 	
	
	
-
Roosevelt Co^
uebecfor
onference
>{;
1500 Toni ef Bombt Dropptd on  -.
Induitry Centra ef Nurtmburg.—Pigt I,
ChurchiU'i Vliit Stin Optlmlitie
Talk ef Victory Thli Year.—Page I. /'
Mobil* Hoipital Uniu In Canadian,
Army Being Orginiied.—Pige 8.
/OLUME «
riva cents pIr copy
By C. R. BLACKBURN
Canadian Prow Staff Writer
QUEBEC. Aug. 11 (CP)-^Pattern of tho f rl-Partito War
Conference here began to take definite shape today whan a
three-hour session of th* joint British and Canadian Cabinet
War Committeei lurveyed "the whole field .of war" and can-
son permitted announcement that President Franklin D.
Roosevelt of the United States will arrive here later to make
the Conference complete.
It wot not known what will be permitted to be said of
Mr. Churchlll'i movements or activities between now and the
tinrie the President arrives;
Neither wa> it known when Mr. Roosevelt will come but
it Is a matter Of daya only.  The huge Quebec hotel—the
Chateau Frontenac*—" takenf
over in its entirety for the principal conferees and their assistants was advertised as closed
until Aug. 27.        ■    ■     '
Todiy'l mtetlng, offlclils tald, wai
unique In that It brought together |
the Britith and Canadiin Prime
Mintiten and their Cabinet War
Committeei in part, for tli etirst
tia*.
Th* Britiih War Cabinet wai rep-
resented by Mr. ChurchUl who ii
Britiah'Defence Miniiter, and Sir
John Anderson, Lord PreiMent of
Uie CouncU.
{•rltae Mlnltter.Mackenzie Klng*i
10-man Canadian Cabloet War Com
mittee was complete but for the ab
•ence of Ag-fcultur* Minister 0*r
dtatr. ■    •"
Whtt wai dlecuiied tt till three.
hour teuton and what U being done
•t the continuous conferences of the
combined chieft ot staff which continue indefinitely at the Chiteau,
must remain only subjecti tor ipec
ulation.
But.it It believed certain that
tbey dealt with the possibility of
further use of Canadian forces in
whatever n»w MHults may be
launched against tht Axis fortress
in Europe, and discussed the put
played by the Canadian Tint Dt»y
ision lh Sicily.
The larger question of grabd itrategy la believed to be subject of
the deliberations being carried on
by the chiefs of staff, and the mote
remote but apparently vitally Uvt
question of agreed plant for governing conquered or liberated ireu
and for post-wir problemi is ex
pected bere to bt tbt maio tubject
of tht Churchill--Rodsevelt talki.
Shortly befon noon tht familiar flour*—long clgir, black H°m-
■burg, (itovei and cane, confident
•mile and fingert In th* "V fr
victory" alio—tpptarad for a ttw
mine*! wHhln the wellid gu*d-
' ringle btfort thi main intranet Of
tht Chiteiu whtn ht trrlvtd ">r
tbt cibinet mtttlng.
Many pictures were taken ot Mr.
Churchill and Sir John Anderson
itanding with Mr. Kllg and hli cabinet colleague! on the stepi.
Mr. Churchill ind Mr; King lunch-
ad at the Chateau and thla ifttr
noon drovt to the 86-ycar-old legislature bulldlngi to call on Premier
Adelard Godbout who, with btl
cabinet colleagues, conferred briefly with tb* viiiton ln tbt Executive
council chimber.
Duller tbt two Prlmt Mlnliten
drove out to Spencerwood, the suburban residence of Quebec's Lieutenant-Governors, to call upon Maj.-
Gen. Sir Eugene Fiset, the pretcct
Governor.,
WtvA ht irrived at th* Chateiu
thli moming Mr. Churchill found *
large group ot reporter! and photo-
graphers cluttered about bil cu.
had been permitted to enter the
guadrangle for thii occasion only, so
they might get • clote view of the
Prime Minliter whote presence in
They were permitted to inter Uie
only by virtue of * brief official
itatement
Mr, ChurchlU wu genial and ap
pirently happy and In high ipirits.
Mr. King'i mtniiteri preient were:
Reiourcei Miniittr Crerar, Defence
Miniiter Rikton, Air Minister Power, Fitim* Miniiter Ililey, Tnniport Mlnliter Michaud, Munitions
Minliter Howe, Ntvy Mlnliter Micdonald, and Justice Mlnltter St
Laurent.
Otheri it the War Cabinet meeting wer* Normin Robertion, Under-
Secretary of the Canadian Cablntt
Wu Committee.
The ititement covering thii meeting uld a further Joint session
would be held "tt a lattr date."
Offlciali hirt commented «n Un
ftot thtt tomorrow, Aug, It, ti thi
•econd annivenary ef the signing
of th* Atlantic Charter proalam-
•tlon, formulated by Prim* Mlnliter ChurchlU md Preildent Hoe-
•evelt it thiir flnt matting at tea
In thl Mirth Atlantic.
Th* conferencei ifow proceeding,
and thoi* to be held later whea
President Rooievelt trtlves, sn (k-
pected to draft plani for th* ipeed-
ing of victory over lh* Axii In the
Europem md Piclflc wu ireu, ind
tmong other things the general pro-
ceduri .to ichieve the objective!
of fhe Atltntic Charter.
Sweeping Transfer
Ordtr May
Include Woman
LONDON, Ont, Aug. 11 (CP) -
OfficiaU of tha National Selective
Service office here today wld •
ilxth Compuliory Tranifer miy bi
luued by the Dominion Oovernment
mora iweeplng thm th* flnt five
•nd pouibly Including womm. It
wu mnounced thtt only 10 men hid
reglitered In London undir tht
fifth Ordtr before thi Mondiy dud
lint-
JAPS SQUEEZED
AGAINST IHE
SEA AT BAIROKO
Officer Drives
Soldiers to
Machine Cun Post
THEUiT STAND
r
AUDIO HEADQUARTERS IN
SOUTHWUT PACIFIC, Aug. 11
(AP) — A report of unwilling
Jipaneie toldltri drlvtn to fight
came from tht Solemont fronl todty at Unittd Statu toldltri md
mirlnei clued In on Balroko, thl
mim/i m lAWon »n N,w
Georgia laW.
Tht i-iMf ttm* fraw Munda
airfield, *l#rt mllu South of Balroko, In a diipatch quoting a mar;
In* r»ldir ai uying ht aaw a Jap
anew officer hitting apparently
recalcitrant mtmbtrt of t miohlni
gun unit with the flit of hip iwerd.
Announcement! from Gen. Douglu MtcArtbur'i headquarter! here
md from tht httdqutrten ef Admlnl WlUlim F. H*l**J, Commander of South Pacific Fore**, uld the
Jipineie are iqueezed against tat
tit at Bairoko.
Tlulr only remaining escape rtute
wu across Kula Gulf to Kolombin-
gara Iilmd, a nine-mile itrttch of
water madt hazardous by patrolling
tea and aircraft.
On th* New Guinea ilde otihe Allied  Northwud  drive,   '
the ift'emyTs-famaua l
ping.
; Pt». 0*org» W. Stotkley, whou
mirine raider unit itormed Enogli
Inlet nur Balroko, reported leelog
the Japaneie officer driving hli men
to their machint': gun nut
Stockley, a veteran of action on
Makin bland, the Marquesas lilindi, Guadilciml and New Georgia, uld: "We were facing Jip pillboxes, giving them a bad time. One
Mt of thre* Nimby midline guns
wer* operated by apparently unwilling privitcs. Suddenly an officer appeared, draw hi! iword, tnd
whacked th* privtte!, trying to drivt
them to thtir gunt."
Tbi mirine wld ll unit, ifter
watching a moment, opened fire ud
settled th* matter by killing lU of
tht group.
SICNS POINT TO
FURTHER CUT IN
US. NEWSPRINT
OTBW YORK, Aug. 11 <AP) -Thl
possibility of I further curtiilment
ot newiprint coniumptlon In - thi
United Statu wu dUcuued today tt
• Preu conference of the Home ol
Representitlves Sub-Committee on
Brand Nimes and Newiprint which
li launching ah Inquiry Into the piper ihortige.
There ii every lndlcition of a further reduction ln supplies, Chiirmm .Lyle H. loren (Dem.-Okli)
nld, unlta poiltive itept cin be
taken to Increase pulpwood production ln Cinada ud tht United statu.
Chairman Boren, commenting oo
recent classification of United Stitei
pulpwood workeri u euentlil, utd
iuch a move by Canidi—urged recently by Canadlm newsprint producer! In th* U. S—who mak* 70
per eent of tbe news-print used
"might be i larg* itep towird wlutlon of Ibe problem."
One Woman Stays
in#Chateau
During Conference
QUIBEC, Aug. 11 (CP. - th*
Chateiu Frontenic'i exodui of
guilts to make way for the currtnt
Drltlsh-Amerlcin-Cinidlan conftrence wu pretty thorough, but it
leut one womu wu permitted to
itty In tht hostelry.
Then were torn with tecui te
the bl| hotel who iald tiny hive
■een "three or four" peopl* iround
who didn't look Uk* conkraei, but
only In the oo* cue wu tht Informition definite.
And the woman, offlciili uld wiih
i imile, ll not ixpected to know
mora thu inyom outiide tht hotel
•bout whit goei on within.
Tht ('hiltiu wun't making har
nam* public but ihi wu undentood
to bt luffering from hetrt trouble
•nd her doctor hid idviied lt would
be dingr roue to movt htr.
So sht ud htr mild ire living
In tht buitlt of oni ot tht biggeit
confirencet of th* war,
ANADA-THURIDAY  MORNINQ,
,   'V   ,
12. 19"U
NUMBIR H.
ALLIES CUT BOTH AX
Famous Quebec City hostelry taken
over by the Canadian Government for
Low Diving Naii
Planei Drop Oil
Bombt in Britain
LONDON, Au8. 12 (Thuridty)
(CP)—Nul bombtn mad* two
raldi tn Southern artat of Inglind eirly todty.
Th* raldi wtr* th* tharpttt In
wt*ld. . .
Diving Itw, th* plUM dropped
flirei tad followed thtm up with
oil bombtr Mining a numbtr of
caiualtlei.,
In a Southwett Dlitrict, mttt
of thi bombi ftlt In reildentlil
tectlons. A building forming pirt
af a hoipltil wu hit, but It wa
unoccupied It th* tim*. A police
itation wu dimiged,
By EOWARD D. BALL
Auociited Pnu Itaff Writer
LONDON, Aug. 11 (AP)—Russian forces advanced to
within 7Vi mllei of Khirkov today and ahot a column South-
wast of tha almost encircled city to cut ona of the last German escape railways in a sudden wheeling movement that
carried them t**wKhln 93 miles of the pnjepfr h-_t Bend. ;
••*'"■'lty cutting' the Kh*'rfe»"-Pdltava "ftallway'af'Vocfyanaya
40 miles West of Kharkov, thef
of Parked Car
CRANBROOK, B. C, Aug. 11-
Gime Wirden Ben Rauch ud Con-
■tableiNorman Weill are combing
the vicinity of Sheep Creek .fear
Canal Flit ln Kirch of Arthur G.
Beld, M to 10 yun, unknown ln
ttlll DUtrict, whose car hu beu
parked near'a lumbar camp tor tht
pait ilx weeki. Document! ln tht
ctr Indlcite ht took a driver's teit
at Creiton lately, had beu in Qrand
Forks, made two trips by car to Ontario ln tht put few yean and *nn
at on* Umt a Saskitchewan resident. Iloore'i Auto Ctmp at Mud
Crank reporti tht cu and driver
stayed overnight June 13 or 11 The
driver iald he had btu to a natural hot ipring neu Sheep Creek
early ln June, went to Creiton ud
wu now enroute unittudod with
luggige ud grubitike to spend a
fortnight at tbe ipring
A. W. Nlcol and Jimmie White
of Fort Steele hive made separate
tripi Into tbt ipring ln recent weeki
ind uw no trace of him. The luggige wu In- the cir whote tlrei
hive flattened alnce it wu left, but
the grub-tike wu milling.
UMWA Reodmission
Application Put
Side Till October
CHICAGO. Auf. 11 (AP)-The
Americin Fedentlon of Ltbor Executive Council decided today to
refer the application ot tht United
lytlne Worken of America fof re-
affiliation to lti annuil convutlon
tn October without recommendation.
Preildent Williim Green, innounclng th* decliion, old It meant
thit the UMWA. oould not lx seated it the l>ts convutlon.
-  •-■-.■
^__.
■**
Stalin Receives
British
and U.S. Envoys
LONDON, Aug. 11 (CP)-Pr*-
mltr Jouph Stalin received th*
Brltlth ind Amtrietn Ambini-
den In Matotw todiy, tht Moicow
radio mnouncid tonight
Vyicheiliv Molotov, Mlnliter if
Fonlgn Affiln, alio wu preunt.
uld th* broidout, recorded by
the Soviet Monitor.
Stalin'* mealing with tha an-
voyi colncldld with prtpiritlom
•cron the Atlantie ftr th* muting ef Prim* Mlnliter Church-
III ind Pruldtnt Reutvtli
Mmhw mad* th* innoune*-
mtnt if tht oonftrinci without
comment   but  It  turned   cirtiln
that It wn etnntttod with Mr.
Churchlll'i vltlt to North America.
s___-m__mmm_____
conferencei-«f  United   Nations  war
leaders. ' : -^f • * ±
 -     i',ii. ■. ' r
Russians thus narrowed the tt*
cape gap from Kharkov to
about 60 miles in the South.
Th* tdvinct toward the Dnieper
threatened to drop down behind the
Germim in the Doneti Buin,
where large Nail forcei ire deployed from 100 to -00 milei Southeastward ot ttie sew thruit
Soviet airmen ilrudy weTe blut-
Ing German-held railway stations,
trains,.and troop columni South of
Kharkov, apparently ln an effort
to cut ott tht retreat of sizeable
AxU forces based it Kharkov ud
Jn the Doneti Basln.Laiovaia, Bar-
venkovo ind ower itition! on the
vital Kiev- Stalino line were attacked, the bulletin uld.
Capture'of tht himlet of Cher-
kutkii Tishkl brought the Russians nearest to Khirkov from tht
Northeut Ruuia'i third largeit
city, Kharkov, lying on in open
plain, appeired doomed, for tbe
Russians were now 7Vi mllei away
on the Northeut, 10 milu on the
But, 13 mllu on the North, 30
milu on'the Wut and 22 milu ol
the Southeut.
The Germani hurriedly brought
up several tank divlsioni In in attempt to breik the,Soviet drive on
Khirkov, uid . the Moicow midnight communique.
But the Ruulani crashed through,
capturing 60 populated placu ln a
12-mile advance.
One unit bunt Into the large
town of Akhtyrki, 43 mllu South
of Sumy, and captured lt after heavy
street fighting in which 1100 Germans were killed, M Unki dutroyed ud Up trucki wrecked. Almost
300 trucki ud other wtr miterial
were captSred In thii irea, 05 miles
[Northwut of Khirkov.
In cutting the Poltava Riilwiy
the Russians lent the Oermini into
headlong retreat. Typical ot the
fighting wu a night ittack by Rui-
liu automatic riflemen who ttole
silently into t village tnd wiped
out ISO Oermini, capturing the villtge ud ltrgt tmounta of war miterlil.
Mokow dlipitchu uld Poltivi
Itielf wu heivlly'bettered Tueidiy night by Ruulin bomberi. The
communique uld t tottl of 127 Otrmu plinu were brought down In
two dayi of fighting.
The btttlt, raging along t 400-
mile front North of Smolenik to
South of Kharkov, uw other Hui-
llu gilru.
One column reached to within 40
mllu of Bryinsk by cipturlng Al-
excyevkt deipite itiff ruiituce
and cleverly-pliced Germin minefield!. '
Seventy populited plidet wtrt
ciptured ln thll tru tnd ont Russian formtUon wiped out tbout W00
Germim'ind ciptured itorei, gum
ud trucki. South of thll tnt,
nur Kroml, 1200 Germim were
killed' ud 9000 Sovltt cltlieni,
Ibout to bt unt to Germiny for
forced ltbor, rescued from their
ciptori.
airman dlipatchu ducribed thl
imsMO-Hn tA th| fighting u "ua-
surpaned*' ind "never before "witnessed on the Eutern Front."
They told of a drive from Vyazma le within 21 mllu of Smolensk by masses of Russian tanki
and infantry moving ln trom abroad
front "between Yartsevo, 21 milei
Northeut, and Kirov, 106 miles
Southwut of Smolensk which ll 280
mllu Southwut of Moicow In the
Napoleonic corridor of retreat
The Russians mide no mention
of thli fighting in their bulletin,
but the Germans laid lt "equals in
fierceness the Soviet onslaught
igaimt Kharkov."
Canadians Bomb
Beaches Through
Holes in Clouds
By LOUIS V. HUNTER
Canadlm Prui Wtr Correipondent
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, _
AFRICA, Aug. 11 (CP Cable) -
Squadron* of Canadian Wellington
bomben for the third tucceiilve
night preued home their attacks
Tueaday nlgbt on Sicilian beaches
in and around Messina and on the
Itallu mainland acron the narrow
Messina Straits.
Crqwi of tht bomberi lighted
barges tnd lncreulng evidence of
ictivlty on the beaches which the
Axii li uilng in iti attempt to <et
ltl betttn forcei out of Sicily.
Cloudi Interfered with the bomb,
ing, but other crews struck an area
where ume bargei were bhterved.
Sgt Bruce Oray, Air Gunner, of
(1484 10th St. W.) Vincouver, uW:
'We found * hole ln the cloudi and
rained bombi on a jjetch op the
Italian ilde. There muit hav* been
loti of (tuft iround there." •
6-Car Train Takes
Churchill Party
Through Montreal
MONTRIAL, Aug. 11 (CP) -
Prime Miniittr Churchill pitted
throuih Montrttl tonight from
Quebeo enroute te in uninnounc
Id definition.
A llx-etr ipeclal Wain carrying
thi Prlmt Mlnliter thd hli ptrty
wu glvtn rlghtof-wiy from Que
bie tnd itopped for 11 minutu it
Ptrk Avenue Station In Moat-
reil'i North Ind.
While englnei wer* ehugid,
MV, Churchill and hli diughter
lubtlttrn Mtry Churel.HI cime
out ud itood tn th* lowtr ittpi
of their oar for a mlnut*.
It wu not publicly known that
th* Prim* Mlnliter would be
pining through. Montreil tnd
thtrt wu nt crowd on htnd to
grttt him..
HAVY WARSHIPS
BOMBARD
ITALIAN COAST
Movi in Easily on
HeavHy Guarded
Naples Shipyards
PRE DAWN ATTACK
v
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
NORTH APRICA, Aug. 11 (AP)-
Brltlih wanhlpi extended Allltd
domination of Italy'i eoutllni
from tot to ihln In tht pre-diwn
houn of yeiterday with t bombardment of targeti u fir North
a* tht Bay of Naplei.
Tha ghostly flotillas movtd .with
ene tip to tht hitvlly-gutrdtd
navil eitabliihmenti tf Cutellim-
mire'at tht Southarn corner of
tht Sty Of Naplei ud vulnerable
railway bridgu at Capt Vatleano,
160 m»u to tht South, dramatically demonstrating tht weakneu
of Italy to imphibioui Invulon.
Tht action wu hailed here u
"the pattern of thing! to come."
Barely hu Italy's harbor-hugging
Navy appeared in a poorer light
than. whu t pair ot tht Hoyal
Navy's cruisers and a company of
destroyers poured their broadsides
into the Castellammare shipyards,
lighting hug* tlrei ln the dock tru
which wert seen by raiders seven
mllu away.
Shore ium, tome much heavier
thu thou -on tht Britiih wanhlpi,
replied without effect, revuling the
shoddy ttate of Itallu coutal defences which art responsible for
protecting hundredi of mllu of
coastline.   -
Shore-based aircraft, too, failed
to protect ttt* vital naval comtruction ud repair eitibllshment (rom
serioui damage, leading to tho iur.
miie that Italy'i .whole coutal de-
fence letup ii on a pu with the
garrlsont which were out-smarted
and out-fought in Sicily.
on
Essential Heeds
OTTAWA, Atlg. 11 <CP)-Tht
Pricti Board announced tonight
thtt tubildy paymenti wlll be
made to civilian uun of lumbtr
for ipeclfled euential purpoiu to
maintain -retail celling pricei In
lumber, tnd that the pltn wlll takt
effect Sept 1.
Th* announcement uld lubtl
diu will be paid on retail ulu to
farmen, flihermen, groweri of
frulti knd vegetablei, trappen andi
othtr lndlvlduil civilian uun who
purchue lumber for uie In per
untl trtdt or oocupttlon or for
mtlnttntnot tnd repair purpoiu.
Subsidized ulu do not Include
lumber tor the building of any
dwelling or improvementi or iddition* to them, nor ulei of lumber to
contractors or lndustrlil users. No
subsidy wlll be paid on hirdwood
or lumber for sash, doon, mould
Ingi or general millwork.
On rough and dreued soft wood
lumber, lath, posts and shingles, sub-
sidles will be paid on ulu of more
than $10. On ulei up to $200, prior
approval is not necessary, but on
ulei exceeding thit imount permiulon to lupply the lumber muit
first be obtained trom the timber
controller. '
The Board uld essentiality cer
tificatu muit be filled out and ilgned by the purchaser for each ull
before subsidy will be pild. The rite
of wbi-dy hu been temporarily
Ht at 10 per cent ot the Invoice price
but is open to revision.
The announcement uid thit sub
sldies now being paid t<j producer!
and retailen wlll be cancelled Aug.
10, but will be offiet by Increuu
in maximum Hit price*
^______m_____m mtm
	
Canadians Working
for U.S. Firms
Protest W.LB. Rule
______-_. Aug! H (CP)-Hon
Jimu A. MicKinnon, Federal Mlnliter of Tnde ud Commerce, uld
todiy he will "look into" protutt
from Canadian employeu of United Statei contracting firms over
the Wutern Wir Labor Board'i
rejection of their recent ipplicitlon
for a wage increase. A delegation repreientlng the employeu
Interviewed the Mlnltter htrt.
Ont of tht polnti In the delegi
tlon'i protest wu thit th* Botrd
hid Inidequiti Ltbor represent!-
tlon. It clilmed thtt of thl lix
mm on tht Board, only ont wu a
repreientitive ot Libor.
Victoria Airman
Awarded D.F.C.
OTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP) - Air
forct hetdquirten tonight innounc
ed the award of a Diitinguiihed Tiy
Ing Crou to Sqdn. Ldr. W. F. New.
Wn of Victoria, urving oveneu
with tht R.C.A.F.
' _
ahd Linguaglossa to Taormina catching convoyi tb route ud creating
traffic jams it Falcone, Pitti, and
other pltcu, tnd causing tremen-
dous exploiloni at Barcelona.
Thi itorm of aerial tire alto wu j
carried to the toe of Italy where ihe
roidi and railwayi muit eventuilly .
be used by the neaping G.rman |
torcu If they get out of Sicily.
Drug Conviction
al Nelsen
Quashed al (oasl
VANCOUVHFt, Aug. 11 (CD
(Mr.' Justice Sidney  Smith In Supreme Court today quished a con-1
victlpn of Lillim Eldridge for pollution ci morphine on tht ground
that tht rtcord failed to ihow thtt
Miglitrite Williim Irvine of Nelson hid Jurisdiction to try the cut. I
. The  discharge  from custody   of -
Mn. Odridgt wu ordered.    She
bad been lentenced, to tb^Qppthuj
1' WO'fhw """"jf an "additional iix
monthi by tne Magiitrate.
' With her huiband, Oeorge Alfred
Eldridge, and Clyde Anvoot, Mrt.
Eldridge wu arruted June 90 in |
Nelson ifter the narcotic wu fount
bi i tnln which brought them from
Penticton.
By LOUIS V. HUNTER
Cantdian Prin Wir Correspondent
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Aug. 11
(CP Cable)—The Cermans are attempting desperately to hokft
onto Randazzo, the key to the present phase of the Sicilian
campaign, but British and American attacks, knifing through.!
both coastal flanks, put the Cerman resistance at Randazzo
undrfr increasing pressure today.
,   |h Allied hands this vital road junction North of ^vlount'-
Etna woul<J present a direct1 —
threat to the Axis.positlons in
the Northeast tip of the Island.
It it the lut Importut highway
Junction Southeut of Meolna and
when they yield it the Oermam will
be confronted with almoit insuperable communlcition difficulties.
Whilt Brltlth ntvtl unlti In t
forty up tht oout af IUly nktd
Urgeti it tht edge of tht  Bty
of Niplei, Brltlth troopi of tha
10th Northumbrian Dlvlilon fought
thtlr wty through tht town ot
Guirdli,  uvtn   mllu  North   ot
Acireale on tht Eait coait of Sicily Ud advanced to within I ihoit
dltttnce South of Rlpoito,
Tbt vanguard of tht British Ith
Army thut drew up » lin* dlrecUy
East of Mount Etna's summit ud
gained IU fint glimpse of IUly'i
ihorellni ifter battling iti w»y from
Egypt Rlpoito I* nine mllu South
of Taormina, *_ Axil evacuation
bau, and leu thu IO milu trom
IUly.
lb* Anwriun Tth Army wu reporttd to have madt gains ln thl
Battle for Cap* Orludo, a llttlt
mon thu 10 milu from Meulnt,
tfter firmly utibllihlng itulf on the
Wmeh'*m^«ra^ThVlan_ln1g
wu at tht mouth of tht Botmario..
BiVer, three mllu Xut ot Su Agata.
Th* German oommuniqua* uld
Oermin forcu there were idopting
t mobile defuce.
Canadian troopt again wer* not
mentioned in today'i communique
from Allied headquarten but there
wu itlll no official Indication whether thiy ire resting or continuing
to fight alongside Britiih ind American troopi.
Randaizo commands the lut North
ud South line of communication
open to tbe Axii ud it is thli line
they ire to stubbornly defending
In the face of releotlen preuure
by tbe Amirtcani.
The Ith Army, patroli of which
now have linked with the American!
tn the Central Sector, It flghUng
North ud Northweit of Bronte, 13
mllu Southweit of the vlUl town
The fighting li uvere.
Front line dlipatchu hive pliced
the British within iix mllet of Rin-
dazzo and the Americans within
uven mllu. A Reuten Newi Agency
diipatch, not confirmed from other
sources, uid Allied troopi were
only two mllu trom the key centre
The bittle grew in Intensity •■
the enemy burrowed Into the ruins
of Randazzo. Allied combit engln
een continued to perform neir-
miriclei in building temporiry
bridgu tnd clearing the roidi of
thouiudi of toni of dynamite
looiened debrii In order to gat up
the guni tnd the miteriili nieded
to itnngle tht Germans into tub-
million,
Tor the fourth consecutive diy Allied light bomben md tighter- bomben of tbe Northweit Afrlcin Air
Commind continued to pound Ru-
dizzo, trying to choke the narrcw
twitting roadi ind mike it untenable.
Tht flak wu heavy during the
earlier tortlu but lt hid dwindled
away to nothing by the time the
lUt ttttck wu mtde. Wellington
squadrons, Including Cimdiin units,
malntilned their attacks on benches
ln ud iround Messina, where Ihe
enemy It trying td hid* uctpt cn!t
ln covet ind biyi,
Thl enemy'i imall but tnfflc
•cron tht nirrow Minlnt Strut
Incrtued tnd Indlcitioni of the
• githerlng of u tvuuttlon flu*
multiplied — ilgni which ciuied
thi Allied Air Forou te hurl grut.
er fleeti thin tver Into mtking
tny Sicilian Dunkerque ■ eoitly
endeivor. >
But Allied- tpokesmin warned
agalnit expecting uythlng but •
mtuured idvinee.
The enemy wu reported by aerial
reconnaluiqce to have concentrated
more thu 100 birgu ind irmored
ferrlei ilong 11 mllu of milnlind
cout bitwein <Jipe Spartlvento ud
Cape Armi.
Somi forcu were" known to hiv*
bun rtmovtd tlrttdy from Ttor-
mini on tht Eut cout tod Ftlcone
on thi North Cout.
Light bomberi ud flghter-bomben iwept the coutel loidi ud tne
Inner highwiy running rfom Capo
Orlindo through Flornti, Randawo
•
Quick Action on
Eden's Part
Averts Crisis
By SCOTT YOUNQ
Cuadlan Preu Staff Writer
LONDON, Aug. 11 (CP)-One of
the graveit crises on 1 domutic it-
sue to face the Brltlth Houu ot
Common! iince the debite On th* I
Beveridge Plin wu averted, by tho
npid ictlon of Anthony Bden, For-.
elgn Secretary and Leader of thl
Houie, in withdrawing thi Government'! bill to iet up peniioni ippeal
tribunals.
Hid the Government tried to force
the bill through It would hive met
ilmoit certiln defeit—which on a
mijor meuure, could not hive beu •
Ignored, even In wartime.
..The back-bench demand for ua«
Bmlted right of appeal by lervioa- '
men ind women igalnst rulingi Of
Beniloni BoirdH-i right given only
in t limited fuhion ln the bill — I
caused the itorm.
Another itrong note In the opposition, Injected by Cmdr. J. O.
Bnlthwilte (Con. Holderoeu) uld
the Government wu putting the cart
btfort the hone in seeking to put
iuch • bill while lt wu known thit -
chingei in the Royil Wtrrint controlling peniioni were immlnut. . I
Sir Wilter, who hu been under
Ittack by public ud prui tor severil week* for Intquilltiu ud Insufficiencies ln Um Peniioni tyiteJ,
could not control the griduilly riling oppoiition.
So in urgent metugi wu unt
In to whert Mr. Edu wu titling la
council with the War Cabinet Ht
hurried to the Houie, iiz.d up ihi
iltuition rapidly, listened to iome
of thi objection! to thi bill, lod
bowed to the itorm.
Arthur Greenwood, Deputy labor
Pirty Letder, niggeited thit when
Ihe Government took the bill bick It
should not only yrrllt In the unlimited right to ippeil but ihould mike '
revisions ud reinforce the bill wlto- -
out deliy.
Mr. Eden  mured  htm  thit tit'
imendmenti idvanced would be «•
•mined ind thit Government would
try to meet the members' req'uuu.
COOKING CAS SOLVES
RATION WORRIES
OMHOA. N. Y, Aug. 11 (AP) —3
Mr. ind Mn. Selih E. Northwtyj
•re driving to Florldi, free of giio>1
line rition worrlei. Northwiy re»i
built hit carburetor to permit thl
uu ot bottled cooking gu.
 k-NELSON DAILY NIWS, THUMDAY, AUCUST 12, 194!
llW—ifii.1     —i   I **■    — I   ■**!■ !_■■'"'    ■I.^PN««1>iWiii'-i.—Pin      up*-* p.   ■
jr Batch ol 2000 Parasites
Fight Mealy Bugs Released
I Koolenay River and Lake Points
(Another "bitch" ot piriiltti,
ttt ln to itteck meily bug ln-
Mtetloni in Weit Kooteniy oreh*
fdt, hu betn released In this dli-
m*. Th* pantltn—MOO minute
mps-Avere brought here trom the
lerailte laboratory tt Bellevue,
lti, ud wert' nInMd by tb*
}.C. Depirtment of Agriculture it
lonnington, South Sloctn, Queens
Jty tnd Gny Cr«*k.
Ttiii cimpilgn against meily bugs
IM been cirrled on for about flv*
reiri, parasites being released uch
fear tt selected point*. Where pouible they hive been freed in orchirdi
where spraying Is at a minimum, W
ll to glvt thim tilt btlt chanct tor
survival. Thi tiny wupi tppeir to
htvt btcomt icclimiilied, tnd it ll
hoped they will build up to thl
point whert they wtll eltmlnitt th*
mealy bug.
Mealy bug inftitetloni htvt been
prevalent In orchirdi tlong Kootenty Ltkt tnd Kootenty Rlvtr
Weit of Nelion, tnd ntptriminti In
control methodi hive bttn going on
tor tomt timt. Apirt trom the pira-
sltes now btlng tmployed, oU sprays
have been emphasire.d.
Patesltes were released Uit yttr
it Robion, tnd ln preceding years
tt Longbeich, Hirrop, Willow Point,
Boiwell, Crwton ind othtr potnti.
ik Exposed
Ian lor Mass
►rison Escape
TIMM-NS, Ont, Aug. 11 (CP) -
ficiali    of   tb*    prisoner-of-war
, tt Montellt. 40 milei Eut ot
nini, from which Eckhert Bro-
tt-yetr-old Oermin pirichut-
escaped   Sundiy,   said   today
uirdi hid uncovered plani for i
i   eitape   ot   prlsoncra-of-war
itl\ecimp. <
Broilg, believed i leider of the
tpt plot, ll nld to 'havt escaped
ough tunneli, dug liborlouily by
.Isoners with shovels Improvised
om tin etni.   Hli brttk tipped
th* plot before the min exit
, Uld be mtdt.
i More thtn 100 food kite, which in
ticial Mid mult hiv* taken monthi
put together, were found. They
ire mid* up of food from their
i tupply ind from pirceli lent
betn through the Red Cron.
Volo Song Wins
Hambletonian
j     By ORLO ROBIRTSON
. Auoelittd Prttt Sportj Writer
NBW YOBK, Aug. 11 (AP) -Volo
hit pounding hooves belting
ut sweet Jive on Umpire City'i
i-floor rtce track, tod»y giv*
String, the Brooklyn wire-
owner, hit itcond itnlght
■ in the Hambletonian >| 13,
firu hung up t ntw betting
for Trotting1! blue ribbon
After bowing In th* first heat to
Boy, the speedy colt from
Jimei B. Johnton'i Rochuter,
, btrn, Volo Song cime routed. In th* itoond tnd thtlr
under tht guidance Ot 70
year-old Ben White to takt down
$_),__—I, the winner's share of t
purse thit totalled $48,296.03. And
fer Agelesi Ben, lt was hli fourth
Hambletonian triumph—e mirk thit
ko other driver hu ever ben ible
to touch.
^ With lecond money of $8,450.01
jgoing to Worthy Boy, Joe Burke'i
Phonograph of Plilnfield, NJ., cir-
Off third (honey amounting to
.76 is he wound up fourth
the tint duh md iecond In the
bit two mllu. And down In the
Ko*. gran of Kentucky, Volo Mite
ctn tike i bow for he ilred the
Snt three honei—tnother No. 1 for
classic.
Makas New
Geological Survey
at Ainiworth
Dr. H. A. M. Rice of tht Mines De
pirtment it Ottawa Is miking i
complete new geological survey of
the Alniworth mining cimp. Following'hii work lt li expected thit
• new geological map, which will
be of exceptiontl vilue to mine
ownen ln thi Alniworth Diitrict,
will be publiihed.
Stalin's Absence
Draws British
Press Comment
By JAMIS K KINO
Auoelittd Prtu Stiff Writer
LONDON, Aug. 12 (Thundty).
(AP)—Thl absence of Premier Jo-
septh Stalin of Russia from tht Impending conferences ln Ctntdt between Prlmt Mlnltter ChurchUl
tnd Preiident Roosevelt drtw comment from London newspapen todty.
Tht Timei commented thit If
Sttlln Tor perfectly comprehensible
reuoni*' cannot leive hit own country "other muni of personi! consultation nltt or muit bt found."
Tht DtUy Telegraph commented that "tht practical inconvenience" of Stalin's absence ll not I
barrier to associating thl Russians
closely with th* talki.
Tilt Dilly Expreu uld Sttlln hid
bttn Invited but wu unible to iccept, to ht will bt glvtn detailed
tccounti tnd wiU tend bil commend,
In Bucklnghim Pilice-thi King
conferred yesterdty with Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden ind Domlnloni Secretary Clement Attlee.
It wtt th* lecond successive day
ht hag received AtUee.
Rtport Raspberry
Processing
Nearly Completed
BHTLUANT, B. C—George Chah
ley ot Ortnd Forks, tn charge of the
processing of fruit in the old jtm
twtory at Brilliant, reporti thtt thll
week will practically finish Uie raipberriei. Blackberriei will be retdy
1000.
Child Loses Toes
Whtn Cor
Door Slammed
BRILUANT, B. C.-6ut_«ring ttt*.
lou of, two ton whin Uit huvy
door of thiir otr wu ilimmid ihut,
Ui* thrte-yur-old diughter of Ptte
Olebo wu t«k*n to Kootenty Ltkt
Genertl Hoipittl {or treatment on
Tuudty morning.        ,'
IIP   I ■>!,   ■
Drew to Form
Government
in Ontario
TORONTO, Aug. JI (OP)—Lt-Col
George A. Drtw, lttdtr of tht Progressive Conservative Pirty, '.announced todty ht hu iccepted in
Invitation ot Lleutienant Governor.!
Albert Matthewi to torm a Oovernment In Ontirio to succeed tht
Liberal idmlnlstratlon ot Prtmltr
Nixon which was defeated ln Uit
Ontirio election hit Wtdntidiy.
Tbt Progressive Conservative
leidtr uld Uit "ntw govtrnmtnt
wlU tike office ttrly ntxt wttk tt
i dtte to be igreed upon between
MT. Nixon ind myself."
Ht iddtd: "Tht govtrnmtnt wiU
bt t Progreulve Conservative Government. I btUtvt Ultt our *_■
point' program wlU wtn support ln
tht Legislature u it bu with the
ptoplt of Onterio.
"Now that tht election li ovtr I
hopt Uut iU of ut ctn Join harlds
ln t united effort to mtkt Onttrlo
worthy of tht young men ind women whou welfire muit be onr tint
consideration.
"Victory drawi nearer every day.
The war Itielf hu opened greit
new fields of opportunity for aU
our ptoplt but thtrt is milch to bt
done here tt homt. It wlU take the
best thtt Is In ui to win tht peace."
TORONTO, Aug. 11 (Thundiy).
(CP)—The Toronto Globe tnd Mall
uld ln i newspage itory todiy thit
Lt.-Col. George A. Drew, Onterio
Progreulve Conservative Leider
tnd Premier-elect, WlU be iworn
Into office next Tueidiy afternoon.
Mr.andMrs.
James (.Forbes
Goto Victoria
teck Discharges
:rom the Bowels
I, Bowel trouble^ although happealing at my time of the year, ar*
'more prevalent during the hot «nm-
' mer and early fall monthi,
Bummer Flu la one of the wont
troubles, bnt diarrhoa, dysentery,
colic, cramps ud paiu in tht in-
tuti-w, or toy looienea of _p
bowell ihould nave immediate ittention.
The tction of Dr. Fowlor'i Extract
of   Wild   Strawberry   ii   pleaiant,
\ rapid, reliable and effectual in help-
. lag to  check ' the  nnnatunl  dl*
KqM
It hu been on the market for tb*
put 94 yetn, to why experiment
with new tnd untried remedieel
Get "Dr. Fowler'l" and feel uM,
ltl T. -inborn Oo- lid, Toronto, Onl.
7 0
8 4
ind
Workings Being
Cleaned Out
-_-*_--__-. B. C.-^rognit li
btlng mtdt ln dttning out tht
workingi of tht Piradlse mint, neir
Invermere. Prtptritlon! trt Bting
mtdt for tiling tht dltmond drill
Immedlitely. Tht mint li owned by
Sheip Creek Mlnu Ltd., of Nelion.
'_'  I
Teachers Ask
David Rees Soft at
Australasian Port
David Reel, • chief.wireleu officer ln the Canadian Merchmt Mirine, hu cabled hli pirenti, Mr. and
Mri. O. S. Reu of Nelion, of hli
safe irrivil In in Australasian port
after an uneventful voyage.
BAU STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
M 33. .667
ansa
- SO .31)
BO 98 .472
47 94 .465
44 93 .494
36 _ .372
St. LOUll  	
Pittiburgh 	
Cinclnniti    „.
Brooklyn     _ 	
Philadelphia 	
Chicago  	
Boiton      _
New York  _.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York  _ SI   SS
Wuhlngton _ 8S  90
Detroit    61   <_»
Clevelind    91   41
Chicigo      01   41
Boiton   ' '. 48  11
! St.   Louli   49   M
Phllidelphii
 40
.810
.924
.919
418
.910
._
495
.388
, Guide for Travellers
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
(
"YOUR VANCOUVIR HOME"
Dufferin Hotel
Itymour tt Vincouver, B. C
Ntwly nntvttid through-
out Phonei tnd  tlivittf.
A  PATTERSON,   Utt  of
Colimin, Altt, Proprlttor
]
Baseball Scores
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
St Ptul 11   4  I
Columbui   17  0
Nltcholu ind Andrewi; Becklni
ind Garagioia.
Kiniu City '._-   1
LoullviU*  »
ueen   tnd   Glenn; .Brown
Doylt,
FIEST QAMX
Mlnnetpolii       14  1
Toledo :  I  »  1
Scheetz tnd Rolandson; Petenon
and Keller.
SECOND OAME
Minntapollt     J 11   0
Toledo   18.0  0
Clark, Hogiett (9) ind Bluo; Cox
ind KeUer.
FIRST GAME
Milwiukee  _..._    4  7   1
Indianipolli       8  7 0
Berry,   Caldwell   (4)   tnd   Helf;
Rich, Jeffcott (7) tnd Hofferth.
SECOND GAME
Milwiukee    4 8  J
Indianipolli   8 11  1
Livengood, Oissawiy (7) tnd Pru-
ett; Hutching! end Hotferth.
pacific coast League
Sin TrtnclKO    I 10  1
Sacramento          0  8  4
Epperly ind Ogrodowikl; Plntir,
Roy (8) ind Maione.
Loi Angelei _  ..480
gan Diego     1   7   1
Riffimberger md Sarni; Schini
ind Detore.
Portltnd    8 18   1
HoUywood   _,   8 16  0
Llska, Cook (8), Herring (10) md
Adimi; Blanton, Eicilante (J) and
HIU.
Seattle  _    » 10   0
Oakland    8 10  1
Speece   and   Sueme;   De   Blail,
Kleinke (J) tnd Raimondl.
INTERNATIONAL
FIRST GAME
Jeriey City    1  8  1
Toronto     4 18   1
Volselle end Ileitis; Sulllvin ind
Willlimi.
SBCOND OAMB ,
Jeney City     1 10  0
Toronto   ,.   0  7   1
Weill itid Stelner; Schumin ind
Crompton.
FIRST OAME
Rocheiter   _,    8   8  0
Syracuie     6 19   8
Hutchlnion ind D. Rice; Carter,
Birtleion (8) ind L. Rice.
SBCOND OAME
Rochester      0  1   1
Syricuu     1  7   1
Schmidt and   Burmeliter;   Kon-
ittnty ind Wut.
FIRST OAME
Newirk     T •   1
Buffalo      4   8   1
Rour, Mtrletu (8) ind Oirbirk,
Roxbury   (1),  Pirkhurit   17)   ind
Hahn.
SECOND OAME
Newirk	
Buffilo	
Divli  ind   Cronin
Dinning.
Blltlmon       4   8   7
Montrul     IB 11   1
divert, Burkirt (3) Ecker (8)
Thomu (8) ind McOirlty; Flowen
and Howell.
I 0. FORBU
Termlmtlng t 29 yein residence
In Ntlun tnd • to y**r* residence
ln Ul* Kootenay, Mr, tnd Mrs.
Jtmu  C.  forbu  ptutd  through
by trtin Wedneidiy forenoon trom
Btlfour whtrt thty ipent,the lut
diy or two— enroute to Victorit.
It It Mr. Forbu' Intention to cattle
on t until nnch In Uit Vlctorli
ami.
It wu In 1009 thit Mr. tnd Mrt.
Forbei oun* out trom thtlr homt
in Dundee, Scotlind, ind settled ll
Fernie, whtrt Mr,'Forbu wu on
Uit office itaff of tht Hk Lumbtr
Comptny for 10 yeari.
About tht tnd of tbe Flnt Orut[.
Wir thty movtd to Nelton, whtrt
they htvt since ruided.
For nurly t decide Mr. Forbei
continued to bt usoclited with tht
foreit Induitrlei, u an accountant,
fint with Max Baskin, then with
Lindiley Bros., the big Amerlcm
pole' operators who had i lirge
Kootenty opentlon, ind then with
tht lttt A. C. Yoder, successor
to Lindiley Broi. i
19 YEARS HOSPITAL
EXECUTIVE     I
Thin ht becime Stcrttiry ol
Kooteniy Like Generil Hoipltil,
in office he held for 16 yein, reUrlng several monthi igo.
Mr. end Mrt. Forbei loit their
home, on Cemetery Rotd, by fire
ibout ieven yurt ago, then ruided
on ttie North Shore, ind more recently on Third Street, Fiirview.
They ilso hid i Summer home up
the like
Three memberi of their fimily—
the three ions—ire oversell, PU.
Jamei Forbu ind Sergt Ted
Forbet ln the Royil Cimdiin Ord-.
mncet Corpi. ind 'Kenneth ln the
R.CA.F. Mri. Arthur Stringer of
Nelion md Mri. Gordon Berry ol
TnU tre their diughten.
TRANSPORTATION—Passenger and Frtlght
Nelson-Trail
Rossland Freight
|. C. MUIR
Phenttt Ntlion 77; Roulind 2131; Trill I ISO
  Connection! For:—
SALMO   -   KASLO   -   CRISTON   -   NAKUSP
_       4   I   1
    8 11   1
Om try  ind
WRENS PLAN TO
ENLIST
LAUNDRESSES
VANCOUVER, B. C.-W*vil tu-
thorities thtl week reported the Women s Royil Cinidlin Ntvtl Service now hu opening! for i lirge
number of liundresiei, who will be
cilled up ilmoit Immedlitely ifter
enllirtment
The innounceent wu mide In
conjunction with the Naval Recruiting Party which will tour Brltlth
Columbli thl! month to Interview
R.C.N.V.R. ind "W.R.C.N.S. ippli-
cinti. "Rie pirty will be it the
Hume Hotil In Nelion on Thuridiy
Iheretied rttet of ptv will ihortly
be In effect for ill Wren recruits.
Thl buie piy for probitloniry
Wttns ll to be $1.09 i diy Insteid
of 90 centi. Alio, on completing
their bulc trilnlng, Wreni will receive in increut to 81.10' • diy;
ind ifter .my extension trilnlng
neeemry for their ipeciil citegory,
ill Wreni wlll be enliited to extri
proficiency pay.
A new ind untrter Winter uniform will be luued to ill Wreni
In the eirly Autumn.
Recruiting for liundruiu wlll
begin Immedlitely. Women In thli
citegory ire etpeclilly needed to
tike ovtr light operttlonil Jobi ln
the Navy's miny new modirn
liundrlai. Thi ige llmlti tor liun-
dre*ie» trt 18 to 48 years.
OlrU ind women Joining u liun-
drutu irt given in Intereitlng
ipeciil courti ln the Iut. All
heavy minuil work ll itlll done
by mile ritingi. The lltut labor-
saving iclentlfic equipment li uud
In ill naval laundrlei.
Freezing Order
SAINT JOHN, N. B„ Aug. 11 (CP)
—Dm CanadUn Tuchen' Fedentlon, ln conference her*, tonight
unt I tele grim to Ltbor Miniittr
Mitchell requesting in' imendment
to in ordtr which, they itld, "freei-
es" them In thtlr jobi,
Tht Miniittr wii uktd to meet
* delegation trom the Teacheri'
Conference regtrdlng Uie mitter "n
non u poulblt." A copy of tht tel-
egrim wtt unt to Prime Miniittr
Mackenzie King.
In anticipation cf * reply from
Mr. Mitchell, th* eonttrtnet appointed t committee repruenting
til lections 0( Ctnidt, to confer
With tht Minister.
Tht committee will requeit thtt
machinery be established for idjuitment ot iilirlci ot teichen, on
llnu which might be suggested by
the Nitional wir Ltbor Botrd or
some ilmiltr body which would bt
uked to itudy tht quutlon tnd
bring ln mcommenditloni.
The teichen alio wtnt money
from Federal cotfen to thit tuch
Increuu In salaries ran be effected.
If theie requests in not found
acceptable, then the delegation wiU
leek the repeil of the order.
Nary Wall Pulls
Major Upset
In Western Golf
BVANtSTON, Jtt, Aug. U (APJ-
Miry Agnu Wlll of Menominee,
Mich., • young women of 24 yeirs
but in "old campilgner" in wo-
men'i Weatern golfing circlei, pulled the first major upiet ln the current Weitern Amiteur tourniment
todty with t remirkible 3 end 1
decliion over the fivored Kty
Byrne. Mln Wall's victory wu
mide pouible' because ihe lank
two chip shots ilmoit ln succession neir Uie clou of their second-
round mitch.
Pliylng with superb determlnttion tgtinit the girl from Rye, NX,
who wu co-medalist Mondiy with
t lUb-pir 74, Mlu Wtll ntvtr permitted Miu Byrne to hold the lttd
during thtlr feature mitch.
No iuch fite befell Cltherlne
Fox, Ult other top fivorite tnd
•hirer of medil honon with Miu
Byrne MOndiy.
The ittnctlve 18-year-old from
Glen Ridge, NJ., defeited Mn.
Liwrence Sell ot Chicigo, 8 ind 1.
Thtt mtdt pouible t quarterfinal clash tomorrow ifternoon between Mln Fox ind Mirjorie Row,
thi blond Detroit girl who scored t
1-up decliion over Dorothy Foiter
of Springfield, 111.
Mlu Will'i opponent .tomorrow
will be Uttle Jennie Cllne of Qloom-
ington, 111., who defeited Georgii
Tilnter. of Firgo, N.D., one-up.
Celling Puton
FancyMeals,
Liver, Tengue
OTTAWA. Aug. 11 «*) - F. -.
Grlidili, Administrator of Meit tnd
Meit Products for Uit Prleu Boird,
tonight Issued in ordtr fixing miximum price* at whloh various fincy
moats ind byproducts of beef, veil,
lamb ind mutton mty bt iold In tU
parts of Ctnidt. Tht order It effective Auguit lt.
It covers liver, heirti, tonfutl,
■wtetbrudi, kldneyi, brtlnt, nl**,
httdi, f*et, tills ind trlpt, ind at-
ttbllihu miximum wholeule pricu
in ctntt ptr pound for ttch of thtit
items in tht IB ionu in Ctnidt.
Th* Botrd innouncement did noV
specify tht pricti.
Three New Relay
Transmitters
lor the Cariboo
VANCOUVIR, Aug. 11 (CP) -
Three ntw nliy trinsmitten, to be
known u CBRL, CBRQ tnd CBRG
of tljt Cariboo Network, wlll begin
opentioni Friday, lt wti tnnounctd htrt todty by officials of tht
Ctntditn BroidcuUng Corpontlon.
CBRL li locited it Williami Ukt,
CBRQ it Quesnel tnd CBRQ It
Princt George.
Dr. Jtmei _*. Thomion, Genertl
Mtntgtr ot tht Corporation, will
tpeak to tht ntw Ctrlboo Hitmen
in in Inaugural prognm from Vtncouvtr Friday tt 10:15 p.m. Other
speakers wlU be In Dilworth, Regional Representative, tnd Gray
Turgeon, Libenl M.P. for Cariboo.
Britiih Columbli ii the tint Prov.
lnce to try thll new coverage technique, tnd with tht ntw installations will hivt perhaps the belt
coverage of tny pert ot Canada.
These low-power transmitters will
be maintained at Williams Ltkt,
Queinel tnd Princt George by either Government Telegnphi or C«-
ntdiin National Telegraph*. Thtrt
will bt no studios or staff, tnd no
locil broadcasts. Tht unlti will rtlty network programs of tht Ctntditn Brotdciiting Corporation.
Unique In dulgn, the transmitters were planned tnd built' by
Vincouver radio engineeri especially for the purpoie.
When the new network goei Into
operation Friday It means thit people living ln Isolated , villeya up-
country wtll h*ve prtetlcilly the
itma reception ti cltlieni cd Vtncouver.
Water Level
Propping Juit i fifth of • foot—
JO foot—during tht Vi houra ending Wedneidiy it 8 p.m., the Wut
Arm it Nelion it thit hour itood
•t 4.25 feet ibove the low wtttr
mirk, by thi Liunch Club gauge
GRACIE FinDS
ARRIVES IN BRITAIN
LONDON, Aug 11 (CP).-Grtclt
Fitldi, Britiih ictreu ind linger,
irrived todiy from the United
SUtet where ihe htd extended rtdlo tnd screen tngigementl.
LOUD HALIFAX IS
BACK IN BRITAIN
LONDON, Aug. 11 (CP) .-Viicount Halifax, Brltlth A-ribasiador
to Uie United Statei. ind Lidy Hit
lfix irrlvtd In Britain todiy.
Starts Today at 9 a.m.
8th Army Keeps Pressing bu! Makes
Slow Pace Along Lava Flanked Roads
by ROU MUNRO
Ctntditn Prtu War Corrtipondtnt
WITB THI BRITISH BTH ARMY
IN SICILY, Aug. 11 (CP Cablt)-
On both sides "of volcanic Mount Etna tht 8th Army ktpt up ltl pressure
todiy tgtinit ■ itltf Otrmtn rearguard but progress wu ilow tlong
thl lava-flanked roads.
BrlUih inftntry trt working their
wiy into Oermin positions In thd
Miletto arei to tht Northweit of
Etna, halfway between Bronte and
Randazzo, and the Amtrlctni ar*
fighting • taw miles Northwest of
them, moving ilowly down tht Cei-
aro-Banduzo roid. Contact hu bttn
established between the rBlUah and
Amtrlctni forcti ln that uctor.
Tht Royal Navy hai been shelling enemy poiitioni But of Mount
Etni and AUitd bomberi trt con
tinuing their ittacki thtrt ti well
u ln tht Randazzo are*. On both
Bth Arrmy sectori the Germini rae
fighting bick trom positions which
■ra awkward to attack. Tha British
gum and infantry trt untblt to
dtploy extensively ott til* twisting
roadi. It ll Uk* flghUng down a
tunnel when tb* tntmy tin makt
thlfigi hot with only « itw morttn
ind guni.
Tht Oerman rearguard lt executing a leapfrog movement In reverie. Flnt on* unit lr at the tront
then uother. At the moment pirichut* troopa are In the forward
Unu In tha coaital uctor.
It hat bttn learned that ordtn
havt bttn luued tor Oermin _&■
ien to deal ruthlessly with Italian
civilians and soldiers who htmper
withdrawals. Tht Null evidently
wtnt t clear pith for pulling out
U.S. Cost of Living  -
Shows First Drop
WASHINOTON, Aug. 11 (API-
Propelled by • two-per cent drop
In food pricu, Uie cost ot Uvlng tor
city dwellers ln tht Unittd States
wtnt down thit < Summer ln (fat
"tint substantial dacUne" ilnce the
Unittd Stttu entered tht war, tabor Secretary Frances Perklni uid
todiy.^
 'tyr^
Dr. Toone Now
Overseas
Ul May Buy Up
Food Crops
■y OVID A. MARTIN
Auoclated Pnu Stiff Wrlttr
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 __)-•
*nie United Statu Government may
ask Congreu for at leait $1,000,-
000,000 whin lt returni trom recesi
in September to finince the 1044
Wir Food Progrim — a program
which li expected to ut production
goali considerably higher than Uii!
year's prospective record oujput
Tlie money would be uud lirgely to tupport firm pricei tt levels
designed to encourage farmeri tc
product to the limit of their reiourcei. Because production costs
hive idvinced somewhat tnd Congrui hu eliminated benefit payments for 1M4, lt miy bt necessary,
Food Officials Hid, to raise th* IUP-
pp*rti pricu on aom* commodities
to mun firmen t sufficient rt:
turn. •
Rossland Social. ♦
w.
ASTHMA
You**can't itop Ult ipnid ot
"D*vli' Aithma Remedy No.
7895"; lt gltt ruulti. Mri. Mc-
Ctnt ol Silt Likt City, Myi: "I
got • bottll t wttki igo for t
friend; lt worked io wlll thit
I now ordtr 3 mort, ont tor my
brother. OM tor my friend ind
pnt to hive In my houu. Thit
wu i htrd cue tnd wt in
greatly pleued."
Ott your M-dou pkg. _ at
iny drug itore.
Don't -torgit "Divta1 Prurltui
Crura," Ull greiiiltii, odor-
leu, colorlu*, effective Crum
tor Eciema of Btby or Adult;
JOc, tl ind economy ilit 11.M.
ROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 11—Mr.
tnd Mn. Oeorge Shepphird ind
children left Tuudiy morning lo
villi it Winnipeg.
MUi Dorothy Nubltt wu ■ Trill
vtiitor' Tuudiy.
Thi Mliiai Clirlci ind Shirlty
Him tnd their couiln. Mlu Joinnt
Flttt of Brilliant, were Tnil vlilton kondiy.
Jick Steveni lift Stturdiy for
Reglnt. i      >>
pMTi. F. O. Briy ind Shirlty wire
Trill vislton Mondty.
Mn. Mitthew EUU ind diughttr
Edm hivt Uken up ruldence ln
Trill.
Mn. Donild McDonild wu •
Trtll viiltor Mondiy.
Mr*. M. Scorttz of Vincouvtr
lttt for home Thundty ifttr viiiting her mothir, Mn. John Fnnch,
who tl I pttient In Miter Miiericordiae Hoipltil. Whlli htrt iht
wu Uit guttt of her iliter, M"
8. flowin.
Ur. and Mn. Jouph Ltngmm
hav* ntumtd from Ntlion whtrt
Uiey wtr* holldiylng.
Mr. tnd Mrt. Idwird Wilttn hive
reiurnid frem Bilfour, whtn they
tptnt thiir holldiyi.
Jimmy Wright, Jr., of the Cm*
dim Activt Army, li iptndlng hli
luvt with hit pirmu.
Mn. I. Butchtr of Stlmo tm •
Roulind viiltor Saturday.   ,,
■y MJ.S. HARVEY   FLEURY
Mr. and Mn. Donild McDonild
tnd ion Jicklt have returned trom
Christina   Uk*.     .
Mr. tnd Mn. J. A. WUlltmi ind
fimlly hav* nturnid from i holiday ipent it Nelion ind Kooteniy
pointi.
Mn. Oli Osing tnd ion Herbie
wtrt Nelion vUlton Sundiy.
Mn. Edith Innu md diughter
Goldie wen Nelion vlilton Bundiy.
Mlu tioretti McDonell hu returned from Chrlitlm. Ltke, when
ihe ipent the holldiy*
Mn. I. L. Conny li ,i pitient
In Miter Mliirtcorditt HoiplUl,
whtrt ih* underwent in opentlon
Tuudiy
Mri. Omlty-Jonu U holldiylng
at Kinnalrd.   '
St. Otorgt'i Anglicin Church,
Roulind, wu thi seem.of i qultt
tv*ddlng_ when Rev. C F. Ormtn
united in mirrlige Mlu ldt Elge
md Nick Berg, both ot Slocin City.
Tht brldt wu btcemlngly tttired
In t navy blue iuit with white hit
•nd whlU md blut ihou. 16.
md Mn A. E. JMHR ot Roulind
wen tht witntuu. An informi!
riceptlon wu htld it tht homt Of
Mr, ud Mrt. Jtnitn. Tilt hippy
couple lift by cir for Slocin City.
whtn thty wlU mtkt thtlr Umt.
Mlu L. Jirvli ot Vmeouvtr li
ulilttnt hir pirtnU, Mr.1 tnd Mn.
11 S. Jirvli, Itn Koottniy Av*nu*.
Recover Bodies of
Lethbridge Miners
LUTHBRIDGE, AlU., Aug, 11
(CP)—Bodiei of four minen trapped M houn ln Ule Kerralta mtne
on tbe Old Man River near here,
wert removed from Uie mine yeiterdiy.
The men were killed in an explosion it tht mine Mondiy ifternoon. • -
Detd irt:
.Sim Cr&bb, overmtn; Wllllim
King, mine electrician; John Zu-
brey, miner; J. PenU, miner.
Ciuse  of   the  exploiion   it
known.
not
School System in
Berlin
Being Transferred
STOCKHOLM, Aug. 11 (AP). -
Genriin dispitches uld today thtt
Berlin's tntire ichool system it being moved to undisclosed points In
Brandenburg, Eut Prussia and
Wwtrthtgtu before the cipital becomu "tnothtr Hamburg."
DR. W. M. TOONE
formerly ot Nelaon, hu irrived oveneu' with I Royal Canadian Army
Medical Corpi unit Ht holdi tht
rank ot Captain.
Dr. Toone, t gnduitt ot Toronto
Univenlty, took post-graduate itudy
in London and then went to India
with i Canadlm Miuionary group. |
Later ht entered the Indlm Civil
Service it Pelhawir, North India,
On hii way back to Ctntdt, ht
wu aboard i ship iunk in the South
Pacific etrly in tht wtr, md lott
■11 hit effects.
When he arrived ttl' Cmada hi
took up prtctlct tt Kimberliy, tnd
ln Auguit 1940 came to Nelson. Ht
had offered tor urvice it the ttart
of Uie war but did not receive, a
call until late IMl, whm ha left
Nelion In anewer to lt
Shortly afUr hit arrival ln Nelwn ha went to Vincouvtr to bt
married to Anne Rosemary, daughter ot Lleut.-Col. tnd Mn. H. M. L.
Dowblggin of Mong Kong. Mrs.
Toone li now it Vmcouver.
AMERICAN GUNNERS
HELP AT MALTA
VALHITA, MilU, Aug. 11 (CP).
— Americtn tntl-ilrcraft gunnen
now Irt helping man Milttt formidable defencu it wu dlicloied
todty, In thl lltut evidence of Allied coopention.
LONDON (CP) - Add to idvo-
cttu of ttie Beveridge Plin Um Ai-
lOclttlon of Civil Strvlot Dtiigncrs
•nd Draughtsmen, composed of i.
ilgnm, driughtsmen, calculitors.
eitlmatori and tracers tmployed by
tht itate. At IU recent conference
the uiocittlon ixpn.ied dliutii-
fictlon with Ult preient government itUtudt tnd dim'tndtd Uie
pltn'l idoptlon without tmendment.
Mer-,30,40,50!
Wnt HoomJ P* Vim, Vigor?
v_s
ROCKETS DROP
JACKS
TO SECOND PUCE
ORANBROOK, B.C., Aug. 11—In
I sloppy exhibition of softball tbe
Rockets tumbled tht Lumberjicki
Into iecond place by • 39-21 icon.
Sound pliylng plui leveral brttki
ln hitting by .e Rockets givt thtm
i subitantial lead In ttie urly Innlngi to hold oft • tremendoui uprising by the Lumberjicki ln the
litter Inning*
Llneupi:
Rockets—Ktsmir, SUnley, Milcolm, McDonild, Yadernuk, Hughes,
Dunlop, Eberleln, Coldwell.
Lumberjicki—Hirriion, Bakken,
Bell, Porter, Cox, Rushcall, »kt-
rud, Muirhead, Staples, Stender.
Rossland Red
Cross Ship
Many Supplies
ndwum b. a-ma «_»«
work roomi on Wedneiday shipped
16 cartom ot luppllu, the iccumultted work anj donitloni of tht
put tix weekt. '
Tbt trtlclu tent wins
Civilian- Clothing, Out B-«even
ltrgt qullti, J medium quilU, 7 imtll
quilts, 3 lidlei'. cotton iweiten, I
pill* of ladiei cotton itocktnp, 1
ptlr boyi1 panti,'1 ptlr boyi' braces,
1 boyi' cotton ihlrta, 1 glrli prlot
dreu. 1 bablei loakeri, I bablei
knitted Jacket, 1 bablu bonntta, 1
child's apron, 3 ctrdi of halrbowi,
t ladlu print dresses, 1 package of
pip* cleanen, 1 pacing* of ruor
bladei, J tooth bruihei, 1 ntU file.
3 boyi ikevelesi pullovers, 1 boyt
pullover with ileeves, 4 bereta, 6
pair of children1! tox, 1 babies layette, donatad by Uie Martha Cird*
ot th* United Church, 1 Vyclli knitted Jacket, 1 bablu knitted Jicket,
1 bablu bonnet, 2 pain of itockingi,
S pain ot bablu bootees, 1 ptin
of babies mltti, I wool ihlrti, 1 ki-
mom, i nightiei, 18 dlapen, _ turkiih toweli, ] turklsti wuh clothi, I
bibs, 1 ptlr btby blankets, 1 mothers
nighty, 1 btby book, md on* cotton
bag conUining 7 bin of soip, 1 boxei biby powder, 1 cards ot nitty
pint, 1 WUh cltth, old linen.
Clan A articles-made trom Bed
Crou material — 22 ladiei rayon
blouses, 12 boyt flannelette pyjimu.
17 glrli print dressei, t pair print
panties, t children's ileepen, 4 glrli
sweater coats, I boyi pullover iweiters, 4 boyt ihlrta, I pair children's
sox, I Udiu print dreuei, 33 glrli 1
wool dresses, 31 girls wool pantiei,
10 btby nightiei indl ltrgt quilts.
Women'i Auxiliary Services- 14
ptlr inkle sox, 7 piir long itockingi,
lt ptin knitted glovei, 3 knlted
knlcken ud 10 ileeveleu iwttten.
Civilian Defence Workers—7 ptn
of socki. «
Priioner ot Wtr Comforta-3 khaki
Ktrvu, 5 iweaten with ileevei, 1
turtleneck Airforce iweiter, 1 tiro
helmet ud 13 piln of glovu.
Wool comforti tor Servicu- -2J
men'i ileevele.i iweaten, | turtle-
neck iweiters, 1 man'i iweaten with
■luvu, 53 piln of iocki, I Mtmtn'i
scarves, 1 pair of leaman'i lodtl, 1
Quebec helmet, 1 ptlr of .rlflt gutta,
1 ptlr of glovu, 1 touqui, 1 beime
ud 13 iteel helmet caps.
Hoipltil SuppUit—43 pillow ilips.
94 lurglctl toweli, 11 hospital gow.11,
11 bed Jackets, 13 piln ot men's pyjimu, ud P0 khaki handkarchlefi.
Surgical Suppllcs-flO 4-inch cot-
Ion bandages, 36 3-lnch cotton bin-
dages, 4g Binch flannelette bicdige 1,
M 4-inch flannelette bindigei, 170
dressings, igo compreuei, 1 dortn
unitary pids, 5 md* T blnden, 1000
wlpei ind 1660 comprwsei.
. Tbt brink of Nligirt Tills b receding it th« iverage ntt of IV.
feet* yttr.
FIT FEET FOR FIGHTERS!
V-_tmt-_te.ic-__kett_ltt—t_,.
t___ bona. re. Sootfilni, «_*
t_   '"^ *_____*
€r____7"««
HEAUNGSAitt Mmt
 mmmm
1500 Tons Bombs
rt J
Dropped on     -'
■ ■
■
■
LONDON, Aug. 11 (OP).-R.AJ.
and R.C.A.F. bomberi dropped more
than 1600 torn ot bombi lut night on
Nuremberg, Important railway tnd
lndustrlil wntre in Southern Germany and a Nazi Party rallying
'point, the Air Ministry announced
today.
At the umt time, the Ministry
of Economic Wirfire explained the
Bomber Command wu switching its
offensive to attacking industries
turning out finished products, now
that the Rurh'i heavy, industry wss
crippled seriously.
Halifax squadrons from the Canadian Bomber Group Joined with
the R_A,F. in hammering Germany
for the second successive night The
Canadian Press learned today.
Sixteen bombers were lost in the
raid, a communique uid, but all
Canadian   planes   returned   safely.
IN   THE  QUALITY  TRADITION
HUDSON'S BAY
YES-
BUT FLAVOUR
TOO
A GOOD DINNER
fcppdUin
■ Dessert
The -lousew-v-i of Canada, ever
anxious to provide attractive and
nouriihing meali fer their families,
are "Houioldien",
Tbey have teamed that delightful desserts,
made easily and at little cut with Canada Com
Starch, are a welcome addition to meali prepared in accordance with. Canada's Food Ruin.
They know the high quality of Canada Com
Starch ensures fine, smooth resulti.
Wow Cdmdo'i food Mu for HtoMi and fifntn.
CANADAS
A produc.^*. CANADA CTAKH COMfANY, UnM
Thrte tnemy flghteri wirt rtporttd
thot il.'ivn.
Ironically lt was juat tour yeirs
ago todty thtt Re!ch_marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goerlng boasted to
the German public thit not • single
enemy bomb Would be permitted
to fall upon Germany.
Nuremburg has bein raided ilk
times previously, the lilt tlmt on
March 8. It Is S2S miles from Britain
by airplane tnd Juit 75 miles short
of Berlin. s
The city is the junction of two
grett trunk railway llnet—ont running frotn the Ruhr to Southeut
Germany md the other from Berlin md central Germmy to Munich
trad Italy.
There have been many recent reports that IUly Is being reinforced
with'Germm troops md munitions
md It this is the case probably much
ot these reinforcements are flowing
through Nuremberg.
The city Ls the site of largo fictoriei engaged in the manufacture
of dlesel engines for submarine and
producing tanks, aircraft parts and
motors.
The comrnunlciue announcing the
raid said that the city had been
"very heavily bombed." Residents
on Jtie British Southeast coast declared great numbers of British aircraft had headed acron the Channel at dusk last evening and said
the force apparently was one of the
biggest to leave Britain in some
time.
German air raiders retaliated by
making their flnt attack on Britain
this month last night, dropping a
few bombs over East Anglia,
Restrictions on
Advertising for
Labor Modified
OTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP.-Libor
Department officials said today that
Selective Service regulations restricting advertising for labor have
been modified ln respect to certain
categories and such advertising may
be undertaken with the approval of
the Service.
Advertising for help will be permitted in cases of institutions sucn
ti hospitals mid asylum.., and by
the Dominion Civil Service Commission. Persons seeking to employ women of more than DO years
also msy advertise.
The Service reservis the right to
prohibit tdvertlsing where t shortage exists.
Says Nothing
Can Crush
Chinese Spirit
VANCOUVER, Aug. 11 (CP). -
Blng Shuey Lee, Pint Secretary of
the Chinese Legation at Ottawa,
who has first-hand knowledge of
Japanese tactics In China, Is convinced that nothing can crush the
Chinese iplrlt but he would like to
be anured of more assistance from
the Western powers.
Mr. Lee, on a brief visit to Vmcouver today said that whenever the
Japanese occupy a town they loot
every building and all young men
in the district are lined up and shot.
The ruthless attacks, he continued,
have only made the Chinese more
determined in their resistance.
Mr. Lee hopes that the Canadian
people will rally around the Chineie
War Relief Fund campaign by
which it is e-rpected that »1,000,000
will be raised in Canada during
August
AT lait we have been able to replentih our atock
_ of tea of the beit quality—and onee again thla
auperb brand la available to you. Now you can aet
mo_ cupa of more delicioui tea with every ration
ooupon . . . enjoy, onoe again, the full, tatlifying
flavor of Malkin1* White Label tea,
ON SALB AT YOUB GROCEH'S TODAY
1 lb. package, We -  _ lb. package, Me • 1 lb, package, Ht
THE   W.  H.   MALK.N   CO.,  LIMITED
Vi_oue*,r, Canada
fPP
(
l,,,W1,"M     '
Churchill's Visit Stirs Oplimisli
Talk In London of
"Vidory-This-Year" Assault
By JAMES F. KINO
Auoclated Pren Stiff Writer
LONDON, Aug. 11 (AP).-Prlmt
Minister ChurchlU'/ Journey icrosi
the Atltntic for hli il*"* wtrtimt
meeting with Preildent Roosevelt
and his conferencei with Prime
Minister Mackenzie King, stirred
spontaneous and optimistic talk ln
London todty of t vlctory-thli-
year" assault on Europe.
The virtually unanimous igreement was expressed on all sides that
the Allied chieftains were getting
together to lay final plans for the
grand offensive ln theitrei ot wu
other thin thl 'Mediterranean whert
overwhelming mlllttry might hu
ilretdy uierted itself.
Tht presence ot Britain's topflight military men with Mr.
Churchill ln Quebec lad to one
conclusion — that Britiih, United
States md Dominion torcei would
soon be storming the Europem continent trom mmy direction! ln fulfilment of Mr. ChurrtilU'i own prediction of i combined ictlon before
Winter.
The absence ot Premltr Joieph
Moscow Dateline •
hy  HtN-Y   C.  CAS-IDV
Copyright 1943, by Henry C, Cassidy; Houghton, Mlffln Co,
The Veil Is Stripped From
the Red Army.
CHAPTER TEN
The Red Army, by Autumn, 1841,
constituted a collection of armies
numbering in the sixties. The individual armiei were smaller than
the American or British, correspond,
ing roughly to what we would call
army corpa
The Red Army occupied a vast
land of its own set apart from the
civilian territory, and extended from
the actual front lines back for miles
to the points where military control
began. That entire area the Russians called "The Front".
Thli land was populated by some
five million men, forming the active
fighting force. Fpr each man at
least two more were waiting to take
hii place, on the basis of a total
mobilisation potential of nineteen
million men. one-tenth of the entire
population.
This land was also inhabited by
strange birdlike machines called
"Yak", "Mig", and "Lagg", by crawl,
ing land monsters named "KV", and
most of all by a flrelbreathing girl,
affectionately known. throughout
Russia either as "Kattusha" or ai
"Maria Ivanovna."
It was a land of mystery which
ttw, if any, foreign eyes had ever
beheld. So secret was all pertaining
to the Red Army, beifore the war,
that I knew of a foreign military
attache who tried for months to determine a single fact-—the base pay
of Red Army privates—a fact known
to millions of Russians—and he
could not find it.
As the war progreeted, it gradual.
ly stripped the veil from the Red
Army. The military attache discovered that the private's baBe pay was
10.50 n_bl_s a month (officially, two
dollars), plui food, tobacco, and
clothing, issued to him free, as his
own personal property. Dispatches
described publicly iome of the Red
Army's operation!. Correapondants
learned something of its make-up
in tripi to military establishments
and interviews with officers. The
more the Germans learned the hard
way, tearing out the information at
the cost of their Hves, the more the
Soviet authorities permitted the
rest of the world to know of the
Red Army.
It turned out to be a highly developed machine, not differing in
many respects from the regular
armies of other great powers, and
most amailng for Its modernity, efficiency md strength.
Its infantry was organised in tr>-
angular formations, later adopted
by the United Statee, with three
s_fnaller unit, such as three regiment!
to a division. Each infantryman carried what he called a "Vintovka",
the Moiin rifle, designed in 18-4
and moderniied in 1938, of 7.82 millimeters, the same calibre ai tht
American Army rifle. On this, he
carried a "Shtik". a triangular-
bladed bayonet, balanced io that the
aifle could be fired accurately with
the bayonet alwayi in place.
The artillery wai built around
the buie 76-mil-imetre field gun,
illghtly larger than the celebrated
French *•_". A 45-millimetre gun
was also used u a field or antitank t-n.. while i m-mlllimetre
pin-howitzer, md • 152-mlllimetre
howitzer, hurling an 88-pound ihell
for ll miles, did the heavy work.
The tanks, which had been the
subject of bizarre legends, making them out to be huge 90-ton
monsters, capable of swimming under water or beltg dropped from
the ilr, proved to be quite conservative, and were effective. The
"KV", named after Klementy Voroshilov, which was put on display
for corretpondents. weighed 48 tons.
It carried one 78-millimetre gun,
three 7.82 millimetre machine guni,
and one anti-aircraft machine gun,
the light, 702 millimetre "Degtlar-
ov" model. The Red Army slso had
Its heavy •■Maxkn" machine gurl.
The "KV" was powered by a 12-
cyHnder, 800 honepower dlesel engine, developing a maximum tpeed
of 25 miles an hour, and protected
by armor capable of reiiitlng a 75-
calibre ihell, although aometimei
pierced by the Germin Bfl-mlllime-
tre anti-tank gun. The "KV had
two imaller brothers, a 27tcin "T-
34" and a 8-ton "T--0".
The plane! were led by the "Yak"
a light, fait fighter drilgned by Al
tnnder Yakovlev ind the "II," in
armored, low-level "Sturmovik" or
attack bomber, deiigned by Sergei
Ilyushln. Two other flghteri, the
"Mig' ind the "Lagg." older but
still lervlceible, were in opentlon,
together with i whole fleet of mx-
illary enft, ranging from the Douglai, built after the American model,
to thi U-2 an antique llttlt wood-
and-fabrlc bl-p)tnt, whioh wti itlll
uieful for training, communication!,
observation, ind sometimes even ifor
■teilttiy night glider bombing, it
low iltltude tnd wltb high prectilon
on crowded battlefields like tht onr
which wu to develop at Stalingrad.
Of ill theie arrnt, tht Red Army
found Itielf outdlitinced by Uit
Germani only Hi numbrri of tanki
and pltntt, ind  In  both quintlty
and quality of morttn, Thi Oermans concentrated on -mortars at
the expense of their light artillery,
while the Russians had neglected
mass development of 'mortars ln
favor of guns. This trror thty rapidly repaired. A people's commiutr-
iat for mortar manufacture was established, Hundredi of fictoriei
were turned over to it, md ioon,
50, 82, tnd l2.-mtlllmt.re mortars
took their plaoe ln the Red Army's
armament.
All this, the Germans learned,
to their displeasure; tnd we, to our
pleasure.
One myitery we did not solve—
the mystery of "Kktlusht". Htr
story was one of the moit Intriguing of the war, tht story of i -ec-
ret weapon, the'kind thtt always
catches tbe imagination of til peoples.
Katiusha camt on tht icene at the
very start of the war, when atories
were whispered from mouth to »ar,
of her marvelous proweu, she was
the latest md best weapon of the
Red Army, she calt t detth rty, or
she belched forth flames, or sht
hurled multiple explosives. Her el
feet wae so devastating that, where
ever the itrnA no living thing survived for feet or yardi or mile!
around. So frightening wu her taped that upon her very appearance
the enemy fled in panic. So lecret
were her operations, that, personally escorted by NKVD men, she
drove to tht front In a private car,
fired three timei, and then withdrew so that she should never fall
-into the hands of the enemy.
This much wti certain; Kitiuiht
wai t new powerful weapon, built
by Andrei Kostikov, t dtrk, young
looking shrtwd military engineer
of first rank, made lieutenant-general, chin of a construction bureau.
The nickname Kitluftit came from a
love song, popular among millioni
of Red Army men. Red Army men
who preferred to be more respectful Invented a .more polite form ot
first and middle namei, Mafia Ivan,
ovna.
Katlusha remained a myittry
throughout th* first two yetrs of
the war. I ctme tcrou whtt itemed
to be her trtcki several timet. Once
I wei shown t rocket gun, tnd told
that wta little Kitiushi. Anothir
timi, i enter wu pointed out to
me ind I was told, "Katiuihi did
that." An artillery genertl told mt
*bt Germani feared her to much
that they threatened to employ poison gas if tht Russian* contlnutd
to ute Kitiushi; tnd they wirned
that no Red Army man aerving Kit'
iusha would ever bt tiken tlivt by
the Wehrmacht. The only othtr ta'
formation he would give tbout Kt'
tiun wm thit iht wai itill hi ic
tion.
In the aecond yaar ot thi wtr, I
wu told thtt Kitiuiha had grown a
large family, and that now htr offspring, big tnd smill, wert living
all tlong tht front. They worked, I
was told, on the mortar principle,
By then, the Germani had ciptured
Severil of them, and hid produced
their own versioni of the gyh
promptly nlcknimed by tht Rui-
slim — "Viniuiht." Exictly whi".
Katiuihi or Viniusha wai, I itlll did
not know.
But In thtt fint Summer of tin
war, Katlusha wai only one of the
myiterlei of tht Red Army. No
foreign observer had yat been to
the front. Then, is ttw Red Army
shook off the first ihocki of the in
vaalon, felt th* confidence of iti
itrength, flowing back tnd fought
the Germtni to • sttnditill on tht
Centnl rront, we wece idmltttd to
id myitlc pneinctt. Oeneral Muon
MacFarlani, Chltf of th* Brlttih
Military Minion, later to become
Governor-General of Gibraltar wu
escorted on a Hip to the front nttr
Smolenik lite in Auguit. On September 8, the Red Army innounc
ed iti greitest victory to data, th*
defeat of eight German divtilons
and the reoccupatlon tt Y*lnla,
Southeut of Sijrolentk. Tht atwi
wai given to the eorrupondenti in
the cellar of tht Ntrkomlndltl while
6ymphony
the anti-aircraft guna outiidt play
ed their venlon of tht Seventh Symphony. One week ltttr the eorrupondenti were taken on their flnt
visit to the front md Yekili.
TO  IE CONTINUED
NILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, IMl
_
ACATI0M
l/l
Men's Slack Suits
tf
A iure investment in ease ind
amartrieu for active wtar or
lounging on i Victory Vacation.
Choose thii cotton Slack Suit in
your favorite light shade. Sires,
small, medium and large. Each
regular $6.50.   SPECIAL—
$4.95 _
Boys'
SLACK SUITS
Mothers, here is coolness and .comfort for
your boy. Light weight,
good wearing cotton
suits, easy to wash and
iron. Choice colors for
holiday wear. Sizes 16
to 16. Reg. to*1 nr
$2.95. EACH Ql.ud
Boys'
SCAMPERS
A sturdy shoe for vacation days. Strong leather uppers, stout leather
soles that will stand
lots of hard
usage. PAIR
$2.29
Men's Cotton
PULLOVERS
Made for active wear,
loosely knit for coolness. Cay assortment of
colors. All sizes.
ea. 79c
Men's
CAMP SHOES
Brown soft leather uppers and sturdy sole*.
Ideal for sportswear.
Sizes 6 to 10. (O JQ
PAIR $_.-m
Wfyteinff 1^ €amjmttfit^i||
Stalin wu noted by most commentator!.
Tht Yoriuhlrt Pott uld H wu
understood thit he had been invited but wu unable to attend. The
Post idded that Stalin was being
informed of developments "almost
hourly."
Declaring that the prdblemi facing Mr. Churdiill and Mr. Hoosevelt
are more than juat military, the
Poit userted, "The hour is tt hand
when It will be imperative for the
United Nations to pursue a united
count not only with regird to mil-
ttry oppperatlons but equally with
regard to the politics of .Europe.
It could hirdly he expected that
Marshal Stalin would be able to
travel to Montreal or Washington
at the present time; but it ia none-
thelesi important that ill stepi bt
taken to tecure i far-reaching
agreement with Soviet Russia on
thes* aridar problemi ot war-winning and peace-making."
The Times, In an editorial dealing with the Atlmtlc Qitrter which
wu tn outgrowth of mother Rooie-
velt-Churchlll meeting two yein
ago, itrested the neceulty for unity
among tht Americas, British tnd
Russians.
Tt mutuil Jealousiei wart to
drivt thete thrtt countries along
separate pathi of nt-Towly-lntar-
prtted lelf-lnttrest," tht Times
nid, "or If nitlonil rivalriet and
ambitions ot letter powtn wtre tllowed to inert themulvu In tht
detriment of t firmly-welded common organization for the prevention of aggression ani tbe maintenance of peact, then littla hope
would exist of averting t treth calamity for Europe and tht world."
L o t d Betvt-brook's Evening
Standard uld, "Only ont disappointment, whloh tht principall,
themselvei, avow frankly, cloud!
thli ilxth war conftrenct ot tht
Preiident tnd Premier. Thtt ii tht
abienct of Premier Stalin, upon
whoa* iturdy shoulder! the main
burden of the battle still falls "
Tht tttention given to tht polltlcil ispecti of the lituation wa;
overshadowed by i feeling thit Allied milltiry operttloni will ioon
be forthcoming to provide tht relief for which tht Ruulini hive
been cilllng.
Tht dominating poiition ot. the
Alliei, who now hold the initiative
everywhere—ln tht Piclflc ind Europe u well—wu idmitted In i
broidcait by German raidio commentator Lt-Gen. Kuct Dietmar,
who told tht Germin peoplt, "Ger
many and her alliei are now on tht
defensive."
HAVE ENOUGH RUBBER
FOR JAR RINGS
OTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP).-Muni-
tlons Depirtment offlciili taid todty that sufficient rubber had been
made available in Canada to mett
the needs for rubber Jar rings used
in home canning, and this policy
wai being continued.
Jn Waihington yesterday the United States War Production Board
authorized manufacturers to resume
mailing rubber jar ringi.
999 Axis Planes
Recovered From
Sicilian Airfields
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS W
NORTH AFRICA, Aug. 11 (AP).-
The Allied Air Command iaid teday that 909 Axii aircraft hid b«*n
recovered from captured Sicilian
airfield!. Included tn Ull booty
wtrt 33 Mtiiertchmitt lOO'i.
The mijorlty ol these planu ware
wrecked whtn found, but a "lur-
prisingly ltrgt numbtr wtrt tUB
serviceable" tnd were flown to Ulvage eentru, lt wai uid.
SUNBURN
INSECT BITES
poison ivy
the Antiseptic Lihiheht
NOW i--__m
Cream Deodorant
ut/tlj
Stops Perspiration
1, Doei mx tot dram « mta'i
•htra. Don hoc irritate ikin.
2. Nowiitiogtodiy,Gu-tutd
right iftet ihiTmg.
_, It.it-ritlritopipf._ptr_tion.of
1 to J diri. Prenoti odot.
4. A port, ahttt, grtutltti,
mitilfii VM-ilhtflf .trim,
%. Amttitl Appto-il Sttl of
Americin Itutitutt of Li undtr -
itu fot being tumlta lo
MER 18 tO 45 . . . Canadian aoldieri are
in actioni They have ihared tha Immortal
honor of aatahHihing tha flnt bridgehead in
Alii Europe! Be ready to reinforce the hoyt over
there. Cet going now—why wait to he drafted?
Remember it takea ■ year to bain a toldier.
Volunteer noir.'
WOMEN II tO 45 ... yon «« h*lp, toot Jotn
the CWAC to a man ean be reltutd to _$_U lt't a
grttt tapttUnea for any woman • . • lt't teal full
time terrlotl
Y0IN8   MEN Of 1 7 . . . the,.'.  .  .Untly oppor-
, t unity far you to tak* a trade-training cou me ln tha
Army, if 70a hava completed grada VIII echoollnf.
VETERANS IREI 55 . . . \*_ « ,-—
younger men to nght by taking on MtentlaJ dntita
In tha Vattraai' Goatd *t <__ni<Ia. Catagaria* A, B,
ar C may •nllit.
for injormitto- re*_re_n$ .nltetm.nt apply
_> yeur marasl Army Remitting Office er
yeme loetl CMltan R__ultlnt AivUm.
CANADIAN ICTIVE ARMY
__--     ...    _____
■*—.--:   ^-	
■jad
'Jl
 _____**•
klmm _\-\l\s U mb
Established April 31, 1902.
k> •".. BriHth Columbia'i
Mott Interesting Newipaper
lished every morning txctpt Sundiy by
NEWS PUBUSHINO COMPANY LIM-
_. 366 Biktr St.. Ntlson, British Columbil.
[BER Or THE CANADIAN PRES8 AND
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.
THURSDAY, AUG. 12,1948
[Against the Government
|; In the four Federal byelecttons on
today, two Western seats went to
ie C.C.F., one Quebec seat to Labor
nd a second Quebec seat to the Bloc
jjopulaire. All were Government losses.
I Any enemy of the United Nations
pvho saw in these results a protest
tgainst the war, or any weakening In
the Canadian determination to fight
in all-out war until the Axis powers
have unconditionally surrendered
would be fooling himself. Not one of
the winning candidates would have got
gore than a handful of votes if he had
Wvocated capituation to the enemy, or
withdrawal from the war. Any candi-
j»te who had taken such an attitude
would have been snowed under by an
avalanche of votes.
'. The fart ls that the Canadian people netsd take a back seat to no country
In the United Nations in their grim
■Merminatlon to beat the Axis, and to
Incept the tragedies, trials and incon-
keniences that may be necessary to
■dory. They will go to any lengths to
■111 the War, but they feel that Ottawa
li making a mess of things, especially
In the details of war administration.
Whether they are right or wrong, it
li salutary feature of our political system that such opinions can be expreas-
|jl freely and effectively.
Parachute Troops Saved
a Week
Airborne troops are beginning to
nt some of the credit due them for
neir work in the invasion of Sicily.
Bhese men, who landed some distance
P^and, held off enemy attacks that
|lght have made matters decidely
jjMcward for the troops who were
[anding on the beaches.
These parachute troops, it has been
fcvealed by Major-General Joseph M.
■Wing, commander of an airborne di-
rision, were used more extensively in
felly than in any other engagement,
fcnrl  proved their worth completely.
knd he quotes Lieutenant-General Sir
Barnard _. Montgomery as saying,
(jlhey advanced our operations by a
Pioneered by the Russians before
ie war, this form of attack neverthe-
failed to produce anything spec-
tacular up to the Sicilian campaign.
Parachute troops, of course, had a
Bart.in the swift collapse of Holland,
■pt there was little glory in their op-
Iwtions there. Theirs was a sneak at-
kack on'an unsuspecting neutral, and
■Ttn at that the paratroopers in many
Instances had to resort to disguises to
J*ln their .ends.
Crete, it is true, fell to an airborne
mit, but it would not have succeed-
I If the British defenders of the is-
Bd had any kind of air support. As
was, casualties among the attacking
Jaratroopers were heavy, in some cases
almost a slaughter.
Success of this form of air attack
IH give the Germans something to
link* about. Their defences In depth
long the English Channel no longer
)k as secure as they did for the pros-
of having thousands of men armed
1th anti-tank and field guns drop into
behind those fortifications rob them
some of their vaunted impregnabil-
b
Law Student Shortage
Because of conditions brought about
the war, the Law-School of Columbia University,  New  York,  has lost
llree-fourths of its students and one-
Mrd of Its teachers. It now has an en-
Dlment of only 12B, and that Is the
est among all thc exclusively day
lw schools of the United States. The
ptal number of law students In the rc-
jlblic has dropped from 28,174 In 1938
i 6685. Approximately 80 per cent of
he day law schools have fewer than
«tud»nts each.
The New York Run, which gives
le figure*, quotes in contrast Its
nment on the 1930 report of the Co-
nbla School nf Law: "Thf rapidity
with which law achoola et all kinds
grind out graduates la alarming."
Now, Tha Sun sayi:
"Tha decline in numben la not the
whole, or even the worst of the story.
The war has accentuated the need for
men trained ln technology and ln the
mechanical arts. This need Is being met
through university training programs
that have been adopted by the Army
and Navy; but, as Dean Smith rays,
'these programs have also stopped all
education ln the liberal arts and the social sciences for millions of young men
who are being called into the military
service.' What this is going to mean In
the training of lawyers for the future
is a major problem with which the college must grapple."
U.S. Navy Plans for
6 More Years of War
The United States Navy, which was
fir«t to learn of Japan's strength and
craftiness, n> not permitting itself to be
beguiled into a state of complacency
because of the numerous triumphs it
has scored on its own account since
Pearl Harbor. The Navy is planning
for at least six more years of war with
Nippon.
Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox
and Vice-Admiral Frederick J. Home,
Vice^Chief of Naval Operations, are
agreed on the wisdom of taking this
long-range view of the war in the Pacific. And in giving their reasons for
this belief, they have let the public
know a few things that previously were
unknown or not duly appreciated.
Not only must vast distances be covered in the Pacific advance, with bases
built from the ground up as the attackers move forward, but the United
States will require a fleet twice as
strong as Japan's, supported by twice
as many airplanes, before it can conduct the kind of offensive war it must
fight to win.
Even more revealing Is Secretary
Knox's statement that in the Pacific
the attrition is "frightful". He did not
enlarge upon this point, but his meaning was clear. The wastage of supplies,
and of the ships needed to transport
them, are inordinately high on that
front. Any slackening of production,
slight though It may be, is immediately felt in that vast scrap heap for war
equipment.
The two naval men complained that
reports of victories have inspired a letup in the factories, and part of their
purpose In speaking out was to correct
that misconception. They have taken
the rosy glow off the news for most.
Japan still is sitting securely on its
spoils, and complacency on the United
Nations' home front ls one of its best
allies.    •
Press Comment
EAT IT ALL
An observant citizen was lunching the
other day with a number of Americans and a
British officer recently arrived from England
noticed that the Americans, without exception, helped themselves to a little more food
than they ate. The young man ln uniform wai
the only member of the party who cleaned hli
plate,
Our friend thought there was a lesson ln
the incident, and we agree with him. Amerl-
cans have lived in i land of plenty for io
many generations that many of i_ have come
to regard the leaving of food on the plate
as normal. Those of us who as children were
taught that it was linful to waste the glfti
of a bountiful Providence seem to have forgotten the lesson. It's time we learned lt again.
A very appreciable saving In the nation's food
stock would be made If every one In helping
himself took no more than he was sure he
would eat.
Those Americans who delight ln following
English manners and customs will no doubt
be more saving of food as soon as they learn
thut in England it Is the thing to do. The
re-st of us needn't wait. W« dn clein our
plates because common sense commands It,
particularly in time of war.—Chicago Tribum.
POISON QA8
Evidently Allied leaders are genuinely disturbed over information they have received
that Axis Powers are preparing to resort to
gas warfare on the Continent.
How authentic the iivformatlon may be, remains to be seen But the response of Allied
leaders to the threat of gas warfare givei
gives the Axis a clear-cut idea of what they
cnn expect in retaliation.
Retaliation will be swift and unsparing In
case gas Is used. Thc Allies wlll not bt
the first to use It. but they are fully prepared
for any eventuality.
The Allied position ought to be, and li,
that we shall never stoop to iuch barbaroui
buslnesi unlets someone all* itarti It, but If
tha Axis leaden want to play rough, wa can
beat them In that kind of a game, too. Unfortunately, that ls the only way you cm deal
with them.
The Axis chiefs were the ones who started
the wholesale bombing of cities. Today they'r*
nrg-.nfT.Ing propng.ind.i campaigns to halt tha
bombing of Axis cities now that the system of
? ? Questions ? ?
ANSWERS
Optn to iny reider. Namei of pinom
uking quutloni will not bo publiihed.
Thoro tl no charge (or thll lervice. Queitiom wlll not bo aniwered by mill except
whin thoro li obvlpui neceulty for priv
acy-
(
L. _.., Ro.sl_.nc_—I would Uki tp know whin
•nd when Jeanette MacDonald, thl movie
actress ind linger, was born.
Jeanette MacDonald wu born ln Philadelphia ln 1907.
0. K„ Kimberley—I have iome old English
coins nnd (would like to find out If thiy
in of iny vilue. Can you please supply
mi with Oil address of ttrmi who handle
old coins?
Thl American Collectors Association, SU ,
La Tuera Station, Loi Angeles, Calif.
M. N. R., Nelion—I have uveril iott wollen
iweaten which I wish to wash. Can you
tell me how to do this suceeufully?
Waih woollens by themielvei tnd om
trticle tt t time. Wash before they become
•o tolled that they have to be rubbed to bl
madi clean. Have the water lukewarm, never
hot or cold. Make • thick iudi of soap and
then put tbe garment ln. Squeeze the soapy
water gently through the woollen article. Then
put It ln fresh toap suds'and repeat the pro*
cess. Never rub soap directly on woollens.
Rinse ln two or thfee clear, warm water biths,
always squealing, never wringing. Work
quickly amd do not allow woollens to itand
ln water. K drying woollens Indoors, do not
place the article near heat. If drying outdoors,
do not place the article in the direct rays of
the sun. Before the article ls dry, draw lt into
the correct shape and size. Do not iron unless
lt Is absolutely neceisary and then only with
a warm Iron. Shake to loosen the fibres and
restore flufflneis.
Not So Qood
By Q. 8. Ft.
Shortly tfter the fill of France, Herr Hitler and his generals, standing on the coast ot
France and gazing towards the chalk cliffs
of Dover on the coast of Bngland, cried exultantly, "Deutschland Uber Alles". "On August
15th, we shall be ln London". His goose-stepping Sturmtruppen helled the martial Mystic,
and sang "We're sailing against England."
As a short-term prophet, the former Corporal proved i wash-out, and also ts t long
term prophet, when one considers many of
his subsequent prophecies as to his whereabouts on any given date. What's the matter
with his seers and astrologers? Can It be that
they are all wash-outs too, and that then is
nothing but windy words to It aU.
Recording to one newsplece, lt wai Just
10 months ago that Hitler deplored the fact
that he could not foresee tht next moves of
the "military idiots" who led the AUiu. And
he ls ln the same fix today, as doubtless also
his High Command. They evidently think thi
Nazi chieftain ls tn for a spot of trouble ln his
own land of the ever deepening twilight, for
they have now appointed the fat Marshal) who
by the way promised and failed to deUver
England) as one of a Triumvirate to rule Germany to her doom.
One would roughly say that Hermann Goerlng, now Mr. Big Buslnejs of Nazlland, will
be the peace front behind which Hitler's betrayer! wUl hide In due date.
Today's Horoscope
This date gives its birthday child a rather
uneven temperament, sincerity, rich self-con-
fidence, and the ability to plan and execute
your plans with precision. Curb your rash impulses. You are fond of travel. A happy marriage is Indicated. If you stay out late the night
before you birthday and come home in the
early morning hours, or If you are early ou_
your way to work this morning, be careful
with your keys and documents. Do not entrust
a secret to anyone today, not even to your best
friend.'
War—25 Years Ago
By Thi Cinidlin Prew
August 12,1918.—Hard fighting In progresi
on the Una of Allied advance as the British-
Frtnch forces took Des Loges and the French
captured Gury; British airplanes bombed thi
Somme crossings and nearby railway Junctions. BriUsh raided the enemy'i Jerusalem-
Shechem poslUon.s
Words of Wisdom
Patience Is power; with time and patience
the mu-bery leaf becomes silk.—Chinese proverb.
Test Yourself
1. In whose Presidential admlnlstrlUon
was Aaron Burr Vice-President of the United
Stttei?
1. Who was VlcePresldent when George
Washington was President?      \
3. Who was Vlce-Preildent during Theodore Roosevelt's elective term of office?
TUT ANSWER!
1. Thomai Jefferson.
J. John Adami.
3. Charles W. Fairbanks.
Etiquette  Hints
Sit up itralght Bt the table. Don't slump
with your elbows spread out on the Uble.
wirfire filly deviled ll being uud agalnit
them. But tt won't work.
We havi no doubt that If Axis leaderi now
resort to (as, the dty wlll come when they
wlll be appealing to the Allies to halt the
gassing of Axis citlu. But thiy ought to mill! now that thtt won't work, fither,—Montreal Herald.
I
r   r    r
Today $
JCTORY GARDEN-GRAPH
By.OIAN HALLIDAY
\J/\ PROMM.Y
W.IMTV
OP ROOM
f01 ROOTI
CROWDED ROOTlf
ONT SUPPORT/1
UNPRUNED
TOPOPTRtt
Rossland to Lay Off Clfy Engineer
R.W. Haggen al End of Year
as Wetks Pro|eds Wlll Be Few
PLANTING FRUIT TREES
IN VICTORY QARDEN
Mtny Victory gardeners htve de-
tided to pltnt trult trees thb Fall.
The decision ls a good one, fbr t
homi orchard ctn prove t profitable
addition to a Victory garden, providing thi variety of fruit treei Is
carefully selected and the planting
ls properly done.
There is more to planting i trult
tree thm just (ticking lt Into thi
ground, even though the trees when
received from the nursery look Uki
Uttle more thtn sticks or whips.
As Illustrated In the accompanying Garden-Graph, the holes for
planting trult trees must be largo
enough to permit the roots to be
ipread ln nttunl position, I* Illustrated. AU broken portions ot lhe
rooti ihould be cut oft so u to leave
the endi smooth ind sound. If thl
rooti of the youn; tree ire crowded
into t hole which is not largo
enough'or deep enough, the chances
trt the tree will not live.
AU trees should be plinted two
or three Inchei deeper thin they
stood ln ttit nursery row. Then pack
the »oll firmly ibout the roott, being careful, however, not to break
or birk thl rooti. Leave three
Inchu of the surface soil loose to
serve (ts i mulch.
Pruning of thi tree thould be
done at Ume ot planting approxi
mately as lUuitrated.
ROSSLAND, B. C, Auf, lO-Al-
dermin F. M. Ethridge, Chairman
ot the Fire, Water and Ught Committet, recommended it Monday'i
City Council union thtt ill piths
•round thl City'i reservoir be cloied
uid ilgni placed warning people to
keep tway lo that thi water would
not become contaminated.    /
Aid. A. C. Rldgen, Chilrmin ot
thl Boird of Worki, recommended
thit owing to Ull KIKlty of engineering projects for next ynr, thi
urvicu ot the City Engineer, R. W.
Haggen, be discontinued the first ot
thi yur.
Aid. Rldgers also reported thit
hi wu now tble to fit t large
washing machine tor the Ctty, as
Iti gift to thi crtw of thi mint,
sweeper, HMCS- Roultnd.
Aid. Wlllltm Cunningham, Chairman of the Parks Botrd, reporttd
ht htd applied to the Swimming
Pool Society to put the Checker
Board on ltl lot adjoining the pool,
is Esllnf Park wis too damp. He
ilso reporttd the Parks Botrd htd
Uktd permission to Improve the
appearance of the wading pool by
CORN PROTECTION
IN VICTORY OARDEN
'Dwarf varietlei ot corn, if plinted deeply enough, need not be 'hilled up", but taller growing corn
should be supported against wind
damtgt by being "hUled". The hiU-
lng of corn also serves u a mulch
and helps to retain moisture In the
.soiL
A corn stalk thtt hu been "hilled"
Is shown In the accompanying Garden -Graph. Pile the dirt up four to
' six inches on both sides of the row.
On the latt, tall-growing varietiu,
the dirt ean be piled up u high is
eight Inches.
The hilling of com can bt accomplished by plowing tlong nch tide
ot the raw with t wheel cultlvttor,
Confusion Over
Evacuation
Mounts In Reich
NEW YORK, Auf. 11 (CP). -
BBC uld today a breakdown ln thi
Nazi transport machinery has heldj
up the evacuation of Berlin, It
quoted Stockholm reports.
"Evacuees must prove thtt thty
will be cared for In some other
part of Germany, and u 80 per
cent are unable to do so, chsos nil
resulted at the evacuation offices,"
continued BBC.
'Sanitary and ftedinf arrangements tt camps near Htmburg tra
described u very unsatisfactory,
and there trt reports of cases ot
typhus. The Germin rtdlo list night
nld: ■Hundreds of thouundi of
peopli trt being driven out, to
winder about in tht country outside, looking for en uylum.' . . .
"A Lisbon -report uys the masi
evacuation of the big Germtn Industrial centres tn tht North tnd
West has disrupted Hitler's police
syitem. Tongues are reportedly
loose snd criticism of Uie authorities
is rife..Already old ptrsontl scorei
■re being paid otf without any Ul
effects to the avenger"
Q_-_Ce__JL
(1.00 will bt ptld nch wuk
for ths but problem lubmitted
to Mr. Cirter. Write him today, care of Ntlson Dally Ntwi.
Hivi you my rulu for kuping
frlendihlp! bright?—Tint M.
Thi liking of such I queition ll
the evidence Uitt tht wrlttr wlll
be ible to maki ind kttp frlendi.
Too few peoplt piy enough ittention to keeping their frlendihlp* ln
good repair. Recently ont correipondent gave mt in excellent prescription for tills very thing. She
Uld, "Surrender non-iutnUili." ln
tny issui thi point to bt decided Is
ntvtr u Important u the keeping
ot good frlendi ovir It If we surrender food nituredly Wl build UP
tht othtr penon'i esteem ind leive
frlendltnen for tht future A friend
Is one whole Interests tnd dulru
are subordinated to tht Interests
and desirei of his friends. H you
ire lonely—you ire te-flsh. Thit'i •
quick wty of laying surround your
friendi with younelf!
or lt can be dont by _Mtns of t
htnd hoe.
Keep your eyei open now for evidence of the European com borer
among your cherished sweet corn.
Infested plants can bt detected by
broken or detached tassels, as illustrated, and the presence of holes
with protruding "boringi" In tht
sides ot thl stalks.     '
It li cltlmed thtt 80 per cent control ot the borer cw bt obtained by
spraying or dusting with rotenone
Juit u the green tusel is flret visible. Repeat four timu it tlve-day
Intervtli.
putting I coating of black tap OB
Mayor J. E. Oordon and Aldtrmu S- R. Corner wire appolnttd
delegates to attend tbe British Co-
lumbla Municipalities Convention,
to bt htld In Victoria.
At Uii requut of the Provlncitl
Civilian Protection Committet, a
budftt covering tht estimated administrative . expendituru '-, trom
April 1, IM, to Mtrch 81,1M4, wu
presented It imounted to $MM0,
ind till Provinciil Headquarter!
hu offered to piy HO per ctnt
ASK FOR
Replacement of
Sumner Welles
Denied as Rumor
WASHINGTON, Auf. 11 (AP).-
Stitt Secretary Cordell HuU denied
today thit Undersecretary Sumner
Wellei li to receive i roving assignment ind be repliced by Normin
Armour, one-time United Statei
Minister to Cinada and now Ambassador to Argentine.
HuU uld this neweit story wts
I recurrence of similar reporti circulated ln recent yein nid on ucb
occulon denied.
The battledren of the Canadian
soldier hu no brau to shine.
Sunburned Lips
Quickly Relieved
Prevent Painful Cracking
Rough, encktd, mnbinud Hpi tr< painfully ion od unilihtly —tit cnckid
nufaeu tidy Infected by dtngiroui
germi. Grt relief thl quick, mre wljwitk
Lypijll IM wonderful emollient acta
ln-tinUyKx.thii_hewoundid_nimt>-tnM
ind icili them igilnit germi ind Impurl-
tlu. It nftui thl painful, crackid ust-
fuel, huteni nitu.il killing, lypiyl
icti u t prottcttT! fllm betwun tht dill-
cite 11 p-ikin ind thi burning nyi of tht
•un. Get Lypiyl it your itore todiy. Uu
11 ngslarty to wetkt ud protect yonr
11 pi. Sold •nrywhirilnh-_ndy itick fcpim.
LYPSYL -SSSr
I
i
Yourttmily will Iort
Quiktr Corn Fliku,
btcinn they're
touty-trlip ... milt
* tnt—
delicloui. A nil
tempting brukfut
cereii Order apaclo-
lft Off two stttt*
you grocer todiy!
.;.
Proven Superiority
Nabob Coffee hai been honoured by the teet of time
... and proven by ite popularity. Today when rea)
coffee flavor and goodness mean so much/ Nabob ie
the name to remember. Always roaster freih in ite
modem Pliofilm container. Nabob ii your guarantw
oi utmoit coffee enjoyment and full coupon value.
Tune fo lhe nese tnd
entertttininf r_i,t shptr
. .. Ntbob tnrtj Tm*
t-__t. DOUOLAi * CO. LTD.: NABOB FOOD PRODUCTI LTD.
VANCOU vm. CANADA
J__
___
 u
Andrew's
For
Qood Shoes
R. Andrew
&XOa
Leaders In Footfashion
JOHNSON'S
LANDiNG
• JOHNSON'S LAND-NO, B. G-
Mr. md Mri. Perrin ot T_nll were
Siturdiy guests of Mr. ind Mn.
MoNicol md fimily.
Un. Jonei md her two little girli
Vblttd it thl Unding -between
boiti on Siturdiy.
Hn. Greenlaw ind Archie tnd
Mr. ind Mn. Millir md their twini
were Sundty vlilton here.
I Malcolm Greenlaw md hii men,
hiving finished haying on the Johniton Ranch have returned to the
logging camp up Hie Lardo River,
. Lillian (Bubblei) Stenberg hu
Wone to Howier to viilt Mn. Mai-
eplm Greenlaw for t few dayi.
1 ■ pMt. and Mn. Noel Bacchui of
Blrchdale were viiiting it the Land.
fag on Sunday.
Mn. Likt md Stanley md famUy and Jtck Raper were Kulo
shoppen on Thursday.
Mn. J. N. Thompson and three
children from Kulo are viiiting
lhe former's mother Mn. W. F.
McNicol.
Good Noon Meal
Is Importmt
Nobody rully win ti fe ba luy—
not In Umu Uka tbeu, any wty.
But there ii 1 lot of involuntiry
lulneii thit comet from a lick of
food food. Thit Isn't entirely dut
to the war md ihortagei. In fict
lt ll largely dul to poor food habiti.
If you work md have t chince to
|tt a good noon mial, tike lt. It'i
ilmost mora Important tor you thin
for tht men because most men have
a nourishing dlnntr witting tor
them it night. Be imart ind lit
thll mill Include it least one-third
ot the essentitl protective foodi, especially those bird to prepire—let
someone else do tha work.
You nted it least two cooktd vegetiblei every diy. Why not gtt
them it noon? Hivt 1 pun leafy
one—It adds 10 miny of thi vitimini md minerals, and'it li no
troublt to fix. Then it your evening metl, you cm hivt t green leafy
salad.   TTiit is etsy to tost togeth
er, parfeultrty 8 yen har* • bif
Jir of Trtnch drilling ill madi 19
In tba lea box. For viriity, turn
it Into a chtf 1 ultd. Put In ltttuct,
rnmtlna, chicory, wittrcrtsi, cir-
rot illveri, and itripi of him, er
ham loat or cooked tongue, or
Swlu cheese. Sometlmei ual hird-
cooked eggi or itited nuti ln place
of thi meat
It you hive coffee at noon, then
bl sure to have milk at night. Adequate cilclum ll necessary to your
nervoui lystem md fl is even mora
Importmt whtn you ire working
under tension.
You nied two fresh frulti ■ day.
You cm hiv* ont at breakfist ud
thi othir It lunch or supper. You
could hive one at each meal—that
U nont too mmy.
Thl protective foodi are not thl
wtight maken. They irt tht foods
you muit hivt every day. Hirt'i
tht list: MUk, fresh frulti and freih
vegetables, wholt grain braid, in
egg, lean mut, fish or fowl. If
you nttd to cut down on tht cilorlu, leave otf tht ptstrles, candy ud
sweet drlnki. They are high ln calorlei but furnish very llttlt protecUon.
It ll vlttl these dayi thit thl protective foodi bt includes ln thi diet I
health emanating trom SulU Hayward, popular screen star, il in ex
to produce tht energy required to imple of whit good eating habiti
do  our Jobi  weU.    The  glowing I will accomplish.
CASES
* I uw but ona empty box ot
any kind except Pacific." Omitted from thi litter Stturdiy,
till Mntenct repeats ttit itory
of -he use of Ptcific MIU ln 1
-  "ghoit topwn" ln tht Pir North.
"Bviryw here," uyi the writer,
"through thi deeerted campi
and cabins art empty Pacific
Milk cum.''
Pacific Milk
Irradiated tnd Vacuum Picked
iiiiiiiimiiiiiinniiiiiuiininiiiiniimi
On. JJm CU/t
THURSDAY, AUCUST 12
CKLN AND
CIC PROGRAMMES
MORNINC
7:45-Mu.l.il Clock
8:00—CEC Niwi
8:15—Front Lint Family
1:30—Muilcil Merry-go-Round
9:00-BBC  Niwi
(:1 J—The Women'i iCorner (C_KLN)
0:30-Vocal Virletlei (CKLN)
9:45—Dance Timt In Englmd
9:59—Time Signil
l0:0O-_ketches In Melody
10:30—Lyrlci by Llxa
10:«5—Claire   Wallace,   "They  TeU
Mt"
llrOO-MuilciI Americim
ll:15-Moodi ot thl Momtnt CKLN
ll:S0-"Soldlir'i*Wlit"
ll:4J-Dan_ing TU Noon
AFTERNOON
12:00—B.C. Finn Broadcait
13:25-The Notice Boird (CKLN)
U:30-CBC Ntwi
12:4V-Land  of  tht  Maplt   Leat
(CKLN)
l:0O—J. Roberto Wood, Baritone
1:18—Inttrludi
Wg-JIklfc-Ttttlcoat  Pionten"
l:30-Jolnt Recltil
3:00—The Adventurei of Raffles
2:19—Genu of Rhythm
J:80-Tu Time
2:45-Llstener_* rivorltei
J-OO-Werttm Flv*
1:15—Muiical Progrimmi
3:30—Saptrton & Shelter, pianists
3:45-BBC NtWl
t-00-Cruiadtii ln Brittuy
4:15-Johnny Perklni, plmlit
4:30—Cirl Kalash tt Orch.
4:45—In thl Ntwi
5:00—Newi Commtntiry
5:08—Swing for tht Servicei
5:30-Alouette Octet
EVENINC
8:00—Evening Serenidt
8:30-Sonn it Twilight (Oowu)
6:4J-JUiythm of Romance
7.-00-CBC Niwi
7:14—Concerti du chalet
8:00—BBC Newi Reel
8:30-We ShaU Htvt Muile
»:00-Drajni: "Ltke Freighter"
8:J0—Cflunci for Today
10:00-CBC Niwi
10.15-TiIk—"The Roadi Men Live
By"
10:30-Anlta Ellii
10:43-Dinea Orcheitra
11:00—God Sivt tht King
Grasshoppers Ravage
Windermere Valley
Tttm* md gtrdeni In tht Windermere ViUey ire luffering severely
from • plague of grasshoppers. Fieldi
of alfalfa, potato crops, raipberriei
md miny other cropi ire filling
prey to tht ravages of thue lnstctl.
Prison Convict
Tells off
loyal Sweetheart
By BIATRICE FAIRFAX
A letter which camt to thli column tbt othtr day, nt mt wondering about tba wrlttr. Written by a
man serving a prlioo ttnn, H plaques me wHh tbt question of bow a
man who could havt evoked mch
loyilty and devotion In tbt heirt of
a gtrl, could bt 1 crimiml. Tht litter, ont of tbt most Interesting I
havt tvtr rtetlvtd, uys:
"Dear Miw Fairfax:
"Rtctntly, I read in your column
Sailor M&'l letter ln which ht
•aid hli iweetheart int blm a letter uking him to 'd-irtgard anything tbt may havt promiied, 11
iht dldnt know where iht'd bt by
tht tlmt thli war Ja ovir."
"May I ttU your readen 1 true
story ot ont girl'i loyalty to a man
ln uniform — unfortunately not 1
uniform ln iht Army, but ont of
priion gait. It illus.ra.ei 1 contrait
In thc loyilty of two glrli—M.S.'i
sweetheart md mint, whoit mmt ia
Jeanne. Whilt the sailor's girl hai
every incentlvt to keep her word
ind bt proud ot lt, my girl hti nont.
And yet ihe waits.
"When I wu committed to priion
ln UM, my girl voluntarily promiied to wait until tht diy Td come
btck. Thit wit nearly ieven years
igo. At that thne, iht wu 19 ind I
wai 30. Durlryj all thoie years iht
hu written to me more thin 1300
times, a letter ivery 48 hours, not
Including postcards, ud the ll still
wilting md writing as faithfully is
ever. Of the prlaon'i population, of
tlmost 3000, I'm Uie only ont whose
wttt or iweetheart hu written him
thit often during thi same period
of time—tht put seven yein.
"Some of my feUow priionen uk
mt Uu atcret of _wt loyilty. I tell
them there'i no secret to tt. She's
thit nrt typt of girl whose loyilty
ll spelled with a capital L.
"Jetnot livet ln a small town
where evtryont la prttty well ac
quainttd with everyone else md
my friends ind relatives who live
there art amazed at btr fidelity during all these years. Severil young
men from thit community have
looked mi up to tfll mt about my
extraordinary sweetheart. Some of
Upm I dldnt' tvtn know; they've
heard of mt through the townspeo
pie ttlk of my Jeanne's long md
ftlthful waiting.
"And htr waiting hu not beei
easy; iht hu sacrificed iome of the
greateit tings in Ufa—huibtnd com-
pinlonship, chUdrtn, homt lift, md
everything elst thtt loyil wilting
Incurs. All these yttn ihe hu mide
her own living 11 1 seamstress ln
ber llttlt homt town when sht
Uvu with her parents. She'i tht
kind of girl you reid about only ln
fiction—but ihe li reil
"You uk your reiden whit they
think of glrli wbo fiU In love with
uniforms md forget tht men they
contain befort they're wtll out of
light. I believt any mm li well rid
of iuch a gtrl, md I hope that
Mirine M fl, and othen who've
bad ilmllar experience! WlU not
believe thit ill girb art like that.
Surely If ont girl hu hid tht will
md the courage to wilt seven yein
and longer for t mere convict, there
tra othen who certtlnly ought to be
willing to 'tand by • mm who his
thi honor of wearing Army uniform.
J3."
Fernie Man Dies
raRNIE, B. C.-Lornt Hamilton,
the eldeit ion ot tht lite Andrew
Himllton md Mrs. Hamilton, tged
36 yetn, passed away Thursdiy
morning it Uit lootl hoipltil tfter
1 lengthy Ulneu. He It lurvived by
hli mother ind three brotheti: Ken
lerving with the trmy ovtneu, Sidney lerving in 1 mlllttry bind In
Calgary, and Grant ln Fernie.
The funeral wu held Saturday af-
ternoo from the United Church. Interment wu In St. Mirgirefi Cemetery.
NELSON SOCIAL
PHONI SOCIAL ITEMS TO 144
Ohargl far Ingagemint Announceminti In Thll Column ll I1.B0
J.   (Joker)   Tonelli   wbo hu
e Lut Thunday night a miscel-
lineou ihower was htld In honor
ot Mtu Irli Johtnsion, brlde-elcct
of thli month, at tht homt ot Mn.
R. Burgtu. Tbt gutiti playtd court
whiit md the prizes wtrt taken by
Mlu Mtrgirtt Thain and Mn. W. D.
Bum*. Guesti wtrt Mn. J. Johtni-
son, Mill Doloru Johansson, Mri.
A. Peterson, Mlu Tiny Driver, Mill
Alma Smith, Mlu Lucille Whitehttd, Mlw Bitty Robtrtion, Mlu
Rolna Coleman, Miss Margiret
Thain, Miu Doreen Long, Mn. Lin
Ltmbourne, Mn. Andrew Niven,
Mlu Emily Leeming, Mn. H. J.
Blihop, Mn. T. Mldgley, Mn. J. W.
Hendrickion, Mlai Joanne Hendrickion, Mrs. Roy Mmn, Mn. W. D.
Burni, Mn. AS. Read, Mrs. Ralph
Johansson, Mn. T. A. Wallace md
Mn. John Voltuon.
a Mn. J. D. Spiers, Kokanat
Street, hu bten vtiltlng htr par-
ents, Mr. md Mn. G. Hendron nt
Creiton.
a Mr. and Mn. W. Byrts htd u
gueiti Mr. and Mn. R. Byru ml
children of TnU, ind Mn. W. Byrei
md ion of Warfield.
a Mn. P. P. Sparki of Vmcouver
formerly of Nelion, is ■ vititor ln the
city.
a Mn. G. B. Abbott and daughter
Angle hive returned home trom 1
two weeka holldiy spent tt the
Coast, Banff md Cilgiry.
been on sick leavt from tht Army
md hu bttn holidaying in Ntlion
hu returned to TrtU and will leave
this wttktnd for Vancouvtr.
t Mr. md Mrs. C- A. Newmm of
TnU in holidaying ln Nelion.
t Mr. and Mn. Kenneth Pople
md daughttr of TnU in ipending
a holldiy ln Nelson.
t Fo. md Mn. Hirold Bttt art
visiting Po. Bate's pirtnti, Mr. md
Mn, F. Bate, Stanley Strut
e Lt-Col Pred Lister, C.M.G.
of Cimp Lister, wu ln Nelion Wld
ncsdiy enroute to Kelowni to it-
tend a meeting ot tht Board of Dlr
ectori of Trtt Fruits Llmlttd.
t Carl M. Mohr of Ainiworth
wu 1 viiltor to Ntlion Tuesday.
Engagements
• Mr. md Mn. J. Russell Thompion of Sheep Creek, B. C„ announce
tbe engagement of thetr only dtughtir, Mtrgirtt Bvtlyn, to Pilot Offlctr Ctrl W. Linden, eldest ion of
Mr. and Mn. John Linden, Nelion,
B. C, tht wedding to takt place
Septtrr-ber 8, it 4:00 p.m., In Trinity
Church.
Willow Point
WILLOW POINT, B. C.HMn. M.'
Howe md diughter, Mn. H. WU1-
timi of Trail were recent visiton
to WlUow Point.
Mr. ind Mn. J. Weill hivi u
gueiti, Mn. WeUs' brother-in-law
md sister, Mr. md Mn. Stont of
Revelitoke.
•Miss Irene Blunt hu hid as gueiti
Mr. ind Mn. C. Weatherall and two
sons of Swift Current.
Holldiylng ln WlUow Point for 1
tew weeki ire Mr. md Mrs. J. Bell
of Trail, Mr. md Mn. J. Salter md
ftmily of Trail md Mr. md Mrs,
G. Helbecque of Bonnington.
Mr. end Mn. A. Hopkins md
family of Trail hive returned after
ipending 1 holiday ln the Knoepfll
Summer home.
Sgt md Mn. P. W. Green, their
two aom Beverley ind Normm who
havt ipent two weeki tt their homt
here, htvt lett for Vtrnon.
BRILLIANT
BRILLIANT, B. C-Mn. P. W.
Glebo wai a visitor at Nelson Tuesday.
Tannii ind NelUe Koftinott were
Nelson viiiton Tuesday.
Mr. and Mn. P. P. Konkin wtnt
to Nelion Tuesday.
Mike Radulovich hu returned to
BrUlimt after two weeks' vacation
John Gerchko hu left BriUltnt
to return to hli home it Mikido.
Suk.
WiUiam Evadikhno, after ipending two weeki' holiday at Perry
Siding, has returned to Brilliant.
Mr. md Mrs. W. H. Saunders have
returned trom a holiday in Nelson.
George Chahley returned Monday
from 1 ihort trip to Ainsworth tnd
Creston.
NILSON DAILY NIWI, THURSDAY, AUCUST 11, 1943-5
Rossland Social
♦ ♦
The monetary unit ln Denmark
li the krone, with m ivtngt vtlue
of 20 centi.
', ■ ■ 11111111T ■ ■ I r T11 ■ 111 r T i ■ I ■ E T111111 ■ 11 ■ I ■ 111 r I ■ ■ r ■ 1111 ■ TI ■ 111T11T ■ T1111 r 1 ■ I r TIT1111
mUnhfoA
m_l__\__)W_-
RM.
By BCTIY NEWMAN
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi
A pot pie li i dish to conjure with
when fimlly tnd guut tppeUtu ire
lusty. You cm uu veil, pork, limb
or beef for the pot pie, combining it
with vegetablei for i one-dish meal,
md topping It with luscious looking
baking powder biscuits btked to t
nice brown.
TODAY'S MINU
Veil Pot Pll
Cabbige ind Apple Sliw
Frosted Moliuei Squares
Coffee
VEAt POT PIE
3 poundi veil, ntck or breut 2
small onloni, t smill potitoes, diced,
1 cup diced celery, 1 cup diced cir-
CHOCOLATK    V
MILK '
Tht Populir livtrigi ftr
Any Mttl
OOTENAY
YALLEY  U
AIRY
WASH DRESSES
Slit! 11 to 15.
$4.95
FASHION FIRST LTD.
rod, I tablupooni flour, ult tnd
pepper, biking powdtr biscuits.
Cut veil Into cubes md cover
with hot ulted witer. Cook for
30 minutei. Add vegetables and
cook slowly unUl they ire done,
seuon with Hit md pepper. Thicken liquid with flour smoothed .
cold wtter. Pour Into cmerole
diih, cover with biking powder biscuits md btkt in t moderately hot
oven (400 degreu F.) until biicuiti
are done, ibout IS minutes.   Servu
FROSTED  MOLASSES  SQUARES
(4 cup ihortening, _ cup iugar,
1 tgg, _ cup moliaut, _ cup iwtet
milk, 2 cupi lifted cike flour, IH
teupooni biking powder, Vt teaspoon iodi, Vt teupoon ult Vt teaipoon vanilla, V4 cup raiilni, V, cup
nut metti.
Cretm ihortening, add sugar and
btat light Add unbeaten tgg tnd
but wtll. Add moluiu ind van-
llli, lift flour, baking powder, ioda
_tnd ult three Umu; idd ilttmtttly
wltb milk. Mix wtU ud tdd nut
metti md rililni. Pour into Jtlly
roll pm md btkt it M0 to J7B degrees r„ IS to 20 minutu.
BUTTIR CREAM FR03TINQ
Vs cup confectloner'i sugar, 1
tibleipoon butter, 1 ttblupoon milk,
V« teupoon vanilla.
Mix together md but will, ipreid
on moluiu tquirei whilt still In
pm. Cool tnd cut In .-inch iquire!.
■y MRS. HARVIY FLEURY
BOSSLAND, B*. C, Aug. 11-Lt-
CpL C. W. Hutton of tht Royil Canadian Engineers tt CMHIwack, trrlvtd Wedneaday to Vialt hli wife
-lid family.
Mri. LUlian Watklnion of the R.CA.F. (W.D.) ipent her leave visiting her parenti, Mr. ind Mn. T.
Stephens.
Ak2 Ron Stundry of the R.C.A.F.
who has tpent hli leave with hit
wlft and family, left Tuesday to rejoin hii unit.
Mri. P. O. (-"aimer wu a Trail visitor lYlday.
Mils Eileen Nixon left Friday for
Cilgiry, when iht wlU Join the
R.C.AJ. CWJ3) She wu accompanied u far u Trail by her mother,,
two lliten tnd brother.
Mirs. Charles GUI and family of
Oregon City arrived Friday to vlitt
relaUvu end friendl. At pruent ihe
U visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Evan'.
Al Nicholi left for Vancouver on
Tuesday to end-it.
Leaving Rosslmd Saturday to it-
tend Cimp Lourdes wtre the Misses
Barbara Burrell, Donna Burrell,
Marietta Rewe, all of Spokane, and
Nfedlne Fleury,. They were to be
Joined at Nelson by Anna Marie
Mara, who has been visiting the
pait wtek there.
The Mluei Yvonne Fleury, Margaret Bourchier md Thereu Milan
returned Saturday from Camp
Lourdei on the West Arm.
Pte. Vincent Mariom of *he United States Army at Camp Robert!,
Calif., li renewing acquaintances
here. He left Rouland a year ago to
reiide in the Stites.
On Aug. t France! ind Join Allen celebrated their Uth and 12th
birthdays. TTielr Invited gueiti wirt
Noreen Hedley, Msie Dresler, LU-
Utn Wfritehoivi, Jeanint Peddv-
coart, Eunice Stanley, Ma_r]one
Kerne, Rniemary Turner and Put
Betty ind Gerald AUen. The tta
table ww decorited in pink md
irihlte centred with a large birthday
cake. Mbny gtmu were enjoyed.
Hirvey Fleury of Rossland ted
Douglu Cummins of Nelion returned Frldiy from Chrlitini Like.
Dr. _. Wrlnch returned Saiurdiy
from 1 holiday at Christina Lake.
Mn. Prestley hu u her guesti
her granddaughten, Barbara, Donna and Patty Burrell of Spoktn>,
wd Marietta Reale alao ow Spokme.
Mn. Thomu Moorcroft and ton
Ltrry of Nebon ire vteltlng Mr.
and Mri. T. Moorcroft Sr.
Mlsa Joinne Piatt of Brilliant Is
visiting her grandmother, Mn. Supple, Le Rol Avenue.
MT. ind Mn. Tom White have
returned frtm South Slocan;
Donald Littley left Siturdiy tor
Vmcouver to tike hli medletl examination for the Navy.
Ruuel Birch left for Vmcouver
to take hla medical for the Navy,
AB. Michael Johnson, R.CN.V.R,
left Friday to rejoin his uplt
-Mrs. F. M. Erskine of Ntlson Is
visiting htr nn md daughter-in-
law, Mr. md Mn. M Grahim, Co-
lumbli Avenue.
Po. Auitin Btthli of tht RCAF.,
stationed it Vulcm, Altt., li ipending his leive tt the home of hli
mother, Mn. Gladyi Bathie.
Sgt. rider of tht RCJUT. li
•pending his leavt it hli home here.
Sgt Harry Buulleu of Cimp Borden, Ont, il home on leave.
Second Lieut G. B. Long of the
Canadim Active Army lk homt on
leave.
' Mr. md Mn. O. Wilion of Kimberley in Roulind vlilton this
week.
Mlu Barbara Ring of Seattle ll
viiiting her gnn-hndther, Mn. E.
Dewir.
Mrs. W. R. Selby of UM Kootenay Avenue had aa her guuti Thunday afernoon Mn. George McKay
of Tadmac and Mrs. A. Choquette
of St. Johns, Quebec, and her ton
Andre it the tea hour. Mn. J. T.
Fox, Mn. E. Kambic md Mts. H. O.
Fleury who all attended St. Joi-
eph's Oorwent ln Nelson together,
ilso Slater Norbert and Sister Inno-
centta of Bellingham, Waih., were
also preient
Miss M. Butlin
Weds P. Jupp
al Hew Denver
NEW DENVER, B. C-A wedding
at lntereit took place on Thunday
at 11:30 i.m., ln the St. Stephen'!
AngUctn Church, New Denver. Rtv.
Frank Browne heard tht marriige
vowi of Joyct Marie, eldeit daughter of J. W. Butlin md William Jupp
eldest ion of Mn. Jupp of Ntkuip,
and the Iete Percy Jupp, Mrs. A.
Levy played tht wedding mualo.
Tht bride ndio entered tht ohurch
on tbt arm of her father, looked
dunning tn i gown of heavy classic white tatln featuring a iweit-
httrt neckline, edged with pearli
end lact. The full ikirt flowed from
a molded bodtoa and tha Mary,
Queen of Soott headdrtu htld foldi
of a full length veil. Her bouquet
wu white md yellow rosei ind tern.
Miu Monia Butlin, youngeit uiher
of tht brldt, htr only attendant,
wort i floor length gown of yeUow
sheer made on the Unei of tht
bride's gown, with heed piece made
of .petals of tht uma material. Her
bouquet wu yellow |nd white rotes
with fern.
Charlu Horrey of Naki«p wu Uit
groom'i but man. Tht uiher wai
Dan Peter Morgan.
FoUowing tha ceremony a rtctp-
tion wu held at tha Legion Hall
which wu beautifully decorited in
whltt tnd yeUow. A four-tltred
wedding cake centred tht bride'i
table embedded in wMte net with
illvtr and yeUow bowi of ribbon
eurrounded by four yeUow tapen
set ln silver.
A later reception wtt held at
tht Butlin ruldence.
Mr. and Mn. WUliam Jupp left
to ipend their honeymoon it Cotst
dUei. On their return thty wUl
makt their home in Nakuip. For
traveUlag the bride cboie a roie ennoble with brown accessories tnd
coruge of white rue*
Out of town guesti included Mr.
tnd Mn. C. S. Leary, Mr. end Mn.
F. Rushton, Mr. md Mn. W.G.M.
Hakeman, Mr. md Mn. C. Horrey,
Mn. P. Jupp, Mrs. F. Fellows, Mrs.
W. Carruthen, Miss P. McDonald,
Mr. md Mn. Hu Humphtii, iu Humphrii, Mr. end Mra. B. Wip, Mr. ind
Mn. Z. Munn, Mri, E. C. Cretney,
Mr. tnd Mn. W. Mixwell, Mri.
Gower, Mn. Ivor Jonei, Mn. Hod-
uet
Eight Birmlnghim docton luve
cloied their lurgeriu, pooled their
practicu tnd iet up a central heilth
lervice.
FREEMA11
*    FURNITURE CO. *^
Tht Houm ef Furniturt Values
Phont US Nelwn
TRAD! IN YOUR
Old Furniture
on NEW
A recent Canadian Army order
allowi "othtr ranks" to wttr blick
Uu with battle dreu when oft duty.
WATCH TOMORROW'S
PAPER  for  our  GROCER V
SPECIALS    *
R.&R. CROCERY
Mr. R. R. Horner
%w SANDWICH
FAVOURITE
Mix equal parti of French's
Mustard and butterandnie
aa a sandwich filling. Easy
and a big favourite with
all! Try it in
tomorrow's
lunch bo__m
Watches - Diamonds
ewellery
_^^~      491 Baker St.
lllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.UIIIMIIIIIII.il
MIDSUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE
■t
MILADY'S FASHION SHOP
llllllllll I IIII1MIMIIIIIIIII1M III III I
hese days, when tea must yield
the utmost in flavour, quality
is of supreme importance* Ask for. *
SALADA
TEA
'
: _._.-,..-_.	
m
■"*
»
,Jl
 6-NILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, AUCUST 12, 1943
TODAY'S News Pictures
Prisoners ot wir in Canida art
provided with tomtortablt Summtr md Winttr clothing, including Jackets, pants, ihoei ind
glovei. The ibovt plcturt wai
ttken ln t Montreal factory where
a girl worker takes measurement!
on a Jacket. Material is blue den-
lm. A large rtd circle goei on the
btck ot ttch Jacket.
GENERALISSIMO ARRIVES FOR CITATION
Generalissimo and Madame Chiang Kai-shek, arrive for the ceremony at which General Joseph W. Stilwell, on behalf of President Roosevelt, presented the Gis-
simo with .the Legion' of Merit Order in the degree of
Ohief Commander.
SALlYS SALLIES
HOLD THAT TIGER
When the iplrlt ot adventure became too strong tor "Benny", two-
weeks-old Bengal tiger born it
Flleshhacker Zoo, In Stn Francii.-
co, hli mother, "Rente", put forth
a reitratnlng hand. But whto
Benny Inilittd upon uetng tht
world outiidt tht bin ot hli mother'! cage, "Renee" resorted to
itronger methodi. She took young
"Benny" by tht icruff ot thi ntck
tnd otrrled him btck whtrt ht
belonged.
jk^-i_-____
7__AW_.     __-__!_.
PRgTTY, PRACTICAL
Willowy slim and beruffled,
Marian Martin Pattern 0474 keep,
you alwiyi looking your prettiest.
Yet. thii practical apron knows its
duty . . . covers yoiy hlpi way
'round to the ilde-back . . . fit!
you comfortably ... no slipping
ihoulder itrapi ... has handy
patch pockets—optional.
Pattern 0474 may be ordered
only in misses' siies 12. 14. 16, '/
and 30. Siie 16 takes 3v» yards Si-
inch.
Send 20 centi lor thli pittern to
Tht Ntlien Dtlly Newi. Needle-
craft Dtpt., Ntlun. Wrltt plllnly
pittern numbtr, your ntme tnd
tddrttt. Pittemi wlll be milled
to your homt In tbout 16 diyi.
Thtrt mty bt iomi furthtr deity In delivery beciuie of the
ltrgt Increue In orderi during thl
prtunt uuon.
AUNT   HET
By ROBIHT QUILLEN
Thtrt'i no reison for 1 big hand-
toint iwindltr to risk Jill In i land
full t' rich ind lonely wldowi"
■AKE THE VITA I. FIAT
CONCENTRATING on what ll
tb-cJutcly eitentitl to tht lucceu
of your contract, it you can figurt
out what Is, will pay you hand-
tome dividend! in tht long; run.
Many a pliyer tees a number og
plays which may contribute to
the dulred reiult, but doei not
realize thtt one of them U abto-
kitely necessary, whereaa the othen come tinder the held ot superfluities. So hit trying of the un-
neceuary movt ctutei him to
tumble the vital ont.
.-
4QJ083
♦ Q101
+ J 8-2
(Dealer
iBtrablt.)
North Iut
14 Paa
1^ Put
4A Paa
84 Fm
14 Paa
4 10 I 8 4
4 10 2
4884
*KQ10I
4A.KJ88
• Ttl
4_YK
«Att
North. Eut-WtM vul-
South
INT
INT
«♦
Wett
Paa
Pui
Ai'.er Wttt opened tht heart Q
to the K, louth decided to ruff a
elub loier. tnd try to dlicard hla
hurt by netting up a diamond.
•0 ht at once ltd the club 4 tion
dummy, and lit bit hold It wtth
the Q A htart return knocked out
tht dummy'i A, and daclanr'i
gooie waa oooked. Ht played to
tht club A, icored the diamond
K and A. rufftd thi dub I with
tht tptdt 7, rufftd a diamond wtth
tht ipadt 8. letting up two diamond! btctuit tht wit divided,
but MIU could aot utt thtm.
Thert wu no utt going to dummy
with Ijruinp to pit/ Umu whUt
Eait itlll had a trump (or rufflng,
so ht scored four trumpi and had
to glvt up a htart at tht tnd.
Keen analyili would havt ihown
South that, after cm heart top
wu out of dummy, tht only
chance tor hit contract wu to Snd
tht dlamondi divided evenly and
to ltt them up before the other
htart top wu knocked out u a reentry. Sun tht opponent! would
whack at tht htart again It they
got tht lead, ht ihould not havt
let thtm gtt It until Um dlamondi
wen ltt np.
Afttr taking tht fint heart
trick, hi ihould have acored hla
two diamond topi, thtn tht ipadt
A. K and Q, ruffed tht diamond T
with tht ipadt 8, tcortd tht tptdt
J, ltd to Ult htart A, taken Um
remaining two ditmondi for dli-
cardi of ont club and a heart, led
to tht club A and then given up a
trick with hit final club. Concentrating; on tht crux of tht hand
would htvt madt hit contract tor
Dtaltr: South. Eut-Wett vulnerable. North-Couth, part icon
of 10.)
If North get! Into 3-Sp*d«l with
a ptrt-tcort of 10, hli partntr
hiving opened with 1-Httrt and
Wett only having retponded with
J-dubt to a doublt by But. whtt
would yosiu Eut laad. tad wtypt
ACROSS
1. Linen
vestmenl
4. Perform
7. Ostrich,
like bird
8. Sandarac
tree
10. u. s.
president
11. Thick cords
13. Awn
15. Lave
16. Weight 1
17. Destruction
19. Cobalt 1
(sym.)
20. Nor6c god
21. Tear 1
22. Concealed
33. Piece of
Sculpture
24 Heed
215. Social rank
27. Musty
28. Skein of yart
29. Money
Islang) 1
30. Sum up
31. Verbal
32. Germanium
(sym.)
34. Fish
35. Imaginery
line
36. M-trgin
37. Withered
39 Awkward.
stupid
perion
41. Diseaae
of rye
43. Charget
44. Any
45.1 'pn idi t
46. Herd of
whales
47. Lair
DOWN
1 Violently
Part of
glasses
Support to
a wall
Swiss river
Royal
headdresa
Cloth of
m'llberry
bark
Mistake
Abrogate
Movable
barrier
Kind of
reclaimed
wool
A relative
18 Neutet
pronoun
2t.Bread-hke
biscuit
22. Handle of
sword
23. Cang
24. Diminutive
of Mary
25. Two-wheeled
carriage
26. Implement!
nf ascent
27. Calculated
29. Grating
31. Farm animal
32. Color
33. Spikes of
cereal grain
35. Frtgranct
36. Frequently
38. Eager
40. Diminish
In eolor
41. Sun god
'
I
.-■.-.• ■  . .  ■'. .
 S'T
.
Look Down These Wont Ad Columni for Bargains
PHONE 144
__._t.-tn — To Q.M.S. and Mrs
ert Smalts, at Mater Misericor-
1 Hoipltil, Rouland, August 7,
1 _      '"
Bi-To Mr. and Mri. Paddy
i, at tht Miter Miatrlcordiae
pitil,, Roisland, Auguit 9,lion.
HELP WANTED
oys 12 to 15
Do You Want Your Own
Business?
Dp You Want to Earn
Your Own Money?
ofltable Dally Newi piper
ltu irt open from time to
M, if you wmt to get itarted
your own buslneu ind .to earn
ur own money apply now for a
Btt, it the Dally Ne
Newi Office.
S_ FOR C. W. RAMSDEN
(MAN   FOR   SMALL   CAFE,
ted UVlng accommodations. No
Miction to ale child. Standard
ages. Experience not necessiry.
itlonal Selictlve Service, Nel-
m.
MBb_ jflflLiASLE ___&
ffi or elo-rly woman for mod-
m home, ai housekeeper, until
Ihfly, of working couple. 823
until. D>ys off. Sleep in. Box
iTjtjm)trley, B. C.
___$- ONCE - A CX50D
ulldoztf operator. One uied to
DT Ild LeTourneau angle-dozer
rtferid. Oood wagu and steady
rork./Apply National Selective
'l|fe,iNtlion, B. C.
PARTY WANTED TO
vSl936 Ford Coupe from Cai-
.gi to Vtncouver. For particu-
an{vrlti Bok. 5173, Dally Newi.
-_______m__mm-\__
arge. Sleep In. Phone 590L
U | pjn. or call at 413 Slllci.
" OCRL FOR GENERAL
ework. Sleep ont Ph. 247-L
.     "gi.1  ',
YOU CAN
TELEPHONE REPLIES
TO
ADVERTISEMENTS
•   WITH
BOX NUMBERS
for tht accommodation ot reader! who find It Inconvenient to
writt an tnswtr to Clisilfled
Advertisement! which ctrry
Daily Nf wi Boa Number* rather thin I mme or addresi of advertisers and to serve advertli-
ers better we wlU iccept replies by ttltphont
PHONE 144
YOU CAN ORDER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS BY
PHONE ALSO
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY
TEACHERS
ASSAYIR8 AND MINK
REPRESENTATIVES
PERSONAL
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al
Aimer Hotel Opp. C. P  R. Depot.
ftUBBBRSTAM^yOftAtlt'im-
pOKI Ntlion Dllly News Commercial   Printing   Department.
iii 1 a mm um. iu
buy anything. Chen Stcond Hind
Stort, vimon St.        - .   •
Mj^tKiyTA6uia-aA&iflja»
and effective. $1 (3 wttki lupply)
It Fleury's Pharmacy.
_-_Y-___~_-Tl___.
get acquainted. Join friendship
Club Pirtlculin 10c, lidlei Bit
P.O. Box 3*3, Vincouver,
25* THE PHOTO MILL 25*
P 0 Bos lit. Vincouvtr,
Rolli dtvtloptd and printtd 25c
U rtprlnti 8x7 tnlargtmini Mo
25c l10NS PHOm-25c
P O. Box 434. Vancouver
Any 8-exp. roll developed md printtd 25c Rtprlnti 8c. Free 6x7 coupon
LorfnY _-__ isa. m__t_
confldentlal    matrimonial    club
Many Members with meani  Particulars tnd descriptions 10c. La-
dies free. Box 121, Regina.
FILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-
HAROLfi 1 '-__, ____.t
B.C.,  Provincial Assayer, Chemlit
Individual  repreientitive for
ihippers at Trail Smelter.
A. 1  Buie. Independent Mine Representative  Box 84  Trill, EC.
I W WIDDOWSON PROVlW-HAL
Assayer, 301 Joiephlne St., NeUon.
THE  WEST   KOOTKfJAV   ____-
Office, 950 SUnley St, NtUon, B.C.
ENQINEER8 AND SURVEYORS
R *# itAGGfiN. H__- U C.VH.
Eng.neer; B.C, Lmd Survtyor.
Roiiland and Grand Forki, B.C
BOYD C. AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST
Nelion, B.C Surveyor md
Engineer, Phont 868-11.
INSURANCE  AND REAL  ESTATE
vmm w_-m_
CHAS. F.
Reil Estite
Phone ISS.
MACHINISTS
HBWHHB LlMl'l'Bf)'
Machine shop, acetylene ind ilectrlc
welding, motor rewinding
commerciil refrigeration
Phone 893 324 Vernon St.
TEACHER FOR PARK
ding School. Salary (OOO per
unb. Apply  Sec. L. A. Bell,
■Btew^rm for _tt.!g"s6^ MAfcHrtTC AHOP
l____   WANTED   FOR   BhL-    <-.~i.ii,,. ■- m|n. ..A mm wnrW
rd School, Blewett. Salary $980
W. Pratt, Secretary.	
SITUATIONS WANTED
pedal  Low. Rata  for  non-
immercial advertisements un-
ar nil classification to assist
au Payablt ln advance. Add
Uc If box number desired, .
nly Uc tor ene week (6 dayi)
iven any number of reqitred
ill    seeking    employment
RENTALS
■ERAL HOUSES FOR RENT, 112
DO i month C W Appltyard.
tont 369.
,V__- i RM. AW. *__*__.
range. Rtuonablt rent Very
I In. 411 SUlca Phone 449-R.
[' WHW-SlX-ROOM   H6USE,
iJrview. Furnace, fireplace. Ph.
___D 2-RM. HOUSE FOR
nt. US Silica Street
FftENT-S-RM. t__. ___.
ith. 803 Cedar. Ph. 494R. Clou ln.
SESCE APTS' BEAUTIFUL
adern Frlgldalre equipped lultei
B HOUSE. FURNISHED OR
furnished. Stangherlin Grocery,
Specialists In mine and mill work.
Machine work, light md heivy
Electric md Acetylene welding.
708 Vernon St., Nelion. - Ph. »8.
OPTOMETRISTS
W. E. MARSHALL
OptometrliU
1458 Biy Ave., TnU.      Phont 177
..   +    SASH FACTORIU
DfWsoTrs    saSH    factory
Hardwood merchant, 273 Biker St
SECOND HAND STORES'
WE BUY, SELL A__  KCHAtKll
What have you? Ph. S34 Ark Store
PETS
ARDEE   KENNELS,   WALDHEIM.
Suk Specializing In Irish Setten.
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
ESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
IY CHICKS, NEW HAMPSHIRE
id Rhode Island Red.' Approved
blood-tuted. Ready to ship
try Tuuday. $12 per 100. John
JOdman, Gilley Avenue Hitch-
1855   Gilley   Avenue,   New
Utmlnster. Jl. C.	
ISS, ___%& AND __-.'
lilt.     Apply  Stewart Bros.
_ cksmith Shop, NeUon.	
INO HORSES FROM 12 TO 17
lred lbi. Abey'i Rmch, Mirror
ikt, B.C.
SINESS OPPORTUNITIES
SALE; OLD ESTABLISHED
it   ihop.    (going   concern)
locition.   Low   overhead,
retiring   on   account   ot
ulth. No reasonable offer re-
Box 8114 Dtlly Newa
FOR SALE:  ONE ENGLISH D.B.
hammer ihotgun lit class cond.,
md box caie $22.80. Alio ont takedown repeating ihotgun, perftct
cond. $35. H. R Kitto.	
STANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS. 4
receipts to page with duplicate
sheets, NeUon Daily Ntwi Printing Dept.	
SECRETRIAL DESK, SOLID
oak, side table wi|h Urge drawer,
picturei, armchair, wheelbarrow,
302 Houston St., evenlngi.
FOR SALE -' 2ND HAND TEXT-
booki for Nelson Business Col-
lege. Box 5180, Dally Newi,
PIPE - FITTINGS • TUBES SPE-
clal low pricei, Active Trading Co
916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C
NEW 1JLBC. VACUUM CLEANER
with attachments. Phone 383R3
ICE COOLER FOR SOFT DRINKS
Biihop'i Newsstand, 271 Baker tit.
ed (8 or 8 exposure roU) Uc. Rt
printi 8c uch For ybur vacation
snapshots, choose Krystal Fimsn
Guaranteed non-fade printi, Kryital Photoi, Wilkie, Saskatchewan
Established over 30 yein.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
Only Two Left
1939 Ford Pinel Delivery
1931 Ford 1 ft-ton Truck
KOOTENAY
MOTORS
(Nelson) Limited
213 Baker St. Nelion
WORLD'S FUNNIEST JOKE NOV-
elty 10c, including catalogue ot
Penonal Hygienic Supplies, Books
on ill subjects, Noveltlei, etc
MEN! REGAIN NORMAL MANLY PEP AND VIGOR Try Vlta-
Perle Cap-Ulea—SO for $178; 100
for 18.00-
WESTESN DISTRIBUTORS
Box 24,   Dtpt. KNC,  Reglni, Suk.
McCORMICK DEERINQ AGENTS.
Ht ui now for mw firm equipment In tht Spring, ilio rtpilr
pirtt. Ctntrtl Truck St Equip-
mint Co,, 702 Front Strttt, City.
ii)« FORb ._X_i ftHJAM,' L3W.
mlleige. Flnt dm ru&bt'. Htit-
er. Muit ieU qultkly. Ltivlng
town. Box 8175, Dllly NtWl.
1938 bOI-GE WASSHMB-. SI-
dan, will Mil, or trada for B-pau.
sedin of liter model. Box 8127
DiUy Newi.        .       	
WaJW-D - LATE MODEL CAR.
Wlll piy cuh. Box 5148, NeUon
Dtlly Newi,	
FOR SALt-1935 MASTtt'CKV.
In good condition. Very good tlru.
Box 5172, Dllly Ntwi.	
FOR SALB_-*36 CHEV STANDARD
coich. Good condition. Box Ull,
Daily Newi.     **■	
FBR saU! - 1*91 PtMfflA<! a-
Cheap
VANCOUVER
STO
MINIS
■id
Biyonne   —...
...   .03(4
Bnlorne '....	
-.11.28
Ctrlboo Gold ............
... 1.20
Golconda .. __.
_   .08
Gold Btlt —       -.
-   ill
Grandview   ....——
_   .18
Orull Wlhkmi —-
-   J02H
Hedley Mucot .......
_   XI
Mand Mountiin ...
_   .76
Kooteniy Belli.......
_   .SS
Piclflc Nicktl ........
_   M
Ptnd Oreille ___
-ltl
Plontw Or.i 	
...2.00
Prtmltr Oold ——
...  X
Reeves MicDontld
...   —
Rtno Ckild 	
...  MH
Shttp Crttk	
-   M
Whlttwattr , -.
_   OS*
Ymlr Yinkti Olrl.
_ at
OILI   .
Anaconda  	
-   M_
Anglo Canadian  ...
-.  .71
A. P. Consolidated
_   .18
_.   ,07
Calg. tt Edmonton
... 1.38
PROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS
Exceptional
Buy
livt room bungalow,on two level
loti. Living room, kitchen ind
three bedroomi. Front verandih
and glassed in bick porch. Stone
foundition, part basement. The
groundi In lawn, vegetables,
small fruiti md  12 fruit trees.
PRICED AT
$850
T. D. Rosling
868 Wird St Pbont 717
FOR SALE: 6-RM. HOUSE AND
tilth. Breakfait nook; ileeplng
porch; fin place; hard wood floon
Efficient hot wtttr heating iyttem. Stont foundation. Corner lot.
Phone 47S-L.
WAtrtTOl TO SUV - A Jtoft-EWI
ranch In Nelion irea. Muit hive
good witer supply. Mail full de-
scrlption to Box 5189. Dally News.
•wri-_~~_-W__~_w
mortgage it 6%   We htvt fundi
available Monthly reduction plin
APPLEYARD	
f. A. WHITFIELD REAL BSTXT8
. ind Iniurtnce, 417 Hall St„ Nelion
BEFORE BUYING   YOUR HOME
SEE C W, Appleyard It Co.
Commoil ._  ..  .1*
Commonwulth 23
Dilhouile .....  .40
FOOthllll     —mmmmm.   140
Homt  _,..-.,.,.,... 3 _
McDougill Stgur   _
Nitlonil Pttt , «•>■.
Okilta Com. .68
Piclflc Peti   ; Xt
Royil  Canadian      .-M
Roytlltt  -M00
Southweit Pett    _K
United . .OTH
Viniltt       .__
Vulcin _..  mm.   J2
INDUSTRIAtS
Capital Estates 	
Cout Brewerlu	
United  DM11	
Aik
.04*.
1.25
JO
oa
.39
80
.37*4
.IOU
1.10
1.00
XI
st
.05
.80
.04
.04**
.77
.18
.10
1.58
.18
.27
.45
1.56
.09
.10H
,68
.42
.04
26.00
.35
MVs
.06
230
1.38
2.75
1.40
2.23
din. Good tlru  Licence
for cuh. Phont 72S-R.
ft PLYMOUTH ENdiNB C*5M-
plett    with    Transmission    815.
Queen City Motori Ltd.	
ifo.W HUB v_b BAWHU-B:
Nelion Auto Wracking md Ou-
ige. Nalion.
OftAft
for *28 Ford. Box 163, Caitltgir
RADIATORS  AND  BALL  BEATf
Ingi City Auto Wrecken.
BOATS AND ENGINES
WANTED-ROWBOAT,  IN GOOD
condition Ph. 580-L, 720 Litimer.
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY, Aug. 11 (CP) -Ctt-
tle 80S; calvu 11; hogi 120; iheep 7.
Spring limbi 18.23-13; good butcher iteen 11.23-11.7S; common-med-
lum 8-11. Good cowi ..25-8.75; common-medium 6.7M; caontn tnd
cutten 6.50. Good bulls 858-8.73;
common to medium 7-8; Jiood to
chbtct «tl ctlvu "11.50-12; common
to medium 8-11: Good itocker tnd
feeder iteen 8.75-10.23; common-
mtdium 8-0 80.
Hogi yuterdty 1340 for Bl yardi
md plinti; httvy sows 11.88 light
sows 10-10.23 Uvt wtight yards; 12.40
dressed yardi md plint?.
STOCKS
_   18
...   »•_
.- 138
12%
44
MONTHEAL
INDUSTRIALS
Assoc. Brew, of Can. .
Can. Car Se Ny. Pfd.
Cm.  Celaneie   Ptd.   .
Can.  Stetmihlp	
Con. Mln. 8k Smelting	
Dom. Stetl tt Coil B »_
H. Smith Piper Pfd.  106
McCoU Fronttnic     8
NiUonal Brtw Ud. 	
Quebec Power       ,. ■ „
Shiwnlgin W. tc P.  ...
St Liwrence Corp ...__
St Ltwrtnct Corp. PM. -__.
South Ctn. Powtr .._____
Stttl of Cm. Ptd.	
IANKI
Commerce  _-_________...
Dominion	
Imperitl  	
Montreil    ...
Novi   Scotli
Royil  ._	
Toronto ._	
34Y,
15
17V<
t_
17H
11
76
140
163
171
251H
143
2S2
Bucs Lose Twor
Cards, Reds, One
as Dodgers Win
PMLADELPHIA, Aug. 11 (AP)
-Tht Philliei btit PltUburgh Plr-
ttes, 2-1 ud 24, In a iwlngihlft
doublehuder btfort 11,128 todiy—
ind thtlr deposed Maniger, Bucky
HtrrU, cheered whUt thty ild It
> Harris, who called Phllllei' Prill-
dent BUI Cox in "ill-Amwlcin
Jerk" tfttr Cox tired him, wtnt
Into tht Shibe Pirk itindi ind rooted whilt hii friend and lucceiior,
Fit Freddie Fitzsimmons, madt hit
debut btfort tht hometown tui U
Manager.
The Club responded by whacking
the Nttiontl League's leading pitcher, Rip Sewell, tor eight hlti ln tbt
flnt game tnd Hmk Gornicki for
tour and Max Butcher for two In
tht second.
Pittsburgh's losses moved tht Cin.
clnnaU Rtdi Into i tit with tht
Pirates tor lecond place ln tht National League itandingi. For tht
PhlUIu, It wu tht 11th victory
against four louu ilnce Fltnimmoni. former Brooklyn pitcher, it-
pliced Hgrrli July 28.
Fint gimt;
Pittiburgh    1   4  8
Philidelphli  18   0
SeweU md Btktr; Rowt ind
Moore.
Second game:
Pittsburgh    0  6  1
Phllidelphii  16  0
Gornicki, Butchtr (8) ind Lopei; Barrett md Moore.
GIANTS  HUMBtE CARDS
NEW YOBK, Aug. 11 (AP) - A
home run by Nick Wltek In the 10th
inning, hit iecond of the gime,
brought Ntw York Glinti • 3-2 Na.
tionil League victory over St. Loull
today ifter tht Cirdlnali had rallied to tie the icore with two runs
In the ninth.
Rookie Rube Fischer kept tht
Rcdbirds ihut out on lix hlti till
tht ninth, but weakened u tht
Cardinals clustered four ilnglu, and
wu rtpltctd by Act Adims, whole
50th relief eppttrinct of the yur
developed Into his eighth triumph.
St. Louli  1 10   1
Ntw York  18   0
Linler, Kriit (8) ind W. Cooptr;
Flichtr, Adams (J) ud Lombirdl.
v
NEUON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1941—7
Batting Leaders
By Thl Auociited Put*
Bitting (thret leiden In ttch
leigui)
G ABR H Pet.
Muslal, Cards US 411 60 142 .346
Appling, W. S. M 877 38 128 .834
Wiktfield, Tig 100 428 59 138 .322
Hirman, Ddgr 104 194- 81 IM »
Cuttrlght, W S 82 178 44 86 .313
W. Cooper, Card 79 201   88   91 JU
Runi bitted in: American Leigue
-Etten, Yinkees 75; National Let-
gue—Nicholson, Cubt 78.
Homt runi: Amtrietn Leigut—
York, Tigen 19; Nitlonil League-
Nicholson, Cubi 16.
NIW   YORK  STOCKS
..— __
Amerlcm Ctn.  	
Am. Smelt, tt Ref. 	
Amer. Telephone ,.	
Americtn Tobacco	
Anicondi.     	
Beth. Steel 	
Cinidlin Piclflg -
Gen. Electric 	
Gen. Motori   	
Internitlonal Nickel ._
Inter. Tel. dr Tel ...._	
Kenn Copptr 	
Sttn. Oil of N. J	
U. 6. Rubber _..
U. S. Stul   t_
-mm 154
.  87
  26
  60H
    914
-..._ MH
  M
  J0H
  MH
  MH
  MH
  40H
  MH
mm-mmkL j^^
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or Iron: Any quintlty Top pneu
ptid. Activt Tndlng Compmy.
916 Powell St, Vtncouver, B   _.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.
SHORT-HAIR POINTER PUPS 10
weeki old for sale. Litter reglitered. Write Thomas Vanderhoof,
Rossland, B. C.
FOR SALE-PURE BRED ST. BER.
nard male pup. $20. Abey'i Ranch,
Mirror Like, B. C.
-yptoquotes
OWMYYTHN     I VHH0UYH     DVYZ     TIT
HTITLJTH   MFR   YZT   ALJTH-DOHPT.
Siturdiy'i    Cryptoquotei    THEY    WHO    ARE    PLEASED
THEMSELVES MUST ALWAYS PLEASE—THOMSON.
Cryptoquotei irt quotatloni of famoui penom wrltttn cipher,
lubititute chiracter nu repliced tha orlginil letter. For Instinct.
"R" miy lubititute for the original "E' throughout tht tntlrt
Jptoquote. or i "BB" miy replice in "LL" Find the key tnd lolar through to tht solution.
WILL PAY CASH FOR USED PT
ino. Apply Box 5170, Daily Ntwi.
Jfolflon Sailg ^ptOB
Teles
Trill Clrculafi
tone 144
in: Phoat 132S-L
Classified Advertising Rates
lie per lint ptr Insertion
44c-per Unt per week (6 comec-
ulivt Initrtloni for cut of 4)
81.43 i Une i month (26 times)
(Minimum 1 Unei per lniertion)
Box number Uc extri, Thii
eoven iny number of tlmu.
PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOT1CB9.
TENDERS. ETC.
18c ptr line, first Insertion and
14c etch subsequent Insertion.
ALL ABOVE RATES LESS
10% .FOB PROMPT PAYMENT
SPECIAL  tOW  RATES
Non commerciil Sltuttioni
Winted for 88t for tny required
number of llnu for ilx diyi
payable   In  advance.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Singlt copy  8   03
By cirrltr. per, wtek _      .M
By carrier, per ytar   13.00
By mill;
Ont month »   .79
Thru monthi • 2.00
Six montha   _    4.00
Ont  yetr     8.00
Abovt rttu tpply In Ctnidi.
Unltid Stitei md Unittd Kingdom to subicrltien living outiidt regular cirrltr trtll.
Eliewhere ind to Cinada whert
txtrt poitige li required ont
month SIM; ibret monthi MOO;
ilx monthi M:00; ont yur lis
LONDON. Aug. 11 (CP).-In I
quiet session pricei were inclined
to drift lower. Induitriill ructid
ifter eirly flrmneu ind home rlili
closed generilly euler. Movement
ln oili was fractionally lower, while
Kaffirs declined on leUlng from
Cape Town although there wii* •
slight rally it Uii dole. Diimond
shares were limilirly eesltr,
NEW YORK — Buying continued
to control the trend. Advincei
ringed from friction! to i point or
mere. Like Shore led the advancing
side of Canadian luuei it I gain ot
Vi point, Canadian Pacific and Dii-
tiller Seagram eich gaining H.
Dome Mlnei dropped H and Mclntyrt wai unchanged.
MONTREAL — Newiprinti put
stiffness Into eirly lhaky trading.
Brazilian and Montrtil Powtr poited decrcaici. CPR WU harder. Norindi went to i new high and Alto
Pfd.. Internitionil Nlekil ud Normetal! improved btlt Aluminum,
Hudion Bay Mining lnd Aldermac
were lijwer.
TORONTO — Further wetknau
wu displayed by goldi while industrials finished wtth t sizeable
gtln tnd but mettli ind Wutern
oili finiihed ihowlng Uttlt chingu.
WINNIPEG--Whut futuru finished H to H cent • buihtl lower
In icattered trading. Octobtr cloud
it S1.10H
DODQERS   BREAK   STREAK
BROOKLYN, Aug. _ (AP) —
Brooklyn Dodgeri bounced out of t
10-gimt loiing itreik todiy to whip
Cincinnati Redi 8-1, icorlng all
their runs ln i leventh-lnning uprising against Ray Starr,
For five frimu Starr tnd Whtt.
low Wyitt wrutled In a icore-
less mound duel until Eric Tipton
homered ln the ilxth to put the
Reds in front
Then in the seventh Billy Har-
mm ilngled md Louli Olmo celebrated hli MthJ)Mfc.d|y. will^ 4.
triple."Joe Orengo wilked. Bobby
Brigtn ind Frtnchy Bordigirty
doused, md Bordagtrty climaxed
the rilly by stealing homt.
Cincinnati     17  0
Brooklyn   __ 8   7   1
Stirr, Beggi (7) ud IWueUtr;
Wyitt ud Brigan.
BRAVES AND CUBS (PtIT
BOSTON, Aug. 11 (AP) - Boiton
Bravu, ifter seven straight louei
to Chlctgo Cubt it Bnvu Fitld,
finally conquered the Chictgo ttam
6-2 In the iecond game of ■ Nttiontl League doubleheader todty after
Chlctgo hid Uktn thl opentr 8-0.
Hiram Blthorn won hti 14th gtmt
of the season is he tamed tht Brtvu
In Uie opener, but Maniger Jimmy
Wilson usedifour pitcheri in • vain
WINNIPEG GRAIN
Toronto Stock Quotations
MINES
Anglo Huronian	
Baw Metils Mining .
Beittie Oold  _.
Bidgood  Kirkltnd _
Bobjo Mines       	
Buffilo Ankerite .. -
Castle Trethewey
.K
13
113
.46
.10
3 W
ns
Central Pat  _      137
Chromium M Jc S .
Coniaurum Minei
Cons M It S  	
Dome Minei 	
East Malartlc _ ...
EMondo Gold
1.30
l-l
U_
21 ,S
1 53
I M
Falconbridge Nickel   4.30
God'i Uke Gold ISH
Hard Rock Oold       _  .39
Hollinger     11.00
Hudton Bty _  S3O0
Inter Nlcktl    85.SO
Kerr Addiior.   7.1S
Kirklmd Lake     .._ 70
Like Short Minu  _.... 16.78
Lamaque Conttc    5 83
Leitch Gold  _... 1.06
Little Long Ltc    ._   .81
MtcLeod  Coekihutt    1.96
Madicn Red Lake        „.  1J6
Milartic Gold        _ IS
Malntyre Pore     ....     il.SO
McKenzie Red Ltkt   110 ,
Mining Co.   100
N-piulng      1.5S
Noranda   41.73
Normettl    _..._ _.. 1.08
Omtgt Gold   .30
Pimour Pore   1__0
Perron GoM      .X
PtcUe Crow Gold   1O0
Powtll Rouyn Gold  .87
Pruton   3.10
Sin Anlonlo       - SO0
Sherrltt Gordon    .93
Slicoe Gold  _ - .33
Sltden MtlarUc  .43
SMtp Rock -  1J8
Sudbury Beth.    1.20
Sulllvin      J7
SyhrulU      1.00
Ttck Hughu Gold   1.23
Tobum Oold      .10
Trim Contl Ruourcu   .60
Vtnturt ■         ...   .-..„  6 80
Wlltt jlmulit   S-30
Wrijht Hirgruvu _  330
Oltt
A P Corn  _   .18
BritUh Amtr   B.50
t-fhtmlctl Reieirch   14
Imptrltl         16 28
Intir Pttt     UN
Roytlltt   .. ...   14.15
Ttxu Cdn     -. ~ 1.70
Abltlbl  Powtr   3
BtU Ttlt    1S4H
Brewtri A DM  6H
B C Powtr      _  MH
B C Powtr B  IH
Build Prod     .  — 16H
Can Cat It Ttty    IH
Can Ctroint   8
Ctn Malting    40
Cm Pac Rly    11H
Cm md Al    S
Dominion Brldga  _ MH
DM Sugrimi  3.1'i
Ford of Cm  _ 83H
Goodyetr Tin    IS
Himllton Brldgi    IH
Impultl Tob   .   11%
Montrul Powtr  M
Ntt Stttl -Car .... -   88 H
Powtr Oorp —.-. I  IH
Stul of Can _ _....... 67H
WTNNTPBG, Aug. 11 (ap).-Gnln
futurei qutititions:
Open 'High   Low   Clou
WTTRAT——
Oct 110%   111H   110H   110H
Dtc  lOflVt   100H   100%   106",
Miy      ... 110      HO',4   100 H   100H
OATS-
lOct.  .. _   -       -       -       81%
Dec    -       -       -       81%
■Miy ....      -       -       —       Sl%
BARLEY-
Oct       -       -       -       MIA
Dec.     -       -       -       64%
May     .... -       64%
RYE-
Oct     03%    03%     M        92%
Dec    92%     93        01%     11%
May.    84%    MH    80       93H
CASH PRICK;
Whttt: No. 1 hird 113t; No. 1
Nor. 113%; No. 1 Nor. 108H; No. 3
Nor. IM; No. 4 Nor. »%; No. 8
wheit 60H: No. 6 wheit 97H; feed
06; No. 1 Girntt 104H; No. 3 Garnet 103»4; No. 3 Gamet 103H; No. 1
amber Durum 11W4; No. 1 ind 1
AJtW.  IIOHI No. 3 ARW. 106%.
Otti: No 1 C.W., tx. 3 C.W. No 3
C.Z., tx. 1 feed, No. 1 feed tnd No.
2 feed 31H: No. 3 tied BOH.
Birley: Milting grades — No. 1
■nd 2 C.W., 6-row, No. 1 tnd 1
C.W., 1-row ind No 3 C.W,, 6-row
84H: other gradei—Noi, 1, 1 ind 8
fetd 64%.
Ryt: No. 1 C.W, fl%.
Dividends
Intimitionil Nickel Co., of Cm-
ldt Ltd, 60 centi per .hire.
DOW IONES AVERAGES
High Low Cloce Chgi
SO tad 137.18 136.11 136.70 up .38
20   Ralli    M.U   34 SO   34.66 up .01
IS    Util.       »JM   30.88    30.82 up .05
19th York Homer
Lifts Tigers
Over Senators
DETROIT, Aug. 11 (AP) - Big
Rudy York regained the American
Leagut home run leadenhip by
hammering No. 10 td give Detroit
Tigtn i 3-3 victory over Waihington Sentton tonight ln the opentr
of ■ four-game series. Thla put him
one ihead of Chirley KeUer of-
New York Yankeei, who got his 18th
at St. Loull.
Wulhngton     1  J- 1
Detroit    -    1   I   1
Leonard and Early; Trout md
Richtrdi. •
BROWNS SINK YANKEES
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 11 (AP) - Back.
Ing up tht one-hit pitctting of Stive
Sundri with t 16-hlt onslaught
against Lefty Marlui Russo and
Milkman Jim Turner, St. Louil
Browni wiUoped New York Ymkeu by i lop-sided score today for
the ucond itrtight timt, 9-1.
The only hit off Sundra wu ■
home run, the 18th of thi uuon by
Charley KeUtr, ln tha iecond inning.
Otherwise Sundra gavt tight walks
and put t mu on but with in tr-
ror, loading the ucki In tbt leventh
but tht Yinkeu lttt eight runners
ttrinded.
New York  .._    1  1  0
St. Lfluli     8 16  1
Russo, Turntr   (8), lnd Dlckty,
Scars (6); Sundri and Hayes.
INDIANS DOUBLE ATHLETICS
CtiEVl-l-AWD, Aug. 11 (AP) -
Cleveland's Indians took both gamu
of I twl-night doubleheader with
Philadelphia Athletics tonight, win
ning tht affair 2-1 on Al Smith's
two hitter after-slugging out a 10-5
decision ln ttie opener.
-  Fint game;   '   '
Phllidelphii 8 10  1
Clevelind   . 0 18   1
Cloli md Swift;  Wigner, Reynoldi, Heving (7) ud Rour,
Second gime;
PhUidelphli  l  g j
Clevelind   _ 2   8  0
Wolff, Floru   (8)   md Wagner;
Smith tnd Rour.
RED HOSE BEAT WHITE
CHKtAOO, Aug. 11 (APJ-^Wlth
George Metkovltch hitting i homer
and thret ilnglu, md Joe Dobson
pitching ihutout ball, Boston Red
Sox defuted Chicago Whitt Sox
10-0 befort 19,293 tonight to even
tht lerlu it • victory tplece. The
Red Sox ring up Id hlti against
Orval ind Joe Hiynei.        v
Tht dtfeit dropptd the While Sox
to fifth place ln tht Amerlcm
Ltigue.
Boiton 1 10 16  0
Chicigo     0   6  0
Dobion ind Pirttt; Grove Tiyn,u
(8) and Caitino.
Haegg Wins by
2-Yard Edge
Over Gil Dodds
•y HAROLD CLAASEN
NEW YORK, Aug. ll (AP) -
Gunder Haegg tonight won hli
tlghth itralght race in the United
Statu, turning ln a tlmt of 4:08.9 in
running a mile in i twilight meet
at Randalls Island in tht East Rivtr.
Tht swift Swede had only a two-
yard tdgt over Gil Doddi il he bit
tht tape tnd the Boiton divinity
itudent In turn wu only uother
yird ahead ot Bill Hulse, New York,
WOSlBlUtG/LUTT?
eiAoes am sm
waving!]
Give you BerreR-
lOOKIMG SHAMS
FASTiR M*"r[
\_mWR'£i
RIGHT., ANOWM
_WG£TM0R£
m_fsm$t-D£,f
PURE
I WHITE
s^sr*
effort to halt the  Bravu  In thi
nlghteip.
First gime:
Chlctgo 3  6   1
Boiton   0  8  2
Bithom ind McCuUough; Tobln
ind Mui.
Second gime-
Chicigo    _.
Boston
-1   8   1
.... 6 IS   0
(1)   Der
Hinyitwiki,   Burrowi   ,,,
rlngtr (3) Prim (7) md Livingston;
Btrrett and Klutti,
i-lL_A -- -..
• Precision-mado Blue
Gillette BUdea breeze
through •van th*
tou ghest beards easil v,
quickly. They're made
of iteel hard enough
to cut glass, and have
the sharpest edges
ever honed. Try long
lasting Blue Gillette
Bladei for the slickest,
beat-looking shaves of
your life. ,
PRECIS.ON-
m_._l« to fit four
Gillott, ,R.-or
• xactlf ana
avoid lerftpo
ond Irritation
_ ml-fit bl.d.t.
IDEAS
Are Valuable, but they fail to
ring the bell in the cash register,
or put profits in the cash drawer
until they are acted upon.
Our job is to help you whip your
ideas into shape, dress them up
in ink and paper and start them
out to get orders for you.
We Will le Clad ta Furniih Eirimatei on AH Your
Printing Requirements.
•
Phone NELSON DAILY NEWS
144      PRINTING DEPT.
•••*»
 ———
W_^_^_W_W
______—W*r"
8-NILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, AUCUST 12,1941
lOOK^isie
*•     . awn *. onree" w
\fi\_ y*_____m. warn
_____ ^£Z _+__.
^—m Wgz s-Sr +"*
**-_!*•*
_t
ttttrM
Special ln Paramount Canadiu
Newt—
"CANADIAN TROOPS
UND IN SICILY"
CIVIC
A f AMOUS riAYHI THEATU
sbe
PEGGY SAGE
NAIL POLISH
I tuU range ot ihidu
60c
Mann, Rutherford
DRUGCO.
Former Hazel Spiers of Nelson lets
Fast Pace in Hamilton-Toronto
Softball; Wins 23-lnning Struggle
Churchill Visit Spurs Hope of Big
Offensive Against Oermany;
Reports Persist Italy Wants Peace
ipt-OH, Aug. 11 (AP) - Prim*
Miniittr Churchlll'i wtr council!
with Canadian leaderi and later
with Reildent Rooievelt at a time
when Allied iortunei are at their
hlgheit, produced tbe confident hope
lo Britein today ot Italy'i quick tut1
ftom tbe conflict followed by a
grand offensive agalnit the Germani
before tbe end ot IMS.
Theie were th* Imrpedlate p. os-
pacte railed tor. Briton* whoie paramount lntereit Hei In the European
phase of the itruggle.
It wn recalled Uat a Canadiip.
expeditionary force In Britain—superbly trained and anxloui to fight—
hat been nominated to apeirheid
•ny Allied cross-Channel assault on
tha continent.
Whil* Pruldent Roosevelt and Mr.
ChurchlU were engaged in the preliminaries to thtir momentous meetings with their military staffs soon,
W   ONI HOUSKMPINC ROOM
•a Ground Floor, Cool Furnlihed.
Reasonable. Anniblt Block.
Phone 358-R
F. H. SMITH
If Ifi Electric
Phoni «M        351 Blkir St
_
J. P. Walgren
Ceneral Contractor
SOI Carbonate St.
nmwumttwiiettttti
*       SOMERS' FUNENL
SERVICE
m Btktr SL Phoni 232
**     Op«n Day and Night
Crtmttorlum Ambuluct
~T -Illlllllll»lll___-M
Wl ttkt  pride  In
keeping  your  hiir
beautiful.
Halgh Tru-Art
Phont 827
Something te Think About
whtn your root leaks.
Expert Idvlci and coniultetlon.
STUART ACENCIES
877 likir ltrnt       Nilion, B. C.
Phoni MO
If You Hav* a
Dirty Watch
Tike It to . . .
HARVEY
Th* Jiwtller. M4 Bikir SL
CET YOUR '
FAVORITE SANDWICH
it the
STAR CAFE
report. Mill per.lstcd here of Italy's
deiire for petce.
But whether ihe would get it br
choice or by force ot Allied irms
remtlned unanswered.
A new peace feeler wu reported
to have reached the Allied government! recently.
tt wai iald to have emphuized
Premier Marshal Pietro Badogllo'i
tribulation! were cayted by the pretence ot tke Germani in Itely ind
Implied the Marshal wu trying to
get them out without fighting.
At the ume time t Germin propaganda broadcait declared that Badoglio had decided to continue to
fight ind that the Alliei would be
compelled to fight their wiy onto
the Italian mainland.
The German radio, giving the Berlin reaction to the Churchill trip,
uid the Allied leaderi were getting
tobether to discuss "an entirely new
situitlon" brought tbout by whit
It cilled Italy'i determination to
continue the wir.
The broadcut played on the tb-
sence of Premier Joieph Stelin from
the council! tnd tdded, ";o dr the
German thesis thit Stalin ln iome
form of other claimi the whole of
Europe has alwayi proved true."
The German propagandists also
uld tht Weitern Alliei would hive
to commit themselves to gretter efforti to please Stalin, who wu pictured *! diasitirfied with the Sicilian effort. *
The disclosure thit the British
Ambuudor to Waihington, Lord
Halifax, li ln Britiln md the absence of Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden'i nime trom the llit of tho.-e
•ccompmylng Mr. Churchill Indicited thit military tnd not polltlcil ii-
roei would domlmte the Churchill-
Roosevelt talks.
Failure to Give
Half of Road
Results In Fine
Pleading guilty to a driving charge
-that of failing to glvt htlf tht
road whtn mtttlng mother vehicle
on a curve—Ira Tombaugh ot Salmo
wu fined $10 In Provi.icial Pollct
Court Wedneiday.
He appeared belore Stipendiary
Magistrate William Irvine.
The offence occurred on a curve at
the top of Tighum Hill.
Utile Change fn
Migratory
Bird Regulations
OTTAWA, Aug. ll (CP).-Mlgra-
tory bird regulationi for IMS were
luued today by th* Resources Department, letting forth open seasons for hunting of gum birds.
Some hunters mty havt tmall
stocks of ammunition held over
trom put yeari and will be able to
spend a diy or two it their fivorite
iport but Pricei Botrd officials uld
that regulationi providing thit
snail armi ammunition! ihould be
available only to those who needed
lt for essential purpoiei were being
itrictly enforced.
Apart from the services, immunitlon will be available tnly to police,
llcenied trappers, prospector!, pertont dependent on hunting for food
tnd those protecting liveitock tnd
crops. '
Reiourcei offlciili iald thtt tht
migratory bird regulitloni ihow
little chinge from lut year,- either
in tht open seasons allocated varioui provlncei and district* or in
the bagi allowed.
The prohibition of baiting and
the,use of live decoyi continue! in
all province!.
6 Forest Fires
Burning
bui All Small
Six flrei officially Hited u burning ln Kootenay-Boundary were ill
•mill tnd probably would be out, or
cloie to ouL by nightfall Wedneidiy,
.stated officials at Foreit Branch
Dlitrict heidquirten at Nelson.
Twenty-four firei, nearly ill
lightning itrikei, were Hited in the
past week, bringing' the total tor the
teuon to dite to 212. Ten of the
new firei were in Eut Kooteniy, IS
in Weit Kootenay, and one in the
Boundary.
Of the season's total of 212, Eait
Kootenay had 92, Weit Kootenay
IS, and the Boundary 25.
Itn. Huel Johnion—th* former
Mill Hazel Spien ot Nelion — is
miking her mark In bigtime women'i loftball u t pitcher tor tht
Hamilton, OnL, tetm.
In a recent Himllton ptptr thl
following ippeired:
"On* ot th* greatest loftball gamu
In Uit hiitory ot the Sunnyside
loop wu pliyed lut evening befon a wildly enthusiastic crowd ln
Toronto In what li thought to be
a record tor ladies' softball, a 23-in-
nlng gimt won by Hamilton Ladies,
4-3, ovtr Toronto Staffords. Hazel
Johnson, speedball hurler, combined with Allce Green to turn in ont
ot tht flnut btttery jobi seen In
AIR CASUALTIES
OTTAWA, Aug. 11 ,<OP) - The
R.C AJ*. reported tonight in lti
901st euuilty lilt ot the war, conUining 92 names, thit four men
were killed on ictlve lervice overseas, 38 ire milling on ictive tervlce after ilr operatloni overieu
md one mm previously reported
missing on ictive service now lg re.
ported i prisoner of wir In Ger
miny.
Following Ii the latest Hit of B.C,
cuuiltiei,   with   offlclil   numben
ind next of kin:
OVERSEAS
Mining on ictlve service ifter
lir opentioni:
Ciulderwood, John Simuel Divldion, SgL, RI 18082, Mri. W. J.
Cluledwood (mother) 1109 Gladwin
Rd.. Abbotteford, B.C.
Clee, Hugh Alexinder Mclvlr,
Sgt., R»TT1», Mn. M. L. Clee (mother) 2880 Trinity Street, Vincouver.
Foiter, Arthur Biker, To* J22783,
Mn. A B. Foster (wife) 4799 Gladitone, St., Vtncouver.
Previously reported milling on
ictlve service, now for official pur.
poiei pruumed deid:
Crocker.    Murny    Rowi,    Sgt.,
R11043S, MiJ W. H Crocker (fither) Prince Oorge, B. C.  ■
CANADA
KlUed on tctlve service:
Ntwmtn, George SUnley Burt,
Sgt.. mw.c.1. Mri. E. G. Newmin
(mother), JUS Yew Street. Victorit,
Lord   Croft,   Undenecrettry  for
Wir,   wirned   the   Britiah   Home
i Kurd any Oermin ittick on BrlUin would be airborne ind the coun.
try would be relying jilmoit entirely on the Homi Guird for defence.
Seattle Faces
Severe ■»
MilkShortage
SEATTLE. Aug. 11 (AP).-flett-
tle and the North Central part of
the state particularly Wenatchee,
face a severe milk shortage, luthoritles uld today, .
Dr. Robert Prior, maniger of the
Waihington State Dairy ProducU
Commission, said that supplying
Seattle hu become "a dllly bugbear." He added, 'If the Government uyi no more dlvenlom, that
more milk producU ire needed'for
the irmed forcei ind lend-lease,
we won't be ible to get enough milk
in Setttle.'
Privateer Mine
Will Close
VICTORIA, Aug. 11 (CP.-Olrec
tori of Privateer Mine, Ltd., following reporU lubmitted by the Presi
dent md W. S. Ellis, the Company's
Consulting Engineer, hivi decided
to cloae the mtne until condition!
ire tgtln f-vorable for operation
Thli decliion hu been forced by
the ihortige of labor which hu
griduilly become more icute, Dlr.
ecton explain.
Tbt gunt itirted, u til gunti
played undtr lights in tbe imart
stadium it Sunnyslde, with ptp
galore, beautiful girls on the dltmond tnd, tint claw softball. Ethel
Harrop, llttlt third ticker, took a
walk ln tht flrtt frame tnd later
scored on Ursula Sayers' ilnglt.
Staffords camt right btck in the
flrft of the iecond to tally thrtt
runi on in error, a walk arid a
couplt of doublei. From the itcond
frame Hazel Johnion tnd comptny
net* topi, especially with runners
on the sacks."
14 SCORELESS INNINGS
Hamilton tied the game ln the
ninth, wiping out thp two-run ad-
vintage garnered by Toronto ln the
second inning. "The remainder of
the game wai 14 Innlngi of scoreless ball", the paper continued. In
the 23rd inning Hamilton icored
again, tnd won the long tussle.
The Himllton piper tdded:
"The itan for Himllton would be
herd to select, but Huel Johnion,
pitching the entire 23 innlngi, deserves plenty ot credit ti does
AUee Green, who lupported her
behind the. pltte."
Hazel Johnion—then Hazel Spiers
—wai outstanding in toftball circles
ln the Kootenayi when the played
here. At the ige ot 14, In her tint
regular season ti t pitcher, lhe won
21 games against eight losses.
FANNB0 285
During the uuon, Including Intercity games, elty lttgut gtrnet tnd
PubUc School leigut gtmti, the
pitched 298 innlngi ln 33 games, tnd
tinned 283,bitten. These statistics
did not include interclass games it
Hum* and Junior High Schools.
Htr batting wu tlto good. On two
occasions lhe obtained five hits
per "game, and on two otheri four
hlti. She led the City Leigue in
two-baggers, smashing out eight
For several seasons ihe wis pitch-
WQH]
Sli
,:v.
MRS. RICHARD JOHNSON
pictured when, as 14-year-old Mlu
Hazel Spiers, ihe was a leading soft-
ball pitcher in Nelion and the Kootenay.
er on the Nelion rep tetm in Weit
Kootenay championships.
She ii now Mrs. Richard John-
Normdndie Tilts
at 38 Degrees
NEW" YORK, Aug 11 (AP).-The
former French liner Normandie
tilted at an angle ot 3t.it degrees
at t a-m. today, the smallest degree
ot Hit since righting operatloni began,
Captain Bernard E. Manseau, the
navy's supervisor of ulvige operatloni, uld thtt' when the veuel
reiched an angle of 37 degreei rilling operttlom would be suspended
temporarily to illow removal of
torn of concrete which were poured
into the ship ln the etrly stages ot
repair work. Already derrick* were
being used to remove parti of the
superstructure.   •
Prices Board Says
Conditional
Buying Illegal
OTTAWA, Aug. 11 (CP). - The
Price Botrd todty issued an order,
effective Immediately, miking it
illegal for t merchant to require t
customer to buy additional goodi
when purchulng other goodi which
were IA short supply. Exception!
•re made for any practices ot the
kind which were established during.'
or before the buie period, Sept. IS-I
to Oct. 11, IMl, ind the order doei'
not tpply to goodi diitributed under provinciil direction, iuch u
ilcoholic bovingu. The order will
not interfere with the tale of artlclei ordlnirily sold ln set*.
tM Jap Planes
Shot Down by
U.S. In Solomons
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 <AP).-
Tht Nivy Depirtment boosted by
32 plinet today the number of Japmese aircraft deitroyed during the
first 10 diys of the present offenilve
ln the Central Solomon Islands. The
aggregate wai raised from 147 to
199 Japinese planei ihot down by
United Statu ilrforcei md antiaircraft unite.
The American flien loitM planei
but lt pilot* were rescued.
Mobile Hospital
Units
Being
'OTTAWA Aug. 11 (CP).-Two
mobile general hospitals, tint iuch
unlti in tha Canadlm Army, ara being organized, defence headquarters
innounced todty. Thty will bt undtr commmd of Lt.-Col. J. A. A.
Htrcourt, Toronto phyiiciin, and
Lt-Col. Pterro Tremblay, permanent forct medical officer who went
overseas with a field ambulance ln
1940.
Tha ntw hospitals wlll serve Juit
behind front-line scenes ot action
ind provide tull surgical and pathological facilities tor treatment of
casualties. In each, one or more
complete surgical teams; consisting
of surgeon, specialist in medicine,
radiologist and anesthetist, all holding the rank of Major, will furniih
operative md post-operative treitment,
A dentil officer tnd two mutants wlll specialize ln treating injuries to jaws end dentures tnd will
assist plastic surgeons.
There will be 20 nunu on the
itaft of each hospital, In chirge ot
a mitron ind assistant matron. In
iddition, I pool of nurses will be
itteched to each hoipltil, from
which emergency teami for front
Une evicuatlon duty will be drawn
The nunlng listen will work netrt
eit to battle linei of my members
of their profession. ,
Kapak Meeting
Nelson
Folk In Halifax
William Kapak of Ntlion, recent
graduate ln law now practicing to
HtUftx, ii meeting quite t number
of Nelion young people ln the Atlantic seaport.
In t letter home he stated:
"I uw Albert Hooker—the tint
tlmt I hivt ieen him ln Halifax.
Only tht dty betore I wu talking
with Ernie Belmd, md i few diyi
before that I uw Ruby Gibboni
md Mabel Conrad/ About onct In
every two weeki I run into Jimmy
Eccles. AU of these Nelionitei tppeir to be ln the pink.
"Beland tl • iter ihort-itop on thl
Nivy baseball team hera, champions
of the Halifax League. For quite i
ipell he led the leigue io batting.
He li now about tenth ln batting but
ii still hitting well over JOO."
At the time Mr. Kapik wrote hli
letter the Hillfax Navy teim wu In
Toronto pliylng in t tourniment
and Belmd wu with IL
MaU
Orders
Rtctivt tur prompt eartful attention. You etn ihop,by mall
with confidence at
Your Rexall Store
CITY DRUG CO.
Phon* 34
Box 480
Workeri In * British tlrcrtft ftctory, gtve up t weekend to anemble a Wellington bomber In tht
fastest time they could. They timed
tt 30 houri ind did it tn live leti. |
Thty gave their weekend bonui to
the Aid tor Russia fund.
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.il
FORSYTH
WHITE SHIRTS
t
For Summer wear therel
ii nothing nicer thm i|
white shirt.      '
• Country  Club  ?2.50|
• Clever Club     *3.00|
• lend Street     ?3.60|
Cuirantied by Fonyth
"A new ihlrt for one thit)
fills." •
PMORY'g
*"*        LIMITED *P
THE MAN'S STORE
.iiiiiiniiiiiniiinnimmimiHiiinjI
His Name Was Jake-Gunner S.aked|
Ule en His Word and
Stayed by Pal When Shell Hil Plane
By JOSEPH MORTON
A-iootetid Pren Wtr Correipondent
AN AMIRICAN BOMBER BASE
IN SICILY, Aug. 10 (Deliyed). (AP)
—They're talking htrt todty tbout
i ntw immortal sergeant—a gunner
who staked hit life on hli word.
Hil name wu Jake. Hil pinion
wae I battle-stained bomber in
which he tought. Hii bett friend
wu Bill, hli pilot I ctn't tell you
their full nimei until their families ire notified. Together they
came out of the Mideast with the
British 8th Army—from El 'Alamein
to Tunlili to Sicily.
Almoit every day Jake repeated
thii vow:
"If BiU ever gou down, TU go
with him."
Yeiterday, ln the imoky skies
over Eutern Slcllv, he Uved up to
thit promlie.
A German cannon lent in exploilv* shell Into the pltne, kiUlng the
co-pilot ind gravely injuring Bill
EARL E. SWANSON
RETURNING
FROM OVERSEAS
Flight Lieutenant E. E. Swinson,
R.C.A-F., who hu betn serving oversea!, il expected to return to hli
home in Nelion this week, iccordlpj
to idvice from Weitern Air Commmd, Vincouver.
Flight Lieutenant Swanion wu
formerly with CJ.R. Telegriphi
here, ind subsequently wu transferred to the Cout He enliited it
the Coait md wu lut In Nelson
when on his way overseu. His wile
ind fimlly have been In Nelion
■lnce.
Hamburg Bombings
Worst in
World's Hiitory
STOCKHOLM,. Sweden, Aug. 11
(AP)—The record bombing of H»m.
bur| by th* Allies dutroyed 11 of
the city'i 40 districts ind il believed
to htvt killed it leut 50,000 persons, reporti retching Sweden nld
todiy.
The chief editor of the Himburi
newipaper told correspondent! In
Berlin that tht bombardments were
"io terrific nothing can compare
with them ln the world'i hiitory."
illlimi.llimimill.IIIMIIII.llllllllll.il
NEWS OF THE DAY
Rat .i: 22c line, 27c lint bltck ftet
typt. lirger typt ratti on requut
Minimum two llnei. 10% dlicount for prompt piyment
11111111111111111111m1m11111111u11111111.il
GRENFELL'S  CAFE
Closed temporarily.
Houie for rent on North Shore. 10
m:n. from ferry. Blickwood Agency.
Electric Motori rewound, Beitty
Repilr Service, Ph. 91.
DANCING TROM  9:30-1  TONITI
EAGLES' HALL   EAGLES' MUSIC
The moon completei ■ circuit
iround the earth In 27 days, 7 hours
and 43-2 minutes.
Interpreting
The War News
Zootsuiton Start
in Montreal
Fight
MONTREAL, Aug. 11 (CP) -
Police uld todty thit Mn. Alice
Kenworthy, 44, of Montrul, iuffered illtfit Injurlu lut night when
itruck « blow ln the mouth by one
of severil Zoot-iulten who tried to
break up * itreet dmce.
A carload of the Zoot-iulters
drove to the ipot where tht dene*
wu being held, poUce uid, md
then rushed Into tha crowd iwinging
thalr ftet*. Th* fight only luted •
ftw mlnut**
Dr. W. T. S. Sttllybrtu, Principtl
ot Brutno.t College, moved • decree it Oxford for thl anointment
of in "Institute ot Colonial Studlei"
to coordinate colonlil itudiu in the
Univenlty.
j
By KIRKI L. 8IMPSON
Auociited Pnu Wtr Antlyit
Tht drumi of dutlny in betting
for the Axii not only in Ruult, It
Slolly, in the Solomoni tnd New
Guinea ind it sea, but on thl* tide
ot tba Atlantic. Th* King-Churchill
meeting in Quebec and the Imminent C-iurrtilU-Roouvelt contennci
with Itaff itritegiiti fnresh'idowi
AUied miliUry decisions of supreme
coniequence.
The hour tnd the forcei ire it
hand for bold tnd tggreulvt itrokei
to clinch the dawning victory, md
clinch It won. It ll with the wiyi
ind meint, military lnd perhipi
political, thit the AUied wir cap-
teini ind their councillors wlll detl
when they meet In the new world
to pltn the rebirth ln freedom of
the old.
Before them will be t Europem
war mtp utterly changed even trom
tbe heartening protptct it Ihowtd
whtn thty lait mtt only three
monthi ago. Italy ii a col__pt*d and
politically-purged t*gm*nt of th*
one* mighty Axli nch, t liability,
not an met to Nul Germiny. The
U-boat cimpalgn ln tht Atlantic,
lut high cud ln tht Nul hind, hu
been pliyed end trumped.
The AXlr tatelllte framework li
wavering trom the Bilktni to Flnlind. Nul wtr induitry ti • bomb-
ihattered ihidow of IUelf. Cumu-
-_!__.___
Ittlve Allied blowi ir* bleeding Jipan of ihlps md planei ind nun-
power.
But moit of iU, ln Ruiili • tremendoui tnd expending Rtd Army
offenilve U rolling weeki before
•Wuhlngton ind London deemed It
pouible thne monthi igo.
Immeditte mijor new movei to
bolder the Rmstin offenilve ind
keep It going relentlessly into thl
coming Winter when Ntil tuttle
proweM fall* to lti loweit ebb mu<t
■tend first on that Allied itnteglc
conference igendi.
There li one other upect of the
lituation In Europe with which the
coming Allied itrategic conference
conceivably might deil effectively. Thit ll the reduction to concrtte
termi of lhe unconditioml lurrem.-
er motto.
A preciie outline of the military
tennl on which Italy, the Btlkin
Axil iitelllttl or Finlind could ei-
ctpt from tin wtr migtit bt dnwn
up it tht coming stiff conferencei.
It lt deili wiU) my other element of
Km Axb thtn Itely, However, Rui-
•Im Unction mutt bt tought. And
the extent to which Ruuli li rep-
relented ki tht Britiih, Cimdiin
ind Americtn pirltyi, If dlicloied,
could go fir lo indicate whether •
concerted Allled-Ruitlin attempt to
bring Iht wtr to a quick tod in
Iurope li poulblt.
Smoke Canada Straight Cigarette
Tobacco. Wc tin it VALENTINE'S.
Hive you considered burgliry Insunnce? The ritei ire low. See ui
Robertion Heilty.
We will buy your empty flower
pota.'GrliieUe'i Oreenhomei. Phone
187.
Houie for nnt from Sept. 1. North
Shore, 10 mln. from ferry. Blickwood Agency.
O'Cedir   liquid   Self   Pollrtilng
Wix. quirti ind gilloni. O'Cedir
Chan Wax In tlni, l lb. ind S lbi.
HIPPERSON'S
Stenclli,   piper.   Ink,   correction
fluid, etc. for ill makes of dupl
ctteri. D. W. McDerby, 'The Sn
tinner   tnd  Typewriter   Mln",  854
Biker S'., Nelion.
FUNERAL NOTICE
runeril lervicei for the lite Mri
Leonird J. Evini (net Mirlon Mc-
Innei) will be held from St. Piul'i
United Church Sundiy it J:S0 pm
Interment will be In Nelson Memorial Pirk. Funeril irnngementi un.
der direction of Thompion Funeril
Home.
TOO LATi TO CLASSIFY
TWO TEACHERS WANTED FOR
Thrumi Khool. Apply Mn. N.
Johnion, Stcrttiry Thrumi school
Boird. Thrumi, B C.
WANTED TO 3_*-l_~TC__~OT
good tint tnd iecond cut tlfilfi
hiy Submit prlcet to Box 91,
Trill.
HIOH SCHOOL TEACHER WANT-
ed, full or pirt time Especiilly
for Klqpce. mithimit'ci, lin-
guign. Write f O. Himllton,
Ltmon Creek.
Jake lett his gunner's turret tt
friend's summons tnd fltw I
bomber while Ibt other crew mei
ben balled out NO pilot hlmH
Jake kept the fhip righted wh
BIU tried to gtt tree. The plan* 4
ploded with bote itill aboard.
The Navigator Bombardier, Lie
Gabriel Dumont, -1 Skowhegan, W
ohe of the three vho ufely bill
out told th* ito:
"We were ln fortitlon, bomfti
Randazzo and had Just finished I
run over the city ahen Uie pla|
wai hit by flak. Down Below *
bombardier's compartment I hei
the shell strike—not\ much mc
thin t thud. The interphone iyst<
went out
"The wiy I figure It, Bill wu
•tunned to mtkt It," trt utd.
mty htvt been Jammed In hli te
Jake went down lighti* to k*
the plane under control. "Hii pa)
chute wu on the navlgate'i tei
behind him. I don't think he ev
Intended to leave wlthput Bll."'
Canadian Farm Seed Vital Factor
in World Reconstruction;
Special Requirement lor Alsike
1
By JAMES MeCOOK
Cinidlin Prm Stiff Wrlttr
OTTAWA.  Aug.  11   (CP)-«eed
from Ctmdltn firmi todiy tppeired to be one ot the keystones ln
world recomtrucUon.
At requuti went out for every
effort to provide the largest pouible
supply of tU forage crop seeds ln
the present yetr, officials let It be
known that countries now occupied
by the enemy wiU need mlllloni
of pound* af teed ot iU kindi to
restore their lands to productivity
ifter liberation.
To that reconstruction, Canada
pltni to mikt I notable contribution, working In moclition with fte
United Stetei ind other ieed-pro-
ducing nitioni.
An innouncement today by Nelion Young, Seedi Administrator,
uld thit while there wu urgent
need tor the largest supply of all forage crop seeds it ls pouible to obtein thli yeir, special concern Is
felt over iliike clever ieed.
The iverige alsike ieed crop Is
3.000,000 pounds but for 194S the
objective wu BO00.000. It now ip-
peiri thli objective wlU not be
reiched.
"Thl* menu thit every farmer
who cm live even the smallest
•mount of Hed ihould do to," ttld
Mr. Young.
"Alsike ieed or the ieed ot alfalfa
red clover or ilgtkt tnd white clover mixtures ihould be iold through
llcenied ned dealen tnd tbe grower
ihould be iure to ui tor t profit-
participation certificite u iny profiti mide on the resale of the ieed
will be shared pro rite imong fte
growers."
Se^ deilen must hive nlttiorl-
zation to issue profit-participation
certificitei to groweri from the
Seed Export Office eitabllihed it
Llnduy, Ont., by fte Agriculture
Depirtment Speciil Product* Botrd.
Af i clue to the lmporttnce of
Cmidim ieed production, Cinidlin officiaU cited the ititement of
Roy F. Hendrickion, Deputy Adminlitntor of the United Stetei
Wir Food Administration, thit there
No Public Health
Nurse Available
lor Rossland
ROS6LANC, B. C, Aug. II—At
dty Council meeting Mondiy evening I litter from Dr. E. F. Amyot,
Provincial Heilth Officer, Victorii.
idviied thit it present there wu
no public health nurse available
(or Roulmd. Dr. Amyot'i letter
ilio contained coqgratulatlom to
the City for IU Intereit ln public
health mitten.
Aid. A. C. Rldgeri, Chilrmin of
the Boird of Heilth, reported on
two ipeciil meeUnp, one held Aug.
>. it which it wu reeommended
thit lhe'City Council hire t Sanitary Inipector it MOOO i month:
■nd thl other htld Aug. J, it which
■ report wu received from thi
locil dilrymtn ngirdlng ftt centnl paiteurli.tlon of milk for Roulind coniumin. Thli report pointed out thit not ill the dilrymen
were In fivor of the project, md
thit the cotl wu uUmittd tt ipproxlmitely (11.000.
Thi dtlrymen dulred lo know If
thl City would ihiri tht cott, ind
If io, to whil extent.
nttd bt no teir of excess ieed ]
ductlon.
6UU greiter Increue* tn ieed ji
ductlon irt needed to meet dom
tic needi, those of the UnitedT
tion* thd "those ot ftt libenj
treu both during ind ifter
wtr."
In tht production of tU food j
duett, Cintdt tnd tht United ml
work ln clou issociition, with j|
grtmi dovetailed for utmott
fectlvencM, tnd Mr. Hendrlcki
praised tht cooperation'of the I|
minion With hli country ln
velopmg t stockpile of esienl
leedi io thit tht world needi _g
be met u tbey develop.
Canadian ieed supplies tired
have been moved In quintlty to T
United Nations, u the Allies tui
ed to fte Dominion when old soJ
es of supply were lost because of i|
development!.
«mwm«»M««ia0»aiM»pjM
J00
ChocobHl
Milk
For Pickup and P-J
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
THOMPSON FUNERAL HOl
Btl Koottnay St Phont |
J. A. C. Laughtoj
Optometrist
Suits 205
Medicil Art* Building
S.3-S3PSSg»S$SS»$33-3«S{liS0»SSl
Hivi Hi* Job Dens Rid
VIC  GRAVES
MASTER   PLUMBER •
PHONI 815
•_&es__i__-_9U'__Qti
FLEURY'S   Phormol
Prescripts
Compounded
Accurately I
Med Art! Bll
PHONI 23
POLAROID CLASSES
For your protection.
Now ivtlliblt it
Cuthbert Motors U
Opp. Humt Hottl md Post Ott
CONSULT
MURPHY IROS.
ABOUT
•■____;_._■
•
,
'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
DELIGHTFUL FOUNTAIN
REFRESHMENTS
it tht
♦Melon Dewj
IIIIIIIIII"IIII!II!!IIIII!IIII11I_III1I_UJ
mH_it_____t—_—_
