{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415604":{"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":"1942-07-17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415604\/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":" *t\n. __   ________   **\u25a0\u25a0 **   BUaik\n(Met fed tai*.-*.^* I\n)tft Use \u00bb Wsfsftips Cfptrtd te\n41 ef U J\u2014e\u00bba\u00abe,1.\nUeJted Nafloes Mer Yet\ntt lawsde f ftne*\u2014 faga\nVOtUHl 41\natvg csnts ne. corn\nHeH ef HtMstatf Shortage fa CaaadW\nIs Nat Teaaftvary.\u2014\u00bbije 2.\nBrrrtah Aed 500 New Birrtetk.pt\nte Fleet ia Three Years.\u2014*s|e Z.\nDrew Cfiticiemi Coming Up Agile\nNeat Week-fig. 9.\nNtLSON, SRITIS4H COLUMattA  CANADA-FRIDAY MOHtUNO, JULY tf. tttt\nMjMBSR 75\nRUSS SAVAGELY ATTACKING EAST OF DON\nEnemy Threats to\nSt. Lawrence Bring\nOutburst in House\n')\n,     Members  Demand   Secret  Sessions\nSo That Truth as to Defences May\nBe Known\u2014Bombers Are Sent\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP)\u2014Unof. mikt It ippeir thtt \"I wis t iort\nficlil repor.j of further, unreported , of i traitor,\" Mr. Roy iald \"1 wis\nincident! In the lower SI.-Lawrence, firmly convinced within my soul\ntnd of \"irregularitlei\" md of neglect   and conscience thit 1 wu perform-\nof duly In responsible quirten. were\nhetrd in the House of Commons\ntoday when J. S. Roy (Ind. Gaspel\nasked (or a secret sitting to discuss\nthese matters.\nConiervative House Leader Hanion Joined wilh Mr. Roy in urging\na secret sitting and asserted thst\nhe, like Mr. Roy, had received numerous reporti \"of a startling ntturt.\"\nPrlmt Minister Mtckenne King\ntold tht mtmbtn that they ihould\nconfide their privtte Informition to\nthu Defenca Ministers tnd a decliion on i lecret sitting could not be\nreached until iuch Information\nreached the Ministry.\nMr. Roy laid his information wu\ntuch is to lead him to believe \"that\nthort is reason to fear that perioral responsible for the protection\nef our coastal waters have been\nnegligent In their duty.\"\nMr, Hansen ttld hit Informition en hipptnlrigt In 'thi St.\nLawrence River wat tuch thtt\nwould \"mtke mt believe thet ill\nll not will,'1 Thit wit to put It\nmildly In relation to whet hid\nhappened ind which WII already\nknown end \"other thlngi which\nIlio hive hipptnad and which\nhave not ytt betn divulged.\"\nHt idded: \"I think tht Prime\n| *,mW\\totrty*t!&*>a*U>\" \u00ab***\nernment will know whet Cam alluding.\"\nThtre hive been two reported Ifi-\nrldenti In the St. Lawrence Involving linking of ihips\u2014a total of five\nvesieli have been announced u\ntorpedoed and sunk.\nThe result wss t vote ot 111 to\nIS agalnit adjournment with moit\nof tht opposition tnd some Liberals\nvoting for the motion.\nMr. King said there had been\nmany off-shore sinkings and he\nwould be surprised If there were\nnot more, md the people ihould\niccept those possibilities.   .\nHt questioned the needttlty of\na lecret ilttlng whenever theie\nacta of wtr occurtd ind. mured\ntht House thtt ill pouible itept\nwert btlng tiktn to meet the\ndinger.\nNavy Minister Macdonald was not\ntil the House and Mr. King said he\nwas visiting CoUingwood and Midland, Out., shipyards on duties directly associated with this problem.\nThe discussion occupied nearly\ntwo hours and brought speeches in\nrupport of the motion from M. J.\nColdwell (CCT. House Leader),\nRev. E. G. Hansell, for the New\nDemocracy group, and Jem Frm-\ncols Pouliot (Lit* Temlicouata).\n] T. L. Church (Con, Toronto-Broad-\nvlew) opposed the motion.\nMri Roy asked for '.'an Immediate\nsecret session of the House to dis-\n' cuu certain grave eventi which\nhave occurred within the pait few\ndayi in the St. Lawrence, about\nwhich thli house ihould be fully\nI Informed.\"\nTo give details In open teulen\nWould be to give Informition to\nthe enemy, Mr. Roy uld, \"but my\nInformition letdt mt to believe\nthit there It reiton to fur thit\npersona reiponilble for tht protection of eur cotltil waters havt\nbeen negligent In their duty.\"\nMr. Roy said he had, In the pait,\n'* tent information to the Government\ni on this matter and had isked for\nprotection and  defence  works  on\n' the CSupe Coast.\n\"I am Informed that bombers were\nI rent to those two places only after\nl<he last torpedoing.\" he continued\n'and proceeded to talk of the possibility of Germani landing  lo  get\ngaioline supplies, when he was in\nterrupted by cries of \"order\" from\n' mtny quarters.\nSpeaker Glen utd Mr.-Roy Was\nj mentioning mitten which should\nI come up only in a secret ilttlng.\nMr. Roy said he had been \"re.\nbuked\" ln the House by Navy Min\nliter MacDonald following his\nipeech last Friday when he reveal\ncd the latest sinkings In the St. Law\nrinot River.\nThe   Ministers   remarki   would\nng my duty as \u2022 citisen of this\ncountry tnd as a member o( Parliament.\"\n\"I am not taking for t public\ndiicuuion,\"   Mr.   Hanion   uld.  \"I\ndo think thtrt in good groundi\nftr uking  for  \u2022   publlo  discus-\nsion, however, tnd I do not be\nHtvt l publlo  discussion  of thli\nkind would be rtfuttd In Britain.\"\nHe uld It wu \u2022 right of mtmben\nto be given in opportunity to question the Ministry on theu mitten\ntnd \"furthermore, is to certiln Irregularities which lt ls alleged to\nhave occurred  in  connection wtth\nthe operation of at least one arm of\nthe armed forces In that area\u2014with\nwhom I Intend to acquaint the Minister.\"\nMemben might be told, at \u2022 secret sitting \"whtt hti hippened not\non two occtslont but on three, tnd\nwhit he hu there to meet the situation \u2014 I am tfrtld lt Is not very\nmuch, though there mty be good\nreisons for  that.\"\nFirst duty of Canada was to protect International convoyi but tecondtry wai tht defence of Canada\n\"With reipect to the irei In question we know very little. I do not\nknow whit It the nature of the defence! or what itepi hive been\nim* tltwe m-ymk jup,4ine\u00bbr>\nrepair any deficiencies which there\nmty be.1'\nThe Prime Mlnliter iald It wat\napparent that tome memben winted an open discussion and otheri \u2022\nsecret sitting, adding \"It seems that\nno matter what the government\ndoes It Is wrong.\"\nHe reminded the house that there\nhad been \"a very large number of\nships\" sunk off the Nova Scotia\ncoast and there had been an attack\non the Pacific coast Itself.\n\"And may I sty furthir thtt It\nwill be t very grttt turprlti, I\nthink, If further occurrtncltt of\nthe kind do not tike place at iny\ntime, on either cout, tnd I think\n\u2022thii country must tectpt those\npossibilities.\n\"But the question we must ask\nourselves Is whether each time a\nship is torpedoed off one coast or\nthe other, or some act of war takes\nplace, it li to be the duty of the government to hold a secret session in\norder to discuss that particular situation.\"\nNO DIFFERENCES\nWITH SIFTON\nSAYS HOWE\nOTTAWA, July IS (CP) -\nMunitioni Minuter Howt told\ntht Houie ot Commoni today ht\nhid no difference! with Victor\nSifton of Winnipeg wbo recently reilgned u muter-generil\nof the Ordnince.\nHe wis aniwerlng \u25a0 question\nfrom Dr. Herbert Bract (Con,\nToronlo-Ptrkdtlt), tnd pro-\nteited igtlntt tht tenor of the\nqueition which, he uld, midt\nt statement of fict tnd ipreid\nthe impression across Cinada\nthtt Mr. Sifton hrd reilgned\nbeciuse of qutrreli with tht\nminister.\n\"The (ict Is.\" ht uld, \"trust\nMr Sifton ind 1 worked in the\ngreitest harmony. We visited\nbick and forth frequently. We\nhad i common problem of getting tuppliei for the troopa. So\nfar ti 1 know there wu never\nany   tntigoniim   between   us.\"\nJapanese Find\nWar Brings\nGrim Hardships\nBy FRANK  MARTIN\nAuoelittd Prist SUff Wrlttr\nANKARA, Turkey. July 15 (Deliyed) (AP)-Jtpin wis deicrlbed\ntodty byt neutral arriving from\nTokyo is i cold tnd sombre country\nwhere people with grim facet are\ntightening their belti beciuse of\nhardships brought on by the war.\nThe Informint wis a young woman of \u2022 neutril country. She waj\none of the tint to irrlve ln the Middle Eait from Toky tnd the reached Ankara after a 33-day trip icrosi\nRuuli.\nShe uld iht wis having lunch In\nTokyo when the United Stttei\nbomberi attacked, but ihe paid little\nittention to the sirens beciuie Japanese officials bad lounded so many\nfalse alarms.\nDIPLOMAT ABOARD SHIP\nREPORTED\nSUNK OFF PORTUGAL\nLISBON, July 17, Friday, (AP)-\nUnconfirmed reporti were received\nhere today that the 2991-ton Argentine freighter Argentlno had been\ntorpedoed and sunk off the Portuguese cout, with an Argentine diplomat among lti three passengers\nand 39 crew members.\nMONTREAL, July IS (CP) -\nCanadian National Railways report\ngross revenues for the week ended\nJuly 14 totalled $7,821,000 compared\nwith g5,M4,000 for the corresponding period last year, an Increase of\n$2,277,000 or 41.1 per cent.\nCanada Cuts Bren\nGun Cost\nlo Less Than Half\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP.)- The\ncost of Canada's .funs Is coming\ndown, it was revealed In a report of\na House of Commons lub-commlt-\ntee on war expenditurei, tabled in\nthe House today.\nThe report cited the case of the\nBren light machine gun which cost\n$390.59 to produce at the start of\nthe first quarter of 1941 and $192.28\nat the end of the first quarter of\n1942.\nBrens are made by the John Inglls Co., Toronto, and total cipital assistance granted this farm was $9,-\n005.544, the report said.\nThe .303 Browning machine gun\nfor aircraft, also made by the Inglls firm, cost $402 on Nov. 15, 1941,\nand $220.50 on April 25, 1942.\nSINK RUSSIAN SUBS?\nBERLIN, July 16 (AP.) \u2014 The\nGerman high command claimed today German naval craft had sunk\ntwo Soviet submarines operating\nin the Gulf of Finland.\nTYPHOON KILLS JAPS\nBERLIN, July 16 (AP.) - More\nthan 200 persons were kileld by a\ntyphoon which swept icross the\nNorthern part of Japan'i Island\ncolony of Formosa, according to a\nTokyo dispatch.\nWeather al Crucial Stage for West\nKootenay Cherries; Processing\nof Early Fruit Under Way at Harrop\nWeather conditions hive reiched\nthe crucial stage for West Kootenay cherry growers. At the moment most of the cherries are being\nprocessed for later ule* but ripe\nfruit is due to itart moving to mirket tt any time if the weather improves.\nHarrop li again the scene of processing by the Associated Growers, both cherrlei and itrawberrles\nbeing put\" up. The volume of strawberries' Is nol large.\n\"The cherries received at Harrop\nso far havt beta of eatoelUnt qual-\n,\nIty,\" itated Robert Foxall, Manager\nof Nelson sub-central of the Associated. IThey are mostly from\nthe early districts, the Arrow Lakes\nand Brilliant, but West Arm cherries ire ready to start any dty\u2014\ndepending on the weather. Up to\nthit time the nln hai not caused\nserious damage but It will If lt con-\ntnues,\" he stited.\nBulk of (he cherries are Royal\nAnnes. with a few of other varieties from the early districts.\nMarketing of rasrpberriei tj be-\nglnnng, but there have been only\noccasonal elites to date.\nCRUCIAL BATTLE\nCENTRE J AROUND\nHILL OF JESUS\nRommel Seems to Be\nAttempting Final\nBreakthrough\nBRITISH BRING\nT55'S INTO PLAY\nBy EDWARD KINNIDY\nAuoelited Prete Stiff Writer\nCAIRO, July 11 (AP)-A mi)or\nbtttlt between Britiih ind Axli\nirmored forcei on which It ippetred the entire fight for Egypt might\nturn erupted todiy ln the ctntrtl\n\u2022edor ot the El Alimeln deiert\nfront while Germtni ind Auttrili-\ntm fought \u25a0 ding-dong engagement\nfor \"the HUI of Jesus\" on the coest\nTbe Germans ippirently wire\nfollowing up in uniucctttful ittempt to brttk Into tht poiitioni\nwon by tht Brltlth forcei Wednesdiy with in itttck bicked up by\nheivler trmor. Deliiled Informition wn licking on the ntw btttlt\nbut lt wn indicated It wn of decisive proportions.\nIt wu possible thtt tht Germini\nnote irt attempting i final breakthrough towird Alexindrli tnd the\nNile. The forces of Field Minhil\nErwin Hommel havt been stilled\nIn the Alamein itctor tomt 63 miles\nto 70 milei Weit of AJextndrli\nilnce the Britiih irmy on June 10\nhilted IU long retreit from Llbyi\nand mads a stand.\n(At that time Rommel'i forcei\nwert exhiusied tnd he wu depending on long communlcition llntt\nhastily extended. It wat possible\nhe now felt he had gathered lufficient strength and rest for en all-\nout ittempt to imish the defenderi\nof the itritegic Nile Villey).\n(Reuters nld In tt Cttro dispatch\nto London jirtat Uit Wtdneidty\ndrive on Vie centre- ptidul U><\nBritish fortgt teven mlbii ftf* Yd*\"1\nAxis llnet).\nOn the Northtrn tector tlong tht\ncoist, Britiih tnd Auitrillin troopt\ncounter-attacked earlier In the day.\nretaking the Ttl Bl Bill (Hill ot\nJesui) ridge. Liter the Axis, using\nsome irmor, recovtred the position\nind i see-saw fight roared on into\nthe evening.'\nBritish and Axli forces both Improved their positions on the El\nAlamein battleground In fighting\nwhich was featured by mounting\naerial activity.\nGen. Sir Claude Auchlnleck'i\ntroopi seized ne*w objectives ln the\ncentral lector of the Cauldron, 70\nto 80 miles West of Alexandria.\nFirit advancing eerly yesterdiy,\nthey gained positioni it the Western\nend of a ridge South of El Alamein,\ntaking a number of prisoners. An\nAxis counter-attack yesterday afternoon was declared repulsed.\nIn the coastal tector,' Field Marshal Erwin Rommel attacked the\n\"Hill of Jesus\" ridge with dive-\nbombers, tanki and at least 500 Infantrymen, and succeeded ln reocu-\npying aome petitions which Aus-\niralian troops had seized lsst week.\nBut British troops still clung to\nhigh ground on this lector.\nRommel's attack was preceded by\nspectacular artillery action and followed by one of the heaviest dive-\nbombing attacks.of the campaign,\nInvolving from 36 to 40 aircraft,\nSeven of the Nail planes were\nshot down by British fighters ind\notheri damaged.\nOn the Allied tide, heavy United\nStales army bomberi ittacked Bengasi In daylight, itarting a big tire\nIn the docks of that main enemy\nsupply port. The K.A.F. followed\nwilh night attacks against Bengasi\nand Tobruk.\nMany Axis Unks also were reported destroyed by Britith artillery.\nBritish gunners In the foremost positions were using 155 mm. guns\nwith excellent effect agalnit the\ntanks.\nIn a iwlft movement South African forces pushed across the white\nsand from El Alamein itition to attack Italian poiitioni. That battle\nitarted at 7 p.m. Wednesday and\ncontinued until 3 un. today.\n\"There wai cloie coopention between the R.A.F., the 'South African flieri and the ground forces.\nReaching the Italian minefields In\nthe darkneu the Infantry pushed\non, allowing their artillery to ihejl\nenemy troop concentrator!! from\nthe minefield! themielvei.\n\"Still other ralderi, openting in-\nside the disorganized enemy llnei.\nreturned with bloodied bayoneti\nand more than 80 Italan prisoners.\n\"While  thle  operation   was  proceeding British bombers wer- >-' \u25a0 \u2022\nIng tnemy poiltlons, giving tht har-\naited enemy no bretthng ipell.\"\nI\n\u2014ajjjjjjjjjjjjj \u2014^\nHowe onrf Air Chief\nAfoul ott Blackout\nRegulations\nOTTAWA. Mty It (CT)-Air\nMarshal L. S^Breadoer, Chltl\nof Air Stiff, atM munitioni MlnUttr Howe ruy if vul of tht ltw\ntodiy for tlleM lntrectiom of\nbltckout regulations.\nAir Marshal Breadner wu\nfined 110 ied a cotti on \u2022\nehtrgt ot permitting Ughti to\nbe left on lo hii borne during\nthe June 17 (uaekout here It wu\nexpliined in court thit tht offence wu committed during tht\nibience IngBrltiin of tht Air\nMarshal\nMr Howl received I summons Instructing him to tppeir\nIn Hull Bfctrict Court Jury 11\nfor allegedly filling to extinguish t bMtnlng mitch ind covering his pipe-bowl when idvised to do to by t warden. Trie\noffence is laid to hive occurred\nwhen Mr; Howe itruck t mitch\nto light .hit pipe during the\nblackout.\nSE\nIntense Attacks\nFall to Block\nMurmansk Route\nBy J. P. SANDERSON\nCinidlin  Prett Itiff Writer\nWAWINCTON, July 16 iCP)-\nThe JPtr Northern lupply route to\nRusilt, put Cape North In Norway \"gnd into the Arctic seaports of\nArchangel md Murmansk, li itinding u|, deipite ill the efforti of the\nfiermtns to block lt with mi md\nair attacks. It wai staled here today\nby J. C. Patterson, Canidlan-born\nDirector of Trinipert for the Brl-\ntish Miniitry of Supply,\nHe iti dthtt up to lhe end ot Junt\nBritain had dtlWered to Ruisli]\nevery, tank, machine tool i*i plane\nthat was promised and, although the\nGermani have subjected the convoyi to intense attack! from iir-\ntrict, submarine ind lurface veitels,\ntheir clalmi ot sinkings have been\n'absurd and fantastic.\"\nBlast Ruhr In\nDaring Daylight\nR.A.F. Solo Raids\nNazi Nests in Low\nCountries Also\nAttacked\nLONDON, July 16 (CP)- The\nRoyil Air Force made ltt tlrtt daylight raid on the Ruhr todiy ind\nIlio tttacked Urge'i tn Norlhwttt\nGermtny ind occupied Holltnd.\nThi nlds were appirently Ught\nmd m tome cimi by single nldtn\nbut the very extenilon of daylight\noffensive activity\u2014 now thtt tht\nnighti are short\u2014teemed to presage\ngreater forayi.\nInformtd quarter! believed the\nNorthweit German target wu the\nDuliberg dlitrict, when the lirgest\nGerman inland port il situated.\nThe R. A. F. bombed Danzig htrbor while tht sun wu shining five\ndayi ago, but thii wu tht tint dty\nlight nld on Oermtny proper ilnce\n11 greet four-motored bomben\nhedge-hopped to Augsburg In the\nSouth of Germtny April 18 to blast\na tubmarine engine plant. Seven\nof the enft were lost.    \u2022\nRAF. piloti hive been rtitleis\nrecently beciuse poor wuther hu\nrutricted' their vut, pulverising,\nlOOO-bombr visits ;o Germin arsenals, porti tnd tubmirlne works.\nNazi-infested Holland alio wu attacked todiy by single ilrcnft that\nhid the protection of cloud covering. Other tighten raided the coist\nof Fnnce, attacking railway yards.\nGerman plmu attacked the East\nMldlindi ttrly todiy, machine-gunning men ind women en route to\nwork. Some flrei ind dimige reiulted.\nNEW YORK, July 16 (AP)-Bob\nFalkenburg of Hollywood, Calif.,\nwon the Eastern United States Junior tennis championship today by\ndefeating Charles OUver of Perth\nAmboy, N. J., 6-3, 6-4, 17-15. in a\nthrilling final.\nOffensive Costs\nHuns 900,000 in\nLast Two Months\nNazis Thrown Back in Bloody Battle\nat Voronezh; 4000 Germans\nKilled in Three Days\nly EDDY CltMOM\nAssociated Preu Staff Writer\nMOSCOW, July 17 (Friday) (API\u2014Soviet armies have\nnow taken the initiative from the Germans on some sectors\nof the Voroneih Front and are stoutly resisting in the South\nin terrific campaigns which have cost the invaders 900,000\nmen and the Russians 399,000 in two months, the Soviets\nannounced early today.\nThe Russians said that the Germans had been thrown\nback on the defensive at Vor- >\noneih, an important railroad\ncity eut of the Don River which\nthe Germini hive beulgtd for\ndiys with wsves of men, tanks tnd\nplinet- \"In iome lectori of the\nVoroneih Front, the initiative pisi-\ned Into Soviet htndJ,\" the midnight\nRussian communique sild. \"The\nGermini ire on the defensive.''\ntroops slnct tht outbreik of the\nwir were to be cilculited. It would\nseem Ultt the Red Army hid long\nsince been left not only without t\nsingle tank, ind without t tingle\ngun, but hid ilso been left without\nmy men.'\nAs this Russiin picture ot trtmen-\nCONFUSES TO KILLING\nOf THREE WOMEN\nMK^JUBN* July 16 (CP.)-A\nUnited SUtei mlUtaqLcourt, trying\nPtey Idwird\" J. Leonskl tor the\nslaying of three Melbourne women,\naccepted in evidence today t purported confeulon ot guilt which\narmy officeri nid the' former New\nYork groetry cltrk had signed in\nthtlr prtienct.\nYORKTON, fjaik., July 16 (CP)\n\u2014Graduatu of No. 11 Strvlct\nFlying Training \u00bbehool of tht Royal Cinidlin Air Force received\ntheir piloti' wlngi n \u2022 ctrtmony\nhert todiy. Artnen Motiving\nwlngt Inoludtd J. R. Gowtni of\nGrind Forks.\nMcGeer Declares Inflation of\nCurrency Not Danger If\nPrices and Exchanges Controlled\nOTTAWA, July t (CP.)-G. G.\nMcGeer (Lib. Vancouver-Burrard)\ntold the House of Commoni today\nthat six monetary reforms, which\nwere looked on as \"dangerous Innovations\" In 1934, have been put ln\noperation In Canada and are an essential part of the national economy.\nHe spoke in support of Issuance\nof national currency during debite\non budget resolutions providing for\nincreases in Canadian income tax.\nThe proposil! frowned on In 1934\nbut Uter iccepted. said Mr. McGeer,\nwere: A publicly-owned nitional\ncentral bank; removal of the gold\nreserve limitation on the Issue of\nfull legal tender; national paper\ncurrency; control and regulation of\nthe international movement of currency and credit and Investment;\ncontrol and regulation of international trade; control and regulation\nof production, prices of goods ind\nservices and the use of taxation to\nwithdraw from circulation iny excess of buying power which would\ncause an Inflationary rise ln the\nprice of goods and services.\nMr. McGeer said the Government\nshould not reject the uae of nitlonil\ncurrency Issued to aid in financing\nwar outlays.\nMr. McGeer said he knew the\ndangers of Inflation of the currency\nbut so long as prices wert controlled and the flight from the dollar\nwis prevented by the control ind\nregulation of the movement of currency tnd credit and Inveitment ln-\nternatlomlly, the volume of money\nIn circulation would not of Itself do\nany harm.\nThe most dangerous ind insidious\nform of Inflation wis not the Inflation of currency but the Inflation of\nInterest-bearing debt, Mr. McGeer\nsaid.\nJ. J. Klnley (Lib. Queent-Lunen-\n:.     _,m.\nburg) said he wu opposed to i suggestion for tn issue of nitional currency.\nHe said he could not see how\nthe Issue of money would make the\nwar load easier to carry.\nCanadians would have to travel\nthe hard road\u2014the only road\u2014to\nvictory.\nVictor Quelch (N. C. Acadia) said\nMr. Kinley appeared to be one of\nthe \"museum piecei\" which wor\nshipped it the goldtn bull.\nThe press of Canada was largely\nowned and controlled by large financial syndicates, uid Mr. Quelch.\nEver ilnce the Social Credit-New\nDemocracy group had entered the\nHouse of Commoni the press had\ntried to discredit and misrepresent\nIt.\nThe communique said there were   .      . .  \u201e.   _\n,, ,   , .,_    .     ,    dous lossei was Issued, the German\nno esientlal changes on other fronti. ~ ......\nbut  icknowledged    thit   the   Red| \u00b0!'ensive in tne Hdutn ilretdy win\nArmy hid wlthdriwn- to new poiltlons touthtut of Millerovo, where [\n20 miles within the extreme North*\nern Caucasus at Millerovo, driving\ntowird Stalingrad on in elbow ot\nthe Volga 175 miles to the Eait.\nThe Millerovo sector, due East ot\nLisichansk   and   on   the   MoKowa\nthe Oermans tre pounding furiously towird tht Caucasus snd the\nVolga.\nIn   bloody   continuation    of  the\nfighting   which   a   ipeciil   Soviet j R\u00b0attw riilwiy, ippetred lo be the\ncommunique uld had coit the Germani. 900,000 men killed, wounded\nand captured between May lo  md\nJuly 15, the midnight communique\nssid\" 4,000 ''Hitlerites'' have been\nkilled In three dtyt of fighting In\nthe Millerovo sector.       . .\nThe- Red Array also destroyed 39\nGermin tanki In that fighting, it\nwu uld.\nDuring the two month!,, Ifit Germani loit 350,000 men killed.\nThe figurei covered the cim-\npalgni of Kerch, Kharkov, Izyum,\nBarvenkovt, the ilege tnd fall of\nSevastopol and the sweep across\nthe Don- Essin to .he gateway to\nthe Caucasus.\nThe Russians said their own casualties, 330,000, included killed,\nwounded and missing.\nOf the Germans, the communique\nsaid:\n\"Not less thap. 350,000 of theie\nwere killed. They lost besides up\nto 2,000 gunt of ill cilibrei.\n\"The Germans lost at least 2900\ntanks and 3000 planes.\"\nThe communique aaid Red Army\nlosses included 1,905 guns of all\ncalibres. Also lost were 940 tanks\nand 1.3S4 planes\n\"It It true that ln the course of\nthese battles, Soviet troops evacuat-\ned a number of districts and towns,\nbut they inflicted on the Hitlerites\nenormous losses in manpower and\nequipment,\" the statement said.\n\"Experience shows that the\ngreater lossei borne by the German\nArmy, the more insolent are the\nlies of the German Information Bu\nreaux and the louder Is the howling\nof the Berlin mongrels\n\"Morevover they give stupendous\nfigures on the alleged number of\nprisoners taken and of Unks and\nguns destroyed.\n\"If iccording to mnouncements\nof the German Information Bureau\nall the booty and prisonen alleged\nto   have   been   taken   by   German\nmost critical but another Nail threat\nto the great industrial city of Stal\u00ab\nIngrid developed to the North\naround fallen Boguchar.\nInject in tbe two-weeks-olt} ,\nfighting at Voroneih, lhe battle\nflamed with Ihe greatest intensity\nin the rich, blick firm linds be\u00ab\ntween the DoneU snd Don Rivera,\nThe German advance not only wai\nImperilling the oil treasure! of the\nCaucasus\u2014some 800 mllei beyond .\ntheir Immediate reach\u2014but wil\nwretting from the Soviets anothe*\nvital farming area from which Russii feeds msny of Its 190,000,009\npeople.\nSharp attacks ln the Kalinin and\nRzhev sectors northwest of Moscow were declared repulsed with\nheavy German losses. ' Severe\nfighting also took place in the Bryansk salient 200 miles south of\nRihev and 220 miles southwest of\nMoscow. All these German itlliet\nwere believed to be diversionary\nattacks to pin down Russian troopt\nand prevent their transfer to the\nmore crucial Don front.\nThe Russians admitted the Nazil\npenetrated deep into the defences)\n130 miles from Moscow, with huge\ntank attacks under smoke screens.\nGriffiths, Gibbon Receive Wings al\nClaresholm; lo Be Fighter Pilots;\nFamilies See Inspiring Wings Parade\nTwo Nelaon youths, who received Royal Canadian Air Force wings\nat Cla'reiholm, Alt*. Wedneidiy are\nto become tighter piloti, ind will\ngo overieai. ihortly. They ire Donild Gibbon, ton of Mr. and Mri. W.\nR. Gibbon of Trail md Nelson; and\nThomu Griffiths, son of F. W. Griffith!, Nelton. Both ire sergeant-\npilots. Thty expect to be home on\nleive Stturdiy.\nThlrly-ilx itudent piloti received their wlngi it Claresholm Wednesday ind'out of the SO five wert\nselected to become fighter pilots-\ntwo Nelson tnd three cout msn.\nAbout 10 membtri of the clus\nwill-go to the Ferry Commind md\nothers will take additional courses\nfor reconnaissance and other duties.\nGibbon and Griffiths reached the\nclimax of months of training with\ntheir familiei present to see them\nreceive their wings.\nMr. Griffiths stated the wings\nparade wu an insplrng affar. The\ngreat training field, traner planes\ncontinually In the air overhead, the\nclau of 30 surrounded by a thousand or more officer! and men and\na group of air cadett from Calgary,\nwhile the officer commanding presented the wings\u2014all this made up\na scene that would remain long In\nthe memory of those participating,\nhe uld.\nBig Truro Blaze\nRazes Lumber\nand Buildings\nTRURO, N. S, July 16 (CP.>\u2014\nSoldiers and civilians joined Truro'l\nfiremen today to bring under control a fire which destroyed two\nbuildings and 3,000,000 board feet of\ndry lumber of the Spencer Brothers and Turner Limited woodworking plant and jumped a half-mile to\nlevel a farmhouse and barn on the\nSalmon River Road.\nIn addition to the buildings and\n'lumber destroyed, the lir% burnt out\nthe main Halifax-Moncton telegraph\nlines.\nNo authoritative estimate of the\ndamage was available. Unofficial\nsources, however, .expressed relief\nit might reach $100,000.\nOne of the Company buildings\ndestroyed was a new combined\nwarehouse and boilerhouse, In\nwhich thousands of feet of finished\nmaterials were stored. ;\nSyrian Tribes in\nRaid on British\nVICHY, July 16 (AP.) - Vichy\nFrench press dispatches purporting\nto come from Syria reported today\nthat outlying Syrian tribes had been\njoined by Kurds from Iraq and Iran\ndn raids on British communication\ntines across the Eastern Syrian desert to Mosul on the upper Tigrit\nRiver ln Northerr. Iraq.\n \u2022\u2022\u25a0fmi\\\n-\nPAOI TWO\nCanada Protect*\nParliament\nWith Bags of Sand\nOTTAWA, July \u00ab (OP)-!*\nUsHlsmlM buildings ar* prtptr-\ntd to matt an tir raid aay tint*,\n\u2022mall tags *f sand, v\/alghln*. 10\ntt it teuttds sath, hav* beta\nplated tt sasovtt of Milt thrtufh-\n\u2022irt ih* building.\nSAVE ALL\nEMPTY BOTTLES\nEmpty Bottlei are need*\ned.along with icore* of\nother article* normally\ndlicarded In peace Ume.\nYeur local Salvage\nCorpi will collect them,\n\u2022ell them, and um the\nproceedi for patriotic\npurpoiei.\nSo\u2014pttt all dlicarded\nartlclei, including\nempty bottlei, to one\n' tide and have them\npicked up by your local\nSalvage Corpi. Make\nlure nothing ii waited.\nHudson's Bay\n'RYE\nin Tit\n\u2022*>\u00ab HUf\nNation-wide Problem .\nHall of\nHousing Shortage\nIs Not Temporary\n\u25a0FINKS\n*_f_fUa.   aftrtniTC. t_y m\ncnn iaie 0*1 cwrr\n\u2022ALI OM CWT tail! ONI CHIT SAL* OMI CWT UUgfl CWT\nFINK'S J\nOTTAWA, July M (OP). - A\nnation.wldt *mtptl|n tupportM\nby IossI oommlttMi, to mtkt iur\nplus living acoemmedttlon svsll-\nthl* to nonsuits ttmlllM wtt\nurged th th* rtport tf t iub-\u00abom-\nraHtee ef th* Htutt tf Oemmens\nCommittet tf Wtr liptattttuftt\ntabled lo ths Houie ef Comment\ntodty.\nTht tub-wmmitttt found min\nthm tat htlf ef tht fitmlng short-\ntgt tf I permanent thtratttr.\nHeaded by Hughes Cletver (Lib -\nHalton) the (roup undertook a study\nof tht work of Wtrtimt Housing,\nLtd, a Government company organised to construct homes in areu\nwhert thtrt was not enough accommodation for war industry workers\nTht sub-committee said the proposed campaign ihould be undertaken by volunteer workeri\nOther recommeadtUoni wtre:\n1. A plan ot loins for financing\nconversion of old ilngle-ftmlly\nhomes into two and thrtt family\napartments on t basii similar to tht\nHorn* Improvtmttt Plan. Loans\nshould ba repayable In Instalments\novtr I period of at leut flvt years\n1 A survey to establish tbt numbtr of permanent hornet which oaa\nh\u00ab built without endangering \u25a0 post-\nwir surplui In urban ctntrtl whert\na serious houiing iltuition txlits.\nTht tub-committte nld the ihortige oould be mtt by building perm-\ntntnt homu under tht Nations!\nHousing Act whtrt it eould bt dim-\nonitrsted thst by tht ust of building materiali non-essentlsl for war\npurposes, or by the ust of building lots tlreedy served by locsl\nImprovements, an actual saving ln\nlabor and essential wir materials\ncould be effected through the eon\nitrucfeton of permtntnt homei' rath-\ner thin temporary structures built\nby Wartime Housing.\nJ. Wartime Housing should-atudy\nJUST Arrived!\nMEN'S SWEATERS\nl   Pullovers, round neck ijl *jr\nM  waffle stitch    <Pl.\/D\n' \u2022.    ^J Jantzen, ileevless. wheat gold,\n\u25a0 rust, blue (po nr\n, \u25a0 Each   *)L.Vd\nJackets With Zipper\nWaffle stitch, two-    fM QC\nBf tone i]>a-.a7j\nfB Poplin, two tone, green-gray,\nroyal-grey if4 TA\nEach   tJ)t).0U\nJantien, clipped        tfi QC\nrayon  tp'iwtJ\nSharkskin, two-tone, blue |antzen, pure wool     IJC QC\ngrey f3.95 Each  tj>d.\"j\nGodfreys' Limited\nThe Home of Cuarantaed Work Clothing\nPhone 270 387 Bakir St.\nGuide for Travellers\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL\nLet tht Dally Newi Advertliing Department quote you on \u25a0\ndally advertisement for your hotel or cabin camp,\nVANCOUVER, B. C., HOTELS\n.\"VOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\ni    Seymour St       Vtncouvtr, B. C,\nNtwly rtnovtttd through-\ntut Phonti and elevitor.\nA, PATTERSON, late ol\nColemin, Alta., Proprietor\nHOTEL AMBASSADOR\n773 Seymour Street Vancouver, B.C.\n!        Newly Furnlihed and Rtdecorated \u2014 Abiolutely Fireproof\nMODERATE RATES\nKenneth Campbell tr Unt,\nLate of Nelion, Props.\n\u2022 Quick\n\u2022 Convenient\nt   Comforttbls\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Motor  Freight  Line*\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELION DAILY\nAt 10:30 t.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTro\nM.  H. Mo|VOR  Prop\nPhone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\ntht witdotn of erecting ttejtptrilj\nhomei of tlthtr itudtrd or rusty\ncut eoavitrueUon rtthtr thtn ami-\nprtithrK-ittd cotitruction now used.\nM that tke unit cost might hs rt-\nduotd. IWi itudy would also tfl.\nvolvt coosiderstion ef tht mt of\nsottttrtd victm leti ilretdy nrv-\nictd by local unprovtaents tnd tht\nawardlni tf building osntiteU ln\ngroups of lttt thu 10 housei in\norder to enlist the servlcti ot sraiU\nbuilding contractors.\nt. tn localities tuoh it Nofcel.\nOnt, (whtrt thtrt U bo posiibillty\nof uh bum mtdt of houiea now\nbeini built, after tbt war,) modification In tht Houst plant should bs\nmsds to reduce thtlr cott to the\nlimit. In lint with proper living\naccommodttlon. Houm In iuch localities will hsve prectlcilly no Ml-\nvsfe vilue, the Committet nld.\n9. Dependents of toldltri Ovtr-\nMas, civil servants, ind Canadian\nworkmen who trt Indirectly nrvlc-\ning wtr worktn ihould at pre.\nvidtd with low-cost houiing ie-\ncommodttion which thty urgently\nrequire,\nt. Wherever titlt to ltnd ll htld\nby Wtrtimt Houiing Ltd, or cm\nbt icqulred, itltt of houm built\nby tht Oovernment company ihould\nbt midi now to oecuptnti dulrlng\nto buy tafcm.\nTht Siib-commitlet rtcommindtd\nthin bt furthir itudy of itaff\nhoum built by Wirtlme Houiing\ntnd thli ictlvity ihould bt dull\nwith In t finil report.\naiRtoua CONGESTION\nTtit rtport sttd thst tht movtmtnt\nof libor from normtl resident*! to\ncentrei ef wsr Industry hid etuitd\nserious eongtttlon. Miny initsncti\nwtrt glvtn of eight, nln* and 10\nfamiliei living ln eight, nine ind\n10-room houses, with ont room ptr\nfamily tnd ont bathroom ptr houie.\nSince Incorporation in Februtry,\nIMl, wtrtimt housing htd received\ntpprovil ot building projtott totalling 11,842 houses -nd M stiff\nhouiea tnd other ipeclal blludlngi\ncost estimited tt $48,021,741, undtr\nwhich 9489 houses tnd Tl itaff\nhousei and other ipecltl bulldlngi\nbeen completed it t cost of $33.-\n449,719 and now tr* occupied.\nThe report praised the work of\nlocsl voluntary committees which\nundertook the management of\nbuildings. At the end of April, netrly $500,000 had been collected ln\nmonthly rentals wlth\/t rentsl losi\nwritten off it $317.\nThe sub-committee found from\ntonsnts that the heitlng costs of\nwartlmt housing bulldlngi wtre\nlow and the sccomodsition was\nhealthful. Isolsted lmtincei were\nfound where defects In construction required correction.\n\"The sub-committee has not bttn\nable to obtain any sstlsftctery tvidence as to the Mlvtfe value of\nthe houses at the conclusion of the\nwar,\" said the report\n\"Undoubtedly, heavy lost will\noccur when the problem of islvag-\nlng these wartime housei trim,\n\"The sub.commlttet btlltvts that\nthis problem should be cirefully\nstudied and that lt may be posilble\nto substantially Increue sslvtgt\nvalue by the ssle of housei snd lott\nto owners who will turn them Into\npermanent homes by building ban-\nments underneath them.\"\nIN THE UMPORARY AREAI\nThe general polley was. thett sll\nthe wertlme housing buildings\nwould be torn down or moved sway\nwithin six monthi ifttr tha cloie\nof hoitilitles. Tht reason for thia\npolicy was thst the prttant housing\nproblem wsi not t perminint difficulty.\nThe report nld (hit iomi miyon\nof dty munlciptllties tppearlng before the sub-committee expressed\nstrong viewi that the housei ihould\nbe removed it tht end of the wu\nas they were likely to become ilum\nsreas.\nThe sub-committee found, however, that most of the housei were\nso constructed that a ilum condition would not neeetstrlly follow\nIf the housei were built on permanent foundations wj\u00ab, a^ellar eccommodation.\nBuilding sites hsve not been\nbought where niitablt lots could\nbt leased st nomlnil ratals, ind\nsuch leaiet ttrmintitt alx month!\nafter the end of hostilities. The iverage cost of local improvements\nlnstallition was $705 a lot, tnd tht\nsub-committee   recommended   thst\nONE CENT\nm_f Jtm Jm JU\nSTARTING SATURDAY 9 a.m.\nBUY ONE\nMr ot $1.95\nEXTRA PAIR\nSAMI VALUE\nBUY 1 PAIR POR THE REG. PRICE\nCET AN EXTRA PAIR POR te\nBLUE\nNO EXCHANGES\nBUY ONE\nPAIR at $4.95\nEXTRA PAIR\nSAME VALUE..\nWHITI   \u2022\nBLACK    \u2022  MOWN   \u2022\nLOW, CUIAN ANO HICH HULS\n\u2022\nALL COLORS\n\u2022\nALL STYLES\n\u2022\nALL LEATHERS\n\u2022\nSTREET\nt\nBUSINESS\nt\nSPORT\nt\nDRESS\n\u2022\nEVENING\nBUY ONE\nPAIR ot $5.95\nEXTRA PAIR\nSAME VALUE..\nI\n3\nNO REFUNDS\nFINK S\nFootwear\nBUY ONE\nPAIR at $6.95\nEXTRA PAIR\nSAME VALUE..\nI\n3\nOKI CSMT lailS ONI GBMT fALIOMB CENT iALE QUI CIMT 8At* OME CIMT SALE OW C-tWS SALE ONE C\u00a3NT\nCanada's Part Large\nBritish Add 500\nNew Warships\nFleet, in 3 Years\nto\nLONDON, July Is (CPI- How\nhiv* incrtutd Britiih dutroyer\nproduction tenfold tnd htvt tdded\nto Hit Brii.h flttt mot than 900\nwarships of all dusts ilnct tht war\nbegin wai revelled lut night by\nH. C. rerreby, BBC ntvtl commentator. ThU metnt thit ntw British warships htvt rolled Into the\nwater on an average ol one every\nother day iin.ee the wir itarted.\nFerraby ssid that of these ihips,\nsome 100 wtrt ordtrtd or under\nconstruction when wtr broke out\nTht otheri trt ntw tnd many havt\nIncluded radical changei In design\nand building which hive reiulted\nfrom lesions learned tn tht ttrly\nstages of the war.\nIn one clau of warship alone,\ndestroyers, of whloh we're told wi\nctn't htvt tnough, British ind Dominion shlpysrds have already delivered no lett thtn ISO in the\nlist W monthi. Thit'i I tenfold\nIncreue ovtr peace-time flguru.\ntnd a ftet which the men of then\netn be proud of.\nBritish   tnd   Dominion   ihlpyirdi\n\"But thtt ls only pirt of the\nitory,\" he continued. \"On top of\nthis itmfotd increase, the yards\nhavt bven tble to turn out 180 eor-\n i ;\t\nsomt provlilon be mide to secure\nlubstantiil reimbursement to the\nGovtrnment of tht expenditure.\nOwing to the urgency of the situation, the Committee found that\ncontracts for erection of housei\nwtrt let to Urge general contractor! ln lots of not leu than K it i\ntlmt, tnd uiually iltu wtrt choun\nef sufficient list to ptrmlt full\nblocks of housu being built In om\nlocation.\nDIFFICULT JOB\nDONE WILL\nWhile It tppeired mistakes hid\nbttn midt In connection with this\nltrge prognm, the rtport Hid, \"ytt\nia tht light of ill tht circumstances\nand pirtlculirly In view of thl\ntlmt element which wu constantly\ndemanding Immediate reiulti, thl\nsub-committee flndi thit this corporation hid performed I difficult\ntalk with lurpriilng expedition.\"\nThi Committee hild thtt the temporary housing shortage ihould bl\nmet by thi construction of tempor-\nrary structures by wartime housing\ntl now Is being done, with idditlonil powers for the compiny to\nenable lt to meet tht temporary\nproblem In its entirety.\nThe Committee group found\nthtt more thtn one-htlf of the preunt housing ihortage il of t permanent chtricter tnd ahould bt\nmtt by tht construction of permanent homu undtr tht Nitlonil\nHouiing Act,\n\"Thl lub.commlfc't* ti i rtiult\nof |t| inquiry finds that thlrt U lta\nippirtnt Shortegt of thl mttonry\nmiteriili, tuch u brick, stone ind\nconcrete, whieh ire pteullir ta tha\nerection of perminent homu aa\nopposed to temporary homei,\" uid\ntht report.\n\"Tht present existing shortage of\nmiterial* ll confined principally to\nsteel, iron, copper and lumber.\"\nviltei\u2014t typt of thlp on which\ncomtruction wis juit itarting in\n1MB. Corvettei have been delivered\nit \u25a0 rate of nearly ieven \u2022 month,\na large share of the credU for thu\nbeing due tht Cinidiini.\nThii l| I f\u00bbirt of Britain'i all-out\nwar ettort about which little ii\nuid,\" Mr, Jerriby uid. 'Htherto\nInformation concerning ihip building his been kept secret to ill but\ni handful of peoplt.\nPonting out that ln 1917 tnd In\nHIS British shipyards turned out\n3,500,000 tons of new merchmt ships,\nIn iddition to warshlpi, Ferraby\niald Britain's current merchant ihip\nproduction muat be it least com-\npirable wth thli, and that the first\nlord of the idmlra|ty Indicated in\ni recent ipeech that It wu iven ba'-\nter,\n\"Another aspect of shipyard work\nthat we don't Ulk about nt ill Is\nthe repain to damaged ships. There\nhu been a lot of thli however, ind\nthey've been made In record time.\"\nHe said thit the 900 warships\nthat have been added to the British fleet have, unfortunately, n\u00b0t\nbeen net gains Since the ittrt of\nthe war the British Navy hai lost\n17 cruisers, 78 destroyen, SS lubmarinu, five cipital ihlps and four\naircraft carriers.\nIndicating all these production\nficta were already known to the\nenemy, slthough the Brltlth peoplt\nhid not ytt ieen tuch s tabulation\nof them, Mr. Terraby uld his figures ctmt trom a compilation ht had\nmtdt of published namu of new\nships. He indicsted thst ths names\nof a numbtr ot additional new ships\nhive probably not yet betn cleared\nfor publication. His figurei do not\nInclude production of mint-iweep-\n\u2022M. motor-torpedo bolts, ind motor\ngun-bos ts.\nIn 1939, 7S ptr cent of Cuba's exporti went to the U, S. and 73 per\ncent of Imports were received from\nthit country.\nCanada Has Done Magnificent Job\nin Gun Production But\nInspection Duplication Is Wasteful\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP)-A H\u00b0u\u00bb\u00ab\not Commoni sub-committee headed\nby Uontl Chevrler (Ub. Stormont)\nreported today thit the gun production branch of the Munitions tnd\nSupply Department hu dont t\n\"magnificent Job\" ln manufacture\nand production of weapons, but rt.\ncommended chtrtges In gun Inspection systems and in relations with\ncontractors.\nIn brief, theie ire the recommendation! it mtde:\n1. Duplication and overlapping\nwhich lt found In tht lnipection of\nguns should be eliminated!\n2. The Ctnidan Inspection ihould\nbe put on \"thi same buis as thst\nprevailing ln Bngland undtr tht\nexisting urge of wartime neceulty\"\nInstead ot being predicated on the\npeacetime British lyitem,\nchanged.\nA complete system of spot inspection ind final Inspection of the completed article should be set up \u2014\nind tht tub committee uid thtt If\nthli recommendation wtrt iccepted aeveral thousand Inspector! ean\nbe employed elsewhere In the production of guns, ind hundreds of\nthouiandi of giugM oould be Uken\nfrom tht lnipection brinch md used\nprofitably In othtr branches.\n.. Studies now undertaken In the\nsmall arms branch, to bring ibout\nreduced costs through dulgn simplification and elimination of non-\n(tills, ihould bl extended to\nvier guns.,,\nS. Maui contractors should be required to sub-contract items where\npoulblt tnd tht facilities of tht\ninduitry and sub-contracting branch\ndesigned to ipeed war mtttrlili\nmanufacture by obtaining the maximum use of exiiting ficilltlei,\nhow. should bt used for iuch purpose;\nS. No machint tools ihould be\nprovided for any prime contractor\nwhere lt la known tn unused capi\ncity of machint toola ot tht re\nquired typt exists tad ean bt tc*\nonomlcslly tnd efficiently utilized.\n1. At educational program of tht\nindustry tnd sub-eontrlctjng branch\nshould bt expanded to explain, to\ntbt public tbt necessity of hiving\nwork placed where It ctn bo produced efficiently rither than being\npliced for the purpose ot relieving\neconomic distress.\nIS THAT\nPALE YOUNG GIRL\nYOUR DAUGHTER?\nraraala ehmld tat braOTt tkt devneea*\n\u25a0ooi, *t liatUee, tM th, tht Milan\naaausaaltaa, Heale epp.tlt\u00bb-the arrttfotB\n-at tw lautatara eihlblt da rtnt 9m\nnan whta Uw art paaalm Into a_^.\nU lta kttJth it this atafe'le aet \u2014ra-\ntunad br l auHlciancjr of food Haa aatoS\nall kinda of waakneaaaa mar ariaa tt aaaS\n\"\" p <oha\u00bbr.\nrou aoUoa aar of taste dla-\nha| later Ufa anaupr.\nBo ahould rem no\u00a3l\u00ab\ntorbinf sii-na la rour daufhter, lost aa)\nthat, Qet aome Dr. William, rtnk l'lil. a\njour dnisstat. ,Thaj ara \u2022oedarroOr mtat.\nMyt In tablu to build ur iToo-tmpo.ar.\nlabad blood and hava hatped to tranaforaa\nthouaanda and  thouaanda of aieklr,\nJawktara euffariot from alrapla uamit\nUte luppr Mttvi f Irla full of rltaJitr t3\nkith .plrita, hum rr for neela, ilad to ball\na&wsitfflss&as\nmining tha .tranitb aad raalataaaa mm\ndauahtar needa eo badlr. Don't wait-aat\nUr. WiUlama Pink Mia toto.\nForesees Need in\nU.S. to Widen\nDraff Categories\nWASHINGTON, July Ifl (AP)-\nUnited States Secretary of War\nHenry Stimion expreued his beliet\ntodsy that young married men and i\nyouths of 11 to JO would have to\nbe drafted for the srmed forces\nbefore s victory over the Axil ls\nwon.\nAsked at hli preu conlerence\nwhether the War Department atill\nbelieved theie men would be needed for tht Army, Stimion replied\nthit \"we never had a great war in\nwhich we did not Und lt necessary\nto call up both these classes.\"\nHe reminded reporters that some\nyoung married men already were\nbeing drafted under the Selective\nService Law, and laid alio he believed it would be necessiry eventually to lower the draft age to 18,\n\"However,\" he said, \"young men\nIn that group should not feel It necessary to alter their plans for the\nImmediate future.\"\nIs Your Radio Good\nfor the DURATION?\nNever before has Radio filled such a vital need as It doat\ntoday. Events mova swiftly. If your present radio needi\nto ba rapaired\u2014we can do It. If you should need a naw\none-\u2014we can still supply the famoui\nRCA-VICTOR RADIOS   ^\nfrom $25.05 up. Yeara of reliability are behind the most\nfamoui name In radio today.\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nPhona 544\nNtlien\nNOW IS THE TIME TO\nPrepare for Next Winter\nFUL YOUR COM\nBIN TO THE TOP \\\nIton    i tont est\nover   .\nWESTERN MONARCH LUMP $11.25 $10.75\nWESTERN MONARCH STOVE    10,00 9,50\nCALT LUMP      11.25 10.75\nCREENHILL WASHED FURNACE .... 11.00 10.50\nCREENrlILL STOKER      9.00 8.50\nFor Comfort Next Winter Pill Your Coa| Bin NOW!\nPhone 8S9\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\n ^^\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\n-NILSON DAILY NIWI  NILtON, t 0\u2014PR IDA Y NORNIM   JULY 17.\nOnly Two Small Forest Fires Now\nBurning In Kooten^-Boundary;\nTotal Leg Than MfN Jeason\nOtrty two fares* fine in burn.\nIng lit Kooumay Boundary, both\nNi th. Ottoon DUtrict ind both\n\u2022mill. Ti data thai aeiaon there\nnay. hat* a firu, inly .lightly\nmart tha* half ef thi 110 record-\n\u2022d sft tin sam Urm lut ynr.\nAlmost ill af thai year'i W firu\nheadquarters. 01 thui lg wen in\nEut Kootenay ind two In the\nBoundary. Wut Kooteney hid none.\nThe toul of Si is uide up of \u00ab\nid Eut Kooteniy, 15 In West Kootenay ind tour In ibe Boundary\nLut yur it thii time five fires\nwere  burning.  Twenty-fiv.  occur\nhav. bun lightning strike, whieh , red during thi week nd the teuon\nwin  axtlngutahad   before   attain\nIng iny tne.\nDuring the week ending Wednesday i toul of lg firu were reported to the Forut Branch office\nIt     Nelson,      Kootenay-Boundary\ntotal wu 110.\nThomas Masaryk, Ciecho-Slovak-\nia's first pruident, and Eduard\nBenu,t second president, were both\nteachen\nWorkinq Days - Traini nq Niqhts\n\\m*\u00bb\"~E_\\*\nAH\nFOOD\nCirbohydntc* fbr .energy; phosphorus for teeth ind boon; iron\nfor ehe blood\u2014these sre the eoer*\nfiling, nourishing elements you\nget when you enjoy tbe distinctly\ndifferent, nut like flavot of\nGrape Nun. Easy to\ndigest, too. Get a pack*\nage for tomorrow.\nChild Death Rate\nUnder Nazi Rule\nIs Terribly High\n-RAM   THRtt\nLONDON, July 16 (CK-A s0-\nper-cent rise is infant mortality In\nNaal-occupied Europe wu reported\ntoday by the Britiih Famine Reliel\nCommittee, i fact-finding organiiatlon of churchmen.\nOn the basu of ftw-hiad reporti,\nit likened thi suffering from wint\not food in conquered and occupied\n.real a. well u other embattled\ncountries on the continent with tne\nsituation after four yein of thl\nFirst Greet War.\nThere is increasing frequency of\n\u2022curvy, rickets, anemia, dermatosis\nmd eye infections, lt slid.\nHere is \u2022 country-oy-country r<f-\nsume of ita reports:\u2014\nBELGIUM;\n\"A special survey with reipect to\nchildren ittending ichool indicates\nthat 63 per cent get no or scarcely\nany breakfait, 33 5 per cent get an\ninadequate noon meal and 56 per\ncent get Insufficient supper.\"\nIt* puts the general death rate for\nadults and children so far this year\nat S 1.5 per 1000\u2014compared with a\nnormal 13\u2014and added 'there ti abundant reason to beUeve that the\nhealth of several generations may\nbe irremediably Impaired.\"\nFRANCE:\nThe committee quoted \u2022 Quiker\nFruits and Vegetablei\nCRAPE FRUIT\n4 for\t\nORANCES, reg.\nlire 288'i, 2 doi.\n19c\n59c\nCARROTS AND BEETS\n2 bunches  ._..\t\nNEW CABBAGE\nP*r Ib\t\nFRESH GREEN PEAS\nPer Ib\t\nFort York\nTEA\n79c\nCountry Club\nCOFFEE\n53c\nShaping Bags,\nMcH  ....\ntf\nKleenex Fact Tissue\n500 carton    331\nEconomy Specials\nFig Bar Biicuiti, Freih, Lb     Vt*\nSpork, Ready hfierve, 12-M. tim, Eaeh 29f\nPork Shoulders, Union, Lb.  27\u00bb*\nFlour, Ellison's Vitamin B, 49's, Sack  $1.45\nSoaps and Floor Waxes\nPalm Olive Toilet Soap, 4 cakei . :_\\t*\nLux Toilet Soap, 3 for  lltt*\nSunlight Laundry Soap, 4 cakes . .25t>\n|ohnson'i Glo-Coat or Wax, Tin  . .590\nOXYDOL\nGlint Carton\nEach 69c\nCanned Fruits and Vegetables\nApricoti, Aylmer, 16-oz. tint, each 160\nPean, Aylmer, 16-oz. tint, each ..180\nTomato juice, Sunny Dawn,\n26-oi. tins, 2 for 230\nDiced Carrots, Broders'\n16-oz. tins, 2 for 210\nDiced Beets, Aylmer, 16-oz\u201e 2 tins 230\nAsparagus Tips, Malkin's, 10-oz. tin 210\nPeas and Carrots\nAylmer, 16 oz. tins\n2 (or 25c\nSTAPLE GROCERIES    .\nLIPTON'S SOUP*\nMIX\n2 pkgs. 25c\nPastry Flour, B & K, 7 Ib. sack .. .360\nBran Flakes, Posh', 2 pkgs 230\nSoda Biscuits\nOrmond's\ncarton\n23c\nButter, Hudsonia 1st Grade, 3 Ibs. $1.20\nMiracle Whip Sandwich Spread,\n16-oz. jars, Each 320\nV\\'T%,\nNOODLE SOUP|\nMix\nCANDY SPECIALS\nPeppermint\nPatties\nPer Ib.\nMixed\nSatins\nPer Ib.\nLicorice\nAllsorts\nPer Ib.\n39c    37c    35c\n'fytanfyr Ba\u00a3 (Lmjmiqta\nINCORPORATED   i**9 MAY 1670\nreport dttseribiag children with\n\"distended ttemichi ind min\nspindly legi\" tnd Hid ttat mortality\nrati Ul unoccupied Frmce hu ria-\nen 45 per cent, lt cited me report at\nt rreneh physician thtt ttat mortis-\nny of children up to nine yeers old\nIn Nazi-occupied Ptrii hu increued bjr tt per cent.\nPOLAND:\nInitead of \u2022 daily 2*00 cilonea\nneeemry to maintain \u2022 hetlth; existence, tood rttioni tllowed to\nPolei provided them with no-more\nthtn 080 ctloriei ind illowtncei\ntor Jewi yielded only WO. Citing\nbreed u \u2022 typictl example ol tood\ndiscrimination, thi committee report uid Germini get i weekly illowtnce ot tVt pounds, Polea 2V\u00ab\n\u2022rid Jewi 1.\nFINLAND:\nIn Karelii, \"10 per cent ot the children under seven are dying ot star-\nvation.\" Ita authority wis John P\nThilen of the Americtn Red Crott.\nTHE NETHERLANDS:\nThe committee slid 20 to 15 per\ncent of the children living in towns\nare  undernourished tnd the adult\npopulation is netr starvation\nGREECE:\nQuoting what It cilled ftrst-hand\nreporta, the committee said: \u2014\n\"From August until the end ot\nMarch 320,00 deaths were registered\nin Greece, exceeding over tive times\nthe normil death rate amd being\nhigher among Infants.\n\"On the other hand, births are\nbeing reduced to exceedingly low\nrates and of new-born children\nhardly any survive.''\nHanson Stays on\nHouse leader\nfor Conservatives\nOTTAWA, July 11 (CPI^Coneer-\nveuve Houie Letder Hinton todey\nacceded to the requeit ef t Coniervitive caucus thtt he conUnue\nit letder at tbe Cootervimve memberi tn tttt Houie el Ccaxmont.\nAt the ume thtt lit Boa. Arthur\nMeighen of Torenae wu selected\nNational Coniervitive Letder it t\nparty meeting hen, Mr. Hanaon. f\nwho heartily supported ttr. Meigh\nin tor the leadership, expreued hit\ndesire ta he relieved cat the Houie\nleadenhip.\nRcently. tt had become mown\nthtt, while from the sttndpoint of\nnil own convenience he would have\npreferred to be replaced tt the\nend ot the preaent station, he felt\nduty-bound to continue u House\nLeader tf his followers urged him\nto do so.\nBig Fines tor\nBntont Who\nWait* Rags, String\n' LONDON, July 16 (CPi\u2014Sever* panattiee for thote who dutroy regs, rope or string were ordered today by thi Government,\nringing up to CSM (li226i fine er\ntwo  years' Imprisonment\n, The Ministry of tupply slid\nhundreds if thouundi of tons ef\nrigs were needed u rtw mtteriil\nto maka iquipmtnt for the armed\nforces.\nFrench Admiral\nTold lo Fight\nRather Than Move\nVICHY, France, July 16 (AP) -'\nThe Vichy French government announced today that it had officially informed the U. S, lhat the proposal of president Roosevelt to remove Interned French warships\nfrom Alexandria to Martinique had\nto be \"rejected as contrary to the\niiiinor and interests of France\"\nThe French note, sent July 13 io\nWashington concluded: \"By exposing these dismantled warships to\nattack by British forces President\nRoosevelt would assume a responsibility of extreme gravity which\nthe French Government must once\nmore underscore.\"\nThe announcement was made on\nthe same day that the Vichy government officially protested to Washington against alignment of I'm-\nied States military representatives\nto Gen. Charles de Gaulle because,\nH was said, \"this constitutes an attack on the sovereignty of France.\"\nWith respect to the fleet, the announcement disclosed lhat instructions had been sent to Admiral God-\ntroy, commanding the French ships\nat Alexandria, that in no case must\nthey follow British forces in their\nretreat and that if the British 'it\ntempted to molest them they should\ndefend themselves by all means at\ntheir disposal.\nThe government said it hat? to reject President Roosevelt's proposals\nbecause it was bound by the armistice convention with Germany and\nIUly to put French warships in\nports of unoccupied France to be\nimmobilized for the duration.\nBomber From Spokane\nin Fatal\nCrash in Idaho\nSPOKANE, Wash.. July Ifl (AP)\n\u2014A heavy bomber bued at Geiger\nField crashed lut night near Post\nFalls, Idaho, 20 milea East of Spo<\nkrine, killing the entire crew of\nfive men, the Public Relation* Office at Geiger Field reported today\nSecond Front Unlikely .\nTHE  BAY'S  BIG\nMIDSUMMER SALE\nSee our two-page Flyer packed with Seasonable Goods at the Lowest of Low Pricei. All\nDepartments are competing to give you\nValue and Satisfaction.\nSHOP NOW AND SAVE\nVutontft. butt (Lompiitttt. )$\nWar Broker in U.S.\nMakes Big Money\nWASHINGTON, July 16 (AP).\u2014\nHorace Ward, of Washington, a war\ncontract commission agent, acknow-\nledged earnings of $431,463 in an\n18-month period today, and said he\nentertained Coast Guard'and Naval\nofficers with whom he did business\nbecause \"I'm socially inclined.\"\nmat a Ilk!\nNot Yet in Shape\nto Invade France\nLONDON, July 18 (CP)-A Brl-i\ntish miltary commenUtor confirmed today Russian reporU that Oerman divisions recently withdrawn |\nfrom France hed appeared on the\nEastern front, but he said there had\nbeen no reduction in the regular\nNaii garrison holding Western\nEurope against invasion.\n\"The Oermans form and train a\ndivision in France end then send it\nto whatever front is required,\" the\ncommentator declared, adding that\nthe troops sent to Russia were from\nthis category only.\nHe said the German garrison\nforces in France are \"not spearhead\ntroops, but are good soldiers nevertheless.'\nBritish promptness to emphasne\nthe strength of the German gerri-\nson, plus other Indications, led informed British observers to conclude that the Western powers are\nnot ln a position to' open up a aecond front on the continent this\nSummer.\nAn informed British source seid\nlarge-scale exercises In which the\nCanadian Army is engaged are \"evidence that we are preparing for\nInvuion,\" but he declared he did\nnot believe thaf'invasfon wae possible in time to relieve present\npressure on the Russian armies.\"\n\"lt is evident,\" he said, \"that the\nGermans are throwing their entire\nweight into the present offensive\nwith the intention not merely of\nreaching the Caucasus oil fields but\nof defeating Russia in the field before a British-American invasion\ncan be launched.\"\nThe possibility of a series of\nlarge-scale Allied raids on the continent was discounted by this source\nwho said that only a large-scale invasion could force Germany to\nshift enough troops to the West to\nhelp Russia.\nAllied dlplomatie quarters geve\nindications of being perturbed at\nenthusiastic stories In tke Soviet\npress concerning an imminent invasion of the continent.\nObservers believed It probable\nthat Sir 'Archibald Clark Kerr, British ambassador In Moscow, had\nbeen instructed to Inform the Soviet\nGovernment that this does not represent the true position.\nSECRET DEBATE\nON SHIPPING\nLOSSES\nLONDON, July 16 (CP)\u2014The\nHouse of Common, went into\nsecret session todey to discuss\nwar shipping losses after the\nGovernment decided to reconsider IU refusal to authorize a\npublic debate.\nA suggestion of Leslie Hore-\nBelisha, National Liberal Member and former War Secretary\nthtt Hi* Government hold an\nopen session wea parried br\nSir Stafford Cripps, Lord PrlvT\nSeaL     '\nSir Stafford announced that\nno summary of the debate\nwould be published but that\nmembers might communicate\nto their eonstttuenU \"the general Impression created on theif\nminds.\"\nThere were 810 breweries In tht\nU. S. at the firat of the year, ud\nin 1938 there were 750.\nFights Pirating\nof Labor From\nWar Industries\nWASHINGTON, Jul' 16 (AP) -\nManpower Commissioner Paul V.\nMcNutt, building methods to halt\nthe pirating ot skilled Ubor from\nwar planU, said today government\ncontracts or materiala might be\nwithheld from manufacturers who\nviolate the Job-freezing policy.\nAdmitting thet the storage of\nmaterials might hamper wu production and would be 'difficult, there\nfore to apply, Mr. McNutt Indicated\nin response to questions at a Press\nconference that legislation might\nbe necessary ultimately to guarantee an adequate labor supply for\nessential  industries.\nHe also forecast aome action In\nthe ne\/ar future on the question of\nwage controls, and said that such\ncontrols would implement our efforU to keep skilled workers aA\ntheir vital machinei.\nLizzie is the farmer's daughter,\nShe hasn't boy friendi\nlike the oughter.\nShe muit penpire\u2014\nwell, that's all right,\nBut otiendint keeps her\nhome at nighti\nBalh tonight with tlFEBUOY\nGestapo Murder\nCang Still\nBusy in Bohemia\nLONDON, July 16 (CP)- A\nCzech Government spokesman said\ntoday the Gestapo is continuing to\narrest hundreds of persons in Bohemia and Moravia in iU purge resulting from, the slaying of Reinhard Heydrich. He said while he\nhad no knowledge of a Moscow radio report that 10,000 Czechs were\nexecuted in one month, \"the Nazis\nhave executed many more than the\n1350 they .have announced, but we\ndo not know the exact figure.\"\nCERTO takes the\nGUESSWORKout of\nJAM and JELLY.\nMAKING\nm-\nFly Nazi Regiment\nto North Africa\nLONDON, July 16 (CP) -British sources uld today that a\nQerman light Infantry regiment\nflown to North Africa 'rom Crete\nhad been put Iri the Egyptian line\nto reln'oroo Field Marshal Erwin\nRommel'i torcei.\nThe Battle of White Mountain hi\n1620 marked the beginning of Austria's three-century domination ot\nBohemia.\nduring\n_*\u00ab_\ntwy War Savingi Stamps trom\niahks \u2022 pen officii \u2022 DiueoiiTi\nmiFHONt OFFICII \u2022 TOHCCONIST1\nOIPAIIMINI ITOtn \u2022 OIOC1IS\nIOOK ITOIII \u2022\u2022\u00ab\u25a0 ataat UTAH ITOIII\nMS.! \"1\nENSURES JAMS AND ALLIES\nTHAT SH PERFECTIY.. TASTI\nBETTER .. COST LESS!\nHOW CERTO\nSAVES YOU\nTIME, MONEY\nWORK, WORRY\nSe Quick and Eaiy\u2014f or Jam Tea need\nonly a one to two-minute, full rolling\nIinil \u2014 for jelly a half \u2022minute to a\nminute.\nEconomical, toe\u2014Since very Tittle juice\nhai time to boil away yon get up to two-\nthirdi more jam or jelly from the tame\namount of fruit.\nFreih Fruit Taite - Natural Color \u2014In\nthii short boil the fresh flavor and natural fruit eolor stay in the frait.\nCERTO is Pectin\nExtracted from Fruit\nWhen pectin ii used in making jam and\njelly, the Wartime Pricea and Trade\nBoard Order No. 150 allows yon to nee\naugar not in excess of one and one-\nquarter pounda of augar for each\npound of fruh. On the basis that\n\"fruit'' means \"unprepared\" fruit, this\nallowi you to make your }ama and jellies the Certo way which gives you approximately two-thir H s more jam\nNor jelly from the same amount of\n__.\nLOOK FOR Boo* of 11 Tutttt Recipe.\nunder thet Label of atery Carlo bottle.\nEU\nt ' au, '\u25a0'\"\u25a0' ''\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\n -\nI\nNova Scotia Helps\nthe Fighting Man\n\u25a0y FRANK LOWI\nCtntdlm Free, ataff Writer\nHALIFAX   (CPI - Movt   Scotia,\nI trots roada of ta empirt it wu,\nj took  thu  otf from   btttle-urgtnt\nI   dutitt during IMl to tntensin more\n> than 1400,000 wrvlce mtn.   Tilling\n[ how hospitality on such t big scale,\nI   wts poisible, the Nova Scotia Gov-\n[ trnmtnt publlihtd a booklet titled, |\nf \"Novi   Seotia   Hslpt   the   Fighting I\nHtn.\"\nBriefly, thU told of the avtivitlet\not lnnumtrttait womtn'i organixt-\ntiona, aervice dust, church groupi\ntnd hundredi of volunteer worktn,\ntil openting witb the tsilittnct ol\ntht Novt  Scotli  Oovernment\nWorking both independently and\ncollectively, these organisations\nhavt mtde t notable effort to give\nterries men from ill Allied countriu t temporiry home awty from\nhome and a welcome iecond to\nnont ln the world.\nStarting In Halifax, where more\nthin 19 hostels htve sprung up m\"\nleas thin three yeari of wtr, these\nhospitality purveyor! branch out\nto include Bedford, Yarmouth, De-\nBert, Truro, Sydney, Aldershot,\nNorth Sydney, Miller's Lake and\nMiddleton\u2014wherever service men\nmty be concentrtted\nFOR RELAXATION\nEntertainment ls the main concern of tht holtels. They reallie\nmen oft ships and free from stretch-\nFLIES CAUSE\nINFANTILE PARALYSIS\n\u2022 Invettlittioni by mtdietl scientim\nindicate thtt fly infected foods trt ont\nef tht principtl Ctultl of Infantile\nPtrtlyait (Poliomyelitis). Every try\n\u2022Ilowed to Uvt ii t potential mtntct to\ntumtn health.\nKILL THEM ALL WITH\nWILSON'S\nFLY PADS,\n\\      OU1CKIV. CltANl V      \/\nk\\^    HUMANIlt    y'y-\n__        'J^\n10c nt M\u00abAoi or 3 PADS\ntU_WB_}Q_M_WU___tBt\nes of tometimet ttdloui duty wut\nto relax. Titty htlp thtm do this\nwith dutet, concerts, motion pit-\ntunt tnd rellgioui services, all\nfrtt.\nAccomodations for men on letvt\nirt ttto provided by the hostels, it\nwell ll athletics orgsnized. Ovtr\n1M,000 men took ptrt in such contest! list yttr. while uother 1,700,.\n000 enjoyed billiards ping pong,\nchess, checker! ipd othtr gtmti\nsupplied thtm by thett organisations.\nRaiding tnd writing roomi of tht\nhotttll irt used to their fullest ex-\n'.ent. Fret writing ptper tnd envelopes were distributed by tht\nmillions lsst yetr. Approximately\n4,500,000 migiilnet. booki ind newspapers wtre distributed to thott\nwishing retdlng mitter. Dry cm-\nteens in the ume plice catered to\nmore than 1,710,000 hungry itrvict\nmen. '\nHUP WITH ADVICI\nPetsonsl guidance Is mother home\nneed filled by miny of the hostels.\nThey havt specially trained men\nwho, when asked, give young soldiers, sailors and airmen advice\ntnd guidance In many matters. Last\nyear they so helped approximately\n75,000.\nSponsoring thete hostels are the\nYM.CA. and YW.C.A, the Stlvt-\ntlon Army, the Klnghti of Columbui, the Canadian Legion, the Ntvy\nLeague of Canada, the Anise Club,\nBoy Scouti' Association, Rotary tnd\nKlwanis Clubi, mtny church organisation! tnd hundreds of Independent volunteer helpen.\nOther hosteli opened by ptoplt\nintereited ln letting foreign icrvice\nmtn hivt their own gathering\nplicet, ire th* Belgian Seamen's\nHome, the Royal Norwegim Club\nind the Netherland Seamen's Home.\nBacking theie groupi in every possible way is the Nova Scot's Government.\nLONDON (OP).-Speclal training In modem arms for street fighting li being given iome police in\npreparation for their duties ln else\nof Invasion. The training includes\nthe uie of tommy guns, hand grenades, machine-guns, rifles snd revolvers.\nHOW TO KEEP MW\nFREE FROM\nIt Buy corefully\ntnd bit sure you get   ^\nyour right ilze tnd\nlength.\n3.Eaiy doei it \u2014put\non your rayons al carefully as those silk ones you\nsued to hsve.\n3. Avoid cake soap ruh- I\nblng: don't twin . . . harih \\\nhandling weskens delicate -\nthreads, encourages runs.\n4.Dip itockingi In lukewarm lux tvtry night when\n. you take them off. This saves\nj their elasticity.;; helps them\n! fit better.\nI 3. Gently squMlt oul moli-\ni fun without wringing, then\n| roll in i turkiih towel. Hing\nover i rod away from heat\nsnd sun. Don't use clothes-\nI pins.\n6. Dry a wholt day at least,\nsfter dipping before you wetr\nthem tgtio. Rayons are\nitrongeit when perfectly dry.\nOUR glamorous new rayona\norbembergs aeedgtntlt care.\nBe sure you dip them in Lux\nevery nlgbt. Gentle Lux\nwhisks away harmful perspiration which rots delicate\nthreads. Luz cuts down embarrassing, costly runs;\nl LEVER Mower\nMental Upsets\nBelieve Worry\nIs Came of\nStomach Uucers\nBy LOOAN CLINOININO. M.D,\nThe idea that patlenti witb ulctr\nof the itomtch batata ctctala bodily form or constitution which influences thtm to tesjWtt thot condition hit long bttn dtbbltd with\nby differtnt phyiicita*. For In-*\nstance, Dr. George Drtptr ol Ntw\nYork, whose itudiei la human con-\n\u2022UtuUoni are wt.! known, hla felt\nthat ulcer patients hava a ctrtaln\ntype at Jtw tw} Uct whloh prevent! their miitUwtlrm thtlr food.\nI! well tl otheri tad thertfort\nthrowi undigested mmet of food\ninto tnt itomtch.\nNATURAL WORRIU\nIn nil mott recent itudy ht hu\ncalled ittenUon to Uvt mtnttl Uft\nof these patients. He believes thtt\nthey sre natural worriers tnd this\nhas ii much influence on tht development of the ulcer u tor other\nfactor. It li, of course, v.-ell-known\ntlong thii line that menUl upsets and worry will lncreu* toe\namount of acidity la tb* itomtch\nmd ilso make movtmtnta of tht\nitomtch mot* rtpld tnd Irritable,\nand sometime! worry' will entirely\nslow down the digestive processes\nto a practical stoppage.\nHe hu a numbtr of histories\nwhich show thst episodes such u \u2022\nhemorrhage or' sn internal hemorrhage or t relapse of symptons\nare associated with upsets In the\nmental life of the patjents.\nTbt examination of tht whole\nmental life history of these patients reveali that thty trt often\neither Incompatible or -difficult to\nsuit in the wty of jobs, do not gat\nalong with ptrents, brothen, sisters, or in domeitic relstlom generally.\nIn a group of patients itudied,\n84 per' cent hid t sense of Insecurity; 97 per cent were dependent\nupon some member of the ftmily,\neither mother, tlthtr, wlft, brother or sister. There was a guilt and\nfear complex present in 49 per cent\nand compensatory striving in order to overcome whit they thought\nwu \u2022 natural inferiority in 96 per\ncent.\nThere is no question that one ol\nthe reasons why hospitalization\nfor ulcer is so valuable Is because\nit takes s patient iway from\nworldly contacts that Irritate and\nuptet him. In all medical treitment psychotherapy ls a necessary\npart of the treatment.\nQUESTIONS AND  ANSWERS\nA. N. N.'.-Whit ia t metabolism\ntett given for?\nAnswer:\u2014A metabolism test met-\nsurei the amount of oxygen consumed per amount of body weight\nor rather per amount of body space\nper minute. This is Influenced more\nby the ductless glands than by anything else, and therefore in practice the metabolism test ls used\nmore to determine the activity of\nthe thyroid gland than anything\nelse.\n..    MtLtOH DAILV NIW*. NILSON. ts C.-NUDAY MOftNINO, JULV 17. Ht*\nWar Marriages\nand Their\n*\nLasting Chances\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nMarriage 'li an almost daily occurrence at the various Army posts\nand adjacent towns and cities. Some\nof these \"hit-and-run\" marriages\nare the culmination of two, three,\nand four-year engagements. Before\nthe war, the young people were saving for thot home of their dreams,\nand there was plenty of happiness\nin seeing the joint bank account\ngrow while the girl initialed charming household accessories for her\nhope chest.\nThousands of safe and sane young\npeople decide to snatch a few brief\nweeks of happiness before the\ngoodbyes are said. That's the story\nof two-thirds of the Army marriages\u2014sober, sensible affairs, hurried because an ocean would soon\ndivide them.\nThe other third of the war marriages very likely hive been compounded of moonlight, roses, compelling romance, and something of\ndesperation too.\nAhd what of the soldier? With\nthe swiftness of a tornado life had\ncaught up with him. Just beginning\nto take root in that Job he had landed after putting awiy his school\nbooks.\nAcross the marching, drilling,\ndiscipline, and lonellnail with the\nuncertainty of everything that had\nseemed so aecuTe, came the girl\nIt wasn't like any other lOve afalr;\nit fitted into the hectic new pattern\nof things. So they were married.\nChances of survival? That depends on the people entering into\nthe contract. Marriage is a partnership, and whether it will hold and\nprosper or fill to pieces is like iny\nother plrtnershlp. It depends on\nwhit goes into il\u2014steadfastness of\ntht individuals making the contract. If they're responsible, governed by a dealre f6r fair play, with\nreil love is \u2022 foundition, it hu\nevery chance of survlvsl ln spite\nof the hute with which the mer-\nriige contract ls made.\nIf the partner! are the type \"willing to try anything once,\" llliety\nthl mirrlige won't idrvlvt.\nJACKET DRESSES ARE \"OUT'\nPrint frocks are t Summer stand-by for women\nacross the continent. Although drosses made with\nmatching jackets, like the one pictured at left, have been\nprohibited for the duration of the war under the clothing simplification orders of the Wartime Prices and\nTrade Board, the two-piece model ^t right will continue\nto be made. By giving up jacket frocks, two yards of material is saved in each model.\nSERIAL STORY By ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES\nYOU ARE THE ONE\nCHAPTER TWENTY-ONE\nIn a way It did not item quite\nfair, if Wayne had done this even,\nif lt did make matter! ilmpler for\nTibby, for she could tell Steena afterward that Wayne had taken hep\nto the dance. Steena would not need\nto know he htd aaked Tibby ahetd\nof time. Being Steena, she probably\nwould decide Tibby had been lecond choice.\nAlthough Tibby thought that Friday night, th* evening for the aviation banquet and dance, never\nwould arrive, it finally did. She did\nnot know why ihe was in such a\ndither, unlesi It wm the prospect\nof dressing up and really going\nlomewhere nicer It could not be because she was going with Wayne\nCourtright, although she felt that\nwu nice, too.\nThe new dress Tibby would wear\nwu not of gold lame, as Steena's\nevening gown was, but It wu a\nlovely dreis Just the same. It was\nwhite, with a cunning tight taffeta\nbodice, a long, wide skirt of yards\nand yards of frosty, foamy tulle,\nciught here and there with a garland of dainty tea roses. It wu the\nsort of dress thit mide you think\nof moonlight and girdens, billowly\nclouds and muted violins. It was,\nTibby decided, its zipper fastened,\nthe straps of the tiny bodice ln\nplace, a dream of a dress. And she\nlooked very nice In lt, If she did\nsay so herself.\nNot so breath-tsklngly beautiful\nis Steena, of course, but quite nice\nenough to do Wayne justice. That\nwas the important thing, as Sienna\nhad mentioned when she had\nthought she would be the one whom\nhe would escort to the aviation ball.\nTibby wished, although there\nwas no possible connection, that\nTommy could aee her now. She had\nresolved that he should see her\nsometime, all dolled up, looking\nsleek and sophisticated and grown\nup. Maybe, then, he would realize\nshe was not just a girl to take on\nroller coasters, feed peanuts to, and\nsuggest that the place for her was\nsitting at home patiently waiting\nfor iome' man to make up his mind\nabout her. ,\nAnother reaion she would like to\nhive had him' iee her tonight\u2014ihe\nhid hid her hair done, too, pulled\noff her ears, piled high In cunning\nprovocative curls \u2014 wai that she\nwu mad at Tommy, more mad\nthan usual, for it seemed ihe nearly alwiyi wu provoked at him\nabout something or other. But this\ntime she had a really good excuse.\nHe had phoned her on Wedneiday,\nlaying he would drop in that same\nnight. And he had never shown up.\nHe at least could have phoned\nagain, or sent' word the foUowing\nday, or today, even. He must think\nihe had nothing to do but ilt and\nwelt for him\u2014which wu the way\nhe would have liked it. Wtll, could\nhe see her now, and It did. seem a\nihamt he couldn't, he would know\nhe had another guess coming.\nThere muit be lomething in wish\nfulfillments, for Just as Tibby, all\nready now except for her wrip, wai\nabout to put in a call for a cab, the\ndoorbell rang, ind there stood Tommy.\nHe wore a kind of Bheepiih look\nthit turned to one of itupld In-\nindulity ti his giaact mud oa\nthe vision thtt confronted him.\n\"Oh, io It'i you?\" The funny ptrt\nwas that Tibby was not surpriied.\nIt wat almost as If she had known\nher wish would come true. Or maybe it had been a premonition. She\nmight hava sensed that Tommy was\non his way to see her.\n\"Sure it's me,\" Tommy said, ungrammatically at well li stupidly,\nfor the point was, was this Tibby,\nthis vision floating before hli Incredulous eyei, thli beautiful\nstranger with dark curls iwept\nback from her brow, giving her the\nlook of a princess, dark mystery In\nher bright eyes, a faint, knowing\nsmile on red lips that was both\ntantalizing and Inviting? He hai\nnever seen Tib look like this. He\nhad never dreamed she could look\nthis way.\n\"You're going away?\" young Dr.\nDare inquired. She had not asked\nhim in. She had practically asked\nhim out the last time he had been\nthere. And he knew he had not\nhelped matters any by not showing\nup Wednesday.\n\"I'm not staying home,\" Tibby\nreturned, more sharply maybe than\ncalled for. \"I'm going to the aviation banquet and dance. Won't you\ncome in? I have a few minutes before my taxi calls for me.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nNo Excuses . . .\nDoing Exercises\nthe Right Way\nBt \u00bbA JEAN KAIN\nWktt MtrdM* art your tttnd-\nlyiT I Afck I can guess-toe bicycle, btnding ovtr to touch your\nteat, md rolling. And you dut\nda thtm beciuse it just wetn you\ntut io faoitt your hipi in the ilr ltd\npedal, tnd *eu ctn't quite mtkt it\nto your toes, ud you htvtnt tht\nrooas to roll\nWiU, you un toratt tatt ttt ol\nexercises ind excuses. Tht bicycle\ntxtrciN la good but then u\u00ab'bit-\ntar octt ftr iluauning tht kips And\nIt dtttn't miittr If Sara Bernhardt\ndid ttar up th* morning mail uld\nthin bend tver tnd pitk up ttch\nscrip leptrttely. Beading over tt\ntouch your toet wiU nevtr iirttm-\nUnt you. Aad, third nd laat, tt\ndoesn't ttkt tay room to roU.\nIf you want to btnd dtwn ind\nttkt tncbtt oft your wlntlini, do\na s-dt-oend. Stand on tht fetor oa\nyour antes, with kattt litgauy\n\u2022eptrtttd, ind arms straight out at\nlidtt frotn your inouiatn. Thtn,\nwithout lowering tat inns it tht\nihouldtrt, tay to bunt skltwird until yeur fingers touch tht floor.\nVou ctn ttkt it ttty while yeu\npedal to ilun your hips Lit on\nyoui back on tht floor utd limply\nHex tlttrntlt kneei high up towird ytur chut u you thruit tttt\n| other foot itrtight down. It'i tht\nl angle tt tht hip joint thtt counts.\nGet your left up to i 45 degree\n| angle tnd you'Jl illm down.\nI Ai for rolling, thtt U ont. of tht\n! most streamlining forms of exer-\nI cue It doesn't take much room.\nYou don't wtnt to roll over and\nover\u2014til you want lo do ii roll\nover on the fit ptdi. Do s cradle-\nroll\u2014lie on your btck on Iht Door\n_*\u25a0*\n*__n__.gffL\n?(nu*_2U)iu_L\nty eatav newman\nwith trunk aM*Uy rttttd tad top\nheld dttr, tad roll from on* aMe\nto tbt ttator. Gt twty trim oa tba\nhip tad thigh \u00abd tkta path your*\nnil ta tbt oppaito iltrtetion.\nNEWCASTLE Bog. (CP) - So'\nmuch bad btat tt ttrly Juat *\u00bb\u2022\npandtd matel ea a Tyee Si ver twing\nbridge  thtt it ww Itatttubla to\nopen Uw bridgt until plice delugtd\nIt with wtttr. t rtaeaaakip\nhtld up during tbt dt-httting.\nThtt ont hot diih for tht tummer\nmttl might be chili con ctmt. If hy\nnot try toy beam fot \u2022 different\nfltvor? How ibout t mapi* chiffon\nfit for oiitrt? It's a \"compiny\ndish,\" I know, but t morilt builder\nfpr the fimlly meil, too You cm\nuie honty in plact oi maple iyrup,\nlt you prefer.\nTODAY'I MENU\nSoy Bean Chili      Bttt Orient\nRtdlahti\nCtrrot Sticks Green Onloni\nMaple Chiffon Pit        lead Tei\nSOY BEA CHILI\n\"* pound ground freth bttf, Vi\npound ground pork, ont medium\nonion, chopped, otte tablespoon chili\npowder, one tetapoon silt, two cupi\nstrained tomatoes, three cups cooked soy beini, H cup cooking witer\ntrom beam.'\nBrown men tnd- onion In fit\nfrom mut, or In imtll tmount of\nmeat drlpplngi; tdd othtr ingredients except the toy betns, tnd simmer for 49 minutes, covered. Add\ncooked betni ind continue cooking\nuntil thoroughly hot. Soy beans art\ncooked in this way: Soak overnight,\ndrain, add tresh water tnd ilmmer\nuntil tender, ibout two hours, or\nsometimes less. Servei ilx.\nLima Beans (an\nBe Planted Late\nBY DEAN HALLIDAY\nAt thli time, when many of the\nearly corps have matured, a late\nplanting of lima beans can still be\nmade. They should be soaked overnight, planted eye downward and\nthey will come up qttlckly. Plant the\nbush limas In rows about two teet\napart. Place the beans four Inchei\napart and one to two inches deep.\nWhen the plants begin to blpom I\ncomplete fertilizer broadcast between the rows is beneficial.\n'BEST FOR EATINCJ WHEN\n1 vbuHa ANO GBBKN        >-'<\nBuih lima beam in victory\n'gardeni\nAs shown in the drawing, lllni\nbeam are at their vtry beit- If\npicked while still young and grttn\nWhen the pods begin to turn yellow\nthe beans are past their beit stage of\ndevelopment and had best bt allowed to ripen on the vine for Use\nduring the Winter months.\nThe flavor and quality of lima\nbrans Is especially fine when tbey\nare paten as soon after picking as\npolliblt.\nr\nl^aaaaauaaay\nMAPLE CHIFFON PIE\nBaked 8-inch pastry shell, Vt cup\nmsple syrup, 2 egg yolks, Vi teaipoon ialt, Vi cup c61d wtter, one\ntablespon gelatin, two egg whites,\nthree uvblespooni sugar, Vi cup of\ncream, whipped, salted nut meats.\nBake plstry shell to golden brown\nIn hot oven, remove ind cool. Heat\nmaple syrup to boiling and pour\nslowly into egg yolks beaten with\nsalt; cook over hot, not boiling\nwater, until mixture coita tpoon.\nSprinklt gelitln over surftct of cold\nwiter ln meisurlng cup, ind let\nstind five minutes, then dissolve ln\nhot miple custard Set aside un' 1\nlight. Bett egg whitei itiff with\nsugar, adding it griduilly ind betting it in. Fold whites into yolk mixture ind fold ln whipped cretm.\nTurn Into btked pit shall, cost with\nadditional crum If liked, md top\nwith chopped salted nut mitts.\nBAiUHY T^\nGOODS        \u201e\u2022_\n4X QUALITY,\nBREAD\nFiv\u00ab  Reasons Why You Wlfl|\nLikt 4X Bread:\nFor Its freshness\nFor Ifs flavour\nFor its even texture\nFor its energy value\nFor the sanitary conditions\nunder*which it Is made.\nFor fresh bread buy 4X Bread\nwherever you buy bread\nLAND BAKES,\nOF COURSE\n\/ALWAYS\ndMmrspmT_rEomnk.^__m\u00bb'i^,:'\nbecauie ahe Insisted on Silverleaf, Swift's famous Lard With\ntha tweet-nutty flavour. Tha lard that keepa ao much longer,\nla alwayi uniform. For plea like Granny uaed to bake, insist\non Swlft'i Silverleaf Lard. Swift Canadian Co., Limited.\nwith every purchase of\n2 packages of Kellogg's ALL-WHEAT\nToday... get thit lovely tea plate (or only 6(\n\u2014a fraction of it* actual worth. Choice of two\ndelicate pastel colours\u2014green or yellow. They're\nso smart you'll certainly want a complete set-\neither all one colour, or mixed as you wish.\nSupply Limited!  Don't delay 1\nYour family will love crisp, crunchy Kellogg'i ALL-WHEAT,\nit'i Canadiin whttt in iti most delicioui form. So, don't wait!\nTike advantage of thU offer ttowt Buy two packages of Kellogg'i\nALL-WHEAT from your grocer today and get your first pltte!\nWhen yoU iee it, you'll be sure to want a whole Mtt Kellogg'i\n, ALL-WHEAT is made by Kellogg'i In London, Cantdt.\nGET YOUR FIRST PLATE TODAY!\nm\n _\n~^\u2014\n-MUON OAIUY NUM. MRU\u00a9*. fr ft-WIDAY UOHHIM*. JULY ff. tf\nSTARTS TODAY AT 8 a.m.\nWE HAVE NOT SPACE HERE TO BEGIN TO DESCRIBE THE TREMENDOUS VALUES AND SUPER-LOW PRICES THAT ARE YOURS TO TAKE\nADVANTAGE OF. WE ONLY ASK THIS: REMEMBER OUR SALES REPUTATION\u2014ASK ANYONE WHO HAS EVER BEEN TO ONE OF OUR SALES\n\u2014 AND THEN INVESTIGATE OUR GUARANTEE THAT WE HAVE\nMORE GOOD SHOES ON SALE AT LOWER PRICES THAN EVER BEFORE\n\u2014OUR ENTIRE STOCK IS REDUCED, NOT JUST ODD LINES. REAL\nSHOES, NOT PAPER AFFAIRS, FOR 95c, $1.95, $2.95 ETC., ALSO:\n$3,95\n$4,95\n$2.95\n$4.95\nMore than 100 pain ladies' Treadeosy, Georgina,\nJulia Arthur pumpi and ties. Sheet sold acrois Canada from $7.00 to $12.00. Various colors in many\nmodern styles. This opportunity will not last long.\nMore than 100 pairs of the famous Tango pumps.\nRegularly selling for $7.00 - $8.00, these tailored\npumps are worn wherever well-dressed women congregate. Black and brown kid, black and brown\nsuede, blue kid, and white kid.\nA big selection of men's oxfords formerly selling for\n$4.50 - $7.00. Smart dress oxfords and rugged country shoes in black and brown. Also a good stock of\nwork boots with either panco or leather soles. You\nalways need these, buy now and sore dollars.\n100 pairs of Scoft-McHale shoes offer you the finest\nin modern shoe-making. Boots and oxfordi in black\nand brown. Regularly selling from $7.00 to $12.00\ntheie shoes will give you exceptional value for your\nmoney.\nNELSON SOCIAL\n\u2022y MM. M. J. VIONtUX\ne According to word received is\nNelson yesterday, by ltt*. Joseph\nSturgeon, Silica Street, Mrs, Charlotte McDowell, widow ot tha lata\n\u00a5. T. McDowall pioneer mining man\net Nebon and district died to Oakland, Calit In May, Mn. McDowell\nwho wu chiel nune tor Lord\nCampbell, EnglUh physician betore\nresiding in Ymir and California\nwben the hu apent thi past twenty\nyean in tha latter ctty. wu matron\nei the Ymlr hospital while Mr. McDowell wu i partial owner ot the\nYmir Yankee Olrl mtne, Ymlr tor\nseveral 'years. Mn. McDowell wu\na native ot Scotland.\n\u2022 Mrs. Bruno Bourgeois, Latimer\nStreet ll visiting ln Needles at thl\nhome at Mr. ud Mri. Herman Kendrlck. Sbe li accompanied by her\nlittla daughter Duane.\ne   Mrs, C. S. Horsfield ot Willow\nPoint visited Nelion yeiterday.\nTO LEAVE FOR WASHINOTON\ne Miu Jeannette Lerlger, formerly of the Bank of Montreal itaft,\nirrived In NeUon yuterday to spend\na tow daya baton luring tor Washington, D.C, when ibe hu obtained a poiition.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. T. Walley, ot Vaneouver, ez-nstdent ot Nelaon, who\nll visiting at tha home ot her sister-in-law Mrs. A. D. Emory, Vernon Street left yesterday tor Nakusp to visit another sister-in-law,\nMrs. Oeorge Clark tor a tew dayi.\n\u2022 mui Lillian Davis of SeatUe\nii visiting at the home of her aunt,\nMrs. W. Brltton Behnsen Street,\nFatrvtew.\ne Mn. Alan Oliver, Richard\nStreet, hu nturned trom Seven\nMile when the hu vUited it tbe\nSummer place of Mr. and Mrs. Norbert O. Choquette. Stanley Strut\ne Sapper Floyd Witerer who hu\nipent the put week ln the city st\nthe home ot his pannti on Union\nStreet left yuterday for Chilllwack.\ne Mlu Pit Collins daughter of\nMr.'and Mrs. F. C. Collins, 513 Latimer Street lesves thii morning for\nCalgary when she goes to take her\nexams for the RCAF\nATTENTION PLEASE\nPluu do not uk to take goods on approval, to charge\ngoodi or to exchange goods. We do not wish to offend\nany of our customers but owing to the super low prices\nwe have set on our merchandise we must refuie then\naervices. This sale Is for\nCASH ONLY\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footf ashion\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. HARVEY FLEURY\nKelowna Goes All\nOut lo Help\nHarvest the Fruit\nKELOWNA, B.C., July U <CP)-\nKelowna merchants will close their\nstoru on Mondays and Thursdays\nduring the harvest period lt such a\nmove is found necessary to permit\nall their employees to ssslst In\nbringing io the Mcintosh spple crop\nduring Its peek.\nIn another move to help the termers the Kelowna Junior Board of\nTrade ls cooperating with the Kel\nowna Hsrvert Cropi ln a house-to-\n.JaD\u00bb\u00bb.jr\u00abtl.XaV\u00bb.W..JUa--\u00bb\u00bb \u00abW\navailable man, woman and youth\nin the corpi ind at thi ume time\nascertain what accommoaatlon ean\nbe found for any labor help from\noutside the district should lt become\navailable.\nFew groweri have living accommodation for helpen and If they\ncan be brought In to the district lt\nis expected townspeople will cooperate by placing every available\nroom at the disposal of workers.\nHarvesting ot the Tomato and Mcintosh crops at the same period this\nyear will make for an unprecedented labor demand.\n8el| the Classified Way\nOverwaiteA\n^^ LIMITED ' \u2014\nGrocery Specials\nCood for Friday, Siturday and Monday\nKRAFT CHEESE, y2 lb.  -19c; I Ib 35c\nROLLED OATS: Buckeye, \u2022 Ib. sack \t\nGRAPE NUTS:\nPkt \t\n331\nCRACKED WHEAT:\n2 Ib. pkts\t\nCREAM OF BARLEY:\nMcKay's \t\n251\nGem Fruit Jars, Quarts, per dozen $1.25\nBRAN FLAKES Poit'i,\n8-tii., 2 pkts.\t\nCOFFEE: Cife Blend,\nLb.  \t\n23*\n39r\nBLENDIES:\nOgllvle'1, 8 pkti\t\nB. A K. PASTRY\nFLOUR: 7 Ib. uck .\n2\u00bb\n35*\nDominion Fruit Jars, Quarts, doz. $1.45\nDOG FOOD: Energy,\n2 tins\t\nFRUIT JAR RING8:\nDox. \t\n6r\nLEHRAM JAR TOPS:\nDm.   \t\nMEMBA PECTIN!\n2 pkti. \t\n45t\n23(5\nDominion Fruit Jars, Pints, dozen $1.25\nm\nCARBOLIC  SOAP;\nJergen'i, 4 fer ...\nSHREDDED COCONUT: 2jC(<\nLUX SOAP:\n4 for  -.\nMA80N LIDS: Wide\nMouth, doz\t\n2S_\n25<\nJelly Classes, per dozen\n-60c\n]\u25a0___. J-muLl and, 0_y_abk_\nBEETS: Locsl,\n2 bunchei \t\nCHERRIES: Royil Ann, -tCJ,\n2 lbi.     *-\u00bbV\nCUCUMBERS:\nLargs, 2 for  \t\nOREEN PEAS: fj,t\nLocal, 2 lbs.  _...  *-\u00bbV\nIW\nw\nCABBAGE: New,\nLb,  \t\nLEMONS:\nLsrge else, dos,\t\nCARROTS:\nLocsl, 2 bunches \t\nLETTUCE: Freih local,\n2 for\ns.\n35r\nW\nW\nFREE DELIVERY - PHONE 707\n0TL  JJtJL   Obt\nFRIDAY, JULY 17, 1942\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:44-0 Canida\n7:48\u2014 Morning Serenade (CKLN)\n8:0O-CBC Newi\n8:19\u2014Maiter Musicians\n8:30\u2014Front Llns family'\n8:45\u2014Texas Jim Robertion\n9:00-B.B.C. Niwi\n\u00bb:15-Concert Time  (CKLN)\n0:30-Hymn Time (CKLN)\ng:49-Breakfsit at Sardl'i\n9:99\u2014Time Signal\n10:15\u2014 Sketches in Mslody\n10;45-Morning Visit\n11:00 \u25a0 Lubka Kolesss, Recital.\nll:30-\"Soldler,s Wife\"\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:25-The Notice Bosrd (CKLN)\n12:30-CHC News\n12:45\u2014Clete Roberts, Talk\n1:00\u2014One o'clock Melodies\nl:15-M\u00abt!nee Melodiei (CKLN)\n1:30\u2014Interlude\n1:33-Talk\n1:45\u2014Music by Cugat\nJ:00\u2014Moods for Moderni\nJ:30-Talk\n2:45\u2014Three Sum Trio\n3:00\u2014Don Messer and His Islanders\n3:15\u2014Chotem te Kushner\n3:30-Ted Steele'i Studio Club\n8:45\u2014BBC News\n4:00\u2014Allen Gordon's Orch.\n4:15-Plmo Recital\n4:30\u2014Our Canadian Home\n4:49\u2014Recital.\n5:00\u2014news Commentary.\n5:05\u2014Merchant  Navy  Programme\n5:30\u2014Impressions   by   Green\nEVENINC\n\u00ab:0O-Musicsl Variety Hr. (CKLN)\n6:49\u2014Ifg Dance Time (CKLN)\n7:00-CBC Newi\n7:19\u2014Jean Lallamande Quartette\n7:49\u2014\"Our Canadian Homes\"\n8:00\u2014Recital.\n8:15\u2014World Affairs\n8:30-BBC News Reel\n9:00\u2014\"Treasure Island\"\n9:30\u2014The Cavalien\n9:45-\"As a Mitter of Fact\"\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014The Musical Mirror.\n10:49\u2014Old Time Fldler'i BsU\n11:00\u2014God Save the King\nROSSLAND, B. C\u201e July 19-Mrs.\nFreds Hings, s former resident of\nRosslsnd, is here from the Cosst\nShe wu the guest of Mr. snd Mrs.\nRonsld Irwin until Wednesday,\nwhen she moved into her house on\nQeorfla Street\nMr. and Mri. Ronald Irwin and\nson Rlchsri leave Thursday for a\n10-day holldiy to be spent at Peach-\nland.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred G. Barlee and\nthree soni will lesrve Ssturdsy for\na vacitlon to be spsnt st Christina\nLake. Mr, Barlee will return after\ntwo weeks. The others will remain\nall Summer.\nMri. T. S. Knight Columbil Avenue, will leave Friday for a holiday to be spent st the Coast\nVen. Archdeacon D. S. Catchpole and three ions, Donald, Bruce\nsnd Michsel, left Tuesdsy .for their\nnew home st Kelowns. Mrs. Catchpole Is remaining ln Rossland, as a\nguest of Mr. snd Mrs. Arthur Tur\nner, until her small daughter, Mar\nJorie, recuperates from her recent\nopentlon.\nBert Crane expects to leave tor\nVancouver on Friday, Mri. Crane\nand small daughter to follow later,\nMiss Luclsnns ^Hertig, who attends Queen Margaret's school at\nDuncan. Vancouver Island, srrived\nIn Rosslsnd s few dsys sgo to spend\nthe Summer with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Gaston Hertig.\nMrs. tf. E. Perkins hu u her\nguest her brother, Po. Lou Crowe\nof the Royal Canadian Air Force,\nwho hu been itatloned at Rivers,\nMan.\nWilliam Purcello hu returned to\nEdmonton, after spending a short\nUme with his family here.\nMr. and Mrs* Lewis Freemen\nhave returned from their honeymoon spent at Kootenay Lake\npoints, and have taken up residence at 1791 Thompson Heights.\nMiss Mae Sommerville snd Miss\nClaire Jamieson spent Sunday In\nNelson.\nMrs. L. Lini haa returned from a\nholiday spent st Christina Leke.\nRev. Joseph Boyle, C.Ss.R., of the\nRedemptorist Monastery, Nelson, is\nspending the week ln Rossland,\nMiss Molly Beley wu a recent\nvisitor to her parents* ranch at\nRiondel.\nMr. and Mrs. WUliam Mauchline\nJr., and their two daughters, have\nreturned from a holiday at Christina Lake.\nLome A. Campbell, Columbia Av.\nenue, returned Tuesday from a 10-\nday trip to Vancouver, Victoria\nand Penticton.\nMr. and Mrs. D. B. Smith and son\nleft Tuesdsy to spend their two-\nweeks' vacation at Edgewood.\nMiss Connie Eccles, whose mar-\nSALMO\nSALMO, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. J.\nF. Donaldson wera Nelson shoppers Mondey.\nMrs. F. HawkS s of Seattle ts visiting her sister, Mrs. G. Lindstrom.\nStanley Eagle left Tuesday for\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Bremner were\nNelson visitors Sunday.\nMrs. L. Larsen and daughter Lillian left Tuesday to reiide in\nPrinceton.\nSergeant Hunter Smith and Mri.\nSmith and son Dsryl were guests\nof Mrs. Smith's sister, Mrs. G. Waterstreet for a few dayi while en\nroute from Debert, N. S. to Vancouver. Mrs. Smith and Darryl will\nremain tor a few weeks visiting\nwith relatives.\nElmer Gibbon returned home\nfrom Nelson where he received\nmedical attention.\nMr. nnd Mrs. W. Dorey and son\nof Trail spent the weekend in town.\nMiss Phoebe Flynn of Sheep\nCreek a guest ot Miss Jean Avery\nSunday.\nMiss Shirley Lindstrom returned\nhome from Seattle where the hss\nbeen attending school for the past\nyear.\nMiss Eva Leahy was a visitor\nfrom Sheep Creek Sunday.\nMiss Ether Hamberg was a Nelson\nvisitor Sunday,\nR. McDougal of Ymir was a visitor Thursday.\nMrs. Ida Gray and granddaughter Helen returned from Calgary\nwhere they attended the Ftampede.\nMr. and Mrs. George Page left at\nthe weekend for Trail. Mr. Page\nwill report for military duty In a\nfew days.\nMrs. Chet Bush returned from\nNelson where she had been a patient in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nMrs. Bert Steenhoff of Nakusp is\nspending a few days in town.\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Cawley were\nNelson visitors.\nMiss Maudie Stewart wes a Nelson visitor Sunday.\nA surprise party In honor of Mrs.\nL. Larsen and Miss Lillian Larsen\nwho leave shortly to reside at\nPrinceton, was held at the home of\nMri. E. Drugge. The evening was\nspent playing whist after which\ndainty refreshments were served\nttit gueits of honor each received a\nfarewell gift from those present.\nGueits included Mrs. Larsen, Miss\nLillian Larsen, Mn. O. Jensen, Mn.\nr. Culbert Mn. I. Lund, Mrs. A.\nScheldrup, Mn. A. Balcolm, Mrs.'\nV. Pearson and Mrs. Drugge.\nDenis Waterstreet left Friday to\nattend boys camp at Lourdes, B. C.\nMn. Kae Bennlng was a Nelson\nvisitor Saturday.\nV.C. Winner Does\nChar Work in\nCommons\nOTTAWA. July 18 (CP) -\nOne of Canadas first Great Wsr\nheroes, Philip KonowaL V.C,\nappeared before the Special\nHouse of Commons Committee\non Honors and Decorations today on presentation by J. F.\nPouliot (Lib. Temlscousta).\nMr. Pouliot said he called attention to Mr. Konowal's cue in\norder to suggest that an award\nof the highest decoratoln for\nvalor should carry with It some\nprotection and assistance for the\nrecipient during hla.life.\nQuestioned by the''' Chairman,\nHon. Cyrus MacMillan, Mr. Ko-\nnowal said he was employed on\nthe temporary char staff of the\nHouse of Commons and received a pension of $15 a month.\nIf he was off work a day his\nwages would stop but he had\nnever been off. He appeared In\nsmock and overalls and carrying\na broom.\n\"I killed 18 Germans with the\nbayonet and captured s machine-gun,\" he said, in winning\nthe V.C.\nNormally, more than half the\nsugar produced In Australia is exported.\nriage will take pile* early next\nmonth, wu the guest of honor at a\ndelightful miscellaneous shower on\nWednesday evening when Mrs. J.\nMarions, snd Miss Louise Irvin were\nco-hostesses st the home ot tt letter. Summer flowen were used effectively throughout the living\nrooms. Bridge and whist were en-\nJoyed. Mrs. Stanley Jackson won\ntint prize In bridge and Mn. R.\nTerhune , the conaolatlon. Mn. H\nKeffer won tint prize ln whist and\nMrs. Wallace Hocktns the consolation. Mrs. J. Marions and Mrs. Sam\nIrvin presided at the tea table that\nwu most sttractive, covered with\na lace cloth and centred with s\nbouquet of rosea. Mrs. McDonald,\nMrs. Helmer Hanson, Mn. E. Swan,\nMlaa Adeline Tippe, snd Miu Helen\nBauer assisted as serviteurs. Other\ngueeta mculded Mrs. Peter McCul-\nlough, Mrs. M. Purcello, Mrs. C.\nBradshaw, Mrs. Carl Ttoseth, Mn.\nS. E. Wilson, Mn. E. Woima, Mn.\nJ. Camoizi, Mn. George Kent, Mn.\nS. Jackson, Mrs. Hank ,Metzgar,\nMn. B. Irvin, Mn. G. Nyman, Mn.\nN. Bacon, Mn. Frank Coates, Mn,\nKen McGuire, Mn R. Munn, Miss\nAudrey Spencer, Miu Eileen Men,\nMlu Edna Robertson and Miu EUeen  Livingston.\nMn. Thor Heyerdahl and two\nchildren spent a week ln Rossland\nu guests 6f Mr. and Mrs. O. Ass-\nland, prior to leaving for Toronto,\nwhere they will Join Mr. Heyer-\ndshl, who hu enlisted with the Norwegian forces.\nMn. Barney Lees la spending s\nfewadays visiting friends ln TnL\nMr. snd Mrs. Earl Mellet have u\nther guest trom Penticton, Mrs. C.\nBelt\nMn. D. Richardson of Nelson Is\na guut of Mrs. Jessie Spencer.\nSft. Pilot D. Calder and Mn. Calder, are guests of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Ruelle.\nMiss Edna Roberts* of Craig,\nSuk., is visiting her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. snd Mrs. Robert\nMunn.\nMr. and Mn. \"Boots\" Griffiths\nhave returned trom a vacation spent\nat the home ot the former's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. T. Griffiths, Revelstoke,\nMr. and Mrs. II. Hoyte snd san\nMordin have returned from a holi-\nday spent at Vancouver.\nGlyn Langdale who has lived at\nthe cout since Eaater, is in the city\nvisiting trends and relatves.\nMrs. B. P. Sutherland and chl-\ndren are apending ehe balance of\nthe Summer at their Summer home\nat Robson.\nPercy Bloomer, superintendent of\nthe C. M. & S. Company at Gold-\nfields, and a few days in Rosslind\nrecenUy, renewing old friendships.\nGeorge Tomich hss returned from\nCalgary where he attended the annual Stampede. He leaves for the\nCout on Friday to,enter military\ntraining.\nRt. Rev. A. K. Mclntyre, V.O.,\nbu returned trom a Ulp to Banff.\nRossland Board\nGives Red\nCross Supplies\nROSSLAND, B.C.. Jury It-Junior Beard of Trade at lti Tuesday\nevening meeting, heard a report that\n|5t worth ot suppliei is being given\nto ths local Red Cress Branch.\nRagi, prefersb-y dean onu, ita\nto be    added to the salvage list\nwhich alreidy includes rubber, glass,\naluminum and cut iron.\nOALY II TREASURER\nThree Dew memben, Verne Davidson, Wilfred Woodhouse ind C.\nCohoon were accepted,\nId. Daly wu appointed Treuurer\nto succeed Maurice Llfchuf, wbo\nresigned and is now ln ths Canadian Army Ordnance Corps at Winnipeg. Irvin Gurevltch wu nimed\nEntertainment and Membership\nChairman. Bert McCoy wu made\nMsnsger of the Rosslsnd Hsy Bees\n\u25a0oftball teem, which ls sponsored by\nthe Board, u former Manager Samuel Smith hu left Rosslsnd to\nreside in PenUcton. Tubby TurnbuU is the Cosch. Irvln Gurevltch\nsnd Mike Welykochy were put ln\nchirge of the men's team. Verne\nDavidson is slso on ths Sports Committee.\nThe Board la InvuUgsUng ths\npouibUlty of getting an Honor\nBoard for the memben enlisted In\nthe Armed Forces.\nIt wu decided to hold a picnic\nihorUy.\nFREEMAN\n\u2022   FURNITURE CO.\nThe Bouse at furniture Vetoes\nUl\nFRAME\nMIRRORS\n14x14\nlach .\n$2.95\nKASLO\nKASLO, B. C, July 15-Mr. and\nMrs. James Paterion ot Fernie are\nvisiting John McLennan, Mrs. Peterson's father, tor a few weeks.\nJ. Vaude Cuteyer wu a visitor\ntn TraU.\nMr. and Mrs. R. V. Rogen ind two\nchUdren of Triil are guesti ot Mr.\nand Mri. J. F. Clumbers.\nJ. Taylor, Dlstriet Road Superintendent of New Denver, waa a vlll-'\ntor in Kislo recently.\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Spence and twe\nchUdren of Trail sre holidaying ta\ntbe city.\nJ, Shaw, Superintendent ot P.\nBurns In Calgary-Is s visitor ln the\ncity.\nLieut. George Armstrong, ILCN,\nsnd Mrs. Annstron. snd two chUdren Patsy Ann snd Jackie of Victoria, sre guests of Constable and\nMrs. T. Glsholm. Mn. Armstrong\nand children wiU spend the Summer\nhere.\nRossland Airman\nHeard on ilr\nROSSLAND. BC, July 18-Pllot\nOfficer Lou Crowe, a nsUve Rosslander, wu heard ln an Interesting\nInterview over Radio Station CJAT\nWednesday at 9:45 o'clock, p.m. in\nthe program \"Highlights ln Our Air\nForce.\"\n\"Hello out there to ill my friends\"\nwas hli greeting. In iniwer to\nquesUons u to whst a PUot Officer was, he explained it was the\nequivalent to a second lieutenant\nln the army. He also explained hli\nduty wu to teich itudents ln lircnft opentlon.\nNavigation wu the Important\nthing ln this war with the battle\nfront becoming more distant, he uld.\nA good grounding In mathematics\nwu essential. Junior matriculation\nwu sufficient he said. Life ln tha\nair force was interesting, Po. Crowe\nsaid, snd one met fellows from sll\nover the country. He said he had\nmet a man from Rhodesia, South\nAfrica, snd msny from AustrUa,\nand many Britishers.\n'They are sll fine fellows, and\nthey get a kick out of our slang\nwhich mixes them up quite a bif\nhe said.\nPilot Officer Crowe said he would\nbe going to in Ontario flying service\nstation u an Instructor shortly.\nBetore ilgning off he sent greetings to Dr. H. R. Christie, now on\nthe staff of a New Brunswick hospital, to Bob Marshall, who Is taking an lnstructon course in Claresholm, Alta., and to Stan AUibone,\nnow at Riven, Man.\nSTOCKHOLM (CP).-In the Ger\nman pavilion of the Venice exhibition there an two rooms filled\nwith csricatures of Winston Chur-\nohiU, the BriUsh Prime Minister.\n1\nTRY THIS\nIF YOU'RE\nr.m\"-mm---\\\u2014 A.m.\"nt mm-U,\nOR CtllaUDUyi OTDrOnTn\nIf functional monthly disturbances\nmaki you nervous, restless, hfcjh-\nit ru ng, cranky, blue-try Lydia S.\nPinkham'i Vegetable Compound at\nonce to help relieve pain snd nervoui feelings ot women'i \"difficult\ndays.\" Very effecUve. Made tn Canada. Wttt worth trying\/\nColorful Cottons\n$3.95 and up\nMilady's Fashion Shop\nff It Is on the air *\nC. E. RADIO\nwill get,It\nNILSON ELECTRIC CO.\nTTTTTT\nUXI\nFjiMiininiiiniT\n\u25a0_&      W-dding md\ni    Engagement Ringi\nby\nH. H. Sutherland\n481 Baker St\nNelson, B. C\nimttllltmitt\nCEREALS AND FRUITS\nare twice is good with\nRICH CREAM\nfrom\nKootenay \"alley U\nAIRY\nLADIES' SHIRTS\nMAN TAILORED\nly TOOKE stPZ.OO\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nFairview\nCaih Market\nOpposite Hume School\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIALS\nShoulder Spring Lamb OA\nRolled en request, Ib. *)\"C\nRolled Vaal Roaiti\nWith Dreuing,\nBABY BEEF LIVER\nLb\t\n\u20227.. 32c\n18c\nRound Bont Pot       OQ.\nRoaiti, Billi Bttf, Ib. \u00a3OC\nHAMBURG AND\nSAUSAGE, 2 Ibt.\nSPICED HAM,\nSwlft'i. Vi lb. ..\nCRADE A LARGE\nECCS, doztii ...\nPhone   295\u2014Free   Dtllvtry\n35c\n22c\n42c\nHouse Rented\nON SECOND DAY THE ADVERTISEMENT APPEARED\nIN THE\nDaily News\nCLASSIFIEDS\nTHIS IS THE AD\nTHAT RENTED\nTHE HOUSE\nFOR HINT: TURN. 5 HM. SEMI-\nmodern house. 7 lots. Garden. Garage. Barn. Close In. $20 mo. Ph. \u2014\nor write St., Nelson.\nBy Using the Classifieds You Can SftII, Buy,\nRent or Hire Quickly* and Economically\nPhone 144\nThe Classified Dept*\n\u25a0 A\\-Wttt ,V.T\/W\u00abivwv>>\/' \u00abiNV'..\n\u25a0aaaaaaaaaM\n r^^^^^^^\nU\nPAOI IIX-\n\u2014\u2014\n MILSON s7Aft* -n\u00bb  OTIIC1   B. C-PWIOAY MORNIN4I. JULY t?,\nJJrlBtm flaily Nf ma ? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nEttabllibed April II 1801\nBritith Columbvx't\nMott tnttrttting Nevftpap-r\nPubliihed tvtry morning exeept Sunday by\ntb* NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED 188 Baku St. Nelton. Britisn Columbia.\nMUIBER 01 THE CANADIAN PRBSS AND\nIBI AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nFRIDAY, JULY 17, 1942.\nThe Drew Case\nThere is little doubt that the blast\noi criticism from Liberal papers across\nthe country had much to do with convincing the King Government that it\nhttd made a foolish move in trying to\npunish Colonel Drew for expressing\nhis surprise at the Duff report, surprise based on his knowledge of the\nfacts, as he was one of the counsel appointed by Parliament to assist the\nHong Kong inquiry.\nHere is the coment of the Liberal\nWindsor Star on the Government's\nbackdown:\n\"With the withdrawal of charges\nagainst Lieutenant-Colonel George A.\nDrew, Ontario Conservative Leader, a\nprize fiasco is completed. The whole\ncase sums up to one of the most stupid\npolitical blunders in Canadian Parliamentary history, and the Government,\nred-faced and headachy, has chosen the\nonly way out that could conceivably he\nlooked on as graceful.\n\"Unfortunately for the Liberals,\nthe dropping of the charges does not\nend the matter. It is the sort of thing\nthat will have repercussions for years,\nand it will rise again and again to\nplague the party.\n\"So far as its effect on Colonel\nDrew is concerned, he should thank his\nlucky stars\u2014and the political ineptitude of his opponents\u2014for the \"break\"\nthat has been accorded him. In few\nother cases has the public pillorying\nof a martyr worked out so handsomely on behalf of the man who was the\nintended victim.\n\"How much the Government as a\nwhole had to do with the prosecution\nthat was launched will continue to be\na mystery. It scorns inconceivable that\nan astute politician like Prime Minister Mackenzie King could have been\nbeguiled into such a short-sighted manoeuvre. All the evidence is that the caso\narose out of the strictly legalistic viewpoint of Hon. Louis S. St. Laurent, the\nMinister of Justice, but even the fact\nthat he is a comparative tyro in practical politics does not entirely explain\nsuch a blunder.\n\"As a matter of fact, now that the\ncourt case is closed and it is proper to\npass such comment, there never seemed to be one shadow of justification\nto believe that any such charge as that\nlaid against Colonel Drew could be\nmade to \"stick\". It seemed from the\nstart that only the most far-fetched\nview of the Defence of Canada Regulations could support the theory that\nhe had said anything that was culpable under the law.\n\"Even if there was, as there might\npossibly have been, a technical violation in the words which Colonel Drew\nused in his comments on the Hong\nKong report, the identity of the man\n\u2022 made the charges ridiculous. What\nwas overlooked by those instituting the\nproceedings waa that such charges\ncarry the implication that the accused\nperson is either deliberately or recklessly disloyal, and no considerable\nbody of Canadians could be convinced\nof that in connection with a man poa-\nsesing the record of service which\nColonel Drew can boast.\n\"The full effect of this farce on\nthe Government is yet to be determined. It is not likely, of course, to\ncause the downfall of the Administration, but it will subject it to embarrassment for years to come. It will be\neven harder to live down than the\nBeauharnois scandal, for it has subjected the Government to ridicule, and\nthat has a much more swearing effect\nthan indignation and condemnation.\n\"As to Colonel Drew, the results as\nthey touch his political fortunes may\nbe far-reaching. He is generally looked on as an outstanding candidate for\nthe national leadership of the Conservative Party. This fiasco has\nbrought him into Dominion-wide prom-\ninenc--- th\".! he could have achieved in\nno other way. The retreat wbich the.\nGovernment has made in the case will\nOpen te aay reader, Namu ef peieeae eiktng\nquutloni wtll not be publiihed.\nR K L., SUverton\u2014Do we nave to take our\ntruit to the neereat store and nave tt\nweighed before we can fat our tugar for\nctnning? If to, dou tht truit have to bt\ncooked first!\nNo, tbe fruit dou not hive to be taken to\nthe itore where sugar for preiervlng or ctnning it purchued. Weigh the trult et bom*\nind wben you purchue the nifir i voucher\nIt given to you to ilgn, itatin ghte amount ot\nfruit to be canned tnd tbe sugir required.\nC. J.. Ymlr\u2014Will grouu or chicken bonu fed\nto a dog do him harm?\nDogs ihould not be fed grouu or chicken\nbonu u they ire brittle ind tpt to splinter.\nReader, Sandon \u2014 Will you pleue tell me\nwhere the government It getting the\nmoney to build the Japanese homes tn\nSandon, Kaslo, Slocin City and Greenwood?\nFrom the consolidated revenue.\nM L, Edgewood\u2014Will you pleue tell me how\nmuch Income tax would 1 mirrled mtn\nwith two children pay under the new budget if he geti 13.75 a day working ln a\nsmelter? How much  Income tax,  defence\ntax and compulsory savings?\nThe Combined National Defence Tax (normal tax) Income Tax and Compulsory Savings\non an income of 11794 a year. 15 75 a day for\nsix days a week, would be 1118.80 a year and\napproximately 1890 a month,\nTeh amount of National Defence Tax paid\nfrom January 1 to August 31, 1942 will be deducted from this amount.\nConstant Reader\u2014Please publish the population, latest figures, of Penticton, Kelowna\nand Vernon.\nKelowna population by 1941 census figures\nIs 5047; Vernon, 5099; Penticton, 5743.\nLooking Backward\nTEN YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Ntwt, July 17, 1132).\nKaye Don, noted British speed boat pilot,\nbroke his new world's record, yesterday aver-\nalng 120 miles an hour.\nE. C. Cherry and J. R. Tinkess were elected to the Kaslo Volunteer Fire Brigade on\nThursday.\nMiss Lois Boomer and her brother Dalton\nleft Saturday for Vancouver, where they will\njoin their mother, Mrs. L. L. Boomer.\nNelson's senior baseball team hammered\nout an 8-4 victory here over the Colville,\nWash., Club, Sunday afternoon.\n25  YEARS  AGO\n(From Dtlly Newi, July  17, 1917).\nA. G. Langley of Vancouver has been appointed resident mining engineer for the Kootenay District.   ,\nM. E. Purcell of Rossland. Maniger of the\nConsolidated Company's properties in that\ncamp, has left for Alaska on business.\nMiss Ina Steed returned Saturday from\nToronto, where she has been studying music\nfor the past three years.\nC. C. Brown of Vancouver, a pioneer of\nKootenay and Boundary, is in Nelson.\nTest Yourself\n1. What is a \"fresh-water'* college?\n2. What is a discobolus? *\n3. Name the four states of the Union that\nbegin with the letter I.\nlege\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1. A comparatively small, little known col-\n2. A dkscus thrower.\n3   Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Idaho.\nToday's Horoscope\nToday's birthday children should follow\ntheir own insight and judgment if they hope\ntn attain success. They should not listen to\nothers. They are studious, energetic and affectionate. They also have pleasing manners\nand will have congenial homes. The next year\nwill be most auspicious for them. Substantial\npain will come through literary activities, solicitors, interviews, agencies and travel, it is\nportended, They should make the fullest use\nof these beneficient influences. Excedingly\nclever and very fortunate will the child be who\nis born on ihis date. Success as orator, writer\nor lecturer is foreseen, and a happy marriage.\nr\u201425 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Preu\nJuly 17, 1917.\u2014Russians driven from Kal-\nisch. Galicia French captured two lines of\nGerman defences on one-and-a-half mile front\nnear Verdun. Sir Edward Carson succeeded by\nSir Eric Geddes as First Lord of the Admiralty; Winston Churchill named Minister of\nMunitions.\nWords of Wisdom\nGod is better served in resisting temptation Ui evil than in many formal prayers \u2014\nPenn,\nlie construed as evidence that the Liberals fear him, and the Tories undoubtedly need a man who can strike\nfear into the hearts of their powerful\nopponents.\n\"Meanwhile, the collapse of the case\nleaves the way open for the fullest debate on the Hong Kong report in the\nHouse, and the Conservative Members\ncan be trusted to make the greatest\npossible capital out of the embarrassment in which the Government finds\nitself.\"\nNelson Municipal Library\nBook Notes\n\u25a0HOUU COrttTmUCTIOM DITAIlaV\noy H#HaMi Li BMnwifca\nA well  orguiicd, profuiely  iltoitrittd,\nguide to stindirti, buttdiag construction.\nTHI JAPANg\u00abg INIMY,\"\nby Hugh Byte.\n\"Whit wi most and Just now U to be\nreminded of the itrength sf Japan and juit\nwhtt element! compos* it, Bru don thit\n\u2022nd hu given mi i better idu of whit mikes\nthe plice run.\"\n\"COMPLITI GUIDE TO MODIRN\nKNITTING  ANO CROCHITING,\"\nby Allc* Cirroll.\nA New York designer ind luthorrtj on\nneedlecraft   gives   up-to-date   and   complete\nknitting Instruction!.\n\"MR. PAN,\" by Emily Hahn.\nSympathetic sketches trom thi daily life\nof conventional, patriotic Mr. Pin (I Mr. Smith\nof Chini) and hli Innumerable relatives in\nShanghai. By the luthor of \"The Soong\nSlaters.\"\n\"MIROIS OF THI ATLANTIC,*\nby Ivor Halstead.\nThe British Merchant Navy carries on; the\nitory of the men who go down to the sea so\nthat the fight for freedom can continue.\n\"TALES  FROM  BECTIVB  BRIDGE,\"\nby Mary Lavin.\nTen short stories make up Miss Lavln's\nfirst book. \"Her tales are as wise, as simple,\nas good-humored, and as sad as the Irish themselves.\"\n\"YOU CAN'T DO BUSINESS WITH \u2022\nHITLER,\"\nby Douglas Millir.\nThe author of \"Berlin Diary\" says of it:\n\"He gives the facts about what happened to\nAmerican Investments in Germany; to American firms and factories which strove to carry\non in the Third Reich.\"\n\"MEN WITHOUT COUNTRY,\"\nby Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall.\nThe courageous story of five Frenchmen\nand how they came to be fighting with the\nBritish in the present war.\n\"ISLAND   NOON,\"\nby Mabel  Louise Robinson.\nThe story of an American girl who fashioned her own destiny on a tiny island off the\nNew England coast; of a handsome young sea\ncaptain and his older brother who salvaged\nAbbie's empty life as he salvaged his barren\nlittle Island.\n\"VICTORY THROUGH AIR POWER,\"\nby Major Alexander P. DeSeversky.\nQuotations from among many reviews;\n\"No one can afford henceforth to believe he\nls thinking about the war if he has not read\nacrefully and opened his mind fully to what\nMajor Seversky has to say.\" \"His book, if\nread *\/nd heeded, might become a turning\npoint In the war.\"\n\"THE SONG OF BERNADETTE,\"\nby Frani Werfel.\nThl real and simply told story of Bern-\nadette Soubirous who, in Lourdes some 80\nyears ago, experienced a vision of measureless kindness and beauty. The author's \"luminous story of her life makes her completely\nbelievable to any reader.\"\n\"8WEET8 WITHOUT 8UGAR,\"\nby Marlon White.\nOver 200 recipes for favorite desserts In\nwhich sugar plays no part, using Instead the\nvarious syrups.\nPress Commeet\nTO TELL STEEL STORY\nAnnouncement of United States Steel that\nIt is planning to run a series of advertisements\ntelling what that corporation has been doing\nto win the war is worthy of emulation by other\nsuch companies. At first blush this may appear as an argument for more newspaper advertising. And it is.\nThe freedom of the American press depends upon its diversified advertising revenue,\nThe tremendous cost nf covering the world's\nnews can be met in no other way. Circulation\nincome meets only a small part of such cost.\nAnd if the price of any paper is raised too high\nit goes beyond the reach of the great mass of\nthe people.\nBusiness has a story to tell in these changing times. There is no more honorable way to\ntell that story than by advertising. It is up to\nbusiness leaders as well as political and labor\nleaders to kee palive the system of free enterprise now being threatened by the Nazi\nphilosophy.\nAbove al!, advertising is the guarantee of\na free press which means personal freedom\nunder democracy.\u2014Detroit Free Press.\nDON'T FORGET\nBut for Britain, the war would be over\nnow\u2014at least so far as Europe is concerned\u2014\nwith democracy the loser. But for Britain the\nUnited States would today be facing a victorious Axis on two fronts, each two continents\nlong, menaced by the Jap fleet on one side\nand the combined German and Italian commandeered English and French fleets on the\nother. But for Britain, thst is, either Hitlerism would be triumphant over the whole earth\nor, at best we would be fighting ft, unprepared, with no greater hope than to defend\nour own soil at the probable cost of complete\nexhaustion and  bankruptcy.\nLet those who are inclined to belittle Britain's performance in this war remember that\nfor more than a year she held the fort absolutely alone and that, in all, she provided'us\nwith more than two years of grace in which\nto get ready to fight.\u2014Los Angeles Times.\nEtiquette Hints\nWhen you are saying goodnight to your\n\"date,\" girls, don't thank him for having invited you to go out with him; thank-him for\nthe good time you've had.\nTODAY'S News Pictures\n.\nFOUR COURAGEOUS R.CA.F. FLIERS DECORATED BY KING\nPilot Officer Larry Robillard,\nphotographed just atter he received the Distinguished Flying\nMedal from His Majesty the\nKing, has a score of four enemy aircraft destroyed and one\n\"probable\". Robillard, 21, flying\na Beaufighter, brought down\none Folkewolfe 190 at Easter\nweekend and damaged another\none.\nFor bringing ln hli badly\ndamaged bomber and crew after\na raid over Germany, Wing\nCommander Thomas C. Weir\nof Toronto ind Winnipeg received the Distinguished Flying Cross from the hands of the\nKing. Weir was seriously\nwounded on the flight. His parenU live at 104 Haielton Ave.,\nToronto.\nThe Diitinguiihed Flying\nMedil his been awarded to\nFlight Sergeant B. C. Paige of\nBridgeport. Ont, for safely navigating a badly damaged Hudson bomber and Its crew to its\nhome base. The aircraft flew so\nlow to attack an enemy ship\nthat one wing-tip clipped a projecting rork, disabling one en-\ngln- and destroying all instruments.\nFlying Officer J. Nicholson ot\nWindsor, OnL, who bu butt\npruented with the Georgi\nMedil (or exceptional bravery,\nIgnored exploding ammunition\nto dfag a pilot from a wricked\naircraft which had cruhed in\na takeoff. Nicholson wu blown\n20 yards by an explosion during the rescue but both men\nsurvlved.-R.C.A.F, Photoi.\nBUNDISTS IN THE TOILS\nThis group of German-American1 Bundists is shown\nleaving the Federal court in New York after being taken\ninto custody by the U. S. Federal Government in a sweeping raid of ali Bundists throughout-the U. S. They are,\nleft to right, Bruno Clemens Knupfer, leader of Brooklyn unit of Bund; Carl Bregler, leader of Lindhurst rniit;\nrear, Gustav Elmer, treasurer of the bund; Hu^o Weiss,\nleader of Astoria and Ridgewood units; Otto Fentske,\nemployee of Free America, Bund periodical, and William\nC. Kunz, who the government filed denaturalization\nproceedings against.\nMAKE MESS OF JAP FIGHTERS\nU. S. pilots in sun helmets and an Aussie flight officer inspect a Jap Zero fighter that had been forced down\nnear Port Moresby. Below is the electrical switchboard\ntaken from a Jap Zero fighter which was shot down by\na U. S. fighter pilot, also on New Guinea island.\n| $&W\ni\ni\n*   '\u25a0     V %.*\u25a0'\u2022\nDEATH FOR U-BOATS\nAs the U-boat menace daily comes nearer to Canadian shores, ships of the Canadian Navy seek out the\nskulkers, dropping deadly charges of explosives in their\nundersea lairs. In Canadian factories war workers are\nspeeding production to keep up the supply of depth\ncharges. Here a worker in a Pacific Coast plant is shown\nassembling screw tops for the charges.\nBIG CONVOY REACHES INDIA\nI\n7\nAt an India port this transport loaded with British\nsokiiers arrived safely recently along with dozens of\nother vessels which carried planes, tanks and guns for the\ndefence of India. It was the biggest convoy ever to leave\nBritain for India.'\n\t\naliaau\n\t\niMMthlll       \u2022\" m-C_,__J_^\t\nf_tk'._':\n____.\n Jap Warship Loss\nIs 89; U.S. Is 48\n-NIUOM DAILY NlWt  NILtON   S. C\u2014frtlOAY MORNINO   JULY IT.  _t-\n-s>A\u00abl MYM\n\u25a0y -TH|I^OeiATI0 MIM\nThe JIM\u2014I Navy Ms lost M\nftghuog ia* ilnce Peer) Harbor,\nia Anodwtd Press compilation oi\nofficial pour cements trom the U.S.\nArmy, \/Kvf ind General MacArthur's heedo.usrten in Austrilii\ndisclosed Tkundsy.\nSimilar  snooujscemenu   disclose\n41 UA nevil craft ol ill cetegeriei\n\t\nIs Your\nWash a\nVictim\nBLUE stops\nclothes from\nturning yellow\nand makes them\n....\nWhite thlngi thai have tracei\nef yellow look old \u2014that'i\nYellow Tinge. For sparkling\nwhiteness give them a loit rime\nIn blue water. All the nibbing\nand scrubbing In the world\nwon't give you inowy white\nclothes without that latt, magic\ndip in Blue,\nSeven colours com-\nblna to maka whlta.\nOne of theie\n, colours    b    blua.\nThere li no Int.\nincluding luxiliariss, leet on ill\n\u25a0ee fronti ilnce the lubmsrioe tanking of the Reuben Jamu in the\nNorth   Atlantic,   Oct.  30,   IMl\nChiirman Welsh (Dem. Umt) ot\ntbe Nivil Attain Committee leveral monthi ige eitimated tbe Japan-\nm Nivy had MO lighting craft.\nTht folowtng U \u25a0 uble ot Jipineie naval itrength based on Walsh's\nreport ind Associated Press loss\ncompilations:-\nIn Service\n10\nI\ntorn\n71\nSunk\n1\nBatUeships\nAircraft Carriers\nCruisers\nDestroyers\nSubmarines-\nWalsh gave the Mowing class\nificition of ships under construe\nUon by the Japaneie:\u2014\nBattleships I\nAircrsft Csrlers\nCruisers\nDestroyers\nSubmarines\nl\n10\nn\n7\nHighway Robbery\nCases Cause\nBritish Debate\nLONDON, July It (CP)-Dis-\nclosure thst highwiy robbery cases\nsre on tbe Increase ln London\nbrought s suggestion ln Parliament\ntoday thst the crime be msde punishable by death before a tiring\niquad, but the Government refuied\nto be alarmed by the situation.\nHerbert Morrlion, Home SecreUry and Miniiter of Home Security,\ntold the House of Commons that\nduring ths first six months ot 194]\nthen were U cases of robbery or\nassault with Intent to rob u compared wtth 7S for the corresponding period In 1041.\nHi raid, however, that the police \"are satisfied there ll no ground\nfor apprehension that there is i\ngrowing menice ,.. . \"\n\"My own opinion,\" he raid, ls\nthat the figures ire i remarkable\ntribute to the chincter of the people of London ln ill circumstances\nof blackout ind wartime conditions.\"\nYUIOW\"\n| ro keep them sparkling\nIwHiTi-\"\nRtCKITTS\nBLUE\nCASUALTIES\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP) - The\nCanadian (Active) Army In its\n117th overseas casuslty list ot tbr\nwir todsy nported the death of\ntour men.\nFollowing Is the litest list ot casualties.\nRoyal Cacedlan Artillery\u2014Holmes, Robert, Onr., MontreaL\nRoyel Cmaditn Engineers- McNicol, Francis Berntrd, L. Cpl.\nCrinberry Portage, Men.\nAlbertt Regiment\u2014Betts, Andrew\nMarall, Pte., Sunderland, Ont.\nCinidlan Forestry Corpi\u2014Doljac,\nNikola, Pte., Yugoslavia.\nWounded, returned to duty: Roy\ntl Cantdian Army Medical Corps-\nBrian, Francis Earl, Pte., Dorchcs\nter, N. B, MacDonald, Douglas Ber\ntrim, Pte., Halifax.\nDtngerously 111: Canadian Armored Corps\u2014Catherwood, Godfrey,\nLieut., Mrs. Allison Evt Cither-\nwood (wife) Mission City, B. C,\nFollind, Nelion George, Tr., Emerald Junction, P.E.T.\nReconntlsstnce units\u2014Danti, T.\nHudson Falls, NY.\nSeriously  ill:\nRoyal Canidlan Corps of Signals;\nPaterson, Clifford Alonto, Sigmn.,\nEmo, OnL\nNew Brunswick Regiment\u2014Cromwell Wellington Wolfe. Pte, Colei\nIsland, ueens County, N.S.\nRoyal Canadian Army Service\nCorps\u2014Eldon, Robert Patrick, Cpl,\nDun-Ltoghtin, Eire,\nCantdlin Forestry Corps\u2014Grant,\nThomai, Pte, Bliirmore, Altt.\nRESCUE BY RA.F. IN THE ENGLISH CHANNEL\nOne of the unsung branches of the British Royal Air Force is its sea rescue service. Composed of planes and fast motorboats, this service has saved many lives of\nfriend and foe hy picking up downed aviators in the English Channel and other waters\nadjacent to the English coast. Here you see a fast motorboat about to pick up the\ncrew of a destroyed Halifax bomber in the Channel. The men are crowded into a tiny\nrubber dinghy. Aircraft of the rescue service keep constant patrol in search of such\ncastaways. Surface craft is summoned by radio.\nMust Show Bask\nPrice of\nLuxury Tax Goods\nOTTAWA. Jly M (CP). - The\nWirtlme Pricei ud Tnde Botrd\nrequires merchants who sell goods\nsubject to tbe retell purchase tu\nimposed In Itnince Minister Ilsley's\nbudget to show the price of such\ntrtkles exclusive of thl tut.\nA Boird order hu been issued\nprescribing the procedure, thi,\nthe Botrd tnnounced last night The\nprice must be exhibited by price-\ntig or otherwise.\nIt Is optional with merchinti\nwhether In addition to showing the\nbasic telling price, tbey also dlsplsy\ntbe imount of the tn or the telling price cost, ttx Included.\nGoods lubject to thli tix Included\npunes ind handbags, diamonds snd\njewelry, cut gltss, chins tnd porcelain (except irtlclei tor use In preparation or serving of food snd\ndrink) docks snd wmtches.\nThe Botrd previously luued tn\norder \"respecting maximum prlcet\nof goods snd servicei affected by\nIM Fedenl tax changei,\" ln which\nwu set forth procedure by which\nthe new and Increued taxes were\npermitted to be collected from con\nsumers, without profit or msrkup\nbased on them, so that price ceil\nings should be maintained.\nSales of Pants and Shoes for\nProvincial Police\nCause Fraud Charges; Case Adjourned\nVICTORIA, July 16 (CP).\u2014Four\nVictoria men were remanded until\nAug. t lor preliminary hearing on\ncharges of conspiracy to defraud\nthe Provincial Government when\nthey appeared In City Police Court\ntodiy before Magistrate H. C. Hall.\nThe four are Joseph A. Walsh,\nManaging Director of WUliam Cathcart Ltd., shoe merchants; J. G.\nSimpson, Managing Director of\nJames Maynard Ltd, shoe merchants; George Henry Hall, Manag-\nIng Director of Hall and Company,\nwholesale drygoods and manufacturers, and Leonard J. Simmons,\nformer quartermaster ot Provincial\nPolice.\nlend-lease Turns\nto Equip\nU.J. Europe Force\nLONDON, July U (CP)-Edward\nR. Stettinius, Jr, United States\nLend-Lease Andministrator, arrived ln Britain today for several\nweeks ol conferences on the Lend-\nLease program.\nAn unofficial American source\nsaid Stettinius' Ulks will concern\nputting lend-lease into \"reverse\"\nto speed the day of an invasion of\nEurope.\nUnder the reverse program, Britain will supply American troops\nwith many articles while the United\nStates will send Britain raw materials to make un losses.\nIt was pointed out that this will\nmske available, for Immediate\nAmerican use, thousands of tona of\nsupplies which It would take weeks\nto ship aerou the Atlantic.\nThe charges followed a lengthy\ndepartmental inquiry conducted by\nW. H. M. Hsldane, Victoria Barrister, Into alleged irregularities In\nthe Stores Department of the B C\nPolice amounting to ipproxlmitely\n$28,000.\nHall Is chirged with conspiracy\nto defraud in the sum ot $2400 tor\n300 pairs of pants which the Crown\nalleges were not delivered to the\nPolice.\nSimpson and Walsh are charged\nwith conspiracy to defraud in presenting invoices for boots and shoes.\nThe three businessmen are'at liberty on bail ol $2000 eich in twn\nsureties. Simmon's bail was set at\nthe same amount.\ntttflW\nYOU NEED COAL HEAT\nAnd if you want Coal Heat It\nwill be the wise thing to FILL\nYOUR BIN NOW!\nDon't wait for a possible congestion\nof transportation facilities next\nFall.  Order Your Coal Today!\nmmm PHONE 33 \u2014\nWest Transfer Co.\nESTABLISHED IN 1899\nHP\n\u25a0\"\nMexicans Catch\nEnemy Radio\nTransmitting Crew\nMAZATLAN, Mexico, July 16\n(AP)\u2014Federal troo i< sesrohlng\nfer s mysterious radio station\nspreading Axli propaganda frem\n- this Pacific coast region arretted\na Japaneie- ind \u2022 Germsn near\nhire yeiterdiy ind were reported\nunofficially to have seized a rldlo\ntransmitter.\nSix Billion in\nTaxes for\nCitizens of U.S.\nWASHINGTON, July ]\u00ab (AP).\n\u2014The largest Ux bill In the hiitory of thl United Stitei \u2014 \u2022\nVt, 143,900,000 wirtlme meaiure\ncarrying heavy new income ind\ncorpontlon levies\u2014went Detore\nthe House of Representative! to.\ndiy for generil debate.\nRed Navy Fliers\nDestroy\nFive Axis Vessels\nMOSCOW, July 11 (AP)-Red\nNavy flieri ittiched to tht Bel-\ntic Fleet have deetroytd thrte\nAxil gunboati, a pstrol bost snd\nan armed traniport ind dimiged\neight patrol boati, two gunboati\nand a torpedo boat, the Moicow\nradio innounced today.\nThe opentioni, bringing concentration! of Axil naval vesseli\nunder bomblngi and machine-\nrjunnlng ittacki, were said to\nhave been carried out \"in the last\nfew dayi.\"\nMrs. Roosevelt Sure\nShows Don't Shock\nthe Soldiers\nWASHINGTON, July 16 (API\n-Take it (rom Mri. Fnnklln\nD. Rooievelt \u2014 amateur shows\nthat shock women reporten\nprobably dont shock the soldien for whose entertainment\nthey are itaged.\nTwo reporters who attended a\nrecent show put on by three\nWashington Recreational Organisations without rehearsal commented at Mn. Roosevelt's press\nconference thit they had come\niway shocked.\n\"I don't think the soldien\nwere shocked,\" Mra. Roosevelt\ncommented with \u2022 laugh.\n\"No, they seemed to love it,\"\nidmitted one of the reporters.\nMrs. Roosevelt added that the\ngirls probably also would be\nshocked at talk that goes on in\nbarracks, too.\nAir and Cas Attack\non Coast Plana\nFactories Is Likely\nLM ANOILIt, July 11 (AP).\n-An iir Ktsck ee the Pa\u00bbrfH\nCoest, iMluelnt tte me ef (el.\n\"any ke eapeetod it my time,'\nLt-Col. I K. Merrltt, U.t Army\nAir Ferees, Uld HO Induitrlil lata\ntedey.\nHe wirned: The enemy certainly Is net telitf to let eur tre-\nmtndoui ilixnft production contlnut ee tte Meet without trying\nto put I crimp In tt\"\nSenators Think\nArgentina Grows\nHeated Over\nAxis Sub Warfare\nBUKNOS AIMS, July U (API-\nTerming unsatisfactory the Oerman explanation that the 4800-ton\nArgentine frleghter Rio Tercero\nwas sunk by mistake, Nicolas Re-\npetto, Socialist Deputy, propoied\nin the Chamber of Deputies last\nnight that Argentine seize Axil\ngoods in this country and create a\nfund to cover damages to Argentine ships in \"this unrestricted submtrine wirfsre.\" The Rio Tercero\nwas sunk off the coait of the United Statei June 32.\nThe Deputies adjourned to discuss today ln secret session whether\nArgentina should break diplomatic |\nrelations with the Axis.\nViolent Storms\nHit Grain\nCrops In Sask.\nSASKATOON, Jury 18 (CP)-\nA violent wind, riin and hail itorm\nwhich iwept' Northern Saskatchewan districts lilt week damaged\nthousands of seres of whestlsnds\ndisrupted telephone end power services, unroofed houses and wrecked\nfirm machinery.\nThe itorm took heavy toll kt the\ndistricts surrounding Vansoqjr, IS\nmiles South of here, wd it Con\nquest, 40 miia Southweit of Su\nkitoon.\nIn the Vanscoy district crop losses\nwere from It to 100 per cent, while\n\u2022t Conquest \u2022 30-mlnute itorm dim.\naged thouiandi of icres of wheat\ncrop in i atrip roughly tour mllet\nwide. Several ftrmen leet ill their\ncrop, in the town of Battleford\nroan were blown trom a number\not\nBetter In Army\nOTTAWA. July 11 (CP) - The j\nSentte Banking and Commons* j\nCommittee todiy decided to obtain j\ntram Defence Department Offlciili\nan opinion on the necessity ot havi\nIng men of military ige conttaM j\nstudies in medicine, dentistry and j\nengineering.\nIn considering the Government\"*.]\nvocational training bill, .some corn* 1\nmlttee memben expreued teir that j\nyoung men might use the coune*\nwith Oovernment fininciil asstit- I\nince to ivoid being celled up for ]\ncompulsory military  tnining.\nSenitor A. D. McRei (Con. Brit- j\nish Columbls) said he doubted \\\nwhether ln the face of a tight manpower iltuition miitince ihould\nbi given ln training men who would ]\nnot complete their counts for seversl ytan\nPreliminary consideration WU ilio given to the bill providing for\nreestibllshment of memberi of thd]\nirmed forcu in civil occupations, j\nThli bill ll 9-lOrn promlsei and\nl-10th fact,\" uld Senitor John Hilf\n(Con. Minitoba). There wlU be\nnine people disappointed for ever*]\none helped but It lt will make iny\nof the men in the forcu feel iny\nhappier I will support It. Knoklnf\nlt cinnot be cirrled out wi really\nshould not, pass it.\"\nVictoria Employees\nAsk Mora Bonui\nVICTORIA, July M (CP).-JVIe-\ntoris's civic employeu othir thin\nschool teachers and members ot the\noutiide statfi will ipply for a boird\not conciliation on the cost of living\nbonus question, T. O. Hirrii, Secretary of the Civic Employeu Federation of Greater Vlctorli, uid todiy.\nBy council resolution employeei\nwho ire fimlly headi or have dependentl would receive i bonui of\n$10 i month. Thou without dependenta ire given $5.\nThe employeu originally sought\ni cost of living bonus thit would\nhave meant approximately $16.25 for\neich employee.\nTry a Wmt Ad.\nSORE FEET\nTHIS WAY\nBob In Minard's Unlment generously,\nud feel the relief steal over the aching\nmuiclu and joints. For all muscle in*\njoint paini, aches and itifinees, sprained\nmiles, twisted limbs\u2014Minsrd's hu\nbeen famous lor over 00 yearn Qood\nfor dandruff and ikin disorders, tool\nOet a bottle today; kup it x*v\nhandy. ftfl\nlARD'S\nTender, Aching\nBurning Feel\nYout feet may be so iwollen ind\nInflamed that you think you can't\ngo another Itep. Your shoes may\nfeei as It they aVe cutting right into\nthe flesh. You (eel sick all over\nwith the ptin and torture; you'd\nglVe inything to get relief.\nTwo or three applications of\nMoone's Emerald Oil and in a few\nminutes the pain and soreness disappears.\nNo matter how discouraged you\nhave been, if you have not tried\nEmerald Oil then you have something to learn. Gol a bottle today at.\nMann, Rutherford Co. ahd all\ndruggists. (AdvU\nAir Casualties\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP)- The\nRoyal Canadian Air Force in its\n318th casualty list of tha war today\nreported two men killed on active\nservice overseas and five missing\nafter   air   operations   overseas:\nHolmes, John Gordon, Fit. Sgt.,\nLondon, Ont., Mair, James Irvine,\nSgt., W.A. Mair (Father)  Vidtor.a.\nDied as result ot injuries\u2014Parkinson, Jack Askew, Sgt., London,\nOnt.\nMissing after air operations \u2014\nEmond, Joseph Hector, po., Ottawa.\nNickerson, Allen Ernest, Fit. Sgt.,\nSackville, N. B, Westgate, Robert\nJohn, Fit. Sgt., East Angus, Que,\nWoolner, Robert Ward, Fit. Sgt.,\nAyr, Ont., Jones, Elric Cameron\nLatter, Sgt., Chute Tanet, Portnutf\nCounty, Que.\nPreviously reported missing now\nprisoner of wanWernham, James\nChrystall, Fo., Winnipeg.\nPreviously reported missing, now\npresumed dead: Monk, Arthur John\nBenning, Fo., Winnipeg, Hegar'.y,\nHugh Francis, Po., Sarnia, Ont., Pi-\nbus, Henry Hodsmyth, po., Montreal, Lewis, Arthur Lloyd, Sgt.,\nCalgary, Pick, William Rogers, Sgt.,\nProvost, Alta.\nSeriously injured in motorcyie\naccident:Leiteh, Glenn Arthur, Wo.\nIslington, Ont.\nSeriously 111: Robb, William Rol-\nand, sgt., Hubenacadie, N. S.\nKilled on active service\u2014Wolch,\nTheodor   Benjamin,   Lac.,  Toronto,\nDied from natural causes:White,\nAltred.   Lac,   Hertfordshire,   Eng,\nMissing, believed drowned\u2014More\nS.-illey Frederick, Lac, Toronto.\nPreviously reported missing, now\npresumed dead:Freeman, A. J., Po..\nDevon, Eng.\nSeriously injured in automobile\naccident-Mallory, Harold Jimes,\nAc 2., Blenheim, Ont.\nMissing after flying operations\u2014\nCorly, Douglas Eafle, Po., Bedford,\nQue., Flnnlss, Charles Harold, Fit.\nSgt., C. B. Finniss, father, W. Van-,\ncouver, Paddon, Edwin Joseph, Po.\nChicago, 111., Crerar, George Taylor\nPo., Princeton, Ont, Stubb\u00ab, Staley St. George, Po., Vinnipeg, Few,\nThomas Harold, Sgt., Gueipa, Out.\n\"They Kiled Him\"\ndemocrats of\nArgentina Shout\nBUENOS AIRES. July 10 (AP>-\nTh3 funeral of former President\nRoberto Ortii, whose death removed one cf ths hopes of Democratic\nForces In Argentina, was turned\ninto a fervent pro-Democratic demonstration today by a shouting crowd\nwhich defied a rainstorm to pay him\nfinal tribute.\nAs the procession formed and the\ncoffin was placed on a gun carriage,\nabout SOD persons surged forward\nwith thp evident intention of joining the procession for the man\nwhose deith removed one of the\nhopes of Democratic forces in this\ncountry.\nPolice repelled them in s seriu\nof fist fights, Ind the procession\ngot under way while the crowd followed, shouting, \"Ortiz,\" and \"Viva\nla, Democracia.\" ,\nOrtiz died yeiterday. three weeki\nafter he had reiigned the Presidency\nbecause of 111 health, leiving office\nwithout having realized his ambition of assuring Argentines allegiance to Democratic ideals.\nThe crowd today, growing steadily\nai the funeral cortege moved along\nthe streets, cheered for Democracy\nand shouted \"we loved him,\" and\n\"they killed him.\"\nHalfway to the cemetery, mounted police charged into a crowd of\nseveral hundred demonstrators. Two\npolicemen were unhorsed and two\ncivilians were injured and removed\nin ambulances.\nHonor Mother of\nDeod Airman\nLACHUTE, Que., July 16 (CP)\n\u2014BelleVed to be the flnt Canadian woman to be so honored,\nMrs. J. H. Theoreit, of this town\n40 miles from Montreal, was presented yesterday with the wings\nher 21-year-old son, Lac. Jean-\nCharks Theoret, would have had\npinned on him with members of\nthe latest graduating class from\nNo. 13 Service Flying Training\nSchool at St. Hubert. Lac. Theoret\nwaa ont, of the victimi of the\nfour-plane craih near Maione,\nN.Y., Just two weekt before he\nwas slated to receive his wlngi.\nYou'll never be satisfied with anything else\nonce you see RINSO WHITENESS\nfAf077H-K:Iiowdoyoiuloit,Ruth?\nJenny's dress nukes my little girl's\nlook dingy. And'port my word, I\ntried so hard to get it snowy.\nRUTHt That can mean only one thing\u2014you\ndon't use Rinso! Try Rinso next washday\nand see the difference. Rinso doesn't\nmerely get clothes white... it gets clothes\nthe WHITEST ever!\nMOTHER: That's wonderful news! And\njust one look at your lovely print dress\na LEVER raotmcT\ntells me Ri n so's grand for washable colors.\nRUTH: Indeed, it is! And remember, Rinso\nfloats away dirt without hard rubbing or\nscrubbing. That's one reason why Rinso\nhelps make clothes last longer.\nMOTHER: What a big saving that is!\nRUTH: It's also a saving to get\nthe GIANT package of Rinso.\nGet Rinso at your store for next\nwashday.\neflntict\nBites-\nHtatRmSh\nStop*Itch\nTot quirt rrllM from IteWU \u00abt U*_t bite*, hMl\nrwh, tthletfl'i toot. Mstmt tnt) other eitemtllj\n\u2022simm.ikln troublM, u-o tutt-totlw, eoollw. *\"'\u25a0-\nrwptlc. liquid H I) 1). ITffirrlirtlon. OtmuwI\u00abm.\nhi xinlrm toothM Irritation ino rpilrtl y nnpi Ikmm\n(trtil mr ibe trial bottll iifovrt It, or owiwry btek. Aik\nrour rin.Mlrtt today for D. O. O. riUlCniPTION.\n___<_*_.__ . i ,:\n past iioht-\nOttawa Explores Idea of Dealing\nWith Western Debts\nTemporarily Under War Measures td\n| OTTAWA, July 1\u00ab (CP)-Pce*-\n' Huty of desllnj temponrUy .with\n(Wttttrn Provlncei debt tdjuitrntnt\nf toftilatlon under tht Wir Meuurei\n'.Act wu being explored here, Juitict\n(tnUMIIHItllHIMIIIIItMiUHMIIIIIIIIIIIIK\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n'niiiiiiiiiuHntimiiiiiiuiiiiiiiNHiiiiiiii\n' AINSWORTH Hot Springi OPEN.\n[   Colllirt, W. H. Comptnlon, ind\n! Life on Salt it VALENTINE'S.\nCovtrini    Oksnagan,    probibly\nVincouver. Comptny wtd. Ph. 233.\nPllmi,  Oiviltplnj, Printing\nVOGUE STUDIO\nNtlion    Sohool    Boird    Regulir\nMtttlng tonight, 8 p.m. CITY HALL\nSelect t food book trom Wait's\nlanding Librtry for tonight.\nTnttrmedlitt Glrli for Cimp Koo-\nltret meet tt C.P.R.. 1 P-m. todiy.\nFurniture vtn letvlng for_the Okt-\ntugin next Siturdiy. Room for\nBtore. WilUimi TTtnifer, NeUon.\nDtnce to the music of Turk's\nJ)tnce Bind in Ksslo Oddtellow'i\nUtolL rrldsy, July 17.\nATTRNTION!\nGolf Club  dtnce scheduled for\ntonight postponed.\nTtnden ire tsked for iniolttlon\nof Isolation Hoipltil, returnable July\n(Oth. Ptrtlcultn from Mr. Hirry\nBurns. J. C. Fortel, Secretiry,\nI We hive \u2022 few retl buys In gen-\ni Wnt rebuilt typewriter!. Cuh or\nt OS euy terms D. W. McDerby, 654\n' Baker St, Nelson, B.C.\nI   For lmmedlite itle\u2014New cindld\nI Xodtk \"M\" mm. etmert, F 4.8 lens.\nI Complttt with film tnd exposure\nmeter, $49 cuh. Phone 19.\n, NOW AT VOUR DEALERS\nThl Treit of tht Yur\nMcDonalds'\nNtw   Pick,   atrivvberry   Jim\nTRY IT - IT'S DELICIOUS\nNeUon Public Heilth Clinic Im-\nmunizstlon for dlptheria, small pox,\ntrhooping coup, scarlet fever. Battel, children to 8 yrs. it Hume\nhool, today 9 to 10 i.m.\nSACRIFICE\n[ 1038 Deluxe Plymouth Coich. Heit-\ntr,   defroiter.   Licensed.   Excellent\nrts. Owner cilled up. Must sell im-\nedlately. Ph. 3 M,  Balfour, collect.\nR A ft GROCERY\nPhont 181     \u2014     Free Delivery\nDon't forget our ipecial weekend\n8 per cent diicount on ill ihelf\npricei txctpt augar tnd tobacco.\nFRIDAYS\u2014tnd-SATURDAYS\n\u2014I\t\nHonoring Group Capt. A ap Ellis,\nB.I, tnd Squtdron Leider B. H.\nowelli, CF, Cltlieni Committee it\nome, Memoriil Hill, Monday 8:30\n\u2022pm. to holt] tnd hostesses of vistl-\nf tirmen for put year.\nNow, mort thin ever, Is the time\n'la buy time-tested products. Frigidaire, thl greatest name ln refrigeration, midt by Generil Motors,\n' b your guarantee ot quality and\nI eautfictlon. Sold only by Hipper-\ni aon Hardwire.\nCARD  OF THANKS\nT wish, to expreu sincere thinks\nI tnd tppreclitlon to my many friends\n; tor  kindnesi  tnd   expressions   of\nnpsthy extended to me ln my\nesvement.\nMRS. MARY BREMNER.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the lite Wlllltm H. D. Halg-Smellle will be held\nSaturdiy it 2 pjn. from St. Saviour'i Pro-Cathedral, Rev, J. Q.\nHolmes officiating.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST SUGAR RATION \"CARD\nnear Nelson Hardware, Tuesday,\nPhone 891-L.\nTry t\nSALMON SAUD\nClubGafe\nTHOMPSON\nFUNtRAL HOME\nMlr.Uter St lament told the Houm\nof Commons today.\nHt itld Ibt Government delegations hert trom Manitoba, gtskit-\nchewtn and Alberta teek.ng Dominion Legislation to ttkt tht pltct\nof Debt Adjustment Legislition In\nthou Provlncei htd been told thit\nit would be Impossible to get such\ns meuure through Ptrliiment btfort tdjournment.\nBut tht delegitei htd been uked to make rtcommenditloni on my\ninterim action they thought might be\ntaken under tht Wtr Meuurei\nAct ind htd retired to consider thu\nproposal.\nIk Intermediate\nGirls Enter\nKoolaree Today\nSeventy.four girU of Eut snd\nWest*Kootensy centrei, comprUlng\nthe lirgest Intermediate girli csmp\nyet held, will go under csnvsi st\nCamp Koolaree today. It will be\nthe opening of t 10-diy outdoor\nholiday under the auspices of the\nWest Kooteniy Religioui Educitlon\nCouncil for tie 12 to 14 year old\n;lrU.\nEleven DUtrlct centrei ire rep-\nreiented ln the hUtory-miking enrollment Twenty-eight cimpers ire\ncoming from Trill, IS from Kimber.\nley, nine from Rosalind, eight from\nNeUon, five from Crinbrook, three\nfrom Nikuip, two from Ymlr tnd\none eich from Cistlegsr, Frultvsle,\nBslfour snd Sheep Creek.\nMlu Helen Vince of Vincouver\nU Cimp Director, tnd ihe will be\nuiUted by Csmp Mother Mrs. D.\nMscDonsld of Trill, Mri. Norman\nFawcett, R.U., of Nelion, tnd Camp\nCounsellors Mrs. A. Condy of Nelion, Mri. H. L. Relmes of Trail, Miss\nEileen Crowe of Trail, Misi Annie\nMcGillivray of Cnnbrook, Miu\nMargaret McKinnon of Cranbrook,\nMUs Geraldine Dodman, MUs Florence Stovell ind Miss Dawn Sharp,\nall of Nelson.\nThe girls tre lucceedlng the junior boys at the West Arm holiday\nspot, and will In turn be followed by\nsenior girls. The boyi will return\nto their homes today.\nArrangementi hive been made\nwith the CPJl. for i passenger\ncoach to be attached to an Eutbound Freight to tske the girls\nfrom Nelson to the camp In the afternoon. The train will probably\nletvi between 1 and 2 p.m.\nFuneral Services\nfor N. Liflebo\nFuneral services for Nili Litlebo,\ncarpenter and resident of NeUon and\nDistrict since 1929, were held from\nthe Thompson Funeral Home Thursdsy morning. Rev. C. C. Osterberg\nconducted the rites.\nPallbearen were Alvin Elsstrom.\nOle Ulness, Nils eUon end Chris\nHalvorsen. Interment waa ln Nelson Memorial Park. \u2022\nMr. Litlebo, after being mUsed for\ntwo days, was found July 7 hanging\nby a rope about his neck from a tree\nin the bush on the West side of the\nBluff.\nAn inquest by a Coroner's jury es-\nta\/blished suicide ss the cause of hU\ndeath.\nTrozzo, Morrison\nWhist Winners\nFrank Trozzo and D. Morrison\ncarried off top honors ln the Eagles\nwhUt drive Thursday night. .Second prizes were won by J. W. Robb\nand E. Adcock, while consolation\nprizes went to Mrs. J. Weaver and\nA. Copen. RefreshmenU were served, and dancing followed.\nGus Pasacreta was Master of\nCeremonies.\nCALGARY, July 16 (CP)-Commending of the Canadian Government's share in formulating the International wheat agreement, recently announced at Washington,\nwas expressed here today in a resolution passed at an Inter-Provincial meeting of Wheat Pool representatives.\nNILtMtt DAILY NIWS. NILSON. \u25a0. C-FRIDAY MORNIN*. JULY 17, tttt\nU.S.  Asks Finland\nConsulates to Be\nClosed\nWASHINOTON. Jul) U (AP.)\n\u2014Tha Unittd Statet hu requested\nFinland to clott ill Finnish con-\n\u2022ulatu ln thii country not later\nthan Aug. 1.\nThli iction wu teken t Sttte\nDeptrtment innouncement expliined tonight, btctuit tht Flnnlih Govtrnmtnt hu denied tu\nAmerican Consular offlcen in\nAmerictn lntereit! ln Finland.\nnection with representation of\nFinVnd their treaty rlghti in con-\nTht Stete Department pointed\nout thtt tht Flnnlih Fonlgn Offlct t yetr tgo htd notified the\nAmerictn legation In Helsinki\nthtt \"in vitw of wtrtimt conditions,' 'consular mitten should be\nhindled entirely through tbe\nFinnUh Fonlgn Miniitry nther\nthan directly with local luthoritles.\nThU tction ot tht Flnlnih Foreign MinUtry,\" the Department's\nsnouncement continue, \"htd the\ndirect effect of denying to Amerlcm consular officeri ln FlnUnd\"\ntheir specific treity rlghU is con-\nlulir officials.\nWoolls, Berge of\nNelson to\nTrain as Aircrew\nErneit WoolU, ion of Mr. tnd Mn.\nH. WoolU, 414 Latimer Street, Nelion, hu enlisted In tht Royal Csnsdlsn Air Force at the Calgiry Recruiting Centn is an Aircrew I.T.S.\nTriinee.\nPrevioui to enlUtment Alrcnfti-\nmm WoolU hu been working for\nthe A. H. Green, Contncton.\nOle Mtnzingo Berge, ion of Mr.\nind Mn. Thomis Berge of J15-4th\nSt., Nelson hu enlisted 1 the Air\nForce it Calgary al in lircrew\ntrainee. Previoui to enlUtment Air-\ncrafUman Berge hu been an employee of the G. N. Railway at Nl-\nson.\nFenwlck-Wilson Is\nal Rock (reek\nROCK CREEK, B.C., July 18 (CP)\n\u2014Wing Commander Roy M. Fen-\nwick-Wilson, R.A.F., whose name\nfor months was on the front page\nof every Canadian newspaper ai\nthe leader of ilmost diily bombing\nraids over Germiny and other parti\nof the continent, U here visiting hu\nparenU, Mr. md Mrs. E. Fenwick-\nWilion.\nWing Comminder Fenwlck-Wilson, 28, has been overseu with the\nRoyal Air Force for nine yetn. He\nii now on loan to the United States\nfor ipeclal Instrumental duty.\nHe went to Englind ln 1983 tnd\njoined the R.A.F. end waa itiltoned\nfor \u25a0 time ln Egypt and then In\ntrans-Jordanii, where he uw service during the Arab disturbances.\nThree years ago he was given a\nfurlough from Mesopotamia, md\nspent a holiday In B.C.\nIn April 1941, Wing Commander\nFenwick-Wilson received the Distinguished Flying Cross for exceptional service and devotion to duty\nover a period. He will return to\nSpokane after the weekend. To visit\nhis parents, he flew 2000 miles In a\nbomber. \u2022\nMisi Ruby (ose\nDies, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., July 16-Mlss Ruby\nCose, 20, died Thursday morning in\nthe TraU-Tadanac HospiUl after I\nlengthy Illness.\nMiss Cose was the daughter of\nMrs. R. E. A. Davis, 1288 Second\nAvenue, and the late Mr. Cose.\nShe was well-known In church circles having been Secretary of the\nPrimary School of East Trail United Church.\nBesides her mother, Misi Cose\nis survived by her step-father, R.\nE. A. Davis; four brothers, James,\nKootenay, Raymond, and Walter;\nand two sisters, Margaret and\nBeatrice.\nFuneral servicei will be held Saturday afternoon with the Rev. J,\nLyn Clerihue officiating. Interment\nwill be in Mountain View Cemetery,\nOrganizer Douglas Says C.C.F. Has\nUnbeatable Machine in Sask.\nW. L. THOMPSON. Prop.\nDay and Nlgl.t Service.\n<4hour Ambulance Service\nI    815 Koeteniy St Phon\u00ab \u00ab1\nHOOD'S\nBread Is the\nBEST\nSASKATOON, July 18 (CP.)-\nThere Is not a rural seat in Saskatchewan that the C.C.F. cannot win,\nJohn T. Douglas, provincial organizer for the C.C.F., uld In presenting the report of the organization committee to the 300 delegatei\nat the mnual provincial convention\ntodsy.\n\"The C.C.F. at the preient time\nhas more than 10,000 paid up members In Saskatchewan as compared\nwith a number of approximately\n4000 at the same time last year,\"\nMr. Douglai iald.\nWhile there had been many rumors of fourth party candidates\nbeing placed in the field, he stated\nit was his opinion that any iuch\nmove would be to the advantage of\nthe C.C.F.\n\"We have ln many pt tht provincial constituencies,\" Mr. DougUi tl'\n\u25a0erted, \"lit up t michlnt to efficient\nthit lt cinnot be matched by in opposing political group, in iplte of the\nfact that the people who iee, In the\nC.CF. the only threat to the present\nsystem, will see to it that fundi are\navailable to cirry on tht fight.'1\nBrain Hemorrhage Cause of Gorkoffs\nDeath Coroner's Jury Told; Death\nFollowed Dispute Over Bottle of Rye\nDeath tf Frttttrlck Thomu\nGorkoff, H-yttr-tld Doukhobor\nwht dltd July I It in unused\nbunkhttm at tht Kootenty engineering Ctmpiny't power plant\nconstruction tamp ntar Brilliant\nifter t ditputt tver t btttlt tf\nryt whItkty, wu cauied by ctrtb-\nrtl hemorrhage, prtbtbly dut to\nin Imptct tn tht htld. Dr. R. B.\nBrummitt, wht mtdt tht pett\nmortem tximlnatlon, Thundty\ntftirnoon told I coroner'i Jury\nthat tht imptct ctuilng tht him-\ntrrhtgt might have bttn lutteln-\ntd houn btfort hli death. Thi Inqutit concludtt todty.\nAlex Waley, t fellow employee\nof the Kootenty Engineering Compiny, U charged with manslaughter\nas t reiult of tht detth. He wu repreiented it tht inquest by E. P.\nDawson. Constable G. A. Brabuon\nand Conittble J. L. DeVoln represented the B. C. Police, ConsUble\nBrabuon examining the witnesses\nDr. F. M. Auld Coroner, presided.\nTO QO TO SCENE\nTodty the coroner'i jury will go\nto Brillitnt to go over the Kene,\nand will then nnder iu verdict. The\nJury consists ot R. A. Peebles, Michael Hinx, John Hawkins, H Lowery, Wilter D. Armstrong and Harry\nBrook. Afternoon md evening sessions were held Thundiy to hear\nevidence, and the Inquest was adjourned to today for completion.\nChief witnesses Thursdsy were\nLloyd C. Hargal md Hirry Jamei\nPeck, who with Gorkoff md Wiley\nmide up \u2022 foursome travelling In\nHargu' cir from Cutlegir to i\nDoukhobor village near Brilliant\nand then to the conitruction camp\nwhere Gorkoff waa put to bed In a\nvacated bunkhouse In the early\nmorning houn of July 5. He died\nabout 10 i.m.\nWaley, In view of the manslaughter charge against him is a result\nof Gorkoffs deith, was excused is\ni witneu.\nWALEY HAD ARMY CALL\nHirgai tnd Peck told how they\ncame to Nelson on the Ssturdsy\nnight with Waley. While Waley,\nwhb has Just received his irmy call,\nwent to see \u2022 doctor, Peck waited\nfor him md Hargas bought three\nbottlei of rye, two 16-ounce and one\n25-ounce.\nHargu told of having i glau of\nbeer ln Nelson before leaving, and\nPeck itated the three stopped at\nThrums en route home for a drink\nof rye. At Cutlegir they were joined by Gorkoff, who esked for a\nride back to Brilliant and Joined\nthem when they went for a hamburger and cotfee. Hargas stated\nthey had another drink at that time,\nbut Peck, who got out on the other\nside of the car, wu not sure.\nOn the way home the party drove\nthrough the Brilliant Doukhobor\nsettlement and over the Doukhobor bridge, going to see a girl who\ndid Hargas' laundry.\nWhile Hargas and Waley were\nit the girls' home\u2014they were iway\nonly two or three minutes, Hargas\nmd Peck stated\u2014the wiring of the\ncar caught fire. Hargas and Waley\ndashed back to help Peck put It out.\nThe car's lights were put out of\ncommission. Gorkoff, who sat alternately in the back seat and on the\nrunning board while Hargas and\nWaley were Sbsent, disappeared for\na short time and then came back\nto the car for the return trip. He\nappeared to be drunk, Peck testified.\nACCUSES GORKOFF\nWhen they had recrossed the\nDoukhobor bridge Gorkoff askeS\nHargas to itop the car and he got\nJut, Waley missed his unopened 25\nounce bottle of rye and accused\nGorkoff of taking it, Gorkoff denied\nhe had It. Waley seized him by the\ncollar and shook him, said the two\nwitnesses. Hargas stated Waley slapped Gorkoff across the face. Peck\nsaid he saw no slap.\nTbeu, the two men continued.\nWiley demanded thtt Gorkoff go\nback with him to tht point when\ntht ctr etught fin t qutrter ot t\nmilt btck tnd find tht botttt.\nHargu and Peck wilted tbout tn\nhour. Thta Hargu wtnt back ilia\nWiley tnd Gorkoff wtn itinding\ntogether talking, ht itld, tht bottll\nitlll unfound. Hargu ln direct teitimony itated ht thtn nturned to tht\nctr tnd drovt lt btck to pick up\nGorkoff. Examined by Mr. Dtwion,\nht uld ht md Wiley looked for\nthe bottle ind wben they returned\nto thi ipot wben they left Gorkoff\nht wu lying on tht ground.\nGORKOFF PUT TO BED\nThey nturned to tht ctr, left\nPeck on the opposite lide of the\nbride, md drove btck without IlghU\nfor Gorkoff. Stirting otf then for\nthe ctmp, they picked up Peck it\ntht bridge. On arrival at the ctmp\nGorkoff wu pliced In the Chinese\n\"bull cooks'' bed ln the old bunkhouse. Peck uld he uw Wiley dabbing witer on Gorkoff i fict ln the\nwuhhouse before uking him to\nbed. They did not know when he\nlived, io could not tike him home\nHargas md Waley, going bick to\nthe Doukhobor village it diybreik,\nfound the bottle of rye, itlll sealed,\nbetide s fence poit neir the point\nwhere the cir ciught fire. They left\nIt ln Peck'i custody. Liter Peck\nturned It over to the police, itlll\nseiled.\nPeck testified none of the pirty,\nexcept Gorkoff, ippetred drunk.\nOut of the liquor purchised ibout\na bottle wu used, he uld, idding\nhe ttlll hid htlf ot hii own 18-\nounce bottle. Hirgu eitlmited they\ndrink hilf \u2022 bottle.\nHirgu lUted thit about nine ln\nthe morning, after breikfut, he\nlooked it Gorkoff ln tht old bunkhouse. The mm rolled over from\none tide to the other, he iald.\nPeck and Hirgu tettlfled they\nbelieved Gorkoff wu drunk when\nhe wai put to bed.\nWALEY ASKED\nCALL POLICE\nMaurice A. Andenon, timekeeper, testified Wiley came to him at\nhis work on the Sunday morning\nind uked him to call the police,\nsaying there hed been some trouble\nthe night before.\nConsUble DeVoln related how,\nIn response to the call by Anderson, who said a man wai Injured\nas \u25a0 result of \u2022 fight, he went to\nthe construction camp and was Uken to iee Gorkoff. He could iee no\nsign of life and called Dr. V. Goresky of Castlegar.\nDr. Goresky itated he reached\nthe conclusion when he saw Gor-\nkoUin the bunkhouse, that the man\nhad died of i cerebral hemorrhage.\nThU conclusion wss based on his\ncontrition and the circumstances.\nDLATH DUE TO HEMORRHAGE\nGorkoffi death, Dr. R. B. Brummitt, .testified, was due to cerebral\nhemorrhage on the right side of the\nbnin.\nNo\" fractures nor abdominal Injuries were revealed by post mortem examination.\nDr. Brummitt reported Gorkoffs\nleft eye was swollen and duclosed\nand there was a small abrasion over\nthe outer side of the right eye. The\ndoctor found three small abrasions\non the top of the head, and evidence of hemorrhage. Removal of\nthe ikull cap revealed a hemorrhage into the right side of the brain\nbut the source of bleeding could\nnot be found.\nNOT DIRECTLY CONNECTED\nQuestioned by Mr. Dawson, the\ndoctor stated he did not connect\nthe marks on the top of the head\ndirectly with the cause of death.\nHe believed the hemorrhage was\ncaused by an Impact on the head.\nThe' hemorrhage might have been\ngoing on for som time before Gorkoff was aware of ill effecU.\nGorkoffs condition might have\nbeen mUUken for Intoxication, Dr.\nBrummitt told ConsUble Brabazon.\nWar Council Studies\nProbUmi in\nPacific Arta\nWASBDfQTOM, July 18 (AP) -\nTh* Ptcific Wtr Cauacil tt   tta\nwttkly meeting with President\nRooievelt Hsrvtycd todty wtr problems in tha Ptcific mat and their\nother fronU\nAgain todty, u t week tgo. tome\nittention ctLtrtd on tht Medlterrinein wtr tetttn 'here, Wilter\nNuh, Htw Eetlind Minister to tbe\nU. S. uid thtt the situation wu\n\"obviously improved.\"\nFinds Plenty ol Woman Power In\nBritish Columbia to\nJustilvSlarlino New Industries\nNo Funds for Air\nRaid Shelters\nat Coast (Ily\nVANCOUVER, June It <CP>-\nMsyor J. W. Cornett, Chiirmm of\nVincouver'i Civiliin Protection\nCommittee, said today the committee hu no funds to fit out public\nlir raid inciters, tnd even if it\nhid, its memberi would run the\nriik of personal liability should accident! befall iny person using the\nihelten.\nMiyor Cornett drew ittention to\nthe section of the Defence of Csn-\nads regulstions empowering Minuter of Peniioni Mackenzie to designate certain premUea In which the\npublic might take ihelter in the\nevent of atr raids.\n'The regular method iet up by\nFederal Authority li not being used,\nMr. Mainwarlng (Chiirman of ihe\nProvincial Advisory Council on\nA.R.P) uyi It li i local reiponn-\nbility lo be worked out, appirently\nwithout iny legil btcklng, md by\nvolunUry irringement with the\nowners of suitable buildings.\n\"There hu been so much criticism of the failure of tomebody to\nprovide ihelters that I think it is\ntimo the facts were stated,\" Mayor\nCornett laid he affirmed his belief\nthat the Civilian Protection Committee cinnot be expected to take\nthe responsibility of erecting public shelters In downtown areas.\nVANCOUVER, July M (CP)-\nMri. Rex Etton, Assistant Director\not the Women'i DivUion, Depirtment of Nitiontl Selective Struct,\nOr.iwi, uid hert todty thtt mtrried women with training in higmy\nUilled occupitlons soon will bt\nurged to return to work.\nMrs Etton itld thit cltaaificttlont\nmost needed will Include women\nwith mining In teiching, nunlng.\nsocltl welfire tnd newspiper work.\nShe hu concluded \u2022 two-months'\nsurvey ot conditions in BritUh Co\nlumbil ud Mid ttat feund tht nam\nber of womtn tviththlt for war pro\nduction In thii Province fully Juit-\nified tbt opening ot aew induitriet\nhere.\nIn Eutern Canaditn citlei, Mra\nElton Mid, thtn it tlrttdy t terioui ihortige of womtn worken.\n\"I think,\" iht tald, \"tnen tf\ntvery likelihood of t regUtntion ot\nunemployed women in ctrttin elm-\nlflcttloni befort long. Thou rf\nquired will be choien icccrding to\n\u2022gt tnd experience.\"\nLethbridqe Man\nEnjoys Holiday\nort Kootenay Lake\nS. A. Bucbintn, Circulation Maniger of the Lethbridge Herild, wu\nin NeUon yeiterdiy. He U enjoying a holiday in the Koeteniy Diitrict ind left yesterday ifternoon\nfor Kulo.\nReport Parachutes Land Few Miles\nFrom Roosevelt Estate\nNEW YORK, July Id (AP)- The\nPublic Relations officers of the Eastern Defence Command said tonight\nthat a military Investigation of unconfirmed reports of parachute\nlandings near Rhinebeck, N.Y., is\nunder way.\nThe SUte Police teletype said six\nparachutes of extra large size were\nseen descending late today in the\nvicinity of the Astor EsUte near\nRhinebeck, and State Police from\nnearby areas converged on the\nscene, which is only a few miles\nfrom President Roosevelt's Hyde\nPark estate.\nUsing an audio-telephone syitem\nfor communication with the Preu\nfor the fint time, the Eutern Defence Commind Issued the following tUtement:\n\"In reply to Inquiries mide by thl\nPress, in reference to the New York\nSUte Police reporU of parachute\nlandings In the vicinity of Rhinebeck, N.Y., the Army itites is followi:\n1. The Police report has been received st this heidquarters.\n\"2. A military investigation U\nnow under way at the scene.\n\"3. There has been no confirmation of the report, and there U no\nfurther Information available at this\ntime.\"\nGranby Declares\n15c Dividend\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP.) -\nOperating profit of Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and Power\nCo. for the quarter eded June 30,\n1942, imounted to $192,113 efter deducting reserves for income and ill\nothir taxes, tht quarterly nport\nshows. After deducting trom this\nfigure the uiual reserves tor depletion and depreciation, the net income for the quirter was $77,608.\nThe directors declared a regular\ndividend at the rate of 15 cents per\nshare United SUtes currency.\nHeads B. (.\nTree Fruit Board\nKELOWNA, B.C., July 16 (CP)-\nGeorge A. Barrett, Kelowna, will\nhe.id the British Columbia Tree\nFruit Board u Chairman for another year and Percy French, Vernon, and C. J. Huddleston, West\nSummerland, will again serve on the\nboard with him.\nThe thre men were re-elected to\ntheir posU yeJierday at the short\nest annual session of delegates in\nthe nine-year history of the organiiatlon.\nBoard remuneration will remain\nat the same figures ai lait year,\n$3000 for the chairman and $500\neach for the other members.\nThe same 27 men reconvened as\ndirectors of the British Columbia\nFruit Growers Association and returned fe cifoot\nturned to office the same executive\ntbat lerved last year: Gordon Desbrisay. Penticton, President: Mainline, Capt. C. R. Newman, Sorrento; North Okanagan, P. Leguin, er-\nnon: Central Okanagan, W. J. Coe,\nWinfield; South Okanagan, G, Desbrisay; -Kootenay, Col. F. Lister,\nCreston.\nThe B.C.F.G.A. directors also\nelected the Governors of B.C. Tree\nFruits Ltd., which handles the saies\nof all the fruit In the Interior of\nBritUh Columbia. All of the 1941\nGovernors were re-elected excepting the two from the Central Okanagan where L. E. Marshall, Glen-\nmore, and L. C. Butler, East Kelowna, replace R. W. Ramsay and\nW. H. Moodie. The remaining Governors are: Mainline, J. C. Hanna,\nSalmon Arm; North Okanagan,\nJames Goldie, Okanagan Centre;\nand A. T. Howe, Coldstream; South\nOkanagan, Albert Millar, Oliver,\nW. Powell, Summerland and W, H.\nMorris of Penticton; Kootenay, Col.\nF. Lister of Creston.\nThree Weddings\nat Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B C, July 16 (CP.l-\nThree marriages of considerable interest here took place during the\npast week.\nTwo Kimberley high school itaff\nmemberi were united In mirrlige\nit Vancouver. They were Olga\nThiessen, daughter of Mr. md Mn\nPeter Thiessen of Sirdis, B. C, ind\nHugh Naismlth Matheson. ion of\nRev. and Mrs Robert Matheion ol\nNew Westminster. At the end of the\nschool holidays, the couple will reside ln Chapman Camp.\nIn a garden ceremony it the home\nof the bride's parents, Rex Wiyne\nColmer of Cranbrook md Dorothy\nMay Nesbit, eldest daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Nesbitt of Kimberley,\nwere married, and after i wedding\ntrip to Banff, they will reside ln\nCranbrook.\nAll Saints Church, Kimberley,\nwas the background for the marriage of Iris Gwendoline, eldest\ndaughter of Mrs. I. G. Coon of Kimberley, to Joseph Alexander Clark,\nof Kimberley, youngest son of Mr\nand Mrs. C. F. Clark. The couple\nwill make their home in Kimberley.\nCanada Shipbuilding\nNo Mean Effort\nVANCOUVER, July 16 (CP) -\nII. tl. MacMillan, President of Wartime Merchant Shipping, Ltd, told\na Vancouver Board of Trade luhch-\neon here today that Canadi'i record ln shipbuilding represenU no\nmean effort.\nMr. MacMillan iald that Canada\nwill produce 65 ihips by Dec. 1,\n1942, She has now delivered about\n25 ships ready for iea, and has hit\nwhat the speaker termed \"a uniform rate\" by sending 10 warshlpi\nmonthly down the ways since June.\nSymonds Jailed\n23 Months\nfor Delinquency\nFound guilty of contributing 1,\nJuvenili delinquency, Thomu As\nfred Symondi wu sentenced Thuna\ndiy moming by stiptndUry Migls-\ntrste  WtUlsm  Irvine   to  urvt  Jl'\nmonthi  in OtktUt JtU.  Symondi'\nwu arrested Tuesday night by Con-   ,\n\u25a0Uble G. A. Brabuon of tht Provinciil Police md Sergeut R. R.  '\nHouse ind Constable John Carpers*\nter of the NeUon City Police. Appearing in ProvincUl Police Court\nWedneidiy morning ht entered t\nplet of not guilty tnd wu reminded to Thuridiy, |\nThundiy morning HU Wonhip\nheerd the evidence of three youtha\nmd ConsUble Brabaion. Symondi\noffered no defence ind wu found\nguilty.\nHarvey Bremner\nLaid at Rest\nHirvey Ferguion Bnmner, rul.\ndent of Nelion for five yein, wu\nUid it reit ln Memoriil Ptrk Thuriday ifternoon. Funenl services\nwere conducted by Rev. G. G.\nBoothroyd from the chipel of tha\nThompion Funeral Home.\n\"Sun of My Soul\" and Breathe Oa\nMe Breith of God\" were the hymni\nsung.   C. C. HUlerin wu organUt\nThe body wu carried to rest by\nPallbearers Herbert McGuire, Jack\nMulhollcnd, James Wilkinson, Ole\nOlsen, Charles King ind Harry\nCrowe.\nMr. Bremner, who latterly hid\nbeen openting the Cillfornli Mint\nnear NeUon, died here Mondiy,\nSALMO, B. C., July 16\u2014On conviction Thundiy evening In Pro- ,\nvinclil Police Court it Salmo, of\nhaving exceeded the 40 mile ta\nhour ipeed limit set by. the Munltloni ind Supply Act, Tom Jtdra\nof Sheep Creek wu fined $15 md\ncosts by MagUtnte Henry Johni.\nThe offence was committed on tha\nSelmo-Nelway road Monday. Constable J. R. Payne prosecuted.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBERLIN, July 18 (AP.) \u2014 The\nGerman radio quoted the Prague\npress today as saying that five\nother \"parachutists agents\" had\nbeen shot dead at the same time the\ntwo assassins of Reinhard Heydrich\nwere slain In Ihe Borromeaeus\nChurch in Prague June 18.\nVeat%\nHeavy showers Thursday gave\nNelson IU fifth day of rain in the\npast six days. Precp tallon for the\n24 hours ending at 5 p.m. was .25\nInch. While the clouds and showers held sway, Ihe sun did break\nthrough on occasions and the ddy\nended on i brighter note. The ther-\nmometer showed a range of 15 degrees in temperature, the m nlmum\nbeing 55 snd the maximum 70 degreei.\nLevel of the West Arm at Nelrnn\ndeclined M foot during the 24\nhours until the Thursday reading\nWedneiday's level was 8.64 feet\nabove the low water mark, while\nThursday's was \u201e.40 feet above.\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\nAssociated Preu Wir Anilyit\nA meagre gleam of hope that the\nGerman offensive ln the Don Basin\nis losing some of its momentum and\nmay bo halted is reflected in Moscow\npross advices.\nThey make no effort, however, to\nconceal the extreme' gravity ot the\nsituation or the imminent danger\nof s. German break-through to the\nVolga down the Don-Donetz gateway. Russian censorship policy, that\neven seems distrustful or revealing\ntoo intimate a picture of the growing crisis to Washington and London authorities, makes no bones of\nletting American and British correspondents paint it in darkest colors.\nThat Russian policy probably Is\ntraceable to hopes that the gloomy\npress versions sent to the United\nStates and Britain will help develop popular demand into a compelling voice on both sides of the\nAt'antic for second-front operations.\nRussian fostering of second-front\nagitation on Ihe home fronU of her\n',vaf Allies is obvious. It may be\nborn of desperation, and the hope\nthat despite all the risks involved,\nAnglo-American troops can and will\nmove in on Hitler's Western flank.\nYet it also must be based on the\nRursian belief that on both sides\nof the Atlantic the voice of the\npeople is sovereign; that it commands in war as In peace, and is resolved unshakably and beyond\ncounting costs or risks on smashing\nthe Axis.\nThe basis for the faintly more optimistic note which hBS pierced Ihe\ngloom of the otherwise sombro reports from Russia is not clear, It\ncould rest on knowledge of increasing German difficulties ln replacing manpower md equipment lou-\nes as the battle expands\nA successful Russian withdrawe!\non wide front seems indicated. Russian s'.att skill in effecting giganttc\nretreats under enemy pressure is\nwell proven.\nA retreating army sucks IU advancing foe after it, extending hit\ncommunication lines, expanding hla\nbattle front, thinning out and exhausting his advance itriking forces.\nA retreat strategy robs the aggressor of iome of the advanUgei of\nthe Initiative. He must keep contact with hia foe or risk being\ndrown into a trap himself.\nGerman war bulletins have stressed for days that ictlon In the Eart\nexcept In the Voronezh region wai\na fast \"pursuit\" of Russian \"rearguard\" that of Itself indicates thit\nMarshal Semeon Timoshenko is en-j\ngaged ln the far South In pulling I\nhis armies back to some telected j\nfront, or falling back upon reinforce- I\nments he knows to be coming up.\nIn either case, if he continues to\nescape Nazi encirclement, the odda\nmight shift In hli favor once ha\nreaches  his   Intended  positions  to\ngive battle anew.\nI II111111 I I Illllllllf TTT\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWatchmaker,  Jeweler\n\u2022nd Optician.\n415 Hall St.       Nelion, B.C.\nMOVING\nPHONE\n106\nWILLIAMS\nTHE SPECIALISTS\nav\n,   a j     tm.\n^jMatjtf^gZjij^!^^^^!^^^!!\n_m___________t_m____m__^\n  NIUON DAILY NlWt NILMN  t. C.-MIDAY MMNIN*, JULY 17. *__\nSPORTS\nDodgen ud Cabs Split Double Bill\nWhile Cards Blanked ty lowly Phiis\n\u25a0y Tht Cinidlin Prew\nAtter drcpping tbe tint gunt of\n\u2022 Nitional League doublibitder 7-0\nbefore. A irowd of 19,888, Brooklyn Dodgiri battled b*ek te a t-1\nvictory ofet Chicago Cube yetterday lrr t fiercely fought iecond gtme\nio whic* II pliyen vere uted oy\ntke twe dubt. A tingle by Arky\nViughan, l doublt by Pett Belter\nud A eiaglt by Joe Medwick provide\/! ty Brooklyn runt to offiet\nt hotter by Lou Stringer.\nCafl HubbeU hurled the Ne*\nYor| Giints to a 3-1 'ictory over\ntbe PitUburgh Plritet Is i night\n\u25a0\u2022rae, HubbeU give up only two\nb:. until tbe ninth inning wh;n\nJoAnoy Barrett tripled ud Elhte\ntletcher ilngled to give tbe Buei\ntoe ir only run.\nT;rie Cinclnniti Bedi coUected 11\nkits ott five Boiton pitcheri to beat\nthe Bnvti 7-8 In another Nttionnl\n\"League nighter. The Brtvea. drovt\nJohnny Vinder Meer from the Bill\n- a the flrit frimt with \u25a0 three-run\nally and ln the leventh \u00bb-rni* Lombardl homered for hla fourth hit\nStan Benjamin icored oa Danny\nLitwtuler's high Infeld bouncer ln\ntbe 10th inning to give the Krtppy\nPhUtee i 4-3 triumph over St. Louu\nCirdintli In   mother night cap.\nErnie Bonham ended a penonal\nthree-gime losing itreik md won\nbit flnt victory In more thin i\nmonth bi the Ytnkeei mtdt it two\nla t row over Clevelind Indians 8-5\nbetore i crowd of 10.252.\nChet Laabs, who knocked ln five\nruni to beet the Athletics Wednesdiy night, drove ln four more tallica yesterday, to lead St. Louli\nBrowns to their sixth itrtight trt.\numph, i 9-1 conquest ot the A'l\nbefore t crowd ot IMl.\nLee Rom turned ln e six-hit pitching gem tl Chictgo Whltt Sox defeited Boiton Red Sox 3-2.\nGtorge Cue1! ilngle tn the 10th\n\u2022coring Bobby EsUllelli from third\nenabled the Wuhlngton Senators\nte defeat the Detroit Tigeri 1-5 fn a\nHifht game betore B0J0 tana. While\nttt Senaton made only five hit!\noff three Detroit pitchers the Tigeri\ncontributed ilx erron Wuhlngton\nwu forced to uie three pltcsheri.\nnational leaque\nfirst gami:\n\u25a0rooklyn  OOO 000 000- 0   8   2\n<\u00bblci\u00ab,o    001 112 lix- 1 14   1\nDiv!* Kirabtll (T) end Owen;\nSeWta,'WirneSe* It)' uii Mcfcul-\nleugh.\nSECOND GAME:\nBrooklyn    000 000 200- 110\nChicago   000 010 000- 1   7   1\nAUen,  Caiey  (7)   md  Sullivan,\nOwen (7); Fleming, Olien (9) ind\nHernandez, McCuUough (0).\nNew York .... 000 210 OOC\u2014 3   8   0\nIPlttaburgh  .... 000 000 001- 1   4   1\nHubbeU  and  Danning,' Butcher\nApd Lopei,\nBeiton  100 010 110\u2014 \u00ab 14   0\nIncinnati 000 141 lOx- 7 14   0\nHutchings. Riddle 1, Stin 4, Early\nWtllice 5 md Lombard!; Vander\nMeer, Beggs 8, and Lamanno.\n(Philadelphia .. 010 200 000- 4   0   0\njBt. LouU  000 020 100\u2014 3 10   2\nHughes and Wren, Gumbert, and\ntore 8, Cooper 10, and O'Dea.\nIAMERICAN LEAQUE\nIcago  002 010 000- 3   8   1\n\u2022ton    000 000 200- 2   8   1\nRose, Hiynes (9) ind Turner; H.\newwroe, Brown  (7), Dodson   (8)\nConroy.\nleveland  002 100 020- 5   7   2\new York ... 331 000 lOx- 8 11   1\nHarder, Milnar Ct) and Hegan,\nDenning (3), Bonhim ud Roeer\nSt Louil 000 Oil oro- \u00bb I 0\nPhiladelphit    000 100 000- 1   7  0\nHolllngsworth and Terrell, L HtrrU B. Harris (I) aad Wagner, Swift\ntl).\nDetroit 010 100 021- III\nWuhington     010 031 000- I   9   I\nTrucki, Gortici 8, Trout 8 tnd\nTebbetU; Hudton, Ctrruquel I md\nferry.\nBALI STANDINGS\nNATIONAL LEAGUI\nBrooklyn\t\n9>   24   .711\n30   31    817\nCinclnniti   \t\n48   30    941\nNew York _.\t\nIS   il   .500\nChicigo      _\t\n42   48   .477\nPlttaburgh \t\nM   43   .489\nBoiton      ..'\t\n36   53   .408\nPhiladelphia\n23  80   jt;\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York \t\n97   28   .871\nBoiton       \t\n90   34   Mt\nCleveland\t\n49   38   .997\nDetroit   -v\t\n48   48   .900\nSt. LouU .\t\n43   43   JOO\nChicago ....\n35   48   .421\nPhiltdelphU   \t\n38   98   .381\nWuhlngton  \t\n32   54   m\nGene Sarazen to\nBaffle for\nRyder (up Squad\nBy  WATSON   IPOILITRA\nAuoelittd Preu Ipert Writer\nDETROIT, July 18 <AP)-Thet\nOene Saruen it back with tbe American Ryder Cup iquad le u item\nof no scent attention to goit tent\n\u2014or promoteri ot tbe Charity Do-\nneitie terlei thtt reechet \u2022 ihowdown stage thit week-end when\nWilter Higen'i chaUengen encounter tht cupptn.\nrrom 1827, when tbe InttrntUonal\nteriet with Oreet Britain wu et-\ntibllebed, through IHT, wben tbe\nAmerlcani icored their only victory on BritUh toil, the tquat Connecticut Ymkee wu In* the thick\not cup battlei. In fact, he ia the\nonly Americin to hivt played in\nboth individual md four\u00abomt\nmitchu ill the wiy through.\nTbe challenge match opens over\ntht long Oikland HUU coune, icene\nof the 1814 end 1937 Nitlonil opens,\nwith foursome pity on Stturdty\nTtn hind-to-bind tngtgemenU between the picked prot over the 38-\nhole route provide the decisive ttlge\nof the progrim Sundiy.\nThe Red Crou wlU receive u\neltimtted 118,000 in recelpti, which\nFred Corcoran, P.G.A. tourniment\nmtniger,' labeli u golri greateit\nsingle contribution to charity thus\nfar.\nReds Gel Two\nMinor Stars\nlor Trade, (ash\nCINCINNATI July 18 (AP) -\nCinclnniti Redi obUlned two itar\nminor-lttgu* outfielderi today In\nreturn for thrte pliyen ud bundles\not cuh to Newirk of the Intermtlonil Lugut ind Kauai City of\nthe Americin Auoclition.\nFrom Kantu City\u2014tor cut) md\nHarry Cnft\u2014they received Eric\nTipton, 27-year-old former ill-Araer-\nIcm football pltyer of Duke Unlvenity who, hitting more thin 300,\nwu the only unanimous choice\namong American Association tporti\nwriten for in outfield berth on\nthit loop'i all-star game. He will report tomorrow.\nCraft cime to tht Reds from Syracuse in 1937.      ... \t\nThe second deal tent Jim Turner,\nveteran pitcher, Young Joe Abreu\nand in unnanounced sum to Newirk In return for Pnncli kelleher\n28, who led the InterniUonil League\nlart yeir with 37 homeri ind 125\nruni bitted in. To date he hu poled\nout 23 circuit blowi and driven In\n82 rum wilh \u2022 bitting average ot\n.292. KeUeher, a dlitance hitter, U\ndue to report Saturday.\nDoily Double\nPavi$..65\nNEW YORK, July 18 (AP)-The\nsecond'largest daily double payoff\nIn New York turf history wai\nworth $1,185.40. each today to the\nholder! oi 41 tlckeU on the combination of Henry L. Straus' Daring\nand Faust II from the railroad stable.\nDaring won the first race, a two-\nyear-old affair, and returned $58.90\nfor a $2 win ^utueL Faust II tooR\nthe second at odds of $31.40 for $3.\nThe New York dally double record\nis $1450 set at Aqueduct ln June.\nMore Than 10,000 Plants Sel Out In\nNebon Parks, Gardens This Yean\nFloral Victory Vs on Boulevards\nHustlers Turn\nAside Rally,\nBeatCasUegar\nTRAIL, B. C, July 18 - HarrU\nHustlers, holding the edge throughout the game and fending ott a\nninth Inning nUy In their opponenU, defeated Cuthtftr Mlllionairei 12-10 it Victorii Pirk Wedneidiy night.\nHuitlen had a margin of l-l at tbe\nend ot tbe fifth. Caitleger icored\nfour in the ilxth to cut the lead to\n0-9. Huitlen tallied once ln thit\nInning md twice in the leventh to\nmike up tbeir totil of 11 Then\nMlllioniires came back with a ninth\ninning rilly that added five rum\nbut was Juit two short of tleing it\nup.\nMillionaires picked up 12 hits\nand committed tour errors while\nHustlers made ilx hits ind three\nerron. Two pitchen were used by\nboth teams.\nTor the Cutlegir boyi Cronin\nitruck out two md walked ieven,\nmd Zebin firmed none ind gave\n\u25a0way one walk. Tognotti, opening\nfor Husftlen, tinned four md illow\ned tour walks, md Howard had two\nstrikeouts and gave four passes to\ntint\nThree bate hits were ill for the\nHustlers, with Stanton getting two\n\u2022nd Dimock end Tognotti one eich.\nHagee made Castlegar's only two-\nbagger. Pagnan and Tognotti each\ngot one tor toe Hustlers.\nTeams were:\nCasUegar\u2014J. Veregin cf, P. Samson 2b, c; G. Wanlen c, ss, B. Magee lb, F. Zebin ss, p, B. Hoosan\nIf, P. Obecto 3b, E. Coleman p, W.\nPetenon rf, McKinnon 2b.\nHuatlen-K. Stanton 2b, J. Blletky, u, B. Dimock lb, J, McLeod c,\nS. Pagnan lb, D. Baril If, L. Tognotti p. rf, B. Howard rf, p, B\nBurke cf.\n\\r_U\nDominion's Choke:\nSavi...on dean shaves with\nMinora Blades. Canada'!\nfavourite economy blade!\nBatting Leaders\nBy tht Auoelittd Prtu\nBatting (three leaders tn each\nleague).\nO AB R H Pet.\nReiser, Dodger 73 279 58 101 .382\nCordon, Yanks 82 302 39 104\nWUUams, Red S 85 292 79 89\nMedwick, Dodg 78 300 42 101\nDoer, Red Sox 77 303 38 101\nLombardl, Brvs 66 187   21   62\nHome runs: American League-7\nWilliims, Red Sox 19; National\nLeague\u2014Mize, Giants 15.\nRuns batted in: American League\n-Williams, Red Sox 87; National\nLeague\u2014Miie, Gianta 87.\n_\u00bbff_\nIB 01.\n25 OZ.\n40 OZ.\n.344\nH39\n.337\n.333\n.332\n*4\u00ab\nRYE\nHeave at Dugout\nCosts BiHiorn $25\nNEW YORK, July 18<AP)-Preil-\ndent Ford Frlck of the Nitlonil\nBueball Leigue today fined Pitcher\nHiram Blthorn ot Chicago $28 md\nwarned both Manager Leo Durocher\nof the Dodgeri and Jimmy Wilion\nof the Cubt for their conduct In\nyesterday's game at Chicago.\nBithorn was fined -for throwing\nthe ball Into the Brooklyn dugout\nafter taking a riding from the\nDodger bench. The game, won 10-5\nby the Dodgers, saw rival pitchen\ndusting off the latters repeatedly\nand general bickering among the\nplayeri\nMere* thtn 18,000 pHirta heve\nbeen tet eut In Nelton pen*\nboultvtrdt end girdint thle tenon.\nAid H, H. Hinitt, Parki Chairman,\nIn t report to the City Council outline! tbe plmUng of 8000 it Ltke-\nlide Park, 1800 lu boulevard!, 1089\nln Ntlion Memorial Park, and hua-\ndreds ot othen it vtrioui beauty\nipoti. A total of 7730 innuili rail-\nid ln tbi Liketide Pirk green-\nhtuie and cold framei, together\nwith perenniili, shrubs ind plinti\not ill i-lndi In itock or donated to\nthe City by privttt and commerciil\ngirdenen hive contributed to the\nhetvy planting prognm.\nUkulde Pirk gardens, boultvtrdt, and the roea bank at tbe\nhotpital corner, gnd \u2022the imall ptrk\noo Cottonwood Creek it Baker\nStreet, are ln the care ot S. N. Porter, City Gtrdeuer. J. B. Bedford,\nCiretiker, ti reiponilble for care\nof the llwni tnd beautlficitlon\nwork at Lakeilde Park. At Ntlion\nMemorial Park, work is cirrled out\nby i crew directed by A. O. Line,\nSuperintendent. At Gyro Pirk t.\nPowell hit chirge tod it the City\nbandstant Victoria Street, planting hu been ln tht handi of Caretaker WilUam Ecclei.\nOutlining the prognm to dtte\nAlderman Hinitt reported:\nLAKESIDE PARK\nThe bulk of the planting ii ln\nLiketide Ptrk where more thm\n9000 plants have been tet out The\nmiin flower bordtr takes care of\nmoit of tht planting. The nirrow\nborder along the fence next to the\nroadway It featured thli yetr with\n\u25a0 planting of giant end dwirf mtrt-\ngoldt. At tnt btck of the mein\nborder which hu tome hundredi of\nperenniili and herbtcioui plants,\nthrtt 18-foot trenches of iweet peu\ninterspaced with dahliu form \u2022\nbackground for tome 200 till French\nmarigold!, 860 itocki ot tht doublt\nflowering typt, 800 llnnlu, 880 in-\ntirrhlnums, 300 itlvla, 180 petunias\not tht Rosy Morn variety md 190\nmlxtd asten. The front of the border li edged with i triple border\nof 300 dwarf nemeiti, 700 iweet\ntlyssum ot the white ind purple\nvirlety ind 10 godetli and clarkli.\nTwo varietlei of biennisli alto feature the front of this long border.\n100 of the Icelind popplei now coming into bloom tnd 10 Canterbury\nbelli.\nThe border ilong the east ildt of\ntht park next to the railroad right\nof way hu been widened and is\nplanted with 200 calliopaii, 190 cos.\nmos, 190 mixed gladiola and 300\ngeraniums, as well as 100 tiny dwarf\nmarigolds.\nAt the end of the esplanade a\nlarge bed of the sun plant, portulaci,\nbordered with red geraniumi, coven a desirable location.\nThia year, to takt cire of e Urge\nnumber of dahlia a new bed wu\nbuilt near the new fill. More than\n100 plants ihould give \u25a0 good showing In this bed.\nAt the cir terminus, tht nunery\nmd other bedi hive been planted\nwith turplui itock to further im\nprove thii irea. A large portion\nhu been newly seeded to grui tnd\nfurther Improvements ire under\nwty.\nANNUALS RAISED AT PARK\nFoUowing il I Bit of annuals rais\ned at Lakeilde Park greenhouse\nind cold frtme: BOO itocki, 480 tall\nmarigolds, 390 dwarf marigolds, 700\nzinnias, 800 antirrhinums, 700 tlyt-\nsum, 880 cosmos, 880 calliopsls, 100\ncuphet, 80 mlrabilis, 360 portulacas,\n300 isters, 100 godetlas, 90 clirkli,\n900 geranium!, 300 dthliu.\nAU the picnic tablet and benchei\nhave received one coit of green\npaint. The play equipment hai\nbeen overhauled and painted. The\nbeaoh has been combed clean and\niix new cedar logi have been In-\nlerted under the miin float The\npicnic water heating aparatui hu\nbeen moved South some distance\nand near the fence, one of the advantages ot thli being thit wood\nwill not havt to be stacked la an\nuniightly pile In the park, and will\nbe kept out ot light\nThe pirk attendant, J. E. Bedford,\nIt. very Interested In hie Job md\nhu got thingi in good shape. The\nlawns ire showing up exctUently\nmd coniidenblt beautlflcttlon\nwork ln the lmmedlite vicinity of\ntht pirk lodgt hu been cirrled out\nwhich I conilder ii quite in asset.\nOn Vernon Street boulevards, new\nbedi cut out earlier ire ne* plinted\nIn tbe topbouleverd the three bedi\nhive been plinted to red phlox\ndrucnmcatdl, ctsnet, nteturtlume\nind red nemeiii. In the \"V\" garden boulevud one V ind iu accompanying dote end duh in plinted to red nemettt The whole boulevard It edged with, white ilyi-\nlum.\nIn tbt boulevard directly oppotitt\nthe Civic Centi*, the coler Kheme\nIt blue. Ibe two imall tnd beda\nare planted to igerttum ud brew-\nillli, tnt center bed being eolid blu\npetunlis. An edging ot blue lobelia\nseta otf theee beda.\nLtrgt elliptical bedi mark the\nboulevtrd opposite the New Grind\nHoteL The lirge bid in tht ctnter\ncontajni \u2022 variety ot plinti of muy\nspecial. Tbe end bedi ire covered\ntn pink petuniu, phlox drummond!\nend ntmeili, ud ire tiso edged\nwith lobelia.\nTwo triangular bade ind two\nmoon shaped bedi Ht out tbe cenotaph boulevard. The triangular btdi\n\u25a0re filed with pink petuniu tod\nigeralum. The two halt moon bedi\nit the bue of the cenotaph are In\nblue browtllii. Some 1800 plinti\nwere required in the pltnting ot\ntheu boulevirdi. Surplus planti\nwtre liven the caretaker at the\nbanditaod. The 1 wm ere regularly\nmown and edges sUpped.\nTht rote bank at the hoipital\ncorner wu seeded wtth in edging\nof dwirf ud climbing nulurtlums.\nCOTTONWOOD PARK\nNo new planting hu been cirrled\nout et thii imall triingultr gardtn,\nenclosed by the cnek, Rillwey\nStreet md Baker Street, but cultivation gnd lawn mowing hu been\nctrried on u needed.\nCEMETERY\nAt the entrance cubt bed, X\ncannas, mixed with Salvia Splen-\ndeoni, orange flare ud Sensation\ncosmoi, with t gold bordtr ot la-\ngetat, marigold, totaling 139 pltntt\nhtve been planted. The three corner\nbeds In thli block have been carried\nout in the red; white and blue\nscheme. Plantlngi conilit of violii,\nlobellu, phlox drummondl, nlcotl-\ninit, cuphet, ud violet tlyssum\ntotalling 300 plints. Tht largt bordtr it right ot tht entrtnee hu\nbeen plinted with ibout 18 kinds\nof plinti, md ihould mike \u2022 good\nihowlng ilthough It it known thit\nsoil condition! there irt not good.\nSix hundred plinti hive been\nplanted In thb) ten* border. At the\nback of thit border against tbe wire\nfence, mock ormge hu beu plinted to form \u2022 flowering hedge.\nGYRO PARK\nThe gardens htre ere receiving\ntttention it the handi ot the caretaker, E. Powell, who hu iet out t\ngreat number ot young planti ot\nvirloui kindi.\nSports Roundup\nBy 110 FIDIR\n\u25a0*_a_tW_4 Pr*\" (pert. Wetter\nBOaTTOH July IS tAPl-Ttteee\nred-faced guyt iround your village\ntoday ar* tbe 'lefti* wbo taid\nWhirlaway wam't i gnat bou becauie be bed only \"one run* to btat\nin eny rue and that wun't good\nenough to knock off lb* ipeed\ncoltt\u2014well, th* charta want tnow\nit, but Mr. BlgUil ru tbe iecond\nquarter of ynterdiy'i Mitrhnt-\netta to 13 4-8 tecondi-lncktuttlly,\nWtrrra Wrbjht, wbo owni Whirly,\ndldnt make the trip to BuMk to\ntee hie coit break the Biicuiti record becauie be wam't mr* whether Whh-ty'd win latttaT. Warren,\nbe would bare wen thle one it\nthey'd put en obtbenrd motor and\nfive galloni ot gu to tbe often\u2014\nN QOOD WITH THI BOU\nWhen King Peter ot Yugoslavia\nturned out on Yankee itadium but\nweek, Walt Judnich, tb* Browni'\noutfielder, wno ll i Yugoalav, ibook\nhandt with the King nd then ended\nHmk Borowy'i bid for a no-hitter\nWith e lingle In tbe fourth\u2014nothing like doing lt wben tbe bead\nman't tround\u2014\nTHIS AND THAT\nWnen the boyt ttart to tell yeu\nhow Seablecuit would have been\na bigger money winner it he hadn't\nmiteed thott two Bute Anita bun-\ndred.-grtnds by \u2022 couple of none,\nJuat remind 'em thtt the Blicult\nbad three creeki it thi big pot-\ntod Whirly didn't hive one. Art\nRon, bofe-cnu ot Bolton'i hockey\nBruins, It hollering for hockty to\noperate on 1 no-profit principle\u2014\nhib ownen ihouldn't mtke \u2022\nnickel, pliyen ihould perform for\ncotfee end cakei md rlnk ownen\nIhould illce rend until lt hurt*\u2014\nmd then, uyi Uncle Art, there'll\nbe iome exctjn for hockey next\nwinter.\n(lamp Down on\nMedal ior\nFurniture Parts\nOTTAWA, July 16 (CP)-Metal\nmay no longer be uted in tbe nunu.\nficture ot furniture parts without\na permit in writing trom the Controller of Suppliei, Alu H. Williamson, It wu mnounced todiy by the\nDepirtment ot Munitioni ud Sup-\nPly:\nStamped pulli for doon ud\ndrawers, euton ud tmall Joining\nand fastening hardware are exempt\nThe order dou not extend to the\nmaking ot parts for spring-filled\nmattresses, upholstered md Uvlng\nroom furniture or itudio couchet\nwhere metal Is uted for iplngs or\nframe, couches, bedi, cribs, bed\nsprings, filing cabinet!, shelving,\nsites, lockers, or visible record\nequipment Thete articles hivt been\non t quota Hit tlnce lait Dec. IS\nand their manufacture It under control.\nThe new order atfectt iuch furniture Item u chain, desks, flower\nstandi, stools, foot itooli, tablu,\noutdoor or gtrdtn furniture, dlipliy stands ud benches.\nChinese, Nip Off\nJap Carriion   -\nCHUNKING, July 18 (API-\nThe Chlneu High Contend en.\nnounced today rt-oocupttlon ef\nTllngtlen In Chekiang Province\nSunday, with BOO te 800 Jipinett\nkllltd er wounded tnd the re-,\nmolndir fitting toward Winohow\n28 mllu to the Southtttt.\n(Tht Jipintti took tht port\nof Wenchow Stturdty. The Chineie ippirently employed their\nfomlllir tactlci of closing In frem\nbehind tnd nipping off tht garrison lift) bthlnd by tht Jipineu It Tllngtlen.\nDEATHS\nVICTORIA-Ollver Oourliy Miller, 80, i lormer reildent of Vincouver.\nw\nDrew's Hong Kong Crffldsms, Denied\nTabling in Commons, to\nGel Into Public Debate Next Week\nOTTAWA, July 18 (CP>\u2014The debate on the Hong Kong Commiulon\nreport probably wiU com* up In tbe\nHouu ot Commoni aeat week ud\nM. J. CoetwcU. CCT. Boom Leader,\neald todey h* propoied to mtke tte\nmeteritl contained to th* letter ot\nLt-Col. Oeorge Drew to Prime Mlnltter Mackemie King criticising the\nreport, the beait ot hli ipeech to\ntbat debet*.\nThe Prim* Mlnltter lut night rata table the letter on tbt\nground that tabling would be a violation ot tbe Order ot Secrecy under\nwhieh tbe Inquiry wu conducted.\nwbo Jotted ln tut nighti dtoeunioa\nixpreutd the view tb* Information\ncontained in tbe letter might be\nand bi tbe debate.\nConiee ot CoL Draw1! latter wagt\ntut to Conurvetlve Houn Luder\nHanion, CCT. Letder Coldwell, and '\nHew Democracy Luder Blackmore.\nIt waa learned teday that a num.\nber et coplta of tht teller were\nmade In the Parliament Building!\ntor um ot private memben thug,\nmtny will be able to itudy tt before the debate.\nCanadian Grain Crop Outlook Is\nProbably Best in History\nwrNNOTO. July 11 (CP)-Oen-\neral crop outlook ln the Prtirlei It\nprobibly th* beet In the hiitory ot\nthe Weit\" the Wlnipeg Tribune reported todiy ln lti fourth crop rtport of th* year.\nWarm wuther It needed to almoit ill dUtrlcti to promote rapid\ndevelopment the report nld, but\nthe genertl moisture condition ot\nthe Pralriet li good ind thi majority of polnti cu go more thin two\nweeki without rain.\nMore thin SO per cent of the wheit\ncrop li now huded out md In practically ill dlitrlcts itandi ara heavy.\nCondition ot cats md birley la\nrtporttd generally good.\nSomt nwfly lnfutitloni are reported ln the Southern lectloni of\nAlbtrti md Sukltcbtwan, but It u\ntoo eerly yet tor dimige to thow,\ntbt report itited Gruihopper damage, confined entirely to Minitoba,\nll not ttrloui except in the Intetijt\nregion where It li plteed u high\nu IS per cent\nWeedi irt i terioui problem In\nmuy cane. It nld Flax It good at\nmoit polnta and in Albtrti many\ncorrespondents report the crop new\nflowering.\"\nSalmon Pack Low\nFined $15 for\nExceeding Limit\nVANCOUVBR, July 18 (CP)-Tbe\nweekly bulletin of tbe Dominion\nrismerln Department, issued todty showed the nlmoa pick ttl*\nyeer u tar behind lttt teuon. In\nill gradei there bar* beu 78.815\ncatet packed on thli coait up to\nJuly 11. On July 11 Utt year tne\npeck totaUed 115,888 cuei.\nThe Sockeye peek thle yeir ilandi\n\u2022t 48,995 cuu, tbout 11400 down.\nThli idvertliement tl Dot pubUthtd or dlipliyed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nRoy AUtn of Winnipeg, M-year-\nold winger of Moon Jtw Millers\nIn tht Saskatchewan Senior Hockey\nLetgut but ntion li tn ordinary\nseaman ln the Royal Canadlm Nival\nVolunteer Rettrvt.\nLis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n[Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nFrank Benwell, 18, formerly of\nHamilton, Ont., enlisted u \u2022 Sublieutenant In the Royil Cmadian\nNaval Volunteer Reierve ifter becoming one of Manitoba's leading\npaddlen and skiers at Winnipeg.\nHe wis selected to represent the\nDominion paddlen at the Olympic\ngamei but the war ciuied cancellation of the 1040 event.\nTry \u2022 Wint Ad.\nIf You Are Planning\nOn Outdoor\nVacation\nThen naturally you'll want\nto be  well  stocked  with\n,*f Quality\nTackle1\nGUIS TOOL AND STAMPING\nWORKS\nTha Tackle Thit\nLindi the Big Fiih\n PaCl   TIN-\n-NMOM DAILV NlWt  NILSON. t   C.-\u00bb-RIOAV IM>s\u00bbH1Na- JULV t7. If-\nHe* Guest Toweb\n*y_^;ftf__r\nThs newest and prettiest ln\nguest towels \u2014 a perfect gift for\nbride-to-be or any housewife, in\nfact! The colorful stitchery's a delight to do! Do them now to put\naside for future gifts. Pattern 351\ncontains a transfer pattern of 6\nmotifs averaging 4x12 1-4 inches;\nIllustrations of stitches; materials\nrequired.\nSend twenty cents Tor thit psttern to The Ntlton Otlly Newt.\nNeedlecra't Dept. Nelion. Write\nplainly pattern number, your\nname and addreu. Pttttrn will\nbe mailed to your homt within\n10 dayt.\nCOMiC AND ADVENTURE STRIPS ..,.\n\"I turned in all except thia one to the salvage committee!\"\nBARROW-IN-FURNESS, England\n(CPI. - Albert Anson, 46-year-old\nj pipe   fitter,   claims   to   be   world\nI champion blood donor. He has given\n524 pints of blood in transfusions\nin  various parts of the country.\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP).-\nSir James Curtis, who initiated the\nrationing scheme in the last war\nwhich later became the buis of\nthe national rationing system, has\ndied here at the age of 72.\n\\Yn__i_TL %n____\n\u2022OPT   AFTERNOON   MODE\nBecause beauty is your duty-\nmake this Marian Martin dress,\nPattern 9030. The tapering bodice\npanel, with gathers at either side,\nhas graceful lines; the skirt has\nsmart panels. Contrast is optional.\nPattern 9030 may be ordered\nonly In misses' and women's sizes\n14, 10, IB. 20, 32. 34. K. 38, 40 and\n42\/Size 16 requires 3 1-S yards 39\nInch fabric and IV. yards ribbon.\nSend twenty cents for thla\nMarisn Martin pattern. Be ture to\nwrite plainly your SIZE. name,\naddress and style number.\nSend your order to The Dslly\nNewt. Pattern will be tent to your\nhome within 10 dayi.\nOLD TRICK WORKED\nLONDON, (CP).\u2014A Frenchman\nand two boys escaped from Mnr-\nlaix, Britanny by getting the harbor watchman drunk. When he\n\"passed out,\" they jumped into a\nsmall yacht and were picked up by\na British trawler 40 miles off the\nEnglish coast.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nCONTRACT...\nWUT AB THE ENEMYt\nIF TOU let your opponent do\nhis own guessing, Initead of giving him positive answers to the\nquestions that assail him, he will\nmake his shart of mistakes. Why,\nthen, ahould you help him to know\nthe winning play of a iuit, which\nyou am tell Is badly bunched\nagainst hire ? If you know something which he does not, why not\npreserve that advantage snd keep\nhim ln the dark!\n.) A KM\n\u00ab 10 9 8 I\n4AKJI\n+ 6 2\n\"Folks judge by nppeeranc-e. After\nme and Pa built our own house,\nthey treated us with as much re-\ntjiect as if It wasn't mortgaged.\"\na jog j\nft 35\nf 10 8 7\n*J 9 4\nN\nW  E\nS \"\nfi\n\u2022 Atl\nt>Q31\na A 10 8 7\n03\nIf\na)KQ87l\nf KQ.J\n\u2666 954\n\u2666 KQ\n(Dwter West North-Sou*\nvulnerable!\nWest      North     UM\nPats        Pass      14\nPass        1\u00ab       Pus\nPass        if\nEast should have beem tttle to\nread the trump situation very\nclearly after West led his club J\nto the A. South'i bidding msde It\nalmost certain that South had Ave\nor six spades, and that they probably Included two of the three\nhonors ranging from J to K, but\nprobably not all three of them. In\npther words, East should have\nread thst his partner had either\nthree or four trumps headed probably by one of those three honors\nBy Shepard Barclay\nIf it happened to he three .heeded\nby the J, then the declarer could\ncatch them wtth three leads of\nhigh trumps. But if It was four\ntopped by the J, or three headed\nby the K or Q, then the honor\ncould not bt caught except by\nfinessing,\nEstt's mind went through no\nsuch figuring, however. Seeing\nthat the declarer might ba planning to ruff a cluh In dummy, he\ndecided to lead a trump, his singleton. South put on the \u00ab... and no\nmatter what Weat did. his chance\nfor a trump trick wu gone. So\nthe defenders managed to get only\ntwo tricks, the club and heart\naces.\nAny other return would have\ncompelled South to guess how to\nplay the trumps, and the chances\nwere heavy he would have taken\nthree top cards, setting vp tha J\nfor Weil, and preventing the extra trick.\na    \u2022   a\nTomorrow's HoM\u00ab\u2014\na)KM4\nf K10 J\n\u2666 KQ\n49841\n\u2666 Q\u00bb\n\u00bb\u00bb\n\u2666 A J9S4\n+ K J7S.1\nN\nW E\nS\na> A9.1\n\u00bbQ984J\n\u2666 10 6 3 2\n\u2666 A\na> J 10 7 2\nf AJ7J\n\u2666 87\n+ Q10S\n(Dealer: North. Both sides vulnerable.)\nAfter West opens this deal with\n1-Dtamond and North passes,\nwhat should Esst do, and why'\nDAILY CROSSWORD.\nDOWN      18. Tes (8p.)\n1. Crust on       19. Before\nwound 20. Cotton cloth\n2.1 t.ili.-in river 21. Evade\n3. To win\n4. Type\nmeasures\n.V Possesses\n6. In the\nmidst of\n7. To look\naskance\n8. A Royalist\n10. Fills with\npeople\n11 Coop for\nsheep\n16. Frantic\npersons\n22. Destinies\n24. Greek letter\n25. Polite\n26. Platform\n32. Brief\n35. Speak\n40. Exclamation\n42. Javanese\ntree\n43. Expression\nof disgust\n44. A preposition\n45. First man\nHlilSlii HUtfflHD\niiu-lfj A.-i.t \\im\naa p._-v&) ua\n\u00aban..aa __v.\nHCisa aaaoBi\n'illl i-KK'rMi HO\n__  _-M  KQ3\nSHtiHHa ui\u00abau\n\"M:m;; mum\niroaaa ._nm\nrJW.U   US-..]\nYeaterdmr'aaAaawtf\n47. Messenger\n48. Examine\n49. Ogled\n81. Wrath\n53. A marble\n^mmjMjm\n1. Meat\nflavoring\n5. Stop\n9. Muscle\ncontraction\n11. Gem carved\nln relief\n12. An herb\n13. Variety of\nwillow\n14. Japanese\nfestival\n16. Often\n(poet.)\n17. Arid\n18. Frolic\n20. Narrow\ngorge\n23. Fabulous\nbirds\n27. Guldo's\nhighest note\n28. Type\nmeasure\n29. Send forth\n30. Block for\nbolt\n31. Dry, as wine\n53. Feminine\nname\n34.15th of\nMarch\n36. Sign of\ninfinitive\n37. Carriage\n38. Flat-topped\nhill\n39. Breathe in\n41. Flower\n43. Herb\n4<3. Greek letter\n47. American\npoet\nGO. Asian\ncountry\n52. Theatrical\n54. Asterisks\n55. Bird\n66. Orle's dwelling place\n(7. Obnoxious\nplant\nf IK YITOaVOTf\u2014A 1\nUT J    BDXJ    JCJK    WX    M V J    AJTJKJQM\nAUK,    DX    HJOJ    TWWT    MW    O J A J A R J O,\nD Q    V    SWJA-EUOBPBJ.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: LET MY NAME PERISH SO LONG\nAS FRANCE IS FREE\u2014DANTON.\nli\/fi..yuuiei ire quotatloni of famous penom written cipher.\nA substitute character hai replaced the original letter For lnttance,\nan \"R\" may substitute for the original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote. or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\" Find tha key and follow through to the solution.\n\t\nTHE CUMPS\n\u2022\nByCaiCiton\nLIL ABNER\nByAiq#\nrELLOW HO<a>-aRttOCRS\/-WE,<RE\nABOUT TO P*rVTAKE Of THt LAST\nFEAST OT ITS KIND ON EAKTH-\n%__)U_mtt ntHAlX MAMHUS\nALA*AMr1USr AFTER WE'VE EATEN THE\nLAST TASTY MOHMEL, THt SPECIES WILL BE\nforever \u25a0xrwcT\/r- i will now take the\nFCMALE'HArlrtlJS ALABAMMUS'TO THE ijARBKUEAS,\n1    AWAITINtJ IN THE CELLAR -\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nV\n\u20221\nJ\u2014\nfjrj\n__mJ\n\/\/\n(\\lJ    Y-f\\\n221\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManui\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\nGIMME THOSE\noippsrsiiu.\nSHOW MUH.\nHOW TO DO IT!\nff\n.\nm''                  A\n*toJ\nm \/VP\\          -V'l\nKINC OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zone Grey\n0OE3 TH'MOUNTIE 1TNQ, N4DH6VONT.' I'M\nSUSPECT *E FQliO&flONNA LOW HM ON\nTH' MONEV, **_(_-  f-\" \u2022_0*l_ufa\nBLONDIE\nBy Chjc Young]\n WU\nmilti ii fiiiilW\n <m\nClassified Advertising\nX    Look Down These Wqnt Ad Column* fw Bargains\nHILION DAILY NIWI NILION   I   C.-FRIDAY MORNINtV JULY 17. *\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0,\t\nfHONI m\nPHONI 144\nBIRTHS\nINOUYE-To lgr. \u00bbnd Mn. F.\n(nouye, it tbt Kulo Victorlin Hoipittl. July' u, i 'ion.\nHELP WANTED\ni taai\"*a   aV    \u25a0\u2014\u2014~ \u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\nApplUat'Jont will net ot roruiotr-\ntd trtnY pyttaaV in th* employment\nef anf> Jton&eorporition oi other\naagriMt tftged to tb* produc.\nUea jHauuition! wir equlpmen'\nor if pgjijr'for thi irmed ferret\nunlee.'luctr t partem It t IkilltO\ntrideutm nol ictuilly employee\nit kn_trae>\nMAN FOR WORK ON\nch, good milker, alio girl for\n\u25a0k ud htlp tn dilry. Ap-\nBP. Box 111 Cruton, B.C.\nOIRL FOR GENERAL\njiouifwork it Bonnington, $18 per\niqpth. Box 8404, Delly News.\n'GIRL FOR HSWK. TO HELP\ncooking. Phoni 488-R.\nDE FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK\nifep out Phone 140-X\nI WrTNTEl): 2 CHERRY, PICKERS AT\nWUlow Pt. 822 Viotoru, uptturs.\n TgAOHtRI\t\nIffArWBD: HSR SCHOOL TEACH-\n*T, New Denver, B.C., Crtdei 10,\nU. I*. Apply C. Clifford, Sec.\nBoard of School Trustees, New\nDuver, B-C\nIJIACHER WANTED] FOR RURAL\nichool. Apply SecreUry, Big Sand\nCreek School Board, Jiffriy, B.C.\n|v7ANTED; TEACHERS, FRUIT.\nTtlt School Apply giving' detail*\nto Geo. Cutle. Seerefy, Fruitvale\nVJSrnESi TEACHER FOR JUNIOR\ntoom. Thrumi school. Apply Mrs.\nNermin Johnson, Secretary.    '\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n' Special Low Ratu for non-\neommercitl idvertltementi under tblt classification to Unit\nptoplt tteklng employment\nOnly 15c for one ween (8 diys)\ncovers tny number of required\nllnet. Piyible ln idvtnce Add\nUe If box number dulred\nfOUNG SALESLADY DESIRES\npoiition Sept. 1. I ytan experience. Genenl dry goods, buying\nexperience,  excellent  references.\n; State salary. Box 8778 Dally Newa.\nf\u00bbQM|TY, POLISH, FARMS\nHOUSE FOR SALE\nlarge family dwelling on two\nJotl, Silica Street, close ot business district. Seven roomi.\nJfeeds aome repairs. Small down\npayment.  Makt  us  in  offer,\nT. D. ROSLING\n1868 Ward St. Phone 717\nJR SALE: 3 ACRES OF LAND,\nB-room   cottage   with   basement.\nI Spring water piped to house, Situated at Willow Point, ibout 1 mile\n|rom store. No reasonable offer\nIbfused. Box 27 Trail, B.C.\nI'ANTED TO BUY; SMALL COT-\nmodern, four rooms, Fatr-\ntrlew or cloie to town. State price\nnd terms, full particulars ln flrit\n. Box 8379, Daily Ntws.\nHOUSE FOR SALE\nlltra modern Bungtlow on two\ni In Fairview, convenient lo-\nation. Built less than two yttn.\nLiving room, kitchen with dln-\n, fully modern bathroom tnd\nbedrooms. Full concrete\n|pasement, cement floor and\npiped hot-air furnace. Full price\n$3100\ncash and the balance at\n.   $18 per month,\nHowe ean be ieen at my time.\nD. Rosling\nStreet Phone 717\nD FARM LANDS FOR SAl.tt\neaiy termi  In  Alberti   ind\nSaskatchewan    Writt for full In-\normation to 80S Dept of Natural\n(teiourtei CPR    C|l\u00abirv   Alta\njtOOM HOUSE, GARAQE AND\nIfor sale. On IVt lot in Salmo.\nMl practically new. $600 cash.\nVox 45, Nakusp, B.C.\nJlR-BALE: DESIRABLE PROPER-\n' at Willow Point. Particulars on\nf quest Box 6348 Daily News.\nML*\/-farm for sale-also\nlimber land. J. Graham. Slocan.\npity,' E.C.\n. ,\u00abJALE: FIVE ROOMED BUN-\nalo and ont tnd one-hilf loti.\nIn. I'hnne Sit-L\n; WHITFIELD. Rul Etlalt ind\nMufarice   417 Hall  St..   Nelson\nCANARIES. BEES  ETC\nSALE: WIRE-HAIBED FOX\nterrier puppies,  purebred  itock.\nules. H. Harding. Nelson Ph. 110\nJTTED; BIG BfrCH DUE TO\nip early Aug. $3 per pup fost-\nI. Cowan, Kaslo.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTMCTCLIS,   BICYCLES\nLate Model\nLow Mileage\nUSED\nCARS\nYeu on looking for man miles\nper tallon tnd l cir that could\neuily put (or BRAND NIW\naJ81\u00ab'*ieiei\u00bbi*!*ni\u00bbiar\nTo ne eur tine group of\n\u2022DURATION-laed*\nUSED CARS.\nNelson Transfer\nCo., Ltd.\nPhone 18\nNelion, B. C\nFOR SALEt WILLYS LIGHT Delivery truck Alto 1817 Haney\nDavidson, model 74 ind ildt ear.\nBoth hava good tlru. Apply Union Service Station, 188 Btktr Vt\nFOR BALI OR TRADE; IMl Dt-\nLuxe V8 four-door Sedin. Low\nmileage. Light truck preferred, or\nwhit havg you? Box 118 Frutt-\nvtle, B.C.\t\nWe _.*_ a RW LIGHT AND\nhuvy truclu left Central Truck\ntnd Equipment Co. Phone 100\n701 Front ltrnt Nelion, B.C.\nres m_ m \\mra_ max\ngood tires. Licensed. Qood running eond Apply Fred McCauley,\nTighum,\nFbR SaleYneW And USeTj BAT-\nterlu, Nelion Auto Wrecking, 811\nVemon St.\nFbtt mx im hash, vm*.\nOood condition, good tlrei. Owner Joined R.C.A.F. Phone 890-R.\nWRECKING   IMo   MASH    CITV\nAuto  Wreckers. Ntlton.\nUINTAH\nFOR RENT: FOR 1 MOS. AVAIL-\ntble Immedlitely, comfortable\ntully furnlihed home, } bedroomi,\nfrlgldalre. tlec. rtngt, bttt' water.\nPhone 118.\nWANTED: FURNISHED HOUSE\nwith furnace. Netr SchooL Four\nbedrooms. Writ* Mn, Bell, e-o\nMrs. Curwen, R.R. No, 1, Vernon.\nUNFURN 10171 4 RMS 1 BED\nrooms if desired. 115 tit* furn\n\u25a0ulte 130 Hot water, heat and rt-\nfrigeriilon  Included 'Kerr   Ao i\nFOR RENT: FOR WlREE MONTHS.\nfully furnished modtrn house; frig\ntnd garage, Phont 1038.\nFOR RENT, SMALL HOUM ON\nCedir St. $18 ptr mo. C, W. Appleyard le Co. Ltd., Baker St.\nFOR RENT: HOUSES, UnTWI-\nIshed. C. F. McHardy, Phone 138.\nInsurance tnd Retl Estate.\nCOMFORTABLE HOUSEKEEPING\nsuit tor rent, Apply 018 Koottnay\nStreet or Phont 713-L.\nFOR RENT; FURNISHED l-ROOT\nsuite. KWC. Block,\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful\nfrlgldalre equipped suites\nmode!\nFURN  suitJ. AUO A SMALL\nhouse partly furnlihed   Pb  ltl\nfoYrentTTthrbe-roImj iUjn*.\n\u2022ultc. Phont 1081-R.\nA   HOME   FOR\" THOSI   away\n.-OS   SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nMILLWORK\nW\u00bb miuuficture -Stih. Wln-\nfrom home. S.rathcona Hotel Apt*.\ndows, Doon, Screens, Kitchen\nCupboards, Ironing Boardt,\nMedicine Cabinet!, Store. Office   and   Restaurant   Fixturci,\nand any detail mill-work.\nEstimates gladly given.\nKOOIfcNAY SASH  &  DOOR\nFACTORY, Nelion, B. C.\nPhone 830 907 Front St\nMUST BE SOLD WITHIN NIXT\ntwo weeks, power brick and blook\nmachine. Block pipe, ornamental\nmoulds. Other articles too numerous to mention. Particular! R. H\nMason, Box 293, Rossland.\nYOU NEED \"RUBBER SMMfS\nfor yout unemployment Insurance\nand Wartime Price Board Licence,\nWe can give you quick service it\nreasonable prices.' Nilson Daily\nNews Commercial Printing Dept\nCOCO\" COLA ICE FRIO. ALMOST\nntw. Btrgaln. 813 Vlctorli, up-\nlttin.\nPTPE \u2022 riWlNflS \u25a0 TTJBB8 8Pl-\ncial low prices Activt Tndlng Co\n818  Powell  St.   Vancouver   BL\nriw.tof mnscsm wxm\nStanding, nttr Ntlton. Pb, M8-X1\n^ra^npnT~\nBEDROOM FOR RENT IN QUIET\nprivate  home.  Near  C.P.R.  tnd\nBui Station. Ph. 939-X.\nH1SONAI\nWBW IN VANCOUVU STOP Al\nAbnet Hetet tip CM  O\u00abpot\nFOR   SALI:   SIVSaUL   DOORS'\nend wmdowi, ta ieed toad. J. Caen,\n814 Verge*) |t, Meteea, B.C\nUIID CLOTHING WOULD BC\ngntttuiiy rueived at tbe fiin-\nttan Army, ltt Viwont Sweet\nttf-THE PHOTO MILL Ma)\nP O  Boi 334  Viucouyei\nRelit developed tnd printed m\nII rtprinti W tnlirgimeut Wt\nI PAV CASH FOR AIX UQUOR\nMd wtnt battlei. \"Mitknr 8c\ndoi, M ied 40 o\u00bb.. He du. Deliver to ). P. Morgan, NeUon, B C.\nMIN ONLYI SIND It POSTAUi\nbr Free Ctuioi el Jokee. Nov.i-\ntiu. Booki, Bitdet, Sundriei, Etc\nPirn Novtlty, Dept \"B\" 11) Mclntyre Bldg, Winnipeg. Minitooa\nVOUR SICK rRIIND Ol RILA-\ntive In the hotpital will enjoy\nending Tht Duly Ntwa Phoni\nIH tnd havt e copy delivered\neech morning.\nW_ -LIONS PHOTO- 85*\nPO  Box 411 Vucouver, Bt\nAny iut roll dtv, printed, lie Reprints, lc uch   Free 1x7 coupon\n\"A trltl will convince you\"\nMIN-REGAIN VIOOR, PIPI -\nTry Vitex, 1113 per box. Penonal\ndrug sundriei. lt fbr 1.00. Supreme Ruor Bltde Sharpener 13c.\nSharpeni'bltdti perfectly. J. Jin-\nMn, Box Ut. Vtncouvtr. B.C,\nIUSINESS AND\nHOmSIONAl OIMCTOHV\namayIm\"and mini\n\u25a0tlPKgfgNTATIVES\nHAROLD I ELMJS. ROSILAND\n\u25a0 C Pro* iti eit I Amytr Chem it\nIndividual nprtuutttlvt tor tbip-\nptn ll Trill |mti iar\nA, * IDU lndepeneent~Mine Rtp-\nnsenuuvt Bog 81 TrtU. \u2022 C\nI W WIDDOWSON PROVINCIAL\nAutytr Wl jouphint St mat\nKOOTENAY MINIS ASSAYtRS\nBox 301, Ntlion, B.C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nA   B   McDONALD   DC,  -f*imn\nOnd  X-Ray  Strud Blk.. Trail\nK*W_W*W^tmWtmW*9mM__\\\nC0K8ITIIRII\n8PINCIR CORMTIEM\nMln S Boomtf. lit Don. Ph 88\nINOINIIRI AND IURVIYORI\nBOYD C AFFLECK. PO Box 104,\nTrail BC Survtyor ind Engineer\nPhone \"Bitver Fill*.\"\nR W KAGOEN. MINING A CIVIL\nEngmttr; B C Ltnd Survtyor.\nRoulind ind Ortnd Forkt, \u25a0 C\nFOOT IPICIAUITI\n8. I GILLIS. US.C, R -S* RSU D\nChiropodist, Foot SpecitlUt Ber-\ngtron Bleu, Ph. 1199. Tnu, B.C.\nFIRST AID-WI CAN HELP YOU\nobtain in Induitrlil Flnt Aid Cer-\nlificitt, correipondtnct coursu.\nelm Initruetion Write for In\ntormitlon te Fint Aid AUeodinU\nBC..30JA Wttt Pender St., Vincouvtr, B.C.\nnnw pivtLBFib *__ nm-\nId (I or I txposurt roll) JSc, Re-\nprinti lc uch For your vtcition\ninipihoii, ohooit Kryitil Fipnh\nGuirtnttid non-tidt prints\nKryiUI Photoi. Wllklt. Suktlebe-\neral  litibtlthed ovtr' 30 yurt\n POUR fURS-lTD\t\nFINI QUALITY FURS AT RIAS-\nonablt pricu Expert restyling\ntnd npairlng- Low ntu Outr-\nintted nor tgt \u2022 100 ptr cent\nprotection - 848 Grtnvillt St.\nVtncouvtr. BC\n MEW5SPKIAL\nMtn't persontl drug sundriei\n. fineit quality, ttttto, guirtn-\nteed. 11 [or JOc, 13 for 1100. ii-\nlortca, Including world'i funniest Jolt novtlty fru. tnd eiti-\nlogue af sundries\nWESTERN DISTRIBUTORS\nB 'x M Dept NC. Regim Suk\nKODAK FiNtSHWC: WO COM-\nplttt sets velox prlnti from tny\nroll ot films, Uc SpecliL mill only,\nreprlnti IVtc etch. Prompt nrvict. Wt promlie to utility you\nIn tvtry wty, Profeulontl Pho-\ntogripher. 13 yrs. experience.\nStnd In your frlend'i films tool\nFILM EXCHANGE, P.O. Box 80,\nCutltgir.\nIBM RBPOCf nocissm\nPrlnu you will bt proud to thow\nto your fritndi. Any 8 or 8 expo\nturt roU developed tnd printed\n18c: or 11 reprints 35c. Enlirgl-\nments mtde trom your own ntgt-\ntlves ind framed m in tttrietlve\nusei frtme 3v,x5tt; specltl 18c;\nS for 79c. 3x7 ipecltl 4lt| I lor\n11.20 Pltce your films In profu-\ntloml handi. No italns. No\nicrttches. Send your orden with\nconfidence to Super Snipthoti.\nBog 1999. Winnipeg.\nFUNERAL HOMU\nSOMERS FUNERAL HOME\n701 Biker St Pbont IN\nCert Moniciin      Udy Attendant\nModern Ambulance Servlee\nINSURANCl ANO REAL EITATI\nC   D   BLACKWOOD  AGENCY\nIniurinct. Real Eittti. Phone W\nCHAS F McHARDY, INSURANCl,\nReel Eitate Phont 111,\nJIWILLIM\nWATCH,\" CLOCK AND JEWEL-\nItry rtpaln. Work guirtnttid.\nHtrvty't Jewellers, 884 Btktr St.,\nNeUon. B C.\nMACHINISTS\nR.C.A.F. Spitfire Souadroir In\nFurious Action Over\nChannel Wben Rush to Rescue Job\nBy WILLIAM ITIWART\nCtntdlm Pru* Staff Wrlttr\nLONDON, July II (CP Cable)-\nAa RCA F. SpltfirvHUdnw fought\na furioui 25-minute action over the\nEnglish Channel yeiterday witb\nluperior number* of the viunttd\nFockt-Wulf UBg. Ont ot tht tntmy\nnuehltiM wu dutroyed ind another\nprobibly doetreytd.\nThe Ctnidltni, commindtd by\nSqdn. Ldr. Bob Marrow ol Toronto,\nwere off duty wben air-tee retcut\ncrtft it wotk tight mUu ttt tbe\nFrench coast netr Lt Toqutt iMid\nter protection. The squadron vol-\nuntttitd for tbt Job.\nAfter tbey locited the both) tad\nwtrt circling ebout thtm, tht Spit-\ntins were ttticked by tht fut\nntw Nui pltnei,\n\"I ntver put In such i crowded 11\nminutu Id til my life,\" idmitted\nMorrow, who hu ieen plenty of\ncombit\n\"It wu probibly the longest oontinued ntlon Spltflru htvt fought\nwith Focke-Wulf 190s.\" hi Hid.\n\"Thtn wu no ltt-up fbr ont moment. When we cimt out ill the\nboyi were wringing wit with pin-\nplntlon but win tickltd pink. Tbty\nctrttinly did \u2022 Job.\" \u00ab\nFit. Lt. D. G. Malloy, of Toronto,\nformer Instructor it Uplanda, Otttwt, uld the Canadians wtre \"flying practically on deck when tht\nFW't luddenly broke tn* cloud\nibove\".\nThey ktpt diving it ua In twos\nMd fours without pkuie,\" hi iddtd.\n\"Thtre were it leut 18 ind pouibly\nmort but wt got plenty of food\nsquirts tt them. I uw one cruh Into\ntkt mi md inclined to think wt got\n-PAOI   EtfVIN\nCOAST IANK CLIAHINCS\nVANCOUVBL July II (CP). -\nlank cleeringi tor the week tnding\nJuly 18;\nMS 1881\nVincouver   ...$14,UM88   1!9^7M14\nVictoria \u2014 1.MWS1     1,\nN. Watt \u2014    UW      T\ntnothtr\"\nKe recalled teeing i Nui lircnft\nskimming through the wtter like\nl motorboat when he wta tblt tor\nene moment to cut i quick glinct\nel th* water. A tew momenta liter\nwhtn ht looktd again, only foamy\nwik. wu viiible.\nThe commander ind othtr flien\nillpped the bick of IU Sgt J.\nHughu of Diuphlo, Mat)., tor Ul\nbrilliant flying performance wben\nhit fighter ciught fire barely 100\nfeet {rem tbe wtttr.\nHughei puUed up the Spltflrtt\ntm* quickly, undid kit uftty belt\ntnd iqulrmed from tne cockpit Hli\nparacbutt immtdiittiy billowed out\ntnd ht fleeted te tbe water, where\nhe wu promptly picked up by the\nrucue vewtli.\nFit. Lt Brownie Truk ot Yarmouth, N.S, il#o counted If Null\ntt ont itaft u they attempted to\nbreak thl Spitfires' deftmlvt Circle\ntround the botti, whieh wen eicorted thi 31 mllu to Inglind.\nSo many of th* Doten Cantdlant\ngot tbtlr ctnnon on tht Ntgtt during\ntht tngigement tblt ill of them\nwill shirt in the dtilructlon of\nthe only enemy destroyed tnd tbt\n\"one probable unlesi cimtru prove\n\u2022n lndlvlduil credit\nFit Sgt N. A. Keen, of Whltt\nRick, B.C, drew tmokt from e\nthird enemy. Sgt. 0. C. McGnw of\nKirkltnd Lakt, Ont, brought baek\ntouvenlri of the flight\u2014bullet holei\nln the wIngi of hli plan*,\n\"I uied to think I htd a food\niquidron, row I knew,\" Morrow\nuld, \"Ai the night wore on the Oermini leet their initial enthmletm.\nThey never succeeded ta bwktng\neur circle aid finally buried off.\"\n\u00bb\u25a0*    '80%     SO*    80*4\n47 V\u00bb\n4JH\n844,\n47 V,\n45',\n044,\nem\nMtt\n43 Vk\nMS\n00*\nSTOCKS\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ITC.\nBABY CHICKS-RHODE ISLAND\nRedi tnd New Hampshlres Andrew Chrntlt strain good Utility\n.\"\"\"k tnornv\u00abd inr) blond-luted\nato per 100. Chicki reidy to\nship tvery Tuetdty   John Qnod\nmm   1833  Oilley   Avtnut   New\nWfjlmInner BC\nFflft-SALF,: 3 tfflRSM, 1 Of ITO\npounds, 3 of 1100 poundi. Oood\nfor  singlt  or  piir.  Apply  Alex\nToth, Park Siding.\n\u2022K. \"iXOfc\" rtlAVV   H6RSS9\nFred Hlookoff Cutlegir. B C.\nIftR'SALE: PACK HflMI. AHNlE\nPicton, salmo, B.C.\nTo Flnderg\ntt you find inything telephone\nThe Dtily Newt A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cott to\nyou Wt will colltct from tht\nowner\nWANTID MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO PURCHASE: EITHKR\nitindird or portable typewriter,\n\u2022lao good adding machine. Must\nbe cheap for cash. Box 6288. DaUy\nNewi.\nifotpui vmjsKKf.mKa\nor iron Any aumtity Top prion\npaid Active Trtding Compiny\n918 Powell St   Vlnrnuvpr  B  C\nWANTTcfif 108 ' fORfig\" tW Ff\u00bb\ntnd tamtrte. Wett Trinsftr Ca\nMUSICAI   IN1TRIIMBNTS\nAND RIPAIM\nYOUR PIANO d.EANED. TUNEU| to good bulls 7.90 tc 8.28,\ntnd d?mnlhed,\nlertn, 784-R3.\n$500. Phont  Hal\nB1NNCTTS LIMITID\nMachine ihop. tc.tyl.n. tnd electric\nwelding,   motor rewinding\ncommtrcltl refrigention\nPhont 803 824 Vtrnon St\nOPTOMETRI8T8\nW   E  MARSHALL\nOptometristi\n14S8 Bay Ave.. Trail        Phone 17T\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSONS   SASH   TACTORV\nHardwood merchant. 173 Bakir St\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhat havt you? Ph. 834 Ark Store,\nVANCOUVER\nMINES:\nBnlorne     8.00 613\nCtrlboo Oold       M 1.00\nOeorgt Copper ._.     .18 \u2014\nOokt'Btlt      .10 .11\nHedley  Mucot 14 Jl\nIiland Mountain ....     tt \u2014\nKooteney Belle 16 \u2014\nMcOUlivriy        - .11\nPioneer Gold     122 110\nPremltr Border ....     .OOH .01\nI'remitr Oold        .41V, At\nPrivateer        J8H, 'JO\nQuatalno           4514k -\nReevu MtcDontld     .20 \u2014\nReno Oold           JMV, .04\nSheep creek        iM .76\nSurf Inlet \u201e \u2014     41 r-\nWhltewtUr       jOlVt \"1\nYmlr YtnkM Olrl     .03Vk -\nAnglo Cantdiin 41 \u2014\nA F Coni        .06 \u2014\nCilgiry & Id       .90 IM\nCilmont           ,11 \u2014\nCommonwetlth    17 Jl\nDllhousie   _      .18 \u2014\nHome       1.21 123\nMercury    \u201e..      04% \u2014\n.13   ' '   .18\n.04 -\n.30\n.11 25\n.08 H .04\nMH -\n.11 -\nNf laon Satin Nrum\nTelephone 144\nTrtU Circulation; Phont M0\nClaulfled Advertliing Ratti\nUt ptr lint ptr lniertion.\nHt ptr lint ptr wuk (6 comecutlve lniertloni for cost of 4).\nll 431 lint t month (28 tlmu).\n(Minimum 1 llnu ptr lniertion)\nBoa number. tit extra ThU\neovert iny number of timet.\nPUBLIC NOTICES. TENDERS,\n18c per lint, flnt Inurtlon tnd\nltc eich subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commerciil   Situations\nWinted for 26o for eny required\nnumbtr of llnu for tlx dayi\nptyiblt In tdvinct.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy .. I  .01\nBy carrier, ptr wttk ..,       23\nBy ctrrier, ptr yur     13.00\n\u2022y malli\nOnt month    I .78\nThru monthi      1.00\nSix monthi           4.00\nOne yetr      _       8.00\nAbove ratea apply In Canada.\nUnited Statea md United Kingdom to subscribers living outside regular carrier ireu.\nEliewhere ind In Canada where\nextre poitage it rtqulrrt one\nmonth 11.80; thru monthiiUh.\nlix monthi H.00: ent yttr 818.\ni-iVarv Livestock\nModel\nNitlonil Pete ....\nOklba Com ........\nPiclflc Ptte \t\nRoytl Cinidlin\nVanalta \t\nVulcan \t\nVancouvtr Fr\u00bb\u00ab ef\nD\u00abbt te Bank\nVANOOtTVffll, July If (CP). -\nTht nit todiy of U,814,\u00abll worth\nof 11-year-old. unissued by-Uw\nbondi, beld by the Bank et Mont-\nnil u tecurity igiinit the city's\ncapital loan of \u00bb3,\u00bbM,096, hu left\nVancouver tree from bank loani for\ntht flnt time ln 11 yean.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nCut Celanue Pfd \u201e 11\nCan Steamihlp Pfd ....  tl\nCon Mlq It Smelting   M\nDominion Textile   71\nInter Nickel ef Cur \u2014  \u2022*\u2022*\nNational Brtw Ud. ....  MM\nOfllvlt Flour Ntw \u201e,   lttt\nShawnigan HP ..-,..\u201e _   11\nBANKS\nCommerce m\u2014........... 141\nImperial   ......\u2014 \u25a0 \u201e 170\nNovi Scotia .mm. \u2022> HI\nRoyal \u201e.m-. -y HI\nToronto  _\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u2122.\u201e\u2122..\u201e_..\u201e Bt\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 PM ..m.  8%\nBuuharnoli Oorp  \u2014... <tt\nCent Paper Corp .\u2014,-,,..  1-71\nFriaer Co Ltd  I\nWINNIPIC CRAIN\nWINNIPIO, July 11 (CP)-Gnta\nfuturu luotationt:\nOpen High  Low Clou\nWhut;\nJuly  .....\nOatt:\nOH   \t\nPee\t\nBerley:\nJUIT      m~\nOet. \t\nDec  \t\nRye;\nJuly ..... -\nOct,     57H\nCut pricu;\nWheat-No, 1 hard ft No. 1 Nor.\na% No. l Ner. ntt, No. 1 Nor,\n7\u00abK, No 4 Ner. 7! V Ne. t whett\nTOtt, No. f wheat 66v,, fud \u00abs*\nNo. 1 ferntt 74%, No. 1 garnet\n74tt. No. I garnet 71tt, No. 1 amber\ndurum tltt.\nOit\u00bb-Jjo. 1 C. W. tx. 1 C. W.\ntnd No. 1 feed lltt, No. 1 feed\nM, No. i feed tS.\nBirley\u2014Milting gndu-No. 1 ft\n1 CW. t row, 3-row and No. 1 67\nrow Mtt, other gradu No. | feed\nOtt, No. 1 feed Slstt, No. 1 feed 38.\nRye: No. I C. W. Mtt-\n\u00bb7tt    *Jtt\n43S\n64tt\n60tt\n80tt\n\u00bb4tt\nMtt\nJapanese Truck\nat Kaslo Hits\nElderly Jap\nKAStaO, B. C, July 18-A urloui\niccident occurred b*r* Tuuday\ntvtnlnf whtn a track, operited by\nJipineu. got out of control and\ntailed to make a tun: runnlnf into\nan orchard and itriking is elderly\nJtptnut, J. Onlsht, whe wu gardening. Re ll in tht Kulo Vlttorlir\nHoipittl la I urloui condition.\nTbe truck bit e tree tnd tu bad .\nly damaged.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, July If (CP) .-Butter, Que. 14 traded, tela, 1100 boxu\nIt 34. Egp, Eutern A-ltrge Mtt to\nMi A-medlum 31 Vk to 31; A-puUeti\nItttA; E-B MVk to 2\u00bb; E-C lltt to M.\nFuturu; Butter, July tnd Aug.\nMB, StpL Mtt to Mtt, Nov. Mtt\nto 18c; eggi, July UB.\nYORK\nAmerieen Cin ...__\nAm Smelt It Ret\t\nAmerican Tobacco ...\nAniconda \t\nBendix Aviation\t\nBtth Steel\nCanadian Pacific \t\nChryiler  _.\u201e.\nC Wrlfht pM  _\nEuunan Kodak  ......\nGeneral Electric\nGenenl  Moton   ....\nGrinby   \t\nQreat Nee pfd  \t\nInternational Nickel\nKenn   Copper\t\nPhllllpi Pete  \t\nRadio Corp  -._\nStan OU of N J _\nTexu Gulf Sul \t\nUnion Carbide   \t\nUnion OU of Cal\t\nUnited Alrcnft \t\nU S Rubber  \u201e.\t\nV S Steel\t\nSTOCKS\n.-._.... 88Vk\n-  Utt\n- - 43Vk\n  Utt\n  lltt\n  Mtt\n  4tt\n  UH\n  ttt\n  13341\n\u2014 ntt\n\u2014 mt\n _ 4tt\n  lltt\n_  *tt\n  KM\n  Mtt\n  ltt\n  Utt\n  Sltt\n  68\n  lltt\n ._ 17\n  lt\n  eo',t\nFor Wint Ad Servic. Phon. 144\nSEEN AND HEARD AT THE\nCHAMBER OF MINES\n\u25a0y MIN IDYTHI TltOMION, Itcntiry.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lnduitrltlt\n20 ralli     \t\n18 utllltlei \t\nChinge\n-  up    .81\n1.70  up    .01\n11.M  oft   .07\n_7lo_ht Jk_ndL\nNEW VORK\u2014To Inflet* er not\nInflate? That wu the quutlon which\nstumped the stock market todty\ntnd kept moit dealen In t nirrowly irregular ire*. There wu \u2022\nnotable scirclty ot offirlnfl.\nCHICAGO \u2014 resilience gelling\npreuure throughout the 'session\nforced wheet md other graini lowtr today, Anti-inflation talk la\nWuhington, weikneu in the cotton\nmtrket, ind excellent weither for\nhtrvesting In mott areas combined\nto Induce the liquidation,\nMONTRIAL - Industrials took\ntumbles ind leaders in other groupi\nalso wtrt euier.\nTORONTO-<lood eetlon In Steep\nRock uved the Toronto itock mirktt from drtbneu today. Other Issues were dull.\nWtNNETOl \u2014 Wheat pricei remained unchanged, July at SOtt and\nOctober at 80 cents.\nLONDON\u2014Stock market cloied\nfirmer today with considerable selective Inquiry for lnduitrltlt.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAnglo-Huronltn ' -  M0\nBllt Metili Mining \u201e .\u201e M\nButtle Oold Minet  .Mtt\nBobjo Minu   ' 0\u00bbVk\nBuffalo Ankerite  -  1\u00ab\nCanadian Milirtlc  M\nCentnl Pitrlcii   '.,  .77\nChromium M le B _  MO\nCout Copptr'   l\"0\nConiiurum Mlnei  .63\nConsolidated M ts 3  !\u00ab\u25a0\"\nDome Mlnei   13.18\nt_\\ Milirtlc  \u201e  us\nFilconbrldge Nickel   1.68\nCALGARY, July 16 (CPr.-We*\nnesday'a receipts: 2M cattle, lt\ncalves, 43a hogs, 33 sheep.\nToday's receipts: 120 cattle, flvb\ncalves, 100 hogs; 10 iheep. | q0j'i uke Oold .\nOne  loid of today'i cattle  wu Ounnar Oold\t\nthrough billed. The cattle market (fird Rock Gold \t\nwis steady to firm on light offer. Hollinger\t\nIngs. Wednesday'! hogs iold mostly Hudson BayMiS\nat 14.00 for B-l's at yards and plint\nwith iome off yarda it 11.10 to 14.181 Jack Waite \t\nsows   moitly  tOO  litre   weight   it Korr-Addlson   \t\nyirdi ud 1.30 'to 10.00 dressed Klrklmd Uke ..\nweight It plinti. lilt limbs brought Like Shore Mlnu .\n13 00 Wednesdiy. Limanue Contact .\nTodty'i  mirket;  Mtdium   gnu Ltltch Gold\niters 100 te 888. Medium to good, Lltle Long Ltc\nhtlfori (OO lo ttt. Two bids of top\nfed (llvei Wednesdiy 11.18; good to\ncholci  lo,7t to 1100. Common  to\nmedium cowi 8.00 tn 7.00. Medium\n.08tt\n.0744\n.01\n7 JO\n24.00\nInternational N'ektl    M-8S\nsTf\n3.86\n.41\n8.10\n3.3A\n.31\n.80\n120\n.41\n48.00\nJl\nMedium  to\ni 3.00 to 9.00.\nfood itocktr  iteen\nMteLeod \u25a0 Coekihutt\nMtditn Red Leke Gold\nMclntyrt-Poreuplne   ....\nvcKmi't Red Like'\t\nMlnlrjf Cornontlon     106\nNipluing Mining    _       .87\nKorandk  _     41.00\nNormetal r   -88\nO'Brien Oold ..\u2014 - 'M*\nOmega GoM  -. - HI\nPtmour Porcupine _.. &\nPerron Gold \u2014 \u2022\u00bb\nPickle Crow Gold .,  183\nPowell Rouyn Gold  M\nReno Gold Mlnu _. J03tt\nSin Antonio CWd - IM\nSherritt Oordon  - 63\nSladen Malartic \u201e 21\nSudbury Buin   1.U\nYmir Yankee Girl -  -03\nOILS\nBritish Americin  \u2014   13.25\nRoyilite    17.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A _     .30\nBell Telephone    118\nBrMillut T L ft P \u2014 '. ~    I\nB C Powtr B  - _ 80\nCanada Milting   .' 11\nCtnidt Pielflc Rly i     ttt\nCanada Ind Alcohol f,     3\nDominion Bridge   Utt\nDistillen Seipimi    I8tt\nGoodyear Tire ...._\u201e.    41\nMatey Harrii      _     3tt\nMontrttl Power \u2014  tl\nNttiiitlCir.    ,, -  17\nPowtr Corp   _   _    4\nPreued Metili _ _.    ltt\nSteel of Can  -  tt\nProspecton, mining engineers md\nrepruontMiveo of companies engaged in mining made up t vtrltd\nlltt of vlilton to th* Chimber of\nMinu af Eutern British Columbli\nit Nelun.\nOne at our Intereitlng vltlton to\nregiiter wu Hon. Herbert Anicomb\nMinuter of Mlnei, who sUted he\nwu very well pluttd wltb eb* office set up tnd the work being done.\nAllot Klnnard of Vernon, eelled\nto look over the dlipliy and obtain\na few umplu of dlitrict oru.\nCharlu R. Burrowi ot Rock Crttk\ntilled to reg later tnd inquire u to\nleulng pouibUltlet la tbt dlttret\nK* wu acoompaned by Ban Allen\nof mot.\nAn nterutlng vliMor frem Vancouver wu G. R. Glbion, representing Hollinger Minea, who called while In tb* dlitrict looking over\na recent tungsten find hi the Ltr-\ndteu.\nE.W. Girrttt ef Kulo tailed to\nInquire u to line prist* \u25a0\u25a0 quoted\nhy Amerlcm imelten.\nTwo well known proipecton tnd\nmining men wto alwayi tall for\nInformition in K. K. tnd R. Laib\nof the Spokin* Mine at Tye. Tbey\nhoped to ittrt ihlpping from the\nmine in the near future, condlUoni\npermitting\nA welcome viiltor wu Thomu\nAvison of New Denver who owni\nth* Hirtliy group tnd worked the\nBosun dumpi for I long time. He\nmd Mri. Avison were returning\nfrom a viiit te MontreaL Mr. Avis\nen I* one of th* reel old timen of\nthe diitrict and li itill keenly interested in the mining ictivlty.\nH. M Riddle md hli two tani ot\nSalmon Arm apent tome time in\nthe offloe going ovu the varioui\numplu md compering specimens\not tungiten or*. Tbey are Interest.\ntd ln war metali, principally scheelite tnd their enthusiasm indlcitai\nthey will work bard to find them.\nE. P. Haukedahl ot Ymlr called\n10 look over the new maps and\nreporta. He and hit partners have\nturned over recently thtlr t-agrttn\nfind on Stewart Greek to the Premier Company who hava I email\ncrew on the groundt doing surface\nwork. M. Htukedahl states that he\n11 still looking for other war metals\nand hopes to find something worth\nwhile In the neer future.\nDr. M. 8. Hedley who Ii now itatloned in Nelson m Ruident Mining engineer celled to regiiter. Dr.\nHedley is Nelion-born ind mmy\nold timen will remember hit fither, Bob Hedley, so well known\nIn the Kooteniyi. who wu con-\nnected for mmy yeart with the HtU\nMlnu Smelter.\nR. A. Grirnet, who u Pruldent\ntnd Maniger directed former operation! at the Silver Ridge, Smdon\ncalled tO examine samples under\nthe flourescent limp.\nH. W. Herridge of Nikutp who\nla on the Mining Committee of the\nB. C. Legislature md is intereited\nin ill mining actlvltlei, called to\nmike Inquirlu,\nJ. Sapplei ot Selmo owner of the\nUttle Keen group, cilled to rtgis-\nter and stated tbtt he hoped te\nturn over hit property very short-\nly. The property eonttlni both moly-\ndenviffl ini tungsten vtluu.\nW. Smith, wtU known mining\nmtn ot the Ntlson district now\nleulng at tbe Hewitt mine at Silverton, cilled to regiiter.\nRichtrd Biron et Andenon Crtek\nciUed tn with umplei to put under the newly acquired flourescent\nltmp, which Is proving of the greatest interest to the prospectors and\nmining men.\nOne of the mart enthuttaetie mining men we hive In the district It\nW. Ronn wbo afler working aH\nWinter tnd getting a grubstake, It\nout bi tbe hllli igiin. Rt wm keenly interuted In th* flourteentlimp\n\u2022nd Immediately wired Vancouver\nfor on* to tab* eut in tb* hills on\nSundiy. A proiptctor it ttlll a prospector whither be 1* tnined gtol-\nogltt, mining engineer or tny other\ntpt et mm u loaf ubtha what\nIt takei to make food In the billi.\nW. 0. Norrle-Ixiwinthtl cilled\nwhile in town to mtke Inquiriei.\nThis wis his first vlitt to Ntlion\nibtot leiving to take up wer work\nin the But Ht U btck In tbt mining game again. ,\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo called\nto regigter, accompanied by J. Pi-\nton, M.L.A., Point Grey, who ll\nvisiting tne dlitrict in connection\nwith the Governmenti rehabilitation progrim,\nArchie Ony of Selmo exiled to\n\u00ab* if the floureseint lamp would\nthow up iny tungsten In hli umplu.\nC. Hlggln* who hu bten employed hy the Alnsmore Mines, cilled\nte obtain reporti and Informition on\nth* Sloctn District, prior to letvlng\nfor Stndon to look over the Cinidlan mtne with a view to leasing.\nN. E. Nelson, Vincouver, of the\nGranby Coniollditcd cilled while\nIn the dlitrict examining propertlu In the Sloctn.\nOthtr vlilton registering during\nthe month were Frank Friiby md\nA. D. Pipuiin, Nelton; & E. Dtr-\nrock, Calgary; Victor Lock, Trail;\nR. Blyth, Rouland; E. W. Wlddowion, Nelson; George Matthews, Salmo; E. H. Pettnon, Sandon; J. J,\nKelly tnd J. Fliher.\nMr. ind Mn. R. J. Leigh of Reglnt ipent iome Ume in the Chamber looking over the varioui sample! ind were keenly Interested ln\nth* display.\nB. T. Nesbit, Mining Engineer for\nKelowni Exploration, called to obtain mining reports.\nEXPERIENCE\nSTABILITY\nThe many yeirs of\nInvestment experience\nand the facilities of an\nextensive organisation are placed at the\nservice of our clients.\nThis service may be\nsecured at any of pur\nbranches,\nA. E. AMES & CO.\nUMITD\nSvslsen ttttttUmi 1889\nVANCOUVER\nTanutt\nMfitrMi HtwVtfb la>isd.i>,gn|\n MU TWILVt\n^m^*m*mm*\\mw\nI DAILY I   Wl NILION. A A-flllOAY MOftHINA. JtAY TT. tMA-\nmr\u2014^mm\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2014\n*~-\nand Stt. Voluts\n_\nPhonti 10 and 1\nFrit Delivery\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 The Englishman and hU ubiquitous umbrella\nmay won bt parted. In future iny\nGrenfell's\nSpecial Fried Chicken\nDinner\nTODAY and SATURDAY\nANNABLE BLOCK\nPhont 657R or SUR\nOne- md two-room tpirtmenU,\nfurnlihed, iteim heited, hot\nwater ill thi time.\nThe astoundingly different\none-coat flat oil paint that\ncovers:\n\u2022 KALSOMINE\n\u2022 WALLPAPER\n\u2022 NEW PLASTER\ne WALLBOARD, ate.\nEight tints and white\nSEE YOUR DEALER!\nBURNS\nLUMBER _ COAL CO:\nWa ara \u2022quipped to Kindle\nANY KIND OP WORK ON\nYOUR CAR OR TRUCK\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n109 Biktr St Phont la?.\nLAMBERT\nTutt tht Thrill of ftaJTaek\nMELON DELIGHT\nat the\n\u2666Melon Dew4\nICE CREAM PAHLOr.\nI winted my hiir\nfixed right io I\nvUited the\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeiuty Salon\nJohnitone Block\nPhone S27\nCRIM-0\nchan Sssedmit\nCHOCOLATI  MALTID  MILK!\nBorden'l, JOe-*\nLb. tin mmr\nIDEAL FRUIT JAM:  CI \u00bb{\n\u00bb oi, doi.    \u00bb\u00ab\u2022.?\u00bb\nCERTO: _-.g_*\nStttlf       \"mr*\nRICE  KRIIPIE1 -yet*\nKiiiogg-t, t pkts. m*rr\nKLIM: For ovtraete, ttt*\nLIFEBUOY  aOAP: <*%_*\n4 ban - *\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\nSTAR QUALITY PRODUCE\nSTRAWBERRIES\nThi beit of the ytar. Britiih Sovereigni.\nLarger S Ik. batkati 45<;   Par crile (4 bati.) f 1.75\nRaapkerriai, lovely fruit, 2 capi 29<\nCharriaa, Bingi, 2 Rat.  SStj)\nWatermelon, all lim, Wholt, Ib. . .7c: Cut, Ib. . .8c\nCABBAGE: new, local Ib. . . 5c\nCtuliHowar, locil, Ib U)<?\nCree* Paai, fraih dally, 3 Iba. 28<\nLettuce, Extra Large, solid fitidi, 2 for 19*\nRidiihei, Creen Onioni, 3 bunchet 10e*\nNEW BEETS, MEW CARROTS, 3 bchs 19c\nTomatoei, Cucumbers,  Plumi,  Naw Potatoai,  Sweet\nPotatoai, Cantaloupe. Orangei, Lamom, Crape Fruit,\nBananai\nICONOMY CAPI:\nDea.\t\nV.\nWIDE MOUTH MAION\nLIDI: t dot. \t\nm\nDOMINION     WIDE     MOUTH     DOMINION     WIDE      MOUTH\nQUART JAR8: SJ,CQ      PINT JAM'\nDoz.\nDoi.\nfl-39\nReckitt's Blue\nPkg.\n5c\nNabob Coffee\nN A u o B\nV. coffee' '\nIn tht wtrtimt\ntconomy ptckigt.\nLb.\nLb.\n50c\n26c\nBUTTIR: Cltrtthtlm, tjf <M\nlit gndl, I ibi.    f*taa\nPUFFED WHEATi\nQuaker, I pkta.\t\nCORN FLA KM: Poit'.,\n1 pkti. \t\nBREAKFAST   CEREALS:    K.I-\nlOH'l, variety pick,        ^gA\n\u25a0V.\nFLOUR! Miple Ltlf, <t_t__*\nVitamin B, 7 Ib. uck .. .. -*J_\nQRAPE  JUICE: Welch'.,  COl*\nU oi. bottlt  -P-9-\nP.ORK tnd BEANS:\n11 ta. tlni,\nI fer  \t\nLUX FLAKEI:\nLtr|t pkg.\nCimpbtll'l,\nLAUNDRY SOAP: mm*\nFill Ntplhi, I cakea   .... \u00ab\u00bb*>\nDOQ BIICUITI: Nttiontl Mlxtd, tntckt,'\n2 Ib. btg \t\nQRAHAM WAFERS:\nChristie's, lb. pkg. ...\nrOFFEE:  Mclntoih,\nttisrtid, wnpptd, Ib.\n._ta_U_m*pttmm\nBISMA-REX\niea.\niee*\n7S*\u00bb\u2014 .J$\nSold only it your Haull Stort.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox eW Prttcit 14\nThi broad buin ot tht North\nSet U t Uttlt mort this \u00abN mil*\nit lta widen.\n\"CARELESS\" Todiy\n\"CAR-LBST tomorrow\ncar\"saver\nSPECIALISTS\nSowerby-Curhbtrt Ltd.\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbtTl\u00bb<\u00bb>'*lt\u00bbW<-\u00ab^W'>'BW\u00ab!g\"\u00ab\u00bb\nHave tha |ob~ Dona Right\nVK GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE815\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMtdietl Arti Building\nSivt  Monty on Iniurinct.\nWt ctn do It for you.\nROBERTSON REALTY CO. Ltd\nPhont tU 533 Wtrd St.\nAik fot eur\nWEEKEND SPECIALS\nPhont 415\nLAKESIDE SERVICE\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPHONE 25\nMid. Am Blk\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccurately\nWitch for tbt\nSUGAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\n\u2014\u2014\u2014-\nWt .Art H*U*\nFor tht Rain\n.tit You?\nJUST ARRIVED!\nLightweight Raincoat*,\nhigh ecaW ity(e\nRubberized\nat\n\u00a3MORY'g\nLIMITID\nTHE MAN'S STtjRE\nPOR NIWS OP DAY AMfr\nOTHER  BACK PACE ADJ\nmP_UO\nLONDON   (CP)\/-Nearlv\n000 men, womm ind children I\nbeen rtfiittred for virloui purptttt '\nby tht Miniitry of Ubor tnd Nttiontl Strvlct ilnct war btiaa.f.   \\\naaaaaaaaawaaaaaiiiaeaiwf*\nFISH is tht\nDISH ot\nBUTLER'S Today\nF. He SMITH\nIf It'i Electric\nPhone 666       S51 Biker St.\nAmonj tht Pine.\nWhtrt It'i Cool\nSaturday Night\nDANCING\nIl \u2022 nil treit ln Weitern\nCtntdi'i fineit niw dinct\npavilion. Comt out . thia\nweekend. You'll hivt t frind\ntime.\nRegular. Adm. Pricei\nIt is vtry important.today that you preserve all tht fruits\nand vtgttablts you art ablt to and thtn call on us for any items\n\u2014so check ovtr your equipment you art short.\nBrilliant Blue Cold Pack Canners,\nComplttt with 7-jar wirt rack, Each  $2.65\nRollman Cherry Stoners, Each .._   $2.00\nWirt Preserving Racks, for wash boilers, Each .     90c\nWayritt Kitchen Scales, 25-lb. capacity, Each $5.75\nPyrtx Measuring Cups, Each   23c\nWirt Strainers, Each  _ _ _ 30c\nSkimmtrs, Each   -_.  50c\nThtst and Many Othtr Items\nart on display at\nKitchen\nHelps\nEgg Beaters ...50c\nPierced Spoons 15c\nCan Optntrs ..20c\nPastry Brushes 35c\nMtndits 15c\nTta Strainers 20c\nDish Mops .....10c\nSpring Scalts -35c\nDough\nBlenders   ... 20c\nCork Sc rows\u201415c\nPot Knobs ...... 5c\nBroom Holdtrs 10c\nKitchtn\nSpongt \u201430c\nCrumb Brush .-45c\nScrub Brush ....45c\nChort Boys .-10c\nChort Girls ...10c\nCraters   20c\nPint Measures 35c\nParing Knives 20c\nWire Skewers   25c\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nMAIL ORDERS WILL RECEIVI OUR PROMPT ATTENTION\nPHONES 26,27 and 151 P.O. DRAWER 500\nSALE\nOF\n$795\n$845\nBuyia 1938 Chevrolet Sedan Thoroughly\n'Duration-lsed'. Excellent rubber \u2014 A\ntruly fine value.\nBuyt i 1938 Dodge\nSedin, mechanically\nperfect \u2014 Powerful\nhydraulic   brakei.*\nExcellent rubber.\nAnyone!\nCAN BUY A\nUsed Car\nTAKE UP TO\n18 MONTHS\nTO PAY\nURATION-IZED\nCARS\n$900\nv\nBuyi a 1939 Plymouth Sedan. Beautifully finiihed dark\ngreen enamel. Mechanically A-1.\nBuyi a 194 0\nChevrolet Coach.\n\u2014Practically new\nChevrolet famoui\nquality throughout.\nAssure Yourself\nPLUS MANY MORE\nNELSON, B.C\nTransportation for the Duration\nNELSON TRANSFER\") ltd.\nMf\n\u2022\u2022*\u2022        \u25a0\nii\nif <: <,__\\\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1942_07_17","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415604","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"}]}}