{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415119":{"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":"1940-06-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415119\/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":" llMsh Attacks on French Coait\nRepelled Say Nasii.\u2014Page 12\n-m\t\nNew Heavy Taxes tn New Zealand\nin War Budget.\u2014Page 12\n$22,250,000 In Munition Orders\nfor Canada.\u2014Page 8\nNas) Factories, Refineries, Docks\nand Bridges Bombed.\u2014Psge 12\nFrench Colonies Prepare to\nFight.\u2014Page 13\nFord Plants Make Big Contribution\nto War Iffort.\u2014Page 10\nw\n* * * *\nurks Send Navy\nnto Black Sea\nRussians Watched\njmania Reported to Have Agreed to Demand\nfor Control by Reds of Oil Fields and\nDifferent Political System\n, BUDAPEST, June 27, (API-\nSoviet Russia reached across the\nDanube and thrust the hammer\n\u2022nd sickle deep toward the Balk-\nen ipherei of Germany and Italy\ntoday in a new man-shuffle which\nact Southeastern' Europe aqulver.\nAgainst a background of mobilising armtei and centuriei of\nracial and national rivalry, the\nquestion tonight was whether\nHungary and Bulgaria would accept the Russian coup as a signal for a complete Rumanian\nbreak-up.\nThe reliable report that Hungary's Premier, Count Paul Teleki, had received a letter from Hitler promiiing him' that Hungary s\nterritorial aspiration! \"will be\nmet\" waa one straw in the wind.\nBut reporti Rumania ia secretly\nlobillzing reserves to reinforce 1,-\n10,000 or more men already under\nrms and rushing them to her\nfastarn frontier may restrain Hun-\nuy at this time.\nRummla tonight cut off all tele-\nbone   communication   with   her\neighbori, veiling her moves.\nTheie   reports   suggested  King\n*rol h*d made his peace with\ntalin at great sacrifice in the hope\nlaving the big province of Trans-\nlvania from Hungary and South-\ni Dobrudja from Bulgaria.\n\" ie was no ilgn of exceptional\nttj activity in Budapest, but\n_\u00ab_T_ was known to hav* large\nircei gathered near the frontier\nf Transylvania, which ihe. lost In\nta tint Great War.\nTte German-and Italian Ministers\nUed upon the Hungarian Premier\n1 Torelan Miniiter, but whether\nve assurance of support of her\n..is on Rumania or to counsel\nIraint was not known.\nrie Hungarian Government radio\nnnouncement of Carol's acceptanc*\nt the Soviet demand commented:\n\u25a0   Thoa tha Integrity of th* Ru-\nI maniao territory, about which io\n1 many debates have been heard In\nI the last 20 years, exists no more.'\nI   King Boris of Bulgaria presided\nlever   an   extraordinary   crown\nI council meeting at his country\nI palace outside Sofia after repeat-\nled conferencea on the Balkan lit-\nI uatlon.\nfofficlala in BiAgarla expressed\nHbt any move toward Dobrudja\nmid be made until results of the\niet action became known.\nigaria also has called up reier-\n,ista, and Bulgarian newspapers\nprinted long articles on Balkan ter-\nlorial revision from the German\n\\ Italian presi.\nES few months ago Hungarian\nitesmen were declaring their denization to stop a Soviet Rus-\nwd advance into the Balkans. The\nlarpathians were declared th* Bar-\nilcde against Communism, and Ital-\nlan aid was envisaged in holding it\n[Today, with the Soviet already in\nla Carpathian passes on Hungary's\nlorthern frontier by reason of the\nippearance of Poland and\necho-Slovakia, the Red army\njoved closer to that same curving\nterrier on the East\nj Stalin chose an opportune mo-\nlaent to move into the Balkans and\nktend a Pan-Slavia sway that hai\nwen an ambition of Russians from\nhe days of the Tsars.\nJ Germany Is too busy ln the West\nIpparently to pay heed; Italy has\n\u25a0oiried her in the war and may not\ntt ln the mood to help Hungary\nKrry out any proposed rush to\nhe Carpathian barricade in Rumania.\n[Both in Berlin and Rome \"dlsin-\nireat\" In the Rumanian situation\nlias expressed, but informed opinion in the Balkans was that only\nlecauae of the emergency in the\nWest could Germany accept a lit-\naatton which will leave Russia con-\npolling Danube ports and otherwise\nlominating German economic in-\nrreit in the Black Sea region.\n, In Belgrade, the Yugoslav cabinet trot upon reoelpt of the Rumanian newi. When Italy entered\nwar   Yujoslav   leaders  an-\nANKARA, Turkey, Juna 27\n(AP)\u2014A Turklih naval iquadron\nsteamed through tha Straits of\nBoaporui today to th* Black Sea,\napparently ready to defend thi\n\u2022traits agalnit attack.\nThli historic guardian of the\nDardanelles felt deep concern\nover Runla'i ultimatum to Rumania, demanding not only large\nland concaiilom but, apparently,\nalio naval baiei on tha Black Sea\nand Danube,\nTurkey'a main fear wai of a\ngeneral move In thli direction,\nwith th* straits at tht ultimate\ngoal.\nTelephona communication with\nTurkey from outside capitals proved\nimpossible tonight as Istanbul authorities tightened the censorship\nimposed after the Soviet demands\non Rumania became known.\nLONDON, June 27 (CP) - The\nSwiss radio tonight said Russia, ln\naddition to demanding Bessarabia,\nNorth Bukowina and certain port\ncontrol from Rumania, also insisted\nupon control of Rumanian oil fields\nand a different political system ln\nthat country. Rumania agreed to the\nultimatum, the radio report said.\nNEW YORK, June 27 (AP)\u2014A\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\nreport heard here by the National\nBroadcasting Company tonight\nquoted a Bucharest dispatch aa\nsaying the German minister had\nleft there for Vienna to confer\nwith the German Foreign Min\nlater, Joachim von Ribbentrop.\nnounned they expected Ruulan\nhelp If Italy attempted an Invasion of their soil.\nThe German radio, In a report\nfrom Belgrade, aaid there was no\nqueition of Yugoslavia observing\nher Balkan entente obligations with\nRumania. Theie provided for assistance only in case of aggression by\nanother Balkan power, not in the\ncase of Soviet Russia, the radio\npointed Out\n\"Should another Balkan or Southeastern, country intervene then the\nsituation would arise which would\ninduce Yugoslavia to re-examine\nthe situation,\" said the broadcast.\nBelgian Leaders\nReported in Touch\nWith Nazi Heads\nBERLIN, Jupe 27 (AP). - The\nGerman radio claimed tonight the\nbeginning of German-Belgian discussions had been announced by\nBelgian Premier Hubert Pierlot.\nSpeaking from Bordeaux to his\ncountrymen, Pierlot \u2014 whose Gov.\nernment fought on after King Leo.\npold had ordered a surrender\u2014de\nclard, according to the German\nreport:\n\"In carrying out the unanimous\norder of the Belgian nation we\n(the Government) went to France\nto continue the war on the side of\nour Allies. The fate of arms turned\nagainst us.\n\"We have established contact\nwith the (German) occupation authorise! and with the authoritiei\nthat remained in Belgium.\"\nAllen to Direct\nFire-Fighting at\nLumberton Scene\nCRANBROOK, B. C, June 27 (CP)\n\u2014R. E. Allen, Diitrlct Foreiter for\nthe Kootenayi arrived here today\nfrom Nelson, to direct operations\nfor controlling a fire near Lumber-\nton, started by lightning last week.\nBlaie which started on Lewiiby\nCreek has now spread over an area\nseven miles long and three mihs\nwide. It is burning mostly ln ilash-\nings and so far has been kept away\nfrom valuable timber.\nMore than 200 men are fighting\nthe blaze.\nSERIOUS DAMAGE CAUSED BY\nNEW GERMAN RAIDS ON BRITAIN\nLONDON, June 28 (Friday)\nIfCP)\u2014The Air Mlniitry and Min.\n| latry of Horn* Security announced\n11(1 * itatement today thit \"reports\n[received to far Indicate that no\nliarloui damage wai cauied ind\n[that caiualtiei were viry slight\"\nI during German air raid! last\n[\"night.\n(The itatement laid the German\nlomben \"carried out bombing al-\nicki on teveral districts of Great\nrltain.\"\nI Royal  Air  Force  fighter  planes\npuld be heard patrolling at various\npints. Anti-aircraft fire greeted the\nevaders whenever they were spot-\n[The raiders flew at a great height.\ntrchllghts pltyed over the sky\nJhen the enemy bombers approach-\nSoutheast England and British\nIghters   darted   up.   The   bomben\nne singly and at almost regular\nintervals, seeking loopholes ln the\ndefence to penetrate the coast\nOne machine after diving In\nan attempt to elude searchlights\nturned toward the sea and was\nfollowed by two other machines\nwhich headed back for their bases\nwithout crossing the coastline.\nOne bomber, spotted by search\nlights, carried on and flew inland\nwith a British fighter In pursuit\nBursts of anti-aircraft tire also\nmet ralden flying over Northeast\nEngland. In one district thuds like\nbombs dropping were heard in the\ndistance.\nMany Incendiary bombs were\ndropped In one area of Northeast\nEngland but nearly all fell on open\nland, causing little damage. One\nwent through the roof ot a small\noutbuilding, causing a fire which\nwai quickly extinguished.\nA party bt officers of the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve\nare now in training at a South coait depot ln England, with other\nreservists. Th* training of Canadian naval officers with th* Royal navy\ndoes not introduce a new principle becauie many of the Dominion'!\npermanent naval officer! have undergone training ln England. They\nare trained on exactly th* sime lines as officers of the Royal Navy.\nAn old German torpedo, upper left makes an ideal seat for some\nof the officers aa they take messages from semaphore signals. Ai part\nof their training, some of the volunteer! are ihown, right, rigging up\na whaler, while others are ihown, bottom left in training as a gun\ncrew, loading a 4-inch naval gun.\nMajor Sutton Is\nExpected Prepare\nNew Draft Today\nPhysical Standards\nlor C.A.S.F. Revised\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP)-Phyii-\ncel standards for admission to the\nCanadian Active Service Force are\nbeing revised it wu learned from\nthe Department ot National Defence tonight\nAmong other changei tha minimum itandard for height hai heap\nMajor A. C. Sutton, D.S.O., M.c4 reduced from five feet four inchei\nto five feet.\nA detailed announcement of the\nchtrgci in standards ia expected\nshortly but instructions are uc,u_\nof Roailand, ll expected'to arrive\nln Nelion today to prepare another draft of recrulti to leave Nelson on Saturday morning's train.\nAH those who have offered them- --.      , ,\nleivei and hav* b**n before the I diitncta to apply U\u00bbnew. height\nMedical  Board, a\u00bb instructed, tp I itandard* t\u00bb all enllett_eji\u00abi.,\nreport to the Armory et 1 pattrwhen.\nMajor Sutton will swear in those\npassed by  tha  Board  and place\nthem in their proper category.\nent out to headquarters of military\n>ly \"\nTechnocrats Are\nRaided al (oast\nVANCOUVER, June 27 (CP). -\nPolice continued their drive here\nagainst Technocracy, Inc., today,\nraiding four suburban offices of the\norganization and seizing a truck load\nof papers and documents.\nMain offices of the group In down\ntown Vancouver were raided last\nnight\nMeanwhile W. E. Walter, Vancouver Director, said that sections here\nand in Nanaimo and North Vancouver would be disbanded.\n\"Technocrats have no choice but\nto disband and obey the law,\" he\nsaid.\nVICTORIA, Jun* 27 (CP)-Police today raided.the Victoria headquarters of Technocracy, Inc., and\nseized a truckload ot literature.\nPolice Commission\nStill Investigating\nFisher, Walker Fight\nMayor N. C. Stibbs, J. J. McEwen,\nand R. E. Crerar, members of the\nNelson Police Commission said on\nThursday they were \"still investigating\" the altercation Tuesday evening between City Police Constable\nGeorge Fisher and George H. Walker, on Baker Street, More information concerning the affair had been\nlaid before them and they were\nconsidering It, they ssid.\nConstable Fusher meanwhile, wai\nitill under luspenslon.\nCanadian Nurses Will\nDonate Surgical Units\nCALGARY, June,27 (CP).-Thre*\nsurgical units, costing approximately\n$4500 and consisting of complete\noperating room equipment will be\ngiven the Canadian Government by\nthe Canadian Nurses' Association,\nlt was decided at this afternoon's\nsession of the C. N. A. convention,\nwhen the Association's war effort\ncame up for discussion.\nIn addition members voted that\nfor the duration of the war surplus\nfunds will be put Into war bonds.\nOrangemen to Raise\n$10,000 for War Fund\nVANCOUVER, June 27 (CP). \u2014\nCanadian Orangemen were pledged\ntoday to raise (10,000 toward a war\nwork fund and to take part in a coordinate plan to assist Canada's war\neffort\nSome 500 delegates from all parts\nof Canada attending the 110th annual convention adopted resolutions\nto this effect as the convention\nopened with Dr J, J. Williams of\nToronto presiding.\nThe convention also named a committee to confer with national veterans' groups and .patriotic organization! to further a scheme for\nBritlih Immigration to Canada. The\ncommittee will, also assist In plans\nfor settling Overseaa children In\nthe Dominion.\n        -\n________\nGerman Spies\nWhen in France\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nJune 27 (CP.-Cable) \u2014 Sergeant\nR. S. Breenan of Kingiton, Ont,\nmember of a Central Ontario battalion, today received congratulations of hii general officer commanding for trapping two German spies.\nThe incident In which Breenan'! alertness spelled death for\nihe spies, occurred, while the Canadians were in France and the\nSergeant was on-guard duty at\ndocks in Brest\nAfter an air raid warning was\nsounded, he noticed two blue\nlights flickering from a window\non the top story ot a small\nbuilding.\nFour hours later there was another raid. Again the lights appeared, apparently signalling to\nenemy aircraft. \"It was sufficient\nevidence to convince me there were\nspiei in the building,\" Breenan said\nlater. Off hli way to report the incident, he had further evidence to\naupport hi! belief when he waa\nfired on from the direction where\nthe light! were seen.\nHe Informed a French policeman\nand a British military policeman\nand the trio investigated. Unable to\nenter the building, they shouted\norders for the doors to be opened\nbut there was no response.\nBreenan and the two policemen\nmoved across the itreet and opened\nfire on two figurei viiible through\nthe window!. Both men dropped to\nthe floor and later their bodies\nwere found in the room.\nIn their pocket* were mttugti\ndetailing Information on the number of boat* that had left port\nwith troopi, th* time they idled,\ntho number of ihlpt tied up and\nloading, and alio bit* of other\nmenage* which had been torn up\nbut which w\u00abr\u00ab found to\nhave contained equally vital\nInformation,\nUrges Prcicrvation of\nAnglo-French Friendship\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-Andre\nMauroii, noted French writer, isk-\ned the Overseas League ln an address today to do overything possible to preierve Anglo-French\nfriendship. \"Many mistakes have\nbeen made on both sides,\" he said,\n\"but there are more common aiplra-\ntions ln Britain and France than\nIn any other countries.\"\nlegion Considers\nence\nCorps al Nelson\nExecutive of th'e Nelson Branch\not the Canadian Legion had under\nconsideration the information of a\nLegion Voluntary Defence Corps,\nstatSdH.'E.Thain, Se\u00abettdy-Treas-\nurwrTKursday. In T|*U, some 300\nex-service man, maw of them\nmembers of Trail LSfphmnqMi,\nwere expected to register for the\ncorns. \\_i\nMr. Thaln said that fun Government approval of the more htd not\nyet been received in Nelson but\nthat veterans were willing to enlist\nfor the corps.\nTime of service would be for the\nduration of the war. However, enlistment In the CA.S.f'.. or any of\nHis Majesty's forces would automatically cancel the agreement.\nMU8T BE FIT\nIn a letter to Branch Secretaries\nthroughout the Province, the Secretary of the Provincial Command explains that \"it would be necessary\nto nttke certain that only members\nwho are fit enough and who had\nthe time should participate in this\nactivity, and that it was thoroughly understood that service wai entirely voluntary, at-least for the\nfirit 48 houn during an emergency.\nIt was further emphasied that\nthe Voluntary Defence Corps will\nnot be expected to displace the enlisted home guard (Veteran's Home\nDefence Corps) or any other enlisted body of men, but If required for\nservice beyond a period of 48 hours\nthat such service would be paid for\nat the recognized army rate of pay.\nAMENDMENT VALIDATES\nLIFE INSURANCE CLAUSE\nVICTQBIA, June 27 (CP)-En\nforcement of suicide clauses in life\nlnsuranc contracts Is validatd by an\namendment to the B. C. Insur.nce\nAct which will go Into effect July\n2 by Government proclamation.\nIt guarantees beneficiariei the\nright to collect iuielde claims where\na company has entered into an\nagreement to pay ln case of suicide\nafter a policy has been in force for\na certain length of time.\n8000 BLANKETS SENT\nTO RED CROSS BY B. C.\nVANCOUVER. Jun 27 (CP). -\nBritish Columbia haa donated 8000\nblankets since the call went out by\nthe Red Cross, official* announced\ntoday. In all more than 75,000 were\ngiven throughout Canada.\nINDIA BILL PASSES\nLONDON, June 27 (CP Cable)-\nThe India arid Burma emergency\nbill, to permit the Viceroy of India\n\u00abnd the Governor of Burma to con-\nicrlpt European Britlih lubjects in\nIndia, passed all stages in the House\nof Lords today.\n750 INTERNED\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-Biit-\naln'i anti-fifth column campaign\nhas resulted In the Internment of\n750 British subjects In the United\nKingdom, Sir John Anderson, Home\nSecretary and Minister of Horn*\nSecurity, announced today\nSTORY OF REPUBLICAN BALLOT.\nPHILADELPHIA, June 27 (AP)-\nThe first ballot on a Republican\npresidential nominee failed today 'o\nproduce a majority for any candidate.\nUnofficial result! gave Dewey the\nmoit votei on the flnt ballot with\n359. to Taft'i 209 and Wllkie'i 100.\nThe iecond ballot results on a\nRepublican presidential nominee\nwere officially announced as:\nDewey 338; Taft 203; Willkie 171;\nVandenberg 73; Hoover 21; McNary\n____.\n10; Bridget 9; Gannett 30; Martin 28;\nMacNIder 34; Capper 18; James 68;\nLa Guardia 1.\nThird ballot\u2014Thomai E. Dewey\n310, Wendel Willkie 259, Robert A\nTaft 212.\nFourth ballot-WUlkle 306; Dewey 251; Taft 225.\nj Fifth ballot-WUlkle 429; Taft 377;\nDewey 57.\nSixth ballot unanimous for Will\nkit\nDaily News Will\nPublish as Usual\non Dominion Day\nThe Daily Newi will publish\nai uiual on Monday, Dominion\nDay,\nInto Transylvania\nfor Hungary Move\nRussia Agrees to Delay Occupation of Ceded\nAreas Until Capitulation Worked Out;\nMeans Return to Balkan Obscurity\nBUCHAREST, June 27 (AP).\u2014Rumania bowed tonight\nto a Soviet demand for large areas of her territory, and moved\nnearly 2,000,000 men into Transylvania to meet an unexpected Hungarian attempt to regain that former Magyar Province,\nDespite earlier reports Red troops already were on the\nmarch, it was disclosed late tonight that Russia had agreed to\nhold back from the actual occupation of the ceded areas\u2014\nBessarabia and Northern Bukowina\u2014until the last details of\nthe capitulation had been worked out. Diplomats worked at\nthat task. It was expected to be completed tomorrow and Soviet troops then would cross the frontier.\nThe capital was qyiet tonight The Press was not permitted to publish a word of the Red ultimatum or of King Carol'*\nacceptance.\nRoosevelt Gives\nAuthority lor\nSeizure ol Ships\nWASHINGTON, June 27 (AP)\n\u2014Preiident Rooievelt, in a itep\nInterpreted as laying the groundwork for possible detention of\nFrench ships, today authorized\nselrure   of   foreign   vessels   in\nAmerican waters if neceisary to\nprotect United States interests, or\nthe safety of the ships themseles.\nThe President acted under the\nEspionage Act of 1917 to grant this\npower to Secretary ol the Treasury\nHenry Morgenthau, along with other broad powers of control over\nboth domestic and foreign vessels.\nBoth the Coast Guard and the Custom! Office are units of the Treasury Department.\nThe White House iaid ln a itatement that Mr. Roosevelt's action\nwas supplementary to his proclamation of a limited national emergency last September. It described\nthe poweri grunted to Secretary\nMoruenthau in this manner;\n'The poweri which are mode\navailable for exercise by today's\nproclamation Include the promulgation of regulations subject to the\nPresident's approval, governing the\nanchorage and movement of vessels,\nand, with the consent of the President, taking possession and control\nvessels of necessary to secern from damage or injury,\nor to prevent damage or injury to\nUnited Statei harbors or waters, or\nto secure or<ervance of the rights\nand obligations of the United\nStates.\"\nof any vesse\nthi\nWhether she fights Hungary or\nnot, whether Bulgaria presses her\nown territorial claim for Southern\nDobruja or lets its lie, Rumania\nwas well on the road to dismemberment. Axis Ministers were in long\nconsultation with King Carol II in\nhis hours of deliberation and decision, but whether Russia's coup\nwas carried out with German and\nItalian approval was not clear.\nWanhlpi of the Rad fleet wera\nreported to have iteimed Into the\nRumanian Black Sea harbor of\nConstanta which Ruiila li laid\nto hava demanded ai a naval baie.\nRumania, rich In oU and grain,\nbut poor ln strategic location and\nuseful alliance!, decided ihe muit\ngive in to Ruiila\u2014that no calling\ninto force of her monthi ot mlU-\ntary preparation! could alter the\nfinal result.\n. Hence the Welded Juit ihort of \u00bb\nitr-p.m.-dtadlliie'sef-jrlnn'liaace-' \u25a0\u2022\nfut assent and agreed to discuss detail! later.\nA Rumanian communique, Iisued\nshortly after 8 p.m., announced acceptance of the demands.\nTha communique iaid:\n\"The Crown Council, under the\nPreiidency of Hii Majesty, the\nKing, took note of demands of the\nSoviet W cede to Russia Bessarabia and the Northern part of\nBukowina,\n\"With a desire to maintain good\nrelations with the Soviet the Rumanian Government aiked the\nSoviet Government to discui! the\nRussian demands.\"\nForeign military attache! were\ntold that most of Rumania's armed\nforces were en route to Transylvania, backed up by reservists\ncalled to the color! only today.\nNow, observer! said, will come\nHungary with the reported backing of Adolf Hitler, to ask for\nTransylvania. Bulgaria, friend ot\nRussia, may seek the return of\nSouthern Dobruja.\nAll told, Rumania stands to lose\nnearly half ot her 113,884 iquare\nmiles and return to Balkan obscurity, these sources said.\nAmid reports that Red warplanes\nwere swarming through Rumanian\nskies and Red troops, tanks and artillery wer massing at her frontier,\nRumania gave reluctant consent to\ndemands, which authoritative\nsources outlined as follows:\n7000 APPLICATIONS TO\nMOVE KIDDIES, DAILY\nLONDON, June 27 (CP) \u2014 An\nauthoritative source said today that\napplications for the removal of chil\ndren ove\/seas are being made at\nthe rate of 7000 to 8000 a. day, but\nthat ships now available can carry\nonly about that number monthly.\nThii lource declared the movement Is being made in \"a fighting\nspirit\" to strengthen Britain as an\n\"island fortress,' and not in \"a refugee spirit.\"\nMOTOR LICENCE MONEY\nGOES TO MUNICIPALITIES\nVICTORIA, June 27 (CP)-Dii-\ntrlbutlon to municipalities of $570,\n000, their annual share of motor\nvehicle licence receipts, was announced today by the Provincial\nTreasury.\nQUEEN'S PRINCIPAL AND\nWIFE SAFE AT GIBRALTAR\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP) - Dr.\nBruce Taylor, former principal of\nQueen's University, Kingston, Ont,\nand Mrs. Taylor have safely arrived\nat Gibraltar after escaping from\nGerman-occupied France.\nURGES AMERICANS TO\nSAIL ON WASHINGTON\nLONDON, June 27 (AP)-United\nState! Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy urged all Americans today\n\"who do not have an urgent reason\nfor remaining here longer,\" to ml\nfor home on the U. S. liner Washington from Galway July 4. He said\nthe Washington \"li vrey likely to be\nthe lait Amerlcin vessel to come\nover until after tha war.\"\nReturn ot Bessarabia, 17,140 iquara\nmilei of fertile country, Inhabited\nby more than 3,000,000 perioni,\nwhich once wai part ot the Czariit\nRussian Empire and to which Red\nRussia never formally renounce!\nher claim;\nCession ot the Northern part ot\nBukowina Province once part of tba\nAustro-Hungarian Empire, but how\nmuch of Bukowina'i 4030 iquar*\nmiles and 011,000 inhabitants Run\nila wanted was not known;\nControl of Rumania'! big Black\nSea port, Constanta aa a Red naval\nbase;\nSupervision of Galatl and Bralla,\ntwo Rumanian porta controlling all\nnavigation on the Danube, ona ot\nGermany'! principal lifelines; and,\nRailway bases at certain Rumanian porta along with certain other\nIncidental conceaiiona, (Reports '\nBerUn laid \"control\" Of Tulcaa. i\n_icr.\u201eDanube   port,   also\not\nResponsible Bulgarian sources at '\nSofia expressed belief that Russia's\nsuccess was the long-awaited opining wedge for remaking tha Balkan\nmap.\nAdvance German\nTroops at Border\nSAN SEBASTIAN, Spain, Juna 2T\n(AP).\u2014With propagandists ln tha\nspearhead, advance detachments ol\nHitler's armies reached the Spanish border today.\nThe propagandists arrived ln a.\nradio-equipped truck carrying 11\nGerman newspaper correspondent*\nand seven uniformed representatives of the Nazi Ministry of\nPropaganda.\nThey were greeted by the Spanish Frontier Commander, Col. Luis\nOchotorena, and Baron Eberhard\nvon Stohrer, German Ambassador\nto Spain. '\nThe German correspondents said\nthe main body of German troops\nstill waa several hundred miles\nfrom the frontier, North of Bordeaux, which had not yet been occupied in order to allow the French\nGovernment time to move to Clermont-Ferrand or to Parii. They aaid\nthe German! expected to move into\nBordeaux tomorrow.\nWillkie Is Unanimously Nominated\nRepublican Presidential Candidate\nPHILADELPHIA, June 28 (Friday) (AP). \u2014 The nomination of\nWendell L. Willkie as the Republican Presidential candidate\nwas made unanimous on the sixth\nballot early today.\nOut of a possible 1000 votes,\nWillkie received 998, aU that were\ncast on the lait ballot.\nWillkie, the political miracle\nman, stampeded the Republican\nnational convention Into a lixth-\nvote nomination ai its 1940 Presidential candidate.\nThe Indiana-born utilities executive who has fought the >!ew Deal\nup hill snd down dale for some\ntime, lurged into the convention\nwith 105 votes on the first ballot,\ngained by big jumps on each succeeding roll call until the nomination was his.\nRunning third at the atart to\nThomai EL Dewey and Senator\nRobert A. Taft, he quickly passed\nboth, and then he and Taft left\nDewey so far to the rear that during the fifth ballot the New York\nDistrict Attorney withdrew and released hli delegates.\nIt waa a spectacular night crowd\nthat watched Willkie reach the last\nrung of hii brief and abrupt rise\nfrom dark horse to convention\nstampeder and RepubUcan nominee.\nFrom the start It was for Willkie.\nIt shouted for him, it yelled tor\nhim, itamped and applauded every\ntime a lingle gain for its candidate\nwaa registered. Taft had hia supporters in the galleries too, but\njudging by the noise they were\nbadly outnumbered.\nThe break to Willkie came\nabruptly on the last three ballots.\nGovernor Alf M. Lindon, the 1936\nnominee, announced that hia Kan\nsas delegation had swung solidly\nfrom Senator Arthur' Capper to\nWillkie On the same roll call Willkie bagged 75 New York votes where\nhe had had only a few of them\nbefore.\nWhen the sixth roll call began\nthe race had narrowed down to\none between Willkie and Taft,\nand the latter got away to a lead.\nSeniing the moment it had been\nawaiting, the moment in which\na posiible future President of tha\nUnited States was being made,\nthe crowd leaned forward.\nIts bursts of applause came In\nshort shouts, as each State added\nto Willkie's total. Finally. Virjm-\nia's vote gave Willkie 503 votes-\ntwo more than enough. But such tallies are tricky things. Votes previously cast can be changed. Tha\ncrowd literally sucked its breath.\nBut at that dramatic moment tha\nannouncement came that Pennsylvania which had previously \"passed\"\nhad caucussed and was ready to\ncast Its powerful bloc of 72 votes.\n\"8eventy-two for Wendell\nWillkie\" Iti ipokeimm announced,\nThit clinched It, and the crowd\nwent Into a freniy.\nWillkie's drive for the Preiidency\nbegan only a few weeks ago. Hia\nrecord as a battler against the New\nDeal, his bluff, home-spun manner,\nand his way of dealing with peopla\nattracted attention to him at once.\nSo rapid was his rise, that although\nhe came to Philadelphia with only\na small minority of the delegates\npledged to him. his secondary\nitrength was obviously enormoui,\nii wai revealed on tonight's successive ballots.\n\u25a0 Jai__i_____n ii__r_\n_.\n PAGE   TWO\nNELSON DAILY NIWI. NELSON   B. ..-FRIDAY MORNINO  JUN.  to  1940\t\nThia advertisement la not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nARE A TRADITION AT THE\nRockaway Cafe\nIN SPOKANE\nWt extend a warm welcome to our many,\nmany good friends from Canada and invite\nyou to make the Rockaway your dining headquarters during your next visit to Spokane.\nWe trust that it will be a most enjoyable one\n501 Sprague\nAvenue\nMaclean School\nPass lists Are\nIssued, Rossland\nROSSLAND B.C., Juna to-Tol-\nlowing ara the' promotoln Hits ot\nMacLean Elementary School of\nRossland, Issued with tha close of\nschool:\nDivision 13, Grade 1, Miss Berna\nDonaldson, tescher\u2014Promoted from\nGrade I to Grade H.Clarcncc Aiken,\nAlbert Berola, Doris Bourget, Shirley Bray, Allan Erickion, Raympnd\nEvans, Dlna Fabbro, Donald Fox,\nEdwin Grubisic, Irene Hanion,\nHoward Hayden, Joan Holt, Sonia\nIngraldien, Loila Kalhovd, ArVena\nKlen.ing, Wilfred Mahy, Alva\nMaida, Wtyne Mariteri, Jean Nichols, Gunhild Roiland, Dorean Samuelson; promoted to Grade I Senior,\nWayne Birch, Lindy Lou Bourget,\nTony Gray, Evelyn Miller, Robert\nMcColl, Molly Lou Nesbit, Betty\nStevenion, Annie May Trewhella,\nJoan Turner.\nDlviilon 12, Grades I and II, G. F,\nMartin, teacher \u2014 Promoted from\nGrade I to Grade n, Verna Friberg,\nGeraldine Gardner, Shirley Ham,\nAlice Kootnikoff, Iris Kiway, Patricia Ling, Bob McFarland, Jim McKenna, Margaret McNish, Richard\nMann, Seath Martin, Theresa Milan,\nMaria Monoghan, Louiie Morris,\nBrian Moule, Helen Nori, Jacqueline Partridge, Jeannlne Peddycoart\nShirley Pat Perkins, Luella Poleiel-\nlo, Andrew Poohachoff, Billy Richardson, Laurence Schewe, Tom Supple, Helen Swedberg, Clire Stinson,\nKatie Taubner, Alice May Therrien,\nShirley Tlndall, Valerie Topliff,\nJoan Walker, Philip Walsoff, Mary\nYurlslch; promoted to Grade I Sr.,\nMarie Gresley-Jonea, Alfred Hauk-\naai, Peter Nevakchonoff, Carl Olson, Colin Turner.\nDiviiion II, Grades I and II, Lillian Barton teacher-Promoted to\nGrade I Sr., Hugh Bates, Glendon\nDavis.\nPromoted to Grade II Jr., Garfield\nBelanger, John Bourchier, Reggie\nCooper, Irene Conroy, Jeanne Cotnoir, Donna Davlei, Tommy De-\nLong, Glenn Fisher, Denlae Fourt,\nCarmon Gipm:n; promoted to Grade\nII Sr., Ronald Cameron, Eugene\nDyion; promoted to Grade III Jr.,\nOddman Anlind, Eileen Allison,\nWilliam Allison, Bill Barlei, Join\nBell, Amelii Blelli, Isobel Cent, Edward Caron, Bruce Citchpole, Catherine Christemon, Roberta Colenso.\nMichael Conci, Cecilia Connor, Tan\nenter, Marlon Donnelly, Pamela\nDrake, Patricia Drake, Raymond\nMaclntyre; promoted to Grade UI\nSr., Gordon- Borkei.\nDlviilon 10, Grijde II, Mra.\nDivldaon, teather\u2014Promot-J\nGrade II to Grade III, June _--,.-\nale, Jim Milligan, Bernice Milligan,\nEileen Monaghin, Paddy Morrii,\nRoai Munroe, Leighton Nesbitt,\nMike Ozeroff, Gwen Parker,. Billy\nPaavlick, Polly Poohachoff, VOctty\nRizzutto, Rontld Shearer, Margaret\nSnowball, Bob Sorenson, Leonard\nStevenion, Joyce Sutherland, Wllla\nTernan, Paul Thederebn. Jernr\nThomion, Margaret Troafcth, Patiy\nTurner, Roiemary Turner, Joyce\nTweed, M\u00abT]ene Walker, Artn. r\nWalker, Helen Williams, Tom Williami, Mary Wllion, Mary Wrlfteh.\nGeorge Yolland; promoted to Grade\nII Sr., SWriej: rticheely, Kennath,\nNyman,   WaHer   Seor.\nSpring, Bob Walteri,\nitch,\nft Yurf-\nBell, Lena Cimpana, Leola Carr.\nBill Oheveldieff, Doreen Cooper.\nJoyce Davidson, Donate Davii, Raymond Domlnlci, Pearl Donnelly,\nJuna Dunn, Yvonne Fleury, Edna\nFoiter, John Fox, Louise Freder-\nickiln, Nona Funk, Fred Gowing,\nBrian Keane, Louise LgBarge Betty Jean LaFace Billy Lees, Ethel\nLynn, Harry Minn, Sheill McKenna, Jean McMartni, John McNiven,\nLawrence Miller, Frances Nichols,\nEddie Paaylick, Llmbenla Pighin,\nArthur Ridgers, mala Rolland, Donald Ruelle, Sheila Singer, Harlan\nSmith, George Subaiic, Marilyn\nTurner; promoted to Grade IV Sr.,\nEllen Flndlay, Billy Subaiic.\nDiviiion 4, Grade V, J. Peachey,\nteacher\u2014Promoted trom Grade V\nto Grade VI, Stanley Allison, Roy\nBoiworth, Betty Caron, John Cooper, Herbert Exner, Gerold Glpman,\nBruce Ham, Irma Hanson, Gladys\nJecks, Minnie Martin, Marguerite\nMiehaely, Bob Miller, Campbell Mcintosh, Gordon Mclntyre, Hilda\nPhillips, John Poohachoff, Anna\nMarie Spring, Irene Stevenion, Cllf-\nf-rd Tlfoing, David Tweed.\nDivision 3 Grade V, M. E. Good-\nenough, teacher \u2014 Promoted from\nGrade V to GredeVI, Stiiene Anderson, Margaret Bourchier, Kepny\nBowen, Ronnie Briggeman, Helen\nCheveldoeff, Terry Clegg, Charlea\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\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nHow t6 Enjoy Your Holidays\nForget  the  possibility of lou  or\ndamage to your car and home by\nprotection provided through our lniurance Policiei.\nH. E. DILL\nCar, Fire, Accident Insurance\nHUME \u2014 J. B. MacNeil, Okotoki,\nAlta.; Jamei Brody, Jack Smith,\nEdmonton; Marion Olatad, Slocan\nCity; Frank Staple!, A. Bull, Guy\nConstable, Creiton; R. A. Weit,\nKaalo; 3. C. Kolb, H. Tewikbury,\nJ. R. Torrance, Calgary; -George S.\nDick, Vernon; J. McCook, Eric G.\nWatt, New Westminster; D. J. Rog-\nerson, Holt, Ont.; A. J. Watson, Kootenay Bay: C. S. Pace, Toronto; H. N.\nCoursey, Medicine Hat\nMEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms in the Interior \u2014 Bath or Shower.\nROOMS It UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHING\n30 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, 6. C.\nRates reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn This Space\nWhere Thousand! Will Read It\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"       Newly renovated through-\nft*_CC__,_e_M  Ua_-__J   \u00b0ut* phone* ,nd \u00ablevator.\nifuiierin notei a. patterson, im of\nWW Seymour tt        Vancouver, B.C. Coleman. Alta., Proprietor.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\n410 Riverside   W_t_-*.___ V\/\\V IISV       Opposite\nAvenue        J_10I\u20ac1  V \\J__lJN___ I     Paulsen Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nRELAX\not the GALAX\nCanidlm Money it Par\nRoomi $1.00 to $2.50\nFREE GARAGE\nHOTEL\nW. 814\nFlnt\nRIDPATH\nThe Hotel Canadians Like to\nCall Homa.\nIN  SPOKANE\nIW Outilda Roomi and\nApartmenti\nALL AT MODERATE RATES\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\nS a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n_H\nCancellation\nNotice\nSunday steamer trlpi announced to commence on\n|uno 30, Nelion to Aim-\nworth return hive been\ncancelled.\nN. J. Lows, CTA Nelson\nJean Donaldion, Regale Exner,\nBuddy Fulton, Gael Gibson, Clara\nGleiehman, Verlle Gooding, Alice\nGordon, Shirley Gray, Kenneth\nGreiley-Jonei, Roy Hancock, MoUy\nHatlevlk, Don. Hings, Dawn Hird,\nMargery Homer, Allan Johnson,\nGordon Jonei, Frank JOrteneon,\nMargery Keane, Margaetr Kentish,\nJoe Kershaw, Margaret Kort, Jlmmie Leckie, Wilfred Leaergint, Jo*n\nMcKenna, Billie Maitland, Carol\nMartin, Gerald Walten; promoted\nto Grade II Sr., Nesbitt Dunne,\nLouU Eapenhaln Billy Fox, Bobby\nLloyd, Norman Manning,\nDlviilon 8, Gride III, Elsie Mc-\nR*e, teacher\u2014Promoted from Grade\nIII to Grade IV, Bjarne Aisland,\nBetty Anderson, Lets Camo\u00abi, Den-\nIs Daly, Frank Delmas, David Exner, Allan Fisher, Jack French,\nBilly Glover, Ronnie Harriion, Connie Hird, Duncan Keffer, Charlie\nLavorato, Charlie Letorta,'\u25a0 Jerry\nLittley, Geoffrey Mason, Jlmmie\nMcMartin, Jackie Molyneux, Lily\nNilaion, Mary Nollie, Rlgmor Nora,\nGeoffrey Portman, Francea Read;\nJoan Smith, Ellen Stange, Jerome\nTopliff, Bobby Tweed, Betty Vetere;\npromoted to Grade III Sr., Elile\nAmbroie, Kenny Davis, Robert\nGlover, Bobby Maitland, Aitrl Roiland, Jack Swedberg, Betty Wood,\nDonnle Zanussi.\nDlviilon 7, Grade III, M. L. Johniton, teacher\u2014Promoted from Gr\u00bbde\nIII to Grade IV, Nan Alllion, Alan\nBacon, Patsy Bathie, Stella Bell,\nInga Bonde, Winnie Bourchier, Billy Bradshaw, Myrna Colenso, Andrea Davidson, Barbara DeLong,\nBobby Ewing, Pat Ewing, Fay Fach,\nPatsy Gibbard, David Gooding,\nJoyce Harper, John Haratin, Joyce\nHcaton, Stuart Johnion, Velma\nKamm, Dorothy Kenhew, Loll Ann\nKing, Ivy Kiway, Mary Lou Leckie,\nJimmie McCall, -Betty Mclntyre,\nMaureen Manning, Lillian Marcui-\nzi, David Mason, Herbert Oiini,,\nGordon Pefklna, Buddy Postill,\nAlex Rlzroto, Robin Scare, Gladys\nSamuelson, Marie Scorgle, Anita\nTaubner, Douglas Tweed, Billy\nWalker. ,\nDivision 6, Grade IV, Margaret E,\nForbei, teacher\u2014Promoted I from\nGrade IV to Grade V. Gordon Atkinson, Soy Barlee, Wallace Bertoia, Eileen Bray, John Buick, Bill\nChesham, Bernice Clare, Dora Dawson, Betty Densky, Lawrence Dorey, Lundy Hamilton,- Donovan\nJacks, Irvln Lavorato, Dolly Leland, Roddle Littley, Marion Manning, John Miehaely, Ennio Pighin, Bernice Pitt, George Profili\nFrances Sutherland, Betty Welsh\nJohn Wllliama, Betty Zenbier, promoted to Grade IV Sr., Grace Alllion, Bobby Alllion, Earl Collet\nJoan Corner, Catherine Evans, Ver-\nnon Hanson, Jick Lloyd, Billy Ml\nion, Frank Stevenson, Carol Swed\nburg, Steve Yurlsch.\nDivision 5 Grade IV, O. B. Bryden, teacher\u2014Promoted from Grad*\nH to Oadel^R^bertDeKuy^fier gg ffi^feK\nRossland High\nSchools Issi\nHNK'S=\nORTSWEAR\niVCllla    aatauaicaaau,    a \"unaic   vu.t.iaa...\nPeter Jure, Irene Kootnikoff, Stan\nley Langman, Joseph Lesargent,\nDavid Logan, Elmarle Martin, Marjorie Markle. Eileen Mclntyre, Gordon McKenzle, Cyril Milligan, Desmond Monaghen, Dorothy Nesbitt.\nPercy Ogg, June Palmer, Mary\nPlotnikoff, Marion PoitlU, Bob\nRlchardion, Kathleen Radich, Pamela Topliff, Juna Tortorelli, Murray\nWoodwetd, Paulyne Yarmoluk.\nDlviilon 2, Grade VI, J. C. Wilkie\nteacher\u2014Promoted' from Grade VI\nto Junior High, Patsy Bowen, Orma\nBray, Patsy Bryan, nmona Conci,\nDoreen Devil, Annie Evant, Eileen\nExner, Ruth Foster, Dorothy Heat-\non, Herbert Johnion, Raymond\nKeane, Barbara Lewis, Cay Man-\ntg, Irene Mcintosh. Clifford Mc-\nrtln, Dorothy Milligan, Marlon\nRlchardion, Bernard Spring, Bernice\nSintori, Achle Scott, Willie Scott,\nPearl Therrien, Louise Vetere.\nDivision 1, Grade VI, E. J. Varcoe\nteacher\u2014Promoted from Grade VI\nto Junior High, Ronnie Aiken, Vincent Anderson, Audrey Bacon, Lola\nBertoia, Marie Bowen, Ray Briggeman, Donna Clelland, Lul Corrado,\nMaxine DeGroff, Charles Dougan,\nDouglas Evanson, Nadlm Fleury,\nDorothy Fox, David Glover, John\nGordon, Mar\/aret Haggen, Howard\nHarrison, Peggy Johnson, Steve\nJuba, Margaret Kalhovd, David\nKeffer, Irene Kiway, Mareeline La-\nlend, Ruth Lynn, Caroline Man-\ntin, Isobel McNab, Doris Ogg, Bet-\nnlng, Richard M4rcurzi, Agnes Marty Petrle, David Smith, Orwall\nSmith, Mary Starvevlc, Dorothy\nUrauhart, Hugh Urtjuhert, Arthur\nWalters, John Woodward.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, June J7 (API-The\nYanki didn't win \u2022 series in the\nWeit. Ain't lt awful?.,. Max Been\n\"If Tiny Galento nulla any rough\nstuff, 111 walk out in the middle of\nthe fight.\" Well we wouldn't be\nsurpriied. , . .Larry MacPhail li\nfeuding with the radio again because the Dodger game wai cut ott\nTuesday night in favor Af a phono-\ngraph record of the Hoover speech.\nBEAN BALL DEPT.\nThe Sporting Newi and othen are\nwaging e campaign to stop beaning\nby having playen wear helmets\nwhile batting Strangely enough\nthe opposition group leaders are the\nMeishs. Hank Leiber, Joe Medwick\nand Pee Wee Reese.... Tliey want\nno part of the headguard idea,\nROSSLAND, B.\nftclal pan liiti for\nSchool were Issued\nmorning.  Wednesdl:\nbreak-up of the ichool 'Haiti, tho\nmajority of them leaving Wednesday atternon and Thunday morning to apend holidays elsewhere.\n. The pass list follows:\nGrade VH to Grade VIII-Rec-\nommended, Jim Cant, Shirley Davidson, Jack FOss, Lena Jovanavic,\nZena Logan, John Melvnle, Katn-\nleen Montgomery, Donna McKenzie, Joy Riagers, june brauh. paised,\nIda Agazzi, George Bourchier, Rich-\nard Gibbard, Madeleine Lesergent,\nViolet Miros, Irene Mclntyre, Olive\nPhillips, Julia Polonlkoff, Lorraine\nSantori, Mabel Treverton, Mary Vetera, Leonard Camozzi, John Cozzetti, Bernard Fourt, Carl Oaing,\nTom Thompion; passed ott ttla.1, Pat\nCurrie, Tom Ham, Jerry Monoghan,\nRita Christensen, Clarice Ham, Eileen Lloyd, Dorothy Mason, Roderick Mcintosh, Kathlen McKenna,\nNorman Van Tassel.\nGrade VIII to Grade DC-Recommended, Ralph Arrowsmith, John\nBryan, Margaret Christenson, Jean\nErskine, Lucianne Hertlg, Ronald\nSmith, Joan Bacon, Ellis Nichols,\nHelen McAulay; pasted, Eugene\nCrowe, Arthur Donaldson, Willie\nDorey, Fred Hancock, John Hutton,\nJamaa Keffer, Rudy LaFace, John\nL'EcIuse, Pat Martin, John Miros.\nFfed Munro, John Pavlick, Helen\nSchley, Margaret Synwns, Frank\nConci, Charlei Connor. Margaret\nCullinane, Clifford Dally, Thomas\nDunne, John Hamilton, Viola Hea-\nton, Morden Hoyte. Denis Lalonde,\nDorothy Lynn, Edith MuKenna,\nAnna Marie Mara, Enid Mariter.,\nElinor Pitt, Eric Tongue, Joyce Topliff, Mary Jane Walker; passed on\ntrial, Roberta Bryan, Lawrence\nClegg, Gordon Gralg, James Leeion,\nIrwin Palmer, Vera Petrle, Irene\nTipping, Bernice Ward, Mona Conroy, Marion Fertich, Ada Hutchinson, Tom Jonei, Arthur LaFace,\nDon LaFace, Arthur Martin, Grant\nMilligan, Joieph Profili,\nGrade IX to Grade X\u2014Recommended, Donna Berg, Richard Bourchier, Pearl Conci, Amerlco Mazzoc-\nchl, Mary Maclntyre, Lucia Whitehead, Margaret Wright, Alfred Mason, Walter Manning, Celeatino\nLenarduzzi; passed, Orml Joy Bu-\nBARGAIN FARES\nto\nVANCOUVER, VICTORIA, NANAIMO\nGOING July 11 and 12\nFrom Nakusp and South, Procter to\nMidway, Trail to Caitlegar\nNat Fleischer, Ring Magazine editor, will referee Dempsey-Luttrell.\nwhich will add prestige to the event\nbut not to Mr. Melicber Waihington aiked and got waiver! on\nZeke Bonura^and lt looki like Jer-\nden, teacher\u2014Promoted from araaa i sey city for Old Bansnai. . . ,, Ai\nIV to Grade V, Joan Allibone, Mary simmoni hai made good In eight\n \u2014i-' itralght plneh-hltting tn.i for tha\nAthlete. It's too bad there'i no\ndepirtment for iuch feats in the\nrecord booki.\nRETURN FARES\nFrom:            To:  Vancouver Victoria Nanaimo\nProcter    f 13.65 f 15.55 *} 15.05\nNelion       13.05 15.05 14.55\nTreil       12.70 14.70 14.20\nCrand Forki  ....   10.45 12.45 11.95\n\u2022Nakuip      14.55 16.55 10.05\n\u2022\u2014Via Robson West\nFires from Arrow Lakei apply July 11 only, returning\nJuly 23. * i\nCorrespondingly low fares from Intermediate pointa.\nFinal Return Limit July 24\nTickets good ln day coaches only. No baggage checking privileges. No stop overs allowed. Children 9 and under 12, half fare.\nRegular train service in eich direction.\nFor further Information apply to nearest igent or write\nN. J. LOWES, Olty Ticket Agent, 502 Bakar St., Nelion.\nQsMdiJ^c\nUSE NbWSPA.tK  ADVEKllblNC HR.l\nAnd Get the Most for Your Advertising Dollar\nTeaming\u2014Moving\nExpressing\nFully Equipped With\nHorses or Tracks\nOur 40 yean experience in thi\ntranifer business in Nelion\nmakei ui competent to lerve\nyou.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhono 33      Established 1899      *. 0. Box 116\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTID - MAN. OR MAN AND\nwife, both must be good milkers,\nto work on dairy farm. State age,\nwages expected, nationality, etc.,\nto Box 302- Daily Newi.\n\u00abd_\u00bbycyW\u00ab\u00bbMM$W\u00bb\u00abW\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTaylor Becomes\nManager of Co-Op\nROSSLAND, B.C., June to--. S.\nTaylor hu been appointed manager\not the Rossland Cooperative Transportation Garage for the duration ot\nthe war. Mr. Taylor lucceedi A. L,\nJohnion, who has enlisted ln the\nCanadian forces.\nWHAT HAVE YOU?\nWe have a Cash Buyer for a\nFive-Room Bungalow, cloie in\nRELIANCE ACENCIES LTD.\nPhone MO 652 Baker St.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUm SOS. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nSUPERIOR SERVICE\n.    PHONE 1-2-8\nSEE\nCRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needa In plumb*\nIng   repain,  alteration,  and\nInitallatloni.\nP.i. 115 301 Victoria Bt\nDance Willow Point Saturday.\nKen Moore'i Calgary Orchestra.\n'   Light rowbpat for sale. Good condition, IM Douglas Road.\nLeft go with Bugle Band July 1.\nHelp ua to help the kida.\nSalvation Army Tag Day Sat.\nPlease help local work apd refugeei.\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS, F. H.\nSMITH, PHONE Ml, 351 Baker 8t\nKen Moore'i Calgary Orcheitra,\nWillow Point Saturday.\nBritiah Magazines and Papen\nBISHOP'S NIWS STAND\nHarold Foulds * Electrician\nAppliance! repaired. Phona 944.\nMermaids still gain in favor.\nTastiest and healthiest Sc drink.\nWait's Newi.\nDANCE AT GOLF CLUB\nSaturday, June 29. 9:90. Muiic by\nMargaret Graham.\nBargain! In sealers, cooking utensils, etc., W. M. S. Rummage Sale,\nCity Market Saturday morning,\nDoa.'t forget Eagles Midnight\nFrolic, Sun., June 30. Muiic by Alberta Ranch Boyi. Start 12:01.\nHoliday at Cedar Cabins, Apple-\ndale. Rates by day, week or month\nFully furnished. Apply Appledale\nGeneral Store.\nSuccessful pupils of Miss Mary\nHeddle for Toronto Conservatory of\nMusic examinations:\nLevi Corbett Grade IV Violin passed\nFrances Butler Grade 1 Piano honors\nA tew dollars down and a few\ndollars each month buys a genuine\nFrigidaire. Start now to enjoy the\nadvantages offered in a Frigidaire.\nHipperson Hardware Company.\nIf you need a typewriter see our\nitock. We are lure to have something to suit you. Cash or terms. D.\nW. McDerby, \"The Typewriter Man\"\n654 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nYOung folks enjoy reading The\nDally Newi. Have a copy tent to\nyour boy while he is ln camp at\nKoolaree or at the Catholic Boyi\nCan.p. Phone 144. Nelson Dally News\nCirculation Department.\nMake arrangement! for your holiday!, ipecial rates on boats, out-\nboards and cruiser trom 2 dayi up.\nFiihlng licences isiued. Owner,\u2014\nplease claim camera lett here.\nBalfour Boat Livery and Service.\nes\u00bb#s\u00bb#\u00ab\u00abs\u00bbs\u00ab#s\u00abe*\u00bb*a\u00bb*\u00ab\nPHONE 1042\n\"Your Clothet' Friend''\nQuality Ttt tod\nDoughnut!  OC\nptr doxen   fawC\nThe PERCOLATOR\nPythian Sisters Garden Tea, bake\n\u25a0ale and fancy work table at home\not Mri. D. T. Heddle, 1303 Hall\nMinei Road from 3 to 8 today, ft:-\nday, June 23. Coma and bring a\nfriend. Tea 25c. PrOceedi for Patriotic purpoiei.\nTEACHER WANTED\nElementary teacher winted; ability to play piano and teach muiic\ndesired. Give full reporti ahd recommendations. Fred L. If win, Secretary, Nelaon School Board.\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory ot \u2022 dear husband and dad. who oasied away\nJune 28th, 11.39.\nOur family circle has been broken,\nA link gone from our chain;\nBut though we're parted for a while,\nWe know we'll meet again.\nMra. A. Line. 639 Baker St.\nfor the Holidays\nYou'll enjoy a grand and glorious\nFirst of July If yon are comfortably attired in smart sportswear\nfrom Fink's.\nSLACK SETS\nSanforiztd fabrics, stripes\nand plains in black, teal,\nwine, etc. Sizes ffO tt-t\n12-20. Up from . ffcawl\nFARMERETTES\nNew, brighter colon with\ncontrasting trims, In wirm; j\nand pansy. Sizes   f 1 OA\n14-20. Up from .. $ImZ*\nPLAY SUITS\nShorts and novelty printed\ntops. Two-pieces, Ot QC\nSizes12-18 *leW-\nPLAY SUITS\nSmarter prints. 2-pleee play\nsuits with skirts. (0 OC\nSizes 12-14-16. . $\u00a3.__*}\nSPORT SHIRTS\nNew novelty prints, stripes\n**-.   and whites. Sizes  (M AA\n14-20. Up from.. \u00abJ1.W\n$U)WL $UjtL\nSwim Suits\n\"Skintite\"\nA large range of these perfect fitting suits. Side lacing or zipper. *0 AP\nUp from \u00bbPt)i JO\nSwim Suits\nXrtalema''\nNovelty lastex fabrics with\nnew   front   panel.   High\ncolors.\nUp from ..\n. $2.95\nSjmioAh, (jJetVu\nStmsuits\n39c\nTiny Tots  Wash  Suits.\nContrasting CA\u00ab,\ntrims. Suit waft*\nSunsuits.   Cotton   prints\nassorted    with    colored\ntrims. Sizes\n1 to 3. Suit .\nSwimsuits\nSwim Suits, \"Skintite\".\nTrunks, lace sides. Will\nnot fade. Sizes   QO-\n2to6.Suit.... Ivy\nChildren's\nWear\nFootwear.!\nLADIES' WEAR\nPhont 73\ntone, Florence Corrado, Llla Gooding, Violet Heaton, Janette Hutton, Margaret Johnaton. Doreen\nJonei, Jean Leea, Dorothy Mara.\nSadie Maclntyre, Lillian McKenna,\nEileen Radich, George Rollini, Frances Slubowiki. Josephine Smitn,\nKarl Taylor, Eugene Toplitt, David\nWoed, Roy Johnion, Kenneth Gallic Hugo Salo, Peter Jensen, Frank\nCozzetti, Jim Benion; passed on\ntrial, Ruby Fobs, Vincent Marioni,\nEarl Martin, Alex Turner.\nGrade X to Grade XI\u2014Recommended, Betty Atkinion, Helen\nEouglu, Florence Harriion, Jack\nces, June Leland, Marcel Leier-\ngent, Annie Lucln, Peggy McCullough, Nancy Plotnikoff, Giorge\nStaUdinger; passed, Sari Coulter,\nMurray Duclbl, Ruth Finney, Ini\nIrvin, Marion Johnion, Hiyward\nKiway, Aloiiise Mtra, Elsie Parker,\nHelm Purcello, IU PurcellS, Carl\nSchley, Ivy Scott, Annie Vu'nilch;\npassed on trial, Molly Jones, George\nLucln, Edward Taylor.\nGrade XI to Onde XII\u2014Her-\nommended, Lorraine Berg, Freda\nClare, Edna Ellis, Helen Juba, Gordon   Mason.   Dallas   Smith;   pro-\nBurns Block\nmoted but writing Government \u00ab\naminatiom in one or more matrlci\nlutlon subjects, Norman Galli, BIU\nTurner. Claire Jamieion, MiCnai\nJohniton, Virginia Johnion, Ailee\nLaslett, Jimmie Wright, Vera Polon\nkoff, Ailsa Craig; passed; Lido Bel\ntoia. Mona Connor, Jack Co\nJames Douglas, Robert Irvi:\nYvonne Langdale, Stanley Minnlti\nOlive Schley, Lillian Stephen!, A\nUn Hutton, Henry Fourt.\nGrade XII Graduation Clasi '\u25a0\nGraduated, Laurine Clelland, latt\nGordon. Joyce Gordon, Joan Hi\nriion, Audrey Lins, Winona Mf\nning. Jean McDonell, Cleo Nyma\nIra Page, Viola Smith, Vivti\nWoodward; to receive marks lit\non departmental etamlnationi r\ncently written. John CUrk, (It\ntrade Crawford. Kathleen Dote\nGeorge Hoyte, Hani Johnion, A\nthur Jones, Cameron McKimle. Jii\nPatetson, Mae Sommerville, Hell\nTurner, Doreen Wllion, Bill Zebfo;\n=\u25a0\nHave  You  Read tha Classified\n -NIL.ON OAILY NIWI. NELSON. B. &-WIOAV M0BN1IW. JUNI St UW \" \u25a0  ' \t\nNews\nLakeside Park Beckons to All\nFrench Tanks May Fight for Allies\n\u2022an* ruarp\nruDKi    'I\nFrench Tunisia's strong defences may yet turn away forcei ot the\naxil poweri u Frenchmen aniwer the call to resist surrender. Thli\nparade ot heavy tanki wai photographed before the war began.\nLondon Children Evacuated\nYoungsten tasting tint dayi ot\nfreedom from ichool work, boll-\ndayers, mothen and their children, all are Invading Lakeside\nPark these days as the mercury\nremains in the 80-90 range. The\ntop picture shows the ever-popular slide with one youngster fust\nhitting the water while others are\nabout to \"take off.\" Lifeguard\nBrian (Gubby) Gore, ln the helmet, keeps' an alert eye on the\nproceedings. In the second picture\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Bush of Trail,\nformer Nelsonites, are sunbathing\non the beach. Bob Brown leeki\nmore strenuous activity as he ridea\nthe skis behind a boat driven by\nGordon Stewart In the third picture. At left is a closeup of Lifeguard Gore.\n\u2014Photos by William Ramsay.\nExited\u2014by Hitler\nRejoins Husband\nAt least 190,000 youngsten have been evacuated from London as\nHitler'i threat of total war turned to England. Some of the youngiten\nare ahown lined up at a railway itation, awaiting the train which la to\n\u25a0peed them to the comparative safety of the country. Thousands of\nchildren will be lent to Canada end other Dominions in the near\nfuture.\nHer Majesty at Canadian Camp\nMn. Myron C. Taylor, wife of\niPreildent Franklin D. Roosevelt's\npeclal envoy to the Vatican, is\nown as she boarded a transat-\n: clipper at North Beach alr-\nWt, New York, en route to Italy,\nirhere she will rejoin her hus-\niand.\nBound for the comparative safety of England\u2014a little French girl\nIs pictured in the French seaside\ntown where she *ras embarked for\nBritain In mass evacuation ot\nFrench civilians as they fled Naii\nblitzkrieg machine. Her tartan\nplaid and Glengarry cap should\ngain her many a friend ln the\nhighlands.\nQueen Elizabeth Is pictured with Major-General A. G. L McNaughton, commanding the tint Canadian diviiion, during a visit\nwith King George to a Southern England encampment where they\ninspected regiments of the Canadian Active Service Force.\n1\n-i\nTourist Body\nHost of Board\nat (ranbrook\nOUSBHOOt B. C - twenty.\nlour members of the second annual\ntour ot Travel Bureau officials\nand newspaper people, sponsored\nby the Pacific Northwest Tourist\nAssociation, were guesta ot the\nBoard of Trade at a luncheon here\nWednesday.\nW, H. Wilson, President, wai the\nCl.airman. E. W. SJodin on behalt\not th. Mayor extended the city's\nwelcome to the visiton, saying he\nthought tbe visit beneficial to both\nhosta and guesta.\nM. O. Ryan, Preiident ot tbe Pacific Northweit Touriit Association, aaid the Aieocietion of raem-\nberships Includes Washington, Oregon, Idaho, North Dakota, Alberta,\nSaskatchewan, and invited B. C. to\njoin. With a C, he said tbe group\nrepresents North America's moit\nremarkable scenic attractions. The\ntours taught the guests much and\ntbey are able, on their return, to\nroute their clientile more sccess-\nfulljr.\nHomer B. Thomas, Manager of the\nSt Paul, Minn., Auto Club, commented on the nalee theories ot\nEasterners regarding the \"wildness\"\not the West, and said his tour last\nyear took him to tbe Black Hills,\nfollowing which he directed some\n200 couples to that point. He hoped\nto do tne same for Kootenay and\nBanff Parka thia year.\nDavid E. Caesar, Travel Editor\not the Chicago Herald-American,\nexpressed appreciation of the hospitality they had received on the trip\nand said he had already aent bis\npaper four columns of description\nand Intended to send further accounts ot East Kootenay and Cranbrook.\nHarold Cassell City Editor of the\nSpokane Chronicle, concluded the\nvisitors' speeches with words of appreciation, and said they would like\nto return. Mrs. Grace Kirkpatrick,\nTour Man:ger and feature writer\nfor the Spokane Chamber of Commerce, thanked the Cranbrook\nBoard for lta hoipltallty. The visitor! were taken on a brief tour\nof tbe city prior to their depcrture\nfor Sookane.\nAdditional party membera were\nMin Winnifred Gates, Auiitant\nTravel Editor ot Chicago Dally\nNews; Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Zinderna\nof the Detroit News; Fred Rehm,\nAutomobile Club of Michigan; Vern\nW. Turnquist of the SL Paul Dispatch-Pioneer Preis; Edward Buck-\nbee of the Minneapolis Star Journal; Miss Mary Jonei ot National\nReclamation Association, Washington, D.C.; Miss Mary Hammond.\nGreater North Dakota Association,\nFargo; J. A. Schoonover, Jamestown Chamber of Commerce, North\nDakota; A. M Paulson, Valley City\nN.D., Association of Commerce; R.\nH Fletcher. State Highway Commission. Helena, Mont.; Miss Tripp,\nPocatello, Ideho; Harold Zent, Radio Station KHQ and KGA; Miss\nMarjorie Whltham, Inland Automobile Association, Spokane; Frank\nByerly, Official Photographer, Far-\ngo; and Mr. and Mn. Fry, Spokane\nChamber of Commerce.\nAustralia Firm\nDefers Project\nBy J. I. HOLQ8WORTH\nSYDNEY. June 27 (CP cable)-\nAustralian Consolidated Industries,\ntte firm with which the Commonwealth had the motorcar manufacturing igreement which led to\nmany political difficulties, today announced that the car-making project has been deferred, probably until after the war.\nThe Australian war effort bt every way ls being intensified. Recruiting for overseas service, which\nwas greatly increased after the early\ndisasters in France, Is now being\nmaintained steadily above the peak\nReriod of the Fint Great War.\nfearly 50,000 men are ln camps\nhere, with 20,000 already overseas.\nThere is no lack of recruits for\ntbe air torce either. Young airmen\nare going steadily into camp, while\nthose for whom there is no room\nat the flying schools are remaining\net ctllvlan work and attending\nspare-time lectures.\nSubscriptions to the interest-free\nwar loan now total nearly \u00a34,000,-\n000 ($13,200,000). Sales of savings\ncertificates total \u00a35.500,000 and war\ngifts to the treasury nearly \u00a3300,-\nt  \" jjff .17\n1     '\nClearance Sale\nCONTINUES WITH\nin Every Department\nShop at the \"BAY\" and Save\nMorgenthau Backs\nSuspension of U.S.\nFord Negotiations\nWASHINGTON, June 27 (AP) -\nSecretary of the Treasury Morgenthau upheld today the Government'! insistence that any American\nmanufacturer who makes Rolls-\nRoyce airplane engines for the\nUnited States should make them\naa well for Britain.\n\"I just can't imagine the British\nbeing shut off from their own engines,\" said the treasury secretary,\nwho himself obtained from Britain\nUnited States rights for manufacture of the engine.\n\"Aa a matter ot fairness and policy,\" Morgenthau told his Press\nconference, tbe administration head\nto cancel negotiations with Henry\nFord for a 9000 Joint British-American engine order, when Ford refused to make motors for any country other than the United States.\nOTHER MOVES\nThere were these other defence\ndevelopments:\nThe United States laid down the\nkeel of its fint 43,000-ton super-\ndreadnaught\nPresident Roosevelt ilgned a eup-\nWheat King Enlists\nCALGARY, June 21 (CP)-Her-\nman Trelle of Wembley, Alta., outstanding grain grower and numerous times crowned world wheat\nand oata king at the Chicago International Grain Exhibition arrived\nhere today in khaki. He enlisted\nthis week as a sapper in the Royal\nCanadian Engineers and together\nwith about 40 other recruits from\nthe Peace River District will be\nstationed here for training.\nU. S. CRUISER SAILS\nRIO DE JANEIRO, June 27 (AP)\n\u2014The United States cruiser Wichita moved Southward from this Brazilian seaport capital today, apparently sound for Montevideo,\nUruguay, where the U. S. cruiser\nQuincy has been stationed sinci\nJune 20.\nThe British cruiser Hawklni arrived at Rio de Janeiro about tbe\nsame time the Wichita left.\nBreakfast Nooks\nBUILT TO ORDER\nKootenay Slid & Door Worki\nM. L OBAL Opp. City Hall\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding Machinei\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fiiher Ltd.\n536 Ward 8_ Phone M\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS tnd ALTERATIONS\nB. C. Plumbing tt Heating\nCompany  Limited\nplemental detence bill giving the\nwar and navy departments $1,475,-\n147 in cash appropriations and authority to make additional contracts totalling $289,136,761.\nMorgenthau approved a congressional limitation of sevent to eight\nper cent profit on warahlp and airplane construction, terming the limitation a challenge to the \"patriotism' of American manufacturers.\nDEATHS\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C.-W. C.\nHamly, 72-year-old Port Albernl\nbusiness man. Born at Port Hope,\nOnL Came here In 1912. Surviving\nare widow and four brothers.\nGUELPH, OnL - Thomu J. Han-\nnigan, 71, widely known ln Ontario\nas a close associate of the late Sir\nAdam Beck ln the hydro-electric\npower movement. Was prominent\nin the tobacco Industry, track sport\ncirclet.\nTORONTO DEALERS REFUSE\nTO HANDLE FORD PRODUCT\nTORONTO, June 27 (CP)\u2014Toronto Retail Fuel Dealen' Association\ndecided at a meeting not to handle\nFord coke because of Henry Ford's\nrefusal to make airplane engines for\nthe United Kingdom. A resolution\nwhich describe the automobile man-\nufscturer's attitude as \"anti-British\" said, \"We refuse to handle Ford\ncoke or purchase other Ford products.\"\n10LTMPEME|fePEHE|:P\nBKME |P\nEm\nQuick\n1U\u00a3i4fa*\nSUNBURN\nPOISON IVY AND\nINSECT BITES\nUYMPffl\nthe Antiseptic Lmimemt\nBWOUT\nIT WAS A\n...BELIEVE ME THERE'S\nNOTHING WORSE\nYOU'RE WRONG\u2122\nSKfDSARE EVEN M0RE\nDANGEROUS!\n\\y Argue? New Goodrich\nTire Protects Against B(flB\\\nSkids and Blow-out* I\nl!l*_M^\u00abK>RCl\u00bb*\n\u2022 DO YOU KNOW whtl hippened when we tiled\nthousaods of motorists this question: Which art mon\ndangerous\u2014skids or blow-outs) Well, just about half said\n'skids.' And the other half said 'biow-outs.'\nSiivertowos are the only tlrei that give you the Life-Saver\nTread and tbt new, improved Golden Ply ... the greatest\n\"safety combination\" ever offered against both skids and\nblow-ouu. Think of it! The \"windshield-wiper\" action of\nthe Life-Saver Tread actually iweept wet roadi so dry you\ncan light a match on ia trick. No wonder this tire will\nstop you quicker, ufer on e wet pavement than you've ever\nstopped before!\nBrer put your hand on the outside of a tire after lt had been\nrun fast? Pretty hot, wasn't it? But that's nothing compared\nto the beat that's generated imiJe\u2014the internal best thu\ncauses so many of today's high-speed blow-outs. And that'i\nwhy this new Silvertown hu another great safety invention\n\u2014the new, improved Golden Ply. By resisting this internal\nbeat, tbe Goodrich Golden Ply protects you against highspeed blow-outs.\nDon't take chances with either a skid or a blow-out. See\nyour nearest Goodrich Dealer now about putting Silvertown s\non your csr\u2014tt\/e tire that does \"double duty\" isa life-saver!\n^Goodrich Iff IT! Silvertoi\nLlll    SAVER   1KIAD   SKID   PROTECTION\nGOLDEN   PIY  BLOW  OUI  PROIECTION\nGOODRICH DEALERS\nRIVERSIDE MOTORS \t\nHUNTER BROS. LTD\t\nGRAND FORKS GARAGE\t\n... Trail, B. C.\n  Rossland, B. C.\nGrand Forks, B. C.\n mm\t\n.\n______\n_______[\n 'wwpu mmm.\nPHii jppppwil  -\nPAGE   FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NIWI NILION. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. JUNF _S. 1940-\nWILSONS\nOne pad kills (Ilea all ity and even\niay test 2 or 8 weeki. > pada in each\npacket. Mo spraying, no atlcklneas,\nno bad odor. Aik yonr Druggist,\nGrocery or General Store.\n10 CENTS FER PACKET\nWHY PAY MORE?\n\u25a0j03^ss__iw_j_^_mb-\u00bb\nSIMS'\nPrlcei effective Frldiy, tit-\nurdty and Tueidiy, June 21,\n\u00bb, July 3.\nBUTTER\nOeldvale lit Gride\n3 Ibi 79e\nRownfret'i Cocoa, Ib. Mtf\nPtmut Butter, 57 oz. 49<>\nPrtmlum Sodas, 12 \u00abi. 39 <\u25a0\nSERIAL STORY\nBy Oran Arnold\nHAPPINESS, C. 0. D.\nCHAPTER TWENTV-fOqit\nOn that Saturday evening during\nwhich rehearsal of \"Miid to Mel'\n\u2022ure\" wai such t failure. Gayle DU-\non hid sent the other glrli home in\n\u25a0 Merrifield ctr without bothering\nto go with them. In unhappy mood,\nihe had not entered into the usual\nbanter and teasing and email talk\nof departure, tnd nad not tocompt-\nnied them to the ear.\nAa wai hit custom, too, Jeremy\nTucker sought to withdraw quietly\nfrom the group when the rehearsal\nwas over and the aix girls were\ndismissed. He thought it wes about\ntime to go to bed. He would just\nsay good night politely and go upstairs.\n\"Oh, fiddle and looey!\" Adele\nLarraway exclaimed while they\nwaited (er the chauffeur to bring\nthe llmoueine around. \"It's Satur-\nday night and there'i e moon, and\nit's Spring, and I don't want io go\nhome and sleep, Jeremy!\"\nShe selred on thtt ihy young\ngentleman, grabbing him by tha\narm.\n\"Jeremy, how'd you lilge a late\ndate with six glrli? It'i your cat.\nYou don't have to be tucked in now\nforceful mtn than he ?oul'J*YJ\nyoung womeji, ill who could explode Itughter and tmpuWvtnw\nand enthuslaim. Whatever he might\nhave eeld-or eoMttytbiy. did-ity\n-wu drownid I., chorusing femininity. There might htve betn one\nwho did not gush and shriek about\nit, but her ap\nleaa\ndo you. Come on\u2014let's go places!1\n\u00abf_I_' -'\u2022\u25a0\"\t\nhe should have known bitter. More\nft Cl  .\n\" Jeremy opened his mouth\n(or a quite Involuntary protest. But\nMODERN\nPUREX TISSUE: 3 rolls 21c\nBiicuits\nAnorttd\nLb... 24c\nChocolate\n-clalrs\nLb. - 23c\nSalmon\nSockeye, Vu\n2\u00bbin.35e\nCheeu\nKrift\nLb.- 28c\nUPTON'S HIGH GRADI\nTEAS\nRod Ublt, Lb 73#\nOrtngt Ublt, Ib. .. 83*\nYtllow Libit, lb.  . 93<>\nAlto told In '\/_ Ib. pickets.\n... ___ __ __-.     dt the idea\nwas no less plain.\nJeremy came to hli senses, io to\n\u25a0peak, when several blocks from\nhoma. To hia amazement he wti\nsurrounded by lovelineii. Adele iet\nat bit fight, extremely cloie (rom\nmcessity. Hazel Green pressed into\nhli left side, Lola Montesa waa\nsqueezed in next, holding another\ngirl. A fifth sat on the limousine\nfloor leaning against Jeremy's knee.\nAnd Tempe Hyde's toft body was\non hli lap.\nThe glrli were singing, ai)d a\ncalm stranger might have detected\ntwo different longs going at once,\neach making up in volume what It\nlicked in harmony.\n\"For goodness aake ling, Jeremy!\" Tempi ordered, wriggling.\nHe tried to answer, but could not\nquite make his thought! behave,\nmuch less hla tongue. He was excited, delightfully so, somehow. It\nwas all very ttnnge to him- He\nknew he waa smiling, but it was a\nffoten, soared, Md therefore contradictory sort ot smile, contradicting what he nally (elt.\nIt developed that some ot the girla\nmuit have given an order to the\ngood-natured Merrifield chauffeur,\nbecause he swerved (rom the itreet\npresently and pulled up at a big\neatery whoie neon sign proclaimed:\nFOOD, TUN AND FESTrVTTK\nCROWD m\nAlluring music (rom an orcheitra\nmilled  them  and the  girls  til\nMARKET\nLARD:\n1 Ibi.\n25c\nPineopplt: Black LabU,\n2 tini 33c\nClonic Cleanser: Tin \u2014  6c\n\u2022UTTER: Pionter,\n2nd fradt, 2 Ibi. .\n47c\nVanilla: 16 OS., artificial,\nBottU      24e\nSoap Flakei: 5 lb. pkt -. 39c\nCHEESE: Ctntditn\nMatured, Ib\t\n24(\nTomatoes: \u2014\u2014 2 lbs... 29c\nSoap\nCastile\n10br22c\nLicorice\nAlliorti\nLb.. 26c\nCarrots:\nOM English\nSPtClAL OFFERl\nQUART NO-RUIIINC\nWITH MOP\nSoap\nWoodbury's\n2bri15c\nChocolate Ban\nMtket  floor  Wtxlnj Ittyl    6 for 25c\n\u25a0OTH FOR\nONLY .  . .\n98'\nFrtih Local\n3 bunches 13c\nKETCHUP: Htlm,\n8 OI. 2 bottlei ...,\n25c\nBAKING POWDER-Blue Ribbon\n16 oi. Hit ... 22*    S lb. Hn ... 59*\nVINECAR: Heinx,\n32 oi. botHe ....\n33c\nLaundry Starch: Pkt  iler\nCorn Starch: Pkt  11 4\nPotato\nChipi\nNalley's\n2 pkti. 19c\nNALLEY'S PRODUCTS\nSalad Dmiing: 32 oi. jar  46<\nMarmalade: 32 at. jar   25<*\nSweet Pickles: 28 oi. |tr   31*\nBreakfast Syrup: 44 oi. |tr   431\n____-_\u00bba\u2014____\u25a0_______-_\u25a0\u25a0_\u00ab_____\u25a0____________\u25a0\nGrapefruit\nJuice\n20 OX. tir*\n2 for.. 23c\nSANDWICH SPREADS: Favorite Foods, regular sixe, 4 tins 25c\nDATE and NUT BREAD: Crosse fir Blackw.lli. 2 tint 31c\nROBIN HOOD PRODUCTS\nFLOUR wHBATirrc      ROLLED OATS\n....$2.94   \u2122IAT\"\"   __ 34c\n 89c ~\" U* __** 88c\nCOFFEE as    2 lbs. 59c\nSIMS' PRODUCE\ni\nBEETS:\n16c\nPotatoes: 7 Ibi    2&t\nORANCIS: 2 dot  58*\nCABBAGE: Lb *.... 5*\nLETTUCE: Ltrgt, head    Sai\nCRAPEFRUIT: Ltrgt, 5 for  23*\nCELERY: Utth, 2 Ibt  19*\nWATERMELON: Lb  6*\nSIMS'MEATS\nPOT ROASTS BEEF: Lb 19*\nOVIN ROASTS: Lb 18*\nROLLED ROASTS PRIME RIBS: Lb. 25*\nVIAL SHOULDER ROASTS: Lb. .. 20*\nLITTLE PIC SAUSACI: Fresh, Ib.. 20*\nLIAN PORK ROASTS: Lb 22*\nSIDI BACON: By Hit pitct, Ib. .. 25*\nA full lint of Cooked Meats\nBANANAS p.** 3 lltt. 250\nhooped eut et the car like birds\nsuddenly released (rem a coop. And\nIn the same figure ot speech\u2014there\nwas a happy cackling of laughter,\nthen the booster\" of the family\nfollowed with a certain dignity, ignored but expected. J.rimy, ill at\neue but inxloui to be gay, came\nin behind them.\n. The jltce wm large and brilliant.\n\"Uw. lood tnd IfcUvity* wai no\n-__,\u2014MTT (fc\u00ab    \u00ab_____     vnnthl\nfn\nexaggeration, the eevtn youthi\nfound. Already a number of people\nwere preitnt, iome dancing, iome\nsittingbefore drink apd food. The\norcheitra wai excellent, tbe decorations and furniture end genera\natmosphere labelled it all ai one ol\ntbe better places; An ..Hable waiter\nhastened to Jeremy.        \u00ab,______\u25a0.\n\"Welcome, sirl\" the waiter reeled. \"Seven in the partyt , .. TU\nhave a special table stt up for ycu\nat once. Just follow me.\"\nThey tttneted couldertble it-\ntentien-eix girla i\u00bb uniformly it;\ntractive, albeit io utterly different\nin typei, would Inevitably com-\nmind intereit In pubic. Other\nwomen pttrow ot, the place tp.\npraiitd tham hurriedly, and then\nturned with frank Intereit to In.\nipect their man. Jeremy wtt a letdown fer them, of medium build\nonly, dreisid well but not .exceed;\nIngly eo, spectacles with rims that\nwere unnecessarily heavy\u2014Jeremy\nJuat didn't stack up to the distinction of tbe girls he had escorted\nhere. UnUl, thet is, somebody recognised him.\n\"Hi, there, Tuckerl\" a voiced\ncalled. \"Jeremy Tuckerl . . . KEYI\nJeremy Tuckerl\"\nTo be lure, thii wn the young\n\u25a0 man in the loclety newi recently!\nTha Merrifield heir, rich ia all get-\nout. Hla pictures had been in the\npapers. A party thla week. Sure.\nJeremy swallowed. Shyness and\nmisery assailed bim. but he turned\nto the hearty voice and smiled at\nthe youth behind It, There was one\nof the boyi who had come to hii\nparty, he knew. He felt that iome\nretting in turn waa essential, so\n... iheer desperation he shouted\nback: \"Hi there-ab-Butcbl\"\nHa had heard the elaner nickname \"Butch\" toned around by the\nyoung folk in hia grandfather'!\nhome on occrtlon. He had sort et\nadmired tba Catalan ugUneai of it,\nthe comradaahlp Its uie connoted.\nAnd lt teemed to be a happy hunch\nnow.\nThe tallow \"Butch\" anumlng\ntrlandihlp he htd a rtrtt. to eptpeef,\ncame to them and ihook hands,\ngreeting aU the girls, inviting them\nto Join his party. Alter Mother\ntive minutes Jeremy found, himself ln the midst pt a purely un-\npromptu gathering of people he\nscarcely knew. They were laughing\nand talking and cutting up in the\neasy, happy abandon of young peo-\npie everywhere. It had not been\nneceaiary tor him to iay or do much\nmore about it; he hid simply moved\nalong with the stream of events,\nsmiling and nodding sometimes.\nNevertheless, an acute contusion\nhad enveloped him. tot one thing\nhe felt the many eyes that wert\ndirected at him Men in the big road\nhouse looked mostly at the rare assemblage of girls, but a great\nmany people teemed to stare at\nJeremy too, The fellow nicknamed\nButch had been sitting with two\nmore girls, and so that left him\nand Jeremy squiring not six but\neight lovely Homebodies now. In i\nway, it was a heavenly circumstance\nbut in another way It wai distressing. Jeremy wai plainly flushed,\nnervous, 111 at ease. He fingered the\ntablecloth. He licked his lips. He\nglanced from one girl to the other,\nat tha itaring people, and back\nagain.\nHa wai not aura how long a\nwarm something had been holding\nhli hind under cover ot the tablecloth but presently he became con-\nscloiu ofit, and It gave a gentle\nsqueeze. He turned to face Lolo\nMontesa, who iat nearest him. and\nwhose exquisitely beautiful face wai\n(lushed with excitement, too.\nflu a plice to b ehappee,\" lha\nsaid ln a whisper. People look at us,\nJeremy. Do not mind, laugh, and\nsay thlngi. I\u2014-lam-near you.\"\nThat lait was ipoken io confident.\nly, so Intimately and sweetly, that\nits effect was almost sedative to htm.\nHe looked at Lela, close up. He per-\nceived that the was a shy penon,\neven ii ha was.\nQuickly, then, Jeremy iqueeied\nher hand In turn and wu Immensely thrilled at hli temerity. He had\nnever held handi before; he couldn't\nunderstand the magic effect of It,\nbut he knew it was good.\nFor him the party became marvelous.\nAll at once Jeremy wished that\nBill Bailey were present. He\nthought of Bill with a sudden warm\nfriendliness. He thought too, of\nGayle.\nShe had long ago sensed hia need\nind his possibilities, He was profoundly grateful. He was thankful\ntoo, that circumstances had caused\nhim to be enveloped in this whirl\nof feminine gaiety tonight. He felt\nhis very toul expanding.\nLater, when tht moment ot departure came, he discovered that he\ncould act with admirable masculine force.\n'Tm paying the check myielf.\nButch,\" he itated firmly. \"M Is a\npleasure I wouldn't min.\"\nIt wm Just over $1 _ and he left\na substantial tip ai will. Which,\nagain, wai the flnt Ume Jeremy\nhid ever htought to do iuch a\nthing.\nTo Be Continued\nRENATA\nRBNATA. B. C.-Mr. Nichols of\nRossland apent \u2022 few dtyi with\nW. Hale In Renata.\nMrs. K. Storie of Nelaon wu a\nguut of Mr. and Mn. r. Reimer.\nAllan Mackereth and Arthur are\nhere from Broadwiter.\nLouli Wine irrived here from\nTrail to spend the day with his parents, Mr. and Mn. S. Wine.\nPeter Dell viilted Broldwater.\nMn. W. J. Hale and Infant daughter left for a vacation.\ntttt. MacNlel, Mn. Oeorge Walker and Mn. Lillian Blacklbum viiited Renata\nMn. John Hamm entertained\nfriends on her birthdiy. Gueits being Mr. and Mn. P. W. Harms,\nMh. A. Hamm, Mr, and Mn. W. J.\nSfck, Mr. and Mn. Julius Dyck,\nfc and Mri. J. Martens, Mt. and\nMrt. P. Dyck, Miss Mary Wlebe,\nMin Mary Martens, Mn. E. Hi.\nner, Mn. H. S. Frieien and Mr.\nand Mn. H. Schtpanaky.\nMlu Lorettj Friesen and Miss\nFradi Jung brought Miss t. Dan-\n<!helli to Deer Park where ihe will\ncontinue htr work.\nMh. J V. Briggeman, Harold end\nVvonne of Deer Park ware gueiti\nof Mn. G. D. Frliien They were\niceompanied by the former's father. Mr. Johnion of Medicine Hit\n. Don Herman of Trail visited here\nSunday.\n2wi\u00a3l got\n~W *-WO***********w******^^ i*^*^ ^a^^^^m\nBy B.T8Y NEWMAN\nThli menua mty bt uied for l\nluncheon, dlnntr or tupper, It U\neaiy to prepare \u2014 whleh is whit\nthe cook likes on a hot dty. Tht\nchicken may bt lilt of tbt one you\nroaited or frlcuseed for dlnntr yuterdiy. if you with, or you cm\nWe cinned chicken.\nToday'i Menu\nCreamed Chicken        Potato CltiM\nStriwberry Salad       Orlen Peu\nSoft Sugar Cooklei\nIced Tee\nITNAWMIaRY tALAD\nCtit large  itrawberrlea  In  half\nWith whipped ertiS) flavored w\nthick mayonnaise to your tistt,\n\u2022OPT  8U0AR  COOKItl\n3 cupi light brown tugar\n1 cup thortening (halt butter and\nhalf lard, or butter Or margarine)\nItlp-iodi\nVt ts.. Hit.\nv, cup tour milk\n_.***** ________________\nPersonality...\nDressing Room\nShows Own Sell\nThe smart dressing room !\u2022 no\nlonger a luxury, It'i a neceMlty. In\nthe modtrn home, where there ll no\nroom for It, there will be a powder\nroom. But thli is mote formal than\nthe Intimate Utile room that ii (art\nof the boudoir.\nOne's own dressing room can be\nthe dainty typt, with colon and fur-\nnithlngl to suit the taste, but there\nshould be no riot of superfluous ruffles and hangings to collect dust and\nclutter things.\nUtile drapes about the background are pretty It weU made and\ncorrectly arranged; to li the ikirt\nruffle for the table. AH tuch furbishing muit be neat and done with\ndecorator's skill.\nThe Interior decorators will tl-\nways give edvice on color combinations and design. This miy be dona\nto harmonize with the atpolntmanti\nof thl roomi and the toilet articles.\nGold, silver, crystal and the clear\nplastic tets will go with many a\ncolor, but if your pet toilet let li a\n\"I'LL GIVE\n[YOUR FAMILY]\nTASTIER,\nMORE\nDIGESTIBLE\nJW.'KASSWfflS\nott the ensemble.\nAll creim jars, lotions and the\nui everyday working things trt\nkept Out of light in cablneta. Atom-\nlien, pretty bottles and a few or-\nnamenta may be uied for the top.\nThis will (Upend on the site Ot the\ntable. It is alwayi bitter to have\nonly a few things than to clutter\nUie top with unnecessary novelties.\nAll bottles and ornament! ihould\nbe washed or thoroughly cleinsed\nevery week. Glau or mirror topi\nthould be cltlr and shining without\npowder dusting.\nYour dressing room expresses\nyour own penopellty-ltt lt be is\nnice u you ire,\nFOR OTHirt NIWS OF INTIRMT\nTO WOMIN\n\u2022II PAGE EIGHT\n.'\u25a0     '\">    \"\u25a0 \t\n1 tap. baking powder\nFlour\n1 tip. flavoring.\nCream shortening, gradually\ncfeem in sugar, then add beaten\neggs, than add half the sour milk\nwith soda dlitolved In It, then htlf\nthe flour, abeut ioti cupa, aeeord-\ning to the kind of Son med. Sift\nflow with baking powder tnd wit\nYou ew uie almond, vanilla or\nlemon extract for flavoring, or %\nteupoon nutmeg, whichever you\nprefer. Roll fairly thin and tike\"\nin quick oven-around 400 degreea\nll\"\"\"   \" \u2014 P.     \u25a0-\nV\nDelicious and Refreshing\nr#TSA\n |i.mii;ii\u00abinii>\u00ab\u00bb-w_w*ww\u2014mmmmmmmmemm\n\"No time for outdoor exerdse\nBUT I KEEP FIT1\nTon! will, sti your doctor\nTo Imp well, witch your hiMtt\n\u2014aepwiiny U you are ladoon\nmott o( the time, like Mn. L.\nShe realbee It'i belter to eat\nthii oriep. touted, mildlylua-\nthe cereal wary day. Right\nthrough the year uie this euy,\npltatant way to get extra\nHoik,\" and to iToid bartb ind\npossibly dangerous drugs.\nTRY DOING THIS\nliny Denial dorlai a whole\nnegtli, elt a haaploi bo\u00abI of\nfmrn-titU KeDoii's Brio Arte..\nJut in If thii doesn't pat tt* ant\nId lifrl Order the blf soldn-yellow\npackise today, f hrn yen elt ent,\n\u2022ik foe the wu^rrlpped Mlmiual\nplekiie. Mide by Eelloii's in\nLondoo,r    \"\nKwpawny thi, \"Dull Days\"!\nIf yon frequently fed \"low,\" hiadtchy, you're\nprobtMy aeneeeied by bccmpleto dfaijatrfcm.\nSo yon hid better (et mote \"bulk\" ta your\ndiet to more food wutee promptly.\nWise people everywhere hive found appei\ntiling Kellogg's Drm Blikci the hippy antwtr.\nGiatly laxative... rich iu natural Vitamin Bi\n... Kellogg's Bran Flakei W| th-Other.Parti-\nof-Wheat lupply bodybuilding proteins, too.\nAnd they tre eo positively delicioui you'll\ngladly make them l isily habit. Start the\nKellogg'i Bran Flakei way tomorrow moraio gt\nDRESS IIP YOUR COMPANY DISHES fyl\n*4f*      \u25a0'   '    .\n'\u25a0\u25a0'ni-'\n\"I **f;5\n,^%'v\nHEINZ\nTOMATO    v (\nKETCHUP      *    ~\nmi\n_ mii_****tlet.\n_\u00a7\u00a7_i\nTOU Ctl. Olvt Your Cooking Out-\nOMht-Ordinory Flovour With\nTongy, Tally Htlm Tomato Ketchup\n\u2014 Our Zeity Blend Of Rosy-RIpe\nHelm P\/lie Tomatoes, Helm Vlnt-\nflar And Racy Oriental Spices.\nfork loin lanWed\n\u2022 Prepare uucehyeomWnlngl cup HllM\nTomato Ketchup,){ cup eich Heins 57--\nBeafttaak Sauce, luur and Hilni Cider\nVinegar ;\\_ cup each Helm Woreeitenhire\n8eu.e and water; 1 tba. salt. Tie 1\nehoppod onion and 3 el.v\u00ab garlic in bag\naod plate ln tauce. Pour over 5 lb. pWk\nloin (out; partially cut Into ehopa, ea lllue-\ntrated. Bake in moderate oven (350'_.)\nabout 1 houri, batting tvtry JO mlauUe\nwitftituee.\nVeo\/Crto\/t\n\u2022 Brown 4 medium veal cutlets Ou both sldaa\nIn 4 tba. butter or drippings. Stuoh with Salt\nandpeppar. Md H cup finely Chopped Onion,\nH cup chopped grean pepper, 1 bunch young\ncarrots eut in halves. Combine H cup Helm\nTomato Ketchup with 1 cup warfn water and\npour over meat and vegetable*. Cover. Cook\n\u2022lowly 45 minutes.\n______________\n **mmm\n.\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILtON. t. C.-rmOAY MORNINO. JUNI M WO-\nWhites\nComfortable\nYpu'll enjoy your holiday more In a pair of\nthese ultra stylish\nwhites Thty ara elegantly suited for Dress\nWear, Street Wear or\nSports Wear. In a\nchoice of models that\nwill please you.\nAH Sl.ee\nFor a Glorious\nPriced Up From\n$2-95\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNELSON\nSOCIAL...\ne Tbt Ewing garden Silica Street,\nwaa the scene, of* pretty wedding\n[fempw early TWraw wrotei\nFlorence Elisabeth, daughter\n. William H. Hoare and the Ute\nMri. Hosre, to J. R. Malcolm McNaughton, ion ot Mr. and Mri. Jelm\nMcNiughton ot London, Ont The\nceremony wu performed on the\nUwn In a lovely letting ot garden\nflowers by Rev. T. J. S. Ferguion.\nMn. Harvey Wallace played the\nwedding music. The bride wai\ngiven in marriage by her father,\nand waa attended by MUi Eileen\nDill. Hirvay F, Wallace wti best\nman. The bride wore a eharmlni\nredingote ensemble of toelt blown\ncrepe trimmed with beige lilted at\ntha waist Her hat wai \u2022 toft kaiie\ntilt button tailor which perfectly\nmatched her glovei and * little\nbeige trim at the neck ol her dress.\nHer shoei ware the tame shade tt\nher ensemble, and hat coriafe wti\not deep Talisman roses. The bridesmaid waa in robins' egg blue crepe\nwith white accessories. Her corsage\nwas ot butterfly pink roiei. A reception wei held at the home of the\nbride's father. Buffet refreihments\nweri ierved. C, W. Tyler proposed\nth toest to th bride and the groom\nresponded. The bride and groem\nS\n==_\nSWEEPING POWERS QIVIN\nAUSSIE MUNITION! HEAD\nOTTAWA, Jtme JT <C?)-Det\u00bbll\u00bb\nIngton Lewis, leading Australian In-\n\u2022 dustxlillit recently appointed Director-General et Munition! ln Australia. Wtrt revealed In t cable re\nceived today by the Australian High\nCommiailoner here, Sir William\nGlaigow.\nThe Munltioni MlnUter wUl be\ne member of the Auitwllan War\nCommittee with accew to the war\nCeWnet, will fermuUtt e.teriei ot\nobiective! and ia authorised to Spend\nup to \u00a3250,000 (SU50.000).\nPRE-HOLIDAY SUGGEST!\u00a9\nChateau CHEESE\nVi Lb. Pkt... 15c\nCRAPEFRUIT OC\nJUICE: 50 oi. fin . \u00a3JC\nPICKLES: Aiiorted, |A\n7 on. jar W**\nPINEAPPLE JUICE: OC.\nUfcby's, Vs, I tint ODl\nRELISH SPREAD: lest\n8o_.|ar L^y*\nCRAPE NUTS:\n2 pkts.\t\nAU BRAN:\nKellogg'i, pkt. .\nWAX PAPER:\n100 ft. roll ...\nMARMALADE:\nU ei. Jar \t\n25c\n20c\n19c\n25c\nHighway BUTTER\nJ    LbS*     FIRST GRADE    79C\nAylmer Chicken: 7 ox. Hn\nWalnut Pieces: Lb.\n'TIHWi Ur|t        OC*\nro!l\u00bb. 6 for t-OK\nJIUY POWDERS:   OC\nEmpreu, 5 for .... -**>*'\n25c\n25c\n29e\nEmpreu,\nCINGER SNAPS:\nlit*\t\n22c\nSAUSACE: Burnt,\nTin \t\nIT\"\"'. *.\":\u2022. 25c\nSALMON: Cold      OA.\nStai, Vi Hit faWC\nGINGER ALE\nPts. Hi\u00abh.M.D,y Doz. 75c\nPlui Deposit on Bottlei\nPalmolive Soap: 4 bars \u2014 21 e\nAnd e Week'i Supply of Teeth Pevvder\nEeonomy Capi: Dox. _ 27c\n|eli Rite: Bottle 19c\nTomato Juice: Libby's, 14oz.... 3 tins 20c\nLifebuoy Soap 3 bars 20c\nParowax , 1 lb pkt. 16c\nGrape Juice: Aylmer,.... 32 ox. bottle 39c\nBananas;\n23c\nCARROTS:\nlunch   \t\nBEETS:\nBunch  \t\nLETTUCE:\nHead   \t\nCAULIFLOWER:\nLb\t\nNEW SPUDS:\n10 Ibi\t\n5c\n5c\n7c\n9c\n37c\nTomatoes:\nHot Houte, 2 Ibi. .\n29c\nORANCES:\n2 dot\t\nLEMONS: Large,\nlist, dos\t\nCHERRIES: Bingt, 01.\n2 lbs 01C\nGRAPEFRUIT:\n4 for\t\nWATERMELON:\nmod slit, tach .\n55c\n25c\n25c\n69c\nCucumbers:     S\u00ab\n. eney, eeeh   ****\nQUALITY\nMEATS\nPICNICS: Tandtr\nr\": 17c\n15c\n20c\nISc\n10c\nBOLOGNA:\nLb\t\nWEINERS:\nLb\t\nSPICED HAM:\nVi lb. ......\nPORK SPARE\nRIBS: Lb.  ...\nPOT ROAST BEEF: Lb.\n12C and  15C\nSHOULDER VEAL QC.\nSTEAK: 2 Ib OOC\nROASTS PORK: Lb.\n18c 22c\nBACON: Sliced,    Of.\ntldt or back, Ib. .. AJC\nHAM: Swift's\nCooked, V. Ib.\n22c\ntapiwav tToeaa limitsd\nat I,\nHAtr ef Pert\n%l%\nPAnr Five\nCrawford wai la tha Otr yeiterday <\u25a0\u25a0\nto meet har ion Jan. whe raturned Urr-\nfrem North Shore doUeee in Van- f\ner, and her daughter North.\"\nettendi a private girla' ichool\nR \u00ab R Grocery\nNthon'i. rogntihw Houn Owntd Food Start\nARCHIE and TEDDY, Willing and Rtady\nEFFECTIVE FRIDAY ANO SATURDAY\nWIZARD WAX: PM bottle SB*\nCUE: Tht liquid Tooth Pitta, bottrt  IH*}\nTISSUE: Nile Whltt, li-ge reil    ty\nFill FACI POWDER: 10 days supply Ctihmtrt Sou-\nqutt and 4 ban Ctahintrt Bouqutt Soap: OP\nAll for   t*Zm\nGRAHAM WAFERS: 1 lb. plt|.  19*\nSODAS: Sunland, 16 w pkg.  Ity\nFIG BARS: I H.. ctHo  20*\nWHEAT PUFFS: Aproni, tte, buihel  89*\nTEA: Braid'., Blut Ubtl, Ib.  59*\nSALMON: Red Cohot, Vi's, 2 for  35*\nCHOCOLATE MILK: Borden's, Ht. Hn ......... 89*\nEAGLE BRAND MILK: 2 Hns  48*\nBUTTER: Brl.j_tr.oln., 1st grade, I Ibi.   88*\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nWATERMELONS: Whole, uth   79*\nORANCES: Good tasta, mtdium, I du 66*\nPEACHES: Frtih, Ib.   20*\nCABBAGE: Ntw, Ib.    8*\nCUCUMBERS: Lirgt, 2 for   13*\nCREEN QNIONI and \"ADISHBS: I bunthtt 10*\nCARROTS: Ltrgt bunehts  86*\nNEW BEETS: Bunch     8*\nTOMATOES, CAULIFLOWER, WHITE ONIONS\nNIW LOCAL PEAS:\nlib*\t\n24c\nPhont 161\nFree Delivery\n*s^\u2122!*(r-r-i.\nPli^BlagHffi\nSpecials FrLy Sat, and Tues.\nJune tl and M and July t\nBUTT!*:\nFlnt (trade Overwaitea Br\u00bbnd. I Iba. far.\n79c\nSALT: Windsor, 7 Ib lack   81*\nHONEY: B. C. 4 Ib. Hn  83*\nSALMON: Tills, choho pink, Hn  16*\nBABY SOUPS: Libby'i, . tlm  86*\nBRAN FLAKES: Kellogg'i, 2 pkti  88*\nTOMATO JUICE: Drlr-kmore, 25 M., 2 tint  80*\nSUGAR: B.C.,\n18 Ibi fer \u201e..\t\n75c\nSOAPt Lifebuoy, _ takei ....\nOXYDOL: Large, pkt.\t\nCHIPSO: Large pkt.\t\nSOAP: Miny Flowon, 3 ctkts\nCLEANSER: Classic, 2 tins ...\n88*\n81*\n.81*\n9*\n13*\nFLOUR:\nRoyil Household leet 9li ..\nFLOUR:\nRoyil Houiehold tart \u00ab\u2022\n$2.95\n$1.55\nGRAPE NUT FLAKES: 2 pkti.  19*\nMACARONI: Quakor. roady cut, 2 lbs. 17*\nEGGS: Local, Grade A, large, 2 dos 86*\nDOC VARIETY SQUARES: 2 Ibt 86*\nLIQUID VENIER: 1 large botHe, 1 small bottle for 46*\nPICNICS:\nlurni' Tendirlnd, It.\n16c\nPAROWAX: 1 lb. pkt.\t\nPOTTED MEATS: Hedlundi, I Hns ..\nSALMON: Fancy rod, 1 Ib. Hn\t\nCORN FLAKES: Quaker, 4 pkti ....\nMILK: Tills, ill kinds, 3 Hns\t\nLARD: Shamrock, 1 Ib. ctrtont, 2 for\nBAKEASY SHORTENING: 2 lbs. ...\n16*\n86*\n88*\n86*\n85*\n17*\n83*\nSALAD DRESSING:\nMiracle Whip, St-ei. jar\t\nCHEESE: Kraft,\nMb. hex\t\n42c\n52c\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables\nCRAPEFRUIT: Good site. 5 for  84*\nORANGES: Sweet and juicy, good llll, 2 du 69*\nPEAS: Local frtih, 2 Ibi  19*\nCUCUMBERS: Ltrgt. 3 for   19*\nTOMATOES: Hot houie, 2 Ibi 36*\nWATERMELON:\nChelee, Ib. ._ \t\n6c\nBINC CHERRIES: 2 lbs 38*\nCARROTS: 4 bunches   83*\nNEW POTATOES: 10 lbs  35*\nSports Wear\nFOR A GRAND  HOLIDAY\nSWIM SUITS\nJintion ind Catallna makes In Satin Lastex, ftncy rayons ind wools, vilvi\nmaterials. All tho newest styles flJO QC\n\u2022nd colon. Up from yCitd\nContort closes for Gitalin! trip to Hollywood on July 5th, send your entries In\nIt onct.\nCool Girdles\nA Summer salvation, Pantie\nGirdles, two-way stretch, cool\ntnd comfortable. Pink-tjl AA\nand whltt $l.W\nHickory Elastic Girdles. Ntw\nSummer styles.\n$1.00 to $3.95\nFor Real Comfort Slacks and Shorts\nFini cotton ehimbrty Slack\nSuits. Contrasting tops and\nplain Slacks. Ideal for picnics ind thi beach. Blut\nind rosi.\nPrlct \t\n$2.59\nbanforired    shrunk,    two-\npiece Slack Suits for iports.\nStriped waists with plain    ^\nblut slacks. A       MQC\nHampton Product, f\"\u00bbW\nPlain colored shorts In a tot-\nton suiting material. A\nsplendid\nstyle\t\nShirt Blouses to match In ill\nplain colon.\nEich \t\n$1.00\nCool Summer Cottons\nNiw Summer washable Dressis. Spun shins, spun charms,\nSunnyvale prints, lystavs and linens. Buy ont of these Summer dresses now while there trt still hundreds to choost\nfrom. \u2014 Prices\u2014\n$2.95 _ $10.95\nHats From $1.95\nHats from $1.95. Charming, feature-flattering hats Wido\nshady brims, smartly styled that will compliment d\u00bb1 AC\nyour looks. White and tuscan. Each ipl.JJ\nVacation Hosiery\nHosiery 69e. Full-fashioned chiffon hose In new Summer colors. All first quality. Sizes 8'\/_ to 10V_. Cft*\nJerman Hunt's\nPHONE 200\ne Mrs. W, J. Terntn ot Roeiland\nla viiiting ber parents, Mr. and Mrs,\nW. A. Robertion, Silver Klnf Road.\na Un. Ti. Bowkett wai In the\nFRESH SHEERS. GAY PRINTS\nSo Cool tor Hot Weather\nNavy and Black. Situ 14 to Jl'.V\nti- to \u00bbm>5\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n441 Biker SL Pbone 114\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Bakar It\n\"hone tM\nCity trom South Slocan yesterday.\na Mr. and Mri. Percy Andrewi,\nH. K. Dill, Mn. G. Renwick, Mn.\nMaude Travel, D. Maloney, G. Will,\nHorace Kiy, F. Jeffen, J. Hunter,\nMr. and Mri. Lane, and C. Jetts attended the strawberry loclal at Vallican given by Slocan Lodge No. 4\not the I.O.O.F. and Floral Rebekah\nLodge No. 15, Wedneiday.\ne Mill Bdna McKentle, 714 Victoria Street, wbo teachei ichool at\nSheep Creek, left todiy for Victoria\nto attend Summer school.        _,\na Thi homa ot Miu Beth McKinney, Hoover Street, was thl meeting place ot the memberi of the\nJunior Red Croai Auxiliary thli\nweek, when Mn. C. D. Pearion ot\nthe Nelson Red Crosi reviewed the\nwork done by the girli. A feature\nwu preientation to Miss Jine Wigg\nof e gltt ot illver teaepooni from\ntha memben on the occailon of her\nforthcoming marriage. Mri. J. A.\nBAKER ST.\nBallantyne attended in connection\nwith the lawn social plana. Othere\npreient Included the Preiident MUl\nRuth Jonei, Miss Annie Bird, Misa\nKayo Anderson, Mils Eileen Colliw,\nMiss Patricia Colli\u2122, Mlu Ana\nLaakso and Mill Franoaa Jonei.\na Mr. and Mri. Louie Houde ol\nSheep Creek viaited town yeiter*\nday.\n\u2022 W. R. Taprell ttt Calgary, who\nspent Wednesday ln town, returned\nyesterday, joining Mri, Terrell at\nGray Creek,\n(Continued en Paga leven)\nPURSES\nWhite and eolored Summer begs.\nClearing at $1.23 and \u00bb1D0.\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nOpp. Capitol Theatre     Phona IStl\nTummn.nnmnin\nASK  FOR\n4X Hot Dog ond\nHamburger Bunt\nPOR  YOUR PICNIC\nTt 11111 It ltt 11111111 till.\nNEW SHIPMENT OF\nSUMMER DRESSES\nAll itylei and ihidei\nSites 13 to 44\nS..9S to 11.99\nFashion First Shop\n436 Bakar SL\nNelaon. B C\nPHONE 116 for\nand Cream\nHAW OR PASTEURIZED\nKOOTENAY VAUEY DAIRY\ntmmtmm_t-_mmmmtmWt__m\nH. H. Sutherland\n346 Baker tt\nWATCHES, DIAMONDS,\nWEDDINC RINCS\nr;_^nTI____^BlXM)r_K__fl_____l__i\nm________________.\nItlMi ______\n\u25a0_\n \t\nrat six .  i         , ' ,\nJWamt Sailg JJfttta\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia'! Most Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sunday 'by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266   Baker   Street   Nelion   Britlih   Columbia.\nMEMBER -01 THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   C1RCULATI0N&\nFRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1940.\nIS RIDICULOUS TO ASSUME WAR LOST\nJust before France'g surrender, the United States\nteemed to be headed toward a terrific munitions effort on\nbehalf of the Allies, with a strong sentiment rapidly bulldog up for direct action also.\nSince the surrender, while the Government, under\nPresident Roosevelt, is going \"all out\" to give help to the\nBritish Empire, a number of American statemen and a\nlumber of American newspapers have jumped to the con-\nflusion that the British fight is already lost, and are discussing the future of Europe, and the position of \"Ameri-\n\u00bb,\" in the light of that supposed fact.\nThis is simply ridiculous.\nIt overlooks the fact that the land connection between\nBritain and Contiental Europe vanished beneath the,\"waves\nlome scores of thousands of years ago, and that no way has\nfet been discovered for driving tanks on the sea-bottom.\nLacking sea-going tanks, lacking comparable sea-\nbower, and having superiority only in volume of air-power\nfor attack and transport purposes, Germany and Italy\u2014if\nftaly is really going to risk its forces\u2014are going to have\niome difficulty in bringing to bear their military superior-\nWhile all the Continental countries Germany has in-\nfaded are now out of the picture, these surrenders, or, in\nthe case of Norway, withdrawal of troops, have not re-\nitored to life or wholeness the million or so Germans who\nirere casualties, and have not renewed the equipment that\nGermany expended so lavishly, and which alone bought the\nrictories.\nThe German armies have had enormous wastage, and\ntoday there are spread over a vast territory in Western\n|nd Eastern Europe keeping order.\nAny force of invasion, if it can ever land, will have\nBritain's entire armed forces to meet.\nIf by any means invading forces could be landed, it is\nhard to imagine that the tanks, monster steel lorries, and\nrllery could be got across in the face of opposition.\nIn fact, with the British navy reenforced, as now it\npppears it will be, by a substantial portion of the French\nbavy, it is hard to see where Britain can be attacked except\nby air, and that medium, while lending itself to mass bomb-\npig raids and to parachute troop landings, seems to offer\nno possibility of subjugation.\nWith Continental Europe held in the grip of the British\nSlkwkade, it would seem as though Germany can be held off\nndefinitely, while the Anglo-Saxon world turns out.equip-\nhient and munitions at top speed and capacity, to provide\nithe means for the ultimate defeat of the aggressor.\nTHE CHINA \"INCIDENT\"\nJapanese propaganda has now reduced the three-year\nideclared war against China to an \"incident.\"\nSays the latest issue of the Japanese American Review,\nrahlished in New York, and circulated free to the press of\nhe United States and Canada.\t\n\"As a result of the munitions boom, curios, Japanese\npaintings and Calligraphical works now are in enormous\nlemand, their prices rising. \"The prices of these articles\n>egan to rise at the end of 1937, several months before the\nMitbreak of the China incident.\"\nQuite an incident, to occupy the whole military strength\nof Japan for now well into the third year!\nAnother favorite Japanese description of the trifling\nmatter that somehow seems to keep Japan busy is \"China's\nrefusal to cooperate,\" and the mission of the Japanese army\nIs \"Bringing of peace to the Orient\"\nGreat is propaganda\u2014provided a public can be found\nto swallow it\n\t\nMOSQUITOES AND MOSQUITOES\nAlong the shores of the Caribbean Sea we find a region\nknown as the Mosquito Coast. When Christopher Columbus\ndiscovered America he did not occupy this territory. In 1638\nIt became a haunt of pirates\u2014the Buccaneers. Later on,\n\"Mosquitia\" came under the sway of Britain. In 1860\nBritain ceded Mosquito .Coast to Nicaragua.\nThis coast owes its name to the Mosquitoes\u2014the Indian and Negro cross-breds inhabiting the territory. These\nMosquitoes are not more than 6000 in number. But on the\ngame shores dwell a host of other \"mosquitoes\". \"Mosquito\"\nis actually the Spanish word for the numerous breed of insects which spread terrible diseases among the \"human\nMosquitoes\", especially malaria.\nFor this reason, efforts have been made lately to Induce the Mosquitoes to make a regular use of quinine. On\npage 124 of its report, English edition, issued in 1938, the\nMalaria-Commission of the League of Nations, composed\nof the principal experts in malaria control, stresses the fact\nthat the harmlessness of quinine makes it a suitable drug\nfor administration by subordinate personnel without constant medical supervision, whereas Such supervision is\nessential in the case of synthetic products. The Commission\nalso recommends, as a preventive measure, a daily dose of\nsix grains of quinine throughout the fever season and for\ngome time afterwards, and for actual treatment a dose of\n15 grains to 20 grains of quinine every day for 5 to 7 days.\nNo supplementary treatment is administered, but each relapse is treated in the same way.\nThe Moquitoes still regard these Western medicines\nWith some suspicion, but a great many of them have experienced that quinine is the best remedy for protecting them\nfrom the deadly effects of those other \"mosquitoes\"\u2014the\nbarriers of malaria.\n NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B. C-FR.DAY MORNINO. JUNI M. IHO-\nm\nwm-n\n\u25a0\"\u25a0\"-\u2014\u25a0\nw**m>>*-m\nB* B* F, Chief We cc. es Son-in-Law\nGeneral Lord Gort, right, V.C. commander of\nthe British Expeditionary Forces, is pictured with\nhis only daughter, Jacqueline Vereker, after her\ncqt\nmi-\nmarriage to Captain William Philip Sidney, left, of\nthe Grenadier Guards. The marriage took place at\nthe Guard's chapel, Wellington barracks. A reception was held at Lennox Gardens, Brompton Road,\nwhere this photo was made.\nBRITANNIA'S REALM\nBy GERALD S. REES\nThere comes to me at thla moment a memory\u2014a quarter of a\ncentury gone\u2014when two English-\nborn volunteers in Kitchener's\nkhaki army spent their last homeland leave in.a valedictory visit\nalong the Southlands of England,\nbeloved since boyhood days. Towards the hour of sunset, when the\nrocks were trailing homeward to\nthe treetops of distant elms, the\ntwo wayfarers\u2014as the bugles from\nthe vast tented encampment nearby were soundlng-in mellow meter\n\u2014a silvery \"Retreat\"\u2014rested momentarily on the yielding turf of\ndownland crest within sight and\nsound of the sea, from whence\ncould be seen in the gathering dusk\n\u2014veiled in misty smoke frqm their\nown hearth-fires\u2014t h e twinkling\nlights of village homes nestling in\nthe folds of the jade green-clad and\nchalk-ribbed hills o' home. Here\nwas where our English forbears had\nonce worshipped the sun with Dru-\nidic rites and had trod the Pilgrim's Way from the weathered\nWiltshire plains acrou the Soyth-\nern shires and counties of the\nHomeland.\nOne of the soldier-men, sifting the\nsoft earth between his fingers, quietly said\u2014\"As long as one English\nfield lies against another, there will\nalways be something left in this\nworld for a man to love and fight\nfor...\"\nIt waa a benediction on our ended\npilgrimage. (God rest his soul). He\nwas killed in action a year later below the crest of another hill, the\none known for all time aa the Ridge\nof Vimy.\nI am thinking also of the low-\nslung Kentish coastlands. Rudyard\nKipling, in his inimitable verse, put\nthe longing quastldn between the\nlips of an exiled soldier of Queen\nVictoria's day\u2014\"Are Dover's cliffs\nstill white?\" Yes, they are still\nchalk-white! Their whiteness mas-\nbe stained crimson with the blood\nof Britons ere long, but in God's\ngood Ume they will become white\nagain, and the close-cropped grass\nwill be greener than ever caross\ntheir broad bosoms.\nBROAD SUNLIT\nUPLANDS\nI think too of the red earth\u2014Na\nhire's red\u2014on rounded newly\nplowed hills, ot plowland and park\nand ot pasture and woodland; of\nwallflowers budding out from castle ruins, and of grazing sheep in\nfertile fields beside the white wind\ning roads of \"The King's Highway\"\nthat the Romans built in the \"ery\nlong ago.,..\nI remember also at this moment\nthe colors and scents and sounds\nof an Engllah June, with a com\nforting thought of the Weald of\nSussex, where life moves slowly\nbut surely in the deliberate rhythm\nof limited horizons. . . of grey-towered churches, their dim interiors\nscrolled and emblazoned with\nthousand-year-old history, and ancient hamlets, half as old aa Time,\nwith half-timbered, semi-stone cottages; ot village greens and duck\nponds; of quaint inns with quainter\nnames where \"English Teas\" at\nOne Shilling are as quickly served\nas English Ale (in pewter pot or\nlittle brown jug) at so-much-a-plnt!\nThe strawberries \u2014 luscious and\nlarge \u2014 have ripened now ln the\nlittle island under the North Star,\nand the blackberries too along the\ncliff hedgerows where \"When all\nthe world was young, lad\", I pricked\nmy fingers as a boy.\n\"These sing the song of England,\nwhose words I cannot hear,\nI only know they build for me a\nmeaning that Is dear.\"\nA man's love for his naUve land\nshould be unashamed, deep-rooted\nas  the trees that flourish firmly\nupon ita soil, as unassailable as the\ntrees of oak that, in the Homeland,\nstand foursquare to the high winds\nof Heaven.\n\"Thatch or heather, cloudy skies,\nOr is it mist before my eyes?\"\nThe thought of lt all at this Ume\nmoves one nearly to tears!....\nORDEAL BY FIRE\nThe thoughts of Britons all over\nthe world rest at this hour on the\nMother Country, cradle of freedom,\nthat has now become a beleaguered\nisland fortress, a last bastion of a\nfree people in a storm-lashed Europe. She has come at long last to\nthe grimmest peril in her rough\nisland story, with back to the wall\nbehind her ramparts of the sea;\nthere are no \"behind the line\" positions, no bomb-proof cushy jobs. It\nwill all be \"front-line\" stuff, but\nshe Is going on to the end of the\nroad, rough and hard though It be,\nlong or short, with a man of valor\nat the helm, breezy and dynamic,\nobstinate and tough, whose words\n-*   mm......    matrhari    with   action.\nhave made him Brltaln'i Man of\nDestiny. Never has Winston Churchill's prestige stood higher than in\nhis wonderful speech in Parliament\non a recent Monday\u2014strong, generous and wise, without bitterness or\nrecriminations.\nDRAKE'S DRUM\nA-ROLLINQ\nFrom John .o. Groat's to Land's\nEnd, warning beacon fires are figuratively ablaze, as they were literally so in tbe days of the Dons.\nBritain's cry, \"Come over Into Macedonia and help us\" is not the utterance of weakness or despair. Her\nkinsmen and allies beyond the seas\nwill not fail her. Never have the\nwinds of England been so strongly\nstirred, never in all Its colorful\ncenturies of history; never such a\nchallenge with such clearly defined\nissues that will affect every man\nwoman and child of every race,\ncreed and color, in all the remo.es.\nhabitations on our earthly planet.\nLet us remember that, for more than\napparent reasons, the British Isle?\nhave not been positively conquered\nby a foreign foe since their annexation by Rome in the first half century after Christ. The Norman Conr\nquest was not a true conquest; it\nwas a natural merging of two peoples of kindred blood.\nHOLDING THE FORT\nCitizens of old London Town,\nwhere the Thames widens to go\ndown to the sea, \"carry on\" where\nthe great tides of road traffic sweep\naround the base of Nelson's lofty\nmonument in Trafalgar Square.\nBritain's tutelary genius of her salty\ndomains has no time now to scan\nthe hurrying crowds below, but\nkeeps his one good eye towards\nthe grey-blue skies to warn his\npeople 'gainst invading hosts from\nthe elr! The bronze lions, which\nhave always seemed half asleep in\ntheir guardian pose' around the\nmonument, are now wide-awake on\na clock-round sentry duty! There is\na 20-foot hoarding across its plinth.\nOn it are these two pregnant words,\n\"England Expects\"! They are\nenough! And the Royal Navy\u2014Britain's sure shield\u2014stands guard\nacross the narrow seas, and across\nthe Seven Seas beyond dim home\nhorizons.\nBritains' great \"picture gaUery\"\nis full of the deep organ notes of\nthe sounding seas; its character has\nbeen pounded into the hearts ol\nour race; its salt is in our blood,\nand its tang in our nostrils. \"We\nhave fed our sea for a thousand\nyears, and she calls us still unfed'\nOur Empire's history has lain upon\nthe sea, and lta life-story is linked\nup with saltwater. The command\nof the seas across the centuries has\nexacted a terrific toll. As one ol\nour Empire balladists has written:\n\"If blood be the price ot Admiralty\nLord God, we ha' paid in fulL\"\nLet us stand to salute the officers\nand men ot the Royal Navy\u2014under\nthe White Enaign\u2014from the hightest\nagust admiral to the humblest mid-\nshipmite, in their dogged, courageous devotion to duty in this hour\nof destiny. Let us, in our pride of\nthem, breathe a prayer for their\nprotection; they carry our good\nname upon their broad shoulders,\na memory of us in their Marts, and\nwe remember, too, that great host\nof our sailormen in the Merchant\nMarine, many of whom, alas, will\nnever again come homeward to any\nshore on any tide. . , .\nYOUR HAND-\nIN THE HAND OF GOD\nA singed and battered curtain\nrises over the Isles of Britain in the\nprologue of its most fateful scene\nsince the Islands were. We know\nthat even if very many outward\nforms of her civilization and culture be consumed as. by fire\u2014in\nsorrow and mourning for wanton\nwaste of priceless handicraft\u2014they\ncan be restored anew, for all are\nbut externa! modes of creative\nthought. All are as dross if the\ngolden gift of freedom be not preserved. The soul of Britain can\nnever be destroyed by Pyrrhic victories of her enemies. It is eternal\nand infinite, imperishable, and tangible, real and present. 'This England\" is not the shuttlecock of circumstances; her priceless heritage\nof liberty and religious freedom,\nculture and civilization, will and\nmust survive, England's own Shakespeare, her timeless prophet, defied\nhistory and grammar, but not the\nfuture, when- he wrotei \"This England never did, nor never shall.\nHe it the foot of a' conqueror!\" The\nvery stars In- their courses fight\nagainst Herr Hitler and his fellow\nKB. ester-executioner. Signor Mussolini, with his pseudo-Mach'avel-\nlian Impulses. Adolf and Benito\nmay shake their puny fists in the\nface of God. but the last chapters\nof the Nazi Bible\u2014\"Mein Kampf\"\u2014\nare going to be rewritten by some\nother than the \"ghost writer\" of\nlhe Nazi realm, who stated that an\noutworn era ls crumbling to dust\nbeneath the marching feet of Germanic armies! England will never\nbe the vassal of Germany\u2014nor of\nItaly!\nFOR ALL WE\nHAVE AND AREI\nAnd so, in humble gratitude, and\nwith friendly permission of such\nother readers as I may have. I have\naddressed these words particularly\nto the men and women ot England\nwho are now volunterlly exiled in\nour peaceful valleys of the Kootenays and whose love of native land\nis too profound for mere expression\nof written or spoken word. 'There'll\nAlways Be an England!\" The song\nof the hour is more than a song; it\nis a prayer, an affirmation of Truth,\nsymbolic and mystic, with deeper\ninterpretation than the continued\nexistence of England as England.\nRemember this, if you will, when\nnext you hear again or sing tbe\nwords. Some day, under Divine\nGuidance, our England will find\ndignity and greatness and peace\nonce again. Through the undoubted\ndark days that lie ahead\u2014almost\nimmediately\u2014let us hold fast, fight\non in thought, word and deed 'gainst\nspiritual ^wickedness ln high places,\nendeavoring to see through it all-\neven if dimly\u2014the Shape of Things\nto come after the storms are stilled.\n'THIS WAS HER\nFINE8T  HOUR\"\nFinally, even as I commenced on\na note of retrospective remembrance\nacross the duska of yesterday, let\nme close with a reminder of the\nsolemn promise, recently and magnificently made by Britain's Prime\nMinister on behalf of England and\nher Empire: \"If all do their duty\n. . . we shall prove ourselves once\nagain able to defend our Island\nhome, ride out the storms'-of war,\nand outlive the menace of tyranny\n... We shall not flag nor fail. We\nshall go on to the end (Britons can\ndo nought else!). We shall fight\n... on the sess and the oceans; we\nshall defend our Island whatever\nthe cost may be'; we ihall fight on\nthe beaches and in the fields, In\nstreets and on the hills. We shall\nnever surrender ...\"\nGOD SAVE ENGLAND,\nGOD SAVE THE KING.\nEliminate Weeds\nShepherd'e-pnree rich in seeds\nShepherd's purse Is an annual\nweed which ls not particular as to\nsoil, therefore lt is to be found almost everywhere. Each plant produces seeds running into the thou-\n4sosooxoMO#>\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbMiwioe)o\u00bb\u00bbn\n?? Questions 11\nANSWERS\nOpen te any reader. Names ol\npersoni asking questions will not\nbe publlihed.\nmsttmstsetteetsttettetsteeetttetm\nJ. M., Nelson-Where would a person write to obtain a position as\nseamstress ln one of the large\nhospitals?\nAddreii your application to the\nSuperintendent of the hospital ln\nwhich you are anxious to be employed.\nWhere does a person write for information regarding Joining tbe\nCanadian navy?\nApply to Royil Canadian Navy\nHeadquarters Offlcei, Ottawa.\nD. L., Trail\u2014What wai the recent\namendment concerning travel system employees ln regard, to the\npassport regulations?\nThe operaUon of the regulation\nrequiring Canadians travelling into\nthe United Statei to have passports\nafter July 1 wu postponed in the\ncase of operating personnel o! bus,\nrailways   and   airline, companies\ncrossing the border In the course of\ntheir duties, until July IS.\nO. M.. Wynndel\u2014What ls the best\nmethod of watering small straw-,\nberry patches?\nIrrigation is .preferable to overhead watering.\nR P, Tadanac-What ls the fastest\nspeed of an airplane  In  level\nflight, and In a power dive?\nIn recent yeara many high speed\nplanei htve been developed, but information ai to their speeds and\nother abilities have nof been generally released. However, ln April\n28, 1988, Fritz Wendel of Germany\nflew a plane at 499.22 miles an hour\ntn level flight, and, according to\nreports, a Curtis Hawk 75-A in tests\nJanuary 24, 1939, was power-dived\net 575 miles per'hour.\nXC3tMtOS&&?''&rX0>C00)0CO0tC0*\nJail yoWtislf\nONE MINUTE TEST\n1. From what ls the word \"vaccinate\" derived?\n2. What duck makei lta nest ln\nhollow trees?\n8. Which of the Napoleons lur-\nrendered et Sedan, Belgium?\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTt\nYour goodmannen ihould come\nfrom much good sense, some good\nnature, and a little self-denial for\nthe sake of others,\" says Lord Chesterfield.\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nTrue courage is not the   brutal\nforce of vulgar heroes, but the firm\nresolve of virtue and reason.\u2014Whit-\nhead.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nAre you celebrating a birthday\ntoday? Your business and personal\naffairs will prosper during the year\njust starting If you refrain from\narguing with your employers. You\nalso should safeguard your health\nduring the year. Good nature and\nfrankness will be two engaging\ntraits of the child born on this date.\nHe or she will possess a bright, happy disposition, and be enterprising\nand bold. A fair measure of success ls predicted for such a character.\nONE MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. From the  Latin  \"vaca\", \u2014a\ncow.\n2. The wood-duck.\nS. Napoleon HI.\nWAR\u201425 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nJUNE 28, 1915 \u2014 Austro-German\narmy captured Hallcz, Gallcia, Italian army forced the Isonzd River\nbetween Sagradg and Gorlzia. The\nFirst Canadian Division took over\nfrontage opposite Messlnes. Allied\ntroops smashed Turks In action at\nSaghir Dere, Gallipoli.\nLYLEN RETURNED\nBOURNEMOUTH, England, June\n27 (CP Cable)\u2014Sir Leonard Lylen\nConservative, today was returned\nto the House of Commons for\nBournemouth by acclamation, succeeding Lord Croft.\nsends. Each little seed pod or purse\nholds some 20 seeds. Because Shepherd's purse is so rich in seeds It is\nImportant that the plant be eliminated from yards md gardens at\nthis season, wben its seeds are -lp\nening,\n'heoherd's purse has a flat whorl\nof root leaves, as shown in the\n\"n-Grroii. The seed pod is flat\n\"\u25a0-\"' \u25a0-'\u2014\u2022-.. The seeds from\nthis weed will live for a number of\nThia pest can be pulled out of\nthe ground easily after a soakins\nrain, or It can be cut off below\n\u2022he crown by means of a hoe. In\nlarge areas it can be controlled by\nspraying with iron or copper sulfate.\neMse>s\u00bb!xxz\u00bbxi&xx#^^\n\"How ls It you chaps always manage to be in here first during\nthe Intervals?\"\n\"Which intervals?\" \u2014Humorist\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLitters may be publlihed ever \u25a0 nom de plume., out tha actual\nname ot the writer mutt be given to the editor aa evidence ef\ngood faith. Anonymous letten go In the waite paper basket\nmenting that my grinders were getting out of whack. Andy aald that\nhe used to be able to lilt up an\nordinary light kitchen chair with\nhla teeth and bold lt out like a\ncigar. There was a chair handy and\nthe late Tom Lloyd suggested that\nhe try once more, Andy held that\nchair but for some seconds and\napologized for not holding it for\nlonger.\nJ. Cfiarril\nNew Denver, B: C, June 27,1940.\nR. B. W. Still Thinks\n\"Conservative\" Not\nlimely in His Letter\nTo the Editor of the\nNelson Dally News:\nSir: I appreciate \"Conservative's*\noutspoken and gentlemanly reply to\nmy criticism of his former letter.\nHis Identity ia unknown to me. But\nhia letter and the pen name he\nused gave the impression lt waa\nparty propaganda. His reply makea\nit clear it wu the general welfare\nrather than party welfare he had\nat heart Yet I itill think hli latter\nwas not timely although lt li well\nto think over and study iuch matters for future use.\nHe ls mistaken ln supposing I\npicked on hla letter alone for criticism and had not a word to aay\nagainst anything else. And he particularly mentions Technocracy. The\nfacts are quite the reverse. I have\nspoken strongly agalnat it and lta\nnotorious \"Director-in-Chlef\", and\nhave written about it ln two newspapers, beside making an unsuccessful attempt to have an article published ln a well-known magazine.\nIn conclusion may I congratulate\nyou In your excellent article, 'The\nLaw Catches Up With Technocracy.\"\nR. B W\nTrail, B. C, June 17, 1M0.\nSlocan Friends of\nAndy Wallace Will\nRemember His Work\nTo the Editor of the\nNelson Daily News\nSir: Very many of the friendi of\nthat grand old pioneer, Andy Wallace, must have rejoiced to see the\nfine tribute to his memory that\nyou printed recently. We of the\nSlocan have special reason to remember him, for there are few\nbuildings in this neighborhood In\nwhich aome of his fine work does\nnot remain.\nI arrived at New Denver ln the\nSummer of tt and three or four\noutstanding men attracted my attention. I already knew that excen-\ntrie genius R. B. Kerr (afterward\nof Phoenix) who was practicing law\nln this young mining camp, Kerr\nat once introduced me to 'Billy\nThomllnson, who was then manager of Bourne Bros. Store, and to\nAndy Wallace, who had Just built\na tiny house for Kerr and his bride.\nKerr described Andy's prowess as\na carpenter and his qualities as a\nman, and Andy and I remained\ngood friends from that date. Ot\ncourse when I In turn brought out\na Scotch wife, I turned to my old\nfriend Andy to convert my very\nrough bachelor's shack Into a decent dwelling. Andy cleared up the\nrough, old, log building in very\nshort order, and the little Scotch\ngirl soon had a home that she be\ncame very proud of.\nAndy was a gentleman by nature.\nA hard life and rough and tough\nsurroundings never degraded him.\nIt was always a real pleasure to\nwork with him and he always did\nhis full share of any job.\nI saw him perform one very amazing feat of strength. We had been\ndiscussing our teeth .and I was la-\nLOOKING BACKWARD . ..\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News of June 28, 1930\nNext week Donald MacDonald\nwill lund oer the Presidential reins\nof the Trail Rotary Club to Dr.\nC. S. Williams. S. G. Blaylock is\nnew Vice-President\u2014 On Sunday\nFred Simpson of Gray Creek caught\n12 trout and one char and shot two\nbears\u2014 R. Williams hrs been appointed Rural Registrar at Newgale\nfor the forthcoming elections.\u2014C.\nBird was elected President and E.\nHarvey Secretary-Treasurer of the\nMarysville Conservative Associa-\ntion.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFYom Dally News of June 28, 1915\nB. P. Steeves, Principal of the\nNelson High School, left last night\non the Coast train for Victoria.\u2014\nW. J. Devitt came first In a Rossland Gun Club shoot with a score\nof 12 out of 15.\u2014Miss Laura Wade\nand Miss Beulah Wade of the Nelson Public School teaching staff\nwill spend their holidays at Victoria.\n\u2014Five patrols of Nelaon Boy Scouts\nwill go on a 10-day ctmplng trip te\nC. R. Hamilton's ranch at Kokanee.\n40 YEARS AQO\nFrom Dally Miner of June 28, 1900\nA i.ewspaper Is soon to be established at Peterborough, centre ot\nWindermere mining\u2014H. C. Neave,\nM.C.M.I., mining engineer, hss resigned as Manager of the Kootenay\nLand and'Exploration Company of\nRossland.\u2014The lineup of the Nelson Football Club has been chosen\nas follows: Rev. George Munroe,\nC. W. Dill, A. J. Fisher, W. J. Mont-\ngomery, J. Bsrnes, H. Houston, W.\nMartin, D. Duncan, D. McNlchol,\nA. T. Bochmer, J. Thompson, L. A.\nHodge and F. W. Lang.\u2014Electrle\nlights were turned ou at the General Hospital for the first time\nMonday.\n\u00ab&&$$&g$$tt$\u00bbtttt\u00ab&s\u00ab\u00bb$&&_:\n*\nRED\nCROSS\nNOTES\ntitSiSS&lSSiSliStSSSSSSSSSS&SSOStO\nSunshine Bay Group\nto Buy More Blankets\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-The Sunshine Bay Group of the West Arm\nAuxiliary of the Nelson Branch of\nCSnadian Red Cross, meeting at\nthe home of Mrs. O. P. Appleton,\ndecided to purchase a second p-ir\nof blankets to be sent to refugees.\nSpecial funds for the blankets were\nraised by the Sunshine Bay group\nby donation and a successful bake\nsale md tea at the home of Mrs. J.\nF. Stevenson. Miss Edna Johnston\nwon the contest.\nThe sum of $2.40 was raised from\ntea collections. Mrs. A. Batchelor\nassisted Mrs. Appleton in serving\nrefreshments.\nLardeau Peoole\nGive Red Cross Aid\nAt a recent get-together of Lardeau district c..:zen3 h?id rt poplar Creek a beautiful piece of French\nfilet work made and donated by\nMrs E. D. Morel of Marblehead was\nraffled off and the sum of $25 was\nAn express order for $36 wu re*\nceived yesterday by Tha Nelson\nDaily News from E. J. Leveque of\nLardeau, B. C, and has been handed\nto E. E. L. Dewdney, Nelaon Red\nCross Tressurer.\nAUNT HIT\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Maybe spankln* ia wrong, but\nyou've got to punish younguna. The\nyoung or old, nobody can behave\nright without the fear o* punishment\nraised for the Canadian Red Cross, to help keep 'em straight\"\nCONTRACT ,.\nBARK! DANGER SIGNALS:\nAIR RAID alarms have been\ndevised for the best Interests of\nthe community. They would be of\nno value If nobody paid heed to\nthem, but Instead everybody ran\nout Into the open streets to watch\nthe excitement That would be\nJust what the enemy would love,\nand therefore they seldom have\nsuch an effect. The same kind of\nwarnings go unheeded, however,\nln the mimic war which la bridge.\nPlenty of players keep right on ln\nthe face of danger signals to unnecessary defeat\"\n\u2666 \u00bb\nit None\n\u2666 J 10 76541\n*A7B82\n+ J65\nfjgri 43\n2\n\u2666 K\n*K 10 8\nn:\ni    **\ns.\nAAK84\nVNone\n\u2666 AQ93\n*OJ964\n4Q107S2\nVAKQ1097.\n\u2666 8\n4 None\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable.)\nSouth     West    North        East\nIV Pass      2\u00ab l A\nDbl Pass      3 4 Dbl\nilt Dbl\nBoth North and East aavt.-\ntised to South the fact that West\nhad a lot of hearts, but South was\nnot listening. He could have reasoned it all out. North showed\nenough diamonds and cluba to\nbid both of those suits\u2014ln fact, a\nvery large number of them, or\notherwise he would never have\ntaken out South's business double\nof snades\nBy Shepard Barclay\nEast made lt clear to any careful kibitzer that he not only had\nenough spades to Ud tham, plua\nenough clubi to double that ault,\nbut that he alio held enough diamonds to double them. Had he not\nheld a sizeable number of diamonds, he should not have doubled clubs. In consequence of having ao many spades, cluba and\ndiamonds, he could not have held\nmore than perhaps one heart, and\npossibly none.\nSince North's bidding of tbe two\nsulfa proclaimed that be hadn't\nenough hearts to support hla partner'a suit, lt ahould have been\ncledr to South that they could be\nnowhere except bunched In Weal's\nhand. Over Eaat'e double ot 3-\nClubs, he ahould have Ud only\n..-Hearts. Maybe West would have\ndoubled thla and maybe he would\nnot. In any event, though, the play\nthat developed would have eet thie\ncontract one trick, not two.\n\u00bb  \u00bb  \u2022\nTomorrow'! Probl\u00abo\u00bb\n\u2666 A87\n\u00a591.2\n\\.tim\n*8 4 2\n4 K J 10 6\n\u00abK8\nA K J 10 5 %     Id\n+ 065\n._!_\n4Q-BS\nVQ\n\u2666 7S\n\u2666AKQJ\n10 7.\n441\n\u00bbAJ107\u00ab4J\n\u2666 AQS\n*\u2022\n(Dealer: North. Eait-Weat viA\nnerable.)\nOver 1-Club by Eaat on thli\ndeal, why ihould South not make\na shutout jump bid of 3-Htrj'j at\n4-Hearta.'\n\t\n\t\n__________\n PP^PPmRlliHill un. ii u I ii 11111.11 wi\n.<.\ni. \u25a0. .1     \u2014;\t\n NELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. JUNI .8. 1t4\u00bb\nNELSON SOCIAL\n(Continued from Paga Five)\nt   Mrs. Keith Kettlewell ol Trail\n< la spending \u00ab tew dayi witb her\nlister, Mrs- Whiteside, Kerr Apartment!,\ne Mlaa Mary Jarvis et Procter\nvisited Nelson yesterdiy.\n* Mrs. W. R. Laws Of Kelowna\nli here tor the marriage of her\nDRESSES ^ Your\nVACATION\nNew Linens and Sheers\nAre simply musts for every vacation\u2014They'll be smart\nfor every occasion wherever you go and they're oh, so\ncool!\u2014You never dreamed you could get such styling\nand workmanship at such moderate costs.\n$6.95 * $12.95\nSUPER SILK\nHosiery\nYou'll want a good.supply\nof these and wa have\nthem in all sizes In the\nnewest Summer shades.\n.   Crepe or Chiffon.\n89c to $1.15\nFashion First Shop\n436 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.        Phone 942\nnephew, Wilfrid Lowery of Trail,\nto Miss cooper, this evening at 6:30\no'clock\n\u2022 Mlaa *t~s Wright ef Trtil\nleavei via Great Northern tomorrow Tor VafccotrtWt\ne PIMn WoUt and Mt daughter,\nMisi Pbylua woMe, *. o were dtjr\nviiiton trom Calgary Wednesday,\nleft yesterday tor fte Oktnthp.\ne Mr. and Mrs. B. Read, Mrs.\nA. S. Bead. Mr. and V_-$Jt-9M*\ntidae. MSia Labile HOWf.jf BJrtlea,\nV. Crawford and ion, Reginald, and\nJames BoMrtion motored to Vallican Wedneaday for Sloetn Lodge\nNo. 4 of the l. 0. 0. T. and floral\nRebekah Lodge No. U dance and\nstrawberry social\ne Miss Shirley Donaldson and\nMisi Peggy Donald>on of Salmo\nare spending a lew dayi ln Spo-\ne 'victor Howard haa returned\nfrom a holiday with hli parenti ln\nVencouver. .\ne Mlaa Bdna Jarbeau, who\nteaches at Brldeivllle, arrived home\nWedneiday night.\na Robert Cooper of Trail waa In\nthe city yeiterday for the wedding\nOf his daughter to Wilfrid I>wery.\na Mr. and MN. A. J. Cornish,\nKerr Apartment, leave today for\nQueens Bay to apend tha holidays.\na Mn. Oeorge Moore and infant daughter left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hoipital yesterday for their\nhome ln Salmo.\ne Mr. and Mn. Collingwood\nGray of Bonnington shopped ln\ntown yeiterday.\ne Mrs. S. M Manning, who\napent yesterday in town, returned\nto the Relief Arlington mine lait\nnight and leevei by motor with\nher daughter and ion thla morning\ntor Vancouver, where she will re-\nlide. She will be accompanied by\nMn. H\u00bbrace Whltaker, who will\nalio reside In Vancouver.\na Mr. and Mn. Gilbert Kay ot\nWarfield arrived in town yesterday\nto attend the Lowery-Cooper wedding thli evening at Trinity United\nChurch.\ne Mrs. A. W. Idleni end diujh\nter Molly Jean leave today lor Victoria to apend a month with Mrs.\nIdleni' mother.\ne Mr. and Mn. Fred C. Sharpe\nof Crescent Bay shopped in town\nyesterday.\ne Miss Helen Douglas of the Ju<\nnlor High school start has left to\nspend her vacation at her home in\nNew Westminster She was accompanied by her brother Leslie, who\nmotored to Nelson tor har.\ne Mn. Margaret Relster, who\nteachei at salmo, left yeiterday for\nSpokane to apend a tew dayi.\na Wednesday evening at 507 Ctr\nbonate Street a charmingly arranged miscellaneous shower wat\ngiven by Miss Malsle Grimes and\nMlu Jean Bell In honor of Mlaa\nMarlon Younger, whose marriage to\nRay Bell is planned for July \u00bb\nin Penticton. Olfti wire presented\nby Colin Bell in a tally decorated\nwagon. Quera vt'ere Mn. J. B. Gray,\nMrs. L. L. Boomer, Mn. Gordon\nAllan, Mils Mary Baa M\u00ab. 1. E.\nBedford. Mn. Jack Be\", Mrs. J.\nBeU, Jr., Mrs. Jack Kirkpatrick,\nMias Hilda Talberg, Mias Merle Mc-\nCaslan, Min Jean BelL Mn. Monty\nMorley. Mill Bdna Bush, Mn. Colin\nBaker, Misa Agnes Gibson, Mrs. Stuart Russell, Min Aliion Younger,\nMin Mae Fotoi, Mi\u00ab Greta Curwen\n\u25a0nd Mlis Rita Jonei.\ne Mr. and Mn. I. Jeffcott, MUl\nStreeL have as guests their ton\nCecil of Calgary, alao Verne Trui'.t\nof Westminster.\ne Mr. and Mri. Archie Phillips\nof Trail will be ln the city today\nfor the Lowery-Cooper wedding thla\nevening at \u00bb:30 In Trinity United\nChurch.\ne L. V. Rogen, Principal of the\nNelion High School, leaves thli\nmorning for Rett Haven, V. I.,\nwhere he will ipend a month.\na Mrs. J. Leeming, formerly\nMin Hazel Smith, hu lett Kootenay Lake General Hospital, with\nher baby daughter, for her home on\nNelion Avenue.\na Mn. J. t. Donaldion of Salmo\nipent yesterday ln town.\ne Mr. and Mn. George Porteoui\nand daughter of Queeni Bay viaited\nNelson yesterdiy.\na Mrs. M. Burkinshaw, who\nhaa been teaching at Erie is leaving\nto attend Summer School at the\nCout. She will be accompanied to\nthe Coast by her ion and her\nmother, Mn. W. Waddi of Crawford Bay.\na Miss Maybelle Stephenson of\nVancouver, who haa been a guest\nof Mias Jean Robertion, is leaving\nfor Wardner to loin her cousins,\nMr. and Mn. W. Glaholm, who \u00bbre\nmotoring to the States and the Coast.\na Miss Muriel McLanders, Innis Street, left by motor yesterday\nwith relatives tor Cranbrook to\nvisit her brother-in-law and siiter,\nMr. and Mrs. James Davidson.\na Mr. and Mn. George Reamui<\n\u2022en of Willow Point viilted town\nyeiterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Lewli Johnstone\nend Jacqueline of Salmo are taking up residence ln the Kerr\nApartments.\ne In honor ot Mias Anne Muraro, whose marriage takes place\nthe middle of July, Mill Augustine\nKahle entertained Wedneiday evening at her home on Government\n<fe\u00a3& ICE CREAM\nThe Perfect\nOn hot Summer days give\nyourself a lift ond new vitality with Palm Ice Cream.\nEither for dessert at home or\nat your favorite fountain\nyou'll really enjoy it.\nKIDS\nCreamiicles Art Now\non Salt\nPALM DAIRIES LTD.\nRoad, whan aha wu aailsted.by\nMn. Oeorge te\u00abtwon, who pre-\ntided at the tea table centred by a\nbasket of roses. Othen aislstmg\nWert Mn. ff\/MMttn tnd MM. Gordon Mackewie. The hpnoree wai\nthe recipient of a dainty set ot\nitem wear. Gueiti included Mm\nMary Muraro, Min Julia Potoiky,\nMi\u00abi Martht Hutton, Miss Httdt Irvine, wSTfittfle Btewejt Was\nMargaret Meyer, Wis Elizabeth\nLeilie, Mlaa Marcella Nedelee, \u00bbOali\nMary' -\u2122\u00ab*&_\u00ae__** **_%\nUsle, Was Jew Ml| Mils,Ethel\nSutcliHe, Mill Maytne Dellecor,\nMiss Vera Holllday. Miu Helen Oar-\nrick, Min Elu Gausdal, Mn, Lome\nMansfield, Mti. Duncan Daroj\u2014-\nMn. Daniel McDougall and\nJ. P, Du&y. \u25a0\ne MUa Alison Younger apd her\nsister Marion left yeiterday morning for Penticton.\ne Nelsonites attending I. O. 0. F.\ndance and strawberry aoclal tt\nVallican Wedneiday evening were\nMh. _(\u2022\u00ab. Peto, Mti. AnnleTeten,\nMr. ahd Mrs. J. Woodi, Mn. Walter\nFisher, Mr. and Mn. J. Turner, Mm,\nK. Oielle, Mr. and Mrs. G Shaw ol\nNelion end Mn. Barnes of Trail.\nGame Hazards...\n\"Tennis Elbow\"\nNeeds Treatment\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nTennis ll one'of the leut dangerous iporti. Tennii, however, takei\nIti toll ln the way of sprains, some-\ntlmei broken bones and at leut one\noccupational hazard.\nTENNIS ELBOW\nTha occupational hazard ot ten-\nnil playen la \"tennis elbow\". Tennii elbow ii a pain on the outside\nof the arm, Juit above the elbow.\nX-ray shows the bone is perfectly\nnormal.\nThe wont thlng.to do Is to try to\nbuck It and go oh playing tennii.\nIt ti really due to an inflammation\nof a onall buna underneath one\nof the muiclei In the forearm, which\nrldei over the elbow Joint Sometimes the buna hu to be removed\n6urglcallyl. Heat and reit and strapping with adhesive plaster, and\nsometimes even putting on a pluter\ncut, la necessary.\nBE SURE IT* SPRAIN\nSprains ln playing tennis are\ncommon enough. Sprains ihould not\nbe treated too seriously it they are\nreally ipraini. In other wordi the\nfint thing to do with a sprain is to\nbe sure that lt ll a sprain and not\na fractured bone. An X-ray picture\nla the tint treatment of sprain. A\nKraln ia only a torn or stretched\n.lament\nTennii had something to do with\nour modern treatment of sprains\nbeciuse iome years ago an Engliih doctor found that hla young\npatlenti who disobeyed hli orderi\nand went on playing tennii got well\nof their ipratm faster than those\nwho kept in bed for aix weeki, io\nthe general Idea now ia to real a\niprain for a day or two, itrap it\nfirmly with adheilve tape and encourage motion and action.\nQUESTI0N8  AND   ANSWERS\nReader\u2014Ii a device similar to an\nelectric rolling pin, to roll away\nfat, injurious?\nAniwer\u2014It ii neither Injurious\nnor helpful. External massage does\nnot reduce fat\n0. M.\u2014Does a quart of chocolate\nmilk a day harm anyone? Is the\neating of yeut daily of benefit?\nAniwer\u2014 A quert ot chocolate\nmilk li limply getting io much energy and nutritious food so It il ln\nno way harmful except in the cue\nof overweight Yeut contains the\nVitamin B complex which la preventive of varioui deficiency diieuei\nand neuritis, and lt promotes growth\nand general good health.\nV. M.-\"If a email piece of glau\nwere to be swallowed accidentally,\nwould It cauie any harm? Would\nthe effects be Immediate?\nANSWER-The only dinger oc-\ncun when a spicule ot glau or a\nbroken chicken bone ia swallowed\nand perforates the itomach or the\nIntestines. The effect would be almoit immediate-wlt)iln *U to 49\nhoun, and would be unmistakable.\nNot Always Safe ...\nShock Often Cure\nto Sleepwalking\nThere Is an old superstitutlon that\na penon walking In his sleep is\nphysically safe. He la not. Every\nnpw and than we read of a death resulting from a fall during sleepwalking.\nMany psychiatrists assume that\nthe cure of ileep. walking la best\neffected by mental treatment of the\npatient while awake. No doubt aome\ncurat are effected ln thla manner.\nAa tor children under 10 ot 12\nwho, upon examination by a competent doctor are found to have\nhearta that are healthy, a ahock\ntreatment li probably the lureit\nand simplest cure. But you had\nbetter not employ lt except on the\nadvice of your physician.\nSuppose you have a child who\nhu been carefully checked by your\ndoctor and found physically sound,\nwho begins prowling about ln his\nsleep. A daih of a pall of water\n(cold) on him or a god whack on\nhli anatomy with razor strop, may\ndo the trick. The only two cases\nof ileepwilklng I have known well\nhave been treated ln thli fashion.\nDANGER IN BUILDINGS\nAnd Juit ln paulng may I urge\nmy fellow parenta to keep their\nrunabout children away from bulld-\nIfigi under construction?\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEM*\nQ\u2014Would you punish a child tor\nthlngi he had done at home in your\nabsence, reported to you by the\npenon lett in cherge ot him?\nA. No, next time I would find a\nbetter caretaker, stay home, or\nput up with the consequences.\nQ.\u2014Would you ever admit to the\nchild that you had commanded or\npuniihed him wrongly?\nA. Yei. And I'd apologize to him\nsincerely and penitently. I've done\nit Every other parent who tries\nto be fair and juit to hit children\nhas.\nEat to Gain .. .\nThe Underweights\nDon't Eat Enough\nEvery time I publish a list of\neta tor overweight which I do\nabout once a year, I get a long\ndiets tor overweight which Id.\nabout once a year, I get a\nlist of complaints, the burden of\nwhich la: \"Why don't you do something tor ua underweights, who\ncan't teem to fatten tipr\njre are really almost at many\n,em u there are of the over-\niti. io I em going to publish\niome advice and a lilt of died for\nunderweights during tbe next few\n.ween.\nOne thing the underweight patient doei not aeem to realize is\nthat lt takei Juit about u much\nwork and self-denial to gain weight\naa it doei to loie lt. The underweight patient seems to think that\nhe can take aome vitamin' tablets\nor aome other mysterious kind of\nmagic and he will begin to gain\nweight automatically. Thit it not\ntrue.\nAa in the cue ot the overweight\npatient there are two distinct kltdi\nof underweight!. In the imaller\ngroup ere thoie who have iome organic or physiological cause for\ntheir underweight. These may be\nhidden or difficult of assessment.\nOf coune the conspicuous one >\u25a0\ntuberculosis. Cases of diabetes may\ngo unrecognized for a long time\nand be a cause of underweight.\nConditioni of the ductless glands,\nsuch ts Simmond'i Disease, and ad'\nrenal insufficiency, may cauie ab\nnormal thinness; alao certain nerv<\noua conditioni, or asthenia.\nIn most instances, however, underweight li due to the fact that\nthe Individual does not eat enough.\nThree days a week, for a time,\nwe will publish in thia column a\ndally menu of a diet planned to Increase weight. They contain at least\n3500 calories per diem. They are\nbalanced as to minerals, vltamlni\nand roughage.\nBreakfast: Cantaloupe, wheatena\nwith cream; bread and butter; glen\nmilk, % cream.\nMid-morning; Chocolate malted\nmilk.\nLunch: Steak sandwich; freih\nbroccoli; baked tomatoei with\ncheeie; Italian bread with iweet\nbutter; black coffee.\nMid-afternoon: Glau of eggnogg.\nDinner: Antiputo; roait beet;\nItalian ipaghetti: assorted freih\nfruiti; coffee with cream and sugar; cheeie and cracken.\nEvening: Cream euitard.\nApproximate value\u20148100 ealorlei.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nT. M\u2014\"Ii it adviiable for one\nwho hu chronic asthma to be near\nanimals?\"\nAniwer \u2014 Chronic aithma esn be\ncauied by animal dandruff, the commoner form being sensitiveness to\nhone dinder; rabbits, cat! and don\ncome next, and birds may be the\nguilty pirtiei. A penon with chronic uthma ihould have a determination made with a patch teit to iee\nif the uthma is due to sensitiveness\nto a particular animal dander.\nL. ft.\u2014\"Will drinking carbonated\nwater which contains sodium and\nlithium stimulate and be Injurious\nto the heart?\"\nAnswer\u2014 No. Carbonated water\ncontaining sodium and lithium is\ngenerally considered to be very\nhealthy. Taken by mouth, theie\nsalts do not affect the heart in any\nway because the body Is able, by\nits Internal mechanism, to form a\nbalance. Excesi of these salts introduced directly Into the blood doei\nnot have an effect on the heart\nmuscle.\ntt E. D.-'My dentiit tells me\nthe reason my teeth decay at the\nbottom li because of acid ln my\nmouth. My mouth Uitei very bitter\nat times, and I wondered if you\ncould tell me if it ii pouible to\ncombat thli acidity. Ia it cauied hy\nmy tonsils?\nAniwer\u2014A good way to determine\nwhether your mouth li really acid\nli to take iome litmus paper and\nmoisten it with saliva. If blue litmus paper turns red, the mouth il\nacid. It li very unusual, however,\nto have continuous acidity in the\nmouth, and It la probably due to Infection, either pyorrhea, or poiiibly\nfrom the tonsils.\nPAGE   SEVEN\nPOTS _n-PANS\nKEPT CLEAN\nthis EASY way\nNO more rubbing tnd scrub-\nbing to get grease and hard-\nbaked food off pott and pant\u2014\nGilleU's Lye cott right through\ndirt of any kind I\nUm Gillett'a Lye, too, to keep\ndrains clean and running freely.\nDoesn't barm enamel or plumbing. Keep a tin bandy.\nnn eooKin-T_\u00bbom\u00ab.iL..\nDooklttltllihowthUpow-fulclaumt\ndan domd inhi... buys opt.\n__u_,\u201e<_n__l __*>\u00ab\u2022\u2022 by dMttorini\nth. mau of tha timet.. .taw it\npaforau Aomi of tuto. t\u00bbd ftf a\ntm, cop, to 8t_nd_td BritndiUA.,\n__. W nd Ubeett Stmt,\nTocwito, Ont,\n'Nome ttlirolv. lya fn nil w*t*r. Tta\n.ctlcn ol lit* (\u00bb\u2022 Ileett met, th* \u00ab\u2022<\u00ab.\nFREEMAN FURNITURE CO.\nPHONI 115\u2014Eagle Blk.        Tht House of Furniture Values        NELSON, B. C.\nWt aim to please you and It it our pleasure to ihow you our ltrgt tnd vtrltd itocki of\nfurniture We invite you to come in and feci at homa to look around.\n245% MORE SPRINGS\ni. taMMM^n I\n7\n\u25a0\u25a0-.', :\n,.-j - * * -.\nPARKHILL,\nAl illustrated, Bed Chesterfield Suite. Thli tultt htt tht Fetthtrtoft Construction\nmtdt by Parkhill, only thit construction ctn give you thtt luxurious Cheiterfield by\ndty tnd tht comfort of t deep Inner Spring Mattress at night. Covered in rich silk\nvelour covering with Chesterfield chair to match. Thii it in Cl 10 A A\noutttading valua tt   \u00abpllt..UU\n* Your Dollars Buy More at Our Store\n3-plece Chesterfield Suite as illustrated. Mtdt by Parkhill which ft t guarantee to yoa\nof high quality construction Thii suito htl Chesterfield tnd one chair covered In rich\nwint velour. Ont chtir covered In a soft green velour. Cover ii belt grade of velour tnd\nwill give you t lot of hard weir. A suite that will tdd bttuty tnd comfort (Tl CO CA\nto your home. A Real Value     \u00abP_.UL.JV\nBuy on Our Easy Payment Plan\n\u25a0'\n=!\u25a0- \"\"      >-\nMake your next mattren tht\nSpring-Air    Ariitocrat.    Tht\nK*\"   $42.50\n. ..,,\t\n\t\na\n PAOI   _IQHT\nParty Reaffirms\nIts Confidence\nIn Chamberlain\nLONDON,  June 71   (CP)   -\n\"Complete confidence\" in Neville\nChamberlain as party leader was\nreaffirmed today by the Executive\nCommittee of the National Conservative Party.\nThe Committee expreaaed\n-warm appreciation\" of Mr.\nChamberlain's services. The Committee also pledged support to\nthe Churchill Government \"in\ntheir determination to prosecute\nthe war to a victorious conclusion.\nAlthough Mr. Chamberlain wu\nreplaced as Prime Minister by\nWinston Churchill May 10 he remained leader ot the Conservative Party.\nFRENCH YIELD TO\nJAPANESE DEMANDS\nSHANGHAI, June 27 (AP) -\nYielding to Japanese demands, the\nFrench concluded today an agreement permitting the Japanese army\nto extradite anti-Japanese Chinese\narrested in the French concession,\n1 end to participate ln military search\n' ot property In the concession for\nelements suspected ol being anti-\n: Japanese.\nNazis Broadcut at Parii\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)\u2014An experimental German broadcast over\nthe Paris radio was heard today in\n1 London. An announcer speaking\nfirst in German and then in French\naaid, \"This Is the French national\nI broadcast in Paris on wavelength\n1648.\" Music and a French dialogue\n.\u2022were put on from records.\nC. W. L. CONVENTION IAID\nONI OF MOST IMPPORTANT\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., June 27 (CP)\n\u2014Business sessions continued with\nCommittee meetings and reporti today at tha national convention of\nthe Catholic Women'i League of\nCanada.\nThe Preiident, Mrs. T. H. Hay,\nRegina, remarking that 181 memberi were preient from polnti\nthroughout the Dominion, called the\nconvention one ot the most important ln the League's history.\nItalians Capture\nSomaliland Post\nCAIBO, June il (AP)-A \"itrong\ndetachment\" of Italian troopi, reinforced by tanks, has attacked and\noccupied one of the British froniter\noutposts on the border between\nEthiopia and British Somaliland,\nthe British military announced today.\nA statement said the attack was\nrepulsed for four houri by the imall\ngarrison consisting of e police force\nunder a British officer. Then the\ngarrison withdrew intact There\nwere said to have been no British\ncasualties.\nThe statement aald there was\nnothing to report on the Libyan\nfront.\nThe Royal Air Force announced\nIts bombers had attacked the Gura\nairdrome in Italian East Africa yesterday \"with considerable success.\"\n\"Several\" raids were iaid to have\nbeen carried out on the airport\ngasoline dumps at Macaaca, where\nthe 'targets were hit, but it was\nimpossible to ascertain the extent\nof damage.\"\n\"Military targets\" at Assab, Italian Eritrea, also were raided.\n11.00 will m_ 300 SwMtCip.\nar 1 lb. Old Virginia pip. tobaooo to\nCanadians swing In United Kingdom\nand Frmeo only.\nA*_m-\"8*t\u00ab.C\u00abw\"\nP.O. Bat 0000, Montreal, Qui,\n\"Do the glrli llka Captain Wlthenpoon? \"\n\"Dolhty?   They call him Sweet Capl\"\nSWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES\nTie purest form m which tobacco em hi molted.\"\nPREVENT\nFOREST\nFIRES\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. _,,&-. RIDAY MORNINO. JUNI ES. il\nReel Hero Beturns Beat Hero\nRobert Montgomery, American motion pictures ....\nhere at the Pan-American Transatlantic clipper plane base at Port\nWashington, Long Island, as he returned from playing.a hero toll\nln real life. The screen hero has been driving an ambulance in France.\nNew Uniforms for Eire's Soldiers\n$22,250,000 in\nMunition Orders\nPlaced in Canada\n-   By ... r. IANDIRION\nLONDON, June 27 (CP Cable) -\nMunitions orders. totalling \u00a35,000,-\n000 (about $22,500,000) have been\nplaced in Canada during tbe laat\nthree weeki, Herbert Morrison,\nMinister of Supply, today told tbe\nHouse of Commoni,\nMr. Morrlion did not specify\nthe types ordered,\n| He said that Britain is Increailng\nmunition orders in Cinada, the\nother Dominions and the United\nStates, not only because of immediate necessities, but as an insurance\nagainit the future.-\nCanada, the Minister of Supply\n\u25a0aid, il \"vigorously cooperating with\nua,\"\nVast new orderi have bee A placed\nin the United States.\nAustralia ia lending large quantities of small arms and ammunition, revolvers and fuses.\nThe whole available surplus capacity in India has been taken up\nand the' Ihdian Government now is\nbringing into production various\nprivate anna firms.\n\"We'are concentrating on the\ngreatest possible output ot those\ntanks which have proved to be satisfactory,\" Mr. Morrison said.\nCONTROLS FIRMS\nMr, Morrison iaid he had taken\ncontrol of 1500 or, 1800 firms and\nwaa empowered to shift managements if desirable.\nIncreases in the output of guns\nranged from 50 per cent on two\nitems to 228 per cent on another,\nMr. Morrison said, while small arms\nIncreases ranged from 49 per cent\nto 186 and ammunition trom 35 to\n420 per cent.\nThe Minister said that these figures ' were encouraging, \"although\nthe last thing I wish Is for the House\nand country to believe that things\nare satisfactory.*\nThey are not. They could not be\nsatisfactory tn the circumstances,\nbut I can only tay they are becoming nearer and nearer to satisfaction.\"\nMen of Eire's army are being Issued with new uniform! which\ncombine the maximum comfort compatible with efficiency. The high\nstiff collar of the old uniforms has been replaced by a loose turned\ndown collar. Another notable change is the replacement of the old\ntype steel helmet which is similar to that worn by the German army,\nto type similar to that worn by the British forces.\nNakusp Schools\nPromotion List\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Following is the\npromotion list for Nakusp Public\nand High Schools:\nDivision 3 (in order of merit),\npromoted to Grade 2\u2014 Lawrence\nReilly, Beth Rushton, Alan Stanley,\nRichard Collinge, Bernard Oxenham, Edmund Parkinson, Donald\nMarshall.\nTo Grade 3\u2014Joyce Millar, Sonja\nDolman, Curry Morton, Linden Aal-\nten, Arthur Cartie, Fred Wahlstrom,\nFred Johnson, Douglas Hakeman,\nJoy Oxenham, Bruce Motherwell,\nWilliam Marshall.\nTo Grade 4\u2014Doreen Parent, Ard-\nen Gran, Charles Cartie, Eunice\nMarshall, William Barrow, Roy Aal-\nten.\nDiision 2, to Grade 5\u2014Laura Robson, Margaret Chappell, Margaret\nOlson, Arthur Berard, Jimmie Brodie, Syl Cann, Tom Morton, Earle\nMotherwell (trial), IyvCann (trial),\nTo -Grade 6\u2014Betty Miller, Frank\nDolman, Mavis Barlow, Gordon\nSutherland, John Cann, Jean Collinge on trial).\nTo Grade 7\u2014Ruby Berard, Olive\nJohnson, Roy Marshall, James Robson, Harold Cann, Selma Soder-\nman, Pat Maitland, Margaret Vin-\nall, Ruth Marshall (on trial).\nDivision 1 to Grade 8\u2014Dorothy\nWahlstrom, Margaret Brodie, Pamela Herridge, Margaret Salstrom,\nCharlotte Barrow, Robert Dolman,\nBilly Robson, Orren Hoy, Bay Barrow (conditional), Gladys Olson\n(conditional).        v\nTo Grade 9 \u2014 Leonard' Parent,\nLouise Brodie, Leonard Reilly, Delbert Olson, Margaret Bailey, Ruth\nJohnson, Leslie Baird, Vivian Berard, Bernice Jordan, Alfred Dunn,\nAlice Bailey.\nTo Grade 10\u2014Raymond Gill, Jean\nCann, Wllma Robson, Wilfred Bredy, Ernest Shelling, Lloyd Reilly,\nKay Sutherland, Claude Sutherland\n(supplement in math.), Robert Ma-\nyoh (supplement in math.).\nHigh School:\nTo Grade 11\u2014Martin Funk, Dorothy Welch, Lawrence Bredy, Hazel\nHerridge, Georgina Munn, Freda\nJohnson, Kathryn Robson, Elizabeth Sunstrom (supplementel), Jack\nBailey (supplemented).\nPromoted to Grade 12\u2014Peter Miller, Eileen Kent, Irene Buerge, Ernest Baird, Mary Boden Jack Kerr\n(with supplemental), Alice Shelling\n(with supplemental), Leonard Funk\nwith supplemental).\nPromoted on probation to Grade\n12\u2014Mary Rushton (with supplemental), Irene Miller (with supplemental).\nGrade 12 students are writing\nGovernment papers for University\nentrance and High School graduation certificates.\nWinners of the Barron Prizes for\nbest progress during the year:\nGrade 12, Heather Heridge; Grade\n11, Eileen Kent and Irene Buerge\n(tied); Grade 10, Lawrence Bredy\nend Hazel Herridge (tied).\nSupply Board\nAssumes Cost of\nPlant Building\nOTTAWA, June 2. (CP) - The\nBritish Supply Board has assumed\nthe capital cost of plant construction on behalf of some 35 Canadian\ncompanies, the Department of Munitions and Supply announced todsy. By far the largest proportion\nof these plants are already producing munitions, explosives, and other war material. But several are\nstill under construction, and two\nare to be built shortly.\nIn addition to financing these 85\nplants, tthe British Board has placed\norders for one year'a supply of\ntheir output, the announcement\nsaid.\nAs a result of these orders many\nplanta sre now producing.\nThree of the major planta on\nwhich construction work is progressing are the two explosives\nflan ts being erected at cost of more\nhan $20,000,000 and the new shell-\nfilling plant costing some 18,000,-\n000. In addition, work la to begin\nshortly on a third explosives plant\ncosting \"many millions\" and also\non a very large extension to one of\nthe Canadian chemical manufacturing properties. This new plant will\nprovide some of the raw materials\nrequired in the explosives program,\nIn addition, the British Govern-\nment la purchasing direct in Canada\nfoodstuffs and raw materials which\nduring the first year of the war\nshould Involve an expenditure of\nsome $400,000,000.\nPodrasky Heads\nNatal Workers\nNATAL, B. C.-The Michel local.\nNo. 7292, District 18 of the United\nMine Workers of America held their\nannual election ot officers at the\nlamp house, when over 570 members voted.\nFor President, T. Podrasky of Natal was reelected for the second\nconsecutive year. Tor Vice:Presi-\ndent, J. Tupper of Michel was reelected for the fourth consecutive\nyear. For Secretary-Treasurer, S.\nWeaver of Natal defeated H. Sanders of Michel; A. Podrasky was\nreelected for the Recording Secretary's office for the fourth consecutive year.\nScrutineers were S. Chala, F.\nThomas, J, Whlttacker Sr., L. Little\nand J. McGovern.\nFor checkweighman S. Weaver of\nNatal maintained his popularity by\nthe contract miners when he polled\nmore votes than his three opponents by receiving a total of 54\nvotes, C. Podrasky of Natal being\nhis closest rival with 20 votes. A\ntotal ot 108 contract votes were\ncast. Scrutineers were J. Whlttacker Sr., and J. McGovern of Michel.\nThe official result of the ballot\ntaken on all offices ls as follows:\nFor President: T. Podrasky 294;\nG- Mannion 184; J. Grocutt 85.  \u2022\nFor Vice-President: J. Tupper,\n358; A. Causey, 196.\nFor Secretary-Treasurer, S. Weaver, 343; H. Sanders, 215.\nFor Recording Secretary: A. Podrasky, 355; J. Mitchell, 200.\n\u2022For checkweighman: S. Weaver,\n54; V. Podrasky 20; N. Unfarao 17;\nJ. Mitchell, 6. Spoiled ballots, 8.\nTo Build Crib on\nCreston Elevator\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014 A rib annex\nwith a capacity ot 40,000 bushels ot\ngrain is to be built to the South\nside of the Alberta Wheat Pool elevator at Creaton. Contract for the\nlumber has been let, and construe\ntion will .proceed Immediately.\nThe paovlsion of thli additional\nstorage by the Wheat Pool gives\nthe dyked land farmers elevator\naccommodation for over 200,000 bu-\nshela, at the two elevators of Mid,\nland lc Pacific Grain Corporation\nat Wynndel and Creston, and the\nenlarged Poll premises here.\nThe 10 days of exceptionally hot\nweather that prevailed until Wed-\ndnesday has brought the grain\nalong rapidly, and cutting of Winter wheat will commence before\nthe end of July.\nPOWER RIVER PUNS\nBUY-A-PLANE  DRIVE\nPOWELL RIVER, B. C, June 27\n(CP) \u2014Powell River made plans today for its \"Buy a Trainer Plane\"\ncampaign, opening July 1, which it\nis hoped will raise $8000 for purchase of a Tiger Moth trainer for\nuse in Vancouver.\nef\n.\/)Si\/f\/itf\/\/*'Mf\nROYAL\n.65   .90 1.70 S3.I0\n\u25a0 \/ Aw\/m\/of\nCALONA\nWINES\nThis advertisement il not publlihed\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by tht Government of Biitisb\nColumbia.\nLabor Supply\nCouncil Forms\nOTTAWA. June tl (CP)\u2014 A national labor supply council to adviue\nthe Government on wartime labor\nmatters and to aid ln settling labor disputes has been authorized ty\norder-in-council passed June 18, it\nwas learned today.\nA. 3. Hills, Montreal, personnel\nchief for Canadian National Railways has been selected by tbe government to act aa -chairman, and\n100 members of the board will be\nannounced shortly.\nRod, Gun Clubs\nto Convene In\nNelson In Fall\nOrganization meeting ot the West\nKootenay Rod and Gun Club Association at Kaslo recently pointed\nthe way for district cooperation\nof anglers and hunten seeking to\nconserve fish and game and to Improve their favorite sports,. stated\nJ. J. McEwen, President at a dinner meeting ot Nelson Rod and\nGun Club Committeemen at the\nHume Wednesday night\nTrail, Rouland, New Denver,\nNakusp, Lardeau, Gray Creek end\nNelson were represented at the\nmeeting which elected A. U McPhee of Kaslo as first President of\nthe Association and decided to hold\nits first convention ln Nelion ln\nOctober or November.\nDan McNaughton, stating ihe Gyro Club's \"salmon\" derby would\nwind up about that time with a big\nbanquet, suggested It might be an\nideal time for the Association to\nhold a convention and to Join ln\nthe banquet\nJUNIOR ANGLERS\nMr. MoBwen, reporting on the\nattendance of members of Kaslo's\nlunlor anglers at the district meeting, said there had been considerable discussion of the responsibility\nupon Rod and Gun Clubs to teach\nyoungsters the aport and lo teach\nthem how to be good sports. Since\nthen Rossland had gone actively\nahead with the plan, he said\nDeclarig \"It's remarkable, the\nefforts the people of Kaslo have put\ninto their rearing ponds, and the\nresults they have achieved,\" Mr.\nMcEwen stated delegates to the\nmeeting Inspected the ponds and\nthe coarse Ash refrigerating plant\nat Kaslo ,and saw ln both possibilities for much freater future development.\n\"It's a sight for sore eyes to iee\nwhat can be done by people working together as they art,\" he declared\nIAPANESE DO NQT PUN\nATTACK ON INDO-CHINA\nTOKYO, June 27 (AP via radio)\n\u2014The authoritative Domei News\nAgency broadcast a dispatch from\nNanning, China, today, declaring\nthat, although Japanese troops are\noperating along the Chinese side\nof the Indo-China border, \"Japanese forces have no intentioh of invading  French  Indo-China.\"\nThe report trom Nanning, based\non a Japanese field dispatch, iaid\nthe Japaneie seek merely to cut\nthe supply route from Indo-China\nto the armies ot General Chiang\nKai-Shek.\nFERNIE SCHOOL\n'(I PROMOTION.\nFERNIE, B. C.,\u2014He promotion\nlilt of tbe Fernie High School followi:\nPromoted from Grade X to Grade\nXI-Mike Borlsuk, Marlon Cunliffe,\nPearl Herchuk, Jsmes Ince, Tootiie\nKappel, Jean Kelman, Dante Lenardon, James Logan, Annie Maxi-\nmick, Louise Snow, David Verkerk,\nSidney Ward, George Zinovich, H.\nBrown, Bob Gordon, Feme Morris,\nYoland Nsccarato. promoted witb\nsupplementals: Frances Auguaton,\nTom Phillips, Valdina Rinaldi, Edward Brown, Dorothy Derbyshire,\nFrances Ferguson, Emma Letcher,\nWilliam McNay, John Reed, Irene\nRobinson, Jessie Webster. Granted\npartial itanding: Gwen Brewer, Josephine Carolei, Jean Clowen, G.\nDrew, Alice Furneaux, Cyril Gillis,\nWallace Gilmour, Donald Holllday,\nJoseph Sprlak, Albert Vecchlo, Jessie Webster.\nPromoted from Grade XI to XII\u2014\nFrank Augustynek, Henry Bella,\nBert Britney, James Corrigan, Margaret Dufour, Jean Harrison, Hilda\nHerchuk, Paul Kusnir, Norman Mc-\nBean, Ruth McDonald, Margaret\nReewrs, Anna Sslvador, Peter Wa-\nhulchuk, Jack Wilson, Margaret\nAnderson, Irene Haigh, Kenneth\nMinlfie, Alma Peten. Promoted\nwtth supplementals: Helen Belecky,\nSam Marasco, Jessie Muirhead, R.\nPsllone, David Paton, Ruth Peterson, Kathleen Aahmore, Roger Brett\nCarol Carolei, Tom Cltra, Joe Doly\nnuk, Albert Maraaco, Louise Pal-\nlone, Teresa Ferri, Dave Slalne,\nAlex Stewart Mildred Williams.\nGranted partial standing: John Cit-\nra. Bill May.\nGrade Xu promotion! \u2014 Recommended in all subjects. Audrey\nMay, Jtmes Anderson, Harry Wilson, George Mills, Recommended\nln five subjects-Kenneth White-\nlaw, Margaret Gill, Recommended\nin two subjects\u2014Fred Baker, Albert Brett Maureen Caufleld, Ruth\nMatthews, Recommended ln one\nsubject\u2014Aurore Crlsaflo, Helen\nDicken, Kathleen Hockley, Edna\nPsrnell, Claire Podbielancik, Anna\nRiley, Bill Ross, June Thompson.\nPresent Wallets\nto Natal Recruits\nNATAL, B. C\u2014A farewell dance\nwas given by the ladies of the 107th\nClub ln tbe Michel Legion Hall\nJune 23 when four more recruits\nfrom Natal-Michel left for Vancouver to train with tbe Seatorth Highlanders. The new recruits were\nJohn Myles, Herbert Travis, Barney Taylor and Jack Weaver. During the farewell dance they were\npresented with leather wallets donated by the Michel local No. 7282\nof the United Mine Workers ot\nAmerica, with J. Lyne and A. McGovern of Michel making the presentations.\nALBERTA ELIMINATES\nCONFECTION LICENCES\nEDMONTON, June 27 (CP-\u2014Designed to enable civic authorities ln\nAlberta towns, village! and municipal districts to enforce early closing bylaws, an order eliminating\nprovincial licencei for tbe sale of\nsoft drinks or Ice cream ln rural\nrestaurants has been Issued by Hon.\nE. C, Manning, Minister ot Trade\nand Industry.\nWardner Man Makes\nWar Gift to Ottawa\nAmong Kooteniy residents aiding Caneda't war efforts by dlrtct\ncontribution forwarded te the\nMlniiter ef Finance It Fred Hrui-\naowy of Wardner. A rtport from\nOttawa lists e gift of 18 from tha\nWardner man.       iui.__.i_,_._..\nBOTTLED IN tOND IN CANAOAl H VIARt Ot_\n18 oz. \u00bb2.00; 25 oz. $3.15\ntomB i\u00ab torn m came*\n11 oz. *1.\/0; 28 oz, $2.65; ii ox. MH\nunderwoodI\nLONDON\nmm UID Wl Mtnn tit CANADA\n12 oz. $1.20; 25 oz 12.30; 40 oz. tSM\nThis advt. is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nRide on Canada's most popular tirei\nEnjoy the long-wearing, trouble-free\nA& service and the extra mileage of\ntlte iJamoHd\nmd PAY AS yOU RIPE!\n_\\\nNO MONEY DOWN!\nWEEKS TO PAY!\n\u2022 \"G-3\" has every quality you want and need In\na tlrei Goodyear centre-traction, All-Weather diamond tread (or safe, non-skid mileage ... Twin\nprotector cord piles between the tread and the body\nof the tire to absorb road shock and provide longer\ntire life ... new Supertwlst cord for extra protection\n. . . more rubber for longer, low-cost service. And\nyou can buy this great tire value on the easiest terms\nyou ever heard of... pay no money down ...\ntrade ln your old tires. . . and pay us In small\namounts weekly as you ride. Drive in for details of\nour friendly budget plan today I\nNELSON GOODYEAR DEALERS\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n323 Vernon St.\nPHONE 35\nNelson, B. C.\nI\n.._... -.i.ii_ . .-\u25a0-\u25a0-. ...,...\u25a0___., .\n\t\n ;___*_(\u00ab&*.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\n\u2022 5iBr!r'-:'\nlelermlned lo Beat Cards, Cummins\n5 Take His Club Kimberley Tourney\nossland Joins League\nis Demore-Cummins\nFeud Result\nDetermined to gain revenge for\nShtt ha termi \"a dirty deal which\nemore end the Cardinali hand-\nad ua,\" Con Cummlna aald Thunday night that he would Uke hit\nNelion Baieball Club to Kimberley after all to participate In the\nDominion Day baseball tournament In competition with at leait\nfour other teami besides Trill.\n\"And wa'ra going to win the\ntournament,\" Con aald. \"We've got\nthe beat club In the league, and\nanyway we are going to ihow\nLouie where te head In at\"\nFinding much difficulty ta talk-\nt much over a whisper because\na lore throat, the Nelion Club\nresident wai no less steamed up\nan be was the previous day when\ni learned that Demore had thrown\nide a league game with Nelson\nll Sunday In favor of a chance at\nt tint prize ol $125 at the Kim-\nirley tournament What burned\nm up moit wai the fact that he\nlard only via the grapevine ln the\nrst place that the Cardinali were\ninning to go to Kimberley, and no\nflclal notification wai given Nel-\nn till Demore phoned Mri. Cumins Wednesday to iay, \"And lt\nan don't like lt, he knowi what\nI can do. We're going to Klmber-\ny and that'i that\"\nThe tournament will get under\nty Sunday and will continue\nrough Monday, But the most spicy\n:tion of the tournament'will take\nace when Nelson and the Cardin-\nI tangle. Both teams will go all\nit then tu settle all charges pro\nid eon. The runnerup team ln tha\nuniey will get $75 and the thlrd-\nacer $50 and all others $20.\nCummins did not plan to entering\nIt tournament until he found that\nI could get all the playen to make\ne trip except \"Doc\" Chodorcoff,\nid Jesse Seaby, who is getting\narrled. Tournament officials made\nro long distance calls to him dur-\n( the day in an effort to get Nel-\nn to compete before definite ac-\nptance wat made.\nOSSLAND JOINS LEAGUE\nCummins had been so burned up\ntet the action of the Cardinals that\ni said he was going to throw them\nit of the league, but it ls apparent\ntt a victory over the Cards ta the\nurnament will satisfy his appetite.\nPerfectly aged, rich\nand mallow, Oitrkh\n(1 Star) Bfindy ll an\nEmpire Product. ..\nmodeitly priced\nbecame el Imperiil\nTariff Preference.\n13 ox.       26 or.\n5|50  $275\noil advertisement ta not published\ndliplayed by the Liquor Control\noard or by tbe Government of\nBritiah Columbia.\nIn fact he wu io mad at one\ntime that ta order to find a- replacement ta tbe league for the\nCardinal! he phoned up Russell\nJonei, Preiident of the Rosiland\nSenion, and lucceeded ta getting\nthe Golden City to rejoin the\nleague. But now lt appears that\nwhen league action resumes July\n7, four teami will be ta tbe circuit On that day Carda and Indiana will itage another of their\nIntra-city tussles and Nelion will\ntravel to Rouland.'\nThe Rossland aggregation, which\nIncludes \"Rusty\" Wynn, one of the\nmainstays of last year'i Miner team,\nfound after the season got under\nway that it would be ttronger than\nat tint thought and io jumped at\nthe opportunity to get back into the\nleague. The Rosslanders have games\nlined up at home this weekend with\ntwo Washington nines from Kettle\nFalls apd Northport on Sunday and\nMonday.\nTrail Indians, the other league\nteam, will play an exhibition down\nin Metaline Falls, Wash., Sunday.\nMay Run Off Red\nCross Intercity\nSoftball Sunday\nDents Bell and Bob Paterion, of\nthe Savoy Hotel men'i softbail\nteam, iaid Wedneiday night they\nwould try to bring over i Cattlegar or Trail team tor a game here\nSunday afternoon, proceeds to go\ntoward the Red Crou.\nAccording to the ichedule prepared at the beginning of the season, the Recreation Groundi were\nto be left idle June 90 io that preparation! could be made for the\nKelson Bugle Band'i Dominion Day\ncelebration! the following day. But\nlait night Herb Pitta, in charge of\nthe celebrations, iaid that softbail\nwould not interfere with the worker! Sunday, and that he had no objection! whatever to the staging\not games.\nIt is posslbe that a doubleheader\nwill be staged, since nothing else is\nscheduled for the afternoon. In that\ncase one of the other City League\nKitchen will probably be drafted to\nurl the second game, such as Les\nTrainor or Len Blcknell. Jack Fisher, Savoy regular, will handle the\ntint game early ta the afternoon.\nIf a iecond game li played, lt would\nlikely be played ln the evening.\nREDDING WINS\nDISTRICT GOLF\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014The Wood-\nVallance Cup playoff, major golf\ntourney, took place at the Kimberley course lut weekend, with eight\npicked players from Cranbrook and\nKimberley clubi taking part Fernie ind Nelion, alio eligible to enter eight playen each, failed to\nattend thli year.\nThe trophy went to Ralph Redding, his second consecutive win.'\nThe competition was on the buls\nof IB holu of match play. Sualdlary\ncompetitioni \u2022 were irranged for\nthoie eliminated from the-trophy\nround.\nThe first flight resulted ln a tie\nbetween Alan Graham of Cranbrook\nand Chester Roberta of Kimberley\nand the second flight In a tie between J. McLay of Kimberley and\nDick Large of Cranbrook.\nPart of the competition was played Saturday and Cranbrook had a\nblanket invitation to play on the\nKimberley course Sunday. Cranbrook playen entered ln the Wood-\nVallance were Elgin Hill, men's\ncaptain; Dr. W. A. Fergie, Dick\nLarge, Gordon Pucuko, G. M. Argue, G. C. Wilton, W. D. Gilroy and\nAlan Graham.\nCompetitioni were alio arranged\nfor ladies that afternoon, and tea\nwai served ta the clubhouse.\nNelson Plays Cricket\nat Spokane on Sunday\nThe Nelson cricket team will\ntravel to Spokane Sunday for the\nflnt of two matchei with the American eleven, whom they have engaged on a number of occasion! during prat years. A return game will\nbe played ln Nelson later in the\nseason.\nNelson last visited Spokane early\nlut seuon but the match was rained out.\n-NILtON DAILY NIWI, NIKON, \u2022. tt-FRIDAY MOR\n\"The Champ\" Plans \"One More* Fight\nJack Demptey, still \"The Champ\" to many fight\nfans, span with Jim Downing, boxing promoter\nafter signing for a charity bout in Atlanta on July 1\nwith \"Cowboy\" Luttrell, a wreatler. The bout may\nbe Jack's fint move toward a return to the ring\nfor a series of exhibition bouts.\nBrooklyn Takes\nFinal ol Series;\nGiants Victors\nBBOOKLYN, N.Y, June 27 (AP)\n\u2014Brooklyn teok the final game of\nthe seriei from Chicago Cubs at\nEbbets Field today 9-4 as big Bill\nLee gained the questionable distinction of being the flnt National\nLeague flinger to lose 10 decisions.\nTrailing by a run going Into the\neighth inning, the Dodgers brought\nJoy to 17,000 fans by pushing acrois\nthe tying and winning scores on a\nfluke double by Dixie Walker, a\nwalk, a double steal, a slashing\nsingle by Dolf Camilll and Joe Vos-\nmik'i fly to centre.\nChicago   4   \u00ab   0\nBrooklyn       5  9  0\nLee and Rodd; Carleton, Tamuiis\nand Phelpi, Mancuio.\nPHILADELPHIA, June 27 (API-\nHal Schumaker shut out the Philliei\nwith three singles tonight u the\nNew York Gianti pounded Hugh\nMulcahy and Lloyd Brown for 15\nhlta and a 7-0 victory before 10,985\nat Shibe Park.\nNew York  7 15   0\nPhiladelphia     0  8   1\nSchumacher and Danning; Mulcahy and Atwood.\nBUFFALOES WHIP\nFERNIE NINE, 9-2\nFERNIE, B. C\u2014Pouncing on two\nrernle pitchers for 10 hits and seven\nruns in the last two innings the\nNatal-Michel Buffaloes defeated\n.Fernie 9-2 in a Crow's Nest Pau\nBaseball League game here Wedneiday evening. The late uprising\nbroke up a grand pitchen' battle\nbetween Andy Krall of the Buff!\nand Dick Guzzi of Fernle, After a\n\u25a0haky start, Krall settled down to\nhold the Fernle -batters ln check,\nstriking out 17 and allowing but\nsix scattered hits. It was Krall's\nlast appearance with the Michel-\nNatal team, as he has enlisted and\nis to report to his regiment at the\nCoast.\nThe teams:\nNatal-Michel-Galla 3b. Gergel 2b,\nChalla lb, Peters cf, T. Krall rf,\nChizmar ss, A. Krall p, Weaver c,\nWhite If.\nFernle\u2014Persona 2b, Bouio 3b,\nKasmar as, Mlsclico If, Heeney lb,\nRiley rf, and p, Harrington cf, Siri-\nanni c, Guzzi p, and rf.\nUmpires\u2014J. Joaay, Michel, and\nDan Oliver, Fernie.\nfills advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nKaslo Golf Club\nSets Match Dates\nKASLO, B. C\u2014The match committee of the Kaslo Golf and Country Club has drawn up the following ichedule for the balance of the\nseason:\nJune 30, handicap matches, Bowker Rose Bowl tor ladies and Koo-\ntenaian Cup for men. July 1, medal\ntourney; July 14, hidden hole; July\n24, mixed foursomes, Graves Cup;\nAugust 11, \"monkey\" tourney. .August 25, alternate Club tourney; August 31 to September 2 inclusive.\nClub championship, the Armiitead\nCups, for both men and women;\nSeptember 10, backward tourney.\nBall Players Urged\nto Stop \"Bean Ball\"\nWASHINGTON, June 27 (AP).\n-Clark Griffith, President of the\nWuhington American League Bail\nClub, urged today that \"ball players themselves put a stop to the\n'bean ball'.\"\nAdoption of an \"honor code\" barring use of such pitching was suggested by the \"Old Fox\", himself a\nformer Major League hurler.\n'The recent happeninga whereby\nball players have been hit ln the\nhead by pitched balls, is only further proof that ll is high time the\nball players themselves put a'itop\nto the 'bean ball' and the 'dust oft\nball' and they are the only ones wbo\ncould do this job,\" Griffith said. .\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nManager Jack Adams of the Detroit entry in the National Hockey\nLeague announced a year ago today that the club would not renew\nlta option on Charles (Chuck) Con-\nacber, 29-year-old former crack\nwinger of Toronto Maple Leafs. The\nbrother ot Lionel Conacher, Ontario\nM. L. A. had gone to the Red Wings\nthe previous season on a three- year\noption. He played with New York\nAmerlcani list Winter.\nStaMi&s\nAMERICAN\nCleveland   .\nDetroit  \t\nBoston   \t\nNew York\nSt. Louli ...\nChicago\nW\n41\n36\n34\n29\n29\n27\nPhiladelphia   24\nWashington       25\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati    3\u00bb\nBrooklyn    35\nNew York     35\nChicago     33\nPittsburgh 32\nSt Louil     22\nBoiton         19\nPhiladelphia   ....    19\nL Pet.\n23 .541\n24 .600\n24 .586\n31 .483\n35 .453\n32 .458\n34 .414\n39 .391\n20 .555\n20 .636\n21 .025\n31 .516\n31 .415\n33 .400\n32 .373\n36 .345\n11. S. Amateurs to\nPerform Today In\nTrack, Field Heel\nFRESNO, Calif., June 37 (AP).-\nAmerlca't track and field athletes\nstage a two-day domestic venion\nof the war-postponed Olympic\nGames here tomorrow and Saturday\nnights ta the 52nd running of the\nNational A. A. U. championships.\nAn army of stars, nearly 300 from\nevery lection of the country, will\nlaunch an attack on world and\nAmerican records under the electric\nllghta ln Fresno State College\nStadium.\nCollege, club and unattached\nathletes will perform. Even the\nUnited States Marines will be represented. Junior championships will\nbe decided Friday night and senior\nevents Saturday night.\nHeadlining the competition, at\nleut from a sentimental viewpoint\nwill be the 1500 meter*, ruhs. The\nevent will see Glenn Cunningham,\ngrandpa of the topnotch flat racen,\nmaking a bid for hii sixth national\ncrown. He recently ran the iecond\nfutest 1500 meten ever clocked in\nthis country, a 3.49 time.\nThe 400 meten duh will bring\ntogether Lee Orr of Wuhington\nState College, the new NCAA champion, Grover Klemmer, Univenity\nof California freshman, Warren\nBreidenbach, of Michigan and\nCharlu Belcher, formerly of the\nGeorgia Tech.\nTigers Edge Out\nWin From Browns\nST. LOUIS, June 27 (AP).\u2014Big\nBuck Newsom, helped along with\nhomen by Charley Gehringer and\nHank Greenberg, pitched the Detroit Tigers to a 2 to 1 victory over\nthe St. Louis Browns tonight. It wai\nNewsom's tenth itralght triumph.\nRUE\nDetroit    :..  2  3   1\nSt. Louil    1   7   0\nNewsom and Sullivan; Harrii,\nTrotter, Swift and Grace.\nC.B.C.'s to Play\nFairview Bantam\nLacrosse Tonight\nNelion bantam lacrosse will be\nresumed at 7 o'clock thli evening at\nthe Civic Arena when Father\nDoyle'i C. B. Cl and \"Slim\"\nPorter's Fairview team are tcheduled to cluh.\nThe Catholic boyi are Don Ross,\nDominic Maglio, Con Cassios, Jack'\nJarbeau, Jack Crowther, Tom Madden, Jim DeGuglelmo, Frank Morrlion, Bobbie Rash, Pat Morrison\nand othen.\nPlaying for Fairview will betJ.\nWaldle, Jim Mclvor, Bill Postle-\nwaite, Jackie Breeze, Gordon McDonald, Jackie Whitehead, Reginald\nCrawford, Fred Moffatt, Allan DesChamps, Dick Thain, Vernon Hall,\nJim Chambers and Howard Procter.\nCoach Jock Walmiley will be ta\ngeneral charge.\nCreston Grocery-men\nDefeat Vagabonds\nCRESTON, B. C-Iri a Town Soft-\nball League game at Exhibition\nPark Tuesday night, Overwaitea\nscored a 9-5 win over the Vagabonds, their nearest rivals. Vic fm-\nhomm and Larry MacDonald did\nthe battery work for the winners,\nwith Clasky and C. Amatto and F.\nRoti performing similarly for the\nlosers. Both teami are to appear in\nthe two-day tournament at Kimberley, June 30 and July 1.\nC.Y.0. Girls Are\nStronger Tonight\nto Play Rookies\nWith the return ot Rosa Stewart\nto their lineup, the C.Y.O. glrli are\nprepared to give the high-flying\nRookiei their itiffctt fight ot the\nseuon ta an effort to pull out their\nfint victory In thre league starts.\nRosa, who has just arrived back ta\ntown from Provincial Normal\nSchool, li expected to hold down\ntint baie, but the will alio be available for hurling duties If necessary.\nShe will strengthen the Catholic\ninfield considerably, to give the regular pitcher, Millie Horrigan, better\nsupport than of late.\nHazel Splen, who ia rounding Into as good form u at any time ta\nher City League career, will take\nthe mound tor tha Rookies, with\nJosle Ross behind the plate. Georgie\nEberley will catch for tha Catholics,\nPoulin Catches\nBiggest Derby\nWith the continuation of hot\nweather which has gripped the Kootenays, entries ta the Nelson Gyro\nClub's Kootenay Lake Salmon Derby likewise are taking a downward\ntrend, there being six salmon entered ta the derby during the psst\nweek.\nThe biggest of the lot was hook'\ned by P. E. Poulin, a 12-pounder,\nwhich beat \"Slim\" Horswlll's by\nhalf a pound.\nBo Leslie Pickard's 20-pounder,\ncaught a month ago, still reigns\nsupreme as the leader of the derby\nwhich ii nearing the end of the\nthird month.\nThe latest entrlei, received by\nSecretary Danny McNaughton, follow:\nMike Brader, View Street, Nelion\n\u2014SVt and 5-pounden, caught at\nDeamhaven June 15 at 10:30 a.m.\nwith weather bright. Lure\u2014Gibb!\nStewsrt No. 4 Witness\u2014O. C. Thorn-\nu, Weighed In at Balfour.\nRobert (Slim) Honwill, 513 Silica\nStreet, Nelson \u2014 UMi-pounder,\ncaught at Queen. Bay Point June\n18 at 5 p.m. with weather bright\nand hot Witneu\u2014J. E. Sowerby.\nWeighed In at Balfour.\nCharlei A. L. Jensen of Nelson-\n9 and 4U-pounders, caught at Pilot\nHead June 22 at 2 p.m. with weather bright. Lure\u2014Glen Stewart. Wit-\nness\u2014Lester Gregg of Usk, Wash\nWeighed in at Procter.\nP. E. Poulin of Nelson\u201412-pounder caught near the Lime Quarry\nend Irving Creek June 18 at 4 am.\nwith weather bright. Lure\u2014Red Eye\nWobbler. Witness\u2014W. A.' Werd.\nWeighed in at Procter.\nFruitvale Girls\nPlay Softball at\nSalmo on July 1\nSALMO, B.C., June 27 \u2014 The\nSalmo girls' softbail team, victorious\nIn three of five starts this season,\nwill entertain the Fruitvale girls\nhere Dominion Day u part of the\nSalmo Valley holiday celebrations.\nSalmo lost its first game to Fruitvale here 29-10, but later won - at\nthe latter town 15-5. Then the Salmo girls swept a home-and-home\nseries with the Trail Marycttcs.\nTrail Boys for\nCamp Saturday\nTRAIL, B. C, June 27-The Trail\nRossland boys bound for the Senior\nCamp at Koolaree will leave by\nthe C. P. R. train at 10:00 a.m. from\nTrail Saturday. They will be joined\nby the Nelson boys at that point\nand conveyed on to the Camp, ar\nriving early In the afternoon.\nIn the senior camp special attention will be given boys desiring\nadvice about future education and\nemployment. Brian' Thompion ot\nthe Trail High School, a specialist\nin thia field, will be the camp counsellor. While in camp he will alio\nconduct a group oh \"Better Atn-\nletcs and Sports Through a Knowledge of the Rules.\"\nThe advance party, headed by\nFred Roblni left Thunday morning to open camp, a new feature ii\nthe Glrli Sorority who have undertaken the advance preparation of the\nkitchen and dining hall, under the\ndirection of Mn. W. C. Kettlewell\nand Misi Amelia Hanna.\nCanadian Derby\nto Test Canada's\nHorses, Planned\nBy CHARLES EDWARDS\nCanadian Preit Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG, Jun- 27 (CP)r-Sir\nTrapieth'i great ihowing yeiterday\nta uie Royal Alexandra Handicap\nat Polo Park catapulted the chestnut colt owned by J. Hazza ot Toronto into favorltlim for Monday'i\nrunning of the Manitoba Derby, a\nfeature of tbe Prairie racing season.\nInterest ln the Uth renewal of\ntha $2000 added Derby for three-\nyear-olds foaled ta Canada la particularly keen becauie lt marks\nthe laat running under that name.\nIn future, with the purie lncreued to (5000 added, the race\nwill be known as the Canadian\nDerby\u2014a yardstick by which Canadian breeders may meuure\ntheir success.\nR. 3. Speeh-Honorary Secretary\nof the Prairie Thoroughbred Breed-\nen and Racing Association and\nleading Canadian breeder of 1939.\ntoday explained Inauguration of\nthe Derby u a national race to be\nrun annually on Dominion Day,\nJuhf 1.\n\"We are endeavoring to establish\na race over tbe Derby distance of a\nmile and one-quarter that will oe\nnational ta acopc,\" Speers iaid. \"The\nobject bi to draw nominations and\nparticipants from all parta of\nCanada.\n\"In breeding horiei one must\nhave a yardstick and distance and\nweights are the governing factor\nln meuuring results. A national\nrace for three-year-olds over the\nDerby distance at full weight! provides the yardsticks.\"\nSpeen referred to the King\"i\nPlate run In Toronto each year u\nthe Dominion's but known race, the\noldest race consecutively run on thli\ncontinent, but explained the Ktng'i\nPlate li open only to honei bred\nand railed ta Ontario.\n\"All Canada is mighty proud of\nthe Klng'i Plate but breeding in\nother parta of Canada hu been\nstimulated to such an extent demand hu arisen for a truly national\nrace.\"\nKimberley May\nPlay Softball\nHere Labor Day\nTiie Kimberley softbail team ts\nplanning a trip to Nelson over the\nLabor Day weekend, and will ln all\nprobability play the Savoy Hotel\nnine of the Nelson Men's Softball\nLeague, according to arrangements\nunder way.\nVernie Ahreni, third sacker for\nSavoy ln the.early gamu of the season, Il now working at Kimberley,\nind ln a recent letter back to Nelion said he hoped to line up with\nthe Kimberley team and make tbe\ntrip here,\nAhrens, who played first bue for\nthe Nelson Puckiten lait Summer,\nsaid that Klmbefliy loftball enthu-\nsiasts.roHowedNel.tin play closely.\nHe wrote thit pitchers teemed to\nhold a superiority over playen ta\nthe East Kootenay League.\nSeattle Women\nOusted In Golf\nBy The Anoclated Prate\nBatting (three leaden ln each\nleague)\nPlayer, Club O Ab R H Pet\nDanning, Gianta .. 82 203 32 76 .374\nFinney, R. Sox .... 63 240 39 89 .371\nRadcliff, Browni. 69 230 36 84 .385\nMcCosky, Tigen .. 52 216 52 78 -61\nWalker, Dodgen .. 47 160 27 82 .344\nGustine, Piratei .. 45 171 22 57 .333\nHome rum:\nAmerican League: Fox, Red Sox,\n17; Trosky, Indians, 17.\nNational League: Mize, Cardinali,\n20.\nRuni batted ln:\nAmerican League: Foxx, Red Sox,\n58.\nNational League: Mize, Cardinals,\n50.     \t\nExtra Hole Games\nFeatured, Seattle\nSEATTLE, June 27 (AP)-Four\nextra hole matchei featured the\nPacific Northweit men'i emattur\ntournament   at   the   Broadmoor\nGolf Club today at the upset-ridden field niched tha itml-flnali.\nSurviving the day'a two \"tudden\ndeath\" 18 hole matchei were Harry\nGivan of Seattle, recently crowned\nBrltiih   Columbia  amateur   champion;  Ernie Johnson,  slim   young\nUnivenity ot Washington itar; defending champion Jack Westland of\nEverett, and unheralded young Bob\nTindall of Seattle.\nGivan ihot two over par golf ta\nboth morning and afternoon rounda\nto defeat Ernie Ketch.\u2122 of Seattle,\n2 and 1, and lanky Bud Campbell of\nSeattle, 3 and 2. Campbell had reached the quarter-final by beating Foreit Wation of Seattle on the 19th\nhole.\nJohnson licked his univenity\nteammate, Bob Lee, 1 up ta the\nmorning then upset Ralph Whaley,\nof Seattle, the bow and arrow expert who eliminated national amateur champion Bud Ward yesterday.\n3 and 2. Whaley earlier had been\ncarried to the 20th hole before defeating diminutive but determined\nLeonard Mitchell of Seattle, who\nsquared the match after being\ndormie five.\nSEATTLE, June 27 (AP) \u2014 The\nPacific Northwest Men's Amateur\nTournament may be mostly a Seattle proposition, but the out-of-\ntowners monopolized all four places\nafter today's quarter-finals in the\nNorthwest Women's Tournament\nplayed at the Broadmoor Golf Club.\nThree Potrland women, Including\nMiss Marian McDougall, defending\nchampion and Northwest winner in\nfive of the last six years, reached\nthe semi-finals, along with Miss\nMuriel Veatch, Washington State\nwomen's champion from Longview.\nLong-hitting Nancy Hurst of\nPortland, the Oregon women's\nchampion, defeated Mrs. J. H. By-\nen, steady, down-tbe-mlddle Seattle\nwoman, 3 and 1.\nCranbrook Comets\nDown Kimberley\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The Comets, Junior bell team, took the iecond game of the seuon from Kimberley ln their three-game series,\nwhen they won 13-11.\nComets battery was Holmes, Bak-\nkon, Carver and Erickson and Kim-\nberley'a Caldwell and Jsmes. Of\nCranbrook's runs Erickson made\nthree, Scotty Malcolm Kenny Carver and Bud Holmes, two apiece\nKimberley's Pitcher Caldwell chalked up three for his team while Dickson and Leith turned in two.. Kimberley pitchers had seven strikeouts, Comet pitchers had nine. Each\nteam had one three-base hit, Kimberley had three two-base hits and\nCranbrook four. Kimberley allowed\nsix bases on balls and Comets four.\nLineups were.\nCranbrook\u2014Scotty Malcolm, lb,\nGordon McDermid ss, Kenny Carver 2b, Curly Cox If, Al Bakken\ncf, Blue Malcolm 3b, Bill Laurie\nrf, Bud Holmes p, Bert Erickson, c.\nKimberley \u2014 James, Dickson,\nKelly, Caldwell snd Chesham.\nCranbrook teams made 11 errors\nand Kimberley eight.\nBatting averages so far show Met\nUkralnetz out in frot among the\nComets with .500, Curly Cox second with .466 and Al Bakken third\nwith .412.\nOvcrlin-Brown Bout\nHalted by Weather\nRICHMOND, Va\u201e June 27 (AP)\n\u2014Rain caused postponement until\ntomorrow of tonights 10-round non-\ntitle scrap between Ken Overlin,\nNew York-California version of the\nworld's middleweight champion and\nBen Brown, young Atlanta fighter.\nSCOTLAND 3, ENGLAND 2\nGLASGOW, June 27 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Even In war the spirit of International competition remains. Five\nGerman plana were brought down\nover Britain yesterday, so a Scottish newspaper plutered the following on lta bulletin board: \"Scotland\n3, England 2.\"\n\u2014  \u00bbAOI  \"INlj.  rt\\\nlater Seasons on ^\nGrouse Proposed\nby Rod, Gun Club\nLater aeaioni for both Blue and\nWillow Grouie hive been recommended to the B.C. Game Commission for Nelion district, reported\nFred Waters, Chairman ot the Upland Game Bird Committee of the\nNelson Rod ind Gun Club, to a\ncommitteemen'! dinner meeting at\nthe Hume Wedneiday.\nReplying to a query aent out by\nthe Game Commission, be laid the\nCommittee had recommended October 1 to November 13 for the open\nseason on Blue Grouie Instead of\nSeptember 15 to October 15; and\nSeptember 30 to October 13 for Willow Grouie Instead of September\n15 to 30.\nTbe reason for recommending a\nlater Blue Grouie season, he laid,\nwai to make lt pouible for hunten\nat high elevation! late ln the seaion to obtain birds. Few reached au\nelevation sufficient to take a heavy\ntoll of the grouie, he iaid.\nCONSERVATION\nMEASURE\nA later Willow Grouie leuon waa\nsuggested ai a conservation measure, it being the opinion of hunter,\nthat fewer Willows would be shot\nfrom September 30 to October 15\nthan In the period of September\n15 to 30.\nWhether the deer aeason wu too\nlong, and should open later, was a\nquestion asked by Dan McNaughton. He suggested It was of little\nuse to hunt deer in the early part\not the season because the meat\nwould go bad before It could be\nused, due to war weather common\nta September and early October.\nMr. Waters felt the tame argument would apply to hunting of\nduckt and geese.\nIt wai the opinion ot J. J. McEwen, President, that Game Branch\nOfflcen ihould have the authority\nto cut a season ihort If local conditions warranted iuch action.\nMOTORS REBORED\nand WELDING\nShorty's Repair Shop\n14 BAKER ST.      NELSON, B. O.\nQUALITY\nTACKLE\nWILL PLACE YOU IN THE FINALS\nLook for the name Gibbs on all spoons, tackle which you purchaie.\nMade by\nGibbiTool ft Stomping Worki, Von., B. C.\n* 1 measure HIRAM WALKER'S LONDON\nDRY GIN\u20142 teaspoonfuls powdered sugar.\nJuice of 1 lime... Shake well with ice, strain\ninto glass and fill with soda\nTHE SECRET.\n\u2022\nThere'i s reuon why this\nrecipe it to good\u2014it\nspecifies Hiram Walker's\nLondon Dry Gin. The\n\"harmonized flavor\" of\nthia fine gin worki wonders with sny of your\nfavorite gin recipes.\nYou'll do well always to\nspecify Hiram Walker's\nLondon Dry Gin.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Qovernment of British Columbia.\t\n\t\n_\n L\n______\n \u25a0umiiiui\n\u2022\"\"w\nPAGE TIN\n-Nil SON DAILY NEWS. Nil \"ON   B  C -FRIDAY MORNING  JUNr (I  1940-\nFord Plants Hake Huge Contribution\nfo War Effort In Canada\u2014Campbell\nWINDSOR, Ont, June 27 (CP)\n\u2014All the facilities, resources,\nman-power and equipment of the\nTord Motor Company of Canada\nand the overseas affiliated Ford\nCompanlei are making every possible contribution to the defense\nof the BrltUh Empire and the\nsuccessful prosecution of the war,\nWallace R Campbell, President of\nthe Canadian Ford Organization,\nslid here today.\nMr, Campbell was commenting\non Canadian reaction to the refusal\nof Henry Ford In Detroit to manufacture airplane motori In his United Statei plants for the British Government\nREAFFIRMS  POSITION\n\"At the outbreak of war I assured the Canadian Government\nthat Ford Motor Company of Canada, Ltd., would make all its facilities available for the production\nof essential war supplies,\" Mr.\nCampbell said. \"We have done\nthat. Last night I reaffirmed the\nFord position in Canada ln a telegram to Hon. C. D. Howe, Minister\nof Munitions and Supply.\nMr. Campbell said he had discussed the matter with Mr Ford,\nSersonally, after he had received\neports ot the debate on the question In the House of Commons.\n\"Mr. Ford realizes fully that all\nthe Industrial resources of \u2022 nation at war automatically become\navailable in the defence of the\ncountry in which they are located,\"\nhe said.\nHe said the Canadian Ford\nplant ls particularly well fitted\nfor. production of the mechanical\nmotorized transport used so extensively by modern armies.\nANSWERED   REQUEST\n\"Sven before war was declared,\non the request of the Canadian\nGovernment we laid the ground\nwork for military production,\" he\naaid. \"Since the beginning of the\nwar nothing has been left undone\nto produce as quickly as possible\nequipment specified by the Government\n\"More than 80 per cent of the\nproduction of our Windsor plants\nconsists of vehicles for military\nuse. This percentage Is rapidly increasing. We are supplying the\nBritish Umpire with a total of\nApproximately 38,000 of these units.\nOf this total nearly 10,000 are for\nthe Canadian Government and 28,-\n000 are for use by other Empire\ncountries such as South Africa,\nAustralia and India.\"\nMr Campbell said the Canadian\nplant Is being rapidly tooled tor\nproduction of universal machine\ngun carriers. These will be supplied to the Canadiin Government\n\u2022t the rate of SO i weak when\nproduction gets Into full awing\nwithin the next few months.\n\"We have a number of men with\nspecial training and qualifications\nuseful to the Government In war\nwork. These men are working with\nthe Department of National Defence at Ottawa and In England.\n\"At this time I believe the Canadian people are Interested in\nknowing the extent of Ford military production,\" Mr. Campbell\nsaid and he listed thl various\ntypes of equipment now being\nmanufactured by the Canadian\nFord  plant.\nHenry Ford Issued a statement\nyesterday in which he' declared\nthat hli decision not to build airplane engines for other than tha defence of the United States ln no\nway affects the policies of the\nFord companies in Empire\ncountries.\n\"They are serving their people as\nthey should do and as I would do if\npermitted and If occasion required,\n1 am against war ln any form. I\nhave no animosity agalnit any people of any race or nation whatsoever. I shall be glad when all wars\nwill cease all Over the world.\"\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP)-A boy-\ncott ot Ford Motor products would\nbe against the Interests ot the Canadian public holding a majority of\nthe stock of the Ford Motor Company of Canada, Senator J. J. Donnelly (Con., Ontario) declared In\nthe Senate today.\nThe Upper House discussed a\nquestion by Senator F. B. Black\n(Con. New Brunswick) as to whether the Government would cancel\ncontracts with Ford and prohibit\nFord sales in Canada because Henry\nFord had refused to make aircraft\nengines for Great Britain.\n\"There are no better Canadians\nthan those at the head of the Ford\nCompany of Canada and those employed by that company.\" said Senator Arthur Meighen, Conservative\nlesder.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON. B. C\u2014Mrs. Charles\nMurrell left for Vancouver to visit\nher daughter, Miss Mary Murrell.\nMrs. F. P. Levirs and two children\nof Kimberley are visiting Mr. and\nMrs. E. Marriott here, en route to\nVancouver for the Summer holidays. Mr. Levirs, a former Principal of Creaton high school Is taking\na Summer course at the University\nof Idaho, Moscow.\nMra., George Hobden returned\nfrom Cranbrook where she visited\na week.\nLeslie Dee of Nelson ls a guest\nof Rev. A. S. and Mrs. Partington\nat Christ Church Rectory.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Gay and ion,\nCharles, are viiiting relatives at\nPrince Albert end other points in\nSaskatchewan.\nJ. W. Smiley of Nelson wu a\nvisitor at Creaton and District\npoints.        '\nMiss Charlotte WUki left Saturday for Invermere to spend the\nSummer.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cartwright\nare beck from their wedding trip\nto Spokane, Vancouver and Coast\npoints. They are stopping at the\nhome of the latter's mother, Mis.\nH. McRobb.\nFrank Nadon was a visitor at\nNelson.\nMrt. Frank H. Jackson left Wednesday on a two months' holiday\nwith friends at Vancouver, Victoria and Coast points.\nRev. Geoffrey and Mrs. Smith\nof Toronto, are visiting the latter's\nparents, Rev. J. H. and Mrs. Armi1\ntage. They will spend July in British Columbia and leave in August\nto take up United Church missionary work in Japan, after a year\nin University at Tokyo.\nS. A. Speers returned Saturday\nfrom Nelson. Mrs. Speers, who visited Vancouver, returned with him.\nMiss Helen Moore left Tuesday\nfor Vancouver. She is Director of\nMusic at Creston High School and\nis taking a Summer course at the\nB. C. University.\nDr, D. J. Campbell Is at Vancouver this week, for a meeting of\nthe B. C. Medical Association.\nW. C. Courtney, who has been\nat Kamloops the past six months,\nis a guest of his sister, Mrs. B.\nCalkin.\nMiss Vidal, R.N, visited Rossland friends.\nCol, and Mrs. E. Mallandalne returned Saturday from a brief visit\nln Spokane.\nMrs. G. B. Henderson, Mrs. P. R.\nRobinson, Mrs. Wells. Mrs. C. H.\nHare and Mrs. H. S McCreath visited Mrs G. A. Hunt at Kitchener.\nMrs. Monrad Wigen was amongst\nthe delegation from Wynndel Women's Institute, at the rally.\nClarence Christensen has returned from Lewiston and Moscow.\nIdaho. He visited his mother at the\niatter point for a couple of weeks.\nC B. Garland cf Nelson was at\nCreston Tuesday, for the last rites\nof the late W. L. Hataway of\nKitchener. During his stay In Crej-\n' ton he was a guest of Col. and\nMr?  E. Mallandaine.\nMiss M. L. Wade. Vice-Principal\nt_ Creston School, is spending the\nSummer holidays at her home at\nCloverdale. She left for the Coast\nWednesday.\nH. Legg of Calgary. Customs and\nImmigration Office Inspector for\nAlberta and Southern British Columbia, was the weekend guest of\nhis son and daughter-in-law, Mr\nind Mrs. Herb Legg here.\nMiss Doris Crosby visited Nelson\nit the weekend.\nCol. and Mrs. Mallandaine were\nSunday visitors at Kitchener.\nRev. A. S. Partington was at In-\nfermire Wednesday and Thursday\nfor the semi-annual 'meeting of the\nAngilcln rural deanery of Kooli-\nnav East.\nH. Bunker of the Federal Arclil-\notlnstct\nBltos-\nHeatRash\ntot quick rdW fr_o itckiai of 1mm. bitaj, aril\nnik, athkia'a toot, e_ffli and _W e.lwmlly\nlauH Ikia trooblw, t_a world-laoou, coolina, aalt-\na-ptis, liquid D.D.D. IWiptiofl. GreaKlti.\n'  L Booth, irritation and quickly itop. inUwa\nMill lie trial b\u00abtlapro\u00bb_ it, or money balk. Aik\nlour Jju\u00abilt todaj lor O.D.D. PRESCRIPTION.\ntect's Office, Calgary, was here on\nofficial business.\nMr. and Mn. \"Bud\" Andrewt and\nDonald returned Monday evening\nfrom a motor trip to Spokane and\nGrand Coulee dam.\nMr. and Mn. W. Bridy md Mrs.\nC. Fry are home from a visit with\nfriends in Spokane.\nBert Crosby, who visited Kimberley, has returned to his home\nat Creston.\nMiss F. Matheson of the High\nSchool Staff was at Nelson at the\nweekend.\nMiss Barnett of Saskatoon, Sask.,\nwas a guest of her uncle, R. Jacobs.\nShe was en route to Vancouver.\nCharles Sutcliffe is home trom\nCentral School's Winning Choir\nDisplaying tha shield lt won at the Kootemy Muilcal Festival\nls the Gradei 1 and II choir, Centrei School, conducted by Mlaa Eileen\nMackenzie. \u25a0 _.'-..\nLeft to right: Front row\u2014Heather Homenhem, Jimmie Ballin-\ntyne, Maureen Shepherd, Fted Anderson, Sue MarHle, Merle Smiley,\nPatsy Kellogg, Gilbert Johnson, Lois Fleck, Jimmie Todd, Roberta\nBoyes.\nSecond row\u2014Ann Davis, Lois Hedley, Dick Rimsden, Alice\nParker, Leona Lanen, Luoy Clvette, Nanoy Bodnaruk, Mrt Nelson,\nTom Pagdin, Margaret Leilie, Joe Sikorskl Roil Burnham.\nThird row\u2014Carole Lipsack, Dorothy WeeUck, Gall Swan, Roie-\nEnid Holtom, Laura Livingstone,  Bob Anderson,\nmarie Crossley,\nAnnie Bergmann,\nhouse,\nFourth row-Oene Nutter,\nRoberta Rldenour, Billie Parker, Tommy Short-\nLloyd Brook, Barbara Crerar, Jae-\nrul  row\u2014U\u00abne  miner,   laiuyu  orvvi.   uaiu.i.   \\..*iai,  ti\u00bbw-\nueline Bates, Hazel Seminoff, Barbara Frenzler, Frances Andersen,\nToggln.\nBack  row\u2014Elizabeth   Relkotf,   Brian  Johniton,  Carole   Sims,\nAnne Chamberlain, Billy Goggln.\nBack row\u2014Elizabeth  Relkofc,  .\nDonna Walley, Raymond Johnion, Bruno Pin, Raymond Swan, Shirley\nDobbie, Deane Diaereaux.\n\u2014Photo by William Ramsay.\n33( Complete Year al High School;\n85 Grade Xr 76 Grade XI Promoted\nAUSTRALIA LOSES\n$1._,_00,000-TRADE\nMELBOURNE, June *7 (CP\nCable)\u2014Government trade officials\nestimated today that Australia has\nlost an annual export trade ol \u00a334,-\n000,000 ($112,200,000 Canadian) with\ncountriei that Germany haa overrun since the war itarted. Thla alao\ninvolves a probable shrinkage of\n\u00a310,000,000 ($33,000,000) in the Australian customs receipts, necessitating some revisions of the Government's plans for financing war expenditures.\nSTUDENTS COLLECT $207\nPORT ALBERNL B. C, June 27\n(CP)\u2014Jufiipr Red Crou Clubs here\nhave collected (207 tn nickels and\ndimes to be donated to tbe Queen\nAlexandria Solarium, the ambulance fundi, and other charities,\nofficials of the Society nld today.\nEDITOR |UMPS TO DEATH\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 27 (AF)\n\u2014A man, identified by State Highway Patrolmen from his effects as\nW. N. Burkhardt, editor of the Sin\nFrancisco News, Jumped to his\ndeath today trom the San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge.\nVancouver, where he visited hii\ndaughter, Miu Ethel Sutcliffe.\nArthur Nichols, Assistant C. P. R.\nAgent at Kimberley, ls visiting his\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. George\nNichols.\nMr. and Mn. Lynn Bullock and\nMrs. R. Anderson, Jr., of Tabor,\nAlta., were guests ot Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Eastman, Creston,\nMr. and Mn. F. E. Thompion of\nCarmangay, Alta., spent a few days\nwith Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Measlijger.\nThey were on a trip to the Pacific\nCoast.\nS. J. Clark ind daughter, Miss\nSally Clark, spent the weekend at\ntheir home at Wycliffe.\nMr. and Mn. Herman Adams and\nMrs. W. K. Brown are home from a\nbrief holiday with friends in Spo-\nkane and Coeur d'Alene.\nMiss Rita Wall of the Creston\nPublic School staff, visited Trail.\nGeorge Robertson of Nelson visited Creston. He is a former teller\nat the local branch of the Canadian\nBank of Commerce.\nCliff Aldrich was a visitor at Nelson, returning Friday.\nJ. Graham la on a holiday visit to\nVancouver.\nMisi F, Matheson, B, A, il leaving Thursdiy for Kimberley, where\nshe plans to ipend a week before\ngoing to Vancouver tor a Summer\ncoune at the University ot B. C.\nMr, and Mn. Jamei Cherrington\nara viiiting Mr. and Mri. Monrad\nWigen, Wynndel.\nMr, and Mn. Henry Christensen\nand Miss Marjorie Learmonth are\nhome from a three weeks' tripi to\nEastern Canada and New Vork.\nThe 1933 graduating class of Creiton High School had their third\nreunion Sunday. It wu a baiket\npicnic it LaFrance Creek, Kootenay Lake, and wai attended by 11\nof the graduating group of that\nyear, Misses Fay Tompkins, Opal\nLaBelle, Marjorie Learmonth, Betty Speen, Muriel Thunton and Iris\nTaylor, and Jack Young, Herbert\nDodd, George Connell, Arthur Nichols and Sid Scott. Missing members\nwere Misi Minnie Downei, who ll\nIn Vancouver; Misi Elia Willis, now\nof Phoenix, Ariz., and Mrs. Percy\nTruscott, and \"Bud\" Miller,- both\nof Creiton.   : - - . -\nA total ot 334 itudenti completed their examinations er were\nrnT_.ii.vu sis\nduring the put two weeks, itated\nPrincipal L. V. Rogers Thursday\nwhen he Issued the promotion\nlilt tor the 1089-40 term. The\natudenta may be divided Into\nthree groups, Senior Matriculation, Univenity Entrance er\nJunior Matriculation, and local,\nor Grade X and XI stydenti, bl\naald. There were 41 Senior Matriculation candidates 108 Univenity Entrance, and 184 local.\nRisults of the Departmental examinations would be announced\nfrom Victoria toward the end of\nJuly. All studentl would be advised regarding their results dl-\nSctly by mail. Any wbo were\nVan supplemental exams should\nmake application immediately alta.\nthey received their reiulti by mail,\nMr. Rpgen iaid.\nGrade X and XI itudenti who\ncompleted their courses could be\ngrouped In five classes. These were:\n1.\u2014Those who completed all courses that tney undertook.\n2.\u2014A few who failed in not more\ntil\nsupplementali.\n3. \u2014Those who had completed\ncertain courses and bad dropped\nor were changing othen.\n4,\u2014A number whose general average wu low and who were promoted conditionally for two months.\n5.\u2014Those whose general result\nthroughout tha year and at the final\ntut wu very low ind who .were\nadvised to repeat the year'i work.\nA statement of the marks received\nhu been mailed to all ln thii group.\nA Itatement of marks wu also\nmailed to parents ot students whose\nnames were not on the promotion\nlist.\nSupplemental exams will be written at the High School August 30.\nthan two tests and had been given\nIn Grade X, 74 itudenti com\npleted all subjects, and were promoted, and U were promoted\nconditionally.\nIn Grade XI, W itudenti completed all courses, seven were\ngranted supplementals, six completed certain courses, and three\nwere promoted conditionally.\nThe promotion lilt followi:\nGRADE X\nCOMPLETED ALL\nCOURSES\nAlex Allan, Betty Benwell, Doris\nBergstrom, Sunn Berry, John Bradley, Evelyn Breeie, William Chapman, Frank Christian, Jobn Cor-\nbelt, Gertie Creak, trie Denny, Pamela Dewdney. Inez Dodman, Jean\nFiiher, Gladys Fleming, Edward\nGausdal, Mary Gordon, Leah Green,\nEvelyn Gunn, Clarence Heijhton,\nJamei Heuston, Betty Hickey, verna\nHickey. Miriam Hilliard, lisle Hodgson, Lindsay Holt Jamei Hoover,\nRichard Hornett Connie Johnston,\nIsobel Kay, Frank Kennedy, Iris\nKennedy, Frank Kohar, Stanley\nLyon. Mona Miller, John Milne,\nArvid Moen, Christine Moen, Lo-\nBin Morrison, I Wills McClement,\nuriel McLanders, Eater Nelion,\nRobert Noakes, Charles Noakes,\nMackenzie Norris, meaner Paddon,\nOla Patterson, Mike Pavlch, Robert\nPeacock, Edna Peacock, Robert Perclval, George Perdue, Gordon Pickard, Evelyn Powell, William Pmo\ntor, Batty Rasmussen, James Kit-\nchle, Daphne Rohde, Eleanor Simpson, David Slader, Delbert Smiley,\nLeatrice Smiley, Arthur Smith,\nNorma Staples, Harold Tapanila.\nRobert Thaln, Phyllis Thompson,\nDorothy Todd, Anthony Trigg, Mary\nWalton, Mike Wesley, Gladys Wigg,\nRobert Wilson, Jean Young.\nPROMOTED\nCONDITIONALLY\nBarbara Bird, George Ioanin, Nor\nman Kelley, Herbert Learmonth,\nGwen Macrons, Donald McKerns\nPater Reibin, Maureen Rowley,\nMary Shepherd, Avonia Stewart,\nWilfred Wood.\nGRADE XI\nCOMPLETED ALL\nCOURSES\nTed Affleck, Frances Aldersmith,\nJeanne Andenon, Dick Attree, Bert\nAuld, Evelyn Bill, William Bar.\nwil, Lena Bodnaruk, Joyce Bremner, Philip Brewer, Ida Busk, Cecil\nCallbeck, Ian Carne, Ernest Colman,\nLevi Corbett Jeanne Courtney.\nMargaret Dawion, Louia DeCocq,\nDonella Dingwall, Geraldine Dodman, Lily Edwards, Betty Emery,\nWarren Ferguion, Donald Fiiher,\nArthur Fleming. Margery Fraier,\nVictor Graves, Laura Oreer, Thomai\nGriffiths, Patricia Guy, Evelyn Hanv\nmer, Joseph Hilliard. Erie Holmgren, Olav Hopland, Jean Horner,\nJanet Hughei, Ted Huyck, Marjorie\nJorgensen, Edna Kennedy, June\nKennedy, Oliver Laakso, Myrtle\nLeet, Moira Mansell, Wallace Matheson, Mollie Murray. Martin McLennan, Arthur Neill, Walter Nil.\nbet, Robert Proudfoot Ward Red\u00bb\nshew, Faith Ritchie, Fred Robinson,\nRonald Rutherglen, Mone Scott,\nCharles Spall, Helen Stout, Robert\nThaln, Peggy Trlggi, Isabelle\nYoung, TTary Zetnuck.\nGRANTED\nSUPPLEMENTS\nWilliam Burn (French), Wallace\nFleming (Social Studies), Jacqueline\nHesse (Mathematics), Paul Hlookoff (Social Studies), Claire Hughei\n(Mathematics), Ralph Johnion (Bn-\nSllsh, Social Studies), Graeme Tin-\nale (Mathematics).\nCOMPLETED CERTAIN\nCOURSES\nBertha Anderson, Denii Boyd,\nRobert Clarkiton, Mabel Conrad,\nHarold Stainton, Elmer Tattrie.\nPROMOTED\nCONDITIONALLY\nRobert Elsdon, Luite Hart, Betty\nPorteoui.\nInsurance Plan\nResolution Passes\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP) - Th*\nSenate adopted a resolution that\nthe Britiah Parliament be petitioned\nto agree to ap amendment ol the\nBritiah North America Aet to permit establishment of a nation-wide\nUnemployment insurance plan. The\nresolution, prevlouily passed by the\nHouse of Commoni, was carried in\nthe Senate on division without a\nrecorded vote, ,_\\\nCanadian\n(flijvWIihkk)\nheat yourself daily to healthful, delicious\nDOUBLEMINT\nGUM\n\u2022 Enjoy the refreshing, genuine pepp\nfavor of Wrlgley'! Doublemint Gum tjter\nmtal. doublemint Gam it good for\nyou, too\u2014helpt keep your teeth clean, bright\nud attractive, your breath pleasant \u2014the\nchewing relieves tension ind aids digestion.\nMl advertisement ia not publisht\nor displayed by the Liquor Contr\nBoard or by the Government t\nBrltUh Columbia.       .,\nm\nPRE-BUDGET PRICE\nUSED CAR CLEARANCE\nThe New Budget means that all new cars in the low price class have advanced in price from $25.00 to $100.00.\nYOUR PRESENT CAR is WORTH MORE today than it was before the Budget was brought down.\nTHE NELSON TRANSFER COMPANY, LIMITED large stock of carefully reconditioned Used Cars are worth\nmore than they were before the Budget was brought in on June 24th, 1940.\nBUT\nFrom June 28th to July 13th, we are still holding our complete present USED CAR STOCK at the old PRE-BUDGET\nPRICE. You can save approximately $100.00 by the purchase of one of our better class Used Cars NOW and\ncorresponding amounts on our lower priced models.\n_n __ wh __\u00bb \u25a0_\u25a0_ \u2022 m _r_*_**_*M9    __*9_-h._t*m9      ^he car you buy now will be\nSAVE \u2014On This Year's Depreciation - BUY NOW   *or'h \u00abpproximo..iy \u201e\nmuch ont year from today.\n'35 CHEVROLET.\nMaster Deluxe Sedan. Built-in trunk. Superb peacock\nblue enamel original linish. Improved enclosed knee\naction to give vou the wonderful\n\"Floating Kide\" on the roughest\no( roads. Reputable valve-in-nead\nChevrolet motor. Renowned GM.\nwhip cord upholstery, like new.\n!le horn. Vour rare opportun-\nBugle horn\nIty. at  ....\n'550\n'36 OLDSMOBILE\nseat. Repainted In a sparkling\nOldsmobile\n\u00bb675\n'38 CHEVROLET\nCoach. Heater and defroster. Built-in trunk. Finished\nIn luxurious Royal Maroon Enamel. Chevrolet's tarn-\nCoupe with rumble\npolychomatlc blue,\nmighty \"L\" head motor, good for\nthousands of miles. Perfected\nhydraulic brakes that will\nstop you on a dime. \"Turret!\nTop\" body by Fisher. A real\nsacrifice at    -\nous Blue Flame, high compres\nsion motor ln A-l shape. Upholstery like new, original owner\nused seat covers. 5 almost new\ntires with less than 9000 miles\non them. A star performer\u2014lt_\nworth more\n'775\n36 CHEVROLET\nCoach. Built-in trunk, s new\ntires. Refinished ln fresh sea\ngreen enamel. New fibre seat\ncovers on Chevrolet's easy riding bucket type front seats.\nChevrolet's peppy motor, thor-\noughly reconditioned. For\nsmart, roomy riding, this car\nis really a car for a fine-car\nfamily. Designed to sell\t\n'36 FORD SEDAN. Built-in trunk and hot water\nheater. Don't let this low price mislead you! It\nhas many more thousands of miles in it yet. Up-\n'\"'' :    !    '* \"Breathing Type', djirn\nholstery ot the latest\nTo clear as is ......\n'31 CHEV STANDARD COUPE. Here's the most\neconomical car on the road todiy. Chevs powerful valve-in-heid motor assures you of power\nand speed, with economy, as you want it. M91\nA give away at    VtaeW\n\u202234 CHIY1 Vi TON TRUCK. The buy that we've\npriced to clear to make room for later tk*)t\nmodels. A sound bargain at e^taW\n'34 OLDS 6. Spacious 5-passenger Deluxe Sedan.\nBuilt-in trunk. This is General Motors car tha.\n\"has everything\". Durable whip cord upholstery.\nSmooth L-head motor, hydraulic brakes, finished\nin the smart Royal Blue Enamel. An CC7C\nexceptional value at only  *-*** \u2022 V\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 35\nNELSON, B. C.\n'37 CHEVROLET\n'750\nMaster Deluxe Sedan. Refinished ln the very latest\ntwo-tone colors of Seagull Grey\nand   Huron   Green   enamel.\nHere's your chance to own a\nc\u00bbr   with   1941   colors   befor.   -, B\nthe 1941 cars are on the mar- Jl #      ill\nket Motor, brakes and chassis        M   mJ^f\n37 OLDSMOBILE\nCoupe. Opera seata, finished bi a luxurious deep\ngreen   enamel.   Moto\nShape.   Smart   bod;\nOpei\nenamel. Motor In A-l\nape. Smart body find la\nequipped with a Troplc-Alre\nhot water heater and defroster,\nThia outstanding value can't\nlast. Don't flU to see it A\nsteal at\t\n$775\n'38 PONTIAC\n'S|lver Streak' Sedan. Has its original finish of alluring\nblack enamel, and chroma trim\naad sliver streak. Pontiacs* dependable motor In A-l shape.\nThU smart carl with Its refined\nbody lines, plus Its excellent condition, makes it thi buy ot the\nyear for only\t\n'875\n \u2014\n \u2014\n\u25a0;v \u25a0'.:':''-;; \u25a0 >x-i -''--\nrail Bears Beat Nelson in Final\nGame First Half to Bolster lead\nIruins Lead at End of\nEach Period of\nRousing Game\nTRAIL, B.C., June 27 - While\nBaldy\" Mayo re.urned to the Nel-\nm Maple Leafs' fold to pace the\nItm'aicorer i ta the game against\nwiden Bears In Trail Thursday\nIght, the home club exerted them-\nlives Just that much more to again\nike the Leafs ta the Trail rink and\nicrease their hold on the Wesl\n'.ootenay Lacroue League first half\nlanding. Bean led all the way,\nruining by a 20-15 count.\nBeen lead 5-4 at the end of the\nWt quarter, 11-8 at half time and\n_t) at the three-quarter mark.\nDespite a imall and listless crowd\neing in attendance, neither team\nIgged ln Its enthusiasm and play,\nd a rugged hard-fought battle all\nhe way, deserving of far better sup-\n01*1\nMax Desbrlsay and Mickey Bren-\n\u2022a.refereed.\n(OX SCORE\n[ELSON\nlibbons\ntorris\nCuW\nJonneville\nPapanila  ..\n'.apointe \u201e\nPaterson ....\t\nTotali \u201e\n[\u2022RAIL\nWoro  \t\nr. Kendall.\nBerto .\t\n15 11 2\u00ab   16\nlev\t\nHood\t\n\"  Kendall _.\n, Sammartino ,\nB. Sammartino .\nGallicano\t\n\" nie\t\nilth\t\nHgnan \t\n' Mple\t\nI Total\t\n1 .1\n0  1\n. 20 11 31   20\nTrail Truck Is\nOff the Highway\nTRAIL, B.C., June 27\u2014A truck\ndriven by Walter Duncan, jr., left\nthe Trail-Cutlegar highway near\nCrocketvllle at about 2:30 a.m.\nThursday and turned over on Iti\nilde. The driver wai uninjured and\nlittle damage was done to the car.\nCalgary Couple\nPlunge ISO Feel;\nEscape Injury\nROSSLAJTD, B.C., June 27-Mr.\nand Mrs. E. V. Woodlock of Calgary\nhad a miraculous escape from death\nor serious injury when their car\nwent off the Rossland-Paterson\nHighway, a mile below the Rossland\nrock cut, turned over three or four\ntimes, and came to rest against some\ntrees about 150 feet below the road.\nBut for the trees the car would\nhave continued down another 250\nfeet. The accident occurred when\nthe outside ahoulder of the road-bed\ngave way.\nThe Calgary couple were badly\nshaken up, and Mr. Woodlock sustained a cut on the head, but neither were seriously Injured. They received treatment at the Rossland office of the C. S. Williams clinic.\nTrail Board Asks\nEarlier Reports\nFrom Associated\nTRAIL, B. C., June 27\u2014After a\nreport of proceeding of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eutern\nBritish Columbia convention held\nrecently at Fernle, was received\ntrom W. A. Porteoui, R. G. Anderson and W. A. Curran, the Trail\nBoard of Trade .Thunday night\ndecided to write the Assoc1 ate\nBoards' Secretary suggesting that\nimmediately following conventions\na summary report of the proceedings be forwarded to all member\nBoardi.\nithusiastic Public Meeting Names\nCommittee of Seven for Refugee Work\n-\nCitizens of Nelson and the entire\nllstrict packed the City Hall in a\ntreat patriotic move Thursday night\nit they named a strong committee\nIf aeven with power to add as an\nnltlal step in forming a Nelson\n.iatrict Branch of the Canadian\nNational Committee on Refugees.\n\" Btenfllng room only was left be-\nOre the meeting began aa repre-\nentatives of nearly every Nelson\n(ganlzation and society, and. many\nllstrict bodies, jammed the hall,\nsiuussions and questions on the\nefugee problem from nearly every\nngle were beard, the meeting end-\nng with \"God Sav the King' and\ni general feeling that \"we're under\nley In this refugee work.\" It wu\nSilled to discuss the placing of tet-\n[fee children in the district\nThe committee, which will meet\nthii morning to add to ita num-\n) ben, was appointed by Chairman\nDC. A. Mann. It consisted of A.\n. G. Thompson, President ot the\n_ Nelion Branch of the League of\nI Nations Society, who instigated\n[the movement for the meeting:\n' Mn. Leo S. Gansner, S. N. Maddocks, Rev. John Cheevers, Prin\ncipal F. B. Pearce, Dr. G. A. C.\n,\u25a0 Walley, and Rev. W. J. Silver-\nwood.\n_^After opening remarks by Mr.\nIlompson, Mr. Mann, and Mayor N.\n1 Stibbs, who decared  the City\nwaa willing to help in any way\n^^ssible, Mrs. Gansner outlined the\nork of   the  Canadian   National\nommittee on Refugees, She told\nof  100   hand-picked  children   hewn the ages of three and 13\nan,   of   Polish,   Austrian   and\nlechoslovakian   nationality   who\nre on their way to Canada, and\nne of whom would be settled in\nNelson district. She stressed\nhat each additional child that could\ntaken out of Britain was lessen-\nng the burden on that Government.\nIt was up to Canada's citizens to\nike care ot the refugees for the\novernment had its hands full, both\nnancially and otherwise, with the\nMr effort, and could spare little\nit no money for refugees. It was\nolng all possible, however.\n*Miss Nancy Dunn, Public Health\ngurse, speaking on behall of Public Healih Nurses throughout the\nProvince, pledged their support and\naid that Dr. Amyott, Provincial\n'ealth Officer, was doing all possi-\ns in preparation for the receipt\nthe relugees.\nDr. H. H. MacKenzie said  that\nCanadian Medical Association\ninchee in all Provinces were pre-\nring io tanj care of health problems of tbe relugees.\ndlS8 HOLBROOK IN\nCHARGE OF PLACING\n\u25a0 Kits Jean Holbrook, in charge of\nhe Nekon Branch ot the Provin-\nChild Welfare Branch, would\nin direct charge of placing the\nfugee children in homes. She urg-\nI that all who could should take\nlie children without remuneration,\nrrovision would be made, however,\nor those wbo could not pay full\nTtpenses. She suggested that van-\ntis committees be formed by the\nbitial committee, including publicly, transportation, aplpication committees, and so on.\nI She strongly urged that all those\n(tiering to take children\u2014and there\nyere many of th,|n being received\n' ahould turn in their names to the\nv committee, for her oifice wu\nling flooded with offers. If W>e\n\u00abmes were turned in to the com-\nBittee, they would then be given\n. her department co lhat the fam-\n\/ could be investigated. Protestant\nlildren would be placed in Pro-\n\u00abtant homes, lhe said, and Catho-\njes in Catholic homes.\nI She did Lot know who was to\nSy the transportation of the child-\n'en or how they were to be trana-\nIprled. These were problems that\nfrould have to be dealt with by the\nIpvi con.mittee. Therefore it was\nirged that a \"definite committee be\named to get definite information\"\nlorn  Ottawa\nRED CROSS\nWORKING\nAfter the meeting wu thrown\nopen to discussion, Mrs. T. W.\nBrewer of the Red Crou disaster\nRelief Committee, said that the\nClothing Committee of the Red\nCross wai making over old clothes\nand would accept any old clothes.\nBoy Scouti would pick them up\nand deliver them to committee\nheadquarten. A number of articles\nmade by the committee were exhibited.\nH. D. Dawson, Chairman of tbe\nDisaster Relief Committee, oflered\nthe services of the Committee,\nMlis Mae MacFarlane, Captain of\nNelson Girl Guides, offered about\n30 dresses that the Guides had collected.\nLeo S. Ganiner offering legal advice, said thai it would be necessary\nto register tne\" Refugee Committee\nunder the War Charities-Act. This\nwould take but a short time, he\nsaid.\nMrs. R. L. Oliver, Registrar of the\nVoluntary Registration of Canadian\nWomen last Fall, said that over 300\noffers had been made to take children. These had been turned over to\nMiss Holbrook's department\nA letter drafted by Mrs. R. E.\nDill, and J. E. Kraster of South Slocan, which had been aent to W. K.\nEsling, M.P. for Kootenay West\nHon. C. S. Leary, Minister of Public Works; and the Chairman of the\nWomen's Evacuee Committee at Ottawa, was read by Mr, Kraster. It\nembodied the aimi and purposes of\nthe meeting. It had been written\nabout a weft ago, Mr. Kraster saidt\nso these public officials might be\nable to help. He said that if tens of\nthoussnds of children were sent\nCanadian homes could accommodate them, but if millions were\ncoming, then farms for the placing\nof the refugees would be needed.\nHe offered the use of his farm.\nIn answer to a suggestion by C.\nD. Pearson, it wu assured that\ndistrict people would be taken Into\nthe committee.\nQuestions regarding whether parents in England could finance their\nchildren's living in Canada, and\nother matters of finance, were an\nswered briefly by Miss Holbrook\nand Mr. Maddocks. It was said that\nsuch matters would be ironed out\nlater.\nMrs. Paul Lincoln told the meet-\nirg Itat she hiZ wired to a friend\nin the United Statei Thursday in\nanswer to a letter stating that she\ncould place four children. One of\nher neighbors who learned that\nshe had wired, offered to take two,\nfour even six children.\n-NILSON DAILY NIWI, NILION  I. C-FRIDAY MORNINO JUN* tt IW\nWcSJ_a\n'    Min. Max.\nNELSON ____ \u00ab     Tf\nNELSON\nTRAIL\nVictoria \t\nNanaimo .............\nVancouver \t\nKamloopi  \t\nPrijce George .\nEstevan Point .\nPrince Rupert .\nLangara\nAtlin   \t\nDawson, Y. T.\nSeattle\nPortland -\nSan Francisco\nSpokane  \t\nPenticton\t\nVernon\nKelowna\t\nKaslo  _\nCranbrook \t\nCalgary   \t\nEdmonton ....\nSwift Current\nRegina\nPrince Albert\nWinnipeg\n04\n77.\n50\n04\n5.1\n73\n48\nM\n54\n70\n40\n60\n50\n01\n40\n02\n\u00ab\n59\n43\n57\n44\n78\n52\n74\n60\n80\n54\n78\nM\n80\n40\n\u2014\n47\n\u2014\n47\n77\n45\n\u2014\n.19\n76\n43\n61\n40\n61\n47\n60\n52 \u2022\n62\n53\n55\n54\n69\nForecast: Kootenay \u2014 Light variable winds, fair and warmer, low\nhumidity.\nNelion water level Thunday, 6.95.\nLerose Right lo\nTackleWaytella\nSays Magistrate\nTRAU, B. C, Juna 27 \u2014 The\ncharge of unlawfully assaulting Joe\nWaytella, occasioning bodily harm,\nlaid against Rosario Leroie u result of an altercation In the Palm\nPool Room, Rossland Avenue, ou\nJune 16, wu dismissed by Magistrate\nParker Williams ta City Police\nCourt Thunday afternoon.\nWaytella, Louie Carriente, clerk\nIn the poolroom, Mike Georgette,\nDr. D. J M. Crawford, and Conitable Joaeph McMlllen testified\ndrinking. Then he dropped the bot-\nconducted by F. H. Steele, Acting\nChief ot Police. Lerose was the only\ndefence witness. Leslie Baker wu\ncounsel tor the accused.\nCALLED STOOL PIGEON '\nWaytella claimed that when be\nentered the premises, Lerose uked\nhim to tell Joe Primo, if he aaw\nhim, that Leroie wanted to aee\nhim. He replied to Lerose that he\ncould find Primo himself, u he did\nwhen he wanted anyone. Waytella\nsaid Lerose called him Primo'a stool\npigeon, which itarted an argument,\nfrom which the fight resulted. Waytella aald Leroie hit him two or\nthree timet on the head with a\nbottle.\nLeroie itated he had entered the\npremises with I. Georgette to talk\nover aome business, and that tbey\nsat down at a table near a window\nto have a soft drink. He said he\naaked Waytella when he entered,\nto let him know if he aaw Primo.\nHe iaid Waytella bad replied:\n\"What do you think I am, a stool\nplgeont\"\nBush Heads Salmo\nValley Drive for\nWar Certificates\nSAI\/MO. B. C, June 27-A War\nSavings Certlflcatei drive, with e\nhouie to house canvass hu been\norganised ln the Salmo Valley and\nArchie Bush hu been named Drive\nChairman.\nThe a committee la arranging for\na headquarten office at Salmo\nwhere committee meetings can be\nheld and advertising matter and\nrcation forms can be obtained,\nmines ln the Erie area are\narranging their own canvau.\nThe Salmo committee will comprise Mn. Carl Lindow, North of\nthe railway track; Mn. Don Aldis,\nSouthwest section; Mn. Doug Gibboni, Southeast section; and Mn.\nAlex Hearn, Central section. The\nYmir 'committee wtll be Mn. Allan John, Mri. R. A. Barron and Mn.\nR. B. McKay, -and ln Sheep Creek\nMn. Harry Lanen will be ln charge.\nTennis Club Runs\nOff Tournament\nat Grand Forks\nBRITAIN RUMORED\nSEEKING UNITY\nIN IRELAND\nDUBLIN, June 28 \u2022 (Friday V\n(CP). \u2014 A itatement ln the\nEire Senate by Vice-Premier\nSean O'Mally that the question\nof the Eire-Ulster border la\nagain under consideration haa\ngiven rise to rumors that rBit-\naln may be seeking union ot all\nIreland for defence.\nO'Mally told the Senate Wedneiday It would not be \"edvli-\nable\" to iay more \"at thia time\"\nbut reliable sources disclosed\ntoday that meetings, guarded\nwith secrecy, have been held\nalong the border.\nGRAND FORKS. B. C.-One of\nthe   most  sueceuful   tournament!, m. \u00ab_.-._.*.,, \u2022__...\u2022 -... ~ ..-\u2014,\never held in Grand Forki wai itag-1 and completing them to make one\ned  on  Sunday  by  Grand  Forki bar of a certain (liven time. The pu\nCentral, Hume\nPiano Classes\nStage Concert\nBefore a large number of admiring parenta and friendi, members\nof the piano clause of Hume and\nCentral Schools staged a fine concert at the Central School Wednesday evening, under the direction ot\nMiss Amelia Hanna, their teacher.\nClasses I and II of Central played a game ot finding notes, a drill\ntn giving names of notea when\npointed out The two schools did\nseveral exercises such as putting in\nthe bar-lines, adding tails to notes,\nTennis Club, over 30 playen took\npart   In   three   contests,   mixed\ndoubles,   and   ladles'   and   men's\nsingles. Champions were Mn. Aihby, Maurice Kllnkhamer and Misi\nSimmons and Howie McPhee. Play .\nlasted all day with the ladies' singles the piano,\nfinal being plaved Monday and tha,   The program follows:\nmen's on Tueiday. I   Clan I Central, flnt year puplli\nHefrethmenti were ierved during -Thompson's \"The Long Trail and\nthe afternoon by Mn- Plncott, Miu, \"Stepping Stones\" by Noreen Hed-\nPhyllii Simmons and Miss Iris Vye.! ley;   Thompson's   \"The   Jugglers\"\nplls clapped 0thmnousing nuriery\nrhymei and decided the time signature, then gave tbe note values for\neach meuure.\nKeith    Stainton    transposed    a\npiece Into another key at light at\nMEN'S SINGLES\nFint round \u2014 Eric Atwood defaulted to Norman Hull; Bert Dif-\nfin beat P Johnson 10-0. M. Kllnkhamer beat Bert Clark 10-6.\nSecond round\u2014Norman Hull beat\nBernard McPherson 10-5; J. T. Simmons lost to Bob MacKay 10-3; Bert\nDtffin beat Chester Hutton 10-1;\nJ. Little beat H- Ritchie 10-7; Howie\nand \"The Swans on the Lake\" by\nNorma Cummins; Thompson's \"My\nBonnie\" and \"Runaway River\" by\nLaura Livingstone; Thompson's\n\"Home on the Range\" and \"Hunter's\nHorn\"; Wigwam Dance by Class I.\nHume School, first year pupils-\nThompson's \"The Fairy Court\" by\nKeith Buchanan; Thompson's\n\"Spring Song\" by Thelma McEwen;\nThompson's \"The Singing Mouse\"\nMcPhee beat Bob -Spurr 10-7; O.. by Keith Stainton\nMitchell defeated K. Pincott 10-8; I Hume, secind year-Thompson's\nM. Kllnkhamer won from R. G. \"Skyscraper\" and \"Dublin Town\"\nRitchie 10-3. by Don Kettlewell.\nThird round\u2014Bert DU fin beat i Central, second year \u2014 Duval's\nBob MacKay 10-4; Howie McPhee \"Southern Nights\" and Thompson's\ndefaulted to J. Utile: M. Kllnk- \"Fairies' Harp\" by Lois Anne Hed-\nhamer best O. Mitchell 10-8. I ley;   Hoist's   \"Three   and   Twenty\nSeml-finali \u2014 Bert Dtffin won pintu\" by Alfred Andenon;\nfrom Norman Hull 10-1; Maurice Thompson's arrangement of \"Dark\nKllnkhamer won from J. Little 10-6. Eyet\" and \"Haberna Carmen\" by\nFinal \u2014 M Kllnkhamer won Anne Louise Wodal; Aubry's\nfrom Bert DiHIn 6-3, 6-1. I \"Wodland    Scene\"    and    \"Roses'\nSemi-finals \u2014 Simmoni and Mc- Dream\" by Donna Mae Walley; vo-\nPhee defeated Bickerton and Dif-  cal, Arnold's \"The Dandelion'1 and\nBOYS' CHOIR AT. BEACH\nPARTY PRESENTS A NEW\nTESTAMENT, RUTHERGLEN\nWinding up their 1939-40 aeuon\n\u2014the tenth of their career\u2014members of St. Paul's Boys' Choir with\ntheir gal pals enjoyed a merry\nbeach party at Bealby's Point Wed'\nnesday evening.\nConway Rutherglen, fint tenor\nIn the choir, who expects to leave\nNelson Saturday u a recruit, was\npresented with a New Testament\nby President Donald Beattie. He Is\nthe third Rutherglen boy to eniist,\nhis brother, Ted, also a tenor, having enlisted with his eldest brother.\nTudor, last week Ted was alto\npresented with a New Testament\nbefore he left Nelson.\nPresident Beattie and Mn. T. J. S.\nFerguson. Conductor of the choir,\npaid high tribute to Conway, stating\nthat his lou would be a\nblow to the choir. Rutherglen\nresnonded fittingly.\nStories of the Orient by Rev.\nFoster Hilliard, group singing with\nsolos by Donald Beattie and Sydney Horswill, and refreihmenti\nwere enjoyed by the gathering.\nThe evening closed with the\nsinging of \"Tapi\", after the group\nsang \"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow\nand gave three- rousing cheers and\na tiger for Rutherglen\n.1ST HAD BOTTLE\nIN IT '   -\u00bb\nHe noticed Waytella had been\ndrinking. Waytella came over to his\ntable and threw hii hat on lt and\nuid he'd ihow him who he wai.\nLeroie uid he had tried to \"cool\nWaytella off,\" laying there wu no\nreason to fight After ha had been\npushed a few timet, Waytella\nstruck him on the wrist, and then\non the left side of the face near Lhe\neye. When he wu hit on the face,\nhe said he lost his temper and\natruck out at Waytella with hii\nflit which wu still holding the\npop bottle from which he wu\ntor the prosecution, which wu\ntie on the floor,\n\u25a0 They clinched, he aald, and Mr.\nCarriente separated them. He then\nlett\nMr. Georgette Mid that Lerose\nhad asked the queition pertaining\nto Primo In a decent manner. He\nleft the premiiei before the fight\nitarted\nFORCE JUSTIFIED\nMagistrate Williami itated he wu\nnot Impreued with Waytella'i evidence but he wu with Mr. Georgette's. He contended that Waytella'i conduct wu unwarranted.\nHe uid he couldn't expect to provoke a tight and expect a man to\nrun away. He laid Leroie wu\njustified to uie the force he did to\nstop the onslaught of this attack.\nDr. Crawford told of treating\nWaytella for a cut on the head.\nLouie Carriente served the toft\ndrinks, but did not iee the fight\n\u25a0tart. He picked up the bottle and\nreturned it to a cue with othen\nof the ume kind.\nConstable McMillen told the court\nof his investigation after arriving\nat the scene.\ntin 10-9; Ashby and Little defeat\ned Mitchell and Simmons 10-5.\nFinals\u2014Simmons and McPhee defeated Little and Ashby (-3, 4-6, 6-3\nLADIES SINGLES\nFirat round \t\nMrs. Talbot J04; Mabel.ftwrfer beat song\" by Eddie Hedley; Bckiteln'i\nMrs. Wlebe; Pbyllli SrirfmorS lost \"jolly Roger\" and Elmenreich\"!,\nto Isabel Huffman 10-6; Berta MC-\nLeod defaulted to Dlly Sutherland; Mn. Simmons defaulted to\nRoma Donaldson; Elva Kidd de.\nfaulted to Joan Fetenen; Irene\nBickerton won from Iris Vye 10-3.\nSecond round\u2014Mn. Ashby beat\nMn. pincott 10-8; Mabel Euert>y de-\nfaulted to Isabel Huffman; Dolly\nSutherland won from Roma Donaldson; Irene Bickerton beat Joan\nPetersen 10-2\nSemi-final\u2014Mn Ashby beat Isa\nHap Hap Happy Day\" by Pat Birk'\nI beck;  B  Rubinstein's  'Tally-Ho!\"\nand Handel's \"Air\" by Ruth Cham-\nben; vocal, Thlman'i \"The Lady-\nI bird\"   and   Taylor's  \"Robin   Red-\n, breait\" by    Donna Mae   Walley;\n' M?', ft*'?  _**\\ Bach'i \"Intrata\" and Dunhill'i \"Sea\nUy   Roger\"\n\"Spinning Song\" by Pat Birkbeck.\nRossland Calls\nfor Canvassers\nwon from ,ren\u00ab Bickerton 10-2. \u00a3^~ ^LS-Wtr \\tt\nnigs campaign committee, held\nWednesday evening.\nThe city hu been divided Into\nfive zones, covering the electoral\n ,_ divisions  of  the  recent  election.\nand Bernard McPherson. 10-.; Bob S^lc' I _- J? charge of Gilbert\nwon from Irene Bickerton 10-2.\nFinals \u2014 Mn. Ashby won from\nDolly Sutherland 6-1, 6-1.\nMIXED DOUBLES\nFlnt  round \u2014 Phyllli   Simmons\nand Howie McPhee beat Iris Vye\nMacKay and Isabel Huffman beat\nRuby Wiebe and Chester Hutton\n10-1; Irene.Blckerton and Bert Dif-\nfin beat Mn Talbot and J. T. Simmons 10-5; Mn. Pincott and Bob\nSpurr beat Joan Petersen and R.\nG. Ritchie 10-7; Mn. Simmoni ind\nO. Mitchell beat Berta McLeod and\nEarl Bickerton (default); Dolly\nSutherland and K. Pincott beat\nMabel Euerby and Hume Ritchie\nHunt, L. E. E. Hamilton, F. E. Piper,\nand Fraser Mitchell; diitrlct i in\ncharge of W. A. Darby and Howard\nBayley; district 3 ln charge of S. R.\nDavies, King ComesotU and Robert\nCrane; district 4 in charge of Aid.\nJ. R. Corner and L. J. Nicholson,\nand district 5 in charge of F. L.\nFletcher and A. E. Walters.\nThe object for the campaign ls to\nobtain   individual   pledges   from\n10-4;~Mri.\" A2_y~and*-. Little beat I Rossland citizens to buy war say:\nTrail's Largest\nDraft Off Today\nTRAIL, B.C., June 27\u2014The seventh and largest draft of recruits\nfrom Trail will leave Friday, Major\nA. C. Sutton, Recruiting Officer for\nKootenay West, itated Thursday.\nThe Trail draft will comprise 49\nmen, the largest previous one being\n38.\nMajor Sutton will leave for Nelson Immediately after the departure\nof Trail recruits.\nNITE BALL\nINTERNATIONAL\nBaltimore 1, Montreal 8.\nJersey City 7, Toronto 10.\nNewark 8-4, Buffalo 4-2.\nSyracuse 3, Rochester 4.\n60 German Cities\nRaided by British\nLONDON, June 27 (CP).-The\nRoyal Air Force hu raided 60\nIndustrial cities ln Germany and\nGerman-occupied territories ilnce\nlast Saturday, the day tbe German-French armistice wu ilgned,\nit wu announced tonight\nThe announcement wu made\nover the facilities ot the British\nBroadcasting Corporation.\nCoast Couple Killed\nMERRITT, B. C, June 27 (CP).\n\u2014Mr. and Mn. Morley J. McCOmb\nof Vancouver were killed tonight\nwhen their automobile plunged\ndown a 200-foot embankment 10\nmiles South of Spencers bridge.\nMn. Plncott ind Norman Hull 10-L\nSecond round\u2014Phyllli Simmoni\nand Howie McPhee beat Isabel\nHuffman and Bob MacKay 10\nIrene Bickerton and Bert Diffori\nbeat Bob Spurr and Mn Plncott\n10-4; Mrs. Simmons and O. Mitchell\nbeat Dolly Sutherland K. Pincott\n10-7; Mrs. Ashby and J. Little beat\nRoma Donaldson and M. Klinkham\ner 10-7.\nKelowna Regatta to\nAssist War Effort\nKELOWNA, B.C., June 27 (CP)-\nAnnual regatta of the Kelowna\nAquatic Association, largest West of\nthe Great Lakes, will do lta bit toward assisting the war effort this\nyear, according to Secretary-Manager R. F. Parkinson.\nEfforts are being made to obtain\nmore entries than ever before, and\nall profits will be turned over to\nthe Government or will go to assistance of war charities.\nLADY CONAN DOYLE DIES\nLONDON, June 28 - (Frldiy) \u25a0\n(AP). \u2014 Lady Conan Doyle, widow\nof Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, tne\ncreator M Sherlock Holmu, died\nIn London Thursday.\nLORD NUFFIELD WILL\nSPEAK ON RADIO TODAY\nVANCOUVER, June 27 (CP). -\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation\nwill carry a ipeech by Lord Nut-\nfield at 2:15 p.m. POT tomorrow\nover iti national network.\nBRITISH UNIT RETURNS\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-A mining British ambulance unit commanded by the novelist Mary Borden arrived In England today from\nFrance.\n13-YEAR-OLD  DROWNS\nCOURTENAY, B. C, June 27 (CP)\n\u2014Mike Donovick, 13, wu drowned\ntoday when he slipped Inlo a deep\nhole In the Puntledge River while\nfishing with a friend.\ntag certificates which can be paid\nby salary reduction, or by Individual remittances through the Bank\nof Montreal.\nSalary deductloni for imeltermen\nwlU be taken care of under the\nConsolidated Mining It Smelting\nCompany'! recently announced\nacheme, and dependents and faml-\nliei will be encouraged to accept\npenonal responsibility for their\nown uvlngs.\nGovernment pledge cards have\nbeen ordered, and u soon as they\narrive the campaign, planned for\none week, will get underway. An\nextensive publicity drive will be\nconducted in conjunction with the\ncanvass.\nPledges will be for war saving\ncertificates only, and will not be\nmerged into Red Cross pledges or\nfor other war charities, and the\ncommittee is endeavoring to secure\na targe number of voluntary canvassers to make sure the entire\ncity Is covered. V. M. Van, Secretary of the commtitee, will receive\nany volunteer applications at his\noffice.\nA general meeting of all canvassers is called for Wednesday evening.\nBritish Bombed Oil\nTanks Report Nazis\nBERLIN, June 28 (Friday)\u2014(OP).\n\u2014D.NB, German News Agency, today acknowledged that British\nplanu bombed oil tanks at Hanover yesterday, starting flrea. The\nagency, which circulates German\nGovernment propaganda, claimed\nseveral persons were killed and\nwounded.\nThe agency claimed one ot tbe\ntwo bomben, which dived trom\nthe cloudi to make the attack, wat\nihot down.\nDIANA DEMOCRATS\nENDORSE THIRD TERM\nINDIANAPOLIS, June 27 (AP>-\nThe Indiana Democratic Convention\ntoday renominated, by acclamation.\nUnited Statei Senator Sherman\nMinton, ardent new dealer, after\nendorsing Pruident Roosevelt tor\na third term. The endonement camo\nin a last-minute plank.\nConservatives of\nBritain Reaffirm\nResolve lo Fight\nLONDON, June 28 (Friday)\n(CP)\u2014The powerful Conservative\nparty today formally branded ap-\npeuement talk u \"obviously Inspired trom Fifth Column\nsources,\" and \"emphatically reaffirmed its whole-hearted resolve\"\nto support the Churchill Government In their determination to\nwin the war.\"\nThe itatement wai iuued upon\nauthority of Neville Chamberlain,\nmember of the five-man war\ncabinet, leader of the Conservative party and Mr. Churchill'! pre-\ndecessor ta office.\nThe itatement followed by one\nday a itatement in authoritative\nLondon circles that Britain expected a German-Inspired drive aimed\nat trying to persuade neutrals that\nBritain could not achieve victory.\nThe itatement uid suggestions the\nConiervative party \"it not united\nand that a powerful section headed\nby Mr. Neville Chamberlain ls prepared to come to terms with Hitler\" were \"obviously Inspired from\nFifth Column sources.\"\nIt said such rumors have lately\ntained   currency   ta   the   United\ntates.\nParliament and the nation are\nunited hi their will to complete the\ntask to which they have set their\nhand, the statement uid.\nTrail Board Asks\nWorkAllolment\nPaterson Highway\nt TRAIL, B. C, June 27\u2014Aa it had\nbeen informed by W. K. Etling, M\nP. for Kootenay Wett that $600,000\nhad been allocated by the Federal\nGovernment for the development\nof tourist highways on a 50-50 basis\nwith the Province, the Council of\nthe Trail Board of Trade recommended that the Department ot\nPublic Worki be urged to do some\nwork thii year on the Paterson\nhighway; that a letter to this effect\nbe sent to the Minister ot Public\nWorks; and that a copy be sent to\nR. R. Burni, M.L.A., Rossland-Trail.\nThe recommendation wu unanimously approved..\nWilson Sentenced\nToday for Having\nPossession, Watch\nAfter he pleaded guilty to charges\nof retaining possession of a stolen\nwatch, Frank Wilson wu remanded\nin custody until todty for sentencing when he appeared before Police\nMagistrate William Brown Thursday. The watch was allegedly stolen from Mrs. Francis Rossi at\nCranbrook.\nWilson first uked for a two-\nweeks adjournment to obtain witnesses and a lawyer, but changed\nhis plea to \"guilty.\"\nGENEVA BOMBED BY\nBRITISH IN ERROR\nBERN, Switzerland, June 27 (AP)\n\u2014Switzerland announced today receipt of a note from Britain stating\nthat planes which bombed the Geneva-Lausanne area June 12, killing\nseven persons and Injuring 28, were\nBritish planes whose pilots believed\nthey still were over Italian territory. Britain said she would make\nreparations for the damsges.\nResponse to War\nSavings Campaign\nExcellent Already\nResponse of builnett firms tnd\nIndlvlduils to the War Sivings\nCertificate! campaign bad already\nbeen excellent though only a faw\nof the 18 teams had ttsrted their\ncanvau, itated Chairmen E, A.\nMann, Thunday. \"Tie other teami\nwere expected to atart work today,\nMr. Minn aald. It wu expected they\nwould be finished by next Wednesday.\nPiano Pupils of\nMiss Hanna Give\nConcert, Trinity\nA large audience heard a delightful concert Tuesday evening ln\nTrinity Church Hall presented by\nthe private piano pupils of Miss\nAmelia Hanna, Tuesday night.\nThe program, consisting of piano\nselection! except where otherwlie\nitated, followi: Behr'i \"Lilac Fairy\"\nby Betty Wassick; Offenbach's \"Barcarolle\" by Frances Turner; Kohl-\ner's \"Sonatina\" by Joe Hielscher;\nvocal, Haydn's \"Ave Verum\" and\nWood's \"Dreams\" by Joan Nagle;\nGrieg's \"National Song\" by Connie\nHammond; Bach's \"Minuet ln D\nMinor\" and Kullak's \"Dance on\nGreen\" by David Story; Gretchanln-\noff's \"The Tin Soldiers in Camp\"\nand \"Riding Away on the Hobby\nHorse\" and, Bach's \"Gavotte\" by\nJoan Nagle; vocal, Welsh folk song,\n\"The Ash Grove\" and folk song,\n\"There Stands a Little Man\" by\nLavlna Stilwell; Mozart's \"Sonatina\"\nand Voomolen's \"March of the\nSwans\" by Rose Beattie; Niemann's\n'Willy and the Wind\" and \"The\nMermaid in the Shell\" by Lavlna\nStilwell; vocal, A. A. Milne's \"Missing\" by Betty Waulck; Kuhlau's\n\"Rondo\" by Gwen Clark; Frederick\nKiel's \"Bolero\" by Betty Brown;\nvocal, Schubert's \"German Dances\"\nand Plere Vellone's \"The Green Lizard\" and \"The Sand Jlea\"; Engle-\nman's \"The Whirling Dervish\" by\nEvelyn Hammond; vocal, Elliott's\n\"Spring Bells\" and Nevln's \"Little\nBoy Blue\" by Betty Brown; Beethoven's \"Fur Elise\" and Schubert's\n\"Moment Musical\" by Shirley Robinson; Cyril Scott's \"Water Wag-\ntall\" and Debussy's \"The Little\nShepherd\" by Joyce Rees; Godow-\nsky's \"Alt Wein\" and Bilotti's \"Spanish Dance\" by Cecil Maloney; \"God\nSave the King\" by Evelyn Hammond.\nChildren Coming\nlo Canada, July\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP).-Pre-\nlimlnary plans for reception in\nCanada of thousands ot children\nseeking a refuge from war provide\nfor placing of about half of them in\nOntario and Quebec homes, it was\nsaid tonight at a conference of\nProvincial authorities with He-\nsources Minister T. A. Crerar.\nRemainder of the children will\nbe distributed throughout Canada\non a pro rata population basis, it\nwas added.\nMr. Crerar, whose department\nhu charge of Canadian plans for\nthe child migration, told the Commons the first batch of 3000 children from the war-threatened British Isles would arrive in the Dominion about the middle of July.\nOther groups of 750 would cintinue\nto arrive until July 25.\nmop ei nn\nChurch Softball\nSemi-finals lo\nStart Tonight\nFINAL STANDING\nW LDPts.\nSr. C.Y.O. 10\nJr., C.Y.O. 8\nTrinity   8\nBaptists\n2 1 21\n4 2 IB\n4 1 IT\n9 1 11\n6 2 10\nSt Paul's \t\nWith a victory over Baptlsti\nThunday, Junior C.Y.O. climbed into iecond place of the Nelion Men'i\nChurch Softball League in the latt\nleague game. They will now advance to a best of three serai-final\nseries with the team they displaced\nin second place, Trinity, starting tonight at 8 o'clock at the Junior\nHigh.   '\nThe second game of the series\nwill be played u part of the July\n1st celebrations at the Recreation\nGrounds in the afternoon, and it a\nthird- game Is necessary it will be\nplayed either Tuesday or Wednesday evening. \u2022\nThe finals between the wlnnen\nof the semis and Senior C.Y.O. will\nbe a best of five affair.\nDe Gaulle Tells\nFrench Be Firm\nLONDON, June 27 (CP). - Gen.\nCharles de Gaulle ln a broadcait\ndeclaration made \"In the name ot\nFrance\" tonight said every French*\nman who still has arms hu ''an absolute duty to' continue resistance.\"\n'To lay down arms, to evacuate\na military position, to agree to submit to enemy control any portion\nof French soil, any acre of French\npossessions, would be a crime\nagainst our country,\" he  said.\nHe told French soldlen to \"stand\nfirm\" and added: \"It would be Intolerable If the panic of Bordeaux\nwere to cross the sea.\"\nDe Gaulle, who hu repuc\"\\ted\nthe Petain Government for Its armistice with the Rome-Berlin axle,\nworked at high meed today to organize the French Legion he hope*\nwill carry on the public's war at\nBritain's side.\nGibbons Champion\nGolf Putting Test\nat Kin's Last Meet\nDavey Gibbons of boxla prowess\nproved himself a champ in another\nfield when he defeated a galaxy\nof golfers by winning a putting\ncompetition at the Nelson Golf _\nCountry Club Tuesday evening, lt\nwas a feature of the last meeting of\nthe Nelson Kinsmen Club for the\nSpring season. He dropped in 20-\nfoot putts with ease in competition\nwith such golfers as Dr. T. H.\nBourque, Walter Duckworth, J. B.\nStsrk and others. Lee Bates wat\nrunner-up.\nThree new members were Initiated by President T. S. Shorthouse\nand Initiation Chairman J. P. Horswill. They were Dr. Sidney N. Chodorcoff, John Stringer and John\nTowler.\nPresident Shorthouse reported\nthat the sale of Kinsmen \"Lick Hitler\" stamps was progressing favorably snd that a further order had\nbeen sent to national headquarters.\nFollowing a discussion on the proposed 1940 regatta, it wu left in\nthe hands of the Regatta Committee,\nhesded by T. C. (Buck) Lambert, lo\nfurther investigate the posslbilitlel\nof holding the water sports.\nThe Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd.\nIS DOING EVERYTHING IN ITS POWER TO AID IN\nCANADA'S WAR EFFORT\nHere is a statement by\nWallace R. Campbell, President of\nthe Ford Canadian Organization.\n\"At the outbreak of war I assured\nthe Canadian Government that Ford\nMotor Co. of Canada Ltd. would\nmake all its facilities available for\nthe production of essential v\nsupplies.\"\nHere Is What Ford of Canada Is Doing\n\u2022 50% of the production of the Ford plant at Windsor\nis on vehicles for military use\n\u2022 The Canadian plant is being tooled for the production of machine gun carriers\n\u2022 Anti-tank gun tractors, wireless trucks, water tank\ncarriers, ambulances, etc., are being manufactured\nat Windsor\n\u2022 War orders take priority in Ford plants oyer all com-\nmercial orders\nFord of Canada and Your Local Ford\nDealers Say: \"ON TO VICTORY\"\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS\nNelson's Ford Dealers\nSee today's Press dispatches for the complete Ford story\n]\n-*_..... ..:... \"^\u2022^-\u25a0^\u25a0^!^-^j^i|iV|f||||^M^lk\nm__i_______\n\u00bb\n' *\n PAOit  TWILV.\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION   I.\nC.-FRIDAY MORNINQ   JUN.   58. 1941V-\nItalians Claim\nSuccess in Raids\non Malta Bases\nROME. June J7 (AP)-Th Italian High Command's daily communique:\n\"Bomber formations have flown\nover Malta In waves, subjecting air\naad naval objectives on the island\nonce more to Intense destructive\naction. All our planes returned to\ntheir bases.\n(Twenty-three persons were killed when the Italian bombs tall into\nthe working class district, according to advices direct irom Malta.\nDamage was slight.\n\"In Northern Africa there wu\nrepeated air action against supply\ndumps and motorlted equipment.\nAll aircraft returned.\n\"Our warships have bombarded\nthe English base of Solium with\nconsiderable effect.\n\"Enemy air raids on Maasawa and\nAssab (In Italian East Africa) accomplished no result.\"\n(The R.A.F. ln Cairo aaid airport\ngasoline dumps at Macaaca had\nbeen hit but that lt was Impossible\nto ascertain the extent of damage\ndone. At Assab hangars and workshops were severely damaged.)\nNew Heavy Taxes\nin New Zealand\n1940 War Budget\nWELUNOTON.   June   27    (CP\nJeuters)\u2014Higher taxation, * national savings scheme and power\nto impose compulsory loans wera\n\u2022bounced by Finance Minister Walter Nash in presenting the New\nZealand budget in the Dominion\nParliament today.\nWar expenditure wu estimated\nat \u00a337.500,000 ((123,790,000), ot\nIWfcich \u00a319,758,000 ia for overseas\nexpenditure and \u00a317,750,000 for\ndisbursement within New Zealand.\nfee United Kingdom has agreed lo\nfinance the cost of the New Zealand\nforces overseas on a loan basis.\nA national security tax of a shil-\n|ng In tbe pound (five per cent) on\n\u202211 incomes in addition to the existing social security tax of one shilling In the pound.\nThe sales tax is doubled to 10\n\u25a0er cent\n\u25a0 Mr. Naih announced Introduction\nttt the national savings scheme for\nthe benefit of small investors and\nof three-year interest-free loans for\nlarger Investments. The Government also proposed to empower it-\neelf to compel, if necessary, the\nwealthy to subscribe appropriate\n\u2022mounts of war loans.\nIncome tax will be two shillings\nSix pence ln the pound for the first\njt 100 of taxable income instead ot\ntwo shillings as formerly. It will\nIncrease to 12 shillings in the pound\nfor Incomes above \u00a33800.\nMr. Nash said he would submit\nto Parliament later proposals empowering transfer to the state of\ntie whole of any excess profit made\nduring the war.\nSurplus for the last financial year\nwu \u00a3319,000. The public debt in-\nereased by nearly \u00a319,000,000.\ngs<\nLaPointe Calls\nAd a \"Dastardly\nAttack\" on King\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP)-An ad-\nertisement headed \"Calling Canada\"\nwhich appeared in certain newspa-\nira constituted a \"dastardly at-\nck\" on Prime Minister Mackenzie\ntag, Justice Minister Lapointe told\nfee House of Commons today.\n\"I am not prepared to say that lt\ntomes under the Detence of Canada\nRegulations dealing with jubersive\nfitments.\" said Mr. Lapointe, \"but\ndon't know of anything better\ncalculated to create disaffection and\nhamper the war work of Canada.\"\nThe advertisement dealt with the\nSnsportation of British children to\nnada end charged that Mr. King\nwag an obstacle to that movement.\nIt wee brought to the attention of\nfee House by Paul Martin (Lib., Es-\n\u2022ex East).\nMINISTERS CONFER\nON REFUGEE PROBLEM\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP)\u2014Provln-\ntlal ministers arriving here today\nlor a conference with Resources\nMinister Crerar concerning Canadian homes for British children,\n\u25a0aid they sought information from\nfee Federal Government concerning\nthe number of refugees and facilities for transportation\nWelfare Minister Cross of Ontario,\nprovincial Secretary Weir of B.C.,\nHon. A. T. Procter of Saskatchewan\nand Health Minister Cross of Alberta attended the conference.\nV. S. Civil War Period Stressed in Bridal Brasses\nFERNIE SCHOOL PROMOTIONS\nLEFT TO RIGHT, ANN SHERIDAN, VIRGINIA BRUCE, MIRIAM HOPKINS\nThe U. 8. Civil war period is strongly stressed ln\nthe costumes 1940 June brides are wearing. If you\nwant to have grandmother's wedding dress remodeled, these photographs will give you some idea of\nhow to streamline it for today's needs. It you prefer\nstrictly up-to-date styling ln your wedding gown,\nAnn Sheridan shows you the latest modern style\ndress in ivory satin with three-panel bodice ahd\npeplum caught into the waistline with self-fabric\nbelt. The skirt Is full at back, ending In a long\nsquared train, while orange blossoms fasten the tulle\nveil and drape the prayer book. Creamy white net\nfashions Virginia Bruce's lovely gown, with girdle\nof white taffeta ribbon and an over-skirt edged with\ntwo-Inch niching. The veil is white tulle. Miriam\nHopkins shows the Civil War period gown in shell\npink slipper satin, a 10-inch acordton pleating edging the skirt and a scalopad lacc-oversklrt ln cream\nlace, caught with cluster of orange blossom.\n'FTONIE, B.C.\u2014The Fefrnie Elementary Schools promotion lists follows:\nTrom Grade VI to Grade VII -\nGertrude Crossfield, Stella McLennan, Kathleen Turner, Eugene Steinert, Bobert Dally, Helen Larner,\nBill Eckerslye, Frank Delure, Margaret Kubenic, Frances Cockburn,\nAngelo Glgilotti. Donald Wilson.\nSprlak. Morris MacKenzie, Ronald\nBenn, Bill Commons, Martha Bad-\nlik, Frank Pearce, Marion Donovon\nRoy Smith, Roger Fabi, Letitla Uphill, Grace Pascuzzi, Reggie Mc-\nBean, Jean Quail, Annie Zaporozon,\nJune Smith, Virginia Bossio, Clifford Lindenberger, Anna Pennington, Nick Badanlc, Avalon Castle,\nIrene Latak, Mike Melnik, Angelo\nPascuzzi, Roberta Fowler, Ruth\nPolnton, Fred Marasco, Lawrence\nSharun, Lillian Hunt, Melvln Nei-\ndig, Betty Slalne, Frank Nee, end\nLily Gilmour.\nFrom Grade V to Grade VI ->\nLouise Glgilotti, Tommy Eckeraley,\nBernard Peterson, Raymond Candy,\nErnest Baker, Jean Tully, Steve\nPozniak, Robert Hockley, Mildred\nAtherton, Helen Ml6Covltch, Florence Delure, Awdrle Elkington,\nJosephine Carolla, George Elmes,\nHarold Neldig, Reid Gilmour, Douglas Vanlerberg, Lorraine Prosser,\nJoe Siriannl, Bill Komarevlch, Norma Common, Leslie Kosiec, Jimmie\ndowers. Kathleen Shaw, Ronald\nNee, Leslie Minifie, Alice Smith,\nRose Gallina, Frances Sosnowski,\nArnold Broster, Jean Shlngar, Roderick Smith, Melville Walshaw,\nTome Cole, Janet Leu, Catherine\nWilson, Raffle Marasco, Betty May,\nBillie Benn, Steve Servello, Angelina Fabi, Edward Borlsuk, Jack\nCutts, Mike Naccarato, Ralph Spels-\nberg, Louis Marasco, Dahlia Servello.\nFrom Grade IV to Grade V \u2014\nDaisy Parnell, Billy Siriannl, Catherine Thomson, Agnes Auguson, Doreen Biggs, Leon Rushcall, Mona\nThomson, Billy Shypltka, Margot\nMcKenzie, John Clrlanni, Bobby\nBarclay, Edna Edgar, Ruth Thomson, Muriel Polnton, Jim Borlsuk.\nKen Markland. Ena Wilson, Eddie\nDutka, Jim Lewis, Helen Badanlc,\nNorman Crossfield, Eileen Dalles,\nDoreen Elmes, Mary Jurczak, Ken\nGaskell. Wilfred LaLonde, Marlon\nLees, Norma Polnton, Yvonne Smith,\nR. A. F. Bombs Nazi Factories,\nRefineries, Docks and Bridges\nLONDON, June _7 (CP)-Brltlsh\nbombers hava made new \"very\nheavy attacks\" on \"various military\nobjectives in the Ruhr,\" aviation\ncircles said today.\nIn daylight raids over Germany\nyesterdsy one plane penetrated East\nof the Ruhr snd scored a hit on the\ncentre of an oil plant, these circles\nsaid.\nThe Air Ministry's bulletin:\nYesterday R.A.F. bombers made\ndaylight raids into Germany In spite\nof enemy tighter attacks.\n\"An oil plant at Gelsenklrchen\nand railway sidings at Soest wera\nbombed. One of our aircraft is missing.\n\"Other bombers attacked the\ndocks, lock gates and bridges ol\nWillemsoord and Genemuiaen in\nHolland. Two of our bombers are\nmissing.\nATTACK AIR BASH\n\"Today our bombers again raided\nGermany in daylight An oil refinery at Misburg near Hanover was\nhit ahd fires started. Other bombers\nattacked oil refineries at Bremen\nand a factory near Salzberge. All\nour aircraft returned safely.\n\"During last night further bombing operations were carried out.\nOur aircraft attacked seaplane bases\nat Texel and Helder and airdromes\nat Schipol, Wallhaven and Deekoy\nin Holland.\n'Airdromes at Dortmund and\nPonn and at Handord near Munster\nand Langhenhagen near Hanover\nwere also bOmbed.\n\"Attacks were made on an oil\nrefinery at Cologne and on an explosive factory at Ludwigshafen\nnear Mannheim.\n\"Marshalling yards and railway\njunctions at Omabruck, Rheydt,\nHamm and Soest were hit.\n\"This morning our fighter patrols\nover France attacked two enemy\naircraft, one of which was destroyed.\n\"Four members of the crew of a\nHeinkel bomber that took part in\nthe raids on this country Wednesday\nnight were landed at an Eut coast\nport today. It is thus confirmed that\nthree enemy bombers were destroyed in these operations. A fourth is\nknown to have been seriously damaged.\"\nU. S. Lays Keel of\nSuper Warship\nWASHINGTON, June 37 (AP)-\nThe United States laid down the\nkeel of Its first 45,000-ton super-\ndreadnaught today and on a less\ndramatic defence front sought vast\nstores ot strategically vital rubber\nand t|n, rour huge capital ships\nwill be built\nThe start of work on ths battleship Iowa at the Brooklyn navy\nyard and the opening of negotiations by the Reconstruction Finance\nCorporation for essential war mate-\nrials typified the'divergent activity\nof the preparedness program.\nJAPAN CENDARMIE\nIN CONCESSIONS\nLONDON, June .27 (CP)-An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Tientsin today said the Japanese gendarmerie had established offices In\nthe British and French concessions\nof the North China port in accordance with agreements recently\nreached with Tokyo ending the\nJapanese blockade of the concessions.\nNails Repel Weak Attacks on French\nCoast They Say; Sub Claims Huge Toll\nBERLIN, June 57 (API-Today's\nGerman High Command communique:\n\"In accordance with the armistice\ntreaty, our troops advanced as far\nas the Dordogne sector East of Bordeaux.\n\"Reconnaissance attacks ot weak\nenemy naval forces on the Northern\ncoast of Frsnce during the night of\nJune 24-25 were easily repulsed.\n(Casualties were inflicted on the\nenemy and valuable Information\nobtained in these raids.)\n\"A submarine reported the sinking of 35,000 tons of enemy shipping space.\n\"In the course  of the night of\nJune 28-27 (Mrman fighting planes\nagain successfully bombed port establishments and buildings of the\nairplane industry In England. One\nof our own planes failed to return.\n(Two German plane> were shot\ndown, according to the British Air\nMinistry. Damage was slight).\n\"British planes last night again\nresumed bombings In Western Germany without causing military\ndamage. Several civilians were killed or Injured. Two British planes\nwere shot down by anti-aircraft and\nanother by chasers.\"\n(The British Air Ministry said\nthe industrial region of the Ruhr\nwas heavily bombed. One bomb hit\nthe centre ot an oil plant.)\nTravellers the World Over\nJ LOOK FOR THE\n| HD LABEL OH\nI SQIMII lOtUS\nstick to\nI JOHNNIE JVALKER\n... because they know their Scotch\nRed Label, 26',_ oi. f3.75; 40 oi. SUM\nBlack Label Over 12 yeara old.\n. . _\u2014__.\n1-40     .\nDistilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland\nThis advt. Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Govt of British Columbia\nBritain Prepares\nto Take Offensive\nAgainst Enemies\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-Great\nBritain is looking forward to taking\nthe offensive in the war against the\nGerman-Italian axis, Minister ot\nSupply Herbert Morrison Indicated\nin tne House of Commons today.\n\"We have concentrated quite properly on immediate production, he\nsaid, \"but we ere not going to forget the long view,\n\"We all hope that this period of\nthe last few weeks will in due\ncourse change, and we must think\nof long-term policies end of offensive as well as defensive policies.\"\nMr. Morrison disclosed that the\nBritish output'of \"cruiser\" and Infantry tanks for June was 115 per\ncent greater than in April.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u2014The Kimberley Ski Cabin was the scent\nof a delightful party and welner\nroast Saturday evening when a\nnumber of young people gathered\nto celebrate Arthur McLtocf s birthday. The evening was spent in\ngames followed by a presentation\nof a gift to Arthur from those present. This was followed by a welner\nand marshmallow roast. Those Invited included the Misses Marlon\nDeltz, Marcella Aldrlgde, Marvel\nWiley, Marcella Wiley, Maxine Wiley, Jetnette McLeod, Janet Jackson, Pauline Mahaffey, Phyllis Miller, Jean Graham, Eileen Jenkins,\nShirley Granger, Betty McLeod,\npatsy Palm, Margaret Raynor, Aileen Westgate and Martin Hanson,\nIra Olsen, Ray Moe, Irvin Moe, J.\nHagen Gordon Dickson, Otto Scribe,\nIrllng Edwards, Herb Edwards, H.\nLlndqulst and Larry Musser.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Wright accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Hunter\nMcLure spent the weekend at St.\nMary's Lake.\nMrs. J. J. Rollhelser end Mrs. r.\nJ. Kocevar, were Joint hostesses at\nthe latter's home recently when\n. they entertained at a miscellaneous\nI shower in honor of Miss Mary Stepping. Court whist was played, the\nprises going lo Mrs. G. Wanuck,\nfirst; Mrs. B. Fabro, second, and\nMrs. *f. Ridell, consolation. A dainty\nlunch was served, after which little Jeanette Rollhelser presented\nthe guest of honor with a decorated\nbuggy laden with lovely and useful\nlifts. Miss Steppllng thanked the\nladies. Those present were Mra. F.\nWasilleu, Mrs. M. Koper, Mrs. J.\nOlennle, Mrs. P. Ridell, Mrs, T.\nLambert, Mra. G. Wanuck, Mrs. B.\nFabro, Mrs. E. Jones, Mrs. O. Saat-\nela, Mrs. K. McKay, Mrs. G. Krot-\nner, Mrs. B. Browne, Mrs. A. Johnson, Miss Annette Fontaine, Miss\nRita Fontaine,. Miss Bertha Phillips, Miss Mary Steppllng, Mrs. J.\nJ. Rollhelser and Mrs. F. J. Kocevar. _>q\nMr. and Mrs. Port and two children, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. McGlnnls\nMr. and Mra. P. A. McKim, Mrs. R.\nSmith and son and Alex Johnson\nwere Kingsgate visitors.\nMrs. D. Whellam and Mrs. O.\nOram, are spending a holiday at\nFairmont Hot Springs.\nEric Leveque and Arthur Nichola\nwere visiters to Creston, the latter\nvisiting with his family.\nMrs. Harrison of Cranbrook was\nthe guest of Mrs. potter of Blarchmont\nJim Pratt accompanied ,hy Miss\nBessie McLaren and Mrs. MbLaren,\nspent the weekend in Trail.\nMiss Margaurite Hotchkiss lett\nfor a month's visit in Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. Bowness of Cranbrook, accompanied by Mr. and\nMra. J. H. Campbell and daughter,\nViola, were rort Steele vlaitore on\nSunday.\nDougal McNIven of Calgary has\ntaken ut) reeidence here His wife\nand family will follow later.\nB. C. ITALIANS UNABLE\nTO INHERIT WEALTH\nVICTORIA, Jime 27 (CP) - No\nItalian nationals may henceforth\nreceive property or wealth in B.C.\nHelen Goralskl, Russell White, Don-\naid Peters, Eddie Darshawskl, Archie Anderson, Albert Anselmo, Tony\nPuppln.\nftom Grade IH to Grade IV -\nFrancis Hockley, Jack Uphill, Wilfred Wllliama, Kenneth Gibson.\nAlice Clowen, Margaret Haile, Pat\nDonovon, Betty McNay, Dick Bryant Victor Marasco, Ella Potekal,\nBill Slemko, Mary Gredxuk, Willie\nBossio, John Badanlc, Norma Bossio.\nGladys Matt, Henna Pozniak, Norma Bartlett Bill Whalley, George\nLetcher, Raymond Albo, Mike Kom\narevlch, Gordon Manning, Douglas\nTurner, Yvonne Nordstrom, Lorraine Hartley BUI Corrigan, Jack\nWhitelaw, Ronald Cole,\nFrom Grade II to Grade III\u2014Mar-\ngaret Ratkowski, John Ptucha,\nMarion Whltt, Olga Cutts, John\nFleming, Jimmy Marasco, Ann Lam\ner, Kenneth Morley, Lenore Galloway, Leona McKenzie, Billy Mogltl-\nka, Roland Servello, Esther Whalley.\nRobert'Duthie, Henry Miscovitch,\nAlex Grediuk, John Grand, Ronald\nNeidig, Bobby Corrigan, Alan Barclay, Harold Brewer, Robert Shypltka, May Broster, Dahlia LaLonde,\nFrank Albo, Phyllis Cocknurn.\nRalph Guzzi, Emily Glowers, Helen\nDunlop, Ronald Polnton, George\nKubos, Douglas Prosser, Eddie Cir!-\nanni, Angelo Picco, Betty White.\nDorothy payne, Betty Bean, Doreen\nHockley, Raymond Chlvers, Carl\nKnlert, Audrey Fowler, Betty Elkington, Lena Cesarln, Jimmy Robertson, Leonard Kopchiak, Gordon\nPeten, Kenneth Ashmore.\nFrome Grade I to Grade II\u2014Edward Rushcall, Sophie Culplk, Mary\nBachlef, Gordon Lewis, Doreen\nBroster, Jimmy Robson, Patti Whalley, Ronald Price, Louis Bossio, Sam\nMarasco, Cecile Kubos, Grenny Up\nhill, Ellgio Lozza, Kenneth Hunt\nBessie Tolley, Billy Slalne, Gabrlela\nCretonl, Georgina McNay, Billy\nKennedy, Shirley Uphill, Barbara\nHunter, Mildred McKeown, Angela\nDalles, Shirley Bryant Florence\nSmith, Joan Letcher, Mildred Commons, Phillip Ray, Roy Eckeraley,\nMargaret Parker, Marion Bean, Dorothy Latak, Jean Markland, Donald\nWhittaker, George Irwin, Mike\nSamardak Margaret Becker, Leslie\nClowers, George Wilson, Stephen\nShypltka, Mary Marasco, Jack\nBrown, J. Buchanan, Berry Creek.\nTells of Nightmare\nRescue of Friend\nLONDON, June J7 (CP Cable)-\nMarcel Porchon ot Montreal, clerk\nof the Canadian Legation in Paris,\ntold today following his arrival in\nLondon how he dashed through the\nGerman and French lines to rescue\na friend from Paris sfter the Germans had entered tbe capital.\nWhen Porchon reached Tours, the\nflnt provisional capital Of the\nFrench Government with the rest\nof the staff of the Canadian Legation, he was told that a friend. Louis\nRelamey of the Canadian National\nRailways staff in Paris, bad been\nleft behind.\nHe drove madly through side\nroads and reached the Porte d'Or-\nleans entrance to the city ae tba\nGermans were preparing to enter\nthrough tha Porte de Lilae on the\nother side of the capital\n\u2022\u2022Parir wu like a ghost town, but\nhere and there e cafe was open,\"\nPorchon said. \"I found my wife,\nRejamey and hla brother, and we\ndecided there was nothing to do but\nto takt It calmly. -\n\"The Germans enterefl by the\nPorte de LOaa. They were still\npouring into town wjien we stole\nout four hours later southward.\"\nFrom then on, Porchon said, all\nwas a nightmare, aa they drove tc\nTours along refugee-crowded roads.\nFor four days they had nothing but\na few tins of asrdines and a little\nbread. At night they slept In ditches\nand deserted barns.\nFILM CENSORS MADI\nAGENTS OF COMMITTEE\nOTTAWA, June 27 (CP)-Whlle\nfilm censorship remains ln the\nhands ot provincial authorities, the\nDominion Government's Censorship\nCoordination Committee plana to\nmake heads of all provincial film\ncensorship boards unofficial agents\nof the Censonhlp Committee so\nthey can remain on the alert for\noffensive material In films they re-\nvelw, It was learned here today.\nACTOR RECOVERING\nHOLLYWOOD. June 27 (AP) -\nJon Hall, screen actor, was recovering in a hospital today from injuries he received when he wu\nstruck by a fragment ot a land mine\nln e film scene yesterday.\n13 DIE IN AIR\nRAID OM MALTA\nVALLETTA Malta, June 27 (AP)\n.-Twenty-three per\u00bbona were killed\nend many othen wounded ln an\nItalian air raid during which a\nnumber of heavy bombs were dropped yesterday on the working class\nsection ef thla BrltUh island naval\nbue in the Mediterranean, it wu\nreported today.\nFive air attacks were made after\ntwo dayi of qijlet Stvtnty bombf\nwere dropped.\nThe bomba which feU on the\nworking class suburbs were dropped during the fifth attack, reports\nsaid, under pressure trom fighter\nplanet and anti-aircraft batteriei.\nBLAZE OUT OF CONTROL\nSEATTU, June JT (AP>-The,\nWashington Forest Fire Association\nreported today a 1000-acre blew\nstill wu eut of control near He-\nbart, U miles East pf Seattle but\nthat State and County tire flftUM\nbad prevented it spreading Into\ngreen timber near the Seattle Cedar\nRiver watershed.\nKISS YOUR\nTIRED FEELING\nGOODBYE!\nPepl.M Many Suffer Lew Blood\nCount-And Don't Know It.\nTM taeniae Abe about l\u00ab\u00ab Hood wort\nli th>t rou tu wtliti tkoot u much u rm\nmt dia\u2014ma lou Manser aaa itron*. tm\n-iniiaMnllriiMMIi yem\nLow blood Saw Mo! wo -mat ae*\nmouth rod blmd_.rmi.lti.lt It thtlr \u00bbft_\nrati thtoushout jourhodi. And jutt aal\nc\u00abi o>um to tiplodt tuollnt la jour me\nwd mike tile \u00bbowtr to turn tht whttli, to\nSL\"___!_A_\\__^_ff___tS_2\nt_t tntrgy Id yonr body tae girt jou gang\nto-V.f.ApV)\nthrough probate of a will.\nA special order prohibiting such\ntransfers was passed today by the\nProvincial Government\nfcxaptinqm ZLqjwuLil\nHermits are people who think two's a\ncrowd.\nThey live in caves or huts, wear long\ngray beards and eat evrything from\nberries to nuts. They don't, as a rule,\nbuy anything.\nSelf-respecting hermits spend most of\ntheir time meditating, contemplating and talking to themselves. Their\nminds are hermit-ically sealed to anything going on in the world. In fact,\nwhat really puts hermits in a class by\nthemselves is that they don't care a\nhang about the news.\nBut for everyone except.nq hermits,\nnews is a vital nece\u00ab\u00abt'tv of everyday\nlife. Since the day Eve told Adam\nabout the apple, news has been the\nleading topic of conversation all day\nlong.\nAnd today the cravipa for the news is\nstronger than ever before... because\nnever before has the individual's welfare and haopiness been so intimatelv\naffected by events at home and\nabroad.\nThat's why your daily newspapers\ndraw a larger and more intensely interested audience ... day after day\n... than any other medium. And that,\nin turn, is the fundamental reason\nwhy your advertising in newspapers\ninevitably hits harder, works faster\nand brings more immediate results.\nIOMI OF THI ADVANTAGE* OF NEWSPAPER ADV.ftTI.IN_\nWith newspaper advertising you can . . . (1) reach the largest number of your potential\ncustomers...(}) tell your story to the whole femily . . , (3) time your advertising to\nmeet changing conditions ... (4) get quick results when you want them . . . (9) build\ngood-will aa well at salei ...It) tie your message to the news .. . (7) give your ada a\nlocal touch, a home-town flavor ...($) illustrate your product and its uses . . . aftd\n(9) do all thla at a lower cost than with any other medium.\n\t\n\u25a0\n_____\u25a0*\n\u25a0\n NILION DAILY NIW.. NILION.\nKELOWNA PUNS TO\nRECEIVE EVACUEES\nKELOWNA, B. C, June 27 (CP)\n\u2014plana were made here today to\nreceive Kelowne'e ahare of overseas children when they arrive in\nCanada.\nSporting tatin blue caps bearing a large white\n\u2022W for Salmo, these tour were among the boosteri\nattending th* South Kootenay Schools Track and\nField Association meet at Fruitvale. From left, they\nare Helen Gray, Archie Gray, Joan Scrlbner and\nTiny Malakoff.-Daily News Photo.\nBritish Fight Among Selves in Time\nof Peace When Backs lo Wall as\nNow 'Something Doing'\u2014Blaylock\nUrges Build Defences\nAfter War; Train\nYoung Men\nTRAIL. B.C., June 27\u2014It is a\nmatter of historical record that the\nBritlih fight among themselves con-\ntinuouily ln times of peace but\n\u2022when they really get their backs tu\nthe wall, as they nave now, there's\ngoing to be something doing now.\nThe Empire li determined to carry\non to victory and Its is unquestionably going to do so,\" declared S. G.\nBlaylock, President and Managing\nDirector in an address Wednesday\nnight to the Canadian Club at the\nH5h School Auditorium.\n\"The whole conflict has been left\non Britain's doorstep. The rrench\nfleet still la apparently a question.\nPetain has handed the fleet over to\nHltltr, but whether he gets lt or\nnot remains to be seen.\n\"We are going to be broke by the\ntime tha war is over, but I am sure\nthere is not one person who would\nrather be broke flat than have the\nEmpire defeated,\" he said.\nSpeaking of the increue in pay-\ntoll that the Increased production\nof war materials by the C. M. & S.\nCompany would mean he said there\nwould bt nothing for war if the\nincrease wei uied for the purchase\nof goods. \"If purchailng it not withheld prices will sky-rocket as they\ndid in the lut war. In the end you\napend all your money and you get\nSeat goods.\n\"H you buy war savings eertlfl-\ncates you get your money back with\nintereit after IVi year Vou can redeem them any time after six\nmonths. It costs $2,500,000 a day ai\nthe war goes on. It is a tremendous\ntwk to finance thia war on top of\nordinary expenses.\nPREPARE FOR IND WAR  .\n\"By taking tha money otf the\nmarket in war aevlngs certificates\nyou make a neat egg for yourself.\nyou help the Government and hold\ndown the coat of living. After the\nwar there Is bound to be reaction,\nretrenchment or a depression. To\nwhat extent we are affected will be\n5uged by the success we have had\nholding down th costs of goods.\nWar savings will put a spur to induitry end put the money beck to\nwork whenever lt is moat opportune.\nThe new taxei are severe. I un\nture no one will flinch, and I am\nequally ture that the next budget\nwill be wone, so cheer up.\n\"So far we haven't done much\nThe only groups which have done\ntheir share are the Red Cross and\ntbe I.O.D.E.,\" he asserted.\nReferring to the refugee problem,\nMr. Blaylock said that arrangements\nwere being made to send from 5000\nto 10,000 refugee children to both\nthe United States and Canada.\n\"I miss my guess if it is not multiplied by 10 within six months he\nlaid.\n\"Unquestionably we are going to\nbe short of labor and of money. It\nwould be an opportune time for the\npeople of Canada to again consider\nthe whole Railway Situation. The\nGovernment should do something to\neut out useless duplication, which\nwould mean the saving of $70,000,000\na yaer. The cry which blocked the\namalgamation of the two railroads\nbefore wu that It would put men\nout of work. If they were consolidated now, within the next six months\nevery solitary man could be employed In War service\nBUILD DEFENCES\n\"Right after the war Is over, I\nthink we should start right In building defences. We should be Independent of the rest of the Empire\nlor our protection, and ihould have\nsomething over to help the colonial\nlisters and the Mother Country.\n\"Up until two yeari ago some at\nleait were perfectly satisfied that\nwe were doing our duty to the Empire.\n\"Ifrglend hu conieripted every\ndollar and lt hu been given cheerfully ahd willingly,\" he itated. \"You\nmight uy these who give it would\nlose It anyway if Germany wen tho\nwu. But why knock the gloss off it?\nI think it'i a wonderful thing. I\nthink wt can maintain iome of thii\nspirit after tbe war If we insist that\nall governments make national safety the first plank in their platform.\"\n\"As soon as the war is over we\nshould cut out unemployment relief\nby universal military training.\nThere is nothing in the world that\nwould do our youth more good than\neven six months military training.\nThey would learn how to obey and\nlearn to work is a team. If there\nwas another war they would not\nbe at a complete loss to know what\nto do.\n\"If men who were placed In camps\nbecause they could not get work\nhad been placed in some military\narmy, given part military training\nand part work for which they were\npaid, and given a uniform, they\nwould then have had the right to\nhold up their heads,\" declared Mr.\nBlaylock.\n\"It is the period of reconstruction\nwhich will try us more than the war\nitself.\nEXAMINE THEORIES\n\"A lot of theories were tried out\nduring the lut war and more are\nbeing presented during this one.\nThey appear Innocent on the surface and tend to slacken the Empire's war effort. The beet thing\nior us to do is to examine all these\ntheories, as we see fit, to think about\nwhat they itand for and how to act\non them.\nMr. Blaylock castigated experimentation by varioui countries\nseeking to make all equal, saying\nthat \"as soon as Jack Is as good u\nhis boss he wants to be boss and\nhave his boss do the work. In Russia they tried shooting men whose\nwork was not satisfactory and shooting of men who made mistakes.\"\nHe declared he wu not ln favor of\neither.\nA. L. McCallum, President of the\nCanadian Club was Chairman.\nThe Trail Veterani' Orcheitra eon-\nducted by Hani Fogh Dohmsmidt\nrendered several selections and Miss\nCarol Wright and Miss Pamela Hartman gave a piano duet on two\npianos.\nAUSTRALIA IS\nFAST BECOMING\nPLANE PRODUCER\nMHjBOURNE, Australia, June 37\n(OP)\u2014Estimates today indicated by\nthe middle of 1941 Australia would\nbe producing one bomber a day\nand service planei of all types at\nthe rate of 1000 a year.\nIncluding flying boats and a unit\nof Lockheed Hudson bombing\nplanes from the United States, the\nCommonwealth Government has\n\u00a314,000,000 ($39,200,000) worth of\naircraft on order, in the course of\nconstruction  or   delivery\nWithin the past two yeari threi\naircraft factoriei have been established in Australia. The de Havil\nland Aircraft, visiting American\nengineers paid warm tribute to\nthe speed and efficiency with which\nAustralia ls becoming an aircraft\nproducer. They said that with further experience Australian plants\nwill be able to produce any type of\nmachine the Commonwealth nei.da.\ntdt.\nQuestionairu\nare being dletrlb-\nC-FRIDAY MORNINO. JUNI at.\nuted seeking information about\nhomes willing to accept children,\nand arrangements are being made\nto obtain a large home as a central\nhostel. The Rowecllfte Canning\nCompany hu offered to process\nfruit and vegetables tree in Its plant\nfor use by the children If the local\nRefugee Committee provides unskilled labor, cans and material.\nJritish Encounter No\nDefence in Somaliland\nNAIROBI, Kenya Colony, June 27\n(AP)-British 'ground patrols' have\nSenetrated 20 miles Into Italian\nomaliland without encountering\nopposition, a British communique\ndeclared today.\n\"Continued reports have been received from Italian Abyssinia (Ethiopia) and Somaliland that bands\nconscripted by the Italians wish to\ndesert to ui,\" it added.\n(Britiah South African detachments are operating agalnat Italian\nterritory from Kenya.)\nPAQI THIRTEEN\nCHURCHILL AND IRONSIDE\nINSPECT COAST DIFINCB\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-Prtaui\nMinister Churchill and General Sir\nEdmund Ironside, Britain's Home\nJhief, .   '   \u25a0 \u25a0\nDefeqce Chief, lut night personal'\nly inspected anti-aircraft and coastf\nerlei guarding England's Belt\nCout.\nFAREWELL TO\nBACKACHE!\nHw b\u00abk tthei-ir*\nMl itlimMi ne eat\n\u2014sht taalda't bt\n%__Hr legeee*-\nl*t emttct wkh h\u00ab\nMauds tad ins My.\nHat sister edtised fir-\nla. le take Dtdd'tOi\nKid*. Pill.. Htrkatb-H\n'   '    i tad\neyas iftnded-fcw sttp wu epri ridjy-aM\n\u00bbnr\u00abe|iin ska wn hit \"ttd sell.\"       lib\nley GOODI Ft TO 14 CM C H t will\nDoddsKidney Pills\nLONDON, June 27 (CD-Brig\nClaude Nicholson, leader of the\nBritish Defence of the rrench port\nof Calais, from which only 30 un\nITALY MAY JOIN\nNAZI ATTACK ON\nBRITISH ISLES\nNEW YORK, June 27 (CP)-A\ndispatch te the Atioclated Prttt\nfrom Iti Rami correspondent to.\nday quoted an Italian source described at authoritative at laying\nthat Italian troopi may Join Oar-\nman forces in an attack on tha\nBritish Isles.\nThis source alio taid Italian\nplanet and warthipa are \"believed\nlikely\" to uke part In tuoh an\noptratlon.\nMrs. Bouma Seeks\nto Start Women's\nTraining In Nelson\nAn attempt to organize what the\ncalls a Nelson Women'i Civil War\nWorken Club, to train women to\nUke the jobs of men when they\nare away at war, Is being made by\nMrs. Rosa von Lima Bouma. Mrs.\nBouma, although of German birth,\nwas a naturalized citizen of The\nNetherlands tnd came to Canada\nseveral years ago. She received her\nCanadian naturalization papers\ntive years ago.\nShe states she obtained tht sanctioned of the Department of National Defence at Ottawa and sent\na similar letter to headquarters of\nMilitary District No, 11 at Victoria.\nShe asked Major A E. Pearson at\nVictoria for the use of the Nelson\nArmory u training headquarters.\nMajor Pearson commended her effort but iaid it was regretted that\nthe Armory would be used for\nmilitary recruiting headquarters.\nGirls from Id to 18 yean of age\nwould be trained ln heelth itrvice\ninspection and other women would\nbe trained to take the Jobs of men\nin factories, garages, nulls, and al-1\nmott every kind of man's Job. She\nserved In varioui capacities during\nthe Great War and li trained in\nmany fields\nMra. Bouma, who now has booths\nbl two Nelson cafes as head headquarters, states thet she will attempt to secure a schoolroom as\na training room.\nU. S. Department\nCalls for Halt\nin Army Expansion\nWASHINGTON, June 27 (API-\nProspect of a congressional drive\nfor a regular United Statea army\nof 750,000 or 1,000,000 men placed\nthe war department today in tbe\nunusual position of counselling a\ntemporary halt ln further expulsion of the fighting forces.\nAuthoritative sources forecast\nthere would be army opposition to\nany plan that would Increue Ihe\nnumber of troops beyond a mail,\nmum of 500,000\nThe 400,000-man army, recently\napproved by the House, embodies\nthe generals' staff ideas ot the size\nof land and air corps forcei which\ncan be fully organized, trained and\nequipped in the next few months\nwithout jeopardizing readiness to\ncope with in emergency\nLord Cor manson Mining\nlaONDON, June 27 (CP)\u2014 Lord\nGormanson,  Premier  Viscount  of\nwounded  \"tommies\"  were\"  among j Ireland, today was reported missing\nthose rescued out of a force  of I in France where he has been serv-\n4000, wu reported by tn authorized Ing as a captain of Infantry,\nsource today to be a German prison-     Lord Gormanston,  29,  has  one\ner l son, born last Nov. 19.\nDe Gaulle Reports Colonies\nPrepare to  Repel Invaders\nLONDON, Junt 27 (Cl\u00bb)-Gen.\nCharlta Dt Gaulle announced today that ht his rtotlved \"definite\nInformation\" from Frtnoh Indo-\nChina that Gen. Georget Catroux,\nwho wat reported from Bordeaux\nto havt bttn rtplactd ai governor\nthert, would rttlit any attempted\nInvasion of that French potstts-\nIon,\nDe Gaulle's  headquarters  hen\nannounced tht   French   National\nCommittal 'hid reaton te believe\"\nthat Qen. Auguit Nogues, French\neomminder In chief In Northirn\nAfrica,  It taking  \"all   necesiary\nitepi for organising resistance.\"\nDe Gallue has been communicating with French colonial and naval\nleaders to rally the French to fight\non against Germany and Italy.\nLondon sourcei as well ai the\nDe Gaulle headquarters were of-\nficislly silent on the Implications\nof the replacement of the governors\nSeneril of Frenoh Indo-China and\nladagtsctr.\nTHOUSAND! WANT\nTO CARRY ON\nOff-the-record comment from reliable source! wu thtt it wu realized hire that Premier Henri Petain of France must try to remove\nthose who will not cooperate with\nthe armistice terms Frence has signed wtth Italy and Germany.\nHowever, lt was added, the effectiveness of such moves depends on\nhow sUch officers react to orders\nfrom Bordeaux and whether they\ndecide to recognize some other\nFrench authority.\nDe Gaulle's attitude toward the\nBordeiux Government is that \"lt\nls doing the best lt can under the\ncircumstances,\" but that there are\nhundreds of thousands of Frenchmen who want to carry on the fight\nLONDON, June 27 (CP)-Freneh\nauthorities at the French Somaliland port of Jibuti \"intend to fight\non,\" a Reuters News Agency oil-\npatch from Aden iaid today.\nAden ls across tbe Gulf of Aden\nfrom Jibuti, where the French Government at Bordeaux agreed in\narmistice tehns with Italy to iur-\nrehder full port rights.\n1. To organite a volunteer French\nlegion with the sizeable forcts still\nln Britain from the Norway and\nFlanders campaigns at a nucleus.\nAll Frenchmen on land or aea forcei who eicaped German capture\ncould join.\n2. To itt up a French centre tor\narmament tnd scientific research\nan effort which headquarters aald\nhad brdught a \"terrific'* reippnie.\n3. To establish a non-political\nfully reprtitntatlve French nitional committee u a body to coordinate French policy.\nAides ot de Gaulle aaid actual enrolment of volunteers wat awaiting\nthe completion ot irrangementi for\nequipment and billeting. This likely\nwill Uke several days longer.\nIT\nTO ADVERTISE\nEvery Business Man Should Read This Advertisement\n\"It PAYS to advertise!\" An indication of how well it pays is shown in facts and figures from the Canadian\nConsumer Survey recently published by the Bureau of Advertising of the Canadian Daily Newspapers Association. In this Canada-wide survey, which was made in order to secure authentic information about buying\nhabits, consumers were asked to name the products they purchase. To manufacturers who do not advertise\nat all and to those who do not advertise enough the results as shown below will be enlightening.\nOf   28 brands of Corn Flakes 2 advertised brands received 96% of all mentions\nOf 218 brands of Cocoa ...'. 4 advertised brands received 81% of all mentions\nOf 275 brands of Packaged Tea : 8 advertised brands received 83% of all mentions\nOf   73 brands of Food Drinks 3 advertised brands received 77% of all mention!\nOf 110 brands of Packaged Wheat (ready to eat) -.3 advertised brands received 87% of all mentions\nOf 155 brands of Packaged Wheat (to be cooked) -T.2 advertised brands received 72% of all mentions\nOf   46 brands of Packaged Bran 2 advertised brands received 93% of all mention!\nOf   32 brands of Evaporated Milk 3 advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf   26 brands of Condensed Milk 2 advertised brands received 99% of all mentions\nOf 157 brands of Packaged Cheese 2 advertised brands received 82% of all mentions\nOf 337 brands of Canned Salmon \u20144 advertised brands received 71 % of all mentions\nOf   49 brands of Corn Syrup .\u20142 advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf 101 brands of Ketchup and Catsup 3 advertised brands received 84% of all mentions\nOf   76 brands of Grape Juice 1 advertised brand received 90% of all mentions\nOf 153 brands of Tomato juice 4 advertised brands received 80% of all mentions\nOf 143 brands of Salad Dressing 2 advertised brands received 75% of all mentions\nOf 137 brands of Soda Crackers 3 advertised brands received 68% of all mentions\nOf 371 brands of All Purpose Flour 5 advertised brands received 76% of all mentions\nOf 119 brands of Prepared Cake Flour 1 advertised brand received 77% of all mentions\nOf 338 brands of Pastry Flour , 5 advertised brands received 52% of all mentions\nOf   88 brands of Pancake Flour 1 advertised brand received 92% of all mentions\nOf 249 brands of Packaged Coffee 3 advertised brands received 62% of all mentions\nOf 337 brands of Baking Powder 6 advertised brands received 86% of all mentions\nOf 102 brands of Shortening  - 4 advertised brands received 86% of all mentions\nOf   76 brands of Baking Chocolate . 2 advertised brands received 90% of all mentions\nOf 328 brands of Soft Beverages - 6 advertised brands received 69% of all mentions\nOf 114 brands of Jelly Powder 4 advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf 114 brands of Dessert or Ice Cream Powders 3 advertised brands received 74% of all mentions\nOf 171 brands of Smoked Hams % advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf 137 brands of Toilet Soap 8 advertised brands received 92% of all mentions\nOf 181 brands of Bath Soap 5 advertised brands received 86% of all mentions\nOf   93 brands of Bar Laundry Soap 7 advertised brands received 85% of all mentions\nOf 133 brands of Soap Chips  5 advertised brands received 91% of all mentions\nOf   70 brands of Soap Granules or Powder 3 advertised brands received 98% of all mentions\nOf 111 brands of Laundry Starches 2 advertised brands received 61 % of all mentions\nOf 118 brands of Cleansing Tissue 3 advertised brands received 90% of all mentions\nOf 494 brands of Toilet Tissue 5 advertised brands received 67% of all mentions\nOf 551 brands of Floor Wax $ advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf 134 brands of Tooth Paste - 8 advertised brands received 86% of all mentions\nOf 107 brands of Tooth Powder -* advertised brands received 78% of all mentions\nOf 140 brands of Mouth Wash 3 advertised brands received 85% of all mentions\nOf 203 brands of Shampoo 4 advertised brands received 60% of all mentions\nOf 242 brands of Hand Lotions - *\u25a0 advertised brands received 79% of all mentions\nOf 463 brands of Disinfectants and Germicides 1 advertised brand received 74% of all mentions\nOf   74 brands of Cigarettes 8 advertised brands received 86% of all mentions\nOf 446 brands of Pipe Tobacco ~ ? advertised brands received 54% of all mentions\nOf 412 brands of Razors  *\u25a0 advertised brands received 82% of all mentions\nOf 146 brands of Shaving Soap -7 advertised brands received 81% of all mentions\nOf 224 makes of Refrigerators (mechanical) 6 advertised brands received 70% of all mentions\nMANUFACTURERS!\u2014Whether or not you make one or more of the articles listed above, the result would\nbe fhe same. If you do not advertise and some of your competitors do, chances are the advertisers are getting\nthe cream of the business and you with other non-advertisers each get only a small fraction of what is left. If\nyou have a good products and wish to Increase your sales and profits, remember \u2014 It PAYS to advertisel\nThe Nelson Daily News\n\"British Columbia's Most Interesting Daily Newspaper\"\nm\n_______mw__mm\n___\u25a0_\u25a0__\u25a0\n____________\n______\n piipuji m i. u*Aw*w^mimm^**Wr*m\n.\n\u2022AGS FOURTEEN\nftt JAe ^t\nFRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nlORNINC\n7:00\u20140 Canada _\n7:03\u2014Toast    and    Coffee   Club\n(CKLN)\n\u00ab:00\u2014BBC Newa from London\nKSO\u2014Joyce Trio\n*45\u2014The News\n9:00\u2014 Musical Roundup (CKLN)\nS:30-Rhymes It Rambles\n10:00\u2014The Balladeer\n8:1s\u2014Blue Network Varieties\n8:30\u2014NBC Concert Orchestra\n10:45\u2014The News\n6:00\u2014Hit Revue (CKLN)\nC:36\u2014Composers Corner\np:0O\u2014Club Matinee\nfSTEPNOON\n[3:45\u2014Hawaiian Harmonies, CKLN\n1:00\u2014-The News\n_:1S-Talk\n1:30\u2014Closing Stocka\n1.45-BBC NEWS\ni'3:15\u2014Dance Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Three Cheers\ni.S:45\u2014Organ Recital\n3:00\u2014Josef Marais, Bushveld Songs\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\n3:45-An Editor Looks,at the West\n8:57\u2014News Bulletin\n*00\u2014The World in Review\n8:00\u2014Concert Master (CKLN)\nH:30\u2014Edwin LeMar Trio (CKLN)\nJ.;4S-Hollywood Brevities (CKLN)\nffcOO\u2014Chamber Music\n[vENING\n*80-Junior   Chamber   of   Commerce (CKLN)\n0:4B\u2014Don Turner's Orch.\n7.-00\u2014The News\n745-Talk by Wlckham Steed\n7:80- Woodhouse & Hawkins\n7:57-News Bulletin\n8:00- Drama\n8:30-Banff Trio\n(1:00\u2014Musical Mirror\n0:80-Talk\n9:45\u2014Joint Recital\n10:15\u2014The News\n10:30\u2014Joe Sudy's Orch.\n11:00\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orch.\n11:30\u2014Newa Roundup tnd Talks\u2014\nRebroadcasts\n12:00-God Save the King\nCJAT-TRAIL\nMORNINC\n7:00\u2014Church ln the Wlldwood\n7:1S-Breakfast Club\n8:30\u2014On the Mall\n10:00\u2014Voice of Memory\n10:30\u2014Master Singers\n11:30\u2014Dance Hour\nAFTERNOON\n12:30\u2014Love  Stories\n12:45\u2014News Oddities\n1:1_\u2014Song Recital\n3:30\u2014Home Folks Frolic\n4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:15\u2014Joe Petersen Sings\n4:30\u2014Parade of Melody\nVENINC\n8:00\u2014Dance Music\n8:15\u2014Aloha  Land\n8:00\u2014Musical Workshop\n8:15\u2014Murder Mysteries\n9:15\u2014On With the Dance\n11:30\u2014Midnight Matinet\n12:00-Sign Off\nOther   Periods\u2014CBC   Programmes\nKASLO\nt KASLO, B. C\u2014Mr. end Mrs. J.\nftrylor and Misa Butlin of New\nDenver visited town.\n\u25a0 :Mr. and Mrs. Harrison of Victoria spent Tuesday in town.\n[Hon. C. S. Leary, Minister of\nPublic Works, visited Kaslo.\n\u25a0\u2022Dr. David Hartin and son John\nli Spokane are spending a few days\nrlth the former's brother and sis-\n\u2022r-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Har-\n\u25a0 Mrs. Otto Augustine and baby\nire home after spending some time\na Nelson.\ni\"Jessie Stewart and Jaan Wyness\n( Vancouver visited Kaslo in con-\n(tctlon with Women's Institute\nfork.\n\"Miss    Joyce    Sutherland,    who\nBaches school at Johnson's Land-\nng, visited town en route to attend\nlummer school at the Coast.\n' Miss Flora McLeod and Miss Miler of Trail visited the former's partita, Mr. and Mrs. McLeod.\nMiss Kate Riddell has returned\n10m attending Normal School  in\nrancouver.  She was accompanied\nr her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Pierce,\nd   the   latter's   brother,   Henry\nilnbow of Hedley, who Is visiting\n^t. and Mrs. J. A. Riddell, while\nrs. Pierce and daughter are guests\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Webster. Mr.\nierce returned to his home.\n'Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Greenlaw of\n[owser and Mr. and Mrs. Archie\nGreenlaw   of   Lardeau  visited\n9Wn.\nD. de Wolfe of the Kaslo Public\nchool teaching staff left to spend\nie holidays at his home in Chilli-\nMr. and Mrs. C. Dawson and\naughter Mary of Okanagan, Wash.,\nave arrived to spend the Summer\nrlth Mrs. Dawson's parents, Mr.\n|id Mrs. S. H. Green, who also\nlave as guests their son and daugh-\ner-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roland\nTeen and baby of New Westmin-\n\u00abr. \t\nASLO YOUTH HAS\nFINE SCHOOL RECORD\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Robert Strachan\n11 t record that is hard to beat,\ne has 12 years of perfect attend-\nice at school and 12 years of per-\net Sunday School attendance to\nda credit\nCRANBROOK\nCRAJJBROOK, B. C.-The Central School Glee Club, the High\nSchool orchestra, the Grade V Boya'\nChoir end home economic classes\nof Grades VII and IX presented an\nentertainment at the High School\nAuditorium.\nShowing of the dresses made by\nthe girls of Grades VIII and IX\nduring the Spring term as a practical eddition to their education was\none of the objectives of the entertainment\nThe program follows: \"O Canada,\" Central School Glee Club, under the direction of Miss Glendinning, \"Winter Lullaby\" and \"John\nPeel,\" accompanied by Miss Ruth\nHardy; piano duet Margaret MacKinnon end Grace Brock; Grade\nIII Rhythm Band, conducted by Miss\nLundy of Central School; Miss\nGlendinnlng's Boys' Choir of Grade\nV, \"Let Bucks a-Hunting Go,\" and\n\"The Song of the Music Makers;\"\nGlee Club, Dutch Dance; School\nOrchestra under the direction of\nMr. Hunter, \"Grand March From\nAida\" and \"Still Is the Night;\" Glee\nClub, \"The First Tulip,\" \"Down in\nthe Valley\" and \"Beautiful Violet;\" and Shirley Leigh's piano\nsolo, \"The Garden Swing.\"\nFASHION SHOW\nWhen the curtain rose next two\ngirla were shown in aprons hustling\nthrough their cooking ao tbey could\nlook at a new fashion magazine.\nThe backdrop of the stage was arranged to appear as big book cover, which turned page by page with\nthe living models stepping out to\nshow the handiwork of the Grade\nVIII and Grade IX girls. The frocks\nwere Summertime dresses of prints\nand spun rayon. Commentary was\ngiven by two aproned girls, Ruth\nDey and Joyce Alward.\nA minuet by Glee Club members\ncame next followed by orchestra\nnumbers, \"Black Eyes\" end Chiri\nbiribin,\" Glee Club, \"Golden Slum\nbers,\" and \"Evening Song.\"\nArrangements for the program\nwere made by Miss Campion, Home\nEconomics instructor of the two\nschools, Miss Glendinning as music\nsuperisor at Central School, and\nMr. Hunter and the High School\nOrchestra.\n-NILION DAILY NEWS, NILION. I. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. JUNt tt. 1940-\nYou Can't Afford to Miss the Big Bargains Offered Below\nSMami Bally Nrttw\nTelephone 144\nTtall: CaU A. R. Joy\nRossland: Call K. Lowdon\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUe per Une per insertion.\n44c per Une per week (8 consecutive Insertions tor cost of 4).\n$1.43 per Une a month (28 Umes).\n(Minimum 2 lines par lniertion).\nBox numbers lie extra. Thla\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18o per Une. first insertion and\n14a each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nIPECIAL  LOW  RATI!\nNon-commercial   Situations\nWanted for 28e for eny  required number ef lines for aix\ndaya, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy I  j08\nBy carrier, per week .\nBy carrier, per year -\nBy Mall:\nOna month\nThree montha\nSix months _\nOne year __\n25\n13.00\ntn\n. 2.00\n, 4.00\n. 8.00\nAbove rates apply ln Canada,\nUnited Statea, and United Kingdom, to subscribers Uvlng outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage la required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix montha $8.00,. one year $15.00.\nSolvation Army Lost\n$200,000 Equipment\nin Flanders Retreat\nReports reaching Major David\nHammond of the Solvation Army\nat Nelson Indicate that Uie sudden\nchange in the military situation in\nFrance and Flanders placed a heavy\nextra burden upon workers overseas with the soldiers. Seventeen\ncanteen centres were bombed, destroyed and abandoned. Mrs. Brigadier Herbert Climpson, wife ol\nthe Deputy-Director of Salvation\nArmy war work ln France, was killed by a bomb splinter and buried\nin the soldiers' cemetery outside\nDieppe. Two hours later the town\nwaa heavUy bombed. Army officers\naccompanied refugees fleeing to the\ncoast SalvaUon Army equipment\nvalued at $200,000 was lost. .   -\nAt the request of the British military authorities, the SalvaUon\nArmy rushed six mobile canteens\nto England's South coast and ministered to thousands of Britiah,\nFrench and Belgian soldiers brought\nover from Dunkerque. Refreshments were distributed to the exhausted men. Large groups slept on\ntheir feet while waiting supplies.\nSalvaUon Army workers toUed\nnight and day.\nThousands of refugees trom\nNorthern France\u2014some of whom,\nfootsore and bleeding, had walked\n120 miles\u2014were assisted by the\nSalvation Army of Paris.\nIn Great Britain, 320 Red Shield\nClubs and 90 mobile canteens are i\nnow operating. A Salvation Army\nhotel has been recenUy opened in\nWest Central London.\nBIRTHS\nCOATES - To Mr. and Mra.\nAylmer Coates, Bonnington, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, June\n-77lM0, a aon, _\n\"\"HELSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. O.\nAlbert Nelson, 204 Nelson Avenue.\nat Kootenay Lake Oeneral Hospi-\nMjj, June 26, 1940, a daughter,\nMILLER \u2014 To Mr. and Mn. W.\nMiller of Alice Siding, at Creston\nVaUey Hosptal, June 24 a, daughter. Mrs. Miller waa formerly Miss\nPearl Huscroft\nHELP WANTED\nEXP. GIRL FOR HOUSEWORK AT\nonce, not under 18 yrs. No outside\nwork. Three adulta. Apply Mrs.\nP. A. Schlag, Fauquier, B, C.\nAUTOMOBILE SALESMAN, \"REAL\nproducer, must be able to appraise\ncars. Box 2922 Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratee 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.\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL WANTS\npost for July and August ln Summer cottage, or camp, to help\nwith housework or children. Box\n1034 Dally Newa,\nWanted - jOb as f ARM HAND\nAllround experienced man. Especially good teamster. Write 1534\nFifth Avenue East Trail, B. C.\nCAPABLE WOMAN DESIRES PO-\nsition as hotel housekeeper or\nchambermaid. C. P. R. Hotel ex-\nperlence. Box 2485 Daily News\nEXP.   GIRL   WANTS   MORjfDK.\nwork, also work by the hour. Box\n2913 Dally News, _\nGIRL 18, DESIRES HOUSEWORK.\nExperienced with children. Apply\nBox 2878 Dally Newa.\nHIGH    SCHOOL   GntlT-\"WASTS\nlight housework for months July.\nAugust Box 129, Nakusp, B.C.\n___>__  YOUNG \"GIRL   WANTS\nwork of any kind. Phone 743B3.\nYOUNG  GIRL FOND OF  CHIL-\ndren wants work. Phone 752-R.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nC. W. WALTON & SON. BOAT\nBuilders. Boats for rent Briggs\nfc Stratum ait-cooled Inboard and\nJohnson Outboard engine agents.\n$90 BUYS MOTORBOAT Sc BOAT\nhouse. Inboard 2V_ h.p. engine,\ngood condition. Excellent for fish-\nIng. I. ______ Procter, B. C.\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBand and Orchestra Instruments,\nstrings, repairs. Webb's, 808 Baker\n(Next Scandinavian Church).\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nPETLAND - W. 241 RIVERSIDE,\nSpokane. Dogs, Birds, Goldfish.\netc. Full line supplies, accessories\nWIRE HAIRED FOX TERRIER\npups. Harding, Nelson, Phone 110.\nLONGBEACH\nLONGBEACH, B C.-The Willow\nPoint Guides held a weekend camp\nat Longbeach. Their leader, Mrs,\nHolt  accompanied  them.\nMajor and Mrs. P. Mathisen visited Mr. and Mra. Moore of WUlow.\nPoint. \\\nCommander and Mrs B. A. Smith\nspent a tew days at Trail.\nMrs. H. Leggatt spent a few days\nwith Mrs. E. D. Rutherglen of Nelson, j\nMiss Gladys Houghton-Brown\nhas lett for the coast to spend her\nvacation. 1\nMiss Ruth Ferguson, who attended school in Trail, has returned to\nher home here.\nWindermere Folk to\nTake British Kiddies\nLAKE WINDERMERE, B. C.-\nThe Executive Committee of the\nWindermere District Branch of the\nRed Cross discussed, at a recent\nmeeUng, the question of providing\nhomes for relugeea under Government scheme for evacuaUon. Mrs\nA. F. Sinclair was appointed to get\na list of people willing to take one\nor more children Into their homes.\nThe response from loesl residents\nhas been encouraging, and there appeared no doubt that a number of\nchildren can be placed in tbe dis-1\ntrict\nPERSONAL\nHOTEL MARTIN-ROOMS $1 AND\nup. Quiet Central. 1178 Granville\nVancouver, B. C.\nMURPHY BROS.-FORTHJfiJD\nable work. Wallpapers, end Glid-\ndens Time Tested Paints.\nHURRYI HURRYI 5 _t>R 25c FOR\ntrait special at Vogue Studio now\non. No appointment neceasary.\n25c - tilM. mm.. 0STAG1\npaid. Reprints 3c. Lions Photo.\nP. O. Box 434, Vancouver, a C\nBUTTS s&ALLOW HZ pRSS-\naure pump with tank. J. Chess\n824 Vernon St, Nelaon,\nSALVATION ARMY - H1 \u00a500\nhava old clothing, footwear, turn.-\nture to spare please Ph. ua, 818L\nPURCHASE YOUR FRUITS XRB\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Ab\nways fresh In modem refrigeration\nA P6ftTRAIT_Y Mc6ftE(-(-ft 13\na Portrait of Distinction. Pbone\n224, 577 Ward Street.\nHXVEY6UAKY ANTIQUIS.\nTop prices paid for antiques at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 HaU St\nCHOfiUETTE BROS. \"MO-HER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. CPR Depot\nIN SPOKANE MAKE YOUR HOME\nThe Empire, 108 N. Division St\nThe friendly hotel for Canadians\nWHEN THE TOURISTS ASK\nwhere to stay; give them an in\ntelligent answer, say  \"Kokanee\nLodge\"\nMEN'S SANITAftV ftUBBE-ft\nfoods, send $1 tor 12 samples,\nlain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist Princeton Distributors, Boa\n61, Princeton, B. C\nWRITE FOR FREE PRICE LIST\non Hygiene and Sanitary Sup\nplies, or send $1.00 for special\nsaihple assortment of 27 best\nquality latex, postpaid under\nplain sealed cover. Western Sup-\nply Agency, Box 887, Vancouver.\nM\u00ab_J PAST 401 RUNDOWN. PEP-\nless feeling? Try Ostrex tableU\nfor stimulants, tonics, oyster elements as aid to recovery normal\nvim, vigor. Get package today It\nnot delighted, maker refunds Its\nlow price. CaU, write Mann,\nRutherford Company and all\nother good drug stores.\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlarge\nment free with each fUm devel\noped. Include 5c tor postage and\npacking. Krystal Photos, WUkie,\nSaskatchewan.\nB. C. HAD ONE _\nGreat War (on the Allied side)\nMunro, the veteran furrier (1914\n1918) allows a full 10 per cent\ndiscount to relaUves of Service or\nEx-Service men; thia applies to\nremodelling, storage, rellmng and\ngenuine cold storage aa weU as\non new furs; furs sent to your\nExpress Office on approval.\nMunro Fur Store, 505 Granville\nStreet, Vancouver, B. C.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOR SALE - BLACK GELDING,\n8 yrs, 1500 to 1600 lbs. $135. Belgian gelding, 5 yrs., 1600 lbs. $150.\nEd Paul, Box 186, Rossland, B. C.\nFOR SALE 6 H\\TY. WK. HORSES\nsaddle horse. Ellison Millg. Co Ltd\nFOR SALE - COWS AND HEIT-\nera, S. BenUey, Perry Siding\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nRESTAURANT TO RENT ON THE\nmain highway in fuUy licensed\nhotel. Bus station in connection.\nApply New Hotel, Yahk, B. C,\nFOR SALE - ABRIEL ESTATE\nTheatre (300) at Nakusp. Apply\nBrown Sc Dawson. Solicitors.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT SUMMER COTTAGE\non North Shore, 12 miles from\nNelson. Percy Mills, 904 Stanley\nStreet Phone 198L.\nft* RfcNT-lfUfiJflflHEl. HOUSE\nNorth Shore opposite Rowing Club\nAug.-Sept Phone 894 or Box\n2837 Daily Newa.\nPOR RENT JULY 1 6RM. STUCCO\nhouse with furnace and garage.\nCorner Nelson Avenue and Chat-\nham Street Apply 520 Mill Street.\nSMALL FURN. HOUSE NEAR\nLakeside Park. Mrs. Wilkie,\n1008 Third Street    \t\nFURN. HSKP. ROOMS FOR RENT\nat reasonable pricei. Central\nRooms, 718 Baker Street\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOM MOCESS\ncottagt Furn, with garage base-\nment. Close In. 809 Victoria St\nFOR RENT - 8 ROOM'FUSNISfl.\ned suite, very close in. $20 month.\nC. W. Appleyard,\n#OR RtolT-^OWAfiE OH UKE\nfront at Willow Point, 3 bedrooms\nApply H. Rosllng, or Phone 717.\nrepHff WVt ftOOM COTTAGE\nCement basement 1011 Hall\nStreet Phone 495L.\t\nFOR REtW - . tlM. -Uftt WITH\nbatb and 8 rm. suite with bath, 1\nblk. from Baker St Ph. 441R.\nSfwLY  DECORATED HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms and suites Star\nRooming House, 705 Victoria Alley\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR RENT,\n807 SlUca St, Phone 440X.\nFURN HOUSE FOR RENT ACROSS\nlake. W. Rutherford, Nelson.\nFOR RENT, BUNGALOW, JUCY.\nReferences. 604, 4th St. Ph. 935X\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE FOR\nrent Stirling Hotel.      _______\nFURN. HOUSE __SEP\"_ScTR55SlS\nprvt hm, 904 Stanley St. Ph. 158L\nSmall FtrartiSHED house for\nrent July, Aug. 614 Kootenay St.\nHOUSE FOR RENT. 824 SILICA\nStreet, or Phone 297L.\t\nffFHAVE SEVERAL HOUSES\nfor rent C, W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT, JULY AND AUGUST\nsmall furn. house. 101 Chatham St\nFoil RENT, FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Dally News A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from tbe\nowner.\nLOST - JUNE 22, VICINITY OF\nBaker St, child's gold initialled\nlocket with Jewel Inset Keepsake, reward. Write Mra. R. A.\nSosted, Erie, B. C.\nFODND NEAR CENTRAL SCHOOL\nKeytainer end three keys. Apply\nLost Sc Found Dept, Dally News.\nLOST\u2014BROWN LEATHER PURSE\ncontaining articles and identifies\nUon. Phone 905-R\nFARM. GARDEN St NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nTHRIVO GROWING MASH;\nGrowing Scratch Food; Chick\nCut Corn; Chick Cut Wheat;\nPoultry Food Groats; Feed Oat\nGroats; Chick Shell. The Brack\nman-Ker Milling Company Ltd\nAUTOMOTIVE,\n'38 PONTIAC SEDAN WITH THF,\noriginal Seagull Grey finish and\nPontiac's chrome Silver Streak,\nwlU really make you proud to\nown this car. Motor thoroughly\nreconditioned Enjoy the Summer's highways by owning and\ndriving thia powerful, troub.e-\nfree, comfortable car. Only $825\nOur reputation ia your guarantee\nNelson Transfer Company Ltd.\n1936 INTERNATIONAL K-l TON\ntruck. 750 x 16 heavy duty Ures.\nA-l mechanical condition, new\npaint 1940 licence. $625. Sowerby\nCuthbert Ltd., Opposit Post Of-\nflee and Hume Hotel.\n'35 CHEV. MAPLE LEAF 2 TON\ntruck. Dual wheel and hydraulic,\nsingle Uft steel dump box. Ideal\ntor ore hauling and road construction work. Chevrolet's powerful valve-ln-head Blue Flame motor. Hydraulic brakes, all in A-l\ncondition. Really a true value\nat $800 Our reputation Is your\nguarantee. Nelson Transfer Co Ltd\n'36 FORD LT. DELIVERY' $48S\n\"35 Chevrolet Lt Delivery     $325\nCENTRAL TRUCK lc\nEQUIPMENT CO, Nelson, B. C.\nBATTERIES - GRTD, $4.50. RE-\nchrgng, rprng, servicing on aU\nmakes and types. Currins, at Sky\nChief Auto Service, 206 Baker Si\nTRADE IN OLD TIRES ON NEW\nNelson Auto Wrecking, 613 Ver-\nnon Street Nelson. Phone 946.\n'28 NASHlPfCIAL COUPE. A-l\ncondition, $25 cash. Apply. Mrs.\nR. Ball, Vernon Apartments.\nFOR SALE, '37 INDIAN JUNIOR\nScout Motorcycle In perfect condition $200. John Robinson, Ymir.\nWANTED - TRUCK AND TRAIL-\ner for pole haul S. P. Pond, Nelson\n1928 ESSEX FOR SALE'CHEAP.\nCall at 674 Baker Street\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nSUMMER HOMES - 3 TWO ROOM\ncabins with furniture at Crescent\nBay for rent, $15 month or $10\ntwo weeks. Beach lots at Crescent\nBay for sale on easy terms.\nRobertson Realty Co., 347 Baker St\nFAIRVIEW PROPERTIES. IDEAL\nHome sites. Easy terms to suit\nTie-up one of these sites now for\nlater building R W Dawson,\nsole agent Hipperson Block.\nPhone 197.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for fuU information to 908 Dept of Natural\n_ Resources. C. P R\u201e Calgary Alta,\nFOR SALE: HOME, BEAUTIFUL\nlocaUon, stone foundation, furnace, two car garage, five lots.\nSacrifice price. Call at 532 Baker\nStreet or Phone 9.\nFOR SALE. BUNGALOW, FINEST\nlocation In Kaslo, fully furnished,\nFrigidaire and garage. Apply to\nBox 190, Nelson, B. C.\t\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 OR RENT\u20144 ACRES\nof cherry orchard. Kaslo. Apply\nC. Brett, 212 High St, Nelaon.\nFOR SALE PARTLY FURN CABIN\nNo. 43, Cottonwood Flats.\nSTRAWBERRY lc RASPBERRY\ncrates. Prompt delivery. Wynndel\nBox Sc Lumber Co. Ltd, WynndeL\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C.\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nLOANS - WE HAVE APPLICA\ntions for loans on improved property, $2000, $1500, $1000 and $750.\nGood interest return. If you have\nfunds you want to invest, aee us,\nRobertson Realty Co. 347 Baker St\nWE HAVE CONSlDTRABn,\nmoney available for Mortgages,\nrepayments monthly. Yorkshire\nPlan. C. W. Appleyard.\t\nFOR CAR INSURANCE. FIRE IN-\nsurance. or burglary insurance.\nPhone Appleyards, 269.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\npiPRTUBES. rrmNo\nNEW AND USED\nUrge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Mate St\n      Vancouver, fl C.\nCAMP FTJRlTOuWrX' VHOTO\nCream Separator, Evlnrude Outboard Motor $30. Kootenay Sec-\nond Hand Store.\t\npipe-fittings tubes - grat\ncial low prices AcUve Trading Co.\n916 Powell St. Vancouver. \u00a7 C\npor_a_.lT PBRMANBUY' WAVls\nmachine, Gd cond. 809 Third St.\n2 caMp t(M WITH MAT-IBS-\nses. Gd. cond. 413 Carbonate St\nBARBER SHOP. POaV IQUtP \u2022\nped Box 2822 DaUy Newa.\nSUMMER RESORTS\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS,\nAppledale Ratei by day. week\nor month. FuUy furnished. Apply\nAppledale General State.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAS8AYER8\nE W WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst' Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter. 304-805 Josephine\nStreet Nelson. B. C.\nGRENVILLE HT GWU~&SB~\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 420\nFall Street P O Box 9. Nelaon.\nB. C. Representing shipper!1\nInterest at Trail. B. C\nharold s. R3HK ftdSSLAJflJ.\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual repreientative forahlp-\npeg at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTOR!\nj r McMillan, d: c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray McCuUoch Blk\nDR   W1LBER_ ftftOCK. D. C.\n542 Baker Street Phone W9.\t\nC0R8ETIEREI\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V   M.\nCampbell, 870 Baker St Ph. 688.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR!\nR W. HAGGEN, Mining tt Civil\nEngineer; R C. Lend Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks.\nBOYD C. AF-LfeflK. fruitvale, B.C.\nSurveyor and Engineer. Phone\n\"Beaver Falls\".\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance ot\nevery description. Real Elt Ph. 99.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, IN-ORANGE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR W. DAWSON, Reel BBS In-\nsurance, Rental*. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electrle\nwelding,  motor  rewinding\ncommercial retrigeraUon\nPhone 593 324 Vernon |t\nSTEVENSON'S   MAClitME  SHOP.\nPh. 98, Vernon St Nelion, agenta\nfor Renold Chain drlvea it gears.\nMEMORIAL!\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES AT\nForest Lawn Memorial Park, Get\nErice list from Bronze Memorial!\ntd. Box 726 Vancouver. B. C.\nSASH FACTORIEI\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY,\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n8ECOND HAND STOREI\nWE   BUY,  SELL  8k   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph. 881\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nWomen Wear Slacks for Care-Free Weekends\nLETT TO RIGHT: OLIVIA de HAVILLAND, MARION WRDCON, BETTE DAVIS\nCare-free weekends In the country are ona of\ntha things that mane Summer such a joy. For these\n; refreshing interludes slacks not only are correct\n\u25a0 wearing apparel, but they are as practical and comfortable as they are smart. Olivia De Havilland Is\n' modelling a one-piece patio py.ama with banana\nieolorcd top and sage green, voluminous trousers.\nThe girdle and turban are of mustard gold. Marlon\nWrixon weara natural colored slacks with a gailjr\nplaided shirt ot navy and beige. The slacks have\nsuspenders of natural color, and belt ot plaid.\nSmarUy cut gabardine slacks have been selected by\nBette Davis, and with thein she wears a soft blouse\not white Jersey with broken stripes of aapphlre.\nC\nrATHER-DO YOU KNCW\nTHAT JAMES GRfcBMEV-\nTHE MOvlE STAR-IS WERE?\nME ISDININQIN THIS\nHOTSLTONIGHT-MV\nHtie8VWBNTOOWN\nTO SET A TABLE NEAR\nHIS'\nIJUSTGAItfTMAkS\nUI? MV MIND WHETHER\nTO WEAR W BLUE\nOR PINK DRESS-\n______\n t>H3\npaq.  nrr.iN i\nStrawberries Are\nPast Peak: Will\nProcess \"Annes\"\nMovements ot strawberries in the\nNelson district was almost past Its\npeak, with most ot the berries going to lam or processing factories\nstated Robert Foxall, Manager of\nthe Nelson Sub-Central of the Associated Growers of BriUsh Columbia, Thursday. <\nRoyal Anee cherries from the\nArrow Lakee were moving \"and\nBings wera expected to start in\nemail lots next week. Cerlot move-\ngents were expected to begin tbe\nllownlg week.\n' It wet tbt plan of the Associated\nGrowers to process about 50 per\ncent of all Uie district Royal Anne\ncrop at the processing plant at\nHarrop, The plant was installed last\nyear and fruit turned out proved a\ngreat success;\nLambert cherries will start to\nmove after the Bings are picked. A\ntew crstes of raspberries have arrived at Nelaon but the heaviest\nmovement ls not expected unUl the\nend ot next week. Black currants\nand other small berries appear as\nthe raspberries slacken.\nOils Active, Golds\nOff at Vancouver\nVAHCOUVm, june 27 (CP). -\nOils came out for more active trading during the afternoon period on\nVancouver Stock Exchange today.\nGolds ware off sligbUy. Transactions totalled 83,885 shares.\nOkalta at 70 gained 28 trom yesterday's closing bid and Calgary -\nEdmonton was up 9 to 1.28. Home ad'\nnoted 1 to 1.50 and Anglo Cann\ndlan rose t to 82.\nBralorne Gold tumbled 80 to 7.80\nand Sheep Creek was down 6 at 80.\nPioneer lost B to 1.50 and Privateer\neased a cent to 89 while Kootenay\nBelle gained 8 to 40. Other golds\nwere Inactive.\nIn the base metals Pend Oreille\nslipped 3 to 1.38.\nToronto to Observe\nHoliday on Monday\nTORONTO. June J7 (CP). - The\nToronto Stock Exchange will observe Dominion Day on Monday and\nthe Exchange will remain closed.\nMETAL MARKITS\nLONDON, June 27 (AP) - Tte\nsteady; spot \u00a3257 bid, \u00a3257 10s\nasked; future \u00a3280 10s bid, \u00a3280\n13s asked.\nBar silver 2111-184 up 71-18\n(equivalent 39.33 cents baaed on\ndollar at $4.03). Bar gold 168s, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\u2014Silver futures closed unchanged today. June futures\nclosed out today. No 'ales. Bid;\nJuly 37.75.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 12.75;\ntin 62.50; lead 8.90; line $.63; antimony 15.25.\nBar gold ln London wae unchanged at $8,784 an ounce te Canadian funds; 168s in British, representing the Bank of England's\nbuying price, The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $38.50 In\nCansdian.\nNEW YORK-Bar ailver 34*. unchanged. \u25a0 '\nCopper eaay; electrolytic, spot,\nConn. Valley, 11-11.50; export, f.a.s.\nN. Y., 10.80. Tin steadier; spot and\nnearby 52.87',.; forward W.37%.\nLead steady; spot New York 5-5.95;\nEast St. Louts 448; fine steady;\nEast St. Louia apot and forward\n825.\nOILS RECOVER\nAT TORONTO\nTORONTO, June 27 (CP)-Senior\n\u2022oils were In moderate demand and\nthey recovered minor fractions ot\nWednesday's losses ln today's operations on Toronto Exchange.\nBidgood-Klrkland Gold weakened\nto 11. Bralorne declined 80 to 7.40.\nLosses of 3 were netted by Wright-\nHargreaves, Teck-Hughes, Sylvan\nice, Pickle Crow, Hard Rock and\nAunor. Mclntyre at 38 touched a\nnew low.\nFord of Canada showed a loss ot\n% at 4. C.F.R. and Brazilian took\nminor losses. Abitibi pfd, teU to a\nnew low at 2%.\nFage-Hersey and Dominion\nBridge were up Vt to a point and\nGoodyear pfd, added IH.\nHome Oil loat 8 to 1.40 and Foothills was up 8 to 38. Brown, Calmont and Nordon were a bit heavy.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, June 27 \u00ab3P)-Re-\ncetpts, cattle 37; calvea 8; hogs 839;\nsheep 94. Moat of hop and sheep\nthrough billed.\nCows and atockera made bulk of\nearly light salea. >\nGood cows 4\u20144.50; common to\nmedium 3.50-4.78. Good bulla 4.30.\nCommon to medium atockera 4.50\u2014\n6.00.\nLast bacons 7.25.\nSheep Creek Producer\nHew York Rallies\nNEW YORK. June \u00bb <A_.-Mikt\ntaUyteg tendencies prevailed in today's slock market as Wall Street\ntook a more hopeful slant at the\ndomestic political picture and displayed a little leas nervousness over\nwar newa.\nGaina for favorites ranged from\nfractions to 2 or mora pointa te the\nforenoon, bait dealings wera sluggish throughout Prices were eut in\nmost cases at tha close. Transfers\nwere around 480,000 shares.\nAircrafts, utilities .rails and chemicals were Intrant the greater part\not the day.   .\nAmong bolstering factors ot the\nsession waa the announcement laat\nweek's freight loadings, Ior tea\nthird successive week, were up\nmore than seasonally te a new 1940\nhigh.\nProminent gainers at one Ume or\nanother were Douglas Aircraft,\nGlenn Martin, Great Northern,\nPennsylvania, Southern Railway,\nConsolidated Edison, American Wu-\nter Works, Public Service of NJ\nDu Pont Westinghouse, 3. C. Penney and Montgomery Ward.\nPackard wu relatively lively at\na minor advance following reports\ntela company might turn to big-\nKale manufacture ot airplane and\nmarine engines.\nAmong the Canadian issues Dome\nand Lake Shore gained tractions\nwhile Walkers loat *A. In the bond\nmarket Canada 4i gained halt a\npoint\nU. S. Plane Plants\nExtend Operations\nNEW YORK, June 27 (AP). -\nPlant expansion programs of tour\nof tee leading fighting plana manufacturers \u2014 Douglu, Lockheed,\nVultee and Brewster \u2014 were made\npublic today.\nDouglas wiU add 112,000 square\nfeet of floor apace to the El Se-\ngundo, Calif., plant at a coat ot\n$200,000. Lockheed will apend $8,-\n000,000 te duble tee capacity ol ita\n-factory at BuAanK, Calif. Vultee\nia spending $2,900,000 to Increue\nlta plant apace by 142 per cent\nBrewster is doubling lta manufacturing space by leasing trom Ford\nMotor Co., a plant near lta present\nfactory in Long Island City, N. Y.\nOil Trading Slow\nCALGARY, June 27-Tradlng in\noll| conUnued slow with few actual\ntrades being made on Calgary Stock\nExchange today. Transfers 303\nshares\nA few shares of Royalite sold at\n$17.80, off $1.80. Okalta at 62 was\nott a cent. Blda on C. _ I. and\nAnglo were oft 14 and 4 cents, respectively, Home wu bid up 6 to\n1.38. Anaconda gained tt.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG,  June 27   (CP). \u2014\nGrain futures\nWHEAT    C.\n71\nI\nGrand Forks Has a New Canning Factory\nNo Tenderfeet These\nuotetiona:\nHIA Low Close\n-   -   m\n\u25a0   tUU at Reno OOld Mines Ltd., Sheep Creek, one of tee district's\nateady gold producer! \u2014Photo by William Ramiay.\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nPremier Gold\nMINIS:   \u201e\nAldennac Copper\t\nAmm Gold  \u2014-\u2014\nAnglo-Huronian  \t\nArntfleld Gold  \t\nAstoria Rouyn Mines\t\nAunor Gold\t\nBagamac Rouyn .\nBankfleld Oold  \t\nSue Metals Mining \t\nBeattie Gold Mines\t\nBldgood Kirkland .........\nBig Missouri   \t\nBobto  Minea   \u2014\nBtalorne Mines\t\nBuffalo  Ankerite\n.12\n.01%\n1.50\n.04\n.Oltt\n.95\n.03\n.06\n.03\n.80\n.11\n.05'.\n.04 tt\n7.40\n2.85\n.01\n.43\n1.60\n.07\n1.45\nJO\n.50\n1.00\n31.50\n17.00\n.om\n2.15\n25\nFalconbridge Nickel ._     190\nBunker Hill Extension .\nCanadian MaiarUc \t\nCariboo Gold Quarti.....\nCuUe-Trethawey \t\nCentral Patricia  __.\nChrOmmm MAS -\t\nCout - Copper\t\nConiaurum Mines \t\nConsolidated MIS \t\nDome Mteea\t\nDorval-Slacoe  - \u2014\nEast MaiarUc  _\nEldorado Gold\nFederal Klrkland\nFrancoeur Gold\t\nGillies Lake\t\nGod's Lake Gold ...\nGrandoro Mines \u2014\nGunnar  Gold\n.02\n.18\n.03'.\n.26\n.02\n.32\n.55\nHard Rock Oold .............\n\"Marker Gold  . .   os\nIJellteger.    10.00\nHowey Gold\nHudson Bay M It S\t\nInternational  Nickel  \t\nJ-M Consolidated \t\nJack Waite\t\nJacola Gold \t\nKerr-Addison \u2014\nKirkland Lake\t\nLake Shore Mines \t\nLeitch  Gold      \t\nLabel Oro Mines \t\nLittle Long Lee \t\nMacassa Mines ..-\t\nMacLeod Cockshutt\t\nMadsen Red Lake Gold .\n24\n19.90 '\n31.75\n.OOtt\n.I8tt\n.Oltt\n1.57\n.75\n.15\n.43\n.OlVa\n1.90\n2.53\n1.05\n.25\nMclntyre-Porcupine     38.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake\nMcVlttie-Graham\t\nMcWatttrs Gold  \u2014\nMining Corporation .\u2014\nMoneta Porcupine \t\nMorris-Kirkland\t\nNlpissing Mining\t\nNoranda ,\t\nNormetal       \t\nO'Brien Oold  \u2014\t\nOmega Gold \t\nPamour Porcupine .........\nPaymaster Cons   \u2014\nPend Oreille\nPerron Gold\n.87\n.07\n.22\n.4m\n.44\n44.00\n.20\nsa\n.10\n.80\n.20\n1.33\n1.10\nPickle Crew Gold .77.    fjj\nPlOheer    \" '\nGold\n1.40\nPoweU Rouyn Gold\nPreston Eut Dome\nReno Gold Mines ...\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold ....\nShawkey Gold \u2014\nSheep Creek Gold ....\nSherritt Gordon  _\nSiscoe Gold \u25a0. \u2014\nSladen MaiarUc \u2014\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury Bute \t\nSullivan  Consolidated\n.75\n.67\n1.40\n.19\n.02tt\n%\n.85\n.53%\n.61\n.23 Vi\n,08V.\nJO\n.50\nSylvanite\/........,. _    2j00\nTeck-Hughes Gold .\nToburn Gold Mlnea .\nTowagmac \t\nVentures   \t\nWaite Amulet\nWright Hargreaves .\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS;\nAjax \t\nBritUh American ....\nChemical Research\n2.40\n1.00\n.10\n2.00\n2.90\n4.85\n.03\n.10%\n16.15\n.17\n29H\nUtt\n26%\ntttt\n3J%\n34tt\nJijy \".'.. iaott ttt  wtt 132\nOct.    138    M\u00bbtt 13J    135\nI July 41 tt  \u00ab%  40%  40tt\nOct       40%   40%   40      40\nDec.      41tt   41%   41      41\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT \u2014 Noa. 1 hard and 1\nNor. 71tt; No. 2 Nor. 68tt; No, 3\nNor. 63%; No. 4 Nor. 6114; No. 8,\nB7tt; No. 6, M%. No. 1 Garnet\n85%; No. 2 Garnet 64tt; No. 3\nGarnet 60%; No. 1 Durum 62.1;\nNo. 4 special 61%; No. 5 apeclal\nMH; No. 8 apeclal 56%; No. 1\nmixed 57%; track 71%; screenings\n23 cents per ten.\nOATfe - No. 2 C. W. 80tt; No.\n3 C. W. 29%; Ex. 1 and No. 1\nfeed 29tt; No. 1 feed 72%; No. 3\nteed 34%; track 29%.\nBARLEY - MalUng grades: 6-\nrow Nos. 1 and 2 C. W. 31%; 2-\nrow Nos. 1 and 2 C W. 37%; 6-\nrow No. 8 C. W. 39tt. Others: No.\n1 feed 29%; No. 2 teed 28%; track\n33%\nFLAX - No. I C W. 131%; No.\n2 C. W. 127%; No. 3 C. W. 120;\nNo 4 C. W. 107; traek 132.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 40%.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON. Jupe 27 (AP). - BrltUh stock doings In sterling:\nCent Mining \u00a310%; Metal Box\n80s; Crown \u00a313; Mining Trust at\nls 3d; Springs 17s 6d.\nBonds: British 2tt per cent Cob-\nsols \u00a370%; British 3% 'per cent\nWar Loan \u00a396%; BriUsh Funding\n4s  1980-90   \u00a3108%.\nimperii.;;:::::::..-:..--, jg\n.    1.00\nInter Petroleum\nTexas Canadian \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A ....\nBell Telephone  \t\nBrazilian TUP.\nBrewers Sc Distillers\n_5\n144%\n3%\n3%\nBrewing Corporation     116\nB C Power fi  .\nBuilding Produete  \u2014\nCanada Bread  \t\nCan Bud MalUng  \t\nCan Car tt Foundry \u2014\nCan  Cement \u2014\u2014.\nCan Dredge  \t\nCan Malting ..:..:  \u2014\nCan Pac Railway \t\nCan Ind Alcohol A \u2014~\u2014\nCan Wineries  \u2014\nCons Bakeriu  \u2014\u2014-\nCosmos    - -\nDominion Bridge  ....\nDominion Stores  \t\nDo m Tar St Chem \u2014\nDistillers  Seagrams  \t\nFanny Farmer  \t\nFord of Canada A \u2014~\u2014\nGen Steel Wares  \t\nGoodyear Tire \u2014_..\u2122~\nGypsum L & A ............\u2014\ngarollton Bridge ..\u2014\niram Walker  -~_\u2014\nIntl Metals   \t\nimperial  Tobacco  \u00bb._\u2014.-\nLoblaw A .a\u2014....\nLoblaw B  ,\t\nMaple Lest Milling \t\nMassey Harrli    \t\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corp   _.___\u2014-.\nNat Steel Car \u201e.\u201e.__a-\nPage Hersey  ...\nPower Corp    \u2014\t\nPressed Metals - ...\nSteel Of Can \u2014\u2014\t\n2\n12%\n3%\nWt\n6\n3%\n3$\n4%\nlit,\n3%\n12\n20%\n22\n3\n4\n21%\n22\n14\n60%\n3\n3%\n30%\n5%\n12%\n21\nir\n2%\n28%\n36\n37\n83\n\\*\nWhen Australia raised the age limit for enlistment to 40 years, these were among the men who\nanswered the call to tight for the motherland. All\nare veterans ot the first World War, as tee medal\nribbons on their breasts signify. All are ready to go\nover there again, but tee probability is that they\nwill be kept to Australia for home defence.\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LISTER, B. C.-Mrs. W.\nMcMann and two daughters and son\not McGrath, Alta.,' are gueits at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe\nWocknitz.\nMiss Agnes Nolce ot Calgary Is\nvisiting ber aunt'and uncle Mr.\nand Mrs. Pete Kerluke.\nElmer Huscroft wu a visitor to\nCranbrook.\nMiss Mary Rosi is on a two-week\nvisit at the home ot Mr. and Mrs.\nAl Wilson of Cranbrook.\nPat Harold and Oscar Oliver of\nCreston viiited John Krisby.\nJohn Ringheim wu a visitor to\nCreston to attend the Ostrensky\nMcNeil wedding.\nMr. and Mrs. George Johnson ot\nCreston were visiton to Huscroft\nElmer, Burton, Leonard and Kenneth Huscroft and Tom Ross left\ntor Blue-Joe, near Summit Lake,\nwhere they will'operate the John\nHuscroft portable mUl this Summer.\nMr. and Mn. Pat Holland and\ntwo daughters of Kimberley visited Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Yerbury\nand Mr. and Mrs. D. J. McKee.\nKirk Beard and Ernest Stalte\nleft for Blue Joe near Summit Lake.\nIrwin Rylan left for Haul Creek,\nwhere he ls employed.\nAl Wilson of Cranbrook visited\nGeorge Hurry of Huscroft\nMr. and Mn. E. Stevens and son\not Trail were guesti ot the former's\nparenti, Mr. and Mrs. R Stevens.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Stevens Were en\nroute home trom Spokane.\nW. A. Yerbury and W. Clarrl-\ncoati ot Kimberley were weekend\nguesti of the former's parenti, Mr.\nand Mn. Herbert Yerbury.\nMONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE\nPrice Broi\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAmoc Brew of Can .\nBateunt P ft P \"A\"\nCanadian Bronze ...\nCm Car It Fdy ptd\nCan Steemship\t\nCan Steamship pfd\nCon Min lc Smelting\t\nDpra Steel tt Coal \"B\" .\n.75\n14%\n13\n3\nWi\nCon Min It Smelting...       32\n\"  6S\nD_mlnTon Textile       \u2022_%\nDryden Paper        *%\nHoward Smith Paper _      13\nImperial Oil         8ft\nInter Petroleum  \u2014      \u00bb%\nInter Niokel of Can -     81%\nMcColl Frontenac          \u00bb\nNeUonsl BreW Ltd ~      38\nNat Brew pfd   .        . 36%\nOgilvie Flour new .,      *->Vt\nShawlnigan W fc P .\nSt Lawrence Corp .\nSt Law COrp pfd\t\nSteal of Can ptd\t\nBANKS\nCommerce  -\t\nDominion  -\t\nMontreal\t\nNova Scotia\t\nToronto  \t\nCURB\nAbitibi ptd\nBeauharnois Corp .\nBriUsh American _.\nB C Packen\t\nCons Paper Corp ...\nFalrchild Aircraft .\nMacLaren P te P\t\nMitchell RObt \t\nWalker Good fc W .\n10\n16%\n2%\n12\n65\n142tt\n159\n160\n250\n220\n3%\n16%\n10\na\n10%\n6%\n31\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C. - L. Truscott,\nPrincipal of Nakusp Public School,\nleft for his home In Nelson.\nMr. and Mn. Gilbert Fowler of\nCastlegar are holidaying in Nakusp\nwith the latter'i pirents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. E. Fowler.\nMiss H. W. Relth, Principal ol\nNakusp High School, left to vacation at her home in Penticton.\nG. Davison ot Salmo is visiting\nhla family In Nakuip.\nMUl Betty Sumtrom, who attends\nHigh School ln Nikusp, has left\ntor her home ln Burton.\nMiss Frances Lidberg visited her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMn. A. Renwick.\nMias Eileen Kent hu returned to\narrow Park after attending school\nte Nikusp.\nMlis Mary Boden, who hss been\nattending High School here, left\nfor her home In Fauquier.\nA. Kent and two ions of Arrow\nPark viiited ln Nakusp.\nMr. and Mn. Stanley Williams of\nTrail were guests of Mrs. Williams'\nparents, Mr. and Mn. G. H. Gardner Sr.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Keys are visiting\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. M. Keyi.  -\nRev. O. Grondahl\nof Elko Leaves\nELKO, B. C\u2014Rev. O. Grondahl,\nPutor for the Moyie-Wardner field,\nfor the past four years, preached\nhis farewell service Sunday evening\nto a good congregation. He has\nbeen transferred to Nakusp. Mrs.\nGrondahl and children accompanied\nhim.\nRev. Mr. Dovey trom Peachland\nwill take over the pastorate fere\nGREENWOOD\nGREENWOOD, B. C- Mn- E.\nAlmstrom left to spend several\nweeks in Oregon.\nMiss Mary Madden returned after\nspending a tew weeks In Grand\nForks hospital, where she underwent an operation for appendicitis,\nMiss Irene Inglis spent the weekend at her home in Beaverdell,\nR. Lee returned from a trip to\nPenticton.\nWarren Brown lett to spend a few\ndtys in Rossland.\nMrs. J. Halstrom and son Jim\nreturned from a trip to Rossland.\nMr. and Mrs. J. McReath ol Trail\nspent a few days with Mrs. H.\nThomas.\nKen Jorde of Osoyoos ls visiting\nhis brother and aiater-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. M Jorde.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Worthing and\nchildren, John and Phyllis, of Beaverdell, visited Miss Margaret Ashcroft.\nHarold Cousins of Beaverdell was\na weekend visitor.\nEXCHANGE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, June 27 (CP) .-British and foreign exchange, nominal\nrates between banks only;\nArgentina, peso, 2387.\nChina, Hong Kong dollara, 2720.\nSwitzerland, franc, 2814.\n(Complied by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rates;\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 4.43,\nseUing 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10, selling 1.11.\nNEW YORK, June 27 (CP).-Re-\nporti that the establishment of an\nofficial rate for the British pound\non the foreign exchange market\nli Imminent lent sterling to the $4\nmark for the fint time thu year the\ncurrency closing today 20 centa\nhigher In relation to the United\nStates dollar.\nThe Canadian dollar Unproved\n3% cents to 85.50 centi. (Ottawa\nForeign Exchange Control Board\nrate 9.09-9.91 per cent discount).\nThe Swiss franc gained .05 cent\nto 22.83 cents.\nChicago Drops\nCHICAGO, June 27 (AP)-While\ngrain traders awaited clarification\nof negotiations teat might lead to\na reopening ot the continental European market for foodstuff imports, wheat prices today fluctuated nervously, advancing tint teen\ndeclining to net lossei for the session.\nMost dealers adopted a waiting\nattitude. Some hedging sales and\nfavorable weather conditioni tor\nharvest In tee Southwest and\nSpring crop growth in parts of the\nNorthwest contributed to the late\nreaction.\nWheat closed 1\u20141% cents lower\nber Tltt-tt; corn Vt otf to tt up,\nthan yesterday, July 77, Septem-\nJuly 80%, September 58%\u201459; Oats\nVi\u2014tt down.\nNickel Advances\nMONTREAL, June 27 (CP) -\nPrices were mixed to steady in conUnued quiet late trade on the\nStock Exchange today\nFractional declines were boarded\nagainst Algoma, Dominion Bridge\nand General Steel Wares\nNickel and Hudson Bay displayed\nmoderate advances while Canadian\ncar tacked on a small gain, Dosco\neued.\nImperial OU scored lightly. Brazilian retreated.\nAxis Bonds Climb\nMEW YORK, June 27 (AP). -\nA bond group identified with tee\nRome-Berlin axis today pushed up\nfrom 1 to around 3 points. These\nincluded Rhine-Westphalia 8s of\n'52, Franklort 6tts, Heidelberg 7tts\nand Bavaria 68tts. Others Improving Included Argentine 4s of '72,\nBuenos Aires 4Ki and Rumania Institute 7s. Minor losses were posted\nfor most Italian and Japanese loans.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C-E. D. Ho-\ngers of Slocan City left for Vancouver after enlisting.\nJ. Raymond Reynolds, who enlisted in TraU, visited hla home.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Potter of Trail\nwere weekend guesta of Mr. and\nMrs. Howard Parker.\nHoward Parker of the Trail teach.\ning staff spent the weekend here\nwith bis parents. \u25a0\nRev. Jemes Dewar preached hla\nfarewell service in Knox United\nChurch. He hu left for Ganges,\nB.C.\nT. McNeish and son Murray visited Rossland.\nMr. and Mrs. Stephen Grant left\nto visit their daughter, Miss Irene\nGrant, a patient in Tranquille Sanitarium.\nMrs. E. Reynolds and daughter,\nMiss G. L. Reynolds ot the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital nursing staff,\nwho have been on an extended\nvisit in Toronto and other Eastern\npoints for two months, have returned.\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Pinchbeck and\ntwo chUdren of Trail visited here.\nFutures Remain\nat Pe^ed Levels 1\nWINNIPEG, June 27 (CP). -\nApart from a brief opening flurry\nwhich opened trading in wheat futures prices for the tint Ume in\ntwo days, the Winnipeg Grrin Ex-\nhange recorded a dull session today with wheat futures prices red\nmalnlng on their pegged levels.    -\nJuly closed at 71%, October 78\u00bb,\nand December 74%.\nThe pit was practically deserted\nthroughout   the   session,   the   feag\ntrades being apparently routine lo\u00ab\ncal spreading. There was no iupa\u00bb_\nport from  export  or  intermarketl\ndealings.\nA slight advance on United\nStates markets failed to influence\nWinnipeg trading. Chicago hadj\nranged from unchanged to Vt cent;\nhigher Just before the close. Buenoa.\nAires wu unchanged to % cent)\nhigher.\nIn the cash wheat section North--\nern exporten were still showlnsl\nInterest in most grades of ReU\n\u25a0Springs and also ln No. 3 Durum.1\nSales were confined to odd lots, I\nwith tee spread remaining gen**\n(rally unchanged.\nSlight domestic and mill luppflH\ngiven oats and barley on an other-1\nwise dull coarse grain market. Thtf\nprices remained steady. There weflT\nno trades in rye.\nReports of general rain throughout the Prairie had no apparH\neffect on today'a trading. Centra\nand Northern Sukatchewan r*i\nceived most of the moisture, wita\nManitoba, and Northern and South*\neastern Alberta receiving their\nshare, Saskatchewan points lea\nwith Melfort at 1.82 Inches, and\nHumboldt at 1.10 inches. OutlooM\nSaskatoon, and Prince Albert also I\nreceived favorable moisture.   ^^\nMr. and Mrs. A. Legault and Mrs.\nM. Rendel visited Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hallet ot Oliver\nvisited Mrs. H. Hallet.\nH. Hi Sumusgill returned after\na few days te Spokane.\nMrs. J. McLean left to spend several days in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. E, Johnson and son\nBobby of Danville visited Mrs. Johnson's mother, Mrs. N. Brown.\nMrs. T. McArthur returned after\na trip to Vancouver.\nMiss Edna Fisher returned after\nspending several days ln Vancouver,\nDale Brown and Paul Forshaw\nvisited Curlew on the weekend,\nMiss Lois Nicholas of Midway\nspending several days with Miss\nViolet Bombini.\nMrs. Ernie Johnston returned after several days in Vancouver.\nDOW JONES AVERACES\n80 Industrials\n20 rails\t\n15 utilities .....\nHigh\n121.23\n25.90\n22.20\nLow\n120.01\n25.57\n21.39\nClose Change\n120.69-up .98\n25.73\u2014up M\n22.10-up   .75\nAm Smelt It Ret\nAmer Tel \t\nAmer Tob \u2014\nAnaconda \t\nBaldwin    ~-\nBait & Ohio \t\nBendlx  Avi .\u2014\nBete  Steel  .\u201e\t\nCan  Dry \t\nCan Pac \t\nCerro de Puco\nChrysler   :\u2022..,,\t\nCon Gu N V .\nC Wright Pfd ...\nDupont     ....\nEast  Kod    .....\nGen Elec .........\nGen Foods\t\nGCn Mot  ....\nGoodrich\t\nGranby       ..__.\nOrt Nor Pfd ....\nHow Sound\nInter Nickel\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen Close I Open Close\n86tt    \u00bbtt|Mont  Ward       38tt    38%\n156% 137\n77% 77\n20% 20%\n15% 14%\n3tt      3%\n27% 28\n73* 73%\n14 13%\n2% 2%\n25% 25%\n61% 61%\n27% 2-tt\n7 1\n158 158\nill 122%\n31 30%\n3\u00bb%\n42%\nlitt\n5% 5tt\n11% 21%\n30% 80%\n- __,      30% 21\nInter Tel it Tel       _% 2%\nSean Ce\u00bb     26% 26\nMont Ward  -\nNUh Mot\t\nN Y Central -\t\nPack Mot\t\nPenn R R \u2014\nPhllUpi Pete \u2014\nPullmin \u2014\nRadio Cora  \u2014\nRem Rind  ......\nSafeway Storei\t\nShell Un ......\t\nS Cal Ed  \t\nStudebaker \u2014\nTex Corp  .\u2014-.-.\nTex Gulf Sul\t\nUn Carbide \t\nUn Oil of Cal .....\nUnited Aircraft\t\nUn  Pac   __\nU S Rubber\t\nU S StetT \u2014\nWarner Broi\t\nWest Elec  \t\nWest U\u00ab     \t\nWoolworth  \u2014\nYel Truck .\t\n4%\n11%\n3%\n19%\n82%\n20%\n4%\n7%\n41\n8%\n2ll\n37%\n31\n67%\n12%\n34\nTt\n19%\n81%\n2%\n90%\n17%\n31%\n12%\n4%\n11%\n3%\n19%\n32\n20%\n4%\n7\n41\n8%\n28%\n8%\n37%\n31\n67%\nlltt\n33%\n77\n19%\n51%\n2%\n89%\n17%\n31%\n12\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE\nBid\nMINES:\nBig Missouri  05\nBralorne      7.85\nBridge Riv Con\nCariboo Gold ...\nDentonla \t\nFairview Amal ..\nGrandvlew \t\nGruU Wihksne\nHedley Mascot .,\nHome  Gold  \t\nIndian Minu \u2014\nInter Coal\n1.80\n.00%\n.10%\n.01%\n.33\n.00%\nIsland Mount \u2014\nKoot BeUe  \t\nMetaline Met ....\nMinto Gold _\nMcGillivray .\u2014\nNicola M It M .....\nPend Oreille\n.32\n.04%\n.(11\n.18\n.    138\nPioneer Gold  1.45\nPorter Idaho  _\\-\nPremier Border .... .00.1\nPremier Gold  ..... \u2022\u00ab\nPrlvataer     -39\nQuatslno  - -01%\nRed Hawk Gold ... ~.\nReUet Arl   04%\nReno Gold   \u2014\nSalmon Oold   -02\nSheep Creek   .80\nSllbak Premier 40\nTaylor Bridge  .02\nWellington        ... *-\nWhitewater          -Ott\nYmlt Yank Girl .. 04%\nAmaliamated \u2014 \u2022\u00ab>\u00ab\nAik\n.08\n7.75\n.01\n1.70\n.01%\n.00%\n.12\n.35\n.01\nM\n.75\n.35\n.01%\n.02\n1.40\n.00%\n.40\n.01\n.05\n.19\n.03%\n.01%\n.01%\n.oa\n.00%\nAnaconda   \t\nAnglo Can \u2014\t\nAP Con \t\nBrown Corp \t\nCalgary fc Edm .\nCalmont  \t\nComoil  \t\nCommonwealth  ...\nEut Creit\t\nExtension \t\nFirestone Pete   ...\nFooteilla   \t\nFour Star Pete ...\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome  \t\nMadison\t\nMar Jon \t\nMcDoug Seg\t\nMercury\t\nMill City \t\nModel \t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNational Pete \t\nOkalta com \t\nPacalta -\nPac Pete ;.\u2014^_\nPrairie Roy -\nRoyal Can  \t\nRoyal Crest Pete\nSpooner   \t\nSouth End Pete ...\nSouthwest Pete ...\nSunset  \t\nUnited \t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIAtS:\nCan Pa.\nCapif   Est   \t\nCoaat Brew  \t\n.03%\n.03\n.51\n.55\n.09\n.10%\n.06%\n.08\n1.25\n1.26\n.19\n\u2014\n.18\n\u2014\n.16%\n\u2014\n.02%\n.03\n.15\n\u2014\n.05\n\u2014\n.32\n.45\n.10\n\u2014\n.07\n\u2014\n1.48\n.1.50\n.01%\n\u2014\n.00%\n.01\n.06%\n.08\n.03%\n\u2014\n.04%\n\u2014\n.13\n\u2014\n.06\n\u2014\n.05\n.63\n\u2014\n.03\n.05\n.22\n.14\n\u2014\n.13\n.15%\n.07\n\u2014\n.02\n\u2014\n.03\n\u2014\nPROMOTIONS OF\nLONCBEACH SCHOOL\nLONGBEACH, B. C. - School\npromotions were as follows:\nFrom Grade 8 to Grade 9-Bil.\nHandley, Daphne Leggatt, Allen\nWard, Haiell Major.\nFrom 7 to 8\u2014Vivian McTavls'i,\nRose Ferguson.\nFrom 6 to 7-Franklin Ward, Alfred Handley.\nFrom 5 to 6\u2014MarjorIe Ward.\nFrom 4 to 5\u2014Msry Woikin, Paul\nArgotoff, Ray Hamilton, Robert Major.\nFrom 3 to 4\u2014Polly Argotoff, BiUy\nFerguson, George Tucker, Florence\nJukes.\nFrom 2 to 3\u2014Darlene Ward, John\nWoikin, Peter Popoff.\nFrom 1 to 2\u2014Jean Hamilton, Norma Erickson, Annie Krivak.\nCRANBROOK AREA |\nOFFERS 25 HOMEI\nCHILD EVACUEES\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Eaat Stf\ntenay hai responded weU to\nappeal for homes for refugee r\ndren from England.\nTwenty-five homei lor one\nmore children have been voir\nteered by residents ot thii area..\nplication for these children ls mad\nto Miss Betty Mocovlch of the Prr\nvinclal Welfare Field Service,\nthe Government building.\nMiss Moscovich plans to org\na committee with the Welfare\nciety ai nucleus and members tr\nthe tefchera, ministerial end otl\nbodies to assist te the detalla ;\nquired to bring the children\ntheir new homes.\nMiss Moscovich makes a ion\ninvestigation ot each applicant (\nher report is forwarded to the I\nperlntendent of Neglected Child:\nFruit Import Tax\nto Help Okanagai\nKELOWNA, B. C, June 27 (CP)i\nLocal fruit growers will be mate\nally assisted by the 10 per cent i\nport tax upon truita entering C-\nada, providing United Statee i\nketa remain firm, according to mai\nketlng officlall here.\nTree fruit conditioni here an\ngood and heavy shipments are mol\ning today.\nThe cherry crop was reported I\nbeat in many years, and neavy i.\nliveries are reaching the packlj\nhouses. Harvesting ls general frOi.\nPenUcton to Kelowna, althouj\npicking is nearly finished In tb\nOliver district.\nUp to Saturday 21,000 packaM\nhsd been shipped through B. Q\nFruit Trees, Ltd.\nLondon Stocks Goljl\nLONDON, June 27 (AP). - W\nmarket pointed definitely hlgha\ntoday aa traders viewed more fn\nvorably the overnight war new]\nRecently declining industrial! el\ntraded numerous buyera. (B\nedged Issues were quiet but steadj\nHome rails were higher and 9\nshares recovered most of yestn\nday's losses. Foreign bonda w*|\ngenerally unchanged.\nDIVIDENDS\nPreston East Dome Mlnea IM\ncents.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, June 27 (CP)\u2014B\nter, Que. (92 score), 21%; Cue. i\nscore), 21%. Eggs, Easter A-largi\n23%-24; butter futures, Nov. 22%-i\nELECTROPLATING\na   CHROMIUM\ne   COPPER\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLaurit- Bids.        704 Nelson Ave\n.16%\n.04\n.03%\n.25\n.01\n^_-_^___^rf||;|rti^\n105\n.35\n.04%\n.04%\n1.25\n1.09\nNOW OPEN\nSaturday Evenings\nFor the convenience*of customers who are unable to call during\nregular hours our office will be\nopen Saturday evenings till\n^it1.............\nOffice Hours:\nWeek days 8 a.m.\nSaturdays\n8 a.m.\np.m.\np.m.\nMann latlg toss\n M SIXTEEN\neos&ssss&st&ssostsoooMVAtemKeMsoS'\nGnmia\nFOR FREEDOM\nION DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B, C.-FRIDAY MORNINO  JUNf tl\nMickey Heafner, Minneapolis\nSouthpaw, recently hurled e no-\nrun, no-hitter against Milwaukee.\nWith Eng.and'i greateit actor\nWILL   FIFE\nOFFICERS  and  MEN  OF\nH.M.S. AJAX and EXETER\nAt\n2:38\n7:38\n9:34\nBUY THRIFTICKETS and SAVE\nOt(86Z!)!^V8!#Xt!&X)!^i^^\nMd Cudgel has been retired atter\nlong and honorable career in tee\nid. The old son of Broomstlck-\ngenia Burch, now twenty-six\nKl ot age, will wind up his car-\nr under the care of his new own-\nHussel Graul. He wai the leed-\nPick of the Market\"\nGuaranteed Used Gars\nDwerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\npp. Port Office and Hume Hotel\nHoliday Specials,\nHOOD'S\n1M0-\ning sire in Canape for the past ten\nyeara with 950 winning racei to\nnis credit from 66 winners who won\n$343,365. So Cudgel has earned the\ncomfort teat he is enjoying lor tee\nrest of hli dayi.\nAuthorized Headlamp\nStation\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n206 Baker St  SERVICE   Phone 122\nFOR THE FIRST\nFlag* \u2014 Fireworka\nFilmi \u2014 Fiihirtg Tackle\nSwimming Cap*, Shoei,\nBalls, etc.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 460\nPhone M\n' In tee past five yeari, Paul Derringer of Cincy has nitched 1390\ninnings, and has walfed only 230\nmen, an average of one pass every\n6.04 Inningi. Lait year he iisued\nwalks to only 85 men ln 301 innings\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savinga Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nW. W. Powell Co.. Ltd.\n\"THE HOME OF GOOD LUMBER\"\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St. Nelson, B. C.\nRETAIL PRICE LIST\nEFFECTIVE JULY 1,1940\nNOTE \u2014 Lumber prlcoe are lubject to a   5%   DISCOUNT FOR  CASH  WITH\nORDER of $5 er more\u2014Free Delivery within the City en orders ef $5 er ever.\nPRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE\nFir and Larch\nSelect No. 1 No. 2\nfit   to 2x12 in., 8 to 20 ft Dimension. SB\nCedar\nJtS to 3x12 in. end 4x4 to 6x8 in., Plank and Tlmbera\nfij and 1x4 in., 10 to 16 ft, No. 1, S2S, S4S, Shiplap and flooring\n1x6 In.\n1x8 ln,\n140.00      $25XK)     WM\n~_5_.\n25.00\nS2S, S4S, Shiplap\n45.00\n22.00\nTOB\n1x10 ln.\n___r_r\nS2S, S4S, Shiplap\nS2S, S4S, Shiplap\n45.00\n24.00   '   20.00\n45.00\n24.00\n20.00\n50.00\nS2S, S4S.\n50.00\n24.00\n24.00\n20.00\n20.00\n1x4   to lx\u00ab  in., 10 to 16 tt, S_S, St.,   Shiplap\"\n1x8   in. 10 to 16 ft., S2S, S4S,  Shiplap\n1x10 in. 10 to 16 ft., S2S, S4S,   Shiplap\n1x12 ln. 10 to 16 ft., S2S, S4S,\n2x4   to 2x12 In., Cedar, S4S, Dimension\nSxT\n50.00       22.00\nIPS\n50.00        24.00\n60.00\n24.00\nmoo\n18.00\n70.00        25.00\n20.00\nto SxlJ and 4x4 to\n22.00\n18.00\n25.00\nWhite Pine and Spruce\n1x4  to 1x8 In., 10 to 16 ft. S2S S4S\n.   Shiplap\nS2S, _4S,   Shiplap\n1x10 in., 10 to 16 ft\n1x12 in   10 to 16 tt, SBS, S4S\n1x4   and 1x6 in. Flooring. Ceiling and   Siding\n50.00\n27.00\nToB\n70.00\n27.00\n20.00\n100.00\n32.00\n1x7   and 1x9 in., S2S, and Shiplap, No.   1 and 2 ftradT\nfr4   to 1x8 in., S2S, and Shiplap, No.    3 Grade\nCoast Fir\n50.00\nJ5___\n20.00\n23.00\n16:60\n1_3 and 1x4   In. No. 1 and j (ilear Flooring, _.&.\nSelect\n1x3 and 1x4   in. No. 3 Clear Flooring. E.G7\n1x4 to   1x12 in. No. 1 and 2. Clear, S4S\n$65.00\n55.00\n5-4, 6-4 and 8-4, No. 1 and 2. Clear, S4S\n75.00\n10 te.\nClear E.G. Stepping\n75.00\n12 to. Clear E.G. Stepping\n1 x 6 to. Clear Window Jamb\n2 x 6 bi. Clear Door Jamb\n2 x 8 in. Clear Door Jamb\n1 x 3 In. Cove Casings\n1 x S In. B.N. Casings\n.15    per Lin. Ft.\nJt \"\n^04 ^_\n_M         \"\n.12\n.03 Vt\nI x 6 in. B.N. Casings\n04\n1 x 6 in. B.N. Base\n1 x 8 in. B.N. Base\n.04 Vi\n.04H\n1 xlO ln. B.N. Base\n_05^_\n.07\nShingles and Lath\nNo. 1 XXX Coast Shingles\nH75\nNo. 1 XXX Local Shingles\n_Io. 2 XXX Local Shingles\nTS\n3.25\nNo. 1 White Pine and Cedar Lath\"\nNo. 2 White Pine and Cedar Lath\n7.00\nLumber Stock Complete\nWe carry a complete stock of all kinda of\nlumber. All our stock is dry, well manufactured and true to grade.\nRoofing, Building and\nWaxed Paper\nRoofing, 1 Ply Light\n$2.60 per\nroll\nRoofing, 2 Ply Medium\n3.15\n\"\nScutan Tarred Building Paper\nStand\n2.20\n\"\nScutan Medium\n2.95\nM\nScutan Heavy\n4.40\n\"\nWhite Building Paper\n1.00\ni,\u2014\nHercules Waxed Paper X\n1.75\n\"\nHercules Waxed Paper XX\n2.50\nHercules Waxed Paper, XXX\n3.15\n\"\nTar Building Paper\n1.35\n\"\nIN USED CARS\nHere are cars that will allow you to have a\nreal holiday at a small cost\nALL WITH 1940 LICENCE\n1929   Chevrolet.   2*\ndoor tedan. A \"Reel\"\nHiding car.   (MOC\nPriced at .. $100\n1928   Chevrolet.   4-\ndeer    sedan.    Don't\nmtn this buy frl OC\nAAC*           \"I***\nUUb) 't-VHH 'Xiatiietidn tv\\i vim -.Seai.iu\nmoi MeiiMO a_o 'uipet joop-j, x|i luting |\u00a3(j \u2022 \u2022 Mta\n\u201esm_IPH\u201e v ,.,\u00bb\"0 '111 P\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab \u00ab-K Jl P*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbl\u00abl w.neA,,\n1929   Plymouth.   4-\ndoor    tedan.    Many\nmilei ef        {OCA\nsatisfaction    \u00ab])\u00a3dV\n1928 Buick Sedan. A\nideal  family car.   In\nexcellent       ffl CA\ncondition  ..   <P1\u00abJV\nBUDA DIESEL POWER UNIT\nAND SCHRAMM\nCOMPRESSOR\nJACK ANNABLE\nSOMETHING NEW!\nSEA FOOD PLATE\nAT\nQrenfelVs Cafe\nLht Timet Tonight\nComplete at 7:00-8:18\n\"BlgCuy\"\nwith\nVictor\nMcLaglen\nJ. Cooper\n\"Scandal\nSheet\"\nwith\nOtto Kruger\nOna Munson\nStarts Saturday\nBUY NOW FOR JULY 1st HOLIDAY\nLET US CHECK YOU OVER\nBefore going on your trip come in and let\nus check your gas, oil, tires, etc. A careful\ncheck-up will save you grief and allow you\nto enjoy a carefree outing.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT\nPhone 75       Dodge De Soto      Opp. Pott Office\nHEIODY 1Q40\n.'<\u00bb 6wn_ MURPHY . Frank MOKGAN\nd\u00bbWNm.B\u00abnKilWE..y\u00ab_U_Vn\nSPORTSWEAR\nfor Vacation Days\nWhether It's )ust for the weekend\nor for a grand two weeks vacation, you'll be needing some of\nthis fine sportswear from Nelson's premier Men's Store.\nSmart Sports Jackets\nAll wool Tweed Jackets in plain\nor fancy back models. Ideal for\nsports or business <M C AA\nwear. Up from ..     \u00abPltJ.Uv\nSUMMER\nSTRAWS\nNew weather-\n11 e d straws,\nsmart and cool.\n?2.25 to\n^3.50\nSLACK SUITS .\nBeautifully finished slack suits,\nthe perfect answer to Summer\ncomfort. In matched or contrasting sets. ?8.25 to 90.95\nKMORY'C\nLIMITED       *^\nStyle Leaders in Men's Wear\n1^7 DODGE\nTOURING SEDAN\nThoroughly reconditioned. Looks\nand runa llka new.\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43      Limited      661 Jesephlns\nNOW-Parm\nCREAMSICLES\nELECTRICAL WIRING\nSUPPLIES\nStandard Electric\n433 Joiephlne St. Phone 838\nFACIALS MANICURES\nSHAMPOOS    PERMANENTS\nHaifrh Tru-Art\nBeaut; Salon\nPhone 337        Johnstone Blk.\nFOR THE  SUMMER \u2014\nBe Lovely!\nWITH A HAIRSTYLE BECOMING\nAND E\/\\SY TO KEEP\nWe study your features, decide which\ntype you are, and show you many suggestive styles that will bring out your best\npoints. Come in today and see what new\nhair style can do for you.\nIt's not a Business\u2014But an Art, With us!\nilady's Beauty Parlors\nCall at 577 Baker St.     Phone 244 or write     Nelson, B. C.\nM    CANNING\n\u00bb_ TIME IS\nHERE\nCold Pack Canners  -f2-25\nStrawberry Hullers  *****\nCherry Pitters 15* and 20*\nStrainers,  from    20*\nCanning Racks 45* and 90*\nCheck over your equipment now\nWood, Vallance .\nHardware Company, Limited\noisssssie&sssssotso&t&'s\/PAratiss\nCUT FLOWERS. WEDDINC\nAND FUNERAL DESIGNS\nPhone   KITCHENER\nM&ssststoe&MtaotoMtsMosoetoowi\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655        S10 Kootenay\nDEPENDABLE GUARANTEED\nUSED CARS\nPriced Right\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker tt     Limited     Phone 119\nBOYS', MISSES' AND\nCHILDREN'S\nSummer Footwear\nGodfreys' Limited\nFriday and Saturday\nBRICK SAYS:\nYou just phone 10 or 11\u2014I'll do the\nrest\u2014I can't see why you should have\nto carp\/ your groceries on these hot\ndays when I have a smart International\nPanel Delivery for just that purpose.\nWEINER8: Swlft'i Premium\nPer Ib   -\t\nCOOKED POT ROAST: Swlft'i Primlum\nchicken loef, jellied tongue, Jellied\nveal, illced to order, pea Ib\t\n, PURE PORK SAUSAGE: Brookfleld.\nLb. carton - \t\nCORNED BEEF: Swlft'i Auitrallan.\n2 tlm \t\nBURNS' 8PORK: Tha meat with\nmany uses. 12 oz. tin v... \t\nSLICED BACON: Swlft'i. No rind\nYt Ib. cartom, 2 for\t\n23*\n. Beef,\n25*\n35*\n39*\nEGGS: Fresh local, Grade A medium\n2 doien ,\t\nSOCKEYE SALMON: Fancy quality\nNabob <\/,'t, 2 tlm \t\nSHRIMP: Fancy quality Blrk'i\nTall tlm, 2 for \t\n.ELLO: All flavor*,\n4 package! \t\nJUNKET ICE CREAM MIX:\n2 packagn \t\nPURE LIME JUICE: Montierrat\n19 oz. bottle\t\n-m\n45*\n39*\n29*\nm\n49*\nCLOUDY LEMON SQUASH:\nYeatman'i 11 oz. bottle\t\nPURE APPLE JUICE: Edan'e\n10 oi. tlna, 3 for   \u2014\nSALAD TIME DRESSING: Nalley's\n12 oz. Jar   \t\nPEANUT BUTTER: McColl.\nhermetically naiad, 20 oz. tin\t\nPURE STRAWBERRY JAM: Sunline\nNew pack, 4 Ib. tin\t\nFRESH MARSHMALLOWS: Lowney'i\n1 Ib. cello \t\nOMjSn&lWi\nSPECIAL OFFER!\nQUART NO-RUBBING\nWITH MOP\n98.\nFloor   Waxing   Ettyl\n 39U\nBOTH  FOR\nONLY .  . .\nTHOMAS J. LIPTON'S IMPORTED TEA: Rod\nLabel. Per Ib\t\nOrange Label\nPer Ib \t\nYellow Label\nPer lb. \t\nCOFFEE: Star Special freih\nground to order\nPer Ib.\t\nBUTTER: Clareiholm Flnt\nGrade. Freih dally direct from\ntha creamery. {___\nm\n85*\n95*\nI freih\n45*\nJ lbl. .\n2 package! Kellogg'i All-Wheat Flakea\nand 1 colored fruit dlih for __\t\n29*\n23*\n25*\n59*\n23*\n25*\nCOTTAGE ROLLS:\n3 to 6 lb. average, Ib...\nSOUP: Nabob Tomato, Vegetable, etc\nS tini   \t\nASSORTED SANDWICH DISCUITS:\nMcCormick'!, Ib. \t\nMARMALADE: Joan Abbot Pure Grape\nFruit, Orange or Lemon,4 Ib. tin\t\nGLASS CLEANER: Union\nBottle   \t\nFACIAL TOILET SOAP: Woodbury'i\nI bare _ \t\n6 bare Colgate'! Toilet Soap and 1\nfanoy fruit bowl all for\t\n8ANI FLUSH:\nPar tin \t\n25*\n25*\n29*\n59*\n19*\n23*\n29*\n25*\nFRESH FRUIT and\nVEGETABLES\nWATERMELON: By half or whole,\nLb\t\n5c\nRASPBERRIES: Local, 2 boxei\nCANTALOUPE: Large, 2 for .\n251\n35*\nSTRAWBERRIES: Brltiih Sovereigns,\nThe beit berries of the year, large baiket\nCRATE: (4 large baiketi)\t\n35c\n?1.35\nTOMATOES: Okanagan, hot home, Ib\nLETTUCE: Large, solid headi, 2 for...\n17*\n19*\nNEW CARROTS, NEW BEETS: Local,\n4 bunchei \t\n19c\nCAULIFLOWER: Snow white headi, Ib\nRADISHES, CREEN ONIONS: 2 for ...\n12*\n5*\nCREEN PEAS: Freih daily,\n2 Ibi\t\n19c\nBANANAS: 3 Ib ,. 25*\n\u2022iGROCERYirfr\n I\t\nm\n.-.--.\n.\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_06_28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415119","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"}]}}