 ^'■pfe^'WW'.!!*
Crick Chintie Units An Striking
on 2000-Mile Front. Pag* 1.
Britain and U.S. Putting Preuura
oa lira. Paga 9.
Arrtit All Formtr Norwegian
Officen. P,ge 5.
NEL80N. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. JAN. IS, 1942.
3=
VICTORIA, Jin, 12 (CP) — In
thi flnt dlviiion of the Laglilature
today Llberali end Comervativei
combined to defeit 26 14 the
amendment to the throne ipeech
moved laat Fridiy by Harold E.
Winch, CCF, opposition leader,
calling for mobilization of mater
111 Ind financial resources ll well
1 »a manpower.
R. H- Carson (Lib.-Kamloops),
wondered if the Winch amendment
wai "all on the lurface." He doubted if it would contribute to the war
effort and couldn't help but feel
that the C.C.F. leader wai playing
for position. The C.C.F. parly, he
laid, teemed to feel its members
were elected to represent the CCF.
principle! only, which wu a wrong
assumption. Furthermore, recommendation! mide by Mr. Widen In
hli 14-point program enunciated last
week were not within the competence of the province.
It wu the duty of the legislature
to do al' possible' to assist the Dominion Government in ita wir efforts ind tee thit iny mistakes that
have been made were corrected. He
wu glad the CCF. were prepared
to support the wir effort but thought
it queer thit that party withheld iti
lupport until Hitler attacked Ruuia.
The communiit party In the United
Statei. also opposed help to Britain
until Ruuia wu attacked.
Mr. Caraon  hoped that  Britiah
Columbil would be ebl* t* find
money te pay Ita shire of * coit-
of-living bonua to Ild ate peniion-
' era If grinted by Ottiwi.
Herbert Gtrgrave, (CF-Macken-
lie), contended thit the C.C.F. program laid down by hia leider con
tamed concrete proposal! for a auc
eeuful wir effort but doubted if the
usiitance of the CCF. wu desired
by the Government.
He uld there waa i feeling ot dis-
aatiifaction imong the workeri it
legislation limed against them
Worken believed their right to collective bargaining wu being him-
pered by iuch legislition. They be
lieved that war efforti were "Just
another Job" due to the coit-plus
. contracti.
Mr. Oirgrive told ef in llrplane
factory In Vinoogver where a
young worker completed hli ll
loud task In three houn md wu
reprlminded by thi foremin for
ipildlng up, yet every defeit luf
fired by the Britiah ao fir hia
been dui to lick of equipment
and luppllei.
There wu lick of efficient coordination ind liaison between the
varioui bodiei in A.R.P. laid Mr,
Gargrave. There wu • "criminil
lack ot equipment and ill of the
triining would be in viin unless
adequate equipment is provided at
once."
'There wu i bountiful supply of
efficiili, however, who leem to
ihow i greiter desire for a piper or-
ginllition, to ihow a front, than to
build up an efficient organuation,"
be added.
•"There must be i definite division
of luthority ind Jurisdiction in order to be ible to effectively carry
out Instruction. Adequate fundi muit
be provided in order to provide the
necessary equipment ind luppllei
and • provincial wide fire fighting
and police luxiliiry lervlce with
uniform methodi of triining to crtite
a mobile force for any section of
tht province, the details to be determined by Britiih Columbil, not by
Ottawi."'
C.C.F.   memberi,   he   laid,   met
Miyor Cornett, of Vmcouver, ind
offered their uliitince. but were ip-
pilled it the lack of Informitlon and
lthuiiatm.
He asserted that the fire chief
lh Vancouver had requested 10.000
feet of three-inch hose. Hon. ian
Mickenzie, pemioni ind heilth
minister, however, reported thit
Ottawi government expert! hid
decided thit lv, Inch hose would
suffice.
"Perhaps iome enterprising contractor In the Eist managed to tell
the government this hoie and it had
to be gol rid of quickly," md Mr
Girgrive "The plan ind budget for
auxiliary fire fighting for Vancouver cilli (or $80,030, yet Utile more
thin |300 his been received for ill
purpoiei."
HIMJiiy |J,ll'l"**pi**Hp^iyuil!*|iiltij|i upmpwfp
HPPJPk: U:-
m*v*>
m
Raadtt Undar Fire for Giving
Fatal Rtporti. Paga 3.
Syntht..e Rubbtr Production to
End U.S. Shortage. Ptga 9.
Canuck and Auui. Fight B.mbtr
Fire, Clin Sataty. Pig* 3.
________________________________________________
51
NUMBER tit
AS.PACIFIC WAR ENTERED FIFTH WEEK
Although the Japa have.Manila (1). the harbor is of no use to them while tha Corregidor fortress holds out. U. S. and British planes operate from Burma (2) and blast
Jap bases in Thailand. In Malaya (3) British forces give ground. Japs land new forces
in British North Borneo (4). Japs bomb an Australian base in New Guinea (5), At
Changsha (6) Chinese rout great Jap army. Australia dejiies Port Darwin (7) bombed, speeds preparations as Japs invade Netherlands East Indies.
2 JAP CRUISERS,
2 TRANSPORTS, 4
PLANES DOWNED
Netherlands Aided by
Alli«# HJttlnfl,.;,
Back m faps
SITUATION ON
FRONT OBSCURE
By HENRY HOOGENDOORN
BATAVIA, N.U., Jin. It (AP)
—Dying Netherlinders ind their
allies (apparently American and
Auitralian pilots), ll was announced tonight, hive itruck two; Jipanese ciuiien and two triniporti,
• nd shot down four planes fn trying to smash Japanese footholds
on Borneo ind Celebes South of
the Philippine!.
The situation wai obscure in the
bitter ground fighting it,Tarikan,
Island oil centre off Northeastern
Borneo, and at Minahaiia, the Northeastern part of Celebei where Japaneie setborne troopi and pirichut-
isti lindtd eirly yeiterday.
"Operations in the Mlnihaiaa area
are being continued," a communique
said. "No further particulars can
yet be given at the preient ibout thi
attack on Tarakan nor ibout the
strong resistance which our 'roops
continue to offer,"
Tokyo clilmed the surrender of
Tarakan and the capture of Mecado,
main city of Minahaisa.
NEED AU) AT ONCE
An Informed Netherlandi lource
in London uierted thit the lou of
all Borneo and Celebes wll probable
"unleis heavy allied sea |nd ilr reinforcement! arrive quickly."
The garrison at Tarakan wu uld
to be "only a demolition party which
hid been ordered to deitroy oil
facilitiei."
The importance to the alliei of retaining Bilik Pipin, mother oil
centre and Netherlindi nival bue
300 mllei South of Tarakan. wu
emphulied by thli lource. He uid
itlied bomberi were operating to
utilize Tarakin'a oil depoilti, ind
stem the Japineie sea ind air push
South md Weat towird Java and
Sumatra.
Two Austrillm planes and one
Netherlandi nivil lircnft were lost
In the operationi.
HOME   DELIVERIES
ARE DUE FOR
REDUCTION
OTTAWA, Jm. 12 (CP)-Thit
old builneu of "to market, to
market to buy a fat pig, home
again, home again Jiggedy-Jig"
nen will be more thin I rhyme,
JtoT^naitnt Kjittt* ^Ucatid.
r  tonight      *
Ai war priorltiei make themielvei felt itore dpllverlet ire
due to be decreaied and thia
mains houaewivei more Ind
more will bave to fetch their
food from stores.
There are plenty of lurprlses
In atore for ill of ui, mmy of
them will directly iffect the
home and they will come in
IMl."
Report Hum Building
New Siegfried Line
LONDON, Jm. 12 (AP) — A
foreign lource todiy uld he hid
heard from continental Informant!
thit the Todt Engineering Organ.
lutlon li building a "niw Siegfried Line" en both aides of the
Oder Rlvek Inaldi Germiny. (Thi
Qermin Prtu took tbe trouble to
ipeclfloally 'deny thli report lut
week.)
At Menutlr, In Grrman-occu
pled Rumania, te men penoni
were wld te kivt been ient»r>ced
te detth fer r\llrM*4ibo<ige,
33 Jap Planes Are
Destroyed by U. S.
and British Planed
CHUNGKING, China, Jin, 12
(AP)—The Chlneie Radio In •
broadcait tonight recapitulating
American, ilrmen'i lucceuti In
Southern Aile uld thit U.S.
bomberi deitroyed nine Japaneie
■Irplinet at a Thailand but Siturdiy, ind imtihed 24 mon y».
terday In cooperation with the
Royal Air Perce.
JAPS' SHELLING
SEEN AS STMT
Of BIG ASSAULT
Americans Hit Back
,^.,Vm,BiQ    ^
Guns
WASHINGTON, Jm. 12 (AP>-
The Japanese heavily shelled tnd
bombed American-Filipino poii-
t:om todiy in whtt miy be the
initial phise of an all-out attempt
to crush Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Army md free the bulk of
their Philippine forcei to tupport
the Netherlandi Indiei Invulon.
The Americans were hitting
back, tbe United Statu War Department reporting in a communique that "a heavy artillery battle il In progress ilong the enure
front."
For iome diys, the Jipineie hive
been bringing freih troopi to thii
front North ind West of Manila In
apparent preparation for in offen-
.1 v S
That thli wis beginning wu indicated not only by the irtlllery
• cticn but also by • report from
MicArthur thit "Ground ictlvity li
tncreuing."
Enemy bombing raids ilao were
I made on the Americin fortiflci-
[ tioni In Manili Bay but word wu
i lacking  as   to  their lucceu.   Mic-
TO   REGISTER  JAPANESE
VANCOUVER,  Jm.   12   (CPl
Royil    Canadim    Mounted    Police  Arthur" idviiid only "thil "Air it-
taid today  they have begun  com-ltirki are being renewed."
pultory rtgutritlon of ill Jipineie|   The  Philippine Commwder ilso
resident! here who did not regUter' reported   the   Jipineie   were   it-
under tbe Dominion-ordered volun-! tempting  to  .uppren  the  uie  of
tary reglitratlon cirried out in Brit
lih Columbil list Summer.
Late Flashes
WASHINGTON, Jm. 12 <AP>-
The Americin Federation of Labor
today requested ■ voice In govern-
ment policy miking In the production of wir luppllei, but conceded
to Industry the right to minige ltl
own affaire.
WASHINGTON. Jin. 12 (AP) -
Miyor Fiorello H. U Guardia of
New York cilled on the United
Stitei Government todiy to ibollsh
"uieleu igehclei" ind devote the
money to helping ciliei meet ex-
pemea incurred under the wir progrim.
WASHINGTON, Jin. 12 (CP)-
A settlement of the future itltui
ef St. Pierre Mlquelon, thi twe
tiny French lilindi off the South
tout of Newfoundland, li expected
hire aeon but nom hu bun
nachid io fir, It wu learned today In diplomatic quarter!.
BERLIN. Jan. 12 (Germin broad-
cist recorded by. AP) - Germin
newspapers reported todiy thit M,-
.125.990 plecei of Winter clothing for
Nul soldier* ori the Ruuiin front
ban been donated by thi Germin
people in reaponit to Hitler'i appeal
radio receiving sets by civilian! In
Manili ln order to kiep them from
hearing the Americin ind Britiih
broadcasts.
It wu dlicloied thit formtr Sen-
itor Harry B. Hiwu of Miiiourt,
ln i short-wave broadcut to the
Philippine! thii weekend told the
Flliplnoi to "Witch thi Quislings"
until the inviden ire driven from
the lilindi.
Says Market Board
in Undesirable Hands
NANAIMO, B.C,.Jm. 12 <CP>-
A Weitholme firmer told Com-
miuioner A. M Hirper todiy thet
in his opinion the Britiih Columbil
Vegetable Marketing Boird wai In
undesirable hindi md poor for the
firmer or producer.
L T Solly told Judge Hirper, ln-
vestigiting ictlvUlu of the Board.
'.hat he thought every grower ihould
have the right to sell ■ uck of
potatoei u well u the Board. 'The
Board hu continued to exploit the
firmer," Solly continued. •There ii
too wide t ipreed between firmer
md comumtr. The longer the Boird
hu been In builneu the lirger the
ipread becomes."
Level of the Wut Arm it Nelion
Mondiy wu 7:18 feet above the low
witer mirk, i drop of 07 foot from
Sundiy.
(POWER PLAN
iCTEDTOBE
OUT SOON
Gradual  Assimilation
of Women in War
Work Planned
FARMS NEED AID
OTTAWA, Jan. 12 (CP). - War
Servicu Mlnltter Thorson expects
tt pneent tt tht Cabinet thla
walk Mt ricommindltlona for
hindllng the manpower problam
In Ctnadt. It wu leirned en high
authority tonight.
It la probable a definite policy
will be decided In t ftw diyi but
pouibly will mt bt mnouncad
until Parlllmint opma.
In addition to tht demands of
Cimdlin minpower for tht armed
forcei end lnduitry, t shortage of
firm help hit bttn taken into consideration.
In speiklng of "man power," officiils have emphasized that the term
embrace! wominpower tnd lncreaied uie of women ln war industry ln
receiving iteidy consideration, it
wti laid.
Ona authoritative lource aid
there wai no question ot a nan
movement Into wartime lnduitry to
rtpltct mtn tnd leave them ln •
poiltion to Join tht irmed forcei.
Rather, It wu idded, tny plan
worked out will Involve a gradual
aulmllatlon of women into lnduitry.
Tlie ntw mobillzition plan, lt
WU lild by Informed sources, Involve! important measures of re-
orginlxitlon tnd expinslon in ont
or mort government departments.
Some problem! undtr conslder-
ition relite to tht mobilisation
the number .
>h who miy
be made liable to compulsory
tranifer from <at sphere Of ictlvity to mother, while otheri relite
to the machine by which the plin
miy* be oper ited.
' lilt coordination of machinery for
the execution of the plan it also
under active coniideration. The
labor Department now operates
the wtr emergency triining progrim under which large numbers of
people, including women ind older
unskilled men, ire elng fitted for
•killed md semi-skilled Jobi ln wir
Industrie!.
Thit depirtment ilso operates the
employment service which ll under
direction of the Unemployment In-
surmce Commiuion, ind hu offices
ill icross the country, facilities for
placing people in employment, and
data on perioni ivillile for employment md thi needi of lnduitry for
employeei.
On the other hind, the Department of Nationil Wir Service! hu
the michlnery for idmlnlitering the
compulsory calling up of men for
mll'tiry aervice ind ii doing thit
work contlnuouily, operitlng
through regionil Wir Servl, t
Boardi
Whatever michlnery li decided
upon to effect i more complete
mobilization will call for co-ordination of theie now separate ictlv-
Itlei. One suggestion believed to be
under coniideration U the trinifer
of the whflle lob to the Libor Depirtment.
Another ii underitood to be i
lyitim whereby the regionil Wir
Servicu Board now operating to
call men UP for military training
would be lncreued In number
•nd mide to represent both the
Labor Department In Iti concern
to obtiln men for euentlil civilian Jobi and the Wir Service!
Depirtment with Iti concern to
obtiln men  for the forcei.
In connection with the moblllzi-
lion plan itself It li underitood the
tendency li to fivor proceeding by
dauei iccordlng to age, domeitic
itltui ind ui rither thin by Induitrlil.
Thli might Involve railing ill
single men ind wldowen up to the
• ge of 49 before boirdi u in initial itep. An Inquiry would then
be made Into the abilities of eich
nd thoee whom the boird ahould
find mon uieful tn other pursuit!
thm ln thou In which they were
then engiged would be ordered to
make ■ change.
After the ilngle mm end wld-
ewin wen chicked evir the
boirdi would preeeed to dill with
ether tltutt—elegit womin, married mtn without children, mar
ried women without ehlldnn.
mirrlid   aereent   with   ehlldnn
Labor Army Repairs
Tracks, Bridges
Behind Russ
LONDON, Jtn. 11 (CP)-Tht
BBC laid tonight that at Soviet
troopi continue to drlvt thi Otrmtni bick Ruuiin liborers behind tht linn ut working dty
tad night to restore communi-
citlom in tht reconquered terri-
tortei.
"Thli itcond Soviet irmy, following closely behind tht td-
vancing toldien, hu repaired
KM mllei of railway tracki and
41 bridgei behind the front ln
leu than a month," the BBC
Hid.
tnd ao on iccordlng te tn irring-
td icheduli.
A plan ot proceeding by Industries or businesses li known to
have been conildered alio. Under
it tha authoritiu would itart with
large employer! md obtain a list
of the agei, skills, experience ind
training of all penoni employed by
each.
BRITISH SET UP
HEW LINE BELOW
KUALA LUMPUR
Losses Astonishingly
Few in 9-Hour
Retreat
FICHTERS BEAT
OFF AIR RAIDS
aiN«APOP.l, Jan. 12 (AP)-
Brltlih troopa hive abandoned
Kuala Lumpur, bitterly oontwttd
rubbir centre ind capital of tht
Fedinted MHiy ttlUt, and at-
Ubllihed anew line bilow the
elty iomi 150 milu North if
aingipon.
Thi wlthdnwil wu orderly da-
■ pit* t nmeruleia pounding from
Jiptniu ltnd tnd ilr forcei. For
nine houn thi retreat wti carried
out down thi main North-South
highway with aitonlihlngly few
lliill,
rarther down the penlniula •
Britiih cotitil patrol captured t
•mill Jipineie unit which linded
from fiihing enft ln Southern Johore.
The RAT. wu busy throughout
the diy heiding off Jipineu nid-
en winging towird Slngipore.
Europein ind Aiiitic residents
begin leaving Kuili Lumpur, one
of the moit beautiful cities in Malays, several weeki igo. Refugeei
irrlvlng yeiterdiy uid the Jipan-
eie would find little of use to them
except empty buildings, io thor-
oughly wu the iccrched-earth policy cirried out.
Britiah fighter plinu win In
the air over 8ingapor« In relay!
from airly morning until lite
ifternoon belting off the moat
imhltloui raiding attempti thi
Jipanwe hivi h fir mide In daylight over thi Iiland ind thi
adjacent itate of Johore.
A itorm broke In the eirly evening, blanketing the island under
dirk rain clouds ind ending the
memce of Jipanese nidi. Loan
were found to be negligible. Pre-
limlniry reporti uld there hid
been two cuuiltiu. A few rubber
treei were uprooted ind i few nt-
tlve huti bettered.
Moit ef Singapore'! nildinti
win unaware ef the drima
fought high In tht eloudi but
nccailonil bunt ef machlm-gun
fire win hurd high above,
prompting manja, to move Into
ihelten. People win vlalbly
heartened by the familiar whittling roar of the R.A.F. plinei.
Britiih Heidquirters uld teven
fighting continue! In the Selangor
trei, although ''our troopi hive
been withdnwn to position! North
of Seremban."
Serembpn ll 39 mllei Southeast
of Kuala Lumpur, which ll lecond
only to Slngipore itself u Milaya'i
biggeit city.
The new line hu been eitabllihed
In that region and Japanese amulti
in being resisted, the war bulletin
iald.
More than two-thirds of the penlniula hu fallen to tbe Inviders.
who now have entered another
state, Negri Sembllin. which li
bordered on the South by Johore,
tbe lut Ijefore the narrow, ciuie-
way-ipmned strait which separatei
the Miliym Penlniuli trom Slngipore Iiland.
Regiment Rushed
From France I
Smashed by Rus:
Huns Fall Back Nine Miles in Single Day]
on Moscow Front; Ski Troops at Work;
Put Crimea Rail Lines Into Order
MOSCOW, Jan. 13 (Tuesday) (AP) —The Red Army ...
reported today to be threatening to envelop another secta,.
of the Cerman Winter defence,line between Vyazma arttP
Bryansk after smashing a German' regiment of the 216th Division in th Mosalsk aere* 50.miles Northeast of Lyudinovw
which the Soviet yesterday announced retaken.
Latest dispatches broadcast by the Moscow Radio said
the regiment in the Mosalsk area had been rushed to tm
Russian front from France. The commanders of a light trans--
port column and a Nazi anti-tank group and other officers
were captured in this action?—-—- —
mid-way  between   Lyudinovo
and Mosalsk, the Soviets said.
The regular midnight communique reported new localities taken in
tht itetdy Runian push Westward,
but did not name them.
Two" battalioru of German infantry wera annihilated yeiterday
by Red airmen attacking along the
Weitern front, and one troop trtln
also wu deitroyed, the communique
uid.
A Tail broadcut aaid Soviet
troopa in the Crimea alio had captured many locomotive! and railway
can and wen putting tha lines Into
order for the movement of mtn tnd
suppliei.
Kuibyshev dtipatchu nid the
Germans had been umble to'tn-
. trench themselvei on tbt frozen
Uaicaw front and that In one lector thty wtrt puihed back nine
milea ln a ilngle day.
Ski troops, playing a more Important role ln the fighting, were
uid to have knifed silently behind the Germani ln another area,
wiped out a heavily armed Naxl
garrison and captured a village.
In itill another sector the Russians
stld the German retreit hid become
io hurried ind disorganized thit
only imill detachmenti of mto-
mitic riflemen were left behind u
I covering force.
LONDON, Jan. 12 (AP) - Thi
Runian irmiea ef the centre,
flanking the Bryanik Southetn
anchor of the main German offence line md cutlng out i great
arc whleh threitened development
of the Vyaima end of that line,
wen reported imuhlng forwird
•t accelerated pace tonight on thi
raid to Smolensk.
One hundred md fifty-seven id-
ditlonal Soviet lettlemenli, uid
Soviet military diipitchei, have fallen back Into Runian handi during
the lut three diyi of thli mighty
offemlve, and lt wu idded that In
the Southern lector below Moicow a
large city hu been encircled with
two Germin regiment! ind lirge
Unk forcu entrapped.
Thil could have been either Orel,
some 200 milei to the South of the
cipital, or Bryansk itielf, but the
former wu more likely lince previoui Soviet chirgu which had
broken the Vyazma-Bryansk German front hid by-pisied Orel.
Official Ruiiiin reporti lhat thli
punuit Is githering ipeed were ic-
compmied by Informitlon from the
Null themielvei Indicating thit the
entire battle area from a point iome
ISO mllei below Moicow to the Vil-
dil Hllli. 200 miles below Lenin-
gnd, li violently erupting.
The Germin communique ippke
without detail of fighting In. the
ViVda region, where the Russians
are hitting hard for full restoration
of all Lenlngnd-Moicow communl-
ci tions.
There wai heivy md punlihing
•ction igiinst the invaders, too, ln
the fir Southern Crlmei, where
the Runlani on the buii of previous reports, had cut off the
whole of the extreme Southwest
and appeared to be Imprisoning
the Germini between there and
the previously recaptured Eastern
extremity of the Kerch Peninsula.
Striking from Sevutopol, the
great dynamo of ill thi Pir Southern Soviet effort, the Russian Black
Sea fleet wu reported heivily
shelling Nizl columni fleeing inland
and to lhe East.
How thll continuing fleet action
hid mide possible the Russian coun-
ter-invtiion of the Crimee wu deicribed by t ntvy ipokeimin, who re
ported thtt in the initial phut of
the toperationi Red marinu jumped into the icy water netr ' tha'
shorei under enemy fire tad, in
drenched uniforms tt t temperature
of 14 degreei above zero, fought
their way onto the frozen betchet.
On the central front, recapture of
Lyudinovo, iteel-produclng city dr
milu North of Brylnik, hu nised
tfae itrong new menace to the entire :
existing Germin battle line before'
Moscow, thus putting the lower Rui-
lian arm In position to reach out
Northward for Vyazma.
Tht ruihing apeed tf tht lovlit
tdvanet wu attributed In ptrt ta
ikl, iledge tnd civilry dlvliioni
whleh in dtlivtrlng tht umt'
ttlt of darting thotk iiuulla
Whloh tht German micrtinlzid
columni dellvired Hat Fill.
It wu uierted, too, thtt In lomt
ireu Hit enemy wu burning hli
deid; wu using gunners u civilry-
men, motorcyclists as engineer! tnd
headquarten guardi u ordinary infantry.
The German preu Itielf meanwhile itill wu stressing the difficultiei of the fighting md wu leaking
to explain thit Hitler'i "Winter
line"—a line whoie extent, itrength
and location remains unclear—ii not
in any sense fixed.
Rather, laid German dispatches received ln neutral Switzerland, then
was "• loose network of itrong
polnta" behind which Hy certalr?
main buet—"in elutlc Winter line." -
New Labor Board
Is Set Up in U.S.
WASHINGTON, Jin. II <AP>-
Prnident Rooievelt creited by executive order tonight i United Statea
National Wir Labor Board with
William H. Davis, Chairman of tht
National Defence Mediation Boird,
u Iti head.
The new board hu 12 memben,
four eich repreienting the public,
lnduitry and employeei.
It wu iet up to adjust labor dit-'
pulei ind avoid itrikei md lockout! io thit there might be no interruption of i vut 'flow of war
machine! and equipment from
United Stitei industrial planta.
The exetutive order nid thit "tha
nitlonal Intereit demmdi thit there1
shill be no Interruption of any work
whloh contr>butei to the effective
proiecutlon of the wir."
-
WeaBg
Min. Max.
NELSON       20
TRAIL
Victoria   	
Nanaimo  	
Vancouver
Kamloops
Prince George
Penticton
Vernon
Kelowm
Grand Forks
Cranbrook
Kaslo
Calgary
Edmonton
Swift Current
Regina
31
7,
40
41
38
3»
21
Prince Albert        22
Winnipeg 2*
•—Below zero.
Forecuts: Kootenays—Moderating
temperatures.
____.	
'tffl_ni_*i»i i_ Mm, _«____*   ii n __r__t1_____l
*em±mut
■ ^___. :..,l:^ ^ j,, ^. /.__.. I,..
•■-•■•■'        -■-■  -■-'■•-*—
___________________________
 TWO
iy Nazi Shock Troops to Attack
Malta Soon; Huns Pour Into Italy
LONDON, Jtn. 13 (CP) (Tueidiy)—Tht Dilly Mill, In I dispatch ditellned Madrid, uld todiy
reporti from Rome Indicated Germin ihook troopi would attack
Malta within "ten dayi or thrtt
Km"
lilt diipatch, by ipeclal torrea-
Rtdent Harold Cardozo, said Ger-
lan reinforcementi had been.re-
orted pouring Into Italy to pointi
WD Brindisi to Syracuse, and that
kirei of coaital vessel, were carry-
K "voit quantities" of ammunition
td luppllei for the gathering army.
*Bs* concentration of German
[OOpt all face Malta," the correi-
jndent continued. "At the nearest
oint they are within 90 miles of
It bland and at the most distant
pint they ere only 100 mllei away.
"Ihe assault on Malta will be carried out practically exclusively by
tha German Air Force."
The recent Increase ln the number
of dtily tir raids on Malta already
had led British observers to speculations on the likelihood that tht
next Axli invasion attempt might
be directed against that stubborn
British outpost ln the central Mediterranean.
In in article dealing with tht,
Germin retreat In Ruult, Midrld'i
only Mondiy morning paper, Hoji
Dt Lunes, concluded that "ill
then iterlflott havt thtir, compensation, for they permit the organising and safeguarding of tha
whole continent and free large
forcei for action In another theatre
of operation!."
Lethbridge Trounces Smokies 10-3
ior Second Straight Road Victory
TRAIL, B.C., Jan. 12 (CP)-
Llthbrldge Maple Leaf! mtde
0ielr second ippearance In the
British Columbia loop of the
A.B.C. Senior Hockey Leigut t
Winning tonight when they beat
Trill 8moko Eaten 10-3. The Al-
btrtini dominated play from the
flnt period when they icored
twice, the lecond with three mon
goals ind through the third when
Ihty tdded five more.
Leaf! had all the play in the fint
Hod with Rimstad and Culley
pring the only two goals of the
■lon.
Thin ln the second Burke, Pringle
Ich icored with Trail'i counter by
iffy landwiched in.
The   third   period   provided   the
ll fireworks, however, as Rimstad
tiled in two quick counters before
t period was three minutes old.
Itnton  miped  one  for Trail  but
■nnant,    Negrello    and    Rimstad
(me back with three more for the
rliltors before Dewar wound up the
eoring it 15:04.
Lineup:
Trail—McAneely; Morrii, Bobroi
ky; Cronie; Duffy, Buckni, Subs-
Wade, Dewar, Bentley, Chriitenien,
Stanton, Kwong.
Lethbridge — Voung; Slobodian,
Lane; Rlmitad; Culley, Pringle.
Subs—Mullen, Camyre, Burke, Maher, Negrello, Tennant.
Oficials—Brennen and Culley.
Summary:
First period—1, Lethbridge, Rimstad (Pringle), 1:41; 1, Lethbridge,
Culley (Pringle), 8:40.
Penaltlei—Pringle,  Wade, Lane.
Second period — 3, Lethbridge,
Burke (Maher), 11:00; 4, Trail, Duffy (Buckna, Cronie), 11:15; 5, Lethbridge, Pringle (Rlmitad, Slobodian), 12:06; 0, Lethbridge, Rimstad
(Culley, Pringle), 16:28.
Penalties—Slobodian (2), Wade,
Slobodian (10-mlnute miiconduct).
Third period—7, Lethbridge. Rlmitad, 1:50; 8, Lethbridge, Rlmstid,
2:24; 9, Trail, Stanton, 5:00; 10, Lethbridge, Tennant (Burke, Negrello),
5:08; 11, Lethbridge, Negrello
(Burke), 10:28; 12, Lethbridge, Rlmitad (Culley), 12:00; 13, Trail, Dewar
(Buckna, Cronie), 15:04.
Penalty—Slobodian.
Fatal Industry
Accidents Lower
.^fOJJONTO. Jan. 11 (CP)-M. T.
fcrttr, President of the Industrial
LOWER
ARROW LAKE5
SERVICE
Effective |an. 12 account
let condition there will be
M Steamer Service between EDCEWOOD and
NEEDLES. Traffic for
pointi SHERWOOD and
North to OATESCOTT
will ba delivered and accepted   at   EDCEWOOD.
uuuiaMvadlk
Accident Prevention AaiocltUon,
today reported he eitlmated approximately 1250 fatalities occurred
in 1941 through industrial accidents
in Canada.
In IMl there were 314,514 accidents reported to Workmen'! Compensation Boardi in the Dominion,
an increase of 2d per cent over accident! reported In 1040 which
emounted to 248,704.
Thli increase ln the face of an
eitlmated increaie ln the number
of employee! of 30 per cent ln the
lait six monthi of 1941, and coupled
with the greatly lncreaied work
pressure, indicates that Industry
and the various accident prevention organizations across the country have lecured reiults from the
intensified campaign begun shortly
after the war broke out," slid Mr.
Verity.
Eiling to Be in
Nelson Saturday
W. K. Esling, MP. for Kootenay
Weit, will be In Nelson on Saturday on his way to attend Parliament it Ottawa. The Houie openi
on Jan. 21
I
Do_ft coofti In pabflc placet. Cany with yoa
I box of d.liciow Smith Bracken Coofb
Drops. (Wick or Menthol, 10^)
SMITH BROS.
COUGH DROPS
Guide for Travellers
NELSON'S LEADINC HOTELS
Hume Hotel—Nelson, B.C.
GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.
SAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM
European Plan, $1.50 Up
HUM&-W. E Mitchell. Nelion;
R. S. Chomley, Crawford Bay; E. C.
"Webster, New Denver; R. S. Fraser,
C A. Yule, Penticton; R. D. Leath-
erdale, Vancouver; P. S. Weitrop,
Calgary; R. Simpson, J, H. Lewis
Medicine Hat.
NEW GRAND HOTEL
PHONE     MR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, Propi.     PHONE
1} a     In our new wing you miy enjoy tne flneit     13 A
-LOt        rooms in the Interior—Bath or Shower •■I™
SPECIAL RATES BV THE WEEK OR MONTH
VANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS
I
"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME"
Duf f erin Hotel
900  Seymour St.        Vmcouver, B.C.
Newly renovated through
out.  Phones  and  elevator.
A.   PATTERSON,   late   of
Colemm, Alta., Proprietor.
—NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILION. B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNING. JAN. 18. 1M»
AS PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL ATTENDED OTTAWA HOUSE
SALE OF
UNTRIMMED
$12-95
ML ready   TO    WKAR
Steele's (ar on
i-
Before a packed Houaa
of Commons, Prime Minister Churchill addressed
Canada's Parliament, right.
Mr. Churchill is pictured
leaving the Parliament
buildings, left, accompanied by Prime Minister Kirar
after the historic speech.
Sullivan Workers
Delegates Return
From Board Probe
Harry Nlcholaon, Chiirmm, E.
Ure, Secretary, and T. McLay of the
Sullivan Mine Workmen'! Cooperative Committee, and T. Wilson of
the Sullivan Mill Workmen's Cooperative Committee were In" Nelton Monday night returning to
Kimberley after attending the
week-long adjourned hearing of the
Supreme Court Workmen's Compensation Board Inquiry before Hon.
Mr. Justice Sloan, Commlsitoner, at
Vancouver.
The cases of J. M. McKim, miner,
John Kadin, barman, and Wilmot
Swan, miner, all of Kimherley,
were dealt with during the hearing,
and Mr. Nicholaon cross-examined
Foiter P. Archibald, Compensation
Board Secretary, extensively regarding these.
Dr. Andrew R. Riddell, BA, M.D,
Ph.D., of the Ontario Health Department, waa Introduced to the
Commissioner by C. H. Locke, K.C,
Counsel for the Mining Assoclitlon
of British Columbia. He reviewed
lilicoiii in Ontario, the let-up for
eximination of lillcotici, ind chir-
■cteristict of the disease. Dr. Riddell, who is Chairman of Medical
Refereei of the Ontario Government
Clinic, ii recogniied aa the third
specialist of the world on illicosli,
The sitting, which wn adjourned
from Oct. 30, waa held between
Jin, ! and 9, and will reiume it
Vineouver Feb. 8.
Staggering to Ease
Coast Car Congestion
Coal Orders Mount
VANCOUVER, Jen. 13 (CP)-A
ipeclal Trtnaportation Committee
wai named today by City Council
to draw up plani for itaggerlng
working houn ln Vacouver buii-
neti tnd lnduitry to relieving
civwdlng of itreet cars due to war
time congeetlon.
Scrap Collection
Useless in Trail
at Present Time
TRAIL, B.C, Jan. 12-The City
Council hai authorized W. E. D.
Monypenny to write to R. "M. Hoyland Informing him that until iuch
time ei there Ls i meani of disposal,
it la uieleu to commence collection
of acrap metal, paper, etc-
Two Recrujts for
Trade Training
TRAIL, B.C, Jan. l""-Two recruiti, to take trade training ai
motor mechanic!, left Trail for the
Coait Mondiy momlng. They were
J. M. Bendii of Ktilo tnd J. W. F.
MacDonald of Nelson.
Curate to Reach
Trail February 1
TRAIL, B.C., Jan. 1»—Rev. J,
Edward Barrett of Lytton, appointed ai assistant to Rev. L, A. C.
Smith, Rector of St. Andrew'i
Anglican Parish here, will arrive ln
Triil Sundiy, February 1, according to word received from Mr. Barrett Monday morning.
	
LETHBRIDOE, Alta, Jan. 11
(CP)—South Alberta coiyerlei reported today they were deluged
with a riling flood of orderi from
points throughout the Pnirle Provinces and Ontario. Operators accelerated production to capacity and
sent mit • call for more minen.
Waving his hat aloft in one of his many now famous
gestures, Prime Minister Churchill, left, waves to the
cheering throngs that greeted him on Parliament Hill in
Ottawa. The British prime minister ls shown, right, with
Prime Minister King following his historic address.
Eight Airmen
Die, Seven as
Planes Collide
Say Hun Movements
in West Europe and
Norway Significant
LONDON, Jm. 13 (Tueiday (CP)
CHARLOTTETOWN, Jin.  (CP)
—The Daily Expreai said today that
the RA.F. haa observed "significant movement! by German forcei
into Western Europe and Norwiy
since Adolf Hitler took over per-
—Eight ilrmen of the Royil ind sonli command of the Germin
Royal     Cimdlin     Air     Forcei  Army."
plunged to deith todiy In Prince "Moit of the reinforcementi ire
Edwird Iiland, liven of them In being massed in the Weatern parti
the crash of two plmei after a,o( Occupied Europe. Hitler miy
collision near Chirlottetown. I have lent hli troopi to these two
| countrlei to be prepared for a posil-
ble invasion from Britain," the
paper laid.
I An authoritative source, however,
commented that there had been "no
I evidence" of iuch a passing ln the
: West and the movement of Germin
The single known Canadlm victim of the eight was Lac. C. L.
Mclntyre, 24-year-old Montreeler,
who cracked up on a solo night
flight during a snow flurry near
Summerside. He was a student it
the R.CA.F'a No. 9 Service Flying
Training School there.
Six of the seven who died after
the fatal plunge of two R.A.F.
tnlners three miles from here were
from the United Kingdom. Group
Capt. E. A. Blake, Officer Commanding the R.A.F. General Re-
connalsaance School it the Charlottetown arlport, iald:
"Two Anson aircraft belonging to
the Royal Air Force Station, Charlottetown, collided over Southport,
about three mllei Southweit of
Charlottetown, at about 3:30 p.m.
on Monday, Jan. 12. Both ilrcraft
crashed to the ground and one exploded on contact."
Curling Scores
Results of play ln the Nelson
Curling Club's Colllnsoir Cup competition Monday night were:
M. Robichaud won by default
from H. M. Whimster.
W. R. Dunwoody 10, C. H. Marshall 8,
J. P. McLaren 12, H. H. Sutherland 12.
W. T. Fotherlngham 10, J. Dingwall S.
William Mirr 11. J  H. Allen 8.
R. E. Horton 0, T. A. Wallace ».
R. D. HaU 11. J. A. Smith 9.
T. H. __ourque 10, J. J. McEwen 8
K D. Wallace I, F. A. Whitfield 7.
F. Ewing 10, F. D. Cummini 8,
Hits Two Others
TRAIL, B.C Jul li-The $rtll
City Police car, left parked with the
emergency brake aet, In trout pi
the'Police Station by Acting Chiel
ot Police F. H. Steele at tbout 11
o'clock Monday morning, .lipped
out of control tnd roled down Spo- -
kane Street directly acrou tha Pine
Avenue Intenectlon, and crashed
into a oar owned by K. M Spence,
parked it the top end of Spokint
Strtet directly opposite tht B.C.
Telephone ottict. Jarred by the
Impact, Spence'i etr skidded ilde-
wiyi Into Jimes Dome'i etr, ilong-
ilde.
The first Intimation tht pollet bad
ot the Incident wu i phont call
trom tht telephone ottict ihortly
tfter Chief Steele hid entered tbt
itation.
Estimated damage to Spence'i ear
wu $125; to Dome'i, $71; and to tb-
pollet ctr, |W,
Horton Guilty of
Gyro (rime; Gets
Gift, Best Wishes
Gyro Htrty Horton wai tound
guilty ot the tretiomble action at
taking unto himself t wttt without
notifying Club memben of hli
plant, ifttr I hilario- . Nelion Gyro
Club kangaroo court Mondiy night,
and wu mttneed by Hit Honor
Migiitrate B. D. Barnei to receive
a wedding gift and the Club'i belt
wishes for happineu ln hli new life.
Gyro Horton, tnxloui to get hii
trial over, attempted a plea of guilty, but Counsellor! John Thorn ud
P. E. Poulin, itatlng that It wu
quite apparent from the defendtnt'i
action ht waa not retpomlblt ior
hli utterances, entered on hli behalf i pie. of "not guilty." And
then the tun itarted. Attorney-General E. A. Minn proved to the
Court'a Htiifactlon through talented argument—and the subtle lug-
gestion to Magistrate Barnei that
the defendant wtt % guilty character because of I failure to serve
Nelson-brewed beverages at a party—that tha chargea wert Justified.
Wild expostulations by the Defend Counsel failed to iway tht
Judgt or Jury, and tbe defendant
wu found guilty and sentenced.
CRANBROOK CUSTOMS
,  INCREASE IN DEC.
CRANBROOK, B. C Jan. tf (CP).
—Caitomi md excise receipta for
the port of Cranbrook for December ihow in Increase of almoit
(0000 over flgurei for November.
Totala for December were $20,707,
comapred with (20,822 In November.
MIDGET CAME IS
MADE A PRACTICE
Panther Midgets were on hand
10-atrong for their icheduled game
Monday afternoon with the FA.C.
Mldgeta, but for the lecond tlmt ln
succession tbt FA.C.'i could not
field t team, and the game wu eon-
verted Into a pick-up one for a keen
hockey practice,
Feel Chilly • - - Stirt te Sneeze
Nose Starts to Ru
19 Republics May
Co Against Axis
RIO DE JANEIRO. Jan, 12 (AP)
—A highly placed official here for
the Pan-American Conference opening Thunday declared tonight that
19 American republics—ill uve Ar.
gentlna and Chile—stand ready to
approve blanket declarations levering all relations with Germany,
Italy and Japan.
This Informant said Chile Is expected to Join the majority when
the delegation arrives tomorrow,
leaving only Argentina to be won
over.
forcei In occupied ireai observed
by the R.A.F. "wai no mort than
it his ever been,"
Argentine Opposition
Urges Special Meet
BUENOS AIMS, Jin. 12 (AIM -
Leaden of three oppoiition blocs In
the Chimber of De^utlei cilled
upon Acting Pteildent Ramon S.
Citlllo today to convoke a ipeclal
senion of Congreu for a itudy of
"urgent fundamental problem!"
facing Argentina.
They noted that roreign Mlniiter
Enrique Ruli Guianzu recently declared Argentina would be unable,
with Congreu idle, to commit herself to i military alliance it the
forthcoming Pin-Americin Conference opening Thunday ln Rio de
Janeiro.
Cost Living Bonus to
City Employees to Be
Continued at Trail
TRAIL, B.C, Jan. 11—The City
Council Monday night voted to continue payment of the coit of living
bonui to civic employeei is at preaent In force. The bonui ii $10 to
itlarled officlali receiving under
$2100 per yeir, and 40 centi per day
to diy laboren, not to exceed $10
per month.
Then comet the cold which, if not attended to
immediately, ihortly worki down into the bronchial
tubea, and the eough itarta^ .
On the fint nan of a oold or cough go to any dm
counter and get a Dottle of Dr. Wood'i Norway lint
Syrup. You will find it to be a prompL pleasant ud
reliable remedy to help you get rid of your trouble. It hat been an the
market for the put IS yeara. Don't experiment with a mbetitute tnd bt
diaappointM-tet "Dr. WoodV*.
Priee 3So a bottle; the Large .amity .be, about I _______ u moch, OOo.
Look for tht trade mark "3 Pisa Trees."
T*.T.ia*mmO*.l**mt,Tmm*.<**.
51 Coses Mumps
at Trail, Month
TRAIL, B. C, Jan. 13—Fifty one
cases of mumps were reported during December, Dr. N. D. C, MacKinnon, Medictl Heilth Officer advised the Trail Council, Mondiy
night Other Infectious dlieuei reported were 11 cuei of chicken
pox, and one of typhoid lever.
Child Dies as Mother
Enquires as to Dad
MONTREAL, Jin. 12 (CP)-Mir-
querlte, four-year-old daughter of
Mri. Sante Petriuello, was burned
to death here today when fire destroyed i chesterfield on which the
child had been playing while her
mother was trying to find out If her
husband hid survived the fire at
Shlpshaw, Que.
The official list of deed. Injured
and mining did not carry Petrlz-
zello'a mme.
ASK AID FOR PLANES
IN TROUBLE AT COAST
VICTORIA, Jan. 12 (CP)-Coait- j
il communitiea were requested today to render autttance to Boyil
Canadian Air Force aircraft in distress or any making landings ln
the count ol their patroli.
Thi
Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Company ol Canada, Limited
Manufacturer! oi
Producers and Eteflatn ot
Elephant       Tadanac
Brand
Chemicals and
Chemical Fertyixers
Ammonium Phoiphitt
Sulphite ot Ammorlt
Superphoiphitai
Monoctlclum   Phosphite
flrino
Metals
LEAD-ZINC
GOLD    SILVER
CADMIUM    BISMUTH
ANTIMONY
MERCURY
Alia Sulphuric Add and Sulphur
General Office and Works, Trail, B. C.
Fertiliier  Silei— Mirine   Bldg.,  Vancouver,   B.  C
Metal and Fertiliser Salet—215 Si. |amei St., Montreal
 Under Fire
Reports to Nazis
LONDON, Jan. 12 (CP).-Grow-
Ing dissension in the Nazi High
Command wai reliably reported to
have ipread to the Navy today with
a sharp disagreement between
Grand Admiral Erich Raeder and
tit
THE  BEST  IN
COALS
DRUMHELLER
£LO-COAL
MERCURY
PHONE 701
Fairview
Fuel Co.
hli submarine chief, Vice Admiral
Karl Doenitz.
Earlier the London Star quoted a
Moscow broadcait that Field Marshal General Wilhelm Keitel, Chlet
of the Nazi High Command, suddenly had been taken ill.
A foreign source,, whoie information about Germahy hai almoit Invariably proved accurate, uld Doenitz had accuaed hla superior of
misleading him about successes of
submarine raiden  and the  avail-
H.LP GET RID OF THAT
Tkt koVltr <«y- TU mw IwpwuJ It-eUty
(mmU mw tl m»4keHoer~M tyri* **t eekf
Win* qvldw. nliti fet* ftvM yea mete tei tern
tAtto* f. w v% eate wi wta iimwi ■ ■ • ^.^
UCKLEY
MIXTURC
-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNINQ. JAN, 11. 1942— —
ability to replacements. He flatly
charged Raeder wltb "being responsible for tbt miscarriage nt submarine warfare."
Thil lource Wld tbt Doenitz
phraie, which bt detcribed ai a direct quotation, "beara Mt Indication! thtt thingi trt not going to
well log tht Germani in tht Bottle
of tht Atlantic." /
■ Thit soilrr_e said that Doenitz
charged thtt Raeder deliberately
permitted fain reporti to spread indicating tht rale of sinkings of British tnd Allled'shlps wtt much higher thtn It actually wit. He also wu
said to htvt charged thtt the rate
ot ntw submarine conitruction wai
much lowtr than tht Germans reported. -,
The Keitel report hai not been
verified.
Neither Russian lourcei ln London nor the Associated Press listening poit, howtvtr, heard anything
on tht Moicow or Kuibyshev radio
to confirm iuch a report.
AXIS IN HALFAYA
SHORT OF WATER
LONDON, Jtn. 12 (CP).—Thi
Britiih Broadctltlnj Corpontlon
quoted i Cairo mttttgt todiy ll
•tying tht holdout Axli gtrrlien
In Htlftyt It believed to bt 'uttering from t ihortage ef witer
but thtt luppllei are btlng dropped by bomber tt mtkt up ftr other lupply defIclencei,
It sounded I Minting note, however, thtt tht "lytttmltlc reduction" of Htlftyt wti t blggtr job
thin It sounded becauie tht enemy
htd carefully-hidden strongholds
Ideal for defence.
Crack Chinese Units
Are Striking at Japs
on 2000 Mile Front
By CARL C. CRANKIER
(Anoclated Prut Staff Wrlttr).
NEW YORK, Jan. 1J (AP)«-Tht
"Chinese Incident," which developed a warfront a* long as Germany'i
in Russli and which now hai merged into t world conflict, todty furnishes tht brightest newt for tht
united nttioni fighting Japan.
At vital spots ill along a 2000-
mile front, from Mongolia tb Burma,
the troopi of Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek
are on the move ln something re-
inhbllng a genertl offensive after
4V4 yeari of bloody, down-hill war.
The Chlneie, who havt inflicted
2,000,000 caiualtiei upon tha Jtptnese Army, appear no more willing
than the Russians to glvt tht Axil
a breathing space,
Wtth a trained and seasoned army
of anywhere from 4,000,000 to 8,-
000,000 men drawn from tht great
reservoir of China'i 400,000,000 population, Gen. Chiang latt week
sprung offensives in four main areai.
One of these is aimed at Canton
in the South. Another ii directed
at Hankow from three positions irranged   semi-circulirly   ibout   tht
FOR COLLECTION-TELEPHONE
480 NELSON
— DONT THROW IT AWAY
THROW IT AT HITLER I
e**a*wm—******
Ottawa
Honounble J. T. Thorion
eialetm
Department of National War Services
grett Yangtie River port—Chtng-
iha, Nanchang and irom Northeut
of Ichang. A third hu been en tht
Yellow River front In tht Cheng-
chow area, lbt fourth wu in Inner
Mongolia in tht area of Paotow, tht
farthett Wttt outpoit of Hit Japanese in that far Northern area.   *
CHUNGKING, China, Jtn. 12 —
(A3?).—Chlneie newi dlipttahei declared todty Japaneie forcet rt-
treating Northward tram f*»»«m»8i»
after luffering t .tunning defeat
htd bten completely rooted while
trying to eicipe t Chlneie encirclement tnd. htd ltft more thia 8000
dead on the field of tattle.
Tbe Chlneie otptaad approximately 1000 priioneri tnd ltrge
quantitiei of equipment during the
battle, whloh took plice between
the Laotao tnd Milo Riven tbout
SO milei North of Chenphe, Humn
Province capital, tht dlipatchei nid.
Weather Moderates
WINNIPEG, Jtn. 12 (CP).—Mod-
erttura from tha Lakehead to the
Pacific Coast were rtporttd ovtr
tht weekend wtth moit polntt sev.
eral degreei above tht tub-mo
readingi of lut week.
Coldest ipot tn tita Wttt wu Tht
Pai, In Northern Minltobe, with 10
degreei below zero.
-PAM THM
m Itttemfcliqi dtttnpang.^
»w MAV l«70
TODAY
Hundreds   of   Useful   Household
Items   Including
• Writing Pith
• Serving Need!
• Toiletrltt
• Combi
• Artificial Flowen
• Kitchen Cadged
• Duiten
0 Face Clothi
• Clovei
• Buttoni
• Paptr Serviettti
• Electricali
Canuck and Aussie
Fight Bomber Fire
and Get Home Safe
■y DOUGLAIAMARON
SOMEWHERl IN ENGLAND,
Jtn. 12 (CF Cable).-A Ctnidian
sergeant tnd in Auitrtlitn lecond
pilot brought I big Wellington
bombtt beck from Wilhetouhaven
alone tfttr the reit of the crtw hid
bten ordered to bill out to escape
t-imtt threatening to destroy the
aircraft.
Sgt.Hpilot U C. Gray of Toronto,
who wu captain of the Wellington,
told the itory of the flight which
he thought for ■ time would be hli
fait of the war, after returning to
hli itation from • Saturday night
attack on tht German naval but.
During the flnt run over the target the crew law no bombi explode
and, thinking pouibly they hid not
been releaied, decided to mike I
second run despite heivy anti-aircraft fire tnd the glare of searchlights. Just u the bomber ctme
over the target a theil bunt directly
ander the machine.
With    the    ihell-burst    came
heavy ]ar and in a fraction of
lecond   fire   broki   out   half   way
down the fuselage.
Thingi leemed bed m I told the
crew to bail out. Through a cloud
of smoke somebody grabbed my
hand."
Grey heard the crew leaving the
aircraft. Then, feeling it was time
for him to go too, hi stood up to
see that all had jumped. To his
surprise the smoke seemed to be
clearing and he found the explanation when he saw the second pilot,
the Auitralian, hard at work fighting the flames.
When Grey saw the fire was almost under control he returned to
jhis ieat and continued flying
"We itill were in the searchlights
and I could heard the flak banging," he related. "Through the windows and through the open door by
which    the crew left I could lee it
Younger Officers
for (anadian Army
By ROU MUNRO
Camdian Pren War Correipondent
SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,
Jin. 12 (CP Cible)—Thi lirgeit and
moit important itaff reorganization
in tht Cinadian corpi U under wiy
u nearly a Kore of brigadiers, colonels and lieutenant colonels over
the ige limit for their ranks leave
field formations ind field units to
be succeeded by younger officen.
Over-ige officen ire going to
importint ippolntmenti in holding
units, depots ind bate headquarten
in England where they will continue
to make available contribution! to
the oveneu force.
There ire reliable indications the
age rule might be extended to Include limit! for majors, captains and
lieutenants, stressing even further
Ihe necessity of hiving young officer! who cin itand up to heavy going
in the field.
-■- ■ -■—     ■ __________ ■___!   _____*        ____________■__
GROCERY SPECIALS
ON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
PHONES 193—194
Tangerine
ORANGES    While they lait
Box 99c
CAKE FLOUR: twirli
Down,  pkg. 	
CURRANTS:   Ri-clnnid,
Lb.
BLEACHED   RAISINS:
Fincy, Ib. 	
WALNUT PIECES:
Lb.   _	
W
6#
PEANUT  BUTTER:   Mc-  -ynA
Mccoii'i, 2.1, tin *yy
STRAWBERRY   JAM:
Sunllni, 4'i, tin 	
69<
PORK ind BEANS: Llbby'i,
18 oz. tint, -je-4
I for   **T
EXTRACT: Lemon, Vanilla ,H.I, bot $1-23
LOUR:   ElMion's
49'i, lack
COTTAGE   ROLLS
Union, Ib.
Swlft'i,
SAUSAGES:
Vi, tin
GRAHAM  WAFERS: Or
mond'i,  large carton. ....
COFFEE: In Lunch kit
2 Ibi. net, per kit
■««- $1.59
3*
29<
221
$1.19
i TEA: H B Broken
Pekoe, Ib.        ...     _..,
! KLEENEX TISSUE:
SOO1!, carton
FLOOR WAX: Leliun,
No. 1 tin
OXYDOL: Giant
pkg.
ORANGES:   California,
2 doi -.	
TURNIPS:
10 Ibi.        	
331
23*
741
25*
i bursting." ht turned over tht oontroli to tftt
I After 10 or 12 minutei In the Australian and took over the navi-
j jcarchliffhts Grey climbed to 12.000 , gator's table, setting a oourse tor
j feet and set a Northern course, then (home.
Libyan Unit Marks
200th Enemy Plana
LONDON, Jtn. 12 (CP). — A
Libyan fighter wing oomprlilng
Brltith, Soulh Afrleto tnd Auitrtlitn ilrmen recently celebrated
Iti 200th inimy plint that down
■ Ince thi deiert battle begin.
The group otptiln pralieri tht
"flnt rtcsrd" of hli mtn tnd dt-
•erlbtd hew thty often wtlktd
• crou mllei ef dtwrt ta return to
but tfttr being ihot down.
13 ARRESTED IN FIFTH
COLUMN ROUNDUP
CAPI TOWN, 8outh Afrlct, Jin
12 (AP). — Thirteen trrtiti were
made during the weekend following an anouncement that the Government wai determined to crush
fifth column ictivitlei.
Beauty eont wit you Irienej, If
you're cora/tu. hit ii, people
target your attefi write, you
have OM fou*-"B.O."l
Wt all pertpirt—•/) tha time.
And penpiration oa your ikin fut
become! ttale, unpleiicnt. Don't
take chance* ivmon needi
Lifebuoy—it'i the ONI IOAP
especially mtde to prevent "B.O."
No other popular totp conttint
Lifebuoy't ipecitl DtODOtiiuta
ingredient   No other leap ceo
give you the LAtmeo, all-ovm
PJtonCTIOl. you get with Lifebuoy.
And whtt t thrill it it to bath
with Lifebuoy I Thtt rich, niTY
lather leavet you tingling with
glorioui rillHRlli! Mike
Lifebuoy TOUI regular bath toap.
Uie it for your face tnd handi
too—ifi 20% milder than many
•o-ctlled beauty and btby toape.
LIFEBUOY^;?$«B.O.
r     ■    m   r, _____«_,      'i, ,1,   ■■   ■■.--•"-.-i'-'■"*-A- *■--~--^-> -*^—*.w_^,^_._.v___.-__.____a____L_i
 FOUR
SpouseWIII
Over'Love'
)i Other Woman
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
(ar Mlu Fairfax:
lam a married woman of 36 and
wt three children—18, 12 tnd 8.
'e've been married almost eighteen
ears. Now my huibtnd hai fallen
i love with a married womtn. Ht
anti a divorce, saying he hat ntvtr
ived me.
the other womtn'i huiband tound
Ut about lt, and he and I accused
_em both, whleh made my huiband
ngry. The other woman wld ahe
|ade a mistake and wasn't in love
rlth my husband at all. But my
uiband can't forget her and Juit
*eps on drinking heivily to forget
tout her.
I itlll love him, although ht doei-
it care for me. What ihall I do?
BLUE
' If the married woman who wai
Dltrumental ln breaking up your
tame now confesses ihe never cared
lor your huiband, It'a likely he'll
■ave a lucid Interval, In which hell
»allze that forfeiting the affection
rf a wife who really carei for him
t folly of the nth degree.
Hope for the beit. Don't nag, keep
Stt homei fires burning, and lee If
Bill huiband of youn wont re-
tarn to "normalcy." He leemi to be
throwing away hli life for i womin
Who doeint care about him.
Hart Asks Increase
in Old Age Pensions
VICTORIA. Jtn. 13 (CD-Pre-
mitr Hltt todiy, In t Utter ta Hit
Victoria Old Age Ptniloptn Aitocl-
itlon, uid tht British Columbia
Government already hu madt rep-
reientitlona to Dominion authorities
requesting that thiy increaie tbt
old lfl pension allowance.
Mid-Section...
Flat Front Line
a Sign oi Health
NEL80N DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. JAN
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CITY, B. C.-*tr. and
Mn. W. Wilkie of Silverton villted
ltt. H. Denlg on their way to Nel-
A. McMillan left for hii borne In
9mdon Fridiy.
Ted Graham wai a visitor to New
Denver.
Mns. J. Law is a patient in Slocan
Ooremunity Hoapital, New Denver.
Uri. S. Giant waa a vliitor to
JJtw Denver.
Tlie Ladiei Aid of Bt Andrew'i
fteebyterian Church met at the
hone of Mrs. Stanley Perklnsons.
Officers md committee! were ippolnted.
According to the American Ll.
brary Anoclition, Berlin Diary wai
YOted the moet popular book of IMl.
■y IDA JEAN KAIN
A middle-aged ipreid is not heil-
thy it tny tge. Whtn tbt abdomlnil
wall becomei fltbby, the muMltt
not only collect fit but trt lncip-
able ot aupportlng tbt weight of tht
organi. Al t coruequence, tht organ! si g ind crowd etch othtr. Thli
lnterftret with tht circulation, digestion ind elimination. Aalde from
the iqueezlng of the organi, the
nerve centrei are affected and high
blood preisure mty remit.
Thli midsection ipread ll ciuied
by slumping tnd by lick of exercise. Hie iverage perion tends to
go Into a comfortable slump whtn
she itands, walk! or sits tnd whit
little exercise lhe gets ll apt to mill
thete muscles. To add to the trouble,
the attempt at correction la uiuilly
holding the ttomich ln rather than
up. You cant hold your itomach tn.
It ii unnatural and uncomfortable.
Your rule ihould be to hold up. Tlie
upward pull ahould originate with
the lower abdominal muadea tnd
ihould extend right on up through
the cheit tnd tht top of your held.
But btfort you ctn make a habit
of tha upward pull ln poiture, your
musculir girdle muit be itrong.
And ilnce theie muscles trt moit
Important to heilth. your general
conditioning progrim ihould btgln
ln tbt middle. The exercise! need
not be ttrtnuoui ner tike more
thin i ftw minutei but thty ihould
be done regularly.
To avoid itriln. tike your firtt
exerdiei lying flit on thi back on
tht flor, kneet flexed, soles of feet
retting on floor.
From thtt petition, bring liter
nttt knees to chett u you pren
tht small of tht btck down igilnst
tbt floor tad poll up tnd Is with
the lowtr tbdomlnil muiclei. To
•void tny ponible itriln, keep ont
foot on floor it the othtr knee Is
brought to tbt chett Repeat 10
timei, later JO.
Remilnlng tn tht ume petition,
raise feet illghtly otf tht floor tnd
ipread kneei wide ipert to form
V. Hold for t second, tnd bring
knttt together. Rapeit six timet,
then reit.
Still In the lame itartlng poiltion. continue to pull up tnd ln
with the abdominal muiclei. nlie
the feet off the floor ind ilternetely
flex ind itrilghten the left—another way of doing the bicycle ex-
erdie. Twelve counti will be plenty
to itart with. If your back it not
itrong. it will be wiier for you to
do that exerclie lying on tbe ilde
on the floor ind pedaling.
Stage Fright ...
Students Suffer
Whep Making
Public Speeches
By GARRY 0. MYERS,  Ph.D.
During recent ylln, I hive col
lecttd considerable Information
tbout itudenta from college down
to Ult fourth gnde level on how
thty feel whin thty talk In din or
btfort t public audience.
Below ire Individual onl state-
menu by high ichool itudenti,
Whtn I talk I leem to bt listen-
lag to mother talk md tm not
iure what thtt person ll going to
ny. Mr ont foot, usually my right,
gotl to ileep. Thingi whirl tbout
mt ai I rite. My hetrt gotl doublt
tlmt. I feel Jittery ind vtry much
wont tfttr I tit down. My volet
doein't tound llkt mt whtn I talk.
I feel a great weight on my ihoul-
den. I cin't Mt iny person Jutt
• iet of facei. I feel every one ll
staring it mt. I feel ai if a cake
of ice li dripping down my chest.
I Ittl ai though I hid no itomach.
I am afraid I can't exprtn myself
tight. When I am talking I am
alwayi thinking of what others an
going to ny and think and how I
am going to feel when I alt down.
Though I believe teachen ihould
take the chlet responsibility for
preventing uid reducing iuch fern,
I do not tell itudenti io, I urge
them to work on themielvei, ti
tbey thould; not to try to ny much,
to be sure of whit thty wmt to
ny btfort beginning, to take plenty
of time, and to keep everlastingly
at IL
Kootenay Families, Friends, Hear
Radio Talks From Boys Overseas
Many NeUon tnd Kooteniy folki
itayid cloae by their radioi Satur-
day night, an.l were rewarded by
bearing broadcast meisages trom
Diitrlct men ln the anidian Army
oveneai.
Thtrt wti a nal thrill for many
wlvei, mothen, Ind families ln hear.
Ing tht voicei of their loved ones.
.Even ln cafes imall groupi gathered
iround radioi to hear the boyi,
Thtn were at lent messages for 40
District familiei tnd friendi heard.
TWO 8END MESSAGES
Two Ntlton men oveneu, Herb
Towniend tnd Charles Dunattll,
were unable to ipeak themielvei
but reipective metngei for Mrs. H
R. Towniend ind for the DunittU
family wire relayed (or them.
Gunner Paul Ritchie ipoke * message to hli family at Procter, and
aaked them to pan along hli "hello"
to "Mra. Long and the men on the
boat-
Gunner Richard Thexton of the
Arrow Lakee spoke to hli "friendi
In Salmo"; while John Thompion
o" Nelion asked hearers to "uy
hello to Herb Pitta, Clarer/ce Ward
and tbe gang." There wen meutgti
for hla family and' Mn. Lakes and
"hello" to Choquette and Dave Wade
from Max Kypcr of Nelaon.
SOLVING
PARENT PROBLIMI
Q. Dont yeu think that many
utterincei by wlvei tnd husbinds,
ln the guiat of humor, it t iocIiI
githerlng ire conscious or unconscious efforti it inflicting emotional
pi In?
A. Yu; wlvei end huibtndi
ought to try to exalt their egos ln
a mora humane, cultivated and
Intelligent  way.
Health...
Errors In Timing
Influence Life
DRAMATIC EVENING WRAP MAKES GRAND ENTRANCE
four prize white fox skins and may be
worn over evening or formal afternoon
gowns equally well. The fur-bedecked
cape,-right, is made of scarlet wool enhanced by silver fox whoj_\white tail tips
blend into the white band around the bottom of, the wrap.
Nothing ia more important to a grand
entrance and that vital impression than a
dramatic evening wrap. At the left .above
is a simply cut green velvet coat in full
length. It is trimmed on collar and cuffs
with gold and silver braid interwoven
with ailver sequins and tiny, star-shaped
buttons. The fur stole, centre, is made of
SERIAL STORY
By LORENA CARLETON
Castle of Contentment
CaitUqar Community
Club Plans Social
CASTLEGAR, B.C. — CuUegar
Community Club met ln the Coronation Hall with Victor Jenka In
the chair.
A beaket iocIiI for the and of
January wai plinned and V, Jenki,
S. C. Wataon and Mn. ]. Hanion
wen named to the committee.
The C.W.L. wu given permission to utt the HiU for t bingo
ptrty and Iht IO DE. for t dmce.
J. P. Tiylor wu acctpttd u •
new member.
DEATHS
MONTREAL - Chtrlw Joieph
Brlttatn, 99, Chairman of the Board
of Canadian Fiirbmks Mono Co,
Ltd.
NANAIMO, B.C.—William Chid-
wlck Smith, 88-year-old naUve of
Guelph, Ont., and reiident of BrltUh Columbil for 11 yean.
I   All dainty women art
1 ! lux Daily Dippers
Wut to b« popular? Then remember ilii * rule-! Today'i anrli-M
won1! do for tomorrow, too! For
und iff ahtorh p-rriplritloti which
quickly leada to horrid undie odor.
Dip ondles In Lax every night
... jait ■■ ■non ■■ yoo Uke then
off. LUX whltk* away nndle odor.
And dally care with Lax keepf
ondtei lovely and new (u longer.
New undtr^trm
Cream Deodorant
"fib
Stops Perspiration
1. Doei no.
ihira. Don not initite ikln.
2. No wiiting to dry. Cu be
used right ifter ihiving.
1. Instantly stops penpindon
foe 1 to J din. lemoret odoe
from penpiritioo.
4. A mre, white, gieiselesi,
irunleu nnlihlng creim.
a. Arrid hu been iwlided the
Approval SetloftbeAmertrtn
Imuran ot laundering foe
being hirmleu to fibcici.
Ar.td li th. UUIOUT tELUKO
D_tOHO-UUtT. Try a In todayl
■y   LOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.
Perfect health li a very difficult
thing to define, probably largely
becauie lt doein't exist, it is i sort
ol ibitractioo made up of different
parti of different individuals' Ideals
In iome respect.
You take tbe Ideal of one min'i
hud of hiir, mother min'i perfect
teeth, mother man'i unusual eye-
light, thii fellow'i perfect digestion,
thit min'i iplendld muscular build
md poiture md the other fellow'i
feet md the composite Ls whit you
call a normal perion In perfect
heilth. But he isn't normil it ill.
You find him in probibly one ln
five million people ind hit perfect
heilth la limply in lUtriction or a
theoretical Ideal.
No; dlieue or Ulneu ll tbe lot of
min fir more thin perfect heilth
All the element! thit go to mike
up even a reuonably healthy hu.
man organtim in very complex
One of theie elements thit we ire
Inclined to forget ti chronometry,
or the normil palling of time, the
normil development of various
function! tt the proper time.
SCHEDULE OF
DEVELOPMENT
A little baby U not supposed to
hivt tny teeth. When It doei gtt id
flnt teeth, they tn mull tnd
fragile. But auppoae tt wu bore
with adult teeth md could chew
and masticate til kinds of food.
Thll ability would bt fir ahead of
ltt dlgaitlvt powen md in adult
mouth and adult tistes ln food
would limply overwhelm the
Itomach and inteitlnei.
Juit io tht development of tbe
briin cm go too tut. A too precocious child li regarded by everybody except Ita parenta wtth a certain amount of dlitiste.
Somt people you know ire going
through life on i time ichedule
thit li ill keyed up. They rush
through life getting things done tt
t ntt wblch mlku ui dizzy ind
perhapi it tha end ippeir to be old
md broken before their time. Oth
en err ln the oppoilte direction
md trt alway. behind tnd ntver
item to catch up, either with their
work or with life. Thli leemi to
break men down quite u much u
being in too much of a hurry.
Hippy li the mm who findi hli
body md hli mind developing nit-
urilly through the eyelet of tbe lge
changei, and who meets childhood,
youth, mmhood, middle ige and
old ige on their own termi.
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS
EB.T—"Hiving a diignoiii of
neuruthenli, ls it poiilble for the
gutro-lnteilinil trict to be involved, giving rise to ipastlc con.
itlpation, colltli, gu and detention.
•nd could then be my connection
bttwttn any of the conditloni md
low blood pressure?"
Aniwer — Yea. Gaitro-lntestlnii
symptom! tuch u you describe in
tht mott common lymptomt of
neuruthenli. Low blood pressure
ilso uiuilly goes with thtm.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
(Continued)
He began to baggie, lazily at flnt
with t totally disinterested look on
his face, u other cuitomen drew
nearer, he gradually crescendoed,
until through varioui changes, he
wu bargaining with a frenzy as
Latin u that ot the storekeeper. The
crowd grew itill more, watching
with Interne intereit After • final
spiel, Cuban shrugs, expostulations,
followed by financial surrender,
compllmenti to Yleni, imillng con-
gntulitloni to Scott md various
beaming salutations, the garnets
were Scott'i. And then Ylent'i, He
dropped them into her cupped hands
u casually u if toning feed to her
chickens.
"Htng the ring In your noie If
you're afraid to wear a ring I've
given you. But do wear the entire
batch tonight. And thit beautiful
white dancing frock—we're lucky to
be here between November and
March. We cm go to San-Soucci."
Under the expert guidance of
their chauffeur—and ot Scott Hamilton himself, who often had been in
Cuba—they itarted on a tour of con-
truti. Sixteenth century ruins and
decayed looking churchei mide a
contrail to Amerlcinlied office
buildings, modern hotels and the
reipendent new Capitol. Narro*
itreeti Uie.vendor'! carta piled high
with tropical • frulti, many colored
fish, vegetables, made a contrasting
to the wide, iweeping boulevirdl
And the plaiter-cracked, low dwelling! of the poor to the excluiive
Vadido residential lection, with Iti
houiei of itone, marble, colorful
stucco, set imid extrivagant gardens
of flowen.
Chamber of Commerce de luxe,"
Rose designated.
"Oh, but beiutlful." the girl cried.
"Still I prefer the 'Old Town' Spin-
lih lection. It made me feel like
dancing a Carmen right there
the cobbleitonei.""
"Let'i go bick ind do lt: Til pan
the hat for you — by the way, no
one hi! uld inythlng ibout my new
Monte Chrlstl Panami," Scott lamented.
Roae uld evenly, "You were too
proud."
"And why not? It coit me over i
hundred dollan." He turned ni he
heard Ylena gup. "Some Panamas,
\*9f>*
ARRID
mmmtmt
tmm if 1*1 m*
my little lamb, coit u much ai a
thtosand dollan."
She quickly recovered. "Well, you
needn't try to pay for youn with
my itreet dancing."
Scott Hamilton Ignored her lo
aay to the chauffeur, "(Jet over on
the Fifth Avenue drive." He leaned
back and Informed the women with
all the pomposity of a profeislonal
guide, "Three lolid milu of flowers," then nudged them limultane-
ously. Paying no attention to the
street, his eyes were wide, hii imile
was bright.
Roie trumpeted, "We'yy ill have
plenty of flowen If you don't watch
where you're going." Savagely ihe
metioned him around.
The next couple of hours they
dawdled away at the Havana Yacht
Club, lipping eirly drinks while
they sat overlooking the clean white
sands and the blue waten of the
Gulf of Mexico,
As they drove home ln the early
dusk, along the Malecon, Ylena ilgh-
ed with complete pleasure and iald,
"I'm trying to decide whether Havana is more beautiful in the twilight
or in the early morning."
"Stick with me," Scott advised,
"and you'll soon see it again In the
early morning. Then you can make
up your mind."
Ylena looked lovely thit evening
in the waap-waisted, full-iklrted
chiffon dress and the full let of
garnet jewelry. Of all the placei
they went, she liked beat the cafe
off the beaten path, where they
dined, a small place, quiet and
peaceful, redolent with native atmosphere. A tiny boy gave her a
flower. All during dinner, ind while
they lingered over liqueun in that
soft fragrance of half-wilted flow-
irs, coffee, liquor and strange fooda,
an old, old woman in ragged skirts
and an exquisite head-ehawl, played
the guitar and sang, In a voice un
believably good ud itrong.
In reiponae to Scott'i generoui
appreciation u they left the rei-
taurant, ihe bowed again and again,
and showered him with loft-relter-
ated smiling Spaniih phruei.
"What did ihe uy, Scott?" They
had reached the itreet.
"Nothing much. The uiuil flowery
raving of • well-tipped Latin.''
"But   what?"  the girl  penlited.
diouMwivsiL
By BETSY NEWMAN
"What, that could pouibly  make
you bluih io much?"
Scott pauied before they reached
their car ahd the perpetually grin
ning Pepe. "She butowed a million
bleuingi and a million- priyen —
lhe wiihed for much proiperlty
much heilth md many children-
to you ind your angelic wife."
(Tt Be Continued)
Lt Lionel Moore of Creiton uked
to be remembered to Roy Johnion;
while Cipt. Don C. Corbould of
New Westminster spoke tb hit "Nelson DUtrict friendi.'' Capt Corbould
When*it Ntlion waa i Sergeant ln
the lllth Field Battery, R.C.A., tnd
titer btlng cotnmlnlontd it the
Coast rejoined that unit u one of
Iti officen,
MANY OTHERS
There were meisiges u wtll from
Merlin Livenldge, Gnr. Tom Aitken,
Qnr. B. K. Weill, Gnr, Peter Petrel,
Bdr. Norman Slader, Gnr. Jim Reid.
Gnr. John Thompion, Gnr. Leo
Powtr, Sgt. Fred Cutlt, Qnr. T. C
Wilton, Onr. Frtd Turcot., tnd
Unce-Udr. Hughes, all of Nelion;
Victor Bridge, Gnr. W. Graham, Gnr.
E. s. Thomu, Gnr. Dave Cooptr,
Gar. W. Duchtk, Onr. H. Bartlett,
Gnr. Joseph Buckni, Williim Sharpies of Tnil; WlUlam Thomson and
Gnr Lyon of Michel; H. Davldion
and Gnr. Otter Strasier of Shore-
acres; Donild fry, Gnr. Steve Reid
cf Rossland; Gnr. Wei Scot., Gnr.
W. T. Craig of Crtrton; Onr. J. _» .,
Undboken of Jaffray; Gnr. Dames
of Beton; Sgt Thexton tnd Gnr.
Richard Texton of Glenbank; Gnr
Henry Courvlle of Nikuip; tnd Sgt-
R. I. Wood ot South Slocin.
Mri. C. Pleasanco
New President of
Aid at Castlegar
CASTLEGAR, B.C. -United
Ladiei Aid met at the home ot Mn.
C, Pleuince with Mn. C. Appleton
u cohostess. Officer! elected were
U follows:
Mn. C. Pltuence, Pruident; Mn,
W. ftiton, Secretery-Tnuurer. Mra.
H. Huddleston, retiring pruident,
thmked the memben for their lupport ln tbe put two yean.
-The commute ln charge of thi
church lots made a report Two new
memben,.Mn. E. Wallner ind Mra
Qrenrod were welcomed.
;».T*iM» ■	
Plan lo Put Women
in Jobs lo Free
Men lor Services
OTTAWA, J(tn. II (AP)-A plin
for the nptd replacement by women
of some 200,000 men in Canadian
induitrlil plants hu been given to
Munition! Miniiter Howe for presentation for the new cabinet war
committee on labor supply, the Ottawa Journal iald today.
"Purpoie of the wholeule labor
replacement would be to make
available immediately aome 200,000
men to the armed forces.
"Under the plm, men to be replaced would have no lay In the
matter. They would simply lose their
Jobs to the specially trained women.
How the replaced men would be
funnelled into the armed lervicei
waa a point yet to be settled. So far,
compulilon figured ln the program
only so far as dismissal from their
industrial jobs for replacement by
women waa concerned."
Castlegar C.W.L
Plant to Stag* Party
CASTLEGAR, B.C.-The Caitle
gar Catholic Women'i League met
at the home of Mn. W. Shkworek
/ bingo party to be held ln January wu decided on,
A ipeclal meeting will be held
at the home of Mn, W. Whittaker on
Jan. 22.
"BuM B. C. Payroll*1
It Makes a
Delicious
Pudding'
"I always have Pacific Milk
In the house, as we use It
on every dish of fruit and
bowl of cereal," writes Mrs.
R. "It makes a delicious
rice and tapioca pudding,
and we like Pacific Milk.'
Pacific Milk
Irradiated and Vacuum Packed
LONDON (CP)-The late Lord
Rothermere'i collection of paintlngi
wu sold it auction for £25.962.
Mr.
TH
COFFEE
NERVES
If TOO (Ml «lt ol Mttt, fe .
•ad art ganeralty trritabU, why not iwttch
to Portnm? YouTI like Ui Herat, tnd It'i
ibaoluWly cafftlae-fi-**. Ordtr Pottam
from your froctr today. Try It lor 10
dayi uid Mt how much better yoo (eel.
*&k
"CifTelne nerves mide Mr. Brown the most
Irriuble nun la town. I even bad children
oiling him "Tbe Grouch." But Mrt.
Brown knew too much foe me—ihe knew
thit too much tea aad coffee often aase
fiiyed nervei nd bad temper. She per-
raided Brown to switch to Postum. Now
h_'s tbe friend oi emybody md I've loit
laothe r cue ot caffeine ne rv e _."
Ht. T. N. Coin Sims.
POSTUM
.I.IM«4I«K>>
-      ■
LONDON (CF.-rour Belgltm.
sentenced to death by a German
Military Tribunal for helping Britain and poueulng irmi, havt been
executed, iccording to Inbel, Fret
Beljlin Newi Agency.
miik ml .a iii .   _ hii 11 iiif
TODAY'!  MENU
Scalloped Liver and Potttoei
Btked Squaih
Celery Cibbage,  Apple and
Onion  Salad
Mock Cherry Pie
Coffee or Subititute
SCALLOPED LIVER AND
One pound pork or btef liver,
ult and pepper, flour, 2 tablespoons
fat, 1 one, illced, I cupi illced potatoes, IH cupi milk.
Salt and flour liver and brown
lightly ln melted fat Place a layer
ot nw potatoei ln greased baking
dish and iprlnkle with ialt and
pepper. Add a layer ot liver md
onion, then I layer of potatoei until all are uied. The top layer ihould
be potatoei. Add milk, cover and
bake ln a moderate oven until po
tatoei   are  tender. Remove   cover
and let potatoei rown on top.
CELERY CABBAGE, APPLE
AND ONION 8ALAD
One cup diced apples, 1 cup diced
celery cabbage, M teaipoon chopped
onion or onion juice.
Tosi together ipples ind celery
cabbage until blended, add flavoring of onion If Uked, mix with
mayonnaise, and serve.
MOCK  CHERRY  PIE
One cup cranberrlei, V, cup leed-
cd raisins, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 cup
boiling water, 1 up lugar, 1 teg1
spoon vanilla.
Mix and boll ill lngrtdlenti together for a few minutei except
vanilla. Add vanilla, blend, and
bake between two cruata.
	
Late Photographs
FOR THE NELSON DAILY NEWS
PICTORIAL EDITION
We have received a wonderful showing of interesting photographs for our 1942 Pictorial Edition
which will be published on lanuary 31.
Space for pictures it now filled. Picturei received
late will be published in the edition If ponible but
we will be-compelled to omit many that wa would
like to publish.
Order Your Extra Copies
Now — 10c Each
Jfeteon lath} Nftua
i'
____■
 —NELSON DAILY NIW* NILSOH. B.O^-TUf 8DAY ttORklN*. MR, ft WW
Astoria
The Shoes
preferred
by the
smartly
' dressed
nr.an.
L Andrew & Co,
Leaders In Footfashion
iermany Rushes
Medical Aid
to Fight Typhus
BERNE, Swltzerlmd, Jin, 12 (AP)
Qermany, combatting an outbreak
typhua fever, recenfly hai rushed
ndreds of additional docton and
inei to the Eaitern front and
Itbllihed an anti-epidemic centre
Wtriaw, the Berlin correspond-
t of the Swlsi newspaper National
Hung reported today.
*. "battle against lice," the chief
nler oft yphus, has resulted. Nazi
Idien, wearing heavy clothing for
l( periods without washing them,
. newspaper iald, have been be-
; with lice.
"Hie abnormal climate and weath-
condltloni of the Russian Winter
t only neceisltate cire of clothing,
)d and ihelter for the troopi but
fretting painstaking examination
health conditloni," the dispatch
d.
"Special meaaurei hive been Uk-
Utinst epidemic! for which the
lifer ii very greit... in birncks
blockhouiei there frequently
three to four times is many
ople crammed together as was the
on the Western fronL
[potted typhus was reported In
rtdlsh dispatches to have broken
t iome weeks ago in the Baltic
tea and in Polish areas, resulting
ttrlct quarantines in some zones
Skittle cholera also had been relied from regions iround the Ural
lunttlni.
Airman Reeve
Has Never Met
Friendlier (Ity
Britiah Airman Dennli Reeve,
who wu ln the motor accident by
the Hume School during tht holidayi within a few minutet of when
he wti to board the train for Medicine Hat after ipending hU Christ-
mm letve, tnd becime, with the
other three ocupantt of tht ctr t
hospital patient, wrltei hli thanki
as follow! from the training centre
at Medicine Hat, to which he recently returned:
R.A.F. Station,
Medicine Hat, Alta.
To the Editor of the Dally New*
To the Public of Nelion:
Juit 1 letter of appreciation for
the klndneai, generosity and consideration tendered toward me during my altogether too brief lUy in
Nelion,
I would also like to take thli
opportunity of expreulng my
thanki to the staff and attendanti
of the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, and Mr. and Mn. McLeod
of Mill Street, whose sympathy and
undemanding was entirely beyorld
reproach.
I have travelled quite extensively
In Britain and Ireland, but my personal opinion, formed during my
visit, is that never have I come
in contact with people as friendly
as the inhabitants of Nelson.
Hoping to be with you all once
ajaln, this coming Summer, I remain,
Yours sincerely,
DENNIS REEVE, Lac
former Nelson
Boy in R.C.A.F.
Leaves for East
-PAOS FtVB
No Serious (rime Other Than Eight
Housebreakings by Juvenile Here In
r41 Chief Bone Reports; Praises Men
WED IN NELSON; MAKE HOME IN TRAJL
Mr. and Mrs. Porfirio Angerilli Jr., of Trail. The
bride is the former Miss Emma Misuraca, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Misuraca of Nelson.
—Photo by Vogue.
NELSON SOCIAL
By  MRS. M. J
Peter  Dewdney,   In-1
Reporting that tight tutt tf
houie-breaklng In Nelion In 1MZ
wart iu6iiquently tracid te • Juvenile, wM WM committed to tn
Induitrlal homt, Chief G. R. Bone
of the City police Department In
hla annual rtport to tht Police
Commiuion iald "no othtr ttrloui
crlmei wtrt committed during tht
yttr. Credit for thli otn be given
to the comtablei In maintaining
proptr patroli of tht City."
In thinking the Police Commli-
sloners for their courttty in tbe pait
yetr, Chief Bone aaured them tht
morale tnd discipline of tht forct
htd been of f"very hl|h ittndtid."
He expressed hit iippreclition of
»e loyalty and cooperation of the
department memben, and alio hii
appreciation tendered by Inipector
John Macdonald and tht ittff of the
,B. C. Police, the general public, the
Nelion Dtily News, Rtdio Station
CKLN, tnd other police forcei of
the Province tnd Dominion,
CAR PATROL INSTITUTED
A patrol af the City by car wai
initltuted during the year when a
patrol car wai purchaeed. It has
enabled the department to greatly
increase its aervice to the public,
and Increue efficiency.
School traffic patrols were organized and maintained throughout the lohool year, and ai a re
suit no traffic accldenti occurred
during school houn in thete ionea.
School principals, the Chief reported, have taken a great lntereat
in the work, and have expreued
the opinion that the patroli ate
worthwhile. Patrcla were organ-
lied at Hume and Central Schooli
VIGNEUX an(i st. Joseph'i Academy
Johnny McLean of Trail was  LICENCE lil BIKES
Biciycle licensing at a meani ot
term, and one one-year term. Two
impended sentences, one for tbt
monthi and t tecond tor one year,
were alto recorded. Two Juveniles,
ont male and one female, were
committed to Provincial Induitrlal
Schooli. Four personi wert committed to mentil hospital.
Only $33.94 worth of articles,
out of a total ot $461.30 reported
itolen, htvt not bten recovered.
Three autos wtrt stolen tnd recovered, their theft being attributed by the Chief to "Joy riden."
Eleven bicycles wert stolen, tnd
10 recovered. Sixteen children
were reported lost, tnd Itttr
found.
City police during tbe year lnvci-
tlgtted 447 complaints and made 17
investigations for other police de
partmenta. Fifty-one auto accldenti
were invettigited, md IM driven
wtrned regarding faulty lighti and
other hazards. Eleven aeta of fingerprint! were taken, and 29 suspicious character! checked. Police
patroli found 105 doors left open,
11 wlndowi open, and six safes left
open. In all instances the promises
were made secure and the owneri
notified.
FOUR  SUDDEN  DEATHS
Four tudden deathi, two ai the
reiult of drownings and two as a
retult of motor accidents, were invettigited.
In mtintaining the patrols by police ctr 7288 were covered.
Scventy.four transients were
supplied with meala and 77 with
beds during IMl.
IN TRAINING FOR
MEXICAN CHILDREN
MBXICO CITY, Jan. 12 (AP). -
ty thousands ichool children will
gin drilling with wooden gum
b. 1. The lystem will be extended
[dually to the whole country.
Sergeant-Pilot A. S. MicPhill, i
former Nelson boy, end ion of Mrs.
E. Aimes of Wells, in Northern B. C,
his left for the East after ipending
hii embarkation leave over Christmas and the Yeir at the home ot
Mr. and Mrs. A. Spence at Nelton.
His wife ii the former Mils Caroline
Spence of Nelaon. Sergeant-Pilot
MicPhail attended High School
here and later moved to Vancouver.
He Joined the Air Force ■ year
ago.
t   Sub-Lt.
itmctor it Sukatoon. ii home on!a City visitor yesterday
furlough,  visiting hii pirenti, Mr.     ,   Mrs   Albert  Smith  and  her | g,^ voyKt , tilt of til bicydei
md Mn. E. E. L. Dewdney. jnfjnt 5:n left Kcotenay Lake Gen-',_, the city wai ,\,0 instituted. Some
t   Ac2 Dick Dennes hai returned] eral Hoipital Sunday for their home, |497 licencei were lnued. The rec
to   Edmonton   ifter   ipending   his  101 Union Street. j0-js jirtady have proved valuable
holiday leave with his mother, Mn.
B. H. Dennes, Chatham Street.
Anderson     of    the
Palmer
Music Festival
Syllabus Placed
Printers' Hands
, The Syllabus tor tbe Thirteenth
Annual Koottnty Muilc Festlvil,
sponsored thit yetr by the Ntlton
Music Festival Auoclttion, it now
completed,, tnd placed ln tha handi
of the printers, It li expected thtt
tht syllabus will bt reidy for distribution by the end of January.
The dates for the Music Festival
are May 13-16.
pUEEMAJJ
FURNITURE CO.
Tht House ot Furnlturt Valuei
Phont 119 Nelion
See Our Beautiful Selection
of New
PARKHILL
Chesterfield  Suites
BUY ON OUR BUDGET PLAN
TRAIL SOCIAL
■y MISS KAY LOWDON
Trail and Nelson
Rotarians Have a
Joint Meet Soon
TRAIL, B. C, Jtn. 12 - Mill
Margaret Kty tnd Edwird L. Marietta were married ln Montreil Dtc.
24. Miu Kty resided lit Trill tor
ilx montha, having been employed
in the office of Trail-Tadanac Hoipltal, and, latterly, ln the tabulating department of the C. M tt S.
Comptny. Mr. Mtrgetti, eon ot J. T.
Margetti, of .Trail, is studying for
medicine in McGill Univenlty.
J. T. Margetti returned, Sunday
evening, from a holiday to Vancouver.
Mr. and Mra. J. T. Newman and
daughter June, accompanied by
Mri. Newman's cousin, Mill Lila
Bowser of Edmonton, who la their
guest, are ipending the week at
Deer Park.
Mr. and Mrt Joseph Parent of
Nakuip ittended the funeral of Mr,
Parent's brother, Louis Parent of
Castlegar, at Trail Monday.
Rflm. Robert Gerace of the Duke
of Connaught'i Own Rifles, on leave
from Eastern Canada, and Mra. Gerace and baby daughter Gloria Jean
of Vancouver, are vlilting Rflm.
Gerice'i parenti, Mr. and Mri. Joe
bence. Mn. Gence'i mother, Mrs
J. Pittenon of  Vineouver  is  ilso
RETURNS TO COAST | in tiding police in identifying stolen
e   Allan McLean, who with Mrs  ■""achine!
, McLean has been spending the past     Hoping to  reduce the poaiibiltty I „0'".j"'' J^^mment,
R.M.R.,  Vmcouver,   left  yeiterday! (ew   w._k,   _t   ,he   home   /hiJ|o(   bicycle   tra((lc   ardent,  Chief j ^7^."^ Club af,
lor the Coait after being called by , Mr „< M„. u       Bone ha, lectured it Nelson school, I «™*"™J'n '„"b   H
the death of hi. mother, Mrs Ander- ia Rlm on lhe proper m,nner ln wnicn t0 1™ «™« mettaj «L 11.
Nelaon   Rotarians   at   a   business
luncheon   meeting   at   the   Hume
John Welton li ■ patient ln the
Trail-Tadanac Hoapital.
Mr. and Mra. F. C. Drake have
returned to Zincton ifter a short
viilt to Trail.
Riflemen Leslie Murdock, A
Davli and Richard Cummings, of
the Duke of Connaught'i Own
Rifles, are ipending leave ln Trail.
Mn. C. E. Hogg of Medicine Hit
il visiting her husband, itatloned
with the Veterans' Guard at Tadanac.
, Mr. ind Mn. A. Polech of Nelson visited Trail list weekend.
Mr. md Mrs. J. S. Mcintosh have,.,
returned to Sheep Vreek after via-:..:
itlng ln Trail on a short holiday.     •
Mrs. L. N. Adcock of Nelson vii- ''
Ited Trail last weekend, ,j
Mn. J. Willis of Fan-on arrived
in Trail Monday to ipend i week,,
as guest of her brother-in-law andi(.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Brother!
of  Sunningdale.
Members  of  the   Duke  of  Con-,\.
naught's  Own  Rifle,   who  arrived
in Rossland  from  Eastern  Canada
last Wednesday, on 20 days leave,'
Included Cpl Jack Purser, who, before enlisting was a member of the"
Bank of Montreal staff ln Rossland
and   Rifleman   Melaine   Lesergent,'*
the guest of Mr. md Mn. Gerace, j Jick and Hugh Richardson, Hector
sr. 'Henry, and Patrick Ward.
EGG MARKETINGS CAIN
DESPITE COLD WEATHER
OTTAWA, Jan. 12 (CP).—Ego
marketings have lncreaied In iplti
of cold weither In the Eut tnd on
the pnlrlei ind thli will tiilit the
Dominion in meeting United
Kingdom requirement! of 30,000,-
000 dozen under in existing contract
son, list week.
lit  the home of his father-in-law,' ride cycles, the rules of the road,
Mr. and Mrs. James Morrison | p Jarrett, leaves today for his home signals and lights.
CHURCH MEETING
TRAIL, B. C, Jan. 12—The Fruitvale  United  Church  will  hold   Its
congregational meeting Friday.
and young son Wayne of Kimberley plan to return today after a
couple of diys in the City visiting!
relatives.
t   Mr.   ind   Mrs.  C.  W   Apple-
yard, Terrace Apartments, hive returned from sojourning In Vincou-1
er at the home of Mr,. Appleyird's
m Vancouver.
a Mrs. K. White cf Ymir spent
yesterday  in  town.
• Shoppers in the City yesterday included Mr. and Mrs, T. L
Bloomer of Castlegar.
e   Mrs   Ida Gray of Salmo ind
be   Fred   Edmunds   of  Trail,   who
will iddress the new memberi of
Instructioni in the dutiei of both clubs. The meeting will be
special constable, were given dur-1 mainly buaineas.
ing the yeir by the Chief lo Air j A letter from Jack Robert, on be-
Raid Precaution personnel. Theie j half of the Rotary Club of Oroville,
Llmdudno, in North Wales, extending leaaon'a greetingi to its Nelion
Ore JhiL Oh,
• brothcr-in-Uw ind lliter, Mr   ina ; her son Archie .pent yesterday
will be continued
IIS CASES
Altogether   118   cues,   83   under
brothers, wis reid. Llmdudno is 35
town.
• Mrs, Cal M.Leod. Kerr Apartments, i, a patient in Kootenay
Lake General Hospital
• Mn E. J   McGregor of B n-
TUESDAY, JANUARY 13,
CKLN AND
:bc programmes
I0RNINC
1942
:t5—O Canida
:46-Wake Up md Live
:00-BBC New,
15—Wir Commentiry
6J0—Front Line Fimily
tt-CBC Newi
:0O—Concert Time (CKLN)
:JO-Vocal Parade (CKLN)
;4S—Skitch  Henderson
:5»-Tlm6 Signal
:00—Let's All Sing Together
(CKLN)
JO—For Our Llitenen.
•Jb—Hymn Time (CKLN)
M—U. S. Army Band
:S0—Music and Musings
■ashen up that Winter outfit
with a new HAT from
Milady's Fashion Shoppe
1CHTTS'
Up to date on
Columbia Records
NELSON ELECTRIC
MBtker St.
Phone 2S0
FOR  MILK-TRY
K. V. D.
PHONE 11«
AFTERNOON
12:00—B. C. Firm Broadcait
12:25—The Notice Board  (CKLN)
12:30—CBC New,
12:.5-The Balladeer
l:00-Talk
1:15—Club Matinee
1:30—Columbia School of the Air
2:00—B.C. Schools Broadcast
2:30—Wishart Campbell Slngi
2:45-BBC New,
3:00—Salon Muilc
3:30—To Be Announced
3:45—Books of the Day
4:00—Gentlemen  With   Wings
4:30—Dances of the Nations
4:55—Willson Woodside
Commentary
5:00—CKLN's   Birthday   Party
5:30—Le,  Concert!  Symphoniques
EVENINC
6:30—Meet the Band (CKLN)
6:45-Evening Varieties (CKLN)
7:00—CBC New!
7:15—"Newbridge"
7:30—Gentlemen With Wlngi
(Rebroidcait)
8:00— Blended Rhythm
8:30-Theatre Time
9:00—"Speaking of Booki'
9:15— Recital Seriei
9:30—BBC News Reel
10:00—CBC New,
10:15—Sophisticated String!
10:30—Howard Becker'! Orcheitra
11:00—Anita Carol and Erwin Veo
ll:30-God Save the King
U. S. NETS' BEST
NBC—RED
7:00—Bob Hope
8:00—Fred Wiring's Band
8:30—Johnny Preienti Programme
NBC—BLUE
6:80—NBC   Symphony   Orcheitra
8:30—Information Pleue
COLUMBIA
9:00—We. The People
9:30—Arkanui Traveller
Mr,. E. J. Vanderwater.
MOVES TO  TRAIL
,    e   Kingsley   Fleck   ha,   left  for
j Trail  where he  is employed with
| the Consolidated Mining Sc Smelt-
! mg  . Compiny.    Mr,,    Fleck    and j ni,,*:;o'" v:s"«i Ncl!on yesterday
j daughter plan to join him later.    ' e   W J. Reid of Calgary plam to
t    Mrs. C.  E   Hild  was  in  town arrive in the City today to spend a
from Kaslo yesterdiy                      ' couple nf days.
e    Weekend   visitors   in   Nelion a   Mrs.   Halbauer   was   in   town
included   Mr,.   Fred   Johnson   o! from  Sheep Creek Sa'urday,
Sheep Creek. •    Mrs   El   Ames of Wells, BC,
t    Mis, R. H  H.ndkey of Harrop returned t.  her home Wednesday
visited  Ne)son yesterday e    Cpl.   C.   F   Graham,   Vict na,
t   Shopper, in the City yester. Staff H2, is visiting his sister, Mi.w
day   included   George   Fleming   of Margaret Graham, Baker St
Sheep Creek. e    Mrs. H  Crowther. wh i has re-
e    Karl Laib and his brother R . ently been in Salmo.   s root ued to
Lr.ib  of Tye visited Nelson yester- her home, K. Front St..
ilav broken r.b
milei West of Liverpool. The let-
.,,.   Summary  Conviction, Ac    32  ,„ , ^ ^ ^
a.   indictable   ofe.ee,    and , th;« I International   would   play, real
under th,: Juvenile Delinquents Art. ,„ ^ ,„ £J f
were   tried   in   CHy   Police   Court ^ Llandudn0 club had , _ome
Only   two cases, enc  on t chirge
under a City Bylaw and the other
on a charge under the Deserted
Wive, Act, were dismissed. Finei
collected for offencei under the
Summary Convictioni Act imounted
Arrest All Former
Norwegian Air,
Navy Officers
BERLIN, Jm. 12' (German broadcast recorded by AP)—The Germani
announced today all former officer!
of the Norwegun Air Force md
Navy have been  ordered  arrested
memberi   to   the  services,   it   was > ,«.    ,
. i because some 100 of their number
carrying on the same al ever.
This North Wale, town has not
undergone the severe bombing
raids of other parti of the British
Isles,  in spite of it, proximity  to
to  *2236;  while  those Impoied '°*'ii.:vcrpooi
indictable   conviction   were   |M. |    The letter will be icknowledged
Thi, together with $26 ln fine, col- by m. Ne]ion ^
lected from finei imposed the pre-1
v.ou, yeir totalled >2S2S. Flnet col-jc°AST EDITOR TO SPEAK
iected and turned over to the Do- [    H. M. Whimiter, of the Program
minion   Government   imounted   to Committee,   reported   that   he   had
$150. j had a letter from the editor of the
Eleven    one-month    prison   ien-, Van«uver Province,  who  recenUy
THE HEADACHE WILL COME LATER
Eaton's Order Office
THE MODERN WAY TO SHOP—Wide varieties—low prices—fast deliveries. Immediate
attention and quick service on all orders
received.
Leave orders at Nelson or Trail for catalogue
lines of merchandise.
*T EATON C
■ ■     western     ^^
o
LIMITED
NELSON, B. C
i a   tence,  were  meted  out.  two  three | went t0 En8la*ld « > guest of the
i   terms,   three   «ix   months . Government, Hating that he would
 .   likely   be speaking   to  the  Nelson
Rotary Club in the neir future In
the courie of i ipeaking tour
through B. C,
A vote of thanki wti extended to
C. F. Hunter who hu retired from
the Rotiry Club ifter serving for
19 yean ai auditor. *
At the head of the luncheon table
wn a new flag setun arranged by
A. B. Gilker. The banner of Rotary
International wis flanked on al
itandard by the American and Ca-1
nadiin flags.
The report of Mr. Gilker, the!
treuurer, ihowed thit there wu j
$9« 44 io the general account of the
club at the present time and $335.23 !
in the Crippled Children'! Fund.
President J. R. McLennan wai in
the chair.
have escaped to England to resume
their fight against Germany.
Another decree issued by Josef
Terboven ordered arrest of 20 former high court of/icials and close
friendi ot the Norwegian Royal
house in reprisal "for the kidnapping
of eight memberi of the National
Samling .Quisllngl party by Englishmen in violation of International
Law."
(These Quiilingist, appirently
were imong prisoner! captured by
Britain's hard-striking Commandos
In hit-and-run raids upon the Norwegian coait.)
In Kootenay for
New Victory Loan
To take preliminary steps to assist in the organization of the February Victory Loan campaign in
Kootenay, N. C. P. Graves wai in
Nelson yesterday. He will visit
all the major centres in the district.
H, A. Matthew,, who was active
In the Nelson campaign last Summer, has also reached the City, accompanied by J L, Burns of Vancouver.
WOOL SKIRTS
Gored and Tleatcd Styles.
Sites 12 to 30
$3.50    $4.95
Fashion First Ltd.
WATCH REPAIR
i Job for experts. Our work
■iiurci your utlifietlor-i.
H. H. Sutherland
Yahk Red Crosi
Lists Supplies
Made During Year
YAHK. B. C.-The Red Crou
Unit it Yihk reporti thit itippliei
made during the year were M pain
soeka, two pairs seamen'i socks,
five pairs stocking!, 17 iweaten, 13
btby ieti, six baby nlghtgowm,
two down handkerchief!, 36 pain
pajamas, 28 nightgown,, 40 pair,
mittt, three hospital gowna, «
dreeaei, 14 ladies' slip,, four dressing gowns, 17 pairs bloomer!, lix
imputation cover,, 12 scarves, one
body belt, four flannel ikirti, eight
toques, five helmets.
Fewer Apples Held
in Storage This Year
OTTAWA, Jin. 12 (CP)^-Ct
nadlan apple, held In cold and
common itorage it Jin. 1 totalled
2.330,297 busheli compired with
...SM.OU it Deo. 1 and 4.955,670
a year ago, the Dominion Bureau
of Statlitlci reported today.
Ctnidlin pun In itorage totalled 13.709 liuiheli.
Stock Taking
The use of special Printed Inventory Sheet helps to eliminate a lot of unnecessary work of
recopying. You will find our
sheets will help you to check
your stock completely.
PHONE YOUR ORDER TO
We will attend to your requirements   immediately.
Nf laott lailg Npuib
COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.
266 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.
____________
___
 -NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. JAN. 11.' 1912-
SfelnimlatlgKtttW ??Questions??   Our Sanctuary
1
Established AprU 22, 1902,
British Columbia's
, Mott Interesting Newipaper
Publiihtd tverr morning except Sundiy by
tht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, UM-
ITED, 368 Baker St, Nelaon, British Columbia.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS.
TUESDAY, JAN. 13,1942.
There Will Be Tourist Travel
for Those Who Co After It
Cities and provinces and states
which adopts a defeatist attitude toward 1942 tourist travel will regret it
this year and in the years to follow.
It is ijne that car travel during
1942 will be curtailed to some extent
by restrictions on new cars and gasoline rationing. It is true that the
amount of idle time for tourist travel
will be less. People will be busier. All
available energy is required for war.
But vacations are still a human
need. Mankind cannot work without
holidays. Great Britain soon discovered that. Britiah holiday resorts have
been crowded even during the years of
blitz, and while the government has
aaked the public to cooperate in the
most efficient use of available transportation facilities it has abandoned
any idea that the maximum of production can be obtained through the abolition of vacations. A reasonable amount
of vacation time refreshes the worker,
whether he works with brains or hands
or both, and increases ultimate production.
Canadians and Americans will need
and will have vacations during 1942.
They will travel sufficiently to obtain
the change in scene and surroundings
that is necessary to their health and
well-being and ability to produce.
And the provinces and communities which go most aggressively after
this wartime vacationer business will
get the biggest share of it. The facilities they offer to holiday-makers, their
hotels, their resorts, their garages,
their cafes, will perform a national
service—and holiday travel will maintain in being services which will be
also needed after the war.
4
Victoria, for example, last year did
about the biggest tourist business in
ita history—but it did not build up«that
business in 1941. It was built up
through years of aggressive and sustained promotion of the delights that
Vancouver Island has to offer the vacationist.
A Big Gain in War
Savings
Purchase of War Savings stamps
in Nelson and other cities in Kootenay
is showing the desired snowball effect.
In the case of Nelson, purchases
through banks and the Post Office rose
from |52,897 in 1940 to $70,626 in
1941. That is a gain of 331/. per cent.
Additional purchases were made
directly from Ottawa and are not included in the $70,000 total. As monthly
purchases showed a substantial increase during the latter months of the
year is to be expected that there will
be a further increase in sales during
1942.
War Savings certificates are the
perfect investment for the average man
and woman. They can be bought in
units sufficiently small so that many
children are able to invest their savings
in them. They pay a good rate of interest and the security behind them is
the best in the world.
The individual who purchases War
Savings certificates will have a nice
steady annuity coming in as the cer-
' tificates become redeemable 7'/j years
from date of purchase. The commun-
. ity whose citizens invest extensively
in War Savings certificates will have
a fine economic cushion for the future.
The first consideration is patriot-
■ i■■■-.*. We can't build planes and tanks
tnd ships and guns unless the government has the money. But War Savings
certificates are a good investment from
, the purely selfish viewpoint of the in-
>dividual investor.
Test Yourself
1. On what river in what State li the
Boulder dam?
2. Where ls most of our table ialt obtained?
3. What li the government statui of the
Hawaiian Islands?
Open to any reider. Nltntt of penoni asking
queitlom wilt not bt publlihed.
0. F. D, Procter—Will you please explain tha
real meaning of tht expression "fifth column", tnd tht difference between thtt
and tht term "Quilling?''
Fifth Column—Spin, provocateurs, labo-
teuri, and traitors working behind the lines
to tld the enemy ind reidy to give him succor tnd guidance when he cornea. The phrase
originated ln the Spanish Civil War. Generalissimo  Francisco   Frinco   hid   four   columni
pressing at tbe gatei of Madrid when General Gor.zalo Quelpo de Llano broadcait that
the Nationalists had a "fifth column" inside
Madrid, ready to itrike at a propitious moment.
Quislings ara fifth columnists, taking tht,
name from Major Vldkun Quilling, Norwegian
Nul leader, who greeted the Germani when
they invaded Norway ln April, 1940.
Reader, New Denver^-Could you tell me how
I could get my cat'i fur glossy again? I
have a grey Persian, about four yeari old,
whoie fur keeps matting ln large lumps
all over hli body. I groom him every day
and feed him prepared dog meat and dry
bread. I have tried clipping but it hai
not been successful.
Meat ihould form the main part ot a cat'i
diet. Vegetables and grail ihould also be fed
to the cat.
We suggest you write to Jamea Shellard,
Rouland, for further advice on the care of
your cat
P. B.,  Klmberlejr—Have  iteim  driven  tor-
pedoei ever been luccesifully uied In1 war-
fare?
We have no knowledge of iuch • torpedo
being used lucceaifully.
Curloui, Trill—Pleue teU me If lt li cuitom-
ary for i club or organization when electing officer! for the New Year to elect the
lut yetr'i vice-president to the office, or
li lt i geiture of courteiy only?
The vice-president  of a club need not
necemrlly be reelected by either cuitom or
courteiy. A reelection by acclamation li often
conceded ai  a  courteiy,  but  ai  a  general
rule the majority vote reelect! the perion to
o„fice.
Reider, Nelion, request! the wordi to the
longi "You Wilted Too Long", ind "Why Do
You Treit Me Al If I Were Only a Friend?"
Can any Daily Newi Reader supply the wordi
to these songs?
Press Comment
SILLY INDEED
An Ottawi correipondent reporti thit lug-
gested removil of British Columbia Japaneie
Eut of the Rocky Mountaini evoke! the
prompt rejoinder: "Nothing so silly u thit."
There ii nothing inherently silly about a
plan to get the Japaneie away from the Coast.
It U life to assume that in the event of attack
it leut iome of them would be inclined to
Join forcei with the attackers u a fifth column. No one can uy to what extent thu
might influence the bulk of the 23,000 Japaneie in British Columbia but certainly their
potentiality for ill would be much reduced If
they were far from the coait. On the other
hand it is probably silly to expect Ottawa to
concur. Ottawa's vision wai alwayi blurred
when turned Westwird. In days of peace Ottawa was only Intereited In the Japanese
problem to the extent of making sure the Japaneie itayed In Britiih Columbia. It Is
hardly likely Ottawa would now welcome an
opportunity to make a closer acquaintance
with the little brown brother.—New Westminster British  Columbian.
THE LOCAL ANGLE
In newipaper parlance the local angle
meani some connection, however tenuoui, between the city of publication and the newi of
the day. Say a ihip la wrecked. The home
town editor will report that lt visited the city
monthi or yein prevlouily. Or a heroic exploit li recorded. The hero may have a lecond
rouiln'i wife in town,
English Journalism produced the dictum:
"An earthquake that rattlei the beer poll In
Fleet Street ii of more Importance than one
that ilayi Iti thousand! In China." The local
angle ii an Illegitimate child of that dictum.
Thu comment li occuioned by reading In
a Vancouver newipaper the headline: "Six
die when train from city craihes stalled auto."
The train, lt ii true, wai "from" Vancouver.
It wu alio from Calgary and Winnipeg and
many other place!, including Port Moody. Thii
li an example of the local angle at Ita worst
and suggests that Vancouver, after all, ii still
a imall town, •
Gems of Thought
FIDELITY TO GOOD
"Conitincy to truth ind principle may
lometlmei leid to whit the world calls lncon-
itancy in conduct."—Tryon Edwardi.
"Without conitancy there li neither love,
friendship, nor virtue in the world."—Addlion.
"Every man and woman ihould be today
a law to hlmielf, henelf—a liw of loyalty to
Jeiui' Sermon on the Mount."—Mary Baker
Eddy.
"A good man li Influenced by God Hlmielf, ind hu a kind of divinity within him; io
it may be a queitlon whether he goei to
heiven, or heaven cornel to h!m."Seneci.
"Political or profeulonal reputation cannot lait forever, but a comclence void of offence before God ind mm li in lnherltince
for eternity."—Daniel Webiter,
Today's  Horoscope
If your blrthdiy ll today, you hive in
extremely ictlve mture. You poiiesi ihrewd
ideu, ind ihould go Into builneu for your-
lelf, io thil you may profit by your own Ingenuity. Builneu proipecti for the next year
are excellent, ai are those for making changes,
trivel, literary work and for dealing with
lawyer! ind agents. Unexpected good fortune
will also come to you. For the child thit Ii
born on thll dite lt li prognosticated that he
or ihe will be exceptionally clever, and remarkably lucky ln builneu or profeulon.
Such • one will be especially lucceuful tn
Journillim, liw, accountancy, teaching, evil-
tlon ind ridlo. Some love sorrow Ii foreieen.
■y O. i. RIM
An ittnctive calendar hu comt to nt
, thli New Yeir: lt ihowi—ln dtllcitt colon—a
view of the High Altar ind choir stalls ln
whit an artist has called " A Great Stone
Ship", becalmed In tht night with rigging tnd
decks: vault tnd chapel-eablni ot itone. It
ll our Valhalla of Empire, "Tbt Abbey thtt
makei ui We," II Kipling called It, symbolizing Britain'i thousand year rough Iiland itory.
Westminster Abbey, the beautiful Gothic
Church familiar to all Brltoni, world-wide,
standi on sanctuary tlte whert the flnt Benedictine monks ln Engllih exile built their
monastery; lt li tht third church of Stint Peter
there to be built; tbt firtt dates right btck to
Saxon timei ln A.D. 616, ind In the eleventh
century Edwird the Confessor, lut ot tht
Saxon kings, railed the second church. For
over seven hundred yeari, lt hai been gathering London grime to the grey austerity of ltl
fabric, and has become the most venerated spot
ln the British Empire—and rightly do.
PATINA OP PAGEANTRY
Slowly treading Iti dim aisles between
■hatted pillars upbearing vaulted arches ol
high-spanned roof, all our kings—Plantage- •
nets, Tudors, Stuarts, Hinovcrlans and Wind'
ion hive come to their crowning; aU have '
■tood under the same roof, now ahattered by
tbe Butcher of Bercbteagaden'i bombi!
DUST OP DEMOCRACY
Beneith ltl pavements, whose engraved
tablet! have almoit been eraied. by the feet
of passing generations, lie the Undying Dead!
There are more graves in Weitmlniter Abbey
than ln any church ln the world; lt la the
great reliquary of our hlitory. Commoners of
genius and pioneers of freedom, kings and
queeni who ruled the realm, aU of whose
thoughts and actions stlU Influence our lives.
So many hundred! of namea, io many famoui
In their day than awaken no echo of recognition now. A new tomb bean the lnicrlptlon
"A Britiih Wirrior who died in the Greit War
1914-1918." Ai long u there'll a mother, ■ wife,
a lover In the whole Empire who doei not
know where her mm who was killed ln
Flanders la buried, so long will the Unknown
Warrior be i living memoryl
A NATIONAL SHRINE
Much hlitory ln little ipice. Yei, Indeed!
It li our visible record of spiritual valuei that
are beyond bomb-blitiei:
"What If the splendor of the put
Is shattered into dust? We raise
A monument thit ihall outlast
Even the Abbey'i ipan of dayi."
Weitmlniter Abbey li not Juit a building.
It li hlitory—the hlitory of the human loul
md we call the human mind, itruggllng up-
wird toward! the itari. Tie courage and the
devotion, the love of country and of Juitlce
and beauty and true freedom which the Ahbey
and our other monument! merely record are ■
the real treasures, Imperishable and manifest
today ln all our peoples ln as magnificent mea-
lure u ever.
Thii then ihall be my reminder of i notable calendar as lt hangs on wall for all the
dayi of 1942. Weitmlnster Abbey represent!
the character of Britain and Britons Oversell.
One hu to get deep down to the rooti of n
people'i character to undentand how they will
face any lupreme ordeil of courage or ipend
everything, Including their Uvea, for iome
purpose beyond their own lelf-lntereit. To
know lomethlng of the. Abbey li to know a
Shakespeare tool The men who fought at
bit of Englind'! history, to know a bit of
Aglncourt Tn 1415 under King Harry were the
forefathers of the men who are fighting our
attlei todiy under Occidental and Oriental
iklei. Put md present are thus linked up
and with the itory in itone that has been
revealed, we need hive no fear for the future
welfare of the British Realms. The threat of
world dominition was ui old itory to our
history—making leaderi of the Abbey's remembrance, and long before their time too.
Alexander was bent on thli achievement, alio
Caesar ind Attlla and Charlemagne; Genghis
Khan of Tamerlane, and the more modern
Napoleon and William Hohenzollern. Theie
would-be domlnaton are duit, and the world
li dealing now with an upstart Napoleon, a
sawdust md a metallic slant-eyed Tamerlane!
They too will be defeated, not by the disciples of despair, but by people who will not
accept defeatist principles, and who are sustained by historic precedent and honorable
tradition of vision and courage and commnn
decency Immortalized In "The Abbey that
makei Ul We."
Looking   Backward
10 YEARS  AOO
(From  Dilly  Newi,  Jin.  13,  1932)
Mr. md Mrs. A. A. Pagdin hive tiken up
residence it TOO Joiephine Street.
Mri. C. Myers of Bilfour was a city shopper yeiterday.
Major Turner Lee of Bonnington ipent
yesterday in town.
Lieut.-Col. md Mra. John Murray of South
Slocan motored to Nelson yesterday.
Mri A. Sommerville of South Slocan and
her daughter, Mrs. Gordon Jewell of Moyle,
who li visiting her, were shoppen to the dty
yesterdiy.
25   YEARS   AGO
(From  Dilly  Newi, Jin.  13,  1917)
P. B. Fowler md Misi Helen S. Fowler of
Fernie reached the city lait night for i visit
of" i few diys and registered at the Hume.
W. C. Smiley of Enderby li imong the
guests it the Strithconi.
C. Hilrslne of Vernon reached Nelion lut
night.
George G. Thurmin of Nelson left for
Winnipeg.
40 YEARS AQO
(From  Dilly  Miner, Jin,  13,  1902)
Gerild V. Hopkins, luperlntendent of the
Yellowitone mine neir Siimo, ii In Nelion.
At the record offlc yeiterday certlflcitM
of Improvement were grmted to Henry Keirni
on the I- M. Friction ind Carthage claims
Rowlind Brlttiln, pitent ittorney, reporti
thit lut week Chirles Ramos, of Vineouver,
received the allowance from the United Statei
office of hli patent for i gold washer.
War—25 Years Ago
By Thi Cimdlin Priu
Jin. II. 1917—Ruulini repulied Germin
itticki Eut of Kilnzem on Rlgi lector of
Eutern front. Turkish forcei In the Ciuciius
routed Northweit of Kilklt in lurprlie ittick.
TE8T ANSWERS
1. Colondo River In the State of Colorado.
2. Trom minei.
3. They conititute in organized territory
ef the United Statei.
Etiquette Hints
It li perfectly permlnlble for • girl to
telephone i young mm ind uk him to • pirty.
Only unnecessary calls are frowned upon.
Words of Wisdom
To write • good love letter, you ought to
begin without knowing whit you mem to
uy, ind to finlih without knowing whit you
hive written.—Roueiu.
——.,,„  , .„,,,    ,, ,^ ._„ ,„ ^ ; _>.■.'<.;'. 7**r*. t"
*S Netus Pictures
GUNS TALK FROM CONCRETE BATTLESHIP IN MANILA BAY
The great guns ot Battery Marshall Fort Hughes open up with a roar from the concrete battleship, which is situated on a little island near the main fortress island of Corregidor. These guns would blast to bits any Jap ships ap«
preaching the island from the sea.
CHURCHILL DISPLAYS "SIREN SUIT"
Prime Minister Winston Churchill is pictured at
the White House as he demonstrated his "siren suit," a
type of coverall worn by the British while confined to air
raid shelters. Left to right are, Harry Hopkins, lend-
lease administrator; Diana Hopkins, his daughter; Commander C. R. Thompson, of the Royal Navy, aide to
Prime Minister Winston Chuchill and Winston Churchill.
U-BOAT KAYOED AFTER SINKING SHIP
A German submarine, at top, sank a merchantman!
in the Atlantic and was, in turn, brought to the surface byl
depth charges from a British corvette. The Nazis jumped!
into the ocean and can be seen bobbing about like corks.1
In the bottom photo, members of the crew of the sunken!
merchantman are shown approaching the corvette to
be taken aboard. Later one of the sub's officers sat at
the wardroom table on board the corvette with the master
and officers of the merchant vessel he had sunk.
TM
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RED MARINES IN ACTION IN THE BALTIC
Marines of the Russian navy are shown landing on an enemy-occupied island in the Baltic. Russia's Baltic fleet has
played an heroic role in the defence of beleaguered Leningrad, which is now relieved of Nazi pressure by a strong Red
army offensive.
	
	
__________________________________________________________________
 MMPIPPfMfl^^
51
■■ii*'*"
NELSON DAILY NEWS   NELSON, B.C-TUItMY MORNINO   JAN. 11. 1MS
'
LIGHTWEIGHT BOSS
Sammy
Angott
AteWlWPtSWfBP
9oxse#-(iHt\
U&WWei6rtT.S
By Jack Sords
•"VAsTMe
i, wiu.se-
four Trail Rinks
and One Rossland
Goto Kimberley
TRAIL, B.C, Jan. 12—Four rinki
from tht ladiei' dlviiion of tht Trail
Curling Club will attend the Etit
Kootenay Ladlea' Bonaplel tt Kim-
: berley thU Thuridiy ind Friday.
- Tte rinki In order of ikipi, lecondi,
thlrdi tnd leads, ire:
Mn. George Hicks, Mri. W. For-'
Itit, Mri. J. M. Cameron and Mri.
' D. Miller.
Mrt William Barchard, Mlsi J.
forreit, Mn. A. McMillan and Mrs.
"IF. P. Robertaon.
Mri. P. C. Lawley, Mn. Colin
Jones, Mrs. J. Montpellier md Miu
Miry Buckna,
Mrt. C. F. Middleton, Mrs. F.
Hudocklin, Mrt J. Graham and
Mri. R. Duchene.
Ont Roisland rink Is alio attending. Skipped by Mri. Robert Don-
aldaon, other memberi ire Mn. A
E. Hirriion, third; and Mrs. Jamei
Wright, itcond. A lead for this rink
ll being selected In Nelion.
The Rouland and Trail party li
leivlng by train Thuridiy evening,
tnd wil! elso be acornpanied by
Mn. Angus Johniton of Trail.
Hockey Standings
SASKATCHEWAN
W L D F A P
' iatkitoon    14   4 1 S3 M _)
Mooie Jiw    9   8 2 62 48 20
Regina  .    6 10 2 M 74 14
Flin Flon    6 10 0 46 82 12
Yorkton  ...     5 10 1 57 84 11
NATIONAL
Boiton     16 S S TS 4fl 33
H tngerc     15 8 1 84 68 31
Toronto         15 8 1 75 51 31
Chicago    11 10 3 87 97 25
Detroit     9 15 2 73 81 20
Amerlcani _ _.   9 18 1 70 94 19
Canadiena .....   7 17 1 54 90 15
AMERICAN
Weitern  Dlviiion
Kenney '   20   « 4 121 74 44
Clevelind   .......... 70   7 2 94 70 42
Indltntpolli     17 12 3 100 75 37
Buffalo   ....,  . 12 12 2 99 82 26
Pltttburgh     8 20 3 74 123 19
Eaitern Dlviiion
Springfield   18 10 4 M 75 36
Providence  12 15 4 11511128
New Haven   12 16 1 84 105 25
Wuhlngton   _  10 18 3 82 105 23
Philadelphia   _  8 19 2 80 11818
A.S.C.                    W L D F A P
Ctlgtry  .12   2 1 80 31 25
Ltthbrldgt _    8   .. 2 84 41 16
Trail           8   8 1 97 98 13
Klmbariey       6   9 0 « 70 12
Rtd Deer    4 14 0 48 97   8
lack Whitfield Has
Coaching Reins of
Panther Puck Teams
Coaching dutiei of the Panthen
hockey teams thU year are ln the
hand, of Jack Whitfield, well
known former athlete and now a
member of the City Police Force.
Whitfield coachei the Midgeti and
Juveniles ln their reipective league!
in the Nelion Amateur Hockey Allocation, the club not being represented In the bantam dlvialon.
Red Dutton Demotes
Centre Fred Thurier
NEW YORK. Jan. 12 (CP)-Man-
ager Red Dutton of Brooklyn Americans today sent Centre Fred Thurier
down to Springfield Indians of the
American Hockey League.
The Granby, Que, player, one of
the top woreri of the Americin
League last year, hai not fitted in al
well aa expected with Brooklyn.
club officials uid.
No replacement will be brought
up Immediately.
TROUBLE?
Call Shorty'i Repair Shop
PHONE 171
—  .__
Panther Midgets
MM.'s Tie M
MIDGET HOCKEY  STANDING
W L D Pt
M. R. K    4  0   19
Panthers       0   0   11
F.  A. C    0   4   0   0
After being disappointed Thursday by finding their opponents, the
FA C. Midgets, were unable to field
a team, thua reducing the game to
an exhibition pick-up, the newly
organized Panther Midgeti had
their tirst Midget Hockey League
game Saturday evening when they
croued hockey sticki with the
M.R.K. Midgeti, who had Uken four
itraight gamea from the F.A.C.'i.
Each team found the other worthy
of IU iteel, and the hard fought
conteit finished a 8-6 tie. Panthers
used two goaliei, Arneson taking
over when Townsend had to leave
after the first period.
Appel gave the Panthen in Initial lead, which wai quickly evened
by DeiChamp, for the M.RK.'i, following which Crayford gave the
M.R.K.'i a lead, their only one of
the game. The next four goali were
icored by Panther iharpshooteri—
Arneion, MacDonald, Appel, and
again MacDonald, thll taking the
game nearly through the aecond
period, to give the Panthers a 5-2
lead. But the M.R.K.'s then icored
three to wipe out the deficit, Caa-
sios' tally winding up the lecond
period, while Hielscher opened the
third period with a brace. Breeze
then netted the puck close in on
Goalie Wildle, io cloie that there
was an argument ai to whether he
wu in the crease at the time, but
the shot wu eventually called a
goal, and the Panther! were once
more in the lead. Hielacher once
more came through for the M.R.K.'i,
however, and the closing minutes of
the game were ipent by both lidet
In i viin battle for ■ deciding point.
On only one goil of the 12 wti in
us is l allowed, that being Appel'i
second tally, which waa on a pui
from MacDonald DeiCharrrpi of
M.R.K, served the game'! only penalty.
Bud Whitfield was Referee, with
Joe Staples a, Scorekeeper and
Timekeeper Teams were;
Panther,—Art Towniend, Bruce
Arneson, Jim Ortett, Earl Lepetski,
Jack Breeze. Jack Prestley, Hilton
Mayne, Bun MacDonald, Jim Bill.
Len Appel
M. R. K -Bill Waldie. Paul Hiel-
•cher, Ronald Cnyford, Lealie Rogen, Dick Coatei, Ronald Lyon,
Richey Wuulck, Allan DeiChamps.
Con Ousioi.
News Bowlen Win
Way Out ol Cellar
Dally Newi bowlen moved out of
the cellar in the Hume Hotel Cup
bowling tournament by taking three
points out of four from the Milllon-
tlrei on Gelina, Alleyi Monday
night
Prevlouily each team had failed
to win pointi In their first matchei
Scorei  follow:
OAILY NEW8
J. Young   IM 129 18T- 441
F. Brown    124 138 110— J80
T. Mouei   142 I'M 153-' 426
A. Brown  -. 140 148 178— 484
W. Gallicano .... 173 318 147- 538
Malt  «... 725 781 .8J-2348
MILLIONAIRES
J. Anderson   177 149 167- 493
E. Woolli    140 153 13*- 428
F. DeFoe   108 129 120- S58
A. Grodzki ...  108 140 IVt- S81
W. Anderson   .   191 158 189- 518
Totali 748   751   745—2244
High individual icore, W. Gallicano, 218.
High aggregate acore, W. Gallicano, 538.
War Beginning lo
Take Bowlers Now
Bowling hai been about the only
sport in Nelson that hMn't suffered
serious setbacks' becauie of war
conditions.
Enlistment! and drafts have raided the ranks ot bueball, loftbalf!
hockey, badminton, lacrciae, bai-
ketball and even curling to a certain extent. But bowling, experiencing one of its real boom yeara
In Nelson after a iteidy return to
populirity, hi, escaped io far.
But now the itrvlce! are beginning to tap the itrength of aome of
the senior men'i teimi. Bat Vecchio of the Cherry Pickera left lut
week to begin military training at
Vernon. And last Saturday two ol
the Gelinu Bowling Club'i leading
bowlers took firit itepi toward entering the R.CA.F. They ire Johnny Aurelio tnd Frank McClement.
who took their medical examination! ai far ai is given by the recruiting officen on their tour.
Both Aurelio md McCleme..t ire
memberi of the Dodge team, and
Aurelio at preient is engaged In a
neck-and-neck race witS Nick Cassios for the league'i icorlng championship, with an average around
180. Aurelio is also President of the
Bowling Club. McClement Is •
veteran of the First Great War.
Hockey Results
OH.A. SENIOR "A"
St Catharines 8, Kingston 4
Toronto  Marlboro,  6.  Port Col-
borne 1
CAPE  BRETON SENIOR
North Sydney 5, Sydney 3.
 . :
juves Will Take on
Old Timers Tonight
in Hockey Challenge
Juvenile Repi, who held the Spitfirei of junior ranks to • 3-1 triumph last Saturday night, will take
on the Nelion Old Tlmeri ln a
hockey challenge game tonight at
8 o'clock at the Civic Arena.
It will be the tint test of the
seaion for the Old Timen, who
will soon itart their titanic leriei
with the Triil olditer, again. The
first game between theae teami
will be In Trail on the 23rd, and
then they will pliy again In Nelion
loon afterward. Proceed! of both
gimei ai uiual go toward helping to
defray expenses of developing kid
hockey   In  both citiu.
Hogan and Thomson Tie for First
Prize as Snead Blows Up on 18lh
L06 ANOILBS, Jan, 12 (API-
Drama tnd heartbreak! were written into the finish of the seventeenth annual $10,000 Los Angelei
open golf tournament today as wee
Benny Hogan and husky Jimmy
Thomson wound up in a deadlock
fOr th* rich prlte, and history repeated Itself with t slap in the ttce
for hard luck Sam Snead.
Hogan and Thomson finished the
four-day 72-hole battle tied it 282
blowi tpiece. Thomson ihot the finlih round over the par 38-36-72
Course in uneventful, oonliitent
faahlon, leaving Hogan to lupply
the galler ythrill, and Snead and
pace-letter Harry Cooper to furnish
the  disappointment.
Slimming Sam from Hot Springs,
Va„ blew himielf out of the tournament on the eighteenth. He took
eight blowi to conquer the iteep
elevated par five hole, and ended
with 285.
The two play the deadlock tomorrow for the prize money—$3500
to the winner and $1700 to the runner-up.
Loading tcoren:
Ben Hogan, Hershey, Pa., 212-70
-282.
Jimmy Thomson, Del Monte,
Calif, 213-69-282.
Sam Snead, Hot Springi, Ark,
213-72—285.
Chick    Harbert,    Battle    Crttk,
Mleh,' ill.-107-W.
Harry Cooptr, Minneapolis, 210-78
-Mt.
Willie Goggin, Whltt Pltini, N.Y,
215-79—288.
. Byron Nelion, Toledo, O., 218-72—
288.
Chandler Harper, Portsmouth, VI,,
219-69-188. -'
Herman   Barron,   White   Plaint,
N.Y, 2W-71—288.
Horton   Smith,   Plnehurst,   N.C.
214-78-288.
Paul Runyan, Rumson, NJ, 218
71-289.
Tony Penna, Dtyton, O, 116-71—
200.
Mark Fry, Oakland, 218-75-291,
Vic Ghczzi,-Deal, N J, 218-76-292.
Jimmy Demaret, Detroit, 217-75—
292. '
Chet Beer, Loi Angelei, 221-72—
293.
Stan   Leonard,   Vancouver,   B.C.,
220-73—293,
Johnny Dawion, Hollywood, 2S1-
72-293.
Lawion Little, Sin Fnnclsco, 222-
71-293.
Denny  Shute,  Chicago,  217-76—
293.
Johnny  Revolta, Chicago, 218-7!
-293.
Ray    HIU,    Mamaroneck,    N.Y.,
219-7V-29I.    ^
Ciri Bowlers Give
Wolves (lose Call
Led by Rosa Stewtrt'i iematlonal
bowling, the Rooklea, a girli' bowling squad, made thingi plenty uncomfortable for the Wolvei of the
Senior Men'i Ten-Pin Leigue, but
a bad fint game coit the girli a
challenge five-pin match on Gelinai
Alleyi Monday night
The girli took the lait two gamej
b] .air margins, but when it wi
all over they were KJ nlm behind
their male rivali. Tony Arcure
uved the Wolvei' bacon by bowling
t series icore of 583, Juit two pini
bick of Rosa Stewart who wai topi
for both squadi.    '
ROOKIE* '
L. Hlckey    148 152 168- KA
R. Stewart   175 2M 151- 588
A. Beatt 10. 153 91- M8
A. Romanic .       97 181 119- 397
I. Johanson      .  158 143 182- 4»3
Totals
WOLVES
T. Romano
J. Hamion
A. Arcure
680. 868   709-2277
138 155 114- 406
157 189 181- «7
175   227   181- 563
D.  Meaklni   114   198    93- 405
B. Wilion   J19   113   155- 487
Joe Cirveth
REDWING COMMUTERS
In another shakeup designed to
add more scoring punch to the
Detroit Red Wing,, now the weakest goal-getting club In the N.H.L,
Right Winger Bill Jennings ha,
bten sent to the Indianapolis farm
team operated by the Wings ind
Right Winger Joe Carveth will
get a chance In the big time.
Cleveland Wins Bonus
CLEVELAND, Jan. 12 (CP)-Play-
ers of the Cleveland Barons cut up
a $1200 melon today—a bonus given
by their management because, during their second 14 games of the
American Hockey League season,
they made a better showing thm
any other club in the Weitern Diviiion.
The Birons, who have not been
beaten on home ice, tre in second
place ln the division with 42 pointi
to Henhey'i 44. But the bonui ls
not given for leading the league ln
aggregate points. It goei o the Cleveland playera If, a, hai Just happened,
they made the best ihowlng In 14
gamei.
Totals 801   8«2   704-2367
High Individual, R Stewart, 259.
High aggrepte, R. Stewart, 586.
Sports for Morale
Better Than.Social
Program—Tunney
NEW YORK, Jan. 12 (AP)-Lt.-
Cmdr. J. J. (Oene) Tunney laid
today he favon vigoroui athletic
activities, Including boxing and
rope skipping ai morale builder,
for lervice men rtther thtn
"smokes for the Yinki tnd the
gentle ministritioni ot hoiteiiei".
The former hetvyweight boxing
champion uld In in Interview thit
the greatest mortle he hid witnessed wti In the Unlttd State,
Marine Corpe, In 1917-11, "where
they got up at 5:30 in the morning
and learned the trade of two-fiited
fighting men—wirrion with • purpoie."
Battle Practice
on Merry's Flats
TRAIL, B.C, Jan.  12—Trtil and
Roaaland platoon, Rocky Mountain
Ringers, really got down to builneu Sundiy afternoon, with a tactical march and battle practice on
Merry'i Flata. The "forty" wti reported luccanful, the men reipond-
ing enthusiastically to the taste of
active tralnipg.
Calgary Strengthens First-Place
Hold by Blanking Red Deer 2 loO
RED DEER, Alta, Jan 12 <CP)-
Taking advantage of the breaks the
Calgary Stampeden strengthened
their hold on firtt place in the
ABC. Senior Hockey League by
edging out Red Deer Buffaloes 2-0
before a small crowd here tonight.
The game wu one of the fastest
played here thli itason and one In
which Bufaloe, displayed greater
plaving ipirit thin at any other
time, There wai no scoring In the
first two perjoda.
Tommy Dewir and Pete Atkinson
got the counteri for Stampeden
late in the third session ifter Iluf-
faloei left the two unchecked.
Lineups:
Calgary — Rice-Jonei; Mlllmin,
Ettinger; Atkimon; DesmariU.
French. Sub, - Dewir, Sprout,
Cairns, Thirlwell, Shannon, Grant.
Red Deer — Pow; Wirihiwikl,
Sturk; Yinew; Ab Newiome. Clyde
Newsome. Subi—Milford, Proulx,
Dahl. Speiker, Green, Brinder.
Summiry:
flnt period—No icoring.
Pemlty-Mllford.
Second period—No icorlng
Peniltlei—Sturk, Millman
Third period—1, Cilpry, Dewir
(Thirlwell), 14:09; 2. Cilgiry, Atkimon (French), 18:30.
Penaltiei—Ctirni, Sprout. Proulx,
Desmaraii.
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EMBARRASSING MOMENT FOR LES CANADIENS
Bombarded, 9 to 2, by the Black
Hawka in Chicago, Goaler Bert Gardiner
of Les Canadiena, way out of the cage in
the centre of this picture, is evidently
befuddled as to the location of the puck.
It's in the cage after a thrust by BiU
Thorns—indicated by arrow—who scored
two of the Hawks' tallies. Ken Reardon
(No. 4), Montreal defence, failed in his
effort to back up Gardiner.
Sectional Play
Men's Curling al
Trail Nears End
TRAIL, B£, Jtn. 12—Dtve Mc-
Lenmn'i rink, with nine pointi out
of t possible 10, leads Section A in
the Crown folnt Compttltion, i
roubd-robln tvent being plty'es. it
tht Tnil Curling Risk.
E. A. Calvert, A. M. Cheiter tnd
Hunter Woodburn ire tied in front
in lection B, with eight out ot i
poisible 10, tnd In lection C, P. F.
Mclntyre tnd Dtve Balfour are also
is a lead tie with t similar icore.
Five gimes evefi hive been
pliyed ln the firtt three sections,
•nd the number of gimei viries
from three to ilx In lectioni D, I,
•nd r.
R. P. Dockerlll, Williim McLeiry
and Jamei Atwell, with ilx pointi
ln ilx gamei, are tied firit ln lection D, ind Dive Fon-est, with i
100 per cent average of eight point!
ln four gime,, heada lection E. William Baldrey, with eight pointi in
five gamei, htadi lection F.
8tindlngi follow:
SECTION A W L D P
Dave  McLennan    4   0   19
W. L.  Wood  _  4    10   8
A. M. Sleeth  3   117
W, f. Doubt    3   2   0   8
W. Weir      o  2   3   0   4
H. L Leckie  14   0   2
M. M Butorac       14   0   2
W. H   Shepherd  14   0   2
Bapcos Sign Former
Turner Valley Star
In an effort to plug the gap lett
by the loaa of Bot Algar to the
Canadian Army, Victoria Bapcoi
have ligned Dutch Even, former
Turner Valley Oiler flnt itring forward who played laat leuon on the
i»me line with Pete Atkimon and
Doug Ctirni, now Calgary Stampeden.
Even li available to the Victoria
hockey team at a military replacement.
N.H.L. LEADERS
(By The Canadian Prtti)
Stindlng—Boiton, won 15, lost 5,
tied 3, pointi 33.
Points—Hexttll, Rmgen, 14 goala,
12 assists, 26 poind; Grosso, Detroit,
11 goali, 15 assists, 24 polntt; Cowley, Boiton, 4 goals, 22 assists, 26
pointi.
Goili—Hextill, Rangeri, 14,
Aiiliti—Cowley, Boston, 22.
Peniltiet—Egan, Americans, 57
minutei.
Shutouts—Brodi, Toronto, 5.
SECTION  B
A. E, Calvert .
A. M. Cheuer
Hunter Woodburn
Andy Crichton
George Bumfrey ...
A. D. Turnbull 	
H. A. McLaren ....
C. D. Stuart _.
Tonight's Hockey
NATIONAL
Americans at Rangers.
Detroit at Boiton.
A. B. C.
Lethbridge it Trill.
SASKATCHEWAN
Saskitoon it Yorkton.
PACIFIC  COAST
Nanaimo it New Westminster.
EXHIBITION
Spitfirei v, Old Timen it Nelson.
SECTION C
P. F. Mclntyre  4   10   8
Dtve Balfour _ 4   10   8
Charlei  Hoefer   3   2   0   8
Wilter  Brown  I   2   0   6
Donild MicDomld ..... 2   2   1   5
H. L Beckett  13   13
Fnnk Strichin  14   0   2
W. J. Stevenion  -  14   0   2
8ECT10N  D
R. P. Dockerill   3   2   0   8
Wlllltm McLeiry   3   3   0   8
James Atwell  _... 3   2   0   8
t. J. Pleiter  2   3   0   4
D.  Smirt  2   3   0   4
R. C. McGerrigle  1   S   0   2
A. t. Milton  _.._ 14   0   2
8ICTION I   •
Dave Forreit  4   0   0   8
Williim Rie  1113
t. W. Hazelwood   2   115
J. P. Schofield .  2   10   4
R. Somerville  12   13
J.   Robertscn      12   0   2
R. McOhie   13   0   2
L F. Tyion          . 0   3   11
SECTION r
Wlllltm Baldrey  4   10   8
Walter Bndy  _  4   10   8
A. C. Alllton  8   2   17
A. Woolf .     .   _ 3   2   0t
C. Strachan  2   3   0   4
Tom Rice  12   13
W. Hunter   0   3   0   0
Navy Gets $90,000
Out of Louis Fight
NEW YORK. Jan. 13 (API-Promoter Mike Jacobs innounced todiy
the United Statei Nivy Relief Fund
reciived $80,091.01 from laat Friday night'a benefit between Joe
Louis and Buddy Baer.
Thil repreiented Louis' entire
purse, minus only triining expenses;
Jlcobs' entire promotionil profits,
i portion of Baer'i cut, a contribution from every preliminary fighter
on the card and half the salary of
every ring official who worked ai
referee or Judge.
The gross gite wis $189,700 35 The
net wai eitlmated at $181,000, of
which Louli' ihare would have been
in the neighborhood of $84,000. Hli
training, expense ordinarily run
about IU.0O0 for a fight, which
would make hu contribution to the
ntvy fund tpproxlmttily $80,000
Hotkey's Big 7
(By Thi Cimdlin Prtu)
Don Grotio of Detroit moved into
a three-wiy tie with Brytn Hextall,
Rangeri and Bill Cowley, Boiton,
for top ipot In the National Hockey
League individual KOrlng race,
when he picked up four pointi
agilmt Chicigo Sunday night to
boost hli totil to 28 pointi.
The leideri:
G APt
Hextill, Rangen  14 12 26
Groaio, Detroit      11 15 28
Cowley, Boiton    I 22 X
Abel, Detroit    • 18 M
Pitrlck, Ringeri    13 11 34
Wition, Rmgen    7 17 24
Drillon. Toronto    12 11 M
Thorns, Chicigo  10 13 23
Hockey Players Are
Being Drafted Into
the Army at Coast
Though the army proved a boon
to Victoria Bapcoi by providing
them with Elmer Kreller, former
Winnipeg star Junior, and New York
Rover, it is now having a two-way
effect ln the Pacific Coait Inter-
medute Hockey League.
Jimmy Miles, right winger on a
enck line with Don Stanley and
Jikle Mann, and Mac Beattie, tfotlle,
have been drafted from the Nanaimo
Clippen, and are now ln khahki at
Vernon. Art Davii, ilternate net-
minder .will succeed Beattie.
At Victoria, Bui Algar will be loit
soon to the irmy too, tccordlng to
reporti from the Coait.
Hogan Easily Top
Coif Pro in U.S.
LOS ANGELES, Jin. 12 (AP) -
Benny Hogan wn Amerlci'i beit
profcasionil golfer ln 1941 iccord-
ing to the avenge itrokei per round
itatiitlci. He wu ilio the country'!
money winner.
Hogin, iccording to figure, re-
leiied by the Profeisional Golfen
Anoclition of America today, had
an average of 70 28 ihota per round
In tournament play. It repreiented
101 roundi.
In order behind the little Henhey,
Pa, Texai-born pro were Sim
Sneid, 88 roundi, 70 70; Byron Nelion, 82 roundi, 70.»2, Jimmy Demaret, 50 roundi, 7122; Henry Plcird,
33 roundi, 71.21; NtUontl Open king
Cnlg Wood. 79 roundi. 71 28; Clayton Heifner, 85 roundi, 71.58.
Louis Is Whole
Show as Army
Takes Him Over
NEW YORK, Jtn. 12 (AP)-Jot"j
Louli todiy took a five-mlnutt ferry |
ride acrou New York Harbor,
ctme draft regit Iran t No. 374X tt tbt-;
Fint Army Headquarters on Governor'i Island and waa glvtn hit
final physical "okay" for tht United
States Army.
Then, munching a handful ot
peanuts, he took the ferry btck
to Manhattan for hli lait 48 hour*
u Jot Louli, the hetvyweight
chimpion of the world who gete
$100,000 or so for t ftw brief
minutei' work. Wedneidty tt hit
induction it Cimp Upton, Long'
Island, ht becomei Private I.
Louis Barrow at $211 month.
Afterward, the army will thtft
him to ltl morale diviiion, and In
late March he probably will htvt'
a furlough to fight for the amy
fund.
The army took over Joe Louii to-.
day—but in the procen Jo» Jutt.
ebout took over the trmy. Ht crt-'
ated more furore tt Flnt Arm/'
headquarters than a full drtii in-.
spection for the chief of itaff. Somt
400 other selectees, on hand for their
own physical test, flocked around
him on the ferry and in the long
chutelike examination roomi of Fort
Jay'i medicil building, and paid
little If any attention to the Sergeants and "M. P.'i" trying to kttp
them lined up. Mijon tnd Colontli
and C"aj>ttini it the poit cimt ovtf
to shake hands and be photographed
with him. And even Jot Braddock,
the gallant old warrior from whom
Joe won the hetvyweight title in
1937, took the ferry ride to tn*
him a "good luck, partner."
In fact, Joe wai about tht ctlmtM
cltiien in light during the proceedings. He got up it 8 t. m„ tad w**
itill ileepy-eyed when he turned UA1
at the ferry houae.
"That wai the tougheit part tboul
it," Joe yiwned, "thii get-In' *V*
But I gueu I'm gonnt get uied to iy
io I might'! well ittrt right now.
Lady Curlers Stop
Play Out of Respect
to Mrs. W. Johnson
TRAIL, BC. Jm. 12-<-tmti la
the ladiei' division of TnU Curllae
Club will be cancelled Tuetdtyll
respect to the funeral of Mn. Walter
Johnion,
Cancellation! of Thunday and
Friday gamei hai alao been nectt^
iltated aa tour rinki are attending
the Eait Kootenay Bontplel tt Kimberley. The ichedule for the ft*
miinder of pliy for the Bltylodi
Cup will be redrawn tnd poited for
next week.
Arcaro Returns to
Saddle; Wins Three
MIAMI, Fit, Jan. 11 (AP.-ttdil
Arcaro, whose four-month eentenci
for rough riding expired New Yttrt
Day, booted home a trio of winnen
today at Tropical Park, among thtn
Dekalb, wlnntr of the featured it*
furlong Indltn Creek purtt.
UDi
■tvr
This idvertisement is not pub
lished   or   displayed   by   th
Liquor Control Botrd or by th
Government of Britisn *
Columbia.
	
	
	
 >»«r EIOHT.
-NELaON  DAILY NEWS   NELSON   "..(..-TUESDAY  MORNINO   JAN. 13   1942-
—
CHIC   DRE88ANDHAT
ENSEMBLE
ynaJUML   Wxvditt
PATTERN 9964
"hnt H true th« most fashionable women have that ensembled
look? A dress and hat to match is
imartest of all," says Marian Martin—"like this costume from Pat-
ern 9964." The dress is a cleverly yoked shirtwaister that buttons down '.he front. (There are
only five buttonholes to make)
Gathers or impressed pleats are
optional at either side of the skirt
to give it feminine fullness. This
is echoed In the softly draped hat
with the new down-in-back silhouette. Rayon shantung makes
a mart ensrmble: try using a
vivid contrasting shade for the
hat and the belt. Tab pockets and
long sleeves are optional.
Pattern 9964 may be ordered
onlv in misses' and women's sizes
12, 14, lfl. 18, 20. 30. 32. M, 36. 36
and 40 Size lfl. dress, requires 3Vn
yards 39 inch fabric; hat and belt,
1 1-8 yards contrast
Send twenty cents for this Mar-
Ian Martin pattern. Be sura to
write plainly your SIZE, name,
address and style number.
Send your order to The Dally
News. Pattern Department, Nelaon, Pattern will be sent to your
horn* within 10 days.
R.(.t_F.tou*llles
OTTAWA. Jan 12 'CP). - The
Royal Canadian Air Force today reported three men missing after flying operations and one man dead
from natural causes This brought
air force dead and missing reported
lince   war  started   to   1272.
Following is the latest lift:
Canada:
Previously reported seriously ill —
Now reported died from natural
causes: De Lorme, Emile, Ac2, Cal-
«ary.
Previously reported missing: Now
for official purposes presumed dead;
Wylie, Richard Brock, 5qdn. Ldr,
tottvan. Sask Parker. Frederick
James. Po., Montreal. Chat, L#on-
•rd Joseph Reynolds, Sgt, Hamilton. Tibbett, Floyd Joseph, Acl ,
Bracebridge,  Ont
Miaaing   after   flying   operations:
I  Morgan, Alexander McDonald. Lac,
Toronto. Sutton, Bede Bernard. Lac,
• Manly,  New  South  Wales.  Australia. Witts. John. Ac2, Penrith, New
South   Wales.   Australia
S-eriously injured ir automobile
tccident: Blank. Floyd Ross. Ac 2
Carman. Man.
PEACOCK MOTIFS
PATTERN 216
LAURA WHEELER PEACOCK "SHOWS OFF"
COLORFUL PLUMAGE ON LINENS
Easy stitches—done while you' relax or chat—soon?
yield sparkling scarfs, pillow cases, or other linens to
match the gay peacock bedspread, Pattern 1022, shown
recently. Pattern 216 contains a transfer pattern of 8
motifs ranging from V/iX&Vt inches to lVfex6 inches;
illustrations of stitches; materials required; color suggestions.
8end twinty centi for thli plttern to The Nelion Dilly Nowl,
Needlecrift Dept, Nelion. Write plainly ptttern number, your name
tnd addreu. Pittern will be milled to your home within 10 dtyi.
♦     ♦     ♦
—-——-'■     ' ■   .
TMECUrife
■■-
mmr
7
By Gus Edsor
CONTRACT .
Two U. S. Tugs Safe,
Third Is Missing
SEATTLE. Jan  12 'AP)—The 13th '
naval district headquarters announced today that two of the three Seat-
tic tug* which were in the Pacific
war zone when the Japanese opened
hostilities December 7. are safe in
an undisclosed port The th;rd still
waa missing i
One ferti]i?er is drawn from the
llag or waiste matter obtained in
the production of steel.
AUNT HET
By ROBERT QUIU.EN
TOD KEED CONFIDENCE
MUCH OP the finest play of
hinds depends upon your having
confidence ln your own card read-
lag. Btlng able to read them
soundly, then lacking the assurance that you are right, can keep
you from making playi which fur-
nlah the only chance to take trlcki
which are really possible. Espe-
tt__tty In tournament play, in
which an extra trick may mean
the difference between top and
bottom. It payt to spring the device! which produce R.
♦ Al
»Ak;»
4>A62
♦ K8 4 J
♦ K8I1
*f8
♦ J 104
f J  10 » 7
i
"Jim say. he believes Ln helping
the deserving, but he always figure.
that people are ornery nr wicked
Of '.hey wouldn't be hard-up"
A".
S.
♦ Q * 2
*) Q 10 8 I
♦ 75
+ XQ6S
4 J io » <
»J»«J
4>KQ»8I
4 None
(Dealer: Wett. Both sides vulnerable.)
Wett       North      East       South
Pats        1 +        ly 2*
Paai 3 NT
Seeing that East's bid of the
mlt had kept hli ilde out of 4-
Hee,rta, the probable contract at
mott tablei, and that 5-He«rt..
"rVOUld be the likely number of
.tricks it that declaration at most
tablei, with loeen totaling one
e»ch In trumpi and ipadei, John
R. Crawford, spectacular young
By Shepard Barclay
Philadelphia!!, decided he would
hava to And the way to make thi
same numbtr of trlcki tt No
Trumpa In order to get a good
tcore. So he went titer thtm.
, East led the spade 2, tht J going on tnd Weit ducking, In the
hope thtt later he might tcore tw<5
trlcki for hit tide In the tuit. Mr.
Crawford then led to hla diamond
A, offered the heart 3, which Eut
decided to duck, ao that the J
won, then ran tear more dit-
mondi. The apade A, heart A and
K brought discards enabling him
to know Eait atlll had the heart
Q and two clubt, which mutt be
the A-Q for hla bid. So tht heart
7 waa sent to the Q, and Eaat
could do nothing but take hia club
A and then give the important
eleventh trick to Hr. Crawford
with the club Q to the K.
.   .   .
Tomorrow's Problem
♦ K Q J 9 3 2
»A3
♦ 2
4 A 10 t 7
♦ «
♦ Q J 10 t
i t
♦ JM
4 J Ml
♦ A 10 8 «
em
♦ AKM
+ tbi
(Detler:   North.   Neither   side
vulnerable.)
JANE ARDEN
By Monte Barrett ond Russell Ror
BRINGING UP FATHER
By Geo. McManui
f K 97 J
♦ Q 10 8 7
3
*K<}
Ar*.
S.
How would you play thli deal
to make 6-Spade». after a lead of
the heart Q?
Distributed by Kinj peeleres Syndicate, toe.
DAILY CROSSWORD
Italian coin   28 PortJqrtof
A fruit curved line
Kind of cap  30 Japaneae
Subside
Large cat
At home
Detpoti
Condition
aaah
37 Sloth
i*. Silk-cotton
tree
10 Thick toup
Lubricator    .1 Dancer'i
Place
Cease to
ileep
Speciel of
pepper
To make
holy
cymbala
« Greedy
43 Capital of
Italy
48 Tax
46 Source ey
Indigo
•lur.vi'-i      i
p_nr*ia Haass
\mmu oat-inn
UHM!:'        iJIIIMI
she wa lAmm
..'J_l_l.i|_l:*..
J-.ll1-*.!
atfaaiiBa
*am uao oho
areas uaiia
■■..huum auaraa,
innwin-. ii!*ii"j'.-*n*i
HL=_iai_li;U_.!i_l
TeHertai's Aaiwer
47 Head covering
49 To put on
50 Attempt
ACROSS
1. Peekt
B. Swallow
8. Pertaining
to Udet
10. Infirm
12. Arabia
(archaic)
13. Towaah
14. Sheer
:18. Young
sheep
16. Rancor
M.Dlltrees
■lgnal
SS. Somt
24. Warp-yan.
27. Mythical
glint
tW. Wheel on
atpur
31. Wide-awake
32. Diminish
83. Instruct
184. Coddett of
victory (poet.'
Lss. Shrew-mouse
138. Consume
38. Syrian delt*
(poaa.)
| W. Brittle
41. Allowance
for weight
44. Western State
48. Shun
BO. Hydroua io.il-
um carbonate
51. Place of
, conflnemerH
52. Ignited again
tl. Univenlty
officer
-HSbout
DOWN
LTWriNe
X Jet*flah montt.
8. Infanta
4. foxy
S.roel
fl   A -TiflTT***
OWTOWIl-A »Jt*eejnm
A*    SAB    A II L    TSPC    OBCAQOt    XB8L
OBC   IOB.    ABZ   CB   PIRTO   R O J C A Q O V—
T BWLLSBW
Tee««»fcy*iOij>lniiil., IT W THE NATURE OT FTJIXT TO
BEE THE FAULTS OF OTHERS AND FORGET ITS OWN-
CICERO
till.Hint at Etta llllni IwMt-tt, fct.
HOW TO WORK  CRVPTOQUOTES
Crytoquotei ire quotatloni of famoui perioni written cipher.
A lubstltute character has repliced the original letter. For Instance,
an "R" may substitute for the original "E" throughout the entire
cryptoquote, or i "B" may replace an "IX". Find the key and follow
through to the lolullon.
MV PATH?-. IS EUTESTAMUG
SOME OF US OLD COONIES AT
THE HOUSE-SO i THOUGHT rp
LET  HIM
HAVE THE
PLACE TO
HIMSELF
HlNRY.
By Corl Anderion
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disne-
J I'VE BEEN ^-N
THiNKIN' IT OVER
AND IT WAS All MV
FAULT, Vr-iSV' If ■
YOU'LL COME OVER.
I PBOMISE NOT TO
START ANOTHER
FKSKTI
^f
::^—
P
/
ll      i!
i
If   1
1/1
f
\i
Mr'
5
g
t*m,hem* *l t**l
9
*rr"i—
w               _^<_-^
KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zone Grey
BLONDIE
n
By Chic Young
Large*! of Its kind Is the basking The United States Murine Corpi
shark which attains an average never has had a mutiny ol any de.
length of 3« feet approximately.       ' icription.
-	
 .
 -
 ."I'.eyi.iWIHON DAILY NBW*. NELSON   B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO   JAN. 11  1M*
Phone Classified Advertising  phon«
144 .
WHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET
144
BIRTHS
WALLEY-To Mr. tnd Mn. H A.
falley at 'the Vancouver General
tospltal, Jan. Jl, * daughter. Mn
■/alley il the former Eileen Berg of
touland while Mr. Walley ii train-
ftg with the R.CA.F.
GIBNEY-fo Mr. and Mrs. E. J
llbney, Rouland, at Mater Mneri-
jprdlae Hoiplt»l, Jaj). J), a ion.
TreaUS^b.Mr; md Mri. L. T
ftgtu, Trail, tt Trail-Tadanac Hcs-
lUal, Jan. 3, a ion.
nHILLEB-Tb Mr. an3*Mrs. Hugh
llller, trtfli-.ti Trail-Tadanac Hoa-
Jtal, Jan. 8, a ton.
HELP  WANTED
Applications will not be con.
lldered from personi engiged in
tht production of wai suppliei
SO", frAtlMHAND. $30 MONTH-
ly Board; cabin. State exp. and
age. Box 9967 Daily News,
SITUATIONS WANTED
SSpecial Low Rites rot uon-
commercial tdvertisemenlt undtr thll classification to assist
ptoplt seeking employment
Only 39c for one week (6 dayi)
coveri anv number of required
Unea PayaWe in advance Add
10c II box number desired
(OOD MALE COOK WANTS
work immediately. Will cook in
tny camp Going wages expected;
•llo referencei if desired. Box
7020 Dally News.        	
IATERPILLAR 0*_TBULLDOZER
man fully exerienced wants work
Box 9955 Dally News.
ffWtooRAP.fl.-i, s6Mfe BOTT-
rience, desires position. Write to
Box 107. Trail, B.C.	
'ROPERTY, houses, farms
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer Hotel, opp. C.P.R  Depot
u5ED~0.bT.m-G~ WoTO BB
gratefully received at the Salvation Army, 518 Victoria Street.
WANTKD - GOOD CLW* COT-
ton rags, oot less than 11 inchei
squirt, 9c lb F 0 B Ntlion
Dally Newi
WE
china, silverware, and furniture
Anything old Antique Shop. 413
Hall St.. NeUon   B.C.
men's DftUA siW_.h!S!_"Sll-N_J
$1.00 for 13 samples, plain wnp
ped Tested Guaranteed tnd prepaid Frtt Novelty prict lut
Princeton Distributors. P O Box
61. Princeton. B  C,
35c - Tht Photo Mill - Ot
P O Box 335 Vincouvtr
Rolls developed tnd printed. 15c
l'l 1 ^Enlargement Fret
13 reprints 5x7 enlargement, 35c
GUARANTEED DRUG SUNDRIES
Send for new low price lilt with
•ample, or $1.00 for 18 mper fine.
postpaid Western Supply, Box
383, Vancouver, B.C.
YOUR SICK FRIEND OR RELA-
tive in the hoipital will enjoy
reading The Daily Newi. Phone
each morning
INTRODUCTIbt. OTHIKTJ OR.
ganiied for the purpose of Introducing men and women, who
through lack of opportunity find
It difficult to meet one anothei
Highest references given P O
R x 385. Victoria. B C
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
AS8AYERS AND  MINI
REPRESENTATIVES
HAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSLAND
B.C. Provincial Assayer, Chemul
Individual representative tor ihlp-
pen it Trail Smtlter,
A J BUIE. Independent Mine Representative Box H Trail B C
t n: wmsewsoH, raWiNtm
Assayer, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.
CHIROPRACTORS
A.   B.   McDONALD.   DC,   Palmer
Grad   X-Ray   Strand Blk., Trail
CQRSETIERE3
SPENCER CORSETHRE,  MISS
Shirley Boomer, 217 Port, ph 889L
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR*
BOYD C AFFLECK. PO Boi 104
Trail, B.C Surveyor and Engineer
Phone "Beaver Falli"
R W HAGGEN, MINlMft S (ilVlL
Engineer; B. C Land Surveyor
Rossind ind Grand Forki.  BC
FOOT   SPECIALISTS
S J. GILLIS, D.S.C, R.CJ», REGD
Chiropodist, Foot Spccliliit   Bergeron Block  Pb   1199. Trail BC
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT
ed (6 or 3 exposure roll) 25c Re
print! 3c each For your vacation
snapshots choose Kryital Flnun
Guiranteed non-fide printi
Krystal Photos Wilkie Saikatchi-
wan   Established over 30 yean
MEN - REGAIN VIGOR, PEP 1-
Try Vitex. 25 tibleti $1.00. Personal drug lundrles, 34 for $1.00
Supreme Razor Blide Shtrpener
35c. Sharpen! bladei perfectly. J
Jensen, Box 324. Vancouver, B.C.
KDOD FARM LANDS FOR SALt
on easy terms in Alberta and
Saskatchewan Write lor *ull in
formation to 908 Dept ol Natural
Resources C P R   Calgiry  Alta
'. A. WHITFIELD. Real Estite and
Insurance. 417 Hall St.. Nelson.
OR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
BBAVY  PORTABLE   SAWMILL
(Excepting Power)
Saw Arbor, cirriage, edger md
lower—ball beiring. New feed
lOtkl, new let works, edger nearly
r. Rolls, cutoff law, two good
Itrttd-teeth head laws, endless
..ive belt ill in first-clasi shape
ian be Inspected at Creston. B C
O. Rodgers Ltd., Creston. B C
JANUARY FUfi~SALE
Special reductions on all fur coots
during our sale... Convenient terms
POLAR   FURS   LTD.
Vancouver.  B.C.
MEN'S SPECIAL
Men's personal drug lundrtei,
fineit quility, tested, guirinteed. 12 for SOc, 25 for $100,
aisorted. including the world'i
funniest Joke novelty free, ind
catalogue of sundries.
WESTERN DISTRIBUTORS
Box 24   Dept   NC, Regini, Saik
FUNERAL HOMES
SOMEES FUNERAL HOME
701 Baker St. Phone 252
Cert Morticiin       Lady Attendant
Modern  Ambulance Service
INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE
R W DAWSON. Real Eitate, In
lurance. Rentals 557 Ward Streit
Annibie  Block.  Phona 197.
C    D   BLACKWOOD  AGENCIES.
Insurance. Reil Estate Phone 99
CHAS .' McHARDY, INSURANCE
Rea! Eitate   Phone 135
H   E   DILL.  FIRE.  AUTO  ACCI-
dent Insurance   532 Ward Street
MACHINISTS
BENNTITS LIMITED
Machine ihop. acetylene and electric
welding, motor rewinding.
commercial refrigeration.
Phone 593 324 Vernon St
PUBLIC NOTICES
 .    t       „
OPTOMETRI8TS
IN   THE   8UPREME   COURT   OF
BRITISH   COLUMBIA
(Ip Divorce and Matrimonial
Cauwi)
TO; Herman Peter Adolf Helleien,
Utt ot Nelion tnd Vincouvtr,
Brltith Columbia
TAKE NOTICE thtt I Petition
bearing date Mth dty of Junt, IMl,
hai been filed in tht Supreme Court
of British Columbil, in Divorce and
Matrimonial Causes ln tht cauie
numbered 1017/IMl, by Idt Helle-
wi ot Vincouvtr, Brltith Columbia,
praying tor.t Decree thtt tht marriage lolemniied bttwttn her, Utt
Mid Ida Helium, tht Petitioner,
and you tht Mid Herman Peter
Adolf Htlleitn, the Respondent, it
Hamilton, Ontario, on tht 12th day
of Mty, 1990, bt dissolved on tht
groundi of your adultery tnd (or
costi.
AND THAT by in Order of Tht
Honourable Mr. Justice Flthor
dated January 8th, 1942 it hat been
ordered that lervice upon you of
a sealed copy of the said Petition
and of the notice to the Reipondent
to Appear be effected by thii advertisement.
UPON DEFAULT of your ippelr-
ing, the Court will proceed to httr
the said chargei proved and pronounce judgment, your ibsence
notwithstanding,
AND THAT you are hereby
required within fourteen (14) diys
from the date ot the lut publication
of thii Notict inclusive of tht ditt
of such lut publication to enter an
appearance either ln person or by
your Solicitor at the Office of thi
District Registrar of tht Supreme
Court of British Columbil tt
Vancouver, British Columbia, and
thereafter mike aniwer to the
chargei ln the Mid Petition
mentioned.
DATED it Vincouvtr, Brttlih
Columbia, thii 10th day of January,
AD   1943.
W. C. THOMSON,
Solicitor for th« Petitioner,
1001 Rogers Building,
470 Granville Street,
Vancouver, B. C.
The date of tht flrit puhllcttlon
of this Notice ii Tueiday, Jinuary
13th. 1942 and tha date of tht 3rd
and last publication will bt Siturday, Jinuiry 17th, 1943.
lUBUKK STAMPS FUK UNEM
ployment Insurance These are re
■ quired lor cancelling stamps bi
employers Ln ertaloyee'i books
85c eich. Postage oc extra Nelson
Daily News Commercial Printing
Dept
TWO COMPLETE SETS VELOX
prints from any roll of fllmi, 25c
R.printi 2Vi cents each. Overnight
icrv ce We promise to iitlsfy you
in every way. Prrfeiiional Photographer. 25 yeari' axpentnet
S-nd in your friends' filmi too!
Film Exchange, Box 60. Ctltlt-
gar. BC.
W  E  MARSHALL
Optometrist!
1458 Biy Ave . Trtil Phone 177
IASH FACTORIES
KOOTENAY SASH & DOOR FAL-1
tory. 907 Front St.. Nelson PUOie i
530 No job tstr.mill or foo"blI
LAWSON'S   SASH   FACTOR*
Hirdwood merchint 273 Biker Si
8ECOND   HAND  STORES
PIPE. TUBES. FITTINGS
NEW AND USED
Urge itock for tmmediale shipmen;
SWARTZ PIPE YARD
lit Avenue ind Mun St
Vancouver   B   C
tWO   BADMINTON   RACQUETS
1 pair men's skatea, size 8; 1 piir
ladies' skates, size 4. All ln goou
Condition. Phone 1M-R-3.
TTt   WASA ER-GUA'RATf-,
teed, $4450. Beatty Waiher Store
Phone 91.
PIPE • FITTINGS • TUBES • SPE
Cial low pricei Active Trading Co
tig  Powell St    Vancouver   B   L
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
SUPPLIES, ETC
WE BUY  SELL AND EXCHANGE
Whst have vou' Ph 534 Ark Store
THE IWH.CH
CHICK5 GIVE BEJULTJ"
LOST AND FOUND
TO FINDERS
If you find _iiyihi-i_  lelephoni
The Daily News  A  'Fiiuno1  Ad
will be in.ened witnrtui cost to
„ you   We will collect  from  the
owner
JEOST - 32x6 GOODYEAR D1A
anond tread truck tire, between
"Fraser's Landing ind Nelson.
Wed., Jan. 7. Reward, Creston
Builders Supply,  Creston.  BC
fouND - __.isH~srn-i.FC~ ma"
hogany colored. Licence No. 271
Initial DTP. Phone 186-1.1.
tOST - WALLET CONTAINHR!
money and other valuable papen
F. J Tarron, Ymir, BC
fOUND-LADY'S SLACK-TRSE.
on Stanley StlVet Saturday Enquire at Daily News Office.
We cloied our -BANNER YEAR"
ol 1941 with ■ record of 560.218
chicki told to poultrymin In Wettern Cinida.
Wi itirt our "PRODUCTION
VEAR* of 1942 better equipped thin
ever before to lupply then oui
tomeri ind new ones with "CHICKS
WHICH GIVE RESULTS".
I Poultrymin In Weitirn Omada
! hive proven to their own iatli.ee,
tlon thit <4ur Chicki will "Dillvir
the  Goodi."
Quality   Chicki   will   bring   you
extri proftti.
Before ordering write for I free
copy of our 1942 "Production Yeir"
AUTOMOTIVE.
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
1940 INTERNATIONAL 1-ton truck,
like new. New tirei, only 16,00.
milei. 197-inch whielbue, two-
ipeed axle.
19»1 3-ton MAPLE LEAF truck. 197
inch wheelbase. Low mileage
tirei like new.
1939 H-l   ton   DODGE.   A-l   ihijx
throughout.
I«31 PLYMOUTH 'coupe,   over-
j hauled,  new   paint,  tirei  Uke
new
CENTRAL TRUCK
S>   EQUIPMENT   COMPANY
701 Front St„ Nelaon
book.
RENTALS
Couple" require    modern
imall attractive house, neighborhood Kill" Large living room
tuentitL Rent with option purchaie, State rental, price, full
partlculan, photo. Box 70.1 Daily
Newt,	
fcuMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED
house keeping rooms in Annable
Block lor rent R W Dawson
Agent   BOT Ward Street
*tos.ns,gs'6mcfcr~A7'n.
houses   tor   rent   Oet   our   till
Robertion   Rulty  Co.   Ltd.   $41
Baktr Street
t»OLISHERS  fo~RF.NT-"BEATT?
Polisher to rent,  $100  per  day
Beany  Washer Store,  Phone  91
fOR RENT   SMALL COTfAGflN
Fairview. $15 Mo. C   W   Apple-
yard.
X^homFTor Those~ away
from h'une Rtrathcork Hotel Anti
'TERRACE APTS "ffcauT;fuT"morleTn
ftigidaire  equipped  suites
.Km reNT-HJiW OPfuJTft'RTi
well heated Urge 3-ro m suite
w th fireplace. Oarage  Ph  542.R
Wanted to fTESt-fFt.nisiifT6
house. 1 or 3 bedrooms. R>x "016
Daily News
WAlffSTTTULT-Y      M (5W/ft"N
small house in Flirview  Ph fi.ltR
ISKi^CTooMS: KITt-Tn_mfC*
room. fur. ind heited 711 Vernon
\FarM~ RdoW  B!5AhD""ir~T)F:.
sired, 212  High  CI   Phone  (»5 Y
"SEE~KERR  APTS   FIRST-
Bos N Langley Prairie. B. C.
BABY CHICKS-RHODE ISLAND
Reds and New Hampshires, Andrew Christie strain, good uUlity
stock, approved md blood-tested.
$12 00 per 100. Chicks reidy to
ihip every Tuesdiy. John Goodmin. 1655 Ciller Avenue, New
Weitminiter. B.C.
FOR SALE - 3 GOATS DUE TO
kid.   9   Flemish   Cunt   Ribblti
Ph-ne  186-R-3.
good FARM H65.SE MR SALE
Box 13. Nelion. Phone 891-L.
1930 FORD PA-TON TRUCK
Dual retr wheels, 4-speed transmission, overload springs. Excellent mechinlcal condition.. Closed
cib with itake o.) 1 r
body. 0„l«t
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Telephone 144
Trail:   K   Lowdon, 718-Y
Classified Advertising Ratet
lie per line per Insertion.
44c per Une per week (( comecutive iniertloni for cost of 4).
SI 43 • line s month (26 times).
(Minimum 2 linei per iniertlon)
Box number Uc extra Thit
coveri iny number of timet
PUBLIC NOTICES. TENDERS,
ETC.
Uc per line, flnt Initrtion ind
14c eich  subsequent   Iniertlon.
ALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
SPECIAL  LOW  RATES
Non commerclil   8 11 u 111 o n i
Wanted for 25fc for iny required
number  ot   lines  for  ilx  dtyt
piytble In idvmce.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Single copy    |     ...
By carrier, per week _...        25
By carrier  per yeir    13.00
By mill:
One  month         $  73
Three  monthi       J.00
Stx monthi           4 00
One veir 8.00
Above rates apply In Canida.
United Statet ind United Kingdom to suDsrriben living outiide regulir eirrler iren
Elsewhere ind In Ctntdt whtrt
extra postage ll rtqulrtd ont
month $150. thrtt monthi 84.01k
■is months $800 one yetr $15.0(7
(OST OF UVI
DROP REFLI
PRICE CONTROL
. i 2        ■ " -
OTTAWA, Jm. 12 (Ct») - Tht
Dominion Buriau of fttitlitlci re
ported todiy lt| coit-of-living Ins,
dm dicllned from 1184 Nov. 1 tt
.184 Dte. 1, reducing tht wartime
Increln ilnet Auguit, 1888, te 14.9
ptr cent
Tht buniu'i coit-of-llvlng In-
dix Is the bull for iwirdlng bon-
vitt undtr tht'atvtrnmtnt'i v»tr-
tlmt wigei ptlloy,
"Tht December dtortttt WU
dut ilmost entirely to I decline
In the food Indtx from 125.4 to
123.8.
Todiy'i Index hid bun iwiltid
with Intereit bsciuie It wil tikin
11 relictlng tht iffeoti tf tht Fid*
trtl prlci-cilllng polley whleh
wint Into tffttt Deo. 1.
i    ■■ iiiilliij-')| ,    ' i» ■ ■ n)i , i i   11) ii,   PAOI NINt
Privateer Cold
Output $73,000
VAwcouvm, jm. a (d») -
Privateer Gold Mines Ltd., rtfcrl
production tor tht month ot December imounted to $73,745 from tht
milling ot Wt ton ot en trom
Which 2107 ounces ot gold WM obtained.
Shareholderi, who recently received tht regular dividend ot thrtt
cents plut ont ctnt ptr .hire bonui,
trt advised not to expect tht ent
ctnt bonui with tht ntxt dividend.
Mount Zeballos GoM
Production $67,000
TORONTO, Jin. II (CP)-Mount
Zebillos Oold Minei, Zebillos, B.C.,
todty reported'production during
tht final quirter ot IMl imounted
to $07,774, compired wtth $42,499
during tht third quirter ot tht year
■nd $152,582 during tht lltt quirter
ot 1840. This brings total production
tor 1941 to (971,973, compired with
$587,027 during tht previous yeir.
Britain and U.S. Put
Pressure on Eire
LONDON, Jtn. 12 (CP) - Britain
•nd Unlttd Statei wtre rtllibly rtporttd todty to be renewing their
pressure tor war bases in ntutrtl
Eire.
Ntw ovtrturei, combined with i
concerted BritUh Preu cimptlgn
to lid the tilled wu In the Atlantic, io fir hive been miinly ln-
formil but official, it wu uld.
Prime Miniiter Eimon de Vilert
ot Eire hu uid he sympithlzed with
the Unlttd Statei in IU wir, but thit
It sirouH promote dUunlty for Eire
to become involved.
United Stitei rtpreientatlvei in
Dublin, lt wu uld, hive been exerting io much pressure on tht Eire
government In penontl contacU
iome ot their old popultrity U win
ing.
Both British md Unlttd States
rtprtitnttuvu wtre uld to hive
Insisted nothing ln the wty of new
proposals bu bten lubmitted formally, but they mike no lecret thit
they look wishfully it tuch potential
bases ll Berehaven, Cobh and Lough
SwHlly, which would htlp the tlllei
oounter Germin Intenilticition of
tht Btttlt of the AUintlc or new
moves towird Wut Africa.
bl 1899 whtn ceded to Eire the
bues were deicribed by Winston
Chtlrchlll, then I critic Of tht Chamberlain government, u lentlntl tow-
ers ot the Wutira ipproichet upon
which 49,000,000 people in thue lilindi depend for foreign food ind
dtily bretd."
NEW YORK—Buytri ihopped for
steels, rails ind tfiorted specialties.
leivlng miny leaden to shift for
themielvei it nirrowly irregulir
levels.
USED CM GOT WATER HEATER
with Defroster "Jnjt, completer
Nelson Auto Wrecking, 513
Vernon Street
WANTED    MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED-HAY  CARRIER  WTTH
fork ind V) ft of trick. Box 13.
Ne'jion   Phone 891-L.
Ship us your scrap metals
or iron Any quantity Top prlc**
Pild Activt Tr-id'nR Company
91«  P'-wpII   St    Vinrouv#T    B   C
GOVT TO AID OUTPUT OF
PROCESSED VEGETABLES
OTTAWA, Jm. 12 (CPL—Largt
tcale     ax perl mental     work     and
■ paptation   of   commercial   planti
to   tha   production   of   dahydrated
vegetable!, which* may ba aant to
the   United   Kingdom  In  the  moit
uiaful   and   economical   form,    li
being iponiored by tha Dominion
Government, It waa learned today.
Two plant* in Nova SrotU, two in
Ontario anrl one in Qriliah Columbia
wpre understood to be preparing to
Instal the required equipment with
Federal aMijtanre.
TIKES AND PARTS
cm AUTO
Wrecken. Biker St.
NEW   YORK
STOCKS
Open
Cloie
Amer   Cin   -      	
. aon
Bl*.
Amer Smelt 8c Ref ..
UVi
41*
Amer Tel bs Tel 	
. 127*4
127 .*
Americin   Tobtcco   ..
.   48*
49
Beth Steel	
MS
«4.t
Borden  Corp  	
.    -*)>.
W,
C P R  	
.    4.4
4S
C Wright pfd 	
B"i
8H
Eastman Kodak	
135>%
1S7
General   Electric   _
. ny,
27 S
General   Foods   	
38
884
General Motors  	
.   82
824
(1-anbv   Cons
.     5V,
54
Great Northern pfd ._
ia*
244
Intl   Nickel
. .«•,
27
Kcnn   C pper
33 Vs
35 S
Nash Motors       . ....
3*
84
Phillips   Pete   ..   _   .
384
39
Pullman   Carp   _    	
.   _*'.
li',
RCA
.     3*i
2%
iSifewav  Stores   	
.   41 Mi
42
Studeb.ker           .
4
IV,
t Texas Corp
.   MVt
MS
Union  Carbide
.   MV,
904
Un'on Oil nf Cal
13<V
134
'U S Rubber
.   13%
194
U S Sieel
M
MS
(West   Elec        ..   . ....
784
79
W iclworth          _.   .. ..
27',
'.'7 4
Engineers dem dehclte Instru-
tsvn's nn the cnntrnl boards nf the
Grand Coulee darn with corn pith.
LONDON (CP)-MtJor Sir Hcnr?
tlurrows, 39. A DC. to the Governor nf Uganda from 1928,to 1929
ws- killed In iction In the Middle
East
VANCOUVER   STOCKS
MINES                           Bid Aik
Brtlorne                8 70 8.93
Ctriboo Gold     .. ..     170 1.80
Dentonli          00S J01V4
Oeorge Copper ...:...      .124 *-
Golcondt 0S4 —
Gold Belt           13 .18
Gnill-Wlhksne        Hi .034
Hedley Miscot              .334 -
Inter Cotl Ss Coke      .29 -
Island Mountain           1.0S 1.08
Picific Nickel               til —
Pend Oreille      1.80 1.70
Pioneer Gold     . ..    2.00 2.08
Premier Border     .      01S .01K
Premier Gold               ii —
Reevei-Mac       34 .48
Reno Gold            ..       13S 14
Sheep Creek        — .85
Silbak Premlir .            — .78
Surf  Inlet                 — .07
Tiylor BR 03S Ol
Whitewater         03 —
OILS
A P Con               .084 —
Anglo Can      51 —
Cll «c Ed              1.18 125
Cilmonl       18 —
Commoil    20 —
Dilhousle      2(1 —
Daviei Pete        15S -
Home                          2S8 2.85
McDougill-Segur         .034 .044
Meteury                .034 -
Model 174 .21
Okilta com      33 —
ftcilt*         024 .03
Royil Cin            .      044 -
Southweit Pett             13 —
LONDON (CP)-Feir of in open
revolt prtventi the Germini from
setting up i 100 per cent Nul gov-
vernment in Holland, tccordlng to
Vrt) Nederlmd. rree Netherlindi
newipaper. publiihed in London.
Buying Wave
Boosts Cotton
NEW YORK, Jtn. 12 (AP)-Cot-
ton futurei iwept upwtrd |1,78 to
$2 t bile todiy on t w*ve of buying iet off by ipeculitlve interpret
tation of the firm producli lection
of the Senite-ipjrovrt prict'control measure.
Another fictor behind the rilt
wai the growing demand for cotton
to UU expected Government doth
contracts.
Closing pricei ringed from 1798
to 18.88 cents I pound tn the futurei
Ult, ipot cotton tdvtndng to i nom-
intl 19.74 centi t pound.
Rubber
'reduction to End
Shortage in USA.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (AP) -
Jesie Jonu, Federil Loan Administrator, announced todiy t $400,-
000,000 program tor making synthetic rubber which ht said would
virtually tnd the United States rubber shortage in tbout 18 monthi.
Jonei told reporten thtt the Preiident had authorized him to go ahead
with a plan to build enough new
ftctoriei to turn out 400,000 toni ot
lynthetic rubber t year. He estimated the planti could be reidy by
the middle of 1943 and, along with
other rubber' lources would be
enough not only to fUl ill military,
but a limited amount ot civilian
needs, including automobile tirei.
In the meantime, Jonea iald, thert
it enough rubber to meet all essential needs of the United Statei until
tbe new planti can be completed,
Jonei announced thtt he had arranged a pool ot nearly all the lead*
ing rubber, oil and chemical companies ln the country to make tht
plan possible. These companies will
pool their patents, scientific tnd
technical processes end other facilitiei, Jonei iald.
How Urge the program was could
be Judged from the fact that all the
synthetic hibber planta now In operation or under construction in the
United Statei have a total capacity
of 90,000 tons a year.
Blood Teit Birds
Will Be 160,000
Approval tnd blood testing of
poultry flocki in B. C. will be completed ibout Jtn, 19, with approximately 180,000 birdi blood testrt
under the supervision ot the B. C.
Department of Apiculture. Thli Ls
88,000 more birdi tested than in
1840, and makes a total ot 700,000
birdi blood teited in seven yetn
from 1935 to 1941 Inclusive.
The flock approval work U lup-
erviied by G. L. Landon, DUtrict
Agriculturist at New Weitmlniter,
formerly of Grand Forki ind Nelion, milted by Intpecton J. A.
Smith of Penticton, S. J. Saundin
of Mllner, H. E. Wtby of Salmon
Arm, and J. R. Terry of Victoria.
CALGARY LIVISTOCK
CAI_GARY, Jan. 12 (OP).-Week-
end receipts: Cittle 1006; calvei 87;
hop 142; iheep 198. Todty: CtlUe
128; cilvei S; hogi 190.
Medium butcher iteers 8 to 873;
medium to good heifert 7.28 to 9;
good cows 8,50 to 7; topt 728; common to medium 5 to 8.28. Cinners
ind cutters J.50 to 4.50. Medium to
good vealeri 7.50 to 10.00.
Hogi Saturdiy 13.50 to 13.80 for
8-17 it yards ind planti.
TfloJthL JjuwdL . . .
LONDON, Jin. 12 (AP).-A riie
In Brltith ind Chinese bondi countered the main downwird trend in
securities market today.
NIW YORK-Leidlng sugir refiner! of the Unlttd States todiy
innounced an increue of 1-5 cents
• pound to 548 cents In the price
of wholeule refined sugsr.
TORONTO—Drib mtrket tctlon
left itocks little chsnge in price it
the end of today's lession.
Steep Rock traded ibout 13.000
shires tnd advanced to 192. The
dote iround 1.88 was up 18 net.
MONTREAL - Trading for moit
of the session on the Stock Exchinge today wis without in important future ind price fluctuations were nirrow.
VANCOUVER—Stocki  cimt out
for more active triding ind smsll
gains outnumbered losses.
Brilnrne Gold tumbled 15 to 8.70
while Sheep Crttk it 83 firmed i
cent from previous bid ind Reno
finished fractionally higher at 14.
WINNIPEG—Responding to United Statei mirket trends, Cimdlin
wheit futurei pricei on Winnipeg
Grain Exchinge dosed today 4
cent higher with May flnlihlng it
79S centi i buihel ind July at
80S.
In cash wheit there wu good demind for the lower gridei with
Eastirn feedir Interests tiklng cir-
loti for rill shipment Eut
CHICAGO—Gnin pricei took a
shirp riie today on the itrength of
Senate action to lift minimum cell-
ingi applicable to agriculture commodities under the pending price
control bill.
Galm of 1 to more thin 4 centi
carried prices to topmost levels for
almoit 5 yean in tome cuei. Otti
reached highs unequiled since 1928.
DOW   |ONES  AVERACES
High    Low Close Change
30 induitriiU  _ _    111.48   110.10 11088 up     .11
20 nill             28.08     2782 2789 up     SS
15 utiUtitl                 14.84     14.48 14.88 up     .04
TORONTO    STOCK     QUOTATIONS
MINIS
Aldermic Copptr  13
Anglo-Huronlan         2.10
Aonor       1.40
But Metali Mining       .07
Bidgood Kirkltnd        jOOS
Bobjo Minei MS
Bnlorne Minei     8.70
Buffilo Ankerltt      3 88
Cutle-Trethewey  90
Central Patricia         128
Conlaurum Minea  90
Con If fc S    8839
Dome Minei   _    15 75
Eut Malirtlc            218
Eldondo Gold  47
rtlconbrldge Nlcktl    I.M
Francoeur Oold     37
Hard Rock Oold  52
Hollinger       10.12
Hudion Biy M fc S     ttX
Inter Nickel           34.00
Kerr-Addiion       400
Kirklind Uke  99
MtcLtod Cockshutt         1 99
McKenile Red Like       98
Mining Corp      180
Moneti Porcupine    28
Norindi     48.00
Normetal        .83
Pamour Porcupine       Jtl
___. ___■_.__. a      .
Perron Oold      133
Pickle Crow Oold    _    JJ8
Sin Antonio Gold         1.93
Sherrltt Gordon 90
Sliden Milirtlc 29
Sylvinlte       1.90
Teck-Hughei Gold         210
Tobuigi Gold Mtaei       184
Wiltt Amulet             4.70
Wright Hirgrtavei     1.88
OILS
Brltith Americin     17.80
Imperiil 8.75
Inter Petroleum     12 82
Texu Cimdlin       1.80
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi Power        80
Bell Telephone          149
Brezlllin T L fc P ~    «S
B C Power A           20H
Cin Cir fc fdy  _.      5S
Cm Milting      _ _     38
Cin Picific Rly      8S
Coamoa            II
Distillers Seigrimi      22
Ford of Cinidi A -.    154
Oen Steel Want     8
Goodyear Tire      8J
Intl Milling pfd                8S
Imperial Tobicco            334
Lobltw "A" _    23S
MONTREAL PRODUCE
MONTREAL, Jtn. 12 (CP).-Spot:
Butter, Que. 34 to 34S; (freih 38
•core) 334A; Weitern regnded
34SA. Eggs—Eaitern A-large 334
to 34; A-medlum 30 to 304; A-pul-
leti 28 to 284.
Impending Price
Control Boosts
Farm Products
CHICAGO, Jan. 12 (AP)-Unlted
Stitei farmen today watched the
pricei of iome of their commodities
soir on the itrength of Indications
price control legislation to ba
pined by Congress may be lest
restrictive regarding agricultural
producti thm heretofore expected.
Heivy buying in Chictgo'i turbulent gnin pits ihot whett and
rye pricei up more thin Jour centi
a buihel; corn ind oats mort thin
• rent md toybeini six centi, the
maximum permitted for beans in
one session on the Board of Trade.
Pricei of all graini weie it or
netr top leveli lince 1987. Oati, ruing to 80 cents • bushel for Miy delivery, were the hitfieit ilnce 1928,
Winter Bird Visitors Include Some
Seen Here Only an Occasional Year
Birdi Wintering In thli diitrict Include Redpolli, Clark'i Nutcncken,
Snow Buntingi, Americin Oold-
finchet, CuiIq'i Flnchei, Bohemian
Waxwlngs, the uiutl Blackcipped
Chlckadeei, the usuil Woodpecken,
iome WILson'i Snipes, ind in oc-
cuional Robin.
Mn. E F. Edgington of Nelion,
who hu been tpending a couple of
mon*i it Nikuip, reporti rose-
plumiged birdi of iparrow lire
there, with brownish gny femilei
Theie preiumably ire the Ctnln'i
Ftnch, the BC. venion of the
Purple Finch. Thll ipeclei ll irregulir In iti Winttr wanderingi. Mn.
Edgington observed Blutbirdi it
Nikuip up to Dee. 3. She hu 1U0
leen cock phttitnti thu Winter.
Redpoll! wtrt noted in Hume Addition, Nelson, by Mn. H. E. Thtln
•bout tha lut week of December
They ipend the Summer in tht Art-
tic, ind iri irregulir In their Winter triveli.
Snow Buntingi wen iround the
witerfront In December, ind on one
occuion wtre teen on Vernon Street
by Joe Lingley.
Goldfinchei trt teen hen In
flocki. citing weed teedi.
Thi Mountain Aih berrlei in the
food of tht Bohemlw Wixwingi.
If the flocki of Evening Groj-
bttki *lt were iround ln November ire lUll here, they mike t ipec-
lilty of extrictlng the ktratli frem
the maple leeds or "keyi."
NUTCRACKIRS TACKLI
CONI*
On the other hind, pine cones Uire
the Clark'i Nutcracker! or Clark's
Crowi, tht Urge blut and white
birds that ihow up in thti diitrict
at long Intervals They hive been
seen frequently thu Winter on the
Jimei  Avis nnch  on the Onnite
Montreal Stocks
INDUSTRIALS
Can Bronie             tlV,
Can Celineie  -   M*
Can Celanete pfd  114
Can  Steamship    _     8S
Cons M fc S     -   MVt
Dom Coal pfd .         »S
Dom Textile ...   83
Foundation Co of Canida -      "
Imperial OU - '    «S
Intl Petroleum           124
Intl Nickel of Canada        34V,
Nat Brew Ltd     23S
Price Bros        -    ln
Quebec   Power      ...!       12V<
Shawlnlgtn W fc P -   14
BANKS
Battk of Commerce ...   190
Dominion Btnk ..  189
Imperial Btnk        - 100
Btnk ot Montrttl  187
Royal Bank - _..   131
Bank of Toronto  _.._  253
CURB   .
Beiuharnoli Corp 94
Britiih Amtrictn Oil        174
Coru Piper Cnrp 3
Donniconi Piper A       ...    4
Fnser Co Ltd US
McColl Trontenic pfd   . 924
Roid, tfttr an absence of yean.
All tht woodpecken except tiji*
sapiucken division ignore sea-sons,
■ nd whether seen or not, trt no
doubt iround, the most numeroui of
course being the fimilur Red-Shift«
ed Flickir.
At leut up to the told snap—
whioh began two days before Chriitmu—a Wllton'i Snipe could bt
Kired up occuionally from running
water on the Nelson witerfront, as
wai the cue all through the phenomenally mild Winter of last yeir.  ,
Two yein igo lirge flocki et
Roblru Wintered here, ind all
through Weit Kootenay. A yetr igo
thert were imall flocki. At lent
the odd Robin ii here thll year, for
one wai seen on Baker Street Jan.
4, while on Jtn. I J. C Bedford,
CireUker of Lakeside Pirk-who
hu been feeding some wild ducki—
noted one it the Park.
DUCKS AND DIV8R8
Of coune there ire the witerfowl,
thit Winter on the witerfront ind
feed in the ihillowi. There in iome
seven duck species—i smaller number than in most Winters here —
these being Millirdi, Greater
Sciups. Leuer Sciups, Bufflebetdi,
and Americin Goldeneyes, of tht
game ducks, and American Mergan-
len and Hooded Mergatueri of tht
fiib ducki.
Dlven  here-or   thit  wen  itlll
hen late In December—ire CooU,
and western Grebes, Homed Gnbei f
ind ISared Grebei.
WINNIPEC  CRAIN
WLVMIPBG. Jin. 12 (CP) .-Grain ■
futures quotttloni:
open   High   Low   Cloie
WHEAT:
Miy 794
July 804
OATS:
Miy 484
July 48S
BARLEY:
Miy 814
July 80S
Oct 59S
FLAX:
Miy
794
nos
404
40
82S
814
794
80S
404
K,\
11*.
884
99H
79S
80S
40S
4«S
StVt*-
Ijuly
|    RYE:
May
.July
1504
1594
180       198S
81S
8.-14
ISO
1594
154 884 884 88 H
884 884 684 ""*,
I CASH PRICES:
! WHEAT-No. ! hard 76«-i: No. \
Nor 764; No 2 Nor 734: No. 3 Nor.
|71S: No 4 Nor 70>«: No. 3 wheat
jsflS; No, 8 wheat BUS: feed wheat
844.
OATS-No J C W. 51; Ex. 3 C. W.
J04; No. 3 C W 495i; Ex 1 feed
494; No. I feed 48. No. 2 feed 44>);
No. 3 teed 424
BARLEY-Noi. 1 and 2 C W. 8-
row 84<4: Noi. y ind 2 C W. 2-row
844; No 3 C W 8-row 84S; No. 1
feed 59. No 2 feed 584; No 3 feed
574
FLAX    N"    1   C    W    1 !U_   No,  ]
C   W    1 55  No   3  f   W    1 48 No. 4
C   W    I 4_.
RYE   No.  2  C.  W   63S.
2
 PAGS TEN -
Ir-PfPffipPl^pPt—e-t—4
-* ;.„* -";•-- -
CIVIC
'  AfAMOUJPUYIMtMMTU
LAST' TIMES TONICHT
Shows at 7:00, 8:27
"Submarine Zone"
with   . •
PAT O'BRIEN
CONSTANCE  BENNETT
Plus     .
"She Couldn't
Say No"
WEDNESDAY ONLY
$25.00 Bank Nite
"Reaching for tha Moon"
"Outlaw of tha Desert"
CIVIC—Thursday
GRENFELL'S CAFE
CLOSED
for a few weeks only
Hava tha Job Dona Right
Sea
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
*e**e»ea&aaoM&&xs(8e&sc*m«t*
'36 FORD DeLuxe SEDAN
Looks and runs like new.
Heater and many extras.
Queen City Motors
Phone 43    Limited    Ml Jouphlm
"TIRED"?
Than don't worry.
Hava   DINNER  at
BUTLER'S
&,pr*JQMEAl VALUE
•I nana* MM m amtt m
' Collinson's
The Houie ol
Fine Diamonds
liRinfllilUREHTlT
.Oe'.l"l'-l.ti
Trail Is Ready
lor Wednesday
Night Blackout
THAU, B. C, Jtn. 12—Troll's
ARP committee, directed by Chiel
Warden E. A. 0. Colli, stands ready
tor the city'i teit black-out between
8 and 9 o'clock Wedneiday,
Warning will be given by the new
air raid siren, recently arrived Irom
Ottawa, and through arrangement!
with the Weit Kootenay Power tt
Light Company, all itreet lighti
will be turned ott. AU other lighti
muit be put out by householders
and owneri of business premises.
The black-out will lait 19 mlnutei,
the all-clear being signalled by
three whlitlei, the tire ilren, the
CM. It S. imelter whistle, and "Sea-
biscuit", whlltle on the C. M. St S
armored car.
Perioni requiring to uie torchei
muit uie them through two sheets
ot tluue paper, the light not to be
directed upward. Smoking ii also
forbidden.
WILL REPORT VIOLATIONS
Wardeni and assistants will be
posted throughout the entire vlcin
ity to check on the eftectlvenen,
both from the angle of cooperation
from the citizens, and also on the
sound of the new siren. Violation of
blackout requirements will be re-
ported to the Police Department,
which has been empowered to lup-
plement regulation!.
In conformation with general orden Issued throughout the Province, all advertising signs and unattended light! and porch lights muit
not be lit at night. Acting-Chief of
Police T. H. Steele reported to the
central ARP committee meeting
Monday afternoon, that he had received Instructions from Impector
John McDonald, of the Provincial
Police at Nelion, to thli effect.
Hiller Still the
Leading Enemy
WASHINGTON, Jm. 12 (API-
Navy Secretary Knox uld todiy
thit whilt thi Unltid Stitei fleet
hai not been Idle no early con-
cluilve ihowdown cin be expected
with the Japaneie flnt ind thit
the battle of the Atlantic li itlll
the wir'i moit Important itruggle,
"We know who our greit inimy
li. Thi inemy who, before all
otheri muit bi defeited tint It li
not Japan, It la not Italy. It ll,
Hitler and Hitler'i Null. Hitler'i
Germiny. It It Hitler we muat
destroy.
"Thit done, thi wholi Axli fib-
rie will collapie."
-"— NtWON D/tTlY M»W». NIllaON. B.C—TUMDAY MORNINO, JAN. 18,
._....,,._,..,,.,
i   i    *'    ' i
As Commandos Raidjd Norwegian Island
Move Lumberton
A wounded comrade is helped into an invasion barge during the raid by Britain's
Commandos of the Hun base at Vaagsoe, Norwegian Island.
and Cranbrook
■' **
. CRANBROOK, B.C., Jan. 12 (CP)
—A plan to men. e 49 houses trom
tht former mill site of tht Britiah
Columbia Spruce Mllli at Lumber-
ton to Cranbrook and to ihlp otheri
to Ctlgtry ,hai beep completed with
ult of tbt assets at the Cranbrook
Suh tnd Door Comptny tt Lumberton to Horner & Gerlitz, ot Calgiry. .
Hartman Leaves
CJAT to Assume
Postal Victoria
TRAIL, B. C Jtn. U - Rudolph
Hartman whose volet hai been
heard over radio itation CJAT for
nearly-three years, It leaving for
Victorlt Jan. 15 to replace Charlei
Snttth ai program director for itation CJVI.
Mr. Smith, who wu program director at the Trail Station until
accepting the appointment at Victoria lut Fall, hai enlisted ln the
Canadian Army.
- Mr. Hartman Is the ion of Mr.
and Mn. E. R. Hartman of 1355 Second Avenue, Trail, and wai chief
continuity writer at the Trail itation. No further appointment will
be made to the Trail itaff u George
Lunn, formerly of Nelaon, wu taken on ai member during tht Chriitmu ituon tnd hit appointment hai
now been made permanent
Prottot Yourttlf Vnm
Coughs; Colds
Take Pureleit Halibut Liver
OH Capiulei.
lOo for SO
$1.60 for tOO
8oid'only"tt youiffltxtil Store.
City Drug Co.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH
NEWS OF IHE DAY
lllllllllllMIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
AT THI RINK TODAY
Children's Skating, 4 to 5:45 P.M.
Read a good book tonight. Walt'i
Landing Library.
I.O.D.E    Monthly   MeeUng,   2:30
p.m., Legion, todty. Nominations.
Prompt,  efficient typewriter repairs. Underwood Agency. Ph. M
Holeproof
HOSIERY*
A man  goes  where
knows he can get hose-
that look good, wear well
and last long. We spec-_
iallze in that kind. Full-:
assortment, of colors ppd
sizes. '   '
50*. 7Sf fr fl.00
Emory's
Smoke Willi' Engllih Mixture, 10c
ind 15c pounch tt VALENTINES'
Aux. Boyi' Band meets Mrs Barton's, 410 Vlctorli St., Wed, 8 p.m
mOLBBY, Englind (CP) - A
farmer, hli wife, two children ot
thll Yorkshire village and the crew
of a bomber were killed when the
plane cruhed into a farmhouse
near here.
Smoke is shown rising from an oil factory. The plartt was one of-many destroyed
by the raiding Commandos. Land for^fs destroyed plants, warehouses and coastal gun
emplacements, while naval unita were sinking Nazi shipping in the harbor.-*"
Fleury's Pharmacy
PHONE 25
Med.  Arti  Blk.
Prescription!
Compounded
Accurately
F. H. SMITH
If -It's Electric
Phont 666 351 Btktr St
Utt
LAMBERT
LUMBER
For Economy
B. (. Cheese, Eggs
for Export to U. K.
OTTAWA; Jan.  U  (CP)  - The
farm production responsibilities of
Canadian Provinces in meeting
United Kingd.m food requirement!
have become clearly defined, of-
flrlati laid today In reviewing result! of successful ampaigrvs in 1941.
With the Canadian farm economy
geared to an all-time high in many
lines, It was evident the Prairie
Provinces would bear the major
part of Increased hrg production
required to provide «00,000,000
poundi of bacon for export.
Eastern Canada and British Columbia are concentrating on cheese,
eggi and other farm products essential  to  Britain
British Columbia hog gradlnis
were up more than four times in
1941, from 38.B3S to 159.824.
5IX INDIANS DEAD
FROM THROAT DISEASE
EDMONTON, Jan. U (CP)-Slx
Indians have died and no hope il
held for the life of another is a
result of a streptococci throat disease, which swept through an Indian
village 15 miles North of Scott Lake;
near Fond-Du-Lac, on Lake Atha-
beikl.
oo^r^^r^^-^.^^,*^&^*o*o^^**o**^oo^*
Don't Sav BREAD - Say
ESEEH
SUPREME MILK BREAD
Mann, Rutherford
Drug Co.
1928 CHRYSLER 65 SEDAN
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
Opp. Hume Hotel mt Poit Office
A reil good buy
At	
ASTHMA
BRONCHITIS
THAT
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MIXTURE
254
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Enlarging
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Reil Estlte ind Insurance
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THE ANNABLE  BLOCK
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
W  L. THOMPSON, Prop.
Day and Night Service.
24-hour Ambulance Service
SIB Kootiniy at Phoni Ml
40 PONTIAC SPORT COUPE
4 Paiicngcr. C199C
Lew Mileage  ....    $1LLJ
SKY CHIEF AUTO
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Sultt 205
Medical Arti Building
FOR RENT
Light  Housekeeping  Roomi
Anmble Block
R. W. Dawson
Big Troop Movement
Along Burma Rood
CHUNGKING, Jin. 12 (AP).—
Christopher Sharman of a Quaker
Ambulance Unif, who hai Jutt
mide a round trip on the Burma
Roid,    declared    today    It    Wai
"chock-full of Chlneie troopi
moving Weitwird toward the
border with tinki, motorized artillery, Bren gum and light weapon-."
From Burma, Sharman brought 29
truckloada of medical supplies ln
three convoyi.
(Large contingents ot Chlneie
forcei hive irrived lo Burma. Theie
are probably the troopi observed by
Sharman.)
LONDON (CP)—Slid one of two
Free French lailon bound over for
breaking Into a club and stealing
13 magnums of champagne: "I
thought tbey belonged to tbe Vichy
Government."
Used 8-tube battery and electric
portable radio, excellent value at
(39.50. McKay ic' Stretton.
January Salei Bread tins 1128
enamel dish pans 86c, Chan Wax,
1-lb. tin Wc. HIPPERSON'S.
WHIST DRIVE AND DANCE
Cathedral  Hall TONIGHT
NEW ORCHESTRA
riling carda, all ilzei and ruling!
D. W. McDerby. 'The Typewriter
Man", 854 Baker St., Nelion, B.C.
Nelion St Procter Freight Truck
will run Mondayi, Wedneidiyi and
Fridays—A. Knauf.
>. KNIGHT8  OF  PYTHIA8
All Knighti, Pythiin Sliters ind
their familiei are invited tonight to
Joint Installation. Knights meet 7:30
p.m. and Slaters at 8 p.m.
Interpreting
The War News
By KIRKE L. 8IMPSON
Auoclited  Pren War Analytt
Japanese seizure of two strategic
footholda tn the Netherlindi Eait
Indlei mirki • further deteriori-
ation of Allied defemive deposition! in China Sea, although it indicated heavy coit to the enemy
in ihipi tnd men.
Firmly baaed on Tarakin Islands
ln Dutch Borneo and on the Eaitern tip of Celebei, Nipponeie plines
•nd U-boata woul dbe in additional
menace to Allied naval forces attempting to retch the China Sei
from the South Pacific. Tinkan ti 1
within 300 milei of Amboini, Netherlandi Island naval base in the
Bindi Sea.
The Java Sei passage to the
China Sei between Malaya and
Borneo il also blocked by the enemy. Bombera from North of Singapore could range over It, also those
baaed in Sarawak, Borneo', Natuna
Island, midway of the passage, also
ii held by the Japaneie.
The   make-up   of   Japanese   con-
Subsidies Ny
Is Incorporated!
OTTAWA, Jan.  U   (CP)-Incc*|
poiltion of the Commodity Pricei
Stabilization Corporation, to be re.
sponsible for subsidies which mt)
bo pild to maintain the price cell,
Ing, wai announced today by trie
Wartime Pricei md Tride Boird.
The Corpontlon "will be reijkni.
slble for the payment of subsldu*
which may be approved from tlmi
to time under the policies formi'
lated by the Wartime Pricei tn<
Trade Board for the purpoie of en
suring suppliei, particularly of lot
ported commodities, it pricei unde
the retail price celling."
WHAT IS SO BARE AS A DAY IN JUNE?
voyi lighted ind attacked suggests
thit the Japineie ire throwing
large forcei Into the drive igiimt
tbe Indlei.
To date It hai cost the Jipineie
■ heavier toll in transports ind
fighting ships than landings In tha
Philippines, or the initial atticki
on Singapore ind Hong Kong. Allied iir defence tempo U riling to
wirn Tokyo that it dire not loie
time. Allied counter iir ittacki
Irom Burma on Japanese bases In
Thailand are alio intensifying, indicating thit • Britiih Chinese
flmklng ittack behind the enemy
drive it Singapore may be impending. The Japanese hive itill
IM miles to go to invest the greet
fortresi baie,
Meanwhile, development! both on
the Malay Peninsula and on Luzon
point towird slow ind costly ilege
operations. British defence linei
above Singapore appear to be about
half their original width. If the
Japanue claim to have taken Olongapo- at the head of Subic Bay It
true, Gen. Douglas MacArthur hu
ilso further shortened hla Batin
Peninsula defence linei.
Thit meiru intensified resistance
in both cues and concentration of
defensive fire power, The narrowing fronts also mean lick of room
for deployment of superior Japaneie numben, compelling frontal ittacki with Inevitably diiproportion-
•te Jipineie losses; ind further losi
of time before the enem yein reejly
concentrate on a Netherlindi Indlei
Invuion.
Time is the vital element of Jap-
inese stralegy, far more important
to Tokyo war lordi thin the japaneie lives they iquinder to gain
dayi or hours.
M
Daring Night Roid
Mode by Guerilla!
Behind Jap Lines
LONDON, Jin. 12 .CP).—Fifty
"devil-may-oare" guerilla troopi]
•telling behind Japineie linei III
Miliyi under oover of darkntttl
•hot • Jipineie officer, blew up I
■t'ritegle bridge and eieapid "with'
out a icntch." a ipeclal corru.
pondint uld today In a diipatch
quoted by the Britiih Broidcutlng Corporation.     •
Thi correipondent hid ipeclal
prilie for Auitnliin buihmm
who tiki pirt In the Allied for
•yi—thiy hid an "uneinny iem<
of dlrictlon."
CONSTABLE GRAY BACK
TRAIL, B. C, Jin. lJ-ConittW
Lloyd Griy, In chirge of Trail O*
tichment, B. C. Police, returned
Sundiy evening from Vincouvtl
where he hid gone on eacort duty
CRAY'S Tea Shop
serve a dainty lunch
Women'i new footwear ihades
include colon of burgundy, port,
sherry, muscatel, mai aga and claret.
DINNER TIME
It ANY TIME tl
The PERCOLATOR
i   Drop In for ■ inick It
Club Cafe
■ny time.
Lovely to look it
Styled it
HaiAh Tru-Art
Beiuty Salon
Johnitone Block
Pbone 317
Taki Advantage of Thle
Dry Cleaning
SPECIAL
and ipend thi livings en
War Sivlngi Stampi.
SUITS
J-PIECE, MEN'S
DRESSES
PLAIN
SUITS
LADIES'
COATS
LIQHTWaiQHT
WINTER COATS
85c
EVENINC   COWNS
$1.00
PHONE 128
Nelton city
Laundry
Cr Dry Cleaners
Limited
Out ef  Tew*  Ordera
. Accepted »t Thea*
Pricei. foliage lain
	
