps around the,\ncalendar like an Easter rabbit\nOnly twice in the present century will Easter Day fall on April\n13; this year and in 1962.\nThe original Easter was the\nAnglo-Saxon Eostra or Eostera dedicated to the Goddess of Spring.\nThis Christian Easter ls set by\necclesiastical authorities as \"the\nfirst Sunday after the full moon\nwhich happens upon or next after\nthe 21st ot March.\"\nWith the pagans Eostra meant rejoicing over the arrival of Spring.\nWith the Jews it is a commemoration of the Passover, with the\nChristians, the Crucifixion and the\nResurrection.\nThe Hebrews held that their\nPMSover must come on the 14Ch\nday of the month. In the Christian\nchurch there was much dissension\nabout Easter Day. The Western\nChristians observed Easter Day on\nthe Sunday and the eastern Christians on the 14th day, irrespective of what day it might be.\nFIXED BY COUNCIL\nOF NICAEA\nThe Council ot Nicaea in A.D.\n323 decided Eaiter should be celebrated on a Sunday, snd that it\nshould be the tint Sunday following the full moon after the vernal\nequinox, March 21.\nThe tull moon, however, could\nnot always be observed. It had to\nbe calculated. More trouble arose,\nthe astronomical mathematicians\ndid not agree on the cycles to be\nused as the buis of calculation.\nThe British, Roman and Irish\nchurches commemorated Euter on\ndifferent Sundays In different\nyears.\nIn 1582 the calendar md thi tun\nwere 10 days apart and Pope Gregory XHI had to exercise 10 diys\nfrom the calendar to get March 21\nwhere it really belonged.\n(When the Gregorian calendar\nwas adopted by Great Britain and\nher colonies in 1752, Washington's\nbirthday, originally Feb. 11 became\nFebruary 22.)\nFor centuries March 21 wu not\nreally March 21. It was just a day\nthey thought was March 21.\nCareful scientific Investigation\nputs the most probable date ot Easter Day as April 9. Under the preient system Eaiter Day only comei\nthrice on April 9 in the present\ncentury; in 1939,1944 and 1950, and\nthen not again for 60 years.\nAs Euter Day dominates about 17\nweeks ot the church calendar ln iti\nfluctuations, the Council of Nicaea\ndidn't do much of a job.\nIn 1928 the British parliament\npassed a permissive statute so that\nEuter would be the firit Sunday\nafter the second Saturday in April.\nCOULD BE FIXED DATI\nThen is no real need for Eaiter to Jump about any more thm\nChristmas. December 25 is celebrated as the anniversary of the\nbirth of Christ but nobody knows\nIf lt ls the real anniversary.\nTheophllus of Antioch recorded\nthat the Gauls celebrated the birth\nof our Lord on the 25th ot December. Hlppolytus at a later date declared Jesus wu born on the 26th\nof December and that it was a\nWednesday.\nA Latin chronographer of A D.\n254 stated that Christ was born on\nthe 26th ot December, a Friday. A\nGerman commentator insisted thit\nthe 25th ol December, the day of\nChrist's birth, was a Sunday. Other\nchronologlsts put the birth date variously on Auguit 28, May 20, April\n19, md April 20. Clement of Alexandria set it at November 17, in the\nyear 3 B.C.\nIn Africa, a learned writer ln A.\nD. 243 argued that the world wai\ncreated perfect; flowen ln bloom,\ntrees ln leaf, md therefore In the\niprlng. \"Now the sun ind moon,\"\nhe wrote, \"were crated on a Wed-\nmsdiy. The 28th of March suits all\nthue consideration!, therefore,\nChrist being the Son of Righteousness was born on March 38.\"\nWhile primarily Easter is a religious commemoration, your wife\nmd mine, and their sisters and\ntheir cousins, whom they reckon\nby the dozens\u2014and their aunts,\n\u25a0till have a bit ot pagan\u2014Easter\nil the coming of Spring\u2014and Spring\nfinery\u2014Mother Earth adorns herself In the Spring but it is nature's\nSpring\u2014nature's resurrection. She\nwon't lend up crocus and daffodils\nud Spring flowers If Euter hap'\npens to tall in thi early blustery\ndayi of March; nor witholi them\nwhen Euter it it the tag end of\nApril The womenfolk, nowever,\nobserve the ecclesiastical Easter.\nSo the Eaiter which may be\nEuter (and uiuilly isn't) demoralizes the Spring fashion show, and\nall the trade and commerce connected therewith. The womenfolk\nare mostly for a fixed Euter, when\nIt will be Eaiter and Spring and\ntheres' only the ordinary uncertan\nty of the weather.\nPALESTINE SPRING\nIn Palestine, where the tint Bu\nter morn witnused the Resurrection, Spring comes earlier thin the\ngeneral run for North America,\nprobably about the lame time as\nthe southern states. A fixed Easter\naround April 9 would be a fairly\naverage approximate of Spring.\nAt the general convention of t\nEpicopal Church in Atlantic City,\nOctober, 1934, a United Presi survey found 310 delegates in favor\nof a fixed Euter and 19 for tht\nstatus quo (which so far u Easter\nDay is concerned is never the status\nquo)<\nProposals have been made before\nthe League of Nations for the reform ot the calendar and after the\npresent war steps may be taken,\namong the democratic reforms to\nestablish a new syitem of days md\nweeks and months\u2014md feast days\nand fast days. Easter is the most\nmoveable of all the calendar dates,\nand when it'i Euter one never\nreally knows whithw lt is or it\nisn't or when lt ls,\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mn.\nJ. Muoha md son and daughter\nhave lett to take up residence at\nSlocan City.\nMn. W. S. MacAlpIne and son\nAim have returned to Cretton after\nvisiting thi former's sister Mn. P.\nG. Bennett ,   ,\nL. Kenerit visited Mr. aad Mrs.\nA. Ogden. ,  _,\nA. Walton of South Edmonton Is\nvisiting his sister Mrs. P. G. Bennett and his mother Mrs. R. Walton.\nMrs. I. Jensen hu returned to\nher home.\nMn. A. H. Noakes of Balfour\nwas a Procter visitor.\nMn. A. Ogden md daughter\nClaire visited Nelson.\nMn. P. Blundon of Nelson visited\nher mother Mn. A. Crosby.\nMlu Elsie Sopow wu a guest\nof Mlu Anne Crosby.\nMr. md Mn. E. Leichlutta of\nTrail viiited Mr. md Mn. L. Bonacci.\nMra. A. Ling visited hir lon-ln-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. md Mrs. L.\nBonacci.\nPaul Solecki b viilting here.\nMiss Beverly Rose Solecki ot\nBlske is visiting her grandparents,\nMr. md Mra. N. Shkwarok.\nMiu Faith Ritchie wu a guest\nof Mr. md Mra. H. CUft\nMra. R. Walton, Mrs. P. G. Bennett md daughter. Miss Elsie Bennett and A. Walton were Gtw\nCreek viiiton.\nFREEMAN\nThi ROOM ol Furniture VtllMt\n!\u25a0('\u2022 Block    Nslion   Phone IU\nTrad* In Your   '   '\nOLD FURNITURl\nii Pirt Payment tn\nNEW FURNITURE\ntei\nSi\nAPPLEDALE\"\nAmaDALli. B. C - ybtJAi^A.\nwlft her husband, who ls residing\n\u25a0-wd*Archibald 'and' family   oi\n_| were Sunday |uei_ ol Mn.\nMtsIh. Fordyce wu a visitor\nto\u00bbSr^: c_* vuito* gqfeg,\nMn. B. jhaw Is home alter rat-ding the Winter with her daughter,\nMn. H. Towniend, of Murrayv-Be,\nB. C. ' K\nMr. ind Mn. 3. Fordyce visited\nMn. B. Beninger of Perry Siding\nSunday. f-\nNAKUSP\nNAKBSP. B. C.-W. end Mtl-A.\nCowan have u guest their daughter Mn. Dorii Hoot a\nC. Horrey wu a Tueeday vtyto*\nto Nelson. l\nMra. M. Ion left Wedneed-J j*\nCalgary to visit her son In law and\ndaughter, Mr. md Mn. C. Howard..\nMlsi Ivls Ferguion left to ipend\na few days in Jto\u00ab-md with \u00bbr\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr, ind\nMrs. H. G. Gardner.\nMn. E. Angrlgnon of New Denver and her daughter, Mn. A\nGreenlaw of Lardo were Nahap\nvisiton en route to Edgewood to\nvisit tb. and Mn. Albert Angrlgnon.\nJ. Jenkins of Arrow Park wu a\nNakuip visitor Wednesday.\nMn. O. Hunter Gardner Sr, utt\nWednesday to vitit relativee In\nMiss Mary Rushton who attends\nbusiness college in Nelion, Is ipending a tew dan at her bom* here.\nStanley wDliaras of TnU wu \u00bb\nNakuip visitor.\nMn. A. Johnson of Burton wu \u2022\nshopper In Nakusp.\nCorp. Llndsey ot .\nGuard at Fernie visited Nakusp en\nLlndsey of the   Vete-lM*\nroute to his home in Edgewood.\nMrs. H. F. Tyreman wu a visitor\nto Nelson.\nMn. Wells, wno teaefcu at Oar-\nroll! Landing, wai to town en rout*\nto the Cout to ipend Juter.\nMr. md Mn. Knelson-were in\ntown from Makinion'i Landing.\nMn. A Middl\u00abmu_ wu a vliitor\nfrom Rock Iilmd.\nMr. ind Mn. L. Ott hive u guest\nMn. Ott'i mother, Mn. T. Steenhoff\nof Salmo.\nMiss Dorlnne Munro who teachu\nat Grahams Landing, visited Nakuip\nen route to the Coast for Euter.\nMf. and Mra. N. Moxham of Arrow\nPark were Nakusp visiton.\nR. Workman of New Denver wu\nIn town Tuesday.\n\u25a0st to 52 ystri old. Women who are\nrMtl-M, moody, MRVO-B-who\nteat bot luhts, <__y spellt-to take\nLydls E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound, plnkham's Compound Is \u2022.-\nIectlve to tulp women during these\n\"trying tlmts\" due to functtonsl\nlrrigularMM. Made ln Canada.\nWORTH TOYING!\nWATCH REPAIR\nli a Jib fer ixpirti. Our work\n\u2022aiurei your utlifutlen.\nH. H. Sutherland\n-irt\nSWEATERS   *\nIn pastel shades. Sires 14-20.\n$1.95   $2.95\nFashion First Ltd.\nSe. Hii Niw 1941\nRefrigerators\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO;\n574 Baker tt Phone M0\nTh* Eaiter Favorite!\nFOUREX\nHot + Buns\n251 Doi.\u2014At Yoar Croceit\nEaster\nIce Cream\nt    Pineapple and Crip* Brick\n\u2022 Iff Centre Brick\n\u2022 Brick of tha Month\nNOW AT YOUR PALM DEALERS\n25c\nSlightly higher priced at\niome country pointi.\nPalm Dairies Ltd.\n\u25a0 \u25a0_..,a.-,i.,....-i-tlfYjM*';ll,., |\n\t\n wppw^WM .m \"- \u25a0 J>fijptpffW\"  '\"\"PD\nI'Aae si*\n\u00ae fiamt Sailg SVma\nEitabllihed April 22, 1901\nBritish Columbia'!\nMoit Interetting Newipaper '\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED. 286 Baker St.. Nelson. British Columbil.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nFRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941.\n4M3r Savings Will Be Cushion\nfor Peace time\ni j .The big argument for investment\nin War Savings Certificates is that\nthe country needs money. We can't\nproduce a maximum of munitions and\nsupplies for consumption in defeating\nHitler without it.\nThat argument is unanswerable,\nand on that ground alone investment\nin War Saving Certificates is a privilege as well as'a duty.\nBut there is another reason for\nparticipation in this form of investment to the maximum that the law\nallows\u2014investors cannot put up more\nthan $480 a year because the government wants the bigger fellows to buy\nWar Bond issues\u2014and that is that it\nis mighty good business.\nEvery $4 purchase produces $5 in\n7*_ years, which is a good return on\nthe best security that the world can\noffer. Many of us during the years\nafter the war will be grateful to our\nown wisdom in having prepared to this\nextent to meet conditions which may\nnot be easy. And, jf we do not need\nthe money for the necessities of life,\nit will be a very useful backlog of security or, perhaps, if we feel like.it,\nfor the purchase of some of the luxuries that could not be enjoyed in wartime.\nScuttlers at Heart\nAccomplished scuttlers as they are\nwhen facing British naval units, even\nwhen the units are much inferior in\ngun power, the German and Italian\nrepresentatives of \"sea-power\" have\nnow taken to scuttling at moorings in\nforeign harbors.\nSabotaging at anchor is the land\nequivalent of scuttling at sea, and the\nconcerted attempted destruction, or\nattempted crippling, of German and\nItalian merchant ships interned in the\nUnited States and in South American\ncountries shows that Hitler and Mussolini have the jitters over what they\nenvision as happening to them as a result of the intensified United States\ndrive for aiding Britain.\nJitters it must be, for while they\nare doubtless wise in fearing the ultimate direct participation of the United\nStates in the war, it is a little difficult\nto see indications of the South American countries turning over interned\nships to the British. At least it would\nhave been difficult up to last week.\nSince then, the situation has changed\nsomewhat, and the South American\nrepublics are following the lead of t_he\nUnited States in seizing the interned\nships and in imprisoning the saboteurs\n\u2014a pretty amazing development.\nThe criminal acts against the laws\nof the United States, and of the South\nAmerican countries affected, act3\nwhich will be punished, both in respect\nto the actual saboteurs, and in respect\nto the diplomatic agents who transmitted the orders, have gone further\nthan anything heretofore, toward producing a breach in relations.\nIt has also in every case resulted\nin seizure of the ships, and in the case\nof those seized by the United States\nwill inevitably suggest the advisability\nof adding them to the merchant fleets\ncarrying munitions and food to Britain.\nIn harbor, or at sea\u2014it is all the\nsame. Destruction seems to have been\nordered.\nSaturday's Daily News reported\nthe arrival at Lima, Peru, of crews of\ntwo Axis ships that were set on fire\nand abandoned 200 miles from port.\nNo longer do Axis ships wait to see\nthe enemy. Under orders of their high\ncommands, they are destroyed \u2014 to\nprevent them falling into the hands of\nthe British enemy.\n\"Sea-power!\" Of the Berlin and\nRome types.\nToday's Horoscope\nSome minor domestic and business annoy,\nances will beset the person who has a birthday today sometime during the next year.\nOtherwise the fortunes are quite 6atisIactory.\nSuch a person should not trust his friends too\nmuch and should guard against deception. The\nchild who is born on this day will be refined,\nartistic, poetical nnd fond of display. He or\nshe will be liable !o suffer deception and even\nlibel in bu-ini;_.-., love affairs or through\nfriends.   .\n__-k______-_,-i_'-._- \u25a0_!._ ... J^t,.,,^ fa'Wim,'.\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of perioni liking\nquestions will not be published.\nB. P. L\u201e Nelson\u2014Could you please tell me tho\naddress of the Canadian Polish Recruiting\nheadquarters? \u2022 .\nNo details have been given out yet ai to\nwhere recruiting offices will be. The training\ncamps have been named and wiU be at Owen\nSound and Windsor. We suggest you write V.\nPodoskl, Consul General, 381 Stewart Street,\nOttawa and have your name listed.\n0. T., Creston\u2014What is the origin of coloring\nEaster eggs? <\nThe custom of coloring eggs at Easter can\nbe traced back to very early times..Red was\nfrequently employed, symbolizing the blood of\nChrist. Primitive persons used the juices of\nplants to color the eggs.\nA. K., Silmo\u2014Are there any fruits or grains\nthat contain iodine?\nBananas, strawberries, grapes, pears, oatmeal and wheat contain small amounts of iodine. Many vegetables and fish also contain\niodine.\nB. W., Castlegar\u2014To setUe an argument, how\nis the length of a river measured?\nUsuallyipg a river's length is measured by\nshore surveying. Occasionally it is calculated\nby a steamboat. Knowing the rate of speed\nand the time the journey takes, a computation\ncan be made.\nH. L., Trail\u2014Can you tell me if there is any\nmethod of making paint dry quickly?\nOzonized turpentine makes the paint with\nwhich it is mixed dry quickly. It is turpentine that has been exposed to air and\nsunlight.\nG. T\u201e Trail\u2014What is an epcyclical?\nAn encyclical Is a circular letter, and in\nan ecclesiastical sense means a letter addressed\nby the Pope to all the bishops in the world who\nare in communication with him.\nDust of Gold\n\"He said, So is the Kingdom of God, as\nif a man should cast seed Into the ground;\nand should sleep, and rise night and day,\nand he seed should spring and grow up,\nhe knoweth not how.\" Mark 4: 26, 27.\nJesus knowing nature, understood growth\nin both plant and man. As seeds grow naturally if given a chance, so should the Soul\nTree with its fruitage grow normally if man\nwould comply with the spiritual law. The\nsoil is the .heart, with its subsoil a clean body.\nThe fruitage is the developed spiritual life.\nWe must meditate on each different fruit until we have started its growth in our heart.\nLet us begin with Love. Love is God, and is\nthe highest fruitage of a human soul. He that\nloves not knows not God. Select a passage\nfrom scripture and make it a subject of meditation for Jhe day. Use any of the following,\n1 Cor. 13, St. Matt. 23:36-40, John 13:34-35, 1\nJohn 4.\nPress Comment\nU. 8. INDIANS HONOR FLIERS\nWhen King George VI of England and\nQueen Elizabeth sailed into the harbor of\nQuebec on that famous visit to the American\ncontinent, in May of 1939, high up on the\nHeights of Abraham stood a little group of\nwatchers who had stood there since the dawn.\nThey were aborigines of the great lands the\nwhite man had become heir to. Motionless In\ntribal costume and plumed headdress, they\nwere scarcely noticed behind the glittering\ngold and scarlet of the pageant on the quay.\nThe red man seldom'tells the white man\nwhat he is thinking, but whatever his status\nin the modern world, he has his ear to the\ngroun^ and makes his own deductions as to\nwhat is going on. Courage still rouses his admiration, and there is something deeply moling in the report that the Indian Council Fire\nand Indian Society of Chicago have sent\neagles' feathers to pilots of the RA.F. who\nhave particularly distinguished themselves in\nair fighting.\nChief Whirling Thunder, as head of the\nlodge which sent the feathers to England, has\nreceived a message of gratitude from the air\nstaff and  his Majesty's Government. Whatever fears white Americans may have expressed concerning totalitarian propaganda among\nthe Indians, this gesture from Illinois at'least\nindicates a sound attitude on the part of one\ngroup, aware that the Battle of Britain is:\nNot for triumphs in the battle,\nAnd renown among the warriors,\nBut for profit of the people. . . .\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor,\nECONOMY\nTo tell the people of Ontario about the\nRowell-Sirois Commission Report\u2014after the\nconference at Ottawa\u2014the Ontario Government spent $100,000.00 for full page advertisements. This is equivalent to the total Provincial income tax collectable from 16,000 single\nmen earning $1500.00 per annum\u2014Hamilton\nJunior Chamber News.\nWords of Wisdom\nHe who reigns within himself and rules\nhis passions, desires and fears is more thai-\nking.\u2014Milton.\nEtiquette Hints\nIt is rude to break into a conversation,\neven .if you are tempted to do it to make a\nwitty remark or wisecrack.\nNazi Boss for France\nChancellor Hitler has a Nazi type of dictator for France \"on ice . . . wrapped in German cellophane,\" all ready for the moment\nhe decides to transform the conquered country into an out-and-out Nazi area. His choice\nfor the job is Jacques Doriot, for many years\nthe leader of the French Communist Party\nand since 1936 the leader of a Fascist movement closely modeled on Hitler's.\nThis is the judgment of William S.\nSchlamm, European journalist now in the\nUnited States. Writing in the March Issue\nof The American Mercury, Schlamm charges\nthat Doriot, who is now publishing his paper\nin Paris, is on the Nazi payroll and merely\nawaits Hitler's order to take over.\nSchlamm traces Doriot's career from the\ntime he started as leader of the French Communist Youth, through his break with Stalin\nover policies for France, to his emergence as\nthe foremost Fascist chieftain of his country.\nThe Germans, according to Schlamm, will\nturn the French Government into a Nazi regime under two conditions: First, if Hitler\nwins a quick victory; sceond, If he is convinced that the war will drag on for many\nyears. At the present stage, however, the\nGermans prefer to hold their candidate for\nFuehrer in reserve.\n\"Doriot could crush the present French regime easily enough,\" Schlamm writes, \"but\nHitler is not ready to risk further social earthquakes in a France whose resources are sore_J\nneeded by the German occupation forces,\".\n******* NEtSON DAILY NBW8. NELSON. B.\nQyro Park\nBy O. 8. REES\nThia wayfarer clambered around the Bluff\nin early March at an early hour\u2014a bleak\nblustery morn with snow-edged clouds drifting and merging with plumes of smoke and\nsteam from the C. P. R. Flats. This was before\nSpring had spread its warm rug over the cold\nfloor ot the world, and green become a word\nfull of meaning, full of hopp. A thin trickle,\ndank and dark\u2014leaf-obstructed, was seeping\nthrough the bathing pool, yet despite the Ides\nof March, Gyro Park looked prim and trim\nand \"ririn' to go\" into ita Summer season. I\nwas up-along there more recently, and a further peek at the park shows there Is no sabotage of Spring thereabouts, and it is coming \u2022\nalong finely under the loving ministrations\nof Park-Keeper Powell. He is gradually pushing the park confines Into the wild woodland,\nand if a bearded stranger emerges from the\n\"Jungle\", let the park-keeper at once grasp\nhis hand and say \"Dr. Livingstone, I presume!\"\nAn early Springtide this year\u2014may there\nbe no ebb\u2014and one hears the swallows are\nzooming up from far Winter haunts to the\nMission of San Juan Caplstrano well ahead\nof the season, but ln other directions much of\nour human hegira is hopelessly off \"timetable!\" In the midst of blood and sweat, toil\nand tears which shroud the road to salvation.\nBritons smile grimly and bitterly but are\nthankful for even a temporary dislocation\nof Herr Schickelgruber's sinister schedule\nOne of these days he will be praying for a\npoliceman to save him!\nLOOK-OUT POINT\nOne hears the drone of a Trans-Canada\nplane pushing her prow through the sky's\nblue ocean high above the good green earth,\nwith morning sun glinting on silvery wings.\nKith and kin in embattled Britain must sometimes wonder what it can mean to live in a\nworld where an airplane brought no lethal\nload; one longs hopefully'for skies filled only\nwith silver wings making music of love and\npeace.\nFrom the civic eyrie, city streets appear\nfresh and clean before the work-a-day world\nhas rubbed the sleep from its eyes. The Dawn\nPatrol has already been \"on the job putting\nout bottles of milk, hosing the highways and\nhurling the morning paper, hit or miss, into\nloorways, stepping, so to speak, on the starting pedal for thousands of their fellow-men.\nEarly morn is an intriguing hour; the coming of dusk\u2014in reverse. Objects resolve their\ncolor schemes in the alchemy of changing\nlight; the winding river\u2014as ever-softly luminous, mirroring tree-clad slopes, swims\nthrough the valley in long curves and slips\nthrough Westward gap. It is hard to tell where\nshore begins and reflection ends; a slight\nripple and there is no reflection. In the words\nof worldly-wise Omar Khayyam:\n\"Enough, a smoothly flowing stream,\nWhere lengthening shadows silent lie,\nThe hush of nature in a dream.\"\nTHE UPWARD LOOK\nIt was ever this chronicler's view that our\nworld-war memorial should have been erected on the Bluff in form of obelisk or pillar,\nilluminated after dark from concealed lighting at its base; there is a flagstaff, but it is\nbare of our Empire emblem\u2014and this too in\ntime of war! \"Red, white and blue, what does\nit mean to you!\" One does not have to be a\n\"flag-waver\" to regret that the Union Jack\ndoes not fly between dawn and dark from\nour unfortified fortress.\nNO CROSS\u2014NO CROWN\nThis brief commentary reminds me that\nnext Sunday, which is Easter Day, at seven\nof the morn (\"When Heaven's all dew-pearled!\") Gyro Park will be the rendezvous for\nthe annual United Sunrise Service, and this\nfamily journal will doubtless provide citizens with its details.\nIt may be rather early for a Sabbath reveille, but there will be achivement in your\npresence at the Park. Good Friday will be\no'erpast, and it will be the Eastertide. The\nworld is waiting for the sunrise! \"Is it nothing to you all ye who pass by?\" at such a time\nin the Great Crusade when the issues are in\nthe earthly balance?\nWords of Challenge\n\"Hitler seeks to get every civilian, even\nchildren, into the front line of battle. Your\nGovernment and your military chiefs made\ntheir plans for the defence of Britain on the\nbasis of complete confidence that you won't\nlet them down\".\u2014Herbert Morrison, British\nMinister of Home Security.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Press\nApril 11,1916\u2014British and Canadian troops\nrenewed attacks on German positions South\nof St. Eloi following Intense artillery bombardment; three German attacks near Ypres repulsed. Allied troops landed on island of\nCephalonia in the Ionian Sea.\nTest Yourself\n1. What are digitigrade quadrupeds?\n2. What is the capital of the State of Nevada?\n3. Where is David Livingstone, the explorer, buried?\nTE8T ANSWERS\n1. Four-footed animals that walk on their\ntoes, like dogs and cats.\n2. Carson City.\n3. In Westminster Abbey, London, England.\nApril Is Safest Month\nSpring Is the safest season of the year, and\nApril is the safest month, from the standpoint\nof accidents. And if the other eleven months\ncould match April's safety record, there would\nbe approximately 12,500 fewer fatal accidents\nin the United States in the course of a year.\nAccording to Fred C. Kelly, writing in\nYour Life magazine, this Is due to the fact\nthat April is more nearly free of the dangers\nthat characterize both Winter and. Summer.\nFewer fires are needed, thus the risk of death\nfrom burns or asphyxiation is lessened. Babies\nare not bundled up so heavily In bed, so there\nis not so much danger of smothering. The\nseason of falls on icy sidewalks is about over\ntoo.\nOn the other hand, it is not yet time for\nswimming and canoeing and the heavy motoring season has not arrived\u2014and all 'hose\nactivities take a heavy toll during the Summer months. April isn't a hunting season,\neither, and that helps keep its record clean.\nOf course, April is generally accepted as\nthe time for housecleanlng, which always\nbrings its quota of falls from stepladders. But\nwith all that, the month's safety figures lead\nthe list. July is wmen you really need to be\ncareful, for that's when accidents reach their\npeak.\nCLASS OF 941\nAzhar University at Cairo. Egypt, Is the\nworld's oldest, says Pathfinder. It is preparing\nto celebrate its 1000th anniversary this year.'\nThis university is the centre of Moslem learning and Moslem authority, and attracts students from all Moslem countries, such as\nArabia, India, Malaya, China, the Philippines\nand the Balkans.\nC.-PRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 11. 19.1\nPro-Rec at Trail\nPrjze Photo\nTitled \"Pals\", the photo above won a $23 prize for D'Arcy Wai\nof Silverton.\nCCF. Candidate for Cranbrook\nFundamental gymnastics, displayed by the Trail ladies' Pro-Rec\nclass instructed by Miss Eileen Macdonald of Rossland. She also Instructs Trail and Nelson classes.\nRossland Student\nWins Prize\nInjured Moyie\nGirl Recovers\nSTEWART E. JAMIESON\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar\nJamieson of Rossland, who was\nawarded a $25 prize by the\nCanadian Institute of Mining\nand Metallurgy for his paper ort\n\"Drossing Practice at Trail.\nB. C.\" Mr. Jamieson is in his\nfourth year at McGill University.\nHis father is District General\nForeman for the Public Works\nDepartment.\nJOYCE CHAMPION\nof Moyie, aged eight, broke her\nleft arm above the elbow and\nsuffered minor cuts and bruises\nand a stomach injury requiring\nan operation when she fell\ndown the dump of the old St,\nEugene mine. Subsequently she\ncontracted measles. She is now\nwell on the way to recovery.\nHero Worship\nO. A. ELIASON\nC.P.R. Section Foreman at Eager, near Cranbrook, has been cho\u00ab\nC.C.F. candidate for Cranbrook riding. Mr. Eliason, who was born I\nSweden 32 years ago and gained an early contact with the Ibbjt\nmovement there, emigrated to Canada in 1926. He has been employe\nby the C.P.R. since.\nReading and studying are his hobbies. He has been active in tt\ntrade union movement for the past 10 years.\nPrior to the formation of the C.C F. he was a member of tb\nSocialist Party of Canada.\u2014Photo by Nelson.\nMealtime Aboard Corvette\n\u25a0\nk.\nDiana Bounder, left, and her girl friend, Audrey, in the arms of\nPetty Officer H. Bounder, admire the D.S.M. awarded to Officer\nBounder for unusual bravery.\nLady Nancy Curtsies\nMembers of the crew aboard a Canadian corvette in active tet\nvice crowd around the table at mealtime in the fo'c'sle. The salty tanj\nof the sea and the hard open air work of seamen's life make fo\nhearty appetites. Many corvcies are now being built in Canadiai\nshipyards for the Canadian and British navies. Each costs approxl\nmately half a million dollars.\nRescue From Bomb Burial\nLady Nancy Astor, American-born member of the British Parliament and lady mayoress of Plymouth, is shown curtsying to King\nGeorge and Queen Elizabeth at Plymouth. The rulers visited one of\nthe destroyers received from the United States.\nThe dramatic moment when searchers in the ruins of a bombed\npublic house in London came upon the hand of a woman is graph!.\ncally portrayed here. The woman had been buried alive ln the debri*\n,>^^dHtf||Uy\u00abgjU\n\t\n u^\nSPORT\nlelson Boxla Players to Operate\nOn a Cooperative Basis This Year\nNICK  ETTEN\nUp once before with the Phila-\nielphla Athletics, Nick Etten, new\nIrst baseman of the Phiilies, ls ex-\nlected to add considerable punch to\nhe lowly Phils' attack this year.\nEtten, a lefthander, batted a hefty\n121 for Baltimore last season and\nIts looked good ln the training\n\u2022mp.\nEtten ls six feet two inches tall,\nIt years old and wai born ln Chi\n\u25a0go.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON   B. C.\nteds Picked to\nWin by Martin\nBy WHITNEY MARTIN\n(Auoclited Press Sporti Writer)\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP) -\nAfter going about tapping the\nvirious Nationil Lugue pennant\ncontender! WI believe Cincinnitl\nRedi in ths solid teim, ind we're\npicking them to come home In\n^ front\n: Not ai far ln front ai last year. In\nJact, they will have to get their\nshare of the breaks to be in front at\ntil, but figuring that \u2022 team is just\nas good as its pitching they should\nmake It in a close finish, for when\nIt comes to pitching they have nothing else but\nI For sheer power they can't match\n'the unpredictable Brooklyn Dodgers or the up -an-coming St. Louis\nCardinals.\nHere's how we'd line them up for\nBe finish of the 1941 campaign:\n1, Cincinnati; 2, St Louis; 3,\nBrooklyn; 4, Pittsburgh; 6, Chica-\n|o; 8, New York; 7, Boston; 8, Philadelphia.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nAssociated Press Sporti Writer\nNEW YORK, April (AP) - Leo\n[Iilndy, famous Broadway resturan-\nteur. says he hss been offered one\n|of the Boston ball clubs at a good\n'jrlce. . . Jimmy Carroll's latest\nlerby future book odds make Dispose indismited favorite it 3-1,\nfwlth Whlrlawiy next it 4-1 and\nCurious Coin third at 6-1. ... Nat\n_Tle'scher, knock down timekeeper\nIn Louis-Musto bout was paid $200\nand expenses for counting \"one.'*\n\u2022PORTS BULLETIN BOARD:\nTexas U. gave its 71-year-old tennis coach, who has served 34 years\ntana pay, a \"day\" last week. A\nweek would have been more like\nit . . . Dick Chapman, a member\nof Craig Wood's club, Winged\nFoot, bought his pro in the mas-\nter'i pool for MOO. Wood later took\none-sixth fo the Investment which\npaid off at $7500. . . . Comedian\nFred Allen, who once graced the\nBoston U. campus for all of five\nweeks, sent the committee for\n\"Friendi for Boiton U.'s Athletes\"\n\u2022 check for $25. . . . Baseball men\nsay If Bill Lee signs up those 8-1\nodds on the Cubi will be shortened.\nTODAY'S GUEST STAR:\nI Lynn C. Doyle, Philadelphia\nEvening Bulletin: \"Next to the Coulee Dam, the Athletics are currently the most talked about power\nsource West of Joe Louis.\"\nWill Share in Getting\nSeason Started in\nthe Clear\nDecision to operate the Nelion\nSenior Lacrosie Club on a cooperative bull thli seaion wu\nmade it \u2022 meeting of thi playen\nIt the Savoy Hotel on Thursday\nnight\nThi players approved the proposal of Manager Harold Long that\nthey ill help to get the club\nitarted thli leason by supplying\ntheir own initial equipment,\nwhich would come to approximately $300, and then getting their\nInvestments back as receipts from\ntheir home games are received.\nAnd then of coune at the end of\nthe season, the playeri will receive something In return for\ntheir lacrosse when the cash balance Is split up In the Fall.\nIt will be nothing short of a business proposition. In the words ot\nJack Reid, well-known lacrosse\nsupporter who also attended the\nmeeting, \"You'll have something to\nsell, and it will be up to you to\nget out and sell it.\" He pointed oui\nthat this would make for better la-\ncrosse, and start the game on the\nway up again In Nelson.\nReid felt that if the fans were\ngiven a brand of lacrosse they liked,\nit wouldn't be long before the rink\nwas being filled again. The players\nthought that the game should be\nspeeded up as in Its hey-day, for it\nwas pointed out that while the more\ndeliberate style of the last couple\nof years was fine for winning games,\nit had proven that it was necessary\nto \"put on a show for lhe fans, as\nwell as play to win.\"\nDEMOCRATIC 8PIRIT\nWith all the players taking equal\nparts in the direction of the club,\nundoubtedly the will-to-win would\nbe much more to the fore than\npreviously, or at least tend to Increase such a spirit.\nThe Maple Leafs finished the season last year $150 in the hole, so\nthat means the club requires $450\nto put it in the clear at the present\ntime. Among the suggestions to produce additional revenue was a season's sale of tickets for a radio\nwhich would be drawn for at the\nend of the season, and the holding of\na dance. Also one of the players\nthought a drive to sell season tickets at $2 each should be made, and\nIt 1000 were sold, it would move\nthe team out of the red right it the\nStart, end assure good attendance at\nthe games, and these 1000 would\ndraw mora fans.\nReid and Long were confident\nthat there was no lack of player\nmaterial in Nelson, but they\nthought that three players were\nlikely required. One was a goalie\nto replace Davie Gibbons, now\nat Vernon, and they thought they\nmight have the man in a highly\npromising junior at the Coast.\nThen they needed a colorful defenceman, and since Bert Bryant\nlast year a star with Salmonbel\nlies and former Nelson player,\nwas anxious to make his permanent home here, he might prove the\nsolution in that regard. One other\ncrack player might also be a help,\nlt was thought.\nLittle discussion revolved about\nappointment of a coach, but it appears there are three candidates,\nJack Bishop and Pete Bonneville\nwho would probably be playing\ncoaches, and Jack Reid, are the men\nBuddy Hammond was originally\nsuggested, but he has declined.\nThe players will meet again after\nthe Easter holidays. It is rumored\nthat thi lacrosse floor will be down\nat the end ot the month, so the\nplayers are anxious to be ready to\nstart ti soon as possible.\nAces to Ploy in\nHoop Exhibition\nat Trail Saturday\nNelson Aces will play an exhibition girls' basketball game at Trail\nSaturday night againit Trail Jimmies of the Smelter City League,\nIsabel (Red) Donovan laid after\nmaking arrangements with Carl\nBaillie and Lil Saprunoff.\nIt \u25a0will be the second meeting of\nthe teams this season, the Nelson\nsquad having triumphed 19-16 at\nhome some weeks ago.\nThe Aces, who will be managed\nby Carl Locatelli, will be composed\nof Vera Matheson, Mary DelPuppo,\nLorraine Carew, Mary MacDougall,\nLouis Coletti and Miss Donovan.\nlot Schenck Winn\nTropical Handicap\nMIAMI,' Fla., April 10 (AP) -\nHerbert M. Woolf's Joe Schenck\nheld hil own through a stirring\nstretch duel today and won the $10,-\n000 added Tropical handicap, list\nbig horse race of the Florida season.\nThi favored Get Otf, with top\nweight of 120 poundi, wu nipped at\nthe wire for place by W. C. Stroube's\nSlrasia.\nThe bettors collected $20.30 for 1\n$2 win ticket $11 to place and $5.80\nto show.\nSirasta paid off $23.10 and $10.90,\nwhile the cautious who planked\ndown their bet on Get Off to show\ngot back $4.40.\nThe winner's time of 1:42 3-5 for\nthe mile and one-sixteenth was only\none-fifth of a second off the Tropical Park record.\nMcDonald, Aitken\non Way lo Hockey\nMeet al Calgary\nA. W. (Gus) McDonald of Trail\nand A. S (Pat) Aitken ot Nelson.\nPresident and Secretary-Treasurer\nrespectively of the B. C. Amateur\nHockey Association, are on their\nway to Calgary to attend the annual meeting oi the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association.\nThe big contingent from all over\nCanada will be entertained at\nbreakfast Saturday by Uie Calgary\nExhibition & Stampede company. At\nnoon they will attend a civic luncheon and at night they will sit in on\nthe Lethbridge-Regina playoff\ngame.\nSunday they will spend at Banff\nas a special treat for most ot the\nEastern delegates. Monday and\nTuesday will be taken up by hockey\nbusiness.\nIf the Western final series is extended to the five-game limit by a\nLethbridge victory Saturday, they\nwill also see that game. It is also\nlikely that they may watch an Allan Cup final game.\n.-FRIDAY MORNINO   APRIL 11. 1^41\t\nWalker of Michel\nScores Goals In\nOverseas Game\nHarry Brown Handles\nTeam and RJays\nCentre   t\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nApril 10 (CP)-A field regiment\nof the Royal Canadian Artillery de\nfeated a lupply column team of the\nRoyal Canadian Army Service\nCorps 2-0 to win the soccer championship of Canadian Corps troops.\nBdr. A Walker of Michel, B.C.,\nscored both goals In the gunners\nvictory.\nAfter 10 minutes' play, Walker\ntook a pus from Sgt, S. (Shorts)\nRoney of Brandon, Man., to beat\nL. Cpl. H. L. Bath of Plcton, Ont,\nin the food rationers' nets. In the\nsecond half Walker got his other\ngoal and the artillerymen stood off\na siege by the supply column in\nthe final minutes.\nSgt. H. Brown at one time with\nKimberley Dynamiters of hockey\nfame, played centre for the field\nregiment as well as managing the\nteam.\nThe other R.C.A. players included: Gnr. W. Kerr, Edmonton, Gnr.\nR. Mitchell, Gnr. W, Smit, Bdr. F.\nDavis, all of Michel, Gnr. T. Parkinson, and Bdr. R. Rawkshaw, both\nof Vancouver.\nPACIFIC COAST\nBASEBALL\nLOS ANGELES, April 10 (AP).-\nBill Matheson drove a 3 and 2 pitch\nover the left field wall for a home\nrun to give Seattle a 4-2 Coast\nLeague baseball victory over Los\nAngeles today,\n,   R H E\nSeattle           4 1   1\nLos Angeles     2   6   1\nGregory and Fallon; Prim, Berry\n(6) and Collins.\nPortland-Sacramento nLght game,\npostponed\u2014rain.\nSan Francisco-Oakland night game\npostponed\u2014wet grounds.\nMillionaires took three points of\nfour from Cherry Pickers Thursday\nnight on Gelinas Bowling Alleys to\nadvance within one point of fourth-\nKlace Cherry Pickers in the second\nalf  of  the  Hume  Hotel Trophy\ntournament.\nScores follow:\nCHERRY PICKERS-\nH. Stinaker   133 119 138 390\nG.  Stirzaker   148 124 138 410\nS. Romano  133 130 140 403\nTed Romano  159 165 164 488\nE. Nadeau  136 177 171 484\nSLOCAN PARK WINS\nSOFTBALL CAMES\nSLOCAN PARK, B. C.-Softball\nll In full swing here, the Sluggers\nhaving beaten Crestova Brutes ln\nthree recent games. The scores being 21-17,, 18-16, and 17-16.\n\\     \u2022- \u25a0\t\nJoe Louis, heavyweight champion,\nll providing handsomely for his\nmother, and the rest of his family\nHe sent a sister to college.\n[Nelson in Quest of Second Straight\nDislritl Bowling Title Today, Trail\niTrail,   South   Slocan,\nNelson Have Eight\nTeams in Play\nNelson bowlers travel to Trail today in quest of their second straight\nWest Kootenay ten-pin bowling\nchampionship when they participate\nill the annual district tournament\n\u2022gainst South Slocan and Trail\nteams.\n. Lut year the title wu grabbed\nSf Bud Steveni. George Dill, Frank\ncClement \"Lefty\" Mydansky and\nB. R. Brown tor Nelson's first victory in many a yeir. One ol Nelson's\ntwo teams thil rear will be much\nthe same, McClement. Brown, Stevens. Rash. Nick Cassios md J. H\nAllen to play as a unit Gu House\nGoofers are the other squad, and I Trail Is the President of the Associative  Mydansky, Johnny  Aurelio,.ation.\nTanny Romano, Jack (Junior) Hamson and Tony Arcure in their lineup, with Louis Aurelio as spare.\nFour matches are scheduled todsy.\naccording to Mydansky. who Is Secretary of the West Kootenay Bowling Association. Each team of the\neight is given one match, and the\nequad with the highest number of\npins will be awarded the title\nThe tournament gets under way\nat noon when the Gu House (looter: cluh with the Trill No. 1 teim.\nAt 1:43 one South Slocin will play\nTrail No. 2, and they will be followed by Trill No. 3 and Trill No.\n4 it 3:45. At 5:30 the other two Nelson ind South Slocan teams will\ncluh.\nFollowing the tournament, the\nannual b-nquet and annual meeting will be held. Bill Forrest of\nTotals    709 715 751 2175\nMILLIONAIRES-\nJ. Anderson     150 138 182 470\nW. Anderson  185 120 158 443\nLow Score   133 119 138 390\nJ.   Smith  173 182 168 523\nF.  DeFoe   212 138 137 487\nTrail Optimistic\nof Copping B.C.\nBasketball Title\nTRAIL, B. C, April 6\u2014Trail Aces\nhave been holding brisk workouts\nthe last few days ln preparation\nfor British Columbia Intermediate\n\"A\" basketball finals with Duncan\nZeniths Friday and Saturday nights\nin Trail Memorial Hall. The series\nls based on total points.\nWhile Carl Baillie, coach of the\nInterior champion Aces, admits\nthat the Vancouver Island boys will\nbe \"no pushover\", he is nevertheless confident that his snappy,\nsmart-shooting outfit will bag the\nProvincial title.\n\"On the strength of our showing\nagainst the powerful Summerland\nteam, we stand a strong chance of\ngetting past the Coast boys,\" said\nBaillie today.\n' Buck Kennett, who coaches the\nCoast champions, will trot out a\ntall, speedy team. Four of his players are more than six feet in height,\nKennett is counting on these lanky\nperformers to pop in. the rebounds\naccuately and figures th#y will\nprove effective in the defending\nzone.\nThe Duncan cagers, who took it\non the chin only once this season,\nhave played several Senior \"A\"\nteams in Victoria and are regarded\nas all-round smooth performers.\nSeven players and Coach Kennett\nwill make the trip.'    '\nA preliminary game ls being\nlined up for 8 p.m., while the feature tussle is billed for 9 o'clock.\nLen Wilson will referee.\nCouling Heads\nCreston Tennis\nCRESTON B. C.-At a fairly well-\nattended meeting of the tenr\/s fraternity at the town hall, Monday\nevening the club was reorganized for\n1941. The new officers are: President Arthur Couling; Secretary Mra.\nD. Weir; Executive Mrs. S. J. Graham, D. Weir and G. R. Thorpe. One\nof the club courts at Exhibition park\nis now in use and the other is being overhauled and will be available for weekend occupation.\nTotals       833 697 783 2313\nHigh individual score, F. DeFoe,\n212.\nHigh aggregate  score, J. Smith.\n523.\nWhitney Cherry Jam\nWins $2500 Gallop\nLEXINGTON, Ky\u201e AprU 10 (AP)\n\u2014Mrs. Payne Whitney's Cherry Jim\ndefeated Smacked By A Nose in\nthe $2500 Phoenix handicap featuring the opening card ot Keeneland's\n11-day Spring meeting today after\nWhirlaway and Blue Pair scratched.\nParasang, the well-played favorite which carried top weight of 122\npounds, got away hist but managed\nto outrun Unerring, One Witch and\nBill Farnsworth to take third money\nMrs. Whitney's horse was overlooked in the betting and returned\n$17, $8.20 and $4.40 across the board.\nCherry Jam ran the six furlongs\nunder Al Bodiou. former Western\nCanada jockey, In 1:12 1-3.\nHastings Features\nBowling Tourney\nST. PAUL, Minn., April 10 (AP).\n-A fine 658-score by Walter Hastings In the doubles and a three-game\ntotal of 628 by Pete Gottsellg, Sr..\nin the singles highlighted scores of\nRegina trundlers In the American\nBowling Congress tournament here\ntoday.\nHastings rolled games of 220-258-\n160 and paired with Roy Burgess,\nwho rolled 463, totalled 1141, the\nhigh doubles score of the Reginans.\nHastings also placed third among\nthe Regina men In the tingles with\n597, bettered only by Gottselig's 828\nand R. Peacock's (21.\nWynndel Co-Op\nElects Directors\nWYNNDEL, B.C. - The innual\nmeeting of the Cooperative Fruit\nGrowers was held in the hall last\nTuesday. A. S. Joy and F. Hagen\nwere retiring Directors, and E. Wall\nand E. Ostrenskl were elected to\nfill the vacanctu.\nCOMMUNITY PLEDGE\nPLANNED AT IAFFRAY\nJAFFRAY. B. C.-The April Far\nmer's Institute meeting wu belt\nwith a fair a'tendance. In a discussion of the War Service Fund it\nwas decided that a community\npledge would be more practical than\nindividual pledges.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy The Camdian Preis\nBALTIMORE - Leo Rodak, 134,\nChicago, outpointed Slugger White,\n134, New York (10).\nTAMPA, Fla.\u2014Henry Cooper, 192\nNew Haven, outpointed Marty\nClark, 189, MacDill Field, (10.)\nPERTH AMBOY, N. J- Ernie\nVigh, 157, Newhurgh, N. H., stopped\nLarry Kellum, 155, New York (3).\nBoston Pretty Sura\nStanley Cup to Be\nTheirs in Next Game\nDETROIT, AprU 10 (CP).-The\nBoston Bruins, champions of the National Hockey League, figure, the\nStanley Cup will be theirs after Saturday night when they play the\nfourth gama, ot the finals here\nagainst Detroit Red Wings,\nThe Bruins, who haven't lost a\ngame to the Wings ln the last 13\nstarts, took their victory u a mat.\nter of coune. Coach Cooney Weiland. a former Detroit player, who\nwu traded to Boston, said he could\nsee a series windup by Saturday\nnight\nManager Jack Adams of the Red\nWings credited luck and Boston\nGoalie Frank Brimsek for the Bruin\nvictory. \"You've got to have luck\nin the playoffs, and we didn't have\nit tonight,1' be said. He mentioned\nthat several timet the Wings dragged Brimsek iway from the net but\ncould not shake loose a stick to ram\nhome the puck.\nExperts Predict\nYankees, Indians\nlo Vie for First\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP). -\nEighty-three sports writers can't bl\nwrong, but more than halt of them\nare going to be when the 1941\nAmerican Baseball League race hu\nbeen completed. No matter which\nteam wins, the voten for thit team\nIn The Associated Press poll among\nsports scribes in major league cties\nwill Be outnumbered by those who\nKicked some other team to come\nome first.\nIn contrast to last year, when 66\nof 77 voters picked the Yankees,\nthis year there is a virtual deadlock\nbetween the Yanks and Cleveland\nIndians. Only four voten failed to\nname one or the other for tint\nplace.\nThe Indians drew one more fint-\nplace vote than the Yankees\u201440 to\n39, but on a point buis, based on\neight points for first, seven for\nsecond, etc.. the Yankees edged out\nthe Tribe, 013.to 611.\nThe champion Detroit Tlgen drew\nonly two tint-place votei, and Chicago White Sox and \u2014 surprise\u2014 St.\nLouis Browns, one each.\nThe Yankees were picked no\nlower than third in any selection.\nThe Indians were picked for fourth\nby one voter, the others conceding\nthe Tribe would finish 1-2-3. Detroit however, was picked for the\nfirst six places, with 20 scribes\nshoving the champions down to\nfourth.'\nThe Boston Red Sox boom apparently has faded, as they are\nmoved out of the first division ln\nfavor of the White Sox.\nThe point total of the clubs;\nNew York, 612; Cleveland, 611;\nDetroit, 583; Chicago, 3T7; Boston,\n363; St. Louis, 268; Washington, 136;-\nPhiladelphia, 136.\nLee Won't Pilch\nfor Only $10,000\nCHICAGO. April 10 (AP) -\nChicago Cubs and two of their\nhighest salaried stars tightened\ntheir battle lines today for what\nloomed as the most serious holdout \"siege\" in the club's history.\nIn a grim, strained atmosphere,\nPitcher Bill Lee parted from Jamei\nGallagher, Cub general manager,\nafter an hour's conference had failed to settle their-salary differences.\nAt the same time Gallagher said\nhe had \"heard nothing\" from Hank\nLelber, the big outfield who has\nanchored himself at his ranch near\nTucson, Arii-\nLee, who slumped to nine victoriei\nand 17 defeats last season after\nwinning 22 games In 1936 and 19 in\n1939, obviously was unhappy but\ndetermined as he left Gallagher.\n\"I started the discussion at $15,-\n000,\" he said. \"But Gallagher said\nhis offer was $10,000. Then I offered\nto pitch for $12,500 if assured I\nwould get the difference between\n$12,500 and $15,000 if I had a good\nseason. But Gallagher said $10,000.\nI can't pitch for that.\"\n-HAQI HVtfl\nBoston Witki\nQame of Cup\nRed Burman, the heavyweight\nrecently beaten bv Joe Louis, is\nchauffeur for Jack Dempsey, the\nformer heavyweight champion.\nWest Creston Mon Wins Trapper's\nPrize\nARTHUR HURRY\nWeit Criston tripper, won the 1941 Creiton iward for the largest\nind belt drewed muskrat catch in East Kootenay. Along with rati,\nMr. Hurry traps other water animals iuch as beavir md mink, as\nwell as weasel and the occasional coyote, on hit line it West Creston\nwhich he has handled for more than 15 years. This year ls repro-\n-tlon year and he has limited his catch of rats to about 400 pelti\nThe prlie, a fur lined hunting coat, Is being^ handed to Mr. Hurry\nby Game Guardian W. H. Cartwright, left, ln the background is\nshown part of the 1941 catch of rats, and a few beavers.\nr \u2014Photo bv Lanon.\nActive Service\nSports Promoter\nBack to Canada\nBy ROU MUNRO\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nApril 10 (CP) \u2014 Stocky, good-\nnatured Oscar Pearson ot Toronto\nis going back to Canada\u2014a loss to\nCanadian troopi ln England hut a\nbreak for the boys In Ehahkl back\nhome.\nAt Y.M.CA. iporti supervisor In\nthe lit Diviiion Pearaon did a luper\njob arranging tor everything trom\nhockey to table tennis. On nil return to the Dominion, he will be\nassigned to sports ln campi there.\nStarting from scratch more thin\na yeir igo, he worked energetically\nln the camps here, leetng thit every unit In the division had a\nchance to share ln iome athletic\ncompetition.\nSoccer schedules were run. oft,\nsoftball leagues completed, crosscountry races held, boxing shows\nstaged and several other iport\neventi directed by Pearson, with\nhelp of divisional headquarters officers and other autliiry service officials.\nHis activities helped to keep up\nthe troops' spirits during the dreary\nwinter months and he laid thi bails\nfor the Spring ind Summer snorts\nactivities, as the general staff placed\nemphasis on athletics to toughen\nup the troops.\nPearson's crowning achievement\nhowever, was Winter hockey and\nskating for the troops. From hli\noffice ln the rink, lie mide arrangements thit allowed thousands\nof soldiers to don skates ind for\nscores of regimental teams to play\nthrough eliminations until the Canadian Corps championship ilnally\nwas won by a Western Quebec\nregiment\nVitt Is Happy\nWith PorUand\nPORTLAND - Oscar Vltt ls a\nhappy man.\nJust one year ago Vitt opened the\nbaseball season as Manager of the\nCleveland Indians. Bobby Feller\npitched a no-hit game. Cleveland\nsoon raced into a nice lead ln the\nAmerican League and a bt of ex\nperts figured they were a virtual\ncinch for the World Series.\nThen the Blubber Babies blub\nbered, Cleveland skidded and President Alva Bradley forgot to re-sign\nVitt.\nNow Ol' Osk is with a so-so Portland outfit. Tha Beaven were i\nbad last I year ago.\nKicked downstairs? Sure, but upstairs into peace and happiness, too.\n\"I've got 100 per cent team spirit\nout here,\" Vltt grinned broadly. \"All\nI want is results on the field and\nI'll forget all about front-offices.\n\"We've got a hustling club; no crybabies. Just give us a little strength,\nmainly a coupla pitchers, snd we'll\ngive a good account of ourselves.\n\"I've already got Johnny Gee-\nhe's the big 6-foot-9 boy Pittsburgh\npaid $75,000 for, remember?\u2014but\nhe's not quite ready yet Got a sore\narm, but I think he'll come around\nwhen lt warms up.\"\nCoast League guessperts have\nrelegated Vitt's Beavers to the second division but he's happy to be\nworking with a bunch of men who'll\nplay ball for\u2014and with\u2014him.\nExhibition Bait\nAt Goldsboro. N.C.:\nPhiladelphia (N)     7 10   1\nWashington (A)    4   S   3\nBlanton, Melton (7) and Livingston, Warren (7); Leonard,. Carras-\nquel (7) ind Ferrell, Evans (7),\nAt Wilmington, Del.:\nBrooklyn (N)       I   T   0\nNew York (A)     2 11   2\nCasey, Hamlin (8) ind Owen,\nPhelps (7); Ruffing, Lindel (8) snd\nDickey.\nAt Wichita, Kas.:\nChicago (A) ...    16 IB   0\nChicago (N)   13 19   2\nGrove, Navie (6), Haynei (9) and\nDickey, Turner (5); Dean. Root (3),\nRaffensberger (8) and Schetflng.\nAt Charleston, W. Va.:\nNew York (N)     2   7   0\nCleveland (A)   .      0  4   1\nHubbell, Brown (8) and Danning:\nBagby, Dorsett (4), Harder (8),\nJungols (9) and Hemsley.\nAt Oklahoma City, Okla.:\nPhiladelphia (A)     9 12   3\nPittsburgh (N)       10 14   1\nBeckman, Basse (0) and Hayes;\nKlinger, Bluer (9) and Lopex,\nSchultz (9).\nAt Cincinnati:\nBoston (A)    2  4   0\nCincinnati (N)       6 14   1\nRyba, Hai (7) and Plicock; Derringer, Turner (6) and Lombardi.\nHe Would Rather\nPlay Hockey Than\nLive as Invalid\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP).-The\nToronto Daily Star told in a copyright story today of a youth who\nwill guard a net tomorrow in a\nhockey playoff for the intermediate\nchampionship of Ontario despite the\nfact thit he hu been told thit hi\nwill die within a year unlets he\ntikei whit U left of his lite with\nrelaxation and tranquility.\nThe youth Is 22-yur-old Cecil\nKelleher of Port Elgin, \u25a0 tuberculoili\nsufferer who playi goal for thi\nPaisley Intermediate!. Paisley meets\nSeaforth tomorrow.\nKelleher, who learned he had\ntuberculosis after hi had joined thi\narmy last yeir, left hoipltal tn January whin he told docton thit hi\nwould \"rather live six monthi ind\nhave fun than live 18 monthr like \u2022\nsissy in Md.\" Hi had been told that\nIt he loft the unatorium and walked\naround he would be dud In fix\nmonths whereas If he remained ln\nbed he could live about 18 months\nHe became goalie with Paisley\nOllen on January 18 when they lost\ntheir reiular net-minder.      ^\nDetroit Drops 4-2 as\nSchmidt, Wiseman\nDazzle\nDETROIT, April 10 (CP). -\nBoston Bruini, National Hockey\nLeague champions, made It three\nitraight victoriei over Detroit Red\nWlngi In the Stanley Cup finals\nwith a 4-2 conqueit hire tonight\nbefore 10,117 ipietatori, and drew\nwithin a gime of poiieulon of the\nvinirable lee trophy, . *\nThe defeat brought the Red Wings\nbattling with * rookie-filled line-up\nto the brink of elimination from\nthe Cup series. Boston now can win\nthe Cup by beating Detroit ln the\nfourth game here Saturdiy night\nTwice tonight In the tint period\nthe Bruins, on the dazzling Individual work of Milt Schmidt ana\nEddie Wiseman, came from behind\nto nullify Detroit goi)s.\nThe might ot the champions became evident in the second period\nwhen Schmidt bagged his second\ngoal of the evening, a terrific 25-\nfoot sizzler thit ciught Goalie\nJohnny Mowen flat-footed, 59\nseconds atter the period opened,\nto put the Bruins ahead tor the\nfirst time.\nThe Bostoniini controlled the\ngame after that holding the frantically rushing Red Wings with the\naid of some sensational saves by\nGoalie Frank Brimsek, and adding\na fourth goal, by Art Jackson, three\nminutes before the end of the game\nwhile Alex Motter was in the penalty box.\nBoth teams were at top speed as\ntonight's garni opened, and ln the\nfourth minute of play, Bill Jennings' short goal on a pass from\nDon Grosso was quickly matched 42\nseconds later when Wiseman lifted\nRoy Conacher's rebound over the\ndiving Mowers.\nSid Abel sent Detroit ahead three\n.minutes later and Schmidt in the\nfifteenth minute equalized mitten\nwith his tint goal, skating in alone\natter eluding Detroit Defenceman\nJimmy Orlando.\nSchmidt's second goal, however,\nwas the most stunning blow of the\nBoston attack, as he came in fast to\npick up a pass trom behind the goal\nand blast the puck knee-high past\nthe amazed Detroit goalie.\nFIR8T PERIOD\nDon Grosso broke away from\npileup of Boston players deep ln\nBruin territory and flipped a close,\nln pass to BUI Jennings, who rap>\nped the puck past Goalie Frank\nBrimsek at 3:15.\nLess than a minute later Eddie\nWiseman, on a pass from Roy Con\nacher and Bill Hollett, fired the puck\ninto the cage on a rebound off\nGoalie Johnny Mowers' stick to\ndeadlock the score.\nHollett drew the game's first pen\nalty for holding.\nSid Abel, ifter I lolo trip down\nthe Ice hid apparently been stopped, took the puck neir the boardi\non i pais from Jick Stewart ind\ntallied for ths Wlngi it 7:45.\nThe icore wai tied again at 14.07\nwhen Milt Schmidt took a pass\nfrom Woody Dumart and Bobby\nBauer and skated from the blue line\nto the goal mouth md slid the puck\nbeneath Mowers' pads.\nSECOND PERIOD\nThe period was only 59 seconds\nold when Schmidt fired trom the\ncentre of the ice between the red\nand blue lines. The shot was so fast\nthat Mowers was caught flat-foot\ned Clapper and Dumart were credited with assists,'giving Boston a 3-2\nlead.\nThe Wln\u00abs. on the short end of the\nscore for the flnt time in the game,\nput on a terrific bunt of speed and\nsent ihot after shot at Brimsek.\nClapper and Abel were penalized\nfor high sticking.\nWith both teams short-handed, the\nplay became wilder, but neither the\nBruins nor the Wings could nullify\nthe net-minding of their respective\ngoalies. Mowers, whose lapse had\nallowed the Bruins to move ahead\nmade only one save ln the first period, which Brlmiek was forced to\nmake a dozen.\nAi lhe period neared the close,\nwild scrambling broke out at the\nBoston end ot the rink and Brimsek\nwas pullid 15 or 20 feet from the\ncage before ho could smother the\npuck.\nTHIRD PERIOD\nOrlando tripped Desie Smith as\nthe period opened and was sent to\nthe penalty box. As Orlando left the\ncooler he' was greeted by Hollett.\nwho drew a two-minute penalty for\nInterfering, and the Wings began\npressure.\nDetroit turned loose everything\nagainst the National League cham-\nSloni, who appeared content to play\nefenslve hockey and nurse their\none-point lead.\nWith leu thin five minutes to\npliy Alex Motter, Detroit de-\nfencemm, wis sent to the pen\n\u2022Ity box for holding. Bruini cashed\nIn at 17:20 when Art Jackson,\ncentre, fired \u2022 close-In shot from\ndirectly In front of the cage. Terry\nReardon ind Clipper wen credited with llllltl.\nBenton \u2014 Brimsek; Smith, Clapper; Schmidt; Dumart Bauer. Subs:\nHollett Cain, Crawford, Wiseman,\nConacher, Bill, McReavy, Jackson,\nReardon.\nDetroit \u2014 Mowen; Stewart, Orlando; Grosso; Abel, Jennings. Subs:\nMotter, Liscombe, Howe, M. Brune-\nteau, a Bruneteau, Glesebrecht,\nBrown, WhlteliW, Kllrei.\nOfllclali - Mickey Ion, Referee;\nDan MacFayden, Linesman.\nFint period: 1. Detroit Jennings\n(Grosso, Abel) 3:15; 2, Boston. Wiseman (Conacher, Hollett) 3:57; 3. De.\ntrait Abel (Stewart) 7:45; 4, Boston, Schmidt (Dumart, Bauer) 14:07\nPenalty: Hollett.\nSecond period: 5, Boston, Scnmldt\n(Dumart Clapper) :59.\nPenalties: Clapper, Abel.\nThird period: J, Boston, Jackson\n(Reardon, Clapper) 17:20.\nPenalUei: Orlando, Hollett, Motter.\nAttendance, 10,137.\nJimmy Foxx, tint baseman for\nthe Boston Red Sox, hit 24 home\nruns In 1940 and now has in even\n500 mark. Babe Ruth's HfeUme ttal\nii 714.\nKampourls Gels\nRegular Brooklyn\nSecond Base Jrt\nBy Thi Auoclited Preu\nGREENVILLE; S. ft- A month\nago the Detroit Tigers were lament \u25a0'\ning that Tuck Stalnback had the\nbest throwing arm ol any of the i\noutfielders but couldnt hit Now he :\u25a0'\nflaunting a super .500 average in the\ngrapefruit leigue and is tne only\nbright spot in a club batUng slump\nCHARLESTOWN, W. Va.\u2014BUI\nTerry held a meeting of the Niw\nYork   Giants   before   yesterday's\nRime with the Indians md told\nIs men they couldn't pouibly be\n\u2022s bid is they hid been looking.\nThis lecture coupled with thi two .\nhome rum Hank Dinning hit to\ncelebrate his return to catching\nbrought \u2022 8-3 triumph over Cleveland.\nWILMINGTON, Del.-Allx __I__k|\npouris who figured to be a utility Infielder for the Brooklyn Dodgen\nthis season, now ts expected to start\nthe season at second base. Given a\nchance to show himself when Pete\nCoscarat was benched for weak\nhitting, Kampourls has been hitting\nand fielding in great style.\nCleveland Wins\nAmerican League\nby Beating Bears\nCLEVELAND, April 10 (AP). -1\nCleveland Barons tonight won the\nAmerican League hockey championship with a 3-2 victory over Her- \u2022\nshey Bears in an overtime game before 10,743 tans. Earl Barrholome,\nBaron winger, flipped in the win- <\nning shot at 1:25 of the overtime '\nperiod.\nThe contest was the fifth of th*\nfinal playoff series, Cleveland winning fhe first two games here md\nlosing the next two on Pennsyl-\nvanla ice.\nThe championship Is the second\nfor Cleveland In 12 years of professional hockey here. Providence\nwon the title last season.\nJake Mllford and BiU Summerhill\nscored the tint two goals for the\nBarons, with Gordon Pettinger and\nHarry Frost tallying for the fosen.\nThe crippled Hershey squad, playing with only 12 men, forced the\ngoing early in the game.but tired\nin the closing minutes.'The Bean\nhad five forwards on the ice the last\nminutes, with 12 seconds to go '\nGoalie Nick Damore came out ol\nHhe nets.\nCleveland won Its first- title ln\n1920-30 and the second in 1938-39.\nThe Barons advanced into the final\nplayoffs by beating Providence,\nwhile Hershey qualified by stop*' ^\nping New Haven and Pittsburgh.\nU. S. Boxing Is\nFar From Dead\nBy 8ID FEDER\nAnoclated Preu Sports Writer\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP)-T_\u00bb-\nliveliest looking dead thing around\nat this writing is the business of\nbashing breaks.\nThey've been saying that for y**M\nthat boxing is dead. Well, with the\n(52,000-odd gate for the Joe Louis-\nTony Musto fuss in st Louii Tueiday night, the fight game neared th*\nmillion and a half mark fgr the nations' major attractions in this in-\ndoor season.\nThe total for Promoter Mike Jao-\nob's productions alone this season ll\nover the million-mark. This include*\nhis stop-over in Detroit, Boston,'\nPhiladelphia, Chicago and St. Loull\nas well as in his own back yard, .\nMadison Square Garden.\nJust what lt Is that has caused\nGus Fan to unbutton the \"old socko*\nas they call,it around and about, no\none is quite sure.\nMike figures one contributing factor is that more \"natural' mitchel\nhave popped up among the division!\nbelow the heavyweights. But in\nwar-troubled times like these, not\neven that's enough to bring In the\nneighborhood of $1,500,000 of the\n\"fresh\" out into the open.\nSHORTY'S\nREPAIR SHOP\nFor Reliable Car Service\nPHONE 171\nLetters From\nGreat Britain\nReaders of the Nelson Dally\nNews are invited to tend id\nletten they receive trom the\nwar tones so that other\nreaders can share this newi\nLetteri wiU be copied and\ncarefully returned Only news\nof general Interest wiU b*\npublished Other Items In the\nletten win, il coune be kept\nconfidential Please Mod or\nbring such letters to:\nWAR ZONE EDITOR.\nJMamt\nlatly 5fama\n---i.im.itf-flllfcr\nAIM'I __-Mfl k^AjfAkJiiiK-A\n w\u00bb,ini,,i,\u201ei\u00bbm*,tmi\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON   B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING  APRIL 11. 1941-\nDalnty Girdle-\nWalsted Style\nWaJiian.  WjMil\nI\nPATTERN 96\u00ab7\n\"I want a good little print\u2014a\nftyle that's tasteful and simple\nenough to adapt itself to every\nmood, every hour, every purpose!\"\nIf these are your very own\nthoughts, stop right here! Pattern\n9887 il exactly what you want,\nand the fact that it's a Marian\nMartin design means that it's\neasy to cut and sew, too. There\nare so many nice details: the\nwaistband that curves so gracefully in front\u2014the smart skirt\npanel\u2014the softly bloused bodice\n\u2014the yoke that merrily scallops\nits way all across the front . . .\nthe unusual shape to the neckline.\nLace edging would make a fem-\ninie finish for this style that even\na needle novice will find simple\nwith the Sew Chart's aid.\nPattern 9687 may be ordered\nonly in misses' and women's sizes\n14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 38, 40 and 42.\nSize 16 requires 2% yards 39 inch\nfabric and IV, yards lace edging.\nSend twenty cents for this Mar-\nian Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your size, name, address, and style number.\nSend your order to The Daily\nNews, Pattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be mailed to\nyour home within 10 days.\nHasten Growth\nby Soaking Seeds\nBy DEAN  HALLIDAY\nThe \"speed-up\" is now being applied to sweet pea growing. It has\nbeen found that dark colored sweet\npea seeds are harder and, therefore,\nslower to germinate than the white\nand mottled seeds.\n\\ SI-OS THIT FLOAT ARE\n\\ REAP** TO PLANT\ni^^:\n,\n1     WARM       \t\n|\u2014-   WATER     \t\nI\t\n. XT-*z=xi^r*-\nX 6EE0S THAT SINK TO\n_\/8_rmoM ofolass\n\/jSHOULO HAVE wick cutim\n\"\"OUTER SKIM SIFORE\nPLANTING                            Jgj\nSpeed uo methods for \u25a0\u00ab\"\u2022*\u2022\noea*\nTo hasten germination of sweet\npea seeds, soak them in a glass of\ntepid water, as illustrated In the\nGarden-Graph. The seeds which\nswell and float on top of the water\nare ready for planting. Dark colored\nseeds, if they do not swell within\n24 hours and if they sink to the\nbottom of ihe glass, should be taken\nout of the water for fear that they\nmi(rht rot.\nThese hard seeds should have a\nnick cut in the outer skin with a\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Men are like little boys.\nWhen you see a wife beggin'\nher man to eat something he's\nfound out he can get lovin' attention by not eatin'.\"\nLaura Wheeler Lilacs and Butterflies\nAdd Interest to Linens\ncom mi, netoucwt Slavics, mc\nHOUSEHOLD LINENS\nPATTERN   2720\nMake your leisure hours count with a bit of pick-up work! Begin\nthis filet crochet edging and easy stitchery now. They make handsome towels, scarfs and pillow cases. Pattern 2720 contains a transfer\npattern of 12 motifs ranging from 4V_xl3>4 inches to 3x3V4 inches;\nchart and directidns for edging; materials required.\nSend 'twenty cents for this pattern to The Nelson Daily News,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly pattern number, your name,\nand address. Pattern will be mailed to your home within 10 days.\nERILUANCY ON DEFENSE\nAMONG THE rarest jewels in\nall of bridge ia beautiful defensive\nplay which can be recognized as\nauch. One of the neatest moves to\nbeat an opponent's contract is the\nEeschapelles Coup, whereby a\nplayer deliberately sacrifices a\nhigh card in order to knock out\nan entry\u2014using up a high card so\nplaced that it seemed otherwise to\nbe a trick winner ultimately. But\none of the rarest of the rare is a\ndouble Deachapelles Coup, in\nwhich the aame player makes the\nsame maneuver twice to beat a\ncontract or prevent overtrlcks.\n4Q5\n\u00bbAQ8     '\n\u2666 AQJ975\n410 6\nV 9 6 4 3      v      m    \u00bbKJ5   '\n4 K 8 6        >      *    \u2666 10 3 2\n+ QJ43    I    &    I   *K975\n4 K J 10 . 8 3\n*) 10 7 2\n\u2666 \u00ab\n+ A82\n(Dealer: West. East-West wil-\nnerable.)\nWest Vorth East South\nPass          1 * Pass 1 *\nPass          2 * Pass 2 *\\\nPass          2* Pass 3 *\nPass          4 4\nThat same contract was reached,\nby only slightly different bidding,\nat all tables of the duplicate tournament where this hand was\ndealt. Moat of the declarers made\nan overtrick. including those\nwhere the club 3 was lead, but one\nof them was held to his bare contract, after that lead, by the most\nsuperlative kind of defense.\nEast came up with the K on the\nclub lead, and South let it hold,\nso he could be in position for a\nquick ruff on his third club if East\nrepeated the suit. Where that was\ndone, South won with the A, dui\nthen worked the diamond finesse,\nplayed the diamond -A for a heart\ndiscard, ruffed a diamond with his\nspade 8, ruffed the club 8 with the\nQ and led the spade 5 from dummy. With the diamonds now set\nup and hearts for entries, it made\nno difference what East did. The\ncontract was safe, plus an over-\ntrick.\nEast's brilliant work, at another table, came right upon his winning that first trick with the club\nK. He Immediately led the heart J\nto the Q to knock out entries.\nSouth entered his own hand with\nthe spade 5 to the J, finessed the\ndiamond Q, laid down the diamond\nA, ruffed a diamond to set up the\nsuit, then led the spade K. East\ntook this with his A and led back\nhis heart K\u2014second Deschapelles\nCoup of the hand. This took the\nheart A out of dummy, while East\nstill had his trump 7 to block the\nrun of the suit, so South never\nwas able to discard his last club.\nHe therefore lost two tricks In\nclubs and one in spades, and bare-*\nly made his contract.\n* \u2022 \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n4KQJ94\n*) K 10 4 3\n\u2666 6\n*K5 2\n4 A63\n\u00bb8762\n4 K J 10 5\n3\n+ 10\n\/V.\n2   4\nA None\n*) A Q J 9\n5\n4Q872\n+ .1987\n4 10 8 7 5 2\nfNone\n4 A94\n+ AQ643\n(Dealer:    West.    North-South\nvulnerable.)\nIf both defenders had bid hearts\nstrongly, and West, who doubled\nthe contract, leads the club 10,\nhow should South play this deal\nto make his 6-Spades redoubled?\nCONTRACT\nBy Shepard Barclay\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nPuddles\nActive\nProstrate\nHighest\nmale voice\nGoal\nWait upon\nRequired\nPerforms\nIn the\nmidst of\nTellurium\n(sym.)\n9. Avaricious\n10. Receptacle\n12. Feels displeasure at\n116, Mend\n17. Type\nmeasure\n18. Reject\n21. Speck .\n23. Narrative\n24. Trips\n25. Emmet\n27. Frozen\nwater\nPartly open 29. Newt\nTherefore\nElectrified\nparticle\nNew England\nstate\nSlice\nMusic note\nBotch\nConjunction\nEnsnare\nPreposition\nTo clear\naway\nApproaches\nEpoch\n30. Mischievous\nchildren\n36. Sloth\n38. Narrow\nband\n39. Harangue\n41. South\nAmerican\nrepublic\n42. Goddess of\ndiscord\n43. J .if it. up\n45. Bang\n48. Weight of\nIndia\nHUlll  SDC.   KHI-\nHHB   i_r_r.   ______\n__[=]___.H   [SfflilEP\n_Ti_S3riB laKacH\n3B!.G HEBE\nbbqdb nnEon\nRelating\nto a type\nPeel\nBristly\nGrinding\nmaterial\nDOWN\nWriting\nimplement\nCrude metal\nKing of\nBaslian\nPermits\nHorse\nA Great\nLake\nCity in\nAlaska v\nSet of boxes\nI Jap.)\n15\nIA\n2-S*\n2o\n29\n21\n26\nVfiitrrd-y'i AMW.r\n49. Plaything\n51. Cerium (sym.)\nT\n3a\n2Z\nDlntributcd by Kins Features Syndicate, Inc.\nknife or file. Do not cut them at a\npoint near the germ. Care must be\ntaken not to cut or file deeper than\nthe outer hard surface or the seed\nmay be destroyed entirely.\nMacDonald May Be\nEvacuee Guardian\nLONDON, April 0 (CP Cable) -\nMalcolm MacDonald, United Kingdom High Commissioner in Canada,\nis expected to become the official\nguardian of British children evacuated to Canada under the ctiildren's\nOverseas Reception Board scheme.\nA bill will be introduced in the\nHouse of Commons after Easter pro-\nviding for the appointment of a\nguardian who will be able to authorize actinns such as the performing\nof operations. The bill will not apply to children sent overseas under\nprivate arrangements\nRED STAR VALUES\nYUGOSLAV PACT\nMOSCOW, April 10 (AP) - Red\nStar, organ of the Red Army, said\ntoday the Russian-Yugoslav Friendship Pact signed just before the outbreak of the Balkan conflict is \"all\nthe more valuable under the new\nconditions because the Soviet Union\nalways fulfils its international\npledges.\"\nRed Fleet, .he Navy newspaper,\nsaid the spread of the war in the\nBalkans meant \"a new front for\nGermany on the ilJuropean continent.\"\n\"Ttfe attraction of large forces on\nthe Southeastern front may change\nthe position on other fronts of the\nAnglo-German War.,' the paper said,\nadding that the action in the Balkans necessarily, drew German\nplanes and troops away from England*\nCOMIC   AND   ADVENTURE\n 1,,.,   ,    i,,,,,       i  ,\u2014-****.\u2014'\u25a0\u25a0 \"j     \t\n\u25a0   Y':ti      :\n_\u2014__-____\u2014_\u2014\nSTRIPS..\nTHE GUMPS\n\t\nBy Gus Edsoi\nBRICK BRADFORD\u2014On the Throne of Titania\nBy William Ritt and -Clarence Gray]\nBRICK AND ANOTHER PHOT HAVE BEEN MAKING\nFLIGHTS IN SEARCH OF THE TITANIC CLIFF\nWHERE SANDY SANDERSON WAS LAST HEARD Ft!-*.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nVOU HEARb ME-I'M HAVING MV\nLAWYER LOOK UP MY FAMILV\nTKEE-ALL FAMILIES THAT\nAMOUklT TO ANYTHING HAVE\nAKJCESTOeS THAT AMOUNT\nTO SOMETHING-I WANT YOU\nTO CALL \u00abJ HIM TO SEE HCM.\n\"\" ALONG\" ,\t\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nriTT\nFREE   .'.'\nbeautifully framed\nphotos of alderman\nSCHLUTZ\nktiltik.^\nOni- \u00a3\ntatauaem \u25a0\u00bb\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\nPE\nKING of the Royal mounted\nBy Zane Grey\nI KNOW YOUR FRIENDS ARE IN A\nBOAT UNDER THIS CANNERV, BUT\nTHEY'RE STUCK AND T. IE FIRET.L\nKILL THEM,TOO.'\nBLONDIE .\nBy Chic Young\n___-i~______\u00ab_^_,,._^-\u00bb,.,_---,-^^^  -*-jitM_ito-_i_--i.iiii.i.ii-_ mm   _____\u25a0_..   i ii\n__l__-_-jM*'_.'j_i-__i\n\t\n*l^fcjii\u00abiji\u00ab&^4fl*ta^\n\u25a0iiif!itiH__i_i__N_____i___________i\n .U-\u00ablilWM'W.M>IP\n4'\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. APRIL 11, 1941-\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nMann Daily Nhob\n. Telephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon, 716-Y'\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per insertion.\n44c pet line per week (6 consecutive insertions-tor cost of 4).\n81.43 per line a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers uny  number of times.\n(LEGAL NOTICES\n, 18c per line, first insertion and\n14c each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\n8PECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial Situations\nWanted for 25c for any required\nnumber of lines for six days\npayable In advance.\n\".   SUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nSingle copy  $   .05\nRf carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per year \u2014   13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC. -\n(D\n\"The Chicks\nWhich Give\nResults\"\nPERSONAL\nRED CROSS SHOP FOR KNICK-\n\u25a0 knacks. Donations needed please.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel Opp C P R Depot\n$ .75\n2.00\n4.00\n8.00\niThree monthi....\t\nSix monthi \t\n\u2022 One year \t\n'Above rates apply In Canada,\nUnited States and United Kingdom, to subscribers living out-\n, Ate regular carrier areas.\nBsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth $1.50 three mortbs 14.00,\n' dx months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nBIRTHS\nSKINNER \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nfalter Skinner, 909 Fourth Street,\nt Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nipril 9, a aon.\nWill make 1941 your banner year\nThe results obtained from these\nchicks by thousands of customers\nhave been the means of building\nthe largest cnick business ana\nhatchery in British Columbia.\nUnsexed   Pulleti\n100   1000   100 500\nR _t S Legho'n. $13 $120 '$27 $125\nS. Leghorns       $15 $140   $30 $145\nRocks. Reds and\nN   Hamps $14 $130   $24 $115\nI. Sussex and\nJer    W    Giants $16 $28\nFree book to customers \"Raising\nChicks for Profit\" Write for our\n\"Banner Year\" Book.\n\u2022 REMEMBER-It's results that\ncount!\nRumpft-SenjIjiH\nBox I.        Langley Prairie, B. C\nRUSH DELIVERY. HAMBLEY\nElectric Chicks. Thousands hatching each week tor immediate delivery. Write, wire, phone or call\nHigh Quality Govt. Approved\nChicks at competitive prices. J. J.\nHambley Hatcheries, 607 1st Street\nE., Calgary, Alberta.\nSAVE ON BAGGAGE WHEN YOU\nbuy It at the Ark Store.\nFOR SALE - LARGE TAYLOR\nSafe in good condition. See J\nChess, 524 Vernon St., Nelson.\nSALVATION ARMY IF YOU\nhave 2nd hand clothes, footwear\nfurniture to spare please Ph 618L.\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait ot Distinction Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAVER8 and MINE AGENT8\nHAROLD | ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB C Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual representative for ship-\npea at Trail Smelter.\nA. J.,BUIE. INDEPENDENT MINE\nrepresentative. Full time attention given shippers' Interests\nBrat 54. Trail, B C.\n$15 - FUR COATS RELINED.\nGlazed, minor repairs. Free storage. Polar Furs Ltd., 548 Granville\nSt., Vancouver.\t\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.\nHAIR DRAB AFTER FLU? LET US\nhelp you. It won't cost you very\nmuch. Milady's Beauty Parlor,\nPhone 244.\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees \u2014 Fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue\nHanson Co, p. O. Box 601, Van-\ncouver, B. C.\nBREEZE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\niroM Breeze, K W. C. Block, at\nlotenay Lake General Hospital,\nirll 9, a daughter. ^_\nHELP WANTED\nFARMERS CHECK YOUR FARM\nimplements now and order early\nWe carry Cockshutt, Frost and\nWood Farm Machinery and repairs. Nelson & District Farmers'\nSupply Company. P. O. Box 6\nNelson, B. C, or Phone 174.\nLADIES7-AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees\u2014fit and shading\nguaranteed. Free catalog. Hanson\nCo., P, O. Box 601, Vancouver, B.C\nApplications will not be conildered from persons engaged in\ntbe production ol war supplies.\nWanted \u2014' a  respectable\nyoung woman as housekeeper for\nbachelor (railroader). Must be\nclean and good cook. Light house.\nwork. Box 8469 Daily News.\n&P. FARMHAND, MILK THRElS\n\u00abowi. Year-round Job, $25 monthly\nBoard and cabin. State age. Doi.\nman'- Poultry Farm, Nakuip. B.C.\n|fANT__D-COMBINED 3rd CLASS\n\u25a0team engineer millwright. Dumont, Galloway, B. C.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratei for noncommercial advertisementi under thii classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c tor one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines. Payable ln advance. Add\n10c II box number desired.\nrOUNG MAN NEEDS WORK UR-\nfently. In small mine 15 yeara' experience. Excellent steel sharpener and blacksmith. Technical\neducation. Capable of taking full\ncharge. Go anywhere. Apply Box\n- 8958 Daily Newi.\ni*ULLY EXPERIENCED CAPABLE\ntruck or car driver, would like\n'work of any kind Immediately.\nApply Box 8433 Dally Newi.\n^_RO.NCED GIRL DESIRES\nposition u a housekeeper. Can\ncook. Good to children. Write to\nAnne Buck-nan, Fort Steele, B C.\n&ACK HORSES. HAWKINS AND\nMcGinnis licensed guides and\npackers. Crawford Bay.\nFOR BETTER AND HEALTHIER\nLeghorn chicks and pullets place\nyour order with us. All the chicks\nwe sell are a product of our own\nfarm. Send for catalogue and find\nout .the facts. New Siberia Farm,\nChilliwack. B. C.\nFOR BABY CHICKS WE CARRY\nmost everything they require\nThrivo Mashes; Chieit Scratch;\nGrit; Charcoal; Shell; Cod Liver\nOil; Pilchard Oil; Cel-O-Glass;\nFounts. The BrackmSn-Ker Milling Company Ltd.\nAPPLEBY'S BABY CHICKS. NEW\nHampshires, R. I. Redi, R. O. P.\nSired White Leghorns. Write for\nprice list. Proven information ou\nthe control of laying house-mortality. Appleby's Poultry Farm.\nMission City, B. C,\nBABY CHICKS. RHODE ISLAND\nReds and New Hampshires Good\nutility stock. Approved and blood-\ntested, $10 per 100. John Goodman.\n1655 Gilley Ave\u201e New Westminster\n\"GOOD LUCK\" RHODE ISLAND\nRED chicks. 25, $4; 50, $8; 100. $15\nTRIANGLE CHICKERY, ARM-\nSTRONG. B. C.\t\nF-OR SALE - ra_Sff~_OTH-\ndairy cows, also 8 month old Ayrshire bull. F. Forch, Erie, B C.\nFOR SALE-6 MILK COWS AND\n24 hogi. H. Lafferty Kokanee\nRanch, 12 miles East of Nelson.\nATTENTION! YOU MAY ASK 3\nquestions. I have helped many. I\ncan help you. Send 25 cents with\nname and birth date to Gretta.\n1012 Harp, Vancouver, B. C,\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES. SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested. Guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price list.\nPrinceton Distributors. P. O Box\n61, Princeton, B. C.\n25c\nThe Photo Mill - 25c\nP. O Box 335, Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed, 25c\n5x7 Enlargement Free .\n12 reprlnta 5x7 enlargement, 35c\nUNMARRIED LADIES AND GEN-\ntlemen are invited to Join the\nHome Club (Est. 1928). Exchange\nletters, photos, etc., with members,\nall ages, everywhere. Write fully,\nstating age. P. O. Box 146, Van\ncouver, Canada,\nCHIROPRACTOR8\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C, NEURO\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch Blk\nDR. W 1 LBERT BROCK. D. C,\n542 Baker Street. Phone 969.\nENGINEERS and 8URVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. O. BOX 104,\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En<\ngineer. Phone \"Beaver Falls\",\nR. W. HAGGEN, MINING & CIVIL\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B. C\nINSURANCE and REAL ESTATE\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. 557 Ward Street\nAnnable Block. Phone. 197,\nC.  D.   BLACKWOOD  AGENCIES.\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone 99.\nCHAS. T. McHARDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nH. E. DILL. FIRE, AUTO. ACCI-\ndent Insurance. 532 Ward Street\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nOPTOMETR1ST8\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrist\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail     Phone 177\nSASH  FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\nSECOND  HAND STORE8\nWE   BUY,   SELL   &  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 534\nMEN - REGAIN VIGOR, PEP -\ntry Vitex. 25 tablet! $1.00. Person \u00bb1\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.\nSPECIAL! - MEN'S PERSONAL\nDrug Sundries. Finest quality.\ntested, guaranteed, 12 for 50c assorted, including world's funniest\njoke novelty free and catalogue of\nSundries and Novelties. Western\nDistributors, Box 24, Dept NC.\nRegina, Saskatchewan,\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nFARM FOR SALE \u2014 229 ACRES\nwith 80 chains along the river.\nEnough timber to pay purchase\nprice. 20 acres cleared, 160 fruit\ntrees. Two houses, good bam and\nroot house. Creek on property.\nPrice $2500. $700 cash, balance\neasy terms Box 197, Nelson,\nIFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nA bee \"Room For Rent\" card\nwill be provided at The Daily\nNewi office to penoni advertising Rooms for Rent in thil\ncolumn.\nIflSRR APARTMENTS. QUIET AND\nrefinement, unexcelled appointments including new ranges, refrigerators and vacuum cleaners.\nFurnished and unfurnished suites,\ncourteous service, ideally situated, well kept lawns. Weekly\nend monthly tenancy at most reasonable prices.\nFOR RENT OR SALE-1MMED1-\nate occupancy, cottage, newly\ndecorated, three bedrooms, sleeping porch, garage. Vegetable garden. Phjy. O. Box 17.\nModern  duplex house,  4\nlarge rooms and bath. Electric\nrange and Frigidaire. Hardwood\nfloors, fireplace. Phone 542R.\nfcOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATSd\nhouse keeping rooms in Annable\nBlock for rent It W. Dawson\nAgent. 557 Ward Street\nILaRGE APARTMENT, 3 BED\nroomi electric range and refng\nerator Johnstone Block.\nNICEST LOCATION WEST ARM\nat Crescent Bay for rent. Good\nfireplace, water, excellent beach,\nbeautiful garden. For further information write I. Fosheim, R. R\nNo. 1. Nelson, B. C.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALL\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. ot Natural\nResources. C. P R.. Calgary. Alta\nWILL TRADE 1936 CHRYSLERS?\ndan for property in or within\n2 miles of Nelson. Box 8429,\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE - HOUSE. 4 ROOMS\nTerms. Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nMill St Box 126, Nelson. BC\nSEVERAL SMALL HOUSES FOR\nsale. $800 to $1500. Appleyard.\t\nNORTH SHORE FARM FORREJJT.\nParticulars, Box :\ni Dally News.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n|_P6r RENT - 3 ROOM HOUSE\nwith garden. Apply D. Maglio\nPhone 808L.\nIH-All Cottage for rent on\nGranite Road. Phone 186R3. Bos\n8315 Dally News.       \t\nllta eh-Hrf - 5 &06M roust\nclose in. Apply V. Eperson, 513\nCarbonate Street. Phone 803R.\n|fOR BENT - SMALL PARTE?\nfurn. house. 53 View St. Pb. 743R2\nI RM   FURN.   SUITE.  PRIVATE.\nStore room. etc. 617 Victoria St.\n|f hOOM FURN. SUITE FORllEN.\nClose in. $18. Appleyard.\nDR RENT - STUCC6~TlOUSE\n.Close in. 406 Silica Street\nIfljRN HSKPG. ROOMS. $12 MO\".\n|_Ma-_d\u00abi Apts., 410 Josephine St\nIBbTTAGE FOR RENT. 715 HEN~-\nI dryx St. Phone 778X.\n|X   HOME   FOR   THOSE   AWAY\nfrom home Strathcona Hotel Apts\nIftlRRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equlnped suites\t\nIftffl RENT - FUAN.SHKD surra\nPhone 316\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\n|  If you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without coit to\nyou. Te will collect from the\nowner\nFOR SALE-100 FT., 12 INCH AND\n40 foot, 10 inch Hanged pipe and\nfittings. 5 tons 8%-inch link steel\nchain. Apply Castlegar Plumbing\n_t Heating Shop. Box 48, Castle-\ngar, B. C.\t\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock .for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver B C.\nALL OUR FILMS ARE NOW FINE\ngrain developed. This ensures a\nbetter printing negative and enlargements do not show the grain\nof the film. Any size 6 or 8 exposure roll film developed and\nprinted with one free enlargement\n30c. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask\nSKIN ITCH, CRACKING. BURN-\ning skin, eczema, psoriasis, ringworm and, other skin irritations\nquickly relieved or money refunded with Elik's Ointment No. 3,\nPrescription of farhous Skin Specialist, prepared by experienced\nPharmacist. $1.00, $2.00. Elik's\nMedicine Co., Dept. NDN, Box 234,\nSaskatoon, Saskatchewan.\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\n'38 FORD COUPE, FOR LIGHT\nfast and economical transportation.\nThis oar Is hard to beat Thoroughly reconditioned. Only $695. Nel.\nson Transfer Company Ltd.\n1938 INTERNATIONAL LIGHT DE-\nlivery, like new $695. Central\nTruck and Equipment Company,\n702 F-ont .Street, Nelson.\n1935 FORD COUPE, HEATER AND\ngood tires, looks like new Licensed and ready to go at $495\nInterior Motor Finance Corp\nPARTS FOR SPRING REPAIRS\nat City Auto Wreckers. 180 Baker\nSt.. across from Peebles\nPICK OF THE MARKET USEE\nCars Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nNEW AND USED AUTO PARTS\nNelson Auto Wrecking. Ph. 946.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nHEAVY DUTY DUAL WHEEL\nlogging trailer; machine axle, V-8\nhubs & springs, St booster brakes\nCheap for cash. Apply to C. R. Wil-\nson, Wynndel, B. C.\nDINETTE SUITE, WASHERTM-\nTubs, Westlnghouse Frig., '41 G. E.\nRadio, Bed, complete. Ph. 996Y,\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES - SPS\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St.. Vancouver B C\nONE BEATTY WHITECAP ELEC-\ntric Washer, $19.50, McKay and\nStretton\nBABY PLAY PEN. WALTER, COS*-\nmode chair. Call 484R2 mornings\nFARM. GARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS.    FERTILIZER\nTWO-YEAR-OLD RED DELICIOUS\nWageners, Gravenstelns and Mcintosh Reds. 90 cents each, Bartlett pears, two years, $1. Rochester peaches, two years. $1.25. One-\nyear-old apples, 65 cents. One-\nyear-old peaches. 85 cents. T. Roy.\nnon. Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE - NETTED GEM CER-\ntified No. 1 Seed Potatoes, also\nsome commercial. Apply H. H.\nPeters. Athalmer. B. C.\nFOR SALE-NETf-.6_6EM CgR-\ntified seed potatoei No. 1. $2.00 per\nsack. Buy the best. Abey, Kaslo,\n\"POUND-SET OF KEYS ON HALL\nStreet Apply Daily News Office.\n- .\u25a0-i._iiii.__\nLOVELY GLADIOLI. MIXED COL-\nors Bulbs $1 a hundred, postpaid\nWebster tc Sons Robson. B C\nEXHIBITION DAHLIAS, CHRY\"-\nsanthemums, $1 dozen, prepaid\nMiss Cavin, Duncan, B. C.\nWANTED - ROW BOAT, SQUARE\nstern, Walton or Peterborough\ntype. Jack Boyce.\t\nFOR SALE~% H. P. MOTOR SUIT\nable for shop work or cement\nmixer. Phone 326R3. .   .\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St.. Vancouver, B C\nSHIP   US   YOUR   HIDES.\nMorgan. Nelson. B  C.\nJ.   P\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nGROCERY - CONFECTIONERY\nbusiness. Going concern. New\nbuilding, comfortable living quarters. Wife can run or Ideal for\npensioner. Good living. Apply\nRossland Realty, Rossland, B. C.\nPETS, CANARIES. BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - CANARIES. BEAU-\ntlful singers, We ship birds anywhere. Singers $3.50 each. Hens\n$1.50 each. Miss Marion Woyna.\nAppledale. B. C,\nSPRINGER SPANIEL PUPS. R. S\nSears, Kamloops, B. C\nCHILLIWACK EXCEEDS\nWAR SERVICES QUOTA\nCHILLIWACK, B. C, April 10\n(CP)-Chilliwack reached ita quota\nof $35,000 at the end of the third\nday's drive in the War Services\ncampaign and expects to reach\n$5000 before the campaign closes.\nCollections to date total $4,430.\nChicago Prices\nContinue Recovery\nCHICAGO, April 10 (AP)-The\nwheat market's recovery from its\nretreat that followed opening of\nhostilities in the Balkans continued today, with prices moving upward for net gains of a full cent\nat times.\nWheat closed V>\u2014% higher than\nyesterday, May 90%\u2014>4, July 88%\u2014\n89; corn unchanged to % lower,\nMay 67%, July 67%; oats unchanged\nto V, higher.\nELDORADO GOLD MINES\nREPORTS $50,096 PROFIT\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP)-El-\ndorado . Gold Mines Limited had\nconsolidated net profit of $50,096\nin the year ending Dec. ,31, 1940\ncompared with $153,947 in the preceding year.\nCurreDt assets of $2,086,399 are\nclaimed but $1,795,915 of the total\nrepresent concentrates, stores and\nsupplies and investorjes of finished\nproducts, including radium on rental.\nB.C. Power Profit\nUp af $2,000,000\nMONTREAL, April 10 (CP). \u2014 \u25a0\nBritish Columbia Power Corpora- ment and International Bronze, were\ntlon, Ltd., and subsidiaries, reported\ntoday 1.940 net profit- of $2,001,265,\ncompared with $1,075,417 in the six\nmonthi ended Dec. 31, the latter\nrenort marking a change in the fiscal year-end.\nNet profit, reached after regular\ncharges including subsidiary preferred dividends, was equal to $2.00\na share on class \"A\" stock, against\n$1.07 ln the previous fiscal period.\nNet revenue amounted to $4,292,-\n952, compared with $2,247,601,\nAmong deductions wai $1,932,500\nset aside for taxes, againit $551,-\n247 in the preceding six-month period.\nConsolidated balance sheet listed\nnet working capital of $1,158,585,\nan improvement ot $74,408. Current\nassets were $5,833,987 and current\nliabilities were $4,676,402.\n' During the year, the company redeemed $400,000 in three per cent\nbonds, reducing Its bonded debt to\n$38,097,624. Earned surplus carried\nforward increased to $1,096,754 from\n$1,034,489. \u2022    ,\nBralorne (limbs\n10 at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, April 10 . (CP).\nSmall gains outnumbered, losses ss\ntrading  picked up  on  Vancouver\nStock Exchange 4oday. Transactions\ntotalled 20,450 shares.  '\nBralorne Gold posted av major\ngain of 20 cents and climbed to 9.70\nand Privateer at 46% closed fractionally higher than yesterday's \u00ablos-\ning bid. Hedley Mascot slipped 1%\nto 53 and Premier Border was off a\nfraction at 2Vi.\nIn the oils Model at 15 gained 2\nfrom Wednesday's bid and Extension added a fraction at 1314. Home\nat 1.70 and United at 3 remained\nunchanged.' Other, oils and base\nmetals were inactive.\nBurns Reports Net\nIncome of $580,000\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP)\u2014Burns\nJt Co., Ltd., Calgary reported net\nincome for 1940, before bond interest and depreciation, of $580,217\ncompared with $524,445 in 1939. After all charges the cofnpany showed\na net loss of $76,371 compared with a\nnet loss of $139,451 the previous\nyear. Earned surplus brought forward from the previous year was\n$08,600 and the deficit at the end of\n1940 was $7771.\nCurrent assets were reported at\n$2,984,736 compared with $2,842,-\n791 at the previous year-end.\nRails Take Interest\nin London Trade\nNEW YORK, April 10 (AP) -\nBuyers bid a little higher for most\nobligations in the bond market today and showed continued interest\nin secondary rail loans.\nIn the foreign division, Belgium\n6s lost 3 points on a single transaction, and Rhine-Westphalia 6s of\n'53 moved down sharply also in\nthin trade. Elsewhere prices were\nmixed and narrow.\nMontreal Stocki\nContinue Dull\nMONTREAL, April 10 (CP)\u2014Industrials and utilities continued to\nsell at reduced prices In the final\nhour on the Stock Exchange today,\nTwo preferied issues, Canada Ce-\nleaders ln weak Industrial!, both\nbeing otf a point, while Doeco \"B\"\nand Canadian Car preferred gave\nup fractions.\nMontreal Power remained at ltl\nnew low and Quebec Power waa also\namong retrograde itocks in the utility section. In mines, International\nNickel was in arrears the minimum\nfraction.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, April 10 (CD-Receipts, cattle 150; calves 3; hogs\n1400; sheep 197. Bulk of hogs and\nshare of other receipts through-\nbilled.\nGood butcher steers 8\u20148.35; common to medium 7\u20147.75. Medium to\ngood heifers 6.5O-7.50. Medium fed\ncalves 7.75\u20148. Medium to fair cows\n5-r5.90. Odd good bulls 6. Top veal-\ners 10; common to medium 6.50\u2014\n8.50. Stocker calves 6.50\u20147.50.\nHogs sold at 8.00 livewelght at\nyards; 10.15\u201410.25 for B-l dressed\nat plants.\n\u25a0\nMETAL MARKITS\nLONDON, April 10 (AP)-Bar\nstiver 23%d, unchanged. (Equivalent 42.69 cents.) Bu gold 168s,\nunchanged. (Equivalent $33.85.)\nTin iteady: ipot \u00a3268 5s bid,\n\u00a3268 103 asked; future '265 10s bid.\n\u00a3288 lis asked.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11TB;\ntin 59.75; lead 5.50; line 5.65; antimony, 1525.\nBar gold in London wu unchanged at $37.54 an ounce ln Canadian funds, 168s In British representing the Bank of England's buying price. The fixed $35 Washington\nprice amounted to $38.50 in Canadian,\nNEW YORK \u2014 Copper iteady,\nelectrolytic spot, Conn. Valley 12.00.\nTin iteady; spot and nearby\n51.87*14.\nLead   iteady,  ipot,  New  York\nK OR Qft\nZinc steady, East St. Louli ipot\nand forward 7.25.\nCOAST BANK CLEARINGS\nVANCOUVER, AprU 10 (CP) -\nBank clearingi for the week ending Thursday, April 10, 1941.\n1941\nVancouver   18,365,233\nVictoria     1,845,356\nN Westm'iter       769,628\n1940\n16,069,801\n1,803,\"\"\n649,379\n-PAQI MINI\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials .\n20 rails\t\n15 utilities \t\nCloie Change\n119.06 oft    .It\n28.11 off    .22\n18.80 Oft     .09\nQUOTATIONS    ON   WALL    STREET\nAmer Tel ...\nAnaconda   ...\nBeth   Steel\nCan Pac\nOpen Close\n159%   159%\n23% 23%\n13V, 73%\n3% 3%\nChrysler    80% 60%\nC Wright Pfd  -      8 bVs\nDupont    -.   143% 143%\nGen  Elec     31% 31%\nGen  Mot       41% 41%\nGrt Nor Pfd      24% 24%\nInter Nickel      26% 26%\nKenn   Cop     32%\nMont Ward   36%\nPack Mot   2%\nPenn R R  23%\nSafeway Stores   36\nStan Oil of N J   34%\nU S Rubber  22%\nU S Steel   53%\nWest Elec   91%\nWest Un     20%\nYei Truck   12%\nClose\n32%\n35%\n2%\n23%\n36\n34%\n22%\n53\n91%\n20%\n12%\nMONTREAL   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAssoc Brew of Can       15%\nBathurst P & P A\t\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car & Fdy pfd ...\nCan Celanese \t\nCan   Steamship  \t\nCockshutt Plow\t\nCon Min & Smelt\t\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDominion Textile \t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Nickel of Can ...\nMcColl Frontenac .....\nNational Brew Ltd .\n11\n105\n21\n22\n3%\n4%\n34%\n7%\n74\n9%\n33\n4%\n24\nOgilvie Flour new        20%\nQuebec Power           10%\nShawlnigan W & P        13%\nSteel of Can pfd         68\nBANK8\nCommerce    -    150\nDominion      187%\nImperial      198\nMontreal  -     173\nNova Scotia      277\nRoyal  .\u201e     HI\nToronto        248\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd  _        9\nBathurst P4PB\t\nBeauhamoia Corp \t\nBritish American Oil\t\nCan Industries B _.\nCons Paper Corp \u2014\nDonnacona Paper A \t\nFairchild Aircraft \t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nMacLaren P & P \t\nMitchell  Robt  \t\n8%\n17\n1.81\nS\n3%\n2\n8\n13%\nVANCOUVER   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nBid\nMINES:\nBig  Missouri         .04\nBralorne            9.60\nBridge Riv Con        \u2014\nCariboo  Gold      2.50\n$142,000 NET PROFIT\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP)\u2014Buffalo AnkeritcGold Mines Ltd., South\nPorcupine, Ont., reported net profit of $142,566 for the year 1940. This\ncompared with $557,526 the previous year.\nBullion produced for 1940 wai $2,-\n508,5-6 compared with 1930 output\nof $2,625,962. Current assets totalled\n$291,010 and current liabilities of\n$167,162 leaving net working capital\nof $103,848 compared with $149,973\nat the end of 1939.\nEXCHANGE MARKETS\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound, buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar, buying 1.10,\nselling 1.11.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.03%; Ca-\nnadian dollar .87%.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 10s, Id; U. S. doi-\nlar 61.00 cents; Canadian dollar 55.06\ncents.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, April 10 . (API-British stock closings, In sterling: Car-\nreras A \u00a33 21-32, Consol Gold 35s\n4%d, Crown \u00a312, East Geduld\n\u00a39%, Rand \u00a36%, Rhodesian Anglo\nAm 12s 6d.\nBonds\u2014Brit 2% pc consols \u00a377%,\nBrit 3% pc war loan \u00a3104, Brit\nfunding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3112%.\nMOUNT ZEBALLOS GOLD\nPRODUCTION $119,000\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nProduction for Mount Zeballos Gold\nMines Ltd., for the first quarter of\n1941 totalled $119,207 from the milling of 5296 tons of ore whioh produced 3096.31 ounces of gold at $35\nan ounce,\nISLAND MOUNTAIN COLD\nPRODUCTION $75,000\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP) -\nProduction of Island Mountain Gold\nMines in March totalled $75,786 (at\n$35 an ounce) from the milling of\n4768 tons of ore which yielded Wil\nounces of gold.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, April 10 (CP)-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\n00%\n.01\n.12\n.00\nas\n.12%\n.01%\n.52\n.00%\n.00%\n.90\n.2(1\nCOV'T DEPOSITS DOWN\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP) \u2014 Dominion Government deposits decreased $12,767,000 to $12,279,000 in\nthe week ended April 9 it was\nshown today in the weekly statement ot the Bank of Canada.\nChartered bank deposits Increased $9,639,000 to $228,844,000 while\nnotes in circulation advanced $5,-\n761.000 to $372,844,000.\nTORONTO. MKT. TO CLOSE\nTORONTO. April 10 (CP)-The\nToronto Stock Exchange will remain closed Monday, it wai decided\ntoday.\nWheat:\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nOats:\nMay   \t\nJuly   ....\nOrt\t\nBarley:\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nFlax:\nMay   .....\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nRye:\nMay   \t\nJuly .:...\nOct.\n77 77 75% 75%\n78%    76%    77%    77%\n36% 36% 36% 35%\n34% 34% 34% 34%\n3-%     32%    32%     32%\n50% 50% 50% 50%\n47% 47% 47% 47%\n44%     44%     43%     43%\n165%   167      158      158\n166%   188      159      160%\n160%    181       153%    164\n59% 59% 58% 58%\n59 59% 57% 57%\n56%     56%     56%     56%\nCash prices, basis in store Fort\nWilliam and Port Arthur:\nWheat\u2014Nos. 1 hard and 1 Northern 75%; No. 2 Northern 73%: No,\n3 Northern 71; No. 4 Northern 69%;\nNo. 4 Northern 68%; No. S, 66%;\nNo. 6, 85%; leed 82%; Nos. 1 garnet\nand I- durum 70%; No. 2 garnet\n89%; No. 3 garnet 88%; No. 4 special 67%; No. 5 special 67%; NoT 6\nspecial 63%.\nOats\u2014No. 2 cV. 36%; Ex. 3 c.w\n35%; No. 3 c.w. 34%; Ex. 1 feed 34%;\nNo. t feed 34; No. 2 feed 32%; No. 3\nfeed 30%.\nBarley\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 c.w. 51%- 2-row Nos. 1\nand 2 c.w. 53%; 6-row No. 3 c.w.\n51%. Others: No. 1 feed 51%; No. 2\nfeed 49%; No. 3 feed 48%.\nFlax\u2014No. 1 c.w. 157%; No. 2 c.w.\n155%; No. S c.w, 143; No. 4 c.w. 138.\nRye-rNo. 2 c.w. 58.   '\nDentonia\nFairview Amal\nGeorge Cop\t\nGolconda   \t\nGold  Belt   \t\nGrandview \t\nGrull Wihksne\nHedley Mascot\nHome Gold ...\nIndian Mines .\nIsland Mount\nKoot  Belle  \t\nMcGillivray \t\nMinto   Gold    ..\nNicola M & M\nPend  Oreille        1.30\nPioneer   Gold         1.95\nPremier Border 02%\nPremier   Gold          .88\nQuatsino         \u2014\nReeves MacD  -      .10\nRelief   Arl    .\nReno Gold       .10\nSheep Creek  75\nSilbak Premier ....      .66\nSurf  Inlet    10\nTaylor B R  02%\nWellington    00%\n.01%\n.00%\nAsk\n9.90\n.01\n.01V4\n.01 if,\n.08\n.28\n.02\n.55\n.00%\n.01\n1.00\n.30\n.25\n.02\n1.40\n2.05\n.03\n\u2014 j02\n.15\nBid\nWesko Minei   \u2014\nWhitewater     - .00%\nYmir Yank Girl._ MV,\nOILS:\nA P Con   _ .08\nAmalgamated    j00%\nAnaconda     . JD*\nAnglo Can   \u2014\nBrit Dom _ ftb'\nCalgary & Edm . 1.12\nCalmont _ .18\nCommonwealth   _ _20\nCommoil  .19\nFirestone   Pete   ... \u2014\nHighwood Sarcee - j08\nHome    1.67\nMadison    _ .01\nMar Jon   .01\nMcDoug Seg   fits\nMercury  ,04%\nMill dty Pete _ .04\nModel    S2\nMonarch Roy . \u2014\nNordon Corp  ;04%\nPrairie Roy  .05%\nRoyal   Can   ..  .07\nSpooner  _. JD3%\nUnited    _ .03\nVanalta       _ j03%\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital  Est  1.00\nCoast  Brew     1.30\nPac Coyle   .23\nAsk\n.00%\n.00%\n.05%\n.62\n1.18\n22\n.03\n1.75\n.01%\n.01%\n.05\n.15\nJ03%\n.08%\n.04\n.04%\n1.32\nWall Sf, Aflempls\nFeeble Rally\nNEW YORK, April 10 (API-Selling waned ln today's stock market\naa an attempt wu made to get the\nlist back on Its feet but iuch rallies u appeared were feeble it the\nbest. Some support came ln on the\ntheory the recent sharp decline had\ngone too far.\nRalls and steels edged forward In\nthe forenoon but gains of a point\nwere few and far between ln any\ndepartment. There waa a mild letdown after mid-day and closing\nquotations were a shade Irregular.\nDealings were negligible throughout, with transfers for the full proceedings around 380.000 sharei.\nDome Mines and Distillers Sea-\nnam Inched forward. Other Cana- a\nJian stocks were either unchan\u00abed '\nor  inactive.  In  the  bond market\nCanada 4's advanced % of a point\nPrices in Down\nMove at Toronto\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP)HDull.\nest trading in weeks marked today'i\npre-hollday session of the Toronto\nstock market and prices drifted\ndownward. Turnover was about 100,.\n000 shares. The market will remain\nclosed tomorrow (Good Friday) and\nEaster Monday.\nHudson Bay lost 1% to 28%, Nick.\nel was down % at 33 and Smelters\nweakened % to 34%.\nKerr-Addison, Little Long Lac,\nAunor, Pickle Crow and Wright-\nHargreaves weakened 4 to 10 cent!\nand a few of the Juniors, including\nCochenour Williams, Powell Rouyn,\nLeitch and Kirkland Hudson loit\nground. Bralorne fell back 20 to\n9.80 and Hollinger lost a fraction.\nMacassa, Upper Canada and San\nAntonio were higher.\nHome Oil'lost a cent to 1.85 and\nother Weitern oils held iteady.\nWinnipeg Prices\nSlip to Low Level\nWINN-TO, April 10 (CP)\u2014*__\u00bb\u2022\ndifferent support was blamed for a\nweaker trend on Winnipeg Grain\nExchange today as wheat futurei\nprices slipped to lower levels, despite a fairly strong display at Chi\"\ncago. Quotations at the close were\n1%-1 cent lower May wheat at 75%\nand July at 77% cents a bushel.\nCoarse grain trading was almost\nas dull as operation! In the wheat\npit Flax values recorded few\nchanges, and shippers showed a.\nlittle interest in oats and barley.\n\u2022 Cash wheat trade failed to un- \u2022\ncover even the usual moderate demand for the lower gradei.\n\"Children Can Ploy\nPart in War Effort\" |\nVANCOUVER, April 10 (CP)\u2014\nThe part children can play In war-\ntime was stressed by Dr. L. A. De\nWolfe, President of Canadian Federation of Home and School, TVuro,\nN.S., on his arrival here today on\na survey of Canada's Parent-Teach-1\ner associations.\n\"Parents  and  teachers  together\ncan use the war to help children\nform thrift habiti,\" Dr. De Wolfe\nlaid. \"Give children a chance to \\\ngo out and earn some money on I\ntheir own, teach them to save, for\nevery penny is needed for the war I\neffort.\"\nTORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nYou Saw It In the DAILY NEWS'lets in the end\nSHIRLEY LOSES CURLS\nHOLLWOOD, April 10 (AP) -i\nShirley Temple. 12. has shed her\nformal curls\u2014all 55 of them.\nShirley's hair, naturally curly,\nhas been brushed out and allowed\nto fall  ln soft waves, with ring-\nLogging TRAILERS\nThoroughly reconditioned and guaranteed single and dual axle,\npneumatic tired logging trailers equipped with brakes.\n1 Hayes Model LT4, 34x7 tires $480\n3 Hayes Model LT6, 8.25x20 tires, equipped with breakaway\nvalve, each   \t\n8660\n$875\n5 Hayes Model LT8, 9.75x20 tires, equipped with breakaway\nvalve, each >.\t\n2 Hayes Model LT10,10.50x24 tires, equipped with breakaway\nvalve, each  $600\n19311%-ton Hayes-Anderson truck, 30x5 tires, ln good shape  .. $880\nTERMS CAN BE ARRANGED\nNew Hayes Truck and Trailer prices upon request\nThe largest truck and trailer parti stock ln Western Canada.\nHAYES MANUFACTURING CO., LTD.\n291 Weat Second Ave. Vancouver, B. C.\nMINES\nAldermac Copper  10\nAmm Gold  -      -01\nAnglo-Huronian   -     2.25\nArntfield Gold  04\nAunor        L'l\nBagamac Rouyn  _.      .08\nBunkfield Gold   ..-      .05%\nBase Metals Mining        .07\nBeattie Gold Mines  _      L08\nBidgood Kirkland  -      .08%\nBig Missouri        .04%\nBobjo  Mines      06%\nBralorne Mines       9.80\nBuffalo Ankerite  -    3.50\nBunker Hill Ex -      -01%\nCanadian Malartic 57\nCariboo Gold QuarU  -    2.53\nCastle-Treth   -       SI\nCentral Patricia          L70\nChromium M & S  \u2014      .16%\nCoast Copper   75\nConiaurum Mines      L25\nConsolidated M & S     34.50\nDome Mines    22.25\nPickle Crow Gold  \u00bb.     J.68\nPioneer Gold       2.02\nPremier Gold 90\nPowell Rouyn Gold  70\nPreston Eait Dome      2.87\nReeves Mae\nReno Gold Mines ..\nRoche Long Lac ....\nSan Antonio Gold\nShawkey Gold \t\nSheep Creek Gold\nSherritt Gordon ....\nSiscoe Gold  ...\nSladen Malartic ...\nSt. Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSulllcan Con .\nDorval-Siscoe\n.01K\nEast Malartic      2.55\nEldorado Gold \t\nFalconbrldge Nickel .._\nFederal Kirkland \t\nFrancoeur Gold \u2014\nGillies Lake   .    \t\nGod's Lake Gold \t\nGold Belt    _\nGrandoro Mines  \u2014\nGunnar Gold     -\nHard Rock Gold \t\nHarker Gold   \u2014\nHollinger       ,\t\nHowey Gold  ....\nHudson Bay M _ S ...-\u25a0\u2022\nInter Nickel  \u2014\nJ.-M. Con \t\nJack Waite  \t\nJacola Gold  \t\nKerr-Addison    \t\nKirkland Lake .\n33\n2.31\n.04\n.38\n.03%\n2J1\n.27\n.04\n.23\nJ5\n.03%\n12.50\n.24\n2525\n32.50\n.00%\n.10\n.01%\n3.55\n.80\n18.60\n.41\n.01%\nLake Shore Mines\t\nLeitch Gold         _\nLebel Oro Mines  ...\t\nLittle Long Lac  1.61\nMacassa Mines     3.75\nMacLeod Cockshutt       1.77\nMadsen Red Lake Gold  ff)\nMandy     06\nMclntyre-Porcupine    48.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake .\nMcVittie-Graham  \t\nMcWatters Gold  \t\nMining Corp      \t\nMoneta Porcupine _..\u2014_-.\nMofris-Kirkland\t\nNlpisslng Mining \t\nNoranda    \t\nNormetal      \t\nO'Brien Gold   \t\nOmega Gold       \t\nPamour Porcupine\t\nPaymaster Cona\t\nPend Oreille\n1.05\n.05%\n.1!)\n.75\n.43\n.02%\n1.02\n64.25\n.36\n.61\n.13\n1.30\n.20%\n1.30\nJ Perron Gold   1.48\n.10\n.10\n.03%\n2.25\n.01 Vt\n.75\n.65\n.57\n.24\n.10\n1.10\n.58\nSylvanite   . _     2.50\nTeck-Hughes Gold      3.05\nToburn Gold Mines     1.65\nTowagmac  _      .10\nVentures        3.25\nWaite Amulet        3.00\nWright Hargreaves      5.25\nYmir Yankee Girl        .04%\nOILS\nAjax     _.._..      .12%\nBritish American     17.00\nChemical Research  ,..      .15\nImperial  '..    9.50\nInter Petroleum     13.50\nTexas Canadian         1.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power  _ 85\nBell Telephone  155\nBrazilian T L tt P     5%\nBrewers It Diitlllen     4%\nBrewing Corp  _..     .75\nB c Power \"A\"     23%\nB c Power \"B\"     1%\nBuilding Products  _   15\nCanada Bread  ._     2\nCan Bud Malting  _     3%\nCan Car St Fdy        6\nCan Cement  _     5\nCan Malting    35%\nCan Pac Rly           5\nCan Ind Alcohol A     2\nCons Bakeries  _      9\nDom Tar & Chem ....     4%\nC.P.R. Earnings Gain.\nMONTREAL-Increase of $835,000\nwas reported today by Canadian\nPacific Railway Company in trafflo\nearnings of $3,595,000 for the weetc\nended April 7, compared with $2,-\n760,000 in the corresponding perioil\nof the previous year.\nMINISTER WOULD\nPROTECT TREE GROVE\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C., April 10\n(CP).-Hon. A. Wells Gray, pro-' |\nvincial Minister of Lands, declared\nin an address here last night he\nwould do all ln his power to see\nthat Cathedral Grove, scenic timber,\nstand near Cameron Lake, was not\ndestroyed, but said he could pot\npromise the Grove would be preserved.\nDistillers Seagrams\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Canada A -\nGen Steel Warei \t\nGoodyear Tire  -\nGypsum L & A __\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHiram Walker  _.\nImperial Tobacco _..\nLoblaw \"A\" \t\nLoblaw \"B\" \t\nKelvlnator\nMaple Leaf Milling .\nMassey Harris\t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corp   ..\nNat Steel Car  \t\nPower Corp\t\nPressed Metali \t\nSteel of Can  \t\nStandard Paving .\u201e\n20 %\n24%\n15%\n4%\n68\n3%\n3%\n39\n11%\n25\n22%\n9%\n1.30\n2**\n20%\n48\n33%\n3%\n8%\n62%\n.60\nSERVICES DR.VE\nNEARS OBJECTIVE\nTORONTO. April 10 (CP). \u2014 ,\nNational campaign headquarten\nannounced today that contributions to the Canadian War Services Fund reported so far total\n$5,195,574. The goal is $5,500,000.\nCANADIAN MALARTIC\nPRODUCTION CAINS\nTORONTO, April 10 (CP)\u2014Cana-\ndlan Malartic Gold Mines Ltd., milled 275,-93 tons of ore in 1940 and\nrealized $1,138,377 from metal salei.\nThis compares with $1,078,000 from\n244.720 tons in 1938.\nNet profit was $183,454 agalnat\n$150,124 in the year ended Dec. 3L\n1939.\nAIR COMPANY REPORTS\nPROFIT OP $6,656,24\nNEW YORK, April  10  (CP)\nWright  Aeronautical   Corporation,,\ncontrolled  by  Curtis-Wright  Corporation, reported today for 1940'\nnet profit of $6,656,248,  equal to 1\n$11.09 a share on its capital stock,*\ncompared with $3,740,626, of $6.23\na share, in 1939.\nI\nm\n). -\nDIVIDENDS\nLtd.,\nCalgary   Power  Company,\npreferred. $1.50.\nIsland Mountain Minei Company,\nLtd., eight cents.\nHAVE *YOUR ELECTRIC POWER\nOUTLET PLATES\nCHROME PLATED\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLiurltx Bldg.\n704 NeUon Ave.\nH-'H\u00bbl\"t>MHteH ,\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\nGranville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL  CHEMISTS\nPHONI 618\n189 Baker St.     Nelson, B.f C.\n___\u25a0\n i.i.iup.1 liwi.junii i ii iiiiMinp^iniP^uiiiuvii ii  i i\"iwiJipp.i9uvifpiw mmm^mww\\tmwwhpu\n\"\"i\"\nHWilii,..IM.n,   I,   lUWpi|\u00bbip,^. I W**PJlJ|g\nPAG* TIN \u2014\nSpecial Eaiter\nFried Chicken Dinner\nplease make your reservations.\nGRENFELL'S CAFE\nLAMBERT'S\nPHONE\nI LUMBER t)     00\nJ fa. f\u00bber\u00bb Nttdgf       X\/\n1937 Ford Coupe\nLooks and runs like new.\nQueen City Motors\nI   66. Josephine St.     Limited    Ph. 43\nHave the fob Done Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nJ. A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical  Arti  Building\nSPRINC IS HERE!\nHave your anti-freeze drained,\nrndiator flushed, Spring tune-up.\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n1206 Baker St.  SERVICE   Phone 122\nKELOWNA TAX RATE\nREMAINS UNCHANGED\nKELOWNA, B. C, April 0 (CP>-\nKelowna'i tax rate will remain unchanged from last year's 44 milLs\nII ll expected to raise $118,157.28\nRevenue'ls estimated at $263,238.75\nand expenditures at $381,394.\nPhone    JT*   A MJfVl     Phone\n195     JJ\/flUMUr      195\nBody & Fender Works\nLet us re-vamp your car,\nMake it like new again.\nWatch for the\nSUGAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\nIn Tomorrow'* Paper\nSMELTER REPRESENTATIVES\nat Trail, B. C. and other Western\nSmelters. Write to head ottlce:\nE. W. Widdowson\n_ Co.\n301-305 Josephine St.   Nelson, B. C.\nPasteurized\nMilk   for   the\nbaby  each  day\nis my recommendation the\ndoctor will say.\nHOOD'S\nHOT X BUNS\nTHEY TASTE DIFFERENT!\nTHE SECRET OF\nCHARM\nIs One of our Beautiful Permanent!\nPhone 327\nHaifrh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nChampion\nOutboard Motors\nTHE KINGFISHER.\n3.2* h.p. S.T.D. Single. Each\nTHE FISHHAWK.\n3.4 h.p. Lite Twin. Each .. . .\n$116.00\nThese models feature many improvements\nincluding Internal Rotary Valve \u2014 Combined\nSpiral Rotary Pump \u2014 Removable High Compression Head \u2014 Streamlined Extra Capacity\nTank. Wifle range of speed from the lowest\ntrolling to a peppy \"get-there\" pace, combined with instant starting and low operation\ncost.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\n-NILION DAILY NBW*. NELSON B. C^-FMDAY MORNINO. APRIL Vl. mi-\nTOMORROWJHE LAST DAY\nSAVE ON THESE BEAUTY REQUISITES\nregularly 1.15,\nBeauty Grains 92\nPasteurized Face Cream 92\nSkin Toning Lotion 92\nYoutbifying Tissue Cream .' 92\nSkin Clearing Cream , 92\nHand Lotion , 92\nSpecial Pore Masque 92\nlipsticks (Costume) 92\nRouges (Cream or Compact) 92\nFace Powder 92\nApple Blossom Cologne 92\nApple Blossom Soap (3 in Box) 92\nMann, Rutherford Drug Co.\nPhone 81\nNelson, B, C.\nCanada Fighting Enemy Within lb ,\nOwn Borders-Communists Financed\nby Nazis, Hann Tells Board Nelson\nWar Brings Big\nParental Dulles\nto British Mother\nBy GLADYS ARNOLD\nCanadian Prest Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, April 10 (CP)-For-\ntunes of war have brought to one\n\"British guest mother, Mrs. Thomas\nSnow, parental duties and problems\non a scale she never dreamed of before the war.\nShe has assumed the duties of\nBritish representative in Canada\nfor 1582 British guest children\nbrought to the Dominion under the\nChildren's Overseas Reception\nBoard Scheme. Keith Jopson, now\nattached to the British Embassy\nin Washington, formerly held this\npost.\nMother of three sons, Thomas, 11,\nAnthony, eight and Richardi five,\nand with a background of teaching\nand social service work, Mrs. Snow-\nis well acquainted with the varied\nproblems of child welfare.\nWhen war broke out Mrs. Snow\nwas in Finland with her husband,\nthen British Minister to that country and now head of the Refugee\nDepartment of the British Foreign\nOffice She returned to London,\nwhere she was active in Red Cross\nand other relief work and then came\nto Canada to act as assistant to Mr\nJopson.\n\"Problems of children mostly\nboiled down to the same sort of\nthings repeated in a dozen different ways,\" she said when interviewed in her office today. \"Sometimes I think five boys can give you\nas many things to worry about as\n1000\"\nMost problems which came up in\nconnection with the British children here are easily solved, shu\nsaid. Work done by the Children's\nAid Societies, welfare bodies and\nProvincial authorities is so thorough\nthat only the most unusual cases\nand the problem of liaison with London are her main worries.\nMrs. Johansson\nDies Aged 15\nTRAIL. B. C, April IC\u2014Mrs. Olga\nNancy Johansson,, wife of Carl Johansson, died Wednesday in Trail-\nTadanac Hospital after an illness of\nabout one month, aged 25 years.\nShe is survived by her husband;\ntwo sons, Robert Clarence, six\nyears, and Richard Daniel, six\nmonths; her mother, Mrs. Ida Palm\nof Christina Lake; six sisters, Mrs.\nAxel Johnson, Mrs. Axel Fransom,\nand Norma, at Christina Lake; Mrs.\nWilliam Bishop of Trail; Miss Greta\nPalm of New York City! and Mrs.\nIngemar Edstrom, of Copper Mountain; and two brothers, Harry of\nTrail, and Stanley of Farron.\nShe was born at Fife.\nFuneral services will be held\nSaturday.\n4000 Prisoners Are\nTaken at Addis Ababa\nNAIROBI, Kenya Colony, April 10\n(CP)\u2014 Four thousand Italians and\n1000 natives were taken prisoner\nwith the British occupation o( Addis\nA'baba, it was officially announced\ntoday.\nCAIRO, Egypt , April 10 (API-\nBucking sandstorms which had objectives, the Royal Air Force has\ncarried out manv raids and inflicted\ncasualties on German and Italian\ncolumns in the North African Desert\nThirty-one Italian plane5 were\nleft in a damaged condition when\nthe Italians fled Addis Ababa, a\ncommunique said.\nThe air force cooperating with\nthe capture of Massaua, Red Sea\nport, bombed Italian ships which\nwere shelling the British troops. One\nship was reported hit. Gun positions on Mount Umberta also were\nbombed, the communique said.\nSOCIETY HONORS\nBRIDE-ELECT AT\nSOCIAL EVENING\nUnited Young Peoples Society on\nWednesday evening held a social in\nSt. Paul's United Church Hall, honoring Miss Babs McDonald, Past\nPresident and member of long\nstanding, who is to be married on\nGood Friday. Jamea LeDuc, on behalf of the Society, presented Miss\nMcDonald with two lovely pictures.\nStarting Gtt the evening, the boys\npinned on their aprons and whipped\nup a batch of .baking powder cookies. The best the girls, who Judged\ntheir efforts, would do was to admit\nthe cookies \"were not bad.\"\nA lively skit \"The Morning Paper,\" was next presented. This fea-\ntured a cross-fire of jokes from the\nmorning paper between the street\ncar occupants. The characters were\nConductor, Harvey Moir; Tom, Jim\nLeDuc; Dick. Gordon Stewart;\nHarry, Alastalr Jack; Fat Lady,\nDaisy Croy; and Thin Lady, Ruth\nRixen.\nEvery  Communist   Is\nPotential  Spy,\nHe Warns\nSEEK TO CRIPPLE\nTHE WAR EFFORT\nCanada la fighting not only the\nThird Reich but alio elements\npreviously  unknown.\nThe Communist Influence has\npenetrated into many Canadian\norganizations, and every Communist is a potential spy \"whether he knows lt or not\" because his\n' reports to his Immediate superior\ngo directly to enemy hands.\n\"It has been proved several\ntimes . . . that ihe Communist\nparty is heavily financed by Nazi\nagencies.\"\nEnemies within Canada have\ntwo objectives \u2014 to stop the shipment of materials and foodstuffs\nat the source; and to sabotage the\ngalltical   and   economic   life   of\nanada. and cripple its war effort, by strikes.\n\"We are goihg to fight to retain our liberties whatever the\ncost.\"\n\"And so we shall go forward in\nthe faith that with God's help we\nshall prevail.\"\nThese declarations were made by\nCapt. Francis N. Hann of Vancouver, who served in the First Great\nWar and was wounded at Vimy\nRidge, and who is now an Insurance\nexecutive, when he addressed the\nNelson Board of Trade at luncheon\nat the Hume Thursday. His subject\nwas \"Canada Faces the Crisis.\"\nCOULD  NOT LIVE\nWITHOUT  FREEDOM\n\"We are Indeed people who eould\nnot live without freedom,\" asserted\nCaptain   Hann.\nNazism, Fascism and Communism\nwere \"all offshoots of Marxism\u2014a\npagan religion of materialism, and\ngodlessness,\" declared Captain Hann\nCommunism used a base of class\nhatred and anti-capitalism, while\nFascism and Nazism were based on\nreligious and racial hatreds.\nThere would always be. he declar\ned, an \"irreconcilable conflict\" between the teachings of Christianity\nand the teachings of Marx,\n\"Never could a greater mistake\nbe made\" than the formerly oft-\nheard comment that \"the Communist party and their fellow travellers\nare not of great importance,\" he declared. Though the Communist\nParty was now illegal, it was still\nactive underground.\nTHREAT8 AT HOME\nThe threat to industrv, by which\nthe enemy hoped to halt shipments\nof materials at their source, was\n\"very serious\" and protection was\n\"most important.\"\nIn peace time labor and the professions had been regimented under\ncleverly disguised schemes. In war\nthe enemy would seek to push these\norganizations so far that, aided by\nthe natural exigencies of the war,\nthey could cripple the war effort\nSheila Gallaher\nWins in I.O.D.E.\nOratory Contest\nBesting 12 other youthful orators.\nSheila Gallaher, Grade VIII student of the Nelson Junior High\nSchool, Wednesday afternoon car\nried off an inter-school oratorical\naward in a contest at the Junior\nHigh, sponsored by Kokanee Chapter. I.O.D.E. Honorable mention\nwent to Rosella Poulin and Marie\nStringer, both of St. Joseph's Academy; and to Effie Small of the\nJunior High. The topic was \"Canada\nof Tomorrow.\"\nThirteen contestants, nine of the\nJunior High and four of St. Jo\nsoph's Academy, competed. Such\nevents will be sponsored annually\nso successful was this first contest\nA shield will likely be put up for\nthe annual  competition.\nThe prize won bv Miss Gallaher,\nand presented by Mrs! George Lambert, I.O.D.E. Educational Secretary\nwas a copy of \"Canadian Mosaic'\nby the artist John Murray Gibbon\nJudges were Rev. W. J. Silver-\nwood, L. V. Rogers, and Leslie\nQraufurd. Tbey expressed themselves as highly pleased with per\nformances of the orators.\nA. E. Cobus of the Junior High\nstaff and Sister Christina of the\nAcademy assisted in arranging the\ncontest.\nThe other contestants were Evelyn Hammond, Noreen Drake, Jean\nette Plante, Pat Gillott. Henrv Le.\nMoigne, Betty Brown and Elaine\nRadcliffe, all of Junior Hiffh. and\nJohn Eianey and Frances Horrock\nof St. Joseph's.\nA brief musical program was pre\nsented while the judges were making their decisions. It consisted* of\ntwo choral numbers each by, the\nJunior High Grade VIII girls, and\nGrade IX Girls' Choir; folk dance\nby Grade V1*II girls; and a vocal\nsolo by Mickey Prestley of the\nAcademy. David Abey of the Junior\nHigh was Chairman.\nPentecostal Members\nat Fellowship Today\nto Hear 3 Speakers\nFellowship meeting of Pentecostal\nChurch members from oentres\nthroughout the Kootenay-Boundary\nwill be held at the Bethel Tabernacle\nhere today Three visiting speakers,\nRev. F. G M. Story of Kimberley,\nRev. Earl Wilkie of Metaline Falls,\nWash., and Rev. J. E. Barnes of\nNorth Vancouver will address the\nday-long gathering.\nKimberley, Cranbrook, Creston.\nSheep Creek, Trail and Grand\nForks are expected to be represented\nat the meeting as well.\n-\u2014\u2014\u2014---_-___-___-\u2014-\u2014_\u2014-       \u2022\nEnlistees Leave\nfor the Coast\nTRAIL. B. C.. April 10-A. H\nTblus of Rossland and T. de'Morzay\nof Trail, who. enlisted at the Trail\nRecruiting Office, left for the Coast\nThursday morning.\nand \"with luck might even bankrupt the country.\"\n\"Th. Communist underground\nparty w.a set up before th. war\nand It now functioning vary efficiently,\" asserted Captain Hann.\n\"In Canada we have alwayi teit\nth. national character wu a composite ot two of the most courageous\nand Intelligent peoples in the world\n\u2014British and American,\" be iald.\n\"Nations rise or fall on the strength\nor weakness of the national character. . . Surrender ls completely\nImpossible.\"\nHitler had built up the greatest\nmilitary machine .in the history of\nworld, and it had achieved many\nsuccesses. But the German navy was\n\"still hiding in the Baltic,\" and the\nRoyal Air Force had repeatedly\nhumiliated the German Luftwaffe.\nSUCCESSES AIDED\nFROM WITHIN\nThe German army, he said, had\nyet to meet opposition that was its\nequal ln morale and equipment. In\nevery country except Poland, wh .re\nlt wss overwhelmingly superior In\nstrength, the German army had\nbeen aided by propaganda, fifth\ncolumnists and treachery ln high\nplaces.\nNow Germany faced the British\nEmpire. Britain had bean reborn;\na new people had risen out of the\nnational character to meet the\nnitlonal emergency.\n'They stand together to face the\nbeasts.\"\nCanada, he continued, had its\nmen overseas and at home. The\nCommonwealth Air Training Plan\nwas forging ahead. The financial\nproblem was being met with courage and realism. There was no profiteering, no tax-free bonds as in\nthe last war. Prices and rents were\nbeing.controlled and shortages were\nbeing relieved. Canadians were\npaying 44 cents out of every dollar\nthey earned. There were bottlenecks In industry, particularly in\naircraft but Canadian motor vehicles were streaming overseas. The\nArmy of the Nile \"travelled on Canadian vehicles.\"\nCANADA'S IMMEDIATE\nPROBLEMS\nCaptain Hann saw as Immediate\nproblems the necessity for controlling the wheat situation; financing\na war four times as costly as the last\none; and training thousands of Individuals for new work \"because\nthere Is going to be an acute labor\nshortage.\"\n\"Whatever the cost we are going through with It,\" he declared.\n\"We are sacrificing not only for\nourselves but for our children and\nour children's children. , , .\n\"It Is people like us, the ordinary\npeople, that Hitler is bombing. It\nis people like us, the ordinary\npeople, that form the cogs lh the\ngreat human machine that is the\nCommonwealth of British Nations.\n\"And so we shall go forward'In\nthe faith that with God's help we\nshall prevail.\"\nVow\nEASTER CARD\nPrem our wonderful assortment.\n6** to 25*\nbiter Chocolate Novelties.\nBoxed Chocolates.\nGive her a beautiful  Elizabeth\nArden Srt ..-..'.    12.99.\nFILMS AND KODAKS\nVour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Go.\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nNelson District's\nWar Services Fund\nGifts Near $6000\nContribution! in Nelson .nd vicinity to the Canadian War Services\nFund are nearing $6000, stated\nMayor N. C. Stibbs Thursday.\nThe objective i_ $8000.\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Smart New\nYorkers, \"knittin\" for Britain\" are\nwearing yarn holder bracelets\u2014simple gold rings wltb a bobbin and\nchain on which they wind their\nballs of yarn.\nNEWS OFTHE DAY\nEvangelists Speak\nat Holy Week Union\nService at Tabernacle\n\"God's Mirror\" was the subject\nof Rev. J. E. Barnes, North Vancouver Evangelist, Wednesday night\nat the Holy Week Union service in\nthe Bethel Tabernaole. Rev. Foster\nHilliard of the St. Paul's United\nChurch pnd Rev. T. H. Harris of\nFirst Baptist Church attended.\nThe Evangelist compared the laver\na brass vessel in which Jewish\npriests washed 'their hands and feet\nbefore entering a Tabernacle, to a\nmirror in which a reflection could\nbe seen. As one could see how he\nlooked by gazing into the laver, io\ncould man see into God's word, see\nwhere he failed, and adjust himself\nto a proper mode of living, according to God's word.\nSeveral choral numben opened\nthe service.\nA quartette of Mrs. Calvin Petersen, and Mrs. Albert Wilbur, Frank\nDyke and IJev. C. A. C. Story\nrendered a number, while Mr.\nBarnes sang a solo.\nMr. Harris led the prayer.\nHope-\nToll Road for\n-Princeton\nLink Suggested\nOpinion of the Nelson Board of\nTrade on a proposal to complete the\nHope-Princeton link of the Southern Transprovincial Highway as a\ntoll road is asked by the B. C.\nSouthern Interior Boards of Trade,\na new association of Boards centering in the Okanagan. The Nelson\nBoard, receiving the query at Us\nluncheon at the Hume Thursday,\nreferred It to the Roads and Bridges\nCommittee for consideration.\nThe Southern Interior Boards\nstated both the Provincial and Dominion Governments had been urged\nto complete the 10tt-mile link. Now\nit was proposed, it opinion was\nfavorable, to suggest that the Provincial Government give a franchise\nto a contractor who would build\nthe road and recover h|s money by\nmeans of a toll. It was pointed out\nthe Provincial Government was collecting tolls on the Cariboo Highway and various ferries.\nOur Pop Is electrically cooled. Enjoy a bottle today. Wait's.\nAinsworth Swimming Pool open.\nApply Silver Ledge.\nRemember! The Kin Koon Minstrel Show, Tues., Wed. next week.\nSmart Ties\nFor Easter \u2022\nBest dressed men know |\nthe importance of the details in dressing . , . the\nimportance of heving ties I\nthat tie right and  look '\nright with your clothes,-\nHundreds of patterns to j\nchoose from.\nfl.OO and 91.50    \u25a0\nEMORY'S ltd.\nThe Man's Store\nBELFAST (CP). - As a proU\nagainst crowded court conditions I\nmagistrate fined defendants in 1.\nor offences five shillings and allow\ned them ten shillings costs, runnk\nup a bill of \u00a3 120 against the Corp\nation.\nYour choice of Easter pot plants\nat Walt's News.\nPrinting - Developing - Enlarging\nBILL RAMSAY \u2014 8PORT SHOP\nRoU your own with \"Sentry\" tine\ncut, 10c pkt. at Valentine's.\nFor your convenience open Friday\nKOOTENAY  FLOWER 8HOP\nNew and rebuilt typewriters. Underwood Agency, 536 Ward St. Ph. 99\nLots of good titles among new arrivals at Wait's Lending Library.\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS. F. H.\nSMIT.H, PHONE 666, 351 Baker St\nOpen today. Grizzelle.. for your\nEaster flowers and plants. Ph. 187,\nCold storage space for rent McDonald Jam Company Ltd. Ph. 1055\nSee Kandy Land's display of Easter Lilies and potted plants.\nFor sale\u2014Electric range, step ladders and garden hose. W. M. Walker,\nPhone 61GX.\nCribbage as usual tonight, Legion Hall, 8 p.m. Eats, prizes. 25c\nEverybody welcome.\n85 Per Cent Pass in\nRossland First Aid\nROSSLAND, B. C, April 10\u2014Re-\nsuits of the rec_nt first aid examinations held at the local Junior-Senior\nHigh School have been given out\nby the St. John's Ambulance Association, and show that about 85\nper cent of those taking part were\nsuccessful. Altogether, 182 pupils\npassed.\nLectures were given by Dr. E.\nTopliff, end the examinations were\nconducted by Dr. L. B. Wrinen.\nWomen Trainees\non Route March\nSwinging along in marching trim\nNelson unit of the Canadian Women's Training Corps held a route\nmarch Thursday night on Granite\nRoad\nBoards Urge B.C.\nto Fight G.N. on\nTrain Withdrawal\nSince the gold producing districts\nof Erie, Sheep Creek, Salmo and\nYmir were involved, the Provincial\nGovernment was vitally interested\nin opposing withdrawal of Great\nNorthern Railway passenger service\nbetween Nelson and the International Boundary, lt U contended in a\nletter prepared for submission to\nHon. C. S. Leary, Minister of Public. Works. The letter was approved\nby the Nelson Board of Trade at its\nluncheon at the Hume Thursday.\nThe letter expressed the opirtion\nthat withdrawal of passenger trains\nwould be followed by withdrawal\nof freight service, and this *&ts vital\nto the mines between Nelson and\nthe Boundary.\nA Joint request by the Nelson and\nSalmo Valley Boards of Trade for\nthe Government to oppose the application was included in the letter.\nW. G. C. Lanskall, Secretary, reported receipt cf a telegram stating\nthe Government would be represented by counsel when the Great\nNorthern's application was hoard by\nthe Board of Transport Commis-\n! sioners. The letter urged active opposition rather than representation.\nR. L. McBride. Chairman of the\nNelson Board's Freight and Transportation Committee, stated progress\nwas being made toward financing\nopposition to the application.\nAthlone Extends\nPatronage to Canada\nAir Training Clubs\nOTTAWA, April 10 . (CP)-The\nEarl of Athlone has extended his\npatronage to the Canadian Flying\nClubs Association's contribution to\nthe development of aviation in\nCanada and Its work and that of\nits member clubs in connection with\nthe British Commonwealth Air\nTraining Plan.\nAnnouncement of this recognition Irom the Governor-General\nwas made by the association today\ncoincident with the opening of the\nfirst double-capacity elementary\nflying training school under the Air\nTraining Plan at Boundary Bay,\nB.C., 'near Vancouver\nAs civilian flying training has\nbeen discontinued in Canida the\nentire resources of the flying clubs\nare now devoted to lementary training for the fighting services.\nFirst Presbyterian\nChurch Association\nHas Successful Tea\nA successful Eas(er tea was held\nWednesday afternoon In the church\nHall by . the First Presbyterian\nChurch Women's Association. Eaiter\ndecorations brightened the tea\ntables.\nMrs A. W. Smith, President, was\nGeneral Convener, and with Mrs.\nA. N. Winlaw received the guests\nMrs. David Heddle and Mrs. C. R.\nMcLanders had charge of refreshments.\nBIC  DANCE\nEagle Hall every Saturday night to\nMargaret Graham and Her Band.\nWith appreciation for your patronage we extend to you\u2014Easter\nGreetings. Kitto's.\nMOSS-TEX INSULATION\n$1.00 per bale covers 25 sq. ft.\nBURNS LUMBER AND COAL CO.\nJust arrived \u2014 500 Victor Records.\nLarge selection of popular and concert numbers. McKay tt. Stretton.\nLarge assortment Easter Lilies,\nPot Plants and Cut Flowers. Call or\nphone Mac's Greenhouse. Open today\nIt's true! Nelson Kinsmen are\nbringing Mart Kenney and his pop.\nular band to the Civic Centre soon.\nVisa Lodge Easter Dance. I.O.O.F.\nHall April 12. Everybody welcome,\nGents SOc. Ladies 25c.\nTomorrow is the opening day of\nSherwin-Williams Paint Sale at Hipperson's. Don't miss this opportunity\nto stock up on these highest quality\npaint products.\nLook aroundl Gather those old\naluminum utensils, electrical fix\ntures, rags, sacks and bottles. The\nJr. Ch. of Commerce can use them in\ntheir National Salvage Campaign.\nWe can rent you any make of\nstandard office typewriter for $3.00\nper month or three months for (T7.50.\nD. W. McDerby, 'The Typewriter\nMan\", 654 Baker St., Nelson, B. C\nAttend the Annual D. O K. K.\nEaster Ball, Civic Centre, Monday,\nand help the W. A. to Overseas\nForcei provide comforts for \"The\nBoyi Over There.\" Good music and\na good time aw.lt you. Admliilon\nSO cents pir penon.\nMACO CLEANER!\nI\nCleaning, Pressing\nand  Dyeing\n827 Baker Phon. 288\nSPECIAL\n4-pc. Walnut Bedroom\nSuite for    \t\nHome Furniture Exchange\n413 Hall St. Phone 1032 |\n$6fl\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nMed. Arts Blk.\nFOR RENT\nTWO or THREE ROOM SUITE|\nAnnable Block\nB. W. Dawson\nAdd\nEASTER\nDOUGHNUTS\nto your grocery\norder.\nThe PERCOLATOR\nFor EASTER SPECIALS\nSee our advertisement oa\nClassified Page.\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.]\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Poit Offlti\nAre   You   Protected!\nAgalnit Fire Lou? .\nIf Not, See\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\n347 Baker St Phon. tf |\nGet the\nFURNACE\nPut in working order NOWI\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 653      610 Kootenay St\nSend  your SPRING  CLEANINQ\nnow. Delivery at your convenience.\nPhone 1042\nIONELLA CLEANERS!\nS\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab*5S\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\u00bb*!S\u00abS*5\u00ab\n\u25a0van\nYou'll Have More Fun in a\n\"Serviced-Right\" Car!\nThe care and precision that is a part of\nour service assures you of many miles of\nworry-free driving. Let us service your car\n, . . you'll know the difference I\nA \"CERTIFIED\" Motor Tune-Up Depot\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35 - PHONES - 36\n\u25a0\u00ab>!______\u25a0 _____v__^\t\n^^^^j^^^^^^j9^^^|^^^^ftriUlgj|g^|ffa|\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_11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414891","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"}]}}