 Pint Claw Amy OfflMn of
Canida Griduit*. ftp 3.
Duhburg ind Otttnd Art Tirgth
of IrlHih Planti. Pigi i.
RiimIi'i Crtat All Reitrvt 4
Point In Favor. Page I.
Htrt Shlpt Sarvt Around [IjH '
Britain Sayi Minlifor. Pajt 3.
Nratnl Woritir In Ntil Shipyardi
Portitti Sudden Pall. Pagt I.
Nob Keep Pood Prom Hungry by
Falling Agreement. Ptgt tt -
iven Into Sea
Say 32 Ships Sunk; Stubborn Battles Are
Reported Along Whole Front; 500 Nazi
Planes Shot Down in Week
BERLIN, Aug. 29 (AP) .—The Nails claimed today that
a combined land and naval offensive in which 22 Red transports
and 10. warships were sunk resulted in capture of Tallinn, Es
tonia, and its harbor of Paldiski, driving entrapped Russlahs
into the iea and laying Leningrad open to imminent peril from
tht West.
The fall of long-Isolated Tallinn, as claimed by tht
all the Baltic buffer states won by the Russians In the last
Cerman High Command, would complete the Nazi conquest of
two years.
It was accompanied, the Germans said, by a fierce and
continuing action in the Culf of Finland against the surviv.ng
 •?Russian forces in flight from
Woodward New
B.C. Lieul.-Gov.
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP)-W. C.
^Woodward, prominent Vancouver
merchant, today wit appointed
Lieutenant-Governor of British
Columbia to lucceed Hon, E. W.
Hamber, whose torm of offloe expired recently.
Final approval ot hit appointment
wu liven at cabinet council today.
Mr. Hamber had agreed to carry on
until a luccessor wu named.
Until recenUy Mr. Woodward has
been executive assistant to Munition! Mlnltter C. D. Howe, acting at
a "dollar-a-year" man. He travelled
to the United Kingdom with Mr.
Howe when their steamship, the
Weatern Prince, wu torpedoed Ind
wu reicued trom the iea together
with the miniiter.
Widely known ta British Columbia and aerou Canada, Mr. Woodward had been president of Woodward Storu Ltd., since the deith of
hit fither, Charlu E. Woodward,
founder of the big departmental
itore business.
Hearings on Dam
al Trail, Spokane
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP)-The In-
ternational Joint Commiulon will
hold hearings it Trail, B.C., and at
Spokane, Wash., SepL i and 6 respectively in connection with an
application of the United Statu, for
approval of construction of the
Grand Coulee Dam, it wu announced today.
"It wu originally thought that
thia gigantic work, tht world'! greatest dam, would not back the Columbia acron the International
Boundary, but more precise engineering itudiu have convinced the
reclamation aervice of the United
Statei, which is building the dam,
that when the dam hu been put
into operation a lake will be formed
above lt extending for iome little
distance Into British Columbia, thus
requiring the approval of the International Joint Commission," the
Canadian secUon ot the Commission
taid.
The creation of thii artificial
lake ll bni of many indications of
the unuiuil magnitude of the Grand
Coulee Dam, as the distance from
the dam to the boundary is 191
mllu."
lnteruti which mty be iffected
by the railing of the level bf the
Columbia River in BriUsh Columbia
are the Consolidated Mining tc
Smelting Company, the City of Trail,
the W«t Kootenay Power ic Light
Company, and individual land ownen along the river between Trail
ind Uie Boundary.
Late flashes
LONDON, Aug. SO (Saturday)
(CP)—The Ankara radio' quoted informaUon from Teheran today to
the effect that Red Army formations
were due to enter the Iranian cipital during the morning.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (AP) -
The United Statu Senite Finance
Committee ipproved todty an unprecedented $3,672,400,000 tax bill
LONDON, Aug. 29 (CP Cible)-
The Royal Air Force twtpt over
Northern France and the low
countries todiy. Both the R.A.F,
and the Qerman Air Force loit 10
planei but one Brltlth pilot wu
uved,
GLACE BAY, N.S., Aug. 29 (CP)
-A Dominion Coil Company campaign to break a slowdown produc-
ion policy affecting 10 of lti colleriei wu extended to three nits
odty and the number of men bur-
id from their job! swelled to 97.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 29 (AP)
-Charles A. Lindbergh iald tonight
neither the United Statu nor Oer-
nany could successfully attack the
ither icross the Atltntic Ocetn unlesi Internal collapse preceded invasion.
R.A.F. RAID PICTURES AT 100 FEET
the flaming city, in dozens ot
troopships and fighting craft,
Germin toldlera altering Tallinn
said iti harbor wu a desolate icene
with Russian warships keeling
over ln tha water and the mutt of
sunken ships showing above Uie
surface. Much of the city, including
the, chief railroad station, had been
burned.
It wu clilmed by thi Germani
that apart from 32 Soviet ships destroyed, teven warthlpi, Including
Uie 8800-ton cruiser Kirov, were
imaged.
Tonight, tha Germani claimed
that Leningrad wu almoit conf-
pletely cut off from the reit ol
Russia on the land ilde and the
Gulf of Finland bad become dangerous to Ruuii'i coniiderablt Baltic
fleet, with German plinu laying
minu and controlling the cout
through ihore batteriei.
By HENRY C. CAMIDY
Auoelited Press s3taff Writer
MOSCOW, Aug. 30 (Saturday)
—(AP).-Soviet Russia uid today
that tha Red army tought stubbornly ill day yesttrtiy along
the whole Eastern front and thit
the Red lir force had deitroyed
500 German planei In one week
at a coit of 162 Russian planet.
The midnight communique gave
no Indication of where the fighting wu particularly fierce out
etrlier reporti htd uid Germin
troopt were hurled btck from K
(probably Kiev, in the Ukraine)
ln a fierce battle ln which the
530th German infantry regiment
wai deitroyed.
The communique tald the German planu were ihot down or deitroyed on the ground between Ajig.
21 ind 7, indicating extremely
heivy terial aeUvity during Uie lut
few dtyt.
The Frldiy communique which
reported the bitUe iround K itld
the fighting hid raged on througn
Thursday night but It, too, had
omitted mention of the lectori of
greateit activity.
A ipeclal war correspondent of
the Moscow radio estimated that
ln fighting tround "K" tome 15,000
Germani altogether had been killed and many othen wounded or
captured.
Tht communique uld that before the litest battle, German
troopi toak up position! In gui-
Ilea on the outskirts of a nurby
vii lige.
"But Lleut.-Col. Popov'i men
drove tht Germim out of the
village and converted tht gullitt
Into a Nui graveyard," thi communique uld.
Red artillery fired point blink
Into masses ot Oermin troopa, it
wu reported.
The communique tailed to state
specifically whether tremendous
tank battles ttlll raged ln the Leningrad tree but gave tome ldet of
the intensity of the fighting with t
ititement thtt one Russian tank unit
wiped out 100 German tanki In six
days.
About 500 U. S. Tanks
Shipped to British
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (AP).-
On an iverage, considerably more
thm half of the United Statu tank
producUon hu been going to Britain under the Lease-Lend program,
lt wu learned today, and the total
of light and medium tanks turned
over to Britiln ll tbout 600.
The ponderous trmored fighting
machines so far produced In thtt
country fall Into two categories—
light tanks of about 13 tons, and
medium tanks of approximately 28
tons; American heavy tank producUon la not yet under wiy.
 , 1'
PRAIRIE MEN AT CAMP
WILL BE QUARANTINED
NANAIMO B. C, Aug. 29 (CP)
—Several hundred men who begin
lo trrlve tt Camp Nantimo today
from Prairie polnti will be quarantined for from 10 to 14 diyi In an
isolated part of the camp to guard
against the possibility of Infantile
paralysis developing, military tu
thoritles itid todiy,
PUBLIC SERVICE HOLIDAY
VICTORIA, Aug. 29 (CP).-Ltbor
Day. Monday, will be observed si a
general holld|y throughout tht Provinciil Public Service.
Theie picturu give t dramatic record of the sensational daylight
ilr raid on the huge Knapsack power itation at Cologne, Germany,
Aug. 12. The RAF. bomberi flew it a height ot leu than 100 feet at
Umu. The top photo shows the power station below ind one plane (far
ln background) can barely be discerned between the puffs of antiaircraft explosions. Much of the imoke wu caused by air raid mis-
tiles, And then In the bottom photo the nine plane descends even
lower to get thii record of the damage that hu been done. Many
direct hiti were scored. The wing of-tha plui can be teen lowtr
right
Hitler, Mussolini
e Conference
Nazis Admit British  TCIalT ^urchill  FDR
Raid in Southwest
BERLIN, Aug. 30 (Siturday)-
(AP).—British raiders dropped
bombs it several placu ln Southwestern Germany during the
night, it was admitted officially
- Nazis claimed that several
apartment houiu htd been dimiged and that a number of poisons had been klUed md wounded.
Meeting Put to
Shame
PROSPERITY FOR
EUROPE PROMISED
Fine 2 Trailites;
DogsNolTagged
TRAIL, B.C, Aug. 2/t — Two
chargu of tilling to procure dog
liceneu were tried before Magistrate Parke Wiiliims In City Police
Court Fridiy afternoon.
Both J. McCtrthy and A. M. Oddy
pleaded guilty to the charge. McCarthy being assessed i fine of $5
and coits, and Oddy $1 without coiti.
The finu were ptld.
McCirthy't fine-was heavier owing to the fact that he had had repeated warnings but had failed to
pay attention to them.
Former Rossland
and Trail Mining
Man Dies at Coast
VANCOUVER, Aug. 29 (CP). -
Funeral tervicu were held todty
for John Cyril Willice. 37-yetr-ola
mining engineer who died here on
Tuesday.
Wallace, a native of England, came
to Britiah Columbia ln 1914 and
lived for a time at Rostland, B. O,
before  moving to  Vancouver.  He
gaduated from the Univenlty of
ritlth Columbil in 1929 ind went
to Chelan, Wish, where he worked
for Britanla Mining & Smelting
Company, Ltd.
Later he worked at Anyox, Pioneer Mlnu tnd Trail, B. C, and for
the past three years wu mine foreman for the Britannia M'nlng It
Smelting Compiny it Britannia
Beach, B. C.
Four Killed in
U. S. Plane Crash
MARCH FIELD, Calif, Aug. 29
(AP).—'Four mtn were killed when
two of three trmy primary training
plmu In t practice flight locked
wingi, cruhed tnd burned eight
miles Eut of here todty.
The deid:
Second Lieut. John J. Mitchell,
Pawhu'ka. Okla; Second Lieut.
Fdgar A. Hose, Grttt Vallev. Calif.;
Technical Stf. Rlchsrd E. StrffoM,
Nathville, T'rai.: PL James D.
Glenn, Fort Worth, Tex.
ILSLEY PUNS TOUR
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP).-Sched.
uied to make teven ipeechu In
Western Canadt. malnlv ln the lnteruti of the Fill Wtr Saving!
Cimpalgn, Finmce Miniater I's'ev
will letve Ottawi tomorrow night
with Sukatoon. hli flnt itop.
BERLIN, Aug. 29 (AP) .-Hitler
tnd Munollnl ended a five-day
lecret conference on the Eutern
front today md. luued i communique promising a prosperity
order for all Continental Europe
shorn of the causes of put win.
The Nui Preu Instantly likened Uie conference to that of
Prime Miniiter Churchill md
President Roosevelt on the At-
lantic which wu announced Aug.
14, and claimed the two Democratic leaden made a poor ihow
ln comparison to the two dictators.
"Even the external picture of
the Fuehrer-Duce meeting stands
in sharp contrast on the other lide
ot the Atlantic off the Newfoundland banks," nid Uie NaUonal Zeitung of Euen, Goering'! piper.
The communique announcing the
Hitler-Mussolini meeUng wu dated at Hitler's field headquarters.
It sild the Axli leiden discussed lU
mUitary tnd political quutloni concerning the development and duration ofthe war, and continued:
"The discussions were permeated
wilh the unchangeable Will of both
peoplu and their leaders to wage
wtr to a vlctorloui end.
'The new Europem order whicn
will emtnite from thia Victory wtll
remove u extensively as possible
the causes which gave rise in the
put to Europem war.
"Destruction of the Bolshevist
dinger ind of plutocratic ax
ploltatlon will create tht pout
bl I lty of peiceful harmonloui ind
profitable cooperation of all people! of the European continent In
the political u well ii the economlo and cultural iphere!."
Tha general trend ot Oermin
Preu comment wu that the Churchill-Roosevelt Atlantic declaration
"preserves historic injustices" while
the AxU new order "is i creative
ideal" but specific definitions of
Uie new order itill were licking.
ROME, Aug. 29, (AP)^-Munollnl piloted Hitler't huvy lir-
pltne btck from one tector of tht
German-Russian front during the
meeting of the two dictators, Italian correipondent! reported tonight in lengthy dlipatchu on
the meeting.
Tbe correspondent! uld HlUer
ind Mussolini hid long talki alone
In a big tent. They were escorted
by armored can and mobile antiaircraft gum on their tours of the
front ind were uld to hive etten
soldiers' rations ot soup and black
brud.
Mussolini ind HlUer began their
trip to Uie Northern front by airplane at dawn Tuuday. Munollnl
wu tald to have piloted the plane
on the return from thli trip.
On Wednudiy they visited other
commands by pltne, hetring dettlli
of "conquests tt the tront" from the
Germu generali.
i '
JAPAN WANTS TO
END CHINA WAR;
HAS PEACE AIMS
Claim Conflict Being
Prolonged by Aid
' to Chinese
LASTING PACIFIC
PEACE IN MIND
By MAX HILL
Anocltted Pre» Stiff Writer
TOKYO, Aug. 30 • (Saturday) -
(AP). — The Japanua insisted
today that Japan wu holding firm
on establishment ot a "co-prosperity sphere" ot influence ** i
prerequisite to luting Pacific
place, duplte ''the Very delicate
relations existing batmen Japan
md the United Statu" over the
Russo-German War.
A statement carried by Domei,
the Japanese newi agency, on deUvery of a message bom Premier
Prince Konoye to Pruident Roosevelt Thursdiy gave the view ot
tha iltuition tnd Hid Japan winted to end the Chlnt Wir uia
establish i permanent peace in
Salt Alil.
Iichl Kishl, a Government spokesman, nid moreover that the "unfortunate Chinue-Jtpineu hoiUU-
Uu" were being prolonged by
United Statu-Brituh aid to Chiang
Kai-Shek.
The mnounced Intention to nek
■n end to the Chinese War, involved
no change in Government policy,
each cabinet since the wu started
July 7, 1937, hiving been pledged
to attempt a clean-up ot what Japan
calli the 'incident.''
Kiihi iald tbat ihlpmenti of ott
md wir luppliet to Ruult via
Vladivostok undoubtedly would be
Included ln any conversation wilh
the United Statei.
It wu idded, however, that dis-
closure ot Japanese representation!
to Moicow ind Wuhington over the
hipmenta had been premature.
In   I   nitlon-wlde    brotdcut,
Klthl ttld the publlo that Kon-
oye'i matMM wu of mijor il<
nificince    beciuie    tht    Unlti
wu tiger not to bi
»l relitioni with Jipin.
He reviewed move* of Uh United
S*_ and Great Britain, which he
said were dulgned to block Japan'i
aimi to Eut Asis, and told the nation lt ihould keep lta "firm determination to cope with my untoward happening.
The Japanese, ha uld, win trying to create peace and lecurity ln
East Asia through the aid ot Wang
Ching-Wel (head at the Japanese
puppet regime at Nanking which
claims to ipeak for China) ahd
through economic cooperation with
China uld Manchoukuo.
TOKYO, Aug. 30 . (Saturday) ■
—Kaname Wakasugi, Japanese Minister to Wuhlngton, irrived bin
todiy imld United States-Japanese
negotiations timed at easing the
tenilon in ttit Far Eut, and immediately wu closeted with For-
elgn inliter Admiral Teisiro
Toyodi.
U. B. Ambassador Joieph C. Grew,
who had intended to ipend thi
weekend outiide the cipital, immediately changed hla mind. He In.
dictted the negotlatloni were im'
portent but declined to give any
hint of their progreu.
RUSSIANS OCCUPY
THREE IRANIAN
TOWNS
LONDON, Aug. 30 (Saturday)
(AP)—Tbe Moicow radio announced today the Red Army
had occuped the Iranian towni
of Mehlbad, Pahlevi and Me-
ihed. "
Mehtbad li m inland town
about J10 miles Northwest of
Tehtran; Pahlevi (Enieli) ll I
Cuptan teaport, 170 miles to the
Northwut; and Muhed li in extreme Eutern Inn, iome 420
milu train tbe capital.
Coordination of
Prices, Supply
in Board Hands
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP).-The
Governmmt moved tonight to
bring about full coordination of
control over pricu and lupply of
goods and services essential to the
prosecution of the war through
tha Wartime Pricu and Trade
Board md the Wartime Induitrlei
Control Board.
By order-in-council It made tha
Pricu and Trade Board the supreme luthority ln the field ot
price-control throughout Ctnidi,
and gave I reconstituted Wartime
Industries Control Botrd complete
control pf supply md allocation of
commodities and materials essential
to the wir effort.
The new set-up wu announced in
a Joint itatement luued by Finmce
Miniiter llsley md Munition! Minliter Howe, H..
. The tttttrptnt, givt • itrong
Indication that tba Government
may ihortly move to curb Inital-
ment purchuu. Reitrlction of In-
•talntatit tfjflffib IXMi, "would
appetr to bi In tbe national lntereit under wartime condition!."
The itatement described Uie new
unified .control established under
two separate orden-ln-councll signed today as "evidence bf the Gov-
determination to tight
ary tendencies bimpenng
^^rtidpat^to
._ Wartime Induitrlei Control
Boird under chairmanship of R. C.
Berklnihaw, and the Wartime Pricu
md Trade Board under H. B. McKinnon, both, were enlarged to
provide for an Interlocking membenhlp.
U.S. Sending Men
Bloody Reprisals
ings;
Epidemic Eases
WINNIPEG, Aug. 29 (CP). -
Marked decrease in tbi spread ot
ileeplng sickness md infantile pa-
ralyiii — particularly In Saskatchewan, wai reported by Provincial
health officials in the West tonight.
At Reglna, when the spread ot
encephalitis hu been serious, no
new cuu hive been admitted to
hoipital ln the put 24 houn, while
only 13 new cuu were reported ln
the other part! ot Saskatchewan, 10
In Manitoba and one in Alberta.
Poliomyelitis, which hu centered
particularly In Manitoba, also seemed to be relaxing, with only lt cuu
reported ln Minitoba and two in
Alberta. Manila, however, reported one duth from uch disetse.
botti in Winnipeg.
Total poliomyelitis cuu now
stand at 098 in Manitoba, with nine
deathi; Saskatchewan, 20 cuu ind
no deaths; Alberta, 86 cuu and two
deathi, and Britiih Columbia, 32
cuu and one death.
Land Urges Building
of Barges for Oil
WASHINGTON, An* 29 _?).-
The peppery Chairman of United
Statu Maritime Commission, Rear
Admiral Emory S. Land, today opposed plmt for building a huge
new pipeline from Southwestern
oil fieldi to the AtUntic seaboard
to combit tbe oil shortage In the
litter area.
Land uld he wu "between hell
tnd high wtter" when memben of i
ipecltl Senite Petroleum Committee questioned him about the pipeline idea.
Nevertheleu he went on to erltl
die the idu md to suggest In'
stead the speedy conitruction of 100
reinforced concrete barges, to be
loaded with oil md towed by other
vuteli.
PETERBOROUGH, Ont.. Aug. 29
(CP). - Fife Chief Andy Spalding
of Preston, Ont.. wu elected Pruldent of the Dominion Fire Chiefs
AuocliUon it the concluding con
venUon Hwlodi hera todiy,      ,
Plan Dangerous Operation to Take Bullet-
From Near Heart; Associate Better;
Firing Squad Busy in Paris
VICHY. Aug. 30 (Saturday)  (AP).—Eight more persons have been executed in Paris, dispatcher from Paris re-:
ported today, bringing to 11 the number executed since the
attempted assassination of Pierre Laval and Marcel Deat Wed-
nesday.
Three of those executed, including Naval Lieutenant
Count Henri Destienne Dorbes, were, condemned for espionage,
presumably for De Caullists.
The other five were accused under the new French
law providing death for "activity against the occupying
power." *~
All eight were stood-up
against a wall at Vincennes
prison just outside Paris and
shot to death by a firing squad
frtim the French Garde Mobile.
Among those condemned for espionage was i Netherlands citizen
named Jem Doornik. Tbe othen
executed were French.
, None of the eight wai described as
a Communiit, Indicating the French
had dropped tlie idea of "anti-Red
courti" two dayi after they itarted
working.
By ROY P. PORTER        '
(Auoelited Preu Staff Writer)
PAWS. Aug. 29 (API-Pierre
Lavtl, lymbol of French collabor-
lUon wltb HiUer,, lay clue to
death tonight u hli surgeons determined upon a riaky operation
to remove an assassin's bullet Imbedded I tenth of an inch from
hit heart
The surgeons decided upon the
habtrdoiu step after the 58-year-
old poliUclanand Hltler'i number
om Quilling in Frmce, hid mn
a temperature of 39 centigrade
WA-WnNOTON, Auf. 39 (AP).
—The United statu Government
moved today toward a reappraisal of British md Russian wir lid
by ordering two high civilian defence officials md the chief of the
army air corpi to undertake ipeciil missions abroad,
Pruldent Roosevelt disclosed tblt
W. Averell Harrlman, whom he
once called hit lease-lend expediter
lh London, would heid an Americu delegation to Moicow soon for
conference on Russian munltloni requirements.
Harrlman, Mr. Rooievelt uid,
will be succeeded ln London by
iotas Biggers, OPM production
chief. Biggers will have the tuk
not only of handling Lease-Lend
transportation problemi from tne
end but also of coordinating
ud Amerlcm producUon
whatever pouible.
: Department meanwhile
announced thit Major General
George H, Brett, chief ot the air
corps, would head an army million
on an aerial tour of the African,
heir Eastern, Mediterranean md
Atlantic battle fronti.
A similar but separate tour, touch-
in gat tome of the ume pointi, Will
be nude by a aecond minion headed by Colonel E. M. Powen of the
a|r corpi, . ■
Daylight Time In
Winter Protested
VICTORIA, Aug. 29 (CP) - Thi
coit of living bonui ln all iti upecti
wu Ming "given cireful consideration by tne Provinciil Government,
Premier PettuUo mnounced today.
Daylight uvlng time alto lt being studied, the Premier nid. Messages, letter! and telephone calls
from ill parts of the province were
Election Date
(or B.C. Is Sel
lor October 21
being received protesting against
continuance of the daylight time
during the Winter months ind Mr.
Pattullo hid communicated witb
H. R. MacMillan, president of Wartime Merchant Shipping Limited, at
Whoie requut daylight Ume wu
introduced ln Britiih Columbli.
<_M__t-i__m_^s_.-._t,
IflllliJilMi^
Need for Recruits
"Important Thing"
VANCOUVER, Aug. 29 (CP) -
Lleut.-Col. H. E. Goodman, District
Recruiting Officer for Military District 11, uld here todiy thai "the
need for recrulti ii the mut importent thing in Canida right now."
CoL Goodman, who returned today from Ottawt where he ittended
I convention of all Canadian recruiting offlcen, uld that from 7000
to 10.000 new recrulti per month ire
reaulrefl. . s
"The old quota system for nrov-
'ncet will not be revived," Col Goodmin continued. "It Is neceuary that
every recruiting office get u many
man ti jp-oulblt for tha trmy."
(IOU Fahrenheit) for many hours,
a possible ilgn that perltonlstis
wu developing cloie to vital or
gins.
Tonight thi temperature Jumped
to 39.5 (103.1 Fahrenheit) and X-
rayi disclosed Uie necessity of m
immediate operation.
Laval'a journalistic associate ln
advocating collaboration with the
Nazis, Maroel Deat, who wai wounded it the ume time Wednuday, wu
improving normally.
Laval md Deat were ihot by a
Free French foUower of Gen.
Charlu de GauUe, youthful Paul
Collette, who Introduced himself,
Trojan-horse fuhion, Into the ranks
of m anti-Communist Legion re
crutted to fight alongside the German! againit Ruuia.
At Collette'a home town of industrial Caen in Normandy poUce
preued their lnvuUgttion of the
assassin's political antecedents, and
in France wd the French Empire
authoritiei drove forward ln their
efforti to purge "Communiit" md
elements opposed to both Uie Nazi
md Vichy authorltlu.
Cien, where failing wu reported running high tonight because
Colette thowed tricet of a bloody
butlng, hai bten a centre of numeroui Incident! attributed to British-Free French ictlon.
It wu tht icene of a recent killing of I police chief when a violator of tha ban, on celebration of
Bastille Day, France'i patriotic
holldiy, thot hli way out cf a
police trap.
It ll ilong the Normandy coait
there that Marshal Petain once laid
whole boatloads of Free French
volunteen were luvlng for Britain
every day. ,
Colette himself hid attempted iuch
an escape. ThU wu atter he served
od the wanhip Niger which wu
sunk in the Brltlth evacuation of
Dunkerque, had been taken to Britain md then ip tome unexplained
manner returned Immediately to
Frince.
Hit parents, quiet and respected
folk living in Caen, were stunned
by their lon'i irrut They iald he
had returned home July 28 from the
Mediterranean port of Sete where
he bad been itoker on i ihip, md
supposedly had rone to Parii to
aeek work.
PARIS, Germm-occuped Frince,
Aug. 29 (AP)—Pierre Laval wu reported today to have ient word to
authoritiei from hli bed-side in Ver-
sallies: "I requut that Colette not
be executed.'
HfAD U.S. DELEGATION
XO SOVIET IS NAMED
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (AP) -
President Rooievelt announced today that he would appoint W. Aver-
eU Harrlman held of an American
delegation which will go to Moscow
to consider the problem ot lid to
Russia.
Harrlman hu been In London
handling lease-lend operations, ind
Mr. Roosevelt uld John Bigeers,
who hu been ln chirge of production for the office of production
management, would take over Hsrrl-
man's duUu In the British cipital.
The delegation to Motcow, which
will meet with corrupondlng British tnd Russian groins, may Dl to-
nointed within i few divi, the
President told a Preu conference
tnd may have a half dozen memben.
VICTORIA, Aug. 29 (CP). -
.Premier T. D. PittuUo't Liberal
Government Will leek i new
mandate ftom the people of.Brlt.
iih Columbli October 21, thi Premier mnounced todty, with candidates, for the 48 tuti to be
nominated September 80.
Contesting the Liberal!' bid
for reelection — their iecpn«
lince the general Provinciil elections of 1933 — wUl be the Coniervative and C. C..F. parties,
both of which are expected to
nominate a full ilate of cahdi-.
dates, and a number of Independent and Labor candldatei.
Standing at dissolution of tha
Legislature July 22 wu Liberal!..
31; Coniervative!, 8; C C. F, 7;
Labor, 7, md Independent, 1.
The Premier hu already luued
a romlfuto giving hii reaaoni for
calling an election before hit Government'! term expired ln June, -
1942. Mr. Pattullo uid that "to coordinate Provincial taxation with
Dominion propouli, It will be nee-
essary to pan legislation at tha next
session of the Provincial Legislature to bring into effect appropriate meuuru.
The matter is of iuch Import;
tnce that I feel tha Government
ihould have ail expreuion of tha
wiihu of the electon."        ...
The ConierviUve party, nhdll
Uie leadenhip of R. L. MaiUand.
K. C, hu ilso pledged Itiell to
lupport of m all-out wir effort u
Uie first plank of iti platform.
The C. C. F. party in a manifesto
made public tonight iald iti policy
In the ■ forthcoming elecUon cimpalgn would be bued on the "fundamental and paramount objectivei
of victory ibroad, lecurity it home,
SCHOOLS REOPEN
TUESDAY MORNING
School reopeni Tuudiy, the clot*
ot mother Summer holldiy md tha
beginning of mother yeir of endeavor. ,    m j
Pre-school medial examinationi
for beglnnen md new pupili mtx*
held at the Hume School ThuwtaT
md at Central School Friday.      .
New itudenti for the Junior High
School have been regiitering morning! at the ichool.
BLAST KILLS WELDER
VANCOUVER, Aug. 29 (CP). -
Otto Hofstetter, 26-year-old wtldelt,
wat fatally Injured whm an empty
oil drum on which he wu working
exploded at Uie Petenon & Cowm
Elevator Company Ltd., plmt herl
todiy.
Weaffig;
NHLSO   ....
TRAIL _	
Victoria   -..
Nanalmo
Mln. M x.
.   42     68
Vmcouver	
Kamloopi  -
Prince George .....
Eitevm Point .—
Prince Rupert     S3
T 	
Langara
Dawion, Y.
Seattle         _—.
Portland        ...
San Franciico  _
Spokane    -_...
PenUcton   - —-.
Vernon    — -
Kelowna
Grand Forki  	
Kulo        m.
Crmbrook  _—.--—.
Calgary        _£__.
Edmonton
54
29
51
51
5.1
4«
45
49
a
40
35
37
70
64
63
71
73
72
61
8
I
I
74
73
68
68
71
70    ,
70
68
72
Swift Current     40
Reglna   .   45
Prince  Albert      41
W'nnipeg 51
Forecast: Kootenty: Locil light
wind!, cloudy, moderately warm,
with t few cstttered ihowen be-
ooming colder with i few thunderstorms in the Northeut. ,  I
Stflfltj-jJ ja^vfJsM^tilm''MiM& '•to'i'i.fa-'- hi'■ flu'lift
httfAril'ifttttfl.-'T-l ■
'   :.- .   .
^y^g*^^
 |W^
	
31  TWO-
•**&*
grmtfohtaumtt
QHjurrlj
Baker and Hendryx Streeti
C. Cecil Oiterberg, Pastor.
|  Sun., 10:00 'a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.—Morning Wonhip
7:80 p.m.—Evening Service.
'Wed., 8:00 p.m.—Prayer Meeting
Wt Welcome You.
Steal .
Ollliirrli
Victoria and Kootenay Sti.
Mr. Ian MacSween, B.A.
j    11:00   a.m.—Morning   Wonhip.
No evening service.
A Cordial Welcome to AU
Jfotljel (kberttarl*
Pentecoital
706 Baker St,
8:48 a.m.—'Sunday School.
11-00 a.m.—Devotional.
7:80 p.m.—Evangelistic
Regular Servicei
Tuesday and Friday, 8 p.m.
Rev. and Mrs. C. A. C. Story,
Pastori
Ht. intra'*
•Eutfjpratt (Eljurrli
Stanley and Silica
E. Hopka, Paitor.
10:15 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.—God'i Almighty Word
Gfrtnttg.Httitpb
Joiephlne and Silica
Rev. Gordon O. Boothroyd,
BA., B.D., Miniater
UNION  SUNDAY  SERVICES
WITH ST. PAUL'S
Wonhip at 11:00 a.m. and 7:30
p.m. in charge ot the Minister.
A Cordial Welcome to All
3Ftrat QHjurrlj nf
Otyrtet, fcrtenttet
Ht BAKER STRUT
A Branch ot The Mother Church
The Fint Church of Christ,
Scientist ln Boiton. Masi.
Sunday School 9:48 ajn.
Sunday Service 11 a.m.
Subject Leuon-Sermon
"CHRIST JE8U8"
Wedneiday Testimonial Meeting
8 pjn.
FREE READING ROOM IN
CHURCH BUILDING-
All Cordially Weloome
Iteat
lapttst (Efyurrft
Pastor H. S. Stovell, BA., B.D.
813 Josephine Street
Sunday School, 10:00 a.m.
Moming Wonhip, 11:00
Shirley HtU, SM) p.m.
Evening Service, 7:30
Tht Paitor will praach at both
tervicei,
I Buried al Nelson
_ Thomaa Riggi, oldtimer ot the Sal-
ftno diitrict, who died it Kootenay
Jake General Hospital Monday, was
K*4arrled to his lait resting 'place in
Jfte City Cemetery at Nelson Friday.
^Services in the chapel of Somers
Funeral Home and at the graveiide
were taken by Rev. Gordon G.
Jtoothroyd of Trinity United Church,
-a Mr. Riggs ii believed to have a
.- Alster in the British Isles, but aa far
p aei ii known there are no relativei
- :1a this country.
I ■
Bear Seaion Opens in
the Kootenay Monday
Nlmrodi of the Kootenay will
have their firat opportunities for
hunting thli itaion on Monday. The
seaion for bear, mountain iheep and
mountain goat opens September 1,
Harry Broverman's
Father Is Called
TRAIL, B.C.—Harry Broverman,
ace pitcher for the Trail Mercoi,
men'i ienlor softball ttam, hai received word from Winnipeg that his
father, Morrii Broverman, died at
that city Saturday.
Special Round Trip
VACATION FARES
To the Prairies - Sept 5, 0, 7
Return Farei From NELSON ... 30-Day Return Limit
Coach    ♦TourlifStantfifS
ToT
13.95
16.05
19.85
22.85
28.80
34.20
42.10
49.75
57.20
24.00
28.05
30.45
35.95
41.35
Tits. Regular Bsss-tfa Csssbtsjsm. Tsiiwississsl Tai Extra.
TIU1N-I AND 8TZAMBI8 OrBUT*C ON STANDARD TIMR
STOPOVER IN THE ROCKIES
Round oat yonr vacation witb a tew dayt in th*
mountains. Stoporen allowed at all polnta sin route.
Proportionately lower faret from Interior Pointa.
Children S yeart and under lt, Half far*.
Qm**U_litvS^
-NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON.  S. C-SATURDAY  MORNING. AUO. 30, 1941 —
Warfield Traffic
Infractions Cost
S Drivers Fines
TOAIL, B. C„ Aug, 29 - A tral.
fl» check-up la the warfjtlei "ilow
zone" by Constable D. C. Georgeson, of mt Provinciil Highway Patrol, and Conitable Lloyd Gray, ln
charge ot the Trail Provincial Police
Detachment, resulted In tive men
appearing before Stipendiary MagUtrite t. L. Hodge in Provincial
Pollct   Court   Ifldav   afternoon,
chirged with traffic infractions.
Oeorge H. Craig and Stanley O,
Price of Warfield, and Erneit A.
Mitchell of Ronland, pleaded guilty
to failing to itop at tht atop sign at
the junction of Monument Road
and the Schofield Highway. All
three were fined $5 and coiti.
Irving C. Trembath ot Trail tnd
Gordon T. Harper of Rotiland ware
fined $7.50 ana costi for exceeding
the 28 mllc-an-hour ipeed limit.
Harper pleaded guilty, explaining
that the car he wai driving, belonging to the Rosiland.Co-operative Traniportatlon fleet, had a
faulty speedometer, which he wu
checking at tht time. Magiitrate
Hodge conildered that Harper,
knowing the meter waa defective,
ahould nave taken greater precaution to make lure he was driving
under the minimum speed.
Trembath pleaded not guilty,
itating he was confident he hed
been travelling a normal rate of
ipeed, but both constables testified
that he was going at least 36 miles
an hour, Conitable Gray having
checked him with the ipeedometer
on the police car, and Constable
Georgeson giving his estimate of
Trembath'i speed on judgment based on his experience as a traffic
officer. Trembath drew a 37.50 fine
with costs.
Magistrate Hodge, in each case,
referred to the Improved accident
record in the Warfield Zone, reminding the offenden that lt was
necessary to have strict observance
of restrictions in order to prevent
any further serious accidents on
the flats.
NIGHT BASEBALL
WESTBRN INTERNATIONAL
Yakima 4, Vancouver 2.
Wenatchee 6, Spokane 4.
PACIFIC COAST
Portland 2, Seattle 1.
Sacramento 1, San Diego 7.
Thm Teachers SHU
Needed fer Vacancies
in District Schools
With the exception of three schools
tor which teachen are not yet available, all dlitrict ichooli in the Nelson area are prepared tor reopening Tuesday. Three teachers are still
needed. There hai been iome difficulty ln obtaining tetchen, but .all
vacanclei except theie three have
been filled, Tbe condition is described as "unusual."
Edgewood Beard,
Host to District,
Urges Monashee
Importance ot the Monashee route
trom the Interior to tht Okanagan
and the Coait and means whereby
the government could be preued to
develop lt formed the highlight of
discussions at a joint Board of Trade
meeting at Needles Thursday.
The I/jwer Arrow Lakei Board of
Trade was hoit to district Boards
and Vernon representatives. Originally a luncheon meeting at Whatshan Lakes was scheduled, but owing to weather conditions the meeting was transferred to the Needles
Community Hall.
J. B. McLeod of Edgewood, President of the Lower Arrow Lakes
Board, presided, and Henry Murton
of Edgewood served as Secretary of
the meeting,
J. N. McLerti of Edgewood, don-
sistent booster ot the Monashee
route, argued forefully for widespread district support.
Representing Nelson were W. G.
C. Lanskail, C. F. McHardy, B. C.
Poulsen, J. A. McDonald, P. E.
PouUn and Capt. P. Hartridge.
Among the visitors wai a former
Nelaon resident, Adolphe Browne,
now of Vernon. A. E. Jukes of Vancouver, at present making his headquarters at New Denver, wai also
a visitor.
Following luncheon the party
drove to Whatshan Lakei to iee
thii well known beauty spot and
fishing centre.
The majority of the Nelson men
stopped overnight at Nakusp, re-
turning to Nelson Friday.
Bright Program Assured for Annual
Regatta ot Kootenay Launch Club
-     .    Ill      ■■     Sill      «!■
inch 2nd
ROSSLAND, B. C„ Aug. **9-
Nalten Maplt Letfi ellnohtd no
ond plaot -In tht Wttt Kootenty
LaoroJie . League tonight It thty
administered an overtime 14-12
beating to tha lait-plaet Roultnd
Rtd mtn.
Tht gamt Mat hardly a comfortable one for tht tint, owing to
tht sold following itviral dayt *t
rain. Thli, together with tha fact
that play did ntd itart until 8:50.
prompted tht offlciili to run tht
gtnit through without any aliaw-
anott fgr time loit In faceoffi, eto,
In contrast with tht wtather, Bill
scuby in tha Nelson net wu really
hot all evening. Hit work wii ien-
rational throughout and during tht
tint two periodi, whtn the Redmen
stormed nil gotl repeatedly with
dangerous close-in shots, ht par-
mlttd only thrtt to illp by. Ht
stopptd 36 to 40,
FIVE NEWCOMERS
Five Ntlion men who wtrt ntw
to Ronland tans - Airth, Emery,
Andrew, Arrell and Hundan—accounted tor only one gotl betwttn
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
WILL THE PARTY WHO TOOK
tht pocket book trom the duk in
the Bank of Montretl Thursdiy
afternoon please return papen,
1»3« FORD DELUXE COACH, PM>
vate owner, two new tlrei ou
front wheeli, new battery, heater
perfect condition, price $600!60
R. Hewat, Kaslo, B. C.
TWO EXPERIENCED GIRLS DE
sire hotel work, chamber maids
or home work. Sleep out. Box
2437 Daily Newi. Give couple oi
dtyi to answer.
&SX#X&ZS&!S&SX>&XS2X$&!&
NEWS OFTHE DAY
MSWSSSSSSSSSSSSS-BSSSSSiSSSS-WWS*
Commodore L. F. Gilbert of the
Kootenay Launch Club reported
Friday that arrangements for the
annual regatta on the Nelson waterfront on the afternoon ot Labor Day
wore well in hand.
"Because of war conditions the
entry is down lomewhat thii year,
and the length ot the two bigger
racei hai been cut down five miles,
but we are anticipating a very intereitlng regatta," the Commodore
itated.
Ai usual the highlight of the
afternoon'i activities, which start at
2 o'clock, will be the Kootenay
Lake open race for the Nelson Ho-
telmen's Association Trophy, now
held by Gilbert'i Ladybird. To qualify for this race, a boat must have
Afternoon Teat, soft drlnki and full
eount dlnnen, nrvtd dtlly on tht
Verindt    Caft,    overlooking    tht
beteh tnd Koottnty Ltkt at
KOKANEE LODGE
North Short, IVi miles from ferry.
OUTLET HOTEL
CABINS. BOATING, FISHING
30 miles from Nelson.
vlt Hirrop Ferry
Kootenty'i   But   Flihlng  it
Twenty-Mlnutss Pt
PROCTER,   IC.
Ratu  rtatontblt
a speed of at least 40 miles an hour,
and so far the race Is assured of at
least three entries. They are the
defending champion, Ladybird, and
two of Nelson's new boats, West-
man Motion's Aquaduster and Henry
Stevenson's new craft.
PERHAPS SPOKANE
BOATS
Officials were not absolutely certain of the two Spokane boats coming, but there is a good chance itill
and word may be received today to
that effect. They are F. T. Lenji
and a rival in business, and they
will both be here with their boats
if they can break away from other
engagements.
The next event in point of spectator interest will be the 225 Hydroplane Division 2 class. Stevenson
also qualifies In this division, and
some of his competitors will be
Westman Motion in his Stardust,
and C. A. Cawley who has bought
Jack Annable's boat. The Dr. Wilfrid Laishley Trophy is at stake in
this event.
The open race will be over a 15-
mlle course, and the hydroplane
Dlv. 2 event will be 10 miles.
Other motorboat races will be
the Bang-and-go-back race for the
Plata Cafe Trophy, and an even',
for 35-mile-an-hour Inboard runabouts for the J. B. Gray Trophy.
Intenperaing the program with
comedy and acrobatics will be an
exhibition ot aquaplaning and water
skiing.
There is also a possibility of outboard races.
Guide for Travellers
••-
NELSON'S LEADING HOTELS
Hume Hotel Nelson, B.C.
GEORGE BENWELL, Proprlttor.
SAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM
European Plan, $1.50 Up
HUME—Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
Wilson, W. L. Hunter, Mr. and Mrs.
F. Brownt, J. F. Creba, Thomas B.
/Black, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. F,
•.Buckle.   Copper   Mountain;  W.  G.
Moll, PenUcton; Mr. and Mrs. E.
<Davis, J. E. Une, Victoria; F. R.
IPugh and family, Harrison, Idaho;
H. C. Francis and family, Calgary;
Miss Margartt M. Henderson, Cranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Mowat
Portland; Dr. Marjorie Heilroan and
family, Kathleen Corbett, Mri. h. C.
Corbett, Chriittbel Corbett, Francis
C. Corbett, Laura R. A, Jackion,
Spokane,
r
t
■•
\
NEW GRAND HOTEL
PHONE        MN   AND MRS PETER KAPAK.   Proi
*"    rooms   tn   tht  Inttrlor-Btth or Shower
SPECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH
PHONE
VANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS
"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME*
Duff erlu Hotel
tUt Seymour St.       Vancouver, B. C,
Newly renovated through
out. Phonti ind iltvtfor
A   PATTERSON   lltt ot
Colemin, Alu., Proprietor
PLAYMOR TONIGHT
Dancing 9 to 1.
Wtd.—Fresh milk cow in exchinge
tor icparator. Box 2276 Daily News
Fresh killed pork at the Market.
Becker Stall.
Goldfish and Suppliei
KOOTENAY FLOWluR SHOP
Junior baieball Sunday, 2:15 p.m.
Cranbrook vi. Nelion.
Rotiry Luncheon, Tuesdiy, Sept
2, 12:15 p.m, Hume Hottl.
Wanted—Early  Applet
McDONALD JAM COMPANY LTD
Get your  films also developing
done at VALENTINE'S.
TAG   DAY,   SAT,,   SEPT.   20
By Women'i Aux. to Active Foroti
8EE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING tnd DRAPERIES. 120
HIGH  STREET.
BILL RAMSAY - Photographer
New   location—662  Btktr  Strett.
Fllmi - Developing - Printing
Monday — Labor Day. Our mtits
are tender. No labor. Halliwell's
Fairway.
12 inch Millwood
$4 per load.
BURNS LUMBER Se COAL CO.
For best results try Underwood
Typewriter ribbons and carbon
paper. Phone 99. P. G. Planti.
Labor Day Dance at Salmo kty
Binning's Orchestra. Lucky Numbtr
Door Prize. Hot Dogs. Ladiei 2Jc.
Gents 75c. Salmo W. I. iponion.
We have teveral good buyi in rebuilt National Cash Registers. D. W.
McDerby, "The Typewriter Man",
654 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.
MIDNITE FROLIC
Sunday night at the New Playmor
beginning at 12 midnight
"   Standird Time.
NEW STUDENTS OF JUNIOR
HIGH SCHOOL
GRADES S and 9
art   requested  to   register  at   the
school any morning before Sept. 2nd
Prepare your youngster for
school with a lunch kit. Strong caies
with genuine half pint thermoi bottles, ilso extia half pint vacuum
bottles. Hlpperson Hardware Co.
FLASH
Come and enjoy younelf it Eagle
Hall Tonight, 9 till 1 P.D.S.T. 6 piece
orchestra. Adm.. ladiei 26c, gents
35c. Men In uniform free.
DANCE - TONITE - DANCE
Arrange your party and  follow
the crowd to Willow Point tonight.
Final Dance, so don't miss the fun.
Dancing till 1 p.m. Adm. 75c couple.
R. C. A. Victor, the ijrmbol of
quality for over 4Q years, itlll assures you of fhe finest In radio
ind radio-phonograph combinations.
See and hear these beautiful models at McKay it Stretton.
POULTRYMEN
Keep In touch'with changing egg
prices. Card pricei for ont yttr
commencing September lit, $1.60
Write to the Secretary, Kooteniy
Poultry Co-operttlvt Auoclation.
Robion, B. C.
EXTRA SPECIAL
Comt tnd finish tht holldiy right
hy ittending the Big Labor Diy
§tnct In Eagle Hill Mondiy night.
ood music. Admission, ladies 25c.
genu 50c. Mtn IA uniform tttt.
FUNERAL NOTICE
CAMPANA   -  Ptuid  iwiy  it
Trail-Tadanac Hoipital, Auguit 27.
Giovanni Battiita Campana In his
54th ytar. Requiem High Mau will
be celebrated tt St. Anthony of
Padua Church, Trail, Saturday, Auguit 30, at 9:30 a.m. Rev Father S.
Balo officiating. Interment in Mountain View Cemetery at 4 p.m. from
Italo-Canadese HaU. J
>   *■'     '"■'. ,",
them but ihowed heape' et defensive ability. Bill Towniend wit,i
five goali and two assists, and In:
DlngwtU with two goals and lix as-
lists, were high men for the Leafi
Ernie Carkner tnd Ray Scott
notched thrte nifty goala tach tor
tht-Redmen and Joe Ltface helped
himself te five assists at veil as
one goal,
In Uw overtime period tha Sad-
man want Into tha laad op a goal
from Joa Laface, loit it tgaln when
Bryant icored, and went iheid Once
mora on Slmm't tally. Tht lut five
minutei belonged entirely to the
Leafi ga thay ran In thi winning
counten trom tht Stlcki ot Kuhn,
Towniend and Bishop, with Ian
Dingwall assisting tach time. Kuhn
alto drew an assist on Townsend's
gotl.
Saprunoff In tha Ronland nat
provided support ln Urge quantities
particularly in the tecond and third
Suarter, whtn ht held tht Ltkt
lty crew to I single tally ln each
canto.
■OX ICORI
Ntliom OAPt. P
Souby, g *.... 0 0 0 0
Airth, d    112 6
Kuhn, d      12  3   2
Brytnt, d     2  2 4  0
Jonei, d —-~   0  110
Bishop, c ..,.-„   2  13  0
Emery, c      0 0 0  6
Towniend, r   8  2  7  2
Andrews, r  0 0 0 0
Price, w     10  10
Dingwall, w    2  6  8   0
Arrell, w      0 0  0  0
Hidden, w   0  110
Totali   14 16 30 16
Rosiland:
Saprunoff, g    0 0 0  0
Thatcher, d   0 0 0  0
Jim Laface, d    0  114
Matuccl, d     , 0 114
Carkner, d    8 0 3 0
Joe Laface, e ...........   16  6   0
Pagt, o       0  110
Ray Scott, r  111)
Mcaulrt, r     112  4
Jim Scott, w    112  4
Simm, w      _—  10 10
Jack Laface, w    112 0
Cox, w   10  10
Referee: Curly Wheatley. Judge
of Play: Len Wilson. Timekeeper-
George Nixon Jr. Scbrekeeper—
Harry Beaulleu.
Chanter 1$ Winner
Coast Exhibition
Two firsts, two secondi and a
third were carried off by F. H. W.
Chanter, Longbeach in vegetable,
flower and fruit competitioni at the
Canada Pacific Exhitloni, Vancouver,
He won firsts for Bartlett petn
and Rochester peaches; secondi for
Damion plums and pole beans; and
third for carnatloni.
Additional Kooteniy-Boundary
mineral prizei were:
Quicksilver ore: 1, Consolidated
Mining tc Smelting Co. of Canada
Ltd., PinChi Uke.
Manganese ore: 1, Curie Group,
Kaslo.
Zinc ore: 1, Zincton Mlnei Ltd.,
Zincton; 2, Lilly Mine, Silmo.
Trail Mercos Win
From Sasks, Trail
TRAIL, B.C., Aug. 28—The Trail
Mercoi advanced into the finals of
the Trail Mens Senior Softball playoffs, by defeating the Sasks 10-4 in
the second galhe at a best-of-three
semi-final scries at Victoria Park
Friday night. The Mercoi defeated
the Sasks 2-0 Monday.
The Mercoi itaged a icorlng spree
In the sixth inning netting them
•even runs, which placed them out
of reach of the Sasks, who brought
In all their runs ln the eighth inning.
They downed the Mercos in one-
two-three fashion' ln the eighth and
ninth inningi, but failed to brttk
awty from Brovermtn'i steady
pitching rtcord for any mort than
thtir original four counters.
Ktn Lawn hit tha tint homt run
of the season from Broverman, incidentally, the only homer of the
Same, driving ln Jule Biluky and
itorgt Williams. Ken Stanton stole
homt for the Sasks othtr run.
Oni Basso did the throwing for
the Sasks for the tint flvt lnningi,
registering three itrlkeouti as compared to Broverman's tight. Broverman went the route for the Mercos.
Lance Hudion took ovtr pitching
dutlei for the Sasks for the next two
Innings tnd Ken Lawn finiihed Ihe
eighth and ninth. Neither Hudion
nor Lawn did any fanning.
Scort by innings:
Mercoi    100 017 100-10
Siski        000 000 040- 4
Llneupi:
Mercos—Mush Anielmo c, Loull
Demon rt, Rico Martin si, Harry
Brovtrmtn p. Sllvtr Decembrlnl lb,
Ab Cronie 2b, Frank Pagnan 3b,
Toffolo cf, Nick Turik If.
Saiki—Ken Stanton 3b, Sim Saprunoff rt Juit Bilesky u, George
Wlllltm! If. Ken Lawn lb, Roy
Scheppert 2b, Brick Edmundi r,
Frank Pietrosky ef, Onl Bsslo p, B.
Waddell. rf, Lance Hudion p.
Umpirei-Al HaU, plate; WUh Mll-
burn, baits.
The next playoff game will be between the Acei and Cutlegar, on
Wedneidiy night, Sept. 3, In the
other halt ot the semi-final brackets.
Fraternity Goes
to Koolaree Today
About 40 boyi, mtmberi of the
Koolaree Fraternity, composed of
veterani of three campi, will gather
«t Cimp Koolaree. on the South
Shore of tht Wait Arm todty, for
tht lesson's finil camp which will
extend ovtr tht weekend, tnd will
WO tht camp clethed tip, the equipment stored, tnd the buildings made
mut for tht Winter.
Mrt. Evelvn Carlson, who will Oe
in ehtrgt ot tha cookhouse, wai to
ro out on thli morning's train, while
luppllu and equipment wtrt ilso
to bt delivered by the train end
Uken charge of by tht idvance
party
Most of the bon are expected to
go up in can to Seven-Mile, to be
ferried over to the camp from there
Fred Robins ot Trail will be in
command u Big Chief.
■
ONLY 2 DAYS REMAIN
OF OUR
AUGUST
SALE
EVERYTHING GREATLY REDUCED
Trade-ins Accepted
Fink's Furniture
West Kootenay Open Tennis Tourney
to Start at Tadanac Courts Today
TRAIL, B. C, Aug. 2»-The Tadanac tennis courts will be the centre
of interest for ill district tennii
enthuilatti Labor Diy wtekend
when the West Kootenay Open
Tennii tourney climaxes a buiy
season.
Entries to the tourney were officially closed Friday night, with
entriei classified at follows: men'i
singlet, 21: mixed doubles, 14; ladlei1 sin-les, 11; mtn'i doubles. 11;
ltdlu' doublu, J; ind two tntrlei
in tht veterani doubles men 45 yean
and over class, miking a total of
77 eptrlu.
Entries represent Trail, Tadanac,
Rouland, Naiaon, Procter, Willow
Point, and Spokane and Prosper,
Wash. From tha litter city rtftirn
the two Knox brothers, Clinton and
Clyde,, twini, who turned, out a
brand of tennii that brought keen
competition lait year. Clinton capturing thi men'i singles event liter
a gruelling final match against his
brother Clyde. Mlu Beverley Webtr
of Spokane li alao entering again.
Tha tourney starts at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday ifternoon with the mixed
doublu clau opening the events.
Fintls will bt played off Monday,
the only known finals at present
slated are in the veterans doubles
class, with D. K. MacAjliter, of
Rossland, and Herbert Oxley, ot
Trail, teamed against Jack Wett of
Trail and J. A. Stewart of Nelion.
A split ln the two finals men's
doublet teams of laat year, Ed
Woollner and Bob Moran, of Spokine and Joe MfDonell and Jack
Neal of Rowland, Is alao noUced In
the entrlei, Moran.and Neal being
the two mining playeri. Woillner
and Moran defeated McDonell and
Ne:' In thli event list year. Thli
y»ar, Woellner la teaming with
Frank Gaylond, ot Spokane, and
McDonell his entered with George
Murray of Tadanac.
OPININ QDRAWS
Draws tor tha 1:30 and 3 o'clock
eventi on Saturday havt been made.
The other draws will be arranged
ai the tournament progresses.
1:30 p.m,—
Mixta doublu — B. Shannon and
Miss B. Diamond. Tadanac, vs. W.
O. Williams, Trail ind Miss L. McDonell, Rouland; B. woellner and
Mlu B. Weber, Spokane, vs. C. L.
Knowlei and Mn. W. Brown, Trail;
E. Haley and Mrs. J. D. Hartley,
Trail, vs. J. H. Salter and Mlu K.
Blngay, Tadanac
3 pJn.—
Mixed doublei - Mr. and Mrs.
Geoffrey Birwlsi, Willbw Point,
vi, S. M. Rothman, Tadanac, and
Miss M. Casey, Spokane: G. Dunbar, Vanoouver and Mn. G. Sims-
son, Nelson, vs. Mr. and Mn. A. M.
Chesser, Tidanac; Ned Rhodes and
Mlu J. Evans, Trail, vs. Mr. ind
Mn. 0. L. Murray, Tadanac; J. A.
Stewart. Nelton, and Mn. A. Mowbray, Rossland, vs. S. E. Angui,
Trail, and Miu K. Coffman, Spokane.
Men'i linglei — F. Gaylord, Spokane, vt^^wmtrntATnO.
Scout Leaden to
Do Glacier Hike
TRAIL, B.C., Aug. 28—A party of
Trail Scout leaders, Including Scout
Commiuioner E. R. Humphriu. J.
D. Southworth, Lance Whittacker,
Gordon LeBreton, Melcolm Hodgion, Regintld Flnlow. tnd Don Wilion, ire itarting out Saturday on a
weekend hike to the Kakanee Glacier.
40 Students Write
Their Supplemental
Exams, Nelson High
Supplemental examinations tor
High School itudenti ln the dlitrict
contiguous to Nelson were completed Friday at Nelion High School.
Theie were examinationi for itu-
-lents who failed In one or two lubjecti In June and who wera given
thli opportunity to complete their
standing. About 40 itudenti wrote
F. A Jewett, School Inipector, bad
charge.
BUY AND SAYI   '
At Our Auguit Sail
HOME FURNITURE
413 Hall St. Phona 103J
Fleury's Pharmacy
rreicriptioni
Compounded
Accurately
PHONI25
Med Arti Blk.
Phone 327
WELL!  VISIT
Haigh  Iru-Art
Beauty Salon
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Sulfa 205
Medical Arte Building
FOR RENT
Light Houtekkeeping Roomt
Annable Block
R. W. Dawson
Do Vou Need Another BASE PLUO
in your Living Room. Kitchen, ate.?
Than CaU
F. H. SMITH
Electrical Contractor
Phont ttt 381 Bikir tt
TORONTO, Aug. 28 (CP).-Con-
nlt Mick's Philadelphia Athletici
noted out Toronto Maplt Leafs,
tall-enden of the International
League, 4-3 in an exhibition game
here today.
3%&X.*r
CANTALOUP
ICE   CREAM
1930 NASH Small Six
4-Door Sedan
A holiday ipeclal tn _____
A-l shape. ... ▼"•M
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Hume Hotel and Poit Offlct
foAMf
WHITE
26 Vi Oi.
$4.10
-XSST SCOTCH WHISKY
SINCE 174E
IN SCOTLAND
Thla advert isement ia not published or displayed by ihe Liquor
Control Bowd or by the Government of British Columbie.
 	
	
tola's Great
Air Reserve a
Point In Favor
By DEVON FRANCIS
NBW YORK, Aug. 29 (KP). -
Alter more than two months of
warfare it is becoming evident,
military sources said today, that
Russia's air force not only retains
lta itrlking power but also is likely
to remain a major worry to Uie invading Germans throughout the
Winter.
In preparations for the campaign
the Germans withdrew a large part
of their air forcei in the Weil to
the Eutern frontier.
But in spite of that concentration
the Russians continue to strike regularly from the air both at German
columns and behind the German
lines as well.
The Russian raid on the East
Prussian city of Konigsberg .yesterday is a case in point. At the same
time Russian planes claimed to have
sunk two German transports in the
Baltic.
Significance is attached to failure of the Germans to continue
their lir attacks on Moscow. Leningrad, threatened for weeks, hu put
up a successful resistance with the
help of the Red Air Force.
Contributing to the Russian air
itrength is the fact the High Command has had no worry over replacement of personnel lost in combat. No evidence hu appeared that
iuch replacements will be a problem in the months to come.
Hie flier-reservoir of the Red Air
Force comes from the Osoviakhim
Society, a civilian defence group
numbering between 15,000,000 and
18.000,000 persons.
Several millions in the Society
membership know the rudiments
of flying, and several hundred thouiand at least have been taught military flying.
Axis Calls Quits on
Plan Take Tobruk
LONDON, Aug. 29. (CP)-Axis
forces in Libya, abandoning hope of
taking Tobruk, have constructed a
by-pass around the city to move
lupplies to troops, according to a
dispatch in the Daily Mail from its
correspondent in the Western Desert.
"The new highway is well de-
ligned and constructed," the dispatch said. "It is meant to be permanent—the Germans and Italians
have given up hope of taking Tobruk by assault.
"It must be the heaviest guarded
40 miles of road in the world. It
is separated from Tobruk's perimeter by minefields, barbed wire,
booby trips, tank ditches, machine-
gun nests and anti-tank posts. Along
it ire Uie best part of three divi-
lions."
CONVOY DAMAGED
CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 29 (AP) -
Aircrift of the fleet tir trm tttacked an Axil convoy of four merch-
antmen tnd tour destroyers in the
Mediterranean Wednesday night
causing a series of explosions and
a fire on one, it wai announced today.
Royal Air Force bomberi yeiterday hit two Axil vessels in the central Mediterranean, a communique
announced. One ship began to smoke
and was down by the stern while
bombi pierced the decks of Uit
other.
The acUons at wa were included in account of bombings of German and Italian positions at Bardla, Horns and Bengasi Wednesday
night and Thursday.
Officers Graduate
BROCKVILLE, Ont, Aug. 29 (CP)
—The first class of new officers
for the Canadian Army to be trained in the* recenUy established officers' training centre here graduated today, receiving certificates of
?|ualification for commissioned rank
rom Defence Minister Ralston.
As is the case in graduation of
airmen from schools in Uie British
commonwealth air training plant
authorities placed a ban on mentioning the number of graduates from
Uie officers' training centre.
But when the system ii in full
operation between 4000 and 6000
new officers will be trained each
year.
They may be either non-commissioned officers and men who have
shown merit in an active service
unit, or they can be chosen from
the ranks of the training centres,
The third group in attendance at
the officer? training centres are
reserve army Junior officers, members of Canadian officers training
corps or non commissioned officers of reserve units ofotaining'active
service qualification.
Duisburg, Ostend
R.A.F. Targets
LONDON, Aug. 29 (CP)-Royal
Air Force bombers roared over the
German industrial city of Duisburg
last night and the huge bombs they
d.opped started "very large fires
and caused explosions, the Air Ministry said today.
The Air Ministry described the
Duliburg raid as heavy and successful. Dock sat Ostend, Belgium,
were atacked by a smaller force
of bombers and teveral other targets in Weitern Germany and occupied territory also were blasted.
Nine British planes were lost.
Naii sources in Berlin admitted
that Britiih bombers caused damage
in attacki on Western Germany luring the night.
Canadian Navy Ships Serve Around
Britain; No Better Troops Than
Canadians Says Minister on Return
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP).-Ca-
nadian Naval Units are on constant
duty in the waters about the British
Isles ind the Britiih Admiralty is
"very appreciative of their assistance," Navy Miniiter Macdonald
told The Canadian Press on his
arrival home from Britain today.
Mr. Macdonald flew hy bomber
to Britain nearly a month ago and
returned by clipper by way of
Lisbon and New York, arriving here
by train this morning.
He paid high tribute to the Canadian troops overseas, with whom
he spent some Ume, conferring with
Lt.-Gen. McNaughton, Corpt Commander, and watching men at ip**
noeuvrei.
NO BETTED TRQOP8
There are no better troopi in
England than the Canadians," Mr.
Macdonald said. "That is generously
admitted by all who are in a position to know."
One result of the Minister's vliit
will be the dispatch to Canada ot
a party of skilled British ihipyardi
Dominion'! program for construction
Dominion's prgram for conitruction
of Tribal class deitroyen.
SAND
and
GRAVEL
For All Building
Purposes
PHONE 701
Fairview
Fuel Co.
Satisfaction
It Aiiured With
Correct lelection ot fixtures.
Correct selection  of icceuories.
Correct lelection of materials
Correct method of installation by
men skilled In their lint of work.
Place    your     requirements
with us and we assure you
ultimate  satisfaction.
Phone 666
Kootcnoy  Plumbing
& Henting Co., Ltd.
S57 Baktr Bt
On hit viiit to England Mr. Macdonald was accompanied bv Rear
Admiral Percy Nellei, Chief of the
Naval SUff, and Captain T. L.
Houghton, Directors of Plans and
Operations at Naval Headquarters.
"We went to England mainly to
confer with the British Admiralty,"
the Minister said, "and to exchange
information which would be helpful to both the Royal and Canadian
Navies.
"We had interviews with Rt. Hon.
A. V. Alexander, First Lord of the
Admiralty and other Admiralty of
ficers. They were all very help
ful.
"We discussed particularly the
problem of obtaining skilled destroyer construction men for our
program here and I think we made
■good progress. We will get some
men at once."
Mr. Macdonald had an audience
with the King and conferred with
Prime Minister Churchill. He also
visited a naval training ichool
where many Canadian young men
are being instructed as officers..
"They were in excellent shape
and making good names for themselves in competition with men from
every part of the Empire including
the Britiih Isles," he said.
The Navy Minister was flown to
England by Capt. Stalfoi"d and his
ferry crew, the same captain and
crew who were lost when their
plane crashed on a return flight
take-off, killing all 22 men on board
including Rt. Hon. Arthur Purvii,
head of the British Purchasing Commission in Waihington.
A few days before that fatality
Mr. Macdonald had spent an evening with Mr. Purvis and Mr. Alexander at the home of Lord Beaverbrook.
The Minister's return journey occupied a week, in marked contrast
to his swift outward trip by bomber.
He flew to Lisbon where he had
to wait several days for a seat ln
the clipper ship which brought him
to New York.
Hi^HMHH^H^HiH^HM^M^H
-NEI80N DAILY NEWS   NEl SON   B  fl.-SATURDAY MORNINO   AUO   SO   1M1--
tB&_   I
Conchies Doing
a Great Job In
By FRANK FLAHERTY
OTTAWA. Aug. 2S (CP).-HBome
900 young men of military age Who
&rofess conscientious objection to
saring arms now are at work in
remote wooded areas, clearing trails
and building roads.
After a few months experience
with the alternative service plan
for conscientious objectors, authorities are impressed with the willingness of the men to work and
their amenability to camp lite.
"Once we get them into' the camps
they are swell," said Mr. Justice T.
C. Davis, Associate Deputy Minister
of National War Serylces. "They
work like trojans. They are doing
a great job."
Getting them td camp, however,
la not so easy. Some fail to show
up wben ordered to report, their
names are given to police who arrest them, bring than before the
courts and usually secure convictions and jail sentence!.
IN NATIONAL PARKS
The objectors in the main are
members of the Mennonite, Doukhobor, and Seventh Day Adventist
groups,
The Doukhobor group hu a work
camp of its own at Lac La Rouge
some 200 miles North of Prince Albert, Sask. Tbe men are engaged in
extending for another 50 miles the
road which now runs 150 miles
North from Prince Albert, to give
access to a rich mineral area and
a Bcenic paradise.
The other alternative service
camps are in the national parks.
There are 200 men in Prince Albert Park, 290 in Riding Mountain,
150 in Jasper, and 135 in Banff.
The men got 50 cents a day and
their food and lodging. They must
provide their own clothes and toilet
articles. They live mostly in large
canvas tents but if they remain at
work throughout the Winter will
be moved into logs huts.
A day in the life of a conscientious
objector conscripted for labor service is much the same as that of a
soldier in training. He must be up
at a regular time and make his bed
before breakfast He must be at
work at 8 a.m., gets an hour for
dinner at noon and works until supper time, about 5:30 p.m.
The men have their evenings to
themselves but may not leave camp
without permission. They must be
in bed at 10:30 p.m.
MACKENZIE KING
SPENDS BUSY DAY
ON STATE PAPERS
LONDON, Aug. 29 (CP Cable)-
Prime Minister Mackenzie King returned to London today, refreshed
after a night spent at a famous estate which forms the headquarters
of Lt.-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton,
commander of the Canadian Corps.
The Prime Minister planned to devote the day to working In his hotel
suite on state papers and correspondence. He also will have the opportunity of bringing himself up to
date on international events by
reading British communications normally sent to him in Ottawa hut
now delivered here.
Mr. King will spend the weekend
in the country but the Identity of
his host was not disclosed.
Fadden Calls
Cabinet Meets;
Praise Menzies
CANBERRA, Aug. 29 (AP).-One
of the first acts of the new Prime
Minister, Arthur W. Fsdden, was to
summon meetings ot the War Cabinet for next Tuesday, the Advisory
War Council Wednesday and the
full Cabinet on Friday.
It is expected Mr. Fadden will
carry on with the present Ministry
until after the budget debate, leaving Mr. Menziei, who resigned yesterday as Prime Minister, as Minister of Defence Co-ordination. If
the Government survives the budget
debate a reconstruction of the Ministry will be effected.
All lections of the press and the
public paid tribute to the "dignified,
generous, public spirited action of
Mr. Menzies in resigning in order
to achieve political stability and
party cooperation.
Mr. Fadden was concerned today
about sending a Minister to London
but said at present the Government
will -not do more than enter into
negotiations with Prime Minister
Churchill on the point whether such
a Minister would be received by
the British War Cabinet. He said
no minister would be nominated
until the negotiitioni were com
pleted.
Made from quality fine count broadcloth in a choice
selection of colors and patterns. Sizes 6 to 16 years.
Selling at
79cand$L00
Boys' Pyjamas
Mothers! Your boy's health depends a lot on sound
sleep. Buy him a pair of these soft stripe Yama
cloth pyjamas. Lapel collar style trousers have draw
string at waist. Sizes 6 to 16. Selling at ..
=$1.49
Boys' Mighty
Champ Pants
Made from sturdy hard wearing mole. A pant that will
give service for school and play. Colors of grey and
brown stripes.. Sizes 6 to 8. (1 QC
Priced at -JJ.aW
 $2.50
Sizes 10 to 18.
Priced at 	
.Sjport Jackets
Large check patterns in soft blending
shades. Wear them for school or business.
Sizes 14 to 20. Each
$4-95
New Fall Hats
In sporty styles. Fashion favorite for early
Fall. Small and large brim styles, jaunty
feather trims. Black, brown, timber green,
Airway blue and rust. (M AT
Each -J1..JJ
$ 1.95
Skirts
An excellent skirt for back-to-school
wear. Flared styles in shades of rust,
fuscia, navy and red. Sizes 12 to 20. Ea.
$L89
Chiffon Hose
High School Girls! Here's that favorite
again. Pure silk crepe hose in Fall's
smartest shades. Perfect fitting in mock
fashioned seams and fashion marks.
Sizes 8V2 to 10'/2	
Student Collars
School Oxfords
Comfortable fitting quality Oxfords for
dress or school wear. Black leather with
bend leather soles and rubber heels.
Sizes 1 to BH
$2.98
Sizes   11   to   ISH.
$1.98
Children's
School Shoes
Popular 'Hewetson Brand' shoes that give
long wear and comfort to growing feet.
Made on lasts that fit and look well.
Black or brown calf oxfords and patent
straps. B and D widths.
Sizes 11-1 Sizes 8-10'A Sizes6-7'A
$2.98   $2.50   $2.25
Out and out charmers, this graceful selection of new
crisp neckwear.  Sheer, organdie combined with  lace,
embroidered frills and pique. In host of styles.
Price 	
49c
l}nlfi)*<fil>*t (&Mf*n*
WCORPOBATSft  VI* MAV l«70.
j
m
FIRST SNOW, KECO RIVER
roMONTON, All*. 29 (CP) -
First snow ot the season fell at
Kego River about 350 miles Northwest of Edmonton overnight, and
was still fallin early today. At
other pointi in Northern Alberta
temperatures; were near freezing
and Peace River towns report heavy
fog and rain in many sectors.
NAZIS KEEP FOOD FROM MANY HUNGRY
MOUTHS BY FAILING MAKE AGREEMENT
What will the Winter bring to
Europe? Betty Sargeant telli why
the Red Crosi li fearful of epidemici and what it.li doing about
It
By  BETTY BARGEANT
GENEVA, Aug. 29 CAP) -
Fearing famine and epidemic will
come to war ravaged Europe, the
international Red Cross is preparing for the worst.
Although Europe has been surprisingly free from epidemics in
two years of warfare—despite the
exposure of civilian masses to
rigorous conditions of life, despite bombings and mass migration
—officials express fear for the
coming Winter and Spring.
Two agencies at international Red
Crou headquarters are jointly creating a stock of anti-epidemic serums, to be kept ready In customs-
free <3«neva depots and sent anywhere in Europe where an epi.
demic may break out.
"uropean stocks are dwindling
gradually and there are fewer ana
fewer countries where food can be
bought by Red Cross money.
Portugal and Turkey remain Ihe
only real markets and large-scale
transport problems impede food
movements from those countriei to
most of the occupied countries of
Europe.
Getting overseas foodstuffs is another headache because of the British blockade. Latin American Red
Cross societies have long been willing to send quantities of wheat, canned meats and other foods to Europe's occupied areas provided the
Red Cross could get British navicerts.
British authorities agreed to grant
navicerts If the Red Cross could get
a double edged guarantee from the
German Government.
The first condition was that all
foodstuffs and other necessities sent
for distribution to needy women,
Children, and the tick in areas under German occupation or control
would reach these people and no
one else. Thli condition wai agreed
to by the Germani.
The second condition, however,
wai not agreed to by the Germans.
This wai that the German authorities muit guarantee not to take out
from the countrj ln question local
supplies equivalent to the amounts
sent in by the Red Cross.
Until th German Government
can give such an assurance, the British authorities say tbey will give
no navicerts, and Latin American
gifts still are waiting shipment on
the other side of the ocean.
Turkey Prepares
for Emergencies
By PRESTON GROVER
ANKARA, Aug. 28 - (Delayed) -
(AP). — Turkey stepped up her
emergency preparedness today.
The general administering martial law in Istanbul, European Turkey and the sector surrounding the
strategic Dardanelles Straits issued
a communique stating it is "considered necessary" that beginning
Sept. 5 all male citizens must at
all times carry a birth certificate or
other positive identification.
After Sept. S, it was decreed, all
men will be subject at any time to
identification. This measure apparently is designed to guard
against sabotage or Fifth Column
activity.
The veteran Nazi diplomat, Ambassador Franz von Papen, today
revised plans to quit Ankara for
Istanbul and instead called on President Ismet Inonu to let him feel
once more the weight of German
influence. The call was made after
the British Ambassador, Sir Hughe
Knatchbull-Hugessen' had just outlined recent accomplishments of
the British war effort.
The official reason made public
for the von Papen call was that the
Nazi had desired to present Inonu
with a small copy of a Turkish museum piece made by a German.
Sir Hughe, when he called on the
President was reported to have been
armed with an impressive array of
figures on British aerial operations
over Western Germany, on reduction of ship losses and on the increase of supplies from the United
States.
The possibility is recognized by
Turks that the Russian campaign
may compel Germany to confront
them with demands to use her waters or for passage through the
Dardanelles to make easier the supplying of German armies which
may be deep in the Caucasus.
THREE MONTH8 FOR
FAILING TO REPORT
REGINA, Aug. 20 (CP)—Stillest
penalty yet imposed in Saskatchewan for Infraction of the National
Resources Mobilization Act was given Peter Fehr of McMahon, Saik.,
for falling to report lor compulsory
military training May 20, war aervices officials said today.
Fehr, who police reported to have
shown a defiant attitude, was sentenced this rfeek at Wymark by
Police Magistrate G. C. Thompson of
Swift Current to three months hard
labor in Regina jail without option
of line.
CHINESE PROTEST
FRENCH VIOLATION
CHUNGKING, China, Aug. 29
(AP).—The Chinese Foreign Office
protested today to the Vichy French
Embassy against an alleged violation ol the Chineie .border by
French troops in Indo-China and
demanded guarantees against a repetition of the incident,    '
The protest charged that more
than 100 French soldiers had crossed
the frontier August 4 and attacked
Shangyi, killing and wounding a
number of Chinese peasants, destroying farm housei and ripping up
a highway.
UNLIKELY NAZIS
WOULD ESTABLISH
ISLAND CONSULATES
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP). - A
Lyons radio report quoting a Nazi
announcement that a German Consulate would be established at Sti
Pierre and Mlquelon was described officially here today as
unworthy of serious consideration.
INVESTIGATE DEATH
VANCOUVER, Aug. 29 (CP).-
Vancouver police are Investigating
the death of Bill Grant, 45-year-old
Musqueam Reserve Indian, whose
body was found floating in Burrard
Inlet here today.
31 British Planes,
Two Ships Destroyed,
Nazi Communique
BERLIN, Aug. 20 (AP)- The high
command today claimed the Royal
Air Force lost 31 planes—17 ol them
bombers—in asiaults yesterday on
the Netherlands coast and German
held channel regions. /
It said German fighters and antiaircraft batteries shot down 23 British planes, naval artillery seven and
one pursuit plane was downed by
Infantry.
Two British merchantmen, one ol
them a tanker, were sunk by German aircralt ott the British Weit
coast of Pembroke, the Communique claimed.
Slight damage waa done in raids
on Western Germany, it was said.
R A.F. Thursday losses, day and
nifjht combined, were 21, the Air
Ministry announced.
FOUR-FIFTHS WORLD'S
PEOPLE ARE AT WAR
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (AP) -
On the eve of the second anniversary of Germany's invasion ol Poland the -National Geographic Society noted today that 1,100,000,000
people —lour fifths of the world'i
population—now are at war.
NEUTRAL WORKER IN NAZI SHIPYARDS
FORESEES SUDDEN FAL- OF GERMANY
LONDON, Aug. 29- (CP)—An eyewitness account ol the Royal Air
Force bombing ol Hamburg, told by
a neutral conscripted by the Germans lor war work in that city'i
shipyards, has been iisued by the
Ministry of Information. Ill health
enabled the workman to get permission to leave Germany.
The neutral, who formerly lived
in Hamburg, was ordered back there
from Belgium.
"There I worked and was bombed for Hitler until a few weeks ago,"
he said* "I took the oath that every
German worker has to take to serve
Adolf HiUer:
"Th* army ol Hitler'i war worker! includes a large percentage est
foreigners. We were given the most
dangerous tasks, such as fire-fighting in tbe shipyards and factorial.
So I can give first-hand fact* ol
the R.AT. raidi.
"I have heard thoie new, powerful Britiih bombs explode in the
shipyardi ol Hamburg. Few people
are allowed to aee the worst ofthe
havoc, but the nature ol my work
qualified me lor a ipecial pass that
t-mk me into all four ot the big
yards.
DAMAGE TERRIFIC
"Bombed areas are ringed tor a
radius ol 900 yards; the official communiques grossly understate the
damage and casualties but I can uy
that the damage has been terrific.
'Terror ia one of the methods used
by the Gestapo in Hamburg shipyards. One of my colleagues was
sent to prison lor two yean. HU ol-
fence waa to observe aloud that
Britain had a bigger navy when a
fellow worker was praising the Tirpitz, sister ship of the Bismarck,
which now is being fitted out. He
was overheard by an S. S. Guard,
arrested and sent to prison lor
treason.
'•There are usually about 90,000
seamen waiting lor Ships in Hamburg. There is alwayi a rush when
crews are wanted lor tbe Baltic
coasting trade but when handa are
wanted lor ships going into tbe
North Sea to tbe ports ot occupied
countriei the seamen lind various
means ol keeping out ol the way.
"In the final stages ol my stay ln
Germany I saw ilgns ot tbe weakness of the Nazi war effort.
"The fall ol Nazllim will oome
without shadow ot doubt, and I believe that when Germany cracks
she will crack suddenly. But nothing but unremitting effort will be
sufficient to meet Hitler's maximum
onslaught in the next lew monthi.'
FINNS SH SOVIETS
LEAVING TALLINN
HELSINKI, Aug. 29 (AP).-Fin-
nish fliers claimed today they had
seen many dozens of Russian warships and transports leaving Tallinn and heading Eastward last
night. Germany claimed the capture
of that Estonian capital today.
Heavy gunfire and other explosions have been heard In Helsinki,
50 miles North ol Tallinn across the
Gulf of Finland, and It was believed
a violent naval or naval-air battle
wai taking place in the Gulf.
Artillery lire on land also is believed to have contributed to tbe
din.
REGULAR CAS SALES
MADE ON LABOR DAY
TORONTO, Aug. 29 (CP)-J. L.
Stewart, Deputy Oil Controller said
today that tne regular hours of sale
will be observed by gasoline lervice sUtions on Labor Day, Monday
Sept. 1. He added there are no special restrictions regarding holiday
sale. Regulations call for aervice
stations to close from 7 p.m. to 7
a.m. on weekdays and au day on
Sunday.
Kent Inspects
Wireless School
MONTREAL, Aug. 20 (CP) - A
smart turnout—bristling bayonets, a
lively band and a oolorful crowd-
greeted the Duke of Kent today at
the No. 1. Wireless School here as
he continued his tour of Britiah
Commonwealth air training establishments.
His Royal Highness began a busy
day with a viiit to the Royal Air
Force Ferry Command and then
drove through crowd-lined streets
to the wirelesi ichool. Classes continued during tbe ducal tour and
Hii Royal Highneu was able to see
the varloui stages ol development
of a wireless operator.
At the R.A.F. Ferry Command the
Duke was met by Air Chief Marshal
Sir Frederick W. Bowhill, head ot
the service, and officials of the British Ministry of Aircralt Production.
Ths
Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Company of Canada, Limited
Manutaeturars oi
Producen and Refiners ot
Elephant      Tadanac
Brand
Chemicals and
Chemical Fertilizers
Ammonium Phosphata
Sulphate ot Ammonia
Superphosphates
Menoealelum Phoaphate
Brand
Metals
LEAD-ZINO
GOLD-SILVER
CADMIUM-BISMUTH
ANTIMONY
MERCURY
Aho Sulphurla Add snd Sulphur
General Office and Works, Trail, B. C.
Fertiliser  Salei—Marin*  Bldg.,  Vancouver,   B.  C
Metal and Fertiliser Sales—215 St. |amei St., Montreal
trntt   ...2.1...
	
 ——
""
»A0I FOUR     .. 	
Mrs. Kennedy to
Head Army Corps
OTTAWA,  Aug.   39   (CP)/-De-
fence Headquarten announced to-
lay Mrs, Norman Kennedy ol Victoria has been appointed Canadian Women's Army Corps stall
officer tor Military District No
U (Victoria). Mrs. Kennedy, for-
merly Commandant of tbe British
Columbia Women's Service Corps,
first women's voluntary corps to
organize in Canada, is also the first
officer to receive an appointment
in the C. W. A. C.
Following the visit ol Matron
Elizabeth Smellie, officer administering tbe corps, to M. D. 11 bead-
quarters at victoria, lt Is learned
" initial requirements lor that diitrict are lor about 80 volunteen
who will terve chiefly as clerks,
stenographers,  telephone operators
k and transport driven.
i It is expected to hava a platoon
at Esquimalt; a detachment at Victoria, and a platoon at headquarters for Vancouver defences. Living
quarters for the tint groups to go
into service at the Pacific Coast
' -(trill be arranged trom District
Headquarten.
-NELSON DAILY NIWI  NILtON  B. C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO  AUO. 90
Welcome New
Past orr Creston
CRESTON, B.C. — Members and
adherents of Trinity United Church,
Creaton, and of the associate congregations at Wynndel and Canyon,
were out in large numbers to tender
■■ -tl. enthusiastic welcome to their
new pastor, Rev. Austin A. Fulton,
Mrs, Fulton and three children. The,
at home was held in the Church
! hall. WiUiam J. Truscott wai In
eharge of proceedings.
Community tinging was promin
•nt in the evenlng'i program, along
'    died by'- '
Scott, in which the men in the
with a variety quiz handled by W, J.
audience outscored tbe ladles 25 to
81. The Biblical contest was won
By Mn. A. 0. Howard. There wai a
■ vocal duet by Mrs. W. S. Cameron
and Miss Edith Cook, with Bob Weir
at the piano,
Supper was served by tha ladlei
Under the sponsorship ofthe Church
board ol management at which Mr.
nder the iponionhip ol the Church
oard of management at which Mr
. Truscott, on behalf ot the congta
8?"
tion, in happy fashion welcomed
itor
NEGRO CONFESSES TO
SLAYING SEVEN WOMEN
WASHINGTON, Aug. 39 (AP)-
Clalmlng sn amazing series of confession! from a one-time undertaker's assistant, police ihnounced today solution ol two crimes that
mm v. svc.sj, acting Supcrin-
at of police. s»ld the span —
shocked tha capltal-the rape
'   [i of a government ittiwgra
_ Iward 3,
tendent of r
Jarvis ROosevelVOatOe-a Sj-'year-
o' negro, hkd confessed not only
in these two esses, but in a series
ol tive other sex homicides both
here and In New York. Three ot
the victims were white, four negroes.
Beware Faddists... ,
Tasty Food Is
"Good lor You"
By IDA JEAN KAIN
Dietitians and nutritionists have
been accused of lacing in tight,
unbending stays and taken the fun
out ol eatingl Paul V. McNutt, in
hii opening address belore the Nutrition Conlerence, complained that
something Irequently happens to
good food when its selection is distilled through the coUs ol an e*-..
pert And that lood loses its gas-
tronomic gusto. Those were his
words.
This stalwart Hoosler claims that
in bis state they've gotten their
vitamins tot years, all that could
possibly be strung together, before
they ever knew one by its first
initial, but that the meals also contained an extra vitamin, one that
could not be tound in the laboratory
—the psychological vitamin ol human satisfaction. He termed it Vitamin 2 — Ior zeit, no doubt.
Well, hold on a minute, governor.
You've got something in the idea
that every meal ahould have that
all important Vitamin Z. And we
know that Indiana food has what
it takei. But whatever gave you the
idea that nutritionists didn't go In
for good eats? Did you ever sit down
to a meal served up to us when wa
lot together? I thought not. A num-
TV "   "
got top
er of
nutritionists had dinner the
other night at the country home of
a member who has a string ol degrees alter her name, and this is
new pastor and his wile and
family to the work here, and assured ol wholehearted support in all
branches ol the denominational
work. Mr. Fulton replied.
tember 10-17
Proclaimed Week
of Reconsecration
■ OTTAWA, Aug. 38 (CP) - The
JDWclamation setting the week ot
SepL 10 to Sept. 17 aside ss one ol
"reconsecration ol our lives" to the
Empires war cause was contained in
as extra edition of the Canada
Gazette issued today.
Reconsecration week, the proclamation says, is to be "observed
I throughout our Dominion ol Canada
in national honor lor those who on
. land, sea, and in the air are the de-
iffinders ol our country, and in proud
) memory lor those valient hearts
who have gone out from among ui in
the molt precious ot all sacrifices
for our common freedom;
"And know ye further that we do
also hereby ordain and declare this
week as one ol reconsecration of
our lives and pouenloni, of everything we have and everything we
are, lor the principles which under
divine providence, have been our
stay and help ln the past to tbe end
that torment may be lifted trom
men's hearts and peaoe and safety
eome for all nations and peoples."
. Airmen Entertained
by N. Denver Aux.
MEW DENVER, B. C. — The Wo-
Cm's Auxiliary to the Canadian
gion entertained at a dinner in
tha Legion Hall in honor of visiting overseas airmen.
In the evening the Young People
entertained them at a public dance
in the Bosun Hall.
Tha viiiton included Lac. J. B.
Colei and Lac W. A. Pryce Jonei;
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Grier:
Cpl. Dennis Jones and Lac. Ronald
west, guesti of Mr. and Mri. H.
Ounn. and Lac. G. W. Rowe, the
guest of Dr. and Mn. A. Francis,
what we ate: golden brown chicken,
tlully hot biaculti and «revy. corn
on the cob, a tossed green salad with
anappy cheese, iced tea and honeydew melon. You cant do better than
Oat in Indiana.
And'it isn't a case ol do as I say,
not aa I do. Every nutrltioniit worth
her salt makes it her business to
plan meals replete in the Vitamin
Z that makes for rounded gastronomic aatislaction. We believe lood
should be so good the lamily will
wantlp eat lor the pure Joy ol eat
ing
who
.. U not the nutritionists
have taken the tun out ot eating.
But Tm afraid a lot ol people have
the idea that nutrition meani something that ia "good lor you," but
not too tasty. The lood faddists are
to blame. They have harassed the
public with ridiculous and far-
fetched notions about what they
ahould and should not eat. Some ol
them expound the theory that all
food -Jiould be eaten raw. Nothing
oould be more unappetizing or ldf
otic! Others credit vegetable Juicei
with virtues which the vegetables
in their natural torm do not possess.
Some oppoie the eating of meat—
        'its
psr*
Diet to Blame... *
Prepare Diet to
Eliminate Some
Foods, If Allergic
By LOQAN CLENDENING, M.D.
Certain allergic people are sensitized to loodi which have appeared in-their diets practically throughout Ule. These people may have
hives, asthma, ikln eruptions, abdominal cramps, Indigestion or
diarrhea and not realize that foods
with which *ey have long been
tamiliar are tba cause.
The fesponsiblle toods can be detected b» making.a diary and «-
ltctlng different foods on different
dasrs and noting which diets cause
the lymptoms. A ier'«s of diets lug-
£tsted by Dr. U P. Gay, ol St.
oult, hai proved successlul in doing thli.
it lint the nutritionists who try J","?
to take away your juicy steak. Still "Ks.
othen oppose the mixing ol protein snd starehei, whereai the .scientists stress that we get along bett
on a varied diet and that the less we
think about our digestion the better.
Tba exponents ol these eccentric
dlet« are the food faddists not nutrition specialists. I only hope this
nutritional education campaign will
make the people io well informed
about lood they will not be looled
by the faddists.
Perhapi in our enthusiasm to sell
the public on good eating habits
and make itrong men drink their
milk, we have been a Ut insistent
on the balanced diet But we are
just as insistent on good food. Good
food and good nutrition are synonymous.
'The Market Baiket," which is a
bulletin put out by the Bureau of
heat, milk, eggs, white potato, pork, tomatoei, citrus lruit
and pineapple are lound to be the
most common lood olienden to moit
people. These loodi have' therefore
been taken out of the diet and substitutions made lor them. When the
most toxic foods have been, identified by experimental tests, a corrected menu cat) ba worked out for
each individual. The diets for five
days are as foUows:
FIUST DAY
Breakfast: Sauerkraut juice or
apricoti or papaya juice. Hominy
grits with butter, or corn meal mush
with honey or maple lyrup, or
corned beet hash, or liver. Tea or
coffee.
Lunch: Beef, or muihroomi, or
Uver. Corn pone, corn, asparagus,
carrots, cauliflower, lettuce, string
beans, mustard greens, radishes,
pumpkin, sweet potato. Jello, nuts.
Dinner: Same as lunch.
8ECOND DAY
Breakfast: Prunes, prune juice or
melon (in leason), or data, nice
with butter or preserves. Lamb
chop or aweetbreads. Pure rye
bread (toasted). Tta,
Lunch: Lamb chop or sweetbreads.
Pure rye bread. Rice, aquaeh, artichoke, beets, beet greens, celery
(cooked or raw), lima beans, onions
(cooked or raw), peas, cabbage or
cucumbers. Peanut butter. Tapioca
or fruit.
Dinner: same as lunch.
THIRD DAY
Breakfast: Canned vegstable
juices, spple sauce, baked apple,
peaches or rhubarb. Pure Buckwheat cakes with honey or maple
syrup, or liver or brains. Coffee.
Lunch: Chicken, duck, guinea
fowl, squab or game. Buckwheat
gems. Broccoli, carrots, okra, lettuce, lentils, eggplant, oyster plant,
rutabagas, turnips or turnip greens.
Avocado, olives. JeUo.
Dinner: Same as lunch.
FOURTH DAY
Breakfaat: Grapes, grape juice,
banana or lip. Oatmeal with butter or maple lyrup, or baked iweet
potato, or chicken haih, or arrowroot cakes. Tea.
Lunch: Beef, muihroomi, Uver,
or lamb. Arrowroot cakei. Asparagus, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower,
celery cooked or raw), itrlngbean*.
radishes, parsnips, iweet potato
cabbage   or   watercreii.   Tapioca,
-HinitLgiTX
TftMiAominoA
By BET«Y NEWMAN
TODAY'S MINU
Fried Apple and Bacon .
„ Boiled Rice   • Mashed Tufnlns
Cucumber and Tomato Salad
Sliced Peaches     Angel Food Cake
Coffee or Tea
Bacon is an appetizing meat which
may' be served at any time ol the
year and in many dishes as welt as
by Itself.
FRIED  APPLI  AND   BACON
light slices bacon or more; 4 to
t apples; 1-3 cup sugar (about).
Pan try bacon until crisp, remove to heated platter and ksep
warm. Leave about S tablespoons
bacon 1st in pan. Wash, quarter and
core apples and cut Ip slices; put
in hot bacon tat and cook ovsr low
heat Irom 3 to 5 minutes, until light
brown, stirring as part of apples
brown, to let others brown. Add
enough boiling water to pan to
cover bottom. Sprinkle with sugar,
cover and cook 5 minutes. Remove
cover and finish cooking until thi
applei are clear and Juice is cooked
down. Serve lurrounding bacon on
ANGEL FOOD CAKE
One cup, sugar; 1 teaspoon all-
phosphate baking powder* 1 cup ot
sifted cake flour; 1 cup egg white;
1 teaspoon cream ol tartar: % teaspoon salt; 1 teaspoon vanilla.
Sltt Vt cup sugar, baking powder
and flour together I times. Beat eg*
white until bothy, add cream ol
tartar and atlt and continue beat'
ing unUlatBLhut not dry. Sift
imall amount ot sugar ovtr egg
whitei and t«U ln, continuing until
all sugar his been added, fold in
t)our mixture about 3 or 4 table.
spoons at a Ume until all haj been
added, then told in vanilla. Pour
into ungressed angel food pin and
bake In ilow oven (WO degreei F.:
for lty houn. Whtn done, Invert
pan on wire cake rack. Serve plain
or frost, a j desired.
LONDON (CP)-Miss EUen Webber said on her 104th birthday that
no German bombs will make her
leave London. "I'll stick to the old
home," she declared.
LONDON (CP). — Farm women
are complaining at having to giva
up their dress rationing couponi for
purchase ol butter tnuilln lor milk'
straining in larm dairies..
1M1^
Ball and Chain.
Thing Loving
Husband Wants
|y CAROLINE flHATI-tlLD
Tht second of our three marrlagt
mysteries li tht Insistent crv of husbands tor Ireedom, a freedom thty
don't enjoy as shown by the fact that
thty wont avail themselves of It
tven whtn it'i olftrtd-that is tor a
longer period than a ftw days con-
seoijtivfly. A vtry happy husband
says that evtry wile should occai-
ionally leave her husband with the
houiehol! bag to hold, get out of
town and itay until she's called
back, which won't be long.
Pint tow dayi pf wife'i abitnce,
ityi he, is tht most delicious experience known to a man. Ht treads
air. He takes big draughts ol trte-
dom. He's Ukt a balloon let loose In
olear tthtr. No questions ai to where
ht'i bttn, what ht'i dont, whom he's
ieen and what he'i iald. He can go
to btd and gtt up at will, fling
ntwspapera all over the place, oomt
ln with muddy lett and drop aihes
anywhere. "Frankly," ht adds,
"three dayi li the limit of my enjoyment. At the end ot three diyi
I'm dtvouUy wishing lor my wilt's
return and wiring her to eome
holne?
the men art all alike, you know.
Among tht lint things to bt dont
whtn the **rtfe fMi^ otlowiVil
aitTwd>it wMletTwithHe Ml
thtm to a meal or to a tame 61
cards He fairly Ucki hii chopi ovtr
tht reunioni. Then he declares
moratorium en 111 household rules
and regulations. The youngsters aren't forced to drink theil milk br tfl
are omitted from tht menus. No
rtgultr meal houn or bedtime
houn. The household if one hoUday
and husband, chlldrtn, servants
celebrate the gala occasion. What
Alter a ihort ipell °' *•» **-t*t-
skelter living pop begins to think
wlstlully of mom's return. Soon he's
Impatitnt, Ht's ieen tht old fritndi
and lound thit long Interrupted
communication! have done aotne*
thing to tht friendships. Tha reunions wtrtnt ai iwatt as ht «-
ptcted thtm to be. mmpni a
menage is not tuch 1 soft map after
all. Two movlei a day initead of
two a wetk haVt got the children
into a state ot nerves. Whtt with
sitting up all hours, consuming gallons of let cream and cast! of toll
drinks, pounds of candy, thby havt
headi ehes, tummy aches, sort
throati and toul disposition!.
Tht gtntleman dotsn't teel altogether adtuate ai he imagined he
would. He's lonesome The habit ot
talking lt over, consulting, advising
with tht wilt Is mort firmly ingrained than he guested. He actual-
Nurses Entertain
Airmen al Dance
Brltiib airmen Ott letvt 111 Ntlson lor tht pait Wttk wert entef-
tatnad Thurtday night at a tare-
well danca at tht Nursei* Home.
Thret ol the men - Ao. J. Wetter,
Kt. ft Oawald and Uc. 0. Row#-
will remain tor a tew days mora,
having txttndtd leavt. .
Tht men left oo Frtday men-
ln*t's train tor tht Servlee FttlM
Training School at Medicine Hat.
misses  the  irritating questions
that he's accustomtd ..
he puts his toot Insldt the front
door. The ball and chain that chatot
and weights him down li a blessing
in disguise and he wrltti, wires or
'phones "Com* at once. Home Is tho
pltct tor you."
Im't It myittrlous thit *t vtry
freedom which a man touts ts Mini
something he wants and Hasn't got Is
something ht dotsn't want and won't
ust whtn he's got it—titer a Mw
days? Yet he WlU go on to tht grave
trying to mtke his wife believe thtt
he'i down-trodden and rebellious.
frequently embarrassing her befort
othen by making tarcasUc remark!
about his bondage. And sometimes
he scare* the w-v life out ot ner by
Intimating that if he had It to do
over again he would go lt alone.
Yeah!
Agriculture, and edited by as smsrt
tounch of nutritionist! as you will
find in Ute country, came out with
an issues on ways to make eating
more fun.
CAPE TOWN (CP) — "Wantins
htr picture Uken" a 17-ytar-old girl
put on her sister's uniform of the
Women'i Auxiliary Air Force.
Pleading guilty to a chirge on thli
offence she wss reminded lor sentence.
SERIAL STORY
By RICHARD HOUGHTON
Death at the Switch
CHAPTIR TWINTY-IIX
Henry'i tblt thought, when thty
aaw the Ught moving Inside the sup-
Sosedly deserted lodge, was that
ley should call the poUce.
Then he realized that 11 hs ware
ever to appear a hero to his own
son, thii wai the time. "We're two
against one," he said, trying to
keep hli courage up. "Let'i find out
who it is."
"G-goshi Aren't you afraid, Fatter?*
"Afraid? W-what an idea!"
They walked forward cautiously,
keeping in the grass at the aide ot
the road. It was soaking wet, but
there was less chance of stepping
on loose gravel that might rattle
underfoot.
The key John Jonei had given
them was, of course, the key to the
basement door of the model rail-
' road room. Henry knew there was
no connection from the room to the
upper part of the building, io they
tiptoed up the front iteps. On the
Eorch they collapsed their umbrel-
II. Henry found a niche in which to
lean them where the wind couldn't
b.c-w them over and make a racket.
Carefully, with Rithard breath-
leis behind him, Henry tried the
front door. The handle turned with
a fa,nt raining sound. The door
wai not locked
Henry swung It open very ilowly to minimize the creaking, and
tlchard lollowed him into the darkneu,  prudently   leaving  the  door
' open for quick retreat.
Henry whispered to his son, "That
, ftllow'i on the second floor. Hold
;, onto my coat so we won't get tap-
- arated.''
* He headed into the black toward
Where he remembered the main
staircase to be. Richard stumbled
against his heels, but their rubbtr-
ahod teet made no sound.
'Armi waving gently back and
for.h in (ront of him, Henry advanced. One hand encountered the
heavy baluster. He let one foot on
.the first step.
•fr _    _
Dinner: Same al lunch.
FIFTH DAY
Breaklait: Berry Juice, cherries,
pears or plumi. SOy bean bread
(toasted), soy bean grits with butter or lish (salt or Iresh). Coffee.
Lunch: Fish, frogs' legi, ihrlmp,
crabmeat or scallopi. Soy bean
bread. Artichoke, beets, beet greens,
celery root, lettuce, oars, spinach,
peas, tumlps, dutabaga or squash.
Jello.
Dinner: Same as lunch.
QUESTIONS AND AN6WER8
A. B.: "Why do io many doctor!
prescribe   evaporated   milk   for  a
biby's tint formula initead ot whole
milk?"
Aniwer: Evaporated milk is a re-
_vaporatad m
Uablt clean milk whicn represents
all the Ingredlenti of the beit obtainable whole milk, ft Is not more
fattening than certified milk, but
lor many mothen It is more convenient to obtain and li equally as
nutritioui ai certllled milk.
Miss Hincks Tails
of Radio Programs
VICTORIA, Aug.
rarlans  muit iteel
(CP),-Ub
themselvei  to
There ht paused a moment. Ht
wis surprised to Itel tbtt the stain
wert uncarpeted. The lut tlmt he
had been ln the main lobby of Wild
wood lodge it hid been luxuriously
furnished. Now Uie big halls and
roomi muit be bare.
He climbed two itepi, comforted
by the feel of Richard's hand pulling on the tall ot hli coat.
Again he halted. Thli time he wai
chilled by the thought that perhapi
the man with the candle had heard
them coming and wai waiting for
them in the dark. The building cer
tainly was silent.
Shaking oil hit fean. he ascend
ed ilowly, one hind sliding tloni
the stair rail, lie could feel thlci
dust. Each tread he tested before
putting his full weight on lt, lest it
emit a squeak. But the old building
had been loundly constructed. The
stain seemed as strong as new.
Two dim iquarei of gray took
shape in the blackness. They were
windows seen through an open door
in the wall of the second floor hall.
Henry's hand came to a post at the
end of the rail, and his feet trod
vainly for a higher itep. He reached back, grasped Richard and guided the boy up beside him.
"We wUl wilt here," Henry
breathed. "We ought to be able to
hear htm walking around."
They strained their ears. A faint
moaning of wind camt through tht
windowi, which wera open. Henry
ihivered ln the cold, damp draft.
Faintly he heard rain beating on
the roof A slight, scurrying noiia
cauied him to start. He quickly
decided lt muit be a rat. 01 tht
man witb tht candle thtrt wu no
lound, nor could they see the faintest glow of his light
Richard tugged at hii father's
sleeve and whispered, "The light
wu ln the South wing. Mtybt we'd
better turn to the left down the
hall."
A thrill of parental pride steadied
Henry's quaking heart. Hli hoj
ni-i t afraid.
(To Bt Continued)
meet Uie trying timet ahead and
muit branch out into new fields to
make the libraries ln thtlr communities serve a greater percentage
ol the population, said Mrs. Mary
Duncin Carter, Director of the
School ot Library Science, Loi An-
?:tltt, ln addressing delegate! here
or the Paclllc Northweit Library
<\ssoclitlon convention here lut
night.
Mlu Dorothy Crighton. ol the
Provinciil Llbriry, continued Uit
discussion from the ingle of library publicity. Dealing briefly with
the uie of radio, newspapers and
nviglilnu. Mlu Crighton called on
Mlu M. Hincki, of the Nelion Clrcu-
lating Library to tell el htr pioneer
experiencu with library radio progrtmi on tht Ntlion itation.
Mlu Hincks, who conducts weekly broadcast-, explained the use ol
book revlewi, the oocaiionil dnmi-
tization ol new books, ihd the telling ol amusing incident! In htr
library experiences as mttns ot
rousing i wider interest In the
Ubrary.
QUEEN WISHES TROOPS LUCK
IN FIRST ME88AQE
LONDON, Aug. 28 (CP)- Quttn
Elliabeth Inaugurated Britain's airgraph service to tht Middle Eut
by lending a letter to Lt.-Gen. Auchinleck, Commander in Chief ol the
Middle Eait, prilling British and
Domlnloin  tropi.
Tht Queen said Uie achievements
ol tha soldiers had filled British women with pride Ind the did not
doubt that greater accomplishments
lay ahead. She wished them ipeedy
victory tnd a utt return to their
homes uid thott they loved."
LONDON (CP)-The Poit Otflee
li permitting Itmale tmoloyttt to
work without itockingi because ot
tht ttttd lor economical ult of
clothing. Tht women ire permitted
to wear slacks provldtd thty irt not
serving at public counten.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN, N.C. <CP)--
Before her recent marriage Mrs
William Pitt wu so buiy with a
round ot parties, tte, tte, thtt ihe
tound It expedient to keep t dite
book. And on the wedding dite wu
this natation: "5:3ft-bt at church."
SCHOOLS ^ COLLEGES
For Boys and Girls
ST. MARINA SCHOOL
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
1185 Burnaby Street, Vancouver, B.C.
PRIMARY TO MATRICULATION
MUSIC - ART - PHYSICAL CULTURE - OAME8
Special Courses In Shorthand and Typewriting.
Transportation If desired.
Principal: MISS M. L. SEYMOUR.
*
St. Anil's Academy
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL
Under tht Direction ot tbt Sisten ol St. Ann
Gradei I-XII
Univenlty  Entrance High  School  Graduation
Complete Commercial Course
Music: Students prepared Ior examination Irom The Associated
s        Board, London, England, Toronto Conservatory and
Trinity' CoUege
VancSuver Board ol School Truittei.
The Vancouver School
of Art
Cimbie and Dunsmuir Sti., Vancouver, B.C.
For Professional Training in
Commercial, Industrial and Fine Art
17th SESSION OPENSlEPT. 8th "
Diploma Cou nos: Day and Evening Claiset
Exhibition of Students' Work at Art Gallery
Auguit 26-Septcmber 7
Prospectus Free on Application
Director: Charlei H. Scott, A.R.C.A., F.R.S.A.
PARENTS-
CONSULT
THIS
DIRECTORY
IN MAKING
YOUR PLANS
FOR THE
FALL
TERM
*E
TRAIL BUSINESS
COLLEGE
FALL TERM BEGINS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2nd
Telephone 84        Trail, B.C.        648 Weir St.
FRANCES E. COOK, B.A., Principal
BRAKjOON tt*t**i>t,
VERNON, B, 0. ■
A Boarding and Day tohool for
lirlt Grades I to IX—Reopens Stp
imbtr 11. Excellent Currleutum—
Ittldtqt Nune. Mlu Rhoda Mirle
Htadmlrtrtti. (Oxford and Ctm
irldgt Certificate.
FALL TERM
Opens
TUESDAY
September 1
Make Your Reservation Now
HENDERSON
Secretarial
School Ltd.
CALCARY
509 Eighth Avenue Wort
M3672—M3673
ALBERTA
»*—sss»
=t=t=
:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihii
Edmonton |esuit College
For Boarden and Day Soholtrt
INTERMEDIATE   AND   HIGH
SCHOOL COURSES
taught according to tht ntw pro
grammi of tht Department of Education of Alberta,
For further particulars apply to
REV, FATHER RECTOR,
Jesuit Colltge, 11419 128th SU
EDMONTON, ALTA.
iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
HICH STANDARDS INDIVIDUAL COURSES
ENROLL NOW—Write for Catalogue
Seymour ind Pendtr Street!, VANCOUVER, B.C.
Day and Night
PITMAN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
M.  IIM
DAY AND EVENING CUSSES
STUDENTS MAY ENROLL
AT ANY TIME
Compute secretarial aid bookkeeping couriei, tiuilneu macMnei,
typewriting, Pitman and Grtgg
shorthand, comptometer, dictaphone, Civil Service and academie
HlbJmmU.
IVILINI A. C RICHARDS,
COR. GRANVILLE «id BROADWAY
VANwOUVkilt, B. C.
	
___
jglfgg-fjii
—
9*
BUSINESS
U
GOVERNMENT
THE SERVICES
... ntYtr win lh« oppoitunlllsw io tnot In young nn
ond young women who can "Till tht BUI." At thli School
oi Modtro Biulnm wi an ll touch wilh trtry phot aad
trtif rtquliinsmt oi Uw Jmlneu Woild, Iht Gotesnmenl
Dssportmontl and ths) ur-j»nl nttslt ol Iht NaTy, Amy and
Alt Forcsw, ltt which wt art conUmiallr ealltd upon ts
■upply our Sprolt-Shaw TMnttt. Wt hart tht prtnlMt.
Ihi modtra tsjulpnunt, thi long y-ran ol iipiti-met, and,
•hat* all, a tratntd itatl that li ablt lo Impart tlu knowi-
•dat you nttd In Iht thoftttt poulblt Raw conililtnl wlih
our rtputatlcm tor THOROUGH TRAINING. Eriry cour»«
Irom Stenoaraphy to Builnssli Admlniitration and Account
lag, wilh a iptclal completely •qnlpptd dssparlmtnl la mry
branch el RADIO-TEIEGRAPHY.
V___\ __.'
STENOGRAPHY
SECRETARIAL
COMMERCIAL
CIVIL SERVICE
PREPARATORY
ACCOUNTING
and
SPROTT-SHAW
idtOol Of MOmipSn BtaMHmeU.
ViaORIA, B.C.
G-8121—G-8122
  "WPPPfr
, ^  *™^F?  T'-HWIWH."^ r-.-^,- i »)->«*« -
SCHOOL SHOES
are again In great demand. And they're alwayi more
practical at Andrew's, Their shoes are quality shoes
which means they keep their comfortable feeling and
their good looks while they're outwearing cheap shoes.
The proper fitting given you at Andrew's' ensures not
only healthy feet but longer wear too!
Protect Your Children's Feet and
SAVE YOUR DOLLARS AT
It Andrew & Ca
Leaders in Footfashion
60,000 Nazis in
Argentina Sworn
to Obey Hitler
BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 28 (AP)
—Nut Ambasudor Edmund von
Thermann wu chirged by a Congressional Investigating Committee
today with receiving money from
ostemlble Germm . welfare organizations md using lt tor ends "foreign to hU diplomatic character,''
The committee lubmitted to the
House of Deputies It! report on Nazi
Senetrttion. It said there were 60,-
10 Oermini In Argentini organized Into cells and under oath to
obey Hitler and other Nail luders
"to the deith."
Raul Dimonte Tibordi, Committee Chairman, ln ■ synopsis of thi
report cited i receipt tor 10,000
-posoi allegedly bearing von Ther-
Spring—Fall Coats
Reduced Prices to Clear
Milady's Fashion Shoppe
*=
SONG HITS
Dp to date oa
Columbia Records
NELSON ELECTRIC
KH Btltir St Phoni 280
KEEP A QUART OF
CHOCOLATE MILK
ON HAND.
Rich ln bone ind tooth building
calcium.
Kootenay
Vallsy Uairy
mann's signature ud acknowledging payments by German welfare
organizations which the committe*
chirged were the "Nui political
Sine ln    "       "
machir
disguise."
He nid i special report on activt
ties of the Germin Embassy staff
would be pruented later to Con'
gress.
Th* committee, formed June 21
atter newipaper chirgu thit mill'
tary offlcen md civilians had plotted to overthrow the Government,
revealed the Argentine Foreign Office protested to Berlin against von
Thermann't actlvltlei u much u
three yein ago.
BOMBS MOP HALF
HOUR BEFORE IRAN
CEASES FIGHTING
By DANIEL DE LUCE
TEHERAN, Iran, Aug. 28 (Delay
ed) (AP)—Thirty minutu after i
formation of four Soviet aircraft
dropped lix bombi on a Teheran
auburb today orden by the new
government of Premier All Fur-
anghl went Into effect for Iranian
troopi to cease resisting the invad
ini British and Russian forcu.
Rumors in armistice htd been
declared raised false hopu. They
wire dashed when the Ruulin
plinu ippured in a cloudless iky
it 7:80 a.m., todiy after two blackout alarmi during the'night.
Leu thin thrte hours liter, news
boyi were ihouting the news hoi
tllities hid ended at 8 a.m.
Premier Furanghl, Irinlin philosopher end once Pruldent of the
Letgue of Nitioni Auembly, completed munwhllt hli new cabinet,
which wu iworn ln before parliament.
Kuranghl, who served u Premier
trom 1932 to 1886, nimed u bli
Foreign Mlnliter All Sohellly, whou
wife ll i Ruulin, There wen no
other important changes In the
cibinet
NELSON PAILY NEW*  NILSON. B. C, .-SATURDAY MORNINO.  AUO. 80. 1841—
Thrums Doukhobor Is
Fined for Carrying
Passengers in truck
John S. Pssrehudoff of Thrumi wu
fined 826 and cut! Friday in Provincial Police Court by Stlpendliry
Migiitnte Wllllim Irvine for cirrylng four passengers in his light
delivery truck when he wu not
Uceued to do so.
Perhudoff wu checked by Constable Frink Sliter of the B.C. Highway Pitrol Aug. 16 at 10:16 p.m.
while he wu on hli wiy back from
Nelion to hit Aome at Thrumi cirry-
ing freight He bid two femile passengers In tbe tront seat witb him,
and two men were amongst the
freight
He pleaded guilty to th* chirge.
Conitable Slater prosecuted.
30 More Miners
in Slowdown Laid Off
GLACE BAY, N. S, Aug.'28 (CP)
—Dominion coil compiny laid off
mother 80 miners todty from collieries engaged in a ilow down production pouci ind announced the
output yesterday ln lti 10 mines-
more thm 13,000 toni — wu the
highest since June 25.
For the fint time, tbe compiny,
suspended men employed in pill
other thm Caledonia, refuting limp
for a tottl of 20 loader! In numbers two and 20. Another 10 loaders
were laid off at Caledonia where
in the previoui two diyi 30 were
birred from their Jobi.
Phalen locil of the United Mine
Worker! of Americi, ln the tint
ictlon taken by the men to proteit
the company movu, wired labor
Mlnliten McLarty of the Dominion
Government md L.D. Currie of the
Provinciil  Government  Uut  "we
Slice the tull responsibility of hav-
ig these men return to work upon
your government." The' minen of
collieries two ind 20 belong to the
local
It has been utimated tbat the
iverage penon knows from 29,000
to 35,000 wordi
BUTCHERTERIA NEWS
Phonei 527—528.
Free Delivery
NEW DELIVERY SCHEDULE
In complying with gaiolin* restrictions we hava been
asked to minimlM our deliveries. And in so doing we
ack your kind cooperation. Commencing September 8th
our new schedule will be as follows:
Uphill 9:15 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Fairview 9:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
Please phone your orders early and wherever possible
place your orders one day in advance. Thank You.
Weekend Specials
20c
Rolled Veil Roasts:    OQ
With dressing, Ib. .. &OC
Rolled Brisket:
Lb	
Shoulders Lamb:        OO
Rolled on request, Ib. L(L*Z
toneless Rump Roast OA.
Veal: Lb  JUC
St""* 27c
Choice Pet Routs:    OP
Pork Pies: Oven        OP.
Fresh, 4 for LJC
Jellied Veal:
Per Ib   	
Lard in Bulk:
Cash and carry, 2 Ibs.
Spiced Ham:
ftlb.	
Freih Rendered
Dripping: 3 Ibs	
Fryers:
Each	
Roait ing Chicken:
Lb.	
35c
25c
20c
25c
65c
35c
SPECIALS
ShreddetJ Wheat: 2 for	
Macaroni: Ready eut, 1 lb. pkgs.
Coffee: Fort York, tin	
23c
11c
55c
Graham Wafers: 11b. cello pkg 22c
Wax Paper: 100ft., extra heavy, roll 28c
Baking Powder: IS ox. tin with pkg.
Blue Ribbon Tea —	
Health Meal: Roll cream, pkg. —_„
Pickle Relish: 13 ox. jar
Purex Toilet Tissue: 2 for
Tea: Our own blend, Ib...
23c
32c
27c
15c
70c
Soda Biscuits: Ormond's, pkg..  22c
Preserving Peaches: No. 1 quality $1.39
Phone 235
Horswill Bros.
■■■■■■■■»■■■■■■■■»■■■■■■■■
-PAOI FIVI
WilfWoodShown
in Sun Picture
From Exhibition
Gunner Wilfred Wood, R.C.A., at
Vancouver, who enlisted trom Nelion In January, wii pictured in I
recent luue of the Vincouver Sun
with bil arms tull ot packaged
knitted ind tewn Red Crou articles,
handed him by MUs Helm Costello.
He is the son of Alfred Wood of
Nelion, and, completing bil high
school work lut year, was employ
ed for a few months prior to enlist
Ing.  He played  hockey  for  nine
seasons, tfie 'tint eight'being with
the M.R.K. Hockiy Club.
Under tbe Sun picture, the itory
li told thus: "Sweaten, socks and
mitts ... made from Red Crou materials, are arriving in, * iteady
stream to the Women'i Building at
the Canada Pacific Exhibition ai
part of one of the feature entries
rear. Sortlnf and olar'--     -
. lob,
who fi in
and placing is a
thli year. Sorting	
busy lob, and Miss Helen Costello,
who fi in chirge of the building,
gladly welcomed the two itrong
armi of Gunner Wilfred Wood for
carrying some of the bundles to the
showcases. He attends motor mechanics school, which is arranging a
display In mother part of the
building."
• PAIR CHARGED
VANCOUVER, Aug. 28 (CP).-
Chargei ot breaking and entering
were laid today against Alfred Bissett Ansom, 38, Vancouver, and
Junes Murray, 24, no fixed abode,
arrested eirly yeiterday, near a
branch of the Canadian Bank of
Commerce.
NELSON SOCIAL|Mn.PiihioGo
to Conference ol
Women al Ottawa
By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX
Misi   Mary
•  Complimenting
Linlgan, whose marriage to Albert
J. Llnduy take* place urly in
September. Un. T. J. Stringer and
Mrs. tt. J. Norrii were co-bosteuee
at a ihower at tbe borne of Mrs
Norrli, Silica Street,'recently. Tbe
rooms wera beautifully decorated
in colon of pink ind white ind with
asters and gladioli. Tbe buket in
which the gifts were presented to
Miss Lanigan wu 'tutefully arranged ln a color icheme of pink
and white arranged by Mn. Joseph
Longden. Aa the bride-elect entereo
the room where gueiti were wilting, Mtu Daisy Norris played tbe
Wedding March. Tbe ihower took
the form bt a cup end saucer
from tbe elder memben while young
•friends of tbe bride-elect give mil
cellaneoui gifts. Tbe gifts were
taken from the buket by Joyce
Schumaker and preiented to the
honoree. Assisting thi hoiteu in
serving were Mrs. Irving, Mn.
Stringer, Mlu Marie Stringer and
Miu Daisy Norrli. The coffee urn
wu preeided over by Mn, J. Wood-
all. Among those attending Included
Mn. P. H. Long, Mri. J. Fruer, Mn.
N. P. Goldsbury, Mrs, LouU Choquette, Mn, R. T. Tiffin, Mrs. Moon,
Mri. Valentine, Mn, Miller, Mn. J.
P. Herron, Mtl. Miller, Mrs. Lawrence, Mn. T. O. Stringer, Mrs. T.
R. Alexander of Fernie, lin. Norris.
Miia Mircelle Nedelec, Miu Louise
Coletti. Miu Miry McDougall, MiU
Kiy Triinor, Miu Dorothy Trainor,
MiU Shirley LUnn, Mlu Shirley
Herron, Miu Frances Prestley, Miss
Rosella Poulin end Mlu Joyce
Schumiker,
e  Mr. ind Mrs. Robert Cunning
French Parliament
Exiled, but Leave
Sign Over the Door
VICHY, Aug. 29 (AK.-The gu.
thoritiriin Vichy regime todiy ex
lied the ghoit of the French Parliament to the little watering plice
Ot Chitel-Ouyon Lm Bains, A mllei
away, but uved the face of constitutionalism by leaving tba sign
over the door ot Parliamentary
hudquirtan here.
A decree tb the official journal
ordered removal of "offices ind
legislative, administrative and secretarial services" of Parliament,
forbade legislative ictlvltiu in
Vichy, but permitted the mme to
remain In the Alller Apartments
here beciuse the constitution of the
Third Republic requiru thit Parliament lit only In the capital.
Marshal Petain hat ordered salaries of Pirliiment Memben impended two days hence.
SUB COMMANDER
AWARDED D.S.C.
LONDON. Aug. 28 (CP)-Award
0t the D.S.C. to Lt.-Cmdr. Haggard
of the submarine Truant which was
an Impressive record ot daring exploits is announced ln the London
CUrette.
The award wu for skill and en-
launched a.few months before, the
On, J Jul QJjl
lutbreak of wir, hn iunk it leut
three enemy supply ships ud dim-
aged othen ln the Mediterranean,
In September, 1940, she rescued
the captain md crew of 23 of the
Britiih steimship Haxby who were
prisoners on ■ Norwegian veuel
captured by the Germans.
Tbe Truant also unk the 9000-
ton aerman- cruiier Karlsruhe ifter nosing her wiy through minefields in Otlotjod,
1II,7» AT  EXHIBITION
VANCOUVER, Aug. 38 (CP)
During the tint four days of thi
Canidi Piclflc
Exhlb
MmOTt     1     tOtll
of 183,785 persons, pined  through
vs    iw.,v-   sr.tv.itt    _m***.
the gates compared with 11
correiponding period ot the
exhibition.
1940
New Shipment Of
SUPERSILK HOSIERY
In New Shades at the
}c_hhm, Jikitl d_cf.
Aik for "Weight"
Buy Orangei by Weight
The Juiciest oranges arl
usually the heaviest. Such
terms u "Medium," "Small"
or "Urn" provide no rail
Informition. In order thtt
you   miy  hive   i   bitter
Sarditick ot value, Safeway
i   lelllng   orangu   by
weight,
Orangei advertised
Friday at
4 lbi. for. 59c
ihould have read
6 lb. 59c
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1941
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
8:00—Rex Miupln'i Orch.
8:15-CBC Newi
9:0O-BBC News
9:15—War Commentary (BBC)
9:30-With thi Guardi
9;M-CBC Ntwi
9:5ft—Time Signal
(0:00—Tbe Joyce Trio
10:15—Peter Dawson Recordi
10:30—Answering You
ll:00-Tilk
11:15—Campus Capers
11:30—For Our Listener!
11:45—Nelson Eddy-Songs
AFTERNOON
12:00—Howird Raps
12:15—Indiana Indigo
12:30-CBC News
12:45—Music of tht Americans
1:00-CBC News Bulletin
1:02-Club Matinee
2:00—Glen Miller'* Sunset Seren-
lie
2:15—Saratoga Racei
2:50—Letten from Britain
3:00—Three Sum. Trio
3:15—Afternoon Varietiu
3:30—Musical Interlude
3:35—Jem Civall
3:45—BBC Ntwi
4:00—Canadians With Wlngi
4:15—Canada Calls trom London
4:30-Uttle Ol' Hollywood
5:00—Boy Meets Band
5:30-Hawiil Calls
EVENING
6:00—Coliseum Chorus
7:00—Quiz for the Forcu
7;»-D*n Turner'i Orch.
8:I!0-CBC Newi
8:15—Britain Speaks
8:30—Ray Hetherton'i Orch.
0:00—Will Bradley's Orch.
9:30—Red River Bun Dine*
10:00—Mart Kenney'i Orch.
10:30-Radio News Reel
11:00-CBC New/
11:15—Dick Jurgen'i Orcb.
CKLN—NELSON
CBC PROGRAMMES
AND THE FOLLOWING:
MORNING
7:57—O Canada
8:30—Breakfast Serenade
AFTERNOON
U:a5-The Notice Board ' .-
EVENING
fcjO-CMJri Dancing, Party
1:00—Cod Save The King
U.S. NETS'BEST
NBC-RED
7:00—Grand 01' Opry
8:00—Truth or Consequences
NBC-BLUE
10:30—The Biihop and tbe Gargoyle
COLUMBIA
B:30—City Desk
8:00-Your Hit Pirtde
SUNDAY. AUGUST 3
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
1941
8:00-BBC News
9:15—Between Ourselves
9:30—Overseu Concert
10:00—Hello Children
10:3O—Chamber Muaic
10:55—News Bulletins
11:00—Old Country Mall
11:15—Fiedler Conducts
11:30—Religious Period
AFTERNOON
12:00—Columbia Symphony
1:00—Meet the Music
1:30—Church of the Air
2:00— News Bulletins
2:03—Concert Records
2:30-Roy Shields Orch.
3:00—CBC .Military Band
3:30—Empire Exchange
3:45-BBC Ntwi
4:00—Neighborly Newi
4:15—Melody Album
4:30—Weekend Review
4:45-Niwi
4:50-V01ct of tht R«d Crott
5:00—Sur Let Boultvirdei
5:3C—Carry On, Canadal
EVENING
6:00— We Hivt Been Ther*
7:0O-Rocky Mtn. Melody Time
7:30—Organ Recital
8:00—CBC Newi
8:15—BriUin Speaks
8:30—Cltstics for Todty
9:00-Cirl Hllli, Organist
9:30- Drama
10:00—Joint Recital
!0:3O-BBC Newsreel
11:00-CBC Newt
ll:15-Vespera
CKLN^NELSON
CBC PROGRAMMES
AND THI FOLLOWINC:
MORNING
8:85 i.m.—0 Ctnidi
EVENING
8:30— Salon Muilc
11:30 p.m.-God Save Tht King
u. s. nTts' best
NBC-RED
7:00—Hour of Chirm
9:00—John Gunther
NBC-BLUE
'8:00—Inner Sanctum Mystery
9:30-Tbe Voice of Htwiii
COLUMBIA
7:30—Columbil Workshop
]0:00-I Wu Ther*
bam ot Creicent Villey ip*nt yetterday in Nelion.
• Mr. ind Mn. Fred Olion and
daughter Marina ot Winnipeg, alio
Mn. C. H. Bebbington of Boiwell,
were guesti ot Mrs. J. Luik, 210
Park Street.
• Mrs. Louis DeCocq of Willow
Point viiited Nelion yesterday.
• Mn. A. Willey of Bonnington
visited Ntlton yesterday.
• Shoppen in town yeiterdiy
Included E. H. H. Applewhaite of
Willow P<*int.
• Mr. and Mn. John C. Waldie
and daughter Mary ot Robion ipent
yeiterday in tb* city.
• Mr. apd Mrs. F. Abey ot Kulo
tpent Friday in Nelton.
• Mr. ind Mn, W. J. Miller
and ion Jack, alto W. Miller, all ol
Calgary, wbo viiited tdr. and Mn.
Joseph Longden, Cedar Street, returned Thundiy.
• Mr. ind Mrs. Johnston of Erie
visited Nelson Thunday.
• Mn. William Winstanley ot
Crescent Valley ihopped in town
yeiterday.
• A. R. McGregor and hit ton
of Crawford Biy ipent yeiterdiy
tn town.
• Mr. ind Mrs. Floyd Irwin, 704
Hoover Street, hid u their guests
Mr. md Mn. A. H. Webb ot Vancouver, Wash., ind tbeir daughten
ajid ton, Audrey, Donna and Jimmy,
who leave tomorrow for their homt.
• Mrt, A. P. AUiebrook of
Shutty Bench was a visitor to Nelson.
• Mr. and Mn. J. M. Gordon,
Josephine   Street,  have  at . their
fast Mrs. Gordon't litter, Mn. R.
Dallas of Winnipeg, who arrived
In the city lut evening to spend
levertl weeks.
• L. Shutty wil in town from
Trail yeiterday.
• Angus McKinnon of ■ Procter
visited the city Frldiy.
• Lady Aylmer was in Nelion
from Willow Point yesterday.
• Guy Morey of Trill hit returned from Calgary where he ipent
i few days. He and Mn. Morey and
daughter, have returned to Trill.
• Mrs. J. McDonald and daughter Mirgiret of Bilfour viilted in
Nelion ynterdiy.
• Mr. ind Mrs. T. E. Le-vuaeur,
Silica Street, have as guest Mn.
evasseur's brother-in-law and lister, Mr. ind Mn. Roy Chietioun ot
Victoril.
• Miu Vtlmi Mclntyre ind her
brother-in-law ind litter, Mr. md
Mn. A. H. Smith and ton Noel ot
Annible, ilso George Blaney, hive
returned from i fortalght'i motor
trip to the Okanagan Dlitrict.
• Robert Lockhart was ln the
city from Saskatchewan yetterdty.
• Mn. Eugene Hird and her
children Thor md Eugene of Slocm City are spending a couple ot
days in town.
• W. P. Dickion of WUlow Point
viiited Nelion yeiterday.
• Gordon Cuthbert plans to
leave this morning for Vincouver.
He will be accompanied home by
Mrs. Cuthbert ind daughter June
who spent Summer at the Coast.
• David Rees, Front Street, left
Seiterdty to spend a few days at
it Cout.
• Mr. and Mrt. H. W. deRoche of
Winnipeg, who spent the past tew
weeks with Mrs. deROche't parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Mill
Street plm to leave tomorrow for
their home. Mr. and Mn. deRoche
also visited Kootenay Cottages, Gray
Creek.
• Mn. Ernest Kinahan and sons
Pat and Mike of Trail were city
viiiton Thursday.
• Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Stansfield
have left to make their home ln
Vancouver where Mr. Stansfield has
been transferred.
• Mitt Dorothy May Longden,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joieph
Longden, returned yesterdiy from
Cilgary where she spent a couple*
Of months with her grandparents.
» Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Chanter of
Longbeach visited tovim yeiterday.
• Shoppers in the city yesterday included H. L. Jackion of
Ymlr.
• Mn. M. Towrisi of Crmbrook
arrived In town yesterdiy apd left
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER!. 1941
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
8:00—Prascott preienti
8-15-CBC Newi
8:30—Prelude to a H«ppy Diy
»:fo-BBC Ntwi
9:15—War Commentary (BBC)
9:30-The BtUidttr
9:4J-CBC Niwi
9:5&-Time Signal
10:00—Salute to Labor tnd Address
by Pruldtnt Roosevelt
11:80—For Our Listeners
AFTIRNOON
12:0O-Midland Mosaic
12.-30-CBC Ntwi
12:45—Comnottr't Corntr
LOO-SPBOAL    OVERSEA.S
1:03—Mademoiselle iu Piano
l:15-Club Mttlnt*
2*00-Tilk
2:15—Chirlei Jordm, Baritone
2:50—Fiedler Conducts
2:45—Prtsentlng
3:0O—Thctt SuniTrio
8:15—Mirror tor Womtn
8:80—Songi t
Jitt-BBCNtwt
3:80—Songi by Lowry Kohltr
SAFEWAY O
*:0O-S*lon Music
4:30—Anlmils I Have Known
4:45—Recital Strltt
5:00—Woodhouse sb Htwkins
5:30-"Sonltt Recital"
5:55—News Commentary
EVENING
8:00—Chamber Music Socltty
6:30—Tunei for Today
7:00 - Gordon Jtnklni' Orcbwtri
7:80—Wilh tht Troopt ln Englind
8:0O-CBC jf,m
8:1ft—Britain Speaks
8:30—Songi ot Empirt
0:00—Salon Group
»;30-TUk
9:45-Sophlstlctt«d Strlngi
irgtnBiclui
„_ . 'anbood't Ro«d
10:SO-BBC Radio News Retl'
11-00-CBC-Mwi
11:15—Dine* Orcheitri
CKLN^NELSON
CIC PROGRAMMES
AND TNI FOLLOWING:
MORNINC
7:57-0 Canida
11:00—Muilc for Everyone
11:45-Words it Music
AFTIRNOON
12:U-Th* Notict Board
IVININC
U:30-God Stv. th* King
U. S. NETS' BEST
NBC-RED
5:45—Paul Ctrson
fcOO-Pr 1. 0.
7:0O-Contenttd Hour
7:30—Ctvalctdt of Amtrici
NBC-BLUI
6:30—primi Behind tb* N*wi
7:30—Nitlonil Rldlo Forum
9:00-Trut ot Ftllt?
COLUMBIA
7:t0—"Blondi*"
8:JO-Giy Niaitlti **vu*
in'the afternoon to visit her ion
and diugiii
week,
ter-in-i***/ it Ymir for ■
Ven. Archdueon Fred H. Qn-
 and Mrs. Graham were cit~
visiton yeiterday frqm their Wil
ham and Mrs. Graham were city
._:.. . ' " from their Willow. Point home making  arrange
ments to return to their home in
the Terrace Apartments at tht
weekend.
• H. E. Cooper of Balfour md
hii sister-in-law, Mrs. A. K. Cooper,
who U in Canada for the duration,
were city shoppers yesterdty.
• Ml« Fripcts Taylor, who hu
spent the put couple of weeks visiting her brother-in-liw tnd sister,
Mr. ind Mn. H. D. Foster, Latimer
Street, left Friday for her home in
San Francisco.
• Gtorge W. Steele, Silica Street
hu u weekend guests Mr. md Mrs.
Hone* Keys of Trill, who have,
rtturned from holidaying it tbe
Coist They are hera to visit Mr.
Keys' father, George H. Keys of
Nakusp. who Is a patient in Kootenay Lake General Hotpital.
• Mrs. Ewing tnd her sons Alex,
Roy tnd Bill of Slocan City viilted
NeUon yeeterdiy.
• Shoppers in town yesterdiy
included Mrs. Roy Grahim of Bon.
nlngton.
• J. J. Campbell wai In the city
from Willow Point yeiterday.
NAME NEW PENSIONS
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 «2P).-R».
tirement of Lieut. Gen. Sir Richard
B. Turner, V. C, from the Cmadian Pension Committee, and appointment of two new commissioners was mnounced today by Peniioni Minister Mackenzie.
The two new commiuionen iro
Dr. H. M. Barnes, ilnce 1936 Chief
Medical Adviser to the Commisilon, ind H. A. Bridges, for iome
years solicitor to the Department
ot Peniioni ind Nttiontl Hetlth.
Gen. Turntr retired trom the
Commiulon thli week on hiving
reached the lge limit prescribed in
tbe Peniioni AcL
Hn. H. H. Pitts of Nelson, B.C.
representative, ltives Mondiy for
Ottawa to attend a regional conference of th* Auoelited Country Women of the World, arranged by Mn.
Alfred Witt. M.B&, Preiident. The
Canadian Womti.'t Inititute il patroness ot tbe conference, and tha
Federated Women'i Institutes of
Cinada will serve u the hoiteu
society.
Subject! to be taken up include
food problemi wd agriculture, natural resources .services for the
consumer, nutrition, organizing for
defense, "Democracy In Our ■nme,"
racial problemi, reconstruction, and
so on A lengthy list of speakers ol
international repute hu been announced. War problemi will be
woven deeply into ipeechei and dis-
cutsions. A roll call of Canada'i ef
fort, aniwered by Cmadian women's societies, will be a feature.
Another outatanding event will be
the reception to be tendered to
Princeu Jullani. who Is connected
with the Netherlandi Country Wo-
men'i Auoclation.
60,000 Men in
Canada Steel
Ship Program
OTTAWA, Aug. 29 (CP).-Cloie
to 60,000 men are expected to be
employed on iteel ship conitruction
and on manufacture of component
parts on ships by next March, it
was said ln a Preu, releue from
the Munition! and Supply Department today.
"More than 17,000' men now are
employed on iteel ihip construction in Canada," the announcement
taid. "At the peak of the program,
which probably will be reached
between December, 1941, and March,
1942, in exceu of 80,000 men will
be required in the shipyard!.
Tn addition it is utimated the
number of men employed in th*
manufacture of ihip complimenti it
about equal to the number employed in the shipyard!."
This iteel conitruction includes
the large program for production
of 9300-ton standard freighters,
keels for teveral of which have
been laid and which are due tor
delivery In 1912.
There hat alio been a large corvette building program md construction of tribal clus deitroyen
in Canadi is projected.
It ii expected it will take two
yean to build the destroyers since
this ii a new type of construction
for Canada and the normal construction period In Great Britain il
about 15 months.
Destroyer conitruction ll itill in
the preliminary itage and lt ll not
believed any keels hive been laid
but manufacture of component parts
is going forward.
Provuion of the necesury iteel
for thli conitruction program is
one of the great problem!. One of
the duties of 0. B. Colyer, retiring
head of the Trans-Canada Air Lines
recently appointed to Waihington
ai repreientitive of the Canadiin
Steel Controller, is to hurry ilong
iteel orden placed In that country.
No Trouble in
Regulating Gai
EDMONTON, Aug. IS   (CP)   -
Service itation proprietors ln Edmonton and district said today they
were experiencing no trouble whatever in regulating this week's supply of gasoline to motorists.
Edmonton garagemen said they
would have no trouble getting
through thli week on their allotted
20 per cent md doubted It there
would be my ihortage by the end
of September.
Next month'i lupply to itation!
will be limited to 28 per cent of
July's lupply.
George Dill Leavei
to Serve in Army
Leiving to serve In the Cmidim Army, Georgt Dill, one of the
City'i younger business men, left
Nelson Friday moming for the
Coast
FREEMAN
■  FURNITURE CO.   *'
Ih* Houn et Furniture Viluet
Phen* 118 lagit Block
UST DAY
AUGUST
SALE
i
WAR INDUSTRIES
THREATENED BY
FUEL SHORTAGE
.ug. 29 U
aid  todt;
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (AP) -
■nator  Maloney iald  today  that
numeroui vital defence  Industries
ilong tbe Eutern seaboard of th*
United Statei are terrified becauie
they have only four or five diyi
tupply of bunker oil." \
The chiirmm of tbe ipeclal sen-
ate committee investigating shortages of gasoline and petroleum producti offered this comment as he
questioned the wisdom of diverting
io many Amerlcm tanken to other
than normal transportation of petroleum producti to the Eastern seaboard,
Maloney'a comment came after
Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, ohalr-
man ol the Maritime Commission,
had testified that the shortages wera
cauied by a pseudo-gentleman by
the name of Hitler md further
caused by the laws of Congreii."
Maloney questioned this, saying
that lt hid not been the intent ol
Congress when it ipproved the lease
lend progrim tnd other defence
measures to ciuse my tevere hardships on induitry or citlzeni.
"I'm not blaming Congresi," Land
said, adding that congressional approval of the administration defence
program forced certain burdens.
Tne Senators also learned that th*
Pacific coeit soon may face th*
same curtailment of gasoline sales
now effective along the Eaitera lea-
board.
CANUCK DROWNS TWO
NAZIS IN 2 MINUTES
WITH THE R. A. F. ON THE
WESTERN DESERT, Aug. 29 (CP
Cable). - Pilot-Offloer SUnley A.
Weill of Weston, Ont., it was revealed today, shot dowi*. two Met-
■erschmltt 109s in two minutei
while engaged in protective patrol
over naval unlti off Sidi Barrani,
Egypt.
Wells li i ion of i former Preii*
dent of Canadlm Nitlonil Telegraphs.
See Our Display of
NEW FALL
MILLINERY
Edith A. Carrothers
*l
DEATHS
OOLWVN BAV, W*l**-Sir Harold Elverston. 74, former Liberal
member ot parliament for Gateshead.
FUEL  SHORTAGE   IN   BELGIUM
BRUSSELS, Aug. 38 <CP-H«Uter*>
—Inbtl. indtpendent Btlglm Ntwt
Agency, says sabotage md passlvt
resilience ot miners hav* clustd
a ihortage of industrial fuel in Belgium.
NAII AC( LOST
BERLIN, Aug. 29 (APJ-rThe Ntil
High  Commind  announced  todiy
tht lon In iction ot Ctpt. Hermann
Jopplnt, fighter pilot credited witb!
70 a trill victorit!. i>
BRITONS THROW AWAY
2,500,000,000 SMOKES A YEAR
LONDON, Aug. 28 (CP)-After
--pending six monthi collecting clgaret butt* from roads, research
worken figured unokeri in Brit-
tin throw iwiy ihe equlvilent of
2,300,000,000 cigaret! i year,
sniped «"""
uch long.
cigaret! a'yiar. They
0,000 butts, each about an
Select a new        ...
SAFETY WRIST WATCH
STRAP today   L--*J
H. H. Suthcrlai
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii
"Build B. C Payroll!"
Indiipensible
in
Cooking
"I use Pacific Milk bt-
cause it is vary rich, nutritious and economical,
an indispensable aid In
home cooking," writes
Mrs. M. H.
Pacific Milk
Irradiated ind Vacuum Picked
.lltllUIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMimilllll
BRADLEY S
MEAT MARKET
NEW DELIVERY SCHEDULE
Effective September 8th
TO ASSIST IN THE CONSERVATION OF GASOLINE
UPHILL—9:15  a.m.  and  3:30  p.m.
FAIRVIEW—9:15 a.m. asd 2:30 p.m.
Te assure early deliveriei, w* aik our cuitomsrt to assist
us by placing thtir orden in the afternoon er early morning
HAMBURG:
2 Ibt	
VEAL STEWING:
Lb	
LEAN BRISKET:
Lb.	
.GOOD FOT ROAST:
Lk.-	
EGGS: Grtdt B,
25c
15c
14c
25c
:....35c
VEAL OVEN
ROAST: Lb	
BEEF RUMP
ROAST: Lb	
FOWL: Fresh kllltd,
lb	
CHICKEN: Frtih
killed, Ib	
BUTTER: Third
grade, 3 Ibs. ...
25c
30c
28c
35c i;
$1.20
Recipe for Round Steak With Mushroom Stuct
Brown J poundi Hound SteiJc la I little tit. Add 2 chopptd
Onloni tnd wtter to cover, ilmmtr Ull vtry tender, iboift l
hour. Add 1 tin Mushroom Soup md itir wtll, cook 9 minutei
and serve.
Watch for Our Weekly Recipe
■iflstTlMt
i1iMil#iJ^
 PAOI SIX
-NILION DAILY NtW*  NILSON. B. C^-SATURDAY MORNINO   AUO. 80. 1J41—
JMamt latttj Nettm
Eitabllihed April 22 1902.
Britith Columbia's
Mott Interesting Newspaper
Publiihed every morning except Sundiy by
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIM-
ITED. 28a Bikar SL Nelaon, Britiih Columbia.
MEMBER OF IHI CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1941.
What Japan Sees in Thailand
In terms of Japan's own ambitions,
as well as those of the German-Italian-
Japanese alliance, the conquest of
Thailand would offer three primary
strategic advantages, writes Halloch
Heicher in the Christian Science Monitor: First, Thailand lies between Japanese-occupied French Indo-China on
the East and British Burma on the
West. Second, Thailand straddles the
neck of the Malay Peninsula at the
extreme end of which is the great
naval base of Singapore, headquarters
of the British Far Eastern naval
forces. Third, but not least important in Japanese eyes, Thailand, like
French Indo-China, is withjn striking
distance of the rich Netherland Indies.
New naval and air bases in Thailand
would be a valuable addition to the
bases Japan has already acquired in
Frenfch Indo-China.
Although it is commonly stated that
British influence in Thailand is predominant, the Japanese have never
neglected any opportunity to better
their own position there. As early as
J986 the possibility of a new and closer
relationship between Japan and Thailand was forecast in a speech by a
former Japanese Minister in Bangkok
-who said that there were "a considerable number of protagonists in Thailand for an Asiatic league with Japan
as its leader."
Japanese Influence must not be
minimized. It is quite possible that
there are influential conservative
groups in Thailand which might welcome Japanese control.
In recent years a number of econo-
■nriic missions have been exchanged between Thailand and Japan, and Japanese have often held high positions in
' the national government at Bangkok.
Moreover a great many Thai military
and naval officers have at one time or
another been sent to Japan for training.
. There is an old and constantly recurring rumor to the effect that Japan
and Thailand have reached an agreement to construct a canal through the
Kra Peninsula, 700 miles North of
Singapore. Such a canal would save
.Westbound shipping from Japan,
China and Indo-China the long trip
around the Malay Peninsula and would
thus cut many hundreds of miles off
present trade routes. At the same
time, however, the new canal would
make the great British port of Singapore far less important strategically
and economically than it is today.
Although the strategic value of
Thailand to Japan would be very great,
the economic benefit would probably
be of equal importance^ This is especially true at present when both Great
Britain and the United States have imposed economic sanctions on Japan and
have made it inceasingly difficult for
her to get essential raw materials.
Thailand has an important production of rubber, tin, and tungsten. All
three of these raw .materials are always used in quantity by Japanese industry; in time of war they become
vital military necessities.
Words of Wisdom
The real satisfaction which praiie can afford, is when what is repeated aloud agrees
with the whispers of conscience, by showing
us that we have not endeavored to deserve
well in vain.—Johnson.
Etiquette Hints
The best man at a wedding wears the
same kind ol clothes worn by the bridegroom,
but his boutonniere is different and less elaborate. 	
Army Training
"We now have a syitem
ed and Trade training
worked out in closest cooperation with General
McNaughton, which will
eniure that not only will
■Canadian loldiers know
how to light their weapons
but also how to maintain
them at highest efficiency
ln the field."-Malor-Gen.
H. D. G. Crerar, Chiet the
General Staff.
of Basic, Advanc-
?? Questions ? ?
ANSWERS
Open to any reader, Namei et ptrtoni aiklng
queitlom will not bt publlihtd.
Reider, Nelion—How old la Charlie Chaplin?
i    83 yeari. Hi wn born ln 1888.
H. D„ Greenwood—Il it neceuary to obtain
a passport tor nch member ot tba family
when travelling to the United States?
Canadian passports make provision tor tht
inclusion of a man'i wife and chlldrtn. While
a wife may uie the passport unaccompanied
hy her husband, it is advisable that thay have
their own passport if they plan to crou tha
border frequently. ChUdren under 16 yean of
age unaccompanied by their parent! cannot
use the group passport.
C. O. C Rossiand-I received a card (Mm
Auitralia and on lt was the inscription
"Kiaora". What doea tt mean?
It la a Maori term uied in toasts, tt miy
be interpreted as "Be well'' or "Be happy".
J. R., Robion—Give me ingredlenti for peach
wine?
Four galloni of cold iott water, -Yt poundi
of refined sugar, 1 1-3 poundi of honey, 1-9
ounce of white tartar and 16 to 20 ripe peachei.
Take the kernels from the peachei and break
them before putting them and the peach pulp
into the mixture. After it hai permented a pint
of brandy may be added.
Reader, Nelson—What date did Easter Sundiy,
1928, fill on?
AprU 8.
It. D. B„ North Shore—What animals change
their plumage or fur to white ln Winter?
•   The ermine, Arctic fox, polar hare and
ptarmigan.
How long does It take each planet to circle Uie
•un?
Mars S87 dayi, Earth 365*4 days, Mercury
88 days, Venus 229 days, Jupiter 11% years,
Saturn 29% years. Uranus, M years and Neptune 165 years.
No Clothes Worn
at This School
ADELAIDE, Australia—Away up in tht
far comer ot South Australia is one ot the
world'i strangest ichooli.
Iti pupils are memberi of the Pitjantjara
tribe of aborigines. They wear no clothei and
they come or itay away ai they pleaie. The
ichool ii not yet a year old but it has 100
children on the roll and the average attendance li 40.
Al 1 instruction is given in the native
language but reading, writing and arithmetic
form part of the curriculum. School opens
each day with a communal talk during which
the children are thoroughly bathed and dried.
After school the chUdren return to.their
parenta who live, the lite of the true Myall
native, eating what the bush affords and
sleeping under the itan between two tirei.
"For the most pert the children are fair-
haired, some golden, others even snowy,"
says their only teacher. "Brown-skinned and
healthy, they are free from any dlieue. They
have attractive feature!, are quick-witted,
sensitive, well-manner, affectionate and eaiy
to control.
"Drawing is their favorite subject and
singing comes iecond. With no appreciable
previoui experience of muiic they now ling
in two or three parti, and all seem to have a
perfect ear."
Qayda Thinks War
to Last 10 Years
ROME—Virginio Gayda, authoritative editorial writer, calling the current conflict a
"world war," sayi it will continue "ten yean
or longer" if the United Statei and Britain
really maintain their proposal to destroy Nazi
power.
Hii remark wai made in a lengthy criticism of the eight-point declaration ot Preiident Roosevelt and Prime Minister ChurcnlU
which he characterized in II Giornale D'ltalia
has a "coarse and incapable propaganda gesture" which had tailed at its birth.
Today's Horoscope
If you are celebrating a birthday today,
remember to exercise extra care in business,
agencies and correspondence during the next
12 monthi. Avoid litigation and curb expenditure. This time will be favorable for military
matters, but be careful when travelling. An
energetic, enterprising nature wUl be possessed by a child who is born on this date. He
or she wUl also be extravagant, changeable,
and liable to erron ot Judgment and erratic
conduct. Patience and poise ihould be cultivated ln iuch a penonality.
HOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY
Provided those who have birthdays today are on their guard against deception and
trickery in business during the next year,
and as to documents, the year wtll be favorable, and promotion wUl come their way. Born
today, a chUd will be successful and earn the
goodwiU of superiors, but a jealous friend or
business associate may cause trouble through
treachery. *
War—25 Years Ago
By Ihe Canadian Prtai
Aug. 80, 1916—Turkey declared war on
Rumania. Rumanians captured Petroieny tnd
Kezdl Vasarkely In Transylvania. Light artillery action along the Somme tront.
Aug. 31, 1916-Rumantani occupied iddition places in Transylvania; invaded Bulgaria. French made imaU gaini south ot Es-
trees on the Somme. BriUsh machine-gun fire
halted German attack on High Wood.
Test Yourself
1. What sort of dof la the borzoi?
2. How can. you locate tha North SUr?
3. What animals have the most powerful
eyesight of any ln the world?
TUT AN8WERS
1. A Russian wolfhound.
2. By observing the direction ot the pointers or two end itan of tbe Big Dipper. Alto
by remembering that tht North 'SUr Is tha
lut itar in the handle of Ute Uttle Dipper.
3. Eaglei and hawki.
____^_^__
The Human
Side of
The News
By EDWIN C. HILL
No Trace of Magnificence in
Cellar of Dead Royalty
. In Parii, under the great dome ot Lea In-
valdles, eternally submerged in a blue, mysterious light, the only child of tha Emperor
Napoleon lies by hia father'! ilde. The Eaglet
sleeps with the Eagle at last. Tbe body of
tha Duke ot Belchitadt who, at the age ot 21
died of tuberculosis tn Vienna in 1832, nearly
11 years after hla father's death on the bland
of St. Helena, was taken from its long-time
resting place ln crypt of tha Church of the
Ctpuclnes in Vienna and delivered to Pari!
and tha tomb ot Napoleon at tha express order
ot Herr HiUer.
The event ii lomewhat mysterious to tba
min in the itreet But there is a feeling that
it wai not a casual act on the part ot the
conqueror of France. Her Hitler, aa ia wtll
known, feeli a certain affinity with the great
Napoleon. Uka Napoleon, he seei himielf ai
iweeplng away the rubbish of a moribund
age, as Napoleon iwept away the laat vestiges •
of feudalist. Perhapi Herr Hitler hopei that
the French people will iee In hia return to
Pari! ot the body of Napoleon's ion a lymbol
of good will which' will allay bitterness and
be a step toward tranquillity and peace.
Whatever the-political implications may
be, anyone who hu ever descended into the
dim and dusty crypt where the member! ot
the Hapsburg family have been sepulchred
for many centuries, mutt teel a sense ot satisfaction that tbe Eaglet has been rescued frpm
the grimy crypt where hii dust-covered coffin lay with hii Habiburg kin who hated
him because he wai Napoleon's ton.
There li no touch or trace of magnificence
1 nthat cellar of dead royalty. No slightest
gleam ot magnificence. Dark and . gloomy,
filmed by the dust ot centuries, it contains
coffin on coffin, let down anyhow, piled one
upon another. There la no ilngle spot in ill
Europe- which so grips the Imagination ai thii
dusty, dim-lit, utterly illent resting place ot
the royal dead.
There are two magnificent chamben in
the crypt—the magnificent bronze tomb ot
the great Empress Maria Theresa, and the
gleaming white marble sepulchre ot Francii
Joieph and hie tragic family. One need not be
superstitious to feel conscious, moving ilowly
through that place of the dead, ot the dreadful
cune pronounced againit the Habiburg! a
hundred yean ago—a cune which time and
fata have fulfilled over and over again, until
the cup wai drained to the bitterest dregs.
Press Comment
There has been a slowdown itrlke, In the
Cape Breton coal mlnei tor the past three
monthi, with the estimate made over a week
ago becauie of it production ii short by 900,000
tons. There are two aspecti of this "strike"
which ihow iti effecti on war effort. One 13
that induatrlei for making munitions, etc., are
threatened With a ihortage of fuel., The other
is that shlpi used for convoy on the Atlantic
may also suffer from a shortage. There are
some 9000 minen who are participating in
the slowdown process. It was thought some
months ago that the dispute was ended when
a board of conciliation made an award which
wu accepted by the minen' executive. The
minen themselves, however, refused to be satisfied with a cost of living bonus ot 30 cents
a day. They instituted the slowdown strike
which hu been steadily maintained for three
months.
It is lymptomatic of the Federal Government'! handling of labor matten that it has
taken no steps to put an end to the slowdown
strike, that is, no stepi productive of any reiult. To that extent the Government must
accept the onui of remaining supine in the face
of what is in the nature of sabotage ot war
induitry. The Ottawa Journal believu '.hat
the Government ihould say to the striken: "If
and when you end your sabotage we ihall
consider your demands; but you must end
your sabotage immediately. Failing that we
shall proclaim you saboteurs and deal with
you accordingly." There is but little likelihood
of thia course being adopted. It is not in accordance with the tenets held by the Minister
of Labor. In the cue of the Cape Breton slowdown strike The Ottawa Journal says; "Is the
Government to acquiesce it to become a party
to lack of coal to tend supplies to Britain?
To help mock Canada's pledge to aniwer the
•peal ot Churchill?'Thc Government, through
three monthi, has shown patience with these
Cape Breton miners, and the people of Canada
have ahown patience with the Government
Unless, now, there comes a quick end to the
first there will surely come a quick end to
the lut."—Victoria Colonist
SHABBY PATRIOTS
Miss Kathleen Banting, who refused to
accept a position as school teacher ln Hampton, Ont, deserves a hand. The previoui teacher there—Canadian-born Miss Mary Kozak—
it will be remembered, was uked to resign
becauie the ratepayers objected to her "foreign name." The second cousin of the' late Sir
Frederick Banting would have dragged an
honored name in the mud had she signed a
contract with such ihabby patriots u that
The Hampton trustees, and ratepayers, too,
ought to get lists of the educators at the Unlvenity of Toronto, McGIU, Harvard, Columbia and so on, and check them for foreign
namei. They'd find a Jot who couldn't be
placed in racial categories with the MacGoofs,
O'Gawks and Superbothams. Perhaps, though,
this inub trom a Banting will be all the letson
they'll need.—Columnist H. C. MacPhenon in
Windsor Dally Star.
MIGHTY FORCE AGAINST HITLER
The agreement between Great Britain and
the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics on
Joint action against Hitler, the agreement between Russia tnd the United States on economic cooperation, tn conjunction with ever-
Increasing Anglo-American cooperation — all
this meani that the mightiest forcu ln the
world have risen to the fight againit Hltler'i
tyranny and are becoming more cloiely allied.
They will be able to conclude the honorable tuk ot treeing mankind from the threat
ot Hitlerism.—Moscow Pravda.'
GLARE SUPERLATIVE
A typically terrifying Chineie dragon is
ducribed ai having "deer horns, camel head,
devil eyu. mikt neck, sea-serpent body, carp
scales, hawk claws, tiger pawl and ox eyei."
camp dayi, things that seems to take ln everything but the baleful glare of the quarter-
maiter-ttrgeant wben the trainee uyi hla
pinti .don't fit.—Victoria Dally Times.
TODAY'S News Pictures 1
AS MRS. CHURCHILL GREETED ILLUSTRIOUS HUSBAND AT LONDON
■
i
•■_
Arriving back ln London from his mid-Atlantic conference with     Churchill, Here she walks down the station platform with her 8-
President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill wu greeted by Mrs.      lustrioua huiband.
HE CERTAINLY GETS AROUND
ANIMALS SAVED—
MASTERS HUNGRY
That mm about the world, Prime Miniiter Wlniton Churchill, ll here again, only thii time he ii
pictured u he left the Britiih "War Dog" and set
toot oa Iceland. Directly behind Mr. Churchill is
franklin D. Roosevelt, son of the Preiident, who
accompanied the British Prime Miniiter on thii
trip. This photo wu cabled to New Yor£ from ,
London.
' '
,.. „'   ■-^-^mm'vJAmml—rSmtSmi tr
French  owners  ot  dogs  and
other pets who no longer have tha
wherewithal to provide food for;
these animals, may bring them to "
the animal refuge at Lyon where
they are provided for. This owner,
is turning his dog over to thai]
refuge, comforted by the thoughti
that the animal will be fed, although he, himself may go hun-
tft*      .
 '   "^PJPPPPPPF"'"'""''"''*
l-l
Lillian Hickey, Nelson Batting and
OuHieldJIar, in Fifth Year as Rep
Fine   Throwing   Arm
1 Ranks Her as W.K..'s
Top Outfielder
One of thi moit brilliant tin
toftball playen tht Wttt Koott-
nty hn ytt developed, Lillian
Mtrgirtt Jean Hickey repretenti
' a greit bitting md ' defenilvt
threat at th* Ntlion Repi ttek
thalr third lucceiilve Kooteniy
title thli ytar agalnit Trail.     ,
Th* - good-looking ittr, who
turni 19 on th* 7th of ntxt month,
wieldi a particularly pottnt bit,
and In thi field th* It nothing
thort of a wow. Htr fin* judging ability of fly ballt and htr
tur* handt enable htr to track
down filet from ltft centre ovtr
to right centre during her patrol
of the centre paiture.
One ot the mor* itrlking features
ot her defensive play is her remarkable' arm. She li deadly In
making her throws to tbe plate,
•i her record in lait year'i playoffs
would ihow. In the lint tour games,
the threw a runner out at home
plat* ln each game, and likely the
only reaion ibe didn't continue
iuch accomplishments In the lait
two gamei was tbat the Trill
conches took little chance wtth tbe
base-runners, ind held them Up at
third.      .
•PARKS WHOLE OUTFIELD
In fact, when her fellow-outfielders see that there cab be a possible
play on runners at a base, they give
her the ball to throw in—tbat Is,
providing the ll always ible to get
over to bide them up and help
them out In time.
Thli ii Lil'a' fifth year as a Hal-
ion rep, atter bracking Into ienlor
toftball in Nelion at tbe tender age
ot 13. Tbat was with the Bed Sox
in th* middle ot the 1936 leaion
when LouUe Coletti, i neighbor and
now a team-mate, noted her promise during ichool softball gimes,
end a6knd her to turn out with the
now defunct Bed Sox. She wu
broken In as a third baseman, and
for th* tint two or three yean ol
her Nnlor carter, th* wu itatloned it the hot corner.
Sh* wu back at third but with
the Bed Sox ln 117, and it wai this
rear that ihe got her first break in
the West Kootenay playoffs. Nelion and Tnil htd split the tint
thaee doubleheaden, md tbe series
wu to be wound up it Tnil with l
aevnth and deciding game.
HER BIG CHANCE
babel (Donovan) LocateUl wu
tbe regular third bueman, the former -Qrand Forks girl hiving had a
sensational year with the Acei. But
Isabel left during tbt week Xjet
the game for the Coast on har h
dayt, io Lillian Hickey, u the next
but bit, wu selected tor the job.
Thit wu a tough spot tor a 14-year-
old youngrter to be in, especially
dnce the had been out ot softball
for a month because home league
action had been diibinded in fivor
of the West Kootenay playoffi.
Thli il wtnt the lite Gilbert
Bowling, NeUon sporti promoter,
who covered the game for 'hie Diily
Sews, hui to lty about the young
ickey" girl'i performance.
"Lillian Hickey, who wu tubbing for Isabel Donovan at the
hot corner, played i neat ga
ilthough ih* hu hid only ont
practice ln t month, ind althoi "
charged with three erron, ihe
hindled seven other hard-bit bells
cleanly."
Thui Lll wu Initiated into topflight play. On tht offensive end
qt things tbat day, the got a
jingle in four trin to the pltte
mit figured In Nelion'i icorlng.
Tht Ukuiden won the gun* 7-4,
*nd consequently the leries.
In 1938, Lillian played third base
-NELSON DAILY NEWS  fcSLSOsM   B. C^ATURDAY MORNINO   AU8.J8.  1»4t—■——
Stangherlin Beats
Penwill in Argyle
Cup Lawn Bowling
In the opening match of the Ar-
•lt Cup tournament of the CP.R.
gyl
Lawn
E. Stan
will 18-10.
Score by ends
tangherlin   021
wling Club Friday night,
serltn defeated E. W. Pen-
10 210 503 040-18
.. .02 101 030 101—10
_ Temple, Mn, A. T. Richardi,
Emmott and Eugene Stangherlin;
LILLIAN HI'KEY
again tor tbe Bed Soc, and by this
time, the wu beaming a full-
fledged itar. She < ran beat out
Isabel Locatelli for t e third-basins
job for tbe rep tea a, and Isabel
went into centre fit d. That'i tbt
wty they pliyed di ring the fint
four games ot the ie les, but tlnce
Nelson wit trilling one game tu
three In the terlet, he squid wu
reviled trom begun ig to end. In
th* courie of the ei enslve ahake-
up, Ul and Isabel chi iged positions.
and the third dou leheader wu
split, giving Tnil the series 4-2.
TIR FOR BAT LEA I
The next year the ted Sm broke
up, ind Lll hooked up with the
Aces. She took over i regular out-
field poiition tanned ately, and hu
held t first-string jt > lince. Isabel
and LU had a greit fight ot lt tor
the league batting championship,
the two girli windi g up in flnt
place with .500 each.
Lut Summer, LUI in played tor
the Rooklu, and fin shed high up
te the batting ptrade with .440, and
wu the City Leai *e leader in
extra-base bits.
Thli yur tht   lined uvtrtl
Samei becauie of htr working
oun u a waltrati iut tht playtd
In enough to merit recognition at
tht batting queen if the Nelion
City Leagut In a c ol* race with
Isabel Locatelli am Alice Gillett.
In eight gamu, th tmtihtd out
20 hltt In 41 trip* t tht plate for
a .488 mark, Inclided In her
•xtra-btM hltt hiti bun four
homeri and thru triplet, and the
bitted In It rum. Ttett mirki do
not Include lut Stndly't opining doubleheader tgtinit Trail
whtn th* hit ufely four timet In
10 chancei.
Small wonder then that "Slim"
Porter, Manager of th) Nelaon rep
team, clasiei ber u the best girl
softball pliyer te the tootenay.
Her athletic prowess does riot
stop if toftball Sbe Iss put In a
couple ott basketball seasons in
unior compiny with me -Rid Sox
tnd the Booklet. She stile the thow
on occasions in running ind jumping in school meets, and tor i
couple ot yein ran/for "Major"
Wallach, noted track coach. She Is
also a fine skater, and two yean
ago teamed up with fSnooks" Ferguion ln winning thi Nelson doublu title, the Jut j time it wu
competed tor.
BAU STANDINGS
AMERpAN
,   WL Pet. Bhd.
New York - ...J- 88 44 .SB -
CMcago     I. eg 61 .527 17*
Cleveland   J... 64 61 312 XtY,
Boston   L 65 63 .508 20
Detroit ..Jl 80 68 .469 25
Philadelphit  I.... 96 70 i44 28
St Louis      A-L. 56 71 .437   '
Wuhington ...71..... 54 70 .435 28
NATJONAL
Brooklyn  1 81 44 348 -
St. Louil  .£_ 79 45 .637   IH
CincinnaU   L_ 88 52 .570 10
Pittiburgh .......J. 67 56 .545 13
New York  I....... 58 65 .472 21%
Chicago     J 55 72 .433 27
Boiton  J. 51 78 .411 iSYt
Philadelphia   J  35 86 .285 45
Baseball Scores
enwill       100
Allan Temple,
Emmott and Eugerte _
». J. T. Almony, Mn. D. Cathcart,
■a. T. ft. Temple ahd E. W. Pen-
will.  ■     ■,   -
Trail Ball Team
Will Compete in
Kimberley Heel
TRAIL, B. C, Aug. J9 - The
Trail Men's Baseball team will gel
out bats and gloves and travel to'
Kimberley to play in a tournament
over the Labor Day weekend. This
will.be the second visit the Trail
team has made to Kimberley this
season, the boyt having travelled
to tne East Kootenay city on the
July tint weekend.
Those on the travelling "unit"
will include Loull Demore, Boy
Schapeprt, Ken Lawn, Ken Stab-
ton, Julie Bilesky, Sammy Saprunoff, John Cameron, Cliff Bogstie,
Mush Anielmo, Art Misisco and
Harry 'Broverman.
Trail and Nelson
Girls'Rep Teams
Play on Sunday
TRAIL, B. C, Aug. 29 — Trail
end. Nelson again meet on the
battlefield, when the third and
fourth gamu of the but four oat
of seven seriei in tbe Wut Kooteniy Girls Softball playoffs will
be played at Victoria Park, Trail,
Sunday'afternpon.
The first game will start at 1
o'clock, and the second at 5 o'clock,
to allow, a breather in between the
two gamu..
Sunday'! gamu promise everything in the way of keen playing
and heavy hitting. Judging Dy the
fint two gamei at Nelion lar' "unday when Trail took the .**fior
10-7, and loit the iecond to the
Lake City girls 23-20.
Trail's lineup Sunday will have
Margatat Smith and Evelyn Davies
on the mound; Pat Loblick, catcher,
LU Cuey,  lb;  Hazel Benoit 2b;
Seliie Minton u; Jean KendaU Sb;
11 Smith If; Mary Cronie cf; Hazel
Weir rf; and Helen Rothery, Jean
Grive, Delphine Milter, Jeanette LePage, Phyllis Wallace and Amelia
Wallace in field.
s
Ripley and Howard
Share Banff Trophy
BANFF, Alta, Aug. * (CP) -
Wilder H. Ripley of Calgary and
F. R. Howard of Lethbridge, AlU.
wUl hold'equal sharei in the Prince
of Wales trophy which they have
been battling for during Banft's
golf week. i
The two still wert tied after 36
holes, both turning in 74'a yuterday and falling to break the deadlock today when each shit a 78 in
a playoff round,
With Ripley playingln .
final of tht featured Banff Springs
Hotel event, it wu decided to waive
further playoffi and engrave tht
namet of both conteitanti on thi
trophy.
AL
   0  3   1
    7   7   (
(3), Trexler  (6).
Parsons; Surkont
INTBRNATI
Buffalo
Rochuter
Trucks.
Roscoe   (6)
and Roblnsoi
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Toledo       1      6
Indianapolis)  0
Winegarnf and Harshany
deu and
9   S
10.2
Wa
tt «U
k Board
Tblt idvertliement la not publlihtd
or WM by tbt Liquor Control
Boar*) or by tb* Oovernment of
British Columbli.
t-
NeW Trol Mark
SYRACpSE, N.Y., Aug,
The worlfi record for trotters ln a
four-heatlrice wu smashed in the
featured /Messenger stake of tht
Grand Cfcult harness racu over •
tut tract it the Naw. York State
Fair tod*.
Nibble! Hinover, owned by the
Aiken stible, Aiken, S.C, tnd driv
en by Hirry Whitney, who won the
fourth lett tfter Spencer Scott,
which ct the previous record it
Lexlngtin as i three-year-old lut
Fill, tn( Earls Moody Guy, hid ilio
wop 'lets to forct tht runoff,
tor the fou. heats were
:MU; 2:02 tnd 2:03. break
rtvtout record by Sti tec-
Hanover, which alio
tbe second hut, wu ntvtr
m.
Tlmi
2:00'':
ing tin
ondi.
M»tUI
won*
SAME LINEUP
Cirl LOcatelll, Coach of the Nel-
?i^-3W*#M}
Sunday's gamea. That means Rota
Stewart will hurt the first game,
and Elinor MagUo will go to the
mound in the tecond contest
The Nelson playen to go to Trail
Sunday will be Stewart, Magllo,
Georgina Eberley, AUee Gillett,
Louise Coletti, Vera Matheson, Isabel LocateUl, Amy Butt, Lillian
Hickey, Dot Colman, Mary DelPuppo, Doreen Sinclair, Laura Nelion
and Marie Stangherlin.
Toronto Golfer
Quebec Champion
LAVAL SUR LE LAC OOLF
CLUB, Lava], Que., Aug. 29 (CP).
—Toronto's Gordon Brydton captured the Quebec open golf championship here today with a three-
undtr-ptr 36-hol* total of 139 that
givt him ■ ont-ttrokt margin
ovtr Sttn Horn* of Montretl.
Brydton, wbo took a 73 In the
moming round to tie tor third ipot,
•hot, a sizzling five-under-par ln tbe
afternoon, going out ln 34 and coming back in 32 to iweep to the championship. Home icored a par 71 in
the morning and carded a two-
under-par 69 thii afternoon.
Rodolphe Huot ot Quebec and
BUI Kerr of Toronto tied tor third
ipot with 141'a,  s
Ernie Wakelam of Ottawa, who
led the field ot more than 100 at
the half-way mark with a dazzling
63, faded in the afternoon and went
four over par with a 75 to wind up
in sixth spot with 143 to tie with
Lex Robson of Peterborough.
Stan Leonard of Calgary, who
retained his Canadian profeisional
UUe Over th* Islesmere oourse here
two dayi ago, did not take part ln
today'! evtnt. He left unexpectedly
by airplane for Edmonton to take
part in tha Alberta open Initead.
All Quiet on
Cricket Front
TBAIL, B. C„ Aug 29-A11 wiU
be quiet on the cricket front, Labor
Day weekend, tccordingto Vernon
Taylor, Trail Cricket Club Secretary. It is expected that a game will
be arranged next weekend.'
Lawn Bowling Tourney
Planned on Labor Day
The CPJt. Lawn BowUng Club
is planning for its usual big Labor
Day tournament itarting at] p.m.
Monday. Included ln the eventi, wUl
be singles, doublu and fours.
Dodgers Defeat
Giants; Browns
Take White Jox
NBW TfOBK, Aug. 20 (AP).*-
The National League leading
Brooklyn Dodgers pounded Hat
Schumacher from the mound with
a five-run outburst in the fifth
inning today to defeit the Giants
. 6-4 and increue their lead over
tbe idle St. Louis Cardinali to a
game and i halt. Whit Wyatt
went the route for the Dodgers to
record hii 18th victory of the year
against ame louu.
Joe Medwick and BlUy German
each,drove across two runi with
linglei in the Dodgen' big inning,
and Medwlft further distinguished
himself by ' making ■ a sensational
catch of Dick Bartell's long smash in
the ninth. BUly Jurgess, Glanti
shortstop rapped four itralght singlet off Wyatt.
Brooklyn _. J 10 2
New York ,    4 10   1
Wyatt md Owen; Schumacher,
Wittig (6), Adami (S) and Danning.
•ST. LOOTS, Aug.' 29 (AiP)r-ix-
cellent reU*f pitching by Joe Haynu
came too )ate for Chicago White Sox
today. The Browni icored five rum
off Buck Boss in Uie first three innings tnd made them good tor a
5-2 victor;. The game wu the only
one today In the American League.
Mike Kreevich'i double with the
buu loaded in Uie fifth Inning
drove uv both of Chicago1! runs.
Bou walked the head man in each
of the lnningi be pitched and all
three scored,
Chicago   2   9   1
St. LotWi  _.....:.:... , •  5   8   0
Ron, Haynu (3) and Truh, Dickey (4); Auker and Swift.
Hogan Flashes to
Golf Open Lead
HERSHEY, Pa., Aug. 20 (AP).-
Ben Hogan, Hershey country club
profeisional playing before the
home folks, added a briUiant 67 to
his first-round 69 today tor. a total
of 136 and a two-stroke lead over
Lloyd Mangrum, from Monterey
Park, Calif., at the halfway mark of
the 72-hole $5000 Hershey open golf
championship. ,
Jack Grout of Plttiton, Pi., had
the belt icore of the day, a 66 that
included ieven birdlu, hii first-
round 77, however, put him at 143
for the 36 hold. .
While Hogan's lead Was distinct
it was somewhat precarious in the
face of the steady golf displayed by
Lloyd Mangrum who put together
two 34's for a 66 today and a total of
138.
Still to be counted upon, too, were
Sammy Snead, who had a 89 without getting much of a break on the
greens, for 141 along with Terl
Johnson and Denny Shute who hid
duplicate 71s tnd 70'i.
Dick Chapman, who flow here
from Omaha, Neb., where he wu
eleminated for Uie 1941 United
Statu amateur, wu low among tne
amateun with a 74 to go with hli
earlier 75,
Nelson Pucksler
Bus Algar Marries
BOXING RESULTS
(By The Auoclated Preu)
WATERBURY, Conn. - Eddie
Doltn, 144, Witerbury, outpointed
Manuel Villi, 142, Mexico, (8). .
MANCHESTER, Conn.—Mickey
(Red) Canty, 150, Springfield, Mass.,
stopped Art Moore, 150, Worcester,
Mass. (5).
Pirates Beat London
LONDON, Ont, Aug. 29 (CP).-
Pittsburgh Plratei of the National
League defeated London Plratu,
their pony leigue firm tetm, here
today 4-1 In in exhibition game
which drew more than 2000 fani.
Pittsburgh         4   8   1
London 16   1
,   Wilkie ind Biker; Ctrlonts and
n second in tb* four beats. Schrock.
	
LLOYD (BUS) ALGAR
Bus Algar, quiet-spoken left
winger of the Nelson Maple Leafs,
made a surprise lump Into the sea
of matrimony Friday morning when
he wu united in wedlock wtth
Hilda Talberg.
They left the same morning to
spend their honeymoon on the
Prairlu.
Buldu being an efficient hockty
forward, the Nelsbn fireman hu
been starring in the outfield wtth
the Pucksters in Ult City Mtn'i
Softbill League. Ht mined tht
final game against the Savoyi Friday evening and the Pucksters missed out on giving the old college try
—winning one for Bui.
Algir, who bills from Edmonton,
brokt into Senior hockey witb the
Maple Leafs Winter before lut.
Hit wife ii alio known in Nelson
iportdoM, She uted to pity senior
softbaU and Basketball.
Casey Jonei Trying
Out for Position on
Vancouver Gridders
Cuey Jones, tportdom'i Jack-of-
all-trades, is now turning to footbaU
again. He is turning out with Vancouver Griizllei, mw thtry hi the
Wutern Footbtll ConTtrertce, in
quest of i berth at end or blocking tackle.
ibdiftiiV&tti
mediate and senior hockey In Iii*
Jones formerly hailed trom Winnipeg. -
Nelsbn .Fridiy for .Martlet rounds,
ires
evening.
S. A. MADDOCKS
a A. Maddocks is th* new k _
among the Seniors ot the Nelion
Golf lc Country Club.
He. wound up his campaign for
the B. L. McBride Trophy by beating T R. Wilion on the fifteenth
hole Friday evening ln tbe final
match.
Maddocki held a tour-hole lead
after the ninth, and his opponent
was squarely up against it as they
went into the second round, Wilson
took the tenth and eleventh holes
to stay ln the fight, but Maddooks
won the twelfth and thirteenth.
They halved the fourteenth, and
then Maddocki won the fifteenth
and tbe match.
Earlier In the week Maddocks defeated R E. Horton In a semi-final
match on the seventeenth green.
All the other gamu were played
last Sunday.
R. L. McBride, the donor of the
Trophy and lut year'i wiifner, defeated W. M. CunUffe In the final
of the consolation.
Cranbrook lo Play
in Junior Ball at
Nelson on Sunday
Spotlight on Kootenay bueball
Sunday swings on the Recreation
Grounds where the Cranbrook and
Nelson junior ball nines meet In a
challenge game at 2:15 p.m.
It is the biggest tut ot Uit season for both squads, each proving the cream of the opposiUon In
their respecUve classes In their districts.  •*'
The Nelton team hu been playing senior clubs most ot the season,
and hai been using ex-Nelson senlon to strengthen the squad. But
for the game againit the crack
Cranbrook nine, Nelion WtU employ-the services of only Junior age
playen.
Mickey Preitley will do the
chucking for the Lakesiden, and if
the tall righthander needs any help,
he can get it from Spud Waterer,
the flnt bueman. Frank Green, the
sub-goalie, for the Nelson senior
lacrosse team, WiU catch.
Bud Smith will play second, Doug
Winlaw short and Bua MacDonald
third. The outfielders will be chosen trom Dick Horswill, Len Smith,
Ernie Wilson, Corky BaU, Gordon
Nelson and Jackie whitehead.
Austin Brennan is' the Nelion
Coach. ...
Cranbrook is bringing 11 playen
on the Nelion trip, there being
three chuckers, Allan Bakken, Bud
Holmes and Bob Rice. The visiting
players, their poslUoni and theu"
ages follow: Eddie Eberleln c, 20;
Scotty Malcolm lb, If; Bob Rice,
2b, p, 19; Gordy MaeDerrald u, 20;
Doug Gilchrist 3b, 18; Curly Cox If,
19; Met Ukrainetz cf, 19: Blue Malcolm rf, 19; Jack Russell cf, 19; Allan Bakken- p, 19; and Bud Holmu
p. 18.
Slim Kraft, former Nelion lenior
pitching itar, wlU umpire.
Sports Roundup
By SID FEDER
(Pinch-Hitting for Eddie Brltti)
(Associated prett Sport) Wrltar)
Don Donaahy, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin: "Larry MacPhail
staged a fuhion parade at the Dodgers' ball park betort a ball gamt.
. . . It ii now apparent why Blimp
Phelpi fled the Dodgen' gold. Whtt
ball player wanti to go down In hiitory u the man who modeUed the
stylish .stout;? . . .
GENIUS
The winner of thla wttk'i fur-
llned handkerchief is thi brUliant
mind in Jollct, ill., who Invented a
softball game with thrtt teams
pliylng at Uie ume Ume, One bats,
one fieldi ind one's on tht bench.
. . When a side's retired, lt takes
over ttit bench, the fielding team
comu in to hit and tht outfit thtt
WU resting takes tht field	
What's this about Jimmy WiUon
ind tht Cubs' front offlct? Th*
whisper Is Uie litest frowns came
when Jimmy wanted Burleigh
Grimes as coach and tht offitt Signed Kiki Cuyler.
Entries Rolling
in for Weekend.
Golf al Nelson
Entries are rolling in for thi Nelson Golf Se Cuntry Club's holiday
weekend tournament in great style.
Among the latest entrants are Lt.
Col. H. B. L. Dowblggin trm Hong
-King, and two colorful Trail-Rosi-
lahd. (plttn, Harry Dowiwop and
Tom Root Both of tht litter were
down it Vancouver fer the W«t«ro
Spin, md they wlU b* nil conWn.
ers for the championship and ttt*
Leith Cup, at present held by Ktn
MbBride of Nelion, McBride potted
a 64 qualifying score, two strokes
under ptr. Cot Dowblggin it visiting relatives at preient here.
Donaldion and Bou arrived ln
and they will play 'for their outU-
fying scores before Uie deadline thli
Uatea play will itart Sunday
morning at 9 o'clock, ind will conUnue through Mondty.
Play in th* la-flu" tvtnt tor Uie
Kootenty Brewerlu Trophy will get
under wty thli afternoon.
Amateur Hockey
MighlBelrled
Says (oast Head
VANCOUVSR, Aug. » (CP) -
- Amid prophecltt tt Piclflc Coait
Hockey Letgue mogult thtt pro-
feiilontl hockey will not function
In the far Wait thli Wlnttr, Ouy
Patrick, Owntr of tht Vancouver
Lloni, today railed tht poulblllty
of a -Vancouver entry In tht Allan
Cup ienlor amateur icene.
Pitrlck agreed with Folger Peabody of the Seattle Seahawki that
it wu uncertain whether Uie Pacific
Cout Leigue would be funcUoning
when skates ire got out again, but
uid if the league folded up hockey
fans might be satisfied by an amateur letgue' taking in Victoria, Na-
naimo, New Wutmlniter and Vancouver.
Four teami — Seattle, Spokane,
Portland and Vancouver—played ln
the' P.C.H.L. lut uuon and most
of them had tough sledding financially. Vancouver ended the season
u league champion.
Patrick aald the lituation wu undecided because there hid betn no
meeting of the league u yet to diicuu next seasons iet-up, He Hid
thit if tht amateur set-up were
adopted the BrlUah Columbli teami
could crou the line to play exhibition gamu in the United Statu besides entering the Canadian lenior
amateur race.
Anothir P.C.L. higher-up to
predict an amateur circuit wu
Bobby Rowe, owner of the Portland Buckaroos, who uid lut
night there were "definite plans
. for imateur leigue If th* pro
leigue foldi up."
Tht speculation wu itarted lait
night ln SeatU* by Peabody, who
alio predicted the amateur let-up.
Patrick uld he thought mmy proi
might be reinstated ai amateun.
-PASS SIVSN
Savoys Win 2nd Crown
in a Row by Finishing
Off Pucksters 3 Straight
Fisher   Yields   Only
two Hits, Boll
Homers Twice
Sivoyi, following Into itep bt.
nd th* tuptrb pitch I no of Jtck
Flihtr, hav* addtd their iecond
meetiilve Ntlun men'i toftball
crown after taking thalr third
itralght win from th*- Puekiten
9-2 it the Recreation Groundi Friday evening. Tht Stvoyi won tht
opening tw* gamu of the urlu
r-gandtg-H,
- Through latt tvenlng't victory,
th* 8tvoyi htvt won tight
itralght pliyoff gamu, ihelr record btlng marred by only a di<
' faulted conteit to the Bomberi
through a mlxup In th* ichedule.
Latt yur thty drew a bye Into
th* flnali, and took C.Y.O. Into
ump thret itralght In thli year'i
limit, thay wtn twice from tht
Bomben and defaulted one. Then
lilt evening they completed thtlr
rant of th* Puokiten.
The lait game, though, wu a
battle all the wty. Only tour runi
in the ninth inning turned th* gam*
into a- walkaway, after the Puckiteri had held their opponent! to
9-2 through the fint eight innings.
Tnough they pliyed smart bill
t-fltld, even without the honeymooning Bui Algir, the Pucksters
fill victims u ruult ot thiir inability to hit Fisher.
FISHER IB BRILLIANT
fisher, who hurled a no-hit no-
run game against the Bomberi in
th* first playoff gime, iet down the
Puekiten with only two hlti, both
linglei. Though he itruck out only
six, conilderably under hli performances ordinarily, ha kept Uie
Pucksteri popping up and grounding harmleisly. Only four balls were
bit Into tte outfield.
The tint hit oft ruhar eame In
the tint Inning, and got him into a
mite of trouble.* After Culley had
walked, BickneU, Fisher's mound
opponent, drove him around to third
when hit ground ball went out into
centre field beyond the reach of
Savoyi' shortstop, Sid BaU. Bicknell thtn stole second to put two
men in scoring poiition. Culley
icored on a patted ball, then with
two out Bicknell alio scored when
Howird bobbltd Sethy'i grounder
at fint That put the Pucksters
ahead 2-1.
Th* othar ufety came In the
fifth frame wben Len Buihei, the
fint man up, ilngled over third
bue. After Brennan had walked,
they got around to third and iecond
on an infield out, but they died
there.
•Id Ball continued hi* mighty
playoff hitting with a pair of
horn* rum, hit third and fourth
of th* thm-gam* terlei. Th* flnt
of th* brace wu a long blast Into
right centre field, but ht stretched a Taxu Lugutr In right fltld
Into a circuit clout whtn tht
bounce eluded tht right fielder.
BuldN tht homeri, Ball locked t
pair ef ilnglu for four hltt In flvt
tripi. Hi croued tht pltte tach
tlmt ht wu up, hiving got on
but on tht ihortttop'l error In
th* ninth frame,
Fither himself wu alio dangerous with th* wiUow, doubling home
the tying and whining runt tn Uie
third inning, singling in tbe, fifth,
and drawing a pair of buu
In flv* chancei. Tommy Mclnnei
drove out t piir of ilnglu to help
the Savoyi' cauM along, and Jimmy
Allan hit a three-bagger. Vic Howard, who played a gnat gamt at
tint bue, got the other safety, t
two-run ilnglt in tha ninth with
Uit buu loaded.
. BOX MORI
SAVOYS:
Ab R H Po A I
g 0 0 1 0 0
12  2  0   2   1
OUtatt, of —
Mclnnei, Sb -...
4.'Ball, a _
Fisher, p  	
Howard, lb '_
Allan, e ... —.-*
Q. Scribner, lb ,
McBride, If -....-.
Nelion, rf ...........
Totala 	
PU0K8TER8I
A. Scribner, *t...
Chodorcoff, lb
Culley, 3b ..........
BickneU, p mm
Seaby, e 	
Kunti, lb	
Arcure, et	
Bushel, rt
Haines, rt .
Scanlan, If - 0
Brennan. It 2
. 0
i l
1/14
1 10
0 0
0 0
0   1
.38   9 10 27 12   I
z\
o
0
1
1
0
0
0 0
0 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
0  1
oia
0 1
1 o
o 10
o 1
o
0
0
1
1
I
Major League
By Th* Auoclated Prttt
NATIONAL
Batting-Hopp, St. Louil, JM.
. Rum—Hack, Chicago, 93.
Bum batted ln-MIze, SL Loull,
93
Hlts-Litwhiler, Phllidelphii, ltl.
Doublt»-Reiier, Brooklyn, M.
Triplei-Fletcber, Pittiburgh, 10.
Home run*-Cimllll, Brooklyn, 27.
Stolen beset—Frey Cincinnati lg.
Pllching-Rlddle Cincin/laU 15-2.
AMIRICAN
Batting-Williams, Boiton, .407.
Runs-DiMaggio, Ntw York, 113.
Rum batted tn—DiMaggio, Niw
York, 113.
Hlts-Trivls, Wuhlngton, 179.
Doubles—Judnlcb, St, ind DiMaggio, New York, 36.
TriplM—Travli, Washington, 16.
Homt runs—Keller, Ntw York, 32.
Stolen bue»-Cut, Wuhlngton,
21..
PitcMng-Oomtx, New York, U-4
Batting Leaders
By Thi Auoclated Pr»n
Batting (three leaders In each
leigue):
Player Club 0 Ab SB Pet
Williams, R. S. 117 376 112 153 .407
Travis, Sen. 122 492 83 170 .364
DiMiggio, Ynk. 123 481 113 171 JM
Hopp. Card. . 104 327 65 109 .333
Etten, Phils. . 120 429 66 141 .329
Walker Ddgs.    110 406  74 133 .328
Home runs: American Letgue—
Keller Yankeu, 32. NaUonal League
—Camilli, Dodgen, 27.
Rum batted In: American League
-DiMaggio, Ylnktu, 112. NaUonal
League—Miie, Cardinali, 83.
Suncastle Wins Trial
NEWBURY, Englind, Aug. 29 (CP
Ctble) - Lord Portil'i Suncistle,
coming trom behind In i stretch
run, won tht St Simon ittkes here
today, a trial for the St. Leger next
week.
Lord Glanely'i Devonian wu tecond ind B- C. Dewson's Matarin,
third.
Mri. MicDonald Buchtnan'i derby
winner, Owtn Tudor, ftUed to gtln
1 place ln the mUe and a balf nee,
trailing the field moit of the wty
tdd stopping btdly in the final
drive.-
Total! 32  I  1 27 10   1
Score by Innings:
Savoyi  _ 102 010 W4-* HI
Pucksters   .... 200 000 000- 2   2   J
Bun batted in-Fisher i, • Ball
2, Howard 2, Ntlson. Two-taie hits
—Fiiher. Three-bui hlti—Allan.
Home runs—S. BaU 2. Stolen base!
—BickneU. Left on bases—Savoys
6, Puekiten 5. Strikeouts—Fisher 6,
BickneU S. Walks-Fisher 2, BickneU 4. Tim* of gime—1:10, Umpirei
—Art Rou and Doug Wlnliw.
Wardand Abbott
Reach Golf Final
OMAHA, Neb., Aug. 20 (AP).-
Marvin Harvey Ward of Spokane.
Waih, and BueU Patrick Abbott
of Los Angelu,- a couple of West-,
em to whom the experience Is no
novelty, reached the final round
of the 45th United Statu amateur golf champiomhip today.
Ward, who drew a toft not In
the upper half of the draw, bad to
go only 28 holu for a 9-and-g triumph over 26-year-old Bobby Riegel of Houston, Tex, whoie 12-over-
Sar 84 in the moming 18 holu left
im lix down and practically out of
the running right there.
Abbott, who went to. th* final"
in 1938, the year before Ward won
th* title at North Shore, came
through to a 1-up victory over Ted
BUhop of Boston, the New England
champion.
Tomorrow thty wUl meet it 38
holu for tht crown which a year
ago went to Dick Chapman,
oh balls
C—SHORTY'S
You otn mvi gu by
hiving your tptrk
plugt eluntd
„: GARAGE
This advertisement li not publiihed or displayed by the Llquot
Control Boerd or by the Government of Britiih Columbia. ;
That's easy to explain. He recognizes that proper printed
forms designed for his particular needs have lifted a burden
and make office work a pleasure instead of a continual
nightmare. He uses the proper
printed forms for his business.
Why not take us into your
confidence and let us talk
printing to you?
PHONE 144
Nf laott latlg Neui0
Printing Department
266 laker St.
Nelion, B.C
 e-'?*-w«p,!; usy * -- A}.i1W-rtm^^W'W7''
PAGE  EIGHT-
TAILORED SMOCK
IN TWO LENGTHS
NILSON DAILY NEWS   NELSON   B   C-SATURDAY MORNINO   AUG   M   Wt—
'Wl'ffw
Warm-cut  WmLViihi.
PATTERN 9853
The wiae woman-with-a-career
—whether it be home-makin**, laboratory work or a prolesnonal
or buiiness life—knows that a
smock is a real economic necessity.
Pattern 9852 is a well-designed
new smock by Marian Martin and
as easy to make as it is smart to
wear. You'U like the boxy, full-
cut lines, gathered neatly below
the yokea at front and back —
they'll lit easily over your heaviest wool Irock. The big pockets
are handy Ior carrying odds and
ends. Take your choice ol two
lengths of sleeves—make them
either long and full or short and
straight. For a linal cheery note,
you might use ric-rac at yokes.
sleeves and pockets—so gay!
Pattern 9852 may be ordered
only in misses' and women's sizes
12, 14,16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38
40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3Vi
yards 36-inch labric.
Send twenty cents lor this Marian Martin pattern. Be lure to
write plainly your size, name,
addreu and ityle number.
Send your order to The Daily
Newi, Pattern Department, Nelaon.' Pattern will be sent to your
home within 10 dayi.
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUILLEN
"We've got a drinkin' aet and a
eburch iet, and then we've got another that'i a drinkin'-set on week
days and a church set on Sunday.1'
Spray Destroys
Tomato Pes!
By DEAN HALLIDAY
The tomato hornworm is the most
common and well-known insect of
tomato plants. These caterpillars
eat the leaves of the tomato ravenously; in fact, tbey will eat all the
leaves off a plant in a few days.
TOMATO hormo Worm
vi ravenous iater
Of LCAVti
«#
, A tomato peat with a Us
appetite
As illustrated in the Garden-
(Jraph, these fat green worms are
Irom two to four Inchei long witb
a slender horn on the back end. The
caterpillar '•- the same color ai the
loliage t.nd is often difficult to detect.
~In small gardens the worms can
be picked off by hand or the plants
can be sprayed with load arsenate
before the fruit? aet. oardeners are
reporting success with rotenone
IBM.
LAURA WHEELER HELPS YOU BE
PROUD OP YOUR LINENS
cow. mi. mwucMft wmci. MC
IHOUSEHOLD LINENS PATTERN
Have linens you'll proudly un! The flowers, mainly in cross-
stitch, fill the quickly embroidered baskets. Directions lor the
edging are included. Pattern 2990 contains a transfer pattern ot a
6tt x lS'fi and two 6y4 x 13 inch motifs; materials required; illustrations ol stitches; direction Ior edging.
Send twenty cents lor this pattern to The Nelson DaUy News,
Needlecralt Dept., Nelson, Write plainly pattern number, your name
and address.   Pattern will be mall to your home within 10 days.
CONTRACT . . .
By Shepard Barclay
NOT Till* REAL PURPOSE       In spades, he derided that a sale
SAFETY PLAYS can be Silly
Oilngs. Tbe nel purpose of them
Si to protect -four contract and
help assure tbat you make It, even
at tbe expense of a trick or two
over contract,- which might have
been scored if you bad been willing to risk the entire contract But
fvhen there ia an alternative play
which does not subject tbe contract to any risk, at all, tnt only
stands to gain for you If It works,'
you are out of tbe bounds of logic
tf.yoa paas it up intentionally.
4 K J 10 8 t
fj.5
♦ A« J
♦ AQO     __
•SK1073       <V.
♦ Q874    JS
s.
♦ 753
♦ Q9864
2
♦ KB
464
»A
♦ J 10 9 J
■sAK JI096
(Dealer:   North.   Worth-So**
vulnerable.)
North      East     South       West
.Pase       Pass       14, lty
14 2* 3* , Pass
44 Pass 54
West led his heart 3 to tbe Q
and A. The declarer took in his
top two trumps, then decided upon
what he called a "safety play."
Seeing that be muit lose one trick,
way to avoid losing more than one
other waa to Snd Weet holding
one af the two missing diamond
honors. So be led tha diamond J,
West covering wtth the Q end the
A winning. He led the diamond t,
then to the K. Eaat And beck the
heart 6, which South ruffed. He
took in the diamond 10 and 9, then
led the spade t, Weat playing the
A and making tt easy, as South
now had no more losers.
Better play, after the heart A,
dub A and club K would hava
called for work on the spades.
With tha honon of that ault
marked with Weat by hla bid, he
could have discarded hia diamond
losers on the ultimately wt up
spades. Hia baat method would
have been to'lead toward the ault
If Weat played low, finesse the 10,
then return to hia hand and lead
toward the suit again. By thia
means, he would have made an
extra trick. y
•       *
Tow Week-End lama*
Should a sound match-point
duplicate player ever try a play
which will produce a trick above
bis contract if It works, but will
cause the defeat'of the contract
If it fails? If so, what are the circumstances in wbich a declarer Is
justified in trying this? Can you
set up a hand giving a clear-cat
example of tt?
Distribute ts» Kin* resiturt. S»ndic«te. Ise
DAILY CROSSWORD
Sailor
Western
SUte
Tear
apart
Recognised
Honestly
I-carned
person
Depart
Dress
trimming
Avoid
Russian
leader
Chinese
measure
Aloft
Wanderer
Serious
27 Chemical
compound
29. Force
(Latin)
31 Indian of
Tlerra del
Fuego
34. Glacial
ridge
35 Jumbled
type
37. underwater
rocks
39. Symbol for
erbium
40. Kerry boata
41. Russian
mountains
42. Timber wolf
44. Elliptical
'.'l*!U!.! *;HUU
■m;.ij'.i        (iss-ii
■jaims-i unuun
-xiMUUunronnn
uciidta*-,
'Jl:!!-*'   HHH   UMM
i*ianiiia Sanaa
mam     ninaa
unifi*-*   '.. ■ isi-lis;
hkk aran wun
'    -      iV'S
HOHBaGlMaiDHai
bhieww aaaiaa
a»an       luaci
uia-jn-t      iLiiia
tttttmm-t* ~tt.tr
48. Strang liking
46. American actor
44. Hand
covering
50 Eccleslastle
vestment
ACROSS
1. American
Inventor
5 Native of
of Turkey
■J. Aside
11. Glossy
fabric
12. Flicker
13. Long for
14. Foxy
15 Exclama-'
tion
17, Chop
^8. Card game
19, Gelatinous
food
23. Plunge
forward
28. Toward
the lee
29. Fumes
30. Kind of roU
31. Pinaceoua
tree
32. Pad
33. Hateful
35. Cover with
asphalt
38. Rigid
37. Additional
clause to
a bill
38. Turn to-
the right
40. Bulletin
(abbr.)
43. Anger
44. Ancient
47. Fragrance
49 Patronage
51. Room on
a ship
82. Vassal
53. Vent
54. Moved, as air
DOWN
1. Hawthorn
berries
2. Precious
stone
I. Undulatory
4. Before
CRVPTOQUOTE-A cryptogram s***eoUtte«
JOBTXAPR RL8NAK ZPOPAM B T X B-
VCUP  JLPOP RZBAPB  LOWP  QPPT-
O J G B T.
Yesterday's Cryptoqaotet A SOTT ANSWER IURW4III
AWAY WRATH: BUT GRIEVOUS WORDS STIR UP ANGER-
OLD TESTAMENT.
DMritt-aMb-r 1
COMIC AND ADVENTURE STRIPS .. y
HOW TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTU
Cryptoquotei are quotatloni ol famous penons written In cipher.
A lUbstitute character hu replaced the original letter For initance,
an "R" may substitute ior the original "f" throughout the entire
cryptoquote, or a "BB" may replace an "LL" rind tba key and follow
through to the solution
TO USE 186 REFUGEE
SHIPS RELIEVE TRADE
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (AP) -
Pan American shipping prospects,
hard-hit by diversion of merchant
vessels to transport of war supplies,
brigntened today with the announcement e-t an inter-American
agreement which eventually is expected to place as many at 108 ref
ugee foreign vessels ln service along
the trade routei ol the hemisphere.
In concert with the U.S., which
already has requisitioned M War-
Idle ships of Axil or Axii-dominat-
ed countriei, the 21 American re'
P'' lies announced Jointly their intention ol utilising all iuch veueli
tied up in American t»*"
\/
«J
•$•0-1
. ■*
r$
Ww *\
Sr
•C-
iaa
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disney
r
KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zane Grey
	
.. •■• •■•»*^^^%iiijffl^giii^
 MWIfl.B L«t Timet Today
VlWIVlliam   empirt* thew, sWO-TSO-StSS
J^^mtuum*
mim, FUll-LENGTH FEATURE PRODUCTION.
Plus Ctnt Aiitry In
"MELODY^ RANCH"
Swettttito
MIRTIPIANI
TECHNICOLOR
9#
an miii ricnitii, i>i.
THIS ON*' DIDNT OET
.. . AWAY-IT BLIW UP!
jj 8EC£t<B¥, W. Va, Aug. 19 (AP)
»-A jdWfer plant engineer went
rjihingin'd hooked a catfish, which
tie toot;' home, cleaned and placed
Auction Sale
TODAY—SATURDAY
Under and by virtue of a distress tor rent I will tell ill the
itock and chattel! of John Knl-
osowsky, Kootenay Secondhand
Store, next to Public Market,
Vernon St., Nelson, on Saturday,
Aug. 30th at 10 o'clock sharp.
It will be offered en bloc
Terms: Cash
MONTAGUE E. HARPER,
Bailiff.
GEORGE HORSTEAD,
Auctioneer.
in a frying pan. In a moment an ex
plosion blew filh. skillet and hot
greaie ovtr tht kitchen. The engineer concluded that the fish, living
to tha stream below the powder
plant became lo Impregnated with
nitro cotton it exploded In the heat.
School
Opening
a_wmmawtwaaam_m_____aa____*m
As always we are ready with 6 tremendous I
stock of school necessities at the cheapest
prices !n the district.  /:,'
Text Books ara to be sold for Gash Only.
Then will be no exception from this rule.
Mann, Rutherford Drug Co.
rw**  »"»■"■ '
OTHIR RACK PACI ADS
Sea Page Two
Club Cafe
Tender, Juicy Steak
624 Baker St., Ntlson, B.C
1939 CHEVROLET
Maiter DeLuxe Coach
Qood tlrei and (ood CQ1C
condition.   _.    9*1'}
SKY CHIEF AUTO
Phons 81
Nelson, B. C.
First ichools were opened at Ta-
doussac and on the alta of tha City
of Three Bivera ln Quebec In 1616.
Grenfell's Cafe
SPECIAL ROAST CHICKEN
DINNER
. Saturday and Sunday
MACO CLEANERS
We call and deliver tea* of charge.
CLEANING,  PRESSING
AND DTEING
827 Baker Phone 288
LET  A  WANT-AD  SERVE
YOI
Have tht Job Dent Right
VIC GRAVES
FOR
RELIABILITY
QUALITY
PRICI
Try your Rsxall Store first
Prtierlptlom,  Film.  Kodak.
Stationary and School Suppllei.
Thit store open Labor Day
City Drag Co.
Phone M
Box 460
In the first ilx monthi ot 1M1
the V. S. aircraft Industry turned out
7418 war alrplanei..       ; ,
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
J
DRESSUPTHEOLD
Maka It look like ntw.
Ramp Body & Fender Workt
Phont 195 A. Firenholti.
itimsmiimttismSmi-tmHgmttit
Don't Sav BREAD - Say
iiiii.iimiTiiiiriiint!
SMELTER REPRESENTATIVES
at Trail, B. C, and othtr Weitern
Smelten. Wrlta to head off leal
E. W. Widdowson
A Co.
Wl-Mt Joiephlne St
UIXX1
Ntlton, B.C.
aUFKbME MILK BREAD
aaaawaaswawisaasMst'siMSWwtW''
GRAY'S
The right place to go
for a dainty lunch
580 BAKER STREET
With Guests Over the
Labor Day Weekend
Serve
Columbia
Lager Beer
IT'S BEER AT ITS BEST
KOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED
THE NEW
PLAYMOR
Special Labor Day Holiday Weekend
Attractions
3—Big Nights-3
DANCING
SATURDAY BIG WEEKEND DANCE
SUNDAY MIDNITE FROLIC
 Starting at 12 midnight standard time
Monday Mammoth Labor Day Dance
Thla advertisement ii not publiihed or dliplayed by tha Uquor Control
Board or by the Government of British Columbia.
Tonight:  Margaret Graham  Music
Midnite Frolic: Emit Defoe and hit
.O Eight Acta
Monday: Margaret Graham Musie
The new Playmor Is now
being   conditioned   and
decorated for the
Greater Fall
Dance Season
and will present a more strikingly beautiful and smarter
appearance   than  ever.
Regular admission prices.
MiY
sroTLioHr
Niw streamlined
design b black and
topper. Uses two
'■f*er«ady"No.935
batteries.
He. 9231
LOW MIC1D
rLOOOUOHT
Gives brood llluml-
notion. Finiihed Je
block ond copper.
U tes two'' r v n i r. a d y "
No. 950 batteries.
No. 92 30
Complete
with Sotterle*
1.00
LOW PMCID
SPOTUOHT
New itreeeillned
dotlge ie Mock ond
copper. Uses two
"Eve-ready" No. 950
batteries.
No. 9231     4„
CompUtt       liD
IONO HANOI
IPOTUOHT
New  ifreamllned
dtsign In block ond
copper. Uses three
"EvoreooVNo.950
PINUOHT
Snail enough for
.pun* «r vest pocket
yet gives a surprisingly brilliant light.
Uieitwe"bereody"
No. 915 tatter:-«.
No'ai(>      TT.
Compete with JKC
HIOH QUALITY
srouioHi .
Popular focetleg
spotlight, block and
chromium fitiingt.
Uiest*o"tveready"
No. 950 batteriei.
No. 3071 4 Cr
Complele I.W
with Botteriee I
MOMRN
PlOODUOHt
Sea ml t)«tu bt, we or -
resistant block ond
dwonwim Anith. Uses
twe "Evereody" No.
930 batteries.
No. 23 30 * -p
C ample le |.*W
with Botittitt I
ruiMUOHf RfffiBB
"Evert ady " bo Merits ere guaranteed
freth to provide brighter light oed
tongr service.
No.915 PenIightTub«lor11,...10^
No. 935 M>yTubvlor...,,„,15*
No.950   Feat-lac War IS*
EVE READY
FLASHLIGHTS   md
B Al I I R II S
AUTOMATIC SPOTLIOHT
Afwoyi provides a perfect spot wffll
M o djotimtnt required, iaceptionolly
attractive design in block ond
chromium. Uiei two "tvtreody" No.
930 botietiei.
Ne. 2231
Comptele wmi Sotterios.
1.50    WM
Wood, Vallance Hardware Co*, Ltd
.MMMM
■MMMMM
ASK
About thi Buttermilk at
Tht PERCOLATOR
B'a DIHerentt
R. W. Dawson
Real Estate and Insurance
PHONE 197
THE ANNA6LE BLOCK
WINDOWS-DOORS
ROOFING  -  MOULDING
LAMBERTS
LUMBER LTD.
filiMitav   Chicken
Sunday DlllWra(
BUTLER'S
mi FORD TWO TON
lo-ply tlrei, doubla reduction rear
axle complete, signal arm, clearance
llghti, licences, etc. Save on thii one.
Queen City Motors
Phoni 43    Limited    Ml Josephine
AUCTION
2 p.m. Wedneiday, Stpt. S
(86 Baker St., iipttairt
AcUng under Instruction from
the owner, I will atter the following*.
4 tmaU eook itoru, S gas
platei, 1 gas range, cupboards,'
buffets, centre tablet, drop leaf
tablet, Victor Console radio,
kitchen chairs, kitchen cabinets,
wash tub, pails, Ice box, lino,
dressers, dining room tables,
leather couch, wall bed, quantity
V-Jolnt lumber, V-Joint partitions, Winnipeg couch, chest
drawers. Clarion table model radio, Yt bedi and mattresses, etc.
Goods on view morning of sale.
Termi: Cuh.
G. HORSTEAD,
Auctioneer.
The
Sugar Howl
Grocery
PHONE UO
Quillty Groceries it Your Home
„„__ Store. —	
Deliveries it Your Convenience.
.... Corner Mill md Josephine
BUTTER: Fincy quality,
Glendale, $1A2
S lbi.     .**---
BACON: Fanoy quality,    JM
)4 lb. eello pkte. m*Wt
IQQS: Local, fruh At*
large, dot  **•**
PORK BEANS: 28 oz. tints, | C*
Aylmers eaoh *•*»»
VINEGAR: Heinz, white or malt,
quirt bottles, tQ_
2 for   «*T
LARD: 1 Ib. cartons,
2 for,...
SUGAR: Granulated,
20 lbl. .
COFFEE: Nlbob, In
tlni,, 2 'lbi.    .
TEA: Fancy Orange
Pekoe, lb.     	
PEACHES: Fincy
Deuert, 3 lbi. 	
APPLES: Urge
oooklng, 7 Iba. —.—
PRUNES: Extra lirge,
2 lbl. .,..	
CORN! Large bantam,
Dot — _	
MEMBA SEALS:
8 for
You'U Head the Class
ir, .
If you go tosdiool in
Student Togs
Swssters, |Kkets, Sport Slacks, Shirts, Tits ud Snu
«Lt.*^iaB-,»ii
'   ■
X
mm
-
Tht Mm'-Shop
 ■   . ' ■ .
$1.75
$1.05
IM
__25(S
Jm
m
m
JAM: Strawberry er Raspberry
and apple, AC*
4 lb. tin   M*
COTTAGE ROLLS!
Tenderized, Ib	
RAW HAM: Union tenderized,
fruh illeed, AO*
ORANQES: Choicest and
•weit, 2 dot. 	
GRAPEFRUIT: Fineit       au
quality, 0 for "JT
DOQ FOOD8: Imported muh, a
complete food, "JC*
5 Iba.  _ ***T.
DOQ FOODS: In tlni,       *g*
S for W
Fruh milk, oream, lee cream In
brlcki, revels, creamtlclei, ilices,
etc. Freih oaku and bum.
Kootefiay
Launch Club
LABOR DAY
REGATTA
Launch Club Float
Commencing at 2 p.m.
Monday, September 1st
Power and Pleasure Boar Races
Water Skiing      Aquaplaning
-Feature Races —
15 Mils Race for tht Championship ef Koottnty Ltkt
10 Milt Riet Championship 225 Clast Boata
All boat owners In tht district art welcome tp com-      ■
pete. Get in touch with a member of tht Launch Club
Everybody Welcome
No Admission     Silver Collection
NOTICE
RE SIMS' MODERN MARKET and
SIMS'GOLDVALE STORES
The solicitor In the estite hu bein Instructed to take Immediate legal action agalnit all persons owing the Estite In
the above.
Qarnlihew will be effected where pouible.
All   penoni   Intereited   will   therefore  govern  themselves
iccordlngly.
D. ST DENIS—Trustee
Nelson
Business College
INDIVIDUAL TUITION—COMMENCE ANYTIMI
Glrla are needed fer Jobs vscsttd
by mtn new en activt lervice.
All girli of lttt year'i ttm trt
new placed tnd mtny mert tit
'The College With a Provincial
Reputation."
New Term Commences Tues., Sept. 2
AtrUtW,
TkUon-
CKfcl
1450 Xl
oil yauA. 0-ud.
PRESENTS THE FIRST MONTHLY
Radio Dancing Party
Tonight, Sat, Aug- 30
8:30 P.M. TO \ :00 A.M.,
With Music by These Famous Orchestras
• Ray Heatherton
• Will Bradley
• Bob Crosby
• Abe Lyman
• Henry Busse
• Duke Ellington
• Will Osborne
On the last Saturday evening of each month,
CKLN will broadcast music for dancing between 8:30 p.m, and 1:00 a.m. (Except from
11:00 to 11:15 p.m.) Arrange your own party,
and enjoy the best in dance music from, the
CB.C. network tnd odr own transcription
library.
Requests will be accepted bv tele*
phone from 10:30 to 11:30 p.m.
ONLY
mi
• Mart Kenney
• Lud Gluskin
• Jack Tea-garden
• Freddie Martin
• Alvino Rey
and others
js^jjfil
  „	
m
_(&{ tePy
 NILION DAILV N«W»  NSUON  I. C~4ATU.?.DAY MORNIN*   AUS. ». IHt-
«■ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING *~*
WHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET
144
HELP WANTED
Applications wiU not ba conildered from persona engaged in
tbe production of war supplies
t ANTED - FAMILY MAN TO
take charge of dairy farm, for
half-interest in business and slock.
Box* Mil Dally Newi.
MdfflD'- ON DAIRY FARM,
boy ibsut lt for help in barn tnd
mlli "delivery. No •field ' work
State wages. Box 2370 Daily News
$NCE POST MAKERS. AROUP
40,000 poits. Good Umber and
handy lo camps Apply Chu. O
Rodger; Ltd.", Creiton. Bjp.
VAtmlfi - W WITH THtl58
and trailer to haul logs, M. Dumont, GaUowiy, B. C.
H-WMb - fcJts ERlfeNCfiD flfflT.
tor gentrtl housework. Apply
312 Silica Street,	
WANTED - A FULLY EXPERI-
enced woman or maid. Must bt
able to cook. Box 2296 Daily New?
SEDAN.
COUPE.
$135
 $250
29 ia00™ .'. $125
OC CHRYSLER «t70K
00 ROYAL SEDAN ....    _iA»
QO ™*D_BUS.
SCHOOLS
yyELDING
Opportunitiei ire rapidly pre-
ienting themselves. Learn welding now under union instructors
with many years of experience.
Send for free prospectus.
ILBCTRIC    QXY-ACETYLENE
AIRCRAFT
COMMERCIAL  ^ELDING
CCHOOLS
(Govt. Registered)
IKlngsway Vancouver, B.C.
BW IS THE TIME TO GET A
"'overnment Job as C'erk, Post-
fem, Customs .Clerk, Steno.. etc
Five Dominlon-wld-* exams held
!%ce war began Fret Booklet.
C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnioeg.
f Oldest In Canada. No Agents
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
-mm
Labor Day
Specials
90' rowM-*.
1939 Plymouth "Custom"
4-Door Sedan
Good  heivy  duty  tirei,  cirefully driven. <C1AOtv
Bargain      iD-WhO
OQ GMC %-ton
00 PICKUP	
OQ FORD %-ton
OO PICKUP.
$600
$550
36 ST™NAL $650
Long wheelbase, completely overhauled.
And others to choose from.
PEEBLES'
MOTORS LIMITED
153 Baker St.
a    FAIRVIEW    -
rooms tnd bath, new plumbing,
ement foundation, all newly dec-
rated, Inside and out 3 level lots
i girden. (COl C\S\
'erms arranged. Price    -BstiiUu
fully modern home, 3 bedroomi,
lathroom, modern plumbing, wired
or electric range, living room on-n
ireplace, dining room, sun por;\
ull basement, laundry tubs, ftif-
itce. Double garige, beaut ful
rounds. CQCAsft
'erms arranged. , tDOOUU
f. A. WHITFIELD
417 Hall Street
tdfi SALE - DUNTULM RANCH
'   at Willow Point or parts thereof
ts  iuit  buyers.   Lots   from   1.05
[teres to 43 acres. Highway front-
Ige, Like frontage, Subdivision
toad frontage, Six-mile roid
frontage, Side road frontage, Orchard!, farm land in cultivation.
Wooded land., ample water. Will
liibdivide mora to suit buyen.
Alio 180 acres subdivided at Bon-
Sington tnd 20 acres in Slocan
tilley. J. J. Camjfoell, R. R. No. 1,
Nelson. Phone 462L3,
JOft SALE - 714 HOOVER Sf
has 0 good rooms, closets, cement
foundations' and basement, fire-
; plaee, in Al repair. For ule on
Monthly Payment Plan. $2800.00
Robertson Realty Ox	
[JOOD FARM LANDS FOR SAH
on eaiy terms in Alberta and
■Baikatchewin. Write for fuU Information to 908 Dept. of Natural
Resources. C. P. R, Calgary. Alta
fen SALE-HOUSE 4 ROOMS
Terms. Apply Rueckert's Apiary.
Mill St. Box 126. Nelson. B. C
t»AUTKD TO BUY OR RENT - 5
room house. Box 2431 Daily News.
JVBTOCK, POULTRY AND
SUPPLIES, ETC.
TRUCK  SALE STILL  ON!
1931 FORD LIGHT DELIVERY
Al shape, 1938 International Light
•Delivery. 1937 Ford Light Delivery 1930 International Two-ton
1939 Maple Litf 2%-ton Central
Truck & Equipment Company
702 Front Street. Nelion. B   C
'40 FORD DELUDE SilDAN. VERY
low mileige. Here'i i Ford luxury
car almoit new, it a price you
em't afford to mist, $1090. Nelton
Transfer Co. Ltd.
USED CARS
'39 Mercury fordor ledtn. Low mileage by good driver.        fl»11 QC
-tt Chevrolet master deluxe coach.
Thousands of mUei of _Q_&
economical trinsjportatlon tbV I O
'36 Chevrolet mister deluxe ledon,
green color, excellent (CfiGK
condition. -BUi/d
•40 OMC one-ton picltup, 4-ipeed
transmission. Had m Q1 AOC
euy life. toLVt.O
SKY CHIEF AUTO
SERVICE
206 Baker St
PUBLIC NOTICES
T&NDBBS
SEALED TENDERS, addressed to
tht) undersigned ind marked "Tender tor Staff Residence, Kimberley
Airport" will be received tap to
13 o'clock noon. Eastern Daylight
Saving Time, Monday, September
8, 1941, tor the erection ot a Staff
Residence at Klmbirley Airport,
Kimberley, B. C.   ....
Plini, specifications, labour conditiona and form of contract to be
entered into, may be ieen end
tender form obtained on application
to thi General Purchulng Agent,
Deptrtment of Tnniport, Hunter
Building, Ottawa, or the District
Airway Engineer, Poit Office Building, Lethbridge, Alberta. Further
informition, if required, regarding
interpretation of plans md specifications may be obtained from the
said District Airway Engineer,
Flam, specifications, labour condltioni, form ot contract md tender
form may be obtained trom either
of the ibove mentioned officials
upon receipt of an iccepted cheque,
mide piyible to the Receiver General of Canada, for the sum of $25,00.
Thii cheque will be returned upon
the return' ot the plans tnd specifications in good condition.
Each tender muit be iccompanied
by l certified cheque on i chartered Cmidim Bank equal to ten
per cent (10%) of the tender price,
payable to the order of the Receiver
General of Canada, which cheque
will be forfeited in the event of
Ihe tenderer refusing to enter into a
contract on the bull of hia tender, if
called upon to do so, or falling to
satisfactorily complete iuch a contract Cheques of unsuccessful
tenderers will be returned.
'Any teBder" not" iccompinled by
a «furity. deposit wilf not, bo
ton'SMered. 	
The Department dou not bind
itself to accept the lowest Or my
tender.
GEO. W. YAT8S,
Secretary.
Department of Transport,
Ottawa, August 92,1941,
RENTALS
MARINE CLUTCH GOOD CON-
ditlon. City Auto Wreckin. 18U
Baker Street
BICYCLES, ONE 20 x 18 FOR $20
One  22  x 20, |25.  Reconditioned
throughout Kitto "The Cycle Man"
FOR SALE - WjTBSSlBfTWO-
door. Good running condition $90
Apply Box 2412 DajlyNewi.	
LI3ERAL ALLOWANCE ON "YOUR
old tires. Nelion Auto Wrecking.
PICK
OFTHE
MONTH
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
1932 Ford Fordor Sedm.
$325
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Hume Hotel md Port Office.
t)R SALE - T. B. TESTED AYR-
' ihire milk cowi. Also young beet
itoek.   R.   D.   Kehnedy,   Perry
Siding, B. C
lARE. 1480 LBS. GENTLE AND
good worker for ule or trade for
young .milk itock. Forch Rmch.
Erie, B. C,       	
cow, hiy mower md cream sep-
irttor Mn. A. Jeffrey!. Ph 576L1
6r sale - "hSSvy horses
[ for logging or firm work. Elllion'i
Barn, Nelson, B. C.   '
Mmm 0: till Shuts
Telephone 144
Tralli K. Lowdon, 71»-Y
ICIassif led Advertising Ratet
flic per line per lniertion.»
144c ptr line per week (6 consec-
I   utiva lniertloni tor cost of 4).
11143 a Una a month (26 tlmu)..
I (Minimum 2 llnu per lniertion)
[Box  number  lie  extra. Thli,
■ Wven iny number of timei.
I PUBLIC NOTICES, TENDERS.
I ETC.
118c per line, firat Insertion ind
[ 14c eich lubiequent Insertion.
I ALL ABOVE  RATES  LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.
SPECIAt  LOW  RATES
Noncommercial   Sit ult I oni
Vinted for 26e for tny required
giber  of  linei  for  tlx  dtyi
[tyible In idvtnce.
SCRIPTCON RATES
B:
*.
.05
.25
13 00
. I   .73
100
.    4.00
8.00
.JrJsper wtek ...
illr, per ytir ....
By'mill:
One month    . —	
Three nutathl  -.	
Six month!	
Ohe yiir 	
Abcvl rttei ipply In Ctnidi.
Unltid Stttei tnd United King-
dom to lubicrlben living out-
lldo regulir carrier areas
liiewhere and In Cinadi where
extra postage Is required, one
month II.30. three months MOO.
I<x mopths 88.00, one year'$15.00
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
RUBBER STAMPS FOR UNBM-,
ployment Insurance Thue ire ri-1
quired for cincelling itimpi by
employers in employee's books
05c each. Postage Sc extra. Nelion
Daily Newi Commercial Printing
Dept _^__^____^_
 Pit*. ■_tts. tminti.
NEW AND USED
Urge itock for Immediate ihipment
^SWARTZ PIPE YARD
111 Avenue md Miln St
Vincouver._B  C	
QsJARtEK" HORSE, D. C. GEN-
Electric Motor, 220 volk, u new
117.50. Also qutrter hone D. C.
Gen. Electric Motor, 32 volti, for
$12.50. J. Cheit, 524 Vernon SL
Nelson. BC
PIANO FOR SALE - MASON It
Risch, Steinbich. plain frame,
good tone, hid only jood Uf»,
Tuned recently. $200 cuh. Piy
own freight. Box 158 Pwctlr.B.C.
PIPE - FITTINGS -
. cial low pricu. AcUve Trading Co,
816 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C
BUY  YOUR  ElJCTRjC  n*°NttR
now on very easy termi. Bettty
Wuher Store, Phone H.
USES   WASHER.   ENAMEL TUB
lite rnr.de' 139 Phone 260
SffTnFWOfiLD BOOK ENCYC-
looe'd a. Cheap. Phone 667L3.
FOR RENT - FURNISHED AND
unfurnished ipti. in the Medical
Arti Bldg. C. F. McHardy, 554
Wird Street.     	
CBgyggfegB STEAM ttEAfgb
houie keeping rooma in Annable
Block for rent R. W. Dawson
Agent 557 Ward Street.
FOR Rit)T — SMALtTMODERti
bungalow; t-edroom, front room,
kitchin, bathroom, basement. Mor-
■gin St, ?18 month,. Phone 434X3
.-J.  9ssss-	
BOATS AND ENGINES
22 IT CABIN LAUNCH. 2 CYL.
Marim motor with mirlne clutch.
Owner leiving town. Boat and
boa'.hcuse. (1ZB.00. Phofte 2WL
betwun 6 and 7 p,)a,
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCftAP M1TALS
cr ilbn. Any qutntlty. Top prices
p-.-)/ Aet*ve Trid'ng Com*>env
9lf)JPowell St., Vtncouvef, B C
SHlP/inr^OUS H1DS3 J P
M-min. Nelson  B C
PETI. CANARIES. BEES, ETC.
JlAN KITTENS FOR SALE,
lie or ttmtXe. 2 n*olths. 4230.
her St., Burmby, B. C.
___'
FOR RENT -.roVfe.KOOMED
house on Kokanee Street, half
'hloak from, ttreat. **t:< Modern
home with, garage in .buement
-Rent $20.06. A.■* ;■:>..-: -
Flvi room house on Victoria St,
corner lot'Rent »20.00.
Six room house on Houiton St.,
partly furnished, $25.00 month.
T. D. Rosling, Phone 717, 663
Ward Street
TO RENT - FURNISHED COT-
tage, Josephine Street"!-blocki
from Centnl, High md Junior
High Schools. 1 bedroom, kitchen
witn electric stove and all utensils
sitting room with chesterfield,
good radio, -reading limps. Rent
cheap Including fuel tupply. Apply L. H. Chbquette, 619 Latimer
S.reet or Annable Block. Phones
258 or 210.
o KOOM COTTAGE, 2 BEDROOMS,
garage, buement, modern lira
very close in. Furnlihed comb'
coal-gas range, up-to-date range
boiler, 60-lnch cabinet link, recess
bath md thower, white porcelain
wash tubs, furnace heats all rooms
All practically new. Your Inspection invited. 509 Victoria Street
LOWER RENTALS
Attractive furnished luitei, $30
mo., where you are privileged.
to  enjoy  our  cool,  well-kept
lawni.
KERR APARTMENTS _
FOR RENT - t ROOM HOtJfeE
with  girden, fruit treu md  a
chicken house on Gordon Roid.
Garagi on first itreet Apply to
318 Fint Street
t6_ _-ti - smAlTcottage.
Latimer Street Close to ichools.
Phoni 427R.	
FOR RENT - 4 RM. HOUSE. LGl!
tun porch, garden, fruit trees,
$16 monti-i. 9j5 Observatory_St.
FOR RENT - COMFORTAbCE
bedroom In private home. Gentle-
man preferred. 824 Silica Street.
fOR'lfflNT.- 266 VICTORIA ST..
6 roorta, 3 bedrooms. ■ Apply 416
Mill St. or Phone 966R evening!
Kift ftnW-3' SBbhMs. phivA'ffi
borne. Privite bath and shower
Breaktut 608 Silica St. Ph. 479L
WBt-rrwst. for KEt_7 ott
board    and   room.   Reasonable
Very close In. .419 Silica Street
I6r ftfcMT^-BWtfflC ON bAKER
St. Moderate rent Phone 427R.
I   koiti   F6R   THOSE   AWAY
front home Stratheont Hotel Apt»
K» tim"- MAl'NiM Hbtati
Furnace, electric stove. Ph     '
PbaHINt- i fto6M hoUSe
close in   D  Miglio   Ph   80BL
For RbsNt-MOD. year round
cottiie  R  H. Dl". Ph. 559B2
TERRACE APTS Beautiful modern
(Htsldilre efiuiDned suites
FOR RHlNT - 3 ROOM RJSR
Apt. Petty Apts.. 414 Fall St.
3 ROOM FURN. SUITE FOR RElW
Close In. $18. C W. Appleyard.
FOR RENT - 3 R06M aPaST-
ment. Apply 619 Josephine Street
fOR RENT - MOt>. FURN. BUN-
galow, Fairview, girlge. Ph. 573L
FOR'RfNT^NEWrY DECORAT-
ed houlis 4 bedroomi. 816 Silica St.
FARM. GARDEN & NURSFRY
PRODUCTS, FERTILIZER
RATtS POULTRY RW1ULATOR
Animal Re.fulitor: Cow Tonic;
Ollft'te Meal- Salt Llcki: lain
rnd Iodlz-d; Old Hickory Salt:
KiMom Suits. Thi B-rnkmin-Ker
Millin*! Comnenv Ltd.
PERSONAL
SNAP - MOFFAT
$10. Red Crou SI
fflfftJfAV'WBL
Calgiry. * "J^fej1'f-'
Almar Hotel, Opp. cTF R. Depot
•cUCnibLdt 5*_ALiS, 'am-
vice,   Suppliu.
Flnt feST W
W9TB
of mei
Sub. "
:Y CtJUPHTOOTf
1st. -815 Dominion Sink
Vancouver. B.-CV        ii-
tUtb SOtiHWI • »«KiB 18
Sritifuliy ncelved it Ihi Salva-
■^*qp?v"'..y.*5?.g3E3Li
you -_n
gar ten with our help.' Canadi
Kindergarten Institute, care M.C
Schools, Winnipeg, Manitoba,
Wanted - o60& _M_i CM*.
ton rags, not lui than 18 Inches
square. 9c lb. t. 0- B. Nelson
Dally Newi
sinrREOAw viads, m-
try Vltex, 25 tableti 81,00. Personal drug sundrlu 24 tor $1,00. Supreme Ruor Blade Shirpener 35c.
Sharpens blades perfectly. J. Jensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C.
ATTENTlONI YOU MAY ASK 1
quutloni. I hive helped many. I
em help you. Send 25 cents with
name ind birth date to Oretta.
10H Hiro, Vancouver, B. C,
MEN'S DR00 SUNDRIH3. SEND
$1.00 for 12 samples, pliin wrapped. Teited. Guaranteed md prepaid. Free Novelty price list
Princeton Distributon, P. O. Box
61, Princeton, B. C
25c - The Photo MiU - 85c
P O Box 335. Vmcouver
RolU developed md printed, I5o
5 k 7 Enlargement Free
12 reprints 5x7 enlargement 35c
rtmerttmaaam aetettn ***f****W*>*W*gl
SmTSXMSBLn_Vo strtttftlSS
Sind for new low prloe llit with
umple, or $1.00 for 18 luper fine,
postpaid. Western Supply, Box
383, Vincouver, B. C
YOUR SICK TOEND OR RELA-
tlve ln the hospital will enjoy
reading The Daily News. Phont
144 and hive I copy delivered
each morning.
LonelY  met*  _to  WoifltN
everywhere write to me. I will
help you to mtke new triendt.
Individual introductions, exclusive
methodi Introduction Bureiu, P
O. Box 385, Victoril, B, C
AUGUST FUR SALE
Dont' min thli greit eVent—
your lut chmce to buy the Fur
Coat you want it I reil saving
and. easy terms—coats sent lor
- Inspection,
;   POLAR FURS Lm    '
548 Granville St. Vancouver B.C.
OIO uranvnic as. vcsiss.uuvt:r a.--
f'lLMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT
ed (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c Reprints 3c each. For your vtcition
snapshots, choose Kryital Finish.
Guaranteed non-fade prlnti
Krystil Photoi, WUkle. Saskatche-
wan  Established over 30 yein
±***-.r*l*.   *-   ," m a-*r,mr,e*l *r.T\T. e- r.t.1 .
SPECIAL! - MEN'S PERSONAL
Drug Sundries. Finest Quality
Tested. Guaranteed. 12 for 50c II-
norted, uicludlng world'i funniest
Jiike novelty md catalogue ol
Sundries! md Novelties. Weitern
Distributon, Box 24, Dept NC,
Regint, Saskttchewin.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
A88AY6R8 ina' MINI AGENTS
—s.
HAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND
B C. Provinciil Assayer, Chemist
Individual representative for ship-
£s-jjiiTrtlfSmell*r^
A. j. bUlB. _t_W__W
rapresentative.
tentton   given  „
Box 54. Trill, B. C.
.Full time it-
shippen'  interest.
CHIBOPRACTOR8
I. R. MCMILLAN, D. C, NIURO'
calometer, X-rayi McCulloch Blk
calometer. X-rayi McCi
ll-lleBiiiK&iffr!
A. 4. McB6NALTB, b. EC Palmer
_________________%______■
ta.WUBOi*. BROCK, t. 6.476
Baker Street Phone 969.
CORSETIERES
SPENCER OOBSBOTRl. MISS
Shirley Boomer 217 Gore. Ph. 6691
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS
BOYDC. AFFLECK.P.O.BOX 104,
Ttall, B. C. Svttvtjrot and En-
glneer, phont "Buvet FtUi,"
"Beiver Fl
*j_*mr,
». w. HAisaBM, mm it CIVIL
■ Engineer! B. C. Land Surveyor.
Rosilind tnd Grwjj lorki, B^C.
FOOT SPECIALISTS
J. I. QCmOSH. D.S.C,B. Cp. (DOC-
tor of Surgical Chiropody) Font
Speclillit. 513JH Btrks Building. Ph. MArina UM, Vmcouver.
«ii**m*i i
INSURANCE uld REAL ESTATE
R. W. DAWSON, AmI Bitate, In-
lurance, Rentals. 557 Wtrd Street.
Annible Block. Phoni 197.
C. 1 fiLACRWOODAtSBNCfflS,
Insurance, Rail Eitate. Phone 99
CBa^. r rtcftAMtif. fl>6imAMC8,
Real Eitata. Phone 13$.
ft is. mat ras. auto, ami-
dent Insurance. 532 Wird Street.
MACHINISTS
BBNNBTTS LIMITED
Machine, shop, acetylene and electric
welding, motor rewinding
commerciil refrigeration
Phoni 593 $24 Vernon St
OPTOMETRISTS
W. E. MARSHALL
Optometrlsti
1458 Bay Ave, Trail    Phone 177
Golds Improve
TORONTO, Aug. 18 (CP).-Gold
shires Improved their price level
In thi ifternoon on Toronto Exchmge todty while other groupi
continued • bit hetvy md cloied
narrowly lowtr tor the diy.
Gold iharei wen down a bit at
mid-day but the ifternoon brought
a pickup md higher close for Malartic Gold Fieldi, O'Brien. Kerr-
Addlson, Perron, Chesterville and
Aunor Final prlcet were down a
few centi for Preston, Pickle Crow,
Teck-Hughet, Little Long Lie, Mic-
leod-Coekshutt md Upper Cinada.
Nickel, Sherrltt and Steep Rock
displayed, small decllnu against
gaini for Venturei and Smelten.
A weak tona dominated steels
and' miscellaneous induitriill, ind
prices wer| iteidy for foodi, utilitiu md ptpen. Walkers Common
advanced 114 to 44% md gains in
pointi came out alio for Great
Lakei Piper md Canaditn Celaneie,
In the Wutern oil section moderate-losses appeared for Cilgaiy
and Edmonton, Home Oil md
Okalta.
SASH  FACTORIES
KOOTENAY SASH It DOOR FAC-
tory. 907 Front St, Nelion. Phone
530. No Job too imall or too big,
UWSON'S SASH FACTORY.
Hardwood merchant 273 Baker St,
SECOND  HAND 8TORE8
WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE.
What have you? Ph. 334 Ark Store
SITUATIONS WANTED
Special Low Ratu for noncommercial advertisement! under thii classification to assist
people ieeklng employment
Only 25c for one week (6 daytl
covers any number of required
Unu. Paytble in advance. Add
10c II box number desired.
EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER
desires work on road or eliewhere. Willing and trustworthy
State wagu. Apply P. E. Youiwa.
Cnnbrook. B. C.
EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER
ln long distance hiuling, also experienced cat operator with refer-
ences. Box 2420 Diily News.
EXPER1KNCED SALESMAN DE-
sires work In store, clerking. Nei-
snn or Trtil. Box 2320 Diily News
PLANERMAN DESIRES WORK.
Box 2419 Dally Newi.
ROOM AND BOARD
EXCELLENT ROOM AND BOARD,
close vicinity U. B. C. for girl
student of U. B. C. or Normal
School. Home conditions, ret-
sonable rate. Write Mrs. G. Powell,
"" West 12th, Vancouver, B, C.
GOOD HOME FOR STUDENTS.
Reasontble rates. 1 block from
Junior and Senior Schools. 722
Observatory Street. Phone_981R.
YOUNG BOY. 15. d&lSO TO iff.
School, desirei od. and rm. Servlcei in pirt exchange.. Nelson 6r
Creston. Mrs C. Ingham, Elko.
BOARD AND ROOM FOR 2 STtT-
denti, near schools. Apply 1024
Lttimer Street, Nelton.
A GOOD HOME FOR 4 OR 6 STtJ
dents. 3, bloeks from School. 2
from Baker St. 723 Silica Street.
GOOD HOMEuFOR STUDENTS!
Reasonable rttu. 2 blocks from
Jr  tnd ?r. High. Phone 96SR
LOST AND FOUND
To Finders
if you find inything telephone
The Duly Newi A "Found" Ad
will be Inserted wtthou' cost to
you We will collect from the
owner
A   WANT-AD SERVE  YOU
\u___w__t_____m_________
DIVIDENDS
Sheep Creek Gold Mines, Limited,
four cents per shire.
British Columbia Power Corpora
tion Limited, "A" Itock, 50 cents per
share for threi monthi ending Sep'
tember 3.
Canidi Picken Limited Jl.
Pato Consolidated Oold Dredging
Limited, extrt dividend of 10 cents,
being interim dividend number 6.
Power Corporation Of Canadt
Limited, IH per cent on cumulative
prefered md H4 per' cent on non-
cumulative, particlpatlne: nrefei-red
for nitmrter endlne Se**t. 30.
Klrklmd Ltke C.-ld Mining Compiny Limited, five centi.
Snu'hern Canada Power Company
Ltd., 6 ner cent cu***u!«tlve nartlci-
pitlng breferred. IVi per cent
The Casolin Sm. covering 199.000
•square mllei, Ms the world's largest
Inland sea.
FASCISTS CLAIM FOUR
BRITISH SUBS SUNK
ROME, Aug. 28 (AP).-The Ital-
liin High Commind claimed today
fascist warships hid sunk four
British lubmirinu In thi Mediterranean and that iome of the survivon, including the comminder of
one of the veueli, hid been ttken
prisoners.
This report licked my British
confirmitlon. , .   .
The wir bulletin icknowledged
one Italian submtrine hid filled to
return to bue.
CALGARY LIVESTOCK
CALGARV. Aug, !9 (CP). - Receipts: Cittle 95; calvu 5; hogi 225;
1 few early sheep.
Cattle market active, short lupplies cleming rctdily it firm ratce.
Medium to-good heifen 7-t8; tops
1.60. Top cowi 6.50. Common to
medium 4.50—5J0. Good vealen 9—
9.50; medium kindi 8.60 down: Medium to good itocker ind feeder
Iteen 7—8.25.
Good lambs Thursday 8.25—8.50.
Hogs 13.35—13.46 tor B-l dressed
it yards md plants. „u
Vmcouver Islmd was circumnavigated bv Ctptlin George Vancouver ln 1792.
New Gold Prospect
Merits Investigation
Says Official Report
VICTORIA, Aug, 29 (CP).-Dr,
M. S. Hedley, B, ,C Government
Mining Engineer, describes u I
"raw prospect which meriti investi-
§ ation" the new gold itrlke ln the
hulips Mountains ot the Yilakom
country. North of Lillooet
The tint official report on the
new itrlke was made public today
by the Department ot Mlnu.
Dr. Hedley discloses thit Bralorne
Minu icqulred option! on the orlginil holdings In the region md ire
reported to have staked 130 to 140
clalmi in addition, and raid the
company li determined to give-it i
thorough Invutlgation.'
"No accurate Idea u yet hu been
gained, of the average Value of the
showings beyed the fact thit certain known sections are undoubtedly of high grade. Systematic
umpllng hu ■ not yet been done,"
aaid-Dr. Hedley who hu iuit returned from the district , ,
MARKETS CLOSE
ON LABOR DAY
NBW YORK, Aug. 28 (CP).-AU
securities and commodity mirketi
will be closed throughout the United States Monday, Sept. l, Labor
European markets WlU function
ss usual on Monday.
On Siturdiy, preceding the holiday, all U. S. md foreign markets
will operate on the usual Summer
schedule.
ANACONDA EARNINGS
UP TO $22,844,060
NEW YOBK, Aug, 28 (AP) .-Anaconda Coppir Mining Co. md subsidiaries reported todiy net earning! of $22,864,060 for the flnt half
of 1941, equal to $2.68 a capital
share, compared with $17,549,546 or
82.02 a share in the correiponding
1840 period,
LONDON CLOSE
LONDON, Aug. 29 (APL-pBritish
itock closings, In Sterling: Austin
"A" 16s 6d; Babcock te Wilcox 44i
3d; Coniol Gold 39s 3d; Courtaulds
Sli'Sd; Crown tXOV,; De Beers dfd.
£8i/,; Eut Geduld £9%; H. B. C.
25s; Metal Box 76s 9d; Mining Trutt
li 9d; Rind £6%: Spring! 21s 3d.
Bondi—Brltlth 2% per cent Con-
toll £81 13-16; British SU per cent
war lorn £105 3*16; British Fund-
lng ti 1060-90 £114tt. -
EXCHANGE MARKETS
By thi Cimdiin Preu
Clotlng exchmge ratea:
At Montrul—Pound: buying 4.4J,
selling 4.47; U. g, dollar: buying
1.10, telling 1.11.
At New York—Pound 4X>3«; Canadlm dollir .89 7-16.
MITAl MARKETS
LONDON, Aug. 38 (AP) - Bar
illver   23Hd,   unchmged.   (Equivalent 42.63 cents.)
MONTRtAL
Bir gold In London wu unchmgtd today at $37,54 an ounce
in Canadim fundi, 188a ln British
representing thi Bank ot England'i
buying price. Thi fixed $35 Wuhlngton prloe imounted to $38.50 in
Cinidlan,
Spot: Copper, electrolytic, -12.75;
tin 6150; lud 650; sine 5.65; antimony 15.75; par 100 pounds f. o. b.
Montreil, five-ton loti.
NIW YOBK
Copper steady; electrolytic ipot,
12.00; tin iteady; spot and nearby
52.00; forward 52.00. Lead steaiy;
spot, New York 5.86 - 90. Zinc
steady;' Eut St. Louli ipot md forward 7.24.
VANCOUVER   STOCKS
Bid
Ask
—.
MINIS.
Bralorne ,  1150 11.75
Bridge R1V Con 0H4      —
Cariboo Gold     2.80 2.45
Dentonli       OXY. JOltt
Fairview Amal .....     MVt [     01
George Cop  -      .12  '      —
Oolcondt   .-  M M's.
Gold  Belt       -f-        -28
Qrindvlew      ,«Vt     .15
Grull Wlhkine ....     XII 'A .   02
Hedley Mascot       .48 , -
Homi  Gold    ' • jOOK     «Ui
Indiin Mlnu  •    XII '—
Inter Coil sb Coke      —        .J4
Island Mount   1.00 1.05
Minto   Gold    tVK .02*
Nlcoli MiM      .0014 .-
Pend OrelUe  IM 165
Pioneer  Oold    2.40 J.50
Premier Border ...     jOI*     fl2*
Premier Oold ....     ,86        -
Ruatsiho       *y**r* . , AS
Reeves   MicD  ....      K XI
Relief  Arl   _     W*      -
Reno Sold  11* -12
Silmon Oold       OO*      H\
Sheep Creek      .94 . At
Silbtk Prtmier _     — JO
Surf Inlet    10        —
Tiylor B R  „      .02*      -
Ymlr Ymk Girl...     s04*      -
Oltl: .
A P Con  -     tfl        —
Anglo Cm        — .68
Calgary      Edm  . 1.30 155
Calmont         — . 3S
Commonwulth   ...      2S.' M
Commoil        3S —
Dalhouill         24'        —
Foothllli        M — —
Highwood Slfcu ..      .14*..   -12*
Home   ...■  25$ 2*5
Midlion   : -      m *1*
Mir-Jon,.-  JOI*- M*
McDoug Set         .04* M*r*
Mill City Peti _...     2)5*      -
Model      '* „— ••}        -
Okilta   eom       .55 —
Royal  Cin   ...mm     —:       05*
Pta  '  --..:.•£..    .0-Vt .05
Vanslti       MH      -
Vulcm —      — .85
INDUSTRIALS.
Cmlttl Bit    '5 -  ■
Cout  Brew    ttt 1J«
Pic Coyle.   •". *
Wheat Skids
CHICAGO, Aug. 29 (AP),-Wheat
pricei slid down from tour-year
peak levels today with louu that
amounted to u much u 1* centi
it one itage but later recovered
part of the decline,
Other grains followed, rye and
oiti showing extreme louu ot a
cent or more while corn eued only
fractionally, being lupported by
good lndustrlil ud shipping demand and reports that the Government may relse iti offering pricu.
Wheat closed %—* lower thm
yesterday, September, $1.13*, December $1.17*—*; com * off to
* up, September 77*—*, December 81*-*; oits *-l lower.
Bralornt Climbi 10;
Home Oil Drops Eight
VANCOUVER, Aug. 29 (CP). -
Eirly ictivlty eued oft and few
price changes were registered on
Vancouver Stock Exchange today.
Transactions totalled 18,030 ihares.
Bralorne Gold climbed 10 to
11.50 md Reno firmed a cent at 12
Privateer illpped I fraction to 47*
while Minto idded i fraction to
2*.   .
In the oil! Home dropped 8 to
2.33 while Calgary SC Edmonton remained unchanged at 1.30. Other
oils were inactive.
Grandview wu the only bue
metals trader md rose 1* to 12.
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEG, Aug. M (CP)—Grain
futuru quotations:
WHEAT     Open High Low Close
Oct     73*   73*   73*   72*
Dec.       74*   W*   74*   74*
May  _   79*   79*   76*   78*
OATS
Oct    46*   47*   46*   to-
Dee    44*   45*   44*   44^
May     4414   44*   48*   43;
BARLEY
Oct    38*   82*   51*   51*
Dec     54     52*   51      Jl*
May    82*   63*   51*   51*
FLAX
Oct   148    160    148* 148*
Dec R5*   -     -    148*
Miy ltt* 154* 149* 148*
RYE
Bter-Sjl «!..
May   68y<   58*   86*   68*
Cash pricu — Bull ln itore it
Fort William and Port Arthur
■ WHEAT - Noi. 1 hird ind 1 Nor.
72; No. 2 Nor. 69*; No. 8 Nor. 88%;
No. 4 Nor. 65%; No. ?, 84%; No. 8,
62%; feed 56%; No. 1 girnet 66%:
No. 2 garnet 66%; No. $ girnet
64%; No. 1 durum 68%.
OATS - No. 2 C. W. 46%; Ex. I
C. W. 47%; No. 3 C. W. 46*; Ex. 1
feed 45*; No. 1 feed. 43*; No. 2
feed 43*: No. 8 feed 40*.
BARLEY — Malting grad-ss: 8-
row Noa. 1 md 2 C. W 50%; 2-row
Nos. 1 md 2 C. W. 51%; 6-row No.
3 C. W. 49*. Others: No. 1 feed
48tt; No. 3 feed 47%; No. » teed
tttVt
FLAX - No. 1 C. W. 1«* No 1
C. W. 141*: No. 3 C. W. 1»*; No.
4 C. W. IM*.   „ _ „„
RYE - No. 2 C. W. 84*.
80 Industrials
20 ralli 	
18 Utilltlu	
DOW JONES AVERAGES
.   High   Low    Close    Change
...   127.88   127.05   127.48   off    M
30.07   ott    .15
.01
30.23
18.77
30.03
16.60
18.89   up
TORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS
MINES    '
Aldermac Coppir	
Anglo-Huroman  -	
Arntlield Gold r—
Aunor  >—
liagimac Rouyn —	
Bankfield Gold  	
Bud Metals Mining ....
Buttle Gold Mlnu -	
Bidgood Klrklmd	
Bobjo Mlnli:	
Bralorne Mines —	
Buffilo Ankerite .—	
Cinidlan Malartic -
Ciriboo Gold Quirti	
Cutle-Trethewey ......—
Central Patricia  -	
Chromium M & S .—	
Cout Copper	
Coniaurum Minei -	
Consolidated M & S	
Dome Mlnei. -	
East Malartlc 	
Eldorado Oold— —
Filconbridge Nickel 	
Federal Klrklmd	
Francoeur Gold -.-—
Gilllu Lake' 	
God'i Like Oold	
Gold Belt „ 	
gnndoro Mlnu 
unmr Oold	
§ird Rock Gold 
•rkir Oold	
Hbwey Oo:
.iOwey Oold   : -.-~~
Hudson Biy M ft S	
lnternttionil Nickel 	
Jack Wi"i 	
Jacola Gold	
Kerr-Addllon	
Kirkland Ukt  -	
Like Shore Mlnei 	
Leitch Gold       ....
Lebel Oro Mlnu •■■■—
Uttle Long Uc -	
Micuia Mlnei  —
MacLeod Coekihutt	
Madsen Red Uke Oold ....
Mlndy .., ...:...., ......
Mclntyre-Porpupine	
McKenile Rid Lakt	
McVlttle-Onhim	
McWtttert Gold	
Mining Corp	
Moneta Porcupine	
Nlplislng Mining	
Nonndi        	
Normetal       	
(VBtlen Gold     	
Omtgt Oold
"amour Porcuolm  	
"ay-miter Coni  '  '	
"end 0-»llle 	
"erron Oold ...._-
■"ckle C-ow Gold 	
Pioneer Gold     "	
Premier Gold
Powell Rouyn Gol\l	
.15
2.83
.08*
1.75
.09
.05%
.10*
1.07 ,
.10%
.08%
11.50
4.05
.53
3.25
.55
1,86
.18*
1.20
38.S)
22.75
2.23
.«
3.73
.03*
.47%
.05%
. .82
.12
.05
MVt
'.oS*
12.85
.20*
28.35
34.25
.18
.01*
4.50-
.75
14.50
.47
.01%
1.88
3.85
2.05
,66
.06
48.00
1.06
.65%
J
. .$>
1.18
84.00
.58 .
1.53
.12
.97
.19%
1.60
1.40
2.87
1'S
Pruton Eut Domt	
Reno Gold Jflnu	
Roche Lonj Uc 	
San Antonio Gold —
Shawkey Gold —
Sheep Creek Gold —
Sherrltt Gordon 	
Siscoe Gold 	
Sladen Milirtlc	
St Anthony	
Sudbury Basin  ...
Sullivtn Con  —
Sylvmite  —
Teck-Hughes Gold	
Toburn Gold Mlnu ....
Towagmic 	
Venture! 	
Wtlte Amulet	
Wright HMgreivu ....
Ymlr Yinkee Girl	
OILS
Ajix	
British Amerlcm 	
Chemlcil Research ....
Imperiil 	
Inter Petroleum -
Texu Cinidlin	
INDUSTRIAL!
Abltlbl Power	
Bell Telephone	
BrulflinT L t, P	
Brewen It Dlitillen
Brewing Corn	
B C Power "A"	
BC Power "B"	
BulldlngProducti	
Canada Bread    	
Cm Bud Milting	
Cm Cir & Fdy	
Cm Cement .....
Ctn Dradje  -
Cin Milting -
Ctn Pte Rly —
Cin Ind Alcohol A	
CoM Bakeries 	
Cosmc*	
Dom Tir St Chem	
Dlitillen Seagrams	
Finny Firmer -••
Ford of Canidi A ......
Gen Steel Wmu -
Goodyeir Tire
120
.11
.03*
1.38
.01*
M
.78
.52
.22
.07
1.60
.64
2.54
2.80
1.42
•JS*
4.90
4.75
4.0O
.04*
.13
16.23
.11
9.23
13.50
.     .80
.150
7*
i"
1.30
.   14
2*
4%
7
5*
15*
34
4*
23%
Gypium L & A	
Hamilton Bridge	
Hlnm Wilker 	
Imperiil Tobacco ■,.--„,
Lobliw "A"     .*...._
Ubfiw "B"  —-.
Kelvinator —m.
Msple Leaf Milling 	
Musey Hirrii
Montreal Power	
Moote Coro       	
Nat S'eel Cir     -	
"ite H»ney     .....„_.-..
"•ower C*>rp       .——.
Pressed Mettli   -
Steel of Cm       	
Standard Paving	
. 15*
. 5*
, 72*
. 3*
. 4
, 44*
. 12
. 26*
. 24*
. 9
»«i
.21*
45*
38
10*
4*
7*
67
.     .55
IAQI NINI
futures lower
WINNIPEG, Aug. 88 (CP).-Mod-
ante mill md local buying m.4
light offerings made up a fealui".*
leu trade on Winnipeg Grain Exchange today and whut fulur»i
pjlces moved along 1 nirrow rtnge
to cloie Vt-V, cents lower, with
October at 72%. Decemb-i 74* md
May 78* cents 1 bushel.
Mill -uying In oiti pushed tm
October future to 1 new seasniinl
high, which eased after buyen apparently' wtisfted* tflliT' requirements. Buying In thli' co-hmodr.y
wu stimulated by the reported sail
yeiterdiy to tha. United Kingdon
or an-undetermined quintlty ••!
rolled oatt md oat meal.
Light shipper lupport kept b.ir-
ley pricu fins aa offerings \v a
scanty, While routine investor t
buying wu reported in flix ind
rye.
In the oash wheat market, ute ol
2,500,000 bushels ot Na 1 Northern
wheat to terminal interests v. s
reported. The wheat was said to
be In itore ln the Fort Willla-n
terminal. Mills continued to support
Not. 3 md 4 Northern, with sprea-ti
frictiontlly better.
Chlctgo wheat, pricei sagged *
cent on lick ot Interest while
Buenoi Aires pricei were unchmged.
New Highs Listed
Futures Lower
NEW' YORK, Aug. 29 (JU?)'. -
Strength of an auortment ot specialties kept the itock market alive
todty md helped of ftet legging tendencies displayed by mmy leaden.
The ticker tape frequently wu at
a standstill and tramfen for th*
full proceeding! were under tha
350,000-ihire mark.
In the itock section Consolidated
Aircraft edged into new high ground
for the year on word the company
plmned a 100 per cent itock dividend. Othen at new topi for 1941
Included American Woolen pfd.,
American Commerciil Alcohol ona
Schnley. Douglai Aircraft made
headway, along with Standard Oil
(N.J.) md National Distillers.
Westinghouse wu an isolated
weak spot Backward were Bethlehem Steel, General Electric, Great
Northern, Anaconda and United
Alrcnft
Canadiu itocks were illghtly
higher. Walken gained 1 full point
and Distillen Seagram *. In tha
bond market Canada 4s were U
point lower.
Prices Irregular
MONTREAL, Aug. 28 (CP). —
Trading covered a fairly broad lilt
on tha itock market today. Prlc*
changei were principally confined
to Induttriali and nunu md wer*
irregular. ..
Strongest induitriill wer* Massey-Harris and Canadlm Car. Foundation dropped from a pew high to
even. Losers were Canadian Car
preferred, Canadian Industrial Alcohol "A , Dominion Coal preferred
and National Steel Car.
Consolidated Smelten end Bulolo
did better in mlnu but lnternttionil Nickel md Noranda were on.
the down grade.
NIW   YORK
STOCKS
Open
Close
Amer Cm 	
mi
Am Smelt & Ref	
42%
42 k
Amer Tel	
155%
—
Amer Tob	
70
70%
27*
28
Baldwin    -~	
li
15*
Bait tt Ohio      ,,
4%
Bendix Avl _.	
2SV,
»*
Beth Steel	
69*
89*
Borden	
ao%
20*
Can Pll .*. ...
4*
4*
Cerro dl Pasco ....—
82*
13%
Chrysler —
67*
56
Con Gu X 1 -	
C Wright Pfd
Dupont	
17*
2Vt
17%
9%
155%
156%
East Kod  	
140
141*
Freept Tex  „>.	
40%
40%
Gen Elec . ...»■■■ ,.
32*
32%
Gen Foods  -.	
38*
30%-
Gen Mot -. -, *,
89%
30%
4%
4',is
Grt tfor Pfd.	
18%
26*
33
33*
Inter  Nickel   .„ -i.
27*
27^4
Inter Tel Se Tet	
2",
2%
38 ii
38*
Mont Ward     -j.
84*
34%
Nuh Wot  .Ms*
N Y  Cento*  H3
4*
5
12%
12%
Pfsrk Mot s       73,
2%
3
Penn "R  R    __i
tn
IS*
Phillips   Pete   ___*
r
44%
Pullmin    ...m-l,
Rtdlo Corp   .
27*
4
4*
Stfwy  Stn    —-
44%
44*
Stan Oil of N J 	
43*4
43*
5%
5*
42%
43
Tex Gulf Sul ...........
38
38 *'
Un Cirbide     m
784
78*
Un OU of Oal  m
15
15*
United   Air    ■____.
41%
41*
Un Pac        \m
81
81*
U S Rubber     .
24*
24*
U S Steel  	
51%
67*
West Elec   ....
80*
90*
West Un	
28
W%
Woolworth     _.  _
■m
W*
Yei Truck 	
14*
18
MONTREAL
STOCKS
INDUSTRIALS:
Bathunt P & P A ...
12*
*4
Can Car & Fdy Pfd ..
i
Ctn North Power	
,. m
5*
5*
Con Mln ic Smelting .
lim„m
88*
18*
Dominion Coil PM ...
.
Dom Steel & Coal B ...
m
Dryden Paper 	
«—^
6
Foundation C of C ...
..
15
Gatineau Power .......
..
7
Howird Smith Papsir .
H Smith Paper Pfd .
Imperiil  Oil	
.
14%'
.
89*
0*
Inter Nickel of Ctn .
84
Like of the Woodi ...
17
Nttiontl Brew Ltd ...
25*
Ogilvie Flour new ...
20*
11%
Quebec Power  	
Shawnigan W te P ...
11
13*
BANKS:
Commerce 	
148
Dominion    _..	
187
Imperial    	
.
198
183
Nova Scotia  -mm-
278
Royal   s_»
182%
Toronto  »	
324*
CURB:
Abitibi  6   Ptd    _.
6*
Beauharnois  Corp
9%
rBlllsh American Oil
16%
"ons Piper Corp   .
ft
"lonmconi Pioer A .
'lonnacom Pm»' B
8
'lirchiH   Aircraft  _
--..*
2
Fraser Co T.m
11
,ff**T.a*,n*» " .V P
m	
11
Mitchell Robt    	
11
Power Corp Pfd ..
Walker Good & W
'Jl
