{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415157":{"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":"2022-06-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1942-03-20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415157\/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":" GOES TO MIDDLE EAST\nSir Earl Page, shown with Prime Minister Churchill in London, yesterday waa named Minister of State to\nrepresent the British War Cabinet in the Middle East,\nthe first time in Empire history that a Dominion statesman has become a member of the Home Government\nMlchaud Has No\nApology, Excuse\nfor Quebec Talk\nGov't To Pay Jap\nFares to Ontario\nTORONTO, March 1\u00ab (CP)-Thl\nentire cost of brining Japaneie from\nBritish Columbia to work ln Ontario\nwill b\u00ab borna by the Dominion Gov.\nernment. Premier Mitchell Hepburn wld todiy.\n\"Then men will be brought to\n*M\nOTTAWA, Men* 1\u00bb (CP) - Fisheries Miniiter Mlchaud today told la distributing\n\"\u2022arwaje drcoitto\u00ab*,h\u00bbli5i\"'\u00abno* \u25a0ntmratret\napology and no extnse\" td offer for Hepburn uid. \"We will ptHe t\nhla by-election ipeech In Quebec Urge number of them ln foreitry\ntut Feb. 7, for which he wn it- work amongit wood operator! In\ntacked In the House yeaterday by! <\"\"\"* Northern foresU. They will be\nConservative House Lead'ef Hanion. I placed   in   gainful occupations  for\n|    In hli Quebec ipeech Mr. Mdchaud | war Industrie!.\nnt quoted by The Canadian Preu\n1 ai toying that by next'March Canada would beN\"financially and economically free from Britain,\" and\n\"will be free to find markets where\nwe wuh.\" v\nHe iald he was attempting to \"explain ahd Justify'1 to his Quebec audience the Government's proposal\nto give Britain 11,000.000,000 in materials and convert exlating sterling\nbalances in London to a long-term\nloan.\nTtiat proposal wai not popular In\neertain quarters, not only ln Quebec but in every Province ln Canada, the Minister said, and it had\nbeen hii endeavor to indicate it\nwould be of advantage not only to\nBritain but to Canada as a whole\nand to the people he was addressing\nHe had endeavored to make clear\nthat once this gift had been made\nand other provision! of the bill carried out, Britain's obligation! to\nCanadi would balance tbe amount\nOf BriUsh invejtments in Canad'ani\naecuritiei. Thus there would be\nfinancial independence aa between\nthe two countries.\nShip Torpedoed\nWASHINGTON, March IB (AP),\nTha United 8tates Navy Depart-\nment announced today that i medium sized merchant vessel hid\nbain  torpedoed  off  thi   Atlantic  aid\nJudgment Held\non Proposal lo\nUp Freighl Rales\nOTTAWA March If (CP).-The\nBoard of Triniport Cornmlsiioneri\ntoday reserved Judgment on an application by Canadian railway! to\nincrease rates on Import and export\ntraffic between pointi ln Canada\nand Canadian porta, to correspond\nwith increases recently approved by\nthe United States Interstate Bommeree Commission.\nOpposition was expressed by rep.\nresentatives of several private companies and trade organizations.\nG. W. Walker of Montreal, general\nsolicitor for the Canadian Pacific\nRailway, told the Commission the\nincrease! being lought were a normal adjustment of competitive conditions and said a refusal of the application would disrupt the relationship between Canadian and United\nStates Railways.\nJames P. Harrington of Boston,\nrepresenting the New England\nFreight Association, nid the Commission's decisions would be of greit\nimportance to American railways\nrefusal would disturb exiit-\nCont.\n1 ing port relationships.\nRuss Say Huns Blowing Up Stores\nin Kharkov; Occupation Near End\nLONDON, March 30 (Friday)\n(CP)\u2014Oerman troopi under isaault\nIn Kharkov are blowing up oil\nItorei ind other equipment, \"ipparent^ realizing the occupation.Is at\nintend.\" a Stockholm dispatch to\n.the Daily Mail said today.\nGreat fires are raging in the Industrial city which the Natis captured last Oclober, the report said\nThe Red Army wai reporUd it\nthe gates of Kharkov last Sunday.\nTank, gun, and ammunition depot! ire being dymmlted.\" the correipondent iald.\nThe Germani are destroying\nwhat they and hordes of forced\nlabor hare recreated during six\nmonths of precarious occupations.\"\nThe Stockhbln. dispatch gave this\nteport of the lituition\nKharkov    Itself   li    almost   sur\nrounded, Its Weitwird communication! limited to one railroad and\nroad to Poltava and that link li\ndeemed insufficient to supply the\n500,000 Germans believed to be centered ln the region.\nA railway line Northwest to Kono-\ntop li too lerlouily threatened by\nregular Soviet forces to be of my\nuse. and these regular! eri aided\nby swarmi of guerilla^.\nKharkov now seems hardly \u2022 ten-\nable position for the lsrge admin-\nistratlve staff which comprise! Field\nMarshal Fedor von Hock's headquarters.\nIt is not yet clear whether he (von\nBock) hu retreated, though It becomes dal^r more obvious thst\nKharkov and thi whole upper Donets line li lagging to the point of\ncollipse.\nCOUNTER-ATTACK\nTO RELIEVE MEN\nBEGUN BY NAZIS\nSay Men Sent to Aid\nof 16th Caught\nin Trap\nHUNS' RATIONS\nCUT ONE-THIRD\nMOSCOW, March 1t (AP)--Tha\nNull ara oounter-attaeking prao-\ntlcaly every front In desperately\nfutlli efforts to \"\"cue trapped\ntroopi and stem the Runian advance, thi Rid Army reported tonight\nThe fiercest fighting of all raged\nIn an unidentified sector of the\nSouthern front, the Army newspaper\nRed Star said.\nTrying to relieve leveral unit!\ntrom a grave predicament, tha German! threw ln every weapon of\nwar, but were repulsed and loit an\nother lettlement, Red Star related,\nand added that the Ruuian advance\nthere wai continuing.\nThe itory wai similar on the central front, where Red Star reportod\nthe Russians encircled a German\ngarrison ln an Important town after\nleveral dayi of battle In a blinding\nblliard.\nA dispatch from that front iald\nthat thi Germans were trying te\nfurnish tha trapped unit with munition! and food by plana and\nthat captured orders ihowed thi\nCommander of tha 101 Rifle Regiment bad already reduced tin\nmen'i rations one-third,\nIn the SUnyi Runa sector of the\nNorth Centril front, tha Russian\nGovernment paper, Izvestia, aald\nHitler'i \"sUrved half-frozen, lice\ncovered ISth Army, (0,000 itrong, il\nperishing.''\nReiervei taut to aid thla army\nii mmmMtjtoae\nHuns Eye Turkey tb\n\"Clear Path for\"\nNew Drives\nMOSCOW, March Ml <AP)-\nAn article printed ln tha Rul'\nalao Press and distributed by\nTais Newa Agency today .accused Germany ot deslgni on Turkey \"to clear the path tor aggressive adventures ln the Near\nlait\"\nThe recant \"luiplcloui ilag-\nlng\" of an attempt on the Ufa\nof German Ambassador Franz\nVon Papen and a false German\nForeign Office assertion that\nRuuia Intended to annex part\nof Iran were termed parti of a\ncalculated campaign to taka\nTurkey into camp.\nNEW INVENTORY\nOF MAN POWE\nWIU BE TAKEN\nthey ara lent to relieve,\" Iivestii\niald.\nFor example, It uld, tba 129th\nInfantry Dlviiion, which arrived\nfrom France about the end of\nJanuary, has lait li per cent of\nIti men, and the 5th Jaeger Dlviiion, brought from France ln Feb-\nruary, haa lost more than 50 per\ncent.\nGerman prisoners irrlvlng from\nmsny sectors were quoted on the\nicope of Hitler'i coniumption of his\nreserves.\nOne of these, Johinn Konrad, captured Feb. 22 near Roslavl, uid his\nunit wu brought from tha French\nAtlantic port of Le Havre, travelling\neight daya by train and a longer\ntime afoot.\nManion Consulted\nParty on Issues\nOTTAWA, March 11 (CP).\u2014Hon.\nDr. R. J. Manion, former leader of\nthe Coniervitlve pirty, tonight issued s statement ln reply to \"repeated statements made by the preient leader of the Comervatlve party\n(Hon. R. B. Hanion) and othen\"\nwhich he uid Implied thit u party\nleader in the 1940 general election\nhe had \"decided in favor of National Government, and agalnit conscription for Oveneu lervlce, without consultation with anyone else ln\nthe party.\"\nDr. Manlon said he had personally\nconsulted men conildered leaden of\nthe party In all Province!, Including Mr. Hinion, ln connection witn\nthe Nitionil Government platform,\n\"Not one of them ever put himself oi) record u opposed to national government,\" Mr. Manlou'i\nstatement uid.\nThe lubject of conitruction for\nOveneai service alio had been iia-\ncussed st a full meeting of Conservative Home Memben snd only one\nsupported conscription.\nYon Papan Leaves\nfor Eaitern Front\nANKARA, Turey, March It -\n(AP)\u2014Qirmin Ambauador Frans\nvon Papen departed tonight. In\ndefiance ef doctor's orders, to report to Adolf Hltlir'i Eutern\nfront headquarters.\nNANAIMO, B. C, March U (CP)\n-Arthur Davldion Clark, 27, Wellington truck driver, wu killed today when the logging truck he wai\ndriving apparently got out ot control on a part ot the Blackjack Road\nknown u Pant Path Hill,\nfrom Ninilmo.\nGIFT TO BRITAIN\nA 'RANSOM' FOR\nTHE PLEBISCITE\nPouliot Draws Fire\nas Assails\nGift\n\"PAYMINT OF\nDEBT LONG DUE\"\nOTTAWA, March* 11 (CP). -\nJean Francois Pouliot (Lib. Tim\niMouata) charged tonight In the\nHcum of Commoni that the proposed 11,000,000,000 gift ef materl\nall to Britain wu \"a ransom\" for\ntha forthcoming manpower plab\ntaclte.\nMr. Pouliot referred to tha full-\npagi newipaper \"pronunclamento\"\nof tha Toronto committee for total\nwar, published tn Canadian newspaper! lut January, ind nid thi\nspeech from tha throne read at the\nSn)M Ptfr{%\u00bb\u00bb!-> ftfej\nuenced by that advertls\nwhich declared there ahould be no\nconscription referendum, but all out\naid to Britain without limitation.\nHe questioned tha economy ol\nsending great quantities of muni\ntlom to Britain and contended that\nmuch of the equipment could be\nmanufactured overseas\nHe also questioned the efficiency\nof the Britiih Government.\n\"I have often wondered If thou\nln the government, apart from\nChurchill, are worthy of the BritUh people,\" he uld.\n\"Erneit Bevin (Britiih Labor Mlniiter) li doing \u2022 good Job,\" Interjected John R. MacNIcol (Con.\nToronto-Davenport).\n\"What     about     Sir    Stafford\nCrlppi!\" uked another member.\n\"Sir Stafford Crlppi gave them\nhell,\" Mr. Pouliot uld.\nDouglu Rou (Con. Toronto-St.\nPaul'i) uld memben ihould be\nashamed to call the bill a \"gift.\" It\nwu \"only the payment of a debt\nlong overdue.\"\nHarry Jsckmsn (Con. Toronto-\nRosedale) uld the gift would be a\ncomplete answer to \"thou harping\ncrltlci who have been* uying that\nCanada demand! caih on the barrelhead\" trom the mother country.\nHad the war taken a different\ncourie and had Japaneie forcei\nlanded in Canada thll country\nwould have been receiving great\nhelp from Britain. British troopi\nwould be here fighting with Canadians and a great-flow of luppllei would be moving from Brit-\ntain to Canada Instead of from\nCanada to Britain.\nFinance Mlniiter Ililey uld It\nihould not be assumed thit thli gift\nwould increase Canada'i national\ndebt by a dollar or Increase the\ntaxei tn any degree. Whether the\ngooda wer* given u a gift or sold\nfor iterllng balance! created In Lon-\ndon, they would ba provided by\nCanadi producers and financed by\nthe Canadian Government\nCanada Seeking Out\nWorker NumBers\nand Skid\nPUN FULL USE\nOF MAN POWER\nVANCOUVER, March 19 (CP>-\nHon. Humphrey Mitchell, Federal Minister ot Labor, tonight told\nCanadian! of the Governenfi\nplan to moblliie Canada'i man\nind woman power commencing\nApril 1.\nHa'ipoke from Vancouver over\na nation-wide hookup of tha Can\nadlan  Broadcuting  Corporation.\nUnder tha plan, Mr. Mitchell laid,\ntha  Government would  obtain\n\"manpower Inventory\" of mora than\nS.OOO.OQO   worken  throughout  the\ncountry.\nThla Inventory, be uld, would be\ntaken through the' Unemployment\nIniunnce Commiuion and employers. Starting April 1, In order to\nkeep tha recordi up to data, those\nworken coming within tha scope\not the Unemployment Iniurance\nAct, would be uked to re-register\nAt tha ume time, he old, employees\nwho are not Insurable becauie of\nhigh earnings or other reaioni, will\nalio ba liked to regliter.\nTo Cinidieni who hava bean asking toy totafc war effort an J tull\nuse of man power, Mr. Mitchell laid\n\"you ara going to fat It*\n\"I mun yeu there will be no\neffort spared to make tba plan\neffective,\" Mr. Mitchell said. \"All\nhave bom asking fer total wir\neffort\u2014thou of every; political\nparty, every nation af our *****\nmunltyllfe. All hivt boon aiking\n~.<ee:\u00bbmi lias, at mtaatme*. m*t*\\\\-\nI say\u2014will, yea ara going il git\nIt,*\"\n\"Then win ba, I am afraid, some\nfeatures ol tt which may be difficult and disagreeable. Things we\nwill not Ilka. However, you may\nreit assured that, while tha plan\nmuit go through, R will be made u\nfree trom objectionable ind com\npulsory  feitures as possible.\"\nMr. Mitchell aald that when hit\nDepartment, which has full chirge\nof the registration, completei ltl\ntask. It will hive \"what might be\ndescribed as a 'man-power Inven\ntory1 of well over 3,000,000 worker\nen.\"\nWeath\nDue to war condition!, tha Dominion Meteorological Bureau hu\ndiscontinued lulling weither reporti\nfor British Columbil snd for the\nportion of Eutern Canada East of\nMontresl.\nA brief bunt of Springlike\nweather wu enjoyed by Nelson\nTTiursday u the iun brightened the\niky tor over five houn. During the\n24 houn ending at I p.m., the tern-\n11 mllei I penture varied between SI and M\nI degreei.\n'\u2022*\u25a0\n\"It is taking itock of Canada'i\navailable manpower\u2014and when\nI uy man power I Include woman\npower\u2014to find Its numbers, its\nskill. Ita adaptability, and ltl\navailability for different klndi of\nwork.\n'The war hu made it neceaury to\ndevelop hup Induitriei, many of\nwhich require skilled worken. The\nmanpower Inventory will discover\nwhether or not there ire ikilled\nworken still available who might\nbe utilized to help ilong In wir\nindustries. It will ihow how many\nmen are engaged ln what might\nbe called essential induitriei ind\nhow many are still working at un-\ndertaklngs which could stand over\nuntil after the war. It will In a\nword, furnish a real bans for thi\ndevelopment of an efficient, ipeedy\nand active war effort which will\nbring maximum resulti.\"\n\"Given an accurate manpower Inventory, we can. In progressive stig-\nei md after full consultation with\nthou who will be affected, undertake the task of selective placement\nof the available men and woman\npower where the tull effects of their\nefforti cen be brought to bear on\nthe defeat of that ruthleu man In\nBerlin and all hit fellow erlmlnali.\"\nMr. Mitchell uld that tha Federal\nGovernment to obtain the basis tor\nIti \"manpower Inventory,\" had decided to combine registration of\nworken coming within tha scope of\nthe Unemployment Insurance Aet\nwith a limilar registration ot thou\nnot Insurable, through higher earnings or other reasons If they work\nfor the ume employer. Thus he\nuld, unnecessary effort snd duplication would ba avoided.\nC. C. F. TO DISCUSS A.R.P.\nAND |AP SITUATION\nVANCOUVBt, March 11 (CP).-\nKesolutloni on defence, air raid precaution orginlutlon and tha japaneu evacuation queitlon will be\nconildered at the ninth annual meeting af the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, British Columbia\nDivision, opening here Friday night\nSays Japs Now Ready\n. for Real Battle\nAgainst Allies\nTOKYO, March 11 (AP).-Ja-\npan wai told tonight by Ma).\nKlnzo Nakajima of thi army\npresa uction that Japan hai\nbeen catching Its breath attar\nIts conqueiti ln the Southweit.\nPicific but that It \"now It ready\nto begin the real battle against\ntha Allied nations.\"\nIn a radio broadcast he warned Iha country against being\ndazzled by Japaneu victorlu\nto data'and added: \"We ihould\nba prepared tor any eventuality.\"\nC.N.R. YEAR BEST\nSO FAR; SURPLUS\ntotals mm\nRevenue $66,600,000.\nan Increase of\n$21,600,000\nEXPECT FURTHER\nTRAFFIC GAINS\nOTTAWA Mar* 11 (CP) - The\nCanadian National Railways had the\nmoat successful financial year of ita\nhistory in IMl with a cuh surplus\n\u00ab H01&000, wid Iba annual re\nport of the system .tabled ln the\nHouse of Commons todsy by Trans\npart Minister Cardin,\nNat revenue, liter payment of\nall operating astpanau wu Itt,-\n\u00abH,M1, u increase of \u00bbll,eOO,9M\nover tha previous yaar. Tha caah\nsurplus of |4,oie,ooo, atter payment bf taxes, Interest to tba public and certain intereit payments\nto the Government for capital\nwa* tutnit an liainevwuem\nof $21,000,000 over 1M0. Payment\not this lurplus will be made to\nthe Government before tha close\not the fiscal year ending March\n11, tba report ssid.\nSharp Increases In both passenger\nand freight traffic were reported,\nwith freight tonnage the highest ln\nthe railway's hlitory,\n\"When the need for efficient\ntransportation reached new high\nlevels during IMl the NaUonal Railway system wu found capable and\ncompetent to meet all demand!\" the\nreport uid. \"The demands In 1M2\nwill ba atill more challenging but\nwith tha cooperation of shippers,\npassengers and Government agencies, they will be met\n\"The outlook for 1WJ Is for a\nfurther substantial Increase ln traffic. The directors expect the railway\nwill again earn a moderate surplus\nover the ebove IU fixed charges. It\nil difficult to utlmate how much\nthat surplus will be. The outlook\nmuit be viewed ln the light of war\nconditions ind wilh the reallution\nthat abrupt and far-reaching disturbances occur with startling rapidity,\nOperating revenuu In IMl te*\ntolled POtjntfta er 23 per cint\nover ths preceding yesr. The\namount wu approximately oquil\nto that of 1921, and wu mon than\ndouble that ef 1933. Only twe\nether railway systems en the continent hed larger gross revenuu.\nFreight revenue increased \u00a5*,-\n000,000 or M per oent In IMl the\nrailway moved the largest tonnage\nof freight in lis history. It moved\nthe equivalent ot 27,199,000,000 tons\nona mile, an effort 10 per cent greater than in the previous peek year\nof 1928. The Increased freight rev-\nenue over IM however, wu only\nfive par cant\nPassenger revenue lncreued $10,-\n191,000 or 47 per cant Measured by\npassenger miles, passenger traffic\nincreased 17 per cent but tha In-\ncraase In revenue waa not proportionate ta the IncreiM In volume\nbecause ot tbe low tans for mem-\nban of file armed forces and special\nrilei for workmin'i trains serving\nmunition planti. The average revenue par passenger mile wu 1.1\ncents ,in all-time low.\nIAP HOMI JACK RIDER\nARRESTED AT COAST\nVANCOUVER. Marrch 19 (CPI.--\nJimmy Takaihlmi, Vancouver Japanese, will face chargea under the\nDefence of Canada Regulationi following hli arrest yesterdiy when\nfound riding a hone neir the University of British Columbil in Point\nOfay, There ire military instillations tn ths irea.\nAdvance Overland\non Port Mores\nfor Invasion Jump\nAir Forces in Furious Battles; Missionary\nBand Had Radio Transmitter, Factory\nfor Small Arms, Swastika Bands\nBy VERN HAUCLAND\nAiiociated Preu Stiff Writer       ]\nMELBOURNE March 19 (API\u2014Guided by Nazi Cerman\nmissionaries, a strong Japanese force was reported tonight to\nbe advancing overland in New Cuinea toward Port Moresby,\nenemy-coveteti springboard for invasion of the Australian\nmainland, while over the whole defence periphery the combined United Stafes-AustralianT ' \u2014*'\ntir force and Japanese bombers\nwere furiously engaged.\nThe Japaneu troopi, thui lupported by the tint recorded instance\nof Oerman fifth column Work ln the\nAuitralian theatre, appeared to ba\nadvancing Westward from Lae,\ntheir beachhead on Northeastern\nNew Guinea iiland due North of\nPort Moreiby and separated from\nIt by a mountain range. Tlie objective of the drive wai to gain the\ncentral plateau, then turn South toward Port Moresby, the moit Important defensive poiltion ihort of\nthe mainland itielf. It llei Juit\nacrou Torres Strait from the mainland.\nWANT AIRPORT!\nTbe enemy's immediate aim, uld\ndispatches from Port Moruby, wai\nto taka.over the Markham Villey\nwilh . Iti lystem of first-rate airports.\nthe mUihmaitoi mia.mMto\nhave come from pro-Nail centres In\nFinschhifen and Alexlihafen \u2014\nboth towns are ln tbe ares of the\nenemy's Initial landings on New\nGuinea \u2014 and to have equipped\nthemselves with i ridlo tranimltter, a smsll fictory tor producing\narms and Swastika arm bands.\nIn recent raldi on the missions,\nthe authoritiu smashed one radio\ntransmitter. They found hundreds\nof swastika flag! and photograph!\nof Hitler and learned that iome o(\nthe native children of New Guinea\nhad been taught the Nail ulute,\nto far ai could be learned, the\nInvading force wu In considerable\nnumbers but the Auitralian defenders expressed the conviction\nthat the thruit would be broken\nwell short of Port Moreiby.\nAllied air ittacki were reported\nduring the diy on leveral enemy-\nheld iiland pointi, imong them Kupang on Timor, where the resulting\nflrei were visible 90 mllei iway,\nbut there wai no word of any new\ngathering ot Japaneu ahipa.\nThe enemy'i Invulon trains already have been hard hit, the lateit\nbig Allied success having been a\nbombing attack on a heavy Japaneu cruiier that left lt aflame ln the\nNew Britain Iiland harbor of Rabaul. Near misses were icored\nIndication being that both were\nIndlea on bein gthat both were\ndamaged.\nThli brought to M the number ol\nenemy ships sunk or damaged In\nrecent Allied air attacki.\nMeanwhile, medium forcei\nenemy bomberi raiding Pot\nMoreiby were itrongly dudtfL\u2014\ned by anti-aircraft fire, and cattfe,\ned no known damage in half hour\nraid.\nPort Darwin, on the Northers\nAustralian mainland, wu again\nattacked by a imall force of\nbombers, which dropped 25 scat-\nter-bombi directed primarily\nagainst Allied troopi.\nA late night communique Indlcat- |\ned that In neither Darwin nor 1\nMoreiby were there casualtlei,\nThe tint enemy sir ittack\nCape York, juit acrou the Torres\nStrait from Port Morajlby, also wat-\nreported, but there 'Has no en-\nnouncement ot damag* there. It\naddition, Tulagi, Florida Island, in\nthe Solomons, waa bombed.\nAOVANCtrfTRATUV \u2022<    s6&\nThe Auitralian War Cabinet mat.\ntoday to advance prevlously-pre-\npared itrategy. This ls expected ta\nInvolve establishment of an Allied .\nwar council, new appointment! to\nhigh ranking posts ln the Australian\narmed forces and arrangement! for\nthe disposition of Auitralian and\nAmericin troopi at the pointi of\ngreater danger.\nGen. Douglai MacArthur ll expected to confer next week wtth Ilr\ncabinet officers and Auitralian lervice chiefi at Canberra. '\nUS. Air Force\nArrives in Indii\nSAN FRANCESCO, March 19 (AP)\n\u2014 First word of an American air ,\ntorce in India wai given tonight ln\na new Delhi broadcast relayed by\nRadio Melbourne,\n\"An American air force hu arrived ia Indii, Including Philippine\nveterans,\" uid the Australian broad'\ncut, picked up here by the CBS\nshortwave listening itation.\nHun Rations Cut\nLONDON, Mirch 11 (CP)\u2014\nRenters uld the Berlin radio waa\nheard today announcing that food\nratloni irt to be reduced In Germany beolnnlng April 4.\nMedical Students Planning to\nEnlist to Receive Financial Aid\nOTTAWA, March It (CP). - Defence Mlniiter Raliton announced\ntodsy ln the Houie of Commoni that\nfinancial aulstince will be provided by the armed lervicei for medical studenti who plan to enlist when\ntheir coursu are completed.\nHe uld universities will be uked\nto accelerete their counei by reducing the normal Summer vacation\nperiods to 1 minimum.\nUnder the plin announced by\nCol. Raliton the lervlce propoiei\nto enlist medical itudenti at any\ntime during the final two years\nof thalr college counei. They will\nthen be granted leave with pay\nand subsistence allowance, enabling them to complete their\ncounei and obtain a licence to\npractice.\nThll assistance. Col. Ralston iald,\nwill be tupplemented by the Labor\nDepartment, ln cooperation with\nprovincial governmenti, through extenilon of the preient lystem of\nscholarships to i maximum of $300\nannually, payable during the earlier .\nyean of a studesit's course.\nCol. Ralston said It wai eitlmated\nthe service! would require probably\nBOO medical officer! during the next\nyear, of whom 50 were needed by\nthe navy, 600 by the army and 150 ;\nby the air force.\nScholarships, up to a maximum\nof perhapi WOO, \"will also be opirh\nto other worthy studenti who Ha*\ncause of the acceleration of tha\ncourses will be deprived of tha\nopportunity to earn during what*\nwould be the normal vacattoo\nperiod,\" said Col. Ralston.\n\"StudenU who will be eligible Ht\nthese scholarships will be thou wjjO\nare ln need of such assistance, wljo\npossess itood academic standing aad\nwho give satisfactory assurance to\nserve In the national war effort ttl\nthe capacity ln which they hart\"\nbeen trained.\n\"There will also be some expend)*\nture involved In connection with\nadditional costs to universities Oil\naccount ol the accelerated courui\"\n\\\n\u2014       ___\u00bb__\niti vmi,   it*r_._tt_M\u00abi_i.\n:____*..gi \u25a0__.,.,.\u25a0,_\u25a0-_\u2022.__-. \u25a0__.,._,.. n\n-:\n r\nMOI TWO\nCurran Tells Nelson of Trail Board\nProposal to Streamline Associated\n1 Boards by Splitting Into Two Units\nSuggeetlon ot Iht TnU Board ot\nIttd* tbat th* Associated Boards ot\nTrade ot Eastern BrltUh Columbia\nihould ba divldad into East Kootenay ud Wait Kootenay groups In\norder to achieve more compact organization was placed before the\nCouncil \u00b0t the Nelson Board, lunching Thuraday at the Hume, by W.\nA. Curran, Past President ot tha\nTftttt Board. Guests included, be-\n\u00ab!d\u00abs Mr. Curran, W. G. Tarnan ot\nRowland, President ot the Asaocl-\nWhet a life!\nNo ont wanta Joan for i wife\u2014\nThe truth ia her waya\nahe ahould mend.\nYou htve to perapire all your life\nie But no one need ever offend I\n\u2022Sath tentght with UfUUOY\n1*1 ONI net tipttlolly m.4. i.\npnv.nl \"B.O.\" (lady Oder)\nated Boardi, and Lloyd Crbwe, President ot the TraU Bond. A. H.\nAllen, Nelson President, was in the\nchair.\nMr. Curran urged tbat the record\nof smaller group) ot Boards in other\nsections ot the province constituted\na itrong argument for \"streamlining\"\nthe Eastern British Columbia organization by forming two smallar\ngroupi which could meet frequently\nand follow up proposals and recommendation! more effectively than\none large group meeting once a\nyear. He declared conditions had\nchanged vastly compared with the\nearly dayi whan the Asjoctated\nfunctioned ai \"the parliament ot the\nKootenays.\"\nBoards of Trade In this area should\ntake not* of the changes and \"bring\nthemselves up to data.\"\nMORI IFFICTIVI\nSmaller groups would makt for\nmore meetings, more constructive\nthought and more effective tffort,\nht believed.\nC. B. Garland, Chairman of Uie\nNelson Board Committee charged\nwith studying the Trail proposal,\nasserted close consideration must be\nglvtn to the weight of the East Kootenay and Wttt Kootenay Boards as\na Joint body compared with their\nweight as separate groups. It would\nnot be aufficlent merely to make\ntht division\u2014\"ginger\" must be put\ninto the work to achieve rttults, hi\ndtclartd.\nKaslo bad already indorsed the\nTrail propoial, Mr, Curran stated.\nGreenwood wu interested but at\ntbt moment was aligned with the\nOkanagan. Grand Forks and Rossland wtre studying IL\nMr. Crowe- itated the Trail Board\nfelt mort action could bt obtained\nthrough a smaller, united group.\nHELP CARRY LOAD\u2014TERNAN\nA good deal more could be done\nby tht Aiiociated if the individual\nBoardi would do more to carry the\nload, luggeited Mr. Ternan, Associated Preiident. He felt East Kootenay Boards should be consulted. If\nthe proposal to divide the Associated were not accepted, \"you ihould\nall get behind the Associated and\nmake a go of it,\" he urged.\nSomt angles of the proposal wtre\n\"certainly good, but somt wtrt not\nio good,\" J. R. Hunter, Secretary ot\ntht Anoclated, felt. A ltt kid been\ndont by the Anoclated ln thf pait.\nThe suggtstlon th\u00bbt lnite|d ot separate organiations it might be possible Ior lut Kootenay and Wttt\nKootenay to act ai groups within\ntht framework of tht Associated,\nand thus achieve tht desired objective without splitting lhe district-\nwide body, wai offered by Ven.\nArchdeapon Fred H. Graham.\nB.C. COUNCIL\nMr. Curnn, who repreiented the\nAvoclated at a recent matting at'\nKamloops which propoied a province-wide Board of Trada Council,\nsaid W. E. Payne, Executlvt Secretary of tha Vanoouver Board, hid\nsuggested to him that C, E, Anstle,\nVancouver Preiident, and fit might,\nvisit the Interior to discuis this suggestion.\nThe ipeiker felt a concerted effort\nihould bt made to build up BritUh\nColumbia and the Wait by concerted\naction, and a B. C. body might provide the machinery-\nMr. Crowe, Mr. Ternan tnd Mr.\nHunter agreed there ihould be closer contact with the Coast and\ngreater uae of facilitiei iuch contact\nwould offer.\nDaladier Quotes\nFront Petain Book\nRIOM, rranca, March lt (API-\nFormer Premier Edouard Daladier,\none ot five men on trial oo charges\nof responsibility for France's dt'\nfeat, quoted Marshal Philippe Petain to ihow that Army chiefs did\nnot sufficiently appreciate tha value\nof aviation.\nAi Franot'i laok of planea contlnutd to draw heavy blame for the\nfOennan victory, Daladitf read from\na book entitled, \"la An Invasion\nStill Posslblt!\" 1*11 was an extract\nof a preface written ln 1039 by the\nman who ii now Chief of tht Vichy\nGovernment;\n\"Direct action ol aerial forcei ln\nbattle ia a moot question, for troops\nengaged ln combat on land art disposed to receive blows and return\nthem. It la by Indirect action over\nthe rear that aviation activity Is exercised most efficiently.\"\nBoth Daladier and tnothtr defend,\nant, former Air Minister Guy La\nChambre, attributed the plant shortage to Army leaders.\nCoollns,\ntavMentholatun\niniuntly relttvM\nthe iUMnni\npain. Jan and\nhbee.Kt\nG.LeecefFou\nDead at Coast,\nOnce ol Kelson\nVancouver Sun ln its Wedneiday\nedition telli of the discover of tho\nbody of ah elderly man, Identified\nas George Later of Vancouver, in \u25a0\nditch tear tbl Fruer River at\nBoundary Road on Wedneiday. N\nMr. Lcece wai the father of Mrs.\nCecil Crossley pf Nelion, and many\nyears ago wai a resident of Nelson\nind of Ymir. lit had lived it the\nCout several years. It ii believed\nhit death resulted from I hurt attack.\nOver 500 Guests\nAttend C.W.L SI.\nPatrick's Dinner\nOver |00 guesta tnjoyed tbt annual St. Patrtck'i dinner iponiored\nby tha Catholic Womtn'i Ltagut at\nCathedral Hall Thunday night, establishing another lucceu In the\nlong series of annual dinner\/ The\nJunior C- w- L- assisted.\nTablei were attractively aet and\nwtrt decorated with floweri and\npotted planti.\nMn. L. H. Choquette wu general\nconvener. Mn. 3. Morriion had\ncharge dt luppllu; Mn. R. Lunn of\ntickets; and Mn. W. Deijardim of\ntht kitchen.\npit junior group headed by Mn.\nG. M- Benwell, President, had charge\nof the dining room.\nIn each case a small army of\nhelpen assisted.\nenant Williami\nes fo tht Prairies\nAfter (our dayi leave at hii homt\nfollowing hlf graduation from tho\nOfficers' Training Corps ichool at|\nYtctorti, ap<ru w, r- Wiuiwti of\nN\u00abh|0|i left Thursday for-the Prairies. \u2022 V\n 1   i       ii mi '\u25a0'\nMacArthur\nOffensive Force\nlo Smash Japan\nMELBOURNE, March IP, (AP)-\nOen. Douglu MacArthiy made tt\nplain today with hli paramount\npurpose u Supreme Commander ln\ntht Southwest Pacific Is to build aa\nrapidly - u possible an offeniive\nforce to smash Japan and at the\nume time, relieve hil beleaguered\ntroopi ln the Phlllpplnei.\nMacArthur outlined hit purpose\nto hli old friend and former War\nDepartment associate, Brig. Oen.\nPatrick Jay Hurley, now Minister\nto Ntw Zealand, who told I Press\nconference:\n\"Otn. MicArthur breathes tha\nvery iplrit of victory. Ht iptcill-\noally itated (hat ht itill li in command of tht Philippine iltuatlon ind\nhas the utmost confidence that ht\nwill again be back on Filipino soil.\nHurley uld ht found tht hero ot\ntha Philippine campaign Is excellent health.\nVou don't have to keep\nyour fingers crossed if\nyou are being moved\nby\nWILLIAMS\nTHE SPECIALISTS\nPHONE 106\nWe take care of every detail\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE\n234\nMR. AND MR8. PETER KAPAK, Pfopa.\nIn our new wing you ma; enjoy tht finut\nfc=\nroams In the Interior\u2014Bath or Shower\nSPECIAL RATES BY THI WliK OR MONTH\nPHONE\n234\nWarns Calif, japs\nThey Must Start To'\nLeave Coast Soon\nSAN FRANCISCO, March 19 (AP)\n\u2014Mass evacuation of all Japanese\nfrom Military Zone No. 1 starts\nearly next week with a contingent\nof 1000 volunteers from the Los An\ngeles area, and tha United States\nArmy made It clear today that It\nwants the 2000-mile-long strategic\nstrip of coastlint cleared with the\nleast poulble delay.\nLt.-Gen. J. L Dtwitt, head of the\nWestern Defence Command, urged\nother Japaneie to follow the exam\npie of the Lai Angelei volunteen,\nsaying:\n\"I desire to make It unmistake\nably clear that evacuation will be\ncontinued with or without iuch cooperation. With iuch co-operation\nthoie effected will find their situi-\ntlon much less difficult.\"\nBean Supper Planned\nby Guild at Boswell\nBOSWELL, B.C. - The Boswell\nChurch Guild held Hi March meet\nIng at the home of Mrs. C. H. Beb\nblngton.\nA good deal of needlework done\nin preparation for a Summer ull\nwas handed ln to tha Convener, Mm.\nR. Shell.\nFinal arrangements were made for\nthe bean supper to be held March\n21. Conveners for the supper are\nMra. A. Mickie and Mrs. S. J. Cum\nmings.\nMrs. W. L. Hepher is convener for\ntht social evening which will follow\ntht supper.\nMrs. H Spence will entertain the\nGuild at the ntxt meeting.\nTrout are iport fish ln most loeali\nties, but in Alaska they are considered a pest becauie they destroy\nsalmon aggs. .\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\nf\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"\nDuf Serin Hotel\n100 Seymour  St.        Vancouver, B.C.\nNewly renovatid through-\nout  Phones and  elevator,\nA.   PATTERSON,   latt   tf\nColeman, Alta. Proprietor.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Motor  Freight  Lines\n\u00a5\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM.  H.  MclVOR  Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nAmusma\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AMD\nHOTEL ROOM5^t MODERATE\nMmiCmi RATES Manager\nVANCOUVER B C\nControl School\nROSSLAND, B.C, Mar* IB. -\nWar priorities affect schools, the\nSchool Board learned Tuesday evening.\nA Vancouver firm supplying cast\nIron fittings for school desks, wrote\nthat more than SO new dteka ean.\nnot bt installed without authority\nfrom tht Department of Munitions\nand Supply, except in new schools\nor in thoae destroyed by fire. It wai\nalao luggeited that even cut Iron\nrepair fittings ihould ba ordered at\nonct while tba supply lasts.\nThe FrincipeU were initructed by\nthe Board to advise how many desks\nare in need of repairs.\nMrs. Ife, j. Hussen\nWin Eagles Whist\nTirst place In tbt Eagles partner\nwhist Thursday night fell to Mrs.\nPeter Ife \u00abnd J. Huasen. They scored\n59 points. Louis Coletti and A. Zale-\nnuk, with a score of 42, claimed\nsecond money. Consolation pnr.es\nwent to Mias M. Maco and S. Wylei.\nTwenty-six tables were in plsy.\nRefreshmenta wert arranged by\na committee of Mrs. W. Oold and\nMra. F. Casemore. Steve Maco waa\nMaster of Ceremonies for the cards,\nand Albert Smith waa Floor Manager for the dance following.\nElderly Miner\nDies Suddenly\nBenjamin Freeberg, aged 72, died\nsuddenly Thursday evening at his\nroom in the Vernon Roomi, 523 Ver\nnon Street.\nMr. Freeberg, a Scandinavian and\na former miner, apparently collapsed while at tht dinner table, Dr.\nO. R. Barrett was called by Steve\nSenych, Vernon Roomi, Manager,\nLater City Police Constablei R. R.\nHouse and John Carpenter wert\ncalled, and Dr. N. E. Morrison, Deputy Coroner, wu notified. Tliere\nwas no Indication that death wai\nfrom other than natural causes.\nA miner ln the Slocan and before\nthat ln United States, Mr. FreeberJ\nhad resided at the Vernon Room for\nthe past year.\nYugoslav and\nNorwegian Ships\nHit Off U.S. Coasl\nKWt*% Del, March 19 (Af ).-\nTht 5402-ton Yugoslavian freighter\nTrepca wai torpedoed and aunk oft\ntha Atlantic Coait March 13 In\nbroad daylight, tbt fourth United\nStates Naval Diitrlct' announced today after 99 survivors were landed\nbtrt.\nTour crew memberi ate mlnlnf.\nMIAMI, Fla., March 19 (AP). -\nThirty-four members of tbl crtw\nOf a sunken Norwegian tanker\nlanded bilt from Nassau, tbl Bahamas, and departtd Boon afterward for New York.\nTht mtn said a submarine sent\ntwo torpedoes crashing into tht\nshlp'i side. Ona nan ww killed ln\nthe explosion. The Axlk raider then\n\u25a0helled the vessel, killing another\nman. The remaining men escaped\nInjury.\nTht attack took pilot In tht At-\nUbUo.\nCanada's Plan\nofGift \"Ruinous\"\nOTTAWA, March It (CP). - Rt-\nporta that Hurt ls more opposition\nIn Canada to the proposed gift of\n$1,000,000,000 worth of supplies to\nBritain wert related ln the House\nof Commoni today by two membera\nfavorable to tht project, and one\nother member expressed hla perional\noppoiition to tht plan.\nLlguorl Ucombe (Cdn.-Laval-Two\nMountains), who recently left the\nLiberal ranks to form tht \"Canadian\nparty\" of which he la tht only House\nrepreientative, condemned tht propoial ai \"rulnoui.\"\nFisheries Mlniiter Mlchiud md\nPaul Martin (Llb.-Euex But), told\not opposition to the proposal which\nexisted, they said, ln many parte ot\nCanada, but both supported it as has\nevery other Member who baa Uken\nptrt ln tht debate.\nAustralian Inventor\nWorks for U.S. Army\nNEW YORK, March 19 (AP).-\nThe Herald Tribune said today An-\ntoint Gaida, Austrian Inventor arrested Dec. 1 as an enemy alien, had\nbeen released In custody of the\nUnited States War Department because the Army considered hla talent for gun-making and his Inventions essential to the war effort.\nGazda came to United States a\nyear ago with tht exclusive manufacturing rights of the Oerllkan gun,\ndeveloped by the Oerllkon Machine\nTool Works at Zurich, Swltterland,\nwhich he headed.\nBoard Committee to\nStudy Salmon Run and\nDam at Grand Coulee\nNelion Board of Trade Council\non Thursday Instructed Ita Natural\nReiourcei Committee to consider\nwhether lt waa advisable to draft a\nresolution urging facilitiei at Coulee\nDam to permit a salmon run In the\nColumbia River to Britiah Columbil.\nThe queitlon wai refertd to thi\nCommittee after W. J. E. Biker rtporttd tht Intrnitional Joint Commission, ln iti order. approving\n.Orand Coulee Dam, mentioned the\nstocking of Coulee Lake with sport\nfish but made no mention of salmon. Years ago, Mr. Biker idded,'\nIndians caught quantities of salmon in Interior Britiah Columbia.\nVan. Archdeacon Fred H. Oraham\nluggeited the Committee ihould investigate further and possibly drew\na resolution which could be placed\nbefore tht Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern Britiih Columbia.\nW. M. Cunliffe said that ln 80\nyeara of fishing In this district the\nonly salmon he had seen were IA\nthe pool at South Slocan, and they\nwere not caught by anglers but\ncould be killed with an oar,\nHOSMER\nHOSMER, B.C.-Wllfred Poirier\nleft Wtdne\u00bbdiy for Vernon triining\ncamp.\nMn. r. C. Dildmsn ipent Wednuday viaitlng at Crow'l Nest.\nMrs. Sowchuck spent Wedneiday\n\u2022t Michel.\nWilliam Murdoch li viiiting at\nLethbridge for a few dayi.\nMri. G. Murdoch is visiting Mrs.\nWilliam Murdoch.\nMr. and Mra. St. Denis were Fernie visitors Thursday.\nO. W. Higgins motored to Fernie\nFriday. He wai accompanied by F.\nC. DuBoii.\nAlex St. Denis la leaving Saturday to resume work at Clarejholm.\nThe Red Cross meeting was held\nFriday at the'home of Mn. Fink.\nMn. DuBois wu hostess. A dainty\nlunch wu served.\nNick Krawchuck of Fernie visited\nin town thll week.\nMn. Sandy Schram spent the\nwetkend at her homt hert.\nMiss Sellni Dixon visited Crat)\nbrook it the weekend.\nMr, and Mrs. Steve Hudock ipent\nSaturday ln Fernie.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Dixon were, Fernie shoppers Saturday,\nMn. Fred Hutchinion wu \u25a0 Fer\nnie shopper Saturday.\nJ. Wotton was vUitlng In Fernie\nSaturday,\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C.-Mrs. A. H. Warren\nand daughter Hard of Calgary ar\nrived in Moyie Saturday and were\ngueita of Mr. and Mn- R. A. Smith\nfor the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Marie Nicholson en\ntertalned at cards and tea Wednei\nday evening.\nPhil Conrajl of Chipman Camp\nspent the weeknd in Moyie. They\nreceived word from their ion, Philip,\nof Pullman, Wash., that ht had Join\ned the U. S. Air Force.\nMUs Martin of Cranbrook was In\nMoyie Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Foote and son,\nChris, of Kimberley vUlted Mr. and\nMn. R. A. Smith Sunday.\ntttiwmmp:**^*\"***^\u2122\u2122^\u2122^^\nJki SbokhiL\nW-, 4IIIAKUST. 9-\nCREPE SHOES\nIN STYLES THAT APPEAL TO THI MODERN MISS\n\" ATTltACTIVIlY PRICED \u2022 TANS\n\u2022 BROWNS\n\u2022 SADDLES\n\u2022 WHITES\n$2.99-$3.45\nWOMEN'S STYLE\nSHOES\n\u2022 Lateit Spring Stylei\n\u2022 Fully eliiticiied\n\u2022 AandCwidthi\n|3.45 to\n|8.05\nMEN'S CREPES\nnrown    Oxford,    Jumbo\nCwpe:\nSALI ...\n.$4.75\nMEN'S DRESS\nOXFORDS\n\u25a0lack *2.95\nTm   ?3.85\nBrogun f5.2B to 87.60\nIrown $4.95\niiom\u00bbiim*iiu\u00bbttm\u00bbiimi**it*m**tmmme**\u00bbi>mwimimi:)\nBritish Airmen\nVisiting Trail\nAmong the airmen of No. H 8. F.\nT. S., Royal Air Ferce, viilttnf Nelion Ilnce Siturday Is Sgt M. Hancock of Fllling-on-Tyne, Durham.\nSgt Hancock la the gueit of Aid.\"\nand Mra H. II. Hinitt 516 Kokanee\nStreet\nTwo other Britishers from the\nSchool at Medicine Hat, Cpl. J. D\nAtkinson and Cpl. A. >. Toblason\nare guesti ef Mr. ind Mrs O. A.\nWallinger, MS Ritchie Avtnut, ln\nTrilJ. Previously they ipent their\nChristmas leave with Mr. and Mrs\nWallinger.\nThree Organizations\nHere Plan Replace\nCathedral Vestments\nNelion Council of the KnlghU of.\nColumbus and tht Senior and Junior Cetholiq Women's League havt\nundertaken to replace the vestmtota\nof the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate. Each organization has offered\nto replenish a share of the vest,\nments.\nELECTRA CREW SAVED\nBY U. S. SUBMARINES\nLONDON, March 1\u00bb (CP),-Fifty-\nfour mtmbtn of tht crtw of tht\nBrltUh destroyer Dtctra which WU\nsunk In tht battle tor Java were\nrescued by Unlttd States submarines, Rtuttn rtporttd todiy la \u2022\ndlipitch from Perth, Australia.\nBicycle Output\nMuch Reduced\nNeUon retallin *** being plactd\non small quotaa for bicyclei for ftU\nyear.\nShorUge of |teel, rubber and other\nmaterUU ind nted for employing\nlabor o* war munitions are the rea-\ngoni for tha rtduatlon ln producUon.\nOn tht other hand tht demand In\nmmy parU of tht country U Increasing rapidly. Reduction ln ear\ntravel ind tht crowding of strut\ncar and other transportation faall-\nities la large munitions centrei ire\nforcing many worken to rtturn to\noi idopt the use of tha bicycle.\nAdditional Blotting\nli Planned at Coffee\nCreek to Remove Rock\nOne more round ef bleating remains to complete the removal of\nrock threatening tht Ntlaon-Kailo\nRoad at Coffee Creek.\nPublic Works Department men\nbaUted loose rock on Saturday,\nMonday and Tuesday, clearing most\nof It away, and then drilled holes\nfor tht final round, which Is expected to remove the dinger. Officials\nfeared that the rock, loosened by\nalternate freezing and thawing,\nwould fall upon the road and be-\nside damaging tht surface, might\ntear out supporting waUs on the\noutitdi.\nU.S. Patrol Planes\nGuard Panama\n\u25a0Y  CHANDLER   DIEHL\nAnoclated Prut Stiff Wrlttr\nGUATEMALA CITY, Maroh 11\n(AP)-UnlUd Statei bombing\nplanes, ready for iny eventuality,\nnow art carrying out important patroli In defence of Central America\nand the Panama Canal from an air\nbase \"somewhera In Guatemala.\"\nBearing htevy loadi of explo-\nslTM, tht plinei maintain \u2022 ttase-\nleu vigil far ent ovtr the toning\nwittn of thi Pacific and tht tunny\nCaribbean.\nThe base trom which they in operating wai utabliahad wltb thi\ncooperitlon of (he OtlUtgitlin\nOovernment which, like other Centril Americin republic!, declared\nwer upon tbt Axia powen after tht\nJapaneu sneak-attack upon Purl\nHater.\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B.C.-Roy Andestad\nand F. Merrlin were euto vUlton to\nCranbrook.\nW. Hook of A.S.M.C. vUlted bU\nmother and sUteri here lilt week.\nMn. Hackett and Mn. Huron were\nweekend vUlton at Trail, guests of\nMr. and Mrs. M. Hackett.\nMrs. E. Andestad and Mn. Rotten\nspent the weekend ln NaUon.\nLadies' Aid tea wu held at the\nhome of Mra. Crane Thursday. It\nwu decided to buy lining and complete the quilt, using the butterfly\nblocks donated by Mrs. Keller.\nDainty refreshmenta were itrred by\nJoint hostesses, Mn. Burch ind Mr\u00bb\nCrine,\nO. Ofner of Boiwell .visited hU\nparenta, Mr. and Mn, P. Ofner,\nMlu Elsie Mather, wbo hu been\nvUitlng her brother tnd sUter-ln-\nlaw, Mr. and Mn W. Mather Jr., rt-\nturned to her home at Alice Siding\nlait week.\nVALLICAN\nVALLICAN, B.C-Mn. William\nInnes, Mn. Charlei Harrison and\nMrs. G. S. Strong attended lodge\nat Slocan City.\nTommy Kenny vUlted glocan\nCity.\nL. Roy Strong vUlted hU aunt\nMri. Fnnk Brooke of Nelion.\nF. Soueey vltlted hU family ln\nNeUon for I few diys.\nLloyd Rellind vUlted Nelion.\nMr. ind Mn. Eric Guy of Trill\nviiited Mn. Charles Harrison.\nDenl| HarrUon accompanied hli\nuncle and aunt Mr. and Mn. Erie\nGuy of Trail, to spend a few dayi\nwith thtm.\nMn. Wlllltm Innei vUlted Perrys\nJoyce Reid of Slocin Park visited\nBetty Beiton.\nChirlu Hirriion of Tnil villted\nhis family hen.\nCranbrook   Church\nHolds Successful St.\nPatrick's Tea\nCRANBROOK. B.C.-A very pretty St. Patrick's Ua wu held In the\nPreibyterian Church Sunday School\nSaturday afternoon which reilUed\nthi sum of |71 50. Tht tee tables\nwen iet with white clothi centred\nby green serviettes and tall vases\nof daffodils. The guests were welcomed st the door by Mrs. T. Roul-\niton and Mn. C. J. Little. Tea con-\nvenen were Mrs. C. J. Little and\nMn. McCrindle and thole uked to\npour tei md coffee wert Miss Ems-\nHe, Mri. Worden, Mn. Blair and\nMn. E. Jones. Mra. D. Miller Mri\nA. Moran and Mn A. Llddlcoat\nwere ln charge of tha kitchen and\nthe cookery table wu In the hands\nof Mn, A. Steele, Mn. D. Sneddon,\nMn. A. J. Balment and Mn. Parks.\nServers were Mrs. J. Sutherland,\nMn. G. Barclay. Mra. J. Reekie and\nMn. J. McCallum\nThinks N.H.L. to\nContinue Next Year\nNEW YORK. March It (CP). -\nManager Red Dutton of the Brooklyn Americans, cleaning up hU attain before leaving for Wutern\nCanada, said today ha believed the\nNitlonal Hockey Leagui will carry\non again next Winter.\nThere are many playen who for\nvarious reaions\u2014age, physical !tt-\nneai. family obligations\u2014are not required in the armed forces, Dutton\nuld.\n\"Baseball U carrying on.\" he added. \"People have to have some recreation, and hockey gives lt to\nthem,\"\nAlaska has many picturuque\n\"hanging lakes\" among glaciers, but\nmany of them can bt Men only\nfrom an airplane.\nFewer Australian\nAirmen Will Be Sent\nTo Canada To Train\nLONDON. March 19 (CP CaNe)-\nAuthoritatlve (juarteri, commoting\non a Canberra prediction of radical\nalteration! In tbe Commonwealth\nAir Training Plan, uid iny changes\nwill bt of purely, local character\nand that gtaeral operation ot tht\nC. A. T. P. will not bt affected.\n\"Training centres hi Canada ind\nAt United SUtei will be used ai\nmuch u ever,\" i spokesman uld,\n\"but naturally then will bt fawe*\nAustralians trained In Canada because ot tht difficulty of tramport\nCANBERRA. Auitralia, March 11\n(CP Reuten)\u2014\"Radical alteration!\"\nln the Commonwealth Air Tnlnlng\nPlan to meet thi new needs of tbt\nAllies an predicted ln Informed\nquarters hen and lt U underitood\ntraining of Australian airmen will\nbe changed gradually.\nFiery, Itching\nToes and Feel\nHere U a clean, stainless antiseptic oil now dispensed by chemists\nit trifling coat that will do mort\nto help you get rid of your trouble\nthan anything you've ever uMd.\nIta action ts so powerfully penetrating that the Itching ls instantly\nitopped; and ln a short time'you\nare rid of that bothenorae, fiery\neczema. The ume is true of Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum, Itching\nTou ind Feet \u2014 other lrriUtlng\nuniightly ikln trouble!.\nYou can obUln Moone'a Emerald Oil in the original bottlu at\nMann, Rutherford Co, or any modern drug itore. It ls safe to use\u2014\nand failure U any of the allmenU\nnoted above U ran Indeed. (Advt)\n^.^mat^.eii^ltamrr.^oo.^^-o^^.o^a\nt^i^ati^Utt^itfMfettjfeflLtoMMiii\n \u25a0J-*.\nJaps Gather Forces\nBy  DANIEL  DE  LUCE\n(Anoclated Press Stiff Writer)\nI\nMANDALAY, Burma, March 19\n(AP).\u2014The big battle of the Prome\nRoad \u2014 key to Burma's Yenang-\nyuang old fields , \u2014 seemed today\nready to burst momentarily aa.Jap-\n' anese troops streamed up the Irra-\nwaddy Valley for an assault on the\nnew British defence positions.\n(Reuters said unofficial advices\nfrom Burma reported that Britiih\nImperial forcei had withdrawn from\nTharrawaddy, 60 miles North ' ot\nRangoon and almost half way to\nProme up the asphalt-paved western branch of the road to Mandalay.)\nMarshalling their forces for the\nnew attack, the Japanese were mov-\nRHEUMATISM\nARTHRITIS-\nDon't feel dispirited\u2014dont' give\nup hoDe of getting real relief from\nthose insistent aches, and pains\nALLENRU may bring you just the\nwelcome relief you've hoped for.\nALLENRU acts fast \u2014, the acute\nrains and aches usually start to %o\nn 48 hours Continue for 30 days\nlonger and you too should find the\nrelief you've longed for. Directions\nare simple, the cost is but little.\nALLENRU muit relieve to your\nsatisfaction or your money bak.\nMann, Rutherford Co., and all druggists. (Advt.)\nIng up the broad Irrawa<fdy by boat,\nup the road by motor columns and\ncross-country by mule tralm      '\nThere are no natural obstacles\nalong the lowland road to help the\ndefence. Washes which will be deep\nwith flood waten during the mid-\nMay monsoon now are dry and can\nbe crossed by tanks.\nOther strong Japanese forces are\nmoving northward along the Eut\nbranch of the Mandalay Road toward Toungoo. A sharp cluh between Britiih and Japaneie advance forcei on thii road occurred\nyesterday South ot Kanyutkwin, 40\nmllei South of Toungoo.\nMoit observers here now are convinced that whether an Allied foothold can be retained In Burma depend! ln large meaiure upon the\nChinese troopi which Gen. Chiang\nKai-Shek sent Into the Shan States\nat the Northern flank of the Japanese drive.\nChineie and British commanders\nare known to be discussing coordination of these veterani from\nChina with the British and Indians,\nwho since early January have\nfought here against odds of two or\nthree to one.\nThe Chinese recently repulsed\nJapanese sortiei into the Southern\nShan States, particularly near Mog-\ntung, acrosi the border from Northern Thailand. It Is believed the Japanese Intended these patrol attacks\nto discourage the Chinese command\nfrom dispersing Its troops to help\nthe Britiih forcei farther South.\nAs tbe wsr edged deeper into\nCentral Burma an Indian refuge;\nmigration which a high civil official\nestimated at 7110,000 men, women\nand children, choked the roads out\nof Burma, with starvation and thirst\ntaking a heavy toll of the marchers.\nThe official uid there is suffering on a scale hard to imagine despite efforts to care tor the refugees\nIn temporary camps along the wsy.\nDriven by fean from the land\nwhere they provided the chief labor\nin oil fields, mills, railway!, and on\nthe Irrawaddy'i ships and docks,\nthe Indian laborers and their familiei iet but fdr the vait trek with\nlittle or no food and with all their\n\\tfoodi bundled in cotton cloth.\nparbed wire compound! regulate\nthe number leaving the Western\ndlitrlcts dally. Many are being\ntaken home from the Tangup coait\nWeit of Prome in boat! sent by the\nIndian Government.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO. MARCH M 1942-\nEnemy Ships\nin Mediterranean\nAttacked By R.A.F.\nCAIRO, March 18 (AP). - The\nRoyal Air Force announced today\nthat torpedo-carrying planei had\nstaged a luccessful attack on enemy\nshipping in the Central Mediterra'\nnean on Tuesday night, setting one\nmerchant ship on fire and scoring a\nhit ort-a larger vessel.\nA communique from Middle East\nAir Headquarters gave no further\ndetails of the operation.\nDEATHS\nNEW YORK\u2014Sidney R. Kent, 5\u00ab,\nMidweitern farm boy who became\nPresident of one of the United\nStates largest motion picture companies, 20th Century-Fox.\nWHO IS THIS MAN ?\nHe is the man who spends\nhis life helping others\nfo help themselves\nHe helps the young man or womin gain i stake in life.\nHe helps the father to guarantee his family i continued income.\nHe helps the worker to retire tn comfort ind security.\nWho is this man? Hi tl tht rtprtientatiit of The Mutual\nLife of Canada!\nHundreds like him ire serving todiy the more thin\n170,000 policyholders of The Mutuil Life of Canidi.\nSpecially trained and equipped fot their talk, they cin\nhelp yeu issure idcquite protection at lowcit cok.\nIn these critical timei, you can't i-ford to riik your\nfamily's future. Your neirest Muruil Life reprcscnti-\nbve will gladly help you draw up a \"continues! income\"\nplan to meet their needs. Sec him today!\nTHE\nTht \"VICTORY POLICY\"\nhelps solve your war-time\nsavingi problem\nTo help you inyest in Wu Strings Oni-\nft cites or other wtr loans and mil protect\nyour family, toe, the \"Victory Policy\" his\nbeen specitlly developed by The Mmuil\nLife of Cam Ht.\nLow wor-fim\u00ab premiums\nPremiums \u00bbre mtteriilljr lower thin normil\nduring the first icren yein, and when the\nrite ii adjusted, the manuring War Savings\nCmificite* will take care of the increased\npremium, which is still considerably lower\nthia the norma! rate at the attained ige.\nDesigned for ftmsetet prtttctite, the\n\"Victory Policy\" is arailable (o erery insurable adult under age 56. The connate*! monthly\npayment option makes it especially attractive\nto men and women with modest incomes.\nSee your nearest Mutual Life representative for complete details. Or write to The\nMutual Life of Canada, Waterloo, Ontario\nMUTUAL IIFE\nItIbbof cahada Wmmm\nEitabllihed 1869\nHEAD OFFICE \u2022 WATERLOO, ONT.\nAS\nALL    PROFITS    FOR    POLICYHOLD\nSKINNER District Agent Trail, B. C.\nE  CARD District Agent Kimberley, B\nW. HERTIC Representative Rossland,\nS. NELSON Representative New Denver,\nA. POWELL Representative Creston. B\nM. ROBERYS Representative Crapbrook, B\nTHOS. BECK Representative Fernie. B\nE R S\nCaseyls\ni\nLONDON, March 1\u00ab (CP)-Brlt-\naln smashed precedent today by\nchoosing Richard G. Caiey,,Australian Miniiter to the United Statei,\nas Miniiter of State to represent the\nWar Cabinet in the Middle Eut.\nThe announcement that' for the Churchill aald.\nfirit time in the Empire\"! hlitory\na Dominion Statesman It to become\na member of the Home Government\nand be entrusted with a vital poit\nwaa made by Prime Miniiter Churchill in rthe Houie of Commoni and\nwon a prompt welcome from iti\nmembers.\nMr. Casey, who haa lerved ilnce\nMarch,\" 1940, as Australia's Flnt\nMiniiter in Washington will succeed\nOliver Lyttleton at Caljo. Mr. Lyttleton ii now Mlniiter of War Production.\nMr. Caiey will Be the flrit Dominion Statesman to take a poiltion in\nthe British War Cabinet during thil\nwar. He held leveral Auitralian\nCabinet poata before hla appointment to Waihington.\nDuring the First Great War, David Lloyd George wai assisted at\nPrime Mlniiter by in Imperial War\nCabinet, but no Dominion repreientative became a member of the\nGovernment itielf.\nMr. Churchill said Mr. Caiey\nwould conclude hii affain at Waihington, including conference! with\nrecently-arrived Auitralian representative!, then come to London for\nconsultation before going.to Cairo.\nThere hii job will be one of coordinating all the mIddle-Eait war\nefforti aside from actual military\noperation!.\nMr. Caiey \"will be a member of\nthe United Kingdom War Cabinet\nfor all purpoiei although hla dutlei\n#111 Ue outside thli country,\" Mr.\nHe added it will be possible to\nmake Mr. Caiey a member either of\nthe Commoni or Lord* but there\nare precedent! tor lubjects of the\nKing holding office ln wartime\nwithout belonging to either Houie.\nHe Mid Mr. Casey's powen ln Cairo\nwou'd be ai wide ai Mr. Lyttleton'i\nhad been.\nSAN niANCISCO, March 19\n(AP)^-Brltain'i .election of Richard\nG. Casey, Auitralian Mlniiter to\nWaihington, aa Mlniiter of state to\nrepreient the War Cabinet In the\nmiddle-East came aa a \"complete\nsurprise\" to the Ull, dark-haired\nAuitnliin today,\nA I a_m. telephone call trom\nPrime Miniiter Churchill ln London\nto Caiey In hil San Francisco hotel\nroom advlied him the announcement would be madt in tha Houie\nof Commoni.\nWhile acknowledging that he\nfacei a tremendoui talk ln hii new\nposition, he wai reticent to diicuu\nhii plana or hopea in connection\nwith hii new work of coordinating\nall the middle-East war efforti until\nafter he haa conferred peraonally\nwith Mr. Churchill. Little could be\ndiscussed over the trans-Atlantic\ntelephone thii morning, he iald.\nGIRL MAILS LETTER TOU. J. FOR\nGERMAN PRISONER IN OHT. (AMP\nESPANOLA, Ont., March 19 (CP)\n\u2014One ot five young Eipanola fitlt\nchirged under the Defence of Canada Regulationi for communicating\nwith priionen-of-war in a Nohhem\nOntario internment camp mailed\nletten in German for tha priioneri\nto the United Statei which \"might\nhave contained information very\nvaluable to the enemy,\" Corporal\nJack Burger of the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police testified today.\nThe girli pleaded guilty and were\nplaced on suspended Kntence ifter\nBurger related to Magistrate I.\nArthun and Crown Attorney I. D.\nWilklm of Sudbury, 38 milei East\nof here, the itory of \u25a0 leriei of letter! exchanged between the girls\nand thi prisonen.\nMuh notei, deicrlbed by Burger\nu \"lilly, love-affair thingi\" which\ncontained nothing incrlmatlng, given the prisoner! when the girli came\nupon them doing road work, itarted the exchange.\nBut one of the girli, Burger nid,\nhad mailed letten to the United\nStatei for the priioneri, had bought\ni camera for one of the priaonen\nwith money lent her from the United Stater for that purpose and later ' purchased a developing outfit\nfor the German.\nBurger deicribed the girt who\nbrought the camera md mailed the\nletteri to the United Statei al \"the\nring-leader of the whole thing\" ind\n\"it hai been difficult to obtain informitlon from her.\"\nShe did not. know the contenti of\nthe letten ihe had mailed, Burger\nwid, but they might have contained\n\"very valuable\" Information for the\nenemy.\nAmwerlng the Crown Attorney,\nthe girl iald ihe hid mailed the letteri and bought the camera becauie\n\"I wu afraid.\"\nShe had bean told by a guard that\nthe priaonen would remain ln Canada even after the war and the wu\nafriid \"became I wu told the prlionen would double punish ui ifter\ntha war when they got free If we\ndid not help them. \"\nThe girl replied \"No\" when Mr.\nWllkim aaked If ihe thought the\nGermane would win the war and\nthat wu why the priaonen would\nbe free.\nA large amount of photo-developing material had be'en found on\none of the priaonen, concealed in\nhli trouien. The camera had been\nleft for htm at the place where the\ngirli would receive notei from the\npriionen and leave them letten.\nThe girli wen 13 ind 3d yean old\nand their trial wai held in cloied\ncourt except for the preai.\nTwo of the girli were in tean ai\nthe trial proceeded and they were\ncalled to the witneti itand one by\none. They told a itory of meeting\nthe prlionen, one of whom wu\nknown u \"Pretty Boy\", it a hockey\ngame and while the men were\nworking on roadi and of having arranged a aecret hiding place for let-\nten interchanged among them.\nDaily Mirror Is\nWarned Against\nAttacking Gov't\nLONDON. March 19 (CP)\u2014Herbert Morriion, Home Secretary\nspeaking kn the House of Commoni\nuid today the Daily Mirror, a tabloid whose editorial! generally have\nbeen critical of the Government,\nhad been wirned thit it might be\nsuppresied.\nUnder Defence Regitlationi, iny\nnewspaper that systematically publishes matter calculated to foment\noppoiition to the wir effort may be'\nclosed down.\nA recent Mirror cartoon showing\nseamen of i torpedoed tanker on a\nraft bore the caption \"price of petrol has been railed a penny.\" Objection! were mide that the drawing luggeited seamen were rliking\ntheir lives in order that capital\nmight profit.\nThe question alio wai raised\nwhether the cartoon did not encourage defeatism and might not\ndlK-ourage leamen from lerving\ntheir country.\nH. G Birtholomew, Editoriil Director o( the Mirror, uid that Mr.\nMorrison met 'the Newapaper'i\nBoird today ind delivered the warning that the paper would be cloied\ndown unleu iti policy ii changed.\n\"1 therefore don't doubt at ill\nthat thu iction will b\u00ab taken.\" Bartholomew uid, \"ai the policy wiU\nnot be altered It ia the iame\npolicy which hai obtained through\nout the war and.lt li the only newt-\npaper which hu been consistent\ni \"There ii no aniweT to the Charge\nof undermining the war effort except that it isn't true. I believe\niMorriion ii perfectly ilncere in hli\nbelief but he li mistaken \"\n\u2022a. Mmey Bick\ni____M.IV-riallMllaiiOT.il.\nmmLm**mlm**BO&.\n.hdmtmmlmUUimamlmm.\ntamZmmrnKmmmSb****\nSugar Seized\nin Two Jap Homes\nVANCOUVER, March 19 (CP)-\nBritish Columbia Police leiied lirge\nquantities of sugir ln i raid on two\nJapanese homei it Hillcrest, near\nDuncan, on Vancouver Iiland. It\nwu the first raid made in British\nColumbia under Dominion Government regulation! forbidding iugir\nhoarding.\nThe lugar lelied wai ordered conflicted by C. W. Briiler, Qiforce-\nment Couniel of the Wartime Pricei\nand Tnde Board for Britiah Columbia, and hai been turned over to\nthe custodian of enemy alien property.\nNo prosecutions ire contemplated\nBoird officlali uid, ilnce the Jipineie are to be evacuated with all\nothen of their race from the Pa\nrifle Cout Defence Zone. The raid\nwu made after a \"tip-off.\"\nThe iugir wu nlied at the homei\nof Mri. Morriti Kaiou, where two\nfull ucki of 100 poundi each were\nfound, and Tokosukl Yoshikl, where\n\u2022 100-pound uck ind 30 pounds ln\nan earthenware crock were found.\nCIRLS IN UNIFORM\nATTEND CAS STATION\nVANCOUVIR, Mareh 19 (CP)-\nVanoouver had aomething new In\nthe way ef guoline itation service today. Thru girli, garbid\nIn white hiti, red Jacket! and\nblua ilacki, pumped gaa, counted\nchangi and urvlcid can ginir\n\u2022Ily at a garage here fer the flnt\ntime.\nHitler (alls in Dismissed General;\nto Make Plans lor Spring Offensive\nBERNE, Switzerland, March 19\nHitler hai oalled back nearly ill senior officen who resigned or were\nremoved last Winter to map a gigantic offeniive expected to be\nlaunched soon on the Runian front,\na Berlin diipatch to the Swlsi newspaper Baiei National Zeitung reported today.\nAmong them, tt li uld, is field\nMarthal Walther von Brauchitsch,\nwho was displaced by Hitler himseli\nthe German Army Chief when\nthe drive on Moscow bogged down\nlait December. Von Brauchitsch\nwu taid to be itlll ill. officially,\nbut available in Berlin for consultation.\nOthers named were Field Marshall Karl Von Rundstedt and Fe-\ndor Von Bock, both of whom have\nbeen reported out of favor with Hitler Ior failure! in the Russian campaign; and Erwin Rommel, who won'\na Field Marshal'i baton for hli exploit! in North Africa.\nThe dispatch said the meetings\nare in session now end most signs\npoint toward plani to concentnte\non the Eastern ,front, posifbly\u2014In\nview   of  Romtneli   preience-^wlth\n\u25a0 lurprise ilio In Libya.\n\u25a0 The German Army leaden iup-\nposedly ln disfavor were Mid by\nthe NaUonal Zeitung to have been\nshown in German newsreeli irriv-\nIng it Hitler's headquarten.\nTwo other significant itepi poi-\nsibly denoting Spring activity were\ncited ln the newspaper Basler Nach-\nrichten. One was an appeal by\nReichsmarshal Hermann Goering to\nfarmeri to concentrate u never be-\nWinch Satisfied\nWith B. C. Defence\nJoins Reserves\nVANCOUVER, March 10 (CP).-\nHarold Winch, C.C.F. leader in the\nBritish Columbia Legislature, told\na public meeUng here kit night\nthat he was satisfied with present\ndefences on the Pacific Coast and\nthat \"this Province can give a real\naccount of itself.\"\nHe ipoke shortly after enlisting\nin a Canadian (Reserve) Army Unit,\nthe 2nd Battalion, Irish Fusiliers.\n\"In the event of an Invasion, we\nwill fight inch by inch, foot by foot\nand town by town,\" he declared.\n\"I feel it ii the responsibility of\neveryone of ui to be in the position of trained men so that should\nit be necessary to take up arms, we\nwill be able to art efficiently in defending our coast.*'\nNO NEW SUGAR BEET\nCONTRACTS FOR ENEMY\nALIENS IN ALBERTA\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., March 19\n(CP)\u2014No new sugar be$t contracts\nwill be issued to enemy aliens and\npresent growers who are enemj\naliens will not be given any acreege\nincrease this year, officials of the\nAlberta Sugar Beet Growers Association announced 'today following a meeting yesterday with Sugar Company officials.\nTHREE AIRMEN DIE\nIN PLANE CRASH\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., March\nlt (OP).\u2014A United States civilian\npilot and threi memberi of the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force, were\nkilled last night in the crash ot an\nAnion bombing plane at Kinistino,\ntt, mllei East of here. The men were\nall attached to No. I Air Observer\nSchool and were on an instructional\nflight.\nLemon |uice  Recipe\nChecks Rheumatic\nPain Quickly\nIf you suffer from rheumatic,\narthritic, or neurltic pain try this\nsimple, inexpensive home recipe.\nGet a package of Ru-ex Prescription from your druggist Mix it with\na quart of water, add the juice of 4\nlemons. It's easy and pleasant.\nYou need . only 2 tableipoonsful\n;wo timei i day. Often within ta\nhoun\u2014aometlmes overnight\u2014iplendld reiulti are obtained, fi the pains\nare not quickly relieved tnd It you\ndo not feel better, Ru-ex Prescription will cost you nothing to try.\nYour money refunded If It doei not\nhelp you. Ru-ex Prescription Is for\nsile and recoijimended by Minn,\nRutherford Co., ind other leading\ndruggliti. (Advt.)\nAUSTRALIA MAKES WAR\nDUTIES COMPULSORY\nCANBERRA, Australia, March 19\n(AP).\u2014The War Cabinet ordered\ncompulsory defence duties today\nfor all Australians\n(ore on utmost production. Tht\nother, taken in tome quarteri W\nmean that any plana againit TV-\nkey have been lidetricked for tAff\ntime being, wu the report th&\nKranx von Papen, Oerman ambtfcl\nsador ln Ankara, will not make i\nexpected viilt to Berlin.\n'I\nTO MEN WHO ABE\nN0TUZY..J\nBut Juit Conf Gtt GtlnJJ\nYou uy yoa are not the man S\nnaed to bet Check np on youndfl\nin the mirror. If your eye* apt\nmuddy and dull and yoor tongu*'l\ncoated aa weU, theo you're not ai\nwell u you ahould be.\nBut thtre ut other lymptoBtt\nFood doein't internet you. Little\nthingi get on your nerve*. You fall\naaleep whtn you ahould be awaka.\nYou try to^get out of viiiting friendi\nor going to the moviei. Wone, yoo\nare too tired for your job. Yolt'rt\nnotlaty\u2014you juit can't get going.    \u25a0\nWhat'i the otuae? Your blood-\nitream im't clear. There are toxin\nin it. Poiaonoua wait* ia in your\n\u00bbvstem. Get rid of it. Kruachen il\nthe thin; for that.\nThere are uveral mineral aalta la\nKruachen, balanced in exact proportion! to aaeiat the organa of evacuation to get rid of waste matter every\nday. Kruachen is more than a laxative. It it a diuretic u weB\u2014belpl\nto flush tbt kidneya and at the same\ntime keep tht colon moist, so thai\naction ia tuy and gentle. A pinch\nof Kruachen every morning la all\nyou need. Aik your druggiit for tbl\nspecial Kruachan value called tha\nKRUSCHEN\ntf\/zMTPACKAGE\nThey've reeently arrived\nfrom Britain\u2014a laurae buttle with I\n\u2022mall   extra   jar,   75c.   complete.\nM*\u00b0L\nCtit0&\nmssSf.\nOr mac.\nssm^\ntis*\n\\Jti\n0ff%\">~\u00ab\"t r\nThe tmkr, Ihillir mdi ef New Oxydol d\u00a3\nmort\u2014wuh clothei white without bleecKT\nlag, e-eea in hard wattr-except mini, of j\ncoune, or unuiual pieces. Yet New Oxydol'\nis milder! Sail for waihible colour* and,\nrayons, too! \/\ne ytt dem't ap** V* the whitest walk\nftr, limply mum unused portion of\npackage with nama and addreu to Oxydol\nMontreil. and twice tbe purchase price\nwill bt refunded. Thia offer expire*!\nDecember 51, 1942.\nM ITORU NOW-**** MCKMI ..\n\t\n_____\n\u2014\n\u00bb*\nl_\n II wun    ....\nor . . .\n>alousy Causes\nMany Heartaches\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nettera tomt to mt in every mall,\n|B| how to overcome jealousy.\nWldler writes: \"Jealousy la poling my whole life. Tm going with\nbl who uyi ahe will marry me,\nbut iht Iniliti on dating othtr boyi\nIt \"ham* me up1.\"\nMy young friend seems to think\nJealousy la a poisoned arrow which\nthe fates have reserved especially tor\nhim alone. He ihould realize'thit\nJealousy Is more prevalent than the\ncommon cold and, like the common\ncold, tew escape it.\nIt's too bad that youth ahould\nwaste ita glamorous Inheritance 'n\ngrieving over aomething that In\nlater life will aeem io utterly unimportant. Jealousy, psychologist!\ntell us, ls a form of fear\u2014dread of\nFOR ECONOMY...BAKE\nwith MAGIC! mr\neaa\n: For FREE Cook Book\nMad to Magic Baking Powder,\nFraser Ave., Toronto\n^DB\nat nn\"*\nvp\"7 e;chbeso,\n#B.\u00bb^-beCl.U;;;t an identical\n\u2022dividual C^t\"oaeisarich\ntemperature^^       e&lyd\n^\u2022bf0W% hard beans..-^ ^\ntender.--n\u00b0har        bean uniform\ntnushy bean*--fi0d rich.\ni0t^flr brown in colour- Only\ndeep,golde\u00b0-broWO ledCook.ng\najft exclusive- P;u  ^   ,ke\ndone.--8*  ..MY0\u00bbcA\u00bbl*DA'lW\nnnuBLl YOUR WON? \u00bb*C*owne<\nDOUBU   'TV-  Serve Ubby \u00abDteAlB, thao\nlctyourf.mi^e^a^;\u00abit      , re bett^n^,\ntheyWe ever ta\u00abea .     wJ\u00a3J\u00a3d Beam today-\nbeing deprived of aomething we\nwith to possess. Not flattering to\nyourself, Is lt, to bt t victim of the\ngreen-eyed monster!\nThe first itep toward freedom\ntrom thll blight ls to hive greiter\nconfidence In youraelf, ln your own\npowera to hold your beloved. You\nneed courage\u2014the iame brand of\ncourage that overcame your fear of\ngoing into a dark room when you\nwere a child.\nMen and women who art watohed\nconstantly and whose every tctlon\nll teen through the distorted vision\nof Jealousy are apt to find hatred\nrather than love In their hearta\nThey resent the indignity ot being\nconstantly spied upon and accused\nof thingi of Which they are gulltleis.\nThe cure? it Is so ilmple that it\nls almost universally overlooked. Patience on the part of the beloved\nind willingness to explain twty how\ngroundless tre these fears.\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILION. B. ^-FRIDAY MORNINQ. MARCH 10, 1942-\nSocial Life ..,. .\nNurses Land Safely\nIn South Africa\nOTTAWA, March 19 (CP).\u2014The\noffice of the South African repre-\nlentaUve in Canada announced to*\nday the safe arrival ln South Africa\nby a ship carrying 10 Canadian\nnurses.\nDeficiencies\nFinding Oui How\nVitamins Work\nBy LOQAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nSomething llkt a really sensible\nexplanation of tht way tht vitamins\nwork U appearing. For a good mtny\nyetn since their discovery the only\nthing known about them wai that,\ntor instance, If Vitamin A wai left\nout of the diet, lt cauied eye trouble iuch aa night blindness tnd Infection of the eye. It Vitamin B was\nlett out of the diet it caused neuritis. If Vitamin C waa lett out of\nUie diet, it caused icurvy and an\nabsence of Vitamin D resulted in\nrickets.\nResearch workers continued to\ntlnd vitamins such aa Vitamins E, ,\nand P, substances which they named\npyrodoxlne, biotin, pantothenic acid\nand If one or the other waa removed\nfom the diet of an experimental animal, certain effecta ln the way ot\nIU health appeared ln the animal.\nNobody knew Juat why these effects occurred. They didn't occur be-\ncauae the vitamins supplied an ac-\nJfc\n(HtiUMWW&L\nBy BITSY NIWMAN\nTODAY'S  MENU\nBreikfut ,\nHalf Grapefruit Rolled Oats\nFrench Toast Maple Syrup\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nWafflei or Toait    Creamed Salmon\nBaker Applea      Graham Crackers\nMilk Tea\nDinner\nVeal Roaat Roaittd potatoes\nScalloped omatoes\nCarrot-Cabbage Salad\nMaple Upside Down Cake\nTea or Coflee\nMAPLE  UPSIDE  DOWN  CAKE'\nOne-third   cup  maple  syrup  or\ncom waffle syrup, 1-3 cup brown\nsugar, firmly packed, 2 tablespoons\nbutter or margarine, Vi cup sugar,\n3 slices pineapple, 2 tablespoons\nmelted butter, 1 egg, V, cup milk\n1 cup flour,'-1 teaspoon baking powder, V, teaspoon salt.\nCombine syrup, butter and brown\nsugar in heavy frying pan and boll\ntill a small quantity dropped into\ncold water formi t firm bill. Arrange pineapple, well drained, in\nsyrup. Cream sugar and melted butter, best ln egg and milk, lift ln\ndry Ingredients, beat well and pour\nover pineapple and syrup, spreading batter out well to edgei of pan.\nBake ln moderate oven (35 degreei\nT.) about 30 minutes. Other fruit,\nsuch as canned cherries or peaches\nmay be used In place ot pineapple.\nSERIAL   STORY . . .\n. By   JERRY   BRONDFIELD\nNo Refugfe From Love\nCHAPTER  SIXTEEN\nNEIL STEERED Tiy Whltworth\nand his father Into the library after\ndinner that night. \"I was going to\nketp this to myself tor a while,\" he\nsaid abruptly, \"but on second\nthought this matter is very much\nyour concern and you've a right to\nknow about it.\"\nBurton Whitworth raised an inquiring eyebrow. \"Shoot.\"\n\"Maybe that's the word we'll need,\ntoo.\" Neil said.\nHe told them Uie story of Kurt\nWilhelm. When he had finished\nBurton Whltworth was pacing the\nfloor nervously, his hands behind\nhis back.\nTay looked at Neil queerly. He\nstarted to say something, changed\nhis mind and lit a cigarette.\nThe elder Whitworth was silent\nfor a long minute before he spoke\nThen he .plumped a fist into his\nother palm.\n'There'i only one thing to do at\npresent. We can't go to the police,\nbut there'i no reason why we can't\nhave a private detective sort of\nkeep an eye until we think of a better way to handle this. What do\nyou think, Neil?\"\n\"As good an idea as any,\" Neil\nagreed. \"We'll have to take It easy\nuntil he tips his hand \"\n\"I don't want to intrude on the\nbrain trust, but would you be interested In my slant. Dad?\"\nHis father looked up quickly\n\"Oh\u2014oh, of course.\"\nTay ground his cigarette Into an\nash tray. \"Maybe this ia the time\nto insist on Molla's staying here for\na while. She'd be a lot safer, don't\nyou think?\"\n-She'd be safer,\" Nell agreed,\n\"but I don't think It would be as\nsmart as the other plan. If she\nstayed here lt would take Wilhelm\nJust that much longer to give us\nan Idei of what he's up to. I don't\nthink Molla's in any personal danger yet, and until we find out what\nhe has in store for her, I think we\nought to give him all the rope he\nwants.\"\n\"Maybe you're right, Neil,\" Burton Whitworth murmured. \"Meanwhile, we'd better tell her we're\non her side and perhaps give her\nher choice,\"\n\"I'll tell her.\" Tay taid quickly.\n\"I'll take her to lunch tomorrow.\nThe only thing I won't mention is\nthe private detective,\"\n\"I was going to, but Just as you\nwish,\" his father told him. \"Maybe\nit would be more apropos, at that,\"\nhe smiled.\nTay leaned forward over the table\nand took Molla's hand.\n\"Come, now, don't be obstinate.\nYou know It's the best thing for\nyou, and certainly the lafeit.\"\n\"I cannot argue with you any\nlonger,\" Molla iald wearily. \"You\nwear me down io. I'll tell you what\nI'll do\u2014I'll compromise with yol^\"\nHe smiled. \"Now we're getting\nsomewhere.\" -.\n\"He\u2014Kurt is out of the city now\nI have no doubt that he will de\nmand to see me when he returns.\nUntil then I will remain in New\nYork. After that I will come out to\nyour place.\"\nShe ran a pensive finger around\nthe rim of her water glass. \"But I\nwarn you I will not stay one minute\nlonger than I'have to.\"\nHe looked at her quickly. \"You\nhave an idea you're not going to be\nas happy there, haven't you? And\nI'll bet it's because you think my\nmother doesn't like the idea.\"\nShe shrugged. \"Let's not go Into\nthit.\"\n\"Okay, but there'i one question I\nwant to ask you, if you don't mind.\"\nHe leaned forward again, a slight\nsmile on his face.\n\"Why waa it you didn't come to\nme first, instead of to Neil Lund-\nuist, when you felt as though you\nhad to tell your troubles to someone?\"\nHer eyes opened a little wider\nwith surprise. She tried to piece\nher scrambled thoughts together for\na definite answer, but she couldn't\nfind one.\n\"Why\u2014why, I don't know. I gueaj\nit was Just because he was the one\nI was with at the moment and I\nknew he could be tnuted. He \u2014\nhe's awfully nice.\"\nTay nodde'd. \"Yes\u2014Neil's a swell\ngent but I thought\u2014\" he smiled\nagain. \"I kind of thought I had\nearned some sort of prior rights on\nyour attentions.\"\nMolla's heart took an extra heavy\nJump a couple of times. There was\nno mistaking his feelings. Tay was\nJust a little jealous.\nA tinge of coolness crept Into\nMolla's tone. \"You're not really\nobjecting, are you?\"\nThe carefree grin broke over his\nface again. \"Nope. Not yet, anyway.\"\n\"You'll give me warning when\nyou do. won't you?\" she smiled.\n\"Not very much,\" he told her,\n(To Be Continued)\ntual chemical to the tissues affected.\nFor Instance, Vitamin B, 11 removea\nfrom tbt diet, causes neuritla, but\nthe chemical structure of Vitamin B\nii nothing like the chemical structure of a nerve. Therefore it It not\nbecause the nerve lacks in essential\nchemical to product growth that\nVitamin B deficiency causes nerve\ntrouble.\nIt haa been found that climate and\ntemperature tfftct tht utt of Vitamin B. In cool climates Vitamin B\nremains in the body longer and\nkeeps heat generation going. In tropical climates lt ll eliminated rapidly\nand the fodo remains inert in the\nbody and it turns Into fat rather\nthan energy so that ln hot climates\nthe natives art mort likely to be\nsleepy and more likely to be obese.\nIncidentally, I am glad to iet that\na good word ii being aald or my bid\nfriend, meat For yeara every hyglea-\nlit condemned meat. Nowadays they\nsay that meat la the belt aource we\nhave for Vitamin B and wt all need\naome at least, onct or twice a week.\nVitamin B la not a single substance. Thefe are about eleven subdivisions of Vitamin B, all more or\nleaa related, but all performing more\nor leaa different functions.\nIncidentally, lt la possible to get\ntoo much Vitamin B; at least lt s\npossible to get too much thiamin\nchloride, which is Vitamin B, io It\nwon't do simply to ituft yourself\non Vitamin B.\nLENTEN REDUCING DIET\n900 calories. Efficient, balanced\nsatisfying.\nBreakfast-}* grapefruit (50 calories\u2014roughage); 1 aoft-bolled egg\n(100 caloriei); 1 slice toast (79 cal\noriei); 1 cup coffee\u2014no cream or\nsugar.\nLunch\u20141 large glass milk (190 calories); 1 large banana\u2014no cream or\nsugar (100 calories, minerals and\nvitamins).\nDinner\u20141 cup black bean soup\u2014\nserve with chopped onion and chopped white and yolk of tgg (190 calories\u2014satisfies tht appetite); 1 me\ndlum al{e broiled sweetbread (ISO\ncaloriei); 2 tableipooni carrots (Vitamins A,B, C, G\u2014-phosphorus\u2014cal\nclum\u201425 calories); 1 canned peach\n\u2014served hot (50 calories); 1 small\ncup coffee\u2014no cream or iugir.\nTAXI APPLIES FOR\nHORSE CAB LICENSE\nMIAMI, Fla, Maroh 19 (API-\nSign ef tha tlmti:-\nA Mliml taxi company hai ap\nlied for a license to operatl hone-\ndrawn oabi, which have not bean\ninn on thi itreeti here In 20\nyein.\nYou'll Like the\nFiner Flavor\nGreenlake\nBrand\nCut fysm.\nBEANS\nAsk for it by name\nat your local grocer\nA    Weitern     Product\nSOS\n(SAUUMQ      (ON)      (SALMON)\nDINNER PLAT!\nWOMBN ht?e come to tho cod*\nelusion aftor trying many iiucea,\ntbat thick, fruity H. P. ii topi in\nflavour aud economy.\n\"S.O.S.\" Dinner Plata or \"San-\naage on Salmon\" ia a now, appfr-\ntiiini diab. Break into amall piecea\nand fry \\ Ib. of aausaie. Remove\nfrom pan and nt to coot To tho\naauaaft fat in pan add 2 table-\napoona of floor and blend with 1%\ncupa of milk. Cook until thick,\nthen add Mi tanapoon of aalt, H\nteaapoon of pepper. 1 tableapooti\n11. P. Sauce and 1 teaspoon of\nchopped parsley. Pour over 2 well-\nbeaten em. Drain and flake 1 can\n(1 lb.) of salmon and arrange io\nbattered rawerole; dot with nan*\naaye, Poor nance over flab and pau-\ntage and top wtth bread crumbs.\nBake in moderate oven for 45 min.\nH. P. 8mm adda appetizing\nflavour to yonr favourite diibea.\nR. R. GROCERY\nOwing fo Governmenl  Restrictions we will be making\none delivery per day: Fairview 10 a.m., Uphill 3 p.m,\nWedneiday 11 a.m.\nPlease have your orders in AT LEAST 15 MINUTES\nBEFORE DELIVERY TIME.\nSOAP castille . . 10 bars 29c\nPEAS: sieve 5 choice.. 2 tins 23c\nTOMATOES: 15 oz. tin 2 (or 23c\nBaking Powder: Ji\"..\"\"*\"   tin 22c\nORANGES: 2 doz. 39c\nORANGES: extra large, doz. 49c\nRadishes, Tomatoei, Celery, Lettuce, Bananai,\nTurnipi, Parsnips, etc.\nParents Should\nHelp the Child\nto Make Contacts\nBy OAf RY C. MYErU, Ph.D.\nTht average youth todsy seems to\n(o out to much. Ye' there are a\ntew youthi who stick oo cloae o\ntht home. Unfortunately, their parent! may not recognize this aa a\nproblem.\nThe mother who wrote the flowing letter doea tee a problem ln\nher adolcxent daughter who prefers to stay at home near], all tht\ntime.\nMOTHER'S PROBLEM '\n\"Dear >r. Myers:\u2014Our daughter,\nRuth, 16, ia the eldest of five. She\nla an obedient and thoughtful sort\nof girl, the type who never fails to\nescort her grandmother into the\nchurch safely; the one who takes\nthe dish towel from me and urges\nme to go in and rest. Our Children\nare all atay-at-homes. Our problem\nIs not how to keep our children\nhome but how to get them to go\nout. , . .\nShe doesn't like boya either with\nthe exception of one of her exact\nage for whom she entertains a se\ncret liking. I should like to set her\nmingle wilh more boys and girli.\nShall we simply stay out of tht\npicture and allow her social life to\nwork itself out o. what do you advise?\"\nTHE DOCTOR'S ANSWER\nHow I replied: Yes; you, her parents, can and should do something,\nbut not oy talking to her of her\nsociallack ..nd the nee of going\nout with other youths. You will\nhave to set the stage so she will\nchoose a belter way and find satisfaction from doing so. To aet the\nstage is e greet art which parents.,\nhtve to work oi ln their own way.\nHere are some of your objectives:\nTo help her acquire such social\nskills and interest! as will make hex\nfeel at eaat with boya and girls.\nIt might help her to observe othtr\ngirls of good habit! and ideals who\nhave many friends, In order to *o* *\nquire the traits in them that win\npopularity. Alto it might help her\nto realize that she need not bt talking most of tbt lime in order to bt\npoular and comfortable. . good listener is a rare and attractive person.\nBUNDED ANO PACKED IN\nCANADA\nONE CUP\nSHOWS\nYOU!\nAt your grocer's\nIn 7- and 12-oi.\npackage*\u2014 also\nIn Improved\nFILTER tea\nballs.\nYou'll never be satisfied with anything else\nonce you see RINSO WHITENESS\nHTHE first tdirte you see Rinso-\n\u25a0*\" washed clothes your experienced eye will detect instantly that\nRinso not only washes whiter, it\ngives the whitest w#sh. In fact\nthe only standard of real whiteness\nis Rinso whiteness!\nColors wash beautifully in Rinso\ntoo\u2014they stay just as bright as\nnew through dozens of launderings.\nIn fact Rinso helps all the clothes\nin your wash to wear longtr because\nit floats away\ndirt without\nhard rubbing\nand scrubbing.\nNo matter how varied your washing experience may have been, you\nhave only to try Rinso once and\nyou will never be satisfied with\nanything else. Use it this coming\nwashday. Get the GIANT package,\nat your store, for extra economy.\noLIVIR\nI\nvts-eiNso urn\n<MOK BBlSHT-\nMMfSUOTHES\nLAST lOM&fR,\nTOO\n-gives the whitest wash\n\t\n\t\n-\n M\nI Andrew & Co.\nThe HOME of\n<500D SHOES\n!\u2666 Andrew\na 60.\n,\u00absders in Footfashlon\nigway, Aluki, chief port ot\nduring the Klondike gold nuh,\nued lor iti gardeni.\nI    I \u00bb\nPRODUCTS\nt Your Grocers\nTODAY\n7Bum: 10c\nrs,ry: 15c\nI and Nut Cake:      OA\ncolate Cake: IT\ni*i;;;i;\"i5e\n;R*. 25c\n\u25a0\n-NELSON DAILY NIWI NELSON. B. C-FRIDAY MORNINO. MARCH M IMS\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS.\nGOLDSMITH\u2014LANE\n\u2022 Trinity United Church \"was\nthe scene of 1 pretty wedding Wednesday evening it 8:30 o'clock when\nRev. G. G. Boothroyd united In wedlock Olive Ethel, elder daughter of\nMr. and fits. A. 0. Line, 218 Del-\nbruck Street, and Edward Gordon\nGoldimlth, only ion of Mri. Catherine Goldsmith md the lata r. J.\nGoldsmith of Nelson. Given ln marriage by her~ father, the pretty bride\nwas gowned In a princess-fashioned,\nlong white sheer braided bolero\nwedding drqss and a full-length net\nveil with halo of net and seed pearls.\nShe carried a lovely bouquet of\nred roses. - Her blonde bridesmaid,\n*\nM. J. VIGNEUX\nCOUGHING\nCOLDS\n*-1 III.an. Wtth\nKtntvt DISK} mm\nSee the\nSPRING  SPORT  COATS\nIn Tweeds and Polo Cloth\nFashion First Ltd.\nH.  H. Sutherland\nWhen Sutherland repairs your\nwatch, it's on time, all the time\nSing a Song of Spring In\nJACKETS\nfrom\nMilady's Fasnion Shop\nMiss Lillian Fisher, looked lovely\nln her floor-length, pink sheer Bolero frock made on' identical llnu\nof tbe bride's dress. Her matching\nJuliet np wu trimmed with tiny\nforget-me-nots.' She curled 1 bouquet of white carnitloni, ind won\npink lace mite. F. Turner of Nelson\n\u2022cted u best man while Gordon\nWilliams and Delbert Smiley wen\nthe ushers. At the jignlng of the\nregister, Mn. J. C. Hooker sang\n\"Beciuse,\" iccompanied by C. C.\nHalleran, who alio played the wedding march. Mrs. Line, mother of\nthe bride, wore \u2022 becoming nivy\nsheer dress, trimmed with white\nembroidered collar. Her corsage\nwas white carnations while Mrs.\nGoldsmith chose a striking black\niheer trimmed with red velvet and\na corsage of red roses. The reception\nfollowed tt the Lane home on Del-\nbruck, where a large number of\nguests assembled and toasts were\nproposed by Fred Irvine, J. J, Boyd\nand the bride's father, A. G. Lane.\nThey were responded to' by the\nbridegroom. Presiding at the dainty\ntable centred by a three-tiered wedding cake, tulips and narcissus, were\nMrs. Maude Traves and Mrs.-C. E. A.\nSimopds. Musical numbers were\nrendered by Miss Elva Lane while\nMiss Annie Busk gave several vocal\nsolos. Mr. and Mrs. Goldsmith will\nmake their home in Rosemont.\nANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT\n\u2022 Mrs. M.E. Aylwin of New Denver announces the marriage of her\nyoungest daughter, Ruth Viola, to\nWilliam George, youngest son of\nMr. and Mrs. John, Teir of Rosebery. The wedding will take place\non Thursday, April 16, at 10:30 a.m.\nat SI Stephens Anglican Church,\nRev. Frank Browne officiating.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Bowkett of South\nSlocan visited town yesterdsy.\n\u2022 F. T. Abey of Kaslo spent Wednesday in the city.\ne' John     McGIllivray    of    the\nOre Jka CtxK\nFRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1942\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:48\u20140 Canadi\n7:4&-Wak\u00ab Up wd Live (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:18\u2014Milter Musicians\n8:30\u2014Front Line Family '\n9:00-B.B.C. Newi .\n9:15-Concert Time  (CKLN)\n8:30\u2014Deep River Boyi\n9:45\u2014Skltch Henderson, Pianist\n9:59\u2014Time Slgnil\n10:00-Momlng Vliit\n10:18-Songs of the Ringe (CKLN)\n10:3O-Hymn Time (CKLN)\n10:45\u2014Al Se he* Reiser\nll:0O\u2014 Music Appreciation Hour\nll:30-Muiic Before Lunch (CKLN)\nAFTERNOON .\n12:00\u2014B. C. Firm Broidcut\n12:28-The Notice Boird 4CKLN)\n12:30-GBC Newi\n12:45-'On the Mall\" (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014CBC  News  Bulletin\n1:03\u2014Fireside Fun\n1:15\u2014Matinee Melodies (CKLN)\n1:30\u2014Columbia School of the Air\n2:0O-B. C. Schools Broadcast\n2:30-TIIk\n2:48\u2014Three Sum Wo\n8:00\u2014Don Messer ind Hil Islanders\n3:18\u2014Noveleique\n3:30-Wlshart Campbell Sings\n3:48-BBC Newi\n4.00-Maurice ft Hil Orchestra\n4:18-Songi by Lie Sweetland\n4:30-Rhythm Takes 1 Holiday\n4:48\u2014Recital Seriea\n8:00\u2014Newi Commentary\n8:08\u2014At Manning Depot\n8:80-Supormin (CKLN)\n5:48\u2014To be Announced\nEVENINC\n8:00-CKLN'i Birthdiy Pirty\n6:30\u2014If\u00bb Dance Time (CKLN)\n6:45-Evening Varieties (CKLN)\n7:00-Volcei of Victory\n7:80\u2014Lulgl   Romanelli's  Orch.\n8:0O-CBC Nitlonil Newi\n8:18-\"Niwbrldge\"\n8:80-BBC 'News Reel\n9:0O-\"Wlr ln thi Picific\"\n9:30-World Affiirs\n9:45\u2014'Aa e Hitter of Fact\"\n10:00\u2014Northern Messenger\n10:30-CBC News\n10:48-<Jeorge Erwln'i Orch.\n11:00\u2014Lud Gluikln's Orcheitri\nll:30-God Save the King\nR.C.A.F.   is on   furlough  with  his\nparents In Kaslo.\n\u2022 W. G. Ternan of Rossland visited NeLson yesterday.\ne W G. Norrie Lowenthall, M.E.,\nof Vancouver, is a city visitor.\n\u2022 Frank Morton of the RCA F\nis holidaying at the home of his\nparents at Kxslo.\n\u2022 W. A. Curran of Trail visited\ntown yesterday.\ne Mrs. M. M. Lane of Ainsworth\nwas in the city to attend the Goldsmith-Lane  wedding Wedneiday.\nRETURN TO STATION\n\u2022 Lac. Dai. Palmer and Lac. Bert\nGadsby, of the R.C.A.F. mining\nschool at Medicine Hat, who-have\nbeen guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold\nEmery, Josephine Street, for the\npast week, left this morning to return to duty.\n\u2022 Mil W. C. Mawhinney, who\nhas spent the past three months at\nthe home of Mayor N. C. Stibbs and\nMrs. Stibbs. Silica Street, left yesterday to spend a few weeks at the\nCoast.\n\u2022 Miss Frances Chapman, Chief\nOperator of the British Columbia\nTelephone Co., Trail, who has been\nlo uied\/u *w\u00abtfw\n<Uy; at a time\n\\s positively A\nload vtime\nTRAIL SOCIAL\na patient In Kooteniy Like Oen-\neral Hoapital for levenl weeki\nhas recovered sufficiently to leive\nfor her home on Slith Street\ne Miss Abble Wall wu \u2022 recent\nvisitor ln town en route home to\nLa France Creek from Vmcouver\nwhere she spent the Winter. While\nin the City lhe wu \u25a0 guest ot Mr.\nand Mrs. L. H. Choquette, Litimer\nStreet.\nHONORED AT FAREWELL\n\u2022 A delightful surprise In the\nform of 1 handkerchief shower wu\nrecently held it tht-iome of Mrs.\nRhoi. Dyke, Cottonwood Street, ln\nhonor of Mn. C. F. Keirni, who\nwill be leivlng ihortly for Micleod,\nAlta, to Join her huibind, Flight\nOfficer C. F. Reims. The tible\nwu deconted with St Patrick's\nmotifs, centred with \u2022 bowl of tulips\nflanked by green lighted tapers.\nBridge wis enjoyed ind Mrs. W.\nWright wis the winner of the first\nprize. The honor guest wu presented with \u2022 gorgeous bouquet of daffodils and tulips with streamers\non which were attached the Individual handkerchiefs. Guests Included Mri. r. H. Smith, Mrs. Gor-\ndon Mackeniie, Mrs. Jessie McEachern, Mrs. J. Aylwin, Mrs. H. Ches-\nter, Mrs. T. A. Carew, Mrs. S. N\nMay, Mrs, Robert Jardine, Mrs.\nGeorge Lambert, Mrs. Harry McLean, Mrs. E. C. Hunt, Mrs. T. Man-\nsell, Mrs. Harry Hulls ind Mrs. Arthur Foster.\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Rushton of Nakuip is visiting relatives In the Kerr\nApartments.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mrs. L. W. Mydansky.\nSilici Street, have ss guests the\nformer'i brother, John Rebus, of\nEdmonton, who Is enroute to Vancouver,\n\u2022 Mn. TTieodore Schueerman of\nColville ii in the city with her ila-\nter-in-lsw, Mrs. J. H. Vivian, Johnstone Block.\n\u2022 J. Fair wai in town from Salmo yesterday.\nHOME ON rURLOUGH\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George A Brown,\n'.HI   Silica   Street,   have\ntheir  son,   Sgt.  David   H.   Brown\nwho is home on furlough,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mri. Norman McKay\nMill Street, have, ai guest Mrs\nWallace Huffman of Grand Forks\nTRAIL, B.C, Mirflh 18. - Miss\nGloria Angerilli WU hostess when\nthe Bank of Montreal girls met Mondiy night to do wir sewing. Member! present wen the Misses Anna\nind Lillian Romas, Eileen Marshall,\nBetty Haggarty, Patricia Young and\nMargaret Pardell.\nCpL H. E. Andreas ud Mn. An-\ndreu arrived it thi weekend trom\nVineouver. Cpl. Andreas will ipend\ntwo weeks hen.\nWilliim Harrli, A. B. Clark, Les\nRead, D. B. Merry and R. Fowler\nattended the Gyro meeting it Spokane Tueidiy evening, returning to\nthi city Wednesday.\nMr. ind Mrs. James Buchanan, 20\nRitchie Avenue, hive as their guest\nfor 1 few diys, their ion, Lieut. J.\nM. Buchanan of Dundurn, Suk.\nMill Anne Wallinger of Cranbrook\nll the guest of Mr. anil Mn. O. A.\nWallinger, 208 Ritchie Avenue, en\nroute from 1 holldiy it Vernon.\nAc3. Robert Woodi left Tueidiy\nfor Cilgiry when he Is stationed\nwith the No. 10 repilr depot,\nR.CA.F, after spending two weeks'\nleive with his parents, Mr. and Mn.\nJ. T. Woods, 1759 Second Avenue.\nH. F. Hutchinson has been called\nto Vancouver by the death of his\nfather.\nNo. 4 Circle of Eut Trail United\nWomen'i Association held a SL Patrick's tea Tuesday ifternoon in the\nbeautifully deconted church hall.\nThe guests were received by Mn.\n3. L. Clerihue and MN. O. Pasquill.\nPresiding it thi tea urns wire Mn.\nJ. Minion, Mri. J. King, Mn. William Benton and Mrs. T. F. Cullen.\nThe serving corps consisted ol Mn.\nF. Burrows, Miu Hazel Edmundi,\nMn. G. King ind Mn. S. Parker.\nMn. S. Stephenson wu is charge\nof ihe white elephant table and Mill\nM. King of the home cooking stall.\nCullinary assistants wire Mn. J. A.\nDownie, Mrs. E. T. Hlley, Mn. C.\nTennant.\nMre. J. W. Little wu hostess to\nMn. D. B. Merry'i Red Crou group\nTuudiy. Memben preient were\nMn. Merry, Mn. William Forres!\nSr, Mn. Lloyd Andenon, Mn. O.\nL. Merry ind Mn. R. Palmer.\nMn. Palmer will be hostess it the\nnext meeting.\nMn. A, Dupuls wu hoiteu Wednesday when \u2022 bridge group met it\nher home, 890 Shakespeare Street,\nAnnable. There were two tabid 'n\nplay wtth Mn. O. Hlcki winning\nhigh acore. At the close refreshments\nwere served by the hoiteu. Those\npresent were Mrs. Fred Truicott,\nMn. M. Tebo, Mn. Fred Keith, Mn.\nW. Alcock, Mrs. Williim A. Forreit,\nMrs. Hicks md Mn. Donald Cameron.\nf AOE FIVI\nFREEMAN\nFURNITURE CO.\nThi Housi ot Furniture Vlluei\nPhoni 118 Nelson\nSTUDIO\nLOUNGES\n$31.50\nPRETORIA, (CP)-The South African Wir-Pemioni Office hu an-\naounced a totally disabled soldier\ncan receive up to \u00a3480 ($2011) 1\nyeir pension.\nma*mmm**mm*mamm**wm**\nMilk   in   cooking  helps\ngrownups drink\nthejr quota\nVootenay\nValley U\nAIRY\nYour favorite music recorded\non Columbia and Decca recordi\nNelson Electric Co.\n874 Biker tt -   Phone MO\nR\nMinion Society\nHeart of Church\nWork in China\nRev. H. Stewart-Forbes, addres-\nling the United Women'i Missionary Society Tueiday, paid tribute\nto hli mother, who hid fostered\nmissionary work and who had gone\nto China with him. Speaking ot\nthe growth of the church in Yang\nMa Hu, China, Mr. Forbes said that\nit first there was only one convert, but gradually many were con-\nverted until the church wu filled\nto overflowing. \"Chinese, noted for\ntheir filial loyalty, now have been\ncalled upon to share that love in a\ngreiter meisure (or their country.\nThe President, Mrs. C. E. Jorgen.\nsen, read a letter from Mrs. Foster\nHilliard, who is now much improved ln health and expecting to leave\nToronto for Trinidad early ln April.\nMonthly reports on ictlvitlei were\ngiven by thi Secretary, Mrs. H.\nPeacock, the Treuurer, Mn. H.\nRidcllffe, ind Mrs. I. Spien, Mn.\nC. Chambers, and Mrs. C. M. Young\nwho reported that hospital and home\ncalls were 83 each for February.\nMrs. Robert Smillie opened the devotions with a Bible reading, and\nMrs. J. J. rrench led a preyer.\nSuccessful is\nyour baking\nWhen ROYAL\nmakes your bread\nOn loaves sweet\ntender, tasty\n'*\u2022\nSentenced 3 Yrt. For\nTaking Information\nOn Troops in Ireland\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland,\nMarch 19 (CP)-Charged with car-\nrying letters from Eire asking the\nstrength of the United Stites forces\nin Northern Ireland, Henry Lund-\nborg. dining car attendant on the\nDubhr.-Belfas; Express, was sentenced today to three years' imprisonment and (ined \u00a3200  (8890).\nYour family\nis well-fed\nMivmmY WAMD\n1* Reierve the Right to Limit Quantltlea.SAMWAY STORK UMITIP.\nHEM'S HOW TO KEEP YOUR W001EHS\nMining out on til the fun! Perhapi\nthat iwctter you're wearing ntede\na dip In Lux. Wool carries ptrtpi*\nration odor\u2014en unwuhed tweeter\nthreaten! your dalnttneii and\ncharm. But \u2014 a dtp tn Lux end\nhorrid odor goes!\nYour knitted thlnp vt mh In\nLux ... It keep* colon bright \u2014\nprevents Wooleni from toting their\nthapo\u2014 keepa them\ntoft and fluffy.\nlEWAti . . . W001\nUNDIES, TOO, CARRY\nPERSPIRATION 0D0RI\nDip your woollea In\nLux regulerly jutt\n\u25a0i you dip your thin\nundlri, to keep them dainty, coey,\nfree from undie odor.\n#\"\u00ab\n**'\ni 1 I l I II mm,i , t\nFAREWELL BRIDGE\n\u2022 A farewell bridge was held\nrecently at the home of Mrs. Wesley\nCalbick. Carbonate Street, when\nthe bi-monthly bridge club honored\nMn. W. D. Kurtz, who has left\nwith her family to Join her husband at the Coast where he Is employed. Mrs. A. Brett presented\nMrs. Kurtz with a fine picture on\nbehalf ot the club. Other members playing were Mrs. S. E. Brlird,\nMrs. F. A. Claridge, Mn. Cecil J\nHughes, Mrs. Ernest Marsden, Mn.\nB. C. Manin ind Mn. Robert ^tcB\nStDenis. High honori of thi evening score were won by Mrs. A\nBrett.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. R. Smith of Kimberley\nii in the city, hiving come to it-\ntend thi GoVdonlth-Une wedding,\nWedneiday.\nPRO. REC. PARTY\n\u2022 The NeUon Ladles Pro Rec\nclass held a surprise party at the\nClub Cite In honor of Miss Helen\nCook, who leivei shortly for her\nhome in Victorls. The Ubles were\ndecorated In St Patrick's theme\nind diffodlli as i center piece. Mrs\nJ. Bereiu on behilf of the githerlng\npresented the guest o( honor with\na brown hind big. Those preient j\nwere Mlis Llllisn Hlckey, Miss I\nRiuemiry Fleming, MlH Princes I\nJones, Miss Jem Piterion. Min\nJessie Paterson. Miss Eileen Herridge, Miu Ruby Olbion, Mrs. Anne\nLewis. Mrs. Agnes Skllton, Mrs.\nOeorgie Monteleone, Mn. Davtea,\nMrs. Rose Bridlhtw, Mrs. Ruth\nCrowther. Mrs. Winnie Lusk, Miu\nFrinces Aldersmith, Mist Isabel McRae. Miw Purl Hickey, Min Doreen Ambrose, Mlsi Miry Kubin.\nMils Eva Massey, Jliu Mini Stangherlin, Min Maxine Cady, Mlts\nMarguerite Souccl, Mlu Ruth Nelson. Miss Jean Hooker. Miss Elsie\nEccles snd Miss Peggy Triggs.\ne   Mrs.   David   McDonild,   Mrs.\nPreibyterian Ladiei\nSponsor Spring Tea\nAt \u2022 pretty Victory Spring tei\nguest', sponsored by the ladies of the First\nPresbyterian Church Thursday, the\ni tea-tables were centred with minls-\ni ture \"Vs\" for Victory wound with\nthe patriotic red. white and blue\nribbons. The main tea table was\ncentred with foliage and tiny Union\nJacks.\nMiss Mary Heddle who convened\nthe affair ind Rev A Stewart received the guests Mrs. M. McCreight and Mrs E E. Butchard\npoured.\nServlteurs were Miss Faith Faulkner, Mijs Edna Cant, Miss Kathleen\nBrown, Mrs. F. Rose, Misi Helena\nTirron and Miss Hare] Flint,\nMn. W, A. Robertson w-u in\ncharge of the door.\nThe four houn of morning ue the houn\nyou do your hardest work. Give yourself a\nheidstirt oo \u2022 hippy diy. by eating a de-\nflllftVCD ft\u00abe i.... licious, heaping bowlful of hot. ubeU-graie\n(lUMplMI&ffM Quaker Oats. Quaker\ntlteilltnt tourct et  -ijtiy Oats helps nourish grow.\nVITAMIN Bi.Gw\/bw'Y  iog chiiina tai \u2022\">\" |\not enrootof 70'Intet\u25a0 \/\\  edoto. Cow lew thus\nnotion.IU***pert\u00bb\u00abe lc .\"* b,\u00ab d\u00abUdon' I\nlc etch\n\u2022erring!\nTRY   DELICIOUS-TASTING  QUAKER   OATS\nFOR  30 DAYS-WATCH R\u00a3SUUS-GET A\nPACKAGE fROM YOUR GROi IR RIGHT AWAY\nCharlie Kubiski and Clarence Anderson of Silmo visited Nelson\nThursday.\nEaton's Order Office\nTHE MODERN WAY TO SHOP\u2014Wide varieties\u2014low prices\u2014fast deliveries. Immediate\nattention and quick service on all orders\nreceived.\nLeave orders at I ?lson or Trail for catalogue\nlines of merchandise.\n\u00abT EATON C\no\nLIMITEB\nNELSON, I. C\nne deteivti ike, tuti\nYou could choose no more appropriate tribute to the sincerity\nof your romance thair \u2022 genuine Bridal Wreath diamond ring.\nThe exclusive 4-point guarantee of perfect coloring, cutting,\nbrilliance and flawless, quality tells her that \"only the best Is\ngood enough.\"\" Sold by leading jewellers everywhere!\ntylamcndtfuttU, j\n.ITY UD tllll w'      CHOO\nN00IE TH\u00bbT IKI IT\nCoUbiADfiL ^msJhhJ^ StoML\nExclusive RepresenUlives (or  Bridal   Wreath  Diamond Rings\nS6I Baker St. Nelion. \u2022  C. Phone   120\n\u25a0-'-    \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\n I \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\" II ,\n\u25a0'-.'.''\u25a0 '<  ' I,.-,'',.'\u25a0\u25a0\"    \u25a0 '\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u25a0\" :\u00ab- \u25a0 '\u2022.;.':.'-> ' \u25a0\"' ''\u2022.'.\u25a0\u25a0'        \"\u25a0\u25a0:\nPAGE    8IX-\n-NEL80N DAILY NIWI. NILION. B, C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 20, 1942\nNetam Daily Jf\u00ab8 ? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nEitabllihed April 02. 1902.\n\u25a0V Britiih Columbia'!\nMoit interetting Newtpap**\nPubllihed 'every morning tyctnt IBundiv by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED 208 Baker St. Nelion. Britiih Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTOE AUDIT  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 26,1942.\nMotoring in Britain\nAnnouncement that Britain proposes to end all unessential motoring\nthis year possibly comes as a surprise\nto some persons, who might have\nthought that pleasure driving had\nlong since ended there. A glimpse at\nthe gasoline allowance for private cars,\nhowever, will show that the drastic\ncurtailment of driving privileges that\nis in effect is not fat short of the goal\nnow sought.\nThe basic gasoline ration allowed\nfuel for only 200 miles of driving a\nmonth, or considerably less than half\nthe allowance proposed for pleasure\nmotoring in Canada after April 1. And,\ntoo, Britain has fewer cars per capita\nthan Canada. With Britons going short\nfor years, and soon to lose even the\nlittle they had, Canadians should be\ncontent with their ration of approximately 5400 miles a year, or less.\nTwo round trips between Trail and\nNelson would use up the Briton'3\nmonth's allowance and now that is to\ngo, or to be further curtailed.\nLogical to Use\nthe Japs\n(Vancouver Financial News)\nWho will build thia road?\nThe United States will probably put up\nmuch of the money. British Columbia and Alberta already have a large part of the equipment required and Western States of America\nhave the remainder. There will be no need to\nwait on factories to produce caterpillar tractors, power shovels, angle-dozers, graders, etc.\nThat is because the United States, the greatest\nroad-building country in the world, has been\nin the business on a gigantic scale as an unemployment relief measure and has the equipment available to throw into the Job on short\nnotice.\nWhat about labor? There Is no great surplus of it in Canada or the United States\nat present.\nWe know of no better place to use Japan*\nese labor shifted from the Coast than on this\nJob in the North central wilderness of B. C.\nThe other provinces of Canada do not\nwant them \u2014 and it irdoubtful if they should\nbe placed along our main railway and highway\nlines in any case,\nThat seems to point to the necessity of\nmoving these people to a place in Northern\nB. C. where they will be isolated and remote\nfrom strategic works and vital centres or communications.\nNo one ever said that the Japanese wer?\npoor workmen or pioneers. They are wiry, industrious, clearwand amenable to control under\nmost circumstances. Those amongst them\u2014and\nwe don't doubt that are a good many\u2014who\nare more sympathetic to Canada's cause than\nJapan's, would have an opportunity, to serve\nthis country In a way that must necessarily be\ndenied them in the armed services.\nThry would be dispersed along the line\nof the whole project in company with white\nworkers and could be accommodated in their\nown camps within the general camp groups.\nTo place the Japanese in solid communities of their own responsible fnr whole sections of the road keeping on schedule might\nwell lead to trouble.\nProperly treated, allowed to keep their\nself-respect, encouraged to think they ars\nbuilders, rot outcasts, led by right-minded Canadians and by men of their own race known\nto be loyal to Cannda, the Japanese of British\nColumbia can make a fine contribution to\nCanada in war-time and they should be given\nthe right opportunity, leadership and Incentives to do  so.\nBadly handled, without leadership, they\nmight be worse than useless on the Job. Regarding themselves as members of \"forced\nlabor\" battalions, they might easily become\nresentful, sullen and laggard on the work. If\nthat misfortune were to happen, the Japanese\nof British Columbia would represent more\nthan ever ai> indigestible lump within the social and political life of Canada's Pacific Coast\nprovince.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\n\u2022 y The Canadian Pre,,\nMarch 20, 1917\u2014British hospital ship Asturias torpedoed; 41 drowned. Fourteen villages South of Arras cleared ol German troops.\nImperial War Cabinet held first meeting with\nall dominions and colonies, except Aus'.rSlia\nrepresented\nOpen'to uy rudtr. Nimn of nirioni uklng\nquestions will not bo publlihid.\nL. H\u201e Nelson\u2014Will you pleaie tell me when\nthe Spring assizes ln Victoria were held?\nMarch , 1942.\nit. M. V., Nelson\u2014Are there any factories ln\nCanida that buy old silk itocklngiT\nWe do not know of any factories that buy\nold silk stockings, and considering the silk tn\nold stockings ls perished lt Is hardly likely that\nthey could be used for any silk purpoiei.\nBraided or hooked rugs are the only articlei\nwe know of for which old silk stocklngi may\nbe used to advantage.\nG. C, Nelson\u2014I have a white polo velour coat,\n100 per cent pure wool. I sent lt to the\ncleaners and lt came back a cream color.\nNow I want to try to wash lt myself. What\nshall I use to bring It white again without injuring the goods or shrinking It?\nThere are several bleaches on the market\nthat are used without shrinking or damaging\nwoollen goods, but it is somewhat difficult to\nmake a successful job on a coat\nWe suggest that you take the coat back to\ncleaner and try to make an agreement with\nhim to restore the coat to Its original whiteness as undoubtedly this could be done by a\ncompetent firm.\nReader, Kaslo\u2014Is there a recruiting office at\nPenticton?\nYes.\nHow much does a soldier receive for each\nstripe, a lance corporal, corporal and sergeant?\nThere Is a 20 cent Increase a day for a lance\ncorporal, 40 cents for a corporal and 90 cents\nfor a sergeant.\nJ. N., Shoreacres\u2014Please give address where\nto send scrap rubber as I have quite a\nlarge quantity of this scrap?\nAny of the Nelson garrages are receiving\ndonations of old rubber.\nL. C. K, Sheep Creek\u2014The canval on the\nroof of my car hu very small cracks and\nleaks. I have tried dressings for same, but\nthey didn't help much. Could you suggest some formula that would make the\nroof waterproof?\nThere Isn't much you can do to make a\ncracked canvas top waterproof. A new one\nls the only solution.\nEtiquette  Hints\nIf you nre a motorist, try to be courteous\nnnd give thn po<>r pedestrian a chance. Don't\nt ike r corner at high speed when the pedestrian has th* right of way, and if you see one\nwh?l has been caught in the middle of the\nstreet by a changing light, pause and let him\nor her complete the crossing.\nEncourage the prospector, Encourage the\ntarge and small operators who have a promising property and thereby end all this nonsense of rationing this, that and the other metal\nfequlred for the prosecution of the war. Canada has immense mineral potentialities. Get\nthe ore nnd give mining a chance to do its part\nin winning the slruggle against the Huns, Hal-\ntons and Japs.\u2014Western Canada Mining News.\nConcrete Barges\nRelease Builders\nfor Ocean Ships\nLONDON\u2014BHtaln'i shipbuilders are winning the race with the U-boats.\nLarge steamers and motorshipi of 10,000\ntons are now being completed, from the laying\nof the keel to the final coat of paint, ln just\nunder six months. Indeed, by making parts of\nthe hull and so on in distant workshops Inland\nand assembling them at the shipyard, the six\nmonths have been reduced to five and a half.\nNever before has Great Britain turned out\nships at such a speed; and it is speed that lias\ndecided the peace-time controversy about\nwhether the hulls of big merchant ships should\nbe rivetted or welded.\nWelding is not only quicker but It saves\nsteel, so welding has won. More steel is being\nsaved by the use of concrete for small craft\nHundreds of ferro-concrcte barges have been\nbuilt, releasing hundreds of skilled shipbuilders from the barge building yards to work on\nocean-going   tonnage.\nThere they are concentrating upon the\nwell-tried standard \"economy\" types of vessels which many famous British shipbuilders\nhad already evolved.\nThe shipyards were prepared when war\ncame for an expanding prodution. The Admiralty passed the word to them for so many\ntankers, refrigerated cargo liners, coasters,\ndeep-sea tramps; and standardization has triumphed.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLittiri miy be publlihid over \u25a0 Mill de\nplume, but tht aotual mme of th* wrlttr \u2022\nmuit bt given te tht Editor \u2022\u2022 tvldentt ef\ngold faith. Anonymous letteri gt In tnt\nWlltt ptptr buket.\nAppeals for District\nWide Vaccination of\nEast Kootenay Horses\nTo tht Editor:\nSir\u2014The following lines trt Uken from a\npersonal letter bom Dr. Gunn, \"to horsemen\nof B. C.\" and from an Item ln the farm press\nall on tha subject of encephalomyelitis and\nahould be given serious attention by Eait\nKootenay hone owneri.\nDr. Gunn says \"When you consider that\nthe three Prairie Provlncei had 2000 cases In\nencephalomyelitis and Infantile paralysis with\nsome 80 deaths you can appreciate their Importance. Saskatchewan had 449 of encephalo in\nhumans with 28 deathi, 32 cases of Infantile\nand no deaths, Manitoba 446 cases of encephalo\nwith 44 deaths, 833 oases of .Infantile with 3\ndeaths.\"\n\"From thla you may realize the danger ot\nletting encephalo get eitabllihed in your district.\"\n\"B. C. hai been very fortunate io far but\nthere li the odd reiervolr ln Kootenay where\nthli disease could itart up and leave the diitrict in the poiltion of being ahut off.\"\n\"Alberta lost 1000 horsei last yeir, miny\notheri will be of little future value from thli\nmenace.\"\n\"Surely thii Is of importance enough for\nthe people of East Kootenay to go to work on\nthis program.\"\n\"The Department of Health here at Vic-\ntoria li going to cooperate with the Department of Agriculture thli year ln trying to put\nover a program of complete vaccination and\nwe need the help and immediate action of\nthe 'people of your diitrlct.\"\n\"With our records io far showing one human case ln B. C. we feel proud of our record\nand want to continue to protect our people\n\u25a0gainst a disease which now seems to be more\ndangeroui to humans than infantile paralysis.\nWith the many cases of encephalo on the Prairies that did recover some have since died and\nmany will never again regain fair health.\"\nHorse owners tn Alberta laat year apparently did not carry on aa Intensive a vaccination campaign as before and thus suffered this\nloss ot 1000 animals, todiy Health and Agriculture Departments of the Prairie provinces\nare undertaking a Joint intensive program of\nvaccination.\n\"Their position today,\" Dr. Gunn uys,\n\"may be ours tomorrow If we stray with the\nidea that 'It can't happen here'. Please advise\nus If your people want vaccine or not.\"\nThis means every horse owner in East\nKootenay,\nA. B. SMITH.\nSecretary of the Central Farmeri' Institute of East Kooteniy.\nCranbrook, B. C.\nLooking Backward\n10  YEARS  AGO\n(From Dally News, iMrch 19, 1932)\nThe personality of President Paul von\nHindenberg pitted against Adolf Hitler and\nGermany's restless masses ln the German republic's strangest election, emerged victorious\nas the country's moderate parties crushed their\nrising radical opponents.\nNewlv elected officers of the Ksslo Boat\nClub are F. S. Rouleau. Commodore. J. A. Riddell. Captain and R. A. Chester, Mate.\nE. P. Crawford, ME. who ls now located\nat the Yankee Girl mine near Ymir, speht\nSaturday In Nelson.\nConstable J. Fife of Shoreacres spent Saturday In town.\n25 YEARS  AOO\n(From Dilly News, March 19, 1917)     -\nMrs. Haig-Smlllle of Procter, retiring\nPresident of the Women's Auxiliary, was given\na presentation by the members at the annual\nmeeting Tuesday.\nH. L. Mackenzie left Grand Forks today\nfor Greenwood to attend court there.\nMiss A. Nairn of Kaslo left yesterday for\nChicago.\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo Is In Nelson.\nAstley Cooper of Bonnington visited Nelson yesterday.\nSilverwood Figures\nFrom Head of Church\nSir\u2014I shall be grateful If you will allow\nme a little space to remove a possible mlsun-\nerstanding regarding \"Religion ln Russia-\nmentioned ln my talk to the Rotary Club on\nMonday of this week.\nIt Is true that I mentioned Ambassador Lit-\nvlnoffi statement regarding religious freedom\nln Russia but the real source of my Informs-\ntion \u2014 and which I emphasised strongly was\nfrom Dr. Benjamin's commentary on Article\n124 of the Soviet Union dealing with religion.\nDr. Benjamin ls the Archimandrite ind\nrepresentative of the Russian Orthodox Church\nln America, and his facts concerning the religious situation ln Russia can be taken as a\ntrue picture \u2014 whereas the statements of Ambassador Lltvinoff were given out mainly for\npolitical consumption in England ind America.\nThe figures as reported In your paper ire\nnot those of Lltvinoff, but of Dr. Benjamin,\nthe Russian Archimandrite, who ls a far more\nreliable authority. I think Jt tl lmportmt that\nthis distinction be kept In mind.\nI may aay ln passing that the Anglican\nBishops of Chelmsford and Bradford hive recently deplored the prejudice and wilful misrepresentation of facts regarding Russia and\nits people\u2014but especially the iltuatlon regarding Religion ln Russia.\nW. J. SILVERWOOD.\nNelson, B. C, March 18, 1\u00bb42.\nToday's Horoscope\nYou are a diligent worker and have a\nsharp, perceptive poind, If you have a birthday\ntoday. Your memory is excellent, and you\nfind much pleasure in recalling happy events\nIn your past. T(ou are fond of gaiety and travel.\nA fortunate, happy and Important year la\nahead of you. Take full advantage of the excellent Influences operstlng in businesi, travel\nand domestic matters, \u00a3uard against Imposition. The little one born on thli date will love\nantiques and old associations, and be very\nIntellectual, Intuitive, sincere, kind-hearted\nand successful. He or ahe will, however, be\nliable to suffer through fraud or deception.\nTest  Yourself\n1. What constitutes the crime of espionage\nIn theOJntted SUtei?\n2. What orcheitra conductor II noted for\nhis beautiful hands?\n3. What was the original name of the tune\nof the Star Spangled Banner?\n40  YEARS  AQO\n(From Dally Miner, Mirch 19, 1902)\nMr. ind Mrs. J. H. Carter left last evening\nfor Kobe, Japan, where they will reside.\nHarry Coleman, Procter, Is at the Hume.\nAmong those present at the meeting of the\nMine Owner's Association were Frank Robbins. J. J. Campbell and Captalri Glfford of\nNelson.\nA. C. Gait, barrister of Roisland, was In\nNelson yesterday.\nTEST ANSWERS\n1. Broadly defined lt ia obtaining information regarding national defence with intent or\nreason to believe that the Information so obtained ls to be used to the Injury of the Unltid\nStatei or to the advantage of aome foreign\nnation.\n2. Leopold Stokowikl.\n3. To Anacreon In Heaven.\n'S New Vu\nU. S. NAVY ESCORTS LARGE CONVOYS OF WAR SUPPLIES ACROSS PACIFIC\nWhile a U. S. warship stands by, a convoy moves steadily towards its destination somewhere in the Pacific Oces\nConvoys such as the one shown here, aided by the U. S. navy, have managed to ke^p Uncle Sam's Pacific lifeline ow\nand a stream of supplies and men have reached Australia in anticipation of a Japanese drive against that country. Tr\nphoto has been passed by the U. S. navy censor and approved for publication.\nThat nitlon Is worthies! that will not,\nwith pleasure, venture ill for IU honor.\u2014Schiller,\nEN ROUTE TO INDIA\nSir Stafford Cripps, England's hope for cementing\nrelations with India, is shown in a recent photo when\nhe attended an Anglo-Soviet youth meeting. Cripps is\nperhaps the most popular of all Britons in India bo-\ncause of his championship of Russia and his known\nsympathy for the Indian national cause.\nWOMAN FERRY PILOT DECORATED\nPauline Gower, captain in the Women's Ferry Pile\ncommand, gives a big smile on leaving Buckingh\nPalace after receiving the M.B.E. at a recent inv\ntiture.\nSEAPLANE TENDER\nLAUNCHED\nA leaplane tender, the slim sleek\nU.S.S. Abiecon. slides down the\nwayi at a Pacific coist city dur-\nlog tba launching (irimony.\nGLOUCESTER'S SON CHRISTENED IN PR IVATE CEREMONY\nQueen Mary holds William Henry Andrew Frederick, infant son of the Duke I\nDucbess of Gloucester, following christening ceremonies held In a private chape\nthe country. Also pictured are, back row, left to right, Duke of Gloucester, King Gee\nand Lord William Scott. Front tow, left to right, Princess Helena Vitoria, the Dud\nof Gloutestcr, Queen Mary and Lady Margaret Hawkins.\n &\u00a3\nidiens Hand Leafs 7-3 Beating;\nWings Take Hawks; Grosso Sets Pace\nitONTREAL, M\u00abrcb ID (CP) -\nmtreal Canadleni mirked finish\ntheir regular National Hockey\nague schedule. Ior. thla season\nlight by banding Toronto Maple\nifi a 7-8 lacing, in \u25a0 game which\nambled nothing more thap a\nrtRrV tor both clubi in prepera-\n1 tfy their forthcoming Stanley\nt playoff games which open this\ntteind.i\nianadleni moved into a 1-0 lead\nthe ffcst period on Charlie Sand's\nb goal of his pro career. Toronto\n\u00bbever came flashing back with\n> goals within \u00ab seconds of the\nMd period to gp ahead, but that\n[e was short lived,\n'any Reardon 'evened the score\nJ-l then Ray Getliffe broke\nough for a beautiful goal to And\nHadlens Into a lead they never\nt Ken Reardon added another\nMdlen goal ta the second period\nlore Hank Goldup took Pete Lan-\nle's pass after a neat passing bee\nfc Don Meti to tally Toronto's\nt goal.\nt was all Canadiens In the closing\n\u25a0lon as Toronto let them flow in\nBroda M will with John Quiity,\n4 Herron and Joe Benoit coming\nough with the final three Cental markers. Heron'i goal was\nfint since joining the Canadiem\nhreeney Schriner and Lorne\nIT got the two quick Toronto goals\nthe second period with Bill Tay-\natslitlng on both. Schrlner was\nD In on Carr's goal,\nforonto opens lt Stanley Cup\njoffi against the League lead-\n| New York Rangeri ln Toronto\nI Sahrrday, while Canadiens and\ntrolt start their series at Detroit\nhday.\nineups:\ntoqto\u2014Brosda; Stanowski, Dlck-\nl; Taylor; Carr, Schrlner. Subs:\nPonald, Davidson, .Langeile, Dtil-\nI McCreedy, N.,Metx, Goldham,\nMeti. Goldup.\nanadlena \u2014 Blbeault; Goupllle,\nkehard; T. Reardon; ( Benoit,\nIk*. Subs: Portland, K. Reardon,\ntds, Higgarty, Getliffe, Heron,\ngu Quiity, Hefferman.\nftane Harwood, Llmensmen\u2014\n\u25a0ggC tnd Joliat \u00bb\nInmmiry:   ' ijt\n|nt perlod-l^nanidle\u00ab7sindi,\ntfty, Getliffe), 13:41.\n>entltlei-noaf \u00bb J\nlecond period\u20142, Toronto, Schri-\nl (Taylor) f.Ko t, Toronto, Carr\nbtfiner. Tayl*) 0:4\u00bb; 4. Canadl-\n*, I. Reardon (OoupiUe, Benoit)\nI S, Canadians, Getliffe (Port-\nd, Quiity) S.27; 6, Canadleni, K.\nirdon \u00ab:3t; 7, Toronto, Goldup\n(Langeile, D. Metz) 13:18.\nPenalty\u2014N. Metx.\n'Third period\u20148, Canadiens, Quiity (Sands, Getliffe) 8:24; 9, Canadleni, Heron ( Goupille, Haggarty)\n7:39; 10, Canadiens; Benoit, (Blake,\nK.\"\"Reardon) 10:57.\nPenalties\u2014nono,\nDETROIT, March 19 (API-Detroit's Red Wlngi continued their\nmastery on homo Ice tonight by\ndefeating the fourth place Chicago Black Hawka 64 In their\nfinal game of the National Hockey\nLeague seaion. A crowd of 1170\nsaw the contest.\nTho Red Wings, who will be in\nthe Stanley Cup playoffs by virtue\nof finishing fifth In the regulir season, built up an early lead and held\nIt through for their seventh straight\nvictory.\nFour of the six goals were manu-\ndofactured by Detroit's front line of\nDon Grosso with two and Sid Abel\nwith one and Eddie Wares with one.\nGrosso's two came within eight\nseconds of each other in the final\nminute of the first period.\nThe N.H.L. record for iuch a torrid scoring pace lists three goals\nmade by another Detroiter, Carl\nLiscombe. within 12 seconds In\n1938. His feat also was made\nagainst Chicago.\nLineups:\nChicago \u2014 Lo Presti; Mariucci,\nCooper; M. Bentley; D. Bentley,\nMarch. Subs: Wiebe. Hamill, Kaleta, Allen, W. Carse, R. Carse, Mosienko, Thorns, Seibert.\nDetroit\u2014Mowers; Stewart, Bush;\nGrosso; Abel, Wares. Subs\u2014Orlando, Motto, McReavy, Howe, Bruneteau, Liscombe, A Brown, J. Brown,\nCarveth.\nReferee\u2014mnk Clancy; Llliee-\nmen\u2014Doug Young and Stan Mc-\nCabe.\nSummary:\nFirit period\u20141, Detroit, Grosso\n(Abel, Wares) 19:42; 2, Detroit, Grosso (Abel, Wares) 19:50.\nPenalties\u2014Stewart, Mariucci.\nSecond period\u20143, Detroit, Bush\n(McReavy, A. Brown) 7:48; 4, Chicago, Seibert (Mosienko, R. Carse)\n18:21.\nPenalties\u2014Bush, Orlando, Cooper, Stewart, Mariucci.\nThird period\u20145, Detroit, J. Brown\n1:32; 6, Chicago, Seibert 7:47; 7, Detroit, Wares (Abel, Grosso) 8:39;\n8, Chicago, M Bentley (March, Seibert) 12:24; 9, Chicago, M. Bentley\n(March, Seibert) 14:00; 10, Detroit,\nAbel (Grosso, Wares) 18:00.\nPenaltlei\u2014Orlando 2, Stewirt, Allan.\n. R, Dunwoody Is Curlers'Prexy;\nB.C. Bonspiel fo Be Held In Nelson\nHaoo Curling Club elected W.\nSunwoody Its Preiident for the\nat ltl innual meeting Thurs-\nntght\nI will be lupported by an exec-\nI of C. H. Manhall, Vlce-Presl-\n[ Charles Blunt, Sccretary-\nT. A. Wallace, Honorary\nIdent; A. B. Ronmark,  Martin\nilchaud, Clarence Ward, Robert\nkey, and John Thorn, Executive\nnmlttee; Most Rev. M M. John-\nChaplain; and C. F. McHardy.\nUtor.  It  was decided  that  the\nIng   president   would   become\norary president and serve on\nexecutive each year.\n0. 'SPIEL HERE\n\u2022legates to the B. C. Curling\nDdation annual meeting next\nnary, which will be held In Nel-\nwere Alf Jeffs and J. J. Mein. A. G. Ritchie and J. B. Gray\n\u2022 named alternate delegates,\nn appeal for support ln miking\nB. C. Curling Association Bon-\ni at Nelson next season i suc-\nI wu made by H. M. Whlmster,\nDelation  President.  The  execu-\n1, he said, realized that there\nlid be even greater difficulties,\nnae ot war conditions ln hand-\n| the event next year.\nie named his committee to con-\nOf T. A. Wallact R. E. Horton\nJ. Ritchie, John Thorn, Alf Jeffs,\nB. GUker, D. McNaughton, Aid.\nH. Waters, J. B. Gray, W. R.\nMroody and Mayor N. C. Stibbi.\nH. Whimster voiced the ippre-\nlon of the Club for the Execu-\n*\u25a0 work. He described It u \u2022\nxd year turned Into a successful\netlrlng President Wallace gave\najume of the season's activities,\n. thanked his executive ind the\nnbers for their support. The fl-\nidal statement, showing a small\nince, was given by Secrctary-\narar Chirlei Blunt\nA minute's silence ln consideration of J. B. Gray, veteran curler,\nwho recently lost his son, rilght\nSergt. Jack Gray, was observed.\nA letter of thanks from the Veterans' Guard plitoon stitloned here,\nwhich has been tendered free curling, was received from Lieut. R. R.\nJones, commanding officer.\nHershey Eliminates\nEagles From Finals\nHERSHEY, Pa\u201e March 29 (AP).-\nHerahey Bean whitewashed New\nHaven 1-0 here tonight and eliminated the Eagles trom the playoffs\nfor the championihip of the American Hockey League.\nThe Bean play at Cleveland Saturday night. Cleveland qualified to\nmeet Henhey by eliminating Waihington. Tueiday the Bean return\nto home Ice to meet the Baroni, If\na third game is necessary lt will be\nplayed here Thuriday.\nNILION DAILY NIWS. NILION, B. C-FRIDAY MORNINO. MARCH \u00bb.\nOver 200 Entries for\nEast Kootenay Event\nCRANBROOK, B. C, March 19 -\n(CP). \u2014 More thu 200 entriei ate\nexpected tor the leventh annual\nSlit Kooteniy badminton tournament which will open here thli\nweekend.\nKimberley Is expected to enter\nthe largeit group with other entriei\nfrom Cranbrook, Creiton and pouibly Fernie.\nShaw Curlers Win\nShift Bean Feed\nTRAIL, B C, March 19-G. ShaWs\nrlnk playing in an eirly morning\nfinal today defeated F- Donnelly to\nwin the Shift Curling Club's bean\nfeed competition, the last of the\nseason.\nWriting finis to their first season,\nand a successful one, the Shift Curlers Wednesday evening enjoyed a\nbanquet. Prires won during the year\nwere presented.\nRovers Winners of\nEastern League on\nCoals-Scored Basis\nATLANTIC CITY, N.J., March 19\n'API. - New York Rovers todiy\nwere declared winnen of the Eistern Amiteur Hockey League's 1M1-\n43 pennant.\nPhilip E. M Thompson. Secretary\nof the League, said he had awarded\nthe pennant to the Rovers on the\nbasis of goals scored, in order to\nbreak up a three-way tie between\nthe Rovers, Boston Olympics and\nJohnstown (Pi) Bluebirds.\nAll three teams wound up with\nthe ssme record of 34 games won.\n20 lost snd six tied. But the Rovers\nhad scored 272 goals, against 263 for\nthe Olympics and 248 for the Bluebirds.\n(Women's Teams\nWin In Five Pins\nSt. Patrick's wai 1 lucky day for\nthe bowling squads of Mn. Thomu\nMcGovern, Mri. Guy Browell, Mn.\nG. Smith and Mrs. Thomai Short-\nhouse in the Ladles' Five Pin Club\ncompetition. All four racked up wins\nMrs. McGovern 1348-1248 over Mrs.\nDot Waterer; Mn. Browell 1044-1023\nover Mrs. Flo Waterer, Mrs. Smith\n1248-1173 over Mrs. E. Fiiher, and\nMrs. Shorthouse 1848-1238 over Mn.\nD. Foster.\nTeams and scores were:\nM. McGOVERN No. 7 vs.\nD. WATERER No. 8\n1st 2nd   Tot.\nSpot    18 18\u2014   Sfl\nM. Brewer  100 169\u2014 289\nM. Dingwall   152 134\u2014 288\nJ. Rich  _.... 107 121- 228\nV. Matheson  171 191\u2014 382\nM. McGovern    91 78\u2014 187\n639 709\u20141348\nJ. Gentlei      91 7\u00bb- 167\nL Hoogerwerf  113 186\u2014 279\nA. Rahal .\u00ab    91 140- 231\nH. Sabeck   217 78- 293\nD. Waterer  _  157 121- 278\n669   579-1248\nHigh Individual icore- H. Sabeck,\n217; high aggregate icore, V. Matheson, 362.\nF. WATER No. I vs.\nT. BROWELL No. 6\n1st\n2nd   Tot.\nSpot _\t\n12\n12-   24\nR. Ross \t\nIBS\n158\u2014 341\nH. Murray  \t\nA9\n78\u2014 127\nF. Waterer __\t\n144\n133- 277\nM. Paterson _..   ...\n49\n78- 127\nK. Germsn,\n(low score) \t\n49\n78- 127\n488\n535\u20141023\nT. Browell    _\t\nin\n122- 307\nK. McDougiU\t\n147\n1*4-241\n127\nUJ-H4\nE. Smith,\n(low scon)   ,\n49\n7\u00bb- 137\nM. Stelner,\n(low score)\t\n0\nn\u2014 lar\n557\n489-1048\nHigh Individual score, R. Ross, T.\nBrowell, 185; high tggregtte score,\nR. Rosa, 341. \u2022\nG. 8NJITH No. 2 w.\nE. FISMER No. 1\nlit\n2nd   Tot.\nG. Smith \t\n121\n112- 233\nJ. Woodall\t\nIM\n94- 201\nP. Pirenholti  \t\n150\n113- 263\nM. Hardy        _..\n12.1\n131- 248\nE. Romano \u201e\t\n105\n200\u2014 305\n*\n807\n841-1248\nSpot        _\t\n7\n7-    14\nE. Fisher _.._\t\n108\n111- 317\nG. Phlllipi _ . ...\n109\n88- 195\nB. Simpson  \t\n1(1\n127- 268\nA. Brown  _\t\n62\n107\u2014 169\nH. Pearson\t\n1(17\n103- 210\n632   541-1173\nHigh Individual score, E. Fisher,\n208; high aggregate score, E. Fisher,\n317.\nD. FOITER Ne. 1 vs.\nA. SHORTHOUM No. I\nlit 2nd   Tot.\nD. Foster          ITS 170- 343\nM. McDougiU    83 131- 214\nB. McKinney    79 114\u2014 193\nD. Fox           168 142- 310\nI. MacRae     105 71\u2014 176\nSpot    \t\nA. Shorthouie\nM Birtlett\nS. McLean\nB. Stangherlin\nS. Hunter,\n(low score) ..\n808 628-1238\n.... 38 38\u2014 76\n..- 165 163- 330\n.... 128 127- 233\n... 132 115- 267\n.. 82 190\u2014 372\n7\u00bb 71- 180\n842 700\u20141S48\nHigh individuil score, B. Stangherlin, 190; high iggregite scon, D.\nFoster. 343.\nFoxall, Bourque\nMeet Tonight In\nRed Cross Final\nRed Cross bonspiel, lut event ot\nthe Nelion Curling Club seison, will\nbe decided tonight when Robert\nFoxall and Dr. T. II. Bourque clash\nln the final at 7.\nFoxall late Wednesday night won\nhli wajr to tha final by defeating A.\nG. Harvey, while Bourque ousted\nC. H. Manhall In the other semifinal.\nThe final will not conclude the\nseason's chores of the winning rlnk,\nfor afterward! they are called on\nto defend the males' good name\nagalnit a challenging ladiei' Curling\nClub all-star rlnk. Thll battle of the\nsexes will be played at t p.m.\nThe two finalist rinki in order of\nskip, third, second and 'lead are\nBourque, Leo Deslreau, Robert Reisterer, and W. G. Harold; Foxall,\nW. M. Young, W. Toier and A. Nlell.\nExhibition Ball\nAt Tampa, Fla.:\nDetroit (A) I   \u00bb   1\nCincinnati (N)  4  9   1\nFuchs, Trucki (6) and Tebbetts;\nThompson, Vander Meer (4), Derringer (7) and Hemsley, Likeman\n(7).\nAt Orlando, Fla.t\nNew York (N) I 11   1\nWuhlngton (A)  4 10   I\nMcGee, Melton (6) and Dinning,\nBlaemlre (6); Wilson, Leonard (6),\nMcCullough (9) and Early.\nAt Sarasota, Fla.:\nCleveland (A)  3  7  0\nBoaton (A)  2   6   3\nKennedy, Smith (6) and Desautels,\nHegan (6); Chase, Wagner (6) and\nConroy.\nAt St. Petersburg, Fla.:\nBrooklyn (N)  4   9   1\nSL Loiils (N)   2   8   2\nHigbe, French (4), Davis (8) and\nOwen; M- Cooper, Shoun (4), Gum-\nbert (7), Dlckaon (9), and Odea, W.\nCooper (6).\nAt Lake Wales, FU.:\nNew York (A)     3   6   1\nKansai City (AA)    4   6   1\nBonham, Gettel (7) and Robinson;\nWeniloff, Johnson (4) ind Keane,\nNiahros (6).\nAt Dtytonl Beich, Fla:\nSL Louis (A)   3   7   0\nBrooklyn (N)  \"B\"     4 11    1\nQilehouse, Ferens (3), Muncrlel\n(7) ind Ywift; Lochgsum, Webber\n(7) and Howell.\nAt Lake Worth, Fla.:\nPhiladelphia (N) - T 10   1\nColumbui (AA)  1   3   3\nMasterson, Nahetn (7) snd Livingston, Warren (8); Gabler, Wilkes\n(3) and Heath, BeaU (5).\nAt Anaheim, Calif:\nHoUywood <PC)-9, 13, 6.\nPhiladelphia (A>-6, 12, 4.\nOiy, Oiborne, Root, W. Johnson\nand Breniel; HalleL Fowler, Besie\nand Caitlglla.\nAt Lot Angelei, Calif.:\nPittsburgh (N)     8   8   3\nChicago (N)       4   7   0\nLanning, Hamlin, SeweU and Lo-\npei; Pisseiu, Flores, Fleming ind\nMcCullough.\nRangers Confident\nfor. First Came\nNEW YORK, March 19 (CP).\u2014A\ncock, confidence bind of New York\nRangen, fresh from 1 relaxing week\nin Atlantic City, left tonight for\nToronto to open the hunt for the\nStanley Cup.\nManager Lester Pitrlck took ilong\n16 pliyen ind will decide tomorrow\nwhich min will not be dressed for\nthe first game of the four-of-aeven\nseries which opens at Maple Leaf\nGardens Saturday night againit the\nsecond-place Maple Leafs.\nIbe series, which wiU qualify one\nteim for the cup final, will resume\nat New York's Madison Square Gar<\nden Sunday  night.\nHouse B Beys, A\nGirls Lead Way\nin Volley Ball\nHouse B boys ud Houie A girli\npushed themielvei away out ln front\nin tha Nelion High School Interhouse voUey ball series when they\nboth won their three gamei this\nweek. Each had six pointi, a perfect icore.\nWedneiday House B boyi won\nthree games, while eich of the other\nhouie, A, C and D won a game\napiece. In the girls pliy Thursday\nHouie A took three gamei, Houie D\nwon two, Houie B woo one, while\nHouse C failed In every effort.\nThe series will continue until\nEaster, the boys playing every Wedneidiy and the girls every Thursday.\nFlyers Advance\nlo East Semis\nOTTAWA, March 19 (OP)-Royel\nCanadian Air Force Flyen breezed\nto the Eastern Canada semi-final\nround of the Allan Cup playdowns\ntonight with a hoUow 12-3 conquest\nof Cornwall Colta.\nFlyen' Kraut Line ipllt up six\ngoals between them as the City\nLeague champions swept their best-\nof-three seriei for the Ottawa and\nDistrict Senior championships ln\ntwo straight games.\nThe victory cleared the decks for\nseries against Hamilton Majors\nwhich looms as Flyers' first major\nteit of power since the Kraula joined the team early in February.\nMajon open a best-of-flve series\nwith the R.CA'.F. entry here Monday with the second game in Hamilton Wedneeday and the third game\ncarded for Ottawa a week from\nSaturday.\nHockey Results\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nPLAYOFFS (Series C)\nCleveland 3, Washington 3.\n(Cleveland wins best-of-three\ngame series 2-0).\nNew Haven 0 Hershey 1.\n(Hershey wins best of three series 2-0).\nA.H.L, PLAYOFF SERIES A\nSpringfield 3, Indltmpolis 10.\n(Best-of-five seriei tied 1-1).\nEASTERN U. S.\nAtlinUc City 4, River Vile 2.\nOTTAWA AND DISTRICT\n8ENI0R\nR.CA.F. FJyen 12, CornwaU 2.\n(R.C.A.F. win best-of-three final\nseries 24).\no.h.a. junior \"r\nSEMI FINALS\nUniversity of Toronto Schools 3,\nStratford 4.\n(First of two-gimes, totil-goals\nseries).\nQUEBEC SENIOR B FINAL\nShawlnigan Fills 20, Windsor\nMills J.\n(Shawlnigan Fills takes ienlor B\ntitle\u2014second gime of total-goal serlei ibindoned).\nINTERPROVINCIAL-\nINTERMEDIATE\nSwift Current 2, Port Arthur 2.\n(Swift Current wins best-of-flve\nseries).\nInterpreting\nThe War News'\nShawinigan Falls\nSwamps Windsor 20-3\nSHAWINIGAN     FALLS,    Que.,\nMarch 19 (CP) - Shawlnigan Fills\nCitaracU captured the Quebec Senior B championship tonight when\nthey defeated Windsor Mills Paper-\nmskers 20-3, thereby living themselves the necessity of playmg a\nsecond game by the sire of the icore.\nCataracts, Montreal and District\nLeague champions, now meet the\nwinner of the Quebec Acei-Ottiwi\nSeniton Senior A finil for the\nright to repreient Quebec In the\nAllan Cup hunt.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy The Anoditid Frets\nNEW YORK - Ue Sivold, IM,\nDei   Moines.   U.,   stopped   Teddy\nWint. 186, ML Vernon, N.Y. (9).\nNEW HAVEN, Conn-Willie Pep,\n127. Hartford, Conn, outpointed\nJohnny Compo, 128, New Hiven (8).\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\nAuoclited Presi Wir Analyit\nHird knocks rained by growing\nAllied power in Auitralia on Japineie Sea supply Unas, ind weather\ncertainties ln Burma, are forcing\nthe Tokyo War management to ihow\niti hind loon u ta which way, If\neither, lt Intends to itrike next In\nthe Pacific. Tbe iltemitlve la to\nhalt for coniolldation ind let Hitler try to take over the otfemlve\nfor the Axli.\nIt Is itill uncertain whether Jipineie Invulon thrusts at New Gui-\nnei ire I prelude to I fuU-fledged\nIncursion Into Auitralia. root-\nholijj the enemy hu iilied there\nmd thit hi li weklng to expand\nwould be equally useful u bises\nfrom which to harry Americtn-\nAustrillan supply lines. Thole\nUnas constitute the grille* threat\nto Uie conqueit pattern Tokyo Is\ntrying to work out.\nThere are vary urgint reason!\nfor a Japaneie concentration In\nBurmi however. Thi campaign\nmuit come to a hilt In Lewer\nBurma within a liw weeki fer\nwnthir  reeesni.\nOnce Uie vut wlnde of Uie Indian\nOcein make their annual turnabout beginning In lata AprU    to\npour the Aprtl-to-October \"wet\nmceuoon\" acrou Uie Delta of Irn-\nwiddy, the wu on tbe Burma front\nmuat subside. To maintain adequate\nsupply Unei in Lower Burma bi thit\nperiod of tremendoui thunderstorms snd continuous troplcil\ndownpours ippean at much in lm-\npcailblUty u min troop movements or effective air work.\nUnleu the Japineie mm lufficient force tn Burma to crush\nBritiih - Indian - Chlneie armlet\nvey quickly, \u2022 weither stalunitE\non that front seems inevitable.\nThst Is unquestionably a key to\nthe United Nations strategy of\nretirement Northward ln Burma\nto successive resistance llnes-a\nstrategy that makei Uie lon of\nRangoon an Indecisive vlotory\nThere seems, too, UtUe doubt that\na tremendoui shifting of British\nEmpire forcei aU the wiy from Eng\nland to India hu been gathering\nmomentum ever slnci Japan itruck\nIn the Pacific to change the whole\nnature of the war,\nA British-Chinese itand ln Cen\ntnl Burma unUl the \"wet momoon'\nieuon openi would afford additional monthi to complete a regroup of Empire forcei tor defence\nof India and China'! Ufa lines.\nAirman Visitor\nSuffers Burns\nat R.A.F. School\nUn. Oeorge Perkini, 7J\u00bb Sixth\nStreet, learned Thuriday that one\nof the Old Country airmen, recent\nviiiton here, had been severely\nburped while at hli work at No. M\n8J.T5, Royal Air Force, at Medi-\ncine Hat\nThe airman, Lac. Alao O. Jones,\ntwice a gueit of Mr. and ill*, tut*\nkins, wu taken to hoipltal Saturday night, a letter from one ot hit\nmates laid, suffering severe bums\non hie hands.\nLac. Jonu of Conway, North\nWales, and Lac. Chirlei Rackham\nOf Corby North Hamptonshlre, were\nguesti of Mr. and Mn. Perkini ln\nOctober and nturned here for a\nweek early ln March at the Invlta-\ntion of their host and hoiteu.\nMainwaring Will\nAssist Nelson lo\nObtain War Work\nAssurance of his active interest In\nNelion'i fight for war contracti hu\nbeen given by W. C. Mainwaring of\nVancouver, a member of the Canadian War Finance Committee, in a\nletter to Aid. E. A. Mann of Nelion,\na member of the similar committee\nfor B.C. Thll assurance of sup.\nport wai given by Mr. Milnwirlng\nfoUowing hli recent Victory Loin\ntddress to Nelson business men by\nlong distance phone, ln response to\nthe suggestion by Alderman Mann\nthit Loan officials should remember Nelion'i participation in the\nwar io fir hid bten iU outgo; lt\nhid aent men md money, but had\nnot shared In war work.\nReferring to this Mr. Mainwaring\nwrote:\n... because after all if the Nelson\ndistrict does not fight for war Industries, who ls going to do lt for\nyou? It Is my Intentloy to follow\nthis matter up, and If I can be of any\nassistance to you pletse reit assured\nthat I will certainly do so. Surely\nthere must be soipe way In which\nwar work can be given to your district . . .\"\nGermany's Oil\nPosition Serious\nLONDON, March 19 (CP Cable)\n\u2014The Earl of Selborne, Minister\nof Economic Warfare, in a Preu\nconference todiy slid Germany'i\noil position \" ls i great detl more\ndifficult thin It hu ever been,\"\nlargely u a result ot the Ruuian\ncampaign and the British Blockade.\nHe qualified this statement, however, by adding that supplies for\nthe German Army, Air Force and\nNavy have not yet been curtailed,\nthough he predicted they soon will\nbe unless new sources ara found.\nHe said civilian luppUei hive been\ndrastically cut down or replaced by\ntynthetlc   manufacture!.\nLord Selborne deoWTed the Germans have been compelled to use\nvastly greater quanUtlu of oil ln\nRussia than they originally planned\nadding \"my opinion Is that they\ncannot continue using oil at the\npreaent rate for many months\nlonger unless Germany geti further\nsupplies.\"\nHe asserted the German ittuttlon\nconcerning oil, rubber and textiles\nli \"infinitely more difficult\" thin\nBritain'i\nLA ROGUE URGES\ncen McNaughton\nas prime minister\nCALGARY, March It (CP).-Her-\ntei La Roque, of Montreal, uld in a\npublic address here last night that\nCanada needs t non-party nttiontl\ngovernment with Lt.-Gen. A. G. L\nMcNiughton, Commander of Uie Canadian Corps, at Prime Mlniiter.\nMr. La Roque, one-time Secretary\nto former Mayor Camillien Houde\nof Montreal, uld \"we hiven't htd\nleidership ln this country ln 20\nyein\" md thit this leidership ii\nnecessary to complete unity.\nHis address was the tecond ln \u2022\nseries he and Elmore Philpott, Victoria author, wiU make acrosi Canada. They spoke in Vancouver on\nMonday.\nBoth ipeaken expreued fear ot s\nncial split on the conscription issues\nand offered their suggestion of Gen.\nMcNaughton as Uie needed leader\nbecauie of their beUef thit he is\nnot a party man, has shown a full\nseme of fiir pity and hai the courage to mike decisions.\n-PAQI SIVIN\nBoard Receptive\nto School Bonds\nROSSLAND, B.C., March IS. -\nThe School Board decided Tueidiy\nnight to give all poealble encourage*\nment to Bandmuter E. J. Gibney In\nhla efforti to organize ichool banda,\na project promoted by the Parent-\nTeacher Asiociatlon. Tangible support, however, ln tbe form of providing rooms at the schools for band\npractices after ichool houri, will not\nbe forthcoming until Principal! Wesley McKenrle and E. X. Perkins have\nstudied the propoitl.\nTo Get Benefit,\nUnemployed Has\nto Make Claim\nBenefits ue now payable under\nthe Unemployment Insurance Act,\nand for the benefit of workeri within the icope of the Act, J. H. McVety, Pacific Regional Superintendent hu outlined the procedure to be\nfollowed ln making application for\nbenefits.\nWhtn \u2022 worker becomei unemployed ht muit get hli Unemployment Insurance Book from his employer, ttkt lt to the nearest Employment and Claimi Office If he\nlives within easy travelling distance\nof lt and deposit lt there. A receipt\nfor the book wiU be given to him,\nand this ha must keep as long u hit\nbook remains ln the local office.\nWhile he li at the office he muit\ncomplete the required formi to\nmike tpplicatlon for benefit.\nFIRST NINE DAYS EXCLUDED\nThe flrit ntye <Uyi of unemployment tfttr he makes a claim are\nwaiting days, md no benefit Is payable for these daya It li not necessary thtt these dayi run consecutively. If no work ll found for\nhim tnd he continues to be unemployed tnd utlsty the conditloni, i\nbenefit check li to be Issued weekly.\nTTilt procedure appllei to iU\nworkers wbo might retsonably be\neVpected to call perionilly it \u2022 full-\ntime or part-time local office.\nFor thoie who do not live within\nreasonable distance of a local office\nIf the Unemployment Iniurance\nCommission, other arrangements\nhave been made. In a number of\ntowns and villages a ipeclal part-\ntime representative will be lent out\nby the Unemployment Insurance\nCommission to deal with my benefit\nclilmt which mty trite. All claim-\nmti for benefits wiU regliter with\nhim, tnd he In turn wiU refer eltimi\nto tht nearest local office for examination.\nIN ISOLATED DISTRICTS\nPerioni living ln districts where\nno office hu been established md\nto which an itinerant representative\nii not tent, will file claim for benefit by maU. Any worker In iuch in\narea who becomei unemployed\nshould mill his Insurance Book to\nthe nearest Employment snd Claims\nOf\/ice, tnd itite thtt ht Is unemployed, snd that he wishes to register for benefit. A receipt for his\nInsurance Book, md the neceuary\nforms which every worker who tp-\npUu for benefit muit fill out, will\nbe unt to him. Theu formi muit\nbe completed ind returned to the\nlocal office.\nIf the claimant ll qualified to receive benefit, he muit continue to\nprove hli unemployment by mill\netch week. After the nine wilting\ndays hive been completed, If he hu\nno work ind tbe other conditloni\nire sstlsfled, hli benefit will be pild\nweekly by i check to him.\nTWO PRISONERS\nFROM CRANBROOK\nAT  NELSON  JAIL\nTwo prlionen, escorted by Constable J. A. Roberti of the Provincial Police, irrived it ProvtocliI\nJill it Nelson Thundiy to begin\nserving sentences.\nPleading guilty to a charge of\ndriving while intoxicited. Frtnk\nWhitehead wat unttneed by Stipendiary Magistrate T. M. Roberti\nof Cranbrook to servo 90 days in\nJail. Ht wu alio forbidden to drlvt\na car for ilx monthi. Tht chirge\nwu liid ifter an auto tccident\nabout two miles weat of Crinbrook\nIn which the vehicle Whitehead wu\ndriving ended up acrou the railway tracki.\nThe other prisoner wu Malcolm\nMcNeil, who alto appeared before\nStipendiary Magiitrate Roberts. Ht\npleaded guilty to a chirge under\nthe Indlin Act of supplying liquor\nto in Indian and wu sentenced to\nserve aix montha ln Jill ind to pay\na tint of (ISO. or In deftult of piyment to serve an additional three\nmonthi.\nNew Insurance\nBooks Will Be\nIssued In April\nOTTAWA Mareh 19 (CP)-Iniur-\nance booki Issued to thousindi of\nCanadian worken at the beginning\nof July, 1941, will expire at the end\nof die fiscal year on March SI, tbe\nUnemployment Imunnce Commls-\nilon mnounced today. Tile-booki\nmuit be turned ln and new booki\nwill be liiued to all Insured work-\nIt wUl be neceuary to conduct i\nre-registratlon ot Insured worken\nso u to revile the recordi of the\nCommission and keep them up to\ndate.\nIn addition to Ufli re-reglitratlon\not Insured workers, the Unemployment Insurance Commiuion hu\nbeen Initructed by Order-in-Coun-\ncll to require employers, who hava\nboth Insured worken and thou who\nare not Insured In their employ, to\nregliter both classes. Thli wUl mean\nthat, Insofar u an employer wbo\nhu both clsises of employeei !\u25a0 concerned, lt will be unneceuary to uk\nhim to go over the ground it a later\ndate ln order to obtain Information\nfor a man-power Inventory.\nThe man-power Inventory le designed to ascertain Uie iktlli and\ntraining of workeri to u to eniure\nthtt the maximum un li made of\nsuitable labor ln lndiutrlu wtiere\nthe need li greateit.\nDistrict Roads      I\nImproving Fast'\nContinued favorable weither le\ndrying out diitrlct roada fairly rapidly without extensive dimage due\nto froit coming out of tht ground\nstated Ernest Smith, District Publle\nWorks Engineer, on Thursday. Restrictions remain ln effect, however,\non most ot the roeds.\nThe Nelson-Nelway ind Salmo-\nTrail roadi are deicrlbed u \"quite\npassable\" for a car. They are atlll\nbarred to heavily-loaded trucka\nwhich are restricted to half of their\npay load.\nGrading hu been completed from\nGrey Creek to Creiton, tnd thll\nroid It uid to be in fine ihape.\nThere it itlll mow on the summlta\nWut of Rouland, fresh snow hiving\nfallen ln the lait few days.\nHaff- a -glance -and\nyou know he's going\nto score...\nHalf-a-tast< \u2014 and\nyou know Hudson'*\nBay Rye will score\nwith yoa\n16 \u00bbi_\n2S 01.\nMoi.\nfl.70  ^2.66  9406\nHudson's \u00a9ay\n'rye\nTtsls advertisement ls not publlihed\nor dlipliyed by the Liquor Control\nBoird  or  by   the  Government  of\nBritiih Columbil.\nBorons Cain Semis\nCLEVELAND, Mtrch 1\u00ab (AP) -\nCleveland Baroni advanced to Uie\nseml-flnil round ln defence ot thel,\nAmerican Hockey League title by\ndefeating Wuhlngton Lioni tor the\nlecond itrilght game, 2-2 baton\nMM fani tonight\nThe defeit ellminited Washington\nand Cleveland will play Uie Hershey Bean In the first game of the\nsemi-finals here Saturday night.)   .\nwm C^ti?W\\H^[\ni fastett-grewle') ttentmy olaet I\n?fnCo\u00bbfl<fa. Minora Blades'\n' for dteblt-idgt raiors glue ,\n'quick, taiyshavti at a saving\n \"\"' \" '\"\".WlilJ HiMI .!:II\u00ab|pWipiWJW\u00abUHP\u00abpHUi9PMiW\u00abPVIWM^p^H\n5vif WAiL*  tlmltia   M\u00bbljiw,<   *\u25a0 Cf-rn.wAY  i.iuiiNlNU   MARCH M^IW\u2014 .'   ',   \u25a0 \"'\u25a0 '\n_i_\n^J^pKJa*\nDon't let your leisure time go to\nwaste! Get busy embroidering\nthis baaket of poisiaa on your bedspread. It will brighten your\nwhole room. Pattern 268 contains\nt transfer ptttarn of a motif 15x20\nInches'4 motifs IV,xt inches; illustrations of ititches; color chart;\nmaterials required.\nSend twanty oenti for this pattern to The Nelson Dally News,\nNetdleoraft Dept, Nelson. Write\nplainly pattern number, your\nnama and addreu. Pattern will\nbe mailed to your home within\n10 days.\nCHECK-AND-PLAIN It SMART\nTfljturion.   Wkuiiin.\nCheck tnd double-check thil\nimart idea \u2014 a cotton frock with\ngay contrast! Your pattern is 9006\nby Marian Martin \u2014 your fabrics,\ninexpensive gingham and pique.\nUse the pique for revers, cuffs,\nand pocket tabs \u2014 add the button\ntrim, if you wish! The gingham\ncheck will emphasize the bias center panels front and back; the Sew\nChart will help you cut an all-one-\nfabric version, too, perhaps with\nlong sleeves.\nPattern 9006 may be ordered\nonly in misses\" sizes 12, 14, 16, 18\nand 20. Sizes 16 requires 3^ yards\n3 5inrh fabric and S yard contract.\nSend twenty centa for thla\nMarian Martin pattern. Be sure to\nwrite plainly your SIZE, name,\naddress and style number.\nSend your order to The Dally\nNews. Pattern will be tent to your\nhome within 10 dayt.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACBOSS\n1. Reaortt\n*. Stretch\nacroae\nS.Potpoum\ntt. Self: combining form\n11. Coral island\n12. Game flahet\n14. Bovine\nIS. Bom\n17. Dry, cotd\nwind\nW. Elevated\ntrains\n1\u00bb. Profiteering\nticket seller\n21. Exclamation\n23. Paat .\n34. Facial\natpect\nn.Oodoftertli\n30. Heron\nSI. Arden\n33. Sorrow\n34. Crude sine\nM.Thrita\n(met.)\nm.\n5. American\nIndian\n\u00ab. Indian\nvillage\nT. Jutt titer,\nas an anchor\nI. Loop wit*\nrunning knot\n11. Highest card\n13. Indian\nweight\nW.Mark of a\nwound\n20. Deputy\n22. Devoured\n24. Not many\n28. Self\n26. Speak\n27. Pertaining\nto tht Uft\n28. Feminine\nMint\n29. Plead\n32. Roman\nmoney\n35. Incite\n3e. Old money\nunit\n38. Newt\n30. Clamor\n40. Sayings ot\nreligious\nBWiiiM aaau\nmam.: aiflwa\nmm anuiH\nhki    ana ana\nWWW   HHWll   WW\nii-?  HMIdBIHH\nHMSIMH  BIHHISU\nMBI BlMltlU \u00abMU\nUmt Mi* M\nCCHin  HBIHSIHE\nmm ukmij\nailLWii   >l]i\\nu\n14141   ,.    WW I\n44. Somt\n41. Glowing cotl  W.A thln(\n43. Beast of (Uw)\ntwrden 51. Silkworm\nCOMIC AND ADVENTURE  STRIPS.,\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cut Eds\no.a*\ntt.TodMp.\nM. Prist*!\nJT.Awelgbt\nMLtlft\nett\n10. Pulpy fruit\nM. Without\ntUte)\nH.Bpotht\nU.tstmtma\nM.V\u00ab\nDOWN\nLT*\nptat\nI.Part\u00ab|*w\nLTnaM*\n\u00ab. Perioral\ncHtteaeaota 41\nCSTXCI     WOLRBLYTW     XQEIOCLKZJ\nXQIO KRX oipi maw wbolpx lpr\nVXPKYX   IUI1X- ABOII\nTrrttrthy'i   drjftaaaatai   TRUTH   IS   TIR   FOUNDATION\nAND M BXASON OT AU, PERFECTION AND BEAUTY\u2014,\n1 hii 11 MJOSH nun\nCryptoquotes are quotations of famous persona written cipher.\nA substitute character has replaced the original letter. For instance,\nan \"R\" may substitute for the original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote, or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\" Find the key and follow through.to the solution.\nCONTRACT ...     \u2022\nMARK IT A DOUBIJ5 0!fT.\nIF THM ts no wty to make\ntour eootiMt exoept by a tqueext\npity, you may proceed anally In\ntitter ol three general ways. One\nIt to try \u00bbo equeeae your Mt-htnd\nopponent, another it lo try tt\ntqueete the right-hand defender.\nKit the better way li to try to discard to thtt you may hamstring\ntlther one of them, and possibly\nboth. Vltt goes, no matter how\nwell you htve read their cards at\nthe atari Perhaps one of them has\nfooled you by something ke did\n\u2666 711\n*f 3tt\n\u2666 A 10 3\n+ KJ\u00bb>\net*\ne*\n+ AQ 10 7\n< t\nAt.\n4\n\u2666 K Q 10 9\n3\nf 76\n\u2666 Q974\n+ 84\n\u00bbAJ5\nf A K Q 10 II \u00ab 2\n\u2666 KJ\n(Dealer: South Both sMet rul-\n\u25a0treble^\nSouth      West     North        Eaat\nIf        Paaa       2+ Paaa\n1*        Pats       I a Pass\n4 NT      Pass      6 * Pasa\n\u00ab\u00bb\nWett l%1 down his club A and,\ntfter getting t look at the K in\ndummy, twitched to the diamond\n1. Prom thia South read him aa\nholding the club Q, aa otherwise he\nprobably would have repeated the\ntuit instead of risking a lead Into a\ndiamond tenace With only eleven\ntricks In sight and no flnease. South\ndecided to try a squeeze against\nboth defenders, or aealnst East If\nBy Shepard Barclay\nhe alone held ape.de tnd diamond\nprotection, or agalnat Wett If be\nalone couilB retain diamond tnd\nclub protection, or spade tnd diamond protection\nSouth flnt put bi.the diamond\n10 In the remote hope that Weat\nhad both the } and Q. but Eaat\ncovered with the Q and the K won.\nThen came the heart J, club K and\nall hearta but one. followed by the\nspade A and the laat heart. At thla\nstage he also had the spade J and\ndiamond 3. holding in dummy the\ndiamond A-8 and the club }. Weat,\non the laat heart could not throw\nthe club Q without aetting up the\nJ tn dummy, so dropped the diamond 5, whereupon the now uaeleaa\nclub J waa discarded from dummy\nEaat had to play now either the\nspade K, which would aet up\nSouth's J, or a diamond from the\n9-7. He chose the diamond 7, ao\nthe diamond 3 to the A dropped\nboth the J and the 9. making the\ndummy's 8 good for the game trick.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow's ProMeaa\n*n I\nf Q J 9 T 4\n\u2666 Q42\n\u2666 \u00bb\u2022\n*Q 9 S 2\n*> 10 ti,\na io\u00bbi\n*KJ75L\nM.\ns.\n4 io 5\n*,,-\u25a0:\nav. j 3\n+Q9432\n* xk J4\na a k s\n\u2666 A 87}\ne a ii\nDealer: Wett. Both ssdea vulnerable.)\nIf South bids 2-Sptdea on thtt\ndeal, then North 2-No Trumpa,\nwhat should be South's text cell,\nand why?\njaps Continue To\nArrive Ar Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, March 19 (CP)-\nJapanese continued to arrive at\nVancouver today from points slong\nthe British Columbia coastline under the British Columbia Security\nCommission's scheme to concentrate\nthem here until they are moved Into\nthe interior\n\u2022 Coastal steamers are due to arrive here two or three times daily\nfor the next four days, bringing\nstill more Japanese from fishing\nvillages and other settlements\nMacArthur Took\nTorpedoboats in\nMaking Escape\nNEW YORK, March 19 (AP). -\nSmall but fast motor torpedo boaU\ncarried Gen, Douglu MacArthur,\nhis wife and child, and a small group\nof aides on the perilous first leg of\ntheir journey from Bataan Peninsula to Australia, a copyrighted\nMelbourne dispatch published today\nby the New York Herald Tribune\nsaid.\nThe correspondent, Allen Raymond, learned that the MacArthur\nparty left Bataan by qight on March\n11 and travelled South along the\ncoast of the Philippine Islands for\ntwo nights, hiding in bayous during the daylight hours to reach the\nrendezvous with the big planes\nwhich carried the group to Australia.\nThree days of the one-week journey was apent in waiting for the\nplanes, it wai aaid.\nSullivan Released\nTORONTO, March 18 (CP)-Pat\nSullivan, President nf the Canadian\nSeamen's Union, has been released\nfrom ^internment on the recommendation of the Advisory Committee\nIn Ottawa, it was announced today\nby J. L Cohen, legal advisor for\nSullivan,\nPlain Strict Cat\nRationing in U. S.\na WASHINGTON, March 19 (AP)\n\u2014Petroleum Co-ordlnator ickei\nannounced today a rigid gaiollne\ncoupon rationing lyitem would\nbe Instituted Ip the Eait and Pacific Northwest United Statei \u25a0\u25a0\ntoon aa the cardi can be printed\u2014\nwhich he eitlmated would be\nwithin iix weeka.\nPROTEST TO MITCHELL\nJAP INFLUX INTO\nOKANAGAN AREA\nVANCOUVER, March 19 (CP)-A\ndelegation from the Okanagan Valley laid a protest before Labpr Minister Humphrey Mitchell here today\nagainst the Influx of Japanese into\nLhe area from the Pacific Coast Defence Zone. *\n1\n[WHOEVER IT     \\\nI5TMATWAWT5 K\n\u2022WOK)\n6P COURSJ,^\nj   [ IWIllBwIl rr*\\\nQjg\nvjBl-\n^wEm\\h=\n\u2022Jo         t\n\u00a3*jSM    maititi'i\nM\nJANE ARDEN\nBy Monte Barrett and Russell Re\nHERO PROMOTED\nVANCOUVER, March 19 (CD-\nMajor C. N. Mi>ch\u00abll, who was\nawarded the Victoria Cross ln the\nFirst Great War tor outstanding\nbravery, has been promoted td the\nrank of Lieutenant-Colonel ln the\nCanadian Army and given command ot a Canadian unit.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"A dot a,1|l a servant and a husband are all alike, ln one way. To\nget one lo suit you, you've got lo\nget it young and train it your way.'\n\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\nI\n__^__^_^____^\n_\n \t\nt\n\u2014\n\u2022\u2022'\u25a0 *'\nIII,\n'hone\n144\nClassified' Advertising\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NM-ION. I. C.-FRIDAY MORNINO MARCH 20 1942\u2014\nCHIANG NAMES\nPhone\n144\nHELP WANTED\n.pplicatlom  will  not  bt con-\n.dered (rom perioni engaged In\nte production ot war luppllei. ,\nIt OB WOMAN Tbt HOUSE,\n'orlt,  State  particular!  in   first\nrttet.\u2014lb* A. Heuiton,-Balfour,\nM\t\nItfTfcB, 'ftTJICMY - GoOB,\nirpng canter for sawmill. Fifty\nMti hour. DuMont, Galloway\nHfeuWCKp GM, Fdtt OEN-\nral hiwk., Fairview. No children,\n0\u00bb 7987, Dill\/ News.\n3HKU; ium to bob rom\n) 400,000 ft, of sawlogs-DuMont,\nMeberry, B.C.\nJft'HD - TOMAN   6h   UIRt\nike full charge of email home, 2\ndulti.  Mn. Wilkie, Silverton,\nUTM) - BBWVBflV BOT:\ntpply Maple Leaf Grocery,\ntanley Street\n911\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nIpeclal Low Rates for non-\nommercial advertisements utile* thii clissification to asilit\nilople seeking employment.\nInly 25c for one week (6 days)\novers any number of required\nInei. Payable tn advance. Add\n10c If box number desired.\nBUBTCKfi WOMAN'WOULD\nIke work by day alio look atter\nhlldren evcningi.   Phone 84* R.\nIR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nrBBER STAMPS FOR UNHM-\njloyment Iniurance These are re-\njuired for cancelling itimpi by\nimployers ln employee's boots\nlie each. Postage 5c extra Nelson\nSilly Newi Commercial Printing\nDept\n1 DtARlK AT 8ftOW COST.\nK* doubled up on order for our\n>wn office uie and find that we\nlave teveral diariei left Diane:\nsorting $1.76 for SOc, (200 diariei\nfoe lie.  Call Dally Newi Printing\nDept\t\nPIPES, TUBBS, mTINGS\n.  .    NIW AND USED\nrge itock for Immediate ihipment\nSWARTZ   PIPE  VARD\nbt Avenue and Main Street\n, Vmcouver, B C.\nW fcNOUGH WASHERS FOR\nilL   MM buys e good rebuilt\nHoctric washer. Supply now cut\nlown to 90 per cent of former pro-\nluctlon. Easy terms. Buy while\nrou eaa. Phoni tl.\nVi '8ALE-270 IT. AS50RTED\nitpes, 1 hone power engine. My-\nBulldozer Pump.   Price com-\nilete (90.\nC.\nF. Schmidt, Erickion,\nik SHEER tHAmS, COUCH,\nlfl leather  cushion* deik.    Bex\nUS4, Daily Newi.\nTt \u25a0 FITTINGS - TOBfcS - SPE-\nilal low pricei. Active Trading Co\n111 Powell St, Vancouver BC\nlft SAL*-f-IAhO, UlU NTW\n3ox 4223, Daily News.\n1 C.C.M. BIC?CLE, $20.\n1332, Daily Newa\nBOX\nIOFERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nIODERN HOME and\n2 ACRE LAND\nOne mile from Nelion.\nodern 8-room bungalow. Polish-\nfloors. Good baiemtnt Stone\nosdition. Electric light. Good\niter lupply. 2 acrei of und. Fruit\nIta One mill from Nelson on\nain highway. Owneri owns ad-\nilnlng 30 acrei, if more acreage\nseded, would teU any part of\nI*. One of the beat buys we have\n'tr had at (2300. \u2014 Terms.\nF.A.WHITFIELD\nelaon, B. C. 417 Hall Street\nLL PAY REASONABLE RENT-\nfor good medium-iiied house\nrlth groundi for garden. Prefer\n0 buy on rental terms; iome caih.\nFill also buy furniture If lult-\nIble. Box 4241, Daily News\n&MI AND BUSH TOOLS~aJTB\nlulpt. Homehold irticlei. Light-\nng plant A.C. 110 voltl. Car,\nluck, livestock, taw rig. etc. Mn.\nL. Sewell, Beailey. B. C.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVIR STOP AT\nAimer Hotel, opp. C.P.R   Depot\nused bmuim wOUU)1 BS\ngratefully received at the Salvation Army, til Vlctorli Street.\n\"Wanted - good clean cot-\nton rail, not leu thin 12 incnei\niquare. 9c lb, F. 0. B. Nelion\nDaily Newi.\nft! PAY TOP PRICES FOR OLD\nchina, illverware; and furniture\nAnything old Antique Shop. 413\nHaU St., Nelson. BC\nmviMinnmm stop\n$100 tor 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested Guaranteed and prepaid Free Novelty price Hit\nPrinceton Distributor!. P.O Box\n(1, Princeton, B.C.\n25c - The Photo MW - 55o'\nP O Box 335, Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed, 25*\nt i 7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprint* 5x1 enlargement. ISc\n1K\u00bbft\u00bb 8icK rtlttRb Bft'BJLA-\ntive In the hospital will enjoy\nreading The Daily Newi. Phone\n144 and have a copy delivered\ntach  morning.\nSfTTOTBU A ft-OATES F3ECT\nAll people who had a policy of\nthli kind would have been covered for the loss of laundry, etc.,\nin the recent fire at the Nelion\nCity Laundry.   Appleyard tt Co.\nttyii&i tfEV*LOPJo> Atrt) MTOJT-\ned (8 or 8 exposure roll) 25c, Reprints 3c each. For your vacation\nsnapshots, chooie Kryital Finish\nGuaranteed non.fade prlnti.\nKrystal Photoi, Wilkie, Saskatchewan.  Established  over 30 yeari.\n*\"        POLAR FURS LTD.\nFINE QUALITY FURS AT REAS-\nonabli pricei. Expert re-atyllng\nand repairing\u2014Low ratei. Guaranteed itorage - 100 per cent\nprotection. - IMl Oranville St,\nVancouver. B.C.\nMEN'S SPECIAL\nMen'i personal drug lundriei,\nfinest quality, tested, guaranteed, 12 for 50c, 26 for (100, allotted. Including world'i funnl-\neit Joke novelty free, and catalogue of sundries.\nWESTERN DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 14. Dipt NC, Regini, Sask.\ntWO C6MPLWE SB'S VttOX\nprlnti from any roll ot fllmi, 25c,\nipeclil, mill only. Reprlnti 2V,\ncenti each Overnight servlci. We\npromise to satisfy you tn every\nway. Professional Photographer,\n15 years' experience. Send in\nyour friendi\" fllmi tool Film Exchange, Box 60, Castlepr, B. C.\nFARM, GARDEN fr NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nBURNABY   ROSERY   CO,   R.   R\nNo. 1, New Weitmlniter. often\nfor iale government Inspected\nfruit treei, 4-3 yean old, ready\nto bear. Roie bushel, imill fruits\nornamentals, perennial!. Prict\nlilt per return mill. Mall orderi\npromptly filled.\nand shrubs of every deicription.\nBlk. berry le Lloyd George Rasp,\ncanes 65c doz. Blk Currants 1-yr.\n15c. 3 yr. 30c. English Gooseberry\n30c ea. T. Roynon Agt. Layrlti\nNurseries.\nTRYTpaCKETOF MY SPECIAL\nmixture of sweet peas, 100 seeds\n25c. Catalogue, with over 50 varieties, on request. H. Warrick,\nSweet Pea Specialist, Roberta\nCreek. B. C.\n)OD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\neaiy termi tn Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full information to 008 Dept of Natural\nReiourcei CPR   Calgary.  Alta\nANTED QUICKLY-GOOD BUN-\n(alow, 2 bedrooma, etc. Furnace.\nHurt hive good foundation and\n(ood baiement. Have good cash\nluyera. Write Appleyard St Co.\nto IMMEDIATE \"SALE: IN NEL-\nK>n,~S-room house, 1 acre, one-half\nALL KINDS FRUIT TREES. 1 YR.\nold 50c 2 yr old 75c. climbing and\nbush roses, grape vines, 3 for $1\nBlack currants, white, red currants, 15c each. Apply to Eugene\nHammerer, P   O. Taghum. B   C\nEVERBEARING RASPS. \"INDIAN\nSummer\" registered. Strong healthy canes. Fruit ripens early.\nLarge and sweet. Prolific bearen.\nResistant to moialc, $1*0 per dot.\nMOO per 100,   Holt, Balfour.\n| for^our^requirementTTF\nSeeds, Feed and Poultry, Supplies.\ncall and see us. Ask for our price\nlist. Ellison Milling Se Elevator\nCompany, Ltd, Nelson, B. C. \u2014\nPhone 238\nOARDElTfEAS IN 8 VARfRfK;\nBeam in six, Bulk Beet Seed. Carrot. Cabbage. Corn, Lettuce. Onion, Pannip, Spinach, Turnip.\nThe Br\u00abckman-Ker Mlllg Co. Ltd.\nGI.ADiOLT^CLF.AN'FLOWERlNfi\nlire bulbs $1 00 per hundred post-\npi!d Webiter'i Gardens, Robion. B C.\nhouse.     Box\nfleered.     Chicken\n17, Dilly Newi.\nT5S'ON VoftKShlBfi PLAN\nReduce that mortgage monthly\nUid avi Intereit   C  W   Apple-\nrd.\njrsATx=5nf5SirBTO3AEow.\nVictoria   Street    Apply   013\nNanley Street.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nyou find anything telephon*\nll Dally Newi A \"Found\" Ad\nUll be Inserted without coit io\nrott Wl will collect from the\nowner.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MCTALS\nor Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid Activp Trading Company\n918 Powell St. Vancouver. B C\nTO RENT^^SMALlT BAKERY\nequipped, with option of buying\nBox 4304. Dilly News.\nWanTed^Used STUR'D VThUNR\nMust be In good condition.   Write\nBox 7988. Daily Newi.\nCOAL    BURNING    B R O O BTR\nstove   In good ihape.    Box 4230.\nDaily  News\nWE PAY'CASH FOR USED CHILD-\nrrn's tricycles, wagons and kiddle I\ncars.   Kitto's. 820 Baker.\nW ANfED\"T?niuY\"A TRtOTCT.1!\nIn good cond;tlon. Boi 4320, Duly\nNews.\nPUBLIC NOTICII\nNOTICE\nExamination! for Aulftant Foreit Rangen will be held at:\u2014\nNelion March 28th, 9:30 a.m.\nNakusp: March 27th, 9:30 a.m.\nApplications will be received by\nthe District Forester at Nelion and\nthe Forest Rangen at Nakusp from\nwhom application forms and full\nparticulars may be obtained.\nThli examination is to alta bl Ish\nan eligible list (or the leaion 1042\nfrom whleh appointment! will be\nmade \u25a0\u25a0 Aulitant Rangeri ere require!\t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYER* AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nHAROLD I. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB.C. Provinclil Assayer, Chemist\nIndividuil representative for ihip-\npen at Trail Smelter.\nA. I IUU Independent Mlai *,n-\nreientative.' Box M, TriU, B.C,\ni W WTOMW50H, PBOVWCIAL\nAssaver, Ml Joiephine St., Nelion\nCHIROPRACTORS\n^OiW\nCOR3ETIERES\nTHE  'WHICH K,  ,.\u201e.\nCHICKS   GIVE  RMW\n1942 \"PRODUCTION YEAR\"\nMore Eggi and foultrjr are needed\nYou are aiked to produce them.\nBe sure that you ralie profitable\nitock - \"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE RE8ULT8\" have proven their\nvilue throughout Weitern Canadi\nRalie them and get maximum production.\nPrleei per 100; Uniexed Pulleti\nLeghorni $13.75      $2850\nRocki, Redi, New\nHampi    _.   15.00        28.00\nSuisex     17.00        30.00\nSUPER CHICKS Sired by R. O. P.\nMain\nLeghorn! $18.78      $31.30\nRocki, Redi, New\nHamps 17.00        80.00\nLeghorn Ckls. $1-100; Heavy Ckli\n$10-100.\nQuantity   discount!.   Live  delivery\nguirinteed. SPECIAL FOLDER ON\nBLACK. BUFF AND BROWN LEG\nHORNS.\nSend for your copy of the 1942\n\"PRODUCTION YEAR BOOK-and\nremember\u2014\ntau&tafel\ntt* N Lanjliy Prelrli, B. 0,\nR.O.P. SIRED WHITE LEGHORN\nchicki and lexed pullet chlcka;\nill breeding stock on our own\nfirm ind bloodteitid. AIM ROP\nwlcgbanded cockerel and pullet\nchicki from ipeclal matlngi, with\npedigrees for official approval for\nnext season'i breeding. Price list\non reyueit\nM   H.  RUTTLEDGE\nDoreen Poultry Farm, Sardli, B. C\nSPENCER CORSETIERE,  MISS\nShirley Boomer, 217 Gore Ph 880L\nENGINEERS  AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD 0 AFFLECK. P.O. Bra 104\nTrail, B.C. Surveyor and Engineer\nPVne \"Beaver Falli\",\nPeine \"Bea\nEngineer,  B 0  Land Surveyor\nRossand and Grand Forki. BC\nFOOT  SPECIALISTS\nS. J. GILLIS, D.S.C R.C.P, REG'D\nChiropodist Foot Specially, Ber-\ngeron Block, Ph. UW, Trill B.C.\nPUNIRAL HOMES\nI     .\nydp-\nSTILWELL TO LEAD\nCHINESE ARMIES\nfABHlNqTON, MW\u00abb ll' <AP>-\nTbe War Department announced today that Lioutenanl Ganeral Jo-\nsepta W, Stilwell oi the United\nStatei Army hid been put ln command of the Fifth and Sixth Chlneie\nArmies operating with Britiih Forcei defending Burma against the\nJapaneae.\nThe action wu taken by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek of China,\nOen. Stilwell wtnt to China a few\nweeka ago Ud served Initially aa\nChlang'i Chiel ef Staff.\nSOMERS FUNERAL HOMI \/\n701 Baker St Phoni US\nCert Mortician       Lldy Attendant\nModern Ambulance Sirvlei\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD   AGENCY\nIniurance. Rul Estate, Phone 99\nF, tocHARDY\/lflOTMNCt\nCHAS.\nReal Estate.\nphone 131.\nrt. e dilL. Fire, auto, acci-\ndent Insurance, 832 Wird Street.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene md electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial   refrigeration\nPhone 383 124 Vernon St\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW   E  MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Biy Ave, Tr\u00bbtl Phoni ITI\nBABY CHICKS-RHODE ISLAND\nRedi and New Hampshire!, Andrew Chriitie strain, good utility\nstock, approved and blood-teited\n$12.00 per 100. Chleki reidy to\n\u2022hip every Tuesday John'Goodman, 1655 Gilley Avenue, New\nWestminiter. B.C.\nFOR SALt-J DAIRY COWS DUE\nto freshen, also yearling heifer\nAbout 75 Leghorn hem ln heavy\nproduction. H. C. Gibion, Longbeach, R.R. 1, Nelaon.\nSASH  FACTORIES\nBlizzard Sweep\nBritain to End.\nlong, Hard Winter\nLONDON, Mareh 19 (CP Cable)-\nThe worst blizzard In 80 years\n\u25a0wept Northeait England and Eait\nScotland March 5-8 as a dying kick\nof the moat severe Winter ln memory. Some districts were Isolated\naeveral days, Including ilx Engllih\nvillage! and iome ln the Perthshire\narea of Scotland.\n'  Announcement   of   the   blizrard\nwai permitted by authorltlei today.\nThe Arctic-like weather lasted\nmore than two months and was\nbroken by rain March 8. Snow-\nitomu blocked roadi and streams\nwere frozen. The upper reaches of\nthe river Tyne were Ice-bound,\nSome roads were Impassible for\nmore than nine weeks and the snow\nwas so deep in some sections vehicular traffic was brought to a\nstandstill, Ilthough railways wire\nnot handicapped aeriouily.\nScorei of sheep were lost in English mountain drifti.\nMail was traniported by horseback ln one section of Scotland.\nMiny rural communitlei in Scot,\nland were short of proviiioni and\nsupplies were lent to thim by cart,\nhoneback and tractor.\nBid      Ask\nTM   \u2022    -\n105       115\n.J2H      -\n.05\n.14\n.14V(\n.25\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\nSECOND  HAND  STORES\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhit bin youT Ph. 534. Ark Store\nHEAVY HORSES FOR SALE -\nWell matched heavy, quiet team,\n8 yean old, ind other good chunky horses, very reasonable prices\nEllison Milling bam, Nelion.\nFOR SALE\u2014TWENTY HEAD OP\nyourvg fann and heavy work\nhorses, reasonably priced. Perch-\neron stock. Abey'i Ranch, Mirror\nUke, BC,\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFINEST QUALW? MOOT T5-\nland Red Chicki-23, $350; 50,\n$7; 100, $18 50; 800. $85. George\nGame, ROJ\\ Breeder, Armitrong. B.C.\nFOR SALE-FARM HORSES. ALL\nweights, well broken, very reei-\nonibli. Abey'i Ranch, Mirror\nLake.\nTOU SALE-STARTED PULLJTTS,\nNew Hampshlrei. 7-wki-old, hir-\ndy itock See them outdoori.\nBBB   Rinch, Blewett B. C.\nWANT ED  -  MIL*   GOAT.  G\nBrown. Kooteniy Bay.\nFORTSALE - TWO YOUtfC T%-\nmile  goati   ($10).    S.  Rablnaux,\nCastlegar, BC.\nTelephone 144\nTrail Circulation: phone 1358\nClassified Advertising Rjtei\nlie per line per Iniertlon.\n44c per line per week (8 comecutive Insertions for cost of 4).\n$1 43 \u25a0 line \u2022 month (28 times).\n(Minimum 2 llnea per Insertion)\nBox number lie extra This\ncoven iny number ot timei.\nPUBLIC  NOTICES. TENDERS.\nETC\n18c per line, flrit Iniertlon ind\n14c esch   subsequent  Iniertlon\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon commerclil   Sltuitloni\nWintid for 2Sc for iny rtvulred\nnumbtr   of   lints   for   six   days\nDiyibli In idvince\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nSingle copy .   $   .08\nBy carrier, per week  .....        $8\nBy eirrler  per year     13 00\nBy mill:\nOne  month      $  75\n.Three mnnthj         2.00\nSix monthi               400\nOne  vear 800\nAbove ntei ipply In Csnida\nUnited Statei ind United Kingdom to subscribers living outiide regular carrier ireu\ntutwhere ind In Cenada where\nextra pontile Ii required one\nmonth $1 50 three monthi $4 00\nIII monthi $100. ooe year $15 00.\nReady for\nSale\nV, Ton Int  Light Del. 1935.\nI ton 1\u00bb41 Maple Leaf 197 In. W B.\nVi ton Ford Panel 1817.\n1931 Ford De Luxe Sedan.\nint Dodge Vl ton. like diw.\n1931 Plymouth Coupe. A-l,\nPOWER UNITS\n41 h.p. International Engim.\n1 RD4 Caterpillar Cat\nCENTRAL TRUCK &\nEQUIPMENT CO.\n702 Tront St. Phone 100\nNelion, B. C.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES\nBralorne\nCarjboo Gold\nGeorge Copper ...\nGolcondi\t\nOold Belt     \t\nOrindview. \t\nHedley Mucot \t\nIslind  Mountain\nKootenay Belle \t\nMcGillivray  \t\nPacific Nickel \t\nPend Oreille  .......\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold    ..... .\nReevii-MicDonild\nReno Gold      \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak Premier .. _\nTaylor B. R.\nOILS\nA. P. Coniolidited\nAnglo Canadian ...\nCalg. li Edmonton\nCommoil\nCommonwealth ...\nHome , ...\nMcDougiU-Segur ...\nMercury    \t\nMil! City Peu ._\u2022.....\nOkilti Com \t\nRoyal Can      ...\nRoyilite .  ...\nSouth End Pete\n.18\n.08\n125\nI JO\n39\n.30\nX\n.72\n.60\n.    05H\n.   38\nm\n.   .17\n.   .22\n2 3.1\n.03\n.03 Vi\n.    .05tt\n15\n.18\n100\n.17\n.20 Vi\n140\n21\n.74\n-o\n0(\n28\n2 12\nm,\nK\n05\n.03 Vi\n16 00\n.03 Vi    05\nFOR SALE: 1937 HUDSON EIGHT\nledaa. motor and differential over-\nhauled and renewed lait lummer.\nGas Heater, good tirei. Bargain\nfor quick sale bona fide purchaier.\nIrwin Service.\n(TAY SNCtfflc MOUNTED IN\nframe, luitable for power unit\nNaUon Auto Wrecken, 813 Vernon Street\nFOR SALE: IMl DODGE COACH.\nTirei ind general condition of car\nexcellent. Price $860. Phone 564 R\nor write PO. Box J7>.\nwftNfED-A iratfTDnwrn\nor a small  ear.  Box 4278, Duly\nNewi.\nBUY~YOUR TICK OF THE MAT-\nket\"   Used   Car  Now\u2014Sowerby-\nCuthbert  Ltd.  Nelion. B.C\nfdiTQtflCirmi -\"flkl F6KD\nLight  Delivery  truck' at reuonable price.   Box 4309. Daily Newa\nTRY USTOR>ATm_rCJTrAUTO\nWrecken. 180 Biker Street\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM OR ROOM WITH MEALS,\nIn private home. Box 4322, Dally\nNewi.\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nAn angered electric Ml can dli:\nchirge a ihock of abovt 480 voltl\u2014\nenough to kill a man.\nMontreal Stocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBathunt P. A P A\nCan CiUneie        \t\nCan Steamihip\nCon Min Se Smelting   ...\nDom Steel Se Cosl B\nH Smith Paper pld    ...\nUke of the Woodi \t\nBANKS\nCommerce  \u201e\t\nImperiil\nMontreil \t\nRoyil     \t\nCURS\nCan Industries B\nU4\n21\n$4t\n38\nI\n93\n18V4\n141\n'.IS\n182\n\u25a0A')':\nBoard to Allow\nPried Increase In\nFarm Machinery\nOTTAWA, Merch 1\u00bb (CP), - The\nWartime Pricei and Tride Board\nannounced today lt has permitted\nfarm machinery companlei In Cenada to make minor adjustments In\ntheir pricei for carttta type* of\nmichlnery, but hai not allowed adjustment upward to the full extent\nQt tbe lncreusei put Into effect In\nthe United Statea tor similar machines.\nIncreases in the United Statea .for\nthese machines hsve ranged from 1\nto 17 per cent, but the maximum\nIncrease allowed in C\u00bbnad| by a recent order of the Board li limited\nto 6 per cant.\nMoit Canadian companlei had\nmade price adjustment! before the\nbilk period for celling pricei was\niet at Sept. 15 to Oct. 11, 1941, and\nno further adjustments can be mtde\nby tHfie companlei In reipect of\nlinei on which iuch adjuitmenti\nhad been made, laid H. H, Bloom,\nAdminiitritor ot Farm Machinery.\nHowever, a number of companlei\nhad not been able to make their adjuitmenti before the celling period\nwas. fixed. Theie were moitly lm.\nporting companlei, held up in their\nadjuitmenti becime Washington\nhad not yet dealt with their application! for adjustment ln their U.8\nprices, upon which their Canadian\nprices were necessarily based. The\nboard's order hil now mide allowance for theie companlei, but in no\ncase ls their acquitment upward\npermitted to exceed 5 per cent.\nBANK OF ENGLAND -\nDECLARES DIVIDEND\nLONDON, March 19 (CP) -\nMontague Norman, Governor of the\nBank of England, announced to the\ngeneral meeting of the Bank today\na half yearly dividend of 8 per cent,\nless tax. This is the same as Ior the\nlast nine yean.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAm Smelt It Ref          89VI\nAmerican Telephone  118%\nAmerican Tobacco  38Vi\nBendix Aviation  \u2014 36^\nBeth  Steel    OOVi\nBorden   19\nCanadian Pacific       4V(\nC Wright pfd            7%\nEaslman Kodak   119\nGeneral Electrio   M\nGeneral Foodi  JOVi\n34Vt\n2.3%\n17\nV\\\nGeneral Motori \t\nGreat Nor pfd\nInternational Nickel\nKen Copper \t\nPullman      \t\nRadio  Corporation        2*',\nSafeway Storei    38'i\nStudebaker       3\nTexas Gulf Sul  30>i\nUnion Cirbide     ..-  8OV4\nUnion Oil of Cal    11V,\nUnited  Aircraft  32Vi\nU. S. Rubber   14%\nU. S. Steel  ~  51\nWes'   Electric  69Vi\nWINNIPEG  CRAIN\nWINNIPEG,    March  19   (CP)   -\nGram Futures Quotation!\nOpen High Low Cloie\nWHEAT-\nMay 79Vi   \u2014      \u2014\nJuly 80*   -      -\nOATS\u2014\n...   51V4   51%   51\n501   80Vi   49V4\n49\"-;\nMay\nJuly\nOct.\nBARLEY\n49%    49\n79%\nB0%\n81\nvi\\\n4!)\nGERMANS REPORT\nSERBS KILLED IN\nFIERCE FIGHTING\nBERNE, Switzerland, March 18\n(Delayed) (AP)-Oerman newa dli-\npatchei,reported todty that 199 personi hid been killed ln recent fighting In the Southern pert of Axti-\nOcoupled Serbia.\nIn addition to 440 Yugoslav lol-\ndien previouily reported killed In\nfierce'fighting itToplica, IU later\nwere dam and eight mere were captured and ehet. Seven Serb puppet\npolice ware Mid to have been killed\nand eight woundid.\nThe Europe Preu Mid II Yugoslav! were killed near Nlich, while\nmore were reported ilaln and four\nexecuted ln another locality. Among\nthoie listed ai killed at Topllca was\none of the leaden of a Serb \"self-\nprotection unit,\" described at a\ncolonel tn the Yugoilav army.\n(anadian Airmen\nUnd in Britain\nOTTAWA, March 18 (CP)-The\nDepartment of National Defence\nfor Air today announced the safe\narrival ln the United Kingdom of\n1 further contingent of memben of\nthe Canadian armed forces.\nIt ls understood the movement\nwai relitlvely smill and wai composed of a composite group of Air\nForce men including both air and\nground crewi,\nJivi, the Iiland whoie name la 1\nlynonym for coffee, exporti more\ntea than China ln recent yeara\nMttl   NINk\nWAR SERVICES\nFUND EXPENSES\nBELOW 5 P.C.\nStatlitlci received from NaUonal\nHeadquarteri oi the Canadian Wu\nService! fund by E, E. L. Dewdney,\nNelaon Tieaiurer, ihow that the\ncombined cost! of aU Campaign and\nAdministration Expemei amounted\nto only 47 per cent of the total\namount lubscribed, one ot the low\neit flgurei recorded for a campaign\nof thli magnitude.\nBritiih Columbia subscription!\namounted to (813,478.90, (397,569.11\nhaving been collected to date, thla\nbeing (7.40 per cant of the total iub-\nicriptiom.\nThe Provincial Committee, under\nthe chalrmamhip of Lt. Col. 3. P.\nFell, believe this to bje an outitand\u00ab\nIng record.\nServlcet of campaign worken\nwere voluntary.\nAs at Jan, 31, 1942. tbe total aub.\nscribed In Canada amounted to (7,-\n241,717.64, (7,049,242.77 having been\ncollected, being 97.3 per cent of the\ntotal subscriptions.\nIn a letter to Mr. Dewdney lt I*\nannounced that tha Government will\nundertake the War Servlcei for th*\nbalance of 1942. The Auxiliary Serv.\nicei for the Armed Foreea wiU co\u00bb\ntlnue to be rendered by the Ca.\nnadian Legion, Salavatlon Army,\nY.M.C.A, Y.W.C.A., K. of C, and the\nNavy League of Canada.\nIt is expected that the Red Cron\nwill hold a leparate voluntary campaign thii Spring for an amount of\napproximately (8,000,000.\nTfljoAfaL JmdtL . * *\nNEW YORK-A minor rally In\nthe stock market today was sufficient to overcome later easiness and\nprices generally closed In lower\nground.\nThe comforting angle of the day's\nperformance was the evident reluctance of a number of pivotal stocki\nto give ground and the notable drying up ot telling.\nTORONTO\u2014The Toronto Stock\nMarket posted \u2022 few more losiei\nthan gilni In ill tour Index groupi\nbut ohingei wire narrow and the\ntone ihowed iome Improvement towards the end of the session.\nNew lowi for the year were icat-\ntired through the gold list.\nMONTREAL  \u2014  Trading   trends\nwen indefinite up to the final hour.\nVANCOUVER\u2014Goldi command'\ned trading interest but few prlci\nchanges were recorded.\nWINNIPEG \u2014 Minor mill demand\nand local transaction! comprised thi\nbulk of business on Winnipeg Grala\nExchange today. Wheat future!\ncloied unchanged with May et IBM\ncents a buihel and July at 80%B.\nIn the caih wheat pit here therl\nwere Inquiries for Noi. 1, 2 and I\nNorthern from ihlppen for openlnj\nof navigation on the Great Lakes.\nCHICAGO - Grain futurei loit\nmajor fractions In early trading and\nthen held within a narrow range for\nthe remainder of the .session.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh   Low    Cloie Change\n30 Industrial!    101.82   100.91   101.28 off    .7,1\n20  raili       \u201e      20.33     26.19     28.28 off     ,0(\n15 utilitiei       12.09    11.96     O07 off     .04\nTORONTO    STOCK      QUOTATIONS\n844   84%   64V,    64%\n63%   63%   83%   63%\n82%   62%   62%    62%\nRENTALS\nTOR RENT\nOround Floor Apartment in Green\nBlock, Victoria Street, (33.00.\nApirtment in  Medical Arti Block.\n(38.00.\n\u2022*    C T McHARDY\n554 Wird St. Nelion. B C\nB\"USHTESl~5TflCE8 AHD\nhousei for rent. Get our lut\nRobertion Reilty Co. Ltd, 847\nBaker Street.\nUNFURN. SUITE. 4 KMSTTfED-\nroomi. If deiired, (45 mo.; 1 fura.\nsuite $30 mo,   Kerr Apts.\n164\n85      -      \u2014\n164\n164\nIM\nM%\nflfiS\nWanted to rent good piano Res.\npomibli party. State rentil. Apply\nBox 426J. Daily Newi\ncoMtoHTABl.rt SmVi'fllATTfi\nhouse keeping rooms In Annable\nBlock. Wird St.. Ph  857R.\na tfo<\/E ran most away\nfrom home Strithcooi Hotel Apti\nTERRACE APTS. Beiutlful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites\nhousi\" t>A\u00bbTf.v rownswra\nPhone 628 X. Immedlite poieeis on\nWilght, CPR. Lunch Ctr\nswreo~H5ust.~f u R\" fr* c i\ndole In. 408 Silica.\n4liAtf HbUM.   ALSO   SUTTB\nPhone 116\nSML~HSErruRN. GARAGE  NR\nPark.   R. Hall, 818 Gordon IV\nMay\nJuly\nOct.\nFLAX-\nMay\nJuly     \t\nOct.\nRYE\u2014\nMay\nJuly     , ...\nOct.\nCash pricei:\nWhut\u20141 Hard 78%: 1 Nor 78%; 2\nNor 75; 3 Nor. 73%; 4 Nor. 71%: 3\nWheit 88H; 8 Wheit VIV,; Feed\nWheit 65%; 1 Amber Durum 82%,\nOati-2 C.W. 50%; Ex. 3 CW\n49%; 1 C.W. 48%; Ex. 1 Feed 48%;\n1 Feed 48; 2 Feed 46%; 3 Feed 44%.\nBarley\u20141 and 2 CW 6-row 64%;\n1 ind 1 CW, 1-row 64%: I CW\n6-row 82%; 1 Feed 61%; 3 Feed\n80%; 3 Feed 39%\nFlix-1 C.W 164; 3 C.W. 159%;\n3 CW. 1.54; 4 CW. 150\nRye-J C.W. 63%.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY. March 19 (CP).-Re-\nceipti, cittle 62; cilves J; hogs 25.\nNo sales on Wednesday's few\nmarket weight hogs. A few feeder\nhugs mide 10.5ft\u201411.10 ind sowi 8\u2014\n8 10 live weight it yards\nMedium to good butcher steers\n850\u20149 30. Medium light helfen 8\u2014\n8 75 Odd medium to good fed calves\nI\u2014 tO. Fiw medium to good cows\n625-7 23. Medium to good veiler.\n9 50\u201411.50. Medium to good itocker\niteen 8-^*50.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Mirch 19 (CP). -\nSpot: Butter, Qui, 33%B; Wutern\n(5%B. Eggs, Eastern A-large 30%\nto 31.\nFuturei: Butter (SB. April 34%,\ntraded; eggi, March MB.\nMiny cltlei in iilviglng abandoned streetcar nlli for Iron and\nsteel icrap. 1\nMINIS\nAnglo-Huronlin       200\nArntfleld Oold  \u2014 03%\nAunor - \u2014.     -95\nBagamac Rouyn       05%\nBase Metali Mlnlni  \u2014     07\nBeattie Oold Minei      .65\nBidgood Kirkland      .06\nBobjo Niinei 07 '\nCanadian Malartic      33\nCentral Pitrlcla     -     98\nConiaurum  Mines       60\nConiolidated M. Si 5.   38.23\nDome Mines   13.25\nEast Malartic    ,    133\nFalconbridge Nickel    2.93\nGod's Lake Oold  12\nGunnar Gold 08\nHollinger      6.75\nHudson Bay M 4 S   2450\nInternitlonil Nickel   31 82\nKirklind Lake       _     .45\nUke Shore Mlnu    790\nLamaqire Contact     3 45\nLittle Long Lac     97\nMacaiaa Minei    -   2.30\nMacLeod Cocklhutt     127\nMclntyre-Porcupine  37 23\nMcKenile Red Laki 88\nMining  Corporation    1.07\nNlplailng Mining       86\nNorinda   4173\nNormetal      .70\nPamour  porcupine   \u201e 50\nPerron Gold           1.02\nPickle Crow Gold         185\nPowell Rouyn Gold 40\nSin Antonio Gold       150\nSherritt Gordon  76\nSudbury  Basin           127\nSullivan Consolidated  50\nTeck-Hughn Gold     1 75\nTowigmic       ~ -..     08\nVenturei     3 30\nWilte Amulet         4 25\nWright Hirgrnv\" 1.92\nOILS\nBritiih American   . .13 52\nImperiil     8.82\nInter  Petrolem        1137\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Powir    \t\nBell Telephone\nBrewiri  Si Dlstillen ...\nB. C. Power A\nCan Car <i Foundry ......\nCin   Malting\nCan Pacific Rly     \t\nCm Ind Alcohol A   \t\nPraised Metali\nSteel of Can .....\n3V4\n57\nMl   2ATHE HI71SH CQtUMNA\/\nWi.^k.DBTUiliy COJ.ID.\/\n1 aji *e*ti\\ite^em h *qa p*^aii*4q et eitpatyeQ\ntiiWlW Catbel fed m W *\u2022\ngenu\u2014I 4 te*m (JmJ*a\n80\n146%\n4%\n20\n4%\n33%\n5%\n3%\nDomlnon.Bridge      22%\nDom Tar It Chem\nDiitlllen Seagrams\nFord of Canada A\nGoodyear Tin     . ..\nHamilton Bridge ....\nHiram Walker\nImperial Tobicco\nLobliw A\nMontreal Power \t\nNal  Steel  Car      .....\n3%\n21%\n13\n10\n2V,\n41%\n9%\n21\n\u25a021%\n30\nEXPERIENCE\ne*\nSTABILITY\nThe many years of\ninvestment experience\nand the facilities of an\nextensive organiza>\ntion are placed at the\nservice of our clients.\nThis service may be\nsecured at any of our\nbranches.\nA. E. AMES & CO.\nLIMITID\nBu.\u00abii flKdtteJ 1889\nVANCOUVER\nttteiaatammemamm\n\t\n\t\nPage  Hersey  \u2022  93%-\nMIIMM\n i^tm^me^am\nhaqi tin\n\/5=\nCIVIC tonight&sat-\nThe story of a soulless beauty mad with\ndesire for Dower.\ndesire for power.\n^rj**'\nBETTE DAVIS\nTheLittleFoxefc\nwith HERBERT MARSHALL\nTi'ivsi Wright. UicliMrilCurl-.iii\nAt 7:00-9:16\nExtra\u2014COLORED CARTOON, LATEST WORLD NEWS\nKIDDIES\u2014Don't mill \"LITTLE MEN\" at our Special\nMatinee Tomorrow at 2:00.\nWAR RISK and BOMBARDMENT\nINSURANCE\nWe can write it.\u2014Ask for full particulars.\nRobertson Realty Co. Ltd.\nPhone 68\n347 Baker St.\nPlebian Degree\nto Be Exemplified\nby Trail Knights\nOfficen ot tht Trail Senate, Constantly Knights of tht Cron Sunday, March 21, will exemplify the\nFirst or Plebian Degree of the ordtr on a long clan ot candidates ln\nSt. Anthony Parish Hill at Trail.\nThey will be headed by tht Cappe-\nllanui, Rev. Victor Caeiarlo, O.F.M.,\nand the Imperator, James Leckie.\nAfter the investiture, tht new\nKnights will be gueiti of tbe Senate at a smoker.\n\"Three former membera of tht\nCreiton Senate, George Archam-\nbault, Rene Archambault, and Pat\nGladu, now resident ln Trail, have\nbecome members of the Trail Senate.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEUON. B, C-FRIDAY MORNINO. MARCH M.\nJava's population indudea a crosi\nFISH\nfor Dinner Today at\nGrenfell's\nDance  'titi  Playmor\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nr?\u201ec,     Rhythm Kings\nFor your weekend dance party\njoin the big\ncrowd at Hie\nPlaymor. You'll\nhava a grand\ntime.\nA imart new\nplace fot your\ndancing, pleasure. Beautifully\ndecorated. Luxuriously .furnished.\nF. H. SMITH\nUp to the Minute\nIn Electric Instalationi\nPhone 666       351 Baker St.\nASK FOR\nHOOD'S\nBREAD\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nW. L. THOMPSON, Prop.\nDay and Night Service.\n54-hour Ambulance Service\n516 Kootenay St.\nPhone 311\n\"IT NEVER DRINKS TOO MUCH!\"\nA new featurt sf\nWILLARD\nBATTERIES\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Humt Hotel and Poit Offica\nStudy Courses to\nWomen's Services\nBY PATRICIA CONNOLLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, March IS (CP)-Ord\neri les or clerks, officers or \"other\nranks\"\u2014it makes no difference-\nmembers of tht Canadian Women's\nArmy. Corpi and Royal Canadian\nAir Forct (womtn'i dlviiion) now\nean spend thtir spare tlmt timing\ncollage degrees, If thty want to.\nSqdn. Ldr. Andrew Moore, National Director of Canadian Legion\nWar Services, todiy innounced Le.\nglon educational courses hivt betn\nmada available to members ot tht\nwomen'! services.\nHt said 40,000 mtn art reglitered tor till educational courses lh\nCanada and 11,000 mort overseas,\nand added:-\n\"We expect tht enrolment td bt\ntremendously Increased ll a result\nof tht studies btlng midt available\nto tht girls\"\nCentres at which womtn'i classes\nare already undtr wty Include Regina.\nApart from stenography courses\nconducted ln clinei md designed\nto glvt training for Jobi In tht services, tht women will be eligible to\ntakt tht regulir academic and technical courses by correspondence.\nOfficial! here said a considerable\nnumber of '\"CWACS\" and \"CWA-\nFFS\" art lntertited ln high ichool\ncounei from itcond yeir to mi-\ntrioulatloh and In Unlvtnlty cour-\nlei. One woman at London, Ont,\nla continuing post-graduate Univenlty itudiei.\nDon't forget\nCRAY'S\nHIGH-GRADE CANDY\nYou Saw It In tht Dilly News.\nSTAR GROCERY\nNELSON'S   FINEST   FOOD   STORE\nCRAPEFRUIT JUICE:\nNabob large, OQ.\n48 oz. tint; each ujC\nPEACHES: Royal City\nchoice halves; 9C\u00ab\n16 ox.; 2 tint .. JJt\nAPRICOTS:  Berryland\n29c\n25c\nwhole;\n16 oi.; 2 tint\nFRUIT  COCK\nGlen wood;\n16 oz. tin\nSALAD DRESSINC:\nTang large iQ\n32 oi. jar; each 4jl\nHONEY: Bee-    \u00a3Q\nklit; 4 Ib. tin .. UJC\nSOUP: Creen Pea or\nYellow Pea, quick to\nprepare; ont pkt. will\nmake 40 lervingi OA\nTO-\nNABOB\n^COFFEE.\nIn the Wartime Eeeonomy\nPackage\n2 lbs. . . $1.05\nEach\nHERRINGS    IN\nMATO SAUCE:\n2 tins\t\nSARDINES:\nGlacier; 2 tint .\nBEANS: Small,\nwhite; 4 Ibi. ..\nPEAS: Nabob\nquality, sieve 3\n2 tint\t\n29c\n25c\n29c\nfancy\n29c\nBecoming more popular every\nday. Try one of these delicious\nproducts and you will want to\ntry them all. Make a \"FRESH\"\nSTRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE\nfor your Sunday Dinner.\nPeat, Cut Beam, Whole Kernel\nCom: Each 24<\nStrawberries, Raspberries, Boy-\ntenberriei, Blueberries, Sliced\nPeachei, Apricoti, Cantaloup\nCubei: Each  32<\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONES\n10 11\nRICE: Carolina Of.\nRoie; 2 Ibi. . .. LOV,\nMACARONI:     OQ\nReady cut; 4 Ibi. CVZ\nCORN: Royal City,\nwhole kernel;     OQ.\n2 tim LiJZ\nCUT CREEN BEANS:\nOrchard Grove;   1ft.\nTin IUC\nPUFFED WHEAT:\nQuaker; OC\n3 pkti LOI\nSHREDDED OQ\nWHEAT: 2 pkts. LjC\nTEA: Fort York,\nOrange Pekoe;    'lim\nOLD DUTCH\nCLEANSER 1\n.EUREKA 07\nBLEACH: 2 bot. HI\nKLEENEX: Large pkg.\nof 500; QO\nEach     OOC\nBUTTER:    Claresholm,\n!i!^.. $1.20\nPURE PORK SAUSACE\nAyrihire. Lb. OQ.\ncello. Each .. . \u00a3OC\nECCS: Local Crade A\nMedium; PQ.\n2 dozen *JJ\\>\n:H    ?1r\n: 2 tins Lil\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nIn selecting their Fruit and Vegetables everyone   demandi   Quality,   Economy   and\nVariety. At the STAR yeu can be assured of all three.\nTOMATOES:  Mexican  Field,\nLb. ... -\t\nLETTUCE: Solid heads,\n2 (or\nRADISHES snd  GREEN   ONIONS:\n2   bunchei    \t\nGREEN PEPPERS:\nLb  .-.\u201e -\u2014\nCELERY:  Crisp,  green   heads,\nLb\t\nNEW CABBAGE: Solid, green heads,\nLb. ... \t\nNEW CARROTS, largt bunchei,\n2 for ... ....  _\nNEW BEETS: A real treat,\n2 bunchei    ....  -\t\nSPINACH: Freih from Texas,\n2 Ibs.\nm\n23*\n2#\n25<\n2#\n29<\nCAULIFLOWER: Large white heads,        *%ftA\nEach _  **T\nSWEET POTATOE8:\n3 Ibs.  _\t\nRHUBARB: Field grown,\n2 Ibs _\t\nLEMONS: Full of Juice,\nDo).        1 _.\nGRAPEFRUIT: Good size, -y-tA\n5 for \u201e...._ *3r\nWAGENER APPLES: Good for cooking, *%WA\n\u2022nd eating, 5 lbl.  *aWT\nDELICIOUS APPLES: Fancy wrapped,    *****\n3 Ibi  *9\u00a5\nSUNKIST ORANGES: A ilie for every purpoie.\n344'i, at, *UtA     22Cs, at, mnA\nI dot    w*r        2 doi. 09T\n2S8't, at. *QA       ISO's,  at, mnA\na doi. wj'r    2 dot **>\nThank P.T.A. for\nSchool Radios\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 19. - A\nvote of thanki to tho Roisland Pir-\nent-Teicher Anoclition for pur-\nchuinj four uied ridlos for the\nichooli was passed by Uw Boird\nof Sohool Truiteei Tueidiy night\nTwo of the ridlos hire been placed it the HacLetn School, ud the\notheri it the High SchooL They ire\nIntended to bring to the studenti\nC.B.C. school broadcasts, as well ,i\nother ^roidcuti of in educitlonil\nnature,\nTOO UT! TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SAHWIRSIY COWS AND\nCalvei. One heivy hone. Box\nH, Edgewood.\nTOR SAL&-DAIRY COW, DOT TO\nfreshen Much 20. Apply after 4\no'clock to Rou Heighton, fruit-\nvile, B.C.\nSKALID TENDBRfl WILL BI Accepted by the Ciitlefir Co-operi-\ntlve Tnniportitlon Society of\nCistleilr, B.C, on the comtnic-\ntlon of 1 bui, until the 27th diy\nof Mareh, 1MJ. The bus to hive\n\u2022 capidty of 30 puienfen, con-\n\u2022tructed on not leu than a 2V, ton\nehmls; to comply with standards\nfor passenger vehicle construction\n11 iet out by the Motor Cirrter\nAct for tbe Province of B. C, as\nadopted by the Public Utllltiei\nCommiuion on Miy 17,1M0. The\nbody ti to be cohstrueted of steel,\nrivetted, wlndowi to be equipped\nwith finite Safety Glass ind\nthe body Is to have in Interior\nheight of Seventy Inchei, minimum. There will not be in illuminated slfn on the front of the\nBui, no baggage ricks nor \u2022 baggage compirtment it the reer of\nthe Bus. All tenden to include\nprice of chassis tnd contain complete details of construction. The\nloweit or any tender not necessarily iccepted.\nwOmmmmmmm mo\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nW. H. Comp, Good Hskpg., \u00bbnd\nLife on nie it Valentine's.\nKelvlmtor\u2014the Queen of Refrig-\nerators\u2014sold ln Nelion by McKiy\nt,  Stretton.\nicetlon of the entire Orient, wtth\nsome nitlvei ipttking ell MO.\ntongues of the Indlu.      .\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONI 815\nThe Best In flower ind Vegetable\nSeedt\u2014Order Early\nKOOTENAY fLOWBt SHOP\nReid \"Out of the Night\" lUWilfi\nLending Library.   Btker Street\nCribbige tontght Eagle Hall. S\np.m. Eits, Prliei, JSc. Everybody\nWelcome\nThere will bt 1 meeting of the\nSchool Boird tt the City Hill tonight, I pjn.\nfreih meit, ind fiih.    Orocerlei.\nEverything of the BEST\nHALLIWELL'S fAtRWAY\nPhone MS\nPlay ufe! Buy your garden hole\ntoday. Wt hivt 1 full rtock of Vita., H-ln, ind M-ln., Dunlop quillty\nhose. No more available tfter pruent itock told.\u2014Hlppenon'i.\nATTENTION GOLFERS\nOpening meeUng of the Lidlei Auxiliary to Uie Golf Club, will bt held\nMonday, Mirch JJrd, it the home\nof Mn. R. Witaon, 924 Vimon\nStreet, 2 p.m. All memben ind\nothen Intereited pleue ittend.\nQuillty Grocerlei. We have e complete line, Su our Grocery Speclil\nCounter Fridiy ind Stturdiy.\nLAKESIDE SERVICE\nPhono'4M' Free Delivery\nOpp.  Lakeilde  Pirk\nCONSIRVI YOUR CAR\nPay Monthly-CMAC Budget\nPlan\nGUARANTEED WORK\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nR. W. DawsoB     Jtagi^\nSill Estate lod Insurance\"\nPHQNE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BlOC\u00bb|\nOFCODUVIR\nCOMPOUND\n.J\u00a3*MX>\nHall ver    Capsules    as   a\nprotection against Coldi.\n90c per box of (0\nonly ot your Rexall Store.\nFISH and CHIPS    Ity DHlg CO.\nBoa ISO\nOH BOY\nTh. PERCOlAT<&\u00a3\nSPECI. SALE\nUst\nLAMBERT\nLUMBER\nFor Economy\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuits 205\nMedical Arti BulMlna\nSo Many Admirers\nwhen   you   hive   i\npermanent thet\nbecomes you.\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nI        Phone 327\nJohnstone Block.\nFRIED\nFRESH\nFISHmd\nOYSTERS\nClub Cafe\n\\STERN\nRAND\nRN1SHES\nD ENAMELS\nRCH 20 \u2014 APRIL 15\nSAW 20^ AND 25%\nSave on yourlecorating costs,\nwe guarantee-class job with\nthis  well-kno-grade  Product.\nWestern\nPAINT\nWestern\nENAMEL\nWeitem\nSEMI-GLOSS\nQ....\nC....\n(J....\nc...\nQ....\nC...\nRegular\nPrice\n$1.30\n4.70\n1.65\n6.10\n1.55\n5.60\nSale\nPrice\n$1.04\n3.76\n1.24\n4.58\n1.16\n4.20\nASK ABOUT (E PRICE RANCE\nBINS\nLUMBECOALCO.\nYour NEW HAT\nfor Easter\nThey were designed wltl&\nSpring leisure wear irv\nmind. . . . Lightweight^\ncolorful blocked to fit'\nright. Browns, greys, blues,\nand green.\n^5.00 and up\nEMORY'S\n*\"' LIMITED **\nThe Men's Store\nFOR WANT AD SfcRVlCl\nPHONE 114\nCLAM CHOWDER\nTHE WAY IT SHOULD Big\nButler's CaK\nOpposite Daily Newi\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPHONE 25\nMed   Arts Blk\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nRIGHT NOW\nPrlve In ind have the car\nchecked over.\nQueen City Motort\nM1 Joiephine SL    Limited    Ph.'\nWatch for thi\nSUGAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\nIn Tomorrow's Paper\n\u25a0\nThings You led for Spring\nBamboo Garden   \"Baptone\"\nRakes\n25c \u00abtf\nSensational!\nNEW INTERIOR WALL FINISH\nThe ideal garden tool for Hill time of the yei\ncleaning flower beds and lawni.\nDries a beautiful flat finish\nFor use over kalsomine or wall paper.\nSeveral colors to choose from\nProtect* yoar garden from damage by dop. Jutt ' CttU)n '\/* G*1'0\" Qu>rt\n4 01. bottle ... 75* 12 os. tin ... *} 1. \u00abp4.1D <p\u00a3.lj \u00abpl.Zj\nLiquid Chaperone\nCLEARANC OF 14 ONLY\nDiamond Cs Cut Saws\nET\nPolish Cast Steel\u2014Lance Tooth.\nRegular price $6.00 Exceptional Valu H .\n$3-49\nSEE OURTIFUL SELECTION OF\nEngl Chinaware\nOpen Stock in 32 Piece Sett\nSets priced from \t\n$10.75\nCUPS and SAUCERS\nBeautiful Pattern!\n401 to fl.65\nWood, Vallce Hardware\nPHONE 26\nCOMFLIMITED\nThe Store of a Tid Things You Need\nMail ir Specialty\nNELSON, B. C.\n\u00ab_   ' _\n\u2014J\t\n_J^\ni_\u00ab^_\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_1942_03_20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415157","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"}]}}