{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415148":{"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":"1940-05-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415148\/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":" \u2014-\u00bb\n17 Crown Witnesses Heard af\nFernie Murder Trial\nPage Two\nVOLUME 39\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nDurocher Bats Dod_ers to Series\nWin Over Philadelphia\nPaga Thirteen\nBRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14.1940.\nNUMBER 20\nNAZIS TAKE SECTOR OF DUTCH\nWithdrawing Allies Pour\nFire Into Big Nazi Attacks\n(0 MORE PLANES\nSHOT DOWN BY\nBRITISH PLANES\nRain Bombs on Nazi\nTroops in and Out\nof Germany\nLOSSES ARE LIGHT\nLONDON, May 13 (CP)-Boyal\nAir Foifce planes shot down 40\nGerman machines over the Netherlands and Belgium today, bringing Britain's share in Hitler's 400\nairplane losses in 3% days of intensive warfare to 135:\nThe serial war reached a new\npeak of activity aa the Allied and\nGerman forces wrestled furiously\nfor mastery of the skies and Allied land and sea forces linked up\nwith Hollanders and Belgians in\nthe first stsges of one of the biggest battles of history.\nThroughout last night and today\nthe Royal Air Force rained bombs\non German troopi inside and outside German territory, attacked\ntheir supply columni and Impeded their movements, in cooperation with Allied land forcei.\nAs Parli announced withdrawal\nf Allied forcei to prepared poii-\nioni, an authoritative source here\nrimed the people not to be dis-\neartened when they hear of \"cer-\niln withdrawals.\" This lource de-\nlared the Germani apparently are\ntaking \"almost everything in an at-\n\u2022mot to win the wsr quickly.\"\nThe British fight In the air was\nI in intensive pace. An Air Min-\n'try communique said 40 additional\nlerman planes were shot down \"a*.\nery small cost\" to the R.A.F.,. and\nlut its planes had successfully\nnmbed German columni in Helium tnd Luxembourg.\n\u2022ueoenful bombing attacki by\nthe R-A.F, were alio ita.ed Hat\nnight on the Wallhavon Airdrome,\nnear Rotterdam. Thla airport wai\nlost by tha Naila Saturday but\nrecaptured by them Sunday.\nThe R.A.F. uied Beautorti, \"the\nitest and beit of British light, long-\ntnge bombers,\" in a spirited 20-\nninute attack on Waalhaven and\nheir bombs fired the airdrome\nlulldlngs end pitted the landing\n.elds.\nThe Ministry of Health announced\njrrtngemenU to shelter refugees\nrom Belgium and the Netherlands.\nThe refugee stream began flovc-\nng Into England from Holland to-\ntight A cargo steamship  landed\nutch  women   and   children   mi\nRlllih, French and Pollih resits of Holland at an East Coast\nort.\nThe only Briton now known to be\n_ Amsterdam ia Consul-Gener.il\nJerald Shepherd.\n\"Since the German invasion of\nlolland and Belgium,\" said an Ad-\nilralty announcement, \"strong ua-\ntl forces have been operating con-\ninuously off the coast of these two\nluntries In spite of reported bomb-\nif attacks having been made on\ntun.\n\"Allied operations on lind have\ncen lupported. Enemy troopi laming from the air on airdromes and\ncaches have been bombarded. Re-\nugees have been evacuated from\nhe war area and brought to this\nountry.\"\nCanadians Safe in\n-lolland bur No Word\nof Two in Norway\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP).\u2014Cana-\nTrade Commissioners and their\nitanti   in   Belgium   and   The\netherlands are lafe but no word\nbeen received with regard to\nde Commissioner Richard Grew\nJ his assistant of Norway. Trade\nInister MacKinnon announced\nnighL\nThe Minister said according to\nird received from the Canadian\nfattens In the low countries, Yvei\nmontagne, Trade Commissioner\nBelgium, and hli assistant, Maur-\nBelanger, and J. A. Langley and\nA. Stark, Trade Commi_sioner\nid his assistant, respectively, in\nie Netherlands, were safe.\nNAZIS REPORTED\nTO HAVE PIERCED\nRAIL LINE\nNEW YORK, May 13 <AF)-\nThe National Broadcasting Company picked up a B.B.C. broadcast of a French communique\nfrom London today saying the\nGermans have \"penetrate, the\nmain railroad line\" between\nBrussels and Liege,\nCutting of this line would indicate an advance of 10 milei\nSouthward by the Germans,\nwho last were reported to have\nbeen engaged by French tanks\nand motorized troops in the\nneighborhood of St. Trond, West\nof Liege.\nSWISS BUSINESS\nLEAVING BASEL\nBASEL, Switzerland, May 13\n(AP)\u2014The Bank tor International\nsettlements, which has retained iti\nheadquarteri here ilnce September, ii removing all lta records\nand its business office to the little village of Chtteau D'Oex in\nthe Bernese Alps, it wss learaea\ntonight.\nMany other large banking and\nbusiness firms in Basel and Zurich moved into the Interior during the last three days due to\nlarge German troop concentrations serosa the border.\nThe Swiss army meanwhile stood\nfully mobilized as the reported German troop concentration! on the\nfrontier itrengthened the belief uf\nforeign observers that Germany\nmight itrike through Switzerland\ntoward the Rhone Valley ot France.\nBehind the lines the Swill hign\ncommand took \u25a0 quick lesion from\nthe German Invasion of Belgium,\nHolland and Luxembourg. They held\nback motorized unite to clean up\nany troopi wWch might bt tandeo\nby air.\nAll Swin airports were heavily\nguarded by anti-aircraft gum ind\ntroops.\nMen too old md youthi too young\nto be mobilized but able to use\nrifles were given 40 cartridges each\nand ordered to be on the alert for\nparachute troops.\nFrench artillery and Allied air\nbombs thli afternoon blasted part\nof the Istein railroad tunnel under Germany's \"Gibraltar of the\nRhine\"\u2014the line providing direct\ncommunication between Basel and\nGerminy'i Weit will fortifications.\ntoosevelr Moves\nto Boost Armament\nWUHINGTON, May 13  (AP)\nj\u2014Preiident  Roosevelt   acted  to-\n1 ity to speed  up  the  country's\nl armament, working with military\nend fiscal officials on  a request\n\"to Congresa for an extraordinary\nI defence    fund    which    reliable\nSources said would probably exceed 3500,000,000.\n\u25a0' Initial reaction to the news of\ntil intention Indicated that, as a\nresult of the total war now raging ln Europe, his recommendation would have many supporters\nIn both Home and Senate no mat-\ntar how large lt might be.\nChairman Andrew May of the\nBouse Military Committee, who\nWith Chairman Carl Vinson of\nthe House Naval Group was called to confer with Mr. Roosevelt,\ntomorrow, told reporters he favor-\ntd an additional $1.000,000,000 for\nthe army and navy combined.\nAllied Troops\nGain In Belgium\nBRUSSELS, May 13 (CP).\u2014Allied troops, supported by squadrons\nof tanks, gained ground in a successful counter-attack tonight aa the\nstruggle in the Eastern Belgian fortified zone,.near Liege\u2014hourly grew\nmore violent both on land and in\nthe air.\nWhile stiffening Allied resistance\nchecked the Germans in the strategic Llege-Tongres-St. Trond-War-\nemme quadrangle, Allied forces had\nousted the Germans from a newly-\ncaptured village.\n\"A village which had fallen Into\nthe hands of the enemy has been\nre-occupied after a counter-attack\nby Belgian units supported by\ntanks,\" a communique said.\nThe communique said that\nthroughout the day \"our units\nfought severe combats everywhere.\nThey put up stiff resistance to the\nenemy.\"\nU. S. Makes Cash\nAvailable to Naxi\nInvaded Countries\nWASHINGTON, May 13 (AP). -\nThe United Statei today made\navailable to Holland and Belgium\ntheir large cash resources in the\nUnited States for purchase of defence weapons and other purposes.\nTreasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau granted blanket exemptions\nto the Governments of Belgium and\nthe Netherlands from President\nRoosevelt's order last Friday prohibiting any withdrawals of Dutch\nor Belgian funds from United\nStates without treasury licences.\nMorgenthau's action left the President'! order in effect, as applied to\ncitizens and business firms ot the\ntwo countries, except for four banks\nand trading companies ln the Netherland East Indies, for which blanket exemptions also were granted.\nOfficials indicated envoys ot Holland and Belgium had told the\nTreasury their Governments need\ntheir funds.\nNelson Has Fifth Day\nFine Sunny Weather\nNelson'i fifth day of bright almost Summer-like weather saw the\nmercury climb to i high of 71 degreei Monday ai the tun ihone\ndown for about 10 houri from a\ncloudlesi sky. The day's minimum\ntemperature was 38 degrees.\nWithdrawal in Accordance With Strategic\nPlans Says Spokesman; French Tanks\nInflict \"Heavy Losses\" on Nazis\nPARIS, May 13 (AP)\u2014Allied advance motorized columns poured their fire into massive Cerman attacks In the\nNetherlands and Belgium today as they gradually withdrew\nexcept West of Liege, Belgium, where the French counterattacked with tanks.\nA French War Ministry spokesman emphasized that\nwhile French, British, Hollanders and Belgians were retiring\nslowly in the face of savage onslaughts by Cerman motorized\ncorps and tremendous blasting attacks from the air, the withdrawal was in accordance with strategic plans and was not\nto be considered a retreat.\nThe heaviest fighting, the French stated, occurred In\nthe Belgian Ardennes Mount-f\nains, North of France, where\nthe Germans threw forward\nseveral divisions of Infantry\nand between 1500 and 2000\ntanks In an effort to sever Allied communications.\n\"It's the big push,\" taid, one official commentator, but \"we've\nerected the wall agalnat it\" On thla\nwall, he aald, \"the great battle will\nbe fought\"\nThe Germane were \"able to advance,\" said the nightly French\ncommunique of thla sector.\n\"Our eavalry unite, after having fulfilled their minion to retard the enemy, fell back on the\nMeuie which wu reached by the\nenemy on t ptrt of Ite course.\"\nThe Meuse (Maaa) River swings\nSouthwastward, South of Liege, and\natter passing through Namur and\nDinant, entera French territory at\nGivet, aome 45 milei Wert Of the\nLuxembourg border.\nThe Germani were reported waging violent battle for possession ot\nLongwy, French town at the Junction of the French, Luxembourg\nand Belgian border*. The Trench\nheld th\u00bb-tew_i -*>\u25a0-\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0   stt \u25a0_._.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-.\nThe battle line along Luxembourg\nwas described aa partly in French,\npartly ln. Luxembourg territory.\nFarther! North official spokesmen\nof the War Mlniatry declared the\nGermani had taken but one of the\nLiege forte, that at _ben Emael, 13\nmiles North of the famous fortified centre which stemmed the German advance 12 dtya ln 1914.\nGerman infantry with a apearhead\nof two motorized diviaiona which\npoured through this gap in the Alberta Canal defence line appeared\nto have been checked in tiie 8\u00abtor\nWest of Liege, French spokesmen\nsaid.\nIt waa here, in the vicinity of St.\nTrond, 33 miles East of Brunels,\nthe Belgian capital, and 30 miles\nNorthwMt of Liege, that the French\ncounter-attacked \"mostly led by\ntanks.\"\n\"Heavy loaset on the enemy\"\nwere inflicted  in  this clash  ol\nmachine-age  armies,   fought   to\nstop Germani until the main Allied torce can arrive.\nA French force of tanks tnd\narmored can wts reported earlier today to have waged its fint\nlarge scale battle witn a similar\nGerman column and broken it up\nFarther North, in Holland, the\nFrench said the Germans maoe progress \"especially to the South ol\nine lower Meuse River.\"\nNorth of the Meuse River, in The\nNetherlands, the Allies were withdrawing within the Grebbe water\nline to give the Dutch unique defence system its conclusive test\nagainst a modern war machine of\nmotorized and air forces.\nThe spokesman said \"tremendous\"\nair battles were accompanying the\ntroop movements on Doth sides.\nHundreds of planes on both sides\nbombed enemy objectives, seeking\nto break up moving columns.\nThe Germani were using methodical tactics; motorcycle troopa in\nadvance, then wages of tanks and\nfinally their infantry.\nDefence Minister Edouard Daladier of France was in Belgium,\nwhere he inspected outposts. Allied\noperation! are proceeding under\nthe lupreme command of General\nGamelin of France. Choking the\nroadi were lines of refugeei from\nthe Netherlands and Belgium.\nRefugeei   irrlvlng   by   rail   In\nParli told how their tralni had\nbeen strafed by Qerman planei.\nAt lent S00 came Into the Parli\nNorth itatlon, all wearing special\narm band! and under the lupar-\nvlilon   of   Belgian   and   French\nofflcen.\nMeanwhile official spokesmen,\nwarning the public to be on the\nlookout tor German parachute\ntroopi which might attempt \"Fifth\nColumn\" actlviaei in France, laid\nthia country haa no Intention of relenting on a decision to ihoot all\niuch troopi found'ln French territory who are not wearing the regular German uniform.\nGermany'i threit to make re-\npriials\u201410 for ohe\u2014waa termed\n\"barbarism.\" \\\nThe threat to shoot; German parachutist! not ln uniform, they said,\nmeant those in civilian clothes or\ngsrb that would permit them to\nmix unnoticed with French people.\nA uniform which is not at once dis-\ntinguiihible ai such could not be\nconsidered a uniform, they said.\nDUTCH LEAVING\nITALY AS WAR\nCRISIS SPREADS\nBy RICHARD O. MA8S0CK\nAisoclnted Preu Stiff Wrlttr\nROMS, May 13 (AP). - Large\nnumbers of Dutch citizens were\nreported leaving Italy tonight as\ndemonstrations throughout Italy\nagainst Britain and Frtnct fanned a new Mediterranean crisis.\nSoma of the Netherlands citizens were leaving for France.\nSome aaid they were leaving after consulting the Netherlands\nLegations.\nMany Scandinavian! left Italy\npreviously, at the Ume of the invasion! of Denmark tnd Norwiy,\nTroopa wert posted around tht\nBritish and French Emba\u00bblei in\nRome but their intervention was\nnot neceisary. A few police were\nable to divert columhi of well-dia-\nciplined Fascist itudenti mirching\nIn the atreelkaOHpKaSww\n\"Down With England\" and caftlag\nfor wtr.\nAn Engliih woman wtt reported\nto have been molested while tearing\nup an anti-British leaflet\nA aide issue of the crisis wu trie\ntion between Fascists and the Vatican. Mussolini today again gave his\napproval to the works of t pro-\nFascist author which hu been\nplaced on the Church's forbidden\nlist.\nDetectives stationed at the Vatican City gate! were reported to have\nbeen reinforced without apparent\nreason.\nEgypt Removing\nWestern People\nALEXANDRIA. May  18  (CP)-\nIteypt began removing civilian populations of all strategic Western\ndesert towns along the Libyan Iron\ntier today.\nThe Military Governor ordered\nImmediate abandonment of all\nhomes at three important centrei,\nMent Malruh, Sidi Barrani, and\nSolium.\nIt waa in furtherance of Egypt's\npreparationa \"for all emergencies\nand surprisee\"\u2014with a view to a\npossible war move by Italy.\nTonight wu the last night of all\nEgyptian blackouta in the test of defence against aircraft, but officials\nannounced the blackout would continue In Cairo and other cities.\nGovernment sources declared the\nMediterranean situation was \"slightly reassuring,\" but emphasized that\nEgypt must constantly be \"exceptionally cautious and vigilant.\"\nGermany Honors\nParachute Troops\nfor Fort Capture\nBERLIN, May 13 (AP). - The\n\"incomparable daring\" of eight Nazi\nair force officers ln capturing the\nnew Belgian fortreu Eben Emael at\nLiege and certain bridges over the\nAlbert Canal today won for them\nthe Knight's Crou of the Iron Cross,\npersonally bestowed by Adolf Hitler.\nThe recipients Included t Captain\nKoch, promoted to major; a Lieutenant Witzig, who wu mtde t\ncaptain, and two other lieutenants\nwho were wounded but received\ntheir decorations by proxy.\nDNB, official German News\nAgency, said the offlcen were the\nshock troop leaden of a parachutist\nregiment. DNB said the personal\nbravtry ot the men behind the enemy lines won the awards. There\nwas no indication whether the men\nhad been dropped from planes Into\nthe heart of Eben Emael.\nCOAST FLIER \"MISSING\"\nV-JH-bUVER, May 13 (CP). -\nPilot Officer Berry Morgan-Dean,\n23, ot the Royal Air Force wu reported \"missing and believed to\nhave loat hia life\" ln t telegram received here today by his mother,\nMn. G. Morgan-Dean, from the\nBritish Air Ministry.\nSMITHERS, B. C, Msy 13 (CP)\n\u2014William K. Demoue, 47, collapsed and died last night while trying to rescue belongings from his\nburning home at nearby Walcoti,\nB. C.\nCanadian Mountles\u2014Yfar Style\n,-*;.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 < \u25a0           \u25a0 \u25a0          \u25a0 .' n\nj                                                               '    r:'':;,\nm           *Ca-:\nm      ' 3&   i\n\u25a0 \u2022           ixs-er.:.. > *\n\u25a00\u00bb-         . A\nrs,>        \"J\nj^h \u25a0 \"v.\n\"- >        |\nh\\\n*-\u25a0\u25a0'\n'm_m__r\n*rWTi3Sr\n*\nLjip **f     - '% *k       \u25a0\n\"f\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\n.'\n\u2022\"\u2022'\u25a0\u2022_   ,   ^    .     '  '\"\u25a0\n\u25a0.\"..\u25a0\u25a0'. ..\u25a0,\nir .\n. The members of the Royal Canadltn Mounted Police who went to\nEngland with the Canadian Active Service Force are slightly less\ncolorful without their horiei and red aneVblue uniforms, but, nevertheless, make an impressive.sight when Jktd-up with their motor-\ncyclei as Is thli photograph which was taken ln England.\nDRIVERS' TESTS START IN NELSON\nTHIS MORNING; 1500 TO BE TESTED\n25 Minutes Average\nTime for Test;\nHere 25 Days\nDriver'i extmlnitloni for the\nholden ef driven' dleencei will\nbegin In Nelton thli morning at\nt a.m. and continue until 9 p.m.\neach night except Bundiyi ind\nMondiyi for about 26 dayi,\nConstable H. Fehner end Conitable C. S. Pennock, Vancouver,\nof the Motor Vehicle Branch of the\nProvincial Police, arrived Saturday\nand aet up their apparatus in the\nold Department of Public Works\nbuilding on Stanley Street at the\nrear of the Provincial Jail grounds\nThe entire test, consisting of a\nwritten teit ot 23 questions, and\nexamination! with eye, ear and reaction testing apparatus, ihould\ntake about 25 minutes on the average, it wu itated.\nSome 1500 driven in Nelion will\nbe tested during the approximate\n25 days the officers tre stationed\nhere. All holders of driver'i licence! have been or will be notified\nby postcard from Victoria u to the\ndate and time they axe to appear\nfor  the tests.\nOVER 4000 IN\nDI8TRICT\nThere are over 4000 licence holders in the Nelion district who will\nbe teited during the Summer and\nTalL Of theie, 2000 are in Trail,\n850 in Rouland, 300 ln Castlegar,\nand others at other district points.\nSome driven will write their ex\nanimations at four tables, while\nothers are being teeted with the\neye chart depth perception, double\nvlilon, color bllndneii, \"ilde view\"\nand reaction apparatus. The eye\nchart la iet up 20 feet from the\ndriver'i wet on the reaction machine where the \"patient\" sits. The\nreaction machine consists of a replica ot the driving compartment ol\na car, with driver's teat iteering\nwheel, cluth, brake pedal and accelerator. Red, green and amber\nlights are aet up on the eye chart\n20 feet tway, and blinked alternately by the examining officer.\nAs the different lights blink, the\npenon being examined muit step\non the accelerator or brake pedal\nor cluth u directed, to test his retction time. The time ls recorded on\nin electric clock ln one-hundredth\nlecond. The average time la three-\nquarters of a lecond. The driver\nmust also know 10 standard road\nsigns selected by the officers.\nWOMEN BETTER\nDRIVERS\nContrary to more or less common\nbelief, the officer! itate, women\ndriveri are often more calm and\ncollected than the men.\nThe offlcen will be ln Nelson\nfor about 25 days, then go td South\nSlocan for five days, Kulo three\ndays. New Denver two days, Nakusn\nfour days, Salmo four days, back to\nNelson for one day on July 13,\nthen to Ymir for two days, Sheep\nCreek four days, Rouland 14 days,\nCutlegar 10 days, Trail 38 days,\nfrom Auguit 27 to October 12, and\nthen to Fruitvale for four days.\nResignation of\nManion Accepted\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP)-A ipe\ncial caucus of Conservative members of the House of Commons tonight accepted \"with deep regret\" the resignation of Hon. Dr,\nR. J. Manion as National Leader.\nDr. Manion, who wu defeated\nin Fort WiUlam in the Dominion\nelections lut March 26, tendered\nhis  resignation   in   a  statement\n?:iven the caucus when it opened\nhli morning.\nDR.  MANION\nThe leader then left the caucus\nchamber and took no further part\nin proceedings. After the dinner\nrecess this evening, a committee\nheaded by Hon. R. B. Hanson, chosen temporary leader, conferred with\nDr. Manion in his centre block office, close by the caucua chamber.\nDiscussions ln caucus resumed\nand Dr. Manion went to his Ottawa\nhome. Later John R. MacNicol, Toronto-Davenport, caucus chairman,\nhanded a statement to newspapermen announced acceptance of Dr.\nManion's resignation.\nMr. MacNicol uid he had tele-\nghoned the caucus decision to Dr,\n[anion's home.\nCANADA SENDS 3000\nVEHICLES OVERSEAS\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP). - The\nDepartment of Munitions and Supply announced tonight that work on\nthe $80,000,000 motor vehicle order\nplaced March 20 \"is progressing on\nschedule,\" and to dite more than\n3000 motor vehicle have left Canadian factorlei en route Overseu for\nmilitary use The order calls for\n7302 motor unite.\nLINE\n*        *\nHague Vacated by\nLeaders; Germans\nNear Rotterdam\nGrebbe Line, Retaken by Dutch, Falls as\nGermans Launch Fresh Attacks; Nazis\nHave Most of Northeast Provinces\nAMSTERDAM, May 13 (AP)\u2014Outflanked from the\nNorth and frpm the South, with their famous Crebbe water\ndefence line pierced and Rotterdam threatened by German\nmotor columns but 15 miles away, Netherlands tonight vacated The Hague as a seat of Government and sent their Queen\nto safety in England.\nThe Netherlands High Command acknowledged In a\ncommunique tonight the Germans had succeeded in taking\n\"a small sector of the Grebbe line,\" their main water defence\nsystem running South of the Zuider Zee to the Rhine, and\nthat although Netherlands troops by fierce fighting had retaken the sector they could not hold it when the Germans\nlaunched fresh attacks.\nTo the South, the High Command acknowledged Germans with motorized equipment had raced through the Lang-\n(South  of  the   Maas<;\nstraat\nRiver) and had reached and\npassed the Moerdijk bridge\nwhich crosses the Hollandsch\nDiep South of Rotterdam.\nIn Rotterdam Itself, German parachute and transport-landed troops\nwere admitted itill to be holding\nout \"itubbornly.\"\nMoreover, the Cermani were as-\nknowledged to be in possession of\nmost of the Northeast Provinces and\nto have reached the East coast of\nthe Zuider Zee, the great tongue of\nthe North Sea.\nFrom there, the Germani threatened the huge dam at the mouth of\nthe Zuider Zee, for a march South\nof Amsterdam The. dam however,\nis strongly defended.\nThe radio station at Hllversum\nannounced the decision to transfer\nthe Government, to an undisdoeed\nplace.\nObwrven attached Importance\nto tha eroning of the Moerdijk\nbridge. One of the main llnki connecting North ind 8outh Holland.\nThe bridge li the longest In Europe, and llnki both Brabant with\nthe,Provlnce of South Holland In\nwhich The Hague, Rotterdam and\nLeyden are iltuated,\nThe  Langitraat,  mentioned  In\nthe communique, la the diitrlct\nSouth of Rotterdam.\nObserver! believed the Government planned to operate from England.\nThe text of the communique aald,\n\"ln the stage at which the battle now\nhas arrived, the Government considered it necessary, in the Interest\nof the country and of the overseas\npossessions and for the maintenance\nunder all circumstances of complete\nfreedom of action, to move the seat\nof Government\"\nThe Dutch, their anger aroused by\nactivities of traitors within their\ndefence lines, arrested 300 persons\ntoday in a \"fifth column\" mop-up ln\nAmsterdam. That brought to 900 the\ntotal of suspected persons arrested\nsince the war began for Holland four\ndays ago.\nAlthough Amsterdam waa quiet\ntonight, truck loads of military\npolice and soldiers rode through\nUie streets with rifles ready.\nHolland's High Command earlier acknowledged the Germans are\ndriving through the border tier\nof Provinces\u2014Gronlngen, Drente,\nOverijsel and Gelderland.\nIt admitted they had speared Into\nthe interior in North Brabant Province and  reached the  North  Sea\ncoast and  the  Ijsselmeer  (Zuider\nZee) at some points on the Eastern\nshore on a drive through Friesiand\nProvince.\nBut the Dutch said they had retreated within their defence positions according to plan and with\nsmall losses. They said they had\nfought a retarding action in the\nNorthern Provinces, where there are\nno defence lines.\nThe Germans continued harassing\necattered communities with air\nbombardments, parachute soldiers\nand the activities of saboteurs.\nThere were repeated air raid\nalarm! during the day in Amsterdam and The Hague. Two German\nHelnkeli were ihot down before\ndawn during the fint alarm of the\nday here. No bombi were dropped\nduring three later alarms.\nWar Increases\nChance Roosevelt\nWill Run Again\nWaASHINGTON, May 13 (AP>-\nThe Increased acutenesa of the En\nropean crisis was regarded by some\npoliticians today as having simplified the principal problem of the\nthird-term supports\u2014thit\nvinclng   President\nof  con\nRoosevelt    he\nshould run again.\nThe President has made clear his\nown view that the Nazi invasion of\nHolland and Belgium has Intensified a iltuation which could In the\nend prove extremely harmful to\nthe United Statei.\nThe third termers sre expected\nto point to the seriousness of the\nsituation as an argument why the\nPresident should run. In turn. Republicans and other anti-Roosevelt\nmen are preparing to argue lust\nthe reverse\u2014that world conditions\ncall for a new hand at the balm.\nShoreacres Nan\nSuffers Broken\nLeg; Hit by Car\nSuffering a double fracture of\nthe lower right leg when itruck by\na car near the Shoreacres bridge\nSunday evening, John Popoff of\nShoreacrea waa resting \"ai comfortably as can be expected\" in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMonday,\nPopoff, walking with a number\nof friendi on the Nelson-Trail\nHighway, was struck by t ear\ndriven by Arthur W. Harrod Of\nTrill, who wai- travelling toward\nCastlegar. Constable R. A. Leet\nof the Provincial Police Highway\nPatrol and Sergt..C. W. A. Barwia\nwere called about 7:30 and gave the\nman first aid, after which they\nbrought him to the hospital tt\nNelson.\nPolice said no.charge would fce\nlaid against Harrod, aa there wu\nno blame attached to him.\nChurchill Makes\nk Appointments\nLONDON, May 13 (CP.-Cable)\u2014\nParliament today cast aside party\nlabeli to give its unanimous bleaa-\ning to the Churchill Government\nwhich the Prime Minister pledged\nto one policy, \"to wage war... with\nall our might\" and to one aim, \"victory.\" (See \"Vote\", Page 7).\nMr. Churchill announced four\nadditional   appointments   to   hia\nGovernment. They are Ernest Bevin,   General  Secretary  of  the\nTransport and General Workers'\nUnion, as Minister of Labor; L.\nC.   M.  S.   Avery,   Conservative\n\"diehard\", aa Secretary of State\nfor India; Malcolm MacDonald aa\nMinister   of   Health,   and   Lord\nWoolton as Minister of Food.\nOf these only Mr. MacDonald and\nLord Woolton were members of the\nChamberlain Government. Mr. MacDonald was Colonial Secretary, a\npost now held by Lord Lloyd, and\nLord Woolton was then, as now, tha\nFood Minister,\nIt was predicted tonight that\nOliver Stanley, former War Secretary, would be appointed Dominions Secretary, replacing Anthony\nEden who was transferred to the\nWar Office. There may be ]oba\nopened up for Ernest Brown, former Labor Minister, and Leslie\nBurgin, former Supply Mlniiter.\nWeairngr\nMin. Max.\nNELSON   ..\u2014 \u2014 38 71\nVictoria    \u00ab 68\nNanaimo  -  43 68\nVancouver ....   45 66\nKamloopi   39 72\nPrince George  31 8\u00ab\nEsteven Point    41 60\nPrince Rupert  42 61\nLangara  -  43 54\nAtlin     36 50\nDawson, Y.T. -. 27 57\nSeattle    -\u2014  45 71\nPortland      - - 48 81\nSan Francisco  _ 47 78\nSpokane  3\u00ab 70\nPenticton   ....\u00a3 .'..\u2014 38 \u2014\nVernon          37 \u2014\nKelowna     40 71\nGrand Forks   38 73\nKaslo - 38 -\nCranbrook   _ 34 70\nCalgary  36 55\nEdmonton     36 62\nSwift Current   35 51\nPrince Albert   35 53\nWinnipeg     42 51\nForecast: Kootenay \u2014 Moderat.\nEasterly winds, cloudy, not much\nchange ln temperature.\nN'i.on water level Monday, 1-4\n\t\nK\n\t\nlimn\n,.'-___-__. .\n______________\n \u25a0    \u25a0\nWPW^WWP^\"'\"'\ni-,.\". ^!'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0?\u25a0\u25a0'.'\u25a0-''\u25a0>'\u25a0 r.jh\n17 Crown Witnesses Heard al Trial\nol Savage for Murder Fernie Man;\nMorgan, Pal Tells of the Plans\nrERNIE, B. C, Miy 13\u2014Roy Siv-\nIft, till! Roy Whitehouse, is on\ntrill it tht Spring Assizes charged\nwith the murder of William A.\nIngram, elderly Fernle merchant\nMr. Ingram was itruck down as ne\nwas returning home on the night\not November UI, 1939, and died\nabout t week; liter, Mr. Justice\nMurphy ot Vtncouver is the pre-\nsiding Judge. Seventeen witnesses\nwert called during the day.\nT. B. Hardin identified the map\nof the city which he had prepared,\ntnd upon which several points snd\npltcts mentioned In the evidence\nWMroTriB-ic_it   e_pW_td. the\nstreet UlhUng lyitem,  \u00abpiliining\nwhat llghti were on it tht time of\ntht attack.\nMONEY PUT IN IAFI\nJamei Shaw, an employee it tte\nIngrtm \u00abtort, had seen Mr. In-\ngram place his money ln the life,\nclose tte itore, tnd proceed home.\nMrs. J. Ingram, wife of the deemed, reltted how Mr. Ingram\nhtd arrived home in a leriously in-\niured condition. She called the doc-\nor and notified the police.\nDr. George Leroux gave medical\nevidence as to the cause of death\nHis examination revealed a 4tt\ninch cut, a fractured skull, hemorr-\nhage and ahock. Complications had\nlater developed.\nPete Corrigan teitilied to tte\nfinding of an Iron pipe in a lot\nnear the Cinadian boarding house.\nA piece ol hose had been wired to\none end of the pipe. He had given\ntht pipe to W. A. Harrison.\nMr.  Harrison gave evidence of\nreceiving tte pipe and handlhg it\novtr to Constable Quigley.\n\u25a0AW HOSE OBTAINED\nHannih Cockbum tnd John Stv-\nage gtve evidence that they had\nMen present when the accused, Roy\nSavage and James.Morgan, had obtained t piece of hose and wire.\nJohn Stvtge hid seen his brother\n\u2022lit the piece of hose.\nJtmes Albert Morgan, who with\nRoy Stvtge and Walter Halle, Jr.,\nis also charged with the murder, related how they htd planned to\ncarry out ttt tttempted robbery.\nMorgin was to attract Ingram's at\nRUPTURED?\nEXPERT TRUSS FITTINQ\n'HINDI ER   ARTIFICIAI\n1MB   Ai-r   TRUSS   CO\n,^g>V\nIS NO PROBLEM AT\nALL WHEN\nYOU PHONE\n106\nWILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\ntentlon while tte other two wtre\nto attack Ingram from ttt reir. Al\nttt last moment Morgan had become panicky and fled. He related\nhow he had helped to prepare tte\niron pipe tnd hid suggested cover,\ning the pipe to mike it a \"less dangerous weapon.\" He had later met\nSevage, ana had \u2022 accompanied him\nto the river, where he asked the accused about throwing tte pipe inU\ntte river, but was told that it might\nbe needed again.\nHEARD SAVAGE\nDE8CRIBE. ATTACK\nJohn McNaughton stated ha had\nhad a conversation with Savage In\nthe Northern Hotel lobby a tew\ndays before November 21. Stvtge\nhad asked him. \"How'd you likt to\npull t Job?\" And when he had asked\nwhat, the accused had stated, \"that\nold pinto\u2014across the street,\" it the\nsame time pointing with his thumb\ntoward tte Ingram atore.\nSavage had alio told him that\nhe would like to get money to go\nto the Coast.\nTwo nights after ttt attack, In\ncompany with Jim Morgan, tte witness had met the accused and Walter\nHaile at the South end of Victoria\nAvenue. He had overheard the accused say to Haile and Morgan, \"I\nhit him on the head, and he went\ndown. I hit him again, and I tried\nto get my hand ln his pocket, and\nhe had his hand on hli pocket and I\ncouldn't\"\nTht witness had made no attempt to find out about whom tte\naccused had been talking.\nClifford Uphill gave evidence of\nhaving aeen Savage, Morgan, Haile\nand McNaughton ln the lobby of\nthe Northern Hotel\nConstable N. H. Elphlck answered\nthe call trom tte Ingram home.\nConstable Qulgly Identified the\ncap which Mr. Ingram had been\nwearing on the night of the attack,\nand which tte constable had received from Mrs. Ingram.\nCorporal T. Smith Identified teveral exhibit!, tmong them the iron\npipe, cap, hose, pliers and wire.\nConstable L. Jeeves told how In\ncompany with Corporal Smith, he\nhad aearched tha premises ot tte\nSavage home, and had found the\npliers, hose and wire. These, together with the iron pipe and cap,\nhe had turned over to Dr. U. P.\nByrne, pathologist, for examination.\nDr. Byrne testified that human\nblood was found on the wire projections which fastened tte hose to\ntte pipe. He had compared the\nwire on tte pipe and that submitted, and found them to be different\nThe ends of tte hose on the pipe\nand On the piece exhibited were\ncompared, and in his opinion wet-\nexact ln indentation, thickness and\narea at several different pointi.\n\"RED EMMA\" DIES\nTORONTO, May 14 (Tueidiy)-\n(CP).\u2014Emma Goldrnm, internationally-known anarchist, died at\nher home here early today. She had\nbeen 111 for several monthi.\nMin Goldman came to Toronto\napproximately t year ago from\nEngland tnd her final lecture was\ngiven in Winnipeg last December.\nDuring the years 1998-37-38, lhe viilted Spain three times.\nBorn in Kovno, Russia, (not in\nLithuania), she was tte daughter of\na Russian-Jewish family and went\nto United States when she waa 19.\nAround 1887 ahe became converted\nto anarchistic philosophy and became known as \"Red Emma\" on\nboth sides ot the Atlantic through\nher preachings of social revolution.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1140. \u25a0\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\nJUNIOR CATHOLICS\nBEAT BAPTISTS IN\nCHURCH SOFTBALL\nScoring a doien ot their runs in\nbig second and third innings, Junior C.Y.O, chalked up t 19-17 victory over tte Baptist nine tt tht\nJunior High Mondty evening ln i\nNelson Cburch Softball League\nmen's game.\nRev. Gerald Ward, on tte mound\nfor tht losers, struck out three batters ind walked one, while Jimmy\nEccles, C.Y.0. chucker, finned five\nand passed four.\nScore by innings:\nBtptlsti    OM Ui 70-17\nJunior C.Y.0 IM 103 _x-lt)\nLineups with scorers follow:\nBaptlsts-^-Hirnr Irvint 1, Rev.\nGerald Ward 3, Dick Wallace 1, Sid\nBall 3, Konnie Heisler 1 Frank\nBeresford 1, Alt Ball 1, Gordon Calbeck 3 tnd Percy Perdue 1.\nJunior C.Y.O.\u2014Louli Gagnon 2,\nBarney Preitley 3, Jimmy Eccles 2,\nKohir, Uchttci 1, Rtv. Edward\nDoyle 3, Mickey Preitley 4, Linui\nMorrison 2, and Andy Arnott 2,\nLIEGE ENTERED\nIS NAZI CLAIM\nBERLIN, Miy li  (AF).\u2014 The\nGermin High Command claimed tonight that Nazi troopi had taken the\ncitadel on the Northern edge ol fort-\nress-ringed Liege and had broken\ninto tte Belgian city.\nGermin troops ire still- fighting\nwith tht Belgians for some of the\nouter forts ot Liege, lt wis claimed,\nbut others continued Westward of\nthe stronghold tnd to tht North.\nIn the Netherlands tte Nazis\nclaimed occupation ot fully halt the\ncountry.\nA thrust at armored forcei In tht\nNetherlands, ttt High Command\nclaimed, established contact with\ntroops landed by parachutes tround\nRotterdam. D.N.B., German News\nAgency, contended thit as t result\n\"tte so-called Holland fortification\nsystem hai been flanked.\"\nThe High Command claimed 320\nenemy planet were destroyed Sundiy ind more than M thia morning\nalone.\nBaby Cameron Is\nSpoon Winner at\nRossland Even)\nROSSLAND, B.C., Mty 13-Baby\nDavid Cameron, ion of Rev. W. M.\nCameron and Mn. Cameron, wai\ntte Rossland Hospital Day baby,\nwinning tte silver spoon presented\nby the Miter Misericordiae Hoipital\nAuxiliary to the tint baby born in\nthe hoipital on Hospital Day.\nThe Auxiliary wai hoskss at I\ndelightful tei Sunday afternoon,\nheld in tte Solarium ot tte hoipital\nThe Rouland Junior Boys band\nplayed for the occasion, and tours\nwere conducted through tte hospital and tte Nurses Home.\nOn display in the Physio-tteraphy\nroom was the recently installed metabolism machine, a gift to the hospital from the Women's Auxiliary\nA silver collection was taken, and\n$18.50 wu realised toward ttt purchase of this machine.\nOver IM visited the hospital.\nYanki Barely Bear\nAkron Farm Club\nAKRON, O., May IS CAP) .-The\nNew York Yankees eked out an\n8-7 exhibition victory over their\nAkron mid-Atlantic League farm\nclub today, barely nullifying a\npower demonstration by Rookie\nEddie Bauer who pounded two\nManhattan hurlers for three home\nruns.\nR H _\nNew York      8 14   1\nAkron       7 10   0\nGomez, Donald and Jorgens, Rosar; Newton, Conover and Skill,\nHower.\nWINSTON CHURGHnJ^-Britain's Man of Mars\nHUME-R. E. Davey, Mra. Henderson, Miss Hanlen, E. S. H. Winn,\nR. B. Fulton, Dr. John Nay, W. A.\nArnold, J. Hamilton, L. R. Leslie,\nA. B. Rollo, E. Hilton, Harold Brown,\nW. J. Sheepwash, N. Holland, D.\nWelch, A. H. Mostyn, W. J. Mellor,\nMr. 'and Mri. W. G. Gerrard, Vancouver; G. T, Wadsworth, Montreal;\nR. G. S. Arthur, Toronto; T. A.\nBurni, Medicine Hat; J. C. Fowler,\nCalgary; G. W. Hlcki, Kamloops;\nO. A. P. Aitkeni, Rev. H. C. B. Gibson, Bishop Walter Adams, Vernon;\nA. G. R. Prlckard, Oyama; Mrs. P.\nL. Sullivan, Mrs. D. Baneff, Bosweil; W. G. M. Harrison, R. R. Jor-\ndon, Nakusp; Judge and Mrs. G. H.\nThompson, Cranbrook; H. J. Baw-\ntree, Enderby; Mrs. G. Hales, Grand\nForki; Rev. F. V. Harrison, Cranbrook; Rev. W. H. Ahlers, Procter.\nRossland Boy Breaks\nWrist in Softball\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 13 - Jim\nGeorgeson broke his wrist playing\nsoftbail at Trail last week.\n3-tdtf. %dion,\nHOSIERY\n$1.00\n; Whenever Greet Britain finds herself in a wir ahe turns, lt would\ntppeir, to Wlniton Churchill., He wu flnt lotd of tht idmirtlty\nwhen tht World wtr broke out In W14. In 1917 ht btotmt minister of munitions; in 1918 ht wu appointed secretary of state for\n>w_r and also for tlr.5 A critic of tht Chamberlain government be\nfore hostllltlei begin lut September ht wutgiln mtdt Mjortb\nof ttt admiralty it tht outbretk of wtr. Uttr, retjorrtipontttitlltM\nfor Greit Brlttin'i conduct of tht wtr wu pliced to bllMMJl\nThe photos tbove depict some of the highlights of Ms ttreerJJJI \u00bbl\na descendant of John Churchill, flrtt Duke of Marlborough.r\u00bb\nTrailite's Sentence\nSuspended Keeping\nPigs Within City\n\u25a0FRAIL, B. C, Mty 13\u2014Two cues\nappeared before Magistrate Parker\nWilliams in Police Court Monday\nmorning.\nHartley \"Fletcher, charged with\ncreating a disturbance in a public\nplace, was granted an adjournment\nuntil Wedneiday morning in order\nto acquire counsel.\nErnest Meachem pleaded guilty to\n1 charge of keeping pigs within the\ncity limits. Suspended sentence was\npassed on tte defendant with his\nassurance that tte offence would\nnot be repeated.\nGallicano Scores Goal\nbut Fishmen Beaten\nNEW- WSSWDNSTEIR, B.C, May\n13 (CP)\u2014Vancouver Burrards moved into top spot in the Inter-City\nBox Lacrosse League by defeatine\nNew WMtoiirater Salmonbellies,\n14-11 in a rough and tumble game,\nfeatured with three ftglrta in the\nlast period, before a small crowd\nof spectators here tonight. A total\nof 76 minutes was served in pen-\naltiea by playen before the final\ngong.\nSalmonbellies moved into a 5-3\nlead In tte first quarter. Joe Gallicano, from Nelson, snagged the first\ngoal of the night for the Fishmen\nbut failed to mark for tte rest of\nthe match. Burrardi moved to within one goal at half-time as the Royal\nCity crew finished ahead 6-5.\nOldrimers Attend\nFuneral Mr. Lavik\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 13-Slm-\non A. Lavik, of Sheep Creek was\nborne to hii last resting place, Saturday afternoon, when district om-\ntimen were among tte company at\nJonei Funeral Home Saturday afternoon to pay reipects.\nRev. W. M. Cameron officiated,\nand burial was made ln tte Sunny-\nside Cemetery. Pallbearen were W.\nJ. Jamleion, John Clare, James\nBenion, Portlsnd Gill, Walter Gill\nand Joseph Gill.\nLatest for Comfort\nNEW 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 \u00bb1 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel \u201e\nWO Seymour St.        Vaneouvar, B.C. Coleman, Alta.\nNewly renovated throughout.  Phonei and  elevator.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhtn in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying it the\n410 Riverside   tf aa_h| V AY 11C* V      Oppoilte\nAvinua       I_LOIf31 T VUlA 1    Piulien Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\nRELAX\nat the GALAX\nCanidlm Money si Par\nRooms $1.00 fo $2.50\nFREE GARAGE\nRooms fnot H\n554 Main Ave\nSpojcant, Wn.\nHOTEL     V\"\nRIDPATH\nThe Hotel Canadian! Like to\nCall Home.\nIN  SPOKANE\n196 Outside Rooms ind\nApartmenti\nALL AT MODERATE RATES\nNo discount on Canadian money\non rooms.\nBARGAIN\nFARES\n.' ' to\nVANCOUVER, VICTORIA, NANAIMO\nGoing May 16 and 17\nFrom Nakuip and South, Procter to\nMidway, Trail to Castlegar\nRETURN FARES\nTrom:            To:  Vancouver         Victoria Nanaimo\nProctor   f 13.55 f 15.55 f 15.05\nNolton       13.05 15.05 14.55\nTrill       12.70 14.70 14.20\nCrmd Forki  ....   10.45 12.45 11.95\n\u2022Nakuip     14.55 16.55 16.05\n\u2022-Via Robson West\nFares from Arrow Lakes apply May 16 only, returning\nMay 28.\nCorrespondingly low fares from Intermediate pointa.\nFinal Return Limit May 29\nTickets good in day coacbea only. No baggage checking privileges. No stop overs allowed. Children 5 and under 12, half fare.\nRegular train service in each direction.\nFor further Information apply to nearest agent or writs\nN. J. LOWES, City Tleket Agent, 602 Bakar SL, Nelion.\n\/;>H-'l'-.': - '\u2022 '\n\u25a0  >     .'  \"                                                                  ,.-^.j:\n,     ,J\n*___r-tlr 3_w                        '\u25a0' *'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \" InmI\n-oijk\n'\\i-\ni9**^\n__t$l\n_^   **\n_\\ tk**i\n0i*P*\n>\n,: '_________            __w       _M_\\\n**t        .-a\n\u00ab\nw\n1     .' \u2022\u25a0   V\\3     J\n\u25a0.     ,'\nJ4\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0\u2022\n:M___!\n>.\" . 41\n!\nk;   -\/*\nW\niv > wh' *\n\u25a0  \u2022'$, \u25a0\n. i% .\n*____%\n1         M\n'\n_u__t\n> ^\n\u00a5 _f-m__m\n|\nS^L^k\nBar\n_\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\nj_V ^mbw__-\nSv; mm\u2014I\nCREPE,\nCHIFFON ,\nLadiei' Wear Burnt Block\nProgram Young\nPeoples 3-Day\nMeet Completed]\nlight energetic committees, working under the general chairmanship\nof N. L. Cortield, hav* rounded into\nshape arrangements tor tha second\nYoung Peoplea Clubi of Ntlion hart\nMayl7,1\u00ab and 19. Ow MO viiltlnf\ndelegates are expected htrt.\nThe program hu been arrtnfio\nand only a tew minor deta li ol\nother arrangement! rwtln to bt\ncompleted. From tht registration\nand conference ball on Saturday to\nthe youth service in the Nelion Civic'Cwtrt Sunday tfternoon hMdlj\nan unfilled moment will anpttr on\nthe Conlertnct agtndt. Tht oro-.\ngram beside the ball on Wdty list!\nI morning rally at tht Mmorlal\nHall, tours through Nelson indufc\ntrial planti, a roller skating party,\nluncheon, ad*\u00ab_tt, diicu\u00abloii\nbanouet and muilcal entertalnmsnt\ntor Sat-rday; * mornlM duwurioa\nand tht youth iervlea lor Sunaty.\nA detailed program will be announced later. . .   _       , \u2014 ,__\nN. L. Cortield mOmatttl Oult-\nman, white Mta Dtta Mc_OMW\nUStcrttery and MtatAJtet Mac-\nMillan, Recording Secretary. The\nvarioui Commltttt Otirmtn tit\nMiss Apt* _^*_,-_\\*,m^?* JJS\nFrance!   Wtt-,   Publicity;   Ml\"\nPhyllis Cornfield, cater ng; Gordon\n8tow\u00abt, BUlettMi Jim MDJJ\nTrtMportttlon; BmII MUtttwwi,\nXV-Sstaict! toU Dty, Di_\u00ab5\nsloni; Mist Frances Lincoln ami\nMiss porothy Boker. Danct.\nRossland lo Win\nEsling to Protest\nRelief Grant Cu\nHOaBLAKD, B. C May H-Th\nRowland City Countli __\nMonday night, to wirt W. K. Mta\nM_*, for Kootenay West, at Ottew\nasking him to oppow any cut ot tn\nFederal Relief grant ahould iuch\ncut bt proposed it tht Pvllamen\ntary session.\nThe motion wu pawed <on rtcpm\nmendatlon ot Aid. WlUtem Oumlng\nham, Chairman ot tht -Witt Com\nmittee, who felt that iuch.\u00bb cu\nwould throw an added trurdtn oi\nthe Municipality.\nAlthough no official communlca\ntlon regarding thli had been recelv\ned by the .Council, Mr. Cunninghan\nstated that he had read that it wa\nbeing considered, and ht though\nImmediate action should bt take\nto protest against it\nBy A__CI ALDEN\nCount your Summer comforts one by one, Including wrinkle-resistant fabrics and antiseptlcally-\ntreated fabrics, and add the latest\u2014heat-resisting\nsoles. The pretty slippers shown expose tha foot to\nair and sunshine from all angles, but also protect it\nfrom hot pavements. That's an advantage whether\nthe wearer's enjoying an early dinner - at Ntw\nYork's fair or taking a short stroll on Sunday afternoon. Made of kidskin, the slipper has a blue\nplatform sole, lined ln red, and a red strap contrasting with the white drapery front and back.\nOver 10 Pythian Sisters of Eight\nTemples at District Convention Here\nOver 80 Pythian Slsten, representing eight different Temples,\ngathered at the Eagle Hall Monday\nfor the second convention of Pythian Sisters of District No. 2. Trail\nRossland, Salmo, Nakusp, New Denver, Cranbrook, Vancouver, and\nNelson Temples were represented.\nRitualistic work, drills and dis-\nLOW\nRAIL FARES\nVICTORIA\nDAY\nBttwttn ill Station! In Cinada\nONE-WAY FARE\n\u00abnd ONE-QUARTER\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n(Minimum Fart 26c)\nGOlNGi   MAY 23 to 2 P.M.\nMAY 26.\nRETURN.   Lv. destination until\nMONDAY, MAY 27.\nIUWIM MD MN.6I UI HIYIUUI\nit uaual ratta\nFall In\/ometiM trim am Aatnt.\nW..10H\nwomtn  r.(HtT\u00a3Sl   THftVIl   .1STEM    ,\nplaya marked the afternoon and\nevening sessions. A large banquet\nwas served at 6:00 p.m.\nThe address of welcome to the\nvisiting Sisters was made by Mrs.\nFrank Goucher, of Nelson Grand\nSenior, and was responded to by\nMrs. Dora Clever of New Denver,\nGrand Manager. Following the\nopening ceremony of the presentation of the flag, the singing of \"0\nCanada\", and the opening prjycr\nby Mrs. R. Dowhie ot Trail, Past\nGrand Chief, the presentations of\nPast Grand officers, Mrs. Downey\nof Trail and Mrs. M. McKenrie of\nVancouver; of Grand Lodge Officers, Mrs. Goucher of Nelson, Grand\nSenior; Mrs. N. Ratcliffe of Cranbrook, Grand Junior, and Mrs. D.\nClever of New Denver, Grand Manager; and of the Deputy Grand\nChief, Mrs. N. Ratcliffe of Cranbrook, were made,\nReading of Temple minutes, re-\nJtorts and communications waa fol-\nowed by en exemplification of the\nofficers march by Nelson Temple\nNo. 10; of retiring, entering and\ndraping the charter by Twin Temple No. 83 of Salmo; and of the ballot march by the Nelson Temple.\nROSSLAND  LADY\nWINS QUESTIONNAIRE\nAfter a recesi for tea. an Installation of officer! exemplification was\nitaged by the Trail Temple No. 3,\nfollowing which a questionnaire on\nthe constitution, won by Mrs. P.\nPalmer of Roisland, wai held.\nThe ritualistic observances of the\nSisters Initiation, the Degree staff\ndrill by the Nakusp Temple No. 16,\nand installation drill by Trail Temple No. 3 degree staff featured the\nevening session, following the banquet The Temple closing ritual\nmarked an end to the convention.\nMiss Grace Laughton of Ne_*n\nTemple No. 10, District Deputy\nGrand Chief, was presiding officer.\nOfficers for the afternoon sessloj\nwere Mrs. P. McLandera of. Nelson,\nPianist; Mrs. R. Thompson of Rossland, Manager; Mrs. S. R. Robert-\nI son, of Tjnil, Seasetary; Mrs. M.\nClarke of Trail, Protector; and Mrs.\nE. Shannon of New Denver, Outer\nGuard.\nOfficers for the evening session\nwere Mrs. V. Gibbons of Salmo,\nPast Chief; Mrs. B. Perdue of Nelson, Most Excellent Chief; Mrs.\nMurdock of Rossland, Excellent Senior; Mrs. K. Johnson of Nvkuip,\nExcellent Junior; Mrs. J. Norris of\nTrail, Manager; Mrs. S. R. Robertson of Trail, Mistress of Records\nand Correspondence; Mn, B. Percival of Nelson, Mistress of Finance;\nMrs. A. Draper of New Denver,\nProtector; and Mrs. G. Halverton\nof Trail, Outer Guard.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLETTERING, DESIGNS, POSTERS\nahow cards, etc., promptly I\ncuted and reasonable chart\nWrite Box 2234 Dally Ntwi.\nexe\nges\nRELIEF *\nNazis Concentrate\nin South Norway\nSTOCKHOLM, May 13 (AJ').-\nWith Sweden calmly preparing\nfor any emergency, neutral military observers tonight heard reports of extensive German troop\nconcentrations in Southern Norway and of increased troop transport movement! through Germany's Kiel Canal.\nSome reports said Kongsvlnger,\nstrategic point about 60 miles\nNortheast of Oslo and 20 miles\nWest of the Swedish border, ia becoming a military centre, with\nmore than 100,000 men assembled\nin this area.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Annual meeting of the Canadian Council of tha\nGirl Guides Association and the\nDominion Commiasloners' Conference will be held at the Royal York\nHotel, Toronto, May 20-21.\nThe program will include a special dinner in honor of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of\nthe Guide movement in Cinada.\nSeveral outstanding speakers will\n?;ive talks during the two-day con.\nerence on subjects related to the\nwork of the Association.\nWOOD SAW\nWORKING       FILING\nReasonable Rates\nKootenay Ssih 8* Deer Work\n301 Wird St Opp. City Hill\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Machine!\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fiiher Ut.\n6S6 Ward 8t Phont W\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS snd ALTERATION\nI. C. Plumbing & Hasting\nCompany, Limited\nThe Best in\nCOAtS\n\"     4\nDrumheller\nGlo-Coal Mercurj\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\n.'__ \u00a3__* <'*__\u25a0+\u2022__ \u25a0\u2022_ '\u25a0'.   _.\u201e'\u25a0 i\n\u25a0\n \t\nNazi Bombs Wreak Havoc In Beautiful Brussels        Named Viscount\nI\n*   '      -\n\u25a0\u25a0\nI\n'         '           \u2022     .                     a\n>    '\nJ\n\u25a0  ..\nj\n\u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nF\ni  *i\n______*'\n:             }\n[III\n. ...\n<\ni \u00a39\n'\ni\nL.c-*-'\"\"'\n'\u2022p.\n^L**tmiiim0\n___a_\n\"\u2022'\u2022.\nj. \u25a0\u25a0.*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n<\u00a3^&^\n\"'\u2022 mr \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nKMR&        . J     >n( afc\u00a3Hfc\n_____ i \u25a0      ee__\n\u25a0< \u25a0 bruxeu.es\nV ______JD__\n~-9\\\nSeveral German bombs fell close to the Belgian\nKing's Palace, above, residence of King Leopold In\nBrussels, Saturday as German Invaders swept into\nBelgium, Holland and Luxembourg. Brussels Is considered one of Uie big modem and smart Europe*!.\ncapitals. The King's Palace is shown above.\nSIR JOHN SIMON\nLONDON, May 13 (CP).-The\nKing today conferred a Vis-\ncountcyupon Sir John Simon, the\nnew Lord Chancellor. Sir John\nwas Chancellor of the Exchequer\nin the Chamberlain Government\nbut was succeeded yesterday by\nSir Kingsley Wood.\nj. Sir John probably will choose\nnis new title within the next few\ndays.\nReplaced\nSIR SAMUEL HOARE\nSir Samuel was replaced by Sir\nArchibald Sinclair, Scottish leader\not the Liberal party, as Air Secretary when Prime Minister\nChurchill named his Government\nFirst Envoy\nb the Grand Place, or public square, above,\ntie beautiful spire of the Town Hall, Hotel De Ville,\nIs shown surrounded by unique gilt and served\nBaroque houses and mansions.\n1      \u25a0  \u25a0      ...   .:. \u201e'       \u25a0        \u25a0\"'..';\u25a0           \u25a0\u00a5''  '\u00bb'\",.,,..._\u2014.\nj   i:v   Iw** 'mt      )1 \u25a0\u00bb fti\n~<*r?                                        k.   \u201e___*,,                                IV       *\n4__''      * *'             _p    f-\u25a0.\n\u00bb-^.%-__.r.\"\n[ '      ZWSmu '' *\u25a0 *W&\nJL \u25a0     .\u2022 __ '\u25a0'-<\u25a0' z *_\\\n\"\"    U  l''\u2022'''*'   \"U-----^*\"^\n,, .\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0t2_     \u25a0   \u25a0 - '>\u2022*-'\"'                                                           <\n__W__WL, r, .. i 3 \u25a0\u25a0\nm*41__\\Tm*\\*m\n\u25a0ii..,   ,               '''^CtfJM\n_____________R_Q_____l._________-_-lvV-_l\n_,\u00ab'-   *     ifflt\n\u25a0W   p\/iirrr m lumm'srcsKTsMF nf\nP^\nPeter Benediktsson, 33, has been\ntppointed by the Government of\nIceland as their representative at\nthe Court of St James.\nWriter Dies\ntie\nPorte De Namur,\ncity. Men of the\none of the five\nFirst Great War\nentrances to     ear through this entrance when they visited the\ntravelled by     city on leave.\n\u00ab.'.', Webb Miller, United Press war\n.j correspondent   was   found   dead\n,'.'j       ''', beside a railroad track in London.\n*ff; .     j :. It is presumed he fell .from a\nM.'&H\u00a3ii\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0< train.\n*,***?    '\nModerator\nThe Salnte-Gudule Church rises in Uie background of the above panorama of Brussels. Terrible\nhavoc would be created by bombs In such a closely-\npacked section of the city.\nRev. J. A. Maclnnes, of Orillia,\nOnt, chosen moderator of the\nKingstnn-Peterboro synod of the\nPresbyterian Church to succeed\nRev. C. E. Kidd of Kingston.\n.-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY M. IHfc-\n~WS\nPA9I THrre.\n*_M_Anm_Al_Al_A_m\u00bb_A\u00bb_AMAIjAMAljA^^\nK**.*t\\&.f*\\iv.**\\f*,  ^^^^^^***.^**.^*.T****.T^.T^x^^*T^^.T'f:*^:^*^^T.\nWHATS IN A NAME? *\nFor 270 years tha \"Bay\" hava maintained and steadily Increased their reputation for\nquality merchandise, until now, after years of careful study and research come forward with merchandise bearing their own \"Branded\" trade names of merchandise\nmanufactured to \"Bay\" particular specifications.\nBe sure to look for the label and remember \"Bay\" Branded lines carry the usual\nguarantee of \"Goods Satisfactory or Your Money Returned.\"\n..'>', ' ' \u25a0'\u25a0'\".\u25a0..\nYOU SAVE EVERY DAY AT THE \"BAY\nSEE IT THROUGH OUR WINDOWS\n,.,' J,, :\nWEEKLY FEATURES\nTwo Big Values in\nRefrigerators\nA big sparkling white, ultra modern machine with the\nStewart-Warner reputation. Check these points and be\nsafe in value and performance.\n\u2022 6.1 cubic feet capacity\n\u2022 Snap out lee trays\n\u2022 12 point cold control\n\u2022 Non-tip chromium\nshelves\n\u2022 Class chilling tray\n\u2022 5 year guarantee\n$19950\nA. M. C. REFRIGERATORS AT LOW COST\nA medium size unit for the smaller family at low cost.\n4 cubic feet capacity \u2022   AH steal cabinet In (learning\nInterior light\nAH steel cabinet In\nwhite\n\u2022 Sealed unit\n\u2022 Automatic cold centrei\n\u2022 5 year guarantee\n$14950\nCONVENIENT TERMS MAY BE ARRANGED\n\u2022  \u00bb\nii\nj\nii\nll\nii\na\nit\nm\nRecord Value in\nBleached SHEETS\nNot often such a chance as this. A manufacturer's cleanup of 5 dozen good quality sheets.\nPlain or H.S.  Every sheet worth\nfrom $1.00 to $1.-39. Sizes.70x90 faViC\nand 72x94. One price. Each\n.acli'iy   .ucei\n69'\nNO PHONE ORDERS PLEASE\nBRING SPRING INTO THE HOME\nRAYON CURTAINS\nIn gold shade. 4 designs in the range. Ideal for tbe      * | AA\nliving room. 38\"x2y\u00ab yards. Pair ******\u2014\nFRINGED RAYON PANELS\nReally beautiful quality in rich gold. Size\n\u00ab3\"x2Vi yards. Each .\t\n$1.98\nTELEPHONES\nDrygoods       2\nOffice mot\nQrocerlee US\nHosiery and Notions   52\nLadiei' Wear    49\nMen's Wsar^-Shoes   29\nJt\n*e\n\u2022i\n_\n:i:\n\u2022J\nDutch Royal\nFamily. Arrive\nSafely ln Britain\nLONDON, May IS (CP).\u2014Queen\nWilhelmina of Holland arrived ln\nEngland tonight\nQueen Wilhelmina was met at\nLiverpool street station by King\nGeorge who welcomed her to England.\nShe came only a few hours after\nthe arrival of Crown Princess Juliana, heir to the Dutch throne; Prince\nConsort Bernhard and their two\nsmall daughters.\nThe Queen came to England\naboard a British warship amid reports of \"fifth column\" plots to Ijid-\nnap the Royal family.\nJuliana and Bernard also were at\nthe station. A Royal car took the\nparty to Buckingham Palace.\nTiie Queen, who is 59, was wearing a navy blue coat and skirt with\na dark blue hat and carried a gas\nmask over one shoulder.\nKing George, In naval uniform,\nwalked across a roped-off space on\nthe station platform, clasped the\nQueen's hand and kissed her on both\ncheeks.\nPrincess Juliana led her two-year-\nold daughter Betrix by the hand,\nwhile nine-month-old Irene was\nbrought in a gas-proof box. Prince\nBernhard carried one end of the\nbox and a nurse the other.\nThe Earl of Harewood, brother-in-\nlaw of King George, met the Royal\nfamily at the station.\nA communique issued by the Foreign office, with authority from the\nDutch legation, stated: \"It Is, of\ncourse, of paramount importance\neven if the worst should happen\n(for which fortunately there ls no\nindication at present) that the Royal\nHouse of Orange-Nassau should be\nsafe.\"\nSILVERTON, B.C.-H. Leibscher\nof the Reno mine visited here.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Mathews visited\nNelson.\nMrs. Benlger of Perry Siding visited town.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Miller, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Jones, Dorothy and Bobby\nJones of Ymir attended Mrs. B.\nMiller's funeral.\nMr .and Mrs. Lance Emerson of\nTrail visited town.\nMrs. R. Douel visited Nelson.\nAlec and Tom Miller of Nakusp attended the funeral of Mrs. B. Millers.\nTAILOR SHOP ROBBED\nVANCOUVER, May IS (CP) -\nSixty-five bolts of cloth, valued at\ntlSOO were stolen by burglars who\nbroke into the tailor shop of F. W.\nBeaton over the weekend.\nGreat Activity\nafB.C.Shipyards\nBy ARTHUR MERKEL\n(Canadian Press 8taff Writer).\nVICTORIA, May 13 (CP). \u2014 If\nyou would like to get mixed up In\nsomething that combines the noise\nof Babel and the heat of Hades, just\nenter one of the British Columbia\nshipyards now that they are working under forced draught to complete orders of the munitions and\nsupply department.\nThis writer visited four of them\nIn two days and felt he had been\ncondemned to perdition, what with\nthe racket of the riveters, the heat\nof blast furnaoes and the blinding\nblue flash of acetylene torches slicing through thick steel.\nLess than two months ago, the\ngovernment ordered minesweepers\nand patrol vessels in British Columbia. Since then, Yarrows, Ltd., and\nVictoria Machinery Depot Co., Ltd.,\nboth in Victoria, each have laid\nkeels and begun erecting hull framework on one vessel as well ss preparing the way for another.\nIn North Vancouver, the Burrard\nDrydock Company has the framework started on one vessel and the\nkeel laid for another. The North\nVancouver Ship Repairs, Ltd., has\nthe keels laid for three more.\nAll have contracted to have their\nfirst vessels completed before the\nend of the year. In one shipyard,\nworkers are converting a former\ncoastal steamship, into an armed\ncruiser.\nOnce the top-decks made her ride\nhigh. These have been torn away\nand lower gun mountings substituted. Her funnel structure has been\nchanged. Now, despHe her rusty-\ncolored, paintless exterior, she looks\nas racy as a yacht\nWithin the hull ot this ship, with\nworkmen using compressed air agitators to remove paint and others\nriveting new plates for gun mountings, the noise seemed particularly\ndeafening.\nNaval authorities said the alterations had been designed to allow a\nminimum of remodelling but to assure she will be able to undertake\nthe normal activities of cruisers although her bull will have no armor\nplating.\nFRILLED AND RUFFLED CURTAINS\nNew shades. New styles. A particularly smart nmrtber. Cornel\nIn 5 shades of novelty dot on white ground. \u00a71.19\nComplete with vallance and ties. Set  *******\nHOMESPUN PEASANT DRAPERY\nA natural ground with modern design In combinations of color.\nThe season's favorite for general use. sJOsJ\nSTORE HOURS\nMon., Tuei., Thurs, Frl.\n9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.\nWednesday\n9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon\nSaturday\n9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nson Mondsy were Mr. and Mrs. M.\nBarrow, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hum-\nShries, Mrs. J. Davidson, Mrs. L.\nHt Mrs. N. A. Herridge, Mrs. C.\nL. Herridge, Mrs. A. Stanley. Mrs.\nR. Buerge, Mrs. J. Motherwell, Mrs.\nJ. Parent Jr., Mrs. E. Munn, Mrs.\nE. Olson, Mrs. L. Parkinson, Mrs. F.\nJohnson, Mrs. F. Mayoh, Mrs. O.\nSalstrom, Miss C. Salstrom and\nMiss M. Baird.\nMr. and Mrs. Jenkins were la\ntown from Arrow Park.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank LIkus, recently msrried ln Nelson, are visiting the former'i mother, at Glenbank, before leaving for Sandon.\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP. B.C.-Mrs. Lawrence\nOtt entertained at the tea hour on\ntwo occasions. She was assisted by\nMrs. J. Davidson. The guests included Mrs. L. Ward, Mrs. E. Munn,\nMrs. A. Matheson, Miss N. Harvey,\nMrs. J. Parent Jr., Mrs. N. A. Herridge, Mrs. M. Barrow, Mrs. W.\nWilion, Mrs. L. Ward, Mrs. A. Dunn,\nMrs. E. Olson, Mrs. R. Bradley,\nMrs. R. Barlow and Mrs. J. Davidson.\nAmong those attending a gathering of the Pythian Sisters ln Nel-\nHi Sliftt,\nifottne, that!\"\n\"I always get a kick out of meeting\nBen. He may be fields away; but\nhe's sure to yell, 'Hi, Slim, you're\nthat!' Folks kid us, not knowing what\nit means... Back in '18, Ben's wife\nwas pretty sick. I stuck around and\ndid his chores. One sun-up ho came\ninto the bam staring oddly at the\npackage of tobacco in bis hand, I said,\ncasual like, There's no other tobacco\njust like Old Chum.' But he was\npointing to the name, Old Chum,\n'You're just that.' he said ... I\nalways wave back my package meaning, 'You too, and happy days I'\"\nAr.,'1,1,1, _ ptak.iM,\n_M_Nt OMAN mi\nVdlktfa-.\nCUT COAR-B\ntor Tin pirn\nCUT FINS FOR\nWLUNO YOUR OWN\n;OLD CHUM\nTHE TOBACCO OF QUALITY\n. -J-*\nii ii'ii i___iltii iiiiiiiiiiiii'liiiiW-ifii.-B.hl-\n\t\n'\n\u25a0\n \t\niui.,*wmm.\n'\n-.\npopup\n\" *-*9\u00a7.i\nMl FOUR\n-NILSON DAILY NIW*. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1Mb-\nPNLY WOMAN MEMBER, MRS. NIELSON, ARRIVES AT OTTAWA\nHas No Illusions on New Life, May\n5 Be Called'an Instructed Delegate'\n; JOOTAWA, May 18 (CP)-A lien-\nder, black haired wife and mother\niho tor 13 yeara has known the\nirdihlp, toil and anxiety of t pion-\n' Ar home in Northern Saskatchewan, Mra. Peter Nielsen today was\nl nmlllarizing herself with Ottawa\nand  Parliament  Hill   where,   on\n. Thursday, she will take her aeat as\nI member of the House of Commoni\nlor North Battleford.\nCandidate of a group united to\nforget party intereiti end elect\nmembers who would devote themselves to Immediate needs of the\nweitern farmers, Mrs. Nilesen campaigned over her 30,000 square mi.e\nriding ai a unity candidate to gain\n\u00ab, itlhatantlal majority over the lea-\ntoned former Liberal member, Cameron Mcintosh.\ni \"I am what might be called an\nInstructed delegate sent here to\ntight for certain pressing needs of\ndistressed western farmers,\" Mri.\nNielien laid, \"but I am free to support any political group that apon-\nnthe cause of my elector!.\"\nn. Nielsen haa no illusions\nAbout the life that has been to\nsuddenly opened for her. While she\nhas ipent toe laat 13 yean ln a log\ncabin, striving with her husband,\nto carve out a home in the wilderness and raise their family of three\nchildren, she had aeen much of life\nbefore ahe went to Western Canada.\nBorn in London, ahe was at ichool\nin Belgium when the first Great\nWar itarted. She returned at once\nto her home and, aa a high ichool\ngirl, witnessed most of the German\nair raida on London. She fears that\nthe present conflict will bring even\nmore frightful experiences.\n\"It li a meet critical time for me\nto gain my firat experience in Parliament,\" Mrs. Nielien laid, \"and I\nknow everybody will be mainly\nconcerned with the war effort.\"\n\"But we muit not neglect lhe immediate domestic problems and\nSoae that will inevitably ariie of-\nr the war. It we neglect thoae\nSroblems we will lose the wir even\n! we defeat our enemies in the\nfield.\nAdequate pricei for farm products, education and medical reform\nand elimination of profiteering are\nthe basic planks in Mrs. Nielsen's\nplatform.\nMrs. Neilsen visited Parliament\nHill Saturday. Dr.' Arthur Beau-\nchesne, clerk of the House of Commons greeted the new member who\nwill be the only woman in the\nchamber, had her sign the roll and\ntake the oath, and assigned her to\nthe sixth floor office quarters, occupied for 18 years by Agnei Macphail, first woman to be elected\nto the Canadian Parliament.\nL South Slocan\n', SOOTH SLOCAN, B, C\u2014Mr. and\nMra. G. Tutt, who resided at Cres-\n[   oent Valley for a few weeks, have\n[   moved to South Slocan.\n1 Mn. Carl Wagner of Fruitvale\nI visited her parenta, Mr. and Mrs.\n\\ t. I. Baker.\nI Mr. and Mn. Stanley Dawaon\nvisited Trail.\nMr. and Mn. H. P. McDougall\nllave returned from Grand Forks\nwhere they attended the funeral of\nMr. MeDougaU's father. Her mother, Mn. McDougall, returned\nwith them for a time.\nJohn L. Purdy la a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nHugh Strand of Cranbrook viilted hli family here at the weekend.\nMn. M. O'Neal of Terry'i hai returned after visiting Mn. W. J.\nOliver.\n, Mrs. A. Mitchell and children visited Mn. W. Calbeck, Mrs. Mitchell's\nmother, at Nelson.\nMra. W. T. Jones entertained dlrecton of the Women's Institute\nwhen arrangements were made for\nthe Empire Day celebration.\nMn. 1*. H. Russel visited Nelson.\n*-\nBLACKHEADS\n0* two i\n<-m ol mttnlM rawim tern\nrour dranlst. SprtnkL on \u2022 hot wtt dot!\n. and -pplr to thi (\u00ab\u00ab tnllj. T.ierj -l\u00abk.\nk.W will be timetnl. _f **___. *~*\n\u25a0al pM way to in* btaottM-k\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - Mn. William Hendenon hei returned from\nVancouver where ihe viiited her\neon, William Henderson, Jr.\nMn. Percy Graham haa left for\nVancouver where ihe wai called by\nthe death ot her mother, Mn. Samuel Barkley, formerly of Nelson.\nR. A. Willli, of Montreel viilted\nhere.\nFrank Sheridan hai been transferred back to the district\nJ. F. M. Pinkham, formerly of\nCranbrook and now of Vancouver\nwas a viiltor here.\nMr. and Mn. W. C. Dale of Cranbrook have received word from\nEngland that their tecond son, Gnr.\nE. L. Dale, 1-7 Field Regiment ii to\nbe married to Miss Kathleen Mell-\nham of Harfemere, Surrey, England\nat Uie Parish Church May 13.\nJ. KELSALL.HEADS\nSILVERTON SPORTS CLUB\nSLVERTON, B.C.-The Silver-\nton Sports Club met Wednesday In\nthe Municipal HaU when Avard\nNelson presided. Officers elected\nwere Jack Kelsall, President. Percy\nFairhurat, Vice-President, Billy Ryans, Secretary, and Canute Lindsten, page. '\nW. R. Seel and E. Avery supervised the boyi.\nBELGRADE, Yugoslavia, May 13\n(AP).\u2014A high Yugoslav source reported today \"all security measures,\" including putting 700,000\ntroops on war footing, had been taken in Yugoslavia to guard against\npossible entrance ot Italy into the\nwar.\nNail Care..\n*\nUse Egg Pack lo\nBleach Elbows\nBy DONNA GRACE\nThis ia tbe part of our beauty\nprogram that we devote to our\nhands and nails.\nFirst, remove the poliih and icrub\nthe nails well with plenty of soap\nand water. Then imooth the edges\nwith an emery board and loosen\nthe cuticle from the sides and base.\nDo not cut it unless lt is ragged.\nBuff the nails with a powder pollih. Do. thii frequently whenever\nyou have the time, aa It stimulates\nthe circulation and encourages\nlong, beautiful nails.\nNow consider your hands, arms\nand elbows. They, too, need a\nthorough scrubbing with a rich lather of warm water and soap. You\ncan uae a bath brush and the friction will remove dead akin particles. Rinse well, pat dry and generously apply a rich cream or lotion\nover the armi and handi.\nThe elbows may need a pack to\nbleach and refine the akin. A simple one can be made by beating\none egg and adding the Juice of one\nlemon and enough almond meal to\nthicken lt to the consistency of\nmayonnaise. Leave on for five minutei, then remove with tepid water\nand apply a manage cream.\nHave ready a lubricating mixture\nfor the nails. Equal parts of vaseline, glycerine, olive oil and a few\ndrops of oil of lavender can be used\ntor this. Warm the mixture so that\nlt will penetrate and be sure to get\nit well under the nails at the sides.\nSelect the dress you are going to\nput on In the morning and have\nyour harmonizing bottle of nail polish on the dressing table ready\ntor use. If you haven't time to let\nthe polish dry thoroughly, its far\nbetter to leave off all polish and depend ort your buffing to bring a\nlustre to the nails.\nTODAY'S EXERCISE\nThis is the bear walk\u2014another\nexercise that brings all the muscles\ninto uie. It is done by tint bending\nover with the hands flat on the floor\nand knees itralght. Then walk tor-\nward in thii position. The right\nhand and left foot tor the tint step,\nthen the left hand and right foot\nWalk around the room several\ntimet thii way. Don't be discouraged it you can't do it at tint\nDont mlaa tomorrow'! article, In\nwhleh Donna Grace pallet on Information about making your weekend more luooenful with the aid of\nextra reit\nRegularity...\nTraining Child\n\u00bbX GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nAa tbe dayi crow longer babies\nand young children want to arise\nearlier. But it ll not well for babies\nand young children to get up with\nthe birds. Consider the sleep they\nlose when they do and Bleep their\nmothen also lose.\nRegardlesi of the season, many\nbabies and young children don't\nsleep nearly long enough in the\nmorning. Some young children, especially on the farm, get up when\ntheir parenti do\u2014at four or tive or\nilx\u2014end itay up till their parents\ngo to bed. Such need not happen.\nIt wont if the parents made a sensible plain and carry this plan\nthrough. .\nFOLLOW   PROGRAM\nYou aay it can't be done, except\nwith a few children? Yea, if can.\nIt was done with our children end\nit was done with many other children I have studied. The cost in\npain to the parent and child to accomplish it la about nothing. The\ngain to both parent and child In\ncomfort, health and general welfare il ten thousand-fold, perhaps.\nDecide on a desirable hour for\nUie tot to get up in the morning.\nset the alarm clock for that time.\nWhen the clock rings go for the\nchild, or lt he is old enough let bim\nget up and dress alone. If he\nawakens  earlier  let that be  his\nSrlvllege, hut he muit not stand in\nie crib or get out of hla cot till\nthe designated ime. If he does,\ngive him pain without exception-\na good smacking, preferably. Don't\ntell him to go back to sleep, merely\nthat he must not get up. It you\nhold yourself literally to this program, he wlil find the world io drab\nand unattractive that he will, after\na few mornings, Juit fall back to\nsleep. But if you are lrtconsi stent,\ndon't hold younelf rigidly to the\nclock, or it in any way you create\nthe slightest doubt in nil mind\nabout the program, he will hold out\nindefinitely \u2014 beg, whine, cry and\ncreate all sorts of disturbances.\nThen don't expect him to sleep\nlater on Sundiy or holidays thtn\nany other day. He ahould rite at\nexactly the aame hour the year\nround. Continue with this program\nindefinitely after the child enters\nschool. As he neara adolescence,\neven earlier, he may want to sleep\nlonger than hli school program will\nallow.\nSome parenti, thinking only of\ntheir own comfort and welfare, will\nallow the child to get up and play\nquietly with hii toya whenever he\nhappens to awaken. It'i their child,\nof coune, but it they are considering his health and welfare, they\nprobably will prefer to train him\nto sleep until a regular reaaonable\nhour in the morning. They ahould\nremember that it ia not only tte\nhour when t child goes to bed that\ndetermines how much he sleeps, but\nalso the time when he awakens In\nthe morning. Tbey ihould realise,\nmoreover, that the child wht\nchoosea least sleep lt the very child\nwho needs moat of it, being to excitable and high-strung.\n. You may have a chart of desirable houn ot sleep for children at\nvirioui stages by writing We In care\not this paper, enclosing a self-addressed envelope with a three-cent\nstamp on lt\nIn Love ...\nBoy Friend Should\nNol Show Fear\n\u2022y CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Min Chatfleld:    '\nI have been ln love with a girl\nfor three yean. She'a the only\ngirl I have ever wanted to marry\nand yet I am afraid of what may\ncome. Sometimes ihe il affectionate and makes me think ahe loves\nme to death. At other times iht\nstages scenes, says it is a big\nmistake for us to go on add she\nis not at all sure she loves me.\nI can't describe the feeling I have\nwhen I think of the possibility\not losing her, I get cold all over\nand my tongue sticks to the roof\nof my mouth. Pleaie tell me how\nto handle her.\nti.\nANSWER-\nPardon the analogy, brother, but\nAlbert Payaon Terhune layi a dog\nsmells fear on a human being, dislikes the scent and Jpltei the person that emits it A gal dislikes a\ntearful boy-friend. When he gives\nevidence of abject tear, when he\nshowi her he's scared to death of\nlosing her, ahe frequently experiences disgust for him and laihai\nout at him. You iee a gal reilly\nwants to respect the man the loves.\nShe wants to look up to him and\nwhen he cringes before her the\ncant\nYou must get a grip on yourael\nbehave in such a way that your gi\nrespecti you\u2014otherwlte you w(\nlose her. Here'i the time to tell\nyou that lt you ihould marry her\non any other basis the wouldn't be\na goqa wife tor you. She'd trample\nyou under.\nWhen you have ihown aome Independence, told her to make up her\nweak mind and move off while ihe\nmakea it up, she'll come to tbe time.\nEither tht loves you, or doein't md\nthe threat ot loiing you will clear\nher mind initanter. Of courie you\nunderstand that it you' are not in\nposition to discuss wedding plans\nand wedding date, you are at a\ndisadvantage; becauie a gal that\nhaa watted three yean for the\nword which hasn't been ipoken isn't\nlikely to be in the moit amiable\nframe of mind.\nThere isn't much logic in a maid'i\nway with a man: ahe works like a\nTrojan to get him down and if ahe\ni\nJGnUfot\ndfouMWWfiL\n\u00bby BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S ME\u00bb<U\nBaked Lamb Steaki\nBaked Potatoes Green Feu\nLeaf Lettuce Salad\nGolden Rhubarb Cream Tea\nBAKED LAMB STEAK* '\nTrim aid remove any extra tat\nfrom lan>b steaks cut from the\nshoulder, rub tham with aalt and\nPepper, brown on both sides in lamb\nfat, put in casseroje.\nAdd one-half cup water to meat,\ncover dish tightly and bake in mod\nerate oven (315-400 degrees F.) for\ncite and one-half hours. It you wish,\nfinely cut vegetablea, auch at onlone,\ncarrots, turnips and mushrooms,\nmay be added to the meat during\nthe last halt hour of cooking. Gravy\nmay be made by mixing liquor ln\npan with two tablespoons flour and\nadding extra wtter or stock, it mc\n*ttary.\nLEAF LETTUCE SALAD\nWash leaf lettuce wall and cut\ninto pieces thtt are eaiy to eat, or\nleave whole aa you please, and\nserve with your favorite salad treating with one teaipoon of chopped\niweet pickles mixed with it\nGOLDEN RHUBARB CREAM\nOne and one-half cupa rhubarb,\none-half cup sugar, 13 macaroons,\ntwo eggi, one-third cup sugar, one-\nhalf teaspoon grated lemon rind,\none tablespoon lemon juice, ono cup\nirradiated evaporated milk or coffee\ncream.\nWash rhubarb, but do not peel.\nCut into Until Pieces tnd stir ln\nOne-halt cup sugar. Line a well-\nbuttered shallow baking dish with\nmacaroons.\nSpread tha sugared rhubarb oirer\ne macaroons. Beat egg yolks, add\nie one-third cup sugar and boat\nagain. Add lemon rind and Juice,\nthen milk. Fold in the itilfly-beaton\negg whiter Pour thla custard mixture over rhubarb. Bake in a alow\noven (300 degreei F.) trom 30 to M\nminutei, depending upon the depth\nqt tht baking pan. Serves six. to\neight\nsucceeds, loses har taste tor him.\nlight while she'a pressing for hia\nproposal. It it doesn't Come, she becomes irritable, fretful, and can\nhardly be pleasant with him\u2014even\nthough ihe loves him to distraction,\nSo lt behoove* the man ttrlcken\nwith heart trouble to explore all\nthe possibilities in the feminine\nrealm, to keep hit nerve and show\nno lign ot fear\u2014also it behooves\nhim to get tht dotted line ln readiness to sign.\nCANAPES\nCut them from tout with small,\nfancy-shaped cookie cutten, apread\nthem with the chosen paste, and\nton each piece with something colorful\u2014a slice of stuffed olive, grated\nhard-boiled egg yolk, a tiny pearl\nOAion, or a leaf or two ot water-\ncress,-Start off a dinner in this smart\nfashion, and the family won't mind\nif the rest of tht meal isn't a banquet.\nIt the soup li bouillon, place a\nthin illce ot lemon ln each serving.\nIf it is creamy toup, sprinkle\ncrunchy tout croutons on top. Juit\ncut buttered bread in tiny cubes\nand toast to criipneis in the oven.\nGARNISH MEAT DISHES\nDo right by your meat dtihga and\nthe family by garnishing them, too.\nTriangles of toast and tufts of fresh\npirsley will add interest to a meat\nfatter.\nSprinkle chopped parsley over\nfish and over potatoes.\nTop green vegetables, creamed\nvegetables and baked noodles or\nmacaroni with tine dry bread\ncrumbs, browned ln butter. If the\nmain coune is simple, dress it up\nby serving something extra in tlin\nway of rolls. Most bakers now sell\nmidget-sized rolls.\nTo perk up the salad, add cheese\ntriangles or salad crisps. To make\nthe triangles, trim crusts from\nsliced bread and cut diagonally Into\ntour parti. Dip each triangle into\nmelted butter, then into grated\ncheese, and toast lightly under the\nbroiler.\nFor salad criaps, trim the crusts\nfrom sliced bread, ipread both tides\nwith softened butter, then cut each\nillced into tour strips and toast\nquickly in hot over or under broiler.\nADDED ZIP\nTha, next time you cook peat, car-\nSots or corn, substitute honey tor\nhat \"pinch ot sugar.\" It will give\nthese vegetablei a new taste, and a\n(rand one.   \u25a0\nAa a tip-top ntw btt lor puddings\nor custards or gingerbread, peel and\nslice bananas Into a bowl, add an\negg white, a dash ot aalt a third-\ncup ot sugar, and one-halt teaspoon\nvanilla. Beat until imooth and\nfluffy and pile lt up tor compliments.\ni '  ii     ji'\nKASLO\nKASLO. B. C. - Mn. C. G. Bowker ot Mirror Lake left to ipend several weeks In Crawford Bty.\nDr. tnd Mrs. Hamilton H. Greenwood and Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Traut\nof Coeur d'Alene arrived ln tht city\nfor a weekend of fishing.\nMisa Neta Munn, R.N., ipent Friday In Nelson,\nWilliam Bowman of Johnson's\nLanding viiited town.\nMax Matthew, A. E. Applegate\ntnd -Laurence Richert of Spokane\nare weekend fishing viiiton In\ntown.\n. Ted Russell, Lee Pepper, Everett\nKirkpatrick and Charlei WOrten-\ndyke of Coeur d'Alene are ipending\na tew dayi here fishing.\nKASLO. B.C.-.LThon.llnicn ot\nHowier viilted the city. .\nMiu Elizabeth Giegerich lett u.\nipend several weeki viiiting in\nCranbrook, Kimberley and Vancouver.\nJack MacDougall, of Wells, arrived to arrange for,the funeral of\nhis father, Finley MacDougall, who\ndied Ma- 5.\nMr, and Mrs. John Vallance ot\nNelion viilted town.\nMn. Leonard Garland of Nelson\nIs a city visitor.\nSkippers ot Sut cout fishing\nvessels are hardy. When William\nPuhby, IS, muter ot the \"Courage\", went ashore at Scarborough,\nEng., attar being bombed by a\nGerman Heinkel, he merely phoned\nhla wife he wu tttt, then put to\nset again-\n* They're So Convenient\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA BAGS\n******->\nT.r.y\nIN ELSON ~ The Vacationists Paradise\nNow Is the Time to Plan Your Vacation-\nRemember, Include Nelson the Queen\nCity of the Kootenays in Your Plans\nA Vacation in Nelson Is Enjoyable and Economical\nEVERY FACILITY IS AT YOUR COMMAND FOR A PERFECT TIME IN NELSON-\nBEAUTIFUL SANDY BEACHES \u2014 FINE FISHING \u2014 TENNIS COURTS \u2014 A\nSPORTY NINE HOLE GOLF COURSE \u2014 THEATRES \u2014 DANCES \u2014 ALL OF THE\nTHINGS YOU WANT TO DO CAN BE ENJOYED AT A MINIMUM COST \u2014 IN\nNELSON'S STORES TOO, YOU WILL BE VERY WELCOME TO BROUSE AROUND\nAND SHOP. AT YOUR LEISURE\nEveryone Will Welcome You to Nelson\nA. H. GREEN\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nCONTRACTORS\nWard St.     Nelion, B.C.\nPURITY FLOUR\nBrackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nFront St., Nelson, B.C.\nCall Ua Pint for Coal, Wood,\nCoke, Moving or Trantfar\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone 33\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry and\nNo-Odor Dry\nCleaning Co.\nFor Exquisite\nLadies'\nReady-to-Wear\nEdith A.\nCarrothers\nFink Blk. Nelson\nQUEEN CITY\nMOTORS LTD.\nFORD DEALERS\nSatlafactlon la Our Aim\nBUV-\n\"NELSON BRAND\"\nJAMS AND JELLIES\nProduct! ot the\nMcDonald lam\nSee ua FIRST for your Heating, Plumbing and ventilation\nRcqulrementi\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nend HEATINC CO., LTD.\nSTAR\nGROCERY\nfor\nQUALITY\nGROCERIES\nAND SERVICE\nMother's Bread\nPhone 210 for Delivery\nChoquette  Bros.\nBAKERS\nR. W. DAWSON\nReal  Estate\u2014Insurance\nPhone 197       Baker St.\nNelion, B.C,\nWhen   In   Nelson   dine\nwhere meals are  really\ngood and prices are\nmoderate.\nREX\nCAFE\nBAKER ST.\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelson's Popular\nRestaurant\"\nThe Beit for Leu\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPHONE 35\nAUTO PARTS m TIRES\nTHE MAYOR\nand\nALDERMEN\nof the\nCity of\nNelson\nInvite You to Do\nYour Shopping\nin Nelaon\nTHE\nL.D,\nNelnn'l Moit Popular\nRESTAURANT\nCOOD FOODS\nCOOD SERVICE\nMODERATE PRICES\nKootenay Lake\nSalmon Derby*\nSpenaered by Nelaon Gyro Club\nWin an\nOutboard Motor\n19 Other Cood Prim\nWEIGH YOUR CATCH AT ONE\nOF THE I DEPOTS\nMacdonalds\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholesale Orocett\nPhone 21\nFRONT ST. NILSON\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelaon) Limited\nFor real garage service\nand body work.\nPhone 117\nPHONE 22 for\nLetterhea-1,   Envelopes   and\nall klndi ot Bualneaa Forma.\nH. M. Whimster\nJob Printing\nGingham Shoppe\nFor Ladies\nDresses Lingerie\nHosiery      Sportswear\nm\n\u2022wemmt\n' \u25a0 \u25a0\n.._..__>._\u25a0-__.\n\u25a0\n__\n\"\n_.-_.:_____>-\n_____\n **m**m**\nH\n\"'\u2022i,> '   \"\nThe NEW\nKeaettes\nAre Here!\nLight at Meringue\nThe soft, cool cottony shoei\nfor summer comfort la giy\ncolon - ttiily wiihtblt\neven on tripi.\n\u2666 Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nSecret Weapon\nWon Dutch Fort\nGermans Boast\nFlame-Thrower, Bomb\nor Gas? Experts\nWonder\nPARI*. Mty 18 (AP). - A\nFrench Wir Department ipokn-\nman Mid today thtt to fir tht\nonly fort In tht fortified xent\n\u2022round Liege thit hu filltn te\ntht German! ll Eben  Emiel.\nIt was In the Nazi assault on Eben\nEmael fortreu, one of the strongest\n\u25a0a the Liege-Albert Canal defense\nlone, thtt Germany tried her \"secret\nireapon,\" or \"Angriflimlttel.\" The\nfortress tell, 1000 Belgians laying\niown their arms, the Germani\nboasted.\nlta Newi Agency D.N.B. issert-\ntd vaguely that a lieutenant Wltztg\nlit a plane down within the fortress, an tret perhaps 600 to 800\nrards in diameter, and by using the\n\"Angriffcmittel\" mtdt tht fort tn\neuy mtrk for t column attacking\ntrom tht North.\nSpeculation in Berlin as to the nature of the new weapon ran tht\nrange of fancy. Some suggested lt\nmight bt a new, unchallengeable\nflame-thrower; others a strange device to render guns or ammunition\nImpotent, and itill othen, a mystery bomb which the Germans tl-\nleged they uied in Barcelona, ctp-\n\u2022ble of blasting whole city blocks.\nBERNE. Switzerland, Miy 18\u2014\n(AP).-Neutrtl military attaches\nto Switzerland, who handle much\n' of the war's military information,\nreported the \"new weapon\" which\nGermans used to capture the powerful fort of Eben Emael and\nbreak through the Albert Canal\nline wu believed by them to be\n\u2022toerve gu.\"\nIt affects the nerves of those Inhaling lt and brings laatltuda tnd\ninability to coordinate the musclei\nthete sources nld.\ntt wu raid the \"new method\" apparently enabled the Germans to\ntake forts and whole garrisons with\nlittle effort.\nThe gu hu no luting effect and\naoldiers can be protected only by\ncertain typei of gai masks, they\n\u25a0aid. The fortress troops it Eben\nEmael had only standard Belgian\nirmy flier masks.\nSoldiers Inhaling the gu stagger\nid fall, lt wu said.\nThe gu was reported to have a\nfaint smell similar to a geranium\n~ Is almost beyond detection.\nAnimal Life . . .\nSpring Tonic Is\nAvailable at Zoo\nBy LOGAN  CLENDENING, M. O.\nIn these Spring days some people\nneed tonics md some need sedatives. Middle-aged people trt likely\nto be made more restless and discontented by Spring than encouraged and vitalized. They are likely\nto be cantankerous and crou and\nthey need to be soothed by contact\nwith great forcei of nature.\nI agree with the prescription that\nwas given for Mr. Pontlfex in \"The\nWay of All Flesh\". The doctor told\nhint:\n\"I have found the Zoological\nGardens of service to many of my\npatients. I should prescribe for Mr.\nPontlfex a course of the larger\nmammals. Don't let him think he is\ntaking tham medicinally, but let\nhim go to their house twice a weeit\n(or a fortnight, and stay with tht\nhippopotamus, the rhinoceros and\nthe elephahts, till they begin to 'boro\nhim. I find these beasts do my patients more good than any others.\nThe monkeys are not a wide enough\ncross; they do not stimulate sufficiently. The larger carnivore are\nunsympathetic. The reptiles tre\nworse than useleu, and the marsupials are not much better. Birds\nagain, except parrots, are not very\nbeneficial; he may look at them\nnow and again, but with the elephants and the pig tribe generally\nhe should mix just now u freely u\npouible.\"\nPATIENT CURE FOUND\nMr. Pontlfex's reaction to thu\nadvice is given u follows:\n\"Had the doctor been leu eminent\nln his profession I should have\ndoubted whether he wu ln earnest\nbut I knew him to be a man of'busi-\nness who would neither wute his\nown time nor that of his patients.\nAs soon u we were out of the house\nwe took a cab to the park, and\nspent a couple of hours ln sauntering around the different housei. Perhaps it wu on account of what the\ndoctor had told me, but I certainly\nbecame aware of a feeling I had\nnever experienced before. I mean\nthat I wu receiving an influx ot\nnew life, or deriving new ways of\nlooking at life\u2014which is the same\nthing\u2014by the proceu. I found the\ndoctor quite right ln his estimate of\nthe larger mammals u the ones\nwhich on the whole were most beneficial, and observed that Ernest,\nwho had heard nothing of what the\ndoctor had said to me, lingered instinctively in front of thtm. As for\ntht elephants, especially the baby\nelephant, he seemed to be drinking\nin large draughts of their lives to\nthe recreation and regeneration of\nhis own.\"\nQUESTIONS and ANSWERS\nS. A. R.: \"What are the symptoms of hardening of the arteriei\nand what precaution! can be taken\nln regard to diet, etc., in order to\ntrrest this condition and overcome\nit?\"\nAnswer: I sincerely wish I knew\nwhat were the causes of hardening\not the arteries. Some people believe thtt Increue In the tmount ot\nsalt and meat in the diet causes\nthis, and some believe that the excitement of high preuure modern\nlife is the cause. I do not subscribe\nto either of these beliefs. I am inclined to believe the fundamental\ncause of the condition la hereditary.\nThe most important thing in the\nway of treatment is not to worry\nabout it and not to think too much\nabout it. Hardening of tht trteries\nln itself does not cause symptoms.\nConfirmation Tonight\nChurch of Redeemer\nFourteen candidates, htlf of them\ntdults, will be confirmed tonight\nby Bt. Rev. Walter R. Adams,\nBishop of Kootenay, at the Churcn\nof tht Redeemer. A reception, at\nwhich the congregation is invited\nto meet Bishop Adams, will be held\nat the Parish HaU following the\nservlcL\nTWO CANADIANS TO\nRECEIVE HONORARY\nUNIVERSITY DECREES\nEDMONTON, May 13 (CP).-Two\nCanadians who have been intimately\nassociated with the growth of the\nWest since its early days were named by the Senate of the University\nof Alberta today to receive honorary Doctor of Law degreei at the\n30th annual convocation ot the Univenity here tomorrow.\nThey are C. A. Magrath of Victoria, fint Mayor of Lethbridge and\nformer Chaimian of the Ontario\nHydro Electric Commission, and J.\nH. Woodi. pioneer Westerns newspaper publisher and executive, and\nPresident of the Calgary Herald.\n\u2022\u2014NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILION. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1M0.-\nThe Grenadier Quarts Man the Une\nMortar Without Brief...\nThe famous BriUsh Grenadier Guards are seen \"moving up the line\" ai they prepare for front lint fighting\non the Western front.\nA French IK mm. trench mortar is shown here with Hi crew In\nan emplacement in t front line trench on Ihe Western front.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. IL J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Tha following wedding ta of\ngreat interest ln Nelaon tnd Trail\nwhere the principals are popular\namong the younger set. A quiet\nwedding wu solemnized April 10\nat the home of Mr. and Mm. E. J.\nF. Rlchardion, New Weetminater,\nwhen their only diughter, Eleanor\nAudrey of Nelson, became the bride\nof Lawrence Cntr.es- only ion of\nthe lite Mr. md Mn. C. G. Simp-\nton of Ntlaon. Rev. Jamet Macintosh of Vancouver ptrtormed tht\nceremony under in irch of orange\nblouoma and Japonica. Red rosea\nand daffodils were used In the living roomi. Given in marriage by\nher father the bride waa lovely\nin dusky blue afternoon dreu, wine\natraw hat with white flowen and\nsmall white veil and wine accessories. Her bouquet wu pink roses\nand white hyacinths. Miss Elsie\nThompson, bridesmaid, chose midnight blue lice afternoon dress,\nblue doll hit with blue tnd pink\nflowers tnd matching acceaiorlts.\nHer colonial bouquet wu plpk carnations. Miu Beverley Grimmer,\nflower girl, wu dainty to I rose\ntaffeta frock and carried pink carnation.. J. I. Richardson, brother of\nthe bride, wu groomsman. At a\nreotptton the bride and groom were\ninsisted in receiving guesti by Mn.\nRichardson, mother of the bride, and\nMn. Palmer Rutledge of Trail, sister of the groom. The bride's table,\ncovered by a cluny lace cloth was\ndecorated with pink carnations and\nlighted tapers ln sliver sconces. In\nthe centre wu a two-tiered wedding\ncake. Presiding at the urns were\nMrs. Rutledge and Mra. C. G. Sex-\nsmith, an aunt of tho bride. Aides\nin serving included Mn. Edwin\nRichardson, Mn. Orval Rlchardion\nand Mrs. F. B. Seximith. Later\nMr. and Mn. Simmon left by motor\nfor California and will make their\nhome to Nelaon.\n\u2022 G, Hill wu to town from the\nRelief Arlington mine on the weekend.\n\u2022 Mn. Harold Watson and infant\nton left Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Sunday for their home in\nYmir. , ,    .\n\u2022 Mn. WJ.G. Oliver and daughter ot South Slocan shopped to the\ncity.\n\u2022 Captain C. 8. price of the\nlllth Battery at Edmonton, Mn.\nPrice and aon Michttl of Harrop\nvisited town.\n\u2022 Miu I. M. Matheson WW in\nNelion from Creston at the weekend,\n\u2022 Mn. J. B. Watson of the Relief\nArlington mine viiited Nelson at\nthe weekend. ,\n\u2022 Lyman StDenii of Trail visited Nelson it the weekend.\nHere t \"section moves line abreast to attack\". These trt Brltiih Wtr Office photographs.\nSERIAL STORY ...\nBy Richard Houghton\nTHE KILLER SPEAKS\nCHAPTER S3\nAfter Muriel'! indiscreet uie nf\nthe telephone in my room in the\nmiddle of the night my emotions\nwere in t turmoil. Louise, I was\nafraid, would think the wont of iht.\nI hadn't realized how much I wanted her good opinion.\nI couldnl undentand Muriel's\nbehavior. Suddenly she had become\nvindictive. But why\u2014when the was\nin love with Jerry? Why ahould\nthe thought that I wu no longer\nin love with her make her so angry? Do women so dislike learning\nthat men sometimes could tall out\nof love with them?\nAs for Louise being to love with\nme\t\nI drove my mind resolutely from\nthat subject. My business now was\nto solve the riddle of Alfred Mark-\nham'i death\u2014or rather, the riddle\nof what had Immediately preceded\nhis death.\nI felt certain that he had gone\ninto the garden that night to meet\nsomeone, and that he resented my\npresence because his meeting wu\nto be strictly private. It seemed logical that the man he wu to have\nmet wu the man who kidnapped me\nan hour later. The fellow had been\nlate for his appointment\nAll this fitted nicely together, but\nI still didn't know the purpose of\nthe appointment That was the key\nto the mystery, I wu sure.\nAccording to Belzer the man who\nkidnapped me wu a bootlegger.\nMy own experience showed that he\nwas more than a bootlegger. He had\ndealings of some kind with two\ndrug addicts.\nI had to find that man! Despite\nthe warnings he had sent me I\nknew he had to be found if I wu\nto learn the real reason behind Alfred's death\u2014the reason he had acted so strangely that night the reai-\non he wanted to be alone in the\ngarden where he was killed.\nI wondered if the number \"732\"\ncould be a street addrere or a telephone number. I thumbed through\nthe telephone directory. I knew the\nnames of some of the places on the\nwaterfront and I soon saw that\nthere were no street numbers in the\n700's in that district. The streets\nwere numbered from the waterfront outward.\nThere were three telephone exchanges. 1 began with the most obvious one, asking for Brentwell 732.\nThere was no aniwer. Clagstone\n732 brought a sharp reply from a\nwoman\u2014I judged she must have\nbeen the maid in the house\u2014and\nshe hung up the receiver when I\nuked the address of the place. I\ntried Surry 732 with a little more\ndiplomacy, but no more success. A\nchinaman answered the phone.\nI could sec no solution except to\nlook through the telephone book\nuntil I found the addresses of the\nthree numbers. If one of them wu\nnear the waterfront I would gb\ndown and watch the place for my\nman.\nThat the man had a part In the\nactual killing I knew wts impossible, but I also knew that he wu a\ndesperate character and I would\nhave to be careful.\nI wu lucky in finding Brentwell 732 among the C's. The namt\nwas William Calla and the address\nwas 2 Cleaves Street.\nCleaves Street originated in the\nwarehouse district along the river.\nThe coincidence was striking. I\ngrabbed up my hat and itarted out.\nThe warehouse district was spread\nfor considerable distance along the\nriver. I alighted four blocks fropi\nCleaves Street, knowing that a taxi\nwould he too nollctnbl\".\nODen slieds along the bulkhead\nabutting the river sheltered black\nshadows in the shapes' of sacks,\nbales of fragrant bay, and collections of machinery destined for the\nboats. At any other tlmt I might\nhave looked on the shadows'with\ndistrust but tonight they offered\nme shelter. I kept under the cover\nof the sheds u much ti pos6ible.\nThe street lamps drew farther\nand farther apart u I ncared my\ndestination. Tiie smell of drying\nonions mingled with the odor of\ntar on the boats whose lonely red\nand green lanterns swayed above\nthe water to my right As I paused\nin the shadows of a wall before\nemerging into the square at the end\nof Cleaves Street I looked back and\nsaw a thin wisp of a tog blowing\nacrou the nearest street light a\nblock away. The moon wu Juit\nbeginning to rise, but If the tog\ncame in the night would be dark.\nThe river foga were dente.\nThere wun't a sound anywhere,\nexcept the lapping ot water and\nthe creaking of ropes around Uie\ndeserted bottt. I couldn't iee i soul.\nThere wu no sign of life to any of\nthe buildings acrou the itreet That\nbuilding must be the very one I wu\nlooking for, I told myself.\nIt wu on the very edge of the\nbulkhead above the river, seeming\nto be no more than 15 ftct from\nthe lights of the nearest bolt Although I had heard tht movement\nof a door there was no light ti\nthought the penon Inside did not\nwish hii presence known.\nThat place looked familiar. Suddenly I remembered that I had been\nhere before. I had been with friends.\nOne of them had Insisted on coming to this house to see a man. No\none had been mentioned.\nI had thought it strange at the\ntime. Now I realized that it wu\nmore than strange. I shuddered. I\ndidn't want to believe the horrible\nsuspicion that came to my mind,\nyet it wu the answer to everything. I believed I knew, it leut\nthe secret behind Alfred Markham's\ndeath!\nI must identify the mtn to that\nhouse. If I could make aure he wat\nmy kidnapper . . .\nI tiptoed quickly acrou the street\nto the deepest shadow on the other\nside. It proved to be the entrance\nto t narrow alley between buildings. I entered it tnd felt my wty\nalong, trusting thtt the. sound of\nsomeone moving about in the building on my right meant that I wts\nstill unnoticed!\nFifteen feet from the street the\nalley ended in a solid wall, but the\nhouse on my right had a little en-\ntryway through a back garden. I\npushed open the gate cautiously and\nfound myself looking over the river. Ten feet ahead of me three wooden steps led up to the back door of\nthe house, whilch wu shut and beside the door a window glowed dully u though newspapers had been\npasted over the glass.\nI stepped forward and put my\near close to tht window and listened. I heard glau clinking and\nsomething thumping softly on the\nfloor. The sounds fitted well with\nmy Idea of tht mth I was looking\ntor. This wis another of Ml distribution points for sacklotds of bottles.\n, I wu fairly sure thli wai the man\nbut I had lo be certain. It would\nbe awful to summon the police tnd\nthen discover thtt I'd made t mil-\ntake.\nThere didn't seem to be much\nchance of looking into the roo.n. I\nleaned down and tried the crack\nunder the door. AH I could see wu\ni pair oj! ihoei moving tround.\nThe ict of letning over dislodged\na pencil from my breut pocket I\nmade a grab for it but wu too late.\nIt clattered down tbe steps. The\nfett Inside the room paused. I held\nmy bretth.\n\"Who's there?\" asked t gruff\nvoice, I recognized it It wu my\nman.\nTt It Ctntlnutd\nFredrickion Jailed\n3 Months for Theft\nPleading guilty to the theft of t\nnumber of empty bottlei from the\nSummer home of A. E. Murphy on\nthe North Shore, Melvin Fredrick-\nton wu sentenced to serve three\nmonths with hard labor when he\nappeared before Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine to Provin-\ncial Police Court Monday afternoon.\nHis Worship declared that This\npractice of atealtag from Summer\nhomes muat stop.\" It wu the third\nease- of theft from vtctnt residences in the district within the\nput two weeks. The others involved a houie it Longbeach and\nCamp Koojaree on the Weit Arm.\nFredrickion wu arrested tt hit\nhome Mondty morning by Constable Richard R. House of the City\nPolict tnd Constable G. A. Brabazon of the Provincial Police. Information wu laid by Constable\nBrabazon.\nOn Fashion's\nHorizon\nBy VERA WINSTON\nGrey with t chtrming touch\nof white Is used for this attractive and wearable ensemble.\nThe soft grey crepe dreu hu t\nremovable white pique vestee\nwith t bow at tht neck, over\nwhich the bodice Is held with\ntwo   buttons.   From   there   t\n?letted section falls to the hem.\nhe accompanying coat Is of\ngrey crepe plalded In white. The\nlarge peplum pockets have\nsmaller flap pockets on them.\nButtoned snugly over the bosom,\nIt falls In a gracefully flared\nskirt It hu a removable white\npique collar.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. F. L. Lawton of\nKelowna were weekend vltlton In\nNelson, prevlouily visiting to\nSpokane.\nt- Jack Dingwall of tbt Relief\nArlington mine visited Nelson at tht\nweekend.\n\u2022 M. T. Benthicm ot Gray Creek\napent yeiterday to tha city.\nt Mrs. Max Kaaper, Roiemont\nhu returned from Lethbridge, where\nihe wu joined by htr husband of\nthe lllth Battery at Edmonton.\n' t \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Jamet Wallace\not Ymir passed through town en\nroute to their home from Silverton,\nwhtre they viilted Mr. Wallace's\nmother, Mn. J. Wallace. '\nt Roy Graham of Bonnington\nvisited Nelson at the weekend.\nt Ernest Marsden ot tht Relief\nArlington wu in town it the weekend.\nt Mr. and Mn. Lawrence C.\nSimpson have returned trom a\nhoneymoon in California and have\ntaken up residence at 801 Gordon\nRoad.\nt ' Rtv. J. Fielding Shaw wu to\nthe city from Kaslo Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Joseph Bradshaw, Silica\nStreet, bu returned from Trail,\nWhere the viaited her ion tnd\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrt,\nChirles Bradshaw.\nt Mr. and Mn. A. M Banks\nSilica Street, were weekend visiton ln Spoktnt.\nt Rex Towgood of the Canadian\nBank of Commerce staff in Trail\nviilted relatives in Nelion on tht\nweekend.\nt Mr. and Mrs. F. Crooks and\nfamily of the Relief Arlington mine\nvisited Nelton at the weekend.\nt Mr. and Mra. George He!\nbecque and tons of South Slocan\nshopped ln town tt the weekend.\nt Mr. tnd Mra. David Laughton,\nEdgewood Avenue, had u guest\nMn. Radcllffe of Cranbrook, who\nwu t delegate to tht Pythian Si*\nten convention.\nt Mm. Worley and daughter\nSandra Gall, ot Caatlegar, who were\nguests of Mn. Worley's parents,\nMr. and Mn. C. I. Archibald, Stanley Street for t few weeks, left\nSundty fer Trill to visit it the\nhome of her brother, F. C. Archibald, and her slater, Mn. Tommy\nBishop.\nt Mr. and Mn. Charlei DeFerro, 1420 Cedar Street, had u\nweekend guests, Mr. and Mn. J.\nSImone of Trail ind Frank S.\nLavoratto of Rossland.\nt Bdr. Arthur M. Hlncki of the\nlllth Field Battery, RCA, returned to Edmonton Monday atter a\nfew d\u00abrs leave to Nelson.\n-PAOI FIVI\nNew Sport Frocks\nWoolcraft Collegiate Sport\nFrocks in smart new styles.\nMaterials are Koolshire Crepe,\nHopsaeking and Laces. New\nGipsy Frocks. Sizes 14 to 20.\n$10.95 to $14.95\n1$) fitrman'ftunt ($\nPhont 200\nBtktr St\nRossland Social ..\nROSSIAND, B. C, May lS-Mrs.\nAllan Dixon entertained Friday\nevening in honor of her husband's\nbirthday. The rooms were prettily\ndecorated with mauve and orange,\nand the guests enjoyed games and\ndancing throughout the evening.\nGuests present were Mlu Kathleen\nBrown, Mr. and Mn. Sam Tortorelli,' Mn. Mildred Dixon, Mr, and\nMn. Anton HUbner, Miu Constance\nRasmusson, Miu Grace Holmes,\nMn. Albert Yearby, Mr. and Mrs.\nAlbert L'EcIuse, Mr. and Mn. Orald Neil, Mlu Mary MacAulay, Jack\nVarcoe, David Reid, Ernest Beaulieu, Matthew Fertich, Michael\nRizzutto and Norman Zanuui, Mlu\nHolmes tnd Mr. Zanuui won the\nspot waits. The gathering was entertained by moving pictures of\nRossland and surrounding district\nshown by Mr. Hubner, and dance\nmusic wu played by Mr. Fertich.\nGirla of the Holy Crou study\ngroup called on Mn. Leslie Neil,\nformerly Miss Winnifred Grigg\nSunday evening, and gavt her a\nsurprise cup and stucer shower.\nThose present included Miu Mary\nMacAulay, Miu Millie Cpzetto, Mils\nDelphine Vetere, Mlu Eda Vetere,\nMlu Florence Corrado, Min Irene\nBesso, and Min Evelyn Bourchier.\nMr, and Mn. Joe Gerace and\ndaughter Dora of Trail viilted\nMr. and Mn. John Vetera over the\nweekend.\nMn. J. M. McLeod returned to\nher home at Edgewood after a 10-\nday visit here with her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nNesbitt   -\nMT. and Mn. Gilbert Hunt and\ndaughter Sharon, accompanied by\nMr. and Mrs. Sydney Simcock,and\nGeorge Rollins, spent Sundty u\ngueits of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney\nWurzburg tt Marcus, Wuh.\nMr. and Mn. Edward Schley hive\ntaken up residence at Trail.\nMiss Joy Ridgen entertained' i\nnumber of friendi Saturday ifternoon, to celebration of her thirteenth\nbirthday.\nMils Lorna Jonei hu returned\nfrom Vancouver, where ahe hu\nbeen nunlng at St Paul'i Hoipital.\nMin Jones' wedding to Fred Wendel will take place in the Sacred\nHeart Rectory Thunday.\nMrs. Donald McMillan and Infant\ndaughter, of Erickson, are visiting\nMn. McMillan's parents, Mr. and\nMn. John Lloyd. They expect to remain for a month.\nSynod Executive\nMeets Wednesday,\nSemi-Annual Work\nSemi-annual meeting of the Executive Committee of the Synod ot\nthe Diocese of Kootenay will be\nheld to Nelson Wednesday with Rt.\nRev. Walter Adams, D. D\u201e Bishop of\nKootenay, presiding. Seastona, to be\nheld tt Memorial Hall, are to begin\nat 10 am after Holy Communion\nat St Saviour'i Pro-Cathedral at\n7-4Q\n'Most of the memben will arrive\ntoday or tonight, from Vernon, En-\nderby, Kelowna, Rowland, Trail and\nCranbrook.\nPIANO STUDENTS ASSIST\nAT CRANBROOK RECITAL\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 A quartette\nof piano pupils of Miu Dorothy\nOliver, A. T. C. M\u201e mtde a splendid impreuion it Cranbrook Friday, when they appeared u assisting artists at a recital by the violin\natudenta of W. H. Moser of that\ntown. ., ,\u201e\nMiu Oliver's pupils were Miss\nA. Prlsk, Mlu Audrey Cooper, Miu\nJoan Langston and _tob Weir. The\nnumbera by the latter are said to\nhave been highlights of the recital.\nThe visit to Cranbrook is in return for a limilar favor ahown by\nMr. Moser at the recital by Miss\nOliver's puplli it the Tivoli Theatre\nit Creiton, about a month ago.\nThe muslciani made the trip by\nauto, ln chtrge of W. McL. Cooper.\nWar Orders in Canada\nAmount $62,000,000\nLONDON, May IS (CP Cable) .\u2014\nThe Britlih Supply Board announced today that orden approxi-\nmatlng \u00a314,000,000 ($62,000,000)\nhave already been placed with Canadian firm! u part of the \u00a388,-\n000,000 the British Government will\nspend In the Dominion to the fint\nyear ot the wtr for war material!\napd other supplies.\nThe Suplpy Board statement uid\nlt Is expected thtt contracti aggregating \u00a334,000,000 more will be\nawarded ihortly. Iti order almoit\nexcluiively will cover the purchase\nof finished products, Including munitions md other manufactured material required for war purpoiei.\nPRETORIA (CP)-Soulh Africa\nforbidi the aervlng of liquor to\ncitizens under 25 yean of age ln\nmilitary training. Soldiers of the\npermanent force bllow thtt tge\nmiy be served.\nFleet at Alexandria\nEngulfed in 'Dust-Out'\nALEXANDRIA, Miy U (CP) -\nThe Allied battle fleet to the harbor and all Alexandria wu engulfed today to a \"dust-out\"\nA dense, swirling sandstorm that\nswept to from the desert tossed\nsand in streets, homes and offices.\nVisibility wu limited to a few hundred feet British and French warships which had been patrolling the\nMediterranean were forced to anchor in the harbor.\nAllied quarters here said the Mediterranean lituation wu unchanged, but they believed a showdown\non Italy's attitude would coma thii\nweek.\n3 FINED $10 EACH, EXCEEDING\n20-MILE   LIMIT,  NORTH  SHORE\nPleading guilty to Individual\ncharges of exceeding the speed limit in the 20-mile-an-hour limit on\nthe North Shore Saturday night\nthree men paid fines of $10 each\nwhen they appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine in\nProvincial Police Court Monday\nmorning. The three were Thomas\nJ. Cowling and Alex Gilpin, Ymir,\nand John DeHaan, Nelson.\nInformation wu laid by Constable Ralph A. Lees of the Provincial Police Highway Patrol.\nCANBERRA, Australia, (CP) \u2014\nIn Australia, as in most other belligerent countries, the war hu stimulated the marriage markat Tha\nCommonwealth statistician, Dr. Roland Wllion, reports that a total ot\n18,173 marriage! took place in Australia to the lut three months ot\n1838. Thii ia 2,462 more than to the\nsame quarter of 1838. Mort thin 20\nptr ctnt ot the bridegroom! give\ntheir occupation u \"soldier.\"\nFIRE INSURANCE\nIn All |tt Branchei\nFrank A. Stuart\nTht lniurance Hin\nAberdeen Blk., Ntlion, B.C., Ph. 880\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co*\n874 Btktr St\nPhont 280\nWHITE  CREPE  STOCKINGS\nAll sizes. Regular $1.00.     I*A_4\nFor    !**>\nGINGHAM SHOPPE\nPhone 893'       Opp. Daily Ntwi\nm\n\u25a0 0***%}*** i w 0 \u25a0** B T ******* w *****f*an 't**ti*>^mm*4fAjS\nASK FOR 4X\nDr. Jackson's\nRoman Meal Bread\nCLEARING\nSPRING MILLINERY\nValues to $7.90.\n$1*95 $2.95 $3.95\nFashion First Shop\n439 Baker St Helton, B. C.\n-tf.ll l.il . I I I-i*.I,..ft\nOld-fuhlontd Sheer white blouttt\n-Tha ntwtit thingi All d>Q QC\nrtylei tnd tint tDO.uO\nBETTY ANN SHOPPE\nOpp. Capitol Theatre     Phone 1047\nJIGGER COATS\nIn Pastel Shades.   (10 AC\nAll Sizes fltfiW\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Bakar St\nPhont 874\nWATCH REPAIR\nIt I Job for experti. Our work\nusurei your satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\n349 Biktr 8t\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nA QUART OP MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH CHILD\nA PINT OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH ADULT\nSSSSmUm\nUNLIGHT\n\"MailPUmSazf\nHOW TO GET ORIGINAL ROGERS\nSILVERWARE AT ^llll\nyont\nMate)\nC tote carton\nd In SnilttH or\nir, and M\/i-it\n:, Dq>t. K-B9.\ntellh the t\nlo Kunlllhl, Dipt _\nHamUton, Ont., brlnta\n\u2022 U t \"Anim\" tMlaXHa-1.\n.Ichlnaj kolTM, iortm\nchina I\n\u00bbT-U-t>:\nfaic&l\n6ORIGINAL ROGERS 5ILVERPLATE\nTEASPOONS nn AND5SUNLIGHT\nfOUOAHrW. CARTOHMM\n- --\u25a0      -  \u25a0 v_a___rir***~*\u2014^-**\n PAGE SIX\nJMamt SattgHmu\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBriUsh Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning, except Sunday by\nthe NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street.   Nelaon.   British   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nTUESDAY, MAY 14,1940.\nCAN CANADA AFFORD SEVERAL\nPANAMA CANALS?\nThere are disquieting indications that the King Government is receptive to the Siren Song of Uncle Sam .n\nthe St. Lawrence Waterways project. Prime Minister King\nis said to consider that his election mandate covers this\nmatter, though it was not mentioned in the campaign.\nWith President Roosevelt pledging fraternity, and seeking\nto have this feather in his cap, there is danger in the situation.\nNot only have the different national parties gone on\nrecord against this scheme, but practically all the business\nbodies in Canada outside the local territory benefitted have\nalso declared against it.\nThere are plenty of sound reasons for Canada to shy\naway from this project, which is mainly devised to give\ntiie United States some choice bacon on a share basis, with\nOntario sharing the bacon, but the whole of Canada sharing\nthe cost.\nAnd the cost is \"some cost,\" the different official\nreports show.\nLet us approach this stupendous figure gradually.\nThe Panama Canal cost the United States taxpayer\n1875,000,000. It was quite a sizable job, and took quite a\nlong time to put through.\nThree times that figure is $1,125,000,000, which is\nabout one-222nd part larger than the estimated cost of the\nSi Lawrence project.\nOn any kind of an equal share basis therefore, the\nminimum each country could expect to dig down for would\nbe one and a half times the cost of the Panama Canal.\nBut, in the light of all business experience with grandiloquent projects of engineers and politicians, have we\nany right to expect tiie cost of the St. Lawrence Waterway\nand Power Development would actually be anywhere near\ntin estimate now made?\nThe Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal was officially\nestimated to cost $16,000,000. The engineers were the\n\u2022blest that could be found. It cost $53,000,000 in round\nfigures.\nBack a couple of generations a French company\ndreamed dreams of changing the Mediterranean from being\n\u2022 sea with a blind end, to a direct route to India, by means\nof excavating a canal across the Isthmus of Suez. The cost\nwas figured by De Lesseps, the greatest engineer of his\ntime, at $30,000,000. He had the building of it, and it cost\n$80,000,000.\nStill another Instance, the Panama Canal, already\nreferred to: The United States army engineers estimated\nthe cost at $160,000,000, General Goethals, who carried the\ngreat project through, was obliged to spend $375,000,000 on\nit, or considerably more than double the estimate.\nNow, if the St Lawrence Waterway and Power Project should ever be realized, and'the able engineess engaged\non it hd the same amount of human frailty as their distinguished predecessors on the other enterprises, it would\ncost at least \"considerably more than double the estimate'.\"\nIn such case, the expenditure would be something better than six Panama Canals would cost.\nCan Canada afford to obligate itself to pay for three\nPanama Canals, even if their function was to connect oceans\nnow several thousand miles apart by marine sailing?\nCan.it afford to assume such a burden and then not\nhave anything more than a canalized river open for only\npart of the year, the route opening no new territory, and\nsaving no time or distance?\nUncle Sam's bacon\u2014or to be strictly accurate, New\nYork State's bacon\u2014is no immediate concern of Canada's.\nBuying the job of errand boy to Uncle Sam does not promise\nto be a cheap sailor's holiday.\nFIRST LADY WORKS FOR A SOAP FIRM\nEverybody will admit the ability, independence of\nthought, and charm of the First Lady of the United States.\nAlmost from the time that Franklin Roosevelt became\nPresident, Mrs. Roosevelt has exercised her writing ability,\nand syndicated her talents for a vast circle of readers. Numerous Canadian papers reproduce her daily article. Authorship, however, is in good repute, and Mrs. Roosevelt's\ninnovation was not seriously rapped.\nThe President himself made large sums from reproduction of his speeches and state papers, and there was a\ngood deal of criticism of him for it.\nTheir son, James Roosevelt, now a Hollywood executive, made great commissions for his insurance firm, on\ngovernment business he took away from competitors, and\nthere was more criticism.\nBut the critics have dealt more gently with the delightful and spritely First Lady. Almost the only criticism\nmade of her, until very lately, has been through James'\nformer insurance firm, of which she is a director, receiving\nanother big haul in the shape of the insurance on the Dollar\nLine which is now operated under the Government.\nThe very latest departure, however, of the First Lady\nof the United States accepting employment from a soap\nmanufacturer, has drawn a good many pointed remarks.\nWith these latest critics, residents of the Kootenay\nwill feel a good deal of sympathy, when they see the advertisements in the Spokane Spokesman-Review, which, using\nthe picture of Mrs. Roosevelt, read: \"Listen every Tues. &\nThurs. Eleanor Roosevelt's own program, Station KHQ\u2014\n9:15 a.m. Presented by SweetHeart Soap.\"\nIf Mrs. Roosevelt were going on the air under the\n. auspices of a lecture bureau, or of the particular network\nconcerned, it would be only a logical extension of her syndicate writing. But to have a commercial sponsor hardly\ncomports with the dignity of the position she occupies.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-TUElDAY \"MORNINO. MAY 14, 1940,\t\nA\t\n\"How'a that for a double top, Gertie?\"\nCONTRACT..\nTHE VERY BEST SPOT\nIM DUPLICATE play, you \u00bbi-\ntach much greater Importance\nthan la rubber bridge to finding\nthe contract which will produce\nthe maximum number ot polnti\n(or your ride. Too are not interested merely In reaching the game,\nam&U alam or grand alam safely,\nbut want to be In the suit or No\nTrump whleh arlll produce a few\nmore points than aome other.\nchoice. The few extra pointa may\nmean that you win the deal from\nyour rivals, whereu In rubber\nbridge you look for a alight bit\ngreater safety at the coat of giving up a few pointa, tf necessary,\nbecause of the rank of declarations.\n\u2666 KT\n'    \u00bb86541\n\u2666 QJS\n*A7B\n4JS51\nf J9\n\u2666 io 5 n 2\n+ K42\n\u2666 QIO-J\n\u00a510\n\u2666 A7\u00ab\n+ 109863\n4AS*\nm AKQ7.\n4>K\u00bbt\n(Dealer: Weat Both rides vulnerable.)\nWeat      North\nPasa        Paaa\nPass       3\u00bb\nPass       4*\nPus       S\u00bb\nPass       6*\nTwo brilliant Walters\u2014Beinecke In the North and Malowan\nIn the South-bid this deal with\nextreme thoroughness to reach\nthe safest maximum contract ln\nEaat\nPasa\nPaas\nPass\nPass .\nPasa\nSouth\nIV\ntOT\nSNT\n\u00ab\u00bb\nBy Shepard Barclay\nthe recent Vanderbilt Cup national championship tournament\nMr. Beinecke's 3-Hearts Ud wu\nsafer, following his opening pass,\nthan.2-Heart5, which might be\npaased when It looked u If a game\nwu certain. Mr. Malowan's 3-\nSpadea wu meant to show the A\nonly, u a cue Ud, tnd uk for his\npartner's lowest A, which wu\nahown with the --Clubs. Tbe\nBlackwood convention then Uked\nhow many aces North had all\ntold, and when he showed Just one\nwith 5-Dlamonds Mr. Malowan\nknew the opponents held the diamond A.\nThe S-No Trumps question\ntbout kings brought the response\nthtt only one wu held, so 6-\nHearta wu safer thtn the 6-No\nTrumpa thtt would htve been Ud\nIt Mr. Beinecke htd been able to\nahow two tees.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022 '\nTomorrow's ProMem\nVQ753\n+ 4,951\n+ A6-\nM.\n\u2666 88-\n\u00ab A J 10 8\n\u2666 10 7 6 2\n+ K8\n\u2666 10\nf84\n\u2666 QJ4\n\u2666 QJ10 7\n843\n\u2666 AK98784\n\u00abK93\n\u2666 K8\n\u2666\u00bb\n(Dealer:  South.  North-South\nvulnerable.)\nBow Ihould South play for 6-\nSptdea against t lead of the Club\nQ by West, who had made t preemptive 4-Club overcall during the\nthe bidding?\n\u25a0Ol-trlbute. by King features Syndicate, Int.\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nTEN YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News ot May 14, 1900\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo, Olen\nJ. Morris, W. A. West and D. A.\nActon have Joined the Nelson Board\nof Trade.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hew.\nat of the Reeves MacDonald mine\nwere Nelson visitors.\u2014Ward Thomas, Homer Bishop, Carl Steinert,\nJohn Kennedy and Sam Marasco,\nFernie bowling team, have left to\ncompete in the Northwest Bowling\nCongress at Seattle.\u2014Mrs. Gertrude\nHuntley Green and Rhynd Jamieson of Vancouver will adjudicate\nthe Weat Kootenay Music Festival\nhere today and tomorrow.\n. TWENTY-FIVE YEAR8 AGO\nFrom Daily News of May 14, 1915\nC. E. Cotton of Shoreacres has\nleft for New York where he will\nboard the Auscenla for Liverpool.\u2014\nH. M. Hardie and C. W. Harker ot\nHackensack, N. J\u201e owners of the\nAlice and Patterson mineral claims\nIn the Slocsn, will soon start development work there.\u2014The Grand\nForks Sharpshooters are being recruited into the 54th Battalion, Captain Kirk acting as recruiting-officer.\u2014J. J. McCall of Nelson caugh*.\nthree four-pound trout at Halcyon.\nFORTY YEAR8 AGO   .\nFrom Daily Miner of May 14,1900\nConstable C. W. Young of Howser\nIs a Nelson visitor.\u2014E. P. Whalley\nand family have moved across the\nlake to their Summer home.\u2014A. R.\nBarrow. Land Surveyor, went up\nto Lemon Creek yesterday to survey the site for the new Chapleau\nstamp mill\u2014S. S. Taylor sold to\n.Samuel Marshall a half interest in\nthe Taylor mineral claim on Wild\nHorse Creek\u2014Herbert and Ernest\nWilson's Bird's Eye mine has closed\ndown for several weeks owing to\nwater in the workings.\nJunkers Brought\nDown by New\nBritish Plane\nLONDON, May 13 (CP)-Latest\nmodel British Boulton Paul defiant\npursuit planes scored a victory In\ntheir first five minutes of battle by\nshooting down a Junkers 88 over\nthe Dutch coast yesterday, the Air\nMinistry announced today.\nA squadron of the crack new\nplanes, which are equipped with\nelectrically controlled gun turrets,\nwere cruising over The Hague\nwhen they spotted the Junker attempting to bomb three British ships\noff the coast. Three Defiants swooped on the Germsn bomber, which\nturned its guns on the first British\nplane, piloted by a squadron leader.\nAt close range, the squadron leader fired a machine-gun burst Into\nthe enemy machine, which dived to\na low altitude with thick smoke\nstreaming from its port motor. It\nstreaked landward over the water\nwith the Defiants in hot pursuit and\nfinally crashed in a field.\nMRS. ELLIOTT HEADS\nSOUTH SLOCAN C.W.L.\nSOUTH SLOGAN, B. C. - The\nannual meeting ol the Catholic Women's Leegue of the Sacred Heart\nChurch wu held at the home of\nMra. R. 0. Elliott. Election of officers wu u follows:\nMrs. Elliott, reelected President:\nMn. Joe Potosky, Vice-President;\nMrs. John Laurie, Secretary.\nMrs. P. Horlick was elected as\ndelegate to the convention at Kelowna at the end of the month.\nMrs. Elliott entertained socially.\nOthers attending were Mrs. N.' Dengler, Mrs. W. Pancheson and Rev\nFather MacGuire, C. Ss. R., Priest\nof the Parish; Mrs. L. H. Choquette\nand Mra. Campbell of Nelton,\nNazis Fail to Land\nTroops in Norway\nSTOCKHOLM, May 13 (AP) -\nThe Norwegian Telegraph agency\nreported from somewhere in Norway today that a German attempt\nto land troops to help the besieged\ngarrison at Narvik failed when several transport ships were sunk. No\ndetails were given.\nU. S. Boosts Insurance\nin Mediterranean\nNEW YORK, May 13 (AP) -\nMounting tension in the Mediterranean today led United States\nMarine Insurance Underwriters to\nboost war risk Insurance rates ap\nplying to that .one.\nFor United States flsg vessels\nrates on shipments to and from the\nMediterranean excepting the Black\nSea were raised to 2Vt per cent of\ncar-o value from IVi per cent. For\nforeign flag ships the tariff was\nlifted to five per cent from four\nper cent. Rates for Black Sea shipments are quoted only on application.     '\nRates also were raised on ship\nments to and from the Far East, in\neluding Australasia via the Suez\nCanal, to three per cent from two\nper cent for American vessels and\nto iVt per cent from 41. per cent\nfor foreign vessels.\nOperations in\nNorway Proceed\nLONDON, May 13 (CP).-For-\nelgn Secretary Viscount Halifax\ntold the House ot Lords today\nthat \"operations against the enemy In the Narvik area (of Norway) of oroceeding, and four\nforces farther South are ln contact with the enemy advancing\nfrom Namsos.\"\nCutworm Control\nMusi Begin Early\nCutworms tre usually active and\nfeeding before most crops are even\nln the pound. Hence, aaya Alan\nG. Dustan, Division ot Entomology,\nDominion Department of Agriculture, It It Important to be prepared\nfor their attacks at the first of he\nseuon. Bran bait haa given effective\ncontrol for many yeara. It is made\nup ot bran, 20 pounds, Parla green,\none-halt pound, molasses, one quart\nand water, about 2W, gallons.\nIn making the bait,' the dry Ingredients should first be thoroughly\nmixed. The molasses is stirred Into\nthe water and added to the bran\nand Paris green. In mixing, add\nonly enough water to make the material the consistency ot sawdust.\nIt should not be made sloppy but ao\nthat it will crumble ln the hands\nand slip through the fingers easily.\nLand that was heavily infested\nln the former year should be treated\nbefore the planta are set out. This\nIs done by broadcasting the bait\nat the rate of 15 to 20 pounds per\nacre a few nights before transplanting. One application should be sufficient, but if the cutworms are\nnumerous a second application\nshould be made two or three days\nafter the first Always spread bait\nin the evenings Just before dusk,\nand If possible, choose a warm, still\nnight for the work.\nIf the attack Is unexpected and\nthe plants are already in the field,\nthe bait ahould be applied around\nthe base ot each plant using about\nV, teaspoonful for each. Should one\napplication not kill all the cutworms\na second treatment should be made\ntwo or three nights later.\n*\nRED\nCROSS\nNOTES\nInstructions for Red\nCross Articles Must\nBe Followed Closely\nWhile volume of articles being\nmade in Nelson and district for Red\nCrosa war aupplles continues good,\nconsiderable extra work ls being\ncaused through volunteers failing to\nfollow closely the instructions for\nmaking the various articles, stated\nMrs. C. D. Pearson, Convener of the\nWork Committee.\nThis necessitates alterations. The\ntime and work going Into alterations\ncould be spent to greater advantage\nin making up articles, she added.\nMrs. Pearson explained that ln any\ncase where instructions have been\nmislaid or are not fully understood,\ncomplete instructions are available\nat the work room.\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nI     SCRAPBOOK     I\n\u2022Whet ls defeat? Nothing but education. Nothing but the first step\nto something better.\"\u2014Wendell\nPhillips.\n'The highest reward for man's\ntoll is not what he gets for it, but\nwhat he becomes by it\"\u2014Ruskin.\n\"Experience ls victor, never the\nvanquished and out of defeat comes\nthe secret of victory\".\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n\"The things which hurt, Instruct\"\n-Whltsitt .\n\"There's no defeat In truth, save\nfrom within\nUnless you're beaten there, you're\nbound to win!\"\u2014Henry Austin.\nVERSE\nThe Miracle of Flowers\nIsn't a flower miraculous?\nIt's nothing less than marvelous;\nAs charmed I watch each bud uncoil,\nForget this grim old earth's turmoil.\nHow can a seed grow up, produce,\nSuch loveliness from nature's juice?\nThis seeming muck, so foul and\ndamp,\nHolds magic like Aladdin's lamp.\nWhy can I not myself subsist\nUpon this fump, within my fist?\nNo more a marvel than this flower,\nAnd it has lived, not just an hour,\nBut long, in this same bit of clay,\nWhere I could not subsist a day;\nYet it has spun on nature's loom,\nSo  much of stem,  and  leaf and\nbloom.\nAnd I suppose 'twas made for me,\nThat having eyes, I'd look and see,\nThat God, in his calm, silent way,\nStill gives us sermons, every day,\nWith longing hope we'll trust in him\nAs does this plant, for dally vim;\nBids us consider it a rhyme;\nNor did lt rush, but took it's time.\n\u2014Mrs. W. A. Wiley, Kimberley,\nLAND  OF  POETRY\nThere is a place 'twixt earth and\nsky,\nI've reached this land Indeed,\nA place that's linked with thoughts\nmost high\nAnd God supplies each need.\nWe leave this mortal strife, the\nwhile\nThis halfway land, we're in\nTo bask, it seems, in Heaven's\nsmile,\nAnd know no thought of sin.\n.For every-one loves every-one,\nAs We were meant to do.\nAnd in that land a noble sun,\nCan pierce the raindrops too.\nA rainbow hue casts every-where,\nOn flower and bird and scene\nA steady glow, so Heavenly fair,\nWith no room for things, mean.\nYou know life really Is worth\nwhile,\nThere's no doubt in your mind,\nIf you've walked in this land\nawhile,\nWhere every-one Is kind.\n\"And Where's this land?\" I hear\nyou ask;\nJust come along with me,\nTo .his dad land, where we may\nbask,\nIn realms of poetry.\nMrs. W. A. Wiley, Kimberley, B. C.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nIt aggravates me to hear Jim\nspoutin' about how he'd fight invaders on our soil but wouldn't go\nsnywhere else. It'll be too late To\nsave ourselves it armies ever get\nlanded here.\"\nKeep Soil Loose\nHear Delphiniums\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\n\\ OIUMFR    _PQ_     BBLOaV\nProtecting delphiniums\nagainst drought\nDelphiniums tre very susceptible\nto injury, from drought, therefore,\nwhether the soil in which they are\nto be planted is light or heavy ln\ntexture, lt should be dug and\nturned to a considerable depth, and\nhave humus added to lt to keep\nIt loose and triable and give It\nadded moisture-retaining capacity.\nAa ahown in the garden Graph,\nthe young delphinium plants should\nbe set firmly ln the soil with the\ncrown below the surface. This ls\nImportant alnce it helps to keep\nthe new roots from drying out below the surface. This ls important\nalnce lt helpa to keep the new roots\nfrom drying out before the plant\nhas become established.\nThe soil about delphinium plants\nshould be lightly cultivated and\nthen covered with s light top dressing. By thus keeping the plants\nmulched, it will discourage weed\ngrowth, keep the ground cool and\nthereby conserve the moisture In\nIt tor the use of the plants\nthemselves.\nWAR\u2014 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Prase\nMay 14, 1815\u2014Allied airmen destroyed bridges in attack on German position on Belgian coast German losses reported heavy In fighting North of Arras. Canadian Field\nArtillery withdrawn from Ypres\nfront\nBRITISH TROOPS UNO\nIN DUTCH WEST INDIES\nWILLEMSTAD, Dutch West Indies, May 13 (AP)- British troops\nwere landed here .today from a\ntroopship under the agreement of\nHolland, Britain and France for\nmeasures to guard the oil refineries\nof Curacao and nearby Aruba\nagainst possible German attempls\nat sabotage.\nG\/L Jim CLvl\nTUESDAY, MAY 14, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:00\u20140 Canada\n7:03\u2014Toast & Coffee Club (CXLN)\n8:00\u2014The News\n8:15\u2014George Griffin, Baritone\n8:30\u2014Helen Wyant\u2014Organist\n8:45-Al Gilbert's Trio\n9:0O-Thls Rhythmic Age (CKLN)\n9:15\u2014Hollywcod American Legion\nBand (CKLN)\n9:50\u2014Pelhem Richardson's Orch.\n10:00\u2014The Tuesday Revue.\n10::0-U.S. Army Band\n11:00\u2014Voices on Record (CKLN)\n11:18\u2014The Serenade\u2122 (CKLN)\n11:30-UBC Music Hour\n12:00\u2014Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Ray Martlne.' Spanish\nStrings (CKLN)\nl:00-The News\nl;15\u2014Talk\n1:30\u2014Closing Stocks\nM5-BBC News\n2:15\u2014Dick Stabile's Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Gus St*ck's Orch.     '\n2:45\u2014Orgcn Recital-Allan Reid\n3:00\u2014London Calling\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\nS:<5\u2014Talk\n4:00\u2014Kstherlne Hamilton, Songs\n4:30\u2014Musical Vignettes\n5:00-With Chester Art tt Donald\n(CKLN)\n5:30-Let's Go Dancing (CKLN)\n5:45-Muslcal Newsy (CKLN)\nEVENINC\n8:00\u2014Canadian Snapshots\n6:3fr-Concert Orchestra\n7:00;-The News\n7:15\u2014Interlude\n7:30\u2014Dave Dyck's Trio (CKNL)\n8:00-Travel Talk (CKLN)\n8:16\u2014Margaret   Graham,   Pianist\n(CKLN)\n8:30\u2014Songs ot Empire\n9:00\u2014Smoky Mountain Boys\n(CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Scandinavian Melodies\n(CKLN)\n9:48\u2014Summer Serenade\n10:15\u2014The News\n10:30\u2014Joe Relchman's Dance Orch. |\n11:00\u2014Nick Draper's Orchestra\n11:30\u2014God Save Tbe King\nC)AT-^TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:15-On the Mall\n8:45-Wake Up and Sing\n10:00\u2014Stars of the Week\n10:15\u2014Smllin* Jtck\n10:30\u2014Master Singers\n10:45-Melody Time\n11:30\u2014Variety Revue\nAFTERNOON\n12:30\u2014Sunny Side Vp\n12:45-Novetime\n1:15\u2014Today. Music\n3:45\u2014In Town Tonight\n4:00\u2014Theatre News\n4:15-Aloha Land\n4:30\u2014Parade of Melody\n4:45\u2014Popular Vocal\nEVENING\n8:00\u2014Choral Echoes\n6:15\u2014Bing Crosby Serenade\n9:15\u2014Dance Music\nll:30-Sign Off\nOther periods-CBC Programmes.]\nTHE NET'S BEST\n5:00\u2014NBC-Red\u2014Variety Show\n6:30-NBC-Red - Uncle  WaltetHI\nDog House\n7:00\u2014NBC - Blue  \u2014   InformatloB |\nPlease\n7:30-NBC-Blue - The   Aldrich |\nFamily\n8:00\u2014Columbia\u2014We, the People\noKststtototststteitmsetsottsoottt\nJ\n?! Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader  Names ot\npersons asking questions will not\nbe published\nVQStSSimOSSSSOSSSttSSO&'XOOOSOSSt\nV. B., Trail \u2014 What ls s foot pound?\nA foot-pound is the quantity of\nwork expended in raising a weight\not one pound through a vertical\ndistance of one foot\nH. G., Nelson \u2014 What kind of birds\nhas Central Australia?\nCentral Australia Is arid and barren and not well suited to bird\nlife. The only bird which can be\nsaid to be characteristic of this\nregion ls Uie emu, a large bird related to the ostrich of Africa which\nls flightless and capable of considerable running speed. Next to\nthe ostrich it is the largest living\nbird.\nG. G., Procter \u2014 What Is the food\nfuel value of milk and buttermilk?\nWhole milk contains 315 calories\nper pound and buttermilk contains\n180.\nB. J., Castlegar \u2014 What days did\nMay 16, 1905 and August 13, 1006\nfall on?\nMay 16, 1905, was a Tuesday and\nAugust 13, 1906, was a Monday.\nJ.   D\u201e   \u2014  What  age   Is   Loretaa\nYoung?\nLoretaa Young ls 27 years of age.\nM.N., Cranbrook \u2014 What Is the distance from Los Angeles to Yokohama by water?\nThe distance is 5572'miles.\nK. L., Kaslo \u2014 Please explain\nbriefly the Magna Charta?\nIn 1215 the English barons rose\nagainst the authority of King John\nof England and compelled him to\nsign Uie Magna Charta, guaranteeing to Englishmen certain rights and\netsststtsssststtsineiitttsstsiiUM\netsssssttttssiettsitsiiittsttme^\nONE-MINUTE TEST\n1. What ia the swiftest flying birdf \\\n2. What are Uie primary human]\nemotions?\n3. How many republics are ths\nin the Pan-American Union?\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nTrain yourself, to overcome\nlittle nervous habits thtt may\nannoying to your companions and\nwhich surely  detract from y \"\ncharm. See that your hair la ni<\narranged before you letve you\nroom, and then don't keep pattlni\nand arranging It, aa many womei\ndo, In public.\nWORDS OP WISDOM\nOnly the acUona of Uie just sme!\nsweet tnd blossom In the dust-\nShirley.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPI\nBenefits will come through tb\nopposite sex ln the next year ta\nthose whose birthdays are todty\nThey should exercise caution ia\ntheir business affairs. The chUd who\nIs born on this date will be of I\nvery determined and somewhat dl*\nficult overbearing nature. An in\ndilution to extravagance and to tha\ntaking of needless risks should be\nchecked in such a child.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWER*\n1. The cloud swift which filet at\n200 miles an hour.\n2. Fear, anger and love.\n3. Twenty-one.\nREGINA, May 13 (CP)-Present\ntrends of the war may have far\nreaching effects upon Canadian agricultural economy of the West,\nHon. J. G. Taggart, Chairman ot tb*\nCanada Bacon Board, said Monday.\nliberties which hsve been held by\nthe English people since that day,\nThe charter was signed at Runny-\nmede, June. 15, 1215.\nWATER WINGS OVER EUROPE1\n_-^^^_._.-._.^\n \u25a0 **\nJ\nljSMHj^M&lK}^HHBR9_|HR_pi\n(0S0\note of Confidence\nGiven Churchill as\nHe Urges War Push\nBy J. F. 8ANDERSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, May 13 (CP Cable)\u2014\nPrima Minister Churchill told\nthe Houte of Commoni today that\nha had only ona policy, to wage\nwar with one aim, to achieve\nvictory, when appealing for a\nvote of confidence In hit ntw administration.\nAi a symbol of Brltaln'i ntw\npolitical unity, the Houte untnl-\n. mously voted confldenct In Mr.\nChurchill's Qovernment, the vote\nbeing 381 to 0. The Houie of\nLord's alio acoorded the new gov-\n(ernment a unanlmoui vote of confidence and both houses then adjourned to May 21.\nWith Clement Attlee, Lord Privy\nSeal, sitting on one tide ol him on\nthe treasury bench and Neville\nChamberlain, Lord President ot the\nCouncil, on the other, Britain's new\nPrime Minister warned the country\nthat.the parliamentary stage has arrived ot \"one ot the greatest battles in history.\"\nHe urged the nation as a whole\nto \"go forward together with our\nunited strength.\"\nWhen he entered the chamber before the short debate, Mr. Churchill\nwas cheered loudly, but Mr. Chamberlain, who followed a minute later, received an even bigger cheer\nOnly two voices were raised\nagainst the new coalition, those of\nJames Maxton, Scottish Pacifist and\nanti-war advocate, and his fellow\nmember of the Independent labor\nparty, Campbell Stephen,\nThey forced the House to a division on the Prime Minister's motion, having to act as \"tellen\" \u2014\ncounters\u2014for the \"no's\" they could\nnot vote ln the lobby and had no\n\u2022 votes to count\nAsked whether a general discussion of the war would be likely\nln the week following parliament's\nreassembly, Mr. Churchill said:\n\"I am anxious, and Indeed resolved, to carry the House of Commons along with the Government\ntt every step in our fortunes as they\nunfold. It is by the strength of the\nHouse of Commons that we shall\nbe largely sustained in this conflict.\n\"At the present time we are in\nthe preliminaries of a very great\nbattle and I do not know what the\nposition will be when we meet\nagain.\n\"Obviously If there is a general\ndesire in the near future for a statement on the military situation and\nit is a suitable moment, and if there\n\u25a0 is a wish to have a veneral debate,\narrangements can be made tor it\nand I shall be glad to receive representations on that.\"\nMr. Churchill reported his formation ot a war cabinet of five men\nWas carried out in one day because\nof \"the extreme urgency and rigor\nof events.\"\nHe told the house, suddenly summoned from recess for a day, that\n\"I have nothing to offer but blood,\ntoll, tears and sweat.\"\nThe new Prime Minister received\nt great ovation as he appeared.\n\"Our policy,\" Mr. Churchill said,\n\"is to wage war by aea, land and\n\u25a0ir, with all our might and with all\nthe strength that God can give ui\nand to wage war againit a monstrous tyranny never surpassed in\nthe dark and lamentable catalogue\nof human crime.\"\nThe retiring Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, whom Mr.\nChurchill made Lord President of\nthe Council in the new War Cabinet, also received an ovation as he\nentered the House with hii new\nchief.\nMr. Churchill immediately upon\nthe opening of the session preiented\na resolution \"that this House wel\ncomes the formation of a govern\nment representing the united and\ninflexible resolve of the nation to\nprosecute the war with Germany\nto a victorious conclusion.\"\nHe said the Houie would adjourn\nafter today's proceedings to May\n21. The original dite for lta recall,\nwith the usual provision for an earlier meeting if necessary,\nAnthony Eden, War Secretary,\ntold a questioner in the House that\nhe hoped to make an early statement on \"immediate formation of a\nvoluntary corps composed ot older\nmen armed with rifles tnd Bren\nguns for instant action In tny locality\" in Britain in view \"of the imminent danger of enemy parachutists landing in this country.\"\nMr. Churchill emphasised the\nseriousness of his task ot cabinet\nmaking by stating: \"We are in the\npreliminary phase of one ot the\ngreatest battles ln history. We are\nin action at many other points \u2014\nln Norway and in Holland ind we\nhave to be prepared in the Mediterranean.\nOn  the queatlon  of   Brltaln'i\naim, Mr. Churchill uid In ring\nIng tones:\n\"I cin aniwer In one word\u2014It\nli victory \u2014victory it ill eosts\nIn spite of ill terrort.\"\nHe wirned, however, thit there\nwere miny, many long montha of\nstruggle and suffering ahead.  .\nMembers of the House generally\napproved the declaration of the\nPrime Minister.\nSir Percy Harris, Liberal, said Mr.\nChurchill had \"the necessary vigor\nand imagination for the task ahead.\"\nH. B. Lees-Smith, Labor, praised\nthe Prime Minister's \"fighting and\nstirring and noble words which he\nhas addressed to the nation.\" \u25a0\nMr. Lees-Smith anonunced to the\nHouse the Labor Party conference\nvote at Bournemouth approving a\nparticipation ln the cabinet He said\nBritain's unity was gained \"by discussion, persuasion, good will and\ngood sense, not by the concentration camp, the rubber truncheon\nand the executioner's block.\"\nJames Maxton, Independent Ll'\nbor, said he opposed the motion and\ndid not approve of the government\nHe declared no one could deny Mr\nChurchill's personality and courage,\nbut said he could not see the \"wonderful motive power supposed to\nhave been produced by the change\nln positions\" of Messrs. Churchill\nand Chamberlain.\nW. P. Spans, Conservative, wel.\ncorned the new Government and\nevoked an outburst of cheering\nwhen he praised Mr. Chamberlain\nfor \"the example set to the coun-\ntry'' ln resigning.\nDavid Lloyd George, Liberal, sup.\nported the motion and offered personal good wishes to his \"old friend\n\u2014the new Prime Minister.\"\nCongratulating the country on Mr.\nChurchill's elevation \"at this very\ncritical terrible moment,\" Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge lauded the Prime Minister's\n\"glittering Intellectual gifts, dauntless courage and profound study ot\nwar, he experience In its operation\nand direction.\"\nWith emphasis, he added: \"They\nwill all be needed now.\"\n\"Friends of freedom and human\nright throughout the world wish\nhim God-speed,\" Mr. Lloyd Geor(\u00ab\ndeclared. 'The sacrifices of Britain\nand her Empire will be at his disposal\"\nSir Stafford Cripps, Labor, warned that a \"substantially\" one-party\nCommons might lose interest in the\nvotes and \"alio ln the administration of the affairs ot the country.\"\nHe suggested an overhauling ot the\nnation's Democratic machinery, a\nremark made amid cries of \"Nol\"\nBen Smith, Labor, said there wai\n\"\u25a0 lamentable ihortage of things\nthat our armed forces are much in\nneed of today.\"\nSir Irving Albert, Conservative,\ncriticized \"certain Privy Councillors\" who he said turned last week's\ndebate on the Norwegian campaign\n\"into a political manoeuvre.\"\nDEATHS\nBy Tht Cinadian Pratt\nTRURO, N.S.-G. Y. Thomai, 87,\nConservative Member of the Nova\nScotia Legislature.\nST. PETEESBURG, J*la. \u2014 Dr.\nJohn C. Hammond, 68, retired Principal Astronomer at the United\nStates Naval Observatory in Washington.\nWHYCOCOMAGH, N. S. - Dr.\nHugh N. MacDonald, 83, once\nwrestling champion of America.\nPHn__-__PH_A-Rowe Stewart,\n83, advertising executive and President of the Phlladelhpla Record\nCompany from 19215 to 1929.\nCHAPEL HILL, N.C.-Dr. Alvin\nSawyer Wheeler, 74, Profeasor Emeritus of Organic Chemistry at the\nUniversity of North Carolina, and\nan authority on dyes.\nLONDON \u2014 Sir Ralph Spencer\nPagent, 75, former British Ambassador to Brazil.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C,-TUE8DAY MORNINO, MAY 14.\nDouble-Duty Gown\nThii advertisement is not published\nOr displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard  or  by   the  Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nShacks Near Fish\nHatchery Burned,\nby Fire Department\nThree small shacks on City property on Cottonwood Creek near\nthe Nelion Fish Hatchery, from\nwhich the occupants were moved\nrecently by tha order of Fire Chief\nG. A. McDonald, were burned by\nthe City Fire Department Monday\nmorning.\nThe shacks, described by the\nChief as a fire menace, were banned\nas dwelling places some time ago\nunder the Fire Marshal Act Two\nof them were burned and the other\ntwo were dismantled and the remains burned. A line of hoie was\nrun from the corner ot Silica and\nRailway Streets, a block and a halt\ntwty, to spray on surrounding\ngrass and trees so that no damage\nwould be done to them by fire.\n\"It Is better to burn these places\nnow than to wait for the dry, hot\nseason and have them catch fire\nsome time,\" the Chief said.\nVan Koughnett Fined,\nNo Driver'i Licence\nPleading guilty to a charge ut\ndriving without a driver's licence,\nRoy Van Koughnett was fined $10\nwhen he appeared before Police\nMagistrate William Brown in Po\nlice Court Monday mornin\u00ab_. Information was laid by Constable\nGeorge Fisher.\nHepburn Urges\nRevislonol\nTraining System\nKINGSTON, Ont, Miy 13 (CP..~\nRevision of \"the whole system\" ot\nmilitary, training in Canada was\ndemanded todiy by Premier Mitchell F. Hepburn ot Ontario, speaking\n1 it t Joint luncheon of the Ontario\nQuebec Circulation Managers Asso\nPAOI SEVEN\ndation and tht Kingston Kiwanis\nClub.\n\"We've got to revise the whole\nsystem of training in Canada,\" he\nsaid. \"When I see boys tralninu with\nold Ross rifles and with bayonets\nrushing it sandbags 1 sometimes\nwonder how effective they would be\nagainst flame-throwers of the Italian army or the very modern machines of war used by Germany.\"\nThere were two schools ot thought\nin Canada: That Britain ls the tint\nline ot defence tnd, tt she tills, Cinada falls with her; and that Canadians should wait until the enemy\nls \"at our gates.\"\nPeople ot this country would do\nwell to awaken and review what has\nhappened, to study bow \"unprepared people 'we fallen before the\nmighty German war machine.\"\n\"This war ls no sham. We must\nput forth every effort now. If there\nire no guns or airplanes we must\nget them. Wealth doesn't mean very\nmuch right now.\"\nLEICESTER, England, (CP) \u2014\nCommitted for trial at the Assizes\ntor attempting to murder her child\nand commit iuielde Mrs. Dorothy\nWheeler a widow was granted bail\nto enable her to holiday at the seaside her expenses and cost of a companion pledged by her former employers.\nmmmmitmi\nSEEDY?\n\u2022 Why not treet ItpAptrij--\n(rom within T Let Kruetua\nBeits whisk   away   lurking\npoisonous   wut\u00ab.    Millions    ,\ntake it daily. Kruschen   is '\nBritish\u2014hifheit  qulibr\u2014\nlets than 1 c t day. 260t tfcftTBa\niake i\/ouA,\nJCRUSCHEN.\nBy-ALICE ALDEN\nOnce upon a time lt was difficult to find t dinner dress which\ncould ilso pass as an evening dress. You're still to be congratulated\non having one such style in your collection\u2014not however, because\nthere's a scarcity. Individual designers as well as shops offer lots of\nideas: jerseys by the score, printed cottons from India, sleeved\nchiffons, organzas. Today's dress is cut ot an unusual fabric, pongee\nln a Chinese motif of brick-red and beige stripes, with dashes of\nblack ln the geometric pattern. Unspoiled by trim, it accents a small\nwaist, has a skirt permitting freedom in the rhumba or tango, and\nleaves the wearer free to add costume jewelry or not Lots of girls\nare using evening shawls of silk or wool with dresses like this.\nS. A. Speers Named\nVice-President of\nCreston Hospital Body\nCRBSTON, B. C. \u2014 S. A. Speers\nwas chosen Vice-President of Creston Valley Hospital Association at\nthe May meeting Friday. He replaces Donald K. Archibald, moved\nup to the Presidency last month,\ndue to the removal of President\nGib Sinclair. With the new Vice-\nPresident comes a shift in committee membership. H. K. Legg is\ntransferred to the Grounds and\nBuildings Committee, and J. G.\nConnell cornea onto the House\nCommittee.\nThe hospital wil be represented at\nan East Kootenay Hospital Zone\nconference at Cranbrook May 26,\nat which a revision of rates for public ward patients will be discussed.\nThe meeting accepted an invitation\nto visit Bosweil June 12 at which\ntime the Ladies' Hospital Auxiliary\nat that point is having an afternoon at home at Mrs. K. Wallace's.\nFor the Grounds Committee Chairman W. J. Craig reported on some\nbetterments. These included the\ncompletion of the installation of a\nnew six-inch sewer pipe to serve\nboth the hospital and nurses' home.\nMrs. Murrell reported for the\nHouse Committee and was given\nauthority to purchase a new and\nlarger sink for the hospital kitchen.\nFollowing a very quiet March, the\nreport of Secretary H. A. Powell\nshowed April to be one of the busiest months with a total of 463 hospital days. There were 10 births\nand seven major and seven minor\noperations, according to the report\nof the matron Miss Myrtle Dixon.\nHunden Fined $35,\nDriving in Manner\nDangerous, Public\nJoieph 0. Hunden was fined 885\nby Police Magistrate William\nBrown in Police Court Monday\nwhen he appeared on a charge of\ndriving in a manner dangerous to\nthe public. The charge arose from\nan accident Saturday night, when\nit was alleged Hunden's car jumped\na curb on Nelson Avenue and\nstruck a car belonging to Emil Mis-\nuraca, causing $5 damage to the\nlatter car.\nInformation was laid by Constable Richard R. House.\nGlee Concert for\nRed Cross Funds\nThe Nelaon Glee Club is giving\na concert in St. Paul's Church Wednesday in aid of the Red Cross.\nAmong the artists taking part are\nMrs. Hans Fogh-Dohmsmidt, cello,\naccompanied by Miss Cynthia Docksteader, both of Trail; Mrs. Court,\nney Scott, of Calgary, soprano; Mrs\nH. Jenne, elocution; and E. P.\nBaker, baritone.\nAt the close there will be com\nmunity singing, when the new song\n\"There Will Always Be d*h England'1,\nwill be sung.\n'Nazis Will Slake\nNearly Everything\nlo Win Quickly'\nLONDON, May IS (CP)-An authoritative British source said today that the main German attack\non the lowlands was developing\nis expected and was attempting to\ndrive a wedge between the Belgian\nand Dutch armies.\nThere were many indication!, not\nnecessarily military, thii Britiih\nsource said, that the Nazis \"will\nstake almost everything in an attempt to win this war quickly.\"\nBritons were urged not to be disheartened \"when they hear of certain withdrawals and should not\nbe unduly pessimiitic,\" he said, in\nemphasizing that reports for the\nnext few days would be obscure,\nscarce and often Inaccurate.\nInformation regarding parachutists in Rotterdam and The Hague,\nhe said, was obscure and frequently\ncontradictory.\nGerman parahutists, he said are\nall very highly trained in offensive\ntechnique and \"armed to the teeth\".\nHe charged that they were chosen\nfor ruthlessness and wore Allied\nuniforms, civilian clothes, police\nand postal uniforms and even women's dresses.\nLabor Approves\njoining Gov't.\nBOURNEMOUTH, England, May\n13 (CP).\u2014The Labor Party conference today voted overwhelming approval of a Labor mandate to join\nthe National Government under\nPrime Minister Winston Churchill.\nThe delegates ratified the action\nalready taken by Major Clement\nAttlee, Labor Leader who has become Lord Privy --Ml in the new\ngovernment, and Arthur Greenwood,, Minister Without Portfolio,\nby 2,413,000 to 170,000,\nThe vote was taken on i basil ot\nmembera represented..\nThe resolution presented by Mr.\nAttlee and adopted by the conference said:\n\"This conference endorses unanimously the decision of the National\nExecutive Committee that the Labor\nParty should take its share of responsibility as full partner in the\nnew government which, under a\nnew Prime Minister, commanders\nthe confidence of the nation.\n\"This conference further pledges\nIts support to the new government\nln Its effort to secure a swift victory\nand a just peace.\"\nBOSTON (CP)\u2014 The American\nMerchant Marine Library Association has inaugurated a drive for\n50,000 new books to meet the increasing demand for lending libraries aboard merchant ships and\nlighthouses.\na&*\na.tv\n\u00ab.attotV\noA\nft&S\n3_tV\nate\n&e\n&&* \"\" -_# to\na ^1 **\nDr. Cowen 1\nCredit Dentist\nKsJfL yon-!\nDon't put off needed dental work\nlimply because you cannot pay caih.\nYou are welcome to avail yourself of\nmy Credit Plan. Come in and let me\nexplain how you may arrange to have\nyour work completed RIGHT NOW,\nand pay later, weekly or monthly. Take\nai long at Five, Ten or Fifteen Monthi\nto pay, whichever it moit convenient.\n... in other words, make your own\ntermi for payment, within reason, of\ncourse. You are invited to consult with\nme regarding your dental problems by\nwriting, phoning or personal call.\nNo Discount on\nCanadian Money\nYou will not have to piy\none cent discount on Canadian Money it Dr. Cowen'i ind you miy exchange Canadian currency\nfof United States Currency In reasonable\namount! to help pay ex-\npemei while In Spokane.\nfihhzt\nCome in and let me help you\nselect the style of dental plates\nbest suited for your individual\nrequirements. Enjoy wearing your\nplates while paying by taking\nadvantage of my Credit Plan. I\nwill gladly show you samples, including uppers, lowers, partials\nand roofless dental plates.\n' Out of 1\nTown\nPatients\n.... ire Invited\nto uie the ficlll-.\nties ot either my '\nSpokane or Yakima offlcei. If\nyou desire work\ncan be arranged\nby appointment:\notherwise come In\nat your own convenience.\nCredit gladly\nextended, no\nmatter\nwhere you\nlive.\nThi relationship you eitabHih ttefwaor*\nyounelf and your Dentiit is one of the\nmott important In life.\nRare Indeed It the person who can hop*\nto maintain good health without consulting a Dentist at least twice \u25a0 ytar.\nDentistry is no longer a luxury, but has\nbecome a downright necessity of modem\nliving, so why not coniider your Dentist\nas ona of your best friendi? Take pride\nin your teeth not only because they\nenhance the beauty of your facial features, but because they art the outward\nreflection of good health, your most\nprecious human ponession. Unfortunately wt an not all granted tht birthright of beautiful teeth, but practically\neveryone can acquire a pleajtpt, healthy\nmouth condition through regular viiiti\nto their Dentist. We art al primarily\njudged by appearance . . .\nAn appointment with four, Dtartrf\n\u25a0will be the ftrtt important step toward maintaining lustrous, healthy\nteeth, and a pleasing smile that will.\nimpress your pertonality \\epon all\nyou meet.\nWi\nCASH\nCREDIT\nON BRIDGEWORK, CROWNS,\nPLATES,  FILLINGS,  INLAYS\nTAKE FIVE, TEN\nOR FIFTEEN\nMONTHS to Pay\nNOTICE!\nPRESENT   DENTAL\nPLATE   WEARERS!\nDr. Cowen will reset\nyour present teeth il\nthe NEW, BEAUTIFUL\nTRANSPARENT MATERIALS at a fraction\nof the cost of new\nplates.\nmmmm\n,   OPEN\nEUENINGS\nUNTIL\n9PM\nPEERLESS DENTISTS\nJflMIESDN BLDG.\n.CORNER  WALL  AND   AIUERSIDE   AVENUE\n frAGE\n\t\nEIGHT\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. S.O-TUE8DAY MORNINO. MAY 14.\nht Station of Personalized\n\u2022   Service\"\n[now Its 0. K.\nWhen we have checked your\n. fir and given it an O.K. you\ncan feel confident that you\n\u25a0 Jvlll be able to pass all tests.\nDon't Delay\u2014Drive In and be\nprepared for the test on your\n\"beacon\nSERVICE\nSTATION\nCordon and Len Batley\n01 Baker St Phone 878\nTESTS MAY\nYOU ARE\nSAFE\nProtection\nWhtn You Drive\nTypes of Insurance to cover\nall cars, that give you the\ncomfort of knowing you are\nfully protected for all emergencies.\nC. D. Blackwood\nINSURANCE\nWt Ward St Phont N\nFixing Cars\nIs OUR Job\nOur Service is efficient and dependable.\nOur prices reasonable and competitive.\nThe Smedley Garage Co*\n509 Vernon St,\nPhone 71\nDONT WAIT TIL IT'S TOO LATE!\nSign Up for Your Automobile Policy Today\nPhono 980 and I will call.\nAutomobile  Insurance a Specialty.\nWhat Is the extra coverage at $1.00?\nFrank A. Stuart\nThe Insurance Man\nAberdeen Block Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE 980 NOW!\nWhen We Put\n-O.K.-\nOn Your Car, You'll Know It's Ready to\nPass Every Test.\nBRAKES STEARING GEAR\nChecked so that you can     Bear wheel alignment\npositively   stop\nspecified space.\nin the equipment with a factory\ntrained operator is your\nonly assurance of having\npositive steering.\nTIRES   .\nWe have the most mod- HEADLIGHTS\nern   vulcanizing   equip- Official Headlamp station\nment in the District op- No.  171 with registered\nerated by factory trained operators to serve you in\nmen. this respect.\nNelson Transfer Cq* Ltd,\nDRIVER-BUT. IS YOUR CAR SAFE\nAFTER YOU HAVE BEEN TESTED AS A DRIVER, YOUR CAR IS STILL LIABLE TO\nTEST BY TRAFFIC OFFICERS. ARE YOUR BRAKES OKAY? ARE YOUR LIGHTS LEGALLY ADJUSTED? ARE YOUR TAIL LIGHTS EFFICIENT? ARE YOUR WHEELS PROPERLY ALIGNED? IS YOUR STEERING GEAR IN GOOD SHAPE? ARE YOUR TIRES\nDANGEROUS? YOUR CAR IS SUBJECT TO POLICE CHECK-UP. MAKE SURE THAT IT\nIS IN FIRST CLASS CONDITION. YOU HAVE SERIOUS LEGAL LIABILITIES IN THE\nEVENT OF AN ACCIDENT.\nDRIVER'S TESTS NOW IN PROGRESS\nTHIS IS WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT WHEN YOU TAKE YOUR AUTO DRIVER'S\nSAFETY TEST\nThe main purpose behind the\nteiti is to oblige each and every\ndriver to possess aa much ai poiilble, a complete knowldge ot traffic laws nad regulation! and to act\nupon this knowledge at all times\nwhen driving upon our highways.\nTo effect this will make for a\ngreater degree of safety for alt\nconcerned. Contrary to many opinions these tests are not made with\na view to depriving anyone of the\nprivilege of driving but rather to\nrestrict such persons in whom actual\nphysical faults are found, to driving only under circumstances in\nwhich they are found to be competent. This can'best be explained\nby describing the actual tests and\nthe manner of restriction, if any,\nwhich may be imposed.\nCar\nInsurance\nTODAYJ ...TOMORROW!\nYou never know when? So\nbe prepared . . . cover your\n:ar today with a good sound\ncompany and save money\nwith\nPe Ee Poulin\n682 Ward St\nPhoni 70\nThe applicant flnt approach*s the\nofficer In charge of the examining\nunit and pays to him the aum of one\ndollar. He la iuued with a receipt\nand a copy ot one of the examination papen. As explained before,\nthe examination papers list 25\nquestions, aU taken from the driver's\nmanual. There are 10 sets of papers,\nall with a leparate aet of questions\nand the examiner hands one to\neach applicant, taken from thla iet\nof 10.\nUpon tha applicant completing the\nwritten section of the paper he is\ntaken to the testing room where\nwill be found all the equipment\nand apparatus for testing. He will\nbe shown to the seat in a machine\ncalled a reactometer. This machine\nresembles the actual driving compartment ot an automobile, insofar\naa It il equipped with seat, steering wheel, clutch and brake pedals,\nalso a foot throttle or accelerator.\nTests are first made of the sub\nject'a eye-sight, while seated ln tho\nreactometer. The subject ia uked\nto read, with both and then alternate eyes, a seriei ot letten of\ngraduated size on an illuminated\nchart, 28 feet in front of him. These\ncharta are familiar to all who have\nundergone elementary eye tests In\nthe offices of doctors, optometrists\nand othen.\nIf the applicant passes thii preliminary, the examining officer proceeds to check hii ability to distinguish between the colon red, amber, green and white. This is done\nby meant ot lights placed just under the lettered chart mentioned.\nThe purpose of the two preceding\ntests ia to determine whether or not\nthe applicant is near sighted or\ncolor blind In one or both eyei.\nThe result of all testa are endorsed\non the examination papers of the\nsubject in a apace provided.\nNext, a test is made for diplopia,\nAUTOMOBILE INSURANCE\nThe Halifax Insurance Company Writes All Forms of\nInsurance Including\nAUTOMOBILE INSURANCE\nat Preferred Ratei\nIn this time of stress Insist that your Insurance be placed\nIn an insurance company owned and controlled\nby Canadians.\nT. D. ROSLING\n3 Royal Bank Bldg. Phone 717\n\"INSURE WITH ROSLING AND SAVE\"\n_r-=__\u00ae.\u2014I\n2>juuc\nPHONE\n119\nWe   will   pick\nup your car at\nyour  home  or\noffice.\nLET US\nTHOROUGHLY\nCHECK YOUR CAR\nDrive In today and let us In-\nipect your brakes, tires,\nheadlights and steering apparatus. All work will be\ndone by trained mechanics.\nWE WILL TAKE YOUR CAR TO THE\nTESTING STATION AND RETURN IT TO\nYOU WITH OFFICIAL APPROVAL CARD\n0tucbtt (Ptotmk <W iff Qtmmhk-\nPEEBLES MOTDRS LIMITED\nG  R A PEEBLES. MANAGER. _>\nCHMLER U PLYMOUTH  SALES uSERVICE\n -==____EE NELSON . B.C. ________\u2014\"\nPHONE 119\nNELSON, B. C.\notherwise described as a double\nvision condition. This ls done by\nmeans of a aet of specially ground\nlenses, mounted in a manner similar to the lorgnettes affected by\naome of our ladies ot high society.\nThli test has proven that a considerable number of people are afflicted with double vision without\nbeing aware of it\nThe periphery or tunnel vision\ntest which now follows is one of\nthe moit important checks of all.\nTunnel vision is one of the chiei\ncauses of accidents at Intersections\nand sharp corners. This test is\neffected by placing ln front of the\nsubject a semi-circular shaped Instrument, the ends of which extend\nalong each side of the subject's\nhead to a point approximately opposite each ear. With alternate eyes\nhe ia obliged to look straight\nahead and yet record his ability\nto see an object which is slid along\nthe semi-circular shaped instrument\ntoward the aide of hla head. The\nnormal ilde vision ia 90 degrees or\nat right angles to the eye. Should\nthere be a blank section aa ia very\noften the case, the subject is obviously afflicted with tunnel vision.\nYet another test is made of the\nsubject's ability to judge depth or\ndistance. The applicant looks into\nan elongated box-like arrangement\nat the base of which are pictured\nin miniature, two objects such as a\nrailroad crossing and a road sign.\nThe examiner, by means of his controls moves these objects toward\nand away from the subject's eyes,\nthe subject being obliged to Judge\naa to their position in relation to\neach other. Very often one eye will\nmake an accurate estimation while\nthe other will be definitely out of\nbalance. The effect ot this will of\ncourse Impair the subject's judgment of distance.\nThe last test la probably the\nsimplest of all, that ia the test for\nreaction to danger and ls done by\nmeans ot the reactometer already\ndescribed,, the machine in which the\nsubject has been seated throughout\nthe previous tests. The examiner,\nby means ot hla controls, causes the\ngreen and amber lights on the board\nin front of the applicant to flash\nalternately, oft and on. At this time\nthe applicant it sitting in the normal position of driving, with the\nright foot depressing the throttle\nor accelerator. Without further\nwarning, the examiner causes the\nred light to flash on in a steady\nbeam, in place-of the green and\namber. This is the signal to the\ndriver that sudden danger confronts him and he must immediately\nremove his foot from the accelera.\ntor and depress the foot brake pedal.\nThe time which elapses from the\nmoment when the red light first\nflashes to the time when the foot\nbrake pedal commences to depress\nis recorded on an electrically operated itop clock on the examiner's\ncontrol panel. This clock registers\nthe time in one hundredth parts of\na second, making an extremely accurate check. Four such recordings\nare taken from each subject, the\naverage of all four being taken.\nThese averages all range around\nthree-fourtha part of one second.\nJust prior to leaving the testing\nroom the applicant Is required to\ndemonstrate his ability to interpret\nthe standard road signs on a printed\nchart. These road signs, all of which\nare displayed in the Driver's Manual, are familiar to all of us, yet the\nsubject must be able to explain\nthe difference between an acute\nangled turn, a curve and so on.\nMany questions have been asked\nas to what happens to the person\ntaking the tests who falls to pass\nall or part of them. As regards the\nwritten section of the test, a passing\nmark of 80 per cent is required and\nshould an applicant fail in this, he\nis told to try again in one week's\ntime. If he fails again, he is told lo\nreturn in 30 days. If upon this third\nattempt he again fails, his driver's\nlicence is ordered suspended for a\nperiod of 30 days, to afford him an\nopportunity for further study of his\ndriver's manual.\nIn the case of someone falling to\npass the eye tests, he is given a\nform upon which all details ot the\ndefects found are endorsed. The subject is obliged to take thia form to\naome competent authority, who may\nbe a doctor, optometrist or similar\nofficial. After corrective measures\nare taken, the competent authority\nendoraes the form in a manner prescribed. Upon the subject returning\nthli form to the examiner, his\ndriver's licence is restricted or otherwise, ln accordance with the recommendations of the competent authority. If for Instance the subject's\neyes are found to be inefficient\nwithout eye-glasses, his driver's licence is restricted to driving only\nwhile wearing them. If, for another\nexample, he is found to be colorblind, he may be restricted to speed\nin addition to other restrictions. If\nthe tests show that he has a dangerously slow reaction time, he will\nprobably be restricted in his speed,\niuch ipeed not to exceed the given\nnumber of milei per hour endorsed\non the driver's licence.\nIn amputation and other cases\nof similar nature, the driver's licence may be restricted to operating cars equipped with automatic\nclutches, mechanical arm signals and\nsimilar devices.\nFrom the foregoing it may be\nseen that everyone is given every\npossible opportunity  to  paas  the\ntests yet no one la summarily deprived of the right to drive. Without a doubt, these tests will go a\nlong way toward proper education of our motorists, at the same\ntime limiting the driving of those\nwhose ability is somewhat less\nthan average. The result cannot but\nmake for a much greater margin of\nsafety on the highways.\nThere il one more point that\nshould be cleared up. The present\nholders of driver's licences will not\nbe required to undergo an actual\nroad test. That ls to say, they will\nnot be required to give an actual\ndemonstration of their driving abilities. This will only be required of\npenons who have not held a driver's\nlicence ln this Province and the\nholden of Class \"A\" and Class \"_.''\nchauffeur'! licences. The chauffeur's test will comprise a demonstration under actual conditions such\nas they will be called upon to meet\nin the coune of their usual employment, operating buses, taxis and\nsimilar equipment\nA point of intereit perhaps is that\nall driven tested to date only\nabout one half of one per cent ol\nthe total have been deprived outright of the privilege of driving. A\ngood number have of course been\nobliged to drive under slight restriction orders, the majority ot\nthese being confined to the wearing\nof eye-glasses while driving, or restricted in their maximum rates of\nspeed.\nThis system of restriction may at\nfint glance, appear to work a hardship on the motorist concerned yet\nconsidered in the light of Traffic\nSafety as a whole, there cannot be\nany doubt as to the benefit derived.\nMotorists can prevent the disappointment of failure in the written\nsection of the examination by care^\nful study of the Motor Vehicle Operators' Manual before presenting\nthemselves for testing. These Manuals are available at the local of\nfices of the British Columbia Police. Apart from the necessity of\nknowing the answers to the test\nquestions, all motorists will find\nthat the information contained in\nthe Manual will prove of immense\nvalue in their everyday driving.\nWould Your Car *\nPass a\nSAFETY TEST?\nDrive in Today\u2014Our Mechanical  Work  li  Guaranteed.\nSky-Chief\nAuto Service\nNorm Roscoe and Art Fournler\n206 Baker St.        Phone 122\nAuthorized Head Lamp\nTesting Station\nLET US INSPECT Your\nCAR FIRST\nHeadlights, Brakes, Steering Apparatus\u2014They ill need\nregular and systematic checking. Drive In to our up-to-\ndate shop supervised by Bill Kline and let us attend to\nthese matters for you.\nSpecialized Truck Service\nCENTRAL TRUCK\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\nBaker and\nHendryx\nStreet.\nPhone -\n100\nYou'll Be\nReady for\nthe Open\nRoad or\nAny Test\u2014When Your Car Hai Been\nServiced by\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT\nOur shop is under the personal supervision of Mr. Erie\nSowerby, and your Spring check-up and overhaul will be\nattended to economically and efficiently.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT\nPhone 76\nOpposite Port Office end Hume Hotel\nOfficial Gingi\nNot a Pleasant Picture!\nAvoid Break Downs by Having a Complete\nCheck-Up Now!\nHow does YOUR car rate on these polnti?\nBRAKES: are they in perfect mechanical order?\nMOTOR: is it tuned and ready for the trip?\nTIRES: are they safe, or dangerously smooth?\nLUBRICATION: do you have the right weight?\nShorty's Repair Shop\nOfficial Station\nPhone 171\n714 Baker St.\nHEADLIGHTS\nAlmost every person who drives a motor-vehicle his experienced the difficulty oj\noperating the same when meeting another motor-vehicle the headlights ot which are\nglaring The effect ot glaring headlights on the eyes causes the pupils to contract, with\nthe result that, after the source ot glaring lights has been paased, the vision ot the driver\nis very materially lessened, and should there be a person or object on the road Immediately after passing a pair of glaring headlights It is almost impossible to see such\nobject in sufficient time to stop before hitting the same. This has been the cause ot a\nnumber of accidents in the past, some of which have resulted in fatal Injuries.\nThe regulations under the \"Motor-Vehicle Act\" require that the headlights of motor-\nvehicles shall not project a glaring or dazzling light to persons on the highway ln front\nof them, and while you, Mr. Driver, may complain bitterly against the other fellow, are\nyou sure that your headlights comply with such regulations?\nThe regulations also require that whenever on a highway during the period when\nheadlights are required to be kept lighted, the driver or operator of a motor-vehicle\nequipped with multiple-beam headlights shall use the lower or passing beam of such\nheadlights whenever an approaching or oncoming vehicle is at least 500 feet in front\nof him.\nYour whole-hearted cooperation in the matter of use and operation of headlights II\nsincerely requested.\nQordon S* Wismer\nATTORNEY - CENERAL\n\u25a0   *   \u25a0 *~\" \u2014\"--' mCmmAtml,\n \u2014\u2014.\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NELSON. B.C-TUMDAY MORNINO. MAY 14.1Mb\nvo Day Visit Will Feature Only\nTravelling Kitchen in Canada\nMrs. Henderson holds 1\nunique place among women ln\nthis Province.\nIn addition to the hundreds\nof cooking classes which she\nhas conducted In Vancouver,\nas well as throughout the\nProvince, she also conducts a\nweekly broadcast direct from\nthe Modern Kitchen to keep\nwomen up-to-date on food\nproblems.\nThose women who have attended some of the sessions,\nneed not be told of. the value\nthat such classes have to\nthose who are concerned with\nthe daily preparation of family meals. Simpler and more\nattractive ways of producing\nthe ordinary foods as well as\n,new and smart ideas for comity entertaining will all be discussed. In addition the plan-\nlg of meals, choosing of recipes most suitable for the occa-\nm, consideration of foods that blend and contain the proper\n)d Values are all discussed in'these popular cooking classes.\nTeaching women to cook is all in the day's work with\nra. Margaret Henderson, popular home economist of the\nilly Province. Since she commenced conducting cooking\nusaes for the Modern Kitchen, 150,000 women have contact-\nthis department. Hundreds of women have had their first\noWng lesson from her. Older, experienced cooks have dis-\nvered new ways to do old chores.\nDo you know how to keep berry juice from running out\nthe sides of a juicy pie?\nDo you know the first aid for burnt potatoes?\nDo you know how to keep the odor of cauliflower from\nnet rating the house?\nThese are only a few of the kitchen puzzlers that this de-\nrtment has to answer In a day. There are lota of others.\n>w to give emergency treatment to culinary mistakes is\nmething that every woman wants to know.\nMrs. Henderson conducts her classes In such a friendly\ninner that it really become an interesting, friendly, round'\nble discussion of that most interesting universal topic\u2014\nod.\nThis year an entirely different program has been planned,\ntsed on many of the problems about which women have\nmaulted the Modern Kitchen. Main dishes *W11 be consider-\n1, u well a8\"ft.;nr*-kin8r of Pastry, bakltig 6t cakes and small\nwkies, preparation of salads and desserts.\nHas Been Chosen by Mrs. Henderson for\nDemonstration at the Cooking School.\n\u2022 For a Delightful Beverage\n\u2022 For Better Health\n\u2022 For Healthier Bodies\nPhone 900 and Have Palm Milk\nDelivered Daily to Your Home\n\u2014PALM DAIRIES LTD.\u2014\nMrs. Henderson\nCHOOSES\nBRADLEY'S\nMEATS\nIn her anxiousness to demonstrate only\nthe finest of meats it was only natural\nthat Mrs. Henderson would, choose\nBradley's Quality Meats\nAttend Every Session \u2014 2 p.m.\nMay 15th and 16th\nBRADLEY'S MEAT MARKET\nPhone 831 & 832 Free Delivery\nProvince Modern Kitchen Here Tomorrow\n-^\nUIMlMi\n~rty.\u2122.'\nTOMORROW\nVAICOVVlIt   DAILY  PROVINCE\nMODERN KITCHEN\nAO     C 0 0  K 116     IC\nHere's a real metropolitan treat for every woman, matron\nor miss within ear or walking distance of these fascinating\ncooking classes.\nMrs. Margaret Henderson, popular Daily Province Home\nEconomics Expert, will be in charge of all classes ... she\nwill prepare and demonstrate the newest, tasty dishes ...\nthe kind every housewife likes to make for her own family.\nShe -arm explain several practical household hints... handy\ncooking tips . . . tested recipes, and give important kitchen information that makes for really successful cooking and\nfood preparation.\nFOR WOMEN EVERYWHERE\nPencils and note-pads will be supplied\n,,. every woman is welcome .\nby all means make it your day.\n\u2022   L\nBE SURE TO ATTEND!\nIt's B. C.'s Most Popular Cooking School\nNelson Electric Co.\nSponsors Visit\nSPONSORED IN NELSON BY\nNELSON\nELECTRIC COMPANY\nGeneral Electric Dealers\nUnder the Auspices of the Nelson and District Women's Institute\nADMISSION 15c ONLY\nEntire Proceeds of the Tickets Will Be Given to the Nelson Red Cross Society\nAll dlihei prepared by Mn, Hendenon will be drawn for tt the end of eaeh session and given away fro*.\nAs in previous years tht\nNelson Electric Company, local\nCeneral Electric appliance dealer, Is sponsoring the Dally\nProvince Modern Kitchen's\nNelson visit, and It Is through\nthe cooperation of this progressive electrical establishment\nthat makes It possible for the\nclasses to be held here. Large\nlumbers of Nelson women\nhave attended Mrs. Henderson's lectures In the past,\nwhich has gained for her the\nreputation of B. C.'s most pop-\njlar cooking Instructress,\nMr. K. McRory, proprietor\nof the Nelson Electric Company, states he is anxious for\nNelson to give Mrs. Henderson the largest reception ever\nthis year, and invites all old\nand new followers of the Province Modern Kitchen to be on\nhand for at least one of the\nclasses.\nIn line with the plan adopted In other B. C. cities, Mr.\nMcRory states that a small admission price Is being charged\nthis year, the proceeds of\nwhich are being given to the\nNelson Branch of the Red Cross\nSociety, by arrangement with\nKEN McRORY\nthe Nelson Women's Institute.\nFollowing the two classes on\nWednesday and Thursday afternoons Mr. McRory has arranged with Mrs. Henderson\nto spend all day Friday, May\n17, at the Nelson Electric Company's store, 574 Baker Street\nwhere she will be glad to personally discuss with Nelson\nwomen their Individual cooking problems and give them\nfirst hand advice.\nAgain the Choice-\nMrs. Henderson has chosen Fourex Bread for the\nCooking School. You too will make It the permanent choice for your table once you have tasted its\ndelicious and wholesome flavor.\nPHONE 196 FOR DAILY DELIVERY\nFOUREX BAKERIES\nLAURITZ BLDG.\nFAIRVIEW\nt-~\u2014^~-\n_________\nA_m______\n\u25a0 II niVilnlMTillihiiM-l\n______\n**<*>****-*-***-\n.-__.'\u25a0_! j\n\u201e%__..\n WW^pw*4UU^pp*UWU\n\u25a0ST*\"\nIjllllWWPllI\nPAOI TIN i\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1840-\nPopular Travelling Cooking School on Annual Tom\n..i\ni\n\u25a0V\nI\nMrs. Margaret Henderson In the Vancouver Daily Province Modern Kitchen\nModern Kitchen Hoi Become  Province-Wide   Institution\nBy MRS. MARGARET HENDERSON\nOn April lit tht Vancouvtr Dilly Provlnct Modem Kitchen left Vancouver on their Fifth Annual tour\nthrough Brltiih Columbia to share with tht women of\nthis Province the activities cirrled on ln their Modern\nKitchen In Vtncouver. This very unique department la\nlocated on the second floor of the Vancouver Dally\nProvince Building facing lovely Victory Square, and\"\nk tha only one ot its kind in Canada. Our Modern\nKitchen lt fully equipped with the most modern elec-\nMt tppliances. Bright and cheery with I very home-\nIlka itmosphere that makei It a very favorite ipot to\nill Who tre familiar with it and it il here that all our\nrtclpei trt tested for publications. Adjoining thli Is\namt Auditorium, which is air-conditioned and extremely pleasant. The Auditorium his t capacity ot 200, tad\ntt there our very popultr weekly classes ire held.\nFive telephones of thli department ire continually busy\nreplying to tbounndt of requests every month in the\nyttr. More thin 1900 women t month visit Our Home\nService Department which include! everything from\ntht Bride's Cake to I Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary,\nperhaps refurnishing your homt, or maybe I pattern\nlor baby'i iwetter. All thli Infonnaiton U available\nta you nom the courteous statf of the Dally Province\nModern Kitchen. Our Department also maintain! a\nregular weekly broadcast every Tuesday morning it\n10:18 t.m. over station CJOR. This Includes specill\nrtcipei. a Kitchen Nugget, which is just a tip, or maybe a abort-cut ln tome food preparation; we also have\ni tor Kitchen Query answering one of tht many question! which comes in by mall from other parts ot the\nProvince, til this we wish to share with the women of\nBritlih Columbia. Since each and every part of our\nProvlnct ls somewhat different we try is best we can\nto adopt the moit practical and seasonable recipes.\nOur tint viiit waa in Nanaimo, from there we Went\nto Port Albernl tnd then to Duncan, whtrt wt htd\nmarvellous attendance. So popular were these schools\nwe htvt betn requested to return to the Island ior\nanother week on our return to Vancouver, the Daily\nProvince have already made the nccssary irrangementi to comply with thii requeit\nOur tour through the Okanagan hu ilso been t\nvery delightful one. We hive thoroughly enjoyed wonderful hospitality and cooperation and particularly the\nkeen Interest of the women's organizations ln helping\nto make our school such an outstanding success. Now\nwe are back with you in the Kootenayi. We hive juit\ncompleted our ichooli in Trail, renewing old friendship! and making new ones, and lut but not least on\nour tour is reilly beautiful Nelson. Till! il tht fifth\nyear wt have been permitted- to bring our ichool to\nwomen of Nelson, and we enjoy it all so much ind\nreally look forward to our visit in Nelson. We sincerely trust you will enjoy our classes u much aa we enjoy bringing them to you. We know tht woman of\nNelson tnd ln ftct the entire Province art all good\ncookt tnd we htvt not come to you with tht idea of\nteaching you mything, we have come merely to ahare\nour Dally Province Modern Kitchen and lta actlvitiei\nwith you and alio exchange Ideas realizing aa we do\nthat we benefit so much through our visit with you.\nMay I ity thtt we never iccept luggeitions as\ncriticism at any time, we are more than glad to have\nyour suggestions, so let's make this a round table conference whilt we are here in Nelson and enjoy every\nhour.\nOn Friday of thla week I will be in the Nelson\nElectric with Mr. McRory. If I can be of any uaistance\nto the women ot Nelson ln helping you solve l problem thenl shall be pleased indeed.\n.Our classes will be held Wednesday and Thursday\nln,.your Civic Theatre commencing at 2 o'clock.\nIt\n*\n*\nI\ni\n:\n-.\n*\ni\nr.\n\u25a0It\n4\nI\nGurney Coal and Wood\nRANGES FOR 1940\n\"Built Better by Qurney\"\nKITCHEN\nTESTED\"\nFor Better\nPerformance\n\"KITCHEN TESTED\"\nis not merely a slogan,\nbut is a requirement of\nill Curney Cooking Appliances before being\nplaced on the market.\nThe innumerable experiments in the Model\nKitchen of the Curney\nHome Service Department have resulted 1n\nimprovement in design,\ngreater economy, and\nunexcelled distribution\nof heat in the oven ensuring perfection in\nbaking under all conditions which is demanded by the most exacting housewife.\nRanges From $64*50 and Up\nSEE THEM ON DISPLAY AT OUR STORE\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St.\nPhone 260\nNelion, B. C.\nInstitute Plans\nSports, $.Slocan\nSOUTH SLQCAN, B. C. - The\nMay matting of tht Bonnington\nina South Slocan Womtn's Institute wts chiefly taken up with arrangements for tht Empire Day\nsporti.\nTht celebration Is creating more\nthan usual Interest seeing thit ht\nsports field has been acquired\nthrough the efforts of the Sports\nClub and the Women's Institute\nfor the use pt the community in\nperpetuity.\nTilt various booths will bt tiken\nchtrge of by the Women'i Initltute\nai previously. Mrs. John Murray will\nagain htvt tht First Aid tent on\nthe field.\nTht luncheon tent will hive Mrs.\nW. T. Jones ts convener, the amusement tent, Mrs, H. D. Clark.\nMrs. W. C. Motley and Mri. 0\u201eW.\nHumphry will have charge of tht\nlot cream, pop tnd candy tent.\nFret ict cream will be given to\ntht school children.\nMri. J. D. Yeatman, who presided\nat the meeting will be general\nconvener.\nIt wis decided thtt t bounty of\ntwo cents bt paid on gophers until\nthe tnd of Mty.\nTht Institute will send t thrift\nexhibit to the Edgewood Ftlr, Mrs.\nDownie ts convener for the exhibit.\nThe new celling in the hill wis\nhighly commented on tnd the appreciation ot the meeting wu expressed to Mr. Yeatman.\nTht committee reporti Included:\nTiie Olrl Guldt\u00bb-Mrs. Motley Invited members to attend the rally\nin Nelson May 17; Public Health\nand Child Welfare, Mrs. J. Murray\nreported having made IS calls to\nthe sick tnd notified the meeting oi\nthe proposed visit ot t Heilth Unit.\nTht social part of tht program\nwai arranged by Mill Ivy Walker.\nQuit contests wert won by Mrs.\nMurray and Mrs. Motley.\nCHILDREN'S CONCERT\nHEARD BY KINCSCATE\nLADIES' STUDY CLUB\nKINGSGATE, B.C.-The Ladies\nStudy Club held their regular bimonthly meeting when Mm. Htrry\nHogg wai hostess for the evening.\nHelen Pontesio .had charge of tht\nentertainment and In honor of\nMothen Dty brought her classes\nfrom Eastport ichool to do their bit\nln the show,\nThere were two little sketches,\niome group drill by the younger\nchildren, \u2022 long by Anna Mae\nLewis accompanied on tht piino\nby Mra, Lewis and a couple of selections by the harmonica band,\nMarvin Lotspeich, Shirley Walter,\nBarbara Reuter and Roy Tritt.\nNAKUSP ORGANIST IS\nHONORED ON BIRTHDAY\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Mlu R. Hamer\nOrganist of the Nakusp United\nted Church Ladiei Aid, when they\nbirthdiy. Miss Hamer received a\ngift in appreciation ot her scrxlcei.\nAfternoon tet wai ierved by Mn.\nM. Ion tnd Mn. O. Ktyi. Those\npreient were Mn. E. W. Bill, Mn.\nsurprised her it her home on her G. Keys, Mn. B. McRobens, Mrs.\nM. La Rue, Mn. H. L. Miller, \u00bb\nW. Morgin, Mrs. W. Reilly, J\nR. Brodie, Mrt. C. B. Hambli\nMn. F. Howltt, Mn F. Carli\nMin J, Fawcett, Mn. M ton i\nMrs. Morgan Sr.\nap\nLeaf FLOUR\n\"CREAM OF THE WEST\"\n.    is used exclusively by\n>n_S. MARGARET HENDERSON\nIn the Cooking Demonstrations it the\nVANCOUVER DAILY PROVINCE\nMODERN KITCHEN\nMay 15 & 16\nMaple Leaf Flour is a product that Is endorsed by Canadlen Housewives as the finest. Try a sack todey.\nNelson & District Fanners Supply Co.\nLOCAL DISTRIBUTORS\nPhom 174 P.O. Box 6 Railway St, Nelson B.C.\nJMmraat Pasteurized Cheese\nA New, Richer Tasting Blended Cheese that Spreads\neasily and slices dainty thin at any temperature.\nThe whole family\u2014Mother, Dad, Sister and Junior-\nwill vote PRIMROSE Pasteurized Cheese the \"Best\nYet\",   , v\nYour choice of 3 Flavors\u2014Plain\u2014Pimento\u2014Roquefort\nBlend.\nNo waste, no fuss, no failures when cooking with\nPrimrose Pasteurized Cheese.\nBUY... TRY... COMPARE!\nCreate happy memories of favorite\ndishes by combining. Primrose\nPasteurized Cheese with:\n.   \u2022 Worcestershire Sauce\n\u2022 Preserved or\nCrystallized Ginger\n'\u2022 Mustard       \u2022 Nuts\n\u2022 Marmalade   \u2022 Currant Jelly\nSend tor Recipe Book\nOur 1935 edition ot \"100\nTested Cheese Recipes\" wm\nvoted 'Topi\" by housekeepers everywhere. You will\nwant our 1940 edition \"290\nTested Cheese Recipes.\" 4\ntops mm ij, to 1 lb. Primrose Pasteurised Cheeie cartons wlU get you this valuable kitchen aid. Send no\nmoney\u2014Just 4 carton tops to\nTHK   DAIRY   POOL\nHead Office:   Saskatoon\nAdd color to your cooking \u2014 with Primrose Cheese I\nLADIES ITS HERE\nThe Wonder Dish\nthat you have noticed and admired so much in recent Issues ot\npopular magazines.\nTruly tht Dish of a Doien Duties!... This\nWonderful Piece of Ovenware Pottery\nwill prove to be the'most useful and practical article ln your kitchen.\nWe are proud to introduce It to Canadian houaewivea.\nAVAIXABUS IN\n4 OOLOB8:\nLarktymr Blut, Tm\nBrown,    Daffodil\nYellow,      Myrtle\nGreen.\nMacaroni aod Cheese \u2014 Individual\n\u2022tyle, will have more family appeal\nwhen cooked ln the WONDER D_3H.\nChicken Pot Ko\u2014Watch your guests'\neyes pop When\ndelightful dish.\neyei pop When you serve them this\n ful \"-'\nScalloped Potatoes\u2014Tor a famUy of\ntwo or as an Individual dish.\nWn Serving Seup-Juit the smartest\nsoup dish ever devised.\nPar Serving Porridge-Junior will bt\nthrilled fo eat his porridge trom a\na  handle.   Won't  tip,\ndish   with\neither.\nAs a Mixing Bawl\u2014Just try creaming\nup butter and sugar. You will wonder how you ever kept house without lt.\n\u2022^9 *!!_*-*** \u2014A man's delight\nThe WONDER DISH ls rand Ior\nthe Job.\n*\u2022 a Gravy Boat\u2014so much mora\npractical than the one which came\nwith your aet ol dishes.\nAs a Vegetable Mak\u2014The right bIm\nto hold a can of peas, beans or\ncorn. Heat them In the WONDER\nDISH and take right to tht tablt\ntor. serving.\nPer Serving Hall Graancfr.lt m lea-\nIts shape and weight make the\nWONDER DISH Ideal (or this purpose.\nPor Leftover Meat Dishes\u2014For all\n\"under cover\" dishes\u2014for Oven\nBaked Beans \u2014ln fact, (or All\nCasserole Dlshea you will find tha\nWONDER DISH ptrftct\nHow to Get Your First Wonder Dish\nYoa will want to own a aet of six of theie wonderful Ovenware\nPottery Dishes\u2014so start now I\n1. Savt tht box topi from 4 PRIMROSE CHEESE cartons (_ or Mb. tlzee).\n3. Mall them, with 10c cash (no stampi please) to The Dairy Pool, saskatoon.\nYou will receive postpaid your first WONDER DISH. The regular retail\nprice 0( tht WONDER DISH ll 40c a \u2014\nS. Please Itate the color o( diah you want\n4. To enable you to secure a set of 8 WONDER DISHES, we an leaving thla\npremium offer open till April SOth, 1843. After that date, If you still\nrequire one or more pieces to complete your set, you will be able to purchaie them from your local hardware or department itore.\nNEW WAYS to serve....\nffrtmrOBP   Pasteurized Q\\\\\nVegetable Casserole\nMacedoine\n1 can condensed toup,\nasparagus or mushroom\n!cup milk\nteaspoons grated onion\nteaspoon paprika\nPepper\n1 cup cooked peas\n1 cup cooked carrots\n1 cup cooked lima beam\n_ cup grated Primrose\ncheese\n% cup bread crumbs\n1 Heat soup, add milk, onion,\npaprika and pepper.\n3. Add vegetables and mix well.\nI. Fill Individual Wonder Dishes with vegetable mixture,\ntop with grated cheese and\nbread crumbs.\n4. Bake ln moderate oven (.17,1\ndtg. F.) tor about 30 minutes. Makes B to 6 servings.\nIndividual Wonder Dishes keep\nthis hot and moist for latecomers.\nA Tasty Spread\nA delicious ipread for crackers\nto go with tomato-Juice cocktails: Primrose Blend Roquefort\ncream cheese, seasoned with\nonion Juice, chives and Worcestershire sauce, whipped light.\nServe surrounded by l fence\nof little pickles.\nMobile Meals\nConvenient (or moving a meal\noutdoors ii a iet of Wonder\nDishes with a handled carrying\ntray. A stack of Inexpensive\ntrays makei self-service easy.\nMeals cafeteria-ityle work out\nwell for the family that comei\nhoma at different houri after\ntennii or * lata iwim.\nCheeie Soup\n3 cupi tomato Juice\n1 cup liquor drained tram\nboiled celery\nSalt, pepper\n4 tablespoons PrlmroM\npasteurized cheeie\nHeat liquids, season; whtn\nready to serve add Primrose\ncheese, stirring till thoroughly\ndissolved. Serve la bouillon\ncups.\nSouthern Salmon\nSouffle\n(The Tastiest Thrift-saa*ac\nwt knew)\nSoak 3 cupi soft bread crunk}\nIn 1 cup scslded milk.   '\nPrimrose Pasteurized Cheese la\na \"Zesty\" Food.\nPrimrose Cheese Seme.\n2 oi.   Ci   eup)   Prlmrott\npasteurized cheese\nH cup milk\n3 tablespoons  flour\n3 tablespoons water\nPepper, salt\nHeat the mlllt, add tht cheese,\ncut ln small pieces, stirring until completely dissolved. Add\nsalt and pepper. Stir in tht\n(lour and water ln paste form.\nCook 5 minutei, stirring until\nsmooth.\nThli li an excellent sauce to\nserve hot with peas, beans,\ncarrots, cabbage, cauliflower,\nand celery.\nPrimrose\nCheeie Fish Sauet\nUse above recipe, adding ont\nteaspoon Worcestershire Sauca\nto give the piquant flavor ao\ndesirable as an accompaniment\nto flih.\nGrand (or hot boiled salmon,\ncod, halibut, whlttflih and\nnit.\nteupoon Mit, U teaspoon diy\nmustard, li pound PrlmroM\nPasteurized cheeie (from 3-\npound loaf) cut Into smsll\npieces. Mix until cheese la\nmelted, then cool and add \"\negg yolks beaten until II\nana lemon colored. Fold __\n3 cups (1 pound) flaked canned salmon, and lastly t egg\nwhites beaten until stiff. Four\nInto 6 well buttered \"Wonder\nDishes\" and bake In slow oven\n(838 deg. F.) tor 45 minutes.\nRoquefort Celery Bulls\nCream Prlmrott Roquefort\nblend Cheese. Shape Into balls\nand roll In finely diced celery.\nChill the balls before serving.\nServe with salads.\nA Side Dish\nCelery stuffed with\nRoquefort Blend cream chaett\nls hard to beat for a salad accompaniment.\nPepper Prims\n_ cup Primrose cheese fUk\n_ tableipoom chill sauce\n34 teaspoon dry mustard\nVi cups flaked crab mtat\nt slices hot buttered toast\nDecorate   with    stuffed\nolives.\nAdd mustard and chill sauca to\nPrimrose  cheese   fish   sauce,\ncombine with flaked erab mtat\nSpread on hot buttered taut\nServe at one*,\nL-\u25a0\u25a0 _'J______\\ \u25a0 __v9_r_k'' \u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 ^ftc. J\n_,_t****^L-\\w     eWm_f      A   ___r\\\n\u25a0 '^                      1\n\u20221\n1\n^*r   if*                *\u25a0'' __\\*e_e\nWJL Sfi__Bfc^fe-H_rafSH& \/'-.   \u25a0--\u25a0 \u25a0 V\n,'\/^v ,        ^3fa               f*S_fWrf____&n\u25a0>___?\u25a0*&&\u00a3&\n%_^v_*f$_>_\nLtw      ^v               >Wd_\u00ab it_r__\nThe Wonder Dish is a cotiii of the M Mexican pottery stare. Thit actual photograph e\/ *\nttnatt parti) lable, with Mexican cloth, shows the wonder dish containing indivWual\ncMc\/{rn pol piei.\nOUT OFF COUPON RLOW-TAKE IT TO YOUR DEAUR TODAY!\nCOUPON - VALUE\nThe Dairy Pool\nHead Office\nSaskatoon, Sask.\nTake this coupon to your dealer,\nHe will give you a halt pound,\none pound, or two pound package\nof Primrose Brand Pasteurized\nCheese at hla regular price, leaa\n5 centa. This coupon must be\npresented to dealer before July\n30, 1940.\nNotice to Dealen Your Wholesaler\nwill accept this coupon at face value\nas payment for Primrose Pasteurized\nCheese purchases only, when the\nabove terms have been compiled with.\nAny other application constitutes\nfraud.\nB. C. AGENTS: ROSS MACDONALD & COMPANY, VANCOUVER\n_____________(__________\u25a0\n~____________\\\n Sponsored  by  Nekon\nppy:'L.iiipiiiiiii\u00abju,i,i mwimm[il'-mwmww**\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14.1Mfc-\n\u25a0\nMM  ILIVIN\nany\nLOCAL   GENERAL ELECTRIC  DEALERS\nTESTED RECIPES FROM THE\nDAILY PROVINCE MODERN\nKITCHEN\n(Clip them out for reference)\nPEANUT BUTTER COOKIE8\n1 cup shortening\n1 cup brown sugar\n1 cup white sugar\n1 teupoon vanilla\n1 icant teupoon baking toda\n1 cup peanut butter\n1 cup peanut butter\n2 cupa all-purpose- Hour\nCream shortening well and gradually add the sugar and continue to\ncream. Add peanut butter, well\nbeaten eggs tnd vanilla. Silt and\nmeasure flour and sift again with\nthe baking soda, and add to the\nOther Ingredients. Roll into a ball\nabout the size of a wallnut and\npress flat with a fork. Bake st 375\nto 400 F, using a double cookie\naheet for 12 to 15 minutes, or until\na delicate brown color. Do not remove from the cookie sheet until\n'   eold.\nVariation:\n1 cup chopped walnuts\nV, cup line oatmeal\nWhen using oatmeal omit Vt cup\ntf flour and proceed in the usual\n, maimer.       \t\nCHEESE SOUFFLE\n] tablespoons butter '\nt tablespoons flour\nVt cup scalded milk\nVt teupoon- salt\nFew grains pepper\n1 cup grated cheese\nMake a thick white aauce of the\nfirst five ingredients. Add the grated cheese and stir until melted, remove from fire and add well-beaten\ne-\" yolks. Cool mixture and fold\nitlffly-beaten egg whites. Turn Jito\ni b. '.tered baking dish place in a\npin of hot water and bake at 350 F.\nfor 45 minutes or until firm.\nAvoid opening oven door to murb\nand when souffle responds to pres-\naure test let st. .d with oven door\nopen tor about three minutes.\nMOCK MARSHMALLOW\nFR08TINQ\nt egg whites\n*l cup white corn syrup\nVt teaspoon vanilla\n\u2666 Pinch of salt\nPlace egg whites, corn syrup,\nTanilla and salt in a bowl, beat with\na rotary beater until stiff enough to\nhold Its shape. Spread on cake. This\nIs a delicious frosting for chocolate\ntake. \t\nSPICED   ORANGE  PASTRY\nFor  tart  shells,   French  pastry\n(hells, and single pie shells.\n3 cups sifted pastry flour\nVt teaspoon aalt\n1 teupoon nutmeg\n1 teaipoon baking powder\nJ\/3 cup shortening\n1\/3 cup butter\nGrated rind of 1 orange\n1 small egg\nI tablespoons orange Juice\n1 tablespoon lemon Juice\nVt cup chopped nuts\nSift and meuure flour and sift\n\u2022gain with the salt, baking powder\n\u2022nd nutmeg. Cut in shortening and\nbutter with a pastry blender. Beat\negg slightly and add fruit Juices,\ncut into shortening and flour mixture with the side of a spoon. Form\nInto a roll snd chill for one hour.\nBoll out about H inch thick and\nsprinkle with chopped nuts and roll\nvery lightly before cutting In de-\nlired shapes. Bake tart shells and\npie shells in a hot oven 400 F. for\n\u2022bout 15 to 20 minutei or until a\ncolden brown.\nCOFFEE CREAM  FILLING\nFOR   PIES\nS eggs, aeparated\n4 tablespoons cornstarch\n*_ teupoon salt\n2-3 cup sugar\n1 cup scalded milk\n1 cup strong coffee Infusion\n1 teupoon vanilla\n1 rounding tablespoon butter\nCombine dry ingredients well together. Beat egg yolks until light\n\u2022nd creamy, add dry ingredients and\nbeat well. Combine scalded milk\n\u2022nd coffee and stir into egg mixture. Cook ln the top of thevdouble\nboiler over boiling water stirring\nconstantly until thickened. Remove\nfrom the heat, add the vanilla and\nbeat ln the butter. Allow to cool\nbefore placing in a baked and cooled\npie shell.\nMake meringue for top of the\npie from egg whites, using 3 level\ntablespoons of sugar to each egg\nwhite. Brown meringue ln a hot\noven 375-400 F. for 3 to 5 minutes,\nor until a delicate brown.\nBAKED KOOTENAY SALMON\nFor best results, oily fish such u\n\u2022almon ahould be cooked in its\nown fat and without the addition\not water; it does not require basting u the skin stretches and will\nkeep its own shape without cracking or falling into pieces. All fish\nshould be rubbed Inside with salt\nStuff the cavity with a good dressing and sew the fish securely. Place\nln a very hot oven tor 15 minutes\nor until it begins to brown and then\nallow 10 minutes per pound up to 4\npounds and then allow 5 minutes\nfor each additional pound\nDRESSING   FOR  BAKED  FISH\n2 cps tine bread crumbs\nVt teaspoon salt\nVt teupoon pepper\n1 tablespoon finely chopped green\npepper\n1 medium onion, grated\ni teupoons poultry dressing\n2 tablespoons of finely chopped\nparsley\nVt cup grated raw carrot or 1 cup\nfinely chopped mushrooms\n2 tablespoons soft butter\nCombine all ingredients, lastly\n\u2022dd soft butter, blending well.\nServe baked fish with either of\nthe following sauces:\n2 tablespoons lemon Juice\n2 tablespoons butter\n2 tablespoons ot finely chopped\nparsley\n2 tablespoons of finely chopped\npickle\nCombine all Ingredients and heat\ntogether  to  the simmering  point\nPour over fish Just before serving\nor\nCUCUMBER  SAUCE\n1 teaspoon salt\nVt teupoon dry mustard\n5 tablespoons lemon Juice\n1 teupoon minced onion\n1 cup evaporated milk\n2 teupoons minced parsley\nVi cup finely diced cucumber\nMiss Ruth Hamlin (above), dietitian who will assist\nMrs. Henderson during the Vancouver Daily Province Modern Kitchen demonstrations.\nMix salt, mustard, lemon Juice\nand onion, and stir slowly into milk.\nJust before serving, add parsley and\ncucumber. Serve with fish.\nPUMPKIN WALNUT CAKE\n2-3 cup broken walnuts\nX'\/t cups all-purpose flour\n3 teaspoons baking powder\nVi teupoon baking soda\n1 teupoon cinnamon\n1 teupoon nutmeg\n. Vi teupoon salt\nVt teupoon ginger\nVt teupoon cloves\nVi teupoon mace\nVi cup shortening\nVi cup tine granulated sugar\n1 cup (lightly packed) brown\nsugar\n3 egg Tolks (or 1 egg and 1 yolk)\nVi cup sour milk\n2 teupoons vanilla\nVi cup canned or sieved drained\ncooked pumpkin\nSift and meuure flour and sift\nagain with the baking powder,\nsoda, salt and spices. Cream butter\nand gradually blend in sugar, add\negg yolks unbeaten one at a time\nbeating well after each addition.\nAdd half of the sifted dry ingredients alternately with the milk and\nthe lut half with pumpkin, combining well after each addition. Add\nvanilla and walnuts. Turn into two\nwell greued 9 inch layer pans and\nbake at 350 F. for SS minutes, or\ninto a 9 Inch square pan and bake at\n350 F. for 45 minutes.\nWILLOW POINT W.I.\nTALKS WELFARE WORK\nWILLOW POINT, B. C. \u2014 The\nMay meeting of the Women's Initltute wu held at the Institute\nHouse with 10 memben and two\nvisitors preient\nWelfare work wu dlsc-Hed and\ntwo members appointed to attend\nto It Flowers were sent to a patient ln hospital and a new arrival\nwill receive a small gift\nMn. B. Townshend, Secretary for\nthe Red Cross, in her monthly report said 14 bed gowns, nine pair\nof pillow cues, one dozen bed pads,\n35 pain ot socks and a sum \"\nmoney bad been sent in.\nThree memben who attended the\nreception given Mrs. Watt ln Nelson reported. Mn. J. C. Campbell\nread the message from Queen Mary,\nMn. D Horrigan and Mrs. E. H. H.\nApplewhaite gave a few remarks\non the dinner and Mn. Watts'\naddress.\nMn. C. Shannon won the flower'\ncontest arranged by Mn. Applewhaite. Tea hostesses were Mrs.\nDaymon and Mrs. Learmonth.\nKaslo I.O.D.E.\nPlanning Parade\nKASLO, B. C. - At th* May\nmeeting of the Mth Battalion Chapter, I. O. D. E., the Regent, Mn. E.\nH. Latham, presided, 18 memben\nbeing present\nMrs. D. J. Barclay, Secretary,\ngave a fine monthly report u did\nthe Treasurer, Miss K. M. Strait\nMn. F. S. Rouleau reported' for\nthe Girl Guides and Miss Daphne\nChandler for the Brownies. Mn.\nM. C. T. Percival gave a short account of the Cubs' activities.\nIn the absence ot the letter writing convener, Miss Elizabeth Gieg\nerich, her report wu given by the\nRecent Mlu Alice Augustine who\nvolunteered to act for Min-Giegerich.\nCorrespondence Included reports\nfrom the Provlnclil Chapter annual\nmeeting, the Provincial War Work\nConvener,' etc. The War Charltlei\nAct registration certificate had arrived. Mrs. Rouleau stated Girl\nGuides were undertaking Oe canvass for leather.\nStandard word copies ot \"O, Canada\" were supplied the memben\nby the Empire Study convener, Mn.\nJohn Patenon. Owing to pressure of\nbusiness at this meeting Miss S.\nKydd suggested that her Empire\nStudy paper be read at the June\nmeeting, this wu (greed to.\nChain teas were progressing u\nwere the private small bridge parties the special and general funds\nbeing materially aided by these at-\nfalrt. Mn. Frank Stead, Provincial\nPreiident, wu chosen to represent\nthis Chapter at the National I. 0.\nD. E. convention. By \u2022 standing\nvote th*. memben expressed their\npleuur* that their Repent had been\nelected ta the B. C. Provincial I O.\nD. X. executive committee.\nIt wu decided to hold \u2022 rummage\nsale early ln June, Mesdames McCartney, Lockard and~John P\u00bbter-\nson bung the committee in charge\nof all arrangements.\nThe Regent wai authorized to\nmake arrangement- for an I. O.\nD. B. \u00abnd Girl Guide parade to St\nMark's Church May *\u00bb.\nOne sew member wu elected.\nRefreshments were ierved the\nhostesses were, Mesdames C. Lind,\nT. H. Horner, E. Singel and Miss S.\nKydd.\nFamous Favourites\nIn the \"Province\" Modem Kitchen In NILSON\nCROWN BRAND\nCORN SYRUP\nTha   great   energy   food\nwith tbe delicious fltvour.\nBENSON'S\nCORN STARCH\nCanada's choice for over\nyetr*.\nMAZOLA\nThe Ideal  Selad and\nCooking OIL\nProducts of THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited\nBUY NATIONALLY ADVERTISED FOOD\nPRODUCTS \u2014THEY'RE BETTER\nCOOK BY ONE OF THE TWO\nModern Methods\n\u2022 With Electricity\ne With Qos\nTwo municipally owned utilities enable the\nCity of Nelson to offer you your choice in\nmodernizing your home. Cook with gas or electricity, and you will be amazed at the extra\ntime you have to yourself and the extra convenience It affords.\nThere Is economy too. Let us show you the\nparticulars.\nThe City of Nelson\nDo ol Mrt. Henderson Does-\nMAKE SIMS\nYour Food\nHeadquarters\nAttend each session of t+ie modern kitchen and\nwatch Wednesday's paper for Cooking School\nspecials.\n_-_HOtrom_ luuroa-tut agetkrtttjr.\nEnsures better remits every time\u2014make*\nmeals mora delicious.    Hl-st>ee- Calrod\nelement coin Guaranteed tor Three Tears,\nTm can choose from a wMa Mac* at\nmodels, prices nom \u00ab!*.\u00bb op.\nicture of a\n\u2014nw too money on t <\ncurrent\u2014ead  upkeep.    B-St__\nPlsn on Thrift Unit,   lee tha Mlf\nnew models wit* oil the most mod?\"\ntores... new priced as low atjITMO\nlat*\nShe's completely in love with her\nHotpoint Range that makes her\ncook book come true\u2014with her\nGeneral Electric Refrigerator that\nguards the goodness of food and\nevery day pays its way in savings.\nThe whole familv eniovs better living at less cost,\nG-E Appliances will win your heart,\ntoo. You'll love the magic way in\nwhich they help you to prepare\nmore delicious meals. And you'll\nspeed up your housework, with the\nG-E Washer, Ironer and Cleaner.\nThey make child's play of household tasks. Decide right now to\n\"live electrically.\"\nA wide range of 1940 G, E. appliances is now on display at our store. -Oi_\"H\nfind that they are smart in appearance\u2014modern in features\u2014low in price\n\u2014\u00abnd easy to own on terms to suit your budget.\n\u00ab-\u25a0 WASim \u2014 It's tun to wask eMbea\nwith a General Eeetrio Washes It sMs\ndrudgery and gives you more tree Wtt*.\nBans on laundry bllls-makaa clothes last\n' iger. AU models hav* tamooa G-K\nflv.tor.   Priced 1mm jre.96. \u00bb\nlances\n0-1 OUWIU - Speed, to Jw\"****\"*-\nKeep your run dean and tresh as n*w.\nNew \u2022\u2022Air-Flo\" Cleaner (right, deans rugfc\nfloors, upholstery and drapes. ComWet*\nwith attachments, onlylMSO, OUur\nmodels priced aa low as W8J50,\nSee These Q.E. Appliances at the Province Cooking School\nUSED EXCLUSIVELY BY MRS. MARGARET HENDERSON\nNELSON ELECTRIC COMPANY\n574 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 260\nNELSON, B. C.\n\u2022**----*\u25a0\u25a0 -\u2022\u25a0\u2022- - ---'- \u2014-*- - -Si\n\t\ns,\n mmmmmmmvmm^^\nAat TWELVE\n-NELION DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1940,-\nSchool Brings Wealth of New Recipes to Interior Housewives\nWorld's Future\nMothers'Charge\nSays Mr. Hopka\n\"Upon tht mothen... rests largely the rehabilitation Of society.\"\nThus declared Rtv. E. Hopka, Pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church\nSunday evening in a special Mothers' Day address to a well-filled\nchurch. Basing hli remark! on Proverbs 31:25-30, and speaking on the\n\u25a0 \"Characteristics of a Good Mother\",\nMr. Hopka concluded his remarks\nWith then words:\n\"We cannot but appeal, in the\nfact ot the declining homes ot modern society and the sad economic\nconditions of our dty, to tht mothers ot this generation. Upon then,\nthough they may not realize lt, and\nyet I believe it Is true, rests largely\nthe rehabilitation of society. The\nnext feneration will bt what the\nmothers ot this generation shape\nthem to be. Someone hu said: 'The\nfuture of society ls ln the hands ot\ntht mothen. If tht world waa lost\nthrough woman, ihe alone can save\nB\n\"When Napoleon, alarmed at the\nmoral degeneracy of his day ind\nfrightened it the economic conditions, wu uked, 'What does France\nused most?', he answered: 'Motli-\nen.' So do we. It the mothers of\nthis generation were like Hannah\nin pioty and like Solome, the moth-\n1\u00ab of Junes and John, in spiritual\nAUbltlon for their children, the\nSpverty, the injustice, the crime\n\u2022nd vice of this generation would\nbt almost wholly lacking ln the\nntxt.\"\n{In tht morning lervict attention\nlllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllliliillliillllll\nI * \"BvU B. C. Payrolls\"\nI   \":\nUsed It\nOver 3\nYears\nwu directed to tbe festival ot Fen.\ntecoit, which alio occurred on thii\nSunday. The putor based hii remark! on John 14:23-31. Hla topic\nwu the \"Menage of the Christian's\nPtntecoit\"\nCHRISTIAN DUTY\nTOWARD GOVERNMENT\nA regulir feature of tbt evening\nservices for some time hu been tht\nhalt hour at Bible Study. For Sunday the passage in Romans IS: 1-7\nwu taken up. Thli deals with the\nChristian'! estimate of and duty toward Government. The pastor\nstressed that the apostle here\nteaches that Government of no kind\nIs possible unlets supported by tha\nstrong arm . t God, that 111 Governments exist by God's will only,\nthat Governments are for the curbing of evil and tht praise of them\nthat do well. Because of these tacts,\ntht apostle Insist! that Christians\nmuit be subject to those Government! thtt hive Jurisdiction ovtr\nthem. Thii they must do not only\nfor the take of wrath, tor fear of\nthe punishment that should be met\ned out to them, but also for con.\nscience' sake. The C'-ristlan'i conscience, guided by God's word,\nclearly tells him that Governments\nire divinely Instituted and that God\ndemuds obedience to its demands.\nAll resistance to the divinely ordained powers, all subversive activities, all half-hearted service, especially whtn the country Is in danger, ls resistance against the ordinance of God, is sin, he declared.\nAnd this sin, If persisted in, will\nlead to loss ot the Christian faith\nand position u surely as will any\nother sin lt continued in. The putor stated that this clearly is the\nteaching of the Bible, and hence\nalso, that of the Lutheran Church\nrepresented by St. John's Lutheran\nChurch ln this city. Christians must\nbe loyal subjects, or they cannot be\nChristians.\nSIRDAR\n*%Ay* family has used Pacific\nMilk for over three years\nrtow,\" writes Miss E. E. H\u201e\n'find we have always found it\nt| be dependable and wholesome for the children, cooking\nand general use. The air-tight\ncan assures its goodness and\nkeeps the milk pure and\nsweet.\"\nI*\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated snd Vacuum Packed\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimi\nSIRDAR, B.C.-J. S. Wilion viiited ln tht East Kootenayi.\nMr. and Mn. Oftner ot Wynndtl\nvisited here.\nCtrl Ltvezello viiited Creiton.\nVito Cirnevelli viilted Creiton.\nWilliam Gilchrilt tnd Clarence\nTedlord visited here.\nMr. Wiltit of Arrow Creek viilted here.\nMr. and Mn. Joe Koliman ind\nfamily viilted Creston.\nJ. S. Wilson and son Charles\nviiited Creiton.\nMri. I. Martin viiited Creston.\nMrs. H. McLaren of Creston visited here.\nMr. Cird of Kimberley and Mr.\nWebber of Nelson visited htrt.\nMn. Tktchuk visited Creston.\nJoe Manmrino visited Creston.\nLouis Sillies was at Nelson for\nan X-ray examination of his shoulder which he injured in a bicycle\naccident\nA. S. H. Deverson ot Crawford\nBay viiited here.\nKenneth Wallace ot Boiwell viaited here.\nJohn Andenon ot Kuskanook wu\ni visitor htrt.\nMn. Balog of Nelson il visiting\nit Wuhout Creek.\nMn. Chirles Nelson hss returned\ntrom a visit at Calgary.\n\/cme.\nTHE FLAVOR MAN\nSAVH YOU MORE THAN HALF\n, And provide* I Flavor tor every household ute, Baking, Candy,\n, let Cream, Jelly, and refreshing Fruit Punch for Dances, Picnics,\n1    Baaaars, Banquets, ind Household use.\ni Thert It no mystery tbout LOVES. No ilight-of-hand tricks\nbrought up from the dirk agee. They are stronger\u2014that, all, so\nyou uie leas and their strength saves you money.\nVANILLIX\n|    A US bottlt of Vanlllex hu tht flavor value of IS five-cent bottles\nof Artificial Vanilla. You uve mort thtn 84%.\nI:        WUl of t Western MP. says: \"Your* li thl best Vanilla\nI hava tvtr used.\"\nCARAMEL\nC-nuod replao- Vanilla for tvtry purpose and gives a richer,\ntastier result to your cakes, puddings, etc. It Is also 80% cheeper\nthan Artificial Vanilla.\nA Boiaievain, Manitoba, woman writes: \"Thi Cinmel flavoring I tried todty ll very deliclouil\"\nALMOND\nAlmond Flavor makes t Me quality of Almond Parte for 18 cents per\npound. Again you save more thin 50%.\nA New York denttotl wife writes: \"Every womin in the\nU.S.A. would wint \u25a0 bottlt of your Almond If It were\nivtlliblt.\"\nMAM.IX\nMakes t tint quality of Syrup it iht lowest cost ever offered tn\ntny mirket It ls also fine for cakes, puddings, sauce, candy, Ice\ncream, tte.\nA Toronto woman Mjn: \"My ftmlly like It bitter thin tha\nml thing.\"\nJAMAICA\nA teaspoonful (costing 2 cents) hu tht full flavor value of a\ncupful of Rum (coating $1,001 tn cakes, puddings, sauce, mince\nmeat rum and butter tirta, and candy. Strictly speaking it is Artificial Rum, for lt contains no alcohol to cook out.\nA Keewatin woman writes: \"Your Jamaica surely makes a\nchocolate oaka tuta wonderful.\"\nLIME RICKEY\nThis ls a fine true Lime Flavor, slightly mellowed with Lemoft, and\nproduces one of the finest beverages at a cost of 20 cents for 32\ndrinks. Orangemade made from Love's Orange figures at the same\ncost and Grape. Cherry. Passion Fruit Rasp\/berry, Loganberry and\nStrawberry slightly higher\u2014one cent per glass!\nLOVE has turned the tide for better flavore and more variety.\nYeiterday you took what you could get, but at last it's\nANY FLAVOR \u2014 ANY TIME\nAsk your Dealer fint, but Insist on the genuine. If he can not\ngive you what you want write direct. We will mall at 86c per\nbottle, or 3 for $1.00. Equal to a pint ot good extract.\nLOVI \u2014 THE FLAVOR MAN\n62-68 Lombard St. Toronto, Ont.\nMra, Margaret Hendenon, who conduct! the Vancouver Dally\nProvince Cooking School uses and highly recommends LOVE'S for\nall flavoring purposes.\nCULINARY ART NOW\nA MODERN SCIENCE\nEat Well \u2014But Eat Wisely.\nProtect Your Family*s Health\nby Planning Balanced Meals\nWith 'Known' Food Products.\nOnly Nationally Advertised\nBrands Are Used by Mrs.\nHenderson in Daily Province\nModern Kitchen. Purchase\nYour Own Foods With Confidence\u2014Be Sure to Specify\nEach Product by Name.\nIn ntw \"um\nagain\" .jar I.\nLsrgs sin Ms-\nson jsr tops fit\nthem perfectly.\nIt's Thrifty IN TWO WAYS\nWhen you buy McColl's you get the full rich flavor of frtih\nroasted peanuts. It's flavour perfect peanut butter\u2014peanut\nbutter ii it should be. In addition tht \"use again\" jars\u2014^vith\nwide top and straight tidei are grand tor use for canning\nlater on. Large size Maion caps fit theie new jars perfectly.\nYou certainly get better value all round when you buy Mc-\nColl'i Peanut Butter.\nCranbrook Relief\nCoits Decrease\nC-tANBBOOK, B. C.-The April\nreport of tht city Worki Department to the City Council showi I\ndrop in the cost of relief administration over the previous month, with\nH msrried persons and their 134\ndependents, 24 single persons and 10\nChinese issued direct relief ind\nfour married persons with six dependents and thirteen single persons issued city aid. costing $1662.45,\ncity's share $332.49 against $1717.55\nwith the city's share $343.51 for\nMarch. Two married penons with\ntwo dependents were issued provincial direct relief.\nStreet and general work reported\nincluded: repairs on city streets to\nthe extent of available asphalt I\nf.eneral clean-up of garbage from\nanes, continuation of sub-surface\ndrainage system on the South side\nof Edwards Street and connections\nto the storm sewer trom Armstrong\nAvenue on the East side to tht\nlane on the West side.\nTREES PLANTED IN PARKS\nThe new bungalows at the City\nTourist Camp were completed and\nthe camp opened May 1. Trees and\nshrubs numbering; 200 were planted\nin the notary Park, Biker Pert and\nat the new cemetery. A new nursery bed of 600 trees and shrubs wm\nplanted ln Baker Park.\nEight building permits were it-\nsued it estimated value of $2871.\nEleven arrivals and ten departures\nwere made at the city airport Construction of the addition to the City\nHall is nearing completion.\nGreenwood W. I.\nPlans Banquet\nTlte monthly meeting ot tht\nGreenwood Women's Institute WU\nhtld In tht Institute Hill on tht\nevening-of Hup t.\nThe Youth Recreational Committee rtporttd that trnngementi tor\ntht boys* clubroom wtrt progreu-\nIng. Tht Director! reported that\nseveril successful Siturdiy night\ndances had bttn htld. It wu decided thit owing to othtr ictlvltiu\nthese dincei not bt htld tor t tlmt,\nNo chirge, It WU decided, will.\nbt mide for use ot tht hill by the\nRed Crou Society for lta general\nmeeting.\nTht Initltute pirns on holding its\nmnuil banquet on Mty IS ind\nMrs. R. B. Wallace was delegated\nto mike irringementi tor It\nAfter the busintit meeting, Rav\nW. ChiilU give in iddrtn on\n\"Sanity ln Wartime,\" stressing thi\nneed for calmness in the tut of\nadversity.\nMn. W. Frits tnd Mri. T. Culley\nacted at tea hostesses.\nNew Denver Y.P.\nHas Concert, Dance\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-The New\nDenver Young People's Society hel(\nt concert and dance ln Boiun Htll.\nFriday- Tht proceed! ot the evening\ngo towards Bosun Htll improvements. Tht hall wu well filled,\nmany attending from Silverton,\nSandon and Rosebery.\nThe program for the evening consisted Ot entertainment (caturei\ntaken from their varioui activities\nduring thl year. Pruident J. Dowling gave an interesting address on\nthe Young Peoplei Society, thtlr\nalmi ind activities. Tht following\nwu the progrim, L. R. Campbell,\nHonorary Preiident chairman:\nBallet Danct by groupi one; Melodrama, Pocahantai, by group two;\nTelephone Speech, Monologue, by\nB. DuMont; Shadon play, Major\nOperation, by group two; Melodrama, Supreme Sacrifice, roup\ntwo; Radio group thrtt, followed by\ntn amateur hour ot muilcal number!, songs and instrumental pieces;\nMinstrel Show, by group ont tnd i\ndialogue No Trains Today by group\ntwo. After the concert a dance wu\nenjoyed, music being supplied by\nthe member! of the young Peoplei\nSociety-\nNAKUSP DANCE TO AID\nDELEGATE TO NELSON\nNAKUSP, BC.\u2014A young pto-\nple'i dince In the Smill Htn wu\nsponsored by the Anglican Young\nPeoples Association. Proceed! tre\nto be spent in sending a delegate\nto the Youth Conference to be htld\nln Nelson this month.\nThe hall was decorated for the\noccasion with blut tnd white\nstreamers ind evergreens.\nHot dogt ind coffee were ierved.\nKASLO GUIDES PASS\nFIRE BUILDING TESTS\nKASLO. B.C.-At I Olrl Guide\nmeeting, nearly all the glrli wtrt\nluccesiful in tht flrt building tests.\nOnt member received htr second\ndiss bidge. Winnie Palmer, Gladys\nGopp, Mary Jo McHardy, Helga\nAugustine and Marian Tlnkeii wtrt\nchoien to attend the Olrl Guide\nSill; in Nelson. They will bt accompanied by Gulden Mn. t. S.\nRouleiu, Mn, J. Syddal ind Miss\nAlice Augustine.\nA signalling game, conducted by\nMiu Eloise Little, provtd interesting. Othtr gamei wtrt played.\nCRAWFORD BAY LADIES\nPUN TIA AT SPORTS\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C.-A meeting ot thl church helpers wai held\ntt the homt of Mn. Fiiher. It wss\ndecided to serve afternoon tea on\nchildren's iports day, June 7. Mrs.\nBrundrlt and Mra. McLauchlan\noffered to attend to it\nThe sum of $2.80 was received\nfrom guild chut Mri. Francis told\nof in interesting incident of the\nKing tnd Queens visit to Canida.\nTea wu ierved by Mrs. Fisher, as-\nlisted by Miss Lytle.\nPOLICI RECOVER (1044\nSTOLEN PROPERTY\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-The rtport\nof the City ot Cranbrook detach*\nment of the Provincial Pclice tor\nApril slid thtt $1066 worth ot property wu reported lost or itolen\nwith $1046 of thii recovered.\nFlvt criminal complaint! wtrt\nmade, with three culminating successfully and no result! from two.\nProsecutions in police court totalled\nnine, all resulting in convictions,\nranging from intoxication to reckless driving. Finea and colli collected were $84.50, and tlmt served wu\ntwo month! and twenty-one dayi.\nPetty complaints covered family\ntrouble!, milting children, missing\nhusband, damaged bicycle, poisoned\ndog, and molestation.\nThirty-two transients wtre checked tnd warned, lix drunks wtrt\nordered off tht street tnd ont flrt-\ncall attended.\nA cast of breaking and entering\nwu solved ind an arrest mtdt.\nAn increase ln tht number of\ntransients pissing throttgh wti noted in the report.\nMOYIE, B. C.-SI Piter's mtm-\nbers organized a Catholic Woman-\nLeague. Mrs. R. A. Smith wu elected President and Mrs. Frank Mulat\nSecretary-Treasurer. Rtv. rather\nFlynn presided at tht meeting.\nStill the best\nfor flavor\nBLUE RIBBON\nCOFFEE\nVacuum packed to retain\nall lta itrength, flavor\nand aroma by the mott\nmodern equipment.\nRecently Inttalled cooler\nasaurea greater uniformity and satisfaction.\nTry Blut Ribbon Coffee\nand Tta Thit Week!\nTEA\nStraight from tbe pli-U-\ntlon\u00bb to our wartbeOH .. \u2022\nInspected, cleaned, blinded,\nte popular tut*.\n\u2022 Packed in\nVANCOUVER\nA Piano of Charm\nJHsl WaiswuL\nMADE BY\nSHERLOCK-MANN1NG\nStyle \"Moderne\" is an instrument of charm and quality throughout, hai\n7 1-3 octaves; made from choice materials; has all constructional features\nfound in the large upright piano. We commend it to those who, not only\nwish t musical Instrument of merit, but who desire a piano to harmonize\nwith present day furnishings.\nDimensions:.\nHeight\u201435 Vi inches\nWidth\u201456 inches\nDepth\u201423 Vz inches\n7 1-3 Octaves\nConstruction Features:\nFull steel bronzed frame\nTri-chord overstrung scale\nSpruce sound board and ribs\nCopper wound strings\nFive ply laminated maple pin block\nPost back\nCase double veneered inside and out\nI\nFinishes\nWalnut in art, two-tone art, satin and polish.\nAlso in colors as desired at small\nMahogany in satin polish,\nadditional cost.\nPrice $360.00\nTRADE-INS ACCEPTED BALANCE\u2014EASY TERMS\n-   See It Today in Our Showroom\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 laker St.\nm-*m-mm\nPhone 260\nNelton, I. C.\n__-___t,.-JLy,.. aat. ,l...*X--Ui_,i__i____________m j\n lanager Leo Durocher Bats Dodgers\no Series Victory\nBy The Associated Press\nThre* leaders in each league.\nGABRH Pet.\n\u2022verlll, Tigers 15 43 6 21 .(88\nlanning, Giants 18 73 11 29 387\nfright, White Sox 21 87 14 S4 .391\nadcliHe, Browns 21 87 12 33 .379\nttdwlck. Cardinals 15 87 12 25 373\nlustlne, Pirates . 11 43 8 16 .372\nHome runs:\nAmerican League\u2014Trosky, Indies, 7; National League\u2014Mire, Car-\nInals, 9.\nBuns batted In:\nAmerican League\u2014Foxx, Red Sox\n7; National League \u2014 Lombardi,\nteds, 20; Mite, Cardinals, 20.\nNelson Cricket\nEleven Defeats\nTrail-Rossland\nEntertaining a mixed eleven ot\ntrill and Rowland cricketers, Nel\nton made a victorious home debut\nli the Recreation Grounds Sunday\nsfternoon by piling up 120 runs ln\none Innings agalnit 112 by the vlt\n[tors in two.\nTRAIL-R08SLAND\nFIRST INNINGS\nE. Bourchier, c Barwls, b Main 17\nJ. Balnes, c Bowkett, b Deacon   5\n0. Fitter, c Spencer, b Main ...  0\nD. Colli, b Main   4\n\"ptnctr, b Main  o\nChambers, b Barwii   5\nhei Jr\u201e b Barwls  0\nSantano, b Parker  \u201e.. 12\nSowther, b Bowkett  10\nenson, lbw b Main     1\nWhitehead, not out    3\nExtras        9\nTotals 88\nNelaon Bowling analysis:\n0 M R W\nMain      8  3 17   4\nDawson   \"2  0  9  0\nDeECon    2  0 14   1\nBarwis  8  0 12   2\nParker     2  0  6   1\nBowkett  8  15   1\nNELSON INNINGS\nH. Parker, c Benson, b Whitehead 30\nA. Parker, b J. Balnes   1\nR. Main, b Benson 11\nC. W. P. Wtrviss, b Benson __ 0\n\u25a0 Bowkett, b Baines    0\n8. Dawson, c and b Benson  88\nO. A. Brabazon, b Benson 10\nS. F. Deacon, Wt out 1\nT. Smith, c Chambers, b Benson   1\nCortield, c Chambers, b Benson  0\nJ. D. Yeatman, b Benson    2\nExtra*   6\nTotal _ 120\nTRAIL-ROSSLAND\nBOWLING ANALYSIS\nOMR W\n13   1 31   2\n13   1 33   7\n4 0 11   0\n5 0 26   1\n1   0 10   0\n3. Bains*  _\t\n; Benson\t\nI Bouchier  _\t\nI Whitehead\t\n| Chambers \t\nTRAIL-ROSSLAND\n\u2022ECOND INNINGS\n.Whitehead, c Smith, b Parker    1\nBenson, c Barwis, b Parker     4\nSpencer, c and b Bowkett      1\nColls, c Cortield, b Parker     1\nKtier, not out        41\nBarnes, c Cortield, b Main      1\nTowther, stumped Brabazon, b\nParker ._     4\nTotal   86\nNELSON  BOWLING\nANALYSIS\nOMR W\nBowkett    4  0   6   1\nBarker   7 0 26 4\nDeacon     3  0 12   0\nBarwis     2 0  8  0\n\"\"\"\u2022to    3   0 10   1\n)ver Philadelphia\nNew York Sweeps\nSeries With the\nBees\nCINCY, CARDS TIE\n__ 14-INNING DRAW\nBy The Canadian Prau\nEffective relief pitching by Lefty\nVito Tamuiis and a batting exhibition led by Manager Leo Durocher\nwith four hits brought Brooklyn\nDodgers a 6-3 triumph over Philadelphia Phillies today ln the decide\ning contest of their three-game National League series.\nTha Dodgers took charge of the\ngame in the last of the fifth with\nthree runs on Durocher. double, a\nwalk, Dixie Walker's lingle and\nBabe Phelps triple. Tamuiis held\nthe Phils scoreless for tha last four\nframes and got credit tor his flnt\ndecision of the year.\nNew York Giants made their hits\ncount ln beating Boston Bees 11-6\nfor their sixth straight victory \u00bbnd\na clean sweep of their three-game\nseriei.\nTHREE FOR MIZE\nStarting lata becauie no umplrei had been asilgnad to the\ngame, the Redi and th* Cards\nbattled ts a 14-lnnlng 8-8 tie before darkness cut short a SL Louis\nhitting attack featuring three\nhoma rum by Johnny Mis* and\nona by Jo* Orengo.\nPour Cardinal hurlen and five\nCincinnati pitchers took part In\nth* 27-hlt marathon which, delayed 29 minutes until Umpire Larry\nGoetz coultt be called from a day\noff at homt, continued three houri\n\u25a0nd 36 minutei.\nMize clouted' his first homer ln\nthe second and a two-run blow in\nthe third off Johnny Vander Meer,\non the mound (or the first time this\nyear. He hit his third\u2014and ninth\nof the season\u2014off relief hurler Milt\nShoffner in the 13th to give his\nmates a momentary advantage.\nThe Reds came right back in their\nhalf with a pinch-hit double and a\nalngle, to tie the game ln Its final\nknot.\nYoung Johnny Hutchlngs relieved\nVandy in the fourth after the double\nno-hlt star fed another circuit smash\nto Orengo and a single to his opposing moundsman, starter Mort\nCooper.\nOnly.three garnet were scheduled\nln the National League and none in\nthe American League.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON, Miy 13 (CP.-Cable)-\nR&sult3 of soccer games played in\nthe United Kingdom today follow\nSOUTH \"A\":\nNorwich 3, Southend 2.\nSOUTH \"B\":\nFulham 6, Reading 3.\nSOUTH \"C\":\nMillwall 0, Arsenal 2.\nPortsmouth 1, West Ham 1.\nSOUTH \"D\":\nBrighton 2. Aldershot 3.\nCrystal Palace 2, Queen's Park 2.\nMIDLAND:\nLuton 3, Northampton 2.\nWolverhampton S, Welt Bromwlch\nEAST midland:\nNotts Forest 1, Grimsby 1.\nWEST:\nManchester 6, Crewe 2.\nPort Vale 8, New Brighton 0.\nWrexham 3, Manchester U 2.\nTranmere 5, Stoke 1.\nNORTHWEST:\nBlackpool 11, Oldham 2.\nSouthport 1, Bolton 8.\nSOUTHWEST:\nCardiff 4, Newport 1.\nPlymouth 4, Bristol R 1.\nSwansea 6, Bristol C 2.\nSCOTTISH WEST:\nAirdriconlans 4, St. Mirren 2.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. I. C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1940a\nNELSON EDGES OUT\nWIN OVER TRAIL,\nC.Y.O. SOFTBALL\nComing trom behind on two occasions, the NeUon Junior C.Y.O.\nboy softballers took an exciting\n10-9 decision from Trail Junior\nC.Y.O. at the Recreation Grounds\nSunday afternoon.\nNelson grabbed all the extra\nbase hitting honors, Mickey Prestley and Jimmy Eccles slamming out\nhomers and Rev. Edward Doyle a\ndouble, besides two other hits.\nScore by innlngi:\nTrail*  401 000 400- 9\nMelton    012 300 4Ox-10\nLineups follow:\nTrail\u2014Tino Magliano rf, F. Angerelli 3b, L. Tognotti lb, A. Tog-\nnotti ss, G. Pittao if. B. Baldassi c,\nC. Costanza p, E. Gri 2b and R. Ius\nef.\nNelson\u2014Louis Gagnon 2b, Barney\nPrestley c, A. Arnott lb, Jimmy\nEccles ss, Kohart 3b, Uchaecz et\nFrocklage p, Mickey Prestley It\n\u2022nd'Father Doyle rf.\nArmstrong, Jenkins\nFight on July 17\nDALLAS, Tex., May 13 (AP)-\nFred Browning, who owns Lew Jenkins' contract, said tonight that Jenkins' fight with Henry Armstrong\nhas been set definitely for July 17\nln one of the New York baseball\nparks.\n\u2022Jenkins, of Sweetwater, Tex., who\nbecame New York lightweight\nchampion by virtue of a Knockout\nover Lou Ambers, and his manager,\nHymie Caplin, are scheduled to arrive here Wednesday.\nBrowning, who returned from\nNew York today, uid the tight\nwould be approved by tha New\nYork Boxing Aiiociation tomorrow.\nNATIONAL\nSt Louis    I   11  1\nCincinnati   8  14  1\n(14 innings, darkness).,\nCooper, Davis, Shoun, Russell and\nPadgett, Deltncey; Vander Meer,\nHutchlngs, Riddle, Shoffner, Bebbs\nand Lombardi.\nPhiladelphia  3    7   1\nBrooklyn  - ____  6   112\nPearson and Warren, Atwood;\nCasey, Tamuiis and Phelps.\nNew York    U  10  I\nBoston   ..    5    11  2\nVandenberg, Gumbert and Danning; Sullivan, Lamanna, Javery,\nCallahan, Bamlcle, Earley and Lopez, Mail.\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse  __.... \u201e,.. 3 9 9\nMontreal _  \u201e..:...  2  7  6\nKlelnhans and Bottarinl; Crouch,\nRachunck and Berger, Chervlnko.\nJersey City   8  13 J\nRochester     4  12  0\nFeldman and Blaemlre; Templeton, McLaughlin, Roe tnd Mueller.\nBaltimore ...,...\u201e   4  6  4\nToronto  _  _.. 6 7 2\nLauensteln,   Trinkle   and   Red-\nmond; Relninger and Gray.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nLousvllle    2    7   4\nKansas City  6 11  1\nRich. Parmalee, Nahem and Lacy;\nLindell and Dephllllps.\nIndianapolis   4  12 0\nMilwaukee    7   18   1\nWolfe, Bauers, Wilson and Weit;\nMakosky and Garbark.   \u25a0\nW.K. High School\nTennis Tourney in\nTrail on June 9\nBRAKE RELINING\nWa have tht proper machinery\nfor rtgrlndlng brake shoes.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 BAKER ST.     NELSON, B. C.\nMany Turn Out for\nOpening Tennis at\nLakeview on Sunday\nThe courts of the Lakeview Tennis Club were taxed to capacity on\nopening day Sunday as the players\nwere greeted by warm weather. A\nlarge number were also out Monday and for the rest of the week\nthe courts will be open to the public.\nTrinity, St. Paul's in\nChurch Softball Today\nTwo games are again scheduled\nat the Junior High this evening in\nthe Nelson Church Softball League\nat 5:30 this evening. In the boys'\nloop St. Paul's and Trinity will\nmeet, while the girls of the same\ntwo churches will play on another\ndiamond.\nRecord Marks Made in\nWeight-Lifting Event\nVANCOUVER, May 13 (CP) -\nTwo new Canadian and four British Columbia marks were claimed\nby Vancouverites at the Western\nCanada Weightlif ting championships\nhere over the weekend.\nBill Youag In the 132 pound diss\nexceeded by three pounds his own\nDominion two-hand \"snatch\" mark\nof 174*A pounds md Run Lewen-\ndon in the light-heavyweight class\nbeat by four pounds the 220 pound\nCanadian \"snatch\" record established by Gerard Miehiud of Quebec.\nLewendon beat by five pounds\nthe British Columbia \"press\" record\nof 200 pounds established by Harry\nHickman of Vancouver and exceeded by 12 pounds the Provincial\n\"clean and Jerk\" mark of 286\npounds. The latter was set by Stan\nMorley of Vancouver.\nJimmy Lowe, featherweight,\nclaimed a new mark of 160 poundi\nIn the press\u201412 poundi over the\nexisting British Columbia record set\nby Ed Chow of Vancouver.\nDoug Bell at 148% claimed the\nfourth Provincial record by pressing 175*14 pounds and exceeding by\n.\">\", pounds the old mirk establish\ned by Bill Doherty of Vancouver.\nUnder the auspices of the Wett\nKootenay Tennis Aesociatlon, teami\nrepresenting the High Schools ot\nthe West Kootenay will play tor a\ntrophy posted by the Association\non the Trail and Tldtnic court*\nJune 9.\nEach team will consist of at least\nfour boya and two girls, and mutt\nsupply an entry In the glrli' doubles, one in tht mixed doubles, on*\nin the glrli' singles, thre* lh the\nboys' singles ind two in th* boys'\ndoubles.\nThe method of playdowns will be\ndecided by the number of teams\nentered. If four teams are entered\nthey will play off In brackets. If\nthree teams play a round robia\nseries will be conducted, and If two\nteams compete the two schedules\nwill be doubled. In this way every\nplayer will get four matchei.\nIt was decided that the tournament would be held in Trail lince\nthere would be lesi of a transportation problem than It it were held\nIn Nelson.\nAmong the regulations drawn up\nby A. M. Cheater 0. Trail, Association Secretary, I* that no person\ncan plsy more than two matches in\none round.\nJ. A. Stewart Is the NeUon representative of the -Association.\nReno Goes Wild\nas Beats Queen\nChallenge Ball\nSALMO, B. C. March 1S-H an\nambitious bunch ot baseballen trom\nthe Queen mine didn't win a challenge gam* at th* Salmo Ball Park\nSunday afternoon and as a result\npartake of the victors' share ot tht\nspoils at stake, they at least accomplished something that won't\nbe forgotten around these parts tor\na long time.\nThey were on the very short end\nof a 22-10 final score, but that was\nbeside the point In one Inning, the\nthird, a nightmare to a big crowd\nof Queen supporters, Archie Mac-\nDougall's crew blew higher'n a kite\nas they watched 17 Reno runners\ncross the plate before the third out\nwas made. That definitely clinched\nthings then and there, and dispelled\nany misgivings the Renoltes had\nwhen they were down 4-0 at the\nend of the first.\nTeams were:\nQueen \u2014 Johnny Thompson ss,\n2b, O. Anderson rf, m, Norman Bugg\nc, Pat Gannon 3b, Archie MacDougall ss, p, Cliff Hearn cf, Monte\nTurner p. If, B. Thompion 3b, rf,\nand O. Millar lt, p.\nReno \u2014 D. Fairhurst 3b, Harry\nLlebscher cf, Ted Hicks lb, Jack\nKelly c, George Niblow p, Rusty\nGibbon is, Mike Henderson 2b, B.\nTapples If, T. Fltipatrlck rf, B.\nCarr; J. Street and w. Hubert 2b.\nDick Jones and Sandy Bain um.\nSired behind the plate and on the\nases respectively. Arvid-Hamberg\nkept score.\nELK VALLEY BASEBALL\nCLUB REORGANIZED\nNATAL, B. C. - The Elk Valley\nBaseball Club held the first 1940\nmeeting at the Natal Vene.ia Hall\nwhen the club reorganized for the\nseason. It was decided to keep the\nlut year's officers for the time being, President, J. Baranek, Natal;\nVice-President, A. Latka, Michel,\nand Secretary-Treasurer, T. Svec,\nNatal. The officers were instructed\nto sign ss many players of last\nyear's team that are available, in\nan effort to operate team In the\nCrow's Nest Pass League. It sufficient players are not available it\nwas quite possible that the team\nwould have to fold up for the 1940\nseason and the players seek berths\nwith the other Natal-Michel team,\nthe Buffaloes.\nKASLO BOAT CLUB\nSEEKS MORE SUPPORT\nFOR ANNUAL RECATTA\nKASLO, B. C. - There is still\nsome doubt as to whether the annual regatta will take place in\nKaslo this year. At a meeting ot the\nKailo Boat Club, sponsors ot the\nregatta, It was felt that mot* assistance from the public wis necessary as there bad bean a deficit In\neach ot the put tew yetn and\nmembers of , the Club hid been\nobliged to make personal donations\nto meet accounts.\nClub officers decided to iound\nout the public for possible support\nbeforo making any definite plans.\nRossland Senior\nLacrosse Picture\nAppears Bright\nVeterans Plus Fresh\nMaterial to Make\nRedmen Tough\nROSSLAND, B. C, May IS - Tb*\nsituation on the RossUnd senior\nlacrosse front looks the beat in\nyetn, with many ot tbt veterani\ngetting back into shape, tnd th*\ngraduations ot four Rossland juniors and new blood troth the Smelter City to -.liter th* Redmtii.\nAl Simms, who has been t member of the Redmen since they were\ntint organized, I* definitely leaving the field to th* \"younger men\"\nti he puti it. Dire threats pf the\nsame nature have been heard from\nGeorge Anderson tnd Kteny\n(Moocn) McGuire, but thty htve\nbeen turning out to practical, and\nthe general opinion li thtt thty\nhtvt lacrosse ln their blood, and\nwill be out in front at tht sound of\nth* opening whistle.\nRossland's Itock took another unexpected rise with tht sudden return of Al Sitton from the Const\nAi, who was t minus quantity lut\nyetr, htvlng deputed tor Vancouver at the tnd ot the 1938 setson,\nwill be remembered at a valuable\nwingman.\nOi tht four erstwhile Rossland\nJunion, Morten Johnion Is the only\ndark horse. Ralph Scott, although\nstill ot Junior age, hai been promoted on the merits ot hli last season's play, particularly when on the\nsenior team during the playolfs.\nDave Jorgenson tnd Paddy Dougnn,\na couple of tttt, clean-playing ex-\nJuniors, who have already demonstrated their ability to utt their\nheads as well u their hands, will be\ntwo ltds to bt reckoned with.   .\nBob Scott, tht \"Big Bid Wolf,\nhtvlng slipped under tht bar of\nsuspension this year, ls baek on tht\npractice floor, rarln to go. Bob is\nhaving knee trouble and it is still\ndoubtfull if his luck will hold eut\nundtr a severe test. Ht wit Just recovering trom t knee Injury received playing basketball this Winter,\nand had the tough luck to wrench\nthe othtr at a recent practice.\nVETERANS IN PULL FORCE\nList yetr't veterans htve bten\nout practically in full force, Jo* La-\nFace,, Ross Saundry, Ernie Carkner,\nKen McGuire, Gordon Ezart, \"Ace\"\nBailey, Orald Nell, Sid Simcock,\nand Mike Dellch.\nTryouts for goal IT* being handed to JjiFice, Bailey and Doug Murdoch. Murdoch is t former Tralllte,\nplaying with the Trail Junion four\nyean tgo. Ht hu rtturntd to Rossland.\nSix Trill men trt miking \u2022 bid\nto enter the Redmen ranks this setson. They registered their deter,\nmlnatlon by walking up to Rossland\none night \"Goih, fi they want to\nplay thtt bad, wt sure ought to take\n'om,\" someone remarked, and that\nls whit Rossland is doing.\nDeacon Davis, Lei Murdoch, and\nAngus McDonald played on the Trail\nJunior Rep team la the playoffs\nlast year. Davis tnd Murdoch pliyed for the Inditn Royals, and Mc-\nDonald fought under tht Gulch\nBulldogs' banner.\nEric Taylor, a former member of\nthe Trill Seniors, Phil Thatcher\nwho played with the Trail Junion\nlast year, and Bob Kirby, trying out\nfor the fint time Otis year, completed the Smelter City sextet\nThe rainy weather haa halted, ind\nthe boys ire beginning to gtt in\nregular workouts, and prospects fot\nthe Golden City to come out on\ntop ln the Wett Kootenty struggle\ntre better than tor several yetn.\nOnt ot the mtln handicaps the boys\nhid to face at the Outlet of other\nseasons wai the lick of practice.\nIn 1938 there was no rink ln the\nGolden City, and the boyi played\non the Trail floor, and could not\nget in much practice. Last year, the\nopen air rink wu constructed, but\nIt wu late In the season before the\nteam really got Into stride. Thii year,\nwith experienced veterans, new\nblood, tnd opportunity to practice\nat the very outset of the season,\nRossland plans to go to town.\nTrophy and Leafs\nMiss Connections\nMONTREAL, May 13 (CP.-The\nMontreil Cup, which Vancouver\nMaple Leafi gained by winning the\nDominion Senior Biaketball championship In t seriei last week\nagainst Montreal Y.MHA., will be\nshipped to Vancouver tomorrow\nwith Canadian Amateur Basketball\nAssociation crests for membera of\nthe winning team.\nThe cup, won list yeir by Victorlt Dominoes, arrived here too\nlate to be preiented to the Maple\nLeafs Saturday night after they had\nwon their third straight game Irom\nthe Y.M.HA.\nTeam\nAMERICAN\nW L Pet.\n  18   6 .727\ntveltnd .14 7 .867\nDetroit _. 12 10 J43\nPhiladelphia 10 12 .495\nChlctgO      9 12 .429\n8t, Uuil     9 12 .429\nWuhlngton   9 18 .409\nNew York   7 14 .333\nNATIONAL\nCtaclnnatl  15 4 .789\nBrooklyn  14 4 .778\nNewYork  11 8 J79\nChlctgo    11 11 .500\nSt Louil    8 13 .381\nPhOadtlphla    \u00ab 11 .353\n..Boiton    8 13 ,383\nnttl-uri-    \u00bb 13 ^J78\nINTERNATIONAL\nW Ls\nJtnty City 15 6\nJtochtitar   14 T\nBaltimore   14  7\nBuffalo   8 10\nNewirk   19 12\nMontreil\nSyracuse\n812\n811\nToronto  ,8 18\nWEITERN INTER.\nPet\nI\n.887\n.474\n.455\n.400\n.353\n.238\n13\n7\n8\n10\n8 7\n\u00ab  8\nYakima\nTacoma \t\nWenatchee\nSpokane ...\nSalem  \t\nVtncouver   7 10\nPACIFIC  COAST\nSin Diego 28 17\nOakland  ,  34 20\nSeattle  20 18\nSan Francisco 21 21\nHollywood    22 22\nLos Angtltt .. 19 22\nSacramento   19 25\nPortltnd 18 22\n.832\n.571\n.474\n.482\n.429\n.412\n.805\n.545\n.545\n.500\n.500\n.463\n.482\n.421\nSpiers fans 15\nas Rookies Down\nC.Y.0, Softball\nEight Thirty Wins\nin His 1940 Debut\nNEW YORK, Miy 13 (AP) -\nGeorge D. Widener's Eight Thirty,\nwinner of seven of his 10 starts i\nthree-year-old last year, made bis\n1940 debut today with a victory in\nthe Toboggan Handicap as some\n20,000 fans turned out for the opening of Belmont Ptrk.\nEight Thirty scored by ltt lengths\nover the Fililse stable's War Dog to\nsay 84.50 for $2. William Zlegler,\nJr.'s Out Mat was third. Eight Thirty\ncovered the six furlongs ln 1:09 4-5.\nNATAL ]UNIORS LOS.. IN\nFIRST SOFTBALL CAME\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 The first loft-\nbill gime of the 1940 season took\nplace at the Natal Ball Ptrk Wednesday, when Beegin'a All-Stars\nof Natal dtteated a combined Natal-Michel Junior team 13-8. Both\nteams displayed mldsetson form as\nmoat of the runs were earned\nthrough timely blngles. The All-\nStars took an early tint inning\nfour run lead and lncreued the\nmargin   steadily   throughout   tht\nStmt whije the Junior* after being\neld to a single run Up until the\nsixth inning finally solved the hurl\ning ot A. Krall md collected seven\nruni In the last two frames to avoid\na shellacking.\nTht gam* wu umpired by Dlno\nBaratelli ot Natal. Both these teams\nwill again clash u the All-Stars are\ndetermined to pity in early outside game with some team to of-\nMan-o'-War was retired it thn c  flcially    open   the    1940   soflball\nyears cf age. season.\nBehind effective flinging by Haiel\nSpiers, queen of district pitchen.\nwho recorded 18 Strikeouts, tht\nRookies drew tint blood ln the\nNtlion Ladiei' Softball League on\nSunday afternoon at the Recreation\nGrounds when thty downed \u2022\ngame C. Y. O. aggregation 17-10.\nShort two ot tnree atari for tht\nntxt Ilttle while, the losers ihowed\ndefinite signs of rounding into\nstrong competition for the Bookies\nThey hid a 4-2 lead going into the\nfourth Inning and were good measure for It too, but then the Rooks\nteed off on the deliveries of a former teammate, Mildred Horrigan.\nto build up a itrong lead.\nLaura Ntlson, t rookie, caught\nfor Splen and did I good Job\not It Sht wu replaced by Coral\nSahara in the seventh, u Coach\nBill Freno gave til his players I\ntutt of tctlon.\nHorrlgm doubled for th* losers,\ntnd 8piers, Lilllin Hickey ind Vera\nMatheson hit two-baggers and Captain Eva Henrickson t home run\nfor the Rookies.\nScore by Innlngi:\nRopkles  011 643 101-17\nC. Y. 0 031 000 321-10\nLineups follow:   -\nRookies \u2014 Eva Henrickson cf,\nIris Johansson 3b, Deanie Wallace\n2b, Lillian Hickey If, Vera Matheson ss, Laura Nelson c, Phyllis Wallace lb, Hazel Spien p, Doreen Long\nrt, Mary Kollnski lb, Coral Sahara c and Marge Todd rf.\nC. Y. 0. - Eva Bengert lb,\nMary DelPuppo c, Mildred Horrlgm p, Isobel Donovan 3b, Mary McDougall ss, Louise Colettl If, Agnes\nStewart cf, Gwen Campbell rf md\nEleanor Vecchlo 2b.\nVemie Ahrens tnd Lawrence Selinger umpired, md Bill Kapak end\nGeorgie Eberley kept score.\nSpoils Roundup\nBy EDDIE IRIETZ\nAnoelittd Press Sporti Wrlttr\nNEW YORK, May 18 (AP). -\nRumor foundry: Ltrry MacPhail\nwill tranifar the Brooklyn Montreal farm to Long Island\u2014probably\nMineola\u2014If he cm get consent of\nthe Ymkee* and Giants. . . Lou\nAmbers didn't know lt, but Lew\nJenkins worked out all last Fall\nwith the New York football Oi-\nants. . . Max Baer goes for a buck\nu tut u anyone, but be lt said to\nhli credit he turned down a guarantee of 830,000 per yetr to turn\nwrestler.\nChicago Cubi are mourning the\nloss of their No. 1 fin, Dtnny Ct-\nhlll. . . He mide the Spring training tripe regultrly for 30 yeirs and\nknew all the playen intimately\nsince the days of Frank Chance.. .\nTrials of i promoter: Mike Jicobs\nhun't staged a fight in the Detroit\nOlympla since taking over, but he's\nalready ln the red 825,000 worth...\nCancellations, etc.\nKing's Plate Lacks\nCI ear-Cut Favorite\nBy FOSTER BARCLAY\nCanadian Pru* Stiff Writer\nTORONTO, May 13 (CP)-Raclng\nfever gained momentum today u\nbalmy bretitt turned thoughts of\nturf followed to the King's Plate,\nturf classic which officially opens\nthe Cinadian racing season Satur-\nWorkouts, favorites, conditions,\nprobablt odds ind ill the whys tnd\nwherefores connected with the mile\nmd a furlong rice it Woodbine\nPirk cropped Into gentril conver-\niitlon. To the !-te were the names\nof Dirk Comet, Hod, Kitit Bud\nand Frobisher.\nThey did not maintain all the support in t field thtt licks t clear-\ncut fivorlte. H. C. Hitch's Curwen\nind J. E. Frowdc Seagram's Silvos\ndrew searching scrutiny whin they\ntrotted on the turf for conditioning\ntrials. Neither wu brilliant during\nthe 1989 juvenile campaign.\nHatch's colon have betn carried\nto victory twice in the long gallop\nfor tht King's 50 guineas and tho\nmajor portion of a 877,800 added\nsun*. Monswttp won In 1916 and\nOoldlure repeated tor the stable in\nThe tamtd black tnd yellow colors ot tbt Seagram Stable nave\nbeen carried in the net without interruption line* 1889 when the liable wu owned by J. E. Seagram.\nDuring that period the stable won\nthe historic race 30 times.\nBombersHumbied\n10 lot by Bicknell\nIn City Softball\nRallying from \u2022 bid opening Inning when they (potted th* much\nyounger High School Blue Bomben\nthree uneirned runs, Hume Hotel\nclimbed Into t fint place tie with\nthe Savoy ln the Nelson Men's Softball League with a 10-4 victory over\nthe school kids tt the Recreation\nGround* Monday evening.\nSteady live-hit pitching by the\npitching ace ot the league, Len\nBlcknell, helped the hotelmen no\nend in-taking a victory after being\ndown 3-0 u long as the fourth inning. Th* big fellow struck out 11\nmen md gave one tree pass, to\nHilliard in the ninth, who wu later\nthrown out on an attempted steal\nBlcknell added to hia cause with\nthree hlti, one a double, md he\ndrove lo one run and icored two\nothen.\nBob Peacock mtdt hit debut on\nthe mound In the City softbail for\nthe Bomben, and although touched\nrather freely tt times ht hurled\nfairly .tetdy btll The Bomben\ndon't look u strong u they might\nbe, especially around second base,\nbut with Harold Tapanila, an absentee, In th* lineup, lt might be\ndifferent The losers committed\nnine errors, md put thtlr pitcher,\nwho fanned two tnd walked one,\nIn hot wtter several times.\nOnly one of the Bomben' fivo\nhits went for extra bues. Cleanup\nhitter Dtvt Fairbank homering\nwith none on In the fifth. Nick Hucal tnd Jeue Seaby hit i triple\ntnd round-tripper respectively for\nthe Humes.\nScore by innings:\nBomben  80T01O 000\u2014 4 19\nHume   000 711 10x-10 12 a\nLineupi follow:\nBombers \u2014 Joe Hilliard If, Doug\nWinlaw ss, Elmer Tattrie 2b, Dave\nFairbank lb, Olaf Hopland cf, Ted\nHuyck 3b, Bud Emery c, Ernie Colman rf, Bob Peacock p, md Bud\nSmith 2b.\nHume - Phil Kuntz 2b, Ty Culley\nlb, Tanny Romano ss, rf, Sim Pisacreta 3b, Jesie Seaby If, Len Blcknell p, Teddy Romano c, Slim Elliot\nrf, Ted Bialkowski cf, Al Euerby\nss, Nick Hucal cf, and Johnny Aurelio rf.\nUmp!rn \u2014 Denis Bill, plate; Jack\nGray, butt.\nHenry Outshooh\nU.S. Champs al\nMetaline Falls\nConstable John A. Henry ot Cas\ntlegar, prise marksman ot the Nelson diitrlct Provincial Police, out-\nscored M. R. Rogen, United Statei\nNitlonal Pistol Champion, md John\nJewitt, United States Cout Guard\nRevolver Instructor, in competition\nat Metaline Falls, Wash, Sunday\nafternoon.\nAt 80 yards, Constable Henry md\nMr, Rogen both shot 180 and Mr.\nJewitt 179, but Henry's shots were\nSenenlly better, scoring one 7 to\n.ogera' two 7's.\nAt 28 yards, Rogen shot 197, and\nConstable Henry and Jewitt each\n198. Again Conatable Henry had the\nbitter group of shots and he wai\nranked lecond.\nConstable George MacAndrew of\nCastlegar scored thl high mirks of\n192 ind 187.\nREMEMBER  WHIN?\nBy Th* Canadian Press\nSir Thomai LLpton, one-time errand boy who became world-famous\nla i merchant tnd aporUmtn, wu\nelected a member of tht Roytl\nYacht Squadron nint yttn ago\ntodty, Sir Thomu wu mmy times\nunsuccessful challenger for the\nAmerica'i Cup tnd hli election to\nthe R.Y.S. was ln recognition of his\neffort.\nFlying Ebony, winner of the 1925\nKentucky Derby, became the father of hie third set of twin cols\nrecently. The colts were named Pen\nand pencU.\nJunior Baseball\nTeam Promising\n\"I wu very pleased with the\nturnout at the first practice, last\nSaturday ot the Junior baseball\nteam, and am confident we will be\nable to field a good team,\" \"Slim\"\nPotter said Monday. He plans to\nwork two or three of the best\nplayen from the lower divisions in\nwith the older junior players in order to round out his squad and\ngive them more opportunity to\nImprove.\nAdditional practices are scheduled for m hour this evening and\nThunday at 4:30 prior to the senior\nbtll workouts md on Saturday\nevening.\nAmong the playen turning out\nare the Prestley brothen, Mickey\nmd Barney, pitcher md catcher respectively of whom a great deal are\nexpected. Among other pitchen\navailable are Dooley Scott, a promising southpaw who may be\nshifted to firat base, and Jackie\nWhitehead, son of his llliutrlous father, Bert Whitehead, who atarred\non the mound for Nelson yean ago.\nA slugging lecond sacker, Eric\nColeman halls from Vancouver, and\nis regarded u a cinch to catch \u2022\nposition. Among other players turning out are Sid Desireau, Ernie\nWilson, Horswill, Don Coleman,\nJim TaTling, John Beattie, Alan\nDeiChampa, Ernie Defoe, Bud Emery, Reid Sahara, Dalton Boomer\nmd George Ioanin.\nBantam playen will also practice thii evening, md Mr. Porter\nhopei to start the City Bantam\nLeague Saturday morning.\nGood Turnouts, Kid\nLacrosse Practices\nGood turnouts were on hmd for\nthe opening box lacrosse practices\nat the Civic Arena Monday for\n\"kid\" leagues when C. B. C. ban-\ntami tnd the Fairview Athletic\nClub worked out.\nThis \u00abvenlng the C. B. C. midgets\nmd Juveniles will practice. 4:30-5:30\nmd 8-9 respectively.\nTwo houra have been allotted\nfrom 7 to 9 Wednesday evening for\nFairview lacrosse playen, md from\n4:30 to 8:30 Thursday for all C. B. C.\nteams. These will be til the practices tor this week because ot roller\nskating Friday and Saturdiy.\nNtxt week It is planned to make\na start on league games, and games\nbetween the F. A. C. and C. B. C.\nteams will be scheduled.\nNelson Lacrosse\nChances Are Good\nJock Tells Gyro\nNot calling tht strikes definitely\nio early in the practice season, Jock\nWtlmsley, Nelson hockey tnd boxla\nstar md expert, pictured the city's\nchances in the 1940 Kootenty boxla\nleague as fairly bright when interviewed by John Cartmel, Progrim\nChairman, at Iht Nelson Gyro Club\nsupper meeting Mondiy.\nNelson built its team tround t\nnucleus of tine Juniors lait season.\nJock recalltd, but this yetr ilx of\nthe same Junion ire unable to play.\nFred Gravel and Al Hooker are out\nwith injuries, at leut physical conditions that are likely to result in\npermanent Injuries in a bruising\ngame; George Bishop and Howard\nCampbell are both attending university ln California: while Al Mix-\nwell md Foster Mills both have\nbeen transferred to Kelowna. However the outlook Is not dull tor\nthert art a number of promising\njuniors ready tor senior company,\nWalmsley said, naming Doug Blais,\nHarold Tapanila and Tommy Cook-\nion. Seniors Bud Cooper, Jack Bishop, Pete Boneville, Bill Townsend\nand Dave Gibboni trt expected to\nturn out for thli seuon.\nJUNIORS.IMPORTANT\nVarious systems ot play md methods of coaching were described Dy\nWalmiley, who in two seasons is\nNelson senior boxli coach pilottcd\nthe team to tht District title. The\nold system of man to mm checking\nwaa compared with the new system\nof zone defence.\nGood junior boxla was highly important in preparing playen for\nfuture senior play, Walmsley said,\nadding that he felt Junior boxla\nshould be revived here. If the\njuniors turn out, I'll be glad to\ncoach them,\" he said.\nMr. Cartmell, tfter thanking\nWalmslty, wished him success ln\nhis new work u coach ot Nelson\n\"kid\" boxla. Douglu Cummins,\nPreiident, added the thanks and\nbest wishes of the Club.\nTalented Bobby Wasslck entertained the Club with some clever\ntap dancing, follownlg this with a\ntap routine on roller skates atop\na small stool. He wu accompanied\nby Miss Dora Fotos, who also rendered several plmo solos.\nCanadiens Buy\nLoren Mercer\nMCOTREAi, May 18 (CP).-Of-\nficlals of Montreal Canadiens of the\nNational Hockey League announced\ntoday the purchase of Loren Mercer and Jack Adams, of the Vancouver Lions of the Pacific Ooait\nHockey League. The purchase price\nwas not disclosed.\nThe announcement aaid the deal\nwu arranged by Business Manager Frank Patrick, a former Business Manager ot the Lions. The deal\nfollowed closely at the heels of the\npurchue by Canadleni of Murph\nChamberlain, forward, from Toronto\nMaple Leafs.\nBoth of Canadiens' latest acquis!\ntlons tre young. Mercer ls 22. A native of Edmonton, he played formerly tn the amateur ranks with\nTrail Smoke Eaten before turning\npro back at Edmonton with the\nEskimo* tn the Northwest League.\nAdams, who will be 10 next\nmonth, hu been highly regarded\nin the West and is another all-star\nplayer. A forward, Adams turned\nto pro hockey ln 1938-39. Previously\nhe had played ln Calgary hla home\ntown.\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nTht House of Furniture Styles\nEagle Block    Nelaon    Phono 118\ntrad* in Your\nOLD FURNITURE\nAt Par. Payment on Your\nNEW FURNITURE\nSchedule Salmo\nValley Soflball\nDrawn lo July 3\nW.   L\nPot.\nKootenay Belle\t\nSecond Relief\t\n1     0\n1,000\n1     0\n1.000\nSalmo      \t\n1     1\n.M0\n_old Belt  \t\n0     1\n.000\nSheep  Creek\t\n0     1\n.008\nSALMO,  B. C. -\nWith I\ntimet\nscheduled for Wednesdty tnd Tn-\ndays with odd Sunday contests, a\n20-came schedule ot tht Salme\nValley Softball Lttgut hu been\nprepared up to and Including July\n3. Three garnet havt been pltyed\nto fir, with the defending champi\nfrom Kootenay Belle and Second\nRelief heading the five-team leagut\nwith a win each.\nTht next game ll scheduled for\nWednesday evening when Kootenay Belle tnd Second Relief play\nfor the league leadership.\nThe schedule follow!:\nMay 15\u2014Second Relief vs. Koo.\ntenay Belli.\nMay 17\u2014Gold Belt vs. Sheep\nGreek.\nMay 19\u2014Salmo ts. Kootensy\nBelle.\nMty 32\u2014Second Relief vs. Gold\nBelt\nMty -8\u2014Kootenay Belle vi. Shelp\nCrttk.\nMay 26\u2014Gold Belt Ti. Stlmo.\nMty 81\u2014Sheep Creek tt. Second\nRelit!.\nJunt 8\u2014Kootenty Btll* vs. Second Relief.\nJune 7-Sheep Creek ti. Gold\nBelt\nJunt 9-6*lmo Tl. Sheep Creek.\nJune 12\u2014Second Relief Ti. Salmo,\nJune 14\u2014Gold Belt vs. Koote\u00ab\nnay Belle.\nJune 19\u2014Kootenay Bella n,\nStlmo.\nJunt 81\u2014Gold Belt ts. Second\nRelief.\nJune 29\u2014Sheep Creek n. Koot*.\nmy Belle.\nJune 28\u2014Salmo vs. Gold Belt.\nJuly 3\u2014Second Relief vs. Sheep '\nCreek.\nTeams named flnt have fhe homt\ngames.\nKapak Draws Up i\nCity Softball\nGames lo June i\nIndiqns Drop Hudlin\nCLEVELAND, May 13 (AP) -\nCleveland Indians ot the American\nLeagut today give Willis Hudlin,\n34-year-old right-handed pitcher,\nhis relent. As 110-year man, Hudlin could not be sent to the minors.\nHe Is free to join any other Major\nLeague club.\nHudlin joined the Indians in 1928.\nfrisch just can't\nmake; pirates go\nPITTSBURGH, May IS (AP) -\nNothing works for Frankie Frlsch\nmd hii last-place Pirates.\nFordham Frankie has tried almoit\neverything except hiring a magician to find a winning combination\nfor hii National Baseball League\nClub. Of 18 games the Pirates have\nwon five.\nMost of the trades have flopped,\nor nearly so\u2014the crowning blow\ncoming In failure of the 1150,000\nbattery-pitcher John Gee and Catcher Ray Mueller. Cash paid for these\ntwo, plus the half-dozen players\nthrown in with the deals, reputedly adds up to that figure. Both are\nback In the minors now on option.\nNo Pirate team has worked any\nharder in Spring training than this\n1940 entry in the National League\nrace. Since the season itarted,\nFrlsch has gone the limit ln experimenting. In one game he uied 24\nmen\u2014a league record.\nThe recruits, except Gee\u2014whoie\nbad arm kept him out\u2014have been\nflven their chance. Of the lot\nrank Outline, second baseman,\nlooks best to measure up to a regular Job. In 11 games he hss batted\n.372.\nFrisch admits it seems useleii to\nlote sleep over his current aggregation.\n\"No purpose csn be served ln\ncritlclim of theie players,\" he laid\ntoday. \"I am convinced iome of\nthem cannot deliver but nobody\ncan say they are not hustling.\"\nRossland Trap Shooter\nHigh in Spokane Meet\nSPOKANE, Waih., Miy 13 (CP)-\nJ. S. Robertson of Rosslmd, B.C.,\nplsced second in the handicap individual event of the Annual Inland\nEmpire Trtpshoot tournament,\nwhich waa won by Rex McDowell of\nRocWord Wuh. The Lewiaton Gun\nClub team won the turn event ind\nJoint Grey of Nampi, Idaho, took\nthe Individual championihip.\nThe next games of the Nelson\nSoftball Association schedule, which\nhai been prepared till June 3 by\nLcacue Preiident Bill Kapak will\nbe played Friday evening when tht\nCyclei and the Catholics meet\nA triplchoader will be run ott\nJune 2. two games being scheduled\nln the boys' division, sandwiching a\nladies' contest.\nThe schedule, last named team\nbeing home teem, follows:\nMay 17-Cjrclee vi Catholics.\nMay 19\u2014Savoy vs High School\nMay 20-C.Y.O. vs Rookies.\nMay 2ft-Catholics ve Hume.\nMay 27-Savoy vs Cyclei.\nMay 31\u2014Cycles vs High School\nJune 2\u2014Hume vs Savoy.\nJune 2\u2014Rookies va C.Y.O.\nJune 2\u2014High School vt Catholic*\nJune 3\u2014Hume ve Cycles.\nMo__MI_aL\nCigarette Papers\nUOUBlt. Automatic\nSenior C.Y.O. Girli\nPile Up 22-18 Scon\non Juniors, Softball\nJunior C. Y. O. girl softbtlltn\npressed the Senior C. Y. 0. team to\nthe limit before they lott t 22-18\nNelson Church Letgue game at tht\nJunior High Monday evening. Flvt\nrunt in tht fourth md 10 ln tht\nfifth give the Senion the victory.\nScore by innings:\nJuniors   ...288 3 08 8-di\nSeniors   203   8103  x-M\nLineups follow:\nJuniors\u2014Denise Romano p, Utt*\ncedes 2b, Rene DoLucreiio lb, Bi\u00ab\neanor Vecchlo u, Molly Kirkpatrick cf, Gwen Campbell 3b, Anna\nMaglio lt, Dora Logut rf, Isabel\nArnott\nSeniors \u2014 Mary DelPuppo c. Su\u00ab\nsle Vecchlo If, Mary McDougall 2b,\nIsobel Donovan p, Kay Trainor at,\nDot Trainor 8b, Louise Colettl rf,\nAgnes Stewart cf md Georgia\nEberley lb.\n.\nPat Egan Leaves for\nCalgary but He Will\nBe Back for Lacrosse\nPit Egan. colorful Ntlion lacrosse stalwart left early thia morning tor his home at Calgary, but ht\nwill bt bick, hi assured Nelson\nMaple Leaf officials, Mayor N. C\nStibbs, Club President, said Sunday night. He will return to tht\nLakeside City, where he has played\nboxla for the past four seasons, in\nthe second week of June.\nUDL\n\u25a0ti ut\nrfit*L\nThis advertisement ts uot puonined\nor displayed by the Litjuor Control\nBoard or by the Government ot\nBritish Columbia.\n____________mt__m\n______\n________\ni_i_J_a_A_&____\n________ '\n ___________\nPAOI FOURTEEN\n\"Scotty\" Mitchell\nPioneer of trail\nOff fo Vancouver\nTRAIL, B. C,.MW It-John T.\n(Scotty) Mitchell, pioneer fireman\nand constable, who retired from the\nTrill Police Force March 1. 1958,\nwas bidden adieu by a number of\nfriends as he boarded the trsin Saturday for Vancouver where be will\ntake up residence with James Melvln, former long Ume resident of\nTrail,\nFriends presented him with an\nelectric shaving set shortly before\nhe left.\nThe fire hell was alwayi home for\nMr. Mitchell during moit of his 40\nyears in TralL Arriving ihortly after the turn oi tbe century, he\nworked for a time \u00bb' the smelter.\nHe joined Trail'i early day volunteer fire department and his ilnce\nlived st the city's various halls.\nSince retiring from the Police\nDepartment he was slways on duty\nto snswer emergency call! while\nthe aonaratus was out responding\nto alarms.\nMr. Mitchell served for 17 years\nunder the late Chief Benjamin\nDownes, on the police force, retiring with him.\nA native of Scotland, Mr. Mitchell\nserved in his early years with the\nCounty Constabulary of Lanarkshire, Scotland. Before coming to\nCanada he visited the Antipodes.\nA huge and powerful man, Mr.\nMitchell was known by all as s\ngood natured policeman, and he\nlooked toward everyone ai a friend.\nHis friendliness, perpetual \"kidding\", and store of stories of the\n\u2022any days ta the fire and police\ndepartments, made him welcome\ncompany anywhere.\nNo Change in East\nIndies' Status\nTOKYO, Slay IS (API-Britain\nMad Holland formally informed Japan today they had no Intention of\nlltering the status quo In Hie Neth-\nerlands' rich Indies possessions.\nSir Robert Crtigle, the British\nAmbassador, informed Foreign Minister Hachiro Arila that Britain did\nnot Intend to  interfere with the\nEesent situation in the Dutch East\nlies since she believed the Dutch\nforces there were sufficient to maintain the integrity of the islands.\n, Concern had been expressed In\nSany Japanese quarters lest the\nritLsh snd French landings of\nforces In the Dutch West Indies\nmight be followed by similar allied\naction in the East Indies. Japan has\nofficially notified interested powers of her insistence that the Eu-\n'   ropean war shall bring no change\n\u25a0 -In the East Indies' status.\nHolland also reassured Japan.\nhi\nI Herridge Favors\nI Canada Conscription\nOTTAWA, May IS (CP)\u2014 Hon.\nI W. D. Herridge, reorganized during\nI the Dominion eleotion as leader >f\nI the New Democracy movement that\nI affiliated  with the  Social Credit\n\u25a0 | prrty, said in a statement today tlat\n\u25a0\u2022lhe Empire's peril puts the stamp\not shsme upon Canada'i contritu-\ntion to the war.\"\nIn a statement of 600 wordi Mr.\nHerridge said:\nI      \"To get results Parliament must\nI   enact the law of national service.\ni   It must draft the manpower and\nmaterial resources  of the nation.\nBut the government has given a\npre-election  pledge  against    conscription. It promised not to takn\nthe action which every warring nation In the world has found itself compelled to take.\n\"Are we a warring nation? Does\nthis government mean that Canada\nshall really fight? This crisis demands a government thit does.\"\nFour Canadians\nInvalided Home\nVANCXKJVm, May IS (CP). -\nCorporal P. M. Lindsay and three\nprivates of the Seaforth Highlanders\nef Canada are ln Vancouver today\nafter being Invalided back trom\nEngland.\nCorporal Lindsay, who said mem\nbers of his regiment were anxious\n(to fight In the Norwegian campaign.\nadmitted that he and most of the\n100 officers and men of the First\nDivision who were returned to Can\nada, had fooled medical officers in\nCanada so they could get overseas.\nThe people of England are swell,'\ntie said. \"I can't lay I like the coun.\ntry after the Winter we went\nthrough, but the people are grand.'\nHe eaid that mail from Canada Is\nlate ln arriving in England and said\nthat the troops wanted cigarettes\nts much as anything.\nREAL UNDERSTANDING\nBETWEEN CANADIANS AND\nAMERICANS IS NEEDED\nVANCOUVER, May 13 (CP) -\nA friendly understanding between\nthe peoples of Canada and U. S. A.,\n\"was never more needed than it Ll\ntoday,\" Lieut. Governor E. W. Hamber of British Columbia today toll\nOOO delegates attending the1 10th\ndistrict National Retail Credit Association convention here.\nNazi Parachutists\nShot at Amsterdam\nBy Geraud Jeuve\nHavas News Wrlttr\nAMSTERDAM, May 13 (CP-Ha-\nvas)\u2014German parachutists attempted yesterday to land ta the train\nstreets of this city and were shot\ndown by polici ta swltt, sharp gun\nbattlei. Dozeni were rounded up\nUd arrested.\nThis correipondent taw Germir.\nparachutists, who cime down ta the\nLeldescestraat, ta the heart of Amsterdam. Tbey were equipped with\ncollapsible bicycles. Several were\nkilled by police as they descended.\nTwo of the' Germans who landed in\nParamaribo Square succeeded In\nseizing a truck and killing iti driver. They were itopped a little\nfarther on after they bad run down\nand killed two Dutch policemen.\nDutch military authorities today\nwarned the civilian population to\naccept no clgarets, candles or refreshments of any kind from string-\nen. Memben of the armed forcei\nwere expressly forbidden to do ,ia>.\nALIENS ROUNDED\nUP IN BRITAIN\nLONDON, May 18 (Monday)\n(CP.-Cable) \u2014 The British Government rounded up hundreds of\naliens in the Eastern half ot England and Scotland Sunday and early\ntoday and hustled them off to internment camps as a precaution\nagainst a parachute invasion of this\ncountry.\nMoving swiftly against \"Quislings\" and Fifth Column activity\nin general, Sir John Anderson, Home\nSecretary and Minister for Home\nSecurity, gave orders that every\nmale German and Austrian between\nId and 60 must be interned if he ls\nliving in the Eastern half of the\ncountry. It was estimated 3000 were\naffected by the order.\nIn addition every alien, no matter what his nstionality, living in\na restricted area, must report to the\npolice daily, stay indoors between\nI a.m. and 8 a.m., and avoid using\nany private vehicle, even bicycles.\nThis order applies is ot midnight\nlast night.\nThe restricted area Includes the\nentire East coast from the Isle of\nWight to Moray Firth in the North.\nWith Hie British\nForce in Belgium\nBy DREW MIDDLETON\n(Anoclited Press 8taf( Writer).\nWITH THE BRITISH EXPEDI-\nTIONj\\RY FORCE IN BELGIUM,\nMay 12 (Delayed) (AP).\u2014Tanks and\narmored cars of the British Expeditionary Force threw their first fire\nInto the advancing Germani today\nand there was no doubt that the\nfirst great battle of this war had\nbegun.\nInformed sources told me thst\nGermans had two armored divisions\nin the van ot the attack; synchro'\nnized with a terrific aerial bombing.\nDespite serious losses in The Netherlands, Belgium and France \u2014\nplaced by some ln the neighborhood\nof 200 planes \u2014 the German fliers\nstill are hammering at their ob.ee'\nlives.\nA new front was established by\nlandings of German parachute\ntroops behind the Allied lines.\nAs I write, this dingy hotel shakes\nwith the thuds of bombs falling outside the town and with the deep\n\"twung twung\" of anti-aircraft batteries.\nI have been on the continent just\n3d houn but I have heard sirens\nscream the \"alerte\" 11 times, seen\nsix Nazi bomben methodically lay\ntheir eggs, watched two fall burning to earth and seen scan of their\noperations.\nA railway which Germans bomb\ned at dawn was uncut. A French\nobserver counted 18 craters, but\nsaid proudly \"they were hurried,\nthose devils, look\u2014\u2014\"\nSure enough, there was a train\nchugging steadily along the trucks\nIn a Journey of nearly 300 miles\nover this little nation there was\ngrim evidence of what total war\nmeans.\nThere was two-way traffic on the\nroads. Moving toward the dlsftnt\nsound of guns were British men, materials and munitions In trucks,\nwidely spaced to offer unattractive\nbombing targets.\nMoving slowly away from the\nguns was another army\u2014the army\nof homeless stricken. Refugees went\nthrough the thick white dust toward\nthe safety that may lie behind the\nlines.\nThe rich rode In cars, the poor In\ntrucks, or burdened bicycles or\nwalked.\n\"We knew nothing,\" they said.\n\"Friday morning there came the explosion. Our windows broke. The\nlittle boy across the street \u2014 so\nbright a little boy\u2014is dead. So we\nleft.\"\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. Al\nG::nm and infant baby are here\nfrom Hedley. Mr. Gomm Is employed on diamond drill work across the\nla'-e.\nVictor SlivlnskI of Fernie visited\nT.:n Farrell.\nArt Johnson ls down for several\ndays from his traD-line, snd is a\nguest of Tim Farrell.\nMiss Veronica Werden left for\nher home at Fort Steele.\nAfter a month's vacation at Edmonton, Paul Solecki is home and\nWill leave to work at Tye.\nMrs. Alice Gulndon visited Mrs.\nAlex Hurry of Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Chris Foote and\ntheir son Christie and Archie Allan\nall of Kimberley visited Mr. and\nMrs. R. A. Smith.\nL.80N DAILY NEWS. NILSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO  MAY 14. 1940.-\n*****m*&&***>'ltW*w*^\nHJWJ W^f'PJJ^|T^a\"_aT.^pr\nSell What You Don't Want Through The Classified Adsl\nMem Bail.il JJmra\nTelephone 144\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUc per line per Insertion.\n44c per line per week (6 consecutive Insertions tor cost of 4).\n$1.43 per line a month (28 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox numbers Uc extra. Thit\ncovers any number ot timet.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per Une, first Insertion snd\n14c etch subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon-commercial   Sltuatlona\nWanted  for  ttte  for  tny  required number of lines for ilx\ndiys, piyable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy $  JOS\nBy carrier, per week -.._     3S\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nBy Mill:\nOne month\nPRAISES CANADA'S\nHEALTH AUTHORITIES\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP).-Warm\npraise (or the part played by health\nauthorltlei on Canada's behalf, particularly ln this time of war, was\nexpressed today by Hon. Ian Mac-\nI; Kenzie. Minister  of Pensions  and\nI. National   Health,   in   opening   the\n| 40th session of the Dominion Council of Health at Ottawa.\nARRESTED ON BREAKING\nAND ENTERINC CHARCE\nEDMONTON, May 13 (CP)-Dan\nBrent ot Edmonton was arrested\nover the weekend and charged with\nbreaking and entering Macdonalds\nConsolidated Ltd., Miy 6 when several thousand dollars in cash and\nchecks were taken. He was released\non $10,000 bail.\nSTONES THROWN AT\nCOAST GERMAN CHURCH\nVANCOUVER, May 13 (CP) -\nServices in the first German Baptist Church were interrupted here\nlast night when youths threw two\nstones through the window.\nThree months\nSix monthi\t\nOne year\n 1.78\n 2.00\n   4.00\n 8.00\nAbove rates tpply ta Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage Is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $19.00.\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nLARGE STOCK STRINGS, ACCES-\nsortei, repain. Webb's, 808 Baker\nSt (Next Scandinavian Church).\nAustralian Pilot\nBags 11 Planes\nLONDON, May 18 (CP Cable)-\nThe Exchange Telegraph agency's\ncorrespondent with the Royal Air\nForce in France reported today that\none young Australian fighter pilot\nhas downed six German aircraft in\nthe past three days, bringing his\ntotal bag since the war to 11.\nThe' pilot got two Dorniers Frldiy morning, the first day of \"total\nwar,\" one Messerschmitt 110 Saturday, and two Henschel army cooperation aircraft and one Messerschmitt 109 yesterday.\nThe correspondent added \"this Is\ntypical of the work being done by\nour fighter pilots.\"\nYesterday the same pilot, with\nother members of his flight, battled\nwith five Messerschmitt 110s\u2014the\nformidable cannon-firing type\u2014and\nbelieves the R.A.F. formation shot\ndown the lot.\nChris Spencer Heads\nWar Savings Body\nOTTAWA, May 13 (AP) \u2014 Appointment oo* nine provincial war\nsavings committee chairmen was\nannounced today by Hon. J. L- Ral-\nson, Minister of Finance.\nThey included: British Columbia,\nChristopher Spencer, Vancouver;\nAlberta, John Bums, Calgary; Saskatchewan, W. G. Yale, Regina;\nManitoba, E. J. Garr, Winnipeg;\nOntario, R. V. Lesuerur, Toronto.\n. \"Our fight for freedom brings\nwith it added responsibilities tor\nevery Canadian,\" Mr. Ralston laid\nln making the announcement \"It\naugurs well .for this undertaking\nthat these nine men, who are undoubtedly leader in their respective\nProvinces, have accepted enthusias-\ncally Ihe resyponsibility and added\nburden for this task.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - MARRIED COUPLE\nlor dairy farm. Separate house\nprovided. State age, experience,\nnationality Box 2228 .lily Newi.\nWANTED-rCERTIFICATED FIRST\nAid man for t mine. Box 82, Nelton, B. C.\nWANTED GRAD. NURSE FOR\nArrow Lakes Hospital, Nakusp.\nSalary, $90 month. Wire Secretary.\nCAPABLE GIRL OR WOMAN FOR\ncare of children afternoons and\nevening!. $15 mo. 024 Vernon St\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED WO-.\nman for houseclcanlng, 312 Silica\nAOENTS AND SALESMEN\nEXCELLENT DIRECT SELLING\nOPPORTUNITY\u2014exclusive territory rights for live-wire ambitious\nmen and women, selling a line of\nguaranteed quality products. Send\nior our Plan and catalogue TODAY. Famllex Products Company,\n870 St Clement St. MONTREAL.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. Depot\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop prices paid for antiques at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St\nGIANT SPENCER SWEET PEAS-\nSlngle and Mixed colon. Write or\ncall Mann, Rutherford Company.\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 298 for daily dlvry.\nSAbVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, foptwear or furniture to spare please Ph. us 618L.\nWE BUY AND EXCHANGETOOLS\ntrunks and bags, mem suits in\ngd. condition. J. Chess, Vernon St\nCLARESHOLM BUTTER 1st Grd.\non bread is delicious. Fresh Direct trom Creamery. Star Groc.\nPICTURES, COPIES, 8x10, IL\nSnaps Enlarged, colored, 8x10, $1.\nEst. 20 yean. Mail to Wand Studio\n8 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C.\nMEN'S SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples.\nPlain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist Princeton Distributors, Box\n61, Princeton, B. C.\nAN  OFFER  TO  EVERY  IN-\nventor, list of wanted Inventions\nand full information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEL-\noped and printed 29c The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\nthe West. Established over 30 yrs.\nKrystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask.\nKIMBERLEY CHURCH\nASSOC. HOLDS SOCIAL\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-The Women's Association of the United\nChurch held a successful social in\nthe Church Monday. The Blarchmont. McDougall and Town groups\neach held their regular meetings and\nthen Joined together for a social\ntime. Contests and games were played and prizes were won by Mrs.\nGlanville and Mrs. J. Giegerich. A\nmusical program consisting of solos\nby Mrs. Glenvllle and Mrs. Yullle\nfollowed. Refreshments were served\nby hostesses from each group,\nBlarchmont Mn. Crooks and Mrs.\nMcDougall, Mrs. Sims and Mrs.\nManiey Haines, Mrs. Moe and\nMrs. Switzer\nKaslo Hospital Board\nPlans Better Ward\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 The Kaslo Ladies\nHospital Aid May meeting was\nheld at the home of Mrs. T. H.\nHorner. Twenty-seven members\nwere present with the President\nMrs. F. S. Chandler in the chair.\nThe Secretary, Mrs. F. S. Rouleau\ngave a satisfactory report\nThe report of the Treasurer, Mn.\nJ. E. Papworth, showed a balance\not $229.78 ta the current account\nand $221.96 in the savings department Reports were given by representatives of the various city women's organizations. Mrs. Frank\nHelme, Chairman of the House\nCommittee presented s list of requirements and was instructed to\nmake the purchases.\nBoard representative, Mrs. Chandler gave a short resume of the last\nBoard meeting, when A. L. MacPhee was elected President to succeed the late H. Giegerich.\nArrangements were being mede\nto have the West porch adjoining\nthe men's public ward, screened in\nand many other Improvements and\nrepairs were being made.\n\"Ihe Board had asked the Aid to\ntake charge of arrangements for\nHospital Day and this had been\ndone.\nMrs. Horner snd her assistant\nhostesses, Mesdames G. W. Tinkess\nand Fred McGibbon were accorded\na hearty vote of thanks, when tea\nwas served.\nULSTER HALL TO HOUSE\nNETHERLANDS REFUCEES\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland, May\n13, (AP)\u2014The British Government\ntoday commandeered Ulster Hall,\none of the city's Isrgest buildings,\nto house Belgian and Dutch refugees.\nCLAIM MAPS OF CERMANY\nFOUND IN NETHERLANDS\nBERLIN. May 13 (AP). \u2014 The\nGerman News Agency, Nazi propa-\nganada Outlet, claimed today that\n32,000 general 6taff maps of Germany were found in headquarters\nof The Netherlands army in Arnhem.\nIt said among them were scale\nmaps of the Ruhr District which the\nagency cited as \"further proof\nthat Britain and Holland planned\nan attack on the Berman Industrial\nregion.\nDIES FROM PUP'S BITE\nVANCOUVER, Wash, May 13\n(API\u2014Nipped by a playful pup,\nRobert Makley, 3, bled to death of\na severed jugular vein last night\nThe dog's shcrp tooth made so\nslight a surface wound that Its fatal\nnature was not discovered until too\nlate. The child bleH Internally, it\nwas reported\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY, VIG-\nor, pep. Try Vitex, 29 tablets $1.00.\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed. 24\npersonal rubber goods $1.00. Free\nSrice' list  of drug  sundries.  J.\nensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C.\n$1 BRINGS \"MANLIKE\" TORM-\nula to all weak run-down Men,\nrestores lost pep, Vigor, and Vitality, to HE-MAN proportions. \u2014\nGuaranteed\u2014Send $1 with your\nname and address to Park Laboratories, Creston, B. C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE\u2014LAUNCH AND BOAT-\nhouse. Cheap. Jess Sanden, R.R.-1.\nWANTED - GOOD CANOE. P. O.\nBox 480, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nSITUATIONS WANTID\nSpecial Low Rates {or noncommercial advertisements under .thli classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 28c for one week (6 days)\ncoven any number of required\nlines Payable ta advance.\nENGLISH TRADESMAN WANTS\nwork ta paperhanging, kalsomln-\nIng, painting; (Interior or exterior). No Job too large nor too\nsmall. SO yean experience. Art\nWoods, Madden Hotel.\nYOUNG MAN ACCUSTOMED TO\nteam work and cattle wishes position on stump ranch or farm, able\nto handle tractor or team, tnd\nhandy with tools. Oo anywhere.\nBox 2050 Dally Newi.\nWORK MAKING WATER PIPE\nwinted by experienced man. Will\ngo anywhere, provided timber\navailable and paying quantity of\npipe to be made. Apply Box 2210\nDaily News.\nGIRL, MIDDLE TWENTIES, DE-\nsires work. Experienced clerking,\nhousework, driving car, dressmaking. Will do all or any of same.\nApply Box 2180 Dally News.\nEXPERT RADIO TECHNICIAN,\nfive years experience on ail\nmakes, exceUent references, test\nequipment M. E. Mansfield, Vernon, B. C.\nAN ALL ROUND' HANDY MAN\nwants work by hour or Job kalso-\nmlnlng, carpentry, gardening, etc.\nPhone 1024R.\nCAPABLE WOMAN WANTS\nwork as chambermaid or general\nhousework. Will work by the\nhour or week anywhere. Ph. 1049L.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n,    PIPE, TUBES, FITTTNO\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate ihlpment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE-GAS RANGE \"MOF-\nlat\", B. C. Electric Exhibition\nModel, four rings, oven, warming\ncloset water heater. Good condition. Phone 906.\nRANGETTE ELECTRIC STOVE\nBrass bed, spring snd mattress.\n1323 Stanley Street Phone 346-L1.\nFOR SALE USED COAL AND GAS\ncombination range $83, Apply\nB. C. Plumbing.\t\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\nTIRES, GLASS, PARTS FOR ALL\ncars, trucks. City Auto Wreckers,\n180 Baker Street Phone 447.\nFOR SALE - *S8 PLYMOUTH\ncoach. A-l condition. W. K. Clark,\nPhone 773-Y2.\nFOR S-aI__-'31' BUICK SPECIAL\nSedan. A-l condition. Licence.\nCheap for cash. Phone 790,\nFOR SALE - WRICKING 1929\nBuick. 9 good tint, 890-20 tnd\nmany good: parts. Irving, Tarrys.\n\" E \"ui.  11 tar\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any qusntlty. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C.\nWANTED FOUR TON MINE RAIL\nand 3000 ft pipe. XVt to t inches.\nBox 2189 Dally News.\nWANTED SEVERAL CARS 25 IT.\nCedar poles. 8 Inch tops, large\nbutts. Dumont Galloway, B. C.\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES. ETC.\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nCIVE RESULTS\"\n\u25a0'.___, OUB JOth\n^\u25a0^W      ANNIVERSARY\nI   SR, _H Cor 20 years we have\n\u25a0n     V enjoyed   the   confi-\n^S_Wr   dence    of    Western\n*\"*\"      Canada'a      Poultry-\nmen. Write tor our 20th Anniversary  Book  and  read   why \"Tht\nChicks  Which  Give  Results\" are\nmore in demand each year.\nPrice per 100:  .\nIMay 15 Mty 15 Mty Uune\nUnsexed Pullets Unsexed Pullets\nW. Leghorns\n$11.00    mOO    $9.00    $19.00\nSuper Leghorn!\n13.00      24.00      11.00      20.00\nRocks, Reds, Hamps\n$13.00      27.00      11.00      23X10\n' Light Sussex\n14.00 '    -6.00      12.00      22.00\nUnsexed Chicki\n1000 lou lc per chick less\n'     Pullet Chicks\n500 lots 2c per chick less\nPullets 97% and 100% live delivery\nguaranteed.\nA 16-page book \"Raising Chicki for\nProfit free to customers, contains\nvaluable information on brooding\nand railing chicki tnd cue and\nfeeding ot poultry.\nRurept,$M>daU\nBox N        Langley Prairie, B. C.\nHAMBLEY ELECTRIC CHICKS\nf.o.b. Calgary, Edmonton\nMay 10- May 21\nMay 20 June 10\nWhite Lghm. 11.25 5.90 10.79 5.89\nW.L.' Pulleti 24.00 12.25 22.00 11.29\nBarred Rki 13.25 6.90 12.75 6.65\nB.R. Pulleti 20.00 10.25 19.00 9.75\nN. Hampshire!\n& (Mixed.) . 13.25 6.90 12.75 6.65\nK I. Rc-s\n(Pullets) 20.00 10.25 19.00 9.75\nJune 1 reduce Alta. prices 75c per\n100. 100 per cent Live Arrival\nGuaranteed. 98 per cent Accuracy\non Pullets. Order direct from thii\nadvertisement with Caih ta full\ntor date required. J. J. Hambley\nHatcheries, Agency: 607 1st St E.\nCalgary, Alta.\nOEORGE GAME'S TRIANGLE\nStrain ot Rhode Island Reds\nbring more profit because they\nlay more eggs than cheaper grades.\nI sell only Dominion Government Inspected \"Red label\" chicks\n\u2014R. O. P. sired. '(I do not sell the\nlower \"Blue label\" grade). Hatches\nup to and including May 6th at\n18c each; May 13th hatch at 14c;\nMay 20th and 27th tt 12c. Nice lot\nof itarted chicks and pullets to sell\nthis yesr\u2014ssk for prices. Triangle\nPoultry Farm, Armstrong, B. C.\nVIGO-PEP CHICKS\nAH breeds for Immediate delivery.\nWrite for FREE catalogue. Reduced prices effective May 10th.\npuarantee 100% itrong, Gov't\napproved Chicks.\nALBERTA ELECTRIC\nHATCHERIES\n2417N-1A. St S. E. Calgary\nQUALITY PULLETS FROM\nblood tested stock. Reds, Rocks,\nLeghorns and Hampshires. 8 wks\nold 69c; 10 weeks 79c. Satisfaction\nguaranteed on delivery. S. J,\nSanders, Milner, B. C.\nBABY CHICKS, RHODE ISLAND\nReds, bloodtested approved stock\n$10 per 100. John Goodman, 1695\nGllley Ave., New Westminster.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE OR RENT, KOFFEE\nKabin, opp. Daily News. Good\nbusiness. Write or cell 269 Baker\nStreet Nelson, B. C.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT-FURN. BUNGALOW\nFrigidaire, Electric Stove. Central\nlocation. June or July 1st to Aug\ntl. Phone 377-Y.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED HOME.\nWhole or part July and August.\n504 Mill Street Phone 285-X.\nFOR RENT-MODERN FURNISH-\ned Bungalow, Immediate possess-\nlon till Sept. 220 Victoria Street\nFOR RENT-FRONT SUITE..TWO\nrooms. Hot and cold water. Apply\nNoble Hotel.\nFOR RENT-ONE LIGHT HOUSE-\nkeeping room newly furnished.\nClean and bright. Phone 564R.\nFOR   RENT.   APARTMENT.   AP-\nply 414 Fall Street\nFOR RENT, FURNISHED HOUSE\nfor Summer months. Phone 854L.\nFOR RENT, BUNGALOW, CLOSE\nIn. Also furn. suite. Ph. 377X.\nFOR RENT-SUITES AND SINGLE\nhousekeeping rooms. K.W.C. Blk.\nFOR RENT, SUm,.- AND SINGLE\nhkpg. rms. Star Rooming House\nPARTLY FURNISHED HOUSE FOR\nrent Apply 614 Kootenay Street.\nTO    RENT-TWO-ROOM    FURN\ntshed suite. Stirling Hotel.\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED HOUSE,\n818 Silica Street\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent, 711 Vernon Street\nFOUR-ROOM    APARTMENT\nPhone D. Maglio, 80BL.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG., MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFAIRVIEW PROPERTIES, IDEAL\nHome sites. Easy terms to suit\nTie-up one of these sites now for\nlater building. B. W. Dawson,\naole agent Hlpperson Block,\nPhone 197.\nPRIVATE SALE, STRATHCONA\nHotel, beginning 2 p.m. Wed., 16th.\nCut glass, hand painted china,\nstiver, linens, pictures, bedding,\ncedar chest waterless pressure\ncooker, etc.\nTO CLEAR UP AN ESTATE, TWO\nlarge fully modern apartment\nhouses furnished, at sacrifice price\nwill be sold separately or together\nApply S. Smythe, Box 118, Nelson.\nFARM, CARDIN & NURSER1|\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nPLANTS, PERENNIALS AND !\npines, MacDonald's Rhubarb,\nparagus Roots, British Sovereig\nStrawberry Plants. Hardy Plat\nGardens, W. H. Mawer, NeUoi\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES \u25a0\ncial low prices. Active Trading <\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTOR!\nASSAYER8\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVTNI  _\nAnalyst   Assayer,   Metallurgy\nEngineer, Samplytag Agents loi\nTrail Smelter, 304-305 Joseph\nStreet, Nelson, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWS613\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist,'\nFall Street. P. 0. Box 9, Nelaon\nB.    C.     Representing    shipper!\ninterest st Trail. B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROS\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist]\nIndividual representatives foi\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neurc\n_ calometer, X-ray. McCulIoch I\nDR.   WILBERT  BROCK.  D.\n542 Baker Street Phone 989.\nCHIMNEY SWEEPS\nLICENCED   CHIMNEY   SWEEPj\nri. D. Duncan, Phone f\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETS, Mra. V.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St Ph, i\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR*\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale, B.C.B\nSurveyor and Engineer. Phontl\n\"Beaver Falls.\"\t\nR. W. HAGGEN, Mining S Civ_-\nEngineer, B. C. Land Surveyor.!\nBox 509, Roislanu ana (innd\nForks.\nHOMES  POR THE  AGED\nCONDUCTED  BY  THE SISTE\not the Love ot Jesus for elderl;\nladiei. The Priory Guest House, i\nnew residence with every mud]\nern comfort St Anthony's Guei\nHouse, a lovely home with ver\nmoderate ratei St. Raphael's Wind\ntor  invalids  and  convalescents\nSt Jude's House ot Rest for eld\nerly couples. For prospectus app:\nMother  Superior,  849   W.\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan, Write for full Information to 908, Dept ot Natural\nResources, C. P. R, Calgary, Alta.\nFOR  RENT   OR   SALE \u2014 GOOD\nranch with buildings and house,\nnear Willow Point Apply Whitehead, 717A Victoria St\n4 ACRES GOOD GARDEN SOIL,\n10 minutes from P. O. in Penticton\nfor quick sale, $800 cash. F. O.\nDeMaudsley, Penticton, B, C.\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. A s o u r d Investment\nTerms. Johnstone Estate. Box\n198, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR RENT, LARGE HOUSE. ALSO\nSummer home at six mile. Phone\n925-R. 509 Victoria St. Nelson.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance\nevery description. Reel Ett Ph. f\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, 1\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real BS&T\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hippen\nHardware. Baker St Phone 197.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS UMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and ell\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon Stl\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES ATI\nForest Lawn Memorial Park. Get!\nErlce list from Bronze Memorials I\n,td., Box 728 Vancouver, B. C.\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S  SASH FACTORY,|\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY,   SELL tt  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 584.\n^..__._.:...._-_._A,,    ,. \u25a0-.._ . s^u^_______tl\u00bbl!_-, . _.'., . ..'   .- ..\u25a0 ._<_______!\n Battle Against\nTime to Finish\nSpring Planting\nWINNIPEG, May \u00ab (CP) .-Seeding drills cut into thousands of acres\nof Weitern wheatlands today as\nprairie farmers rushed to complete\nplanting ot the 1940 grain crop.\nWestern grain growers battled\nagainst time to finish Spring seeding operations now far behind the\nschedule maintained lut ynr.\nWith moisture condlUoria'.m**mkl*s\nper cent below normal for the Western grain belt as a whole, approximately halt of the Spring wheat\nplanting has been done. A year ago\nabout 90 per cent ot land had been\nseeded by this time while moisture\nconditions within a few percentage\npoints of normal.\nManitoba farmers appear to have\nbeen favored with the West's best\nseeding conditions. Almost all wheat\nhas been seeded and the molstur.?\nsituation Is within 20 per cent of\nnormal.\nAbout half the wheat seeding has\nbeen completed ln Saskatchewan\nwhere moisture ls approximately 40\nper cent below normal Most of the\nseeding has taken place in the\nSouthern areu while many Northern farmers are awaiting more favorable weather.\nAlberta Is the only prairie province with moisture conditions above\nnormal but farmers there have been\nhampered by the heavy precipitation and only about 15 per cent of\nthe land has been seeded.\nEvery district ln Alberta hu been\nfavored with good moisture while\nNorthern and Central Saskatchewan\nI need rains to aid early germination\nNorthwestern Manitoba farmlands\nalso require soaking rains.\nBright spot of ihe Saskatchewan\npicture is the Southwestern area,\nwhich for years suffered from\ndrought, but now hu more moisture than normal. Some farmers report their land to be ln better condition than lt hu been for at least\n10 years.\nOata and barley growers ln Manitoba have almost half their seed ln\nthe ground. Saskatchewan coarse\npain seeding ranges from less than\nfive ner cent to within 20 per cent\ncompleted while Alberta producers\nhave juat started.\nKootenay Belle Gold\nProduction $35,000\nTORONTO, May. 11 (CPl.-Xoo.\ntonay Belle Gold Mines, Nelson,\nBa C\u201e reporta production for April\napproxlmated $35,000 trom treatment of 8500 tons ot ore, compared\nwith (48,536 taken from 3688 tons\n, ln March. Output for the first four\nMonths ot the year stands at $173,\n707 from 14,664 tons against $207,\n680 from 17,019 tons ln the same\nperiod ot 1939.\nLONDON CLOSE\nlaONDON, May 18 (API-British\nslock closings, in sterling:\nCelanese Corp of Am \u00a38, Cent\nMining \u00a312,., Consol Gold Fields\n48s Id, Courtaulds 86s 6d, Crown\n\u00a3--*!_, East Geduld \u00a311, HBC 21s\n3d, Mining Trust 2d, Hand \u00a37%,\nSpringi its lOVid.\nBonds: Brit 2% pc Consoli \u00a373*44,\nBrit 3',4 pc war loan \u00a399%, Brit\n-   funding 4s  1960-90  \u00a3111%.\n'     MITAL MARKITS\nLONDON, May 13 (AP) - Bar\nsilver 21 3-16d, up 3-16. (Equivalent\n38.42 cents buad on dollar at $4.03)\nBar gold 168s, unchanged.\nTin itrong; spot \u00a3269 10s bid,\n\u00a3270 uked; future \u00a3267 10s bid,\n\u00a3268 uked.\nMONTREAL\u2014Bar Gold In Lon\ndon wai unchanged at $37.54 an\nounce In Canadian funds; I681 ln\nBritish, representing the Bank of\nEngland's buying price. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$3850 In Canadian.\nSpot: Copper, eletrolytlc 12.75;\nUn 66.25; lead 5.50, line 5.65, antimony 15.25.\nSliver futurei closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid: May 37.75.\nNEW YORK\u2014Copper steady*, electrolytic ipot and Conn, valley,\n11.50-Export 11.50.\nTin iteady; apot and nearby 54J0\nnominal; forward 2.50 nominal\nLead steady; ipot, New York 5-\n8.05; East St. Louis 4.85.\nZinc steady: East St Louis spot\nand forward 5.75.\nPig Iron iteady; No. 2, fob Eut-\nPennsylvania __24.00;\nBuffalo\nMRS. B. MILLER IS UID\nTO REST AT SILVERTON\nSILVHRTON, B.C.\u2014Funeral aer-\nvlcea conducted by Rev. J. Dewar\nln the United Church Friday after-\nnoon were held for Mrs. B. Miller,\nwho passed away at Slocan Com-\n(minify Hospital.\nHjmna, \"What a Friend We Have\nln Jesus\" and \"Rock of Ages\" were\nI bearers were J. Matheson, L.\nShanta, H. Retail, W. Nelaon, L.\nTralll and S. Kennett\nInterment was ln New Denver\nCemetery.\nern  .\n23.00; Alabama 19.38.\nAluminum, virgin 99 pc 19.00,\nAntimony, Chinese spot 14.50.\nQuicksilver 175.00-176.00 nominal.\nPlatinum, pure 40.00,\nChinese wolframite, duty paid\n22.50-24.00.\nDomestic Scheelite 22.00.\nBar silver ti% unchanged.\nPrices Break on\nToronto Market\na\nTORONTO, May 13 (CP) .-Prlcei\nbroke oh Toronto Exchange today,\nregistering tha widest declines in\nmany monthi. Western Oils dropped.\nBell Telephone declined about 4,\nand losses of 1 to $ were netted by\nConsolidated Smelters, Canada\nSteamships ptd., Gatineau pfd.,\nShawlnigan, Dominion Bridge, Dominion Steel, National Steel Cat:,\nCanadian Car, Page-Hersey. Algoma\nSteel, Abitibi p(d\u201e and Canadian\nCelanese.\nWalkefl and Distillers-Seagrams\nweakened a point or more. Ford \"A\",\nBrazilian, *C, P. R., Imperial Oil\nB. A. and International Petroleum\nlost % to \u2022*.\nSteep Rock sold down to 101, ott\n46. Pend Oreille lost 35, Waite-Anv\nulet 50 and Nickel a point.\nLosses expanded to 15 to 80 for\nMacassa, Little Long Lac, Wright-\nHargreeves, Sigma, Central Patricia,\nPreston, Malartlc Gold Fields, McKenzie, Aunor and lut Malartlc\nBidgood-Klrkland dropped 7 to 27.\nHome OU hit a low ot 1.84 and\ndoted around there tor a low of\nabout 40. Calgary and Edmonton,\nFoothills, Anglo-Canadian and Okalta closed 10 to 20 down and Royal'\nIte lort IH to 25.\nDIVIDENDS\nTORONTO,\u2014The Stock Exchange\nannounced today the following distributions had been declared: Monarch Royaltiei, Limited; and Prairie Royaltiei Limited, both ot Calgary, one oent each.\nRoyalite OU Company, Ltd, 80\ncents per ihare.\nCanada and Dominion Sugar\nCompany, Ltd, t*1*r, centa per share.\nWINNIPEG MKT. CLOSfO\nWINN-HBG, May 13 (CP)\u2014Grain\ntraders remained idle today aa the\nWinnipeg Grain Exchange wai\ncloied In observance ot Arbor Day.\nOperations will be resumed tomorrow.\n-NILION DAILY NIWS, NILION. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MAY 14. IMA*\nCanada Builds Giant Air Bombers\nWATER RISES AT SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014A considerable\nrise in the water la noted at Gauge\nat Slough Bridge, thii rise Is expected to be maintained from now\non, but all appearances point to a\nnormal peak thli year. The rate\nof the run off being the essential\nfactor in determining the peak\nrise.\nThli photo Shows a workman drilling holes In a\nrib tor a Handlcy-Page Hampden bomber, a number\nof which are being manufactured in Montreal. The\nHampden Is one of the largest machines ln the ser\nvice ot file Royal Air Force and Ae letting of contracts' ln this country ls looked upon u a decided\ncompliment to the skill of Canadian workmen.\nTills workman is piecing together the only\nwooden component of uie Hampden bomber, the\nfamous Handley-Page \"slot\" which is fitted into the\nleading edge of the wing and ls a special safety\ndevice.\nSTEEL-MAKING RATE\nADVANCES IN\nU. S.\nSnails, becauie of their ability to\nundergo long fasts, are taken along\non safaris by African natives ai a\naource of freih foods.\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nmines:\nAfton Mines \t\nAldermac Copper\t\nAmm Gold  \t\nAnglo-Huronian - _\u201e_.\nArntfield Gold \t\nAstoria Rouyn Mines\t\nAunor  Gold    .\nBagamac Rouyn \t\nBankfleld Gold  \t\nBase Metals Mining\t\nBeattie Gold Mines\t\nBldgood Kirkland  ,\nBig  Missouri  _ \t\nBtmlo Mines \t\nBralorne Minei\t\nBrett Trethewey       ,..\nBuffalo  Ankerite\t\nBunker Hill Extension\t\nCanadian Malartlc  \t\nCariboo Gold Quarti\t\nCastle-Trethewey\t\nCentral Patricia  \t\nChlbougamau     \t\nChromium M & s\t\nCoast Copper      __.\nConiaurum Mines \t\nConsolidated M tt S\t\nDome Mines ......\t\nDorval-Slscoe  \t\nEut Malartic\t\nEldorado Gold\nFalconbridge Nickel\nFederal Klrkland ..-,\nFrancoeur Gold \t\nGillies Lake  \t\nGod's Lake Gold\t\nGold Belt\nGrandoro Mines \t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHard Rock Gold\t\nHarker Gold \t\nHollinger  \t\nHowey Gold\nM*%\n29\n.02y\u00bb\n2.25\n.08\n.02*4\n1.40\n.06\n.16\n.16\n1.00\n.25\n.08*\n.07\n9.50\n.01\n4.80\n.02\n.60\n2.41\n.66\n1.93\n.10\n29\n1.00\n1.30\n33.00\n20.10\n.02*.\n3.10\n.60\n3.10\n.04\n.35\n.05\n.33\n.23\n.04 Vi\n.44\n.75\n04 %\n12.50\n.33\n26.00\n34.50\n.01%\n.11!\n02H\n2.20\n1.00\nPaymaiter Cons  \t\nPend  Oreille    k\nPerron Gold  \t\nPickle Crow Gold\t\nPioneer Gold  \t\nPremier Gold  \t\nPowell Rouyn Gold ___\nPreston East Dome\t\nQuebec Gold \t\nReeves MacDonald .. __\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac   ..._..___\nSan Antonio Gold ................\nShawkey Gold  \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon  \t\nSiscoe Gold  _.___\t\nSladen Malartlc\t\nSt Anthony\nHudson Bay M tt S\t\nInternational Nickel ...\nJ-M Consolidated \t\nJack Waite \t\nJacola Gold \t\nKerr-Addison \t\nKlrkland  Lake   \t\nLak* Shore Mines   22.00\nLeitch Gold Mina \u201e     .65\nLabel Oro Mines        .02\nLittle Long Lac      2.15\nMacassa  Mines    -    3.05\nMacLeod Cockshutt      1.60\nMadsen Red Lake Gold      .35\nMandy          jOOK\nMclntyre-Porcupine      48.25\nMcKenzie Red take _    1.05\nMcVlttie-Graham       XI8V4\nMcWatten Gold    35\nMining Corporation 83\nMoneta Porcupine        .66\nMorrls-Klrkland          .04\nNtplssing Mining     1.11\nNoranda   61.00\nNonhetal'     48\nO'Brien  Gold   90\nOmega Gold  20\nPamour Porcupine     1.25\n.30\n1.50\n1.60\n2.90\n2.23\n1.00\n1.03\n1.93\n22\n.25\nM\nM\n1.98\n.02\n1.02\n.83\n.75\n.38\n.14\nSudbury Basin      1.50\nSullivan Consolidated       .15\nSylvanite         2.70\nTeck-Hughes Gold  3.80\nToburn Gold Mlnea ..\u201e \u201e    1.50\nTowagmac           .17\nVentures        2.80\nWaite  Amulet        4.80\nWright Har_re\u00bbvee -     6.80\nYmir Yankee Girl       .05\nOILS:\nAjax        .16\nBritish American      19.75\nNEW YORK. May 13 (AP).-A\nsudden upsurge in the rate of iteel\nmaking this Week In the United\nStates\u2014to 70 per cent of the industry's capacity\u2014wai estimated today by the American Iron It Steel\nInstitute.\nThe production rate is 42 points\nhigher than last week's 08.8 per\ncent and compared with 60.9 per\ncent a month ago and 45.4 per cent\na year ago.\nIn iteel circles, it was said the\nJump waa caused largely by the war\nand expectatloni of new buying by\nthe Allies as well as by new orden\nfor United States defence purposes.\nBritish GoVt.'i Roily\nLONDON, May 13 (AP)-A sharp\nraliy in British Bovenunent bono\nencouraged support elsewhere in\nthe security market today. Formation of a national government wai\nrated the chief Impetus to buying.\nDomestic rails overcame Initial\nweakness and most Industrial leaders added a few pence. Foreign\nloans moved against Uie general\ntrend. Sues Canal dropped five\npointa to 75.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, May 13 (CP) -\nSpot: Butter, Que. 23*A; Western\nApril 23W. Eggs, Eastern A-large\n23>A. Butter futures: No. 25*A.\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nAmerican Can .\u2014\nAm Smelt & Reef.\nAm Tel \t\nAmerican Tob \u2014\nAnaconda \t\nBaldwin .\nOpen\n109H\n50%\n171*4\n84 ift\n30H\n19*\n4%\nS3H\n89%\n1\u00bb*_\n4%\nChemical Research\nImperial    \t\nInter Petroleum\t\nTexas Canadan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:-\nAbtb Power A \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazlanTL *_ P\t\nBrewers le Distillers\nBrewing Corporation ...\nB C Power A \t\nB C Power B _\nBuilding Products \t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car tt Foundry ....\nCan Cement \t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Pac Railway \t\nCan Ind Alcohol A ....\nCan Wineries \u201e\t\nCons Bakeries  \t\nCosmos    -\nDominion Storei  _.\nDistillers  Seagrams ....\nFord of Canada A\t\nGypsum L tc A \t\nHamilton   Bridge  \t\nHlnde Dauche  _.\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl  Metals  '.\t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMaple Leaf Millng\t\nMassey Harris     \t\nMontreal Power  \t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car \t\nPressed Metals\t\nStandard Paving \t\n30\n13.00\n20.75\n180\n1.50\n150\n7Vi\n4H\n2\n25V,\n2V,\nBU\ni\u00ab\n4*4\n32 Vi\n5%\n1.90\n4Va\nWA\n1.66\n4*4\n25\n18%\n3*\n5\n9\n36\nI)\n11%\n26\n25\n3\n4Y4\nm,\n45%\n52*.\n9\n.65\nBait lc Ohio\t\nBendlx AvlaUon\nBeth Steel \t\nCanada Dry .....\nCan Pacific \t\nCerro de Pasco _ 37\nChrysler _ 81\nCon Gas New York _ 30H\nC Wright pfd   11*4\nDupont    184V.\nEastman Kodak 150 V*\nGeneral Electric   35\nGeneral Foods \u2014 46V4\nGeneral Motors  52V4\nGoodrich   ; 15'A\nGranby     _7Vi\nGreat Nor pfd _.\nHowe Sound ...~\nHudson Motors\nInter Nickel\t\n25V4\n40%\n4\u00ab!\n27 Vi\nClose\n109\n49%\n167%\n81*\n28V.\n19\n4%\n32%\n84\n16V.\n4%\n35%\n74\n29%\n10\n181 Vi\n149\n33*\n48\n48*\n15%\n7%\n23%\n40\n4*\n26 Va\nInter Tel tc Tel \u2014 8*\nKenn Copper    36\nMontgomery Ward \u2014 45*\nNash Motors   5\nN Y Central  14*\nPackard Motors  2*\nPenn R R  20*\nPhillipp Pete   38\nPullman  24\nRadio CorporaUon \u2014 6Vi\nRem Rand \u2014 8%\nSafeway Stores   33%\nShell Union   12\nS Cal Edison   29*\nStan Oil of N J  42*\nStudebaker     9V4\nTexas Corporation   46V4\nTexas Gulf Sul _.\u2014 33*\nUnion Carbide   80%\nUnion Oil of Cal \u2122 15*\nUnion Pacific   90%\nU S Rubber .\nU S Steel \t\nWarner Bros\t\nWest Electric\t\nWest Union\t\nWoolworth\t\nYellow Truck\t\n27%\n.   62*\n3\n, 102\n.   \u00bb*,\n,   37*\n17*\n2*\n34\n44*\n4%\n13%\n3\n18%\n37\n20%\n5%\n8%\n40%\n11%\n28%\n42\n7%\n43*\n37%\n78%\n14%\n89%\n23%\n57%\n2*\n108\n18\n37\n14*\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, May 13 (CP).-WeA-\nend receipts, Cattle 205; calves 10;\nhqgs 77; sheep 205. Today: Cattle 39;\ncalves, hogs, sheep nil\nMedium to good butcher steers (h-\n6.75; common to medium light heifers 5.25\u20146. Good to choice fed calves\n6.76\u20147.25. Medium and good cows\n4\u20146. Good stocker steers 6\u20140.50;\nmedium 6.50\u20145.75.\nLut bacons 7.25.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C- John\nTlnline of Trail motored here, returning accompanied by hia wife,\nand son, who have been visiting\nher parenta Mr. and Mri. Heywood.\nMrs. Heywood also returned to\nTraU, where ihe wiU be their gueit.\n' H. Murray ipent a few daya ln\nNelson.\nMr. and Mn. Fisher and Mri.\nFrancis viilted Creston.\nColonel Chalmley viilted Nelion.\nCaptain and Mn. Hlncki have\nreturned from Radium Hot Springs.\nMr. and Mrs. C. King of Castlegar motored here with Mr. King's\nmother. Mn. C. H. King, who has\nbeen their guest for two weks.\nWall St. leaden\nin Sharp Decline\nNEW YORK, May 18 (API-Lead-\nIng stocks hit the skids for losses\nof more man seven pointa In today's market, Uie wont slide since\nlest September, as trading fortes\n\u25a0aw trash gloom in shifting European war currents.\nThe list got off to a fairly ateady\nitart, but prices soon began to tumble. Transfers were tn the neighborhood of 2,500,000 shafts, largest ln\n\u2022bout eight months.\nHelping touch off the relapse, It\nwu said, was the closing out et a\naUeable assortment of Dutch margin accounts by brokers who were\nunable to get in touch with customers In The Netherlands.\nProminent on the down swing\nwere U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Chrysler, General Moton, U. S. Rubber,\nDouglu Aircraft, American Telephone, Allied Chemical American\nCan, Dow Chemical International\nPaper preferred and Great Northern.\nFavorable Items on tha domestic\nfront, such u a mora than expected\nlump in thii week's iteel mill operations estimate, -were virtually lg\nnored.\nCanadian issuei were a bit sluggish. Hiram Walker held steadily\nwhile Dome Mines, Mclntyre and\nDistillers rested unchanged. Canadian Pacific and Lake Shore Mines\ndipped fracUons. Canada 4s, among\nbonds, dipped * point\nWide Declines ot\nMontreal Undtr\nSoiling Pressure\nMONTREAL, May 13 (CP). \u2014\nPrices tumbled one to aix points today u stock market traders, nervously watching European war developments, unloaded their holding!.\nBell Telephone fell ilx.\nSt Lawrence Paper preferred had\nfour-point decline. St. Lawrence\nCorporaUon wu down a slzeablo\nfraction.\nSteel of Canada lost 2* while declines ot a point or more were chalked up for a number of Issues ln this\ngroup.\nSmelters neared Uie close at 38,\ndown four, whUe Nickel and Noranda were minus a point National\nSteel Car wu down three.\nCreston Supplies\n72,000 Tulips\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Creston flower\nfarms contributed almost 72,000\ntulips to facilitate an ornate and\neffective observance of Mother's\nDay ln the territory from Trail to\nRegina and Moosmln, Suk. And had\nblooms been available sales could\nhave reached around the 100,000\nmark.\nWeather the fore part ot Uie week\nwaa on the cool aide and shortened\nup supplies somewhat, but Thunday and Friday's heat wu timely\nto assure an abundance for Uie\nnearby pointa ln the Crow that\ncould be served with Saturday\nmorning shipping.\nUp to Saturday it is estimated 80\nper cent of the 1939 crop hu moved\nand if warm weather prevails the\nend of this week will see the end of\na tulip teuon that hu produced\nsomewhat better pricu than ln 1939.\nThe cold storage at the Fruit\nExchange wu used to good advantage In handling surplus blooms\npending Uie Mother's Day rush.\nNATAL\nNATAL, B. C. - Mrs. S. Romeo\nof Calgary was a guest of Mr. and\nMrs. P. PugUese.\nW. Payne hu returned from the\nUniversity of Albert*?\nG. Peters of Fernle hu been trans\nferred to Michel.\nMorris Duncan hu returned trom\nthe Univenity of British Columbia\nwhere he completed hia fourth year\nin arts.\nNorman Phillips, who is a Medical\nOrderly in the Canadian Forces at\nKingston, Ont., is spending a ten\nday leave at his home ln Michel.\nSamuel Hampton ot Michel ls seriously ill at the Michel Hospital.\nMiss Atda Littler ot Michel visited Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Oley snd family\nvisited Fernie.\nS. Grls and two sons, Celeiter and\nRegi and Q. D'AngeUo of Natal visited Calgary.\nH. Anderson visited Natal.\nFRESH SNOW AT SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014A fall of mow on\nthe higher reachei was experienced\nhere during Tuesday night. Rain\nfell on the level spumodially during the period.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh   Low Close   Change\n30 industrial!   144.42  137.25 137.63   off   7.22\n20 rails      _    29.65    27.63 27.83   off   1.98\n15 utilities _        23.73    23.50 22.50   off   1.29\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE\nBid\nMONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain   2%\nAssoc Brew of Can  18V\u00ab\nBathurat P & P A   11%\nCanadian Bronze - -. 40V4\nCan Car tt Fdy pfd - 18\nCan Celanese   30 y4\nCan Celanese pfd a 126\nCan North Power  - 12U\nCan Steamship   i\\\nCan Steamship pfd   15%\nCockshutt Plow   7\nCon Min tt Smelting .\nDominion Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel lc Coal B .\nDominion Textile \t\nDryden Paper -..\nFoundation C of C ....\nGatineau Power\t\nGatineau Power pfd ..\nGurd Charles \t\nHoward Smith Paper .\nH Smith Paper pfd ....\nImperial Oil .\nInter Petroleum \t\nInter Nickel of Can    34\n33\n17 IA\nlOVi\n88\n7\nSVi\n90\neVt\nn%\n100\n13\n20 tt\nLake of the Woods\nMcColl Frontenac ...\nNational Brew Ltd .\nNat Brew pfd\t\nOgilvie Flour new ...\nPrice Bros\n21\n7\n29%\n38\n30\n16\nQuebec Power     15\nShawlnigan W fc P .\nSt Lawrence Corp _\nSt Law Corp pfd .\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nWestern Grocera\t\nHANKS\nDominion  .............\nImperial \t\nMontreal\t\nNova ScoUa\t\nRoyal\nToronto  ._\nCURB\nAbitibi 6_pfd\t\nBathunt P lc P B\t\nBeauharnois Corp \u2014\nBritish American OU .\nB C Packen  \t\nCan Industries B\t\nCan Marconi\t\nCan Vicken .\n. 19V\u00ab\n. 5%\n. UH\n. 12\n. 76tt\n. 60\n.204\n. 210\n. 200\n.904\n.172\n.256\nCons Paper Corp\t\nFalrchlld Aircraft\t\nFraser Co Ltd . \t\nInter Utilities B\t\nLake Sulphite\t\nMacLaren P fc P .\nMcColl Frontenac pfd .....\nMitchell Robt  \t\nPrice Bros pfd .   ;\u25a0-,\u2022\u201e...,\nRoyalite Oil \t\nWalker Good It W\t\nWalker Good pfd\t\nIo-\n4tt\n19%\n17.83\n1.95\n1.05\n3\nttt\nltt\n14\n.30\n1.60\n18%\n98 V,\n9.40\n2.40\nJ01H\njOIH\n.03%\n.23\nJ2%\nMINES\nBig Missouri\t\nBralorne  \t\nCariboo Gold \u2014\nDentonla  \u2014.\nFairview Amal\t\nGolconda    \u2014\nGold Belt\t\nGrandvlew  __.\nGrull Wihksne \t\nHedley Mucot ._\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines\t\nInter Coal  \t\nIsland Mountain ....\nKootenay BeUe ...\nMlnto Gold  __\nMcGillivray \t\nNloola M tc M\t\nPend Oreille     1.50\nPioneer Gold .    128\nPorter Idaho _     .Oltt\nPremier Border ....     .01\nPremier Gold     14)3\nPrivateer      M\nQuatsino \u201e       \u2014\nRed Hawk Oold ....      -\nRelief Arlington .     .05\nReno Gold        -ltt\nSally Minei      .05\nSalmon Gold       .03\nSheep Creek      1.02\nAik\n.10\n9.50\n2.50\n.Oltt\n.01%\n.04\n_25\n.14\n.03%\n.40\n.00%\n\u2014\n.00%\n\u2014\n.37\n.45\n\u2014\n.95\n\u2014\n.53\n.02\n\u2014\n.24\n\u2014\n.02%\n.03',4\n.50\n1.65\n.25\n2.20\nSilvercrest -     .00%\nSurf Inlet  05\nWellington \u201e       .01\nWhitewater .01%\nYmir Yankee Girl     .04\n16     OILS\n26%  Amalgamated        .OOtt\nAnaconda             .04%\n20% Anglo Canadiin 70\n.01%\n1.08\n.03\n.01\n.08\n.03%\n1.05\n.01%\n.01%\n.01%\n.05V,\n.00%\n.05\nA P Con ....\u201e\n.12\n\u2014\nBrown Corp  _\n.12%\n\u2014\nCal It Ed\t\n1.60\n1.63\nCalmont  _\n.27\n.30\nCommonwealth  ...\n.22\n.23\nExtension  _\n.18\n\u2014\nFirestone Pete .....\n.05%\n\u2014\nFour Star Pete\t\n.08\n\u2014\nFreehold Corp .....\n-02tt\nsa\nHargal\t\n.17\n\u2014\nHighwood Sar ....\n.13\n\u2014\n1.82\n1.83\nImperial\t\n23.00\n\u2014\n.01%\n\u25a0\u2014\nMcDougall Seg ....\nMill City\t\n.10\n.04tt\n.05%\nMonarch Royal ...\n.07\n\u2014\nNational Pete \t\n.05tt\n\u2014\n.81\n\u2014\nPacalta   \u2014\n\u2014\n.05\n.17%\n.17%\nRoyal Crest Pete ..\n.06%\n.08%\nRoyaUte  \t\n25.00\n\u2014\nSpooner ....\n.03\n\u2014\nSouth End Pete ....\n\t\nM*h\nUnited    _\n\t\n.05\nVanalta \t\n.04%\n\u2014\nVulcan  _\n\u2014\n.49\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates \t\n1.40\n\u2014\nCoast Brew \t\n1.25\n\u2014\nBeautify Your\nDOOR HARDWARE\nWith Glistening Chrome Plate\nfXCHANCI MARKITS\nMONTREAL, May 11 (CP)-Brit-\nlsh and foreign exchange, nominal\nrates between banka only!\nChina. Hong Kong dolara, .2210.\nFinland, flnmark, .0228.\nFranca, franc, .020091.\nJapan, yen. .2605.\nSwltxerland, franc, .2481.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange ratei:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 148,\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10, selling 1.11; franc 2.00 29-32.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 8.17: Canadian doUar .82%; franc 18.80.\nIn Gold-Pound 10a, Id; U. 8,\ndollar 61.06 cents; Csnadlan dollar\n85.06 centa.\nNEW YORK, May 13 (CP-.-The\nEd sterling slumped 11 cents to\nln relation to the United States\nr today under the Influence ol\nwar news from Belgium and The\nNetherlands.\nThe belga and the guilder were\nunquoted In the foreign exchange\nmarket The Canadian dollar, it a\ndiscount of 17% per cent finlihed %\ncent down. (Ottawa Foreign Exchinge Control Board rate 9.09-9.01\nper cent discount).\nThe French franc dropped .06\ncent to IM centa and the Swiss\nfranc a naw low with a decline of\n,15 cant\nClosing ratei, Great Britain In\ndollars, othen ln centi:\nOfficial Canadian Control Board\nratei for U. S. dollan: Buying 10\nper cent premium, selling 11 oar\ncent premium, equivalent to discount! on Canadian doUars ln New\nYork 9.91 per cent, selling 9.09\npar cent\nCanadian dollar ln New York\nopen market 17% per cent discount\norM.UttU. S. cents.\nGreat Britain, demand 3.16, cables\nS.17, 60-dsy 8.18, 90-day 3.11.\nFinland 2.01N, Fnnce 1.80, Germany 40.10N, benevolent 17.99;\nGreece JSS, Hungary 17.66N, Italy\n5.05, Portugal 3.25N, Rumania ,42N,\nSweden 23.84, Swltxerland 22.20,\nYugoslavia 2.35N.\nArgentina official 29.77, tree 22.80;\nBrazil official 6.09, free 6.10; Mexico\n16.80.\nJapan 28.48, Hong Kong 19.98,\nShanghai 4.95.\nRates in ipot cables unless\notherwise Indicated. N\u2014Nominal.\nChicago Wheat\nDown 3 Cents\nCB-CAGO, May 13 (API- A\nwave of telling that broke out in\nthe wheat pit during the final hour\ntoday pushed prlcei down to net\nlosses of around three centa a bush-\nPrices ef other grains also were\nlower.\nTbe liquidation accompanied\ngrain trade pessimism over war developments and wu Induced partly\nby extreme weakness of securities\nprices. Talk of improving crop conditioni and favorable weather, with\nshowera forecut for the next 24\nhoun, also influenced the selling.\nWhest cloied 2%-3 centi lower\nthan Saturday, May $1.05%-%, July\n81.05H-H; corn ltt-1% down, May\nStt, July 67%-%; oats H-l cent\nlower.\nASPARACUS SHIPPING\nINCREASES AT CRESTON\nCRBSTON. B. C. - With the\nweather taking a decidedly warmer\nturn the latter part ot the week,\nasparagus shipping ls ihowing I\nmarked increase with the peak ot\nthe seuon Just about at hand.\nA total shipping of five toni la\nexpected, which is a considerable\ngain over 1939, when the total\nmovement wu but illghtly over\nthree tons, which ln turn wu on a\npar With 1938.\nThe Monrad Wigen ranch at\nWynndel will provide the bulk ot\nthis yesr's outgo. So far the demand hu been good and the dump\nduty appean to ham kept out\nWashington supplies more effectively than lut seuon.\nArrow Lakes Couple\nMarried at Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C. - The nierrlsge\nof Marjorie Bonlta Bedwell, elder\ndaughter of Mn. Bedwell of Arrow\nPark and John Percy Williams,\nsecond ion of Mr. and Mrs. J. WU-\nHams of Grahams Landing, wu\nsolemnized ln the United Church\nMay 9. Rev. CaUum Thompson\nofficiated.\nThe bride, in a long gown ot traditional white satin, and silk net\nveil held ln place with orange blossoms, wu given in marriage by\nher- grandfather, Mr. Slsson of Arrow Park. Her only attendant wu\nher sister, Mn. C. Mliera, who wore\nah attractive gown of blue crepe.\nHarold Williams, brother ot the\ngroom, wu best man. The wedding\nmusic wu played by Mrs, C.\nThompson.\nMr. and Mrs. Williams left by\nmotor for Trail and Spokane. They\nwill reside at Grahams Landing.\nPARIS (CP)\u2014A number of English girl volunteer ambulance driven and orderlies have reported\nhere for duty in various sections of\nthe British forces in France.\nCrop Indications\n.Goodfor .MM\nVERNON. B. C May 19 (CP) - j\nWater conditions have been the\nmildest experienced throughout the\nProvince for a number of yean,\naccording to the first horticultural\nreport of tha season Issued today\nby the British Columbia Depart,\nment ot Agriculture,\nReporting Upon British Columoia\nfruit crop prospects for 1940, the\nDepartment uid the in all the\nfruit and vegetable producing cc- :\ntlom no low temperatures were re\ncorded and added that there wu \u00ab\nsatisfactory rainfall ln aU areu.\n\"The Spring wu much earlier \u00abi\nthe beginning of Uie aeason tha\nln 1939, but at present date it\nonly slightly in advance of the .put\nseason at the same Ume,\" tha report stated.\nFollowing Is a summary:\nTree fruits \u2014 tree fruiti ot til\nkinds came through the Winter -0\nexcellent condition, and the weather hu been moit satisfactory\nduring the blossom period. The present Tndlcationi are that all tree ,\nfruit crops will ba u heavy u similar cropi ln 1939.\nSmall fruits\u2014present indications\nsre that crops of all kinds ot small\nfruits wlU be hesvler than in the\nput year. AU crops came through\nthe Winter in good condition and\nwith Uie prevailing Spring conditions ihould be on the market a\nlittle earlier than in 1939. From a\nmarketing standpoint lt should be\npointed out that there. Is no carryover of lsst year's crop.\nVegetable- Mild Winter condU\ntlons materially assisted in moving Uie production ot overwintering vegetable crops. Rhubarb has\nbeen moving to the market for tha\nlut month. Lettuce is being shipped in small quantities and will\nmove in carload lots about May 15.\nPresent indications are that all vegetable acreage will be larger thai\nin 1939 with the exception of onions,\nVancouver Losses\nRange Up to 42 Centi\nin Active Trading\nVANCOUVER, May 18 (CP). -\nLosses of fractions to 42 centa\nwere general among golda and oils\nduring fairly active trading on Vancouver Stock Exchange today. Tha\ntransactions totalled 69,505 shares.\nHome OU dropped 42 cents\n1.83 while Okalta at 85 and Calls Edmonton at 1.63 both dropp\ncents. Angle Csnadlan cloied\ncenta lower at 70 and Prairie Royal.\nties at 16% lost 8%. Royalite eued\n1.00 to 25.00 while Calmont at 30\nwu unchanged from Saturday's\nbid.\nBralorne Gold slipped 16 cents to\n9:50 and Cariboo Gold Quarti wu\nott eight cents et 2.42. Pioneer at\n215 and Premier at 1.03 were both\ndown five centa and Sheep Creek\neued a cent to 1.02. Unchanged\nwere Kootenay Belle at 55, Privateer\nat 55 and Reno at 25.\nGrandvlew .wu the lone trader\namong the bue metals and closed\nfractionally lower than Saturday'a\nclosing bid at 12%.\t\nOils in Sharp Decline\nCAM-VRY, May 18 (CP). - OU\nIssues declined sharply on Calgary\nStock Exchange today. Losses\nranged from tractions to 15 points.\nTransfers 13,850 shares.\nOkalta at 88, wu off 15 points;\nC. & EL was ottered st 1.69, off lix\npoints from the weekend close.\nRoyal Canadian lost % to 17%; Lethbridge Pete % to lHi'Rlchfleld % to\n1% and Firestone % to 5%. Anglo-\nCanadian traded ln broken lota at\n75, ott eight points.  -\nGold Belt Mining\nCompany Limited\n(Nsn-Penonal Liability)\nNOTICE OF INTERIM  DIVIDEND\nNO. 1\nNotice Is hereby given thst Interim Dividend No. l of two cents\nper share haa been declared on the\npaid-up Capital Stock of the Company, payable on the 29th day of\nJune, 1940, to shareholders ot record\nat the close of business on the 15th\nday of June, 1940.\nPersons holding certificates not\nregistered in their name, commonly known as \"street\" cerUflcates,\nshould have them registered In their\nne by the Company's Transfer\nAgents, The London lc Western\nTrusts Company Limited, at their\noffice, 801 West Hastings Street,\nVancouver, B. C, or at their office,\n200 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, on\nor before 15th June next\nBy Order of tiie Board.\nJAMES ANDERSON,\nSecretary.\nVancouver, B. C\nMay 10th, 1940.\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nUurit- Bldg. 704 Nelson Ave,\n_\u25a0\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nManufacturers of\nProducer! and Refiners ot\nElephant       Tadanac\nBrand\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilisers\nAmmonium Phoiphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\nMonocalelum Phoiphata\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD\u2014ZINC\nGOLD\u2014SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nZINC DUST\nAlso Sulphuric.Acid and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilizer Salts\u2014Marine Bldg., Vancouver, B.C.\nMetal and Fertilizer Sales\u2014215 Sr. |ames St., Montreal\n N:IJUi|J\nLast Times Today\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT\n2:00,' 7:00 md 9:00\nYour\nBRENT'MIRANDA\nADVENTURE\nin DIAMONDS\nJohn Lotler \u25a0 Nigel Rrnce\nElizabeth Patterson\nAt 2:40, 7:40, 9tW\n\u2014EXTKA TREATS-\nCARTOON\u2014SCENIC,\nSPORT and NEWS\nW-dnesd-r-\"Reb\u00abce\u00bb\"\nDRY SLABS\n-   tft,eord\nMllltndi, load\t\nDry Slaba, 12\", load\n.83.60\n.83.80\na $4.00\nPhone 163 or 434R1\nEAST TRAIL LOTS\nI\/. Wrltt or call for maps and price\nHsts. Monthly payment plan.\nRobertion Really Co., Ltd.\n847 Biktr \u00abt\nReplact Those\nOLD FIXTURES NOW\nWhile Spring Cletnlnf.\n\u25a0 Standard Electric\nJ4S8 JosephlneSt. Phone 838\n1937 FQRD\nDo Luxe Fordor, Licence,\nHeater, Al  Condition\n_Y CHIEF AUTO\nI Biker St.  SERVICE  Phom 122\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nLET   US   REFRESH\nYour Dance Duds\nPhone 1042\n$omUcl tflwtwAA.\nttsossetettsostMSi\nFOR QUICK SALE\noffer two choice homei en\nNorth Short. Lott of fruiti tnd\nden with \u2022 undy beach. Cloie\nIn. Ifs t reil bargain.\nRELIANCE AGENCIES LTD.\nPhont 680 882 Biker St.\n1937 FORD\nCOUPE\nSitter and many extras.\nLike a new car.\n\u00aboeen City Motors\nL 48   LIMITED   961 Josephine\nPerfection nnd\nColor Determine\nDiamond Value\nd'honse a X\nBLUEBIRD\n0(.14~ltAjA_\nDIAMOND KING\nBluebirds are exquisite     |~\\\ndiamonds, guaranteed\nperfect, the world's fin-!\nest in b-sulv and nlueaj\nE. Collinson\nDiamond\nSpecialist\nPRESCRIPTION\nli  alwayi diipemed by \u25a0\nGraduate Druggist\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON, B. &\nSt. Paul's, Trinity\nMinisters Go Coast\nChurch Conference\nRev. Foster Hilliard ot SL Paul's\nUnited Church, ind Rev. J. A. Donnell of Trinity United Church, accompanied by Mrs. Donnell and her\nmother, Mn, Ella Me\u00abi. left by\ncar Monday morning for Vancouver where Mr. Hilliard and Mr.\nDonnell will attend the British Columbia conference ot the United\nChurch which opens Wednesday.\nMrs. C. A. Leggett, now it the\nCoast, and David Beattie are delegates from St Paul's to the British\nColumbia Lay Asioclatlon meeting\ntoday. Dr. W,B. Steed is the Trinity delegate. The lay delegates wil.\nalso attend the church conferenN.\nOverseas Troops\nHear Canadian News,\nAalJMRSHOT, May 18 (CP-Cable)\n\u2014Officers and men crowded around\nradios In the quarters of the 1st\nCanadian Division tonight to hear a\nbroadcast of news from home, provided by The Canadian Press and\nbrought to them by the Canadian\nBroadcasting Corporation.\nIt was the first time the men had\nheard directly of news happenings\non the home front. The broadcast\nwill be brought to them each week.\n-ffSU-tm BAILY rTIWS. HILtOH, RR-TUIIBAY MORNINO. MAY 14. 1848-\nH Jf.CS. Asslnlbolne Assists In Capture of German Freighter\nAssisted by t British cruiser the new Canadian flotilla leider\nHM.C.S. Asslniboine overhauled the Germin freighter Hannover ln\nthe Caribbean Sea as the Nazi ship tried to run the blockade with 6000\ntons ot ore and lumber. When capture appeared inevitable the crew\nof the Hannover set the ship afire tnd abandoned It Quick work by the\ncrewi of the Asslniboine ind the British cruiser quickly subdued the\nflames, is shown above. After battling heavy seas for four days, the\nHannover was towed Into port\nSheep (reek Gold Reserves Big as\nEver They Were, Doelle Tells Rotary\nCommodities Rise\nAfter Each Gold\ndiscovery\nAn Interesting history ot the discovery of gold in the Sheep Creek\narea; lhe monetary value ot gold\nIn the part tnd present; tnd tht lu-\nture at tht precioul metal, were\noutlined for the Nelson Rotary Club\nby H. B Doelle, Manager ot the\nSheep Creek Gold Mines Ltd., tnd\noutpost member of the Club at the\nluncheon meeting at the Hume Monday.\n\"The lint diKovery of gold ln\nthe Sheep Creek district was made\nin 1896,\" Mr. Doelle said. \"This was\nthe Yellowstone vein, now part of\nthe property of the Sheep Creek\nGold Mines. Mining was started in\n1898 and was carried on until 1918,\nat which time operations ceased due\nto the high cost of commodities and\nlabor. In all this time the total production of the camp was less than\none year's production now.\n\"Prior to the Great War, gold discoveries were being made at regular intervals, starting with the California gold discovery in 1894. Each\nmajor discovery was followed by a\nrise ln commodity prices, or in other\nwords, a lowering of the price of\ngold. A period of business adjustment or depression would come\n\u2022long, and this would be followed\nimmediately by more gold discoveries or by metallurgical advances\nmaking a greater supply of gold.\nWAR CONDITIONS\n\"When the Greet Wir broke out,\nprices dropped, and 1918 was i year\nof high production. However, me\nfinancial advisors of the Important\nnations found a new means of expanding purchasing power; that ls,\nthey began to use the credit of the\nIndividuals. War loans were floated,\nand these were used to extend buying power. Costs went up. Gold was\ncheap. It took only a little wheat\nor a few pounds of copper to buy\nT. H. Waters & Co.\nLimited\nBuilders ind Contractors\nFigured Glau \u2014 Muraneu,\nArctic ind   Moil  pattern-\nAlwiyt In itock.\nWINDOWS REOLAZED\nBreakfast\nIS ALWAYS\nCOOD AT\nThe PERCOLATOR\n1929 Oldsmobile\nSEDAN.   Reconditioned.   Good\ntlrei. CfOC\nLicenced t**7J\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBtktr St     Limited     Phoni 119\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly .Savingi Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 81    Hippenon Blk.    Ph. 197\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Limited\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSHELF\u2014HEAVY HARDWARE\u2014MINE SUPPLIES\nMILL SUPPLIES\u2014SPORTING COODS\u2014BUILDING\nMATERIALS\u2014ZONOLITE INSULATION\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR BAPCO PAINTS\nin ounce of gold.\n\"At tht dost of tht wtr there\nwis \u25a0 temporary business recession. However, other means of extending credit were developed, ind\nprices went up for \u25a0 few more\nyears. Times were hard for the gold\nminer. United States production\ndropped from 115,000 ln 1915 to half\nthat amount Big mines like the\nDome of South Porcupine were\nforced to shut down. The Band\nmines could not meet the demands\nof labor with the low price for gold,\nand they had a revolution on their\nhands. Following this, gambling tn\nforeign exchange became a pastime.\nUP IN 1929\n\"By 19-9 credit was expended to\nthe breaking point md suddenly\nthe price of gold went up. It took\nlots of wheit to buy in ounce ot\ngold. Gold mining began to pick up.\nHowever, even that did not supply\nthe requirements. The international\nstandard which had been adopted\nby the leading countries, led by\nEngland In 1818, was followed by\nthe other countries, until, when the\nU. S. adopted the standard in 1900,\nonly China of the great countries\not the world did not adopt this\nstandard,\n\"By 1931 the demand for (old\nreached the point where Great Britain was forced to expand her money\nbeyond her gold reserves. The U. S.\ndollar was devalued in 1934 to 59\nper cent of ther former value ln\nterms of gold. Canada followed\nclosely on the track of the U. S. All\nthis demand for gold caused a great\nboom in gold mining. New mines\nwere brought in throughout the\nworld and marginal producers were\nrevived. Many people became\nwealthy, either by mining or by\nstock promotions of various sorts.\nCharles Bankcs got the brilliant\nidea ot packing supplies by airplane\ninto Central New Guinea, and gold\nmining companies in Eastern Canada began to hire landscape architects and to build civic centres.\n8HEEP CREEK REVIVED\n\"The Sheep Creek mines were revived with this revival of the Industry. Heno had started ln 1929, but\nwas having a tough time. In 1934\nKootenay Belle started production,\nand Sheep Creek followed in 1935.\nThese companies however, were organized and. financed in 1933, or\nwhen the boom was expanding.\n\"At present there ls a camp of\n1300 people at Sheep Creek. There\nare 450 people on the voters' list\n500 men are employed. There Is a\nthree-room school with 110 pupils.\nPRODUCTION $2,563,004 IN 1938\n\"Production for 1939 follows:\nSheep Creek Gold Mines, 81,010,060;\nKootenay Belle, $877,000; Gold Belt,\n$802,085; Reno, $274,309; total, $2,-\n563,004. The total for Canada was\n$181,274,189 or about one-eighth of\nthe world's production.\n\"In 1938 these mines of Sheep\nCreek paid a total of $132,588.06\nIn direct taxes to the Province of\nBritish Columbia. At the present\nrate of taxation the Sheep Creek\nGold Mines will pay $180,000 in direct taxes to the Province and Dominion for 1939-40.\n\"Now what is the future of Sheep\nCreek? Gold mining ln British Columbia is not on as permanent a\nbasis aa it ls in Ontario. This ls due\nto geological conditions. B. C. Is a\nnewer country. The mountain building forces did their work opening\nup channels for mineralizing solution; however, these same forces\nbroke up the interior of the earth's\ncrust and these found various localized places for deposition of\nminerals. It is frequently said that\nthe deposits don't go down. This ls\nhardly true. The broken nature of\nour mountain country is such that\noutcrops of surface ore-bodies were\neasily found. Those deeper down are\npretty well hidden. However,\nthough, as science ot geology develops, more and more will be\nfound. For example, the moit recent vein found in the Sheep Creek\nproperty disappears upward at\nabout 1500 feet below the surface.\nOur ore reserves are as large ai\nthey ever were, and we hope to\nfind gold for some time to come.\nWHAT IS FUTURE OF QOLD\n'More important! What ls the future of gold? The value of gold depends on use as currency, or to\nDownstairs Wins in\nNews Softball Opener\nOpening the aafttwll teason tor\ntht Newi Sporti Club, Downstairs\nand Upstairs teams clashed ln a\nweekend gtme, tha Downstairs winning 30-21.\nAccepting Oil challenge el the\nC.Y.0.,. the dub Willfield a team\nagainst the Catholic boyi this weekend.\nback paper money.\nAt the preient timt thtrt trt\nvarioui schemes, such u a variable\nor compensating gold dolltr, Tht\ncommodity dollar as used in Swe-.\nden il t central bank price-setting\nsystem. Others, Including one of\nour B. C. Legislators, htvt urged\nthe issuance of currency againit\npublic improvements.' Our old\nfriend, Sidney Norman, now Mining\nEditor of the Toronto Globe tnd\nMill, statei: 'By no itretch of imagination cin gold now be considered\n\u25a0 monetary metal except in tht\nIT, S. tnd then only tn t thidowy\nform, since it hn been withdrawn\nfrom circulition prictlctlly through,\nout the world. In no cut does nitionil currency longer bear tny\nstabilizing ratio to metallic coverage. Under theie conditioni lt would\nseem to be the sensible policy to\nproduce ill the gold pouible while\nwe ire sura lt ctn be sold it t satisfactory price.'\n\"In Spoktnt it tht Northweit\nMining Association headquarters\nthey are much worried about the\nfuture of gold unless it is again put\ninto circulation as money, and the\nAmerican Mining Congress ls lobby,\ning at Washington with this in view.\nThe Engineering and Mining Jour,\nnal in Its annual review number\nstates: \"Uncertainty surrounds the\nquestion of the future value ot\nprecious metals and its use as money. The rapid growth of America's\nhosrd gives cause for concern.'\n. \"Greit Britain itarted the International standard tt the close of the\nNapoleonic wars it t tlmt when\nthat nation had most of the gold of\nthe world. It waa in much the tame\nposition aa the U. S. Is at present It\nhad most of the gold, and u ihe\nhad acquired control of the seas, lt\nwaa the safest place.\n\"From the beginning of history\nwealth wai valued ln gold, and usually had gold backing\u2014that is, savings. Mirabeau at the beginning of\nthe French revolution put that\ncountry on t lind money basis.\nHe claimed that land wu tht\nmost secure of all possessions. The\nfirst issue of 400,000,000 francs bore\n5 per cent interest lor a yeir, then\n3 per cent then none. More paper\nwas issued. However, depreciation\nwas so rapid that within seven years\nthe money passed out even against\npenaltiea for diaoountlng, fint lix\nyears imprisonment, then 20, then\nthe guillotine.\n\"In our time we have seen the\nGerman mark depreciated to pay\nGerman Internal debt until you had\nto be a billionaire to purchase a\ncigarette-all this in five years.\nDEBTS ARE WEAKNESSES\n\"Internal debts seem to be the\nweakness of democracies. As Calvin Coolidge said, \"Debts can't be\ncancelled. Someone muit pay.'\nThere ire only two wiya of paying. One is with materials, and the\nother ia by inflation. Citizens of\ndemocracies don't vote for higher\ntaxes. Hence, as internal debts increase, the currency is inflated. The\nfranc ls only one-tenth of its value\nback in 1918. The U. S. dollar ls\n89 per cent of its value. The Canadian dollar is 10 per cent less. The\npound sterling is still lest, etc.\n\"The democracies, while off the\nold international standard, use gold\nand only gold as a standard of\nvalue. They have 38 per cent of\nthe trading population of the world,\nand 91 per cent ot the monetary\ngold.\n\"The totalitarian Statei hive 82\nper cent of the trading population\nand 2 per cent of the gold. These\nstates are trading on a barter basis,\nand hence gold la not necessary.\nHowever, these states tre the ones\nthst are not satisfied, their standard of civilization is lower, snd living conditions are not to our liking.\nSTOOD TEST OF TIME\n\"Gold haa stood the test of time.\nIt ls mentioned ln the Old Testament before woman. Genesis 2:11\nsave: 'And a river went out of\nEden, which encompasseth the land\nof Havelah, where there is gold*.\nIt ls treated in the tables of other\npeoples.\u2014'Jaion In search of the\nGolden Fleece,' etc. It wai considered valuable enough for the Egyptian rulers and the Inca chiefs to\ntake with them on their departure\nto the unknown.\"\nJens C. Hansen House on Sheep Creek.\nSecond Oldest* If Damaged by fire\nMr. tnd Mrt, Hinitn In front yard, ai photographed list yetr.\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C, May IS\u2014Fire, originating ln the chimney,\nset fire this morning to the Jens C. Hansen house, occupied by Mr.\nand Mrs. Hansen tor over 28 years, and did extensive damage before\nit wai extinguished by voluntary workers, with the aid of the new\nwater system Installed list Summer.\nThe roof was destroyed, and much damage was done to the Interior ol the house.\nMr. and Mrs. Hansen, the pioneer settlers on Sheep Creek, have\nnent only one Winter away from their home, that being a year when\nthere were no operatlona on the Creek.\nThe house ls the second oldest house In this settlement\nBaptist Girls Open\nNew Conduct Study\nA study on Christian conduct\nwhich Is to replace the regular devotion period for the next few\nweeks, waa begun at the First Baptist Girls Club meeting Tuesday\nevening. A study hook reading preceded the opening of the study.\nFollowing refreshments, the girls\npracticed camp songs preparatory\nto the Summer camping season.\nHULL WARNS OF NEW\n\"DESCENT INTO DARK\nACES\"; SEES TRIUMPH\nWAaSHINGTON, May IS (AF).-\nState Secretary Cordell Hull said tonight the world Is menaced with \"a\nnew descent Into the conditions ot\nInternational anarchy which characterized the dark ages\" and that the\nUnited Statea has no choice but to\nexpand its armaments progrim.\nHe appealed to thoie who believe\nin \"international morality\" to \"hold\nfast to tht conviction thtt law tnd\nmorality will triumph over the\nforces of lawlessness and chaos.\"\nBelgians in Canada\nCalled to Colors\nOTTAWA,  May   13   (CP).   -\nBaron Robert Silvercruys, Belgian\nMinister to Canada, lett lite todiy for Montreal to complete irrangementi for the dispatch Overseu of Belgians in Canada who\nhive been called bick to the\ncolors since the Germin Invulon\nof their homeland.\nHe could give no estimate of the\nnumber of reserve offlcen returning to Belgium Immediately.\nMIN\nFor \u25a0 nal cool and enjoy-\nable  smoke\nTry \u2022 \"Frank Medico\" Fil-\nter Cooled\" Pipe.    .\nf 1 each.\nSold only tt your Rexall store.\nCity Drug Co.\nPhont 84\nBox488\nMalkin of Vancouver\nGets Ottawa Post\nOTTAWA, Miy 13 (CP).-The\nDepartment of Munition! ind\nSupply innounced tonight the appointment of 3. p. D. Malkin,\nprominent businessman of Vancouver u Director of purchases\nof the department.\nThe position wu created to coordinate more completely the purchases of the Board with the general economic needs of the Dominion and at the same time\nstrengthen the liaison between\nthe purchasing divisions and the\ndepartment administration. .\nBinder Takes Blame\nfor Anti-War Papers\nOTTAWA, May IS (CP) .-Harry\nBinder assured an Assizes jury today he took full responsibility for\npublishing and printing anti-war\npamphlets which brought him and\ntwo other men before the court on\ncharges of contravening the Defence of Canada regulations.\n\"I have the honor and privilege\nof being i member of the Communist Party of Canada,\" Binder added.\nHe claimed the pamphlets contained\nthe platform of the party In the 1840\nDominion elections and did not\nconstitute an offence against the\nDefence of Canada regulation!.\nMontreal Plant is\nStormed by Workers\nMONTREAL, May 13 <CP). -\nMore than 200 persons stormed the\nplant of the Consumers Glass Company at neaVby Ville St Pierre to.\nnight, set fire to packing cases piled\nat the rear ot the factory, broke\nwindows ln the office building ind\nsent six employees to hospital with\nminor injuries.\nSpecial Officer Louts Jargatlle of\nthe Provincial Police said 12 persons\nwere arrested on charges ol disturbing the peace. An investigation will\nbe held tomorrow, he tdded\nllie plant has been picketed since\nthe beginning of lut week when\napproximately 375 employees went\non strike in t demand lor union\nrecognition.\nMore than 41 ptr cent ot the men's\nclothing manufactured ln the United States ls made in New York\ncity. t\nHeadlight\nWork Clothes\nGuaranteed the best work\n-jarments you have ever\nsought or your money\nback after 30 days wear.\nOVERALLS\nKHAKI PANTS\nSHIRTS\nEMORY'S\n***** LIMITED V\nShortage of Nazi\nClothespins in Britain\nLONDON, (CI )\u2014It's a \"lovely\"\nwar for the British housewife. She\nwants to hang out the washing on\nthe front line but cannot because\nthere's a scarcity of clothespins.\nApart from the lew made by\ngypsies, they never were manufactured here on a large scale. Before the war 192,000,000 pegs were\nimported annually, mainly from\nGermany.\nAs If the pin question and planning family meals under rationing\nwere not enough, Isolated reports\nare at hand about makers of mouse\ntraps experiencing a scarcity of\nwire. The trap-makers at Leeds face\nthis difficulty due to the use of\nwire in making anti-magnetic mine\napparatus.\nClothespins have been to scarce\nIn many districts that women Introduced \"staggered\" wuhlng daya\nand others used safety pins. To meet\nthe difficulty a firm of spring\nmanufacturers plans turning out\n5,000,000 spring pegs a week. Due\nto labor costs, they may have to be\nsold at about eleven cents a dozen compared with the old price ot\n12 wooden pegs tor a penny.   .\nALBERTA  MAN  KILLED\nLLOYDMINSTa_R, Alta., May 13\n(CP). \u2014 Lawrence Rogers, 22, ot\nLloydminster, was killed ln action,\nacordlng to a telegram received today from British authorities by his\nparents here.\nThe youth went to England IS\nmonthi igo. His father is a contractor in Lloydminster.\nAccording to manufacturer!, the\nlife of a good tire is about 20,000\nmiles.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT\u20144 ROOM SUITE WITH\nbath, blk. from Biker SL Ph. 441R\n!S*\u00ab$\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abs\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abs\u00ab\u00ab5\u00ab\u00ab$\u00ab\nNEWS OF THE DAY\ntmsttsttitstmtssttttttsttttttttssi\nWhist at Cathedral Hall \u2022 postponed until next week.\nChoice planti ot all kinds\nBealby'i, Phone 328X1.\nI. O. D. E. regular monthly meeting, 3 psa., Legion, Today.\nDo not overlook reading page 101\nJune issue of True Story magazine.\nCHURCH OF THE REDEEMER\nConfirmation Service tonight it\n7:30 by The Bishop of the Diocese.\nWomen's Institute meeting Frt\nday, May 17, 2:30 p.m. Talk on Finland by Mrs. Saare. Tea will be\nserved.\nmesotsttttesettsimeitosttmettl\nFLOWERS FOR EVERY\nOCCASION\nFuneral tnd Wedding Designs\nPhone  KITCHENER\nRepossessed Car For Sale\n1837 Chevrolet Muter De Lux*\nCoach Complete with heater ind\nspotlight.   Sacrifice   price,, 8889.\nTermi to responsible party.\nT. D. ROSLINC\n8 Roytl Btnk Bldg.       Phont 717\nFootenay No-Odor\nEfcy C'eanlng Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT SERVICI\nRebuilt typewriters from $18 up.\nCr-sh or Easiest of terms.\nD. W. McDERBY \"Tha Typewriter\nMan\", 884, Bakar Street\nDUNLOP Garden Hose, Sprinklers for lawn or garden, hose menders, etc. See the new Handy Hose\nHolder, at Hippersons,\nAll registration forms for Young\nPeople's conference must be handed\nIn to Babs McDonald by Wednesday,\nMay 15th. Phone 370L for registration cards.\nNELSON GLEE CLUB CONCERT\nHear Mr. E. P. BAKER, Baritone\nand join in singing England'a latest\nand greatest patriotic song,\n\"THERE'LL ALWAY8 BE AN\nENGLAND\"\ntomorrow night St Paul's Church,\n8:19 p.m., 35 cents.\nPALM CHOCOLATE\nDAIRY DRINK\nAT YOUR PALM  DEALERS\nSPORT JACKETS\nFor Ladies\nNavy Flannel  _.- 84.88\nArctica Cloth Wlndproof ind\nlower proof  88.80\nreys' Limited\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhont 888 818 Kootenay\nJ. AX. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 209. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nPHONE 815\nfor better end prompter service In plumbing repain Md\nalteration!.\nVIG GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMed. Art! Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\n7 rm. houie, Third St, Ftlrvltw.\nFurnace heated, fireplace, ward-\nrobea In bedroomi, garage, cement\nfloor, S lott, $3000, eatv Jermi.\nLow price compared with cott\nH.E.DILL\nFlrt Auto lniurance, Real Ettatt\nNEW COIFFURES\nA STYUB TO SUIT YOU\nHai&h Tru-Art\nPhont 327 Johnstone Blk.\nBEAUT. SALON\njjjjjjjSjjtjtlllftM) MM 1.1.1)1.1 ) COWi\n1935 Chevrolet\nMister. Licensed, good condition.\nA real attractive buy. d_._____.___.\nPrice  *r*V95\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Port Office ind Hume Hottl\nHOOD'S\nHOME MADE\nBROWN BREAD\nYour Homt Bakery\nTWO SINGLE\nHousekeeping  Rooms\nNewly decorated\nJ. E. Annable\n883 Ward St. Phont 888\n&$oe&c&eotwoo)ooo6mo)otoeo9Mi\nYou'll Enjoy\nQrenjelVs Cafe\nCool, Crispy Salads\n.\n1933 Plymouth\nSedan\nBargain\u2014$295\nKootenay Motors\n(Niltoh) Ltd.  Phont 117\nIVIC\nLast Times Tonight\nComplete Showi 7:00-8:40\nLITTLE OLD\nNEW YORK\nFAYE \u2022 IrUtMURRAY \u2022 GREENE\n\u25a0MUM JOTCI\n\u2022hit mvini . amu\u2014mam \u2022 m me\nSO* Onla\u2014f.Fu riclur.\nPLUS-\n\"N(CK CARTER.\nMASTER DETECTIVE\"\nWEDNESDAY\n\"Meet Doctor Christian\"\nmd\n\"AN Women Have\nSecrets\"\n\u2022_   _-_-._.       ....\nrrT_-.i-.-r i\u25a0*  iiiii- \u2014-'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:-'------\u25a0-\u25a0<-\n'__\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0'_.'-' '\u25a0\"\".   \u25a0_     _ '     -\u25a0\u25a0: !.'-_\u25a0 \u25a0\n _^^H_i__________i__\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_05_14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415148","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"}]}}