{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415594":{"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":"2022-06-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1943-04-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415594\/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":" New Tax Deduction\nScale Will Hit        !^ML\n'\u25a0\u00a7 e t\nThis Week's Paycheaw _\nNew scale of Income Tax deductions came into effect with the first\npayday ln April. Those paid weekly will notice the full difference on\ntheir paychecks tomorrow. a\nThere ii no Increaie in the rates but there is an lncreast ln payroll\ndeductions because 95 per cent instead of 90 per cent is now to be deducted tt the source and ln 1942 there was a credit for National Defence Tax\nwhich was paid ln the first part of the year and then abolished, or\nreplaced by the \"normal\" tax of 7 per cent which ls now treated as part\nOf the Income Tax.\nIn the table below are Illustrated differences between the prtsent\nacale of deductions and those which will apply trom the first payday ln\nApril. Examples given cover single persons without dependents, married\nwithout dependents and married with two dependents. For each additional dependent there Is an extra allowance of 8108 a year, made up of 828\nfrom \"normal\" tax and $80 from Income Tax, though the difference In\npayroll deductions will not be exactly this figure because only 95 per\ncent of tax due ii being collected at the lource.\nIn the following table the first line for each payroll pracket ls the\nprtsent tax deduction, the second line, ln bold face, li the new rite.\nActual tax deducted will generally be aomewhere between tha figure\ngiven for \"total tax\" and that figure less \"savings\" portion. Allowance li\nmade up to the limit of the \"savings\" portion for payment! on life insurance, mortgages, etc., as at present.\nWeekly\nPay\n$15\nSingle\nNo depndnts.\nTotal      Savings\nTax\n1.07       .78\n1.45       .75\nMarried\nNo depndnts.\nTotal      Savings\nTax\nMarried\nTwo depndnti.\nTotal   Savings\nTax'\n$20\n2.57\n3.40\n1.44\n1.50\n__\n.\t\n\t\n\t\n$25\n3.80\n5.25\n1.80\n1.90\n.90\n1.20\n*87\n.60\n.29\n.60\n.29\n.30\n$30\n5.37\n7.15\n2.16\n2.30\n3.18\n4.40\n2.09\n2.20\n.43\n.95\n.43\n.47\n$35\n7.36\n9.50\n2.52\n2.65\n4.92\n6.40\n3.04\n3.20\n1.69\n2.50\n1.17\n1.25\n$40\n9.15\n11.65\n2.88\n3.05\n6.73\n8.50\n3.60\n3.80\n.3.51\n4.55\n2.16\n2.30\n$45\n10.93\n13.75\n3.24\n3.40\n8.55\n10.60\n. 4.05\n4.25\n5.32\n6.65\n3.15\n3.35\n$50\n12.74\n15.90\n3.60\n3.80\n10.36\n12.70\n4.50\n4.75\n6.13\n8.75\n4.14\n4.40\nHANSON URGES\nFORGIVENESS\nOf'\u00abTAXES\nIlsley to Consider\nArguments\non Interest Penalty\nSOME CHANCES\nt  \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\nOTTAWA, April 8 (CP)-HoH.\nR. B. Hanion (Prog. Con York-\nSunbury) delivered the bulk of\nerltlclim directed at Income tax\nbudget resolutloni In tht Houie\ntf Commoni todty ind urtjtd torn,\nplett forglvtnen of 1*42 taxei.\nHe alio attacked the propoied\nehirge of Intereit on imounts by\nwhich taxpayers may underestimate\ntheir incomes for the current year\nFinance Minister Ilsley wid, as\nha aaid Wednesdiy, thit: to forgive\nthe entire 1942 tax, instead of the\n80 per cent proposed ln the budget, woudld Involve wholesale refunds to thost who have already\npaid more than SO per cent of last\nyear'i taxei, and completely up\u00abt\nthe budget estima'es.\nWith regard to the interest penalty for those who underestimate\ntheir 1943 incomei, the knitter md\nhe would takt into consderalon\nthe arguments preiented todiy when\nthe necessary cliuse Is placed ln the\namending bill after the resolutions\nare paued.\nMr, Ililey announced that he\nwould havt iome amendment! 4b\nthe resolutloni. Ont of theie, hi\n\u2022aid, would plact imill flrmi nearer to the position of corporatloni\nIniteid of treating them ai Individual!.\nHe alio repeated hli murine*\nof yeiterdiy that there would be\nconsideration of an amendment\nwhich would meet the objection to\ntreating anruliles or benefits paid\nfrom capital Is income.\n. When the second section of the\nreiolutlon wis taken up, having to\ndo with 1942 Investment income.\nMr. Ilsley offered an amendment\nwh'ch would provide that the lax\nremaining for payment on death ot\nthe recipient might be prepared in\na lump lum on or before April 30,\n1944. discounted it two per cent on\nlhe life expectancy of the recipient.\nMr. Hinion wai vehement in his\neondemmllon of what he described\nai a \"pemlty\" for thoie who eitimited their 1943 income it lesi\nthin It actually came to be. It wn\nimpossible for iny perion with investment! or In a profession iccur-\nitely to eitimate what Ihey would\nreceive until the year was ended,\nhe said.\nMr. Ilsley said all lhe Income tax\nform wsrned was that \"interest Is\npayable In reipect of late or Iniut-\nflrent  paymenti?\nUnleu there was such \u25a0 provlilon somt taxpiyen might estimate\nihclr incomei at a very low level or\nat nothing In order lo avoid*\"\"**\"!\npay-ai-we-earn  deductions.      '*?\nFailure to Deliver\nFull Order of\nCoal Brings Penalty\nVANCOUVER. April 8 (CP) -\nW'\"-m McKinnon wis fined ISO\nor i ihonth In j\u00abll by Police Migu-\ntrite H. S. Wood today on \u25a0 charge\nof obtaining money on false pre*\nlences from Mn. George Herring\nfor coil he did not deliver. Mrs.\nHerring ordered and paid for two\ntoni of coal but a checkup showed\ntbt delivery to bt 1300 poundi short.\n77-Year-Old Man\nFatally Beaten\nby Mental Patient\nST. CATHARINES, Ont,, April 8\n(OT.)\u2014Jamei Albert George, 77-\nyear-old bachelor, wai fatally beaten, today in an attack by a youth\nwho escaped from a detention room\nin the St Catharinei General Hoipital where he wai awaiting removal to a mental institution.\nPolice and hoipital authoritiei\niald the attacker wu William Mc-\nLelland, 18, of nearby Grantham\nTownship. After the attack he wai\ntaken into cuitody by police and\nlater taken to the Inititutlon.\nTwo German\nSeamen Escape\nSHERBROOKE, Que., April 8\n(CP)\u2014Official! of I neii\"by prisoner-of-war ' camp reported tonight\nthe escape of two German teamen\nbelieved to have fled the encampment shortly after dark.\nThe missing men were Identified\nas \u2014\nWilhelm Gratsch, 31, five feet 10t4\nlnt^iei tall, weight, 168 poundi, fair\ncomplexion, light brown hair, green\neyes, icar on cheit, tattoos on both\narms.\nErich Gron.lJS, five feet four\nInchei, 117 pounds, fs'ir complexion,\ndark brown hair, grey eyei, gold\nfillings In teeth.\nWord of the escape was flashed\nthroughout the Eastern townships\nand detachments of Royal Canadian\nMounted- Police and the Provost\nCorps blockaded roads leading to\nMontreal and the United SUtei\nborder. A ipeclil guard wn placed\nat railway lines.\nTo Tiy Australian\non Gold\nSmucgling Charge\nAUCKLAND, NZ. April 8 (CP\nCable\u2014Leo .Edward Morlind. a 42-\nyear-old Auitralian metillurgiit,\nwas committed for trill today on\ntwo chargea of stealing i total ol\n3850 ounces of gold belonging to\nthe Arahun Gold Dredging Company of Westiand, N.Z.. which he\nallegedly took to Cimia. ittempt-\nlng to smuggle some Into the United\nStates.\nMotland pleaded not guilty after\nCpl. Maxted of the Royal Canidlin\nMounted Police hid given evidence\nof hli Inveitlgatlon of the accured\nIn February, 1941, one day following hli arrest by United Statei\nCustoms Officers it Blaine, Wish.,\non a charge of attempting to smuggle bsrs of gold across the Canadian\nborder.\nLoan to B.C.\nExtended One Year\nOTTAWA, April 8 (CP)-A loan\nof 81M8.B81 due to the Dominion\nOovernment from the Province ot\nBritish Columbia n April 90. 1M3.\nhas been extended for one yeir\nunder luthorlty of in Order-n-\nCouncil tabled today In the House of\nCommoni by Finance Minister Ilsley.\n11   DIED  IN QUAKE\nSANTIAGO. Chile. Aprll I (AP)\n\u2014The Government announ|-d today thst 11 penoni were killed in\nthe eirthquake thit rocked nearly\nJ000 miles of the 1800-mile Chilein\nCout Tueidiy, The deith toll previously had bem eitimited it 18\nor 30. All the fitalltlei were in\ntht Ovillt area.\n >____.\nSM Um 17 Plants In Attack en U.S.\nIpa Off Guadalcanal.\u2014Page 8.       2Qf)l\nCanada'a Wtr Effort Amulnf, Eden ^\nTelli Commoni.\u2014Ptgt 4.\nComplttt Anglo-U.S. Agreement on Future\nFrench Policy.\u2014Pigt i.\nCANADA-FRIDAY MORNINQ. APRIL I, 1943\nNUMBER Ht\n8th ARMY NEARING 2nd JUNCTION\nGov't to Inquire\nInto Labor\nRelations, Wages\nOTTAWA, April 8 (CP)\u2014Plans for an immediate public\ninquiry into \"matters affecting labor relations and wage conditions in Canada\" were announced tonight by the National War\nLabor Board.\nAim of the Inquiry will be to formulate a report \"with\nconstructive recommendations for a co-ordinated program on\nlabor relations and wage matters.\"\n\"The situation prevailing in Canada today in respect to\nlabor matters generally, and having particular regard to the\nexisting war emergency, makes it appear necessary and advisable than an inquiry of this|\nkind should be instituted at UTUt tllffCCCEC\nSCORED\nBY RED TROOPS\nonce,\"  the Board said  in a\nstatement.\nPreliminary public lessioni will\nbe held ln Ottawa on Aprll IS and\n18, to make a general canvau of the\nmethods and program to be adopted\nin the Inquiry.\nIt wai underitood that deciiion\nil to whether later hearlngi will\nbe held outiide Ottawa would not\nbe taken until after the preliminary\nhearlngi had bten held.\nTha Board aald It wai anxioui\nto make clear that It welcomed\n\"tht wldtit poulble dlscuulon\"\nof III matters filling within ltl\nscope and relating to ltbor relations and waga condition! In Canada,\n' It luggeited four topic! for Inquiry:\n1. A review of exlitlng provision!\nof tht Government'i wage-itablllz-\natilon policy, \"having regard to the\ngeneral principle! underlying the\niame and the achievement ot utmost production for war needi.\"\n2. Function! and operation of the\nNational and Regional War Libor\nBoardi and their relationship to\neach other.\nt. A review Ot the Government*i\nlabor relation! policy, as outlined\nin order-ln-councll TC. 2688, \"and\nthe meani which mltht be adopted to achieve better application\nthereof with a view to the secur-\nlng of Improved relatloni between\nlabor and loduatry.\"    ,\n4. \"Any other matter! relevant to\nthe above, apeclfic or general, related to the complete and effective\norganization of lnduitry and labor\nfor the furtherance of the war ef-\ntitV\nIn order-ln-councll P. C. 2888,\npasaed June 19, 1940, the Government iet forth a number of general\nprinciples aimed at avoidance of\nlabor unreit during the war.\nThe order declare! that employees\nshout! be free to organize in trade\nunloni without Interference by employeri or their agents, and, through\ntheir tride union officers or other\nchosen representative!, to negotiite\nwith employer! or representative! of\nEmployeri' Associations, with the\nview to the conclualon of a collec-\nUve agreement.\nIt alio declares that workeri In\nthe exerclie of their right to organize ihould not use coercion or\nintimidation to Influence any person to Join their organization and\nthat wartime suspension of estao-\nlished labor  conditions  should  be\nbrought about only by agreement.\nIt declared that there ihould oe\nno stoppage of work in wartime\ndue  to strikes  or  lockouts  and\nthat where any difference cannot\nbe settled by negotiation, assist-\n' ance should be sought from the\nGovernment   Conciliation   Services.\nThe order layi thit there ihould\nbe recognition of fair and reasonable standard! of wage! with\nbonus paymenta, where necessary,\nto meet temporary war conditions.\nThere should be no undue lnereai-\nes In wocking hours.\nThe Board'i itatement laid that\nauthority for the holding of an Inquiry like the one planned li contained ln order-ln-councll P.C. 1141,\npaued when the Board wai recently reconltltuted. In IU preient form.\nChairman of the new three-man\nNational War Labor Board ll Mr.\nJuitice C. P. McTague of Toronto.\nThe other two member! ire Senator\nJ. J. Bench of St. Catharine!, Ont.,\nind J. L Cohen, K.C., of Toronto.\nIn conducting the Inquiry, the\nBoard uld. It will \"conduct public hearlngi which will ifford in\nopportunity to all public bodlei and\nto Individual!, whether repreientlng Industry, labor or other Interested sectioni of the community, a\nfull opportunity to present their\nvlewi and propoial! on these matter! upon- which the Board might\nformulate a report with comtruc-\ntive recommendatloni for i co-ordinated program on labor relation!\nand wage matteri\"\nLONDON, April 8 (CP) - The\nUnited Stales Embiiiy announced\nthit former Governor Hertwrt H\nLehman of New York, United Stitei\nDirector of. Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation, arrived In Londdn tonight.\nOccupy \"Favorable\nDefence Line\",\nBeat Back Infantry\nAIRMEN ACTIVE\nLONDON, April 8 (CP)- Rut-\n\u2022ltn troopi fighting apparently\nlocalized tank and Infantry battles In tht Izyum lector of tht\nDonttl Bailn scored luccetiat In\nboth offence and defence agalnit\ntha Germini today, tha Soviet\nmidnight communique aald tonight\nOn ont unnamed sector of this\nfront   the  Ruulani   attacked  the\nenemy and \"occupied jt favorable\ndefence line. In fighting for this\nline,\"   the   bulletin   continued,   \"a\ncompany of enemy Infantry   wai\nJSrifedinW'. .   \/    .   ... A   .....\nMirth of Balakltya, whloh la 27\nmllti Northweit of izyum on the\nrailroad from Kharkov, tha German! attacked with an Infantry\nbattalion lupported  by a doien\ntanki but were beaten back, tht\nRuulani iald. Three hundred and\nfifty   German   officen  and  men\nwere wiped out\nTheie lucceiiei were reported liter Moscow diipatchei told of the\nRuulani routing tht enemy trom\nleveral advantageous poiitloni in\nthe' Izyum lector after taking a\nheaa\/y toll of Nazi casualties ln the\nlast week or 10 dayi.\nElsewhere the front remained\nquiet. On the Weitern Front, where\nthe Ruulani'hive driven to about\n30 milei from the big Nazi base of\nSmolenik, the Soviet troopi \"fortified their poiitloni and conducted\nfighting reconnaissance,\" the midnight Bulletin said, adding that our\nartillery and Infantry arms wiped\nout more than 150 German officers\nand men, and lilenced two artillery\nbatteries.\"\nA flare-up of action to the South,\non the front West of Rostov, wai reported In which occisional blast!\nfrom artillery pieces were exchanged. One Soviet unit reported des-\ntroying six Nazi blockhouses and\npartially wiping out about a company of enemy Infantry.\nOn Wednuday, Red air unlti\non varioui lectori of thi front\ndeitroyid or damaged a score of\nGerman motor trucki with troopi\nand luppllu, blew up an ammunition dump and imuhtd 1 train,\nthe midnight communiqui uld.\nFires Set by Raids\non Berlin\nExhaust Fighters\nSTOCKHOLM, Aprll 8 (AP.) -\nPersoni returning from Berlln reported thit flre-flghten were 10\nexhiuited ifter the R.A.F. raldi on\nthe Germin capital March 27 and\n29 that most would \"have been unable to combat Incendiaries had the\nBritiih bomben returned for 1 third\nquick blow.\n(An RAF, commentator In London uld Wednesday that firefighters had been called to Berlln from\nai far away ai Leipzig during the\nraldi md mggeited thit R.AF-\nraids might be ipread to create\n\"strategic laturatlom\" of defences\nIn whole areas from the present\n\"tactical saturation!\" of ilngle city\ntargets)\nOther report! related that \u2022 bomb\nhit 1 train Just after It had left the\nPotidamer Station, killing 58 German officers returning to their poit!\nafter leivei.\nDlSPUTfS CAUSI LOSS\nOF 78,000 WORK DAYS\nLONDON, April 8 (CP.) - Erneit Bevin,. Miniiter of Labor ind\nNitlonal Service, told the Houie of\nCommoni today that about 78.000\nworking dayi had been lost In January and February through work\nstoppages due to induitrlal disputes.\nPUTS (EILING\nPRICES ON\nUl U.S. GOODS\nTo Prevent Switches\nin Jobs to\nObtain Higher Pay\nSOME EXCEPTIONS\nWASHINGTON, April 8 (AP.)\n\u2014In a drastic tightening of all\nwage and prict control! Pruldtnt\nRooievelt tonight took itopt to\ncombat Inflation by placing colling prleei on all commodltlei affecting coit of living In the United Statei, except whtrt iome adjuitmenti may ba necessary. Ht\nalio directed, on the iame conditloni .that there bt no furthtr Increuei In wagtt or ultrlei.\nThe President also directed Paul\nV. McNutt, War Manpower Commission \"Chairman, to prevent\niwitchei In Jobi to obtain higher pay\nunless iuch shifts would aid in the\neffective prosecution of the war.\nHOLD-THE-LINE   ORDER\nTht Preiident uld In an accompanying itatement that thli wai a\n\"hold-the-llne\" order under which\n\"all itemi affecting the coit of living are to be brought under control.\"\n\"No further prict Increuei,'' he\nuld, \"are to be sanctioned unlesi\nImperatively required by law. Adjuitmenti in tht price relationships between different commodltlei will bt permitted if iuch adjuitmenti can be made without Increasing the'general coit of living.\n\"But\u00abany further Inducements to\nmaintain or increaie production\nmust not be allowed to disturb the\npresent price level; juch further\ninducements whether they take the\nform ot support pricei or subsidies\nmust not be allowed to Increase\npricei to coniumeri. Of course, the\nextent tb which subsidies and other\npayments may be used to help keep\ndown the cost of living will depend\non Congressional authorization.\"\nCm the waga front, he declared:\n\"There ll to be no further Increaie\nln wage ratei or salary scales beyond the \"Little Steel' formula except where \u2022clearly necesiary lo correct aubstandarda of living. Reclaii-\nItlcatlons and promotions must not\nbe permitted to affect the general\nlevel of production costs or to Jui-\ntlfy price Increasei or to forestall\nprice reductloni.\"\nOne provlilon of the order directed attention of all Federal\nState and municipal authorltlei\nconcerned with rate! of common\ncarrlen or other public utilitiei to\ntbe stabilization program \"so that\nrate increase! will be disapproved\nand rate reductions effected\" con-\nilitently with the Stabilization Act\nand other applicable Federal, State\nor municipal law so as to keep down\nthe cost of living and effectuate purposes of the stabilization program.\n'To hold the line,\" Mr. Rooievelt said ln hli explanatory itatement, \"we cannot tolerate further\nIncreases In prices affecting the\ncost of living or further Increases\nIn general wage or salary rate! except where clearly neceuary to\ncorrect sub itandard living condl-\ndoni. The only way to hold the\nline li to stop trying to find Justifications for not holding it here or not\nholding it there.\"\n\"While no one itraw may break\na camel's back,\" the Prealdent declired, \"there alwayi li a lut\n\u2022triw.\"\n\"Wi cannot ifford to taki further chancei In relaxing tht line,\"\n'ht iald. \"We already havt taken\ntoo many.\"\nSay Allies Dropping\nParatroops to\nAid Balkan Fighters\nLONDON, Aiprll 8 (CP)-The Ger.\nmm radio claimed today that Allied paratroops \"dropped by plinei\nfrom Alexandria or Moscow\" ire\nhelping guerillas fight In Bosnia\nand asilitlng them In \"forming a\nBalkan vanguard for an Allied Invasion.\"\nAs a result Germsn mopplng-up\nopcrat;om In the Yugoslav Province\nare \"being carried out by a considerable force.\"\nUrge Easier Tax\nMeasures\nAqainst Farmers\nOTTAWA. April 8 (CP.) - Termer membera from all groups In\nthe Houst of Commoni united tonight In an appeal to the Government to be more generoui In the\nchirgei firmen may makt againit\ntheir Income for tax purpoiei. particularly In reipect to the work performed by the firm wife ind children.\nRobert Fair (N. D Battle River)\nwent further ind urged that the Income tax on farmeri be abolished\naltogether ilnce leu than 1500 out\nof tn eitlmated 750.000 firmen paid\nIncome tax lait yeir,\nAustralian Bomber*\nStrafe Jap\nShips for Full Hour\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nAUSTRALIA, Aprll t (Frlday)-\n(Afc)\u2014Auitralian flown Hudiom\nbombed and itrafed nearly a\nicore of imall Jipaneie ihlpi In\ntht trta between Auitralia and\nNetherlandi Ntw Guinea Thunday while to tha Northaatt heavy\nbomberi attacked scattered point!\nIn Naw Ireland, Ntw Britain and\nNew Gulntt, tht High Command\nannounced today.\nFor a full hour, ona Hudion\nbombed and itrafed a flotilla of\na doitn tntmy lupply barges\nEut of Ktuktnau, Netherlandi\nNew Gulnet. A motor patrol boat\nescorting tht flotilla and thret\nbargei were ut afire and the rut\nttrlouily dimiged.\nSWEDEN SEIZES\nMAPS FROM\nGERMAN TRAIN\nShowed Vital Details\nof Norway and\nSweden; Plan Inquiry\nTAKE CAR GOODS\nSTOCKHOLM, April I (AP.) -\nTht Swedish Foreign Offlct innounced tonight thtt mapi of\nSweden and Norway, which It deicrlbed \"u extraordinarily detailed,\" had bttn confiscated from\na frtlght car bound acrou Sweden from Finland to Gtrmany.\nAll goodi In tha oar wtrt removed by Swedlih authoritiu, tht\nannouncement uld, and a complttt Investigation hu bttn ordered by the Foreign Office\nDiscovery of the mapi came on\nthe annlveriary of Germany'i invasion ol Norway three yean ago and\nln the midst of a controversy over\nshipment! of German goods and\nsoldien through Sweden between\nGermany, Norway and Finland.\nSwedish customs and military\nofficials discovered the maps\nwhen inspected goodi wera being\ntransferred from one car to another at Haparanda in Northern\nSweden. What itepi Swedlih authoritiei will Uke will depehd on\nthe reiults of a full inquiry, the\nForeign Offica reported.\nThe confiscated mapi, lt wai announced, had rail telephone and\ncommunication llnea all marked.\nDiscovery of the maps recalled the\nprotests made when a German\nplane, forced down ln Sweden early\nin March, was found to be carrying\ndismounted machine gum.\nUnder 1 transit agreement between Germany and Sweden, courier planes acrou Sweden to the occupied countriei may not be of a\nmilitary nature, must have civilian\ncrewi and muit be unarmed.\nThe agreement also grant! German tfoopi permission to cross Sweden If going on or returning from\nleave.\nSay 500-Ton Steel\nMill May Be\nStarted at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Aprll 8 (CPJ) -\nTht Province uld today that\nGeorge E. Murphy, Portland, Ore.,\nindustrialist who seek! ipproval of\nthe United Statei War Production\nBoard for establishment of-a steel\nmill at Everett, Wash., has obtained option! on iron depoilti on Tex-\nada Island and at Zeballoi, on the\nWeit coist of Vancouver Iiland.\nThe paper uld Aid. Jack Price.\nChairman of the Civic Steel Committee, has been advlied Britiih Columbil Is included In Murphy'i development plans Mr. Price hai received \u2022 letter from Henry J. Lan-\ndahl, Secretary of the Pacific American Steel Corporation \"indicating\nthat a 500-ton mill may be itarted\nin thli Province by the ume interests as art represented by Murphy.\"\nLaGuardia More\nUseful in Job\nWASHINGTON, April 8 (AP) -\nSecretary of War Henry L Stimion uld todiy thit Mayor La Guardia of New York had iffered hli\nlervicei to the irmed forcei but\nthit \"It would be very difficult to\nfind my place In the Army\" where\nhe could be u helpful 11 ln hli present Job.\"\nNEW FLOOD THREAT\nAT RED DEER\nRED DEER, Alia., April 8 <CP>-\nA itcond flood wti threatened here\nttyilght, with nearby Waikuoo\nCreek overflowing onto Gitei Avenue ind covering about three or\nfour city blocks. Flrmi began moving their goodi 11 the new flood\nthreatened and Nararent College\nwu lurrounded by witer.\nDrives 15 Miles\nin Pursuit\nof Rommel Forces\nExpects to Meet Second U.S. Column *\nBetween Mezzouna and Gra iba;\n1 st Army Smashes Ahead Toward Tunis\nBy EDWARD KENNEDY\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 8\n(AP)\u2014The British 8th Army, gaining 15 miles in the coastal\npursuit of Marshal Rommel's forces, was reported tonight only\n25 miles from a junction with a second American column,\nwhich was driving toward the sea in the Maknassy-Mezzouna\nsKtor of Central Tunisia.\nIn the North Cen. K. A. N. Anderson's British 1st Army,\nstriking out Northeastward in|\nthe Medjez - El - Bab region.\nreached a point within 27 airline miles of the Axis stronghold of Tunis.\nField diipatchei aald all Southern Tunlila now ii in Allied handi\nafter tht Britiih 8th Army ihattered tht Wadl Akarit linei and made\nIts flrit Junction with the Americana on the Galia-Gabei road.\nThe next Juncture of the Britiih\nforcei with an American column il\nexpected ln the area between Mez-\nxouna and Graibi,\" more than 80\nmiles up the coait from Gabei.\nThtrt wtrt Indlettlom that ad-\nvanot 8th Army troopi tlrtady\nhad iwtpt btyond Ctkhlrt  (La\nSkhlrrt),.. a   coaital   itttlement\nwithin 80 mllti of Sfax.\nTwenty-flvt mllti lo tht Northwut United Statei troopi under\nLt-Qen. Gtorgt 8. Pttton wert\nbattling Otrmtn irmortd columni\nnear Mtiount in an effort to\nbreak through to the iea and out\noff Rommel'i rttrttt\nThe iwift 8th Army pursuit alio\nindicated that Rommel'would he\nunable to make another defensive\nstand ln Cekhlra sector between the\nsea and the Sebkret Salt Marsh.\nThe American! fighting near Mei-\nzouna are leas than 25 miles from\nGraiba on the coaital road along\nwhich Rommel now ii retreating.\nMilitary observeri pointed out that\niteady preiflire on Rommel may\nforce him to run clear up the coai'.\nto the mountains North of Sousse,\n120 airline miles North of the broken Akarit Line.\nRelentless Allied air hammering was ipeeding the enemy's\nflight\nBritish and American troops\nwere mopping up isolated pockets\nof reiiitance in the area between\nEl Guetar and the coast, burying\nAxil dead, sending the enemy\nwounded to hospitals, and methodically rounding up surrendering Itallani.\nFrench troops sweeping acrou the\nbig DJerid t**l marsh South of the\nGafsa-Gabes road knocked out remaining enemy positions, taking\nnumerous prisoners and war ma'e-\nrlal, a communique said \"ton.ght.\nBIO AERIAL JOB\nThe loss of every Axis piece of\nequipment made Rommel's situation all the more critical because\nAllied bombers also ire doing 1\ntremendous Job against Axis supply lines between Tunisia and Sicily.\nIn thi last week theie ilrmin\nhit 83 thlpt, nine of which unk\nImmedlitely. Miny of the otheri\nwirt lift thine or In a linking\ncondition.\nNot only wai Rommel's flank menaced by the American column near\nMcHouni, but another United\nStatei group li operating In the\nNorth-Central sector between Fondouk and Kalrouan. The latter ii\n35 milei Southweit of Souve, where\nRommel il expected to hole up\neventually with Col.-Gen. Jurgen\nvon Arnlm's forces which are under preuure In the North.\nSURPRISE BLOW\nThe lit Army'i lurpriie blow at\n\u2022 new point on the long Axis defence line gained four or five miles\nyeiterdiy over country 10 difficult\nthst mulei largely were relied upon\nto move lupplies. Anderson ient\nhis troopa forward it dawn, and\nby noon the first objective and ISO\nprisoner! were taken.\nIt wai disclosed that the Germani, after being hurled from their\nWadl el Akarit poiltion at dawn\nTueiday, launched leveral determined counter-attacks that the 8th\nArmy repulsed only after heavy\nfighting.\nWhen thete counter-attacks failed, Rommel ipparently reilized his\nbig armored forces In front of the\nAmericini ilong the GifM-Gnbos\nroad were In danger of being trap-\npeal and began withdrawing them\nTueidiy night. The American in-\nfintry ind irmor Immediate'y\nipnng forward ifter the retreating\nGetmini and Itallani to reach 1\npoint 42 milei trom Gabes. and it\nwas there that they met advanced\npatroli of the British 8th Army yesterday. ,\nHELLO, YOU LIMEYI\"\nFront dlspatchei told how Sgt,\nJoseph A. Randall of State Center,\nIowa, helmeted and grinning, shouted \"hello, you limey!\" ind itepped forward to ihakt handa with\nSgt. A. W. Acland of Maldivale,\nLondon, for the flnt formal contact\nbetween BritUh forcei which hai\nchasatd Rommel 1500 milea fronf\"\nEgypt and the Amerlcani who ha4\nadvanced 140 miln from Kataerlnr\nPasi in lix weeki.\nTht historic mtttlng plice wn\ndeicrlbed by Acland aa \"a big\nItretch of wasteland In tht mlddla\nof nothing.\" Ht uld tha British\ntroopi camt very nttr firing on\ntheir Allies btfort thty eitabllihed their Identity. \u2022 \u25a0\nAllied Air Forcei of tha Middle:\nEait Joined the great fleet operating'\nfrom Tunisia and Algeria ln battering Axil Mediterranean bases, re-\nkindling-fire* ln Naplei and raining explosive! on Palermo and Mes- .\nsina harbors\u2014all without loas of a\nplane. Fighter-bombera from Malta\nbombed and itrafed industrial tar--\ngeti on Sicily. In all, It enemy air.\ncjaft were reported ihot down yeiterday in air fights, against the losi\nof 1 single Allied plane. Allied anti-\naircraft fire brought down three\nmore.\nAllied fliers ciught ont big\ngroup of Axli triniporti In I\nmountain pau In tht South tnd\nlift at leait 85 vehicles burning,\nwhile flghter-bomberi attacked a\ncluster of 20 to 28 tanki and ttt\ntomt ifire. In a ilngle aerial com-,\nbit In the.Northern lector R.A.P.\nSpitfires ihot down tight Stuka\ndive bomben.\nAmerican caiualtiei were iald to\nhave been heavy ai they struggled\nto dislodge the enemy trom advan.\ntageous positions In the highlands\nbefore the 8th Army rooted Rommel from his Wadi defences Tuesday and relieved the pressure on\nthe Americans. *\nThe German military comments-'\ntor, Capt. Ludwig Sertorioui claim-\ned a counter-attack by Rommel'i\ntanks Wednesday morning prevented an earlier junction of Britiah\nand American forces tnat would\nhave cut off a German group In the\nDjebel Chemsi region. \"In hand-to-\nhand fighting enough time was\ngained to allow the last six formations to retreat ln good order. \"Hie\nJunction of British and American\nforces thus was effected outside tha\nGerman linei.\"\nSay Prisoners\nDamage Jail\nQUEBEC, April 8 (CP)-The Qua-\nbee Chronlcle-Tolegriph re\u00ab?orted\ntoday in a newsfiage itory thit it\nhad learned from \"relliile aourcea\"\nIha*. \"serloui damage\" wu civued\nin ihe Quebec Jill lait night by prisoners believed to bf protesting ostr\nfood snd new regulations resulting\nIn an earlier return to their ctUi\nat night.\nThe Jall'i population generally\nnumber! 10.\nAttomey-Genenl Leon CiigralB\nuid he had \"nothing to Uy\" on tM\nreport., adding thit he could nelthtt\nconfirm nor deny them. Sheriff\nLaureat Laplerre uld tht mstter\nwas \"of no importance\" ind declined to comment further.\nThe Chronicle-Telegraph itory\nlaid, in part:\n\"Prisoners broke a number of windows, smashed many benchei and\nother furniture ind dirtied lOma\nsections of the Jul. They wera fln\u00ab\nally rounded up and relumed to\ntheir colli where they nre still under\nlock and key. A iquad of Quchec\nProvincial Police hive re-lnforctd\nregular prison guardi.\"\nCALL  OFF WALKOUT\n.PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., April I\n(CP)-A walkout threatened by\nlocal shpyard workeri through thi\nAllied Tradei Council ,n promt\nigainst railng conditions 1: the yard\nha\u00ab hern obviated by Ihe agrc-moiH\nnf Wart mc Housing Limited to install a dietician.\n __\u2014\u2014\nNELSON DAILY NIWS,  FRIDAY, APRIL 9,  194!\nMHUHPLAHES\nDOWNED IN\nTWO BIG RAIDS\nR.A.F. Resumes Day\n.  and Night\nAttacks on Nazis\nRUHR BATTERED\nLONDON, Aprll * (Friday).\n(CP)\u2014R.A.F. bomberi raided the\nInduitrlal Ruhr Valley of Germany Thuriday night, It waa dli-\noloaed today,\nLONDON, April 8 (CP)\u2014Car-\nrylng the aerial war back to the\ncontinent after a lull, the RAJ*,\ndamaged a radio itation near Us-\nhant et the too of the Brittany\nPeninsula In widespread daylight\nfighter sweeps orar France today and flghter^bombers pounded\na Oerman airdrome at Trique-\nville.near Le Havre In an evening\nraid.\n\u2022 Typhoons and' *3p!tfires escorted\nthe iwlft bombers on the late day\nattacks. Two fighteri were lost ln\nthe operations.\nEighty German planei, including\nmany from Reichsmarshal Goering's\nElite yellow - nose Focke - Wulf\nlighter squadroni, were destroyed\nin running dogfights Incidental to\ntha American heavy bomber at-\n< tacks on the Renault Worki near\nParis last Sunday and the Erla Ae.ro\nEngine Factories at Antwerp on\nMonday, an official tally showed.\nForty-seven German planei were\nshot down In the Renault raid,\nmoat of them Focke-Wulf tighten,\ntho Bth U.8. Army Air Force\nHeadquarten laid.\nThe following day, attacking the\nErli Worki at Antwerp, the American bomberi deitroyed 23 Oerman tighten.\nEscorting R. A. F., Dominion md\nAllied fighteri shot down 10 more\nthillenging fighteri in both rsids,\npushing the overall figure to 80.\nEight bombers and eight fighters'\ndid not return from the missions.\nl*our bombers and seven fighters\nwere lost-on the Renault raid; four\nbomben ind one fighter over Ant-\n\"werp.\ntwo kimberley\nAirwomen\ncomplete course\nTwo Kimberley memberi of the\nRoyil Canadian Air Force, Women's\nDiviiion, have completed general\nclerki\" courses and have been grad\nuated from No. 2 Composite Train\ning School at Toronto. They are\nAw.S Nan Sutherland and Aw.2\ntcrnlne M. Aldrldge.\nBoth have been posted to stations\nreleasing men for other Air Force\nduties.\nMrs. J. J. McEwen\nin Hospital\nMrs. J. J. McEwen, 202 Union\nStreet, went to Kootenay Lake Genersl Hospital Thursday morning,\nwith an attack of flu.\nSS^Jo\u00bb\u00ab...\u00ab\u00ab,l,\nSub Minard's generously Into them,\n\u25a0 md get the blessed relief that thli\ngreat rubbing liniment has been brine-\n\u2022nig to people for over 60 years. For all\nsprains, twists, aches and soreneea of\n\u2022muscle or j oints; for colds and ordinary\nwn throat; for dandruff and Skin\ndisorders, Minard's is excellent\nOet a bottle today.\n1MB\nAllied Coast Ships\nSink 10 Enemy\nVessels in Month\nLONDON, AprU * (OP.) - Allied light coaital ships bate iunk\n10 enemy vassals and hive severely\ndamaged ilx others, Including several E-boats, ln hard-hitting raids\non Axil ihlpping In the English\nChannel and along the continental\ncoast ln the last month, tha Admiralty announced tonight.\nAllied losses were said to have\nconsisted only of one light cralt\nsunk ahd superficial damage to a\nfew other vessels. >\nPosl Offices and\nBanks Sell\n$3387 War Stamps\nNelson banks and post offices sold\nWar Saving* Stamps and Certificates to the value ot $3387.90 in\nMarch, reported' Mrs. G. S. Mclntoih of the I.O.D.E. committee ln\ncharge. v\nSales In March brought the total told by these agencies to $12,-\n20S' in the first three months ot\nthis year, and to $175,731.25 since\nWar Savings Stamps and Certificatei were placed on the market.\nBank sales were (2059; post office\n$1170.78; and sub-post office, $*157.75.\nSales by five schools amounted\nto $478.25 in March, made up as\nfollows:\nHume $130.00\nCentral  _  145.80\nJunior   High    _ _ 142.25\nHigh      _    41 50\nSt Joseph's   _    14.00\nTotsl _ .....1473.28\nWinnipeg Juniors\nBeat Quakers\nfor West (rown\nSaskatoon. Aprll 8 (CP)\u2014Winnipeg Rangers, \"Manitoba Champ\nIons, won the Western Canada Jun\nior Championihip here tonight as\nthey defeated Saskatoon Quakers,\nSaskatchewan representatives, 3-2\nIn the fourth game of their best-of-\nflve series.\nRsngers won the first two games\nat Winnipeg last week by 12-8 and\n7-2 and Quakers the third game\n12-4 here Tuesday night. The winners will meet lhe winners of the\nOshawa Generals-Montreal Canadiens series for the Dominion championship.\nEddie Coleman icored Rangers'\nwinning goal esrly ln the third period.\nBill Vlckers scored the Rangers'\nfirst period gosl off a pais from\nJoe Peterson and Church Russell\npassed to Ritchie McDonald for their\nsecond period marker.\nGerry Couture figured In both\nSaskatoon goals, scoring the first\nunassisted and passing to Eldy Ko-\nbussen for the second.\nj The game, which attracted 2850\n! fans, produced eight penaltlei. There\nI was no scoring while the teams were\nshort handed.\nRED RIVER FOLK\nMOVE ARTICLES\nFROM CELLARS\nSeine,. Assiniboine\nRivers Also\nThreaten Lands\"\nRISE STEADILY\nWINNIPEG, April t (CP) -\nReildenti along tha Red River began moving articles from baie-\nmenti todiy \u25a0\u25a0 loe and water roie\nInto bick yirdi.\nOfficials ot the city engineer's\ndepartment reported, however, that\nthere waa an overnight drop ot 1.8\nfeet ln the Red River but thla \"did\nnot mean theft the flood threat had\nvanished.\nReason for the drop, lt waa stated\nwas the fact that ice began to move\nfaster.\nOfficials warned that witer of\nthi South tnd Weit had not yet\nreached Winnipeg from North\nDakota, where hundredi of acrei\nhad been Inundated and more\nthan 200 familiei driven trom their\nhomes.\nCitliens living on the East side of\nthe Seine River, a tributary of the\nRed, about, eight miles South of\nWinnipeg, were ln Imminent danger of being flooded out as the river\noverflowed the crescent Road and\nwai reported rising steadily.\nWater in the Assiniboine was rls-\ninr steadily in Winnipeg and guardi\nwere posted at bridges to relieve\npossible lex jams.\nAt Brandon, the Assiniboine began to flow over some low-lying\nbanks West of the City and. officials\nwere watching the situation. Tho\nriver wai rising about one Inch an\nhour.\nAt Lockport, 17 m.ies North of\nWinnipeg, location of the St. Andrew's Locki, water ln the Red\nRiver was more than 20 feet above\nWinter ice level.\nReports from Emerson, Man.,\nJust North of the international\nborder, families living along the\nriver were removing articles from\nbasements as flood threats per.\nlisted. The Joe River, East of the\ntown, overflowed today compelling country reeldents to make\nlong detoUh to reach town.\nHigh water of the South Saskatchewan River near Saskatoon were\nreported receding today and the\nflood danger had passed. Several\nresidents who had evacuated are returning to their homes. '\n\u00ae\nARD'S\nCM. & S. to Operate\nInternational\nTunasten Mines\nTORONTO, April 8 (CT)\u2014International Tungsten Minei has entered into an agreement with Consolidated Mining k Smelting Company\nunder which the latter will take over\n'.he operation of the former's mine at\nGreat Slave Lake, contingent upon\nIhe remits of an examination of the\nproperty by smelten. Purpose will\nbe to place the mine ona production\nbasis In excess of that at which It\npreviously operated. Coniolidated\nSmelters estimates the sum of $328,-\n000 would be required for this purpose.\nA meeting of ihareholders of International Tungsten Mines will be\nheld April 15 in Toronto for the purpose of diicussing the agreement.\nDUFFUS\nSchool of Business\nCivU Service CIllMI\nSeymour and Pender, Vancouver, I. C\nGuide for Travellers\nBombers Strike\nAgalnat Naples\nCAIRO, April 8 (AP). - Allied\nheavy bombers blasted the battered\nItalian port of Naples and the Sicilian ferry terminus at Messina\nTuesday night, a Middle 'Eaat air\ncommunique aaid today,\nFirei were again itarted In the\nharbor, which has been the objective of -a series of devastating blows\nby Allied bombera. AH planes returned safely from Tuesday night's\nattack.\nIn the attack on Messina, bomb\nbursta were seen North of the harbor.\nA United Statea communique iald\nAmerican bomberi attacked Palermo harbor by daylight yesterday\nwith hits observed along the quay\nand in the vicinity of a icaplane\nstation. Fighters attacked the bombers but all returned safely.\nThink Japs Have\nReached Limit\nAN ADVANCED ALLIED {SASE\nIN THE .SOUTH PACIFIC, (Delayed)\u2014(AP.)\u2014Walter Nash, New\nZealand's Minister to Washington,\nbelieves Japan has reached Its limit\nof cohquest ln the Pacific. \"Nothing is sure In war,\" he said here,\n\"but lt appears the Japanese expansion ls stopped.\" .\nNash ls touring South Pacific bases en route from Waihington to\nNew Zealand.\n(Since this dispatch was written\nhis arrival In Auckland, N. Z., has\nbeen announced).\nAberhart Says He\nDidn't Know\nAbout Alaska Study\nEDMONTON, Apti! 8 (CP.)\nPremier Aberhart nid today that\nAlberta hai not baan Invited to attend a conference In Victoria next\nweek to study possibilities of economic development of Northern\nBritish Columbia and Alberta, Aluka aod the Yukon,\nThe Premier also said he wu unaware of the Intention of Russell K.\nOdell, of tha Minee and Reiourcei\nDepartment, Ottawa, to come to\nEdmonton after the Victoria conference to discuss the study with\nAlberta officials.\nA report from Ottawa Wednesday\nannouncing the conference, said Mr.\nOdell would coma to Edmonton,\nR. E. Gardner\nof Trail New\nKaslo (ity Clerk\nKASLO B, C.-The Kulo City\nCouncil met ln the -City Hall on\nMonday evening when an application for the post of City Clerk\nwas received from R. E. Gardner,\nlate of Trail, was accepted at a\n\u2022alary of $150 parr month.\nAfter some discussion it wis decided to have 100 copies of the 1942\n'Financial Statement printed for\npublication.\nO. Lambert and B. MoCreight of\nNelson waited on the Council for\nthe purpose of. leasing the Buchanan mill site for the erection of a\nsaw mill. Lambert Lumber Ltd.\nwill erect the mill and the logs\nwill be supplied by MT. McCreight.\nThe lease Is to commence from\nAprll 1.\nMayor E. Latham and Alderman\n0. W. Tlnkess were named a committee to arrange for the cutting\nof from 300 to 500 cords of wood for\nKaslo fuel for next Winter's uie,\nPlan Orderly\nDevelopment\nof Alaska Route\nWASHINGTON, April 8 (OP.)-\nCanada' and the United States are\ncombining to Insure orderly \"development along the 1871-mile route of\nthe Canadian-Alaskan Highway, it\nwas announced today by Interior\nSecretary Harold L Ickes.\nThe National Park Service ls cooperating with the War Department in a study of the Alaska portion of the road, particularly the\nprotection of the scenic and scientific features and the selection of natural areas for park end recreational\npurposes.\nCanadian and American officials\nwill collaborate In developing a\njoint policy for the protection and\ndevelopment of the lands flanking\n\u2022the strategic highway. Canada already has reserved an area of 10,-\n180 square miles on the Canadian'\nside of the Alaskan border. It also\nhas been suggested by Canadian\nauthorities, Ickes said, that an International park be established on\nboth ,8ldes of the boundary In the\nregion of the St. Ellas Mountain!.\nIckes said the highway li destined ultimately to become an Important travel artery through the Northwest .one that will be of recreational importance and will serve set-\ntlen who will follow when the road\nis opened to public travel after the\nwar.\nThe Interior Department, he iald,\nIi conducting a larger and more\ncomprehensive study through Its\ncommittee on Alaska to determine\nthe Industrial and commercial opportunities opened by the ro*\u00bbd\nwhich may affect the whole economic structure of the continent.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nj       \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nI Dufferin Hotel\nI    Soymour SL Vancouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated throughout  Phonei and  elevator.\nA.   PATTERSON,   lite   of\nColeman, Alta, Proprietor.\nCOMMONWEALTH CHIEF\nWINS FIRST VICTORY\nLONDON., Aprll 8 (CP) - Sir\nRichard Acland, founder of the tiny\nnew Common Wealth Party who recently gave his \u00a3250,000 family\nlands to a national trust, won hie\nfirst party victory it the polli yesterday.\nThe Party's candidate, Warrint\nOfficer John Lovaerieed, a Battle of\nBritain pilot, wai elected to Parliament from Eddlabugy, Cheihire,\nover the Llbenl National Candidate\nwho had the support of the Church-\nIll Government under the wartime\npolitical truce.\n1\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 i.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135      Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nWEYBURN SURVIVORS\nARRIVE IN TORONTO\nTORONTO, April 8 (CP.) - Survivors of the Canadian corvette\nWeyburn, iunk by enemy action In\nthe Mediterranean early In Feb-\nniary, arrived here today from an\nAtlantic port.\n(HERRIER PLANT\nNEN VOTE TO\nRETURN TO WORK\nFavor Closed Shop\nat Montreal\nMunitions Factory\nPLAN MEETINGS\nMONTREAL, Aprll I (CP) -\nStriking munltloni workers were\nreported tonight by Union officials to hivt voted by I \"lubitin-\ntill\" majority In todiy'i secret\nballot to return to their Jobs In\nth* huge Che[rler munltloni plant\nneir here.\nThe ballots, distributed to thi\nstrikers it \u2022 meeting ln the Malson-\nneuve Market, called for two replies\n\u2014whether they wlshod to return to\nwork and whether they were In\nfavor of a closed shop at the plant,\nabout 20 miln North of \"here,\nFigures on the reiult of the\nvote were not innounced but officiils of the Cherrler Munitions\nWorkers' Union (A. F. of L.) uid\nthst \u2022 \"substantial\" majority voted\nto return to work. They added\nthat the aecond question- was\ngiven an affirmative reply by\n\"nearly everyone.\"\nThe Union officials announced\nthat demands for reclassification\u2014\ncalling for the shifting of \"severil\nthousand\" workers Into higher wage\nbrackets\u2014would be placed In the\nhands of the Union Auditor who,\nIn turn, would meet Company delegate, the two to select t Chairman.\nTheir decisions will be submitted\nto the Federal Labor Department\nand the Allied War Supplies Corporation, which operates the plant.\nThe Union's demand for a new\nwage-bracket for 600-odd men md\nwomen \"working on \"dangerous\"\nJobs will be submitted to the.Na\ntlonal War Labor Board.\nOfficials expressed belief the\nplant would be in ful) operation\nagain tomorrow.\nThe walk-out, which it no time\nspread to include all the workers,\nstarted yesterday when 800 employees failed to report for work,\nbefore the passing of an 8 pm. dead\nline, set by the \"Cherrler Munitions\nWorks' Union (A.F.L.) for a reply\nfrom the Regional War Labor Board\nto demands for wage Increases.\nWalk-out of the WO wai declared unauthorized by Union\nofficlali, who alio dliclalmed reiponilbllity for ipread ef the\nitrike to many other workeri lut\nnight Before conducting \u2022 vote\non \u2022 return-to-work queitlon thll\nifternoon, Union offlclili warned\nthe workeri thit their elie could\nnot be Uken to the Nitlonil Wir\nLibor Boird until they were\nback it their Jobi.\n'John Cowling, Executive Assistant of Allied War Supplies Corporation, which operates the plant\nsaid \"Union officials did all they\ncould to keep the people at work.\nThey have all the machinery set up\nto deal with the questions of wages\nand classifications.\"\nWheat Futures\nCo Into\nSpectacular Slump\nWINNIPEG, April I (CT)-In\nmost .fpeotioular decline lino* f\ntember,  1940, Winnipeg wheat\ntures  prices todey slumped mi\nthan five cinti below tbe previous\nclose before recovering In late trtde.\nThe May price slumped 8*A to\n5% 'cents in \u2022 wive of selling but\nclosed 8H down from Tuesdiy flntl\nfigure at WW cents a buihel, July\nclosed 2V, to IV, cents lower et\nM\"M and October wu down three\ncenti it S8H.\n\t\n\u25a0\"*\nFoot\nFashions\nPresent Plan for\nDevelopment of\nWaler Projects\nOTTAWA, AprU 8 (AP)-A plan\nfor the development of Irrigation\nand other water conservation projects ln the Prairie Province* calling for a total expenditure of $111,-\n308,000 was presented to the House\nof Commons Post-War Reconstruction and Re-Establishment Committee today by George Spence, Director of Operations of Uie Prairie\nFarm Rehabilitation Act.\nIn his brief on the future possibilities of large water development\nin the Prairie Provinces, Mr, Spence\nuld there Is a group of eight Irrigation projects costing approximately $16,002,000 which could be constructed st once. These Included\nthe St. Mary and Milk River Development in Alberta, which had al\nready been recommended to the\nCommittee, and the Swift Current,\nSask., Irrigation Project now under\nconstruction.\nHe said the second group of six\nIrrigation projects, costing approximately $1,422,000, wu practically\nready for construction. Surveys\nhad been completed but some additional Information was still required\nand with adequate staff these could\nbe ready ln a year.\nPreliminary surveys for another\ngroup of IQ Irrigation projects at\na rough cost of $48,011,000 had been\nmade. Investigation still required\nto be made In greater detail but\nsufficient information wu available to indicate that they were all\nquite feasible and desirable.\nMr. Spence said still another\ngroup of six irrigation projects\u2014as\nyet unsurveyed\u2014wai known from\nreconnaissance to be possible. The\ntotal cost of these had been estimated, by a comparison with other\nprojects, to be about $16,290,000.\nThe total estimated expenditure\nof $81,415,000 would provide Irrigation for about 2,234,000 acres which\nin addition to the area now irrigated, would make a total of 3,000,-\n000 lores, he said.\nBladworth Has\nR*riken Ribs\nG. A. Bladworth, while doing\npa:nt work ln his boathouse Wednesday, fell Into the boathouse Well\nand broke two ribs. He was around\n\u00bbi usual Thunday.\nOLD ISLAND CHURCH\nDAMAGED BY FIRE\nVICTORIA, April 8 (CP.) - One\nof the oldest churches of Victoria,\nthe Salvation Army Citadel on\nBroad Street, suffered damage estimated at $10,000 In an early morning fire today. Cause of the blare,\nwhich broke out in the atlic of the\nchurch, was given by Fire Department authorities u defective wiring.\nKASLO\nHere's Welcome Relief From\nACUTE CATARRH\nPut a few dropt of Va-tro-nol up eech\nnostril and (ttl It go to work right\naarherr catarrh mlaery li .. . bringing\ni quick, soothing jJKfto\nVA-TRO-NOL\nKASLO. B. C. - Mr. tnd Mrs.\nChris Jensen spent several days In\nNelson.\nPte. George Palmer has left for\nMedicine Hit, after ipending his\nleave with his family In Kaslo.\nJ. Tonkin of Salmo ls visiting\nKaslo.\nMrs. Guy Browell has a guest\nMrs. J. B. Curran of Grind Frfrks.\nMrs. A. Pearson ll a patient ln\nVictorian   Hospital\nMrs. C. Moore and Mrs. A Brown\nvisited Nelson recently.\nPLYMOUTH, (CP)-Mlss J. M\nWonllcnmbe, serving with the W.\nR. N. 8.' ilnce lhe outbreak of the\nwar ai Superintendent of Penonnel,\nhu been nimed Deputy Dlrecor\nof the W R.M.s, In charge ot m.-m-\nnlrfg.    \u2022\nDonkeyi, which med to take children tor rides on the sands at one\nof Britain's peacetime seaside noil\nday resorts, are now doing war\nwork, They are led round the town\nevery day carrying sacks In which\nhousewives plice their lalvtge.\nABSENTEEISM IS\nTHREAT TO\nB.C. WAR INDUSTRY\nVANCOUVER, AprU 8 (CP.) -\nAbsenteeism, which threateni to become a major problem In British\nColumbia war Industry.wlll be corn-\nbatted by the Joint efforts of labor\nand management, it was decided at\na meeting of labor organisations and\nthe War Industries' Coordinating\nCommittee last night.\n\"Absenteeiim ls a question of\nmorale.\" said Gerald Heller, Personnel Manager at Dominion BrldKe\nCompany and Chairman of the\nmeeting. \"If the worker llkei his\nJob, he will make a real effort 'to\nget to the shop under any circumstances.\"\nThe labor and management\ngroups decided to make further independent studies of the problem\nand submit them at another meeting later this month.\nFeaturing\nHew Pumps - Ties - Oxfords \u2014 High\nHeels - Medium Heels \u2022 Walking\nHeels \u2014 Full Slie Range \u2014\n- THREE PRICES:\n$2.95-$345-$3.95\nMEN'S SUMMER SHOES\nMen's Scampers\u2014Meal for Spring wear \u2014 Tan - Black\n$2.75     $2.85     $4.95\nArmies of Occupied Countries Train\nin Britain for Day of Invasion\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LISTER, B. C- Nellie\nHuscroft spent s week ln Creston\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nPerry.\nCol. K. Lister returned from Kelowna where he attended the Tree\nFruit Board meeting.\nMrs. J. Stimson of Huscroft left\non Saturday for Kimberley where\nshe will be a guest of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Edgar.\nBob Huscroft and George Sikora\nwere Sunday visitors at Wynndel.\nUc. Gordon Sherik, of the R.C.\nA.F.. Alta., was a guest of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sherik.\nMn. Ed Siebert returned to her\nhome In Kimberley, after visiting\nrelatives here.\nAlbert Montgomery of Alice Siding was a Sunday visitor at Huscroft.\nEva Huscroft was a visitor at the\nhome of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey Sam-\nuelion at Canyon.\nAlbert Wocknlti arrived from\nKimberley to visit his mother, Mn.\nJoe Wocknitz and family.\nMrs. Garfield Gorril and daughter Elenore l#ft for Enerlod, Sask,\nwhere they will Join Mr. Oorrll.\nOtto Kockelt and daughter, J\"reda,\nleft on Sunday for Victoria.\nArthur Sommerfeld arrived from\nTrail to \u25a0visit hil parents, Mr. and\nMn. Ludwlg sommerfeld.\nAfter spending two weeki vlilting his grandparents, Mr. and Mri.'\nC. O. Montgomery, Mcrvln Montgomery left for hli home In Alice\nSiding.\nFrench Puzzled\nat Statement\nby Eisenhower\nLONDON, Aprll 8 (CP.) - Fight-\nIng French quarteri apparently\nwert puzzled today by dispatches\nfrom Algiers quoting Gen. Dwight\nD. Eisenhower as expressing \"lurpriie\" over a French National Committee itatement that he had aaked\nGen. Charles de Gaulle to postpone\nhis visit to North Africa.\nDeclaring that he saw no occaiion\nfor Gen. Elsenhower's surprise, a\nFighting French spokesman said the\nNational Committee rtterely had Issued Its statement ln explanation of\nthe Fighting. French leader's failure\nto depart as expected for conferences with Gen. Henri Giraud on\nthe unification of French forces\nfighting the Axis.\n\"De Gaulle had been expecting tn\ngo since shortly after the first of\nthe year,\" the ipokesman said, \"and\nthe reaion for the delay ln opening negotiations with Giraud otherwise could not be understood.\"\nDispatches from Algiers said the\ncomment Issued from Elsenhower's\nheadquarters did not deny the Allied Commander-In-CJhief had asked\nDe Gaulle not to make the trip,\nbut declared cryptically that, since\nthe Fighting French statement was\nIssued In London, Eisenhower \"had\nno doubt that a full itatement of the\ncircumstances\" will be made there.\nFighting French sources, however,\nsaid the National Committee did not\nplan a further itatement at the moment, adding that \"the text of Elien-\nhower'i letter will not be made\npublic because lt will add nothing\nto the caie.\"\nBy R08S MUNRO\nCanadian Pren Wtr Corrttpondtnl\nWITH EUROPEAN FORCES IN\nBRITAIN, April 8  (CP)\u2014You see\nthem on London streets, ln Scotlind and In the placid English\ncountryside.\nThey are the soldiers of Fighting\nFrance, Poland, the Netherlands,\nBelgium, Czechoslovakia and Ner-\nway, each wearing a shoulder flash\nbearing his country's name.\nWhen Invasion comes these men\nwill have I part. Perhaps some of\nthem will be with the Canadian,\nBritish or American Forces. They\nare part of a \"mighty army being\nrallied and prepared in the United\nKingdom for the biggest task probably in ill military history \u2014 the\nattack on the Continent.\nFrench troops have been training\nwith the Canadians here. There\nare Fighting French squsdroni ln\nthe Canadian Armored Division,\nCanadians on manoeuvres come into\ncontact, too, with Poles _and Czechs,\nparticularly d ur Ing \"Commando\ntraining in Scotland.\nF i gh 11 n g French Commando\ntroops have been with the Cans-\ndiani on one operation\u2014Dieppe\u2014\nand they are likely to be along on\nthe big show.. Many have been\nsent to the Middle East, North Africa arid other theatres of war where\nFrench forca are engaged.\nA Netherlands force In Britain has\nbeen preparing for a long time for\noperations. The Royal Netherlandi\nBrigade \"Princess Irene\" ls a crack\nformation which Iticludes many\nNetherlanders-who came from Hoi\nland In 19W or have escaped since.\nThere Is also a Netherlands Army\ncontingent In Canada which trains\ntroops for formations here.\nCzechoslovak soldiers evacuated\nto Britain when France Jell now\nconstitute a self-contained, independent brigade. It receives recruiti\nfrom all over the world, Including\nsome Czechs who came to Britain\nwith the Canadian Aray.\nA Belgian Army is stationed In\nBritain as well. Many, of the men\ncrossed the Channel In HMO. They\nguard a sector of the Brit-sh Coast\nand are ready to Jump to the Continent when the order is given.\nPolish forcet will be Included In\ntny lnvsdlng iimlei. Poland hli\none ot the largest armlet of the\nUnited Nations, Including Its troops\nln Britain and Abroad. Many of\nits men fought ln the French and\nNorwegian campaigns.\nNorway li repreientatd by I force\nln Britain, too. A Norwegian Army\ndetachment went to Spitsbergen\nwith the Canadians ln August, 1040,\nand otheTs have been on raldi to\nthe Lofoten Islands and Vaagso on\nthe Wert Coast of Norway. A Norwegian infantry battalion II under\nformation ln tht United States\nArmy.\nCAPE TOWN, (CP.)-Tht H\u00bbas-\nland Government reporti that 84,000\nSouth East Africans tre registered\nas peasant producer! of tobacco for\nthe IVa season. This ll an lnfretst\nof 88 per cent over 1941\nStubborn\nRheumatic Pain\nWatch Out for ARTHRITIS\nWhether you tr* feeling first\ntwinges or have suffered from those\nInsistent aches and pains for some\ntime, you owe lt to yourself to find\nout Just whtt ALLENRU, thtt great\nformula for relieving tht pains of\nRheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago\nand Neuritis, will do for you. ALLENRU acts fast\u2014conttloi no opiates. Must relieve nagging pain and\nsuffering or money back.. You can\nget ALLEItRU at Mann. Rutherford Co, and all druggists.\nTowler Fuel\nand Transfer\nCREEN HIU\nWESTERN MONARCH\nand CALT COALS\nFURNITURE MOVINO\nAustralian soldiers, ullori and\nairmen killed on war service in\nAuitralian territory will be burled\nipfcltl wtr cemeterlu now being\n\u2022Vial, ,1.\nMrs. Mara Heads\nCatholic Women\nROSSLAND, B. C, April 8\u2014Mri.\nMtn wai reelected Preiident of\nthe Catholic Women's Leigue, it\nltg innual meeting Tutsdty evening; Mrs. P. Lalonde. Mn. T.\nKnight, and Mn. E. Kamblck were\nelected First, Second and Third\nVlce-Presldenti,. respectively. Mrs.\nB Lawrle was named Secretary,\nMn. J. Mitchell, Treasurer, and Mri.\nP. Lalonde, Pirish Work Convener.\nMn. Russel Jones, Treasurer, and\nMn. Jack Mitchell, Finance Convener, gave their reporti for lait\nyear.\nVotei of thanki were extended to\nthe President, Mrs. Mara, and' to\nMrs. Mitchell, who convened the\nSt. Patrick's Tea; also to the Executive and memberi for their cooperation during tht put yetr.\nMri. R. I. Irwin wu the guett\nipeiker. tnd her topic, The HoUm-\nvrlvte' .League.\" She explained thai\nthe Houiewivei' League wu non-\npollticil and non-itcttrltn. Memben liked many queitlom, which\nthe ipeaker answered.\nEighteen memben were present.\nMrs. 'Man wat sjn the chair. At\nthe opening Rt. Rev. A. K. Maclntyre, V.G., recite,) the League\nPrayer\nJust Arrived . . .\nDRESS PANTS\nWORSTEDS,   TWEEDS,\nGABARDINES,   SHARKSKIN.\nPriced from:\n$4.50 ,o $9.00\nGODFREYS'  LIMITED\nPhone 270\nThe Home of Guaranteed Work Clothing.\n387 Baker St.\n.^yHlS\/ARADOL\nNearly all the girls\nare using them\"\nDr. Chase's PARADOL\nLn   .Jti-tJi.t-L'i   and   OUifA   Pauu\n Eden Says,\nComplete Anglo-U.S.\nAgreement on\nFuture French Policy\nLONDON, Aprll 8 (CP.\u2014For-\ntlgn Secretary Anthony Edtn, dli-\ncuulng hli rtctnt conferencei in\nWaihington btfort tht Houu tf\nCommoni, dlicloitd today ha had\nInvited State Secretary Cordell\nHull to visit London tnd uld ht\nwtH aatlifitd thtrt li \"complttt\nagreement\" between Brlttln and\ntht United Stattt on the \"future\npolicy toward Franot,\"\nTht Foreign Secretary uld of\nhli visit to Ottawa that \"Canada'i\nwar effort li truly amazing.\" The\nremark wat greeted with cheers.\nHe deicrlbed his conversations in\nWashington m similar to those he\nhad more than a year ago in Moscow with Premier Stalin and Foreign Commissar Molotov.\nHe also reported that he and\nUnited States authorities \"found a\nvery close similarity of outlook\" on\npost-war problems.\nHe said an agreement on policy\ntoward Spain, Portugal, Turkey and\nother European neutrals was reached and plans had been made for an\nimproved exchange of information\non enemy and enemy-occupied territories.\nEden said the invitation was ex-\nWIN YOUR FAMILY'S PRAISE\/\nTHE WS EMM CAMP SUR[\\\ngo nr mst mr mm )\npahcake\nPARTIES\nHBC Food Specials\nOn Sale Today, Saturday and Monday \u2014 Phonei 193-194\nFOODS THAT MAKE BLOOD\nROLLED OATS, Quick Cooking, 5 lb. sack ' 2<S<*-\nBRAN FLAKES, Ready to Serve, 2 pkgi V.lc\nPRUNES, Large Siie 30-40'a, 2 Ibs 29<\nBEANS, Small White, 2 lbs 17*\nTONIK WHEAT CERM, 12 oz. pkg 50*\nSODA BISCUITS, I.B.C, Dollar Boxei, Per box . .38.*\nCRAHAM WAFERS, Red Arrow, 1 Ib. pkg 22*\nSTONE WHEAT THINS, Per pkg 14*\nCOFFEE, Cavendish, Freih, Per Ib 44<\nKRAFT DINNER, Cooki in 7 Minutes'A pkg 18*\nOXO FLUID, Excellent for Craviei, 16 ox. bottle $1.10\nLOBSTER, Scalcct Brand, Vl'*, Per Hn 65*\nSAUSACES, Pure Pork, Per Ib 29*\nGELATINE, Knox'i Sparkling, pkg 21*\nFLOUR, Ellison's Vitamin B, 49 Ib. iack $1.45\nBAKING POWDER, Magic, 16 oz. tin 30*\nCORN FLAKES, Quaker, 3 pkgi 25*\nCARDEN SEEDS, Per pkg 5*, 10*, 15*\na*w**a*M*a trr tam tanx\nYOUR CHOICE OF $100 VICTORY BOND ot\nHOME\n*0>*.\nm\n(outside .only)\nMARSHALL-WELLS\nQUALITY   PAINTS\nIf you win Flnt Priie In\nMARSHALL-WELLS\nFREE LIMERICK CONTEST\nAlia S25.00 EXTRA In War lav-\ninji Cettilicitei to fint prlu win-\nmr If thi entry form is accompanitd\nby I label (torn iny ilzid cm \u2022(\nmy of Mirihill-Willl paints.\nFOUOW THESE EKY RULES\nI Simply write what you think la\nh. b\u00abt lait \u2022'.\u00ab f\u00ab th. L,m.Hck\nON AN OFFICIAL ENTRY\nMM WHICH YOUR MAR-\nIHAIL-WELW PAINT DEALER\nWILL \u00abIVE VOU FRlt-\nWITHOUT OBLIGATION.\n2. You miy mt \u25a0\u00bb \u00bb m,n>\nontrleiiayouw.ihljut MO ENTRY\nIt ELIGIBLE UNLESS IT li\nACCOMPANIED BY OR WRITTEN ON THE OFFICIAL FREE\nENTRY FORM.\nj. Yout mtry muit bi In th. mail\nbefon mi-inight Miy SI, !\u00bb\u00ab\u2022\ni  Mill  your  \"try  to  Contiit\nllianaVir.MarihallW.lli Co. Ltd.,\nWlsnian. Man.\n,. An\u00bb tttidtnt ol Wutirn OM-\n.lo, Manitoba, \u00abMk*tthejjW.jM*\nbitu md Btltlih Colum la may\neompit.. .\u00ab\u2022\u00bb M\u00ab;h' MW,,I,\nimployM *\"t th,lf l,mi\"\"'\n( Wlnnari will b\u00ab tnnouMrf\nibout June 10th md wwytful\nnttst.nt. \"-HI b* \u00ab\u2022 \u00abWlb\nmall. Judgn d.tlilon will b. fins\nEvirybody hu i ctunti to win thi. pnltiv.ly Im\nconteit. Send your tatty todiy\u2014and whin you buy\npaint, f.membtt - \u25a0Mifihall-Wtlti Quillty Flint givei\ni mon duribli finlih, i tolld, wuthtr-ttilitlni cutlng\nthit ptotecti your homo ind glvn It luting btauty it\nlowtt coil.\nMARSHALL-WELLS\nPAINTS    VARNIbHf'j    FINISHES\n4 tTHII  PRIZES TOTHUH 1125,00\nIt FOLLOWS:\nSECOND PRIZE $50.00 Vlctoty\nBond,\nTHIRD. FOURTH ind FIFTH\nPRIZES 125.00 uch in Wir Sivingi C.rtificitn.\nCIUPUTI THII LIMIIM\nWith Mitihill-Wei li piint I will gtt,\nThi (meit piint job I'vt tun ytt,\nI know thit li true,\nAnd It laid longer, too,\n(Gtt in official .ntt\/ form FREE\nftom  your  M.tih.ll-W.lli  Plint\ndealer    to    mako   yout   aniwer\nillglblo.\nMenhill-Wellt Paint Product. May Be Obtained From:\nCRANBROOK\nPtrki Hirdwin\nCRESTON\nCrttton Valley Co-Optratlvo\nAnoclition\nGRAND FORKS\nGrind  Forki  Furnlturt  *\nHirdwin Co, Ltd.\nKIMBERLEY\nFabro Building A Supply\nCo., Ltd.\nROSSLAND\nHuntor Broi., Ltd.\nTRAIL\nTrill Mercantile Co.\n\u2014\u2014\ntended to \"Hull with th. approval ot\nPrime Mlnlater Churchill, but ha\ndid oot itate whether Hull had accepted. |\nHe iald hli discussions In Washington fell miinly under three headings: Flrit, \"operational mitten\u2014\nimmediate queitlom concerned with\nthe conduct of tha war.\"; lecond,\n\"political cooperation between ui in\nconnection with actual military operation* that have taken place or\nwill take placa\"| and. third, queitlom arising out of the war.\nEden mid he though \"the Prime\nMlniiter waa satisfied with the\nprogress that wai made\" ln the discussion of question! concerning the\nconduct of the war.\n\"I came back,\" Eden said, \"greatly\nencouraged by the large measure of\ngeneral agreelnent which we found\nand I am certain that will be of\ngreat value to ui in future exchanges we ahal! have, both with\nthe United States and other Governments who are our Alliei.\"\nThis was the first reference he\nmade which aeemed to apply to\nRussia.\n\"Our converiatlom constitute a\nbeginlng,\" Eden said. 'A start has\nbeen made In the best conditions. I\nclaim no more for them than that\nThey will be followed up.\"\nEden concluded wtth the itate\nment that hit trip had been fun.\ndamentally the molt worthwhile\nof hii career.\n\"My doling Impression of Ami\nrlca,\" he taid, \"wat one of I young\nand vigoroui people, wholeheirt-\ned In tho itruggle ard determined\nto work together with the other\nUnited Nationi In war and In\npeace.\n\"I have come back with, | tay\nfrankly, a different view of the\ntentlmenti of tho United States\ntoward both thli itruggle and the\npoit-war period. I believe the op\nportunltlet that are opened to ut, i\ngroat though the difficultiei are,\nare wider In .cope than I thought\npollble.\"\nEden disclosea nothing of any military matters which may have been\ndiscused.\nWhile a \"close dimilarity of outlook\" waa found on the maintenance\nof future peace by the United Nations, the Foreign Secretary emphasized that the exchanges were\n\"entirely exploratory,\" committing\nno one.\nAdvocating that relations between\nthe United States and Britain be\n\"based on common interest in the\nmaintenance of world peace\" and\nnot on sentiment, he stated that Un-\nAmerican people recognized the\nneed for \"some authority to ensure\nby force\" that the Axis powers\nkeep the peace.\nIn emphasizing that there should\nbe a close coordination in the political sphere as in the military, the\nForeign Secretary said that \"if we\nhave a close understanding at least ]\nwe are better able to stand the\nstrain and stresses that will inevitably arise as military campaigns\nprogress.\"\nHe took as an example the quei-\ntion of North Africa and said there\nno doubt had been so misunderstanding in Britain of the purpose\nof the U.S. administration in maintaining relations with Vichy.\nThen he said:\n\"I can assure the House that they\n(the U.S. adminsitratibn) thought,\nand we agreed with them, that by\nmaintaining relations with Vichy it\nwai posiible to keep open a useful\nwindow in Europe which must otherwise be !hut and I have no doubt\nthat we were right and they were\nright.\n\"It was only through maintenance\nof those relations that the American\nGovernment were able to place a\nconsiderable number of agents in\nNorth Africa who were quite valuable in opening the way for Allied\noops.\"\nWASHINGTON, April 8 (API-\nSecretary of State Hull said today\nthat the British Government's invitation to him to visit London wa*a\nmuch appreciated, but that he had\nnot formulated any plans in this\nconnection.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, APRIL 9,  194S\nGirls' Suits\nSuits in Cay Plaids ... A swing\nnumber gay all - wool plaid in\njacket and skirt, three-button\njacket has patch pockets. Colors:\nRose, Blue Plaid. Sizes 8-12.\nPrice:\n$6.95\nChildren's\nCoats\nPolo Cloth Coat. Wool and\nRayon Polo Cloth Coat. Has\nset-in slanting pockets to give\nit dash. Belt at panel back.\nSizes 8 to 14.  Price:\n$12.95\nGeneral Grant Tank\nStands Up\nUnder Direct Hits\nCAIRO. April 8 (AP)-Four direct hits from a German 105 millimetre gun failed to knock out a\nGeneral Grant tank in recent savage\nfighting in a forward area, Cpl.\nHarold Clacksfield, of Bexhill-on-\nSea,  England, said  today.\nReport Von Arnim\nand Rommel\nNow Under Messe\nNEW YORK, April 8 (CP)- A\nLondon broadcast recorded :oday by-\nCBS said that General Giovanni\nMesse, an Italian, was lhe new\nCommander in Chief in Tunisia.\n\"A   Berlln    military   spokesman\nsavs that Rommel and Von  Arnim\nare now both under General Messe's\ncommand\", it quoted the broadcast I AFRICA,   April   8   (CPl   -   Paul\nas saying. < Park.  22-year-old clerk  from  Sim-\nChildren's\nAnklets\nA large assortment of Kiddies'\nSockees in plain shades or\nstripes with elastic tops. Sizes\n5 to 8V2. Per pair:\n10c 25c 29c\nKiddies' Coats\nA bonny young Coat on tailored lines, of wool\nand rayon tweed. Sateen lined. Colors: Blue,\nRose, Beige.  Sizes 6-10. $7 QC\nPrice    \u00a7 t, Jo\nLong Sleeved, Tailored\nBlouses\nTailored  Blouses, witti red saddle-stitch\nthat are ideal for wear with suits or\ncoats.  Sizes 8 to 10.  Price\t\ntrim,\n$2.95\nMen's Spring Suits\nMade up from fine Worsted materials \u2014 Choice\nof natural or standard models. Shades of Blue,\nBrown or Crey.\n$19.95\nMen's Hats\nMen's \"Stylecrest\"\nOxfords\nExclusive at ttie \"Bay\" . . . Quality Calf and\nKid uppers with flexible hard-wearing soles.\nBlucher and Balmoral cut.   Sizes 6-11. Price:\n$5.75\nFine quality Felts. Firm,\nyet pliable, so you may\nblock your own style . . .\nDeep tones in Craen,\nBlue, Teal, etc. Sizes 6V4\nto 7 Vi.\n$3.95\nSPRINC TIES   IW=TO=\nto go with that new\nMorale Lifting Ties\nsuit and hat \u2014 Get\nthat dressed-up feeling. Latest Spring\ncolors.   Priced at:\n$1.00 m\nSTORE HOURS:\nMonday. Tuesday.\nThursday, Friday\n9 a.m to 5:30 p m.\nWednesday. 9 to 13\nSat'day: 9 to 9 pa\nfytanfr $\u00abti (ttttptftg\nPHONES:\nGrocerlei 193\nHosiery 52\nReady-to-Wear 49\nMen's Wear 29\nDrygoods     49\n0  ISt tutt 167Q\ni Former Canadian\nClerk Has 3\n' Planes to Credit\nWITH   THE   RAF,   IN   NORTH\nI Milk\nTRRAD1ATW Corn*.\na- lion Milk - undiluted,\nuse it like cream for coffee,\ncereals, whipping; chilled and diluted with\nan equal amount of cold water, for drink-\ning-and diluted as required, for cooking.\nCarnation is good, whole milk, evaporated to double richness, homogenized,\nsterilized, and irradiated for txlrn \"sunshine\" vitamin D. Write for fret Cook\nBook. Carnation Co.\nSt. Vancouvtr.\nf, I HAM ATM\nLimited, 470 Granville\nCarnation Mi\nA CANADIAN PRODUCT -'\/wn donttrttid'Guett'\ncoe. Ont., raiaed hli \"ba\"|j\" to three\nenemy aircraft destroyed on two\nfronti thii Winter by shooting down\na bomber which attempted to make\na night attack on Tripoli.\nHe shot hii victim Into the aea,\nwith the assistance of hii English\nflight-sergeant with whom he hai\nrharcd all his trlumphi to date.\n\"One burst from dead aitern wai\nenough for this one,\" the chunky\nCanadian reported afterwardi. \"Hli\nstarboard engine Immediately bunt\ninto flames and after he had loat\nabout 1000 feet of height the fire\nmust have reached h|\u00ab bomb load,\nfor he blew up In the air and fell\ninto the sea.\n\"We cruised around over the area\nfor a half an hour, ln caie any of hla\npals showed up, ind he wai itlll\nburning. Our Engliih iquadron leader got one that did show up.\"\nEarlier, on the Tuniilan front,\nl'ark Intercepted two German bomberi and destroyed both of them\nwithin three minutei.\nLAURIf L05IS K\u00bbT\nAS PROVOST MARSHAL\nLONDON, Apcll 8 (CBI-MaJ.-\nOen Sir Rob\u00abrt PeTcy Laurie, converted and fined about \u00a3585 for\nminuting civilian food ration ..tamps\nin addition to hit military ration\nbook, hai been suspended from hit\npost as Provoit Marihal of Greit\nBritain. It was announced In the\nHouta of Commons Uaday.\nTokyo Jittery Over\nPossible U. S. Raid\nNEW YORK, Aprll 8 (API-Japan had a freih attack of \"bomb\njitters\" today at the Tokyo radio\nfor the lecond time In !4 houn\nwarned the Japanese people that a j\nnew American bombing aasault\nmight come at any lime \"either\nfrom the China cont.nent, the Aleu-\ntlani or from aircraft carriers.\"\nThe U.S. Office of War Information said Tokyo broadcasts recillea\nthat it was Just short of a year ago\nthai Ma).-Gen. James H. Doolittle's\nbomberi made Iheir first iweeplng\nraid on Japanese mainland cities.\nMay Ration Beer\nTORONTO. April 8 (CP)-^Beer\nrationing may become effective in\nOntario May 1. H\u00b0n. A. St. Clair\nGordon, Chairman of the Ontario\nLiquor Control Board, today told\nthe Ontario Legislature's Public Accounts Committee,\nThe present beer iltuatlon li leading to absenteeism in Industry, he\nsaid, adding that hourt of sale in\nhottl beverage roomi mty alio bt\nreduced.\n\"Vnare lan't tht b\u00ab\u00ab available\ntor people avtio want it,\" iald Mr.\nGordon. \"The reduction In the nip-\nply of wliiskv and wine hat reiult-\ned In more people wanting beer.\nIn critical company \"Rn-'EV\"\nwhen you lay it meani Rihev, Rui-\nlia.\nCosts So Little...\nProtects So Much! -u\nThe cost is really modest. 2% ot a lair\nvaluation covers storage in our modern Cold\nAir Vaults. 1% of a fair valuation allows\nfor storage and all-year-round protection\nigainst fire, theft or loss.\nj\nYour Furs Are ...\n1\nI\nSummer Safe at the Bay\niN-COAPOMriO   tt   MAY  i\u00ab TO\n $feteim Battg Jfeora ? ? Questions ? ? Letters to the\nT5i\nEitabllihed April II. 1901.\nBWM CaivmMa'i\nit\/ost Interetting Ntvmpaptr\nPubllihed ever} morning tacept Sundiy by\nthe NBWS PUBLISHING COMPANV UM-\nITED 368 Blk\u00abr St.. Ntlion, British Columbia.\nJOMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS ANO\nTHE AUDIT BUHEAO OF CIRCULATIONS.\nFRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1943.\n\u25a0\u25a0aaaaaaaaaaaaaa^\u2022*aajaaaaaa^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaajaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaajaa^aaaaaaaa>-~i la^^aaaajaaaaaav,,aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa|aaaaaaaaaaaj^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^aaaaaaa\nTobacco Barter\nThe Australian Army has aaked the\nFood Distribution Administration to\nsend over 20 to 30 tons a month ol a\nparticular kind of dark twist tobacco,\nwhich has long been chewed by natives\nof 'New Guinea, the Solomon Islands\nnnd New Britain and also used for\nmoney. The \"Auiaieg\" want the tobacco to bargain with South Sea Iilanders.\nPicture, asks the New York Times,\nan Australian aviator, hU plune shot\nfrom under him, parachuting down\nthrough the steaming New Guinea air\nto land among funy-haired, auspicious,\nheavily armed Boongi. If he haa A few\nsticks of twiit he may buy mangoes\nand obtain a guide who will lead him\nthrough the jungle back to hii baie.\nUnlike the conventional loop of home\nchewera, the tobaooo ll twlited like\nrope and cut in aeven-inoh lengths\nwhich are proiaure-flattoned into\nstick! one-fburth of an inoh thiok \u00bbnd\none-half an Inch wide,\nThe requeit wai rated \"flniihed\nwar material,\" That plftoed it above\n\u2022\u2022essential material for oivllians\" in\npriority for oargo ipaoe.   \u2022\n-  Situation of Sweden\nGrowirfg coneern li evident In Britain-over the iltuatlon in Sweden. That\nnominally neutral country ii being uied too freely aa a Wghway for German\ntroops, and matteri have come to a\nhead with the landing of a Nail plane\ncarrying soldiers and armi. Thii, however, is but one incident in a long aeriei\nwhich adds up to a grave international\nsituation.\nThe time seemi to be rapidly ap-\n' proaching when Sweden will have to\nabandon her incongruom position. She\nil situated in a strategic location which\nmakes it a lerious matter for her to\n' trifle with neutrality lawi. Norway ls\n' the possible locale of one of our drivel\nIpto Europe, and it ii not a comforting\n, thought that such a convenient corridor for the traniportation of enemy reinforcements exists,\nMany of our gravest difficulties\najnce the war began have been conse-\n, quent on our scrupulous regard for the\nneutrality of small nations. We have\nsuffered, as we were bound to suffer ln\n' a contest with the Axil, from our\ngentlemanly Imtincts. There is a limit\nto forbearance, however, and it ii being stretched by iome of the Swedish\nmoves, though of courie, they are made\nunder dureu, The fate of the world ls\nat stake,\nANSWERS\nOpin to any reider. Ntmtt ll ptritm\nUklng queitlom will not bo publlihed.\nThtrt ll no oharge for thli lervloo. Quel-\ntlom will not be amwered by mill exoept\nwhin More ll ibvloui nioenlty tor privacy.\nT A. H, Castligar-I undentand thll ttie\nFederil Oovernmint hu put forth I new\nhousing scheme under which I perion\nmay build In a congested art*. Could you\ntell me whether thii li really |o md how\nI could get more Information on thll subject?\nSuggeit you write B. C. Conitruction Control Adviiory Commlttti, Ml Weat Pender\nStreet, Vinowvw,\nE. I. H., Sheep Cretk\u2014Can a pircel of und\nclothing be lent to needy relatives In thl\nU. S. without the tender or recipient having to pay duty, or where ahould I write\nto Had out?\nSuch goodi would bo dutiable.\nC. P.\u2014I am under the Impreulon thit a tenant cannot bl aiked to move without three\nmontha\" notice and then li only compelled\nto move If the owner wishes to reiide In\nthe houu hlmielf. J hive ilwiyi kept my\nrent paid up. Lui Summer the owner asked me to move laying thit he waa going\nto move Into the houn himself but did\nnot arrive. I have kept living ln the house\npaying rent ume ai uiual but now the\nowner (who doei not live here) aayi he li\ngiving me final natlot to move. Will you\nplease tell me If I have to move?\nIf the ownw purchwd the house prior to\nDecember 10, 1M2, thr\u00bbi months' notice to\nvacate ls required. No notice to vacate can be\ngiven to vacate except for specific reaaona\u2014\nsuch as default of rent, tenant making a nuis-\n\u25a0nce or using house for Immoral purposes,\nfailing to take reasonable care of the property\nand allowing It to deteriorate. If the landlord\nwishes to use the residence he must itate In\nwriting hi the notice that he intendi te occupy thl premises for 12 months, at least. Suggest y\u00bb\u00ab write to the Wartime Pricei Ihd\nTrade Boird, Nelson, fdr further Information.\nM. W., Trail\u2014Could rubber, otto eighth Inch\nthick be ituck on an Iron plate to be used\nIn i wirm lolutlon?\nRubbw wtll lolldlfy If used aa I hot pltte\nReader, Nelson\u2014Could you please give me I\ngood formula for waterproofing a imill\ncanvas tent and a mining suit?\nThe foUowlng procen 1\u00ab recommended for\nwaterproofing tents: Soft icap ll diiiolved ia\nhot wstter \u00bbnd a solution of Iron lulphate idded. Thi lulphurlc acid comblnei with the pot-\n\u2022th of the soip, and the Iron oxide Is precipitated with the fatty acid as insoluble Iron soap.\nThii ll washed and dried and mixed with\nUnseed oil. The kip prevents Uie oU from letting hard ind cracking, and at thl iame time\nwater hai no effect on it.\nWaterproofing for coat or auit: Equal parts\nof Isinglass alum, soap; dissolve ueh lepir-\nately in water. Mix the solutions and ipply tf\nthe inside of the garment. Dry, then bruih well,\nfirst with a dry brush, and after (lightly)\nwith a brush dipped In water.\nEditor\nToday's Horoscope\nYour outilindini traU li i deep love for\nyour family ind friendi. You ire diligent In\nyour work, self-dependent and very practical.\nFriends ollen sock advice from you and your\nooniel ll usually advantageous to thoie who\nUke it. During the quilt hours of the night\nthink of thi most suitable way to oomhtne\nbusiness and pleasure, with gainful results.\nMake out an efficient plan for the next few\ndayi, so as to advance in your career. Success\nshould follow the right combination of theory\nMd management ikill.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Pren\nApril 9, 1918\u2014Germini renewed offenilve on the Western Front and thia Bittle ol\nIjri began; enemy pemtnted the Allied centri\nnear Neuve Chapelle, but drive neir Amleni\nfilled. New military Servloe Bill calling men\nup to 50 years of age Introduced in Britiih\nCommons.\nLooking  Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\n(From Daily Newi, Aprll \u00bb, 1933)\nThe Red BuUet, powerful little ipeed\nplane painted entirely red, broke the world's\nseaplane speed record today with Francesco\nAgello at the controls. For five laps over Lake\nCards, Agello made an average of 426.5 mllei\nan hour.\nThree great nations had iald \"yes\" last\nnight to the dispatch of their ouUtandtng ftg>\nyrei to parley with President Rooievelt OB\nalleviating the world economic ills, even U\nSecretary of State Cordell Hull ]ott^ down\nwheat and silver problems, as among thl\nmatters to be discussed. Canada wu llnid up\nwith France and Great Britain aa definite\nword reached the capital that Prime Minister\nR B. Bennett would Journey to the American\ncapitil to talk over possible contribution! tho\ntwo nilflhbor nations may make to worW recovery.\nA .Chinese counter-attack was reported\nturning a triumphant advance of a Manchurian army in Chlnwangtao area Into a rout\nyeiterday.\nRabbi Maurice lliendrath todiy defendtd\n\"troubled Oerminy\" ind h\"\u00bb people in en id-\ndress before the Toronto Canadian Club. Describing the German people ai puppeti Ut thl\nhandi ol a \"dapper Austrian quack,\" thi Rabbi earnestly predicted mliery, suffering and\nwarfare for the entire world if Hitler WOW\nallowed to remain in power.\nLetten may bt publlihed over i nom de\nplumi, b\u00bbt Ihi actual mme of the writir\nmuit kl ita* tt thl Editor li evidence of\ngood filth. Anonymout llttin go In thl\nwute piper buket\n\"Freedom From Want\"\nCalls for Justice to\nFarmtrs, Urges Harris\nTo theBdltat:\nSiiv-Huminlty hai always owed an enormous debt to ltl sufferings ind mlifortunes;\nIndeed the circumstances about which we\ncomplain moat ire usually the very means\nthit Providence li using to drive into us that\nminimum ol dwency and rejwd for the rlghti\nat othen Alt preiervei humanity from deitructlon.\nRationing 'of food Is moit disagreeable\nand disconcerting to thl folk on thll continent.\nFancy not being able ta go to I itore and\norder any quantity of wonderfully prepared\nfood ,ln most convenient packages, delivered\nright to our doors, it remarkably law cost.\nLong before Hitler had even begun- to stir up\ntrouble, thl' condition of affairi wu established and goods and services from the farmi\nand mlnu ud f isherlei and forests flowed to\nthe ever-growing cltlei and little dribbles of\ngoodi ind services returned to the primary\nproducer!.\nAmong the wild animals we see certain\nspecies that seem designed to be the natural\nprey of the stronger and fiercer varieties;\nauch are the humble rabbits, field mice and\ngophers who limply trust to their tremendous\nreproductive qualities to preserve them from\nannihilation. More especially lt has been the\nfarmers on this continent who have been the\nrabbits of society. The great cities, with their,\nmore or less, useful inhabitants have grown\namazingly; they could always rely on a plentiful lupply ol poor, simple farmers to provide\ntheir .sustenance and keep vast numbers In\nluxury, Suddenly the firmer has found a\nmean! of escape. He could Join the armed\nforcei md very many did io. Of course you\nmight be ihot dead or horribly mutilated, but\nfor the preient, you hid freedom from debt\nind worry, companionship, ohinge, fairly regular houri and good food, glory and excitement, also admiration, instead of humiliation\nand drudgery. Or there wire the munition in-'\ndustriei where you get real money, paid\npromptly, lot! of lt and far more easily earned, ihort hour! and easy, If monotonous work,\nwith ill Krtl Of amusements. No wonder the\nyoung formwa quite, also the hired help.\nNo wonder thit our nnirt city folk are\nfeeling agrieved md our statesmen are feeling\nMirly trontle, Imploring Uie farmers to return and even commanding them to do ao.\nThe very idea of treating our farming population half decently and paying hayseeds at least\nIS well II financial Impostors and the sleek\npervertert oi thl truth who frequent our\noltlei aeemi to these eloquent gentlement utterly Impossible.\nThU bring! Ul to thl coniideration of our\n'Tour Freedomi\" of which we probably shall\nagree that \"Freedom from Want\" is the most\nfundamental. Those who had thi good sense\nto listen ln to the Farm Forum program last\nMonday heard four leading authorities from\nBritain, the U.S.A. ind Canada discuss tht\nworld food lituation, The present total population li enormous ind Increasing, the total\nof available arable soil tends to decrease as\nfaulty methods of farming and cultivation and\nthe destruction of forest areas allow vast area!\nto be swilled away.\nThe problem la tremendous. It can be\nsolved by thorough cooperation among all\nthl nitlonj ind within eioh nation. Old method! end mtny ot our old customs will have to\ngo, so that humanity may work together ln\nharmony. This implies treating even the farmers properly\u2014helping them to live and do\nthllr work\u2014not living on them md meaking\n\u00bbwiy their produce by fair meani or foul, as\nIn times past. Only when in return for the\ngreat streams of produce that flow to our\ncities from the firm! ind fiiherlei, mines and\nforests, equal streams of valuable goods and\nlervicei return to repay the primary producer!, you city folk may get plenty of butter,\nmilk, vegetables, ito., ond whit ls far more\nImportant eat theie good thingi with clear\nconiclences.\nJ. C. HARMS.\nNew Denver, B. C, April 3.\nEtiquette   Hints\nThe person al the bridge table who analyz-\nei every hand played and tells hli or her part-\nnet Just where they failed In play, It \u2022 bore\niq\\d will soon have no more Invitations to play\ncardi with frlmds.\n25 YEARI AQO\n(From Dilly Newi, April I, 11111\nDavid Lloyd George, thl Brltl* Prime\nMinister yesterday made the boldut itroke of\nhii career by coupling homi rule for Ireland\nwith  the  conscription of IrUhman,\nSir Robert Borden Intimated lut night\nthat Canada's Daylight Saving BUI will go\nInto effect on Monday, April 11\nThe Mankln Lumber Company will itart\noperating its mill at Hill today, C. Mankln\nstated at the .strathcona lut evening. About\n100 men will be employed it the Mil) ind\nthl Cimpi-\nTest   Yourself\n1. For what li milkwoed used at a lubitl-\ntute ln the war effort?\n2. What new coin will probably make Its\nippearance soon In the United Statu?\n3. What phobia do you have If you fur\ncrowi?\nVerse\nTEST  AN8WIRS\n1. IU flou li uiod in placi of kapok In life\nprest rvin\n2. A three-cent piece\n3   Ochlophobia.\n40  YEARI AQO\n(From Dilly Newi, Aprll I, 1103)\nJ, I.. Coles of Greenwood hM Uken into\npartnership W. M. Brlth, well known u 01-\nslitant to his brother K. C. B. Brlth, Cirien-\nwood poitmister.\nJ, F Muuelman, Manager ol the Cilumit\nind B, C. Oold Mines, Ltd., who returned on\nFriday night from Cambourne, itatti tho anow\nalong the road between thit point ind aOoma-\nplin li itlll from three to (OUT (Mt dlip. Thl\nmachinery for the Eva Mill hu bttn partly\nhauled In to the mine, but It will tiki mmi\ndiyi ytt to get In the balinoi M the roadi\nare cxtremily bad,\nJay P. Oravu ot tht Grinby Company ii\nIn Boaton on builneu ln connection with the\nlisting of the Granby itock on the Bolton\nStock Exchinge.\nP.E.I. Premier\nResigns Portfolios\nCHABWTTITOWN,   April   I\n(CPl-Prtmltr Thane A. Campbell todiy reiloned tho Portfniloi\nof MinUter of Publio Worki ind\nHighwayi, and Attorney and Ad\"\nyiMto-tlineral, hut ratalpad the\nPnmlirihlp of Princt Edwird\nIiland. No reuon for hli rail\u00abM-\ntlon of tha portfolio! wu glvtn.\nSeveral other Cibinet change!\nwara announced at tha time time.\nHon. Mark R. MicGulgan reiign-\ned ai Minister of Public Welfare,\nwhile Hon. Hany H. Co* resigned\nas Mlnlater in charge of air raid\nprecautlont and civilian defence.\nMr, MicGulgan wu appointed as\nAttorney and Advocate General.\nwhile Mr. Cox assumed the portfolio\nof Publio Worka and Highways.\nA new mlniiter entered the Cabinet is Hon. J. Walter Jonea wu\nappointed MinUter of Public Welfare, A.R-P. Md Civilian Defence.\nTHI RED CROSS CAMPAIGN\nThe Campaign li oyer, the canvasser! through,\nThe reports they turned ja-were very good too.\nThe weather wai cold aftd ilcknaii wu rife\nBut others eama forward and gave it new lift.\nTht Chairman too had to hunt him a den\nWhen he oould talk to the ladiei and the men,\nHe finally uttled In very good quarters\nTnanki to thi Shop md the Red Cross Daughter!.\nThi ladiei, \"Ood blesi 'em\", win right on\ntha dot,\nAnd vary non thty hid brought In quilt i\nlot\nThe  mtn  wara  much  tlnwer  ind  potttrod\n\u2022bout,\nBut ifter muoh prompting they too got out.\nProm Proctor to Brllllint tht country wu run\nBy lidlu \u00bbnd genu who wire ifter your\n\"mon*!\nYou nomad not to mind, lor the iniwtr li\ntrui-\nWa beat our own quota, which you htlp to do\nWt miy hlve our Jokei, we miy our hm.\nBut look it the good that everyone'i donel\nThl Kid -Crou can thank you, md no doubt\nIt will\nBy sending mire priioneri pan-els still.\n, U W. *ViM.\nNelion. B, 0\nCanada War Effort\nAmazing Says Eden\nExplains Delay\nin De Gaulle\nVisit lo Africa\nWASHINGTON, Apr\" I <AP).-\nWar -Secretary Jfonry Stimson Indicated today that pootponement of\nthe aohaduled matting between Gen.\nCharlea da Gaulle and G\u00abn. Henri\nGiraud In North Africa was decided\nupon by Allied military and civilian\nleaders becauie of the Immediate\nmilitary operationi ln Tunisia.\nAiked it hli Pren conference if\nhe could ahed any light on why Gen.\nDwight Eisenhower, Allied Commander in North Africa, ihould express \"surprise\" at De Gaulle's announcement in London that the\nmeeting was postponed, Stimson replied: \"I believe that Gen. Eisenhower's surprise was occasioned by\nthe failure of this French political\ngroup to reelUo that the meeting\nwas Impracticable at the height of\nbattle.\"\n\"At the moment ot this incident,\"\nStlm-wn Mid, \"J happen to know\nthat Gen. Eisenhower wai not even\nIt hli heidquirten in Algiers, but\nout on the front, visiting and con-\nlultlng with the varioui eenHnand-\ners.\n\"I believe It il evident to all of\nui that until the issue Is decided in\nTunisia, the undivided itrength of\nthe Allies, including the French ol\nall tactions, ihould bd concentrated\non military ilms. To Interject political conferences would be most\nunwise.\"\nStimson added that Elsenhower's\nmessage to De Gaulle postponing\nthe meeting was preceded by an explanation of the situation and the\nstatement that Eiienhower had no\nwish to place any Impediment in the\nway of a confarence that might settle French dlflerencea\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Pren Itaff Writer\nLONDON, April I (CP Oiblt)\u2014\nFortlgn Saoratary Idtn today told\nI Ihlarlng Houu of Commoni\nthat \"Cimda'. war effort ii truly\namailng,\" and \"wt ihould ply\ntrlbuta tl ClMdl'i record achieve-\nmant,\"\nRiportlng tl thl Houu on hil\nrettnt viiit to tha united statu,\nthi Pirolgn laoratiry iald:\n\"Niw \u25a0 want to travel to Canada wh.re | iptnt thrtt dayt at\nOttawa it thi Invitation of tha\nPrimi Mlnlitir.\n\"They ware very crowded dayi.\nI had an opportunity of moating\nthose responsible for Canada's truly\namazing war effort.\n'I hid two meatlnii with tha War\nCamm I ttie which oorreipond\u00bb\nroughly to our Ww Cibinet here at\nhome. I told them of my talks in\nWashington and we exchanged\nviews on many matters of common\ninterest between ui.\n\"Then I addressed a Joint teuton\nof the Canadian Parliament . . .\nand there I regret I have to report\nthat unwittingly I committed a\ngroae breach Of censorship.\n\"I informed the Cinadiin Par-\nllamerft that we (the British House\nof Commons) now are meeting ln\nanother place (the House of Lords)\nbut I did go on to assure them that\nwe are doing so in excellent spirits\ndespite aotlon of the enemy and the\nauguit nature of our new surrounding! . . ,\n\"I eame away with the impres\nsion of a great people, itaadtlst and\nloyal In the struggle, proud to bo a\nmember of the British Commonwealth of Nationi, and proud too of\niti iplendld loyalty in our darkeit\nhour.\"\nHe said he wu the bearer at a\nmaisaga ot good will fi'iun tha Canadian Parliament, and then read tha\nconcluding wordi of Prima Miniiter Mackenzie King'! ipeech to the\nJoint session asking the Foreign\nSecretary, to return with \"most\nloyal greetings and expressions of\ndevotion\" to Their Majestlei as well\nas to tell the BrltUh people thit\nCanada il \"heart and wul\" with\nthm to \u00ab*\u2022\"\"\u2022 itruggle.\n$ \" i n 9\n\\\ns PUT\nIN BREAKFAST WITH\"\nQUAKER\nPUFFED WHIAT\nBREAKFAST WITH f\nGOV'T TO ENCOURAGE\nUSE OF LIME ON FARMS\nOTTAWA, April 8 (CP) - The\nDominion Government has provided\nup to HW,00O to encourage use nf\nlime to Improve the toll on British\nColumbia and Eastern Canada farmi\nit was dlteloiod todiy through publication of an order-ln-councll n\nCanadian war orders and regulationi.\nR\u00ab R\u00ab HORNER\nROR CROCERY\nPLUMS (PRUNE), 1 Hm Mf\nENOS FRUIT SALTS, Urge Slit 08tf\nSHREDDED WHEAT, pkg He)\nKRAFT DINNER: pkg. . . . 18c\nRITZ SODAS, Pkf 15*\nPALM OLIVE SOAP, Cike .....'  6*\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER, 2 tlm 23*\nMACARONI, Catelli'i, I H>. pkg 10*\nSOAP FLAKES: Princess, pkg. 25<\nWINESAP APFLES. Wrapped, lb 10*\nFRESH SPINACH, lb. 83*\nFRESH DUG CARROTS, 4 Ibi 25*\nPOTATOES, Lethbridge Cems, 7 lbl 25*\nPHONE 161\nUrges People to\nTake Out War\nIniuranct Policies\nVWTORU, April \u2022 (CP)-Attor-\nney-Oeneril Maitland today urged\nall Britiih Columbiani to take out\ntho Dominion Government's War\nRlrk Iniunnoi Policial, reminding\nthem that ordinary Iniurance polioloi do not oover damage caused\nby enemy aotlon,\n\"I'm vary much oonoarned by the\nlaak of Intereit ln war damage insurance,\" thi Attomiy-Qeneral said,\n\"because I fear It may bo due to\nmisunderstanding. \"A lot of people\nteem to think wir dunago is covered by ordinary policies. That is\nnot io.\nOttiwi'i wir damage Insurance,\nMr, Maitlind uld, \"is a very cheap\nind roaionaolo form of coverage.\"\nMoit Iniurance policies say invaiion li not covered. However, in this\nwar a ilngle enemy plane could\ndestroy houiei and a person with\nan ordinary polloy could try to collect, pointing out that one plane\ndropping bombs did not comprise\nan invasion.\nEverett Choice\nfor Big\nNew Steel Plant\nWASHINGTON, April n (AP)-\nEvorctt, Wash., hu been lelected as\nthe site of a IKOM.OOO Itool plant,\nlubject to approval of the development by the United Statei War Pro.\nduotlon Board.\nGeorge E. Murphy, Portland, Ore,\nindustrialist, told reporter! he had\ntaken options on a 400-acre alte for\nthe plant ond expreued hope that\nW.PB. would approve the undertaking.\nIf Your Husband Doesn't Say\nIt's The Best He's Ever Tasted-\nDOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK\nWords of Wisdom\nThin niver wai iny heart truly greit nnd\ngeneroui thit wai not also tinder and oompai-\n\u25a0donate.\u2014South.\nABBOTSFORD AIRPORT\nTO BE NEW\nAIR TRAINING SCHOOL\nABBOTSFORD, B. C\u201e APrtl 8\n(CP)\u2014AbboUford airport is to bt\nuied for in elementiry flying triining sohool, officials htrt wart id-\nvised today by George Cruickshank,\nLiberal member of Parliament for\nFraser Villey.\nVancouver's Black\nMarket Prices\nVANCOUVHR, April I (CP) -\nDeclaring \"tht Blick Mirket hie m-\ntibllshed itielf in Vancouver,\" the\nSun todiy publlihed t price list\nwhich it uld pttwilad Ior tht rationed cnninauditir, mid hy tha underworld.\nIt included butter, $1 a pound (legal prlci 41 oonti); tlm, up lo fiO\niplccc (Itgal price \u00a311 to iii); mg.ir\nf 10 per 100 pounds. IS mort than tht\nlegal rtttll prleei 1\u00ab\u00ab ind coffee,\ntach about II i pound, marly doublt the legal prlci, and faiollnt IM\ncents a gallon or an increase of 21\ncents.\nThe Sun l*!*! thl Bltck Market\nretailer* \"will not tell to itringtn\"\n\u2022nd \"po||oe hive little chinri to\nnab thrm red-htnded.\" It iald the\noommaditlei cami from varioui\nlourccs. Muoh wis stolon \"but It Is\nhinted strongly thit iome restaur-\nWU are not ivene to miking a\nllttlt Mtri profit out of t\u00abt\u00ab butter, sugar, tei or coffee.\"\n\u00a7 Let your huibiod chooie for\nhimielf\u2014let him mike thii tute-\nteit. If be doesn't igree that\nLihhy'i Tomito Juice ii the beit\nhe'i ever tatted, Llbby'i will pay\njrpu double your money back.\nSimply return the labeli to Libby's.\nRarer\"\/ tomito Ubby'i use for\nthil biggest-selling juice in\nCanada, ii a \"ipeciil\". Sundrenched, smoothaiklnncd, fairly\nbursting with juice, It is in\nexcellent aource of Viumins A\n\u2022nd C, eiiential to buoyant health.\nLlbby'i \"Gentle Prtu\" method\nretains the nourishment md flavour of tho priie tomitoei so\nthit you get a juice that'i\nincomparable.\nServe Libby's Tomato Jui\nhe'll thrill to iti ung and joit\u20141|\nwill tho whole fimily.\nLMy'iPtHmmf'Gmll*\nPress\" hem* ii eb*\n*u4 in metlatjMyi\nCttdif en*1 Timet*\nSnap.    Flmi nile;\n(*aMi***it\/T**H*i\nProducn tt aetfeeti \u2022\nAttn is a* rteuoa, It iuy\nmrt than y*er htm**\nJutci\nmir, MiNiiti i mir er canada, ud. ck.ih.a-, on.\nTomato Products\nJUICE   \u2022\u2022\u2022   CATCHUP\n\u2022 \u2022\nSOUP\n \u25a0\nFOR'\nQUALITY SHOES\nGO tO a . .\nAndrew's\nRe Andrew\n& Ca\nLeaders In Footfashion\nBLOUSES\nFOR YOUH SPRING BUIT\ne   Lingerie Type Sheen\n\u2022   Long Sleeve Sheen\ne   Tailored Crepei\ne   Gay Colored Stripes\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nFor Extra Pep at work or play\nDRINK MILK.\nK-V-D\nWIDE VARIETY OF\nNEW SPRINC HATS\nJUST ARRIVED\nMilady's Fashion Shop\nWATCH RIBAIR\nll a lob for experts Our work\nanurit your tatlitactlan,\nH. H. Sutherland\n4\u00bb1 Biker t*.        Nelion B C.\nWINDIRMIM SCHOOL'\nHAS MCORD IN\nWAR SAVINGS STAMPS\nINVIRMNtf, 9. C.-Topping the\nprevioui record made ln February\nOf $5.52 lor War Saving Stamps, the\nfour roomed Athalmor-Invirnicro\nSchool reached * new high in March\nwith $109.72, bringing he total (pr\nthe first three montha of the year\nlo $226*7. There ar* approximately\n100 pupila In the sohool.\nFairview\nCash Marktt\nWEINERS, t)7\u201e\nPerlb Ull\nSAUERKRAUT. 1C\u201e\nPcr lb l-DV\nROLLED CORN BIIP, Bone-\npVk. j5c\nFRESH OYSTIRS,      QC.\nVi Pint   ... 0 JK\nBABY BEEF LIVER,   OO\nPer Ib \"4-Ov\nOVEN ROASTS PORK 00\nPer Ib w^V\nPOT ROASTS HIP, \"OQ\nSAUSACE, Breakfait, it-\nAlso fresh carrots, cabbage,\ncelery and lettuce daily.\nPHONE 295\nMakes Broad that's rich, delicious,\nlight-textured, tu->ty. mort; digestible!\nAimrs fUU STRENGTH, A1WM MMHDABlt\no****.\nt*\nQverwaiteA\nLIMITED\nON'SALE FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY\nENO'S FRUIT SALTS 89e\nEPSOM  BALTI:\n\u2022ulk, Ib.\nMILK OF MAGNE8IA\nBattl*\nLISTERINE:\nI oi. bottlo\nFLOUR: Purity,\n49'i\nlot\n$158\nCHICORY:\nLb.\nCLOTHII FINS:\n4    (Ial,\nBULK   COCOA:\nLb.\nRICC\nI lbt.\n35*\nW\n25<\nMATURED CHEESE, lb. We\nCALUMET BAKING \u2022a.A\nFOWDEH: II ot. .   .m+T\nHIQH-N-DNVl\n\u2022\u25a012 oi. bottlei\nB  4 K. PABTHV\nFLOUR: 7 Ibi.\nPRIID AFFLEII\n| lbl- - - .-\n74*\nm\nPHONE 707\nALL WHEAT: Kellogg'i, m*A\nWith tunaiiiT. 2 plate, . *9T\nOHAfkPHUIT: jj^J\nLAVIT HANP\nCLEANER. 2 for\nI AllNORV  ITARCH: *anA\nI Ibi.          **+\nIK\nSoroplimisls lo\nHold Tig Day\nOn Saturday, April 10, Soroptl-\nmist will hole their fourth annual\ntag day. Small sums contributed\nta tha boxes of the taggen make up\nworthwhile sumi that can be applied to worthy *n*ltare projeoti\nh* and near.\nA clailified club for business and\nprofessional woman, chartered ieven years ago thii month, the Sorop-\n\u25a0tlmist Club of NeUon loolw back\nover seven yeari of welfare work In\nthis community.\nThe first and outstanding projeot\nof the Club is the Chlldran'i Ward\nof the Kootenay Laki General Hoipltal. All furniture and equip,\nment hai been provided by the Sor-\noptlmut Club at I cost ot MOO.\nWith the advent of war Nelson\nSoroptlmliti worked with other\nCanidlin Soroptimists to purohasi\nan ambulance for use In Britain.\nThen IV wu thought that much\ncould ba done for air raid victims by the Soroptimiit Liaison\nOfficer In England if thll Club provided the means. Accordingly members gave a personal donation every\nmonth for wool and materlali that\nwere made up Into small garments\nand sent overseas. Then parcels,\ntogether with sutni of money, haavi\nbeen gratefully acknowledged. Difficulties In mailing foroed discontinuance of parceli directly but\nmembership donations amounting\nto $220, together with the proceedi\nfrom a soft drink sale and two art\nexhibits made thli a moit worthwhile effort.\nAs a club as well ai Individually,\nSoroptlmliti have given generoui\nsupport to the Red Cross. Personal\ndonatloni of the members amounting to (190 during the last 16 months\nhave been used for the purchase of\nwool and yard goods that have bsen\nmade up and donated to the local\nRod Crou. A unit ot the Red Cron\nBlood Bank wu purchued by the\nSoroptimist Club of Nelson. For\nthe past two Summon thi Club\nhu assisted in thl purchase of sugar for the Red Cron lim making\nproject.\nThe Aid to Russia fund wm pn-\n\u2022TOUily lupported hy this Club.\nMagazines for the Hasher Houu\nit New Westminster and purchuoa\naf cigarettei (or a soldier overseu\naa well hi a donation to the Women'i Auxiliary to the Armed Servicei of thli Diitrlct hive brought\ngrateful thanki,\nProvision  for  imall  Itemi  that\nmight otherwiie have been overlooked auch ai books, glasses, booti\nand olothlng for needy familiei; codliver oil for underprivileged ichool\nchlklren,   equipment   for   i   loci!\n.RP. Poit, donations to the Chrlit-\niai Cheer Fund and help to older\neoplc have all formed part of the\njroptlmilt welfare projeoti.\nRemembering that \"the gift wlth-\nut the giver ls bare\", Club mem-\naors have delivered personilly or\nent with a personal note many ot\nheir small  donations.   So  seven\nyeari   of  ftoroptimiim   In   Nelson\nhava quickly passed hut not without leaving  tangible  evidence  ol\ntheir progress on this oommunlty.\nNELSON SOCIAL\n\u00ab Wa4naatta\u00bba\u00ab\u00abi>'<>|Wfl.Fr\u00bb*\u00bb\nBireiford Jr., and M\u00bb. I A. Mahal ware co-hosteisea at the homa\not tha latter, IIS Pork Strett, at a\nsmart farawell party honoring Misi\nMnriorle Maber, who leavu tomorrow for Toronto, whari her\nmarriage to Mr, Cunningham takei\nplace April IT. I*ram the |ueiu, a\npresentation by Mra. Robert Finlay of Victorii of a mauva bedspread and an address raid by Mm\nConnie llamson were received by\nthe honorcc, who hM been the Incentive for a number ot social it*\nfairs. The prises for whilt were won\nby Mrs. J. Cunnlnghaim end Mn.\nA. Brown, Invited gueiti included\nMri. Cunningham, Mri. R- H. Maber,\nMn. McDonald, Mn. J, B, Maglio,\nMri. T. Williami, Mn. A. Walton,\nMn- Frank Peresford Sr., Mrs. Erlo\nAmbroie, Mrs. Qeor\u00ab Robinson,\nMn, Finlay, Mrs, A. Brown, Mrs.\nS. Edey, Miss Jessie Byen, Mrs. E.\nHalilwell, MUi Agnei Kliuon, Mi\u00ab\nVera Matheson, Mill Anne Holunga,\nMiss Mary McDonald, Mlu Ellen\nMcDonald and Mlu Hamson.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. C. Bush wai ln the\ncity  from Salmo yesterday.\nHOME ON LEAVU\nLac. J. Read of the R.CA.F., Edmonton,  is spending leave  at his\nhome ln Nelson,\nt Mri. R. P, Daviei has taken\nup reiidenoe In the Kerr Apartmenti.\n\u2022 \u2022 Mrs. J. H. Clark of Ymir spent\nyesterday in the oity.\n\u2022 W. T. Wickham, merchant of\nRobson, visited Nelson yesterday,\ne Mr. and Mrs. R. Jones have\ntaken up residence in the Kerr\nApartments.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. F. Donaldson. was in\nthe olty from Salmo yesterday.\nHOME FROM CALIFORNIA\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Hennes-\niey. Hoover and Cedar Stoeet, have\nreturned from Rivernde, California,\nwhere they spent several months at\nthe home of Mrs. Hennessey's sister, Mrs. Blanche Pedley.\ne Mr. and Mn. Oeorge Palethorpe of New Denver were oity\nvisitors yeiterdiy.\n|y MRI. M. J. VIQNIUX\n\u2022 Mr. md Mrt. 0. R. Hmni,\nCarbonate Street, have left tor Cillery where they were called by the\ndeath of Mri, Hanni'i glster'i husband, W. R. Bailey.\n\u2022 Yesterday afternoon, Mrs. W.\nR, McCandllsh, Carbonate Street,\nentertained No. 3 Circle of Trinity\nUnited Church at her home, when\nthose atlendlng included Mrs. J.\nI. Annable, Mn- Nell Haggarty,\nMrs. Bertha Sinn, Mri. W. Hutohlm,\nMri. H. A. Parker, Mrs. C, A. Dayman, Mra. Qrummett Sr., Mn. Jamei\nRobertson, Mrs. W. A. Qordon, Mri-\nJ. B. Stallwood, Mrs. J. Spear, Mn.\nWatkins, Mw. A. A. Pagdin and\nMrs. Douglai Nagle.\nHERE FROM CRANBROOK\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Taylor\nol Cranbrook ara guests ot Mn.\nTaylor'l parents, Mr. and Mrs, J.\nSpeer, Carbonate Street.\n\u00bb Mrs. Frank Oldi of Needles\nviiited town Wedneidiy,\n\u00ab Mrs, O*0emkl ot Apex has left\nfor Seattle whara ihe was called by\ntha serious Illness of her diughter\nAnnie.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. Q. \u2022McCallum and Mrs.\nPrime were Joint holtesiei Wednesday afternoon at the home of the\nformer on Stanley Street to the\nCircle of the Cathedral af Mary Immaculate, when those attending were\nMrs. Henri Qagnon, Miss Albertine\nCroquette, Mrs. Lutkiwich, Mrs.\nNorbert O. Choquette, Mrl. W, G.\nFullerton, Mrs. D. Aurelio, Mrs. D.\nMclnnes, Mn. P. DeFoe, Mrs. Philip\nRahal, Mrs. I. Smelt, Mrs. Joseph\nSturgeon, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mrs.\nM. DeGirolamo, Mrs. J. N. Hunt,\nMra. A. G. \"Gelinas, Mrs. G. F. Stevens, Mrj, D A. McPhenon, Mrs.\nLouis CoUetti, Mrs. James Morrison,\nMrs. J. Muraro, Mrs. Edith Edgir,\nMrs. Ann Aduddle, Mrs. Jamea Eccles and Mrs. Henry Lindblad.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hearn\nof Salmo visited town yesterday,\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Roberts of Willow\nPoint visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jones was in town from\nSouth Slocan yesterday.\ne Robert Laughton of Grand\nForks has returned after attending\ntho funeral of his brother, W. M.\nLaughton, Monday.\nRotter lumber\nEmployees\nMake 100% Showing\nEmploye!! af Rotter Lumber\nCo. af Salmo subscribed one hundred pir oent to the Red Crou\n\u2022Campaign itatei L. W. Sails, Campaign Manager for Ntlson and\nDlitrlot\nThl lilt ef subscribers to this\npatriotic effort ihowed that ibout\nII pir cent win Doukhobon.\nLONDON (CP)-P. J. H. Stent,\nienlor regional officer of the London diitrict, predicted Hitler may\nlaunoh a big commando raid with\nthe object of crippling .Britain's, war\neffort when thing! bascome desperate\nfor him.\nFour yean at hird labor was 1m-\npoiatd in Stockholm on S. T. Mueller, a oonaOTtpt corporal on his conviction of espionage nd burglary.\nOn. Jhe*. Qbt\nFRIDAY. APRIL 9\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\nflM-\"0 Cinadi\"\nl:00-CBC Newi\n8:11\u2014Front Line Family\nWO-Ywfcee Houie Pirty\n9.00-DBC Newi\n\u2022ilS\u2014Organ (CKL.N)\ne:S0-The Concert Master (CKLN)\n|:4S\u2014The Record Cabinet\n9:58\u2014Time  Signal\nlOiOft-Morning Visit\nMilH-Hslf k Half  (CKLN)\n10:tJ-\"They Tell Me\"\n11:00\u2014Talk   \"International   Biplon-\nlie\"\nll:ll-Variety Time (CKLN)\nll:30-\"Solojer's  Wile\"\n11:45\u2014Your Hollywood News\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\nU:25-The Notice Boird (CKLN)\nUiSO\u2014CBC Newi\n12:44\u2014Between the Bookendi\nl.iOO-The Balladeer\nlil\u00bb-Interlude\n1;1B\u2014Talk\n1:30\u20143ymphonic Music\nJiOft-BX. Schooli\nJ'.JO\u2014Tea Time\nl:4H-Liitenan' 'avorttai\nl:00-Don Miner and Hli Islanders\nl;lo-Telk  \"Canadian  Memories\"\n1:30\u2014Muilc by Lavalle\n3:45-BBC   News\n4:0ft\u2014Petit* Muilcale (CKLN)\n4:llt-Pleno Recital\n4:30\u2014Songs It Teatimi\nUS-Recite!.\nS;Q0\u2014Newi Commentary\n5:05\u2014Serenidi for Strings CKLN\n5:J0-Orgsn Reveriu (CKLN)\n5:43\u2014Vocal Paradl  (CKLN)\nEVENINC\n\u00ab:00-Buppar Melodies (CKLN)\na;jt)-Hiw\u00bbilan ParadlM <cklni\nB:(i- Mid the Band  (CKLN)\n7:00-CEC News\n7:15\u00bb\"Comradei In Arms\"\n8:(>o-HHC Newreel\nl.so-Dnma\n9:00\u2014Tunes for Todey\n9:10\u2014Sophisticated Strings\n100O-CBC Niwi\nlOill-Iiabelle McKeown Singi\n10:K>\u2014Clentlemin With Wmgi\n11:00\u2014Unci Sava iha Ring\nSaturday Night\nStore Closing\nDoes Not Work Well\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nApril 8\u2014\"Proposals that retail stores\nin New Westminster ihould close\neach Saturday evening on account\nof shortages of gai ind other difficulties, have not worked out satisfactorily.\nRetail merchant! through their\nAssociation entered Into an agreement to close. There wu considerable unfavorable public reaction\nand lait Saturday a large number ot\nlocal itorei reopened.\nSeattle tried i similar plan of\nclosing every night ln the week.\nPublic reaction wai such that all\nstores are now remaining open ot\nleast one night a week, and some of\nthem several ntghta, In order to\nserve the public.\nWindermere Civet\n$1000 to Red Cross\nINVHRMBRR, B. C.-The Windermere District has surpassed ill previous record! by subscribing the\nsum of $1000 to the Nitlonal Red\nCross Campaign. Quota set for the\nDistrict wu |100.\nDr. C. A- Harding, Invermere,\nwas Chairman of the Campaign, Col.\nE. MacBrayne, Windermere, was\nSecretary, assisted by \u00ab\/\u2022 H. Cleland,\nInvermere. Canvassers representing\nevery community in the Valley assisted in the Campaign.\nTwo $50 mbscriptions swelled the\nfundi consialerebly, one from the\nWindermere pLstrict Farmers' Institute and one a private donation.\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\n% Sn\n^aMJ\/ei\n2(duaqwwqa.\n9* IITIY NEWMAN\nm|l||ll||l|l|||llllll|l|l|||IIHIIIII||llllll|l|IIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|llllllll|IIIMl\nTODAY'S  MINU\nChicken Tetrauini Broccoli\nWaldorf Salad\nOrange C.iifl.ui Pla\nCoffee\nCHICKEN TITBAWINI\n3 cups diced oooked chicken, |\nhard-cooked egg, 4 ounces spaghetti\nor noodles, 1 cup sliced mushrooms,\n3 tablespoons chopped green peppes,\n1 cup milk nr ca\/anorated milk, |\ncup diced celery, 1 teaspoon m need\nonion. 3 tablespoons fat. 2 table,\nspoons Hour. 1 cup chicken broth.\nStew a 4 or l\\k pound chioken. Re.\nmove meat from bonei \u00bbnd oui in\n\u25a0liable pliers. Htra n the broth\nHard-caiok the lg| Oook \u00abpa.\nghettl nr noodlw in lime quantity\nof boiling lilted wilir drain and\nblanch. Saute mushrooms green\npeppfr, oiliry and onion in fat-\nblend In flour and ch eken broth;\n\u2022dd milk gradually. Seuon. Combine Ingrcalenls in iiiasavi bakng\naliih. sprinkle bread crumbi and\ncheesi ovir lop ind bake in mod\nenlrlv hot ovep, 973 degrees F.\nuntil healed through and browned\non top.   Servae I to I.\nORANQE CHIFFON Pll\n1 baked >-lnch pie ahell, 3 egg\nyolks, ,i cup mgar, l teaspoon\ngrated orange rind, J tablespoons\norange Juice, 1 tablespoon lemon\n|uioe. H teaspoon ialt, V, teupoon\nlemon-flivored gelitin, Vi cup hoi\norange Juice, 3 egg whitei. V, teaspoon cream tartar.\nBeat egg yolks in top part ol dou.\nble boiler, stir in half sugar, salt,\nrind and fruit Juices Cook over\nhot water until ipj*lurc thickens\nslightly and coats the spoon about\n10 minutes. Stir hot fruit Juice Into\nflavored gelatin then peal custard\nInto ;t with rotiry beater. Coo)\nthoroughly until mUilure ilirls to\nthicken, hut slightly to break Into\nsmall plecei, Beit egg whltei stiff\nMth cream of UrUr. beat Ip rest\nof sugar i little ll I time, ind fold\nInto *a*\\H eiutaMd mlituw. Turn\nInto prepared shell and ''hill until\nflrip. Vou oan uie a orumb crust\nIn place of the baked ihall II you\nWilh. A linger snap cruit U nice.\nRoll J cupi ginger inip crumbs fine,\nblend In I tablen\u00bbom melted but.\nter. Press Into pie pan ind let\nstand until firm.\n...but DONT WORRY about\nVITAMINS mi MINERALS\nYou ko<m authorities uy the\ndifference belw.f\u00abibu\u00abky joungit\u00abrt\nand thane who an poor eaten,\nunderweight, ana) nervous U often\nlimply a mitter of an adequate\nsupply of vitimini and mineral'.\nBut aon't worry ihout them!\nYoungiteri who <a\u00abt J image good\nmealsincluding fnilt juice, and driu\n2 glmat* of Ovaltine rw-li diy \u2022<\u00bb\nletting ill the estri vitimini ind\nmiaii'taili thiy !'\"\"!\u25a0 t\u00ab addition to\nin well,balanced food valuei, the\niVrai-, lmprctmi Oyallim nidi ligni-\nl\u201e-.(il\u00abl(lai(iilHofViUliiilH VII,,and\nD and the minerals Calcium,\nllaoaapiioeoiii and Iron, Bo, if yoair\nelaild is naat developing nonnillv,\nrrmemtwr thla rule:\n.1  fled   IMIltl   \/Jus  2   aa\/auiaai  nf\nNtjt, ) mpreiani Oavdline vill ff\nhim nil lie \u2022urn l'i<u\u00bbaiiii \u00abn,l\nAliiaerel, He IMwJl.\nf a-   MAR 101   Pill   IA-WI\t\n|    A. W.aaalra 1 1 aaa 11 rat.\nI     \"'l'l'   .,   IVl'da-aa-anli. !*.*\u25a0\nl'l..* Mlal aaaaa I Mmpl, .1 M\u2014* l\u00abfa\u2014\u25a0<\nI    ll\u201elliaaaa lad kfcnutjjaa eimelalaal \u00abaa In\nI   n\u201euii\u00ab\u00bb,l  nh\u00bb    law  \u201e\u00bb(\u2022\u25a0\u2022  \"li\"\ntttim...\nCkr -.\n1       NEW, IMPROVED\n[OVALTINE\n-ti\nGirl Guides\nElect Officers\nRepresentatives trom South Ha.\ncan, Willow Point and Robson attended the annual meeting of tht\nNelson Auoclatlon of the ail)\nGuidei held recently In Memorial\nHall.\ninteresting reporta were preiented\nfrom ell tha Oulde Companies and\nBroymia Paoka at tha Dlatrlct. Mri.\nW. A. MacCabe, the Divisional Commluloner, who prulded, gavi a\nfull report of the work of the Division during the poit year. Mri,\nW. c. Motley, Diitrict Commluloner,\nwu preient.\nOfficers elected lor the coming\nyear war*: Hon, Preiident, Mn.\nN. c. Statu; Preiident, Mri. 1*.\nPaddon; Vlce-iPrMldent, Mn. Q. S,\nReel; Secretary, Mre. J, I Holt;\nTreuurer, MUs Harriett! Keating;\nI.O.D.E. Representative,* Mn. H.\nRead; South Slocan Repreientative,\nMri H. Samu; Willow Point Rep-\nresentitlves, Mra, J, Learmonth end\nMri. t. Qaskell; Robson Repreientative, Mri. W. Weldle .\nAll the Guides and Brownlee, together with the Nelaon Awociation\nmembera. ara contributing to the\nLord Baden-Powell Memorial Fund.\nThii money, which li being collected either In cash or war savings\nstamps, li being forwarded to Heidquirten to be oonverted Into War\nSaving! \"Certificatei. Ultimately\nthue certificates will be redeemed\nand a fitting memorial arranged,\nThere'i plenty of buwlng In Biierte, North Africa but the bees are\ncomparatively quiet \u2014 it'a \"Bea-\nZAJRT.\"\nNILSON  DAILY NIWS,  FRIDAY, AWL 9,  \\t&~2.H\nSoldiers,\nSailors,\nAirmen\nAppr\u00abel\u00abt\u00ab \u00ab Well-\nCroomvd Ditt...\nPHONE 389\nPOR APPOINTMENT\nFAIRVIEW\nBEAUTY SHOPPE\nFREEMAN\n*     FURNITURE CO.\nThe House ot runtturo Valuu\nTRADE IN YOUR\nOld Furniture\non NEW\ntaONDON  (CP) -a Provoit.Ser-\ngeant Dolg of Shoreham-by-Sea, hai\nmade more than MX) modeli of ihips\nof ill typei, uHAg only a 10-cent\n\u25a0aw and i patt ot plleri u tools,\nand by thli meani he hu raised\n$763,000 (or war ohavlties.\nuality counts most-for that\nrich, satisfying flavour which\nonly a fine quality tea yields, use**\n\"SALAM\nJl   M Jem\n\u25a0\u25a0i  \u25a0  b \u2014\"\/\"\u2022***::\nGEIDIRI\nOIMFF\nlifebuoy's husky lather works\nfast-yet is wonderfully mild\nt Nothing like Lifebuoy for dirty hands!\nEven ftreasy, grimy work-hwida come dean\n\u2014teally clean, That'a becauae Lifebuoy's\ndaep-cleanaini UtW grtl dirt ouf as well\nas offl Yet Lifebuoy is mild anil ajpitle\u2014\nsoothing to the alnnl\nFor <sla*nef, better-looking hwtU-you\nnea_d Lifebuoy Soapl And reniembar, because\nof its special purifying ingredient, Lifebuoy\netops \"B.O.\" Oet plenty of Lifebuoy today,\nfor both the bath and tha wiuh-baiint\nNO \"|,0.\" FOR ME\nTHANKS TO LIFEBUOY I\nAND IT'S ALSO GRAND TOR\nTHE SKIN, MUCH\n., MIIDIR THAN   \/\nORDINARY^, -*\u25a0\nSOAP\nGUARD AGAINST GERMS\n\/ HANDS PICK UP MANY KINDS OP\nI   GERMS EVERY DAY I RUT WE WASH\n>    OFTEN WITH LIFEBUOY _\/7\n{REMOVES WM44MNMT,. \u2022\nPtrty handa -un\ntpr\u00ab*d |\u00bbnni . . |\nubotH*-* bctlthj\nWiiyt;ikoth\"nrf\u00bb|\nLifebuoy   tau'inllv\nUden dirt\u2014 leavei  N\nhandi healthfully   j\n'''\u25a0in- \u25a0$\nMtftM HIAO\nT0T0I-IT\n-'\u00ab\t\nrt lDUt rtwwT\nWash away GREASE \u2022 GRIME * GERMS with LIFEBUOY\nA\n\\\n < \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY. APRIL *>\u25a0  1943\nTODAY'S News Pictures\ni.\nTAKEN PRISONER AS BRITISH ADVANCE ON BIZERTE\nHisre's a group of German soldiers\ntaken prisoner by Allied forties in the vi-\ncnriaty of Medjez-el-Bab, recentlj, as the\nBritish First Army and its supporting\nforca3s drove against Bizerte. The toll of\ncaptives has multiplied considerably since\nthen as the British drives make progress.\nI\nMANY NAZIS CAPTURED BY YUGOSLAV dkETNIKS\nSmuggled out of Yugoslavia, this\nphoto gives evidence that guerilla fighting in German occupied countries is powerful. That the Chetnik guerilla fighters\nare still making it tough for the Nazis who\noccupy their country is shown here as\ncaptured Nazis are ied'through a Yugoslav village.\n\" J   fj'\niti,'.\ni \\\n\u2022 *'\n\u25a0-mm\nmm. *\nBr*\nfl ______\u25a0\nBRITISH SOLDIERS FIGHT FIRE ON MUNITIONS SHIP\nThese British soldiers are risking an attack on a convoy running the Med-\ndeath as they fight fire on a burning mu- iterranean gauntlet of enemy submarines\nnitions ship. The ship caught fire during      and planes.\nHIR CONTRIBUTION\nThli little girl Is affixing her\n: lontrlbutlon to the big bomb put\nj lft London'i Trafalgar Square to\nI boon the sale of Britain'i War\n' Savings Stamps. When the bomb\n1 was completely covered with\nI itimpi it wai dr\"pped over Germany.\ntyJatiiaTtfitxIt*\nVIVID EMBROIDERY\nTouch up your best linens with\nbrilliant color \u2014 in these charming floral motifs. They're in convenient varied sizes and include\ngarlands, wreaths, corucopias and\ngraceful sprays of Spring blossoms. Pattern 633 contains a transfer pattern of 12 motifs averaging\n3.4x8 inches; 3 motifs 3*4x3*4\ninches; color schemes; stitches;\nmaterials needed.\nSend 20 centi for thit pattern to\nTht Nelion Dilly Newi, Needlecraft Dipt., Nelion. Write plainly\npittern number, your mme and\naddreu. Patterns will be milled\nto your home In about 15 days.\nThere miy bt iome further dolly In delivery becauie of the\nlarge Increue In orderi during\nthe preient season.\nWltwotL   maAiui\n'      DOUBLE VALUE STYLE\nActive youngsters need plenty\nof changes! Here's a double-pur-\npost Marian Martin style, Pattern\n9368. First use it to make a sun-\nfrock, Then turn it into a little\njumper to wear with the blouse\nincluded in the pattern. There's a\nback buttoning and perky side-\nfront skirt pleats.\nPattern \u00bba\u00ab8 may be ordered\nonly in children's sires 2, 4, 6, 8\nand 10. Size fl, lurifrock, requires\n1% yartls 35-inch and V* yard\nruffling.\nSend 20 cents for this pattern to\nThe Nelson Daily News, Needlecraft DepL, Nelion. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Patterns will be mailed\nto your home in about 15 days.\nThere may be some further delay In delivery because of the\nlarge Increase In ordert during\nthe present season.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nf I OOtT TEUST UOUHTSS--)\n^m^L\n~~K\\ti\nM        mm\nfl&jr\ny)\nWW\nK\n3\nm    ^\nv)\n^DfttAML.e\n\" ALL THE MORE REASON\nSOLID HIGH-CARD winners ln\nthe side suits, when combined\nwith a very sketchy trump suit,\ncause tHe less skillful declarer to\navoid leading trumps. To the more\nable cardsman, that situation furnishes all the more reason for getting the trumps out as soon a.,\npossible, for fear that the oppo-\nnenta may ruff some of his high\ncards. If he takes his unavoidable trump losers as early as possible, he reduces the hand quickly\nto what amounts to a No Trump-\ner, with no chance to have hia\ngood honora of other suits\ntrumped.\n+ J854\nf 982\n. \u2666 (3 10 7\n*3\n\"I mined pan o' the sermon I\nwas trying to flffllre out which members nf the church he was hittln'\nIt.\"\n\u2666 A7\n\u00bb A K 10 I\n3\n\u2666 65\n410972\nN\nW E\nS\n\u2666 Q103\n<* Q J 7 5\n49432\n+ 53\n+ K962\n:AKJ8\nAKQ4\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable.)\nSouth      West     North       East\n14 'IV      Paaa        Pan\n2* 2*      Pass        Past\n2*        Pus      8t> Pau\n\u00ab\u2666\nOnly through the grace of luck\ndid South reach that game contract. Better bidding by him\nmight have been a double when\ntht 1-Heart came around, and\nperhaps a repeated double If Weat\nthen hid 2-Hearti. But he reached\nhli  gime   .anyway,   ind  thould\n. By Shepard Barclay\nhave made It, but didn't.\nAfter ruffing the second heart\nlead, he was afraid to go after\nsuch a weak trump suit, with\nthree honors against him. so tried\nthree rounds of diamonds. West\nruffed the third and fired back a\nthird heart for South to trump.\nThree very silly leads of clubs\nfollowed. East ruffing the third\none ond making South ruff another heart. The club Q was ruffed\nby the 8 and over-ruffed by the 10.\nthen the diamond 2 ruffed by the\nA, setting the contract two.\nSouth'i Job was really simple.\nIf, as soon as he ruffed the aecond heart, he had gone to dummy\nwith the club J and led a trump to\nfinesse the 9\u2014his best chance-\nlater hud laid down the spade K\nand then run his side suits untU\nEast ruffed with his Q, he would\nhave lost only two tricki in\ntrumps and one In hearta.\n...\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u2666 983\n1\/10 9 3\n\u25a0\u00bbK JU\n+ AK7\n\u2666 J2\na k 7 e\n* A 10 4 2\nx in i;:.;:\nN\nW  E\nS\n\u2666 K Q 10 0\nat*\n\u2666 7.1\n\u2666 QJ8JJ\n\u2666 A754\n\u2666 AQJJI\n4QS6\n\u2666 \u2666\n(Dealer: South. Eist-Weit vul*\nnerable.)\n' If South bid! hearti and apadaa,\nNorth diamonds, and Soulh wind!\nup In 4-Heartt. how ihould lie\nplay for his contnet afttr Wut\nleaali the tpadt J*\nACBOSS\n1. Applaud\n5. (Comrade!\nt. To spin\n10. Mine\nentraneei\n12. Sprites\n13. Plant of nettle family\n14. Joyful\n15. Wander\nslowly\n18. Turf\n17. Sixe of coal\n19. Over (poet.)\n20. Implement\nfor aweeplng\n22. Shoe part\n25. Beaat\n29. Apportion\n31,ToJe ,\n82. Talented\n34. Fencing\neword\n35. Guide\n87. Perform\n40. Female fowl\n41. Viper\n44.TO let\n48. Not too\nmuch (mus.)\n48. Place of\nwonhip\n49. Simpleton\n50. Oom\n61. Surnmoni\n62. Plant\n6.1. Scottish.\n% Gaelic\n*   DOWN\nl.Mll.-IC\nInitrument\n1 Weahed\n9. Birdi u a\nclau\n4. Plague\n6. Modeli\nI. Flnt nam\n7. Place of\noblivion\n8. Steps over\na fence\nfl. Networki\n11. Prophet\n18. Gazelle\n20. Blurs\n21. Blahop'a\nheaddreu\n22 Witch\n23. High pi lest\n24. Sprite\n26. Cleanalng\nImplement\n27. Und\nmeaiure\n28. Uxlvium\n30. Fattened\n33. Engllih\nriver\n38. Lure\n37. Expreuloi\nof aorrow\n38. Prlion\ncham ben\n39. Potato\n41. Source of\nIndigo (pi.\n42. Pilfered\n\u25a1auu aaau\nHMLIHGI   rinunn\nasaoa wanna\naBDaa Sl_.ll\nonauB\nVJUL.   lIlflRWWM\nncjiiH UL.rjw.i_;\nebh aon HOE\naannnH wnnn\n' kiHUiiii\nnnnnir qhhbb\naaaiin edqqei\naonan mms\n43. Kettles\nit Identical\n47. Jeajrlih month\nA\n 1\n- V 1\n. '  '       ' \u25a0'       ' \u25a0 , ' *\npv\u00bb\u00abrw* '   .  ' \u25a0   \u2022\nClassified\nPHONI M4\nLook Down These Want Ad Columni for Bargains\nPHONI 144\nHELP WANTED\n\u25a0\/ANTED: FIRST-CLASS BARN\nBoss for dairy farm ln Kimberley\nDiitrict. Full knowledge ot '.he\nbusiness. Good wages and house\nfor married man Apply National\nSelective Service Office, Cranbrook, B.C.\nUBSTITUTE TEACHER REQUlH-\ned for Cranbrook High School, to\nteach mathematics\u2014Grades 9-12,\nand physical science\u2014Grade l'l.\nior the period ending April 22.\nAddress applications'stating experience, etc., to F. W. Burgesa\nSecretary. \t\n\u2022RADUATE NURSES FOR AL-\nberta hospital of over one hundred\nbeds. Eight hour duty. Salary 170\nWith full maintenance. Annual increase. Travelling expenses advanced if required. Apply Box\n2682 Nelson Dally News.\nIANTED: MAN FOR GREASING\nuid front-end work In local up-\nto-date modern garage Good\niteady job for party military exempt. Apply National Selecuve\nService, Nelson, B.C,\ntIDDLEAGED COUPLE FOR\nCrawford Bay. Housework, milking, garden, separate furnished\ncottage, steady job- References,\nHincks, Mirror Lake.\t\n\u2022\"\"ANTED: FOR KIMBERLEY District, two first-class painiers. Apply National Selective Service Ot-\nflce, Cranbrook, B.C.\t\nilDDLEAGED COOK, HOUSE-\nkeeper, small tamily, country\nhome. Box 2538 Nelion News.\n\u2022\/ANTED; JANITOR FOR APT.\nhouse. Living quarters provided.\nApply National Selective Service.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\n REPRE8ENTATIVE8\nHAROLD S\" TXM&. ROSSLAND\n'B.C.,  Provincial  Aasayer, Chem it.\nIndividual   representative   tor\nshippers at Trail Smeller.\nA. J. Buie. Independent Mint Representative, Box 84, Trail, B.C.\nE W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAssayer. 301 Josephine St., Nelion.\nTHE  VttST  KGoTOAY KBSXY\nOftlce, 550 Stanley St., Nelion. BU.\n CHIROPRACTOR8\t\nFAft McDONALD, D.C. PALMER\nGrad. X-tay, Strand Blk., Trail\nENGINEERS AND -SURVEYORS\nR W. HAGGEN, MINING k ClVlt\nEngineer;   B.C.,  Land   Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forks, B.C\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.,\nNelson. B.C., Surveyor and\nEngineer, Phone 669-R,\nINSURANCE AND REAL EST AT I,\nCHAS F. McHARDY INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP\nSpecialists in mine and mill work.\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nElectric and Acetylene welding.\n708 Vernon St., Nelson. - Ph. 98.\nPETS\nARDEE   KENNELS,   WALDHE1M,\nStsk Specializing In Irish Setters,\nl\/ANTED ROOM AND BOARD, 16\nyear old boy. Box 2737 News.\n.IVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n.-.hicks civBiWTJ\n1943 \"ACTION YEAR\"\nOrder JUNE CHICKS NOWI\nWees per 100:        Unsexed Pullets\nIUPER W. Leghorns $13.00   \u00bb26,00\nIUPER Barred Rock*\nNew Hamps, R. L\nReds             $14.00   $24.00\nAll chicks Irom above matings\nsired by R.O.P. Males.\nI k S Leghorns    ...   $11.00   $23.00\nIkS Barred Rocks,\nNew Hamps, R.X\nReds  $12-M   *22a00\nAll White Leghorn mating! sired\nby R.O.P Males.\nIhe following breeds available ln\nlimited numbers:\nllack, Brown and\nBuff Leghorns  $13.00   $26.00\nJght Sussex     ..    .    $14.06   $24.00\nWrite for your copy of the 1943\n\"ACTION YEAR\" Book giving\n(ull particulars and prices and\nremember\u2014\nIT8 RE8ULT8 THAT COUNT\nN Langley Prairie, B. C.\nOPTOMETRI8T8\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometruti\nJ458 Bay Ave., Trail       Phone 177\n8ASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S      .SASH      FACTORY\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St.\nPERSONAL\nWHBN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer   Hotel. Opp, CPJt.   Depot.\n1 PAY CASH FOR HIDES. J. P\nMorgan, Nelsun, B.C.\nEVERYTHING FROM COA'l\nhangers to bath tubi bought ana\nlold at Cheis Second-Hand Store.\nfQ_> PftlClW PAte i?(5tf \"USKU\nfurniture, stoves, haters, tooU,\nmusical Instruments  Ph. SM Ark\n25*-THE PHOTO MILL-25*\nP O. Box 335, Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed 29c\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement 35c\n25c LI0NS PHOT<>-25c\nP.O. Box 434, Vancouver\nAny 8-exp. roll developed and print-\ned 25c. Reprlnu 3c. Free 5x7 oupon\nLONELY FOLKSI JOIN RELlABLi\nconfidential    matrimonial    club.\nMany Members with means. Particulars and descriptions 10c, La-\ndfes tree. Box 121   Regina\n$2.00 SPECIAL-30 REPRINTS and\n1 8x10 enlargement, colored in oils,\n\u2014Give colon fully\u2014\nlUM EXCHANGE\nBox 50, Castlegar, B.C.\nHOME   FURNITURE  EXCHANGE\nTemporarily  Closed\nMoving to New Location at\n640 Baker St\nHOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANUE\nFOR LOWERED VITALITY TRY\nVIGORINE. Regain your vigor\nand energy. Month treatment $1\na box. Drug Sundriea. Write for\nprice list. Western Supply Agency.\nBox 883, Vancouver, B.C.\n8EC0ND HAND 8TORE8\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANUE\nWhat have you? Ph. 534 Ark Store.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1031 MODEL A FORD DeLUXE SE-\ndan. Excellent condition. 1933\nChevrolet light delivery. Central\nTruck, k Equipment Co, 702\nFront St., Nelson.\nFOR QUICK SALE: FOR CASH\u2014\n1928 Chrysler sedan, 18\" good\ntires, $40. 1930 Hudson sedan, 20\"\ntires, $35. QUEEN CITY MOTORS\nNELSON.\nBABY CHICK BUYERS\nREAD THIS FIRST\nWith2S yean experience ln'breed-\ning and producing high clan\npoultry, we conaldrt our chicks\nequal to the best on the market\nWe offer - Barred Rocks ana\nNew Hampshires unsexed al $14\nifcr 100. Pullet chicks at $24\nCockerels at $8.\nBOP. Sired White Leghorns uniexed at $12 per 100. Pullet chieka\n(97%) at $26   Cockerels at U\nWrite for descriptive Mating tut\nAPPLEBY POULTRY FARM.\nMission City, B.C\n.by .Chicks, new'hampshire\n\"\u00bbnd Rhode Island Red Approved\nand blood-teited. Ready to ship\nevery Tuesday $12 per 100 John\nGoodman, Gilley Avenue Haich-\nery,   1655   Gilley   Avenue,   New\nWestminster, B C.\t\n\u2022TOR SALE: HOR.SE, BROKE TO\nharness and saddle; weight 1100.\nIdeal for farm. George P. Stewart,\nNew Denver.  .     \t\nR SALE: ALTA. 'HORSES.\nyoung, sound, gentle. Age 3 to \u00bb\u2022\n1200-1700 lb. F N. Day doff, Tarryi\n.._XOAD HEAVY WORK AND\nsaddle horses ln Nelion at Ellnon\nMilling barn.\nRADIATORS  AND  BALL  BEATT-\nings City Auto Wrecken.\nGenerators and Starters\nNELSON AUTO WRECKINO\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron Any quantity Top pricea\npaid Active Trading Company\n916  Powell St.  Vancouver.  Bt\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not less than 12 Inches\nsquare. 9c lb. F.O.B. Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED: FACTORY BUILT ROW.\nboa!. 13 to 15 feet long. Dumont,\nGalloway, BtC.\nWANTED,   ELECTRIC   AuTOMA.\ntic water pump. Box 2732 News\nVANTED:\nIng poles  S\nWANTED: TRAILER F6R HAW,:\nPond, Nelson\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratei for noncommercial advertisement! under this classification io assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of rerjuired\nlines Payable in advance Add\n10c if box number desired.\n\"WE COLLECT YOUR DEBTS\" IF\npeople ln British Columbia owe\nyou money, we will collect It.\nStandard Rates; Highest references Commercial Service Corp\noration, Ltd., 8J0 Weat Hastings\nStreet, Vancouver, B.C.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. He-\nprints 3c each. For your vacation\nsnapshots, choose Krystal Fin.sh\nGuaranteed non-fade prmts\nKryaial Photoi. WUkle, .Saskatche.\nwan. Established over 30 years.\nMEN! RBOAIN NORMAL MANL\"?\nPEP and vigor. Try Vitamin '\ncapaulee\u2014M for $1.75; 100 for\n$3.00 WORLD'S FUNNIEST JOKE\nNOVELTY 10c, Including cau>\nlogue of Personal Hygienic Sup\npiles. Books on All Subjects, Novelties. Etc.\nWESTERN DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 24,   Dept. KNC,   Regina, Sask.\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nFARM, GARDEN O NURSERY\nORDER NOW FOR EARLY DEL1V.\nery peaches, apricots apples,\nplums and pean, 1 and 2 yrs. blk.\nand red currants, rasp, English\ngooseberry and blk. berries T.\nRoynon, Box 327, Nelson Agt\nLayriti Nuneriei. Ph. alter 6 P.M.\nFOR SALE: SOFT SHEU, WAL-\nnut treei, Viking raspberries,\nblack currants, grapes, gooseberries, lilacs, snowballs, paeonies,\nbleeding heart, lilly of the valley,\nhorseradish, rhubarb. Walnut\nGrove (Mra. C. Becker), Nelson.\nATTENTION FARMERS k GARD-\neners. We stock Cockshutt-Frost\nk Wood farm lmplementa and repair parts. For feedi and leeda,\nwrite for our catalogue. Nelson\nFarmers' Supply Ltd., 524 Railway\nSt. Nelion.\t\nALL KINDS FRUIT TREES, 1 YR.\nold SOc, 2 yr. old 75?, climbing and\nbush roses, grape vines, 8 for $1.\nBlsck curranis, white and red currants, 15c each. Apply to Eugene\nHammerer, P. O. Taghum, B.C.\nFOR YOUR REQUIREMENTS IN\nSeeds, Feed and Poultry Suppliei,\ncall and see us. Ask for our price\nlist. Ellison Milling 4 Elevator\nCompany. Ltd., Nelson, B.C. \u2014\nPhone 238.\t\nFRUIT TREES. PEACTHES, APRI-\ncots, Pears, Apples, and' Plums,\n$1.25, $1.50, $2.00 each. Mac's\nGreenhouses, Nefcon, B.C,\nFOR SALE: FLOWERING SHRUBS\n8 varieties, ornamental flower\npot 31x21 In. Apply 1013 Carbonate Street, evenings.\nBEATTY IRONER IN GOOD CON-\ndition. Price $110. Ph. 458-R.    a\nFOR SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nDo you need new counters or\ndesks in your office or store?\nFREE estimates given on\nrequest.\nNELSON   SASH  &   DOOR\nWORKS,  Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 530    907 Front St.\nNelson, B. C.\nVictoria Army\nBeats rPeg\nBombers W\nWINNIPEG, April I (CP) -\nVictoria Army deflated Winnipeg\nR.O.A.F. Bomberi 4-1 mri tonight In thi third gtme of \u2022 beit-\nof-flve Western Canida Sinlor\nhookiy flntl. The win give victoria \u25a0 1-1 leid In the urlii, both\nteimi hiving icored a win prior to\ntonlght't gime.\nPie. Bill Carse wis Injured ln I\npilcup it the Bomber blueline In\nthi second period and wu tiken\noff the Ice, It wu innounced liter\nthit he hid suffered vera shoulder\nligaments and probably j would be\nout for the remainder of the season.\nPte. Nick Metz, a forwird, wu reverted to I defencemtn as i result,\nand turned in a brilliant exhibition\non tha blue line ipot.\nWinnipeg icored the first goal at\n3:48 of the second period when Ac.2\nRoy McBride netted on I past from\nAc.2 Willy Stanowski. Victoria tied\nit up less than a minute later when\nPte. Mel Lunde beat Po. Harry\nMoroz on a put from Pte. Sam\nKennedy.\nAc.2 Sam Latfltt put Bombers into\nthe lead again at 8:39 on a pus\nfrom Lac. Paul Plati but Victoria\nroared right back again and deadlocked the count, Pte. Joffre Desileti\nscoring after a combination play\nwith Nick Meti. Pte. Julian Sawchuk made it 3-2 for Army after \u2022\ndouble pass from Lunde and Kennedy. \/\nThe third period goals were wide-\nly separated, Winnipeg's tieing\ncounter coming at 3:03 on an Individual effort by Ac.2 Bill McGregor and Army's winning counter by Kennedy on a play with\nPte. Pinky Melnyk and Lunde.\nBAND AND ORCHESTRA INSTRU-\ninents not ln use may be turned\nInto ready cash. Send full particulars to Whaley Royce k Company, 318 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont,\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOOT REGISTRATION CARD, RA-\ntlon.book and other papers on Baker St. T Beresoff, Crescent Val'y.\nL6ST: NIAVY.PIN R.C.N. itfSlUNiA\nPhone 785-L. Reward.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nRENTALS\n\"I*ANTED TO RENT: SMALL FARM\nnear school. Light k Water. Give\nfull particulars. Box 2694 News.\nJ-JGLE HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\nalso 2-nm. suite with bath for rent.\nStrathcona   Hotel,\nERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nFrigidaire equipped sutes.\nCom. hsekeeping suitETfW-\nPhone   713-L:   918  Kootenay   St.\n5R RENT- MODERN APT~MEDT-\ncal Arts Block, Ph McHardy 135.\nHjRN'D   SurrESTTJNrURN'D   6-\nrm. suite. Kerr eStol.\t\n\u2022J.RM. HOTJseTCIR RENT, APRrL\n15, Ph. 316.\nHave you rend the Classified?\nNflantt Hatty Jfrtua\nTelephone  144\nTrail Circulation: Phont 1323-L\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per Insertion\n44c per line per week (J coniec-\nutlve insertions for cost of 4)\n$143 a line a month (26 timeil\n(Minimum 2 lines per Iniertlon)\nBox number lie extra. Thll\ncovers any number of timet.\nPUBLIC NOTICES. TENDERS.\nETC.\n18c per line, flrit insertion ind\nlie  each  subsequent  insertion.\nALL    ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n8PECIAL LOW RATE*\nNon commercial  Bltuitlont\nWinted for 2bc tor tny requlrtd\nnumber   of   linei   for  ilx   dayt\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATEO\nSingle   copy   .. ..$   .08\nBy  carrier,  per  week      -25\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mall:\nOne   month      $    75\nThree  monthi       2.00\nSix   monthi          4 00\nOne vear .     _.   8.00\nAbove rales apply in Canada,\nUnited Stales and United Kingdom to subscriber! living outside  regular  carrier areas\nElsewhere and to Canada whert\nextra postage Is required one\nmonth \u00bb1 50: (hree months 14 00;\nsix monthi 1800: ont \u00bbeir 815\nIn Fairview\nONE OF THE BEST\nFive rooms and bathroom. Modern. Large Living Room with\nFireplace. Dining Room, Kitchen, two Bedrooms, one extra\nlarge; lota of closet room. Compact bathroom with good fixtures. Full size basement, concrete walls and flour. Garage in\nbasement; up to date heating\nplant; two level lots. Possession\nwithin 30 days Price $4000\nA very attractive house, and\nIdeal location.\nPIPE - FITT)NGS \u2022 TUBES \u2022 SPE-\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916   Powell   St    Vancouver    BC\nELECTROLUX CLEANER SERT-\nice and supplies. Ph. 520-Y.\nCalgary Livestock \u2022\nCALGARY, April 8 <CP)- Cattle\n118; calves 1, hogs 249; sheep 2.\nGood-choice butcher steers 11.25-\n12; common-medium 10-11; good\nbutcher heifers 10.75-11; common-\nmedium 9.50-10 50. Good cows 9-9 50;\ncommon-medium 750-8.50; canners\nand cutters 57.\nHogs yesterday 15.90 for Bl yards\nand plante, sows 1075 live weight ] Royal\nyards;    13.90    dressed    yards\nplants. Good lambs 13-1350.\nNEW   YORE\nSTOCKS\nAm Smelt k Ref \t\nAmer Tob  o\t\nBeth Steel    \u201e...\t\n48\n.-       MVt\n3114\n       684\nCan Pacific  _\nGeneral Electric \t\nGeneral Motors\nHowe Sound  _..\n       10%\n       36*4\n50\n       41\n       3414\nInter Tel Si Tel ... -\nKenn Copper\t\nStan Oil of N 3\nTexas Gulf Sul ......\n._       5714\n35\n5%\n       93\nUnion Carbide .........\nUnion Pacific \t\nU S Rubber  \u201e.\n\u201e       8414\n       93\n       38\nU S Steel\t\n     nv,\nMONTREAL\nSTOCKS\nAsioc Brew of Can\nCanadian  Bronie  ....\n15%\n       32%\n       284\n      134\nCan  Steamship  \t\nCon Min k Smelt\nGatineau Power .....\nMcColl   Frontenac\nNat Brew Ltd\nShawnlgan W4P.\nSouth Can Power .\u201e.\nSteel of Can\nBANKS\nCommerce   \t\n       3514\n45%\n._       83\n        SV,\n..      30\n       17*4\n.. _        10\n.      73\n __    132\n       155\nImperial     .... \t\nMontreal _..\nNova  Scotia   \t\nRoyal\t\nToronto     l.   \u201e\t\n     172\n      158\n         250\n      140\n.._     140\n' t .'.\u25a0'\n-\n'     , . - I\nExhibition Baseball\nATPLAINMELD, N. J.\nBoston (Amn) .., .,._    8  8   0\nNewark (Int) .2)1\nDobeon, Olson  (9)  ind Bremer,\nConvoy (6); Davii, Ananicz (T), ind\nGarberk.\nAT NORFOLK, VI.\nBaltimore (Int)   0 \u2022 \u2022\nNorfolk Nivy Triining Sfn   8 10   0\nKlieman, Roper (7) md McGar-\nIty, Pare (7); Hutchinion, Ray (8)\nand Smith.\nAT LAKEHURST, N. J.\nJeney City (Int) . ...  ._..   7 18  1\nNew York (N) \u00bb- U \u00bb  \u00ab\nKenworthy, Slmi (4), Oikei (V\nat.d Lorenz; Eut, Feldman (8), and\nMancuso, Poland (6).\nAT WILMINOTON, DU.\nToronto (Int) .% _ \u2014  ttt\nPhllidelphii (Amn)    \u00ab 11   1\nHamlin, MtCibe (4), Hopper (7)\nand Crompton, WUl'ims (0)1 Arnt-\nzen, Burrows (4), Odom  (7)   md\nWagnir, Swift (8).\nAT INDIANAPOLIS\nIndlanapolli (AA) ..-.- -   1   T  *\nClevelind (Amn)     T 18   1\nHutchings, Logan (J) ind Sehlue-\nter, Hofferth (5); Calvert, Kennedy\n(4), Bagby (7) and Rosar.\nAT LEBANON, Pi.       >\nPhiladelphia  14 18   0\nIndlantown Gap  0   0   8\nRowe, Gerheauser (4), Laplhuska\n(7) and .Padden; McLoughlln, Aior-\nnock (4) and Williams.\n3P3\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, APRIL 9, IMS\nSPORTS\nRed Wings Again\nBlank Bruins\nto Capture Cup\nOshawa Juniors\nUp 2 Games\non Montrealen\nMONTREAL, Aprll 8 (CP)-Led\nby the three-goal effort of Ktn\nSmith, Oihiwi Gtnenlt p\u00bbtd\nthrough with \u2022 8-4 victory over\nMontreil Cinidieni tonight to\nUke \u2022 2-0 leid In \u2022 bett-of-flvi\nEaitern Canada final for the Cinadiin Junior Hockey chimplonihlp and thi Memorial Cup.\nThe Generals showed all'the power they needed in the first two per-\niodi, when they outscored the Canucks 3-1 In each of the early frames,\nbut ln\" the closing session the habitants showed the speed and netted\ntwice, while the Oshawans were\nheld scoreless.\nBill Ezlnlckl started the Generals, on their trek to the top with\ntwo goals In the first period. Then\nTom \"Hunter, a Flight Sergeant ln\nthe R.CA.F. replied with I goal for\nMontreal but Smith came back less\nthan a minute later to score on a\npiss from Red Tilson and Floyd\nCurry.\nSmith took another goal ln the\nsecond with Tilson and Curry assisting, before Hamel drew the second goal for Montreal with Gibbon\ngiving the assist. Then Smith netted hil third goal aided by Tilson\nand, before returning to the bench\nfor \u2022 rest, Smith jerVed up in assist to Curry, who netted the final\nOshawa goal.\nA ptui&lty to Bob Marshall In the\nclosing frame allowed the Canucki\nto make a mild comeback and Andy\nPerron added two goals.\nWlahkL JjumIl . . .\nLONDON, April 8 (CP)-Profit\n:aking crept into some sections of\ntoday's itock market and the close\nwai Irregular with activity quiet.\nIndustrials were irregular. Oils and\ncoppers advanced.\npeak levels In mettls and Hollinger\nand Bulolo were at new highs In\ngolds.\nVANCOUVER - Mines were active. Oils remained qulel but firm.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy Tht Aiiociated Pre,,\nOAKLAND, Calif-Paul * Lewis,\n154, Oakland, knocked out Bernie\nCardenai, 162, Mexico City (2).\nROBERTSON REALTY  ground for  the year or longer\nCf*)    I TD Low-priced issues again were the\n532 Ward St. Nelson, B. C.\nNEW YORK-The itock market, WINNIPEG - May wheat dipped\non a selective bans, rega.ned its | more than five cents in late trading\nequllibrum and a wide assortment I before fresh buying developed and\nof favorites edged   into  new  h gh j Pf\u00ab of the drrjp was recovered.\n1   The decline was caused by local\nllquidition\nspeed.est movers. Th\u00ab May future finally closed at\nH   Wb cents i bushel, 3% cenli below\n_\u201e-,_,___,   _ ,_    ,   ,      ,   \u201e    .  the previoui close. July wai 3H-3V<\nTORONTO-Gold  itocki chalked LcntJ lower \u201e a,*.^ and 0cto-\n25   AC.   LAND;  SPRING  TOOTH up new high pricei for the year.     b\u201e thrM \u201e\u201e\u201e ,ow\u201e ,t n%\nharrow  2  See   Wee   MacGregor,    Base  metals  lon  ground   Better \t\nsawing outfit with circular saw; I  prices ruled for the feel, food and I    CHtCAGO-A seUing wave hit the\nAryihire   heifer,   freshen   Sept.;, building stocks. j wheat* pit Jmt before the cloie to-\n2 Holitein helfen 9 k 10 mo. old; j   day. reflecting a sudden break  of\n1  1928 Chev. truck; 1 1930 Chev,    MONTREAL-  Metali and  golds over 5 centi a buihel at Winnipeg,\ncar Apply W Riley, Blewett.        , were itronger spots. I and   pricei  dropped  more  than   a\n600D FARM LANDS FOR SALE !    Consolidated Smelters and Noran-, cent before b\"y:ng power wai un-\non   eaiy   termi  ln   Alberta' and ^ mm*a <*? fractionally to new' covered.       \u2022\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Informitlon to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. CPR.. Calgary, Alta\nMODERN 5-ROOMS  AND  BATH.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nClose   Change\nFurnace, Fireplace. Concrete foun\ndation. Garage. 2 level loti, Fair\nview, 84O00, with 82500 cash. Rob-\nertson Realty, Ward St.\nFOR SALE OR RtNTr 9 ACRES\nland, fruit treei, 5-rm. houie, other bulldlngi, good water lupply.\nAt.Willcw Point. Apply W. A.\nSoukoreff, West Grand Forki.\nWANTED: 4 OR 5-RaOO!OONi_f\n30 Industriali    -     135.54\n20 rails        35.80\n15 utilitiei _      18.98\noff\nI'i\noff\n.19\noff\n.11\nKaslo Hospital Aid\nHas $209 Balance\nKASLO, B. C. - The monthly\nmeeting of the Kaslo Ladles' Hospital Aid was \"held in the City HaU\nTuesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank\nChandler presiding. A minutes silence was observed ln memory of\nthe late Mrs. B. Cosgriff, who was a\nmember for many years.\nThe Treasurer, Mrs. J. Papworth,\npresented the financial report,\nshowing a balance of $20921 ln the\nbank. Mrs. F. Helme, representing\nthe buyen, reported that 800 quart\nsealen were needed for the Hospital and it.was decided that the\nBoard'be asked to, purchase these.\nThe Sunshine Secretary, Mrs. H.\nJ. Armitage, read letters ol thanks\nreceived from recipients of gifts,\nwhile In hospital\nA vote of thanks was passed to\nMiss Giegerich who had canvassed\nfor members, there being 107 to\ndate. Final arrangements were\nmade for* the Eaiter Dance. The\nPresident gave a ihort report, of\nthe Annual Board Meeting.\nBOSTON, Aprll 8 \"(CP)-Wlth\nJohnny Mowen thilr ill-lUr goil-\nle, turning In hli lecond ihut-out\nIn ii many nlghti, the hlgh-po-A-\nend Detroit Rid Wlngi clinched\nthe 8tinliy Cup, hocki\/i molt\nprized  trophy,  In  foqr itrilght\ngimei by out-icorlng the Boitoft\nBruini 2-0 tonight before a 12.9M\ncrowd it the Boiton Oirdin.\nAi wai the case In the three previoui gamei, the Red Wingi were\nso far tuperlor to the war-riddled\nBruini that the action throughout\nwai decidely one-aided, despite the\nfact that the vlcton were out-shot\nby I 30-18 margin.\nBOTH  SOLO GOALS\nBoth of the Detroit icores, by Joe\nCarveth in the first period and Carl\nLiscombe early in the second session, were' unassisted affairs. Carveth beat Bill Cowley, Boston's nil-\nstar centre and Hart Trophy winner,\nto a loose puck in the centre-zone\nand, with one Bruin back to challenge him, raced tn and zinged a\n15-foot shot through Goalie Brimsek.\nLlscombe's solo effort, which gave\nhim his 14th playoff point and enabled him to equal the record\nshared by Cowley and Don Grosso,\nhis Detroit team-mate, had Ita start\nwhen the Wings broke up one of the\nfew really effective five-man rushes\nthe Bruins organized during the entire game. He broke out of a Detroit corner, sped down the left\nside boards and, after swinging\naround the defense, rifled a 12-foot\nangle shot into the opening Brimsek left In his net.\nWhtn   they   chalked   up   thit\ntally, the Red Wlngi concentrated\non their defemei to enable Mowen to go through hit lecond white-\nwaihlng Job In 24 houn. Eirly In\nthe final period, the Wlngi hid\ntwo playen In the pemlty box it\nthe iame time but the, Bruini,\nwho were much too eiger to miki\nthe kill, cheited themielvei with\ntheir ragged pliy.\nBy sweeping thia National Hockey\nJiCj^ue final seriei In four itraight,\nthe Red Wings gained the Stanley\nCup for the third time since 1938.\nThe lineups:\nBoston: Brimsek; Clapper, Hollett;\nCowley; Demarco, A. Jackson. Subi\n\u2014Gallinger, Guidolin, R. Jackson,\nCrawford, Shewchuk, Chamberlain,\nSchmidt, Boyd.\nDetroit: Mowers; Orlando, Stewart; Abel; Fisher, Liscombe. Subs\u2014\nGrosso, Carveth, Wares, Simon, Hal\nJackson, Howe, Brown, Douglai.\nReferee\u2014Bill Chadwlck; Llnes-\nmen-<5am Babcock and Bert Hedg-\nSUMMARY\nFirit period\u20141, Detroit, Carveth\n12:09.\nPenaltlei - Guidolin 2, Carveth,\nOrlando, Galllnger, Groiso, Chamberlain.\nSecond period\u20142, Detroit, Llicombe 2:43.\n' Penalties\u2014Stewart 2, H. Jackson,\nHal Jackson.\nThird period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalties \u2014 Guidolin, Shewchuk,\nBrown, Stewart, Orlando.\nSports Roundup\nBy HUGH FULLERTON, JR.\nNEW YORK, April 8 (AP) -\nWhen some 3000 Lakewood, N. J.,\nschool kids were given time off tha\nother day to watch the Giants practice, they also were given a lecture on good behaviour. . . . For\nabout a half hour they acted like\nperfect ladies and gentlemen, then\nthe strain was too much for them.\nA voice in \"the deep silence suddenly rang out: \"Hey, horsefece, back\nto the underbrush for you.\" . . .\nAnd from there on the kids behaved\nlike themselves.\nONE-MINUTE 8PORT8 PAGE\nThe Jamaica Racing Association\nhas set a row of hitching posts behind the grandstand to accommodate\nspectators who know that horses\nare more than just numbers at the\nMutuel windows. . . . Rose Cohen,\nwho handles Press tickets for Mike\nJacobs and has dealt out about 40,-\n000 ln the last year, forgot to reserve one for herself last Friday\nand had to crash the gate for the\nArmstrong-Beau Jack icrap.\nwmawNiamaaaeaaaaaueaaem\nTIRES\n800x18 AND ALL 8IZES\nVulcanized\nWITH OOR NIW\nELECTRICAL  PROCESS\nHeal thoie breaki and cuti\nwith live rubber and keep\n'tm rolling.\nBEACON\nService and Garage\nWhere Autoi Are Repaired\n701 BAKER STREET\nPhoni 678\n\u25a0HMM^M^mmnamre   11,\" |HilLlifT\"\"TniBF\nToronto Stock Quotations\n>yptoquotes\nMRA   COWIN   PAI   HNHPUUt   N D M A B-\nIKIV   LB   MHA   CTJMAPJRI \u2014 DULIAf\n24 CI J R I A\nYeiterday'i Cryptoquotei   THKRB IS !\"JO CREATER CAUSB\nOF MELANCHOLY THAN ID.LENESS\u2014BURTON\nCryctoquoiei are quoutioin ol fimoui oerioui writttn cipher\nA tub\u00ablitut\u00bb ehtrnctet has repured the original letter F.ii inittaace,\nlo 'R' may lubititute fot tn\u00bb original E' ihrnunhnui the tniire\n{ryptnquott. oi t 'BH\" may replact in \"LL\"   Fuiu tht key and t(^-\niMa'll    tn    th\u00ab    .aalaa'aaali\ncryp\nHaw\nalow, modern, full cement basement, on two or more lots. Wuh\nto purchatte. Apply Box 2728 Newi.\nWILL  SELL, TRADE  OR   REN*t.\nfurnished or unfurn.. my home \u2022'\u2022\n905 Edgewood Ave. G. B. Ma'thew\nCall after 1 pm.       \t\nWHY   NOT   RE-FINANCE   YOUR' Dome Mines\nmongage it 6%, We have funds Ea-.t Malartic\navailable. Monthly reduction plan. | F.ldondo Gold ...\nArFLEYARD. I Falconbrldge Nickel\nSMALL  HOME  OI4   CARLINE.  2 ; Hard Rock Gold\nbedrooms k cemeni  foundation.; Hollinger\n' J18S0. .1300 Caih   API'LEYAHD       Hudson Bay M A S\nMINES\nAnglo Huronlan ....\nBeattie Cold\t\nBidgood Kirkland\nBuffalo Ankerite\nCaitle Trethewey ..\nCentral Patricia\nChromium M k s\nConlaurum\nCam a M k S\nF   A   WHITFIELD REAL ESTAflE\nand Insurance 417 Hill Sv Nelmn\nBEFORE  BUYING   YOlfa  HOME1\nSee C  W  Appleyard Se Lo\nptTS. CANARIIS. BUS. ITC\nPEDIGREED   ANGORA   RABBITS\n1I0-13O per pair. Apply H. Foch.\nBlewett.\t\nRAISE OWN MEAT Pllht QUICK\nmaturing rabbits, II and up. Tom\nTsylor, Kulo, BC.\nThe Soviet Unlon'i mtn source of\nlodlnt li now tht water from Baku\noil welli.\nInter Nlcktl\nKerr  Addlion    \/\t\nKirkland Lake\t\nLake Shore Minea\nIjamaque Contkct\nItitch Goll  \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nMacLeod  Cocklhutt\nMadsen Red Like\nMalartic Gold\nMclntyre Pore ..... ...\nMcKrnrie Red Mke\nVipl\u00bbln\u00ab Mining\nNorandt        . .\nNirmttil      \u2014\t\nPimour Pore ....    \t\nPitron  Gold     .     .\nPickle Crow Gold _\n4 00\n.81\n11%\n2 50\n75\n1 JO\n2115\n1.10\n4800\n18 28\n129\nHI\n380\nJ2\n10W\n31.50\n.ia 50\nfi :\u25a0>\nivi\n18 SO\n*,v,\nBt\n.75\n1.84\n125\n184\n55 IV)\n.93\n1.12\n\u00abH .\"\u2022\n18\n0.1\n\u25a0il\nI.\u2122\nPowell Rouyn Bold         58\nPreiton East Dome ._     2 00\nSan Antonio       3.10\nSherrltt Oordon            .90\nSladen Milirtlc .._.        39H\nSudbury Bllln        1.88\nSylvinNe        _     188\nTeck Hughei               3.10\nTobum Gold      60\nVenturei   ....  - 8 83\nWright H\u00abrgreivei            4 15\nOILS\nBrit American     \t\nBritiih Dominion\nImperial . ...\nInter Pete  -   1875\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl Power        _.\nBell Ttlt\nBreweri k Dirt \t\nB C Power A        \t\nCan Car ali Fdy ....   __\nCm Malting       \u2014\nCan Pacific Rly _\t\nCm Ind Alcohol ._\t\nDominion Bridge ._ ._\nDom Tir k Chem __\nDiit Setgramt\nFord of Cinedi ._\t\nGoodyttr Tire \t\nHamilton  Bridgl\t\nMontreil  Power\nNtt Steel Car        _\u2022\"...\nPower  Corp     \u2014\t\nSteel ol Cm     _.   ...\n20 lao\n.28\n13.75\n75\n131\ni','i\n21*4\nn\\\n89\nllVk\n('.\n:\u00ab'-,\nIV,\nnv,\n?.\",\nan,\n51,\n18\n\u00ab'!'.\n7\nVANCOUVER\nSTOCKS\nMINES\nBralorne  .... \t\n9 15\n10.00\nCariboo Gold     _\n1.20\n\u2014\nGolconda    ...\n.05 ti\n.07\nGold Belt  ..\n.15\n.111\nGrandview  .    .\n.15\n.16\nGrull Wihkine     ...\nMH\n.Wi\nHedley Maicot    ._\n.43\n44\nIsland  Mtn     \t\n.70\n.90\nKootenay Belle\n.:*.'\nM\nMcGIllivray\n.184\n33\nPend Oreille\t\n185\n\u2014\nPioneer Gold _. .\n2 02\n206\nOILS\nAnaconda       .\nMVi\n\u2014\nAnglo Cdn     ...   ..\n\u2014\n.68\nA P Cons \t\n.11\n\u2014\nPremier Cold\n87\n.92\nPrivateer ....\n.-nn,\n.41)\nReewi MacDonald\n3i\n50\nReno Gold\t\n08\n.084\nSheep Creek\n1 \u2022\u00ab!\n102\nCalgary k Ti\n1   11\n1.30\nCommonwealth   ...\nJM\n27\nDalhouile  \t\n.30\n\u2014\nHome  ....\n3 30\n1 S3\nMcDougall Secur .\n.084\n.094\nMercury   \t\n084\n,074\nModel        ... .. _\n.22\n.'.'..\nOkalta Com\t\n55\nw\nPacific Ttte \t\n.28\nJ7\nRoyilite ....      \t\n14 78\n\u2014\nSpoontr \t\n.07\n,08*\nUnited    ,\nJ08H\n\u2014\nVanalta\n08 Vi\nHIV,\nBURTON \u2022 ON - TRFJn*.\nEngland\n(CTl-A magiitratt\n\u25a0 nd two\nfriendi\nwho hired t taxi to lake Ihem eight\nmllcj   from   Donctster   to\na   nre\nmeeting  it   Burton\n-on-Trent   were\nfined   ipproxlmalely   15 SOC\nThe\nprosecution called the case\n\u25a0 \"flag-\nrent waste of gaiolt\nir \"\ni\nARE YOU\nPlanning to Move?\nDO YOU\nNeed More Fuel ?\nIt has always been our policy to giva the best\npossible service at all times . . . However, with\nchanging personnel . . . difficult transportation problems, etc. . , ,\nWe would appreciate your placing your orders\nwell in advance of the time that you will require\nOur services . . .\nPHONE 33\nWEST TRANSFER Co.\nEitibliihid In 1899\n 'GARLAND\nfyrMemdJfylk\/^\nwr wh ora ia\nwt mn ii nw\nmis\/mn mn\nlUaUMNMI\nGEORGE MURPHY\nGENE KELLY\n\"BELL BOY DONALD\", LATEST NEWS\nComplttt ihowi 7:00-8:53\n15r000 to 16,000 Kelson District\nResidents Ask Canning Sugar;\nAverage 40 lo SO Pounds Per Person\nANEWSHIFIMINTOF\nSCANTY,\nEVENINC IN RARIS.\nand ASHES OF ROSES\n\u2022 TOILETRIES\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG co.\n^ \u25a0 . \u25a0\nJaps Lose 37 Planes\nin Attack on U.S.\nShips Off Guadalcanal\nWASHINGTON, Aprll I (AP).- which would make the Japineie In-\nCanning lugar application* for\nbetween 13,000 and 13,000 Nelion\nDiitrlct reildenti\u2014tpproxlmitaly\ntwo-thlrdi ot the number to\nwhom iugir rttion booki were\nlnued\u2014have been received by the\nLoctl Ritlon Boird tt Nelion ind\nare now being torted. The flntl\ndite for receiving appllcatloni for\noannlng lugar li Aprll 15.\nThe applications are being separated into alphabetical classifications for ease in handling later. So\nfar the Ration Board Is concerned\nonly with receiving the applications\nand sorting them.\nWhile no cacurate checkup has\nbeen made, quick scanning of the\napplications indicates that ln this\ndistrict housewives are asking an\naverage of 40 to 50 pounds of canning sugar for each member of\ntheir household. This would mean,\nroughly 600,000 to 800,000 pounds of\nlllllllllllllllllllllljlllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSTAR CAFE\nAGAIN OPEN FOR\nFULL COURSE MEALS\nTEAS LICHT LUNCHES\niiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nW  L THOMPSON, Prop.\nDay and Night Service.\n24 Hour Ambulance Service\n313 Kootenay 6L Phone 331\nFOR RENT\nSINGLE ROOM\nANNABLE BLOCK\nF. H. SMITH\nIf It's Electric\nPhoni \u00a366        351 Baker St\nsugar for this district on the basis\nof applications to date.\nReports persist elsewhere that the\nallowance for canning will be 15\npounds per person for city dwellers, and 25 pounds per person for\neach farming family.\nL. B. Unwin, Administrator of\nConsumer Rationing for the Pricei\nBoard, stated ln Montreal Wednesday that the amount for each person had not been decided. The Vancouver Province of Tuesday reported it had confirmed the 15 and 25\npound allowances by telephoning \"a\nBoard chief\" at Ottawa.\nMost Tax\nReturns Are Due\non June 30\nUnder the 1043 Budget taxpayers\nother than corporations or sole\nproprietor! will now make their income tax returni by June 30, 1943\non 1942 Income. At thli time such\nadjustments as may be neceuary\nwill be made. Some taxpayer! will\nhave credits on account of salary\ndeductions. Thoie who itlll owe\nsomething on their taxes will pay\none-third by June 30 tnd the balance by Dec. 31.\nCorporations will make their returni six months from the end of\ntheir fiscal period.\n\"Sole Proprietors,' 'that Is to lay\nthose owning their own businesses,\nand also taxpayers whose income\nfrom sources other than salary and\nwages exceeds 25 per cent of their\ntotal Income, pay their 1M3 taxes as\nfollows: 20 per cent by 31st of\nMarch, 25 per cent by 30th of June\nnext, 28 per cent by 30th of September next and 30 per cent by\nDec. 31.\nFarmers will pay their 1943 Income tax in two Installments. Two-\nthirds on or before December 31st\nnext and remaining one-third by\nMarch 31, 1944.\nElsenhower Says\nAllies Ready\nlo Oust Enemy\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IK\nNORTH AJTUCA, April 8 (AP.)-\nGcn. Dwight Elsenhower, ln a message of congratulations to Gen. Sir\nHarold Alexander, hli deputy ln\ncharge of land operations, said the\nArmy, Navy and Air Force \"are now\nIn a poiltion to exact the full price\nfrom the enemy confronting us lo\nAfrica.\"\nHis message followi:\n\"I hope that you and all ranks\nserving under you will accept my\npersonal congratulations and ttjose\nof the entire Allied headquarters\non your recent successful operations\nwhich Joined up the victorious 8th\nArmy with the British, American\nand French forces that have been\ncarrying an for four months a magnificent fight ln central Tunisia\nunder the most unfavorable condl\ntions.\n\"While everyone of us fully appreciates that, great difficulties and\nbitter'fighting still lie ahead of you\nand that beyond thii campaign He\nstill greater hardships and sacrl\nflees, itill you and your 8th Army\ngroup, thd Navy and the Air Force\nare now In a position to exact the\nfull price from the enemy confronting us In'Africa.\n\"You may be iure that the whole\ndemocratic world ii applauding\nyour luccess against the forcea that\nhave outraged our concept! of freedom and human rights. Good luck!\"\nAmirlcan fighter plin?i deitroy<\ntd 37 Japaneie aircraft In I iky\nbattle over tht Southeastern Solomon lilandi Wedneiday, tht U.S.\nNtvy tnr.ounotd today, when the\nenemy itruck it Amerietn ihlpping off Guadalcanal with an\narmada of 98 planei.\nSeven American fighters were lost\nbut one pilot was rescued.\nThe battle, one of the greateit\never fought In the air of that area,\nclimaxed a two-day period of aerial\nactivity during which American\nplanet made ilx forays against enemy insinuations throughout the\nSolomoni Archipelago.\nWhether the Japanese, whoie\nforce included 50 bombera and 48\nZeros, were successful ln reaching\nAmerican ships at Guadalcanal was\nnot reported.\nThe destruction of the enemy\nplanes during the actions on Wednesday raised to 943 the total num-\nber of Jap aircraft reported In the\nUnited States Navy cbmmunlques as\nhaving been destroyed ln the Solomons to date.\nThose are actual combat lossei\nand do not include operational losses\nvestment of aircraft in the Solomons\nfighting much greater.\nNot for many weeks had the Japaneie struck at Guadalcanal or shipping in the vicinity 1 that Island\nwith iuch force. The last fighting of\nany consequence had developed\naround Feb. 1 when the enemy was\nattempting to remove his officers\nfrom the force then being crushed\nby advancing American ground\ntroopi of the Island.\nThe force of planes which the\nJapanese mustered for the attack\nmight have come from the Short\nland Island area, about 295 miles\nNorthwest of Guadalcanal air field\nor from Munda, only'190 miles to\nthe Northweit.\nIt Kerned Unlikely, however, that\nthe entire attack could have itarted\nfrom Munda ilnce Installation! at\nthat field havt been repeatedly\nbombed so effectively that they\nprobably could not support a full\noperation of this kind. There are,\nhowever, various subsidiary fields\nin both the Munda and Shortland\narea from which groups of the assaulting planes might have taken\noff.\nB.C. War Finance Committee Heads\nlo Visit Nelson on Monday\nBRITISH PUSH\nIN INDIN AREA\nNEW DELHI. India, Aprll 8 (AP)\n\u2014Britiih artillerja hai pounded back\na Japaneee attempt to advance dun\nIng the continuing fight in the lndm\narea of Burnia, a British communique taid todty.\nIt taid the Japane.se withdrew after auffering heavy casualtlei.\nThere hai been no change in the\nlait 24 houri In fighting ln the\nArakan area.\nAllied aircraft hit an enemy airfield at Shwe*bo, In Central Burma,\nattacked the railway itation at\nWuntho, and itrafed PInlebu and\nanother enemy village West of\nKatha yesterday.\nFighter patrols raked the Japanese forces In the Mayu Peninsula\nduring the day,\nTwo Japanese motor launches\nwere damaged and one probably\nsunk in a brush with a British light\ncoast craft on the Mayu River Tuesday night.\nPOLAROID CLASSES\nFor your protection.\nNow available at\nCuthbert Motors Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Post Office\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuit* 205\nMedical Arti Building\nIt li worth while to vliit\nLtkeilde  Service for\nGROCERIES\nOpp. Ltkeilde Pirk\nPh, 485 W. D. Armitrong\nYour Watch Is\nPrecious . . .\n'ee* it on time all of\/\nthe time.\nHARVEY\nThe Jeweller, 884 Baker SL\nWitch for the\nSUCAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\ntn Tomorrow'i Paper\n*n\nSurprise the party\nwith a PermancnL\nHai Ah Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nWholesale md Retail\nTelephone 176\nFoot ot Stinley Street\nGranby Conditions\nSatisfactory\nReports President\nVANCOUVTJR, April 8 (CaP.)-\nBecause of war conditloni, result\nof Granby Consolidated operationi\nIn British Columbia copper production was not as favorable lait year\nIn IMl, However in his report\nPresident Julian Beaty says general conditloni are satisfactory.\nAfter deducting operating charg-\n, and provisions for depreciation,\ndepletion and taxes, there remained\na net profit of $300,904 against $551,-\n224 In 1941. This Is equivalent to 67\ncents a share compared with $1.23\nln 1941.\nDecline In profits was caused by\nlabor shortage, Increased wages, increase in cost of materials.\nNelson Red Cross\nShips Car of\nSalvaged Paper\nCarload of salvaged paper, shipped by the Salvage Committee of\nthe Nelion Red Cross, was scheduled to leave Castlegar Thursday\nenroute to Victoria.\nPartly made up ln Nelson, the\ncar was completed at Brilliant by\nloading with paper cement sacks\nfrom the Kootenay Engineering\nCompany. The cement sacks comprise- a trial shipment, and if it\nshould prove successful, it is expected a grejt many more will be\nshipped.\nMaterial loaded at Nelson Included newspapers and magazines in\nbundles, cartons and brown paper.\nJ. H. Aylwin, Committee Chairman, stated Thursday a Spring\ncleanup of salvage materials would\nbe staged. It is planned for later\nthia month.\nVictory Loan campaigning will\nbegin in Nelson Monday when\nGeorge Kidd, of Vancouver, Chairman of the War Finance Committee for British Columbia, and the\nYukon, and Murray Brink, Vice-\nChairman, visit Nelson.\nTheir chief purpose will be to\ncontact local Chairmen and Executive members. Representatives of\neach sub-division in the Nelson\nUnit \u2014 Nakusp, New Denver, Kaslo and Salmo\u2014are being asked to\nattend.\nThe Executive of the Nelson War\nFinance Committee, meeting Thurs\nday afternoon at the Victory Loan\nOffice, 347 Baker Street, made arrangements for the visit of Mr.\nKi'Jd and Mr. Brink.\nIt was indicated the visitors would\nstress the great responsibility placed upon all executive members in\nthe forthcoming campaign, and the\nurgent, necessity of each community\ndoing Its full part.\nIt was announced the Royal Canadian Navy Band from Esquimalt\nwould be in Nelson during the week\nof May 9 to 18. The Band has twice\nvisited Nelson during Victory Loan\ncampaigns, and has won a large following.\nLIVERPOOL (CP)\u2014 Thefts of\nmilk bottles here have been so\ngreat that milk firms are considering a system of delivering by which\nmilk Is poured through a tube passing through the letter box into a\nJug.\nMrs. Astor Seeks\nReno Divorce\nNEW YORK, April 8 (AP)-Mrs.\nJohn Jacob Astor, Srd, the former\nEllen Tuck French, established res-\nidence in Reno, Nev., today preparatory to obtaining a divorce, Astor's\nNew York office announced.\nCharlei Gilbert, Astor's Secretary,\nsaid that In a recent agreement Astor settled $1,000,000 outright on\nMrs. Astor, who .relinquished all\nclaim to any of Astor's other property, Including several farms, two\nof which are in Canada. Eaoh will\nhave custody of their child, B.lly,\n7, six months of each year, under\nterms of** the agreement.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nAssociated Preis Staff Writer\nBy GLENN BABB\nGen. MacArthur's moving statement on this first anniversary of\nBataan is a reminder that there\nis a long and probably bloody\ntrail back to be travelled belore\nthat tragedy 1 savenged. But \u2022\nbrief stocktaking shows that already a good start has been made.\nAt this point on the road back the\nlatest dispatcher emphasize two aspects of the situation In the Pacific.\nFirst, the Japanese are determined\nto maintain the offensive and arc\nready to spend men, planes end ships\nfreely to that end. Second, the Ame-\nrlcan\u00bbhave such a tremendous qualitative superiority in the air as to\nmake any Japanese offensive adventures highly costly, perhaps so much\nso as to hasten the day of victory,\nBoth in the South Pacific and in\nBurma the Japanese are increasing\ntheir forces and their pressure. The\nNavy's communique of yesferday\nrecording another brilliant American air victory over Guadalcanal\nalso Illustrates tbe aggressive temper of the enemy.\nThis victory, coupled with similar\nheavy tolls taken by Allied airmen\nfrom large Japanese air armadas\ntrying to raid American posts on\nNew Guinea, aeeme to show\u2014\n1. The Japanese still are turning\nout more than tnough planes to\nreplace losses; apparently there is\nnothing wrong quantitatively with\ntheir production.\n2. Apparently they are not very\ngood planes rr they are not flown\nby very good airmen.\nEvidence piles up to support Gen,\nKenney's recent comment that Japan's \"first-string team\"\u2014the few\nthousand highly trained pilots with\nwhich she entered the war\u2014 has\nbeen largely expended In the 18\nmonths of the Pacific conflict.\nOna now wonders how long\nthe morale of the Japaneie Air\nForce can withstand the realization that any pilot who goei Into\nbattle has about one chance In\nthree or four of dying.\nOn the Burma - India frontier\nagain the Japanese are giving proof\nof their aggressive purpose. Reinforced by fresh divisions, they have\ncompelled the British-Indian forces of Marshal Wavell to relinquish\nmuch of the territory gained ln th-3\nfour-month.-5-old minor offensive toward Akyab. The British communi-\nques insist that the withdrawal\nabandoned only territory that could\nnot have been held In any case\nthrough the Imminent Monsoon season but the fact remains that the\nAllies still have to make a convincing start toward their avowed objective of reconquering Burma and\nreopening the road to China.\nGeneral Yahagl, the Army's\nmouthpiece In Tokyo, says the British retreat means that \"the enemy's\nambition of recapturing Burma has\nat last been crushed\" and that this\n\"has Increased the confidence of\nour forcei to advance into India \"\nThe threat to invade India can be\ndiscounted\u2014but the developments\nin Burma at least have given Yahagl and his colleagues the flnt\ngood material for boasting since tho\ntide turned In the Solomons and\nNew Guinea half a year ago,\nIIIIIIIMII1IIUIIIIMIIHH11IIIIIIIIIIIIII1II'\nNEWS OF THE DAY\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\nSummer cottage, Balfour, close to\nbeach. Blackwood Agency.\nFor seeds that will grow\u2014Go to\nWalt's News Depot.\nNelson Board of Trade. Monthly\nmeeting, Hume Hotel, Noon today.\nTrue Experience, Battle of Egypt,\nMcLean's on rale at VALENTINE'S\nWe can repair any make of ironer.\nBeatty Repair Service. Ph. 91.\nReserve April 22, Tea and \"Bake\nSale, First Presbyterian Church.\nOnion sels\u2014Yellow and White\nLimited  Quantity\nKOOTENAY   FLOWER   SHOP\nBungalow. 4 rooms, bath 3 lo'.s,\nclore In, $1250. Terms. Robertson\nRealty.\nSOROPTIMIST CLUB OF NELSON\nTag day, Saturday, ApriJ 10,\nin  aid   ot  general   welfare\nHave your films finished by experts\nLeave  them at\u2014\nRenwick's Studio \u2014 652  Baker St.\nChoicest of entertainment witn\nTRAIL BRASS QUARTET kt St.\nPaul's Church, April  15.\nSend your Easter Cleaning NOW\nand   avoid   dlsappolntmenl\nJONELLA CLEANEHS-Ph.*-1042\nScouts and Cubs\nHope fo Have\n(amp This Year\nA feature of the Nelson Boy\nScouts Association meeting Wednesday was the report by Chairman\nDon Ure on the recent \"Apple Day\"\nTag.\nThU year proved to be a record\nsome $308.53 having been Uken ln\nby the Cubs and Scouts, despite bad\nweather. The expenses amounted to\n$195.84, leaving a balance of $112.50\nThe question of holding a Cub\nCamp this year was discussed, and\ntentative dates of Aug. 7 to 14 were\nset. Committees were appointed lo\nget data on the matter of rationing\nfor such an undertaking, and to get\npermission from the B. C. Scout\nExecutive to hold the camps.\nIf the camp can be assured, It ls\nproppsed that Boy Scouts will be\nassigned to the work of looking after the Cubs, and It Is planned that\nthe camp generally will be In\ncharge of a Scout or Cub Master.\nThe Property Committee reported\nthat several matters around the\nScout Hall had been attended to recently. The question of getting the\nroof of the hall renovated was\nbrought up, and J. P Walgren and\nS. Bostock were appointed a committee to look Into the matter.\nNelson Surveyor\nof SO Years\nAgo Comes Back\nCharles Moore of Creston, who\nfirst came to Nelson ln 1692 and\nwho ln those early days surveyed\nminea and townships In this Dis\ntrlct, ls again In Nelson, and again\nin connection with surveying. He is\nwith the Public Works Department\nparty which, under T- E. Clarke, Is\nengaged in making a topography\nsurvey ot the Nelson-Taghum road,\nthe North Shore road and adjacent\nland.\nMr. Moore was with Perry, Gray\nJt Davys, Mining Engineers and\nLand Surveyors, when he first came\nto Nelson. They surveyed mines\nand. laid down townslte3l including\nNakusp, New Denver, Silverton and\nanother which never developed\u2014\nBonanza City at the head of Slocan\nLake.\nLater Mr. Moore went to the\nOrient, where he spent eight years,\nHe returned to Canada in 1008 and\ntook up residence at Creiton, his\nhome since. He had an office, as an\narchitect and land surveyor, In the\nGriffin Block at Nelson up to the\ntime thia block was destroyed by\nfire ln 1935.\nfeel well-groomed\nall day\u2014tvtry day\nWtt\nBACHELOR\nSHAVING CREAM\n\u2022*j\"40c*ii'wwun\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34\nBox 460\nEddie Leeming\nNow Overseas\nLoose Tilk  Can Coil\nLives...\nKEEP IT UNDER\nYOUR STETSON\nStetson Hats In all tht\nnew shades and shapes\nfor Spring .,.\n?7.50 tnd 98.50\nPMORY'Q\n*^        LIMITED\nTbe Man'i Store\nYUGOSLAVS KILL 300\nIjONDON, April 8 (CP.)\u2014Yugoslav patriots killed about 300 Axis\ntroops In a clash near the town of\nStolac and killed 50 more near\nKiln, a Moscow radio broadcast said\ntoday,\nThey also seized a great deal of\nAxis war material ln their raids, the\nRussians said.\nAmbolna, that Dutch East Indies\nisland in the war news theae days is\nproperly pronounced \"AM-BOY-na.\"'mont Avenue, Vancouver.\nMr. and Mn. John Le:m!ng, 111\nNelson Avenue, received a cable\nWednesday from their son, Eddie,\na private ih the Royal Canadian\nArmy Service Corps, announcing\nhis arrival in Britain. He enlisted\nabout a year ago. In this picture,\ntaken at Red Daer, Alia., he was an\nacting corporal.\nSergt. Emily Leeming, who ls ln\nthe C.W.A.C., and ls in charge of\nrecruiting for that arm in Trail and\nNelson, ls Eddie's sister.\n5.4 Inches Snow;\n1.99 of Rain\nHere in March\nMarch at Nelson taw the breav\nbetween Winter and Spring weath<\ner. There were only two dayi wltl\nsnowfall, and seven days with ra:\nThe remainder were dry, the\nperatures crept upward, and\ntimes it was even bright and sunny\nPrecipitation totalled 2.53 Inches\n1,99 Inches of this total being raln<\nfall and .54 the precipitation frou\nsnow. The heaviest snowfall ln\nsingle day was 3.2 Inches on Marcl\n15 which followed a 2.2 Inch fall ot\nthe 13th. March 30 saw the heavlei\nrainfall for any one day, .59 Inch.\nOn three iays, the mercury waa u\nto 50 or better, reaching a max!\nmum at 562,degrees on March 29\nOn 11 days in the latter part of thi\nmonth the thermometer never rej<\nIstered below freezing point. tow.\nest temperature was 12 degrees re\u00ab\ncorded on March 5.\nNelsin Garden Club March meeting at the City Hall tonight at 8.\nTalk on Rock Planta and Rockeries.\nStaples for nearly every make ft\nstapling machines. D. W. McDerby,\n\"Tha Stationer and Typewriter\nMan\". 654 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nSPECIAL SALE    ,\nMAGLIO PLUM TREES\nOne year old trees each SI\nTwo and 3 yr old trees each S2\nSpecial Pricei for larger orders.\nC. Maglio. 620 Robson. St. Nelson\nTIKE  RaETREADING\nTruckowners\u2014\nhave   modern   equipment,\nyour  tires   retreaded   NOW!\nRIVERSIDE MOTORS\n1995 Col. Ave.. Trail - Phone 440\nWe\nHave\nEverything lo keep your home\napic nnd span\u2014Floor wax, liquid\nand paste: DIc-a-Doo paint cleaner,\nflax soap. Absorene wall-paper\nclrnner. Brasao nnd Sllvo, weighted\npolishers, dust and floor mops, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for Ihe Iale Wll-\nlam Henry Mawer will be held\nfrom Ihe Thompson Funersl Home\nSaturday at 2 p m. Rev. W. J. Silver-\nwood wtll officiate.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED: FURNISHED APT. OR\nsmall furnished house. T. E\nClarke, Box 2744 Nelson News.\nWANTED FOR MAY 1: SMALL\nhouse or apartment for family nf\nfour, one small child. Box 2748\nDaily News.\nWould Not Release\nStudents to\nbin Land Army\nVANCOUVER, April 8 (CP.) -\nSchool children should not be released from schools for Land Army\npurposes unless the case ls proved\nto be of urgent need, and both\nteachers and trustees should be represented on any Und Army proposals affecting school pupils. In\nthe opinion of the Metropolitan\nBranch of the B. C. Trustees Association. A resolution to that effect\nwas adopted by the Association last\nnight and will be forwarded to the\nDepartment of Education.\nti&&ss^*MSit&?^xs\u00a3xe*oo~~},\nHave the  Job Done Right\nSee'\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\n%&&>stz**ea>&sKaettceeoct&see*t\n<f\nPasteerixed\nMilk Makes\nChildren\nHealthy\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\n.Compounded\n' Accurately\nMed   Aria Blk\nPHONE 25\nIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nPAPERING YOUR HOME!\nFree Advice goes with the\nWALLPAPER\nYOU BUY AT\nMURPHY BROS.   '\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU\nSeek New\nMarching Song\nA Canada-wide competition for a\n\"World War Two\" song Is being\nheld under the auspices of the Allied Arta War Service Council of\nVancouver which hopes to uncover\na present-day marching lyric.\nThe beat lyric submitted will be\nchosen by a group of competent\nJudges and then a second competition will be opened to composers\nto write music for the words. If a\nsong is found end judged to be\nworthy it will be published.\nThe Allied Arts , War Service\nCouncil ia a group of artists, writers,\nactors and newspapermen and women who hope to pool talents and\nideas to help In the war effort.\nRules for the competition, entries\nfor which must be in the handi of\nthe Judges by April 30, may be obtained from the Secretary, Allied\nArts War service Council, 4687 Bel-\nAs to Rabaul, In New Britain,\nSouth Pacific, you aay It Rah-BAH-\nooL\nTry.\nQUICK LUNCH\nMELON DEW\nTODAY\nJ. P. Walgren\n\u2022General Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.\n< 11 r e 111111111111 r t s i \u25a0 i \u25a0 1111111 s i t ill*\nASK YOUR.GROCER POR\nHOOD'S Bread\n\u2022     YOUR HOME BAKERY\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSktA, 5\/W\u00a3QAj\u00a3\nPhone\n10-11.\nBON AMI CAKES,\n2\u00abfor \t\nSpring Cleaning Needs\n 27c\nLEMON OIL, Aero,\n8 oi. bottle\t\n19c\n49c\nO'CEDAR, NO-RUBBING CREAM\nPOLISH, Polishing Cloth Free,\nO'CEDAR, NO-RUBBINC CREAM POLISH, Polishing Cloth Free,\nLarge bottle\t\n.NONSUCH  ENAMO  CREAM,\nEnamel Stoves, Refrigerators,\nBottle   \t\n49c\nWashes\ne'e29c\nBON AMI POWDER,\n2 ting\t\nUPHOLSTERY AND RUG\nCLEANER, bottle\t\nClLLETTE'S LYE,\nTin   \t\nNONSUCH WINDOW CLEANER,\nBottle   \t\nSANIFLUSH,\nTit  \t\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER,\n2 tin*\t\n33c\n35c\n14c\n19c\n29c\n21c\nChan\nSpeed Coat\n59c-98c\nfS^S-fc**.\nRobin Hood\nOats\nS lb. bag\n25c\nMAaCARONI, Quaker Quick ECCS, Local Crade A \u00a3Q\nCooking, 16 oi.       OQ       Large, 2 doien UjC\npktt., 2 for LVZ __..._- \u201e\u201e\u201e,\nTOMATO JUICE \u2014 Camp-\nLARD, Union,\n2  Ibs\t\n33c\nbell's, 20 oi. tins,\n2 for,\n25c\n2 pkts.  KELLOGG'S  ALL-\nWHEAT and 1 Class'\nTumbler, all for\nPEAS, Sunrise, Sieve OQ\n5, 20 oi. tins, 2 for LjZ\n27c\nCood Size 220's,\nORANGES,\n2 doien \t\nCRAPEFRUIT, California\nSpecial, 4 for ........\nLEMONS, 360*1.\n6 for \t\nStar Quality Produce\n83c\nExtra\nSPINACH, California or Ttxas,\nLb\t\n25c\n19c\n23c\nLETTUCE, Large Solid Heads,\nEach   \t\nTURNIPS,\n9 Ibs. ..\nPARSNIPS,\n4 Ibs\t\nRadishes, .Green Onions, Celery,\nCabbage, etc., etc.\n19c\n25c\n15c\nNew\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_1943_04_09","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415594","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"}]}}