 ,
By JOHN A. PARRIS
LONDON, Oct. 2 (Tuesdoy) (AP)—The five-power Foreljjn
nisters Council, still unable to break an impasse over how |
Wind up its conference, talked at LancasterIHouse until
fc50 a.ro. (5:50 p.m. P.S.T.) today and decided to reconvene
it 11 o'clock. .-: '■
I The possibility that Prime Minister Attlee and President
'ruman and Generalissimo Stolin might be called upon to
ackle the knotty Balkan issue was advanced by a high Council
Sure* as the Conference1?
treatened to end in a dead-
R.C.N. Close* Iom
at Prince Rupert.—Page 3.
Te Change Repatriation
Depot to Victoria.—Page I.
lire Watches for Outcome of
Anglo-American Talki.—Page 1,
DA-TUESDAY MORNINQ. OCTOilR 2. 1945
jck without accomplishing
fly of its important goals.
Apparently the Mlnliten have a-1
indoned hope of resolving proce-'
ure for Balkan peace treatiei,
fitch hive kept them In lesiion
ft the lilt eight dayi. Thty now
hd themselves tied up on whit
I do -bout the final conference
ocuments.
It tht counclllori go home wlth-
\»t tgreelng on these  records, lt
ruld mean that after three weeki
discussions they have had to id-
Stt that they were unable even to
eich ■ unified decision on whit
heir meeting was about
The principal Issue itlll centres
II I Russian demand that Trance
nd China be excluded from dli-
luniom on the Balkan treatiei.
i. delegate at lait nlght'i protracted
neetlng laid the queitlon had been
lit this wiry:
The Potsdam declaration said the
dree major poweri—Britain, the
Jhited Statu and Russia—could ln-
rtte other poweri to discuss the
luroptan peace settlements with
hem. Whtn the Foreign Mlnli-
krs convened Sept, 11, France tnd
Una wert Invited to participate ln
11 matten on the agenda. Should
bat' decWon now he revoked?
< Appirently the Rtmlini were
landing firm, Ind tha Britlih and
Imerican conferees icemed equally
I determined not to go beyond a
oaipromlie which would restrict
halting of treaties to the three
irlncipal poweri but would inure
retties' ipbmiulon to t conference
t ill major Allies Interested In
!urope.
-Ike meeting ortglnslly icheduled
or S pm. yeiterdiy was twlct pott-
Kmed ln Uie hopt thit some solu-
lon could be worked out.
McNAUGHTON
TO RESIGN
11,000 Veterans
|C$.rfic.
'•rsonnel to
/o\e in England
I0NDON, Oct t (CP Cable) -
Lrtangements have been completed
indfr which British Columbia Kr-
rlct men and women in the United
Ungdom .mill vote Oct. IS, .15 ind
t In thit Province* electfooi, 0. H.
Tird, supervising tht Special Dtp-
ity Returning Office™, nld.today.
The reiulti of tbe service vote
rill be announced In British Co.
ooibia Ifter tba regulir voting
lay, Oet 21.
Due to tha movement ot Cani-
Mm Army unlti from the contln-
Int to Britain, enroute home, no
iptlmate of the number of votei
thich will be cut li possible but
omt sourctt uid it might be around
f.000.
OTTAWA, Oct. I (CPy-<ien. Me
Niughton, former Defence 'Minis
ter, told Prime Minliter Mackenzie
Kirig In Ml letter ot resignation
from that post thit he had no re-
greta for having accepted to enter
the Cabinet in November, WA.
The letter, dated lut Aug. S, wu
tabled today ln the Comr-ora itong
with the letter! of resignation of
other Ministers and repliei trom Mr.
King. S.
Gen. McNaughton said be wu resigning because he felt that the Defence Minister ihould hav. 1 seat
Tn the Commoni.
"May I uy that throughout all the
last nine difficult monthi 1 hive
valued very deeply Indeed the firm
friendship tnd understanding consideration which you have alwayi
extended to me in my many problems; that I have the utmost conviction both of the rightnesi ol the
cause we have sought to serve ind
ot the course which has been taken," iald Oen. McNaughton te hla
letter.
"I believe that any other couno
would have brought disaster both
here it home ln Canada any! to our
Army overieu; and so I hive no
regrets for having accepted your Invitation lut October to join you te
Ihe endeavor which had then to be
made to keep our unity and to discharge our full Juit put ln the wir
igalnit the dictatorships."
In hit letter of reply Mr. King
•aid:
"At the time you accepted my request to become a member of the
Cabinet, tha Government waa laced
with the mott lerlous situation.with I „,tm lH,lOANt
which it had been confronted lime' .■-.■•
the beginning of the war. Had that
situation not been net in the manner te which it Fat, I believe, with
you, that1 any other coune winljd
}if»e
ill thit hai ilnce
Mr. King iald he agreed with Gen.
McNaughton, now a member of the
Canada-United States Joint Defence
Board, that the Minister of Defence
ihould bt t member of Parliament.
To have ensured your being a
member of the Houie on trie opening ot Parliament (Sept. 6) would
have necetaltated t by-election alrnoit Immediately following the recent general Uectloni," said Mr.
King. ■*■
Settle Seed QMn
Dispute With Sash
OTTAWA, Oct 1 (CP)-Settle-
best of the seed grain loan dlipute
between the Dominion snd Saskatchewan Governments wu m-
pounced tonight by Finance Mlnli-
' x Ilsley.
Under in agreement with Premier
f. C Douglu of Saskatchewan the
Dominion accepts tome 12.212,000
\em thin the |1S,4S8,S3] prevlouily
Claimed ind spreads payment of the
remainder over a longer term.
Mr. Ilsley said terms were: W,-
tttAM 88 to be paid , monthly as
bollected from munldpslltles and to
be ptid in full u an obligation to
Die province by July 31, 1J48; H,-
TfO,l_-.T_ to be paid by the province
a period of ll years.
It a statement Mr. Ilsley expressed tht hope, that "now thit thii dlipute matter hu been settled on i
bull satisfactory to both Dominion
province the future relitlom
ten Dominion tnd province
■would be harmonloui tnd coopen-
Btlve and that no further dlipute or
mlsunderstinding would arise out
1 tbe teed grain loam."      ,
Tht two amounts payable by the
province tottl $14,198,788 compared
Kth $1S.4S8.S3_ which the Domtrj-
I pild,to the banki lut fill on*
bt guirantrr by Ittelf ind the
jvlnce for which tt lought re-
buriement from the province.
I QUICKIES ... By Km Rtyntldi
'Order another Nilion Dally
. Newt Wint Ad, Mln Jonu; I've
' lott my ilattet tgilnf
The debt irote out of crop failure in certain parts of Saskatchewan in 1037. In order to emble
firmeri ln thoie areas to obtain
seed the following Spring the two
Governmenti guaranteed loam to
the binki by municipalities. Tht
province wu tht primary guarantor ind the Dominion undertook to
pay If the province failed.
Lut fall the loani cime due tnd
the Dominion pild. Meanwhile, the
province had made an adjustment
In favor of farmers who had contracted to pty for seed received under the loans by reducing the price
from $1.40 i bushel to 70 cents t bushel. The province uked the Dominion to share ln tht cost of this adjustment. .
The Dominion declined md submitted t plan whereby tht province
would piy $000,000 Immediately tnd
provlnci Treasury bills for tht reminder tilling due serially over
the next five yean.
Under proteit tht province provided ■ iTtuury bill ifor Ihe whole
•mount which the Dominion presented for payment tnd on which
no payment wu made. Thereafter
the Dominion proceeded to deduct
certain sums from tht amounts payable to the province under the wartime tax agreement
The province claimed thli, wu I
violation ef tht agreement by which
the provincei give up their right
to rolled Income and corpontlon
taxes ln return fer certain payments
from the Federal Treiiury for tht
duration of the wir. It uktd fer the
establishment of in arbltri! tribunal ai provided ln the agreement to
determine whether the agreement
wu broken.
Tht tribunal wu ut up ind two
ot Iti thret mtmbtre, Ihe Chair min
•nd tht Pomlnjon'1 nornmie reported that tht Dominion wis wi tain ltg rlghU In Mtttag off tht teed
grain debt by the grovinet agslnit
the taxation agreement ptymenli
owing by It to the province. Tht
third member, the Ssik-t.hewan
nominee, found the Dominion had
contravened tht agreement.    , ,
Following Ihe finding! of tht tribunal negotiations were returned
btfwien tht two Oovtrnramta resulting in the rtttlimtnt.
BATAVIA, Oct. 1 fAP) - Britlih
occupation forcei moving into the
Netherlands Eait Indies peacefully
expanded their hold today on Ba.
tavla where Independence-loving
nativei painted buildings with ilgns
taylng "we don't aik freedom—we
ere entitled to It."
With Indonesians protesting thi
return ot their Dutch rulers, and
with 35,000 Japaneie troopi still on
tht Island, the situation ia "potentially explosive" ind "could lead
ta a horrible, ''racial war," aald
Charlei O. van derPlas, senior
representative of the Netherlands
Government te Java.
Indonesian leaden said they
would fight rather thu return to
colonial  status.
Under Undid
OTTAWA Oct 1 (CP)-.Veterani
who have' settled te Saskatchewan
under- the Veterans J,and Act number 86 to date, lt was reported ln
the Commoni today in reply to
questions by T. J. Bentley (CCF-
Swlft Current). The average farm
was of 26l acres md Colt $4071 with
in additional $1085 conditional grant
for equipment.'   •   •   '
An inter-departmental committee
hu been wt up by tht Federil
Government to study the queitlon
et the establlihment of tree porta
in Cantda and the specific recommendation! mide on the lubject by
the City of Quebec, Transport Minliter Chevrler said.
Loank and investments of the Industrial Development Bank, excluding Dominion Government ucurt-
totall_d $711,905 at at Aug. tl
—     _ ifiieveloi
meat Snd reconversion purposci.
There still are 190 mm detained
lh alternative service camps, Libor
Minister Mitchell uld te reply to
questions by. M. J. Coldwell, CCT
leader. The Minister uld the m \
Were constantly Informed that arrangements would be made to transfer them from the camps at Once "if
they will agree to inter Into a contract whereby they will be making
'a contribution to tha national welfare. They were still detained becauie of their refusal to conform to
theae  regulation! by whu*h they
be directed to employment
, tbe camps."
Applications under tht Veterans'
Land Act now total 11,343 of which
4929 have to far qualified md 1123
have been approved, the Government discolsed today in reply to
question! by John Probe (CCF-Re-
gtaa).
German prisoners employed on
Job! in Canada numbered 13,660 at
Sept 1, the Libor Department uld
in reply to queitlon! by John Probe
(CCF-Regtei): Prllonert were only
used on Jobs for which ao civilian
labor wat %vallable.
CCF. CALLS FOR
"POLITICAL UNITY
OF LABOR"
VANCOUVER, Oct. 1 (CP)—Rejecting a bid for electoral agreements with the Labor Progreulve
pirty, CCF provinclil headquarters
today called for "political unity of
labor*- ln tht formation of a CCT
government
Basin its statement on a B. C. Federation of Labor (CCL) proponl
that tht two parties enter into con-
vertstlons, with • vltw to division
of provincial leats, tht CCT laid
over tht signature ot Frank McKenzle, provincial secretary, that
"iuch a coalition of parties, divided
by fundamental differences of policy, could only result In chaos"
The statement declires that results in 4I1I1 yeir _ Ftdtrtl election
"prove beyond dispute thit,the LPP
li Incapable of attracting tha support of enough voteri te elect t can-
dldte, even If given a free field."
8 C. Federation of Labor, Mr. Mc-
Kenile'i itatement maiti, ii ifflllit-
ed with Canadian Congreu of Labor, "which at Its 1W convention
md at its tilt annual convention,
adopted resolutions referring ts the
CCF u the political afm of labor."
-*:—r-T—:—*
Two Lo bor Co nd idat«
Enter
B.C. Election
VANCOUVER, Oct 1 (CD-Twe
I-abor tindldatci havt entered the
Qet 3' provincial election ltlta In
Grand Forks-Greenwood.
They ate Aim Cltpp, Labor Progressive Pirty contender, ind
Chirlti W. C!ir>. who will run ai
'•* fp.dertrdtnt Labor candidate.
DIVISION
—r—
WHERE MONTY TOOK SURRENDER: The crunders' .rotted
iwordi appear at tha Itead ef tha plaque marking tht tpot when Field
Manhal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery accepted thi turrtndtr of the
Qtrman land, ita and air final IrKJtarthwttt Oermany, Ointntrk,
• nd Holland on Miy 4, 1945. The spot H on Luneburg Htath and tht
wooden plaque it mada from pine FaBBjj turrbuna the piece,
BRUSSELS, Oct 1 (Reuters)—In
a proclamation to the Belgian
people, King Leopold uld today he
bad refuted during the German oc-
cupatlqn ot that country to treat
with the Germans and thua saved
the honor of Belgium.
Tbe proclamation, dated at King
Leopold's villa at Bt Wolfgang,
near Salzburg, Austria, md issued
here,by the King's secretariat, laid
that throughout the occupation the
King "refused to negotiate wtth tha
enemy md did nothing md permitted nothing to be done which could
harm the military, political or economic interests of the poweri which
tided Belgium when the wu Invaded ln 1.40.
The proclamation, 1 bid tor nip-
port te the plebiscite to be held
next Much on retention of the
monarchy, aald: "Tha passive resistance which I maintained prevented
Belgium from negotiating with a
Germany temporarily victorious
md held her from allowing herself to be seduced or to be made
use of by the enemy, who wu sided by a handful ot traitors md bad
cltlzenc whom wa will refute to
recognize u Belgttni."
Ia remaining is a prisoner-king,
tha menage added, King Leopold
maintained Belgium'! "right to Independence tad ihe will remain,
despite the odious violence which
wii done to her,. • sovereign na-
fHon,"
^'*   * _}-■    _\     '
Search for Jap
Loot; Some
TOKYO, Oct. 1 (AP)-7.mcrlcan
on iet out today on the
foiter fanaticism and wars.
In Tokyo the great Bank of Japan
wu Cloaed. Army authorities declired it could reopen tomorrow if
its officials quit stalling ind helped
'track down the stolen riches ot
Alia.
Thi little people of Japan, who
crowded about the bank, tearful
that their savings would be taken
away, dispersed *fter being inured
their money wai'iafe. ,
In the Vaults,of thli bank, financial keystone of the Japanese Government, troopi found gold tnd gold
stocks earmarked for Slam and
Indo-China.
(It was not immediately clear
whether thii gold belonged to the
Japanese or had been teiied from
thoie formerly Japanese-controlled
countrlea)
American troops stood guard over
21 financial institutions, closed tt
Gen. MacArthur's order Sunday.
Theie Si were the big combine! which had exploited In 1 business wiy Japan's military" conquests.   All will be liquidated.
The Yokohama Specie Bank md
try Hyoptec Bank, alto doled ln
the swift economic coup Sunday, reopened todiy.
No trace wu found In. their record! ef tht wealth removed by tht
Slmultantouily, Oen. .UacAith
ur'l Civil Information 'and Educi
tlon Section prepared to deal 1
death blow to 'the Japaneae Gov
emment's control over Shintblsm,
which waa artfully turned from, the
field ot religion to war.
NO  INTERFERENCE
CoL Ken R. Dyke, -head of the
Section, emphasized that no attempt
would be made to Interfere with
the freedom of religion, but, "We
are going to be certain lt (Shinto.
lam) isn't- uied u a tool of tht
militarists."
Closely linked ln thli Inquiry, he
laid, wu 1 second'one Intq the
Japanese educational system, de.
signed to discover Just how history
gow li being taught.
"It'i ill tied up ln the sun god
den and the deity of the god Emperor," he uld. "I don't ray we are
going to eliminate ill thii'. . . let'i
uy we deiire to get history on •
more factual basis."
The influtntiil Tokyo newipiper
Asahi charged the Government itlll
wu holding Liberal! u political
prisoners, illd it leut three Tt
cently hid died ln prlion, md dt
minded the liberation of ill thole
held.
Meat Packers
Threaten Strike
WINNIPEG, Oct 1 '(CP) —
Canada'i meat-packing lnduitry
wu today threatened with pet-
libit tie-up In two weeki through
nation-wide itrike ai tht Unlttd
Packinghouse Workeri of America, (CIO) District No. 10 preiented dtmtndl for 1 SO par cent
wtgt Imrtaee tnd • 40-hour, five-
day weak.
Directly affected by tha demanda which ara part of a muttr
agreement, were Canada Packers
Ltd, Swift Canadian Company
and Burnt ind Company.
Present wage rates rangt from
M centi in hour for union laborers
to M emit m hqur for top rate
butchers. The men now work a 4g-
bour week couptred with M hour*
InlWg.
Fred Dowling, Canadian director
ot tbt U.P.W.A. tald Immediate ictlon would be toktn with Burm k
Co. It this don't meet ui within 10
dayi, he uid. "we'll Uke • strike
vote. If the pickers force ui to
ttrlht, we're going to gtt what we
demand or  there'll be no eettla-
The decision! of tha Union were
agreed upon by representative! of
10,000 Cmadltn picking plant employee, ln Canada meeting here.
Mr. Dowling predicted that If
than ware a itrlke it Burnt Co.
plants In Winnipeg. Ileglni. Prince
Albert, Edmonton ind Vincouver,
it would soon iprtid to all three
mett-pickin| companlaa.
Offlclili it tht Edmonton plant
were not available for comment today on the Union's action. Tht vote
would affect ibout 400 workers
there. ,
A Union letter wu recently tent
to tha three packing ebmptnles
suggesting that they apply Jointly
with tha Union to Rlchardi' Com-
minion for a revision costricti
The, commlulon wai let up lut
Fill to study negotiation! between
the companlei md the Union.
It wu reported thit thli proponl
vfcs refused by the compinles md
tht Union decided to detl with ont
company it iir.it. The outcome of
dealing! with the Burnt k Co. will
decide whttbtr the whole lnduitry
will Itrike.
Mackenzie King
leaves lor London
By JOHN D. HAMILTON
Cmadltn Preu ttaff Writer
NSW YORK, Ot t (CP) - Prime
Minuter Mackenzie King, freih
from hll first conference with Preiident Truman at the White House,
boarded the giant Cunard liner
Queen Mary here today enroute to
London.
POSSD . OR PH0'
Mb King A....
photographers before'' "hurrying
iboard ihlp. "Give my beat regards to the Canadian people," ana
nil smiling comment when aakad
ly Tbe Canadian Press for a itatement.
In Wuhlngton the conference wu
deicrlbed officially ai,having covered 1 "pretty broad field " Charlei
G. Hon, White Houie Preu Secretary, quoted the Preiident u laying the two-hour diacuulon of Canadian-American relatibni wm "interesting and important md'quite
utisftctory."
The Prime Minliter reached New
York from Wuhlngton lut night
after conferring with the Preiident,
Vord Halifax md Canadian Ambassador L. B. Pearton. He waa accompanied by Nurman Robertson,
Under-Secretary for External Affairs, md two personal lecretarlei.
- Mr. King's departure came after
• crowded weekend te which he
flew to Wuhlngton, ipent two houn
with President Truman it the White
Houie arid -queued In a number of
vlilts elsewhere in tbe city, leaving
lite in the diy by train'for New-
York.
Canadian-American iffalrs largely
dominated the Prime Minister'!
ichedule ln Wuhlngton. Before
him In London Hi problems chiefly
concerning Anglo-Canadian md
Commonwealth affairs which, of
necessity, ire bound up with Otti-
wi-Wuhlngton policy.
. In iddttlon to conferring with
members ot the new Britlih Libor
Cabinet, Mr. King will ice leaden
of other European Governments.
To hll forthcoming talkp the
Prime Minliter will lake a fund of
Information gained trom hit vltlti
In Wuhlngton. Of hll Sunday vlilt
with Mr. Truman, the Cantdltn
leader wu reticent but emphasized
that tht valut of hii White Houit
conversations could nol be overestimated.
Shipment of
Steers Held
Up, Vancouver  '
■VANCOirm, Oct l (CP)-Fur
of Vineouvir meet picktri thst
Vmcouver butchart win go on
strike led to whole shipments of
ataen being held up tn ttoekytrdi
Ialt week, Tom Blair, Manager of
the British Columblt.Llveito-k Producer! Co-Operillve Anocittlon,
uld here todiy. He added thil unit m tht mut ritlontag uphtavtl li
uttled the ume condition will pre
vail thii tnd ntxt ---*-
Aluminum Export
Jumps, Canada
OTTAWA, Oct 1 (CP>—Vtlut of
Cinida/i aluminum exports Jump-
id (rem t-t,4».lM tn IBM to $103,-
M..M3 ln 1944, Tndt Minliter MacKinnon uld today ln a rtport tabled
In the Commoni.
' Tht report wu In the form of t
reply te • queitlon uked by Stanley Knowlet (CCF — Winnipeg
North Centre).    .
la the tint tight monthi of 1MS
the valut of aluminum eiporti
rriched We.OR.Mt. leu than f 10,-
000,000 ihort of the figure for ill
of lut year. Bulk of the export! In
ill yean wu made up ot ban,
blockt, ingoti tad theeta.
British Warship,
Dock at Saigon
NIW YORK, Oet 1 — War-
thlpi ef Hit Britlih laat MIm
Fleet have dot kid at taiga*, the
SBC rtptrtid tenlfht In 1 hrtetS-
emt rtetrttt by NIC. The Ion
tee bread-ait ttt net tay hew
many vetult wire Involved.
By J. A. MERKEL
Canadian Press Staff Writer
HALIFAX, Oet. 1 (CP)—The, 43,450-ton liner lie dr
France docked today with 9,754 Canadian veterans of war'orC
land, s«a and air In Europe, and military authorities announced
that the great bulk of the First Division, which went overseas
in December, 1939, had been returned.
Great yheers rang through the air as the returning service?
men lined tr,e docking side of-.-
the troopship and yielled themselves hoarse, at their first
sight of homeland. ■     .    •
Majority of the returning veteran!
were soldiers, Including men of the
Loyal Edmonton Regiment, the Sea-
forlh Highlander, of Vancouver and
the Princess Pitricla Canadian
Light Infantry ot Winnipeg and Victoria.
Arrival of the lie de France twilled to more than 18,000 the number
ot Canadlgn troops arriving from
overieu ln the past three dayi. The
38,287-ton liner Nleuw Amsterdam
brought-back 7744 Saturday.
Penonnel returning on the He de
France Included 8091 Army afld 1121
from the Royal Canadian Air Force.
Smaller. numbers including Royal
Naval penonnel, th Canadian nursing sUteri, Including 21 -who went
to South Africa when the African
campaign wu In a critical stage, 87
memben of the Canadian Women's
Aymy Corps and a number, oi other
miscellaneous types.'
All united ln their praise of the
wiy they were handled once they
reached the repatriation depots.. Lt.-
Col W. T. Cromhe, Commanding
Officer of the Loyal Edmonton Regiment, described It u follows:
: *J-ver ilnce we hft Nljmegen (the
Cinidlan Repatriation Dtps'
Holland), we hid Hot data
~et ■-_-■„■
■   :!
.. i
.... - .
I ,   !.■■_.    .'• .-    a   f
;_.___. _,   .   eMxt'lY+jFi
bait trip we were ever on."
RANKS DEPLETED
All the battallom returning as
units could die only a small percentage of men who went oveneas
with the first contingent and returned on the lie de France. Their
rahkt bad been depleted by caaual-
tin In Sicily, Italy', and Northern
Europe and by the earlier return to
Canada of highpoint men. - '
Among the few men returning
with tha units they west over with
wu Lt.-CoL Crombe, former Edmonton ichool teacher, who wu a
Lieutenant when hii battalion tailed out of Halifax Is the iccrecy of
the early daya of the war.
Known u the "Stiver Fox", greyheaded Lt.-Col. Crombe took command of the Edmonton! tlx month*
ago. He wu Iway from the Western
outfit, with whom he fought ln Sicily, Italy, Holland ind Germany,
for about t year during which he
took tbe Lincoln md Wolland Regiment Into Normandy u 0.C
Lt-Col. Crombe iald tha Edmon-
toni met their toughest fighting it
Ortoni, the Hitler-Line, the Gothic Lint tnd Fortugato Ridge, all
ln Italy. Their only "tying ictlon''
ln Northern Europe wu the IJisel
River crossing ln Holland.
After V-E Day, two companies ot
the battalion joined the composite
Canadian battalion which marched
Into Berlin md tpent the rest of the
time wilting to come homt nttr
Utrecht They bid only 18 dayi In
England before they iet tall for
homt.
Romantic figure ot the Loyal Edmonton! wu Maj. John Alpine
Dovigtn, M.C., md Bar, of Edmotv
ton who married Miu Rie Kooptnin
of Almrlo, Holland, Juit five dayi
before the outfit left for home. She
wu left on the other tide, u hive
been hundredi of other Cantdltn
war bridei. to await peuage whtn
military priorities lttten.
Maj. Dougan won the MC. at
HUI 73«, below Mount Mia In Sicily, and picked up the Bar a year
later, u • fellow-officer described
"chiilng ■ Jerry down Fortunato
Ridge ln broad daylight md swinging t rlflt by the muule."
Brig. W. C. (Shorty) Colquhoun.
M.BJt, MC, whose towering frame
took Ihe Princeti Pitricla Cinadlan
Light Infantry to tha other ilde md
who now commmdi the Canadian
Infmtry Triining Brigade at De-
bert, N.S., wu one ol th* tint lo
board tbt ne de France on bar ar-
rlril
Tbt Winnipeg Brigadier tpent
several houn chatting wtth Maj. P.
t). Croft™ who eama back In command of the battalion and with
other offirert he had known over-
Mat Ma). Crofton, hailing from Salt
Spring Uland, BC, look commind
Of tba >rln-eu Pata June 15, IMS.
He ween uuntat with tht Cantdltn
Jcottlih "Juit ever Ave yeen ige."
p-COAAT-D
Ctpt 1 (. Chirnberi of Wlnnl.
peg, who won the Military Crou In
the Oothic Una, counted Ihe number of deiwatlont woo by tht unit
In ltt fighting with the "Shlney Sec.
V
ond" Brigade ef the Flnt Division
■t 10 M.C.'s, six D.S.O.'s md li
D.C.M.'s and M.tyl.'s.
Among the decorated veteran! returning with the Princess Pats were
Sgt L. Kraerner, sometimes called
"The Killer" by hit matn, who
fought ill the way through with'
the sniper platoon without a scratch
md won tha Military Medal In'
Italy.
One of the "original" officers of
Vancouver's Seaforth Hlghlmden
returning todiy wu its O.C., Lieut
Col D. M. Clark of Vmcouver. Lt-
Col. Clark went overseas ln 1(39
md was home on leave In 1842. Th*
Seaforthi tpent 30 dayi In Amsterdam after V-E Day md had "a
glorious time" there, leaving In
mid-June to Bllthoven, near Utrecht, where they ipent the reit of
the time before itarting on the
homeward trek ln mid-June..
During the period between the
md of the war and their departurt
from Holland, the Seaforthi were
"stamping to get home but were
wen behaved," he tald.
Pipe Major E. Esson, M.B.E.,
whose Seaforth Pipe Bind wai the
pride of Vincouver baton the wait,
said the band did not play in ac- ■
tlon in this war a j in the lait The
practice of troops being led into
battle by skirling pipes wu dlscon-
I tlnued In the eirly daysoffighting
reeflm implacable number of pW
pen. Seaforth bandsmen were em-
ployed In other dutlei during tht
fighting period! of thli war.
V.C. WINNER
Mi). R. L. McDougill of Via-
Lcouver, who Joined the Seaforthi ln
1941 ln time for the Sicily invasion, counted the number of decoration! won by the battalion u follows: One V.C, won by Pte. E. A
"Smokey" Smith at Savlo River,
one O.B.E. three M.B.E.'i, eight
D.SO.'i, nine M.Cl. four D.CJd-'i,
23 M.M'i md four Mentioned in
Dispatches.
One of the D.S.O. wlnnen wee
Pidn R C. H. Durnford, Protettant
chiplaln from Prince Rupert B.C,
who wu with the Seaforthi through
til their fighting.
Memben of Ihe Seifortht agreed
their toughest fighting wu on May
23, 1M4, when they cruhed the Hll- '
ler Line. Col. Clark said only about
«j of the battalion came out un-
tcithed ifter eight houn of fighting md that although "the fighting
ln Sicily wis tougher for days on
end thst wis the wont diy of all."
Finds Difficulty
irt Changing
Plans to Shelter
IX)rfb0N, Oct 1 (CP Clble) —
Brlik Aneurin Bevan, 47-yeir-old
Minister of Health In charge ot
housing ln Englmd and Wain, ll
finding his main difficulty to trani-
form plini Into the shelter wanted
by millinni.      ,
He it expected to itive off numerous questions on the housing pro-
grim by in early statement on pro-
greu after .Parliament reiumtt
Oct. 9.
People tn. heartily tired of
cramped quarters tnd hiving to depend on the goodwill of friend! md
rel.itivrs for accommodition. Only
ibout one-tenth of the 3.000,000 mir-
rltd during the war tre mre of
homes, md returning sen-Icemen
want to set up their, own aetiblllH-
ments
GERMAN PRISONERS
WANT TO 60 HOMI
WINNIPEG. Oct. 1 (CP)—Qtt—ttm,
prisoners of wir ln Northwestern
Ontario ramps who once believed
they were fighting with in army '
which would conquer tht world, ara -i
thinking of little elie thin returning
home lo Oermany.
Whtn that will be li not known
but tn tht meantime they have been
eernlng their keep, working In tha
mtkir beet field, of Eiitern Manitoba—and making vtlltu bl -anticipation of going home.
The Weather
Tempertturee Mondayi
Mln. 31.1; "Max. tA\».
Foracttt: Kootenay- Light
becoming locally moderate Tuei-
dty afternoon Fair tn partly cloudy
with scattered fag pattern! In val.
leyi In early morning. Light ground
frottt locally. Not much thtngt In
temperature.
...
 - NILSON DAILY NIWI, TUIWAY, OCTOBIR 7,1945
W,,.i|iypiii!Uiipii^W'.,l|i|ftl wi' "PiJia. iff
lake "Holi
|      , By The Cmidlin Pre*
;' Wreat of i gtntral walkout f.
between 6500 and 9000 District 11
i United Mine Worken of America
i'(CCL) miners ln .Alberta and British Columbia, paralleling the two-
{week  itrike  In  1943  when  they
: sought higher wages md holidays
I with pay, emerged u a distinct
possibility Mondiy night
[ Proteitlng tgilnit tht Government's re-introduction of meat rationing, which' thty have declared
]j» "unrealistic  and  stupid",  their
■ self-termed "holiday" his mushroomed icrou Alberta and Into
lome areas ot Britlih Columbia with
j tha estimated total now out let it
i 7700—and mort likely to Join their
I raaka
fir Latest development In tht Wllk-
j out.occurred Monday evening when
iQJM men at Nanalmo, B. C, and
I nearby Cumberland mlnei decided
at meetings to cease ill coal pro-
i ductlon for this week unless the
I Federal Government Is prepuMd to
f make aome  modification!  ln  tht
' present meat-rationing lyitem.
'    On tht heels of thli ictlon came
ii Word that 110 minen it tht Black
■; Dlimond mine, four mllei Eut of
I Edmonton,  walked off their  Jobs
\[ earlier ln the day and prepared for
a mass meeting Tuesday. Union of-
, flclili tt Edmonton uid tht meet-
I ing likely would be attended by
il rereamtatlvti of 10 Edmonton dis
trict minei with Union membership of more than 100 men.
COAL MININO ON ISLAND
HALT*
With the 1200 miners Idle it Ne-.
naimo md Cumberland, practically
all coal mining on Vmcouver Iil-
and li ihut down, Oni; a taw privately-owned concerni itlll are operating.
■ Minen ln the Drumheller area tn
Southern Alberta served notice on
the Government Stpt 11 that'
itrikei ln proteit agalnit rationing
would not be • butcher's monopoly. Their deadllnt for modlflcitlbn
ol rationing wu set it Sept 17 md
when the Government did not get
1000 miners from the area, bolstered by another IUO frem tbt Crow'i
Nest Put, also ln Southern Alberta,
laid down their tools.
Their action wu followed quickly
by miner! at Fernie md Michel,
B. C Men from some mint! ln
Northern Albertt's coal branch
Joined the rinkt it tht weekend.
Union officials term tha walkouts u ■ "holiday" and declare
Union members will stay out until
the Government li prepared to gtvt
miners doublt rations of "red" meit
and exclusion of cooked md smoked meat! from tha rationing. When
thli decision li mide the men will
return to work the following dty.
Jury Impanelled
for Death
of J. Monahan
i
ii
!!
. ROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. _-_or-
don McTeer, Gordon Simpson, R.
Blelll, Ivan Hutching!, J. R, Rym
and Albert Chrlitenien were impanelled u a Jury to tnveitlgitt
the death of Jerry Monahan at a
retult of i cir teddent Siturdiy
night on tht Roulind-Tnll highway.
They viewed tht youth's body at
Somen-Carberry Funeril Home tn
Trill and then adjourned until such
time ai his companion Tommy
Lloyd ll well enough to be t wit-
nut. 1\e hoipltal reported be wu
itill ln • leml-comcloui condition.
• WNDON (Reuten) — Thomu
Wallace Young, muter mariner of
Klngibridge, Devon, whose death U
-announced, wu tbe fourth gtntra-
tion of t Scottish fimlly ot shipmasters He wu bom on • tailing
ihlp commanded by hll father tnd
wai 10 yttn old baton hi lived
aihore.
3. i .nald Adimt, of the New
York Sundiy Tlmei, ail u I
result pf a recent experience ln
reidlng novels In manuscript
for I prlie otfered by Harperi:
"It Hem! to me thit . . . then
ll perceptible in the new novels I btvt recently rttd (tnd I
am not referring merely to the
mtnuicript ...it ilickenlng of
lntroipective teniion, 1 mort fre-
qutnt tblllty to creltt char-
actcrs thit irt drtwn with in
outwird-looklni eye. I think we
cm be reasonably eerttln thit
tht potential novelitti btck from
tht war, ind the girli who hive
stayed it home, will not be
bombtrding us with the lelf-
pitylng, ntrcisllitlc noveli thit
poured In t flood from their
fatheri ind mothers There will
llwiyi be some, of course, but
If the list few yeiri hive done
mything they hive opened win-
dowi for miny of ui on wider
&roipecti thtn miy be lem by
ie    too-often    Inwird-turnlng
eye"
CoODFRHAM/WoHTI
Limited
1   TORONTO, ONTARIO
"-It ~
Pte. J. D. Doig
of Rossland
Arrives Homt
ROSSLAND, B. *, Oct 1-Ptt.
3. D. Doig, who returned to Canada aboard tht Scythla on Mondiy
Sept 17 hu arrived In Rosslsnd
to visit his parents, Mr. md Mrs.
J. B. Doig, 2074 Butte Street. Ha
served overseas from November,
1941, md uw ictlon ln Frince, Belgium,   Holland   md   Germiny.
B.C. Firms Plan
to Spend
$19,000,000
VANCOUVER, Oct 1 (CP)-B. C.
firms plan to spend $19,000,000 on
plant exptnslon md equipment Installations ln tht next year.
Theu figure! revealed by the Tax
Department cover programs in-
nounced to tht Government up to
Sept 1.
British Parliament
ns on Oct. 9
Oct. 10 Deadline
for Troop Mall
to Eastern Zone*   .
OTTAWA Oet 1 (CP) - October
10 U deadline for Chrlilmu troop
mill to India, Burma, Ceylon et
the South But Alia Command, Jnfrt-
maiter Gtnertl Btrtrtnd innounc-
ad today. Oct is it deadline for
troop real! to Egypt, Iran, Iraq,
Syria, Italy, Malta g Wait Africa.
Mrs. E. Gaskell,
Mn. Emma Gaskcll, reiident of
Nelion for 19 yean, died in Vie*
toil a on Sunday at the ige of 78.
She ii the mother ot Walter E. Gai-
kell ot Nelton.
Born In Sandy, Hcrtfordihlre,
England, the went to Victoria in
1818. She wu married to Richard
Gaskell In 1891 md came to Nelton
In 1897. Mr. Gaikell died on April
8, 19S2, it Willow' Point
Mrs. Gaskell returned to Vlctorii
in 1939, where she has ilnce lived.
Al well u Welter ln Nelson, ihe ll
survived by mother ton, Richard,
of Alert Bay, and five dtughten,
Mn,- J. Qrlghton of Vmcouver,
Mrt. H. Flnmore, Mri. A. Wright
and Mn. C. H. Crou, all of Vic
torli, md Mn. J. Coittln of Kim'
berley. Another daughter died ln
1908 when tour yean old.
Mrs. Gaskell also leaves 18 grand
children and one great-grandchild.
Burial li to ba midi it Nelion.
Fred K. Jones, Director of Rolary
International, Tells How Rotarians
Reoper
11 .
=TS_w
Fattening Mash
Olvt your birdi thil top flnlih
by feeding Thrivo Fattening
Mash for 10 dayi before marketing. Your birdi will cirry'tht
neceuiry fleih ind bloom to
bring No 1 rill grade Yei.
Thrivo conlilni powdered milk
tnd other tuenllil foodi.
n.
Irickmis-KK HflHng
HI Front St Phoni IM
Nilion, B. C
LONDON, Oct 1 (Reuttrt)-Ptr.
liament reopeni Oct 9 with the first
real lotion of tbt new Labor-dominated Houm ot Commoni it (ht
highlight Thli week-end political
partiei put the finishing touches
04 their campaign plans.
Prime Minliter Attlee will lead
hll Government md 111 mort than
400 Labor memberi Into tht Common! without benefit of t holiday
to relieve tht pressure on him since
hli election.
On thi othtr hind, Mr. Attlti'i
Coniervttlvt tdvtrury — Winston
Churchill—hu enjoyed t lengthy
vacttion tret from the-ctrei of office Ht li reported to bt coming
bick brimful ot hli old tparkle
md flrt to lead hli formidable oppoiltlon of 200 into battle.
WYNNDEL
WYNNDEL. B.C.-Mr. md Mn.
A. T. Dtvli o. Cutlegar in visiting
tht former'i parenu, Mr. md Mri.
L. A. Dtvlt heu. Mr. Dtvlt rtetnt-
ly received hi! discharge trom tht
R.CAF.
Mr. ind Mri. L. E. Davis snd Ji-
net, tnd Mr. Wtlktr of Trill, wire
recent visiton here, gueiti of tht
former'i parent!, Mr. and Mri. L.
A. Dtvli. Mr. L. EL Dtvli ilio received hli cUichargt from tht R.C.
A_f .
Mlu Htnl Dtvli hu returned
from t holldiy spent with rtlttlvet
ei it Rouland. Trill aid Cutlegar.
Miu Griee-Jean MeFtrltnd of
Erickion li ipending the weekend
with htr grandpirenU, Mr. md Mn.
I. A. Dsvii htrt.
Mrs FoxtU wu I patient la tht
Creiton Villey Homitil.
Mra G. Huicrof. md children
hive returned trom • holiday ipent
•t Silmo. I
Tha .Community Hill wu tht
tcene of i farewell party lut Fridiv
evening honoring Mr. md Mn F.
Mtrttlio md Kathleen, who hivt
taken up residtmct In Crttton.
Cardi, refruhmtntl and dtnclng
wtrt enjoyed md tht guesti of
honor wert prttenttd with a lovely
dlnlng-»oom table.
Mln J. Btrnbrldgt md Mlu M
Wallace are'vliltlng thtlr parenu
it Boiwtll.
PROPERTY OWNERS
WARNED TO FILL
VACANT PLACES
VANCOUVER, Oct 1 <CP)-Van.
couver property ownen wen warn-
ed today to fill their vacant accommodation or official! will fill it for
them.
Leigh F, Stevenson, Emergency
Housing Administrator, In a statement ln conjunction with a preliminary survey of vacant housei laid
"tha number found so tar will not
go fir toward relieving the situation but It li intended that thli
ipace be put Into use md If neces-
ury, compulsion will bt uied.''
Mr. Stevemon will retire ioon
u Emergency Housing Admlnlttri-
tor.
Ownen, meantime, in asked to
rent or cell vacant homes in order
to "eliminate the necessity ot mon
itrlngent measures."
Mr. Stevenson suggest! thit local returning veterans ihould be
liven first opportunity to occupy
•11 vacant houses. Emergency shelter officials will willingly assist to
find suitable tenant!.
He «ddl "Investigation of vacant
housei will continue md ictlon of
thli nature will proceed until ill
vacant space ii tilled."
. _ ■„ . ,1, ..   .
Bacon a Savory
Dish for Britons
LONDON, Oct. 1 (CP)-Probtb-
ly tht moit savory dish found In'
Britain's bare post-war larder it.
repreiented by tbt four ouncci i
penon of btcon tvtlltblt weekly—
uiuilly by the grice of Canada.
The Food Ministry hll recognized
thli ippreclatlon of bacon in i le-
rlci of tdvertlumenti luggettlng
rtelpeg "to make t little bacon go
a long wiy."  '
Shopkeeper! uy thit many Britlih b-jyeri do not know thtlr treti-
urtd bacon comei trom Canada.
Even penoni handling ltrgt quantities of btcon miy fill to notice the
"Cantdt' 'ittmped on WUtihlrt
sides which of course dlupptan
whtn.the bacon ii sliced tor tali to
tht houtewift.
Fred K. Jones of Spoktnt, pelt
Dlitrlct Governor of this district In
Kotary, md Director ot Rotiry International at the preient time
spoke at a dinner meeting In the
Hume, Mondiy night to the Nelion
Rotiry Club and to gueiti trom vi-
rloua polnti In the Koottnayi,
Washington and Idaho who were
attending In Autmbly muting of
the Northern half of Dlitrlct 103.
Hi told thtm how much be enjoyed vlilting Canada, tnd laid that
In tht 18 monthi he lerved M Dlitrlct Governor h\ wet often teeue.
ed ot being mere a Cinidlan than
a citlun of the U.S.A.
Spttklng of tht Boird ot Dlrec
ton he mentioned thit "a reel Eng-
Ilshman", Thomai Ai Wirrtn wai
Preiident"
"Hi li om of the moit out-tending gtntlemen I hivt been privileged to meet," Mr. Jonei uld. "He
ll an tx-ichool administrator, a
very -fine tlneere ttudent md in
■ble gentleman with a lot ot Intestinal fortitude. I think you cm look
forward to a very lucctttful yttr
ln Rotary with Tom Warren at the
helm."!
Mr, Jonei iald there were two
other memben ot the Britlih Empire on the Board, one ot theae a
Canadian and the other from Wiles.
"Yoit do get to know the moit
Interesting group ot men," Mr.
Jonu remarked. "The more I meet
thit type of men the higher regird
I have for Rotary."
He paid tribute to Rev. H. Stewart
Forbes ot Nelaon, u he told of being
In Nelion three yeari ago at the
District Autmbly held hert.
It wu the prtctlce then he iald
to hold club auembllu the evening
prior to the Rotary Junchton. When
this fill on Mondiy In lome ot the
places ministers in the Rotiry Clubi
objected to tha assembly being held
Sundiy evening.
"We wanted the assembly to be
held on Sunday evening here, .it to
happened thit the Nelion Rotary
Club had planned to |o to Mr. Forbes church In a body that evening.
When the question of the assembly
Wu put to Mr, Forbes, he uld he
would tgrte to it provided I led a
parade of Rotarlam from thli hotel to the church, andtbat I ipoke
during the tervlce," The numbly
wu held nfterwifrds In tht church
hall, Mr. Jonei laid.
He told Rotarians that on Aug. 31
SALMO
thil year there were M71 Rotary
clubi in tha world with e total mem-
benhtp.of 248,450. In the.lait 13
months there had been an Incrtase
of 243 clubi md 20,037 memben. In
Canada on Aug. 31 thtrt wen 212
clubi and a membenhlp of 10,000.
An - outitindlng   illuitratlon   of
whet Rotary cm do wu given at
tht United Netloni Conference it
Sin Frinclsco lut Spring, ht uld,
when obiervtri or consultant! wan
sent trom lervice clubs to Die conference.
"Thli certainly turned out, to be
one of the most outstanding f ictors
ot the conference, Some of the out*
standing Rotarlam were there,
think the Important pert Rotiry
took In the conference egnnot be
txtggerited. I am looking forward
to letlng Rotary take an equally
Important pari ln the foundation oi
luting peace.
"There mutt be miny participants
in World War l in thli room, We
won tht wer md lost tbe peace.
Let'i not repeat that mistake. Thli
time we have our ions, nephewi
and relatives to the war. Again we
have won the war, thii time let us
wta the peace." , ■'' .
Rotary, he iald, would be rep.
resented at a worldwide meeting ot
educators to ba held In London on
Nov. 1. From time to time then
would be other meetlngi for peace
to which ha hoped Rotary would be
Invited.   , '    ■
"In every community represented
here toijlght your clubi have a fine
cross-section of manhood and mm*
ttl ability. Outstanding men In
business or professions are will repreiented by the memben of Rotary.
"I hope that li going to be the
entwer. I'think Tom Warren It
going to ne lt ln that light I think
wa ara going to win not only tha
war but the peace." .
Giving a definition of Rotary Mr.
Jonu laid that thi Golden Rule
wai "do unto othen u you would
have othen do unto you."
For another definition be quoted
from Lincoln's Second Inaugural
Addrm, beginning "with malice toward none, with charity for all..."
Preiident A H. Allan had previously Introduced Dr. Robert W.
Irving of Kimloopi, District Govtr.
nor, who In turn Introduced Mr.
Jonei to the Rotarians.
W. G. Harold thanked Mr. Jonei
tt the termination of his speech.
Dwellings
to B« Built
by End of Year
OTTAWA. Oti,'-4 _CP>-4ndlc*
Horn on Sept 11 lust were that 48,-
000 dwelling units will either be
built or building in the year ending P«e. SI, Finance Mlnlitir Ililey
•aid in a return tabled ln tha Common! today. Tha Information wai
uked by A. M. Nicholson (CCT'
Mackenzie).   '   '"' ," -'
Mrs. W. Meor, 68,
of Trail, Dies
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. I — Mn. Beule
Meir. wife of Walter Mttr, UM
Fourth Avenue, died Saturday afternoon at her home at the age of W,
following a lengthy lllneu.
Mni Mear who wu bom In
Devon, England, came to Canada
33 yean ago ind had lived in Trail
t*r 15 yearn   ','-.     • •»>•■.  i- • • '
She ti lurvived by hir huibind,
two loot, Charles R. md Robert E,
both of Trail; four daughter!, Mn.
F. McGregor and Mrt. A Wtbb of
Fruitvili md Mn. Dave Miwdtley
and Mrs, F. J. Mathewt ot Trail;
one brother, Herbert Tucker, in
New Brifniwick, two brother!. I
iliter md a itep-mother In England.
■ Funtrtl teivlcee ara to bt htld
In Trail on Tuesday.
NAKUSP
NAKUSP, B.C.—A tucceuful ef-
ternoon tea md uie of fruit md
vegetables was btld on Mondiy af-
 '-  t* —'"- """
ttfnoon ln
''Parish Hill undtr
tht auiplces ot tht St Mirk's Anglican Church Ladles Guild. Committees In charge were, kitchen.
Mrs. H. I. Jonu, Mrs. M. Embree,
Mri. R McWhirter: Tei, Mn, I. J.
Morehouse, Mrt. F. Ruthton, Mrs.
,W. Jupp; Sales Ladiei, Mn. M
Bird and Mrs. E. Brown.
Mn. A. S. Fowler, Pint Lodge,
Nikuip, entertained delightfully it
tht tea hour on Monday afternoon
to honor Mrs. l. J. Edward's 78th
birthday anniversary. Many old
callid to wlih Mn.
SALMO, B. C-Mr. ind Mn C.
Treat md daughter! Miybellt ind
Althei were Silmo vUiton, Althei ,.■_-  _____,.
remaining a. guut of Mlu Wrbir. HS-**!!
Moor*.
E. J. Avery wu a visitor to Nil- i„Vofuilon
r-jt rvik_*4 i... it. «_. m._      RCAF.  Sgt.  W.   (BlU)
owing to.th. death ofJii, mother. . ^^.^[l^ta %
i many happy nturni of the
day md brought glnt tnd floweri
Rogen,
from
Mr. and Mn. C. H. Scrlbner were
Nelion vlilton.
Mr. ind Mn. Rty Wlntan of
Pend d'Oreille <>;rt vlilton ln town.
L. Schyltr, of tht U S. Army, wu
t guut of hll listen. Mrs. Reg Nelion md Mrs J. Henry.
Wilei. He li on 30 daj
layi
li visiting hii fsther. W. Bogi
Lac.   Rowland   Jordan.  R.CA.F,
rave md
Rogers.
irrlved Wednesdty to s
days
Jordi
with his  lunt
ipcr
Mrs.
nd I few
George
...    «_ -,   r,    _   ■      .   w --._ i   Rmdolph Htrdlpg of Burton wu
Mm Marie Drordi wu t ihopper , w„kend vMio_ fn N>ku,.
to Nelion.  I   Mr. md Mri. J. Jimu, Mr. tnd
Mr tndMn Bill Young of Sheep Mn>   Alec Jimei ind Jamily, Mr
CANYON
CANYON, B. C—Mr. md Mrs
G. Browell left for their home ln
Kulo ifter vlilting Mr. md Mrs. R,
Browell. While here they ittended
the Browell-Sorrlmerfeld wedding.
Mri. A. Dodd end ion irrlved
home from spending a holiday ln
Spokane, Wash.
Gordon Armstrong returned from
the Coait md U. S. A. points. While
In Vmcouver he received hll discharge from the RCAF.
Mr. md Mn. Sun Morrli left
tor their home In Vernon after
spending a holiday with Mra. Morrli' parenti, Mr. md Mri. R. Brow-
Mr. md Mri. J. Lawrence and ton
Lloyd, are holidaying-in Spokane.
Mn. Blair md daughter Eleanor
arrived home trom Vmcouver
when they btvt tpent tht Summer monthi.
Bert Trdford ll ipending • leive
with nil parints, Mr. md Mrs. A.
Tedford.
Mr. ind Mn M. Shubtrt havt
taken up reiidence In Canyon, having built a store there which li
now open for busincis. They were
formerly living it Yihk.
Mri. John Welu md chlldrm trt
guests st the home of Mn. Weiss'
parenu, Mr. md Mn. R. Browell.
Mr. md Mrs. J. McLaren of Klmberley ire staying with -the for-
mtr'l parenti, Mr. md Mrs. E. McLaren.
Mr. ind Mrs. L. E. Davis md
diughter Janet, also, Mn. W. Walker of Trail, lift for their home after
vlilting Mr. md Mra E. W. Davis.
Mr. md Mn F. Wllliimi, ind
Mrs Birnhirt of GltnllUy win
viiiton during tht wttk. They wire
accompanied home by Mri. Knott,
who has spent a week ln Glenlilly.
lo Future
Needed-Gardner
trail, b, c. Oct, i tcp) - Re.
turning to Trail after an abimct of
34 yeari, B. C. Gardner, Vlce-Preil-
dent md General Manager ot tht
Bank of Montreal, addressed a
Board of Trade meeting here tonight on problems of tht post-war
period. Mr, Gardner wu paying hii
tint vlilt to Trail since leaving
hen tn 1(11 after being manager of
the old Bank of British North America ln Trail md Rossland.
Outlining problems Involved In
Increased locial security, Mr. Gardner uld that a bold approach to
the future wu necessary but that
one hazard Involved wu a tendency
to forget that social security was
only a meant of distributing goodi
produced by somebody.
However complin modern lift
had become, Mr. Gardner emphasized, brttd still depended on twtat
md the objectives ot Canada ln tht
future world itlll depended
everyone producing more than In
the put ,      '
Says No Special
Provision Mad*
for Handicapped
OTTAWA, Oct 1 (CP)-No tpe
clsl provision has been made for
the vocational training of physically-handicapped youths and adult civilians by tha Labor Department,
Labor Minliter Mitchell aald In i
return tabled ln tba Commoni todty.
Hit itatement was In reply to t
queitlon by D. J. McCualg (CCF—
Maple Ceek). TSie question referred
to "thoie mentally tit but handicapped In earning full maintenance by
reason of amputation, deformity,
partial paralysis, etc." i
lit.. Mitchell said iuch penoni
who hivt been gainfully tmployed
could be admitted through the pro- j
vlnces under the re-eitabllihment
tnlhlng agreementi.ient to Provin-
clal Mlnliten for completion.
Also, they could be given train.
Ing under - youth training agree-
menti ln effeet with the provincei
"If the provincei wish to include
training for iuch person!.''
They would ilso be covered by
Old Age Pensions. The Unemployment Insurance Commission bad
speclil sectloni concrntnting on
problem! of the dliabled.
TENSION RISES
IN BOMBAY AREA
BOMBAY, Oct. 1 (RetJten)-An
atmosphere of riling tension prevailed todty In tht Bombiy Baraar
district, itorm. centre of the communal riots which ln the lut tlx
dtyi hivt taken ■ toll of 31 lives.
WKh thi trouble thrcttenlng to
spread, i battalion of Britlih troopi
hive been called In to reinforce
Indian, troopi tlntdy In the tret.
CALL and SEE
our MANAGER      _«
'
Mr. Q, E Thompson
who will show you the latest in
Footwear.
AT
JJUL fiDDt&hJ^
The Print Shop
411 Boker St. — Phone 1134
Tint Wool Sergt. M" wide Q Juk
Wool Crepe ln rtd, green, white, navy, powder blue,        CI TM
browh md black. M" wide. Yard _ . ?*•'«
Cotton Plaids ln green, brown, blue, SS" wide. e i 4f_
Vud      - -   ?*•__■
Rayon Crepe In black, grey ind heaven blue. 38" wide. CI M
Yard   ?*a*W
NATAL
Creek hive left to take up reiidence
at Zincton.
Jim Oreenwood of Cilgiry li vlilting hli wife md biby it the homi
ot Mn. Greenwood'! parenti, Mr.
md Mri. P. N. Ptttn.
Floyd Sage hu returned to Ctl
NATAL, B.C.-Sgt. T. Keeling tnd
Ptt. 1\ Rosier lift for Ctlgtry after
spending some tlmt tt-the home of
their families it Nat.il. Tht former
went lor l)ls diichtrge from the R.C.
AT. while the Utter It itttlontd it
80 Brides on Way
to Australia
VANCOUVER, B.C., Oct 1 -
Bound for new homei md • new
life h> Auitrtlli, i party of 10
Canadian girli — brldei ef Royal
Auitrallm Air Torce mm—arrived
ln Vancouver thli morning ovep:
Canadian Pacific llnea
Thiy are enroute to Sm Trm-
clico where they will board t ihlp
for the Antlpodu. Tht brldu
came from all parti of Canidi with
the main group of B0 from Cilgiry.
A number of them hid (half until
chlldnn with them Iotdad down
with gift! of dolli md toyi given
them u going-iwiy glftt of relt-
tlves md frlendi In Canada.
■nd Mn J. Lea tnd W. Mole of
&yP,rk WM* N'ku,p *^|c^™!M_W.
T. W. Somen md ton, Ronald
Somen c/t Nelion were ln Nikuip
Wedntsdty from Ntlson.
Il/irice (Mic) Keyi irrlved Wed-
Need a Better
Argument, Gordon
tarv ifter visiting hli wlft ind ftm-'n^'^from"Triirto' loin'hlt 'wife
"v.nert. _^ ^ _..___,„„ ,. „,.. |tnd fitnlly who are holldtylng here,
LONDON (CP) - Alr'Chltf Mtr-
■htl Sir Philip Joubert U. hu retired from tht RAT Ht beeime
■ nitlonil tlgun tirly In tht wir
through hll ngulir broidcut! on
tht wir In tht ilr.
Trank Morrow nf Creiton li vii
King hll brother-ln-liw tnd iliter,
Mr. and Mn Imle Thell.
Mr md Mrs. O. G. Ptir wtrt Nilion vlilton. .,,_.,
Mn. Chrli Hinion wu i_dell|M
Ti
guest!  of  Mr.  Keys'  ptrtntt,  Mr.
and Mri. Oeorge Keyt, Nikuip.
Mn. W. Carruthtri of Nelion ti
a Ntkutp viiitor.
Mn. O.  Hood  wii a delightful
ttt  liosteii  on Tueidiy afternoon.
CALGARY, Oct. 1  (CP) - Alberta' and Britlih Columbii minen
will not get more meit rttloni un-
leii they cotnt up with better trgu-
mtntt thin thty hive so fir,JDon-
Pete Zelth returned to hll home it I aid Gprdon, Chairman of the Wir-
Nittl ifter tptndlr/g ovtr I wuk it  Umt Prlcu ind Trade Boird, uld
Lethbrldgt when ha-went on buti-  it t preu conference on hit trrivil
neu. hert tonight
Pte. Prtd MutU. who hu been ln     Mr.   Gordon   itrongly   crfllcUed
tht Army for the put thru yttn | their itrike ictlon.   Tbt luut Wu
Vancouver W|ns
Lacrosse League
VANCOBVBR, Oct 1 (CP) -
Vmcouver Burrirdi tonight won
thi Inter-City Box Lacroist Leigue
championship by defeating New
Westminster Adinacs 13-11 ln the
final game of I best-of-ieven icr-
lei. Burratdi now mut Bt Catharines Athletics In tha Canadian
final beginning here Friday.
FUNERAL SERVICES
FOR GIRL SHOT
AT VANCOUVER
NEW WMTMINSTfcR, B. C, Oet
1 (CP)—Funeril iervlces will be
held' here tomorrow for Doreen
Ryan, 10, who wu ihot to death lait
Wednesday at her borne South ef
neirby MurrayvUlt.
An Inquest Into the little girl's
death will be resumed Trlday In
Mumyvllle. Nobel Monahan, 53,
firmer, ii being held on ■ chirga
of murder in connection with tht
glrl'i death.
TRUMAN UNAIL- TO
ATTEND WORLD SERIES
WASHINOTON, Oet I (AP) -
Preiident Truman will be unable
to ittendtany World Seriei baiebtll
garnet, beciuie of "prevloui engige-
menti md commitment!," tht White
Houm uld today.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiii.ul
Lucky Draw Number
for September.
Miss C. Driver
918 Joiephlne St.
NUMBER 1041.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii]
Labor-Prog. Choose
Candidate
at Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, B. C, Oet l-Ui I
Labor Progressive party In conven-|
tion Sundiy chose William Brown,!
i miner tt Klmberley ai their can-'
didata for the forthcoming Proviri-,
Clal election, bringing to three the!
nominee! contesting tht Cranbrook |
riding.
He wai named by Otto Anderson,
seconded by Mrt. Victor Oakley and
the.nomination wu unanimous. He
U ibout 32 yean old md haa lived
it Kimberley for tan years.
He hu appointed Mn. Oakley hll
election agent The other two om-
dldatei already In the field ar*
Harry Gammon, CCF choice, and
Dr. T. W. Green, Incumbent member
Conservative-Coalition candidate
Many
Women
Depend On It
Come neroee a company of women having __ chit-chat end sooner
or Inter they ire almoet sure to get around to Ibe queetion ol
health and Dr. Chiet'i Nerve Food
Tfiis ia because women of nil agee have lewned to depend on
Dr. Chsee's Nerve Food to help them over the trying timet of
their live*.
The maiden grov. .ng into womanhood, the young mother before
and after childbirth, the older woman experiencing the change
of life—all fad Dr. Chaae'i Nerve Food just what thty Deed to
enrich Um blood and build up nervou*
energy and to help them through theae
trying time* with least disturbance.
Headache, loae of gleep, indtpeetion and feel*
inga of fatigue and depraeton aie avoided
and they have the energy to live a full and
jovoui life. Aik for the new economy gua
bottle of Dr. Chaae'i Nerve Food.
BLACKHEADS
P^.ii-1 iViillil-   M«|lieftf.O-l
Kmrtt CBMB « yevCBM MWt OtOt **F
trm mn. ,ni Ul sm:!, .t M. M
4A Mr ftllTlTll TWy Kmnlm _4
tarn W OO. ml, OmL mn-U.
fui "ho.ru. "tlhr■ howi Thurii,, Z""^ TohaSTpolwrtt
iftemoon when she mUrUlned In JJ m    .prwt-t.d t„ ublt. Mra
?f.•_!_0.' -I.?_J[W?.._.,_!J!1!_*_JVS8 ||ioea«Mrti_.-a htr guutt with
tit cup nidlng. _,
C. Slewtrt trrlvtd from Wlnnj-
old
Mirlons eighth blrthd'iy and Loll'
.fourth blrthdiy. After gimu dell-
.ri..- iaairrstrur^j^^****^®w^*
ii*.J_!?".l T*t ■*?' ftll'-FSji.' B Houghton, R.A.r.,'of Victoria.
2_^MI-__?_2__i'2_lS_E !*h» h" K5 the tueit of Mr. an*
!*f__,h_,^^"-^^MolI_,iu_?'Mri. F  Riymond, left Mondiy for
on Pacific - duty, U ipending hli
leave it home it Natal.
Mlu Alice Ttppay and Mlu Helm
Iwtnluk of Hlllcreit were recent
viiiton it Nittl. i
Mlu Petri Zeith of Ntttl wu t
recent viiltor it remit.
one ot Government be uld. "Il
thtn I Government tt Ottawa, or
an tht minen tht Government!"
Taking the Itw Into their own
hmdi ind trying to "bludgeon" the
authorities Into concesilom would
get thtm nowhere, be uldv
Dr. Chase s Nerve Food
10.   rlf.W PL I'
AND I Nin.y
TRANSPORTATION—Passenger and Freight
■*■      - 1 -■:-■■,       ■  :
iDeddi. ntlnt tnd Betty AnneJUr- hli home,
ien. Joinnt Thill. Adtltlnt rlyr,-     pj,_ Gordon Herke trrl
chuk. Rtrben  tnd  Bettr. Moore. |__, _____ Medicine Bit
Nelson - Trail
Rossland Freight
J. C MUIR
rhot.ii: Nelson 77; Ronlorsd 171
Conntctlont Pari
SAIMO   -.   KASLO   —   C.ISTON   —   NAKUSf
SEf&aSSftJj&J-Sf^^H! tepWiliS furtou'A" WtS h-
flrutchfltld. Shirley Noi.ander.Ann ]eW_K'Ur, md MnTP.R. Hinke,
r__m_nn\t_etti hit furlo-th with
-.. ,-__---_- .'"T._y5.n i«i-'-r. md Mn P.TLt
Htnnin. tnd tht two tuuti ot honor  Marlon md Loll nrnion.
Tht following Pvthlan Sliten
were vlilton le Cuiltftr Wednei-
d.v Mn Kmll I.und. Mn. Minhall
MrDearmld. Mn. Ctde _uhl. Mrt
Carl Andenon, Mn Lew Robloapn.
Mn. Mm Hum, Mn fn Buteket
Mrt. Jim Dnddt. Mn Ptul Ureen.
Mrs MsTtrird Moore tnd Mn Id
Wotte.
rrlved Tuu-
Will
par-
wTtTiRTDOt. Snglind (Rtutfci)
—Lieut Sir Tliomu P. C. Bowtn.
wii'.hire Rtglment. li tht bolder ot
t Brlttfh btronttey wtileh' hu
changed hand! four lime. In lt
I yttn  The tltlt wu cntttd In INI.
F Ruthton md A. K, Bennett returned from Nelton Monday.
Mr. and Mn. A. Woodhouse cime
te Nakuip from nilcyon Hot
Sprlngi Siturdiy, They win tht
overnight gueiti of Mn wood-
houie'i mofhtr. Mn. R. Patleraott
0 route to thtlr homt In Vemon.
Cimeron Hood lift Wtdnudiy
far Kdieofitort
Mn, la. Hughu of Nilion irrlved
Saturdiy and It vliltloj her ptr-
enii, Mr. tnd Mn. O. « Gardner.
Glenbank.
Ttys flnt Capital of Guatemala
wu ittebllihed by Pedro de Alvtr-
Whirls So Good
for Relieving Miseries of
and kupa on mit_H____[*_^*Z^
S       -L .    tmmm     — ■ -■_... ^   mmm___Bmt *
"on tmntwo fwientnnt t*p—tn em .—     _.
grmdmot tier 'i diy—mothtrt tint dlt- eaee coughing ifeimi, help clur cm-
covered Vkki VtpoRub. Todiy It U «_tion In cold-clogged upper hruth-
thtrr»tt!rrl<i_yutedhrii»--rimidylr« Intpaeaap^ rtUen:—
ni-vingmiitriuofd-iirtn'iwld-, ortigt1tn01.lt
tti~_et
tmmcxmveottmt
prornot-rwtfuliltep.
Tin mctntnt wa rub VipoRub on
At throat, cbofand btditat badtiini
It tttrrt to work two waya et (
Ofmttm ot the rr_uryrf«-eS
itrfini.Tryltl
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.
LOOSE LEAF BINDERS
WI MAKI OUR OWN
For ony STANDARD LEDGER SHEET
or SYNOPTIC, ond they carry our guarantee of expert workmarahlp...
We alio make BINDERS to take any
kind or lire of loose leaf iheet or ruled
form,
Write for rortl.uk.re.
M l - ■
Jfclamt Saihi _\ ruts
PRINTING DEPARTMENT
Nilion, B.C
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH
IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHM.
 White Ensign Lowered..,
_______^~____ W ■ '   ____
R.C.N. Base at
I   Written for Tht Canadian Pnu
By LIEUT. GLYN LEWIS,
R.C.-.V.R.
I PRINCE RUPERT, Oct. 1 (OP)
;J "Thil Northernmoit but of tht
j Royal Canadian Navy, which wai
>j on   North   America'!   front   lint
{ durlnu tht dirk dayi of Japaneie
; aeertulon, todiy otiud  opera-
' tlont after ilx yttn of wir.
I H.M.C.S. Chttham: valued at more
than $1,500,000, held a paylng-off
and decommissioning ceremony ut
which the White Ensign wu lowered ln final salute to ll.C.N. activities ln the land ot the midnight
•un.
HIDDEN UNDER
WARTIME  SECRECY
The base, ltt Importance hidden
'for yean under wartime secrecy,
Would hive played in even more
Vital role If Japan hid not surren
dered io suddenly. The Allied
poweri had chosen It u a strategic
cttipult to hurl ."men, ihlpi, planes
md gum igalnit tht Japi,
Extensive ihore installations,
which grew from the small peacetime Prince Rupert R.C.N.V.R
Headquarters, Included btrrtck accommodations for' more thtn 700
men. Guarding the Northern approaches to Canada'i Weit Coast,
the "Rupert" Command extended
from Cape St. Jamei on the Queen
Charlotte Islands North 190 mllei
to the Alaskan boundary.
23 SHIPS ON PATROL
From the early dayi of tht war.
when a few Fishermen's Reserve
vessels patrolled the stormy witeri
Into the open Pacific, RCN. operational strength grew until, In Nov
emby, 1044, 23 ships were on pa
troj out of Rupert. Tney Included
Bangor-type minesweepers, Fair-
mile motor launches, wooden minesweepers and auxiliary craft. In
addition, numeroui tugs ind harbor
craft maintained' the sizeable Northern fleet.
First wartime commanding officer
at Prince Rupert wai Capt. C. D.
Donald, R.C.N., of Victoria, lh 1»»,
followed by Cmdr. Geoffrey Borrie,
R.C.N.R., of Vancouver. Cmdr. Borrie wai succeeded by Cmdr. A. H.
Reed, R.C.N.R., no* retired on Bow-
 /	
Eire Watches for Outcome of Anglo-
American Talks in Washington
ANNOUNCEMENT
A Re^organizbtion of
Air Cadet Squadrons
and their local commit, es will be affected
ihortly.
Out of school squadrons will be formed in every district of the Province where sufficient interest is shown.
• Some school squadrons will be maintained upon request.
All squadrons ore advised to give consideration to their
future plans, Personal contact will be made in each
case by representatives of the Provincial Committee.
The Air Cadet League ol Canada
Provincial Committee
By ALAN MONTOOMKRY
Cinidlan Pratt Corrtipondint
DUBLIN, Oct. 1 (CP) - Eire li
watching with anxious eyes the outcome Ot Anglo-Amerlcin financltl
talki ln Waihlngton.    i
At a member of tha iterllng bloc,
Eire It it deeply concerned ibout
the situation at any other country.
Financially Eire is Just as much
a part ot the United Kingdom, at,
say, Northern Ireland or Scotland.
Her financial dependence on Britain haa become Intensified in the
lait lix years. Mmy ll) Dublin believe that bomb-battered Britain is
brokl and •many alia believe thit
ihe hai bad a "raw dttl* from the
United Statei as a result ot (ht
abrupt termination of lend-lease.
Patrick Murphy, while he hai not
much deep love for Britain, itlll hai
good sense of fair play. He believes that in the war juit, ended ill
countrlei went ln together to fight
at one.
Eire hai accumulated iterllng assets ln London to the tune of £ 154,-
000,000   ($193,000,000)  although be
fore the war aha waa a debtor country te Britain.        . v
LEND-LEASE -NDINQ
The situation, caused by the end
ot lend-lease will have a profound
effect on Elre'i economy If a lettle-
ment b not reached. All tht pott-
wir planning will come to nothing.
Alrnoit 111 Elre'i foreign trade ll
dom either directly through Britain or In Britlih ships, and Eire,
tied hind md foot to iterllng, hat
no dollari with which to carry on
direct trtde with the United Statei.
The dlscuiiions conducted ln
Washington between Britlih tnd.
United Statet representatives then-
fore have vital Interest to Dublin. A
good deal for Britain will mem a
good deal for Bin. Unless there It
an agreement Eire facet a serious
lowering ot the standard.of living
for leveral yean. '   ;
Tht suggestion hll been made
that Eire might obtain a loan from
tht United States to buy Amerlcin
goodi, but for a variety of rcasoni
thli Is unlikely. Financially Eire
probably will link or swim with
iterllng.
Jewish Physician Testifies. t
80,000 Je
to
in'
~PPPWS^P;MPWI.1P_W1UU    ii nmmp^Myw
NILSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, OCTOMR 2, 1941 —1
or
en Island, B.C. After several other
changes, Cmdr. M. A. Wood, ILCN.,
ot Vlctorii, remained at Chatham
until decommissioning.
Tht problem of defending tbt
port  of   Prince   Rupert  Wll  an
iwered by Installation ef a boom
defence oontlttlng of huge ttttl
neti lunk to a gnat depth — tht
deepen known ntti In tht Brit
Ish  Empire.    A tplkt boom, to
keep eut hlgh-tpitd enemy motor
torpedo boati which might hivt
trltd to force tntry Into thi htr.
bor, wat located In Mttlikatla la-
land Panage.
With tht arrival ot U.S. Array
unitt   who  established   a  port  of
lub-embirkatlon at Rupert, the duties ot the Canadian Navy Increased.   During tbe period ot Japanese
aggression,, especially  when  some
of  tht  Aleutiani  wen  occupied,
dally minesweeping wu carried out
ln the harbor approachei. V,
Complete communication liaison
wu maintained at the bate md
throughout the Command in strategic, Island positions Including tht
Kinahan port wir signal itatlon,,
Ridley Island lookout, Port Edward
wireless ititlon ind Mauett wlrt-
lesi station on the Queen Charlotte
Ulanda.
INCREASED SHIP
MOVEMENTS
With Increased merchant ihlp
movement! ln tnd out of Prince
Rupert, the necessity of keeping
vital wir supplies moving Wu thru-
led by the post's naval control tervlce officer, Lt-Cmdr. T. W. Eddy,
R.C.N.R., of Vancouver. In one
peak month, 17 vessels, eich weighing more thtn 10,00(1 torn, md 90
smaller ships, sailed out of Prince
Rupert. They Included Liberty
ships carrying ammunition from the
dump at nearby Watson Island, and
troopship! bound for Aleutian Iilmd garrlions.
Added to theie dutiet came chart-
t*
This is
"CLEAN-OUT-TOm
ClOTHES-CLOSET-mEK
keeping tor a vut area, Lt-Cmdr.
Eddy wu the United Statu Navy
Hydrographlc Chart Representative,
handling more than 700 charti.
R.C.N. BAND
An R.C.N, band arrived at Chatham ln July, IMS, under tbe direction of CPO. Stan Sutherland, R.C.N.V.R, of Saskatoon, Suk. He hu
ilnce been promoted to warrant officer.
Of the thousands of Canadian nil
on to pan through H.M.C.S, Cha
tham md the ships alongside, bun.
dreds will remember fondly tht
lines of a famous wartime parody
en the bate, "Here'i to Rupert, Fan
Thee WelL"
HD_! li your opportunity to help the needy
ind ilcstitutc In wsr-torn countries Cquot-
leaa thouund i of men and women and Little
children, in theie lands, need all the used
serviceable clothe*, footwear, blanket! we
cm spare. Make thii "Clean-Out- Your- Clothes
Closet-Week" in your home. Turnout all tha
usable discarded wearing apparel von can—to
help thoie who hive given all but lifcitself.
Get H out-get it retdy-NOW.
What YOU Can Do...
la Get together ill lerviceible uied clothei,
bllnketl, footwear— for niru. women, children
tnd j ofanti.
7. Tike your contribution to your nearett Pon
Office or any official COLLECTION   I)hl'O 1.
9. Support your Locil Committee not only with
your ciothipj contribution but aim with your
' time, effort end energy.
KATIOHAL CLOTHING COLLECTION
THI CANADIAN AUIID Mill. FUND on
of UNMA
B. C. Products
Part of Exports,
Slates Banker
B. G. Gardner, Vice-President md*
General Manager of the Bank ol
Montreal; wu a visitor ln Nelion
Siturdiy In the course of t five
weeki tour ot Weitern Canada,
which be uiually visits every second
year. He addressed tht Trill Board
of Trill Monday, md alto visited
Rossland for a few hourt.
"Canada'i business," said the Eastern viiitor In t brief Interview, "it
geared to the country's exportable
lurplus of primary producti and ot
goodi
"The Prairie's wheat, md Britlih
Columbia's lumber md bate metals,
loom large In that exportable surplus. We have a 300,000,000-bushel
wheit crop, which, while below last
year's figures, ll substantial md valuable       i - -».    •-1-*
"Canada, with ltt developing resources md Industries, bu become
ont of thi greit exporting countries of the world.
"One ot the problems thead li
how our cuitomer countrlei ire going to pay for whit they buy from
U_"
RECALLS  EARLY  DAYS
In vlilting tht Kootenayi, Mr.
Gardner ii in familiar scenes. In the
early dayi he wu on the staff of the
Bank ot British North America in
LUENEBURG, Germany, Oct l-
(CP.-A Jewish phyilcltn tcatify
ing it the Belien war crime! trial
today uld. 80,000 Jewi, representing
the entire ghetto of Lodz, Poland,
wtrt glued or burned to deith In
one night et the concentration
camp.
Or. Ilgltmund Chirlei Bindall,
tha wltneii, uld thi Germim Had
deilgned a system of trenches
which could burn UNO human
bod lei an hour. He uld he wM
ordtrtd te work In crematorium
No. 4 In Auguit, 1944.
,  Bendell laid:
"They are crowded Into the rooms
by guar A with sticki. The doors
close. There are ihouts, screams,
cries and knocking on the wall.
Thli lasts tor two minutes-then
complete silence. Five minutes liter
tht doors open, but only after 10
minutes can ipeclal workeri get
near to remove the bodlei.
"The bodlei fall.out and are almost impossible to leparate trom
eath other.
"They fought horribly against
death.
"The workers began removing
bodlei—itlll warm, covered with
blood, human excrements. Then the
bodies muit go to the barber and
dentures ud hair are removed, all
teeth are pulled out before they
are cremated. Thoie who were unable to enter tht overcrowded gas
chamber wore lined up near
trenches and shot."
Asked by the prosecutor who wu
the commandant of the camp during
this period, the witness replied:
"Kramer".        , .
Josef Krtmtr is the chief of 41
defendant!.
Bendell uld that 800 persons ware
ihot la tha neck by S.S. guirds and
added that Krtmtr wu prewnt at
the man killing. He was hiked fo
enter the well of the court and
face the accused. He, hurried,out ot
the witness box and wtth a wave of
his hat pointed out Kramer and S.S.
Dr. MU Klein.
During Crou-examlnatlon Bi
dell uid 800 prlsoneri who, had
been forced to work In the crema
torium taction had itaged a revolt
and had niccaeded ttt letting fire to
crematorium No. 1 Some hid fire,
arms, he laid.
He tald S.S. Dr. Mingle carried
on experiments in the crematorium
before prlsoneri were put to death.
FORMULA FOR TWINS
The^S.S. doctor wu alto Intereit
td ln experiments to find a formula
which would guarantee that moth.
en would give birth to twine.
Dr. Bendell laid he lived In Paris
tor 10 yeen before hit arrest ln
November, 1943, for refusing to
wear a badge. designating him as
a Jew. On hit arrival at Osweicim
concentration camp ha became a
doctor for tha internees.
Prosecutor T. M. Backhouse an
nounced he expected to wind Up hll
cue against Josef Kramer, Belien
and t Osweicim camp , leader, md
other defendants .by Wednesday.
He expects to call seven mere witnesses, bringing to 28 the number
who hive told of appalling conditions at Osweicim and Belien concentration campa
Rosiland. and he recall! that* tt
yean ago there wu a Joint banquet
at tha Allen Hotel ln Rouland,' te
honor two business men who were
moving away, one of them being J.
C. S. Fraser, the bank manager, md
it fell to him to mike one of the
ipeechee
"I took e lot of trouble with that
speech," recalls Mr. Gardner, "md
I wrote lt put on piper. After I wu
through making it, Billy EtUng, who
wu Mated next to me, arose, md
addressing me, aald:
"Congratulations, Gardner. I didn't know you hid it ln you."
Mr. Gardner's party consist! of
himself, Mn. Gardner, md J. A.
Hobson, hll private secretary.
While miking longer stops In
Winlnpeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Van-
couver md Vlctorii, Mr. Gardner
hai tin worked In ihort visits to
various intermediate branches, md
in the B. C. Interior bu to far been
at Pentlcton; Kelowna. Vernon and
Nelion. He irrlved' ln Nelion Set
unlay forenoon, having vent Friday night at the W. K. P. e. L. Com
pany Staff House at South Slocan.
He leaves for the Crow Tueiday
morning and . will go straight
through to Montreal.
BATH, England (Reuters)—Police think lt ll tlmt ht wu caught.
A thief who hu broken Into several railway stations in Wiltshire
and Somerset hu In etch case taken away the brut drum clock tup-
plied for uie ln stationmasters' offices.
Rossland Social
Br MRS. F. O. BRAY
ROSSLAND, B.C.-Rty Dominic.
formerly of the Merchant Marine,
irrlved ln the city Trlday from
Vincouver. He wai accompanied
by hli father, A. Domlnlcl, who hu
ipent the lut three monthi it tht
Cout
Don Slmi left Saturdiy for Vincouver ifter ipending two weeki
In the city with relitivei.
Pte. Join Bicon of the CWAC,
Canadian Poitil Corps, arrived in
tbe city Frldiy night to ipend i
ihort leeve with her parent!, Mr.
md Mri. C. Btcon. She wllkletve
on Mondiy morning to return to
her nation it Vincouver.
' G. E. City ton, who hu ipent the
Summer monthi ln Aluki for the
C. M. k S., returned to the city
on Tuetdty.
Sgt. J. Minhall, of the Veteran!
Guird of Cinada ititioned It Lethbrldge, irrlved In the city on Siturdiy to ipend hll furlough with
frlendi.
Piddy Topllu, who recently "received hll discharge from tbe RCAF., irrlved In the city on Frldiy
fr.m Eaitern Canada and Ii the
gueit of Mi mother, Mri. L. I.
Hidfleld.
Mr. ind Mri. John Mttigtr lift
Saturday to makt their home it
Yakima ifter 12 yean reiidence in
the city. They wert accompanied
by their daughter, Mn. B M. Wilton
of Seattle, who hu been their gueit
for t week.
Mri A. Wuorl left Thuridty for
Vancouvtr where ihe will visit htr
dlughten, Pte Wuorl and Pte. Fer-
tlg of the C.W.A.C. '
Mn. J. B. Cooke of Grind Forki,
who hu been vlilting her ten md
diughttr-ln-ltw, Mr. tnd Mrt. Norman Cooke, left Thuridty for her
homt. Little Glorlia1 Cooke, who
hai ipenj the lut month with htr
grandmother In Grind Forki returned to Rouland with her.
Mn. Edgar Jamleaon, accompanied by bar daughter, Mlu Doreen
Jimleion arrived on Wedneidiy.
While vlilting htr daughttn In Vancouver, Mn .lamleion bid the mil-
fortune to tall md break her nip
ind hu been t pitient In Vincouver General Hotpltil.
Mn. Miry Johnion of Vincouver,
•ceompanltd by Mn. Thorogood'of
Klmberley wtrt tht guests of Mr.
md Mrs. T. Kalhovd They in tn-
route home to Klmberley md hire
visited with Mrs. Johnion'i other
diughter, Mn. Zook it Sllverton,
Montana. Mn. Johnion will mike
her home ln Klmberley.
Mr. tnd Mri. Oeorge Dyson hive
returned from t visit to tht Okanagan.
St Andrew'i Church, Rowland,
wu the scene of a lovely, quiet wedding Saturday evening, when In tha
presence of immediate relative!,
Rev. H. K. Johniton heard the marriage vows of Dorothy Jean.-eldeit
diughter at Mr. end Mn. Harvey
Lynn and Walter Ragner, only ton
of Mr. ind Mrt. Guitavc Ragnor
Hanson. Miu Jem Hedley played
the nuptial muilc The young bride,
who wu given ln marriage by her
father, wu attractively attired ln
a teal blue dresimaker suit. A
small dark brown felt, halo effect,
hat, which wu trimmed with fait
lloweri md brown veiling, md other icceuorlu of the tune ihade,
completed her coitume. Sht won
t ihoulder eonage of pink tnd
white carnations. Her only ornament wu a golden locket Mlu
Ruth Lynn wu htr iliter'i attendant. Floyd Birch supported tht
groom. A reception for 100 guests
wu held ln the Odd Fellowi Hall.
Tht hippy couple wen misted by
their mothers ln receiving the
guetti. Both ladiei evore ilmilar
conagei of carnatloni. Vaiei of fall
bloomi wert tffetclvely arranged
on tht tablet. Tht three-tired wedding ctkt, which wu beautifully
decorated 61th tilver letvei md
good luck motifi md topped with
t miniature bride md groom under
t floral arch md wtddlng bell, md
wu embedded In tulle, wu placed
on an Individual table, which wai
covered with a lovely lace doth.
Four white tapen ln twin crytal
Four white tapen in twin crystal
tide. ' After the young couple cut
the flnt piece, Mri. J. Cox out the
cake. Floyd Birch propoied the
tout to the bride and tha groom
responded. The tervlleun were
tht MltiM Peggy Culllntne, Enid
Minteri, Anna Mirle Mara, Ruby
Foil, Ethel Lynn md Irma Htnion.
Mri. O., Erickion and Mn, FriU
Johanton also aatltted. An evening of dancing wu enjoyed.
Thi happy couple left Sunday for
a honeymoon to lie ipent motoring
through (he Stttti. For travelling
the bride donned m afternoon dreii
of green atlk crape, alio t brown
tweed coat and brown acceuorlet.
Victoria to Be
Centre, Not Coast
VANCOUVER, Oct. KCP) - Vlctorii Is to replace Vmcouver, alrnoit Immediately, u repatriation
centre tor thousands of Canadians
md Britons liberated ln the Fir
Eait who will reach B. C. ihortly,
m army spokesman uld today.
Ships bringing Far East repats direct to B. C. will dock it Victoria.
Mm landed at U. 8. ports will proceed to Seattle ud then by boat to
Victoria, he iald. Few, If any, will
henceforth come direct to Vmcouver.
Meanwhile, one of three big Britlih aircraft carriers scheduled to
bring repats to Victoria hai been
diverted to Australia, tha army
spokesman said..
"Thli li either H.M.S. Glory, or
H.M.S. Formidable—We don't know
which, u yet" he uid. Each ot
then ships hu 1300 Canadians tnd
Britons aboard.
"II.M.s. Implacable, wtth 2175—
the largest group—ll coming to Vlctorii for sure, however."
Arrival of another repat ihlp,
not prevlouily reported, wu learned todty,
Thli it tht American transport
SS. Ozark, which will reach Sm
Francisco, Tueiday, with 212 Canadians.
It. wu announced Saturday that
SS. Admiral Rodman will reach
Sm Francisco, Tuesday, with' 104
Canadians.
Thli n\eins that a total of 31- Canadians will reach the Californtan
port tomorrow—the largest group
to date. If they leave Sm Francisco
immediately, they ihould arrive In
Seattle about Thunday.
Rossland Flier
Wins D.F.M.
ROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 1-Frink
Fertlch wu advised by wire September 25 that he had been awarded
the Distinguished Flying Medal. The
congratulatory message from tht
Minister of Air md Chief of Staff
itated the award wu effective September 8.
Frank, who Just returned to the
city from Vtncouvtr, where he received hit discharge, enlisted ln the
RCAF, ln June, 1942, going overieu In May, lMsV.Prlor to returning to Canada In June, 1945, be had
completed a tour of operation! tnd
htld tht rink ot pilot officer. He
hid volunteered for Pacific duty.
Hit only brother, PO. Joe Fertlch,
tlto received hit discharge leveral
weeki ago from tht R.C.A.F. Both
boyi ire it prtunt it the home of
their permit, Mr. tnd Mri. M. Fer'
tieh, In tha city.
Headquarters for
ttt mining, lumbering, railroading and all work that colli
far clothei that con take It...
Bone Dry Work Clothes
Seviceobla and waterproof—Interlined with oilskin. '   JS
TROUSERS-SIMS' 36-44
Pair „_., ..	
MCKETS-Slzes 36-44.
Each , _.
•5.50
•7.25
Frieze Windbreakers
Zipper ftont style, adjustable waist and two pockets'j-wi
Comfortable and warm for outdoor jobs. %£* *\ M
Sixes 36-44 Oe_L J^
Heavy Tweed Trousers
Tailored for long wear and warmth for outside f(J   _yt
jobs.  Sizes 30-38 _/e_i.
Bib Overalls   '
Heavy duty denim, roomily tailored, reinforced at point*-,
of strain. Sizes 34-42.                               %*% fM
Priced at   aLelj
SMOCKS—To match above.
Sizes 38-42	
♦2.75
The "Bay" carries a complete line of Working Mitts
and Glovet for all typet of work.
The "Bay's" Grocery Specials
On Sale Tuesday, Wedneiday, Thursday—Phone 193-194
PASTRY FLOUR:
Monarch, 7'a, nek .
FLOUR! 6 Rout,
49 Ib. nek	
SUNNY BOY CEREALi
4 Ib. pkgi- ea-h 	
SHREDDED WHEAT:
z pkgt	
SODA BISCUITS:
I. B. C., 2 lb. pkgi.	
COFFEEi Nibob,
1 Ib pkgt, each 	
CANADIAN CHEESE:
Lb.	
KARO SYRUP!
2 Ib. tint, each	
FLOOR    WAX:    Old
2 Ib. tint,
38*
$1.63
291
230
ZH
45<
350
240
English,
*85<
"■ 23*
SOUP MIX: Stafford'!, Onion or
Vegetable,
2 pkgi, 	
CHUTNEY SAUCE
Bin, t or. bottle
TOMATO JUICE: Ayl
mer, 20 ei tint, ttch
MACKEREL: Sea-Leer,
It oz. tlm, each   	
TOILET SOAP: Camay,
3 bin	
PALMOLIVE SOAP:
A bin	
LIFEBUOY TOILET
SOAP; 3 bin _
OXO  FLUID:
16 oi. bottlei, ttch
C. 4 B. BRANSTON
PICKLE: 9 oz. Jan ....
150
330
19*
2$t
IH
$1.10
33<
v
incokpOttatao fet hay i870.
Coventry Attends
T.B. Society   .
Meeting at Coast
J. H. Coventry hti rtturned from
Vmcouver where he attended a director!' meeting of the B. C. Tuber-
culojli Society. He represents the
Nelson Rotary Club on the directorate.
The meeting wai addressed by Dr.
W. H. Hatfield, Chairman of the
Medicil Advisory Committee, and
he itretstd tbt treei of t new, continuous fight againit tuberculosis.
stating that 15 per cent of cases
ware coming trom the armed forces
where tbt itandard of health Is
usutlly higher thsn ln the civilian
population. Ht wis of the opinion
thit thli disease would ioon be under control In Britlih Columbia if
the efforts of the various orgmlza-
tlons were not relaxed.
The Board of Directors passed the
recommendttioni of the Medical Advisory Council for the purchase of a
power unit for one of the mobile X-
riy unit!, establishment of in X-riy
clinic • In Vlctorii, tppolntment of
three additional nurses ind t staff
of two to organize the various units
for miu X-rty.
Fred T. Arnott announced that tht
city of Vtncouvtr wii being organized it tht present time for i man
X-rty thli Till. He also paid high
tribute to Dr. Hatfield ind members
of the Medical Advisory Council for
their vtry splendid iupport.
It It the intention ot the Society
to purchase additional mobile units
ai won ai fundi ire available. These
unlit trt paid for from tht lale of
Chrlitmai tetlt tnd ire turned over
to tba Government for operation.
B.C. Policeman
Transferred From
Victoria to Fernie
Comtable G.  E.  Hovind  of the
B. C. Provincial Police wai recentl
transferred from Vlctorii to Ftrnle I
to rtplaoe Comtable J. R. Taylor,
who hai reaigned from the force.
Monthly
Account
Forms ...
No matter whot itylc, ihape
or liie you uw, wo ore
equipped to give you juit
what you want.
We have a complete Ruling
and Bindery Dept. for this
class of work.
We will be glad to show
you samples.
Nelson Daily News
Printing Department
NELSON, R C.
IT'S THE TRUTH!!
We're onftef the biggest and best-equipped
Transfer Companies in British Columbia
DON'T  BE  OLD FASHIONED!
MOVE THE MODERN.WAY
.WILLIAMS TRANSFER
Phone 1106
613 Ward St.
* _____       ■■_.
\
——
 4—NELSON DAILY NEWS,
m .	
T
m_
Headstrong ..
f
Nervous
Parents Separated
By GARRY 0, MY1RS, Ph.D.
.grandmother who takei care of
' Kit
BRAN
IOFFIUS
i npt bro», I at pon nr Am, 41
biting  m-tr,  Vi  as  bran
tt, 1 tn, % eat milk, 1 tablMpeM
•.-Mill- bultir, 1 to.l.n».nl S0YHMT
SKIAD. \
i tttte at* Mill ►««-« togMInf,
I eW m at! bma ttetr, mix milk with
bt-lin an, mill!, bull., tat SOYHART
'   IMIA0 and ttt to dry logrt-l.nti.
r^"s Bit |N_a4 mlfla tlm ',4 roll,   lokt el
.     I75- lo 400' F. (or 20 to 25 mlnutis.
A Recipe on Each Label.
r
QYHART
.It?
LLTD.,Vancouver,B.C-
two grundchildren, boyi ten and
tight, whoie mother works ih a
war plant and li separated trom the
father ("who contributed to tba
chlldren'i iupport but never comei
near them"), layi thi older boy took
the sepsration very hard. "He
adored hll father and Could not un'
derstand, but now teldom mentloni
him except when other youngsters
brif about their dadi, tnd then he
sayi he U dead.
Thli boy lt very headstrong tnd
goet Into a tantrum over nothing
and will not mind us at all. Ha has
hit mother in a state ot nerves is
toon ai the enters the houie. Ht
it nervous, cries easily ind doei not
(et tlong with other children.     i
"He deteitt arithmetic ind spelling. He loves drawing and Is wonderful it It. Ht follows the wtr
trom i mtp he hai ln his room.
"He lovet poems and will stop to
read one, no matter whit be lt
doing.   Please help ui."
That lid hit much strength on
which to build. Enjoy hli drawing!, you and hit mother, diiplay
them on the walli aijd ihow them
to your friends. Listen to him read
the poemi he enjoys. Collect others
he will like. Oet him to write lome
himself. Encourage him to explain
tb you the world's news with his
maps and attract hll playmates to
come enjoy this with him, and play
quiet games. Have lots of fun and
laughter In the family.,
LONDON (CP) - Air mall correspondence for France and Switzerland Is being accepted now for
conveyance by air to Parla.and to
Geneva and Zurich. Air postage
rates are five pefice for the first
ounce and three pence for each
additional our--< ?•- letters and 2.V.
pence for post cards.
TESTS SHOW
LUXED STOCKINGS
LAST TWICE AS LONG I
Luxed stockings last twice as long
without going into tuns, strain
tests show, as'stocking's rubbed with
cake soap or washed with a strong soap.
Let Lux help you make one
pair give the wear of two.'\t'% like getting
an txira pair every time you buy one.
Tests on rayon, silk, nylon, cotton
show similar results.
Dip your stockings
in Lux tonight!
_ I.IVES
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Dear Mist Fairfax. «,
The girl I've been going with tl
almost 21 and Is sn allround good
sport—she swims, plays tennis, and
rides a bicycle, hlkei and
skates ind can even carry on an
Interesting conversation. She'i alio
very good looking, though not beautiful, and has • lot ot frlendi.
Tm very much In low with her
tnd hope soma day wa can gat married. But what can a man do with a
girl who It 10 temperamental? I try.
in every wiy to pleue her, alwayi
do tha thlngi she wants, even It I
don't approve, ind itlll ihe'i unret-
tonible. I'm tfraid I'll tost bat If
I crosi bar. And Ilia wouldn't ba
worth a thing then. F.D.S.
Perhapi you've been spoiling thli
young woman. Maybe If you ihow
a little more Independence in deal'
Ing with her, you won't have so
much to worry about Vary often,
you'll find that the proper .treatment for these temperamental girls
Is the "iron bind In tbe velvet
glove."
CRANBROOK
CRAN-iROK, 8.C.-Mr. and Mrt.
D. W. Dow- have had at gueiti their
nephew, Flying Officer Harold &
Dow ot Nanalmo, hll wife, nee
Kathleen Oreen, Ml mother, Mri.
Campbell 3. Dow of Ntnilmo and
Mrs. G. W. Oreen. FO. Dow returned to Canada In Auguit from India
where he wu attached to No. 17
Fighter Squadron, HAT.
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Slmpion ot
Nelson and Lieut. May Stone,
CWAC. of Vancouver and Cranbrook, are ipending a holiday at
Munroe Lake.
Mr. and Mn. T. A Moore have
as their gueits Mr. Meore'i mothtr
whose home Is ln Calgary.
Frank Hinlon, who is securing hit
discharge after, lour years service
ln the Navy, hu lift to enroll at the
University oi B.C.
Pte. M_el Hughes, who ll stationed
at Vernon, ll spending hll leavt
here with hll parenti.
Mrs. F. W. Green Is ipending several days it her Summer home tt
Mirror Lake She wu accompanied
there by her son, Dr. W. 0. Oreen,
and by Mri. A. C. Nelion of Calgary, formerly of Cranbrook.
Mrt. G. E. L. MacKinnon hu left
for Inveraitre to Join Dr. MtcKln-
non there tnd remain for tht next
few weeks.
Word hu been received here of
the mirrltge In Hollind of Ann
WalUnger, C.W.A.C, diughter of
Mn. Muriel Wtlllnger of Femle,
formerly of Crinbrook, tnd Jamei
Pierce, Cinidlan Army, who wu
formerly with tht Cmidlin Bank
of Commerce here.
Mr. ind Mn. Frink Mtldment
have returned to their home here
after a holldiy ln tht Windermere
Valley.
I Mn. Divid Hunden of Comox It
vlilting litre tt tht home of har
parentt, Mr. ind Mn. Jimu Nor-
grbve. Mn. S. J. Graham and
daughter!, who hivt also bean vlilting it the Norgrova home have left
for Pouce Coupe where they will
join Mr. Graham.
South Slocan
Mr. and Mrs. R. Mulloy hivt rt-
turned from I two weeki motoring
trip to Cilgiry ind other polnti ln
Alberta
Mr. and Mn. A. Mtcront tnd Mlis
Gwen Mtcront wtrt Nelson visitors Siturdiy.
Sgt. David McDonald, who lift
here with the Forettry Corpi tome
flvt yean ago, and hu been ita-
tloned bl Scotland, hll r.l.rn.-. Ht
hu visited (riends htrt when ht
wu living befon Joining up.    Ht
II miking hll htsdrjuirttri with
his mother, Mri. ft. McDonild'In
Nelson.
Mri. Jacob Koilmelc of Creicent
Valley wu tit gueit of Mri. It. 0.
Elliott Sunday.
Mr. tnd Mn. Elmore Rldga and
children Norm! ind Shtron of Trill
have been ipending I ftw dayi it
their home htn.
Mr. tnd Mri. E. J. Leveque of
Rosebery midt t rtoprovir vlilt
with Mr. tnd Mn. F. Oarrttt on
their wiy to Kulo whtre Mr. Lt-
vtcqut hu been transferred u
C.PB. Agent
Mn. title M. Long tnd Mn.
Bernard Harrlion of Nelion vlilttd
Mr. md Mrt, IX 0. Elliott, Mri
Long'i parenti, Sundiy.
A. Tnrlkt of Elko wu weekend
guilt ot Mr. ind Mrt. F. Garrett.
Leading Seimin Jtue Ridge, who
ll on t month'i furlough vlilttd hii
ptrenti, Mr. tnd Mn. w, D. Ridge.
Mr. ind Mn. Stan Ogenikl hivt
lift by motor to ipend i ftw dayi
In Spokine.
Mlu Beverly Oirrttt wu t Nilion viiltor Siturdiy.
Mn. W. EUuk tnd family vlilttd
their homt ln Procttr ever tht
wttktnd.
Frink Scott wai ■ Nilien viiltor
Tueiday.
Mr. tnd Mrs J Bttlty hivt rt-
turned from ipending t tew dtyi
it their Summer home it Betlby'i
Point.
Mn Divid Motlty tnd little ion
Trevor hivt returned from Trill
where thty ipent i week U gutiu
of Mr. tnd Mrs Frtd Buckley.'
Mlu Berth! Ridge of Nelion wu
t weekend visitor of htr parentt,
Mr. tnd Mri   W. D. Rldgl
Mr. Ud Mrt F. Garrett ind family, iccomptnled by C. Torlkt at
tlko were viiiton In Trill.
Mn. Rat Demptey tnd diughter
Beverley Ann tnd Mn. A Muir
wire  Nelson  ihoppen   Saturday.
Mr. and Mrt. 0. W, Humphrey
Ipent tht weekend In Nilion.
Mn N. T-ick hu left tM i
vlilt te kpokiae for in indtfl_lte
tlmt.
Mr. and Mn, jr Dwytr of Trill
were motorliti hert on Sundiy
They were accompanied iby Mn.
Howard Fririfil tnd baby ilte*
a 11111111 ■ 111111111111 g 111111111 • 1J1111111 ■ 1111F1111111111 a 11 f ■ 111 ■ 1111111.111 ■ 1111111111111
diinhgoh '".}
■ Ont-flfth of th»  whole human
i ire Uvea In India.
minimi
Make a meat .outfit with that
tiny bit of mut you have left from
Sunday. You can lerve tour with
l cup of lt. Can you obtain prickly
pear In your town? It you can, a
very colorful ulid, Ideal for ran-
mar serving, can be made with it.
TODAY1* MENU
Mut Souffle. '.
Baked Potatoei
Prickly Pear Salad '
Beeti
Hot Biscuits Honey        .    .
Iced or Hot Beverage.
MEAT I0UFFLI
1 cup medium cream uuce, Vt to
1 cup finely chopped, cooked meat,
1 cup finely chopped raw carrot,
celery or parsley, 9 eggi, separated,
■euonlngt.
Add meat and vegetable^ to hot
cream sauce, stir beaten egg yolkl
ln gradually; cook and itlr 1 minute to thicken yolkl. Season with
emit, pepper or paprika, nutmeg,
Worcestershire uuce or curry pow-
■y BETSY NEWMAN
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
der, ind cool. Beat egg whltet itlff
ind fold in lightly to tint mixture.
Pour Into baking diih and bike In
moderately ilow ovtn (SU degreei
F.) tor io mlnutei, thia Increue
heat illghtly to IN degreei F., and
continue biking until firm .(about
39 to tO minutes ln all). Serve
with tomato aauca or mushroom
uuce. 'Serves 4.
, . Cactui Pear Salad
1 cactui pear, 1 grapefruit, 1 or 2
orangei, lettuce, mayonnaise honey
Prickly pear hai j_\ blend flavor
io ihould be marinated in lemon
Juice. Leave tht leedi In as they
too are edible., The pear It .bright
rM in color, to makei a pretty talad
Peel pear and eut In wedges. Marinate in lemon juice. Alternate pear
with ilicei of grapefruit and orange,
neited ln lettuce. Serve with miy-
onnalice-honty dreislng which Is
made by combining half cup miy-
onnalae-honey dressing which ll
mixed wtU together, and 1 tables
spoon'i honey. Serves 4 to 6.
Taking a Chance....
Salmo C.W.L
Holds
Successful Bazaar
SALMO, B.C.—The Salmo Catholic Women'i Leagua held a vtry
luccessful bazaar ln tht community Hall Wednesday afternoon:
hi tha evening Bingo wu played,
and hot dogi and coffee were served.
Lidlei ln charge of tht bake table
which wu loaded with grand things
ware Mri. B, Campbell and Mn.
Steve Bellas. Fancy Work table,
Mri. It. Leddlcoat tnd Mrs. John
Lodder. Ladiei tarvlng tea during
the afternoon were Mrs. Herbert
Grutchfleld, Mrt. Chrii Mtndln,
Mn. George Bradley, Mn. Doug
Gibbon. Cashier wu Mn. Johnny
Mandln. A cake wu won by Mln
Deryl Watentreet
• i* ■  ■'' r 1—
Nakusp Pythian
Sisters
Plan Bazaar
NAKUSP, B.C.-The ladles of
Myrtle Temple Lodge -made final
arrangements for their forthcoming bazaar to be held on Saturday
afternoon. Committees appointed
were: Tea, Mesdames L. Embree,
C. H. Horny, H, Q'. Gardner ind
II. Herridge; Sales Committee, Mesdames F. Miyoh, W. Millar ind W.
Larsen, J. Parent, Jr., and E. Oiion. Tht prize donated by Mn.
Ed Munn wu won by Mrt, W.
Schleld. Arrangements were made
for a joist meeting with thi New
Denver Lodge on Oct. ., when
Mrs.  R. Hipperson,  D.D.G.C, will
vitit front Nelion.      xt,       » '■
 —-, :—-   i n  ■     ■■   -
By HERMAN N.BUNDESIN.M.D.
When a womtn with dlabetei becomes pregnant and leu thin the
moit expert type ot eare li given,
there it a great chanea that the
infant will either be born dud or
will dlt toon ifter birth. According
to Dr. Prlscllla 'White of Boiton,
many young women with dlabetei
have a lack of Ovarian secretion.
Thil ll ihown by Irregularities ln
the periods, although these women
ippetr youthful ind healthy. Fur*
thermore, personi with dttbetet
miy develop disturbances ot. the
circulation such ll hardening, of the
arteries, particularly thoie h tht
kidneys
Then, too, during pregnancy ln
dlabetei, abnormal conditions occur. Then Include early delivery
ot the baby which appears in about
one of every four, the occurrence
of toxicity or poisoning and weakness of the muscles of the womb
known as uterine Inertia. In practically all iuch women there Is •
failure of tht pitient to secrete milk
tn dlabetei, there Is t failure on
tht part of the gland known u the
pancreas to form enough insulin id
make it poulble tor the body to
uie sugars. In the diabetic woman,
a great deal ot sugar Is lost through
the kldniyi, tnd unless thil it corrected i condition known as acidosis
will develop. In acidosis, there li a
decrease ln tha alkali ln the blood
tnd tissues.
Another condition which may develop ii tht retention ln the tissues
of large amounts of fluids. Doctor.
White also lays that tht glandular
secretions connected with tha lex
glands ire ilso deranged.
Tht babies born of diabetic mothers in eight cases Out of ten ire
•bove tht average in weight. Thin
is due to fluid ln the tissues and enlargement of the liver md heart. On
the tint day after delivery of tht
baby, there Is trouble with the breathing, disturbances Of the median-
lop which regulates tha body temperature and some disturbance of
tha amount af luear In the blood.
In view at all thest facia. It can
bt tain how: Important It la thai
the pregnant woman with dltbetes
bt carefully handled during her
pregnancy. The diet muit be carefully planned and be rich la protein iuch u meat, milk and eggj.
There muit bt sufficient lugar ind
itirchtl. Injectioni of Intulln muit
be given dally, tnd tht amount of
■alt ln tha diet restricted. It alio u
important to give glandular extracts
iuch ll progesterone tnd dlethyl-
itilbutroi. With thli torn of treat-
mint, ln 181 diabetic women who
btetmt prtgntnt only ont luwume.
td to thi disease and mora than
eight ot tvery ten bib'lu wtrt tar-
ed.
1XTRA FINE BREADI
QUICK HELP WITH FULl-STRENGTH FRESH YEAST
Watch Fleischmann*. active fresh Yeast fo tight to work
—help give jour bread more delectable flavor, finer,
smoother texture every time.
IF YOU BAKE AT HOMI, be sure to get Heischmann's
fresh Yeast with the familiar .yellow
label. Dependable - Canada's favorite
yeast for more than 70 years.
MADE IN CANADA
GUARANTEED MEATS
TURKEYS— A limited stock
"A" Chicken, 5 Ilx. up, Ib 38c
"A" Fowl, fresh killed, Ib 32e
Cottage Cheese, Ib. 15c
Ch«es«, Medium, Ib  33c
Pork Lirer, Ib   14c
TUIIHWH
MON.,  OCT.  Ith
AB Btltmeei
tame -ui ta
imeet Ot tee
XUntAt, Oeetme I
SMOKED FILLETS, J Qe
Per lb. -....30
SALMON STEAKS, J /I t
Nr lb.  _ 3**t
PRIM! RIB ROLLS, JQe
Commercial, Ib.  J J
PORTERHOUSE STEAK  A (-«
Commwcla., Ib "J
ROUND STEAK, JOC
Commercial, Ib. 9 0
SPECIAL VALUES
KiTciii cun
Vitamin B While
FLOUR
DOUP  Hetos Tomato, 10-os. can 1 UC
C_aOCO(S   Nelleon'i lfrtu, can 31 C
I Cd   Canterbury, 1 lb. bag 0«jC
Edward's Coffee i-ib.b_g.-35c
O-tS   Quaxtr, quick cooking. *»-<*. pkt 20c
Cereal •««•»'■<-■'"■ • • • •«■ ■ ZZc
t
\_0WZZ   Nabob, regular or tlna, 1 Ib. baf 4vC
MACARONI
Cut.   1  lb.   r>-t  	
PECANS
ammo pimw, i-m v.%.
FLOOR WAX
Olt  fefltth,   ll-ol   Ml _
LIGHT.GLOBES
rmtte. ii. io, «c--n
PRICES      EFFECTIVE      OCT.      Zed     TO      OCT.      6th    •
SAFEWAY
* "'    4
...At   A...
:..:.   ..___  ._.     ._.    .,,
t____M
 wpippiipjippip^ppp^ippfp_jj; i     uiiwwwpfwwm«ifipw wppwinijiiiii
A good smart walking
■for tha woman who-wants
comfort y     ,'".
BR0VyN.6\|.R
V;    WELTEDSOLE .
Price,-* $7.50
««_*»!ei<l^e*a«*^_-_"
iVhi'.vv....'.':
8L__Anclrew
Si Co.
Leaders in Footfashion
—
rta Indli floiti ,to ferry people
eross iwolleh streams ire made
f pottery.
I
KID GLOVES
f«r   FALL
$2.50 to *3.9S
FASHION FIRST LTD.
U-COLM'S FURS
Storage
Repalrt - Alterations
«S9 Baker St.    Phont) 960
. MILK
Give the children
• lots of it
Kootenay Valley
Dairy
Gladys Hudock Weds
Phillip Musil in
Natal Ceremony
NATAL, B.C.-In an Interesting
wedding here. Mlsi Qltdyi Hudock,
eldett diughter of J. Hudock- ot
Natal became the bride of Phillip
Muiil, youngett ton of Mr. ind
Mri. P. Muill, Sr, of the Elk Valley.
The wedding ceremony took place
at the United Church In Coleman,
and Immediately after the ceremony
the young couple tnd thtlr attendant! journeyed to the home of the
bride's father where a> reception
waa held. «
- Miss Margaret Hudock) sister of
the bride, and Miss Nancy Lema-
chukof Natal were the bridesmaids
while Robert Hudock, brother ot
the bride, of Natal, ind Fred Sow-
chuk of Hosmer, supported the
groom. The young couple left for
their honeymoon to be spent at
Calgary and at Banff. They wiTi
make their home in the Elk Valley.      •	
GUERNSEY, Channel Islands
(CP) — Guenity'i "Battlt of the
Flowers", a colorful lummer festival
cancelled during the German occupation, wat revived thii year.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
"BUILD-*. C. PAVROLL8-
A Product
100% Mode
in B.C.
A public spirited citizen
speaking of the B.C. Products Campaign about to
open said yesterday, "I can
think of no better thing.
Things made in B.C. should
be mode better known."
And we are glad to hear
his opinion for Pacific Milk
is o 100% British Columbia
product.
Pacific Milk
Irradiated and Vacuum'Peeked
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
m
I   CUI» AND HANG THIS IN YOUR KITCHEN
OCTOBER RATION NEWS
■UTTER COUPONS Vi-LB. — SUGAR COUPONS 1-LB.
• For Finest
Quality  Meals,
Fith, Poultry.    '
• For Garden-
Freih Vege-
tablei and '
Fruiti.
• For • Fair
Share of Short
Linei of Goodi.
SHOP AT
THURSDAY
_\ fcOTTrt'CdUPON 124
MEAT COUPON 5       Valid
]] BUTTER COUPON 125
MEAT COUPON 6       Vo|y
18
BUTTER COUPON 126
SUGAR COUPON 65
pwsavtecoupo-rspi»-pi?w ...
MEAT COUPON 7 * Valid
25 BUTTER COUPON 127
MEAT COUPOIj. 8       VaW
The FAIRWAY
PHONI 265
FREE DEUVERY
NELSON SOCIAL
Wm^SSt
M. J. VIGNIUX
tnnounctm'enti en thli page ll 11.50
• Mrt. Horace Hume, pioneer
reildent of Nelion, and har ion-ln-
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrt.
Hayes, of Vancouver, are ipending
a ftw days In the,; elty.
• Rev. J. Rosen (ook Thanksgiving lervlce it St. Saviour's Pro-
Cathedral on Sunday. I
• Jacob Knauf of Harrop ipent
yeiterday in town.  -
• Mri. Fred Johnion wu a
ahopptr trom Sheep Creek yeiterday.
• Mri. John Burns ind htr two
little daughters ot Ainsworth wtrt
amqng elty viiiton yeiterdiy.
• Mia. N. Dosenberger of Sunshine Hay ipent yeiterday In town.
• Fred Graham, who recently
hat been discharged from the R.C.-
A!f., it with hii parenti, Mr, and
Mrt. F. M. Ersklne, Victoria StreeL
• A tea cup ihower wai held
•Sunday at tht homt of Mrt. Evelyn
("aslcy, Hall Mines Hold, whose
marritge takei place shortly. She
wai the, winner of the prize for
cardi. those present included Mn.
H. So/cey, Mri. M.' Stain ton, Mri.
Yvonne Bourgeois, Miss Josephine
De Gugliclmo, Mn. I, Moen,. Mrt.
J. Bellargeon, Mrs. 3. Mariana, Mn.
J. Fife, Mrt. T. Imraing, Mn. Ben-
lngtr, Min Jennie Sick, Mri. Ecjith
Edgar, Mn. C. Gates, Mill Gloria
Casley, Mrs. C. Smith and Mrs, G.
Haskell.
• Mr. ind Mrs. Jack Flngltnd,
who visited relatives in Nelson,
Trail and Klmberley, hive returned
to the Coait.
• Mln Georgini DeGlrolimo
left yesterday to spend a couple of
weeki vacation visiting cousins tn
Victoria.
• E. A. Mann, Medical Arts
Apartments, returned Sunday night
from a ihort vacation ipent at the
Coast. Mn. Mann, who accompanied him, will return later.
• Eugene Maglio, who teachei
tt Kamineau, tpent tht weekend it
tbt home ot hit parenti, Mr. and
Mn. D, Maglio, Latimer Street
•' Mr. end Mrs. L. Houde of
Sheep Creek viilted town yeiterday.
• Mra; F, Svott ot South Slocan
spent yesterday in Nelion.
• ' Mr. and Mra. W. B. McKay
were ihoppen from Balfour at the
weekend.
• Mr. and Mra 3. Haiti of
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, are city visitors.
'• John Fraser, Carbonate Street,
hai returned trom e tew weeks
spent in Vancouver and Victoria.
• Mra E. M. Gillolt and her ion
Bill. lift Sunday for Vancouver
where they ire making their home.
• V. Kosianclc and ion of Crescent Valley tpent yeiterdiy ln town.
• Mrs. V. Wilde of Moott Jaw,
Suk., hu returned after a week
■pent at the home ot Mr. and Mn.
C. Irvine,,Stanley Street
• Mrs. H. Breeze and her little
daughter Dawn, Silica Street, are
ipending a ftw dayi at tht home in
Trail of Mrt. Breeze's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. H. Saunders.
• Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Apple-
yard and Mn/ Appleyard's brother-
in-law and iliter, -Mr. md Mrs. E.
J. Vanderwkter of .Vancouver ire
ipending ■ few diyi ln Spokane it
the home of mother brother-in-law
and titter, Mr. and Mri. D. Grobe.
• Mrt. P. G. Mtrty, Hoover
Street hu returned from t holldiy ipent it the Cout
• Mrs. Beuecker of Kulo visited town yesterday. She wu enroute to Spokane.
• Rev. and Mn. W. J. Silver-
wood were at South Slocan Sun-
Mark Cook Cranbrook
Chairman for
Clothing Canvass
CRANBROOK, B.' C. - Wednei-
diy, Oct. S, has been named the
day of the local clothing canvass
which It part of the continental
campaign to collect serviceable
warm uied clothing to be shipped
to Europe for utt thil Winter.
Canvassers irt volunteer! trom
various lervice ind church organizations. Cars havt bten loaned for
the collection ind the Boy Scouts
hive undertaken to help with the
ob. Clothing will be delivered tt
he Red Cross rooms in the Armor-
let for sorting, packing and shipping. Thoie whole parcels are not
ready the day of the collection may
leave them at the Armories until
Oct 20, or the parcels will be collected if the committee is notified.
Mark Cook of the Red Crou li
local chairman, assisted by Mayor
A, J. Balment, Rev. T. E. Roulston,
V, C. Brown ind C. J. Frederlc-on.
CBC Supervlior ol Drama Andrew Allan, above, hu returned
te Toronto attar helldiyt on tht^
Wist coast to produce hit ntw 1 .._t\___j__t 'a_-__L_i «__-___•_..
Winter drtmitlo ttrlti,"Stagt Wt -**•* -7^_'-~,^^ '- y   _T
A highlight tf Canada'i Sundiy •"* V; ** *** "rH*n '*" th»
evening   listening,   Staga  41 will CBC. A Weitermr, Ray Oirby
begin   October 7 tt I  p.m. ovtr . t__i.ii
Radio Station CKLN and ttationt nm **,,rt ,n0,, •, h'Vtlm« ln
of tha CBC Trant-Cintda Hat-   • Vaneouvetj CaHfornli tnd Win..
work. nlpeg.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2
CKLN AND
CBC PROGRAMMES
MORNING
7:30—0 Canada
7:S1-Wake Up and Live (CKLN)
8:00-CBC Newi
8:15— Breakfast Club
8:S0—Breakfut Club
8:44—C.P.R. Train Time
8:45—Tout and Coffee Club
(CKLN)
9:00—BBC Newi
9:15—Musical Programme
0:30—Melody Parade
9:45—Music Room
9:59—Time Signil
10:00-Sketchei In Melody
10:15-CKLN Preu Newt
orouttePfay...
we always enjoy breakfart 4. way/''
10:30—Muilcil Roundup (CKLN)
10:45—Matinee for Modems
ll:88-Muilc ln Walt-time
ll:15-Muilcil Similes (CKLN)
ll:30-Soldier'i Wlft
11:45—Dancing Till Noon
12:00—B.C. Farm Broadcast
AFTERNOON
13:_S—The Notice Board (CKLN)
U:30-CBC News
12.45—Matinee Memories
1:00—Modern Minstrels
l:15-Your Next Job
l:30-Old Fsvourltei (CKLN)
1:45—Old Favourltei (CKLN)
2:00—BC. School Brotdcait
2:15—B.C. School Brotdcait
2:30—The Robinion Family
2:45—Down belt
3:00—Western Five
3:15— Yetterdtv'i Melodlei
3:30—Curtain Echoes
3:45—Swdng Time
4:00—Isabefie McEwtn Slngi
4:15— lubelle McEwan Sings
4:30—Stock Quotations
4:45—Music for Moderns
3:00—Sacred Heart Programme
5:15—Petite Muslcsle (CKLN)
3:S0-CKLN Press Newi
8:45—Chlldren'i Story Tims
(CKLN.
EVENINC
8:00-Clisslcal  Momenta  (CKLN)
6:15—Ctvtlctdt of Melody
(CKLNl
8:30—Ctvalctde of Melody
(CKLN)
8:43—Cavalcade o' Melody
6:S»-C.P.R. Trtln Time
7:00—CBC Newi
7:15—Dr. G. G Sedgewlck
7:30—Claulci for Tsdav
8:00-Polltlctl Brotdcait
8:15-Politlcal Broedcait
8:30—Art Kane.! Orch. i
-:00-Nlght Claulci (CKLN)
»:15—Peerlew Newi iCKLNi
(:30—Roy Shleldi and Co.
»:45-Roy Shleldi k Co.
10:00—CBC Newi
10:15—Derry md Hli Gulttr
10:S0-God Seve tht King
tttttoottmemtemtottttttttttiitti
NEW FALL'
COATS AND HATS
MILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE
**&&>V!KX£ntvx&>*f*mt:smm*t
Reliable Watch Repairing . . .
Consult—
a*****^ ft IAt.ll. «T,
SPENCER SUPPORTS
fo» "health oermenti ond
, figurf control, tee
MU. THU A. GIBSON
llOK.rr Apt!, Nllieh.
diy wtitrt Mr. Silverwood conducted afternoon tervlct it Bt Mat-
thcw'i Church.
• Mrt. Halbauar of Sheep Creek
tpent yeiterdiy in town. :-
• Mr. tnd Mri. fl. Greyion oi
Bonnington vlllted Nelion yetttr-
dW-   ,     "
• Louli Maglio, ion of Mr. and
Mra. D. Maglio, har left for Farron.
• Bert Fitchett of Harrop ipent
yesterday la town.
• Mn. W. Turner, nee Helen
Scanlan, and har two children, Tommy and Mollie of Rosiland, are
•pending a couple of weeki at the
home'of Mri.'J. Winkeliar, Fair-
view. v
Popular Natal
Couple Wed
NATAL, B.C.-A pretty wedding
took place In the Chapel at Natal
whtn Elizabeth, youngett daughter
of Mrs. T. Pugllese ot Natal, wat
united In marriage to Rosarlo Cuz-
zetto of Kamloops. B.C. Rev, Father Brorih- ot Michel officiated.
The bride, given away by her
brother, Out Puglieae, waa gowned
ln white latin, featuring a iweet-
hurt neckline and long sleeves
tapering to i point, and a full length
veil with a crown of orange blossoms. Her only ornament wit t
gold cross, a gift ot tha groom. Sbe
carried a bridal bouquet which consisted of .roses and gladioli. Mill
Role Altomare of Natal wai the
matron of honor while Mln Julia
Jacino of Michel acted at bridesmaid. Armedeo Vercillo of Kamloops attended tha groom and Out
Pugllete, brother ot the bride, acted
ai usher. Miss Treia Anielmo, niece
of the bride wit flower girl. Phillip Puglleie, nephew ot the bride
wu the ring-bearer. A reception
followed at the homt of the bride's
mother, where 100 gueiti were received. The table wai attractively
decorated with garden flowers, md
wu centred by t three-tier cike.
Out of town guesti Included Tony
Cuztetto of Vlctorii, C. Cuattto of
Kimloopi, brothers of the groom;
Mri. Evelyn Schultz, Mr and Mrt.
J. Bombjno and daughters, Mri.
Saccomanno and family, Mrt. T.
Olivierl, Mri. .E. Rogers, Miss Dolores Bomblno of Spokane, Mrs. T.
Romeo of Calgary, Mr. Caroelo of
ll'
N DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, IMS - I
Fernie and Mln Julia Amatto of
Blairmore, Alta.;
The honeymoon will be tpent at
Winnipeg, Fort William, Port Ar'
thur and at Vancouver before re-
CHRISTINE'S
BABY SHOP
,    Acrou from Palm Dairies
»     (Mrt. Gordon Cuthbert)
.     PHONE 331
Children's All Around Pleated
Skirts Sizes 1 to 6 years.
Everything for children up to
10 yeari ot age.
FreemaN
FURNITURE CO.
Thi Houie of .Furnlturt Vtlutl
Phont 115 Nelion
BUY^N ou*:
BUDGET PUN
Terms In accordance with Wartime Pricei and Tirade Regulation.    .
■■___'    ■ •"■ •        .
turning to Kimloopi, where* tif
groom is employed.
The rhinoceros Is dull of elm
but its hearing and scent are ytrf
acute.
  ,	
PPlfPi'^^WpilirfW
'■ I'»'    .   ,       , '   ■  ■■■■.   ■    ■■'t
-.- 'al '■'
>lm\\ HaUtj Nnits
I   '     EitibUihsd April tt ltd!
- British Columbia's
Bi- Most Inttffstitts Netwpaper
Publlihtd svsiy morning except Sundiy by
tki NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, 2S6 Biker St., Nelson, British Columbia.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
gfil-S AUDIT BUREAU OF aRCULATl6Na
TUESDAYj OCT. 2, 1943. •
Poutrymen .Can See
Good Years Ahead
There Is good news for egg producers In the prospects lor the British market in the next two years.
i ■:■■'. Hungry for eggs after a ration of
BlgMp a week per person or less during
..the war year., Great Britain wants all
Grade A eggs wa can ship at least until
th« snd of 1947.
There tre shipping problems. Average tints of dslivery last Winter wss
I days, but this will bt reduced.
Alto is there the difficulty of loti in
transit through cracking. Production of
I with thicker sheila is being urged.
With the release of material for the
aiBufacture of cans and larger refrig-
trator ship tonnage available, the poultry producer may soon find that his
cockerels are a'mere valuable asset.
Last Spring thousands of cockerel
chicks were destroyed.    The dressed
r.try market was not good enough,
poultrymen believed, to offset the
high price of feed. When the meat canneries can get all the containers they
need the demand for chicken for canning will tour. Europe it etger for supplies. Shipments of frozen birds can alto be developed.
..   !
.
Few Problem Men Among
New Veterans
It is becoming lncreulngly desr
I .that the average returning serviceman
F. As not a "problem", as some suggested
I "ie would be, and as some (for reasons
I of their own)' wished that he should
_ be. Most of those who have come back
have not returned as dislocated men,
' needing intensive methods of rehablli-
I tatlon; they hsve come bsck u men
responsible tnd sensible ln their approach to their future. On the whole
'ihey do not dem&nd any excessive
consideration. They ask only for a decent chance to make their own wty
by thtlr own efforts, isys the Montreel
Gasette.
Emphasis was plsced on this condition by Mr. Elliott M. Little in tht
talk, "Tht ^turning Soldier", which
he delivered recently over the C.B.C.
After spesking of the various arrange-
r ments which the management of industry is making for the reception of the
vetersn, Mr. Little went on to say that
the difficulties of readjustment were
, being greatly eased by the cooperative
spirit of the veterans themselves.
"The attitude of those who have returned and whom we have already
interviewed is simplifying the problem," he said. "They make no unreasonable demandi. They seek neither
handouts nor soft jobs. It is evident
that they have given their future serious thought snd sre esmeitly seeking
advice as to how they csn sssure thst
future by hsrd work. If our limited experience with returned men can be
taken ss typical, I would judge the re-
'hsbilitation of servicemen will be less
a problem thsn the reemployment of
thott from wsr industry."
Whst Mr. Little has found concern-
ing the veteram returning to Industry,
many educators have found concerning
the veteram coming to the universities. There, too, as pointed out by President Jamei S. Thomson of the University of Ssskstchewan, the returned serviceman shows sn sttitude more serious and mature than thst of the average student without the experience of
military service. In President Thomson's opinion, they are less a problem
than a challenge.
Plainly what the rntumed veteran
ts s.king for is sn opportunity to make
his own future. For thii rtsson It is
more than ever necesssry thst^uch opportunity shall not be wintlng. If the
opportunity is provided, these mtn will
not be among the most disruptive but
amongit the moat constructive of our
dtittns.
Tht rtcord of thtlr itrvtct ovtrttts
rtreela tht resolution with which thty
fired the probitmt of war. Cantda
need havt no tpprthtnsion thst these
itme mtn will provt less sblt or willing In farr Ihr Inevitable problems of
puce.
Municipal     ?? Questions ??
Library Notes   .ANSWERS
New *Books
FICTION
"NONE SHALL KNOW-Albrind, Mirths.
A tort ot high elite ipy thriller, In which
two young people ot neutral Switzerland en-
l«_e In non-neutral actlvltlti.
"YIOMAN'I HOSPITAL"-Alhten, Hilin.
Yeoman's Is I voluntary hospital, old-fuh.
iontd, btdly llninctd, Inconvenient—but 11
stands tor something human' ind valuable in
tht community, something that' no streamlined metropolitan establishment could equtl.
At tome time or other lt pliyi an Important
part ln the live! of nearly tverybody In the
surrounding countryside. Tht ICtna ll I
imall town ln England, but lt hai Iti coun.
' terpart all over tho world.
"THE WORLD WI LIVE IN"-Sromflild, L,
Htrt tha rtader will find tU tht tpark-
llng entertainment, the dtttniu of plot md
ch1nct.rhr4t.on, tht richneis of btckground
ind tht Infinite virlety of tubjtct tor which
Bromfleld ll famous.
"BLACK CASTLI"-FirJion, Jtffirttn.
How Hugh Donovan happened to bt ln
the Balkans, how he retched the grimly, picturesque cutis tt Holt., tnd how ha became
Involved In ai extraordinary an adventure ai
yet connived by thli resourceful ind Imigln-
•tlve writer li told with Ftrjton't purtomirjr
iklll.
..   t
"THI SILVIR DARLINQS"—Qunn, Nail M.
The herring Industry on the Coast of
Scotland a century ago as background for a
itlrrlng. itory of a community bound urj with
It. Daily Incidents whore md it Mi sre
Inttnptrttd Yd.li the itory of Ottrint, whost
husband wu i victim ot tht iti; Finn, htr
■on, tnd of Hoddlt, who loved htr,
"SO WILL RlMIMSIRID"-Hllton, Jimu."
Tht conflict of Olivia, fortvtr "half child
and half adult", and George, htr flrit hui-
bind; George, lelt-mide, likeable, reformer,,
hid married Olivia, who wu haunted by hir
father'! Imprisonment md tht hatred ot thi
little investor! he hid ruined. Ollvit left
Oeorge for Jiff, tnd yttn liter George met
htr ton tnd lurntd, bit by bit, tht itory
of htr unbalinctd lovt ind wUtulnui.
«A»i»LIBY'8 ENO"-lnnei, Mlchitl.
Appleby's End concerns events which Detective-Inspector John Appleby did not at
all expect when ht iet but on • chilly crou-
country railway journey to inveitlgate a
fantastic crimt in the mow-bound hamlet of
Snarl.
"THE HOUSE IN CLEWE STRIET"-Ltvln,
Miry.
An Irish family chronldt; three gentri-
tions of village lift, lith etntury up to World
Wtr I, with til tht nostalgically Irish Uie
sketched in by I sure hand. A long, entertaining first novel.
"THE WORLD, THI FLESH AND FATHER
SMITH"-Mirthill, Bruot,
. Theiuthor of "fithtr Mtlachy'i Mlrtdt"
writes • wist, peaceful novtl tbout t print in
t Scotch town—from 1908 on, covering 35 yttn
In the life of ■ mtn n lovablt ai Trtncli
Chlsholm in "Tht Ktyi of thi Kingdom."
"THE IRON GATE8"-Mlllir, Mtrgtret
Here Is t rare combination—I popular
myitery story ind the beautifully styled,
well-developed, cirtful, smooth, straight for?
ward narrative thit the profession!! dttec-
tlve itory hater will find himself rttding
wt* pletsure.
"THI  LEPER  KINO'-Koiuk,  loflt.
A richly patterned companion novtl. to
"Blused Are the Meek"—an txclUng bltnd
of roraince and hlltory that is dtltlnid for
the top of thi but nlltr Hsu. Thli book
itormi with epic event! ind unforgtttablt
character!—Bildwln IV, the "Leper King"—
i boy with ■ rotting body and i lion'l hurt;
hii bitutlful lister Sibylla, whose wanton
iou! rtcogniltd no obllgitlon txetpt to love—
tht viclltttlng French knight, Ouy dt Lusts-
nin—and Stltdin. who leads the forcu of
Iilim tgiinit tht Cruitdtri.
"SEFIOIANT  NILSON  OF  THI  QUAR0I"
K.rih, Gerald.
No ont ilnce Kipling hll captured tht
trgot ind ehiriettr of thi Britlih Tommy with
iuch fidelity. Whilt thtrt in mtn llkt Sir.
geint Nelion of tht Gutrdl there'll tlwtyi
bi in Englmd. Thli li hli mignlfictnt itory,
ind tht itory of mtn llkt him, who held tht
line igilnit tht uvige tiiiults of world slavery In tht cruclil yeers of 1M0-41 . . , who
hy covering tht rttriil from Dunkirk, mtdi
Hitltr mlu tht but.
Ope* to;tny raadtr Ntmu of ptrieni
liking quiitloni will not bi publlihed.
Thero It na ehirgt for thli itrvlot. Quti-
tloni WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY
MAIL except when thtrt ll obvloui nates*
tjty fer pflvsey.
X. Y _*., Trail—la Dure a flower tDT ttch
month tl the ytar? If ao could, you pteui
print tjw^lor met               .'-'.--
Yes, there It t flower for each month
of tha year. They are-January, Ctrnatlon;
February, Primrose; March, Violet; April,
Iliter L|ly; Miy, I.lIy-of-the-Valley; June,
Itost; July, Sweet Fen August, Gltdlolm;
Stptember, Alter; October, Dahlia; Novembtr,
Chry.tnthemurn; md December, Polnt.ttla.
Climber: Whit ll tht highlit mountain in thi
Cinadlan Rockies?
Mount Robson, British Columbii, which
hai m altitude ot 12,07.1 feet; Mount Columbii
ranki second, being 13,293 feet high.
Unhappy: Cm I girl of IT years ot Ige leave
home without her ptrtntt' conitnt.
No.
Harpoon, Creston: Hu t whale teeth?
Not ill specie's hivt teeth, but the iptrm-
whale, bottle-nottd whale, ind dolphin hive
tetth tdapttd to thtlr diet of flah, gtntnlly
numerous tnd uniformly pointed.
Looking Backward
10 YEAS* AGO
(From Dally Newi, October 2, 1935)
Britain md France ara dlicUuIng mutual
. ild ihould war brisk out In Europe,!   -
Trill Junior Rugby enthusiasts are turning out in regular fuhion but tha tint weith-
tr li holding up practices.
tl YIARS AGO
(From Dally Niwi, Octobir 2, 1920)
President C. A. Bogirt of tht Dominion
Bank and a party ot director! md officials
pined through Nelson lut night from tht
gout on thilr wiy Eut.
Hon. S. F, Tolmlt, Minliter ol Agriculture, tddreised I large crowd at the Nilion
Fair yesterday after noon. Ht ipokt from
tht bandstand u ilso did Miyor J. A. McDonild md Dr. W. 0, Rote, M.P.P.
40 YIARS AGO
(From Dally Ntwt, October 2, 1906)
Dr. P. I. McLenntn, who has practiied
medicine In Nelson ilnce 1899, left lait night
to establish himself In Vancouver. Both tha
doctor and Mri. McLennan will be greatly
missed.
Tht smeller it Pilot Bty, which hu been
Idle for seven years, will ioon bt In operation again according to C. Fernau, who itatei.
that nagotiatloni htvt been proceding for
some tlmt.
Today's Horoscope
A birthday today gives a lovt for petoe
lad harmony, t sunny disposition tnd an even
temper. You avoid conflict!. Quarrels mjke
you fetl dipresttd. Literature md music Intereit you. You trt divottd to your loved ones
and they, ln turn, esteem you. Should my
plani or appointments go awry today, do not
Itart ructions over the matter. Try to straighten them out logically and sensibly, without
cauilng a great emotional upheaval at a trying cost
Test Yourself
1 Whin in SOS ll itnt by heliograph, li
It • wireless miHsgi, ■ ttltgnm, signalled
wtth t flig or fluhed with i mirror?
]. In whll nunery rhymei dot! a stringed
trio inttrtaln royalty? ,
J. Which muilcil initrumtut rttghes tht
highlit note?
TIST ANSWIRI
I. Fluhed with i mirror,
a 'Old King Colt".
I. Tht violin.
Words of Wisdom
A fool miy hsvt hli coit tmbroldtred
with gold, but it ii ■ fool'i coit illll.-Rlvtrol.
NON-FICTION
"A. WOOLCOTT; Hit LIFI AND HIS
WORLD'-Adimi, Simutl Hopklni.
The eontndlctory chiraeter of Woolcott
li revelled tl never befon in thii guity, goi-
lipy blognphy by t noted tuthor who knew
him long tnd Intimiltly.
"W|  ITAND   ALONE    Ada-,,   Dorothy.
Thli li thi itory of Poland's prograu bt-
twetn tht win—in Amtrlein glrl'i itory of
tht lind ihe lttrned to call homt.
"MINOR  HIRtllir-tipiy, John,
Delightful ikttchei of a childhood ipent
In I Pretbyttrlin million In the nttlvt city
ol Shtnghil. A picture of strange lights.
loundt ind tmtlli; ind of people—Chinese
•nd Aauricini, eookt tnd mltsionirltt, ill
done with ■ warmth ind humor that malm
ter lomt of tht pltmrrteit rttding ln i long
time'
"TELL THE FIOFLI"-lutk, Ptirl.
Wh Hi Jamei Yen and hii Mm Education
Movement art famous smong frlendi of Chlni,
fir too llltlt hu bttn known ibout thtm
ihrotd. Thli li tht flnt tomprehtntlvt
dtierlptlon of t plan tor chinglng million!
tt i people In • atngle gintritlon, which hu
been tatted In China for It years tad fouhd
valid. It dtttrvtt tht titration, est thoie who
would pramttt tduettlon In India, Afrlci,
r«rli et South Amtrlcs, tnd tht SoVithtrn
U-U»
"LOVPILV  IS THE  LIE'-Olbblnji, Robirt.
RebtH Olbblisgi, rtirsnlelir ot thi^Thimn
■     .1 ,   n______________._, _. ...     „_.  ,_2^....t
Etiquette Hints
Whin other people in rudt to you. don't
fellow their tsimpii. Xitp your tamper md
treat thtm w|th itudled polltihiit
•nd thi Wye, hu rtvltlttd hit nitlvt river,
tht Lti In County Cork, tnd hu brought to
hli description of itonti tnd fltldi tnd bop
•nd rocki of Southern Ireland ill hli iklll
•■ irtlit tnd writer, together with in undtr-
■ttndlng of tht peoplt thit only in Irlihman
cm tehlivt.
"NINI  MILE  BnipGE'-Htmlln,  Helen.
Tht diughter of t Maine gime wtrdtn
went to thi timber irei nur tht Cmidlin
border to teich ichool ln • lumbar camp.
Thtn ihe married t gime warden, ind for
thru yeiri they lived ln the wlldtrnttt,
travelling by dogiled tn wlnttr, living en
game whtn luppllti were low, and enjoying
both the lolltudt ind ocrtilonil vliljrori. Vot
ovtr written, tnd will ippaal to nitun lovtrs.
"THI MORAL CONQUEST OF OIRMANV
-Ludwlg, (mil.
The Internationally Known German-born
hlstorltn tnd blognphtr analyse! tht Oet-
mm chancttr, ind telii how mortl tnd pty-
chologletl muliry of Otrmmy mutt bt
achieved to prevent i ntw war,
"SECRET  MISSION   IUBMARINI"
—Jewell, Lt. N. L. A,
HlghUghll of .tht nir. stive of tht Britlih
•ubmarlnf Strtph trt tha rolet It pltytd In
Oeneral Mirk CUrk't pesssge te Afrlu, -ttt-
•ril Olnud'i rticut from Frtnt*, ud reeen*
iniutnct for tht Invulon of Sicily. Told
hy Iti iklppir, ont of England1! wir htroet.
Tbt beit md most compltte picture tboird
a tlghtlng tubmarlnt ytt publlihid.
Bonninglon Soldier Wins
lor Bravery in Holland
rr*
LIEUT. W. D. ELSDON
a OTTAWA, Oet 1 ^I-Award of
'Hit Oeorge Mtdil to Lieut. Walter
Douglu Elsdon' of Vineeuver and
Bonnington, B. C, Boysl Canadian
Artllltry, for peat bravery ln rescue work durljg an immunitlon explosion ln Holland, and award of
British Empire Medal to S. Sgt.
Clarence D. Woodcock, R-CJ!., Vancouver, wu announced by Defence
Headquarters today,
In citing Lieut Elidon, tht announcement uid an explosion of
immunitlon occurred it Nltuwiluli
Zuld, Holland, May 20T104-, when
a vehicle full of German explosive
wu being unloaded. Five soldiers
md two civilians wtre killed by the
blast, md two toldlert snd four civilians wounded. A further ammunition dump txplodtd, snd burning
liquid iprttd npldly.
Ignoring ptrtoml itltty, Lieut.
Flsdon rushed Into tht Inferno tnd
cirried tht moit itriously woundtd
to ufety, while hli men, inspired by
hii example, aided tht other Injured
to get eleir of the tire.
Lieut. Elidon then evuutted til
persons In tht vicinity ef the ammunition dump, ud "his action li
credited wtth living the lift of one
mm and preventing further casualties te hli men tod civilians."
Lieut Elidon, whost wife llvu it
%m W. Uth Ave.! Vmcouver, went
oversets In Mtrch, 18U,
NATIVE NELSONITE
Lieut Elidon, IS, wai bom ln Nilion md atttndtd High School hart.
He wu In bit fourth year at University ot B. C. whan ha enllsttd.
Hi received hll public ichool tdu-
catlon tn Bonnington, where hll parent!, Mr, md Mri. W. 0. Elidon,
reside. Ht ,li believed to be on his
Wty home from 'overseas.
Arriving in England ln tha Spring
of 1941; he served with the Flnt
Cinidian Light Antl-Aircraft Regiment in the Central Mediterrantan
for some monthi beginning In Novembtr, 1M3. Ht went through Sicily md Italy with thi lit Divliion.
A brother, Wirrtnt Offictr (Flnt
Out) R. W. (Bob) Elsdon, urvid
u tn RCAF. Air Qunntr oviniti
foe two yttrs.
!»"«  '!'■
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OLD FAVORITIS
The British Amerioin Oil Company Limittd makes
THREE ANNOUNCEMENTS
OF INTEREST TO EVERY
CANADIAN MOTORIST
Here's t post-war plan already in operatioa
1. British American Oil
NOW OPERATES THROUGHOUT I. C.
Effective H ilte thliinh At purtKut e( tilt Union OB Comptnr of
Canada hy the Britlih America-. Oil Cenpat- lluilrad ftm Un Ion Oil
itaiion will carr* two ligns—the well known oringi-tnd.Mui 7S and »hr
•Iftt of tbt Uf B-A- Thii mtant thit wfitftree feu drive In Britiih
ColtmUa joa wfll fad tha eourteout tetrkt and hl|b quality peeduett
(vr which both, rompmiti ate rrnownrd.   .
2. British Amtrlean Credit Cardi
NOW VALID THROUGHOUT B.C. ANP THI U.S.
lifftcdrt tl once, rustowtrt of both Britlih Amttkan tnd Union 011
may um thtlr oedit caids tt all unions displaying either ee both t_-t.
Thtaa cardi will ba be-eecd throughout ihe Unltrd Sttttt, tool PrienUy
imngtnt-H havt been eeaplewd with thrrt etfaee p««t indtptndtrit
oil rompanlrt-Giilf Oil, Mid Cemtlntnt Priroltum, Union OO ef Ctli-
fornli-to wottDM tnd tern motetilti holding B-A lad Union Oil
cradit carda.
v 3, British Amtrlean Oii
RESTORES GASOLENE TO PRE-WAR QUALITY!
ni.«ti»i t| net, gtsolmr of prtwar pewet Md Kenemy U baiag nedt
• vtiltble it ill B.A-Unloa Oil ttttitmi h BfUhh Columbia. And., new
jr tuperi-f gteeleaet   ftttriact
tfBt tiglatt ttt produced, bnmeaiurabljr
of wat-yt tee-tieh tad ■ttaiWMtiag ttftitf  tM htrt yew ditpoaal.
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Buy-wilh omIpmmi ti th« itfi if tin iif B-l im tht OrMfe-BM-llB«
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_ .'    •   a   ..._l
V.nieur.r   •   Ctlgtry   •   At|lM   e   WlanlH|   •
». -4    ' •' .   eT: ■
•   Moeltttl   •   WntJtha
 ■y ,* ■  - '
illRevlval In Nelson
isslul; Intermediate and Kid
sr Also Rep Play
iball, which flnlihed a
hid • successful leaion,
all tht difficulties which
themselves to ihow ftlth-
who   revived   tht   Sreat
sport.
ttt of the tenon provtd
thing but promising al far
itermcdlate ball aspirants
learned. Ron Nash, Bob
il and. Leslie Browttt
chief lupportert of Inter-
all.. The Fah view Athletic
ilch was btcklng a Kid
_etgue, lent its equipment.
Kit deptrtmtnt also do-
iw balls tnd bats. Al the
tranced baseballs and bats
ery scarce, but Slin. Por-
lwsys able to get enough
:eep the game going.
Kid League, which was
by the Fairview Athletic
It teams, the Bogut Town
if the City Dudes, and the
flayed out a Spring league
of U games, which halted with tht
clou of ichool u most of the boys
went out on C.P.R. and Forest Service extra gangs.
The Intermediates, who wtre a
little later In getting started, played
a total of 21 league and exhibition
gamei.
Teams wtre Ihe Inlaws, Outlaws.
Juniors and Cuba
IS INTER-CITY GAMES
From the Intermtdlttt League i
Rep team was chosen, and It wat
only through tht lunctloniny, of
thii team that Nelson baseball fi v
were provided with a little sport on
Sundiy afternoons. To Ron Naih
and Bob MacDonald goei credit tor
tha tine work they accomplished,
especially in tha out-of-town garnet
where transportation wai a big
headache, but the team alwayi got
there tome wiy or another. Altogether the team played six games
away trom Nelion—two ln Kaslo,
-"ST I
■<<0Befs*-r~i,_
oooww^ta
fa&&%»%
GOODYEAR
vMi
W_i
w
tmaii&**cbla
CFCN
CALGARY
1010
■in  ,ls*l*l<P9ili*mHJ||.<Wipinfl.|||VI'       " '»'l aanip^yii
Sitter ef Mrs.
Towriu
Diet tn Ontario
Mn. M. Towriu, Strtthcont Hottl, hai received word ot tbe sudden
death of htr iliter. Mri. Jitnti Vil-
entlne ot Waterloo, Ont
lbs. Valentine bu viilted through
the Watt, and letves miny friends
behind here. Funertl services wtre
btld Monday at Waterloo.
NILSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, OCTOIM 1, 1*41 - 7
i i      i .i      ■ i   i .   i
Hurl in World Series Opener
PENNANT WINNERS: Hare la the litest
.roup photo of tht Detroit Tlgtri, Amerlcin Leigue
chimploni. Top row (lift to right): Ray Fortyth,
(trainer): 'George Cllttr, Leillo Mueller, Jamei
Miller, Ztbtlon Eaton, Arthur Hourtoman, Paul
Trout Third row (left to right): Jamei Tobln,
Chirlei  Hoitetler,  Russell  Kirnt, Walter Wilton,
Jimtt Webb, Robert Mtltr, Edwird Borom.
ond row (left te right): Robert gwlft, Ftogtr Crimer, Henry Greenberg, Jamtt Outlaw ind Robert
Hoover. Prom row (lift to right)! Edward Mayo,
Alton Benton, Arthur Mills (cotch), Steve O'Neill
(manager), Paul Rlchardi, Harold Newhouier and
Prank Overmlrt.
ont ln Trail, one in Rossland, tnd
two ln Salmo ind seven home
games, Kaslo playing here once,
Salmo twice, Castlegar three timet,
and Trail once. Besides that the Intermediates played two Sunday exhibition games with tht FAC Juniors.
It took a lot of work on the part
of Ron Nash, Bob MacDonald, John
Harry, Fred Nash and Slim Porter
to dress up the Infield each Sunday
morning for the game ln the afternoon. In the early Summer the attendance was good, but the collections were poor. Thu boys entered
the Rossland Labor Day tournament but lost out to Castlegar. They
blamed transportation troubles for
their poor showing in the tournament.
"Taken all in all, considering the
adverse conditions we had io face,
the boyt played a lot of ball. We
won ume tough ones, tnd lost some,
but we kept the game going, and
with the start of next year, it will be
that much easier," itated Slim Porter.'
Major League
Leaders
By The Attoolatad Prttt
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Batttng-Cavaretta, Chicago. 2SS.
Runt-Holmes, Boiton, ind Stanky, Brooklyn, 127.
Hlti-Holmei,   Bolton.  224.
Doublet—Holmei, Bolton, 47.
Trlplea-Olmo, Brooklyn, 13.
Stolen basei — Schoendienit, St.
■VoWWTBrffetf, Rttsbn-gh, ».
Pitching—Brecheen, St. Louli, IB-
i .789.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Bitting—Stirnwelss, New York,
.309.
Ruat-Sttraweiit, New York, 107.
Hltt-6Urnwe_i, New York, 18S.
DoublMr-Moses, Chlcigo, 34.
Triplet — Stirnwelss, New York,
33.
Pitching—Muncrlef, St. Louis, 13-
4, .7-9.
Bears' Lead Reduced
to Three Games
NIW AM. 1U„ Oct 1 (CP) —
Montreal defeated Newark 7-2 here
tonight In the fifth game of tha In'
temitional League"! final play-off
series to reduce tht Bear.' lead ln
the bttt-of-teven gime set-to to
three gimei to two.
Montretl :.-    7   16    1;
Newsrk    I    3
Roy tnd Todd; Drews, Ftrmer
(«>, Nikosky (8) tnd Stelnecke.
'Ntwtrk ltidt beit-of-ievtii ter
les 3-2).  .
BAGSHOT, Surrey, Bnglind (CP)
—There ware 261 ipplictnU for
ont vacant house htrt. Tht Coun-
dl decided to do lt on t points
bull—10 point! for military I
vice, five tor wife, five for eich
child, five for stack five yeari of
local reiidence.
Michel Mines
Back Working
NATAL, B. C. — In accordance
with agreement, the Michel mines
were working today to provide coal
for the byproduct plant. Thli arrangement was approved by the executive of the Michel local union.
Unlike the beehive coke ovens,
which can be stopped and cooled
off for days like the preient holiday
layoff, the byproduct ovent cannot
be stopped operating, md muit(be
kept heated at ell times to a certain temperature.
It ll going Into the fourth diy
Ilnce the Michel miners Joined the
thousands ot other Alberta miners
in protest of the present meit rationing.
The slack coil available tor the
byproduct plant hu been entirely
uied up, lt thus being necessary
that the mines operate for one day.
The. output will be used only for
tbe operation of these expensive byproduct ovens for some dayi. to
come, depending on the length of
time and layoff affected. In tha
meantime a number at Natal-Michel
miners ire making uie of their
preient holidays by hunting up in
the nearby mountains, especially
since all the big game came Into
season.
The Natal-Michel butchen were
all doted today and will be until
Wednesday.
GA? DANCE HELD
AT LEGION
Tbe Canadian Legion was the
scene ot a lolly dance Friday nlghl
when a large crowd wu on hand.
Quite a number ot khaki tnd blue
uniformed penonnel wire special
gueiti to twill t gay crowd.
Prise winners wtre Mrs. A. 0.
Witeon, Mri. V. Gravei, Cpl. Rock
ot Jericho Beach tnd Alec McPherson. ,
A committee of its wu In chtrge
oontiiting of J. E. Bennttt, chairman; O. Anderson, F. Thompion,
Mrt. H. Harrop, F. Rapley and N.
Bradley.
Deaths
OTTAWA—Frederick W. Runge,
SB. well-known figure in Ottawa
printing and ntwtpapcr circles.
Oak Park, UL—Dr. 3. W. G. Ward,
writer of religious worki tnd 14
yeari pastor of the Tint Presbyter-
Ian Church it Oik Park.
New York—Edwin A. Stuphln, 52,
national advertising manager of the
New York Timet for the lait 26
years.
Tht name Guatemala means lend
of tht treei
About 11,375,185
Watched Major
League Baseball
NEW YORK, Oct 1 (AP)-More
fans watched major league baseball ln 1945 than ever before as
five teams passed the 1,000,000-mark
and the over-all unofficial total for
the IS clubs soared to 11,379,183
paying customers.
To that total add the uncounted
thousands of women, servicemen
and knot-hole-gang youngsters and
tbe grots attendance would be sure
to reach 13,000,000.
Detroit's pennant-made citizens
juit mined letting tn all-time individual mark at Briggs Stadium
where 1,280,321 crowded through
the turnstiles, hardly 10,000 under
the New York Yankeet' high of
1920. The Tlgert were rained out
of one home game.
The Yankees ilso made the million Club in the final, two dayi ol
the campaign and three teams did
the job ln the National. Brooklyn's
1,064:668 was high ln the senior
circuit followed by New York'
1,038,195 and Chicago's 1,037,026.
[Work of Nelson
Miss Canadas
Praised al Coast
Congratulations to Nelson's Mlu
Cinada Girls on thtlr objective of
23 hoipltal -bed! by Christmas In
their War Saving! Stamps campaign
it given ln a letter to Mrs. E. T.
Koch, I.O.D.E. convener of the Miss
Canada Committee, from Miss Elizabeth A. Wilier, B. C. School Saving! Director.
Mln Wilier alio told of the Intereit ot the Prince Rupert girls ln the
"energetic work of the Nelion Mlu
Canadas and your attractive Stamp
Canteen". Tbe Rupert gifls, the
continued, "report that the first
'Stamp Day' after the war, they had
tbe intra difficulty thit you mentioned about tbe general public not
being conscious of the continued
necessity for buying, but they are
getting In their stride again and
making it a point to talk to people
ind explain to them that money la
itlll needed tor hospitalization; education ot returning lervlcemcn;
maintenance and pay of men overseas; doling up ot wir contracts,
tnd establishing credits for devastated countries so that thty can
purchase vitally needed supplies ln
Ctnadt,
"This Is the story that your girls
can tell and we hope that these
polnti, together with the very evident antl-lnflatlon measure and
personal thrift effort, will be factors
ln breaking down public sales resistance."
Mri. Koch had suggested changing from Wir Saving! to "inflation"
itampi or juit "saving." itampi.
The ldet, Mill Wilier iald, wu an
excellent one. "However, you will
appreciate," ihe uld, "that there
are still thousands of Wir Savings
Stamps printed tnd u the money
loaned It itlll needed for mopping-
up operations of wir, .the preient
name li itill applicable"
OtTllO-T, Oct 1 (AR - Her*
Borowy, wiry pitching gift from
New York Yinkeet, will open ihe
World Seriei tor Chlctgo Cubs
tgtlnit Detroit Tigen In Detroit
Wedneidiy.
Mtntger Charlie Grimm of the
NttlOntl Leigue chimploni, telec-
ted Borowy todiy and Indicated
that he Would start Claude Ptiietu
In the second with either Hank
Wyie or Bay Prim In the final
game at Detroit
The Cubi, dripping with conf 1
dence ind rain, held a meeting be
hind doled doors to vote on their
division of the World Series prist,
end then boarded tbe train which
arrived here thil evening. Captain
Phil Cavarretta tald no announcement of the divliion would ba
made, but reporti Indicated that
about 28 full shates were agreed
upon, With perhaps t part thare
being divided by the clubhouse attendants and bit boy.
Strangely enough, Borowy, whose
two September vlctorlei over St
Louis Cardinals aided ln the' flag
clinching, was not eligible to vote
ilnce ht Joined the club ifter June
1. However, It was indicated he
would get a full share. Since itarting with the Cuba July 29 agalnit
Cincinnati, Borowy bu won 11
games ind lost only two.
Grimm laid he wu considering
Prim u a starter, but it a situation iti. ted where relief wu needed. Prim would be uied ln that
role, too.
If rain on opening day puahtd
tht game back until Thuridty
Grimm laid that Borowy would
■tart anyway. He'll be held In readiness until the opening game Is
played, regardless of weather conditions.   . "•
Chirlei Leo (Gabby) Htrtnett
who managed tbt Cubt in thtlr
1938 Nitlonil League trlurpph, gave
them tn excellent chance to win.
Htrtnett ihowed up it Wrlgley
Field to greet tbe players.
DETROIT, Oct 1 (AP) - De-
trolt'i -triumphant Tlgtri fought
their Way through a welcoming
throng here today, and Chicago
Cuba, the National League champs,
pulled In tonight feeling tit and
tough tor tha opening game ot
World Sarlu Wedneiday.
Mantgtr Steve CNelll of the Tlgert looked over hit bedraggled
athletes u they piled otf the train
from St Louis and said: "You're
looking at tha next world chimploni."
Til iayi we'U definitely win lt
ln ilx gimei," continued the Tiger
leader. "We've got the pitching tor
beat their ean off. Hank Borowy't
Ihe only pitcher they've got who
figure! to give ui tny trouble. He
knowi our batten."
Both clubi were due to work out
at Briggs Stadium Jomorrow. Senator A. B. (Hippy) Chandler, Baie-
ball Commissioner, checked in at
hla hotel and iald he would bold a
couple ot pre-itrltt meeting! tomorrow, first with the umpires and
then with the umpires and the rival
manager!, to iron out any possible
arguments.
In Wednesday's tint game, before
an attured sell-out crowd of about
33,000, the Tlgert will start their
left-handed ace, Hal Newhouser,
who hat won 28 gamei, including
Sundays clincher at St Louis, when
Hank Greenberg poled a four-run
home run to end all home rum,
Tht Tigers were slight favorites
to win both the first game and the
championship. To wager on tha
Tlgert a bettor had to put up $13 to
Win $10. The Tiger admirer could
bet $7 against 19 thst hii dub would
win tht tint gime. Or, if ont liked
the Cubt to win tht opener, he
could get $0 against hit tS.
Germans Respected
Graves of tho
First Great War
VANCOUVER, Oct 1 (CP)-
Orsvu ot tht Allied deed in the
Flnt Great War wtrt respected by
the Germans in the Second Great
War and are in remarkably good
condition despite the conflict, Maj.-
Oen. J. H. Roberta, Chief Administrative Officer, Central European
District of the Imperial War Gravei
Commission, uld today. Qen. Roberta, accompanied by hit wltt and
daughter, li visiting In Vancouver.
"Cemeteries iround Boulogne and
Calaii suffered quite e bit ot damage trom our own bombing and
shelling," Oen. Roberta said, adding
thft otherwise except for being
overgrown, "the grtvei ire Juit u
they were ln 1939."    -   '
Charlei Lindbergh delivered the
tint transoceanic air mall.
Tourists Injured
in Car Crash on
Way to Cranbrook
CRANBROOK, & C.-On their
wiy here for a surprise vilit to jrel-
atives, Mr. and Mra. Thomas Col-
ouzii of Burlington, Wash., were
Injured when their car rolled down
a 100-foot bank between Dorr and
Waldo about SO miles Eait of here.
Mr. Colouzli is in the hoapitsl with
i fractured pelvta, while Mn. Colouzli received bruises tnd face lacerations Both their imall children
wert unhurt except for bruises.
Tht car jumped the bank, rolling
over seversl times, ind stopped
Ihort of tht Kooteniy River. Mrs.
Colouzli crlwled out of the wreck-
ige and hailed a passing truck on
the highway for help. The car was
badly wrecked.
Medical attention and the ambulance were aent for ln Cnnbrook
and the four were brought here.
They were coming to visit Mr. and
Mra Sam Hatcliffe.
Production of
Electric Energy
Drops in Canada
OTTAWA, Oct 1 (CP)-The dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today electric energy produced
by central electric itationi in August amounted to 3,237,613.000 kilowatt hours, compared with 3,274,-
831,000 ln August 1944. ,
Output for the first eight monthi
of the current yur aggregated 27.
188,381,000 kilowatt houn, compered with 26.953,157.000 In the similar
period of 1944.
This Army
"A i-lut- |a all thin ntctmry mtn—In future you'll dlipema
with the Ittf lew wtitttleir
THE CIOV__r-NM__NT OF
THE PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
PROVINCIAL ELECTIONS AG
'   Form 10(St.ti.i,4-)
Proclamation of the Returning
Officer
Province of British Columbia
In the NELSON-CRESTON Electoral District
TO WIT:
PUBLIC NOTICE it hereby giv.n to tha Vottri of Nilson-
Creiron Electoral District that in obedience to Hii Ma jcity's Writ
to mo directed, and bearing date tho 31 it day of Auguit, in tho
year of our Lord ono thouiand nine hundred and forty five, I
require thi presence of the. said Voters at Nelson Court House
on the fourth day of October, 1945, ot twelve o'clock noon, for
tho purpose of nominating and electing on* person to represent
thorn in the Legislature of thil Province.
THE MODE OF NOMINATION OF CANDIDATES SHALL BE
AS FOLLOWS:—
•Tho candidatoi shall bo nominated in writing; th* writing
shall bo subscribed by two registered voters of tho district as
proposer and seconder, and by tin other registered voters of
tho laid district as assenting to the nomination, and shall bo
delivered to tho Returning Officer at any time between the date
of thii Proclamation and oni p.m. of tho day of nomination. In
the event of a poll being necessary, such poll will bl taken on
the twenty-fifth day of October, 1945, of which ovory person ii
hereby required to take notice and govern himself accordingly.
GIVEN under my hand at Nelson, thil fifteenth day of September, oni thouiand nini hundred and forty-five.
MARGARET G. OLIVER,
Returning Officer.
I>«ry parson who dettroyt, mutiletei, defaiet, ar WW any Procltmttlon
of the Rettimlitf Officer posted sp In |Wrenews* tf Hill Act, 4ar4itf tht ptriod
for which it Is rtqulrad te ha to pottld up, shall he llekk, on iu-.m«ry con
-,eflon, te • pemfty net t-ceedlftf ten hundred end fifty dollen.
 r
I
meWmm*}wmmmmewwmmmmiKm^
• — NELSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, OCTOBER X 1945
ews Pictures
taWJ-tla-fr ifiitJ
WESTERNERS MEET: An Army phetosrepHkr breaks up a
"chlnwag" In a ward aboard the Ltdy Nelion at Halifax to take
a picture of Sgt Len. E, Thompion, Reglna, (In bid) dtterlblng hit
adventure! with a Public Relation! ntwtrtil group on tht Italian
and Northweit European front! to Ptt, J. A. Clirkion, Ntw Wttt-
mlnittr, B. C; Ptt. A. B. Connell, Trail (lift); and Cpl, R. A. Campbell, Vlctorii (In rear)a—Canadian Army Photo.
WAR CRIMES JUDGE: Former U. 8. Attorney-General Fran-
cii X. Diddle, of Philadelphia,
Ptnn., hll bttn appointed by
Preiident Truman to be the U. S.
Judgt on tht International court
whloh will conduct tha forthcoming wtr criminal! trials In Europe.
GERMAN CHILDREN ARE HAPPY IN ALLIED SCHOOLS: Thli Allied ichool for Qtrmtn
children hu bttn cpcntd it Aachen, Germiny. Tht
picture ihowt ttgtr young pupils enjoying thtlr
ntw Ituoni from which ill tricei ef tht Nul doctrine in eliminated.
DARINO YOUNG MAN OP 77 AND A
COUPLA PALSr Strnarr MtcFieStn, famed physical culturlit, celebrated hll 77th blrthdiy by practising  what  hi  hai  alwayi  preach.d   In I  demon-
itritlon cf agility en tht cronbir at hll homt In
Miami Btach, Fit. Flanking tht clarlng young mtn
of 77 trt Lent and John Knox, of College Park,
Md. Thty ire tht chlldrm of Mrs. Howird Knox.
"It's lovt il ssecond il|ht The Brtt
tlmt he saw her he didn't know
!ht wu an htlrtas."
Pantry Shower Hold
by Natal C.W.L
NATAL. BC-Tht NiUl-MJ-h.l
Citholic Womtn'i Latfiit bald t
lucettiful pantry ihower on bthilf
ot UK Klslers of tht Atcntmtnt In
tha Odklftllow't Hall. Blnfo' and
whlit wtre^ltyed. Lait year • ilmilar panly ihower wu hrld for tht
Slitan. who art spending thtlr tot-
tod y«r it Nilal-MirheL   <
fytu undemwo, cf cairn,
THAT 10U vsa MM TO Mi T
certain mec npMaNV
PCFOre WE CM ENROLL VOU
W A tfbOAL Aft-NT.
WU SI TMMT TO MUT CSWNAU
SM PHONES ANO te-tCTBOatV*
WJUU BE eHOttt MM A BMPWi_f
turn etrti a tmrcm, cw M
a tuns to sook morr eairrsi
%
■ W ■,
-
i
_i
 W^fttrVtSlfey
lit?
PHONE 144
BIRTHS
t-To Mr. and Mn. Her-
Corner, Sept. 22, at Koo-
B General riospltal, a son,
>ert. Mrs. Cooper waa tho
ss Jessy Watson ot Edge.
FOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS
ILP WANTED
-2 MILL SAWERS, TIE8
mber,    snappy    portable Branch: 413
{of makers, contract, top
.pply to the Selective Ser-
:i.e  Cranbrook, B,£ or-
. Large Stock
WNDOWS-DOORS
FRAMES-SASH
WHY WAIT?
For windows to bt made when you
can use OUR STOCK SIZE. Write
tor catalogue ihowlng rough openings In wall
B.C. SASH k DOOR CO.
MS W. Broadway
    Wettmlniter.
iWnWr'"
AM
Box   3J,   Ol
ittrop.  i ,
Ga_M Wds-NAKY. JW' nr.
plained.   Only   10c.   "Delmsrh"
Creicent, B.C.
and Exchtnged J "'
■fe TWO PARTNERS OR
take over logging and
BlU' operations. Capacity
iiisand. Will finance con-
lily equipped. 11. A. Gnus-
-L5--1NG CONfRAC-
cut, skid and haul logi
e Little Sl-can River to
1' M. Cameron,   Slocan
U WAITRESSES, EX-
l preferred but not net-
Apply Zenith Cafe, Cran-
■TTi6T)__r_Sw_R7T<6
M to one child. Out ol
Tiry Box 2636 Dally News. 1
-3.ET OF USED GOLF
pply Box 1632 Dally Ntws.
3R HOUSEWORK, *35
K 838-L, 10M Stanley St
KTIONS WANTED
il tow ratei tor non-com-
advertisements   under
islficatlon to assist peo-
Bl employment. Only
ine week (• dayi) coven
mber of required lLnet.
i In advance. Add 10c tt
mber It dctlrcd.      	
Sced   cook   WfT!.
vanti Job ln two weeks for
ew. Fare advanced to Pin-
eck. Apply by mill to Mrs.
i Meyers, Twin Butte, Al-
i-WORK AS CHAMBER^
I hotel, or to clean busl-
remisei.   Box   1532   Dally
mmmm
tnd sprayer outfits. Tht burner
has many met including burning
weedi. dnlnftcting, thawing, heating, and with the spray ttttch-
m-nt you cm ipny alrnoit any
light liquid solution iuch aa disinfectants,  whitewash,   kerosene,
etc. Write tor lllii.ttated circular.
WILLARD IQU-PM-ItsrT LTD.
660 Beach Ave          Vancouver
FOR 'SALE ~ ELEC.   B-AtfT!
waihlng machine, '36 modal, and
Wettlnghouie elec I tube mantel
radio. Alio itxaphont, C-melody.
All   good   condition. Apply  C.
Mann, Queen's Bay.
FOR SALE-WA"GON"$2t/.00rTWO
sets    logging    sleithi  $90.00.   I
thrashing machine KO0.00.1 hone
1150 lbs.»M.00. Cawley _Curwen,
Salmo, B.C.	
receipts to page with duplicate
sheets. Nelson Dally News Prlnt-
ing Dtpt	
WESTINGHOUSE CYU-TOER
type vacuum cleaner ind electric
hitter, 630 watt. Juit Uke new.
Phone 818-L.
PIPE - FITTINPS - TUBES. 8PB-
clal low prices Active Trading
Co., ail. Powell St, Vancouver,
120 BASS CARMfiTKANO ACS
cordion 1200 cosh. 2117 2nd Ave.,
FOR SALE - OTBBte HEATER.
Excellent condition. Ph. 838-X or
call 811 Joiephlnt.	
FOR   SALE - HOUSEHOLD   EF-
fects, 623 Victoria St, Afternoons
Tues. to Frl.
BF pVaiie sT_Nogra:
ver 15 yean' experience.
___---
~ OL GIRL WILL MIND
i a week. Ph. 1065-L.
new 6ftUSJ.fi WWkWOi Ar-
tlcles. Pay less at the Ark Store.
FOR SALE-OAK DDiiNO-tlOOM
tablaiand tlx chain. Ph. tggC
NEW ELECTROLUX CLEANERS.
Q. Fraser, 1104 McQuarrle.
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
SINESS AND
INI
RBteNTATlVit
*iw-o¥SFCOs-aT
,hine St, Ntlwn.
IMSLA--. b. cZ
. Chem-t Mint tol
KOOTENAY j
jnntve.
 _Ti-RY
410 Kootenay St, Nelson
I Independent Mine Kep-
R. Box 5- Trail,B.&,
OmTc-NTRACIORC.
^JiLbWG cO-'lnU~ir-
, too smtll ot ^_)^t__[
^ftOPBACTQRa''   '
Ud-AREN, DC-CHIRO-
tay Splnopaplw. Strard
. Bldg., Trail BO, Ptt 828
rSTrMG-ANIJ
Mer. B.C. Land Sur-
^iana and Grind Foru.
SFfLECK, 216 GOBE S1!,
lcsT?&XTii
ate.
hone 135.
.U-raKCK
MACWH48T8~~
TS LIMITED
hop, acetylene and
~ motor rewinding,
324 Vernon St
.fS MACHINE §HOP-"
j in mine and mill work
work, light and heavy
and Acttyltnt wilding
Nelson Ph. «
. St. Nelson
FOR SALE-MIXED OR DAIRY
farm, 78-38 teres. 30 under cultivation tnd irrigation, 10 suitable
for cultivation partially cleared.
13 acrei irrigated pasture. Accredited herd ot Jerseys. Horse, firm
machinery. Write or ctU Mra J.
H. Heywood, Crtwford Bty, B.C.
TRADE FOUR ROOM S-lti-MoC".
era bungalow ln centre of Chilliwack for similar or larger house
ln Nelton, 88 ft. front, three blocks
from Pott Office. For quick ictlon reply.it once to P.O. Box 392,
Chilliwack, 	
f6r SAtfc-s. ACM TORS aT
Wlnlaw, B.C. Loti at wood and
water good. Building!. 6 acrei under cultivation. Level-and best of
toil Apply O. Stanton, Winliw,
FOR &a__W ACRES NEAR BoW-
nington or S. S. Bulldlngl, young
fruit treei, bttrlng. Bait wtter
supply    tnd    electricity.    11500.
. Write BOX No. 1521 Nelson Dally
_Newi,
FOR SJU_E - 150 ACRE RANCH,
loti ofwattr, good lind, Umber.
65 head cattle, S horses truck, 8
milking ratehlnti. Kelly Creek
Dairy, Frulteale,    .	
FOR -JAt-t-ftOflW TN WW LO-
cation In Nelson. 4 big rooms tnd
bathroom. Apply .£. J. Tirlant 324
Behnsen. Ph. 311.
oOtTTaIrv-Ew iivEL lot,
close In, near ctrlint. WIS. Tennt.
Box lofe Daily Ht
SEE US IF YOU~
Utjt.-.     ■                 . f...'>\,, 11,
■Mged J. Chtu. 51
ion St.    , •   •        . >	
JlftB'AT'BPlC-AlJW'HA-
never-falllng remedy for skin
dlieaies. Write to E. Thauberger,
M.H., Box 914. Vincouver,
iffmrnjcnrsi mrmsi
Lloyd's Corn tad Callous Salvt
gives prompt sura relief. 50c at
Fleunri Phtrmttry. , .
EtfURVfeD BrnWcWm SPE"-
elallit ln European itampi. US.
and Britlih bought, sold. The New
Stamp Shop, 508 Hornby, cor.
Pender, Vincouver, B.C.
sbLts -MtdPia. ami hunt-
ed, 35c. Reprlnti 4c each. Daily
lervice,
orders
> extra print! with 50c
Satisfaction, guaranteed.
orden.   Satisfaction   guaranteed,
__ Macdontld, Box l°t), Kimberley,
- IONS pHOT">-25c
Bex 434. Vancouver
Any 8-exp. roll developed and print-
ed tec Reprints tt. frte 8x7 coupon
Physiotherapy ond Massage
Electrical treatments, cabinet batht,
particularly helpful ln cases of arthritis, rheumatism, nturltii tnd limit.
Reducing courses. Phont 1121 for
appointment. 614 Victoria St
Hum wtv__wns an-, print-
ad (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. He-
prints 3c each. For your snapshot!
ehooie Kryital Finish Guarcntetq
non-tade nrlnts Krystal Photos,
Wilkle, Saskatchewan. Established
over SO veart.    ,	
FURS
Buy your fur coat not?—Special
pricei, Urge selection—No luxury tax.
POLAR FURS LTD.
MS Granville St.      Vancouver
STOP ITC-UNCl "M-tUOWflF
attemt, psorlnsli, ringworm; athlete'! foot and other ikln irritations with Ellk'i Ointment No t
Ertieription of noted ikln ipeclil-
t Itch relieved promptly, ikn
*3*f|eal*d nulfkN or rnonev ref'^d-
ed, 91.00, $2.00. Mall orden filled
promptly. Order todty trom Eilk't
Medicint Co.. Uept u, sauatoon,
Sask
STOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-
lowlng itomach Dliorden: Add
Stomach, Ir digestion, Heartburn,
Coated Tongue. Bad Bretth. Sick
Headschei. etc Use Elik'i Stomach powder No. t, prepared by
exnerlenced Pharmacist It mutt
give Immediate results or money
back 11, tl Ellk'i Medicine Compiny, Dtpt 42, Satkatocn, Saik.
ed, 61.00, 12.00. Mall orden filled
promptly Ordtr today trom Blk't
aim wootb wiija w awn
a 910.000 Home built wherever you
.with?   Or If you prefer we will
Jive you 810,000 In Victory Bonds.
lont-tly 9100.00 Victory Bond
drew. Proceedi for underprivileged children tnd their playgrounds. DON'T DELAY. SU
down right now, tend 9100 to
Vtrnt Tupllng, Secretary, Klwtti'-
It Club of Sudbury, Box 53, Sud-
bury, Ontario.	
HAVE YOUR DOCTOR AND
Hospital bills pold anywhere
in North Amerlco—N6 need
for lorflt odvonce payments
or groupi. Contract can be
paid monthly. Join the Reliance Heoltti Assoc., Chamber of Mines Bldg., Nelson,
B.C.
chrVsler   ;
FLUID DRIVE'
GASOLINE
POWER UNIT
' ;■ ■  ' \- ■.
" nuftcturini
'■\
Lawrenct   Minuftcturlng   Co.
88 h.p. on belt type TI-20.
jmplete  with crown puller,
1cm (Tax Included)
Complete with crown
Brit
mn
F.O.B. Nilion
Sptclally deilgntd for portablt
lowmlll operation.
NELSON •
MACHINERY &
EQUIPMENT CO.
P.O. Drawer 230    Nelson, B. C.
If It'i Mtchinery You Want,
Consult Ui.
SAW   BETlTtl
economical!;
tnd up-to-rtr
table Sawmills.
NATIONAL   MAI   „
LTD.. Vanoouver. B.C.
:_R Li
illy. Oi
datetyi
UMBER MORE
'se the modern
pa National ~
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
. OF RELIABLE MININ-
MACHINERY
Mancha Trams and Mucking Machines, Mint Rails,
Pipe, Compressors, Rock-
Crushers, Ball Mills. Stop-
ers, Jack Hammers, Velvet.
Vancouver Sales &
Appraisals Limited
Mt Beach Avenue
Vtncouvtr, B. C.       t.,'
MNTAU
OISCHAIia-b AffiMAN Alfp
WANTED, MISCELUNWUS
SHIP US YOUR
Kimberley Desires
Probationary Officer
KIMBERLEY, B.C.-In efforts to
curb, juvenile delinquency, and on
recommendation ot the Ministerial
Aiioclatlon, the City Council li
securing Information on coit ot a
full-time mile probttioniry officer. Willingness of the other
communities in the district, Cranbrook and Creiton to share hll
servicei and tha cost are alto being
sounded. The Ministerial Allocation concluded -recently thet the
problem wai baled on lack ot tup-
erviilon rather thu lick ot recrta-
tlonil fiellltlet. •
Three Servicemen
Return to Natal
NATAL, B. C. ~ Tht ltteit ttr-
vieemen to trrivt ln Ntttl-Mlchtl
and b) Cinsdi for tome yeari art
Spr. R. N. Olundt of tht 4th Field
Park Squadron, who arrived In Nt-
tal to ate hit Wl(t and'ton ifter
strving overieu for mere thia five
yttrt, Alex Moihuk tnd Pte. Fred
Muill,
. Spr. R. N, Olundt Joined the
fereu In July, 1940, tnd lindtd
ovtrseti ln November, 1941, with
the Royal Engineer!, flrit la Afrlci whtre be taw action in Ihe deleft campaign before moving to
Italy, France, and finally la Holland. While fighting In Italy ht wu
wpundtd in the arm lait yttr. Hit
parents live In Coeur d'Alent,
Waah. He haa e brothtr In the U. 8.
ftrcei, Gunntrd Olunde, who flnt
wat a ptratrooptr and later trant-
ftrrtd to the tlrborne, tad who It
tt preient ont of tht U. 8. occupation troopi itatlontd In Japan.
Alex Moihuk, who It aa electrician aboard a Cantdltn ihlp, Is
spending hli lesve ti the homi bf,
hit Ptrentt at Mlchtl. Be hu bten
In tat Navy ilnce the eirly part
of tht war .tnd hai teen action
In Europein waters while en convoy duty aad wtt tboard tht Uganda, Canadian crulier, one ef the
first Canadian fighting ihlpt to let
action la Pacific witcn.
Pte. Musll returned to hli homt
at Natsl tftcr spending tht lait
three yeen en coastal duty with the
Canidltn irmy throughout B. C. At
waaeal he Is stationed at Port
Hardy. He went Into tht army la
1942, and wu tt one time alto stationed at Prince Rupert. Hi hu
another brother Pte. Joe Muill in
Ihe army.
IwP^pP^.:      •'
NILSON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY, 0CT0IIR 2, 1945 - t
■" —"     t ia   ■ ■ t-i_pi' up —an., jin-miy i.^».-tm.,.ii mymyititni w>  _
A.C.T. Urges Change In Ferry
Hours, Mountain lime lor
The Nelion Qub of the Assocltt-, pled In travelling u ftr u Creiton
ed Canadian Traveller! met at tht *■'*_ "» «me forJUfMng «-•, the
when aub projecti tor the coming itor ^ BL^ K wu gg .jgjat* it
itaion were glv%> coniideratlon. I wai itated, that the advanced time
Following discussion u to local, leaving Gray Creek would enable
matter! effecting commercial tra- those travelling to Nelson on tht
vellers working out et Nelson, a i late terry to arrive In Nelion bv bus-
memorandum and resolution was I ine.s hours and those on the earlier
prepared and baited fer submlsilon terry to have some three houn for
to tht Provinclil Minister of Public buslneu.
Worki, requesting a change ln tht A resolution wu also pissed sup-
Winter schedule of the Mala Lake; potting a change In present tlmt
firry, At oh Oct, 1 there will only I toning, so tl. at this- district u far
bt two ftrry trtpi per day, and as Wett ■• Rock Creek would be on
present hour of departure meint. Mountain Time; instead of Pacific
that the whole of the day la occu- Time'as at preient.
Toronto Stock Quotation*
MINEI
Aumauue _
Anglo-Huronltn
Aunor	
But Metali Mining .
Buttle Gold Mlnei.
POWER SAWS-OASOm« AND _  , ,   ,	
tlectrlo model T, I b p.; model U bm-o-j Klrkland ,
8 h.p.; Beaver model, one man , ^X mj.,,~	
RITCHIE k SON LTD, 918 Horn- |r__S{t_iLr^
bySt,VtncoHVW,B.C. ______ ISrfteSwrtcla"
FOR   SALE — ONE   PORTABLE Cochenour	
sawmill, 48 inch circular "saw,
3 7-i.ths mandrel, friction! feed.
2 block carriage. Apply Box 1641
Dally Newi. __*
le roi poRTaWi m
preuori. No orlorlt
EQTJ&I-iNTSER'
Hornby St Vtncouvtr,
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ITC.
News.
MBtr
yTCOoTJ
accident or sickness Policy. C. W.
Appleyard, M3 Baiter St	
LOST AND FOUND
rtRED A6COUNTANT
I M. HOYLAND
aei Accountant
Bt, Trail    ___Ph_
I HAND ■.T.RE8*
LOST-25 YR. PYTHIAN SISTER
I   service pin. Return Mn. Spooner,
I   RJH, No. l_.	
HJI LOST^REr). COCKEl.   SP^ANIEL.
Phone 580-R.
J EXCHA1
your Ph. SU. Ark Store.
ESS OPPORTUNITIES
t.PARK-13 NEW STUC-
qs; two acres on Okanagan
Sally's Rabins, Pentlcton.
BRIDGE, England (CP)—
litli Alley celebrated her
■today here by going shop-
)OM AND BOARD
MD BOARD. POLICEMAN
Iness man preferred. Ap-
11637 Dally Ntwi or phont
Save on Home Heating
THE COST OF DtSULATINO
YOUR HOME COMES BACK
TO YOU IN SAVINGS ON
FUEL-BUT WATTING COSTS
MONEY. YOU CAN SAVE BY
INSULATING NOW WITH A
CAMPBELL LOAN. YOUR
LIFE IS INSURED AT NO
EXTRA COST.
CAMPBELL
FINANCE CORPORATION
LIMITED
560 Btlfer St. Phone 1093
Abovt Flnki Retdy-to-Wetr
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS      6. Mulberry      JS, A continent
1. Foretell I. Windy 24. Slacken
8. Wanting        7. Descry 23. Wooden pin
luster t. Titanium,     27, Pair
12. Covered (iym.) eurloutly
with fur 10. Lure 39, Dirt
U. Backbone 11. Checked       30. Oil of rote
14. Oitrtch-llkt 12. Not many pttala
bird (vtr.) lo.Obtervad      81. Ruler
15. Pig pen 18 Exclamation      (Tunis)
ir,. Music note        of contempt .1 J. Fish
17. Pronoun 19. Volition      84. Crete
18. Rtmunertte 20. Thick illce
- ' 'II'.' _ll
!•
a ii,
il.:.''.-'.'1
•1
■*'t j
'.'IM.'   7
'l.
.Vll'
. ut
;
HUM •
. ui-1;
ii
■in •;
ii'iii.i.'.'
•r<
it
[JHl -■•'
nr..'.
HUH  1:
•;;-
ClM'.t.
;  mu jui f
i:<ii >:i.
(vjr.
llrl
1'13.'
WftH  u
,'|-
in.
Kfuwi:
:uri:_'ii
la
it____i
_________i
Ll
SACRIFICE SALE OF HOBsS^
3- blki., 5 and 6 yrs. 1100 lbi. 1
buckskin, 9 yrs, 1850 lbi.; tin
hetd from 1200 to 2300 lbi. from
140 to 873. Cm bt lean Ted Run-
dell's Ranch, Park Siding, B.C.,
about 10 mllei WtfUf Salmo. Dt-
livtry can be arranged. 2000 lecond band racks. G. O. Quite, Ron-
land, B.C.	
FOR~SALE-10 AYRSHIRE HE1-
fen, 3 year! old, good milk strain.
Also i good hones, ont very tin.
. tie. Apply R. D. McGregor, Port
Crawford.
FOR SALE OR FXCrlAVflll—'lll-
gittered Yorkshire Boar, ihort
rose type, 2 yesri old. A. Dostn-
berger, Sumhint Bay, RR. 1, Ntl-
son. 	
FOR SALE-ONE   BAY
weight about 1000 lot. 7 yi
Apply Mrs, C. Trozro, A[
foA SAH1 - WAV? WdRI-
hone, 1750 lbi, 7 yeart olt
tie. R. J. Preiton, Ktleden,
F0RSAL_*-4sH_A_0fCA'
80     COWL
Frultvtlt.
Conlarum Mlnei	
Coniolldtted M - 8
Donilda 	
Dome Mines _.
Eait Malartic	
Filconbrldge Nlcktl
Hard Rock Oold	
Holllnger
yeari ol>
\ppledale,
Hudson Bay M _ 8 .....
Internet Nickel   -...
San Antonio Gold	
Sherritt Gordon	
Slieee Qpld 	
steep Rock	
Sliden Milartte .—.-.
Sulllvun Coni  ,
Sylvanlte ...,; _._.
T C Ret
Teck-Hu«hei''"''cioid'"Z
Tohurn Gold Mlnei „._
Vinturit. _——
Wtlte Amulet  —
Wright Hirgretves _
OIL*
Chemictl Reiearch —
Imperial  ...
RoyallU  	
Ktrr-Addlton	
8.85 ,
.15
1.28
.35 Vi
.17
5.93
1.43
1.82
2.80
4.73
1.58
70.78
1.55
27.35
2.85
8.10
.82
13.23
33.00
40.88
5.50
.83
.70
2.25
..50
8.05
3.23
1.53
5.10
.,1.80
2.14
11.85
3.70
4.30
.30
1457
19.30
1.67
VAMCOUVM   STOCKS
Kelly   Creek  Di
aEyl
for saTe-cow 'TOST I-rW-T.
cred  Second calf. Heavy milker.
873. N. K. Poohtcbow, Winlow,
MINM
BBX	
Btyonnt  	
B « Con	
Bralorne 	
Cuyunl —
Cariboo Gold —
Dentonlt ...	
Golcooda 	
Grandview   	
Grull Wihkma -
Hedley Mucot ..
Int C * C -
Island Mountain .
Jaton   	
Koot Belli  	
rTEW' UlAb 'OF' TMeSHOuafl-1 ^f^ei'""
bred ihortborn etttlt for tale. J. Sito '"'
Perry, Canyon, B.C | fni jj^jjj,"
FOR  6ALE - 8IX-WEOC-Ol_p Pioneer Gold
feeder pi|i._ Apply 1044 Ftlli St. prtm Bord
or phont
VlT
-T
FARM, GARDIN I NURSERY
in Satla Ni>ma
te_EPHOI« 144
ted Advertising Rate
Unt per InierUon
. line per week (« con
intertlont /or cott ol 4)
Una a month
a lmcrl
aline
-met)
£
Bum 2 lines per Insertion
numb*™ Ho wtrt. Thli
any number of timet
JC (LEGAL) NOTICES,
TENDERS. ETC
line flnt lniertlon tnd
subsequent Insertion
BOVF, RATE8 LESS
PROMPT PAYMENT
CCIAL LOW RATEt
com merclnl sltultloni
for 25c lor iny rtqulrtd
af line, for ilx diyi.
In advanoa.
ION RATES
__  *   »
Ptr weak
Jti
per year — 1800
.Ids Ntnonl
llll J.00
  too
 , too
ttet apply In Canada,
ittt and United Klnt-
ubscrlbtrs living oul-
lltr carrier ares
tnd   to   Ctnidt
rt postage ii required:
■th II 50. three monthi
I inontln $8 00;nnt yeir
A.
ILI
(tlanf)
JJ.Bywtyof
S3. Amerlct..
Indian
87. From
(prt-t)
88. Through
(prefix)
40. Exclamation
U.Galn
20. Cabbage
aalad
22. Moral
failing    .
23. Mohammedan deity
35. Heaped
21. Froth
27. Rtaeund
atabtll
28.Sttel
29. Unit of work
SO. Public notlci
32. Put of
"to be"
S3 Short reoMl
84. Apltxna
88. Kind of tm
88. Combination
39. I/)-! Of
feeling from
tnitthitlc
4-rMareteute
DOWN
l.Long,
handtome
feather
3. Infrequent
S.Belp
4. rrmtmint
camoqtMF-fr-A eerrBttnm vhMm
NOItTJ    11   TQWOIS   TT   »IO   VOUTl
T    A8KJLI-IKMMIU
vtaiert.y't Q|pte|tttl    A DISORDERLY CHINAMAN  IS
RARE. AND A I.A.J-Y ONI 00-8 NOT GXUrt   MARX TWAIN,
piltittaiat tt BJma Tmtam tjemtete,!__,,
BULfiS
FOR FALL PLANTING
20 large Darwin Tullpi 80 to St
Ins. high. 4 ttch red, ytllow, purple, white tnd pink . .- 83.00
20 Urge yellow DtttodUi or 20
ltrgt white Ntrcluui tor ... 82.00
Buncb (lowered Ntrcistui bulb!
for Xmii blooming, 8 large bulbi
lor  — al-OO
Rainbow collection Tullpi of outstanding varletlti, poitpild,
2   dor.         _.     -  81 AS
KUYPER'S BULBS
HAT2IC. B.C.
Wt Prow Only tht pert
Preinitr Gold —
-"rtSjetr --
Rtd Hawk  -
Rtevei MaeD —
Reno Gold  —
Salmon 	
Sheep Creek 	
Tailor Bridge -
Sllbak Premier ...
Wellington —~
Whltewtttr  	
OILI
Anlconda ...- —      .08Vi
/Vnglo Can        M
AP Consolldtttd .     .14
Ctl.'fc Edmon -    173
Ctlmont          JJ.
Bid
.13
.14
.17
18.50
1.87
44 VI
&
ii?
.35
1.32
.43
.12
4
6.30
.07
1.35
.49Vi
.12
.40
.07
.17%
145
,73
1.00
.03 Vi
.02
_M
•Porcublne .
McKenile Red Like ,
Mining Corn	
Nlp'iiing Mining 	
Normettl .....'..., —..
Omegi Oold —,
PtmourPorcuplni	
Ferren Oold 	
Pickle Crew Oold	
INDUSTRIALS
Bell Telephone	
BC Power "A"  —r«_
Can Ctr k Foundry	
Can Pac RIy  _.
Ford of canadt "A" „..
Steel of C« .: 	
Lake Shore Mines	
Lemaque Contae  _..
Leltch Oold	
1.81
2.10
3.00
8.03
3.85
88.50
. 145
_ 6.80
, 2.50.
. 54.50
_ • .70
.39Vi
.70
- 1.45
.     4.10 '
-_.   171
__      ie
:z WW
ii %«
.    23.23
.    23.23
1.45
FOREIGN IXCHANOI
CASTLEGAR
CAflTLKGAR, a C-Bob White
of Kinnaird was a Caitlegar viiltor
Tuesday.
George Dresdoff of Trail It spending I tew dtyt with hit grandmother In Caitlegar.
Mn. Louie Prlorle and two sons
ara vlilting riltUvM in Trail for
t tew dayi.
Mn. L, Parent, who hai been a
gatlent ln Trail-Tadanac Hospital,.
as returned to her home.
Mr. and Mra J. Draper, Miss Dora
Sever. Mri. Begat, Mrt. Crellin and
rt. Shannon of New Denver attended the institution of Kootenay
Temple No. 37 Pythlans Wednesday.
Pte. Lett Morey returned to Castlegar from oveneas. He will spend
t furlough wtth hll wife md family here.
S. Sgt. and Mn. Roy Wallace and
daughter ot Trail tpent a few days
viiitlng Uie former's brother ind
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mri, Don
Wallace.
The memberi ot Maple Leal Temple, Rossland, attending the Koote-
r Temple instituting, wtre Mrs.
McKenzie, Mn. Percy Palmer,
Mn. Bray. Mn. G. Benilet, Mrt. A.
Hubner, Mri. Joe GUI, MiisAnn Evens, Mrs. Cyril Evans, Mrs. E. Swan-
ton, Mra. J. Kennedy, Mn. C. Ther.
rlen, Mrs. Harold Evans, Mn. H.
Murdock, Mn. J. Bradley, Mrs. R.
Mason, Mrs. Walker, Mn. Hender-
lon, Mn. Cook, Mn.'A. Thompion
tnd Mri. J. Woodward.
Mn. C. W. Frtier returned home
after ipending i holiday at the
Coast visiting relative!.
CpL George Sentano bu arrived
ln Castlegar to ipend I furlough
With hit wife.
Thoie from Nelion who attended
the instituting ot Kootenay Temple
No. 37 Wtre Mri. Matasta, Mrs. _to-
bison, Mrt. Morgan, Mn. Kidwcll,
Mrs. Domers, Mrs, Heddle, Mrs,
Percival, Mrs. Chess, Mn. Grey,
rlra Grant, Mn. Rowe, Mn. Haigb,
Goucher, Mrs. Renwick,,Mrr
NEW YORK, Oct 1 «3>>^ Tht
Canadian dollar wu down l-10th at. _.
a dlicount ot 10 per cent ln terms ot Mrs. E. D. Hall.
United States fundi in closing fo-     Mr. end Mn.
Mn. _....,...
Swanson, Mn. Reydon, Mn. Clark
ind Mrs. Denner.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sommen returned from vlsitng relatives ln M-
berta.
Mr. and Mrs, Bo-ione of New
York were gueiti of tht litter's
brother and stster-ln-law, Mr. tnd
_. J. Wlgghavt left
..-<-%: (r_it-/fij'trtenip-mldl-Wi. InTrtll titer
tawa Foreign Exchange Board rates spending  the  Summer months In
" iter-1 Castlegar.
9.00.M1 pc. db.. The
ling wu unchanged it
Among memben of Trail Temple
to attend Installation No. 37 were
Mr. and Mrt. Balfour, Mr. and Mrs.
C. Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Dune Rob-
trtson, Mr. and Mn. Williamson,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Frtnttn, Mrs. Morel, Mrs. W. Lauener, Mn. Dead-
marsh, Mrs. Ally, Mn. Simpson,
Mrs. H. White, Mr. ind Mn. Jick
Balfour, Mn. Mowtns, Mrt. Fergle
Thompson,, Mrs. Underwood, Mrs.
E. Howard, Mir. A. Clark, Mrs.
8rayth. Mri. Woodi, Mrt. O. Moore,
Mri. W. Bradshaw, Mrs. J, Brown,
Mrs. Spooner, Mrs. Gibson, Mri. Evans. Mrs. B. McKay,. Mn. W. Simpson, Miss _ia-*lSobert!on, Miss P.
Norrls, Mist Tnomusina Carter,
Miss Mtrgtret Duffus, Mn.,T. Ewlng, Mrs. Ma_e, Mn. P. Hoggarty,
Mrs. Rlngwooct Mn. W, Dwyer,
Mn. Partridge, Mist Finn tnd Mrs.
A, Almquist.
Natal Man Fined
$50, Exceeding
Price Ceiling
CRANBROOK, B.C.-'Rtm-go Grli'
ot Natal, representing hll father's
grocery store, ippeired ln Fernlt
police court recently charged with
exceeding tht maximum prlct illowed by the Wartime Pricei and
Trade Board on variout food items.
He pleaded guilty and wu fined
830 and $473 court costs. Magistrate J. V. Rewen presided at the
hearing tnd D. M. Mitchell of Fernie protecuted i the charge which
was laid by the East Kootenay office of the Board.
Levi.s, Kimberley,
to Take Action on
Public Health Unit
K-MBERLEir, B.C.—Aldermen F.
P. Levin hu been- appointed to
take further action with regard to-
establlshment of a Provlndtl Public Health Unit for the District. He
has been authorized by the City to
have personal Interviews at meetings of the Cranbrook City Council
tnd the Creston md Cblpmtn
Camp Village Cornmltslonsn to
obtain thtlr intereit ln the project.
The Council hat decided to retain Pacific Daylight Saving Time
for tht City if lt hu tht authority
to do to.
rTARW.N   WL-H,'   WUlffBt I Homt
Common
Commonwttlth
Dtlhnuilt   -
Davlet  	
Foothilll 	
.30
i plui
Nel-
dtffodlls    tnd . nirciiiui    bulbs.
Mixed, dot. SQe, 100 for |8.75 plus
postage Mic'i Greenhouiet,
son, Fi C.
NTS
WHO WANTS A R--AIa DOGT
Registered Alrtdslt Terrier pupt,
three monthi old. Vtry Ifvtly.
825 with ptptn. E. H. Hird. Slocan City, B.C.       	
FOR SALE-SKS. STR75HG 5t5L-
onle! with enough honey left In
until Spring. Apply P. K. Relbln,
NtUon.
FOR sals-rIo, Coi-UIl BA-
nltli. Blick or Golden. 8 monthi
old Apply John L. Andtrton, Boa
817, Ftrnlt, EC.      '	
F6_ lAll-l WBl BlTJI laOTO-
blrdt with cage. Box 1830 Dally
News.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLIS, IICYCLB
McD Segur Exp ...
Mercury   —
Model —
Nitlonil Peto —
Oktllt Com —
Picifto Pete	
Royal Canadian _
Southwett Pete ..
VanalU 	
Vulcan  - -
INDUSTRIAL*
Capital ltt  -_   , -
Cout Brew      IM
Powill River     **■»
Unlttd DlttlU ...-.-    ••»
Pio Coylt -.-      -80
1.28
3 50
.08
T
.12
.39
.80
.03 H
JO
.10
.10
Aik
.15
.15
.18
17.00
1.70
2.48
J»-1
.18
.17
1.48
.48
.13
J?
8.50
.OTA
1.00
JO-
.12V4
J50
,08
.18
1.30
.78
1.10
.04
.02 Vi
.18
1.80
.38
.40
,14Vi
S.80
3.
.13
.43
42
.03
.30
.11
.30
4.78
1.85
,7,00
48
NEW   BICYCLES,  ACCESSORIES,
md repairs. Frte tlliatrttad catalogue. Wtttirn Cantdt'i leading
bicycle ttore. EiUbllthad 1810. C.
H. Herneat tt Bon, IWtNotrt Demt
'"•■Wlr.nl
>JEW   YORK
Am Smalt k Ret ....
Amir Tiltphont ..-
Amtrlean Tobacco
Anaconda —
Beth Sttal  	
Canidltn PaoUlo —
Dupont .'.. —
Eutmin Kodak	
Gen Electric 	
Gen  Motori     __.
Internal  Nickel 1
Kcnn Copptr ■
US Rubber .-aa.
-i txttV:.......—
STOCKS
 a
.._  my
-_-_-_-_______
_)Ti^WM§,H*W AflB
ijted Box 14 City Auto Wre^kert
NEW   Aa<IWlS-_U   I1A'H«_I1
Nelson Auto Wr^cklnt * Gaiatrt-
E
invt
188
48«
74
38%
43V4
mm
MOMTREAL STOCKS
INOUfHIALS
m Steal * C
... Smith Piper Pfd   18
McColl Fronter_c  10*4
Natlrmtl Brew Lid -...._  41 Vi
8htwlnlgtn W 1 P „  l»Vi
Si:
PARENTS
▼    tri
Busy Boys Are Better Boys!
If you hurt an active young ten why not let him un tome of thai)
abundant energy on • littlt part time gainful employment?
A newipaper route li beneficial from a physical, mental and psychological ttandpolnt.
PHYSICALLY, the regular outdoor exercile keep!
tht bey who muit ipend ilx hourt of hii day
in the tchoolroom. In robuit goad health.
MENTALLY, the commercial aspect of t ntwipaper
rout* makes hll mind alert and keen, keepi
his mental outlook (lean and lound.
PSYCHOLOGICALLY, the reipomibility of a ntwt-
poper rout* itrcngthcnt • boy'i character,
givei him polta, portonalily, and self reliance.
ftlfp Mum latlg _^puia
SATURDAY, OCT. 6, IS NATIONAL NEWSPAPER BOY DAY
 "jy^flJ! ^wtm'}' M*ll"P,Mi,Mli.i«iliJ|lli
np^
'""™*r,'iH__^____l
10 — NILSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, OCTOIIR.2, IMS
UCTTIt^TONIflHT
Complete Showt 7:00-8:25
"Kansas City
■',.'" with-
; Join Dtvli • Jtns Preset
Radio'! moit popular ittr In
her latest hilarious riot
Phie-
"toll in tha
Saddle"
i J__w
An AH Star Out
The gayeit Weitern muilcil
ot them all.        <
Starts Wedneiday
$100.00 BANK NIGHT
"Kfep Youi
Powder Dry"
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii
To prevent fell Coldi—um
NYAL HALIBUT LIVER
OILCAPSULIS
89* for 50.  ',
Mann
DRUOCO.
11111111 11111111111 Pjart 111 11111 ] 11111
Signtrt. J. McGinn
Lands at Halifax
Slgnilmtn John McGinn, Nebon
boy who enlisted In October, 1941,
and hai been overieu ilnce March,
1942, wa! smong the returning Canadian icrvlcemen who reached Halt-
tax Monday on the He de France,
according to. a win from him received by hll parents, Mr. tnd Mn.
D, McGinn, Cedar Street. Hli tervlce,waa with an armored unit
In ancient Egyptian court ceremonies only tha the Pharaoh wore
ihocs, princes appeared barefoot.
I
CIVIC BOOKINGS FOR OCTOBER
cfelg-e
"SUDAN"
With MARIE MONTEZ
Oet 17-11
•»   'THI IMPATIINT
YIARS"
Preview 8unday, pet 7
"WHIM DO WE GO
FROM HERE?"
with   '
Prid MtcMurrty-Joan  Leslie
with
Jean Arthur- Let Bowman
, Oct. 22-23
"ADDRESS UNKNOWN"
"BULL FIGHTERS"
pet 1-1-10
"CANT HELP SINGING"
with DIANNA DURBIN
1                '              ,
OotM-27
"IITWIIN TWO
WOM!N'r
with VAN JOHNION
Dot 11-12-13
"A BILL POR ADANO"
with
Gent Tlerney - J, Hodllk
Oct. 29-30-31     '.     ,
"SONG OP BERNADETTE"
'<fet18-1t    .
with JENNIFER JONU
"MOLLY AND Ml"
"CHINA'S LITTLl
DEVILS"
Nov. 1-2-3
"SON OP LASSIE"
With PETER LAWFORD
Subject to Change—Cut to Reference.
FREE7 LECTURE
OB
/
Christian Science
By Gordon V. Comer, C.S.B., member of the Board of
Lectureship of The Mother Church, Tht First Church of
.Christ, Scientist In Boston, Mast.
IN CAPITOL THEATRE
Tonight, Oct. 2, at 8 p.m.
The public It cordially Invited to attend.
Truck and Passenger Fires
Hot weather is really rough
on tires. Repair those breaks
ond cuts now and get many
thousands of miles more wear
All Slut Vulcanized and
Repaired
*
Beacon Motor & Tire Station
Phont S7B - 701 Baker St.
Murder Strikes
Again; Taxi
Driver Killed
•VAMOOOTHL Oct 1 tCP)-**-
Inald Claude Price, », part-time
text driver and University ot Brit-
tth Columbia graduate, today wat
found ihot to detth ln hit taxi on a
rotldantltl itreet In tho Southeast
section ot Vincouver.
Price*! body wai discovered try a
houie painter who went to look at
the car when he thought lt might
have been an abandoned stolen
machine. Tbe taxi driver, who had.
been milting ilnce two a.m., wat
shot through the head twice. Between MOO and $900 In caih which
he waa known to be carrying wai
not on the body when found.
A city-wide tearch wai instituted
for Price today after frlendi and
atsociatei lUspected that he had
met with foul play.-, .
Police laid ha waa killed by two
shots fired at dote range at there
were powder burns on the left
temple. The body was slumped ln
the front teat under a green coat
The cab's meter was stopped at
$1.05 'tnd taxlmen called to the
scene estimated that tha would
have been the fare registered on a
call Bom uptown to the place
where the car waa found.'
A crumpled ten hat wai found
on the floor at Price's feet. Hli left
arm appeared twitted behind hli
back and his left hand wai covered
with blood. Blood had run down the
car floor, out through the crack at
the bottom ot the door, and along
the running board to the roadway.
Price, who had a full-time day
job with tbe /Vancouver Supply
Company, worked nights for the
Pacific Cofcit Taxi Company which
li owned by hli brother, Jim Price.
HBAVY TOLL     .
Crime haa taken a heavy toll this
lait month throughout the Lower
M-ini.m. area. The latest slaying Is
the fourth which bat occurred In
thli dlitrlct All of the other victims were children. The flnt wu
little four-month-old Oeorge Joseph
Hlggenson whose bartered body wu
found Aug. 90 to a waterfronjt rooming-house. A thirty-nine-year-old
former soldier, Oeorge Hlggenson,
hu been charged with murder ln
connection with the child's death.
Then there wu the case of four-
year-old Dlanne Blunt whole body
wu found Sept. 14 buried In a garage near her Vancouver home. A
..•year-old boy wu reported by po-
liee to have confessed to her murder.
Only a week ago 10-year-old Doreen Ryan wu shot to death outside
har home at nearby Murrayville. A
53-year-old fanner, Nobel Monahan,
hu bten charged with her murder.
Today's killing recalled the Phil
Davit case ot exactly three yean
ago when on Oet 3, Davit, a taxi
driver, wu murdered tn a thickly-
wooded area, ln Eait Vancouver.
L.-Cp_ Robert Beatty wu henged
Nov. 22, IMS, for Davis" murder.
Hore than ont-teventh of Mexico
il forested.
DOhTT SAY BREAD
Say Hoods
SUPMMI MILK BMAD
RADIO
REPAIRS
NELSON ELECTRIC CO.
No Great Favor fo Grant Clear
Title to Old Yets for Land
OTTAWA, Oct 1 (CP) - Maj.
Utile Mutch, Liberal Member tor
Winnipeg South, stld tonight In the
Commoni that tbe Oovernment
would not be making any greet favor by granting clear titles to the
4000 vettram who itlll owed money
on landt purchased under the old
Soldier Settlement Lend Act ."*,
Continuing a debate on a resolution calling for the granting ot the
clear titles, Maj. Mutch iald he
knew, tome of the conditions under
which the land WU sold to veterans
of the First Great War.        .,'
Lands were told at Inflationary
prlcei and much ot it wu tub-mar-
glnable. Even It toe dear titles
were grinted, many veterans would
have great'difficulty ln making a
living on iuch lands. By the writing
off ot existing debts was about the
only way many veterans would be
able to obtain clear titles.
, The country owed a debt to the
men who fought in the Flrit Great
War and the granting of clear titles
would be t mark of recognition.
Be would have more hearty-iupport for tbe resolution, presented
by Robert Fair (SC-Battle River) If
It did not contain' a clause Intimating that the preient Veterans Land
Act appeared doomed for failure.
Lt.-Col. J. A. Boat (PC-Sourit)
supporting the resolution, tald a
settler who agreed to pay more
than $5000 for a bait section,was
forced to give lt up and the Oovernment later told to t civilian for
$500. That was typical of the Inflated prices soldier settlers contract
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii
NEWS OF THE DAY
Rattr. 22o line, 27e lint black (tea
type, targtr typt ratei on requ.it.
Minimum  two   tinea.  10%   dlicount for prompt payment
1 f 11111J1 ■ 11111111111111111111 ■ 11 11 _ [ I ■ 1111
Wanted—Oil heater, good condition. Ph. 835-R, 261 Baker SL '
I.O.D.E. monthly meeting next
Tuesday, Legion, 2:90 p.m.
Special! 9 dot, tin 944 Orangei
Bto at Wrlght'i Grocery.
Try t delicious Hot Chocolate todty at Walt'i Newt Depot
Tucketf t T it B English fine cut
20c pkg. at "Valentines.
Houm for tale, $2500 cash. Clote
in. Possession In a month. C. D.
Blackwood Agency.
Tullpi, Daffodils, Nirtlmii and
Hysclnthi now In itock. Kooteniy
Flower Shop.
Just received large ihlpment ot
beautiful corsages. Singer Sewing
Machine, 330 Baker.
ed to pay for their land and equipment.  . ....*.,
These wire 011$ soldier tertian
left on their original holdings and
they ihould bt granted a dear title
on the $7,000,000 still owed by them.
flt-Lt Rene Jutrts (P-Proven-
cher) uld he wtnted "symptthetlc
consideration" given to the situation
ot tht old soldiers itill on the land.
SOMETHING FOR THOSE
WHO PAID
Thomas Raid (L-New Westminster) iald he was tymapthttic to tbe
resolution. However, he wished to
make a plat tor thine who had
sweated and tolled and gave up
some of tbe. necessities of life in
order to pay oft their debts. He
wondered it nothing wu going to
be done tor thoie who bad made
sacrifices to pay oft-their debts.
He wasn't opposed to the granting
of clear titles, biit he thought that
if this wu done something should
be done in Justice to those who now
held iuch titles.
Mr. Reld laid the Government
wasn't entirely to blunt for all the
failures under tht Soldier Settler!
Act Some of those who had bought
farms did not know t thing about
farming. *
The Government bad profited
from experience. Land now wu
not being bought at Inflationary
prlcea. In.fact farmers were com
plaining that the Government wat
paying too little for land bought for
resale to veterans.
Mr. Reid suggested that other
cities could follow the example of
New Westminster in doing something for veterans.
Ma). D. K. Mahony and Pte.
Smoky Smith, both Victoria Crou
winners of this war, were assured
by their home city of New Westminster of an annuity ot $100 a
month each for life trom the age ot
$0. The Province of I Britlih Columbia had set aside 1,000,000 acres of
land that would be given outright
to veteram who wished to settle
on a farm.
372,491 Canuck
SSoldlers
Sent lo Europe
T. _
OTTAWA, Oct. 1 (Cm*- Death
tentencei were impoied In three
courts-martlaj in Canadian Army
between 109$ and Sept 1, 1945, but
ln two of tbe cute the sentences
were "commuted to pent! servitude,
the Defence Department said to a
itatement tabled today ln tbe Commoni. Department officials iald It
wu Army policy not to disclose
names.
Tht Information wu given ln re.
tponie to questions by John pleftn
baker (PC—Lake Centre). Sen.
tencei of Imprisonment of from one
to three yean numbered 2,776 and
ot more than three yean 302. In
the period ,1940 to 1045. the verdict
of a court martial was reversed or
varied in 099 instance!.
Total strength of the N.R.M.A.
Home Defence Army ln Canada and
adjacent territories on Aug, 29,
1045, wu 95,276 including 9,422 on
extended leave, according to a return tabled today by Lt.-Col.
Huguei Lapolnte, Parliamentary
Assistant to Defence Minister Ab'
bott. The question wu asked by
D. King Haxtn (PC-St. John Albert)
Of the (79 Canadian officers loan-!
ed to the British Army 947 Wire
casualties, it wu disclosed in a return by Lt.-Col. Hufrues Lapolnte.
Only 175 Canadian officers still are
serving with the British Army.
Tht number of Canadian Army
penonnel unt to Europe during the
war was 372,491, it wu disclosed in
a return tabled tor Col. J. A. Ron
(PC—Souris). On April 90, 1045,
the strength of the Army overieu
was 282,593 men.
A return by the Defence Department ihowed that 4,740 officers and
men had been sent oventu since
VE-Day, May 9.
. For that troubltiomt itomtch,
heartburn and acid ttomaeh:
BISiVA REX
75e and $1.75 bottle
I     -
Sold only at your Rexall Store
City Drug Co.
Phont 94
|ox<Ht
If you are thinking ol fire insurance think of Ron Somen' Agy,
\Xt Baker. Ph. ip.
KOOTENAY ilPT IHOP
Agentt for Walkden't G.eenhoui-
et. Cut Flowert, Pot Plants, Wedding Bouquett. Funeril Designs.
Building lots ln Eait Trail. Easy
terms. Now Is tht tlmt to buy and
build later. Write Robertson Retlty,
592 Ward St, Nelion, B.C.
Oddfellowi" Annuel Ball at Slocan
City, Friday, Oct 5th. Muitc by
Rhvthm Kings Turkey supper at
midnight Admission $1.00 per pet-
ton.
E. A. CAMPBELL & Co.
Chartered Accountonti
Auditon
941 Baker St Phona HB
atae
Btttmmxttt»&»>miM»>mx»
Have  Tour Furnlrurt  Btpertry
Bammed at tha
NILSON UPHOLSTERY
411-Hall St. Phona ltt.
e»>*ttt>eex9i&)&e&c!$e&st>!>s)s»ei
IT IS GOING TO BE PRETTY COLD AT NIGHTS
How will your house bo whtn
you got up in tho mornings?
If year houie It
Imuloted with
Vacuum cleanan need lubricating. Phone SK-LTON, 91. Butty
Service.
Make your wallpaper like new
ith Abtorent, tht magic cltaner.
Quickly   cleans   soiled   wallpaper,
window blindi, kalsomlne, etc. 25c
par tin at Hlpperson'!.
Prepare tor Winter with Mortlte
Plastic Weatherstrip. Eaty to apply
tnd can be painted over. Alto Felt,
Rubber tnd Wood Wettheritrlpplng
for all purposes. Wood Valltnce.
Ladlet—Save money—by having
your old hats remodelled new hy
Mperlenced English milliner. Also
materitl and fur had made. Apply
102 Robion.
SANDON
SANDON, B.C.-Mn. I. A. Rlth-
ards, ot Boston, Mass., wu the weekend gueit of Mr. tnd Mri. J, M.
Harris.
R. H. Stewart, M.E., was In town
on Saturday enroute from Kimberley, to hit home in Vincouver.
James Anderson of Vancouver
and J. Macintosh of Uie Lucky Jim
Mine at Zlccton were viiiton ln
town during tha weekend:
R. A. Grimes tnd party motored
in to tht Silver Ridge Mine on
Monday:
Meiirs. L. R. Campbell ot New
Denver tnd Cox ot Silverton were
visitors on Friday.
Mr. and Mrt. A. L. Harris of
Nett Denver, accompanied by C J.
Campbell of Vancouver were f&etti
of tht Jofinnit Harris' on Friday.
Mr. and Mri. W. J. Turner oi
Zlncton were weekend viiiton tn
town.
a Ekeblad of New Denver paid
I vlilt to hi! old homt here during
the week.
Vincent Dtvey of Kellogg. Idaho,
il ipending hit holiday! with relatives in town.
H. Peterson oi Kellogg, Idtho, is
the houie guest of his mother, Mn.'
Eugenie Petenon.
In Hinduism It U believed that he
who diet ln debt lutftn torment or
degradation ln the next life.
HUDSON
PAkCS AND SERVICE
SMIDLEY GARAGE CO.
Next to Pott Office
508 Vernon St ^ Nelton
All thou Interested In t Mixed
Bowling Leigue leave thtlr nimei
let GeMnn' it.re not liter thtn
iThnre. Oet 4. Muting Frldiy, Oct
Thinkiglvlnj netting chickens
Ave to tlx pounds, 40 cents t pound.
Cleaned, dressed tnd delivered
Please order etrly. Halltran't, phont
909-RX
To Ftlrvlew residents, money in-
ed on your fin Insurance Is money
earned whan you Insure with T3-
year-old company. Phone MM for
rate. 577 Baker 81
rrom'thli dste onwtrd I win not
be responsible for «n- debt Incurred
In mv namt by tnyont other thtn
L C Mtraula
Ntlton, BC. Sept 90, IMS.
Tho Answer will bo
Worm, Co$y ond ComfortobU
2" Popor-Bocked Bafts 15" x 24" $7.00 Por 100 Sq. ft.
Cash Booki, Journals, Record
Booki, Minute Books, Receipt Booki
everything In tht lint __ office
booki. D. W. McDerby, -The Sta-
tidntr k Typewriter Mtn," aoJ-654
Baktr Street Ntlton, B.C
Vou trt Invited to ittind a frte
lecture entitled "Chrlrtlin telenet:
Tht Religion ef Love", by Qordon
V. Comer, CA B, membtr of tht
Boird of Ltctureenlp ef The Mother
Churrt, Tht Flnt Churvh ef Chrlil.
telontlii In Boiton, Meet, In Ctpl-
|tol Theatre tonight it t o'clock.
HOPI ONMT WINNIM
Ticket No   4t4. Hope Chut and
eotltanta, Mrs. Watton, tl4 Rtsnley
Strttt
Conenhtiol. Print:
_ _ V, Oram, Latimer St
Cpl leek, CAD. Army, Jericho
BURNS
LUMBER _. COAL CO.
.
I AM
Royil Hotel.
FUNIMl NOTICt
COMMOTION
Comrth — Alfred  Jtmaa.  paaaed
tway at Oueen't Bay on Sit Sept.
JS Funeril servicei will be held on
Wed. Oct 1 at I pm from 51 Sa-
viour'i Pro-Ctlhedrtl. Rev W. J.
SQeerweotf officiating. Cremation
1 ttltow servicei at the Cat).
will f(
&
'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II1MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIK
For Reliable Watch Repair*
PROMPT SERVICE
HARVEY'S
,       ,    684 Baker St
IIHIIIimillllllllllllltlllttlllllllllllllllli
KOKANEE
SERVICE STATION
tnd QARAOI
Expert Rcpoir Work
Promptly Done.
On,   Oil,  Wilding,   Qrenlng.
Opposltt Bank of Montreal
Nakusp Couple
Celebrate 40 Years
of Wedded Bliss
NAKUSP, B.& - Prank Ruthton
prbposed tbe tout to the bride and
groom ot 40 yeiri on Thuridty evening when Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
Fowler ot Pine Lodge celebrated
the anniversary of thtlr wedding.
Mr. and Mrt. Fowler were mtrrled
at Trout Lake, Sept. 27, 1005, the
Rev. David Scott then Presbyterian
Minuter, officiating. Tbe table
decorations anf anniversary wedding cake were in white tnd green,
'denoting what li known u the
"Emerald" wedding anniversary
color. Four tables of bridge were
ln play. Ladiei' flnt prize was
won by Miss M. Staniforth; gents'
flnt by 3. Dolman; ladiei' second,
Mrs. A. J. Harrison; gent's second,
F. Ruthton. Mr. Fowler preiented
hli bride of 40 yean with a gold
and emerald ring. Congratulations
were extended to thii popular
couple of 40 years wedded life.
Troops on tho Move
HOMEWARD BOUND
Arrived at Halifax—Nleuw-Am-
sterdam (Saturday) with 7744 servicemen, Including mere than 6000
men of the lit Canadian Divliion,
with 871 RCAF penonnel, 11 Wreni
and other assorted groupi.
Due at Halifax—He de France
(Monday) with 0010 veterans of all
ranka aboard.
JIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH
Dea-Jacket
By DEACON BR0
A coat you can slip |
during those off i
around the house or j
den.   Warm but" 11$
weight.     In plaids
plain colors.
LIMITED
The Men'i St«
I'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniil
Asparagus hu been kn
early Greek and Roman I
Kimberley Pythiarts
Hold Bazaar
KIMBERLEY, B. C-The K. P.
Hall was the scene of much tctivity
when the Pythlin Sisters held their
annual bazaar under the supervision
of M. ft C. Sitter Pateraon.
The home cooking table, prettily
decorated with flowen and Itood
thlngs to ett, brought a crowd at all
timet.
Tbe tablet, centred with Autumn
flowers, the buutlful coven tnd
dainty china, made an attractive
sight and the. goodies and tea were
much enjoyed.
The fancy work tnd knitting itall
wu tilled with beautiful handwork,
u wu the apron and chlldren'i
—tee,
Lemonade wu provided for the
children.
A crocheted buffet let wu won
by Mn. Grtflths and a contest wu
won by Mn. Preston.
   COWUN'S	
RADIO
REPAIRt   and   8ERVIC-
Phone 1*        »10 Hoover St
llllllilllllillllillllllllllliiitllllllllllllll
FLEURY'S   Pharmacy
Preicrlprloni
Compounded
Accurately
Med Arts filk
PHONE 21
n
TH«"
Coffee Cup Ctfe
Soeclillzlng In
Homp cooked meolj ond
.andwichei.
Nur Greyhound Octet
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE   SERVICE .
"Distinctive Funeral Service"
918 Kootenay St Phone Ml
Minimi,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniur
eemtrn n Mcetntttuwwti
J. A. C. laughton
Optometrist
Suite 205
MEDICAL  ARTS  BUILDING
r^^.^^Ji'^-^KSSsasSSOS-iSStjetiSStrrK
SOMERS' FUNERAL
SERVICE
TOl Baktr Si Phone Bl
Open Doy and Night
Crtautortum Ambulance
MEN'S OXFORDS
The Bootery
Right
Sti
VIC GRAVES
MAtTlR PLUMtlK
PHONI US
PHONE SM
Wt Coll For and Oellvei
Men's, lettef tultt. ladlef      t__A
Dltttll. plain •»»»
_______   ____„ ___, P-Tl tnd UdlW CI 14
Funeral   srrsrgemtiitt   hive • Summer Otatt     • mmmmmm
lXtmmm% TO-JTHtMNM CUANIM ft DYIM
15 Y_ARS EXPERIENCE
,    WITH TUB T. EATON CO
Service on ill makei of rtdloi
tnd refrigerators
WELL'S SERVICE SHOP
617 Vernon St Phone lilt
JUST  RECEIVED
' Large thlprntnt of
TRICYCLES AND DOLL
CARRIAGES
Home Furniture Exchange
tMOMOOXCtAKOSC&ttSSSSXZXeOmSO
ROSCOE
AND
FOURHIER
GARAGEMEN
sky cHnar Auro^attvKE
Phone-- Nelson.B.C.
Universal Stop and Ta|
Auembliet. Complete
fUTHBK
V MOTORS. UMITI
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIMHiq
Looking
depends
Beauty   L^^
choose. ComB
Hai&h TA
Beauty 9
Johnstone!
■ weetj
R.C.A.-VICTCI
RECORDS^
McKAY ft STRITTOH
Phone 544     — '
mt««» *»«|
Por Rett Retutta. flfl
CATKIN'S PLT AND |
SP.RAY
SPINCER C. COM4
Nelion  Detlert
624 VICTORIA ST.J
ELLISON'S BEST FLi
Constontly creating conf
Ellison Milling
Phone lit
Helled
Tht Legion Entertainment Committee with to thank I
following firms for their support and assistance Iim
tteptt^Jitat plW: AHcberby Stationed Fir** 4
Gilkers Ltd., Mann-Rutherford Drug Co., Hu"
Boy Co., Dave Wode- J. P. M6rgan, J. Ramsden, |
person Hardware, Fleury't Pharmacy.
iiiiliiliiiiiilliiliillllllliiliiiliiiiiiililiii
A POPULAR PLACP. FOR
AFTERNOON TEA
THI
The Melon Dew
ICE tRF.AH PARLOR
lllil-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
If it's Electric
F.H. SMITH
Phont 666       351 Bol.tr St.
Fairview Fuel
& Supply
Sand - Gravul
General Hauling
LI$TEN
Hon JOHN HAR'
Premier of British Columbia
"Plans (or the Future"
AND CBC
NEfWORK
CKLN
8:00 P.M.
LIBERTY SPECIALS
STOCK REDUCTION OFFER |
Se we will be able to terra you toon lit our ntw preu
YOUR SATISFA.CTI6N, OUR AIM    I  '
POTATOES
Buy them by the sock before the frost ond snow c
We hove some lovely Netted Gems. Delivered In"
frte of charge.   100-ib. lock:
ICE CREAM MIX or DESSERT POWDER.
Londonderry, 2 for  _, ►_.	
FLOUR—Buy It by the wck now. Your fovorltt $1
brands available here. 49 lbs. delivered, No. 1    I
SODA CRACKERS, Red Arrow.
I lb. , .
COFFEE, Braid'* Big 4.
%eelpl, Ib , ___a --.
JAR LIDS, No. 63—Bemarrjlnt will fit your |om
and salad dressing jars.   Screw type, lids, doien
CAPS, Completo. Sove money now by using your
oW |an. <Jo»:en .   . .      r ,—,—_______
»■
1
3
m
