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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" T1*-\"   1NCIM  P'P^,-W,\u00bbW,,IL\u00ab\"\nEmpire Pauses lo Remember War\nDeid.\u2014Page 6\nBritain Builds Up Near Eaat\nForces.\u2014Page 8\nJapan May Pren Indo-China for\nMon Concessions.\u2014Pago 6\n*' \"'M\nR.A.F.STRIK\ni\\\nUtter Rout   Is\nanded Italians\n13 of 26 Axis Planes Destroyed During Raids\non Britain Were Italian; Eight Bombers,\nFive Fighters Are Destroyed\nBy ROBERT BRUNELLE\u2014Associated Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (AP)\u2014The Italian Air Force, joining the Germans in Armistice Day raids on these islands lost 13\nof 26 Axis planes blasted out of the air during the day, the\nAir Ministry announced tonight.\nAn \"utter rout\" was the way the Ministry summed up\nrepulse of the Italian attacks, aimed chiefly at English Channel\nshipping while other Axis squadrons of up to 150 planes\nranged far inland throughout the day.\nA Channel gale halted the night assaults \"early and\nLondon's anti-aircraft batteries went quiet after five daylight\nalarms.\nSure Roosevelt\nWill Keep War\nPledge-Willkie\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP). -\nWendell L. Willkie said tonight\nhe knew that President Rooievelt\nwould keep the \"solmen pledge\"\nmade by both candidates during\nthe election campaign to keep the\nUnited States out ot war unless\nattacked.\n\"Mr. Roosevelt and I both promised the people in the course of the\ncampaign that if we were elected\nwe would keep this country out of\nwar unless attacked. Mr. Roosevelt\nwai   reelected   and   this   solemn\npledge for him, I know will be ful-\nlilled and I know  the American\npeople desire him to keep It sacred.\"\nThe defeated Republican  Presi:\ndential  cindidate  suggested  \"five\nI Iteps for our Government to take\n\u25a0 Immediately''   to   \"counteract   Up\nI threat of inflation and to correct\niome oi our economic errors.\"\nt .'JF.i-st, til. Federal .**{__r_diti__es\nexcept those tor national defence\ntnd necessary relief ought to be\ncut to the bone. . . every effort\n\u2022hould be made to substitute for\nrelief, productive jobs.\n\"Second, the building of new\nplants and new machnlery for the\ndefence program ihould be accomplished \u2022\u2022 fir is possible by\nprivtte capital. There ihould be\nno nationalizing under the guise\nof defence of any American Industry with a consequent outlay ol\nFederal funds.\n\"Third, taxes should be levied so\nts to approach as nearly as possible\nthe pay-as-you-go plan.\n\"Fourth, taxes and Government\nrestrictions should be adjusted to\n-take the brakes off private enterprise so as to give it freedom, under\nwise regulation, to release new investments and new energies and\nihus to Increase the national income. . .\n\"Fifth, and finally, our Government must change Us punitive attitude toward Doth little and big\nbusinessmen. Regulations there\nmust be\u2014we of the opposilion have\nconsistently recommended that. But\nthe day of witch hunting is over.\nFactor Joins R.C.A.F.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 11 (CP)-Samuel\nFactor, Liberal Member of Parliament for Toronto-Spadina since\n1930, has Joined the Royal Canadian Air Force with the rank of\ntemporary flying officer. He is the\n17th member of the Ormmons to enlist in active service since the war\nitarted.\nThe bag of Mussolini's planes\u2014\neight bomben and five tighten\u2014\nthe first recorded in the tir siege of\nBritain, was accomplished by the\nR. A. F. without the losi of t single\nplane, the Air Ministry announced.\nTwo British craft were loit to\ntights with the Germans.\nTo make the R. A. F.'i ichleve-\nment more notable, the Air Ministry\nsaid thi Italians were routed by\nonly two squadrons, one of which\nknocked down seven of the Fascist\ncraft\n\"Britain's former ally, Italy, cele.\nbrated Armistice Day by sending a\nnumber of bombers and fighters lo\nattack a convoy off the Thames Est\nuary,\" the Air Ministry news ser-\nvice said In recounting the battle.\n\"Hurricane pilots of the R. A. F,\nFighter Command, who hive been\nlonging for thli particular event,\nshot down eight bomberi tnd five\ntighten. Most of the Italian planei\nwere ihot down Into the sei. The\ncraft wen Ciproni 135 bomberi\n\u2022nd CR-42 tighten.\n\"At least 12 German aircraft also\nhave been destroyed tn attacks on\nconvoys. Four' Were northers md\nseven were tighten. One wai t\nseaplane.\"   \u2022        . -,       ':\u25a0\n\u25a0ih\"addltlwi'tt-thtl pTahWdwtf-yed\nby the R. A. F., a German Dornier\nbomber was shot down near t Midlands town by a Home Guard with\na rifle.\nAfter stabbing it Britain dur\nIng moit of the diy, thi rtlders\nconcentrated late In the ifternoon\non the Thames Estuary district.\nOne town was bombed ind ma-\nchine-gunned by four Messerschmitts. The homes of five worken were demolished in \u25a0 bombing attack.\nThe Messerschmitts destroyed \u25a0\nchapel where the civilian population\nhad taken refuge but all escaped injury. British planes swept to the\nChannel and drove off the raiders.\nIn the London area a' printing\nworks was smashed and a number\nof casualties inflicted. Two hour,\nafter the attack rescue workers still\nwere digging into the debris for the\ndead and injured.\nLetters to Trainees\non Way to Interior\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 (CP)-The\nfirst batch of 2000 registered letters .. be sent out calling the next\ngroup of military trainees to report\nat the Gordon Head and Vernon\ncamps Nov. 22 was on is way today\nThe letters, mostly to men living\nin outlying parts of the Province,\nwere sent Saturday from the offices\nof Registrar C. G. Pennock here\nNotices to men living in Vancouver, in some points of the interior,\nand on Vancouver island will g_\nout early this week.\n10,000 Earthquake Vidiim; Oil\nOulpuf Will Be Hit Drastically\nNEW YORK. Nov. 11 (AP). -\nVictims of the Rumanian earthquake are estimated at 10.000 and\noil production in that stricken\ncountry will be curtailed drastically fur at least several weeks, the\nBritish Broadcasting Corporation\nsaid tonight in a broadcast heard\nhere by the National Broadcasting\nCompany. The BBC said it quoted\nthe latest Bucharest reports\nNEW 8H0CK8\nBUCHAREST, Rumania, Nov\n11 (AP). \u2014 Huge fires burned out\nthe centre of Bucharest as new\nearth shocks spread fresh terror\nin earthquake-devastated Ruman'.o\ntonight and made more dangerous the national task of succoring\nthousands of injured and homeless\nSoldiers, Iron Guardists, police\nand voluntary workers combined\nforces to dig wherever possible\nIn the flaming ruins for victims,\nliving and dead.\nThis morning a tremblor slowly\nbuckled a 12-storey apartment hou.*e\nin Bucharest. The residents fled to\n\u2022afety. The nearby Carlton Apartment building was a mass of flam\ning debris and a pyre for 200 tenants trapped in its collapse early\nSunday.\nThe apartment building fire\nspread and appeared out of control\nDust explosions hampered efforts\nand hundreds of German soldiers\nand Rumanian firemen to localize\nit and a square mile around the\nblaze was i roped off. Numerous\nother fires were reported.\nThe most serious was at Galati, on\nthe Danube River, where the death\ntoll was not estimated.\nSixty-five per cent of the homes\nIn Giurgiu, chief Danubiaf...oll port,\nwere demolished and then. were\nmany casualties.\nSeventy per cent of the houseS'tt\nFocsani were knocked down, when.\nthere are 35,000 homeless and fit\nleast 22 dead, with hundreds of\ninjured.\nA cold wave tonight added to in_\nsuffering.\nAfter a survey, oil men said dam\naged reservoirs had spilled oil over\nwide areas-while the buckling earto\nhad caused gushers in many places\nDestruction ofXhe entire oil field-\nwas possible, they said, if a serious\nblaze got under way\nALASKA HIGHWAY\n\"MUST\" BE\nBUILT\nPORTLAND, Ore- Nov. 11\n(AP). \u2014 Mal-O-mn MacDonald,\nFairbanks, Alaska, associate engineer for the Alaska Highway\nCommission, urged construction of the Alaska-Unlt-d States\nHighway as t \"msul\" defense\nmeasure todty.\nHe isserted thtt Russia, Japan and Germany hive tl) been\nactive in the North region, and\nsaid Alaskt was vital to the\nUnited Stites for its resources\nand as a defence outpost. He\nsaid he would appear before the\nU. S.-Canadlan Defence Commission in Seittle Tuesday.\nCaplain, Chinese\nWheel Man, Save\nEmpress ol Japan\nGunners Sure Attacker\nDid Not Escape\nUndamaged\nBy DOUGLAS AMARON\nCimdlin Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP.-Cable)-\nThe skill tnd coolness of the Empress ot Japan's captain tnd hit\nChinese quartermaster were credited\ntonight with saving the former Ca\nnadian Pacific Steamship's Pacific\nflagship from more than slight damage when she was attacked by an\nenemy plane in the Atlantic last\nSiturday.\nCrew tnd passengen of the 26,000\nton liner, which reached I Britiih\nport safely yesterday, tgreed that\nCaptain J, W. Thomas of Vineouver\nand his quartermaster were heroes\nof the dive-bombing attack.\n\"Our captain's coolness wu marvellous,\" t crew member uid.\n\"The iklllful way he zigztgged\nthe ship  from  the  dinger  tnd\navoided a direct -hit lived .us all.\n\"; Tht Chinese quartermaster at the\n''\u25a0 vrtWel-wi. * *\u00bbWi1-jjfi-lTr*_WW\nhis stomach to dodge machine-gun\nfire, he carried out perfectly every\norder from the skipper.\"\nThe plane attacked the liner on\nSaturday morning. Pasiengcn\nwere walking the deck after breakfast when claxoni warned them\nto take cover. Women and children went quickly to their shelter\nIn the lower deck. The youngsters\nsang until the raid was over.\n\"Our anti-aircraft gun put a good\nshow and some people with rifles\nalso had a shot at the Nazi as he\ndived to attack,\" a crewman said\n\"One bomb struck the rail a glancing blow and there was some damage to lifeboats by machine-gun\nfire.\"\nThe plane was seen to be rocking\nabout after a shell burst above the\nwing. Gunners were certain the\nraider did not.escape unscathed.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 <CP). -\nCapt. J. W. Thomas, master of the\nEmpress of Japan when she was\ntaken over by the Admiralty last\nyear, ls the third man to command\nthe big Canadian Pacific flagsh-p\nsince she was launched in' 1930. He\nhad resided here since the close of\nthe last war.\nFires Roar. Coats\nPooular as Mercury\nSlides to New Low\nNelson furnaces were blazing and\npedestrians huddled into overcoats\nagainst the wind and chill of the\nseason's coldest day Monday. For\nthe second day In succession the\ntemperature was never above the\n28-degree mark, and the minimum\nof 12 degrees was the season's lowest so far.\nLate flowen and grass were crisp\nwith frost, the frozen ground and\nsmall puddles crunched underfoot,\nand a small edging of ice rimmed\nthe lake shore and Cottonwood\nCreek mouth around the C. P. R.\nFlats. Citizens were wary after the\nsudden freezing snap of the weekend and car radiators were drained\nand fires were built up to protec'\nwater pipes overnight.\nCrowds attended the Remembrance Day exercises at the cenotaph in bright sunshine, the su*h\ntempering the cold. The clear sky\nhowever made conditions ideal for\nobserving the phenomenon of the\nplanet Mercury passing in front ot\nthe sun. The sun shone over four\nhours.\nRetakinq Empire\nSays De Gaulle\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP)\u2014Gen\nCharles De Gaulle, whose \"Free\nFrench\" Forcei have captured\nLibreville, most important port\nIn French Equatorial Africa, said\nin a broadcast message tonight\nfrom the Belgian Congo \"we tre\nretaking the French Empire bl\nby bit,\" the British Broadcasting\nCorporation reported.\nLondon Children Evacuated to the Country\nAs bombers of the Axli powers renew fierce itticks on London, more mothers tnd children are being\nevacuated to the country. A policewoman Is shown, left, carrying a youngster to a waiting bus, while a\npoliceman follows closely with another small evacuee.   Not  the   identification   tag   around   her   neck.\nItalians Retreat to Albania\nin Disorder; Lose All Areas\nMOLOTOFF TALKS\nWill BE \"WORLD\ntWftPHI SCOPt\nTurkey Hints German\nAid to Italy Is\nImminent\nREASON FOR VISIT\nBy LOUIS P. LOCHNER\nAssoclited Press -tiff Writer\nBERLIN, Nov. 11 (AP). - Soviet Premier Vyacheslaff Molotoff\nand German officials will open\nconferences here tomorrow for\nthe purpose of\" discussing and\nagreeing on policies of \"world\nwide scope,\" informed Nazis said\ntoday, with the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis and British-guaranteed\nTurkey high on the agenda.\n\"Molotoffs visit doubtless goes\nbeyond mere recognition of the international position of the Soviet\nUnion and the positive friendship\nbetween the two powers,\" said\nDienst aus Deutschland. commentary with close Foreign Office connections. \"The general atmosphere\nattending this visit seems to be a\nprogressive development of the\nRussian position.\"\nIf this last cryptic sentence has\nany meaning, it would seem to indicate Russia will be invited to play\nan active part in creating the \"new\norder\" of which Germany and Italy\nhave made themselves sponsors in\nEurope and Africa and under\nwhich, by the treaty of Berlin, Japan is recognized by the Axis as the\nleader in the Far East.\n\"It may be assumed,\" the commentary uld, \"the Berlin talks\nwill reflect the leading function\nof the Soviet Union within Its\ngrossraum' (Iti vast connected\niret).\"\nMolotoff reached \"German territory\" late tonight when his special train pulled into Maklinia which\nlast year wai part of Poland. He is\ndue in Berlin in the morning. Hitler\nsent a leader of his blackshirted\nElite Guard to greet the Russian\nPremier.\n\t\n\t\n- ___.\nISTANBUL, Turkey, Nov. 11 -\n(AP). \u2014 The Turklih official\nridlo ind Preu Indicated tonight\nthit they believe t German military move In the Balkans to ild\nItaly Ii Imminent ind thit this\nmight bi the essential reaion for\nthe Berlin visit to the Russian\nPremier, Vyacheslaff Molotoff.\n.Although Istanbul was filled\nwith rumors of German demands\nupon Yugoslavia for the free pss-\nuge of troops through that country,\nneither the radio nor the newspsp-\nen hinted that Turkey would act if\nGerman forces did enter Yugoslavia.\nMost foreign observers in Turkey\nheld the belief that Turkey would\nmove only It Bulgarli tcted.\nMechanized Material\nBogs Down in\nMire\nATHENS, Nov. 11 (AP). -\nGreece'! mountain defenders have\n\u2022 beaten the .Italian invaders ana\nthey \"are retreating in disorder toward Albania,\" the Greek radio\ndeclared today. Despite superior\nforces, it said, the Italians \"have\nlost the battle in all sectors.\"\nHer leaders feel now not only\nhave Greek defences proved themselves under fire but also that in\nthe four rainy months ahead Italy's mechanized forces can only\nmire in the mud of Greek mountain roads,\nAlthough the Greek radio said that\ninvaders fled before Greek mountain fighters, charging with bayonets\nand hand grenades, other reports\nindicated cavalry had played o\nsingularly large role for modern\nwarfare.\nGreek cavalrymen were said to\nhave harassed the Italian forces,\ncutting their communications ano\nsplitting them into small groups\nwhich fell easy victims in infantry\nThe mountainous Pindus sector\nwas said to have proved an excellent cover for the quick manoeuvres\nof the mounted troops and poor\nterrain for lumbering tanks and\nmechanized equipment.\nAnother batch of 600 Italian prisoners was taken to Salonika, Agean\nSea port.\nThe Greek High Command said\nits air force had made reconnaissance flights over Italian territory\nand hod bombed Italian ships and\nInstallations at Valona, Albania.\nThe High Command also said Italian planes unsuccessfully bombed\nthe Greek front and killed and\nwounded some civilians in raids on\nthe interior.\nLate Flashes\nNEW YORK, Nov. Jl (AP). \u2014\nMackay Radio reported tonight\nthat the British freighter Bal-\nmore wirelessed at 8:18 p.m. MST:\n\"Almost gone, 17 men on board, no\nboats, do your best.\"\nZAGREB, Yugoslavia, Nov. 11\n(AP) \u2014 The newspaper Vecer reported today from Varna, Bulgaria's\nchief Black Sea port, that \"many\"\nGerman soldiers were stationed\nthere and in surrounding territory.\nVarna, \u2022 popular resort, is close to\nRumania, where unofficial reports\nhave said the German army has 18\ndivisions (about 250,000 men).\nBERLIN, Nov. 11 (AP).-Nau\nspokesmen claimed five vessels\ntotalling about 37,000 tons were\nsunk today when German dive\nbombers attacked a British convoy of Harwich, on England's East\ncoast. (There was no confirmation\nof this report from British\nsources).\nCAIRO, Egypt, Nov. 11 (AP).-\nAn air raid alarm kept Cairo on\nthe alert from 7:45 to 10:10 p.m.\ntonight.\nU. S. MAY BREAK\nOFF TALKS WITH\nSOVIET RUSSIA\nMolotoff Visit Seen as\nMove in Axis\nFavor\nTURKEY CENTRE\nOF SPECULATION\nBy J. C. STARK\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 11 (AP).\nSlow-moving talks between the\nUnited States ind Soviet Russia,\ntowird t better understanding\nmiy be broken off entirely, It wis\nbelieved tonight, as \u2022 result of So\nvlet Premier Vyacheiliff Molo\ntoff's visit to Germiny,\nThe visit wis interpreted gen\nenlly here is in Indication thtt\nRussia wss prepared to colltbor\nate more closely with the Axis\nPowers and that efforts of the\nUnited Statei ind Greit Britain\nto Improve their relations with\nMoicow were nearly futile.\nState Department officials were\nsilent on the implications of Molotoffs visit and its probable effect\nqn the negotiations which have been\nin progress here for some time.\nIn most quarters, however, lt was\nconsidered probable that the\ngroundwork had been laid in advance for Molotoffs talks with Hitler and. other German leaden on\nmeans of increasing their collaboration.\nSpeculation on the main purpoie\nof Molotoffs journey centred on\nTurkey, nettral ally of Great Britain and guardian of the Dardanelles.\nDespite a widely-held belief that\nRussia would never accede to German control of the Straits leading\ninto the Black Sea from the Mediterranean or extension of German\ninfluence to neighboring Turkey,\ncertain informed quarters appeared\nto be expecting some such development.\nThe possibility also wu idvtnc\ned Russia might be prodded by\nGerminy Into \u2022 closer relationship\nwith Japan through \u2022 non-tg\ngreuion pact, or \u2022 partnership In\nthe triple alliance cf Japan, Germiny end Italy.\nUnited States policy toward Rui-\nsia veered suddenly last Summer\nfrom condemnation of the Soviet\nabsorption of the three Baltic States\nto an active effort to Improve relations.\nThe talks of Sumner Welles, Undersecretary of State, with Constan-\ntine Oumansky, Soviet Ambassador,\nwere said to have been aimed first\nat removal of trade difficulties with\na view to later discussion of broader questions.\nTho only apparent result so far\nhas been release of some $7,000,000\nof machine tools for export to Russia.\nFire Trails Are Left\nAcross European\nand African Area\nRound Trip to Danzig Longest Attempted\nAcross Nazi Areas; Naples Blasted;\nRange Along Albanian Coast\nBy EDWIN STOUT\u2014Associated Presi Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (AP)\u2014Striking into Axis territory\nnever before touched by the war, Royal Air Force bombers\nSunday night blazed trails of fire across Europe and North\nAfrica in violent attacks on the broadest range they so far have\nattempted, the Government disclosed tonight.\nThe picture was filled in by reports from here and\nCairo, from the Air Ministry and the Admiralty.\nDriving through icy storms, British planes aimed new\nbombs at crucial military centres all across the German-held\nterritory \"from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay\" and East to\ndistant Danzig, the Air Min-1\nistry announced\nImportant supply bases in Albania for Italian troops attacking\nGreece tnd the great Italian industrial city of Naples as well as Fascist outposts in Africa felt the impact of British bombs, the Air Ministry's news service tdded.\nCagliari, on the Italian island of\nSardinit, wis bombed by British\nplanes  from  the  tlrcraft  Carrier\nArk Royal, the Admiralty disclosed.\nMeasuring more than 1400 miles\nacross the perilous North Sea and\nover   land   dominated   by   Nail\nguns, the round trip to Danzig\nwas the longest ever attempted\nby British bombers across German trets. Dtnzig, once-free city\nof the Polish Corridor, was the exploding point of the present war.\nBetween the English Channel and\nEast Germany, R.A.F, pilots damped\ntheir destructive loads, the Air Ministry laid, on mtjor plants feeding\noil, munitions tnd planei to the\nGerman war marchine.\n-OHectlvei Included the Krupp\nAran Worki at Essen In Germany,\nthe Fokker aircraft plant at Am-\nsterdamMn German-held Holland,\nand oil plants at Gelsenkirchen,\nShipping wu attacked it Kiel\nnetr the Baltic, tnd it the Rhine\nRiver port of Dulseberg. Railroad\njunction! were the target! it Dtnzig, Dessau, Munster, Mannheim\ntnd Dresden.\nOther tttacki were mtde on\nBremen, the \"invulon ports\" of\nLorient, Cherbourg, Le Havre,\nDunkerque and Flushing, and 14\nGerman tir bases.\nIt was the first visit of British\nbombers to Dresden.\nFive British planes were missing\nafter the extensive operations the\nMinistry said.\nThe British planes from the\nbroid flying deck of the Ark Royil, the Admiralty disclosed, destroyed twe \"shadowing enemy\ntlrcrtft\" which tried uniuoceii-\nfully to bomb the ctrrier. The\nBritiih fighters probibly damaged othen.\nThe hirbor md ilrdrome of the\nSardinian port of Cagliari were hit,\nthe Admiralty laid.\nAll-planes relumed Safely to the\nArk Royal.\nAt Naples, raided for the third\ntime in 10 days, the Air Ministry\nnews service said, the principal targets were the railway junction, station and an oil refinery.\nA communique of the Middle\nEast headquarters at Cairo, announcing this and other numerous raids, said lhat by attacking\nharbors used by Italy for her invasion of Greece, the Royal Air\nForce is giving \"very effective\nsupport for Britain's newest ally.\"\nAcross the Adriatic Sea, RA.F.\nbombers also ranged the Albanian\ncoast, the Air Ministry news service\nsaid In amplifying the more formal\nstatement.\nMary Harlin, Once\nof Nelson, Dies in\nU. S. Car Crash\nSPOKANE, Wash., Nov. tl (AP).\n\u2014 Two 19-year-old University o_\nIdaho students, both from Spokane,\nwere killed and two others were\ninjured late today when the automobile in which they were riding\ncrashed Into a parked truck on the\nPalouse Highway near Rosalia.\nThe dead were Mary Hartin and\nFrank Schwartz, tioth died en routs\nto hospitals in Spokane. Miss Hartin\nis the daughter of Dr, and Mrs.\nDavid Hartin of Spokane, formerly\nof Nelson, B. C.\nRobert Hoesley, 19, driver of tha\ncar. and Loren Rice, the fourth\npasseeger In the car were .lightly\ninjured' and taken to their homei\nhere.\nSpokane District State Patrolmen\nsaid Hoesly was too dazed to explaia\nwhat happened, but Hoesly's brother.\nWen, said the car had rounded a\ncurve in the highway facing directly\ninto the sinking sun and that the\nblinded driver had crashed into the\nback of the parked truck.\nWord of the death of Miss Hartin\nwas received by friends of the former Nelson family here Monday\nnight. Miss Hartin was a Nelson-\nborn girl and had visited the District many times with her parenti,\nsince the Hartin family left Nelson\nabout 15 years ago.\nDr. Hartin practiced in Nelion\nseveral years ago with his father.\nHe visited Kaslo for some time thla\nSummer convalescing from a heart\nillness. Hilliard Hartin. City Cleric\nof Kaslo, Is Dr. Hartin's brother.\nDies in Mixer Blades\nYORKTON, Sask., Nov. 11 (CF)\u2014\nNick Morozott, 50, of Yorkton wai\nkilled Sunday night when caught in\nthe blades of a machine mixing\nblack top for the runways at No. 11\nservice air training field here. He\nwas cleaning out the mixing chamber when caught by the whirling\nblades.\nMorozoff is survived by his widow\nand live children.\nMissing Man Safe\nCOURTENAY, B. C Nov. ll\n(CP). \u2014 Provincial Police hero\nsaid tonight that a search party\nseeking Albert Heighes, 30-year-\nold Courtenay resident in tha\nCamp No. three district 25 miles\nNorth of here, had met the missing man late today as he was making his own way out of the wood!\nwhere he was lost since yesterday.\nHoliday Six-Day Leave Planned\nby Army \"as Far as Possible\"\nOTTAWA, Nov. 11 (CP) .\u2014National Defence Headquarters announced tonight that \"as far as possible,\nconsistently with the necessities of\nthe wartime situation,\" Christmas or\nNew Year's leave will be given to\nmembers of the Canadian Active\nService Force serving in Canada.\nSuch extra letve will tmount to\n\u2022Ix dayi, the Department's statement uld, a.id not mere thin 40\nper cent of the itrength of any\nunit, In my rink, will be granted\nleave tt one time,\nDistrict officers commanding have\nbeen notified of their authority to\ngrant leave on. the basis of these\ndirections, in conference where\nnecessary with general officers\ncommanding the Atlantic and Pacific army command.\n\"It is expressly stipulated that\nwhether leave can be granted will\ndepend, in all cases, on the nature\nof the service being undertaken by\nthe man concerned, the necessity\nof having certain types of training\ncompleted Bpeedily. and the. importance of the service from the\npoint of view of the defence of Canada and of war conditions generally,\" the statement said.\n'To allow every Canadian serving in the armed forces in Canada\nto go home at Christmas or for the\nNew Year's holiday would Involve\nthe absence from their units- of\nsome men for as many as 14 days.\nLeaves of this length would result\nin a major disruption of training\nand unduly inlerfere with their important duty in the service of thte\nstate. . . .\nThe statement said all ranks on\nleave during Christmas and New\nYear's will be able to obtain return trip tickets to their destination at the cost of a one-way fare,\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0      i\t\n \u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u2014\"---\n\t\n*****\nWt\n' *  *- -        \u25a0    -      . - \u25a0\"\u25a0\nNELSON DISTRICT PAYS TRIBUTE\nTO FALLEN OF FIRST AND SECOND\nGREAT WARS, REMEMBRANCE DAY\nLargest Parade to\nCenotaph in Years;\nService at Civic\nTribute to the fallen heroei of\n1914 to 1918 and to todiy'i soldiers\nwho tre \"carrying the torch\" in tht\nBattle ot Britain wti paid by Nelson\nDiitrlct on Remembrance Diy with\nthe lirgeit Remembrance Day par-\n\u25a0 tde in years, the Impressively reverent laying of wreaths and silence\ntt the Nelton wir memoriil, tnd\nat i Remembrance service in the\nCivic Theatre.\nLARGE TURNOUT\n.The Itrgest company In years participated in the ceremony tt the\nCenotaph tnd tttended the subsequent memorial service, The Nelton\n' Bran Band, Veterans Guird of Can-\nadt, t district detachment of B.C.\nPolice, Pipen, Nelson High School\n\u25a0 eadeii, Junior High School cadets,\n'Scouts, Cubs and Girl Guides\nmtrched in the parade, and formed\naround the Cenotaph, while the\nWomen's Canaditn Training Corps,\nin t body, Kokanee Chapter I.O.D.E\ntnd representatives of the Civilian\nTraining Corps, attended the ceremony tnd lervlce.\nShortly before the eleventh hour,\nthe parade irrived at the Cenotaph\nand tha unite took itation, the ex-\naeovice men facing he memoriil and\nthe othera disposed tbout it. A two-\nminute lilence for the war deed was\n'observed, ending is the National\nAnthem wai pltyed by the Brass\nvfeind. Whili the Anthem was play-\ned, the Veterani' Guard presented\nEm.\nt Wreaths o_ Nelson patriotic organizations, the Canadian Legion,\nKokanee Chapter, I.O.D.E., Kootenay Ledge, No. 16, I.O.O.F., tnd\ntothen, ts well at some private\nIWraat-U, were depoiited. President\nJames Spencer deposited the Leg-\nIon wTetth, Mrs. John Cartmel, Resent, the I.O.D.E. wreath; and Fred\n\u2022Jlcholll the Odd Fellows' wreath,\ntitle ptrade then re-formed and\n'> --iniirched along Vernon Street to the\n\"Iteatr-.\nHOLD HIGH THE TORCH\nI Bringing a reminder ot the sacred\ntrust committed to the peoples of\nthe Empire to \"hold high the torch\"\nhanded to them by the fallen of\n\u2022the Flrit Oreit Wtr tnd the Second\nGreit Wtr, Rev. J. G. Holmes urged\n\"tttt C-iriitltns \"take up the quarrel\n\u2022wlh the foe\" until the principles of\nCod prevailed.\nRemembrance Day thla year had\ntiken on an added significance he\naaid, for It reminded of the sacred\ntrust committed not only by the\nglorious dead of 1914 to 1918. but\nby hose who have already laid down\ntheir Uvea in the Second Greet Wir\nNelion ind District names were il-\nreidy on the honor roll of the second conflict\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. NOV. 12. 1940-*\nWords of the fallen were to \"hold\nhigh the torch\" tnd \"take up our\nqutrrel with tht toe,\" he laid. It\nwai significant that tha fallen passed on ha torch\u2014the symbol of light\n\u2014for God had said \"I am the light\nof the world.\" The people ot the\nEmpire were at war to maintain\nChristianity, and their foe wti \u2022\npagan people believing that might\nwai right, and exalting the state tr\na position only God should occupy.\nVight until the principles ot God\nprevail, the speaker urged, and until\nit was certain the light of Christian\ncivilization would not be put out.\nHe stated his pleasure at teeing\na ltrge representation ot young people tt the commemoration. Employing the words of General Currie in\nhli orders ot March 27, 1918 on the\neve of the great advance, he gave\nthe young folk an Insight on the\nspirit ot the older generation in the\nfirst. struggle. God then and now\nwas the source of their strength.\nRIGHT OWN WRONGS\nThe present generation was committed to carry the torch of those\nwho gave their life for peace, said\nMayor N. C. Stibbs. He urged that\n\"we rededicate ourselves for the\nnew war\" and called for moral rearmament, and for a sense of responsibility for supplying the manpower, machine power and resources necessary for victory. Finally he\nurged that people everywhere right\nthe wrongs In their own lives; then\nstrive to build the world \".those\nheroes\" died to bring about.\"\nCoupled with the remembrance\nol the fallen In two conflicts ihould\nbe remembrance for the late Rt.\nHon. Neville Chamberlain, who died\nSaturday. The ex-Prime Minister\ndied striving for peace and to carry\nthe torch of those who died for\npeace.\nCANADA MUST\nPLAY PART\nPrompting Ctnidiins to \"get rid\not the complacency that exists tn\nthe minds of miny,\" H. E. Thiin,\nCintdian Legion speaker, urged ill\nCanadians who could still stand on\ntwo feet to do their bit, for \"before\nwe get the Hun to his knees, th-\nhorror of hii wtrftre wil surely\nbow the shoulders of Canadians\nwith its weight\" Mr. Thain spoke In\nplace of Dr, H, H. MacKenzie, who\nwas celled out of town.\nCantditna were fortuntte, tor tl\nthough miny Canadians had already\nfallen In the current conflict Ctn\nada generally had not been scratched\nby the war. It would not alwtys\nbe this way, for with the Empire\nforced to a total war by its ruth\nless enemy, \"Canada must surely\nplay a full part\"\nNot all heroes were fighting her\noei, he said, pointing out that the\nEmpire mourned a hero statesman\nin Mr, Chamberlain, as well aa her\nwar dead. He showed the Empire\ndid not want war, ha ahowed the\nEmpire would do ill It honorably\ncould without fighting, tnd ht \"did\nthe Empire well\" to itave off hoi-\ntilities to allow tor war preparations, Mr. Thain said.        '\nIn addition Canadlana muit not\nforget \"that wonder, that marvel,\nthat man among men, tha mtn\nwho ipsaks, acts tnd literally ll\nBritain. Winston Churchill.\"\n\"While tht Implrt hit such a\nman, and tha man haa such a\nbicklng,\" Mr, Thain andad, \"than\ntil can shout, 'There'll Alwayi Be\nAn Englind, tnd Englind Shall\nba Free'.\"\nPRAISES YOUTHS\nMr, Thain paid tribute to the\nnumbers of young people who attended the commemoration exercises and service. He especially congratulated the ichool cadets tn showing their willingness to take hold\nand help In \u2022 national response to\nthe Empire's need.\nLong applause followed thll\npraise.\n\"80 WHY NOT Wit\"\nMany wondered why the Remembrance Day ceremony wu cirried\non, whtt \"we htvt to remember,\nsaid Preiident James Spencer, when\nthanking the organizations and public for the splendid turnout, However there wu much to remember\nIt seemed like only yeiterdiy thtt\nthe husbands, brother! tnd fathers\nof miny preient were laid to reit\non foreign sod to protect the safely\nof those it home.\n\"They served to detth io why not\nwe?\"\nFollowing the singing of '0 Cmada' tnd tht opening remarks by\nMr. Spencer, t two minutes alienee\nin memory of the war dead wu observed. A prayer by Rev. J. 0\nHolmea for the fallen and for\nstrength In the new conflict broke\nthe lilence. \"The Lament\" by the\npipers and drummers followed.\nTwo hymns, \"Fight the Good\nFight\" ind1 \"Onward Christian Soldiers\", by the entire gathering, tnd\nthe stirring, pttrlottc solo, \"There'll\nAlwtys Be An Englind\" by Arthur\nStringer, interspersed the addresses\nThe service concluded with the\nBenediction by Mr. Holmes, tnd\nthe singing of the National Anthem,\nAccompaniment wu supplied by the\nNelson Brass Band.\nPreiident Jamei Spencer was\nChairman for the service. On the\nplatform with him were Mayor N\nC. Stibbs, Mra. John Cartmel, Regent tnd Mrs. Alltn Wllley. I.O.D.E.\nstandard bearer of Kokanee Chapter, I. 0. D. E.; Rev. J. G. Holmei,\nLieut M. K. Harrison. Officer Com\nminding the Veterans Guard; and\nThomu Parkinson, Legion standard\nbearer.\nPercy Bennett\nLived Procter\nNear 30 Years\nPROCTER, B C, Nov, 11 - The\nlite Percy Bennett, who died In the\nKooteney Lake General Hospital\nOctober 31. wu born In Portsmouth. England, and cimt first to\nWinnipeg In 1910.\nAlmost Immediately he came to\nBritiah Columbia, to work on the\nC. P. R. Hotel at Baltour u a painter\nand decorator. When the hotel wai\ncompleted in 1912. Mr. Bennett re.\nmiined in the Kootenays. He married the former Mlu Hilda Wilton\nof Procter in 1916, md they lived In\nRlondel for tbout 18 monthi, whan\nMr. Bennett enlisted. He served in\nEnglind ind France In the Flrit\nGreat Wtr tnd returned In 1919\nHe and Mn. Bennett made Procter\ntheir home from that time. They\nwould have celebrated their 25th\nweddig anniversary January 14 next.\nMr. Bennett wu an active worker,\nmostly In building in tnd iround\nProcter. Lut Spring he built a itore\nand living quarters for Mr. tnd Mrt\nA. MacPhee, and hit lut job wu\naltering the McLeod home. On hii\nlut day, October 31, he wu up\ntnd around, but took ill in the evening, ind a little later wti taken\nto the Nelion hospital, where he\ndied during the night\nHe la survived by hla wife and\ndiughter, Elsie, of Procter; t tiller, Mn. S. Spitch ot Vancouver;\nand three brotheri, Victor, Herbert\nand Alfred In England.\nTroublesome Right Coughs\nAre Hard on the System\nit'a the cough thtt sticks; the cough that is hard\nto get rid of: the cough accompanied by t tickling in\nthe throat thtt causes the nerve tnd throat wracking\ntrouble thtt keeps you awake tt night.\nDr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup helps to relieve\nthia coughing condition by soothing the irritated parti,\nloosening the phlegm and etimulating the bronchial organs, tnd when thii\nii done the troublesome irritating cough mty be relieved.\nDr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup hu been on the market for the put\n48 years.   The Trade Mark \"3 Pine Trees\".\nPrice 35c a bottle; large family size, about 3 times u much, 60c at all\ndrug counters.\nTh. T. Milburn Co- limited, Toronto, Ont.\nFrench Indo-China\nGovernor Resigns\nTOKYO, Nov. 12 - (Tuwday) -\n(AP). \u2014 Domei, Japanese newt\nagency, reported tonight trom Hanoi,\nTrench Indo-China, thit Reir Ad\nmini Jetn Decoux had resigned ti\nGovernor-General of that French\ncolony.\nTha agency uld tht reuon for bit\nresignation wu reported to be the\nIncreasing difficulties creited by t\nstrom. group In Silgon favoring the\n\"Free French\" movement of Oen\nCharlei De Gaulle.\nIt laid the French Government it\nVichy wai expected to appoint\nsuccessor soon.\nTrail Chapl\nForm:\nGuide for Travellers\nWind and (eld\nStrike Canada\nRaging winds which left a trail\nof death and destruction throughout\nwidespread sections of the United\nStites'reached Canada late yesterday causing heavy damage to property and communications from Manitoba through Ontario to the St.\nLawrence valley. No casualties were\nreported.\nThe winds, reaching velocities ts\nhigh as 65 miles an hour, following\nheavy raim through central sections\nof Canada. The Remembrance Day\nweather map in other parts ot Canada ranged from clear, cold weather to blizzards in Manitoba.\nStorms which struck lut night\nstopped telegraph communications\nwith New York. In Ontario thousands of dollars ot damage was\ncaused along Great Lakes waterfronts and lnlmd. Hydro-electric\npower lines tnd telephone lines\nwere disrupted throughout large\nareas of Western Ontario, trees were\nuprooted and buildings were damaged.\nDeath Spread by\nTerrific Gales\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP). -\nTerrific winds ipreid. death end\ndestruction in broad sections of the\nMidwest snd South today while a\ncold wave whisked across the Western Prairies on the wings of a\nsnowstorm. Breaks in communication lines isolated miny communities.\nNine persons were killed and it\nleast 79 were injured when gusts\nwhich scaled up to 63 miles an hour\nlevelled several homes and small\nbuildings, unroofed houses, uprooted trees, flattened poles and shattered windows.\nSnow drifted on highways in\nMinnesota, the Dakotas, Iowa and\nNebraska. Traffic was stalled in\nseveral lectors. Temperatures dropped as much u 30 degrees in three\nhours as the mass of icy air moved Eastward and dipped below tero\nat iome pointi In Nebraska, the\nDakotas, Wyoming, Colorado and\nMontana.\nThe November storms \u2014 termed\nunusual but not without precedent\nby forecasts \u2014 wrought greatest\nhavoc in States In the Great Lakes\narea.\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME-Linden Stane\nHulty, H. J. Boyanner,\nR. S. Lawrence, W.\nticton; Ace Mesker,\nC. P. Mc-\nVancouver;\nG. Moll, Pen-\nGrand Forks;\nG. W. Boles, Edmonton; J. H. Blackburn, Lavoy, Alta.; A. Anderson, R.\nBrough, Medicine Hat; F. C. Cralgh,\nBonners Ferry; F. A. Hobert, Tacoma.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK. PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nroomi  In   the   Interior\u2014Bath  or  Shower\nROOMS $1 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLV RATES\nPoppy Sole Large\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 (CP).\nThe largest single day sales of\nArmistice poppies in the city were\nreported today by Vancouver officials, who said that $6322 wu col\nlected Siturdiy by 2000 womer\nworkers.\nGREENHILL\nWashed Furnace\nRumors Rise as\nWeygand Fails to\nReturn to Vichy\nBy CHARLES 8. FOLTZ\nAiiocltted Prm tuff Writer\nBERNE, Switzerland, Nov, 11\n(AP) \u2014 General MU-lme Wey\ngtnd'i failure to return from Africa to Vichy hu aroused speculation in foreign circles here who\nprofess to sec therein evidence of\na stiffening attitude toward\nFrance's German and Italian conqueror!.\n\u25a0 Rear-Admiral Rene Platon, Minister ot Colonies, returned to Vichy\nfrom a plane trip to North Africa\nwhich Informed perioni. uld wu\nfor the primary purpoie of bringing\nWeygtnd btck.\nBut Weygand remained In Africa.\nHe hu been there lince Oct 10,\nempowered by Marshal Petain, the\nChief ot the Petain-Laval Government, to take charge ot all political\ntnd military mitten in France's\nAfrican territories.\nThere wu speculation here as to\nwhether thii metm thit t thow-\ndown between Weygtnd, one-time\nAllied Commander In chief, and the\nFrench North African Army, on the\none hind, and the Rome-Berlin\nAxis on the other may be at hind,\nReports sre current here that\nGoering, No. 2 Nazi, told Vice-\nPremier Laval In Parti thll weekend that the Germani could not\ncontinue to deal with the Vichy\nGovernment unless Vichy brought\nWeygand back.\nIt was uid that Weygand had taken mitten into, hli own htndi tnd\nrefused Vtchy'i officials instructions\nto return.\nVICHY, Fnnot, Nov. 11 (AP)\n\u2014Rear Admiral Rtnt Platon, tht\nFrench Minister ef Colonies, after i hurried airplane trip te Al-\nglert to talk with,Gin. Maxima\nWeygand, returned here today\nWithout Weygand who had bun\nexpected to accompany him bick\nto Vichy.\nTRAIL,\nWomen'i Vi\nIt being orgi\nlorshlp of thi\nChapter, I.O.D.E.\nTo be known U the I.O.D.E. Voluntary Service Corps, the unit is\nbeing formed along lines similar to\nthou ot tht Canidlan Legion Homt\nDefence Corpi. G. W. Ruit of Trail,\nand Robert McNiih, ot Rouland,\nhave been appointed drill Instructors, tnd will conduct squad drill,\nplatoon drill, company drill, tnd\n\u25a0mall anna training. Other training,' which may be later taken by\nthe unit will Include signalling, organisation, map reading, tactical\nexercises, and ambulance first aid.\nNO AFFILIATIONS\nThe unit li to be entirely voluntary, without affiliation with any\norganization, the main purpose\nbeing to prepare its memben for\neventualities.\nAge limit wai iet trom 18 to 35\nyean, and Mlu Dorothy Walley,\nMlu Edith Beit and Mlu Winnifred'\nFlett htve been appointed ti application committee, application\nforma to be obtained either from\nthe committee, or trom Mr. Rust at\nthe Hudaon'i Bay Store.\nFrom 50 to 75 applications will\ncomplete the original membership\nbeing planned, as it was decided\nto organize and train a small group\nat first Officers and non-commissioned officen will be selected by\nthe Instructors, subject to the ap\nprovtl ot the sponsors, on the merits of their ability, following t period of general training.\nFinal date for applications was\nset at November 30.\nLadies' Winter COATS\nUntrimmed style*, in tht fineit purs wool cloths, fully\nlined and interlined\u2014\nAS LOW AS $14.95\nFINK'S Ready-to-Wear\nPhone 73\nBurns Block\nIdeals Can't Die il People Ready\nlo Die for Them Lees Tells Trail\nWARDNER\nWARDNER, B.C-Mn. F. Anderson visited Cranbrook.\nKenneth and Glen Thompson entered at a party, the occasion being\ntheir birthdayi. Guests were Clifford Bartlett, Dale Embree, Lenard\nAndenon, Dean Thompson, Kenneth\nJohnson, Julia Jakubec, Verddle\nThompson, David Glaholm, Norman\nand Douglas Renstrom, Mrs. G.\nJohnson, visited Cranbrook.\nMiss Ruth Hamrin visited Cranbrook.\nMrs. R. Wilkinson visited Yahk.\nMrs. J. Anderson of. Natal visited\nMrs. F. Anderson.\nMr. tnd Mrs. A. Kievill and family visited Cranbrook\nD. Hamrin visited here.\nMiss S. Moberg, G. Thompson and\nE. Johnson visited Waldo.\nMiss Isabel Renstrom visited here.\nMrs. Rowland of Turner Valey,\nvisited her sister, Mrs. P. Keyan-\ndwy.\nMrs. C. Nobels of San Creek visited Mrs. F. Andenon.\nL. Flesberg visited Cranbrook.\nMiss Elsie and Ellen Holm visited\ntheir sister, at Waldo.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Renlck visited\nYahk, Mn. R. Wilkinson returned\nwith, them.\nMr. ind Mn. F. Wellmder villted\nit Jtffray.\nRev. Mn. Smith villted here.\n\u2014\ntr\\ x\nVANCOUVER, B. C.# HOTELS\n.\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nW0 Seymour St\nNewly renovited throughout  Phones  tnd   elevator.\nA.  PATTERSON,   lite ol\nVineouver, B.C. Colemin, Alta, Proprietor.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.\u2014Exeept Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n'MaV\nCOMFORT\nHEAT\nSATISFACTION\n$10.50 per ton\nPhon* 889\nT0WLER\nFuel and Transfer\nAINSWORTH\nAINSWORTH, B. C. - Mr. and\nMrs. R. Sherraden returned from a\nholiday at Borden, Sask.\nJ. Fit-simmoni left to spend a few\ndays with his family in Kaslo.\nMn. Lane had at weekend guests\nher diughter, Miu Isabel of Nelson, and Miss Mabel, who attends\nschool in Kaslo,\nMn. King had is weekend guests\nher niece, Miss Mary Smith of\nToledo, Ohio, who has been holidaying in California, and her daughter,\nMiss Geneva King of the Kimberley teaching staff.\nWalter Butler of Kaslo spent a\nweekend here.\nMn. Duncan McDiarmid of Silver-\nIon is a guest of her cousins. Mrs\nE. McKinnon and Mrs. J. J, Scott.\nMr. tnd Mrs. E. Matthews of\nSilverton are guests of Mr. and Mrs\nR. Sherraden.\nJ. J. Scott of Trail is holidaying it\nhis home here.\nBill Wilson of Trail was a Sun.\nday guest ot his aunt, Mn. M. M\nLane. Norma Wilson returned home\nwith her father after several\nmonths here.\nJoe La Fontaine of the Veterans\nGuard. Trill, returned to duty after\n1 weekend with his family here.\nMr. md Mn. W. H. Dunn qf Kulo\nviiited Mn, King.\nHanson and King\nto Take Spotlight\nOTTAWA, Nov. 11 (CP).-Con-\nservative House Leader Htmon tnd\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\nwill hold the spotlight In the House\nof Commons tomorrow.\nMr. Hanion will lead off tht de\nbate on the tddreii In reply to\nthe speech from the throne tnd\nthe Prime Mlniiter will follow In\nwhtt li expected to bt t rtvlew\nof the lut ilx,monthi in wtr md\nInternational attain,\nIn tome quarten it hu been\nforecast there will be a long debate\non the address.\nDefence Minister Ralston is expected to follow the Prime Minis\nter likely speaking Wednesday tf\nternoon, giving a review of actlvi\nties ot the army and training\nservices.\nAir Minister Power tnd Ntvy Min\nister MacDonald also tre expected\nto give \u25a0 review of their work. Supply Minister Howe tnd War Services Minister Gsrdlner, miy take\npart\nCol. Ralston li expected to leave\nshortly to? conferences In London\nwith Prime Minister Churchill md\nother high officials there.\nEx-Service Men\nand Wives Enjoy\nInformal Social\nA diy 23 years ago when four\nyein of detth tnd destruction ceiled tnd Joy reigned wu recalled by\nex-service men tnd their wives who\ngathered it the Canadian Legion\nlounge Monday night\u2014the evening\nat Remembrance Day. It wti in informal affair from beginning to end.\ntnd lt wu thoroughly enjoyed.\nSongs oi the Fint Great Wtr,\ndinging to music of that diy tnd\nsince, cirds for thow who wished\nto play, chats In cornen tnd so On,\ntilled the evening. Mrs, Arthur\nNeil'i solo, \"Jeannle With the Light\nBrown Heir\", tnd Mt. Neil'i piano\nduet with Mlu Margaret Orabam\nwere among popultr Items.\nS. P. Bostock wu muter of cere\nmonies, i ..i\nA ladies' committee consisting Of\nMrs. H. t. Thain, Mrs. H. H. Currie,\nMn. Nell Derby, Mn. Thomas Ocok-\nson and Mn, E. J. Coombs prepared\ntnd served refreshments.\nMemorial Hall Is Site\n,of Tribute to\nFallen\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. lt\u2014\"It li fot\nthou who fought through, worked\nthrough, md lived through that horror which ended on Nov. 11,1918, to\nprovide the resolution, determination, md spirit with which to ctrry\nthrough amidst the new horror of\nour day. Wo, who hive the experience and know the relief which\nArmistice brought, must not break\ntilth,\" asserted Dr. M. W. Lees,\nChaplain of the Trail Cantditn Legion, In hii sermon tt the Armistice\nService tt the Memorial Hall, Monday morning.\n\"We ire mide of British fighting\nstuff, tnd fight to the finish when\nthe occasion ctUi for it, Thil occa-\nlion calls for it, tnd to the finish\ntt shall be.\n\"The life of man haa alwayi flourished best when he hu been most\nconictoui of his best ideals, and he\nhat been most conscious ot and\ncherished these at timei when they\nwere moit In peril.\n\"Theie ideals cannot perish from\nthe earth io long as men md women are willing to work, strive, and\ndie for them.\n\"There li accumulating all over\nthe civilized world a disgust with\nall that letds to war; a disgust and\nImpatience which li becoming a\ntldtl wtve to iweep iwiy much\nthtt nothing else seems able to\nsweep away\u2014much thtt holds back\nthe progress of mankind.\nSLACKNESS BREAKING\nFAITH\n\"We dare not be weak nor slack\nnor even diicouraged In these days,\nthere Is no room tor these things.\nIt we allow this, we shall break\nfaith With those who 'ileep where\npoppiei blow in Flanders Fields'.\n\"The pressure of present events\nand the immediacy of the present\ncrisis tebd to eclipse the annals\nand the men ot the last conflict. In\nfact there are thoie who would\nhave us drop these remembrance\nceremonlu and, ti they ity, 'live\ntn the present'.\n\"I mtlnttin thit theie memorial\noccttlans, properly celebrated to-\nday]M_(e of Incal.ulabW vtlue to us\nIn the preient situation, in thtt thty\nhelp to t truer perspective; exemplify tnd inspire courage, resolution\nmd sacrifice, and challenge us to\nfortitude md wholehearted endeavor.\nThe glory of these men il not\ndimmed In the light ot our dty, it\nshines tht brighter. Nor doei lt dim\nthe glory of thoie who tre now lty-\ning down their lives. These but add\nto the glory of human sacrifice for\nfreedom, right and justice.\"\n3 in Hospital\nFrom Accident\non Merry Flal\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 11-Vlto Sordi,\nof Trail, Is in the Trail-Tadanlc\nHospital with a broken leg and in\na serious condition, u t result ol\nhis car leaving the Fruitvile Hlgh-\nwty on the straight stretch of roid\nat Merry's Flats about 9:45 thii\nmorning.\nTwo others who were in the car.\nMr. md Mn. Giovanl Vehdtmint,\nalio ot Trail, tre also In the hospital suffering trom cuts tnd abrasions. The car turned over twice end\nwas badly damaged.\nBritish Freighter\nCalls Urgent Help\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP)'. -\nMackay Radio reported tonight it\nhad heard a aecond distress signal\nfrom the British freighter Balmore\nwhich laid that her port lifeboat!\nwere iwamped and help li \"urgently\nrequired.\"\nThe call wu heard by Mackay\nthrough the British relay itation\nGCK. It give the position of tbe\nHBJ-ton British freighter u tpproxi-\nmitely 300 miles West ot Ireland.\nThis morning the Japanese liner\nFushlmi Maru reported that ihe hid\nheard t distreu call from the Balmore saying ihe hid been bombed\nby Nizi planes tnd wu In danger\nof linking.\nNAKUSP\nThrongs at Rink for\nFirst Public Skating\nThe spacious ice surface at thi\nCivic Centre waa taxed to capacity\nMonday afternoon and night \u25a0\u25a0 children tnd the general public respectively enjoyed their firsl skating periods ot the Winter.\nSILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B. C. - Mr. md\nMrs. George Driver md fimlly of\nOsoyoos htve taken up residence in\ntowp,\nMrs. M. Emenon, who ipent four\nmonthi tn Silverton, hu returned\nto Trill.\nA. R. Finglmd visited New Denver.\nMrs. J. D. Matheson ll i gueit of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\ntnd Mn. W. McKay of Ymir.\nMri. A. Linen left for New Wut-\nminster to reside.\nMrs. D. McDiermid li vlilting her\nson tnd daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. M. McDlerlmd of Salmo.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Harrli of Sandon visited town.\nMn. W. Morrison md sons Wtyne\n\u2022nd Btrrie htve returned to Trail\ntfter spending t few weeki with\nMri. Morrison*! mother, Mn. M.\nEmerson.\nW. McKay of Ymir villted town.\nHe wu accompanied back by his\nwife, MM. McKay, who ipent 10\ndayi with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. Matheson.\nNAKUSP, B.C-Mn. L. J. Edward! returned from Calgiry, where\n\u25a0he viiited relatives.\nMrs. Cyril Mayoh and infant son\nare spending t few diyi In Nikusp.\nMra. E. C. Johnson left for Vancouver to attend tn executive meeting of the Women'i Misslontry Society.\nR. Johnson tnd his mother-in-lew,\nMn. Dunlop ot Cilgary, motored to\ntown from Burton. In Nakusp they\nmet Mr. Dunlop, who wis en route\nto Burton.\nMrs. J. Thompson of Penticton\nvisited her husbind, J. Thompson,\nwho it on the Stetmer Minto here.\nT. Evans of Burton, who has been\nworking in Nakusp tor seven)\nweeks, hu returned to hli home.\nN. A. Herridge, A. E. Jones, E. J\nLeveque, C. B. Himbllng md M\nBsrrow .attended the funeral of C\nF. Nelson it New Denver.\nMiss Pearl Wird tnd Mlsi Irene\nMcAllister of Lumby ire visiting\nNikusp.\nVerne Miller, teller it the Cma\ndim Bink of Commerce, lett for\nVlctorli.\nH. W. Herridge hu returned from\nt C.C.F. convention it Winnipeg.\nMrs. J. Psrent Sr, wu in N_w\nDenver for the funeral of C F.\nNelson.\nMr. tnd Mn. J. Roblni of Arrow\nPirk ihopped in Nikusp.\nMr. and Mrs. G. W. M. Hakem .n\nhive returned trom i holiday in\nVmcouver tnd Victorlt.\nMn. J. Motherwell and two children returned from Nelion.\nN. A. Cowtn, G. Keys, H. V. Harrli tnd W. Herridge tttended the\nNelion funeral tt New Denver.\nW. L. Maxwell hu returned from\n\u25a0 trip io the Cout.\nREGISTER OGDEN'S\nU.S; Economist Dies\nCAMBRIDGE. Mill.. Nov. 11\n(AP)-Frank W. Taunlg. inter-\nnitlontlly known political economist and profeiot.-emerltui of\nHarvard University, died todty\nHt would have been 81 yetn old\nnext month.\nBASNET, Englind (CP)-Linci-\nihlre h t foreign lind to Hertfordshire termera md two Lincuhlre\nmen In hospital blue wmderlng here\nwere taken for Germans and cht.id\nby Indignant citizens who turned\nthem over to police.\nKASLO Social\u2666\u2666\u2666\nKASLO, B. C.-John Mtnden of\nMetdow Creek visited town.\nJohn Dinney ot Johnson'! Lending visited town.\nMiu Mollic McGlbbon hu returned from a visit to Nelson.\nMrs. Besecker left for l short vilit\nto Nelion. ' '\nMn. 3. L. Syddtll of Shutty Bench\nviiited Nel-on.\nThomu Sparrow, who iptnt t\nweek in Nelson ind Kulo, lift fur\nbit home In Hawser.\nMn. Percy Amu is visiting flendi\nin Nelson.\nMn. G. S- Baker is visiting rela\nlives in Frutvile.\nRoll a cigarette with Ogden's\nFino Cut, touch a light to It\ntnd you'll register \"real\"\nsmoking enjoyment. Ogden's\nis a \"star\" cigarette tobacco\n\u2014 the featurs turn on the\npleasure programme of wise\nroll-your-owndrs everywhere.\nOf course they choose the\nbest papers, too \u2014\"Vogue\"\nor \"Chantecler\".\nOGDEN'S\nFINE   CUT\n\u25a0 GDfN i CU 1 Pi L j\n , ,\n'\u25a0 \u00abpiiipi|||ikj|p.p,L i,l^lii|J!iJJ|J_WP      ju\nTODAYS News Pictures\n-NBU80N DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B. C.--TUE8DAY MORNINO   NOV. It  1940-\n-PAO_  THRU\nOn Guard Over Yltal Firth of Foi^Jfygfef\nPrinct? Fights\nfor Britain\nFrowning muzzles of anti-aircraft guns on a British warship sweept the skies, ready <f German planei again\nattempt to blast the great steel bridge spanning Scotland's Firth ot Forth. The Forth Bridge wu one of tht\ntirst objectives attacked by Nazi raiders on outbreak of the war and lt and tha naval bate have been\nbombed repeatedly ever since.\nPrince Rudlger von Starhemberg, who used to have hia own\narmy and vast wealth, now ii\nfighting Hitler, hli one time crony,\n\u2022a \u2022 pilot in the Free French tir\nlorce.\nGandhi Disciple\nImprisoned\nTheir Majesties Visit Union Jacft Club\nPtndlt Jawaharlal Nehru, one\ntt two men chosen by Mohandas\nK. Gandhi to make anti-war\nipeechei In India, wai sentenced\nto \"tour yeari 11 rigoroui Imprisonment\" on charges brought under the Defence of India Act\n\u2014__ ,  _-- \u25a0-.;-\u25a0   \u2022''. :\u2014: : \" -\nKing George and Queen Elizabeth are pictured chatting with a soldier In a barber's chtir, is they visited\nthe Union Jack Club in London. King tnd Que:n tre' constantly teen amid the treat which have been\ndemolished by Hitler's Luftwaffe.\nBound for Atlantic Patrol Duty\nNew Destroyer\nfor V. S. Navy\nH.M.C.S. Ottawa, one ot the Royal Canadian Navy's growing (leet of destroyers, ll ihown u ihe steams out\ninto the Atlantic on patrol duty.\n-Lewis' Resignation \"Accepted\"\nBanner \"icceprlng'* the rciignition of John L. Lewis, C.I.O. Preiident, who threitened to leive thtt poit\nIt Preiident Roosevelt wis reelected, shown across the entrance ot the United Mine Workeri' at America\nbuilding.\nThe U.S.S. Swanaon, recently\ncompleted deitroyer, pictured\nsliding down the ways at the\nCharleston navy yard during ltt\nlaunching. The destroyer waa\nchristened by Mrs. Claude Swanaon, wife ol the late Secretary ot\nthe Navy.\n$wt($ $\\%\nlNCORK?\u25a0*VSf__0 ;2** MAY' .670,\nSALE OF AXMINSTER RUGS\nHere's a chance to purchase that rug you have promised\nthe home at a price away below today's figures. Beautiful\npatterns In all sizes.\n9*xl2'. Each .. %55.00       4* t}\"xT 6\". Ea. 117.05\n9'xlOVi'.   Each ?40.50       36\"x6' 3\". Each   $7.95\n6' 9\"x9*. Each . $29.50       27\"x54\". Each .    $4.95\nCompare these prices and buy early.\nBeautifully matched walnut bedroom suites with genuine plate glass\nmirror on vanity, full size bed,\nbench, and large four drawer chiffonier. Included with these attractive suites are a spring filled, fully\nguaranteed mattress and high riser\ncable spring.\nConvenient Termi May Re Arranged\nSIX WAY TRILIGHT LAMPS\nBright hours ahead with one of the lamps you have\nalways desired. Heavy, al) metal standard and onyx Inset\nbase in finishes of bronze and gold. Hand painted or\nfluted parchment shades In assorted colors.   (PO QC\nComplete\n55\nDORATY REINSTATEMENT\nAPPLICATION APPROVED\nSASKATOON, Nov. 11 (CP). -\nKen Doraty, once,'the \"mighty\natom\" ol the Toronto Maple Leafs\nof the National Hockey League and\nFern (Curley) Headley, who turned\nprofessional in the old Western\nCanada League, were recommended for reinstatement as amateurs by\nthe Saskatchewan Amateur Hockey\nAssociation at Its annual meeting.\nDoraty turned professional with\nPortland In 1925, Headley with Saskatoon Sheiks.\nTwenty-Eight Die\nin Boat Collision\n,ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Nov. 11 (CP\nCable)\u2014The engineer and part owner ol the ferry Garland today, described* the collision between his\n18-ton ship tnd mother motor vessel, the Golden Dawn, in which an\nestimated 26 persons were drowned\nIn Conception Bay last night.\nOne of four persons who survived the disaster, Norman Ash,\nsaid the terry left Portugel Cove\nabout 5:30 p.m. with, he believed,\nabout 20-odd passengers. Most of\nthem were on deck but teven or\neight were below.\nThe Garland carried navigation\nlights tnd t spotlight, Ash said.\nThey met snow flurries, he added,\nbut the water was smooth and the\nmoon visible.\nAsh wat on deck ihortly before\nthe crash tnd said he could see the\niillhti on the Bell Islsnd pier, perhaps a Quarter mile away.\nAsh said he had lust gone below\nto collect fares when the Garland\nploughed into something with tremendous force and water immediately poured in. Before he could\nflounder to the deck, it was nearly\nwaist deep.\nCaptain William Abbot wai still\nat the wheel and he explained Ash\nsaid, that the other ship, the Golden\nDawn, \"cut right across my bow\".\nHe had not seen Abbot afterward.\nSo fir ti he could determine, Ash\nraid, the Garland hid itruck the\nother vessel amidships and crushed\nin her bow. Almost immediately,\nthe ferry plummeted Into the\ndepths.\nAsh believed he waa the laat living perion aboard the sunken craft.\nThe waten til iround were tilled\nwith panic-stricken, thrleking\npeace.\nMeanwhile, thoie aboard the\nGolden Dawn were helpless to do\nanything with their engine stopped.\nEventually, il wai itarted tnd her\nCaptain Mitchell betched the foundering craft.\nFrom mother tource, It wti\nlearned that the Golden Dawn's\nengineer, who had been knocked\noverboard, pulled himself back\naboard, soaked hit coat In kerosene\nand Ut lt aa a signal.\nAsh wu tt t lots to explain why\nneither ship sighted the other, but\nat the Golden Dawn was under the\nhigh land of the Island her lights\nmty htve been confused with thoie\nashore.\nMrs. Phyllis G. Turner, Formerly of\nRossland, Receiving Highest Salary\nPaid Any Woman Dominion Service\n*  -\"-\u2014- - - \u25a0 mmmau*^*dnJn*ma*A^m.m,mum**t^*n*n**mm*i\nHolds Important Wa\nPosts; Leading\nEconomist\nsuit with a white blouse. She was\nalso wearing pearl earrings.\n'COMMON SENSE\"\nAa an economist Mn. Turner, says\nMrs. Phyllis G. Turner, daughter I \u00a3\u25a0*.At, ^VeL_JM !C4dT'i.\n8.     I trainine (which is wide and vsrled)\not Mr. md Mrs. James Gregory, for\nmerly of Rcssland, today is recelv\ning the highest sabry paid to any\ntraining (which is wide and varied)\n'with a lot of common sense\".\nA graduate ol the University ol\nTh? \u00ab\"'\u00a3 \u00ab5ft.0_S |B.iU_h-Columbia, M, Turn* tt-\nwoman in .  .\ndlan Government. She receives S4500\na year. She is one of the outstanding\neconomists in the Dominion, and\nhas recently been appointed Technical advisor to the Canadian Oils\nAdministrator,\nW. K. Esling, M.P. ter Kootenay\nWest, who knew Mrs. Turner when\nshe resided in Rossland\u2014her lather\nbeing for many yean a pump man\nat the famous Rossland mines\u2014forward, a clipping from the Ottawa\nJournal In which Patricia Connolley\ndescribes her. It follows:\nBehind the scenes of what Is probably the foremost prcblem today\nwith most Canadian families\u2014the\nproblem of the budget \u2014 is Mrs.\nPhyllis G. Turner, one of the most\noutstanding economists of the Dominion.\nHer ]ob Is to help investigate, balance and figure ways cl keeping\ncommodities at a sane level.\nReceiving her first appointment\nwith the Government in January ot\n1931, tall, beautiful Mrs. Turner is\ntoday receiving the highest salary\nof any woman In the Government\nservice\u2014OAbOO a year.\nNAMED ECONOMIC ADVI80R\nRecently appointed Technical Advisor to the Oils Administrator by\nthe Wartime Prices and Trade\nBoard, Mrs. Turner before the war\nwas Chief Research Economist ol\nthe Tariff Board and Dominion\nTrade and Industry Commission.\nSince the war she haa also been\nI seconded to the Wartime Prices and\n. Trade Beard as an economic advisor.\nNow, combining all these positions,\nMrs. Turner is without doubt an Important figure In the setting and\nestablishing of the prices of commodities in the Dominion.\nInterviewed In her office on the\n-tret floor ol hex Justice Building.\nMn. Turner possesses a charm and\nbeauty which one does not ordinarily associate with so many Intellectual accomplishment!. Auburn haired, her grey-blue eyes light up when\nshe smiles\u2014which is frequently. She\nwaa wearing a two-piece green wool\nDr. Chase's\nKidney-Liver Pills\ntended the acholastically famoui\nByrn Mawr College, just outside\nPhiladelphia, tnd trom there won\nt scholarship to tht London School\nof Economics, and she also spent t\nterm at the Univenlty ot Marburg,\n\u25a0 Germany. She waa also the winner\n\\ot a fellowship from the Canadian\nFederation ol Univenlty Women.\nHAS TWO CHILDREN\nIn London, where she lived lor\nfive yean, she was married to the\nlate Leonard Turner, who waa a\nwriter. Mrs. Turner has two children, of whom she It very proud.\nJohn, 11, and Brenda, nine. Her\nhobby ls riding.\n\"Canada Muit Look te tha\nFuture With Confidence\"\nOTTAWA, Nov. 11 (CP).-Cana-\ndianl must look to the luture with\n\"ever Increasing confidence,\" be-\nctuie beyond the monthi ahead\nwhich may teem dark \"the light of\nfreedom, ot love and ol charity\"\nshines, Alex Wilker of Calgary. Do.\nminion President ot the Canadian\nLegion, said today.\nfor\n8acl.ac.ie\n\/nc-iges.ion\nKidney Disorders\nMore of Tacoma\nBrictae Falls in Sea\nTACOMA, Nov. 11 (AP). - A\nmulti-ton section 'of twisted steel\nthat had been clinging precariously\nto the East side tower ot the Tacoma\nNarrows bridge plunged into Puget\nSound today, putting additional sag\nin the broken approaches and placing greater stress on the already\nbent towen.\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK ,'.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany  Limited\nBreakfast Nooks\nBUILT TO ORDER\nKootenay Sash & Doot Work*\nM t OBAL Opp City Hall\ntssostssMctssttstsstssttssstssts\nUnderwood   Elliott  Fisher   Ltd.'\n536 Ward St.    Phone 99\nSundttrand Adding Hichlnei\nUnderwood Typewriter!\nSALES and SERVICE\n-GALT-\nLETHBRIDGE\nAs fine a Coal as yoa\ncan buy\nPHONE 701\nAnd fill Op your bin*\nTODAY\nFairview\nFuel Co.\n\u00a7 IMPORTED FROM f 1\nSCOTLAND \\\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nI Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\u25a0...-^^.^^^^^^^^\u25a0^^.^xp^W^^\n'-;\n'A\n Here Are the\nCorrect Names of\nthe Advertisers\nA MANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nB McDONALD JAM CO., LTD.\nC SKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nD FLEURY'S PHARMACY\nE CHARLES MORRIS\nF MALCOLM'S FURS\nH PALM DAIRIES LTD.\nJ E. COLLINSON\nK W. W. POWELL CO., LTD.\nL EDITH A. CARROTHERS\nIs for ACCURACY\nIn making up Prescriptions, there ctn be no\nlubititute tor ACCURACY. You can depend on\nthe trained stiff of\nMANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\n The Nyil Store\t\nIs for BEVERAGE\nEnjoy KOOTENAY VALLEY FRUIT til the\nyetr round in delicious lott drinks, jams, jellies,\npreserve!.\nMcdonald jam co., ltd.\n 301 Vernon St \t\nIs for Courteous\nQAS\u2014OIL-REPAIRS\nTtke your cir to tht Sky Chief whert courtesy,\nipeed tnd expert lervlce' give you maximum\nsatisfaction.\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\n      Your Ttxioo Dealer .\t\nIs for DRUGS\nDo you dread Winter's effect on your ikin? We\ncarry t complete line of beauty preparations\nand will advise you as to the type best suited to\nyour complexion.\nFLEURY'S PHARMACY\n Every Inch t Drug Store\nIs for ECONOMY\nMEN!  OPEN YOUR CLOSET DOOR!\nAre your suit! threadbare? Trouieri btggy?\nPep yourself up with a suit from Morrli. So\ninexpensive, you can still biltnce tht budget\nCHARLES MORRIS\nPepulir  Pricei\nDozens of entries from all over the East and West Kootenays were\nreceived by the Contest Editor*. The judges, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mr.\nL V. Rogers and Mr. E. P. Dawson, have unanimously chosen the\nthree winners as follows;\n1\u201e* T)^__r^__(hir\\   ,N MERCHANDISE AT ANY, OF THE\nISt  1 riZe\"\"~\\plU   STORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nMRS. LEO GANSNER, 504 MUI St., Nelson, B.C.\n\">~_4   \"D^-^    (hC    IN MERCHANDISE AT ANY OF THE\nZtlQ  1 riZC    vjO    STORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nJ. F. AHRENS, Rosemont, Nelson, B.C.\n\u2022_;\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n1   J   T^i  ~ (hi    IN MERCHANDISE AT ANY OF THE\njrCl lriZC\u2014   CpJ   STORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nARTHUR FOSTER, Nelson, B.C.\nThe Advertisements Appear on This Page as Written by Mrs. Cinmsr, ths Winning Contsstsnt\nIs for FINE FURS\nGreet the Winter In t Pur Colt\nAll perfectly mttched ikins, etch coat Individ-\nuilly modelled. Spec.aHit alio in remodelling,\ncleaning tnd gluing,\nMALCOLM'S FURS\n6S9 Baktr St\t\nIs for MOVING\nYour furniture will not bt damaged If Willlimi\nmovei lt\nDependable Economlcil\nBtit\nWILLIAMS TRANSFER\n. Phoni 106      '\nIs for HEALTH\nHeilth  li  Llfe'i dreiteit Gift\nTo  ensure perfect health for you and your\nfamily, drink MILK dilly.\nPALM DAIRIES LTD.\nPerfectly P-rtt_u_rjwd^Pjoducti_\t\nIs for NATTY\nHtvt you ll much buslneii is you would like?\nWell fitted, nitty lulti crette confidence, ind\nImprove your business conttcti.\nEMORY'S LTD.\n^^^^jd^rsJn^enj^Veti^^^^^^^^\nIs for JEWELRY\nTHINKINQ OF CHRISTMAS?\nWhtt better gift than Jewelry that will alwtyi\nbe treasured. \u2014 See our watches for the boys\noverseas.\nE. COLLINSON\nThe Houn for Fine Diamond!\t\nIs for Paperhanging\nand Painting\nDon't be discouraged it your home looks old-\nfashioned. Transform tt quickly tnd cheaply by\nredecorating.\nMURPHY BROS.\nLtidtn In Thtir Fllld   \t\nIs for KNOW\nThe wite man knowi value!\nThat Is why he always orders his lumber from\nthe W. W. Powell Co. The best In the city.\nW. W. POWELL CO., LTD.\nThi Home of Good Lumber\nIs for QUEEN\nFeel llkt t queen in our latest Fall styles. Every\ngarment new thit season. Bt lure tnd im our\nytrd goodi tnd wooL Tht moit up-to-date in\nthe city.\nJERMAN HUNT\n^^__^jytker8t^^^^^^^\nIs for Ladies'Wear\nDiscriminating  women   ire   well   dressed   on\nevery occasion. That ii why they purchtse their\nclothes it\nEDITH A. CARROTHERS\nSptcltlhdijcHr^Urii^mMjtl'8'iei\nIs for SERVICE\nNEWCOMER TO NELSON! Ttkt tht advice of\ntht majority tnd open a charge account it tht\nStir. Excellent quality ind dependable lervlce.\nSTAR GROCERY\nNtlion'i Fln.it Food Stort\nHere Are the\nCorrect Names 0\/\nthe Advertisers\nM WILLIAMS TRANSFER\nN EMORY'S LTD.\nP MURPHY BROS,\nQ JERMAN HUNT\nS STAR GROCERY\nT MILADY'S BEAUTY PARLOR\nV KOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nW WEST TRANSFER CO.\nX. MACO CLEANERS\nZ R. ANDREW AND CO.\n1   hi\nIs for TREND\nNo love interest In your life?\nthen you htven't kept pice with tht litest\ntrend! In hilr itylei it\nMILADY'S BEAUTY PARLOR\n 677 Btktr fc    \t\nIs for VITALITY\nCANADA IS CALLING-It ll your duty tp keep\ntit tor nitlonal itrvlei. Increue you; vitality\nby drinking milk.\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\n' MS Rtllwty fc '.\nVforWARMTH\nSnow is predicted for the\nKootenays. Order your\nfuel today.        (\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n Ittibllihtd In 1iyt '\nMarks the SPOT\nA ipot miy bt 1 good elut In I detective itory,\nbut on your suit, it Is only 1 clue to your perioni! slovenliness. Don't ltt it happen to you!\nMACO CLEANERS\n^^^Jh|iMj|^ii|j^fewm!___________________\nIs for ZIP\nStyle is no blessing If your\nshoe pinches. Our shots\nhave   both   zip   and   fit.\nR. ANDREW AND CO.\nPopularity of\nVoroshlloff In\nRussia Unabated\nBy ROBERT MAQIOOFF\n(Associated Press Stiff Wrlttr).\nMOSCOW,   (AP).-Manhal   Kle-\nlientl  Voroshlloff, Intimate friend\nStalin for the last 20 years tnd\n: IS years Commissar for Defence,\nKlti-lost neither hii popularity nor\nImportance after being replaced by\nthe younger and energetic Ukrainian Semeon Timoshenko, 11 held of\nRussia's armed forcei.\nVoro-hlloff has remtlned member\nof tht powerful Ptlofburo of the\nCommunist party, tnd the official\nannouncement ot hit appointment to\nVice-Premier, mtdt it tht lilt session ot tht Supreme Council, wu\nmet with in ovation itcond only to\nthat tccorded Stalin.\nVoroshlloff, furthermore, wu given the post of Chairman of the\nDefence Committee of the Russian\nCabinet, thus being entrusted with\nthe task of co-ordinating the work\nof all commissariats dealing with\ndefence, Including the production of\nwtr material!.\nReorganization of the Red Army\nand Navy which hu been going on\ntver ilnce Voroshlloff wai replaced\nby Timoshenko lut Mty tends to\nprove thit tht Ruuo-Finniih wtr\ndisclosed serious gap! In the organization and discipline of tht irmy.\nInstead of being called to talk tor\nthe deficiencies In tht structure tnd\ndiscipline of tht army, Voroihllotf\nii believed to htve been actually\nparticipating tn the reorganization\nof tht Soviet armed forcei.\nThe reorganization Includes luch\nchanges as the abolition of political\ncommissars,   iht   introduction'   Of\nranks of generals and admirals, obligatory salute and, finally, demand\nfor aeverest military discipline making officers supreme authoritiei in\nthe units under their command.\nAMERICANS IN CHINA\nWARNED TO LEAVE\nPEIPINO, Chlnt, Nov. 11 (AP) .-\nWarning that transportation ctnnot\nbe guaranteed liter, the Unlttd\nStatei Embassy here hu circularized Americana in North China for\nthe tour time suggesting thtt they\nleave for home. The circular was\nwritten in urgent terms.\n357 Nazi Planes\nDowned, 13 Weeks\nLONDON, Nov, 11 (AP).-In 1J\nweeki of the fiercest aerial ilege\nevtr endured, Britiih anti-aircraft\ngunners have ihot down 397 German bomberi and fighters\u2014a seventh of the total German losses\nover England\u2014the Air Mlnlitry innounced.\n\"Theie figurei,\" tht Mlnlitry\nadded, \"do not tell the full gory\nof the damage Inflicted on tht Ger\nman air force by anti-aircraft flrt.\nThert in 'winged' bomberi thtt\nmay just manage to limp homt but\ncrash in landing, whilt otheri miy\nbe out of service tor leveral weeks.\nThe fate ot these planei can never\nbe known to our vigilant gunner\ncrewi.\"\nFut Meiierschmltts, u will as\ntht ilower Helnkeli ind Dornitrt\nhavt bten hit, tht Mlnlitry uld.\nIa ont week, It wu added, tht\nanti-aircraft accounted for 64 planes\n\u2014to bomberi ind 14 tighten\u2014or in\naverage of nine a day.\nFourth Round\nCompleted In\nBridge Tourney\nFourth round In tht bridge tournament iponiored by Mri. Vincent\nFink's Circle ot St. Saviour's Church\nHelpen hu been completed, tht\nresults being u follows:\nFint Prize Group\u2014Mr, tnd Mn.\nE. C. Wrtgge beat Mn. W. M. Wtlktjr\nind Mn. W. R. Grubbe: Mn. K. H.\nGrenfell and L. H. Choquetle beat\nMr. tnd Mn. W. W. Ferguson; Mrs.\nA. G. Mackay tnd Dr. H. F. Cameron beat Mrs. It. H, DU] md Mn.\nT. H. Johnstone; Mr. tad Mn. E. E.\nL. Dewdney but Mr. Ind Mri.\nGeorge Hallett.\nConsolation Group-Mr. ind Mrs.\nJohn Erb but Mrs. 0. Lawrence\nind Mn. A. McD. Noxon; Utt. 3.\nO'Shea ind 8. A. Maddocks beat\nMn C. A. Larson tnd Mri. L. II.\nChoquette; Mr. tnd Mtt. D. C. Aldn\nbeit Mn. Robert Wation tnd Mm\nB. Johnion; Mn. John Cartmel and\nMn. P. G. Morey beat Mr. tnd Mr*.\nA. J. t Ped.    -p\n____.\n \"^\"mppm\n*********\n\u2022nmw \"\nT\n^\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. S. C.-TUE8DAY MORNING. NOV. 12,  1940-\nw\u00bbiawww\u00bb9a\u00bbM-wi'\u00bb\u00bb>*Mi\u00bb*>*\u00abwi8\nSKATE\nFOR HEALTH\n.ou'll find economy and\n- omfort in our moderate-\npriced skating - outfits\nt MEN\n| \u2022 WOMEN\nI t CHILDREN\nSatisfaction Is Guaranteed\nI Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nt*tse>tttttitttts\u00bbrtttatttttttttt\nOne-Time Hitler\nFriend Fights W'irh\nFree French Airmen\nLOI.DO*., Nov. 11 (CP). - Hi\nuied to have an army of his own,\nvast wealth, 11 castles, and he\nmarched alongside Adolf Hitler tn\nthe abortive beer cellar putsch tt\nMunich in 1923.\nNow he is fighting Hitler, his onetime crony, ti t pilot officer In the\nFree French Air Force. Hii pty\nil \u00a321 4d (tbout $6.75) a dty. Hli\nestate and his fabulous fortune htve\nbeen confisctted. The Germen government his condemned him to\ndetth.        -..\nHli name il Prince Ernst Ruedlger\nvon Starhemberg, 40, former Vlce-\nChancellor of Austria.\nProspects\nfor Trail Unit\n(omen's Corps\n\u25a0BAIL, B. C, Nov. 10 - Over SO\nire in attendance at the organ-\n,tton meeting of the Trsil unit of\n\u25a0 Cintdian Women'i Triining\nrps, in the Trail Memorial Hall.\nIday night Application forms,\ngiven out and it ia exe .ted that\nthin the required 25 applica-\n_s will be turned in.\nt 25 or more tpplicttloni tre\nit lo Vancouver, Mrs. A. Preiton\nfrii, Provincial Commander, will\nne to Trail to establish the unit.\nvolunteer drill instructor snd\nIt aid instructor has been ob-\nned. Mrs. S. Bowden, 1128 Bay\nenue, is Recruiting Officer,\n0 EASE MISERY\nIF CHILD'S COLD\nlUBONWICKS\nw VapoRub\nRossland Guides\nlo Attend Trail\nTraining (lass\nROSSLAND, B. C, Nov. 10 - An\nexecutive meeting of tha Rossland\nGirl Guides Association held Thursdiy ifternoon, discussed plans tor\nsending the Guides to Trail to attend the Guide Training Class to be\nheld in -that city Tuesday and Wed-\nnesday.\n- The question of making Guide\nbooks more readily available came\nIn for discussion, and it wos suggested that perhapi the books could\nbe'obtained from Guide headquarters and sold through the drugstores,\nunsold books to be returned later.\nA list of books required in Guide\nwork will be posted in the public\nlibrary so that those wishing to\ntake advantage ot the Junior membership plan for buying booki for\nchildren can choose froro this list if\ndesired.\nThe Guide Association will also\nname a representative to the Executive Committee of the Rossland\nSoldiers' Cheer Fund.\nThose present were Mrs. A. F. G.\nDrake, Mrs. 6. C. Montgomery, Mrs.\nH. Fleury, Mn. A. C. Ridgers, Mn.\nR. Donaldson, and Mrs. B. G. Lees.\nMrs. Leo Gansner\nIs Win\nWriting\nAD-WRITING WINNERS\nFirst\u2014Mrs. Leo Ginsner, (04\nMill Street\nSecond\u2014J. F. Ahrens, Rosemont,\nNelson,\nThird\u2014Arthur Foster, (02\nFourth Strait \/\nThese wera tha winnen ot Tha\nNelson Dally Nawi advertisement\nwriting competition which closed\nStturdiy. Their advertisements ware\nselected by the Judges from t great\npile ot entries which arrived in increasing volume until the climax at\nthe weekend. Judges wara Mra. John\nCartmel, Regent ot Kokanee Chapter I. 0. D. E.; L. V. Rogers, Principal ot tha Nelion High School; ind\nE. P. Dawion, barrister.\nEntries wera received from pointi\nthroughout thi diitrlct, Including\nKimberley, Trail,* Caitlegir, Ymir,\nBalfour, Rossland, South Slocan,\nSlocan City, Slocan Pirk tnd other\ncentres.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. Mi J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022W CAMEL HAIR\nitmoii Interlined,\nCOATS\n:es 14-16-18. -OO5-UU\n'{lady's Fashion Shoppe\nI Baker St\nPhone 874\nFOR HEALTH - USE\nASTEURIZED MILK\nootcnay Valley Dairy\nPHONE 116\nTrail Churches\nHold Combined\nCommemoration\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 10\u2014AU Protestant services for Sunday evening\nwe.e cancelled, by arrangement of\nTrail Ministerial Association and a\nspecial Armistice Day service was\nheld in the Trail High School Auditorium at 7:30 p. m.\nProgram of the service wis a:\nfollows: Invocation, Rev. M. W.\nLees, Chaplain Trail Branch No. 11,\nCanadian Legion; hymn \"Before Jehovah's Awful Throne\"; Old Testament Lesson, Rev. A. W. Mayse of\nEmmanuel Baptist Church? Hymn,\n\"Come Ye Disconsolate;\" New Testament Lesson, Capt. A. Cartmell of\nthe Salvation Army; solo, \"There\nIs No Death,\" Allan Broom; Prtyer\nby Ven. Archdeacon F. H. Graham;\nhymn, \"0 God Our Help In Agei.\nPast;\" sermon by Rev. F. G. St. Denis, First Presbyterian Church; \"Land\nof Hope and Glory\", C. M. k S.\nGlee Party; hymn, \"Onward Christian Soldiers;\" Return of Colors;\nBenediction by Rev. J. L. Clerihue\nof East Trail United Church; Nitlonal Anthem. \u2022\nWING VEMHAPPy \"PANCAKE SMILES'TO YO'TABLE WIT\nVASTE-TEMPTIN'\nHunt Jemima\nPANCAKES\nDIG\nThe secret of pe worlds most\nfamous pancakes is right here in\noese boxes ready mixed for vou .\njust app water or milk an'pop on pe\ncripple. you oet'\nlight, tender\npancakes every\nTIME\/\nIAN toustTJ\ntxf HOWii\t\nAdvertisers Are Invited\n[Use Daily News\nI Advertising Office\nFacilities. . .\nSome Nelson advertisers find\nit convenient to write their advertisements at the Daily News office.\nWe welcome them.\nDesk space, advertising layouts and paper, illustration service\n\u2014 everything is available that an\nadvertiser needs in the preparation\nof copy.\nmtimxx SaiUj Newa\nFaints...\n\"Heart Attacks\nAre Explained\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nNot ill \"hetrt attacks\" are serious.\nAny time anyone over the age ot\nconsent' nowadays gets suddenly\nsick, It Is reputed to ba a \"heart\nattack\", although it'mty retlly be\nanything from gallstone to a spree.\nTha heart doei iome peculiar tnd\nalarming things, hut (is I uy, the\noutlook mty not be ao grtve. There\nare the minor heart emergencies\u2014\nfaints tnd flutters and \"vapours,\"\naa cur Victorian ancestors called\nthem.\nThese sudden upsets ira either\nself-limited, atop spontaneously, or\nrespond to some simple medication.\nFAINTING SPELL\nTht plain, ilmple, domestic or\ngtrden faint hai been divided by\nmy leirned colleagues Into i number of cttegorles. The one thtt moat\nof you call t \"fainting spell' It cilled by them \"a reflex circulatory\ndisorder.\" Emotional disturbances,\nor excitement will precipitate them.\nI uied to examine candidates for\nlife insurance quite often, tnd mmy\ntunes one tainted during the examination. Once I wis examining the\npulse, tnd I hid t finger on the\nwrist tnd both eyes on my watch,\nso I didn't notice the condition of\nmy client was getting into. I did\nnotice, however, that the pulse completely stopped tnd I looked up Just\nin time to catch him.\nAnother time I wai taking the\nblood presiure, and again my eyei\nwere directed iwiy from my .lien's face, fatchinj the mercury\ncoiumn which went down tnd\ndown. I said' to myself, 'The mtn\nhit no blood pressure it all\"\u2014and\nlooked up again juit in time to\nprevent him falling.\nThese experiences illustrate the\nmechanism of fainting completely.\nThe hetrt, through nervous influences comes to t standstill. It il t\nphysiological axiom thtt if tha\nbrain ii deprived of blood for five\nseconds, unconsciousness is bound,\nto occur.\nFIRST AID\nIf the pstient li put flit on the\nbtok, the clrculttlon to the brain\nwill be restored tnd the hetrt will\nresume ita rhythm,\nAromatic spirits, at ammonia ll\nthe aid flrit thought of in this emergency. It owei iti ej-ectiveneii\nto tha fact that lt irritates tha mucous membranes, causing reflex\nstimulation of tha heart, It rapidly\nabsorbed and nisei the blood pressure through the nerve centrei.\nMoyie C.G.I.T. Formed\nMOYIE, B. C. -A  C. O. L T.\ngroup was organized at the Moyla\nmanse. They called themielvei, \"Ci-\nnaditn Helpers\". Officers ire il\nfollowi:\nPreiidtnt, Lois Andrewi; Secretary, Loii Willi; Tretaurer, Stelli\nGeorge.\nMeetings sre to be held every\nother Fridiy, commencing Novem'\nber 15th. A small tee of 10 centa a\nmonth li to be paid. Thia club wil]\nembrace \"Home Nuning.\"\n\u2022 Mn. A. T. Pirk, Blchirdi\nStreet,   hu   returned   from   two\nSouth* ipent in Toronto, Stratford,\nit, tnd Detroit, Mich., where she\nviaited relatives.\n\u2022 Mn. A. Barnes of Willow\nPoint spent Stturdiy In the city.\n\u2022 Charlei Hufty ot Slocan City\nhaa returned trom Vernon.\nParker Williams, Trail lawyer'.\npassed through Nelson anrouta from\nCreston, where he haa been duck\nhunting.\nMiss Edna McKenzie, who\nteaches at Sheep Creek, apent tha\nholiday with her pirenti, Mr. and\nMra. 3. E. McKenzie, Victorlt Street.\n\u2022 Mn. Margaret St. Denis, ot\nDeer Park ii a patient In Kootenay Ltke General Hospital..\n\u2022 Min Emily Harmon, Latimer\nStreet, returned last night trom\n.pending the weekend In Rouland.\n\u2022 Miss Mollle Kirkpatrick and\nMini Jean Logan, resident pupils of\nSt. Joseph's Academy, ipent the\nweekend at the Kirkpatrick home,\nWillow Point,\na. H. Matheson of Kimberley villted Nelion tt tht weekend.\n\u2022 Dr. tnd Mn. H. H, MacKenzie tnd ion left yeiterdiy by motor\nfor 'Vineouver. They were accompanied by Mn. Wilfrid Allan.\n\u2022 Miss Shirley Cosgrove, resident pupils of St Joseph's Actdemy,\nspent tha weekend with her parenti\nto Trail.\n\u2022 Mn. Arthur 3. Choquette, lett\nKootenay Like General Hospital\nyesterday for her home on Josephine Street.\n> Mn. J^eo Tattrie left Kootenay\nLike General Hospital Sundiy for\nher home tn Silmo.\na W. R. Btxandtle of Trill visited town en route to his Procter\nhome.\ni Min Kty Sparks md Min\nWinnifred Perrin of Trail have returned after vlilting Mrs. M. Mac-\nRte, Latimer Street.\n\u2022 Mn. A. P. Whiteman of Pass-\nmore visited Nelson Sundiy.\na J. R. Hind, Principal of tht\nProcter School, vlalted Nation at\nthe weekend.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mri. R. D. Haggen of\nRossland and their two daughten\nvisited town it the weekend.\na Mrs. John Budveiel md Infant\nson left Kootiniy Ltke General\nHospital yeiterdiy tor their home\non Ymir Roid,\nMr. tnd Mn. R. W. Klinck\nwera in town from Trail tt the\nweekend.\nCaptain H. McCarthy of Sunshine Bay viiltad Nelion Siturdiy.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jamei Cherrington and\nbaby daughter left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Sundty for their\nhome at 708 Kokanee Street,'Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 L. Nowlln of Creacent Valley\nvisited Nelson Saturdty.\n\u2022 Dr. md Mrs. Mittun of Trail\nwere in Nelion tt> the weekend, the\nformer going duck hunting In Creiton.\n\u2022 Ernest Cook of Trail wti In\ntown en route to Creiton to hunt\nducks.\n\u2022 F. .D. Pratt, Greet Northern\nbarrister, Vancouver, will arrlfe In\nNelion tonight.\n\u2022 The Study Club md Sewing\nCircle ot the Blessed Sacrament\nParish, Fairview, met tt the home\nof Mrs. F. Rossman, Nelson Avenue,\nFtirvlew. Thoie present were Rev\nGerald Murphy, C.Ss.R. Mra. A.\nMcL. Fletcher, Mn. Thomai Cook-\nion, Mn. A. W. Stubbs, Mra. T. L.\nMarquis. Mrs. H. Dronsfield, Mrs.\nR. W. Hunter and Mri. Willitm\nMarshall.\nStudy...\nParents (an Help\nthe Poor Reader\nBy Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph. D.\nRepeatedly in thll column I have\nurged parents to read dtily to the\nchild from hii early second yeu\nlong past the time he enten ichool.\n1 know thtt retdlng experts occasionally find t poor reader In the\nthird or fourth gride whose parents\natlll read to him. Indeed, I have\nheard from a few of such parents\nthrough this column. Some yean tgo\nI studied and worked with iome\nsuch cases following them through\nleveral monthi until they were able\nto mike rapid retding gains. But I\ndid not, is do most retdlng expert!, advise the pirenti to quit\nretding to thla poor retder.\nContinue to reid aloud to him\nbut ptuse occasionally to show him\nthe word or phrase he hears you\nsay. In the midst ot a new brief\nitory he likes lind occasion to'quit\nreading, suddenly, and don't resume too soon. Impatient, he might\nchooie to dig It out tlone.\nAl further help to the poor reader:\n\"Hive him dictate stories of his\nown to you to type and read to\nhim. Comiea which are really funny\nmd not fearful are also good tor\nteaching reading at home....\nURGE TO READ\n\"About the greatest possible urge\nto learn to reed is the with to be\nable to retd to i younger child,\nespecially to t baby brother or\nlitter; therefore, ibout the beit way\nto help a poor reader is to Induce\nhim to read to a btby or very young\nchild. Naturally then he will choose\nto read easy material., the very\nkind this poor reader ought to practice on. Have him read; only from\nwhat he can read easily, even If it\nmust be no harder thin a primer....\nI have been quoting t bit from\nmy \"Home Helps for Poor Read-\nen.\" You mty hive the whole of\nit without cost, by writing me st\n239 Etat 49th Street, New York\nCity, enclosing t lelf-iddfeiied envelope with \u2022 three-cent stamp on\nit.\nWATCH REPAIR\nli t Job for experts. Our work\nisiures your aatlifactlen.\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Biker tt\nCARLISLE, England (CP)-There\nla i shortage of barben in Northwest England with young hair-clip-\npen called up for military service.\nQueues (of customers) in many\nihops ire longer than usutl.\nPOLISH ENVOY RESIGNS\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (API-\nCount Jerzy Potocki hti resigned as\nPolish Ambassador to the United\nStates, a pott he his held through\nfour snd hill critical yean, Embassy officials disclosed todiy.\nMeddling...\nLeave Neighbors\nDo Own Fighting\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\npear Miss Coalfield:\nI want to know what you think\nof a neighbor who comes to our\nhouse md boasts tbout hii church\nwork? On Sunday he gets in the\ncar md away he goes to church, ls\nvery religious on Sunday, but that\nis as far ts his religion goes. It is\nonly skin deep. By the end of the\nweek his religion is all gone, we\ncsn heir him swearing, cursing,\ntnd very often we can hear his\npoor wife saying, don't kick me so\nhard, and please don't hit me, it\nhurts.\nWe are not a family thtt meddles\nwith other people's business, but\nsometimes I feel like picking up\nthe telephone tnd having him arrested for the way he curses. Would\ny'ou advise us to call the police or\njust let them alone?\nA WORRIED NEIGHBOR.\nAnswer:\nContemptible as i big hypocrite\nil, the meddling neighbor runs him\nt close lecond. This li what you\nwould be if you mixed In the affaire of the family next door. With\nWinter coming on, the doors and\nwindows will be closed, your children will be protected against the\ninsidious influence of the gent'i\ncursing snd beating his wife. And\nif she can take it, so should you.\nThere are some family matters\ntoo delicate for the touch of the\nmost friendly outsider, and I'm sure\na family that had the police forced\non them wouldn't think the so-called friendly neighbors who sent out\nthe csll. You see some women are\nwilling to take kick and scuffing\nfor the bread md butter and it's a\nwell known fact thtt however bid\nthe trettment t woman receives tt\nher husband's hands, she fights sn\noutsider who attacks him. Even\nwhen she turns him up, she sometimes relents and begs the court for\nmercy.\nSlender...\nSelf Discipline\nNeeded to Keep\nPerfect Figure\nBy DONNA ORAM\nWhan there la so much laid and\ndone about keeping slender, we\nmty wonder why there is \u25a0till an\noverweight in the land, also it the\ncoming generations will ba made\nup of only the streamlined type.\nThia would be the natural result of all the talk md work along\nthese linei if there waa not another\nlide to the question. Spine have\ngood intentions but never get pait\nthe talking itate. They are the onea\nwho will get to work \"one of theie\ndays\"\u2014the manana girls wt call\nthem. Otheri begin md tire of the\nroutine before they tccomplish\nmuch. Still another- group, and we\nbelieve the largest, do stick to their\ncoune until they are beautifully\nslender, but after such success just\nslip back again to the old habits md\nthereby the old poundage.\nIt ii fun to indulge In rich foodi\nwhen one enjoys ettlng tnd every\nhealthy girl ihould htve t good ap-\nSetlte. But tfter one li fully grown,\nie diet, tl physicians tell ui, cm\nbe radically chmged.\nMoit mtture tnd elderly women\ntre advised to ett only about hall\nof the tmounts they felt neceistry\nin earlier years, md ss t result\nlose superfluous weight tnd tre\nless likely to fatigue tnd illness.\nThe girls who find metsurements\nIncreasing without much chtnge of\nweight may be sure they need exercise. The normal circulation\nshould be kept stimulated ao that\nthere are no dormant, sluggish\nmuscles.\nNever permit the abdomen to\nround out unrestrained. Keep lt\nflat The back also must be flat,\nthen, with well-stretched neck, the\nwhole body is bound to be relieved\nof excess rolls.\nIt sounds easy, and it will be after\npractice, but this good posture does\ntake thought, determination and\nsome strain until lt becomes the\nnatural pose.\nThe best of this making over Is\nthat one can work tt it tnywhere,\neven in public. The only noticeable\nthing ibout the carrying on will\nbe an improved tnd tttractlve figure.\nWomen's Association\nIs Formed or Moyie\nMOYIE, B. C. - At t meeting ot\nthe ladies of the Moyie community\ntt tht United Church manse, t Women's Auoclttion wu formed. Officen elected: President, Mra.\nGeoffrey Smith; Vice-Preiident,\nMn. R. N. Bnlden; Secretary-\nTreasurer; Mlu Barbara Nesblt.\nRev. G. G. Smith gave a brief talk\non hli experiences tnd impressions\not China.\nThoie preient wera Meidamei\nThomai Willi, Mirk Nicholson, Adam Birr, H, M. Pearson, Clive Bateman, Al Chimpion R. N. Brtlden,\nAlex:St. Denis, A. G. Smith, R. A.\nSmith, ind Mines Nesblt, Ads Birr.\nMiss M. Blaylock\nShows Color Films\nto Rossland Club\nROSSLAND, B. C Nov. 10-Thc\nRossland Movie Camera Club wit\ntreated to a fine showing of amiteur md professional films by Mlsi\nMargot Blaylock at the Club'i mee.\nlng Thundiy night. The professional films dealt with the visit of\nthe King tnd Queen to Canada and\nthe United States, md also covered\nscenes in Australia. |\nMiu Blaylock ihowed amateur\nfilms in color taken by herself and\nher father, of scenes In Quebec and\nNew Brunswick, pictures ot Their\nMajesties' visit, tnd also picturei\nof gardens In the Tadanac District\n\u2022AO! five\nec:mios*s*Meem*\u00bbe;\u00bb\nLadies'\nSkating Outfits\nFlaring Vilveteen \"Shottle\"\nSkirts and fitted Grenfell\ncloth jackets.\nSKIRTS\nUp from\n96.95\nJACKETS\nUp from\n96.95\n($) g\u00bbman7lunt ||\nPhone 200\ntxtsttsx\nBaker St\ntttttttsttx\nN Scouts in\nTrail Colled\nfor the Chesi\nTRAU. B. C Nov. 10-Generoue |\nresponse by the Trail cltlieni greeted the Community Chert canvasi\nby tha Trill BW Scouti. Eighty\nScouts, tniited by IB volunteers\nwith ctn, worked throughout the\nmorning ind afternoon githerlng in\nltrge quintltiei ft clothing, \u00bbod-\nituffs, tnd household artlclei for\nthe Cheit headquarten.\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-Mn. J.\nSewell lett to holiday at the Coast\nwith her two daughter!.\nMrs. 3. \u25a0 T, Stevenson tnd her\ngrandson of Trail villted Nelion.\nOscar B. Appleton ii in Victorlt.\nMiss Jean Ferguson shopped in\nNelson.\nMrs. Marchtnt of Sheep Creek li\nvisiting her brother-in-law and sitter, Mr. and Mrs. Alan BatchClor.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred F. Neale shopped at Nelson.\nMrs. Leon Gamier and son Lionel\nlett to visit Mr. and Mrs, Joe Gamier of Trail.\nBlanshar Birtles of Ymir visited\nMr. tnd Mra. Robert Hong.\nMiss F. Williams Is\nWed at Cranbrook\nto Murray Wheaton\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-A wedding\nof interest took place Friday when\nMiss Florenoe Williams, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Williams, be\ncame the bride of Murray Wheaton,\nion of Mr. tnd Mra. 3. Wheaton,\nat the Presbyterian Manse.\nThe bride wore a Soldier blue\nsilk crepe dress with black iccea\nsorles md her consge wti of white\ncarnations. The bridesmaid was\ndressed in wine with bltck accessories tnd her corstge wti of pink\ncarnations. The groomsman waa David Reekei. After the wedding\nbreakfast the couple left for Cal\ngtry tnd will mike their home on\nSt. Josephs Street on their return.\ndtiidLfrt.\ntTtfoUMLOWtU.\nBy BET3V NEWMAN\n0. E. Radios\nMtde in Canada\nTopi In Performance\nTopi in Beauty\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n574 Baker tt Phone 2\u00ab0\nALWAYS DELICIOUS\n4X CAKES\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nwaaiawww\u00abWi-wi_<(it)M-\u00bb>>M\nFUR TRIMMED COATS\nSizes 14 to \u00ab\n825.00\u2014f69.50\nFashion First Shop\nAit Baker St Nelson. B.C\ntrtttttsacttstststtittsteat\nTODAY'S MENU\nBraised  Short Ribs  of Beet\nVegetables\nLettuce with Spanish Dressing\nCrepes   Suiette\nCoffee\nBRAISED SHORT RIBS OF BEEF\nWITH   VEGETABLES\nThree poundi ihort ribs ot beef,\ntwo to three teaspooni salt one-\nhalf teaipoon pepper, one biy leaf,\nsix medium-sized potatoes, six small\nturnips, six small beets, one ltrge\nonion.\nCut beef In pieces tor serving,\nseason with ult tnd pepper and\nbrown in hot fat in hetvy mice-\npan or biking dish with tight-fitting lid. Add enough witer to cover\nbottom of pm, then idd bay leaf.\nCover tightly tnd bike in moderate\nOven (350 degrees F.) for one hour.\nAdd whole peeled potatoes, turnip!, beets and onioni; cover tnd\ncontinue biking tbout 30 mlnutei\nlonger, or until vegetables tre done.\nArrange tttrtctlvely on plttter,\nkeeping each vegetable separate.\nThil serves |l_t*\nFRENCH DRESSINQ\nOne-half cup sslsd oil, two or\nthree tablespoons vinegar, one-quarter teaspoon juice mustard, one-half\nteaspoon paprika, one-half teaspoon\nsalt one teaspoon sugar, few drops\nWorcestershire sauce.\nPut all ingredients in covered\ngins jar tnd shake vigorously until\nthick tnd well blended. This may\nbe kept on hmd in the refrigerator.\nCREPES SUZETTE\nOne cup all-purpose flour, two\ntableipoom powdered sugar, one-\nhalf teupoon nit two eggs, one\ncup milk, one talblespoon butter,\norange sections.\nSift flour, measure ind sift again\nwith salt and powdered sugar. Beat\neggs well, add milk and flour mixture; belt with rotary belter just\nuntil bitter ii imooth, tdd melted\nbutter. '\nFry on medium hot lightly greeted griddle or hetvy frying pin.\nSpread with ormge spread, roll\nup like Jelly roll while hot and\nserve garnished, if you wiah with\norange sections,\nORANGE SPREAD\nOne ind one-half cupi powdered\nsugar, one teaspoon grated orange\nrind, two tablespoons butter, about\none-third cup orange juice.\nSift sugar, measure. Cream butter, add grated orange rind, then\nidd one-quarter cup of the sugar;\ntdd remaining sugar tnd orange\njuice ilternttely, adding juit\nenough juice to mike thin spread.\nrNervous Restless-\nfl!-. I Cranky? Restless?\nllllIC I Can<t 6l\u00b0\u00abP? Tire\nI lu \u2022 \"\"'Uy' Because of\nejHIl IV I fema_e functional\n\"disorders\" causing monthly distress? Then try Lydla E. PlnUiam's\nVegetable Compound. Plnkham's\nCompound Is well known for help-\ntag such weak, rundown, nervous\nconditions. Made In Canada. WORTH\ntryinoi Any drugstore.\nConstipated? Get\nrid of the came!\nDoctors know thtt the cause ot\nyour constipation It probably\ntuy to And, It, Ilka too mmy\npeople, yon eat \u2014bread, meat,\npotatoes. Perhapi your diet doea\nnot torn emougK \"bulk.\" And\n\"bulk\" does net mean quantity of\nfood, but th* Mad of food thtt\nll not completely iiUmlltted in*\nlit-ii a ntt \"mail\" In tbe\nbowels, thtt helpi the bowel\nhiotc mc w t.\nIf thll ll your eut, the solution Is a crisp canal for breakfast - Kellogg's All-Bran. All-\nBran helps form the necessary\n\"bulk\" ind contains Vitamin Bu\nthe natural Intestinal tonic\nSat All-Bran every diy, drink\nloti of water, ud iet life\nthrough row colored glass.!.\nHide In London, Canada, by\nKellogg.  At aU grocers.\nimaA***\"*\"'\n\/*Jf^& all PtmSotrf,'\nju   \/h\\ \\\/Br\n*-' w\\ I\nrt   Im   I Im\nASIC TOUR GROCER HOW TO GET\nTHESE GORGEOUS SPOONS 1\nt \"Allure\" |.att.m Orlalnil Rotor. t__.po.n_!\nYour, for 5 S _ n 11. h t Soap carton e nd., printed\nIn Entllsh or with th. Hoc, plus Stt, mailed\ntoSu_.l_llt.D_pt.,.,,,. K____Jtos_.6.t\nCHINS UP! THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND\nResolve\nto Make\nSome Distant\nFriend or\nRelative\nHappy This\nChristmas\nThis simple resolution can be easily snd economically carried out this festive season\nby sending\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nCome in and choose from our large and exclusive stock.... We feel sure that we can\nsatisfy you. Our cards are sold in lots of two dozen only .. . which means that there\nis no duplication. Printed with your name and address. The prices are reasonable, from\n$1.75\/ $1.90, $2.20, $2.85 up to $4.50\nPHONE 144\u2014Our Representative Will Call Personally\nMaott lathj faa\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\n266 Baktr Street   ' Nelion,\nB.C.\n_\u00bb>i_ii-M-*_\u00bb----\u00bbi-to*a*>*a*a*i*>\u00bb\n r\"\n\u2014,\nPPWPPPPIP\nPAGE SIX-\nNetentt laity -Nhub\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed   every  morning  except  Sunday  by   '\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\nJ 266 Baker St., Nelson, Britiih Columbil.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRFSS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nTUESDAY, NOV. 12, 1940\nBRITISH COLUMBIA SHOULD GO ALL OUT\nFOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF\nTHE SIROIS REPORT\n1 From a British Columbia viewpoint there is one outstanding feature of the Sirois report, 'apart from the general principles it outlines for the re-allocation of Federal\nand Provincial responsibilities.\nThis one feature is that, on the basis of pre-war taxation, the redivision of Federal and Provincial activities\nand finances would result in a saving to the taxpayers of\nthis Province of between ?3,000,000 and $4,000,000 annually.\nOther Provinces would not, of course, benefit proportionately.    British  Columbia's disproportionately large\nbenefits would be due, of course, to the fact that British\nColumbians, taking all taxes together, are relatively to\n, earnings, the most heavily taxed people in Canada.\nIn order to save to the people of this province between\n. $3,000,000 and _f4,000,000 a year what would we have to\ngive up?  In effect, nothing except the right to the distribution of a lot of political patronage, that we would be much\nbetter off without.\nIf the war conditions force early implementation of the\nSirois report, British Columbians should throw up their\nhats and cheer.\nFROM DEFEAT TO DEFEAT\nThe defeat of France is not over. Reports on the\nrneeting of Reichsfuhrer Hitler and Marshal Petain indicate that this defeat will be continuous and increasingly\nIgnominious, as the Nazi plan against Britain may require.\nOfficial secrecy clothes the meeting. But that France\nJias been \"persuaded\"\u2014by threats \u2014 to co-operate more\nclosely with the German war machine seems certain. Apparently both the men of Vichy and the Nazis recognize\nthat it would be highly dangerous to their schemes to\nattempt to lead the French people openly to war against\nBritain now. But if, as some dispatches state, the French\nare to permit German use of their bases while France protects them against the British, the Vichy regime will be at\nwar with Britain in all but name.\nThe possibility of Vichy's thus giving important aid to\nthe Nazis is sufficient to have caused Pan-American leaders\nto prepare tb take action with regard to France's possessions in the Western Hemisphere. What further aid Germany may be squeezing out of the Vichy group can only\nbe guessed. It could include French warships still in existence, and F'rench planes. In return the Nazis appear to\nbe making gestures of reciprocity; permitting the French\npassage to Bordeaux and moving the line of occupation\nback nearer to Paris.\nWhether such gestures will divert the French people's\nattention from the further encroachment by the Nazis on\nFrench prerogatives is a question. Herr Hitler, with the\naid of M. Laval, seems to be directing French foreign policy\nnow. Evidently an elaborate- ground-work for a new\nattack on the British Empire is being laid. It may be carried out in fields as far apart as Syria: to threaten Palestine\nand the Suez Canal\u2014and Dakar: to menace another British trade route. A German move into West Africa, however,\nwill be of more than passing interest to the United States\nand its Latin-American collaborators in hemisphere defence.\nWith Bourbon-like disregard for new values, the Nazis\n\u00abeem to regard Spain as a possible offset to United States\ninfluence in Latin America. And there are reports to\nthe effect that Herr Hitler has been making presents to\nSpain at France's expense, as in Morocco.\nThe picture is necessarily blurred, by diplomatic complications and by secrecy. But one' feature of it stands\nout in pathetic clarity, all that the Vichy regime can do\nfor France now is to lead it from defeat to defeat. France\nstill lives under an armistice, with a peace treaty yet to\nbe \"earned.\" But by how many more capitulations to Nazi\nviolence, only the French people will decide.\n\u2014NtUSON  DAILY NEWS,  NELSON   B. (..-TUESDAY   MORNING.  NOV. 12, .1940-\n\"And where are til tht patients, nurse?\"\n\"They're waiting outside tor me, matron. I'm otf duty tor the afternoon In t tew mlnutei.\"\u2014Humorist\nOfL Jim Ovl\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:57\u20140 Ctnada\n8;00\u2014BBC Newi\n8:15\u2014Clark Dennii, tenor.\n8:30\u2014Musical Varletiei\n8:45\u2014Lyle Henderson\n9:00\u2014The Newi\n9:15\u2014Sweet Hour of Priyer\n9:30\u2014B.C. Schooli Broidcut\n10:00-Muiicil Interlude (CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Frankie Maiten' Orch.\n10:45\u2014The Newi\nll:O0-MUsical Varieties (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014U. S. Army Bind\n12:00\u2014B. C. Farm Broadcait\nAFTERNOON\n12:30\u2014The Newi\n12:49\u2014Musical Melodies\n1:00\u2014Muiicil Programme\n1:30-At the Console (CKLN)\n1:45-Talk\n2:00\u2014Closing Stocki\n2:15\u2014Chansonette\n2:30\u2014Popular Songs\n2:45-BBC News\n3:00\u2014Topical Talk\n3:15\u2014Songs of Today\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\n3:45-Talk\n4:00\u2014Music You Like to Hear\n4:15-Talk\n4:30\u2014Musical Rendezvous\n4:55\u2014News Commentary\n5:00\u2014Concert Master (CKLN).\n5:30\u2014iRadio Birthday Party\n(CKLN)\nEVENINC\n6:00-Clary Settell\n6:15\u2014The Guirdmen'i Quartet\n8:3--Edwin LeMirr Trio (CKLN)\n8:45\u2014Musicsl Newsy (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014The NeWi\n7...   Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014BBC Radio Newi Reel\n8:00\u2014The Junior High School\n(CKLN)     .\n8:15-Ttlk\u2014\"The Hotne'i Part in\nEducation\" (CKLN)\n8:30\u2014Recital\n8:45\u2014C.K.L.N. Player!\n9:30\u2014Theatre Time\n10:00\u2014Iiabel McEwen Singi\n10:15\u2014The Newi\n10:30\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orch.\nll:0O\u2014God Save the King\nCjAT^TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00-Chur.h in the Wildwood\n7:15\u2014Roundup Time\n7:30\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014News and Music\n11:30\u2014 Britiih Music\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014Song Review\n12:15\u2014Ranch Boys\n12:45-Music Hall Revue\n1:30\u2014The Bflccaneers\n2:30-Home Folki Frolic\n4:30\u2014Musical Workshop\n4:45-Spotlite\nEVENINC\n8:45\u2014Vocal Trio\n9:00\u2014Announcer's Contest\n1*:00-Sign Off\nOther Periods CBC Programmes\nSERIAL STORY\nBy RUPERT GRAYSON\n'.CONTRACT\nBefore   the   Blitzkrieg\nJsl&i yOJLVLAjrfJl,\nostttt\nONE-MINUTE TEST\n1. Is  oil found in  low land or\nhigh?\n2. Who was the Vice-President of\nthe abortive American Confederacy?\n3. Which is correct\u2014to say tea-\nipoonsful or teaspoonfuls?\nWORD8 OF WI8DOM\nThoughtfulness for others, generosity, modesty and self-respect\nire the' qualities which make a\nreil gentlemen or lady, as distinguished from the veneered article\nwhich commonly goes by that name\n\u2014Huxley.\nHINT8 ON  ETIQUETTE\nIf  you  borrow something from\na friend, or neighbor and you lose\nor break it, it should be replaced\ntf at all possible.\nTODAY'S HOR08COPE\nA year of much good fortune\nawaits ail of you who have birth\ndiyi today. You will meet with\nmuch success and your domeslic\ntffalri will bring you happiness\nIf young you will court and marry\nActive, energetic, impulsive, impatient and somewhat wilful, oo-\nttlnate and dogmatic traits will be\ndisplayed by th: child born on this\ndate. Unnecessary risks should be\navoided by such a one.\nONE-MINUTE  TEST  ANSWERS\n1. Both.\n2. Alexander Stephens of Georgia.\n3. Teaspoonfuls:   teaspoonsful   is\nfor more than one teaspoon.\nWAR\u201425 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Pren\nNOV. 12, 1915\u2014Serbisn irmy concentrated around Metrovitza tfter\nretiring Southward along the Ibar\nRiver Valley before the Germin\nand Bulgarian advance. Shah of\nPersia received Allied Ministers and\ndeclared himself friendly to the\nAllies.\nCHAPTER 31\nFor a while Gun wai absorbed by\ncontemplation of the danger that\nconfronted two great cities\u2014a danger that, outside of the gang who\nwere promoting thii piece of vil-\nllany\u2014was known alone to him. He\nwas the only person who could stop\nit\u2014prevent the death or miiming\nof dozens, perhaps \u2022 hundreds of innocent people. ... He realized, suddenly that his life was doubly\u2014\ntrebly\u2014precious now, and with that\nrealization came the thought of\ntime.\nHe looked at his watch again,\nand saw that he already had overstayed his time. He had to get back\nto the bedroom, restore the keys\nand seem to be asleep once more\nbefore that infernal alarm went off.\nHastily, but careful that their arrangements should be precisely tae\nsame, Gun replaced the slim but Infinitely significant letter files in Ihe\ndrawer, relocke_ it, and then, moving as swiftly as the need for silence\npermitted, let himself out of the office, easing the lock so that there\nwas no click as the door closed.\nThen through the kitchen, and\nback into the bedroom. Thank goodness, Trent had not moved, and his\nnote.\nA glance at the clock showed Gun\nthere was only five minutes left in\nwhich to get those keys back without waking the sleeper. The effect\nof the pellet would be wearing off\nby now.\nGun crouched beside the bed and\ngot to work. Trent had grabbed the\ncovering clothes in his hand, and\nwas holding them tightly, close to\nhis face, thus barring the space by\nwhich the keys would have to be\nreplaced in their old position.\nSomehow Gun managed to unloose the fingers, one by one, using\ninfinite care and gentleness. Once\nTrent groaned and Gun's heart\nJumped, The perspiration was now\nstanding out on his forehead.\nThe   fingers   unclasped  at  list\n_____ -ihe LITTLE CARDS\nIN THE DAYS of Whist lt w_j\na great saying that a fine game\ndepended on the uie made of the\nlittle cards, that \"the big onet\ntake care of themielvei.\" In contract thit It equally true. There ll\nnot such a great difference In the\nw\u00bby playen use the big fellows,\nbut a tremendous ont In their employment of the ipot cardi. .\n\u2666Q7 6   ,\u25a0*-..\n4.Q85\n48 5 4\n+ J 10 7 5\n\u2666 J82\nfJ6 2\n\u2666 QJ76\n3\n+ 9 J\nN.\n&\n4 10 9 5 4\n\u00bbK43\n\u2666 10 0 2\n*K4\n*AK\n\u00bb A 10 97'\n\u2666 AK\n*AQ8\u00abS\n(Dealer: East. North-South vulnerable.)\nEut       South     Weit     Vforth\nPass        INT      Put       3 NT\nPui   p   4J.       Put      54.\nPan       5\u00bb       Put      6 NT\nLouis J. Haddad, great Chicago\nplayer, admits he bid hit hand In\nsomewhat unorthodox fashion, but\nhe played lt In a way which would\ndelight the cockles of an old\nWhist expert's heart After Weat\nled the diamond Q and he ituditd\ntht dummy, he uw that hla\nchance might lie solely In the 'act\nthat dummy had the heart 8,\nwhich waa higher than hla 7, as\notherwise he might not have had\n1 good way to get Into the\ndummy.\nAfter winning the diamond lead,\nBy Shepard Barclay\nhe cashed his two top spades tnd\nled the hetrt 10. Thli perfect pity\nassured success. If West played\ntht J, dummy would play the Q.\nIf Eut did not cover thtt, ht\nwould be In'dummy to cash the\nspade Q and try the club finesse;\nif Eut did cover, the heart 8\nwould be ut up for in entry. Actually, Weat refused to cover, so the\nheart S wu played from dummy.\nIf Eaat took thla, the Q would be\nset up. So he ducked to make It\ntough. Mr. Haddad then led the 9,\nprepared to cover In dummy If\nWeit played the J, but he did not,\nso dummy's 8 wu put on.\nIt lt plain that If But covered\nnow, the contract would be made;\nif he ducked, hit heart K could he\ndropped and Mr. Haddad could afford the lou of a club trick. It\nwu nice work.\nTomorrow's Problcir\n\u2666 K7J\nf 854\n\u2666 A74.\n\u2666 A 10 A\n\u2666 98\nV Q 3 10 8\n\u2666 J 10 8 5\n+ 86\n\u2666 10 8 3\n\u00bbAK\n\u2666 !)2\n+ KQJ1\n53\n\u2666 AQ.84\n*)91\u00bb\n4>KQ8\n493\n(Dealer: West. Both sides vulnerable.)\nHow should South play for 4-\nSpadea on thla deal after the defender! take two heart trlcki and\nEut returni the club Kt\nEmpire Pauses tc\nRemember Deaf\nof First Great Wai\nBy D. E. BURRITT\n(Cinadian Preu Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP Cable).---\nOn broad Whitehall, once the icene\nof pomp end pageantry, the Empire\nmerged iti lorrowi today and paid\ntribute to the dead of the First and\nSecond Great Wars.\nAt the base of the cenotaph and\non the tomb 0.' the Unknown Soldier in Weitmlniter Abbey, representatives of the- United Kingdom\nand the Dominions placed wreaths\nalongside those laid there on behalf\nof Queen Mary, the King and Queen,\nthe Duke of Connaught and numerous others, including a group ot\nMaple Leave; and Poppies dedicated\nto the men of Princess Patricia's\nCanadian Light Infantry.\nA giant wreath of poppies, fern\nand white chrysanthemums from the\nGovernment and people of Canada\nwas placed by Hon. Vincent Massey,\nCanadian High Commissioner, who\nwent unaccompanied to the cenotaph, which usually is ringed by\nthousands of bare-headed persons.\nttttsttscitttttsttttstttrtittttttttti\nl7. Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot\npersons asking questions will not\nbe publlihed.\nGun did not dare look at the clock\n\u2014even that would take time. He laid\nthe keys on th< bed by the pillow\nand pushed them along under ihe\npillow. His bent head was close to\nthat of the sleeper, and the man's\nhot breath impinged on his own,\nsweating face.\nInch by inch with his heart beating faster every moment and the\ntick-tick of that accursed clock\nseemed to measure out the seconds\nof doom.\nGun worked the keys around the\ncold muzzle of the automatic and\nthen commenced to push that round\nto the position in which it had been\nwhen he first interfered with it\nAnd then, with a clatter that\nseemed to shake the whole universe,\nthe alarm sprung, and the whole\nroom was filled with a concatenation of sound that sounded in Gun's\nears like the world crashing to little pieces about him.\nAcross the breakfast table ihe\nman who called himself Otto Britton stared sulkily at his companion\nwho did not seem in the least disturbed by the regard.\nWhen Prescott had put her down\nas an actress he had certainly not\nbeen far wrong. Without any stage\nor makeup to help her, she was certainly a superlative actress\u2014for no\none who had seen and heard her 111\nthe company of X and Toni would\nhave recognized hr as the same\ngirl.\nIt was not that her appearance\nwas any different\u2014in any physical\nessential, that is to say, but in some\nwiy she seemed to exude a different\natmosphere. With them no one\nwould have taken her for anything\nbut a girl of birth and breeding, but\nnow in the company of this man,\nthere was a certain devil-may-care\nhardness and defiance about her\nwhich any genuine denizen of the\nunderworld would immediately\nhave recognized and appreciated.\nShe was \"a tough Jane.\"\nTo Be Continued\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nCRESTON REPORTS\nFIRST SNOWFALL\nCRESTON, B. C.-Creston district\ngot its first snowfall Sunday morning. It had been threatening Saturday, in consequence of which quite\na few of the hunters were in readiness to take to the hills after deer.\nwhich are unusually numerous following two mild and snowlesi deer-\nseason Winters.\nThe weekend bird hunters hsd\nfresh supplies'of geese md ducks.\nSub zero temperatures the pa6t\nweek have brought them in from\nthe North in considerable numbers.\n\"Pa thinks he forgives people,\nbut he never doei lt quick. Ht\nquits cirin' tfter he hu time to forget, but I don't tee tny virtue In\n1 poor memorf.\"\nTen Die After Meal\nat Social Centre\nPITTSBURGH, Nov. 11 (AP).-At\nleast 83 men were stricken, 10 fatally, after eating a meal at a social\ncentre today.\nCity chemist! reported \u2022 white\nroach powder, similar in tppetranoe\nto flour, caused the deaths and expressed belief the powder had been\nmixed in bitter for ptnetkes served\nat the meal.\n\t\nBANK MANAGER LOSES\nUSE OP EYE DURING RAID\nLONDON, Nv. 11 (CP'-A Ger-\nmtn explosive bomb thtt landed\nnetr hit suburban homt cost Edwird Pope, Manager of the Bank of\nMontreal's main branch here, the\npractical use of hli right eye.\nThe banker made a dive for the\nentrance of the shelter but in the\ndtrkness struck t gitewty. the\nblow ihtttered hli glasses tnd particles ot glass were dri en Into hli\nright eye.    .   \u00ab^*|A|4\nE. R., Kimberley\u2014Where would I\nwrite with regard to joining the\nCanadian Navy?\nWrite fficer Commanding, Royal\nCanadian Navy, Esquimau, B. C.\nH.S.W., Sheep Creek\u2014Can you give\nme a recipe for \"Tom and Jerry?\"\nBasic mixture\u2014 Separate white\nfrom the yolks of a given number\nof eggs. Beat the yolks until they\nbecome very thin and beat the\nwhites to a stiff froth. Then empty\nboth into a Tom and Jerry bowl and\nmix in sugar, very slowly by stirring. When the mixture acquires\nthe consistency of a stiff batter it is\nready for use.\nThe drink\u2014Fill a Tom and Jerry\nmug one-quarte. full of batter; half\nJigger ot brandy, half jigger of rum.\nFill up with hot water, stirring well\nat the same time with a bar spoon\ngrate nutmeg on top and serve. Another method is to pour the hot liquid from one mug to another until\nthoroughly mixed, and then add '.he\ngrated nutmeg and serve.\nT.  M.,   Cranbrook\u2014What are   the\npopnlations of Manchester, Birmingham and Liverpool?\nManchester 736,500;  Birmingham\n1,029,700; Liverpool 838,300.\nA. R., Nelson\u2014What will keep silver knives with steel blades from\nrusting?\nAll steel articles can be perfectly\npreserved from rust by putting a\nlump of fresh lime in the drawer-or\ncase in, which they are kept,\nMrs. B\u201e of Nelson, V. M., of Rossland, A. M\u201e of Trail and Mrs. A. H.\nof Kimberley have kindly supplied\nthe words to the folk songs requested by I. J., Nelson. They follow, accents being ofnitted.\nPa Roinei Strand\nHjorden betar och klockan klinger,\nKlockan klingar pa Roines strand.\nSvanen flyger med hvita vingar,\nFlyger ensam vid molnets rand,\nVarens vinder i lofven ga,\nSolen skiner och sjon ar bla;\n:,: Men jag sjunger min langa lang-\ntan,\nSjunger ensam vid Roines strand :.:\nFader min ar en bjork 1 skogen,\nMcder min ar en sommarsky,\nBroder min ar ett ax i logen,\nSyster min ar ett vlnterny.\nEnsam ar jag som hedens ljung,\nBlommer ensam och vissnar ung,\n:,: Sjunger, sjunger min langa lang-\ntan,\nSjunger ensam vi*d Roines strand :,;\nOm den stralande solen vissfc,\nOm hon vissle mitt hjertas hag,\nAllt sitt rosenken hon miste,\nSkulle sjunka i qvallens vag,\nSjunka, sjunka i nattens famn;\nMen jag hviskar min alsklings namn\n:,: Sjunger, sjunger min langa lang-\ntan,\nSjunger ensam vid Roines strand.:.:\nAck, Vermeland, du Skona\nAck, Vermeland, du skona, du herr,\nliga land,\nDu krona bland Svea rikes landerl\nOch Komme jag an midt i det for-\nlovade land,\ntill Vermeland jag anda atervander,\nJa der vill jag lefva,\nJa der vill jag do, '\nOm en gang ifran Vermeland jag\ntager mig en mo\nSa vet jag att aldrig jag mig angrar\nJt, ntr du en gmg skill bort och\ngift! dig, min van,\nDt skell du till Vermeland fara.\nDer flnnes  nog Gudz  galfvor  af\n-   flicker quir igeh,\noch ilia- a de praktiga och rara.\nMen friar du der, sa var munter och\nglid.\nTy raskt gossar vilja Vermelands\nflickorna hi,\nde lorgsnt dem ge de uppt biten.\nR. G.Joy Tells\nSoroplimish of\nEarly Days Here\nR. G. Joy, Nelson end District\nOldtimers Association historian, Friday night thrilled Nelson Soroptimist Club members at the dinner\nmeeting with an \"Early History of\nNelson.\"\nIn his search for material as his\ntorian Mr. Joy had met many old-\ntimers whose past experiences were\nextremely interesting and sometimes humorous.'Their adventures\nprovided a wealth of subject for\nthe interesting address. He told of\none oldtimer, with a longing for Ihe\nsea, who was born in Manchester\nand attended art school there at\nthe age of 15. Twice he ran away\nto sea and twice was brought back\nby his parents. The third time lie\nran away and' went on a sailing\nship to Calcutta. Later he came to\nthe Panama Canal zone and event\nually North to Nelson. Since Christmas cards were unavailable he\npainted the first ones to be sold\nhere.\nOne of the numerous coincidences\nrelated by Mr. Joy, was one concerning James McGregor's brother.\nDuring the last war he was looking\nat a photograph of Canadians in\nCanada House, London,* when approached by a stranger. It developed that the stranger was Mr.\nBaillie-Grohman who had visited\nNelson in 1882 when the only man\nhere was the late Dick Fry. Grohman Creek was named after this\nauthor and Sproule Creek after one\nof his companions.\nThe historian told of the first\nschool, the first bank, financing of\nthe first city council, and of the\nfirst stores which contributed to\nthe building of Nelson. Many did\nnot realize, he concluded how much\nof the establishing of the young city\nwas due to the work, enthusiasm\nand optimism of the oldtimers.\nFurther entertainment Was provided by Miss Annie Busk who sang\ntwo lovely solos,, \"Carry On,\" and\n\"There'll Always Be an England.\"\nMrs. C. W. Tyler was accompanist.\nFurther arrangements for the Art\nexhibit at the Nurses Home November 20 were discussed. A new\nmember, Mrs. W. O. Rose, was initiated. ,\nIn the absence of President Nancy\nDunn, the Vice-President, Mrs. L.\nA. McPhail, presided.\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP Cable). -\nAn Empire engaged in the Second\nGreat War paused today to remember its dead in the First War.\nAir raid sirens were used to signal\nthe start of Remembrance Day ceremony at Melbourne where Prime\nMinister R. G. Menzies said \"there\ncannot be a happy future for the\nWorld unless brute force is put\ndown for ever.\"\nNo ceremonitl parades or public\nsilence were observed In India but\npoppies were sold in th. streets.\nliant sun and paid tribute to thtt\nwho fell in the Firit Grett War. f\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 KCPl.-OfflC\nCanada paid homage to the dettt\nthe Fint Great War here todtjr\nyoung Canadians in uniform for th\nnew and grimmer conflict of totit\nstood by.\nFor Uit tirst time the ceremen\nof Remembranoe Day\" was held 1\nthe National War -Memorial in Cil\nfederation Square. In other yean\ntook place at a temporary cenotap\non Parliament Hill.\n. The Earl ot Athlqne, accompanli\nby Princess Alice and Prime lu\nister Mackenzie King, took upj\nposition in front of the monumt\nJust before the guns boomed out tl\nsignal for the start of the silence\n11 o'clock. When the second gi\nbrought the silence to an end tl\n\"Last Post\" was played by a youi\nbugler ot the Royal Canadii\nMounted Police.  '\nMONTREAL, Nov. 11 (CP).\nThousands of Montrealen stood wi\nbared heads around the cenota]\ntoday to pray for a victorious pet\nwhile honoring the deed of anoth\nwar in a poignant two mlnutei\nmemory and hope.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 (CP). -\nThe largest crowd in the history of\nArmistice Day ceremonies here stood\nbefore the cenotaph today in near\nfreezing temperatures under a bril-\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (AP),\nPresident Roosevelt voiced faith\nan Armistice Day speech today ti\ndemocracy will survive and pi\ndieted that the people under\n\"iron heels\" of \"modern dicUfc\nor modern oligarchs\" will \"rebtl\"\nStanding in an amphitheatre ni\nthe tomb of the Unknown Soldi\nthe President denounced \"unpat\notic efforts\" which he said had be\nmade by some Americans since\nFirst Great War \"to make ui\nlieve that the sacrifices were mt\nby our own nation were who\nin vain.\"\nJapan Nay Press French Indo China\nfor More Military Concessior\nSHANGHAI, Nov. 11 (AP).-In-\nformed foreign sources predicted today Japan would bear down on\nFrench Indo-China for additional\nmilitary concessions, possibly aimed\nagainst Britain and the United States\nafter concluding an economic agreement now nearing completion.\nDispatches from Hanoi said agreement between Indo-China and a\nJapanue mission was near on immediate Japanese purchases of rubber, coal and foodstuffs. A commercial pact covering future economic\nrelations between the two countries\nwas expected to be signed in Tokyo\nbefore the end of the month.\n\u25a0 Sources in Shanghai declared that\nthe large Cam-Ranh Bay naval base\non the Southeast coast of French\nIndo-China would be one of Japan's\nprincipal objectives in angling for\nmore military concessions.\nA high Japanese official in Shanghai said the naval base was impprt-\nant in establishing the third side of\nMELBOURNE, Auitralit (CP).-\nGtorge Knyeton, who enlisted In\nMelbourne, wu the list of seven\nbrothers to Join up. Their ftther\nwu killed In the lut wtr, In whicn\ntwo ot the brothers also fought.\nBabjes Born in\nWagon and Snow\nRIMBEY, Alta,* Nov. 11 (CP). -\nWith the temperature hovering\naround 15 below and the snow a\nfoot deep Friday, twin babies were\nborn, one in the covered wagon\nthat was conveying the mother to\nhospital and the other ten minutes\nlater on a snow bank after the\nwagon had upset.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Edson New-\nInn who were married a year ago\nand farm 12 miles North East of\nRimbey, started for Rimbey hospital early Friday, but experiencing\ncar trouble, Mr. Newton was forced\nto get a wagon and team. They were\neight miles from Rimbey when the\nfirst baby, a boy weighing three\npounds 11 ounces, was born.\nMr. Newton, who was alone with\nhis 21-year-old wife was giving her\nevery atention and let the horses\nplod along in the snow, They went\noff the road into the ditch and upset\nthe caravan and occupants into the\nsnow, Before Mr. Newton could get\nhis wife and infant back into the\nwagon, the second baby, a daughter,\nweighing five pounds, was born.\nThe father shouted for help and\na farmer, F. Selenisky, came to his\nrescue tnd they carried the mother\nand newborn babes to Selenlsk's\nhome nearby. Selenliky's son, Welter, rode two miles to 1 neighbor\nNels Gridne, 'who telephoned Dr S\nF. Carr, Rimbey. Accompanied by\nt nurse Dr. Carr went In in ambulance to the firm horpe md cared\ntor the trio.\nHe then took them to hospital, The\ndoctor reported, the mother and\nbtbiei were doing well.\na triangular defence set-ijp whl\nhe said Japan was working out\nprotect her \"Greater East Allt\"\ngram from all outsiders\u2014includii\nBritain, the United Statei and Rt\nsia.\nThis official said the Japanese it\nhope for an improved understan\ning with the United Statei in whl\nthe United States would recognl\nthe Japanese \"sphere\" in Asii, u\nsuggested that a Pacific confereni\nmight iron out all difference!.\nHONG KONG, Nov. 11 <AP).-\ndispatch from the Kunming corti\npondent of the British-owned Chi\nmail said today that the Japane\nmilitary mission at Hanoi was j\nported to have demanded the rig\nto land Japanese troops at Salgc\nFrench Indo-China.\nNo confirmation could be obtain]\nin Hongkong immediately, but to\neign quarters here said luch d\nmands would not come as a m\nprise.\nAir Traffic Big\nProblems in U.S.\nBy DEVON  FRANCIS\nAssociated Preu Stiff Writer\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP).-One\nof Hollywood's fantastic peeps into\nthe future, a few years ago, pictured\na world with aerial traffic cops directing flying machines down \"air\nhighways\" replete with intersections\nand red and green lights. The idea\nis no longer fantastic. The future\ncaught by the celluloid is almost today's reality\". Airplanes \u2014 military,\ncommercial and private\u2014gradually\nare running out of space to fly in.\nThe $40,000,000 appropriated by\nthe, United States Congress for the\nimprovement of existing airports\nand the construction of new ones in\nthe interests of national defence Is,\nin part, a recognition of the fact.\nCollisions among smaller planes\nare becoming relatively frequent.\nAirport control towers, the \"traffic\ncops\" which direct airplanes when\nand where to take off and land, are\nharried by the bunching of arrivals\nand departures.\nDesignated airways, control zones\nsnd traffic cops are not, however,\nfully meeting the problem. The National Aeronautic Association reports that fear is expressed by authorities on private aviation that\ntraffic accidents in intinerant flying\nare going to mount in the next three\nmonths unless measures are taken\nto prevent them.\nActing in the emergency, an interdepartmental committee of the War,\nNavy and Commerce Departments is\nsurveying the situation.\nBRITISH DENY ATTACK\nON FRENCH AFRICA\nLONDON. Nov. 11 (CP).-A British official statement said today a\nFrench Government report from\nVichy that British planes had\n\"bombed\" Libreville in Gabon,\nFrench Equatorial Africa, where\n\"Free French\" forces have been attacking, was \"quite untrue.\"\nPOLICE SEARCH FOR\nMISSING HUNTER\nCOURTENAY, B.C.. Nov. 11 -\n(CP).\u2014Provincial Police today set\nout to leirch for Albert Heighes.\n30, second hunter lost in the Courte-\nnty Diitrlct in 11 miny diys. Alex\nAnnand, 88-year-old Courtenay pioneer, wai rescued yeiterdiy in the\nDove Creek swamp irei where he\nbecime lost Sa'\nFrench Minister\nLimits Pro Spof\nVICHY, (CP). - Jean Borate\nhew French Health Minister, a_\nveteran Davis Cup player, has ai\nnounced a general .ports progrtj\nand laying major emphasis on al\nateur athletics.'\nGeneral recommendations whtt\nBorotra has approved stated \"pri\nfessional sport must disappear. Onl\namateur sport will be continued.*\nProfessionalism will be limited 1\nfootball, boxing, cycling and Basq.\ntennis was given a three year\nlease on life but no longer.\n111111111:im1111111iti\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"  .\nPacific's\nWhipping\nQuality\nMrs. E. L. T. prefers Paclf\nMilk, and gives as her fif\nreason: \"It whips,\" IrfJ\nletter we have received. I\nwhipping quality has draw\nhundreds of complimeri\nfrom ladies who are coj\nslant users of this go.\nmilk. You'll find directioi)\non the can.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packi\n(intuitu ntt imuil\nTtolttoZ\nApartment, House c\nStore\nDAILY NEWS\nCUSS-ADS\nWill Rent It for You I\n\t\n \u25a0*.\u00ab\u25a0._ Jit-WMl\n*************-******&\nSPORTS\niltken Move to\nBoost Intermeds\nHockey Approved\nVERNON, B. C, Nov. 11 <CP..-\nit Britiih Columbil Amiteur\nKkiy Auoclttion hai moved to\n\u2022engthen Intermediate hockty in\n\u2022 Province by passing I ruling\n_ich would allow clubl winning\nilr league title to borrow up to\nur playen random from tho\nigut tor thtir Provinclil ind Inter-\nttvlncitl playoffs.\nDelegates to tho annual convtn-\nm Of the Association yeiterdiy\ntpresged hope thit luch i move\nould lid small cluba which felt\n\u2022 tuk of competing with larger\nims too much for them, In pliy-\nt series.\nThe ruling wu Introduced by A.\n, (Pat) Aitken ot Nelion, Secre-\nry of Auoclttion, who inured\nit convention tint it would be\ninctioned by the Canadian Ama-\nur Hockey Auoclttion,\nA revivil In untteur hockey on\nIt Coast wu predicted by A. H.\n(Herd of Vancouver, who told the\ninvention thtt closer cooperation\nItween Vancouver tnd New Weit-\nilnstcr would result in an im-\nrovement in amateur hockey in\nMM two cities.\nD. G. Grim-ton of New Weitmin-\nler, idded hli hope that \"something\ngreat deil better' could be pro-\nuced In amateur hockey In the\nm large mainland cities, tnd\ntressed tht tict thit hilt the Prov-\nice's population wis In these two\nltlei, with two artificial sheets of\nM within 12 miles of ttch other.\n[.Y.O. Gains a\n20-12HoopWin\nCI, O. bounced Eagleti tor t\n0-12 lou In a City Men'i Basketball\n-eaguc gime at the Civic Centre\nilonday night, Louli Otgnon leored\nlight pointi tor the Catholic boyi\nmd Ernie Defoe wu one buket\nBad.\nFoster Mills, high-scoring tec who\n\u25a0layed lut year for Hornet, and\nwho U now holidaying here from\nKelowna donned tn.Eaglet uniform,\ntat hli ilx pointi didn't prevent hli\nteam from succumbing.\nI Lineups with scorers follow:\nr C. Y. 0. \u2014 Ernie Defoe 9, Loull\nGignon 8, Ctrl Locatelli 4, J. Wink-\nIir _, tnd Joe DeLucrczio.\nEagleti\u2014Bill Btrwii, Don Gibbon.\nGordon Buchanan 4, Foster Mills 6\n_Bd Delbert Smillie 2.\nGordon Stalker retereed tnd\nlien Price wu icorer.\nSt. Saviours In\nPacific Soccer Tie\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 (CP) -\nIt Saviours booted out a 2-0 victory over t hard fighting Nanaimo\neleven tt Con Jonu Pirk here today to move Into a three-way tie\nJot tint plice In the Picific Coast\nSoccer Leigue.\nThe teami battled through I . .ore-\nless tint halt both playing brilliant\ntill. The Vmcouver Isltnd .quad\ndisplayed nice field play tnd back-\nchecking but weakened near the\nbreather.\nTommy Milstead lent the Saints\n(held fivt mlnutei tfter the turnover on t bullet-like ihot from well\neut liter taking tht pass from Jimmy Gemmell.\nMld-wty through the lecond half\nJick Mulr picked up the ball during\n\u25a0 scramble iround the Island net\nand lobbed lt into the twine Ior the\nfinal icore.\nCranbrook Golfers\nto Operate Club\nCRANBROOK, B. C. B. C, Nov.\n,11 (CP)\u2014Club memben here have\naccepted tht golf coune on t five\nyetr leue from the Golf Club Com'\nptny which built the coune in 1921\nIn exchange for'payment of insur-\ntnce and taxes. The Club hu been\nadministered by the company since\nIts building.\nClub memben will nov admlnis\nter the count tnd govern Its finance!. In the put thii wu limited to\n\u25a0those memben who were original\nahareholden In tht enterprise.\nNelson Lady Curlers\nLino Up for Season\nat Annual Meet Today\nPreparing for the opening of their\nplaying ituon later thil week, mem\nbers tnd prospective memben of\nthe Nelion Ladies' Cruling Club\nwill hold their annual pre-season\nmeeting In their clubroom thli\nafternoon.\nTht Club'i membership limit ii 50\ntnd while nearly thtt number is\nlined up for the season, the memben anticipate adding several ntw\ncurleri tnd in Invitation to attend\ntht meeting hu been extended to\nprospective players, Ladle:' curling\nwill likely open Thursdiy or Fridiy afternoon.\nF.S .Rouleau Is\nHonored al Kaslo\nBoat Club Party\nKASLO, B.C.-AI t farewell luncheon honoring F, S, Rouleau, given\nby the Kaslo Boat Club, Captain J.\nA. Riddell waa Chairman.\nMr. Riddell spoke ot the activities\nof the Club during the pait few\nyean, Mr. Rouleau haying been\nCommodore for 12 of thoie yean,\nRegatta!, hunting and fishing parties had been among the most enjoyable event! In which club member! ihared.\nMr. Riddell expressed hli own\nand the regret of hli fellow member! In the lost ot Mr, Rouleau and\npreiented the honor gueit with a\nhtndiome brass retding lamp tnd\nalio t lovely cut glass boudoir limp\ntor Mri. Rouleau. The recipient\nthanked the donors on behalf of\nMri. Rouleau tnd hlmielf tnd wished the club ever; success, saying\nhe would always be Interested and\nhoped to vliit Kaslo from time to\ntime in the future.\nA. L. MacPhee, Preiident ot the\nBoard of Trade and the Rod and\nand Gun Club, also ipoke of the\nregret ot both organizations in losing so valuable and active member.\nTalking over old timei and singing\nended the party.\n-NILSON DAILY NIWI, NILION. B, C.-TU-8DAY MORNING. NOV. 12.\nCollege Football\nArgument Goes on\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP)- Two\ndiametrically - opposed view! on the\nfuture ot college football in the\nUnited Statu were presented at to.\ndiy'a luncheon of the New Yo'k\nFootball Writers Anoclition.\nChick Meehan, speaking strictly\non hli own, insisted it ia high time\nEutern Colleges realize football is\nbig business tnd accept it is such.\nKen Filrmtn, graduate manager\nof Athletics at Princeton, predicted\nthe probable curtailment of inter-\nc.llegiate competition, but with\nathletics surviving on a \"iporti tor\nill* or largely Intra-mural basla.\nMeehan, who raised New York\nUniversity to the status of a major\ngridiron power and itarted Manhattan on the way up, pointed to the\nrise in importance of many Southwestern and Southern colleges md\ntttrlbuted It largely to the wide\nnotice their football teams received.\n\"Those teams weren't built up by\nthe colleges alone,\" he uld. \"The\nRotary Clubs, the buiinesi men,\nthe Chimberi of Commerce\u2014they\nall pitched in. Why? B.eause it\nwu good businesi for them. You\ndon't luppose the hotel-keepers and\nrestaurant owners in Minneapolis\nwere mid last Saturday because\nMichigan and Minnesota played to\n.4,000 people, do you?\"\nFalrman uld privately-endowed\ncolleges particularly may be forced\nto reduce their program! because\nof declining endowment! and a decrease in the football receipts which\nhive made It possible for them to\nenlarge their intra-mural programs\nhe said.\nHockey Scores\nCAPE BRETON SENIOR\nGlace Bay 4, North Sydney 2.\nSENIOR 0. H. A.\nToronto 5, Oshawa 3.\nSt. Catharines 1, Port Colborne 3,\nNO _>.'-_ Bin1\n3 STAR\n(km\nWHKKY\nTurkey Bowling Will\nStart Tonight, Legion\nThe annual Christmai turkey\ntourntment ot the Canadian Legion\nBowling Club opens tonight on the\nLegion Alleys when teams skipped\nby Nick Caisios and R. R. Brown\nart tcheduled to cliih. Six team! in\nill are competing for the turkeys.\nHelping out Cassios are H. H.\nSutherland, Con Cummins and Miss\nJ. Riley and on Brown's side are\nSam Fawcett, C. D. Pearson and\nMn; Con Cummins.\n\u00bb__.\n'til***1\nn.    , ._. J. II   1     \u25a0\u25a0|TISH\njitt \u00bbt\u00aby \u2022gRsr\n\u25a0 * n r-. im-. tt\ni id\u00abrtinmen, tt not published or dlipliyed\nby tr.e bqu* Control Boird or by the\nGovernment \u00abf Biiti-r, Columbil.\n # \u25a0\t\nVancouver Reps\nBeat Thunderbirds\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 11 (CP) -\nVincouvtr Repi todiy defeated Univenlty of British Columbia Thunderbirds 17-0 in the tint gime of the\nMcKechnle Cup English Rugby series tt Brockton Point Oval before\nmor\u00ab thin 1000 penoni.\n'Pace, Callura Draw\nTORONTO, Nov. 11 (CP). -\nOeorgle Pice of Clevelend, 125V.\nand Jackie Callura. of Hamilton\nOnt., 127, fought 10 roundi here tonight to I drew in the headline\nbout ot a featherweight elimination\ntournament\nBritish Soccer\nDodges Bombing\nPlays Fixtures\nBy DOUQLAI AMARON\nCanadian Pren Stuff Writer\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Brittab football, competing against Germin iir\nraids as a Siturdiy afternoon tt-\ntraction, ll bearing up stubbornly\nin the moit trying timei it hu evtr\nknown. '\nForced by war contingencies to\nrun iti leagues on a goal average\nbull rather than on the usual \"two\npointi for a victory, one tor i draw\"\nsystem, the Football Awociation, of\nwhich the Earl ot Athlone, Ctntdt'l\nGovernor-General, It President, hu\nMen gate receipts dwindle because\nof what the Press calls lick pt \"the\nrial competitive iplrlt\"\nChange in the tyitem of compiling standings wu mide because it\nwu believed games might hive to\nbe cancelled tnd becauie lack ot\ntransportation facilities mide a full\nschedule impossible.\nAfter eight weeki of play, however, only i few giroei htvt betn\ncancelled and sporti writers generally have taken to goal-average\nsystem over the coala, claiming the\nstandings give1 little indication of\nthe true merits of the teams.\nPENALIZED FOR\nWINNING\nArsenaL current leaden of the\nSouth Regional section, had a 9.000\naverage October 12 before their\nmatch in Tottenham. They won the\ngame 3-2 and their average fell vs\n4.000. The next week they beat\nNorthampton B-4 and dropped another point in the av tragea. Had\nthey played two icoreleu draw!\ntheir tverage would have remained\nat 8.000 io they actually wert pen-\nallied tor winning.\n\"Surely,\" wrote O. Wagstaffe Sim-\nmom in The Sporting Life, \"it need\nnot be emphasized thit thert is\nsomething wrong with a lyitern of\nreckoning that punishes club! if they\nwin,- but permiti them to retain\ntheir average if no goals ire icored.\"\nDespite the criticism, the Football\nAssociation decided to retain the\nsystem for the second hilt of the\nseuon, starting after the new year\nand continuing until the fint week\nin May.\nBut to conciliate those who believe wlru ind louei are more important than goal!, tha Auoclttion\narranged for a knock-out cup competition. It will begin after Christ-\nmil md run until May 3 when the\nfinal will be played.     .\nCompetition-.hu been keen in\nboth the Southern ind Northern\nhalve! of the English League tnd\nthere wain't in unbeaten team tfter\neight weeki' play.\nArsenal, with leven victorlei in\neight garnet, hu been the pick of\nthe Southern half, while Mancheiter\nCity, with five victories, two draws\nand a loss and a goal-average of\n3.600 hu kept In front in the North.\nCLUBS KEEP GOING\nClubs, paying a maximum of SO\nshillings ($6.00) a week to players\nand filling their lineups with a\nlarge number of amateura, have\nmanaged to keep going despite slim\ncrowds and holdups during raid! md\nthere hive been no withdrawals\nsince the leaguu started.\nTo do away with holdup! a lyi\ntern of \"spotters\" similar to that\nused in factories and office buildings is being considered and If\nadopted it Is expected attendance\nwill increase. Games won't be\nitopped unless there is actual dan\nger of bombing. Crowds of 5000 hive\nbeen topi in England but in Scotland, where attendance reitrlctioni\nare not so severe, u many u 30,000\nhave turned out for a game.\nThe Southern Scottiih League\nwhich itiU uses the points lyitem in\ncompiling itandingi,' keep! to familiar pattern with the Glasgow\nRangen in front with IB points In\n10 gamu. They are the only un\nbeaten team in the league.\nScoring Leader\nTORONTO, Nov. 11 (CP)-George\n(Scotty) Wright of Hamilton Tigers\na home-brew veteran of 26, is the\nEast's leading fotball icorer for\n1940.\nWright wound up the regulir\nEastern schedules with 21 points,\ntwo field goals, 12 singles tnd\nthree convert! to edge out Otta-\nwa'i Andy Tommy for flrirt place\nIn The Canadian Preu lummary-\nTommy nearly caught up with\nHamilton'! star punter in Siturdiy'!\ngame against the Tigers, catching\ntwo pauei for touchdowns. Hli four\nmajor scores gave him an edge in\nthat department and 20 pointi. Ray\nMullim of Montreal, who kicked\na field goal and a single against Toronto Argonauts, finished third with\n17 polnta.\nThe Interprovincial Union had the\nsection's first three, Toronto Balmy\nBeach's Frank Selmour winding up\nwith 15 points for fourth place in\nthe section and tint In tht Senior\nOntario Union. Behind Seymour,\nwho got three touchdown!, came\nhis teammate, Hugh Tunnlcliffe\nwith 13 points, and Hank Galloway\nand Joe Woodcock of Sarnia, with\n11 each.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Prtu\nThe third member ot the colorful DiMaggio family moved into the\nspotlight of sport e yetr igo today when San Francisco Sella sold\nDominic DiMaggio's contract to the\nBoiton Red Sox. Young Dominic\nwhose contract cost the Sox an\nestimated $50,000, wu one of Boi-\ni'i leading outfielders last season.\nGus McDonald Sayi\nKootenay Teams Will\nTop Alta. Pucksters\nIntereit in the ntw B. C.-AlberU\nsenior hockey setup his soared tp-\npreelably, io greatly in fact that\nhockey ihould be u successful thii\nseason u it tny othtr tlmt In the\nput despite war-time conditloni.\nAnd the enthusiasm lint confined to merely Mr. John Q. Phan,\nfor A. W. (Qui) McDonald of Trail,\nPreiident of the B. C. A. II. A., hai\nmade a side-bet with George Mackintosh, retiring Preiident of the Alberta body, thtt the Kootenay\nLeague teami belt thoie la the\nPrairie clrouit In their inter-letgue\nmitchei thii Winter, reporti Dick\nMathewi, In The Lethbridge Herald.\nFarley Activity,\nIndian Manager\nVie in Sport Hews\nBY RAY BLCSSER\nAssociated Press Sports Writer\nCLBVBLAND, Nov. 11 (AP) -\nItem No. 1: Cleveland Indians ot\nthe Americin Baseball League are\nunveiling that man tomorrow. Item\nNo. 2: Jamei A. Farley breezed into\nCleveland today.\nFarley escaped Identification II\ntht Indians' ntw miniger only\nbtctgie hi cimt htrt to iet tbout\ntaking ovtr New York Yankees.\nTht Indians' unveiling, It wll\ninnounced, will t\u00abke.place it t\nluncheon for newsmen.\nThe former Postmaster General\nwent Into t huddlt with Smith Davis, Cleveland broker, Davis said\nthey discussed \"flntl stages\" of purchase ot the Yankee baseball chain\nKan by an investors' lyndlcit*. tor\ni little matter of about $4,000,000.\nFinal arrangements, uld Davit, are\nslated \"before the end of thli\nmonth.\"\nTht two talked t tew houri, then\nleft Cleveland for tome other,' un-\ndltcloied Ohio City. The men with\nthe .money trt understood to Jive\nin several cities.\n, Frenzied activity, meanwhile, pervaded the Indians' front office us\nInvites went out for the luncheon\nhonoring Mr, X. The \"X\" denotei\nthe spot he will occupy.\nGueuei lately hivt narrowed to\nthree penoni\u2014Roger Peckinptugh,\none ot a distinguished line of ex-\nCleveland managers, Coach Luke\nSewell or \u00ab darkhorie.\nOpen Races Main\nEvents of Annual\nHockey Carnival\nA lot ot Intereit will be focuied\non the' open skating races on tilt\nnight of the Senior Hockey Club's\nannual Ice carnival at the Civic\nArena Friday. Thli race will certainly be one of the high lighti ot\na fine evening's entertainment for\nalt speed merchant! in Nelion, Including the Maple Leafs themselves,\nwill be eligible. Among the new\nrecruits there are aome very tut\nmen, such u Dave Haire and Bob\nProulx, while Jakle Mann ot the\nold crew will take iome beating.\nThere It also in open race for tht\nflrit, tnd thit event ihould draw\nkeen competition. Besides there ire\nclasses for the children\u2014both boys\nand girls 10 and under, 11 and 12,\n13 and 14, md 15 to 17.\nH.H.L. Scoring\nStandings\n(Penaltlei In mlnutei).\n(M-Mlaconduct),\nG\nHowe, Detroit    1\nDrillon .Toronto   2\nHextall, Rangen     1\nBruneteau, Detroit .  1\nApps, Toronto     1\nMeta, N., Toronto .... 1\nO'Flaherty, Amerks 2\nColville, N., Ringeri   1\nA  PtJ*n\n3    4    0\nDemaret Teaches\nLittle a Lesson\nHOUSTON, Texai, Nov, 11 (AP)\n\u2014Jamei Demaret carved himself a\nportion of Lawson Little's cuh and\nprestige today, routing the national\nopen champion 8 and 7 in a special\nmatch which proved a lesion to\nLittle.\nThe leuon li: Never challenge\nJimmy on his home course, the Brae-\nburn Country Club.\n\"I brought it on myself,\" motned\nLittle. \"I dared him.\"\nOn the 65th hole, Little made a\ngesture of concession Just u Demaret putted, pushing his putter in\nthe ptth of Jimmy's ball however,\nmd lt trickled to the cup and stayed\nout, giving Demaret a half for the\nhole and hli 8 and 7 margin.\nLittle shot under Braeburn'i SO-\nSO\u201472 pir, battling winds and rains.\nover the 65 holes the match luted,\nand atlll he wu a badly beaten\ncompetitor.\nTommy and Burke\nLead Argo Goaiers\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Prtu Stiff Wrlttr\nOTTAWA, Nov. 11 (CP). - Tht\neyei of the crowd wiU be on two\nmighty little footballera who run\nthe bigger guya ragged when Ottawa\nRough Riden meet Toronto Argonaut! here next Saturday in the\nfint playoff game of the Big Four\nFootball League.\nThe new scoring combine of little\nAndy Tommy and littler OrvUle\nBurke cime out in the open with a\nvengeince Saturdiy u the Riden\nfought their way to a tight 19.18\nvictory over Hamilton's Tlgen.\nTommy weighs only 160 pounds,\nBurke 153.\nTwice Burke ghoited back, iwung\nhis arm and sent the ball sailing\nstraight into Tommy's arms. All\nTommy had to do each time wu\ncross the Tiger goal-line.\nThe touchdowns gave Tommy 20\npoints and second place In the\nleague scoring totals, one point behind Hamilton'! Scotty Wright.\nThrough eight long seasons, Andy\nTommy hu been one of the arresting figures in the Big Four scene.\nIn 1933\u2014hit tint season with Riders\n\u2014he set up an individual record by\nsprinting 113 yards for a touchdown\nagainst Toronto Argonaut!.\nManitoba 'Mediate\nFails Make Leafs\nAlthough he Ls likely to fall ihort\not making the grade with the Nelion Leafa, Arnold Wood, Morden,\nMan., intermediate, is likely to stay\nIn the district playing Junior or intermediate hotkey with the hope\nof getting a berth In senior compmy mother year.\nOwing to heavy enlistment In active lervlce, the future of intermediate hockey Is not bright in Manitoba\nthis leuon. io Wood would rather\nremain in the Kooteniyi. He formerly played in Intermediate ranks\nwith Jimmy McFadden md Romeo\nMartel. now professionals with Portland Buckaroos. McFadden, incidentally, tried out with the Nelion\nSenion four years ago, but wu\nturned 'down.\nShlblcky, Rangen\nWatson, Rangen .... 1\nGlesebrecht, Detroit 0\nM-Ooodfellow, Det 0\nGrosso, Detroit     1\nMarch, Chicago   0\nStanowski,   Toronto  0\nSchmidt, Boston\t\nAbel, Detroit  \u201e..\nKllrea, Detroit\t\nMotter, Detroit  _\nOrlando, Detroit .....\nWirei, Detroit \t\nAllen, Chicago\t\nCine, W\u201e Chicago ..\nChad, Chicago \t\nThorns, Chicago     0\nBlake, Canadiena .... 1\nDemers, Canadiens .. 1\nSingbush,  Canadiens   0\nBoll, Amerks    0\nField, Amerks     0\nJackson, Amerks .... 0\nSlobodilan,   Amerks\nSorrell, Amerks  \t\nColville, M, Rangen\nCoulter, Rangen ....\nPitrlck, L., Rmgen\nPratt, Rangeri   \t\nSmith, Rangen \t\nAdams, Canadiens ..\nM-Goupille, Candru.\nYoung, Ctnadiens ..\nDavidson, Toronto ..\nHamilton, Toronto ..\nHeron, Toronto ....\nKampman, Toronto ..\nAnderson, Amerks ..\nCarr, Amerks    0\nEgan, Amerks    0\nHeller,  Rmgen     0\nPatrick, M\u201e Rangeri  0\nHill, Boiton       0\nCooper, Chicago   0\n1 3'\n2 3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1 1\n1 1\n1 1\n1 1\n1 1\n0 1\n1 1\n1 1\n1 1\n1    0\n2\nKRHK\nMillionaire! . strengthened \u25a0 their\nhold on the leadership of the second\nhalt of the Fleury tournament bowling Monday night whin they trimmed Spitfires two gamei to\" one on\ntha Gelinas Alleyi. Tht Spitfire!\nsqueezed out a win In the first\ngame By three pins, but they wire\nsoundly licked In the other two\nstrings.\nThe Millionaires now have five\nwins and one lou io far In the aecond half with the Gu House Goofers ud Cherry Plcken In second\nplice.\nScores follow:\n8PITFIRE8-\nSpot    _   48  48' 4_-l__\nA. Hamion    99  97 132-324\nP.  Hunden   1<K 184 118-421\nH. Tewksbury . 121 128 121-367\nLow Score 117 140 134-391\nJ. Hunderf  _ 128 141 126-392\nTotali  \u00ab78 885 879 S\nMILLIONAIRES-\nJ. Andenon  138 148 134-420\nF. DeFoe  117 184 139-420\nW. Andenon _ 154 140 167-461\nLow Score   95  97 118\u2014810\nJ. Smith 168 205 198-868\nTotali   872 784 751 2177\nHigh  Individual score, J. Smith,\n205.\nHigh aggregate score, J. Smith,\n566.\nScoren, J. Aurelio md Curly Buih.\niH3p\n-PAGE IIVSN\nSenior Football\nPlayoff Saturday\nTORONTO, Nov. U (CP) -Hu-\nold Billey, Secretary ot the Ontario\nRugby Football Union, uld today\nthe Union's senior playoff between\nToronto Balmy Belch ind Simla\nBattery will opts In Toronto'! var-\nilty stadium Stturdiy. It will bt I\ntwo-gtme, total-polnti series.\nTbe second gime will bt pltyed tn\nSarnia Nov. 23, with the winner going Into the Eastern flntl against\nthe survivor ot the Ottawa-Toronto\nArgonaut Big Four play _ If.\nIff\n-Ut.NIT-l.il COMPANY    ___^\nThi House ot Furniture Valuu\nEigle Block    Nelion    Pho     111\nTridt In Youi #\nOLD FURNITURE\nAl Part Payment en Yout\nNEW FURNITURE\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nAssociated Preu Sporti Writer\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP) -\nSmart baseball men uy Billy Meyer\nof Kansas City ia not the mysterious\nthird man in the Cleveland managerial picture. Well, who li, then\u2014\nHornsby?.., Pete Scalzo, the featherweight king, is going to the coast\nfor three fights, one of them a title\ndefence. .. . Since Larry MacPhail\ntook charge, the Dodgers have paid\noff $356,000 of a $400,000 debt besides\ninvesting a pile of lettuce In playen. .. . One man's opinion: Based\non accomplishments, Minnesota is\nNo.'l in football dr-lea. Just take\na look at the clan ot opposition the\nGophers have knocked off,\nNAMES IS NAMES\nColorado's quarterback, Click,\nmakes his plays do just that , . .\nWhen Fred Stook tackles 'em for\nMaury (Norfolk, Vt.) High, they\nstay that way. , . . Halfback Quick\nof Franklin and Marshall is the\nfutest guy on the squad Thrust\nis the backfield threat of the Mansfield (Pa.) Teachers And Romeo\nPopp pops 'em over tor Mississippi\nU,\nlass Nova's second victim in hli\ncomeback campign will be Johnny\nHanschen of the George Parnassus\nstable. . . . Jimmy Dykes says he's\nwilling to trade every White Sox\nplayer excepted Ted Lyons, Mike\nKreevich, Joe Kuhel and Johnny\nRlgney. . . . The Phillips 06 Oilen.\nNational A.A.U. champs md tht\nOhrbich A_A., metropolitan champs,\nkick the lid oft the basketball season in the Garden two weeki from\ntonight. . . . Tulane playen voted\nBoston College the best team thejCve\nplayed thii year. . . . Harvard Just\nabout changed Penn'i mind about\nputting In 7000 extra seat! for the\nCornell game, Nov. 23.\nTODAY'8 GUEST STAR\nEdward T. Murphy, N.Y. Sun: \"Ai\nson u Alva Bradley names the new\nCleveland manager tomorrow, hell\nlit back and await development!.\n, . . Some of the playen ought to\nhave their tint batch of complaint!\nIn by Wednesday.\"\nGolfer's Slice Pops\nInto Cup From Tree\nVANCOUVER, Nov. It (CP). -\nWeekend golfer Robert H. Best credited himself today with scoring one\nof the queerest \"dodos\" In the hlitory of golf here. He smashed'out a\nipocn ihot on the 150-yard 16th hoie\not the Marine Drive coune and\nexecuted a terrific slice, but ^he\nball* bounced off a tree tnd popped\ninto the cup.\nBrooklyn Pays\nHigh lor Higbe\nIn \"Musi\" Deal\nNEW YORK, Nov.,11 (AP)-<Larry\nMacPhail, President of tht Brooklyn Dodgen Baseball Club, innounced today he hu inquired\nKirby Higbe, a great pitcher wltb\na last-place National League club,\nfrom the Phillies in exchinge for\nPitchers Vito Ttroulis ind Bill\nCrouch md Catcher Thompson Livingston, plus t little matter ot\n$100,000.\n\"We paid plenty, but It wis a\n'must' deal trom our standpoint,\"\nslid MacPhail. \"Higbe wu tht only\nfellow who met the iptclflcttlorn.\nWe've been studying Higbe for two\nyein md wt don't think ht hu\nretched hli peek, and he ihould be\ngood for 10 yein.\"\nHigbe broke in with Muskogee In\nthe Western Association In 1933, tnd\nwas with Atlanta, Portimouth ol\nthe Piedmont League, Columbia of\nthe South Atlanlc, and Moline of\nthe three-eye before going to Chicago Cube in (he Fall of 1937.\nThe Cube termed h_m to Bir_n_ng-\nhim In 1938. He went back to Chicago in 1939, and on May 20 of that\nyear wu lent to Philadelphia with\nJoe Marty and Ray Harrell In exchange tor Pitcher Claude Passeau.\nHe won 12 and lost 18 In 1939 with\nthe last place Phils, md thla year\nwon 14 md lost 19. He led the\nleague In strikeouts with 137.\nHigbe, a right-hinder with great\nspeed md a good curve, la 25.\nBoth High Teams\nWin at Creston\nCRESTON, B. C-Pltylng tht belt\nbrand of basketball aeen here thii\nseason Creston boys' and girli' high\nichool squads trimmed Michel In\ntwo Eut Kooteniy League fixture!\nat the High Auditorium Friday. The\ngirli won 24-10, md the boyi by\n23-35.\nMichel played at tome disadvantage due the fact auto trouble prevented the arrival ot reserve talent\nBoth boys and girls vlilting quintettes had only the requisite five\nplayers, md on the spacious floor at\nCreston found the going difficult\nwith each only able to icore two\npointi In the opening half. In the\nlecond period Creston lent in moit\not its spares and competition wai\ncloser.\nFor Creiton girls, high scoring\nhonon went to Charlotte Wilki with\nteven pointi, with Marlon Staple!\naccounting for ilx. Either Ostendorf\nend Helen McCretth with four each\nwere more prominent in the evening's pity thin the figures indicate. Prominent for Michel were\nQergal and Izubiny with four pointi\netch.\nTeami:\nMichel\u2014Lincuter, Qergtl. lYivll,\nIzubiny, Llnzchuk.        v\nCreiton \u2014 Wilki, Oitandorf, L.\nJohnson, Ml Staples, Hare, A. La-\nBelle, McCreath.\nFeature ot tht boyi' game wu\ntht defensive pity of Ingham and\nFrank Rota. In addition to helping\nkeep tht visitors trom getting too\nclose to the buket, Rota lent a hand\nwith the icorlng with a total of ilx\npointi. Cole, it centre, wu noticeable md accounted tor eight polnta.\nAllan Macdonald and Linden Bell\ngot a halt dozen each. Michel ihowed ltt but form midway of tht lut\nhalf when Red Thompson gave a\nnotable, though brief, exhibition ot\nspeed and ability to locate the hemp.\nTeami:\nMichel\u2014Galla, Turyk, Thornton,,\nMcKay, Travii.\nCreiton \u2014 _.. Macdonald, Skilly,\nInghtm, Fnnk, Rota, K. Kolthim-\nmcr, Cole, Flore Rota, Bell, Turk,\nPelle, Hen.\n- The refereetng wu hindled by\nGeorge Crosson and \"Bud\" Wight-\nmann. The turnout of _____ wil\nlarge, and it half time Ud betwitn\ngames thty hid opportunity to witness i classy athletic display by\nthe High Gym Club under W. McLaren, with similar exhibition by\nthe girli In charge of Mlu D. K.\nJohnion, athletic instructor.    .\nKootenay '40-41 Hockey\nt * *\nTr.urK.ay, Nwember 28\u2014Nelson at Trsil.\nSsturday, November 30\u2014Trail at Nelson.\nTuesday, December 3\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nFriday, December 6\u2014Trail at Nelson.\n\u00bb    Saturday, December 7\u2014Trail vs Turner Valley (Lethbridge).\nMonday, December 9\u2014-Trail at Edmonton.\nTuesday, December 10\u2014Trail at Calgary.\nWednesday, December 11\u2014Trail at Lethbridge.\nTuesday, December 17\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nSaturday, December 21\u2014Nelson at Kimberley.\nMonday, December 23\u2014Nelson at Kimberley.\nFriday, December 27\u2014Kimberley at Trail.\nSaturday, December 28\u2014Kimberley at Nelson.'\nWednesday, January 1\u2014Trail at Nelson (afternoon).\nFriday, January 3\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nSaturday, January 4\u2014Edmonton at Kimberley.\nMonday, January 6\u2014Edmonton at Trail.\nTuesday, January 7\u2014Edmonton at Nelson.\nFriday. January 10\u2014Lethbridge at Trail.\nSaturday, January 11\u2014Lethbridge at Nelson.\nMonday, January 13-*-Lethbridge at Kimberley.\nWednesday, January 15\u2014Kimberley at Nelson.\nThursday. January 16\u2014Kimberley at Trail.\nSaturday, January 18\u2014Trail at Kimberley.\n\u2014Nelson at Lethbridge.\nMonday, January 20\u2014Trail at Kimberley.\n\u2014Nelson at Calgary.\nTuesday, January 21\u2014Nelson et Edmonton.\nWednesday, January 22\u2014Nelson vs Turner Villiy:\n(Calgary).\nSaturday, January 25\u2014Trail at Nelson.\n\u2014Turner Valley at Kimberley\nMonday, January 27\u2014Turner Valley at Trail.\nTuesday, January 28\u2014Turner Valley at Nelson.\nSaturday, February 1\u2014Nelson at Kimberley.\nMonday, February 3\u2014Nelson at Kimberley.\nWednesday, February 5\u2014Calgary at Kimberley.\nFriday, February 7\u2014Calgary at Trail.\nSaturday, February 8\u2014Calgary at Nelson..\n\u2014Kimberley at Lethbridge.\nMonday, February 10\u2014Kimberley at Calgary.\nTuesday, February 11\u2014Kimberley at Edmonton.\nWednesday, February 12\u2014Kimberley vs Turner Valley\n(Calgary).\n\u2014Trail at Nelson\nThursday, February V3\u2014Nelson at Trail\nSaturday, February 15\u2014Trail at Kimberley.\nMonday, February 17\u2014Trail at Kimberley.\nFriday. February 21\u2014Kimberley at Trail.\nSaturday, February 22\u2014Kimberley at Nelson.\nMonday, February 24\u2014Nelson at Trail.\nSaturday, March 1\u2014Trail at Nelson.\n(Clip for future reference).\n\u25a0 \u25a0 r:\nBuddies Edge Out\nAimmies by 18-16\n, B. C. Not. 10-Thi Bud-\ndiet (lined t two-point win over\nthi Jimmies la I girls' basketball\ngame In the Memoriil Hall Saturday night At half time, the count\nitood   8-all.   Nellie  Mlnton,   with\neight pointi, led the icorlng for\nboth teami.\nTeami tnd scores follow:\nJimmles-N. Mlnton 8; Lilly Saprunoff 2;   P. Buih 4; S. Langlink\nFrances Zuk 2; E. Neiblt, E. Daviei.\nBuddies\u2014Ellen Baillie 4;   J. Le-\nPage, M. Smith 3; Hazel Weir 6; Alba Morriion 3; M. McKinnon, E.\nKennedy 3; Chrlitante, G. Owen..\nSTANDINGS\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nP W L D F\nRingers     2   10   18\nDetroit    3  1118\nAmericans ..2110    3\nChicigo    3   110    3\nToronto   2  110    4\nBoiton      10  0   11\nCinidieni ..2011    2\nAPti\n3    3\nGOOFERS GET NO\nSTRIKES IN THE\nFISHING LEAGUE\nFour members ot the Gas House\nGoofers, who are currently setting\nthe pace in Nelson City League\nbowling, made their last fishing excursion of the season Sunday up the\nMain Lake, but returned empty-\nhmded. In tact, they failed to get\neven a nibble.\nThe quartet were Jack Hamson,\ntheir Captain, Tanny Romano, Len\nBicknell md Louie Aurelio.\nSyd Howe Leads\nN.HI. Scorers\nMOpNTHEAL, Nov. 11 (C_**-_*ya\nHowe of Detroit led Nitlonal Hockey League marksmen with tout\nscoring points during the opening\nweek of the season, according to\nstatistics released by the NilL.\nhere today.\nHowe, with one goal and three\nassists, was one point better than\nGordon Drillon of Toronto Maple\nLetts and Bryan Hextall of New\nYork Rangers. Drillon icored two\ngoals md one assist md Hextall one\ngoal and two assists.\nThe Red Wings, who played one\ngame more thm my other team\nin the League, were tied tor leadership with New York Rangen, each\nwith three points.\nMost penalized players In the circuit were Sid Abel of Detroit, Wa_\u00bb\nter (Babe) Pratt of Rmgen tnd\nBingo Kami-man of Toronto, each\nwith six mlnutei off the let.\nSee Our Prices\nBefore you buy or exchange tny\nfurniture.\nHome Furniture Exchange\n413 Htll St Phone 103*\nNow li the time to htvt your\nRADIATOR\nattended to it\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Biker St. Nelion, B. C.\n\u25a0(ail!)\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\n12ol$1.20. 25or $2.30. 40ol'3.40\n'JUST THAT MUCH BETTER'\nThla idverlliement\nBoard or\nli not publlihed or displayed by the Liquor Control\n1 by the Government of Britiih Columbil. ; ' '\n '\"\u25a0\n\".-'.WW\n\u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0mm \u00bbppiii-ifiii i ijiwwwi-iibp\nPWPPWIP\n***************\nra.ae  nam-\nBritain Builds Up Forces\nlear East to Hold Egypt\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\n(Cimdlin Preii Staff Writer).\nLONDON. Nov. 11 (CP Cable) -\nBritain It lending to the Netr East\nevery mtn, gun, tank tnd plane thtt\ncm be spired from the defence of\nthis country In tntlcipttlon thtt lt\n\u25a0will develop  thll  Winter  into   a\nitjor theatre of war.\nAn Informed source aald Britain\nwould strike at the Axli in the\nNear East at the earliest possible\nmoment but meanwhile lt would be\nnecessary to build up forces of men\nand equipment to hold Egypt at all\nCosts.\n\"We are now at the beginning of\nwhat will be a fierce, protracted\nstruggle In the Middle East,\" a military source declared. Britain, he\ncontinued, hts four primary objectives in this area:\n1. To reinforce \u2022 land and air\nlorces to the limit of industrlsl production and shipping facilities.\n2. To hold Egypt at all costi\nbecause ot the strategic importance\nof Suez and Alexandria as1 a naval\nbase for the Eastern End of the\nMediterranean.\n3. To go the limit in helping\nGreece against the Italians.\n4. To strike the axis forces at the\nearliest'possible moment when re-\naources permit.\nItalian strength In Libya was placed at 250,000 troops In addition to\nGerman technicians and tactical experts. Britain's position in the Western desert was decided as \"immensely improved\" with \"better\"\narmament and defences.\nThe source said the biggest advantage held by Allied forces In\nthe Near Eait was their knowledge\nof desert warfare. The tone consists of troopi from Britain, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa,\nPalestine, France, Poland, and a\nbig Arab Legion from Trans-Jordan.\nThe collapse of France created\nformidable problem! Including the\nloss of the, French Mediterranean\nfleet and the French armies In\nTunis, Syria and French Someliltnd.\nBritish forces in that section were\nweak at that time md Ill-equipped\nas compared with the British Expeditionary Force.\nAfter the evrfcuatlon of tha Britiih\nArmy from Fnnce It had to be re-\nequipped, which meant that the\nBritish forcei in the Netr Eait htd\nto go begging. But that il all changed now, with large forcea of men\nand equipment of all sorts being\nsent to the East.\n\"We may count ourselves fortunate that during our period of extreme weakness we were not attacked,\" the source declared.\nThe position of Syria was described as \"fairly stable\" under the\npresent French regime.\nThe same source said defences In\nMalta have improved considerably.\nHe declared \"our ability to defeat Italy depends on holding on\nin Egypt at all costs.\"\nThe Job of holding Egypt was described as \"an Immensely tough\ntask.\" While strategy In North\nAfrica is simple, this source said,\nmaintenance of a military force\nconstitutes \"one hell of a Job.\"\nBritain's duty, he said, is to turn\nout equipment, find ships to send\nIt, and rush it to the Near East as\nspeedily as possible.\nLibreville Port\nIs Captured by\nFree French Army\nVICHY, Nov. 11 (AP).-The Free\n.. French Forces of General Charles\n' de Gaulle have captured Libreville,\nchief port-of Gabon in French Equa-\nI torial Africa the Petain-Laval Government  admitted   in   an   official\nElatement tonight.\n'   LONDON, Nov. 11 (CP). - Free\nFrench headquarters announced today that Libreville, French Equato-\n'. rial Africa, had surrendered (o the\nforces of Gen. Charles de Gaulle.\nIts announcement said the officer\n- commanding the garrison had surrendered himself at 4:40 a.m. Sun-\n\u2022 day. The  warships  Savorgnan   de\n_ Brassa and Commandant Domine of\n\"the' Free French Navy had entered\nthe city harbor.\nNew Polish Group\nDo Refugee Work\nOTTAWA, Nov, 11 (CP) -Another link between Canadian and\nBritish women working on behalf\nof war refugees in the United Kingdom has been established through\nrecognition under the War Charities\nAct of the, Polish Women War\nRefugees in Canada.\nThe new organization will have\nheadquarters at Montreal It was\nfounded by' Mme. Jadwlga Sosn-\nJcowska, wife of the Vice-President\not the, Polish Government-in-Exilc\nIn London.\nOnly last week, a group of French\nand French-Canadian women gathered here for the first meeting of\na Canadian Auxiliary to the Anglo-\nFrench Committee of the French\nRed Cross in London. The Auxiliary\nfounded by Princess Alice, wife of\nthe Governor-General, is working\non behalf of French refugees.\nThe new Polish group also is an\nauxiliary to a similar group in Brit-\ntin. Mme. Sosnokowska, elected\nPresident, organized the group when\nshe brought four of her sons to\nMontreal where they are now in\nschool. She has since returned to\nBritain to Join her husband, and\ncarry on Bed Cross and other war\nwork.\n\\\nBomb Splinters\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nCanadlm Presi Staff Writer\nLONDON. Nov. 11 (CP).-Bomb\ntlinters from the Battle of Britain:\nLondon is to have \"road-spotters\"\nat 123 key points to let busy trolleybus and tram drivers know when\nimmediate danger makes it unsafe\nto proceed during raids.\nSign held by a man on a street-\ncorner in Northern England town:\n\"Give sixpence to the Spitfire Fund\nand I will listen to the story of how\nyou were bombed.\"\nOne of the last \"call-boys' in London,   Henry   Reid,  70,   was   killed\n.  when  his home was bombed. For\n|l many years he awakened workers\nin Ihe district by knocking at their\ndoors every morning.\nWhen the Duchess of Kent paid\na surprise lunch-time visit to a rest-\nhouse for servicemen in Edinburgh\nihe caught a young Canadian unawares, sitting at the table in his\nshirt-sleeves. When he saw the Royal\nvisitor he blushed and dashed for\nhis tunic.\nPrivate firms of shipbuilders and\nship repairers have been informed\nby the Admiralty that Sunday work\nand overtime on naval vessels must\nceaje unless it Is essential. Authorities feel that a seven-day week and\nunlimited overtime do not Increase\nproduction when carried out for a\nlong period. The order docs not ap-\nOly to work on merchant vessels.\nBetter Nazi-Soviet\nRelations May Be\nOutcome of Talks\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP)\u2014A source\nclose to the Soviet Embassy Intimated today that the visit of Premier Vyacheslaff Molotoff to Berlin might result in new Russian-\nGerman understanding \"safeguarding Russia's neutrality.\"\nThe Soviet informant added that\nhe saw little hope for improvement\nof Russia's relations with Great\nBritain at this time.\nOther diplomatic sources Indicated their belief that Russia's for\neign policy now is inspired by fear\not the idle German army and that\nthis, if nothing else, would prevent\nany real improvement in Anglo-\nRussian relations.\nDizzy Doings\nHere and There\nBy GLADWIN HILL\n(Associated Preu Staff Writer).\nNEW YORK, Nov. 10 (AP). -\nNothing in the dizzy doings derby\nlast week could beat the election\u2014\nThat Alabama University freshman who made a 66-hour campaign\nspeech was just a mild sample.\nThe solicitor in Wilson. N. S., got\n7000 votes\u2014although he wasn't running for office! His term has two\nyears to go, but his name got on\nthe ballot by mistake.\nA candidate for the Connecticut\nLegislature went around urging people not to vote for him. He'd been\nnominated in his absence. And didn't want the job. . . ,\nDown in Lufkin, Tex., 400 people\nwere unable to vote because officials\nfailed to provide enough ballots to\ncare for an unexpectedly heavy\nrush to the polls.\nAnd the Laundrymen's association\nreported that the campaign had\nboomed the laundry business because so many people fought the\nelection with drawings on tablecloths.\nOutside the political ring there\nwere plenty of goofy goings-on too\u2014\nA farmer in Princess Ahne, Md.,\nbuilt such an efficient electric fence\nto keep his stock in that he knocked\nhimself out with-it, ... A Columbia, S. C couple paid for a set of\nfurniture with 1000 dimes. . . . And\ntwo teams of University of South\nCarolina Co-eds planned a football\ngame, with the program listing the\nname and phone number of each\nand every player. . . .\nUnluckiest man of the week: Fullback Willie Matthews of Frltzger-\nald, Ga., High School: Just as he\nmade a touchdown during a night\ngame, the lights went out, so the\ntouchdown was disallowed.\nAnd a golfer In Louisville, Ky\u201e\ngot so sore at the game that he'\nhad his caddie finish playing the\nround, while he carried the clubs.\nAnd California scientists discovered that some people can take six\ndrinks in 15 minutes and drive a\ncar better than some people do\nsober.\n95 Per Cent of Air\nField Work Through\nOTTAWA-Completion to date of\npractically 95 per cent of the field\ndevelopment work on aerodromes\nrequired for the training of Empire\nairmen under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan, was announced by thi Hon. C. D. Howe,\nMinister of Munitions and Supply\nwith purisdiction over the Air Services of the Department of Transport. The Minister pointed out that\nthese aerodromes were originally to\nhave been constructed under a two\nand a half-year schedule. As the\nurgency ot the war situation became\nacute last Ma:, the time schedule\nwas cut in half with the hope of\ncompletion of the tlrporti by De\neem_er 31 next All field developments on the aerodromes to date is\none month ahead of the accelerated\nschedule and most of the fields ire\nnow available for actual use for\ndaylight landing. \"In fact,\" added\nyon. Mr. Howe \"mor, than a score\nof Royal Canadian Air Force air\ntraining schools arc now In active\noperation on these fields.\"\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. B. C.-TUESDAY  MORNINO   NOV, 11 1940--\nSell What You Don't Want Through The Classified Adsl\nNpIiuiu Baihi Ncuig\n'   Telephone 144\nTrail: K  London  718 V\nRonlind: Frank McLean\nClassified Advertising Rates\nHe ptr lint ptr Iniertlon\n44c per line per week (8 consecutive insertions for coit of 4)\n$143 per line \u25a0 month (26 timet)\n(Minimum 2 lines per Iniertlon)\nBox numbers lie extra Thil\ncovers any number pf times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, tint Iniertlon and\n14c each subsequent  Iniertlon.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10*4 FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW  RATES\nNoncommercial   Situations\nWinttd   for   26c   for  tny   required number ot lines for Ilx\ndays   ptytbli  In   advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy carrier, per week\nBy carrier, per year\nBy Mail: '\n(\"Inn mnnth\n'       _5\n    13.00\n,.,       $ 75\n\u25a0inn\ninn\nOne year ________\n,., ....  nno\nAbove rales apply In Canada,\nUnited States, 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\nBIRTHS\nHUFTY - To Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles B. Hufty, 609 Silica Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nNovember 10, t ton.\nForeign Newsmen\nTaken Through\nKrupp Plants\n\u25a0\u25a0By PRE8TON GROVER\n(Associated Press Stiff Writer).\nESSEN, Germany, Nov. 11 (AP).\n\u2014A party of foreign, newspapermen\nbrought by plane from Berlin today\nto see whether British reports of\nheavy damage to the great Krupp\nsteel and munitions works were true\nfound Krupps still a going concern\nand the plant apparently little hurt.\nPlant authorities who conducted\nthe writers through the- main parts\nof the plant said four explosive\nbombs had fallen during the raid\nof last Friday night. The effects of\nthree could be seen: One had taken\noff the corner of a two-storey wing\nof a coal plant; another had destroyed a store building: the third\nhad hit a small shed on the outskirts of the city.\nCareful observation from a plane\nflying over the plant and during a\nslow trip by automobile winding\nhere and there through the enormous works failed to disclose an\nevidence of serious hits on furnace\nrooms, coal and coking plants or\nsteel plants.\nThe Krupp works undoubtedly has\nbeen hit from time to time during\nthe many months of British bombing, but the foreign correspondents\nsaw no evidence that its operations\nhave ben seriously impaired.\nQueen Elizabeth\nCrew land in U.S.\nNOT YORK, Nov. 11 (AP)-nMari-\ntime circles said that 80 sailors for\nthe crew of the 85,000-ton liner\nQueen Elizabeth arrived today from\nLiverpool by way of Montreal.\nTheir arrival brought the complement of the big Cunarder rumored\nready to leave within 48 hours, to\nmore than 600 men. Tied up here\nsince last March, the 1080-foot ship\nis believed scheduled for troop\ntransport duty.\nIn a lifeboat drill this morning the\nQueen Elizabeth's 13 starboard lifeboats were lowered to the water-\nline. The hoisting apparatus of each\nwas carefully checked.\nEdmonton Traffic\nStalled by Cold\nEDMONTON, Nov. 17 (CP). -\nStreet cars and trolley buses In\nEdmonton were stalled for more\nthan 30 minutes early today tfter t\ntrolley wire on Edtnonton's main\nthoroughfare, Jasper Avenue snapi\nped as result of contraction caused\nby 26 below weather.\nMost severe contracting of raili\nin yean was noted on the high\nlevel bridge over the North Saskatchewan River here. Workmen\nInstalled short pieces of rail where\ncontraction had occurred.\nA Remembrance Day parade of\nseveral thousand persons in the Canadian Active Service Force, non-\npermanent units aand Great War\nveterans was cancelled.\nKenneth McLellan suffered frostbitten feet Saturday night and was\nrecovering In hospital today.\nCRESTON VOTERS' LIST\nSHOWS DECREASE OF\nELEVEN IN FIRST COUNT\nCRESTON, B. C. - For Creston's\nuunicipal election December 12, Village Clerk E. F. Arrowsmlth has\nfust posted the first draft of the\nvoters list. It shows 315 names, at\ncompared with 326 on the list used\nat the polling in 1939. An officitl\nrevision is announced for Friday\nwhen it is expected additions will\nbring the total up to last year's\nstandard.\nThere U one vicancy to fill. Councillor W J. Cralg'i three-year term\nhis expired. He Is at present employed ai foreman on airporl building conitruction it Penhold. Alts,\nbut It li understood he will seek reelection, tnd will be back in time\nto look after nomination and election details.\nHELP WANTED\nA MAN WITH A TRADE\nIS VALUABLE\nAre you willing to work to\nbe t success? Aircraft workmen\nwith I triining are In demand\nTo be successful you ihould specialize In conitruction; motors or\nin radio, Training men In the\nabove ia our specialty. Why not\ndo aomething about It now? Remember our training includes both\ntheory and practical work, All\ntheory la modern and our equipment li right up to the minute.\nWrite now to NATIONAL\nSCHOOLS, care ot G. W. Blackburn, Stvoy Hotel, Nelion, B. C.\nWANTED-EXPERIENCED FARM\nhand on poultry farm, able to milk\n$25 month, board tnd cabin. State\nage and particulars, J. H. Dolman\nNikspu. B C,\nWANTED - CASpfStiERS A_>-\nply Employment Office, Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company, Trail, B. C,\nWANTED - FULLY EXPERI-\nenced girl. Able to cook. Mrs. B.\nA. Stimmel. 12 Ritchie Ave,, Trail\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates tor noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c [or one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines. Payable In advance\nDO YOUR REPAIR WORK NOW\nbefore Winter seta In. Doors, windows, chimneys, etc. Work done\nat reasonable cost. Phone 940.\nMIDDLE AGED MAN WANTS\ntruck driving -Job at once. Write\n406 Beasley St, Nelson, B. C.\nWOMAN WANTS WORK IMMED1-\nately. Sleep out. Good references\nPh. 94, Suite 21, Noble Hotel._\nYOUNG WOMAN WANTS WORK\nby day or hour. Experienced. Mrs\nTRUCK DRIVER WITH CLASS C\nlicence desires' work. Apply 507\nRailway Street'\nMIDDLE AGED WOMAN WANTS\nJob as housekeeper. Box 5208\nDaily News.\nYOUNG GIRL DESIRES WORK.\nHousework preferable. Box 5231\nDaily News.\nSEWING    IN    YOUR    HOME\nPhone 525R3.   ,\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE ONE 35 FT. CRUISES\ncabin, good for launch parties oi\ntowing. Name Eleanor, boat and\nboat house, price reasonable. P. 0\nBox 51, Procter, B. C.\n.VAN I ED    MISCELLANEOl..\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METAL,\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C-\nshTp Us Tour hides, JT F\nMorgan, Nelson, B. C.\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS\nAND REPAIRS\nWEBB'S. ALL KINDS STRINGS\nfittings, repairs. 806 Baker S Nel\nson. Next Scandinavian Church.\nCrude petroleum production '.n\nCanada during the first seven\nmonths of 1940 amounted to 4,558,l(i_\nbarrels in comparison with 4,270,40V\nbarrels in the corresponding period\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES. BICYCLES\n3-TRUCK SPEC1ALS-3\nId International Panel\n\u202237 Ford Ptnel\n'39 Ford De Luxe Pmtl\nAll Carry Our Guarantee\nCENTRAL TRUCK k\nEQUIPMENT CO.\n411 Hendryx St.     Nelson. B. C.\nREPOSSESSED 1935 TSED M-\nLuxe Coupe. This cir tl In excellent condition, hu good rub\nber tnd licensed. A really good\nbuy Interior Motor Finance Corp\n554 Ward Street. Nelion. B C.\nFOR SALE - 1937 LA-'AVKTTI;\ncoupe, with anti-freeze, radio,\nheater, over-drive, fender guardi\nfog and ipot lighti, etc. In splendid ihtpe. Apply J. Munch, 1160\nCedar Avenue, Trtil, B. C.\n22\" x 20\" C. C. M. BIKE WITH\nlamp, extra brake, stand. $20\nAlso 20\" x 18\" bike, new tirei\ntubes, rims spokes $15. H R Kitto\n1935 PLYMOUTH SEDAN WITH\nbuilt in trunk. A premium car\n$575. Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd. Opp\nPost Office and Hume Hotel\n\u202229 CHEV. DELUXE SEDAN. FlVl\nwire wheeli. Licensed. Drive her\n\u25a0\u25a0 away for only $100. Nelson Transfer Company Ltd.\nSPECIALIZINf_riN ELECTRIC _.\nacetylene welding Stevenson's\nMachine Shop. Nelson, Phone 98\nNEW AND USED AUTO PARTS\nNelson Auto Wrecking. Phone 948\n'mwhippet coupew-Tt err.\nAuto Wreckers. Phone 447.\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWANTED - NEW HAMPSHIRE.\nBarred Rock and Buff Orpington\negjs for the coming hatching leason. Pringle Electric Hatcherlei,\n223. 17 Ave. East, Calgary, Alta\nFOR SALE - PURE BRED GUERN\n\u2022 sey Bull, 10 months old, $60 Dam\nbred by Arthur Zink, Sire by Geoffrey Macdonell. Both of Sardii\nW. H. Mole, E_st Arrow Park, B.C\nSELLING OF. ONE Y.EAR OLD\nWhite Leghorns. 50c each. $45 for\n100. Wallace. Tarry's, Thrums P.O\nFOR SALE - HORSE 10 YEARS.\nGentle. Good worker $70 Owner\nleft dist W. Fraser, Kootenay Bay\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - FINE\nYorkshire pigs. 6 wks. old at $3 25\neach. Erlndale Ranch, Harrop.\nREG. SAANEN BUCK AT~STUD.\nHigh producing strain. Checkering.\nUpper Granite Road.\nFOR SALE, PIGS. ALL AGES,\nsame price. E. H. Hlrd, Slocan City\nFRESH MILK COWS FOR SALE\n3. Hiemstra, Ross Spur P. O., B. C.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nNEW LOCATION\nWe   are   now   conducting  our\nbusiness at 557 Ward St. Annable\nBlock.\nR. W. DAWSON\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPhone 197\nWE HAVE SEVERAL CLIENTS\nlooking for good homes, Fair-\nview or up the hill section. 11\nyou wish to sell get in touch with\nus Appleyard.\n(10OD FARM LANDS FOR SATt\non easy terms In Alberia ana\nSaskatchewan Write (or full in\nformation to 908 Depi ol Natura\nResources C P R   Calgary Alls\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSTTl\nNelson Terms Jonnstone Estate\nBox 198, Nelson, B C.\nPERSONAL\nRED CROSS SHOP. 668 BAKER\nSL needs merchandise donations\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C, P. S. Depoi\nTHE PERFECT CHRISTMAS GUT\nA portrait ol yourselt Special ol\nfer ti McGregors Phone 224\nSALVATION ARM-? \u2014 fF 7-5D\nhtve old clothing, footwear, turn\nture to spare please Ph. ui 818L\nC.HOQUETTE BROS. ^OTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\ntnd girls. Ph. 258 tor dally dlvry\nHATS CLEANED AND BLOCK.,D\nCleaning, pressing, repairing tnd\nliter.tiom H J Wilion. Joiepmn.\nStreet. Phone 107\nDOtJ'T BE COLD - J. CHfiSS _nd\nHind Store hai i itock of good\nheaters on hand. See them t<\n624 Vernon Street\t\nLADIES. WE HAVE JUST M\nceived a shipment ot Chin.se\nSilks, housecoata. scarves nan_-\nlet. etc Stanley's, 652 Baker St\nTEA FOR ENGLAND - PACKED\nreidy tor mailing Murchie'i delicious cup quality Orient Tea Co.\n720 Homer St, Vancouver. B  C\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN C75T\nton raga not less than 12 inches\nsquare. 9c lb F. 0 B Nelson\nDaily Newi. ,\t\nHAIRQOODS\nI. A DIES AND GENTLEMEN S\nwigs and toup?rs fit and shad\nIng guaranteed Free rauhiguc\nHanson Company P 0 Box 601\nVancouver B C .\nLOOK YOUR BEST FOB THE\nFall dances and parties, vis.l\nMilady's Beauty Parlors at 577\nBaker Street tor hair styling at its\nbest Phone 244 tor appointments\nTWO FREE THEATRE TICKETS\nare held at The Daily News for\nMra. F. B. Pearee, 606 Hoover St.\nto see \"Return of Frank James\"\nat the Civic Theatre.GoodNov. 12\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrap\nped. Tested, guaranteed and pre\npaid Free Novelty price lisi\nPrinceton Distributors P. 0 Box\n61  Princeton, B C.\nSUPERFLUOUS HAIR S A F E L Y.\nprivately removed Face arms,\nlegs; treatment $2 postpaid, plain\nwrapper. Guaranteed to kill roots\nwith one application. Canadian\nChemistry Co., Wilkie. Sask..\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY VlS\"-\nor. pep. Try Vitex 25 tablets $100\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed 24\np e r s o n a 1 \"Drug Sundries\" $1.00.\nFree price list of drug sundries J\nJensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C.\nCHRISTMAS CARDS FROM YOUR\nown snjps. A really Personal Card\nOur new designs-for this year\nare very smart Send negative\nand 10c for sample card. Krystal\nPhotos, Wilkie, Saskatchewan.\nSPECIAL OFFER - 100 OUARAN-\nteed first quality double edge\nblades, with free razor for $1.00\ndelivered. Drug Sundries, bes;\nquality, assortment of 27 for $1.00\npostpaid. Free price list. Plain\nsealed wrapper. Western Supply\nAgency, 14th Ave. E., Calgary, Alta\nBE PREPARED\nEvery Winter the cold and the\nrains\nBring back those dreaded rheumatic pains.\nGet complete relief- with\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nAt Mann, Rutherford and othei\ndrug stores.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nPERSONAL\niCinitiiiuedi\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed tnd printed\n25c. We ntve Instilled the ver.\nlatest model Projection mtchuii\ntnd will send a 5 by 7 enlarce\nment. tree with each film devei\n' oped Include 5c for postage mo\npacking Krystal Photos, Wilkie\nSaskatchewan. ,\nfITFJTnrB' OF TETrSTnT AI\nChristmas Cards? Tommy Ciluv\nit T* - Nelion Daily News tgen.\n, He will be on the ipot with ou>\nitmplei tf you leave your siree'\ntddresi tnd the time you would\nlike him to cell Reach tor tne\ntelephone tnd call 144\n-OR and WANTED TO RENi\nFOR RENT, A COMFORTABLE _\nroom stucco house with bath, fur\nnace. garage on Nelson Avenue\nApply 520 Mill Street\nFOR RlFff. 5 RM. BUNGALOW\ncement foundation, white plumbing. M5month_C. W  Appleyard\nr*OR~ RENT. SMALlTCOTTAGE.\npartly furnished, 2 garden lots. $1'-\nmonth. C   W   Appleyard.\nlOHNSl'ONE  BLDG    MODERN\nGen   Electric equipped suites\nTERRACE API'S Be.uu.ul modern\nfrigidaire equipped tunes\nFOH lti_NT - 3, ROOMED HOUSE\nD Maglio Phone BODL\nFOR   REi.T   -   FUHN.   3  ROO\"M\napartment Pr.vate bath. Ph 981K\nFOTTRENT - FURNISHED SUITE.\nVacant Nov. 15. 916 Edgewood Ave\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms  Slrathcona Hotel.\nTO RENT  - COSY  ROOM FOR\nlady. Apply 610 Silica Street\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOMED HOlJSE\nClose in. Apply R, A. Aldersmith\nA SMALL HOUSE FOR RENT\nclose in. $15 mon. C. W Appleyard\nFOR RENT STUCCO HOUSE. FUR\nnace, close in. 705 Stanley Street.\nFOR RENT  -  HOUSE, PARTLY\nfurnished. Also suite. Ph. 377X.\nSea KERK APARTMENTS First\nI   SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock (or immediate shipmem\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nIsl Avenue and Main St\nVancouve,   B C.\nPIPE-FITTINGS TUBES -' SPE\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916 Powell Si., Vancouver   B   I\nWANTED - RELIABLE BUYER\nfor a 30 Holt Cat. Good cond Summer and Winter tracks. Ph. 465X.\nCHOICE OF 3 COPPER TUB\nBeatty Washers, all in good condition $35. McKay & Stretton,\nMETAL LATHE,  WOOD LATHE,\nacesrles., motors, rad. cab. Ph 872X\nUSED  WASHER,  GOOD  CONDI-\ntion. Phone 260.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad. .\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST   -   BLACK   PURSE   COM-\ntaining spectacles.  Rwd.  Ph.  17\n,'ETS, CANARIES. BEES. etc.\nWANTED - SMALL DOG FOR A\npet. Phone 653L.\nLOANS, INSURANCE. ETC\nWHY NOT INSURE YOUR FURS.\nWorld wide coverage against Fire,\nTheft and Hszards of Transport!\"\ntlon. Minimum premium $3 ind\n$7.50 for S yein. C. W. Appleyird.\nFUNDS FOR ltiT-ORTGATjE tftcC\nion or Trail proptrty Yorkshir.\nPlan repay monthly. Let us re-\nfinance your mortgage and savt\nyou money. C  W. Appleyard\nESTABLISHED OVER \"25 YEARS\nH. E Dill. Fire, Cur. Hetltb In.\nsurtnee Agency. 5:|2 Ward Street,\nROOM AND BOARD\nGOOD  BOARD AND ROOM, It.\nCedar Si   Block from Civic.\nBUSINESS AND.\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYER. tnd MINE AGENTS\nE W WIDDOWSON.PROVINIIAL\nAnalyst 305 Josephine Si   Nelson\nHAROLD S ELMES ROSSLAND\nB C Provincial Assayer. Chemut\n.Individual representative for ship\npari al Trtil Smelter\nAT BUIE \"INDEPENDENT UttTt\nrepresentative Full time atten\ntion given shippers' tntereitl\nBox 54 Trail, B C\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj r McMillan, d c. neurO\ncalometer  X-ray  McCulloch Blk\nDR   WILBERT BROC__.T>.\"\"C\n542 Baker Street  Phone 969.    '\nCOR8ETIERES\nSPENCER CORSEtlERE MRS L\nJohnstone. 105 Kerr Apts Ph. 66!\ni M i ii    \u2014i\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C AFFLECK. P O BOX 1M\nTrail. B. C. Surveyor and Em\nglneer Phone \"Beaver Falla,\"\nR W HAGGEN, MINING k CtVTt\nEngineer: B C. Land Surveyor\nRossland and Grand Forki. B C\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATI\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In\n' surance, Rentals, 557 Ward Street\nAnnable Block. Phone 197.\nC   D.   BLACKWOOD AGENCtK\nInsurance. Real Estate Phone 88\nCHAS F McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electrii\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vemon St\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES Al\nForeit Lawn Memorial Perk Oe\nprice list from Bronze Memorial)\nLtd., Box 726 Vancouver, B. 0\nPATENT  ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I, O\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Can,\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd St *t,\nCalgary. Advice tree, confidential.\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORS\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n8ECOND HAND 8T0RES\nWE  BUY.  SELL  k  EXCHANG1\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 534\n\u25a0  '--- >>^^.~-vJt[,\n msn\nCertificate Required for Shipping\nApples Overseas; Advise Good Pack\nOTTAWA. Ont -  Btfort ihlp-\nment of apples to the United Kingdom can be mtde to member! ot\ntbe C. A. 8. F\u201e Ctntdlani itrvlng In\nthe Britiih or Allied Forces or to\ncivilians, a certificate muit be obtained from a Dominion Fruit Inspector certifying that tbe apples\n' omply with the requirement! of the\n\" atructive Insect and Pert Act. The]\neptrtment of Trade end Commerce\nemphasi-es thtt tht greatest Ctrl\nmust bt taken In conforming to\nthe regulations governing package\n\u25a0weighti md methodi of ihipmeut.\nGifjs ot apples may be tent to\ndviliam In the United Kingdom by\nfreight or expreu through trade\nchannels only. Such package! muit\nJiot exceed 15 pounds weight, must\nbe Individually addresied before\nleaving Canada, and forwarded to\nan tuthoriied importer in the United\nKingdom for diitributlon by pircel\n.post. In addition individual parcels\nSot exceeding 20 poundi weight may\n;be lent direct by ptrcel post from\nCanada.\n'* There ire no weight limitations\n'an packagei of apples sent to mem-\ni*ben of the C. A. S. F. or to Cana-\np dlans serving in other British or\n<a_-ied forcei. when forwarded by\ni express or freight. When sent by\n.parcel post from Canada, however,\nthe parcel! must not exceed 20 ^\npounds weight, Gifts forwarded to\nIndividual members of the C A.S.F\nby freight or express muit be addressed to the consignee in care ol\nIhe Officer Commanding the unit\nand shipped through a forwarding\nagent to enable clearance through\ncustoms. Carlo's of individually\naddressed packages ihould be consigned to the Senior Officer, Auxiliary Services, C.M.H.Q., Cockspur\nStreet, London. Similar gifts to\nCanadians serving in British or allied forces ihould ctrry tht name,\nnumber, rank of tht consignee tnd\nthe name of the unit end be addressed in care of the Canadian\nAuxiliary Service, B Dilke Street,\nChelsea, London, S.W. 3.\nThe Dominion Department of Agriculture points out that while there\nis no regulation against the lending of tpples trom Canada by parcel post to the United Kingdom up\nto a maximum weight ot 20 pounds,\nexcept that they require inspection\nby a Dominion Government inspector, the sending of such parcel! is\nnot considered practical and therefore ij not recommended. The reason for this recommendation, states\nthe Department, Is that due to the\nfact apples are a perishable product, they are not likely to arrive in\ngood condition, because when sent\nby parcel post they do not go forward under favorable shippini.\nconditloni.\n'Tramway Being\nInstalled for\nEuphrates Mine\n\u25a0SPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 11 - A\nI Building that will house the machinery  of the Gold-Silver-Tung-\ntten Mining k Milling Company,\n'Sine  miles South of Nelson,  has\n, been completed, Edward Terzian,\nPreiident, announced here. Its dimensions  tre   sufficient  to  admit\nj equipment ot 400 toni daily capacity\ni but It will be equipped for 100 tons\ndaily at preient tnd 400 later, .he\n''t\u00bbld.\n\u25a0   Machinery hai been received for\nt 100-ton mill. Iti installation will\nbe itarted in about a week. At\n.present the crew il installing an\nI aerial tramway. The tramway will\nbe 2400 feet long, ot a ilngle span\ni and will connect the upper bunk-\ni ers of the mine and the 'coane ore\n, bin tt the head of the mill, between\n\u25a0\u25a0 which- there It \u25a0 difference of 1000\nfeet in altitude. The tramway will\n'be of two bucket! tnd gravity operated. Harold Lakes, mining engineer,\nil completing the tramway and mill.\nI   The mill building was erected In\n.10 weeks of steady construction. A\n' ltrge quantity of ore ht! been de-\n. velopcd in the mine, the Euphrates.\nPlant installation will proceed with\nthe purpose of starting a flow of ore\nthrough   the   mill   aa   early   as\n| practicable.\nTrumpeters for\nAir Units Needed\nOTTAWA\u2014The Royal Canadian\nAir Force has issued a call for trumpeter! to sound the daily duty calls\nIt tir stations icattered across Canada from coast to coast\nWhile the trumpeter recruit must\nbe at least 18 yeara old and capable\nOt passing the Air Force medical\nexamination, he need not be a\n' virtuoso on the trumpet. Experience in playing either the trumpet\n\"fier the bugle is essential, and recruits with such qualifications are\ndirected to apply to the nearest,\nB.CA.F. recruiting centre, taking\nWith them proof of their musical\nqualifications.\nTile need for \"itation trumpeters\"\n. wti described at Air Force Head-\n\u2022 quarter* ai a fine opportunity for\n. young men with experience in Boy\nScout or cadet bugle bands. About\n75  trumpeters  tre  required,   end\nthose recruits accepted will be fully\ntrained by expert instructors in the\nvirlous  Air  Force  trumpet calls,\nWhich differ considerably from standard army calls. Trumpeter! will\nhive no other duties to perform.\nThe trumpet used by the R.C.Ai.\nls the E-fltt cavalry trumpet, a\nlonger and more graceful instrument than the short, blunt n- flnt\nbugle of the army. The tone is thinner and more penetrating.\nMONTREAL LIVESTOCK\nMONTREAL, Nov. 11 (CP)-Cat-\nI lit 1313, calves 2919, iheep ind\nlambs \u00ab__; hogs 2359.\nHeifers 4.00-0.00; iteen 6-4.50.\nGood vealeri  11.00.\nLambs 9.50 for good ewes and\nWethers; sheep 3.50-5.50,\nA DAILY NEWS\nCLASS-AD\nWill Sell tt\nPHONE 144\nFOR RESULTS\nWORK RAILWAYS\nDESPITE BOMBS\nLONDON (CP)-Brltlih railway-\nmen continue to work during air\nraids to fulfill their \"front line\" responsibility of keeping the nation's\nrailway services running.\nAccording to a railway ipokei-\nman, all branches ot the railway\ntransport servicei operate is normally as possible during air attacks. Both passenger and freight\ntrains continue to run, trainmen and\nlignalmen remain at their posts, and\ntickets are issued at the booking offices the same as usual.\n\"All other railway itaff continue\nat work during air raids until danger il Imminent in the immediate\nvicinity of the places it which they\nare working,\" he said. \"Work is le-\n\u2022umed again ai loon ai the Immediate danger is past.\n\"The closest cooperation exists\nbetween the railways and the railway trade union! in the maintenance ot the railway transport services.\"\nThe spokesman said that as a safety factor, the speeds of trains are\nreduced during raids so that drivers\nhave their trains fully under control in the event of a sudden emergency.\nNO WALKOVER TO WAR\nWIN PAPER'S WARNING\nLONDON (CP) - Warning that\nthere can be \"no walkover to victory\" for Britain is sounded by the\nDally Sketch in an editorial.\n\"There appears to be at the moment rather too much easy optimism\nabout, mostly engendered by the\nmagnificent work of the R.A.F.,\"\nsiys the Sketch. \"This work does\nindeed 'give us grounds for i steady\nconfidence in the ultimate result.\nBut that does not justify even an\napproach to the assumption that we\nhave anything but t long and hard\nroad in front of us. That we shall\nbeat him (the enemy) no one doubts\nwho has made a careful reckoning\nof all the factors involved. But\nthere is a danger that after arriving\nat this conclusion we may forget\nthe factors.\"\nU-Boal Captain\nHelped Victims\nSWANSEA, Wiles (CP). - A\nU-boat commander towed t lifeboat containing survivors of t ship\nhe had torpedoed, gave them supplies and apologized for tinkin.\ntheir vessel in a manner contrasting\nstrikingly with the usual behavior\nof U-boat men, according to Arthur\nHulland.\nHulland was cook aboard the oil\ntanker British Fame torpedoed in\nthe Atlantic last August. When tht\nsurvivors in the lifeboat came alongside the submarine the commander\nasked \"how many hive I killed?\"\nHulland reltted. He wai told three\nwith the first torpedo.\nThe German said he was sorry and\nasked survivors to convey his regret to their families when they\nreached home.\n\"There you are,\" he idded. \"It is\nyour duty to bring petrol into your\ncountry and lt la mine to stop lt. It\nis your turn this time. Perhapi lt\nmay be mine next.\"\nThe commander provided the survivors with food, water and tobacco\nand then took them in tow until the\ntow line snapped. Not considering\nthe spot a safe one for him to linger\nin, the commander then set the lifeboat a course to the Azores. The\nsurvivors reached there safely after\nfive and a half days.\nWOULD SHOW PLANE\nWRECKS TO RUSSIANS\nLONDON, (CP).-John Morgan,\nLabor M.P. for Doncaster in the\nHouse of Commons, asked Col. J.\nJ. Llewellln, Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Aircraft Production, if he would suggest to competent Soviet authorities that it\nmight be in their interest to accept\nan offer of a conducted tour of\nvarious dumps ot wrecked German\naircraft.\nCol. Llewellin in a written reply\nsaid \"there are a large number of\nwrecked German aircraft on exhibition throughout the country. Should\nrepresentatives of the Soviet or any\nother government represented it the\ncourt. of St. James's wish to see\nthem, I should be glad to arrange\nany assistance they may deiire.\"\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNINO   NOV. 12. .1940\u2014\nCentral Institute\nSemi-Annual to Be\nHeld Here Nov. 23\nFarmers' Institutes of the Wen\nKootenay-Boundary htve been notified by Secrettry Kenneth Wallace\nthat the semi-annual meeting of the\nCentral Inititute wil be held at Nelson on, Saturday. November 23. H.\nW. Herridge ot Nakusp it expected\nto give a talk, and 0. B. Appleton.\nAdvisory Board member It expected\nlo give a full report on the recent\nsessions of thst body at Victorlt.\nUI Christmas\nSales Volume lo\nBe Up 10 Per Cent\nCHICAGO, Nov. ,11 (AP).-Santa\nClaus' gift pack this season is expected to be heaped with the het.i-\neit load he's had to carry In a decade.\nThis was the consenus of Chicago'! \"wholeatle row,\" centre of\ngift and luxury trade for retail merchant! throughout the United States.\nThe Chicago Association of Commerce estimates that U.S. citizens\nwill have approximately $3,000,000,-\n000 more In their pockets to buy\nChristmas gifts.\nPayrolls in the manufacturing industries have gone up 14 per cent.\nFarm cash income, with the crops\nall in, will reach $9,333,000,000, up\n$500,000,000 over 1939, and in the\nterms of purchasing power, the\nequal of 1929,\" the Association reported.\nChristmas in the United States\nshould approach a sales volume of\n$2,000,000,000, or approximately 10\nper cent more Hum a year ago, if\nthe meaiure of buying of holiday\ngoods in Chicago is reflected In retail sales. This estimation made by\nthe Association of Commerce was\nbased on a survey of virioui wholesale markets, stimulated by better\nincomes of industrial workeri.\nIn anticipation of this heavy business retail merchants have added\nabout $1,000,000,000 worth of items\nto their holiday itock!, the eurvey\nihowed.\nThe ltrgest Increase in Santa's\nload will be made up of toys. A\nturvey of manufacturers by the\nmerchandise mart indicates that\ntheir sales volume of toys hai increased 50 per cent over a year ago.\nSales of United States made dolls\nalone rose 75 per cent above a year\nago, as a result of the cutting off of\nImported supplies. Sales of gift-\nwares showed a gain of 25 per cent\nover 1939.\nScientists Take\nWar Machine\nOTTAWA (CP). - The War Technical and Scientific Development\nCommittee la directing ita money\nmd effort toward the development\nof up-to-date war apparatus of all\nkinds, for advanced aeronautical\nstudies and the furtherment of medical and physiological research upon\nmen engaged in mortal combat.\nAir Minister Power made this announcement in a statement prepared\nfor the Press. The statement said\nthat Canada had taken over certain\nresearch work which would have\nbeen difficult to maintain in England under war conditions.\nAssumption of the duty of pursuing research for the Empire\nwould be relatively easy, the statement laid, because of the active cooperation between Canada and the\nUnited Kingdom In recent years.\n\"Canadian scientists have worked\noverseas and British scientists have\nstudied with the Research Council\nin Canada. Stationed in Canada for\nthe duration ot the war as liaison\nofficer for the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research of\nGreat Britain is Dr. R. H. Fowler,\nProfessor ot Physics at Cambridge\nMembers of the War Technical\nand Scientific Development Committee are:\nFor the Research Council\u2014Dean\nC. J. Mackenzie, Sir Frederick Banting, Professor Otto Maas,\nFor the Public Service of Canada\n\u2014Col. A. A. Magee, National Defence Department; J. S. Duncan,\nDeputy Air Minister; R. A. C. Henry,\nMunitipns and Supply; Maj.-Gen. L.\nR. LaFleche, National War Services;\nGeorge Bouchard, Agriculture; H.\nA. Keenleyside, External Affairs.\nMORB FUNDS WANTED\nThe committee wai formed, the\nstatement said, to assure that funds\nplaced at the disposal of the Government for prosecuting the war\nwould be put to the greatest use.\nAir Minister Power wants $10,-\n000,000 for research. He has already\nreceived $2,000,000. The Air Minister\nsaid that with these contributions \"a\nmost Important phase of war activity will be pressed ahead, Industrial and private wealth making\nit possiblo for science to serve its\nfullest capacity without the check\nreins made virtually Indispensable\nunder Government financing.\"\nAt a Press conference the Minister explained that in experimental\nresearch it lometimes happened that\na grat deal of money was spent\nwith nothing tangible achieved except for the exploration of certain\navenues of research. He said he\ncould get all the money he needed\nfor equipment end personnel in the\nair force from the Government but\nwhen it came to expending funds for\nsomething speculative, it was difficult to obtain.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (AP)-Bar silver 23 5-16d. unchanged (equivalent\n42.23 cents). Bar gold 168s, unchanged (equlvalenl $33.85).\nTin easy; spot 258 5s bid, \u00a3258 10s\nasked; future \u00a3260 5s bid. \u00a3260 10s\nask<\nKootenay-Boundary Annie Exports lo\nDate This Season Total 6750 Boxes\nKootenay-Boundary tpple export! for the 1940 season to date total\n-730 boxes\nAn tnilyili of crop movement u at November 2 by the British Columbia Fruit Board shows 6000 boxes -hipped from Creiton Diitrlct, tnd\n750 from Nelion Diitrlct.\nCreiton Diitrlct has dlsoosed of 142,825 boxes out ot t total estimated\ncrop of 298,739; Nelion Diitrlct 12,529 out of 51,967 boxei; md Grand\nForks 41,555 out of 59,440 boxes.\nThe Fruit Board'i analysis follows;\nNELSON AND DISTRICT\nDomestic\ni Xxnort\nTotal\nBalance\n...            Ultimate Shlp'nti. Ship'nts. Shlp'nts.\nUnsold\nCookers \t\nDuchess _.._\n1,231\n1,231\n~-\n1,231\n\u201e_\nWeilthy\t\n     1,986\n1,986\n1,980\n\"***\"\nMclntoih \t\n     7,000\n4,070\n4,070\n2,930\nJonathan ....\n     8,500\n1,023\n790\n1,773\n6,727\nWtgentr .....\n     7,000\n868\n868\n6,132\nBananas   \t\n        _      800\n256\n256\nM_\n10,718\nSpy\t\n-..._, 11,250\n637\n537\nGrimes \t\n     aso\n123\n122\n128\nE. Sundrlei .\n     _,00.\n434\n434\n2,566\nSpltzenberg\n     1,600\n1,074\n1,074,\n926\nDelicious \t\n.....     4,000\n178\n178\n3,822\nRomei\t\n     6,000\n6,000\nStayman   \t\n   _      800\nw\u2014\n300\nL. Sundrlei .\n _..   .       500\n900\n        150\n.\n150\nNewtown \t\n      1,400\n\u2014\n\t\n-\u2022\u2022-\n1,400\n54,967\n11,779\n750\n12,529\n42,438\nCRESTON AND DISTRICT\n     2,194\n2,194\n2,839\n2,194\n     2,839\n2,839\nWealthy   \t\n_   28076\n28,076\n75,297\n28.076\n75,297\nMcintosh \t\n  123,800\n48,503\nJonathan  -..\n    17,700\n8,093\n6,000\n14,093\n3,607\nWagener ....\n      4,700\n2,531\n2,931\n2,169\n     3,520\n2,553\n2,553\n967\nSpy \t\n     4,740\n1,146\n1,148\n3,594\nGrimes \t\n -__    1,368\n1,365\nE. Sundriea .\n      4,800\n2,710\n2,710\n2,090\nSpltzenberg\n  _.    1,770\n135\n135\n1,635\nDelicioui \t\n_.    49,000\n0,424\n9,424\n39,576 '\n     8,050\n1,485\n1,485\n8.565\nStayman  .....\n     2,030\n7\n7\n2,023\nL. Sundriea .\n     4,100\n\t\n4,100\nWinesap \t\n        950\n30\n\t\n30\n920\nNewtown   _.\n         105\n5\nS\n100\n256,739\n136,525\n0,000\n142,525\n114,214\nGRAND FORKS DISTRICT\n      1,042\n1,042\n1,042\nWealthy   _...\n     3,074\n'    3,074\n3,074\nMcintosh \t\n    47,000\n35,717\n35,717\n11,283\n       700\n700\nWagener \t\n         550\n70\n70\n480\n            224\n224\n224\nE. Sundries\n _     2,900\n831\n831\n2,069\nDelicious \t\n     1,500\n1,900\n\u25a0 _       900\n597\n597\n303\nL. Sundries .\n     1,000\n_.._\n1,000\nWlnesip \t\n \u201e       500\n\u2014\n\u00ab-..\u00bb\n500\nNewtown  ...\n50\n50\n59,440\n41,555\n41,555\n'  17,885\nNAZI BOMB SPOILS\nMOVIE PROGRAM FOR\nCANADIAN BRIGADE\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND -\nThere is one Nazi airman who will\nget a hot reception It- he is ever\ntaken prisoner by members of this\nparticular Canadian brigade. It's his\nmean disposition they don't like,\nThe men had braved the storm\nand blackout to enjoy a moving\npicture program arranged by the\nCanadian Legion War Services. Ths\nrecreation hall was at the extreme\nend of the camp compound and\nseveral hundred ot the lads had\nsloshed through mud and water to\nreach it.\nA few minutes after they had\nwrapped themselves into chairs to\nwatch the antics of a \"silly symphony\" star, the Nazi dropped a\nbomb just outside the theatre door.\nFortunately, it didn't explode but\nfor reasons of safety the hall was\nquickly vacated and the men were\ntold the show was postponed\u2014it\nleast until the bomb could be removed and rendered harmless.\nPolish Sergeants\nEscape Adventure\nIs Real Thriller\nLONDON (CP). - How \"Jan\",\nbearded Polish sergeant, escaped\nfrom Warsaw as the Germans\nmarched in a year ago reads like an\nepisode trom an Edgar Wallace\nthriller.\nJan, who learned to ipeak a little\nEnglish as a lumberjack in Canada, is now in the Polish brigade\nwith the British forces in Palestine\nThe tale it issued by the Ministry\nof Information here.\n\"My battalion,\" sayi Jm, \"was\nbrought back to defend Warsaw.\nWe fought from street to street and\nthere's nothing like a torn-up street\nto stop tanks,\" Then ammunition\nran short. A German bomber \"blew\nhell out of high water\" and Jan and\nhis fellow-soldiers had to leave\ntheir barricade, split up, and make\nfor a railway line leading South.\n\"I hid in what was left ot a dressmaker's shop for a couple of nights\nand knowing the Germans hsd\nentered the city dumped my uniform and put on a flashy dress,\"\nJan related. He Joined a crowd ot\nrefugees trekking out of Warsaw.\nIt was stopped by a German patrol.\nJan tried to sneak into an alley.\n\"A little German soldier spotted\nme and shouted 'where are you\ngoing?' I slid into an open doorway and gave him the worki with\nmy Mauser. It took only a couple of\nmlnutei to strip him tnd get out ai\na full private of the Wurtemberg\nHussars.\n\"Three days later I came across\nthe body of a Polish peasant, did\nanother quick change act and finally\nJoined up with a section ot Polish\nregulars making for the Rumanian\nfrontier. . . We outnumbered the\nfrontier post guard io handed the\nsergeant t bribe with one hind tnd\ntook it bick with the other.\"\nThe rest wu easy\u2014comparatively.\nWholesale Index Up\nOTTAWA \u2014 The general Index\nnumber of wholesale commodities\nrose to 83.6 during the week ending\nNovember 1 from 83.5 in the previous week. Milled feeds, potatoes,\neggi tnd dtlry product! were among\nthe commodities to move upward,\nwhile live-stock, meats and raw\nsilk displayed moderately weaker\ntendencies. In the corresponding\nweek* last year the index wu 79.0.\nFamous General\nAmong London's\nFree Frenchmen\nLONDON (CP) - High In the\ncouncils of Free French Forcei in\nLondon ls \u25a0 general of whom the\nBritish people know little. He Is\nArmy Commtnder General Catroux\nwho to millions of Frenchmen ranks\nwith the greatest of France's military leaders and politicians, says\nCharles Gombault In the London\nDally Sketch.\nAfter a short period with the\nChasseurs Alpins, Catroux started\nhis apprenticeship to war in the\nForeign Legion and during his collaboration with Lyautey at the be\nginning of the pacification of Morocco, Catroux learned at the same\ntime both military technique and\ndiplomatic art. He also became ac\ncutomed to important administra\ntive problems, Gombault points out.\nThus, 19 years liter, when \u2022 col\nonel, tnd1 ask_d by Lyautey to\npacify the Middle-Atlas region of\nthe French colony, he entrusted the\nForeign Legion with the building of\none of the hlgh-st roads in the\nworld, by which hli troopi were\nlater able to Join those ot Colonel\nGiraud\u2014since a General in dtaken\nprisoner by the Germans in May,\n1940,\nBy thil meini peace wu eitab\nlishcd, tnd this roid, primarily\nbuilt for military purpoies, hu\nilnce ensure dthe commercial exchanges indispensable to the prosperity oft he country. At the same\ntime, Catroux had an entirely new\ntownship built in the midst of the\nMoroccan desert, to the South of\nBeni Abbes.\nQOETHE TRANSLATOR\nWhen a prisoner of war In 1916,\nCatroux worked out a plan of escape. Hla perfect knowledge of the\nGerman language nearly enabled\nhim to succeed but he wu ciught\nagain near the frontier. He finished\nthe war In t cell and there spent\nall his time in making a remarkable\ntranslation of Goethe's \"Werther.\"\nAfterwards Catroux was military\nattache In Constantinople where he\ntook part in the delicate work of\nestablishing the new frontier line\nbetween Greece snd Turkey is defined In the Treaty of London.\nHaving proved himself a soldier,\nwriter nd diplomat, Catroux was\nproposed by the French govern\nment as Ambassador to Mtdrid.\nBut General Franco, gifted perhaps\nwith foresight, let his choice on\nMarshal Petain.\nThus M. Manderl appointed Catroux Governor-General of Indo-\nChini. Soon tfter the first few\nweeks which followed the armistice\nGeneral Catroux hid to carry on\ndifficult negotiations to safeguard\nIndo-China's Independence, having\nto resist both Japan's demands and\nv,chy'i tppeils for capitulation.\nWhen a few weeki igo Catroux\nleft Salgnon to Join the Free French\nforces In London, not t ilngle .lap-\nanesetoldler had set foot on Indo-\nChina.\nLondon Stoekt Hold\nFirmer Ground\nLONDON, Nov. II (AP)-The recent firming tendency in the Stock\nExchange continued today.\nIndustrials were In good demand\nFrom the provinces came support\nfor home rails, Kaffirs were mixed\nand quiet. Selective buying appeared tor Argentine and Brazilian\nbondi. Greek 7's gained 1 point.\nHecla Mining Co. to\nPay Out $250,000\nin December Dividend\nSPOKANE, Wuh., Nov. 11 - The\ndeclaration of a quarterly dividend\nof $290,000 ii innounced by the\nHecla Mining Company trom its\noffice lq Wallace, Idaho. The disbursement will be it the rate ot 25\ncenls t share on the issue of 1,000,-\n000 lhares. It wtll be mtdt Dee. 14.\nThe disbursement will increase to\n$600,000 the Hecla dividend distributions In 1940. The preceding distributions were $100,000 in March,\n$100,000 in June tnd $150,000 in September. The ptyment to be mtde In\nDecember will increue the grind\ntotal ot disbursements to $23,705,000.\none ot the great dividend monuments of the Coeur d'Alene region of\nIdeho in which by far the greater\npart of it wis dug.\nLewii E. Htnley li Preiident ot\nthe Comptny, tnd Leo J. Hoban,\nSecretary, both of Wallace, Idaho.\nLondon Scribes\nFind Life Full\nDuring Air Raids\nBy O. E. BURRITT\n(Canadian Prtu Stiff Wrlttr).\nLONDON, (CP). -' Notei that\nmight have appeared in the diary\nof a Canadian newspaperman\u2014if\nnewspaperman had time and pencil;\nFirst night back in flat after\nmonth In hospital, three bombs\nwreck half apartment! in block ,,.\nnext morning, no water, no gaa . , .\nstart for office feeling ai used to\nwhen Lake Ontario too cold for\nregular morning dip .. . halt at restaurant for breakfast ... \"sorry,\nyou'll have to wait in line, having\na little trouble with the cooking\"\n. ., day uneventful, comparatively\nspeaking. ...\nNext night three of us walking\nhome are showered with incendiary\nbombs . . . Louis Hunter of Quebec\nsmothers one in tin hit .. . Doug\nAmaron of Montreal burns ihoes\nand trouser legs stamping out in-\nother ... I leap (well I get over\nsomehow) fence of neighborhood\nsquare tnd find myself with nothing with which to dome the one\nI've tackled . . . finally find lawn\nroller and grind bomb plus half one\nshoe into turf. . . forced to drop on\nbellies in gutter four times within\n15 minutes ... one gutter flooded\nby ever present firemen .. . that's\nfun, too.\nADVENTURE IN DARK\nFinally reach home to find building across street on fire . . . Join\nvoluntary brigade and find hydrant\n. . . move into new flat ... (wc\nwere going Vb move anyhow but\nperhaps those three did persuade\nus to leave a little earlier) . . . still\nno water . . . three bathrooms but\ncan't use them . . . even barber\nshaves you with cold water ...\nnext day again uneventful, until\ndark, when things get more interesting. . ..\nFinally reach home after 45 minute hunt for taxi . . . more incendiaries . . . thii time they fall in\nWinter's coal stored in back court\nof big block . .. porter and news\npaperman finally subdue flames\nwith favorite recipe, six pails of\nsand and 10 of water . . . still, first\ntime we've been warm all evening\n. . . more Incendiaries .. . three\nfires within two blocks . .. still\nmore incendiaries . sound like\nblinds allowed to furl uncontrolled\n. . two hefty (and I mean hefty)\nexplosions within a couple of blocks\n. . . everybody with pair good legs\ngoes to lend aid. .. .\nVICTIMS \"LOST\"\nDebris, tons of it in flames .\nair filled with smoke, dust and\nfloating wreckage . . . warden with\nheavily-bandaged head guides in\njured woman over tons of broken\nthings that fill roadway. . . \"wh .re's\nthe nmbulance, please?\" asks the\nwarden in same way as he might\nask the way to nearest pub .\n\"thank you very much,\" adds' the\nwoman, blood streaming from two\nfacial wounds, hand hidden in cotton gauze .. . minute later warden\nreturns, one hand propping bandaged head ...\"anybody else need\nfirst aid?\" . . . another warden\nleads him to ambulance ... he stays\nthis time . ..\nWe return to flat . . . another\nseries of catnaps .. . another day\n. . another night's bombing has\nstarted .. . three hours later for\ndinner . . . and even in wartime\nhousekeepers get annoyed because\n\"dinner is spoiled\" . . . what do I\ncare . \u201e. I'm on a milk diet, . ..\nINDIANS SPREAD WAR\nNEWS WITH RUNNERS\nTHE PAS, Man., (CP). - The\n\"macassin telegraph\" which for\nmany years has done yeoman service among Indian tribes in this\noutlying community, 400 miles North\nwest of Winnipeg, has been operating daily since September, 1939.\nS. Lovell, Indian Agent here, who\nrecently returned from a trip\nthrough the backwoods to register\n300 Indians, said the natives are\nextremely Interested In news of the\nwar. Each day, families living near\ntraders who own radioi gather round\nto listen to accounts of world events.\nThe news is then -relayed from\nsettlement to settlement by \"mocassin telegraph.'!\nLet Us Chrome Plate Your\nPlumbing Fixtures\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLturlti Bldg.    704 Nelion Ave.\n*** I\u2666 \u2666 I ..\u2666.\u00bb..!.\u2666\u2666\u2666 ...!\u25a0\u00bb*****\nGrenville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 616\n189 Baker St.     Nelion, B. C.\nHp+\u00bb\u00ab*'H\u00bb.\u00ab'BOfrH'e\u00bbW\u00ab4\n-PAGE NINE\nNew Denver Looks Forward With New\nOptimism as Signs of Mining Revival\nAppear; Hub of Slocan Is Preparing\nLeasers Active; Six *\nShippers Listed\nat Trail\nWith Increasing hope of the reopening oi Slocan ' iilvc.-lead-zinc\nmints, New Denver is looking to\ntht future with Increasing confidence. Already mirked Improvement tn the business life of the village it, evident, but the brightest\nsign ot all It the lively optimism ot\nits residents.\nNew Denver it the hub of the Slocan. It stands at tht entrance to\nthe great mining country, with both\nrailroad and highway pointing the\nway to the Slocan minei. Out in\nfront of the village il Slocan Lake,\nwith railway barge transportation\nrapidly growing in volume. Northward and Southward through New\nDenver, by railway, barge and highway, flowi the traffic between\nArrow Lake! points and the distribution and manufacturing centres\nof Nelson and Trail.\nNEW GOVERNMENT\nQARAQE\nAi the hub ot the Slocan, New\nDenver il in equipment centre for\nthe Depirtment of Public Works,\nwhich thii year built a large garage\nin the village.\nBut it Ii upon mining that New\nDenver dependi for Ita prosperity.\nOperation ot the Molly Hughes mine\nat New Denver has been a boost.\nWith the Lucky Jim at Zincton being readied for reopening by Zincton Mines Ltd., new subsidiary of\nSheep Creek Gold Mines Ltd., New\nDenver expect! to iee traffic Increase again.\nResidents ipeak more hopefully\nthm In years ot other mines, great\nproducers of the past, to which the\nwar may bring a new lease on life.\nThe list of custom mines shipping\nto the Consolidated Mining k Smelting Company at Tadanac in October\nLONDON  CLOSE\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (AP)-(Brltlsh\nstock closings, in iterllng: Austin\nMoton A 13s 9d; Babcock k Wilcox 37s 9d; Crown \u00a313; De Beers\n\u00a35; Rhodeslan Anglo Am 13e 0d;\nRhokana \u00a37; Springs 23s 9d; Ven-\nterspost Gold 27s 9d; Weit Wit-\nwars rand \u00a32Z. <\nBonds\u2014British 314 per cent Consols \u00a376; British 3.4 per cent War\nLoan \u00a3101*.; British Funding 4's\n1-60-90 \u00a3112.4.\nreflects the activity which it bringing new optimum to New Denver.\nThere were six Slocan shippers, u\nfollows: Bell Mineral Claim and\nChtpleau it Slocan City; Cuba tt\nSandon; Hewitt tt Silverton; Jo-Jo\ntt Three Forki; tnd Highland Surprise tt Retallack,    .\nMANY LEA8ER8 ACTIVE\nProbably one ot the Important\ndevelopments, so fir ti New Denver\nls concerned is the number.of leaiert\nactive in the Slocan mines. Men\nworking individually or in imall\ngroupi ire going into iome ot the\nlarger ot the old mines to take out\nore left behind in the dayi of large\nscale operation, and many of them\nate doing well at it.\nBut new Denver'! greatest hope ll\nthat the war will bring higher\nprices for zinc tnd lead and thtt\nthese prices will reopen mines Ions\nIdle. In the meantime New Denver,\nbright and on its toes, is preparing.\nNelson-Trail\nService\nTwo Tripi Each Wty\nDaily\nLv, Nelion\n10:05 un. and 3.30 p.m.\nAr. Trail\n12:05 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nLv. Trail     .\n10:00 a.m. and 5:15 p.m.\nAr. Nelion\n12 noon and 7:30 p.m.\nFARES\n$1.70 One Way\n$3.05 Return\n$2.15 Weekend Return\nJ. G. WATSON\nCity Ticket  Agent\n502 Baker St.     Nelion, B. C.\nPhone 203\nGwuufcwt\n&4c\nJOIN THE AFTER-DINNER HOUR\nwith Hi home-like atmosphere\nIN THE EMPIRE BUILDER CLUB CAR\nYou'll fin- varied diversion in\nyour Empire Builder Club cir.\nLatest type radio-current maga-ines \u2014 soft\niotas and chain\u2014buffet\naervioe if you wish. The\nsolarium, a special section at the\nrear of the car, ia a vantage spot\nfor viewing the late Fall scenery.\nAa) Tmlar AeaU\nTrant-CreJil Plan\nTRAVEL SOW\nPAY LATER\nAll this (or your enjoymentl And\nmorel For a soft, roomy berth,\nwith coiled spring nut-\ntress, reading light tnd\nindividually controlled\nair-conditioning\u2014 invites you to i refreshing night'i\nsleep. Ask today for fares and\ndetails.   Complete travel service,\nfo on thtAir-Conditionod\nEMPIRE BUILDER\nE. G. WESTBY, C.F.__P.A.\n337 Biker St Phone 57\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada. Limited\nMinuficturen ot\nProducer! ind Reflnen ot\nElephant       Tadanac\nBrtm)\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phoiphtte\nSulphate of. Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\nMonoctlclum Phoiphtte\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD-ZINC\nGOLD-SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nMERCURY\nAlto Sulphuric Acid and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilizer Sale*\u2014Marine Bldg., Vancouver, B.C.\nMetal and Fertiliser Sale*\u2014215 St. |am*i St., Montreal\n liJIipf IH ,     -.\nPAfll TEN.\nCIVIC\nLAST-TIMES TONICHT\nComplete ihowi 7:00-8:65\nIN    TECHNICOLOR\nw,\nHtNRYFONDA\nTHE RETORN OF\nFBANKJANES\nGENE TIERNEY\nJACKIE COOPER\nExtra\u2014\n\"COLORED CARTOON\"\n\"ACTION ON ICE\"\nMovietone New Newi\nStarts Wed. at 2:00\n\"My Love Came Back\"\n\"Gambling on the High\nSeas\"\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nCleaning, Preiiing\nand   Dyeing\n327 Biker Phont 288\nJ\nPrcstonc or Protexall\nPut it In now.\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n206 Biker St. SERVICE Phone 122\ntytttstttttttttttttttttstttttsttt^\nGRENFELL'S CAFE\nOppoilte Civic Theatre\nll the right place to get a good\nhot cup of coffee and real home\nmade pie.\nOtSttttStttttSttttttttllttitttttStteit\nTHAT\nCORN\nWITH\n^BUKMAY\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\n.PHONE 81 NELSON. B. C.\nJuves Will Play\nJuniors in Ice\nCarnival Friday\nWalter Walt, Coach of the Nelion\nJuvenile Hockey Reps, announced\nMonday night that the prospective\nrepresentative iquad for the coming season of that division would\nplay an exhibition game with a\ncombined squad of graduates of last\nyear's juvenile Provincial champs\nand local Juniors as part of the program for the Senior Hockey Club'i\nice carnival Friday night.\nTo give the boys a chance to get\ninto shape for the game, a practice\nfor both teams has been called for\n4:30 to 5:30 this afternoon and again\non Thursday at the same times.\nGROUP WATCHES\nMERCURY CROSS\n\"FACE\" OF SUN\nPassage of the planet Mercury\nacross the \"face\" of the sun was\nwatched by a Nelson group of 14\nMonday at the home of W. G. C.\nLanskall.'\nA surveyor's transit and a small\ntelescope were employed.\nWhile the transit of Mercury was\nnot spectacular, it was highly Interesting to the group watching. It began at 11 minutes to 1 p.m., and was\nstill unfinished at sunset.\nThere will be only six more \"transits\" of Mercury in this century.\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nAll Crystal\nStemware\nNow Selling at\nHalf Price\nNow is your opportunity to fill in any of your\nbroken pieces of crystal stemware.\nCash Sale at Half Price at Long\nu Our Preient Stock Lasts\nI COLLINSONS\nJewellery Store\n561 Baker Street\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B.C.-Mrs. A. Hepher\nhas returned from Lynn Valley,\nwhere she attended the wedding of\nher son, W. Stanley Hepher, to Miss\nMary Underwood.\nMrs. D. V. West is home from t\nvisit to her brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mulloy.\nat South Slocan. Her mother. Mrs.\nA. Mulloy, who spent about 10 days\nat South Slocan, returned with her\n(or a short stay before leaving for\nher home in Winnipeg.\nMill Tressa Yager visited her\nbrother-in-law and sister. Mr. and\nMrs. James Johnstone of Trail, and\nbrought home her little sister May-\nmae, who had been slaying there.\nWINTER O'COATS\nBeautifully Filter Cleaned.\nRepaired. Shortenend and Pressed\nPHONE 1042 FOR PRICES\n$DtlsdlcL glMilSAtL\n1930 Chrysler\n66 SEDAN\nGood tires, rum nice, \"tTt.\nFull price, ts is     Vi _i\nQueen City Motors\nPhont 43    Limited    661 Jotephlne\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNING. NOV. tt, 1940-\nLondon Office\nBoy Typical of\nYouth In Crisis\nBy D. E. BURRITT\nCtudlin Press Stiff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 11 (CP).-Rep-\nresentative of London'! youth too\nyoung to find t \"serving\" Job in\nthe ramifications of war. it happy-\ngo-lucky Frank Backhouse, t 17'\nyear-old Cockney whole biggy\nclothes lacked til semblance of t\ncrease long belore ht ever started\nsleeping In them.\nFor Frank, tnd mmy of hii class\nlife has become disrupted. But\nhe still whistles Incessantly, goe_\nto the movies, playi football when\npossible, tnd has no concrete complaint against conditloni. He has\nhad hli full share of bombing! but\nhe isn't afraid.\n\"I'm better off than a lot of people,\" atyi Frank, \"tnd tnyhow we\nhave got to go through with it.\"\nFor eight months Frank hit been\nthe night office boy in the London\nBureau of The Cintdian Prets'ana\nhai never even been late let alone\nmiss a night'i work although his\nhome has been bombed twice, the\noffice once. And he has been on\nduty all through the long raids\nwhich made it \"uncomfortable\" for\nnight workers In downtown' London.\nSince the bombs itarted falling\nduring working hours, Frank nas\nrigged himself a cot in the office\nbasement tnd instead of going home\nat midnight when his shift is through\nhe sleeps down there until eight .or\nnine in the morning.\nHis mother, because of lll-hetlth,\nhai been evacuated. His father, recently injured in the bombing of a\nfactory, has left by the time Frank\nreachei there. So he lives practically alone in the little two-storey\nhouse that has had its windows tnd\nceilings removed by air raids. Each\ntime he goes out he passes what ,s\nleft of the homei of neighbor! and\nthat of hia married brother.\nFrank isn't the kind to go around\ntalking \"thumbs up\". He'i of even a\ntougher type\u2014he gets to work on\ntime and goes out into the dark\nnights on his errands and reappears\nin his little tin hat even faster than\nh used to. These little narrow\nstreets of old London sre no place to\nloaf during air' raids.\nRouleaus Leave\nKaslo for West\nSummerland Home\nKASLO, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs F. S\nRouleau have left Friday for their\nnew home in West Summerland. Mr.\nRouleau, who has made his home in\nKaslo for 18 years, was owner and\neditor of -Casio's weekly newspaper,\nthe \"Kootenaian\"\nBoth were active socially tnd in\nall phases of community work. Mrs.\nRouleau was Secretary of the Ladies\nHospital Aid, leader ot the Girl\nGuides tnd educational lecretary in\nthe Mth Battalion Chapter I.O.D.E.,\nis well is being Interested in all\nSt. Andrew's United Church activ-\nitles.\nMr. Rouleau has for many years\nbeen Secretary of the Kaslo Board\nof Trade, for 12 years Commodore\nof the Kaslo Boat Club and active\nin the Rod and Gun Club.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS FLORENCE BIRD\nTRAIL, B. C., Nov. 11-Mri. N.\nWllmes hu left {or Spokane to\nspend a holiday.\nMr. md Mn. C. C. McKenzie tnd\nfamily' of Vancouver irrived In\nTrail Fridiy to spend i tew dayi\nwith friends here.\nGlen Cumming wu I business\nvisitor to Grand Forki lut week.\nMri. A. Matassa ot Nelson ii __*\ngueit ot her son-in-law tnd diughter, Mr. tnd Mn. K. D. Croiblt,\n1164 Cedar Avenue.\nMiu Ruby Nelson of the Fruit-\nvile teaching staff wu the weekend guest of .her parents, Mr. tnd\nMn. O. H. Nelson, 99 Aldridge Avenue.\nMrs. Harvey Grummett tnd Mn.\nR. D. Wallace of Nelion villted\nfriends In Trtil Fridiy.\n\u2022Mrs. J. H. Mathews of Grind\n_\"orki returned to her home Sunday\nafter spending t week here tl Ihe\ngueit of Mr. tnd Mn. K. M. Spence,\nMn. Pit Aitken of Nelion was\nthe weekend gueit ol Mn. A. W.\nMcDonald, 1345 Birch Avenue.\nMr. and Mri. George Steele, 518\nSilica Street, Nelion, ipent Sunday\nti the guest of Acting Chief tnd\nMn. Fred Steele, 1738 Third Avenue\nin Trill.\nMrs. Rudolph Moen, Birch Avenue, left Saturday for Calgary, to\nviiit with relative! for t week.\nMember! of the Women'! Association of Knox United Church met\nThursday afternoon it various circle\nteu. Circle No. l wu entertained oy\nMn. Frank Wilby. Members present\nwere Mrs. G. A. Burton, Mn. William Spooner, Mra. C. A. Franien,\nMrs. W. W. Dick, Mrs. E. Swankle,\nMra. N. L. Kllpin, Mrs. W. J. Wag-\nstaffe, Mrs. K. Scheer and Mrs. C.\nW. Fraser, Circle No. _ met at the\nhome of Mrs, J. L. Crowe. Memben present were Mrs. William\nBarchard, Mrs. J. Forreit, Mn. W.\nForrest, Mn. H. 0. Hinch, Mn. Herbert Cltrk, Mrs. G. W. Weir, Mra.\nWilliam Simpson, Mrs. Allan Grant,\nMn. H. A. Shephard and Mrt. A. is.\nWebster. Circle No. J met tt the\nhome of Mn. 3. N. Currie. Memben\npresent wert Mn. R. R. Wellwood,\nMn. R. B. Dimock, Mrs. w. C. Alton, Mrs. John Balfour, Mri. J. M.\nBltck, Mri. Ptul Phillips, Mn. Margaret Ctrpenter, Mn. H. R. Minn\ntnd Mn. C. G. Coulter.\n, Memben of St. Francis Xavier\nsubdivision of the Catholic Womtn'i\nLeigue met Thundty ifternoon it\ncircle teas. Plans were discussed fur\nthe uie tnd tea to'be held Nov. 23\nCentril Circle wti entertained by\nMn. N. RUellt. Memben preient\nwert Mn. J. L. Lalond, Mrs. C. J.\nButorac, Mn. J. V. Dtvito, Mn\nCharles Catalano, Mn. Dominic Orlando, Mn. Ernest Leveque, Mri\nW. Girtrd, Mn. A. Frie, Mn. J. G.\nGagnon, Mn. J. W. Wood, Mrs. A.\nT. Liurlente, Mn. A. Lepage, Mra.\nW. A. Baril and Mri. E. Kinahan.\nRiverside Circle met at the homt of\nMn. I.H.R. Jeffrey. Members present were Mrs. Adellmo Ghetti, Mn\n_>. II. Dtoust, Mrs. Vincent Car-\nberry, Mn. W. McDonald, Mri. E.\nJ. Provoit, Mn. Ole Rygh md Mn.\nO.A.G. Bergeron.\nThe Women's Association of East\nTrail United Church met Thuraday\nafternoon in the church hall. Members dlscuued plans for their bazaar. At the close of the business\nmeeting dainty refreshments were\nlerved by Mn, Conrad Reik, tnd\nMrs. A. M. Adie. Eighteen were present\nSt. Andrew's Young People'! Association met in the Parish Hall\nSunday night at 8:30. A report on\nthe success of the recent dance was\nreid by the Secretary-Treuurer. At\nthe close of business, the members\nspent the evening in miking up parcels to be lent to memben of the\nA.YJP.A. now on ictive lervlce. Be\ncommittee in chirge for the eve\nfreshmenti were lerved by the\nping.\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C-Mr. md Mn. S.\nLozowiki, Edmonton, were guesti\ntt the Soleskl home.\nFred Barr left by car for Jaffray\nto remain until the Christmas holidays.\nMrs. R. A. Smith and Mr. and\nMrs. V. H. Sanders motored to Cranbrook.\nMrs. Adams of Cranbrook visited Mrs. George Whitehead.\nMrs. Greep and two children ot\nRaymond, Alta., viiited Mn. and\nMrs. Simmons.\nLittle Miss Shirley Conrod had a\ncolorful Halowe'en party. Laura\nFiset won the apple contest and\nViolet Freeborn the cat and tail\ngame. Others Invited were Joyce\nChampion, Marjorie Wills, Stella\nSimmons, Violet McFarlane and\nGladys George.\nJoe McConnell is back from harvesting.\nFrank Llvesley, Yahk, visited tho\nWhitehead home.\nMn. Jessie Whitehead wai confined to her home for a week with\nlaryngitis.\nRev. C. Lancaster and lister-ln-\nlaw, Miis James, Waneta, B. C. visited Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nFree Theatre Tickets\nAS ADVERTISED IN THE DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED COLUMNS MUST BE CALLED FOR PERSONALLY BETWEEN 9 a.m.\nAND 6 p.m.\nAT THE DAILY NEWS OFFICE\nC. C. M. Quality\n\"Quality\" in C.C.M. doesn't just\nrefer to the high grades of skate\nsteel and leather used. It includes\nthe C.C.M. design, speed, strength,\nfinish, and \"proven performance\".\nThis is the super Quality that C.\nCM. offers.\nCC'M-\ntrue value\nSKATE 6_ SHOE\nOUTFITS\nFrom $3.75 Up\n(Wood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nGRAY CREEK\nGRAY CREEK, B.C.-Fred Wil-\nmot and Leonard Clark'have returned from Kootenay Flats where\nthey were shooting with Oscar Burden and Al Watson.\nFather Maurice Cooney of Creston was a guest of Mr. and > Mrs.\nWall.\nMiss Abby Wall was a guest of\nMrs. Leonard Clark before leaving\nfor Nelson-\nMr. Shinn of Vancouver viiited\nhere.\nGeorge Oliver is here from Sheep\nCreek.\nCoast Pitcher Signs\nBrooklyn Contract\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11 (AP).\n-Rudoph Biale, young right handed\npitcher from San Francisco, has\nsigned a baseball contract with\nBrooklyn's farm club at Olean, N. Y.,\nMickey McConnell, representing the\nDodgers' minor league connections\nannounced today.\nBiale, 18 years old, was described\nas a fair curve ball prospect with\nplenty of speed. He wsi picked up\nfrom the baseball school at San Ma\nteo last week sponsored by the\nBrooklyn club.\nMcConnell, who said Biale would\nreport to Olean of the Pony League\nnext year, also discovered the Dodg\ners, through their five minor league\naffiliated clubs, had signed 39 youngsters, including 13 at Long Beach,\nCalif.\nDON'T DELAY\nLET US WINTERIZE YOUR\nCAR TODAY\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nitktr Si       Limited      Phont 119\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER-PLUMBER\nFor ill your nttdt In plumbing    repairs,    alteration!,    tnd\n'    Installations.\nPh. 115 301 Victoria St\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATI\nMonthly Stvlngi Plin\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded  Representative\nBox tl      Hipperson Blk.      Ph. 117\nMrs. Kubin of Nelson,\nWins Boswell Hospital\nAuxiliary Hope Chest\nBOSWELL, B.C. \u2014 The Boswell\nAuxiliary to Creston Hospital held\na tea at the home of Mrs. H. Bcyd,\nwhen the drawing was made for a\nbeautiful and well stocked hope\ncheit. The chest was made for the\nAuxiliary by Ralph Johnstone and\nthe contents, donated by members\nand friends, included bed spread,\npillows, pillow cases, towels and\nother articles. The drawing was\nmide by Patsy Bainbridge, and the\nwinner was Mrs. M. Kubin of Nelson.\nIn a guessing competition Mrs. A\nMackie and Mrs. J. Karpowich tied\nfor first place.\nThe tea realised $2.25 and the\nhope chest )__).\nCRAY CREEK CLUB TO\nSEND PARCELS OVERSEAS\nGRAY CREEK, B.C.-A meeting\nof the Porcupine Club was called to\ndiscuss the sending of Christmas\npircels to Gray Creek men in the\nServices. It wai arranged to send\ncigtrettes, home-mide candy, cookie! and razor-blades. The Rod tnd\nGun Club having offered to help\nwith, this work it was decided to\ntsk the Club to piy postage. It was\nalso decided to send a parcel to\nMill Romary Peters, who Is in the\nWomen'i Terrltoriil Auxiliary Service at Uxbrldge, England.\nThe recipients of the parcel! will\nbe\u2014Ptei. Charlei ind Frank Oliver\nin the Army Transport at Camp\nBorden; Gunner George Oliver in\nEngland; Gunner J. D'Arcy Bacon,\nIn England; Mil! Romary Peteri.\n\u25a0nd Midshipman Hugh Clark in\nEngland.\nThe Chrlitmai Tree for the children waa alio discussed. Miss Pennington offered to take full charge\nof the tree and entertainment arrangement!.\nChurch Guild of\nBoswell Plans Tea\nBOSWELL, B. C.-A meeting of\nthe Church Guild wu held tt the\nhome of Mri. Sylveiter Spence tt\nSanca. -        .\nMri. P. H. Richirdaon ind Mri. F.\nD. Cumming! were enrolled is\nmembers.\nArrangements were mide for \u2022\ntet md sale at the end of November.\nMn. M. McGregor was appointed\nconvener for the tet. Mn. Klrkpttrick agreed to press the articles\non hand and to take charge of the\nneedlewbrk stall.\nMrs. C. H. Bebbington will hive\nthe home cooking stall and Miss E.\nSmith a novelty stall.\nThe Guild is again selling Christmas cards, tnd several boxei htve\nalready been disposed of.\nJunior Red Cross\nGroup to Collect\nSilver Paper Here\nA drive t>. collect silver piper has\nbeen instituted by the Junior Am\nillary to the Nelaon Red Cross So\nclety. The paper is sent by the Auxiliary to the Coast, It'is melted down\nand important war metals, tin tnd\naluminum, recovered from it.\nMemben some time igo began\ncollecting the paper, but now plan\nto make the drive City-wide. The\nsilver paper may be hinded in to\nany Auxiliary member, or deposited in a special box to be placed in\nthe Auxiliary's concession at the\nNelson Civic Centre.\nWhile it is preferable that the\npaper be kept flat, it may be rolled\nto convenience the collector. Only\nclean, untorn paper ls required.\nMrs. Nlcewlnler,\nFormerly Nelson,\nDies in Spokane\n, Mn. Pearl Nlcewlnler of Spokane, daughter of Mn. Elite Mo-\nQuaig of Nelson, died Sundiy at\nSpokane. Sht htd been ill for i\nlong time,\nEducated In Nelion grade tnd\nhigh schools, Mri. Nlcewinter went\nto Spokane 12 years igo to train\nto.' nuning. Sht married in the\nWashington city and raided there.\nBesides her huibtnd Md her mother, the il survived by three sisters, Mrs. J. F. Pernio of Nelson.\nMn. H. Norris of Edmonton ind\nMn. Wilter Poole of Trail; tnd\nfour brother!, Alex in the 18th\nKooteniy Forestry Company, De-\nWitt tnd Dunctn In the Roytl Canadian Navy, and John at Nelson.\nThe funertl will be held in Spokane Wednesday.\n(.M.&S. Chiefs\nOil lo Meeting\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 11 \u2014 Jamei\nBuchanan, General Manager ot the\nConsolidated Mining k Smelting\nCompany, accompanied by Mrs.\nBuchanan, M. M. O'Brien, Superintendent of Mines, with Mrs, O'Brien,\nand R. R McNaughton, Chief Metallurgist, with Mrs, McNaughton,\nhave left for the Coast to attend\nthe annual Western meeting of the\nCanadian Institute of Mining and\nMetallurgy, being held at Vancouver Nov  13 to 15.\nCanadian Sailor Lost\nOTTAWA, Nov. 11 (CP). - The\nRoyal Canadian Navy in iti 18th\ncasualty list today reported as missing Os. Stanley'Leskiw, Royil Canadian Naval Volunteer Reicrve,\nbringing the total dead and mining reported by the Navy lince the\nwar itarted to 247.\nThe itatement issued by the Defence Department aald Os. Leskiw\n\"is missing following loss of a defensively equipped merchant ship.\"\nTOO  LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE - HOUSEHOLD FURN-\nIture. Cheap for cash. Apply 82-\nThird Street or Phone 719Y.\nTO  RENT  -  8  ROOM   HOUSE,\nmodern. Apply 815 Third Street.\ntsstc^rtsttstttttsttsttsststssttssti\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nstssessttossssssstsstttstetsssststsi\nSmoke SL Jullen Tobacco, 45c a Un\nat Valentine's.\nHave your Battery and Chains\nchecked. Beacon Service Station.\nQuality Bird Cages. $3.25 and up\nKootenay Flower Shop\nRink  It  open.  Oet  your ikttet\nsharpened now. Wade's Shoe Shop,\nGet your tntl-freeze now tnd be\nsafe. Irwin's Service.\nI.O.D.E. regular monthly meeting\ntoday, 3 p.m. Legion.\nC. Y. O. Basketball Dance, whist\nin Cathedral Hail. 8 tonight. Margaret Graham's Orchestra.\nMany Nominations\nfor Offrcers, Kaslo\nLadies' Hospital Aid\nKASLO, B. C. - The President,\nMrs. F. S. Chandler, presided at the\nlast meeting ot the official year of\nthe. Ladies' Hospital Aid, with 19\nmemben present.\nThe Secretary, Mn. F. S. Rouleau,\ng\u00bbve the monthly report and Mrs.\nJ. N. Murphy acting for Mrs. J. E.\nPapwcrth, gave a financial report.\nMrs. J. Fielding reported for the\n\"Sunshine\" secretary, showing $4.38\nbalance in hand. The Board representative stated that arrangements\nwere being made to place a suitable plate on the door of the Hartin Memorial Ward. Owing to the\nfact that she was leaving town the\nresignation of Mrs. Rouleau was\nregretfully accepted.\nAppeals for voluntary donations\nto the hcspital had met with most\ngratifying results.\nThere were many nominations for\n1940-41 officen, election! to be held\nat the annual meeting to be held in\nthe Nunea' Home Nov. 23. Mn. William MacDonald and Mn. A. Carney were appointed is nominations\ncommittee.\nLeavt Your\nPrescription\nIn Our Hand*\n\u2022 PURE CHEMICALS\n\u2022 LOWEST PRICES\nOnly graduate Dispensers\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 480\nPhone 34\nFarrar Heads\nTrail District\nU. B. C. \"Grads\"\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Nov. 11\u2014B. K. Farrar wai elected President of the\nTrail and District University of\nBritish Columbia graduates, at the\nannual banquet at the Crown Point\nHotel Friday night. Other executive\nmembers elected were Miss Joan\nHudson, Vice-President; and HW.\nSmith, Secretary-Treasurer. Those\nappointed to the district committee were Leo Gansner, Nelson; Er\nnest Mitchell, and John Melville,\nRossland; John Mcintosh, Sheep\nCreek; James Armstrong, Mrs. R.\nS. Woodford, Mrs. W. G. Small, and\nMiss Elizabeth Kendall, Trail.\nSpeakers at the banquet included\nDr. C. A. H. Wright, Univenity\nSenate member; Paul Hookings who\nproposed the toast to \"Our Alnia\nMater;\" and James Armstrong who\nresponded to the toast. Lloyd Williams proposed the toast to the ladies, Mrs. R. S. Woodford responding\nWilliam Whimster gave a short talk\nand Mrs. W. C. Small sang a solo,\naccompanied by Mrs. C. A. H.\nWright.\nSTANFIELD'S\nUNDERWEAR\nBe comfortable theie cold\ndtyl in a lult of Sttntieldi.\nCombinations tnd two-piece.\nRed Label  ?4.50\nGray Label  .... ?4.25\nCold Label  $3.75\nA. C. Label .... f 3.75\nEMORY'S\nA**4        LIMITED *P\n\"The Man's Store\"\nFIRE INSURANCE\nRATES ARE DOWN\nSet  Ut lor Flrt tnd Automobile!\nCover.\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\nGet the\nFURNACE\nPut in working order NOW\nR. H. Maber\nPhont 655    610 Kootenay tt\nFOR RENT\nSTEAM HEATED SUITE\nAnnable Block\nSTUDENTS' BADMINTON\nCLUB AT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-E. S. Jonei\nhai organized a badminton club for\nHigh School and Central School\nstudents. The club will be known as\nthe Jones Junior Bidmlnton Club\nand hai itarted the season with 25\nor 30 members.\nWarm Up With a\nHot Chocolate or\nCoffee\nThe PERCOLATOR\nE. W. Kopecki        509 Biker St.\nI Lambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed Art! Blk\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nWINTER OVERCOAT\nYOUR   CAR\nNOW\nAT\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Offlot tnd Humt Hottl\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.-Mri.'R.\nG. Elliott entertained member! of\nthe Catholic Women'! League. Attending were Mrs. H. Hlltz, Mn. N.\nDengler, Mrs. Norman Robert!, Mrs.\nPeter Horlick, Mn. George M. Helbecque, Mrs. M. Pancheson and\nMrs. H. Tutt.\nMrs. John Murray is spending a\nweek in Vernon with her husband,\nColonel Murray, who ii on the itaff\nat army headquarters.\nMarwood Yeatman visited his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Yeatmao,\non leave from military camp at\nVernon.\nRev. Father Boyd of Nelson officiated at high mass and benediction following a class of children\nfor Catechism at Sacred Heart\nChurch. ,\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. MacCabe and\nion Bruce visited Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. R. G. Elliott had ss\nguests Mn. Elsie M. Long, Miss\nDoreen Loftg, Harold Long tnd Mrs.\nD. Gibbons tnd son David of Nel-\nMOTHERSI\nHorchound Honey and\nMenthol\nFor That Tickling Cough\nett SnujihA\nPrescription Druggist Phont *|\nrtsttst\nsssttstsststtstttttstxtttf\nOVERSEAS\nFRUIT CAKE\nPicked for shipping\nAt Hood's\nttrttttttStttttttSttttttttSSiSSitlOs^\nELECTRICAL WIRING\nSUPPLIES\nStandard Electric    f\n433 Josephine St Phone 838\nJ. A. Ce Laughton]\n%    Optometrist\nSUITE 205 MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.]\nCoal and Wood\nPHONE TODAY FOR PROMPT DELIVERY\nGALT\nLUMP STOVE\nTon Ton\n$10.50 $900\nWildfire\nLUMP EGG\nTon Ton.\n$10.50 $10.00\nGREENHILUr1 $10,501\nBIRCH, FIR, CEDAR and MILLWOOD\nBURNS\nLUMBER g, COAL CO.!\nE(^^jyJoifct3tio!<M,\nMemben Cinadian Club reserve\nNov. 18. Mrs. Madge MacBeth, and\nDec. 9, Tracy Philips.\nEasy Washers, patented vacuum\ncup washing action, Easy terms. Ask\nfor demonstration McKay It Stretton\nMeeting of Ladies' Curling Club\ntoday at 2:30 p.m. at the Ladies\nClub Room. Old and new members\ncordially invited.\nGordon Finlay, popular boy violinist ot Cranbrook, will be heard at\nSt. Paul's Boyi' Choir Concert.\nNovember IS at 8 p.m.\nMadame Burovi, Palmist and\nPhrenologlit, locited oppoilte The\nDaily News. Special retdlng!. Todty 25c.  Questions answered free.\nBuy tht best in hockey ind ikatlng equipment, buy C. C. M., we\ncan supply you with the outfit you\nwtnt. Hlppenon Hardware Co.\nFor Silt\u2014Famous Maglio Plum\nTrees, wtll grown, two or three\nyetr old itock now ready for planting. Priced $2.60 tnd $3. Maglio,\n(20 Robion Stmt.\nEDUCATION WEEK\nCKLN is pleased to aid in the observance of National Education Week by offering\nits facilities to the teachers and pupils of Nelson schools.\nProgrammes will be Presented as follows:\ni i\nTuesday       8:00 p.m.    Pupils of the Junior High School\n8:15 p.m.    Talk: Mrs. F.  M. Auld \"The Home's Part in Education\"\nWednesday 6:30 p,m.    Pupils of the Central School\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Talk: Mr. R. B. Morris, \"Educational Finance\"\nThursday     9:00 p.m.    Pupils of the Senior High School\nFriday 6:15 p.m.    Pupils of the Hume School\n6:45 p.m.    Talk: Mr. R. Smillie \"Training in Citizenship\"\nCKhl\nii.'_,,_\u00bb_ft.i_w-M^-^1'--'-'\"^\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_11_12","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\/1.0414353","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":"1940-11-12 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":"1940-11-12 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":""}]}