 ipWili.aS'n.j i.ij|;wnui».ai ■
Roosevelt Orders Wages Stiblllied;
Byrnei Director—Page 3.
Bomberi In Round the Clock Attack
Smash Rhinslsnd.—Page 3.
Berlin Report! Herriott Put In
Concentration Camp.—'age 10.
Now Precarious
By HENRY C. CASSIDY
Anociated Pre« Staff Writer
MOSCOW, Oct. 5 (Monday)  (AP)—The Russians held
their ground stubbornly against incessant German attacks In
the battered city of Stalingrad Sunday, a communique said
"today, arid maintained the initiative northwest of the'city
.'yvnere the Red Army's advances in the last few days were
■''Mkt to bethreatenlng the entire Oerman position.
1 The communique neither claimed advances for the Soviet
_for.es nor acknowledged withdrawals, but it appears there
— *>was no letup in the Intensity
of the fighting despite earlier
Soviet dispatches that the Germans lacked reservM# within
the city..       "V'
The enemy, with Infantry and
tank forcei ii attacking our positions lnceiiantly," the eommiinlque
aald, speaking of the battle In the
rubble-filled streets.
'Two battalion! of Oerman Infantry aupportsd by tanki attacked
the poiltion of one of our unit!
ibt times In one day. Our men
lupported by artillery repulsed all
the German attacki and wiped out
•bout 200 enemy officeri and men."
In another sector within the city
Soviet forcei were uid to have
■mashed several blockhouses held
by the Germans and killed about
three companies cf Germin Infantry
Referring to the fighting northwest of Stallngrid, the communique
■aid the Red Army continued to
conduct "actlv* operaHons," the
expression used to Indicate they
bald the Initiative.
X~* main battle In thli ares
appeared to hive ben for S strategically-Important-hill held by
tbe'Germani. The communique
gave no indication how the engagement wu. progressing beyond saying that 150 Germani
were killed and a quantity of
equipment Including tanki and
machine guns, destroyed.
It mentioned, however, that Sov
let scouts "cirrled out ■ daring raid
on enemy headquirten and cap
tured Important itaff documents."
In the region of Voronerb, 300
miles north of Stalingrad, the communique laid, Ruailan forcei broke
into the German lines, captured
iome defence position! and killed
ibout 1000 men ln one day'! fighting.   Prisoner! also were taken.
Heavy fighting alio continued ln
the Mozdok area of the Caucaiui
where, the Russians said, the Red
Army repelled lix Germin Ittacks
In one dur.  ■
Tha Qarmani thraihad frantl
oajty at the northwest luburbi ef
Stalingrad, (earing that i ilicken
Ing of thslr offsnilvs would pre
vlds an Interval In which the
Ruuian counter-offenilve could
be itrengthened, dlipatchei said.
The Red Army blocked them
there and firmly held the Inltla
tive with enveloping movement! on
BOARD AIMS
10 REMOVE
HOUSE SHORTAGE
.'   I ■_
Campaigns to Ask
| People to
Give Up Extra Space
OTTAWA, Oct. 4 (CP.,—The Wartime Prlcei and Trada Board hai
been directed to take steps to ensure moit effective uie of existing
hduslifg accommodation ln congested areai, .Board Chairman Donald
Oordon laid today ln a itatement
hinting that 'compulsory billeting
•maj be ordered lf voluntary campaigns fall. -
•In effect, houilng li being con-
. trolled as te supply, uie and prlci
In much the asms manner ai
goodi," Mr. Gordon nld. "The
hoarding of living ipace may be
JlMt,SS- undeilrable snd harmful'
to tha war effort aa tha hoarding
ef scarce commodities."
Because of wartime demands for
building material!, and labor, new
housing conitructlon would  "only
be pouible ln the moit extreme
1 cam."
Ruisel 8. Smart, K.C, of Ottawa
(tad been appointed Real Property
Administrator. He will be responsible "for organizing the new meuure, is well ii coordinating the existing regulations and control of
maximum rentals ind termination
Of
Loos! campaign! will be organ
Ind ii quickly ai pouible with l
view to Inducing people who have
extra' ipace In their homei to
make' It available to thoie who
meet It
th addition to the propoied voluntary local campaigns, central
Clearing bureaui will be iet up In
"a large number of cities and
towm," and It these houieholderi
will be invited to regliter roomi
they have available.
The work "will be carried out
largely by volunteeri through the
Women'i Regional Adviiory Committee! of the consumer branch, un-
der the direction of Byrne Hope
Sender*. Prellmlniry Inquiries re-") ^th <" th« norlh and south'Ger
'sealed "sn enthusisitlc response to
the type of cimpaign' which it ii
proposed to organize."
Taxi Cab Driver
Mining
otVancouver
VANCOUVER, Oct 4 (CP)-.ear
■ wu expressed tonight for the ufe-
ty of Phil Devil, 22-yeir-old Vancouver taxi cab driver mining ilnce
serlr Siturday when he took hli
cab from a downtown itand and
-drove away to aniwer • call.
Tbe cib company which employed
Divis announced a reward for Information leading to discovery of
the whereabout! of the mining driv-
ir whoie cib wu located abandon-
id. 10 houri after he dteappeered.
Jap Burma Bases
Cat Beating
from U.S. Bombers
NIW DELHI. India, Oct. 4 (AP)
-Bombers and flghlera were report-
Id by United States Army Air
force Headquarten here yeiterday
is have left areu of destruction at
lipeneae basea In upper Burma and
ba adjoining Chinese province of
.unnen, during sorties Sundiy and
, Hondo?.
All  the mluloni  were  declared
executed without a lou.
AUSSIE TROOPS
CONTINUE
N. GUINEA PUSH
Retreating Japanese
Harried by
Fighter Aircraft
By MURLIN SPENCER
Anoclated preu Staff Writer
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Oct. 5 (Monuayj. (AP) —
Hard-hitting Australian bush soldiers continued their advance along
the uphill trail of the rugged Owen
Stanley, mountain! of New Guinea
Sunday to a point beyond Efogi
near the Gap through the mountain
backbone, a communique iaid today.
Juit how far they advanced wag
not itated, but lt wu announced
that they, had puihed beyond Efogi. which wu captured the previous day, and still were going
ahead. Efogi Is 64 miles by the
circuital! Jungle trail from the
Allied baie at Port Moresby and
about seven miles from the Owen
Stanley Gap.
Apparently they had not yet
caught up with the main body of
the Japaneie force, which the communique Indicated was retreating
No details of the fighting were given.
An Indication lhat the Japaneie
were In flight wai contained In the
official itatement that "Allied
tighten itrafed and harried key
pointi on the enemy'i line of retreat"
BOMB AIRDROME
There wu a lull In Allied air
activity elsewhere over New Gin-
ea, but medium bomberi mule a
night raid on the airdrome at Buka,
on the extreme'Northern tip of the
Solomoni, causing flrei uid ex-
plosions near the runway and in the
dliperial areas.      .   ,
At leait one enemy plane was
said to have been deitroyed on the
ground. The communique said there
wai.eo attempt at interception and
all Allied planes returned safely.
Punctuating the reversal of Japaneie fortune! in which they have
been thruit back mare than 20 miles
from their farthest advance upon
Port Moresby, the New Guinea Administrative Centre, Allied torpedo
bombers Saturdiy lashed out at a
■navsl concentration surprised at
anchor in the Salomon Islands and
probably registered close-range hits
Upon three cruisers and two merchant shlpi, an early communique
uid.
man flanks
Atter nearly two monthi of liege
the iltuation ippeired to be developing iteadlly In favor of thl Rui-
ilam although the Issue ot the bat
tie itill was not In light
NEED RESERVES
I The Army newipipor Red Star
ssid the Germans were Increasing
thalr attacki ln the diitrlct of Stallngrid Itself, but that their land
and air traniport were unable to
bring up u many troopi u were
being crushed by the Runlau and
the Genhani did not have auffi
dent reservei to drive home i de
ciitve blow.
Kcrwin, Recently
Freed From
Nelson |ail, Arretted
VANCOUVER, Oct 4 (CP)-Pit
rick Kerwln. whom Police uid
wu only recently releued from Jill
at Nelaon, B C, and winted here
In connection witb dealing In
forged document wu in police
custody tonight He wu incited
Saturday night and charged with
having caihed a check here more
than a year ago made out to him
•elf at Capt Patrick Kerwln for
$10. The heck wai alleged to have
been ilgned by T. W. Purcell on
behalf of the BrltUh Purchasing
Commluion   In   Wuhlngton.     \
FivesDie osr-ire
Sweeps
Seattle Kome   ,
gEA'ft'LE, Oct 4 (AP.l-Flvo
perions — Mr. ind Mri. Frank
Campbell Reed and their three
sons died early today when fire
iwept the central portion of their
private eitate at Madison Park on
Seattle'! Lake Wuhlngton.
The dead:
Frank Campbell Reed, 39, ion of
the late Mark E. Reed, lumberman
and former Republican National
Committeeman from Wuhlngton,
for yeari a power in Washington
State politics; his wife, Georglne.
35; three soni, Mark E., 11; Frank
C, 9 and Thomai Mllburn, 6.
SEEK HANGMAN
FOR STEPHAN
WINDSOR, Ont, Oct 4 (CP>-
Mlchlgan authorltlei who will supervise the hanging for treason of
Mix Slephan, a German who once
lived ln Windsor, have written to
the office ot Sheriff A. A. Maren-
totte of the County of Essex for information regarding a competent
hangman.
NEW ANTI-WAR
RUMOR
FACTORY FOUND
Officials "Amazed'''
and "Astounded"
After Investigation
By FRANK I. WELLER
Anoclated Preu Staff Writer
WUHINGTON, Oct. 4 (AP) -
The United Statei Oftlce of War
Information hai uncovered an amazing new anti-war "rumor factory."
Agents try to peddle iti products
chiefly to families of service men
killed, captured or still In action
abroad.
Af present, O.W.I. Is withholding
what lt learned from recent weeks
of investigation, but officlall say
they are "amazed" and "astounded". They may make a private
report to Federal Authorltlei.
They may also ask the newspapers
ftt holp refute enormous lies
• founded on h_lt-__rthg.'-. •
Here Is l lample:—
"A Mlnneiota mother received by
parcel post from Japan a box containing the eyei of her loldier ion
captured in the Philippines."
Americans were taken prisoners
there, true, but officials say no such
mother could be found, and none
ot theruroor peddlers knew where
the story started.
O.W.I., however, learned the "fear
rumor" had been beamed to South
America by radio Tokyo and passed
along by Axil Agenti.
In the buiid-up for Radio Berlin'!
Sept. 28 claim of wholesale linking
of American convoys and troopship! en route to Britain, here were
some of the rumors spread around
Ohio—"Our forces are losing 50
per cent of all troop transports but
the Government ii keeping theie
lossei secret."
Massachusetti — Five hundred
United Statei ships unt to Russia
have been sunk."
Norjh Carolina—"Atlantic Coast
beaches were cloied to iwimmers
because s_ many of them bumped
into bodies of 'drowned American
sailors."
GOERING SAYS
NAZIS WUL
GET BEST FOOD
Occupied Countries
to Suffer
Through, Shortages
ASKS PATIENCE
By  ALVIN J. 8TEINKOPF
Auoclited Preu Staff Writer
NEW YORK, Oct. 4 (At*) -
Relcnimctthal Herman Qoerlng,
Nul No. 2 and one of the belt
nourlihed men ltl Germany, told
hli compatriot! today that they
would be fed thli Winter at the
expense, If neceisary, of the rest
of Europe. Qoerlng wu blunt
about If:—
"In stilling the pangi of hunger
the German people come flnt. It ll
my wish' that the populations ot
territories placed under our care or
conquered by us should not luffer
hunger.
"But if difficulties of food iup-
ply arise due to measures by the
enemy then all should know; It
there la hunger, it will be. ln no
event, in Germany. From now on
it must be an unshakable policy
that German workmen and thoie
working in Germany be lupplied
with food the belt of all."
Goering ipoke for 108 minutes tn
connection with the Annual Harvest
Festival and his morale-building ad
dress Indicated unmistakably .that
German military leaden entertain
no hope of finishing Ruula quickly
and that the High Command ll resigned to mother defensive Winter
in. Ruisii, with Germany expoied
to air ittack from the Weit.
RETALIATION DUE     	
Tha Marshal uked all Germani
to stand up under British bombl_g
with patience, and said hii own air
force is to busy In Russia thet he
cannot get around Immediately to
meeting the British challenge" ln the
air. But the day of retaliation will
come, he asserted.
Making one of the homely smart-
cracks, for which he ls famous, he
said-
Take care of your  potttoei,
take them Into the drawing room.
I would rather put my potatou
In tha drawing room thin In the
cellar, for a drawing room  It ot
no uie to me now, but potatoei
will be of great uie to me In tha
Winter and Spring.
Then he promiied there would be
some extra meat for Christmas (the
averagd ration al present being
about three-quarters of a pound
weekly), extra flour 'and probably
other good thingi'
Special rations are being given to
the more seriously bombed cities,
he added, and said that on orden
of Hitler every soldier returning
from the front will be given a food
package containing two poypds each
cf flour, beana pnd lugar, a pound
of butter "and a great big sauiage".
Nazis Patch Huts
in Preparation-
for Russian Winter
BERNE, Switzerland, Oct. 4 -
(AP.)—Already Wintry ntgbti are
reminding German soldleri on the
Eutern front of their suffering!
in the previoui Winter and they
are patching huts and abandoned
ivllagei againit the sold which
already li Interne, i German war
correipondent has written to the
Berlin Beonenzeltung.
Ha said Nazi field police were
forcing Russian families away
trom the Don tor settlement, but
many of theie old people were unwilling tp leave.
"They would rather have the
roofi ahot off over their headi,"
he wrote.
PRECISION BOMBING-HERE'S WHAT IT MEANS
The marshajjing yard,  in railway
ihaUi
tm.
centre of N«i supply.system, is the target forborne very neat bombiDB of Amer
ican Flying Fortress bombers. BursU tell
where the bombs cut rail lines, blasted
freight sheds and wrecked trains.
10 DIE, EIGHT
INJURED IN
BOTWOOD (RASH
Dead Men Are All
Americans;
37 Aboard Plane
NEW YORK, Oct. 4 (AP)-Ten
perioni were killed md at leait
eight perioni Injured In in airplane cruh at Botwood, Newfoundland, yesterdsy, the Headquirten
of the Eutern Defence Commend
snd First Army announced late
today.
Thlrty-ieven perioni were -boird
the plane, but the Army announce
ment did not disclose how many
were pauengen.
The E.D.C. uid In a itatement
"Poor communication! facilities
at Botwood made It difficult to
establish the Identity of those
. who lost their llvei in, the accident. It Ii known thit the airplane hull wu ipllt In the crash.
The ihip wu towed to ihillow
wateri today to facilitate lalvag
Ing operations."
Tho casualty Hit, u baud upon
reporti made to tlje SUte Department by the American Consulate
at St Johns, Included theie dead
Captain Dwlght G. Thomu, Lincoln, Neb.; Michael C. J. Doyle,
Laurelton, N.Y.; John rt. Redmond,
Jackson Height!, N. Y.; Quentin
Moon, Flushing, N. Y.; Daniel Pip.
oil, the E.onx, N.Y.; C. I. Lansing,
New York City; Lleut-Col. Jamei
Edward Whittaker, Worcester,
Masi.; Capt. Harold R. Freckleton,
Hartford, Conn.; Capt. William T.
Meyen. Tampa, Fla.; Cipt. Wirren
C. Leising, Weit Onnge, N.J.
B. (. Recruiting
(limbs
VANCOUVER, Oct. 4 (CP)-Re
cruiting ln Britlih Columbii dur
ing the first nine monthi of 1942
exceeded the entire yeir of 19.1
by «74 enlUtmenti, Cipt S. H
O'Kell, Dlitrict Recruiting Officer,
innounced Saturday. Total fig
ures to Sept 25 wire 7.949.
During September 979 recrulti
were atleited n British Columbia
349 of whom were rejected. Of the
total 841 were "R" recruiti for ic
live lervke, 7> were volunteeri to
the (Canadian Women'i Army Corpi,
and 68 tame from the Reierve
Forcei.
The C.W.A.C. reporti 49] recruiti
during the Ave monthi May 1-
Sept 38. Attestations In the Veteran! Guard totalled 97.
Weai-_
For four luccesslve dayi Nelson
hu hsd some rain mixed In Its
weather, for three of the days
enough to meuure. The 14 houn
ending Saturday at I pm. had .11
Inch, but Sunday^! vlattallon wu
only a trace. The temperature remained wholly below 90 degreu
during the weekend. Saturday'i
rings being between 474 and 97.4
degrees, while Sunday the extremes
were 40 and N degrees. Both dayi
were largely cloudy, with very UW
tie lunahlne Sunday.
A recession In the Uke level waa
recorded Saturday, when at 1 p m
the lake a'ood at 7.91 feet above
the low water mark, a lou of .10 foot
'tor the M houra.
Second Front
of First
Rate Importance
Henry £. Cassidy, Chief of the Associated Bureau at'
Moscow, has been abroad for the AP in Paris, London and
Moscow since 1936. He has covered most of the Russian-
German war from Moscow and Kuibyshev and is one of the.
few foreign reporters the Russians have allowed to visit the
front lines.
ly HENRY C. CASSIDY
Copyright, 1942, by the Associated Pren
MOSCOW, Oct. 4 (API—Joseph Stalin today described a
second front as of first rate importance, called upon Russia's
Allies to "fulfill their obligations fully and on time" and
expressed confidence that Rus-f
sia's strength is equal to the
attempt of Germany or any
other aggressor tp gain world
domination. .
The itatement was contained ln a
letter to thla correspondent and wu
Stalin's only direct wartime utterance thus far to the foreign preu.
HU letter frankly aniwered three
questions on the second front, allied aid and the Soviet power of resistance. The complete text, in Its
authorized translation, followi:
"Deer Mr. Caaildy—
"Owing to the pressure of work
and my comequent Inability to grant
you, an interview, I shall confine
myself to a brief written answer
to your questions:
"One: 'What place doei the pout-
billty of • iecond front occupy ln
the' Soviet estimates of the current altustion?'
. "Aniwer—A very Important place
one might uy, a place of first rate
importance.
i "Two; 'To what extent ta allied
aid to the Soviet Unlot} proving effective ind what could be done to
amplify and improve, thli aid?"
"Aniwer—Aa compared with the
aid which the Soviet Union ll
giving the alliei by drawing upon
Itself the main force of the German Puclit, the aid of ths allle'i
to the Soviet haa ao far been Ilttle
effective. In order to amplify and
Improve thla aid, only ona thing
ll required: That the alliei fulfill
their obligation! fully and on time.
"Three: 'What remalni of the Soviet capacity for reilitance?'
"Aniwer—I think that the Soviet
capacity of resisting the German
brigands is In itrength not leis, If not
greater, than the capacity of Fucin
Germany or of any other aggreuive
power to lecure for itself world domination.
"With reipect
"J. Stalin."
Thli letter wu typed on i plain
white iheet of paper bearing no letterhead and signed ln purple Ink
In a firm, bold hand with an emphatic period after the J and a dash
after the name Stalin.
The Inter wu written Saturday
by tbe man who combiner the post
of Premier, War Commilwr,
Chairman of the Defence Council
and Secretary General ef the Communlit Party. It wu ln response
to my letter delivered directly to
the gate of the Kremlin the day
before requesting an interview or
a wri'tcn anawer lo tie questions
k wu Stalln'i fint public itatement on the question of s second
front for ilmoit a year. He prevlouily hid mentioned U oijy In 1 ipeech
to a meeting ot the Soviet Communlit Pirty ind other orginlutiom in
Moicow Nov. 8, ltl, on the eve of
toe anniversary .pf the Botihevlst
revolution.
"One of the reasons for the reverses of ths Red Army li the ab-
sencs of s second 'ront," he wld al
the time.
"There can be no doubt that the
absence of a second front in Europe
against lhe Germans makes the po-
lillon of the German Arr y coiuid-
eribly euler. But etiher csn there
ti ii y doubt thst the ppearsnee
of a iecond front on the European
continent—end lt mint unquestionably sppear In' the near future-
will miterislly em the situation
of our army to the detriment ol
thi German Army.
The eeeend front became a major leaue after foreign Cemmluar
Molotov'i vlilt te tendon and
Wuhlngton feet May and the put>.
Mutton ef a Joint wmmunlqui an
nounced  that  "oemplete  under-
atandlng wai reached with regard
to the urgent taiki of creating a
tecond front In Europe In 192."
The iecond front hu come to be
regarded In Russia u an allied obligation as much u the delivery of
supplies which waa agreed upon at
a three-power conference In Moscow a year ago.     ,
The main obligation of the allies,
u indicated by frequent comment
of the official Russian Preu, is considered here to be the opening of
a iecond front
U.S. TROOPS
ADVANCE
IN NORTH AREA
New. Islpnds Tal_jyn	
Cfve Ptahes.
Bases Nearer Kiska
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (AP).-
Unlted Statei Army forcei in tha
Aleutian lilandi have advanced 2J0
nautical miles nearer Japaneie baiei
ln the North Pacific, the Navy an-
nounced Saturday, and have undertaken mong aerial opentioni
■gainst the enemy from their new
positions.
The idvince—firet In,the Nerth
Piclflo irei ilnce the Jipineie
occupied lilandi In the Weitern-
moit Aleutians In early June—
wei covered and lupported by
nsvsl unlti snd iccompllihed
without enemy opposition.
It carried Amerlcin forcei i long -
itride West of Dutch Harbor, heretofore regarded ai the mill
Statei baie tor ail operation)
tbe Japanese-held Islandi i
Attuo and Agittu.
The new Islandi occu
navy did not Identify them specifically .ir In the Andreanof group,
mountainous segment of the Aleutian! itretchlng about 240 miles between Seguam Pais on the Eait and
Amchltka Pais on the West.
The effect of the advance, In
tha flnt Initanee, will be to eut
valuable houn of flying time off
tha round-trip bombing expedition! agalnit the main Japanue
baie at Klika which Army planu
hava bun pounding itaadlly fer
many weeki.
Whether, beyond that advantage,
the new advance poiitiom miy be
uied ai Jumping-off point! for an
actual amphibloua fnvaiion of the
Japanese-hold Aleutians wu i poi-
ilblllty on which the navy offered
no comment.
The Navy communique ilso nld
lhat on Sept. 30. the Armjr'i four-
engined Coniolldated Liberator
bomberi had attacked ihlpi in the
harbor at Kiska and that an enemy
traniport was irt afire by two direct hlti.
The camp irea ilso was bombed
and leveril flrei resulted, the ml*
alon being carried out without'the
lon  of sn  Amerlcsn   plane.
REPORT YUCOSLAVS
TAKE BOSNIAN TOWN
MOSCOW, Oot. 4 (API -the
Soviet Information Bureau reported today that Yugoilav soldiers had occupied the Bosnian
town of Yiltu after two,dayi et
fierce fighting In which thiy killed mora than 000 Qerman and
Italian troopi and deitroyed ume
•CO Wr-ckhouiea,
L
___l_,.__.. . iBiftrtiii
,__.
.    - ~ ■    ,
 2-NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, OCTMM J,
b^m mm.* ., —._.■_ — ._,.    ——,   ..i—n.*   .  ■■,,,  „■■      ■        .	
Fire Means Real Loss Because No
Replacement Possible; Talks,
Inspedionsto Mark Week Here
'Radio addmesi each evening,
addreeics te students In the schools,
wd to varioui organizations, and
City-wide inspections-ell fer tbe
purpose of bringing fire prevention, home to citizens—will mark
the activities • of the Nelson Fire
Department Monday to, Saturday,
pre Prevention Week.
;    "fire prevention li definitely
r more Important.to the builneu
I man and.to every citizen now be-
| eaun of building restrictions end
material    ihortagei,"   uid   .Fire
Chief G. A. McDonald  Sunday.
*No matter hew well a place of
-Uilneii li covered by lniurance,
If It burni now there le a definite
lose becauie It Is, In almost all
Impoaslble to rebuild."
It COOPERATION
[rlre Ohlef McDonald urged citi-
iena' cooperation in carrying out
the work of fire prevention, cleaning thalr premlaei to minimize fire
hazard, and to Install fire fighting
apparatus. Posters in stflre wlndowi will aid In keeping the sub-
Ject'before the public
fire prevention talks will be
heard by itudenti at the , High
School thli morning end at'Central School thli evening, at Junior
High School and St. Joieph'i Academy Tuesday, and at the Hume
School Wednuday. The Fire Chief
hopu also to apeak on fire prevention before the Board of Trade, end
to the staff of Kootenay Lake General Hospital.
A.K.I'. auxiliary firemen may
.have a part in the drive tor fire
prevention. If pouible lt U hoped
to Initltute a patrol for fire hazard!
In the individual lectioni where
tbe A.RP. men patrol
.ossland Picks
Loan Committee
jlOSSLAND, B. C, Oot 4.—Eon-
Sid'i organizing meeting tor the
Ird Victory LaOan, the campaign
far which will be launched Oct. IJ,
v*i held Friday evening at the
Cty Hall, Mayor J. t. Gordon
plesldlng, and Prank Sherrin of
Vincouver, Trail Unit Organlier,
attending.
•Howard  Bayley   will   again   be
efialrman of publicity, and will be
aisllted by H. S. Fowler, C. F. McKenzle, Mri. R. W. Haggen, and
| Mm. L. A. Seed.
HOSMER
HOSMER,   B.C.—A.   Oesparotto
returned from a short trip to Fairmont Hot Springs.
E Mr. and Mrs. P, Ounilll kave're-
fcsreed to the Coast. Mn. Camilll
baa spent the Summer here wtth
her parenta, Mr.'end Mrs. Ganpar-
0*0 while Mr. Camilll has bees ha
| te_ii_g hi Eastern Canada.
F. Fink and son Douglas have renamed from a ten-day holidar rt
Kimont Hot Springs.
:    Mrs. Hike Sowchuck tp*nt |_n-
Bur at Creston.
Mr. aad Mrs. Sand? •chrea were
fernle tisltofi on Saturday,      ,
Mr. snd Mrs. F. A. HutlM-W
fcm_r wereFemie visitors on
Md <__I_|
ihrturder.
Mr. aad Mn. -btagmr and «a__Br
\ Meumpiirted by Mr. end Mrs. 91170
.Mndpek were Fernle ihopperi Sat-
Ht.'m-t Mrs. F. A   Hutchinson
aod Mr. and Mn.  - McConachie
: Malted * Sentinel ot Sunday.
Mr. and Mn. Harry Hutchinson
■sere rlahott nt Sentinel, Alta, on
khdar.
Miu Horma McKerns apent _M
(weekend In Fernle.
Misi Victorii Dominie of Fernle
•pant Sunday at her home here.
Mike Camilll and Andrew du-
eerotto Were on a hunting trip et
the weekend.
Mr. and Mri. Henry Hutchinson
I of Fernle were viiiton at the Hu-
| guet home on Tueiday.
Mr. and Mn. Erneet Stephenson
end  baby daughter  were   visiton
- at Blalrmore.
• Mn M. Sowchuek wai at Michel
Aii week.
' ^Mt. and Mrs Pennington of Natal
E Sunday vliltori ln town,
.  and   Mrs.   Guparotto   were
.ping ln Fernle on Monday.
ttPure
-
filver li sofUr than oopper.
HAVI YOU  A
CAMERA
that you dont want »ny mor* T
Turn It Into uiofulp^.L t
Wt'll buy them ii|Wa»n I
tet ui — lm mediate uth —
fiood prlct. Out-of-.ownort
•end   via   mall,   our  txpenie.
B.C. COLLATERAL LOAN
Tl _. Heatings Vincouver
Eagles Head to Tell
Wartime Works
to Nelson Aerie
State Preiident J. V. Sapp of Seattle, State Pr«iident of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, arrived in
Nelion Saturday. Tonight he will
meet memben of Aerie No. 21, and
outline to them the Lodge'! new
wartime regulations and worki.
The State Preiident hai 200 lodge
visits on his Itinerary, ind ln thii
district will vlilt Michel and Ron-
land u well u Nelion.
Peden and Bergna
Cycle to
Whirlwind Victory
MONTRBAL, Oct 4 (CP)-Torchy
Peden of Victoria and Cy Bergna of
Patenon, N.J., Who aet the pace
throughout Montreal'! six-day bicycle race, cycled to a whirlwind
finish Saturday night, piling Up a
total of 1917 polnti In 34.4 miles
ot' cycling.
Coast Traffic Toil
Rises to 34
VANCOUVER, Oot 4 (OP.-Y an-
oouver. traffic death ton rose to
M Saturday night when two men,
Fidel Johnson of Agassiz, B. C,
snd ITranele Farmer, M-yeer-old
Vanoouver resident, deld ot Injuries to resent tj-afflc accident! here.
v
Canadian Newsmen
Return From Britain
IAJT COAST AIRPORT, Oct
4 (CP)—A. group ot Canadian newe-
papennen who have spent seven
weeks tn Britain visiting the Ann?
snd Air Form and viewing British
life arrived hack to Canada hr air
yesterday.
LONGBEACH
LONGBEACH, B.C.-R. C. McNown hn been a patient tn Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson, for s week.
Mn. Fred Thompson of Sheep
Creek Is visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. McNown. Mri. Cheiter McNown of N_lion wu alao here for
a dey or two.
Mrs E. D. Rutherglen of Nelson
viilted   Mri. I. A. Smith.
0 McTavbh and hli diughter
Vivian were at home at the weekend, returning to Trail on Sunday
afternoon.
Cpl. H Laeggett Veteran's Guard
of Canada, apent a day here on bis
way to Kelowna ta visit Mra. Leggatt
Mrs. Jack Steveni and children
have gone to Argenta, where Mrs
Stevens Is teaching.
Mrs. A. P. Hudion wu a viiltor
to Nelson.
Mrs T. H W. Chanter wai hosteee
to thi Red Crou Group lut Wednesday.
Mr. snd Mrs. R R. Brown snd
family spent lsst Suhdiy hers st
their Summer home.
TRANSPORTATION—Motor  Freight  Lines
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON DAILY
At  10:30 t.m.—Except Sundiy
Trail Livery Co.
M.  H. MelVOR Prop.
Trail—Phone 135       Nelson—Phone 35
Guide for Travellers
VANCOUVER, B. C., HOTELS
■VOUR VANCOUVgR HOMI- N,w|    „„,„.,, ,„„„,,.
Oafferln Hotel T~£rr
Seymtvui It        Vinnouvar, I C.        Coleman. Alti. Proprleloi
I* .■ .
**■■_. *
SOYUIOlD.m
KILLED ACCIDENTALLY
LONDON, pet. 4 (CP)-C»pt Vt*
count Volmer, 30-yeir-old heir to
the Earl ot Selborne, wu killed yuterday by an accidental shall hit
during Army field exerciiea ta
Southeait'England.
A private alio was killed by the
shell which fell among troopa advancing under an artillery barrage.
First Settler ol
Tarry's Marks
101st Birthday
Mn. Lydli Tarry of Vernon, pioneer Brltiih Columbian who "with
her husband and family wu among
the first orchardlsts at Tarry's, 18
miles west of Nelson, Thursday
celebrated her 101st birthday.
Tile Tarry family came first to
the Kootenay ln 1890 and wai one
oi the firet familiea to plant an orchard at the lite of the preient
settlement. Following her husband's death over 20 yean ago, Mn.
Tarry moved to England, but returned to Canada In 1929 to make
her home at Vernon.
Her light li falling now, but ihe
li very active, reports' the-Vancouver Sun. Sha still knits for the
Red Crosi and maintain! a keen
intereit In world affairs. She'attends the Anglican Church st Vernon every Sunday.
■&».,
U.S. Bombers
Blast Ships
CAIRO, Oct 4 (AP)-Two large
enemy lupply ihips exploded under direct hlti from American heavy bombers when they raided NOv-
arlno Bay, Soutwestem Greece, In
daylight yesterday, Jt wu announced tonight.
The haTbor town of Pyloi is on
Narvaripo Bay.
The American formation of B-M'i
(four-motored Consolidated bombers) was attacked by five Axis
tighten, four at which—three Ger-
msn Messerschmitt 109'i and one
Italian Macchl 208—were lent bluing Into Bie iee by the defenders
guns.
Aboard one of the bomben was
Edward Kennedy, of Brooklyn,
Chief of the Associated Preu Bureau at Cairo.
Nelson Eagles Plan
Visit Rossland
to Hear State Head
A party of about 25 Nelaon Eagles
plan to visit Eaglei Aerie No. 10
at  Rouland   Wedneiday  night   to
Salvation Army
Home front
Donations $1405
Salvation Army drlv* foe funds
for the Borne Front activities passed the |1400-mark 'Saturday at tttt
close of the tint week of the Nelson-wide canvau. The day's receipti
were $129, lifting the lubicription
to $1403.
Today with donation! wtthin $595
of the »2000-target, tb* drlvt extendi Into the Slocin Valley where
Capt W. M. Griham of the Army
here will canvau. Tbe canvau will
continue here u well u in the Slocan until the quota la attained.
■
" u a *
I SCHOOL BOYS BURIID
IN COMMUNAL CKAVI
A VILLAGE IN SOUTHERN
ENGLAND. Oct A (OT-Almoet
ovary Inhabitant ot thia bereaved
countryside wtt present to mourn
today u tba headmaiter of e boyi
ichool and the 28 pupils who were
killey with him by a Oerman raider
Tueiday were burled In a communal
grave; ,
Blackpool Takes
Sixth Victory
-ONDW, Oct 4 (OP Cable) -
Blackpool1! high-scoring team scared ita lixth mcceulve 'victory to
remain in front of the Engliih Football League'i northern section yuterday,
The only unbeaten and untied
team ln Britain, Blackpool whipped
Stockport, 6-2, running their goal
total for the leuon to 40.
Southport and Liverpool remained a point behind, beating Crew
4-2 and Bury 8-2 respectively.
.Arsenal and Chelsea continued
their winning waya at the top of
the Southern League but both were
forced to the limit The gunners
beat Fulham 4-3 and Chelsea edged
out West 'Ham 1-0.
Bristol City beat Aberaman Athletic! 6-2 to pin a firet place tie
in the Western League with Lov-
ell'i Athletic, who loit theii flnt
game of the season 3-1 to Cardiff
City.
Arthur Dixon, ion of the Glasgow
Rangers' trainer, wu responsible
for hla father'i team, firit lou,
icoring the goat which gave the
tall-end Queeni Park a 1-0 victory.
The defeat dropped Rangen three
points behind the Scottiih Southern
leaden, Hlbernlin, who won 2-1
from MdtherwelL
Gives Report on
Nurses Gathering
ROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 4- Mlu
Flora McLean, on the Nunlng Staff
of Mater Miaerloordlae Hospital, addressed the Registered Nursei of
Rouland Wednesday on the convention which she attended in the East
and wil1 'Poak to the Registered
Nunei of Trail Monday.
ESCOURT, South Africa <CP)'-
A "quentin Smythe, V.C." univenity
hear State Preiident J. V. Sapp of! scholarship hai been eitabllihed for
Seattle address the Joint gathering. ■ Escourt high achool where Smythe.
Mr. Sapp will visit the Nelson ! second South African winner of the
Lodge tonI_ht, and the Aerie at! Victoria Cross ln the present war,
Michel Tuesdiy. | was once a pupIL
TRAIL SOCIAL
TRAIL, B. «., Oct. 4—St. Marks
Church, Inniifail, Alta, wu the
acene of a pretty wedding Sept 30
when ' Dorli Adrlenne, younger
daughter of Mr. end Mri. Fred W.
Bye, became the bride of Mr. Clarence Ron, ion of Mrs. Elizabeth Clay
of Trail,'Rev. T. J. Williams, officiating. Mrs. sherwln Robinion, inter
of the bride wu matron of honor
•nd Mr. Frink Foxley of Trail, wu
'.he best man. Us hen were Mr. Richard Percy and Kit Robinion. After
i wedding trip by motor, Mr.~ind
Mn. Rou will make their home ln
Trail.
Maurice MacArthur returw home
fr.m Vancouver where he hu been
holidaying for the put three
monthi.
Mn. R R. Knowlei hai relumed
to her home in Vancouver after viiiting here for three weeki u the
guut of her son ind daughter-in-
law, Mr. and Mn. C. L. Kn_wlei,
Warfield.
Mrs. William Lewii left Thursday
for Saikatoon where ahe will make
ber home.
Mn. William Flagel hu gone to
Vancouver to vlik her huiband who
ll ittendlng irmy vocational achool
there.
Mr. and-Mn. Carl Koehler, Annable, leave Monday.for the cout
where they will apend two weeki"
holiday.
ALONE IN EUROPE'S LAST DITCH
-St. Louli Fost-Dlipatch.
District Boards
of Trade Meet
in Nelson Today
1 a I
Adjourned annual meeting of the
Anoclated Boardi of Tradcof Eaitern Britiah Columbia ii to be held
bi Nelson today.
The meeting ln the Spring wu
adjourned ao that special committees might stud> meani of bringing
the Kootenay-Boundary organization Into greater activity, the appointment of a Commissioner being proposed. Since then a committee heeded by Lome A. Campbell of Rossland hu bees actively
engaged In studying this proposal
and means of financing a Commli-
slonership.
Election of offlcen Is slso on the
program, the election' having been
deferred at the Spring meeting in
view of the proposed revitalizing
program.
MRS. P. WILLIAMS
ROSSLAND-TRAIL
GOLF CUP WINNER
ROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 4-Mn.
P. Williami defeated Mlu Florence
Rutledge 8 and 1, ln the final ot the
Blaylock Cup competition of the
ladiei' lection, Rossland-Trail Golf
and Country Club, thii sfternoon.
FERNIE
FERNIE, B. C—Mn. W., Wilson,
of Medicine Hat is i gueit of Mr.
and Mrs. T. Beck.
Mn. P. Bratton is spending a few
dayi ln Calgary.
Pte. Bugler Harry Eastwood of
Kananaskai, Alta., li vlilting hli
family here.
Mra. S. Herchmer left Friday for
Vancouver to apend the Winter
there.
G. E. Elklngtorv returned on Tueaday from Montreal where he attended a meeting of the directors
of the East Kootenay Power Corporation.
City Commissioner J. V. Fisher
of victoria, arrived ln town Sunday
He waa a gueat of <_e Rotary luncheon Monday.
Mr. and Mn. A. Dicken were "at
home" to a number of their frienda
on the oocMion of their 25th wedding anniversary.
Mr. snd Mn. Jamei Littler returned on Saturdiy from twe weeki
holiday ln Jasper and Drumheller.
On -September 23, In Donild.
Avenue, United Church parsonage,
Toronto, at a ceremony performed
by the Rev. R. J. Irwin, Betsy, only
daughter of Mr. and Mn. W. E.
Percy became the bride of Wllbert
John McPhee, aon of.Mn. McPhee
and the late Maurice D. McPhee of
Femie,
Dr. and Mn. 3. Haramanla who
have been holidaying ln Vancouver
have returned to ihe city.
Mlaa Louise Klauer returned on
Sundiy from Vancouver where ihe
ipent a couple of weeki.
Rumors Stalin Dropped Post Due
lo Garbled Radio Reception
propagand-
lln had jlven
Defence Commluir
porti entirely unsubstantiated hours later—appeared
tonight to be due to a garbled recaption of a Moicow news broad-
out
There wai no announcement ol
official comment from Moicow- An
imp re is lon grew that the report
gained currency in Switzerland
through misunderstanding of Rui-
ilan broadcasts telling of congratulations to Marshal Boris M. Shaposh-
nlkov, chief at the Russian General
Staff, on his 60th birthday today.
The apparently erroneoui report
wld the Marshal had succeeded
Stalin u Defence Commissar.
The Marshal, whose name rarely
appear! bl print, wai being called
"one of the mott active organisers
of the armed forcei of the Soviet
Union" and his photograph appeared In prominent front-page display!
ln the Ruislan Press.     .
He il a cloie military adviser ot
Stalin and wai given the title ol
Marshal of the Soviet Union In 1940,
one of the five men elevated to that
rank and entitled to wear the Mir-
•h^l'i. itar.
BERNE, Oct. 4 (AP.) - The Swlu
Telegraph Agency laid today ln a
Moscow dispatch that Marshal Boris M. Shaposhnikov has been named
Defence Commissar and Commander-in-chief of Soviet forcei, posts
formerly held by Premier Joseph
Stalin. Shaposhnikov alio wai given
a leat on the Central, Committee of
the Communist party.
Canada Observes
Thanksgiving
Day Next Monday
At the traditional festive boardi
and In prayer at Churchei, Canadian! next Monday, Thanksgiving
Day, will give thanki for a bountiful harveit
It ia a atatutory holiday, one of
the ilx which may be observed by
employer! and employeei for the
duration of the war under a new
Government order, though Iti date
Is fixed by Dominion order-ln-
councll trom year to year. Schooli,
bankf and government offlcei, and
most businesses will be closed.
Football Scores
By The Canadian Presa
EAST
Army li Lafayette 0
Boiton College 33, West Virginia 0
Brown 28, Rhode Iiland 0
Carnegie Tech 26, Westminster 0
Colgate 18, Cornell 6
Columbia 34, Maine 2
Connecticut 28. Mau. State 0
Dartmouth 58, Miami (Ohio) 1
Duqueine IS, Holy Crosi 0
Williami 19, Princeton 7
Yale S3, Lehigh 8
Penn State 14, Bucknell 7
Pennsylvania 19, Harvard 7
SOUTH
Alabama 31, Misi. State 8        '
Auburn 17, Tulane 13
Florida 26, Tamp* 8
North Caroline 18,' South Carolina 8
Rice 27, Louisiana SUte 14
Tennessee 40, Fordhem 14
Texu A, and M. 19, Texu Tech 0
Wake Forest 30. Duke 7
WEST
Georgia Tech 18, Notre Dame t
Great Lakei 23, Iowa 0
Illinois 87, Butler 0
Iowa Pre-Flight 7, Minnesota 8
Michigan 30, Michigan State 0
Nebraska 26, Iowa State 0
Northwestern 3, Texu 0
Ohio SUte 31, Indiana 21
Ohio U. 39, Akron 0
FAR wtr
Calif. Pre-Fl IB, U.C.LJt. 7 ■
Colorado State 27, Colorado Mines
0.
Oregon State 13, California 8
Santa Clan 14, Stanford 6
Washington 0, So. Calif. 0
Washington State 7. Oregon 0
NATIONAL LKA-UI
Washington 14, Philadelphia 10
New York 10, Pittiburgh 18
Brooklyn 28, Detroit 7
Chicago Bean 21; Cleveland 7
Mrs. McGauley Is
Buried, Rossland
ROSSLAND, B. C Oct 4,-Re,
quiem high mau wai conducted
Saturday morning at Sacred Heart
Church for Mn. Catherine Theresa
McGauley of Cutlegar, who died
Wedneiday at the age ot 83 yeari.
Rt Rev. A. K. Maclntyre, V.G., D.P,
said the man, assisted by Rev. Victor Ceiarlo, parish priest of Castlegar.
Tha pallbearen were five soni of
Mrs, McGauley — Erneit Edwin,
Thomai. William and Gerald—and
a son-lr-ktw, B< W. Whittaker of
Caitlegar, '
A large number of dlitrict points
were represents^ at the funeral,
and there were many floral trlb-
•' See Our Stock
PRINTEP LINOLEUM
PER YARD
$1.10     vj
Firik's
fwn'itum ,      .
-    	
CAREER ENDED
Chief Juitlce R. A. E, Green-
shields of Quebec who died mddenly in his 82nd year. Hli death
endi a long and colorful career ln
Judicial Ufa. He resided ln Montreal. __;
utes.  Interment
View Cemetery.
 ST
In Mountain
CAPE TOWN (CP)-CondlttoH Of
Gerf. J. B. M. Hertzog, 78-yea'r-old
former Prime Miniiter of the Union
of South Africa who underwent an
abdominal operation recently, it re- .
ported satisfactory.
IT
Interpreting
The War News
■y  EDWARD  [. BOMAR
Auoclited Press War Analyit
The praise given army war airplanes by a United States congressional Inquiry committee, along with
the luocesiful advance of American
forcei ln the Aleutian!, promliei to
quiet iome of the recent critical
queitloning of the country'i military
leadership.
Charted In Congress end alia-
where with falling to match ipe-
elillsed typei of enemy and allied
aircraft and oemured fer apparent
inaction In the North Pacific, the
Army pirticulirly haa been In
an unoemfertable poiltion beeauae
ef the neeeeelty of wartime Money.
In defending the quality c' American combat planes, some official!
felt they wen under luiplclon (hit
they feared orUlclm and were trying to hide tallurea and erron. Yet
they were concerned leit the confidence of youthful pilots ln their
equipment should be shaken by assertions Unt certain Japanese and
Nasi planes were euperk* and by
persistent reports thst some new
American models were dangeroui eo
fly.
Until the eir wer in Europe reaches e more Intensified acsle, the House
military nib-committee roncluilon
that present aircraft more thsn
hold their own, alohg with supporting evidence to thla effect, will re-
■olvt most remaining doubta on thli
itore.
For the lake of lecurlty the army
and navy had to Ignore expreailoni
>f popular Impatience and was al
most four months before disclosing
what almost all this time was secretly in preparation ln the Aleutians
When the Japanese bombeo Dutch
Harbor snd lsnded troops ln Kiska
and Attu tn early June, the temptation presumably existed, especially after the Midway naval victory,
to dispatch an expedition to dislodge them without delay. Under
more urgent circumitinces,, Britain
did send a hastily-equipped force to
try to halt the 1940 Nasi jnvaelon of
Norway, with conssquences that
carried a warning.
The more ciutloui course that
waa followed In ths North Psciflc
waa vindicated whan an American
imphlbloua force wai able to occupy the Andteenof group of islands
and, without oppoiltlon, set up en
air field within easy range ot Kiika.
With Winter weather at hand, It
li probable thet tha army and navy
Intended to continue Iheir cautloui
itntegy rather than liak a decliive
fight under conditioni favoring the
foe.
For ahe time being at leait, the
Jipanese sre so checkmated In the
Aletulana that some military opinion la thet they may see fit to give
up their footholds and withdraw
entirely with a lame explanation
thst their objectlvei have been attained
Tha altema«lv.i are to cling to
Attu and RUka under air and aea
attack! which already have coat
them more than 33 ahipa i.nk or
damaged, or to disregard eoitly war
leeioni and launch ■ full-scale onslaught agalnit lilandi now defended by superior, land-based alrenft
YOU NEED COAL HEAT
And if you wont Coal Heat, I.
will bo tho wise thing to FILL
YOUR BIN NOW!
 ■ i    —
There it 0 Distinct Possibility of
Traffic Congestion Later on-
Order Your Coal Today!
- PHONE 3) ~
West Transfer Co.
_     ESTABLISHED IN 1899
HARD OF HEARING
Do Ton
Do You
Mlu the enjoyment of church,
radio, movies, social groupiT
Sit ln a world ilona while
friendi ind family convene
and enjoy themselveif
\mQ        I  OU pe" ""** * W"Ch "Ck wllh *
Do You
Do You
Do You
HEARING
Know thit you can hear whisper
Malcot
Know thst over two hundred
British Columbia builneu snd
professional people are now
wearing Ms. eo?
Realize that many oases considered hopeless sre now en-
Joying this beautiful world of
iound with MalcoT
Know that Main Is identically fitted to your hearing
lou Juit ai accurately as ayes
are fitted for glissss.
Maken of the world'i imnll-
est hesrlng Aid. A great variety of modela to compensate for every type of hearing loaa.
MAUTS NAM
The HARD of HEARING are cordially invited to a privatt
demonstration of the famous Mjico Hearing Aid
on
Friday, Oct. 9 and Saturday, Oct. 10
At the Hume Hotel
The Mslcn li recommended by nfrh luihorltlei ai the American
Medical Anoclatlon ind the Leigue for the Hard of Hearing. It you
are Hard of Hearing do nol min thu opportunity. A demonstration
places you under no obligation whatsoever. Bring s relative or
Mend with ycu and you will experience a plaaunt iurprlaa Mr.
O. F. Hale, The Canadian Conaultint, will be ln attendance.
HALE HEARING
429-30-31  llrki Bid,., Vancouver, I. <\
 Wages Stabilized
WASHINOTON, Oct. 4 (API-
President Roosevelt yesterday nam-
ed Aiaociate Justice Jamei F. Byrnei of the Supreme Court Director
ll   Economic    Stabilization,    with
broad policy-making poweri to con:
trol the United Statei' coit of living.
At the same time be iccepted
Byrnes' resignation from the Court,
the President issued a aweeping or
dtr directing the Nttlontl Wtr Labor Boird to limit wigei tnd lal-
arlea. Price Admlniitrttor Leon
Hendenon to put ceilings oo rent!
tnd prices, ud Secretiry ol Agriculture Wickird tnd Hendeson to
limit farm prlcet it leveli aa of Sept.
18, tt tir as practicable.
Tbe order, iisued won tfter thl
Preiident signed the Anti-Inflation
BIU lut night, creited in Office
of Economic Stabilisation In tbi Office ol Emergency Management
with Byrnei it tht hetd it Director
Alto creited wtt tn Economic
Stabilization Botrd with,which the
Director will tontult in fixing policiei.
On thli Botrd are the Secret*. •
lei pt Treuury, Agriculture, Commerce ud Libor, the Chilrmin ot
thi Federal Reserve Boird, thl
Prim Administrator, thl Chilmtn of
the War Labor Board and two rep.
resentttlvet each of libor, management tnd firmen itill to bt appointed.
The order with respect to wigei
ind nllriet decltred thtt no lncreuei or decretiet thill be authorized unlen notice of them ll tiled
with the War Labor Botrd tnd the
Whoever You Are ... Whatever Your Job.. .
Here is what Canada
Need* of YOU.,
tn
npHIS is a war of peoples—not just of
armed forces. Somewhere in Germany
is your "opposite number"— living on a
meagre margin, sacrificing every day to win
the war—compelled to do it!
You live in a free country. But unless
you, and others like you, do of your own
free will better than the enemy can do by
compulsion, we can lose the war.
WHAT CANADA  ASKS
OF YOU
Every day that passes Canada must spend
for war purposes Six Million Dollars over
and above taxation. It can only come from
voluntary loans by her people. Each one
must accept his or her just share of responsibility.
What's your share of the savings job ?
Well, the average Canadian would have to
lend to Canada to meet Canada's need $1
in every $5 of income left after taxes and
compulsory savings have been collected.
The average may not fit your case. Your
own circumstances are distinctly your own.
You may be able to do better both out of
your current income and out of your
accumulated savings in the bank—or you
may not be able to reach the average.
Your share of voluntary savings is every
dollar you can possibly spare.
HOW YOU CAN DO IT
To do the utmost of which you are capable,
you must budget your living expenses
every week to cut out every item of needless expenditure and never spend more
than your budget allows.
This is what Canada is asking of you
to help win the war ... to lend your money
while others are risking their lives. It is,
in fact, hardly self-denial—because you
will be laying up for yourself the best of
all investments—VICTORY BONDS are
backed by all the resources of the Dominion
of Canada; they yield . fair rate of interest;
you can borrow against them and they are
readily saleable when you need the cash.
Work-?m-Lend for Victory
in Round
the Clock Attack
LONDON, Oct 4 (CP)-RAJ'.
bomben kept ■ round-the-clock it-
aault on Germany's wtr machine
rolling Friday night with i itrong
smaih at the Rhineland which started miny fires only ■ few houn
titer United Stttei .tying Fortresses, tuppOTted by fighter planes
of the R.A.F.-R.C.A.F. and USA.
A.F, ihot down 18 Nul Focke-Wulf
ISO's  In t raid on Northern France.
The Brltlth communique did not
identify the extct ttrgett of list.
nlght'i nld, but lt nld "i itrong
force" took pert.
Seven bomben did not return,
indicating an attacking ton* ol
perhaps 190 planei on the bull of
prevloui average!. In their daylight
attack od Northern France, the
Fortreuet returned to Britain without loti.
Aircraft of two Canadian squadrons participated In lut night't attacks.
The nld wu thi teoono oo Germany in two nights, following up u
intuit on tht big submarine building yardi it Flensburg.
■paturday'a German High Com.
mind communique reported thet
the R.A.F.'i mtln target wu Kre-
fied, a large centre of textile ud
heavy industries. Casualties among
civilians and damage to buildingi
wtre admitted by Berlin. It wu the
21st attack of the war tor Krefcld
laat raided on Aug. 11.
NATIONAL WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE
 n_
Board hu approved tuch changei.
The Board wu ordered not to ip-
prove tny Increatee In wage ratea
prevailing on Sept 15 unlett such
increue wtt neeetttry to "correct
maltdjuitmtntt or Inequalities, to
eliminate tubittndarda of living, to
correct grow lnequltlei, or to tld
in the effective protecution of the
war."
The Board tlm wu ordered not
to tpprove iny decreatet in wage!
below the hlgheit waget paid between Jan. 1 and Sept 11, 1942, unlet! to correct gross inequities tnd
to tld ln the lucceuful protecution of the wir.
No lncreuei in ultrlesnow ln excesi of (MOO t yeir shall be granted
until "otherwise determined by the
Director (Byrnes)" except ln instances te which an Individual "hu
been assigned to more difficult or
more responsible work."
Alio, the order uid no salary
shall be authorized in exceu of
|33,000 after the payment of taxes,
although the order aaid regulations
Ihould make due allowances for
payments on life Insurance premium! or policiei heretofore Iisued,
and for payment! cm fixed obligation! heretofore Incurred, m* well u
make provieloni to "prevent undue
bardihlp." I
The Preiident In t leparate statement declared Congress had "done
iti part ln helping substantially to
stabilze cost of living," adding:
T am certain that from now on
this substantial atabiliiation of the
coit of living will assist greatly in
bringing the war to a successful
conclusion, will make the transition to peace conditions aasler
after the war, and will receive the
wholehearted approval of farmeri,
worken and houiewivet to every
pirt of the country."
In announcing Byrnei' appointment
tha President uid;
'Thii poiltion cillt primarily for
Judicial consideration. The organization will therefore be imall, becauie the administrative action will
be carried out by the existing agencies."
The Executive order authorlied
the War Labor Board to continue to
perform the poweri prevlouily conferred upon it end extended the
Board'! fupctiom to cover "all in-
douitriei md ill employes".
Under the Agricultural title at the
order, Secretary Wlckard snd price
commodities on the oails of leveli
which existed on Sept. IS, with additional inatructione to make appropriate deduction! from parity
prke or oomparable price for payment! made to farmen under the
Sol! Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act parity paymenta 'made
under the A.A.A Act, and Governmental subsidies.
Where the Secrettry and Price
Administrator disagree, the Director of Stabilisation will settle the
matter.
Under still another title, the order
directed the Price Admltiirtrator in
etabili-ing pricea to determine them
ln iuch a manner that proflta "are
prevented which tn hia Judgment
are unreaaonable or exorbitant."
The Director  wu euthorlied  to
If Your Child
Catches
Cold Listen-
-listen to millions of experienced
mothen ind relieve mlteriet with the
IMPROVED Vlckttrettment thtt takes
only 3 minutei ind makes good old
Vlcks VtpoRub give KIT- "
mm it acts jwayi
at oncb to bring relief.
1^m«o»ci.i
4_*	
/ PIMIMIUto upper
/ breathing SUtagu
i wtth nothing me-
I dldnal rapen.
\ ll—HIH iliI tml
\ back surfaeei like a
V warming poultice.
'•teemtmrn"
MM NI MMtoe_Hoou^n,rt_eve
mutculu torantat or tighmeu, ind
bring rw^honMMfryonnweooinfQyt.
To fet thli improved treatment.. •
Juit manage VtpoRub fa 3 minutei
on BACK u well ie
throat ind chett, ttt lett» Matt
then ipread thick a li_*>_tC
layer on chut and UIWI\9
cover with winned ¥ V»»o«M«
cloth. Tryltl   ,      TH laawmt W«
direct tny Federal deptrtment or
sidze and to purchase for resale, i!
agency to uie ltl authority to "iub-
tuch measures ttt necesiary, to u
iure the maximum neceastry production and distribution of tny commodity, or to maintain ceiling prices, or to prevent t price rise inconsistent with the purpoiei at this
order."
"A" Book Holden
(an Ml
Buy Gasoline
OTTAWA, Oct. 4 (CP) .-Holder!
of "A" category gasoline ration
licence books sre still eligible to
purchase gasoline, Munitions and
Supply officials iaid yeiterday.
From Regina, the officlall had received reporta that iome service itation operatora, underitandlng that
"AA" licence! came Into effect October 1, were refusing to sell gasoline to motorist! presenting "A"
books.
Although Mme 229,000 licence
holden with an "A" rating are to
be reduced.to "AA" iome motoriiti
will retain an "A" licence. Notices
are being lent to motoriiti who are
being reduced to the new category
and they are required to turn In
their preient booki, for replacement
with an 'AA" book within one week
of the receipt of the notice.
People Are Ready
for Action
NowSays Willkie
CHUNGKING, Oct. 4 (API-Wendell Willkie pressed tonight for immediate aggressLve action, declaring that the war cannot be won by
timid souls.
"I view thli war u • great world
struggle for freedom," Willkie iaid
at a banquet given in hii honor by
Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek.
"It wont be won by timid louli.
It will be won only by bold, cour-
ageoui men who lnipire their peoplei to undertake and carry through
bold plans Timid aouli can always
find reasons for delay in aggressively puihing through to victory."
Willkie told the audience, which
included leaden of Chineie military and civil life and diplomatic
repreientitlve! of thi Allied Nations thit the "common man" everywhere among the enemlei of the
Axil wants action now."
"I have learned that the ordinary
citizen, from Cairo, to Moicow to
Chungking, li a lover of liberty and
wanta action, action now," he iaid.
"He feeli the time hu come for the
United Nationa, in a great unison
of effort to take the offensive everywhere.
"He li ahead of hit leaden—thli
pliln eitlien of Africa, or Europe,
or Aaia, or America. He wants to
get on with the war. He wants the
Job done.
"He no longer feara the myth that
Germany and Japan an Invincible.
It annoya him that much of the
might of the United Natloni itandi
Idle, wilting action on tome future
day.
"Thli ordinary citizen li ready
now. He li the atrength of (he united
nations Hii faith In the Juitlce of
our cauie makes him ■ luper-man.
Weit muit ill citch hli Infectious
spirit of enthusiasm for Immediate,
slashing, courageous attack to enable us to sweep over aggressor nation! ind on to a new world of victory with Justice, freedom, equality
and opportunity for all nations"
NILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1942-3
New Bags
Smart note for Fall Cos.
tumts — Pigtex — Bin-
galine — Simulated leather* — InTophandla
Pouch and Underarm styling. A new ghipment just
received In all the Fall ac-
cessory colors.
$2.39
^^hiittrtfsbats &_t|»«t. W
CASUALTIES
OTTAWA, Oct 4 (CP). — The
Cinadian (Active) Army'i 108th
oveneu caiualty lilt of the war, la-
sued today, reported the death of
three soldier! and Hated three as
dangerously 111 and two ae leriouily
IU.
Today'i Hit ralaed to 4719 an unofficial count of Canadian loldlen
reported dead, and mining lince the
start of the war. The figure, lub-
Ject to a margin of error for possible duplication of namea, includes
the Hong Kong force of 1965 officers and men except 929 who are
known to be prisoners, and those
who are missing at Dieppe.
Following is the latest Ust of eai-
ualtles: '
OVERSEA*
Died:
Royal Canadian Army Service
Corps—Bryant, Robert Alexander,
Pte., Montreal; Hale, Francis Joseph,
Pte., Cluhmoor, Sask.
Canadian Foreitry Co^pe—Ver-
rall, Walter Harding, Pte., KenvlUe,
Man.
Dangerouily 111:
Canadian Armored Corpi—Gold,
OUver Stewart, Pte., Penticton, B.C.
Royal Canadian Artillery — Mc-
Cow, Lawrence Murray, Gnr., Port
Elgin, Ont.
Royal Canadian Bnginwri—Dean,
Reginald Albert, Spr., Rome, ft.
Serioualy ill:
Royal Canadian Artillery—Welsh,
Melville Morrlion, Capt., Winnipeg;
Hewion, George Jorn, Gnr., CalgtryJ
-.
ftt nleve dhtreit If MONTHIY"^
Female Weakness
AND HELP BUILD UP RED BLOOD!
Lydia E. Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound TABLETS (with added Iron)
have helped thousand, to relieve
periodic pain with weak, nervoui,
blue feelings — due to functional
monthly disturbances. Thty also
help build up red blood and are a
fine tonic for the stomach. Pink-
ham's Tablets are made especially
for women. Well worth trying.
~
CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO.
KLINE FINED $10
FAILURE
STOP AT SIGN
Itrl Kline, Neleon liborer. wn
fined »ln by Magistrate William
Bwwn In City PoUce Court Siturdiy, when he pleaded guilty to t
charge of felling to come to I full
atop when he wu driving hli motorcycle it the inteneotlon of Vernon
ind Cedar Streeti.
Thi offence occurred Oct. 2. Act;
ing Sgt. R. R. Houie ind the chirge.
NEW REDUCED PRICES ON EDISON MAZDA LAK
Popular SiiM—15f
Nelson Electric Co.
574 Biker St. Phone 260 Nelson. B.C
llf  li   #J1_R1 JVP I    fee eof. m'whui-
Your tfottt will give you an "MvenfurM of
Li'l Samson" Comic Bookie! FREE with cvtry
psckajr of Kcllojj'i All-Whest. Gel your
fret coniici today I
 	
4-N_UQN*0A_ IY NIWS. MONDAY. OCTOIW 5. 1M2
■
Yuletide Art
Etchings
Snow Scenes
Modern Cards
Manufactured by
Leading Canadian Firms
AN ENTIRELY NEW
ASSORTMENT
PRINTED WITH YOUR
NAME AND ADDRESS
From
Our Stock Has Arrived and Is Now Ready
for Ybur Inspection
NOW FOR
DELIVERY
$2.00 to $4 .90
SEND FOR SAMPLES
Every Greeting Card Sent Will Play Its Part,
However Small, in Building and Maintaining
the Morale of Our People—in Solidifying the
Ties of Friendship and Family That Bind
Us Together for the Task We Now Face*
Guns Are Needed, Yes, and Planes and Ships
and Machinery—But Behind Them Lie the
Spirit of Our People to Do the Job T%t
Must Be Done — and the Knowledge, the
Conviction That "Ail Is Weir .•••
Great Britain Has Recently Sanctioned the
Sending of Christmas Cards to Maintain the
Ties That Knit Our Friendship, See That
Our Canadian Boys Receive Your Message,
Sending Christmas Cards Is an Act Worthwhile,
Nelson
Printing
News
artment
■
FOR CHRISTMAS CARD
SERVICE
.,-..-_._-,      -,...^__.-__i.____^.__.... ..__.__
 Come in...
See our collection of ntw
FALL SHOES
roil'II find Pumps, Step-
"Ing and Oxfords.
eJJ.3D«nd up
Ahdrew
!&,Co.
Lwders In Foot Fashion
BWA (CP)—A recent gov-
ent innouncement officially
i that a Women's Auxiliary Po-.
Eorpi Is to be established soon
a Union of South Africa,
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT
NEW
. FALL. HATS
,   .LATEST STYLES
.'•$1.95 to $5.95
LADY'S FASHION SHOP
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
If it is on thl ilr I
C. E. RADIO
•      will «tt It
|_L_ON ELECTRIC CO.
WATCH REPAIR
11 Jib for axpirti. Our work
i tuurei your tatlifactlon.
fl. H. Sutherland
•tker St        Nelion, B C,
BLOUSES
I Long ind Short Sleeves
n«ct for wear with your
Ntw Ftll Suit
$1.95-$2.95
fashion First Ltd.
NELSON SOCIAL
By MRI M J
e Mill Elizabeth Gigot, Grad.
Ultl of St. Joieph'i Hoipltil, Vic.
toria, arrived fridty tnd it i gueit
of her uncle end tunt, Mr. tnd
Mrs. L H. Choquette, Latimer Street.
On Tueiday she leaves tor Trail to
join the itaff of tht Trail-Ttdanac
Hoipltil.   .
'♦ Mill Lucille Bon In, diughter
ot Mr. tnd Mrs. G. Bonln ot Trill,
U i resident pupil it St." Joieph'i
Academy.
.   HOME ON LEAVE
e   Mr. and Mrs. W, E. McCand.
lish have aa gueat their ion, Lince
Coiporal Normtn E. McCandLsh,
who is here .on t two week'i furlough from Red Deer, Alta.
• Min Francli Chapmin of Trail
It home to spend t fortnight with
her pirents, Mr. and Mra. 3. H
Chapman, Sixth Street.
e Miss Mary Keough has arrived from Revelstoke and ii taking
a commercial coune at St Joieph'i
Academy.
e Min B Fell, F. E. Archer ind
Ray Lockhard ot Kailo visited Nelson during the weekend.
e Mrs. Chirles Hcaly of Wilow
Point viilted Nelion Siturdiy.
e Clarence Foaler left Saturday
on a holiday to Coast Cities.
e Shpppers In the city Saturday
Included Mra. 0. W. Humphry of
South Slocan.
e Mn. C. V. Gagnon, Silica
Street had ia weekend guests her
ion and granddaughter, Jamei H.
Gagnon and Mary Anne of Trail.
MOVE TO CRANBROOK
Mr. and Mra. Reginald Taylor
Kerr Apartments, left Saturday for
Cranbrook where Mr. Taylor haa
oeen transferred.
e W. P. Dickson of WiUow Point
ipent Saturday shopping in town.
T. Dolphin of Bonnington viiited hli home on Ward Street at Uie
weekend.
e Rev. Olav Grondahl, also Mill
A. A. Allen, of Nikusp, were guei'.i
of Mr. md Mn. E. W. Somen, 702
Baker Street, while attending the
Kootenay  Preibytery.
e Mn. Harry Burns is visiting
Vincouver for t few weeki.   .
YES —WtStll
RAW AND PASTEURIZED
MILK
kOOTENAY
Valley \)
AIR.
Foods You Enjoy-
but Bo/wire Your Diet
In TIMES LIKE THESE choose
foods not only for taste, but also for their
value in. your daily diet Post's BRAN
FLAKES are a valuable ready-to-eat
cereal that you'll enjoy... but you should
eat them also for their special benefits.
1   Theie nourishing, golden-brown flakes
'   have a criip, nut-like flavor to delicious
that yon will want to eat them for taste
alone.
O But they alao help to" correct j.hat is
—** sometimes a lerioui lack in the modern
dirt —insufficient "bulk." IJhey supply
juat enough natural hulk, in the form of
bran, to keep the food wastes moving
promptly. Eaten regularly, they are a
natural, safe way to prevent the "all-in"
feeling that comei from a sluggish
system.
3 Post's Bran Flakes also supply useful
quantities of minerals that your body
needi—iron for. the blood, phosphorus
for the bones and teeth.
Get Post's Bran Flakes today and start to eat
them regularly. They'll prove a great help
in keeping you fit ard energetic In both
Regular and Giant Economy Site packages.
fOR DELICIOUS BRAN
MUFFINS rotLOW THE
RECIPE ON THE PACKAGE
I
VIONIOX
e Mr. ind Mn. A. Barnei wen
recent vliltori {rum WiUow Point.
e Mr. and Mn. N. Waterer, Mor
gin Street, art tpendhig ■ week
wiii their ion-in-law ind daughter
Mr., tnd Mn. Gordon Brown, In
Trill.
e Rev. W. J. Silverwood ind
Mrt. Silverwood, Fairview, hid ai
gueit for i week Mn. H. SoUy of
Weit Summerland, who leavei tor
Trill.   ' ,
• Mr. ud Mn. Georgd Forbei ot
Pasimore viilted town Saturdiy.
• Mri. DeCocq of Bonnington
(pint Siturdiy in. Nelton.  -
e Malcolm Heddle wai ln tne
city from Willow Point Saturday.
LEAVES FOR EAST
e Mra. Lockhart lett yeiterdiy
morning for Windier. Ont, where
the wlU visit her lister, and then
friendi in Tennessee.
e Reginald Germtn, ot tht Big
Miuourl Mine, tnd hit diughter
Loli are gueiti ot hit.ptrenti, Mr.
tnd Mn. Thomat. Germin, Hoover
Street.  .
e Mr. md Mrt. L. W. Humphrey,
214 Silica Street, had as gueti, Rev;
A. A. Fulton of Creiton, who attended the Kootenty Preibytery.
e Mrs. Alex Leith, Terrace
Apartment!, li visiUng Vancouver
for t few weeki.
Mn. Cltrence Shannon of Willow Point ipent Saturdiy ln the
city.
Mri. D. Maloney, 318 Anderion
Street, hid ai guests Rev. and Mn.
H. J. Armitage of Kaslo who were
in Nelaon to tttend the Kootenty
Preibytery.
e Shoppen In the city Saturday
Included John Tawse of Cedar Point.
e Recent viklton in Nelion Included Mn. Malcolm Heddle of
Willow Point.
LEAVES FOR COAST
e Mrs. L. E, Borden left Stturdty to spend t'few weeki ln Vancouver with her diughter, Mn. Elizabeth Horton. '
e Mn. C. E. A. Sipionds, Anntble
Block, hit returned from t two
monthi holiday in Calgary and Edmonton.
Mn. W. Whiteley of Procter
spent Saturday in town.
e Shoppen In the city Saturdiy
included Mr. md Mn. Douglas Flitter and their young daughter of
Port Crawford.
Mn. Kingsley Fleck end
daughter Lois Jean of Trail, formerly of Nelton, ipent the put tew
daya with friendi ind left last night
for their home. They were tccom-
pinied home by Mr. Fleck, who with
J. Nelton, hu been fishing it Procter end district.
e Mn. Roy Graham wu In town
trom Bonnington Stturdty.
e Shoppen in thi city Stturdty
i included Mn. P. Mathisen of Long-
I beach.
' e Mr. tnd Mn. J. D. Foggo, 811
Mill Street, hed it gueit W. J.
Scott of Creiton, who ittended the
Kootenay Preibytery.
Blewett Auxiliary
to Send $15
to Headquarters
BLEWETT, B.C-The flrtt Joint
meeting of the Fall leason of Iht
Blewett tnd City Plmt Auxlliiry
of Uie Red Crott waa held It Uie
home of Mn. J. A. Robinion;
A ihort builneu meeting concluded Uie afternoon's sewing tnd knitting. It wu decided to send I gift
of $15 to Red Crois Headuquarters
tt Nelson.
A war-time tea waa served by the
hoi.ess, milled by her daughter.
Mri. George Fieldhouie.
TWO-SCARF ENSEMBLE
( The plaid design of the scarfs shown on head and at
neckline, above, may be bright and bold with color, or
subtle with pastel hues.
MR CASUALTIES
OTTAWA, Oct. < (CP)-The R.C.-
A.F. in ita 386th casualty list of the
war _»'urday reported one mm
missing and believed kiUed during
overseu operation!, two missing after overseas tlr opentioni and two
killed on active service.
FoUowlng is the latest list of casualties, overseas:
Missing. beUeved killed during air
operaUoni—England, Peter Ayrton
Vittrt, Po., Grand Allee, Que.
Misting efter air operations—At-
kinicn, Joseph Mackay, Sgt., Lachlne, Que., Miller, Victor Howard,
Sgt., Richmond, Ind.
Prltontr of wir—Hur., Clarence
Albert, Sgt., London, Ont., Simon-
ion, Clifford OUver, Sgt., Kingman.
Alta.
Dangerously UI—Oerlach, Joseph,
Sgt, South, Gilliei, Ont.
Seriouily IU—Berube, Joseph A.
Htzinod, Lie, Dugwal, Ont.
Cina^It—Killed on active service
—Denis, Josfiph Jean Real, Cpl.,
Montreal., Burke. John, Lac, London, S. W. 9, Eng.     "
Died of injuries sustained on active service—-Birky, John Jacob,
Lac, Valparaiso, Ind.
Died of accidental injuries —
Thomu, Evan John, Lad, New-
ctsUe-on-Tyne, Eng.
Seriouily ill as result of injuries
sustained on a:tlve service—Mason,
John Stanley, Fit. L. ., Worcester,
Eng.
Canadian   in   Ihe   R.AF—Over
seas—Missing after air operations—
Hooey, Gilbert Campbell, D.F.C,
Fo., Toronto.
Gypsy Moth Likes
Apple Tree
By DEAN HALUDAY
A favorite food of the Gypsy Moth
insects is the apple tree, although
Ihey will also devour thef ollage of
oak, gray birch, wlllowand a large
variety of other trees and shrubs.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
t
%    lft
KMm/.
oHnU-hrnvwaL
By BETSY NEWMAN
Ullllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllli
oughl/ tender, adding a little hot
water to pan if tt seems dry. Some
cooks roait meet uncovered for the
One thing t housewife hu to coniider in buying meat. It whether
the chetper cult are is economical,1
ii the more izpenilve, Uklng Into
comlderatlon the watte in bone,
gristle, etc. Cuti of meat that ire
nearly all meat really art better
buyi from an economical standpoint
than the cheaper cuts. For Initanee.
a rump roait of beet il practically
all meat, whllt • ihoulder or breast
cut hit ro.isidera.le bone.
TODAY'S MEN
Rump Rout Beef
Roilted Potttoei
Scalloped Onioni
Waldorf Slltd
Chocolite Rtfrlferttor Ctkt
Coffee
RUMP ROAST
i poundi rump of but, 1 onion,
1 until biy leaf, ult, pepper.
Light oven tnd hut to 8N degree!. Wipe mtt't with dimp cloth
■nd put in routing pin; cook uncovered for one hour. Ttkt out, idd
onion mi) bty letf, tenon will with
•lit ind pipptr. return to oven ind
roast inothar hour, or until thor- i creim if you like. Servei eight.
whole time, but I like to cover it
tfter it hai browned' thoroughly.
Add polatoei to pan, at leut three-
fourtha of an hour before meat Is
done,sprinkle with ult after putting
in pin. Servti ilx.
Chocolite Refrigerator Cike
2   iquirei   luniweetened   chocolite, H cup water, vanilla waferi
11-3 cupi (1 cm) iweetened con-
denied milk.
Melt chocolate ln top ot double
boiler, tdd condensed milk tnd stir
over boiling wtter fivem lnutei, until mixture thickens, tdd wittr.
Int oblong loti pan with wax paper,
cover with, chocolitt mixture; tdd
liyer of vmllli wafers, tlterniUng
tn thli wty until chocolitt mixture
il uied, finishing with layer of wafer! Chill in refrigerator, either tu-
tomit'.c or ordlniry let box, for 18
houri or longer. To lerve, turn out
on imall platter ind carefully remove wtx paper. Cut ln lUcti. It
mty  be  gtrnlihtd  with  whipped
/__A_W____\Zb<i MASS
\__Wn****___\Or GYPSY   .
'__?'Yl'T_ll l/l°™ s^
Ilr
■__,____■ I ;_______.
__________ ____!_«
*B__I*!$n:
CAT£R.PILLAROP\
_      6VPSY MOTH          \
lrs-1
NILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, OCTOB
M-s
SERIAL  STORY By Marl. Bllzard
MARK'S WIFE
Gypiy moth control in victory
gardeni
As ihown in the Garden-Graph,
thii peit Waters in buff-colored
oval egg masses an inch or so in diameter. They are Iound on the bark
of the tree or on nearby stonei or
other hard objects. At the end of
April these egg masses begin hatching. Feeding begins from the Middle of May to July. The full grown
caterpillars are about 2 and a half
inches long, yellow-brown with'blue
and reddith warti down the middle
of their backs.
Painting the Wintering egg mutes with creuite li an excellent control measure and tree bands are alio
ery helpful. The other method of
control is to spray during the feeding ieuon with lead anenite.
SYNOPSIS
BARBARA WISTER, Former ic-
tresi, flndi henelf a widow »i 27,
whin htr husband diet. Her only
friend' li. the small town of South
Wlntrldge, where the Ilvet It'
Da TONY BRADSHAW, a young
physician. Owner of the town's
only big builneu It
TOM KILCRAN. whott diughter,
PAMELA, tnd wife,   > '•.
CLAIRE, ire haughty, oold tnd telf-
•_*,." .
YESTERDAY-Cltire revealei thit
ihe hu brought her daughter, Pt-
melt home beciuse of in Incident
affair with) i "fortune hunter."
CHAPTER SEVEN
CLAIRE measured her diughter,
with Up ciught beneath her teeth.
Then Uie iaid pleasantly; "Some
dty you'll understand, Pam. I wint
you to mirry t worthwhile person,
I shall be ftlr when I talk to Tom
tnd I expect..."
"Thit I won't glvi you twty. I
won't," the nld, going to thi door,
from where the uid, "Will you come
down td the library or thtU I tend
him up?"
Claire debated for t moment "I'll
come down in I few minutei. I
look t hag."
"You noer look a hag ln hit
eyei," Pamela uid ilowly, Import,
tntly.
"I doubt If hi reilly knowi whtt
I look like," Claire laid, and iHrug-
ged her thin shoulden u her daughter went out.
Tom Kilcran got up slowly from
beck of Ut mutlvt duk,
Pin opened the door to the library
and regarded him silently, admiringly. The library with ltl hunting
prints, ltt big comfortable leither
furniture and the im i of burning
coait mingling with old leather ud
tobicco, she wai thinking, suited the
big handsome Irishman.
She uid, 'Tom, It's a handsome
devil you are",
Hit blue eyet twinkled, but he
mede his face levere.
"You've no need to give your old
(ether the blimey, mlu. Not you
You're ln disgrace—or ire you?'
He couldn't keep the note ot in
xiety out of his voice.
She dionl aniwer, eut cime across
thi room utd rubbed her soft
cheek against hit ruddy {toe for I
moment. Ther ihe perched on hit
desk, twinging ont leg Idly, ud
shook her hetd. "No. darling, I'm
just being a problem ohlld, Clilre'lt
be down in t minute and I don't
win tto spoil her ihow. She'i reilly
enjoying thit. It hat tU Uie elementi
of the drawing room drama of her
youth. Tm the Ingenue, languishing
with love, tnd you're to play the
irate father."
"Look here, there's in end to my
ptUence, Pirn. You've been here
ilnce lut night end not t word hive
I hetrd ..."
She tipped hit cheek and kissed
him on the note, "Don't get your
Irish up, Father. Here'i Claire ibout
to mike her entrance. You don't
wtnt to tpoU It, do you?"
Claire did mtke tn entrance, and
dreued in iweeplng fold! of black
Oil Jim Out
MONDAY, .OCTOBER 5, 1942
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
7:45—Todiy'i   Programme   Highlight! (CKLN)
8:0O-CBC Newt.
8:15-Vamp TiU Reidy
8:30-Front Line Ftmlly
8:45-Pages ot Melody
9:00-BBC Newt
US-Concert Time (CKLN)
9:30-Chapel In the Sky (CKLN)
9:«-Pelham Richardson'! Orch.
9:59—Time Signal
lOiOO-Morning VUit
l.-):!5—Half tt Hilt (CKLN)
13:45—World Series BuebtU
AFTERNOON
1:00—The Notice Botrd
1:05—Mid-dty Mttlnee
l:15-Interlude
1:18—Talk
1:30-Club Matinee
l:5Mnterlude
2:00—B.C. School! Broadcact
2:30-Scbool of the Air
3:00—Soldier1! Wife
3:15—Mirror for Women
3:30—Musical Programme
3:45-BBC Newt
4:00—To Be Announced
4:1!—Piino Recital
4:30—Tht Dinning Sisters
4:45-Recital
8:00—Newi  Comment
3:05—Serenade for String!
5:30—Sonata Recital
EVENINC
8:00—Rtdlo Birthdiy Ptrty CKLN
8:30—Songs by Peggy tnd the Boys
(CKLN)
8:48—Interlude
8:85—RCAF Recruiting   (CKLN)
7:15—Ctnidltn Roundup
7:30—Don Turner'i Orobeitri
8:00—BBC Newi Reel
8:30—Impressions by Green
9:00-Sonata Recital
9:30-Musical  Mirror
10:00-CBC Newi
10:15—The Story Teller
10:30—Interlude
10:35—Dence Bind
ll:00-God Save Uit King
VREEMAM
•    FURNITURE CO.
The Houte ot Furniture Value*
Phone US- Neltoa
Tradt In Your Old
Furniture
IUY0N0UR
BUDGET PUN
velvet. Mid, "Caisldy thi plumber
ll wilting to tee you, Tom."
Pirn itld, "Father'i about to have
apoplexy. Cin't we cut the opening
llnu?"
Til come right to the point, Tom.
I muit uy fc It ill my 'ault. There'i
i type ot penon one thtt one naturally meets ln ... well, where we've
been, that one likes but one would
not Uke to hive to mirry one'i
daughter,"
Ptmelt hid t smile and played
wnh t bronze hone on her father'i
desk.
'To mike i long itory ihort, one
of them—he hu I perfectly food
title but- nothing elie—wantt to
marry Pirn tnd the wtnti to marry
him. I knew youf wouldn't like It,
ao I brought Ptm home. She didn't
wtnt to come, but I thought It you
could talk to her, diicipline her, perhaps ... Shi'i only IS."
Pamela htd itopped pitying with
the paperweight. Her waiting eyu
were on ber father'! face. He ctme
*o her end tilted her chin. "Whtt't
your tide of the itory, baby? Whit'i
he like?"
She slid, "He'i Spanish, Father.
He'i 28. Very imooth, very chiming, dances divinely tnd . . . well,
he'i different from the other men ,
I've met He comes trom a (odd
family, I undentand, tnd mothir
knew him quite well before I did."
Tom turned to hli wife. "I ctn't
hold lt igilnit i nun because he'i
not tn American. My own father
wu an Immigrant, Let's have i
look tt the boy."    -
"He ithreit—He mty comt Eut in
Uie Spring," Pamela uid.
"There's lomething else," Claire
said ilowly. "He takes money . . .
from women."
Tom'i glance twung to hit daughter. "I don't Uke the totlni of thtt."
(To   Be Continued)
ELKO
ELKO, B.C.—A dinner ptrty wu
held at the home of Mrs. R. Long
to honor her mother, Mri. f. Ingham, on the oocgaion o\ her birthday. Gueiti were Mr. end Mn, F.
Ingham, Mr. and Mrt. A. McDon-
aid. Mri* McDonald Sr, Mr. and
Mri. M. Gorrle, Mr. and Mn.
Mri. M. Gorrle, Mr. McBride, A.
McMthe_, J. Pickford, Mr. ind Mn
G. Todhunter and Mr. and Mn. A.
Holmei.
Mr. ind Mrs. F. Ingham viilted
Fernie. Mn. C. Ingham wu a Fernie ihopper.
Mr. and Mri. Dr. Young of Cilgary were Elko viiiton.
Mr. and Mri. 3. Stoku vUlted
Fernle.
A surprise party wu held at the
home of Mr. and Mri A. Holms In
honor of Pte. and Mn. Gorrle. Mr.
Gorrle has been ipending hli leive
here. Gueiti were Mr. tnd Mn. F.
Inghim, Mr. tnd Mn. A. McDonald. Mn. McDonald Sr, Mr. ind
Mri. Sweet, C. Hobnei, Mn. R.
Long, Mr. ind Mri. G. Todhunter,
Mr. ind Mn. BL Gorrie, Mti Hunter.
Dr. ind Mn. Workmin viilted
Elko list-week.
Mr. and  Mri  Gorrle  hivt re-
SANDON
SANDON, B.C.-Mrt. O'Shu,
Mlu Smith, Mr. ind Mn. Tiylor ind
Mri. Ferguion of Nelion wert mo-
loi vilitors to Stndon.
Mr.and Mn. Hirold Lakei of Nel
ion tnd their gueiti from Medicine
Hit viilted Sandon.
Mri. D. M. Jonei ind diughter
Dulcle of New Denver were week'
end vUlton bin.
H. Lirsen of Kulo wu tn town
G. G. Gnhim ipent t weekend
it bit home in Nelion.
Mn. Jonu. tx-Stndonlte, now of
Ntw Denver, wu i viiltor here
Meidimea Con Stewtrt 0. P
Stiwtrt ind J. Stewart and Htll
Mill June of New Denver, were
viiiton hire.
turned where Mr. GorrLe wUl Join
hit unit
J. Sheridan tnd Mlu Mildred
! Sheridan, W. Simmoni, C. Simmoni,
Mr. and Mn. C, Ingham, E. Inghim vUlted Grassmere.
A whllt drive wu held in the
Elko  Khool  on  Friday  In  aid  of
Chrlitmu Tree Fund. Mn. T. Davli
and Mr. Miller won fint prize and
I Mri. C. Ingham lady conaolation.
A. Laton of Trail was an Elko
viiitor.
Mr. ind Mn. R. Brown, G. Roil,
Edith Ron and Florence and Bobby
Brown of Kimberley were Elko viiiton.
Mr. tnd Mn C. Gover tnd diughter of Kimberley were Elko via-
itori on Sundiy.
Mr! tnd Mn. G. Todhunter ind
fimily, Mn. E. Roo and aon, and
Loii Stokei viiiled Fernle Siturdiy.
Mr. and Mri. Davli viiited Fernle.
Mr. and Mn. Grady and family,
and Mra. R. Lister were Fernie
shoppers.
Mn. F. Swanson visited Fernie.
Cpl. L. Barnei of the Veterini
Gutrd, Fernle, ipent the wekend
ln Elko.
__TUEY10^THE to*
Theie pullover! tre eaiy on that
wartime budget... for "bend-
Imiti" weir longer. Eaiy to make,
too, from the NBW Lux Knitting
Book. Four booki in one—IU
pegea—115 deiigm, aU teet- '
knitted. Churning and practical
thlnga for everyone. Send cue
large Lux box top end IH with
the coupon for your copy. Don't ■
fail to get your New Lui Knit-.
Ung Book.
MAIL THISC0VKHTODAY!,
^"otrt. NN.B
I  Toronto
The hlitory of Switzerland u a
federated government began Aug. 1,
1291, with a defeniive elague.
 1	
I Addnee-
I
Town_
I
|   PrOTtDM —      ..  i
this CHOCOLATE ■• a
two
Cadbury's Dairy Milk Chocolate te much mors than a delicious candy.
Mirio with the big be st tjutliry chocolate obtainable, sugar tssdjrtsb uMt
milA, thit popular Cadbuiy bur li really a compact meal containing
the nourishment you need to develop energy and itrength. In wartime
millions find Dairy Milk Chocolate mors satisfying than ever.
Oaint Us rtsHonlnt and fmenmmt mitt, ue emmf oluopi hetp.lh* etsndy
omltrt fully nffUA Wt rtfr* aay Auopptrinlmont Oiit my omit you.
y^m__-—————_itm———_.
 _______________________
-___ —
 , ,	
Nelsmt latin Nmub ??Questions??
ANSWERS
SitiWiibed April ft UM.
■ . Britiih Columbia's
Mott Interesting Newspaper
Publlihed every morning except Sundiy by
tbe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, M8 Biker St., Nelton, Britlih Columbii.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF C1BCUUAT10NS,
MONDAY, OCT. 5,1948.
No Red Tape Hampered
This job
British Columbians know some*
thing of road-building difficulties in
mountainous territory. We have had
plenty of experience of the length of
I that it usually takes so provide an
[-passable highway.
, isn't any four>I*ne tuto speed-
____lhat the Americans have produced in the Alaska Highway, but to have
made such progress that by Dec. 1 the
Ihway is to be open for traffic Is a
Imentous achievement, It wu e.U-
|ted thst the road which was begun
; Spring would take from a year to
eighteen months to build.
Vital to bo'th defence and offence Is
this highway and the speed in construction which has been achieved wag,
due to recognition of urgent necessity
and logical refusal to allow red tape or
anything else to delay the work.
The United States Government sent
in its army engineers to do the job and
gave them freedom of action in expenditures and in arriving at decisions
which may st times have seemed extravagant, but which may well prove
to be one of the most economical poll'
cies of the whole war, if economy is to
be considered at a factor in war operations, If the Alaska Highway brings
victory one month nearer it will be the
best investment the United States or
the United Nations ever made.
. Not as Bad as We Feared
Moit-of us by this time have recovered from the shock of the new income
tax schedule which was announced by
Mr. Ilsley in the Summer.
And most of us have found that it
' was not so terribly tough after all.
The new schedules included the 5 per
cent or 1 per cent which we had been
paying in National Defence Tax, and
then, of course, there are the deductions allowed for life insurance premiums, payments of mortgages, large
medical expenses, etc.
In many eases the income taxation which is being deducted from paychecks is little greater than the deductions'which were beisg made for National Defence tax. In not a few cases
it is less.
Looking Backward
10 YEARS  AGO
(From Daily Ntwt, Oet. S, 1132)
A ptrty of Nelsonites, composed ot Mr
ind Mri. S. Brown, Mn. W. Calbick, Mm
Queenle Oermin md Mlu Ellin MioDontld.
returned Saturdiy (rom i motor trip to Agua
Ctlientc, Mexico.
Tha Japancio Preu vlioromly denounced
Lytton report on tha Manchunan proband demanded the government withdraw
i the Lf ague of Nationi if the'anembly
>ts Ihe findings of the Lytton invtitigaton.
JCtptain F. L Orr of Procter wai a recent
or to Nekon.
Jamei A. Truer wai alerted president of
the Kailo Badminton Club at the meeiini Fridty
25 YEARS AGO
(From   Dally   Niwi,  Oct  5,   ISI7)
A J. Curie of Kaslo has received word
from Ottawa that he hai pcrmlision of the
government to ihip for export 200 toni of ore
from nn minginese claims.
A. D. Wheeler has been working the Gallagher at Alniworth.
Mn. W. A. Hodgson returned on the Crow
boat last night from a trip to St. Paul, Minneapolis, aad other Eastern cities.
Mn. C. W. Tyler who hu been vUitlng
Vancouver lince June, li expected to return to
Nelson tomorrow
40   YEARS   AOO
(Front  Dilly  Newi, Oet. i,  U02)
A F, Roienberger hu returned to Nelton
from his trip tn the East.
Charles Lemnine. contractor on the post
office building, left Friday fnr Montreal
Mr. and Mri. 0. Strei thin ol Kaslo ara
gueits al the Hume
F. W. Guernsey of Roisland ipent yci'.rr-
day in Nelson.
War-25Ye*rsAgo
' By Thl Cinidlin .rut
Oct. 3. I.n.-Unltid lUtti Foreign Sec
retnry Robert Liming uncovered Intrlguei at
Paul Bolo . uhi, Tranch-bom German spy to
brli.2 about • srpi'ite pe.iee between frince
l_id C»rminy German ma nlder Sccn.Ier
of.ltlitly rtporto! w rec__d Aug. 2 in the
leuttrielfie.
Open to iny ruder. Namei ol perioni
aiklnj quiitlom will net bl publlihad.
Thin   It  l»  ohlif«   for   thu  mpvIm,
Reider, Stlmo-Could you jive nw iome information on the Indians in the Kootenay
District, yeari ago? I understand there
used tf be tribal up around Riondel end
thit there win quite a number tlons the
Kootenay Uke ind waa wondering 11 you
hid tny record of It.
Suggait you refer to "Thl Native Trlbei
of British Columbia" by Alice Ravenhlll, ob-
tainabla it Nelson Civic Library or to thl
p. C. Hiltorlct) 8ocUty, Victorlt.
Wtnt te Know, Sanca—I understand we in
net to un our Jama ind Jellies until tht.
tugtr inipector comet to Inspect our fruits?
Il this correct?
Vt.
Reider, Robion-How ii the milk Pfleo Nt In
tht Dominion provlncei uid municipalities?
Thi maximum milk prices ire let by the
Wartime Pricei end Trade Botrd. Various
prlcei prevail in different areas. Prlcei under
the maximum miy hi charged but no over.
How li milk handled In ihlpment! to Britiin?
In thc varioui dried forms it well u In
tlml
C. W., Klmbtrlty—What Is the addren of the
clipping jervict ln Toronto?'
Canadian Prett Clipping Service, «1 Univenity Street, Toronto 2, Ont.
D. R., Creston—Cm you give me iome inform
ation on the removal of fruit ttalna?
To remove itaini made by fruit on cotton
and linen goodi, rinse tht spot in cold water
In which I few drops of aqua ammonia htve
been placed, before the ipot has dried. Another method 1| to spread tht italned pirt
over i bowl or bwln md pour boiling witer
through it; or rub on salts of lemon, tnd pour
boiling water through until the italn disappear! or becomei very (tint. Delicately colored fabrics may be treated with colorless
vinegar of moderate itrength.
Locomotives No
Longer Decorative
Twenty tbouswd Britlih loeomotivw are
putting on wir paint "for the duration," itatei
Britlih Industries Bulletin. Ai eich "loco"
comei In for repair tnd oerhaul, its gty crimson or green or blue for the Individual railway,
together with the embleroi and other decorations, are being hidden beneath a coat of uniform black paint.
Both paint tnd labor are also being uved
by the deciiion not to ptint new or repaired
wagoni except (pr I ilngle bottom board which
bean Iti number tnd ownership,
Pasienger etrrlagei are being given coati
Of paint pr varnish only when absolutely nee-
enary for protection igiinit bad weather conditioni, while Interior decoration muit iwiit
the end of the wtr.
Not an Argument
But a Fight
Unfortunately, we tre still dealing in
concepts. We bout of our freedom and of our
rights ind of our democracy, and of our way
of life. Wt tend to regard these jdeils ti tome-
thing which wtrrtntt our fiml victory. But
Hitler md Hirohlto ire fighting ui. They ire
not engiged In trying to out-argue ui. Wt
muit fight them. The outcome will depend
on Ihi luperiorlty of our armi tnd on tht
will.to-wln of our ptople. Thii ii not t medial-
vtl wir nor even t Napoleonic campaign. Tht
loser does not merely give a prize to the win.
ner. If wa loie, we shall become sn inferior
rice and itep Into the gutt when • Jipanese
passei by.
This thought is being brought home to Canadians. Yet our will-to-win li itill leiiiintensi
than thai of the avenge Nazi. During thl next
twelve monthi our psychologies! attitude, our
understanding of our talk and peril, must
undergo a sharp chinge. Such men il Tintnct
Mlniiter Ilsley see eleirly whit.wi muit ftci
■ nd hive been telling ui io plainly ind ilirkly.
Other Ciblnet Mlniiten muit toon ipeik
equally bluntly. Even minor polltlclani muit
follow.
Of course, Canadian buslneu wil lfeel the
repercussions. The next yeir will witneu
changei which muit cut deeply Into eitibllin-
ed customs. If conscription for overseu itrvlct
Is Introduced, conicrlptlon onthe home ffont
miy exceed mything experienced In othtr de-
mocraclei. In iplte of the preient determlni-
Hon to keep work on a voluntary bull. But
Mr. Ilsley hai ilready Imopscd corporite tixei
on ui which. In their leverlty, ire icarcely
equalled In tny country opposing the Axis.
Even our perwntl Income tixei in tht modest
brickett exceed thou of thl United Kingdom.
It hu been the exptnilon In our industrial production which hti rtiulted ln thli maximum
fixation, tnd thit ixpmilon miy be expected
to reiult In iquilly irvtre reglmenlitlon in
other direction!.—Ctnidltn Builneu.
Test Yourself
1 Ii laughing gu I ntmi uied for ether,
chloroform or nllroui oxide?
2. Would you give ypur girl friend lugar
nf laid to iet?
1. Hew miny poundi ot oxygin would be
etrrlid In t pall rontilnlng nint poundi of
wtttr?
TUT  ANIWER!
1. Nltroui oxldi.
- 2. No; It ll tnd icetit.  tnd would glvt
lead polioning If ttken Interntlly.
S   Eight poundi.  Ihi other pound being
ht Ircgm.
Letters to th
Editor
Lettii. may bo publlihed tvtr t tern di
plumi, but thl totutl ntme if thl wrltir
muit bt glvin to thi Editor •■ avldenea it
good faith.  Anonymous letter! go In the
waite Nan btiktt
Urges Poit-War Standing
Army pnd Strong Defences
, fort in Rehabilitation
To tht Editor:
Sir-Noticing the rehabilitation schemet
in regtrd to returned mm ti Ht forth in 1
lite Isiue of Tho Dilly Newi, it struck mo
thit not one of the luggeitiom submitted
Wint to thl beginning of tho matter, namely
to kelp thl defences of thli country up to »
high telle initead of the usual flumpt md
let-down of thli country'i defencei after tho
wir. No fa|th war kept with M). Mm Hl>
dim after thl Ult wtr which wai tfter |}1
only terminated  ti an  armistice.
I think lt would bi mort to tttt point if
those In chirgl Of the welfare ot this country
in both Important ud oomptntlely unimportant organiutlbnt would begin tt tht beginning md not start halfway. The dtfmeet
of this'country should be In I very high state
at ill time to preserve thl very life-blood °'
It lint tbe coastal province!.
Even if wi are not molested or worn ln
thit war, which li still a very great doubt
with the ever in *oiohin« Orlmttll on our
outlying ihoret, |t will oftly bt I Blotter of
time tnd we will have another wtr on oup
hands. I would luggest going to thl core of the
rehabilitation matter ind thit the people of
Canada tee to It that Canadian defencei ifter
the wir tre brought up to a high standard ot
Pfrfectjon and by defences, I mean highly
trained men at well it tn unlimited supply
of armaments which thit country Is well able
to produce.
All returned mm eotiW bo gtvon th» option of staying In the different forces. There
are always mm md women, too. to whom
trmy life appeal! so thit there will bl plenty
Ot material aviilable for i standing irmy it
all timet without going to thl need of compuliory trintng in peace time. Incidentally thii
ihould to • great extent do away with thl
usual confuiion I disbanded trmy bring!.
Building projecti even it their belt irt
only matter! ot ihort duration, which will
only bring in their wake worn depreislon
tfter thiy ire finlihed. The vital need of this
country Is undoubtedly . highly trained
standing trmy, ntvy, and air force. Quite a
number of our returned men could be uied
ti instructors. Mmy of our returned men will
be found to be entirely unsulted to take up
civilian life and would like nothing better
than to bi able to stay in barracks Instead of
being eut adrift. This would alio take cara
ot t number of our oncoming generation to
whom militaristic life ln all Its branchei of
trmy, ntvy, and air force would appeal. This
tn Iti turn will leave the commercial md trade
world open for our returned men who with to
be discharged.
The defending need of Canada is even today very great and will become more to is
time goei on.
Would it not be the height of itupidity to
cut highly trained men, who might like nothing better than to keep on calling the bar-
racks their home, adrift only to become misfits in a civilian world which has passed them
by?   ,
MRS. W. R.
Nelion, B. C, SepL 29, 1942.
t
Hair'Dos Safe
A correipondent In Britain reports thtt ■
netr revolution tmong women Industrial
workeri hu been tverted, states tht Montreal
Herald.
Tht girli didn't mind weiring trousen; In
Wet, many ot them enjoyed the leg-freedom
which the garment gavt thimvThty didn't o
)ect to the lipper ihlrtt, U they were nea
finlihed at the neck.
But the industrial cap that the men wear,
they limply refuted to tike. They iaid It hid
thtlr htir and ruined their carefully-pro-
eured halr-do'i.
Factory luperivsors insisted however, lhat
loose edlffurei were • menace to safety, and
told the gall they must wear lomething to
keep their locki out of thi machinery.
The trgumtnt htd not proceeded long before iome great mind found t lolution. It li a
lort of flih-net irrangement which confinei
the hair without concealing lt, and with no
dinger lo wtvei tnd curls. They took to lt
with enthulasm, especially after It tppeared
on the market In numeroui colors.
The compromise between a workman'i
cip and a lady'i hit, according to report, wu
Introduced by • former dreumaker who now
operatei i lithe In t munition plmt.
Today's Horoscope
The perioni who hie birthdays todty in
progressive, talented, methodical md dependable. They hive executive ability md handle
othen will. They tre highly esteemed by
friends, trt polled ind diplomatic. For thi
next yetr the protpecli tn idmlrible Indted,
both for builneu ind loe. It li life to leek
fivon from superiors ind elders, ind lt ii excellent for military, engineernig, lironiutlcil
and secret ictlvltlei. io forge ihetd. The child
born on thli dltt will dtrive much benefit
from relatives, luperlon tnd strtngen, tnd
the life promises to be long, hippy ind luc-
ceuful. Miny fine traits will be evinced by
thli child.
Words of Wisdom
Whit wt htvt in ut of tht Imtgi of Ood li
the love ot truth md Juitlci.—Demoithines.
Etiquette Hints
Mumbling Instead ot speaking clearly Is a
bid habit thai amounts to poor mtnntri. Il
•mbarrauei thou to. whom you ire ipuking.
TODAY'S News Pictures
sgt. Aivln York ot thi u. s.
Army captured 1SJ Germtni in
tht flnt.World Wtr, Now Bgt.
Keith Elliott of Ntw Zetland captures 190 Germans near Ruwelsat,
ln the Alamein Line In Egypt, He
li pictured tfter the exploit which
won him the Victorlt Crosi. Enemy tanks attacked three lidei of
hli battalion and 19 men were left
ofjB Company. Elliott led them
ln i charge which it tint rush
captured (our more machine-gun
posts, tn anti-tank gun, I Oerman mtchin»-gun nut, u will ti
the prisonen. Only on» of kil men
wu wounded.
ROLLING TOWARDS A SECOND FRONT
England'i new "Churehills," heavily.
«rmed and armored, ipeedy infantry
tanks, ar« pictured for tho firit time—up
until this photograph was made they were
very hush-hush. But secrecy did not keel
production down, Look at the long linea <T
the new tanks stretching off into the di|
lance—maybe towards a iecond front
F.D.R. SEES WOMEN IN WAR INDUSTRY
During his secret tour of war industries and training stations, President Roosevelt saw women working in
the Allis Chalmers factory, Milwaukee, Wia. Hero the
President looks through the rear window of hit car while
Governor Julius Heil of Wisconsin applauds. Walter
Geist, A.C. President, is seated near the President, with
James E. White, A.C. Works Manager in the front Beat.
•— .■ii)JIL.JJ:U 4JWJ 7
10 DAYS. FROM KEEL TO LAUNCHING
Thii ship wu turned out in Portland, Ore., fn
keel to delivery in W_ days—a new record—the mo
you study It, the more miraculous seems the feat of Hen
J. Kaiser. It was actually built from keel to launching
10 days. Workmen were still putting the finishing touch
on the veaiel during experimental runs, after launchii
It is the victory ship, Joseph N. Teal. Every rope, sp
and chain is in its proper place. Delivery was made aft
forced draft over a measure, mile. The ship was paint
after it hadjtotten under way.
ABANDON SHIP
Somiwhere it' MO thli mer-
chut oftlctr, hit luitctie lowered
to t waiting lifeboat, prtpirei to
detctnd a Jambs' ladder tnd
abandon hli linking ship. The
tanker, torpedoed by in Axil lUb-
rnirini, llttled flit by thl (Urn.
FIRE VANQUISHED ON THIS TANKER
Usually when a tanker ii burning ai
fiercely ai this. It must bi abandoned.
This ipectacular aerial photograph was
taken of a U. 8. tanker after it was torpedoed by an Axis submarine. Despite the
raging fire the crtw members were abl
to bring the flames under control nnd th
tanker was towed to port by a U. S. nal
ship, lt li now In an East Coaat shipytuj
being repaired
.
• - ,
, ■■_._   ..   ■i,na^^h_____a_____ it
1
 p	
^""
■
ad on Yankees
; NTW YORK, Oct. i (AP)-JThi
tltihlng, speeding It Louii Card-
lmli ton Into thi Niw  York
' Ymkttt tgtln Siturdiy for • 2-0
victory behind tht magnificent
(pitching ot Lefty Ernie White,
who ihut out the mighty iluggen
for tho Ont time ln t world nr-
In lince 1926 md put Die Red-
blrdi mud, two games to one,
ln tho current classic.
While the largest crowd ln world
leriu hlitory, 09,129, ut stunned It
tint by the tight of their Bronx
Bomberi being smothered, ind
thtn liter welled up into grett
efceeri for the spectacular fielding
/ot tho viiiting Nationil Leaguers,
the, Ctrdlnals took control with t
run oft Spud Chindler In (ht third
tining md icored mothir ln the
ninth off reliever Mirvin Brutr.
lit tt wu t itormy itruggli with thl
beleaguered and ponlbly bewilder.
td Yankeei arguing time tfter time
Hth umplrei on cloie decltlom at
lbl bases, on balls tnd itrlkei at
the pitta tnd on the ftct thit pitcher White etrly in the gtme wu getting hit ilgnils from citcher Walk-
Cooper before stepping onto thl
1 USED TO TRAILING
Iheir victory, betidot being the
It whitewashing tdmlnlstercd to
Yankees since Jen Haines
Itched,I 4-0 shut-out for the 1020
Ctrdlnals, ilso wu the tint time
tince thtt yur thtt New Ygrk bid
trailed ln I world "cries except tor
lhe temporary idvtntiga Carl Hut
bell gave thl Giants by winning
'ibt opening game in 1D36.
'. WWte. i good-looking 26-yetr
Old lophomore trom Pacolet, S. C,
Itruck out five bitten In tht tint
three frames, Ilio fanned Pinch
hitter Red Rutting tn die eighth
«nd never gave ■ bue on belli during Chi entire gime.
It wu i wilk whloh itirted
Chindlir to defeat, Juit ai a pan
by Iffllt Bonhim htd whipped
; him In It Louli. In tht third
Inning todiy Qeorgi (Whltey)
Kurowikl wilted out t free ticket to flrtt ind irty Mirlon tried
him.
By JUDSON BAILEY
Auoclited Pren Iport Wrlttr
YANKII STADIUM, Ntw York
Oot 4 (AP)-Thi raging Redblrdi
trim St Louli itormed to vlotory
ovir Niw York Ymk.ei igiln
tooty, I-I, In thi wuaeit ind moit
furlout Inttollmint of thi World
Sirin, miking It poiilble for tht
Cardinal! to clinch tht ehimplon-
ihln tomorrow.
It wai t tremendous tnrugglt between ipeed ind power tor thl
greatest crowd In world urtet hlitory, 60,002, md for tbe third ttnlght
game speed wu supreme. The Red-
birds nn md got the Yanks on the
run too, with • deficit of thru gtmu
to ont.
Tht pitching ot both teams till to
plecu ud thc Cardinals, after tp,
parent ly taking complete Chtrge of
the conteit with i six-run uprising
ln thi fourth fnme, wire tied in
the tixth by't five-run Ymkee rally high-lighted by Charlu (King
King) Keller'a tecond homer of the
series with two aboard.
But tht Cardinals Impressed the
huge crowd, 770 mon than Sttur
day's turnout, with their will to win
u they cliwed back to capture thli
gtme juit u tbey hid battled to trt
umph lut Siturday when another
highly run by Keller temporarily
tied the icore of the second gtme,
Whtt proved to bi Uie deciding
runi win icored in the seventh
inning md were partly a gift by
thc unnerved Yinki.
DONALD VICTIM
A«ey Dontld who hid been turn*
moned to relieve Rookie Htnk Bor
owy ln the fourth mtde himsell
tbe victim todty. He give two sue.
cesslve walks tt the ittrt of the
levtWh.
The tint wis to Knot (Country)
Slaughter md tht tecond to Sttn
Muslil. With tht count on Muiial
] md 2, Slaughter tet Mil for sec
ond md Catcher BIU Dickey, not
knowing whether the next pitch
wu I btll or strike, mtde t wild
»to uerlflM hit
Till pity wu i
completed, but tht
Yltikt protested that Mulon had
hit tht btll twice, th* iecond time
Whllt he was not In the box, which
would hive made him out. But the
four umpires conferred on thl infield grin tnd decided to rule the
pliy i foul bill, ailing Mirlon bick
to bit Hi tgiln bunted md thit
Ihpi but Chindltr'i throw to tint
for * ilngle. Then White tier if Iced
md Kurowikl icored boot third u
Jimmy Brown pounded out
' Tbi confident Cirdlnili itticked
Breuer with vigor when hi cum to
th* mound In the ninth. Brown
fad off wtth t ilngle to right center
md Terry Moon followed with t
bunt which Breuer fielded tnd tried
to hud ott Brown it itcond. Hii
throw to ihortitop Phil Rlxuto wu
high, for in error, md both runnen
wire life Enos (Country) Sliugh-
tor then thot I ilnglt to centre,
leorlng Brown, md Moon ilid
Itfely under Joe DiMagglo'i throw
■t third whllt Sliughter himself
ran to teoond.
j Th* Ytnktu brought old Milk-
mm Jim Turner ln lo pitch ud
minaged to put out tht flrt. After
walking Muilil Intentionally to
lotd thl buei, hi |0t Wilker Cooper on tn ivy fly to enter. Johnny
Hopp followed with ■ fly to Charley
Killer ln left tnd Kelle.i throw
to the plate Juit ln tlmt to eitch
Moon tor thi Ytnki' tint double
pity of tht series.
In tht ilxth Inning Roy Cullenblne ilntlid with two out and tht
throw to tecond that illowed
Slaughter to go on to third.
Walker Cooptr ilngled him homt,
sending Dontld to thl ibchveri md
bringing Ernie Bonhim In. Johnny
Hopp lacrlflcefi, Whltey Kurowikl
W|| wilked lntentiontlly to lotd
thi buei md a long Oy by Mirtin Mirlon brought Cooptr home.
Th* Cardi tdded i nin ior e»ri
meuure ln thi ninth on i tingle
by Hopp, I sacrifice by Kurowikl
Ud a limit by relief pitcher Lefty
Lanier, who wu iwardtd credit
for the victory by tht offlcitl tcor-
orl. ,
Mort Cooptr, who hid won 22
limit thli inion, but who loit
th* opining leriei gime, mide in
tttempt to ulvige hit reputitlon
todiy, Initead hi hid It mirred
•vtn mor*. .
He wti thrown for i one-run lou
In thi tint Inning when Red RoU*
doubted ind Roy Cullenblne singled
but he seemed capable of holding
Uie 1-1 lead furniihed him in the
fourth, when the Cardinals came to
btt 11 times with thi first six of
them icoring.'
thit exploiion wu set ott by
Musial who led off wtth a safe bunt
thit incited the Yanks tn an angry
protest around Umpire George Ma-
gerkurth. Walker Cooper followed
with mother ilngle md Hopp wilt
ed out t walk to lotd tht bun.
After that thingi happened tut
and loose. Kurowski • smsshed t
ground single through Rolfe tor
two runs. Mopping hli brow Bor
owy walked Marlon on tour pltchu
to load the basei md Mort Cooptr
brought in mother ptlr of runt with
t ilngle.
■ Domld mid* hli appearance it
thli point and forced Jimmy
Brown to fly out. But Terry Moore
ilngled on the flnt pitoh for a
run md tfter Sltughter had forced
Moore, Musial on hla iecond turn
at bit doubled the sixth run across
by mtkingl two hiti In one inning
he tied i world terlu record held
by teveral playen.
Cooper tet down the Ytnki In or
der ln the next two chapters.
But little Phil Rlzruto openeo we
lixth stanza with I linglei Rolfe
wilked but Cooper wu illowed to
remain unUl Cullenblne singled
Rlzuto home, DIMiggio popped out
end Keller hammered bit high, trcb-
Ing homer Into tht lower right,
field stands tbout 400 feet from tbt
plate.
Cooper wu relieved by Htrry
Gumbert Kurowikl jntde ■ wild
Seattle Takes
Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES, Oct i <AP>-
Setttle defetttd Lot Angeles In thl
lecond gun* ot * doubleheader to-
day, winning thi Lion'i ihiri ot
th* Piclflc Cout Leigue pliyoff
pot ot $10,000.
Th* Angels took dit tint game
I-I, but loit th* seven Inning nlghtcip 104 before't crowd of 8300.
First game:
SWttlt         a, J      I       «        1
Lot Angelei  ..,    IHO
Barrett. Budnick  (1), Llbke  (7)
tnd Collin; Lynn ud Cimpbtll.
Second game—7 Innings:
_*ttU« -,  1« »   •
Loi Ang*lM    1  e  '
Fiicher and Kearse; Millory, Rif-
fensberger (4). Gehrmu (9), Dober-
nlc (7) and Cimpbell  -
throw on a grounder by Joe Gordon
■nd tfter Dickey hid been thrown
out on i tini pity by Brown, Gerry
Prlddy looped i double Into right
field for the tying run.
The crowd let up t rotr of tpprov-
al *nd littered tht outfield with papers, but Lifty Howlt Pollet mtde
Dontld ground ou*.
Since tht Cirdlnili ctme back
mortlng with two runi In tht next
Inning, under ordtotry buebill procedure Pollet would hive received
credit for the triumph by pitching
to only one men, bectuti hi wu removed for t plnehhltter, unsuccessfully, "before the Ytnks ctme to bat
again,
But Iatnier took charge from the
aevonth on, holding the Ytnki help-
leu on two singles, tnd batted in
St Louis's final run to Ute scorers
decided he ihould hive credit for
the outcome.
Altogether the Cardinals used tour
pitchen tnd the Yankeei three, and
for thi tint time In the terlu St.
Louli outhit th* Ymkee powerhoute
12-10, with DIMiggio going hltless
after accounting for ilx safeties in
Um flnt three games.
RUFFING vi BEAZLEY
For whit miy be the final gime
here tomorrow Manager Joe McCarthy ot thl Yanks Mid be would
start Red Rotting, the 38-year-old
veteran, who ttt t series record by
pitching 7 2-3 hltless Innings in the
tint gum. Southworth give the assignment for whit hi hopes will be
th* clincher to lean Johnny Beazley
the rookie right-hander Who won
the iecond game.
crowd cheired it DIMiggio cime
to bit He hit I tnmendoui fly
Into lift center field, miy to hive
Moor* etteh It while crlii-eron<
Ing directly In fruit af MutW,
who fill down ind lomimultod,
In the seventh inning Musial
leaning hli bick agalnit the low
will to catch t 400-foot fly by Joe
Gordon tnd on the next pliy
Slaughter leaped high Into the ilr
juit in front of tbt right field will,
which ll little mor* thin three teet
high to make * thrilling gioved-
hind cttch of t fly by Keller thtt
teemed tbout to drop Into the
ittndi.
Sliughter ilio mide mother
cttch agalnit tht will of i 340-
foot fly by Keller te tnd thl
gtmt.
Thl only time t Yinke got put
tint wu In the tint inning ifter
Rlizuto beit out • bunt to lui
off. Ht stole iecond ud when
Citcher Cooper mide i high throw
Into cuter field, Kimpered on to
third. But he died right there
while Huiett popped toul end Cullenbine md DIMiggio itruck out
In lucceulon.
Huiett, befort going out wu
hit on tht thumb of hit lift hud by
t pitch which hi wu trying to
bunt Hi finlihed hit turn at bit
but wu repltced it flnt but by
perry Prlddy when New York went
Into the field. X-rtyi liter ihowed
the thumb Wu broken. Thli apparently will keep Priddy it tint
tor t|)l retnilndir ot thl leriei.
Box Score
Letters From
the Armed Forces
Readers of the Nelson Dally News ara Invited
to 3«nd In latten they receive from members
of the Armed Fortes so that other readers can
share this newa. Letters will b* copied and
carefully returned. Only news of general interut will be published. Other Items in the letters
will, of course, be kept confidential. Please
lend or bring such letters to:
WAR ZONE EDITOR
3A.TUKQAY >      --*••■■
YANKJS STADIUM. Hew York,
Oet 4 (AP)-Th* offlcitl box More
of the third gtme of the 1142 World
Seriei:
ST. LOUIS (N.L.)
AB R H P A E
Brown, ft  4  1112
T. Moon, cf ..
Sliughter, rt
Mutltl, If	
W. Coop*r, e .
Hopp, lb _	
Kurowikl 	
Marion, u	
White, p 	
1   1
Totali,  30 2 S 27   I   1
NIW YORK (A.L.)
Rizzuto, W 4 0 2   2   10
Huittt lb   10 0   10   0
Croiettl, 3b 3 0 0   110
Cullenblne, rf 4 0 10  0  0
DIMiggio, cf 4 0 2   2   0   0
Gordon, 2b 4 0 0   3   3   0
Killer, if   4 0 0   2   10
Dlokiy, c 3 0 18   10
Prlddy, Sb-lb  ......3 0 0 10   1  0
Voiindlir, p  2 0 0   12   0
Ruffing, I  10 0  0  0  0
Brwtr, p  0 0 0  0  0   1
Turner, p  0 0 0   0  0  0
Total*    33   0   6 27 16   1
i—batted for Chandler In 8th.
St Louli (N.L.)  001 000 001—2
New York (A.L.) 000 000 000-fl
Rum bittod in—Brown, Sliugh-
tar. Stolen bu*—Rizzuto. Sicrl-
t;c*—Whit*. Doublt ptayt-Kellir
ud Dickey. Left on buei—New
York (AX)'l; St Louli (Nil) 4
Itrned runi—New York (AL) 0;
St. Louli (NL) 1. Bum on balls—
Chtndlir 1 (Kurowikl); Turner 1
(Musial). Strlkeouti - Chindler I
(T. Moon, ], Sliughter); White I
(Cullenblne, DIMiggio, Oordon,
Chandler, Croiettl, Ruffing).
Pltohlng Summtry—Otf chtndlir
3 hlti, 1 run In 8 Innlngi; off Breuer
2 hits, 1 run In 0 inning (none out
tn 4th. Pitched to 3 bitten); off
Turner 0 hlti, 0 runi In 1 Inning.
Loiing pltcher-Chindler. Um
plret— Btrr (NL) plate; Hubbard
(AL) lb: _!igerkurth (NL) 2b; Sum
men (AL) 9b.
Tlme-2;S0.
SUNDAY
YANKEE STADIUM, New York,
Oct. 4 (AP)—The official box score
of the fourth game of the 1842 World
Series:
St Louli (NX.)
Haw York (A.L.)       ABRHPAE
Brown, 2b 6 0 2 16 0
T. Moor*. CT  8 0 2 6 0 0
Staught*., RT  _ 4 10 10 0
Muslil LT  3 2 2 8 0 0
Hopp lb   8 2 17 0 0
Kurowikl 3b  _ 3 1110 1
Marlon SS  4 10 8 4 0
M. Cooper P  _ 3 110 0 0
Gumbert P  0 0 0 0 0 0
Pollett P 0 0 0 0 0 0
Stnden x 1 o 0 0 0 0
Ltnler P  10 10 0 0
Totali    86 01227 9 1
x—Batted for Pollett ln 7th.
New York (A.L)       ABRHPAE
Rizzuto  SS   6 18 4 2 0
Rolfe 3b  4 2 2 2 2 0
Cullenbine R_    4 12 0 0 0
DIMtgglo CF 4 0 0 5 0 0
Killer Lr 4 114 0 0
Gordon 2b    4 10 8 2 0
Didwy C  4 0 0 2 0 1
Prlddy lb _ 4 0 17 3 0
Borowy P  10 0 0 10
Domld P  2 0 0 0 0 0
Bonham P  0 0 0 0 2 0
Rosar z   10 10 0 0
SHELLED Off MOUND
Htnk Borowy of New York
Yankees who wu drivtn off tht
mound by Cards in yesterday'i
gime.
 ,i    up..i. mm.
Whirly Goes
Over Nark
NEW YORK. Oct 4 (AP)-Whlrltwty defetted Alitb In thl 825.000
tdded Jockey club gold cup at Belmont pirk Saturday.
Whirlaway won by three-quar-
ten of t length lo pick up thl $11,.
160 top money md become thi flnt
hone to go over tb* htlf-mllllon-
dolltr mirk in eirnlngi with .311,-
486.
Towniend Mirtln'l Bollngbroke,
who defeated Whlrly ovir thli ume
track i week igo, finished third,
•Ight length! back of Aliab. Mri.
Payne Whitney'! Tha Rhymer, who
cut out tbi pic* tor th* tint milt
and t quarter, fided to fourth,
moy thu 28 lengths behind tht
winner.
Salmonbellies Blast Out IM Win
Over Lachine fo Win Semi-Final
By HAROLD ATKINS
Ctnidltn Pren Stiff Wrlttr
LACHINE, Que., October 4 (CP)
-New Wettmlniter Stlmonbelllu
trained their ilghti on thl Dominion Ltcrotit chimplonihlp ind
tht eovtted Minn cup whtn thty
trued Lichlne-Vllle St. Pierre
from tht title trill hero tonight,
Winning the iecond gimt In tht
beit-of-three leml-flntl affair 10-8
to idd to their flnt-gimi triumph
of 18-4.
Tho youthful Cout lnvtden now
move on to Toronto where the* tike
on Mlmico-Brampton Ontario chun-
pioni, ln i best-of-three affair which
open* in Maple Leaf Garden! Wednesday night,
Tor only one ihort phtie during
the struggle did lt look u though
the classy Coast tetm might have
trouble. Thtt wti when Lachine out-
scored them three gotit to one in
the third period to pull within t
five-goal distance of squaring matters.      ,
Silmonbelllet, however, blasted
uy hope* the Quebec boys hid
when they cime bick with a smish-
ing offeniive in the final quarter
to run up lix goali without reply
from Lachine.
Again lt wai the Uncle-Nephew
combination that sparkled New
Wettmlnster to ita one-sided win.
Jim Douglu iccounted for five
of the winners goali and tdded
two mon assists, while hit nephew
John Douglu, fired homt three
goals and an assist. In thl tint
game here Friday, the Douglas
duo accounted for four goals and
an luitt apiece.
While theie two held th* spotlight
in icoring. it wu tb* club't tee
sniper Bill Wilkes who put on •
brllllint display, until Injured ln
thi third period. Wllku scored three
goals tnd two assists tor hit night't
work, but during the iecond blasted
10 shots it the Lichlne net.
Burt Bryant ud Mort Davy each
picked up i pair ot gotlt for Ntw
Westminster while the othen were
accounted tor by Art Prudei), Ed.
Downty, Jim Riltt md "Btackli"
Bltck.
Slim Armtnd Bourdon plcktd up
three of fhe Lachine mtrkers, with
Frtnkle Eddolls, former member ot
Toronto Maple Leafs Hockey Club,
getting two.
"Kip" Tourltty md Hirry Cirtar,
who pltyed tbt regulir seuon with
New Wutmlnitar, but unable to
coma Eut with the turn lut wttk,
havt obtained furlough from the
anny to Join their club In Toronto.
The third mm It Marcus Smith, wbo
belongs to Norvans ot the Coast
League.
NILSON DAILY MIWS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1942-?]
GREAT  FIELDER
Tirry Moon of St Louli Card-
lntlt, who tlong with Enoi
Sliughter, hu robbed Yankeei ot
several home run chances.
Sports Roundup
'   By HUQH FULLERTON, JR,
NBW YORX, Oct 8 (AP)-If the
World Series goot more thin tive
gamei, thi trip, bick to St Loult
mty be pretty tough for the pltyers
md reporter! under the new ruling
against apeclal can, etc., for teami
. . . lt took a 18-ctr "lection"- to
bring them ill Eait... however, It'i
a cinch they'll get back to St. Louli,
If neceuary, and the worst thtt
coujd happen would bt t postponement because the teams didn't arrive on time . . . Reierved teatt
htn tre Just u scarce u they were
ln St Louli ind one ticket igency
took ipace in tbe ptpert to announce that It didn't have my.
Strlout Stuff
Thli ii the ilxth World Seriei for
th*'Cardinals. Thiy won thne of
the others, but the only time they
ever took the opening gtme wu
against thl Tlgeri ln 1834 ... Terry
Moon li hollering because lome-
om twlped the bit he uied to break
up Rid Ruffing'i no-hitter Wednei-
diy ... Roger Honthy, who boned
the Tort Worth club thli yur tnd
Mmtger Tommy Tbooiti of Baltimore Orioles were ipotted ln t St
Loult hotel lobby the other dty
talking about earning back at big-
league playen lf the war takes all
the young fellowa next year. Hog
sayi he already hai gone into training.
McCullough Now
Curlers'Secretary;
Meet This Week
Nelton Curling Club enleri the
Winter   iporti   picture   thli  week
when tht executive meets to line tip]
the teuon'i activities.
When Pruident W. R. Dunwoody ;
ctllt th* Executive together tor tint
meeting thtrt will be mother Slo-
retary In the chtlr iucceedlng Chtr-1
11* Blunt who hu retlgned. S. T.
McCullough hai taken ovir tht port.
ALBERTA SERVICE
HOCKEY -1
LEAGUE PLANNED
LETHBRIDGE, Alta., Oct 4 (CF).
—Detalli for operating a four-letra
senior service hockey letgue in
Alberta will be completed Hon it
* conference ln Cilgary, Squidron
Leider Lionel Conacher, Sporti Director for the Royil Canadian A*
rorce. innounced her*.
Represented In th* letgue, iceord-
Ing to present plane, Sqdn. Ldr.
Conacher wld, will bt In tlr tore*
team from Lethbridge, in army tnm
trom Red Deer, in army tetm uA
in tlr force team trom Ctlgtry.
The ichedule lt expected to begin iome time next month.
HEAVY HITTIR
Chariot Keller, who yeiterdiy
drove out hti second home run of
the World Seriei.
Baa, baa,
\>lack sneep
Have you any wool ?
CUBS STOP WHITE
SOX IN FOURTH
CHICAOO, Oct 4 (AP)-Swnpt
•tide by the Whltt Sox In the tint
three gtmu. thi Cubi ctmt bick to
Hike the fourth gime of Chicago's
city series. 1-3. bthlnd Hinm Bit-
horn's eight-hit pitching todty tnd
thui keep thi tnnui! four-of-ievrn
rivalry alive. Only 3366 uw thl
game it Wrlgley Field, home of tht
Nitlonal  Leaguen.
Chlctgo (A)  3   6  0
Chicago (NL) .. fl 11   0
T Lee. Ron 16) md Treih; Bithorn tnd McCullough.
Totali  37610nil 1
t-Bttttd for Bonhim ln Sth
St Loul* (N.L.) .... 000 600 301— »
N«w York (A.L.) .... Idd 00} 000- 6
Rum batted in — Cullenblne 1,
Kurowikl 2, M. Cooper j, T. Moon,
Muilil, Killer J, Prlddy, W. Cooper,
Mirlon, Lanier.
Two-biM hlta—T. Moon, Rolf*,
Mutltl, Prlddy.
Home run—Keller. Stcrlflcei —
Hopp, T. Moon, Kurowikl. Double-
pity—Mirlon md Brown. Left on
buei-Ntw York (A.L.) 5; St. Louli
(N.L.) 10. Eirned runt-N*w York
(A.LJ 6i Bt LouU (N.L) 0. Buu
on bill*—Borowy 3 (T. Moon, Hopp.
Marion); Donald J (Staughfter, Muiial); M. Cooper 1 (Rolfe); Bonhim
3 (Kurowikl, Muilil). Strikeout!—
Borowy 1 (Mirlon), Dontld 1 (M.
Cooper); M. Cooper ] (Borowy, Keller.)
Pitching tummtry—Borowy 8 hlta
6 rum In 3 Innlngi (nom out In
4th); off M. Cooper 7 hlta 6 rum in
IV, Innlngi; off Donald 3 hlti, 2
rum In 8 Innlngi (nom out In 7th);
oft Gumbert 1 hit 1 run In Vi inning;
off Bonhim 3 htn, 1 run In 3 Inning;
off Pollett 0 lui-, 0 rum In 1-3 Innlngi; off Ltnler 2 hlti, 0 rum ln 3
Innlngi. Wtnnlng pitcher—Ltnler.
Loiing pitcher—Domld. Umpirtt
Hubbard (AL) Plata; Migerkurtb
(NL) flrtt bui; Summeri (AL)
second bue; Birr (NL) third bue.
Time 3:36. <Attendtnce-69,902 ptld.'
Everybody ahould be Intonated ln how Canada'i
industries an servbg tham aa wall a* giving service to hii Majesty't Forcei ln thli all-out war
effort. Canadians also want lo know how th*y can
make thalr present wearing apparel lait longer
and give mon service.
Regarding underwear fer men, women and
children STANFTELD'S have thli to say; "aa one
of the larger! underwear mill* In Canada wo hare
taken the itand that the war needi mint come
first and our organisation and facllltlei an cooperating with oar government ln .applying the
critical needi ol a country at wax,"
STANFIEID'S with to make it dear that they
an anxioui to supply as much uitderwiar ai
pouible fer civilian requirements bui at the tame
time we aik oux patron* to keep ln mind that our
allotment oi wool is necessarily reitricted and the
■ame thing appllei to cotton yarm and practically
all materials entering Into the manufacture of
underwear. Because of the present critical titua-.
tion we an quite frank ln suggesting to civilian*
that they do not buy any more underwear than
they actually need and to try and make their
preaent underwear lait as long at possible by
taking proper can of it.
ITANDFHIO'S UMim, TIUIO, N.».
We recommend to civilians who an actually
ln need of underwear that they buy good underwear, the kind that wffl fit, last and give long wear.
If It Is woollen underwear give lt mon attention
than would perhaps be done ln normal peace
times. The war situation requires that people economise and make things last longer and go farther.
In giving this ad viae to our patroni we do so
sincerely because we believe that the Canadian
people have come to rely on STANFORD'S UNDERWEAR as' a standard oi quality. STANFIELD'S
brands an recognised. We wish to make "STAN-
FIELDS" trade mark a sign and symbol oi goodwill
becauie lt repreientt an inveetment oi million*
oi dollars, not only ln advertising but in research,
manufacturing and marketing.
Wr*t for hhhe-'Hm It Met* tone
itmam-.**
Q
Wftera s__r_U'i
UwtfWMr U modm—
Ttvnt, H»n itolh.
STAHFI ELD'S
Underwear
 g—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1942
"
^fjattia^ltltcdei
OLD-TIME FAVORITE
Want a pretty quilt? Dutch
Windmill'! an old favorite and
It'l done with two pattern pieces
ind two materials. Brighten your
room with this quilt. One block
makea a pillow. Pattern 435 con- |
tains accurate pattern pieces; diagram of block; instructions. for
making; yardage chart; diagram
of quilt.
Send twenty centa for thli pattern to The Nelion Dilly Newi,
Needlecraft Dept. Nelion. Write
plainly pattern number, your
name ind tddreu. Pattern will
bt milled to your home within
todty*.
■Wxvdart   VlrlaAkn,
JUNIOR   MISS  JUMPER
Here'i a "sure-to-sttcceed" style
(or campus—Pattern 9214 by Marian Martin. Front skirt gathers
ind optional pockets and tab. are
emart. The blouse has two neck-
, lines and a choice of sleeve
' lengths
Pattern 9214 may be ordered
only in junior miss sizes 11, 13,
13, and 17. Size 13. jumper, require! 3 1-8 yards 35 inch corduroy and blouse, 1% yards 39 inch
contrail
Send twenty centa ror thli
Marian Martin pattern. Be iure to
write plainly your 8IZE. name,
addren and ttyle number.
Send your order to The Dally
Newt. Psttern will be lint to your
home within 10 dayi.
Two-Year-Old Wins
Futurity Stakes
- NEW KORY, Oct. 4 (API-John
Marscb'i Occupalion won the Futurity, richest ot all -he two year
old itakes, at Belmont yesterday
AUNT HET
BT ROBERT QU1I.LEN
"Jane can't be a  illenl martyr.
- She'll make you take her bedrnom
while ihe ileepa on a col. and then
•he'll tell yu whal an awful night
thl »; i ;.' "
SALLY'S VALUES
■.
fojrijMUdt. . a By Shepard
Barclay
NINE IS NOT ELEVEN
VERY FEW hands are played
in minor iult contracts by the
leaders of bridge. Game contracts
in minor suits are less numeroui
•till, In comparison with major
and No Trump games. That Is,
when they have to be played from
ecratch. A partial acore, already
recorded on the'sheet, obviously
changes a good deal of that. But
lo bid for 11 tricks, ai li necesiary to make a minor game from
iero, Is a terrific job aa compared
to bidding and making ten at a
aafe major or nine at a sound No
Trump. Even many a No Trump
game Ia essayed and scored by
top-llnera with some one suit completely umtopped—either because
It Is not led or because it is only
i four-carder.
« 10 8 T 5
e3 52
*A J 10
|J93
V A K Q J
a k n .
^852
N
W E
S
* A72
♦ A Q 7
3
4974
4 Q 10 5 4
V643
4 10 6
4.KQ 6 3
(Dealer:    West.    North-South
vulnerable.!
West     North    East      South
1. 1*        Pasa     2 a Tim
3 *        Pass    3 NT
2. 1 V        Pass     2 a Pa5s
3 *        ''a--3    •'' ♦
At both table! of a teim ot (our
match. Weit felt he wit committed by hit opening dealer bid
to show a rebid when hit ptrther
responded with a iult, and neither
could find anything better (or the
purpose than an unsatisfactory
ralie with only three diamond!.
East tt the flrtt table decided the
diamondi muit be so near to tolld
that he could take 1 chance on
the club iult. which he did with
hli "No Trump bid. The apade 4
waa led to the A and ten trlcka
were ruh pronto, for an extra
trick.
Where Eaat hopped to 5-Dia-
mondi, he didn't have a ghoit of
a ihow. as the defender! raked In
the firat three trick! ta clubs.
Notice that, at the flrtt table,
even a club could have done no
harm, aa only four trlcka could
have been taken tn the ault. after
which the declarer would have
had one more trick-taker than
there were trlcka remaining to ba
taken
Your Week-End Lemm
Why would a good player be Inclined to open the bidding, In
fourth-hand position, with hand
No. 1 below, and to past with
No. 2, regardlesa of vulnerability?
1. A A <_ 9 5
»K QC3
et 2
4743
Dlitrlbuted by Kma Feature! Syndicate, Iee,
2. 48 2
• Jl)
+ AQ95
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Flesh of cow
5. Cry, as a
calf
9. Shape by
cutting
10. Fanatical
12. Wrath
13. Violin
maker
14. Rage
15. Hiding
place
16. Exclamation
17. Before
19. Roman
money
20. Net
22. Attractive
15. Piece of
akeleton
29. Small
quantities
30. Cringe
31. Resound
32. Ensign
33. Foe
35. Mountain
pass
38. Viper
39. Cushion '
42. Opposite
middle of
ship's si .e
44 To make
amentls
46. Rascal
47. Angry
48. A gem
49. Factors
50. Kill
61. Headland
DOWN
1. Membenof
African
tribe
2. Dlaeaae of
rye
3. Alwayi
CHYFTO<|f_ts__.—A rryf*ta**m
LFJDK    _ VQ W _OQ V K W L   DHSWRTKD—
LVQWDSG PDSTYK      WJTGTSLM      QWB
AC, WNDFC. O — BQYA    LHQOW.
Yreterday'i   Cryptoquote:    WELCOME  EVER   SMILES   AND
FAREWELL C.OES OUT SIGHING—SHAKESPEARE.
IXitrlbuKd br Kln| rtaturw treMctm, lat.
Cryptoquotei ire onniationi or famoui perioni written cipher.
A lubstltute character has replaced the original letter. Tor-Instance.
an "H" may iiihitltute lor Uie original """ throughout the entire
cryptoquote. or a "BB" miy replace an "LL* find the key and follow through lo the lolution
ILLIOTT ROOSEVILT DEATHS
AT BASE NEAR LONDON wiNNlPiO-l.   J.   Victory.   44,
LONDON. Oct  4   (CP)-Lt-CoL  Secrettry of Hii Mtnltobe EootbtU
Elliott Rooiovrl: hai been aligned , Anoclatlon.
to t United Statei air base outline VtCTORIA-Robert (Bob) SU-ert-
Lordon ai a unit commands ind ; a_, M, Chief Oold Commlaaioner
^ill bn making noerntlnnnl II sliti' in the Provincial Department of
ihonly, It vu dlacloied I. .ay.       : Mines
COMIC
THE GUMPS
BRINGING UP FATHER
By George McManus
WEU.-OUR COOK HAS
LEFT TO WORK IN AN
AMMUNITION PLANT- fl GOOD TO GTT BACK
SO-I'LL HAVE "TO DO TO THE OLD WAV
JN'-
.BOO-HOO.'
I   HAV£
FORGOTTEN
HOW TO
COOK;
7 rr
WELL-PONT CSV-'
MAGGIE-MXI KIN
EXCHANGE VOUR
BOOK ON'HOW
BRIDGE SHOULD
PLWECrFOR
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disney
KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zane Gray
BLONDIE
By Chic Young
_..-____________.
 PHONI 144
Classified Advertising
Look Down These Want Ad Columns for Bargains
PHONI <44
BIRTHS
SBLL—To Mr. wd Mrs James
Bell, 2109 Daniel Street, Trail, at
•ll-Tedanac Hospital Sept. 22, a
lighter. Agnei Isabella.
dOBKLEY-To Mr. and Mn. W
liAjg at tbe Arroy Lakei Hoi-
all Nakuip, Oct. 1, a aon.
HELP WANTED
kppliajaiioni wm not oe oommer-
trom perioni tn tha enipiuymeht
•nj firm  corporation oi other
iployet  engaged  In tbe produces ot munltloni. wat equipment
iuppllei tor the armed forcei
ileii tuch a person is a skilled
Idesuian not actually  employed
Us trad*.      .    .
WANTED.
'ERIENCED   ,
>PLE PACKERS
... Packing   House
.j bunk bouse ileeplng to-
modatlona afe provided
:ept  blankets   and   sheets)
Jdining room Where meali
.^obtainable at Uc per meal
btabliihed rata of pay (piece
rfork)—Packing wrapped apples
1'Ac tar bos plus $2.60 per week
poit ot living bonui.    ■ '
(rully two months' employment
Apply-       . ,
|.t>JATIONAL SELECTIVE
SERVICE OFFICE
IANTID. MHHH_~AND MUC
ktiytor camp in Slocin District
bltl_^Ka accomodation. Regular
Hragei plus cost of living bonus.
[Apply National Selective Service
ptflce, Nelion, B.C.
ANfro. miners And muck-
irs tor good camp on Slocan Lake
Dlitrict wages plus cost ot living
tonus paid. Apply National Selective Service Otiice, Nelion, B.C.
MftJD: GOOD BOY FOR ORO-
nery busineu and delivery. Apply
NaUonal Selective Service Office.
ANTED BAKER'S HELPER AL-
to lecond baker. Apply National
Selective Service Office. Nelson
feRrED:"GIRL FOR PART TIME
Iwork, muit be fond of imall chil-
jdren.. Apply »" MUl Street.
tallNESS OPPORTUNITIES
 .      FOR SALE
fc-dles Ready te Wetr. Main itreet
Eatlon. Apply'Mra- *•■ »• H,(W"'
funbrook.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
ASSAYER8 AND MINI
REPRI8ENTATIVES
HAROLD S   ELMES, ROSSLAND
B.C. Provincial Aisayer. Cbemut
.Individual  repreiintatlve tor
ihipperi at Trail Smelter
A J BU1S, Independent Mine Representative. Box M. TraU. B.C
I, W  W1DDOWSON. PROVINCIAL
Assayer.' 301J oiephim St.. NeUon
THS  WEST   KOOTENAY   ASSAY
. office. 550 Stanley SU Nelion. B.C.
KOOTENAY   MINES.  ASSAYEKS
Box SOS. Nelson. B.C,
***•}
CHIROPRACTORS
A.   B   McDONALD,  D.C.,   Palmer
'Grad   X-Ray   Strand Bllfc, Trail
COR8ETIERE8 .
SPENCER CORSETIEBJt
Min S Boomer. 217 Gore. Ph 689-L
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR!
BOYD C AFFLECK. P.O. Box 104.
Trail, B. C, Surveyor ind
Engineer. Phone "Beaver Fall!"
R. W. HAGGEN. 4ININO & CIVIL
Engineer;   B.C,   Land   Surveyor.
Rossland and Orand forki. B.C
FUNERAL HOMES
SQMERS FUNERAL HOME
702 Baker SL Phone IV
Cert Mortician    Lady Attendant
Modern Ambulance Service
INSURANCE AND RIAL ESTATE
CHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE.
Real Estate, Phone ISS
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine shop, acetylene and electric
welding, motor rewinding.
commercial refrigeration
Phone 593 SM Vernon Bt
OPTOMETRISTS
W I.MARSHALL
'   Optometrists
1438 Bay Ave, Trail      Phone 177
SASH FACTORIES
LAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY
Hardwood merchant 273 Baker St
SECOND HAND STORIS
WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE
What have you? Ph. 534 Ark Store
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
SITUATIONS WANTED
ift'"' —r* Ral" Ior UD*
.-srciel advertisements tin-
.  this clasiiflcation to assist
People iceking employment
(Only Uc (or one weet fl days)
iters any.number ot required
■"*  Payable In advance Add
ltc If box number desired
|_PERIENCED BOOK-KEEPER,
_ ..iman, store manager solicits
K>art or whole time work. National Selective Service Office.
Get Ready for Winter
Storm dooori, itorm wlndowi or
combination doom. Sturdy conslruc-
tlon, dear cedar. Any ilze or thickness. >
Kootenay
Sash and Door
Factory
Phone 530 907 Front St
Nelson, B.C.
I/ANTED MISCELLANEOUS
femnoN  school board
Jecretiriei. We have a large nock
jf newiprlnt,  mlmeo ind bond
iper ind cin fill any order immediately.  Dally  Newa Printing
JDept, Nelion, B. C.
FOR SALE: C.C.M. MAN'S BICY-
cle equipped with generator
limp and S speedi, front and
back hub brakea, speedometer,
baiket and kick-up stand. First
clan condition Including tirei. H.
R. Kitto, Nelion.
JLNTED TO BUY: FOR 1MMED1-
Ite ihlpment icveral carloads of
ipllt cedar post! lite 18 to 18-7 teet
long. State price loaded on ear
•nd shipping point. Royal Lumber
Yardi, Ltd.. Calgary. Alberta.
I|V US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or Iron. Any quantity. Top prlcei
Mid. Active Trading Company.
M .Powell St..  Vancouver. BC.
AOTED-hOOOD CLEAN COT-
ton rags, not less than 11 inches
•quare. 9c lb. F. O. B. Nelion
Dally News.
Iante_. ¥6 Bui■. S.ANDARD
T «r ponable typewriter Spot Caih
_______________________________
J Winted - Dry tit, ismirsc snd
|lr<rh wood. Weit Tranifer Company
Livestock, poultry and
FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.
■DR SALE:-YOUNG YORKSHIRE
Tplgi, six weeks old by 14th Oct
| Price 15. f.o.b., Burton. Apply
jClark Marshall Sr.. Burton. B.C.
tb- sal_: i hORMnrcovv,
1 small lable grand piano. Box 87
h.elson Ph. 811-L-2.
■A^'HOMETOrSAlS'CHEAP'.
1 W. J. StreUeff, Taghum, B.C.
ABOUT 17,000 IT. FIRST QUAL-
lty uied lumber.near Ymir. Allotted board and dimension. Muit
be sold. Partlculan Box 88»7
Dally Newi.   ■
G.E. RADIO, $15, 8 TUBE, OOOD
condition. Library, approx. 100
novels, tfl. Chest ot Drawers, $8.50.
Apply Box 8719 Daily News
*6_."s____: lWi. tt>- V-VCK. IN
good condition.. Alio 4 i!ded plainer In good condition. Bo* ISS
Rossland, B.C.
foft ______ ftAftBwoob'VANrr.
drdlier and bench. Box 8713 Daily
Newi.  ■
PIPE-'FtWlNGS - WBM • 8PE-
dal low prlcei Active Trading Co,
SIS Powell St. Vancouver, BC
GOOD USED 85 h.p. Dleiel engine.
Near Nelion. Reasonable price.
Apply Box 8293 Dally Newi.
yoft'sALfc: d-ftOWAMMAULE
typewriter. Almoit new. Apply
Box BRIO Dally Newi.
FOR SALE: MAsdNfc R1SCH UP-
right p'ano. Perfect condition. Q
N  Gllchrlit, 417 Second St.
used iifcc. wASirncusro
loom for weaver. 718 Stanley St.
PERMNAL       ;
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STTOP AT
Aimer Hotel, opp. C.P.R   Depot
HIDES
Ship to 3. P. Morgan, Nelton.
KIMBLE ORGAN IN FIRST CLASS
condition for what have yout The
Ark Store, Phone 534. .
QUICK - CASH FOR  YOUR OLD
range, la good condition; J. Chen.
■ Second Hand Store, Vernon St.
USED CLOTHING WOULD BE
gratefully received tt tbe Salvation Arfny, SIS  Victoria  Street.
25^-THE PHOTO MILL-BBf
P. 0 Box 335, Vancouver
Rolli developed end printed 25c
IS reprlnti 5x7 enlargement, SSe
titf_»fl* At. «6V* PfHJSB
Cleans, polishes,. "cooKlpg-hot"
iteel itovee. Won't blacken. Storei
sell "Jef
r.AV'CA_aw)iit::AiL;i(jt)0R
and wine, bottlei. "Mickier Sc
doz, SS and 40 or,- 16c dox. Deliver to J. P. Morgan. Nelion, B.c,|
MEN-6NL.I _ENb jc . OsitAUk,
lot Free Catalog ot Jokes Novel-
tiei. Booki, Bladeai'Sundries, Be.
Pari* Novelty, Dept. "B" SU Mclntyre Bldg, Winnipeg. MamuiDa
HMJj-f
Would perioni hiving luggige
itored it Noble Hotel, Nelion,
kindly mike arrangement! (or
ume. E. L. Smith, Mmager.    ,
SS -LIONS PHOtO—«_#
PO   Box 434. Vancouver, B.C.
Any ilze roll div* printed, SSe.' Reprints, Se each, free 5x7 coupon.
•A frill *1D cotrvthto JW*
ayaiflffl-soppuM'B? mail.
Guaranteed (Iht {Tide super-tme.
Special assortment of 15 for Jl 00
postpaid ln plain double Mated
wrapper. Western Supply Agency,
P.O. Box SSS, Vancouver.
2$« Any lixe roll developed JJe
and printed"
Reprinti 3c or 40 for $100
4! hours- required on all work.
Send ln your friendi filmi' too.
FILM EXCHANGE   .
P. O Box 50 Castlegar. B. C.
.ILM. DEVELOPED ANb PRlfCT-
' ed (8 or 8 exposure roll) SSe, Rr
printi le each.  For your vacation
snapshots, chooie Kryital Finish
Guaranteed non-fade print!
Kryital Photoi. Wllkie. Saskatchewan   Establiihed over SO years
BUY YOUR FUR COAT itoWl
We Invite yonr Inspection ot ear
lovely idection.
STYLE - QUALITY - PRICE
Convenient Tennt.
All enqulrlei promptly, answered.
POLAR FURS LIMITED
548 Granville BU Vancouver, B.C.
M_N'S SPECIAL
Men'i penonal drug wndnes,
finest quality, tested, guaranteed
IS lor 50c, 24 (or $1X0 assorted, including the world'a (unnieit joke
novelty free, end catalogue ot books
and novelties.
WESTERN DISTRIBUTORS
Box _4 Dept. NC. Regina, Bask.
CHRISTMAS GMHRtNti CASES,
tor Overnu milling, made (ton
jour own ncgativei 75c per dox. S
dot. 1.35 complete with envelop*.
Send your orden NOW. You. will
like our Superior Photographic
Craftmaiasnlp' yonr films and
printi' are properly processed.
Compare them with thoie you now
htve. Any 6 or 8 exposure (lim developed tnd printed 25c, or. IS reprlnti SSc. Enlirgement made
(rom your own negitlvei 5 X 7.
15c. S (or SSe or framed In an attractive leatherette eaiel (rime
easy to mill, no glau to break,
and an Ideal Gift to anyone Over-
leai 5 X 7 lite ipecial 45c 3 for
ISO. or SYa X 5V_ sire ipeciel SSc.
S for 79c. Your fllmi receive proper ctre ind sttentlon. Mail them
with confidence To SUP_RSNAP-
SHOTS. PO. BOX SMS WINNIPEG. THY IT.
RENTALS
COMFORTABLE-STEAM HEATED
rooms and suites. Close ln. Stteth-
coni, Phone 11. -
WAtftl_6'*0'MINT: '4 fl*'.Ml.
Cloie ln. Apply (SO
(um house.
Baker St.
Hutu, ahd t*mm. 'APT. IS
MM. Arts Block. McHsrdy, tm,
Real Est. Ph. ISS.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES
1840 .4-TON INTERNATIONAL
chmil ind cib. Very low mileage. Good rubber, •
Central Truck ind Equipment Co.
Ph. 100 70S-Front SL Nelton, B.C.
FOR SALE; 1981 DODOE COUPE
excellent cond. Good Um. Snip
hr cuh. Paul Markotf, Slocan
Ptrk, B.O.
FOR SALE: '34 FORD DE-LUXE
V-8. Good tlru. Cheap for caih.
Ph.812-X
Generator! utd iprlngi
ern  AUTO  WRECKERS
1936 V-8 FORD ENGINE. NELSON
. Auto Wrecking ind Garage.
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
10 'ACRES. OOOD  HOtfBE":fPC.
Ideal chicken (inch ind itore ille.
Centre of Slocin Jipineie com.
munity. Box 8781 Dally Newa.
mttm.
FOR SALE
In the 400 Block. Mill St. Good
houie, three bedrooms, hdT
water heating plant, cement
basement   with, cement   floor.'
$2600
Alio will accept e imall house
ai a deposit on I large house.
Thli particular houie ll very'
suitable ln every way for room-
eri and boarders. •
FORREMT   ;
Two. fairly large housei, one
clow In,, also quite a nice flat,
very close In, which has two
bedrooms, etc, and . private
bathroom.        / -—
A month —.___.
Cuh income From
Down $33,600,000
OTTAWA, Oct, 4 (CPl-Cuhlin*
come (ran Uie isle of (inn producti
In -the Prairie Provlncei tor' the
crop yeir 1041-42 wai eitlmited by
the Dominion Bureau ot Statistics
today at'$300,800,000, i redycilon ot
S3J,90O,O0O from the preceding crop
year.   ■■
These calculation! did not Include
Govenfment peymenti tb farmeri
under the Whut Acreage Reduction
Scheme, the Prairie Farm Income
Scheme ind. the Prairie Farm Assistance Act. Since the payment!
were conilderbaly higher In 1841-
(1 thin in the preceding crop year,
the total Income to farmen in 1941-
41 would be above thtt et the prevloui yetr, lt wei reported.
■The. decline (in cuh Income)
wii due entirely to I iharp reduction in the Income from the sale
ot wheat it • reiult of thl relatively srntll. harvest of 1941," the -te*
portMi^ ■> '.■■.'■"*
All other tlmei included In the
caloulstlons showed lUbsUnllal In.
cretiei ind thl* wu pirticulirly
true ol live stock end live-stock
products. Income from cattle ind
cilvei Increased by (.16,500.000, Income from hogi Increased by ISS-
000,000; dairy products by IIS.DOO-
0(0 ind Income from poultry ind
eggi by »8,200,000. ,'■
MONTREAL PRODUCE i
MONTREAL, Oct. 4 (CP)-But-
ter, Que. 38Vab. Eggi, Eaitern A-
Wge 47-48.
Futurei; Butter, Oct. SSVib. Nov.
SSHb, Jin. S7M-S7H, Feb. S7«-S7%,
Mireh 37Vi-S7?_; eggi Oct. 48b.
$23
C. W. APPLEY^IRD
& CO. LTD.  .
SIS Biker' St Nelion
4S7V. Acres of land and sev-
onl million (let of pine, coder,
hemlock ind dr. Located on hlghwiy ind close to railroad it Silverton, B.C. Will sell lepirstily.
Apply to Archie Gibb, Corunna,
Ont
-FOR SALE-
Six room bouse on IV, loti,
Silica Street. Living room, with
fireplace, dining room, kitchen
with pantry ind front hall
down, three bedroomi ind
bathroom up. Stone foundation, basement, piped -hot-air
furnace. Priced reduced from
H000 to mtke lm- <£-| nr A
mediate sale at  «I>11 OU
As low it |S00 flown.
Semi-bungalow type of house
with five lota, Anderson St. Has.
living room, kitchen with dinette and two bedroomi down
ind one bedroom up. Concrete
foundation, basement Separate garage. Level lind tn hem,
garden and trult. Mutt be lold
Immediately. Priced (_01 ATi
right it CASH ...  0__luU
T. D. Rosling
M8 Ward Jtreet        Phoni 717
MONTREAL
INDUSTJMALt    "••'_.,
Anee Brew of Cm —•■
C_p Ctr* Tif **-• —
Con Min Sc Smelting ....
Dom Steel Sc Coil "B"
Domlni«\.J.*We —
Foundtitlon' C ot C :-.
Gatineau Power Pfd .
Iirter Petroletnh. ..-■-
Inter Nickel ol Can .
Lake ot the Wood! .....
Nit Breer !__■.——
Quebec. Jtower _!—,
Shtwnlgtn W I P ~
Stx-lpt Can TUT-...
BANKS    '".
Dominion _____-*-—
Montreil   .7.—	
Nova Scotia .................
Toronto —    , —
CURB I
Abitibi « Pfd ........._.
Btiubtrholl Corp .....
Can Vicken  —
STOCKS
FOB SALE: ONE OF THE NICEST
homei ln Nelion, Fairview Sll.
trlct. Oik (loon, furnace, and I
very lovely garden. $3150. Apply
C. W. Appleyard, Stt Biker, a
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR BALE
on easy icrmi In Alberti ind
Satkitchewio. Write for full information to SOS Dipt ot Natural
Resources, CPJt,' Cslgsry, Alti.
F. A. WHITFIELD, REAL ESTATE
end lniurance. 417 BlU St Ntlion,
PUBLIC NOTICES
Fttft RfW:"WARiirh5<.«, W-
vate home. Bon 8723. Dilly Newa.
for rent. Stirling Hotel
|*RM. CARDEN & NURSERY
PRODUCTS. FERTILIZERS
LL KINDS FRUT. TREES. 1 YR
■Id 80c. } yr old 78c. climbing and
»Vuih roaei, grape vines, 3 (or |1
Blirk ourrtnti, white, red cur-
ranli. 15c each. Applv to Eug>'ne
lorer, P. 0, Tighten, B.C.
LOST AND FOUND
To Flnden
ft you find mything telephont
The Daily Newi A "Found" Ad
will be Inserted without foil to
you   We wtll collect from the
ny/ner
f<5SND7TpT6."'_f_Vtft~lfrH.
med glasiei.' In Ftlrview. Apply
Dally Newi
foTlir^ATlnrp_1^10T.
imtl! black Pertlin kitten. Phone
537-YS. ...
rouiBSBr-..st f6r"r_nt.
Ginge. ipply 920 SlUci St.
FOR RENT; MODERN l-RM HSE
308 Hoover St. Phone 484-R3.
TERRACE APTS Betutlful modern
frlgldilre equipped suits       . '
h6Use'PATRIOT "APpLV B
Timber Sale X3033S
Sealed tenden will be received by
the Mtnttter of Landi tt .Victoria,
B. C„ not liter than 11' o'clock in
the forenoon on the 12th diy of
October, 1941, tor tbe purchue ot
Licence X30333, to cut S9J,00<V feet
of White Pine, Fir, Latch, Hemlock ind Spruce, aUo 7J.790 Until
feet of Cedar Polei end Piling, on
an area near Arrowpirk, Kootemy
Lind Diitrlct
Three (S) yun will be illowed tor
removal of timber.
Further particuliri ot thl Chief
Foreiter, Victorii, B.C, or DJitrlct
Foreiter Nelion, B.C.., I •
Mtgllo
"siwr
Phone 808-L.
FOR RANT: OKI SltiSLt ROUtt-
keeping mom K.WC. Block   .
" SEE \_\ww APAftTMEMtT"
INSUMNCI
PROTECT VOUR INCOME WITH
• relltble Accident end Slckneit
Iniunnce Policy. Sse H. E Dill
»*T« C«M*|l|f, |IIS ETC
PURE~BRnf COUJE PUPS." aX-
ex Cheyne, Erie.
14
S6H.
to*-
Vk
n
4Vi
72V.
ish
.   17 tt
,   24
, .12 Vi
14
.   88
. 143
137
.210
.220
WINNIPEC GRAIN
Open
HUJ_"'
Low
ClOW
WHEAT:
..-',
0«t  ...
—
-i
•*.:-.
SO
Dee.  .
91V.
Utt
Sltt
(ltt
8£V
■**}<
4»K
'*■ •■'.
tt
Dec.
484.
«H
48tt
tttt
Mey ....
" —
TT'"' '
' —
tttt
BARLEY:
'     k
Oct   ...),,
OOtt
80tt
OOtt
Utt
Dee,  .
■«'*•
■*%•■
»0tt
"*
May
«1*
—
'■m
Utt
EYE:
.-■'.
Oct.   	
87tt
M«s
!7tt
m
Dec. it	
59
Bt
BBVi
BStt
Mty  _
(ltt
81tt
..«0tt
oott
WHEAT; No. 1 hard 90; No. 1 Nor.
90; No. 2 Nor. 87; No. S Nor. 8Stt.
No. 4 Nor, 83tt; No, S wheat tttt;
No. 6 wheit 82: feed wheat 80; No. I
Garnet 84V4; No.S Garnet 83tt; No S
Garnet S3; No. 1 Amber Durum 94.
OATS: No. 1 C.W. 49; ko. 2 C.W.
tt; No. 3 C.W. 45%; Ex. 1 (aid 48;
No. 1 Ned tttt; No, S teed tt; No.
3 feed 39.
BARLEY: Milting gradei No. 1 C.
W, 6-to'w tttt; Noi 3 C.W, 8-row
84tt; No. I.C.W., 2-row 84tt; No.
2 C.W., 2-row 64tt; No. S C.W., 8-
row tttt! other grades No. 1 bed
Mttl'No.' 3 (did tttt; No. S Ind
tttt.: '■
RYE: No. S C.W. BTtt.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCTOBER J, 1942—»
i, ,   ,«„■■—.■   i,_«_,!,. i. i   .__„,.;..—,_,     n    ina   imm*a.«»mi   -.m.   ■,-,,.._,,.*.aA*'pi.e   	
Market; l
Egg Priced Rise
Maglio plumi at 10 cent! a pound
and three pound! (or 28 cents ind
Flemlih lenity pears at (lve cent!
• pound, wt -a new addition! to tbe
fruit italU at the Farmeri' Public
Mirktt Stturdty. Icicle radlth tt
three bunchei tor 10 centt, Roman
beans it 10 centa a pound and three
for 25 centi, ind yellow turnips at
three (or 10 centi wen new on the
vegetable stalls.
.Ibi price of eggs went up ln ill
gradta; Grade A large Irom, 47 to
90 centi ■ doren;, meditim from .44
to 47 cent! A dozen; pullets from 37
to' 44 centa a doren, tnd peewees
(Tom 30 to 95 cents t- dbien.
Other price change! were, green
onioni from three' to (our bunchei
(Or 10 centi; eggplants from three
to two for 10 centt; pickling tomitoei from  three to (our cent! I
SO lnduitriali
20 ralll	
IS utllitiei ...:..
DOW JONES AVERAGES
Lojr Cloie
110.80 1111.34
28.51 28.72
12.81
High
111.80
28.79
12.39
12.38
Change
up .51
up .21
up    .01
WtoM>e/M&L
NEW TOR!. Oct « <AP)-Stoo_t
continued the forward iwing in|
Saturday'i mirket ilthough weekend profkt-caihing reitricted the majority ol advancea to fractiona. .
, i Some optlmlim apparently was
derived (rem Uie better brand pt
war newi both trom Ruula ind thi
_*»'pieltia.
TORONTO- industrials attracted
moit attention, three new hlghi tee
the yeir bejng reglitered.
. The new high! were C.P.R., up tt
■to 6M, and both Ford Issuei. Utllitiei and'iteel contjned firm.
MONTREAL-Utilltlei ttlfed an
upiwing In trading.
C.P.R. wu np the minimum traction In carrien ind in mettle, ind
minei both Hudson Biy Mining
ind Hollinger worked I little higher.
VANCOUVER- Btlei remained
low with only 1B00 shares changing
Filrebild Aircraft _._
McColl Frontenac Ptd
Mitchell Robt . _
.    «tt
.- Stt
_ 'Stt
-Stt
_"M
. »
VANCOUVER   STOCKS
MINIS
Bralorne	
Cariboo Oold .
Gold Belt.—
Grandview .._
Koot Belle......
Mcdilllvriy
Bid
8.70
.13
.11
JS
.-,HVi
5.80
.14
Pacific Nickel  Wtt -
Pend Oreille'._.!..._. -90 IM
Plonee. Gold ..— 1.10 LIS
Premier Oold  - XI **
Prlviteer    — tttt ■"
Redvet MieDontld .18 —
Reno Gold  Wtt —
Sheep Creek   tt 7"
3ur( Inlet ... -  «tt *•
OILS
Anglo Cintdlin .... SI   - —-
APConi -  tt -
Brltltti Dominion .49 tt
Cil fc Bd — -M
Comoll m~
Commonweelth ...-
Dalhousie     —
Highwood Sereee ..
Heme   	
Mill City -.,	
Model ...   —■
Oktlbt Com	
pacific Pete 	
Royalite ....'.	
Suniet ■'	
Vrnulls  	
Vukih    .-	
.14
.18
.IS
tt
2.22
.05
JS
tt
JS
K.7S
.00
Mtt
.13
Tl
2.29
m
.18
hand!.
In the minei Brllom gained 8
«entl it B.7B.   .
WINNIPEG-Milli made acatter-
ed purchiMt ln December wheat on
the thort Siturdiy session. The
October future wti unchanged it
90 cent! I bushel ud December it
Sltt. /
Export rales of high gride Manitoba wheat to the United Kingdom
were estimated it iround 800,000
buiheli tnd 1 further sale of 500,000
\ bushels of No! 2 Northern wit made
to Greece.
CHICAGrf-Graln prices declined
following quick passage tnd Preii-
denttnl approval of tbe new Price
Control law and Issuance-of sweep.
Ing Anti-Inflation orden by the executive. Wheat tnd corn were off
about t cent it timet. December
corn futurei reaching new lows tot
the leason.'
Toronto Stock Quotations
MINEI
Aldermac Copper	
Anglo Huronitn  	
Ban Metal! Mining _	
Beattie Oold Mlnet —
Bobjo Mlnee ........'.	
Buffalo Ankerite	
Csnadlan Malartlc	
Castle Trethewey"	
Centrei PltrieU .
Chromium M fc S ..__—
ConiiuruBi' Minn;_—.—
CoiufM'fc S 	
Dome Minei ——
But Mtlertle :...__—__
Ftlconbrldge Nickel	
Goifi'Ittn Gold
Gunner Gold ~...
Hard Boo* Gold.
HoUtoger
Hudion Biy M fc S i—
International Nickel _.
Kerr Adddon m~—
_4_e Shore Minei	
Lamaque Contact —
Leitch Gold —~—
Little Long Ltc ... ..........
MacLeod Cockshutt..—
Madsen Red Uke Gold.
Mtlartlc ..:.t:..':......	
Mclntyre-Porcuplne   —
Mining Corp —m-
Nlpllttng Mining .—__
Noranda  .—„_■
Normettl 	
AS
3.00
m
M
mt
ut
as
JO
.85
ttt
' tt
Mtt
13.50
ltt
ttt
.14
.11
tt
7.25
tttt
32.25
3.85
7.80
3.25
tt
Jtttt
1.00
tt
ltt
37.00
ltt
tt
44.00
.70
SS
Perron Oold 	
Pickle Crow Gold .......
Preston Burt Dome ....
Sen Antonio Oold _~
Sherritt Gordon .......
Siscoe Gold  _
Sladen Malartle	
Sudbury Bailn .^.a-^,
Sylvanite
Teck Hughea Gold	
Toburn Gold Miies .......
V«>tui«l, —_
Wright Hargreavei
OILS
British Amerioan ...
Imperiil
,««
ltt
1.38
ltt
jtt
tt.
JS
ltt
ltt
1.47
tt
S.40
J.15
Inter Pete
TexM Canadian —
INDUSTRIALS
Bill Telephone —
Brewen fc DM —
B C Power A .-—.
Can Car 4 Fdy .....
Cm Cement
Can Pacific Rly	
Can Ind Alcohol ._
Dominion Bridge ~
Distiller!' Seagrami .._
Ford of Canada ..........._
Goodyear Tire —_
Imperiil Tobacco	
Kelvinttor 	
Montreal powtr	
Nat Steel Car ...	
Power Corp .........„...._.
Steel of Can —.....
W.7B
9.50
ISM
.90
134tt
Btt
;      _S
.   «tt
7 **
' 'Stt
stt
31
Mtt
»
1     BS .
9tt
• Stt
Sltt
St
4tt
SI
pound. ■
Broad beam, peachei and greengage plumi' w«ra .removed Irom
*-*-"',,-'
Quotations went,.'
VgOtTABLIS
Field Tomitoei, 4 It* .
Held tettuce, esch  ., .'....i
Hothouse tomitoei, 3 Ibt.
Ontont, bunch .........05, 4.
New carroti,   3 bunches
Turnipi, etch  _.: j08 tnd '
Splnich.  4- lbl,''»r^ AV'^
Panley, bunch '.£ _,
Caribige, ib. :'. J., y.- .-.  7e
for
3S
.05
_5
.10
.10
.10
25
.05
\S.
Vegetable Marrow, 10, JB, tt,   33
CaullBoweY, each''X'..'■*'... .15. .20
Sigf. bunch     ........:.._™i
Mint bunch    ,' ' 	
Broccoli,  bunch  ...............
Gafllo. 1.7.7 .'	
Dill,     bunCh    ..    , ...J..',.imm
Urge' Onions, bunch :..'..
Nes. Potitoea,M0. ibt. ...
New corn, doten
Pickling Cucumberi, dot..
2 doz. for ..'..: 1
Eggplants,   2   tor  	
Green' Peppen, 3 lbl, (or
Scarlet runnen, 2 lbs.
Pickling onions, Ib.
Pickling Onioni (green)
Squash, each
Cherry tomatoei, lb	
Hew Celery, bunch —
Pumpkins, each  -. .      —
Ptnnipi, bunoh  „.<„.^.._.
Ridlshei, bunch .'_:..
Icicle Radlih, 3 bunches
Roman Beam, lb 10, 3 for
Yellow Turnipi, 3 tht- .*.	
MEATS
Beet lb. — .18 to
Veal, lb ._. . .18 to
Lamb, lb. JO to
... .05
... M
_.   .18 .
■m     -29
...     00
..... tio
mC-M*.
:. 31
.'. '.»•
..„-»'
    .10
_»' 3t
......ii'
...    .10
.... M
tt
.ii
tt, .10
... .»
Dt
_|
.18 ■
_5
.10
Beef liver, lb. —	
Celt liver, lb. . ■   .     ■
Hetd cheese, lb. _____
Bologna, lb. _______
Liver sausage, lb. , ,,„
Breakfut lausage, 3 lbl..
Pork heads, lb. '•
Jo*-, lb.
.33
.35
Jtt
    .25
___   JJ'
.is to a
___.. tt
 m   JO
 _. at-
  -os
ttte tt
Spring chicken, dreiied, Ib. il
Uve ipring chicken, ei. ...1.50,  l.TJ j
rork. lb. ;, ,.,„, „ „   ,1S to tt
Live .young ducki, neb _.__ 1.28
Jellied chicken, cup , i 1 JS
. S for ■ "     '       tt"
Rabbit lb.......  ,—  tt
Blood sausage, lb. , JS
FRUITS
Red Aitrachin apples, 8 Ihi, .... .35
Ducheii tpples, S lbl.   3S
Crab apples, S Ibt,  Jtt
^Bartlett pun, lb.   jOS
Miner Plumi, lge. blk. ■,.  .40
Wealthy applei, 10 lbl.  JU
Maglio plumi, lb. _....I0, S tor .25
Flemish Beauty pnri, lb. — .09
FLOWER*
Atttn, S doien 	
Gladioli,  dot.  ... _.....
Chryimthemumt, bunch
DAIRY PRODUCE
Dilry batter, lb. 	
Cottage cheese, lb. __
3 lb*   ,....■■,;   ,.i   ,,'„„
EOGS!        .
Gride A-ltrge, doien -
Medium, doien 	
Pulleti, doze,i	
Peeweei,  dozen   ._.._
mt.     3S-M
M..
.10
*s
w
.47
.44
.35
NIW  YORK
Amerioan Can __
Am Smelt fc Red
Anaconda
Bait fc Ohio
Be* Steel
Chrysler ..,
Dupont
General Electric __
General Moton ..—.
Grett Nor Pfd. ......._
International Nickel
inter Tel fc Tel	
Kenn  Copper :——
FhilUpe Pete	
Radio Corporation _
Stan OQ of IT J	
Texu Gulf Sul'	
Union Oil of Cal —,
U S Rubber 	
U S Steel .
40
63    :
«*,
tttt
»3tt
130%
tttt
40
24tt
■:*■•*.
48
Sltt.
tt'
4
il   :
Mtt
»tt
tttt
4»tt..
Pamour Porcupine _.	
|iiMinn>iiilllimiiiwim>iiimnw>Mnineim»M»iJni mn
Rtport Big Convoy
Leaves Gibraltar
LONDON, Oct. 4 ((fP)-Tht Swisi
radio broadcut t dliptlch (ran At-
geclrn, Spain, today laying I convoy at 14 cargo thlpt eseortadSr I
bettlethlp,' two cruiien, tin destroyen ind three lubmtrintt lift
Gibraltar lilt night head«d-for the
Atlantic     ■
It wil one of nyny evidences ot
tctlvlty.it Gibraltar reported recently-by Axli yid neutral lourcei.
Nf lamt Mi\\ Nrtoa
Telephone ltt
.Trill Circulitlon: Pbone Stt
Classified Advertising Ratet
44c per line per week '( coniec-
llc per line per lniertion.
utlve InaertMni for coil of 4).
1143 t'line t month (38 timet).
(Minimum 2 linei per lniertion)
Boi number He extra Thit
coven iny number of Hani.
PUBLIC NOTICES. TBfDBRS.
lie per line, fint lniertion wd
14c eech lubuquent Insertion.
ALL. ABOVE RATtS L*SS
10* FOR PROMPT PAYMINT
I. IOIAL LOW RATES
Nen-eemmerelil  tltuitlom
Wanted fer 25o fer tny required .
number  ef  llnet  tor  ilx  dayi
payable In advance.
SUBSCRIPTION RATtS
Single copy  ' ... I  tt
By cirrier. per week ..     X
By carrier, pir yur 13.00
tr mill!
Onl  month •-...
Three monthi —
Sit monthi  ...._	
One yeer ...        SM
Above ratal apply in Canada
United Statu and Unittd Kingdom tp tubecrlben living outiide regnltr cirrier irate *
Elsewhere md In Ctnida wher*
■ ittrt Dostagr li required ont
month II 50. three mnnlrii 34 00:
ilx monthi S300; ens year SIB.
m
Have You a Photo
of ILLATIVE oiFRIEND    j
Ho will b* known In Kootenay -an'd many
would liko to see the-plcture In The Nelsbn
''' Dally Newi.
o
Blease send to Picture Editor. Photos will
be carefully handled and return*d.- ,
,-,., ■'■,.■'  ■  tr ■ j- .' • 7--\, ■'.     -   .   . ■
Photos with irtv_\\ figures will not repro-
v'"   . duce well. Head-arid-shoulder pictures
art best.
_
 10—NILSON DAILY NIWI, MONDAY, OCTOIIR 9, 1941
£ CA AA    ln *-*•** <*'•*** ht B*nk Nl'lh* Tonight
>jU.UU Draw at 9:26
Hi's thtmt-i ttim's jp«M/.f ,
ltt M p#hw/»|.. .fctorf tn-tmh
Praise Response
lo Cut Down
Pork Consumption
OTTAWA, Oct. i (CP),-Ca_adlan
',. Bacon Board officials yeiterday htd
| a word ot praise for the Canadian
housewife who has abandoned pork
purchases temporarily so there may
be enough fi" 'hc United Kingdom.
,.   Two weeks ago the Bacon Board
. aiked Canadian purchasers tb poitpone   pork   purchases   for   teven
weeks, ao the lMl-_t Britiah contract for 600,000,000 pounds of bacon could be filled.
Fork receipt! by the Boird hive
rlseh about 3,000,000 poundi In eich
, ot the lut two weeki, representing
a gain of almost 50 per cent Two
ttctori were ihvolved-^ne _ being
enlarged ihlpment of hogs and.the
"other reduced buying of pork by
Canadlani generally.
"We certainly appreciate what the
Canadian public hu done'and we
i would aik them to do even more io,
the objective of having the Brltlth
contract tilled' etrly ln November"
wlU be achieved," ,th ofljtial iaid.
ROAST LEG OF LAMB WITH
MINT SAUCE TODAY
ttemtaetsststtpMtMtKtsstdiec&s
Hive tha Job Done Ri_ht
See
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONI 815
maattotsiesssMtxaMcenootssitaue
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist   ■
: kite 205        i •'
Medicil Arti Building
We ar* equipped to handi*
ANY KIND OF WORK ON
YOUR CAR OR TRUCK
SKY CHIEF AUTO
SSS Baker St Phone 122
-—_-_____-_______-_________.
.THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
W. L. THOMPSON, Prop.
Dty tnd Night Service.
2_ hour Ambulance Service
SIS Kootenty St. Phone 261
Sheep Creek Mines
Dividends This
Year Reach 20 Cents
VANCOtfvTR, B.C.-Totll dividend! el 20 cento per Aire will be
paid by Sheep Creek Sold Minu
Ltd, thli yetr compared with a total of IS centi In 1041. Thit Increue
wu due primarljy to performance
of. the Sheep Creek gold mine. The
company now has earnings of Zinc-
ton Mlnet. TM. tb contribute to-
ward ltt dividend fund. Accordingly Sheep Creek Gold Minei Ltd. ls
in better position thtn the. strictly
gold mining conrwnlet to tide over
the period of latter ihortage.
,  *m>    '   - ...
NAIL SUPPLY IN
B.C."TIGHT"
Supply irf najlt tor B.C. conatruc-
tion Industry can still be deicribed
onl? ti "very tliht" reporti the
Financial Newi. However. Hie expected further reduction ln supply
oi iteel rodi for the mil plants did
not materialize. Steel rodi are coming along possibly ln i little better
volume than ln early Auguit -when
fears were entertained that the mil
"bottleneck" would become very
much worse.
Distribution has been considerably Improved tince a W. Atklni
irrived on the Cout to repretent
the,Steel Controller. In touch with
the whole situation, Mr. Atklni It
•ble to allocate available supplies
fairly and to best advantage.
PHOTOS
Cleaned and Oil Colored
Cleaning,' SxMJc    8_lO—Me
OU-colorlng 8_7-80c telO-f 1.00
Enclose color initructloni.
Mn. A. Fcnn     Nation, B.C.
_■     ANNABLE BLOCK
Phone 657R or 358R
One- and two-room apartmenti
furnished, iteam heated, ho
water all the time.
LONDON AIRMAN
SPENDING
LEAVE IN NELSON
Ac. 1 John Richmond of \io. Si
SJ.TA, Royal Air Force, at Medicine Hat hai arrived ln Nelton to
ipend i 10-dty leive. ,Ac;l |ltcb-
mond, whoie home li London! it tM
gueit of Mr. tnd Mra. John Draper,
413 Robion Street.
Sgt Pilot Henry Tord of Birmingham, England, arrived at Kplo Saturday and Is the guest ot A. P.,
Alliebrook there.: .".'■>'.!
. "I.  ;
Selous' Cousin a
Commissioner;
Comes lo Nelson
Genii H. Scloui, Trade Commissioner for! Britain at Vancouver,
wu ln Nelton over the weekend—
seeking Information on a pioneer
Nelion figure. Hirold Selous, hli
cousin.      ■ ','.
• R. O. Joy, Hlitorlan Of the Nelion
and District Old Timen Anoclatlon, wu able to supply for him the
date of hli cousin's birth, obtained
from i Nelton Dilly Newi clipping
now ln the files of the Association.
lie obtained other information on
hit cousin from Mr. and Mrs. E.
H. H. Applewhaite ahd W. P. Dickson of Willow,Point; G. A. Bladworth, Fred Irvine t__. Mayor N. C.
Stlbbi and othen of Nelion.
The visitor ihowed keen Intereit
In the obituary of hit couiln as published in the Nelion'Newt, Jtn. 30,
1933, and Mr. Joy arranged to have
a copy made to tend him.
Former Nelson
Man Prisoner
Trooper Donald Howan' Lazier,
prevlouily reported at mining
after thi Canadian attack on Dl'
eppe, Is now known to be a priioner of wtr In Germiny,. .
Trooper Lazier raided In-Nelson
prior to hli enlistment In 1939 with
the Calgary "Highlander!. He went
overseas with the Highland unit and.
wat later transferred to the Calgary
Tank Regiment
While ln Nelson he took an active
Interut ln sports, especially golt
He Is the ion ot H. F. Lazier of Calgary, formerly of Nelion.
F. H. SMITH
'      If It's Electric
Phone 666       351 Bsker St.
T T T TIT111111111111111111
A.D. PAPAZIAN
Watchmaker,  Jeweler
-.    and Optician.
. ."Thi.Eapirt"
415 Hall St.      Nelion, B.C.
iinitliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Trail Ladies Make
It Two Straight
in Softball Playoff
ROSSLAND, B.C., Oct f-TrtU
ladiei' rep tetm icored in 18-8 victory over the Roetlind Jtybeu
thit ifternoon In the tecond gime
of the Wert Kootenay Ladle. Soft-
biH Pliyoff. TJie gane, tecond hi
the three of five teriei, wu pltyed
in the Rouland ball park. Trail won
the opener at Trail 30-3.
CAPE BRETON (CP)-Dr. H. J.'
Vanderbljl, South Africa'! .Director
General of War SUBpUeti uyi *e
Union's salvation lies ln Industrial
development and that Vcreeniglng,
40 miles from Johannesburg, Will
be one of the world'i grett industrial centrei. _ .;,   ,} ".
WASHINGTON (CP)-.The TJ. S.
Ii spending ibout $3000 a second to
produce enough equipment and tut-
taln armed forcu large enough to
throttle the Axli,       . /  t ...
'-''■ll,
ft
•  •  •
IT OPENS m
the story of
oil food people
everywhere ♦ .. • *
..and of their courage and j attitude
And faith And dm deUrmtnalion It
■ ■_..__ nl.LY AT 2:00**
The picture
that played
to 1.570,622
patrons in 10
WEEKS . at
RADIO CITY
MUSIC HALL
t.s breaking
every attend"
anee record
in CANADA,
too!	
preserve Iheir way of lift and perhapi
slowly And quietly to improve It...
It is a story of our time, but in Ms
way It is timeless, for that* good tittlt
ptoplt bant always fought for those
ume things, mi witb God's guidance, tbey dlweyi will." . . . ■•- ■
-N.Y. MIRROR.
./..-:-..   v
■CUT.
CARSON   PIDGEON
in Mel Id wyn May tfi l
MRS. MINIVER
CIYICI
n Hi -A WRIGH I     DAMI HA. WW I I
I      ill nhi  _IUI
a famous rums IHIATU
S=**_
Emergency Ceiling
on
U. S. Food Products
WASHINGTON, Oot, 4 (API-
Price Admlnlitritor Lion Hinder-
ton 8tturdiy cltmped tn liner-
genoy price-celling over virtually
ill food Ittmt not prevlouily
controlled, ind innounced thtt
within i fiw dtyi tctlon- would
he ttken to Initiate rent control
"oven every reiidence and dwelling unit In the United Statei.
By the move, coming within two
houn after the Presidents Anti-
Inflation directives, Henderson lncreued front ibout 40 per cent to
n full 90 per cent the Government'!
control over the food.budget of the
average family, and acted to extend
rent ceilings over new areas embracing .ibout $0,000,000 people. -
The emergency food ceiling, effective (Monday, will last for 00
dayi anil will cover retailen, wholesalers and proceuort. It "freeiei"
_'. the highest level ot the pait five
daya—September 28 through October -—each individual dealer'!
prices on these food items:
'Butter,    cheeie, 'eggi,   poultry,
flour, dry onioni, potatoes, freth tnd
canned cltrui fruiti tnd juicei, dry
edible betni, evaporated ind con-
dented milk, cornmeal, tnd mutton.
Ai the icore sttndi, the only Important fooditutft still exempt from
price control ire fresh fruiti and
vegettblw (except potttoes, dry
onioni and citrus fruits) freth flih,
tnd'peanut!—all pt I seasonal nature
andexpected ihortly to be brought
under tpeclil price orders. >
By the time die 00-day (reeie expiree, the Office df Price Administration expecti to iuue perminent price ceillngi which In miny,
if^ not ill, cases will actually reduce the prices of the grocery store
items .covered.      . ,   -
"Prices of tome uncontrolled foodi
have been running wild," the Price
Admlntattator noted. "We have now
curbed them. We shall therefore
look Into the matter of setting iome
oi th. m back'to a more normal relationship with the rut of ihe tood
field."-    *■'■':   ■,'*.
Unreality" Themo
of Lesion-Sermon
Chrlitltn Science Churchei havt
no pretchen; they hive the tame,
•ervice everywhere. Tbe tubject of
the Leuon-Sermon on Sunday wu
•UNRSAUTY".
The Golden Text wai: "He thtt
loweth to bit flesh lhall of the. flesh
rup corruption; but he thtt soweth
to thi Spirit shall of the Spirit retp
life everyluting" (GaitHint 0: S).
Among the citations Which comprised the Leison-Sermon wu thl
followlngtng trom the Bible: "Brethren, it i min be overtaken In a
fault, ye which are spiritual, restore
iuch ut one in the spirit of mee„-
nwi; considering thyself, lut thou
also he tempted. For if i mtn think
himielf to be something, when he
li nothing, he decelveth himielf'
(Galatians 1; 1 ind 3).
The Leuon-Sermon tin Included
the following passage from the
Christian Science textbook, "Science tnd Hullh wilh Key to the
Scripture!" by Miry Biker Eddy:
"Self-love It more opaque thin a
solid body. In patient obedience
to i patient God, let ui libor to dissolve with' the univerul eoWent of
Love the idtmept, of error,—iell.
will, self-Justification, and self-love,
—which Wan agalnit spirituality and
ll the law bt tin tnd death."
Ai. Lambert
Nelson, Dies; Here Since 1898
A. G. (.AMB-RT
Alexander Oeorge Lambert,
veteran Nelton lumberman, died
early Sunday morning at Kootenay Lake General Hospital; aged
Tl: He bad been 111 lince Summer.
'Mr, Lambert's itory li the itory
of lumbering ln the dlitrict He
came to the Kootenays u a carpenter, taw early-day mills cutting material that wu used al-
l most u it came oft thl' saws to
build towns and mini csmps,
then got into business himself and
stayed with lt through changing
times and difficult days. He died
a lumberman still, known from
Cout to Cout in the lumber
builneu.
< Ai with most old timen, he
wu Interested in early-day minu.
Mr, Lambert wu born June 22,
1089, at Sharon, Ont He came West
from Thornbury, Ont., ln 188?, going
first to Rossland and Kulo. 'in
1897 he went on to Slocin City;
ind in 1898 to Nelton. During thli
'time he wu employed u a carpenter.
He entered the lumber businen
u one of the principal! of tbi
Porto Rico Lumber Company, associated with J. A. Dewar, the litter being Pruident of the firm.
In 1904 Mr. Lambert bought the
Porto Rico Company, retail lumber yird, formed the firm A. G.
Lambert Sc Co., and started a new
phue ot hli career u I lumberman.
, In 1808, with thi lite John Bell
u partner, he built a mill at Leb-
alido, ln the Slocan Valley. In
1908 they moved the mill to Sproule
Creek, ibove Taghum, and established en operation of luting life;
Their plmer wu it Taghum.   Mr.'
Bell left the firm In 1912. Mr. Lam
bett then formed the A. G. Lambert
Co. Ltd. aod ln 1913 built offites and
lumber sheds on the site of the
pruent Lambert Lumber building,
Baker Street
. The jjreaent Comptny, Lambert
Lumber Ltd., wu formed in 1934.
Mr. Lambert curled on u Pruident Irom thit dite until hli detth
• Mr. Lambert was married In Nelton November 21, 1900, to Iinthli
Mae Buih. Besides hit wife he
leaves three ions, Oeorge of Nelion, Arthur of South' Slocan, md
Cecil of Port Arthur; two dtught
en, Mrs. Karl IE. Swanson of Nelton ind MA t>. G, Bell of South
Slocan; ilx grandchildren; a broth
er, Thomas W.. Lambert ot Nelion;
and a titter, Mri. A. A. Christie
of Nelton.
Mr. Lambert had I hind ln tht
making of early-day Nelson institutions. He wu active in the or
ganlzatlon of th* Y.M.C.A. He auiit
ed In the conitructlon ot the Nelson ikating rink on Hill M'nes
Bold, ind wu associated for ytan
with the company which operated
it- ,t _ '.    '
He wu I staunch lupporter of
Trinity Church, having been t mem.
ber ilnce coming to Nelton. He
hid'been i member continuously
ot the Boird since the Church wu
built in 1908 ihd two yein ago
wu made a life member of the ks-
lion. He wu quietly active ln ill
church activities.
At i young mtn he became I
member ot the Cinadian Order of
Forester! tt Thornbury, Ont
Russ Lure Nazis
to Dummy Post
' ■.'    <
-MOSCOW, Oct. 4 (AP)—A Soviet
wer correspondent tent the follow,
ing itory about what happened to
i hillock it the bittle on the dusty
sleepe North of Stalingrad:—
'Russian gunners fashioned dummy
gunbarrels from plywood and erected them on the hillock, carefully
refraining (rom camouflage.
A Oerman bomber circled the hillock for « long time, studying the
"guns." Then .apparently noting
they were false, the Oerman pilot
flew awiy to report without drop
ping i bomb. •
At night the Russian gunners
swiftly replaced the dummy guns
with real ones.  . *
The Germans ittacked at dawn,
confident they would meet no artillery oppoiltlon. A curtain of fire
sent them reeling back.
Quickly the' Ruulani.. swapped
the guns tgtln for the dummies,
concealing their tctlon behind t dust
Icreen stirred up by t tractor detailed for, thtt purpoie.
The Oermtn bombers were not
slow in coming," wrote ttje correipondent "They made t greet effort
to destroy the plywood guns.
"The whole tteppe iround the
hillock was hopcycombed with craters."
STOCKTON, Mo. (CP)- Wiyfle
Fellow's grandfather carried i Bible
through the Civil War. An uncle curled the time bible in the Flnt
Great Wtr,, Wiyne, in in irmy
cimp, on list west Cout, hu the 100-
year-old Bible with him comtantly.
Balmy Beach
•TORONTO, Oct . (CP)-Royal
Ctnidltn Air Force Hurricanes
smothered Toronto Balmy Beich
48-8 and' Hamilton Wildcats suppressed Toronto OtkWood Indians
19-8 here Stturdty to move Into
Joint letdenhlp of thi Ontario
Rugby Football Union. ,
-In thi third O.R.F.U. game the
Ntvy team, H_J.CS. York, easily
defeated Kitchener-Waterloo Panthers 28-1 it, Kitchener to move into
I third place tie with Oakwoods,
Kitchener-Waterloo ind Bilmy
Betch ended the tecond week ot
lugue competition anchored ln lut
place without having won a game.
> 111 [ 111J11111 ■ 111X ■ E ] IE11111111111 11J1111
NEWS OF THE DAY
>IMIIIII1IIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIMI|lllMllimi||l
Try t tin of "Turf" tobicco it
"VALENTINE'S.
Two-room   furnished   suite   tor
rent Stirling Hotel.
Ctntditn Legion Reg. Oen. tomorrow evening tt 8 sharp. i
All Eagles wishing to make trip
to Rouland Wednedsy evening, meet
at Maco'i Store at 8 p.m.   .
T-room houie,.furnace, fireplace,
garage. Close ln. $2000. Robertion
Realty.
A. C. Murray of Natal
a Notary Public
Alexander Condell Murray of Natal ii guetted it t Notary Public.
Nelson District Life Insurance
Sales Capture (up
in All-Canada Corm
F.D. CUMMINS
Nelion Dlitrict office of the North
Amerlcin Life Aounnce Comptny
hu won the Midiummer Cup for
tht grettett tmount of builneu
written during Auguit tnd September ln iny of the non-metropoll-
tin dtatrlctt of Cinadi.
Nelion office In tbeee two monthi
wrote $314,000 In life Insurance,
Which wu more than double the
builneu In the ume period o( lut
yeu.
t. D. Cummlni, brinch maniger
•t Nelion, hu been idvliet by win
ef Nelson Diitrlct'i victory ln the
contnt by I. H. Htnliy ef Toronto,
Supervisor of branchei. % I. Tow-
lit of Trill wu the utitmdlng
productr tmong diitrlct agents.
ThU l» lhe tint timt thtt the cup
hu ceft_e to the Nelion Diitrlct,
AM Mr. Cummlni, ilnce 1911
Brown crockery flower pott  ln
all iizes-3, 4, 4H, 8, 8, 8-inch.
HIPPERSON'S
Annutl meetlsg Nelion Badminton Club Civic Centre, Thursdiy,
Oct 8,7:30 p.m. AU Intereited attend
$300 down payment, 30 acre farm,
5-rm. house. Edgewood. Blackwood
Agency.
St Jotin'i Ambulince Anoclttion
Pint Aid Cltiiei, commence Tueidiy October 8th, 8 p.m. Regiitritlon
it 7:30 p.m. . i
Filing cirdi tnd Indent ill tltu
and rullngi D. W. McDerby, The
Stationer tnd Typewriter Mtn", 884
Baku St., Nelton, B.C.
All memben of I*riterntl Ordir ot
Eiglei Aerli No. 22 Ire resetted to
be preeent it t ipeciel meeting
Mondiy. Oct | it the ttglei Htll.
8 p_n, to meet MR. I. V. SAPP,
STATE PRESIDENT, wbo will outline new regulation! tnd work (or
ut In wir.
■■
4lb_8iliMtMD!S_nr
«BISMA-REX
ANTACID STOMACH
POWDER
401- HOt
75**— n.75
Sold only it your RixiU Store.
City Drag Co.
Box 460
Rhine 14
Berlin Reports
Herriott Put
in Prison (amp
. LONDON.'Oat.'. ('CP)-We Ber-
lin ridlo broadcut a report from
Vichy yesterday that Edouard Herriot, 70-year-old former Premier,
of France, has been placed In a concentration camp it Vali lu Bains In
itnoccupied France. (
Both the Oerman and Italian radios previously hid reported Herriot under arreit aj hli chateau near;
Lyoni-jeesumably for oppotlng the
Vichy reglme'i program of collaboration with the Axis, although the
Axis reporti give no reaion for
hli detention.
' /•■;.•■
VICHY, Oct. 2 (Delayed) (AP)-
Edouard Herriot, veteran stateiman
of Republican France and outepqken
critic of the Vichy French Tegime
hu been placed.under home ar-
rest.at Lyon, it #u announced today. ""
Herriot tnd . Julu , Jeinneney,
Senate Chalmtn in the Republican
dayi, haw become voclferouily
anti-Vichy ilnce the dorment French
Parlliment. wt. diisolved by Pierre
Ltvil.
Hit detention Ieft~tt targe only
Jeinneney md former Preiident Al
bert Lebrun of ill the leading political figurei In the lut diys of the
Third Republic. Lebrun now ls in
retirement'
Many Pay Final
Tribute to,
Mrs. G. Pickering
Final tribute to.Mn Eva Pickering, who died Thundiy, wu paid
by i large company of Nelton and
Granite Road 'retfdentt' Saturday it
funenl lervicea in Somen Funeral
Chapel. Rev. T. J. S. Ferguion officiated. Interment wat ln Nelion
Memorial Park.
"All the Way My Saviour Leads
Me' -and "Abide With Me' were
rang.
Pallbearen were Arthur Ron-
mark, John Sherbico, HI Ironmonger, Sam Holmei, Howard Murphy
and I. EJnard Kelberg.
Mn. Pickering wai the wife of
George Pickering, Granite Road
Pasteurized
Milk Makei
Children
Healthy
Pm going to have my
hair fixed differently
at
TpwArt
Beauty Salon
Phone 327
Johnitone Block
Hai&h
It ll worth while to vlilt
Lakulde Service for
GROCERIES
Ph. 488 W. D. Armitrong
Opp. Lakeilde Ptrk
Ntw Underwear
te Ktao Warm \   •
Comfortably
You can't gtt away from
tha fact that tha weight
of the man as well as the
weight of the garment'.;
must be considered carefully If you're to have un»l
derwear comfort. Carer
ful measurements assuri
correct size here.
All weights and Styles'"]
for Fall
EMORY'S:
*^        LIMITED **$
The Man's Ston
Boi 100 Phone 11
■M________H
British Advance
lit Madagascar
LONDON,  Oct. 4   (CP)-BriBll
troopa in Madagascar continued:*
advance Southward from Ttntnlr
ive but encountered some oppotl
tion from the Vichy French who ir
withdrawing to the Southern tip o
the lnAlfts Ocean iilan*. • V^
The Vichy French Were ov
at the railway station of' I
British forces   were  repc
protchlng Antsirabe, desplti
because of extensive road 1
Howell of Trail
Leave! for
Air Force Oer. 12
John Howell of Trail pit.
leave, for Calgary Oct. 12 to '
training in the Royal Canadin
Force. He hu enllited tor I
u i wireleu air gunner; Jf
IIIIIIIII.IIIIIIIIIITTJ
Meet Your Friendi here for
AFTERNOON Tl
VoU'll like our urvlci.
Melon De
minimi,imnni,.jh
"
Fleury's Pharmacy
Compounded,'
Preicriptions
Accurately
Med  Am Blk.
PHONI 23
DOUGHNUTS
YOUR  HOME  BAKERY
"CARELESS"
"CAR-LESS"
Tddty        a
tomorrow
CAR-SAVER
SPECIALISTS
Cuthbert Moton Ltd
Opp. Hume Hotel and Port Offlc
W.W.Powell
Company, Limited
The Home of Good Lumbit
LUMBER      UTH
SHINGLES
Wholestle and Retail
Telephone 176
Foot of Stanley Street
CARD OF THANK*
Family of the late Mrt. lva Pickering,with to thank ill friendi for
klndneu tnd expreulom of sym-
pilhy ittended to tnem during their
-jreavement In the lou of t loving
wife md mother.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
WANTIC. BOY. 16. TOR1 PMSS
Room Apply Nttlontl Selective
Service Office.
FOR RKNT IMMEDIATELY: BSI |
two tern ot hiy. tnd fruit treei.
Apply SM Seven* Street, or Pb I
Ml. XI 3
WARTIME WINTER SERVICE
FORETHOUum:
ANTIFREEZE ! !
TIRE CHAINS !!
HEATERS!!
DEFROSTERS ! !
Now ll the rime to inure younelf of tree
Winter Driving Comfort.
.,    OUR STOCK IS OF THE BEST
In Winter Acceiioriei
NELSON TRANSFER
motors Company, Limited
ibodocts 35 _ PHONES - 36
__-,_-•. a
'
,
A
