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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" London Raid! Speed EvaeuafIon\nof Children.\u2014Page 6\nFear Germany May Take) Over All\nof France.\u2014Page 3\nWheat Board to Renew Buying of\n1939 Crop.\u2014Pago 9\nVOLUME SS\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\n\u2022V*r\n0 fjsf .       -80N. BRITI8H COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY  MORNING. SEPT. 16. 1940\u2022\nEmpress of Asia Hit by Japanese\nJest Bomb.\u2014Page 5\nConscription Is Approved In\nUnited States.\u2014Pago 8\nBerlin Dispatches Give London\nChoice of Fates.\u2014Page 3\ni<nl\nNUMBER  124\nRe A^ Fo\nAdvance on Egypt\nKING AND QUEEN\nESCAPE 3RD NAZI\nPALACE BOMBING\nOne Crashes Through\nRooms of the\nQueen\nPLANE IS DOWNED\nLONDOM, Sept 18 (CP)-Ger-\nman bombi hit Buckingham Palace today for the third tlmt In\neight days damaging private\napartments of Queen Elisabeth\nwho, with the King, wu absent\nfrom tht Royal residence.\nTwo heavy delayed-action or\ndud bombs ind I number of smaller Incendiary missiles wtrt showered on the Palace md surrounding ground, by a lone German\nraider. Ona of the big bombi hurtled through tht Queen's quarters.\nTht Germin bomber wit thot\nto pltott \u2022 momtnt liter, eyt witnesses declared, ind tht attacking\nBritish pilot himself was forced\nto hall out of his damaged plane,\nparachuting down to tho acclaim\nOf spectators.\nThere were no casuiltles among\nihe skeleton staff at the Palace. The\n' \"cendiary bombs started fires on\n, the lawn but were extinguished\nquickly by air raid precautions\nsquads and police.\nDetails of the damage to the\nQueen's quarters were not disclosed\nImmediately. The heaviest previous\ndamage was Inflicted Friday when\nbombs wrecked the Royal Chapel\nand damaged the South wing.\nThe first bomb fell on the Royal\nresidence last Sunday and exploded\nTuesday, wrecking the swimming\npool used by Princesses Elizabeth\n(KM Margaret Rose. Another delay-\n\u2022 ed-action explosive, dropped Friday\ni went off Saturday, damaging the\ngreat Iron fence enclosing the Palace grounds.\nTht sergeant-pilot who downed\ntht Nul raider today landed unhurt In the btckyird of t neirby\nresidence, shook off his parachute\nharness tnd reported by telephone\nto hit airdrome.\nThe pilot emerged from the house\nto the cheers of a great crowd which\nquickly assembled and his parachute was torn to shreds by admiring souvenir hunters who called\nout \"good work lad!\" The aviator\nWu rescued by soldiers.\nTwo (lasses Are\n\u2666 Called in Russia\nBy HENRY C. CA8SIDY\nAssociated Press Stiff Writer\nMOSCOW, Sept 15 (AP).-Two\nclasses of Soviet recruits began\ntrooping to the Red Army colors\ntoday amid press warnings that\nRussia must be ready for any emergency arising out ol the war.\nYouths aged 19 and 20 assembled\nIt headquarters throughout Russia\nto be heroes for a day at Communist mass meetings and then entrain\ntor army bases to do their regular\ntwo years of training, the enlistment will continued to October 10.\nGen. R. Tyuleneff, former commander of tht Trans-Caucasian\nMilitary District It wis disclosed,\nhu become Chief of tht Moscow\nregion succeeding Marshal ' Simeon Budyenny, mide First Vict\nCommissar of Defenct In lltt\nmonth's High Commind changes.\nPravda, the Communist Party\nnewspaper, said:\n\"On the basis of instructions from\nour Government and from Comrade Stalin personally, the character and method of training Red\nArmy units has undergone considerable reorganization m conformity to the experience of contemporary wars.\"\nMoving Troops Bombed; Great Damage Done\nto Equipment; Italians Step Up Air\nWar; Move Over \"No Man's Land\"\nCAIRO, Sept. 15.(AP).\u2014Italy's drive Into Egypt and occupation of the Solium area was answered today by the Royal\nAir Force with blasting attacks on Fascist forces throughout\nthe region.\nThe R. A. F. announced its attacks were successful. Moving troops were bombed and great damage was done to expeditionary equipment. Many fires in Italian-held territory were\nstarted.\nBritish authorities still awaited the main force of the\nspearhead Marshal Rodolfo Crazlani's troops were attempting\nto drive into a Mediterranean coastal region of desert villages\n^vacated by British troops.\nThere wu no indication u to\nwhere the British would stiffen\nthtir resistance, but they described\nthe tint Italian advances u a\nmarch into desert wastes.\nThe Italians stepped up their operations In the air along with their\nland movements.\nAs the Italian troops proceeded\nfarther Into the territory of an\nEgypt with which Italy ii not officially if war, young King Farouk\nissued in appeal to Moslems in\nEgypt and all the world for collec\nBlum Locked Up\nWith Other Heads\nfacing War Trial\nVICHY, France, Sept. IS (P)\n\u2014Former Socialist Premier Leon\nBlum was locked up today e.titlv\u00bb-)W_r tax peace.\nChateau Chazeron, feudal castle\nnear Riom where four other topflight leaders of ore-armistice\nFrance are held in the country's\n\"war guilt\" Investigation.\nLike the others \u2014 former Premier\nEdouard Daladier Ind Paul Raynaud, Gen. Marie-Gustave Oamelin,\nformer commander of the Allied\narmies, and former Interior Minister Georges Mandel \u2014 Blum faces\nthe possibility of trial before the\nRiom \"War Blame\" Court   .\nBlum, whose Government is\nblamed by the present Petain regime for a large share of responsibility, came to power In 1936 and\npushed through a number ot social\nreforms, including the 40-hour work\nweek.\nThese measures, we Vichy Government contends, rented tn a pre-\ncipitate fall in French production,\nparticularly irmamenti. Under\nBlum a policy of cooperation with\nSoviet Russia and Great Britain\nalso was pushed and this now is decried u one of France's greatest\nerrors ind one of the heaviest responsibilities of pre-war French\nstatesmen.\nViolent Death\nEnds Friendship\nHASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, N. Y,\nSept. 15 (AP).\u2014The 25-year friendship of two middle-aged spinsters\nended in tragedy today when Miss\nLottie Washington Booth, 50, a lawyer, was found 'bludgeoned to death\nin the mansion she had shared for\n10 years with Miss Mary E. B.\nJones, 44, listed In the New York social register.\nPolice booked Miss Jones on a\ncharge of.-jnurder and committed\nher to the psychopathic ward of\nnearby Grasslands Hospital.\nJohn J. Dunnigan, Chief ot Police\nsaid that as nearly as he could gather from an eye-witness police\nstory, Miss Jones' incoherent account, the shattered and brood-\nstained furnishings and other evidence, death came as a climax to a\nstruggle between the two women\u2014\na fight marked by a mad flight and\nchase throughout the many rooms\nand alcoves of both floors of the\nhouse.\nE-X-T-R-A!\nLONDON, Sept. 16\n(Monday) \u2014 <CP>\u2014 Tho\nGovernment announced\ntoday that 185 Carman\nplanes were destroyed\nyeiterday, t h e largest\nnumber reported for any\n\u25a0ingle day since the war\nbegan.\nThe previous record\nwas 180, on Aug. 15.\nn\n$25 for Fund to\nFight Antichrist\n\"I wish you to accept my check for $25, toward the .\nbombing fund; or, as I would prefer to call It, the war\nagainst Anti-Christ.\n\"Cod grant that our efforts may be multiplied to\nthat end.\"\nThii was the message attached to his gift fo the West\nKootenay Bomber Fund by a donor who preferred to remain anonymous under the designation \"Erickson\".\nThe gift brought the total of the Bomber Fund to\n$2732.25.\nThe Monarch's message uked\nMohammedans to Implore' Allah\nto \"extend his mercy throughout\nthe world and restore an era ot\npeace and harmony, heal the\nwounds of humanity, to protect\nthe Moslem countries from all\nmisfortunes and resuscitate the\nprestige of Islam.\"\nSquadrons of Italian bombers\nand fighter planes were reported\nto be attempting to protect the Italian advance and at the same time\nto avoid a direct clash with British\nplanes which constantly soared\nover advancing mechanized  units.\nThe (Italians were moving most\nof their infantry in fast trucks,\nguarded by tanks, armored cars and\nmotorcycle patrols.\nOnt Italian air squadron attempted to bomb Mersa Matruh, about\n150 miles from Alexandria. British\nanti-aircraft fire downed one raider ind the others veered Westward\nThe Italian penetration Is ex\npecttd to exttnd shortly to Bug-\nbug, 22S miles from Alexandria, \u2022\npoint which British officials said\nnil no military or strategic Importance,\nTurbaned end sandalled Libyans\nand Arabs equipped only with their\nrifles and water bottles, were reported leading the Italian movement followed by Italian regulars.\nAltogether, British officials appeared unimpressed by the Italian\nadvance over what they termed\n\"no-man's-land\" md seemed content to have their planes and armored fighting vehicles inflict as\nmany casualties on the advancing\narmy as possible.\nPushing his thrust through sand\nwastes, Graziani left behind a large\nforce in the village of Bir Nuh, seven miles South of Solium, port near\nthe Egyptian-Libyan frontier,\nwhich, with the British-abandoned\nvillage of Musaid, wu abandoned\nlut night    ,\nA British statement said \"there is\nno anchorage at Solium' or other\nfacilities' and lt hu not been visited by any war vessel for many\nyears.\"\nIts occupation wu regarded as\nunlikely tq facilitate any Italian advance along the cout since the\nroute suitable for military transport has been destroyed.\nThus the Italian advance so far\nhu netted only these villages and\na strip of desert wasteland.\nRepublican Party\nProgram Chairman\nDiet in Car Crash\nGREENLEAF, Wis., Sept 15 (AP)\n\u2014Dr. Glenn Frank, 53, Chairman of\nthe Republican Party's Program\nCommittee, wu killed ind his son.\nGlenn Frsnk, Jr., 21, wu Injured\nfatally In in automobile accident\ntonight\nA third man, not immediately\nidentified, was Injured seriously.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON    5\u00ab 69\nVictoria  _   53 65\nVincouvtr _ 58 68\nKamloops   52 78\nPrlnct Georgt _ _ 44 64\nEstevtn Point    51 65\nPrince Rupert    49 56\nLlngart      48 58\nAtlin     _   41 55\nDawson, Y. T.  40 52\nPortlsnd   58 78\nSan Francisco  58 74\nSpokane   52 80\nPenticton _.__ 48 \u2014\nVernon     : _-.. 51 \u2014\nCranbrook    45 71\nCalgary       40 70\nEdmonton     _.__.  41 70\nSwift Current  49 71\nPrince  Albert     53 \u2014\nWinnipeg     56 80\nNelson water level Saturday 5.85.\nNelion witer ltvtl Sunday IS-.\nSooth African Troops Embark for Active Service\nAfter a period of intensive training these South\nAfrican troops are about to board a transport vessel\nbound for active service with oVher members of the\nEmpire's forces.\n1100-Pound Bomb Taken From\nSt Paul's Cathedral Qrounds\nmm\n000 in\nWar Loan Sold\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP). -\nCash subscriptions te Canada's\nsecond wir loin totalled $248,-\n200,000 In the first week of the\nloin   campaign.   Before   the  oh\nCanadian Engineer Leads \"Suicide Squad\"\nand Takes Bomb to Explode in Marshes;\nWorkers Narrowly Escape Death\nLONDON, Sept. 15 (CP Cable)\u2014Led by a member of the Royal\nCanadian Engineers, a \"suicide squad\" today extricated an 1100-pound\nGerman tlmerbomb from tht precincts of St. Paul's Cathedral and detonated it harmlessly in Ihe Hackney marshes.  .\nThe- Canadian is 45-year-old Lt, R. Davies. ,\nIt was the biggest bomb yet dropped on London, and had It exploded it might have wrecked the cherished edifice. Four smaller bombs\nlectlve Is reached, $51,800,000 more, remain buried in the vicinity of the cathedral .\nmust be subscribed. - I-        Although the risk of explosion wu imminrrl all tbe-time, Lt.\n.-   , --,-     ..-...,      \"   .       I Oivies personally drove the truck at high speed with the bomb from\nTo reach the objective, a large st. Paul's to the marines. <\nUnder Lieut. Davies the workers\nbegan tunnelling four days ago only\nto discover that a slx-mch gas main\nhad been broken by the bomb. Three j\nmen were felled and then the\ngas burst into flames while the\ndeadly bomb grew warm beneath\nthem.\nnumber of potential investors who\nhave not yet subscribed must bo\nimpressed with the urgency of the\nsituation, officials said.\nThe 12-year-bonds are available\nIn units of $100. or more, bearina;\nthree per cent interest, which at the\n'\"75 means a yield of\nsale price of i\n3V\u00bb per cent\nExtinguishing tht fire the work-\ntrie bomb had sunk Itself. On Saturday, they hitched ropes to it.\nTwice, near the top of tht holt,\nthe projectile slipped ind plunged\nbick Into the hole while every\nman expected instant death.\nPraying  the  bomb  might be\ndud\", the men kept at it during\nSubscribe Again and on Maximum\nScale Ilsley Asks of Canadians;\nSmaller Investors Are Shirking\nI- L\nIlsley, Minister of Finance, wired The Daily\nit to publish the following appeal to its\nHon\nNews requesting\nreaders:\n\"Last Monday we began the task of raisin? $300,000,000\nto arm and equip Canada's fighting forces. That task is still\nuncompleted. I have therefore asked the Press of Canada for\ntheir cooperation in enabling me to make this serious appeal\nto all Canadians.\n\"Crave events transpire across the seas: grave events impend. In the ultimate issue, our all is at stake. Canada needs\nyou to put your money behind four men, for airplanes, tanks,\nships, guns, munitions. That is the reason you were asked to\nsubscribe the second war loan. I urge all of you at home who\nhave not yet subscribed, to hasten that important duty. Hearten your comrades. Delay can only hearten our foes.\n\"To those who have subscribed I say: 'Buy more bonds,\nunless your subscription really reflects your ability ^o lend'.\nTO GENERAL PUBLIC\n\"Especially do I direct this message to all those hundreds\nof thousands of men and women of moderate earnings and\nmodest means. It is for them that the books are open.\n\"Their subscriptions, in vast numbers, not only register\nthe nation's patriotic duty, but help ensure a wider and healthier war-time and post-war distribution of purchasing power\nin the form of earnings.\n\"Safe and income-earning Investment though ydur subscription is, it is another sense the greatest, soundest investment opportunity you could seize; an investment in human\nfreedom for you and your children.\nRECRUIT OUR DOLLARS TO COLORS\n\"In this hour we fight to save all we have from destruction, ourselves from enslavement. We fight for the precious,\npriceless, right to live our lives in liberty. It is for this country,\nthis freedom, that our men in arms are risking\u2014giving\u2014\ntheir lives, in the air, on the s.ea, and on the land. Those of us\nwho do not bear arms must bear our dollars to the colors to\nsupport those of us who do not bear arms, must bear our dollars to the colors to support those who do. Large subscribers,\ninstitutions, corporations responded quickly and encouragingly\n\u2014sure evidence of their sense of safe investment value as well\nas their sense of patriotic duty.\n\"To those of modest means, as fo all Canadians, I stress-\nthis solemn appeal: recrgit your earnings, your savings, quickly\nto the colors. Buy war loan bonds.\n\"Invest now in human freedom.\"\n(Signed),   |. L. ILSLEY,\nMinister of Finance.\n..atiiiuuiaiiiiiu   trie   inc tn.  w-iif     ,.        , ,     \u25a0_.-._    .._      _.\n\u2022rt dug down .7i\/2 feet to where the forenoon today It was the ac\ncustomed time for Sunday services\nin St. Paul's, but today for the first\ntime in many years there were no\nservices.\nIn mid-afternoon two tandem-\nhitched trucks iinally dragged out\nthe bomb.\nIt was no dud. Its elght-fpot\nlength was fitted with a profusion\ncf fuses which made it dangerous\nI even to touch. Gently it was loaded\non to a truck, and Lieut. Davies\n| drove it away, with red flags waving to warn of danger, it blasted out\na 100-foot crater in the marsh where\nit was set off.\nThe London Press today men\ntioned a new method of combatting\nthese bombs, but no reference to it\nwas made by the St. Paul's workers,\nwho seemingly had not been able\nto use such a device.\nElatedly telling of the new method\nof combatting these bombs\u2014one of\nwhich damaged Buckingham Palace\nTuesday after lying unexploded for\nthree days \u2014 The News Chronicle\nsaid:\n\"Our scientists have found an\nanswer to that terrible weapon.\nthe time bomb, which Hitler has\nused against St. Paul's Cathedral\nand Buckingham Palace and other\nLondon public buildings.\n\"Working in hidden Government laboratories the experts have\nproduced an apparatus which\nhalts the action of the bomb. The\nbomb then can be safely removed for dismantling.\"\nLate Flashes\nBERLIN, Sept 16 (Mondiy).\nTwo ilr raid alarms of ibout t\nhalf-hour eich Interrupted Ber-\nllners' sleep lilt night ind thll\nmorning. No gunfire wis h-ard\nIn tht capital.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15 (AP) -\nMacKay Radio reported intercepting\na message tonight saying that the\nSwedish freighter Laponia, 5609 tons\nwas disabled in a hurricane about\n350 miles East of Cape Hatteras and\nthat she had asked nearby ships to\nstand by.\nLONDON, Stpt. 16 (Mondiy).\n(CP)\u2014A wounded German aviator who was shot down in a London suburb wu captured last\nnight by a detachment of soldiers\nwho fended off a crowd that surrounded him and tore his parachute to pieces for souvenirs.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 15 (CP)\n\u2014Reports that lacked confirmation\ncirculated on the waterfront tonight that an ftalian engineer had\nbeen removed from the Philippine\nfreighter Dona Auroa when the vessel was stopped Saturday by a\nBritish warship 100 miles off the\nCalifornia coast, en route to Manila and the Orient\n175\nShot\nFrom Skies\nby  British Guns\nSouthwest Town Draws Most Raiders; Nazis\nBelieved Attempting to Smash Air Path\nto Invasion; More Thought Downed\nBy DOUGLAS AMARON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Sept. 16 (Monday) \u2014(CP Cable) .\u2014Germany\npaid with 175 planes in a strenuous attempt to smash art sir\npathway to invasion Sunday, and a procession of German war-\nplanes circling London last night and early today for nine hours\nand 28 minutes was held off by London's steel circle of antiaircraft. ,\nThe sharp \"ackaek\" fire reverberated through old London\nand illuminated an already moonlit sky.\nThe all-night alarm was the second longest of the wir,\nexceeded only by the nine-hour, 40-minute raid of a week ago.\nSunday was started with \"feeler\" attacks, then tfw Germans came over in two great waves during the afternoon which\nsaw some of the greatest air battles of the war in Britain's skies.\nThe ill-clear came at dawn at 5:35^-\ni.m. For three hours before it sounded there was comparative calm in\nLondon. Distant gunfire was heard,\nIn the region of the Thames estuary\nand in the South, but little else,\nA correspondent in a Southwest\ntown said the German raiders there,\nhowever, were more numerous than\nusual, dropping clusters of incendiary bombs and some explosive\nbombs..\n- It wai believed thit whtn Sunday's final count It completer! It\nmight exceed that of tht prtvlout\nrecord diy, Aug. 15, exictly \u2022\nmonth igo, whin tht Air Forct\nbrought down 180 raiders.\nFrom Hammersmith in the West\nof London, to Beachy Head in Sussex, the story was the same\u2014British\nfighters In bitter dogfights with the\nraiders. ,.\nThirty British planes were lost\nbut 10 pilots were saved.\nThe German Sunday daylight\nraids on England were in iwo Dig\nwaves of 350 to 400 planes. Some of\nthe big Nazi bombers were brought\ndown in the heart of London\u2014one\non Victoria Station, others in the\nKensington end Streatharn sections.\nThen, as night came, the Germans\nshifted to the lone-raider technique,\nover London, over the Midlands and\nelsewhere in England.\nThey seemed rattled by the Intense anti-aircraft fire over London\nto the extent that they dropped\ntheir bombs is soon as they arr^'ed\nover the city and without the u-ual\npreliminary \"runs\" over a target\nBombs fell over a wide area,\nnot only in London but in the\nMidlands and Southeast and\nNortheast England.\nOne of London's oldest hospitals\nwas struck, and a medical officer\nwas Injured.\nMany of the Nazi planes were\nturned back as they camt over\nMaidstone and Canterbury above\nthe Medway and Thames estuary.\nOthers attacked Southampton and\nPortland and Hastings.\nA number of casualties were reported in Brighton, London's favorite seaside resort, in raids Saturday\nnight.\nThe most Important battles were\nfought over the Southeast area and\nLondon. Anti-aircraft joined the\nfighters in smashing the London\nraids and crowds in the streets,\ndrawn by the dog fights overhead,\ntook chances with the falling splin\nters to cheer each time a Spitfire ol\nHurricane got on to the tail ot I\nNazL\nOne big bomber, caught by a Spitfire, fell in full light of thousands\nand as the battle proceeded at least\nthree Germans wert seen to bail\nout into the inner London area.\nThere were five Sunday raids\nIn ill London\u2014ont before dawn,\ntwo ef little more than an hourt\nduration each In bread daylight\nanother at dutk, and one during\nthe early evening.\nThe Air Mlnlitry innounoed British defences shot down 18 Nut raiders Saturday, three of them during\nthe houri of darkness. Fighter\nplanes got IS of the bag and antiaircraft fire accounted for two. Nine\nBritish lighten wert lost but the\npilots of six ire safe.\nRaid Bund (amp\nin Blast Probe\nKENVIL, N. J\u201e Sept 15 (AP).-*\nsheriff's force raided the German-\nAmerican Bund camp it nearby An-\ndover and an investigator ot tht\nCongressional Committee Investigating Unamerican activities searched\nemployees' lockers at the Hercules\nPowder Company plant here today as sequels to an explosion\nwhich took at least 47 lives.\nSheriff Denton 3. Quick of Sua*\nsex County deputized 18 smalltown police chiefs and swept\ndown on Camp Nordlan. He uld\nthe force seized subversive literature and a' rifle equipped with\ntelescopic sights.\nHe then came here to check tha\nHercules payroll against i list of\npersons believed to frequent the\nBund camp. Andover is about 10\nmiles from the plant scene .of a\nterrific powder explosion Thursday.\nRobert B. Barker, special Investigator for the committee, said he\nhad searched such lockers as sur-'\nvived fire and explosion for evidence that any workers belonged\nto subversive, groups. He declined\nto discuss his' findings.\nR. A. F. Drops Tons\nof Bombs on Nazi\nPorts of Invasion\nLONDON, Stpt 15 (CP)-Tht\nAir Ministry announced tonight\nthit Britain's bombers, \"struck\nheavily\" Saturday night ind eirly\ntodiy it tht \"front-lint\" of Invasion, dropping tons of bombi\non German shipping, barge concentrations, military equipment\n\u2022nd stores assembled in the channel ports of Holland, Fnnct tnd\nBelgium. \u2022\nTht rtldtrt fltw through \"tp-\npilling weather,\" the Air Ministry\nuld,\nAircraft wtrt itruck by lightning,\nradio aerials were burned off in\nviolent electrical storms snd many\nmachines were \"Iced up.\" But the\nR.A.F. carried out its mission.\nThe Air Ministry news service\nSlid:\n\"Havoc wu caused In the vast\nnetwork of docks, warehouses and\npetrol sheds on the banks of the\nScheldt (In Holland) and the shipping lying in the stream, as larse\nforces of bombers dropped nearly\n40 tons of high explosive bombs\nover 1000 incendiaries in an attack\n(on Antwerp) lasting from 11\no'clock until 1:30 a.m. today.\"\nOne R.A.F. pilot attacking Antwerp, set afire a 5000-ton merchant\nship and said he saw more thsn\n300 barges in the harbor\u2014possibly\nthe dagger point of intended invasion.\nOstend, too, was found to have\nbeen greatly strengthened in the\npast week, and was hit hard. A\nLire was also started at Calais.\nR.A.F. Bombers attacked ports\nill along the Nazi-held coast\nFlushing In the Netherlands, Antwerp md Ostend In Belgium, snd\nDunkerque, Calais and Boulogne\nin Frsnce were heavily bombed.\nRaiders also flew Eastward to attack supply depots at places\nthroughout Belgium and Western\nGermany, including the supply depots at Osnabruck, Mannheim,\nAachen, Hamm, Krefeld and Brussels.\nIn hitting at these centres through\nwhich the Germans are supplying\nthe troops they have massed at the\nchannel in preparation for a possible sttempt at invasion, the RAJ,\nalso thrust at rail communications\nat RheinA Ahaus, Sundew, Hut-\nten and West Hofen.\n\t\n\t\nV  \u25a0;\n\t\n ,\nIPJUIIIII\nr**QE  TWO\n\u2014NELSON  DAILfy  NEWS. NELSON. B. C-MONOAY   MORNING.  SEPT.  IS. 1MB-\nTraining, Team Spirit Lies Behind\nSuccessful Royal Air Force Work\n.    OTTAWA-Men of the Royal Air\nforce do not doubt for a minute\nI that they can withstand tht savage\n; assault ot a numerically superior\nGerman air force, according to a\n[high ranking officer of the R.A.F.,\nnow in Canada'after lift months\nI of active service as commander of a\n[squadron of twin-engined bombers\nin the coastal command.\n:   Morale of the 'British public is\n[high  despite incessant air raids.\nI this British Officer, who declined to\nf allow his name to be published, re-\n, ported. When he wis In London\n| just a little more than a week ago.\nhe wu dubious about train service\n'to the channel ports lollowlng a\n\u25a0\u2022%ave of MO German bombers, so\nhe asked the hotel porter to inquire\not the rallrosd. The porter was astonished   at   the  question.   \"Why\nwouldn't the train be running, Sir?\"\nhe asked. The train did run to\nschedule, and tht officer saw no\nGerman plants as It puffed along\nthe coast, nor did he see any physical evidence of damage from the\n(Jerman bombs.\n\"The success we have had has\nbeen due te crew training and the\nteam spirit,\" he said. The Avro An-\naon and then the Lockheed Hudson\ntwin-engined bombers we flew seven days out of the seven on patrol\n\u25a0work ranging from Norway to beyond the Faroe Islands carry a\nerew ot four. They are two pilots.\nWho alternate as navigators, and\nWe ctffi pfvt yov\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nfor Your form'\/\/\nRETIREMENT INCOME\nfor Yourself\nEDUCATION INSURANCE\nfor Your Children\nTHOUSANDS OF DOLLARS\nOF BENEFITS\nFOR $10 A MONTH\nThe Dominion Lift Ajsnr.nct\nCompter offers you the raodtrn\nJMCua of buyio j Lift Insurance\u2014\ny\u00ab -a-re wut roo csn afford to\nBnjgil tic. monlh, in tmiU l\/tlO\ntad thit 110 (or multiples of 10\nboys yon io much Insurance.\nDid that statement \u2014\nTHOUSANDS OF DOLLARS FOR\n$10 A MONTH-ieem strong?\nWell, it Is true, for tht mtaurt\nyour Application il accepted ud\nyoa par your Premium, you ha\u00bbe\ncreated tn estate of thousands of\ndollars. 120.00 s month would\ndouble these bene-U\u2014$30 triple\nthem\u2014end so on.\nIf you can budget $10 a month for\n. t start (Or in increase) in Life\nInsurance\u2014 let us discuss the kind\nOt Policy you need andhnwmuch\n110 a mom- will provide       ct\nJames Johnston\nDistrict Minager\n524 2nd. St., Nelson, B.C.\nthere are two air gunners who alternate -I wireless operators.\n\"These crewi ire selected very\ncarefully, trained as a smoothly-\nfunctioning unit, and they remain\ntogether. Bach man has his own role\nto play, and each knows that the\nlives ot his comrades He in his\nhands, that laxity on hli pirt might\nbring death to all.\n\"Tht pilots know how much depends on thtir flying iklll. Whtn\nthty are navigating tht aircraft\nover long stretches of Mi with\nrarely a ihlp to be tttn they\nknow, ai do all the others, Just\nhow Important It Is that thtir navigation It without crro-, for bad\nweather and a dwindling gasollnt\nsupply form formldabla foti.\n'\"The wireless operators know\nthat they must listen carefully for\nmessages and orders from other\nplanes in the formation or from the\nhome base, and that failure on their\npert would be dangerous for all\nconcerned.\n\"The air gunner knows that he\nmust be the eyes ot the crew, alert\nat all times for signs of the enemy\nbelow and above. With the others\nintent on flying, navigating and receiving wireless messages, the air\ngunner is the guarantee that (he\ncrew will not fall victim to a surprise attack.\n\"When new air gunners reported\nto the squadron for duty, I used\nto tell them that they were the\nbravest men in the Air Force. They\nare singled out by gunners in attacking planes, and they fly for\nhours In cramped quarters surrounded by guns and ammunition\nbelts, and in some cases are riding\nbackwards through all the evolutions of a dogfight.\n\"Our pilots know they can de*\npend upon their Air Gunners in\nany kind ot a pinch, and with\nsuch large aircraft the- h-ve learned the folly of trying to do all the\nshooting themselves with their fixed guns in the wing. So titty concern themselves mainly with putting tht aircraft in good position\ntor the gunner, to bring his wean'\non to bear.' Very ofttn one wll\nheir the various guns go into action one tfter the other is the\npilot brings first one and then\nmother gunner a target to shoot\nit\n\"All of our crews are well train\ned when they come to ui, but the\ntraining goes on, for they must pull\nsmoothly together for efficiency.   .\n\"A week or so igo \u2022 Heinkel\nbomber was brought down over\nScotland and the commander of\nthe plane, a young wirrlnt officer\nof ibout 18 yein old, was brought\ninto my office, for interrogation.\nHe saluted smartly with thst Hitler\ns-lute, but be told me he had hid\nonly 80 heurs flying experience.\nOur pilots hive at least 1J0 hours\nbefore they come to an active service squadron.\"\nFormer Nelson Minister Now\nSenior Chaplain at Dundurn\nCranbrook Man Is\nBaptist Speaker\nClimaxing a day In Which Frank\nPatch of Cranbrook occupied the\npulpit of the First Bsptlst Church\nat Nelson, the ordinance of baptism wu administered to five candidates at the Church on Sunday\nevening.\nMr. Patch gave a \"chalk talk\" for\nthe Sunday School, and at the morning church service spoke on the\ntheme \"Mind Over Matter.\" He conducted an afternoon service at Shirley Hall, and in the evening spoke\nagain at the First Baptist Church\nhis subject being, \"Sin ind God in\nOur Hindi\".\nMiss Margaret Walton wu soloist\nat the morning service.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\n.r-UME-J. P. Clement, F. M. Rytn,\nMr. tnd Mrs. C. T. McHattes, Mrs.\n_. H. Nibe, W. C. Dagg, J. M Mc-\nAdams, P J. Mitchell, R. R. Walker,\nr. G. M. Foster, T. A. .Wood, Miss\nD. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nSmith, G. Mi Endicott, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. R. Botsford. W. H. McKenzit.\n0. Ledder, G. W. A. Chowne, Vancouver; Mrs. G. Hales, Grand Forks;\nF. E. Smith, Gray Creek; Mrs. A.\nP. Brown, Powell River; Mr. and\nMrs. A. J. Watson, Crawford Biy;\nLt. Col. Philpotts, 'Cranbrook; Dr.\nA. X. Patterson, Rossland; Mr, and\nMrs. H. Johnson, Arrowhead, H. L.\nSinclair. Penticton; P. M. Words,\nMedicine Hat; E. Nellson and family, Yorkton, Sask.; J. Gibson, Toronto; J. E. Josephson, P. J. Ostrem,\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Wall, Seattle. -\nMEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS\nId our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms In the. Interior \u2014 Bith or Shower.\nROOMS SI UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME\"       Newly renevittd through.\nn*aCC____SM    |t__*<.l   out'  Ph0BM ,nd eltvttor.\nuuiierin noiei a \u2022patterson. iat\u00ab _t\ngpO Seymour St Vincouvtr, B.C. Coleman. Alto.. Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION-Posscnqer and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\nS a.m. and 10:30 a.m. \u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM   H.  IHCIVOR, Prop,\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n\u25a0 m%rwmm>mm*-mmmmmm\nHon. Maj. Mawhinney\nDirects Spiritual\n- Work at Camp\n(Pram Rigina Ltider-Poit)\nDUNDURN CAMP, Balk. - A\nsoldier's but pal Ii hli padre,\nNo matter who hi It, seasoned\nsoldier or tyro, the trooper it ont\ntlmt er mother flndt himself\n\u2022gainst stmt problem ind hi hi*\nto oentldt hli troubltt to someone. Hli Colonel his enough worries, to ht dossn't go tt him. Hit\nwlft lint iround. So ht goes to\ntht padrt.\nThat's why Hon. Major the Rev.\nW. C. Mawnlnnty, of the Protestant\nfaith, Senior Chaplain, and his associates are busy men at this Saskatchewan troop concentration\ncentre.\nThat's why, too. that Major Mawhinney, follows this creed, if creed\nIt could'be called: \"It Is the life a\nchaplain lives, is w.ell as the creed\nhe professes, that will count most\nin the service. He can be of the\ngreatest possible value to tht troops\nby creating and fostering a strong\nesprit de cOrpi.\"\nCHAPLAIN'S A8SOCIATE8\nWith the troopi practically since\nthe outbreak of the war, Major Mi-\nwhinney today finds hlmielf directing the spiritual wor-k In a cimp\nwhich assumes the site of a imall\nSaskatechewan city. Aasociated\nwith him in this Important work\nare Hon. Mijor A. J. Barker, Saskatoon, Roman Cithollcpadre; Hon.\nCaptain F. V. C. Ward, Frenchmin's\nBulte. Silk., Anglican; and Hen.\nCapt. G. Turpln, from British Co.\nlum-tta, both with the C.A.S.F.;\nand Hon. Capt. _. Ferler, LlOyd-\nmlnster, Pidre of the Non-Permanent Active Militia camp.\nEvery Sunday morning the troopi\nmarch to the parade ground where\nthey form an open square, the\npadres taking their position at the\nopen end beside flag-draped drums\nto conduct a service particularly\nimpressive under a Summer sky. A\nregimental band provides accompaniment for tht hymns and a public address system carries the voices\nof tht ministers to the farthest\ncorner of the huge squire.\nEvery Sunday evening, too, there\nii a voluntary service In the chipel\nin the recreation building and each\nSunday the response is gratifying.\nIn addition, communion is administered to Church of England adherent! three timei a month, to\nother Proteitmt troops once i\nmonth.\nVISIT HOSPITAL\nBut there ire other duties, equal-\nCanjijjA In Thick of Dangerous\nftSfcorfol Air Patrol and Attacks\nBtfKW. _K - 'Shoulder to\nshoulder as blood brothers of the\nCommonwtlttv Camdlint, Australians, Ntw ZSjandtn, South Africans, Welshm\u00ab_7Seoti and Englishmen live, fly and fight together in\na truly \"Empire\" squadron of the\nRoyil Air Force Coastal Command\n\"Somewhere in Scotland.\"\nA tall, spare Englishman who\nsommandtd thii squadron up until\na week ago told with enthusiasm of\nthe splentdld work \"Slim\" Avent,\n\"Tuffy\" Tufford and other Canadians were carrying on, shoulder\nto shoulder with eager young men\nfrom other part* of the Empire. The\nerstwhile commander who won the\nD. S. 0. and D. F. C. said that it\nwas with real regret that he left the\nsquadron to come to Canada on\nRoyal Air- Force business.\n\"All the boyi are very |tetn, and\nthty art doing important work in\nmaintaining British control of the\nseas,\" he said. Seven days out of\n.even they go out in their United\nStates made Lockheed Hudson twin-\nengined bombers to patrol the seas\nto reconnoitre enemy coastline! and\nbomb their, harbors, and to provide\nan aerial escort for convoys of merchant ships.\"\nPatrols go on In fair weather or\nfoul. Despite rain, fog and bitter\ncold, the squadron mikes long patois from the Norwegian coast to beyond the Faroe Islands, swooping\ndown to. examine strange vessels,\nand reporting their position by radio to the navy.\nU-boats lurking In British shipping lanes dive deep when a Coastal\nCommand Hudson drones over the\nhorl.on. This squadron has attacked\n27 U-boats, and its bombs have accounted for quite i number. One\nundersea boat reared up in' a\nwhirl cf foam and thtn slid down\nto Davy Jones' 'locker tall first. An\nHON. MAJOR THE REV. W. C, MAWHINNEY\nSenior Chaplain at Dundurn Camp, Saskatchewan.\nly as important as the services, for\nthese men who take the salute of\nthe troops but walk arm-in-arm\nand shoulder-to-shoulder with them.\nAn Important phase of the camp\nwork is regular visits to the men\nin the 90-bed hospital, interviewing\nand helping men who come for assistance in personal problems,, of-\nftei ting at marriages and baptisms.\nThe chaplain service is an interesting and Important phase of army\nwork\u2014many ex-service men remember the kind help and encour\nagement of their padres who went\nwith them through shellfire\u2014 but\nnowhere, except perhaps in the\nArctic, does a minister get so close\nto his men as he does in an army\ncamp,\nBut he has to be a good minister\nto do that. He csn't be squesmlsh\nabout things. He is part of the army\nand to be successful ht hai to fill\nin with many ways and ihoW i\nproper understanding of them.\nThat's why the men and their\nministers get along at Dundurn.\nMINE   SWEEPERS\nBAG GERMAN\nPLANE\nLONDON, SepL 15 (CD-\nTwo mine sweeping trawlers\nteamed up to shoot down I German air raider over the English Channel today, the Admiralty announced.\nAn Admirilty communique\nIssued lltt Sunday ifternoon\nsaid:\n\"His Mijesty'i triwltr Libra\n(Temporiry Skipper A. -R.\nAughton, R.N.R.) and His Majesty's triwler Conquistidor\n(temporiry Skipper J. Patter-\nion) destroyed an enemy aircraft this morning, There were\nno casualties.\"\nPlane Reported Down\nNEW YORK, Sept. IS (AP). -\nMtcKay Radio ssid It hid picked\nup \u2022 message from i British radio\nstation reporting \"one aircraft in\nsea\" about 300 miles Southeast of\nReykjavik, Iceland.\nThe position given is -long the\nroute taken by some of the American bombing planes being flown\nfrom Canada to Englind.\nWIN JUNIOR BALL TITLE\nLETHBRIDGE, Alt!., Sept. 19\n(CP) \u2014 The Rosedale Midwiys\nsmashed out \u25a0 third straight victorv\nover the Lethbridge Junior Baseball\nClub by beating them today 8-0.\ncrowning them as Alberta champions.\nDe Gaulle Sees\nAttack on Nazis\nLONDON, Sept. 15 (CP).-Gen.\nCharles De Gaulle believes a military invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe is practicable for an offensive\nforce possessing naval and sir superiority sufficient to seize apd\nhold a deep bridgehead and guarantee continuity of supply.     '.\nLarge scale use of parachule\ntroops would be \"imperative\", he\nsays.\nThis statement by the head of the\nFrench National Committee appears\nin a book entitled \"The Coming Invasion of Germany\" by James Mar-\nlow, published today.\n\"Generally speaking, too, such\noperations are possible as soon as\nthe enemy shows signs of becoming\nexhausted through the blockade or\nfor other reasons,\" De Gaulle said.\nMore B. C. Companies\nSubscribe to Loan\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP)-A further list of subscriptions to Canada's\nwar loan was issued tonight. Subscriptions included:\nBritilsh Columbia: British Columbia Telephone Co.. $50,000 additipn-\nal (total subscription $150,000);\nSafeway Stores Ltd., $100,000; British Columbia Electric Railway Co.\nLtd.. $50,000 additional (total subscription $250,000): Capilano Brewing Co., Ltd.. $30,000 additional\n(total subscription $100,000); all of\nVancouver.\nTrain Ho. 12 East Daily\nStandard Sleeper \u2014 Air-conditioned Day Coach.\nDining Service\nCONNECTS AT MEDICINE HAT WITH\nThe DOMINION\n.   FOR WINNIPEG, TORONTO, MONTREAL AND\nUNITED STATES POINTS\n(Air-conditioned   Equlpmlnt.)\nAttractive Low Fares\nNow in Effect\nPopular  prletd  tabla  d'hote tnd a  li carle  meili served  In\ndiners. Economical trty strvlet In coaches ind tourist can (on\nTrains 3 and 4, only) served by attendant.\nPrepaid Ticket deliveries arranged to any point.\nBleyelti Chtcktd Frtt on Ail Tlekttt\nExcept \"Bargain Excursion\"\nFor further tirtteuliri It* your local ticket agent, or write:\nJ, Q. WltlOn, City Ticket Agent, Nelion, B.C.\nSO. Biker St Phont 203\nGW&\u00bbA#c\nHeavy Weekend Rain\nReduces the Opening\nToll of Grouse, Deer\nHeavy rain Saturday, leaving underbrush heavy and wet- Sunday,\nminimized the toll on grouse is the\nseason opened Sunday. Many hunters who ord'narily would have been\nIn the hills Sunday stayed at home,\nand those who were out saw few\nbirds.\nThe wet weather kept many deer\nhunters out of the hills on the opening day of the deer seasen.\nother turned upside down, exposing\nIts ugly bottom before sinking with\nall hands. Others were tripped under the lurfice, tht bomb Owl*\nlions bringing a tell-tale smudge ol\noil\nAt times the squadron interrupt!\nthe ceaseless vigilance over the lea\nlanes to take the offensive and\nstrike hard at the foe. \"Slim\" Avent\nhas been on 11 raids.\nOna tlmt, tht squadron's commander recalled, word earn* that\nthe German battle cruiser Scharn-\nhont was cruising down tht Norweglin coist. Tht commsnder of\nthi Contil Commind iquidron\ntook six Hudsons heavily lidtn\nwith bombs and tet a coune to\nIntercept the German capital ihlp\nnear Stavangir.\nWarily, the bombers came to the\nNorwegian coast at 16,001) feet, for\na large number ot German planes\nwere Known to be based at Stavan-\nger. A fleecy cloud bank thouisuds\no( Met below hid the sea, but the\ncommander knew the Scharnhorst\nwas there. He did not attack Immediately In a \"blind dive through\nthe clouds because German fighters might be there. As they came\nover the edge of the cotton cloud\nmass, about 50 German Maeser-\nschmltt fighters twinkled In the sun\nIn a protective mean over the\nbattle crulaer.\nThe first salvo of shells from\nthe Scharphorst's anti-aircraft bat-\nterles burst with a crick rightm\nfront ot the ltader'i machine, and\nshrapnel rattled Into the aircraft\ndespite tht fact it Waa 19,000 feet\nhigh. The commander carries I\npiece of the German steel is a\nmemento. Every aircraft In the formation was itruck by the vicious\nantl-i|rcra_t fire from the Scharn-\nhorst, but all dropped their bombi\nand returned home safely.\nHOSIERY\nCREPE,\nCHIFFON\n$1.00\n-idler Wear        Burnt Slock\nTWO FRENCH SHIPS\nHIT MINEFIELDS\nAND SINK\nVICHY, Fr-nct, Sept 15 (AP)\n--\u2022Tht Admiralty announced tonight that two French cargo\nihins, running between France\nand North Africa, had itruck a\nminefield oft the coast of Sardinia Friday and had iunk.\nThree soldiers, among a number Ming transported back to\nFrance, were drowned. The rest\nof the passengers and crews\nwere reported safe.\nThe snips were the GInette le\nBorgne and the Csssldilone, A\nthird ship, the Cap Touralne,\nwas damaged, but kept afloat.\nStaflcro\nAMERICAN\n\u201e     , W    L   Pet. Bhd.\nCleveland     81   59   .579 \u2014\nDetroit         80   60   .571     1   \u2022\nNew York     77   62   .554 3t4\nChic-go    77   64   .546 4V.\nBoston     74   67   .525    714\nWashington     60   80   .428 21\nSt. Louis     60   81   .426 2U4\nPhiladelphia     50   88   .368 29\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati      90   47   .657 \u2014,\nBrooklyn      83   58   .589    1\nSt. Louis ..     72   64   .529 17Vi\nPittsburgh     72   66   .522 18Vi\nNew York     68   72   .478 24V4\nChicago     68   73   .482 24\nBoston       59   82   .418 33\nPhiladelphia     45   93   .326 45V4\nINTERNATIONAL\nFinal standings:\nClub: W   L Pcf.\n\u2022Rochester     96   61 .811\nNewark         95   65 .594\nJersey City    81   78 .M\nBaltimore    II   79 .506\nMontreal    80   80 .500\nBuffalo       78  83 .478\nSyracuse  71 90 .441\nToronto  57 101 .391\nPACIFIC COAST\nFinal standings:\nSeattle      112   66 .629\nLos Angeles  102   73 .579\nOakland     94   84 .528\nSan Diego .:.    92   85 .520\nSacramento    90 . 88 .506\nHollywood        84   94 .472\nSan Francisco    81   97 .455\nPortland     56 122 .315\nCHANCE IN SERVICE\nARROW LAKES\n\u2022      EFFECTIVE SEPT 17\nSteamer Mlnto will leave\nRobson West Tuesdays tnd\nFridays at 7:00 a.m., and arrive Nakusp 5:00.p.m. same\ndays. Balance of schedule ll\nunchmged.\nJ. Q. WATSON\nCity Tloket Agent\n.   Nelson,  B.C.\n^^e\/1rf9V^r^\"I^P*W 9 ^ %>***m^nmwmTw\nNelson Rinks Win\nBowls Wilh Kaslo\nIn another of their series ot\nfriendly lawn bowling matches, Nelson rinks outscored Kaslo 83-62 In\nplay at the C. P. R. greens Sunday\nifternoon. This Is the second visit\nto Nelson of the Kaslo club of th'\nmonth. Nelson going to the Cherry\nCity \u2022 week igo.\nResults, with Ksslo rinks mentioned first, follow:\nRouleiu    000 001 011 025-10\nGraham     112 110 200 100-9\nE. Qiegerlch, A. G. Robertson ind\nFrank Rouleau; A. T. Richards, J.\nSimmcns and J. Graham.\nPapworth   000 100 000 000- 1\nTemple     Ill 021 122 112-15\nMrs. Clirey, Miu K. Watts, Mra\nTlnkess and Mrs. Papworth; Mrs.\nJ. T. Sindel, Mrs. Ben Whiteside.\nMrs. A. T. Richards ind Mrs. T. A.\nTemple.\nExter    110 101 000 000- 4\nPenwill   1. 001 010 913 011-13\nMiss K. Watts, W. H. Dunn, W. L.\nBillings and Harry Exter; Mrs. A.\nT. Richards, 3. Grahim, A. G. Par-\nvt* ind E. W. Penwill.\nExter    100 010 110 0- 3\nPenwill       011 301 001 2- 9\nMrs. Tlnkess, Frank Rouleau, W\nL. Billings and Harry Exter; Mrs.\nJ. T. Sindel, J. Graham, Mrs. A. T.\nRichards and E. W. Penwill.\nDunn    , 000 003 000 1- 5\nHarvey     120 120 053 0-14\nMrs. Papworth, E. Giegerich, Mr\nMcDougall and W. H. Dunn; Mrs\nT. A. Temple. 3. Simmons, A. T\nRichards tnd A. G. Hirvey.\nRouleau  120 101 120 102-11\nGouldlng  001 020 001 010- 5\nMrs. Pipworth, E. Giegerich, Mr.\nMcDougall and Frank Rouleau; Mrs.\nBen Whiteside, Mrs. T. A. Temple, A,\nT. Richards md J. S. Gouldlng.\nExter    Ml 001 110 110- 6\nMorgan   130 330 002 005\u201417\nMr. McDougill, W. H. Dunn, W. L,\nBillings md Harry Exter; A. G.\nHarvey. E. W. Penwill, J. S. Gouldlng tnd J. P. Morgan.\nBilisdtn     240 020001 011-12\nMorgan     001201.320 100\u201411\nMrs. Clirey, Mrs. Tlnkess and A.\nB. Blllsden; Mrs. J. T. Sindel, J\nSimmons and J. P. Morgan.\nU.S. Speaker Dies\n\u25a0WASHINGTON, Stpt. 15 (AP)\n\u2014 William B. Birikhttd, 99,\nSpeaker of tht Unlttd States\nHoust of Representatives, ind father of Tillulih Binkhtid, noted\ntetress, died In hospital htrt\ntoday.\nTr|e Democratic politician from\nAlabama was stricken September 10\nin Baltimore where he had gone to\ndeliver a political address.\nI President Roosevelt, memben of\nthe Cabinet and Congress will attend i state funeral in the Chamber\nof the Houst of Representatives\ntomorrow.\nThe service will be preceded by\nthe elevation ef Sam Riyburn of\nTexas, present House Democrat!.\nLeader, to succeed Bankhead.\nAfter the service a special train\nwill take tbt body to Jasper, All.,\nfor burial. Tht House Will incest\nlot three days to permit member,\nto itttrid tht Jisper services.\nA member of Congress since 1917.\nBankhead wis elected Spesktr in\n1936 Upon tht death of SMlkM\nJoseph^. Byrts of Tenneilte.\nMELBOtlRNE (CP) .-Recruiting\ndoctors wtrt imiztd whtn i man\nrt) acted because one toe overlippcd\nanother, returned I fortnight liter\nwith tbe toe amputated. Ht wai\naccepted.\nCities' Wartime\nProblems lo the\nFore, Revelstoke\nVANCOUVER, B.C, 9*Pt 19 -\nWartime problemi ot municipal administration and finance will be\nSiven attention it tbe convention of\nut Union oi rf.C. Municipalities at\nRevelstoke this week. While the\nlong-twaiteu Slrola report which\nwas to be the basis of a new deal lor\nB.C. municipalities is now a matter\nof publio record, the hoped-for readjustment, lt is expected, is destined to be stood Ovtr indefinitely\nin vitw of the necessity for devoting the country's attention and energy toward tht winning of the\nwar.\nBut there ire municipal problems\nwhich must bt dealt with. Especially in the realm of finance some consideration will have to be given the\nposition of municipalities during the\nwar period.\nIn view- of this the decision wu\nreached to proceed with the annual\nconvention even though not directly\nconcerned with tbe wir effort. The\nquestion of meeting bond maturities\nis in somt cases pressing and in\nothers thtrt Is tht problem of financing public works which cm no\nlonger be postponed. While prepared to concede that financing for tht\nwir effort muit bt glvtn precedence\nmunicipal authorities point out that\nessential services such as educition,\nroids, witer supply and sanitation\ncan not be neglected.\nThe Revelstoke meeting will act\n\u2022s a clearing-house for proposals\naiming it smoothing the pith for\nmunicipal administration in wir\ntime.\nAdvises Industry\nlo Take on Men\nlor War Vacancies\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP) .-Canadian Industry is being advlied to\ntake on additional men to be ready\nto fill, temporarily, the placet of\nthose called up for compulsory military training- and to provide for\npermanent vacancies which may bt\ncreated by men voluntarily enlisting in the Canadian Active Service\nForce,\nHOD. J. G. Gardiner, Minister\nof National War Services, slid in\nan interview tonight that one ol\nthe Immediate tasks of the human resources of his department,\nwould be to cooperate with industry in meeting any skilled labor\n' shortage    resulting    from    the\ntraining program.\nThe   Minister   estimated  Friday\nthat one-eighth of the men called lor\ntraining would want to stay In uniform and would join the Canadian-\nActive Service Force. On the bisis\nof 240,000 men called each yeir lor\ntraining, this would be 30,000 joining the C.A.S.F. Irom this source.\nA great volume ot Information on\nthe skilled labor available In Canada ii contained in the forms completed during national registration\nof ill persona of 18 yean or more\n\"uded last month.\nSI. Paul's Filled\nfor Rally Service\nSt. Paul's United Church was\ntaxed to capacity Sunday morning\nwhen \u25a0 Joint Sundiy School-Church\nrally service was held.\nThe general theme ol tht strvice\nwas \"Serving the Lord With Glfld-\nness\", and Rev. Foster Hilliard,\nPastor, told several stories as illustrations in place ol the regular sermon.\nTbe Boys' Choir under the direction of Mrs. T. 3. S. Ferguson sang\nseveral selections. Marjorie Jorgenson told t Bible Story, md Leonard\nBushel read a psalm. J. II. Coventry\nread prayers. Sydney Horswill sing\ni solo, \"Open the Gates of tht\nTemple\".\nPrevloui to the rally service, the\nSunday School met lor organization and preparations were made\nfor the regular annual promotions\nto be made next Sunday.\nNIGHT BALL\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL'\nTacoma  __    5 12   1\nSpokane :.   7 12   2\nCadlnha, Sandstrom and Brtnncr;\nWindsor and McNamee.\nFOUR DROWN IN\nFISHING TRAGEDY\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Sept. 13\n(CP)\u2014Four persons were drowned\nmd two rescued todiy when their\nsmill boat overturned on Tchesln-\nkut Lake, eight miles South of\nBurns Lake,' a settlement in the\nBritish Columbia Interior 170 miles\nEast of here.\nMeigre reports niching htrt lilted those drowned as Donald Crerar,\nfreight agent it the Cinadian National Railways here, hii wife, Mn.\nCrerar. O. Palumbo, roadmaster lor\nthe Canadian National Railways it\nBurns Lake md Alex Erlkson ot\nBums Lake.\nTht six wtrt fishing on tht lake\nwhtn their small boat capsized. The\nbodies ol tht victims hive not yet\nbeen recovered from the lake.\nBrilliant Doukhobor\nLady Dies, Hospital\nwlft of Wilier Kiitino. of Brlllisw\ndied in the Kooteniy Lake General\nHospital Sunday morning following\na snort Illness. She was in hospital\nfor ibout two weeks.\nThe funeral will take plact at\nBrilliant Thursday.\niformitlon will bt collected ind cliailtled lor the use of the\nhuman resources branch which will\nbe in i position to advise Industry\nwhit men ire available. The aim\nwill be to make lt unnecessary lor\nany Industry to becomt disrupted\nby sbsence ot men in military\ntriining or on active service.\nRUMANIA TO BE\nON NAZI LINES\nBUCHAREST. Sept 15 (AP) -\nRumanli'i new Totalitarian Iron\nGuard State, formed by decree ot\nGen. Ion Antonescu, cheered today\nia Young King Michtel brought hli\nmother, prlneejs Helen, back Irem\nexile to the Palace hli father, Carol,\nvacated a week ago.\nThe return of tht Roytl Matron,\nwhom Rumanians in now calling\n\"Regina Mima Helena,\" wn ar-\nranged by Antonescu n thi climax tf hit announcement of tht\ntransformation of tht state along\nNul lints.\nMother ind ion rode together lo\nan open coach drawn by six white\nhonei through the flower-itrewh\nstreets, followed in another coach\nby Antonescu, who i lew hours earlier hid named himselt leader ol\nthe National Iron Guard State md\nChiel ot the Iron Guard Regime\".\nAntonescu, who came to power\nwith German support but no political organization ot his own, ap-\nSeared to have won over the pro-\nfail Iron Guard by giving them a\nmajority ol the posts in his cabinet\nand naming their leader, Horia Sima\nat Vice-Premier.\nDaughter Greenwood\nMan Dies at Coast\nNews has been received ol the*\ndeath.it Vancouver of Mrs. Theresa\nMacKinnon, 53-year-old wife of\nDonald MacKinnon, of Vancouver,\nand daughter of Matthew Miloney\nof Greenwood. Mrs. MacKinnon died\nThursday ind funeral services took\nplace It Vancouver Saturday.     ,\nBesides her husbind md father,\nshe leaves two brothtn, Jim and\nFrank Moloney, md a lister, Mrs.\nF. Mahir,' two tons, Donald and\nJack MacKinnon, and \u2022 diughter,\nThelma M. MacKinnon, all ol Vmcouver.\n\"TIRED\"\nALL THE TIME\nSki hit _lH..bh-\ndrsm-l\u00bb-ir,Tit_it,\n- -iWref ill tpWN' 5nt\nhldn't iKo-lSt .1 her!\nUd_tfl,n_t-akM-_d\n,_..\u201e\u00ab_] IWn.Ki.-\nimj Pills. At one* ilx\ntttk Mfs. Th.\n\"w.ihe- Mt\" fttlhg\nwit mxm repliced -j\ndtu -m-M twrry\nHwdich., kscksthe,..\nii|M tf ftahy kkfatyt\nDoddsKidneyPills\nWOOD WORKING\nMILL WORK\nExpert workmanship it reasonibll\nprices\nKootenay Sash & Door Worki    '\nMt Ward St Opp City Hall\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. ,C. Plumbing b Heating\nCompany   Limited\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrsnd Adding Miehlnn\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fliher Ltd.\n539 Ward St Phont It\n TODAY'S News Pictures\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON.\n*\nB. C.-MONDAY  MORNINO. SIPT. If. 1940-\n*\u00bb-*-.\nKing Shares Ruthless Nazi Bombing With People\n.....\n:..:.\u201e.   ,\".'\"     '    \u25a0'        '\n*l\n.     \"     '\nn\nf ' '\u25a0 \u2022\n4-' v.% ...\n\u25a0_.\n'_.\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\".\n-JJfv\u00bb.*>\n\u2022\u2022\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0. tfC.\n'% '\u25a0'\u25a0-        -''\u25a0\u25a0,\"\u25a0\u25a0>\n  >,,          <_Yn_\n: '*'\"'\u25a0\" %:'S\n.*'^ln_^_?__---v 5._i\nto\nSharing the ruthless Nazi bombings of civilian London with his\npeople, the King is shown, left,\nconsoling East Londoners whoso\nbomb-wrecked homes may be\nseen In Hie background.. AR.P.\nworkers are shown, right, digging\nthrough wreckage in London's\nEast End. ,\nSwimmer Dies }\nHome on leave, this British Tommy helps his family to move from a bombed section of London\nto safer quarters\nBritish Tors Take Over VS. Destroyers\nGeorgia Coleman, former U.S.\njlympic  divin-'\ndied Saturday.\nOlympic  diving' champion,  who\n\"  1 Sat    '\n\"Miss America\"\nChosen by the judges at the Atlantic City beauty pageant, to be\n\"Miss America, 1940,' beautiful\nMiss Frances Marie Burke, of\nPhiladelphia. Pa., graces her\ncharm on her throne after being\ncrowned.\nPraised\nA cheering band of British seaman are pictured,\nbottom, as they arrived at an Eastern Canadian\nNephew of Prime Minister King,\nCommander H. N. Lay, Commander of the Canadian destroyer\nResligouclie, received high praise\nwhen he brought the battle scarred Restigouche home to a Canadian port from European waters.\nBritish authorities gave the entire\ncrew of the vessel nigh praise for\ntheir work In European waters.\nCanadian Destroyer Relieves Sister-Ship\nm\nBa\ny\n*     *\n9\n\u25a0 _____aJ%_,   \\\nf\nHon. Angus L. Macdonald, Minister of National Defence lor  Naval  Service, announced  a\nBombed Ship Saw  -\nGreat War Service\nMONTOSAL, Sept 18 (CP) -\nThe liner Empress ot Asia, announced In ftkyo,, Saturday to\nhave been accidentally bombed by\nJapanese naval tilers, uw service\nin the Flnt Great War as an armed auxiliary cruiser and a troop\nOfficials of Canadian Pacific\nSteamships Limited, ownera of tne\n16,909-ton vessel, said the Empress\npirticipated In the First Crest\nWar in the chase of the German\nraider Emden and took part In\nbombardment ot Turkish porta In\nthe Rod Sea.\nAfter the war, in 1919, she carried Canadian troopi back from\nEurope,  -.\nFear Germany\nMay Take Over\nport to take over destroyera turned over to Britain\nby the United States. A group of these destroyers\nare pictured, at a Canadian port\ndestroyer depirted frpm Cinidian waters lo relieve a sister-ship overseas. The Minister is shown\nwith the destroyer's commander.\nCHANCY, Switzerland, At The\nFrench Border, Sept 15 (AP)\u2014Defeated France, struggling to solve\nserious economic and political problems engendered by the disastrous\nwar, fears the Germans may take\nover the ' entire country within a\nfew weeks. Travellers returning\nfrom the unoccupied zone declared\ntoday.\nSwiss leaden also were said to\n>be concerned over the prospect of\nGerman control of the entire French\nSwlu border, now the only link between Switzerland and the outside\nworld free of Axis domination.\nThe French were described at expressing no eagerness for closer\ncontact with their conquerors but\nhopeful that union of the presently\ndivided country would improve\ntheir condition,\nAt Vichy the Petain government\nmet Friday night to study the question of food substitutes-. The French\nPress began preparing the nation\nfor severe restrictions as the full\nimport of the cost of maintaining\nthe German Army of occupation\nwas brought home .\nThe travellers asserted the Germans virtually have emptied the\nunoccupied zone of reserve stores\nof food md such merchandise as\ntextiles and rubber.\nThe Germans alone are able to\nmove goods, for there is no regular\nrail service, and only the German\nmilitary authorities have the gasoline to operate truck transports.\nFeeling is growing in France that\nonly a British victory will'assure\nFrance's future national existence.\nDeparture of Gen. Maxlme Wey-\ngand for a new post in French Morocco u soon as he recovers from\nrib fractures suffered in a recent\nairplane accident was regarded by\nobservers here as a spark of hope\nfor France in the event the entire\nnation becomes a virtual German\nprovince.\nWeygand is said to have left the\nPetain cabinet because he disagreed\nwith the aippeuement policy oi\nVice-Premier Peine Laval\nBORDERS CLOSED\nVICHY, France, Stpt 15 (AP)\n\u2014Unoccupied France wu practically eut off from the outsirle\nworld Saturday by elosure or extraordinary vigilance, tightening\npassage along ill ltt borders.\nTht Gtrmini tlghtentd tht re-\nitrlctlont on tho border between\ntht occupied ind tht unoccupied\nxonei, letting through a trickle\nof refugoet homeward bound, but\nrefusing entry to all others except for the most urgent reasons.\nThe Germini ire alto restricting\ndepirture from the occupied territory.\nThe Spanish-Portuguese borders\nare closed because of crowded conditions in Lisbon, now about the\nonly continental port of embarkation. The only exceptions made are\nlor persons holding tickets for immediate sailings or flights.\nThe Swiss also have tightened restrictions. The Italian border, the\nonly other one, is closed, presumably until a peace treaty ir signed.\nEscaped Prisoner\nIs Charged Under\nU.S. Immigration Law\nST. PAUL, Sept. 14 (AP)-Manuel\nFischer, 29, Nazi prisoner who escaped from internment camp ana\nwas captured in International FaUs\nis accused of violating. United\nStatu immigration laws, immigration officers here disclosed yester-\nday. Fischer is held in jail in the\nborder town. ... _.\nThe warrant for Fischers arrest,\nsaid C. W. Seaman, Federal Immigration Agent charges he entered\nDie United States at other than an\nimmigration port of entry; is a person likely to become a public\ncharge; entered without inspection,\nhad no immigration visa; and was\nnot in possession ot a valid pass-\nP\u00b0The date ol a hearing to be held\non the five counts has not been set\nand no action will be taken until\na decision lollowing such a hearing\n\u2022has been submitted to Washington\nofficials, Seamen said.\t\nBomber Caught in\nSearchlight Downed\nLONDON, Sept 5 (CP).-Caught\nin the glare of British searchlights,\na German Henkel 111 bomber was\nshot down in flames by a British\nfighter in Friday night's air raid on\nLondon. , ,       ,\nThe fighter was cruising above\nLondon'in the moonlight when its\npilot saw the Heinkel in the con-\ncentnted beams of searchlights several miles to the North.\nThe Briton pursued for 20 minutes. When the lighter opened lirn\nthe bomber dropped lis bombs to\nlighten its load. A burst Irom the\nHeinkel's rear gun caught the British ship's windscreen and wing, but\nthe lighter's bullets had gone home\nmd the bomber dropped llaming\nfrom the sky.\nCzech Beheaded for\nKilling Policeman\nBERLIN, Sept. 15 (AP)-Franz\nPetr, a Czech, was beheaded Saturday lor the slaying ot German Police\nSergeant Wilhelm Kniest on June 7,\n1939. 'at Kladno, Bohemia.\nPetr waa convicted ol high treason\nby the Peoples Court July 12, 1940.\nwhich lound he had participated in\nthe killing with an unfounct accomplice. The incident brought virtual\nmartial law down on Ihe Kladno industrial area.\nKarl Doepkin and Helmut Kremlin also were beheaded for treasonable activity. ,.'-.<\nCanada's Peace\nGrips Canadian\nFront War Zones\nBy GLADYS ARNOLD\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nOTTAWA. Sept 15 (CP). - The\nnormalcy of Canadian cities comes\nas a slight but pleasant shock, after\nthe day-to-day atmosphere which\nprevades London. One has forgotten\nwhat \"peace\" is like. It's a relief to\nsee a monument like the War Memorial standing naked and unafraid,\nnot dressed in sandbags and a tin\nhat to keep off the rain of bombs.\nIt's good to find the churches, the\n?ublic buildings and stores with\nheir windows unbanked and no\nbarricade of bristling and ruity\nbarbed wire embellishments.\nHow strange too to tee the lights\ncome on until the cities are ablize\nwith brightness md color. To see\nthe people loitering along the business streets \"window shopping\" \u2014\na pastime which has been denied\nto British men and women for a\nyear.\nNo more stepping into a black\nvacuum when coming out of a\ncinema, theatre or restaurant after\n10 o'clock. No more stumbling alor_\nin the dark searching for a whit,\npainted street-edge or dodging\npassers-by whose groping hands\nsometimes push into your face. No\nmore vainly looking for the flint\n\"open\" which Indicates that behind\nthe multitude of black velvet curtains and double doors a sandwich\nor a drink may be obtained.\nNo need here to take the stained\nglass windows of the churches and\nbury them somewhere in.the country. There's something comforting\ntoo about the roar of the airplanes\nwhich break through the busy, hum\nof the cities \u2014 a roar which one\nknows is friendly.\nBut In spite ol that, nerves become tense and strained \u2014 from\nhabit The habit which ciused a\nrecently-arrived Canadian carefully\nto pull down.the blinds In the hotel\nand close the curtains before turning on the light; Just as carefully\nto turn out the light at 10 o'clock\nbefore going to the window to see\nwhere the airplane roar came from.\nThat's the silly sort of thing one\ndoes for a while after coming back\nto a sane corner ol the world.\nTHING8 APPRECIATEp\nThere's something very precious\ntoo about being able to look up tho\ncanal into the beautiful parks and\nnot see the green grass turned up\nand disfigured by trenches; sandbag\nfortresses encircled by barbed-wiro\nfrom which the menacing snouts of\nguns point skyward.\nIt's a bit startling at first to see\na bus or streetcar come around\nthe corner with all lights blazing\nat midnight As the little English\nboy who wrote home from Canada\nto his parents said. \"I like Canada\nvery much but there's a scandalous\nwaste of electricity and petrol going\nHi\nBBBBBBBBW*\u2122*J*Z\u00b0\nRecord Sale of\nRemnants and Millends\n300 yards 36\" print millends 5 to 10 yard\nlengths. Reg. values to 35c. Yard\t\n800 yards 36\" striped flannelette millends.\nReg. to 35c. Yard\t\n17c\nAnd hundreds of useful lengths of cretonne woollens,\nsilks, prints, broadcloths, towelling and sheeting. All\nmarked HALF PRICE.\nafi\non over here. The people Juit get In\ntheir automobiles and drive anywhere instead of somewhere.\"\nBut without being unpatriotic one\nmight say similarly that after living in London there comes the conviction when one has just eaten a\ngood Canadian dinner with fresh\napple pie md coffee with as much\nsugar as you like (and the way It's\nmade over here), that the food in\nCanada is the best ih the world.\nFrench Cruisers\nLeave for Dakar\nVICHY, Prance,-Sept 15 (AP). -\nThe Petain Government . claimed\nSaturday three French cruisers and\nthree destroyers had left the naval\nbase at Toulon, on the Mediterranean, for Dakar, Senegal, in French\nAfrica.\nThe ships are the cruisers Montcalm, Georges-Leugues and \\_loire\nand the destroyers Audacieux, Malta and Fantasque.\n(British authorities at Gibraltar\nreported the six French warships\npassed Gibraltar Wednesday Westbound into the Atlantic. Dispatches\nWednesday from Ceuta, Morocco,\ndirectly across from Gibraltar, said\nthe ships, flying the French flag,\nhad passed Westward through the\nStraits of Gibraltar unmolested, giving rise to speculation that these\nunits, based at Toulon since the\nFrench-German armistice, might\nhave lied to join the British fleet)\n\u25a0 Dakar recently was made official military headquarters for Southwest Africa. Large areas of France's\nterritorial possessions in that part\nof Africa, however, are reported to\nhave gone over to the Free French\nGovernment headed by Gen. Charles\nDe Gaulle in London.\nBerlin Dispatch ]\nGives London a\nChoice of Fales\nNEW YORK, Sept 15 (CP).~-\nPossibility that Germany's plant\nagainst Britain will concentrate -pa\nair war with abandonment of plmt\nfor Invasion were seen yesterday in\nan Associated Press dispatch from\nBerlin quoting \"a well-informed\nGerman source\" as giving London '\n\"a choice between the fates of War*\nsaw and Paris.\" ,\nThe informant of The Associate\nPress correspondent, Louis Lochij\nsaid \"the German Air Force\ncontinue its relentless acts unlj\nthe British Government acts\"-\nsumably meaning surrender \u2014\ndid not mention the possibility sot\nthe long-threatened invasion den\u00bbl-\noping.\n\"We decline to accept the gaUt',\nfor what is now happening in Lflp-\ndon,\" he continued.\n\"The British Government has _>e\npossibility ol saving London, enfn\nnow alter 5000 lives already hare\nbeen lost Irom the late of.Warsatj.\"\nReferring to the fact Berlin\nnot been bombed by the Royal ',\nForce the last two nights, the\ntormant boasted that \"if the Brltl\nhaven't been over here in the ]\ntwo nights it is not because\ndidn't try, but because they coufl\nn't.. . . while I don't claim that I\nmore British planes will reach Gtj\nmany,   I  do  say   that  they  caj'fr\ncome over in large formations.\" .\nVessels entered Inwards at Canadian ports from the sea durings the\nyear ended March 31, 1940, totalled\n30,648 with an aggregate tonnage\nof 33.523,9&5 tons.\nLONDON, (CP). \u2014 Though pip*\nviously stating that the factoty,\nsaid to be the oldest of its kind in\nEngland, would close on account1}),\nthe war, the Wilton Royal Carpet\nComnany has decided to carry Btt\nproduction.\nShe wanted to look in his eyesl\n~but HE wanted\nto get away\nIT wasn't the first time Sue hid noticed that men shied away from\nher\u2014just when she least wanted them to 11 i She didn't know\nthat everybody his to perspire to live\u2014md witm, sticky we-ther\ngreatly increases the imount i \u25a0 i mikes you tun the serious risk of\nBecoming a \"Warm-Weather Offender.'' We ill perspire from a pint\nto three pints daily. This sweat left on the body, under the irmsj\naround the waist, goes stale\u2014decomposes. Then YOU hive \"B.O.\"\n0*mirn \"B.o.\" can ruin your romance, business ind social chincesi\nTake the simple precaution of careful people\u2014stop it before it startsi\nwith lifebuoy. Lifebuoy contains in exclusive deodorizing ingredient\nnot found in my other leading toilet soap. Used in your daily bath\nLifebuoy stops \"B.O.\"\u2014protects you from offending others. It is\nkind to the skin, too\u201420* milder then many so-called \"beauty'1\nmd \"biby\" soips;\nTbe tints skin hu 2 to 3 BuDloa \u2022\u2014__\nllinds which IQHI C00li.f f\u2014.tt\u20144\nsiviof off from 1 to 3 pints of pmpintioa\nd*ily\u2014.tin whtn ttl trt J-.'-. Still If\npenp-itio- stopped, we would die from\nbjerr-tyrtxi. (heat itroke).\n' Because much of the water lo perspfa*.\ntlon evaporates, we do not aee or feel It,\nSummer heat, nervous excitement, hetrr\nclothe, or warm rooma quickly decompose\nthis sweat deposit\u2014turn it stale\u2014oast\noffensive \"B.O.\" (Body Odor).\nLIFEBUOY\nIN YOUR\nDAILY BATH\n-ti-.fiiImT'I iii-iiiliiii'i-lf1! -''in\n\t\n__________\n \u25a0M\u00abB     POUR    \u2022*\u25a0...w^lpkJ-w^\u2014\u00bb\"\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb' \u25a0\u2014\"\u25a0\u00bb\u2014 \u25a0   i \u25a0\u25a0I\u2014\u2122-\u25a0* ii \u25a0     i   \u00ab\u00ab     \u2014i\u2014 \u2022niWfUll   UAtUT    nc.\u00a5YO.   ntLOun,   p.   u.\u2014munun i    invrmmu.   wn.   to.   i\u00bbnr\" ,   . j\t\nMOTHER'S SUMMONS BEFORE ''DRILL SERGEANT'S\" ORDERS\nAppendix\nTheory .\nAn Old\nFallacy Pops Up\nMi a New Name\nly LOGAN CLENDENING, M,D.\nDoei the appendix ever cause pain\nte having a inism? '\nLong ago when appendicitis wai\na new word the theory was widely\nheld that the lymptomi were due\nto a grape ited that had entered\nfie appendix. When eating grapes\nWe were admonished not to swallow the iteds\u2014an extremely unpopular piece of idvice, because if\nyou extract the seeds of a grape\nwhile the grape is In your mouth\nthe result li a bitter taste which\nentirely spoilt the pleasure of grape-\neating. A more enlightened opinion\nlater absolved grape seeds of the\nfrasponsibility of causing appendi-\neitfi end pointed out that what the\nsurgeons had been finding Inside\njh\u00bb appendices were not grape seeds\nbut tiny intestinal stones. So grape-\n.tjatlng was resumed In the more\n'elvllked and only proper method\nof iwallowlng the entire gripe-\nA MAUTIfUL THEORY\nI Ihli ancient theory has now raised its head again under a new\nune\u2014appendlclausls. It means, so\nI are told, a pain or spasm, slm-\nacute appendicitis, but caus-\n,ot by appendicitis but by an\n:ction to the appendix. The\nJar layer of the appendix at\njti to overcome this obstruction\ncauses the champing. The only\nble with this beautiful theory,\nis certainly destined to be\neat boon to amateur surgeons,\n_jat the appendix has practically\nBO muscles at all.\nJfc our discussion of the edvisabil-\nof extracting dead teeth In the\nnn recently, we took the con-,\nlive point of view that such\nihould bt removed only when\ne is definite proof that they are\nling trouble\u2014that they harbor\ntal infection. We are glad this\nweek to see an article by Dr. Louis'\nI. Grossman, which supports this\nsnolnt of view. Referring to pulpitis teeth, Dr. Grossman layi that\nline danger ot the pulplesi tooth as\n\u2022 source of infection can no longer\nbe held valid. \"Fifteen or twenty\nyeari ago,\" he writes, \"in the hey-\nTay of the theory of focal infection,\n'\u2014icians were ordering patients\nivt their teeth removed for al-\nt every kind of obscure com-\nit.\" Pulplesi teeth were almost\nnely removed. A pulpless tooth\not a dead tooth. It still hai vital\nitlonshlps with surrounding tis-\nCllnletl evidence shows that\nly people  with pulpless teelh\n,\u00bbve  no  apparent systematic   in-\nirolvement.\"\nI like two definitions I saw in\narticle in a medical magazine\n. \"Depression divides the per-\nty:   cheerfulness   unites   It.\"\n'Manic patients think of con-\nit, the depressed think of in-\niL\" That seems to me to sum\nthe object of modern psyeno-\nipy and also, incidentally, it ex-\n\u25a0 the war.\n8TIONI AND ANSWERS\nX. M.\u2014\"I would like to know\nwhat the blood pressure of a woman 19 years old should be. I suffer\n3\u00bbith severe headaches and wonder,\ned If it could be corning from high\nBlood pressure.\"\nAniwer\u2014Blood pressure is systolic, which meini when the heart\nl\u00bb Il contraction, is diastolic when\nthe heart is relaxed, So there is\n\u2022 varatton in blood pressure seven-\nTwo times a minute. Normally ot\ntar of age the systolic should\nm 110 to 140, and the diastolic\n80. These variations occur in\nent perfectly normal individ-\nHlgh blood pressure undoubt-\n. causes i quite characteristic\n.* of headache.\nBurned by Fire\nbut Acts Again\nI NEW YORK (CP) - Erin O'Brien\nMoore lt t red heided Irish girl\nWho lovei the theatre, ind who\nClung to her life ihd thtt love\nthrough \u2022 test of tire.\nAt least iht'i half Irish. Her lite\ntothtr, i newipaper publisher, cime\nto the U. 8. is a boy from Tlpperary;\n\u25a0nd inherited Irish grit helped her\nthrough five months of piin tnd\n\u2022earing burns which forced her to\nlie In ont position,\nTht Brotdway footlights never\nflickered out In tht mind of Erin;\n\u2022nd now sht'i bick, wilh her grstn\n\u2022yei as gay as ever\u2014with a role in\nThe Romantic Mr. Dickens\", which\nhas been In Summer try-out for\nlpreientatlon here this Fall, ind acting at tht simt tlmt in t diytlmt\nradio network serial, and sewing\nlike mad In between times for British refugee children.\n\u2022 So now Erin snd Molly ind Houlihan are hippy. Houlihan ind Molly\nAron irt black ind white Japanese\n\u2022par.lels.\n> They frisk iround tht living room\n\u00bbf her ipirtment as merrily as they\nslid before that January night\nwhen a lighted match, tossed in a\nrestaurant, landed in Erin's lap,\n\u2022nd her light pink starched net\n\u2022vening gown burst Into flames.\n1indt muffled her ftce In table\nian, and beat the fire from the\nllewy yards of lace, but by that\nImp there were deep burns on her\n\u2022Jack and along her left arm and leg.\nSheep Creek Bride\nHonored at Shower\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C, -About\n75 ladies gathered at tht Btrvict\nClub Hall in a itirprlst misctllan-\necus shower for Mrs. Bob Roach, I\nrecent bride.\nThe hill wai beautifully decorated with flowen and paper streamers. A luge white bell bung from\nthe centre of the room. Between\ntwo pillars an alcove was formed\nwith pink and white streamers and\na large horse shoe, under which\nstood a cedar cheat containing tht\ngifts. At the far end of the hall a\ntable wai covered with a large\nwhite lace cloth over pink draperies. The table was centred by a\nfour-tiered wedding cake flanked\nby white candles in silver holders,\npink roses and snapdragons.\nMarjorie and Dorothy Roach assisted the bride In untying her\ngifti.\nDainty refreshments were served,\nthe bride cutting the wedding cake,\nMrs. Hughes tnd Miss Johnion\ndelighted the audience b; rendering solos, accompanied by Mlsi\nSchneider at the piano.\nLiving Alone ...\nMother of Three\nFinds Happiness\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nBusiness, politics, love and religion are four subjects that Inspire\nand lend eloquence to the masculine\ntongue. But there's another subject\nthat Inspires the oldish gal. She's at\nher best when lecturing on the\njoys of home \u2014 her home. Not surprising when you consider her home\nis a rtfuge, a becoming background,\na base from which to deploy, a\nplace to entertain, her children,\ngrandchildren end her friends. Her\nhome ministers to her pride of possession and insures her an established plact in society, It also certifies her cliim to independence md\nher right to privicy. But let htr\ntelt it:\nDear Miss Chilfitld:\nGood horse stmt ringi in your\nadvice to Mother who conilderi giving up her homt and going to livt\nwith the children.\nIt miy teem a strange sentiment\nfrom a mother with three nice\ndaughters \u2014 as daughters go \u2014 but\nI would rather stick my head in a\nhornet's nest thin detach myself\nfrom any roof that covered me\nand on which I paid tht taxes.\nThose tax receipts are the open\nsesame to independence.\nBeing left a widow with three\nlittle girls, by the sweat of my\nbrow and the skin of my teeth, I\nmanaged to give them all a good\nuniversity education. Several years\nago I inherited my old family home\nand took all available cash to buy\nsecurity for my last lip. The girls\nare doing well and are generous\nwith advice about what Mother\nshould do with the rest of her life\nand what little money she hss, all\nof which goes in one ear and out\nthe other. I live alone and lovt HI\nThe old house is quiet bu tit is never\nlonely. I have my friends, my books\nmy piano, there is always tht ridio\ntnd an occasional good movie for\nentertainment and improvement. In\nfact, I feel that I am enjoying a\nneeded rest.\nThe home is always here for\nthe children to come back to and\nfind the fires burning. Their happiness and well being is the most\nvital concern in my life, but I have\nrelieved them and their husbands of\nthe responsibility of looking after\nme. This I consider a great boon\nto everybody concerned\nIn one of our earlier article* there\nwas one lentence I, thill never\nforget You uid, \"Alwiyi cirry in\nyour pocket-book the .key to some\nplace where your welcome can\nnever wear out \u2014 If it Is only one\nroom.\" That, Mist Chstfleld is\nwisdom.\nTreatment...\nKeep Hair free\nFrom Dandruff\n\u25a0y DONNA QRACE\n\u2022There is nothing romantic about\nsome of the beauty ilia and the on*\nwe havt in mind li dandruff. Nearly\neveryone may havt thll. annoyance\nat some tlmt or another and the\nremedy li what wt need.\nWhile dandruff may be associated\nwith carelessness, even thi molt fai-\ntidlous have had some acquiinUnce\nwith it It'i juit the dry fluffs of\n\u25a0kin that art constantly shedding\nfrom thi Kalp, We note tiny flakes\nat times whin the hair is brushed\nbut when tha sebaceoui glands of\ntht scilp exude an unusual amount\nof oil, these little dry scilti may\nbecome matted and form a disagreeable coating.\nEven this is not a disease, ai some\nteem to think, although to permit\nthis accumulation on tht sculp may\nInvite minor infectioni md irritation.\nTht dry dandruff may be removtd\neasily with frequent brushing and\ncombing with the tine comb. Oily\ndandruff needs the same treatment\nand, In addition, good shampoos.\n' Fresh air and sunshine helps to\nkeep the hair healthy and thla\nmeans there will be little indications of these scales. Good food such\nas fresh vegetables, salads, fruits\nahd milk are ideal for keeping the\nhair in good condition.\nAll dry hair needs an occasional\noil treatment. The scalp needs lubrication to stimulate the fluffing off\nof the scales. The brushing of dry\nhair will be improved with a bit\nof petrolatum touched to the scalp.\nA light film is all that is necessary.\nScalp manage is very good for\nstimulating the circulation and refining the hair itself.\nWhen brushing, part the hair in\nsmall lections ind brush upward\nfrom the bick of the nick. Lean\ntht head forward for thll. Stroke\nthi brush to the ends but not with\na whipping itrok* ai this Js likely\nto break nil flnt ends and give\nthem i rough appearance.\nAvoid the extra long and \u201e\ncoane bristles. A firm bristle thit\nBeaulleU'MacAulay Wedding at Rossland\nFall Clothes Give\nThat \"Narrow Look'\nNEW YORK (AP)-A glimpse at\nthe trumpet illhouettt of Fill clothes Is the signal for us to get that\nsllm-and-narrow look,\nOtherwise our figure! aren't gong to fit the fashions. It's a hint\nthat we slim our len a bit, especially If iklrti are staying ihort-\nor going ihorter. The rill styles\nust ilmply Jocui ittentlon on the\nTchecked up with tht Rockttlei\nof the New York stage. They're\ngirls whose beautiful, slim lags have\n_ P*Lth,t. _** A itiM \u00ab\u2022\u00ab l\u00bb\ntheir biggest bugaboo.\nToo much tap dancing or too\nmuch dancing on the balls of the\nfeet tends to give them extra bulges in the calves, as high heels do\nfor you and me.\nLimbering as well ss itretching\nwill give you the extra oomph to\nyour trumpet frock at football\ngames.\nAll elementi of itretching, lim\nbering are found in kicking waist-\nhigh, cheit high, eye high, overhead,\nbackward (with the xnees bent)\nor with a full back-ward-forward\nswing. That list nn be your goal\nStart by holding to a chair or to\nthe foot of your bed until you ac\nquire balance.\nNervous and Sleepless\nWhen you can't sleep it's fro-, worry that\npoisons the nerves or anaemia which items\nthem. In either case digestion is poor,\n\u2022ppcllto fields and the blood it lacking in\nvitamin Bi and the mineral substances from\nwhich nerve force is produced.\n' Dr. Chase's Nerve Food supplies these\nettentlil ingredients, in condensed and easily\n\u2022nhailsttd form, to aa to btlp quickly to\n'restore the blood and nerves to health ud |\nTigor.\nTttt thli ntw Dr. Chaaa'i Nerre Food, with\n' Titamin Bi added, and MS for yourself how\nsoon you will be tletping better, digesting your\nfood more thoroughly, snd enjoying full,\n\\ healthful living.\nYou don't worry and toss iltepleaily at\nnight when the blood and nerves are in healthy\ncondition.\nmoves easily through the hair Is\nalways best. Do not use wire brushes\nfor heavy stroking as there is the\npossibility of scratching the scalp,\nVitamin A..,\nEnergy Foods for\nGrowing Child\n\u25a0y GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nFortunate the baby who, until a\nyear of age at least has his foods\nordered for him by the doctor. And\nyou and I can hardly feel happy\nuntil proper medical care is available for every baby and Its mother.\nAfter babyhood, the child usually\nhas the right food when his whole\nfamily is properly fed. The most\nImportant foods for children are:\nmilk and milk products, vegetables\nand fruits, whole-grain cereals and\nbread, eggs, lean meat, fish or poultry, and cod-liver oil. These foods\nprovide the essential vitamins, minerals, other building materials and\nenergy.\nTHE RIGHT FOODS\nMilk. One and one-half pints a\nday needed by the growing child,\na quart by the expectant or nursing\nmother, at least a pint for others\nover 16,\nVegetable! and fruits. Every\nmember of the family needs fruit\nand vegetables daily that are rich\nin vitamin C, including such as oranges, grapefruit tomatoes, greens,\ncabbage, turnips ind rutabagas.\nChildren under 1 especially need,\ndaily, oranges, grapefruit or tomatoes, or their juice. Older children\nand adults need alio one serving, at\nlent, every diy of some food rich\nIn Viiaroine C.\nEvery member of the family\nneeds, every day, a vegetable or\nfruit rich In vitamin A. All green\nvegetable., yellow fruits and ripe\ntomatoes have vitamin A in abundance. Rich In Iron alio are green\nleaves. Let us remember the value\nof such vegetables ai turnip tops,\nbeet topi, kale, ipiosch. collirdi,\nbroccoli, lettuce, dandelion, and\nother edible wild greens. Also the\nyellow vegetable! u, carrots, yellow\nturnip, rutabagas, squash, pumpkin,\nsweet potatoes, apricots, arid yellow\npeaches.\nMoreover, tht growing child needs\npotatoes or sweet potatoes every\nday.\nAlso good and inexpensive foods\nfor daily choice are: apples, pears,\nbananas, prunes and other drltd\nfruits; dried beam, dried peas, peanut and peanut butler.\nTHI ENERGY FOODS\nEggs. For young children and expectant or nursing mothers, 4 or 5\neggs a week are desirable.\nLean meat fish, poultry. At least\n4 servings a week desirable. All\nlean meats are rich in iron and\nhave some of the vitamins and\nbuilding materials.\nCereali. A serving once t day,\nmoro it money Is scarce. Bread at\nevery meal, especially for 'teen-age\nchildren. Mott desirable are whole-\ngrain flour and cereal preparations.\nFats. About three-quarters of s\npound per person per week. Butter ind cream supply vitamin A -as\nwell ai energy; moil other fat energy only.\nCod-Liver oil. Needed dally by\nyoung children ilnce lt contains\nvitamins necessary for building\nstrong bonet tnd sound teelh. For\nthis reason many doctors recommend It as essential diet of expect\nant or nursing mothers.\nI wlah every parent reading thli\nwould get two post cards, addressing one to the Children's Bureau.\nDepartment of Labor, Wathlngton.\nD. C; tht other to the Bureau of\nHome Economics, Department of\nAgriculture, Washington, D. C tnd\nask each for a list of all tht fret\nbulletins available' on foods ant\nnutritions\u2014t wtelth of free Information for my mother.\nLONDON. (CP). - Suggesting\nNorth American origin, a school-\nchild's poster In in exhibition here\ndepicts Hitler is Colortdo btcllt\nput Another shows him crushed\nbetween nutcrackers.\nDr.Chases Nerve Food\nfOR NEW ff-P\nAND ENERGY\n\u00bb!\nrr\nGroup Drill on Corner Skating Rink\nMEDICINE RAT, Alta, (CP). -\nTht ictne wu \u2022 bramble-covered\ncorner skating rink and en It\ntroopi of the 'Cansdisn Kids Foreign Leglon\"-e group of11, igtd\nseven to It and headed by Victor\nMcNaughton \u2014 wtrt holding their\nfinal 90-minute parade ot tht Summer btfort being called back to\nichool.\n'Now, Itt'i g.t thst ilopt.irmi\n'\"btUowtd\"Miior\"Dick\nyeir-old drill sergemt.\nright.\"M6wtd\nthill.\nm\ndo it for you sg-in. Ont - two -\nthrtt. see thit? Do it imoothly.\nAnd klip itltl-you'rt at attention.\"\nDown the ranki \u2014 a little uneven in htlght but straight and\niturdy - thty wint through the\ndrill again and again, itrlving alwiyi for ptrftctlon.\nSomt members of the \"battalion\nwtrt mining, but that wu because\nthey had to run errands for thtir\nmother!, and thit wu ont txeuit\nthit brought them i quick dlimlsiel\nfrom tho rinks. Any one of their\nmother'i voicei ihowed the drill\nitrgeint he wu not In full command\nIn their pirade young MoNiugh-\nton mtrchtd in front and immediately behind him cam* hli second-\nIn-commmd. Wilter Gray, aged 13,\noften consulted an mitttrs of policy and program. Haley came third\nand tht sergeants, corporsls and\nprivates followed. Youngest In the\nrank, wu seven-year-old Miynard\nMcNaughton.\nLike troopi of every foreign legion, tht \"C. K. F. 1.\" druMd in\nmilitary duirt coitum\u00bb-epniiiUt)g\np! black and white cipt with puked\nvlion and white dothi down the\nbick for protection against tun md\niingitormi. __   \u25a0 '     \u2022_\n\"Corporil\" Dune Church, thi flu\nbtirtr, hid tht miln hind in de-\nilgnlng the 'colon\u2014a whits flag\nwith s star In iach corner ahd a\nCanadian msple leaf in thi centre.\nOf count thtrt wis i nurst too.\nSht wu ftve-mr-old Arlens Fruer.\nHtr principal treattninti wire to\nicritcnti iht reeslvsd htmlf ibove\nher ihort locki in rmhlng iround\ntht briroblw of tht training ground,\nBack row, left to right: Henry Beauliiu, but\nman; Ernest BaauUeu, the groom; Miss Kathleen\nDorey and Mlsi Sadie MacAulay, bridesmaids.\nFront row: Lorttta MicAulty, niece of the\nbride, flower girl; Mrs. Bttulleu, the former Miss\nMiry MacAulay: and Ronald MacAulay, naphew\nof the bride, ring bearer.\nRobson Institute to\nOpen Donations for\nNelson Bomber Fund\nROBSON. B.C.-RoD\u00abon Women's\nInstitute was held at the home ot\nMrs. R. T. Waldie with Mr.s D.\nCaster, President in the chtir.\nThe Secrettry reported i balance\non hand of $42.32, which included\nthe proceeds of the recent concert.\nIt wu reported \u2022 donation of\n$10 had bten sent lo the Salvation\nArmy by the Patriotic Socety In response to an appeal. .\nMrs. W. Gopp, reporting on the\nwork done by the Refugee Work\nCommittee, stated in exhibit of tne\nclothing would be held in October.\nIt was decided to send comforts\nof various kinds to the Auxiliary\nTerritorial Service in response to\nan appeal made to Institutes by\nLady Ironsides. All members were\nasked to bring at least one article\nto tht October meeting.\nMrs. Tutt reported that tht Red\nCrou committee hsd carried on\nwith knitting during tht Summer\nand thit 64 completed articles had\nbeen sent in to Trail since the July\nmeeting. She added that more wool\nwas now available.\nTO COLLECT TINFOIL,\nSCRAP METAL\nThe Red Cross Committee asked\nthe members to savt tinfoil and\nscrap metal and suggested that a\ncontainer be placed in the school\nand the children asked to contribute.\nMrs. Obourn and Mrs. Texlee volunteered to act on the Visiting\nCommittee tor the next month.\nIt wis decided to send t letter of\nthanks to the Robson Amiteur Dramatic Society for assistance in setting the stage for a concert.\nMrs. A- F. Mitchell moved thit\nthe Women's Institute donate $10\nto start a contribution of $50 to\nthe Nelson Bomber Fund from the\nRobson District\nAt the close ot the meeting tei\nwas served by the hostesses, Mrs.\nCarter, Mrs. R. Benny and Mrs. R.\nT. Waldie.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.-Mr. and\nMrs. J. Zugal and little son of Spokane art guesti of Mri. Zugil's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Btillargeon.\nJ. L Meikle of Flin Flon, Man.,\nvisited his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Ewing and\nfamily. Mr. Meikle left to visit\nmembers of his family In Vancouver.\nMrs. E. Howard of Trail spent\nI few dayi with her ion and family,\nMr, ind Mrs. James Howard.\nMrs. D. F. Piters of Appledale\ntnd Mrs. H. H. Currie of Nelson\nwere guests of Mr, and Mrs. John\nGraham.\nMrs. T. McNeish attended the Wo-\nmen's Institute Conference In Vancouver.\nSerlgl Story \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 By Helen Welshimer\nLOVE WITHOUT MUSIC\nCHAPTER 44\nLinda had to wait a long time\nbefore her call to Robert'I club wu\nanswered. Finally a ileepy servitor murmured the name of the association and watted.\nTht mm did not give her a chance\nto say that sht wu not Billie Annt\nand in another moment the heard\nRobert's eager tone!, calling her by\nthe other girl's name.\nShe did not aniwer. She knew\nthat her voice would break If the\nshould try.\nInstead she hung up and buried\nher face In tht pillows. Sob after\nsob shook her slender body. Maybe\nthis wu a good thing, the tried to\nreason. She would cry it ill out\nnow\u2014ill the disappointment and\nheartache\u2014end go dry-eyed forever.\nThe next day wu hot The thin,\nwhite linen dress tht wore teemed'\nto cling to her tnd her amber curls\ninstead of tttytng in lilt even rows\nin which the hid trained thorn,\nspun all over her head. Her eyei\nwere a clear, cool green. She wu\nmethodical and orderly and worked\nrtpidly.\nAbout noon Mr. Bagley cime out\nof his office bringinga noted photographer with him. They eyed her\ncritically. Her employer explained:\n\"This Is Mr. Harrison, u you know\nLinda. He hu to supply a whole\nseries ot pictures for a fashion magazine\u2014the girl In everything from a\nbathing suit and negligee to an evening gown. It's to be a honeymoon\noutfit. And he likes your looks.\nLlkt to try it?\nAnything wu bitter thtn sitting\nat a desk, answering s white ivory\ntelephone which rang with every\nkind of business engagement ind\nnothing else ever.\n\"Hortenie will take over for you,\"\nMr. Bagley uld.\nLinda got her turban which wu\nmade from the aame crushed linen\nu the dress ind went with tht\nphotoprtghtr.\nSht spent the afternoon in the\nstudio, posing In ont outfit sifter\nanother. She told herself that the\nwhole set-up wu slightly Ironical.\nHert tht wu, going to movt to s\nwoman's club, and sht was asked to\nbe a magazine bride.\nShe did not go to the office the\nnext day, either, for tht pictures\nwen not completed until dusk.\nWhen the sat down at her desk the\nthird day Hortenie uld:\n, \"There s a telephone message for\nyou somewhere. Long distance. The\noperator tried to call you twice.\nNow where did I put It?\nShe searched the desk but the\nscrap of paper did not appear.\n\"When did the call comt in Wu\nit yesterday?\" Linda asked. She\ntold herself that it wu an unimportant message, but she dirtd to hope\nu women hive always hoped, mat\nRobert had tried to reieb her.\nAnd ytt, why should he? He had\nsnd goodby, definitely, md had\ngone iwiy. Ht hid no wiy of knowing thit iht hid tried to reach him.\nCRANBROOK Social...\nLONDON, (CP).-New prottctlvt\nanti-gas trousers, which can if necessary be worn like plus\/fours, ire\nbeing Issued to London policemen\nincluding the active war reserve.\nCRANBROOK, B. C, \u2014 Mn. T.\nA. Moore entertiintd it a bridge\nand lea Thunday. Assisting at the\ntea hour were Mrs. H. A. McKow-\nan and Mrs. W: A. Fergie who\npoured while Mrs. R S. Inglii assisted In serving. Prize winnen\nwert Mn. R. E. Turner, Mrs. R.\nSing and Mlu A. Woodland. Oilier\nguests win Mrs. E. Church, Mri.\nM. F. McPhirson, Mn. W. B. Johnstons, Mrs. W. A. Fergie, Mrs H.\nN, Wood, Mn. W. J. Barber, Mrs. R.\nE. Turner, Mrs, R. McBurney, Mn.\nC. J. Little, Mrs. George Wilton.\nMrs. R. E- Sang, Mrs. Eric McKinnon. Mrs. J. Davidson, Mrs. W. G. T.\nTaylor, Mrs. 3. Ellis, Miss A. Woodward, Mrs. H. A. McKowan. Mrs.\nN. Hogarth, Mri. T. Flo It Mra. R.\nS. Inglls, Mn, r. V. Hirriion, Mn.\nW. H, Wilson ind Mn. A. 3. Schtll,\nMr. ind Mrs. R. Slriehan return-\ntd from a visit it Vincouvtr.\nMr. md Mrs. H. D. Gibion are\nvisiting at Witerton Lakei tnd Calgary.\nMr. and Mn. W. C. MeKtnile\nof Trail attended the funeral of the\nlite A. A. Robirlion.\nMr. and Mri. J. Wlnktlitr of\nNelson in viiltlng Mn. O. A. Hennessey.\nMri. J. Kerr of Blairmort, who\nhu been a guett of htr brother-in-\nlaw and sister. Mr. and Mrs. R.\nLarge, returned home.\nJ. J Hunter, accompanied by Mra.\nHunter, arrived In town to take a\nposition on the office staff of the\nFink Mercantile Company.\nThe message could not be found,\nso Hortense gave up at last and\nwent back to her desk. A few minutes later some of the pictures of\nLinda came In. Sht looked at her\nself, serene ind cool, in tha borrowed finery. No one ever would\nknow that that girl had wanted\nsomething sht could not hivt.\nMaybe lift wai llkt thtt asking you to take a post and keep It\nto weir i mtik ill of your days,\nso other people would think thit\nyou were happy ind contented.\nWhatever tht message wu, If it\nwin importtnt lt would bt found,\nor the pirty would call again, iht\nrtmindtd herself.\nThit night iht moved out of tht\nipirtment, into the hotel for women. She left no forwarding address.\nInstead, she notified tht postoffice\nwhtre to send htr mill.\nWhtn you closed i door It wu\nbeit to lock it Forever. And throw\naway the key.\nBut during the days thit followed, now md thin she wondered\nwhy Billie Anne hid called Robert\ntwlcethat evening. There had been\na call for Robert from her at police\nheadquarters and mother whtn ht\nhid bten it the club liter thtt\nnight\nQuietly ont evening Ronald ind\nSarah slipped swiy to be married\nmd take i boat Southward. Linda\nread about it In the newspapers.\nHortenie expressed startled Indignation. \"He's youn. You can't let\nthat glamor whoalt march him off.\nWhy don't you do something?\"\n\"He Isn't mint,\" Linda tniwtrtd.\n\"That's ill wuhed up. He ud\nSarah are right for ttch other.\"\n\"And whit ibout you? Going to\nstay htrt ind model clothes whtn\nyou get i chmct tnd answer the\ntelephone md mike out tht bills\ntht rtst of tht Ume? Thought about\nthat?\"\n\"Oh, I'll gel along.\" (I'll get\nalong without Robert. I'll get up\nevery morning st eight o'clock, join\ntht subway procession it half-past\ntight md sit down it i desk it\nnine. And ill of the tlmt I'll bt\nwondering why things didn't work\non i better schedule. But I'll get\nalong!)\nLiter In tht diy word cimt thtt\nlomt of tht group of fashion pictures were to bt used In a photogravure display In t daily paper\nand Linda received another modeling assignment.\nShe was wesry when she left the\noffice that night She bought a paper, noticed thit a jury was being\nchosen md a date selected for tht\nNevini trill, md reid thit Mini\nwu pleading Insanity. It wu true,\ntoo. The actress' sanity bid bten\ndoubted for t long time by Robert.\nSht realized iht ind Robert would\nbl subpensed u witnesses. Welt\ntnywty, she would gtt to lit him\nSht would have ont long lut look\nat tha browned fict, tht far-seeing\neyes, the mouth thit curved Into\nlaughter. She would put lt iwiy,\nthen, md not look it the picture\nuntil lt wu too o|d to hurt\nFor I girl ntmtd Billie Anne\nTrtnt wu tht wlnntr now.\nIf ihe hldn't gone into tht drug\nstore at tht club for \u25a0 late milkshake, iht would not have gltnced\novtr someone's shoulder it t held-\nlint Ih \u2022 paper. And it iht hid not\nseen It ihl would hivt gont up-\nsttirs to sleep in her chintz md\nmsple room, instead of staring\nwide-eyed it tht headlines.\nBut ont thought rtn through hir\nmind. Win ntwsptptn always, si-\nwiys going to uwet htr life!\nWould thty fortvtr bring tht newi?\nThen the wis hurrying toward\nth\u00ab elevators with only one thought\nIn her mind. She muit pick i big\nmd leave. Quickly.\n(To Bl Continued)\nABANDON  APPEALS\nFOR 3 WHO ATTACKED\nR.C.A.F. MEMBER'S WIFE\nTORONTO, Sept. IS (CP).-Ap-\npeals In tht cut of three Toronto\nmen who were convicted list Spring\nof an attacx on the -.-year-old wife\nof an Ontario member of tho Royal\nCanadian Air Force, were abandoned yesterday, legal officials said.\nThe appeals, including one by the\n{irlsoners against the Imposition of\nashes with their lltt -and It-year\nltr\u00bbteneu. and by the crown on the\nground that tht men ihould have\nbeen tentenced to death, were to\nhavt bean heard by tht Ontario Ap-\nptsl Court Monday.\nCanadian Girls\nMake Hot Dogs for\nSoldiefrs in Britain\nLONDON (CP)-Down In the\nSouth of England whtrt publih\nhouses tnd hostels ire iged in stories of the long-put, tht bold sign\n\"Hot Dogs\" iwings dtfimtly over\nCinadlan Manor, 1 quaint little\nbuilding that used to be i cobbler's\nshop,\nThe sign wu stuck there on the\norders of i bright little Ctnidian\ngirl, Mirlon Mcciulty. 19, who was\nworking In London when she heird\nCanadian troops were quartered\nsomewhere in South England. She\nfound out where and then enlisted\nthe aid of two of her roommates,\nLoretto and Maureen Hoey.\nWith a total capital of ...66.75 they\nleased the building and equipped lt\nwith whatever is necessary to prepare hot dogs and other reogmzed\nCanadian roadside deliaies.\nFor some Ume Mirlon hid winted\nto do some kind of wir work so\nwhen she heard about the Canadians being quartered somewhere,\nshe called her pals together to dis-\nuu tht matter.\nAnd u Mirlon handed out mustard coaled hotdogs to bronied Canadian troopi ihe added:\n\"So we hit on the Idti of giving\ntht boys from.home some of the\nnitlonil dlshu they miss here. They\nliked the Idei so much thit they\ngive ui i hind in cleaning up md\ndecorating the old cobblers shop.\"\nResume Frills\nWhen on Leave\nLONDON,' (OP)- British women\nin uniform are allowed now to slip\ninto feminine frills md fanclu\nwhen they go on leave.,\nWhen the war started, girls of the\nAuxiliary Territorial Service, the\nWomen's Auxiliary Air Force and\nthe Women's Royal Naval Service\nwere faced with different ruling!\nof commanding officers ai they\nmoved from one duty station to another. Some women were obliged\nto wear their uniforms all ths une\nand othin enjoyed the luxury of\nclinging frocks and sheer stocking!\nwhen off duty.\nNow, regulations hive been introduced to permit the temporary\ndotting ot uniforms and It Is he\nNivy which thowi the readiest understanding of a woman's liking\nfor her own dainty dresses.\nThe A. T. S. and W-A.A J. ruling\nis that members must be in uniform\non all occasions except whtn on\nleave ot 24 hours or mort.\nThe wrens must weir uniforms to\nand from duty, on duty, within a\nnaval or marina establlrhment even\nwhen not on duty, md on all of*\nficlal and semi-official occuloni.\nThus the wreni hive many oppor-\ntunltlei for changing into more\ncharming costume. At home or even\non ihort leive they miy get out\nof uniform If they like, ind they\nare encouraged to do io.\nUniform! need not be worn by\nofficer! and rating! for recreation.\nFor naval or marine dances, uniform! must be worn unless special\npermission hu been obtained to\nwear dance frocks.\nWASHINGTON, (CP). - The\nyouth of the Seventh Day Advent-\n1st falth--whose elden were \"conscientious objectors\" In tht first\nGreat War\u2014art training for non-\ncombatant service.\nLONDON, (CP) .-Seventy lorries\nloaded with bona ire driven into\na London factory dally to be crushed and converted Into glue and\nother thing! to help keep war industries supplied.\ndUntLf&i\n(TfauAmowcA,\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nLink Pork Sauuges\nBaked Potatoes\nCorn Pudding\nCabbage and Raw Carrot Salad\nApple-Pineapple Pudding\nCoffee\nLINK PORK SAUSAGE\nLink sausages, potatoes.\nScrub   potatoes   thoroughly\nand\ntake out centre! with apple corer\nInsert 1 sausage in the hole In each\npotato and bake until potatoes are\ntender.\nLINK 8AUSAOES  AND\nTOMATOES\nLink pork sausages, one cm torn-\nitoet, breadcrumbs,\nSimmer sausages in boiling witer\nfor ibout b minutes. Put liver of\nfine breadcrumbs in buttered biking dish, idd ont can tomatoes or\nits equivalent In freih tomatoes,\nseason with pepper and ult Lay\nsausages on top, sprinkle with more\nbreadcrumbs md btkt for 19 or 20\nmlnutei or until brown.\nLINK SAUSAGES\nCut  sausages  apart, prick  each\none with fork, put In frying pan\nand cover with cold water. Bring\nto boil, then drain off water v\\i\nset again en low flrt to brown. Be\nsure sausages are done and nicely\nbrown, but not shriveled md dried\nin cooking. Or put sausages in frying or baiting pan, cover with boiling water and allow to simmer for\none minute. Drain water off tnd\ncontlnut cooking, cither on top oi\nstove or In oven until done.\nAPPLE-PINEAPPLE  PUDDING\nFruit Mixture\nThree cups siloed apples, ont can\ncrushed pineapple, one and one-\nquarter cups sugar, two tablespoons\nflour, two tablespoons butter.\nBatter\nOne cup flour, one and one-half\nteaspoons baking powder, three-\neighths cup milk, two tablespoon!\nshortening, two tableipooni sugar,\none-half teaspoon salt.\nMix sugar and flour of fruit mixture and stir into the fruit Spread\nthe mixture in a nlne.-Inch cake\npan and dot with butter. Cover and\nput into hot oven while mixing batter.\nDrop the batter by spoonfuls over\nthe apples and bake about 30 minutes at 425 degrees. Serve warm\nwith the crust above the fruit, with\njuice surrounding it\nGood Light Saves Sight\nEDI50N\nMAZDA\nCANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC^\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS IN ALL SIZES\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St. Phona 260 Nelson, B.C.\n*\n mm\ni:\nNEW\nWEDGES\nJust arrived \u2014 a\nSmart new selection\nIn blacks and colors.\nR* Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nSLOCAN CITY' BRANCH\nHAS BANDACE BEE\nSLOCAN CITY; B.C.-The New\nDenver Unit of the Slocan Branch\nol the Re.d Cross Socety held a\nbee lor making bandages and compresses at the home ol Miss D.\nClever.\nThose present were Mils G. Reynolds, Mrs. L. Beggs, Mrs. J., A.\nGreer, Mrs. A. H. Sanderson, Mrs.\nL. R. Campbell, Mrs. H. Clever, Mrs.\nA. L. Harris, Miss R. Aylwin, Miss\nA. Kennett.\nCommunal Meals\nfor Lonely Men\nGREAT YARMOUTH, England\n(CP). \u2014 One ol the problems ol\nrwar\u2014how to get on without your\nwile\u2014Is troubling civic officials ol\nthis coastal town.\nMany wives have been evacuated. Many restaurants have been\nclosed. Husbands have to cook their\nmetis at home, The result is not entirely satisfactory in many cases.\nTo overcome this difficulty the\nMayor Is trying to introduce a\nscheme ot communal meals on 1 no-\nprofit basis. The plan is in the preliminary stage but officials hope to\nobtain a communal dining room\n\u2022nd provide meals lor the wlleless\nhusbands.\nThese \"grass widowers\", still en-\nJoying their experiments with the\ncan-opener, haven't yet shown\nmuch interest in the scheme. The\norganizers believe a lew more\nweeks ol burnt beans and undercooked hamburger will soon bring\nthem around.\nCanada's Quilts\nAre Appreciated\nLONDON (CP).-Cases ol smart\nnew clothes and ol home-made\nquilts are arriving in Britain Irom\nCanida.\nThe clothes, most ol them made\nby Canadian women, some ol them\nbought, ire being distributed to\nBritish refugees md any others who\nneed them. Some were given to the\nCzech relief fund, some to Norwegians, some went to children evacuated Irom the Channel Islands, who\nhad no time to bring their own\nclothes,\nThe quilts ire arriving because\nminy Canadians in Britain wrote\nhome describing tht record-breaking\ncold spell of last Winter. Women of\nthe Dominion want to be sure their\nklnlolk in the lighting lorces are\ngoing to be warm enough next\nWinter.\nTwo Black Widows\nFound Gravel Pit\nRobert Kennedy md W. D. Kurtz\nlound and killed two Black Widow\nspiders Saturday lorenoon, when\nworking at the City gravel pit at the\nEast end oi Fairview. The creatures\nhad the characteristic shiny black\nlong Iront legs, and the red \"hourglass\" mark on the abdomen, the\nIdentification mark of the lemale\nBlack Widow, which Is the poisonous one.\nIt Is some years since a Black\nWidow has been reported here.\nSILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B. C, - Mr. and\nMrs. J. Kynoch and son Gordon\nol Robsart, Sask., were guests ot\nMr. snd Mrs. S. E. Watson.\nR. Dewar of Sandon visited in\ntown.\nMr. and Mrs. A. S. MacAulay\nand daughter Sadies of Rossland\nwere visitors In Silverton.\nMrs. J. Senning spent a few days\nin Nelson.\nMrs. S. E. Watson left for Robsart, Sask., to visit her daughter,\nMrs. E. Kynoch.\"\nMrs. E. Kynoch and son Raymond of Robsart, Sask., spent i\nweek with Mrs. Kynoch's parents,\nMr. ind Mrs. S. E. Watson.\nT. Lirsen ol Trill spent I weekend in town.\nMr. md Mrs. H. Dewis motored\nto Nelson.\nMrs. A. Wallace entertained the\nmembers o! the Anglican Women's\nGuild.\nS. E. Witson wss a patient in\nSlocan Community Hospitil, lor a\nlew days.\nMr. ind Mrs. L. Flynn who visited Mr. md Mrs. B. Flynn have\nreturned to Mons, Wash. They\nwere iccompanied by Mr. Flynu's\nmother.\nMiss N. Johnson and D. Evans ol\nTrail visited Miss Johnson's parents, Mr. snd Mrs. T. Anderson.\nMiss E. Johnstone of Cranbrook\nwas in town.\nMrs. H. George ol New Denver\nvisited her mother, Mrs. P. Htrding.\nMrs. W. Morrison tnd sons Bar-\nrie and Wayne returned to Trail\nafter visiting Mrs. M. Emerson.\nSweet Potatoes and Pullel Eggs Go\non Sale at Nelson Public Market\nPrices held steidy in nearly every\nline ol produce Saturday it the\nNelson Public Market and there\n\u2022was little change in quality ol produce, although the season Is drawing near lor some oi the Summer\nvegetables and iruit.\nHome-grown sweet potatoes, lour\nSounds selling lor 29 cents, mide\nleir first appearance, and at the\nFOR WOMEff\nONLY!\nIf BdfHr atrvtt, restless nlghtt and\not_erdlitreMrromt_m.leIunctl._-l\ndisorders -ten you from enjoying\nlife\u2014Uke Lytflt E. PlnUu-m's Vent-bit Compound\u2014mil known for\novtr to reus In helping weak, nerv-\npus women during \"dlDcult\" days.\nMide In Canada.\nMillinery Special\nNew Fill Hall \u2014 92.49\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Biker SL Phone 874\n____8__B)\nTry KOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nTht Health Drink\nPhont 114\nn___a____B_______\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Biker St.\nWATCHES. DIAMONDS,\nWEDDING RINGS\n^^ffl'^'yHll^lW<MIHIlllllgmg'yWI,'^!r^l|B',\nALWAYS DELICI.OUS\n4X CAKES\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nA RIAL BUY\n8 CU. FT. G. E.\nREFRIGERATOR\n9209.00\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Biker St\nPhont 240\nOut ol respect to the lite\nMr. J. E. Annable, this store\nwill close  today at  noon.\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nPh. 1047    Opp. Capitol thtttrt\nsame stall pullet eggs were also on\nsale lor the Ilrst time. Pulleta told\nfor 30 cents i dozen, and the prices\nlor other lines of eggs remained\ntht Same\u2014large, 38 cents a dozen;\nmedium, 35 cents a dozen; and pee\nwees, 25 cents a dozen.\nQuotations were:\nVEGETABLES\nCorn, doz   20 and .25\nCelery, lb 08\nCabbage, lb    .05\nRed cabbage, lb 05\nSavoy cabbage, head 10 and   .15\nCooking onions, lb _     .05\nPickling onions, 3 lbs 25\nSage, bunch     _  .05\nParsley, bunch    .05\nGarlic, lb        20\nHead lettuce, head .            .05\nPotatoes, sack   ....... $1.75 and 2.00\n10 lbs.  25\nCauliflower, head   .10 to   .15\nSpinach, 2 lbs _ 15\nCucumbers, 2 for       S>b\n3 lor         .10\nGretn peppers, lb    .05\nRed peppers, lb 15\nSctrlet Runner beans, lb 10\nRadishes, bch  .05; 3 bchs.   .10\nCtrrots. 3 bunches  10\n3 lbs 10\nBeeti, 3 bunches     _   .10\n3 Ib\u00bb 10\nHothouse tomatoes, lb    .05\nField tomatoes, 8 lbs     2b\nBroccoli, bunch  _ 15\nWax beans, lb 10\nVegetable marrow, lb    .03\nHubbard squash, each .05; 3 lor   .10\nEgg plant, 3 lor .10; 8 lor    .28\nGreen peas, 3 lb   2b\nSweet potatoes, 4 lbs 25\nFRUITS\nCantaloupe, eich    .18\nWatermelon, lb    04\nMusk melon, each  10 to   .25\nLocal grapes, lb 10\n3 lbs -5\nBartlet pears, basket 10\nCrate     $1.25\nCrab apples, 10 lbs     .25\nBradshaw plums. S lbs 10\nDamson plurhs, lb _   .05\nItalian prunes, lb     .05\nAlexinder ipples, 7 lbs _   2b\nMEATS\nBeel, lb\t\nVeil   lb\t\nLimb, lb\t\nPork.  lb\t\nBeet liver, lb\t\nCilf liver, lb\t\nHeld cheese,  lb.\nFowl   lb.   _\t\nSpare ribs. 2 lbs\t\nBologna, lb. :  \t\nLiver sauiage, lb\t\nBreakfast sausage 2 lbs.\nSpring chicken, lb  .25 to\nGoat meat, lb   _\t\nPork heid, lb\t\nCorntd btef, lb \u2014\t\nHornt smoked htm. lb.\t\nSpring chicken, lb\t\nDresied ducks, lb    .30\noairy PRODUCE\nButter, lb 23 to .28\nCottage cheese  lb 10,\nor 3 lbs. : 2b\nNew  fhrpse   lb.     ____\u2014.   .10\nButtermilk, qt .\u2014   -10\nGallon          2b\nEGGS:\nGrade A. large, dor     .38\nMedium  35\nPit wee, doz     2b\nPulltts,  doz \u2014 ._   20\n.. .10 to\n.10 to\n.. .15 to\n.13 to\n 15 to\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, I. C\/-MONDAY MORNING. SEPT. 14.. 1940\nSOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. 3. B. Gny,\nBaktr Street, have ai guest Mrs.\nGray'i sister, Mrs. H. C. Banlord ol\nNew Westminster, who came to attend the Gautschi-Gray wedding.\ne Mrs. J. Russell Thompson arm\ndaughter Evelyn ol the Reno mine\nare holidaying in Enderby, Vancouver and Victoria.\ne Mr. and Mra. A. H. Noakes\nol Balfour visited town Siturdiy.\ne M. Olson was In the city from\nYmir Saturday.\n\u2022 Mri. M. Benthlem of Gray\nCreek ipent Saturday in Nelion.\ne Rev. E. Doyle ot the Cathedral\nol Mary Immaculate stall ii leaving\nto vacation in Edmonton and\nCalgary.\nt Mrs. John Paterson ol Kaslo\nis visiting friends in Nelson.\ne MlM Winnie Jardlne, who\nteaches at Brilliant, spent tho\nweekend with her parenti iu\nFairview.\ne Mri, Ernest Kinahan and sons\nPat and Mike ot Trail are guesti\nat the Kinahan home.\ne Dr. and Mri. Walter Bradshaw motored Irom Trail Saturday\nto attend the Bradshaw-Habegard\nwedding and were guests ol the doctor's parents, Mr. md Mrs. Joseph\nC. Bradshaw, Silica Street, on the\nweekend.\nt Beneath an arch ol rosea tnd\nivy, in the home ol the bride's\nparents, the marriage was tolem-\nnized Saturday, September 14, at\n2:30 o'clock ol Phyllis Wilma, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. John Baltour\nGray, and Edward Henri Gautschi,\nson of Henri Gautschi and the late\nMrs. Gautschi of Vineouver. Rev.\nFrederick St. Denis ol First Presbyterian Church ol Trail, read the,\nvows, and the nuptial music was\nplayed by Miss Frances Wheeler.\nGiven in marriage by her lather,\nthe bride was quaint in her mother's wedding dress ol ivory duchess\nsatin with deep yoke and lull\nsleeves of Chantllly lact; the lull\nskirt and sweetheart neckline edged\nwith ruching, and her floor-length\nveil tailing Irom a pearl coronet.\nShe carried a Colonial bouquet ol\npure white gladioli and rose buds.\nHer only attendant, Miss LoiS\nBoomer, chose a frock ol periwinkle\nblue chttlon with tucked jacket en\ntone. With this she wore i turbin\nol blue and blush pink chiffon. Her\nnosegay wu ot pink Isabella rose\nbuds. The groom was supported by\nRobert H. Turnbull ol Trail. At\nthe reception following the ceremony the guests wert received by\nthe bride's mother, weiring a sroart\nfloor-length afternoon drtss ol plum\ncrept with lace Insertions and\n.large matching hat. Her corsage wis\nol yellow rose buds. A profusion ol\nFall flowers graced the drawing\nroom, and the bride's table wis\ncentered with her three-tier wedding cake, embedded in tulle in\nrose buds, The serviteurs were Mrs.\nE. S. Hoar, Miss Ethel Darr, Miss\nSue Urquhart, Miss Velmi Trembath ol Trill, ind Mr\u00ab. Vincent\nFink, Mrs. M. Morley, Mrs. E.\nStromstead and Miss Alison\nYounger of this city. For their wedding trip to Coast cities ind the Island, the bride donned a grape\nwool Princess Iroclt, topped with a\nblack wool coat with which she\nwore black accessories. On their\nreturn Mr. and Mrs. Gautschi will\nreside at 1735 Riverside Avenue,\nTrail. Out ol town guests Included\nHenri Gautschi, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nStark ol Vancouver, Dr. and Mrs.\nE. S. Hoare, Mr. and Mrs. J. R.\nMills, Miss Alice Bush, Miss Anna-\nbelle Ramsay, Miss Lilith McLeod,\nR. Turnbull, R. Dockerill, Ronald\nMcKinnon ol Trail, Mrs. H. C. Bin-\nlord ol New Westminster, Mr. and\nMrs. R. McAllister, Robert McAllister, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bell ol\nRossland and H. R. Younger ol\nPenticton.\nt Mrs. E. T. D. Rogers ol Eut\nArrow Park visited Nelson at the\nweekend.\nt R. Johnson wss in town from\nProcter yesterday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. W. Jones ol\nYmir spent Saturday in Nelson.\nt Mrs. W. R. Dunwoody and\ndaughter ol Sitkum Creek visited\nNelson Saturday.\nt Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ashby ol\nHarrop shopped In town Saturday.\nt   The home ol Mr. and Mrs. T.\nA. Cirew, Fairview, was the scene\nof a delightfully arranged freshman show Saturday afternoon In\nhonor ol Miss Murielle Whimster,\nwho left yesterday for Vancouver\nto attend U. B. C. Co-hostesses Included Miss Lorraine Cirew, Miss\nKathleen Manihan, Miss Olive Waters and Miss Muriel Smith. At the\ndainty tea table Mrs. H. M. Whimster presided at the taper-lit table\nwhich was attractively arranged\nwith a centerpriece ol yellow marigolds and blue larkspur. Tiny U.\nB. C. pennants decorited the dainty\ntea cakes, Gilts accompinied by\nwitty poems were wheeled in on a\ndecorated wigon by Master Pat\nCirew. Guests. Included Mlu Genevieve Gri-zellt, Miss Romaine Bentz,\nMiss Dswn Sharp, Mile Sheila Dun-\nwoody, Miss Helen Alexander, Miu\nLois Gamble, Miss Neena McClem-\nent, Miss Margaret Thain, Miss 1st-\nbelle Young, Miss Lois Brown, Miss\nEdni Stied, Miss Ruth Wright, Miss\nEvelyn Hsmmer, Mias Rosemary\nFleming, Mlsi Myrtle Fisher, Miss\nAudrey Emery ind Miss Mary\nRushton.\n\u2022 Rev. Fattier J. John Chttven,\nEditor of the Prospector, hu returned from Ontario where he attended the funeral 61 his brother ia\nBrintford.\ne Mr. and Mrs. N. O. Choquette,\nStanley Street, hid is guilt yesterday, Mr. Choquette'i father, Arthur Choquette of Spokane, ex-\nresldent 01 Nelson, and Mr. md Mrs.\nHarry Krebs ol Spokane.\ne Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie, Carbonate Street entertained Ittt week at\nt delightfully arranged bridge honoring doctor's wivei attending the\nB. C. Medical convention. Prizes\ndonited by Mrs. W. 0. Rose were\nwon by Mrs. W. J. Knox ol Kelowna and Mrs. McNeilly ol Nanaimo. Mrs, MacKenzie was assisted\nby Mrt. Rise, who poured1, md\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux, who served.\n\u2022 At the Cathedtal ol Mary immaculate Saturday morning at 6.30\no'clock. Most Rtv. Martin M. Johnion, Bishop 01 Nelson, united in\nmarriage Prtscllls Either, only\ndiughter ol Mr. ind Mrs. A. O. GtU\ninn, md Robert Fltziltn Cornwall,\nson ol Mr. ind Mrs. F. V. Cornwall,\nol Victoria. F0r tie quiet ceremony\nthe brie'', given in marriage by htr\nfather, chose i tetl blue woo) dress\nwith wine sccessoriei tnd shouldef\ncorssge o( gardenias. Her only attendant, Mrs. George H. Gelinas. as\nmatron of honor, donned a brown\npolka dot dress, a brown sailor\nand \u2022 Cofsige of Talisman roses\nThe groom wis supported by the\nbride's brother, George H. Gellnis.\nFollowing the family wedding\nbreikfast it the Gelinas home on\nVictoria Street, the bride tnd groom\nleft for their honeymoon by motor\nfor Vancouver and Victoria, visiting\nthe groom's parenti is the latter\nplace. Mrs. Gellnis, mother ol the\nbride, chose a navy blue afternoon\ndress, matching hat and i corsage\nof roses. On their return Mr. and\nVlt, Cornwall will reside In KmIo\nwhere Mr. Cornwall li on the stiff\nof the Bank of Montreal and prominent in sports. Mrs. Cornwall, who\nattended St. Joseph's Academy In\nNelion and graduated from tbt\nSacred Heart convent In Point Grey,\nVancouver,    is   an   accomplished\nSlaniit, having been organist at the\nathedral for many yean, a tennis\nand badminton player and a keen\niSWar.\n\u2022 Mn. Byrnes, who hu been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nMcMillan, Carbonate Street, left\nyesterday for Vancouver, accompanied by her young son Kenneth.\n\u2022 Mri. J. H. Clark md children\nof Ymir visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Miss MOllie Islip is Holidaying\nIn the City with Mr. and Mrs. B.\nH. Pearson, Flnt Street, Fairview.\n\u2022 M. Olson wu In the City from\nYmir yesterday.\n\u2022 Elmer Gelinas, who spent the\nholidays with his parents, Mr. and\nMn. A. G. Gellnis, Victoria Street,\nleft via Great Northern Saturday\nfor London, Ont, to resume his\nstudios it St Peter's seminary.\n\u2022 Mn. J. Donaldson of Salmo visited Nelson on the weekend.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John Potosky of\nGrand Forks were weekend City\nvisitors for the Roberti-Potosky\nwedding Ssturday afternoon.\ne Rev. Siiter Mary Francis ol\nthe Rectory Staff of the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate leaves todiy\nfor Trail ind Vmcouver en route to\nBellingham, Wash., where ihe will\nbe on tbe nursing staff of St Joseph's Hospital.\n\u2022 A pretty but quiet wedding\nwai solemnized at the Rectory ot\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nSaturday afternoon, when Rev. Edward Doyle united In marrligt\nAmelia Frances, third diughter ol\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Potosky and\nNorman Harris Roberts, only son\not Mrs. J. Roberts and tbe lite Mr.\nRobert, of South Slocin. For her\nmarriage the bride chose a dress of\nQueen Blue silk crepe, wine accessories and a bouquet ot pink and\nwhite rose buds and maiden hair\nfern. Her bridesmaid, Miu Julia\nPotosky, her sister, wore a cedar-\nwood triple crepe, black accessories and a bouquet of gladioli In\nblending colors. The groom was\nsupported by William Muraro. The\nbride's mother chose an ensemble\nof navy md white and a corsage\nof pink and white rose buds. The\ngroom's mother donned t black\nand white ensemble and a corsage\nof white carnations. The reception\nwu held at the home of the bride's\nparents on Morgan Street, where\nimmediate relatives and friends gathered. Tht bride's table was dainty\nwith its three-tier wedding cake\nflanked by silver sconces containing rose lighted tapers and rosebuds.\nMr. and Mrs. Roberts left by motor\nfor Spokane md coast cities md\non their return will, make their\nhome at South Slocan, where Mr.\nRoberts is in the electrical department of the West Kootenay Power\nand Light Company.\ne Rev. Sister Anthony Mary ot\nSt. Joseph's, Bellingham, has arrived to take up her duties at the\nCathedral Rectory.\ne A quiet but pretty wedding\ntook place Saturday evening at 8:30\no'clock, when Rev. Foster Hilliard\nunited in marriage Alice May,\ndaughter of Mr. artd Mrs. L. A. Breu-\nton of Quesnel, B. C, md Robert\nHarrison, son of Mr. and Mrs. B.\nCarter of Vmcouver, B. C. The\nbride looked charming In t drtss\not Queens blue, with white accessories, carrying i bouquet of roses and\nwhite heather. They were atttnded\nby Mr. md Mrs. Findlay Jamieson.\nThe latter chose a dress' ot blue\nfloral chiffon with brown accessories, her cortege being composed of\npink rosebuds and heather. Mf. md\nMrs. Carter have taken up residence\nat the Sterling Hotel. Mr. Carter is\na member of the Nelson branch of\nthe Royal Bank of Canada staff.\n\u2022 The home of Mr. and Mn. W.\nByres, 1307 Hall Mines Road wu\nthe scene of a pretty wedding Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, when\ntheir second daughter. Elizabeth\n(Betty), wu united in mirrligt to\nFritz, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Rose, Morgan Street, Nelson.\nThe ceremony took place in the living room under an artistically arranged arch of white aiten md\nmums and wu performed by Rev.\nr. SL Denii of Trail. The bride,\nwho wu given in marriage by her\nfather, looked lovely in her white\nfloor-length gown of muslin-de-soie\ngown. She wore a Juliet cap ot\nwhite flowers trimmed with white\nmd blue velvet and carried a bouquet ot whit* uters, sweet peu md\nheather. Miu Christina Rose, lister of the groom, was bridesmaid\nand chose a dainty floor-length,\npale green taffeta gown with match-\nmi Juliet cap, Her bouquet'consisted of paitel uten and heithtr. The\ngroom wu supported by George\nByres, brother of the bride. The\nwedding march wu played on the\nviolin by Mist Mary Heddle, who\nalso rendered a selection during the\nsigning of the register and wu accompanied on the guitar by James\nLeDuc. The rooma were decorated\nwith white streamers and white and\nSink flowen. Tat three-tier wed-\ning cake embedded in pastel tulle\nana heather centred the tea table.\nT. D. Heddle proposed the tout to\nthe bride, responded to by ft*\ngroom, alter which tbe toast to the\nbridesmaid waa proposed by the\nbest man. Assisting in serving were\nMia Mary Heddle, Min Jessie Richardson and Mlu -Jessie Byres. The\nbride's going away costume was a\ndreu of navy and white sheer and\nnavy accessories. Amid a ihower ot\nconfetti and rice the happy couple\nleft on their honeymoon and on\ntheir return they will reside it 120\nVernon Street Guests included Mr.\nand Mn. John Rose Ud family,\nMr. and Mrt. W. Anderson, Mr. md\nMn. M. Barclay, Mr. and Mn. D. T.\nHeddle, Miss Mary Heddle, James\nLeDuc. Ray Crahin, Miss Jessie\nRiohard-on, Mr. and Mn. Robert\nByes and family ol1 Annable, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. W. Easton and family\not Castlegar, Mr. md Mri. William\nByres Jr., md son ol Warfield, Jack\nByres ol Trail, Miss Jessie Byres\nmd Mr. and Mn. Byres Sr.\n* W. J. McConnell trtt, in town\nfroA Harrop at the weekend.\n* Mrs. Lawrence Gausdale md\nMrs. Ira Marquis left yesterday\nmorning for CoalhUTst, Alta., to\nvisit the latter's father, Mr. Mclnnes.\n* Mn. J. G. Bunyan, Kerr\nApartments, had is weekend guests\nher two sonl, Billy ol Ymir and\nDonald of Sheep. Creek,\n* Mr. and Mrs. Eric Aylen of\nTrail spent Saturday in town.\n* Mr. and Mrs. Julius Relsterer,\nRobson Street, have as guest tor a\nlew weeks their daughter, Mrs. Mel\nSnowden of Kirkland Lake.\n* Mlu Beth McKinney was hostess it tht home of Mr. md Mrs. W.\nByres, Hail Mines Road, at a red\nand white kitchen shower in honor\nof Miss Betty Byes, whose marriage\nto F. Hose took place in Nelson\nSaturday. The evening wu spent\nin games and contests, after which\ngifts were presented in a gaily decorated cradle. Guests included Mrs.\nW. Byres, Mra. J. McKinney, Mrs.\nWilliam Easton, Miss Mary Heddle,\nMiss Christina Rose, Miss Swanee\nMoen, Miss Beda Moen, Miss Jtsssie\nByres, Miss Jessie Gentles, Miss Annie Bird, Miss Jessie Richardson,\nMrs. W. Byres of Trail md Miss\nByres.\ne Mr. md Mn. A. Banks. Silica\nStreet, have as guest Miss Rose\nHeriwlg, matron of the Cumberland Hospital, ex-resident of Nelson.\n* Mr. and Mrs. Archie Gray of\nSalmo visited Nelson Saturday.\n* The marriage took place quietly Saturday, September 14th, at 2\no'clock, at the home of the officiating clergyman, Rev. Foster Hilliard, of Marjorie Doris, daughter\nof Joseph Habegard of Nelson md\nArtiiur Joseph Bradshaw, youngest\nson of Mr. md Mrs. Joseph C. Bradshaw, pioneer resident! of this city.\nGiven in marriage by her father,\nthe petite bride looked charming\nin her ankle-length gown of pale\nblue starched marquisette, embroidered in an all-over design of\nwhite rosebuds, over a matching\nslip of blue satin. Her shoulder veil\nwu held In place by a coronet of\nwhite roses and her accessories\nwere en tone. She carried an arm\nbouquet ot pastel shaded gladioli.\nMiss Edna Nelson, attired In an afternoon dress of dusky rose, wu\nbridesmaid, her shoulder bouquet\nbeing composed of shaded pink\nroses and fern. Paul Hunden supported the groom. A reception was\nlater held at the home of the\ngroom's parents, 102 Silica Street,\nwhere t)ie rooms were decorated\nwith pastel-shaded uten and\nrosu. The bride's table was cen-\ntertd by the two-tiered wedding\ncake, flanked by crystal vases of\npink and white esters. Mrs. R. B.\nSmith, aunt of the bride, presided\n\u2022t the tei table md Servlterui included Mrs. Chester Bridshiw, snd\nMias Florence Jeffreys. For her\nweddina trip by bus the bride donned a black tailored suit with white\nsheer blouse and accessories. On\nreturning. Mr. and Mrs. Brashaw\nwill make their home in Nelson.\nGuesti included relatives of the\nbride and groom.\nRossland Social...\nROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. 15 -\nStately gladioli and delicately shaded roses decorated the rooms when\nMrs. Herb Lowes entertained Wednesday evening it her home on\nQueen Street. The attractive tea\ntable, centred with a crystal bowl\nof deep rose md mauve double\npetunias, wu presided over by Mn,\nHarry Delong, Assisting the hostess\nIn serving refreshments were Miss\nEileen Macdonald and Mlu Catherine MacLean. Among the Invited\nguests were Mrs, Harry Stinson,\nMiss Dorothy McDonell, Mill Eileen\nMacdonald, Mrs. James Bates, Miss\nCatherine MacLean, Mlu Marie\nPrestley, Miss Lillian Bulck, Miss\nConnie Eccles, Mlu Jean Mitchell,\nMrs. Harry Delong, Miu Doris Ter-\ntlck, Mlu Muriel Wilson and Miu\nJeanne Reid. '\u25a0\nMrs. Monte Graham, the former\nMlu Gerry Bryden, was hostess at\nthe tea hour Wednesdiy afternoon.\nAssisting to serve refreshments in\nthe rooms decorated with late Sum-\nfier flowen were Mn. Luter\nrbwn MIA Margaret Forbes, md\nMiu Lilian Johnston, Those present were Mlra Eunice Goodenough,\nMiu Carol Tracy, Miss Betty Jackson, Miss Rachel Douglas, Mrs. Lester Brown, Miss Lillian Barton, Miss\nLilian Johnston, Mlu Betty Ball.\nMiu Cynthia Tiison, Mlu Margaret\nForbes, Miu Prlscilla Bryden md\nMrs. E. V. McGauley,\nThe Dorcas Circle met Wednesday evening at the home of Mn. J.\nRoscorla. Following the -regular\nbusineu meeting, refreshments were\nserved by the hosteu, issisted by\nMrs. E. J. Rose. The next meeting\nwill bi held at the home of tbe\nPresident, Mn. Howard Hayden.\nMemben present were Mn. G.\nCraig, Mrs. E. Seccombe, Mn. J.\nRoscorla, Mn. W. Blackwell, Mrs.\nH. Hayden and a visitor, Mra. E. J.\nRose of Vancouver.\nEntertaining at her home on Columbia Avenue Tuesday evening\nwas Miu Jeanne Reid. Pastel shaded sweet peas md gladioli were the\nartistic decorations used throughout\nthe rooms, while pink md white\nrosebuds centred the dainty tea\ntable. Assisting the hosteu in serving refreshments wire Miu Rose\nWilliams md Mill Catherine Mac-\nLean. Tht list ot invited guests included Mn. Ernie Beaulleu, Mlu\nEileen Mara,'Mia! Catherine Mac-\nLean, Miss Rose Williams of Trail,\nMiu Jem Buick, Mrs. James Bates\nof Vmcouver, Miu Eileen See-\ncombe, Mrs. Ken Jamieson, Miu\nMarjory Heap, Mn. Richard Ayret,\nMiu Lillian Buick. Mrs. Fat Dougan, Mlu Margaret Hughes, Mn.\nBen Rella and Mrs. William Reid.\nJapanese Drop\nTest Bomb on\nEmpress of Asia\nTOKYO, Sept. 14 (AP) - The\nJapanese Admiralty announced Saturday night naval fliers accidentally dropped a test bomb on the Canadian liner Empress of Asia, injuring lour Chinese crewmen.\nThe navy at once sent surgeons\nand official representatives aboard\nto give what assistance they could\nand express prompt apologies.\nThe mnouncement said there was\nno other damage. The incident occurred while a naval squadron wu\nIn'bombing practice ott Oshlma\nIsland.\nThe purser of the liner, which\nsailed tonight tor a Canadian port,\nsaid there wis no structural dim-\nage to the 16,909-ton Ihlp. The Associated Press spoke to him by-radiotelephone, but he would give no\nfurther details.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP)-Exprei-\nslons ot regret have been received\nby E. D. McGreer, Canadian Charge\nd Affaires in Tokyo, from the Japanese Foreign Office, in regard to\nthe bombing ot the Canadian liner,\nEmpress of Asii, it was announced\nby the External Affairs Department\nMr. McGreer said the incident occurred when the Canadian ship was\na short distance from Yokohama en\nroute from Nagasaki. The test\nbomb was dropped from a naval\nplane participating in maneuvers off\nthe Japanese coast.\nTwo ol the lour members ol the\nEmpress' crew injured were badly\nwounded, the External Aflain Department said, but the vessel herself suffered no mijor structural\ndamage, although the bomb penetrated two decks.\nThe Canadian Charge d'Affaires\nwill see Japanese Foreign Minister\nY. Matsuoka, the announcement\nstated.\nWoman Doorman\nKnows Her Job\nNEW YORK (CP). - Stroll down\nEast 48th Street, just Off Fifth\nAvenut, md you see her standing\nststuesquely under .the canopy In\nfront of John Frederics, Inc., creator of woman's hats, holding her\njob with ill the dignity tnd skill of\na man. She Is Fredericka \u2014 New\nYork's only woman doormin.\nOver six feet tei, dark-hiired. In\ni costume of the 1870's, with wide-\nbrimmed hat and sweeping skirt,\nshe commands your attention as she\nsteps professionally to the curb to\nhelp customers alight Irom automobiles.\nOn rainy days she hoists a regulation-size doorman's umbrella to\nkeep customers dry in the wet step\nbetween car and canopy.\nFrederlcka's- reil name is Frances\nBaker. She Is unmarried. In her\nlate 20's, and got htr schooling st\nGirls' High in Brooklyn, N. Y. She\nstill lives in Brooklyn.\nBeing i doormin takes stamina,\nmd she ipents two night a week at\na gym, keeping in trim. On diyi\noil. she rides horsebick tnd goes\nswimming. She modeled hats belore taking her present job.\nStays 22 Years\nas Chorus Girl\nST.   LOUIS,   Mb.   (CP)\u2014Jeanne\nGustovlson hu been a chorus girl\nlor 22 yean. She givu retirement\nno thought.\nFroin high1 ichool She entered the\nsinging chorus ot St Louis' municipal operaa in the year of its birth\n1919, and has appeared every season\nsince. She frequently hu small roles\noutside the chorus.\nStagehands and stars call her\nGussle. A director would no more\nexclude her from a production than\nan Englishman would pus up tea.\nGuuie sings deep contralto.\nWhen not busy on the stage, Gussle knits sweaters for a hobby. She\nlives at home with her mother and\nsister.\n\"I ntvtr struggled to get ahead,\"\nshe says. \"I've seen some of the\nreally great ones go and make a\nhit, then disappear. Nobody knows\nwhat becomes ol them. They spend\nthe big money they make putting\nup a front. Between times they are\nbroke and looking for work. Id rather have ''steady piy, though it's\nsmall.\"\nlfl<?'\nPAGE   FIVE\ntit*t9sstmimms&&&omsame\nNew\nHatidbags\n$1.00\nSmart large handbags -\nsome zipper pockets. In\nblack, wine md navy.\nOthen up from - $1.95\n($) firmest ,g\nPhone 200 Biker SL\nChoose Canadians\nto Model Furs in U.S..\nLONDON, Sept 15 <CP).-C_\u00ab\nnadlan girls will be chosen u man*\nnequlna by representative! ot tha '\nFur Trade Export Group who will\nleave shortly for America in an.'\neffort to gain a section of the fur\ncoat trade in Canada and the United\nStates.\nPhilip G. Mirkham, deputy-chairman of the Group, formed last May\nu a move to maintain London's\nposition as the fur centre of tha\nworld,\" will leave shortly for New\nYork with hundreds ot sample coats.\nAnd while he is there, his assistant,\nJ. A. Kennedy will go to Montreal\nto select mannequins to ihow oft\nthe British fun.\nOfficials uld the plan wu an\nexperiment and if successful It\nwould be repeated annually.\ntawMWjiMt-at-wtawMt-dWWipM\nNEW SHIPMENT 0.\nSPORT JACKETS\nat the\nFashion First Shop\n43. Baker St.        Nelson, B.C.\neeMcae&toMeseeeeeieovaQoetmetl\nFor BETTER desserts\nDURHAM\nTake  the Worry\nOut of\nMoving\n1U-|\nPhone 33\nIt's just\nas simple\nas that\n1:1\nOur staff are all men with yean of\nexperience. To move your furniture\ncarefully and speedily is of prime importance to them.\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished in 1899\n_^a_fc__t.____^__.A__^._\u201e__Lfc___.\u00bb\n __ :\t\n Httam Satig JJwtm\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\n' British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n26S Baker Street, Nelson British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1940,\nTHE ROMANCE OF THE WORM\nProbably thi? ardent fisherman is more intimately\nacquainted with worms than the average person, but we'll\n: wager even he will be surprised to learn that they are capable of emitting an audible sound, and that they have been\ncredited with possessing a surprising amount of intelligence, says our romantic Dominion Bureau of Statistics.\nAlthough most worms look alike to us, experts claim\nthere are about 800 different species, only 90 of which are\nto be found in North America. The majority live in the\nsoil, preferring land containing considerable organic mat-\n. ter and plenty of moisture. They swallow great quantities\nof earth and digest the organic matter, churning up the\nsoil and mixing it with half decaying leaves and roots, thus\nmaintaining the fertility of the land and stimulating plant\ngrowth.\nThe anatomy of a worm is interesting and is no doubt\nquite intriguing to a lover of bugs and grubs. Worms have\nno teeth, no eyes and no feet. Yet they can eat, are sensitive to light and vibrations, and make pretty fair time, all\nthings considered. Their mouth consists of a simple sucking\nmechanism with powerful muscles. They crawl by means\nof the alternate expansion and contraction of the muscular\nrings encircling their bodies, aided by rows of short, stiff\nbristles along the sides.\nEach earthworm is both male and female and produces\neggs. The young emerge from the egg capsules fully formed,\nand mature in about three or four months. They often\noccur in such large numbers that they make the surface of\nthe ground appear lumpy and uneven.\nBesides the \"early bird\" domestic fowl, toads and\nmoles relish earthworms, and it is hot often that steps\nmust be taken to control worms in the garden. However,\nif it is found that they are affecting the root systems of\nplants or marring the appearance of the lawn, a sprinkling\nof lime solution has been found very beneficial.\nThus we see that no matter how many mechanical\ncontrivances man invents, there will always be a place\nfor the common earthworm in the scheme of things:\nThe Bureau pf Statistics does not give us a worm\ncensus, but it is interesting to recall that oldtimers in this\ndistrict have claimed that worms were not indigenous here,\nand had to be \"introduced.\"\nCertain it is that in early days one could not be sure of\ncultivated land containing worms, as is now the case. The\nworm-fisherman of Nelson 30 years ago used to procure\nhis bait at selected spots guaranteed to have worms; the\nvicinity of the slaughterhouse, for instance, an institution\nthat some two decades ago passed out of existence.\nOne of the worries of American scientists at the time\nof the last great Mississippi floods, some 10 years ago, was\nlest the worms should drown owing to the extraordinarily\nlong submergence of the land, and the land should lack for\na time the valuable work of the worms in opening the\nground to air circulation and in fertilizing it.\n\u00bbW*-#W\u00ab\u00ab>5\u00abft\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab*W\u00ab*W\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\nJsl&l yoWLAfrft?,\nK555S-'\nSSMSS\nONE-MINUTE TE8T\n1. How high does corn usually\ngrow?\n2. What animals beside the bear\nhibernate in Winter?\n3. What is an orphan automobile?\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nThe first ingredient in conversation is truth, the next, good sense;\nthe third, good humor and llic\nfourth, wit.\u2014Sir W. Temple.\nHINT8 ON ETIQUETTE\nWhen a woman takes a party of\nboth men and women guests to the\ntheatre, she should hand the tickets\njo one of the men and let him\ngive them to the usher.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nToday's birthday children will experience a happy year, gaining in\nmany sudden, unexpected ways.\nThey may face some opposition on\nthe part of an elder, it is indicated,\nbut a happy romance is predicted.\nBorn on this date a child will be\ngpod-natured, clever, original and\npsychic. There will be some danger\nof deception in such a life, but it\nwill mainly be fortunate.\nONE-MINUTE TE8T ANSWERS\n1. The average height is be-\ntween seven and eight feet.\n2. The dormouse, bat and hamster.\n3. An automobile that is no longer\nmanufactured-\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It's queer how a big man's reputation lools us. If a common little\nman did some o' the things done by\nour statesmen, we'd think he was\nsimple.\"\nWAR \u2014 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Press\nSept 16,1915\u2014Revolution fomented in Russia when Oar prorogued\nthe Duma because ol its dillerences\nwith the Government on war policies and internal affairs. Teutonic\nforces scored big successes against\nRussia on Eastern front.\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nTEN YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News of Sept. 16, 1930\nA. Fletcher was reelected Instructor of the Trail Memorial Hall gym\nclass.\u2014Steve Walley, Harry Hope\nand Charles Dodimead returned to\nTrail from a hunting trip with a\nbag of six groups\u2014F. B. Dickinson,\nPrincipal of the Procter School,\nwas a Nelson visitor.\u2014The Trail\nCity Council is considering bringing in a byla wto make the mayor's\nterm ol two years' duration.\u2014\nTWENTY-FIVE   YEARS   AGO\nFrom Dally News of Sept. 16, 1915\nW. E. Jones, master mechanic at\nTrill, passed through Nelson yesterday en route home from a trip\nto the East-Chief J. T. Black of\nthe Provincial Police Force returned last night from a trip up Ihe\nArrow Lakes\u2014It. E. Lanyon of\nEdgewood built an aerial tram for\nthe Hope mine at Sandon this Summer. -Construclion of a pipe line\nto supply power lor the operation\nof a compressor plant for the Noonday mine at Sandon is to be itarted\nat onc\u00ab according to Bruce White,\nManager.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily Trlbunt of Stpt 16,1900\nThe tricklaying gang on the Bil\nfour extension reached Nine-Mile\nPoint last night. \u2014 Alex Carrie, Dr.\nHall and C. D. Goepel took top\nhonors in a shoot oi the Nelson\nGun Club. \u2014 Bruce White ol the\nMolly Gibson mine ind Al Gray,\nrepresenting tht settlers in the\nMolly Gibson Landing, went to\nKaslo to interview R. F. Green,\nM. P. P., in regard to extension ot\nthe wagon road, \u2014 .Cecil Wird,\nSecretary of i compmy which is\nerecting the Hotel Cecil at Kamloops returned Irom a trip to Kamloops. \u2014 Martin Msdden will finish\nIhe foundations of the new St\nJoseph's School tomorrow.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-MONDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 16. 1940-\n\"Hl! It you must carve your name, lor heaven's sake try somewhere el\u00ab!'' \u2014Humorist\n3M-3ttss3$\u00bb*fss9tt*\u00ab\u00bb#$\u00abe>\u00ab;\nJ? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader.  Names of\npersons liking qutttlons will not\nbt published.\n3_$$39\n0$S3$&\nM. B., Ymir\u2014Can you give me a\nrecipe lor chutney that contains\n\u2022 plums?\nNew Zealand Chutney\u201415 onions,\n30 apples, 15 pears, 30 tomatoes\n(either ripe or green) and a quan\ntlty ol plums. Boil lor two hours.\nThen add: Two ounces of ground\nginger, two ounces allspice, four\npounds brown sugar, three-quarters\ncup salt and four red peppers. Boil\nagain one hour and add one pint\nof vinegar, heat to just before boil,\ning point, stirring and skimming oc\ncasionally. Bottle when cold.\nM. D., Wynndel\u2014When was King\nGeorge VI crowned King\nGeorge VI was crowned King and\nEmperor in Westminster Abbey\nMay 12, 1937.\nG. T\u201e Trail\u2014What can I put with\nwoollens to keep moths away. I\nintend the woollens to be stored\nfor a long period.\nPut a small bottle of chloroform,\nwith a small hole in the cork, in the\nbox to be' packed with woollens.\nThe fumes will permeat the garments and kill any moths.\nA Trail Reader has kindly supplied\nthe words to the song \"Twenty-\nOne Years\" requested by A Reader\nat Renata.\nTWENTY-ONE YEARS\nThe Judge said \"stand up boy, and\ndry ofl your tears,\nYou're sentenced to Nashville lor\ntwenty-one years.\"\nSo  kiss  me  good-bye, babe,  and\nsay you'll be mine,\nFor twenty-one years, babe, is a\nmighty long time.\nOh, hear that train blow, babe, she'll\nbe here on time,\nTo take me to Nashville to serve\nout my time;\nOh, look down that railroad, far as\nyou can see,\nAnd  keep  right on wiving your\nlarewell to me.\nThe iteam Irom the whistle.\nThe smoke Irom the stack,\nI know you'll be true blue until 1\nget back.\nSo hold up your head, babe, and\ndry up your eyes,\nFor the best friends must part, babe,\nso must you and I.\nGo  to   the   governor,  upon your\nsweet soul,\nII you can't get a pardon, try get\na parole;\nII I had the governor where the\ngovernor's got me,\nBelore Tuesday morning thit gov,\nernor'd be tree.\nI've counted the days, babe,\nI've counted the nights;\nI've counted the minutes,\nI've counted the lights',\nI've counted the footsteps, .\nI've counted the stars;\nI've   counted  a   million   ol   these\nprison bars.\nSix months have gone by. babe,\nI wish I were dead;\nThis dirty old jallhouse, the floor\nfor my bed,\nIt's raining and hailing, the moon\nflives no light,\ne I sit here and wonder, why\nyou never write.\nI've counted on you babe, to get\nme a break,\nHave you forgotten, I'm here for\nyour sake?\nYou know who is guilty, you know\nit too well,\nBut I'd die in this jailhouse, before\nI would tell.\nCome all you young lellows with\nhearts brave and true,\nDon't trust any woman, you'll grieve\nif you do.\nDon't trust any woman, no matter\nwhat kind,\nFor  twenty-one years, boys, is a\nmighty long time.\nGerman Downed\nFriendly Plane\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\n(CP). \u2014 A flying officer in a fighter commind is grateful to i German pilot lor doing his job lor\nhim.\nHe had Just attacked, and seriously damaged, two Messerschmitts in\na dog-light over the channel. Then\nhe turned hii Spitfire to attack\nmother enemy.\nHere is his descrption of what\nhappened:\n\"When ibout to attack a Messerschmitt 109 a second Messerschmitt\n109 pissed me md shot down the\nfirst 109. I im definite ibout the\nIdentity ol both thest ilrcrilt.\"\nLondon Using New\n\u2022Balloon Barrage\nLONDON. Sept. 15 (CP). - The\nuse in London ol a balloon barrage\nof \"improved design\" which floats\nat considerably greater height than\nhad been possible heretofore was\ndisclosed yesterday by authoritative\nBritish source*.\nThe informants said it was these\nballoons that trapped a German\nbomber In a raid on the city early\nFriday. Previously it was announced\nmerely a German plane was caught\nand destroyed by a barrage balloon.\nDetails ol the new balloon were\nwithheld. Coastal obsedvers said the\nnew type bags had been used successfully against dive-bombers before they were put up in London.\nCAPITAL HAVING\nHOUSE SHORTAGE\nOTTAWA (CP). - .New houses\nhere are sold \"even before the\nwalls are up.\" so acute is the housing situation these days. Real estate\nagents declare it will be even worse\nby the end of the month.\n\"Things are reaching a point\nwhere it is virtually impossible to\nlind a client a place to live in,\"\none agent said. Few realize how\nserious the problem is.\"\nA \"blitzkrieg\" on real estate ol-\nlices is expected as building -his\nnot kept pace with the increase\nin Ottawa's population since war\nstarted and residents of Summer\ncottages \u2014 there are thousands in\nthe district \u2014 will be coming to the\ncity for the Winter. And on top\nof that, appointments to wartime\njobs here continue.\nBecause they are liable to be\ntransferred at a moment's notice,\nRoyal Canadian Air Force men have\nthe most trouble to find dwellings.\nLandlords prefer more permanent\ntenants than the nomadic airmen.\nCanadians Signs\nfor Uncle Sam\nBOSTON, (CP). - Hundreds of\nCanadians in this area were among\nthe aliens who registered under the\nnew U. S. Federal regulation.\nThe period of registration, which\nis nation-wide, extends from Aug.\n27 to Dec. 26 inclusive. For the most\npart, post offices are the designated\nplaces, and on the opening diy\nhere nearly 1000 aliens and their\nrelatives crowded the corridors of\nthe Postoffice Building.\nElderly men and women predominated in the first groups. Alter the\nreview of the sample lorms, the\na.iens were directed to the fingerprinting division where a stall of\nclerks transferred the prints of\naliens' fingers .and hands on fingerprint cards.\nThe final step in the procedure\nconsisted in the administration of\nthe oath by the registration officer,\nsigning of the form by the alien\nand the imprinting of the right index finger on the form. About 25\nminutes is required lor the complete process.\nBesides the usual questions lor\nestablishing identification, the alien\nis asked to tell how and when he\nentered the country, the method of\ntransportation he used to get here\nand the name of the vessel, if any\non which he arrived. He is also\nasked to state the length of time\nhe has been in this country and\nthe length of time he expects to\nstay. He must describe any military or naval service he has had\nand list the names of any organizations, clubs or societies in which he\nparticipates or holds membership,\nThis information will be kept con-\nfidential in the files of the Department of Justice. Law-abiding\naliens are assured that they need\nhave no lear that the records will\nbe used in any way to their harm.\nAffairs Institute\n\" Has Had Busy Year\nTORONTO, (CP). - The most\nactive year in its history is recorded by the Canadian Institute of\nInternational Affairs in the annual\nreport for 1939-40.\nPresident W. M. Birks of Montreal points out that in the crisis\nof war the organization's efforts in\nthe Held ol public education had\nexpanded, a series ol popular publications launched and a new do-\nSartment of public information cs-\nibllshed, More exchange of speakers and regional conferences with\nvarious groups in the United States\nhad also added considerably to the\nInstitute activities.\nIt is noted that certain points in\nCsnada's policy hid issumed a new\nappearmce md become matters of\nurgency, such as Canada's defence\npolicy and immigration and refugees, including \"the King's wards\nand guest children.\" The work of\nIhe Institute hid been idjusted to\nthe changed situation .d the na-\ntlonil executive was maintaining\ncontact with official services to\ncsrry out the most useful program\nin Ihe present clrcumst-nces.\nCONTRACT...\nCBOSS-B-TF ______\nTHERE ,18 on* type ot suit-\nplay hand on which tt la advliablt\nto count up your winning tiioka\nrather than your lose\u2122 \u2014 tha\ncross-ruff. The usual formula la to\nlee how many top honor tricks\nare In sight, add to them the number of trumps which can be taken\naeparately by ruffing and to them\ntha number of tricks to be taken\nto tnlmp leads which probably\nwill he made by the defender! any\nUme they get the lead. The total\nla the number you should take,\nbut only if the ruling la itarted\naa early In the hand aa la feasible.     ,\nI. *A108_     lAAlOSa\n\u00bb\u00ab. f\u00ab\n\u2666 A764 + JSTB.S3\n+ 1074 3           +10\n*. *A1082 \u2666. AXIOM\n975 9\u00bb2\n\u2666 J87B43 4>A7Si\n+K *KJB\noouth's Hand\nAKQJ9\n\u00bbA643\n+A885\n. Cross-ruff hands usually are\nIdentified aa those In which there\nla a trump fit, but the aide suits\nare non-fltting, -short In one hand\nand Iosg In the other, with no suit\natrong enough to furnish any\nnumber of discards. That la true\nof the situations shown above, the\nnumbered hands being considered\naa dummies opposite South, who\nstrives to make 4-Spadcs against\na lead ot the heart K.\n. With No. t aa dummy, the declarer can count three aide aces,\nsix tricks by ruffs\u2014three In own\nhand and three in-dummy\u2014plus'\none trick on a trump lead to make\nhla needed ten.  v\nWhen No. 2 it dummy, there are\n[two aide aces and apparently a\n'chance to ruff four tricks tn the\nNorth hand and four In the South,\nto make* ten. But, 11 the defenden\nlead a trump when they win a diamond trick, aa they should, obllg-\nBy Shepard Barclay\nIng declarer to use two trumpi on\non* trick, only nlnt can ha nude\nthus. Hence a better chance la to\ntry to ruff up the diamond lult at\nonce, never waiting dummy'i\ntrumpi on nib, but laving them\nto drop hostile trumps altar tha\ndiamonds are established, which\nprobably will require three rounds.\nWith No. 3 as dummy, game\ncan be counted by cross-rufflng.\nTha two club tops, heart A, three\nruffs In each hand and one trick\nwhen the opponents lead trump*\nafter taking a heart trick, will\ntotal ten. But be careful, after\nwinning the heart A and club K,\nnot to use two trump* on a trick\nby leading a trump tor an entry\nto South; because of that trump\nlead and another when the opponent* take a heart trick, your\nruffs will be cut to four. After tha\nheart A and club K, leal* heart\nat once.\nWith No. 4 aa dummy, beware\nof an early club finesse. If you\nlow that after winning th* heart\nA, the foe ihould lead trumpi\nonce; when you then lose a heart\ntrick they will lead trumps again,\nand your game is cooked. Hera\nyou should after the heart A embark on tht cross-ruff at once and\nnever take the dub finesse, risking losing the lead twice.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u00bb\nTomorrow*! Problem\n410785\n4,10\n\u2666 AKJ97S\n+ 10 8\nf 8762\n\u25bc \u00bb \u2022 -\u00bb     .,       .\n\u2666 1084?   $      \u00bb)\n+ 632\nAf.\n*KQ98_\n9KJ9\n\u2666 65\n+ AQ9\n\u2666 AJ\n*>AQ543\n4>Q\n+KJ874\n(Dealer: West Neither aide vulnerable.)\nCan South make 3-No Trumpi\nen thla hand against perfect defense, following a spade lead to\nEast's Q'\nOn. ]Jul dvt\nMONDAY, SEPT. 16, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:27\u20140 Canida\n7:80\u2014Toist    and    Coffee    Club\n(CKLN)\n8:00-BBC Newi\n8:30\u2014Joyce Trio\n8:45-Thi Newi\n9:00\u2014Musical Roundup\n9:30\u2014Rhymes and Ramblings\n10:00-Our Hall Hour\n-0:30--. S. Navy Bind\n10:45\u2014The Newi\n11:00\u2014K.L.G. Hospital Programme\n(CKLN)\n11:30\u2014Composers' Corner\n12:00-Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\n12:45-Muslcal Melodies (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The News\n1:15\u2014Talk\n1:30\u2014Closing  Stocks\nL45-BBC News\n2:15-NBC Salon Orch.\n2:30\u2014Mirror lor Women\n2:45\u2014Blues Songs\n8:00\u2014London Calling\n3:15\u2014Novelty Programme\n3:30\u2014 Recital Series\n3:45-Talk\n3:57-News Bulletin\n4:00\u2014With the Troops in England\n4:30\u2014Toronto Symphony Bind\n5:00-Concert Master (CKLN)\n5:30\u2014In   the   Modern   Manner\n(CKLN)\n5:45-Harmony Hall (CKLN)\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Summertime\n6:30-BBC News\n7:00\u2014The News\n7:15\u2014\"BriUin Speaki\"\n7:30\u2014Library Programme (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014Emily Cirr's Notebook\n8:15\u2014Recital\n8:30\u2014Drama\n9:00\u2014Classics tor today\n9:30\u2014With the Troops in England\n10:00\u2014Organ   Music\u2014Sydney   Kel-\nland\n10:15\u2014The Newi\n10:30\u2014Music by Woodbury\nll:00-Ood Save the King\nCJAT^TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Church In the Wlldwood\n7:15\u2014Roundup Time\n7:30\u2014Breaktast Club\n8:30\u2014 Songs by Nelson Eddy\n11:30-On With the Dance\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Blue Barron's Orch.\n3:30-Home Folks Frolic\n4:00\u2014Tea- Time Tunes\n4:15\u2014Song Revue\n4:30^Musical Wokshop\n4:45\u2014Theatre Spotlite\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Echoes ol the British Empire\n6:30\u2014The Buccaneers\n10:00\u2014The Old Refrains.\nl.:00-_ign 011\nOther periods\u2014CBC network.\nRaids Speed Evacuation of School\nChildren; East-Enders Hale lo Leave\nBy HAROLD 'AIR\n(Canadian Press Stiff Writer).\nLONDON, Sept. 18 (CP- Cable).-\nStand along any street leading\nthrough Central London from the\nEast and frequently you see a light\nwhich brings home the stark tragedy ol air raids\u2014families evacuated\nalter losing their homei through\nHitler's air war against \"military\nobjectlvei.\"\nThese people huddle In the back\nol trucki with thtir pitiful collec-.\ntions ol bags and boxes as they are\ntaken to billets elsewhere in London or In the country.\nAlthough the East End suffered\nheavily in recent raids, London\nCounty Council sources sty there\nil no \"mass evacuation\". Strangely\nenough, they ittm reluctant to\nmove, a spokesman said.\nA \"lair amount* ol private evacuation Irom the city ' reported, but\nthe main effect ol the week'i raids\nhis been a speeding up ol the evacuation ol school children. About 1000\nare registered dally now compared\nwith the trickle ol 200 or io belore\nthe Intenillicitlon ol the iir war.\nEast-Enders whose homes were\ndestroyed or closed un\"! delayed\naction bombs exploded have been\ngiven the opportunity ol living elsewhere but generally accept temporary shelter lor a day or two and\nthen return to their familiar neighborhood. A spokesman said that\noften when a home ii lost ind the\nfather is without a lob, the usual\ncomment is: \"Oh, well, get \u25a0 home\nsomewhere else there and the old\nman will lind another job.\"\nShortly alter the outbreak oi\nwar about 250,000 ichool children\nwere aent to safer parts ot Britain. Last June another 161,000 were\nevacuited. They itarted returning\nto the city with the retult that by\nthe end ol August only 168,000 were\naway.\nL::ts were opened again but only\naround 250 a day registered to be\ntaken away again. The past week,\nhowever, saw the total reach 3500,\nA peak was reached Thursday with\na total ot 1700. Evacuation follows\nabout 48 hours alter registration.\nFleeing Thieves Stop\nfor 90 Cents Change\nNEWARK, N.J., Sept. 18 (AP).\n\u2014Diognes would have liked Mendel Mendelson.\nWhen a man gave him a dollar\nbill lor a 10-cent cigar, the 62-\nyear-old druggist handed over the\nstogie and turned around to get\nsome change. Then the \"customer's\" companion flourished a gun\nand slid:\n\"This is a holdup. Gimme your\nmoney.\"\n\"You get out ot here,\" Mendel-\nson replied.\nThe bandits ran with Mendelson\nalter them, shouting \"Hey, here's\nyour change.\"\nOne ol the men stopped, took\nthe 90 cents and started running\nagain. Mendelson returned to his\nstore.\nMore Knitting\n,  for Air Force\nLONDON, Sept. 15 (CP). - Get\nthose needles working taster, ladles,\nit's getting a lot colder up In the\nsky, especially on those prolonged\nnight bombing trips.\nThe appeal to start knitting \"on\nthe double.\" Is made in behalf of\nthe Royal Air Force Comforts Committee which has sponsored formation ol innumerable \"knitting parties.\" And still more are needed.\nThe groups or parties are formed\nof 10 to more than 1,000 women\nand hive been providing huge quantities of knitted goods for air force\nmen. With Winter coming oh, however, requirements are being doubled lor sweiters ind other heavy\ngoods.\nII you want to form a group\nsmong your neighbors, you will be\ngiven official membership badges-\nend free wool if you can't afford\nto buy your'own.\nA NORTHEAST TOWN, England,\n(CP)\u2014Owen Simminds, an officer\nof the Home Guard, wis fined for\nallowing i glow ol * cigarette to be\nvisible In the street during in air\nnid warning.\nNAZIS CONTINUE\nBOMB ATTACKS\nBERLIN, Sept. 13 (AP)-The text\nof Saturday's German High Command communique:\n'The air force, despite unfavorable weather Friday, continued retaliatory attacks day and night on\nthe British capital, scoring numerous hits on docks,'storehouses, and\nfactories. New fires itarted at several place*. Furthermore, airports,\nindustrial plants and railroads ia\nSoutheistern England were effectively bombed.\n\"The enemy made some short\nflights over Holland, Belgium and,\nNorthern France and dropped some\nbombs at several places without\ncausing noteworthy damage.\n\"Because ol heavy clouds there\nwere only icatterefl air fights during the day. Eight enemy planet\nwere bagged by chasers andenti-\naircraft. Two of our own planes ar*\nmissing.\"\n(British statements Indicated no\nBritish planes were lost yesterday.\nThree German aircraft were destroyed.)\nAir Service From\nIndo-China Stopped\nHONG KONG, Sept. 15 (AP). -\nChinese sources reported yesterday\nair transportation between Hanoi,\nFrench Indo-China, and Kunming,\ncapital ol the neighboring Chinese\nprovince ol Yunnan, had been suspended since Friday.\n(Earlier in the week a Chinese\nArmy spokesman said in Chungking\nthat Chinese troops had blown up\nthe international bridge on the Hanoi-Kunming Railway to prevent\nJapanese from using it as an approach to China.)\nThese sources quoted general\nLung-Yun, Governor ol Yunnan, aa\nsaying the French Government wai\n\"on the point ol granting the Japanese the right to use Indo-China\nas a base ol attack against China\"\nand that the Chinese would take all\nnecessary military measures.\nLet Your Son be\na Credit to\nHis Father\nSet your mind at ease\n\u2014secure his education\nthe Imperial Life way\nHave You a\nUsed\nTennis Racket\n\\\ni\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 0 times Me nit\nTwo (2) lines once -0c nit\nNelson Daily News\nPHON1144\nWHEN be is ready to plunge into the\nhurly-burly of competitive business or\nprofessional life, you may not be here. But\neven now, through Imperial Life, you can\nmake certain that whatever happens, your son\nwill be equipped to be a credit to you\u2014\neducated to compete. And never has education been more essential to success;\nYou, alone, can decide whether your son's\neducation will be haphazard and incomplete,\nor systematic and thorough, Many provident\nfathers, remembering the handicaps way had to\novercome, have made certain that their children will have every advantage that education\ncan give them, by taking outan Imperial Child's\nThrift Policy. This provides that a sum of\nmoney, the amount you decide upon, will be\npaid your son at a given date.\nThe Imperial Child's Thrift Policy has\nthis striking advantage\u2014should you pass away\nprematurely the Imperial Life will piy the\npremiums until the child is 21 and able\nto continue the payments if any are still\ndue. See an Imperial Life representative at\nyour first convenience;\n$1000 for Norman J.\nwhen he is 21\nWhen the 'unexpected happened'\nNormin J. wll little more na a\nbaby; With tome other insurtnet,\nhis l.ther left so Imperiil Life Child's\nThrift Policy. Under its terms tbt\nImperiil Lift will p-y ill premiums\nuntil Norman is 21. Then he will\nreceive $1000\u2014enough to give him\n\u2022 heid start In life;\nNormta'i need will be til thi\npreiter ber.iue hii father will not be\nhere to guide him; Why not proridt\nin Imperiil Lift Child's Thrift Policy\nfor \u00ab*w boy\u2014or girl?\nIMPERIAL\nUT US SEND YOU THIS POOKIHT\nThe title Is: \"Money for Them.\" You'll tnd il very\nhelpful; It is free. Write Imperiil Lift Assuruct\nCo., 20 Victoria Street, Toronto, Ont\nLIFE\n....-\u00bb.'. ...,,.>, __.___fc\\____________M__a.,\n ~^\n\/. ' -'\u25a0;':'\nWW\nwm-mr.\nast Period Rally Gives\nedmen 16-14 Victory to\n.gain Tie Lacrosse Final\n'ifth and Deciding Game at Trail Tonight;\n\u2022 Nelson Crowd Cheers Rossland Heartily\nAgainst Confident Golden Bears\n' While a itml-dtllrloui crowd of over 1000 joyously gave vtnt\nI complete ipprovil, Rossland Redmen Saturday night In tht Nelson\nIvlc Arena forced tht West Kooteniy senior Isorosse issue to tht\nmlt by pulling out an axeltlng 16-14 victory In tht fourth period\nt tht expense of tht Trill Golden Boars.\nI Which itti tht ittgt for tht fifth and deciding garni In Trill\nmight,\nTrill optntd tht series a week igo with \u2022 decisive win, Ross-\nind tvtntd It up In thtir next joust, thin tht Bruins pulled ahead\ngain with a stirring ovtrtlmt vlettry, only to ut their ehimplon-\nlip hopes glvtn s rudt Jolt In thi fourth gimt In Nelson. Thit gime\nas really tht Redmen's homt contest, but rain forcod switching\nII tetnt of battli from in optn-ilr Rowland artni.        \t\nly three-quarter time, miny of* '\u25a0\t\nfans, although definitely par\ntoward tht Redmen who are In\nir first lacrosse final in years,\nlit figured out that the Bruins\nll]d tie their opponents up in\nits in the fourth quarter and\nMh on to victory. Backing thelr\niment was the manner in which\ni Braves wilted in the latter\nget of the ov-rtime game last\nek. And hadn't they started out\nmg in each of the first three\nlodi Saturday .night only to\ni before the powerful attacks\nthe heavier Golden Bears to-\nrd the end of each quarter? True,\ni scoring records showed that\nill jumped off to a 2-0 lead, and\ni Redmen came back with a\nislng ruih to itep out In front\nby the fint rest A five-minute\njetty for high-sticking to Chuck\nsey, big Trail rearguard, paved\nI way for the lut thrtt goili of\nI iplurgt, but the Trailites wert\nsowing fait and beginning to\nlumt an tdge in tht play.\nID AT HALF\nCams tht second period, md\njefore play wu far advanced the\n[njuns wert up 7-3, and quite\n-.finitely on the warpath. But\nihey became badly disorganised\niiidway through the session, really looking bad ai Trail punched\nSome tour goals in a'row to havt\nthings iquared up for tht 10-min-\nllte intermission.\nbee Pitt then apparently instilled\not ot confidence and pep into hii\nrfor they came out for resump-\nof play with blood In their\n\u2022s, and before the rotund Louis\niro and his co-defenders quite\new what it was all about, goals\nSaundry, Carkner md Laface\nt Rossland up 10-7. But up popped\n| old bugaboo of fading under\ni pace, and the Indians were all\nI giving the game back to the\nlen boys. Fiye goals in a row put\nliferent complexion on the game\nTrail got hot Chang McDonald\nred one for Rossland before the\nlod wu out but that still left\nturn behind 12-11.\nlounding Bobby Kendall gave a\ns to Ralph Temple early In the\nirth to put the Bears two goals\nbut as the Redmen's blond\nnber, Kenny McGulre scored\noney Sammartino was given two\nnutes on the play, leaving Trail\nirthmded. Before he got back\n\u2022kner from little Gordie _zirt\ni tha game tied up for the fourth\n\u00bb of the game md the elusive\nirt put Rossland in front 14-13.\nW PENALTIES\nf there wu to be a deciding\nwk in the game, the .opportunity\nsn came tor tbe Bears. Ralph\nott got the gate for cutting down\nrik for tht ninth penalty of an\nusually light night tor tht time-\nIPtri, but Rossland, with a great\nblbltion ot ragging by the same\nqueik\" Ezart put up a magnifi-\nit defence to hold the attackers\nbay, To top off their great stand\nder preuure, Sitton took Liface's\nI to lend Rossland two goals up,\nowed by Ralph Scott's goil from\nftct again after Scott came out\ntht penalty box. Marcus Smith,\n111 redhead, put the Bears back in\nt game with an unassisted goal,\nit'll wu too late to do much good,\nlit'! the way the game ended\u2014\nContinuing hit sensational plsy\n\u2022f thi wholt season, Rookie Simmy Saprunoff came through with\ninothtr miraculous display between tht Rossland pipes. Thi\npint-sized ex-Trail Junior amazed the Brulnt and fans alike with\nsparkling saves that reminded\nthe Nelion ftm of thtir own Dive\nGibbons when he wll In his\nhey-diy. Simmy hid tht same\ncrowd-pleasing stylt of bouncing\n\u2022round In front of Ms getl ind\nrobbing Incoming forwards whtn\niitta Percha Tires\nr Perfect Grip ind Sift Driving\nihorty's Repair Shop\nH\u00ab Baker Nelson, B.O\nthey had only him to beat. Time\nand again hli eagle lyi lived hli\nmates whtn  thty showed  signs\nof coming apart It tht seims,\nFANS FOR REDMEN\nNelson audience, bolstered by a\nbig following of Rossland and Trail\nfaithful, was all for the Redmen,\nYear after year of late, the Red-\nmen have been downtrodden, and\nnow that they have a chance to\ncop the title, the fans are right behind them. A suspicion lurks In\nthe minds ot many fans that Rossland hun't as good a lacrosse machine as the Bean, but they make\nup for all their short-comings by\nsheer pluck and fight u evidenced\nby the play of such youngsters as\nJoey Laface, who earned each one\nof [ill three goals and two assists\nfor the punishment ht took. And\nsuch other bundles of energy is\ntht Scotia to tht cunning plsy and\nopportune sniping by McGulre,\nrjirkner, Burt and Saundry, together of Course .with a liberal helping of .Saprunoff, and you have \u2022\nproduct thit spells plenty of trouble before tht striet Is over tonight\nA rumor is going the rounds\nthat the Bears were so cock-sure\nof grabbing the laurels this season, that lorne time sgo they ordered \"new sweaters to pretty\nthemselves up for the Cout tans\nin the B.C. title series later in\nthe week. They undoubtedly got\nmore than thty bargtlned for in\nthe inspired Redmen, ind it\nwould be i cute trick if the Ross-\nlanders did upset the dope-bucket\nBut Hughic Miller, generously-\nbuilt Trail Coach, didn't stem to\n([et too perturbed over Saturday's\nou, for he cm count on hli club'\nunmirked home record tonight to\ncarry him well on the way to the\nKooteniy championship. Winner of\nthe game will board the rattltrs tomorrow morning to play Burrards\nIn Vineouver Wednesday night\nBOX  SCORE\nTRAIL\nMoro, g\n. d\nTurik,\nCasey, d\nJ.  Kendall  \t\nMerlo,  d  ,\nB. Kendall, r ....\nGallicano, r\t\nB. Sammartino, c\nR. Sammartino, c\nPignan,  w  \t\nTemple,  w \t\nSmith, w    2\nHood, w    0\nPt Pe\n0    0\nTotals \t\nROSSLAND\nSaprunoff, g \t\nCarkner, d \t\nCox. d  __\t\nSimcock, d _ _..._.\nR. Scott d \t\nSaundry, r\n14    8   22   17\n0\n2\n0\n0\n1\n1\nMcDonald, r     2\nDougan,\nJoe Laface, c\nEzart, w \t\nMcGulre,  w  _\nSitton. w \t\nJ. Scott w \t\n8   24     6\n3    5\nTotals    U\nScore by periods:\nTrill    2    5\nRossland     5    2\nStops by goalies:\nMoro       8\nSaprunoff 10\nReferee\u2014John Gidinski. Judge of\npity\u2014Len Wilson. Timekeepers\u2014\nT. R. Wilion, A. W. (Gus) McDonald and George Nixon. Goal Judges\n\u2014Dick Vermeire and Nick Turik.\nScorer\u2014Ervin   Matthews.\n2-14\n5-16\n4-20\n9   32\nCalgary Bronki\nTrounce 'Riders\nREGINA, Sept. 15 (CP)-Calgiry\nBronki smashed through i stubborn Reglni Roughridcr defence\nfor two fourth-qutrter touchdowns\ntnd a 12-3 victory Saturday lo take\na firm grip on top place In tht\nWtstern Interprovlnciil Foothill\nUnion.\nBronks are undefeated in two\nstarts while Regina and Winnipeg\nshare ucond place, both with a\nwin and two losses.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\n.2..A20- 25oz'2.30-40oi $3.40\n\"JUST THAT MUCH BETTER'\nnt\npil advertisement >\u2022 Hiot published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard c^^ the Government of British Columbia.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. I,\nInternational Ball\nPlayoffs Tomorrow\nHOT VOWtBwt, 15 (AP..-*--*\ntotaroitlonal iutball Lswrut an-\nnouncid lis playoffs will begin on\nTuesday at Newark, N. J., and\nRochester, N; Y.      |\nSecond-plice Ntwirk and third;\nplace Jeney City sliy night gimtl\nTuesdiy and Wednesday at Newark and Thursday ind fridty at\nJersey City. If necentry, the filth\nStmt will be it Jersey City Satur-\nay and the sixth at Newark Sunday, both afternoon games.\nRochester, tht ptnnant winner,\ntangles with either Baltimore or\nMontreal, whichever club finishes\nup in fourth place. They will play a\nsimilar schedule to tbe other place\nseries.\n.       i   i\nDizzy Gives Cubs\nEven Spill Wilh\nBees; Cards Win 2\nGiants Drop Two to\nPirates; Reds One\nUp on Dodgers\nPHILADELPHIA. Sept. 15 (AP)\n\u2014Pitchers Bill McGee ud Bob\nBowmin wtrt too much for the\nPhillies todiy md St Louis took\nboth ends of I doubleheader from\ntht Nitional League cellar dwellers\n7-0 and 3-i: ,\nSt Louis  .\"    7 10   0\nPhiladelphia    0   3  0\n' McGee and Padgett Owen; Pearson and Millies.\nSecond\u2014\nSt Loull      3 11   0\nPhiladelphia  _.     1  7  0\nBowman and Owen; Podgajny,\nMasterson md Atwood, Millies.\nBOSTON, Stpt 15 ( VP)-Dliiy\nDean today took another long\nstep along tht oomtbaek trill,\ndefeating Boston Btti 7-4 to glvt\nChicago Cubi an even split after\n' thty loit tht eptntr 7-J,\n\"Ole DU\" displayed good control,\nissuing not i single bue on balls\nmd keening the nine Boston hits\nwell scattered.\nChicago      3   7   3\nBoston :   7 14.' 1\nPasseau, Raffeniberger and Todd;\nSalvo and Berres, Broikle.\nSecond\u2014\nChlcsgo    7 13  I\nBoston     4   0   3\nDean and Collins; Strincevich,\nPosedel, Ceffmtn md Berres, Andrews.\n' BROOKLYN, N.Y, Sept 18 (AP)\nBucky Wilteri waltzed to his 20th\nvictory today as Cincinnati Reds\nrouted Brooklyn, Dodgers 13-3 before t crowd of 33,390, but big Piul\nDerringer missed the same chmce\nwhen the second game ot thtir\ndoubleheader ended in 11-1 tit after\n11 innings.\nCincinnati  13 16   3\nBrooklyn _    15   5\nWalters ind Lombardi, Wilson:\nDavis, Casey, Head, Temulls and\nPhelps.\nSecond\u2014\n(11 innings, tie, called account\ndarknesi).\nCincinnati _.   I   g   j\nBrooklyn _    1   8   1\nDerringer md Wilson; Himlin,\nWystt ind Trinki.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15 (AP)-Two\nteams with five-gime losing streaks\ncollided today and Pittsburgh Pirates ended theirs at the expense\nof New York Grants with a double-\nheader triumph, 10-3 and 4-3.\nPittsburgh  10 13   2\nNew York     3   8   3\nSewell snd Davis, Lopez; Melton,\nDean. Joiner and O'Dea.\nSecond-\nPittsburgh        4   7   1\nNew York    _.   870\nHelntzelman, Klinger, Bowman\nand Davis, Lopez; Gumberl and\nDanning.\nParkhurst and Graham Pitch Trail\nlo Double Softball Win Over Nelson\nPet.\n.625\nCOLUMBUS, 0., Sept. 15 (AP)-\nFinil officlil standings of the\nAmerican Association:\nW\nKansas City     95\nColumbus _    00\nMinneapolis   _   88\nLouisville     73\nSt. Paul    89\nIndianapolis      82\nMilwaukee    58\nToledo      50   go   200\nL\n.17\n60\n50 .593\n75 -J00\n70 .468\n84 .428\n90   _92\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati 3, New York 2.\nPittsburgh 0-2, Brooklyn 5-4.\nSI. Louis 8, Boston 6.\nChicago 3, Philadelphia 5.\nAMERICAN\nNew York 16, Detroit 7.\nWashington 2, St. Louis 5.\nBoston 6, Cleveland 1.\nPhiladelphia 3, Chlcsgo 6.\nPACI\u00bbIC COAST\nOskland 8, Lot Angeles 4.\nPortland 8, San Fnnciico 4.\nSeittle 1-6, San Diego 8-4.\nHollywood 2, Sacramento 5.\nAMERICAN A8SOCN\nToledo 5, Louisville 9.\nMilwaukee 6, St Paul 0.\nKansas City 4, Minneapolis 0.\nINTERNATIONAL     \u2022\nMontreal 6. Toronto 0.\nRochester 8, Bufftlo 0.\nNewark 8, Syncuse 6.\nBaltimore 8, Jeney City I.\nWEST, INTER.\nTicomi 7, Spokane 5.\nSUNDAY\nPACIFIC COAST\nSeattle 8, 1, Sin Diego 4, 2.\nPortlind 5, 6, Sin Frinclsco 8,0.\nHollywood 3, 5. Sscrimento 7, 6.\nOakland 3, 2, Los Angeles 11, 4.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 3-2; St. Paul 4-0.\nKansas City 12-6; Minneapolis 9-6\nToledo 2-4; Louisville 13-1.\nColumbia 1-4; Indianapolis 2-3.\nChapman Easily\nBeats McCullough\nfor Amateur Golf\n\u25a0y HU, BONI\nAisoclittd Press Sports Writer\nMAMARONECK, N.Y. Sept. 15\n(AP)\u2014They threw a tournament\ngolfer against a weekend golfet In\nthe final of the United States amateur golf championihip Saturday,\nand the reiult wii 1 foregone con-\nelusion after the first nine holes.\nWhit wu supposed to bt a 36-hole\nfinal ended on the 27th green, with\nDuff' McCullough,   the   weekend\n.-*i*W',.r,c.ln\u00ab\\,<!.0\u00bb'. the turf to\nshake the hand of Dick Chapman,\nthe seasoned campaigner and now\ntitle-holder.\nRichard Dorvil Chapman thus\nsunplinted Bobby Jones as the second most decisive winher In the\nhistory of the tournament Tor\nChapman whipped McCullough by\n11 and 0, while Bobby's biggest\nscore was 10 and 9 against Phil\nPirkini in 1028.\nMcCullough, 32-yeir-old Phlladtl-\nphlin who retched the finals wilh\nconquests of two former champ-\nioni and a two-time flnaliit, looked\n\u20221 if he were going to make a match\nof lt when ht won two of the first\nthree holes with birdies.\nCurlers Prepare\nBang-Up Season\nExecutive of the Nelson Curling\nClub it laying plans for an early\nstart and a bang-up season.\nPercy Andrewi, Secretary, reported Sunday that a committee\nfrom tbe executive composed ot 3.\n3. (Mickey) McEwen, Preiident\nJohn Thorn and himself met the\nCivic Centre Commission to discuss\narrangements for the season, and\nreceived the assurance that there\nwould bt no curtailment of facilities. Activities would be on the\nsame broad scale aa In former\nyean, he said.\n-^-MONDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 16.\n(ASTIRN JUNIOR IOXLA\nSTARS ON WAY TO WIST\nTORONTO, Sept. 15 \u00ab_P)-l\"our-\ntetn all-star ltcroue players were\non their way to Winnipeg tonight\nto represent the Ontario Lacrosse\nAssociation In tha Camdltn junior\nplayoffs, after being chosen following a contest between two picked\nteams at suburban Mimico Satur-\nIiay will continue\numbia for tht Cf\nBETTY IAMESON\nWINS WEST GOLF\nSEATTLE, Sept. 15 (API-Shooting a four-under-par afternoon\nround, Betty Jameson, United States\nchampion from San Antonio, Texas,\nadded the women's Western amateur\nchampionship to her collection with\na 6-and-5 victory over Marlon Miley\nof Lexington, Ky., in the finals at\nthe Seattle Golf Club Saturday.\nThey were even at the end of the\nfirst 18 holes, but Betty took command of the afternoon round to\nsquare accounts with the girl who\n?:ave her a 7-and-6 lacing in the\nInala of the same tournament three\nyears ago.\n**\non to ft*\nnadlan finals against tha still unnamed Coast title-holders.\nHorton Scores\na Hole-in-One\nR. I. HORTON\nOver the weekend it the Nelion\nGolf & Country Club. R. E. Horton\nclaimed \u25a0 place for himself on the\nroll of the \"honored few\" when he\nholed out his tee shot on the No. 0\nhole for an ace. The feat was accomplished Thursday while playing with John Tier of New Denver.\nMr. Horton, while always claiming hii share of nickels from his\nfellow-golfers, had never before\nmade a hole-in-one. His golf course\ncolleagues were highly elated when\nthey heard of the achievement and\nof course the event was duly celebrated. He was the recipient of a\ngift from his fellow golfers.\nHe completed hir weekend's golf\nby winning the second flight of the\nclub's championship tourney.\nTrail Team Is Two Up\nin West Kootenay\nFinal Series\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Sept 15-Caiey\nJones' Crown Pointi looked llkt\ncinches to retain tha Watt Kootenay men's softball crown for\nTrail whtn thty backed up 1\npair of flnt pitching performances\nby Cil Parkhurst tnd Russ Graham with solid hitting to sweep\n1 doubleheider from tht Ntlton\nRtps, 7-2 and 10-2, It Victoria\nPark this afttrnoon.\nThe games opened a best of five\nfinal series tor the Gilbert Rowling Memorial Trophy won last year\nby Warfield Acts. The scries wiU\nbe resumed in Nelson next Sunday with a doubleheader, if\nnecessary,\nThe first game was a real pitchers'\nduel between Parkhurst and Jack\nFisher, Nelson moundsman. The\nicore going Into the laat hilf of the\neighth was 3-2 in favor of the\nHotelmen.\/isher was giving a great\ndisplay with 10 strikeouts but it\nwu his luck to be pitted against\nthe really hot Mr. Parkhurst. Mixing a clever change of pace effectively with his fast ones, Fisher\nrallied after a shaky beginning, in\nwhich the Points scored three runs\nin the first' three Innings to hold\ndown the Trail sluggers until the\neighth by allowing six hits, tout\nof them Infield safeties.\nBut while all this was going on\nGraham calmly went about his\nbusiness, md until Sid Bill led\noff the eighth frime with an infield hit he had allowed nothing\neven faintly resembling a base blow.\nBall's hit was a high bounder down\nfirst base wiy that took Cronie\noff the bag, and nobody could\ncover the sick in time. Then Denii\nBall, the other half of one Nelson\nbrother act followed with a Una\nsingle into left field, md before\nsome wild pliv in the field was\nover, both Bails had scored and\ncut Trail'i leid to 3-2.\nWALKS THREE TIMES\nThe only mm to reach first in\nthe first seven Innings tor Nelson\nwas Bob Proulx, who will try out\nwith Maple Leaf! thll Winter. He\nwas up three times in the game, and\neach time he waa given a, hue on\nballs, the only wilki issued by\nPsrkhunt. Ptrkhunt allowtd two\nmore hits In the ninth to make four\nIn ill.\nCasey Jones started the Trail parade in the first Inning by dropping 1 doublt Into short left field\nto drive in two runners That gave\nhim first blood in friendly rivalry\nwith Fisher, the Nelion pitcher,\nwho used to plsy on the same tesm\nwith Casey In Winnipeg. Fishtr\nwtlked hli pal next time lo the jr\u00bb te\nbut then he itruck him out ind\nthen threw him out it flrit on his\nlist timet up.\nIn the second gimt both teams\npresented ntw batteries, with Graham and Art Ross doing the chucking. Trouble In the early Innings\nspelt doom for the Nelionltet, the\nPointi tcorlng ill thtir 10 runi from\nthe second to fifth fnmei inclusive.\nRoss throttled them from then on\nthrough tht ninth Inning, but Nil-\n\u2022on couldn't do much against the\nleven-hit flinging of Graham. Graham, like Parkhurst started out like\n\u25a0 whirlwind, ind retired the first\n12 men to face him in a row. Then\nFisher led off the fitt'.i with a nice\nbunt thit he' beat out\nBox scores follow!\nNelson:\nRoss, 3b\".    4\nSeaby. of     4\nBeland, 2b ....:    4\nFisher, p     4\nS. Ball, ss    3\nD. Ball, c    3\nEuerby, lb     3\nPete Runti, If    3\nProulx, rf\nTotals\nTrail:\nAnselmo,\nABR H PO AE\n1 0\n0   1 1\n0   0 2\n0 0 0\n1 1 1\n1 1 12\n0 0 7\n0   0 0\n0 1\n0  0\n28   2   4 24   8\n    5   12   0   0   0\nMorris, cf     3   2   110   0\n3   0   14   1\n0\n0\n1\n11110\n114   0\n0 2\n1 1   0\n0   1   1\n1    0\n1 0\n0 0\n4   1\nJones, 2b\nCronie, lb    3   10   6   0\nAngerelli, If     4\nParkhurst, p    4\nR. Martin, ss   4\nFairbairn, rf    4\nS. Martin, 3b    4\nTotals   ...    34  7 10 27\nScore by innings:\nNelson    000 000 020\u20142   4 7\nTrail   201 000 04x-7 10 1\nRuns batted in\u2014Jones 2, Angerelli* Parkhurst S. Martin. Two-base\nhit\u2014Jones. Three-base hit\u2014Angerelli. Double play\u2014Euerby to D,\nBall. Stolen base\u2014Morris. Sacrifice\nhit\u2014Morris. Left on bases\u2014Nelson\n2, Trail 7. Strikeouts\u2014Fisher 10,\nParkhurst 0. Walks\u2014Fisher 3,\nParkhurst 3. Earned runs\u2014Trail 4,\nNelson 1. Time of game\u20141:36. Umpires\u2014Al Hall and George McCulloch.\nSecond game:\nTrail:\nS. Martin. 3b       5\nMorris, _b     6\nBenoit, ss    5\nCronie, lb     5\nGraham, p     4\nAngerelli, If    3\nFairbairn, rf    3\nBurrows, c     5\nMarshall, cf     5\n10   11\n1   1\n7    1\nI    0\nTotal-\nNelson:\nRoss, p    _    4\nSeaby, cf    4\n1   2\n41 10 12 27   8   1\n1   0\nBeland, 2b _   4   1\nFisher, if .\nS. Ball, ss\nD. Ball, 3b    4  0\nEuerby, lb\nPete Sunt., c ..\nProulx, vt \t\nPhil KUnti, rf\nTotals\n(l\n0\n0\n0\n.1\n2\n9    1\n7   0\n0 0\n1 (I\n7 27   6\nRuns batted in: Cronie 2, Fair,\nbairn 2, S. Martin, D. Ball. Two-\nbase hlte\u2014Morris 2, Angerelli.\nThree-base hit\u2014Fairbairn. Home\nLeft on bases\u2014Trail 10, Nelson 4.\nrun\u2014Cronie Stolen base\u2014Morris.\nStrikeouts\u2014Graham 5, Ross 7.\nWalks\u2014Ross 6, Earned runs\u2014Trail\n8. Nelson 2. Time of game\u20141:35.\nUmpires\u2014Hall and McCulloch.\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Press\n\"Sunny Jim\" Bottomley, St Louis\nCardinals first-baseman, batted in\n12 runs in one game to set a major\nbaseball record 18 years ago today.\nPlaying against Brooklyn Dodgers.\nBottomley had a perfect slx-for-slx\nat bat The Cards won 17-3.\nJohnny Nolunas, 22-year-old middleweight title winner in the New\nYork Golden Glovei tournament\nlast Winter, signed a contract with\nthe New York Yankees Baseball\nClub. Noiunai, a senior at La Salle\nCollege, 11 an outfielder and throws\nand bati right-handed.\nPERTH, Scotland (CP) - Billy\nClinton of Croy defeated Hugh\nCamerqn of Port Glasgow for the\nScottish flyweight boxing championship when the referee slopped,\nthe tight at the start of the seventh\nfound because of an Injury to Cameron's eye,'\n1048-\nIndians Regain\nTop Place; Yanks\nLose to St, Louis\nFeller   Blanks   Phils;\nChicago  Beats\nBoston Twice\nCLEVELAND, Sept 18 (AP). -\nCleveland pennant stock took 1\nspirited jump In the American\nLeague today 11 Indlins knocked\nConnie Mack's Athletics over In\nboth end! ot 1 twin bill to regal\"\nthe leadership by a full game iheid\nof Detroit Tigers.\nBob Feller turned in a masterful\ntwo-hitter to blank Philadelphia In\nthe opener 8-0 and the Tribe overcame \u25a0 four-run deficit to capture\ntht afterpiece $4.\nTeller retired tht tint 22 men in\norder and wu threatening to pott\ntht second no-hitter ot hli brilliant\ncareer when, with one out In the\neighth, Dick Sleberl hit a pitch on\nthe handle of his bat and it popped\nJuit over Ray Mack at second naie.\nThe Athletics collected another\nhit in the ninth as Frankie Hayes\nsingled. Otherwise reller'i mattery\nwai complete as hi hurled hii 25th\nvictory ot tht yeir. against nine\nlosses. He didn't walk 1 min ind\nhe fanned seven.\nFirst: R H E\nPhiladelphia   0  2  1\nCleveland    5  6 0\nVaughan and Hayes; Feller and\nHemsley.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia    1)1   1\nCleveland     8  8   3\nCaster, Dean and Wagner, Hayes;\nSmith, Dobson, Milnar and Pytlak.\nDETRIT, Sept 15 (AP).-Emll\n(Dutch) Leonard yielded six scattered hits today b dump Detroit\nTigers out of first place In the pennant race and pace Washington\nSenators to a 6-1 victory.\nThe defeat, coupled with the\ntwin viotory the Cleveland Indians\nseortd over Philadelphia to go into\nfirst place by a one-game margin,\nfurther scrambled the leigut'i hot\nflag chase.\nWashington       6 10   1\nDetroit  _    1   6  0\nLeonard and Ferrell; Hutchinson\nGorsica, Newhouser and Tebbetts.\nCHICAGO, Sept. 15 (AP)\u2014Jimmy\nDykes' White Sox continued their\nupward surge In the pennant race\ntoday with 1 doublt victory over\nBoston Red Sox 5-1 md 4-2 before\n30.191 spectators.\nIt was 'Ted Lyoni Diy\" ind the\n39-yeir-old vetenn, after rectlv-\ning gifts ind cssh totalling $4500,\ntook tht mound and turned In three-\nhit performance. Joe Kuhel's 10th-\ninning homer broke 1 2-2 tie In tht\nnightcap.\nFint:\nBoiton   ISO\nChicago  5   0   1\nHaving,  Ostermueller ind Pet\ncock; Lyons md Tresh.\nSecond (10 innings):\nBoston   \u201e.   2   8   2\nChicago     4 11  2\nFleming. Hash md Desauteli, Pea-\ncock; Rigney md Turner.\nST. LOUIS, Sept 15 (AP).-St.\nLouis Browni threw the pennint\nrice into further confuilon todiy\nby giving the World Chimpion New\nYork Yinkees \u2022 double drubbing,\n10-5 md 2-1 before the largest\nBrownie daytime cfowd in 12\nyears.\nThe twin setback reduced Yinkees' third-place margin to 1 mere\nhalf game over the White Sox who\nwon twice from Boston.\nFirst:\nNew York    5 12   3\nSt. Louis   10 11   0\nRuffing.  Sundri,  Chindler -md\nDickey: Niggeling and Susce.\nSecond:\nNew York     1   8  0\nSt. Loull     2  5   1\nBonhim, Murphy, Rour; Auker\nand Swift\n_)8iti__\\$\n' cadcrs\n\u25a0o-\nBy The Associated Press\nBatting (three leaden In each\nleague)\nG Ab R H Pet\nDimaggio, Yank 119 460 85 160 .348\nRadcliff, Brns. .. 138 538 77 186 .347\nAppling, W. Sox 138 521 83 180 .345\nLombard!,   Reds 110 376 50 120 .319\nCooney. Bees 105 863 40 115 211\nHack, Cubs   188 547 92 113 .315\nHome runs: American League \u2014\nFoxx, Red Sox, 35. National League\n\u2014Mile, Cardinals, 41.\nRuns batted in: American League\n\u2014Greenberg, Tigers, ISO. National\nLeague, Mize, Cardinals, 120.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE -RIETZ\nNEW YORK, Sept 15 (AP). -\nBroadway is wondering: If Joe Di-\naggio will be the only Yank to\nfinish with a .300 batting average...\nWhether Ceferino Garcia did his\ndarndest vs. Steve Belloise Thursday night.. What happened to Bud\nWard at Mamaroneck. . . If Bill\nTerry will go to Cleveland, take\nover the Boston Bees or stick on\nwith the Giants. . . Whit's the big\nidea of the Yanks to start giving\ngames away at thla stage of the race,\nfor crying out loud. ..\nThe Clemson football squad practices in four seta ot jeneyt \u2014 orange for the first time, blue for .the\nsecond, red for the third and white\nfor the fourth. .. Republican! want\nArtie M'Govern. the phyilcal culture expert, to accompany Willkie\non hii campaign trip and keep\nhim in ihape. . .\nTHERE'S A REASON:\nMost of the country's fins hope\nthe Cleveland Bawl Club doesn't\nget Into the World'i Series but the\nCincinnati Reds, to a man are pulling for tbe Tribe... The Red! figure\nthit two capacity crowds In the big\nMunicipal Stadium In Cleveland\nwould mean a $7000 melon for each\nmember ot Ihe winning club.\nOLDHAM, England (CP)-Jack\nRead, veteran of the Oldham Rugby\nLeague Club, It retiring from the\nfame and has proudly signed his\normal notification to the club \"J-\nRead, 1928-1940.\" V\nArmy Soccer Tournty\nll Being Proposed\nLONDON (CP). - Plan in being mid* for in internitionsl army\nsoccer   tournament   bringing   to-\nSther horns teams and then of all\n1 allied countries wheat forces\nare stitioned In Great Britain.\nMemben ot tht Polish army already ire forming a turn for \u2022\ngime against a British army team\nat Glasgow and opportunist for\nplaying alw will be given Cstchi,\nFrenchmen, Norweglini, Belgiins.\nDutch tnd other allied troops.\n\u25a0   Mtt! SEVEN\nFreeman Furniture\nCompmy\nThe House ot Furniture Stylet\nllgla Block    Ntlien    Phont IIS\nTrade In Your\nOLD FURNITURE\nAt Part Payment en Your\nNEW FURNITURE\nCARDINALS OPEN DEFENCE OF BAIL\nTITLE BY ROUTING INDIANS 9-2\nOnce Famous Diver,\nGeorgia Coleman Din\nLOS ANGELES, Sept M (API-\nGeorgia Colemm, onca acclaimed\nai the world'i greatest diving\nchampion, died in hospital Saturday\nnight of a liver ailment. She had\nbeen unconscious since Tuesday.\nMlu Coleman, 38, wai stricken\nwith Infantile paralysis in November, 1(37, and never had complete-\n1   recovered.\nShe flnt competed in tht Olympic Game! at Amsterdam in 1928\nmd won honori for the United\nStates in both the springboard and\nlower diving. In tht 1033 Olympics\nsht took the three-metre event\nind placed tecond in the high diving.\nSpokane Rejoins\nCoast Puck Loop\nSEATTLE, Sept 15 (AP) - The\nPacific Coast Hockey League readmitted Spokane to membership\nlast night, accepting the offer ot\nDenny Edge for a franchise in the\nInland Empire City.\nEdge said his team would play\nweekly games Saturday or Sunday\nnight in Spokane, beginning Nov.\n2 or Nov. 3.\nSeattle will as formerly plsy on\nWednesday night Portland on\nThursday night and Vancouver, B.\nC., on Monday.\nThe league directors elected Fred\n\"Cyclone\" Taylor as President and\nagreed to name a Spokane man as\nVice-J?resldent later. The new owners of the Seattle club, Folger Peabody, oil man; Jerry O'Neill, florist md Peter Pergolios, coal dealer, were formally accepted as representatives of the team. All player\ndeals were delayed until Seittle\ncomplete! negotiitions for i new\nmanager.\nAttending the meeting were Guy\nPatrick. Vancouver, md Bobby\nRowe, Portland, in addition to those\nnamed above.\nMontreal Winds\nUp in 5th Place\nMONTREAL, Sept 15 (CP) -\nMontreal Royals' last-minute bid\nfor a playoff berth fell short today\ndespite a double victory over Toronto Maple Leafs as the International baseball schedule ended.\nRoyals finished In fifth place.\nFirst\nToronto     3 10  0\nMontreal    3  9   1\nFishcher and Gray; Porter, Rach-\nundk, Fetter md Giuliani.\nSecond  '\nToronto   0  5  0\nMontreal       3   4  0\nWalkup and Gray; Kimball and\nBecker.\nJERSEY CITY, Sept 15 (API-\nBaltimore Orioles walloped Jersey\nCity Giants in both ends of a doubleheader today 6-4 and 9-0 to clinch\nfourth place and a spot in the International League playoffs.        *\nFirst\nBaltimore    6 13   0\nJersey City    4   5   1\nBruner, Hughes and Redmond;\nVandenberg, Henshaw and Epps.\nSecond\nBaltimore    9 13   0\nJersey City     0  7   3\n\u2022 Chelini  and Redmond;  Feldman\nand Blaemire.\nBuffalo    2 12   0\nRochester    1   8   1\nWhite and Zubik; Brumbeloe, Roe\nand Mueller.\nFint\nNewark     3 12   2\nSyracuse     6   8   1\nByrne, Washburn and Sears; Tis-\nlng and Hartje.\nSecond\nNewark     2   6   1\nSyracuse    0   2   2\nJ. Johnson, Borowy and Warren;\nKleinhans and Bottarini.\nFOOTBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nNew York 10, Pittsburgh 10.\nDetroit 0, Chicago Cardinals 0.\nGreen Bay 27, Philadelphia 20.\nBrooklyn 17, Washington 24.\nCliff   Bogstie  Allows\nThree Hits and Fans\nSixteen\nTRAIL, B. C, Sent. 15\u2014It took\nJust one hour and 56 minutes for\nthe Indians and the Cardinals to\nbattle it out in the first game of\nthe West Kootenay Baseball League\nfinals at Butler Park Sunday afternoon, with defending champion\nCardinals drawing first blood with\na 9-2 victory.\nUp to the last half ot the ninth.\nthe game looked like a shutout, but\nRico Martin got on on a fielder's\nchoice, and galloped home when\nPetrunii hit to centre field. Then\nCisey Jones, who took first when\nLawn, Julie Bilesky md Bogstie\ncombined to run down Petrunia in\ncrossed the plate on an error, Dimock dropping Tullock's long fly to\nrlght field.\nStanton brought In the first run\nfor the Cards in the opening frame,\ngetting a walk and completing the\ncircuit when Rico Martin nueted\nScheppert's ground ball to third.\nThe Cardinals pulled ahead three\nmore in the third on three hits, one-\nstolen base and two erron. Anielmo\ndoubled, and icored on Julie Bllei-\nky's hit Stanton went to first on\nChrlstensen's error. With the bases\nloaded, Mclntyre lost control of\nScheppert's long hit into left field,\nmd Bilesky and Stanton came tn\nto score.\nThe icore Jumped another two\nruns in the fifth when Lawn went\nto first on another error by Christensen, and came home on Andy Bil-\nesky's double, Bilesky scoring a few\nminutes later when Bogstie connected for a base-hit\nScheppert brought in the seventh\nrun in the seventh Inning, Purcello't\nerror putting him on first He advanced to third on Martin's error\nand scored on Lawn's safety. Lawn\ncame in on Wolfe's two-bagger, and\nWolfe stole third, but the side waa\nretired when Dimock tanned, with,\nthe score 8-0.\nThe last counter for the Carda\ncame, in the ninth when Scheppert\nsingled and crossed the plate on an\nerror by Mclntyre on Lawn'i hit*\nthat illowed further bases to be\nmade.\nCliff Bogstie, ace Cardinal\nSouthpaw, gave a great performance on the hill, registering 11\nstrikeouts and yielding but three\nhits, two by Tick Hall and one\nby Petrunia. Les Christensen started for the Indians but Pills gur-\ncello was called upon to finish up.\nThe second game of the' best of\nfive series will be played next Sunday.\nBOX SCORE\nCARDINALS\nAb R H Po A B\nAnselmo, c  5\nJ. Bilesky, ss  5\nStanton, If __ 3\nScheppert, 2b   5\nLawn, 3b   5\nWolfe, cf   5\nDimock. rf  5\nA. Bilesky, lb\n2 16\nBogstie. p    4\nMcGibney, rf    1\n0 0\n1 1\n 42   9 11 27   7   I\nTottls\nINDIAN!\nHall, ss   3\nCameron, 2b  4\nSaprunoff, If  3\nMartin, 3b   4\nPetrunia, c   4\nJones, lb    4\nMclntyre, rf  2\nEdmunds, cf   2\nChristensen, p  10   0\nPurcello, p    1   0  0\nTullock,  rf  2  0  0\nRothery, cf   2  0  0\n0 2\n0 0\n0 0\n1 0\n0 1\n1 0 11\n0 0 0\n0 0\n1 1\n7    1\n0\no\no\nl\n0\n0\n0\nTotals  32   2   3 27 11   6\nCardinals     103 002 201\u20149\nIndians 000 000 002\u20143\nRuns batted in\u2014Lawn 3. Bogstie,\nA. Bilesky, Wolfe 2, Petrunia, Jonea.\nTwo-base hits\u2014Anselmo 2, A. Bilesky, Wolfe. Stolen bases\u2014Stanton 2,\nLawn 2, Wolfe, Scheppert. Left on\nbases\u2014Cardinals 7, Indians 6. Bass\non balls\u2014off Bogstie 3. Christensen\n2. Struck out\u2014by Bogstie 16. Chrii*\ntensen 2, Purcello 5. Hits\u2014off Christensen, 6 in 5 2-3 Innings, Purcello\n3 in 3 1-3. Losing pitcher Christensen. Umpires\u2014Bill Waddell and\nJohnny Wallace. Time of game\n\u20141:55.\nCIGARETTE PAPER\nPOUBtE*\u00bbT,C\nB.C. 3 STAR\nCanadian RYE Whisky\n$125    $030    $950\nJhUe*.        main.        \u00ab-\u00bb40or.\nDISTILLED AND BOTTLED BY TH_ B.C. DISTILLERY CO. LIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n PAGE   EIGHT\nNotice lo (lass\nLiable lo (all\nOTTAWA, Stpt, 15 (CU). \u2014 A\nproclamation Instructing single\nmen and childless widowers of\ntht agei 21 to 24 years Inclusive\nto present themselves whtn called for medictl examination and\nmilitary triining \"for \u2022 period of\n30 dtys within Canada or tht\nterritorial waters thereof\" Wll\nmtdt public yesterday by Hon.\nJ. G. Gardiner, Minister of National Wir Services.\nMen called for the first training\nperiod, scheduled for next Oct. 9,\nwill be notified by registered letter to report for physical examination to one of the 10,500-odd doctors throughout Canada who have\nbeen apoointed examining physicians under the National War Ser-\nvi-^s Regulations.\n\"Tie order-in-councll. copies of\nwhich were-distributed lo the Press\nfrom Mr. Gardiner's office, advises\n\"every male British subject who is\nor has been at any time subseouent\nto Sept. 1. 1939, ordinarily resident\nin Canada\" aged 21 to 24 inclusive\non July 1, 1940, and who was, on\nJuly 15, 1940 unmarried or a childless widower, that he will be called\nfor training.\nWhile the order-in-council declares \"we do hereby call out the\naforesaid classes of men,\" the Minister, earlier this week, announced\nthat the proclamation is in effect a\nnotice to the classes mentioned that\nthey are liable to call.\nFirst training period opening Oct.\n6 will require 27,750 men and registrars of the 13 administrative districts set up under the regulations,\n\u2022will notify the men to be called for\n\u2022this period on a printed form sent\nby registered letter.\nThe proclamation cites the National Resources Mobilization Act\nof 1940 which save Hie Governor-\nin-Council extraordinary powers to\nrequire \"persons to place themselves, their services and^ their\n[property at the disposal of his Majesty in the rieht of Canada for use\nwithin Canada or the territorial\n\u2022waters thereof as may be deemed\nnecessary or expedient for securing\nHie public safety of Canada, the\nmaintenance of public order, or the\nefficient prosecution of the war, or\ntfor maintaining supolies or services\nessential to the life of the community.\"\n(Soviet Denies Report\nof Protectorate\nPlan Over Rumania\nMOSCOW,' Sept. 15 (AP). - A\nSoviet communique yesterday denounced German-Rumanian press\nreports that Grigore Gafencu, the\nRumanian Minister, had proposed a\nRussian protectorate over Rumania.\n\"GERMAN PLIERS LACK\nSOMETHING OF WHAT IT\nTAKES\" SAYS CANADIAN\n* PICTON. Ont., Sept. 15 <CP).-\nGerman fliers are described as\n\"lacking in something of what it\ntakes,\" in a letter received here\nyesterday by Rev. J. F. Reycraft and\nMrs. Reycraft from their son, Sgt.\nMax Reycraft, with the Canadian\nAff;ve Service Force in England.\n\"A short time ago a bomber was\n*hoi down near here and the crew\nof three bailed out and came down\nsafely carrying a machine-gim. They\natood by the gun and let themselves be taken by two Canadians\n;who were on pass and unarmed.\"\nPowell River to Be\nPremier's First Stop\nVICTORIA. Sept. 15 (CP).-Pre-\njnier Pattullo will campaign by plane\nin the Mackenzie Provincial by-\nelection.\nLeaving here Monday morning in\na Canadian Airways plane piloted\nby Capt. W. S. Gilbert the Premier\n\u2022will hop first to Powell River\n\u00bbhere he will speak. The- next\nnight he will be in Ocean Falls,\nfrom there the Premier plans lo fly\n,up the coast to make visits in h;s\nmvn riding at Queen Carlotle Ci'.y\nand Prince Rupert.\nGuns Stop Chinese\nCrew From Escape\nNEW YORK. Sept. 15 (API-\nThirty Chinese crewmen of a\nBritish freighter made a dash for\nshore today but were stopped at\nthe main entrance of Pier 97 hy\npatrolmen and a customs guard\nwho faced them with drawn revolvers.\nThe Chinese knocked down a\nguard posted at the gangplank of\nthe freighter, which was tied up\nat West 57th Street, but stopped\nshort at the sight of guns.\nITALIAN FINED FOR\nFAILING TO REGISTER\nVICTORIA, Sept. 15 (CP).-Er-\nJ-igo Esposito, an Italian, was fined\n$10 or five days in jail by Magistrate Henry Hall in City Police\nCourt yesterday when he pleaded\nguilty lo a charge of failing to\n_e\u00bbi_ter under the National Registration Act.\nEsposito was defended by Miss\nE. M. Thorneycroft who asked for\nHeniency in sentence because the\naccused was ignorant of the fact\nhe had to register under the ac!\nand thai he went to the office of\nthe R. C. M. P. lo register as an\nalien. Esposito was charged on\nAugust 20.\nDISBANDMENT DISCUSSED\nBY SHEEP CREEK CLUB\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C, - The\nladies Service Club met on Wednesday. Those present were Mes-\ndames Cnsnetl. May. McMillan, Lar-\nsen, Vandergrift, Hughes and Tonkin. Misses Johnson and Schneider\nwere visitors.\nThe treasurer reported thit $100\nhad been sent to the Nelson District\nBoniber Fund.\nAs several members had left the\nCreek, disbandment was decided to\nfirst have a drive for new members and io leave all other business\nover till Ihe next meeting.\nBODY OF FORESTRY\nWORKER IS FOUND\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 15 (CP)-Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police yesterday\nreported discovery of the body (if\nDave Smith. 40. foreslrv worker, in\nWh'teshell Lake about 75 miles East\ncf Winnipeg. Smith had been missing on patrol work since Wednesday\nand hsd been the object of a widespread search\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C, - O.\nBurden ind A. J. Watson motored\nto Nelion,\nMr. and Mrs. Bennett ud ion\nDeloss of Ontario, who have purchased James Richardson's property, irrived here.\nMrs. Nelion Is visiting relatives\nin Trail.\nMrs, Burkinsliaw his returned to\nErie where she is the school teacher.\nMrs. Tinellne, who has been visiting her daughter, \"Irs. A. Derbyshire, left for her home at Blair-\nmore. She was accompanied by her\ngrandson. Jim Derbyshire.\nMrs. Trail of Mirror Lake Is visiting her son-In-lsw and daughter,\nCaptain and Mrs. Hincks.\nConscription Is\nApproved in U.S.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 1J (AP).\n\u2014Peacetime draft legislation, requiring registration of approximately 10,500,000 men .1 through\n35 for military training, was finally approved by the United\nStates Congress yesterday and dispatched to the White House.\nThe President's signature 'enacting It into law is expected to be affixed early next week, setting in\nmotion machinery which will send\nthe first 75,000 draftees to camps in\nNovember.\nThe House of Representatives\ntook the final legislative step this\nmorning when It approved a compromise between Senate and House\nversions of the conscription measure a short time after the Senate\ngave its assent by a 47 to 25 votes.\nThe roll call vote was announced\nas 232 to 124.\nThe final version included provision for the President to take over\nindustrial plants, on a rental basis,\nwhen necessary to get defence orders filled expeditiously.\nThe Senate's action came after it\nhad been sent the bill back to a\njoint Senate and House conference\ncommittee by a 37 to 33 vote last\nnight with instructions to its conferees to insist on the adoption of\na House-approved clause giving the\nGovernment power to commandeer\nindustrial plants where the own:\ners proved recalcitrant about accepting or speeding up defence\norders.\nThis provision, much more drastic than a compromise version previously written into the measure by\nthe conferees, was adopted quickly\nby ihe joint committee and the\nmeasure returned to the Senate for\naction. ,\nROOSEVELT ASK-\nEXTRA APPROPRIATION\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (AP). -\nShortly after Congress gave final\napproval to peace-time conscription yesterday, it received from\nPresident Roosevelt a request for\nan additional $1,733,886,976 defence\nappropriation, including $24,824,108\nto start the draft.\nReport U.S. Bombers\nWill Go to Britain\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 1. (AP).-\nTwo \"Isolationist\" Senators said In\nthe Senate yesterday that a campaign is under way to transfer to\nGreat Britain 25 of the United\nStales army's biggest bombers.\nSenator Rush Holt (Dem., West\nVirginia! joined Senator Bennett\nChamp Clark (Dem., Missouri) in\ncriticism of President Roosevelt's\ntrade of 50 destroyers for British\nnaval bases in the Western Hemisphere with an assertion that a\ncommittee headed by William Allen\nWhite, Emporia, Kan., Editor, is\nseeking to obtain the transfer of\nthe bombing planes.\nWhite is head of the committee\nto defend America by aiding the\nAllies.        \t\nClipper Makes Lisbon\nBermuda Non-Stop\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15 (AP) -\nThe Atlantic Clipper landed yesterday, the first Pan-American Airways flying boat to cruise non-stop\nin both Eastward and Westward\nflights between Lisbon and Bermuda.\nCarrying 1500 pounds of mail bul\nno passengers the Clipper left Lisbon Friday morning and halted at\nBermuda 21 hours and 17 minutes\nlater.\nTan-American hopes soon to mske\nthe New York-Lisbon runs nonstop.\nRENATA\nRENATA, B. C, - Mr. snd Mrs.\nW. P. Harms and family returned\nfrom vacationing with Mr. and Mrs.\nHenry Taves of Salmo.\nMr. and Mrs. Hardy and family of\nBurton spent a few days in Renata.\nMiss Elizabeth Reimtr left for\nKelowna to work.\nMrs. Grimes of Fruitvale is a\nguest of Mrs. J. Ulmle.\nMiss Goldie Hoffmann has arrived from Trail to attend Renata\nPublic School.\nCharles Klengensmlth of Creston is school principal here.\nMiss Mary Reimer and Frank Relmer returned after spending a few\ndays wilh Mrs. P. Graves of Trail.\nJake Reimer spent a week In\nTrail.\nMr. Beeberdorf and children have\nreturned to Fruitvale after visiting\nMr. and Mrs. F. Koch.\nMiss Elizabeth Danchelli ind\nMiss Phyllis Danchelli spent a day\nat Deer Park and Camp 4, Sunrise\nPeak.\nAllan Mackereth of Ihe survey\ncrew visited Broadwater.\nMrs. P. M. Letkemann, Margaret\nand David Letkemann, spent a few\ndays in  Nelson.\nfor Broadwater.\nMiss   Elizabeth    Danchella    left\nRonald Jordan of Edgewood left\nfor Nakusp.\nMrs. C.' Jordan tnd family of\nEdgewood have taken up residence\nin Renata.\nMrs. H. L. Cairns of Vancouver is\nholidaying st Renata.\nWOULD BAN GERMAN-\nAMERICAN BUND CAMPS\nWASHINGTON. Sept. 15 (AP)-\nCalling for definite government action to eliminate German-American\nbund camps. Rep. Samuel Dick\nstein (Dem.-New York) told the\nHouse of Representatives yesterday\nthat the recent explosion at the\nHercules Powder Cos., Kenvil, N.J..\nplant, \"didn't happen through any\nmiracle,\"\n\u2014NELION  DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C.-MONDAY  MORNINO. SEPT. 18. 1940-\nIt Won't Sell if You Bide It\u2014Advertise It on This Pag|\nTtltphont 144\nTrail; K. Lowdon.  716-Y\n\u2022   Rossland: F. E. Piptr\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per Una per Insertion.\n44c per lint ptr wttk 16 consecutive Insertions for cost of 0\n$143 pel line I month (26 timti)\n(Minimum 3. lines per Insertion)\nBox numbers He extra. Thll\ncoven any number of timet.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nISO per line, flnt Insertion and\n14c each subsequent  initrtlon.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon-commtrclil  S11 u \u2022 11 o n i\nWanted   for  -So   for  tny   required number ot lines for llx\ndays, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingla copy t   .05\nBy carrier, per week ___ '    .25\nBy carrier, per year    13.00\nBy Mall:\nOne month  $ .73\nThree months \u201e , 2.00\nSix months ,_,      4.00\nOne year \u25a0 ,     800\nAbove ratei apply in Canida,\nUnited Stales, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and In Canada where\nextra postage Is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\n4 New Training\nSchools lo Open\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (API-Opening of Instruction at four new training centres in Western Canada on\nMonday will bring the total number of schaols now In operation in\nthe Dominion to 33, the Royal Canadian Air Force announced yesterday.\nStudents from elementary flying\ntraining schools will report Monday for training at No. 4 service\nflying training school at Saskatoon\nand, will have a week's experience\nunder their belts before the official\nopening of the school Sept. 21, while\nNo. 3 air observers school at Regina\nand No. 2 wireless School at Calgary will also become working parts\nof the Brilish Commonwealth Air\nTraining Plan,\nAlso at Calgary No. 11 equipment\ndepot, a storehouse of aviation supplies and equipment for all R. C.\nA. F. training centres in that area,\nwill be opened.\nBy the end of 1940. a total of 48\ntraining schools will be in operation.\nAt present 4500 men are in training\nin the Dominion as pilots, air observers or air gunners and 7500 are\nenrolled as service and maintenance\nmen.\nActually engaged in the plan at\npresent are 600 R.C.A.F. instructors\nand 4000 administrative staff, 100\ncivilian flying instructors and 3200\ncivilian administrative staff.\n\u2022 Total strength of the R.C.A.F. at\npresent is 23,000 airmen and 1950\nofficers. It Is estimated 90 per cent\nof-the present air force personnel\nwill be required eventually for the\ntraining plan, which will employ a\nstaff of 40,000. including 6000 civilians, by the time the complete plan\nis in force.\nAll Orientals\nMust Give Up Guns\nVICTORIA, Sept. 15 (CP).-Attorney-General Gordon Wlsmer said\nyesterday no exceptions can be allowed to the policy of refusing registration of guns to Chinese and\nJapanese. All Orientals must surrender their weapons, he said.\n\"The fact that Chinese and Japanese will not be permitted registration of guns is no reflection on their\nnationality. It is simply a measure\nthat is necessary because these two\nnations are at war. The policy was\ncarefully considered and is required\nto meet the exigencies of conditions.\"\nWebster Is President\nRobson Athletic Club\nROBSON. B. C, \u2014 Annual meeting ot the Robson Athletic Club\nelected Frank Webster President\nand Miss Margaret Miller Secretary.\nG. Clyde was named Vice-President and captain of the Badminton\nClub': and Frank Humphries captain of the sksting rink.\nThe badminton season opens on\nNovember 1.\n\"NO ISOLATIONISM\nFOR THE CHRISTIAN\"\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 14 (CP)-There\nIs no such thing as Isolationism for\nthe Christian. Rev. Dr. Henry Smith\nLeiper of New York declared before the ninth general council of\nthe United Church of Canada at\nthe morning session here today.\n\"In a forced regimentation, the\natmosphere can be changed away\nfrom all that is brotherly or Christian. Voluntary cooperation is Ihe\nonly adequate answer to regimentation. The world is shouting literally\nto the Christian 'unite or perish.' \"\nLT.-GEN. LEARN HEADS\nU.S. SIXTH ARMY CORPS\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (AP).-\nMajor-General Ben Learn now on\nduty In the Panama Canal Zone\nwill succeed Lleut.-Gen. Stanley\nFord as commander of the United\nStates Army's Sixth Corps Area\nat Chicago on the expiration of his\nservice in Panama, the War Depart\nment announced yesterday.\nGen. Learn was born in Hamilton,\nOnt., and during the First Great\nWar served as a member of the\nWtr Depsrtment Generil Stiff in\nWashington.\nAMERICAN SHIP\nRESCUES ALL OF CREW\nNEW YORK, Sept. 14 (AP) -\nThe Amerlctn export Unr \u2022 Exo-\nchorda radioed today that she\nhad rescued \"all 64 members\" of\nIhe crew of the 5199-ton British\nfreighter Sslnt A\u00bbnes, sunk 700\nmiles West of Lisbon.\nCause of the ship's sinking was\nnot given but It was presumed\nby export line officials that sht\nhad been torpedoed.\nBIRTHS\nMcDICKEN - To Mr. and Mri.\nJamei W. McDlcken, Trail, it the\nTrail-Tadmac Hospital, September\n10, twins, I ion ind daughter.\nKRUMENACKER - To' Mr. and\nMrs, Peter Krumenacker, Fruitvale,\nat the Trail-Tadanac Hospital, Sep-\ntember 4, a daughter,\nRENPEL \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Renpel, Trail, at the Trail-\nTadanac Hospital, September 8, a\ndaughter,\nRENWICK - To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam H. Renwick, Trail,'at the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital, September\n7, a son\nMERLO \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nMerlo, Trail, at the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital, September 8, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nWanted an Executive with Munlcl-\nSal Experience as Assistant to the\niunicipal Clerk, Nelson, B. C.\nApplicants to state age, experience and qualification- for such a\nposition.\nApplications accompanied by recommendations addressed to the undersigned will be received on or\nbefore the 1st day of November next,\nW. E. WASSON,\n501, Front SL,\nNelson, B. C.\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE R_-\nceived by the undersigned up to\n5 p.m., Saturday, September 21.\nfor the position of Accountant-\nSecretary of the Society, transacting general garage business and\nproviding transportation between\nRossland and Trail for 600\nmembers. Rossland CO-Operative\nTransportation Society, Box 490.\nRossland, B. C, per J: Melville.\nChairman, Supervision Committee\nMAN FOR RANCH WORK. ABLE\nto milk and drive car. 3 roomed\nhouse (water laid on). Good job\nfor married man over military\nage. Box 4073 Daily News,\nWANTED - CARPENTER FORff\nmen and carpenters. Poole Con\n-truction Co. Ltd. Penhold, Alberta\nGIRL OR WOMAN TO DO GENE,\nhswk. ranch. Write P. O. Box 332.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rales for noncommercial advertisement! under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines. Payable in advance.\nAN ALL AROUND HANDY MAN\nwants work by the hour or Jod\npainting, calsomining, stove and\nfurniture repairing, also carpentry\nPhone 1020H, 311 Union Street,\nWANTED - GENERAL HOUSf\"-\nwork. Phone 416Y.\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nMR, BEV1NGTON, MANAGER Ol\nYorkshire Savings and Loan Assn.\nVancouver, will be in Nelson on\nSeptember 17 for a few days and\nwill be glad to Interview any one\ndesirous of arranging a loan on\nthe Yorkshire Plan. C. W. Apple-\nyard, 392 Baker Street.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE. 6 WEEK OLD PIGS 54\neach. F. G. Shiell. Needles, B. C\nFOR SALE - YOUNG COW, JUST\nfresh. Fred Hawes, Silver King Rd.\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE  144\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel Opp. C. P R Depot.\n_._! ...JS\u2014\u2014A_\u2014I       Ji_.-.iiM_. 1'i.r\nsritr\n-TIRLINCJ BOTE CORNER'OS\nCambie and Cordova, Vincouvtr\nfjjj night, weekly rates.\n2 AND 4 BURNER GUARANTEE-)\nelectric range. Al condition. J\nChess, 2nd Hand Store, Vernon St.\n25c - FILMS PRINTED POSTAli.\npaid. Repriqti 3c. Lions Photo\nP 0 Box 434. Vmcouver. B C.\n-ALVATION ARMY - IS YOU\nhivt old clothing, footwear, furni-\nture to spare please Ph  us 618L.\nPURCHASE YOUR FRUITS AND\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Al-\nways fresh In modern refrigeration\nA PORTRAIT BY MCGREGOR IS\na Portrait of Distinction. Phont\n224, 577 Ward Street.\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop prices paid for antiques -at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St.\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry\nHATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED.\nCleaning, pressing, repairing and\nalterations. H. J. Wilton, Josephine\nStreet. Phone 107.\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES ETC:.\n25 best quality assortment tor $1\npostpaid with price list under\nplain sealed cover. Western Sup-\nply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver\nHAIRGOOD-\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees\u2014fit and shading guaranteed. Free, catalogue.\nHanson Company, P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C.\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES. SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novell;- price list,\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O. Box\n61. Princeton, B. C.\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY, VIG-\nor, pep. Try Viiex 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed, 24\nper s o n a 1 \"Drug Sundries\" $1.00\nFree price list of drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C.\nDON'T LET YOUR RHEUMATIC\nor arthritic complaints pain you\nany longer. Your condition can\nbe relieved by a long proven formula which is now available to you.\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nAt all good Drug Stores,\nMEN -\"HEALTH - REGAIN\nvigor\u2014p e p, try Dupree-wheat-\nperles 25 for $1.00 postpaid. Send\n$1.00 for 30 samples of drug specialties \u2014 tested \u2014 guaranteed 5\nyears against deterioration. Paris\nNovelty Co., Dept. \"N\" 24 Aiklns\nBuilding, Winnipeg, Man\nMEN OF 30, 40 501 VIM, PEP,\nVigor subnormal? Try Ostrex tablets. Contain tonics, stimulants,\noyster elements, aids to normal\npep. If not delighted with results first package, maker refunds low price. Call, write Mann\nRutherford Company, and all\nother good drug stores,\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlarge-J\nment, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\npacking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie,\nSaskatchewan.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found' At-\nwill be inserted without cost lo\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE-UTILITY OUTBOARD\nrunabout with or without motor.\nOwner leaving town. Apply Box\n4144 Daily News.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 160)\nDf THE MATTER Of Part (14\nacres) of the Easterly portions of\nLot 370, Group 1, except Lots 1, 2,\n3, 4, S, 6, 7 and 8, heretofore conveyed and Part (8 8-10 acres and\n10 5-10 acres) of Lot 372, Group 1\nand Lot 6585, Group 1, Kootenay\nDistrict.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice ot Ihe loss of Certificates of\nTitle numbered 7477-A to the above\nmentioned lands In the name ol\nDuncan Davidson Eraser and bearing date the 13th September, 1907,\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nIntention at the expiration' of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to Issue Provisional\nCertificates of Title in lieu of\nsuch lost Certificates. Any person\nhaving any information with reference to such lost Certificates of\nTitle is requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B. C, thll\n10th day of September, 1940.\nA. W. IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nDATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION\nSeptember 16th, 1940.\t\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT\nFOR RENT\nFurnished and Unfurnished\nApartments\nMedical Arts Building\nFive roomed bouse, Cedar\nStreet $25.00\nSix roomed house, Carbonate\nStreet    T. $35.00\nSix  roomed  house,  Stanley\nStreet    $25.00\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nBUENA VISTA APTS.. 1023 STAN-\nley St. New, modern 4 room apt-\nBest view in city. Frigidaire and\nelectric ranges. Separate front and\nrear entrances. Phone 642R,\nFOR RENT, NEW 6 ROOM HOUSE\nEverything modern. Good heating\nBathroom, kitchen, also 3 room\nhouse for rent. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L\nFOR RENT, PARTLY FURNISHED\nor unfurnished modern home\nThree bed rooms. Furnace, garage\n524 Robson Street, Phone 513R.\nFOR RENT - LARGE HOUSE,\ncentral heat, also 4-room bungalow, both furnished, across lake,\nnear ferry, Phone 678R1,\nFOR RENT-1, 2 AND 4 ROOM\ncabins, Winter rates. Shardelow's\nAuto Camp, Phone 864,\nCOZY 2 RM~ SUITE. PRI\\T5HOW\"-\ner. 216 Vic, St, apply 120 Vernon St\nFOR RENT - SMALL HOUSE.\nRueckert's Apiary, MHI St. East.\nTWO SMALL FURNISHED SUITES\nfor rent. Close in. C. W. Appleyard\nFOR RENT - OCT. 1, 5 ROOM\nbungalow, bath, on 3rd St Ph, 859R\nFOR BENT, MAKSDEN APTS,\nfurn. hskg. rms., $10 per montn.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG, MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nFOR RENT FUR7HSKPG. ROOMS,\n1 and 2 rooms, 37 High Street.\nFOR RENT - 6 ROOM HOUSE. 713\nJosephine St or Phone 837X\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED COT-\ntage In Fairview. Phone 328L3.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites,\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\t\nFOR RENT 2 RM. FURN. HOUSE.\nApply 125 Silica Street.\t\nHOUSE FOR RENT ON INNES\nStreet. Phone 419X.\nFOR RENT \u2014 FIVE ROOM COT-\ntage. Phone 778X.\t\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED STJT-T\nStirling Hotel.\t\nSee KERR APARTMENTS First\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\npipe, tubes. rnTmo\nNEW AND USED\nLargt stock for immediate shipmeni\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD   '\n1st Avenue ind Main St.\nVancouver, B C.\nFOR SALE, GARAGE (CAN BE\nused as shack). 2 heaters. Cheap\nfor cash. 327 High St. Ph. 1058R.\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES - SPE^\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St- Vancouver, B, C\n4 WHEEL TRAILER, 40 LEGHORN\nhens, tools, etc., and two 33 x 4\ntires. V. E. Moan, Creston, B. C.\nLIGHT PLANT, CAPABLE OF 6\nlights. Slightly used. Apply Nelson\nAuto Wrecking.   \t\nNEW IRON FIREMAN SAVES\ncoal, Write Box 4182 Daily News.\nFOR SALE, ICE REFRIGERATOR\nand baby carriage. 812 Kokanee.\nMAHOGANY CANOE, COMPLETE\nwith cushions, gramphne. Ph. 672X\nUSED WEST1NGHOUSE E LEC\nrange, perfect condition. Ph. 260.\nUSED CONNOR WASHER, OVER-\nhauled, $30. McKay b Stretton.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St.. Vancouver, B  C\nWANTED - 6\" x 15\" PLANER\nand matcher. Round heads p're-\nferred. Box 4165 Daily News.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nNEW SUBDIVISION RESIDENl-\nial lots. 6 miles lion, ferry many\nwith lake frontage, some with\norchard, some near lake, ample\nwater record, also one with 10\nacres In hay and potatoes. Also\norchard of size to suit witn buildings and four acres potatoes. J. J\nCampbell, R. R. No. 1, Ph. 462L3.\nWillow point 9 ac. 5 cult\nSome timber and pasture wire\nfencing, 150 bearing fruit trees\ngood soil for hay, vegetables,\nsmall fruits. Ample water piped\nfor irrigation. 5 rm. bungalow,\nstone basement., elec. light, garage\n^tc. $3000. H. E. Dill, Ward Street\nGOOD RESIDENTIAL PROPER! i(\nis a tangible asset. Buy a home-\nsite on Fairview,properties, Nel\nson's best residential lots. All city\nservices. Easiest of terms' R. W\nDawson, sole agent, Hipperson\nBlock, Phone 197.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full in\nformation to 908. Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta\nFOR SALE - HOUSE, 4 ROOMS,\nnice shady garden, 75 x 120 feet\nwith fruit trees and flowers\nNear City limits. Apply to\nBox 126, Nelson, B. C.\nCHOICE, LEVEL ACRE LOTS,\nfrom $200 up, water available,\nlight soon, low taxes, good schools\nW R. Nelems, Real Estate Agent,\nCastlegar, B. C.\n$325 FOR 3 CHOICE BUILDING\nlots, corner Gore and Hall Street,\nWill sell to buy war bonds. Apply 621 Gore Street.\nFOR. RENT - FARM ON MAIN\nhighway. Cheap 10 right party.\nTake over 17 goats. Apply Box\n4112 Daily News.\nFOR SALE - RANCH ON SILVER\nKing Road, Hi ac. cleared. Plenty\nwater, wood. Box 4180 Dally News\nSMALL HOUSE TO KENT OR\nsell, furnished or unfurnished. Apply J. Campbell, 5th and Elwyn\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. Terms. Johnstone Estate.\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\t\nFARM FOR .RENT, TWO COWS\nfor sale. Mrs. A. Jeffreys Ph. 576L1\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLsj\npick or\nt TBI. MARKET\n1935 Chrysler  \"Custom  Built]\nSedan with built in trunk,\nbrilliant and stylish car witl\nlow mileage. This week onlf\n$-W.00. I\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT   LTDj\nFOR   TRUE   VALUES   IN   US|\ncan see our stock ot guaranty\nused cars. Deal with a rellal\ndealer for Safety. Nelson Trans|\nCompany, Ltd.\nFOR SALE OR RENT, 25 H,.\nDiesel engine md pulleys. L\nnew. Central Truck b Equlpn.\nCo., 801 Baker Street, Nelion\n1936 FORD .DELUXE COUP-' .\nexcellent condition. Looks Ifl\nnew $550. Interior Motor Finuf\nCorporation, Nelson, B. C.\nSPECIALIZING IN ELECTRIC I\nacetylene welding. Stevensol\nMachine Shop, Nelson, Phont I\nCITY AUTO WR_CK_R_, .fld\nglass, parts. 180 Baker St Ph. 4|\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTOR\nA86AYERS and MINI AGENT!\nE. W WIDDOWSON. PROVINCl!\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgij\nEngineer, Sampling Agent! I\nTrail Smeller. 304-305 Joseph!]\nStreet Nelson, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSI__ri\nB C. Provincial Assayer, Cheat!\nIndividual representative for sbl\npers it Trail Smelter.\nA.\" J. BUIE, INDEPENDENT MIL\nrepresentative.  Full  time  attej\ntlon given shippers' Interest!.\n64, Trail, B. C,\n;\u00ab\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj r. McMillan, d. c neurJ\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch B|\nDR WILBERT BROCK. D.\n542 Baker Street. Phone 969.\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETS, Mrs. V.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St. Ph. I\nENGINEER8 AND SURVEYOR!\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. 0. BOX 111\nTrail, B, C. Surveyor and E|\ngineer. Phone \"Beaver Falls.\"\nR W. HAGGEN, Mining b CiJ\nEngineer; B. C. Land Survey!\nRossland and Grand Forks.\nIN8URANCE AND REAL EST*!\nFRANK A.  STUART, BUSINE*\nEstate, Insurance Service. Phil\n577 Baker St., Nelson.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance!\nevery description. Real Est Ph.f\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INS-RAUf\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\na W. DAWSON, Real Eslila, I\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hippenj\nHardware. Baker St Phone 1|\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and elect!\nwelding,   motor   rewinding f\ncommercial refrigeration   j\nPhone 593 324 Vernon\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. Ll\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Cl\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd SL I\nCalgary. Advice free, confident^\n8A8H FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTOl\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker f\n8ECOND HAND 8T0RES\nWE  BUY,  SELL  k   EXCHANi\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. b\\\nCSOSH, MAC'S SETTIN6 SO\nCONCEITED SINCE HE'S BEEW IM\n\/A \\ t\nft\n^\n0_\nr-\n_\n_}\nO\nz\n5\nz\nc.\n0.\n\\ \\\\                '\ns\\      \\  \\\u2014 ...            I\niWimtS\n\u25a0\u2014<^3\u00a3L*\nev soulv-\nTHS IS TH*\nOJE PLACE\nOU THIS\nBOAT   THAT\nIAAQGIE\nCAW'T   NAQ\n,   IC \"*^\u00bb_\u00bb &*     r*~^*    \u00ab\nCopt 1940, %xn% fatvrn Syndicate. Inc, Wcrid rghu iacr\u00abed. \u25a0\n.      \u25a0 MiTiHirkiii' fitf.L \u25a0\u00bbjn Ifct-JT-JE__ftftlstT-----iiiTI---I11 _rtlj-fTllifulntl\u25a0iiaitfa_lI\n MI.\u00bbMB**TV-\u00abWI\ni^^ippppiiili.ippiui1\nWU.II^JpuiJ|lll^\u00ablWiW|ii\u00bbi.iWP\nil. ^.p^wn-Wl^piWP^P\"\nEW\nIleal Board to\nenew Buying of\n1939 Wheal Crop\nEEG, Stpt 15 (CP).-The\nWheat Board announced\nt wu now empowered to\nw buying ot the 1938 crop wheat\nI producers This countermand*\n'ious regulations ip effect sin.-e\nwid of tbe 1939 crop year on\n31 which prevented the Board\nI purchasing last year's crop\nl farmers.\nle Board said It waa further embed to allow storage in 193i)\n\u00a7_. .\nf delivery at the elevator were\nis before August 8. storage allow-\ni will begin from August 8. II\nvery were made after August 8.\nage allowance will be made\n% dale of delivery at the ele-\nir,\" the announcement said,\nt muit be clearly understood\n[all deliveries of 1939 wheat\nle on and after August 8 shall\nwithin the delivery quota\nllations.\"\neneral wheat delivery quotas\nB the Welt are now eight\nKill a leeded acre. At some\nnts delivery allowances have\nn Increased to ll much as 15\nhels ot wheat for each acre aown.\nfhv.RP BOURSE\nTO REOPEN TODAY\nMISSELS, Sept 15 (AP)- The\nIwerp Bourse will reopen for\nfog Monday, Sept 15, Only\n_ transaction! will be permitted.\nI market hai been closed since\nGerman Invasion ot the Low\nintrics In May.\nINCOME TAX JOTS\nBOTHER BRITISH\nLONDON (CPl-Britlih twpay\ners, now paying record high rates\nof income tax to meet war costs,\nfind new problems to harass them\nIn the forms which the Inland revenue department requires them to\nfill out for assessment purposes.\nThe British taxpayer has one advantage over the Canadian taxpayer\n\u2014even If It'i a folnor- one. The Income tax authorltlei work out the\namount the individual owea, based\non his estimate of hli annual Income. In cases where the estimite\ndiffers from the actual Income, the\nauthorities adjust the assessment\nand the amount of tax payable.\nBut the British forms hive always been- complicated. Sundry\ncryntic abbreviations have made\nthem etill more ditfiiult to fathom.\nOne taxpayer, baffled by tht sb-\nbrevlitions, got the Income Ttx\nPayors' Society to explain them.\nHere's what they told him:\nCY meant current yeir; PY means\nprevious yeir EIR earned Income\nrelief (In other words the exemption allowed on earned Income).\nAS, allowance to a single person,\nDR, dependent relatives, BR, rate\nrelief (that portion of the income\nchangeable at less than the standard\nrate)\nFew Rails Gain in\nSlow New York Trade\nNEW YORK, Sept 15 (AP).- A\nfew rail and industrial bonds\nclimbed fractions In a slow market\ntoday.\nMany issues held unchanged as\ntraders continued to wait for a decisive turn in the battle of England\nto stir the market. .\nCanada 4s of 1860 dropped nearly\na point In the foreign list Italy 7s\nwere off a fraction.\ndustrials\nlltiei\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh    Low Close Change\n ___._._ 1  128J8 up    .64\n_-,.._, ,., __    \u2014  27.87 up', .14\n_..__ -.._.   31.73 up    J)7\n 1\u2014:\u2014|\t\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 15 (CP)-Orih.\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High  Low  Close\n-NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELION. I. C\nWheit:\nOct'.\t\nDisc,\t\nOats:\nOct \u2022\t\nDec.\nMay\nBa\n73%     73%     73%\n30%\n28%\n38%\n30%\n28 Vs\n28%\n30%\ngji\/\n21%\n73%\n74%\n30%\n28%\n28%\n34%\n34%\n35%\n126\n,125%\n42%\n43%\n8*\n36%\n126%\n1-5%\n42%\n43%\n34%\n34%\n33%\n125%\n125\n42%\n43%\n35-\n34%\n125%.\n425\n126%\na\n45V4\nQUOTATIONS ON\nOpen     Close\nurSmtlt&Ref ._.._   37%   87%\nte Ohio\t\nAviation \t\nSteel  i\t\nidlan Pacific\t\ntiller  \u201e ,\t\nafrlght pfd \u2014\nT_t_..\t\nKodak\t\nil Electric\t\nll Motors\t\nSound . ...............\nlational Nickel _,\nCopper .........\t\n3%\n29%\n76%\n3%\n75\n165% 167\n130% 130\n33%\n3%\n29%\n76%\n3%\n73%\n7%\n46%\n32\n26%\n27%\n46%\n32\n26%\n27%\nWALL STREET\nOpm Close\nMontgomery Wtrd \u2014  39 38\nNew York Central , 14 13%\nPackard Moton \u201e..   8% . 3%\nPenn R R ,   31% 31\nPhillips Pete ,._   85%. 35%\nPullman  _.....  19% 19%\nRadio  Corporation 4%    4%\nStan OU of N J    34% 34%\nStudebaker \u2014    7%    7%\nTexas Corporation   35% 35%\nUnion Carbide ....... 71 71\nUnited Aircraft     38% 38%\nU S Rubber   21% 21\nUS Steel  _\u25a0.    54% 54%\nWoolworth  ,_    32% 32%\nYellow Truck     14% 14%\nMONTREAL\n8TRIALS:\n__ Brew of Can\t\nHirst P k P A\t\ni Car b Pdy Pfd \u201e\t\nCelanese \u2014\n1 Celanese Pfd ,. __,\np North Power _\u2122\t\nSteamship  \t\n. Steamship Pfd .....\t\nkahutt Plow .._____\t\nMin it Smelting\t\nnlnlon Coal Pfd\t\nn Steel b Coal B _......_.\nalnion Textile \t\nden Paper   \u2014.\nKlatlon C of C \u2014\neau Power  \u2014_.\n\" leau Power Pfd \u2014\n\u201e Charlei   \t\ni ard Smith Paper\t\nImith. Paper Pfd -_-\t\nerial Oil \t\nB Petroleum    \nNickel of Cm\t\nEof the Wood! .\u2014 \nnal Brew Ltd\t\nional Brew Pfd \u2014\t\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\nOgilvle Flour new\t\nPrice Bros \t\nQuebec  Power\n17\n11\n19\n31\n128\n11\n4%\n14%\n6%\n88%\n20\n8%\n86\n6\n12\n11%\n90\n15%\n108%\n11%\n' 17%\n36%\n19\n29%\n40\nShawnlgan W_P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp\t\nBt Lawrence Corp Pfd\nSouth Can Power\t\nWestern Groceri i........\nBANKS:\nCommerce ,\t\nDominion _____\nImperial   _.'\t\nMontreal \". _' _,\nNpva Scotia ... ___.\nToronto \t\nCURB:\nAbitibi 8 Pfd\t\nBathurst FtiFB\t\nBeauh.rnoii Corp _\nBritish American Oil....\nB C Packers  \t\nCan Vlclien  _\nFiirchild  Aircraft  \t\nfraser Co Ltd    \t\nMacLaren P b P\t\nMitchell Root \t\nRoyalite Oil \t\n28\n12%\n16.\n18%\n3%\n15%\n12\n54\n156\niS\n187%\n377\n220\n.75\n3%\n5%\n19%\n13\n3\n3%\n11%\n. 17\n10%\n24\narleyi\nOct \u2014\nDec.,\t\n_ tlvS'\"\nObt -1J8\nDec.\nMiy\nRye:\nOct ..\nDec. _\nMiy\nCAS : PRICES\nWheat\u2014Noi. 1 hard and 1 norlhern\n73%; No. 2 northern W; No.. 8\nnorthern .68%; No. 4 n rthern.64%;\nNo. 5, 60\u00bb\" No. 6, 58^1 '\u00bb\u00abd 84%'\nNo, 1 garnet 64%; No. 2 garnet 63%;\nNo. 3 garnet 61%; No. 1 durum 85%:\nNO. 4 special 84%; No. 5 leclal\n80%; No 6 special 58%; No. 1 mixed\nr \u00ab^; track 73%; icrecningi 73 cent!\nper ton.\nOits\u2014No. 2 c.w. 31%; Ex. 3 o.w\n38%; No. 1 c.w. and Ex. 1 feed\n29%; No. 1 feed 28%; No. 2 teed\n26%; No. 3 feed -4%; tract 30%.\nBarley\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos, 1 and 2 c.w. 35%; 2-row Nos. 1\nand 2 c.w. 41; 8-ro\u00bb. No. 3 c.w.\n34%. Others: No. 1 fee. 34%; No 2\nfeed 33%: No. 3 feed 33; track 35.\nFlax\u2014No. 1 c.w. 135%: No. 3 c.w.\n121%; No. 3 c.w. 111%; No. 4 c.w.\n100%; track 123%. \u25a0\nRye\u2014No. 2 aw. 42%.\nU.S. Naw May Have\nDraqger Fleet\nBOSTON (CPl-Edward H. Coo-\nley, Manager of the Massachusetts\nFisheries Association has announced\nthat the U. S. Navy may acquire\n19 of the, wooden draggers of the\nBoston tnd Gloucester fishing fleet\nunder negotiations now in progress.\nAlthough the Navy remained silent as to what use would be made\nof them, waterfront observers suggested that the draggers might bt\nused In searching for magnetic\nmines. The .navy recently acquired\n13 trawlers of the Boston fishing\nfleet to be used in mine-sweeping\noperations.\nThe draggers, moat ot them of recent construction, average about 100\ntons, carry two masts and auxiliary\nmotors and have an average capacity ot 59 tons.\nSpokesman for the tithing fleet\nsaid their transfer would hive little\neffect as the fleet numbered about\n150 draggers and more were being\nr*>nstr\"\u00bbted. Approximately 200\nfishermen might be on.tne beach\ntemporarily one spokesman said,\nbut he added that new Jobs would\nba open- as new draggers were\nlaunched.\nThe Gloucester Sea Foods Workeri' Union, however, sees \u2022 -threat\nto the fish cutting and packing industry In Gloucester If the Navy Is\npermitted to  buy fishing vessels\nSteels Only Firm\nGroup at Toronto\nTORONTO, Sept 15 (CP)-Thi\nToronto stock mirket Siturday\nrounled out the week wilh another\ndull session and a moderately weak\nprice tone.\nSteele comprised the ont firm\ngroup adong industrials, Pige-Her-\nsey advanced a Mint ind Dominion\nFonndrlei ad<|td %,\nChan;\nwere ol\npoint   for   Consol\nwas tbe mala chtnie Ih the base\nwas firmer\nrles idded %. . ,\nn\u201e 3 in the mining division\nof small lin. 'A gain of %\nfor   Consolidated   Smiltirs\nmettl grow. \u00bb\u201e\nmd Nlcktl held iteidy it 38.\nWesters oils bOirded few trtdes\nCalgary _ Edmonton sold it 1.41\ntor \u2022 gain of 6 ind Vermilite at\n8 cents wai a cent lower. Homestead Oil fc QM was off % te 3ft;\nWinnipeg Whtat\nTrade at Low Ebb\nWINNIPEG, seat IB (CP) *\nWheat trading on Winnipeg Grain\nExchange Stturdiy wu it \u2022 low\nebb despite reports of the sale of\napproximately 500,000 bushels of\nCansdisn wheat to the United\nKingdom. A few trades were pelted in the October future'and prices\nclosed at fixed minimum levels of\n73% cents a bushel tor December.\nCash wheat trade waa less active\nas buyers did not press for sup-\nnlles. Only minor quantities changed hands and tprtadi were generally unchanged.   .\nMaltsters and Eastern interests\nnurchised barley jn the coarse\ngrain pit but trade Ip other gnlm\nwas thin and routine. Prices moved\nwithin I narrow range.\n.-MONDAY MORNINO. SIPT. II.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Sept. 14 (CP)-Bar\ngold Is' London wai unchmgtd st\n337.54 sn ounce In Cmtdiin fundi]\nlets In British, representing the\nBank of England's buying price. The\nfixed $35 Washington price amounted to 538.50 in Canadian.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 12.75;\nUn 61.00; lead 5.50; line 145; antimony 15.18. .\nSllvtr future! closed unchanged.\nBid: Sept. 37.75.\nNEW YORK-r-Cppper steady; electrolytic ipot Cotin. Valley 1U7%-\n50; export FAS NY \u00bb.\u00bb0.      \u2022\nTin iteidy; ipot and neirby 50.10;\nforward 50 05\nUid iteidy, ipot, Njw York\n4.90-95: East St. Louis ITS.\nZinc sttidy: Eist St. Louis spot\nand forwird IM.\nQulckiilVer 180.\nWheat Trading at\nChicago Limited\nCHICAGO, Sept 11 (AP)-W!th\nstoring of new wheat as collateral\nfor Government loins running ibout\n26 per cent ahead of list year,\nwheat trading Stturdiy continued\nto bt limited. Prices supported by\nthe reduced volume of commercial\nsupplies available, showed little net\nhinge.\nWSeat.closedj* off to, H high*.\nchsnge.\nrtffft'clflN* % 0# t     .\ncompared with Friday's flnifh, Sep\ntember. 711, December 76%-%; corn,\n% lower to % up, September 88%,\nDecember 56%; bats %-% dawn,\nCAN-HttaA, (CP). -Output of\nmachine gum in Australian pltnti\nhas doubled and there hu beep I\n16-fold Increase In production ol\nsn\u00bbll arms munitions In the last\n13 months, said Prime Minister\nMeniie.\n1-40-\nVANCOUVER  STOCK\nMINIS\nBlk Missouri \t\nBralorne  \t\nBridge R Con .......\nCariboo Gold\t\nDentonia  '.\t\nFairview Amal ___\nGeorge Copper\t\nGrandview     ..._._\nGrull Wlhkme\t\nHedley Miscot .......\nInd?m%i_s\u2122\u2122\nInt Coel     \t\nIsland Mount............\nKoot Belle ._.\nMlnto Gold  \t\nMcOini-ray   ___\nNicola M k M\t\nPacific Nickel\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Sold \t\nPorter Idaho ...__.\nPremier Border ....\nPremier Gold ....\t\nPrivateer  .\nRelief Arlington ...    .6.'\nSalmon Gold ______\nSheep Creek ______\nSilvercrest  .\nSurf Islet    .....\t\nTaylor Bridge \t\nWellington  \t\nWeiRo Minei \t\nWhitewater  \t\ntrait Yanjtee Olrl\nOILS.\nAmalgamated  ..........\nAnecftida  \t\nBr?*-1 Con> r\u00bb\nCal at Ed\t\nCalmont ,...___\nComoil  ..._....__. !\nCommonwealth  \t\nExtension    .......\t\nFour 8ttr Pete\t\nHighwood Sarcee ..\nHome .   ... .\nMidlson  _..\t\n\u2022Id\nAsk\nJ-4%\n.05\n8.(5\n9.75\n\u2014\nJ81,\n110\n2.25\n_.'\n.01\n.00%\n.01\n.05\nUrn\n.18\n.02%\ntf\n.48\n.51\n1\n-tm\n_n\n.36\n.70\nte\n2b\nJO\nJ01\n.01%\n.16\n.01%\n$\nA\nM\n.01%\n.01%\n.01%\n.01%\n.96\n.98\n.02%\n.03\n'   \u2014\n.19\n\u202203%\n.05\n.94\n*\u00bb\n.06\n.02\nJ)l\n.04\n.01\n.00%\n.06\n- .00%\nr\n21\na\n.17\n.11\n1.86\n.02\n.11\n1.45\n\u00a3\n,12\n.12\n1.88\n.02%\nQUOTATIONS\n\u201ei\ntn\n\u00a3\n.18\n.04\n.80\nMar Jon _   ..\t\nMcDougall Segur b\n_&-::=_\nModel ..\t\nNordon    \t\nOkalta Com\nPtcific Pete  ,\nRoyal Can    ....\nRoyal Crest Pete _\nSpooner _ ... ..........\nUnited \t\nVmalto _, _\nINDUSTRIALS\nCanadian Pac .-\nCap Weit Lumber\nCapital bt \t\nJoMA w\t\nGrowers Wlnei _.._\nPacific Coyle _____\nUnited aw : -_\n.01%\nj08\nil\n1.00\n_u    Tr\n.02\nJDS\n.04\n.11%\njoe\n1.00\n1_B\n20\n.70\n5.5\nm\n1.80\n16.75\n1.25\nTORONTO STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nIts\ntrmic Copper \u2014\np Gold\nlo-Huronlan \t\nitfield Gold \t\noria Rouyn Mines\n(or ,\t\nkmae Rouyn \t\nEteld Gbld \t\neMetals Mining\n\u201e Gold Mines ....\nEod Kirklmd \t\n\"\u2122_iao_ri,\t\nbM-nei\t\nlorne Mines\t\n[alo Ankerlte _\t\nier Hill Extension\nfMalartic\t\nl)oo Gold Quartz ....\nle-Trethewey _\nI Patricia\nBhium M. b S. a\u2014\n3Y Copper _._\u2014\nkurum Mines \t\nuM.S\t\nU Mines .- \u2014\u25a0\nval-Siscoe   _.\t\nt Malartic  ,--\u2014-\norado Gold \t\nlOnbridge Nickel\t\nleral Kirklmd\t\nncoeur Gold \t\nies Lake .\u2014..\u2014......\nte Lake Gold .\t\n_d Belt \t\nindoro Mines \t\nGold\n\u25a0d Rock Gdd\t\nSer Gold \t\nm\u00bb v.\t\nirsy Gold \t\njaonBayM4-S,..\n\u2122 Nickel ________\nCom \t\n. Wilte ___.\nAa Gold  -._.\nf-Addison ._._.___.\nJland Ltke\t\nke Shore Mines\t\n^h Gold\nbel Oro Minet\t\nttlt Long Lac _..\t\nKassa Minei\t\nicLeod Cockshutt \t\nidsen Red Lake\t\nBfre-Poreupihe \"Z\nEenzle Red Lake ....\n'ittie-Graham \t\nVYatters Gold \t\n.15\n.01\n1.85\n.04%\n.01%\n1.53\n.04\n.09%\n.09%\n.82\n.11\n.05%\n.05\n9.90\n3.40\n.01%\n.50\n2.00\n.56\n1.70\n.18\n.65\n1.26\n38.50\n21.40\n.01%\n3.10\nM\n2.65\n.03%\n.39\n\u25a0   .04\nM\n.20\n.04%\n.36\n2b\n.04%\n11.75\n.25\n25.00\n36.50\n.00%\n.17%\n.01\n2.55\n.90\n20.60\n.45\n.01%\n2.10\n3.25\n2.10\n.38\n.05\n45 O0\n.95\n.08\n.28%\n4-mil\u00bb\u00ab01lO.\u00bb'Hm\u00ab+l\nwnvillt H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nlETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 118\nR Baker St.     Nelson, B. C.\n'\u2666\u26664HI\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbljeHIILHH*<\n\u25a0_flB__P!9\",f?__8\"\niVS YOUR ILICTRIC POWER\nOUTLST PLATES\n(CHROME PLATED\nCM. ElectroDlatinq\nirlti Bldg.\n704 Nelion Ave\nMining Corp\t\nMoneta Porcupine\nMorrls-Klrkland ._\nNipissing Mining ..\nNormda \t\nNormetal ....\t\nO'Brien Gold\t\nOmega Gold .\nPamour Porcupine .._;\t\nPaymaster Cons _.._\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPerron Gold \t\nPickle Crow Gold\t\nPioneer Gold  \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPowell Rouyn Gold\t\nPreston East Dome ...\u201e_,\t\nRoche Long Lac\t\nSan Antonio Gold .\t\nShawkey Gold ,\t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon _.\nSlscoe Gold -_ \t\nSladen Malartic .,\t\nSt Anthony   .\nSudbury Basin __ \t\nSullivan COns __.\nSylvanite\nTeck-Hughes Gold ..\nToburn Gold Mules .\nTowlgmac  __.\nVentures   __-\t\nWaite Amulet\n' thout stipulating that selling owners immediately replace them.\nU.S. Contracts for\nPlane Engines\nWASHTNGT6N, Sept.\" 16 (AP).-\nThe United States War Department announced yesterday tha\nawarding ot contracts totalling more\nthan $239,000,000 including one for\nthe manufacture of Rolls-Royce airplane engines by' the Packard Mo-\ntor Car Company, of Detroit, at an\nestimated cost of $6.,448,000.\nShortly before announcing tht\ncompletion of the contract with\nPackard the War Department midt\nknown thtt lt had awarded a contract to the General Motors Corporation ot Detroit tor the mm production of machine-guns at an estimated cost ot $81,000400.\nIt alio had announced contracts\nfor the purchase of $76,396,592 worth\nof fighter plinei from the Bell Aircraft Corporation of Buffalo, N, Y\u201e\nand the Republic Aviation Corporation at Farmlngdale, Long island.\nN. Y. Approximately \u00bb0fl00)f)00\nworth of other miscellaneous contract! were announced.\nSheep Creek Gains 3\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 13 (CP). -\nPrices were irregular and trading\nfairly active on the tbbrevltted les-\niton of Vmcouver Stock Exchmae\nSaturday. Transactions totalled 27,-\n540 shares.\nIn the golda Sheep Creek gained\n3 it 95 ind Premier Border wai up\n% at 1%. Privateer eased a cent to\n42 while Brilorne at 9.75 and Reno\nat 13 remained unchmged.\nOkalta Oil advanced 5 to 80 and\nHone firmed a cent at 1.86. Calmont af 23 rose 3 from Friday's\nclosing bid while Extension at 17\nind Royal Crest at 7% both closed\nfractionally lower.\nBase metali were inactive.\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYmir Yankee Girl\t\nOILS\nAjax    \t\nBritish American\t\nChemicM Research \t\nImperial \t\nInter Petroleum ,\t\nTexas Canadian  \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl Power .\nBell Telephone *. _ 152%\nBfaz TUP  4%\nBrewers k Dilt __.._ 5\nBrewing Corp .._._,  1%\nB C P0w*r ,rA\"   25\nB C Power \"B\"  1%\nBuilding Prods _.' 15%\nCanada Bread     2%\nCan Bud Malt  4%\nCan Car b Foundry  _ 8W\nCan Cement._ _   4%\nCm Dredge  \u2014, .  13%\nCm Malting .____  35\nCan Pacific Rly    5%\nCan Ind Alcohol A \u00bb  1%\nCom Bakeriei   18\nCosmos   -'\u2022 - -...-.  25%\nDom Bridge  _  28\nDom Tar b Chem  5%\nDist Seagrams   24%\nFanny Farmer   35\nFord of Canada A   10%\nGoodyear Tire ..  70\nGypmm L _ &A ....  3%\nHamilton Bridge .._:   4%\nImpefial TobtceO  14%\nLeillw \"A\" ..\u2014_...._,  MH\nMiplt L*tf Milllnt, ,:,\u201e\u201e,\u201e! }%\nMiweyTtirrls ,i\u2014-.\u201e_\u201e____ f %\nMentr__i Power ...... .__ 38%\nMoore Corp  ,  44 ii\nNat Steel Car  44%\nPage  Hersey   \u201e  101%\nPowtr Corp J.  7%\nPraised Metals ..,.,.....,.,..:\u2014. t\nSteel of Can\n, I Standard Paving,'       .55\nCalgary Active\nCALGABY, Seot 15 (CP).-Trad-\ning continued fairly active for the\nshort Saturday session of Calgary\nStock Exchange. Transfers 7300\nshares.\nMar Jon at 1% wai fractionally\nhigher and Highwood Sarcee at 11\nwas up 4 point Royal Canadian at\n11%. Arrow at 27% and.Sundance\nat 11% each gained a half. Extension, Globe Royalties and Firestone\nwere unchanged.\nEXCHANCI MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Sept. 15 (CP). -\nBritish ahd foreign exchange, nominal rites between banks only:\nArgentina, pteo, JI589.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, _494.\nJiptn, yen, 2Kb.\nSweden, krone, .2648.\nSwitierlind, frino. .2630.\nUnited States dollar 10-11 per\ncent premium.\nCompiled by\nClnadt,\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15 (CP). -\nSlow demand took mother chunk\nout of the price bt the Canadian dollar to the frit foreign exchange\nmarket Ssturday.\nThe Canadian unit cloud to terms\nof United States funds it I discount\nof 17% cents. 1% cent! lowtr than\nyesterdsy.\nTht bourid sterling held unching-\ned at \u2666403%.\n(ST6\u00abH6-,M, icP).-Up to tht\nrrTlddl. of Auguit, ntutrsl Sweden's shipping losses caused by the\nwir compfiied 69 vessels of ibout\n150.000 gross t6nnsge, ind vilued\nIt about $16,500,000.\nFALCONBRIDGE NICKEL\nTO OMIT DIVIDEND\nTORONTO, Sept. 19 (CP)-Dlr-\nectors ot Fllconbrldge Nlcktl Mines\nLtd.. announce thai tht dividend\ntor the current quarter will be omitted. Operations at the mine continue\non a reduced scile, siys the announcement and the cash position\nof the compmy remains strong.\nMontreal Steady\nMONTR1AL, Sept' IB (CP) -\nStock mirket. prices displayed\nsteadiness in dull lite deillngi on\nthe stock market saturdiy.\nIn newsprints Bathurst declined\ni fraction but Prict Brothers tnd\nSt Lawrence Corporation held unchanged. Rails were quiet\nAbitibi md BA. Oil were .lightly\nstronger issues on the curb.\nDIVIDENDS\nKerr-Addison Gold Mines, Limited, interim dividend, five cents.\n. in     _ i \u2014\nPAOt\nChemicals Join\nSteels and Rails\nIn Wall St. lift\nNEW YORK, Sept 18 (AP). -\nChemicils loined iteels md rtili on\nSsturday In a lifting movement that\nsteadied the stock mirket\nSmill experimental order! early\nIh tht ihort session disclosed i\nfairly firm structure. Later trading. In slightly increased volume,\n' rought gains of major frictions or\nmore among leaden. .\nTransictions totalled about 150,-\n000 lhares.\nOn tht advancing side, were\nDow Chemical, Union Carbide, Du-\nKnt, Weitinghouse, American Can,\nS. Steel, Bethlehem, Great Northern preferred, Southern Railway,\nSouthern Pacific. Boeing. Douglas,\nAmerican Telephone and Western\nUnion.\nInterest In steel shares wis heightened by i trade estimite thit the\npreienj steel inventory iccumula-\ntlon \u2014 the largest on record at the\nclose of August \u2014 la \"nearing completion.\"\nIn the Canadian section Dome\nMines ud Mclntyre advanced\n\u2022lightly while Distillers Seagram\nlost % point\n. MONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Sept 11 (CP). -\nSpot: butter, Que. 23%-%. Eggs,\nEastern A-large 84-34%; A-piulets\nButter futures: Nov. 23%-%; Dec.\n23%-\u00ab%.\n\u25a0 Hie Royil Bank of\nThe oulout Of Canada's sugir re\ntlnlnt Industry In 1939 amoun'.ed\nfo 1.158.588.634. pounds, tn Increase\nof 113.124.220 pounds over 1938.\n\u2014\u25a0-\nCanada's 2nd War Loan\nWill Make the Grade\u2014\nif You Are Willing toHelp!\nIs This Too Much to AsJc?j\n, There stands BrltaTnp--tRere Cana3farj flgrifer iqaoBrorw\nare breaking up Nazi raids and Canadian 'divisions on guarding\nthose ancient cliffs and beaches so precious ,to you now.\nWe Canadians can conquer a simple\" Matter HEe this Zn3\nWar Loan, just as we can expect our fighting forces ta Help;\nconquer the enemy. *     v,\nIf you Have not subscribed, don't Hold Bade any loTigw-^\nif you have subscribed consider increasing your subscription at\nonce.\nBefore now, Canada's War Loan Bonds Hav* proved fo Ba!\nthe finest possible investment. They will do so again. THey ar\u00ab\u00bb\nsafe, marketable and provide a good return.\nSee your investment dealer, bank or stock' b'roRer.\nNothing You Can Do Today Is as Important as This.\nPublished by\nGovernment of the Dominion of Canada\n> ON behalf of\nu Cajutfa'i TitsWt Foto\u00bb\u00bb--\nwho are expeclifig your support for Canada's 2nd War Loan\n\u2122\"\"\"\n-\n INIJII|l|WlJ|IJ.U:iJJlHP.\nffsga^mm\n\u00bbr,-lwTJ!. *^r \"    '-^w^''.^-1^11 ;:\"^y^\n\u25a0A\u00ab| TEN -\nDeep-stirring as\ntta famous itory\n...momentous al\ntrie clash of its\n\u2022ttn ... comet a\nmighty romance\nyour heart will\nforever remember!\nMIM.\nDUD\nHEAVEN 100\nJeffrey Lynn\nBarbara O'Neil\nNights\n151,35*\nADDED\nCartoon\n\"AH Baba Bound\"\nTODAY\nTUESDAY AND\nWEDNESDAY\nComplete Shows at 2:00, 7:00\nand 9:27\nMatinee Today at 2:00 P.M.\nI VIC\n-NEtSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-MONDAY MORNINO. SEPT. It, 1M0\u2014\nPoper Doll Books\nPainting Books\nPicture Books\n20s? each\nMann, Rutherford\nPHONE 81\nDrug Co.\nNELSON, B. C\n4fe.\nThousands Turn\nOut for Soccer\nDespite Alarms\nLONDON, Sept. -J (CP Cable)-\nAseries ot air raids disturbed Eng\nllsh soccer games Saturday, but des-\nfilte the danger thousands of fans\nurned out to cheer their respective\nteams up and down the country.\nAt least ont Nul bomb had a\nsoccer ground for its target. A\nhigh explosive bomb damaged the\nterracing on the enclosure of an\nEast London professional club but\nthen was no report of casualties.\nCivil defence requirements halted\nsome matches. Where possible games\nInterrupted by raids were resumed\nalter the \"all clear\" signal \u25a0 was\nsounded. A number of clubs were\nforced to complete teams at the last\nmoment with junior and. other\nplayers.\nTottenham Hotspurs and Chelsea\nmet In London with revised linkups, no fewer than 10 changes being made in the teams. The Spurs\nhad Field, a 16-year-old youngster,\nat centre-forward and won 3-2.\nAlthough reduced to nine men\nthrough Injuries, Manchester City\nsmashed New Brighton 5-3, and Lincoln City walloped Sheffield United 9-2. In the London area Fulham\nwas shut out by Arsenal 1-0 in a\ngame that was interrupted four\nminutes by an air raid. Watford\ntrimmed Aldershot 3-1 and South-\/\nend United defeated Clapton Orient\n2 to 1.\nRossland Set for\nBig Game Tonight\nKOSSLAND, B. C, Sept ..-\"All\nthe boys art In good shape, and\nthey are out to win tha Kootenay\nchampionship tomorrow night,\" said\nCece Pitt, Rosslind Redmen Manager, tonight. \"We have a 60-50\nchance at winning, but we have to\nplay lacrosse to win, we're not ior-\ngetting that\"\nPitt said that the Redmen were\nquite satisfied'with tht officiating\nby Johnny Gidinski and Len Wilton. In fact he went ai far as to\nuy he thought lt baa been ai good\nretereeing as there ever haa been\nin the district\nThe Redmen- llneun for the fifth\nand deciding mme in Trail Monday\nagainst the Golden Bears will bt\nchosen from Sam Saprunoff, PhU\nThatcher, Sid Sirncock, Ernie Cark-\nner, Ralph Scott, Jack Cox, Jim\nScott, Roes Saundry, Gordon Ezart,\nKen McGulre, Al Sitton, Chang McDonald, George Anderson, Dave\nJorgenson, Paddy Dougan and Joe\nLaface,\nTry Newspaper Advertising Flnt\n'    It Gets Results!\nASK FOR\nTHE\nPERCOLATOR\nDOUGHNUTS\ntews\u00ab\u00bbs3s\u00bbs\u00bbe\u00bbassttc*$\u00bb\u00bb?s\u00bbsas\nBLANKETS\nBeautifully Dry Cltaned\nSingle, 76o    Double, $1.25 up\n\u2022\n1042   Jonella  Cleaners   1042\nCall and Deliver\niltMSSWSW-WlWWilWWtWWSMW\nf.\nft\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone (55        510 Kooteniy\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nSex 81      Hipperson Blk.      Ph. 197\nTHE PRICE OF A USEO CAR\nll one thing ... the value another.\n1937 FORD COUPE\nRadio and many extras,\n.  Save on thll one.\nRueen City Motors\none 43    Limited    561 Josephine\nProduction of pig trn in Canada\nduring the first seven months of\n1940 totalled 645,551 tons compared with 356,108 tons in the corn-\nsponding period'of 1939.\nFOR RENT\n4Room Furnished\nor Unfurnished Suite\nSingle Housekeeping Rooms\nANNABLE BLOCK\n1931 FORD\nMODEL A. SEMI LIGHT    _._*._\u2022\nDELIVERY.   _  , 9*13\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBiker St    Limited    Phone 119\nniiiTiMininmiinr\nHood's Supreme\nMilk Bread\n.\"Your Home Bakery\"   .\nllIllMlll.HIlllIllim.\nJ. A. C Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 305. MEDICAL-ARTS BLDG\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nflood! the Room wtt_ Orc-lat-n Win. Mr\ni tip!\nThis new Coleman Oil Heater givet extra\nT-li\u00bb-toyo_r_MnOT--.-wog_-\u00ab_ngaerT-\nice\u2014healthful, radiant heat plus active\nwarm air circulation. Gives dependable\nbeat under all ordinary weather condi tions.\nrow home* mm-To-NUT...iroo_u...\nCMHI... COTT\u00bb0-I... SrJtVIC. -TATIOHI\nBnrni low-cost fuel oil efficiently I Grilled\ncabinet of distincti-a design. Good-looking, with stnrdy, long-life Coleman eos-\nitruction. Haa many of the fine featuree\nfound b higher-priced models. A real\nbaroautl COMB TN AND SEE A DEM-\nONSTRATIONI\nColeman OIL HEATER\nr\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nWoman Killed in\nCoast Shooting\nPRINCE GEOHGE, B. C, Sept.\n15,(CP).\u2014Provincial Police tonight\nheld T. Krawchuk, Polish railway\nsection hand, while .they Investigated a shooting affray which\nended in the death of his wife and\nthe wounding of a friend.\nCanada's apple crop for 1940 is\nestimated at 4,421,000 barrels.\nCarlson, Wilson, Allan, Watson in\nNelson Golf Club Seml-Flnal Pay\nPatriarch Visits\nNelson I.O.O.F.\nH. 3. Worsley of North Vancou\nver, Grand Patriarch of the Encampment Branch of- the Independent\nOrder of Odd Fellows in British Columbia, was gueit of honor pt Nel-\nson Encampment No. 7. He was accompanied on his official visit to\nNelson Lodge by W. H. Houston\nof Castlegar, Past Grand Patriarch; and James Robertson of Nelson, District Deputy Grand Patriarch\nSlocan City and Kaslo members\nof the Nelson Encampment were\nrepresented by strong attendance.\nNine new members were put\nthrough their paces, five being\nfrom Kaslo and four from Nelson.\nOther honor guests included\nMayor N. C. Stibbs, a member of\nlong standing in the Peterborough.\nOnt., Encampment.\nFollowing degree work the re-,\nmalnder of the evening was devoted to a \"camp style\" banquet.\nCaptain Humphries of\nRobson Likely to Go to\nArmy Camp at Vernon\nCapt Stanley Humphries of Rob\nson, recently Stipendiary Magistrate for Castlegar and Robson, has\nbeen .temporarily attached to . the\nC. A. S. f. training centre at Mc-\nCauley Point Barracks, Victoria. It\nis expected he will be pasted to the\npermanent.staff at the army training centre at Vernon when that\ncentre is ready fop trainees iu\nOctober.\nCaptain Humphries had 4V4 years\nservice with the 14th Battalion.\nRoyil Montreal Regiment, in France;\nBelgium and Germany in the Firs*\nGreat War.\nEngland's Sons Beat Rest 110-105\nin Cricket Thriller Tying Series\nEngland took time out Sunday to\nIndulge in a return cricket game\nwith'The Rest. The last meeting of\nthese two Nelson elevens resulted\nIn rather an easy win for those opposing England. This time, however,\nrepresentatives of John Bull took\nrevenge, and after an exceedingly\nclose finish, were returned winners\nby a margin of five runs, the score\nbeing 110-105. The issue was in\ndoubt air through, with the odds in\nfavor of The Rest. They had 105\nruns on the board with two wickets\nIn hand. However,, two exceptional\ncatches by E. Bouchier and Lieut.\nHarrison, off White's bowling, blasted the hopes of The Rest, the last\ntwo wickets falling for no additional\nscore.\nHARRISON PASSES 50\nThe feature of the English Innings\nwaa the batting of Lieut. M. Harrison. Although out of practice, he\ndisplayed some superb strokes, and,\nonce settled down, scored all round\nthe wicket. It was only after he\nreached 50 that he took chances, being cleaned bowled by Tye. He was\nably assisted in the early part of\nthe inning by E. Bouchier, and later\nby McKearns. In the bowling Eric\nWhite was the mainstay. He bowled\npractically the entire inning and\ncame out with the fine average of\nfive wickets for 24 runs. He kept a\nbeautiful length and had considerable spin on tfce ball. He finished\nThe Rest inning by taking two wickets in succession.\nTheopeningbatsmen for The Res!\nall gave the English bowlers, trouble, particularly Barwis. He set\nabout the. bowling in great style\nand lifted one clean over the grandstand. Other scorers were Malloy\nwith 18. and Deacon 14. Later in the\ninning Bob Main tried -to pull tne\ngame for his side, and looked like\nsucceeding until he got his leg in\nfront of a straight one from White,\nscoring a creditable 21, England fin\nally winning by five runt,\nTHE FIGURES\nThe scoring and bowling was\nas\nfollows;\nENGLAND\nH. Parker, b Main  \t\n4\nE. Bouchier, st. Brabazon, b\nBarwis .. _   ...   \t\n18\n0\n53\nE. White, b Main  \u201e..\nLieut. M. Harrison, b Ty.    \t\nS. Dawson, b Barwis  _\n1\nA. H. Noakes, c Yeatman, b Tye\n2\nW. Bennett, c Deacon, b Tye ...\n4\nF. H. Smith, lbw., b Main '\nO\nC. R. McKearns, run out \t\n17\nF..  f_-li-_f run nnt\n(1\nR. A. Aldersmlth, not out . ..\n1\nExtras .._ ' .-   \u25a0  __\u2022\n10\nTotal _i ,\n10\nBowling analysis:\n0   MR W\nR. Main   10   2 36\na\nD. Tye   .,\u201e   5 .0 28\n3\nC. W. Barwii \u201e_   8   0 23\n1\nR. J. Mulloy    2  0 10\n0\nTHE REST\nR. J. Mulloy, c Bennett, b\nParker _ .'.    18\nD. Tye, c Noakes, b Parker\t\nR. Main. jr. b White      7\nC. W. Barwis, run out _     30\nD. F. Deacon, c Bennett, b White   14\nR. Main, sr., lbw., b White     21\nG. Braba-on, c Bennett, b\nNoakes         _\nDr. Toone, c and b Noakes      0\nC. J. Yeatman, c Bouchier, b\nWhite    _.     2\nO. Bouchier, not out     0\nJ. Wallace, c Harrison, b White    5\nExtras     _     5\nTotal __ __ 105\nBowling analysis:\nE. White  __ 12   4 24   5\nH.Parker     8   0 30   2\nM. Harrison 3   1 11   0\nE. Bouchier    J  0 11   0\nA. H. Noakes S .0 24   2\nMrs. Townshen Got^_\u00bb\nto  Ladies'   Final\nWith Mrs. Lakes\nSunday saw the first two rounds\nof the Nelson Golf k Country Club\nchampionihip play get under way\nBy evening all fflghfa had narrowed\ndown to the semi-finals and some\ndown to the finals.\nCarl Carlson, the defending champion ot the Appleyard-Lowe Clip,\nwas still in the mint and next Sunday morning will meet the veteran\nT. ft. Wilion In one semi-final match\nJimmy Allan and Bob Watson, two\nof the other highly-favored players,\nwill clash in the other semi-final\nbracket. The finalists are scheduled\nto play for the title In the afternoon. \"      \u25a0\nS. A. Maddocka, Bmer Carrothers.\nW. Blane and Don Clark survived\nthe opening round of first flight\nplay, and are paired In lemi-final\nmatches next Sunday, with the final\nin the afternoon.\nHORTON WINS FLIGHT ,\nR. E. Horton defeated Alex Allan\nin the final of the'second flight to\ntake that divisional title, and C. H.\nStark took the honors in the third\nflight by beating W. T. Fothering-\nham. _ \u25a0   *\nIn the ladles' play for the Ruth\nArmstrong Rose BowL Mri. B.\nTownshend of Willow Point, defending titlist, and Mrs. Harold Lakes,\nare Itill In the running and will\nmeet for the championship during\nthe week. Mrs. John Cartmel took\nIhe consolation event.\nIn one of the day's best matches,\nT. R. Wilson defeated Elmer Car-\nrotheri on the eighteenth green In\nthe championship flight after a close\nmatch. Each player held a two-hole\nlead at one time or another. Wilson\nwas one up as they approached the\neighteenth tee, but Carrothers \"rimmed\" the eighteenth. hole, without\nmaking It, for a par four,, giving\nhim a half, tnd the rrtatch wai over,\nWilion the winner.      \u2022     ,\nB. Townshend of Willow Point\nhad tough luck when, he wai confined to bed during the weekend\nand had to default his games.\nTownshend proved a dark horse\nIn the Labor Day tournament, and\npromised to make a good showing.\nIn the current tourney.\nWATSON EXTENDED\nHarold Lakes made Bob Watson\nreally extend himself to win a berth\nIn the championihip semi-finals.\nLakes shot a 34, one over par, to\nhold Watson even for nine holes.\nWatson surged ahead during' the\nsecond, and the game finished on\nthe seventeenth. Watson carded a\n70 for 18 holes against Lakes' 13.\nRon Andrews bowed out to T. R.\nWilson, losing three and two on the\nsixteenth.\nCarl Carlson defeated Gord Allan\non the sixteenth hole to move into\nthe semi-finals In a match In which\nneither player did credit to himself.\nJimmy Allan earned his way into\nthe semis against Carlson by defeating L. S. Bradley. Allan wai\ntaking no chances and blasted a 32\n-one under par during the first\nnine holes. . - 1\nIn winning the second flight, Horton let Allan gain an early lead,\nbut he cut lt down and established\na one-hole lead at the turn; From\nthen on Horton never lott his lead\nalthough Allan continued doggedly\non his heels.\nIn the first flight, Blane turned\nthe heat on Jack Stark With a first\nround score of 36 to gain a substantial lead, which he held throughout\nMen's results follow:      ,\nCHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT\u2014\nRound 1\u2014Carl Carlson beat J! B.\nStark, G. F. Allan beat Roy Pollard, Ron Andrews beat O. G. Gallaher, T. R. Wilson beat Elmer Carrothers. Jimmy Allan beat W. Blane,\nL. S. Bradley beat B. Townshend,\nHarold Lakes beat S. A. Mad-locks,\nRobert Watson beat Don Clark.\nRound .-Carlson beat G. F. Allan, Wilson beat Andrews, J. Allan\nbeat Bradley. Watson beat Lakes.\nFIRST FLIGHT-\nRound 1\u2014Elmer Carrothers beat\nO. G. Gallaher, W. Blane beat J. B,\nStark. Don ClPrk beat Roy Pollard.\nSECOND FLIC-HT-\nRound 1-A. H. Allan beat W. T.\nFotherlnghim, R. E. Horton beat\nC. H. Stark.\nFinal\u2014Horton beat Allen.\nTHIRD FLIGHT\u2014\nFlnal-C. H. Stark beat W. T\nFotheringham.\nLadies' results follow:\nCHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT-\nRound 1\u2014Mn. B. Townshend beat\nMrs. Jerman Hunt, Miss Connie\nSmith beat Mrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs.\nBob Watspn beat Mrs. John Cartmel,\nMrs. Harold Lakes beat Mrs. Don\nClark.\nRound  2\u2014Mrs. Townshend   beat\nMiss Smith, Mrs. Lakes beat Mrs.\nWatson.\nCONSOLATION FLIGHT-\nRound 1\u2014Mrs. John Cartmel beat\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. Don Clark\nbeat Mrs: Jerman Hunt\nFinal\u2014Mrs. Cartmel beat Mra\nClark.    \u2022\nMonetary System\nDepends on Outcome\nPHILADKLPHIA, Sept. 15 (AP)-\nDr. F. Cyril James, Vlce-ChanceUor\nand Principal of McGill University,\ndeclared today thtt in international\nmonetary standard \"based on gold''\nshould be established after the current war it the democracies triumph.\nIf Germiny wins, he laid there\nWill be a world of \"regional'' autarchies in which gold \"will be useless except for economic decoration.\" \\\nDr. James addressed memben of\nthe. American Bar Association,\nwhose 63rd annual convention hert\nended yesterday, at a meeting arranged by the University of Pennsylvania in connection with ltt .bicentennial celebration.     \u25a0\u00bb -'\nWhether the United States' $21,-\n000,000,000 gold' hoard will prove\n\"stupendous folly,\" or the 'most\nconstructive contribution to the future welfare of the United States and\nall mankind\" depend! on the war's\noutcome, ht said.\nB. Meakins Dies;\nC.P.R. Employee\nal Nakusp, Kelson\nBenjamin Meakine of Nelson, for\n26 years a resident of Nakusp and\nNelson, died Saturday at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital. Though in\nindifferent health for some time' he\nhad been seriously 111 for a snort\ntime, and was in Hospital only six\ndays. .\nMr, Meakins was born In London\nin 1883, snd came to Canada 28\nyears ago. After two years at Winnipeg-.he moved West to Nakusp,\nwhere he remained untjl 11 yean\nago.\n.When he established at Nakusp\nhii chief .Interest waa ranching.\nSome 22 or 23 years ago he entered, the Canadian Pacific Railway\nservice at Nakusp shipyards ind\nsubsequently was employed with\nsection, crews working out of Nakusp. He wu promoted to foreman\nand transferred to the Lardeau\nbranch of the railway and subsequently was transferred to' Troup\nJunction, five miles East of Nelson. He was a member of the Railway Maintenance of Way Brotherhood. He established residence in\nNelson about 11 years ago.\nMr. Meakins leaves a daughter,\nMary, in Nelson; three sons, George\nand Walter in Vancouver, and\nDavid in Kelson; and three sisters\nand a brother in England. Mrs.\nMeakins died six years ago.   '<\n\u2022     a*\nion\nSpecialists\nCity Drug Co.\nPHONE M\n\u25a0OX 460\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY EXPKRI-\nenced general. 3 adults, good\nwages. P. O, Box 198, Nelson.\n\u00bbSS$SS&SSSSSS9)9&t&StMe\u00bb9S*\u00bb%<.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nl*SS----Stt\u00ab\u00ab-S-_\u00ab-J\u00abSSS\u00abS_\u00ab\u00ab\nSmythe's Pharmacy open tonight\nPhont 1.\nHarold A. Foulds - Electrician\nContracting. Repairs. Phone DM.\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH\n666, F. H. Smith, 351 Baker Street\nHear Mr. Frank. Patch of Cranbrook at First Baptist each night at\n7:45 through Friday. Bright singing!\nCome to the whist drive and dance\ntonight at the Odd Fellows' Hall.\nProceeds to the Salvation Army\nfor relief fund.   .\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts incurred by anyone other than\nmyself from this date, September 16.\nDUDLEY E. PERLEY.\nTable tennis time is here! We\nhave a full stock of complete sets,\nextra bats and balls. Hipperson\nHardware Company.\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nMEAKINS, Benjamin- \u2014 Pasied\naway Saturday. Body rests at Somen Funeral Home until Tuesday\nwhen service will be held at 2 p.m..\nRev. Foster Hilliard officiating.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nANNABLE, John Edward\u2014Pasied\naway September 13. Funeral ser\nvices'will be held In Trinity United\nChurch today, September 16, at\n2 p.m. Rev. J. A. Donnell officiating. Clark's Funeral Chapel in\ncharge of arrangements.\nBomb Flares Light Up Shy Over London\nGreit firei throughout London light up the iky In thll dramatic\npicture, taken aa German warplanes rained incendiary and high ex-\nplosive bombi on tht British capital. Pillars of flame guided Nail airmen to the target.\nTrains Late by\nGilpin Washout;\nRepair Speedy\nSaturday'! Kettle Valley passenger trains, both Eastbound and Westbound, were held up for several\nhoun by a washout eight or nlnt\nmiles this side of Grand Forks, between Billings md Gilpin.\nI A cloudburst about 2:90 or 2:40\npm. resulted In such a volume of\nwater pouring across the track it\nthe point in question, thit the earth\nfill was partly washed ont.\nSection crews of the locality repaired the track, and had it ready\ntor operation In about five bouri.\nThe train from the Coast wu\nheld at Grand Forks until the line\nwas open. It arrived at Nelson about\n1 am. Sundiy. The , Westbound\ntrain from Nelion was not far from\nthe site of the trouble when lt occurred, and waited there while the\nrepairs were being made.\nMANCHESTER, (CP).\u2014A Seychelles Island tortoise, Weighing 200\npounds, reputed to be the largest\nof Its kind In Europe, wu brought\nhere from the South of England.\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nWe Specialize on\nVelvet Dresses\n327 Baker   .     Phont 28-\nELfCTRICAL WIRING\nSUPPLIES\nStandard Electric\n433 Josephine 81 Phont IN\nTOPCOAT!\nTIME\nNow Is the time to\nthinking of that new TopJ\ncoat for Fell and WlnterJ\nOur stock Is now co\nplete. See the new mi\nels and patterns, Raglan\nwrap arounds and belt*\nmodels.\n925.00 to f 30.50\nEMORY'S LTD.\nGRENFELL'S CAFI\nFresh\nHuckleberry PJ\nand a Good Cup of Tei\n1931CHFVKOI\n, COACH\nMany Miles of Satiates,\ntlon tor only   -.,\u201e,.,']',,.\n^owernv-Cuthhert Ll\nOop Pott Off let and Humt Hot\nFIRE INSURANCE\nRATES ARE DOWN\n8et Ui for Fire and Automol\n\u2022 -_   '   Cover.,\nRobertson Realty Co., Ltt\nBRICKS\nBULK\nAT YOUR PALM DEALS)\nREVELc**01**\nSUNDAE\nIce Creai\nRow If tht thst to fumigatt\nWith SMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugs\nPrescription Druggist Phone 1\nThere's a Big Difference\nBetween a Crease Job and a\nGuaranteed Lubrication\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n206 Baker St SERVICE   Phone 1f_\nLambert's\nht\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nCUT FLOWERS, WEDDlM\nAND FUNERAL DESIGN:\nPhont KITCHENE\n<4\u00bbtAMttmtt4M9t\u00bbt\u00abmtmWt\nVIC\nSEE\nGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPer all your needs In plumb\nIng   repilrt,   ilteratloni.   im\nInstillations.   '\nPh. 115 101 Vlctorli St\nWtW-Powefi!\nCompany, Limited\nThe Rome of Good Lumber\nLumber Lath Shingles,\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nTelephone Mt}\nFoot of Stanley St.\nTONIGHT   1\n6:00 to 6:30 P.M.\n\"Summertime\"- with, Geoffrey\nWaddington's Orchestra        *jl\n7:15 to 7:30 P.M.\nTalk by Leslie Howard\n9:00 to 9:30 P.M.\nJean de Rimanociy's String Orchestra:\nin \"Classics for Today\"\nOpening Tomorrow\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND MOST UP TO DATE\/\n\" RESTAURANT THE    \u2022\nCLUB CAFE\n424 Baker St.\n\"Formerly the Rex\"\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED      1\nAND REDECORATED\nOur entire proceeds for tomorrow will be divided\nbetween the Red Cross, the Bomber Fund and the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nYou'll enjoy our finer foods.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_09_16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0414340","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1940-09-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1940-09-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}