 __________
Schtmt (*r Poic-Wtr RthibllitaHon
Mid* tl U.B.C.M. MM».—. igt 10.
Little Foreciiri Draifie Pruning of
Non-Eiitnllal Induitry—Pt|« 9.
Diiturb.net. In India Show*. Will
Planned Organixt-on.—Page }.
U-
;?0cvToiilW
Britlih Columbia Men Listed ti Missing
in Dieppe Offensive.—Pgge 10. ..' .
Canadian Bombers Spread Pirn in
Wilhelmshaven,—Paga 3.
Would taf Higher Allowance Under
Compenutlon Act.—Pagf S.
VOLUME 41
FIVE CENT! PER COPY
NILSON, BRITIIH COLUMBIA. CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. SIPT. 11, H«
,»''.'      i.i
NUMBER 127
JAPS LAUNCH NEW SOLOMON
1      ' . i        ■ . '' »     . ''''*'■'■    *ri '-
MISSING AT DIEPPE
Gunner Gerald McEwan Ross of Nelson, reported
mining in action at Dieppe.
lelson. Natal
-.. a-.'j a'.'*-. t-v^Ic-1*-
A  Ntlion mm ind t former | Ave   years.   His  fither  was   well
Nelion mtn ire among thoie Hit
ed li mining In tht Dieppe nld.
Their ntmu appear In thi Hit
of mining Iuued Tueidiy it Ottiwi.
Gunner Gerald McEwin Row,
hutbind of Mri. Berlhi Georgma
-Ron, 70J Stanley Street, li the
•Melton man mining. He ii the lon-
In-law of Mr. ind Mri. George
Lapointe.
Mri. Roii received ■ telegram
from Ottiwi Aug. 24 advliing her
thit her huibind wai missing, but
this newi could nol be published
Until now. Ottawi made no gen-
trtl innouncement of the names
of mining me_ and newspaper!
were requeited to withhold nam"
In order thit iny of the men who
hid not bten captured might have
in opportunity to escape.
The former Nelson man now reported mining li Domld Lirier,
■ion of H. F. Lazier, formerly of
Ntlion tnd now of Calgary. Lazier
enllited it Calgiry early In 1940
.tnd went oveneai. In Nelion he
wu know in iporti circle!, partic-
known in mining circle!.
NATAL  MAN  MISSING
NATAL, B.C.—Natal'i first wir
casualty was Corporal Jack Wea
ver, ige 22, iecond ion of Mr.vand
Mri. S. Weaver of Natal. He wai
reported milling after the Dieppe
raid.
Corporal Weaver Joined the Sea-
forth Highlanders In June, 1940,
later being traniferred Into a tank
unit which wai the first armoured
unit to arrive overseas. .Thli tank
unit took an active part in the raid
a: Dieppe. Weaver went oveneas
In the later part of June lait year.
He has a brother, Walter, at present in training on the B. C. Coait.
Another Natal lad In the lame
unit who returned lafely after the
Dieppe raid wat Corporal Herbert
Travla, only ion of Mr. and Mn.
B. Travl! of Natal.
Other Michel - Natal caiualtiei
iir.ee the war itarted were: Lance-
Bombardier Robert Mitchell, who
died oveneai, and Seaman Sllwyn
Heycock, listed as mining from the
By HENRY C. CASSIDY
Associated Presi Staff Writer
MOSCOW, Sept. 16 (Wednesday) (API—The Red Army
defending Stalingrad has smashed successive assaults by fresh
Cerman troops west and southwest of the embattled Volga
city, which already is in flames from steady Nazi dive-bomber
raids, it was announced today.
Although the Germans succeeded in advancing yesterday,
southwest of the city, the Russians later threw them back in
a counter-attack which dis-?
abled seven Nazi tanks and
dispersed two Infantry companies.
Weit of Stalingrad "repeated tt-
tacks" by frtih German troopi and
tank forcei alao were repulsed, tnd
ont Russian unit which fought for
one inhibited locality "destroyed
thret German tanks, flvt guns, tnd
wiped out "more than 50 enemy offlcen and men."
In the Mozdok tret ot the Ctuct-
ilan foothills tha Rusilani also, announced successful Ruuian defensive fighting ln which ont unit deitroyed eight German tanki and four
armored carl, dislodged tht enemy
from two populated placet, and captured a trite carrying German of-
doers and troopi.
Germin troopi alto Wirt reported trucking fiercely tnd
steadily South of Voronezh tn tht
Upper Don Rlvtr whtrt tht Ruiilam iild thty annihilated tbout
1000 troopi with tn irtlllery tnd
trench mortar barrage.
The Russian! again emphasized
tht Null' frezled efforti to torce
a decision tt Stalingrad.
Tint and agate tbe battered Bui-
galni even though made with a
prodical expenditure ot blood and
limb, nqw wert being measured in
yards.
(The Qerman Transocean Newi
Agency, quoting German military
quarter!, asserted ln Berlin that
Nazi forcei had seized the main ita
tlon of the, rail lint which runs
through . the heart of Stalingrad
from the Northeait to the South-
weit.)
ularly in golf. He wai here about i deitroyer Marguerite.
Coast Police Chief
in Court on
Charge of Assault
MEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Sept
It (CP)-Police Chief Peter Bruce
of New Weitmlnster appeared In
Police Court here today on a charge
Of insulting Clarence Harrli, alio
Of Ntw Westminster.
Mlgiilnte T. R. Selkirk idjourn-
ed the hetrlng until Thursdiy it
Hirrli' requeit.
The Police Chief Is illeged to
hivt aniulted Harris at the police
' itation here lut June 4.
Wea.h
-%
•cittered over the 24
houn, from lite Monday night on,
• ggrcgated over • liith of it Inch
of rtln for Tueidiy'i recording, the
txtct meaiurement being .11 lnctl>
There were iome gleimi of iun-
ihlne In the eirly ifternoon. The
high lemperiture lor the 24-hour
period ending it 5 p in. wai 718 de-
greee.ind the low. 50.1.
The like itood it 1 p. m. Tueidiy
it 7.14 feet ibove thc low witer
mirk. ■ giln of .14 (oot for the 24
hour*   over   Monday'!   reading   of
IN ttt,
U.J. Planes Raid
Kiska Island
AN ALASKAN ARMY BASE,
Sept. 7 (AP) (Deliyed)-Ameri-
can fighter planei have itrafed
Japanese ihlpplng and men on Kli-
ki for the fint time lince the Iiland wai occupied.
The tpecticular raid by two
tighten followed i bomber trip
mide by Brlg.-Gen. William O.
Butler. Comrainder of the Alukin
Air Force, who led ■ low-level attack three dayi prevlouily.
Butler's three enft itnddled leveral cargo veiiel! In the hirbor with
near misses, md csctped Into tht
(Soudi before the Jap gunnen recovered from the surplrae of teeing
planei at ilmoit eyelevel.
The raiden alio itnfed i column
of troopi ashore ind hit Initalit-
tloni.
British War Relief
Building Bombed
BOSTON, Sept. IS (AP)-Ail ex
plosion, which t police expert said
he believed wai cimrd by ■ bomb
rocked the quarter, of the British
War Relief 8oclcty at Common
wealth Avenue tnd Berkeley Street
1 todiy.
Situation Grave
in Madagascar
Vichy Heads Told
VICHY, Sept. 19 (AP)-The iltui
tlon in Madagascar la one qf "ex
treme gravity," Annand Annett
Governor General of the Island, id
viied the Vichy Gmernment today
as Britlih columni drove cloier to
Tananarive, the capital.
Annett laid a South Afrlcin motorized column pushing southeast
from Majunga, iti landing plice, hid
captured the village of Antilifaboi-
tn after occupying Maevatana, ISO
m i les by road from Tananarive.
The Governor-General said re-
ilittnce is continuing tnd thit British forcei now are in difficult mountain terrain.
There wu ho report on activities
of Britlih forcei moving inlind
from Morondavi, 390 miles airline
south of Majunga, md from Am-
banja, In Northern Madagascar.
PACIFIC CHIEF
OPTIMISTIC
OVER CONFLICT
jap Conquest Plan
Off Schedule    '
in New Guinea Area
SEES HARD FIGHT
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
AUSTRALIA, Sept. IS (AP) -
Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney, chief of
allied forcei in tht Piclflc, dtclartd today lt it unlikely wt will
again htvt to meet the Japi under
such disadvantageoui condition!"
ai those which made lt possible
for tht enety to advance through
tht jungles to within 40 milei of
Port Moresby, on New Guinea
Gen. Blarney, returned from in
Inspection of the New Guinea iee-
Force La
NELSON AIRMAN WITH "DEMONS
The famous Demon Squadron of the R.C.A.F. has
been mentioned in many dispatches of raids on enemy
shipping and coastal cities. Sgt. G. E. "Chub" Greenwood
of Nelson has been flying with this unit since last June
and is shown above with the other members of the Hudson bomber crew. They are all Sergeants and have been
flying together since they completed their operational
training in England and Scotland. In a recent letter to his
brother, H. A. D. Greenwood of Nelson,'Sgt. Greenwood
reported that their plane had been officially credited
with sinking two enemy ships. On another occasion when
returning from a mass raid on Bremen their plane was
attacked by a Junkers 88 and it was only after diving
from 4000 feet to 200 feet that they were able to shake
off their pursuers and return to their base. Left to right,
Sgt Pilot Hamish Collins of Vancouver, Sgt. Wag. Joe
Harrison of .Vancouver, Sgt. Observer Grant Fowlie of
Vancouver and Sgt. Wag. "Chub" Greenwood of Nelson.
WASHINGTON, Sept.  15   (AP)—Reinforced JapaneWji
troops with strengthened sea and air support have IntensifiedI
efforts to drive United States Marines out of the Solomon l%«£f
- lands, the Navy announced tonight, but the Marines are holding and the )aps have lost 21 planes in five days of fighting, i
United States Air Forces have counter-attacked Japanese
bases north and northwest of the main American base on Gua
alcanal  Island, a Navy com-f-
munique   reported,   but   the
enemy is maintaining his pressure in apparently increasing
force.
The Japaneie attacki have consisted of bombardment by lurface
vessels md aerial bombardment,
particularly agalnit the United
Statei airfield' on Guadalcanal.
Moreover, iome atiempu oy the
Japs to land reinforcement!, ln the
American-held area tt night have
been luoceiiful, the nivy iaid, and
on the night of Sept. 13-14 the
itrengthened enemy troopi made an
effort to capture the airfield but
were repulsed in heavy fighting.
>w*n Stanley range
the _!_t of the going to Port Morei-
by would be ftr from ttiy.
They still face ridge after ridge
until they hit open coun'ry which
ii euler for the alliei to defend, especially becauie lt reduced enemy
chances to use infiltration and envelopment methodi.
Today'i communique said the ac-
eral iltuation remained unchanged,
but noted that patrol activity wu
Increailng in tht mountains. Allied
airmen tre rtking Japanese posi-
iom with machine guns tnd bombi.
-Otn, Blarney predicted tht new
Guinea etmptlgn would bt hird
•nd long, but declired tht farther
ht wtnt from Australia ind the
Tobruk Raiders Fight
Way Home Through
i.
CAIRO, Sept IB (AP(-Vhe Brl-
tiih wtnhlpt which bombarded
tht LlbVin itronghold tf Tobruk
Sundty night In tht tlllei' big
lind-ttt-tlr ittiek trrlvtd utt-
ly it Alei(indrlt yeiterdiy undtr
protection of long-rtngt flghttri
whleh bett off wtyt tfttr *nvt
of Axli dlve-bombtri, It yi*i dli-
cloied tonight
Detalli of the nld were linking
but headquarteri of United Statei
Army ilr forcei in the Middle ait
iaid the American bombert which
backed up fhe Brltiih aerial squadron! engaged in one ot their moit
extensive operation! of the Middle
cloier ht get to tht battle area  „
the greater wti th. confidence of **_"_ ?_*£__
our forcei from the men I talked
to In the field te the commindjng
general."
Private St. Dennis
of Nelson
Is Safe Overseas
Mn. R. W. St. Dennii, Nelion,
received word Tueiday of the life
arrival oveneai of her husbind,
Pte. R. W. St. Dennii.
Before enlisting Pte. St Dennii
wu employed u i truck driver by
T. H. Wtlen lc Co., Ltd., Nelion,
He wai home on furlough during
Auguit.
Princess Juliana
Expects Child
LONDON, Sept. 15 (CP)-Crown
Prlnceii Juliana of the Netherlandi
expecti a third child at the end of
Jtnutry, her huiband, Prince Bernhird, innounced tonight in t broad
cut ovtr Radio Orange, thi Netherlandi itation hert.
Prince Bernhard warned listener! In Holland lo tvold mmlfeitt-
tloiis ln connection with the proi-
pectlve event thit might bring re-
prilili by Iht German occupation
lUthorillU. mm.
The Jtpaneie plan of conquest
had not gone according to pittern,
Gen. Blimey nld, add pointed to
the toutheaitern lector of the New
Guinea front where the prompt
work of allied airmen tnd Australian land forcei hid "prevented the
Japaneie from establishing i bridge
head it Milne Bay," last month.
He attributed the Japanese success ln tfte Owen Stanley Mountain! largely to the alliei' difficulty
In moving lufficient itrength to
their forward position! ind expreiied doubt the Japaneie could ever
tike Port Moreiby without heivler
artillery thin the imall mountain
piecei they hive been ible to cerry
over the tortuoui trtili.
The R.A.F. Middle Eait Newi Ser.
v^e iaid that the attack! were the
heavieit night raids of the Middle
Eut campaign and thit flrei were-
ittrted imong naval fuel tinki and
other Installations. One explosion
wu io violent that planei were rock
ed while Hying al 10000 feet. South
Afrlcin and Auitrallan plmei alio
participated in the'attacki.
While forcei which landed In the
commando ityle ilso blew up harbor
installation! and itorei, the planei
iwooped out over the port and attacked enemy encampments in the
detert When they finlihed the del-
ert darkness wu pitted with tlrei.
The Americin air force communique iaid that no Axil night tighten
were encountered but that eomider-
able antl-ilrcrtft fire wu directed
it the raiding planei.
On Saturday night • Brltiih
communique said, bomben of tht
allied air forcei made itticki In
force agalnit ihlpplng tnd port
Installation! tt Bengasi, airfields
•t Sidi Menelih tnd picked Urgtti
■t Tobruk.      .  N    -
"Exploiiom and flrei were caused
anti-aircraft and searchlight batteries put out of iction md encampments ittacked,"
The communique iaid that except
for daylight artillery exchingei and
night pttrol operations the land
front wu quiet.
Air Force Blanks
Bombers in
Winnipeg Opener
WINNIPEG, Sept. It (CP) •_ Ite
Royal Canadian Air Force iquad
icored a 8-0 victory over Winnipeg
Bomben In the opening game of the
Winnipeg Rugby Footbill, Letgue
befort mort thnn 3,000 fini here
tonight
Two Sisters Raped
and Slain
BEDFORD CENTER, N.Y., Sept.
13 (AP)-Two little lilteri, leven
•nd eight yetn old, who trustingly
entered • itolen itation wigon it
the driver'i Invitation, were raped
and ilaln by t 17-year-old Stamford, Conii, youth, he confeued tonight.
Sgt Oeorge H. Ferris of the Connecticut SUte Police aid tht boy
Edwird Hilght • liborer, of Wild-
Kenney to Command
Allied Air
Forces in Southwest
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Sept.
16 (Wedneiday) (CP);-Oen. Douglu MacArthur today announced that
Maj.-Gen. O. C. Kenney had been
appointed Commandtr^of Allied tlr
forces ln the Southwest Piclflc,
succeeding Lt-Oen. George H. Brett,
wbo will be given mother alignment
MiJ-Oen. Ralph Hoyce, Com-
mmder of the nth Bombardment
Whig of the U.S. Army Air Corpi,
•Iso wu relieved ot till isslgnment
for mother poit
.Gen. Brett Ii now ln the United
Stiles. j.
St. Lawrence Power
Scheme Delayed
by Lack of Material
WASHINGTON. Sept 18 (CP)-
Preiident Roosevelt seemed to
duh ill remaining hopes thtt the
St Lawrence River power tnd navigation icheme would Dt iterted
ln wtrtlmt whtn he uid todty It
wu debatable If the mtterlili could
bt ipired.
Mr. Rooievelt told I press conference todiy that It wu urgtntly
needed for thi power it would product but the long deity ln itert-
wood Road, Stamford, confeued j Ing It railed tht queition whether
thit he ittacked and killed Mar-1 the material! could be ipired now
garet Lynch, T, md her illter Helen, | for t project that would takt VA
8, lut niglft. yeiri to complete. «
Brother of Trail
Woman
Missing at Dieppe
VICTORIA, Sept 15 (CP)-A-Cpl.
Herman Cyril Keyi, reported mining tfter Dieppe, wboit mother,
Mn. Anne Knight, Uvea tt 527 Nla-
gira Street, Joined up In Reglm In
January. He wu torn In Balcirrei.
Suk., 28 years ago today. A brother
Sgt Melville A. Keyi, 17, alio wu
it Dieppe tnd wai wounded ln
the arm.
rtn. Keyi todiy received tn airgraph from Melville telling how the
brothen hid fought ilde by ilde
through the fierce 'battle until he
wu wounded. Ai he wu cirrled
■way, Melville nld, ht uw hli brother itlU fighting on the betch, ind
expreeted tht belief thtt ht wu
tektn priioner.
A sinter, Mri. A. V. Hughei, lives
In Trail.
The Jipmett pltnt Itwtt wtrt
tuffered In I leries of tlr tctlom
whleh begin Stpt II when trmy
"Flying Firtreuei" ihot down
four "Ziro" fighters In the vloln
Ity of Qutdtlcintl tnd itrafed
ihore Initallitloni on tht Jtptn
ett but Island of Olio.
Two dtyi liter army bomben at.
tacked aeaplanei on the wateri of
Rekata Bay on the northweit shore
of Santa Isabel Island, destroying
one enemy craft tnd damaging a
itcond.
Tht heavy fighting, which apparently constitute! a. major Japaneie
attempt to re-take Guadalcanal Iiland, began the night of Sept. 12-13.
While detalli of the battle are lacking, the navy Mid that reporti up
to tht preient "Indicate that the
marine! are maintaining their positions."
Thl ntvy related thtt tfter thl
trmy Flying Fortreu ttttck on
Gin, which li tbout 215 miles
northweit of Qutdtlcintl, trmy
bomben ihot down two enemy
•eiplinn the following diy.
Then during the night of Sept.
12-13 the Japanese brought naval,
units and ihelled ihore Installation!.
Marine bttteriei aniwered thli fire
and were reported to have hit one
of the attack ships.
Meanwhile contact wai made with
enemy patroli ln heavy fighting
aihore which continued during the
net day md night.
On Sept 13 the enemy lent over
two flight! ot 28 bomben each, with
"Zero" fighter eacorti to attack the
airfield at Guadalcanal Navy aod
marine corpi Grumman "Wildcat"
tighten ihot down four of the
bomben and four Zeros.
Alio on Sept 13 army bombers
attacked the seaplane! at Rekata
Bay, about 140 milei north of Guadalcanal, on the northweit ihore of
Santa Iubel.
Then on the night of Sept. 13-14
the Japanese again brought up their
warships and ihelled ihore installation! while heavy fighting continued with enemy troopi. It wu at
thli timt that the Japanese made
their unsuccessful attempt to capture the vital air baie.   •
Next diy, another enemy flight of
28 bomben with fighter escorti attacked Guadalcanal ihortly* if ter
noon but onct more navy and marine flghten opposing the attack
took in effective toll of the enemy,
shooting down one bomber and five
tighten.   ' ,
BRITISH, MIS!
BOMBERS
STRIKE AT AXl
Cherbourg Struc
British in^
Daylight 'Offensive j
BUDAPEST HIT
BY PAUL LEE
Aisoclated Preu Staff Wrlttr   '
LONDON, Sept. 5 (AP)-Brltl__
bombers struck heavily tt tht Axis
from the West today on the second
anniversary of the decisive fight of
the Battle of Britain, while Russian ■
plane! apparently were malting in*
other attack tonight on Budapeit
one of the target! in their recently'
opened aerial offensive te Nut
Eastern territory.
An Air Mlniitry eommunlq_»
nld Bolton bomben with itrong
HgMer escort mide t daylight tt«
tack on ihlpplng In thl port of
Cherbourg, Frtnct, tnd thit
other tighten mtdt Chinnel
iweepi tnd .attacked ..railroad
freight yards, factoriei tnd othtr
ttrgeti In Northern Frtnct. All
pltnei returned lately.
The Budapeit radio went off th*
air at 9 p. m. after warning ita lit-, '■.
teneri that enemy aircraft could bt .
expected lromjhe NoTthea__ There ■
were no further detalli but' it WU
presumed the planei must be Rui-
slan ilnce they have bombed Ger* I
man, Rumanian and Hungarian elt*
les ln recent weeki.
A Reuten dispatch from Stock.
holm today said Swedish Journal'
lit! in Berlin reported that planei,
believed to be British and Amerl-
can, last night bombed parti of
Bulgaria. Details of theie raid! wert
lacking.
Soy 73,000 British
Prisoners
of War in Germany
BERLIN, Sept. 19 (AP)-BritUh
prisoners of wir lo OerminJI number 78,0-5, Including ibout 8900 offlcen, Trimorein Newi Agency
nld todiy, quoting 'competent
Germin quirtert,"
Fuel Oil in U.S.
Sections
to Be Rationed
WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (AP)
Chilrmin Domld M. Nelion of the
Wtr Production Board today ordered fuel oil rationing on the United
States Atlantic teaboard ind ln 13
Middle Weitern Stttei to tike effect during the coming winter.
Nelion predicted that the rations
would reduce normil winter use of
fuel oil li much u 29 per cent but
iild definite flgurei on the curtailment could not be given it pres.
•nt.
Until rationing rlarti Nov 30, de
liveries of fuel oil  will be under
control'In 80 Eutern md  Middle] amendment
Wuttrn Statei tnd the Diitrlct of  making this pirt o^ the Act Inoper
Columbii. itive againit i mutual company
Insurance Plan
Approved
alU.BaCM.Meef
KAMLOOPS, B. C, Sept. 19 (CP)
—The Union of Britiih .Columbia
Municipalities at iti annual con.
vention today launched long-dli-
cussed plans for a Provlnce-wldt
scheme of municipal Insurance, tnd
in resolutions asserted tgiln tht
need for Old Age Pension increuei
ind called for sale of all Japaneie-
owned land and repatriation of all
Japs at; the end of the war.
Far ahead of schedule, the con^
vention disposed of the bulk of ltl
more than 50 resolutions^
much discussion.-
Convention approval
the scheme for municipal I
under which munlclpalitf
Insure cheaper than with
companies, after reading of a leng-1
thy report by Alderman O. L. Jonei
of Kelowna, chairman of a ipecial
committee appointed last year'to
inveitlgate the matter. He moved
that application be made to the Leg-
lilature for the necessary charter to
set up such a company and the convention gave its unanimous conient
The Municipal Insurance Committee found that the letting up .of
1 Municipal Mutual Insurance Company would belt lerve the Intereit*
of the Municipalities, but that under
the Insurance Act »2O,0OO Is needed
before iuch a company jan be eitabllihed. The report propoied thit
If 820.000 wai univailable, then
the convention might ieek an
from   tho   Legislature
1
mm.	
_, ______	
*-L " ^-'W. ■.•_____■•
	
__■__
 _______
'■
a
^tamm ***** '
MJItSW DAItY NIWI, WIDN1SDAY, SIPT. 1«, 1*4*
bison
Later Duck Season; Would
Strive lo Eliminate Coarse Fish
When tht Wett Kootenay Bod tnd
lun Club Anoclttion holdi iti tn-
lUtl ,>oi)i meeting it Rowland to-
Ity, tht Nelson Club will htvt tlvt
propoiali to mtke itledlng fishing
Hd hunting, tnd will indorse Row-
hod tnd Trill clubs on othen. It
wlU tdd ltt weight to tht reqdeit
lit iportimen'! clubi thtt illenttion
at hunting tnd tlshlng trttl by
prfvttt tntereits ihould be prevent-
td throughout Britlih Columbii.
' Tbt Nelion Club will propose:
Liter opening ol lhe duck tet-
rton.
I Limitation of lite tnd load of thot
gun shells tor hunting ducks md
Similar grouse seasons next yeir
tt thli yeer.
Reduction   ot  Hit  nUmber  ot
totne fiih in diitrlct waten.
■      Uie of Rainbow trout egg! lo-
* ttlly until witen irt idequately
ttocked.
It Will indorie:
i lotilind'i resolution urging i
fcounty on coyotti throughout the
w
E Trail'i reiolution tuggeitlng earlier opening tnd closing ol Beiver
Ortek tor fishing.
DUCKI UNLIMITED
FILM INTHRALLI
These decisions wtre mtdt tt l
•Vafthy leision Tueidiy night it
ibt Ctntditn Legion following the
Aowing ot a film forwirded by
Dudkt Unlimted depicting lhe tre-
JBtndoui work undertaken by thii
•portmtn't organisation to nriore
duck population. The colored
■mvlng pictures, nearly ill ttken
'ta Northern Ctntdi, ihowed bow
were being built, reclaimed
lend wu being reflooded, over-
r»razl_g nti being controlled, nit-
,(___ tnemiei. were being ittacked,
tt. tontrol orgtnlxttlon wu being
ttt up, md io on in in effort to
■ring btek tht great numben ot
tnd geeee ot former yean.
AU tvillible totting wtt ttken for
Om ihowing o* thli film, t ltrgt
number ot children seeing it.
At tht tuggeitlon ot George Steele
Ttttrin  hunter, the Club decided
to uk tor • liter opening tor ducki
tnd geen   Oct, 1,  Mr. Steele con-
. tendtd thtt nt mid-September many
ot tht blrdi wtrt too young, tnd
thtt whtn hunten thot ducki it
thli tlmt; they often ipolled befort
thty could bt used.
pelegatei to the Zone meeting
were instructed to discuss limiting
the ilze ind load ol shells which
could be used for ducki tnd gene,
Memberi held thit uie ot high pow.
er immunltlon by t few hunten
kept the blrdi high ind ipolled
shooting for the majority.
GR0U8E DATIS SATISFY
Satisfaction wilh grouie open
dates wu expressed, though lt wu
itated the Willow season wai longer thtn requested. It was suggest'
ed the seuon ihould remain the
same next ytar. The Blut grouie
seeson thii yur It Sept. lt to Oot.
IS. Willow or Ruffled grouie may
bt hunted Eut of Kootemy Lake
from Sept. II to 30, end Weit of
Kooenty Likt from Oct. 1 to 18.
Propoied by John Wallich that
the big limit for deer ihould be
lncreued to three bucks wai defeated. Mr. Wallich tnd A. H.
Noakei contended there were too
many deer. Othen irgued thit efforti hid been continued for yetn
to booit the number of deer, md to
Increue the limit now would counteract theit efforti,
Mooie had been seen ln the Dun-
cm recently, Preiident J. J. McEwen reported. Commissioner J.G.
Cunnlnghim hid told him, he added, thit cirlbou were Incretilng
quite rapidly.
WOULD ATTACK COAR8* FISH
How to Improve iport flihing in
diitrlct waten wai again a discussion highlight. Memberi urged
m ittack up coarie flih. Robert
Hickey ittted he uw them teeming at the mouth of Midge Creek
recently; William Marr reported
i ilmllir condltloit below Groh-
mjn Creek; md Preiident McEwen uid thi Little, Slocan was
the same.
Informed by the President that
the B. C. Gamt Commission and
the B. C. Security Commission were
working out a plan to net coarse
fish for Japanese to use ti food, the
Club voiced approval.
Feeling Unt  ill Rainbow trout
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]
TRANSPORTATION—Motor  Freight  Lines
.=
FREIGHT TRUCKS
LEAVE NELSON DAILY
Al 10:JO I.m.—Ixttpt Sunday
Trail Livery Co.
• M. H. MolVOR Prop.
Trail—Phone 135        Nelson—Phone 35
RECEIVES BIRTHDAY PRESENT FROM FATHER
Keith Pratt (_emmel, Markdale, Ont.,
waited a long time for this day. He is here
shown being sworn in at the R.C.A.F. recruiting centre, Ottawa. What's more, it'
is a proud father, Flight-Lieutenant Kenneth Shaw Gemmel, who swears his son
into t_e service. Keith, who enlisted as an
air gunner had four months with the British Merchant Marine and four months
with a Malton aircraft plant while he
waited for his 18th birthday to roll around
and his anticipated present air force
uniform. <•
eggs available ihould be used in
thli dlitrict, the Club on a motion
by C. W. Tyler decided to aik that
lale ol theie eggs to American game
authorities ihould cease until district wateri were adequately stock-
ed. Fishing should be developed
now ts a post-war touriit attraction,
it wai argued.
PONDS COMMENDED.
F. R. Butler of the B. C, Game
Commisiion in a letter warmly
commended the elforti of the Club,
in cooperation with the City of
Nelson, to Improve fishing by
building troot rearing pondi.
~_uggeition was made that Slocan
Pool should be opened for a brief
period of fishing, under supervision
to reduce the number of trout In the
pool. Robert Main said there were
hundreds of fish in the pool and expressed the fear disease might break
out among trem. Doubt was expressed that the the pool would
be opened, since the river was closed as wartime protection for West
Kootenay Power Sc Light Company
plants. .   ,
The Trail Club's resolution asking
that the open season for Beaver
Creek be changed to May 1-Aug. 31,
inatead of June 1-Sept. 15, wai lett
in the handi of delegate! to the
rone meeting.
Delegate! were also instructed to
support any motion designed to
block private eplitation of hunting
grounds or fishing waters, fearing
the public would be barred from
them as In other places, notably in
the Maritimes, where the practice
of granting leases has been instituted.
The figh^ to preserve Duck Lake
at Sirdar as a duck breeding
ground and concentration point
would come under this heading, lt
was suggested. -
Rosslands' resolution for today's
zone meeting urging that thd coyote bounty of 3 should be continued
through the year was indorsed.
 —^ 1	
McDonald Records
Four Mineral
Claims Near Ymir
A group of four claims all on the
divide between Porcupine ind Hidden Creeks about six milei South
west of Ymir have been recorded
by Alex McDonald. The claims recorded at the Mining Recorder's
Office in Nelson ln the last week,
were the Midnight. Granite, Gar-
netite, and Starlight.
Organization of Labor-Management
Boards lo Be Speeded Up
OTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP) — Ac-, tupport of affllitttd union! to tht
tion to speed organization ot Labor-Management Boirds, which
has been disappointingly slow,
will be announced ihortly, Elliott
M. Little, Director ol Nttlontl
[ SelecUve Service, told delegate!
to' the innutl co.. ^;ntlon of the
Cinidlan Congreii of Labor todty.
Discuising Labor - Management
Boardi In 1 queitljin period follow.
Ing the preientation of hla tddreu,
Mr. Little intimated that if necesiary compulsory measures would be
introduced to make the Government's recommenditiohi effective.
Two Important reiolution! presented' by Elroy Robson, Resolutions Committee Chairman, were
referred back to his committee for
further consideration.
One called for itrong collective
extent of calling Nitionil or Region
tl itrlkti. Tht committee hid recommended non-concurrenct ln Hit
resolution. While general feeling
wai that the Congresi licked tu-
thority to ctll ifflliited unioni out
on itrike and wai oppoied to itrlket
In wartime, tht reiolution wai lent
bick to illow framing In • form
which would call for other meaiurei of tupport.
The iecond resolution referred
• back wai the one ln which the
committee had moved concurrence uklng i Federal houri ol
work Act to provide "rapid conversion of essential taduitrlw to
t 168-hour week" providing con-
tinuoui operation. The reiolution lought in eighl-hour diy
with time and i half tor overtime
md double time foV the leventh
dsy.
No Instructor
for Air
Cadets, Rossldnd
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept. 15-Fol-
lowing the reading of i letter from
H. B. Perry. Minister of Education,
on cadet training and the organization of air cadet! at the School
Board meeting tonight, Principal A.
B. Jlompson expltined, "Air cadets have not been organized in
Rossland due tt the fact that tnere
is on one qualified to instruct."
He was not aware before, he Mid,
that ttte uniform would be -applied for air cadets.
Other cadets had been organized
on a sound baiis with Harry Smith
of the High School lUff aa instructor and George Grant Phyiicil
Education teicher. u hit assistant-
Many other teachen were tiking
pirt in the work, the Principil
stated.
This training Is compulsory for.
boys unleii phyiically unfit or a
written request li received trom
the parents. Mr. Thompion nld he
had tried to talk the girli out of
continuing with cadet, work ai he
thought they could ipend their
time  In  Club work iuch u Bed
Crou lewlng, but the glrli lntlited
they wanted their cadet corpi, tnd
todty 98 girli were on ptradt for
the first turnout, .
Signalling, firit aid and homt
nuriing were given on school time
ai regular claiiei. A check for
$82.50 was reported received by Mr.
Thompson for uniform maintenance.
Sunshine Bay
Sunshine bay, b. c.-Mn. J.
Sewell hu returned from Kimberley where the viilted her ion md
daughter-ln-liw, Mr. md Mrs. Jack
Sewell.
Mr. and Mn. Jack Ttteson .of
TraU visited Mr. ind Mrs. R. Maida
at the weekend.
F. H. Smith ot Vancouver ipent a
short time it his ranch here.
Mr. ind Mn. Fred Neale were
Nelion viiiton.
Mri. Jack Jolliffe and ion were
gueiti ot W. H. Thomai ind Min
Thomai.
Mr. ind Mn. H. C. Cime iri
guesti of Mn. J. Yitemm it South
Slocin.
Rock Mildi of Trill spent the
pait few diyt with hii fimily here.
Fred Franwn of South Slocan
viilted hii fimily it the weekend.
Mr. and Mri. Albert Fletcher ind
family of Nelson spent the weekend
as gueiti of Mn. Fletcher'! mother,
Mra. P. Sewell.
Barges Blasted; Ships,
Pounded for
Third Time in Week
ALUED HEADQUARTERS IN
AUSTRALIA, Sept. 16 IWednetdty)
(AP)   —  Allied  air  forcei  again
smashed   at   {he   Japaneie   bases
ln Ntw Gulnei md ground patroli
In tht Owen Stanley mountain!
were more active yeiterday but
the general iltuation remained unchanged, a communique said todty.
Buna, tht base from which the
Japaneie operating in the Owen
Stanley range get their supplies,
wai bombed heavily and a number
of flrea started. The attack was directed tt lupply Instillation! and
ditptrttl treti.
Enemy bargei dn lhe beach alio
were bombed. Two anti-aircraft
bttterlte were illenced.'.Ai in lev-
ertl recent ttticki, no enemy lighten tttempted Interception.
For the third tlmt In t wttk
allied bomben itruck it ihlpplng
off tht Tinlmbir liltndi, Wilt
of Niw Guinea tnd North of Dtr-
wln, Auitralli. At Stmltkl a otr-
go thlp wu itvlrily dtmtgtd by
t direct hit en thl itirn. One
plane wit mining tfter thli it-
tick.
Heavy bomben also attacked ihlpplng in the harbor at Rabiul, New
Britain, A Urge ship wu observed
burning tatter the attack.
in thit attick t strong force of
Japanese Zero fighters Intercepted
the bomben ind an air battle took
place. One Jap plane wu shot down
ind one allied machine wu reported miulng.
Through trains
Slightly Later
on Winter Time
Winter timetable ol the Cinidlin
Ptclfic, that will be effective Sept
27, will mike the through train
lervlce it Nelson slightly liter, except ln the one instance of the departure of the eaitbound.
Train No. 11, the Incoming Kettle Valley, will arrive from Penticton It 7:50 p. m., instead of It 7:20
It will proceed Eait from Nelion, however, it 1:30 am., u it
pretenl
No. 11, from the Eut, wllf ir
rive it Nelion tt 9:55 i.m., or 10
minutei liter thin it preient.
Iti departure for the Weit will
be at 10:20 a.m., or 15 minutei later than the preient ichedule.
ARTILLERY DUEL tN THE DESERT
A British gun crew ia ahown in action in the desert on the El Alamein front,
where artillery duels are In progress almost all the time. The gun craw is under
enemy shellfire aa they blue away with
their 25-pounder. This gun ia saidrto be
very effective as a jtank atopper. j
i.
CASTLEGAR
CASTLEGAR, B.C.-Willltm DeFoe wu ■ visitor to Cutlegar.
Mr. ind Mra. Jick Brown ind
diughter Patiy ot Vincouver were
guesti of Mn. Brown'i uncle ind
lunt, Mr. ind Mn. J. Ltwion/ '
Mr. ind Mn. George Duncm hive
returned from their wedding trl[_
Mn. J. Maion of Vincouver li
vlstlng hei" brother and iliter-ln-
liw, Mr. ind Mn, B. Truuler.
Fred Jenki of Arrowhetd is viiiting relative! and renewing ic-
quaintancei.
Mn. Kenneth Appleby and Infant diughter Gill hive returned
from Trall-Tidinic HoipittL
Mr. ind Mn. Nick Simmoni ind
daughter Mir]ori« hive taken up
reildenc* in Crocketvllle.
Mn. R. Smith wu t viiltor to
Trail.
Mill Carol Davii of Riondel li
a gueit of her brother ind iliter-
ln-liw, Mr. ind Mn. I,. Dtvli.
Mra. Dyck of Ronon. Suk., is I
guett of her ion ind diughter-in-
ltw, Mr. ind Mn. John Dyck.
On Sept. 11, Mn. L. Wition enter-
talned in honor of her ion Billy,
on hli fifth birthdiy. Gimei were
enjoyed followed by i peanut hunt
md fivora, then luppeT. Guesti
pruent were Leon DeVoln, Join
Pitton. Bobby Wition, Jickie Hin-
lon, Divld ind Stanley Follp. Jimmy Pitton, Jerry Howe ind Billy
Patton.
' Group Nn. 1 Refugee Sewing ind
Knitting Club, the memberi m«t
at the home ot Mn. R, A. D. Wer.
A lovely knitted iult wu turned in.
Memben preient were Mri. W.
Rigby. Mrs. R. A. D. Weit, Mn. J.
Morrlion. Mn S. Wllion, Mn. J.
P. Taylor ind Mri. Morey.
Group No. Ill Refugee Sewing
ind Knitting Club met tt thi home
fo Mn. L. Wilion. A new member,
Mri. N. Byitrom. wu welcomed.
Thoie present were Mn. I. Ped«non,
Mn. L. Wation, Mn. H. Merrifield.
Mrs K Rigby ind Mn. N. Byitrom
On Sept, » Leon DeVoln celebrated hli fifth birthdiy when hi
entertained hli friendi it > tupper it the home of hli pirerti,
Conittbli ind Mrt. J. L. DeVoln.
Gimei ind tinging were enjoyed
tfter which nipper wu ierved.
Tht birthdiy cike wu decorated
oln pink. Ouwtt prtitnt wert: Jon
McArthur, Jury Ho»», Bobby
Wition, Freddy Hotltttir, Billy
Wition tnd Jickie Hinion.
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Principal Named
A.R.P. Warden
Rosiland Schools
ROSSLAND, B.C., Sept. it—
Prlnclptl E. E. Perklni wu Informed tt tonight'! School Botrd mttt-
Ing thai tht loctl A.R.P. htd dtfln-
Kelt iccepted tht Botrd'i lUggei-
tlon thtt ht bt ntmtd u School
Wirden. Chairman Arthur Sno^>
ball, ln delegating the responsibility to Prlnclptl Pirkioi, romtrktd
that "It Jtp bombi were dropptd
on Oregon ltrt night, they could bt
dropped on Rossland inytime."
Mr. Perkins. McLeen School Principal, slid he hoped to hive i meeting of the. stiff of the two icholi,
High md McLein very loon, ind
mike AB P. the major topic,
 a ______________   _,
U.S. Bombers Attack
Crete Harbor
CAIRO, Sept. It (AP)-Heavy
United Statei bomben mad- a daylight attack yeiterdiy on dock facllltlei md ihlpplng in Sudt Bay,
Crete, hitting one ihip and pout
biy i iecond, United Statei Army
Air Force Headquarten announced
tonight.
Bombs were teen exploding In tht
dock irea, but the reiulti were not
observed. The dlanei encountered
heavy anti-aircraft fire but no enemy tighten. All American planei
returned iifely to their bues.
PROCTER
Prior lo the war. India rtlttd tht
moit cattle, China the moit hogs,
Auitrtlll tht moit iheep.
PROCTER,  B. C—Mr. end Mri.
Alec McPhee were Nelion motorlili
Thursdiy.
Mrs. J. Soleckl ol Moyie wu I
Procter  visiter.
Mn. C. Cronin hid u 1 gueit
Mn. R. WUUirai of Nelion for i ftw
diys.
Mr. and Mn. A. MacLeod md
daughters were weekend viiiton
it their Summer ho_» here.
Misa, Peggy McLeod who ittindi
Nelson high ichool vUited ber ptrenti over the weekend.
Min Francei McMullen of Nelion visited her ptrenti it thi weekend.
Mr. ind Mn. Piul Munch of Tye
spent the weekend it the Outlet.
Graham McMullen hu returned
to Nelson after viiiting it Procter
for the weekend.
C. Taylor and Derry Diwion who
attend high ichool it Nilion were
weekend guesls of the former's pu-
ents, Mr. «nd Mn. D. Tiylor of
Procter.
Mn. T. Whiton ind ion Geoff
were guest! of Mr. ind Mn D. Bell
on Sundiy.
Edna M. Spring. Bernard Spring,
Adriin Jonei ind Mn. A. Currier
motored here on Sundiy to viiit
Mr. md Mri. A. E. Croiby.
Mr. and Mn. W. Mllli hid u •
gueit their ion. V. Milli of Truitvili
ind TralL W. MHU returned here
wilh hli mn after ipending i f«w
diyi it Trail.
Douglu Mile of Nelson wu i viiltor it Procter.
R. S. Riycock of Winnipeg wui
viiltor at the Outlet Hotel.
Mn. David Bell lefi for Trill on
Sundty where iht will ipend 1
few dayi.
H. R. Boird of Howier ir.d W W
Idleni of Nelton ire gueiti it the
Outlet Hotel.
R H- Boddington hid u i gueit
D. S:ewir| of Cutlegir Sundiy.
Mr. Rom of Prince Rupert n •
viiitor it the Outlet.
Mr. md Mn Miwdiley ind their
diughter Vida motored h«r« from
Willow Point on Monday to vlilt
R. H Boddln»ton.
NIGHT BALL
INTERNATIONAL
Montreil 3, Syricuu I.
(Syncuii   lendi   I-O  In   four-ot-
itven iirlti).
AMERICAN   ASSOCIATION
Milwaukee It. Toledo I
iThledo   leidi  3-3  In  leml final
playotti).
(6 Young Women
Register
Here In Two Days
Twenty-four Nelson District women, tged 10 to M lncluiivt, regiitered tt tht Ntlion offlet ol tht National Selective Servict Tuesday,
tbt second dty of tht nttlontl reglltratlon. No returns on regittratloni
wert received from Dlitrict Poit-
mitten.
Tuesday'i registration lifted to
48 tht number of young women to
rtport tt tht Nelion office. To ttc-
ilit^te registration women have reglitered on dayi tet tocordlng to
their surname initial. Manager i . |
S. Livingstone hu called tor those
ln the H to L group to regliter today.
All women born In the yean U1B
to 1922 Inclusive, who do not already hold unemployment lniur-
ince cards, or who hold cards, but
Ut not tn insurable occupations,
trt required to regliter.
Dlitrict poet officii htvt been
uked to rtport returns on their reglitntloni to Selectlva Service of-
fleet io that lt U expected figures
will be Increased considerably it
tach offlet when these come In.
Rossland Ready
for Sportsmen
ROSSLAND, B. O, Sept. 16-:
The Rosalind Rod md Gun Club
U ill set for the zone meeting to be
held here Wednesday.
Tht meting, which starts at i
p.m. tn tht Odd Fellows' Hall,
will be -tended by delegates trom
Nelion, Trttl, Kulo, New Denver,
Gray Crtek, md other polnti, it It
expected md will also bt open to
the intereited public The banquet
bu been planned for B0.
Following the banquet fllmi on •
"Wild Life", "Ducki Unlimited,"
ud other picturei will be ihown
to the public tnd memben.
It ii expected that ln addition to
game wirden.., J. Cunningham.
Commiuioner ind C H. Robinson,
Inspector of Fisheries, tnd A. F -
Sinclair, Inipector of tht game
branch, will be ln attendance.
DODDS
KIDNEY
PILLS
«*?
WHAT IS
ROCKCAS?
Rnckjn Ii ntturtl gu condini.
•d In hindy iteel eontilmn that
ctn bt tiken tnywhirt—It tht
ttiy or In tht country.
It prevldtt ta* eonvinlintt
mywhirt Juit u though you
wtrt oonmcttd to city gu milni
Phone 666
Kootenay Plumbing
fr Heating Co., Lta,
ttt Bikir It
_______
T
 	
Canadian
;■-■■
ead F
in","'
LONDON, Sept. .15 (CP). - A
itrong force tf Britlih tnd Ctnidltn bomben lut night Itttektd
Wllhtlmihtven, chief German nivil ttitlon on tht North ltt, ind
kindled flru which tnt participating Ctntditn pilot uid were
left ipreiding "right bing In tht
middle of tht docki."     '
- '■r.vtv
-torn thii assault—by perhips
hundreds of bomben—only' two
raiden wert loit, tht Air Mlniitry
laid. Tbt Wilhelmihiven ittack wu
the seeond In u miny nlghti ind
the ninth thli month upon Germany.
Wllhelmshtvtn, BO mile! airline
Northwest of Bremen, tht miin target the night before, Is tht chief
German naval itation on tht North
Set.
The oomttnt "pounding of Germany marked ■ full swing of the
pendulum trom two yetn tgo whtn
lt wu Britain which undtrwtnt iuc-
ceulve smashing attacki.
Today la the iecond anniversary
of the Battle of Britain's climax and
Allied air chlefi commemorated the
event with tht promise thtt their
air.armadas would help destroy and
defeat the Axil enemiei.
The Berlin report wld "Firea were
itarted and iome damage wu cauied to building! mainly in Uie residential district" Four attacking
bomben were clilmed to hive been
ihot down.
The ittack lait night wu the
ninth carried out over Germany by
THE
EMPIRE
BUILDER
Eastward from Seattle the Empire Builder
offers through tervice to Chicago an the
following convenient schedule.
Lv. Seattle 10:15 PM
Ly. Spokane 8:00 AM
Ar. Havre 11:1$ PM
Ar. Fargo 3:55 PM
Ar. Minneapofil 10:00 PM
Ar. St Paul 10:30 PM
Ar. Chicago 8:40 AM
Your choice of coaches, Tourist and Standard Pullman aleeping car accommodations.
All are completely air-conditioned, and
those famous Oreat Northern meali are
terved in the dining car.
For further lnfornuuoo, nu
W. 6. HAROLD, Agent
667 Wirt tt. Phone 57
\ j_*W ^*« /Mm MM-TM
EMPIRE BUILDER
HOW MUCH -a
Ahouldifou poii 3
FOR LIFE INSURANCE:-,
Kormilly, thli could itart a good argument.
BUT ...TIMES ARE NOT NORMAL
UidoM} dsmuvuk thai
Wl PUT "FlItST TWNCS .HUT"
First... We are a LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY. The investment or savings part of this business came later!
Our job li to furnlih you ind youn with needed protection for the least money so you cm devote every
pouible dollar to buying for victory.
Todiy-rt li your Job to buy for victory by putting
every dollar you em into Wir Sivlng certlficitei md
Victory Bondil
Thit'i why we recommend wartime buying of thli
low-nte term protection for the duntlon of thi wir:
QUARTERLY RATES per $10,000
Ag«
Rat.
Age
Rate
20 .
. $20.20
40 .
. $26.10
25 .
.    21.00
45  .
.    3110
30 .
.    22.00
50 .
.    43.00
35 .
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55 .
.    62,10
"A/rrr? Pence nf Mind Per Prrnnium Dollar*'
Llc*n*d under  Domin inn Government  Iniurine* Art
Full Ftetfrve Dfpo»ited with the Dominion Government
STUART AGENCIES
T A. STUART. Mgr
577 like, Strtet
Hmm 980
Mill jour nimt. tge ind oecupitlon. tnd without obligation to you. pirtlculm will be furniihed regirding
thli .Special Plin  It coiti nothing to lnrettlgttt.
Nim«       _
Aidrm      City A Prov. 	
A(e. Occupation     .
tht RAF. ln tht tint 14 night of
September. '    •
' lyALAN RANDAL
(Ctntditn Prtu Stiff Writer)
LONDON, Stpt. 15 (OP Clblf.-
R.CAJ. bombtr crtwt returning
from ltit nlgbt'i raid on Wllhtlmi-
haven reported damige In the heirt
ol the port'i dock trtti.
"1 could iee firei ipreading right
bang In tht middle of tht docki,"
nld Sgt Fred Wood of Edmonton
after Ml 19th operational trip.
US. Hold Power
In West Pacific
for Time Being
WASHINGTON, Stpt. IS <AP).-
Reir Admiral W. H. Blandy, Just
back from I 26,000-mile Inspection
trip, dedtrtd todty thtt United
States forcti preieiitly hold the bal-
ance of itriklng power in the Weitern Piclfic.
Reir Admiral Blandy, Navy Ord-
ntnet Chief who talked with re-
porteri at Nivy Secretiry Frank
Knox's Preu conference, said he ll
not "bold enough" to make iny fore-
casls of the future Pacific si ty a tlm
but thtt "for the time being, moit'
certainly," the United Statei hold
the balance of military tnd naval
itriklng power there over Japan.
He had been uked "Are we in
position to hold the Japi against
anything they might throw?"
"Yei," he replied, "I think we
are. But we can't do it by merely
holding. We've got to keep puihing.
The beit defence ii a itrong offence.
We em't remain itatlc."
Sloan Report
'
Would Pay Higher
Allowance Under
Compensation Act
KIMBERLEY
H________Y, B. C-MItt Mtry
OtCteco rtturntd to' her home at
Blalrmore after viiiting her listers
Mn. Rtdiiky tnd Mn. M. Fabro.
Stuirt McClurt left for Calgary
laat week.
Mn. Leo Johnitone returned home
from Fernle where the vitited her
litter, Mn. Jimes Shaw.
Mn. D. Flike who hu been viiiting .A. Willlamion ltft for her
home tt Spokane.
Mr.. tod Mn. J. McGregor, received word thtt thtlr ion has arrived safely oveneai.
Mn. M. J. Halpin and daughter
Kathleen left for Vincouver lut
week. Miit Halpin will remain to
attend U.B.C.
Mn. F. Sutherland returned from
Ottiwa whtrt iht hit been viiiting
her ion-in-law tnd daughter, Mr.
and Mn. R. Green.
Mr. ind Mn. Norman Burdett ire
viiiting here, the former it itationed with tht R.CA.F. io Alberta,
Mn. W. J. Webb of Calgary it t
gueit of btr lon-in-liw ind daughter, Mr. tnd Mn. E. Whiitltcroft.
J. Forbn left for Vincouver to
raumt hit studies it tht U.B.C.
Mill W. Compton, Vincouver, ii
viiiting friendi here md attended
the Fillows-Hagen  wxidlng.
Mn. Milltr of Sao Francisco ll
viiiting ber ton-ln-law and daughter, Mr. and Mri. Clarence. Skor-
belm.
KASLO
KASLO, B. C. — Mn. M. Driver
left Sunday for Crinbrook, where
her marriage to Colin Cameron of
Fort Steele took place It tht Presbyterian manse, Monday morning.
The couple left to ipend • tew days
at Banff ind will tike up reiidence
at Win,
Mri. W. English entertained it in
enjoyible bridge it her home Stturdty evening, honoring Mri. M.
SindiUndi, who ii leaving ihortly
to ipend tht Winter ln California
Playen wen Mri. G. Gibion, Mri.
Roy Filmi, Mn. J. Papworth. Mra
Frank Helme. Mn. G. Bowker, Mlu
E. Gelgerich, Mill M. Sinclair and
Miu Neti Munn. High icon went
to Mrs. Fihrnl, coniolitlon to Mn.
Helme. A ipecial prize wu given
to tbe gueit of honor.
Miyor Roy E..Green hu left to
attend thi Union of Municipalities
at Kamloopi.
Mr. md Mn. A. B Robertion ind
Mn. M Beattie of Nelson md Mr.
•nd Mri. A. L. McConnell of Vincouver, who in thtlr guesti. motored to Kulo Stturdty.
MUt Dorli Sutherltnd of Balfour
wu ■ guett of her ptrenti. Mr. ind
Mn. G. K Sutherland, it the weekend.
Bert South left Sundiy for Cilgary, to report to thi R.C.A.F. Mn.
South. Mn. T. Homer, Mn. F. Hill
•nd Mn. J. R Ttnkeu ind Billie,
•ccompinird him ii fir u Gray
Creek.
Mr. ind Mri J. R Billey of Nelson wen weekend gueiti In the
city.
Mr. ind Mn A. Vinde Cuteyen
hid ii their gueit, the former'i
brother Leo, of the RC.AF.. Vmcouver. He returned to hli duties
Mondiy.
Mr. ind Mri It Peeblu of Nelion
viilted Kulo it thi weekend.
Viiiton In Kulo recently were
Mr. end Mri J B. Ony of Nelion.
Mr. and Mn. N. H. Bradley ud
ion Roy of Ltthbridge. ltft Monday irtir ii.tril weeki holidiy In
Kulo Thty will vlilt Mr. ud Mrs.
I- S Bradley In Nllion before rt-
umlng home.
After lerenl weeki ipent with
her parents Mr. ind Mn. W. J.
Roberti In Kulo, Mn. G. Paul, hu
left for her home In Trill
VICTORIA. Stpt IS (CP). - In-
creaaed allowance! for perioni receiving compensation undtr terms
of tht Workmen'! Compensation Act
tnd their dependent! are recommended ln the report ot Mr. Juitlce
Gordon Sloan, who ai commisiioner
conducted 152-day Inquiry throughout Britiih Columbii into worklngi
of the tct. Hii report, covering 400
closely-typed pages, wu released
today.
Mr. Juitlce Sloan quoted chief
witnesses at the Inquiry to the effect the Board wu fair ind lmparr
till and noted that while from 1917
to 1M1, incluilve approximately fTfc-'
000,000 had been paid out in com-
peniation awirdi and medical aid,
only one-tenth of 1 per cent of
hundredi of thousand! of personi
Involved had made any complaint to
the Board.
Recommendationi of the report
included:
1. Thit al lowinoei be lncreued.
2. That the Botrd bt permitted
to order md ply for chiropractic
treatment to compematlon CIMI.
3. That further itudy it given
to the treatment ef neurotic caiet
from • medical md legal viewpoint
4. Th 11 workmen Inotpioltited
by tlllot dutt In tny Induitry bt
eomptnilttd.
6. Thit • rehabilitation fund be
eitabllihed.
t. Thit men brought to Vincouver fer medical extmlnitlon
bt paid • ptr diem illowmot of
$2.60 In addition to travelling ex-
peniu tnd time lou compematlon benefit!.
7. Thit the Boird bl tmpowtred
to adjust the contribution of
workmen (now one cent per day)
to the medicil lid fund from time
to time to iniurt distribution ef
tht cost between workmen md
tiiuiibli Induitrlei on t fair
bull.
8. Thtt the prtitnt method of
determining • workman'i average
earningi be retained, but thit In
"time lou" clilmi fof ihort pV
rlodi In leuoml occupitlom.
compematlon might be bind on
the actual wage it the tlmt of the
tocidtnt.
Mr. Juitlce Sloan recommended
that "in conformity with genenl
wage leveli In thli Province" it
would be in the public intereit to
Increaie the preient maximum wage
level tf which a workmen may participate in the icheme from $2000
to $2500 ind the weekly minum
compeniation from $10 weekly to
$12.50 unleii that exceedi the workmen'! iverage earningi.
The report ilio recommended increased allowance! ln many respects
for dependent!. No recommendation
wu mtde regirding a cost-of-living
bonus in view of the feet that when
a worker ii receiving the bonui lt
ii coniidered when computing compematlon, but the report iaid "the
sorry plight which the ihrinking
dollar may viiit on i diiabled workman ii lomething which ihould be
alleviated." Such aulstance, however, wai seen as "a matter of governmental policy."
In connection with workers killed
ln Induitry, the report luggeited
thit the definition of dependents be
extended to Include i wife; huiband, parent or child who is ible to
satisfy the Board he or she had reasonable expectancy of pecuniary
benefit from the continuance of life
of the deceased workman. In iuch
caiei award! not exceeding $1000
might bt mtdt it tht Board- discretion.    ,
Tht report, dealt with tht B.C.
Hospital Anocittion'i objection to
the statutory power of the Botrd to
fix tht tmount ptyablt to hoipltil!
for lervlces rendered ln compensation cases and deductions madt by
tht Botrd from hospital account!.
Tht commissioner wu ot the opinion it would not be ln the public intereit to permit hospitals to havt a
free tnd unrestricted right to chtrge
the Board whatever ratei they
deemed expedient, ud that deduction! made by the Board did not
"reflect an arbitrary qt capricloui
policy ln regard to hoipital items."
In recommending that tne Board
be empowered to adjust the contribution! of workmen to the fund, Mr.
Juitice Sloan noted that ln 1919
workmen contributed 73-15 per cent
of the medical lid fund while in
1941 there contribution wai 35.99
per cent.
' In regard to me evaluation of incapacity, the commisiioner found
the Board'! policy wai not in accordance with the act, as the method adopted by the Board Ignored
the personal ability of the injured
man to earn hli living in some employment or buiineu lultable to his
reiidual capacity, and in many caies
wu paying the man more than he
wat entitled.
Mr. Justice Sloan recommended
adoption of an Ontario statute which
readi: "Where deemed Juit, the Impairment of earning capacity may
be eitlmited from the nature of the
Injury, having alwayi ln view the
workman'i fitneia to continue the
employment ln which he wai injured or to adapt himielf to some
other lultable occupation."
The report poted the British Columbia ict wai the only one In Canada lacking a fund for rehabilitation
purpoiei. The Board had done what
it could by commuting pensloni to
assist handicapped men in reestab-
lithlng themielvei ud Mr. Juitice
Slou uid It leemed to him the annual coit of iuch a icheme. eitlm-
ated at between $75,000 and $100,000,
could be ihared by the itate and the
employee and employer groupi. He
suggested that rehabilitation of in
jured worken be Under tihe direc
tion of the Board but-cloiely allied
with Returned Soldier Rehabilitation agencies.
The commisiioner did not recommend any extemion of the ict to
cover all indsutry and laid he law
no reaion to Introduce blanket cov
erage of Industrial diseases, the
scheduled coverage system being
uniform throughout Canada.
The report dealt wtth iuch occu
pational diseases as hernia, lead and
hemlock poisoning and silicosis, ad
vising in the case of the fint com
peniatlon be paid for auch proportion of hernial disability aa may rea.
lonably be attributable to the in-
Jury upon which the claim li based
The silicosis problem was exhaustively reviewed with the finding
that "the act be broadened to com
peniate silicotics incapacltated'from
silica dust in any industry in which
the Board ii satisfied the hazard
exliti."
Thii would extend the benefit! of
the ict to coal mineri and above
ground workera in metalliferous
mines where workmen are expoaed
to allies dust The report itresied
the need of an educational program
to acquaint mineri with the dust
hazard and Its prevention.
In connection with allowances, the
commiiiioner found that dependent
children ahould receive allowances
up to 18 yean and that the sum al
lowed (or eich dependent child bt I
lncreued from $7JO to $10 up to 16
yetn of tgt, whtn it ihould be
ttlitd to $12.50 t month "to provide
tome Incentive for children between tht Igti of 18 to 18 yean to
remain it Khool."
It wu also luggeited tbt maximum of $70 ptr month to t widow
•nd ftmlly bt increased to $90, and
tht allowance of $15 I month for
orphan children to $20 until the
child ls 18. i
It wu recommended thtt widow!
ud foiter mothen receive $100 in
addition to tht flnt compeniation
cheque, ud maximum allowances
to dependent ptrenti be Increaied
from $30 to $40 per month.
NILSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, SIPT. 16, 194]
Rossland Spends $84,500 8 Months;
May Jell Old Pump fo Sidney
Rehabilitation
Group Start
Tour on Monday
VICTORIA, Sept. 15 (CP). - A
reviled itinerary for the proposed
tour of the Interior of. BrltUh Columbia by members of the Post-war
Rehabilitation Council wai iaiued
today by the Chairman, Hon. H. G.
Perry.
The party will leave Vancouver
next Monday and will hold hearings
In Salmon Arm and Kamloopi on
Tuesday. They will be in Vernon
and Kelowna on Wedneiday and In
Penticton on Thunday. Friday will
be spent in Grand Forki and Saturday in Trail, Caatlegar and Nelion.
On Sunday. September 27, a hearing will be held In Creston, according to the ichedule, and on September 28 in Fernie and Cranbrook. The
party will be In Kimberley on September 28, and the following day ln
Golden and Rei^lstoke. On Thunday. October 1, a meeting will be
held ln Llllooet, and on the following day in Pemberton. From Pem-
uerton the members of the Council
will return to Vancouver.
II Public Works
Projects Get
Council Approval
Laying of i tar-macadam nirlaee
on Willow Street from Front to
High Street wai authorized b ytne
City Council Monday night. The
other Public Worki projecti ilio
were approved.
Filling with rock and gravel to
raise the grade of the lane between
Delbruck and Beailey Streeti West
of Stmley, and grading of the lane
between Falli and Railway Streeti
North of Biker to take can of
surface water were projecti approved on recommendation of the
Public Worki Committee.
Six lidewalk Jobs uiing tar pre-
mix were' authorized u follows:
West ilde of Hendryx Street,
South of Baker, part only.
West side of Cedar Street, Nortn
of Vernon, part only.
North side of High Street, acrosi
Pine Street inteneotion.
South side of Daviei Street, Eait
of Nelson Avenue.
East lide of Railway Street, South
of Baker.
Eait lide of Hall Street, South of
Mill.
The Council authorized replacement of the walk on the West aide
of Hendryx Street, South of Hoover, with a four-foot board walk;
and alio authorized re-laying two-
plank sidewalk on the East aide
of Railway Street in Block 170.
Clearance Croup
of DRESSES
Here'i extra value tor Wednes
WEDNESDAY
MORNING
-SPECIALS-]
$1.1
diy morning ihoppenl Dressy
■Ilk crepes and covert cloth
dressei in lizei  14 to 20. Reg.
$1.49
$2.39
$6.95.
GIRDLES
10 Clear .
A dlicontlnued line—marked to
half price for quick clearance.
zip fattened, elastic gussets at
sides. Slzei 25 to 27. Reg. $2.98.
WOMEN'S SHOES
Pair  	
Black and brown crushed leather
pumps with cubu heeli. Slzei 5
BOYS' BOOTS gnd
OXFORDS.   Pair..
Boyi' huiky booti and oxfordi
with lewn and nailed soles. Sizes
lltt to 5.
SPORT JACKETS
Two-ton*   	
79
$1.98
$2.95
Men'!   full   zipper   front,   slash
pocket!. Sizes 36 to 42. Reg. $5.50.
BOYS' DENIM       <M QQ
PANTS. Pair «pl.jO
Boyi' hard wearing grit denim
long pants. Size 8 to 14.
CAR SEAT
COVERS. Stt
Will Ht any ityle of front
Reg. $2.95.
QUEBEC HOOKED
RUGS.   Each  	
Wide variety of designs. Usefl
for t dozen purpose!.
ENGLISH HAND
TOWELS. Each .... 13
Handy size striped towels at
ipecial price.
STRIPED TERRY
TOWEUING.2 yds.  49'
18" wide good weight. Wedni
day.
STAMPED COODS Tt
OLEAR
Luncheon Cloths—Pink onl
—36 inches squaro. CA
Reg. 79c. To clear    «Vj
Dresser Sets — Yellow Ofj
gandy. Keg. 59c OQ.
To clear .., Otr
Print and Organdy r\pront>i%
Reg. 29c and 39e 0£
To clear «w
^TM*0i#T&iiU &»mpaKg.)jf
incut-Omit tit ram MM.
Disturbances In India Showed Wei
' *   - r **•**
Planned Previous Organization
TOWERS NAMED CHIEF
U.S. PACIFIC FLEET
WASHINGTON, Sept 15 (AP).-
Rear Admiral John H. Toweri,
Chief of the United Statei Navy's
Bureau of Aeronautics, hai been appointed to the newly created post
of "Commander Air Force, Pacific
Fleet," Navy Secretary Knox announced today, in a move giving
new recognition to the Navy's air
arm.
NEW DELHI, Sept. 15 (CP). —
Sir Reginald Maxwell, home member of the Vlceroy'i Council, told a
special teuton of the Legtilative
Assembly today that wldeipread attack! on railway! and other communication! took place during the
wave of disorder! which foUowed
the recent arreit of Mohandas K.
Gandhi.
Describing the attacki aa "an orgy
of deitruction" Sir Reginald told
the Aaiembly, however, that "lf the
enemy believe! our traniport is io
upset ai to make an attack on thii
country eaiier, he will be grievouily
disappointed," adding:
"The ittack on railway! and other communications itarte'd almoit
simultaneously in widely-ieparated
parti of India. That in itself It significant. It become! more ao when
one reflect! that much of the damage caused must have required implement., which could not have been
produced at a moment'i notice —
wire-cutteri to cut telegraph wirea,
spannen to remove flih-platei from
railway linei and so on.
"Even more lignificant ii the fact
of which we have coniiderable evidence, that great technical knowledge wai dliplayed by the Mbo-
teurs."
Sir Reginald told the Assembly
that the disturbances ihowed considerable organization.
"They might possibly have been
planned to lynchronize" with an
enemy attack, he iaid, adding that
another iuch outbreak would bt i
direct invitation to Japan to launch
an attack on India.
"In the area of the worst disorder, Bitiar, any dislocation of the
railway! would leriouily affect
troop movementi md prevent lending reinforcement! from Northern
India to the area moit exposed to
enemy invasion. Moreover, thla ll
the centre of India1! coll Industry
and the Inability to diipatch coal
would paralyze the transport industry throughout the country,
"Both polnti lupply evidence of
previoui organization, hiving the
moit linliter pouible motivei."
Sir Reginald praiied the work of
the police, 31 of whom were killed.
md British tnd Indian troopi w*i<
were called out it 90 placei. Kevi
Britiih soldiers were killed.
The population tt ltrgt did I
ahow any general Inclination to ttl
part in tht movement, with _
Moslem community tnd icheduli
castes itanding aloof.
U.J. Denounces
Deportation
of French Jews
WASHINGTON, Sept. II (AP) ■
Secretary of State Hull denouaet
today aa "revolting and fiendlil
the man deportation of Jewi tttt
unoccupied France Into Genua
handi, and laid ilso thit Iht VI. I
government wii watching clottl
tny plmi of Viohy to tend mad
thousand! of French liboren loi
Germiny.
Hull described it i failure tht *
tempt! of the Laval Government 1
persuade French workeri to go Int
Germany as volunteeri. Whetbl
the latest decree of the Vichy goi
ernment concerning conecriptton I
French labor is part of thli pia
to aid Germany ia a matter whlfl
this government ii studying itit
closeit itteivtion.
They're Dnf-Ti.mi,
Crispin, Im Dilickm
NEXT TIME ASK FC'
QUAKER
ROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. 14-The
City of Rossland disbursed JJ84.500
during the tint eight months of
thli yeir. the City Council letrned
Friday night from tht rtport of
Auditor Leilie Retd. For the same
period the City'i receipt!, from ill
tourcet, grossed $103,799. Mayor
J. I. Gordon deicribed the Cty'i
standing n "very good."
In reiponie to i letter from W.
J. McLein, C.P.R. Diviiion Superintendent at Nelion. asking the
City Us mpply 12 planki for the
railroad croeilng In the vicinity of
the Harr Lefevre reiidence. It waa
decided to reply thit the City did
nol feel thli to be Iti responsibility,
ore-man Roy Hancock stated the
crossing hid not prevlouily been
the City'i respomlbillty.
On lecommendatlon of tht Fire.
Wtttr tnd Light Commltttt, in ordtr wti iiithorized for 1000 feet
of htlf-lnch pipe tnd NO (ttt of
H-lnch pipe
Secretary A. T. OTlelly. of the
City Water Worki tt Sydney, B C
requetter • price on a beltdrlven
pump owned by Rouland, which !■
tt present In itorigt. Mr. Hancock
advised that tbe motor it initalled
in the mow plow, but that the
pump hai been well taken care of,
and wu only uied one Winted. The
complete unit for thli 50 hone
power pump wtt approximately
$2000.
It wai decided to write to the
B. C. Equipment Company asking
for avaluation. Memberi of the
Council felt htli ihould be wld lf
anyone needi lt.
COMFORT STATION PLANS
Specification! for the propoied
comofrt itation received from City
■Engineer R. W. Haggen provided
for fnme conitructlon, concrete
floon, four lavatorial, four wash
basins, two electric hoiters, the approximate coit lo be 1786.00. Mr.
Higgen gave ipproxiimte cott of
upkeep $27.00 ptr month during
Summtr, tnd $55.00 ptr month during Winter.
Tht queition trlling wtt witb
regards to flrt regulatloni 11 the
iltt li ln the fire zone, being between the bui depot tnd tht Midi
ton Building, the mttter wai turn
ed over to the Botrd of Worki tor
comideritlon.
Can twins be divorced ?
DavL* twins crmflrm hhonUny pmqflkat
l'cpsodenl Powder
make* teeth
JKs§ 32% BRIGHTER
^ _£•_£: ""' 1h:iu Ilio next leading brand
far thi safety
et    yttr
"'We're typicil mini, Athilie ud L "liven in our Airlines uniformi,people
Look ilike, dress alike, ihirt the ume begin to know nt ipin. My teeth he-
problemi of tnistikrn identity. We've cime httke tl iritht u my twin'i...
ilwiyi been together on everything... ihinlu to Pepsodent I It wu euy to
except ooo. Thit wit iht timt I nil wbo wu who... but oot foi long.
'divorced'my twin... fot .jest purpoiei Athilie hid enough of our trial matte
ontr, I twitched to Pepsodent Tooth lion. So lhe twitched to Periodent,
PoWer. Athilie went right on using too. And U ihe glidl Nothing but
mother well-known blind." Pepiodeot for ni from now oo."
O.   All fOOIH . OWDIII
TH MlH Oo. Il OHa* lu
• MwM let*
Ma Otk.r Dt.liWt
K B >»*» ,i
Imm m '«* 11% fcrtrttac
Am *• m.i ImAm k_Jl
Im   k\*rm   itwtt    pnAMM   mf
PEPSODENT POWDER
_________ ■■__..____.. ■     __.____a_, _..__.
.    -.    ■      -_______■! :-_._,.___' _---^^-tt
	
	
?
	
 -NELSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, SIPT. 16, 1942
Ime...
here's a Right
lay to Exercise
, ly IDA JEAN KAIN
In buiy timet like thttt you emit tfford to wtstt Ume exercWng.
It know that , and, you ctn't
Ap but itop and think there may
11 ttchniijU' that tutt down your
Eclat Umt.
Suppleneis ll t direct tttt of
meet, to let'i begin with the
Wtllne. When you itretch concen-
ttt the up-pull through the mid-
Mtn, in thtt expanu between
bi and hipi.
Keep your ihoulden down tnd
fltjeed but itretch between hlpi
Hrlbi untU you ictuaUy feel
liter and ilimmer.
'Then, when you have twitted
iound to the side, hold you hips
,utiely to front. Stand with feet
j or io inches apart, ind parallel,
ltd keep hipi front while twisting
I your wtirt.
finally, bend at your walit-but
md while  continuing  to  itretch
to. You're not Juit Irylng to reach
,ver and touch the floor. Anyone
, do that. What you want to do li
gtretch over and touch the floor
ith tht right twUt and upatretch.
SUnd erect with arms upatreched
most of the itretch between ribs
hips. Twltt to side. Now, bend.
j your ihoulden erect, itretch
i~again, and bend to the other
lie. The main point in illmming
nir waist ii to tug at the walit
luecles. in bending keep the itom-
[fc mueclei  pulled up,   the  hips
nder.
Miss Edna Willis
af Creston
Weds Navy Man
CIUBSTON, B. C.-Tht Metropoll
tin Unittd Church, Victorii, wil
tht icene of i quiet wedding, Aug.
10, when Edni Odem, youngest
diughter ot Mr. and Mn. 1. Willis of
Creston became tht bride Of Leonird Jtmtl Vivian, E.R.A., I..C.N.V.R.
tldltt ion of Mr. ind Mrs. J. L.
Vivian of Oalt, Ont, Thi brldt who
wu attended by Mill tilth Radar,
ol Fort Steele, won t floor length
gown of pale blut chiffon tnd t hit
to match. Htr bouquet wai of a
mixture ot asters and baby'i brttth.
The brideamald'i gown wti Of rose!
crtpt, tnd conage ot pink cirni-
tloni. Tht best mm wu Claire Q.
Courtney, Saskatoon, Suk. Tht
young couple will reiide in Victorii
for tht preient whtre tht groom
il stationed and later pltn to takt
up retidenct In Toronto.
_>Knowing how to do it is the sec-
gtt of making an exercise give renins. Here Mildred Cole, screen
jttrlet, shows the correct way to
Bit up-stretch. The pull up should
be concentrated through the mid-
Itction.
1
j vjaO™
. .-lit
JL^m
Don't Overlook
Egg Dishes
Though the United Kingdom li
taking some forty-fivo million doien
Canadian eggi thii yetr, increaied
production hai made the current
supply for home uie adequate.
Eggi trt light tnd nourishing,
tnd theres practlcilly no tnd to
the wiyi they mty bt ttrvtd.
So the white will be palatable and
tender, whether boiled or baktd,
eggs should be cooked at low temperature. For boiling, after w»ter
hu reached the boiling point turn
the heat low. When baked, ovin
tempertture ihould be modentt
(325 T. to 350 T.)
Omelet is a favorite egg dish that
lends Itself to many variation!.
PLAIN OMIUST.    .
For tub en. tdd ont til Iwpoon
top milk, - tetipoon ult tnd pep-
per if desired. Bett eggi illghtly.
Beat In milk and seasoning. Hett
one tablespoon dripping In frying
pan. Add eggi and cook Ilowly. Run
ipatula around edge lifting to allow uncooked portion to flow underneath. When set lncreMe hett to
brown lf deilred. Looeen omelet
from pan and fold one hilt over.
Serve on a warm plater.
JELLY OMELET:
Fold Jelly omelet, allow one t«»le-
ipoon of Jelly tor eich itrvlng.
Spread over top of omelet before
folding. Tart red Jelllei, iuch u red
current, are delicioui. ,
SPANISH OMELET :
One-qtiarter cup cooked tomitoei;
_ teaspoon each green pepper tnd
onion tnd one teispoon celery for
each serving. Cook ilowly until
celery Is tender. Pour over omelet
on serving platter.
low MMly ol
Thyroid Gland
Is Often Serious
By Lo8M Qlendenlng, M. D,
Wt wrott in Uit lut two trtlclei
thit week of tht function! ot tht
thyroid gland perfurmi in tht body,
Ud in lummary we uid thtt It
produce! t Mention which lotiv-
Ittt tvtry cell in tht body to t
certain rttt ol function.
No glmd or human being or living orgBnlim, however, jogi along
at tht Mint rttt tnd the thyroid
jometlmti product! in tsctm ot
secretion, thli mty corratpond to
the dtyi wh/m wt trt full of ptp
or In tht c*w ot ptoplt Wtt Hltltr
dicide to deeltre wtr.
Obvtrttly, It It naturil to iup-
pon thtt tometimti tht thyroid
glmd doei not produce u much secretion u normally. And thli ic-
tutUy htpptni in Ntturt. Tht rt-
mtt it Juit tht oppotltt of lncreued
Mention—tht ptrfop effected In-
itead ot btlng lull of pep is sluggish md sleepy.
SYMPTOM*
Instead of t tut pulie he hu •
•low pulse. Instead ot feeling wirm,
and needing leii clothes ind bed
clothe! thtn normal, be nteai more
tnd will lit with long-tltevtd underwear on tht hottut dty. He hu
in unmponitvo txpreulon on hii
face tnd falli asleep tully. Ht In-
creaies in weight. HU bull metabolism ii low.
Thii condition whloh oomei on lor
iome ptoplt ln middlt age and ii
calltd myxotdtmt ii ofttn very
untortunttt for tht victims because
in io many lntltncei nobody ln the
funlly or tmong tht frltndi understand! what U rtally happening.
Women tre tifllrttd mort often
thtn men, in* I htvt known in-
standi whtn tht condition went on
and grew progrtulyily wont tor
yeari, ud evtry ont ttld—"Ohl
gnndmi, or mother, or Aunt Llule
ls getting old. She doesn't want to
get around my more. She li driw-
lng Into henelf. She Juit likes to »t
by the lire. She im't intereited in
thing! tny more"—md ilmtlir ex-
prealoni, when tU the poor thing
needi li i few grain! of thyroid ex-
trict to make her Juit ai normal as
inybody.
Tea Surplus Will
Be Allocated
.o United Nations
LONDON, Btpt. 15 (Cl")-Lord
Woolton, Minlittr ol Food, innounced todty thtt henceforth that mlniitry will allocate tht emlre exportable lurplui of ttt crops ln India
Ceylpn.^tnd Eut Africa to the United Natl'oiii and neutral countrlei.
Tht allocations will bt mtdt ln
ar,cordince with recommendations
ol tht ttt committee of tht combine
food boardi, which lncludei repre-
wntatlvat of Britain, the Donflnioni,
the Unittd States and Russia.
He wirned Uie public thtt it
might receive ltu, rather than mort
tet through Brltlth adniiniitratlon
of tht crop becauie the United
Kingdom agreed to reduce ltl own
requirement! in order to obtain t
ftlr diitrlbutlon.
Otter of Hew Job
Puzzles Family
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Deir Miu Ttlrfix: Wt'vt been
married IJ y«t_s md have three
children. My husbind hu been
employed tt the ume Job for IJ
yean. Now he hu a chance at a
nuch better paying Job md he doei
not know whether to take It or not.
Th econdltlom of the new employment are iuch u he'i wanted to
work In all his life. Yet wt'rt both
tfrald it would last only for the
durtslon.
Would  lit be unwise to give up
in old Job for a new one, which,
while paying more, wouldn't last?
WORRIED.
Miny letten on this very question hive come to this column.
Boiled down to yet or no, It's a
quettloni for lndlvlduali themielvei to aniwer.
If people own their own home!
htvt t comfortable Ufe insurance,
txpettatlon of Inheriting money,
they ctn afford to take a new Job
In a more congenial environment at
better pay. If I mm is apt at hit
work, iuch i Job li Ukely to lead to
anotheT, after the duration. On the
other hand, If the head of the family hai nothing put by for a rainy
diy, arid h« hasn't plenty of Initiative, lt might be unwise to give
up • iteady Job for ihort-time employment, even though lt piyi better.
SERIAL STORY By ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES
YOU ARE THE ONE
or imall piece of wood to brace the
planki up at one end.
Use Frames In
(old Weather
By   DIAN   HALLIDAY
Either the hot bed or cold frame
or both can be used u storige
quirten during the eirly winter
months.
After the tint frost but before
danger of a hard freeze, endive,
lettuce, ohlcory, panley, iwlii
chard, celery md even ciuliflower
can be heeled ln Uie frames placed
close together. ,
Place a layer of lotie boardi over
,.  the planti and ventilate them on
LThe main point when doing th ^
Sending exersise to slim the waist
£to keep the stomach muscles pull-
ed up, the hlpi under.
Reviews Plons for
I Returned Men
'TORONTO, Sept. (15 (CP)-Pen-
I lions Minister Mackenzie told the
|Ww Amputations Board of Canada
Convention today it Is the national
Eurpose that men who have served
i the forces shall be able to return
civil life in a condition to hold
fihelr own in private employment,
I md able to pull their weight with
leny person anywhere.
i The minister reviewed arrange-
tttenti made for the care of the
ffijured after the  war, provisions
i|or  rehabilitation and reestablish-       Winttr use of (ramei in vie-
I ment, and programs for training for tory gardens
I tmployment and completion of edu- „...,,.     L_
L   ,r As   Illustrated  ln   the  Oirdtn
Graph, when aeven weither sell
in, cover over thi planki with • lay
er of itriw. To shed rilni or melting snow keep the sieh ovir the
straw. Another layer of pltnka or
boards cm be iet over the USh lf
neceisary.
The fnme ihould be bulked up
around the sides with comittlki.
leivei or itriw, covered with soil.
BLUCKW
SANDWICHES
Emergency Food For
Hungry Families
ALL thl fimily will pralie your
sandwiches if you will junt nvnid
"Bat tail*" by the sililitlmi of
11. P. Sauce. This in the aecret to
tppetlzlng sandwiches.
"Blackout" Handwlclie* are ths
latest wirtlme "newey". To make
tliani, whip tftgethtr V, Hi, of
craam cheese with 1 tableipooo of.
H. P. Since md V, Ublnpoon of
honeridlih; then lititt • &V_ oi,
em of chipped beef and 1 uMe-
ipoon of Witter until frlulid.
Break np fine lad idd to ot>M_t
Blxt.rt. Bpreid on buttlnd
brown bmd.
H. P. ll 1 fine old linilinh type,
thick, fruity uuce. It ii econom-
Icil oocauM It li concentrited.
Try It on mnt, fish, fowl, taltdt,
soups, itewi, etc. You'll be lur-
prised it the wonderful flavour It
give! foodi.
CHAPTER . ORTY-«EVIN
Mirg htd uid thit Tlbby looked
pale and Intereiting, u one ihould,
when In hospital. Tlbby wu not
lure ai to the "lntertitlng' pirt.
but ihe certainly looked pile
enough. She tried rubbing ■ little
rouge into her cheeki ind lhe put
on the prttty ihell pink bed-Jicket
thtt Steeni htd brought her. She
wu txptctlng Wtyne tnd » ihe
muit mtke lomt tttort to mrt of
"perk" up. She would hive to try
to put on a brtvt exterior, ilnce
her Interior felt to jittery.
When he finally came, ifter what
seemed houn ot waiting, not be
cauie of eigerneu, but beciuse of
her inxiely, Tibby felt more isham-
ed thin ever to think ihe hid dreaded Wiyne'» return ai ihe hid.
Al Mirg had predicted, he did
not itemed concerned with anything
as long at he found Tlbby ufe ind
sound. He did not even reproach
her for havlngtaken up the illver
ihip without uklng him and ln hli
absence. He did not to much as refer to It until Tlbby henelf brought
It up.
"It wu my fiuit," Tlbby nld,
with her cuitomiry honuty. "It
wu perfect flying witthtr, Wiyne.
Tht Ship wii ln perfect condition.
I don't know whtt htpptnid, even
—but I do know thit lt wu loroe-
thlng within mt thtt went wrong.
thit I did net wike up until lt wu
too late."
Thit wu the only exsllnitlon
Tibby could give. It htd bee lomething within herulf. She ihould
hive bien ible to have righted the
ihip tfter ill Wiyne'i pitlint, expert teichlng. Nothing hid gone
WTong with the motori. There hid
not bten iny dllturbince ln wind
or altitude. She htd been unitrung.
iipiit; iht bid not betn ilteplng
well, either. She htd not bten ln
ihipe, In other words, to pilot the
silver ship.
Wiyne ttld, hli ittil grly eyei
kind and understanding, "You're
not to think of thai Ai long is
you in ufe, my deir, nothing else
II of iny consequence Al for Ihi
■hip, I hid lt heivlly Insured, io
pliaie do not fret ibout It."
But then wis lomethlnj more
thit ihe muit tell him, hotiutijr.
without evulon. Thu wu Tibby'i
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
H_
dUnJLLftrX
cHouAmDwaL
■y MTIY NEWMAN
llllllllllllllllllllllll.llllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllllllllllllll
TODAY'S MINU
Pork Chopi     Muhid Potatoii
Muhtd Squish
Toned Green Siltd
Apple Sherbet
Tea or Coffee
APPLE  SHERBET
i mn imitated ivitoriled milk.
chilled. 2 tibleipooni limnt Juice,
J cupi iWMttDtd ipple liuci, Allied, duh nutmeg.
Whip chilled milk until very lUff.
fold1 ln  ltmon   Juice,  ippli uuce
ind   nutoitg.    Pour  tt 'once  Into
cold    freeilng    Inys    and   free it. I
Mtku _ OlnU. serving I or I
way It wu something harder to
iay than that admission of guilt,
yet ihe had to uy lt. "There'i
something elie," ihe laid, ber
brown eyei meeting his, "something Tm even sorrier ibout. Wayne
—yet lomething I must tell you."
"Surely it will keep!" Humor
lurked ibout hli hindsome mouth,
hli eyei milled back Ihto hen. '"Do
you like rosea? I told them, is soon
is I got the wire ibout the icci-
dent, to send all they had and to
keep on lending them. They look
more like you now than ever, my
sweet. Such delicate budi, their
tint mitchlrig that 10ft flush ln
your cheeki, the ihade of thit
frilly Jacket you're wearing."
"They're lovely," Tlbby iaid.
thanking him. But they had been
like the pearl ring, too magnificent,
too abundant They had literally
filled the imill, bare room, itlfling
It with their heidy, heivy fri-
Rrtfnce, io that, at night, Tlbby had
had to request the nurse to remove
them.
Beiides. although she could not
iay thu to Wayne, roiei were not
Tibbyi ftvorlte flower. She liked
lomething lesi culllvited, more
natural, likt mixed ptreniaU, or the
imill bifheh of vloleti thit hid
come from Tommy. Everyone hid
been io thoughtful—the Jacket
from Steeni, • bliket of fruit from
the more practlctl-mlnded Mirg,
i betutlful plmt from the glrli sht
hid worked with—even • card
from Misi Plcklepuu.
"Im afraid thli won't keep,"
Tlbby said .returning to ihe taik
ihe had set henelf. She htd gont
over md over the way ihe muit
tell him, but there wu only one
wiy. It might not icern the beit,
but i; really wu the klndeit. "I
cin't mirry you, Wiyne." Tlbby
nld limply, directly, u ihe htd
nld. once before, thit ihe would.
"I thought I could; or I wouldn't
hive let you think I wu going to.
I thought I cired for you enough,
but I find I wu mtitiken."
"I told you it would keep,'1 Wiyne
iild. Hli tone wu light, but she
bid not missed the look that bad
iwipt over hli face. It had nol been
itirpriie. Ho hid bein ifrild thit
It would be lomething like thli
thtt ihe hid to tell him. "You in
upiet now, my deir,' he told her.
"Not yet younelf. You cin't bt
lure of whit you wint. If It will
help, I promlle nol to try to hurry
you."
( TO IE CONTINUED)
•"To rtlm fetrut tf HON mY^v
Female Weakness
AND HE.P BUILD UP RED BLOOD!
,vi 1.\ftc\ iattiMMi to nlltrt
nook, n«in with wMk, Mi-vow,
blua fMllnai - in. Us functional
monthly dUturbanow. Th«y lim
help build up nd blood ind are l
tint Xante tar Wt itomich. Plnk-
bim'a TlbUU ire made rtpectlll,
■ Aw mo Ma Well worth try,n» I       _
Health...  •
Urge Moderation
ilYoulh
Takes Up Smoking
By CARRY  C.  MYERS,  . h.D.
I smoke. A pipeful lists for
tbout ont column. I otttn with I
didn't. It coiti monty. It'i a dirty
habit, md to lomt perioni one'!
imoklng li otfenilvt. Lift lniur-
met companlei advise thou thty
insure not to imoke, giving thli id-
vioe in termi or dona-- ird centi
to metr flrmi. Med:~ journtli
don't carry idvtrtliementi of tobicco.
Health authorltlei agree thtt
imoklng li most harmful during
the child's growth, and athletei who
observe the rulei of training don't
imoke. Indeed, iports htvt generally hid good tftect In keeping
iome youthi from imoklng.
i Religious appeals alio ire responsible for ■ certain percentage
of noh-smoklng youthi and adults.
Though we must admire those person! who becauie of religious teachings or obligations avoid tobacco
and  the  like, yet, by and  large,
thttt tnflutneer dt net MM tt bt
vtry grigt.
HEALTH APPEAL
Alio wt muit admit that ptftntal
oxamplt il | tutor, thit tht Jithn
ud mothir who don't imokt trt In
t mort fivorablt poiltion to win
their child not to imoke. However,
we need to recognize that our folk-
wiyi art iuch thit tbt UM of tobicco it genenlly considered u
belonging only to thou grown-up,
or neirly to. To tht child of 10
the parent cm uy thtt imoklng li
for big ptoplt with tbout u mud)
effect M to ity to U^t tot of Vut
that pickles ire not for, little chil'
dren.
Tht health argument, I bellevt, ll
the strongut. Practically all of
us ptrtnti, with thli argument In
mind, strongly . wish our children
would not imoke at all or not unUl
thty htvt fully grown.
COST OF IMOKINQ
I don't btlltvt wt havt emphi-
sired the argument of cost tnough.
Many t youth, especially if ht hli
learned to operate on in allowance
or budget, would not itart smoking
If he hid carefully countid tht tc-
tutl monty coit for cigarettes.
Let no parent luppeit nt ctn keep
hli child from imoklng merely by
commanding him not to imoke.
URGE MODERATION
Having dont your very best to
keep your Ma or diughttr from
imoklng, luppoit Hill child btglns
to smoke. Your ntxt step U to
Induct him or htr 10 imoke In mod-
eritlon, I hopt you dont ciuie tht
child to imoke clindeitlntly, tbuii
him, or tct cfflldlihly in tat' wiy
tbout hli imoklng. Better to htvt
your child lovt you ind imoke than
to despise you ind imoke anyway.
SILVIATON CHILDREN
«N)OY PICNIC
SILVEKTON, B. C. - Thi Silver.
ton 'Sundty ichool htld Id innual
lummtr ptrty Stturdty ifternoon
tt tht Municlpil Htll and adjoining playground. Undtr the iuper-
vllton oi the teichen, thl children
enjoyed gimei, followed by • iup*
ptr ot bot dolt, caki ind cocoi.
HARD WORKERS
ThU delicious (trial
hilpi knp yoa fit.
Gfvti 3 Important Btntflfi
IHtlpi prevent constipation
due to ink of bulk.
2 Suppliei uttfbl quintltln of
iron ud phoiphorui.
3 Wholesome, nourishing and
fall of delicioui flsvor.
POSTS
BtyLNFUKES
WITH OTHII .AITS OE WHIAT
Vi
"Today, with war hitting retail business in so many ways, I want the
kind of support from manufacturers
that I can see...the kind that goes
to work for me right here in town."
"I want adi that help me answer my customers'
questions and solve their wartime problems. When
a manufacturer runs ads like that in my local
tutvspaper, it really takes a big load off a retailer's
shoulders.,.and it's a service to my customers, too."
"Ntw products are helping a lot to fill die gaps on
my shelves. They help most, though, when they're
pushed by newspaper ads...ads that show all my
customers what they look liie, and tell them these
new items can be bought in stores like mine."
"How to toll isn't my whole problem any more.
I worry about what to jell, too...just u Mrs. Customer wonders what she can buy. The best way t
manufacturer can help us both is with newspaper
ads both she and I will be sure to read."
4.
"A manufacturer's newspaper ads show tie, too,
that he's itill mighty interested in my problems...
even though he's got plenty of his own. His salesman may not call so often...but as long as his newspaper ads are pitching, I know he's backing mc,"
Wide-awake retailers...here in town and oil ovtr Canada...ar* realising mer* and
mora this vital fact: In wartime especially, tht best support a manufacturer cen
glvt thorn is advertising in thoir local nawtpapori. In scores of now ways, manui
turors' newspaper advertising is hoi ping retailers enrry on through these crl
THE IUR.AU QF ADVERTISING • CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION • OF WHICH THIS NEWSPAPER IS A MEMSER
 	
.
You can't go
"all out" when
your feet are
"all in" so put
yourself in our
shoes.
R. Andrew
& Co.
Lenders In Foot Fashion
Witch for Our
Weekend Specials
SRADLEYS
MEAT  MARKET-Phoni 832
Horswill's
GROCERIES
The best service In town,
PHONE 235
(f It ti on tht tlr •
C. E. RADIO
will ftt lt.
NELSON ELECTRIC CO.
r     BLOUSES
Long _nd Short Sleeves
perfect for wear with your
New Fall Suit
i;     $1.95-$2.95
Fashion Fjrst Ltd.
Wartime Hint*...
Shoes Take on
New
l_._.
There'i going to bt t lot mort
walking, tht tire tnd gisoline lituation being whtt It It, Thtt won't
hurt anyone, but It doei bring to
tht fort tht queition ot being well
shod.
■ Regular polishing tnd tilt uit of
thot trees trt ot primary impor-
tance ln extending tht lift of footwear ud In maintaining thtlr tp-
pttrtnct.
Comfortable and becoming tbotl
thtt trt will cared for will prove
1 good Investment in health, mono;
(nd appearance. Extra ctrt in buying to Insure t good fit will mtln
iddtd lift to shoes.
Regular polishing II t flrtt rule
because good polish feeds tht lllth- j
tr, makei It pliable tnd protects
lt Wtt thoet trt tully put out of
shape to rubbers tnd giloshei
ihould be warn in wet weather.
When thoea gtt wet tnd muddy
wuh off tbt mud with t dimp
cloth tnd wlpt thtm dry. Insert
■hot treei or stuff well with newspaper tnd iijy ilowly but completely, away trom dlrtct hut, tnd polnti
it toon u they ire dry.
Whtn shoes irt not being worn
thty ihould bt kept In shape with
■hot treet. Replace soles juit u
loon u the outer ones wttr through
and have the heels itralghtened before the last it worn crooked.
NELSON SOCIAL
ww
Cleansing beauty-rich lather
freshens and tenet your skin
Cleanses deeply, ever se gently,
without slightest Irritation
Keeps yeu fragrantly dainty;
perfumed from Up te toe
C. W. Nelson Will
Take His Bride
to New Denver'
VERNON, B.C, Sept, l^The
home ot Sergt. and Mrs. R. S. Nelion of Vernon wai enfete Tueiday
Sept. 8 tor the nuptials of Mri. E.
M.   Reberger,   daughter   of   Mri.
D. A. Dewey tnd the late Mr. Dewey of Ltnglty Prairie, tnd Chirlei
W. Ntlion, ion of H. S. Ntlion, tnd
tht lltt Mn. Nelion ot Ntw Denver. Rev. R. 3. Lovt ot Armstrong
performed tbt ceremony, wltnetted
by Immediate relatives tnd Intimite
friendi. Tht roomi wtrt daintily
decorated with pink tnd whltt
streamers, tnd white wedding belli
combined with latt Summer flow<
en.
A floor-length (own ot Quetai
blut illk jersey, iccordion pletttd
wu tht choice of tht bride, witn
which tht wort t corsage ot whltt
carnations tnd pink roses, Mrs. R. S.
Nelson, ti mitron-of-honor, wort
t drew of printed blut theer, com'
pltmtnted with t oomgt ot roses
md eirnitions. Sergt. Ntlion wu
hli brother's best mm.
Tbt bride'i Ublt wu covered with
t lace cloth, decorated witb rosei
in varied ihidei ot pink tnd roie
tnd flinked by roie tapers. A three-
tier wtddlng cake, topped with
i miniature bride and groom was
tht central motif.
Mr. tnd Mri. Nelton left liter
for Kelownt, the bride travelling
in t nivy blue tult featuring i pin
stripe, and matching tccessoriei,
They will make their home in New
Denver.
Gueiti of Sgt tnd Mn. Nelion
for t few diys ire Mn. 0. A.
Dewey, mother of the bride, whoie
home ii ln the Fraser Villey ind
tht father of thi groom, H. S. Nelson of Ntw Denver.
Made wilh
OfaanJfUtty.
Nature's .Inert Beauty Aids
By MRS. M.
t Tht engagement il tnnounctd
ot Pimtlt Helen, younger diughtir
ot Mri. A. W. N. Tiylor ot Willow
Point, tnd tbt Ittt Lleut.-Colonel
Tiylor, C.S.I., to Auitln Oltt Wolff,
younger ton ot Mr. snd Mri. A. 0.
Wolff of St. John, Ntw Brumwlck.
Thl wtddlng ll to tike plice in
Ukt Charlu, LoulilSm, In October.
LA^JE-CRACK
t  Mr, tnd Mn. A, J, Crick of
Crinbrook, formerly of Nelson, announce tht wedding of thtlr third
diughter, Irene Maud, to Thomai
Herbert Lint, only Mh ot T. H. Lt_t
ot Vincouvtr. Tht wtddlng took
plice quietly tt tht homt of Rtv.
and Mri. A. S, Cribb In Crinbrook,
Stpt 11.
t W. G. Elidon wai In town from
Bonnington yesterday.
t Shoppen In tht city yeiterday Included Mrs. J, B. Fletcher
tnd htr daughter of Ainsworth.
i Mrs. N. Dosenberger of Sunihine Bty tnd young diughtir
Elaine ipent yeiterday ln town.
Telegrapher Otorgt Milne,
who ipent t week with hli ptrtnti
in Fairview, has lift for tht Cout
t Mr. md Mrs. Arthur Smith,
Ntlion Avenue, htvt u guest thtlr
ion Arthur, who hu rtturntd trom
Trail.
t E. H. H. Applewhaite ot Willow Point visited town yesterday.
. i Stpptr T. N. Wtttrtr of Chllliwick li t guest ot hit ptrenti.
VISITOR FROM COAST
e   Mlu Lilian Bennett ot Vtncouver ii viiiting her ptrenti, Mr.
and Mn. W. A. Bennett, 95 High
Strttt tnd plans to go to Trail today to spend t ftw dayi with ber
brother tnd ilster-ln-law. Mr. tnd
Mn. W. A. Bennett.
t Rev. M. C. T. Percival of Kailo
li i city viiltor.
t Delbert Smiley. R.C.N., hu returned to Vtneouvtr ifter visiting
hli parents, Mr. tnd Mrs. W. J.
Smiley, 14M Hill Mints Rotd.
e Robert Gerdti ot Sloctn City
spent yesterday In Nelion.
t Mrt. Roy Grihim of Bonnington visited town yesterday.
t Miss Abble Will ot U Frince
Creek .li visiting Trail.
LEAVES FOR COAST
t   Mlu Frincei Lincoln, Stinley
Strut leaves this morning for Vancouver.
t MUi Edni Kenjiedy, 202 Robion Strttt. rtturntd from two weeki
holidiy ln Lethbridge, Cilgary tnd
Binff.
t Mr. ind Mri. B. J. McGregor
of Bonnington visited town yeiter
if.
HONOR REBEKAH HEAD
t   Schuyler   Club   Put'   Noble
Orand of tht Rebekih Lodge inter-
VIGNEUX'
ttlntd Mondty tfttrnoon it tht
homt tt 114 Filli Strttt ot Mrs
Qecy Petty, honoring Mn. Btule
Bridge of Revelitoke, Grand President of tht Rebekih aisembly, I. 0.
0. F. Tht club members preiented
Mn. Bridge with a hindsome cut
(lm mirmiladt jir. Aiiliting with
tht refreshments wtrt Mri. J. Wood
ind Mn. J. T. Brown. Othen present wtrt Mn. Harriett C. Ferguson.
Mrs. H. Landrldge, Mn. Joseph
Bradshaw, Mn. John Lundle, Mn.
Miude M. Travel, Mn. A. II. Whitehead, Mn. David Proudfoot Mri.
J, H. Lemmon, Mrs. Thomu McMillan, Mri. II. A. Parker, Min D. Whit-
aker, MH. 0. Shaw. Mn. A. E. Read,
Mn. C. R. Hinni tnd Mn. Annie
Peten. j
* VISITOR FROM COAST
t Mrs. E. N.' Dtvty of Vincouvtr ls viiiting htr ion tnd diughter
in liw, Mr. ud Mrs. R. E. Dtvey,
709 Third Street* Sht hu juit returntd from Saskatoon whtrt iht
ittended tht weddings ot htr two
diughters.
t Mn. Robert Hong ind htr
diughtir, Mn, B. J. Birtles ind son
of Hirrop, ipent yuterdiy in town.
t PO, Verdon Scott of Hillfi is
visiting hli ptrtnti, Mr. tnd Mn.
Oeorge Scott, US High Street.
t Miss Arrow Smith of Creston
was in tht city yesterday en route to
Creiton whtre ihe plans to ipend t
wttk.
t Mr, tnd Mn. A. J. Cornish
htvt .taken up residence ln the Kerr
Apirtments.
• Mn. Joieph Grant of Loi An-
geles tnd htr diughter, Mn. George
Mawrt of Seattle, tnd tht latter's
ton Oeorge, left yesterday tfter t
ftw dtyi vlilt it tht homt of Mn.
Grant's ilster-ln-law, Mri. Joieph
Sturgeon, Silica Strtet
t Mr, ind Mn. John Tiwse
Cedar Point htve as guest Ltc. F. J.
Clarke of the R.A.F., Medicine Hat.
HONORED AT FAREWELL
t A ftrtwell pirty wu held it
tht home of Mr. tnd Mn. M Divis,
308 Hoover Strtet tor Alex (Pat)
Johniton, who hu left to join the
Canadian Army. Music uid games
wtrt enjoyed end Mr. Johniton wu
preiented with t pen end pencil iet.
Thoie invlttd wtrt Mr. .tnd Mn.
A. Johniton, James Johniton, A
Turnbull, Miu Mtry Turnbull, Miss
Jem Turnbull, Mr. tnd Mn. M.
Dtvitt, George Bird, Rae Wortll,
Mlu Juniee Krift Mlu Gloria Storbo, Miu Joyce Divlu, Mlu Ester
Anderion, Stirling Manuel, Gordon
Stile*. Mlu Irli Kraft Mlu Myrtle
Leet,.Thomai Wilklnion, Mlu Mir-
lon Divis, Bobby Davis, Mr. ind
Mn. Dunctn McLtUtnd, Mlu Ellra-
bttb.WutUnko. Wilfnd Lttta, Miu
Judy Andtnon ud Miu Mirgiret
| Andenon,
Judge Nlsbet
Recommends 3
for Franchise
Hli Honor Judge'W. A. Nlsbet in
County Court Tuudiy recommended three applicants for natunliia-
tlon.
Tht tint wu Mrs. Mtry Miller,
1 widow, Grmlte Rotd, who cime
to Canada ln 103B tnd hu been 'In
Nelion lince then. She wu born in
Jugo-Slavla In 1901. Mn. Miller
hu two children.
Joseph Piwskl, lumberman of
Slocan City, wbo wu bore ln Poland ln I8O9 tnd ctme to Cinidt
In' 1828, WW tht second. Ht has
been living ln Slocin City since
1997, ii mirried tod hu two children.
Miu Antonny Bergman, house-
worker ot Ntlion, bom in Russia ln
1921, wu tht third. Sht came to
Cintdt in 1924 and hu been living
here since 1929.
Council Civet $1000
to Isolation
Hospital Renovation
Grant of $1000 to thl Kootenay
Likt General Hoipital toward
Isolation hoipital renovation e
rltd out lut yttr wu authorized
by tht City Council Mondiy night
in adoption of iti committee ot
the whole report
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CITY, B,C.-Mtyor N.
C. Stibbs of Ntlion md A. H. Allm
Pruident ot Ntlion Boird ot Trtdt,
wtrt viiiton bin.
' Mn. H. A, Solly of Wut Sum,
merlind, Dloceun President ot tht
W.A., who wu tn routt to Wtnnl.
peg to ttttnd tht Dominion Annul! meeting ot the W.A., visited
thl Japanese Anglican Mission
htrt.
Mr. tnd Mri. Stinley Clough ind
family ot Silverton spent tht weekend htrt with rtlitlvei.
Miu Betty Terry left Sundty for
Kimberley whtrt ihe will ttttnd
high ichool.
Mr. ind Mn. T. Hulli of Nelion
were weekend gueiti ot their son-
in-law ind dtu(hter, Mr. ind Mn.
B. E. O'Neill.
Mrs. R. 0. Warner who wu in
i cir accident iome weeks tgo, il
able to be tbout igain.
Wife Had "Hunch"
Husband Was
Alive
MONTREAL, Stpt 11 (CF)-
Twelve houn ifter thi htd
bttn idvlsed ot tht deith ot
htr husband, tn electrlclin
aboard tht' H.M.C.S. Raccoon,
Mrs. Philip S. Brady of Montreil lut night received 1 win
trom htr husbind tnd saying ht
wu "O.K. tnd fIf
Mri. Brady, who hid i
"hunch" that the official announcement telling.o( her hui-
buid'i detth wu wrong, wired
to hit }ait ihort address asking
if he wen ill right.
Injuries to two rlbi, suffered
in t ipirrlng bout with t Shipmate, ktpt htr Brady aihore
whtn tht Raccoon lut Ittt port
NILSON DAILY NIWS, WEDNESDAY, HPT. 16, 1942—5
Buenos Aires Is tht largest city
of Latin America with a population
of 2,300,000.
Canning Sugar
Musi Be Bought
Before Sept. 30
OTTAWA, Stpt 11 (CP), - Tht
Wartime Pricu ind Tradt Botrd
todty tnnounctd, In ordtr to dear
up mliundentindings, that housewives mty purchase during September tht sugar they axpect to require tor homt canning and preserving during October.
■All purchaiei of lugir for thli
purpoie muit bt madt before tht
tnd ot tbt present month, tnd lt tl
emphasized no purchase voucher!
mty bt used after September SO.
Inspectors ot tht Board'i enforcement diviiioni ire empowered to
check up on tny housewife's tup-
ply of tugar to iee that it Is not being hoarded or improperly used tnd
to make sure that all sugar pur-
VREEMAM
*    FURNITURE CO.
Tht Houit ot rumltU-t Vtluu
Phont IM Nilson    '
Trade In Your Old
Furniture
BUY ON OUR
•     BUDGET PUN
On. Jim CUjl
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1942
CKLN AND
MORNINC
7:45—0 Canada
7:48—Today'i   Programma   Highlights (CKLN)
8:00—CBC Newi
8:15-Vamp Till Ready
8:80—Front Une Family
8:45—Little Jick Little
9:00-BBC Newt     -
»:15—Conctrt Tlmt 1CKLN)
»:30-Hymn Timt (CKLN)
8:45—Breakfast it Sardi's
8:89—Tlmt Signal
lOiflO-Mornlng Vlait
10:l&-rSouth Amtrictn Wiy CKLN
10:4_-"They Tell Me"
11:00—Vincent Lopei Orchutn
11:15—Between the Bookendi
11:30—"Soldier*i Wife"
ll'.ii—Songi by Curly Bradley
AFTERNOON
12:00—Firm Broideut
12.25—The Notlct Botrd (CKLN)
12.3&-CBC Ntwi
12:49—Columbia Concert Orcheitra
1:00—Ont O'clock Melodies
l:15-Marchi_g Along (CKLN)
1:80—Inttrluda
1:83-Tilk
1:45—Music by Cugat
2:00-Scott and HU Music
3:30—Mirror for Womtn
2:45—Dave Cheskin's Orcheitra
3:00—Dan Metier tnd Hli Islanders
3:15—Recital Serin
3:30—Musical Prognmmt
3:43-BBC Ntwi
4:0C—The Balladeer
4:18—Two Piano Team
4:30— String Quartet'
4:45-Vocal Varieties
3:00-Niwi Comment
3:05—Grenadier Guards' Bind
5:30—Musical Programme
EVENINC
6:0C—Mid-Week Meditations
8:30—United Church Biennlil Convention.
8:53—Interlude
7:00-CBC Newi
7:13—"A Baker'i Doren"
7:45—Impresaioni by Green
8:13—Britain Speaks
8:30-BBC News Btll
9:00—"Step It Up"
9:30—Isabelle McEwan Sings
9:45—"Ai A Matter of Fact"
:0:00—CBC Newi
10:15—John Aviion'i OrchMtra
10:45—Abe Lyman_  Orcheitra
11:00—God Save the King
chased tor homo canning ln October
ti io used before October 81.
V ' 	
Salvation Army to
Hold Tag Day
Permission    tor    tbt
Army to bold i Bad Shield I
ln Nelion Sept 28 wu i
the City Council Monday :
WATCH FOR OUR
GROCERY SPECIALS j
In FRIDAY'S PAPIR
Overwaitea Ltd.1
' Phont 707
WATCH REPAIR
ll I Job fir experti. Our work
mum your utlifictlon,
H. H. Sutherland
491 Biktr It
Rowley li Offered
Meter Reader Post
Poiltion of City Meter Reader
hu bttn offered by tht Council to
Al V. Rowley In place of B. 0.
Joy, recently luperannutted. Mr.
Joy'i poiltion wu flnt fUltd by
Wilmer McHardy. but alter Mr. McHardy enlisted ln the Air Forct
Mr. Joy relumed to the poit ind
ll it present engaged in it The
offer, agreed upon in committee of
the whole, wu mtdt official Mondiy night when the Council tdopt-
ed the committee report.
Don't Depend
on Your
Neighbor
Tlioro li plenty of coal, but there Is going to bo
a ihortago of can tnd mon to h.iul tht can to
our ytrdi. You cin protect younelf againit i
ihortage In your own bucment by ordering your
lupply of coal now!
PHONE 33
West Transfer Co.
ESTABLISHED IN 1199
R.A.F. Officers to
Arrive Today
to Arrange Concert
Two Royal Air Forct officers,
Fit Lieut. Andtnon tod Po. Arnold,
of No. 34 S.F.T.S., Medicine Bat,
will arrive in Ntlion thia morning
to make arrangements for tht concert to bt given Sept 23 by t group
trom ttt Medicine Hit Flying ichool
Tht concert, to be preiented entirely by performert from tht R.A.F.
ichool, will be sponsored by Kokanee Chapter I.O.D.E., ind proceeds
will bl divided between the Chapter «nd Ntlion brinch of tht Red
Crou.
Lt.-Col. tad Mn. G. A. Hoover
will entertain tht two officers while
they t» in Ntlion.
C. MacDonald Giren
Administration of
McCuaig Estate
Cliude MtcDontld of Kulo wu
granted letten of administration lo
tht estite of Duncan McQualg, by
Hla Honor Judge W. A. Nisbet in
Chimben Mondiy. Mr. McQuaig
died Mtrch 21, 1341 It Kulo.
Net tmount of tbt estite wu
1383.28, comlstlng of nil utile ln
B. C. tnd cuh, Btntflclirlu were
Mn. Annlt neither, a titter of
Montreil, $191.84, ind Mri. J. A
Slater, lister of Mipltton, Minn.
$191.04.
Solicitor of the tttttt wu E. K
Dawion.
QUEEN'S BAY
QUEENS BAY, B. C.-Mn. Kenneth Attrtt nd htr wo Dlek lett
for Vincouvtr Ult wttk. whtrt
Dlek will enter tbt Univtnity. Mrs
Attru ii viiiting htr couiins, the
Unyoni in North Vtneouvtr.
Wirrint Offletr T.'It. Strttton
•nd Mn. Strttton ind two diugh-
tiri Lorni ind Jicquellnt ot Ctlgtry and Mri. Bird ot Ntlion tnd
Mn. Vtllinei of Creicent Bty, wtrt
recent gueiti of Hon. Kenneth tnd
Mrs Aylmtr.
Mr. tnd Mn. W. H. Foiter of Nelion viilted thtlr homt htn Sundiy.
Hon. Mn. rir.y-L.ike of Nelton wu • Sundiy viiltor htrt.
Mr. nd Mra. H Htrdlng of Ntlion wtrt Sundiy giiirti of Hon. K.
A. tnd Mn. Aylmtr.
Mr. tnd Mrt. I. F. Phillip* of
Nilion iptnt tht weekend with
Mrs J. S. Hint.
Mr. ind Mn. A. J. Cerniih ipent
the weekend it thtlr bcich homt.
Mini Join Scott-Ltudtr wu t
viiltor lo Crawford Biy Sundiy.
King Visits Spot
Where Duke
Crashed in Plane
LONDON, Sept 18 (CP).-The
King tramped acrou rough Scot-
tiih hill country yuterdiy to vlilt
thi ipot where hU brother, the
Duke of Kent cruhed to deith ln
t Sunderland flying boat three
weeki igo.
Mtmben of the leirchlng ptrty
who found the wreckage .as well
u others connected with tht tragedy, relited their itorlei to the
King.
Play Safe ...Use
COLGATE'S
TOOTH POWDERI
If it'l klljln' you'ri mliiin',
remember .thii—76% of ill idulu
hue btd breath. And unfortunately, OTHERS ilwiyi detect it
before YOU do yourself. Tike
no chum! Uie Colgite'i Tooth
Powder... clew yoar hrttth u
yoa clttn your teeth.
Jtlmllflt lull provi iMtlv-
ilvtly thtt It F tut at 10 cam
Colgele'i Teeth . twdtf __fu_V
rtepi orei btd breath.
SAVES YOU MONIYI
Cetnptred to other ludl o g br in _ i,
• Iwgt tin of Colptt'i (Ira too
up to JO m*r* ttwrntrnt t (lui
tin up lo 46 ami trmUagi—tot
not 1 puny morel
TIP TO SMOKHtSI
Colgite'i Tooth Pow.
dtr ii on of tht
quickeit, mint wiyi
to giurd titlait
tobicco litis tnd
tobicco brutkl
COLGATE'S
TOOTH POWtlR
•t-'r-tt,  111,
reetrm^ZZ. "YOUR  CLOTHES LOOK ONLY
ISS**"'**-
MILADY'S
M__an__i!
fjjj|j|
40c
i [| Iff!     | lUR iiufntit
n-, n i ti/iNi youn ini*
Stubborn Spots Vanish -Safely/
yjov, roe, WIU, n aitohiihid to tee
*■ bow much brighter ind iweeter-
imelllng dothei comt wuhed tht Sunlight
way. Orimicit work clothe!, tht mott
lolled toweli, pity mlti tnd btd lintni
turn out ipotlettly dun when you put
t touch of Sunlight to thtm. Yei, Juit a
touch of thii imaiing map on the moet
toiled ptrti doei the trick. For Sunlight tn-
«t n nt ly leivei i Sim of nap when It comet
in conttct witb the dirt... tnd ti you
waih, Sunlight Whlpt up falto thl rirheit,
decpeit-cleiniing Itther you ever uwl
No rubbi'no nttdtd
THINK or III There'i no hird rubbing
needed when Sunlight'! "extrt-iotpineu"
get! to work on (rimy ipoti. Thtt savet
tht clothet—md you, tool And bett of
til, clothes come brl/jhttr all mat. No
danger of anyone laying your clothes look
itreiky or "half-wni_rd" when you un
the Sunlight method. Sunlight ll iU pun
totf-uSt for colon. Oct Sunlight todiy I
speediest, tAS/esr
DISH SWASHING- £¥£*.!
t The moment you touch Bunllfht
Soap you can feel how much more
•oipy it ii. Thli "utr«.»o«plncM"
makei quick work of (rttie and
•tuck-on food ptrtklet. So uu
Sunlight for diihwuhlng tnd ill
deanlng, too. See bow diihn, lulvrr,
glutei tptrkht And Sunlight U k
Irind to hindi.
FOR A COMPLETE WASHING JOB -
YOU CAN'T DO WITHOUT
SUNLIGHT
1 LEf'E* noDKi
I
  1 N ■   ■
 J}»Isnti Jatltj 5J. arc ? ? Questions ? ?
ANSWERS
CtttbUibtd April a, 1901
Brifufc CotamWa'a
Mott Interesting Newspaper
Published tvtry morning txctpt Sundty by
tht NBWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIM-
ITED SM Biktr St., NtUon. British Columbii.
MEMBEB 01 THE CANADIAN PHESS Al<D
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF giadJlaATIONS.
WEDNESPAY, SEPT. 16,1942.
A.R.P. Workers Are Not
Forqetting the
Realities
A.R.P. leaders and workers in Kootenay possess a sense of the stern realities of the situation on the Pacific
front which refuses to permit them to
forget—as do so many of us—that we
are today no more immune from raids
by Japanese bombers than we. were
on Dec. 8 last year.
The Japanese are still In the Aleutians. They still retain their hold on
scores of stepping stone islands in the
Pacific upon which they are building
airfields and improving harbor facilities. In spite of the notable naval and
air victories which have been won by
the Americans the Japanese have lost
little of their offensive strength. That
they are preparing to attack Vladivostok and the Alaska mainland is probable.   '
Nor, if British Columbia to be
raided, assume that the raids would be
confined to the Coast. It would require
an extraordinary degree of optimism
to hold such a view.
A.R.P. is building an organization
to deal with the effects of such raids
if they occur. It is teaching community-minded men and women how to
fight fires, how to protect water and
other essential services, how to prevent sabotage, how to assist injured,
how to prevent panic, and how to take
such precautions in the event of an
alert as to make our towns as near invisible as possible.
Looking Backward
10 MEAR8 AQO
(From Dilly Newi, Stpt.19, 1932)
J. S. Woodiworth, MP., leader ot the Dominion Libor pirty. iddreued i public meeting in Nelion Thundiy.
A. B. Netherby, ex-mimger of the Royal
Bink of Canidi, here, ind now ot Seittle, ii
ipending a few dayi in Nelion ind vicinity.
Zlliworth Vinei, Jr., national and Wimbledon linglei tennii champion, and Henry
Auitln. tltleholder of Great Britain, will meet
ln the finali of the linglei matchei ot the Pacific wuthweit tournament which open! at
Loi Angelei tomorrow.
R. J. Klngiley of South Slocan hai recently completed Uie purchaie of Vic Biner's
pleuure reiort on Chriitlm Lake
29 YEARS AQO
(From Dilly Ntwi, Sept 1S, 1917)
Mr. ind Mn. T. D. Stark left thli mornin?
(or Winnipeg.
Announcement li made ot the ippointment
of Rev. A. J. Mitchell, ot the Preibyterlan
Church it Nikuip for two yeari, to the New
Denver incumbency.
D. T. Bulger, Nikuip, hu lecured i con-
trict from Uie Provincial Government for the
conitructlon of 1 ferry barge for use it Hall's
Landing, on the Columbia.
Lome A. Campbell of Rouland wu elected preiident ot the Northport Power Company at the meeting In Spokane Wedneiday.
40 YEARS  AQO
(From Pally Newi, Sept. It, 1902)
W. H. Holmu, manager ot the Kootemy
Wire Worki, uw a Urge porcupine waddle
acrou the ildewalk on Front Street yeiterday.
W. D. Stewart leave! [or the Coait tonight
to look after iome logging contricti.
P. C. Gimble of Victoria tnd Mlis Eliz-
ibeth Bolton of Toronto, are viiiting Mr. and
Mri. A. G. Gimble here.
A. E. Bloom. Nelion, hu u hli gueit his
' liiter, Mlu B. B'oom of Ticomi.
Today's Horoscope
A difficult, trying yeir li iheid ol those
who hive birthday! todiy. Bereavement!, do-
mertlc and love ind builneu trouble! ire
threatened. Witch your heilth md correspondence, ind avoid chingei. Som« giln will
miterlaliie. You hive i cheerful dlipoiition,
deep lympithlei. md • love of peice ind
nirmony ire ullent triiti In your chincter.
You ieek congenlil friendi ind ire devoted
to your loevd onei. Born on thli dite the child
will experience miny disappointment! in love
and buiineii. md untoward event! will often
iffecl the llie. Heilth will alao cauie anxiety,
rininclil   giln,  however,  li  preuged.
Test Yourself
1   How miny lUtei of the U. S. A. hive
"New'' In front of their nimei?
2. Whit it the profeulon of moit governor! of the United Stitei?
3. How many ititei hive namu beginning
with M?
TI8T  ANSWERS
1 Four—Ntw Himpihlrt, Niw Jiruy,
Ntw York. Niw Mexico.
2 They ire liwytn
3 tight—Milne, Mirylind. Mitsichuiitti,
Mlchlfin, Mlnnuoti. Mlultilppl. Miuouti ind
Mon tint.
Optn to tny reader. Ntmtt tf perioni
liking queitiom 'Will not bt publlihed.
Thtrt   ll   nt   ehtrgt   for   thli   itrvlet.
Worried, Klmberley-^ould you pletit ttll
mt whtt to do ibout the following housing
iltuation? I am a widow living with my
ion. I hive a houie rented, the tenants
' are behind with their rent and have alao
broken into t lock fait ihed and have
taken quite t lot of stuff I expect my ion
to bt balled up anytime. Could I tell thoie
people to letvt it once, or would I htve
to glvt thtm a month'! notice? I expect
to go back to tht houte myself.
Three month'i notice to vacate muit be
given to tenants, ,md tenants muit give t
month'i notice to a landlord. We would advlie
you to consult a lawyer about the damage
to the houie.
Reider, Salmo, end 0. S. Wynndel—Pleaie repeat formula for whitewash to be used for
ourdoor buildings given in your column
two weeki ago.
Whltewaih — Take one half bushel of
freshly burned lime, ilack It well with boiling
water; cover it during the procesi. to keep in
the iteam. Strain liquid through a fine sieve,
and add it to seven poundi of salt previously
well dissolved in warm water; three poundi
of ground rice boiled to a thin paste and
stirred in boiling hot, one half pound of powdered Spanlih whiting; one pound of clean
glue, which hai previously been dissolved by
soaking it well, and then,hanging It over a
slow fire in a small kettle within a large one
filled with water. Add five gallons of hot water
to the mixture, stir lt well, and let It stand a
few days covered from dirt, tt must be applied
quite hot.
Reader, South Slocan—Would you kindly tell
me the names of some publishing houses
that buy cartoons?
Central Presi Canadian, 80 King Street
Weit, Toronto; N.E.A. Cleveland. Ohio; King
Feature Syndicate, Inc., 235 East 45th Street,
New York City.
A. M. W., Nelson—Would you please give •
recipe for iweet cucumber plcklei that
uiei iweet saccharin initead of lugar?
One grain of laccharln li equivalent to
four teaipooni of tugar and may be mbstitut-
ed at this ratio in almost any pickle recipe.
Sweet Cucumber Pickle—Eight large ripe
cucumbers, one eiehth pound stick cinnamon,
one ounce whole cloves, three pounds sugar or
96 grains saccharin, one and a half pints vinegar.
Pare the cucumberi. quarter and Uke out
the seeds then cut the quarters into medium
sired pieces. Scald in salted water (two table-
moons alt to one quart of wateri then drain
and ilmmer in clear water until they are tender but firm. Drain well. Tie the spices in a
bag and boil them with the vinegar and wear
for five minutei. Pour this mixture over the
cucumbers, cover the Jar and set awav. The
next day pour off the syrup,, boil for 10 minutes and pour over the cucumbers agiln. Flav-
or is improved by repeating, this procesi several times. Place the pickles ln clean, hot Jars
and seal.
Reader. Trail—How much would a single man
with no dependents have to pay per vear
In Income tax. his income being from $1800
to $2100 a year? Also what would his exemption be?
The amount ot Income Tax per year on
$1600 would amount to $359.52 of which $127.44
would be the savings portion and on $2100 the
tax amounti to $483.24 and $151.20 lavitgi.
Deductions are allowed on alternative savings
like life lniurance premiums and mortgage
principal payments from the savings portion
of the tax.
Paging Bobbie
The Burns Club of Victoria has hit upon
a novel expedient to bring the works of Scotia's beloved bard more fully before Its membership. There ii danger In the thing. Wo, becauie the organization hai held a debate on
the relative merit!, each to each, of two of the
bard'i well-known pieces; "Tarn O'Shanter,"
and "The Cottar's Saturday Night." They will
be fortunate it heads are not broken over it.
A man who has gone through most of his
life believing that "The Cottar's Saturday
Night" out-distances "Tarn O'Shanter" In merit
is not going to take It lying down should the
judge hold otherwise. The reverse would be
as keenly felt, on the other side of the debate.
In short, only the presence of the Scotla'i bard
himielf would likely Kttle the point—and that
leemi i little too much to expect. In spirit,
no doubt. "Robbie" would be there, and ha
would have liked the argument, too.
Strictly ipeaking. an author's worki ire
leparate, md nldom can be compired. One
wai written on one day. and another on another. One wn written in thli mood, md it!
lucceiior in thit. Most often, they will be
found to hive different themei, and purpoiei.
The Burni Club and Hi memberihlp—md
not a few other people—will be ln the embarrassing poiltion of liking most thingi that
Robbie Burni wrote, ind iome there ire who
can repeit them by heart. Let the judgei beware, that'i all! Heilm' blood rum warm-
Victoria Colonist.
War-25 Years Ago
By Tht Cinidlin Prni
Sept 18, 1917—French ilrmen raided towm
In Wurtemberg ind Rhenish Prussia Auttrlim
air-raided Venice, but four counteritttcki on
the Biimlixi Pliteiu filled. Threttened revolt of Ruulin Couicki checked, tnd Gen.
Ktltdln rulgned hli leidenhlp to Premier A.
T. Kertniky.
.WW
fetters to tl
Editor
Lttttrt mty bt publlihtd tvtr t nom dt
plumi, but tht ictuil Mint ot tnt wrlttr
muit bl Qlven to Ult Editor tl evldenceof
good filth. Anonymoui l.ttart ge In tht
Wlttt piper buket
Admires  Improvements
That Beautify Nelson
To tht Editor.
Sir—Nisty thlngi irt so often reported
and not nice thing!.'which makei me want
to place on record bow happy I htvt bttn to
visit Nelion during i ptriod of 17 yttn tnd
aee Uie many Improvement! ln the town. Of
count. I have, alwayi admired Nelion'i rare
iltuation. iti hillside homes and gay gardens,
but on thii vlilt I havt bttn pirticulirly
itruck with whtt hu bten done to fill tht
Laktildt Pirk gardens with t blut of flowen
•nd traniform Vernon Street into t delight to
iny gaidener'i eye. I ilio noted the fine Civic
Centre which has been built ilnce I wai laat
here. .
Good luck to Nelion.
DOROTHY PILLEY RICHARDS.
(Author of "Climbing Dayi")
41 Kirkland 'Street,
Cambridge, Masi.
Sept. 12, 1942.
.
—	
Press Comment
A LITTU INFLATION CAN RUIN
When the average Individual talki ibout
Inflation he Is rtrely tble to define the term
by Hi precise implication. One ipectacular way
to preient the idea ii by citing Germiny'i experience, culminating ln 1923, when ln December of that year it would have taken 1,200,400,-
000 mark! to buy what one mark—23.8 centi—
bought in 1913. Trmilated into Canadian
money, that would be equivalent to having to
pay $132,044,000,000 (one hundred thirty-two
billions, forty-four millioni of dollan) for the
loaf of baker'a bread that corti 11 centi today.
We all know that there Ii not going lo bt iuch
inflation at that in Ctnidt. Wt tre convinced
there will not even be inflttlon iuch thit breid
will coit $1000 • loaf, or a itamp to mall a
letter $2S0-ratei which obtained ln Germany
in July of 1922, before her notorloui inflitlon
really got iti itcond wind tnd itarted running.
Unfortunately, Inflation doei not hive to
get to the one trillion, two hundred billion
itage in order to do incalculable harm. At
the two-to-one itage it can work hardihip.
At the four-to-one it can wipe out the laving!
of a lifetime. At elght-to-one it could quickly
ruin the nation'! economy. Inflation, mean!
that money hai loit • good deal of iti value.
It will not buy ai much, In the ihape of uieful
goodi, as It did or ihould. It mean! that tha
value of money ii going down. Although we
may buy enough lniurance and put enough
money in the bank to finance old age, we iud-
denly wake up to the fact that we cannot live
one thoit itvlngi. They do not repreient the
value they ihould. Or we may buy gilt-edged
bond!, md lave for a hgmtpf our fcwn. ifrbtft
we iell the bondi, wt eolltct thtlr ftct vtlue.
But they will pay for only half of a houie, lf
money hai ihrunk in iti worth by thit much.
That ll inflition.
; The Germin fluco merely lUuitntei how
far the condition expand!. We are not life,
merely becauie we know Inflation never will
go aa far In thii country; we cm help ounelvei,
our country, and ilay the Inflation dragon with
War Saving! Certificate!' md Stampi — but
only lf we buy enough of them. — Victorii
Tlmei.
STABBER IN THE BACK
Gandhi'i Internment by the Indiin Government; the execution of two iplei In London and of ilx In Waihington, and the len-
tencing of a traitor to die In Detroit, all happening within a few* dayi, atteit the determination of the United Nation! to deal iternly
with back-itabben.
When M. K. Gandhi let lt be known that
he contemplated making a deal with the Japaneie he loit the lympathy of many people ln
the United State! who have hitherto applauded
hii every move. He could not have reallied
how healthy a hate lor tht Jtpl hu been developed on thli continent ilnce Peirl Hlrbour.
He might u well htvt tilked of making a
deal with the Devil. Al one itroke he not only
ruined the proipecta of hli Hindu mutineer!
but also established a new bond of unity between the great Engliih-ipeaklng natlom.
Like the non-Indian fakln ln our mldit,
till I one of the loin cloth traded on the emergent lituation to put over hli pet acheme of
reform. Indiani, he laid in effect, could not
join wholeheartedly in i itruggle for world
freedom unleii they had i different form of
government. Hii oppoiite number! here In
Canadi declare thit they cinnot fully lupport
the war effort until there li • complete chmge
in our economic lyitenv Curloiuly enough,
they have alio ihown • laming towirdi Ji-
pin.
Between them md the fellowi who wen
lummarlly dealt with at London md Wuhlngton there is little lo choott.—Libor Review.
CONCRITS (XAMPLI
The Nitionil Wtr Libor Boird could md
a grow lnjuitice by giving filr pity to one
long neglected clasi of civil lervinti.
Lerge numben of men tnd women' now
employed by the Dominion of Cmtdt ire
classed ll "ttmponry" yeir ifter yeir under
in irbHriry "quota" lyitim. That la, only ■
cirtlln percmtige ricelvi ippolntmtnti to
thi ptrmtntnt ittff. Tht ptrmantnt apoplnttei
get the mnuil lncreuei ln piy provided by
the itiutei of Ctnidt. But tht "ttmponry"
employee! whoie work mty bt ln tvtry wiy
•i satisfactory and efficient ftt no lncreuei
of iny kind.
Thui the* «e frozen to their Jobi In the
moit irbltrtry md unftlr mtnntr.
Then Intquilltlti ihould bt ended — Vincouvir Ntwi-Hinld.
Words of Wisdom     Etiquette Hints
Correction dou much, but encouragement
doei more—Encouragement ifter ceniure li
it tht lun after a ihower.—Goethe.
When on thi itreet or ln a public plice,
try ta bi comlderatt of othen ind not Incon-
vlence them in my wiy.
TRAIL AND ROSSLAND MEN WITH ARMOURED REGIMENT NOW OVERSEAS
mats; Cpl. L. J. Presley, Salmon Arm; Tpr. E. W. Pearson, Vancouver;' L-Cpl. D.'I. Gilbert, Salijion Arm; Tpr.
V. J. Foster, Vancouver; S.Q.M.S. D. E. Nicholls, Vancouver.; and R.S.M R. D. .lay, Vancouver. Third row: Tpr.
J. B. Richardson, Rossland; L-Cpl. J. McEwen,' Vancouver; Tpr. W. C. Knox, Vernon; and Tpr. F. Mitchell,
Powell River.—'Canadian Army Photo.
These men of a Canadian Armoured Regiment now
overseas, all from British Columbia, are keen to follow
Major-General F. F. Worthington, M.C, M.M., into action. They are, left to right, front row, Tpr. E. Hassell,
Powell River; Tpr. D. A. McKenzie and Tpr. F. Kester,
both of Vancouver; Tpr. A. Hallmark, Kamloops; Tpr.
H. Potter, Trail and Tpr. J. McBeth, Abbotsford. Second
row; Sgt.-R. B. Smyth, Trail; Sgt. G. W. Raitt, Nara-
Nelson Brother,
Sister Overseas
laince-Corportl   tiwretict
K> ii with
Cinidi, over-
(Sonny)   Wigc" who  ii  with
Scottiih unit Bom.
KIMBERLEY BOYS HELP CANADA'S WAR EFFORT
Rolling in ties, these lads helped to fill Kimberley's third car of salvaged rubber,
shipped by Kimberley Branch of the Red Cross. A fourth car has since been shipped.
—Photo by Charles Warmington.
ten for tome time.
»
.
Cpl. H I Shilford. brother ot
Mn ,W. J. Bouty of Ntlion. li >
priioner of wir it Hong Kong Hi
wm wtth the Winnipeg Onm-
dieri. with whom bt tnllited three
yttntgo.
) ;
WHERE BRITISH LAUNCHED MADAGASCAR ATTACKS
Tht map above shows the throe weit coast ports occupied, Nosi Be, Majunga
and Morondava, with arrows alao indicating the drive down the east coast, from Diejo
Suarex, 200 miles to Antalaha which the British hava captured.
-4
	
	
.
 '
N.H.L. Hockey Given Go-Ahead
Slanal; Officials Pleased
OTTAWA, Sept. 18 (CF)-Nl-
tional Hockiy Lttgut tttmi In
Cintdt tnd tht United sutu
win officially notified todty by
Selectlvt Service officiate In Ot
Uwi Nd Wuhlngton thtt thty
/ may opinte thli Winter, but thtt
no.tpttlil oomldtrttlon will bt
given under mobllllltlon regult-
tloni to proftillonll athlete.
' Ctntditn tnd United Stitei manpower authoritlei retchtd thtlr decision tfter tht NHL, which ilready hu played three leasoni ot
wartime hockey, requested information u to ltl ttltui ln the light
Of manpower regulations.
Elliott M. Little, Director of Na-
ttonal Selective Service, told of
tht decision ln t brief statement,, re-
ltued simultaneously at Washington, which nld;—
"Whllt neither country (Cintdt
er tht United Stttei) hu my Intention of ptntteg exemption from
inlllttry itrvlct to hockty pliyen
or othtr athletci, there il no objection to allowing thtlr proftillonll
athletic actlvitiei unleii ind-until
they tre requested  to  engage  In
tome non-mllltary war duty."
Mr. Little uid thtt oontldera-
tlon alto hit bttn given to t rf
quest from tht Cinidlin Amateur
Hookty Anoclttion for • ruling
on tho poaltlem of playen tnd
teami In ltt orgtnliatloni.
Tht Ctntditn Amateur Hockey
Aisociation," hei aid, "hu undertaken to arrange ltt schedule!, pirticulirly travelling ichedule! which
occur during plgydowni tnd playoffi, to allow for t minimum of
loit tlmt from work.
"This cooperation ls necessary be-
cauie every adult imtttur hockey
player, likt tvtry other able-bodied
citizen, muit htvt i Job and remain on tht Job tht mixlmum poiilble time."
MONTREAL, Sept 15 (CP)-
Tht go-ihild ilgnal ftr continuation of profeiilonil iport In wtr-
tlmt wti received with utliftctlon
tonight by memberi of tht Nttlontl Hockey Lttgue both In
Cmada arid th* United Statu,
Preiident Frank Calder, who hu
guided the League's destinies since
lit Inception In 1917, teemed highly
pleased with the innouncement of
approval made earlier In the day
tt Ottawa, and be laid that "now
we have the green light we cm
plan aheid."
The clubs will have to rely on
young playen up to 19 yean of ige
and thoie playen who are married
or otherwUe not required for active service,, Calder added the teann
may hive to cut down on active
player itrength.
Pressure Is on
Flatbushers
In winning their 32nd victory in
thttr lut ie gtmet yeiterday St.
Loult Cardinali stretched their lead
evtr Brooklyn to two full gpmei.
Tht Dodgers wtre Idle.
Tht Cardinal! .could clinch the
flag by winning til their remaining
10 gamei. Or thty could loie one
tnd itill gtt no wone than • tie,
•vtn if Ult Dodgen ihould win ill
their remilnlng 13. The preuure il
On  lilt flitbushen.
Tht Cardi ire dut In Boiton todty
for t two-game series with the
Braves,  whllt   the   Dodgeri  open
. ■ two-game teriei with Pittsburgh
■t  Ebbed  Field.    Here  Wu   the
. lituation:
Won   Loit To pliy
SL Louli 97     47      10
Brooklyn ... 94     «     12
Remilnlng ichedule: St Louli,
Sept. 16.17 tt Boiton; 19, 20 it Chicago; II, 22 it Pittaburgh; 2], 24.
1 Cincinnati; tt, 71, Chicago. Brooklyn, Stpt IS, 17, Pittaburgh; 16, It
(2), FhUideJphli; V. Ntw York;
SM, Philadelphia; 24. 25, Boiton; X,
27, it Phlladelphii.
LONDON (CP)—Tht Greyhound
Racing Society hu donited mort
thin |13S,00O to the British Red
Crosi md St John Sporti Fund
ilnct the itart of the war.
ITALY, Tex, (AP)-Thli town
ii lU-cut to lick II Duce'i Italy.
Citizeni turned out en masse to
comb the city dump, collected
125,000 pound! of scrap metal.
BALL SCORES
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Semi-final playoffs:
Kanni City   -  1 7 2
Columbus  4 5 1
Karpel, Ardizoia  (8)  and Sears;
Munger and Heath.
(Teami   tied   with   three   wlni
thret wlni apiece).
PACIFIC COAST
Setttle 8, Oakland 8.
Portland 6, Hollywood 9.
Loi Angelei 5, Sacramento 0.
IWWHB--_-_wb_wiiw
de luxe dinner for whirlaway
None of your blue plate specials for "Whirlaway", but a real de luxe dinner. One of
the chefs at Garden State Park race course is serving the turf king shortly after his arrival for the Trenton Handicap. The little horse with the big tail won the race.
World Series Baseball to Open
Sept. 30, Landis Announces
H. Brook of Nelson
Gets 16-Pounder
Lirgeit citch reported In over I
mon* wu a big Kimloopi brought
In by H. Brook, of Ntlion. The tfout
wu caught Monday off the Outlet along with eight smaller onei.
Dreased, lt tipped the Kales at 16
poundi.
The 11-pound, 12 ounce cttch.take
by W. G. Brown of Nelson Aug. 6
wu the ltrgttt previously reported
In over t month.
Leaders
By Tht Anocltted Pren
NATIONAL:
Bitting—Lombtrdl,   Boiton,  _33.
Rum—Ott New York, 107.
Hit*-Slaughter, St. Louis, 173.
Doublet—Mirlon, St. LouU ind
Medwick, Brooklyn, M.
rlplet—SitughteiT, St. Louis, 17.
Stolen Baiei—Reiser, Brooklyn,
16.
Pitching—Krist, St. Louis, 13-6.
AMERICAN
. Batting—Williami, Boiton, .353.
Runi—Williami, Boston, 135.
Hlta-P.ikey, Boiton, 199.
Doublet-Clift, St. Louis, 39.
rlplet^Spence, Washington, 14.
Stolen Baiei—Caie, Wuhlngton,
40.
'   Pitching — Borowy,   New   York,
16-3.
SHOWS  NAVY  HOW
Lieut. Benny Frledmin who did
lome ftncy paulng for Michigan
In hli college dayi. goei up ln lhe
air to ihow the grlddin of the
Oreat Lakei nivil itation how a
pigikln li toned—properly. Lieut.
Frledmin U now • coioh at the
nivil itation.
Rodak Protests
Armstrong Win
8AJ. FRANCISCO, Sept. 15 (AP)
—Henry Armitrong. onetime holder
ill at once of the featherweight,
lightweight and welterweight bo*
Ing championships, defeated Leo
Rodik of Chicigo here lut night
but the latter'i miniger promptly
proteited.
The 10-round match wu itopped
it the end of the eighth round on
orden of the State Athletic Com
million doctor beciuie of • levere
cut over riodak'i left eye.
Nate Lewli, the loser's manager,
proteited to the Commluion that
Armitrong cauied Uie declilve in
Jury and ilio i cut on top of Rodik'i
hetd by butting. He clilmid the
bout ahould hive been called I
driw.
Lieut. Rick Perley, former out
ilde wing with Ottiwi Rough Rid
en footbill teami, li oveneu with
the Cinidlin Army.
B
*
fl
DEWARS
SCOTCH WHISKY
__>._-. utd, Bitndtd and Bottled
In Scotland.
s
Thli idtirtlienirni
Bo«rd or
is not publlihed or dliplayed oy tne Liquor Co .troi
by the Cavtrnment ol Britiah Columbii.
CHICAGO, 8ept 15 (AP)-Tht
opening gamei of the 1948 World
Series will be played Sept. 30 and
Oct. 1 either In Broklyn or St.
Louli, K. M. Lindli, Commit-
iloner of Buebill, innouncod todiy,
Ltndls also dliclojed the Amerlcin Red Cr6si hu rejected 'bue-
ball'i offer to shire in Seriei receipts and as a result the entire
mm given away' will go to the
United Service Organizations.
If Brooklyn Dodgeri win in the
National League so that, tht leriei
li between the Dodgeri ind New
York Yankeei, the first six games
will be played without t day'i reit.
In the event of a St. Louli Cardinal
victory, an open date would be
lnaerted each time the Seriei shifted litei to allow for travel.
Under the original World Seriei cash splitup announced by
Landis Aug. 27, a ma]o. ihare of
receipts would have been divided between the Red Croat and
the U.S.O. Tiie Red Cross, however, dots not ptrticlpatain ben-,
efltj where ft iharei (he income
with any othtr group.
If the Dodgeri win tht Nitionil
Leagut pennant Landis nld the
following ditei will be in effect
for the Series:—
Sept. 30, Oit. 1 it Brooklyn; Oot.
2, 3, and 4 at Yankee Stadium; i
Oct. 5 at Brooklyn; Oct. 6 open j
to permit ticket distribution for i
the final games; Oct 7 at Brooklyn, j
If the Cardihali win, this iched-j
uie will be followed:— |
Sept 30, Oct 1 at St. Louis; Oct.
2 open for travelling; Oct. 3, 4 and
5 at New York; Oct. 6 open for
travelling; Oct. 7 at St. Louis; Oct.
8 open for ticket distribution; Oct.
9 at St. Louis.
All gamei will start at 1:30 p. m.
except in the event, of Sunday
games ln New Yorjs.or Brooklyn
'which would begin at 2:03 p.m.
Landis uid If any gamt were
postponed lt would be played off
on the field originally scheduled be-
for the next regular game were
played. In the event of a tie game,
the game would be played off following tlje aeventh conteit on tte
field   where originally icheduled.
Sports Roundup
By HUKH FULLIRTON JR.
Associated Prtu Sport Wrlttr
NEW YORK, Sept. 15 (AP) -
Brooklyn fins miy wind up without even "wait till next yetr" to
console them if you can believe all
the hints md green lights turning
red on sports ... end tht full are
no sadder thin Eaitern buebill
scrr.es u they contemplate making
the trip to St. Louii and back without specill trains, cars or comforts
... of course you still have to think
of those leven games with the Phils,
but from the wiy they were acting
up to the ninth inning yesterday,
you'd flgur,e they were trying to
case up and let the Cards in .. .
Negative Note:
Red Burman, who Is working In
a Baltimore shipyard, itopped the
other day to help a blind man across
the street,. .Feeling Rjed'i rouicles,
the man remarked: "Boy, you could
beat Joe Louis with arms like that."
. . . "Nope," Red replied leriouily,
"I tried ii."
BIVINS KNOCKS
OUTTAMI
IN FIRST ROUND
Cleveland, sept is <af>-
Jimmy Blvini' iharp punches floored Tami Mauriello tonight ln the
flnt round of their Cleveland arena
Scrap and handed Mauriello his
first loss since the New Yorker
graduated to the heavyweight ranki
a year ago.
Philadelphia Won't
Operate Puck
Team This Winter
PHILADELPHIA, Sept 18 (AP)
—Peter Tyrrel, Manager of the Phlladelphii Arena, innounced today
that it will not operate a team in
the American Hpckey League during U\e 1042-43 season.
He said Insufficient pliyen were
•vitlible.
The Philadelphia Rockets are the
second team to drop out of the American League. Two weeks «go Ed;
die Shore announced that the
Springfield Indiani hive been disbanded. "
Rossland-Trall
Has Early
Season for Grouse
opening Siturdiy in certitn lections of tht Eaitern Diitrlct li effective ln Roilind-Trnl electoral
Diitrlct aa will u tht DUtrlcti of
Columbii, Ftrnle. Crinbrook,
Grand Forks-Greenwood, and the
portion of the Nelion-Cretton riding Eut of Kootemy Like and Rl-
vire. Tbt leaion extends to Sept. 80,'
In other ptrti of the Diitrlct Including the rldlngi of Revelstoke,
Ktilo-Slocsn, South Okanagan, and
Hit portion of tht Nelion-Cretton
Wett ot tbe Lake and River, the
leaion li Oct. 1-15.
Hunting of Blue and Franklin'!
grouie opened In thli diitrlct Tueidiy .and contlnuu until Qct. 15.
Pheasant Bag in
Nakusp Area
Only 2 for Season
' Pheaiant leaion tor liuntimen In
the Nelson-Creston Electoral Die
trict la of nint dayi duration, Id the
Orand Forki-Orttnwood Dlitrlot, it
is ot 22 dayi duration, and ln the
Nakusp area it is of three dayi duration.
The seasons trt:
Oct. 10-18 for the portion of the
Nelion-Creston Electoral Diitrlct
situated ind lying South of i line
drawn Eelit tnd Weit pining
through Kootenay Landing, and In
the Columbia! Cranbrook ind Fernie District*.
'  Oct  11-Nov.  1   for  the  Onnd
| Forki-GretnwooiJ    Electoril    Diitrlct
Oct. 16-18 for the portion of the
Kulo-Slocan Electoral District lying within a flvt mile rtdlui of the
Nakuip Port Office.
BAG LIMITS
In the Dlitrlcti of Nelion-Creiton,
Columbii, Crinbrook tnd Fernie
hunting of pheuants li permitted
between the houri of 9 a.m. and
5:30 p. m., while ln all other portions
of the Eutern Diitrlct hunting is
permitted between noon md 5 p. m,
on the tint three dtyi of the suon,
and between 8 a. m. tnd 6 p. m. during the remaining dayi.
The bag ll confined to male birds
only. In the Nelson-Creston, Cranbrook, Columbia, md Grand-Forks-
Greenwood areai the dally limit la
two blrdi and the season's limit is
12; in the Ntkusp trta lt ll two
blrdi for tbe season ind these miy
be ihot on the ume day. In other
portion! of the Eastern District the
daily bag limit Is four and the
season's limit ii 20. '
NILSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY. SIPT. 16. 1M2-T
JOINS R.CA.F.
Eddie Bush, youthful member of the Detroit IM
Wings, who has just joined the Royal Canadian Air Fore*
arriving at No. 1 Manning Depot, Toronto. Bush Is the
Collingwood husky who came through with. flVe point*
in the third game of the Stanley Cup playoff ser_M.
against Toronto Maple Leafs last spring.    -,.-' ,
Phils Force Cards lo 60 All Out
lo Win 3-2 ior Two-Game tout
"SUGAR" HANGS NO. 124 ON MOTISI JAW
Ray "Sugar" Robinson rings up his 124th consecutive ring victory, above, as Tony Motisi melts to the'
canvas in the first round of their scheduled 10-rounder
in Chicago. Time of the knockout was 2.41 of the first
round.
BALL STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAQUE
St. Louli    97 47 .874
Brooklyn     84 48 .6S2
New York   80 62 .563
Cincinnati     71 70 .504
Pittiburgh   - 82 76 .449
Chicago 65 80 .448
Botton       58 83 .411
Phlladelphii  38 99 .277
PHILADELPHIA, Stpt. 15,(AP)
-The St Louli Cardinal! hid.to
go ill out In .14 nerve wruklng
Innlngi todiy to conquer the once
docile Phlli, 3-2, tnd Inflate their
Nitionil League lead to two full
gimet over the Idlt Brooklyn od-
gen.
Mort Cooper, big right-hmder
who had won 20 gamei to letd the
Red Birdi in. their queil for the
pennant, had one ol hla rare bad
days and wu lifted ln the ninth,
so Murray Dlckion finally pitched
and batted St. Iaoula to nicceii.
With two out in the 14th he imash-
ed a ilzzling double deep ia to
right centre and came home wilh
the deciding run when Jimmy
Brown .followed with a ground ilngle right through the middle of lhe'
diamond.
If Cooper hid been right there
would have been no need for the
marathon that kept 3526 (ans in
Shibe Pirk 3 houri tnd 19 minutei
because the Cardinal! grabbed t 2-
run letd ln the third Inning.
With one out Harry Walker, subbing ln centre field for the injured
Terry Moore, beit out • lingle down
the firit bue line, md after Enos
Slaughter had gone down on I t\y,
Sttn Muiial and Wilder oaptr, _K
successive doublu good for a ptfcg
of talllei.
Cooptr, weiring the No. 21 mil-
form   of   Johnny   Beailey   u  t.j
piychologlctl aid ln hit tyittm 4H
rotating uniform numbers to coin-'
c!de with hit goal, wu far off tht<:
form he ihowed in tbUttinfO_t_]
Brooklyn on thrtt hlti lut wttk.
Ht wu behind ilmoit every bitter tnd tht PhiU hid him ittg-
gerlng throughout hit itiy.
St, Louli          3 1* tl
Phllidelphii   .'....,....;..'......» 1» I
M. Cooptr, Dlckion 9 tnd W. Cooper; Johnson tnd Livingston.
CANCEL GAME.
' CHICAGO, Sept U (At*)- Tb*.
final IM] Chlctgo appearance of
Boston Rtd Sox wu cancelled to*
day while the Whltt Sox wtrt lud-
ing 4-3, witb one.out lo tbt lut
half of tht fourth inning. It
not t legal gtmt tad none of t_e
stttiitlci will go in tht record I
Ted Lyoni of tht White Sox '
on tht wiy to hli 14th tiptory l
the gime wu celled off becautt ot
adverse pitying conditioni.
Batting Leaders
By Tht Anoclated Prm
Bitting (three leaders In each
League):        '
Player, Club G AB R H Pet.
Wllliama, R Sox 143 501 133 177 .353
Pukty, R Sox 140 588 102 199 .339
Lombardi. Brvi 99 282 21 94 .333
Spence, Sens. 140 586 88 102 .328
Gordon, Ytnki 138 507 83 186 .328
Reiier, Dodgen 113 428 82 196 .318
Muiial,   Ctrds   ISO 426   83 134 .315
Home funs: Nationil League—
Ott, Glints, 27; American League—
WlUIimi, Red Sox, 2.
Runi bitted ln: Nitionil Leigue
— Mlu, Gianti, 100; Amerlcin
Leigue, Williami, Red Sox, 132.
*    %
ht?Sf ff'f   If
70 Men Belonging
to N.H.L.
on Active Service
MONTREAL, Sept 15 (CP) -
Seventy pliyeri belonging to national leigue clubs lut leason ire
now on tctlve lervlce, It wu innounced here today by Preiident
Prank Calder. Most of this number
are registered with the lervlcei ln
Cinada.
Many of these have never pliyed
in the big league but have been
with N.H.L. farm clubs waiting i
turn to itep up. Othen have been
in amateur rank! but on NHL negotiation lists md thui were conaid-
ered VHL material^
Jersey City Leads
With Newark Bears
JERSEY CITY, Stpt. 15 (AP) -
Jersey City made lt three itrilght
over Newirk'! pennint winning
Bears here today and took • 3-2
lead In their best four of leven gime
leml final governors' cup leriei is
they defcited the Brulni J-l before
1757 fani.
I'ewirk     10   0
Jertey City  .... 3   4   0
.Byrne, Roier 7, and Padden, Rob-
lnton 7, Junglei and Poland.
QET8 ANOTHER TRY
Pitcher Vito Ttmulll, one-tlmt
New York Yankees, Is almoit certain to get another big leagut
chance ln view of hli excellent,
record   thli   lumraer   with' tht ,.;,
Naihvllle  Voli of -tht Southirn 1
Association.   Thl   iQiithptw   hu   ^
won 18 games and loit only eight
ii'
k
OLD COUNTRY STARS GIVE PJCTON R.A.F. SCHOOL FINE SbCCER SQUAD .
One of ths finest loccer twins in Canada hai baen assembled by Group Capt; CifiT'offlceFcoramanding the R.A.F.
Bombing and Gunnery School, Picton, Ont. Several old country professionals are-on the aquad, Reading from front to
back, the players are: H. McConnell, captain and centre forward, Ayr'Unitedf W.'1 Lockwood, outside left, Durham
University; G. Flockett, inside right, Spennymoor United; T. Thorton, goalkeeper, Wolverhampton Wanderers; J.
Williams, full back, Manchester City; R. Williams, left back, Eastbourne To*n;,R. Smith, right.naif,.Elgin City; W.
Staveley, outside right, Bishop Auckland; Kellett, sub; P. Ross, left half, Johnston. ,J!upiprs; Sheddou, inside left,
Queen's Park; J. Campbell, centre halfback, Partick Thistles.
■__-_...,.... .._.
_________
._.___-.   ,._,__.__.:      irniiHII,	
____________
 T
 .—
— ,—'—
—_——_—
ji-NHSON DAILY NIWS, WIDNtSOAY, MPT. 16. 1942
SALLY'S SALLIES
• ■ ■ '.
' tyjgutefffiodct.
EXCLUSIVE DESIGN
Thli filet crochet chair set aayi
Home Sweet Home in a different
way. It is lovely done in fine cotton and that means next to nothing in cost. And what an added
decoration for your chairs, Pattern 449 contains charts and di'
rections for making set; material!
required; illustrations of stitches.
Send twenty cent! for thli pattern to The Nelion Dilly Newi.
Needlecrift Dept. Nelion. Write
plainly pattern number, .our
namt tnd iddreu. Pittern will
be milled to your home within
■ 10 dayi.
TnaAwi   TnaAiin.
EMBROIDERED STYLE
Surface "embellishments" <pn
plain fabrics make news Ihis sca-
'' ion. The (lower embroidery on
Pattern 9201 by Marian Martin is
done from a simple transfer motif.
The dress itself has graceful yokes
■ soft bodice and a panelled skirt.
Pattern 9201 may be ordered
only in women's sizes 34, 36, 38,
40, 42, 44. 4fl and 48. Size 36 requires 3% yards 39  inch  fabric.
Send twenty cents for this
'Marian Mirtin pattern. Be sure to
write plainly your 8IZE, name,
addren and styltf number.
Send your order to The Dally
News. Pattern will be sent to your
home within 10 days.
LONDON (CP)- Superintendent
G.M. Vevers of* the London Zoo
Ns assured the world the repiile
bouse at the zoo is open'to visiors
although all poisonous snakes have
been destroyed because of the risk
of their getting out among ihe
public during air raids.
AUNT HET
By robert quillen
"Cuii sin Henry didn't have
time to help sell bonds. [\ keeps
him busy tellin' folks how
eyerybody i* failm' lo do their
duty."
JUtfrWUS.
Be #«>iu». ff You    /  1 HOlten-
Ml MAVt
USJKA
VERY SrtOKT
9..I5'
Di_tnbut«- by Kirn fc*urt> Syndic..., toe
fonihad...
By Shepard Barclay
SUIT PREFERENCE VITAL
NEXT TO the opening lead,
which ii the moit Important ilngle play of all In the overwhelming majority of handa. the one
ranking iecond to It It the choice
of iult to be led by the defenders
to the iecond trick. The ant is
more or leas "blind." except for
whatever Inference! may be
drawn from the bidding, plui
whal you iee ln your own hand,
hut the lecond li or ihould be a
mere preclie matter. Then calculation! may be based partly on
what you iee tn the dummy and
partly on what your partner plays
to the Unt trick.
♦ J 64
f K J 10 7 t
4 J 10 8 2
+ 3
4K ?, 2
4 A 6 513
4 A K 9 1
N
W   E
S
4 A 10 _ 8
»8
♦ K Q97
4.J7 52
4Q75
f A Q 8 6 5 4
+ None
* Q 10 8 6
(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable.)
South       West    North last
1« Dbl       2 V 24
IV 34        . V Dbl
East would have succeeded with
his double If his partner had paid
close attention to all that he saw.
and made proper use of it. But he
didn't.
Picking the Mfest lead of the
club K, instead of the suit which
his partner bid in response to the
Informative double, as a free bid.
but did not rebid, West did not
notice the card his partner put on
the trick, which wai the 2. or elie
did not derive any meseage from
It.   To   the   second    trick,   he
twitched to hli partner'! iult, the
ipade K. That and the A wen
tricks, but the Q icored for declarer on the third round, tnd the
reit of the hand wu t puihover
(or South, by meant of trump-
dropping tnd t crou-ruff.
No trick can ever .be ttken In
spades by South unleaa the opponents lead the iult. Weit ihould
hive retd, upon teeing the singleton In dummy tnd the great nun.
ber of hearta there, that Eaat
knew he would shift to apadea or
diamond!. There would be no
i*nse in a shift to trumpi with »
many In dummy. Hence East's job
wai to signal hii preference aa between apadea and diamond! That
la exactly what he did. Hla 2 wu
meant to call for the lower-ranking diamond!, whereu the 7
would have aaked for the higher-
ranking apadea. Had West read
the message, a diamond lead
would have forced the declarer
eventually to bnak spades himself, and thui tike no trick In the
•ult while losing three, enough to
beit hi! contract.
•    •    ■
Tomorrow'! Problem
♦ K J97
♦ AQ73
ttt,
♦ Q92
4 6 ... 3
» J 9 5 1
♦ J 10 8 7
4,3
N
W  E
S
A**
t K 10 8 6
+ 8.32
A K J 10 8
♦ Agios
♦ AKQ
+ A765 4
(Dealer:   South.   Neither   ilde
vulnerable.)
What method of pliy would you
prefer on  thli dell, to ieek 6-
Spadei. Weat hiving led the diamond J.
Di.trlbuted by Kin* r«itura-i Syndicate. Inc.
DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN
Jl. Bird
1. Artificial
24. Group of
tenta
2 Expunger
25. Route
26. Mute
3. Native of
27. Cotrie
Denmark
hominy
4. Foxy
28. Absolved
S.Ttnta
29. King of
6. Molding
Israel
7. Split
30. Mendicant!
8. Pad to pro
31. Force
tect kjie«
onward
13. Bulk
33. Made of
14. Quick
■teel
15. Butte
34. Jumped
17. Long tooth
36. Cotrie cot
20. Ache
ton fabric
alalia uaiau
[.araiJM naiiLiM
UBBIi-l  Ul-b'JH
S_.H1.I    I' __'--'*.
'_-    I'll •■lllli I
[__U__r.-_l-!   una
auat-i'jn .*._
t.a_u_t_ HOUHH
Elt..   U0_.'QUM
GI.IL.   _J_ll__JH.!-i
-___   _!'..     BIB
...iBMi.!-. imitn
H!_l-_4_1  MUIHMH
UHB'Jtl    '* '.'■ MIU
Hi-iaa __aaa
. .Urdir'i Amww
39. Storm
40. Oavem
• 42. Pull through
wtttr
ACROSS
1. Spread!
graai
to dry
6. Bottle
itop per
9. Ruuian
river
10. Baking
chamber
11. Great
number
12. Solitary
13. Ponder
14. Unitltched
booklet     .
16. Malt
beverage
IT. Gtme of
chance
15. Father
19. Outdo
21. To crowd
22. Steamship
j(abbr)
23.Insert
24. Bounden
28. False hllr
IS. Period of
Ume
Tt. Scnitlnli*
29. Total
30. Buihel
(ibbr.)
32. Uke ale
33. Piece of
needliwork
35. Pronoun
36. Part of a
check
37. Ovum
38. Package
40. Enclosure
41. Infrequent
42 Bark of mul.
berry tree
43 Wicked
44. Acrou
45. Aiizeot
paper
44 Marrie_
CRTTTOiJOOt*—A
ASK   PI   R N LB   PB   QO.    Illaltl   FI
RI5WOME   ANLQOI   NT   po-INWQJPLO.
S-tarfey'i ajptufttli I PREFER PRtrDENC* WHICH H
NOT ELOQUENT, TO IttU-Y WHICH 18 TALKATIVE—
CICERO.
CWribund by Kini return Bmtleali. toe.
Cryptoquotei ire quotation! of fimoui peraoni written clphtr.
A lubstltute character hai replaced the original Ittttr Tot IniUnce.
an "R" miy mbitltute for th* original "K" throughout the entire
cryploqiinte. or > "BB" m»y replace in "IX" Find thl key ind follow through to thi -Million.
COMIC AND  ADVENTURE  STRIPS
♦ ♦ ♦
By Cut Edson
UNP-INCHINCiLY-THB FTWBUCM
OF OUR «ON'» EPUCATION -
s   SWALL IT BB WB5T POINT
\    OR ANNAPOLIS?
wm.    wm__^
LI'L ABNER
By Al Copp
AH'D RUTHER   \
Dit THAN
HAVE HER QO
THROUGH TH'
SHAME .AN'
HOOMIUAVSHUN
O' FtEVEALIN'
AS AH SEES IT- "
THAR'S JEST ONE
WAV YO' KIN
SAVE YO' NECK-
THET 16 -T 'HAVE
TVV 'SARTIN
SOHEONE." YO' v. AS
WIF THET NIGHT
TESTIFY YO'
DlbNT DO ITT
WILL SHE COM!
TCOUHT ?
HENRY
By Carl Anderson
~L WHY  DON'T    XOU SIT]
KC IN   THE    SHADE ,J-t{
5 V-,    HE>4R» ? J~*
_V^''
Ui
\W\    \Y
_^   -**—-_*
_\;".      \
_——V—_
\ C^flj ___PT
L
-1
_
BRINGING UP FATHER
By George McManus
y                                           \-
tr*. 9LtO MAfiOE WENT OUT-
1 WU2  C3VIN' FEB A SMOKE-
BUT 9HE VMUUDN'T LET WE
OUT-AS IVE GOT TO STAY IN
UNTIL .THE PLUMBER SfTS '
1 THOOUSH IW THE KITCHBN-   1
?
4K   _ ■
i *''jy_\W\
WHAT tX)6S THffl ueN_'.
HON O.RE >OU SMOKE
A FILTHY PIPE IN MIY.
HOUSE? I'M PAYING YOU
TO FIX A PIPE-NOT TO
SMOKB ONB- .	
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disney
KINC OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED
By Zone Grey
THAT. ENOUGH,PIERCE- «-
MOORE.' IW PRETENDiNS
'DBEE. KlLLgD--WAS''-;
TUST PART OF VOUR PUN ?
,'vS IW7-AND 1—>( 'OCURSE.'WS
CUTTING THE 'PKJNE ) NEEDED *LC
LINE, I SUPPOSE -> AW ODNT *
|T BRING V014
Nfi?
BLONDIE
By Chic Young
1   A
■ ii     t*__rWlill
	
 I
■ ■
Look Do^rii Thew Want Ad
PHONI 144
IIRTHS
CARKNGR-To    Mr.   and    Mrs.
Ernest  Carkner  ot Rossland,. it
fhe Mater Misericordiae Hospital,
I    on Sept. li, a daugnter.
HELP WANTED
Application! WlU not ht consider
td trom perioni in thi employment
ot my firm corporition ot other
employer engaged lo the profluc
tlon ol munition!, wu equipment
Ot tupplltl tor. thl irnied form
unleii ll|Ch I person li • iKllleO
tradesman not actuallj implored
tt hli trtdt.'
WANTED: OIRL OR WOMAN FOR
, general hiewk. Sleep is. $30 mth.
only experienced ud good chtr-
tcter need apply. Box 8271 Ntwi.
WANTEt. 1 FLUNKEYS. $70 MO
and, botrd,  plus coit of  living
bonui. Apply National Selective
I  Servict Office, Nelaon,
Vanted at once, MAN NOT
•ub.ect to military calling td learn
bakori trade. Apply National Selective Service Office.'
fc)R RENT: NIW MODERN !
room bungalow, Douglai Rd. Furnished except linen, cutlery md
dKhes. .25. C. T. McHardy Ins.
tnd Real Estate Ph. 185.
WANTED; MALI FLUNKEY FOR
logging ctmp. About 20 mtn. Apply Ntt. Selective Service,
tA-tt-D-.  MlDi_L_A<__ WITS**-
'7 . keeper for motherless home. Wage
; SM t month. Box 14, Trtil. B.C
WA_r_l!D. BOY 16, FOR PRESS
Room. Apply Nitlonal Selective
Service Office, Nelion.
wanted DELIVERY BOY FOR
grocery itore. Apply Nationil Selective Service Office.
*AN'_1»: d-ii TO- UGH?
hswk. Box MM Daily Ntwi.
teachers
Wanted: teacher for jaf-
fray School. Salary, ont thounnd
t   year   Apply  Sec of  Jtftrty
School Botrd. Jaffray. B.C
_    i 	
SITUATIONS WANTED
Sptcltl Low Rttti for noncommercial idvertlsementi undtr thit classification to Uiiit
ptoplt leeking employment
Only He for ont week (t dayi)
eoven tay number of required
linei Payable In advance. Add
10c If box number desired
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY
A88*YE.iI ano mTne • '
RgPRESBNTATIVM
HAROLD S   ELMES,'ROSSLAND
B.C. Provincial Assayer. Chem.lt
Individual  rtprttenlttive for
Ih'lppen it Trail pmeiter
A. 3 BU1E. Independent Mine Rep.
retenutlvt. Box 34, Trail. BL
E W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL
Auayer. 301 Joiephlne St.. NeUon.
THE  WEST   KOOTENAY   ASSAY
office, 990 Stanley.St.. Ntlion, BC.
KOOTENAY   MINES   ASSAYER.
Box 308. NeUon, B.C.
CHIROPRACTORS
a. b. Mcdonald, d.c, pumer
Grad.  X-Ray   Strand  Blk, Trail
CORSETIERES
SPENCER CORSETIERE
Mlii S Boomer, 117 Gore, Ph 669-L
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS
BOYD C. AFFLECK, P O. Box 104,
Trill. B. C. Surveyor and
Engineer, Phone "BeavetTilli"
R. W. HAGGEN. MINING it CIVIL
Engineer; B.C. Lend Surveyor,
Rouland tnd Grind Forks, B.C
FOOT  SPECIALISTS
S. J. GILLIS, DSC, R.C.P, REU'D
Chiropodist, Foot Specialist, Bergeron Block. Ph. 11W, Tnil, B.C.
FUNERAL HOMES
SOMERS FUNERAL HOME
702 Baker SL Phone 29?
Cert Mortician     Lady Attendant
Modem Ambulance Service
INSURANCE AND REAL E8TATE
CHAS F. McHARDY. INSURANCE.
Reil Estate. Phone 139
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine ihop. acetylene tnd electric
welding,   motor   rewinding,
commerclil refrigeration
Phone 993 324 Venion st
OPTOMETRISTS
W. E. MARSHALL
, Optometriiti
MM Biy Ave, Trill      Phone ITT
WfflW OISL 6t_W<_ TO fiUST
nesi College deiires room tnd
board In exchange for light service!. Bos 1702 Daily Ntwi.
SASH FACTORIES
LOST AND FOUND
To Finderi
V TOO find mything telephone
Tht DtUy Ntwi A Tound" Ad.
will bt Inserted without coit to
you. Wt wUl collect trom tht
owntr.
foi.it 6   pair  6.   AMllss
: glaisei netr Brilllint. Owner
may recover same by calling it
Pttentodt'i Office, Baker St
tOST $11.   .ASH  58? MONDAY
' morning, lower Fairview or Front
St Rtwtrd. Apply Dally Ntwi.
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
iHIP US YO«R SCRAP METALS
er Iron. Any quantity. Top prices
ptld. Active Trading Company,
MS Powell St. Vancouver. B.C.
*HANTBD TO BUY-. STANDARD
or portable typewriter. Spot Cuh
Apply Box 1788 Dilly Newi.
4ash PAID FOR USED CARS,
trucki ind farm Implement!. Apply P.O. Box 184. Creiton, B.C.
Winted — Dry pt, tamarac ind
fclrch wood. Weit Tranifer Company.
DMi-ntt flaihi Nruto
Telephone 144 .
Trill Circulation: Phone W0
Classified Advertising Ratei
lie ptr Unt ptr Innrtlon.
iAe iet line per week <t coniec-
otlvt Iniertlom for coit of 4)
II 4S • line i month IH tlmei)
(Minimum I llnet otr lniertion)
covers' tny number . of timet
Box number lie extri Thli
PUBLIC NOTICES. TINDIRS.
ETC.
tie ptr lint, flnt lniertion tnd
14c itch subsequent lniertion
ALl ABOVE RATES LESS
10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
SPECIAL LOW RATES
Non commercial    Situation
Winted for Ho for tny required
number  ef  linn fer ilx  diyi
ptyibli In idvtnet.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$   08
SS
13 00
__        per week
By cirrier. per yur _
By mill:
Ont month  _______
Thrtt monthi _____
Six monthi   _____
Ont yttr
$   .71
.    100
400
BOO
Abort ritei ipply hi Cinidt
United Statei and Unittd Kingdom to iiibscrlben living nut-
tide regular cirrier ireu
Iliewhrre ind In Cinidi when
txtn portage li required om
month 11 90: 'bret month! $4 00;
Ilx; mopt_t MQQ  nn. ...r 419
ROOM AND MARD
COMMERCIAL   STUDENT   RE-
qulrei board ind room it reason-
, tble   terms    Ada   A.   Andrewi,
[    Um -p 1
LAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY
Hirdwood merchant 273 Biker St
SECOND HAND STORES
WE BUY, SELL AND EXCJIANUE
Whit hive you? Ph. 934 Ark Ston
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Almir Hottl opp. CJP.B   Dtpot
B5l' PRICES "PAID FOR ANY
kind of rauilcil tnitrumeut, or
tooli. Ph. 134. Ark Store.
QUICK CASH FOR YOUR OLD
range, In good condition, J. Cheii,
Second Hind Store, Vtrnon St.
USED CLOTHING WOULD Bl
gritelully received it tbt Stlvition Army, 811 Victoria Strttt
2-t-iHt PHOTO MIL.t35*
P O Box 311, Vtneouvtr
Rolli developed ind printed 28o
13 reprinU 1x7 enlargement, 31C
WB  SlERVlCI ALL  MAXJ_S~6.
lewlng machines.
Singer Sewing Machine Co.
Phone 41 33» Baker St.
I PAY CASH FOR ALL LIQUOR
and wine bottlei. "Mlckiea" lc
doi., 11 and 40 or., 16c dox. De-
" liver to J. P. Morgin, Nelion, B.C.
IF YdJU WANT PRINTING OF ANY
description write to Daily News
Commerciil Printing Dept, Nelion, B.C.
MEN ONLYI SEND Sc POSTAUt,
for Free Catalog of Jokei. Novelties. Books. Blidei. Sundries Etc
Parii Novelty, Dtpi "B" 312 Mclntyre Bldg., Winnipeg, Mamtooa
PUBLIC NOTICES
LAND ACT
NOTICE OF INTENTION TO
APPLY TO LEASE LAND
In NILSON Land Recording Putrid ot NtUon, tnd ntuati ln tht
vicinity of Shoreicrei, B.C.
Tiki notice thtt Peter S. Tarisoli,
01 Thrums. B.C.. firmer, Intend! to
ipply for t Itnt of tht following
deicribtd landt:—      -V.
Commencing it • poit planted It
he S W. corntr of Pet. 4 of Out Lot
302A. Plm 1871', thence Weit 20
chnlni; thence South 20 chims;
thence Eut 20 cnains; thence Nqrtn
20 chains, ind containing 40 acres.
more or leu.
Dited: 20th July. 1042.
PETER S. TARASO.F.,
by(.M.&S.;
kit
RENTALS
FOR RENT; 160 ACRE FARM.
about 8 acrei cleared, remainder
1 timber, good iprlng witer, 6-room
houie. Include 1 2-yeer-old milking heifers, 1 yearling heifer. All
freihen etrly ipring. Write particular!, Mri. A. B. Willford, Win-
law. B.C.
2ffi? —LIONS PHOTO— 250
P.O   Box 414 Vincouver, B.C
Any size roll dev, printed. 25c Reprinti, 8c etch. Free 1x7 coupon
"A trill wlU convince you"
WE HAVE SEVERAL OOOD
houiei tor rent Call In tnd see
C W Appleyird & Co. Ltd.. Baker
Street Nelion.
HYGIENE SUPPLIES BY MAIL
Guaranteed first grade tuper-fiue
Special assortment ot 13 for $100
postpaid in plain double ieaied
wrapper. Weitern Supply Agency,
P.O. Box 363. Vancouver.
25c Any site roll developed 25c
•nd printed
Reprlnti 3c or 40 for $100
48 houn required on ill ./ork.
6tnd In your friendi fllmi' too.
FILM   EXCHANGE
P. O. Box 80 Caatlegar, B U
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-
ed (6 or 6 exposure roll) 25c, Reprint! 3e eich For your vication
snapshots, choose Kryital Finish
Guaranteed non-fidt print!
Kryittl Photoi, Wllkie, Saakitc.-ie
wu   Eitabllihed over  30  years
BUY YOUR FUR COAT NOWI
Wl Invite your Inspection of our
lovely  selection.
STYLE - QUALITY - PRICE
Convenient Termi.
AU enqulriei promptly aniwered.
POLAR FURS LIMITED
S.S Granville St, Vincouver, B.C
WE NEED 100 CASES B.C. HATCH-
lnfeggs etch week, Feb. 20th to
June 1. (Bldod Teited, Government Approved Flocki only).
Owneri ot good flocki cm have
blood testing done thii fall. Our
plan of prlcei miy intereit you.
State breed, number heni. puUeti,
whether approved last season. Act
now. Write direct to J. J. Himbley
Hitcherici, 607 lit St. E, Cilgiry
Branches: — Winnipeg, Rcgini.
Sukatoon,   Edmonton,   Brandon,
Portage, Dauphin.
for sale: JeRs_y c6\v, t mi.
$60. Black stallion, 2 yttn, 179.
Bay gelding. 3 ytan, $81. Wint
cattle  md  horsei  to  pasture, J.
Grah-m. Slocan City.
FOR SALE: 1700 LB. GENTLE ALL-
purpose hone. 6 yr. old. Will
trade for heavier'hone oi cattle,
chlckeni, pigs. F. Eimer, Kailo.
FOR SALE: 6-WK OLD PIOS
Ready Oct. 1. 83 each. C. H. Bebbington, Boiwell, B.C.
FOR SALE: PIGS, LARGE AND
■mail. Apply Ron, MUe 22. Weit
Robson.
FOR SALE: TWO HEAVY TEAMS
young honei. Abey'i Rinch, Mirror Lake.
FOR SALE: TINE YOUNG TEAM
Belgiin horiei, 1410 Ibi. Wray.
Wtnett.
W AtfTfib. (T<5r"JUsTTRKH_fr-
ed. SUte price ind breed Werner
LlechU. China Cretk. Bluberry.
v.Alrrettt'BfrGodb MIL*' COWS
Ptu-lculin. Box 6307, Dally Newi
f5R~SALE:   FIvr^TL_TT_5W5
Abey'i Ranch. Mirror Lake, BC.
PEJ5. CANARIES, BEES  ETC
WIRE-HAIRED TERRIER PUPPIES
pure Imported itock, milM. (H.
Harding,  Nelion,   Phone   110.
FiTo i. otroTiwro-SPRmOtn
spaniel fimale 6 monthi old pirt-
ly broken under good command.
Cheap. John A Rowlindi, Sll-
verlon, B.C.
MINING PROPERTIES
MINING PROPERTIES FOR SA1.8
Hileni. Nn 4238. 21 tern Mountain Chltf. No I. 81-18'4470 Silver
Bind 82-1-1871 Wrltt Mri E
Nord. Spregui Waihington
. 6_ 'laty.*rrctt_TClTNTA MINE
Ph ii'7 I., or nil it ltm HHI
Minu Rd
MEN'S SPECIAL
Men'i penonal drug ijindriei
flneit quality, tilted, guaranteed. 12 for Mc, 23 for $100. u-
lortcd, including world'i funni-
ut joke novelty frit, tnd cm-
logut of lundnci.
WESTERN  DISTRIBUTORS
Box 14 Dept NC. Regina. Sask
_ttaM_     PhO-_»L.      _R______D
Printi you will be proud to ihow
to your friendi. Any 6 or 8 txpi/-
lure roll developed ind printed
23c; or 12 reprinti lie. Enlargement! made from your own negitlvei and framed in in ittrictive
easel frame S%x5%; ipeciil 29c:
1 for 7Jc. 8x7 iptcitl 45c; 3 for
$1.20 Plici your fllmi ln proftillonll handa No lUmi. No
tertlchtt, Bind your rfrdert) with
confidence to Super Bntpthoti.
Box 2990. Winnipeg
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
MILLWORK
We minuficture—S11 h ,  Win
dow!, Doori, Scneni, Kitchen
Cupboirds, Ironing B o i r d I.
Medicine Ciblneti, Store. Office   and   Restaurant   Fixture!.
md my detail mill-work.
Eitimitei glai.lv  given
KOOIfcNAY SASH  &  DOOR
FACTORY, Nelson, B. C.
Phone 630       ■     (07 Front St
BHB__HW?f8ffHiiBBBf-
■ lion unit Juit received. Sultible
for 1-foot wilk-ln cooler, Cen'.nl
Truck md Equipment Co.. Ph. 100.
702 rront gj. NeUon, B.C.
W-ttl .oRTAHpU ot <_tm
new payroll ind Umt ihttli Thty
trt tutntlil to every Um of bui-
lnesi todty. Dilly Newi Printing
Dept., Nilion, B.C.
fivt -11-PtiN_s • WSM - 8.1-
clil low pricei Active Tredlng Co
918   Powill   St.   Vincouver.   BC
FOR RENT: FURNISHED, OR UN-
furn.' ittrictive four-room tpart-
ment. lower floor, separate entrance. Phone 142-R.
FOR RENT; MODERN 6-RM. HSE
308 Hoover St. Phone 484-R3.
FOR RENT: FURN. STEAM HEAT-
ed luite. Phone 650-X or 917
Edgewood Avenue.
FURNISHED HOUSE. $2S MONTH.
228 Andenon St. Good garden
TERRACE APTS. Beiutlfufmodern
frigidaire equipped suits
A  HOMl   .Oft   _HOS_  AWXTf
from home Stntbcona Hotel Aon
res jiHrti i.m"wiwr."9um
Steam heat. Frigidaire. Ph 1082-R.
HOUSE   FOR   RENT.   APPLY   D
Maglio. Phone 806-L.
SEE KERR APARTMENTS
FOR RENT: HOUSE, ALSO FURN.
Suite. Close In. Phone 628-X.
_OR~RENT:   FURNISHED ""SUITE
Apply 918 Kootenay Stret.
FORlTt.'frHEATED_ATtD FURN.
suite. Box SJ393 DiUy News.
PROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS
FOR SALE; TO SETTLE AN Estate, 19 acrei, ibout 4 cletred end
in hay Large log cibln with witer piped from good well SmaU
biyihed ind liable. No reuon-
■ble offer refused. Apply W
Friwr, executor, Kootemy Bay.
Celling for tungtten 'proipecli, Ihe
Coniolldated Mining < <i Smelting
Company will.Invite prospector! to
communlciii with it ind to itnd
lamplei. Tungsten ii i vitally needed wtr metil.
Tht company pointi out thit tungsten occun moit commonly in ichtt-
lite and wolframite. Botji art found
In "comely cryiUlllied griniti-
like rocki, md icheellte often occun in icdlmentary rocks, ttptclil-
ly llmcitone, neir granite contact!,
Thtfy irt found In many gold bearing velm ind In pltctr gravels."
Scheellte ll deicribed u i "yellow-brown, buff, grty or whi;e
minertl with I dull gretiy lustre,"
It ii brittle. Under an ultra violet
lamp it fluoresces with t blut white
color. But 'fluorescence ll not def-
ite indication" ilnce other minerals,
iuch it calcltt tnd iome typei of
quartz, hive thla property.
Wolframite lt a dirk brown to
bltck mineral wlih black to reddish
brown itreaki. It ii brittle ind harder than scheellte and cannot easily
be tcratched with a knife, as scheellte may be. Iti density ls about the
same ai galena. It dpea not tloureice
with ultra violet light.
Anscomb Sworn in
as Public
Works Minister
VICTORIA, Sept. 13 (CP^.-Her-
bert Anscomb was sworn.in as Minister of Public Work! and Railway!
by Lt Gov. W. C. Woodward today,
filling'the Cabinet poiltion formerly held by the late R. W. Bruhn.
Since Mr. Bruhn'i recent death the
portfolio hai been held, by Premier
Hart.
Mr. Anicomb will retain the portfolio of Mines md Trade and Industry until iuch time ai lt ii determined who will be named to the
Cabinet to balance it numerically.
,UtJlJ FARM LAN US FOH 3A__
on eaiy termi In Albert! ind
Siikifhtwin Writi for full in-
formilion to 908 Dept of Nitum
Reiourcei   CPR    CiHarv   A"'
FOR SALE: 160 ACRES. SOME
clear lots of timber for ties, wood.
piling, etc. $1000. Half cash. J.
Graham. Slocan Cily.
FOR SALE: 8 RM. HOUSE. 1M-
medtate pot'n. No reas'ble offer refused See owner 228 Anderion St
FOR SALE"-IM-ACRES. 3~"M1.
from Nelson. Birch, fir, larch
Some cleared. Witer. J500." Box
8371 Dilly Newt.
-SrTSALE 76 \CRi_niW~_uTU'-
ding cheap or iwip. Apply Mn.
Rom Deirln. Winliw, B.C.
MONTREAL     STOCKS
INDUSTRIALS
Aisoc Brew of Can   WA
Canadian Bronze        80
Can Car 4 Fdy pfd   5%
Can Celmeie ptd       122
Can North Power   4tt
Can Steamihip pfd   26%
Coekihutt Plow  6
Con Min lc Smelt  _.:  33%
Dom Textile  69(4
Foundation C of C  14
Gitlneau Power pfd   72
Howard Smith Paper  8
H-Smith Paper pfd _ 9«
Inter Pile                   13!i
Inter Nickel of Can   30
Lake of the Woods  '... 18
BANKS     -
Commerce  118
Imperial  151
Montreal      125
Nov* Scotia    221
Royal       116
Toronto  212
CURB
Abitibi 8 pfd       iVs
Bathunt V tt P A   11(4
Cm Marconi              75
•Com paper Corp  1 85
Donnaooni Piper A   2(4
Fairchild Aircraft   2(4
McColl Frontenac pfd     8614
Two Inquiries for
Light Will Be
Probed by Council
Two ttiqulrlii for City light itrv-
let wtrt refirred by thi City Council Mondiy night to tht Electric
Light Committee for inveitlgttion
ln tht light of restrictions on new
electrical   lnittllltlonl.
C. E. Bell of Ctlgtry wrote thtt
ht proposed to buUd I houn on tnt
Johnitone lubdlviilon on tht North
Shore, but wanted flnt to know
that powtr would bt available. W.
A. Gordon, Acting City Cltrk, stated tht lnteit ordtr received in thli
reipect pliced t Umit of 20 poundi
on tht tmount ot win which could
bt uied.
E. H. Wellbourn offered to tup
ply tht wire tnd polei when he
uked tor extemion of i City power
line to hli place on the North end
of the old rifle range ln Cotton
wood villey. Ht ittttd thret othtr
families nearby would tike light
llb'S
NILSON DAILY NEWS, W.DNISDAY, StTT. 16, 1942-8
Little Forecasls Drastic "Pruning" ol
Non-Essential Industry
lo Relieve Acute Manpower Shortage
City. Lett lniurance
Contract and
Renews Policies
Dealing with three typei of In
surance the City Council Monday
night.decided.to renew truck fleet
Iniunnce carried by C. W. Appleyird tnd Co., Ltd; and fire truck
insurance carried by C. F. Mc
Hardy; and awarded fire iniuranct
for which tenden were recently
called to Robertion Realty Co., Ltd
at a rate of 45 cent! per $100.
PLAN TO REOPEN
VAN ROI
SILVERTON, B. C. Mr. Beaton
oidtlmer of the Slocan Dlitrict, formerly interested ln the Van Roi
mine, has a small crew of men
cleaning up In preparation for re
ppenlng of the mine.
Report Lorry Allen
Is Prisoner
NEW YORK, Sept. li (AP). -
Larry Allen, Aasocjited Preu correspondent and 1941 Pulitier Priie
winner, wai believed today to be a
priioner of war, captured by the
Italian! ln the Brltiih Commando
assault on Tobruk Sunday night.
A menage from Edward Kennedy, chief of the Associated Pren
Bureiu in Ciiro, said he had reliable Information that Allen wai ln
the enemy'! hands.
Earlier the Italian radio broadcast an official announcement that
American newspaperman had
been taken prisoner ln the Tobruk
raid but his name wai withheld.
Chinese Recapture
City of Wuyi
CHUNGKING, Sept. 18 (AP). -
Chineie forcei reciptured Wuyl,
ibout 20 milei /Southeait of Klnhwa
ln Cheklang province, yesterday, a
Chinese Army ipokesman laid today.
The Chineie had forced the Japanese out of the city on August 31
in their sweep North from Southern
Cheklang province, but lost it the
next day, the spokesman said.
Wuyi ii about 30 miles North of
Llshui, an important ilr baie recently wrested from the Japaneie.
F A  WHITFIELD. REAL ESTATE
and lniurance. 417 Hill St Nelson
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES
•iTpontiac sedan.TnevTr_~-
cipped tirei Ridlo, huttr. Will
tike cheip cir pirt piymint. Ph.
411-R, 114 Victorii St.
new   ANfi   _$__-   BATTER! _S
Nelion Ano Wrecking St Oirafe.
WRECKING
1929     .LVMOlaTlT
Cily Auto Wreckeri.
waWed   slVBUL  GOOD
dairy cowi. W. Konktn, Appleaiie.
f6fi"SAf."«n9SrT5Rb Vi pick-
up. Apply J   Wright Sanca,
SWAPS
FOR   SALE:   WINDMILL.   GOOD
cond. 6 ft. held, no tower   E. T
Colemin. Valllctn.
ddOCOSHTilTprbieiel mglni
Netr   Ntlion.   Rwiomblt   prlct.
Apply Boa 6291 Dilly Ntwi.
M* lALl: 1 KJCTWC W6NS.
good ll new  Phone M3-X.
oirHRTWTjgttroNTiiAsos
Full tvtlUblt. Ph   446-L.
FO^TXHTlTAllBOANyTIKTSi..
ed circulating heiter, ai ntw, |40
cuh  H. 11  Kit'n. Ph  1046.
fS1T_Al,<:".1N_ HAMMERtaBB
ihot gun. I] fiuge. Flrr elm
condition H. R. Kitto. Biker 31 •
FOB SALEf~SMALL UPRIGHT
piino. Boi ill] Dilly Newi
WILL SWAP PRACTICALLY NEW
bidminton ricqutt ind preu for
uied cluh big or lultcue. Box
MOO, Duly Newa
G^m^HAWAllA^^UrFAH
for good uien lul'cm or trunk.
Box MJ2 Dilly Newi.
ARC WILDER. 16 AMPS. H^MBTI'.
for motori tooli, c.c 924 Vernon,
Spanish oumuTm good con
tooli. whit hivi you! Ph. 676-X
BALFOUR
BALFOUH, B C.-Thi locil Red
Crou workeri met II thl homt of
Mri H. lUdun Stpt 10. Siveril
new members ittindid.
Mlu • lulbtrluid of Kulo Ii
teichlng thi loctl toheol.
A vtry lucttwful putting oi
Ladiei Guild wu htld tl tht homt
of Mri M Bnnllion.
Thi Women'i [nitimte held the
flnt Fill meeting it Woodlind Hill
rhlrteen memberi md vliltori were
prtient      f
VANCOUVER   STOCKS
Brilorne       6.00 6.15
Gold Belt  12 -
Grandview lOVi —
Hedley Malcot 1! -
Kootenay Belle ....      .18 .20
McGllllvny    17Vi .23
Pacific Nickel        X)4tt .OS
Pend Oreille -      .85 -
Pioneer Gold      1.12 -
Premier Gold            J8 .40
Privateer                    .24 .26
Reevei MicDonild        .18 —
Reno Gold                   .06V4 ' .08
Sheep Crtek       73 .75
Silbik Premier .....      .35 —
Surf Inlet       .04* .06
Oltt
Anglo Ctoidiin  ..      .35 —
A p Com      .06 —
Brltiih Do*  19 -
Commoil       .13 -
Commonweilth         JO .12
Dilhouilt .17 -
Highwood Sircet        .06^ —
Homt       2 23 2 30
Mercury '       M .04 Vi
Model  13 ,1B
Nitionil Pete        .04 -
Okiltl Com    22 -
Pacific Pett     19 .25
Royillte , 16.00 -
Suniet       .03 —
United         .0SH *M
Viniltt          -04V4 -
Vulcm        13 -
CALCARY LIVtSTOCK
CALGARY. Sept. 16 (CP) -Cil-
tie 270; cilvu 20; hogi 250; • few
eirly iheip
Medium to good htlfen 6-8 75;
good cowi i.li—d.7i( common to
medium t~i. doMM down to IS.
Medium lo good httVJr vtilin 9.30
-1030.
Hogi. Monday 1J.U for B-l it
yirdi and planti. Good Iambi Mondty 110.
The flnl rtllwiv opened In Scot-
lind In 1811 wu worked by hdou
BAILEY NAMED O.C.
OF OVERSEAS UNIT
OTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP)- Defence Miniiter Rilston today innounced appointment of Major C.
E. Bailey, 46, of Vancouver ai officer commanding a Canadian armored regiment oveneas, and hii promotion to rank of Lieut.-Colonel.
CAMr LISTER
CAMP LISTER, B. C.-Miii M.
Sinclair la a gueit of her brother-
in-liw md liiier,- Mr. ind Mn. F,
A, Huscroft tt Triil.
Ted Kilgren ii i viiitor tt the
hoipe of Mr. ind Mrs. Frink Yerbury it Kimberley.
Col. Liiter left for Kelowna to
attend a meeting of the Tree Fruit
Board.
Miriam Spencer of Wynndal was
weekend visitor at the home ot
Mn. M. Rou of Huicroft.
Mn. Douglai McKee Jr, returned
from the cout ifter viiiting her
huiband, Pte. D. J. H. McKee for •
month.
E. Coop of Crinbrook wu I Sundiy gueit of Mr. md Mrs- w- J-
Ekerlk.
After • few diyi on hli rinch
•t Huscroft, Gordon Hurry rtturned 10 Crinbrook.
Mn. E. Kilgren is viiiting her
brother-in-liw ind liiter, Mr. ind
Mri. A, Kilgren.
Ed. BekteT, Adolph Sommerfflld
ind Ed Selbert who ire employed
In Kimberley wire weekend viiiton it their h"mes.
Pte. Kirk Beird ot RMR, stationed it tht cout li vltltlng hli
mother, Mri. E. R Beord,
Mlu Ph|lllpi Thompion returned
to her home In Nelson, While here
iht wai a gueit at Mr. ind Mri.
T. R. MlUner.
Pte. J, Fillgertld irrived from
ihe cout md U visiting Mr. ind
Mri. Wllllim Demchuk of Huicroft
Mf. Ud Mn. Wllllim Wocknitz
wtrt Sundty vliltori it tht homt
ol tht former'i pirenii, Mr, ind
Mri. Joe WocknlU. They were en-
routi to Klmberliy.
Mlu K S. Beird of Crinbrook
viiited her mother, Mr». Burd ind
fa-'ly it lh- weekend,
Daniel Domko lift (or Nntal
where ht li employed.
OTTAWA. Stpt II (CP).-Ctni
tdt ftcti a "progriuive plinned
pruning" of lnduitr(es not essentiil
to • minimum itandard of living to
relieve in acute manpower shortage
which li deterring war production,
Elliott M. Little, Director of Nitlonal Selective Service, itld In an
addren prepared fer dillvery today
to tht annual convention of the Canadian, Congress oil Labor.
Mr. Little gtvt the convention
moit up-to-the-minute figure! on
Canada's manpower needi. Industry
and the armtd forcei wiU require
almoit 200,000 mtn and.women by
tht tnd of tht this ytar and in additional 100,000 men are reijiilred
for logging operation!, ht uid.
"Our wir production li lufftring
right now became wt hive not
dealt sufficiently ruthlessly with the
iltuation," he iaid. "Our baie metal
mines, producing metali absolutely
vital to our munition! production
are far from adequately manned.
We have an Immediate need for
thousands of additional men to
w6rk on defence project! ln vital
coastal areas tnd other strategic
point! In Canada. . . .
"In the reallocation of induitrial
manpower, bailc lurglcal itepi wit '
htvt to bl Uken la tht nitionil Interest," Mr. Little continued. "Wo
ire now at tht itige where we no
longer hive tny choice but mus,,
forthwith iet out to rtduct our" clv^j
ilian itandard of living to tht bin
minimum necessary to maintain,
heilth md efflcieocy.        '   .
Unioni would have to reconcile j
themselves to large-Kale employ- -j
ment of women, not only ln lndufftlH
but also ln lervlcei previously comfl
ildered lultiblt only for tht em-'
ploymijnt of men.
"We trt put tha ittgt where wti
only need ln Induitry women Who I
•rt working because thty need'the
money." he iaid, "From now On ai j
our armed torcei expand tnd our
munition! production growi iccord- I
lngly, women  who ntvtr htd. to
'work becauie of economic necesilty
ihould come forwird tnd offer thtlr '
servicei to Indfuitty to thtlr owif )
and the nation'! interest.   ■
"Not only will, wt need tilt ilngle
young women but alio mtrrled wo-v
men  with  the  exception  only of?
thoie with conildtriblt ftmily rti.'J
iponiibllitln."
WfaAMJjuwjU, * * .
LONDON, Sept Ji <AP>.-With
the exception of 1 slightly backward tendency ln Brltiih fundi, tbt
stock market wu iteady to higher,
NEW YORK-Rtvived 'tu nll«
hopei ipurred selective buying but
on the whole, failed to touch off
much of a rally.
Utllitiei pushed up at tht start of
action of the Senate Finance Committee in voting theie concern! permission to deduct preferred dividends from surtaxes. Other groupi
were aided by the shaving of combined normal md surtax ratei and
the cutting of tht holding period
for capital assets.
TORONTO—General itrength in
the mining groupi on futer turnover enlivened Toronto mirket
Close to 178,000 shares of Ontario
Nickel changed handi and tht prlct
wai up illghtly at the close although most of the itock wai sold
at 12 against yesterday'i closing
price of 12H. Other bue metil li-
luei were more active than uiual.
Some ot the galni In tht goldi
 . . ,	
were trimmed ln tht Utt tctkm. 'i I
MONTREAL —  Strongir    in d
weaker ipoti tppttrtd In tht Hit-  |
boarded  todiy tnd  t number of
iuuei faUed to ahow Ufe.
VANCOUVER-Trtdlng dropptd
to t minimum with only 950 iharei
changing handi.
WINNIPEG—Whtrt trading wti
dull and mostly ln flurries. Thert
wai no Indication of export builnett
ln wheat or flour and the October
wheat future closed unchanged it
90 centi • bushel.
In the coarse grain pit dealing!
again were featured by lupport BV'
tye, presumably in connection with '
inter-market   ipreading,   involving'
purchaiei here igslnst ailei tt Chicigo.
CHICAGO-^Selllng which entered the grain pits ln the doling minutei, tnd which wu attributed
mainly to profit. Uklng, pushed
Whett prlcet below the preceding
session'! close todty. Other grains '
lost mtjor parti of substantia)
early advances. ,
Toronto Stock Quotations
AMermac Copper „
Anglo-Huronian    -
Bue Metals Mining
Beattie Gold Mlnet
Bidgood Kirkland _.
Bobjo Minei  ..:.,
Buffalo Ankerite	
Canadian Malartle _
Central Patricia	
Chromium M it S 	
Cout Copper...	
Coniaurum   Mlnet   	
Consolidated MAS...
Dome Mlnet ._ 	
Eut Maltrtlc 	
Eldorado  Gold  	
Falconbridge  Nickel _
Gods Likt Gold	
Gunnir  Gold  	
Hird Rock Gold	
Hollinger  .
Hudion Biy M It S	
International Nickel 	
Kerr-Addiion    	
Lake Shore Mine.	
Limaque Contact	
Leitch Gold  	
Little Long Lie ,	
Micleod   Coekihutt   	
Midien Red Lake Gold 	
Malartic G F  	
Mclntyre-Porcuplne    39.75
.._ JtrVA
--.IM
_. Bl¥,
__ .55
._ .0«
._ .06
..... 1.11
__  'SI
— .40
.._ US
__ .40
_ M
—87.78
_-.14.26
__ 1.06
.... .60
__ 2.40
_ .16
_ M-
_... .34
..... 7.38
_.__.00
...10.00
... 8.75
 7.48
 g SS
— .464
._   .70
_.   St
SS
1.2(1
McKenzie Red Lake
McWatten Oold 	
Mining Corporation
Nlpiulng  Mining  _.
Norandi 	
NoirneUl 	
Pamour Porcupine ...
Perron Gold 	
..... _2
__ .08H
..... .67
..... .67
 42.75
.._ .61
_. 3i
.... m
Plckle Crow Gold _.
Powell Rouyn Gold
San .Antonio Gold _
Shewitt Oordon ,__
Siscoe Oold ...___
Sladen Malartle _
Sudbury Basin ■ .
Sylvtnltt    |   i
Teck-Hughu GoId-_
Toburn Oold Mln«
Venturei    	
Wilte Amulet
OIL! .•
Ajax     ,
Britiich Amerlcen __
Chem Research ....___
Imperii!    1 ,
Inter Petroleum _.,
Tumi Ctnidltn       ,,'
INDUSTRIAL8
Abitibi Power A	
Bell Telephone  _.
Brewen tt Diitillen
B C Power "A"	
Can Car & Fdy	
Can MaHIr.,1  	
Can Pacific Rly	
Can Ind Alcohol A _
Dom  Bridge ....   	
Dom Foundrlei  _
Dom Tar Ji Chem __
Distillers Seagrami .
Ford of Canida A   ....
Goodyear Tire ....  	
Hamilton   Bridge    ,
Massey  Harris  	
Montreal Power	
Nat Steel Cir   	
Power Corp  	
Sttel of Cin	
. 1.40 '
, Jt '
. 1.45
a-    JT
. HI
■ .1714
. 1.MJ
.1.30
. 1.46
,   .41
MS
IM
_  .18'
_1M0
—   -Oi*
_9J0  '
-.13.86
.  JO:
.46
127H
i%
10
6
33
' >%
9H
20 Vt
18%
SH
a :
18%'
47
3   • I
»V
. »H
16%
this
61
DOW JONES AVERAGES
High Low Clou
18 utllitiei      1183 11.37 11.75   up"  Jtl.
20 ralli     26.58 26.47 26.48
30 Induitrlall                                 101.62 106.17 106.49
Chinie
i *
up
Procter W.I. Member
Knits 49 Sweaters
PROCTER, B.C.— The Procter
Women'i Initltute met ftr tht fint
mt thli season it the home of Mn.
N. Shkwtrok Frldiy. Dilnty ri-
freihmenU were ierved it Uie cloie
of Uie meeting, Tht Pruident, Mri.
W. White\y preilded.
ArrangemenU were made for
the collection of fundi to purchase
contenU for Christmas parcel! to
be sent to esch member of the
armed services who have loft Uie
Procter district.
The Procter Initltute ire ilid
doing good work for the Red Con.
Mn Van Hemert. whou husbind
hu bun In thl Army for thl put
two ind t htlf yun ti knitting
her 49th iweiter for the Red Crou
Inei Joining the Initltute.
A I6-Jnch cout irtlllery gun cin
be fired ibout 200 tlmei before Iti
btrrel muit be rellned.
NIW   YORK   STOCKS
Amerlcin Cm       67%
Am Smelt 6i Ref   36%
Amer Tobicco   42*1
.Anaconda      23% '
Bendlx Avlitlon   34
Beth Steel    „  91%
Cinidlin Piclflc    4%
Chryiler  61%
C Wright pfd    _  22%
Dupont      .   '  112%
Clenenl Electric   11%
Genenl Motori  •    J7%-
Inter  Nickel  27%
Inter Tel A Tel ,   4T-   .
Kenn   Copper   „.,....„  19%
Phlillpa   PeU  33%
Ridlo Corp       JVi
SUn OU of N J ...-.....-  11%
Texu Gulf Sil   UM
Union Ctrbldt  67%
t'nlted Alrenft   St.
IJ S Rubber ,  19%
V S SUel  „..  41   I
 wPI^Tr.
lOu-NILSON DAILY NIWS, WID MOD AY. Ilpt. 16,1941
_TTC A A Cash Prizes for Bank Ntto
V J.UU Tonight  — Drowat9i40
4?
OHtW
LAIRD CREGAR
at 3:12-8:12
Plus —"Mexican Spitfire Sees a Ghost"
with' ■
Lupe Velez,  Leon Errol, buddy Rogeri    .
-,   TODAY ONLY
Matinee at 2:00
Showe at 2:00, 7:00, 8:12
CIVIC
'   AWU_OU$WA_BltHIAtll
BC. Men Listed as
Missing at Dieppe
OTTAWA. 8ept. 15 (CP)^Ca-1 (friend), addren unknown; Edltoi
Scheme forx Postwar Rehabilitation
Made at Muni
_ By H. U JONE8
*:'{Otntdltn Prtu SUff Writer)
JOPS, B.C., Sept. 15 (CP).
revolutionary. plen for poit-
tu rehabilitation, letting out in
186,000,000 model idic-mc for British Columbii and calling .for Federal control of National Finance
.(through the Bank of Canada tnd
miny changes In the preaent economic leUip, was laid today before
the annual convention of tht Union.
ft British Columbia Munlcipallflei
*y a ipecial committee.
h Tht Committee's report propoied
the $35,000,000 scheme tor post-war
nrunlclpal project! and noted that
though the sum Is large lt "ia only
equal to what we now spent every
SJJ'dayi of the war, therefore lt
.could only be met by continuing
the present rate of Federal war
spending for the purpose of peace
tr 18 more dayi after the Armis-
plan, which would Include
nti tnd new building in
_pil treat throughout the
irovliioe would, ilong with Provincial Government projects, "take
tare of 111 returned men and women
GrenfelPs
,ST YOUNC TURKEY
With
EN BROWN POTATOES
Today
Fleury's Pharmacy
Compounded
Proscription!
Accurately
Med   Art! Blk.
PHONE 25
ANNABLE BLOCK
\       Phom 667R or 358R
Ont- tnd two-room apartmenti
fcrnltted. iteam heated, hot
water all tht tlmt.
nmU'H'TTTT'TTmTTTTIT
A. D. PAPAZIAN
Watchmaker,  Jeweler
tnd Optician.
"Tht Expert"
415 Hall St.       Nelion, B.C.
II ll 11,111111111 ll _________
LAKESIDE SERVICE
GROCERIES
PHONE 488
FREE DELIVERY
Opp. Ltkeilde Ptrk.
Today
tomorrow
"CARELESS"
CAR-LESS"
m wa tre
CAR-SAVER
—-J SPECIALISTS
I Cuthbert Motori Ltd.
~ Opp. Humt Hottl tnd Poit Office
B'SHINGLE STAIN
PURE OIL -STAINS
Btd tnd Green ... 5 _tl.$U.75
.Brown   8 Sal   11.78
Weitern SUNFAST Stains
■ Red tnd Brown ... 5 gal.    BOO
Qretn      8 gaL    9.78
BURNS
LUMBER i-COAL CO     .
rjujlkuuf fa Ik fault-*
IU0NI S3      -    NUSON PC
for aperidd of five yetn," tht report ttld. |
Post wir financing wu iet out
as tbe municipalities' greateit problem and on the report uid:
"We suggest that the Federal
Government take over full control
of national finance, and the Issuing
ot money through tht medium of
loaned to til public bodies for
legitimate use, it t cott lufficient
to cbver overhead—printing, dlitrt-
button tnd bookkeeping. Such
charge should not exceed one per
cent Back of til iuch money would
be the people ind resources of
Cinada."
Other Important polnti ot tht
Committee'! post-war plan were:
1. Government establishment of
free medical and dental clinics together with free hospitalization,
with all docton tnd dentists becoming civil lervanls.
t. Litis sdvlct to bt mtdt av
ellable without cost to people with
low incomes.
J. Old ago pensions be brought
much closer to tht cost of living
Index tnd tht pensionable tge reduced tnd madt flexible.
t Government guaranteed minimum pricei for all farm producti
and removal of educational costs
from the land,
S Capital to be made available
to farmeri it low cost, to be repaid
after harvesting of cropi.
6. Establishment ot I nttlontl
minimum wagt for workeri, iuch
minimum to be baled on the Government'! cost of living index.
7. Establishment ot t Dominion-
wide itandard of' education ai t
basic national obligation, with provincial privilege to extend Indefinitely beyond such standard te
miy be deemed neceiiary,
Defiling further with pott-war rehabilitation ln British Columbia,
the report said that the province
could solve any threatened unemployment ..problem by producing
at home goods It now imports iuch
as linoleum, furniture, china, glassware, refrigerator!, electrical goodi,
clothing tnd other thingi lt propoied tbe letting up of new Industries with cooperation ot the munlclpalitlei, such as pottery Industry at Salmon Arm whtrt suitable
clay Is available, a fruit by-products
Industry in the Okanagan, a rayon
industry anywhere in the province,
coal by-products at Princeton tnd
Nanaimo and an asbestos induitry
where abundant deposits art located.
Dealing extensively with labor1
the report recommended equal piy
for equal work for either lex; a reduction lf neceiary of working
houn eo thit ill work miy be
equally ahired by ill memberi of
the community; regulation of working conditioni which wilt ensure the
worker the highest standards of
working condition!; compensation
for Injury or occupational sickness
sufficient for 1 full itandard of
living with adequate medlctl ctre
and hospitalization md equal Representation of libor on ill Government-appointed   boards.
KAMLOOPS, B.C., Sept. IS (CP)
—A call to munlclpalitlei to concentrate all efforti on winning the
wir wai lounded today by Reeve
H. M. Grauer of Rldbmond ln hii
Presidential address to opening
full session of the Union of British
Columbia municipalities.
Preiident Grauer wirned the 123
delegate! from ill parti of the
province thit despite Increasing
municipal costi, lt li Improbable
that additional aid will be forth
coming from the Provincial Government i,
nadian cuuiltlei at thi Battle of
Dltppt asuregate 3360 d e a d,
wounded tnd mining, tht Depigment of Nttlontl Defince 10-
nounced todiy.
Tht innouncement wil made
along with t list of tht men officially reported missing whose
namea hivt been held up from publication until now for itflirlty rtt-
sons, tnd with a itatement from
Defence Mlniiter Ralston expressing sympathy to tht relatives ot tho
mtn wbo were killed, wounded or
ttken prisoner. t
Along with easualtlei previously |
reported, todiy"i llit brlngi the to-'
tal number of known dead to 170,
including 40 officeri, the wounded
to 633, Including 41 offlcen, tnd
tht missing to 2547 including 130
oflfcen,
"In releulng then flgurei and
tht long lilt ot those described is
mining, I wish agtln to express tht
sympathy which all Canadian! will
feel with those who muit endure
sorrow ind anxiety, tnd tht deep
pride which belongi to our country
In the courage, the fighting gallantry and the proof of victory to
come which Canida achieved at
Dieppe."
The llit Included the foUowlng
Britlih Columbia men:
MISSING
Offlcen: '
Roytl Canadian Engineers. Wood,
John Edwird Rogen, Lieut, Mrs.
Margaret Iiabell Wood (wife), Vancouver.
Western Ontario Regiment Laird, ,|
Reginald Robert Capt, William
Henry Laird (father), Oliver, B.C.
Warrant officers, N.C.O.'i and
men:
Canadian Armored Corps: Blair,
George Leilie, Ir., Mrs Delphene
Loli Blair (wife), Ladyimlth, B.C.;
Carnie, Thomai Lawrence, CpL,'
Mn. Louise Carnie (wife1, Vancouver; Hapimel. William L-. Sgt_ Mn.
Olive Lucille Hammell .wife), Vancouver; Lazier, Dontld Rowtn, Tr.,
Mn, Ruth Htltn Lazier (mother),
Vincouvtr; Leonird, Vernon
Chirlei, Acting Cpl, Mn. Lillian
M. Ltontrd (mother), Crowi Neit;
Morrison, John Donald, Sgt, John
S. Morrison (father), Weit Vancouver; Mowat Gordon ,McIntoih, Cpl.,
Mn. Dorothy Mowat (mother), Vancouver; Poirier. Trahan Godfrey,
Cpl., Mn. lva L. Poirier (wife),
Ptrkivllle; Porter, Elmer Stewtrt
Cpl., Mrs. Mabel Porter (mother),
Vancouver; provli, Chirles Lyman,
Tr, Mn. Annie Provli (mother).
Vancouver; Ron, Gerald MoEwin,
Mn. Bertha Georgina Ron (wlft),
705 Stanley St- Ntlion, B.C.; Stow-
Edltor'i
note: Where ihen lllttd U "address
unknown-" they trt. not ntctitartly
B.C. man); thompion, Norman Rupert, Acting Sgt, lbl. Mtty Catherine Thompson (mother), Summer-
laud; Tough, Alexander Howdtn,
Ssm., Mrt. Helen Catherine V.
Tough (wlft), Vtneouvtr; Twtmlow,
Edward, Tr.„Mrs. Katherine Twtmlow (mother), Coghlin; Vtrmllyet,
Cyril James, Cpl, Mri. Elizabeth
Vermllyca , (mother), vWouver;
Wagitaff, Alfred Stanley, Sgt. Mn.
Anita E. Wagitaff (wlft), Summer-
land; Weaver, Jack, Cpl, Simeon
Weaver (fither), Natal.
Roytl Ctntditn Artillery—Charters, James, Acting Bdr, James
Charters (father), Vancouvtr; D'Ar
Charters, (father) Vtneouvtr;
D'Arcy, eLon_rd Joieph, Sgt, John
Joseph D'Arcy (father), tddreu un-
j known; Dtvli, Etrlt Kenneth, Gnr.,
Joseph Ravls (father), Vancouvtr;
France, John Hinton, Gnr, Mn.
Emily Francli McLetn dunt) Vancouver; Holt Juel, Cpl, Eric Holt
(father), tddreu not given; ton-
geuay, Nelaon Edwird, Gnr, Mn.
Elizabeth Longeuay (mother), Vancouver; Northgrlvei, George Allan,
Acting Bdr, De Ton Northgravei
(father), Chilliwack; Slater, Henry
Arthur, Acting Bdr, Joieph Slater
(brother), Victorii; Underwood
Ernest A, Gnr, Mn. Ethel Lorraine
Underwood (wife), Saanlch; Wld
dy, Robert Vincent Gnr, Albert W.
Waddy (father), North Vancouver;
Berry, George, L. Cpl, Ralph Berry
(father), Kelowna; Clementa, William Albert, Acting L. Cpl, Mn.
Frances Clements (wife), Chemainus; Rou. William Hendenon, Spr,
Mra Elizabeth Rou (wife), Port
Albernl; Sparrow, Victor Charlei,
Spr. (unknown).
Western Ontario Regiment—Alderman, Erneit Rutherford, Pte,
Jamei Murphy (uncle), address unknown; Engbert Lome, L. Cpl,
William Engbert (father) Vancouver; Llndiay, Andrew, Pte, Mn.
Jean Llndiay (wife), New Westminster.
Saskatchewan Regiment — Johnion, Wilfrid Laurence, Pte, Mn.
Alice Johnson (wife), Vancouver;
Keys, Herman Cyril, Acting Cpl,
Mrs. Anne Knight (mother), Victoria; Miller, Edwin Albert. Mrs.
Nellie Ellen Miller (wife), Chilliwack; Salmond, George, Acting L.
Sgt, Mrs. Grace Salmond (mother),
New Weitminitft; Schattenklrk,
John Thomai, Pte, John Schatten-
klrk (father), Summerland.
Provott Corpi—Btddeley, Roy, L.
CpL, Mn. Abigail Baddeley (mother). Vancouver; Gold^ Frank Edward, Cpl, Mn. Agnei Goldle
(wife), Victoria; Russell, Alfred
Craven, L. Cpl, Mn. Helen Ellza-
WAMPOLE'S
PHOSPO
LECETHIN
A nerve food tnd tonic
Palatable   and   Pleasant.
Bottle
$1.00
Your   Rexall   Store
City Drug Co.
Phont 34 Box WO
—»—■■___
FIRST OF THE "WAY.ES" ARE NURSES
First Arrivals at Smith College, Northampton,
Mass., where the "waves"—women's reserve of the United States naval reserve—officers will be trained, were
the Scheips sisters, who are pictured here in their uni-
foms as ensigns in the "waves". At the left is Epsign
Edna Marie Scheips, U.S.N.B., who trained at the U_iT
versity of Nebraska, right is Ensign-Leda Ruth Scheips,
who trained at the Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit.
Rossland Social ♦ ♦
ROSSLAND, B.C
tnd Mn. Leonard Pascde were the
gueiti of honor it t farewell party,
given by Mr. and Mn. Herbert
Spencer, it their home on Monlta
By MRS HARVEY FLEURY
Sept IB-Mr.
weekend ln Rijssland, visiting Mr.
and Mn. Alfred Endersby, Sr,
' Mn. George Talbet entertained
at the tea hour Monday, when her
gueiti Included Mri. F. G. Bray,
Mn.  Alexander   Page,   Mn.   Stm
Street Saturday vening. Gamei tnd Stevena, Mn. Jamea Stevin!, Mn.
-  - - ' Harvey  Linn,   Mrs.   John   Trlggi,
Mn. William Turner, Mn. Alfred
art, William, Tr, William Moiman beth Ruuel (wife), Summerland.
Interpreting
The War News
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
Aiioclited Preu Stiff Writer
Byrne Estate Goes
o Nephew
Hii Honor Judge W. A. Nlibet In
Chimben grtnttd letter! ot administration to Cliude MicDontld ot
Kulo In regird to Iht tfttte of
Michael J. Byrne, ot Kaslo, who
died April a, 1042.
Net amount of the estate wu
$480.99 and a nephew, Bull Byrne
of Dublin, Ont, U the mlc beneflc-
liry.
E. P. Diwion icted ts solicitor.
Although tht battle tf Stalingrad holdi tht ipotllght In thl
wir newt, development! In the
Atlantic, In Egypt ind tht Bilkim
hive  definite  ilgnlfleince,
The British commando-type raid
on Tobruk, Marshal Rommel's major advance post and probably the
■ite of hli chief tank and truck repair opentioni, polnti itrongly toward an Impending Britlih counter offensive ln Egypt. Coupled
with the simultaneous landing raid
operationi at El Daba'i behind the
Nazi sea flank, the Tobruk operation looms u a prelude to a formidable Brltiih attempt to drive Rommel out of Egypt before ht can recover from hli recent repulse. .
By every Indication Anglo-American tank power u well u tir now
■urpaisu that of the Axis in Egypt.
The time leemi right tor in attempt
to crush Rommel before Hitler cm
spare planet trom Riueii. Egypt hu
■eemed to thli writer to hold out
mere Imminent tilled lecond-front
poulbilltlu to take some itrain off
tht Ruulani than any othtr lector.
Another development whloh catches ittcntlon It the whlpuw Anglo-
Russian air offensive tgilnst the
Ploeitl oil field ln Rumania. Moscow reported miny fires itirted it
that Nut oil centre ot Nisi lup-
pllei. it hu not been ilmllarly bombarded ilnce tbt fill ot Greece
drove Britlih bomben beyond tht
Me((Uerrinein except for t recent
surprise American attack of limited
tcopt.
Ploeitl li fir remote from any
allied air bate now. The neartit
pouible arei In Ruulin handi from
which bombers could hive taken off
to attack lt would be the Black Set
cout of the Caucasus, 400 milei distant u the crow flies.
Aisumlng the Ruulani took otf
from there, It ti to be recalled thit
Britiin bu created t ntw trmy in
Iran and Iraq lo back Ruulin defence of the Btku oil field tt need.
British or Amerlcin planei tulgn-
ed to thit irmy could utt tht ume
buei ln tht Southern Ciucaiui.
well supplied with gttollnt from
Btku refineries, lo luppltmtnt Ult
Ruuitn oil ittack whtn tht pltnti
•rt available. Tht Ruulin bom
birdmtot of plotitl maj. bt _ fort*
teste of what Is to come ln tbt Balkan! u American heavy bomben
enter the struggle ln ever-lncretilng
numben on ill fronti.
Another development of note ll
Nazi confirmation of t recent
British itatement thit the Germin
U-bott ittack centre in the Atlantic wu ihlftlng Northward tnd
Eastward. Berlin claims • damaging assault on a convoy In the
middle North Atlantic costing the
allies a score of cargo tnd nival
craft out of • West-bound sailing. Ctntda hu announced sea
louei ln nearby waten.
Tbe changed Nazi icene of tctlon
wat due In part to increasingly effective Amerlcin protective meu-
urei ln the Weitern Atlantic and
Caribbean, now supplemented by
experienced Britlih tir pttroli, In
pirt to the sustained British bombing
of Nazi submarine construction centrei, basea tnd Biy of Biscay routes
to Weitern hunting groundi; ind
ln part to growing U-boit losses.
Two things ibout the Berlin clilm
tend to support that British explanation. It wai a West-bound, nol Eait
bound convoy picked for atack. Reluming empty ihlpi art leu heiv
Ily guirded thin Kut-bound troop
transport! or lupply enft. Berlin
•Im piid tribute to young U-boat
crewi uid to hive been engaged
Scrloui attrition among itaioned
undersea penonnel Is luggeited
1 loclal evening were enjoyed, following which the hoiteu ierved
lunch, assisted by Mn. Harry Stln-
son and Mn. George Benzies. A
wilnut end table was preiented to
the gueiti of honor by thoie present
who Included Mr. and Mri. Reginald Wheatcroft, Mr. and Mra. William Papave, Mr. and Mri. George
Benzlei.Mra. A. K. Keating, Mn.
Hirry Stlnaon, and Mr. and Mri.
Herbert Spencer. Mr. and Mn.
Pucoe and family expect to leave
Rosaland Thursday to take up residence in TralL
The Misses Freda and Ruth Clare
returned a few dayi ago from a vacation apent in Vancouver,
Mn. Gordon Sommerville ind
mull ion Rou, left the litter part
of the wtek for t diitrlct north of
Prince George, where Mn, Sommerville will teich ichool.
Miyor John E. Gordon ind Alderman Jack Corner irt tttendlng
the convention of the Union of B.C
Munlclpalitlei being held in Kam-
loopl.     >
Mlu Ermt Oonley of Edmonton II
• guest ot Mr. and Mn. Rene Morln,
Griffith Apartmenti.
Adnlphe Morin, who hu ipent
the put three months In Roulmd
tt the home of hli brother ind sister-in-law, Mr. and Mri. Rene Morln, leaves Saturday for Edmonton,
where hla parenta reside.
Mr. and Mn. Cecil Floyd of
1111111111111111 [ r 11111E11111111111111111111111
NEWS OF THE DAY
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiih
Will your wtiher lut for the duration? Ph.
'Endersby, Sr, and Mn. D. F. Mclntyre.
Mr. md _ti. Jack Leland and
family are expected to return from
Spokane about Thunday.
Mr. and Mri. Henry Metzgar and
Mri. Wallace Hocking, who have
been visiting in Alberta, are expected to return to Roisland at the
weekend.
FINED $10 FOR
FAILURE STOP
AT INTERSECTION
Allan Smith, mechanic of Nelson,
wai fined $10 by Magistrate William
Brown ln City Police Court Monday
when he pleaded guilty to a charge
of failing to come to a full itop at
the lnteriectlon of Stanley and Victoria Streets.
The offence occurred Sep. 10,
and Information wai laid by Acting
Chief Robert Harahaw.
91 for free inspection.
Brown  crockery  flower pots ln
all ilzes, 3, 4, iV,,   . 8, Hippenon'!.
"Sit. Eve. Pist Pic md Liberty"
on uie it VALENTINE'S.
Quiet Hour of Muiic St. Sivlour'
Church, Sunday Sept. JO 3-4 p. m.
No Damage From
Chimney Fire
at J. Cheis Home
Nelson Fire Department extinguished a chimney fire at the home
of J. Chew, 1807 Stanley Street, on
Monday night No damage resulted
from the blaze, reported at 10:lj
Air Casualties
OTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP)-In ltt
370th casualty llit of tht wtr tht
Roytl Canadian Air Force tonight
reported teven men killed on active service overseas and eight kill
ed on tctive service tn Canada.
Following U the latest list ot cas
ualties, with next of kin;
Killed on actie service: Eagles,
Clarence Gordon, Sgt, Southampton, Ont; Granger, John Dow, Fit
Sgt, John Granger (father) Van
couver; Dowland, Frederick Henry,
Sgt, Brawardlne, Mm.; Jackson,
Ronald Adey, Sgt, Aulder. Jackson
(father) Vsncouver; Robb, George
Barclay, Sgt, Expanse, Sask.; Temple, Albert John, Sgt, Winnipeg;
Templeton, Pat Neff, Sgt, Wellington, Tex.
Died of Injuries sustained on active lervlce — Bowes, Reginald
Jamet, Sgt, Newcastle, N.B.    ■
Previously reported missing, believed killed—how reported killed
on active lervice—Waddell, John
Burrows, Sgt, Beausejour, Man.
Mlulng, believed killed during
air operations — Freestone, John
Handel, Po, Waldron, Sask.; Thompion, Harry William, Po, Oxford,
N.S.; Wring, Arthur .Colin, Sgt,
Hampton, N.B.; McKay, Daniel Archibald, Sgt, Sprlnghlll, N.S.; McGrath, Bernard Arthur, Sgt, St.
Catharine!, Ont; Mblr, Alexander
Douglai, Sgt, Fergus, Ont
Missing after air operationi —
Strutt, Gordon Jamei, Po, Shaw-
ville, Que,; Thornley, Bruce Allan,
Po, Toronto; Johnston, Arthur
Oeorge, Fit. Sgt, St. Vital, Mm.;
Matches, Alvin Jamea, Fit Sgt;
Shallow Lake, Ont; Bachelder, Allen Leland, Ste. Anne De Bellevue,
Que.
Prisoners of wai—Heggtvelt, Carlyle Edgar, Po„ Ottawa; Armstrong,
Leo Joseph, Sgt, Plainvlew, Neb.
Previously reported missing—now
reported priioner of war—Langton,
Herbert Cecil, Sgt, L, A. Langton
(father)  Victorii.
Previously reported missing —
now reported safe—MacLean, 3ohn
Angus, Fit Lt, , Beaton'a Mills,
P.E.I.
Previously reported mlulng —
now for official purpoiei presumed
dead—Fairley, William Irvine, Sgt,
Regina; Jackson, Granville Andrew,
Fit Sgt, Brandon, Man.; MMse,
George Joseph, Sgt, Cetral Falls,
R.I.
Seriously Injured on active service—Dunfleld, Samuel Ross Hugh,
Fo, Weiton, Ont.
Dangerously 111 ai a result of Injuries tuitalned on active aervlce
—Greenwood, Edward Alfred, Fit
Sgt, Moose Jaw, Sask.
.. Seriously 111 aa a result of Injuria lustalned on active lervlce—
Douglaa, John David, Sgt, Toronto.
Raincoats  .
Don't take chances—B«
prepared In one of these
fine Raincoats. Made silk
or check lined;—fly front
and loose-fjtting with the
Balmacaan color. Light lh
weight. All sizes.
f 12.50 and f 13.50
EMORY'S
The Man's Ston
Box 100 Phone SI
TORONTO, (CP) - Tw_ will-
known Truro, N.S, boyi ln tht Air
Force are Sgt.-Pilot Dontld Fulton,
goaltender for the Truro Bearcat!
In 1940, md Sgt.-Observer Tom,
Fruer, a member of tht Truro tela
which won the Novi Scotia inter*
mediate rugby championihip ln
1940.
HOOD'S
WEINER  BUNS
FOR YOUR PICNICS
.
;=
F. H. SMITH
If It's Electric
Phone 666        351 Biker St.
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HOT WAFFLES
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ICE CREAM PARLOR
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ANY KIND OF WORK ON
YOUR CAR OR TRUCK
SKY CHIEF AUTO
209 Biker St Phont UI.
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
W. L. THOMPSON. Prop.
Day tnd Night Servict.
ft hour Ambulance Servict
515 Kootenay St Phin. ail
Mickey Rooney Sued
for Divorce by
19-Year-Old Bride
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 15 (AP)-
Mlckey Rooney, at 21 • veteran of
19 yeari on the itage and icreen,
wis lued for divorce today by hi!
19-yeaj-oldj bride of eight months,
Bltckwood Agency, lniurance
tnd Real Estate. 538 Ward. Ph. 99.
Furniture van leaving for Vernon. Room for more. Wllllim!' Trans
Private Funeral
for Mrs. Attree
Private funeral aervlce! for Mri.
_    .        __    _      j Hilda Attree of Queen'i Bay were
Ava Gardner.  She charged extreme ^ from
cruelty but made no definite ille-
gations.
She asked "reasonable alimony"
I and her share of community property, which she itated amounted to
more than $200,000. She aald Rooney eama.$3,000 a week In the mov-
Itf.
The Rooneys were mtrrled Jan.
10 and leparated Sept. i.
tstmtstseetttaltttmtiimtgmftim
Hava the Job Done Right
Sm *
VIC GRAVES
MASTER  PLUMBtR
PHONE 815
«&tomxo&e*&*Koxsttttttmt0
PASTEURIZED MILK IS
NOT RATIONED
PALM DAIRIES LTD.
• «
Wanted—Blickberrlei,   plumi,
gremgtgtt,    dtmioni,    ipplei,
Mcdonald jam co.
Robertion Reilly mthorlied by
Dominion Government to tike your
Wir Risk Iniunnce application!.
CRAWFORD'S
EGGS, C grade dot SSc
CUCUMBERS 4 for 10c
551 Wtrd Street. Delivery Ph. 284.
Council Considering
Salary Increases
at the Power Plant
By reiolution In committee or the
whole, idopted Mondiy night, the
City Council directed tht Superintendent of the City Power Plmt
to advlie employe* under him thit
the queition ot "in Increue In nl-
arlet ptld at tht powtr plmt li
hiving tht consideration of tht
Council, tnd thl Council'! finding!
will bt transmitted to thtm."
Factory Inspector
v/i«!its Nelson
H Douglai of Vincouvtr, Inspector of Factoriei for Britlih Columbii,
wti tn Nelion yuterdiy ind Ittt
for Tnil
Winted at once, itrong and Intelligent boy, ibout 18 yrs. old, to
work ln hirdwire itore. Muit be
willing. Apply Nitionil Selective
Service.
Caih booki, Journals, ledgers,
columnar books, receipt booki. All
detn new freih itock and prlcei
right D. W. McDerby. "The Btt-
tlotiir ind Typewriter Min", 054
Btker Street
Thompson Funeral Home, Rev. W.
J. Silverwood of the Church of the
Redeemer, Fairview, officiated.
Mrs. Attree, wife of Alec Attree,
died Saturday morning at Kootenay
Lake General Hospital. The body
ll being forwarded to Spokane for
crematloji. '
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
Suite 205
Medicil Art! Building
Tm going to htvt my
hilr fixed differently
tt
Haihh Tru-Art
Beauty Silon
Phone 327
Johnstone Block
Manion Appointed to
Street Railway
A. J. Manson wai appointed by
the City Council Monday night to
fill the vacancy on the Street Railway itaff due to the reilgnatlon ot
Motorman A. R. Iianglll, effective
Sept. 80.
TOOLATETOCLASSI-Y
WANTED AT ONCE, SECOND
bakar, Apply Nationil Selective
Service Office.
OOOD MARE 1100 POUNDS,
iround I yn ind colt 9 Months.
Splendid tnlmili. To bt icen it
Brown'i Ranch Corn Llnh. lit
tht two. Or would trtdt for
young Uveitock or young chic-
keni. Jim Jenkini, Rlvenlde
Ranch, Trill
(yivi( Tomorrow
I Dili idvtrtliement li not publlihed or dliplayed by tht Liquor Coitrol
Botrd or by tht uovtrnmtnt of BrltUh Columbii.
*al.t____________________t__^
