{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415073":{"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":"2022-06-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1940-08-03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415073\/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":" Britain Expeett Nail Attack In Spring\nIf Not in September.\u2014Page 3\nFlamei Are Seen 40 Milei Away After\nR.A.F. Raid on Libya.\u2014Page 5\nLargest CA.S.F. Contingent So Far\nArrival in England.\u2014Page 6\nWOtt\nVOLUME 39\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nBRITAIN\nBritain Buyi 100,000,000 Buiheli of    \/ \/S\/S>\nCanadian Wheat.\u2014Page 10 l,(-A-\nUnemployment lniurance. Bill Ready\nto Become Law.\u2014Paga 4\nFrench Leaden to Be Tried; Absent\nDe Gaulle Condemned.\u2014Pago 8\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUG. 3. V\nNUMBER 89\nNOT REPRISAL\nAnother Second Contingent Division In England-\nPhotos Show Departure\nOOODBYE\naboard one of th\nTo  CANADA\u2014A mass o! troops\ne ships as it eased from its berth at\nan East Coast port. Besides the protection of the\nconvoy warships, the troop vessel carried its own\nguns and depth bombs.\n\"GOOD LUCK SOLDIER'.\"-Df>fcnce Minister\nHon. J. L Ralston bids farewell and G.dspeed to\nMajor  General   Victor   W.   O.ltim,   CB.   C.M.G..\nD c <1 V D Crura] officer Commanding the Second Division of the Canadian Active Service Force\nin., ; men of tne Second Division, as they left\nCanada. For story see \"Largest Contingent\", Page 6.\njBritisK Bombs Smash Qerman\n\\Arms* Supplies in 100 Cities\nj Hamburg in Ruins; Krupp Works, Synthetic\nOil Plants, Airdromes Are Attacked;\nNazis Drop Bombs in Scotland\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (Saturday) \u2014(CP).\u2014The Brem-\n\u2022n radio suddenly shut down late Friday night, indicating stern continuation of Britain's sledge-hammer air\nraids on Germany\u2014raids which the Air Ministry announced have scored smashing successes against supply\ndumps, ports, airdromes and war industries in more than\n100 Cerman cities.\nAt the same time, Cerman planes sped back to Britain, being reported over the Northwestern area early\ntoday.\nShipping off the Southeast coast\nhas attacked by bombers and spurts\nIf water were seen around ships\nleveral miles out. Two German\nonibers also flew low over the\n|outheast coast but turned back to\nin the face of defensive fire.\nIOMB$ ON   SCOTLAND\n1 German planes dropped a salvo n!\nIombs in a district of Southeast\nIcotland, the bomb blasts being followed by a single explosion. Tiie\nlbjective was  not disclosed.\nThe German port of Hamhur;*,\nI biggest in all Europe, was piciur-\n1 ed in virtual ruins bv authorita-\nI tive British sources\u2014the result of\nI three months of Royal Air Force\nI blasting.\nI The great Krupp Arms works a'\nfcsen, supply depots, synthetic oil\nRants and airdromes in Western\nprmany find Holland were ihe lat-\n1st targets reported put under the\n\u25a0bmbfights and  bomb racks of the\nIa.f.\niThe Air Ministry said 'hat R.A F\nEiders by day struck a hangar and \\ \\\nIrafed grounded German planes a' \u25a0 r\nlie airdromes  of  l_,eeu warden  and\nfaamstcde,    in     the,    Netherland\n\u25a0fiursriav.\nBy night British squadrons swept\nin un Western Germany and loosed\nbombs on synthetic oil plants at\nFelsenkirchen, Kamen. Homburg\nand Rc.hholz, the Krupp Works\nat Es^en, supply depots at Hamm.\nKrefeld and Mannheim and several\nairdromes in Northwestern Germany.\nOne plane was missing from the\ndaylight attack'On the two Holland\nairdromes.\nEAST INDIES RUBBER\nMAY CAUSE TROUBLE\nTO JAPAN AND U. S.\nTOKYO, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014Friction\nmay develop between the United\nSlates and Japan over the rich rubber resources of the Dutch East\nIndies. General Kuniak; Koiso, who\nis expered to head a Japanese mission to the Indies shortly, told Japanese renorters today.\nInterviewed at Sapporo, Koiso\nsaid that \"the rubber of the East\nI \"dies  is  indispensible  for  the  in-\nistry   of   the  TJnited   States   and\niorefore the question may give\nrise  In  friction\"\n\"The solution of this problem depends, however, on our decision,\"\nhe added\nVast Transplanting\nof Balkan1 Peoples\nIs Germany's Plan\nBUCHAREST, Aug. 3 (Sat-\nurdayt lAP) \u2014 A vast transplanting of peoples will occur\nregardless of how Rumania's\nterritorial problems 'are settled,\nGerman diplomatic circles disclosed  early today.\nArrival of a Bulgarian delegation to discuss that nation's\nclaims onthe Southern Dobruja\nis expected next Wednesday.\nAfter lhat conference ends, conversations will follow with Hungary over her demands for return of the province of Transylvania.\nUnder the transplantation\nplan as outlined by the Germans,\nall Germans in any ceded territory will be returned to Germany, while all Rumanians in\nceded territories and in Hungary will be removed to Rumania, and all Magyars in Rumania will be taken to Hungary.\nSOVIET CREATES\nMOLDAVIAN   REPUBLIC\nMOSCOW, Aug. 2 (AP)-The Supreme Council of the Russian Parliament unanimously adopted a resolution today creating the Moldavian Union Repuhlic, in which is incorporated the larger part of Bessarabia, recently obtained from Rumania.\n\" This 13th member of the U.S.S R.\nis made un of most of the old autonomous Tiodavinn Renublic, previously a part of the Ukraine, plus\nthe newly-Tcauired territory\nJosenh Stalin attended the session. Us next meetings will be tomorrow afternoon\nBeaverbrook Will Join\nBritain's War Cabinet;\nAppointment Is Hailed\nResponsibilities   of\nPopular Canadian\nMay Be Widened\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP.-Cable)\n\u2014Prime Mlniiter Churohlll hai\nInvited Lord Beaverbrook, Canadian-born publisher and dynamlo\nMlniiter of Aircraft Production,\nto Join the War Cabinet.\nAn announcement from No. 10\nDowning Street tonight aald:\n\"The Prime Mlniiter hai Invited\nLord Beaverbrook to be a member of the War Cabinet. For tha\ntime being Lord Beaverbrook will\ncontinue to be Mlniiter of Alr-\noraft Production.\"\nThe elevation of the publisher waa\nin appreciation of hia amaitng work\nin stepping up Britain's outout of\nplanes since he was appointed to\nthe Aircraft Ministry May 14.\nHis elevatjoa means the formation\nof a powariW aextet to direct the\nwar-Prime Minister Churchill. Neville Chamberlain, Lord President\nof the Council; Viscount Halifax,\nForeign Secretary; Arthur Greenwood, Minister Without Portfolio,\nand Clement Attlee, Lord Privy\nSeal and Lord Beaverbrook\nThe appointment of \"Beaver\",\nas he is known along Fleet Street,\nto the Aircraft Ministry was hailed\nby Press and public last May. His\nactivities since have made him\n\u25a0 even more popular, He has given\noptimistic reports ef plane production. A while ago he asked\nBritish housewives to give him\ntheir aluminum saucepans out of\nwhich he would make Spitfire\nfighting planes. The response was\nso great he had to cry halt.\nDuring the last war Lord Beaverbrook, born at Maple, Ont., 61 years\nago, served as Minister of Information in 1918. In 1916 he represented\nthe Dominion Government at the\nfront, and in 1917 was Officer in\nCharge of Canadian War Records.\nIt was pointed out that while the\nannouncement i&M tha} far. the lta*\nb.to_\" \u00bb\u00ab! Beaverbrook wW continue as Minister of Aircraft Production it was considered likely he\nmay assume wider responsibilities\nin connection with the war effort,\nin view of his new status.\nSome quarters believed h'.> oro-\nmotion may lead to some Ministerial changes.\nVICTORIA, Au?. 2 (CP)\u2014Fun\neral services for Rosalinda Laetitia\ndaughter of Lord Dunboyne and\nwife of Captain John Bowen-Col'\nthurst of Cooke, Vancouver Island,\nwill be held here Saturday. Shi\ndied yesterday.\nMrs. Bowen-Colthurst was 59 and\nhad lived in British Columbia 20\nyears.\nLORD  BEAVERBROOK\n2 Youthful Pilots\nDie When Plane.\nCollide, Seattle\nSEATTLE, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014A mid\nair craih of two imall airplane!\nkilled two youthful pilots at they\nmanoeuvred In for landlngi at\nBoeing Field after training flights\nlate today.\nThe victims wera Lea Cornford\nof Portland, Ore., and Roger\nTheron Byron of Blaokfoot, Idaho,\na Univenity of Idaho etudent\nDale Delanty, an instructof, flying with Byron, parachuted .to wfc-\n,tt_.l\u00abta4t_lilR,planes erasing Jj.tyo\ntWam massi oi \"Wreckage at the\nSouth end of the airport, oft the\nrunways, about 100 feet apart\nBoth planes were owned by the\nWashington Aircraft Company,\nwhich operates at the field. Corn-\nford had a commercial license and\nwas training for an instructor's re-\nratihg. He had been flying tne\ncompany's planes only three or four\ndays. Byron had a private license\nand was taking a secondary college\ncourse.\nThe aircraft company headquarters said Delanty was unable to give\nany explanation for the collision,\nand apparently the two pilots were\nblinded as they flew inlo the sun\nfor their landings.\nHanson Wins Applause of Libs and\nOwn Followers as Protests Rush\nTo Vote $300,000,000\nin   Few   Hours\nWrong\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP).-Hopes\nof proroguing Parliament tomorrow\nwere dimmed in the House of Commons tonight when Conservative\nLeader Hanson condemned the\nIdea of rushing important public\nbusiness without giving it due consideration.\nHe aaid it was obvious the work\ncould not be concluded in an orderly manner before next week.\nHu remarks came when Resources Minister Crerar obtained\nunanimous consent.to sit past the\nautomatic 11 o'clock adjournment\ntonight in an effort to dispose of\nthe bill to amend the Wheat Board\nAct.\n\"I do think the business of this\nHouse should be concluded in an\norderly manner,\" Mr. Hanson said.\n\"The spectacle of voting $300,0O0r\n000 of the people's' money in a few\nhours is absolutely wrong.\"'He was\nreferring to the remaining estimates which must be voted before\nprorogation.\n\"It is quite evident that we cannot finish this week.\" he said. \"Let\nus therefore not try to overwork\nourselves. Let us complete our\nwork ln an orderly and dignified\nway.\"\nMr. Hanson was applauded by\nLiberals and Conservatives alike.\nMr. Crerar said he agreed entirely with what Mr. Hanson said but\nthe House had already voted to sit\nSaturday and the Senate was sitting tomorrow to receive the wheat\nmeasure.\nSenate Debate Almost Bitter When\nMeighen Demands Mobilizing Rules\nMeighen Offers Only\n\"Desolation\" Says\nDandurand\nOTTAWA, Aug, _ (CP).-An\nalmoit bitter debate blew Up In\nthe Senate today when Comervative Leader Meighen demanded\nInformation concerning mobilization regulation! ahd cntlclred the\nGovernment'i war operation!.\nCrou fire reached Ita height\nwhen Government Leader Dandurand, answering Senator C. C.\nBalantyne (Con., Quebec), quoted\nthe Defence Minister a'i laying\nGrtat Britain did not need men\nand continued that there waa \"not\na word of commendation\" freto\nSenator Meighen \u2014 \"nothing but\ndeiolatlon.\"\nSenator Dandurand, speaking\nover mutterings from Conservative\nbenches, said Senator Meighen\nthought things were \"going to the\ndogs because he Is not in power.\"\nSenator Meighen asked whether\nhe was to be held up as unworthy\nof his place if he ventured to criti-\ncize. As far at the last war and ttt\nmanagement wat concmed, he\nasked that the Senate keep in mind\nthat the last war was won.\nThe debate sprang up just as the\nSenate was about to adjourn on a\nrequest by Senator John Haig (Con.,\nManitoba) for information at to regulations to be promulgated under\nthe Mobilization AcL\nSenator Meighen protested that\nthe Senate should know what wat\nto be the system of call.\nReferring to the Government's\ncompulsory training tcheme he\nwanted to know the value of a\nmonth, training. Three or four or\nflvt men were going to be trained\nfor every one that could be used\nand equipment for them was not\navailable.\nSenator Meighen believed It\nwould be an \"act of autocracy unparalleled\" if the Government expected Parliament to go home without information on the mobilization\nreputations.\nSenator Dandurand replied that\nwhen the regulations were ready\nthey would be announced by the\nDefence Minister.\njgjgjjfl;\nNEIaSON\nTRAIL \t\nVictoria \u201e\nNanaimo\nMin. Max.\n49     74\n42\n51\n49\n53\nVancouver  \t\nKamloopi   -  60\nPrince George  50\nEstevan Point  _.. 49\nPrince Rupert  -  51\nLangara  54\nAtlin  50\nDawson, Y.T.    45\nSeattle   42\nPortland  56\nSan Francisco  _.  61\nSpokane    _  46\nPenticton -  46\nVernon    50\nKelowna  49\nKaslo          47\nCranbrook  40\nCalgary  43\nEdmonton   47\nSwift Current   54\nRegina   53\nPrince Albert  _  55\nWinnipeg     65\nForecast: Kootenay\u2014Moderate to\nfresh Westerly winds, fair, becoming wanner.\n77\nlittle Progress\nIn Ottawa Upon\nWheal Arguments\nProrogation   of   the\nHouse   Today   Is\nUnlikely\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Wheat\nmarketing argument* held the\nHouie of Commoni in. leulon until midnight tonight but there wae\nIlttle progreu made on the bill to\namend the Wheat Board Act. The\npoiilblllty of prorogation tomorrow virtually dliappeared.\nArguments from Western members for ' a definite government\nstatement on assistance to be given grain producers to finance them\nuntil elevator space permits delivery of the new crop, and general\ndiscussion of marketing policies occupied tlw Houte througlwut most\not the afternoon and the entire laur-\nhbur evening session.\nBoth Conservative Leader Hanson and Resources Minister Crerar\nadmitted there was little possibility\nof prorogation tomorrow although\nthe wh^at legislation is the only\nGovernment measure left on the\norder paper.\nNearly the entire main estimates\nremain to be voted and Mr. Hanson declared it would be unseemly\nto rush through more than $300.-\n000,000 of appropriations in a few\nhou,rs.\nNevertheless the House will meet\ntomorrow as planned when prorogation seemed possible. It will be\nthe fint Saturday sitting of the\nsession.\nTrade Minister MacKinnon saia\ntonight that the new bill provides\nthat the Wheat Advisory Committee\nwill \"assist\" the board, where the\nold act \"advise.\"\nVarious agricultural organizations\nhad been asked to nominate members from  whom  the Government\nmight select committee members.\nVictor   Quelch    (ND   Acadia)\nblamed  freight rates  for higher\nprices  fof many- commodities  In\nWestern Canada than obtained in\nEastern Canada. There* should be\nno more of this \"foolish talk\" by\nEastern members about subsidizing the West.\nOntario Schools Will\nClose Till Oct. 1 So\nStudents Aid Farmers\nTORONTO. Aug. 2 (CP) -\nPremier Hepburn announced\nlate today all high schools' in\nOntario, rural and urban, will\nremain closed until October 1\nand all elementary schools until\nSeptember 15 for this year, thus\nreleasing 'teen-aged youths lo\nhelp in harvesting on labor-\nshort farms. Ordinarily, the\nschools opened Sept. 1.\nAny schoolboy between the\nages of 12 and 17 may enroll for\nfarm work at a rate of pay to be\nset A central bureau tn receive\napplications will be set up at\nToronto and other agencies will\nbe located later throughout the\nProvince.\n59-Yeor-Old Farmer\nDies as Result of\nAttack by Two Men\nEDMONTON. Aug. 2 (CP) - An\ninquest Into the death of Herman\nMcGlone, 58-year-old Lac La Blche\nfarmer fatally injured when attacked by two men June 29. was adjourned tonight until August 7.\nMedical evidence showed that\nMcGlone's death a week later was\ndue to a fractured skull and other\nhead Injuries.\nRED CROSS SUPPLIES\nCO OVER BURMA ROAD\nLONDON. Aug. 2 (CP) - R. A.\n\u2022utler, Undersecretar- for Foreign\nAffairs, disclosed today that Red\nCross and medical supplies could\nstill be sent to China over the Burma road desDite the recent British\nagreement with Japan to ban movement of war materials over the\nhighway for three months.\nIn a written answer to a member\nof Parliament Butler said Red Cross\nand medical supplies were not included in the deal.\nPure Coincident\nOfficial Quarters\nin London State\nJapanese Papers Charge Retaliation; Daily\n\u2022   Herald Forecasts Arrests in England\nJapan and East Possessions\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (Saturday) \u2014(CP).\u2014The arreit\nof a number of Japanese subjects in the British Empire\nwas confirmed in authoritative quarters today.\nThese quarters stated that the arrests were made\nunder the Defence of the Realm Regulations. In no\nsense were they \"reprisals\" for the arrest of British subjects in Japan and it was \"purely coincidental\" that they\nhad been effected at this time.\nTOKYO, Aug. 3 (Saturday) \u2014 (AP).\u2014Japanese newspapers today issued extras carrying reports that British authorities had arrested |apanese executives in London. The papers\nsaid the arrests were \"regarded as retaliation\" for the arrest\nof British citizens in Japan.\nYakichiro Suma, Foreign Office spokesman, declined\ncomment pending reports from the Japanese Embassy in\nLondon.\nARRESTS \"EXPECTED\"\nLONDON, Aug. 3 (Saturday).\n(CP)\u2014The London News Chronicle said today that \"the arrest ot\na number of prominent Japanese\ncitizens in various parts of the\nBritish Empire is expected.\"\nThe newspaper added thai\n\"authoritative circles in London\ndo not make any reference to\nstories current of a 'great spy plot'\nand they emphatically disclaim\nany suggestion that the arrcs'.s\nwill be in the nature of reprisals\nfor the arrest of British subjects\nin Japan.\"\nThe newspaper said it believed\nsome of the arrests will be made\nIn England, others in India and\nBritain's Eastern possessions where\nthere are large colonies of Japanese traders and working people.\n'l\"C'___l__12 ln certificates and J244.73 In\ni\u2014\u00bbw iii<w^w\u00bbiwu.iiuiu\u00bb^y|-antoir. total -\nthe Post Office.\nof the charges under which the\nmen are te be detained will be\nmade available,\" the News Chronicle said. \"All that it expected li\na eerlet of notifications that men\nhave been detained under the\nscope of one or more of the\nemergency acts of parliament glv-\nI ig police power to take Into custody any people whose actions may\nbe prejudicial to the well-being\nof the country.\"\nThe British press for several days\nhas demanded official action in reprisal for arrests of a number of\nprominent British businessmen in\nJapan in what Japanese authorities\nsaid was a drive against possible\nespionage.\n8lx of the Britoni have been\nreleased, but the number still in\ncustody was raited to nine yesterday when it was announced two\nmore British subjects had been\narrested in Korea, Japanese colony of the Asiatic Mainland.\nThese actions brought a statement\nfrom an authoritative Britisli\nspokesman charging that the German Gestapo (Secret Policei had a\nrepresentative in the Japanese\nHome Office who carried considerable wejght in Japanese internal\naffairs.\nCALGARY. Aug. 2 (CP)-Guards-\nman Harry Moore of the Welsn\nGuards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wi'.-\nliam Moore, Calgary, is a prisoner\nof war in Germany, according to\nword received through the international Red Cross today.\nKelson Sales ol\nWar Certificates\nTotal $37,489.25\nKeeping up Its splendid record\nof being among the leaden In\nBritish Columbia in sales of war\nitamps and certificatei, Nelion'a\nfour banki and the POM Offlea\n\u2022old $6408.75 worth from July 16\nto 31, boosting Nelson'i total lalea\nto July were $37,489.2!.\nThis was made  up of $5052  ln\ncertificates sold at the banks; ami\ntotal of JBW.7S, sold at\nIn the period frm May to July\n15. Nelson sold $32,080.50 worth of\nstamps and certificates. Up to that\ntime British Columbia led the nine\nprovinces in the sales of stamps and\ncertificates.\nLate Flashes\nBODY OF BEAUTIFUL\nNUDE MODEL IN POND\nMAMARONECK, N. Y.. Aug. t\n(AP).\u2014The nude body of Ellen\nLegge Naih, beautiful New York\nmodel, wai taken tonight from a\ntwlmmlng pool on the eitate of\nNeil Reed Andrewi, wealthy cos-\nrnetic manufacturer.\nThe Weitchester County Medical\nExaminer, Amoi O. Squire, iaid\nthe 27-year-old blonde wai \"accidentally drowned\" during a pre*\ndinner iwim.\nPolice also called the death ac\u00bb\ncldental and cloied the caie,\nFIRST AMERICAN TO DIE\nWITH CANADIAN ENGINEERS\nOTTAWA. Aug. 2  (CP.-Sapper\nRichard John Ely of the Royal Canadian Engineers (Tornnto) and a\nnative of Virginia is the first American repor.ed to have died overseas\nwhile with the Canadian Active\nService Force. He was listed as\ndead in the National Defence Department's tenth casualty list today.\nNo details of his death were given.\nSingle Men Aged\n21 Will Be First\nCalled to Train\nMilitiamen  Will   Not\nBe Compelled Go\nto Camps\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP..-Plans\nfor training cloie to 300,000 men\nwho will be called up under the\nNational Resource! Mobilization\nAct during the next year are taking ihape at the Department of\nNational Defence.\nIn 30 training centres scattered\nacross the country, 29,750 men will\nbe trained each month. Each centre will handle about 1000 men,\nwith two or three handling 12M.\nThe grand total trained In 10 training per|odi of 30 days each wlU\nbe 297,500.\nTo obtain this number of men\ncalls will go out to single men ml\nvarious age groups starting with\nage 21. The calls will go to met. 1\nwho are not alreadv members of\nthe Non-Permanent Militia Volunteer members of the militia will not\nbe required to take the compulsory\ntraining providing they complete\nan equivalent amount of irainmtf\nwith their militia unit within a\nreasonable period of time.\nThe recruits,will be organized n\ncompanies of 250 men each. Generally speaking each centre will have\nfour companies or 1000 men .n\ntraining for each 30-day period. One\ncentre in Kingston district and two\nin Winnipeg district will handle\nfive companies.\nTraining will probably start about\nOctober 1 when centres will be\nread. They will be located adjneert\nto the headquarters of militia uni*j\nand will consist of regular army\nhuts erected for the purpose, or all-\nweather buildincs taken over for\nmilitary use where such are\navailable\nOn leaving the training centre*\nafter completing the i 30 Jay Periods it is hkelv 'he men w 11 ofi\nattached to a Non-Permanenl MiM.a\nunit in their home area for organization purposes As members ol\nmilitia units they may have occasional parades and dr.U- throughout\nthe year.\n7______tej__*'i_\\\n PPPiPPPpr   r-w\nPAGE   TWO\n1 Silversmith Mines to Enlarge Mill\nlo 250 Tons; Raise $100,000, Shares\nPlans te Increase the capacity of\nthe present mill from 121 toni to\n290 toqs capacity and to Install a\nselective flotation syitem of treatment for line and lead orei, were\nmade at the annual meeting ot Silversmith Minei Ltd.' at Sandon\nThursday.\nAU offlcen were reelected. They\n-were A. E. Oweni, Preiident; J. R\nAtkeson, Vice-President; ind B. P:\n. von Anderson. Secretary-Treaiurer,\nI all of Seattle. Brown lc Dawson of\nNelson were appointed the company's solicitors and Arthur Lakes.\nMining Engineer, wai appointed\nConsulting Engineer. Those it the\nmeeting were Mr. oweni, Mr. vorf\nAbderson, T. R. Owens, and H. I.\nL\u00abe, of Seattle; and A. H. Harsch,\nBellevue, Wash.\nDIRECTORS NAMID .\nrive directors elected were A, E.\nOweni Mr. Atkeson, Mr. von Anderson and H. A. Dent of Seattle;\nand Dr. Lawrence Broe of Hammond, B.C. Mr- Dent was formerly\na lumber-man In British Columbia\nend ia well known in the Province.\nIt was decided to raise the number of directors from three to five\nafter an old bylaw was reinstated.\nThe bylaw stipulated that there\nehould be not less than two and\nDot more than seven directors.\nMr. von Anderson said in Nelson\nFriday that the company had decided to elect five directors for th?\npreient.\n, Mr. Lakes Is to make a report to\nthe company as to where development work should itart. An inipec-\nlion wai made ot the Silversmith\nMine ind the Slocan King, adjoln-\nI, inn li The latter wai purchased in\nMT.\n.   TO WORK AU WINTIR\nirive men are working at the property now and it is planned that\n, about 20 men will be employed to\noperate the property all Winter. The\n. new enlarged mill will be of the\nI mart modern type. The present 200\nten concentrator will be discarded\n. when the mill ls increased to 250\n. item capacity. The selective flota-\nI    tion system will make It possible to\nALCAZAR\nHOTEL\nI    COR. DUNSMUIR A HOMER ITS.\nVancouver, B. C.\n1 ileek Prom Bui Terminal.\ni\n\u25a0\nMODIRN-CENTRAL-QUIET\nj   Largeit family Hotel in the West\n200  ROOMS\nSingle and Eniuite\nwith Private Bath.\nRates from $1.00 ptr ity\nCAFE IN CONNECTION\n___    Call at Nelion Diily News office\nSOJ .   for foldera.\nfloat line and lead ores separately\nIt B planned to raise \u00bbMO,ooo by\nthe sale of 200,000 ihares at 90 cents\neach in the State of .Wuhlngton. A\nsales force Is being organized and\n39,000 is \"lined up.\"\nNeed 200 Workers\nAid Registering\nPeople of Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Am, 2\u2014More Volunteer workers are needed to assist In the national compulsbry registration, J, A. Wadsworth, assistant\nregistrar for Kootenay West, states.\nHe says response to the call for aid\nalready has been fine, but more\nhelpers are still needed to cope with\nthe local situation.\nIt wis expected that between\n8000 ind KOO penons will be registered In Trail, and this will require lome 200 volunteers to assist\nwith the clerical work involved.\nMen ahd women wishing to assist- are urged to call and leave\ntheir names' at registration headquarters, 1140 Cedar Avenue.\nR.A.F. Attacks\nKrupp Works\nLONDON, Aug: 2 (AP) -r The\ngreat Krupp munitions worki at\nEssen, supply depots and airdromes\nin Northwest Germany and four\nsynthetic oil plants were' attacked\nby British bombers lut night, the\nAir Ministry announced.\nThe Ministry said considerable\ndamage was Inflicted on the oil targets md that airdrome! in Holland\nalso h|d been raided in daylight attacks yeiterday.\nLeary Not Convinced 1\non Value of Oiling\nof Gravelled Roadi'\nVICTORIA, Aug. I (CP)\u2014Hen.\nC. 8. Leery, Mlniiter ef Public\nWorki, returned to Victoria today\nafter a tour ef the Interior highway systems studying the effect\nof travel upon newly oiled reads.\nMr. Leary aald he wai net convinced of the value ef oiling a\ngravelled road purely far the purpose ef laying duet, whloh the\npublic demandi. After a month\nor two of heavy travel the lur-\nfaee beeemei pitted and In wone\ncondition that if It had been left\nas gravel.\nA flush eoat, cheapest form of\nlurfaelng, might be more economical In the long run, he uid, although the difficulty In thli re-\n\u2022peot ll te do enough mlleaje\nwith the fundi available.\nMr. Leary Is making a thorough\nstudy of thli hlghwiy problem.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nTwo Large Nugget!\nFound, Prince Geo]\nELSON  DAILY NIWS. NILION, I. C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUO. 3   10.0.\nge\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. O, Aug.\n2 (CP). - The finding ofr'-\nlarge nuggets in the Pi\nGeorge District - one of fceni\nbelieved the largest ever found\ntn the area by hand mining methods \u2014 wu reported here this\nweek\nTbe larger? having an estimated\nvalue of IISS, wai taken from\nNugget Gu|ch, a mile from Man-\nson Creek Postoffice. The other,\nvalued at $160,' wa| found within\n. 300 feet of the postoffice. Both\nwere found by newcomers, inexperienced It placer mining.\nA gold nugget weighing 224\nounces wis recovered two years\nago near Manson creek iq hydraulic operationi,\n\" 'l \u25a0        Am      \"ii\nSouth Slocan Cubs\nPresented Ribbon\naf Last Campfire\nSouth Slocan tent carried off tho\nribbon for general efficiency ai the\nWolf Cub Camp at Camp Bulk,\nwhich break! up today. The ribbon\nwu presented by Diitrlct Commissioner R. R. Brawn before a camp-\nfire gathering of about 35 viiiton\nFriday evening. Edward Olson of\nthe South Slocan tent wai preiented with a gold ribbon al the\n\"best Cub In camp\" by Camp Cub'\nmaster Leslie Dee.\nThe South Slocin tent comprised\nEdward Olwn, A. Nicholson, K. Mulloy, E. Mitchell and Mathew Duns-\nmuir. Camp Cubmjuter Dee wu\nalao preiented with a gold ribbon,\nfor his work in camp-\nBrief addresses, praising the Cub\ncimp ind explaining to the visitors\nthe fine purpose and organization\nof the camp, were made by C. O.\nPearson, President of the Nelion\nand District Boy Scout dissociation,\nand CubniMter Srinty Wade,\nA brief campfire program featured\naccordion music by John Weaver, a\nvocal iolo by Denny Davis, and a\nrecitation by Guilford Brett. Singing of \"O Canida\" opened the pro-\nram, whleh closed with the Cub's\nrand Howl, linging of \"God, Save.\n\u201eie King\" and tM Urd'i Pta\/tr.\nR. B. Morris wu cheer leader during the program.\nAlter the program the Cubi were\nserved watermelon, cike, peanuts,\nand other treats brought by the\nvisitors.\nEvery Able-Bodied\nMan in Ontario Town\nEnlists for Training\nBANCROFT, Ont, Aug. 2 (CPl.\n\u2014Enlistment of every able-bodied\nman of thli Eastern Ontario village In the Second Battalion of\nthe Hattlngi and Prlnee Edward\nRegiment hai been aeeempanlid\nby eeonomlo change*. Ihepi thit\nformerly remained open until lata\nevening now ere closed early\nthree nlghti a week to permit the\nproprietor! te drill.\nMajor H. L. Bibcook, Officer\nCommanding tbe local unit, aald\nthat practically every in an wne\nean pasa In category \"A\" hai\nenllited.\n\"Thli village should be ut up\nai an example te the Dominion\nef Canada.\"\nSixty ef ths village youthi already are lervlng with the Flnt\nBattalion Oveneat,\nBancroft had a population of\nmen than 900 when the lait\ncemui wai taken.\nTwo Canadian\nNaval Officers\nAre Decorated\nLONDON, Aug. I (CP Cibll)-\nTwe effort ef thi W\u00abL MM'\ndigit Naval Volunteer Riservi\nhave b*en awarded the  Distin\nguished Service Crdi \"for tour-\naga and reeeure* In thi withdrawal ef troops from the neighbor\nhoed ef La Havre,\" \u2022 supplimint\nef the London Gazitte announced\ntonight\nTlte officers ere Sub-Lt. David\nKillam of .Vancouver and Sub-Lt.\nLeslie McLernon.\nNo details wire given and it was\nnot knOWA whether tlte officers\nwere on a Clrtlldan or a British\nwarship during, the operation!.\nYACHT CLUB MEMBE-\nVANCQUVEH, Aug.3 (Of)-Sub.\nLt. David Killam, awarded the Distinguished Service Cross (or \"courage ahd resource\" during Uje withdrawal of British troopi from France\naccording to a London dispatch today. Is the ion of Lawrence KUlim\n(Vancouver, Manager of a pulp\nSu_-l_t Killam, 22, wai one\nthe flnt four members ot the Royal\nVancouver Yieht Club to go to\nEngland for training after outbreak\nof war, as a member of lhe Royal\nCanadian Naval Volunteer Reserve,\nBorn here, hi, wai educated At\nPrince of Walei High School before attending the University of\nBritish Columbia. He alio, attended\nMount Allison University at'seek-\nville, N.B., fer one year.\nMrs. Agnes Flynn\nPasses Suddenly\nHUME-A. P. Rollo, D. Defrleuse,\nK. A. Bremner, Vancouver; S. C.\nJohM, Victoria; J. F. Cooper, Spokane; r. L. Pittman, Orient, Wash.;\nA. H. Horsch A. E. Owen, R. F.\nOwens, B. p. von Anderson Seattle;\nE J. Newcomen, Yikima; W. Quar-\nJll, R. K. Ogden, Mr. and Mrs. R. K.\nMooney, Coeur d'Alene; George\nRobinson Portland; D. L. Van Dull,\nWashington, DC; A. D. Blair, Toronto; R. W. Seath and family, Kelowna; Major A. C. Sutton Trail; G.\nA. West, Kaslo.\n.   t\nNEW ORAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms ln the Interior -\u2022 Bath or Shower.\nROOMS It UP-8PECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATEI\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHINC\n20 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, B. C.\nRates reasonable.\n\u25a0\u25a0\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST GAMP\nIn This Space\nWhtre Thouiandi Will Read It\nCAMP PARADISE\n4 miles North of Kaslo, B.C.\nModern   cabins,   electricity.\ngas, running water. Inner\niprlng mattresses, bedding, linen, cooking utensils furnished, meals\nfurnished.\nCabins for 2 to 6 People: Wk.. $12 to $18\nPhone or Write Camp Paradise, Kaslo, B.C.\nVANCOVVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDuf Serin Hotel\nWO Seymour gt        Vancouver, B.C\nNewly renovated throughout. Phones and elevator.\nA.  PATTERSON,   late  of\n,C. Coleman. Alta.. Proprietor.\n1\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at tho\n410 Riverside    |* _A-| VAT MFV        Opp0,lte\nAvenue       llVlVl TVL_.E_I    Paulien Bldg.\nEVERV COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUEST!\nRELAX\nat the GALAX\nCanadian  Money it Par\nRooms $1.00 to $2.50\nTrXtt GARAGE\nHOTEL    \"\u201e_'\nRIDPATH\nThe Hotel Canadians Uke to\nCall Home.\nIN  SPOKANE\n196 Outside Rooms and\nApartmenti\nALL AT MODERATE RATES\nSpark From Wrench\nBlamed for Explosion\nCAMDBN, NJ., Aug. J (AP).-\nA ipirk from a repairman's\nwrench was blamed today tor the\ndisastrous series of explosions ind\nfire which killed, at lent four\npersons end destroyei a four-\nblock area of mid-town Camden.\nFire Chief John H- Lennox slid\nthe ipirk ipparently Ignited a\ntank of Naphtha In the R. M. Holl-\ningshead Paint Company plant.\nGirli One Up in\n\u2022Rosiland Birthi\nROSSLAND B. C, Aug. 2 - Of\nS7 births listed it the M\u00ab\"r Misericordiae Hoipital, up to July 31. this\nyear, 28 were boys and 29 girls.\nJAPANESE SEAMAN\nCAUGHT WITH DRUGS\nWORTH $300,000 INDICTED\nSAN rRAN CISCO, Auf. 2 (AP).-\nA Japaneie seaman caught with 1%\npounds of contrabind narcotics\u2014\nworth approximately $300,000\u2014In a\nraid July 20 on the Japanese freighter Nanman Maru, was under Indictment today for violating the Federal Narcotics law.\nThe indictment, returned yesterday by a Federal Orand Jury, accused Yoshlmoto Wada of Importing,\nconcealing and facilitating transportation of the narcotics. Hli bond was\nfixed at $10,000.\ntMotstmo&o#xomootoK*tttta\u00bb\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nlosimtsosssiisoessemtmttsiom\nFOR SALE, SIX WEEKS PIGS.\nAlso freih cow. Third calf. W.\nNlpkow. Fruitvale, B. C.\nWOOD WORKING\nMILL WORK\nExpert workmanship at reisomble\nprices\nKootenay Saih b Door Worita\nMt Ward St Opp city HaU\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nI. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany. Limited\nm-m\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding MiohlnM\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fiiher Ltd.\nUt Ward St Phone M\nmJJV\n_m\nattach.\n\u25a0*V&B_\nmm. w. w, Wilton, died \u00abUdd\u00abniy\nin good hewMtw])en_ iht went fc\nbut suffered a heart\nU. S. Not Awaro\nBritish. Warship, :\n.  Follows Wirtasors\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (API-\nUnited States Secretary of State\nCordell Hull said today, that the\nSUtt Department had no information JEH] tot;I Brltla).\nwgrihie was following the American sfeimshlp Excallbur, on lta\nway from Lifbon to N\u00bbw York\nwith (he Duke and Duchess of\nWindsor,\nSumner Welles, v        \t\nof State, hai Itld tort for tot\nBritish to convov tot Excalibur\nSumner Wtllti, Undenecretary\n i eeM \u00bbat for T\n,rnvoy tot Ixcal.--\nwould be t violation' of United\nStatei neutra\"\neeivable actio...\ntttt question of whether a Brit-\ntt\nStatei neutrality and an lncon\nction\nJ-ton\nbj\natl    rmmm,   ...   m    \u2122.\n\u25a0iderable distance, Would constitute a convey hai not been settled.\nDM qutiUon pf whether a\ni warship, by merely following\nl American vissel at a con\nCanadian Census\nto Be Taken 1941\nWinnie Palmer\nIs Kaslo Queen\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 Tl)i postponed\ncrowding   of   Kailo'i   1M0   May\nQueen, Miss Winnie Palmer, m\nthe Canadian Legion Ball wai witnessed by a large crowd, many\nSummer visitors viewing the beautiful pageant. The 1(39 Queen, Mias\nCrystal Driver, placed the crow..\non the heal of her successor, who\nwu enthroned on \u2022 dais.\nFollowing wai the progrim:\nTrumpet call and Coronation;\nMarch, children; Garden long, the\nchildren; Trumpet iolo, by Thomas\nBryan; recitation, Keith Gibson;\nsong, Kenneth Mayz&s; recitation,\nKeith Sullivan; vocal duet, Fay\nArmstrong and Mildred Augustin .\nrecitation, Connie Lind; vocal solo,\nMildred Augustine; piano iolo, Dorothy Amai; recitation, Pitiy Sullivan; ukalele iolo, Muter Stocking;\ntoe dance, Gertrude Nagle; recitation, May Wone; vocal iolo. Heather\nAbey; vocal duet, Patsy Sullivan\nand Keith Sullivan; dance, Judith\nHelgren; vocal iolo, Fay Armstrong,\nrecitation. Either Helgren; vocal\niolo, Joan Hild; piano iolo Betlv\nRobertson;-recitation, Anna Surina;\ntap dance, Patsy Abey; piano solo,\nSophia Surina; vocal solo, Miss Ka'c\nRiddell; piano iolo, Anna Surina;\ntrumpet duet, the Brym brothers;\npiino iolo, Misi Kite Riddell: Ore-\nelm dince, Miss Gertrude Nagle.\nMn. John Keen, assisted by her\nsister. Miss Mildred Twlss. md by\nMrs. Percy Amas, had charge.\nAbout $45 realised will augment\nthe funds of the Red Cross Society.\nManagement of Suez\nCanal Carries on as\nin tht Dayi of Peace\nISMAILIA, HOTt, Aug. 1 <AP>-\n_ rom a sandbagged building flying\ntht tri-color of Trance, tht French-\ncontrolled Suez Canal management\ncarried on almoit as If nothing had\nhaopened In Europe.\nExcept for a vait reduction in\ntraffic, the canal ls opentlng njr-\nmally.\nBritish authorities say a real control of the 104.5-mlle waterway\nsplitting the lind bridge between\nAfrica and Asia lies In the British\nEutern Medlterrinein fleet itear.v\nIng in ceaseless vigil off Its en-\ntnnce. The ciml's director! are 111\nFrenchmen, 10 Englishmen ii'd one\nNetherlander.\nSt*t_l\u00abr District\nHit by Heavy Hail\nSTETTUJR. Alia., Aug. 1 (CP)-\nFarmeri In the Northeastern section\nof thii district ind resident ot the\ntown luftend heavy lowei whin\nthe worst hail itorm In miny year!\nitruck here late Thursday afternoon, wiping out gardens and demolishing grain fields.\nThe town wu hit by Heil itonu\nll large u pigeon eggs ind ill gardens were wiped out or badly damaged.\nRossland Area\nHas No Fires\nROSSLAND B.C.\u2014There is nothing burning ln the Rouland Hanger\nDistrict,\" uid J. F. Killough, Friday, commenting on the relief of the\nhaurdoui fire conditions caused by\nUie recent heavy rains.\n\"Although the July rains have\nchecked what would nave been the\ntremendous huard of \u2022 hot August.\nand wa do not anticipate any exceptionally serious oondltloni, lt li\nItill vitally necessary to maintain\nconstant vigilance\" itated Mr. Killough. who warned against thi possibility of people becoming careless\nbecame df toe Improved flrt situation.  \u25a0\nEASTERN CATTLE\" PRl'CES\nLOWER; WESTERN STEADY\nOTTAWA, Aug. 3 (Cp)-Cettle\nvaluti ruled Jl centi to 56 cents\nlower on dull trading at Eastern\nmarkets, the Dominion Department\nof Agriculture laid today In Its\nweekly livestock mirket review.\nWestern markets held ibout unchanged.\nOTTAWA, Aug. J (CP)-A national census will be taken June 3,\n1941, Tradt Miltllttr MacKinnon announced In g Press itatement today,\nIt will be tbt eighth decennial tabulation of Canadians.\nSpecial attention will be paid to\nobtaining statistics on basic industries of tot country.\nDraft formi dulgntd to obtain\ntoe fullest and moit accurate to'\nformation on agriculture, went out\ntoday to leading authorltiw lor\ntortr approval.\nInformation will bt sought cover-\nIng toe whole field of tot induitry.\nAbandoned or Idle farmi will be\ncanvassed as well ai agricultural\nproduction on plots which do not\nCome within toe definition of\n'.irm\"\nA separate schedule will be used\nfor each farm listing products,\nwhether fruit ind vegetables are\nproduced tor sale, and general details concerning operations.\n\u25a0  \u25a0 i -   i\" . \u25a0\", \u201e<'\nTrail Has Strong\nSoccer Prospecls\nTRAIL. B. C, Aug. J-Keen In-\nterest in organising i itrong team\nto play Kimberley In the Kootenay\nsoccer final ln which tot Blaylock\nBowl Is at stake, was shown at Butler Park Friday evening when\nabout 11 playen turned out to toe\nInitial practice. There were several\nntw prospects on hand and some of\nregulars wert unable to attend.\nSS\nNo tfeoe of toe body of Dr. Clart\nM. Bennett was found by volunteer\nsearchers In the Wait Arm Friday.\nWhile police could no longer snare\ntoe men for tht hunt, volunteers\nsearched tnd dragged toe llka ln\nthe area, where it Is believed the\nyoung doctor fell from hii cabin\ncruiser about 0:45 Monday night,\nDr, Bennett, 91 yean of age, wai\nborn February 16, 1909 at Creghton\nMine in Ontario, is miles from Sudbury. Ht wu the elder ion .of Mn.\nEmily Bennett and tot lata Dr. J.\nWith hia mothir and brother, Alan\nJames, he cime to Nelson about It\nyeari ago, Hla father came toe pre-\n-ir. Claw attenjW Nelson\nool and obtained his Senior\nlegation here. In 1929 ht in\njred Toronto University tnd waa\ngraduated with nil degree in 1033.\nAfter that he ierved a year ai an\nIntern it Toronto Qeneril Hoipital,\nReturning to Nelson be entered\npractice with hla father, and after\nhia fitter's death, he took ovtr tot\npractice,\nBefore going to college he worked on the \"rip\" track at tht Canadian Pacific Railway yards. In ont\nof hla vacatloni from university ha\nwas lifeguard at Lakeside Park.\npesldes his mother and brother,\nhe U survived by hla wife, a daughter of Mr, and Mrs. C. D. Blackwood; and two children, Betty Anne;\n HI, -\nabout thrtt yttn old,\nabout m,\nand John\nAnother   practice   will  be   htld\nda:\ntht West kootenay competing.\" toe\nTrail   Club   constitutes   the   West\nTueaday at a p.m.\nt\\_ite no other teami in\ntli\nAl\nfc\nKootenay representative. At the\npark John Ferguion wu elected\nPreildtnt  ef Jht Weit Kootenay\nAssociation, Tom Laurie, vice\nPresident and James Simpson, Sec\nretary,\nj    \u2014, ,\u2014,\t\nRossland Diver\n>   Leaves Hospital;\nScotts Reduced\nROSSLAND, B,' C, Aug. \u00bb-ltay.\nmond Seott, one of Rossland's\njunior-senior lacrosie men, who wu\nadmitted to the Miter Mlierlcordiae\nHosplttl Tuesday suffering from a\nsprained back and concussion u a\nresult of a diving accident at the\npool- Monday night, hu beep discharged, and expects to return* to\nhli poit as locker boy at tbe iwim-\nping pool next week. \u2022\n\"No more sports for me thli Summer\" commented Seott which now\nleivei three Scotts and two Ls. aces\nfor lacrosse referees to sort eut.\nGreat Northern Has\nBreakdown at Apex\nFreight and passengen from the\nNelson-bound Great Northern Railway dally from Spokane, were\nbrought into Nelson by truck ahd\nbus Friday afternoon when the engine broke down near Apex at 3:43\np.m. The train wu exactly on time\nwhen the breikdown occurred.\nThe engine will be taken Into the\nshops at HUHard for repair today,\nand the regular train will leave here\nat 12:30 p.m.\n1024 Farmers Apply\nto Work Off Taxes\nFrom April 1 to July 31,1924 farmers ln the Nelson Assessment district made application to J. A.\nSte'wart, Provlnclil Alienor, to\nwork off their taxes.\nA farmer ii defined u one who\nhu not lui than two acru under\ncultivation.\nNIW CUftRfNCY CONTROL\nFOR NORTH CHINA\nPEIPING, Aug. 2 (AP) - The\npolitical Council of Japanese-dominated North China announced new\ncurrency control today, apparently\nln Una with tbe formation of a\ncloser economic bloc composed of\nJapan, North China and Manchoukuo outlined yeiterday in the statement by toe Japaneie Government\nof Premier Prince Fumimaro Konoye.\nThe new regulations prohibit import, export or trans-shipment\nwithout official permlU of foreign\nand ChlnesVcurrenclei in amounts\nexceeding 200 Chinese dollars. No\npermits are necessity to import\nChinese or foreign currencies from\nJapan.\nEXTRA!\nEvery Shotgun and\nRifle In Canada U\nto Be Regiitered\nOTTAWA, Aub. I (_l\u00bb.,-lvery\nowner ef a rifle ar ihotgun In\nOantdt who hat net ngltttrid\nthtm by Sept, \u00ab will be liable to\na fine.not txceedlng $50 Or te\nImprisonment fer a period net\nexceeding IQ dayi, er to betn, according to in amendment to tht\nDefence ef  Cinada   Regulations\nSubllshid In thi Canada Oaiettt\nmight.\n$200>00dWorth of\nStainless Steel for\nConsolidated Plant\nSEATTLE, Aug. 2\u2014The Pugel\nSound Shtet Metal Worki of Seattle hu been awarded a contract\nto manufacture $200,000 worth ot\nstainless iteel equipment for toe\nConsolidated Mining Is Smelting\nCompany of Canada, whose smelter\nii at Trail, B. C, and the Imperial\nChemical Industries of Bllllngham,\nEngland, Harry 8. Brown, Sr. Vice-\nPresident ot the firm, announced\ntoday.\t\nEIRE TO PROTEST\nBOMBING OF SHIP\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP). - The\nEire Government Information Bureau announced tonight that the Eire\nCharge d'Affalrei in Berlin had\nhfm instructed to protest and claim\ncompensation for the aerial bombing of a Britlih ship In Eire wateri\niait week.\nThe Bureau uid the imall British Steamship Kerry hid been attacked and damaged by a German\nbomber near the entrance to Oyster Haven, county Cork.\nJuly Sets Record\nfor Trail Births\nTRAIL, B.C.. Aug. 2\u2014The largest number of births recorded in\nTrail ln one month ls SL the number registered In July. There were\ntwo deaths and . 12 marriages. In\nJuly of last year there were 39\nbirths, one death and four marriages.\nRed Cross Shop Is\nn for Business\nRed Cross Shop, latest project of\nthe Nelson Red Cross Society, has\nopened for business.\nThe shop's wares, gifts from Nelion and District residents, have beon\ntastefully displayed in the shelves,\nv\/indows and tables, anJ already\nnumerous sales have been made.\nProceeds from the shop, which is\nopen Fridays and Saturdays, will\ngo to the Nelson, Red Cross Society\nentirely.\nA committee of six, headed by\nMn. Reginald H. Dill, is ln charge\nof toe project.\n32 MEN IN TRAINING,\nCRANBROOK HOME GUARD\nCRANBROOK, B. C, - Thirty-\ntwo members of the Eut Kootenay\nHome Guard art training under\nSergt A. Birr, doingilx-mlle route\nmirchei each day. They will also\ndo squad drill.\nThe men have been recruited\nfrom Great War veterans under\n50 who have had experience in\ntheatrei of war. Full itrength of the\nplatoon Is 40 men, and it will probably be retched within a few days.\nPreient headquarten ire at Cranbrook but disposition ot the unit\nwhen trained hu not yet been\nannounced.\nREAL VALUES IN\nMen's Work Boots\nPaneo gnd Leather Solei. Solid     (PO AC {O OC\nCalf Uppen  ty_.9(J  md Wett)\nFor the Firefighter\nFmII hob-nalled boot. Him counter Statl Tot and Heal\nplate. Regular $..95. y Q j\nNow\nI \u2022 t \u00bb \u2022 \u2022\u2022!\u00bb..\nALSO \u2014 Complete linei of Leckie Work and Dreu\nShoot ot Popular Pricea\nSTYLE SHOES FOR WOMEN In pumpi, Hei, and afrapa\nIn all colon. <>1 IQ      V QQ\nPrictd tt      tPIeW'tl tJMeetJaJ\nSisman Scampers\nPOR THE KIDDIES\nm\nFans See Exciting Brawl as Bruins\nTrample Rossland 14-6 In Lacrosse\nRolando Sammartino,\nAnderson  Stage\nSlug-Fest\nBoultnd Redmen eitabUihlng a\nthrVtJgoel lead at the itart, fraU\nOolden Beam tied the battle at 4-4\nand went on to run up a ItA M-\numph when the iquadi met In a\nWeit KootenayUcroaie Lttgut\ngame it tht TraU rink Friday\nnight\nAt tlmu tht btttlt treuttd tx-\nolttmint In tht imall orewd aa\nthey thrilled to antltt of thrill\npacked games of othtr day*.The\n, fam1 treat oame early In the third\nquarter whtn Anderoon of Ron-\nland and Rolando \u2022wymtrllno\nturned In the btit fl|ht of tht\nuaion. After iwlntmt flrtt at\neach other ntar ont, oorner of\nthe rink, Judoe of Play Johnny\nGldlnskl ordered tham to itop\nand they atruttad off to the penalty box. But they no loontr ar\nOper\nBritish Steamship Arrives in Port With\nWreckage of Nazi Plane on Her Poop Deck\nAfter Fighting Off Attack in North Sea\nLONDON, Auf, 2 (CP)- the\nAdmiralty Iisued the following\nitatement today\u2014\n\"Ona ef our convoyi In the\nNorth lea waa reputedi;\nat-\ntaekid by airman aircraft yuterday afternoon. Ne damage wai\ndene to any ef tht escorting vol-\nMil, H.M.S, Weston shot down\none enemy iircnft. There ware\nne euutltlei In thl Wiston,\nIn anoUiir part of ttt Mortis\ni tbt steamship Highlander (Captain Gilford) twice WU attacked by\nmtmy aircraft lut night, in tbt\nfirst attack tbe enemy aircraft dropped bombs which missed and then\nraked tbe (hip with maehtne-gurt\nfire.\n\"While doing so the Oerman air\ncraft wu hit by defensive irma\nment of the Highlander and was\nseen lo cruh Into thl iet ln flames\na hundred yardi astern of the ship.\n\"Tin mlfiutu later thi S. S. Hlgh-\nlindtr wu attacked by   another\nOlrman aircraft. Again the bombi\nmined.\n\"Ai thi aircraft circled to renew\nthe attack it wai bit, causing It to\nloie height. The port wing of the\naircraft struck ttt port lifeboat at\nttt davlti. Thli iwurta the mieJiint\naround ind It crashed on thi poop\ndeck of the SS. Highlander.\n\"Thli morning the Highlander\niteamed Into harbor with the Cerman wreckage On her poop. The\nOnly casualties: sustained by the\nHighlander were two men wound-\n\u2022 l\u00bb_     WUA>    _W\u00bb    \u00bb,,*>\/    ,,w   \u2022-\u00bb\u25a0\u2022-.\nrived .thaw than thty wtre a\nagain; trying topltee puno\npest Qldlmkl'i face ae he tot ba\nit It\nshei\n{nil uioinsM i i\u00aby\u00bb \u2022\u2022 \"\u25a0 \u25a0\u00bb\u2022 --.\nwien thtm. All thru rolled\nabout the fleer for a time, Thtn\nRtfene Mlekiy Bnnnin ittpptd\nIn and the two arlbtera llterelly\ntore the pair apart The btttltri\nwere lent- off tht floor for the re-\nmtlndtr of the timt and lath\nteam wai not permitted to replace them until after 10 mlnutea.\nAfter that the fury of the battlt\nsubsided and lt ended up ln ordinary fuhlon.\nRedmen led a-1 at the end of\nthe first quarter but the count was\n7-5 ln the home club'i favor at\nhalftime, At the three-quarter\nmark the Bean mede it 10-5 and\nbulged their margin to eight goali\nby full Ume.\nBOX SCORE\nRosiland: G A Pt P\nSapronoff     9   9   9   2\nSimcock       MIS\nMcGuire      1   J   2   J\nMcFadyen       0   0   0   2\nMacDonald       0   2   2   2\nR. Scott     1   1   2   2\nSaundry    \u201e    0   0   0   0\nAnderson    0   1   1 10\nJoe LaFace     2   0   1   5\nCox        0   0   0   0\nEzart          10   12\nJorgeson     0   0   0   2\nCarkner    -    0   0   0   0\nTotals    t   5 U 27\nTrail: .   .\nMoro         0   0   0   0\nTurik      0   2   2   2\nCasey     ...._    10   10\nJ. Kendall     2   1   8   0\nMerlo    2   0   2   0\nR. Kendall      12   3   6\nC. Gallicano     112   0\nB. Sammartino    112  0\nM. Smith    1   0   1   2\nTemple       2   2   i  0\nPagnan       2   2   4  0\nR. Sammartino    0   0   0 12\nN. Turik         10   12\nTotals   si 11 25 24\nURCE TERRORISM\nBE SUPPRESSED\nIN SHANGHAI AREA\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 2 (AP) - The\nShanghai consular body urged the\nShanghai Municipal Council today\nto \"eradicate and suppress all forms\nof terroriim\" in tht city where an\naisaulnillon, an attempted slaying\nand a kidnapping occurred earlier\nin the dey.\nThe meeting of the consular body\nfollowed the slaying by a gunman\nof Charlei Metxler, head Of the\nWhite ftusilan community. The\nslaying occurred within the American Defenhe section.\nRECRUITING DELAY\nIS PROBED |N HOUSE\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP). - Complaint from Quesnel, B.C., of failure of a recruiting officer to show\nup on an appointed date, resulting\nin hardship and inconvenience to\nvolunteers, was presented today in\nthe House of Commoni by Conservative Leader Hanson.\nGray Turgeon (Lib. \u2022 Cariboo),\nwho represents thl Cariboo Riding\nwhere Quesnel is located, iaid the\nmatter had bedn under consideration and Investigation by the National Defence Department.\nCHJCLSEA, England (CP) - Two\nyoung soldiers were court-mirtiill-\ned here on charges of attempting\nte commit iuielde. They had been\nconfined to barracks ana were later\nfound unconscious beside a gas leak.\nGov't. Sponsored\nEvacuee Ship Brings\n100 English Ch'ldrer\nAN IAIT COAIT CANADtAr\nPORT, Aug, _ (CP)-A Brltlil\nrteamihlp, btlltvtd te hayi\naboard about 100 English children\nflnt to be evacuated \"under Gov\ntrnmtnt sponsorship,\" arrive:\nthli afternoon.\nTwenty-elght ef the chlldrer\ntrt for polnti In Neva Scotia, 11\nfor New Brunswick and the other:\nfor destination! aa far Wilt ai\nManitoba.\nTWO AIR SCHOOLS\nTO OPEN MONDAY\nOTTAWA, Aug. _ (CF) - Tw(\nlarge ichools under tte BrlUii\nCommonwealth Air Training Plat\nwill -open Mondiy. At Uplandi air\nport near Ottawa, Prime Mlnlitei\nMackenrie King, accompanied bJ\nAir Miniiter Power and other ministers, will open No. 2 service flying training school, and at Edmonton an air obierven Khool wil\nopen.\nThe air observers school at Id\nmonton ia also the second of M\ntype, mottir being ln operation a\nMalton airport near Toronto. Th<\nEdmonton ichool will bt optrattf\nby a civilian company with W. B\n\"Wop\" May, famous Northland fly\ntr and Great War veteran aa ger\neral manager. \\-       \u25a0\na  I'm \u2022'. iylfi        '\nREPORT ALIENS WERI\nFOREIGN AGENTS WAS\nMISTAKEN REPORT\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 2 (AP) -\nThe War Department laid today\nthat a mistake In transmitting I\nmessage had resulted In an erroneous announcement that 81 aliens\ndetained In the canal gone were\n\"foreign agenti.\"\nThe announcement wu made yea-1\nterday by Secretary Stimion.\nEighty-one alieni have been detained \"for deportation or otter deposition,\" thi Department said, bui\nIt wai admitted that the army did\nnot know whether any of them war!\nforeign agents. Perhaps 60 or mon\nof the 81 were reported from Panama to be of German origin.\nOfficials of the Republic of Panama said the aliens were known\ngenerally as \"refugees.\"\nCONSTIPATION\nGAS CAN MAKE YOU FEE\nAS IF YOU'D EXPLODE.\nCan nm help relieve the preuure o\ngae due to waste in the intestines\nYeal Take Beechama Pilli. Thay ad\ntwo ways to help relieve temporary\nconatipatlon. Firat, thla purel;\nvegetable compound inducei i\ngentle, thorough bowel movemen\nwith no unpleasant after-effects\nNext, it quickly relaxei end re\nfreshes you by relieving the dlstrei\nof constipation gas. Take Bacchant\nPills tonight. Feel different tomoi\nrow. Atyourdruggle. i, W,_5\u00bb,gQ,\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFor All Building\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nHii lui <_a____r\u00bbtil_l\"-_i'_liri_l\u00abrl-    ,__ufs\n . Adl THRU\nOmdr. H. E. Reid and Lt-Cmdr. Hugh Paller are shown escorting\nI group of memberi of Parliament aboard the launch Moby Dick for\nt lour of Halifax hartior. Destroyers of the Canadian navy may be\nleen ln be*ground. The MJVs, part of a group of more than 50 mem-\nmUtmbs Fall on Scotland\nben from Ottawi, Inspected hartx>r facilities and defencei. Among\nthose present on the launch here are Rene Jutras, Member of Parliament from Provencher, Man.; Thomas H. Ross, M.P, from East Hamilton; L. E. Cardiff, M.P, from North Huron; Allan Chambers, M.P.,\nfrom British Columbia, and A. C. Casselman, from Grenville-Dundas.\nChurchill inspects Britain's Defences\nThis house ln Southeastern Scotland ww struck by a German\nbomb. Scottish sir raid wardens ire shown in forground inspecting\n\u2022\u00bb ruins.\nPrime Minister Winston\nChurchill is shown emerging\nfrom one of the redoubts constructed on the British coast\nsomewhere in the Southeast\nThis area has been heavily\nbombed by German raiders on\nmany occasions, particularly\nduring the last week.\n\u2022\u2022:..:- i :\u00a3\u00a3'.:.3_t.\nBritish\nCommander\nHome Defences\nCanadian Red Cross Hospital Officially Handed Over\nYour choice ot material in these well tailored slacks with ilda\nilpper faitenlng. Flannel or Alpine cloth. Colon, wine, navy, brown\nand teal, Sties 14 to 20. (PO Qt\nChildren's Sun and Play Suits\njust arrived! A wonderful assortment of\nstyles and colors. These are what you have\nbeen looking for on hot days for the beach.\nDon't miss the opportunity of coming in\nand seeing these. They are really different.\nSizes 8-16 years. <M AA\nPrice, each  \u00abJll.UU\nSavingi in\nMEN'S SPORT SHIRTS\nWhy suffer with the heat while cool comfortable shirts sell at this price. Novelty\nweaves\u2014Crew and collar style necks and\nshort sleeves. Colors of green, blue OA.\nand grey. Special    OUC\nBetter English Broadcloth\nPYJAMAS\nSoft, cool, long wearing, five count English\nbroadcloth pyjamas in all the newest stripes.\nSome have contrasting trim and piping. All\nhave elasto belt feature. (M AC\nSizes 36 to 44 flaifd\nMan's \"Campic\" Shoei\nEnjoy Summer weather while\nyou wear Campacs\u2014the most\ncomfortable light weight sport\nshoe for men. Brown Elk uppers. Cork insoles and corn-\npoiltion soles. _<\\ FA\nSizes 6 to 11 <_ _..DU\nWomen'i White Shoot\nThrifty won^n will buy their\nwhite ihoea now. Many good\npatterns and fittings left yet\nat thli low pricing. Pumps,\nties, straps, to\nchoose from\t\nClan Breakfait Set\nAttractive and serviceable ia\nthis 28 piece breakfast iet ot\nruby and crystal glass mixed.\nConsists of 4 breakfast platea,\n4 cups and saucers, t cereals,\n4 sherbets with plates, 4 tumblers, one cream and sugar and\n1   salt  and  pepper lhakers.\nPer iet _.! $4.95\nWalnut Magatine Rack\nThese handy racks ara made\not solid walnut in finely\nmatched grains. A moit useful home requisite. (JQ QQ\nSpecially priced ... tou.tJO\nNo Variation From Traditional\nService When Windsor Takes Office\nRt. Hon. R. B. Bennett. Chairman of the Canadian Red Cross Society in England, ls shown read-\nrecently completed $1,000,000 Canadian Red Cross\nHospital was formally \"handed over\" to Hon. Vin-\nlng in address during the ceremony in which the      cent Massey, left, Canadian High Commissioner.\nLleut.-Gen. sir Alan Brooke\nIs shown inspecting trenches In\nLondon He was recently appointed Commander-in-Chief of\nBritain's home forces, succeeding General Sir Edmund Ironsides. Taking the rank of acting\ngeneral with his new post, Sir\nAlan will organize the tight\nlittle Isle's defences to withstand threatened Nazis invasion.\nHe commanded the Second\nCorps of the B.E.F. in France and\norganized the Dunkirk evacuation.\nNASSAU, The Bahamas, Aug. 2\n(OP).-fhe Duke of Wlndwr will\nbe sworn In as Governor of the\nBahamas with the same traditional\nceremony that has been used for\nhis predecessors ln thii 200-year-old\ncolony.\nThere may be more touriits on\nhand to watch, and this little colonial capital may show more excitement than usual. But the simple,\ndignified ceremony in which the\nnew Governor takes his oath of\noffice and greela his legislators will\nnot be varied In any detail Just because Edward is the first royal duke\never appointed Governor of a British Colony.\nOther questions of title and ot\ngovernment house etiquette raised\nby the unprecedented rank of the\nnew Governor remain to be settled\nby the Government In London. But\nplans are made for the official welcome just as though the Duke were\nany career man of the colonial service. \u2022\nWhen his boat ties up at Prince\nGeorge Dock, the new Governor\nwill step on Bahaman soil already\nattired In the uniform he will wear\nat official funotlons. In the case of\nthe Duke, this may be the official\nuniform of a Governor or the .uniform of a Major-General \u25a0 in the\nBritish Army of a high-ranking\nofficer of the Royal Navy, which\never he prefers.\nThe Duke and Duchess will be\ngreeted on the pier by the four Eng,\nAshmen in the colonial government\nwho ire appointed directly from\nLondon\u2014W. L. Heape, Colonial Secretary and Acting Governor until\nEdward's arrival; O. B. Daly, Chief\nJustice; R. W. Taylor, Receiver General and Treasurer, and Eric Halli-\nnan, Attorney General. All are newcomers and will be attending their\nfirst such ceremony ln Nassau.\nWith them as escorts, the new\nGovernor and his Duchess will walk\nseveral hundred yardi acrou Bay\nStreet and the public square to the\nlittle neit of official buildings. They\nwill' march to the second-floor\nchambers of the Legislative Council, on whose dark walls hang huge\noil paintings ot former English\nKings.\nThe Duke will mount a dais and\nstand before an ornate chair lym-\nbolical of the crown he repreients.\nAbove him will be in oak canopy,\ntopped by \u25a0 gilt crown. At his left,\non the floor level, will be the Duchesi, the four colonial officials, the\nisland's clergy and other leaders.\nThe oath of allegiance to the\nthrone will be administered by\nChief Justice Daly. The new Governor, according to ancient custom,\nwill read a brief statement to the\nlegislators.\nBritish Think Nazi Attempt Will Be\nHade by Sept. or Nol Till Next Spring\n\\\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP)-The al\nmanacs say that If Adolf Hitler is\ngoing to start his blltzkrelg on England this r.onth the best times for\nit will be next Monday, Tuesday,\nWednesday, Thursday and Friday\nmornings.\nIf Hitler passes up those days, the\nnext best come in September, from\nthe second to the seventh. Third\nchoice would be Oct. 1-8, then Oct.\n30-Nov. 4.\nAll of those periods are when the\ntides will be Ihe highest.\nThe British are inclined to be\nlleve that, if the Germans don't\nmake the stab by mid-September,\nno invasion will be attempted until\nnext Spring. Ordinary prudence on\nthe part of the Nazi general staff,\nthese observers say, will demand\nthat at least six weeks be allowed\nfor the campaign.\nThey point out Hitler can't count\non good weather for operationi of\nhis air force once the equinoctial\nstorms begin In mid-September.\nFrom then on, Britain la cloaked\nIn fogs and mists io thick even the\nnatives can't find their way around\n\u2014and the Germans would be bound\nto get lost.\nNeutral military men, picturing\nthe Nazi attack as they might run\nit, say it should have these conditions:\n1. A calm sea\u2014to keep the German soldiers from getting seasick on\nthe way across the North Sea and\nEnglish Channel.\n2. High tide\u2014essential In order\nthat the flat-bottomed barges of\nthe fir-t landing force can be driven\nhigh enough on the beaches for\ntanks to be run off onto the sand\nin water not too deep to put them\nout of commission.\n3. Fog In the English Channel\u2014to\nscreen the expedition on its way\nover. Sometimes the centre of the\nchannel is foggy when it Is clear\non both sides.\nThese experts say preliminary\nair bombardment and landings on\nthe beaches all would be preparatory to the first major objective in\nany campaign to invade this country\u2014seizure of a port Once a port\nhad been obtained, they explain, the\nGermans could try to supply the\nlanding force by deep-water freighters convoyed by airplane and submarine and possibly run in through\nlanes of mines as a further safeguard.\nHowever, the Britlih would not\nbe Just lifting around while all thii\nwis going on.\nThey point out Hitler's expedition would be vulnerable as loon\nai it got Into its ships and would\nremain that wa on the trip across\nind during the attempted landing.\nThey said they were confident\nany Nazi landing force would be\n\"eliminated\" in short order.\nPOLISH SHIP\nESCAPES UNDER\nGERMAN NOSES\nLONDON, Aug. Z (CP).-The\n1864-ton Pollih steamihip Kro-\nmm hai arrived In a Brltlth pert\nafter escaping from Dakar,\nFrench port In Senegal, under the\nvery notea of Germans who had\narrived to seize her, the Admiralty\nannounced today.\nThi Kroman had been Immobilized by thi removal of a vital part\nof her machinery, the Admiralty\naald, but the Captain made a\nmakeihlp replacement and steamed out of the harbor after Iteming of the arrival of tht Germans.\n\"By Improvisation and engl-\nnerlng skill tha engines ef the\nKroman were made ta work,\" an\nAdmiralty itatement uid, \"Shi\nthen escaped through the harbor\ndefence! and en reaching the open\n\u2022ea ut hir course for a British\nport\n\"All of thli was accomplished\nalthough there were no oharti en\nboard.\"\nDEATHS\n\u25a0y Tha Canadian Preu\nMONTREAL \u2014 Hon. J, T. Dan-\niel, 70, Liberal member of Quebec's Legislative Council tor de\nLanaudiere.\nLONDON \u2014 Admiral Henry Wise\nParker, 88, who commanded H. M.\nS. Benbow in the Battle ot Jutland.\nMONTREAL - Rev. Olivier\nBeaulie, M; Swpohau-recollect no*\nvlcater.\nNBW YORK \u2014 Arnold Pomer-\nantt, IS, pianist and former child\nprodigy who performed as a soloist\nat philharmonic concerts for young\npeople at the age of nine.\nLONDON \u2014 Surgeon Rear Admiral E. L. Pearce, 54, prominent\nLondon surgeon holding temporary\nrank ln the Royal Navy during tht\nwar.\nST. DUNSTAN, England (CP)- j\nWtth a view to finding suitable jobs i\nfor soldiers, sailors and airmen\nblinded ln thli war, a St Dumtan'i\nResearch Advisory Committee of\nindustrial and commercial leaden\nhu been formed.\niBrtlffl OJaltfmarlr\nPentecoital\n70S Baker St\nRev. and Mn. C. A. C. Story,\nPas ton\nSaturday, 2:30 p.m. \u2014 Children's\nChurch.\nSunday, 9:4. a.m. \u2014 Sunday\nSchool, 11:00 a.m.\u2014Devotional, 7:30*p.m.\u2014Evangelistic.\nTuesday, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Preaching.\nFriday, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People.\nEverybody Welcome.\nIirm (Eljttrrli of\n(Hiiriiit -Sriruttai\n201 BAKER STRICT\nA Branch ot Tht Mother Church\nThe rirtt Church of Chriit\nScientist in Boiton, Man.\nSundiy School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject teiion-Sermon\n\"LOVE\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\nS p.m.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nih. ftoula\naCrititty Hnttpb\nPublic wonhlp during August ln\nSt. Paul's United Church, Slllca\nand Stanley Streets.\nRev. Foster Hilliard in charge.\nDome and Worahip With Us.\nJtrirt\nBapturt (Eljurrfj\nRev. Gerald M. Ward, Minister.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Church School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Capt. E. Dyke, Estevan, Sask.\n3:00 p.m.T-Service   at   Shirley\nHall.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Mr. J. Whiteside.\nLet Us Seek His Presence\n__ 1.   laOtjtt'fi\n-.utli-.mt (EIiiutI|\nStanley and Silica\nE. Hopka, Pastor\nSunday School\u201410:15 a.m.\n\"The Right Way to Be Sived\"\u2014\n11:00 a.m.\n\"Jacob's Wrestling With God.*-\n\u2022     7:30 p.m.\n... \u25a0\n_________\n .AOf roun\nf\nTr\nSgflH\"\nT\"\n^HrW*\nBRITISH\nfomen Work to Preserve Food for\nWinter; Extra Sugar Is Released\n\u00bbON OAIUV NIWI. NHltOM. I. C-JATUBOAV MORNINO. AUO. '*. 1W- iTiiririi\nASSISTS IN MASS\nCAMPAIGN\nBy DILY8 THOMAS\n, Canadian Pren Staff Writer\n'LONDON (CP). - Sugar rations\nnot, Britain's preserving season ls\nfull   swing.   Throughout   the\nilted Kingdom women are working to preserve for Winter use all\navailable fruit and vegetables. But\n[ it is not being left to. individual\ninitiative.\n. The Government has evolved a\nT;gcheme of cooperatve picking and\npreserving of crops so there shall be\neo wastage among the smaller producers. Even where orchards or\n(gardens' are remote from established preserving depots, the owners can arrange to call for a mobile\nlanlt which will can all kinds of\ngarden produce.\nB It was early In the year when the\n'Itinlstry of Food, cooperating with\n\u25a0the   National   Federation   of   Wo-\n. linen's Institutes, worked out de-\n<tails for a mass canning campaign.\nSurveys of farming districts were\nmade and sites selected to establish\nieentral canning depots.\nGrants from the Carnegie Trust\n. ind other sources enabled the group\nto. purchase 150 \"home canning'\ninits in the United States. To that\n*ere added 100,000 cans and 144,000\n(\u2022reserving jars, Three-day instruc\ntion courses were given for tte\nwomen ln charge ot the depoti.\nUNDERTAKE\nBIQ SCHEME\nSo far there are 197 depoti In S3\ncountries. It is estimated there will\nbe 300 eventually. Canning centrei\nsometimes deal with one village\nonly. In otter cases one centre will\ndo the preserving for aeven or\neight neighboring villages, The\nfruit li gathered by voluntary workers and bought by the depots\nWhen bottled or made into Jam,\nthe fruit will be distributed either\nthrough village market stalls run\nby Women's Institutes or through\nretailers.\nThe Ministry of Food hu cooper-\nated by releasing extra supplier ot\nsugar. Under a special arrangement growers of trult are allowed\nan additional six - pounds per ration book. Housewives buying their\npreserving fruit are granted an\nextra two pounds per ration book.\nPlans are also under way for\nestablishing collecting depots for\nsurplus vegetables from gardeni\nand allotments. These are to be\nlimited for the time being to non-\nperishable vegetables such u carrots, onions, turnips, etc., and will\nbe passed into ordinary commercial\nchannels for retailing.\nBy Helen Welthimer\njjerial Story - - -\nf LOVE WITHOUT MUSIC\nSYNOPSIS\nThe characters:\nLinda Avery, receptionist at a\nHew York models' agency, starts to\nrebuild her romance with\nRonald Stafford, her childhood\neweetheart, who has \"swung his\ntray to fame on a trumpet,\" but\nSarah Markley, wealthy glamor\ngirl, is trying to capture Honald for\nEerself, Meanwhile\nRobert Barton, young engineer,\natrikes up a friendship with Linda.\nHe introduces her to\nTerry Adams, publicity man, and\nTerry's sweetheart,\nCaroline Pickard, who has been\nUnable to find work.\nYesterday: Linda overhears Sarah\nta she tries to talk Ronnie into be-\n( coming engaged to her. After leaving Sarah's party, Robert, Linda,\nTerry and Caroline start home, but\nfind that Caroline has been evict-\nid by her landlady for not paying\nBer rent. Terry wants Caroline to\n-marry him immediately, but the\ngirl refuses to accept under the circumstances and Linda backs her up,\naaying she has another plan.\nCHAPTER SEVEN\nLinda's swift objection to Terrys\nsuggestion that he and Caroline be\nmarried that night brought a look of\nrelief to the girl's white face.\n\"Caroline's coming home with\nme,\" Linda continued firmly. \"I\nhave two studio couches and lots\nof bed clothes. I raided the closets\nbefore we sold the house back\nhome. If that taxicab driver with\nIhe curious eyes, across the street,\ncould fasten the trunk to his cab\n.We could all be off.\"\nLinda won. Halt an hour later\nthere was fire in the fireplace, the\ngate-legged table was drawn ln\nfront of It, and the four of them\nwere preparing scrambled eggs and\nbacon and toast. Caroline, with two\nglasses of warm milk inside of her,\n.was regaining her lost color.\n\"Come up, all of you,\" Linda had\ninsisted to the men. \"Turn this Into\nIn adventure. Don't let Caroline be\nembarrassed to face you tomorrow.\"\nRobert followed Linda into the\nkitchenette   as  she  attached   the\n, percolator.\n\"You're tops with me,\" he said.\n-Not many girls would have extended hospitality lo a stranger.\"\nAbruptly he changed the subject.\n\"Shall I take In the cups? You\nknow, some hidden instinct led me\nto seek a haven here last night.\"\nHis grin was young and boyish,\ntut there was something cynical,\n\u2022\u2022tern in his eyes. For the first time\nIn 24 hours Linda found herself\nwondering why he had sought succor. He had not told her. He had\n\u2022sated as though she had no right\ntn be inquisitive. But that was all\nright Ronnie was back and she\nwas meeting him the next after-\nMoon.\nLong after the men had gone she\nend Caroline sat in pajamas before\n'the fire, talking.\n''\"Have you ever watched your\nlast quarter go and not know\nwhere you could earn another\none?\" the girl who loved Terry\nasked. \"I had a Job. a dreadful one!\nI came out ot college with all sorts\nof ideas. I wanted to be secretary\nto somebody important. There was\n'Itfst enough money left from my\ninheritance \u2014 I haven't any relatives\u2014to pay for the school.\n\"And I got a job. Such a job!\"\nShe sat with her chin on her hands\nand her elbows on her knees, studying tho greens and reds of the ap-\nplewood fire. \"I was secretary to\na corset buyer! Did you ever see\nthe headquarters where the successful corset buyers have desks?\nThey are successful. They keep their\nBats on while they dictate, and they\nusually need their own products.\nAnyway, I lasted until two months\nego\u2014I went there in July following\ngraduation. Since then\u2014\"\nNow her voice was bitter. But\nthe girl needed to talk. That Linda\nknew. So she said:\n\"Known Terry long?\"\n\"More than a year. He came up\nto school on a promotion stunt last\nWinter and I wfis on the committee he worked with. He's a dear.\"\n\"He loves you.\"\n\"I think so, but he isn't ready to\nmarry me or anyone. He's filled\nwith adventure. Roots wouldn't\nhold just yet. Maybe some day. . . .\nI love him.\" she finished simply.\nThe world was filled with girls.\nLinda mused. Some were like Sarah\nMarkley who would seize a man for\nthe lure of the conquest. Some. Not\ntoo many, though. And they were\nredeemd by the Caroline Plckards,\nwho could have taken the love they\nwanted, but wouldn't because they\nmust be sure tn there was no\npity, no excessive rhlvalry in It.\nWith the knowledge Linda felt\nstrong and comforted. She and Ronnie had found each other and her\nworld was a safe and happy place\ntonight.\nShe studied Caroline's eager, wist\nful face carefully. \"Have you ever\nmodeled?\" she asked.\n\"I? Aren't models willowy creatures with a lot of Inches? And\naren't they beautiful?\"\n\"You're pretty enough, Caroline,\nto suit anybody. By the lime you\nget used to eating again and forget\nto worry you'll be Beautiful. You\nwere. I can see it. Mr. Bagley needs\nmodels for the sub-deb age. You\ncould do most any role. Walt, and\nin two weeks I'll take you in. That\nwill give you time to gain a little.\"\n\"But I'm getting out tomorrow.\nYou've been sweet\u2014and, well, I'm\ngoing to find a job, Really.\"   \u2022 \u25a0\nIt took more pleading to make\nIhe girl agree to remain. Linda at\nlast had to consent to accept payment whenever a mythical job\narose.\nCaroline went to sleep then, but\nLinda was wakeful. Too many\nthings had happened In too short\na time. Finally she got up, slipped\ninto navy mules and wooly navy\nbathrobe and stepped out of the\nlong window, went down the steps\nto the balcony, and leaned against\nthe wide railing. The stars were still\nbright. Somewhere iprlng stirred\nrestlessly. The moon shone Into the\nmonastery garden and the yellow\nlights were gone from the buildings\nthat silhouetted against the night\nsky.\nWhen she heard voices, she did\nnot listen at first Not- until she\nheard a door open onto another,\nhigher balcony. She saw the lighted doorway then, and realised the\nsounds came from Robert'! apartment His living quarters were four\ntimes as large as hers and the balcony was much longer, so she could\nlook up at it from her own lower\nlevel.\nShe did not move away. She\nwould not be noticed And ln a\nmoment she would go in.\nThen she heard a woman's voice,\na voice that was furious with anger.\n\"Why do yon think I've waited\nwhile you were in China. Don't\nyou know I could have married a\ndozen times? You're mine, do you\nhear, mine!\"\nThen Robert's voice, impersonal,\ncool, a litlte bored and a little\npitying, answered:\n\"Seg here, Marta, you don't mean\nany of that! You're excited, but\ngoaodness knows why . . .\"\n\"I know why! And I'm staying\nright here until you understand.\nRight here, If it's one night or\nthree weeks. I wtited last night\nand your man said you wouldn't be\nback, and I made him let me In tonight-\"\n\"Suit yourself,\" Robert answered,\nhis voice cold and furious. \"But\nyou'll wait alone!\" The door banged\nand Linda heard his steps on the\nhigher balcony. Realizing that she\nhad eavesdropped, she turned 'o\nflee. But she was too late. She had\nbeen seen.\n\"Hi. Juliette.\" Robert called, but\nthe light mood he tried to establish\ndid not suit the tightness of his\nvoice. \"You're doing a balcony\nscene, too, I take It!\"\nLinda answered his mood. \"Are\nyou a balcony prowler, too? I\nthought I had the view to myself,\nbut I like to be neighborly.\"\nSuddenly he leaned far over. \"I\nused to be good at high Jumps. Do\nyou think I could make your raiting? I've got to get somebody to\nhelp me!\"\n\"Of course!\" Funny that she was\non Robert's side In whatever happened. Yet\u2014he plainly was avoiding some girl. She held her breath\nas he began to lower himself. Suppose he fell!\nHe was almost down when the\ndoor into his own balcony opened\nagain and somebody stepped out\n(To Be Continued)\nBritish Hopjefo\nSell Tweeds to Pay\nfor U. S. Bombers\nLONDON, Aug. 1 (CP).-Women's\nfashions have been hitched to war's\nchariot in Britain's determination to\n5ut everything tte nation has Into\nie fight against Germany. If tte\nplan works, bonnets will go to\nAmerica and bring back bombers,\ntweeds will turn into tanki, and\nScotch homespuns into weapons tor\nhome detence.\nA line of war-time wear for\nwomen which the Government hopes\nto \"Convert\" Into .American planes\nwas exhibited today at a ihowing\nfor United states buyers. The idea\nli to use tte dollar proceeds to\nbuy planes, incidentally helping the\nBritish clothing Industry to profit\nfrom the collapse ot Paris as a\nworld style centre.\nToday's exhibit included 320\nmodels ready for shipment to New\nYork world's fair and other Amerl.\ncan centres. A laid delegation representing UO British firms will accompany the models.\nSir Cecil Weir, member ot tht\nExport Council who opened the\n\u25a0how, laid British manufacturers\nwere not out to take business away\nfrom American firms, but \"merely\nto supply the American public with\nimports not longer available since\nthe continent was cut ott by the\nBritish blockade.\"\nNatural Friends . . .\nDeplores Passing\nof Fairy Stories\nBy Garry Cleveland Myers, Ph.D.\nSpeaking on the \"Value of tte\nLibrary in the Field of Kindergarten-Primary Education,\" I made\na plea tor tte return of the fanciful in the stories read or told the\nyoung child. This was ln keeping\nwith the pleas for fairy talel Mr.\nClarence Sumner and I made in\nour recent volume, \"Books and\nBabies.\" To quote from my speech:\n\"In the writer's Judgment, library values at the kindergarten-\nprimary level would increase tremendously It folk lore and fairy\ntales were brought back. Jt ls amai-\nlng how these precious treasures\nhave been snatched away from\nlittle children during recent years.\nMere babies now are supposed to\nbe sophisticated little scientists and\nto think and talk about realities.\nwhich only the university student\nwas exposed to years ago.\n. LIGHT8 OF FANCY\n\"Normally the child from two to\nsix lives among the fairies. He creates with them and enjoys his creations, Instead of hampering his\nflights of fancy we should further\nthem. Fill the baby and young child,\ntherefore, full of fairy tales . that\nlack the fearful, Balance this menu\nof the fanciful with adequate activities with things and play with\nmany other children\u2014for the child'!\nlikeableness, happiness and efficiency.\n\"Of a certain family of three\nchildren, all heard fairy tales read\nto them profusely from the middle\not their second year through the\nprimary grades. All excelled later\nIn the factual fields.\nYou may have a list of books lo\nread to the baby and young child\nby writing me at 230 East 45th\nStreet, New York City. N.Y.. enclosing a self-addressed, stamped\nenvelope.\nI.O.D.E. and Rod\nCrou Benefit From\nTea at Shutty Bench\nHASLO, B. C.\u2014As the result of a\ndelightful party at the home of\nMiss S. Jesty, Shutty1 Bench, the\nKaslo Branch of tbe Red Cross and\nthe Mth Battalion Chapter I.O.D.E.\nhave had their funds Increased by\n$8 and $7 respectively.\nAssisting Miss Jesty Were Mrs. A.\nP. Allsebrooke, who conducted a\ngolf putting contest and Ml* Naomi Allsebrooke who had charge of\nvarious games.\nA handsome rug made by Miss\nJesty was won by Mrs. J. Beidis.\nAt tea time raspberries and creim\nwere featured.\nAnglican Retreat Is\nto Bo Hold at Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Tht tnnutl retreat\nof Anglican clergy in the diitrlct\nwill again be held In Kaslo commencing August 3. Conducting it\nwill be Rev. E. H. Maddocks Professor of Emdnuel College, Saskatoon, Sask.\nSlocan Branch\nGiven Donation\n*SLOCAN CITY, B. C.-A regular\nmeeting of the Slocan City Branch\nof the Red Cross Society was held\nIn the Orange Hall Tuesday with\nthe President, W. E. Graham, In the\nchair. Other presents present being Mrs. D. Ewing, Mrs. W. Middle-\nton, Mrs. D. B. O'Neail, Mr. J.\nMarch!. Mrs. W. Bertram and Mrs.\nA. Ewing.\nA special donation of $2 was received to be used towards purchase\nof material.\nWARDNER RED CROSS\nSENDS SHIPMENT AND $1$\nWARDNER. B. C, \u2014 The Red\nCross meeting was held at the home\nof Mrs. J. Lawson.\nA shipment of 12 sweaters, 12\ntowels, three pairs of pyjamas, one\nsurgeon's gown had been forwarded to Cranbrook. The sum of $15\nwas also sent from thc Wardner\nRed Cross.\nTea was served and a silver collection taken.\nKailo Guidei Give $5\nin Ambulance Drive\nKASLO, B.C.-Kaslo Girl Guides\ncontributed $5 towards the fund\nraised by the. Girl Guides of the\nEmpire to purchase an ambulance\nfor the Royal Air Force.\nHospital Nurses\nGiven Exemption\nin  Jobless  Bill\nEsling Explains West Kootenay Situation\nOTTAWA, Ont, Aug. 2-Hospitals and charitable Institutions\nwhleh are not conducted for profit will not bt called upon to ihare\nthe burden of contribution! under the Unemployment InsuranceAot.\nWait Kootenay'! member, W. K. Esling, contended that West\nKootenay hospitals were able to keep open In tha majority of caiee\nonly through the efforts of Women'i Aid associations, Women'i Institutes and voluntary contributions,\nHe itated that many patients were unable to \"pay and in some instances municipalities could not meet their obligations to hospitals. The\nbill passed tte Senate with an amendment which provides that hospitals,\nsuch as were mentioned by Mr. Esling, are to be exempt from the operation of the act whep It can be shown that they are not operating\nfor profit e\t\nWhan the bill came baek to the\nHouie thli. morning the amendment\nwas accepted.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) - The\nHouse ot Commons without division concured today ln amendments\nmade by the Senate to the unemployment Insurance bill. The measure ls now ready to receive royal\nassent and thus become law.\nRoyal assent will' be given Just\nbefore prorogation of Parliament.\nOrganization of the machinery to\nbe set up under tte act may then\nbe proceeded with but the act provides that no contributions to be\npaid by dmployors and workers be\nmade until due notice has been\npublished ln the Canada Gazette.\nLabor Minister McLarty, in moving concurrence, said the' only\namendment of importance wis that\nwhich removed from the operation\nof the tcheme certain hospital employees and those in other charitable institutions which, In the opinion of the advisory committee to\nbe set up under the act, are not\noperated tor gain.\nThe amendment was greeted with\napplause by Conservative members,\nwho had pressed for the same revision ln the Commons. The Minister\nsaid that the number of workers affected by the amendment was small.\nThe Upper House yesterday finished ita consideration of the measure, which Would provide unemployment Insurance for more than\n2,000,000 workers in Canadi.\nWithout a division the Senate approved the bill after voting down\n43 to 26 an amendment proposed by\nConservative Leader Meighen\nwhich would have postponed operation of the proposed aet ijntil after\nthe war.\nThe bill has been supported as\nbeing strictly an Insurance scheme,\nbased on the establishment of a\nfund to which workers, employers\nand the Government wbuld contribute in the proportions ot four, four\nend two, respectively.\nIt presupposes a rate of unemployment of 12% per cent.\nContributions under the proposed\nact would be compulsory. They are\ngraded so that workers in low income brackets would pay less than\nemployers while in the higher\nbrackets the employers would pay\nless than workers.\nFor example a worker earning\n$6.40 but less, than $1.50 a week\nwould pay 12 cents into the fund\nand his employer 21 cents.\nOn the other hand a man earning\nthe maximum of $38.50 a week or\n$2000 a year, would pay 36 cents\nand his employer 27 cents. Those\nearning more than $2000 a year do\nnot come under the provisions of\nthe bill nor does it apply to those\nunder 16 years ot age.\nA plan for book-keeping on contributions provides for the Issuance\nof special Insurance stamps, these\nto be affixed to cards or books, and\nkept as a record of employee's contributions. Other methods of payment into the fund may be used,\nsuch as the depositing of a certified\ncheck with a bank.\nThe plan is expected to raise be-\nmonth which, under control of the\nGovernment, might be used for the\npurchase of Government bonds, thus\nassisting in the war effort.\nThe amount, of daily or weekly\nbenefit under the bill Is 34 times\nthe average daily or weekly contribution for thc person .without dependents, for the persons with dependents the benefit is 40 times the\ncontribution.\nHearings on thc bill before committees . of the House and\\ Senate\nfailed to develop criticism of the\nprinciple of the scheme. Labor representatives were universally In\nfavor of lt. Bankers and business\nrepresentatives suggested delay for\nfurther consideration and various\nother plana lor looking after the\nunemployed.\nIt provides for the appointment\nof an unemployment commission\ntogether with an advisory commission. Among duties of the commission will be the organization of a\nnational employment service. This\nservice will be empowered to pant\nloans to workers travelling to places\nwhere work is to be found.\noHinimmfLTm,\ncHoUASbWWCA-\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nChilled Tomato Juice\nCold Roast Meat\nCreamed Potatoes or Hot\nButtered Rice\nChopped,  Buttered  Young  Beet\nCabbage and Green Pepper Salad\nSoft Custard with Goosebefry\nFloat\nCoffee\nSOFT CUSTARD\nTwo eggs or four egg yolks, ti\ncup sugar, % teaspoon silt one cup\nboiling water, twd cupi Irradiated\nevaporated milk, one teaspoon vanilla mace.\nBeat eggs. Add sugar and salt\nand beat well, then add milk. Stir\nIn the boiling water. Cook over\nboiling water, stirring frequently.\nuntil Mixture coats Spoon, ibout S\nminutes.\nThen add the vanilla. Pour into\neight dessert dishes and chill. When\nready to serve, sprinkle with mace\nand top with gooseberry float.\nGOOSEBERRY  FLOAT\nOAe pint gooseberries, % cup sugar, Vi cup water, one cup cream.\nP|ck over, berries and wash thor\noughly. Boll with augar and waier\ninllf '_._*..        \"..___.    \"\nffloWii'iWy,_'and \"vfrKip \"until\"stiff!\nlinlil 'tender. Presi tlirough\t\najjd ajyK thoroughly. Chill., orea:\nsieve\nFold in cold gooseberry pulp.\nPile lightly on soft custard. The\ntart gooseberries are particularly\ndelicious as topping tor the custard but you may use other berries\nfteaches, or even green apple sauce\nn place of the gooseberries if you\nWeather. . .\nPeople Differ in\nReaction lo Heal\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. 0-\nIn 1904, a physician named Dexter wrote a book, now out of print,\nwhich recorded the results of nis\nstudies to show the relationship between the weather and human activities. He had charts .bowing the\npreponderance of suicides and murders, in certain kinds of weather.\nIn the Bank ot England it was found\nthat during very foggy weather certain types of clerical work showed\nsuch work Was stopped during-these\nperiods and the books locked up\nto avoid mistakes.\nPeople certainly differ In their\nreactions to hot weather\u2014there are\ncalophiles and calophobes. Personally I am a calophobe\u2014I hate hot\nweather and s: lply'can not function or work then in Bpite of the\nfact that 1 spent forty Summers\nof my life in about the hottest part\nof the United States. I do my work\nnow in a cool Summer climate and\nglory to get back to snow and zero\nweather in the Winter. Many of my\nfriends on the contrary say they\nfeel best in temperatures over ninety and plan their vacations ln the\nWinter.\nEFFECT OF WEATHER\nThis question of weather temperament has significance in dealing with your fellow man. Hitler\nis definitely cyclic as regards weather. In a chart of dates published\nin Time (June 24) it is noticeable\nthat he was always inactive in\nFebruary, June, July, October and\nNovember and December. This year\nhe couldn't help himself in June\nand July: his events pushed him.\nMarch, August and September are\nhis busy months for decisions. That\nisn't astrology\u2014that's weather and\npsychology.\nDuring the hot weather, the wonderful machinery of perspiration\nshould be studied and admired.\nPerspiration is secreted from the\nsweat glands, minute colled glands\nwhich lie in the deeper layers of\nthe skin, each one surrounded by\na .network of blood vessels. The\nsweat comes from the blood, con\nsists mostly of water and salt but\nmay contain many other substances.\nPerspiration, aided by the natural\noil from the sebaceous glands keeps\nthe skin pliable, soft and moist.\nEven in cool weather the body produces a quart of perspiration ln\ntwenty-four hours.\nThe sweat glands are most numerous where the temperature\nbuds of the nerves are most nu\nmerous. Very few around the knees\nand thighs, for instance, which are\nnot sensitive to cold or heat The\nexposed parts of the body produce\nthe most sweat, the armpits seem\nto produce more because the skin\nareas are in contact here and evaporation is limited.\nEvaporation is Nature's most efficient cooling device, that's why\nperspiration is such an efficient\ntemperature regulator. Humidity\nand air currents condition this efficiency. Humidity in our average\nSummer temperatures is 40 to 60,\nand this conduces to free evaporation. In dry desert climates, even\nwith the temperature above 110\nperspiration evaporates so rapidly\nlhat you are actually chilly.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nReader\u2014\"I would appreciate a\ndiet for yellowing of the skin. I\nwould like to know If pure olive\noil used as a dressing for different\nfoods is all right to take. With the\nyellowing of the skin there is also\nconstant constipation.\"\nAnswer\u2014Olive oil Is a perfectly\ngood food under these circumstances and will not do you any\nharm, tl ls quite possible that you\nare taking some kind of a cathartic\nwhich produces a change in your\nb:jod and makes your skin yellow.\nConstipation itself does not produce\nyellowing of the skin, popular belief to the contrary notwithstanding.\nSeven Months Old\nBaby Diet ai Cube\nof Wood Chokes Him\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug. 2\n(CP)\u2014A coroner's Inquiry found\nRobert McDowell, seven-months-\nold son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas\nMcDowell, of Sinclair Mills, B. C.\n90 miles East of here choked to\ndeath from a one-inch cube of wood\nthat lodged in his throat.\nEvidence showed the baby was in\nhis crib in one room with his sister, 2% yean old, while Mrs. McDowell waS doing the family washing in another room. Hearing the\nchild choking. Mrs. McDowell rushed to the room.\nUnable to find the cause of tte\ntrouble, Mrs. McDowell took the\nchild to T. L. Mlnty, first aid man\nat tte Sinclair Spruce Mills. The\nchild was rushed to Prince George\nHospital In a gas speeder obtained\nthrough Robert Harlow, roadmaster\nfor tte Canadian National Railways.\nThe child died on the speeder. Dr.\nJ. G. MkcArthur performed an autopsy and extracted the knot of\nwood from the child's throat How\nthe baby obtained the knot could\nnot be determined.\nMRS. R. TURNER HAS\n$100 WAR CERTIFICATE\nOF CRANBROOK CLUB\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014First distribution of tte War Savings Certificates purchased through tte tuba\nscrlptlons of the Four Hundred Club\nresulted in Mrs. Reg Turner taktn_\ntte $100 certificate. Velma Hogarth.\nVictoria, taking the $26 certificate,\nMrs. John Bertoia, Mrs. H. N. Osborne, W. R. Cragg, Mrs. George\nHaddad, Owen Haley. Harry Laker\nand R. D. Anderson the $6 certificates, and Mrs. Hugh Clarke the\naeven stamps.\nMembership has reached neir ilx\nhundred,* with each member putting ln 26 centa each month.\nSensitive...\nTall Girl Should\nBe Tactful With\nShort Boyfriend\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Mlu Chatfield:\nAn awful thing hai happened\nto me. I have outgrown my boy\nfriend, am four Inchei taller than\nhe ahd he is ashamed to be seen\nwith me on the street He ls\n21 and won't grow any more. We\nlove each other and I really don't\nmind the difference in our sizes\nbut everybody teases us and he\nis terribly sensitive about It 1\nfeel so helpless because lt is one\nof these things you can't talk\nabout; the more you say the worse\nit seems. What would you do if\nyou were in my place?\nDEJECTED\nI'd work like a Trojan to keep\nthe boy friend from thinking about\nfeet and inches. I'd do and iay everything possible to make him feel\nbig and itrong. I'd tell my friends\nto lay off the subject of difference\nin our heights, explaining that the\nboy Iriend was terribly sensitive\nabout It while I pretended to him\nI hadn't noted his sensitiveness. I\nwouldn't urge him to go anywhere\nhe didn't want to go with me, but\nat home or abroad I'd try to be gay\nand happy and give him a good\ntime.\nI would try to convert my height\nInto a personal distinction Inst\"\"*\nof looking like I was ashamed of\nmyself. I'd hold my h_ia up \u00bb.,u\nrefuse to slink around and slump\ndown. Next to.personal daintiness,\ndignity ls a girl's best social asset\nand the tall girl is geared for d'\"-\nnlty. Of course we don't mean a\nstitf back, stilted manner.., _ued\nnose and haughty airs. We are talking about an easy grace and poise\nthat is the expression of a calm and\nself-possessed nature. Dignity is attractive because It says, \"Everything is under control.\"\nBarrel Used for\na Compost Pile\ni IMVtm at    -cauosn\n, SOIL. REFUSE\nConvenient and concealed\ncompost pile\nThe gardener always has uses for\nsoil from a god compost pile. Many\ngaordeners consider such piles unsightly and do not maintain one\ndespite the fact that it Is an economical method of obtaining true\nhumus.\nOne can, however, have a compost pile that ls both convenient\nand concealed by the simple method\nof keeping it in a barrel, as shown\nin today's Garden-Graph. When a\ntight barrel or open-headed drum ls\nused for this purpose, holes should\nbe punched in the berttom for\ndrainage.\nOld weeds which have not formed\nseeds, grass clippings, vegetable\nsops, raked leaves, plant tops sods,\nhay, traw and manure can be used\nfor a compost pile in a barrel. The\nmethod Is simple: First, a layer\nof garden refuse, then a layer of\nsoil, as illustrated. Wood ashes or\na few handsful of lime can be added\nfrom time to time.\nForking over a compost pile two\nor moro times a year and wetting\nit down well in hot weather aids\ndecomposition.\nHARROP\nHARROP, B. C, - Rev. C. Lan\ncaster of Waneta visited Mr. and\nMrs. A. R. Johnston.\nA number ot young people left\non a camping trip last weekend.\nThose making the trip were Miss\nHarriet Alexander, Miss Helen\nAlexander, Miss Doreen Manahan.\nMiss Neena McClement, Miss Catherine Pearce, MUs Edna Steed and\nMiss Georgina Willlscroft of Nel\nson, Miss Joan Ashby, Miss Ethel\nFelrbank and Dave Fairbank. The\nNelson girls were later guesti at\nthe Fairbank home.\nMils D. Fawcett and Miss Jessie\nHartOp of Nelson viiited the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Harrop.\nMrs. John  Berry and (jaugjijer,\nM\nMiss\"suslii 8erVy. and gu__.,\"Ml*i\nWilla MbClement of Neliin vll!t*d\nNelson.\nMiss Diana Rowley has been vis\nitlng ln Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Koima. Jr., visited Nelson.\nBralorne Teacher Will\nTeach at Shutty Bench\nKASLO. B.C. - Miss Elizabeth\nWalton of Bralorne has heen ap\npointed teacher of the Shutty-Bench\nReward\nKnowing How to\nWalk Helps tho\nWould-Be Model\nBy DONNA GRACE\nGirls who make good model!\nknow how to walk before ttey go\nto any model Khool. Pride and assurance make them itand up and\nitretch. Tbey sit gracefully with\nkneel together, toll pointing forward and without twining tte\nchair legs with ankles.\nThis knee-crossing can be disastrous to those who do not use\ntheir heads. The graceful drooping\not one knee over the other, without\nextended foot ls permissible. Fat\nSlrls should never cross thalr knees\nut except for a tew specialties, fat\ngirls are never considered for modelling.\nGirls should be conscious of their\ncharms and make the moat of them.\nIt's amazing what they can do In\nmakeup after they know what Is\nreally smart. Even a beautiful girl\nwill look 100 per cent lovelier after\na year's work at modelling, They\nlearn to tone down the note that\ndisplays too much fullness by covering the - sides with ultra-dark\nfoundation. Full places at tte sides\nof the face are covered in the same\nway.\nGood grooming goes a long way\nIn putting a girl over. Those who\ncome in with crooked-seamed stockings, soiled collars, slips showing\nand run-down heels are not conscious of good style and seldom get\nan audience.\nSuccessful models have tremendous ambition to go ahead and their\nexperience has enabled them to attract the attention of Hollywood\nproducers. Besides the ihowing of\nfashions, there are tte attractive\nhoitess engagements for the clever\nones. Large organizations are will-\nIng to pay fine salaries to Intel-\nligent. attractive glrli.\n\"Girls should begin while in\nschool to acquire correct posture,\nknowledge of makeup, good manners and interest in poise. Plenty\not exercise is necessary. Dancing,\nswimming, fencing and all active\nsports will help a lot Good .speech\nwill help any girl to sell herself.\nModelling pays well for' those who\nare good at it\"\n\"T    1\nVERSE\nJ\nIN TNI LONG. RUN\nThe clouds of war wil clear away\nIn the long run.\nPeaceful daya shall come to stay\nIn the long run.\nThe gallant men who struggle on\nIn armies many thousand atrong\nFriendship will be just the same\nIn tte long run.\nShall triumph for to right the wrong\nIn the long run.\nSorrows will find their smiles again\nIn tte .long run.\nDo your beat and have no fear\nPray for thoie who are not here\nAnd God shall wipe away each tear\nIn tte long run.\nPleisant tinea are yet to come\nIn the long run.\nWhen fighting's o'er and victory\nwon\nIn the long run.      .\nFamilies will reunited be\nAnd British lands once more ba\ntree\nFrom tyrants of dishonesty\nIn tte long ran.\nJEAN M. PICKARD,\n620 Victoria St., Nelaon, B. C.\nEXCELLENT MS JTBLBttS TOOT\nAND GENEtAL SUN AILMENtl\n\u25a0ZAM-BUKNiahtly\nSpecial Low Rates for\nSoldiers in Camp\nor Overseas\n25 Qsl*- fait 0ucounl\nMen in the Canadian Armed Services when\nin Camp in other parts of Canada or Overseas will be entitled to a special low mall\nsubscription rate to the Nelson Daily\nNews.\nThis rate goes into effect on all new subscriptions in this category received from\nJuly 15, 1940, until further notice.\nIt will also apply to men under training in\naccordance witn the National Mobilization plan when they are in camps outside\nKootenay-Boundary.\nKootenay-Boundary men in the armed\n1 forces or under training wish to keep in\ntouch with events at home. The Daily\nNews has put this new low rate into effect\nso that they may do so at the lowest possible cost to themselves or to those who\nsubscribe for the newspaper in their behalf.\nThis special 25% discount provides a net\nrate as follows:\nOne year $6.00\nSix monthi $3.00\nThree monthi $1.50\nOne month .56\nSubieriptiom are payable in advance.\nSend The Daily News to your relative or\nfriend in the forces.\nMark Orders Soldiers' Special Rate\nPHONE 144\nMttrn latlg Nimia\nBritish Columbia's Most Inttrltting Ntwipaptr\n\u25a0M_____t_aM_\n..-TV__ -jtdfriartBj\n -NELSON OAltV NIWS. NIV\u00abON. i ^-SATURDAY M0RNIN9. AU\u00ab. I \u00abW-\nSPECIALS\nFor Today\nBIG SHOE SALE\nANDREW'S\nBATHING SHOES\nWpmen'i, liiet 3 to 7\u2014 Cti-\nMilMl', iliill 1 to il\" ' '   PC-\nhir  DDC\nChildren'], siiei 6 to 10\u2014 CA\nMen'i Sport Shoei\u2014 (1 QC\nPilr  9I.9U\nIt Andrew & Co*\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNELSON SOCIAL\n\u25a0y MR*. M. J. VIQNIUX\n. A ceremony ef interest in Nelson ind district took place ln Trail\nFriday ifternoon when Cora Rath-\nleen, elder daughter of Mr. Md Mn.\nS. H. Smythe, fairview, became thc\nbride of Harold Martin Hansen of\nSheep Creek. The marriage wai performed by Rev.. L. A. Morrant,\nPastor of. St. Andrew's Anglican\nChurch. Mr. and- Mn. Hansen left\non a motor trip to Coait cities.\n* Ray Staples ot Creiton viiited Nelion Friday.\n.  Mix Collingwood Gray an*\n\u25a0on John Collingwood Oray of Bon\nnlngton ipent Friday ta N<\nC. D. Jarvli wai\nw\u00ab I?\nHILl\u00bb FOR MOTHIRS\nWDON (Cfl-Now that moth-\ngetting Into overalls there's\niron ltrllt_i to- **by to clutch.\nth. Government Is setting up\nnunerlii ln  Induitriil areai\nwomen munition! worker!\ni their children.\nbutcherteria\nHtwi\nPhono\n528\n25c\niici Rump\nit: Lb. ...\n,y.\"!.Ro\"HV20c\n! Libel Pot Roaiti: 10\nvon Pork Roaiti:\nAt Catholic Camp .\nGirls Complete\nTrail lo Beach,\nStart Another\n22c\nI Vol:\nIPor H>.\n\u25a0oof and Stowing\n...10c\nTtgSDAY, JUl\u00bb 30, 1840-At Uit\nSol hai favored ui with I\nshone all day. For days we\nold King Sol hai favored ui with I\n\" and shone all day. For dayi w(\nhad l|tUe or no luwhlne. Neverthe\nvisit\ni_Ml Ste.ki:\nIbi\t\ni Voal Chopi:\nfoil Pittiot:\nb\t\npar. Ribi:\n35c\n28c\n25c\n13c\nleei the camp spirit remained bright\ntothefulf   \"\nmp\nul.\nand cileerfuf, everyone en joy Ing life\nlelson\n_. _. to Nelion\n{rom Procter Friday.\n,  \u2022   Dr. and Mn. Maurice J. Walley and children Sharon and Mau-\nrice Jr., returned Friday to Van-\nEver after viiiting th. doctor'i\nthkr and liiter-in-law, Dr. and\ni. G. A. C. Walley, Silica Street\n\u2022 Mn. Andrew Cant and Miss\nEdna Cant ot Appledale visited Nelson Friday. .-\u00bb\n\u2022 Mn. J. H. S. Winter and to'\ntint son lett the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hoipital Friday for the\nSummer home of Mn. Winter, parenta, Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. and\nMrs. Graham, at Willow Point,\n* F. R. McCharles, contractor ot\nVsncouver,  visited Nelson Friday,\nShoppers In J4elaon Friday included John Gilroy of Willow Point,\n. Mn. V. M. Campbell and\ndiughter Dorothy, Ml Joiephlne\nStreet, have taken up residence at\n711 Cirtxmite Street.\n. Mra. Henry Johni ind loni of\nSalmo viiited Nelson Friday.\n\u00ab,Frad Speer of Kailo ipent Friday in Nelson.\n* Mr. and Mn. S. H. Smythe,\nFairview, have aa their gueits Mrs.\nSmythe's brother and iister-!n-law,\nMr. and Mn. Arthur Wright of\nWinnipeg!\n. Mrs. Harold McDonald and\nher baby left the Kootenay Lake\nGenenl Hospital Thursday tor tnelr\nhome'In Ymir.\n* Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haggart\nand daughter Margaret True of Trail\nand Mr. Haggart's sister, MUl Mae\nHaggart, Kerr Apartmenti, are holidaying near Kailo.\nMrs. H. L. Butchard of New-\nDenver li a Nelion viiltor.\n. Shoppen in NeUon Frldiy included Mn. E. J. Grant ind granddaughter, MUi Marjorie Serrei, ot\nHarrop.\n\u2022 % W. Graham of Sloean Ci*.\nspent Thunday in Nalaon.\n\"   Mra. Gertrude Carter, Graniti\nMLA. tor Nelson-Creston\nNelion Friday.\n. Mn. J. Stuart Daly of TraU\nipant Thursday tn Nelaon.\n\u2022 Walter McDonald, MIU Stmt,\nhas left to reside in Vernon.\n\u2022 Mn. J. J. Fingland ot TraU,\nwho it Summering at Willow Point\nIn the Ledlnghqm home, ipent Friday in Nelion.\n\u2022 J. J. Campbell wu a NeUon\nviiitor from Willow Point Friday.\n. Mrs. Bert O'Neill of Slocan\nCity visited Nelion Friday.\na Stephen Maaura was in Nelson\nfrom Yinlr Friday.\n\u2022 Earl Thomai ot Trail ipent\nFriday In Nelaon.\n\u2022 VUlton in Nelion Frldiy Included Miu Shirley Stevens and\nber brother Henry ot Ymir.\n\u2022 A. MacPhee of Procter ipent\nFlames Spurt as R.A.F. Hlb Italian\nAmmunition Dump Near Bardia\nCAIRO, L-,,, ..., ,.    ..\nRoyal Air Force announced today\na \"highly successful raw\" en ar\nItalian ammunition dump near Bar-\nLARD: In bulk,\n2 Ibi\t\n17c\nan Fraih Pork Piei: OC\n\u2122v'v,r.'\"'.' .30c\nI Moit:\nI Chicki:\nIndividual, 2 for\nig Fowl:\nhoice,   lb\t\n20c\n28c\n25c\nFroo Delivery\nEach evening at campfire the different camps take their turn putting\non a concert and singing. Tap danc-.\nIng was preiented by Kathleen Gallagher and Carmelite Cosmozil.\nThe Tekawltha Trail over to Second Beach hai been completed by\nthe girls, and a new trail has been\nstarted. Clearances have been made\nfor picnic tables for our guests from\nnear and far.\nOn VUlton' Day we had quite a\nnumber of friendi. When wi awakened at 7 a.m. the Attagirl with\nthe Desjardins family aboard was\ntied up to our float, and the Poulin\nfamily was waving frantically from\nthe Other side of the lake. The\nAttagirl went over for them. Holy\nMau wai celebrated at 8 tm. at\nwhich our gueiti assisted.\nDuring the ifternoon and evening many more viiiton arrived, in-\neluding: Mr. and Mrs. Davis and\nPaulette and Angus; Sisters Mary\nInnocentia and Deme'trla, Mr. mi\nMrs. Mico, Mr. and Mn. Kubin,\nMr. and Mn. Cawley of Salmo, Mr.\nMcKay, Misi Anderson, Mr. and\nMn. Cox of Trail.\nWe enjoyed a hike te Andrew's\nfarm it Harrop.\nThere is only one thing lacking\nout here. Rev. William Harrison and\nErnie Defoe claim there Is plenty\nof fishing In the like, but it U in\nthe lake they will remain we fear\nif someoBe doesn't help them to\nihow ui one on a frying pan. Thiy\ntry hard enough but evidently the\nfish are too self-opinionated to bite.\nGermani Close\nSwiss-French Border\nGENEVA, Aug. J (AP)-The German army of occupation in Trance\nhu ordered cloiing of the Swiss-\nFrench border from Geneva to\nBasel, effective Aug. 4.\nSome observers view thii as an\nIndication that the Germans are\nselling all poiilble channels\nthrough which news of military\nmovements might reach the outiide\nworld.\nRoad, widow of Ernest Carter, wu\nmarried by civil ceremony to\nArchibald Maclntyre of Sunset\nPrairie, B.C., Thunday. The ceremony wu wltnewed by Mr. and\nMn. John Mondlni, who have purchased the Carter ranch. Mr. and\nMn. Maclntyre will leave ihortly\nfor Suniet Prairie, where Mr. Mac,\nIntyre Teiidei.\n*  Frank  Putnam  of Erickson\nFriday In NeUon.\n* P. scrobot waa In Nelion trom\nEdgewood Friday.\n* VUlton in Nelaon from Slocan\nCity Friday included William\nOerdtj.\n* Mr. and Mrs. D. Brown of\nTrail were Nelson viiiton Friday.\n* Mn. Alice Shell wu In Nelion from Boiw.ll Friday.\n* Mlu A. E. (Toots) Houston,\nwho has been a patient in the Koot.\nenay Lake General Hospital for the\npast couple of weeks, hu left that\nmtltutlon for her home.\n* William Pratt of Thrumi viiited Nelson Friday.\n* Thomai Dinimore hu returned to hU home in Vancouver after\nviiiting hli uncle and aunt, Deputy\nWarden and Mn. Thomu Camm,\nWird street.\n* Mr. Palmquist wu in Nelion\ntrom slocan City Thunday.\n* Dr. G. G. McKenzie ot Creiton\nviiited NeUon Friday.\n* Mr. and Mn. J. F. Perasso.\nIll] Ward street, have u their\ngueiti Mr. Peruio'i brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mn. Paul\nPerasso and aon George of Oakland,\nCalif.\n* Mr. and Mr. J. D. MacKay of\nWebb, Saik,, and Mn. Donald Stewart ot High Bluff, Man., viilted Mr.\nand Mra, R. L. Oliver Wedneiday\nen route to penticton. Mn. MacKay it Mn. Oliver'! lister. At Penticton they will vt\u00abit Mr. Mac\nKiy'i brother, J. M. MacKay. Another brother, \"Mac\" MacKay of\nVancouver, will Join tha party at\nPenticton ior a family reunion. Mr.\nand Mn. J. D. MacKay and Mrs.\nStewart will than return to Nelion\nMonday en route to thalr homei.\nThey will then return by way of\nBanff.\na Mn. Jamei Stuart, hai returned to North Battleford. Sask., after\nviiiting her ion, Frank A. Stuart.\nMi|i Mary Stuart accompanied her\nmother.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. J. Smith, Behnsen\nStreet, Miss s. Terry and Miss Lorni\nMoir motored to Kulo Friday.\na Miu Edith Callback left Friday fer Vancouver.\n*, Aug. J (AP)-Tha\n...ea anaouncf\" '\"\nsuccessful raid'\nIl_.a_,a ...aaalUnltlOn ItlBtP 0\t\ndia. Libya, plane crews reported\nseeing flames and smoke eiuied by\ntheir bombardment from a distance\not 40 miles.\nThe communique paid:\nA highly successful raid waa carried out by bombing aircraft of\ntba Royal Air Force on a larga ammunition dump near Bardia. Eastern Libya port, yesterday.\nThe nolle and shock of the explosion wtra teit WOO feet up.\nFlamei roie 500 teet and imoke\n7000. Flamei and columni of imoke\nstill wera visible when our aircraft\nwere 40 milei awiy on the homeward journey. We luffered no caiualtiei.\nAn enemy raid on Port Sudan, by\nItalian bombers ot Sit type, ww unsuccessful.\nOur tighten encountered a Ca-\nSroni bomber, CA133 type, over\nie Ethiopian border. After a ihort\nengagement the bomber wu ihot\ndown.,\nA small formation attacked the\nAccicol oil refinery near Massawi.\nDirect hits were registered. As a\nresult a petrol fire was started and\namoke was seen 50 miles away.\nEnemy fighters were aetlve but did\nnot engage our bomben.\nThe airdrome and hangars at Asmara were attacked by another formation of R.A.F. bomben. One hangar wai demolished and another\nseverely damaged by near misses\nThere also ware a number of direct\nhits on itore buildingi. AU our\naircraft returned lately.\nA further raid wu caried out an\nGun despite low clouds making\naccurate bombing difficult, direct\nhlti were registered on airdrome\nbuildingi, causing several fires.\nDuring two raids on Chlnele\n(Ethiopia), the result of which li\nnot yet known, our bomben ware\nengaged by enemy tighten. One of\nthe Uttar li believed destroyed. One\nof our bombers wu compelled to\nmake a forced landtag in enemy\nterritory.\nOn thc return Journey tram the\nnidi on Chlnele our bomben lighted three enemy bombers, Stl'l, attacking Sella (British Somaliland).\nOur planes attacked Immediately.\nOne enemy wai ihot down in\nflamei. Another was lut seen witb\nblack imoke coming out of one engine.\nSouth of Moyale (Kenya Colony)\nIhe South African Air Force bombed troop concentration! successfully.\nITALIANS ADVANCE\nTO EGYPTIAN FRONTIER\nLONDON, Aug. _ (CP)-Author-\nitative British quartan iaid today\nthat a \"considerable force of Italian! il concentrated in North\nAfrica\" and is \"gradually advancing\" toward the Egyptian frontier.\nThe advance was said to be cautious with the Italiani taking \"careful protective steps as they go\nwith anti-hnk and field artillery.\"\nSPECIALS\npaa^\"^^ajaa_\u00ab__\u00bb___i^\u00ab___-\u00bb\u00aba\u00bbw^ -1 1 \u25a0\u25a0 _\u00ab\u00bb-^\u00aba\u00ab-\u25a0_M_a______M___pM_*w\nBakeosy Shortening: 2 lbs \u2014 23c\nEconomy Lids: Dox. \u00ab 27c\nCoffee: Fort York, Ib    49c\nFig Bar Biscuits: 1 Ib. cello, pkg 22c\nOysters: Cloverleaf, tin  19c\nTomato juice: 26 ox. tins, 2 for 27c\n|iff Soap Flakes: Pkg _\u201e 22c\nGraham Wafers: Pkg..\u201e,.,.-.__-....,,....., 22c\nCorned Beef: Tin  \u2014 19e\nHeinx Cucumber Pickles: 20 ox. bot... 29c\nToilet Tissue: Westminster, 3 for 19c\nSalmon: Nabob, Vi sixe, 2 for.  45c\nTea: Tender Leaf, 12 ox. pkg. 53c\nCorn Pops: The new cereal, lc deal,\n4 for _____   27c\nButter: No. 1 Creamery, 3 lbs.  85c\nMiddleton'. Corn: Fresh today, dox. 38c\nTOMAT6ES: *_\u25a0** GREEN OR WAX 1 Cat\n| Iba. - ****** BEANS: 2 lbl  ******\nCILERY: Of* CARROTS AND SM\n\\,h.  i    **** PEIT8: 3 bunchei   *\"T\nAPPLES: -rtt*       N(w 9PUD8; _tC_>\n6 lbl   ****>.     9 lbl. ****\nPEACHES: 4(at CANTALOUPS: 4Mat\nBliket .., ***** Wl\u00bb Stt, 2 for ******\nBLACKBERRIES: -i(_A HUCKLEBERRIES: 4A|4\nt fer.......  ****** I lbs. ******\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONI 2J5\nPort Koolaree Log . .!\nFleet's In Again\nand Landlubbers\nGetting Sea Legs\nThe fleet ii in. The initiation ceremony ii over it campfire the crews\nof the Intermediate girls' camp\nburned their faggots o? loyally in\nthe fire of purification. The itandard bearer of the fleet was Elaine\nMcLean of Porthill, Idaho, a third\nyear camper. Old fleet members\nwelcomed the new memberi into\ntheir friendship circle. \"Admiral\nTaddy\", Miss Amelia Hanna ot Nelson, presented the combined colors\nof ill the crewi to the Pilot, Mrs.\nWalter Kettlewell of Nelion, the\nChief Bosun, Miss Helen Staples\nof Creiton; and the Chef, Mlu Evelyn Carlaon of Melton; and the individual crew colon to the skippers ot the crewi, theie being: Captain Soangetaha ot H.M.S. Adventure. Miu Gertrude Patmore, Cranbrook; Captain Snookie ot H.M.S.\nOrion, Mlu Nora Ellis, Chilliwack;\nCaptain Richie ot Campfire Cruisers, Mlu Marlon Richmond, Crinbrook; Captain Lindy ot S.S. Sun-\nlpy, Mlu Ruth Lundy, Cranbrook;\nand Captain Chips ot the Black\nPirates, Miu Peggy Spreull, Cranbrook.\nAi lhe pinned on their honon Admiral Taddy told the skippers: \"the\nsafety of the crew depends o n you.\"\nChief Elrtt Mate Jeanette McLeod\n\"beit camper\" by Ult year's cimp-\ni camp\nen, led the fleet ln the search for\nburled treasure left by INS shipmates. Following the successful\nsearch the messages in the treasure\nwere read. Theie Included greetings\ncr\u00abw longs, and yells of uie c\nen of IMS.\nCrew members are as follows:\nH.M.S. ADVENTURE\nColon: Blue and white for truth\nand purity.\nTint Mate\u2014Hanna Dusk, Nelion.\nPurser-Jem Erskine, Nelaon.\nBo'iun\u2014Marvel Wiley. Kimberley.\nSailors \u2014 Aileen MacDonald,\nTrail: Jeanette McLeod, Ktipber-\nley; Elaine McLean, Porthill, Idaho;\nHirrlit Hanion, Ymlri Ruth Johnson. Nakuip; Betty McLeod, Kimberley,\nH.M.S. ORION\nColon: Purple and gold tor loyalty and worth.\nFlnt Mate\u2014Pearl Leggett, Nelson\nPurser-Muriel MacDenali\nild. Trail.\n3Ssll\nBo'iun\u2014June Smith, Roisland.\nSallon\u2014Florence Othenon, Invermere; LOulie Brodie, Nakuip;\nNorma Simpson. Nelion; Inei Kelly,\nInvermere; Marian Cleland, Invermere..\nH.M.S. CAMPFIRE\nCRUISERS\nColon: Oold and green for worth\nand growth.\nFlnt Mate - Peggy Caldwell,\nCranbrook.\nPuner\u2014Donna MacKeMle, Rossland.\nBo'iurtr-Audrey Nelson, Nelson.\nSallon-Beth Beckett, Trail; Mirgiret Duffus, Trill; Dorothea Powell, Creiton; Margaret Salstrom, Nakuip.\nS.S. SUN LOY   '\nColon: Yellow and purple tor\nAt Cub Comp . .\nSouth Slocan Is\nWinner Again in\nTent Inspection\nBy the Cub Cimp Scribe\nCAMP BUSK, Aug. J-Wotta day\n\u2014With the exception of Johnny\nColes, who isn't uied to going without hii beauty ileep, the whole\ncamp wai up bright and early, ready\nfor tent inspection and clean.up\nbefore breakfast Friend Colei woke\nup  as. early ai 9 a.m. and wis\nJenulnely disappointed when Cook\nohnn? Weaver refused him break-\nf_st in bed.\nThe gang from South Slocan\ngathered In the glory for the second morning In a row. They won\nthe tent inspection b\" a wide margin. These South Slocan boys are\nnew to camping, but what they\nlack ln experience they make up\nin enthusiasm. They are a real\ncredit to their leader and arc\ndefinitely making an impression\non the rest of the camp with\ntheir neatness and willingness to\ncooperate in making the camp a\nsuccess.\nNELSONITES WIN\nA football game, Nelaon vs. the\n\"Foreigners\", followed inspection,\nthe Nelion boyi winning 7-3. Joe\nDoyle proved hii ability as a goalie\nby reading a magazine on the sidelines while one of his team's opponents calmly kicked the ball into\nthe goal. Joe bellowed, but it was\ntoo late, and he only escaped a\nducking in the creek by hiding\nbehind the tents.\nThe energy used ln the game,\ncalled tor t little leu strenuous\nactivity to follow, and so the next\nhalf-hour was spent li. instructions\non various Cub test!. A large number passed their Tendefped tests,\nwhile sevenl of the older boys\npracticed semaphore signalling, and\nothers passed in Proficiency badges.\nDuring the afternoon we were\nblessed with a beautiful rainstorm.\nand there wai a ruih to take in\nblankets and clothing. The problem of entertainment waa wived\nthe  more   talented  boyi  who\nC.A.S.F. Announces\nCasualty List\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) - The\nNational Detence Department today issued its 10th casualty list for\nthe Canadian Active ervice Force\noverseas announcing leven deaths.\nThe list also included names of\nfour soldiers prevlouily reported\nmissing and now safe. Two moro\nwere listed as dangerously ill and\nthree as seriously ill.\nThese casualties bring the total\nsince the C.A.S.F. went overseas\nto 38 dud and four missing.\nThe latest lilt of casualties with\nthe regimental number and next of\nkin (no dite* were reported) in-\ncls\nRoyal Canadian Engineers:\nSapper Robert Leach, L-190W, Ernest _. Leach (brother) Moosomln,\nSask.\nAlberta regiment: ,\nPte. Laurence Henry Allen, M-\n16840 Mri. Leona Lillian Allen -\n(wife) Raufurly, Alta.\nPte. Irnest Alexander Delong.\nM-16.8D. Mrs. Sarah Anne Birken-\nshaw (grandmother) Meanook, Alta\nPreviously missing, now lafe \u2014\nRoyal Canadian Artillery:\nGnr. Munro Joseph Daggitt, H-\n24148, Mrs. Mary Daggitt (Mother)\n920 Llpton I, Winnipeg.\nDangerously 111-\nHave Summer's smartest fashions at tremendous savings.\nWide choice of the most popular season's materials and\ncolors and still a month to\nwear them. Hurry!   ,\nOFF\nReg. $5.95.\u2014Out they go.ar\n$3.95\nReg. $7.95\u2014Out they go, at\n$530\nRag. $8.95.\u2014Out they go, at\n$5.95\nRag. $12.95.\u2014Out they gs, at\n$9.95\nirman\nTlunt\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nsunshine and loyalty\n\u25a0Doro!\nRouland.\nFtfit   jfite\u2014fiorothy   U-juhart,\nRADIO AND A.N.IANC.\nSERV1CE\nNtlson Electric Co.\n574 Baker M. Phone 2-\nSOOjtSAtStt\nSPECIAL\nr\"'....... $1.49\nFashion First Shop\n438 Baker SL Nelson, & C\niiiiiitiTTii-tin.it tt'ti t\nASK FOR\n*}X Hot Dog ond\nHamburger Puny\nFOR YOUR PICNIC\nu_-i-_uiui.m,-__u_-U\nPuner\u2014Gladys Olson, Nakuip.\nBo'iunr-Vera Pailonan, Wynndel.\nSallon \u2014 Jean Haggerty, Trail;\nCaroline Olsen, Sheap Creek; Gloria\nMcKay, Ymir; Lillian Elder, Trail.\nBLACK PIRATES\nColon: Red and Yellow for courage and sunihine.\nFlnt Mate\u2014Grace McDonough,\nSheep Creek.\nPuner\u2014Ruth Olsen, Sheep Creek.\nBo'sun\u2014Ina Kder, Trail.\nSallon\u2014Sheila Downey, Trail;\nOlive Johnson, Nakuip: Joan Maclntoih, Trail; Roaa England, Castlegar; ijihel Twaddle, Trail.\nCATHOLIC\nCAM* VISITORS\nWe had an unexpected pleasure\nln the visit of Sister Angus Joseph\nand Miss Miry Horrigin from the\nCatholic Camp. They ware able to\nbe our guesls (or dinner.\nLait night Bo'iun  Blqf\n------ -\u2022 _A* ***\nMin\nBet my\nby  *\u00bb    \u2014\t\nstarted to sing songi and games in\nthe individual tents., Several dark\nhorses came to light in this way,\nuncovering new talent tor the camp-\nfire programs. After the rain parties\not explorers went across the creek\nand through old trails, finally turning up on the main highway atter\nambushing a party of 'tag-endere'\nwho had fallen behind and missed\nthe trail.\nSale Now on\nMilady's Fashion Shoppt\n\u00bb\u00bb Baker St. Phone 114\n\" \u25a0i)iBi'mtp^pi^wna_TW>>,***\u00bb\nHelen Staples, remarked:\nmother will be homesick, 'cause It'l\nthe fint time she's been away from\nme.\" Then who should arrive in the\ntrain but Mrs. Bo'iun Bingo, Mn.\nFnnk Staples.\nWe're In the moviei now! We\ndidn't have to go to Hollywood,\neilher. Our moving picture producer, \"Chlet Frluy\" Robins, itealthlly\ncrept up upon ui during many of\nlour activities ahd ah, how surprised Ow Admiral will be when\nshe findi ihe'i another Bette Davis\nall unbeknown to henelf!\nCabin One hai a pat mouse that\nween honeehtet-et lent this ii\ntheir excuse tor the nelie at night\nTha rainy weather gave us s\n>>i*ndld Opportunity to get a tine\n(tart on our Rid Crop knitting.\nAU tha hfttteilck mothen will\nba eured \u2022\u25a0 hen they iee tha Jolly\nUn that once ware their meek,\nlandlubber daughters on Sunday,\nwhich il the Official Visitors' Dey.\nThanks (or the dey, Shipmates.\nTry Newipeper Advertising Flnt\nIt Get\u00bb Rejyfy!\nA DIP FOR COLES\nSince everyone but Cubmuter\nDee wu running around like a wild\nIndian, -the next move organized\nwu a trip to the rowboat, during\nwhich the aforementioned Mr. Coles\nproved his rowing ability by drop-\nSing an oar on the head ot one of\nte Cuh. The Cub got hii revenge\na tew minutei later when the boat\nlurched md threw th* iaid Mr.\nColes Into the drink. Unfortunately\nhii waterproof boots were not high\nenough and by the time ht wu back\nln the boat hla hat wu the only\nthing that did not look like a discarded dish cloth.\nBecause of the rain, the usual\ncampfire program wai held in the\ndining hall, and despite this handicap, it wu the best one so far. As\nusual our cook did his share with\nthe pianotaccordlon, and Bill Walley\nalso gave forth with a mouth organ\nsole. Mr. C41ea led several good\nhearty songs, and our one and only\nterrible tiner tivored us with a few\nselections. We refer to Pat Carew.\nthe potato peeler ot our previoui\noolurtn.\nThe leaden ire getting Just as\nmuch tun out of this eamp as the\nboyi ire, ind to iee them pliylng\naround ifter the Cubi are in bed,\none might think tha wrong boy|\nwere being tucked in at night. Les\nDee is particularly playful, and Is\nIn the habit of taking advantage of\nT\nnlpeg.\n-Royal Canadian\nArtillery:\nBdr Harold Edward  Splcer, M-\n1006, Mrs. Gretchen Sploer  (wife)\nP. O. Box 1, Red Deer, Alta.\ntillery\nSeriously ill\u2014 Royal Canadian\nEngineers: '\nSapper Alan Birtle. M-TO0, Mrs.\nAgnes Birtle (wife) 11001 Mth St.,\nBeverley, Alta.\n12 Days of Rain\nin July, Nelson\nJuly, ln Nelson and vicinity,\nopened bright and warm but ended\nwith almost two weeks of intermittent' rainfall. While a record heat\nspell occurred In June and early\nJuly, about mid-month the weather changed and rain fell tor 12\ndays. Total precipitation for the\nmonth was 2.58 inches, the heaviest\nrainfall being on July 25 when .62\ninch fell.\nThe mn beamed down on the\nCity for 222.2 hours, ai compared\n, to 319.2 houn in July, 1MB. The\nhottest dsy wu July 11. when the\nmercury reached M.4 degrees, and\nthe brightest day was July 20, when\nthe sun shone 14 hours, the month's\nminimum temperature wu recorded\nJuly 6 at 46.6 degrees. Highest temperature of July, 1939. was 98 and\nthe lowest wu 43 degrees.\nThe wind reached iti hlgheit velocity of the month, 22 miles per\nhour, July 30.\nCrow'i \"Disregard\"\nof Orders Said Be\nCause Coach Deaths\nAKRON, O., Aug. 2 (AP) - A\nciumoled copy of trainmen's orders,\nfound on the conductor of a Pennsylvania railroad motor coach in\nwhich 43 persons perished, becked\nup the road's declaration that the\ncrew's ''disregard\" of instructions\nru responsible for the tragedy.\nThe order provided that the motor\nconch should take a siding and\nallow a 73-car freight train to pass.\nInstead, the coach's crew continued\nfor a mile past the siding, down the\nPennsylvania's  HudsOmAkron sin\nAbout 40 Scouts\nGo Under Canvas\nal Kokanee Today\nNearly 40 Nelson and District Boy\nScouts leave thia afternoon to go\nunder canvas at Camp Busk, Kokanee Point, for a seven-day outing\nNelson, Creston and South Slocan\nboys will attend the camp, which\nis under the Nelson and District Boy\nScouts Association.\nCamp ScoutmMte. L. P. Walton\nof Nelson, an experienced Scoutmaster and first aider, will have\ncharge of the camp. Mr. Walton,\nwho holds two St. Johns Ambulance\nAssociation certificates, will act in\na dual capacity as tint aid man for\nthe camp as well as Scoutmaster.\nHe will be assisted by Assistant\nScoutmaster F. D. Oliver, Cubmaster Joseph Doyle and J. C.\nChamben, and by Earl Jorgenson,\nKing Scout. John Weaver will be\ncamp cook.\nBesides the various features of\ncamp life\u2014hiking, swimming, fishing and games\u2014the Scouts will\nundertake 15 hours ot Second and\nFirst Class instruction work. They\nwill also organise a tent competition, marking being based on neatness, flag raise, tent inspection and\nthe various units' ability in\ncompetitions.\nRegistrations now number 3&\nbut some lut minute registrations\nare expected. Six Scouts have registered from Creston. two from\nSouth Slocan, 12 from the First\nNelson, six from the Second Nelson, and 12 from the Third Nelson.\nTransportation to the camp is being supplied by car owners of the\nNelson Board of Trade and Junior\nChamber of Commerce. Cars\nwill leave from both the Fairview\nand Main Scout Halls.\nNelson Ferry Back\non Full Schedule;\nShaft Is Repaired!\nNelson ferry went bick on full\ntime ichedule at 1 o'clock Thursday\nnight atter running reduced trips\nTuesday and Wednesday. The trip*\nwere reduced because of a broken\nmain shaft. This was repaired ou\nThursday night.\nThe launch Attagirl provldeO\npower for the ferry on Thursday.\nAttack Nazi Supply\nShip Near Norway\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP)-The\nAdmiralty reported todiy a wire-\nleu station had been lucoeufully\nbombed and a., enemy supply\nihip of about 4000 torn attacked\nyesterday In operationi over tha\nNorwegian coait\nThl ihip wu lilting badly and\nwu being abandoned by Iti crew\nu fleit air arm flieri left tha\nscene.\nThe Admiralty's statement:\n\"During operations over the Norwegian coast yesterday Skua aircraft (dive bombers) of the fleet\nair arm successfully bombed a wireless station and attacked an enemy\nsupply ship of about 4000 tons.\n\"When last seen this ship wai\nlistli.g heavily and was being abandoned by her crew.\n\"Our aircraft returned safely.\"\nyour correspondent's good nature.\nTo date he hu availed himielf ot\nthe author's bed, dishes, ipeali, place\nat the table, and hu even been\n\u2022.--_.__     _\u201e_u__    a...*    \u201e|\nle track, and crashed head-on with\nfreighter.\nknown to lock the writer out of\nthe cabin ih which he sleeps. Juit\nthe ume it'i a swell lite, and unlets sameona hu ditched the bed,\nthere ia at leut a good night's\nsleep to anticipate.\nUnited Churches to\nWorship at St. Paul's\nin Month of August\nCongregation! ot Trinity and. St.\nPaul'i Unltad Churches will unite\ntor wonhlp and slrvices in St.\nPaul'i United Church during August\nUnder Rev. Foster Hilliard. Paitor\nof St. Paul'i. During July Join'\nworship wis held In Trinity United\nChurch, R\u00abv. J. A. Donnell, Paitor\n<4l,i. 8 charge-\nUie\nNelson Has Brightest\nDay Nearly 2 Weeks\nSummery weather returned to\nNelson Friday, and while the iky\nwu dotted with large white cloudi\nthe sun ihone tor about eight houn.\nIt wu the brightest day In nearly\ntwo weeki. Rain fell fairly heavily\nIn the eirly hours, but the rain\ncloudi disappeared early in the\nday. Total precipitation was .08 inch.\nA chill wind Blew Thundiy evening and the mercury dropped to I\nlow ot 45 degreea, the coldest in\nover a month. The day following\nwas mtld however and the temperature reached 14 degreei.\nSenior Catholic\nGirls Open Camp\nat 13-Mile Monday\nMonday senior girls from centres\nthroughout the Nelson Catholic Diocese will open a 12-day camping\nholiday at the Catholic Summer\nCamp at Thirteen-Mile. The junior\ngirls camp there will break up on\nMondiy morning, Just previous to\ntha entry ot the senior girls.\nAbout 25 girls are expected to attend the camp, which will be in\ncharge of Sistera of St. Joseph's.\nInspector Barber\nMoved to Kamloops\nInspector C. G. Barber, Division\nOfficer In command of the Provincial Police at Prince Rupert\u2014formerly Staff-Sergeant at Nelson \u2014\nwis moved to Kamloops in charge\nof C Division, effective Thursdiy.\nHli mov* wai made in conjunction\nwith transfer! of other officeri in\nthe province.\nInspector Birber became well-\nknown while in command, of the\nWut Hootenay District at Nelson.\nEstablished 1906\ntluiiUT_.li) School\nResidential and Cay\nSCHOOL\nFOR BOTS\nAll-round development, educational,\nphysical, moral, cultural,\nfor   170  boarderi.\nHeated swlmmln*\nseres   ol\nAccommodation\nBrick buildings\ntank.   Gymnasium,\nplaying fields.\nHealthful climate. Year round opea\n\u2022ir games.\nFor School Calendar, write the Rev.\nG. Herbert Scarrett, B.A. (Queens)\nM.R.S.T.  (Eng.)   Headmaster.\nUniversity   School\nVictoria, B. C.\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Biker St.\nWATCHES. DIAMONDS,\nWEDDING RINCS\nRAINBOW-LAdE-LAsflc' '\nHOSIERY\nAbjorbi knee and garter (M  IK\nitrain. Pair 3) 1.10\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nOn- Capitol Theatre      Phom 1047\nPHONE 116 for\nMilk and Cream\nRAW  OR   PASTEURIZED\n(OOTENAY VALUY DAIRY\nBRADLEY'S \u25a0\u00a3\u25a0\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nSATURDAY BARGAIN\nYOUNG BROILERS: Lb 29*\n-\nChoice Rabbiti: Ib.\nSauiage Meat: lb. .\n... i ,n | m    tm\n20c Coed Fowl: Ib 25*\nmdtf Veal Steaki: 2 Ibi. .. 35f\nVeal Oven Roait: Ib. . 20<*\nPork Roaat: Ib 2..<*\nRolled Rib: Ib 25*\n2Q<\n25*\n20*\n25*\nRump Roait: Ib.\nT-Bone Steaki: Ib.\nHamburg: 2 Ibi 25* Baby Bee. Liver: Ib.\nSauiage: 2 Iba. 25c Mutton Chops: lb. .\n____________m\nmn iMili\n____________________________________\n PAGE MX\nNriamt Ba% Sfettra\nEstablished AprU 22, 1802.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelson   British   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU -OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1940.\nTHE ARMADA LOOKED INVINCIBLE\nTOO, TO THE PESSIMISTS\nApparently there were croakers in 1558 when England with its little ships faced the menace of Phillip's huge\nj^rmada\u2014and licked the life out of it. Turn to Charles\nKingsley's \"Westward Ho!\" and Chapter 30 on: ,\n\"How the Admiral John Hawkins Testified Against\nCroakers.\" Remember the incident\u2014how Raleigh and\nDrake and Sir Richard Grenville and Hawkins, and most\nof the other leading seadogs of Old England, were gathered at Plymouth awaiting the arrival of the Spanish Armada. Suddenly the talk of all the groups was interrupted\nby an explosion from 'Old John Hawkins.' Here is a bit\nof it.\n\"Fail? Fail? What a murrain do you here, to\ntalk of failing ?Who made you a prophet, you scurvy,\nhang-in-the-wind, croaking, white-livered son of a\ncorby-crow?\"\n\"Heaven help us, 'Admiral Hawkins, who has\nput fire to your cukerins in this fashion?\" said\nLord Howard.\n\"Who? my lord*. Croakers, my lord! Here's a\nfellow calls himself the capktin of a ship, and her\nMajesty's servant, and talks about failing, as if he\nwere a Barbican loose-kirtle trying to keep her\napple-squire ashore!\"\nAdmiral Hawkins,\" quoth the offender, \"you\nshall answer this language with your sword.\"\n\"I'll answer it with my foot; and buy me a pair\nof horn-tips to my shoes. Fight a croaker? Fight a\nfrog, an owl! I fight those.that dare fight, sirl\"\nThere was a lot more to the old gentleman's outburst,\nwhen England on that day in 1558 was up against a peril\nas dire as, or worse than, the Empire faces today.\nTHE QUESTION OF GIANTS\nThe death of Robert Wadlow, the young man who\nmeasured 8 feet 10 3-10 inches, naturally raises questions\nwhich have always engaged the imagination of mankind.\nIn Wadlow's case^here was little question of the cause of\nhis abnormal size; he was a victim of the glandular disarrangement known as giantism. He was one of 17 such\npronounced cases in the United States who are listed in the\nrecords of the American Medical Association.\nThe old question continually comes up, however: Was\nthere ever a race of giants? The idea has been suggested\nmany times, but never proved, says the New York Herald-\nTribune. Sir John Mandeville reported that he had \"heard\nof\" an island on which lived men 30 feet tall, and a neighboring island on which were 50-footers, but Sir John, not\nto put too fine a point on the matter, was a notorious liar.\nFrom Mexico occasionally come rumors of a prehistoric\nrace of giants, but conclusive proof is lacking. In India\nthere is the legend of the Seres, a race of men 14 feet tall\nand living 200 years.\nThere have been plenty of instances of individuals of\nastonishing height. Pliny tells of Gabera, an Arabian, who\nwas nine feet nine inches tall. John Middleton, who lived\nin the reign of James I. in England, was nine feet three\ninches. Funnum, a celebrated court giant, was said to have\nbeen 11 and a half feet tall. And there is the highly doubtful tale of King Kintolochus, who was credited with 15\nfeet.1 The famous Giant of Lucerne, who caused hot arguments among German and Swiss scientists in the latter\npart of the sixteenth century, was pegged by some ordinarily veracious observers at 19 feet.\nFor the most part, giants do not have a pleasant time,\nalthough from the earliest recorded history people seem to\nhave a curious affection for them. Most of them, notwithstanding their size, are not strong, and, like poor Robert\nWadlow, are prone to succumb to injuries and ailments\nwhich would not unduly bother an ordinary healthy person.\nThe ordinary giant, however, is almost invariably an\nineffectual fellow, doomed usually to a sideshow existence\nand to listen over and over, to the point of excruciating\nboredom, to the question: \"Is it cold up where you are?\"\njjltmt        tyWtMfy\nOne-Minute Teit\n1  What period of time is represented by a generation?\n2. Under what authority was the\nLeague of Nations founded?\n3. What is the origin of the word\n\"novel\"?\nWordi of Wlidom\nWe must conform, to a certain\nextent, to the conventionalities of\nsociety, for they are the ripened\nresult of a varied and long experience.\u2014A- A. Hodge.\nToday'i Horoicope\nIf your birthday is today, you\nmay expect to receive important\ngood news from afar in the near\nfuture. Exercise rare in all matters\nof business and in the signing of\ndocuments to guard against attempted deception. The child born on this\ndate will be of a determined personality, somewhat self-centred and\noverbearing in manner. Those who\nhave the training of'such a child\nehould teach it self-control, as much\nof it will be needed to master strong\nemotions.\nHint* on  Etiquette\nIt is not considered good manners to clean your nails in public.\nHoroicope for 8unday\nIs your birthday today? If you\n'determine to exercise circumspection in the conduct of your business\nand domestic affairs, the year will\nDrcve moderately favorable for you.\nThe intelligence cf the child born\ntoday will be of a high order. However, wise training is necessary for\nsuch a child to succeed, as he or\nshe will be ambitious, bold, venturesome and of a proud aggressive\nand somewhat quarrelsome nature.\nOne-Minute Teit Aniwera\n1. No definite time, but a whole\nbody of individuals born about the\nsame period is called a generation.\n2. It was established by the Versailles treaty and grew out of President Wilson's 14 points for peace.\n3. Ffom the Italian word \"novella,\" meaning \"tale.\"\nWAR \u2014 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Press\nAug. 3, 1915. \u2014 Decisive success\ngained by Austrians over Russian\nforces West ol Ivangorod. Von Mack-\nensen's army captured Polish town\nof Leczne. French naval squadron\nbombarded Sighdjik on the Anatolian coast.\nAug. 4. 1915. \u2014 French repulsed\nGerman attacks in the Argonne sector on the Western Front. Fortifications at Scala Nova, Anatolia,\nbombarded hy French armored\ncruiser, Colonial Secretary Andrew\nBonar Law reviewed the Second\nCanadian Contingent in England.\n\"BRITAIN IS FIGHTING\nFOR ENTIRE WORLD\"\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 2 (CP) -\nProf. P. A. Martin of Uie Department of Political Science at Stanford University said that Great\nBritain is fighting for the entire\nworld, as he spoke at the University of British Columbia here last\nnight.\n-     .- : .*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022        \u25a0.,.. \u2022      \u25a0    .. \u2022-\u25a0\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. I. C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUG. t. 1940\t\nGREGORY CLARK WILL SPEAK TO CANADIANS\nGregory Clark, special feature writer of the Toronto star and the\nToronto Star Weekly has accepted the Invitation ot the Director ot\nPublic Information to be the third speaker in the radio aeries \"Let's\nFace the Facts.\" Mr. Clark will speak from Toronto, at 10:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, Sunday, August 4th, and he will be heard over a\nnational network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,\nGregory Clark ls one of the best-known newspapermen and radio\nspeakers in Canada. He has just returned from Europe where he spent\nseveral months as a war correspondent with the British and Canadian\nforces. He was an eyewitness to the deliberate mass murder of civilian\nrefugees by Oerman'airmen and tank corps and he saw much of thc\ntragedy of Dunkirk.\nSPECIAL BROADCAST MONDAY\nGracie Fields the darling of the English music halls, will be heard\non the Western Network of tne CBC trom Vancouver in a special broadcast on Monday, from 9 to 9:30 p.m., Nelson time. The broadcast re\nplaces Ior this single occasion the scheduled \"Classics for Today'\nprogramme. ,\nMiss Fields will be In Vancouver during the course of her Canadian\ntour in aid ot the Navy League of Canada and a half-hour of her public\nconcert in Vancouver's Auditorium will make up her broadcast.\nIt is expected that Anna Neagle, another famous British actor,\nwill fly from Hollywood to Vancouver to appear on the programme with\nMiss Fields,\nSpecial facilities have been set up to \"beam\" the programme direct\nto London for rebroadcast on the BBC.\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1940\n2nd Division.\nContingent to Cross\nSeas Arrives Safely\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n6:57\u20140 Canada\n7:00\u2014Toast and Coffee Club\n(CKLN)\n8;0O-BBC News\n8:30-Al Gilbert's Trio\n8:45-The News\n9:00\u2014\"Under the Big Top\"\n9:15\u2014Closing Stocks\n9:30\u2014The McFarland Twins\n10:00\u2014Ray Kinnay and his Orch.\n10:30\u2014The World's Fair Band\n10:45\u2014The News\n11:00\u2014London Calling\n12:00-Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\nl:0O\u2014The News\n1:15\u2014Dance Orchestra\n1:30\u2014Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra\n1:45-BBC News\n2:15\u2014Hugo Monaco's Orch.\n2:30-Vella Pessil\u2014Harpsicord.\n2:45\u2014Musical Programme\n3:00\u2014Novelties in Music\n3:30\u2014Eddie Duchin's Orchestra\n3:4\u00a3-Talk\n4:00\u2014Clinton McLean Organist\n4:30\u2014Len Hopkin's Orch.\n5:00-Hollywood Band (CKLN)\n5:25\u2014News Bulletin\n5:30\u2014WOR Operatic Concert.\nEVENINC\n8:30\u2014BBC News\n7:0O-The News\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014Musical Mirror\n8:00\u2014Concert Trio\n8:30\u2014Red River Barn Dance\n9:30\u2014\"I Cover the Waterfront\"\n9:45\u2014Songs of the Years\n10:15\u2014The News\n10:30\u2014Dal Richard's Orch.\n11:00\u2014Paul Carson\n11:15\u2014News Round-Up and Talks\nRebroadcasts\n12:00\u2014God Save The King\nCJAT \u2014 TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Church ln the Wlldwood\n7:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:30-Wake Up and Sing\n11:00\u2014Concert Hall of the Air\n11:30\u2014Popular Vocal\n11:45\u2014Dance Music\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Bridal Salute\n4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:15\u2014Dance Music\n4:30\u2014Melody Time\nEVENING\n8:30\u2014Dance Music\n5:45\u2014Popular Vocal\n6:00\u2014Interlude.\n12:00-Sign Off\nOther periods\u2014CBC programmes\nSUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:57\u20140 Canada\n8:00\u2014BBC   News\n8:30\u2014Salt  Lake  City  Tabernacle\nChoir  \u25a0\n8:5J-News Bulletin\n9:00\u2014\"Old Country Mall\"\n9:15\u2014Lee Gordon's Orch\n9:30\u2014Silver Strings\n10:00\u2014Sonata Series\n10:30\u2014Religious Period\n10:57\u2014News  Bulletin\n11:00\u2014Columbia Broadcasting Symphony.\nAFTERNOON\n12:30\u2014Chamber Music Society of\nLower Basin Street\n1:00\u2014Church of the Air\n1:30\u2014Band Music\n1:45\u2014BBC News\n2:15\u2014Treasure Chest (CKLN)\n2:30-World Today\n2:45-The News\n3:00\u2014CBC String Orcheitra\n3:30\u2014Canadian Grenadier Gusrd's\nBand\n4:00\u2014The Summer Symphony Orch\n4:30\u2014Romance of Sacred Music\n5:00\u2014News Bulletin\n5:30-Concert Music (CKLN)\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Let's Face the Facts\n6:30\u2014BBC News\n7:00\u2014The News\n7:15 -Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014Rocky Mountain Melody\nTime\n8:00\u2014To Be Announced\n8:30\u2014To Be Announced.\n9:00\u2014For Friends of Music\n9:30\u2014Sanctuary\n10:00\u2014Queer Quirks\n10:15\u2014The News\n10:30\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\n11:00\u2014Let's Face the Facts\u2014\nRebroadcast\n11:30\u2014News   Roundup   and   Talks\nRebroadcasts\n12:00\u2014God Save the King\nCJAT \u2014 TRAIL\n8:00\u2014Evening Vesper Hour\n11:00\u2014Sign off.\nOther Periods\u2014CBC Programmes.\nssftwsssswsaMsswssMSsssssswssa\n?? Questions??*\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not\nbe published.\nW\u00abSW\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\u00abS\u00abSK*S5$\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab$\nK. Q., Fernie\u2014Could you tell me\nwhere I could send old wool such\nas sweaters, etc., and have it re-\ncarded and made into blankets?\nMission Yarn Company, Mission, B. C.\nG. L. W\u201e Nelson\u2014What will take a\nheat stain off a mahogany table?\nHeat stains may be removed from\na highly polished table by applying\nthe following in their respective\norder, using a separate cloth for\neach: Kerosene, alcohol and sweet\nor linseed oil. The last should be\nwell rubbed in until the spot no\nlonger shows. Frequently a cloth\nmoistened with warm camphorated\noil will remove the stain.\nSubscriber,  Nelson\u2014Can  you   tell\nme what to  use to get rid of\nslugs in a cellar?\nCorey's Slug Death may be obtained from Brackman-Ker.\nD. H., Nelson\u2014Will you please give\nme a recipe for maraschino\ncherries?\nThree and a half pounds of sugar,\nthree and a hall pounds Royal Anns\ncherries, one ounce red coloring,\none ounce almond extract. Let sugar\nand cherries stand overnight. Next\nmorning boil until clear and add\nflavoring and coloring Just before\nremoving from the fire. 'Put into\nsterile jars and seal with paraffin\nImmediately.\nG. M., Procter, has kindly supplied\nthe words to the song requested\nby F. H. D., Chapman Camp.\nAnswer to it Makes No Difference\nNow\nMany years have come and gone\nSince you left me dear,\nBut I found out I'll get along somehow;\nNow since I received your letter,\nSaying you are coming home,\nI'm thankful that I got along till\nnow.\nAll the sunshine of my life\nWent with you sweetheart,\nThat's over and it's all forgotten\nnow;\nI'll be waiting for your step\nWhen you come back home,\nAnd I'm thankful that I got along\nsomehow.\nActive in\nKootenay Life\nNo. 6\nEDWARD ROMANO\nyoung business man . . . active\nin orchestral circles . .. interested in sport.\nAs the sun sinks in the West\nYou can be my pal.\nI'll place a crown of orchids on your\nbrow;\nNow the sun shines bright \/or me.\nSoon your face I'll see.\nI'm   thankful  that  I  got  along\nsomehow.\nThen wte'll both forget the past.\nAs we'start life anew,\nWe'll forget who said \"It makes no\ndifference now\";\nAnd in love we'll harmonize,\nLike the blue of Summer skies,\nWe'll thank the Master up above\non high.\nG. M., Procter, requests words to\nthe songs: \"Yellow Rose of Texas\"\nand \"Ragtime Cowboy Joe\". Can\nany Daily News Reader supply\nthese words?\nGREENE RETURNS, LEAVES\nAPPLICATION FOR C.A.S.F.\nVANCOUVER, Aug. J <CP) -\nRichard Green, young English film\nstar returned to Hollywood by plane\ntoday after an apparently unsuccessful trip here to Join the Cans,\ndian armed forces.\nAccording to military spokesmen.\nGreene left an application for a\ncommission with the Seaforth Highlanders here atter being told there\nwere no vacancies at present for\nunqualified officers.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 <CP..-Da-\nfence Minister Raliton announced\nIn the House of Commoni today\nthe ufe arrival In the United\nKingdom of another large contingent of the Canadian Active\nServloe Force.\" He said thli Included part of the 2nd Dlviilon\nunder Major-General Victor Odium, and certain ancillary units.\nThe Minister Interrupted debate\non a Government measure in committee to make the brief announcement which he said he was sure\nwould be gratifying to all members.\nThe House received the announcement with applause.\nBy SAM ROBERT80N\n(Canadian Presi Writer).\nA NORTHERN BRITISH PORT,\nAug. 2 (CP).\u2014The forces guarding\nthis embattled core of Empire were\nstrengthened immeasurably today\nfollowing the safe arrival of a further contingent of the Canadian\nActive Service Force, the largest yet\nto cross the Atlantic.\nThe Canucks came on an armada\not great ocean liners under escort\nof bristling navy guns and the\nfriendly drone of British planes\nwithout having sighted a single\nbomber of the vaunted force Hitler\nboasts is effectively blockading the\nUnited Kingdom.\nGEN. ODLUM\nLEADS TROOPS\nAs he led the contingent ashore,\nGen. Victor Odium, General Officer\nCommanding the Canadian 2nd Di\nvision, Issued this fighting message\nto the press:\n\"We an looking forward eagerly\nto the time when tbe BriUsh people\nwill be ready to resume the offensive on the continent and carry the\nwar into Germany. Until that time\ncomes, we cannot feel that we have\ndone our duty. Germany has asked\nfor it and she will have to take It\"\nThe troops, sun-tannedandbattle,\nworthy after months of training in\nthe Dominion, came from every\nprovince and represented every\nbranch of ground combat duty.\nSeveral hundred Americans\nwere Included In the big contingent and there was the uiual scattering of Canadian \"Redskins\"\nand Negroes. The Americans came\nfrom at far South aa Alabama.\nYoung Donnel Van de Veort cf\nMontgomery In that State, a private In an Ontario Infantry regiment, drawled thli explanation of\nhis enlistment: \"This Is ouah row\nas well ai yoahi and fighting Is\nmah hobby anyway.\"\nMany Americans wore the khaki\nbalmoral of a Scottish battalion recruited in Ontario just across the\nborder from Detroit. One of them,\nPrivate Bob Brown of Wheelwright,\nKy., said most of them had been\nworking in Detroit \"alongside Canadians who were just like brothers\nto us.\"\nAnother was Burling Bing Pondell\nof Los Angeles, who quit the United\nStates Marines after 1% years ot\n\"leatherneckinff\" and hitchhiked to\nVancouver to join another Scottish\noutfit.\nVETERANS INCLUDED\nService ribbons on battle blouses\nmsrked hundreds of men back for\na second crack at the Germani.\nThere was Corporal Francis Bro-\ngan ot Celtic fighting stock from\nWindsor, Out., who worked hla way\nover in cattleboat at the age ot 14\nto fight right through the last war\nwith the Old Country's Seaforths.\nAnother Windsor veteran was\nPipe Major Jack Copeland who had\nhis kilted band skirling 'Donald Is\nAwa tae the War* as the troopships\nploughed Into the harbor. This time\nJock brought his two sons, James\nand Robert, with him \"tae gie the\nHeinies hell.\"\nThree members ofthe Gerouard\nfamily of Ottawa came over to\nround out a four-brother vendetta\nagainst Hitler. Corporal Harry and\nPrivate Jim and Teddy were aboard\nlooking forward to a reunion with\nLeonard, who. arrived with the 1st\nDivision.       '\nIt was a homecoming tor scores\not Englishmen, Irishmen, Scots and\nWelshmen who left their hew homes\nto help defend their old. Among\nthem was Taney Corporal Henry\nHunter, who had been working as\na steeplejack around Toronto for 13\nyears.\nHenry has three brothers In the\nRoyal Navy and another in the\nBritish Army.\nAs the dour grey transports edged\ninto the harbor, passing tugs and\nother craft blew whistles In salute.\nLining tbe rails were troops bared\nto their waists\u2014one of them even\ndonned a bathing suit\u2014taking ad'\nvantage of the warmshlne.\nWhen the liners dropped anchor\na welcoming committee boarded the\nship that carried Can. Odium, and\nmemberi of hts headquarters staff\nand there was a round of Informal\ngreetings lh the Montreal's cabin.\nAlong with ranking army and\nnavy officers ot the area were Rear,\nAdmiral Arthur BrofBely represent\nIng the Dominions office, L. B. Pear-\nson, representing High Commission,\ner Vincent Massey, and a number ot\nofficers ot Canadian military head\nquarters in London.\nThe arrival of the contingent\notherwise was a close military secret and a bare handful of people\ngathered in the streets near the\ndocks to watch the sturdy Canucks\nmarch to trains that carried them\nto their training camps.\nAN EAST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT, Aug. 2 (CP).-Practically\nevery ship Tn the convoy et Canadian troops whose safe arrival in\nthe United Kingdom was announced today had Its.quota of\nnotables ln Uie ranks.\nIn one unit was Pte. David Croil,\nMayor of Windsor, Ont., and onetime member of the Ontario Cabinet. In another was Sgt. Major\nRex Carey of Vancouver, a member of the Canadian boxing team\nln the BriUsh Empire games in\nAustralia and runner up tor the\nEmpire Light-Heavyweight tiUe.\nThen there was Pte. Marcel\nRene de Romanette of Winnipeg\nwho wore 2% rows of decoratons,\nincluding a Rumanian one. He had\nhad three rows but when Italy\nentered the war, he took two Italian ribbons otf.\nSAILED BEFORE\nDUSK ON DULL DAY\nBy E. L. WILLIAMS\nAN  EAOT COAST CANADIAN\nLOOKING BACKWARD ...\nTEN YEAR8 AGO\nFrom Dally News cf August 3, 1930\nA golf course is being planned\nin New Denver.\u2014Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson was inducted as Minister of\nSt. Paul's United Church by Rev.\nC. H. Daly of Rossland\u2014Plans are\nunder way to hold a second Fall\nFair at Creston\u2014Thora Robinson,\nRobert Kidd and Robert Forshaw\nhave been chosen, to represent\nGrand Forks in the stock judging\ncompetition at the Vancouver Fair.\n\u2014Rev. A. C. Pound was inducted as\nMinister of Nakusp United Church.\nTWENTY  FIVE YEARS  AGO\nFrom Daily News of Aug. 3, 1915\nP. R. McDonald ot Rossland is a\ndelegate to the grand lodge convention of the Eeagles at Spokane.\u2014\nIn a shootoff, S. Walley won the\ngold button from R. Swarti In a\nshoot of the Trail Gun Club. Both\nscored 2i out of 25\u2014Installation of\na small concentrator will take the\nplace at the Silver Hoard Mine in\nthe Slocan shortly\u2014The Florence\nMining Company is building a wagon road from the mine to the South\nFork of Woodbury Creek, a distance of a mile.\nFORTY YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally Tribune cf Aug. 3,1900\nGeorge P. Fournier has bought\nthe Central Hotel at Ainsworth from\nRobert Madden and Thomas Garvin.\u2014The connection between the\nNelson lc Fort Sheppard track and\nthe.C. P. R. has been completed.\u2014\nA. B. Buckworth, Ymir mining recorder, was married at Spokane to\nMiss Lily Crow.-rJ. J. Campbell has\nbeen appointed agent tor the Hall\nMines, Ltd., for B. C, his duUes re<\nsembling that of a General Manager\n\u2014J. J. Maione received a telegram\nyesterday that his partner, Al Tra-\nglllus, making a trip around the\nworld since last December, would\nsoon be back.\nPORT, Aug. ) (CP).-The fifth\nmajor continent ot Canadian troops\nto leave this portr-their safe arrival\nin the United Kingdom waa announced today\u2014sailed on great, grey\ntransports just before Uie twilight\nof a dull July day.\nLike those who had gone before,\ntheir departure was witnessed by\nonly a handful of'officials, soldiers\nana longshoremen, but their cheers\ntold an expectant city they were on\ntheir way. They were drawn from\nevery Canadian province.\nThe night before they sailed they\nwere Joined by Maj.-Gen Victor Odium, Commander of the 2nd Division, Canadian Active Service Force,\nand his staff. With him was Defence Minister Ralston, who flew\nfrom Ottawa for the embarkation\nand visited each ship. Gen. Odium\nsailed with the troops while Col.\nRalston returned to his desk pt\nOttawa.\nMIN SHOWED\n8PLENDID SPIRIT\n\"The men are In splendid spirits,\"\nhe said after coming ashore. Tm\nvery much impressed by them and\nthe accommodation for. all ranks\nand Uie way Uie commanding off!\ncefs have their men's welfare at\nheart.\"\nArmed guards patrolled every\npier entrance, the roads and the\npier sheds. Only longshoremen\nworking the vessels in the area, railway or steamship officials and others with definite business were allowed In. Only one newspaperman\nhad a pass.\nREINFORCEMENTS\nFOR 1ST DIVISION\nSome units that embarked were\ntrom the 2nd Divisions but the majority were reinforcements and details for the 1st Division. On one\nship were several companies of Im\nperials returning to England after\nescorting German prisoners and In\nternees to Canada.\nFor dayi. troop train after troop\ntrain arrived at the pier sheds, and\ndischarged Its complement of happy-go-lucky soldiers who marched\naboard ship with little loas ot time.\nThe chalked comment on the railway cars themselves indicated the\nmen's spirits. They ran all the way\nfrom \"On to Berlin\" and \"Hell Hitler\u2014Hell,\" to 'Thert'll Always Be\nan England\" and even verses from\n\"O! Canada.\"\nIt was more than a week from\nthe arrival of the first train until\ntugs pulled the first liner away\nfrom its berth. During that Ume the\nmen were taken on route marches\naround the city and turned out for\nsquad drill in the sheds during the\nday. At _i_ht, their singsongs rolled\nout over Uie Southern end of the\ncity.\nCHEERING\nTREMENDOUS\nWhen their hour of departure\ncame, they made it probably more\ntumultous than any of the other\nsailings. They cheered the big battleship that pujled way from, the\ndock to lead the convoy.\nThey cheered each liner as she\npulled out ..into Uie stream and\ncheered the handful of privileged\nspectators on the pierside. In between they sang\u2014\"Roll Out the Barrel,\" 'There'll Always Be an England,\" \"O Canada\" \"Tipperary.\" The\nvolume was tremendous.\nThe men were sUll singing when\nthe ships were far down the harbor. Some had climbed up into the\nrigging and the crow's nest. One\ngroup even lined the top of a funnel\nalthough no one knew how they\ngot there.\nU. S. Senate Rejects\nLimit Compuliory\nService to 900,000\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (AP) -\nShorUy after President Roosevelt\ndeclared that a system of selective\ntraining was \"essential to adequate\nnational defence,\" the United States\nSenate Military Committee rejected\ntoday a proposal to limit compulsory service at this Ume to 900,000\nmen.\nThis acUon and rejecUon of an\namendment by Lee for a 90-day\nperiod of voluntary enlistments\nseemed to have cleared the way\nfor a final committee vote on thc\nlegislation next Monday.\nMr. Roosevelt's views on the\nquestion of compulsory training\nwere expressed at a press conference at which he said:\n\"I am distinctly in favor of selective service training bill and I\nconsider It essential to adequate\nnaUonal defence.\"\nCONTRACT\nA9 8-.\n\u00ab\u00ab32\n\u2666 73\n(.K875\nA . 10\nf J 10 5\n\u2666 \u25a011082\n+ Q964\nTAKE OUT INSURANCF,\nMaking your contract in rubber\nbridge is ao much more Important\nthan getting an extra trick that\nit win pay you to give up all hope\nfor the latter ln order to Insure\nthe success of the main enterprise.\nPlenty of declarers come to grief\nbecause they seek every trick that\nmight possibly be made, even\nthough doing ao injects t risk\nwhich could be avoided.\/\ne> AQS2\nf AK4\n\u2666 AQ65\n432\n4K76\n+ Q981\n\u2666 K94\n+ AJ10\n{Dealer: North. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nNorth      Ean      South      West\n1 \u2666 Pass      2 NT       Pass\n3*        Pau      3 NT       Pan\n\u00abNT\nWeat's ahort suit lead ot the\nheart t started the declarer on the\nlaziest kind of a plan. He nw at\na glance that It hearts, diamond)\nand spades would all break tor\nhim, he could make a grand slam\nby thtn taking the club A for the\nthirteenth trick.. Reading the\nheart 6 aa probably the top of a\ntpeMeton, he tried that tult first\nand wu happy to aee lt work out\nas he desired.\nNext the spades were attacked.\nBy Shepard Barclay\nbut they didn't break. The contract could still be made, however, lt the diamonds were divided, but they alto proved to be distributed on a four-two basis. Tht\ncontract wu now hopelees, regardless of how tht mining club\nhonon wtrt located, unless Eut\nheld both and would make tha\nfoolish mistake of not playing ont\nof thtm on the small card lead\nfrom dummy. South tried the club\n10 on (he tint round of the suit,\nbut West won with the K and\nthen cashed the setting apade.\nProper safety would have consisted of tint finessing tht club\n10, deliberately giving up a trick\nto the opponents, then trying tht\nthree suits ln succession. Atter\nonly ont of them broke fortunately, the declarer could have finessed\nthe clubs a aecond Ume and would\nthus have madt Ma contract. Tht\nreason would be that the one'\ntrick he loat wu before Wett had\na aet-up fourth-rounder ln apadea.\n\u2022  at\nTour Week-End Lesson\nWith only tht opponents vulnerable, lt your partner makes a\ndealer bid of 4-Spades, tht ntxt\nplayer passing, what would you\nbid with each of tht following\nhandsT\n1. \u2666 A K \u00ab 2. A A K \u00ab\n*A8M f$542\n\u2666KQ7 \u2666AX(\n\u00bbA53 *A..._\n.1 4 A K (, i. 4 g s\nfA74 fAKQJSt\n48542 \u2666AKQ\n*Af>3 4.74\nFRAML1NOHAM, England (CP)\n\u2014Wartime ban on ringing of church\nbells has authorities of this Suffolk\ntown worried as they have always\nbeen used as a fire alarm, and every\nsoy many hours to play the tune\n\"Home\" Swet Home.\"\ntl\nCanadian R.A.F;\nContinue Daring]\nExploits in Aij\nBy D. E. BURR1TT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aut. 2 (CP Cable*\nMembers of Uie all-Canadian squai\nron ot the iloyal Air Force, who\ndaring exploits have cost them\nheavy toll, shot down one Junke\ndiye bomber and seriously damagi\nanother when a fleet of Germ|\naircraft attacked a convoy yestij\nday.\nA Canadian sergeant pilot \u2022\nthe first Junkers spinning into i,\nsea while a blast of machlne-gj\nfire from  one of the  other t\n{Janes sent Uie second Germ!\nimping away Into the clouds.\nAll three Canadians, piloting swj\nHurricanes, returned safely to th(\nbase, It was revealed today by \u2022\nAir Ministry news service bullet]\nThe bulleUn explained how the *\ngeant pilot, whose name was I\ndisclosed, found himself alone w|\na Junkers '88 dive bomber o'\nthe convoy.\nAs the sergeant attacked,\nJunkers dropped its load of bong\ninto Uie sea but even then was'\nable to evade the Canadian '\nlet go his blasts that sent the G\nman hurtling down after the boa\nMeanwhile a running fight 1\ndeveloped in which the other I\nplanes ot the flight had become i\ngaged with the other German cri\nIt was a matter of minutes be.\nthe second German fled to esci\nfurther damage.\nAll three pilots are memberal\nthe squadron originally compel\nentirely of Canadians but whj\nthrough months of heavy action, 1\nlisted at least eight original me]\nbers as missing and at least tl\nkilled in action. At least one r\nbeen awarded the Distinguish\nFlying Cross'.\ntS&OSSSStO&SSSStSSSSSiS&OSSSSSSl\n\"Build B. C. PayroW\nBABE\nTHRIVES\nON\nPACIFIC\nBaby  McLennan  went\nholiday  recently with\nparents and a case of Pact]\nMilk. They took their\nsupply from here just tO'i\nsure against having to g|\nthe  child  any other\neven for a single meal. Cl\ntainly she looks the pefff\nbaby.\nPacific Mill\nIrradiated and Vacuum Ptd\nWHETHER\nIT BE\na humble repair or a hig\nclass installation we are i\na position to serve the moi\ndiscriminating taste.\nConsult ut fint for plumh\ning and heating and furnacj\nwork.\nPhont 666\nKootenay Plumbin\n& Heating Co., Ltd\n367. Baker SL\n, -    y the new low priced\nIRON FIREMAN\nfor\nsmall homes\nOlstrlbutst hy Bal Fsttont S> _\u00ab__u. I__\nk STOKER\nLet as show you\n75 Polnti of Superiority\nLowest fuel cost.:. longest life... heavy-\ngauge steel construction :;; dust tight\nhopper i:. sound proofing:;. high\ngrade motor i i . drop-forged\ngears t ; s cold-drawn steel\nconveyor ;:: self-cleaning\n\"carburetor\" and many\nother features. We\ncan install it in\nin your present furnace.\nH i\u00b0__ **\nCONVENIENT,.\nMONTHLY TERMS\na\nDon't wait longer\nfor automatic heat! Phone ut for full information\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd. |\n357 Btktr St. Phont 666\n.  \u25a0-  i    .*\u2022 '  ,\n____________________________\n \"* '\t\nL-W'\nPORTS\nfive Tiger Pitchers Suffer Barrage\nby Red Sox; Bees Break Loss Streak\nBy The Canadian Prtu\nBoiton'i battering Rad Sox\n\u2022formed five Tiger pitchen,\namong them Buck Newiom, for a\n12-g victory In a free-for-all slugging match today but Detroit\ncame out of the melee still the\nundisputed leader in the American League.\nThanlta to the Yankeei' triumph\never Cleveland Indiana, the Tigers'\nretained their one-game lead and\ngot gome consolation for a hard\nthree-hour Job ln trying to stem the\nhavoc from Boiton bats.\nI Old Bobo, beaten  by the Athletics lut Sunday when trying for\nihis Uth straight victory, departed\nIn the fifth  today, the lut shot\nagainst   him   being   a   homer   by\nwlmmy Foxx, his 23rd of the yesr.\n_ New York Yankees had one of\n(their good days and crushed Cleve-\nnand Indians 10-2 behind the six-\nlit hurling of Lefty Marlus Russo.\nChicago White Sox combined a\nIB-hit attack with Southpaw Thorn-\non Lee's two-hit pitching to win a\nwt victory over Washington Sen-\nitora.\nBEES WIN TWO\nThe lowly Boston Bees snapped\nB nine-game losing streak to take a\noubleheader from the pace-mak-\nng Cincinnati Reds, crushing the\nNational League leaders 10-3 in the\nInst game behind six-hit pitching\n>y Nick Sprincevich and taking the\nnightcap 4-3 ln 12 Innings.\nChet    Ross,    outstanding    Bee\nrookie, lsced Joe Beggs' 3-2 pitch\ninto left field to score Johnny\nCooney with the winning run ln\nthe 12th Inning of the nightcap.\nClaude Passeau stepped to the\nmound In the ninth inning and saved Chicago Cubs a 4-3 triumph over\nBrooklyn Dodgen.\nLarry French got credit for his\n11th victory, but he gave singles\nto two of the firit three batters he\nfaced in the ninth and Passeau\nwu summoned.\nNew York Gianti interrupted St.\nLouis Cardinals' victory parade by\ntaking the first game of a double-\nheader 5-4 but couldn't connect\ntwice in a row and lost the nightcap 3-1.\nAll of the New York scoring in\nthe opener came on two home runs\nby Babe Young and one by Mel\nOtt.\nIn the second game Carl Doyle,\nwhom Brooklyn Dodgers sent to\nthe Cards in the deal for Joe Medwick and Curt Davis, achieved his\nfirst National League victory of the\nyear by holding the Giants to seven scattered hits.\nThere was one night game in each\ndivision. St. Louis Browns, fighting to retain seventh place and\nstay out of the American League\ncellar, smacked Philadelphia Athletics 5-0 for their fint shutout of\nthe year. \u2022\nIn the National League encounter\nPittsburgh Pirates were held to four\nhits In nine Innings, but in Ihe 10th\nbunched four hits for four runs to\nbeat the Phillies 5-2.\nNelion and Trail Girls Start Annual\nSoftball War Sunday With Two Games\nNelson girU will open their de-\nence campaign ot the Daily Prov-\nnee Trophy, emblematic ef the West\nB ootenay women's softbail cham-\nonahlp, at the Recreation Grounds\niunday afternoon when they play\ni doubleheader with the Trail chal-\nengcrs, 1938 titlists.\nfte Nelson club had a tough time\nsuing iti training program under\nray for a number of reasons. And\nIhit week they lost their Coach,\nfony Arcure, who only recently\nlaw hli way clear to handle them.\n_rcure ii in the hoipital, but he\nnay be out for the doubleheader ln\nftieil the following Sunday.\nMeanwhile, the masterminding is\n>eing shared by Anthony Scanlan,\nJeorge McCulIoch and Bob Pater-\nm, Tiie tean; had four workouts\nuring the put week, climaxed by\nn  exterisive batting,  Infield  and\nUtfield drill, Friday evening. The\n|tarting lineup for Sunday's games\nis yet to be announced, but the\naches will have 13 playen to\ni from.\nTHREE HURLERS\nThe ace of the pitching staff.\n\"azel Splen, Is all set to go after\nurling the Rookiee to the Cily\nUe without losing a game all sea-\nIon. And giving her strong support\n\" thii department will be Millie\nHorrigan and Roia Stewart, of the\nCatholici. For the moit part though,\nRosa will play first bue.\nDeanie Wallace or Mary MacDougall will perform at second, with\nVera Matheson at short and Isabel\nDonovan at third rounding out the\ninfield. Georgie Eberley has drawn\ndown the first-string catching assignment and she has Josie Elliot\nto fall back on. Outfielders will be\nchosen from Louise Coletti, Lil\nHickey, Agnes Stewart, Martha\nRogers and Phyllis Wallace.\nThe first game will start at 1 p.m.,\nand the second will get under way\nat 4:30.\nThe Trail players, minus a battery of Cora Miller and Mabel Ford\nthrough injury and sickness, will\nbe chosen from Pat Bush, Lily\nOasey, Evelyn Davies, Margaret\nSmith, Helen Rothery. Sadie Jones,\nMary Cronle, Hazel Weir. Hazel\nBenoit Anne' Gavrilik, Nellie Minton, Isabel Morris, Frances Zuk,\nEva Yonker, Dixie Edwards and\nJeanette LePage. There are a large\nnumber c_ new faces on the Trail\naggregation this season but among\nthe holdover* will be a battery consisting of Helen (Maudsley) Rothery, and Pat Bush. They are coached\nby Jimmy Burrows.\nMax DesBrisay will be the Nelson\numpire.\nCatholics Make Three Hits Count to\nBeal Hume W in 1st Playoff Game\n_.Y.O. Plays Dazzling\nSoftball in the\nField\nBacking up Lei Trainor'a tight\nhurling  with   a  brilliant  defence,\np. Y. O. once again exercised their\n|lnx over Hume Hotel to take the\n; game ot a beit of three seminal series ln Nelson men's softbail\nblayoffs 4-2 in a game which required only 5! minutes to play. The\ncond game will be played Monday.\n\u25a0 The Catholics, who punched out\nIctorles   in   their   two  meetings\nrfth the Humes in the league sched-\nile, reeled otf three pretty double\nayi and were alert ln the field\n' minute of the game.\nTha fielding high-light came In\nthe lixth Inning with Euerby on\n! flnt and Blcknell up and one out\nBlcknell  selected  one of Train-\n, cr'i cholceit offering! and hammered It far out Into centre field,\nbut Jimmy Ecclu, trotting back,\npicked It off over hli lett ihoul-\nj der   for   a   unutlonal   -catch.\nI Euerby, thinking It wu gone for\ni \u2022 homer, wn half way to third,\nI and wai easy to double off first\n| when   Baland   relayed  the   out-\n, fielder's throw to Locatelll.\n, Y. O. IS OUTHIT\nJ The Hotelmen outhit the Cath-\nlllcs 7-3, but they couldn't make\npern count, while the winners didn't\nate any one of the meagre three\nley got  off  Len  Bicknell.  The\natholics got a run in the first in-\n^as without the aid of a single hit\nlut   lt  was   earned.  Pete   Kuntz,\nEadoff man, walked, then stole sec-\nKid when Eugene Maglio, next up,\nTailed to get hold of a ball he in-\npnded to bunt. Kuntz went around\ni third when Maglio grounded out\ni aecond bue, and then scored on\nother Infield out when Locatelli\nammed a hot one down at Chodor-\n1 It flnt\n|The   score   wu  evened   in   the\nurth when Bicknell got on on a\npratch safety and then went around\nthird  when  Phil   Kuntz   took\n.vt via the same route. Kuntz stole\nBond   with   Seaby   up,   but   al-\nlough Jess hit Into a double play,\n[run wu scored. Armando Maglio\nok Seaby'i fly in left field, but\nI throw to the plite failed to nip\nlicknell,    although    Kuntz    was\nlibsequently thrown but going into\nitrd.\nlOOT GAME AWAY\n|Two unearned rum in the lut\nthe fourth broke up the ball\ntOTORS REBORED\nand WELDING\nShorty's Repair Shop\n, BAKER ST.      NELSON. B. C\ngame. Locatelli singled into right\nfield, and advanced to second base\nwhen the Hume infiMd muffed a\nchance to make a double play on\nBeland's ground ball. Armando Maglio singled to load the bases, but\nBlcknell appeared to be on his way\nto getting out of the hole when the\nnext two men were retired. However Euerby booted Andy Selinger's\neasy ground ball when the runner,\nBeland, ran in front of him, and\ntwo runs were scored when Ty\nCulley dropped a throw.\nThe Catholics went ahead by\nanother run when Locatelli, who\ngot two of the Catholics' three\nhits, homered on a line into right\nfield in the fifth. The Humes\nthreatened In the eighth when\nCulley doubled into left with\none gone, went to third on an Infield out and scored on a wild\npitch. Euerby and Ross walked\nin succession but Bicknell popped\nout to the infield.\nBickneU struck out six and\nwalked two, compared to Trainor's\nthree strikeouts and three walks.\nHume Hotel also pulled off a twin,\nkilling.\nScore by innings:  ' 1 H!\nHume     000 100 010- 2   7   3\nC. Y. 0  100_10 00x- .3   1\nLineups follow:\nHume \u2014 \"Doc\" Chodorcoff lb, Al\nEuerby ss, Art Ross cf, Len Bicknell p, Phil Kuntz 2b, Jesse Seaby\nIf, Teddy Romano c, Bob Batten rf\nand Ty Culley 3b.\nC. Y. O. \u2014 Pete Kuntz c, Eugene\nMaglio 3b. Carl Locatelli lb, Ernie\nBeland 2b, Armando Maglio If,\nLawrence Selinger ss, Jimmy Eccles\ncf, Andy Selinger rf, Les Trainor p.\nMax DesBrisay and Walter Kitto\numpired.\nDodgers Get Flowers\nFrom Louisville for\nPressnell and Cash\nBROOKLYN, Aug. 2 (AP).\u2014The\nDodgers gave up an unannounced\nsum of cash and the services ot\nPitcher Tot Pressnell today in order to get \"Lefty\" Wesley Flowers\nof Louisville.\nFlowers, 2\" years old, has won 13\ngames and lost five this year for the\nAmerican Association club. He had\na trial with the Chicago Cubs a few\nyean ago.\nBrooklyn retained an option on\nPressnell.\nFearless Peter Wins\nThree-Year-Old Race\nPAWTUCKET. R. I, Aug- 2 -\n(AP).\u2014Dr. L. M. Guilingers Fearless Peter won the National Stake\nIor three-year-old pacers here today.\nHe covered the firsl mile in\n2:09V, the second in 2:06% and the\nthird in 2:06 to score his ninth victory in nine starts this season.\n-NELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-SATURDAY MORNINC. AUO. 3. 1940-\nBy The Associated Preu\nBatting (three leaden ln each\nleague)\nPlayer   Club G Ab R H Pet\nRadcliff, Brns. . 92 SSI S3 130 .370\nMcCosky, Tgrs. . 90 376 81 132 -51\nFinney, R. Sox . 82 366 53 126 .351\nDanning, Gnts. . 87 331 50 111 .335\nMay,   Phils 71 252 34   83 .320\nNicholson, Cubs .. 86 315 54 101 .321\nHome runs:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox\n23.\nNational League-Mize, Cardinals,\n30.\nRuns batted in:\nAmerican League - Greenberg,\nTigen, 93.\nNational League\u2014Mize, Cardinals,\n77.             .\nSports Roundup\n.  By BILL WHITE\n(Anoclated Preu 8porU Wrltir)\nNBW YORK, Aug. 2 (AP) .-Tennis tidbits: Alice Marble stayed out\nof the Eut Hampton tennis tourney\nthis week to work on her lecture\n\"The Will to Win\" with which she'll\nthrill the hinterlands this Winter.\n... For two sets old Sidney Wood\ncan still chase most of the current\ncrop oft the courts.... The experts\nare wondering why Sarah Palfrey's\ntutor changed her forehand, one of\nthe best in the women's division.\n. . . Don McNeil won a lot of friends\nwhen he played two sets with that\nball boy after winning the Chicago\nclay courts title. . . . -\nONE MINUTE INTERVIEW\nTy Cobb: \"Bobby Feller's first\nrate, but he's no Walter Johnson,\nWhy, Johnson won all thoie games\nIn spite of the fact that we all\nknew Just what he was going to\nthrow us before he threw it.\"\nTHEY SAY:\nThat Hal Schumacher of the Giants wu only a fourth stringer\nwhen he attended St. Lawrence U.\n. . . That the Red-Sox are so desp'rjt\nthey're gonna turn Elton Duse, ex-\nProvince Collitch catcher, into a\ntwirler. . . .\nTODAY'8 GUEST STAR\nCharlie Landolf, New Castle (Pa.)\nNews: \"It was only natural for the\nDodgers to bring up Ed Head from\nElmira. The twirler started out as\na Southpaw pitcher, suffered a\nbroken arm,and converted himself\ninto a light hander.\"\nHERE 'N' THERE:\nOnly two pitchers, Walter Johnson and Lefty Grove, have ever won\nthe American League's most valuable player award. . . . Wanta bet\nthe third won't be Bottoy Feller this\nFall? , . .\nWhen the Waner Brothers were\nthe \"faculty\" at the world's fair\nbaseball school the other day. the\nstar pupil was a fellow called Bucky\nWalters, a reformed third baseman,\nHe \"snuk\" in and sat In the audience, and when apprehended aflcr-\nwards said modestly \"I'd a lot rather\nlisten to the' Waner Brothers than\npitch against 'em.\"\nFrank Boucher and\nOther Hockeyists\nEnlist at Ottawa\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP).\u2014Frank\nBoucher, Coach of the National\nHockey League's Champion New\nYork Rangers, and four professional\nhockey playen have joined the 4th\nPrincess Louise Dragoon Guards,\nNon-Permanent Active Militia.\nThe four professional players are:\nDes Smith, Chicago Black. Hawks;\nFrank Boucher, son of George\nBoucher and a member of the New\nYork Rangers system; Gordie Bruce,\nHershey Bears, and Sandy Ross,\nIndianapolis Capitols.\nThe hockey players will report for\ntraining two nights each week until they go to camp with their unit\nAugust 13.\nSalmo-Nelson Junior\nBaseball Game Off\nThe bueball game \"Slim\" Porter,\nManager of the Nelson Juniors,\nhoped would come off at the Recreation Grounds this evening between Nelson and the Salmo Juniors\nwill not materialize. The Salmo\nteam had already arranged to go\nto Kaslo on the following day and\ntwo trips out of town in u many\ndays will be too much.\nHowever, the Salmo boys will be\nhere to play a game they owe Nelson later on, perhaps next Saturday.\n350 Lawn Bowlfers in\nVictoria Tournament\nVICTORIA, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Three\nhundred and fifty lawn bowlers,\nthe majority Victorians, but a good\npercentage coming from the United\nStates, interior and coutal parts of\nBritish Columbia and up island\nlocalities, will be on hand for Victoria's 13th annual holiday tournament next week.\nSan Diego, Tacoma and Portland\nrinks have entered, while Britiah\nColumbia rinks are entered from\nall the Vancouver clubs, and from\nKamloops,. Powell River, New Westminster, Courtenay and other Island\ncentres.\nHerbert Anscomb, Hononry President of the,Greater Victoria Lawn\nBowling Association, under whose\nauspices the tournament will be\nheld, will officially open the classic\nMonday mornin.g The meet will\ncontinue through to Saturday.\nScrap Purchases\nUntouched by New\nLicensing System\nWASHINGTON. Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nGovernment experts disclosed today\nthat 75 to 80 per cent of Japan's\nscrap metal purchases in the United\nStates were'untouched by the new\nexport licencing system.\nExisting -regulations apply only\nto No. 1. heavy melting iteel and\nIron scrap. Experts estimate thii\nclassification .accounts for only 20\nto 25 per cent of Japan's scrap metal\npurchases over a long period;  .\nOne phai,e of the new licencing\nsystem\u2014covering aviation gas\u2014is\nknown to have affected the Japanese. President Roosevelt clamped\nan embargo earlier \"this V\/Sek im\nshipments of aviation gas to pointi\noutside the Western Hemisphere.\nNelson, Cards lo\nPlay Last League\nBall Trail Sunday\nThe lilt gam* of the Weit Kootenay Baieball League ichedule will\nbe played at Butler Park ln TraU\nat 4:30 Sunday afternoon when the\nNel*on Senion claih with the Cardinal in a game that will decide\nlecond place. The Cards are in that\nfavored position right how by a\ngame, but a Nelson victory will put\nthe teams ln a tie.\nThe aeml-finals will open in Trail\nAugust 11 between the same two\nteama, and the second game will be\nplayed in Nelaon the following Sunday. Should a third game be needed,\na toss of a coin will decide where\nIt will be played.\nNelion have taken the Cards into\ncamp twice in three attempti this\nseason, but their winless record\nagainst the league-leading Indians\nhas ahoved them down to where\nthey are.\nNelson, new policeman-nltchrr.\nJack Carpenter, will go to the hlU\nand the Nelson management expects hli fast ones will befuddle the\nyoung Cards no end. Veteran Cliff\nBogstie will likely do the hurling\nfor the Trailites.\nTh4 Nelion lineup will be chosen\nfrom Gordon ' Richardson, Carpenter, \"Lefty\" Mydaniky, Coach Ray\nHumble, Al Euerby, Carl Locatelli,\nTommy Mclnnes, Jesse Seabv. Ernie\n? eland,   \"Doc\"   Chodorcoff,   Jack\nlsher, Steve Smith, Art Rosa and\nSteve Scott'        ' j\nCampbell and Hanen\nin Final Washington\nAmateur Golf Today\nTACOMA, Aug. 2 (AP)\u2014A tour-\nnament veteran and- a 19-year-old\nUnivenity of Oregon freshman\nmaking his first bid In major competition stroked their way to double\nvictories today to enter the finals\nof the Washington State amateur\ngolf championihip.\nAlbert (Scotty) Campbell of Seattle; defending champion and a\nseasoned golfer whole career includes Walker Cup competition, will\n(ace Dick Hanen, Mmhfleld, Ore.,\nyoungster who's been the glamor\nboy of the four-day tournament, in\nthe 36-hcle title mitch at Fircres*\ntomorrow.\nCampbell, Improving steadily\nsince he qualified with a 75 Wednesday, shot a two-under-par 69\nthis afternoon to dispose of his\nsemi-final opponent, Bob van de\nMark of Tacoma, 4 and 3.\nHanen, who was tournament\nmedalist with a 69, shot a 73 as he\neliminated Ralph Whaley of Seattle,\n4 and 2.\nNeither Hanen nor Campbell had\ndifficulty disposing of quarter-final\nopponents this morning.\nAndy Blair, Once\nLeafs' Hockey Star,\nIs Now a Salesman\nTRAIL, B.C, Aug. 2-Andy Blair,\nmember of the Toronto Maple Leafs\nHockey team for eight years up to\nfour years ago, left Trail Friday\nafter a short stay in the City on\nbusiness. He is travelling for a\nToronto firm.\nBlair played cenlre and defence\nand in '1928-29 campaign finished\nthird in the National League scoring derby.\nWhen the Leafs performed in\nTrail with the Detroit Red Wings\nsix years ago, Blair was with the\nClub.\nRossland Trail\nBoxla Bantams\nPlay 7-7 DraW\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug, 2-The\nRossland and Trill bantam lacrosse\nteams ended a four period bout ol\nromping boxla witb a 7-all tie at the\nRossland rink Wednesday night.\nThe game was played before the\nsenior fixture between the Nelson\nMaple Leafs and the Rossland Red-\nmen, and the last three periods were\nstaged between those of the seniors.\nThe lineupi follow:\nTrail\u2014Tom Pattenon, John Allen,\nBob Keohele, S. Sammartino, Irvin Robertson, Campbell Aitken and\nEddie Conroy.\nRossland\u2014Archie Scott, Babe La-\nFace, Willie Scott, Buddy Dupperon,\nTom Ham, Pat Martin, Bruce Ham,\nJerry Monoghan, Arthur Martin.\nThe Rossland bantams are staging an exhibition with the Nelson\nteam, between periods of the senior\nboxla fixture at the Lake City on\nMonday night\nPar Punished in\nMilwaukee Golf\nMILWAUKEE, Wil., Aug. 2 (AP).\n\u2014Par took a bad'beating today in\nthe opening round of the first $5000\nMilwaukee open golf championship.\nNo. 1 star in the first aet of the\n72-hole show was 30-year-o)d Frank\nMoore of Detroit. He toured the\nrolling North Hills Coune in 65, six\nunder par. Right behind him were\nEd Oliver of Hornell, N. Y., and\nthe Johnny Bulla of Chicago, with\n66.\nFour players were ln the 68\nbracket. They were Charles Kocsls\not Detroit Ralph Guldihl of Chicago, twice winner of the national\nopen crown, \u2014 J, Harriion of Little\nRock, Ark., and'AI Favelll of Litchfield, nr.\nFive Nelsonites\nHave Busy Sunday-\nFacing Them, Ball\nIt's going to be a busy day Sunday for five Nelson ball-tosscrs.\nFor five of the Nelson men's rep\ntoftball team, which continues intercity warfare at Salmo Sunday, are\nilso memben of the Nelson Seniors\nwho have an importan*. baseball engagement at Trail with the Cardinals. They are Al Euerby, Jack\nFisher, Art Ross, Jesse Seaby and\nErnie Beland, and \"Lefty\" Mydansky, another baseballer, ll going\nalong as a rooter.\nThe Salmo and Nelion softbail\nteams are billed to play at 11 a.m.,\nand it Salmo wins a third and\ndeciding game will start at 1:15 pjn.\nThen they are scheduled to perform\nin Trail at 4:30 p.m. The Nelion\nsoftball-baseball playen, travelling\nIn Euerby'i car, will head for Trail\nimmediately after the Salmo games,\nvia Fruitvale\nJohnion, Wilson, _,*.\u00ab.\u00bb ...\nFoxx, Newsom, Seats, Trout, SmlSi,\nMcKaln and Tebbetts.\nNew York 10 13  4\nCleveland _t,    2  6   8\nRusso and Rour: Mllnar Dobson,\nAndrews, Humphries and Hemsley,\nPytlak..\nWaihington    2  2  3\nChicago    10 16   1\nHudion, Carrasquel, Krakauskas\nand Ferrell; Lee and Tresh.\nPhiladelphia      0   8   1\nSt. Louli     5   4   0\nBabich, Heusser and Hayes; Harris\nand Swift\nNATIONAL\nFIRST\nCincinnati   .\".    3  6  1\nBoston   10 13   2\nTurner,  Shoffner,   and  Baker;\nStrincevich and Berres.\nSECOND \u25a0\nCincinnati    3   7.0\nBoston     4 11   2\nMoore, Beggs, and Hershberger;\nSalvo and Musi, Berres.\nChicago    4 10 1\nBrooklyn    3   9   1\nFrench, Passeau and Todd; Tamuiis, Pressnell, Carleton and Mancuso, Philps.\nFIRST\nSt Louis    4 10   0\nNew York    5   9   0\nCooper, Russell and Owen; Pad-\nJett;  Melton, W.    Brown,    Lynn,\noiner and Danning.\nSECOND\nSL Louis     3   9   1\nNew York    1   7   1\nDoyle and Padgett; Gumbert and\nDanning.\nPittsburgh    Z    5   8   2\nPhiladelphia       2 12   1\nBowman, MscFayden, Klinger, Lopez; Blanton, Si Johnson, Smoll and\nAtwood.\nINTERNATIONAL\nFint game:\nNewark '5 12   2\nBuffalo     6  8   1\nWashburn and Fadden; Trexler\nand McCullough.\nBaltimore       2  9   0\nToronto      3   6   2\nStromme and Kracher; Fischer and\nHeath.\nSyracuse     2  9  0\nMontreal     3   6   1\nDleti and Hartje; Wicker and\nBecker.\nJersey City     2   8   5\nRochester     3 15   2\nPearce and Blaemirc; Brumbeloe\nand Mueller,\nSECOND, Night Game-\nNewark     8 12   0\nBuffalo    3   5   4\nPeek. Frahkhousc, Gette and\nWarren; Giebbell, Jacobs and McCullough. ,\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nFirst game:\nToledo 4. Louisville 3.\nSt. Paul 7. Minneapolis 3.\nColumbus 5, Indianapolis 3.\nMilwaukee 2, Kansas City 8.\nSECOND GAME\nToledo 1, Louisville 2.\nSale of Yearlings\nat Saratoga Is On\nSARATOGA, SPRINGS, t\\. Y\u201e\nAug. 2 (AP)\u2014America's leading\nyearling thoroughbred horse market\nopened tonight and five dollars still\nwill get you five more if you can\npick any horse that will win one\nrace next year.\nColonel Edward R. Bradley,\nderby-winning owner of Bimelech.\nmakes that proposition each year\nat Saratoga's yearling sales. You\nget your choice of any horse sold\nduring the sales' three weeks stand.\nYou collect if the horse wins any\nrace between Jan. 1, 1941, and New\nYear's Day. 1942.\nMostly, though, you lose. The good\ncolonel knows the purchase of thoroughbred racehorses is the biggest\ngamble in sports; imagine a base-\nhall magnate buying a player when\nhe's still in the cradle!      *\nIn the past, cheap Saratoga yearlings like Cavalcade at $1200 and\nMan O' War at $5000 have earned\nfame and fortune on the turf. Others, like Broadway Limited at $65,-\n000 couldn't win a race.\nThis year, Saratoga offers 675\nhigh-grade young hones.\nB. C. Swim Gala\nSoon at Kelowna\nVICTORIA, Aug. 2 (CP)-A team\nof nine Y.M.C.A. swimmers will\nleave here Sunday to take part ln\nthe annual British Columbia championship gala at Kelowna next\nWednesday and Thunday.\nArchie 'McKinnon, Physical Director and swimming-coach of the\nlocal Association will be In charge\nof the team which will consist of\nLen Stark, Gordon Lawrence, Bob\nJohnstone, Hugh Reston, Stan Peden, lorence Byatt, Aileen Stark,\nJoan Morgan and Jackie Morgan.\nLawrence will defend the Wrlgley mileley mile senior championship contest and Johnstone will attempt to repeat his winning performance of last year in the Wrigley\nhalf mile junior swim.\nCanoe Regatta at\nMontreal Saturday\nMONTREAL Aug. 2 (CP) -\nBladcsmen from as far West as\nWinnipeg are converging here today in preparation for the annual\nCanadian Canoe Association regatta\nSaturday at St. Johns, about twenty-five miles from Montreal.\nStrong threats for the aggregate\ncrown won by Toronto Parkdales\nlast year are teams entered by Ottawa New Edinburghs, Montreal\nand Gran Trunk and Lachine, Que.,\nParkdales will defend their crown\nwith a strong squad while Winnipeg has sent a two-man entry.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Preu\nRemerabei. when\u2014\nVince Dundee, world's middleweight boxing championship in 1933,\nretired from the game two years\nago todey. He held the title\u2014won\nfrom Lou Brouillard\u2014until Teddy\nYaroi toppled him in Sept. 1934.\n$1500 Daily Double\nPaid Eight Bettors\nSALEM, NX, Aug. 2 (AP)-A\n$1617.80 daily double \u2014 largest of\nthe New England hone racing seaion\u2014was paid to nine $2 ticket holden ai Rockingham Park today on\nAthanaslan, winner ln the first race,\nand Mon Time, winner of the second.\nAlhanasisn paid $36:20 to win and\nMon Time $17.86.\nNelson, Salmo lo\nFinish Softball\nSorlos on Sunday\nLen Blcknell will be assigned to\npitching duties when the Nelson\nMen's rep softbail team and Salmo\nValley All-Stars resume their West\nKootemy semi-final series Sunday\nmorning at Salmo, Coach Louis Aurelio said Friday.\nBickneU was to have started the\nseries-opening game Wcdncday In\nNelson, but in a last-minute change,\nAurelio1 sent Art Ross to the hilt\nRoss came through nobly in his\ntint pitching of the season, striking out 17 batten and. setting hii\nopponents down with a scant three\nhlti, two of them of the scratchy\nvariety.\nIf Salmo doei pull out a victory\nto square the series, a deciding\ngame will be played immediately\nafter 1:15 p.m. The first game gets\nunder way at 11 a.m. If the third\nSame ls necessary, Jack Fisher will\no the hurling, hut at any rate he\nwill be used in centre field in the\nfirst Sunday game.\nThe Nelson lineup follows: Pete\nKunti c, Bicknell p, Al Euerby lb,\nErnie Beland 2b, Sid Ball ss, Denis\nBall 3b, Art Ross If, Jack Fisher\ncf and Jesse Seaby rf. Spares will\nbe BUI Kapak. Jimmy Eccles and\nJim Cherrington.\nThe Salmo hurling will be shared\nby Earl Rickard and Hal Bergstrom,\nboth of whom saw service ln the\nfirst game of the series and Ernie\nOliver. The rest 6f the lineup will\nbe chosen from Johnny Waloshyn,\nCoach Elmer Gibbons, Skinny Anderson, Rusty Gibbon, Frank Postlethwaite, Tommy Matheson. Dick\nHambly, Johnny Bohan, J. Fairhurst,\nJimmy Allan and Eddie Hearn.\nFour Toronto Pros\nBattle in Eastern\nCanada Golf Final\nTORONTO, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Four\nToronto professionals today gained\nthe semi-finals of the Millar Trophy\ncompetition, emblematic of the\nEastern Canada professional match\nplay championship.\nGordon Brydson of Milslssaugi,\n1937 titlist, moved into the semifinal with a 5 and 4 victory over\nWillie Lamb ot Toronto Lambton.\nBob Gray of Scarboro defeated Ben\nNorris of Toronto Fairmont 6 and 4\nto complete the upper bracket\nBill Kerr of the Hunt Club disposed of Windsor's Bobby Reit.,\nformerly of Winnipeg, 4 and 3, winning the right to meet Lou dimming of Toronto in the other semifinal. Cumming won two from Lloyd\nTucker of Kitchener.\nBlue Devil Goalie\nGoes to Montreal\nKIRKLAND. LAKE, Ont, Aug. 2\n(CP).\u2014Bill Durnan. goalie for 'he\nLake Shore Blue Devils, 1940 Canadian senior hockey champions,\nleaves here tomorrow to join the\nMontreal Royals of the Quebec\nSenior League. He is the third member of thc disbanded Blue Devils to\nleave here.\nCoach Lex Cook and Centreman\nJoe Brown have gone to Edmonton\nand Kimberley respectively to play\nnext season.\nAMERICAN\n.Oftrolt\t\nCleveland -\nBoiton \u2014\nChicago ..._\nNew York -\nWuhlngton .\nSt Louli \u2014\nPhiladelphia\nW\n..-68\n-87\n-83\n...48\n...49\n....42\n-.41\n,..38\nCincinnati\nBrooklyn \t\nNew York _\nChicago  \t\nSt. Louii\t\nPittsburgh ...\nPhiladelphia\nBoston  \t\nNATIONAL\nL Pet\n99 .398\n40 .588\n43 .552\n44 .522\n45 .521\n56 .429\n57 .418\n58 .396\n30 .874\n38 .548\n41 .544\n49 .505\n46 .495\n48 .473\n57 .360\n86 .344\nKovacs Defeats\nRiggs on 7lh Try\nSOUTHAMPTON, N.Y., Aug. 2\n(AP) \u2014 Frank Kovacs, Oakland,\nCal., slugger trying for three years\nto beat Bobby Riggs, finally turned\nthe trick today. After seven straight\nunsuccessful efforts, the last at\nSea Bright, NJ., last week when\nhe held rhatch point four. times,\nKovac. beat the national tennis\nchampion, 8-4, 7-9, 64, 8-2 to reach\nthe final of the Meadow Club invitation tournament\nHis opponent tomorrow will be\nDon McNeill of Oklahoma City, the\nUnited States clay courts champion,\nwho beat Elwood Cooke of Portland, Ore,, 6-0, 6-4, 6-1.\nRiggs, playing about as well as\nusual, suffered from the changing\nwind that affected his \"soft\" game\nmuch more than lt did Kovacs'\nheavy-handed strokes.\nTed schroeder of Glendale, Cal.\nand Jack Kramer of Loi Angeles\nadvanced to the doubles final with\na 6-4, 9-7, 4-8, 6-3' triumph over\nBitsy Grant of Atlanta and Hal\nSurface of Kansas City. Eddie Alloo\nof Berkeley, Cal., and Larry Dee ol\nSan Francisco beat Charles Matt-\nmann of New York and Bob Har-\nman of Berkeley. 5-7, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2\nin the other semi-final.\nALICE MARBLE HAS\nNO IDEA RETIRING\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2 (AP),\u2014Any\nyoung lady who hopes to be United\nStates tennis champion would better not count on lt too heavily before  1945.\nFor Alice Marble, who hain't lost\na match since she was beaten in\nWimbledon in 1938, hasn't any\nthought of abdicating, doesn't feel\nany remorse about wittering her\nopponents senseless and thinks her\ngame, If anything, is getting better.\nResting here Detween her last\ntriumph at Sea Bright N. J., and\nher expected one at the Eastern\ngrass courts opening tomorrow at\nRye, the pretty queen of the world\ntennis courts has some interesting\nslants on how lt feels to be so\n\"durn\" good.\n\"No, I don't get tired of winning\nall the time,\" she said. \"That's why\nI've spent so many years in hard\npractice\u2014so I can win. I love it\nAnd though I've beaten everybody\nand am pretty sure my game Is\ngetting better, I Itill get tremendously excited over each match.\nIt's a lot harder staying up on the\npinacle than It ever was getting\nthere.\"\nPAGE  SEVEN\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nTba Homt of Fumttun Valuei\nEagle Blk.      Nelion      Phone 115\nAUGUST SALE\nTiki Advantage of Our\nReduced Pricei\n-\nBrake Memorial\nLawn Bowling to\nStart Next Week\nEleven rinks have been drawn in\nthe E.Y. Brake Memorial Trophy\ndoubles' competition of the Nelson\nC.P.R.  Lawn   Bowling  Club,  and ,\nplay will get under way Monday.\nEach match will consist of 10 ends,,\nand a victory will count for two\npoints and a draw for one point\nThe teams are J. P. Morgan and\nA. T. Richards, J. S. Goulding and\nCharlei Sewell; A. G. Harvey and\nJ. W. Graham, H. H. Sutherland\nand J. F. Coates, N. B. Bradley and\nW. M. Wood, W. T. Calbick and T.\nA. Temple, Albert Smith and Mn.\nA. ,T. Richards, Jack Draper and\nJ. Simons, E. W. Penwill and Mn.\nJ. T. Sindel, E. L. Wright and Mn.\nBen Whiteside, F. Geder and C. I.\nArchibald.\nThe schedule for next week'i play\nfollows:\nMONDAY\u2014Morgan and Richardi\nvs Gouldln\" and Sewell, Harvey and\nGraham vs Sutherland and Coatei.\nTUESDAY\u2014Bradley and Wood v\u00ab\nSmith and Mn. Richards, Draper\nand Simons vs Penwill and Mri.\nSindel.\nWEDNESDAY-Calblck and Mri.\nTemple vs Wright and Mrs. Whiteside, Geder and Archibald vi Morgan and Richards.\nTHURSDAY\u2014Goulding and Sewell vs Sutherland and Coates, Harvey and Graham vs Bradley and\nWood.\nDorothy Round Little\nArrives Nova Scotia\nBRIDGE.. ATER, N. S-, Aug. J\u2014\n(CF).-Mrs. Dorothy Round Little,\nnoted British tennis itar who twice\nwon the women's single* title at\nWimbledon, arrived here today\nwith her two-year-old son, Ean \"tot,\nthe duration.\"\nThe wife of Dr. Doug Little arrived in Canada recently with her\nson and will reside with friend-\nhere. Although she hopes to keep\nup her game, she does not know aa\nyet whether she will participate in\nany of the tournaments during the\nSummer.\n54th Highland Games\nat   Vancouver Today\nVANCOUVER, Aug, 1 (CP) \u2014 (\nScotsmen from all parli of British\nColumbia will gather at Hasting!\nPark tomorrow for the Mth consecutive annual celebration of Vancouver's historic Caledonian Games.\nSAVE MONEY ON TIRES!\n\u00ab\natom*\u00ae **\"m.\nBUY THE NIW..\nMARATHON\nTAKE MANY WEEKS TO PAY!\n\u2022 Marathon's the buy! A big\nvalue Goodyear with the famous\ndiamond non-skid tread at an\nextremely low price. Marathon Is\nbuilt to give you long, safe,\ntrouble-free mileage at low cost\n. . . and you can buy this great\ntire here on easy terms. Use\nyour credit for tires today! No\nembarrassment, no red tape, no\ndelay . . . It's easy to buy tires\nhere!\nDRIVE IN FOR MEW MARATHON'S TODAY!\nTRAPI IN\nYOUR OLD\nTIRES\nNELSON GOODYEAR DEALERS\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n323 Vernon St.\nPHONE 35\nNelson, B. C.\n_\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0____\u25a0\n^^^UtAjt^r^^i.\nItlam.<a-^C-\u2014\n i)JH,iu'\"'\"^^i__n__i\n!\n..\nPAUB  BIGHT mm, \u2014\t\nFormer French\nLeaders to Face\n. Trial August I\nBy JOHN LLOYD\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nVICHY, France, Aug. 2 (AP) \u2014\nMilitary leaders, former Government members and others charged\nwith responsibility tor France's detest, will go on trial at Riom Aug 8\nbefore a supreme court constituted\nby the Petain regime\/\nTiie names of those to face the\ncharges were not disclosed officially\nFormer, Premiers Daladier and\nPaul Reynaud. Gen. Maurice Gamelin and George Mandel, former\nMinister of the Interior, frequently\nhave been attacked in the controlled press in connection with the\nfo-thcomlng trials.\nIn certain cases it is expected the\ncharges of plotting against the state\nw U be brought.\nThe setting of the date for the\nstart of the trials was announced\nby Raphael Allbert, Minister ot\nJustice In the Petain Government.\nIt was announced that the new\ncourt, headed by President Chaours.\ntviil consist of the following:\nVice President Lagarde, who is\nnow Counsellor of the Court of\nCessation (upreme Courti; Admiral\nHerr, Louis-Jacques Tanon, also\nCounsellor of the Court ot Cessation\nat present; General Watteau, Jean\nBenoist and Georges Ripert.\nDE GAULLE\nCONDEMNED TO DEATH\nClermont-Ferrand, France, Aug. 2\n(AP)\u2014Gen. Charles de Gualle.' thc\nFrench officer who heads a provisional French committee in London\nto carry on the fight against Germany, was condemned to death by\na military court which tried him in\nabsentia.\nCharges of treason, attacks on the\nsecurity of the state and desertion\nto a foreign country In time of\nWar were laid before the military\ncourt of the 13th region, presided\nover by On. Frere.\nGen de Gaulle is in London. He\nsprang into prominence when Premier Paul Reynaud dismissed Gen.\nGamelin and reorganized the high\ncommand.\nNazi Prisoner\nSwims U.S. Shore\n. BOSTON, Aug. 2 (API-Walter\nKurt Reich, 23-year-old survivor of\na sunken submarine and first German war prisoner known to have\nescaped to the United States, credits his expert swimming ability and\nknowledge of geography for carrying him to a haven.\nThe slim, blond machinist's mate\nrelated in an interview how he\nwriggled through the porthole of a\nBritish ship taking him to internment in Canada, dropped into the\nSt. Lawrence River and evaded detection for four days and five\nni\"hts. He escaped July 15.\nUnder international law. a prisoner escaping tn a neutral nation becomes free, but the United States\nimmigration authorities regard\nReich as an alien without a passport\nor proper visas. He was placed under supervision of the German consulate in Boston, which posted a\nbond.\nP.eich told how he spent four\nmonths in a prison camp at Manchester, England, before he was\nloaded with other German prisoners on a ship for Canada\nHe could tell by the sun, he said\nthat thc ship' scourse was Westward and he hided his time until\n'wecould see land in the distance.\"\n\"Then, that night when it was\ndark. I wriggled through a porthole,'.he continued.\n\"It was not far to the water, for\nwe were kept always below decks\nas prisoners, yah, that water was\ncold in thc St. Lawrence River.\n\"I think it was about two hours'\nswimming before I reached land.\"\nFor fouc days and five nights, the\nyoung German said, he walked with\nblistered feet with \"nothing to eat\nbut wild strawberries and blackberries.\"\nCurie of Kaslo Sends\nManganese Samples\nDepartment of Mines\nKASLO. B. C\u2014Responding to i\nrequest by the Dominion Department of Mines, A. J. Curie has forwarded about 75 pounds of manganese samples from his properties,\nthe \"Manganese\" at Seven-Mile and\nthe \"Contact\" at Fourteen-Mile,\nJWaim\" Eailtj Jfattta\nTelephone IM\nTraU; Call A. R. Joy\n' Rosaland: Call K. Lowdon\nClassified Advertising Rites\nHo per line par Insertion.\n44c ner line per week (6 consecutive Insertions for cost ot 4)\n$1.43 pei line a month (28 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers He extra. This\ncovers any number ot times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, first Insertion and\n14c each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon-commercial   Situatlona\nWanted  for  25c   fer  any   required number of lines for ilx\ndays, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  _  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week ___      .2S\nBy carrier, per year ._   13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month __. $ .75\nThree months    2.00\nSix months 4.0O\nOne year    8.C0\nAbove rates apply ln Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and In Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months.$4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nSCHOOLS\nNOW IS THE TIME TO GET A\nGovernment Job as Clerk, Postman. Customs Clerk, Steno., etc.\nThree Dominion-wide exams held\nsince war began. Free Booklet,\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest in Canada. No agents.\n45 Per Cent CASF\nVacancies Are\nfor Specialists\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP) - The Na-\ntional Defence Department announced today lhat vacancies in\nthe Canadian Active Service Force\nat present number 5932 of which\n45 per cent are for specialists.\nThe course of active operations\nin the theatre of war will continue\nto determine the need for men and\nactive recruiting will be resumed\nthe moment more men are needed,\nth announcement said. Specialists\nneeded now are signallers, motor\ntruck drivers, tradesmen, and\nothers.\nOnly military districts still In\nneed of substantial numbers of\nvolunteers are M. D. 2 with headquarters at Toronto. M. D. 4 at\nMontreal and M. D. 12 at Regina.\nForming 60 per cent of all the\nvacancies In the C.A.S.F., Toronto\nstill needs 1800 men and Montreal\n1881. In Saskatchewan there is a\nvacancy for 859 men.\nIn the six weeks which saw thc\nretreat of the channel ports of the\nBritish Expeditionary Force, the\nDunkirk evacuation and the collapse of France more than 50,000\nmen enlisted in the C.A.S.F.\nWith tne ranks of the 3rd and 4th\ndivisions practically full, the task\nof training and equipping them for\nwar will proceed with all possible\nspeed, the announcement said. A\nsmall but continuing number of recruits still will be required to reinforce the divisions in the field.\nGermany Embassy in\nArgentine Protests\nSeizure Swastikas\nBUENOS AIRES, Aug, 2 (AP)-\nThe German Embassy questioned\nthe propriety of the Argentine Federal policy investigation into reported Nazi activities in the Northern provinces and was said to have\ndemanded return of swastika flags\nand pictures of Hitler seized from\nGerman sympathizers.\nMrs. Lockard Kaslo\nInstitute Delegate\nKASLO. B. C. \u2014 Mrs. Leona\nLockard has been appointed delegate from the Kaslo and District\nWomen's Institute to the Provincial meet to be held in Vancouver\nIn August.\n?\nNazi Communique Makes Month\nOld Claims in Shipping Losses\nBERLIN. Aug. 2 (API. - Today's\nGerman high command communique;\n\"Lt.-Capt. Wilhelm Roliman. commanding a submarine, sank one enemy U-boat Thus this ship in two\noperations within a short time destroyed 12 armed merchant ships totalling 74.338 tons, the British destroyer Whirlwind and a submarine.\n(This apparently is an old claim,\nsince the loss of the Whirlwind was\nannounced by the British Admiralty\nnearly a month ago.)\n\"A fight developed In the South\nAtlantic between a German auxiliary cruiser and Ihe British Alcantara. The superior and heavily armed enemy ship of 22.209 tons sustained severe hits. One. among others, hit its machines so that it was\nforced lo abandon the fight and seek\nrefuge in Rio de Janeiro harbor. The\nGerman auxiliary cruiser proceeded\non schedule to continue operations.\n(It was the German ship, not '.he\nAlcantara, which broke off the\nfight, escaping under cover of a\nsmoke screen. The Alcantara suffered some damage and went to Rio\nfor repairs.)\n\"German fighting units on Aug. 1\nbombarded a number of smaller\nconvoys ss well as several singly\nsailing armed enemy merchantsh.ps\noff the mount of '.he River Humber,\nin St. George Channel and off Yarmouth. In this action one merchantman was sunk, two additional merchant ships, one tanker and one\nminesweeper severely damaged.\n(The British Ministry of Home\nBecurlty said some houses were\nslightly damaged in German raids\nin the vicinity of Ihe Thames estuary and the Bristol Channel.)\n\"Another especially effective raid\nwas'directed  against an  airplane\nfactory In Norwich. Heavy calibre\nbombs dropped from low altitude hit\nIhe plants, causing big fires and\nseveral explosions.\n(British authorities announced\n\"some damage lo industrial premises\" In this raid by a single German   plane.)\n\"One plane destroyed one enemy\nsubmarine in Norwegian waters on\nJuly 31.\n(This claim was not confirmed\nby the British Admiralty.)\n\"In the course of yesterday afternoon eight British Bristol Blenheim\nbombers attempted a raid on the\nairport at Querville, near Cherbourg\nquick defence by chasers and antiaircraft succeeded in shodtlng down\nall eight planes, three by Messerschmitt pursuit ships and five by\nanti-aircraft. There were no losses\namong our own rraft.\n(The British Air Ministry an\nnounced that three British bombers\nfailed to return from this raid.)\n\"During an attempted raid on\nNetherlands territory, two additional British Blenheim planes were\ndown in an airtight.\n\"During the night of Aug. 1-2\nBritish planes again entered Western Germany. Their bombs caused\nno military damage but caused con\nsiderable damage to houses in Ihe\nvicinity of Cologne, killing and In,\nJuring a number of civilians.\n\"Enemy plane losses Aug. 1 totali.\ned 10. lo one of our own planes\nmissing\"\n(The British Air Ministry has not\nyet reported on last night's raiding\nactivities of the R. A. F. from accounts so far available, to German\nplanes were shot over the British\ncoast yesterday and, in addition to\nthe three bombers lost at Cherbourg.\nan R. A. F. fighter failed to return\nfrom patrol duty.)\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELION. B. C.-SATURDAY MORNINO,  AUQ, S. 1940\u2014\nSome of the Opportunities Here Are Just What You Need\nBIRTHS\nLAMBERT - To Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur Lambert, South Slocan, at\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson, August 2, a son, Patrick Arthur.\nSMITH - To Mr and Mrs. A.\nGlen Smith ot Oak Harbor, Wash.,\na son. Mra. Smith is the youngest\ndaughter of Mrs. A. McQueen of\nKaslo.\nWILSON \u2014 To Mr, and Mrs.\nGeorge Wilson, of Rossland, at the\nMater Misericordiae Hospital, Roasland, July 30, a daughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - AN EXPERIENCED\nteacher for the Carrolls Landing\nSchool, salary $780 per annum.\nE. Hardy, Secretary, Carrolls\nLanding, B. C, \u25a0\nWANTED - MARRIED COUPLE.\nClean, capable, honest, for reta 1\ndairy. Box 76, Creston, B. C.\nWANTED - GIRL FORGENERAi\nhousework. Apply 910 Victoria St.\nWAITRESS WANTED. APPLY TO\nL. D. Cafe, Salmo, B. C.    \t\nAGENTS AND SALESMEN\nAGENTS WANTED\nIF YOU ARE INTERESTED LN\nsteady cash profits \u2014 if you\nwould like interesting, profitable\nwork selling the most popular\nline of Everyday Necessities at\npresent on the market, inquire\ntoday without obligation: Famllex,\n570 St. Clement. Montreal.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines. Payable in advance.\nELDERLY BRITISHER WANTS\nposition as caretaker, watchman or\nanything on that line. First class\nreferences. Box 3357 Daily News\nEXP. GIRL WANTS WORK AS\ncook or cook-general. Trail preferred. Box 3365 Daily News.\nRELIABLE GIRL WILL CASE\nfor children afternoons and eve-\nnings. Phone 938L,\nMARRIED MAN WANTS TRUCK\ndriving job, urgent, write to Box\n3343 Daily News. \t\nPERSONAL\nGOOD WORK DEPENDS ON THE\nmen who do the Job. For painting\nand papering see Murphy Bros.\nSTIRLING HOTEL, COINER OF\nCambie and Cordova, Vancouver.\n75c night, weekly rates.\nSALVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear, furm-\nture to spare please Ph. us 618L\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot.\nPURCHASE YOUR FRUITS AND\nvegetables at The Star, Groc. Always fresh in modern refrigeration\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street.\n2 AND 3 BURNER OIL STOVES\nand camp stoves. J. Chess, 2nd\nHand Store, 524 Vernon Street.\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop prices paid for antiques at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St.\nCLARENCE HOTEL, 515 SEY-\nm o u r, Vancouver. Reasonable\n'rates. Near bus terminal.\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry.\nIN SPOKANE MAKE YOUR HOME\nThe Empire, 108 N. Division St\nThe friendly hotel for Canadians.\n25c FILMS PRINTED. POSTAGE\npaid. Reprints 3c. 5 by 7 enlargement free. Llou's Photo, P. O. Box\n434, Vancouver, B. (j.\nYOU CAN RUN A HOME KIN-\ndergarten with our help. The\nCanadian Kindergarten Institute.\nWinnipeg, Manitoba.\t\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES, SEND\n$1 for 12 samples. Plain wrapped.\nTested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free\nNovelty price list. Princeton Distributors, Box 81, Princeton, B. C.\nHAIRQOOD8\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees\u2014fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue.\nHanson Company, P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C.\t\nMEN-REGAIN VITALITY, VRT-\nor, pep. Try Vitex 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed. 24\npersonal \"Drug S u n dr i e s\" $1.00\nFree price list of drug sundries. J\nJensen, Box 324 Vancouver, B. C\nHYGIENE AND SANITARY Supplies. Write for free price list, or\nsend %l for special sample assort,\nment of 25 best quality latex:\npostpaid under plain sealed cover.\nWestern Supply Agency, Box 667\nVancouver, B. C.\t\nA MEDICINE FOR RHEUMATIC\nand arthritic pain. No exaggerated\nclaims \u2014 it's proven and the testimonials speak for themselves.\nWhat it has done for others it can\ndo for you. Ray's Rheumatic Rub.\nAt Mann-Rutherford Co., Nelson.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTENDERS\nSEALED TENDERS, addressed to\nthe undersigned and marked\n\"Tender for Radio Living Quarters,\nCresoent Valley\" will be received\nup to 12 o'clock noon, Eastern\nDaylight Saving Time, Tuesday,\nAugust 6, 1940, for the erection of\nRadio Living Quarters and Garage\nat the Crescent Valley Radio Range\nStation, Crescent Valley. B. C.\nPlans, specifications, labour conditions and form of contract to be\nentered into may be seen and\ntender forms obtained on application to the General 'Purchasing\nAgent, Department of Transport,\nOttawa, Ontario, the District Airway Engineer, Civil Aviation, 409\nWinch Building, Vancouver, B. C,\nor Uie District Airway Engineer,\nCivil Aviation, Post Office Building,\nLethbridge, Alta. Further information if required, regarding interpretation of plans and specifications may\nbe obtained from the District Airway Engineer at Vancouver or the\nAirway Engineer, Hunter Building,\nOttawa.\nPlans, specifications, labour conditions, form of contract and tender\nform may be obtained from any of\nthe above officials upon receipt of\nan accepted cheque, made payable\nto the Receiver General ot Canada,\nfor the sum of $25.00. This cheque\nwill be returned upon the return of\nplans and specifications in good\ncondition.\nEach tender must be accompanied\nby a certified cheque on a chartered\nCanadian Bank equal to ten per\ncent (10%) of the tender price, payable to the order of the Receiver\nGeneral of Canada, which cheque\nwill be forfeited in the event of the\ntenderer refusing to enter into a\ncontract on the basis of his tender, ;f\ncalled upon to do so, or failing to\nsatisfactorily complete such a contracti Cheques of unsuccessful\ntenderers will be returned.\nAny tender not accompanied by a\nsecurity deposit as described will\nnot be considered.\nThe Department does not bind Itself to accept the lowest or any\ntender.\nGEO. W. YATES,\nSecretary.\nDepartment of Transport,\nOttawa, July 19, li-.\t\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nProspector with crew now opening up high grade property for\nearly production. Will sell\nsmall interest, $1000\u2014$500\u2014or\n$250, proportionately. Opportunity make fortune. See property\nyourself. Take own samples.\nOnly few interests can be purchased.\nBox 3450 Daily News\n~i_\nFOR SALE, GARAGE, 2 PUMPS,\ngood location on main highway,\nwith 5 rooms, living quarters.\nCheap for cash. Apply to Box\n3236 Daily News.\t\nFOR SALE-GROCERY AND CON\nfectionery. Good location Take\ncar as payment Apply 1701, 3rd\nAvenuS, Trail, B. C.\nCOFFEE SHOP FOR SALE, AP\nply Coffee Shop, Natal, B. C.\nWant to Sell  Something? A\nDaily News Classified Ad will\ndo it. PHONE 144.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nWhen your husband arrives home\nfor dinner show bim thii ad. Talk\nit over, then phoAe me at 980 for\nan appointment to Inspect this ultra\nmodern, beautifully finished new\nhome, full of delightful conveniences from kitchen through, hardwood floors, fire place, velvety\nlawn, cement walks, everything, and\ntho price\u2014at least $1000 below) actual cost Owner built it as permanent home then bad to move to Coast.\nIt's furnished and comfy, well beat-\nCash, only iboud\nPhone 980 for details.\nGood solid home, acre fine land,\nlots water, electric light, just what\nthe family have talked about. Milk\nawn cow. Grow ' vegetables and\ntrult. Phone me at 980 for location\nand price. You can own it. \u2022 (PCAA\nCash down payment  JDW)\nBalance monthly as rent\nIf it's Real Estate or Insurance\nPhone 980 to save money. Or\ncall at,577 Baker Street.\nFRANK A. STUART\nLicensed Agent\nNEW SUBDIVISION RESIDENT,\nial lots. 6 miles from ferry, many\nwith lake frontage, some with\norchard, some near lake, ample\nwater record, also one with 10\nacres in hay and potatoes. Also\norchard of size to suit with buildings and four acres potatoes, j. J\nCampbell, R. R. No. 1, Ph. 462L3.\nGOOD RESIDENTIAL PRO.KRT.\nis a tangible asset. Buy a home-\nBite on Fairview properties, Nel\nson's best residential lots. All city\nservices. Easiest of terms. R. W\nDawson, sole agent, Hipperson\nBlock, Phone 197.\nSMALL MODERN RANCH, TWO\nstorey frame house, water rights,\nelectric light, telephone, Vi mile\nfrom street car. Cow, calf, chick'\nens. Price $1950. Box 67, Nelson\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908, Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\nFOR SALE - MODERN 5-R50_l\nhouse. Rock foundation. Beauti\nful location. Phone 919Y or ap\nply at 115 Union Street.\nHOUSES FOR SALE7TEST BUYS\nin town, easy terms. Car. Lite\nand Fire Insurance. C. W. Apple-\nyard. Established 28 years,\nWE SOLICIT PARTICULARS OF\ncity houses and country properties\nfor sale H. E. Dill, 532 Ward St.\nFOR SALE, SMALL HOUSE VERY\nclose in, indeed, $1350, $200 cash\nbalance as rent. C. W. Appleyard\nAT AINSWORTH, 4 RM. BUNGA\nlow, lge. vrnda., plmbg., electcty.\n1920 Daniel Street, Trail, B. C,\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE 4 RM. COTTAGE AT\nPilot Bay, partly furnished, $300\nJess Sanders, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE VERY DSRBLE. GUN'S.\nBay farmland. S. P. Pond, Nelson.\nCABIN FOR SALE. NO. 47 COT-\ntonwood. Ymir Road.\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nC. W. WALTON tc SON, BOAT\nBuilders. Boats for rent. Briggs\nlc Stratton air-cooled inboard and\n_ Johnson Outboard engine agents,\nFOR CHARTER, MODERN C\/ffilR\ncruiser by day or hour. Phone\nBalfour, Wilmer J. McHardy.\nFOR SALE - LIGHT LAP SIDE\nskiff, 14 feet. $25. Apply to Box\n3380 Daily News,\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, mTDK.\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWART? PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\t\nFOR SALE, MODERN BEDROOM\nsuite, chesterfield suite. Kitchen\n.chairs, heater, radio, like new\n709 Fifth Street,      .  .\nPIPE-FITTINGS, TUBES - SfE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nANGLO CANADIAN WIRE FtQPl\nStevenson's Machine Shop. 708\nVernon St., Nelson. Phone 98.\nUSED   BESfTY    WASHER   $5S,\nj fully reconditioned. Phone 260.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nWANT CEDAR POLES INCLUD-\nIng fifties for quick delivery. S. P.\nPond, Nelson, B. C.\nWANTED FOR CASH - 75 H. P.\nSteam Engine, Dumont, Galloway.\nWANTED - 2 BQYS' BICYCLES,\n2nd hand. Call 515 Third.Street\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT'\nWANTED TO RENT SEPT. 1 WELL\nequipped completely furnished\nhouse or apartment Adult cou-\nple, refrncs. Box 3418 Dally News.\nHOUSES TOR RENT. MONETON\nhand for Mortgages, Yorkshire\nPlan or private funds. C. W\nAppleyard.\nTWO STORES IN CENTRE OF THE\ntown. Steam heated, good windows^ ppJy_JL_EAnnable^^\nFOR RENT SUMMER COTTAGE\non lake at Willow Point. Apply\nH. Rosltng or Phone 717.\n4 RM. FURN. HOUSE. EDGEWOOD\nAve. 524 Victoria. St. or Ph. 697J.\nFOR RENT OR SALE 5 ROOM\nhouse Gordon Rd. apply 318.1st St\nFOR RENT 3 ROOM FURN. OR\nunfurn. suite. 311 Vernon Street.\n2 RM. SUITE ALSO SINGLE RMS.\nall furnished. 711 Vernon Street.\nSINGLE HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\nand apartments. Annable Block.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG., MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nFOR RENT FURNISHED SUITE tc\n6 roomed house. Phone 377X.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\nStirling Hotel.\t\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,  BICYCLES\nReliable Used Car\nBargains\n'34 Oldsmobile Special      (_****{!\nSedan _.,...  SD\/D\n'35 Ford Fordor \u00a3K__ft\nSedan \u201e _    (OUUV\n35 Chevrolet Master ffKKft\nDeluxe Sedan   _... wUUU\n.7 Ford Tudor '(__t_OI_\nCoach   L (DO JO\n'37 Chevrolet Master <&70E\nSedan   \u00abD I uO\n'38 Pontiac Silver QQr. I.\nStreak Sedan 3501 D\nDeal with a reliable dealer\nfor safety.\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nChevrolet-Oldsmobile Dealers\n_>ICK\nOFT\nHE\nARKET\nM\n1938 Ford Cabriolet, new rubber, heater, radio. A snappy buy\nat           $775.00\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nDodge-DeSoto. Dealers.\t\n'37 Chevrolet, %-l ton, 4 speed\nTrans. Like,new   $700\n'37 G. M. C. %-l ton reend. $700\nCENTRAL TRUCK AND\nEQUIPMENT COMPANY\n801 Baker St. _Nelson,_B!_C.\nGOOD   BUYS   REPOSSESSED\ncars. '35 Ford Sedan, good tires\nand   good   running  order  $395.\nInterior   Motor   Finance    Corp.\nLtd., 554 Ward Street\nWANTED-'36, -37 OR 'SSTONTlS.\nChev., Plymouth or Dodge Coupe.\nGood-upholstery and paint. Box\n3403 Daily News.\n1936 WILLYS LIGHT DELIVER?\nFirst  class  shape.  Nelson  Auto\nWreckers, Telephone 946,\t\n'28  CHEV. SEDAN, GOOD RUlT-\nning ord. $100. City Auto Wreckers\nFOR   SALE   2   WHEEL   HOUSE\ntrailer furn. $125. City Auto Camp.\nFOR SALE GIRLS CCM BICYCLE\nPhone 371Y after 5 p.m.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nCtarke Centrifugal      WATER   PUMP\nPRJMELBSS. SELF-DRAINING\nYou can carry it in one hand\nPumps 4000 to' 5000 gallons per hour.\nWeighs only 25 pounds. Simple to operate. 3 cents worth of gasoline will run it\nan hour Handy for many Jobs around the\nfarm including file protection.\nA Canadian Product, made by\nD. R. Clarke Engine Co., Limited\nWrite for Illustrated folder and further Information to the\nDEER PARK STORE\nDEER PA^K, B.C.\nVhe11   EMPIRE MACHINES Ltd. TJCif.\nSUMMER  RESORTS\nGLENAIRLEY L O D.G E, E A 81\nSooke, V. I., 23 miles Southwest\nof Victoria. Ideal resort tor restful holiday. Lodge uid cabin accommodation\u2014new spring mat*\ntresses throughout Home cooking,\nJersey cream, freih fruit ana\nvegetables. Riding, swimming,\nboating, tennis, Indoor badminton. Riding only extra. Phona or\nwrite David Gray, R. It. L\nVictoria, B. C. _____\nWATEHLEA - N. _*Ntl.__t 1&>\nland. B. C. A resort with unique\nattractions, tennii, aalt water\niwimming pool, excellent table,\n$15 weekly up. Brochure apply\nManager. .\t\nSPEND YOUft H6LH.AY At\n\"The Holme,\" Gibson's Ldg., on\nbeautiful Howe Sound, $12.50\nweek. 3 roomed apartment tot\nrent. Furniihed.\nBANFF - LAKE MUWfiWANKS\nChalet and cabins. Rooms from\n$1.50, cabins from $2.50, als\u00bb\nweekly rates. Box 270 Banff.\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS\nAppledale. Rates by day, week\nor month. Fully furnished Apply\nAppledale Genenl Store.\nKOKANEE LODGE, CABINS, RMSC\nmeals, 1 _ miles from Nelson ferry\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, etc.\nPETLAND'- W. 241 RTVERStDl\nSpokane. Dogs, Birds,. Goldfish,\netc. Full line supplies, accessories\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\ni       \u25a0 \u00bb\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents foi\nTrail Smelter. 304-303 Josephini\nStreet NeUon, B. C.\ngrInville h. GSISiwobir\"\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 420\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9, Nelson,\nB. C. Representing shippers\ninterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLANTJ\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual representative for ship-\npers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. mcmillan, d. c, neuro\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulIoch Btt\nDR. WILBERT BROCK, D. fc,\n542 Baker Street Phone 909.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN, Mining te Clvt\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor;\nRossland and Grand Forks.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B*C\nSurveyor and Engineer. P h on (\n\"Beaver Falls\".\nIN8URANCE AND REAL ESTATI\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance-o\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. jl\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANC1\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hippersoi\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 191\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electrli\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon 81\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTOB.\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker SI\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,  SELL  tt  EXCHANOl\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph. 534\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nCAN YOU MOUNG WOMEN HELP ME ?\nI'M NEW AT THIS BUSINESS..THIRTY-\nTWO KIDS UNDER MY WING\nEVERY ONE A PROBLEM CHILD\nMEN - HEALTH - REGAIN VIG-\n\u25a0 or \u2014 Pep, try Dupree-Wheat-\nPerles, 25 for $1.00, postpaid.\nSend $1.00 for 30 samples of drug\nspecialties. Tested, guaranteed 5\nyears against deterioration. Paris\nNovelty Co, Dept. \"N\", 24 Aikins\nBldg., Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURS\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlargement, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\npacking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie,\nSaskatchewan.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\n\u2022nd SUPPLIES, ETC..\nFOR SALE 1 MARE ABOUT 12\nyears old, very gentle and well\nbroken, also 1 yr. old colt and 2\ncows, one just fresh and the other\ndue to freshen soon. J. Hiemstra,\nRoss Spur, B, C.\t\nHYPRO STOCKTSPRAY IN VARI-\nous sizes; Sprayers; Stockaid;\nHypro White Fluid Disinfectant;\nPratt'i Cow Tonic; Animal Regulator, Brackman-Ker Millg. Co Lid\nFOR SALE - A GOOD TEASTOF\nhorses about 1300 lbs. each. also\nwagon, etc Owner joining army.\nJames H. Sadler, Creston. B. C.\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\n*___.\n \"\"\u25a0\"'\n- -NELION DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. ..-SATURDAY MORNINO   AUG. &, 1940\u2014\nSheep (reek Gold Provides $150,000\nlor Income and Excess Profits Taxes\nand Reports Het in Year of $381,000\ni\n'Over Million Paid in\n.-    Dividends Since\n1935-36\n; I Increased on reserves, greater\nproduction, and dividends past the\npiljlion-dollar mark were features\not the sixth annual report of Sheep\nCreek Gold Mines Ltd., issued by\npresident H. W. Bruhn. The report\nJ overs the 12 months ended May 31\nut, ind shows net profit to be\n1381,000, a decline from the (409.342\n. for tht previous year which was\ntccpuntM fer by \u2022 $130,000 provision for income and exceu profits\ntaxes compared with $08,835 In 1939,\nShen the excess profit! tax was not\nforce.\nOre reserves at the end of the\n' JUcal year were 139,555 toni tvtr-\n- aging  0.44$  ounces   gold per  ton\nI compared with 132,338 tons of 0.465\nounces   the' year before.   Ore   re-\njtrves on the 92 vein increased from\n17,185 tons last year to 45,504 tons\n< this year, while on the 81 vein,\nreserves Jumped from 10,720 to 85,-\n108 tons.\n\u25a0 The dividend record of the com-\n-\u25a0pany Is Impressive with the total\nI Bow reaching $1,102,500. Since divi-\n\u2022 dends were started in 1935-36 when\n*37.500 was paid, the annual  disbursements  have  increased  steadily,  rising   to  $131,250   in   1936-37,\n$225,000 in 1937-38, $281,250 in 1938-\n89 and $337,500 In 1939-40. During\nthat period, the company paid out\n$441,945 ln taxes.\n''MORE BULLION\nToUl value ot bullion produced\n. during the year was $1,019,205 compared with $968,329 in the previous\nyear, actual gold produced for the\n112 months ended May 81 being 26,915\nounces worth $1,015,831 at an average price for gold of $37,734 an\nI ounce, Silver produced was $3574.\nL   Total mine operating costs were\n^illghtly higher than the previoui\n[ year, (mounting to $354,476 against\n\u25a0MBH77. Mining costs wir\u00bb up ts\n1186.546 from $160,110.\n1    Develooment footage for the year\n(mounted to 10.076 feet of drifting\nj -tnd erosscuttlng, 672 feet of raising and 766 feet of diamond drilling.\n.   The 09 Vein wu discovered dur-\ni Ing the year. All ore mined from\nf\"thls vein was broken during the\ncourse of drifting and raising on\nfour and five levels. The 75 and 78\nveins were developed on six and\nseven levels but only occasional\nvalues were encountered. The good\ngrade ore shoot developed on five\nlevel, 78 vein, during the previous\nyear, is still In reserve.\nCUT 81 AT DEPTH\nThe 81 vein was cut by a cross,\ncut-on the nine level 250 feet below the deepest previous work,\nThe vein was followed for \u2022 total\nlength of 812 feet, all In ore iver*\nling 0495 ounces across 3-1 fee',\naverage width. This vein produced\n462 per cent ot Ihe gold and 38.6\nper cent of the -tonnage handled\nduring the year.\nThe 83 and 85 veins were alio\ncut by the main crosscut on nine\nlevel, but neither showed com.\nmerelal values. No new develop,\nment was done on 92 or Queen\nveins.\nSteels and Motors\nLead on Well SI.\nNEW YORK, Aug, t (AP)-Re.\ncovcry steps were taken by steels\nand motors in today's stock market\nbut many other leaders were hesitant on the follow-up.\nThe list was a bit ragged at the\nstart. A little bidding appeared\naround mid-day and lifted selected\nissues fractions to a point or so.\nShares given a lift it one time\nor another were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Chrysler, General Motors, International Paper common and preferred International Nickel, Mont-\nSornery Ward Union Bag & Paper,\niu Pont, Westinghouse and Chesapeake it Ohio.\nLONDON CLOSI\nLONDON, AM- J (AP),\u25a0\"\u25a0British\nstock closings, in Sterling: Cent\nMining \u00a39',i; Consol Oold fields\n28s 9d; Courtaulds 26s . Wd; Crown\nC1214; East Geduld \u00a371',; Mining\n, Trust is 3d; British 2V4 per cent Can.\nsols \u00a373'A; British 2% per cent War\nLoan \u00a399%; British Funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3110%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nK Hi*      Low\n50 industrials _  126.37    126.27\nfc rails ,   v      S6.99\n,15 utilities:        22.84\nClose  Change\n126.37-up   .24\n28.98      _8.\u00bb-unehgd\n22.80      22.82-otr  Ol\nQUOTATIONS   ON  WALL  STREET\nMETAL   MARKITS\nLONDON, Aug. 1 (AF)-Bar silver 22 6-154, unchanged, (Eguival,\nent 40.46 cents baled on dollar at\n$4.03). Bar gold 188s, unchanged.\nTn easy; spot, \u00a3385 bid, \u00a3265 it\nasked; future \u00a3265 ts bid, \u00a3265 10s\nasked.  , .\nMONTREAL-Bsr gold ln London was unchanged it $87.84 an\nounce in Canadian funds; 168s in\nBritish, representing the Btnk ot\nEngland's buying price. The fixed\nf\u00bb Washington price tmounted to\n$38.50 in Canadian.\nSpot: copper, electrolytic, 12.75;\ntin 6385; lead 5.50; ilnc 8.65; antimony 15.25.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid: Auguit 87.75,\nNEW YORK - Copper iteady,\nelectrolytic spot, Conn. Valley\n11.25\u201411.50; export fas NY 9.90. Tin\neasier, spot and nearby 83.12ft. Lead\nsteady, ipot, New York 5.00-5.05.\nZinc iteady, Hit St. Louis spot and\nforwird 6,25. Pig Iron aluminum,\nantimony quicksilver, platinum,\nChjneee woftnmltt and domestic\nscheelite unchanged.'\nBir silver 3414, unchanged.\n,\", \t\nCustom, Revenue\nReceipts Down\n$3242 at Nelson\nWith Nelson receipts down $4081,-\n85 and two other District offices\nreporting lower receipts, customs\nind inland revenue returns reported to the Nelion Office for\nJuly were $3242.30 lower thin (or\nJuly list yur,\nNelson receipts ihowed tht greatest decrease over the year, but Nelway reported I drop of $7.89, and\nCarson a decrease of $37.96, However, to balance these somewhat,\nWaneta receipts wtre up $816.65,\nMidway up $998 ind Cascade up\n$167.91.\nDistrict retumi for July, 1940,\nwd July, 1989, follow;\n1939 1940\nNtlson $ 18,068.87  8,977,01\nNtlwiy     SM.83     201.94\nWmtU    555,\u00bb7   1,8888}\nMidway      I486      .1*6\nCascade      54.98     222.19\nCanon    140.56    108.59\nTotal\n_   14,0\u00bb.85 10,882.05\nOpen\n; Am Can  -\u2022\u2022 95%\nI Am Spelt & Be  38\nAm Telephone  1J1J4\nAm Tobacco  77%\nAnaconda  20%\n\u25a0Baldwin        15J4\nBait lc Ohio   i%\nBendlx Av   M\n\u25a0Beth Steel   79%\nBorden  - - 1\u00bb\u00bb\nCanada Dry      I\nCerro de Pasco  MJ4\nChrysler  \"H\nCon Gas NY  38 tf\nC Wright Pfd   7\n_ Dupont  167\nliast Kodak  1414\nGen Electric   33%\nBGen Foods   40%\n\u25a0Gen Motors  _ \u00abV\u00bb\nGoodrich       12\nGrt Nor Pfd   24%\nHowe Sound  29%\n_ Int Nickel  22%\nlut Te. & Tel - 2%\nClose\n95%\n38\n162%\n77%\n20 Vi\n30 \"4\n80V*\n19%\nI\n23 %\n74\n29\n7%\n166\n14%\n84%\n45%\n12\n23'4\n28^\n23\n2%\nKenn Copper  27%\nMont Ward   41%\nNash Moton      4%\nw Y Central  12'\nPack Motori        8\nPenn R B     1?\nPhillips Pett   33\nPullman  HJ4\nRadio Corn    4%\nRem Rand      8\n8afewjj:_J.tores   *Vr\nShell Union     >V4\nStan On of N J   83\nStudebaker  JJ4\nTexas Corn  37%\nTexas Gulf Sul   82\nUn Carbide  70%\nUn Oil of Cal  1244\nUnited Air    37%\nUnion Pacific   \u00bb4%\nU S Rubber   20\nUS Steel      84\nWest Electric   8944\nWest Union  1>\nWoolworth       $3%\nYellow Truck   13%\n27%\n4144\n4%\n12\n3%\n19%\n83%\n19%\nr\n44%\ne%\nS3V.\n7%\n37\n32%\n70%\n12%\n37%\n84%\n20\n34%\n101%\n18\n33%\n13%\nMONTREAL\nINDUSTRIALS\n\u25a0Alta Pac Grain\t\nAssoe Brew ot Can\t\nCanadian Bronie\t\nCm Bronze pfd\t\n, Ctn Car & Fdy pfd\t\nHCtn Celanese\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\n100\nIS\n1\n4\n14V.\n30\n\u25a0Cm North Power  11%\n[,Cin Steamship  4\nCan Steamship pfd  13%\nCockshutt Plow  5%\nCon Min le Smelt  34%\nt Dominion Coal pfd  20\nj- Eom Steel lc Coal \"B\"  7%\n| Dominion Textile   81\n1 Dryden Paper  6\n' Foundation C of C  10%\nGatineau Power  11%\nGurd Charles  4%\nHoward Smith Paper  15%\nImperial Oil   10%\nInter Petroleum   15\nInter Nickel of Can  34%\nLake of the Woods  17%\nMcColl Frontenac .......       5%\nELECTROPLATING\nCHROMIUM\nCOPPER\nL.C.M. Electroplating\n|  Uurltz Bldg.        704 Nelson Ave.\nNational Brew Ltd\t\nNat Brew pfd \t\nOgllvle Flour \t\nPrice Bros \t\nQuebec Power  ...\nShawlnigan W It P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp \t\nSt Law Corp pfd ....\nSouth Can Power\t\nWestern Grocers\t\nBANKS\nCommerce \u201e \u2014\nDominion  \u2122\u2122\u2014..\nImperial  .___......\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia\t\nRoyal  -\t\nToronto \t\nCURB\nAbitibi pfd\t\nBathurst P tt P \"B\"\t\nBeauharnois Corp \t\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packers \t\nCan Vickers  _\t\nCons Paper Corp \t\nFairchUd Aircraft\t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nInter Utilities \"B\"\t\nLake Sulphite\t\nMacLaren P lc P\t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd ...\nMitchell Robt \t\nRoyalite Oil\t\nWalker Good lc W\t\nWalker Good pfd\t\n28\n36\n23%\n12%\n15\n18\n3%\n15%\n12\n54\n146\n175\n173\n180\n2R>\n149\n211\n.90\n2%\n5\n17%\n13\n3%\n4%\n244\n11%\n'    .25\n1.00\n13%\n9.3%\n9\n23\n40\n19%\nThi\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada. Limited\nManufacturers ot\nProducers and Refiners ot\nElephant       Tadanac\n\/ Brand\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmTnonlum  Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nSuptrphoaphttee\nMonocalclum Phosphite\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD-ZINC\nGOLD-SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nZINC DUST\nAlso Sulphuric Acid snd Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilizer Salts\u2014 Marine Bids., Vancouver, B.C.\nMetal and Fertiliser Sales\u2014215 St. lames St., Montreal\nBritish War Buying\nin United States\nOver Two Billions\nNEW YORK, Au|. i (AP).-Brlt-\nlih war purchases in the United\nStates have climbed above the 52,-\n000,000,000 mark, it was indicated\nby the British Purchasing Com-\nmillion hen today.\nIt also was intimated, although\nnot itated definitely, thit airplane\ndeliveries from tht Unittd Stttea\nto Britain new are it the rate ot\nabout 300 \u2022 month. \u2022\t\nLeary Opens Bids\n(er $100,000 Road\nWork In Province\n\u201e VICTORIA, Aui. J (CP). - Hon.\nC, S. tftty, Mwater of Public\nWorks, tod\u00bby opened bids fot \u00bb100,-\n000 worth of highway construction\nwork in British Columbii.\nLargest project wu for construction of tour miles on the Usk-Cedai-\ndale section of the Northern Trans-\nprovincial Highway, The four bids\nwen: W. C. Arnett fc Co., \u00ab5,97i;\nAssociated Engineering Company,\nUi., M7.ne.10.Tred Mannix lc Co.-,\n$88,883.50; Genenl Construction Co\nltd,, $84,631.50.\nOn construction of a 10-mllt rotd\nleidlni from tht Manson Creek\nroad to tht new mtrcury mine at\nPinchi Ukt thl tenders were: W. C.\nArnttt It Co., JJ3.M2.70 ind Ml,-\n716.20 (alternative bids on different\ntypes of construction); Associated\nEngineering Company, $37,701 ind\n$26,651; Alfred J. Horie, $30,115 and\nMJ8.802.60i Smith Md Hartley. $38,712.50.\nThird project wts for reconstruction between Miles 1 and 3 East of\nSpenee's bridge on the Transcanada\nHighway. Bids: Dawaon, Wade Construction Company, $11,672.89; W, C\nArnttt fc Co., (13,634.50; J, C. Budd,\nVancouver, $13,815.50; R. H. Christie.\nNtw Westminster, $14,043; Interior\nContracting Compiny, Penticton,\n$14,177; General Construction Com\npiny, 515,282.50; Murphy Excavating\nCompany, Nanaimo, $15,965.90; Dan\nMcKensle, New Weitmlniter, 818,-\n018,80;-George Smith and Walter\nHartley, Vtncouver, $16,250.90.\nMr. Leary said contracts will be\nlet atter bids have bten analyzed.\nB. C Cottonwood Is\nSuitable for Basket\nVeneer, Old Country\nVICTORIA, Aug. 9 (CP-.-Stmple\nihlpment of ttleeted cotlonwood\nlogs from British Columbia to Glasgow have ihown the wood entirely\nsuitable for cutting to venetr ln\nthe chip basket tradt ot the United\nKingdom tnd opens a potential market for tht Province, tht Dtptrt-\nment of Trtdt tnd Induitry announced todty.\nTht ihlpment wm mtdt is the result of t survey conducted by the\nBureau of Industrlil ind Tride\nExpansion.\nManufacturer! of the veneered\nwood baskets ln England and Scotland have been using Baltic aspen\nwood for the purpose. The supply\nis now shut off by war conditions.\nIn normal times the fictories use\nabout 9,000,000 board feet a year.\nINCORPORATION*\nMotor   Inn   (1940)   Ltd.,  $10,000,\nTrail,\t\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. a (CK-Orsta\nWHEAT: ' _\nOpen  High Low  Close\nOct   \u201e  If*    -      -      73%\nPte     .\u00ab,  \u2014      \u2014      \u2014'     W*\nMinimum prlew: Oct, 78H; Dtc-\n74*\nOATS;\nOct  ...\nDei\n29.i    \u00bb%\u25a0   23%\nOct\nDec ....\nFLAX:\nOct ...\nRYE:\nOct ...\nDtc\nS4V\u00ab\n3414\n'u%\n3414\n34 %\n34%\n2-i.i\n27 Vi\n341*\n344.\n_.\"\u00ab\u2022.-__       -      183\n48*\n48 Vj.\n45Vi\nm\nUVt\n46(4\n44 Vs\nVANCOUVER\nBid\nMINES: .,\nBig  Missouri      .\u00ab\u2022\nBralorne  . _\t\nBridge Rlv Con .\nCiriboo Gold \t\nDentonlt \u25a0\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u25a0-\nFairview Amil ...\nGeorge Cop  .:\t\nGold Belt \t\nGrandvlew  \t\nGrull Wihksne \t\nHedley Mascot ......      \u2022*>\nHome  Gold\nIndian Mines\nIsland Mount\nKoot Belle  ..\nMlnto Gold ..\nMcGillivray -      \u2022\u00ab\nNicola M fc M       M*\nPend Oreille,      }\u00a3\nSTOCK   QUOTATIONS\nA*. Bld\n.07\nf    H\n2.00\njOOVi\n08\n.20\n.10\n.02 V.\n.OOVi\n.62\n.25\n.OlVi\n.16\nPioneer  Gold\nPorter Idaho  ..\nPremier Border\nPremier Gold  ... ,\nPrivateer            \u2022\"\nReeves MacD \t\nRelief Arl  \t\nReno Gold \u2022\u25a0\u2014\nSalmon Gold\t\nSheep Creek  -\nSilver Creit \t\nTaylor Bridge\t\nWhitewater\t\nYmir Yank Girl\n.01 Vi\n.01\n.78\n.06\n.18\n.031.\n.84\n.OOVi\n.02\n.01\n.03 Vi\n.01\n.00*\n\u25a024\n.12\n.03\n.00'.i\n.01\n.01 %\n01 Vs\n1.28\n1.85\n.02\n.01 %\n.47\n.25\n.06V.\n.19\n.04\n.01\nOIL8;\nAmalgamated  \t\nAnaconda.   \t\nAnglo Can  \t\nBrown Corp\t\nCalgary fc Edra\nCalmont  \t\nCOmoil     ;\u00bb\"\t\nCommonwealth  .\nEut Crest \t\nExtension \t\nFirestone Pete .\nFour Star Pett .\nHighwood Sarcee\nHomt   \t\nMadison   \t\nMar Jon   \t\nMcDoug Seg\n.031.\n.54\n.08\n1.35\n.21'.\n21\n.03\n.19\n.05\n.09 Vi\n.03\n1.81\n.01.4\n.01\n.06\nAsk\n.00%\nMVi\n.88\n.09\n1.38\n.23\n.25\n_1\n1.63\n.OlVi\nNo. 1 hird 71... No, 1 nor 7l*;\nNo. 2 nor MH; No. 3 nor ti%; No.\n4 nor 80H: No. 8 wheit MVi; No\n8 whett tst%; feed whett 621s; No\n1 garnet MH; No. 2 garnet 81%;\nNo. 1 imbtr durum 81%: No. 4 spt-\ncial 37%; No. 6 special 5514; No, 8\nspecial MH: track, bails NO; 1 nor\n72%; screenings, per ton 38 centi.\nOats-No. 3 CW. 30%; No. IX. 8\nCW. 38%; No. 3 CW. 26%; Ex, 1\nfeed 26%; No. 1 teed 28%; No. 2.\nfeed 23%; No. 3 feed 21%; trick\n38%.\nBarley: No. 1 teed 33%; No.\nfeed\/32%; No. 3 feed 31%; track\nFlax: No. 1 CW. 131; No. 1 CW,\n127; No. 3 CW. 119; No. 4 C.W.\n108; track 131.\nRye: No- 2 C.W. 42%.\nDUNDEE VEIN IS\nENCOURAGING BUT\nINDEFINITE YET\nVANCOUVER, B C. Aug, *-\nWork on tht adjoining Dundee\npronerty his given Ymir Yankee\nGirl Mines Ltd., some encouragement, but considerably more drifting on the Dundee vein will be required to put the Company'i tn-\n5Sneers in a position to make a\neflnlte recommendltlon, it ll indicated. The Dundee vein was reached by extending an 800-tfoot cross-\ncut from the 1235 level of the Ymir\nYankee Girl mine.\nThe first 50 feet of drifting on the\nvein disclosed values for about half\nthis length of appoxlmately halt an\nounce in gold per ton across 2%\nfeet. Values in a raise of this ore\nshoot .roved to be less thin in the\ndrift. In t total of 200 fett of drift-\ning values beyond tht first 80 tttt\nhive been consistently low, but the\nEtst fsci has been showing a heavily mineralised -quartz vein across\ntht full width.        .\nWheat and Corn\nPrices Lower, Chicago\nCHJOAGO, Aug. 2 (AP),-Whett\ntnd corn prices turned lower today\nbut most of the selling wis attributed to commercial transactions.\nCom tell almost two cents.\nWhett closed %\u20141% centi lower\nthan yeiterday, September 75%\u2014%,\nDecember 78\u201476%; corn 1\u20141*\ndown, September 80%\u2014%, December 86%; oats %-* down,\nLondon Trade Quiet\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (AP). - The\nstock market cloied quiet but with\nsatisfactory tone. A modest turnover\nin British funds continued throughout the tession but kaftirs were neglected despite iteady prlcei.\nAfter \u2022 dull opening industrial |\nleaders attracted some attention, in\nwhich home nils shared. Oil shires\nwert without feature. Copper issues Improved slightly.\nCar Loadings Down\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP). - Cir\nloadings in Canada dropped to 54,635\nthe week ended July 37 Dominion\nBureau of Statistics reported today.\nBritish Order\nFails lo Rouse\nWinnipeg Trade\nWINMTOG, hot. i <CP>.-Uite\nreports ot the purchase of 100,000,000\nbushels of Canadian wheat oy the\nBritish Ministry of Food tilled to\nrouse the Winnipeg Grain Exchange\nfrom its lethargy today ai prlcei\nclosed it their pegged leveli ot\n73* for October futures and 74H\nfor December futures. December\nwheat had tilled to open in t dull\nsenion.\nIrish Importers wen reported inquiring for supplies to be handled\n\u00bbi       -     \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022  ' \u25a0     \u2014J--\nthrough New York, but no trades\nwere recorded. Some buying wis\nattributed to Amerlcin mills but\nvolume wu very small.\nWheat at Buenos Aires was\nlower at noon, and on tht Chicago\nmarket it wai % to * lower.\nIn tht coarse grain market oats\nand barlty wen Inclined to higher\nleveli, rye eased md flu wu entirely neglected.\n{Slight Gains During\nLight Session Upon\nVancouver Exchange\nVANCOUVER, Aug. I (CP). -\nSlight gains were registered during\nlight trading on the Vtncouver\nStock Exchange today. Transactions\ntotalled 11,080 shares\nIn the golds Bralorne gained 10\nto 8.40 and Relict Arlington closed\nfractionally higher it 6%. Cariboo\nGold Quartz at 2.00 and Sheep Creek\nat 85 remained unchanged,\nHome Oil advanced 4 to 1.84 and\nCalgary fc Edmonton rose 3 to\n1.36. Extension wu up a traction to\n20 while Okalta wai unchmged\ntt 71.\nBase metils wtrt lntctivt.\nPAOI  N1NI\nGolds Hold on\nSlow Toronto MM.\n^TORONTO, Aug. 1 (CP) - Tht\nToronto stock market was lifeless\ntoday. Odd shares htld narrowly\nto the up side while other groupi\nrecorded minor price declines.\nAn advance of 2 polnti tor Cat'\nada Packen to 82 ind i ont point\nrisi by Bell Telephone to 148, wtrt\n\u2022the best gaina in the other groupi,\nThree of the lecondard golds.\nKerr-Addison, East Malartlc and\nMacLeod-Cockshutt traded it narrowly higher prices and galni of 10\nto 20 cents were netted by Bralorne,\nMacassa and Sigma,\nPrices were down tor Malartle\nGold Fields and Broalan,\nSmelters and Hudson Biy wert\nnarrowly higher against moderate\ndeclines for Falconbridge, Pend\nOreille ind steep Rock. \u2022\nMercury          03%      \u2014\nMill City          \"'\"       -\nMonirch Roy .......\nNational Pete \t\nOkalta com \t\nPrairie  Roy  \t\nRoyal Can \t\nRoyal Crest Pete\nSpooner \t\nUnited  \t\nVanalta  \t\nVulcan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nBrew St Dist\t\nCapital Est \t\nCout  Brew  \t\n.04%\n.0514\n.70\n.12\n.13\n.0614\n.02\n.04V\u00ab\n.03V.\n.25\n1.25\n.07\n.05\n.75\n.13\n.14\n4.75\n1.25\n1.40\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nMINES .,\nAldermac Copper - - cl\nAmm G\u00b01(1 -,-  1*5\nAnglo-Huronian   -  '\u25a0\u201e,\nArntfield Gold g\nAstoria Rouyn Mines   \u00ab\nAunor ... _ ~ 03%\nBagamae Rouyn   -\u21221*\nBanktield Gold       -jX\niEr&tali Mining   \u2022\u00ab\nSeattle Gold Mines JL\nBldfciod Klrkland   4|\u2122\nBig Missouri  - ;05\n_i%\"lnJ? :::::::::::: w\nBraforne Mines\nBuffalo Ankerite  .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\nBunker Hill Extemion\nCanadian Malartic\t\nCariboo Gold Quarti ...\nCutle-Trethewey \t\nCentral Patricia   \t\nChromium M 8s s \t\nCoait Copper       \t\nConiaurum Wpu     \t\nConsolidated M lc 5\nDome Mines \t\norval-Slscoe\n3.05\n.01%\n.35\n1.95\n.58\n1.80\n.15\n.50\n1.09\n35.00\n19.50\n.01%\nMalartlc. -    2$\nEut\t\nEldorado Gold\nFrancoeur Oold\t\nGillies Lake       \t\nGod's Lake.Oold \t\nGold Belt\n,82\n2.50\n.02%\n.25\n.33\n.30\n.2(1\nGrandoro. Minei ^5\nGunnar Gold\nHard Rock Oold\nHarker Oold\t\nHollinger     \t\nHowey Oold\nHudion Bay, MJfc.8\nInternational Nickel\nj.M Consolidated\n,38%\n.71\n.08%\n11.00\n.23\n23.00\n34.00\n.00%\n.16\n.172\n2.15\nJack \"Waite\nJacola Gold\nKerr-Addison    - \u201e\nKirkland Uke        f\nUke Shore Mines     IB-\"\nLelUihOold        JL\nLebel Oro Minei -     \u25a0\u00bb'%\nLittfe long Lie    2.15\nMacLeod Cockshutt   .........    1-M\nMadsen Red Uke Gold'       \u2022\u00ab\nMandv    ,    ,,_\\\nMclntyre-Porcuplne     41.80\nMcKmule Red Uke        \u2022\"\nMcVittie-Otaham           -OJ\nMcWatters Oold      26\nMining Corporation       \u2022\u00bb\nMoneta Porcupine  }<\nMorris-Klrkland      -gJVi\nNlplulng Mining      \u00ab\nNorandi      M\"X\nNnrmetil        *,\nO'Brien Oold    ...- -     \u25a0?'\nOmega Oold    ,   ..,. \u00bb\nPamour Porcupine fi\nPaymaster Cons        -23\n1.25\n1.47\n2.65\n1.85\n.75\n.65\nPend Orelllt\nPerron Gold\nPickle Crow Gold .\nPioneer Gold   \t\nPremier Gold     ...\nPowell Rouyn Gold\t\nPreston East Dome     'j'3\nReno Gold Mines  \u00ab\nRoche Long Lie  i    J\u00bb-\nShiwkey Gold      0\\%\nSheep Creek Gold 83\nSherritt Gordon        \u2022\u00ab;>\nSiscoe Gold      -      \u25a0\u00bb\nSladen Malartlc  \u00ab\nSt. Anthony          -9\u00bb\u00bb\nSudbury Buln     if\nSullivan Consolidated      _J\u00bb\n2.25\n3.05\n1.03\n.12\n2.26\n3.10\n5.70\n.04\nThe corresponding week lut year\nloadings amounted to 45,588 can.\nLoadings in the Western division\ntotalled 17,338 can compared with\n15,660 the corresponding week last\nyear, and in the Eastern diviiion 37,-\n290 compared with 30,028.\nMontreal Steady\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (dP)-The\nstock market wu steady to a shade\nhigher in quiet late trade today.\nIn newsprints, Bathunt gained a\nsmall sum while Price Brothers wis\neven.\nMines were quiet on the curb u\nHome Oil advanced a few cents,\nSylvanite \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold .\nToburn Gold Mines\nTowagmac \t\nVentures\t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWright Hargreaves\nYmfr Yankee Girl ..\nOILS\nAjax       , .10%\nBritish American     17.75\nChemical Research     . Jf\nImperial    10.26\nInter Petroleum     14.78\nTexas Canadian      1.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A 7?\nBell Telephone  148%\nBrazilian TL4P     4J4\nBrewers & Distillers     3%\nBrewing Corp     1.20\nB C Power A  ...,   25%\nB C Power B      1%\nBuilding Producti     13%\nCanada Bread      2%\nCan Bud Malting       4\nCan Car & Foundry _....    6%\nCan Cement      4%\nCan Dredge  11\nCan Malting     33\nCan Pacific Rly         444\nCan Ind Alcohol A      1.85\nCons Bakeriei    14\nCosmos       21%\nDominion Bridge    24%\nDominion Storei     t%\nDom Tir te Cham     8%\nDistillers Stigrami     24%\nFanny Farmer         24\nFord of Canada A _    15%\nOen Steel Wares     8%\nGoodyear Tlrt   68\nOypium L It A     3%\nHimllton Bridge      8%\nHlnm  Walker L   87%\ntnt Metali          6%\nImnerial Tobacco     13%\nLoblaw A  -   23%\nLoblaw B     22%\nManle heit Milling    2%\nMassey Harris     \u201e     3\nMontreal Power     27%\nMoore Corp  _.    38\nBonds Irregular\nNEW YORK, Aug 1 (AP).\u2014Bond\npricei moved irrejularly over a\nnarrow range in a thin market today. Rails received the majority ot\nattention toward noon but here, as\nin the other classifications, fli.\\ u-\natlons were fractional.\nGrease Creek Active\nCALGARY, Aug. 2 (CP)-For the\nsecond day in succession, only one\nstock showed any action on Calgary Stock Exchange today. Yesterday lt was Okalta; today it is\nGrease Creek, with a turnover ot\n500 shares at four cents, unchanged\nfrom the previous close.\nEXCHANCE MARKITS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 2 (CP).-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange, nominal\nrates between banks only:\nArgentina, peso, .2460.\nGreat,Britain, pound, 4.43-4.47.\nIndia, rupee, .3364.\nJapan, yen, .2605.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2528.\n(Compiled by The Royal  Bank\nof Canada).\nClosing exchange ratei:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10. selling 1.11; franc unquoted.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 8.88: Canadian dollar .87%; franc unquoted.\nIn Gold\u2014Pound 10s, Id; U. S.\ndollar 61.06 cents; Canadian dollar\n55.00 cents.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 2 (CP).\u2014The\n\"free\" pound sterling was a half\ncent off at 83.88 ln relation to the\nUnited States dollar. Tht Swlu\nfranc wu unchanged.'\nCALCARY  LIVESTOCK\nOAWIABY, Au\u00ab. 3 (CP)-Re-\ncelpts, cattle 80; calves 35; hogs 97;\nsheep nil  _\nGood dTy-ted steen 8; plain dry-\nfed 7a Common to medium grassers\n3.50\u2014855. Medium to good heiten\n5.60-0.75; .common anjlneavy kinds\n4.50\u20145.25. Common to medium cowl\n83\u20143.80. Top heivy bulls 4.50; common 8.50\u20144. Common to medium\nvealers 4-<-6.\nUst b\u00bbcom 7,28\u2014756.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Aug, 2 (CP)-Ca-\nnadlar) commodity exchange. Spot:\nbutler, Que (92 score) 23%\u2014%.\nEggs Eastern A-large 24%.\nButter futures: No. 24%-%.\nYou Will Actually Be PROUD to\nWear Dr, Cowen's New ...\nPerhapi for years you have\ndreamed of owning denial\nplates se natural in appearance that detection Is almost\nImpossible. If so, the New\nTransparent Dental Plates\nhave such a striking resemblance to Nature's own\ntooth and gums, they will\nmake your dreams come\ntrue. Never before has the\ndental profession been aljle\nto produce dentel plates so\nbeautiful and Natural Appearing, Come In and let mo\nshow you tho samples.\nPAT BILLS IN NELSON OR TRAIL\nAll bills may bo paid af tho Canadian Bank of Commerce In Notion or Trail.\nThis arrangement, wo fool, will bo a real convenience to our patients.\nNO DISCOUNT ON CANADIAN MONET\nYou will not have to pay one cont discount on Canadian Money it Dr. Cowen'i\nind you miy exchange Canadian Currency for United States Currency in reasonable amounts to help pey expenses while in Spokane.\nGUARANTEED FOR A\nLIFETIME\nThl New Transparent Dtnttl Plttti in tht\nlightest In weight, affording you greater comfort while wearing them. Yet they are possessed\nof such unusual strength, I do not hesitate to\nfully guarantee thtm fer t lifetime. They are\nvirtually unbreakable and durable enough to\nservo tht hardest biters. These new platei ire\ntasteless and odorless, and being exceptionally\nsanitary, prevent offensive denture breath.\nTruly, they are a compliment to your personal\nappearance, and you wilt actually be proud to\nwear them. Purchue them oh Dr. Cowen'i Liberal Credit Terms, without Interest or extra\ncharge. Enjoy wearing your plates while paying.\nTake advantage of Dr. Cowen'a\nLiberal Credit Plan without\none penny additional cost.\nYour work completed immediately, end you can arrange\nto pay later, weekly or monthly. I mean every word of it\nwhen' I say, \"Make your own\nterms for payment.\"\nSpecial  Onc-to-Three-\nDay Service for\nOut-of-Town   Patients\nIf desired, work oan bt arranged\nby appointment, otherwise, comt In\nit your own oonvenlence.\nLOW Prices\nThe low cost for these fine pletes, com-\nblned with my Liberal Credit Term*,\nbrings them within tho means of even\nthe amallest wage earners. Why not exchange your old-fashioned, ill-fltHnf\ndental plates for those made of tho\nBeautiful Transparent Materiel. Liberal\nallowances.\nAll Prices for Bridg* and Plate\nWork Quoted in Advance\nyQh\u00a3diZ\nDEnTISTRV\nCrowns,   Plates,\nFillings,, Inlays,\nBridge work\nMy Low Pricei end Lib*\noral Credit Terma enable\nyou to have immediate\ndental attention. Don't\nendanger your health\nwith neglected tooth.\nCome  here  and   SAVE.\nopen .\nEUENINGS\nUNTIL\n9-PM\nPEERLESS DENTISTS\nJAMIESON  BLDG.\nCORNER   WALL  AND   RIUERSIDE   AVENUE\nSPOKANE, WASH.\n\u00bb,_____.._ i^j,j>|-iiiMiiiimh^\u00ab\u00bb-->'*-tt*- -\"\u25a0'\u25a0'iA :-^Ua-___^i_____.\ni _-__fc^__fcr_____^__-*'i*'-*^'r;'*'\n ppiWP!W .*\nI TIN-\n\u2014NILSON\nIVIC\nLast Times Today\nComplete Showi, 2, 7, 8:24\nMatinee at 2:00\u2014One\nComplete Show Only\nIIHt tetOTHT\nCROSBY LAMOUR HOPE\nOADtoSINOAPORI\nOtofM St \"ictoi schktzmgii\nADDED HIT-\n\"CITY OF CHANCE\"\nwith\nLynne Barl\u2014Donald Woods\nTense drama of the men who\nare a  law unto  themselves.\nSerial. Matinee Only\u2014\n\"Dick Tracy's G-Men\"\n-\nMONDAY-\n.  \"JOHNNY APOLLO\"\n\"YOUNG A8 YOU  FEEL\"\nMatinee at 2:00 p.m.\nNelson-Nelway\nand Gray (reek\nRoads Are Oiled\nNelson-Nelway Eoad Is oiled from\nSalmo to Nelson, and the Goatfell-\nGray Creek Eoad is oiled from Goat-\ntell to Gray Creek.\nThree cars of oil have been put\non the Nelway Eoad, and one car\non the road near Fruitvale. The\ntownsite of Sheep Creek has also\nbeen oiled.\nOne coat of oil has been put on\nthe roads wherever they are not\nblacktopped.\nVANCOUVEE, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Dr.\nIan McTaggart Cowan, Assistant\nDirector of the Provincial Museum\nat Victoria, will become Assistant\nProfessor of Zoology at the University of British Columbia when\nthe Autumn term opens, it was announced here today from the\nschool.\n1933 PLYMOUTH\nSEDAN. MCA\nBargain    \u00abPJ\u00abW\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker 8L     Limited      Phone 119\nFRIED SPRINC CHICKEN\nCorn on the Cob\nQrenfell's Cafe\nKootenay No-Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT SERVICE\nFleury s Pharmacy\n_   . Med. Arts Blk.\n\/_* TO ii      PHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nWatch for Pickpocket!\nPEGGY SAGE'S ZIPPER  KIT\ncontaining\nPolish Remover, Emery Boards,\nOrangewood  Stick, Cotton and\nyour  favorite  shade of Peggy\nSage polish\n$1.25\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE SI NELSON, B. C\nAcross Dominion\nTo Establish 30\nTraining Centres\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP)-Thlrty\ntraining centres will be established\nacross the Dominion to provide a\ncompulsory military training for\n29,750 Canadians during every 30-\nday period, it was announced today by the defence department\nTrainees will be enrolled in 119\ncompanies and training will take\nplace in all the 11 military districts.\nTotal men trained over 10 of the\n30-day periods is estimated at 297,-\n500,\nAn instructional staff of 5417 will\nbe needed. This will' consist of 900\nofficers. 1830 non-commissioned officers for instruction, 300 N. C. O.'s\nfor administration and 2387 clerks,\ncooks, butchers and orderlies.\nFollowing is a statistical summary\nof the details of the training plan:\n(A) Military District; (B) Approximate number of Training Centres;\n(C) Number of Training Companies;\n(D) Staff, Administration and Instructional; (E) Men Training per\n30-day Period; (F) Men Trained\nOver Total of 10 Periods.\n(A) (B) (C)    (D)       (E) (F)\n1 3     12       548     3,000        30,000\n2 4     16      728     4,000        40,000\n3 2      9      388     2,250       22,500\n4 6    24     1092     6,000       60,000\n5 3     12      546     3,500       30,000\n6 2      8      364     2,000       20,000\n7 1      4      187     1,000       10,000\n10 3     10       479      2500        25,000\n11 2      8      364     2,000       20,000\n12 2      8      364     2,000       20,000\n13 2 8 364 2,000 20,000\nTotal all districts;\n30   119    5417    28,750      297,500\nGLADE MAN FACES\nCHARGE OF RAPE\nJim Pozdnikoff, arrested at Glade\nJuly 2 and subsequently charged\nwith rape, was remanded for eight\ndays when he appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel\nFriday morning.\nPozdnikoff was arrested by Constable George MacAndrew of Castlegar and lodged in the Provincial\nJail at Nelson. He appeared for\nhearing July 28 and was remanded\nfor eight days by Magistrate Cartmel.\nE. P. Dawson of Brown It Dawson\naopeared for Pozdnikoff.\n114 acre lots at Balfour 100 feet\nreal sand beach, and trees for shade.\n>25o each. Easy terms.\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCo., Ltd.\nLook years younger and be\nmore   beautiful   with   a\npermanent from\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327      Johnstone Blk.\n\"PICK OF THE MARKET\"\nGuaranteed Used Cars\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Office and Hume Hotel\nLeague Lacrosse Game\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nMonday, August 5\u20148:15 p.m.\nNelson vs. Rossland\nWEST END DOOR OPEN AT 7:30\nGAME AT 8:1.\nUSUAL ADMISSION PRICES\nBICYCLES\nTHE BEST BY TEST\nAbove all a bicycle must be reliable and always ready\nto carry you easily and with comfort wherever you may\nwish to go. Reliability, like quality, Is built right into\nevery CC.M. Bicycle, as is proven by long and satisfactory performance in many services In many lands.\nTERMS CAN BE ARRANCED\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nBusiness Generally  .\nGood Throughout tht\nCountry, Poet Week\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 2 (CP)\u2014Bus-\nness conditions across Canada varied but were generally good during\nthis week, according to the weekly\nreport issued by tbe Canadian Credit Men's Trust Association.\nWholesalers and retailers supplying the building trades throughout\nthe Dominion said most points show\ngood movements in-hardware, paints\nand other builders' supplies.\nSeasonal variations were noted in\nsome areas Montreal reported Summer dullness tn some lineea while\nToronto and Winnipeg had slight\nrecessions in clothing lines. In other\ndistricts the clothing business held\nup well, however, with reports varying from fair to better.\nDemand for foodstuffs was fair\nto good throughout th. country.\nCollections varied from fair to\ngood.\nTrailer for lhe\nFerry Is to Be\nStarted Tuesday\nConstruction of I \"trailer\" eeow\nfor the Nelson ferry will begin\nnext Tuesday when timber arrives, stated F, R. McCharles ef\nVancouver, contractor whose bid\nwas accepted by the Provincial\nDepartment of Public Works. The\ntrailer Is expected to be finished\nabout the end ef August\nIt will be 22 feet 6 inches wide\nby 70 feet long, with a capacity of\nfrom six to eighl cars. It wlll.be\nattached to one end of the ferry\nby heavy chains. It will be narrow\nenough to fit between the two cables on the ferry, so that the cables\nwill not have to be run over pulleys\non top of the scow or ln any other\nway interfere with its speedy attachment and detachment.\nThe scow will be tied to one end\nof the ferry so that it will be pulled\nacross the West Arm on one trip\nand pushed on the return trip. While\ntraffic is not heavy enough to require its use, it will be tied up at\none side of the lake.\nSeven or eighl men will be employed to rush the job to completion.\nMr. McCharles left Nelson about\n10 years ago. He first came to Nelson ln 1900 and was well known\nhere as a contractor.\nNorth Idaho Miners\nto Take Strike Vote\non Holidays With Pay\nMULLAN, Idaho, Aug. 2 (AP)--\nA strike vote, affecting possibly\n950 North Idaho miners, will be\ntaken Saturday among employees\nof the Page and Morning mines, according to a notice posted in the\noffice of the Secretary of the Mine,\nMill lc Smelter Workers Union, a\nCIO. affiliate.\nThe Union reported negotiations\nfor a contract to replace one which\nrecently expired broke down when\nthe company failed to meet union\ndemands (pr vacations with pay and\nbetter ventilation \"on the 4200-foot\nlevel ot the Morning mine.\"\nGOODMAN  PLANS TO\nCONVALESCE AT BANFF\nROCHESTER, Minn., Aug. 2 (AP)\n\u2014Benny Goodman, swing band\nleader, has made arrangements to\nleave St. Mary's Hospital here Saturday or Sunday.\nGoodman will fly to Calgary,\nAlta., and then motor to Banff\nwhere he will rest from his recent\noperation for a protruded intervertebral disc.\nAT HOOD'S\n\"YOUR   HOME   BAKERY\"\nMoca Malt, Cold  and  Burnt\nSugar CAKES\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nifiooteaostosseseoeotseesots\nBANISH YOUR\nWARDROBE WORRIES\nPHONE 1042\n________________\n'\/\/Af.iAA.IVvV^AAA\nJ55SK5555KK5SW5K\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nNow It the time to'fumigate\nWith SMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugs\nIf you want results\nSmythe\nPrescription Druggist Phone 1\nBUDA DIESEL POWER UNIT\nAND SCHRAMM\nCOMPRESSOR\nSEE\nJACK ANNABLE\nCOOL OFF ON HOT DAYS\nVisit the\nPERCOLATOR\nFOUNTAIN\n1936 FORD SEDAN\nRadio, heater. Finished In olive\ngreen. Looks and runs like new.\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43      Limited      561 Joiephlne\nDAILY NIWI. NELSON, B. C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUG. J. 11\nLargest Order in History...\nBritain to Purchase\n100,000,000 Bushels\nof Canadian Wheat\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (CP Cable).-\nHlstory'i largest wheat purchase\nwu announced today by th* Ministry ef Food whloh uid It hid\nagreed to purchase 100,000,000 bushels of Canadian whut\nAn official announcement said\n'The Ministry of food hu entered\ninto an agreement with the Canadian Wheat Board to purchase during this cereal year, July 1M0 to\n1941, a further 100,000,000 bushels\nof Canadian wheat\n\"ThU Is the largest purchase ever\nreported,\" the statement tdded.\nThe huge purchase wu said to\nrepresent a big proportion of a\nyear's wheat consumption here.\nIt Indicated that Canada ls regarded as Britain's No. 1 granary. It\nis understood the Ministry hu arranged for some wheat from Australia although it Is not like Canada's famous hard kind.\nNothing could be learned of the\nprice paid for the newest purchase\nor of the quantity, of Canada wheat\npreviously purchased.\nREPORT PRICE\nABOVE MARKET LEVEL\nOTTAWA, Aug. 2 (CP). - Trade\nMinister MacKnnon today confirmed\nLondon reports of the sum of 100,-\n000,000 bushels of Canadian wheat\nto the British Food Ministry. The\nMinister aid the price was \"considerably above the market level.\".\nThis transaction, the largest in\nwheat history, wu made directly\nbetween the Canadian Wheat Board\nand the British cereal authority. It\n.wu the second deal made ln this\nway, the first being the sale of\n50,000,000 buiheli to the United\nKingdom announced last June 1.\nOther British purchases since the\nwar itarted have been made through\nthe Winnipeg Grain Exchange.\nThere will be no difficulty ln providing delivery whenever required.\nAt the moment the visible supply\nof wheat in Canada, ln store, is\nslightly above 270,000,000 bushels.\nOf this total the BritUh Government is understood to town already\nsomewhere between 50,000,000 and\n70,000,000. Only the BritUh Govern'\nment knows exactly.\nMost of the remainder of the\n270,000,000 U for sale and that figure will swell steadily in coming\nweeks u the 1940 crop begins to\nmove.\nThe new Canadian crop Is reported, to be substantially in excess of\n400,000,000 bushels, the average crop\nover the yeara being around 375,000\nbushels Highest production was\n566,000,000 bushels in 1928 and low\nest ln 1937 when only 190,000,000\nbusheU of wheat wu produced.\nCHAPMAN CAMP WINS SWIM GALA\ns Compete\nin   Kimberley'\niews*_ym_y0\u00bb.\nMeet\nman Camp\u2014A. Young, P. Farquhar,\nD. Barrett and F. Dutton.\nLadies relay, McDougall\u2014F. Parks\nP. Buzan, B. Patterson and R. Massie; Chapman Camp\u2014L. Conrade, M.\nConrade, A. Young and P. Farquhar.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. \u2014 Although     Mens relay, Chapman Camp-C\nrather chilly weather prevailed, a McGowan. W. Johnston, P. Gallpen\nfair-sized crowd turned out to the and D. Gallpen; McDougall\u2014D. Mc-\nMcDougall   Swimming Pool  Weo- Kay, J. Carter, G. Howey and D\nnesday - to watch the McDougall\nSwimming Gala. It wu the first one\n\u00bbto be put on by the club and much\ncredit wu due Herbert Stanton,\nHarry Robertson and D. McArthur\nwho worked 'With the kiddies and\nfor the gala. Competitors were in\nattendance from Cranbrook, Chapman Camp and McDougall Clubi.\nThe following committee had charge\nof the gala:\nReferees\u2014H. Robertson and D.\nMcArthur; Starter\u2014L. Bullen; Timers\u2014E. Whistlecroft and A. Morrison; Scorer\u2014Miss O. Bentley; Prizes\n-F. Waldie and W. Fulton; Judges\n\u2014M. Thomu, C, Howey,\" G. Wilson,\nD. Gill, T. Charlton and C. McGowan; Announcer \u2014 M. Haines;\nSteward\u2014H. Stanton.\nResults follow:\nGirls 8 and under, 13 seconds,\nCarol Stanton, first; Betty Park,\nsecond.\nBoys 10 and under, 6.4 seconds,\nSam Fyles, first; Charlei Shulie,\nsecond; Rodger StantoA, third.\nGirls 10 and under, 8.1 seconds,\nDorothy Harrison, firat; Alice Fred-\nerickson, second.\nBoys 12 and under, 21 seconds, Arthur Burrows, first; Billy Irvin,\nlecond; Sam Fyles, third,\nGirU 12 end under, 212 leconds,\nConnie' HarrUon, first; Lorraine\nMassie, second; Mabel Patterson,\nthird.     '  \u2022\nBoys 14 and under, 18.1 seconds,\nB. Herchmer, first; W. Leamen, second; H. Ironsides, third.\nGirU 14 and under, 18.1 seconds,\nR. Massie, first; B. J. Stanton, second; T. Pascuzzo, third.\nBoys 16 and under, 59.4 seconds.\nD. Gallpen, first; S. Eberline, second;\nH. McGowan, third.\nGirU 16 and under, 44.3 seconds,\nE. Mann, first; R. Massie, second;\nP. Farquhar, third.\nMen's free style, IS seconds, W.\nJohnston, first; D, McArthur, second; C. McGowan, third.\nLadies free style, 36 seconds, M.\nConrade, first; L. Conrade, second;\nB. Patterson, third.\nBoys 16 and under diving, Eccle-\nston, first; W. Leamen, second; Conrade, third.\nGirU 16 and under diving, B. J.\nStanton, first; A. Young, second; J.\nHolland, third.\nMens free style, 100 yards, 1.13\nseconds, P. Gallpen, first; Fred Stev-\nenson, second.\nLadies backstroke, 27.1 seconds, R.\nMassie, first; M. J. Stanton, second;\nA. Young, third.\nJunior boys relay, 1.13 seconds,\nChapman Camp A, first; Cranbrook,\nsecond; Chapman Camp, third.\nJunior girls relay, 1.22 seconds,\nMcDougall Club, fint; Cranbrook,\nsecond; Chapman Camp, third.\nPlunge for distance, 39.9 feet, W.\nJohnston, first; F. Stevenson, sec\nond; L. Conrade, third.\nMen's medly, 3 lengths, W. John\nston, first; P. Gallpen, second; D.\nMcArthur, third.\nLadies relay, McDougall Club,\nfirst: Chapman Camp, second.\nMens diving, P. Gallpen, first; II\nRobertson, second; W. Leamen, third\nLadies diving, L. Conrade, first;\nB. J. Stanton, second; J. Holland,\nthird.\nMens relay, Chapman Camp, first;\nMcDougall Club, second; Cranbrook,\nthird.\nLife saving, M. Deltz, first D. Buzan, patient; D. Gallpen, iecond,\nW. Leamen, patient; R. Massie,\nthird, B. Patterson, patient\nThe relay teams follow:\nJunior boys\u2014Chapman Camp A\u2014\nGallpen, H. McGowan, B. McKenzie and Herchmer; Cranbrook \u2014\nEberline, McDonald, Ironside and\nWlznowich; Chapman Camp B\u2014Leamen. Eccleston HoUworth, Conrade.\nJunior girU, McDougall\u2014R. Mas-\nsle, B. Stanton, P. Buzan and M.\nDeltz; Cranbrook\u2014F. Parki, T. Pal-\ncuzzo, H. Voiiey and E. Mann; Chap-\nMcArthur; Cranbrook\u2014Stevenson\nJarvis, WaUh and Selwyn.\nChapman Camp won with a total of 126 points, McDougall second with 76 points and Cranbrook\nwith 36 points,\nJ. Giegerich presented the life\nsaving trophy to Miss Deitz and Miss\nBuzan. and also the cup to the Chapman Camp Club, received by T.\nCharlton on behalf of the Camp\nClub.\nNames Trail Men\nLeft on July 2,4\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug 2\u2014Names of\nrecrulti drafted from Trail July 2\nand 4 were not published due to\ncensorship restrictions in effect at\nthe time out those restrictions having since been removed, the list of\nrecruits leaving that day, hu been\nreleased.\nRecruiti leaving July 1 were:\nCharlei Frederick Oliver, Nelson;\nAlex, Bremner, James Doherty, Gilbert Lloyd Gillet Eric Hamilton\nDouglas, Samuel James Mathews,\nRobert Edward Mear, Harry George\nWere, Alf?ed George Cooke, Walter\nHerbert Craig, William Irvine,\nJames Moore Brennen, and John\nCarruthers, Trail; Dave Bissett of\nFruitvale; John Greenlaw and Ran'\nsom Greenlaw, Howser.\nRecruits leaving July t were\nArthur LouU Johnson and Arthur\nThomu O'Reilly, Rossland; Wesley\nGordon Bruce Forteath, Donald\nRalph Hugo Fried, William Mc-\nNivm Graham and John Watson\nYoung, Trail.\nAustralian Labor\nSuspends New South\nWales Executive\nSYDNEY, Aug. 2 (CP Cable) -\nThe Australian Labor Party suffered IU biggest split since the First\nGreit War today when the Federal\nExecutive suspended the entire New\nSouth Wales Party Executive because of the latter'i opposition to\nthe Federal body's policy of supporting the Government's wartime\npolicies.\nThe New South Wales' executive\nhad been openly opposed to the\nGovernment's enlarged war powers\nwhich the Federal Party supported\nln Parliament\nPolitical sources felt the split Is\nbound to extend to Federal Labor\nparliamentarians and may precipitate early Federal elections.\nSOVIET NEWS REPORTS\nFINNISH POLICE CLUB\nWORKERS AT MEETING\nMOSCOW, Aug. 2 (AP)-A dispatch by Tass, Soviet News Agency,\nclaimed today that FinnUh police\nin Helsinki clubbed workers who\nwere attempting to attend a meeting\nof the \"Society of Friendship and\nPeace With the U.S.S.R.\" Similar\nclashes occurred ln other Finnish\ncities, the dispatch alleged.\nSELLS NAZI LEAFLETS.\nMONEY FOR RED CROSS\nLONDON, Aug. 2 (API-Souvenir collectors paid six penoe\n(about 10 cenU) apiece for Adolf\nHtller's leaflets dropped ln Southwestern England last night The\nproceeds were donated to the Red\nCross.\nThe leaflets measured 12 by 8\nInches and bore a caption \"a last\nappeal to reason by Adolf Hitler.\"\n31 Nelson Buildinq Pemits in July\nLift 1940 Total by $5004 to $83,897\nThirty one building permit! limed at the NeUon City Engineer's\noffice during July represented an\nexpenditure for new constructions\nrepairs and improvements of $8004.\nThis figure was $17,186 below July\n1939, which waa the largest July\ntotal since 1933.\nThe July figures brought the\ntotal for the yeu date to (83397 ai\ncompared to $88,699 for the same\nperiod In 1939.\nIncluded In the July permits was\none for $2000 issued to Mrs. Bjertness for the construction of a four-\nroom house on Union Street; and\none for $1230 Issued to Mrs. Fanny\nPorter for the construction of a\nthree-room house on Chathem\nStreet\nTake a Kodak with you en your\npicnic. We hive' all slzei ind\nprices. Film and Movie Film.\nWe develop and print ln 8 hours.\nToys, Games, Books, Etc.\nCity Drug Co.\n Your Rexill store   ;\nMrs. Gallup Dies\nin Minnesota; Is\nKnown in District\nNewi of the death of Mn. Andrew Gallup, well-known In Procter, Nelson and other points ln the\ndistrict has been received by Mrs.\nW. A. Ward of Procter. Mrs. Gallup, who of recent years, has made\nIt a habit of spending three or four\nmonths in Nelson and visiting relatives in the States each year died\nJuly 23 at St. Charles, Minn., and\nwas buried four days later at Livingston, Mont, which was her home,\nMrs. Gallup, wife oi the late Mr.\nGallup, who died about 12 years\nsjgo on a trip with hU wife after\nbeing superannuated from the service of the C.P.R. with whom he\nwas a lineman, lived for about 32\nyears in Procter before Mr. Gallup\nretired.\nAbout the beginning of April she\ncame up for her usual visit to Procter and left at the end of June\nto visit her niece, Mrs. Steele, at\nSullivan, Ind. Both Mr. and Mrs.\nSteele are als. known in the district having resided at Ainsworth\nuntil about 12 or 14 years ago. Mrs.\nGallup also Intended to visit her\nsister, Mrs. Hart at St. Charles, and\nwas there three days before taking\nill, and dying the following day.\nMrs. Steels Informed Mrs. Ward\nof Mrs. Gallup's death.\nAUo surviving Mrs. Gallup Is a\nniece, Mrs. Hill of Spokane.\nMr. Gallup's people owned the\nBalfour Beach Inn, before lt was\nsold to A. H. Green.\nismeeesai&tosooisamimisom*\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nHelp the Canadian Red Cross, buy\na tag today.\nGet your films, also developing\ndone ai Valentine's.\nJunior Red Cross Open Air Dence\nAugust 9th. Lakeside Park.\nEnjoy a refreshing ice cream sun\ndae at Gray's Candy Shoppe.\nHarold Foulds - Electrician\nLighting planU. Hse. wiring. Ph. 544\nMake a date for the Big Dance,\nAugust 8. Music' by Alberta Ranch\nBoys. Eagle Hall,\nAluminum French Fry baskets 69c\n1 gallon crock 19c. Aluminum saucepans 59c. Hipperson's.\n5 cu. ft. Crosley Shelvador Re\nfrigerator. Like new. $150. Easy\nterms. McKay 8c Stretton.\nFOttOW THE CROWD TO\nWlttOW  POINT  FOR  THE  BIQ\nDANCE TONIGHT\n-r*y: \" . \u25a0 - - -\t\nI mmmmmm U    ' \u25a0____\u2014_\nRossland and Nelson Eagles joint\npicnic for members and friendi at\nCastlegar Sunday, August 11,\nSEE A. TERRItt FOR UPH0L8-\nTERING and DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH 8TREET.\nPythian Sisters and KnighU of\nPythias Basket Picnic at the Park,\nWednesday, August 7 at 2:30 p.m.\nDOUBLEHEADER LADIES' SOFT-\nBALI\u2014Trail at Nelson. First two\ngames West Kootenay playoffs. At\nRecreation Grounds. Sunday after\nnoon. 1:00 and 4:30\nCARD  OF THANKS\nWe wUh to extend our sincere\nthanks to Dr. Auld and all our\nfriends for their kindness and expressions of sympathy in the loss of\nour son and brother, Richard.\nMr. and Mrs. R. R. McCandlUh\nand Family.\nREFRICERATORS, WASHERS\nRADIOS,  RANGES\non Sale at the\nStandard Electric\n433 Joiephlne St Phone 838\n.-:\u2014\u2666\u2666\u2666 \u2014i\u2014 ...\u2014:..-- , . ,-.-.-..\nCream-0 Milk\nTry  a  pint  for your\nSUNDAY   DESSERTS\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\n1937 Ford DeLuxe Ferdor.\nLicense, heater, good tirei.\nCoodwell tfiQC\nCuarantee <J)0 JJ\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n_M Baker St   SERVICE  Phone 12!\nSpecial\nDry Slab Wood, 4 foot,\n3 cordt  $10.00\n12\", load     $4.00\nPhone 163 or 434R1\n$*075\n$*_4.75\nValuei to\n$40.00.\nValuei to\n$32.50\nYour chance to pick up t Fashion Craft or Cook iult\nat a great saving\u2014Clothing prices art advancing rap-\nIdly, making these suits real bargains and valuei that\nyou won't got again. Some with extra pants.\nTERMS:   CASH.\nEmory's Limited\nRossland Social\nROSSLAND, B, C, Aug. 2-MUs\nKay Lowdon returned Tuesday\nevening after a four weejts vUit\nat Vancouver.\nWilliam Inglis, who has been\nconfined to the Mater Misericordiae\nHospital for the past two months,\nreturned to hU home Wednesday.\n0. L. Christie, who Joined the\nCanadian Naval Forces recently,\nhas received word to report to the\nCoast next Thursday,\nMr. and Mn. R. W. Hasgen attended the funeral of the late\nThomas Couper at NeUon Wednesday.\nMrs. T. O. Wood and daughter\nElizabeth returned Wednesday evening, from a two weeks vacation\nspent with Mrs. Wood's mother,\nMrs. Elizabeth Buxton, at Vancouver. They were accompanied on\ntheir return by Miss Irene Buxton,\nwho will be the guest of her aunt\nfor a few weeks.\nMUs Eileen Mara and Miss Gertrude Mara are expected home\nSunday from a holiday at Lake\nChristina.\nMrs. W. G. Mara, who has been\na patient at the Mater MUericor-\ndiee Hospital for two weeks, returned to her home Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Herbert Bosworth,\nRoy Bosworth, and Mr. and Mrs.\nLeslie Treverton are leaving Sunday on a week's holiday at Grand\nForka and Greenwood.\nMr. and Mrs. Lester Brown returned Friday from a honeymoon\nat the Coast, and have taken up\nresidence in the Marks Apartments.\nMrs. Jack Spencer entertained at\na presentation tea ln honor of MUs\nMary MacAulay, an August bride-\nelect at her home Thursday afternoon. The rooms were decorated\nwith red and white phlox, and the\ntea table, set with a lovely ecru\nlace cloth, .looked very attractive\nwith dainty vases of sweet peas\nand snapdragons. Mrs. Thomas\nBeaulieu poured, and MUs Delphine Vetere and Miss Eda Vetere\nassisted in serving. The honoree\nwas presented with a coffee urn,\nand a pair of linen pillow slips on\nbehalf of the company present.\nBarnes and contesU were clayed,\nMrs. Frank Thederahn, Mrs. A.\nWuorl, Mrs. Thomas Fourt. and\nMrs. Peter Corrado winning\nprizes. Other invited guests included Mrs. A. McAulay, Mrs. M.\nM. Butorac. Mrs. LouU McAulay,\nMrs. J. B. Camozzi, Mrs. Louis Pro.\nfili, Mrs. John Vetere, Mrs. Helga\nStaudinw, Mrs. A. J. Vetere, Mrs.\nVictor Lonzo, Mrs. Armando Santori. Mrs. Edward Ruelle, Mrs,\n\u25a0Jeth Martin, Mrs. Allan Dixon.\nMrs. Bernard Ferrey, Mrs. Wilfred\nDorey. Mrs. W. Adams, Mrs, Clarence Therrien. Mrs. Ian Fry, Mrs.\nA. Bourdon, Mrs. Harry Douglas,\nMrs. H. Bell, Mrs. Frank Leeson,\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFINANCIAL .ECURITY\nINVE8TOR8 SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 81     Hlpperson Blk.     Ph. 197\nFURNACES\nInitalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 888        610 Kootenay\nMrs. Daniel Dosen, Mrs. Ray Underwood, Mrs. A. E. Harrison, Mri.\nHerbert Spencer, Mrs. Ross Jack*\nson, Mrs. David Calder, Mrs. Mil*\ndreg Dixon, Mrs. B. Zanussi, Mri.\nM. Conci, MUs Pauline Lonzo, Mill\nCurtis Trisgs, Miss Dores Metzgar\nand Miss Constance Rasmussen.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Penny returned\nThursday from a two weeks holt,\nday at Vancouver and Vernon.\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. McLeod have\nreturned from a honeymoon trip,\nspent at Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Penney leave\nMonday for their home at Vernon\nafter their honeymoon visit here..\nJoseph LaFace has returned from\na 10-day vacation at Banff.\nMiss Aili Hermans and Mill\nFreda Hermans are vacationing at\nChristina Lake for two weeks.\nFrank Gibbard. who has beea\nvisiting hU son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ezart\nhas returned to his home at Lulu\nIsland.\nMUs Sybil Jackson has returned\nfrom a holiday In Saskatchewan.\nMrs. V. Borelll and daughter Rita,\nand Mrs. Yolands Nacaratto, and\nAlbert Vecchlo of Fernle and Mn.\nJoe Gerace, Miss Dora Gerace and\nGino Gerace, were guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. John Vetere, Friday.\nSugar Rowi\nGrocery\nYour  Local   Independent\nGrocery\u2014Where Pricei and.\nQuality Ara tha Beit\nCATSUP: Helm _.\u00ab-\u00ab\nLarge bottles, 2 for  ******\nCHILI SAUCE: Heinx      mt*\nEach  *\u2022**>\nHeinz Baked Beans, 2 16 ox. tall\ntins and 1 small bottle Heinx\nTomato Catsup. IC_*\nAll for  ******\nSTRAINED BABY FOODS:\nHeinz, all kinds |IU\nEaeh    *WF\nEGGS:  Fresh   local \u00a3*A\nGrade A large, 2 doi  ******\nBACON: Premium 3fi\u00ab*\nFresh, sliced, per Ib. *******\nHAM: Tenderized aqA\nRaw, fresh illced, per Ib... b***t\nBUTTER: Fancy Glendale OAtA\nFirst grade, 3 Ibi for ...... owT\nLARD: 1 Ib, cartons iCtd\n3 lbs. for *****\n8PORK: The new delicacy J2__\nTry one. Per tin ******\nWONDER   MEAT SAUCE:\nSpecial  offer tCt*\n2 bottlei for  ******\nPORK  SAUSAGE:  Campfire\nBrand, 1 Ib. tins A*C*\\\n2 for Wr\nSUGAR: Granulated      Cf \u00a3\u00a3\n20 lbs for  9**33\nNABOB TEA AND ftf f g\nCOFFEE: 1 Ib. of eich YAt***\nPUREX  TISSUE: *gJL.\n6 rolls for ******\nORANGES:  Fancy At**\nQuality, 2 doz. for _ *-*\u2022***\nGRAPE  FRUIT: m+A\nFancy quality, 6 for   ******\nJAM: New strawberry AtCrt\nand apple, 4 lbs ******\nPHONE   110\nFor free and prompt delivery,\nfreih fruits and vegetable!, milk\nand cream, Ice cream and Revels.\nWe shall appreciate your huil*\nnets.\nFOR THE WEEKEND \u2014 YOU'LL NEED\nColumbia Lager\nBEER\nAnd for Your Convenience \u2014 Why Not\nHave It Delivered\nHhone the Liquor Vendors, give them your\npermit number and your address, and deliveries\nwill be made C.O.D.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThii advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\n....,... a _,..,______.._\u201e..\nI\n .\t\n..'\n__M\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_1940_08_03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415073","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"}]}}