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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Single Attacks Dwindle to Nothing When\nWeather Thickens; One Raider Is\nDowned on Edge of London\nLONDON, Oct 19 (Saturday) (CP)\u2014London had an air raid alert\n\u2022i dawn wil breaking todiy following; a few houn of \"ill clear\" \u2022\u2022\nlow-hanging clouds and a roaring barrage of anti-aircraft fire took\nthe steam out of the 42nd Nail night raid on the capital.\nA long lull followed Ihe sounding of the alert, and root top ob\nServeri aaw no sign of activity and heard no planei. Laat night, In the\nface of heavy defensive fire, the Germans itruck at the city elngly\ntrom different directions.\nThey spread out. too, all over  the United Kingdom,  cauilng\n' casualties in the London irea and\nelsewhere.\nThe weather steadily thickened,\nhowever, end lulls becime longer\nind more frequent, until finally the\n\"raiders passed\" signal tounded.\nOne raider Wai reported downed\non the fringe ot the London area.\n, Several penoni wire Injured\nwhen raiders demolished a row\nof houses at Liverpool.\nMany fires wire itarted in one\nMidlands town and high explosives damaged some industrial\npremises. In another town a home\ntor mental cases wai damaged.\nA \"stick\" of oil bombs (ell In one\nLondon area ihortly after the\nnight's raid itarted but residents\nof the neighborhood nid they did\nnothing but cover the lection with\nthick black grease.\nA heavy bomb scored a direct hit\non houses In one section and blew\nan adjacent public house Into the\nroadway, burying an unknown\nnumber of perioni under the debris.\nFour warden! were wounded seriously when their poit wu hit.\nThree Royil Air Force men and\na member of the R. A. T. women'i\nauxiliary were among six persons\nkilled when a high explosive bomb\nhit one London district. An elementary ichool, a workmen's club md\n\u25a0 number of shops ind houses were\ndamaged badly.\nIn many outer. London areai it\nwai tbe quietest night tor some\ntime.\nLondon thanked the dirty flying\nweather for a day of comparative\nrest from attack. Only one daylight\nalarm was. sounded instead of the\ncustomary half dozen or io. Clouds\nhid the raiders from the man In the\nitreet but the drone of Nazi motors\ncould be heard.\nOna Southeast Scottish town\nuld German planes made their\nflrit daylight appearance there In\nminy monthi. Their bombi tripped two women In their home,\ndamaged other houses and a\nchruch. The planes were chased\neut to tea.\nA woman and her ion who took\nshelter under the kitchen table were\nrescued alive from their bombed\nhome. The woman\u2014trapped eight\nhours\u2014was given coffee through a\nbicycle inner-tube.\nResponding to calls for better\nshelters against the raids, the Minister of Home Security announced\nthat 12,000 tens of steel have been\nreleased for construction of 600,000\nair raid shelter bunks.\nNazis Unable lo\nHold on Declares\nFreedom Station\nNIW YORK. Oct. 18 (CP) -The\nSermin people miy not be able to\nstand war condition! \"much long-\nat\" Germany1! famoui \"freedom\nItation\" laid tonight in a broadcast\nheard here by the Columbia Broadcasting System. It wu the lint\nUme the itation had been heird in\nlix months.\nRecalling thit Oct. 18 wu the\nday. Goering'i liecond tour-year\nplin ihould hive ended, the announcer uid: \"But the people are\nnot laughing. There'! nothing to\nlaugh it. Since Hitler uttered hli\nlying peice offerings there his\nbeen much - more crying thin\nlaughing.\nI 'Mothen are crying about ions\nMien on the battlefields, crying\nabout their children they went to\nprotect from British bombi. The\nonly people not crying ire the tas-\ncils In power. Germiny for them\nli only a means to an end.\"\nContinuing, the announcer taid\nGoerlng when taking command of\niraba-fti-sajrear'pliia >iuniliiil -naugh\nlood lor Germci y |nd enuogh German-made gasoline to make the\ncountry independent ot foreign\ncountries. \"But something went\nwrong with food and petrol nd\nmiracle substitutes had to be crested,\" he idded.\nBarham Goes to\nPort lor Repairs\n__*. LINEA, Spiln, Oct. 18 (CP'\n\u2014It wu reported here today the\n81,000-ton British battleship Barham\nhu irrived it nearby Gibraltar for\nrepairs after being damaged in the\nexpedition of Gen. Charlei De\nGaulle'i Free French forcei to Da\nkar. capital of French West Africa\ni\u00bb<The Admiralty in London declined Friday to comment on a German claim that the Barham hid\nbeen damaged, saying that to do so\n\"would be playing the Germar.\ngime ilnce they obviously only put\nout these reporti to lind out where\nthe ihlp Is.\")\nThe reports here uld the 26-year-\nold ihlp, which normally carries a\ncomplement of about 1100 men, entered the bisin at \"The Rock\"\nyuterday. It was added that .hi1\ntook a position near a cruiser all?\nundergoing minor repairs for dam\nagu reported to have been iu'\nfered in a Mediterranean naval\nbattle last Saturday when three\nItalian destroyers were sunk.\nLate Flashes\nLONDON, Oct 18 (CP)-The Admiralty announced today that a\nflotilla of German destroyers \"retired precipitately\" without damaging any British vessel when Brit-\nI Ish ihipi attempted to engage them\n100 milei Southwest of Lands End\nyeiterday.\nLONDON, Oct 18 (CP)-A bombardment of German Invasion\nbases on the French coast waa carried out by the Royal Navy last\nnight The bombardment wu so\ninterne that the reverberations rolled back across the waten ot the\nChannel like thunder.\nNEW YORK, Oct 18 (AP) -\nJamu L. Stewart, Associated Press\ncorrespondent in Chungking, tonight broadcut from the wartime\ncapital of China thit the movement of 1600 trucki liden with military suoplies over the re-opened\nBurma Road \"provided the signal\nlor \u25a0 wive ol optimism sweeping\nGovernment military and civilian\ncircle..\"\nBONNIE BAKU*, ORRIN\nTUCKER TO MARRY\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct. 18 (AP). -\nBonnie Baker, petite linger,-told\nfriends thil ihe md Orrin Tucker.\nwho leads the bind with which ihe\nworki, ire engaged but haven't ut\na date tor the ceremony.\nJapan After Oil\nFrom East Indies\nNEW YORK, Oct. 13 (AP) .-Foreign trade circles uld today that\nthe Japanese Government, through\nan economic mission in The Netherlands East Indies, hi reported\nbringing increulng preuure upon\nIndies oil companies to ihunt I\nlarger proportion of their output to\nJapanese interests. The minion is\nsaid to be expressing willingness to\npurchase 14,000.000 barrels of oil\nand gasoline annually.\nJapan In the past bought iround\nfour-fifth! of her guoline and oil\nneed! in the United Statei. Three\nmonthi ago, however, Wuhlngton\nput an embargo on exporti of aviation guoline ind lubricants ind\nsince then tha Oriental nation's only\nimportation of plane fuels hu been\nscattered shipment! from Venezuela.\nMexico md Netherlands Eut Indies\nrefineries.\nEngland to Hold\nBishop Declares\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (CP). - Air\nMarehil W. A. Bishop raid tonight\nthat u a result ot hli recent vliit\nto Britain he li \"itlll further convinced that Englind' shall stand,\"\nmd thit the Empire liter the wir\nwill be \"\u2022 greater, more vital, more\ndecisive factor la world hlitory\nthan tt ever hu before.\"\nAir Marshal Bishop, Director of\nRecruiting, for the Royal Canadian\nAir Force, addressed a dinner meeting ot service clubl. Hii speech wu\nbroadcut over i nitlonal network\nof. the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.\n\"It ii only outside that fortress\nisland thit doubt ever arises, 'can\nEngland hold out?'\" Air Manhal\nBishop uid. \"There ll no such\ndoubt in the mind ot anyone there.\"\nNIW ORLEANS, Oct 18 (AP)\n\u2014Outbreak ihortly ot a series\not \"sabotage incidents\" like \"the\nrecent Hercules Powder explosion in New Jeney\" unless the\nFederal Government takes active steps it once wu predicted\ntodiy by Representative Martin\nDies, Texal Democrat\n\"Foreign Governments hive\nplaced agents end saboteurs In\nevery key industry ind unless\nthe Government acta within SO\ndayi I predict a series ot actual\nsabotage that will cripple the\nwhole National Defence program,\" the Chairman ol the Congressional Committee investigating Unamerican activities\nlaid ln< an interview. '\nJAPANESE BOMB\nTERMINAL CITY\nOF BURMA ROAD\nMilitary  Objectives\nAre  Damaged\nSeverely\nROAD ATTACKED\nHONG KONG, Oct 18 <AP)-\nJapan itruck her flnt blow\nagainst the re-opened Burma\nRoad today by bombing the strategic city of Kunming, Chinese\nterminus ot the road over which\nil surging one.of the* greatest\nmotor' caravans of htitory\nWith the flood ot arms-bearing\ntraille along the Burma Road\nrising hourly, Honk Kong headquarten ol the Japanese South\nChina fleet announced naval\nwarplane. severely damaged military objectives jn and around\nKunming, capital of Yunnan\nProvince.\nJapaneie airmen, flying deep Into\ntie Province, alio heavily, bombed\nhe Burma Road itself, cauilng considerable damage to bridgei, the\nJapanue South China fleet headquarten claimed.\nNone of the Chlneie truck caravans wu lighted, the Japanue\nuid.'\nTlie Japaneie bomben were reported to have attacked Chinese\nmunitions factories in the suburbs\not Kunming and military establishments within the city itself. Japanese headquarten said the raiden\nmet no opposition from the air.\nHowever, the Chinese were reported ready for the promised\nJapanue attacki on the road between Burma and China, Antiaircraft guni wera uld to be\nplanted at many pointi along the\nwiy.\nSupplies itarted moving toward\nChina in the early darknew today\nafter a three-months suspension of\ntraffic.\nes to Go Backto Duty\nON GREECE\nLand Concession,\nUse of Air Bases\nThen submarines, tied up at Charleitown,\nare staging a comeback Theie eight -and many\nothers will be recommluiofled and returned to duty\nwith the mwly planned U.S. Atlantic fleet The\nU.S. Nivy expecti to. have 36 ot theie submarine!\nready for duty by Jan. 1. Jn -addition it has 104\nfirst line subs and 81 more building.\nHUNGRY CONVICTS\nFINALLY GIVE UP .\nSITDOWN\nST. VINCENT de PAUL, Que.,\nOct. 18 (CP)\u2014Cold and hunger\ndrove leven rain-sodden convict! today from the top ot a\nprison chapel where they had\n. apent more than 22 houn defying guards in in unexplained\nitrike.\nOne by one the men went\ndown afedder Into the yard of\nSt Vincetft de Paul Penitentiary .\nfrom tht roof of the chapel,\nwithin the prison walls to which\nthey hid climbed suddenly lite\nyeiterdiy. There was no explanation from prison officials lor\nthe men's action.\nTrial of Indian\nlor Murder Opens\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct 18 -\n(OP). \u2014 Frank Sylveiter, 21-year-\nold Shuawip Indian charged with\nthe murder of an 83-year-old pensioner, John Lundy, near Windermere 80 mtlei North of here Sept.\n36, appeared for trial in Assize\nCourt here today.\nDr. F. E. Coy md Dr. A. G. Nil-\nsmith told ol finding the burned\nbody of Lundy In the fire-iwept\nhome of Harold Fonter, former\nMember of tbe Provinclil Legiila-\nturc, whose body also wis found.\nLundy's remains were identified by\n\u2022 curvature of the spine.\nJohn Edwird Barbour . told of\nhaving dinner with Fonter and\nLundy on the evening of Sept 26.\nHe left without seeing anyone.\nPierre Sylveiter, brother of Frank,\ntold the court ol hii brother!! homecoming in a strange car Sept. 27\nwhen Frank told him:,\n1 killed Fonter and the other\nguy, and thla is their car.\"\nPierre uid he heard nothing further until the next Sunday morning, when Frank came home alter\na night'a absence and made sign\nlanguage lor burning.\nDefence Counsel Allen Graham\nquestioned the medical witnesses on\nwhether an Indian under the influence of liquor could not be accurately termed \"a craiy man.\"\nConstable John White ot the Britiih Columbia Police, who laid the\nmurder charge agaimt Sylvester,\ntestified thit when examining the\nburned ruins of the ranch house\nOct 2 he found two empty cartridge\nshells. Detective Jacob Young, ballistics expert, uld that One cama\ntrom a rifle identified at belonging\nto Sylvester. The other, he uld,\ncame trom a rifle registered by\nLundy, which Steveni laid Fnnk\ntook trom the home the night of the\nOre.\nVke-Consi\nSpy Head in U. S,\nNEW YORK, Oct IB (CP).-The\nNew York Poit In a copyright dl.\npatch by Edward P. Flynn, its\nWuhlngton staff correipondent, says\ntodiy it hai learned the top man\n\"in the Nazi machine lor propaganda, espionage, sabotage and intrigue in the United tatei Is Fried-\nhelm Draeger, German Vice-Con-\nsul in New York.\"\nThe dispatch continue.:\n\"He his been betrayed, The Po.\u00bb\nleirned todiy, by one ol Hitler's\nmoit important md'trusted agents\n\u2014Dr. Friedrich E. Auhigen, the former Columbil University Profeisor\nwho wu arrested last month in Los\nAngeles as he was about to flee to\nJapan.\n\"In-addition to the iccusing testimony of Auhigen, given in secret\nhere (Washington) during the put\nfew diys, Draeger has been deeply\nInvolved by documentary evidence\nnow being eximined by the House\n(ot Representatives) Committee on\nun-American Activities (the Dies\nCommittee) the State Depirtment\nud the Department ol Justice.\"\nFlood Toll Rises\nBARCELONA, Spain Oct. 18 \u2014\n(AP). \u2014 A mounting toll ol deathi\nfrom floods in Barcelona md Ger-\nona Provinces wai reported tonight\nwith some estimates letting the total\nat more than 200. .\nThe itreets of the city of Gerona\nwere flooded by the overflowing\nRiver Ter, the waten In some places\nreaching balconies ot homes.\nGerona ia 53 miles Northeast ot\nBarcelona.\nThe public services, gu and water  ayitemi were   halted by   the\nfloods md telephone\ntlon with towni inthe Province wu\neut\nMany bridgei were swept away.\nPatched Up Ajax\nOff to New Wars\nDenies Russians\nEntered Rumania\n, MOSCOW. Oct 19 (Siturday)\n(CP>\u2014Tass, Soviet Russian new!\nigency todiy denied reports 'hat\nRussian troops' had entered Rumania u reported abroad.\nTta denied:\n- ReowU that a Soviet destroyer\nsank a Rumanian ship In the Black\nSea.\nReporti thit Russian troopi entered Rumania or that a clash occurred between Russian and German frontier guards in the vicinity\nof Galiti, Rumania.\nSink Nazi .hip\nLONDON, Oct. 19 (Saturday)-\n(CP).\u2014British light naval craft sank\na German ihlp. off the coast of\nFrance yesterday, the Admiralty\nannounced early today.\n\"Whilst carrying out a patrol off\nthe coast of France yuterday afternoon our light craft sighted three\nlarge enemy trawlers.\n'The enemy was Immediately attacked and hits were scored on a\nrear ship which wu lunk.\n\"The proximity of the enemy\nshore defences precluded further\npursuit\n\"No damage or cuuiltlei were\nsustained by our vessel!.\"\nSome Internees From\nBritain Gain Release\nOTTAWA, Oct 18 (CP)-From\ntime to lime, on orders of the British Home Office, civilian aliens interned In Cmada at Great Britain's requeit are being release!\nand -from an authoritative source\nlt wu understood tonight that release ol a new batch ol civilian\nInternees has been ordered.\nAi their casu are reviewed by\nthe British Home Office othen probably will be releued for return to\nEngland where they were rounded\nup In a general round-up of enemy\naliens, it wu uld.\nCOAST SEAMAN DROWNS\nCOURTENAY, B. C, Oct 18 (CP)\n\u2014Surviving crew members of the 42-\nfoot Miner Mildred G. recounted tonight the drowning of one of their\ncommunlca- number and ' the rescue of five\nothen when the seiner foundered\nin heavy weather off Eut bout of\nVmcouver Wind Thundiy.\nNELSON - TRAIL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC\nHELD UP THREE HOURS BY SLIDE\nTraffic on the J*elK>n-Trill Highway wu held up tor about three\nhoun Fridiy afternoon by a tall\nol rock estimated at 900 cubic\nyards.\nA large number of big boulders\nand accompanying rock and debris\nwere moved off the road by a\nPublic Works Department crew,\nwhile other employeei and Provincial Police officen halted driven\nto inform them they could not get\nthrough. It wu finally cleared at\n4 o'clock.\nThe mass of rock tore out part\nof the embinkment on the outer\nside of the road. The tall occurred\nih the narrow, \"winding section ol\nroid cut out ol the bink in the\nBeuley section.\nDriven who went out to Beasley\nstated there wu still a considerable quantity ol rock almost overhanging the road, and expressed\nthe opinion it wu fortunate no one\nwu puilng it the time of the fill.\nA car struck by a man of rocks\nluch u came down would be completely crushed, they asserted.\nIt wu believed It would require\nseveral thousand dollars to put tbe\nroad In safe condition.\nFleet Expected to Be\n. on Mediterranean\nProwl Soon\nBRITISH ATTACK\nTROOPS FROM AIR\nBy LARRY ALLEN\nAssociated Pren Staff Writer\nALEXANDRIA, Oct. 18 <AP>-\n. Her dead buried and her scar.\npatched) the British cruiser Ajax\nstood ready with1 steam up and\nguns primed tonight to take up\nwhere she left off In last Saturday'! victorious encounter with\nthe Italian Navy in the Mediterranean Sea. ,\nAlready twice victorious In this\nwar \u2014 against the Italians and in\nthe River Plate battle which sent\nthe German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee to self-destruction\n\u2014the 6985-ton Ajax appeired u\ngood u new when repair crews\ncompleted their task today.\nEgyptian workers rivetted \u00bbteel\nplates over holes caused by shell\nfire from Italian warcraft in Saturday's battle in which three of\nMussolini's destroyers were sent to\nthe bottom.\nNew supplies of ammunition were\nstowed away and new crewmen\ncame aboard to replace the 1_\nkilled and 22 injured in that\nencounter.\nThe buttle around the Ajax was\nduplicated aboard numerous otlur\nBritish warships lying In Alexandria Hirbor, indicating that the\nMediterranean' fleet might toon\nbe on the prowl again.\nWhile the fleet made ready,\nRoyal Air Force headquarters at\nCairo announced Its airmen had\ncarried out a number of successful\nattacki against Fascist forces In\nLibya ind Egypt.\nAn Italian motor column was reported scattered by bombs dropped\non Hellfire Pass, near Sallum on\nthe Egyptian coast Returning from\nthis .attack the British pilots raided\nBengasi, Italy's main Libyan naval\nbase, where direct hits were\nreported scored on two ships\nunloading.\nIn Italian counter-raids in the\nWestern desert, British officials said\nthit 30 cuuiltles were inflicted by\nbombi dropped on i train carrying\nrefugees and livestock.\nRoosevelt Plans\nloAflswerWIIIkle\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (AP. -\nAccusing his opposition of \"sytem-\nitic\" md \"deliberate falsification of\nfact\" President Rooievelt announced\ntoday he would reply In a lenei\nof political ipeeches to be delivered in the East and in Ohio, before the United States election day.\n, Al part of the travelling involved, he told a Press conference,\nhe plans to make a series of defence inspection tours, similar to\nthe leveral of the recent put But.\nhe added in a voice heavy with\nsarcatu, tor the benefit of people\nwhose ethics differed from hli own\nthe defence tqtiri would be paid\nfor by the Democratic National\nCommittee becauie there would be\nsome political speeches during the\ntrip?.-\nin\nSeverance of Trade Relations With Britain\nand Reorganization of Government to\nFit Axis Pattern Called for\nBy EDWARD KENNEDY\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nCAIRO, Egypt, Oct. 18 (AP) .\u2014Germany and Italy hava\nmade five all-inclusive demands on Greece, calling for territorial concessions to both' Italy and Bulgaria, the use of Greek\nair bases by the Axis powers, and reorganization of the Government to fit the Axis pattern, Greek diplomatic circles reported tonight.\nThe demands were said also to stipulate that Greece break\noff trade relatiqns with Great Britain.\nSpecifically, the five points were said to have been set\ndown by the Axis partners in this order;\nImmediate severance of economic relations with Britain.\nCession of a atrip of territory ad-#-\nJicent to the Albanlin border to Italy ind cession of i corridor to the\nAegean Sea to Bulgaria.\nGrant of the right to Italy to\nconstruct a road'from Albania to\nSalonika, Greek port and lO-ciUed\nkey to the South Balkans.\nUse of certain Greek air buu by\nGermany and Italy.\nAbdication of King George II\nof Greece, reilgnatlon of Premier\n.John Metaxai and formation ef a\npro-Axis Government\nThe Greek diplomats uld thiy\nleirned of the alleged demands directly from Athena,\nGreece md Turkey are Britiin'i\nlist remsining friends in the Bsl-\nkans. Britain Is pledged to aid the\nGreeks against attack and is aligned\nwith Turkey. In a mutual defence\npact   \u25a0':.,''--'- ,\\ r\u25a0!*'. ;.- 'i- \u25a0-\u25a0' --,.\nUnofficial reports earlier in the\nweek from Ankara laid .Turkey\nwould go to the aid of Greece in\nthe event of an Axis thrust The\nTurki already have declared \"2,-\n000,000. bayonets\" will resist any\nGerman-Italian drive against the\nNear Eait\nCession to Italy of a itrlp of territory adjacent to the Albanian border meins the rich Province of\nEpirus on the Ionian Sea, which\nItalian newipapen frequently have\nset aside as 'rightfully\" belonging\nto Rome. Epirus lies on the Northwestern coast of Greece and bor-\nders Italian-controlled Albania.\nSecond demand,was cession of a\ncorridor to Bulgaria to give that\ncountry an outlet to the Aegean Sei.\nThis would cut a wedge into Northeastern Greece. Since the Axis\nPowers are noted for never giving\nwithout asking, such a concession\nto Bulgaria presumably would mean\nthat Germany woull be allowed to\nmove troops through Bulgaria to\nthat outlet.\nShe would then have a corridor\nfrom Rumania along which to move\nGerman troops against Turkey, since\nTurkey has innounced she will fight\nto defend Greece.\nPOLICE PROPING\nMYSTERIOUS FIRE\nKELOWNA, B. C, Oct. 18 (CP).\u2014\nMysterioui circumstances surrounding the burning ot the Winfield\nhome of Mr. ind Mrs. A. C. Jewett In\nwhich the former Prairie couple\nand their 26-year-old ion, Kingsley.\nlost their lives, were probed tonight by Provincial Police.   -\nPolice sought to confirm reports\nof neighbors that outbuildings it\nthe Jewett home 12 miles North\nof here, seemed to flame up ilmul-\ntaneouily with the house in which\nthe burned bodies of the victims\nwere found.\nA .23 calibre rifle wai found be-\nilde the remiins of i bed on which\nlay the bodies of Mr. and Mrs.\nJewett\n50 Vehicles Struck\nin Italian Base Raid\nNAIROBI. Kenyi, Oct 18 (CP.)-\nThe South Africin Air Force raided\nthe Itallen base of Neghelli In Ethiopia yesterdiy for the seventh time\nin the war, end damiged it least\n80 vehicles when bomb! were ..altered over i concentration of motorized transport, a communique\nuid today. An ilrdrome building\nwu hit in i raid on the previous\ndiy. lt idded.\n\"One ot our pitroli gained contact\nwith the enemy in th- neighborhood of Libol.\n\"Neghelli in Abyssinia again has\nbeen successfully raided by the\nSouth African Air Force. On Wednesday a Capronl machine was\nbidly damiged, end direct hits ware\nregistered on tbe airdrome building.\"\nFAMILIES FLEE\nISLAND FLOODS\nVANCOUVER, Oet 18 (CP). \u2014\nCommunications with flood-stricken\nZeballos on the Wait coait of Vancouver Island were rat otf lata today after the'mining settlement reported one ot the wont floods In\niti brief hlitory hid forced several\nfamilies to flee their homei and\nleft the town without'trash water.\nAt the aame time reporti from\nother district! along tbe British\nColumbia coast . Indicated heavy\nrains which caused the Zeballoi\nRiver to- lump Its banks flooding\nthe Mala Street of the settiemehV\nwere general. Several families la\nthe Bella Coola Valley, midway up\nthe Mainland coast where marooned\nand in North Vancouver the Seymour River swirled over its banki.\nA total of 9.1 Inches of rain fell\non Zeballoi during the past -4\nhours, accompanied by high winds\nmd tides. At last reporti rain v\nstill falling and water twirled over\nthe first floor of many homes Is\nthe lower part of the town.\nInspection Tour\nPleases Premier\nBy 0. R. BLACKBURN\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nHALIFAX, Oct 18 (CP) .-After\ncompleting an exhaustive inspection tour ot Canada'i army and al;\nforces on active duty along the Atlantic seaboard, Prima Minister\nMackenzie King tonight declared\nhimself \"deeply impressed with the\nvigor and strength of lt an.\"\nMr. King said he wai \"not a bit\ntired,' but greatly Interested and\nenthused hy what he bad ieen. Tomorrow he will ipend the morning\nwith the Royil Canadian Navy.\nFrom 10 o'clock thii morning until nearly 8 o'clock tonight the Prima\nMlniiter was almost constantly on\nthe move. In addition to the air\nforce establishments and coastal defence works, he visited and closely\neximined \u2022 number ot service\nhosteli.\nTonight Mr. King was guest at a\ndinner given by Premier A. S. MacMlllan and members of the Nova\nScotia Government\nWeaR.gr\nMin. Max.\nNELSON _ \u2014 _ \u00ab 80\nVictoria    53 83\nNanaimo _  58 82\nVancouver    - - 59 65\nKamloops      45 71   .\nPrince George  - 48 IS\nEitevan Point   58 \u2014\nPrince Rupert  \u2014 48 61\nLangara      48 60\nAtlin \u2014 32 37\nDawson, Y. T   24 30\nSeattle               61 75\nPortland \u00bb. 58 76\nSan Francisco  54    \u25a0 82\nSpokane    .-...- 51 76\nPentlcten      48 -\nVernon      49 \u2014\nKelowna   , \u2014  46 \u2014\nKaslo   46 -\nCranbrook    _  46 67 :\nCllgiry       46 67\nEdmonton  \u2014 34 54\nSwift Current  _ 47 71 i\nPrince Albert  \u201e 33 55\nWinnipeg    _  42 85,\nForecast \u2014 Kootensy: Ftesh East\nto Southeast winds, mostly cloudy\nand mild with showers. '              . |\nmt        \u2022ii,\u00bbL--!i----,-.,'-.--_,-.-.-.-i-.-,.-^.. 'iiritrtMiiiriar \u25a0\u25a0* -,Ji--'\"!-:lri>ii\n ,\u2014. ,\t\n\u2014TIIPIPPPPI1\n\"mWm**************m\\*m*W^aStm*'\nJAGS  TWO\n\u25a0CHURCHES\nXpoatolir flUfiirrlj, Mttwn fllork\nJW. OOSCTL        SPDCIAL BBVIVAL SERVJCES\nEVANGELIST E. L. McRAE \u2014 Scotch Preacher\nSunday 7:30 p.m. \u2014 England's Invincible Defender\nTuei, Wad., Thuri., Fri., 8:00 p.m. \u2014 Paitor C. I. Klngifleld.\nTuna In CJAT Trail. 10:30 to 11:00 each Monday Night\nft. ilait.'fl\nJtottrt atf|\u00abrrlj\nStanley and Silica\nRev. F. Hilliard, M.A., B.D.\nSunday Services:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\nH:00 eon.-The Boyi' Choir\nwill line. Male Heroes ot the\nBible, \"Joshua\".\nWO p,m.-\"A SclantUic Faith\"\nMon. 8 p.m.\u2014Excelsior Club\nat W. Graham, 001 Latimer.\nMen'i Brotherhood in baie-\nment Geo. Hoover speaker.\nTues., 8 p.m.\u2014Public Prayer,\nIn the Church.\nWed, 8 p.m.-Y0=_..\nMONPAY, Oct. 28 Toll Bros,\nTravelogue, In peraon.\u2014\"Hiking\nThrough South America\".\nJflrat (Elrurr-i of\n(Eltnat fcrfcttttet\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church\nThe Firit Church of Christ\nScientist in Boston, Mail.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject   Lesi.n-lermon\n\"Doetrlni ef  Atonement\"\nWednesdiy Testimoniil Meeting\nI p.m.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\n\u2022   CHURCH  BUILDING\u2014\nAll Cordially Welcome\nHmtljermt *t\\)\\xtt\\)\nStanley and Silica\nI. Hopka, Pastor\n110:15 am\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m\u2014Morning Service.\nT:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nfllrtlirl Salirnutrlr\nPentecostal\n708 Biker St.\nSaturday at 2:30 p.m. Children's\nChurch.    \"\nSunday Services:\n9:49 a.m. \u2014 Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m, 3:00 p.m., 7:30 p.m.\nSuperintendent  Tom  Johnstone\npreaches at all services.\n3:00 p.m. - A SPECIAL SUBJECT - \"WILL THERE ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND?\"\nYou are invited to hear this\nout-tending preacher.\nftrat\n-Baptist (Eijitrrlj\nRev. Gerald M. Ward, Minister\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Church School.\nRev. A. W. Mayse of Trail.\nPreaching at 11:00 a.m. and **:30\npan\n3:00 p.m. at Shirley Hall.\nCome and Worship\n\u2022Jrimtg -KntteH\nQUfttrrli\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nRev. J. A. Donnell, Mlniiter\nChurch School at 10 a.m.\nPublic Worship at U a.m. and\nT:30 p.m.\nCome and Worship With Us\nRosary Service\nfor Mrs. Bourdon\nloyt Whose Tussle\nimaged Typewriters\nlust Make Good Loss\nTwo boyi tussling In the com-\nnercial room at Nelion High\nIchool knocked over a table and.\ntwo typewriter! and caused $39\ni $10 damage to each machine. The\nSchool Board decided Friday night\nto inform their families that they\nwere required to make good the\n'dam-fee.\nA MEAN ACTING LIVER\nCAN MAKE YOU COHSTIPATEd\/\ni Yoo may hava \u25a0wondered why aome\nlaxativei fail to give real relief\n'. 1 rom temporary constipation. Often\nJthie la bacauaa tha flow of liver bile\nia insufficient to prevent decay of\nintestinal waatea. Try Beechams\n'Ilia, tha purely vegetable com-\npound. Be side a bain*- a gentle,\neffective laxative, they encourage\n-thla flow of liver bile which la ao\nMcaaaary to help digest what you\n.eat, help prevent decay of intet-\ntinal waate and help keep elimination thorough. Buy Beechams Pilli\nat your druggist's\u2014IM, 25;, 004.\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct, 18\u2014Fun.\neral lervlee for Mri. Wilfred Bourdon, wife of Wilfred Bourdon of\nRossland, will be conducted Saturday morning.\nMn. Bourdon had been under\ntreatment at Tranquille Sanitarium\nfor three yean, dying Tueiday.\nShe ia survived by her mother\nand father, Mr. and Mn. Fred Redding of Grand Forks; four sisters,\nMri, -Leo Bourdon of Castlegar,\nRosle, Doreen and Mine of Grand\nForks; and tour brother!, Hubert,\nClarence, Freddie and Ralph ot\nGrand Forki,\nA Rosary service wu conducted\n\u2022t Jonei Funeral Parlors thla evening.\n450 to Patrol Coast\nCity on Hallowe'en\nVANCOUVER, Oct, 1\u00ab (CP) -\nA force of approximately 450 constables, detectivea and ipeclal officen will patrol Vancouver on Hallowe'en as a precaution agalnit\nviolence.\nThe police commission empowered Acting Chief Constable Donald\nMsXay to hire 190 ipeclal officen.\nThey will reinforce nearly 300 regular members of the Department\nwho will be on duty.\nSteps to prevent \"serlouj and malicious damage\" in the city's Japanese quarter wtra urged in a letter\nsent to the Department by Dr. G A.\nIahlwara, President of the Japanese\n'Citizens' League.\nBaynes Lake Man Is\nKilled ot Newgate\nKenneth Stirling, aged 27, of\nBaynea Lake waa killed In an accident at Mulr'a mill, Newgale,\nThunday afternoon, stated a radiogram received Friday by the B.C.\nPolice Divisional Headquarten at\nNelaon. An Inquest will be held\nMonday or Tueiday, \"\nRed Cross Head\nTellsWorkers\nNeed for Help\nMn. H, A. Ramadan of Vaneon\nver. Provincial Chairman pf thi\nRed Crow Work Cotnmlttae, Friday night addreaed Nation Red\nCrou Society memben, workers\nand Auxiliary workeri, emphutfr\ning the dire need for Had Cross\naid to the fighting forces, rifunn\nand evacueai in the war area, describing in part tha arrangemints\nfor shipping goods, and giving\nhelpful answers to tha workeri'\nproblem..\nPreviously Friday, Mn, Ramiden\nhad addressed limllar bodlei at\nCreiton and Kaslo, and today will\nvisit slocan polnta, and Monday\nwill speak at Rouland and Trail.\nTha need waa great, and too much\nemphasis could not ba laid on the\npart tbe Red Cross wu taking in\naiding those In the battle areas,\nMn, Ramadan nid. In addition,\nprecautions must be taken, and\nsupplies made and kept on hand\nfor any emergency at home. There\nwere many polnta, even on the\nBritiih Columbia Coast, vulnerable\nto attack, and provision must be,\nand wai being made tor luch eventualities.\n\"Wa can't afford to waite, for in\nall likelihood there will be a universal shortage of materials,\" Mn,\nRamsden laid, urging the worken\nto uie remnants for clothing, and\ncomforts for refugees.\nURGES  FOLLOW  RULES\nMethod! of packing clothing,\nblankets, medical suppiiei and\nother articles were individually\noutlined. The Canadian Red Cross\nwaa allotted 10,000 cubic feet of\nshipping space trea and a ipeclal\nrate on space over that amount\nused. At thii tha monthly freight\ncharge wai over $9000. With a premium on space, the Red Crou could\nnot afford to ahlp second hand\nclothing and good! for refugees,\nand the speaker urged that such\narticles be handled through other\nchannels.\nThe following of knitting instructions wai of the utmost Importance, ihe laid,- and ahe enumerated the commonest mistakes of\nknitters. She also described the\nnew work of knitting aero helmets,\ntwo-way mllta, and turtle-neck\npullover sweaters, which is to be\nundertaken by all branches ihortly.\nSunplei of quilts and other articles prepared By B. C. women for\nrefugee! were passed around. The\nwork was beautiful, and wai described is \"example! of the art of\nB, C. women being brought to\nlight\" Problems of the individual\nworken were answered by Mrs.\nRamiden.\nMn. L. M. Varner, Nelion Work\nCommittee Chairman, presided.\nNELION DAILY NEWI, NELION. B. C.-SATUflDAY MORNING. OCT. 11\nJunior Chamber Sends\nSympathy to Bums, a\nPatient in Hospital\nNation Junior Chamber of Commerce directed Friday night that a\nlatter of sympathy ihould ba sent\nto Gordon Bums, a member now in\nKootenay Lake General Hoapital recovering from an operation. Ha wm\nreported to ba making prograis.\nGuest Children\nFrom England at\nHemes In Trail\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nI HUMB-H. J. Godley, Fred Har-\n'grave, S. Vandt, Mr, and Mri. Nel-\n.son Hicks, H. J. Seed, A. S. Gentles,\nMr. and Mrs. H. A Ramsden, L. M\nI Herod, Frank Jackson, A. Andrews,\n\u2022Vancouver;   R   L.  Poller,  Pentic\nton; J. E. Miller, Vernon; A. Brln-\ndie, Kamloops; J. P. Bell, Fruitvale; Mn. R. A. Yeld, Edgewood;\nW. H. Ahler, Procter; Mn, A. E\nFowler, Nakusp; A. Anderson, R.\nBrough, Medicine Hat; D. Cunningham, Calgary,\nCamouflage Art\nTaught lo Army\nOTTAWA. Oct. II (CP) .-Every\nman in the Canadian army now gets\na certain amount of training in art\nthe new art of the new wan but\nneverthless one of the oldest aril\nIn the world\u2014camouflage.\nThe Canadian army trains Iti\nmen without outside assistance.\nMany aoldien, an authority said\ntoday, become remarkably profl.\n.dent in using what means in at\nh|nd to hide themselves and their\nequipment from ground and air observation.\nInformal competition between amateur designers experimenting with\nthe painting of gum and motor vehicles stimulates Interest. Pictures\ntaken of machines after they have\nbeen camouflaged show with striking clarity which are difficult to\nsee and which \"stick out like sore\nthumbs.\"\nThe camouflagilt worki against\ntwo type* of observation, ground\nand air, and In both cases ona ot\nhis basic principlei li no straight\nlines ai presence cf such a line immediately indicates the presence of\nmm and his worki, experts say.\nTeaching of Senior\nFirst Aid by School\nTeachers Authorized\nAdvice thit the Britiih Columbia\nCouncil of the St. John Ambulance\nAssociation had authorized teachen holding St. John certificate, to\nteach senior flrit aid wai received\nby the Nelion School Board Friday\nnight\nTRAIL, B, C.-Barbara Jonei, ige\n11), and her ll-ytir-old brother Albert ara tare recently-arrived fueit\nchildren trom England. Barbara :s\nstaying with Mr. and Mn. Thomas\nWilton, vt li Maple Street and Albert la tha gueit pf Mr. and Mn.\nA. E. Mortimer, 724 Victoria Street\nThe parenti of the two chlldrijri,\nai wall ai a iletor agad 14, and a\nbrother, five yean, ara atlll tn Mid-\ndleiborough, Yorkshire, England.\nCar (rashes\nTrill Area\nBring Fines\nTRAIL, B, C, Oct, 11\u2014Reckleai\ndriving chargei ware laid In Provincial Police Court agalnit Mn.\nHartley Fletcher, ot 1199 Dewdney\nAvenue, Trail, and Wesley Allardice, of m\u00bb Circle Street Trait,\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate E. L\nHodge, Friday afternoon, An additional charge ot driving without a\ndriver's licence wu Uld agalnit\nMr. Allardice. Both parties pleaded\ni-My.\nMra. Fletcher wai fined $15 and\ncoiti,\nMr. Allardice waa fined 111 and\ncosts on tha reckless driving count,\nand $5 without costs tor the licence\ninfraction, and waa forbidden to\ndrive a Car for 11 monthi.\nComtaffle Lloyd Gray, In laying\nthi charge against Mn. Fletcher,\nstated that the car, wrlch Mn\nFletcher wai driving, tur.sd ovar\non the itretch of road near Merry'i\nFlats, outside Trail, on Saturday\nmorning. Ha attributed the accident\nto the fact that the driver had not\nbeen paying strict attention while\ndriving along the straight stretch ot\nroad, and the car turned over whan\nMrs Fletcher swerved luddenly to\navoid going Into the ditch,\nMn. Fletcher, who wu alone In\nthe car, had received a bad shaking\nup, but wu not leriouily hurt\nDamage' to the car was an estimated $200.\nCAR OUT OF CONTROL\nSpeaking to the reckless driving\ncharge agalnit Allardice, Constable\nGray aald that It wai the result of\nan accident last Friday evening,\nwhen a car. driven by tha Trail,\nman, with Gerald Simpson, alio of\nTrill, u a passenger, went otf tha\nSchofleld Highway'Just below the\nMountain View Cemetery. Measurements Indicated that the car must\nhave been travelling at an excessive\nrate ot ipeed, In view of the fact\nthat can travelling at 33 miles tn\nhour were able to\" negotiate the\ncorner it which Allardice'i car lef;\nthe road, he stated.\nAllardice uid' that he had loit\ncontrol of the car about a mile\nabove the point where the car had\ngone off the road. He had had tho\nfoot brake tested previously, and\nhad been told it waa all right\nAllardice wu bruised and Simpson wai In tha hospital ai a result\nof the cruh. The car wu stated to\nbe a total loss.\n38 Juniors, 29\nSeniors Out lor\nFirst Badminton\nNtlson Badminton Club iciion re\ncalved an enthuilaitlc tendoff\nThunday night u it Junlontnd 29\nsenlori participated in.tha opening\nplay and enrolled (or tha itaton.\nA record fer tha tint; night wu\nthe Junior enrollment ot 10 girls,\nand 11 boyi. Many othen turned out\nto watch an' signified thalr Intentions of Joining. Tbe Juniors 'will\nagain be mpervlied by Denli Crow-\nthers and Hector Macken-ie. Mr.\nMackenzie hai consented to act al\nCoach tor a third season. '\nMr. Mackenzie ippka briefly on\nthe successes ot the Juniors lut\nseason, and' uld that ha and Mr.\nCrowther expected \"great things\"\nfrom the Juniors in the numerous\ntournaments to ba arranged. Spec,\nial effort would be made to tea that\nall playen, especially beginners,\nwould receive u much coaching as\npossible.\nThe senior enrollment Indud\nnine ladles and 20 man. Many of the\n1939-40 memben were on hand, and\nalio signified their intentions of on1\ntering pliy ihortly,\nA good crowd li expected at the\ncourts. Sundiy afternoon when old\nand new memben will be iritrodu.-\ned. Tea will ba served by Mrt. D.\nMale and Mrs- J. R. Fleming, assisted by members ot tha tea committee. An Invitation to old members,\nprospective members and friends\nto attend hu beep extended.\nLONDON (CP) \u2022- Their home\nhere threatened by bombi three\nsucceisive nights, an aged couple\nnotified Weit country relatives\nthey were going there for ufety.\nTha reply: \"Don't come. House hit\nComing to you.\"\nTRAIL, B. C, 4I___M>-Plaadlng\nguilty to parking b-HF within 10\nnet of tht interaacUatrot Spokane\nStreet and Cedar Avenue, Peter\nDurkln, Trail, wai fined $5 and co-ti\nby Magistrate Parker Wllliimi In\nCity Police Court thii morning.\nButorac Moton Limited, represented by M. M. Butorac, proprietor.\nwera charged with unlawfully driving or operating a motor vehicle\nwithout the required licence. Mr,\nButorac pleaded guilty, and wu\nfined (10 and costs. The eue arose\nfrom the fact that Butorac hid lent\na truck to the D. B, Merry Lumber\nCompany, with a demonstrator'i licence, and had ilgned a nven day\npermit for it According to the B, C.\nstatutes, the demonstrator's licence\nia granted only for the operation\nof a vehicle for 48 houn, twice a\nyear.\nTrail Pupils\nGet Start on\nWar Sayings\nTRAIL, B. C,, Oct, 18\u2014Ai a feature of cooperation toward Canada'i war effort a method ot collecting war uvlpga stamps hu\nbeen recently inaugurated among\npuptli of' the Trail High School.\nEach pupil bring! amounts of\nmoney'to be contributed, no matter bow small, and the home room\nteacher keeps a record of the money. When 23 centa hu been credited\nto a pupil, a stamp- is bought and\nput on the war savings card, and\na $4 certificate ll pruented to tbe\npupil ai loon aa a complete card\nii filled in.\nAlthough thli icheme wu pu>\ninto effect only lut week, a large\nnumber of pupila have already contributed enough for their individual certificates.\nome Nursing Classes\nGiven Permission\nto Use Central School\nPermiwion tor clattta in homt\nnursing to be held at Central School\nby tha St. John Ambulance Awociation wu granted by the Nelaon\nSchool Board Friday nighfupon receipt ot an application by A. O.\nAndenon, Honorary Secretary \u2022\nTreasurer.\nTruitee David Reel itated Mrs\nQ. F. Sparki would instruct the\nolinu.\nHigh School girls will alto itudy\nhome nursing.\nffC Allowad on Your Old\n\u00abPd Mattreit\nWhan you buy a\nSuper Rett Unit\nFINK'S\nFURNITUR.\nPhone HI 441 laker St\nArthur Foster Is New President ol\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce\nCHIMNEY FIRE AT KASLO\nKASLO, B. C\u2014The fire brigade\nwu called out early Tueiday\nmorning to a chimney fire at Victoria Hospital. No damage wu\ndone.     .1\n\u2022\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAFAK. PROPS.\nIn our ntw wing you mav enjoy the finest\nroomi  in   tha  interior\u2014Bath  or  Shower\nROOMS S1 UP-SPECIAt MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u2022YOUR VANCOUVER H&ME\"\nDuff erfa Hotel\n900 Seymour $t\nNewly renovated throughout Phones and elevator.\nA.  PATTERSON,   late ot\nVinoouver, B.C. Coleman. Alta. Proprietor.\nWOOD SAW\nWORKING        FILING\nReasonable Rates\nKootenay Saih tr Door Worki\nWt Ward St Opo. City Hall\n|      UNDERWOOD       |\nTYPEWRITERS\n536 Ward St.      Phone 99\n8-ndstr.nd Addlnj Maetil-M\nOFFICE BUPPLIIS\nI Und.rwooo   llll-tl   Fl-har   Ltd  I\nTT\n*-\u00ab\u2014aa\u2014\u25a0\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing b Heating\nCompany.  Limited'\nVariety Concert\nYields $350 for\nBattery Hampers\nTRAIL. B. C.-The Trail Junior\nChamber of Commerce expects to\nrealize about $360 from the recent\nvariety concert, sponsored to raise\nfunda for a Christmas hamper to be\nlent to the men serving in the Rossland-Trail field Battery overseas.\nA huge greeting card, signed by\nthose who contributed toward the\nhamper fund, is being sent over to\nEnglind early in November..\nAll Pupils of Hume\nSchool Salute Flag-\nDifficulty Overcome\nDifficulty encountered early in\nthe ichool terra when two pupils\nof Hume School refused to salute\nthe Union Jack on religious\ngrounds, had since bean cleared\nup and the two pupils were now\nparticipating in the flag saluting\nceremony with other pupila, Fred\nL. Irwin, Secretary, reported to\ntha Nelion School Board Friday\nnight.\nRules Internment\nMove Out of Order\nMONTR-SAL, Ocl 11 <t_P).-Pre-\nMayor Edmond Himelin ruled out\nof order at a City Council meeting today a resolution asking for tht\nInternment of Jobn Baatett of Montreal. President of Tha Gazette Publishing Company.\nThe resolution, flrit lubmltted on\nAugust -2 by Alderman J. M. Slvig.\nnac, Chairman of the Civic ___<\necutlva Committee, had claimed that\nBeiiett ihould be interned becau-t\nthe Montreal Oaaetta published the\nantl-regtitritlon statement for which\nMayor C a m i11 i e n Houde wti\nInterned.\nBoswell Youth to\nMarry Coast Girl\nBOSWELL, B.C.-Th* engage-\n.Mat ll announced o: Leila Mary,\nsecond daughter of Mr. and Mri.\nfrank Under wood. Upper Lynn,\nWorth Vaheeuvir, to William Stan-\nla;- Haphtr, only son at Mr. and\nMfl. Albert Hepher, Hill Ranch.\nt 'Swell. The wedding will take\nplace in Knox united Church, Lynn\nValley, at 7:80 p.m.. Nov. 1. Mr.\nHtpfter, who ll t graduate of University of Idaho, attended--high\nichool In Nelion.\nCommittee to Help Guide Wayward\nChildren Is Suggested by Pearee\nSuggestion that a committee\nformed outside ichool circlet to\nguide wayward children Into proper\npathi might exert a greater influent), than ichool or welfare organizations, wai placed before the\nelaon School Board Fridiy night\nby F, B, Pearee, Principal of Central\nSchool.\nDemonstrating hia point by stating\nthere were two boyi and a girl at\nCentral  School  whoie attendance\nrecord wai poor and who seemed to\nbe 'heading toward delinquency, Mr\nPearee laid that tuch children\nneeded aomeone other than their\nteachen who would taM a perional\ninterest In them and help them to\nfind their places. They needed more\nthan such authority ai the ichool\nor the law might bring to bear, he\nnid.\nIt was suggested that Inquiries\nshould be mide of the Board of\nTrade.\nBurns Working to Secure Waiving\nof Formalities al Border Points\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct II - R. R.\nBurns, M.L.A., told the executive\not the Trail Liberal Association\nThursday night ha had written to\nOttawa requesting that steps be\nUken with the United Statei Gov-\nernmen to allow passageway tor Canadian citizens between Northport\nand Laurier without the necessity\not border formalitiei.        ,\nMr. Burns, who hai been advocating the necessity of keeping the\nCascade Highway open ' ai the\nSouthern Provincial Highway into\nthe Interior of the Province, wai of\nopinion that, as he understood similar arrangement! were being made\nalong other parts of the International border, and ai Canada and\nUnited Statei ware trading airplane\nbues and harbora, thii could be a\nfurther gesture of intentional goodwill. Due to the absence trom, Ottawa of Hon. Ian Mackenzie, Minister for Britiih Columbia, no reply\nto thii suggestion had yet been received. Mr. Burns hoped to arrive\nIn Vancouver in time to see Mr.\nMackenzie before the latter'i departure tor the Eaat, when he would\ntalk the matter ever with him per;\ntonally, Mr. Burnt leaves Saturday\nfor the Coast.\nROAD GRANTS IMPOSSIBLI\nOutlining the work done In the\ndistrict during the year, the member itated war conditions made it\npractically Impossible to secure fur'\ntber district grants. No Federal\ngrants for this diitrlct had been\nsanctioned thli year,\nHe laid three necessary projects,\nthe Wellington Street extension at\nAnnable. the Fruitvale cut-off ra\npain and the sidewalk at Castlegar\nhtd been completed.\nMr. Burns aald the missing affi\ndavits of the Provincial voters lists\nhad been replaced by an official\nwho had been specially appointed\nfor the work. Theie affidavits were\nreported missing from the Rouland\nCourt House lut Spring by Major\nA. C. Sutton, then Government\nAgent\nA vote of confidence In Mr. Burns\nai member for Rossland-Trail Riding for the pait leven yean wu expressed.\nDt. W. J. Endlcott ipoke of the\nvalue of League ot Nations atudy\ngroupi in he community.\nDivision Winners Will Represent\nTrail in B. C. Basketball Playoffs\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. It\u2014That the\nwinning teami In tha mep't senior,\nintermediate and girls' senior basketball leaguea will repreient Trill\nin the B. C. playoffs wai the decision hen.ed down by the Trail\nBasketball Club Executive Friday\nnight. Teams will be empowered to\nadd one or two memben from other\nteami in their divlalon lor itrength,\nhowever.\nOn thli decision hinged the policy\not the directorate for the Trail basketball season, and lt wu only\nreached after i heated debate, wltb\ntwo viewa, that ot estibllshing rap\nteams at the beginning of the sen-\nson with the object ot training them\nto plact in tha B. C. playdowni, or\not keeping up a keener Interest\nIn tha local gamaa by a balanced\ntaara membership, conflicting.\nNO JUNIOR PLAY\nElimination of Junlori frMn tht\nleague resulted from the unanimous\nopinion that thtrt wai not tut-\nflcltnt tlmt allotted at the Memorial\nHall for league games for the young-\nster group, and thtt thtir btsk.tb-i;\nactivities could be centred iround\ntha schools.\nNina teami, three In each division,\nwill be entered in the Trail league\nas follows: Men'i Senlon \u2014 Tadanac Police, Pats and Sheika; Intermediates \u2014 Acea, Maple Leafs\nand Crescents; Ladies' Seniors \u2014\nEut Trail, Tories and Buddies,\nTen memben, with one extra\nmember allowed for each two memben on shift work, will be allowed\nto register on each team. Fee*\nwera ltt at 28 centa for students, and\n90 centi tor other membra, and all\nregistrations mutt be madt and feei\npaid by October 30.\nJack Mlnton, Preiident; Jim Little, Treasurer, and Eddie Groves\nLeague Manager, ware appointed \u25a0\u2022\nthe Schedule Committee, to draw\nup sehdulei both for practices and\nlea jut games.\n_>ddli*| Interaet by inviting out-\naide teams If) for exhibition games,\nwu discussed u a possibility, and\nleft for future developments.\nA special feature opening ll being plirined for Wedneidiy, October\n30, Ind the Executive li buiy arranging for an Old timers booster\ngtme tmong the ex-hoopiten in the\nSmelter City,\nMayor Stibbs Tells\nJunior Chamber of\nActivity in East\nHighlights of hia trip Eait, during\nwhich ha viiited hit home town,\nBradford, Ont, and tha natlon't\ncapital, ware given to tht Nelson\nJunior Chamber of Commerce 'at a\ndinner meeting at the Hume Friday\nnight by Mayor N. C. Stibbs.\nHe spoke of seeing three gamei\nof the Vancouver-fit Catharine-\nlacrosse title atrial, at which ha\nmet four Kootenay men. A partdt of\nmechanized troops wu a great thrill.\nActivity at Ottawa wu \"a wonderful light*' Similarly at Calgary.\nbuilding wu going ahead rapidly.\nTha type of buildings being constructed were built \"tor a lifetime'\nrather than for three years, and Indicated to him that Canada was\nbecoming more and mora a centra\nof tha Empire.\nRossland Cross\non Last Lap oi\n$4000 Canvass\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct II - Tha\nRossland Red Cress Society ia embarking on the last lap of ita preient\ndrive for $4000 to carry on tor tha\nensuing year. To data a total of\n$2880.10 hu been subscribed In cuh\nand pledgee, but tha committee In\ncharge polnta out that thla amount\nsplendid though it is.. U aemt $1100\nihort of the objective.\nThe city hu been canvassed ilnce\nthe opening ot tbe drive In September by some 50 penoni, under the\ndirection ot five captains J. R. Corner, ' T. J. Supple, Gilbert Hunt\nJamei F, Cooper and H. L. Christian, a\u00bbd those who are engaged in\nthla work urge every citizen who\nhas not yet made hli or her contribution to do ao in tha Ume remaining In order that tha campaign may\nba a complete success.\nSecond Bridge\nRound Played\nRossland P. T. A.\nROSSLAND, B C Oct 18-Tht\nfollowing ire tha resulti ot the\nsecond round of the Rouland Parent-teacher Asioclatlon bridge\ntournament: '\nFir\u00bbt flight-\nRound 2\u2014M. Woogman and I.\nGurevltch defeated Mr. and Mn.\nE. Perklni; Mr. tnd Mn. F. Ran-\nsom defeated S. Jtrvil and D. K,\nMacalliter; Mre H. Woodward and\nMiu G. Martin defeated Mn. W\nTernan and Mn. J. Hunter; Mn.\nChernoff and Mn. Gurevltch detected Mr. and Mra. T. Yolland;\nMri. B O. Lett tnd Mrs. J. Bryan\ndefeated Mrs. Corbin and Mn.\nMowbray; Mn. Morin and Mn.\nDunn defeated Mn. J. A- Hendtr-\nlon and Mn. H. H. Met-gar,\nSecond flight-\nRound 2\u2014Mr. and Mn. T. Nora\ndefeated Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Haggen; Mra. P, Palmer and Mrs. I.\nConroy defeated Mr. and Mra. A.\nMarkle: Mn. W. Reid tnd Mn. G.\nMara defeated Min L. Barton and\nMra. K. Martin; Mr, and Mn. H.\nFleury deflated Mrs. L. Stinson\nand Mn. H. Stinson; Mr. and Mri.\nG. Dy-on defeated Mr. and Mra.\nL Nicholson; Mn. K. G. McTeer\nand Mn. C. H. Clegg defeated P\nMelnec.uk and R. Saxton.\nThird round drawl are u fol-\nlowi:\nFlart fUght-Mn. H. Woodward\nand Mlu G. Martin vs Mn. 8. C.\nMontgomery and M\". \"\u00bb Clerk:\nMn. Gurevltch and Mra. Chernoff\nvi Mn. B. G. Leei and Mn. J.\nBrytn; Mrs. Morin and Mn. Dunn\nvi Mn. R. Andenon ind Mn. A.\nPagt; M Woogman and I. Gure-\nvitch vi Mr and Mrs. F. Ransom.\nSecond flight\u2014Mr. ind Mn. T.\nNora vi Mrs, P. Palmer and Mri.\nI. Conroy; Mra. W. Raid and Mn.\nG. Mara vi Mr and Mn. H. Fleury:\nMr. and Mrs. 6. Dyson vi J: Bryan\nand T. Knight; Mn. K. O. McTeer\nand Mre. C. H. Clegg vi Mre. T.\nTroiet and Mn. S. E. Wilion.\nMcNaughton   Again\nin Secretary's\nFor tticflrit time In its hlitory the\nNelion Junior Chamber of Com*\nmerce bu elected two major officer* by acclamation. Whan the annual meeting wu held at a dinner\nat tha Hume Friday night the Presidency and Secretaryship wera filled in this manner. The complet.\nslate elected follows:\nHonorary President\u2014E. A. Mann,\nPresident of Ntlton Board of Trade.\nHonorary Vlce-Pratldent\u2014Mayor\nN. C. Stibbs.\nPresident\u2014Arthur Foster.\nFint Vlce-Preiident\u2014Alex Leew,\nSecond Vice-President \u2014 Freak\nBecker.\nSecretary\u2014J. R. M. McNaughton.\nTreaaurar\u2014Clare Jewtlt\nDirectors\u2014J. J. McEwen, J. C. V.\nRamiden and William Moffatt .ot\ntwo years; 3. H, Aylwin, for ont\nyear.\nAitditorr-Harvey Wallace.\nURGES GET TOGETHER\nMorris Bercov, retiring Flnt Vice-\nPreiident who took over the -bait\nafter the departure of W. A. Hot-\nion, Preiident to Vancouver, urged\nmemben to bend thalr efforti toward harmonious cooperation io\nthit tha Chamber might make new\nstrides forward.\nThe anual report ot Secretary McNaughton reviewed meeting!. Mr.\nFoster, retiring Treuurer, reported\na bank balance of $90.48.\nBurns Leaving\nfdr the House\nTRAIL,  B.  C,  Oct  18-R.  R\nBurns, M.L A. ind Mrs. Burnt luvt i\nSaturday for thi Cout and Mr.\nBurnt will attend the Provinclil\nSession at Victoria, opening Oet 23.\nJ*rt**loi*e to going to Vlctorli, Mr.\nahd Mri.' Burnt -ntt -\/lait relallvei\nIn Vtncouver, tnd will atted the\nwedding of their ion, Surgeon Lieutenant Robert Edward Burns, Royel\nCanadian Navy, to Miss Marlon\nHelen Sprcull, diughter of G. J.\nSprtull ot Cranbrook. which will\ntake pltce at the Ryenbn United\nChurch, Vancouver, October 24.\nBritain to Double\nIntensity of Raids\non German Capital\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP)- Arthur\nGreenwood, Minister without portfolio, uld today thii country hu\nalready bean returned.\"\n\"Whit hu been dofla to London\nwill ba douoled to Berlin,\" ha told\nmen arid woman employed th war\nwork at a factory Ih Southeast England.\nAl Chairmsn ot tht Wtr Production Committee, he expressed satisfaction thtt ilr raid sirens did not\ncause the factory to loae much\nworking time and uld he agreed\nWith tht rult tklt production should\ncontinue until bombers wtrt actually overhead.\nBailess to Quit\nPost as Janitor\nJ. J. Bailess, Janitor at Central\nSchool tor tha put 71 yeara, la to\nretire on superannuation.\nIn a letter received by the School\nBoard Friday night the veteran\nJanitor itated trouble with ah Injured knee influenced him to takf\nthia coune.\nThe Board decided to call for applications from qualified men, tht\nsuggestion being made that a general\nhandyman be given preference.\na   \"\"\"\nCentral Collecting\nAgency in Nelson li\nSuggested to Chamber\nSuggestion that the Nelson Junior\nChamber ot Commerce should investigate the possibility of organizing in Nelton io that one drive\nfor fundi tor patriotic, welfare and\ncharity purposes would be made\neach year wu placed before the\nChamber Friday night by Robert\nFoxall, It would eliminate a multiplicity of appeals. He itated Kelowna, a imaller city than Nation,\nhad initiated luch a plan thia ytar\nand raised $20,000.\nTrail had organized effectively.\nIt wu pointed out\nLao Gansner itated Vancouver\nhad a Welfare Federation whlca\nmtde such a drive each year, and\nexpressed the opinion Mr. Foxall'l\nsuggestion waa.will worth investigation, aqd that such a movement\nmight ba welcomed.\nThe suggestion wu referred to\nthe Executive for consideration.\nThe Best In\nCOALS\nDrumheller\nGlo-Coal Mercury\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\n__________\u25a0__________\n__\n -NELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C^SATUIIOAY MORNINO. OCT. H. UW.' '           \"\". '.  '    '\nMSI THRII\nTestify in Trial of Suspended University Lecturer        Killed In Raid\nNorman Freed and Morrli Erl'ch, interned ai Communliti,\nare ihown here accompanied by an armed military guard aa they\nappeared at Toronto City Hall to teitify at the trial of Dr, Samuel\nLevine, Univenlty ot Toronto lecturer, who is being tried for a\nbreach of th\u00bb Defence of Canada Regulation!. Both Freed and Erlich\nwere roomen in the Levine houie in which communistic literature\nwai aelzed. Note the patches on their trousers, which are placed there\nto mark them ai lnterneei,\nGerman Bombs Demolish Famed\nBritish library\nLydia Hill, English actress who\ncaptivated the heart of the Sultan\nof Johore, was killed during an\nair raid on Canterbury. The Sultan showered jeweli on Mill HOI\nand one time there were reporti\nof a criiii in Johore and a possible abdication. The Sultan and\nMiss Hill alwayi denied rumon\nthey were engaged, although tha\nSultan divorced hli wife and\nMisi Hill then wore a large diamond ring.\nChosen for\nAfrican Tasft\nDR.  LEVINE\nSilent Exit\nReturning to hii home in\nUvalde, Texas, Vice-President\nJohn Nance Garner ii shown tn\nthe compartment of hli train before hii departure from Washington. Asked for comment on the\nforthcoming presidential election,\nthe vice-president said he came\nIn silent and will go out the\nlame way.\n. ....\nf     \u25a0\u2022;.'\nr\ni\n1\n\u25a0 \u25a0\n\/j\n\u25a0 .y-   ?>-\u25a0\nBBBM    - **  1\n\u25a0\niHa*.\ntt *-_af--\"'\n___. .ji-ai__*<-\u00abg_!j*ri_J\n1-\n_^H__Hksi___ti\nmlt**t}lsm***m**l**'m****\n_*  -     ..      A\nmm\/A ^\n:\u25a0\n'\u2022''  '   \/''\n\u25a0 ***\n-\"'*\u25a0\n*V    *\u2022\n-\u25a0-     '\n:\nmuni              .   \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\nm\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\n1 S*\n, > -\nIt \u2022\nSf||\n% I'll\nif\nf \\\nA-*\n\" *\u2022\u25a0.\"\n\u25a0\n\u00ab-aC*t\n&     L.A\ngjl\n-**\u25a0\u25a0  im\nI i_ff\"*3__a \u25a0\nSSL\n\u25a0-\u25a0>\u25a0-'&\nCabled from London thil picture ihowa the rulni of the University College library which was itruck by Nail bombs. Hundreds\nof priceless booki.ere believed to have been destroyed.\n_H_,-iU<\nYou wouldn't offend thli British miss by alluding to her as\na \"tough baby.\" In fact ihe would\nbe proud of the title; for the ii\none of 50 picked for their hardiness tq go to Britain'! African\ncolony in Kenya. The girli were\nlelec^ed from 300 applicant! to\ndrive ambulance! in the African\nwar .one. Thli one ia showing\nhow tough she can be with a\nstubborn tire.\nMajor Warfare Looms In Africa\nNazis Respect Balloons\n'     \" W^g'\"\u25a0':\u25a0\u25a0\n*<->\n*'.'-.\n. \u25a0   \u25a0 -.\n_    maAJtB$i-    j|^_--\". '\nA\\W     bH   \u25a0K^.l\u00ab._t,Ui:     -^____.\nmi\n:]\n^_c_V                         1    _____\n'_^F'*                              Vk^~\nLi* \u2022       i\nM! \u25a0        1\nGerman bomben show a healthy respect for theie Britiih barrage balloons. In the background the \"sausages\" drift high In the\nair, while two in the foreground are being operated by truck!.\nThe cloudi of major warfare which have been hovering over\nAfrica for several weeki are quickly lowering as General Maxime\nWeygand (1) Is .busily engaged in attempting to loltdify the French\ncolonies on the side of the Vichy Government. General Charlei\nde Gaulle, who landed at Duala (2) and took over Cameroons for\nFree France, is likewise engaged. With the Italians stalled at Sidi\nBarani (3) the British have bombed the Italian base at Tobruk. They\nalso borpbed the Assab and Djibuti-Addli Ababa railway (4). The\nItalians retaliated by raiding Aden (3). The Island ot Madagascar,\nwhich his thrown in its lot with the Vichy Government, ia being\nblockaded by the British Navy (6),\nOne reaion why Germani heaitate to launch tavailon agalnit\nBritain is thii tut Britiih cruller tank, shown dashing at full ipeed\nacross rough ground.\nLEADERSHIP\nand Save\nRE A\n. W'\nLADIES* WEAR\nAND LINGERIE\nLADIES'NEW CREPE DRESSES\nAll tha season's bait styles. *9 OQ\nSixes 14 to 44. Each $\u00abJ.J->\nFUR TRIMMED COATS\nBoucles and tweedi, luxuriously furred. Ml CA\nValues to $35.00. All alsea, each t*>Ll.O\\)\nWOMEN'S PYJAMAS AND GOWNS\nFine qualtiy celaneie knit in tearose and blue.     d> 1 1A\nSmall, medium snd large. Each . <P*\u2022 s.V\nPRINT HOUSE DRESSES\nColorfait florals and new designs. d*1 AA\nSixes 32 to 46. Each ,\u00abpl.UU\nDARKER TAFFETA SLIPS\nBig rangs ef beautiful shades. Reg. $1.29. <M AA\nSixe 32 to 44. Each  \u00abP1.UU\nWOMEN'S FLANNELETTE PYJAMAS\nPrinted designs in 3 stylei. Small, medium and    (1 AA\nlarge. Pair........ '-. \"Pl.UV\nCHILDREN'S FLANNELETTE PYJAMAS\nDainty designs. Good qualify. - QQ\nSixes 2 to 14. Pslr  OUC\nCHILDREN'S WOOL PULLOVERS\nFine knit botany wool. Long sleeves. Zipper QQ -\nneck. Sixes 4 to 10. Each  OjC\nLADIES' FALL FELT HATS\nA wide choice of new styles snd colon. (j***   in\nHOSIERY and NOTIONS\nHBC MALT EXTRACT\nWith cod liver oil. 7Q\u201e\n2 Ib. jar    IMZ\nPLAYING CARDS\nDouble decked, good quality. (*(*\u201e\nPrice  OJC\nLADIES'FALL GLOVES\nSuede and capeskin. New colors. (PI CQ\nLADIES' FALL HANDBAGS\nThe latest colors and styles. (PI  J A\nfries    \u00abpl.**W\nLADIES' CREPE HOSE\nPerfect crspe, new Fail shsdss. CQ.\nPair    JjC\nCHILDREN'S % HOSE\nQuality cotton and wool. All sixci. (M A A\n3 pslr Jpl.UU\nGARMENT BAGS\nFloral cretonne. Roomy else. QQ\nPrice  03C\na-a\u2014aaa i   ._a-aa-SM-aesnawe_aMSSpa\u00bb__-a. aaa-s---\u2014-_-_sa_i      i        a_-a_-aa--\u00bba_--Ma--a--\u00ab*--------w*-aas---a--i\nHOMEWARES and\nHOME FURNISHINGS\nSPRING FILLED MATTRESSES\n\"Cold Bond\" quality at a big ssving. All sixes   <J* *| Q rt\\\nto sell st this low price. Each $10,011\nWALNUT BEDROOM SUITES\nRich veneers, vanity, chiffonier, bed and        (79 CA\nbench. Suite tJilL.dV\nBED DAVENPORTS\nUpholstered in fine velours. Bedding fl*OQ \\\"A\ncompartment In base. Each   tfLeJ.dv\nREVERSIBLE WOOL RUGS\nPastel shades of rose, orchid, blue, green or       <P 0 QQ\nfawns. Slse 25x48. Each ......... \u00abpj .00\nBudget Plan available on $15.00 or over.\nELECTRIC TOASTERS\nSelf-timing, chromium plated. <P1 7Q\nPrice 4)1.1*\/\nENGLISH TEAPOTS\nBrown earthenware, holds 6 cups. \u00a3A.\nPrice ;. WC\nMEN'S AND\nBOYS* WEAR\nMEN'S FALL SUITS\nFine English worsteds. Slses 38 to 44. <P 1 \u00a3 QQ\nSuit  4\u00bblD.Ol7\nMEN'S FALL TOPCOATS\nAll wool tweeds. New styles. Sixes 36 to 44.    (1 r AC\nPrice    e?lj.73\nMEN'S WORK PANTS\nHeavy cotton tweeds, well made. <P j AC\nSlses 30 to 42 tJtl.UO\nMEN'S WOOL SWEATERS\nCardigan style, full tipper. (PO AC\nSixes 36 to 44 t^LitlO\nMEN'S WORK SHIRTS\nQuality doeskin, coat style. (Pi OQ\nSlses 15 to 17   tjtl.0\\1\nMEN'S BROADCLOTH SHIRTS\nFused collar attached. Sixes QQ .\n14Vitol7V_ *fOZ\nBOYS' SUITS\nQuality tweeds, well made, smartly styled. fl\u00bbr nr*\nBOYS'LONGS\nSturdy cotton tweed. Strongly sewn. (PI JQ\n6 to 16 years d)1.49\nBOYS' SHIRTS\nNeatly tsilored, roomy cut. \u00a3Q\nSixes 11V* to 14Vi.  OjZ\nBOYS' GOLF HOSE\nWool mixture. Reinforced. OQ\nSixe 7 to 10. '.... OUC\nBOYS' SWEATERS\nAll wool, hslf xlpper. Sixes 24 to 34. (1 1Q\nPrlee $1,111\nFOOTWEAR\nWOMEN'S AND GIRLS' SHOES\nSmart Fall styles in real value. <P*|  AQ\nSixes 4 to 9   \u00ab7 1. W'\nMEN'S WORK BOOTS\nSturdy elk uppers. Leather and panco soles.        ffO AO\nPair    tPeVW\nMEN'S SLIPPERS\nImitation leather. Softly lined. <P1 -IQ\nSixes 6 to 11' \u00ab{) L1\"\nBOYS' OXFORDS\nQuality uppers, heavy leather soles. CO CO\nPair      tSLol\nSTAPLES Department\nRAYON BROCADE BEDSPREADS\nPastel shades in sixe 80x100. Reg. $2.95. (PI QO\nWHITE WOOL BLANKETS\nDainty rainbow borders at old price. CQ Q_*\nSixe 64x84. Pair <P J. JO\nBATH TOWELS\nSeconds of higher priced towels in plaids and        QQ.\nchecks. Each    *WC\nH.S. WABASSO BLEACHED SHEETS\nA rock bottom price on quality sheets. (1 OQ\nSixe 77x90. Each xfl.ttH\nDOWN COMFORTERS\nCovered with rich sateen con trait panels. (\"*[* QC\nSixe 60x72. Each tJtd.Vd\nPRINTED CRETONNES\n36\" wide. Good designs. Fast to washing. 17\nFLANNELETTE \"MILLENDS\"\nSnortends 2 to 6 yards of regular 29c quality.        1 *J\nSpecial, yard  UC\n\u25a0**     \":'   V*a,!t*** *.\u2022***    'J !\"\u25a0\"\n.   -*___.   A l    4'\ntttomfrlfog \u20ac(-m|n\u00abt\nRATED  2?\u00bb MAY 1670.'\n,, 4\n-\n.'    .   ... ,\n'\n_h_e_M\n *****\n********\nPAGE   POUR\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIW*. NELSON. B. C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 19,\nTht Graceful Front Drape\nTODAY'S MENU\nBaked Sausage and Apple Rings\nCreamed Potatoes\nCelery Olives or Picklei\nStewed Fruit One-Egg Cake\nCoffee\nPersonality...\nHome Atmosphere\nTells a Story\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nEver think about the difference\nbetween what you hear and tee and\nwhat you feel In a home when you\ngo to have dinner with a family\nsit at their table and in their living\nroom and chat with them aa a family group? Sometimes there's a vast\ndifference. Someone hai aaid that\nin every marriage there ia a third\npersonality, the combination which\nhusband and wife work out together.'Well, it ia thii third personality\nthat we feel in a home and If it isn't\nan agreeable one, no amount ot fine\nmanners, fine food, fine service and\nfine conversation makes us easy end\ncomfortable and sends us away with\na good taste in our mouths.\nH one makes the other nervous\nand fluttery, il one irritates the\nother or la critical of the other: lt\nthey haven't made a good adjustment, the atmosphere of their home\nis charged end supercharged with\nan  electricity  which  the  vlaitor.Llt ia really Internal friction that is\ndtinlLpt\ntJloti&smwcA\n'\u25a0i\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nBesplte trend! in other direction-, the long-tono iflhouette and\nthe graceful front drape continue to mark many of the imarteit new\nmodel!. Lynn Carver models a Balenciaga frock that typifiei thii\naspect of the hiode.  , \u2022\nIt is a striking afternoon drese of dull black crepe cleverly cut\nIn one-piece' with a graceful front drape aection. The long, tight\nlleevei and the dressmaker neckline give this frock added distinction ai does the touch of white in the form of ivory buttons. Skull\ncap, gloves and ehoei in dulr black antelope.\t\nMathematical...\nHelping a (hild\nto Do Arithmetic\nBy Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.\nThere ii many a child at ichool\nwho does well, or shines, in every\nother lUbject, but is dull, or fails,\nIn arithmetic, spelling or reading.\nIf it ll arithmetic his teacher may\ntell ,the parent that the child Just\n^\u2022daesn't have a mind for arithmetic.\" The parent may be ready to\naccept thii as a I-ct, even, recalling\nan aunt or uncle \"like that.\"\nIt Is a comforting doctrine both\nto the parent and teacher. Their\naklrti are cleared. AU the burdens\nof their hearts have rolled away\nonto the ihoulden of Grandma Nature. Even the child may feel better.\nIt ii possible, of course, that\nWith all such worry removed, this\nchild might stumble on wayi of\ndiscovering that he was born with\na more mathematical mind than\nthey supposed. But more likely\nthan not the child will be so sure\nhe can't; learn arithmetic that he\nwon't try to an'd will grow worse\nand worse in the subject.\nCHILD CAPABLE\nOF LEARNING\nIn the light of sludiei carefully\nmade in thii field, there is no con-\n\u25a0 elusive scientific evidence that any\nchild, barring auditory and visual\ndefect!, who- is average or above\nn any one or most Bchool subjects\ncannot succeed about as well in\nany other subject\nHELP CHILD SUCCEED\nDont tell this child he should,\naa a matter of duty, master aucn\na subject and that lt is his own\nfault he hasn't. Merely tell him\nthat,he can and that you're going\nto find ways to prove to him that\nhe can.\nThe principle to guide you Is\nthis: Set the stage so the child\nwill succeed. You may have to induce him it in the fifth grade in\nreading, say, to read from materials no harder than primer or\ntirst grade. Be sure you help him\naave his face. As he enjoyi iuc-\nceu he will grow more interested\nand try harder so ai to win more\nsuccess and In turnchargeandre-\ncharge his dynamo of Interest and\neffort\nthough blind-folded and earstopped\ncan aniff and recognize ai dangerous. Good ' breeding, impeccable\nmanners, culture or whave they,\ncannot make up tor the thing which\nIs lacking under a roof where husband and wife aren't in iweet accord.\nOn the other hand; be It ever so\nhumble, there'i a fine feeling In a\nhome where the partner! have combined to build that third personality that's fragrant and pleasant.\nWe don't wlnt to leave when we\nare there.\nBAKED 8AU8AQE AND APPLE\nRINGS\n2. tablespoons brown sugar, 3\ntablespoons water, 1 tablespoon bacon tat few grains salt, fl link sausages, 4 firm tart apples, 1 tablespoon molasses.\nGreaae large Hat baking dish with\nbacon fat (deep glass pie plate\nwould be good). Wash and core\napplei but do not pare, cut In -rowwise slices and arrange rings on\ngreased baking plate. Sprinkle with\nsugar, salt .molasses and water, be\nIng careful to wet the sugar, so lt\nwill melt Bake In 400 degree oven\nuntil apples begin to soften.\nPrick sausages, scald but do not\nboil for two or three mlnutei In hot\nwater. Place over apples and return\nto oven. Bake until sausages are\nbrown (turning them once) and the\napplei are done. This serves 2.\nONE-EGG CAKE\n1 cup sugar, Vi cup butter, 1 well\nbeaten egg, 1 cup milk, 3 cups lifted\nflour, 3 teaspoons baking powder,\nflavoring.\nCream butter .add sugar a little\nat a time, creaming well together.\nAdd well beaten egg, then part ol\nmilk, thep part of flour lifted with\nbaking powder, alternating until all\nare used. Last add flavoring, which\nmay be 1 teaipoon vanilla or lemon\nor Vt teaspoon, almond extract\n1140\u2014\nFestive Season .. .\nPerfumes Heeded\nfor Autumn Days\nAutumn li always the herald ot\nthe festive social season, and along\nwith tha other changes in costume\nand .makeup, there la a definite\nchange In perfume. -\nIfa no longer smart to use only\none acent as they did In the past\nEven though you have your own\nipeclal one made up for you. you\nwill tiro of it without the exhilaration of a new one from time to time.\nThe beit way la to have one for at 81.\noccasions, or for each costume. Perfumes of the clean, outdoor type are\nsuitable for atraet clothes and tha\nmore exotic aromas tor late afternoons and evening.\nTha only scents we find agreeable'for mornings are the colognes\nand toilet waters. Theie are used ai\nan after-bath, treahener rather than\niprayed on as a perfume. You rub\nthem on the skin. This, by the way,\nli the beit method for lasting effect.\nThe ikln and hair retain'acent until it la washed off and there la a\npersonal delicacy in fragrant hands\nand perfumed tresses.\nGLASGOW (CP)-Edward Boi-\ntock, world-famous showman, and\nsurvivor ot a great circus family of\nWorabwell and Bostock, died here\nVALLICAN\nVALLICAN, B.C.-F. Flynn viiited Vallican.\nMiss Helen Talbott of Trail ipent\nThanksgiving with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Talbott.\nE. Kennett of New Denver Is visiting Mr. and Mn. F. Soueey.\nMrs. S. Reid and son Bobbie visited Mrs. William Beaton.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Greenwood of\nSlocan City villted Mrs. Gordon\nStrong.-\nMr. and Mri. E. Hicks and Mrs.\nW. Hicki visited here.\nHonoring Mrs. Bowyer, President\nof Rebekah Lodge, Mrs. Gordon\nStrong was hostess at a tea for\nFloral Rebekah No. 15. Those present were Mrs. A. Clough, Mrs. E.\nEwing, Mrs. B., McNeish, Mrs. P.\nCooper, Mrs. E. Stogard, Mri. Mor-*\nley, Mrs. J. Brooks, Mrs. M. Terry,\nMrs. E. Day, Mrs. C. Harrison, Mrs.\nH. Horn, Mrs. N. Innis and Mrs. E.\nInnes.\nNeurasthenics...\nWarMayAidMany\n\"Bom lo Fatigue\"\nBy   LOOAN   CLENDENINQ,   M.D.\nThe war will certainly create a\ngreat many cases of nerve shock,\nbut perhapi, curibuily enough, lt\nwill probably cure a good many\nchronic nervous invalid!.\nThe layman can icarecly realize\nhow much of hii doctor'i time Is\ntaken up with patients who are\nreally, in the tense of organic disease, not sick at all. They consist ot two classes, described by\nthe late great physician Richard\nC. Cabot as:\n(1) The misi of women who by\nthe inertia of rest are thoughtlessly\ndrifting anywhere.\n(2) The mass of men who by the\ninertia of motion are recklessly\nrushing nowhere.\nWORK ONLY CURE\nTypical of many auch human\nderelicts are those who suppose\nthemselvea ot be suffering from\n\"nerve fa-igue\". They must continually rest on account of that fatigue. They were born tired in\nnine cases out of 10, and the more\nthey rest the more tired they get.\nNothing but work will rest them.\nThey are not fatigued: how could\nthey be? They do not do anything.\nSERIAL STORY ,\nBy RUPERT CRAYSON\nBefore   the   Blitzkrieg\nNAKUSP DRAMA CLUB\nPUNS FOR SEASON\nNAKUSP, B.C. \u2014 The October\nmeeting of the Nakusp Dramatic\nClub was held at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Dolman, with Mrs. A.\nMatheson in the chair. Plans for the\nseason's activities were discussed.\nThe.Club hopes to present an evening of three one-act plays before\n\u2022 Christmas. A play reading was given by Mrs. P. Young, Miss B. White,\nA. Matheson, D. Hummon and J,\ni Armstrong.\nCHAPTER TWENTY-ONE\nGUN AND Tommy arose and\nstrolled casually into the bungalow, lighting cigarettes and apparently talking trivialities, turning in\nat the door just as the man who\ncalled Himself Trent reached the\ngate, and paused for a word with\nthe sentry.\n\"Can I come in?'-' called Trent a\nmoment later, just as they had aat\ndown\u2014Gun in an armchair, Tommy\nperched on the table.\nIt waa Tommy who answered.\n\"Of course!\" he called, and then,\nas Trent entered he went on: \"Question for queition. Can you come\nin.' Yei! Can we get OUT?\"\nThe other smiled deprecatingly.\n\"The answer, I'm afraid, Is no\u2014\nfor the time being ,at any rate!\"\n\"I seel And\u2014why not?\"\n\"Well\u2014let us say that it might\nnot be convenient for either of us,\nIf you did! May I sit down?\"\n\"Of course!\" said Gun. \"Have one\nof your own cigarettes?\"\nHe pushed the box acroii. Unobtrusively, he wai studying Trent'!\nface and manner, and could iei\nthat he was annoyed, but Waa trying to hide it. Gun guessed the reason, and the man's next words\nproved him correct.\n\\ '\"By the way,* he addressed\nTommy. \"That plane of yours\u2014\"\n\"Well, what about it?\" Tommy's manner was tinged with\naggressiveness.\n\"Just this. You were supposed to\nbe up the other night.on an ex\nperimental flight wth a new plane.'\n\"Well?\"\n\"Apart from the rather peculiar\nshape of wings and fuselage, I can't\nfind anything strange or new about\nthe plane. That's all.\"\nTommy grinned, with imp lib\ndelight.\n\"That IS all! Because there isn't\nanything new or different!\"\n'Then  why?\"\nExcessive Worry\nSips the Nervous System\nWorry over business or household duties, midden\nshock, distreesing news, the foolish attempt to put a\nweek of normal life into 24 hours all put a strain on\nthe nervous system it cannot stand. '\nIf you are tirerLliitlese, nervoua and worried why\not give Milbum'a Health and Nerve Pills a chance\n3 hup put yon on your feet again?\nThey are a blood enriching and nerve tonic containing essential elements\n(or the blood and the nervous system.\nHelp j-ourseIf back to health\u2014happiness by taking H. ft N. Pills.\nPrico 80e a box, 70 pills, at all drug counters.\nLook for our registered trade mirk a \"Red Heart\" on the package.\nTbe T. MUb-r- Co., Limit,-,], Toronto, Out.\nwearing them out\nIt is here in this class that the\nwar may come as a savior. War\nand war wbrk and preparations for\nwar\u2014theie may be the focusing\npoints that will give many \"neuras-\nthenlci\" a new interest in life, and\nin th* work they do and in the determination to accomplish a definite\nobjective they frill find a way of life\nthat has been grinding them into\nnothingness.\nDo not misunderstand me. I am\ncertainly far from advocating war,\nI certainly do not think a war is\nworth the laving of our neuraithen-\nici. But im't it tragic that they cannot find aomething aa completely\nabsorbing ai war, aomething in ordinary life that fills their mental\nand spiritual horizons sufficiently\nio that they could shake off their\nlethargy and go to work for lt and\nbecome whole, complete and useful\nhuman beings?\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nM.L.:-\"Ii lack of Vitomlne B\nwhat causes the hair to turn gray?\nWill a sufficient intake of Vitamlne\nB prevent premature graying? In\nwhat form can Vitamlne B be\ntaken?\"\nAniwer\u2014There hai been tome\ntalk of lack ot Vitamin B cauilng\npremature gray hair, but I doubt\nthe evidence. We are blaming too\nmuch on the vitamlni lately. But\nat any rate it docs no harm to take\nplenty of Vitamin B. It can be taken'\nin the form of whole rice, whole\nwheat yeast or in concentarted\nform ai thiamin chloride.\nNEW DODGE ON DISPLAY\nAT SOWERBY-CUTHBERT\nCUTHBERT\nThis is an invitation to you\nfrom C. C. Cuthbert to treat\nyourself to one of the happiest\nsurprises you've ever had\u2014\nyour first glimpse of the 1941\nDodge!\u2014See it in our show,\nroom. Drive it on the street,\nThis year's Dodge is more\npowerful than ever, magnifi\ncently styled, interiors are\n-richer than ever. From the\ngleaming grill to the smooth\nlines of the luggage compartment you'll agree with us that\nDodge is more than ever the\nbest buy for 1941. In spite of\nall the high-priced improvements, Dodge remains a low-\npriced car. \"*\nNakusp Boy Is\nlaid al Rest\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014'Tear not, go on\nbelieving, fruiting in me, tor your\nchild is not dead but sleeping\" waa\nthe menage Rev. O. Grondahl gave\nat the funeral ot Frederick Earl\nMotherwell, 11-year-old ion oi Mr.\nand Mrs. Jamei Motherwell, held\nfrom the Nakuip United Church\nOctober lt.\nSchool children from Earl's dike\nattended the service, aa well as a*\nlarge crowd ot f.iends of tha family. Flowen were banked high about\nthe casket. Pall bearers were Ft. S.\nLa Rue, A. Stanley, N. A. Herridge,\nA. E. Jonei, J, A. Matheson, and\nM. Barrow.\nEarl wai the eldest of a family ot\nthree. He wai born in New Denver\nand came with hla parenti to Na*\nkusp shortly afterwards. He leavea\nhli parenti, Mr. and Mri, Motherwell, a brother, Bruce, age 8, and a\nsister Myrtle, age 2.\nIUseZAM-BUKNiah.lv\nGun wai cursing illently. It\nlooked, as though Tommy was going to give the game away\u2014and\nthen the fellow would at once suspect that they had INTENDED to\nbe kidnapped! But Tommy rose\nnobly to the occasion.\n\"You lee,\" he laid, with geniality,\n\"I wasn't quite born yesterdayi\nWhen we took the air the second\ntime, after you, and I found you'd\nbeen fooling with the instruments,\nI guessed something wai wrong. So\nI Just quietly heaved the little attachment I was experimenting with\noverboard! I thought perhaps you\nwould have seen lt go!\"\n\"Tbe hell you did!\" Trent wai\ndefinitely showing sigm of temper\nnow. \"If I HAD seen it. . . Well,\nthat doesn't matter now, I lup-\npose.\" He Wai obviously getting con-\ntrol of himself.\nBefore he could ipeak again,\nTommy broke in:\n\"Look here,\" he said bluntly,\n\"let's get right down to brass tacks.\nIn the first place, what am I to\ncall you? I take it your name is not\nTrent?\"\nThe other imiled.\n\"On the other hand, perhapi it\nIS! Anyway, it will do as well as\nany other name, I expect!\"\n\"Very well, Trent And am I to\ntake it you're an Englishman?\"\n\"No. I'm an Americanl\"\n\"Well, I'm glad to hear thatl\"\n\"Why? Are you fond of\nAmericans?\"\n\"I'm not fon dof Englishmen who\nturn traitor, and indulge in dirty\ngames like thii against their own\ncountry!\"\nThe other flushed.\n\"Might I suggest Mt. Hazeldeane.\nthat I did not come to see you this\nmorning in order to be interrogated!1\nHe retained his politeness, but\nthere was a rasp in his voice,\n\"Just a couple more, If you don't\nmind!\" suggested Tommy. \"In the\nfirit place, there were three men in\nthat bomber which you \u2014 ere \u2014\nhave borrowed. Where are they?\"\nGun . law Trent'a face fluih\n\u25a0lightly. He looked, for the first time\na trifle nonplussed.\n\"I\u2014er\u2014well, they are, I trust,\nquite happy and \u2014er\u2014peucefull\"\nTommy's eyes narrowed,\n\"I asked WHERE are they?\"\n\"I am afraid J cannot answer\nthat question,' Mr. Hazeldeane.\"\n\"And I am afraid I CAN, Mr.\nTrent!\" waa Tommy'i grim retort\n\"One more quentlon, then\u2014what do\nyou want from ui?\"\nTrent was suddenly imlllng\nagain.\n(To Ba Continued)\n^DODGE KINGSWAY!\nLook at the exciting new styling... Relax fa modern living room LUXURY... Drive with less GEARSHlDTlNG...\nThrill to the new GETAWAY GEAR..Sat_s_y yourself with greater DODGE DEPENDABILITY, Lower OPERATING\nCOSTS and LONGER LIFE than ever before in Dodge history!\n\u2022 IT'S NEW... It's Beautiful... It's\ngood design and the traditional Dodge\nqualities of Dependability, Long Life\nand Low Operating Costa are present in\nevery moving part of the Dodge Kings-\nway and its companion cars\u2014tie Dodge\nDe Luxe and De Luxe Special.\nThis 1941 Dodge Kingsway is an easy\ncar to drive. The power rating is\nstepped up to 88 horsepower. A new\ngetaway gear in second speed gives new\nflashing performance at the stop lights.\nMost of the time it won't be necessary\nto use low gear. On the Dodge De Luxe\nSpecial a Power Shift is available at\nslight extra cost.\nThe famous Dodge engine has added\nlong life and economy features that\nmean still smoother operation and money\nsaved... New oil bath aircleaner.new\nfloat-type oil strainer, new \"_j\" piston\nring, new long life main and connecting\nrod lien rings.\nThese 1941 Dodge bodies have a new\nspring counter-balanced trunk lid that\nopens and closes without effort New\none-piece hood opens from the front\nBattery is under the hood for convenience\u2014in the fan blast to keep it cool.\nInteriors are the most luxurious Dodge\nhas ever turned out Famous Dodge\nchair-height seats, the enemy of driving\nfatigue, are found in all Dodge cars.\nNew door handles point straight down\nand must be pulled straight toward the\npassenger to open the door, thus preventing most accidental door openings.\nCheck and Compare the Dodge Kings-\nway with ANY car. You don't have to\npay more to own a Dodge. Inspect and\ndrive a Dodge Kingsway and see if it\nisn't the greatest value you ever saw\nin the very lowest price field.\nPhone your Dodge dealer \u2014he\nwill be glad [to give you a ride\ntoday!\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LIMITED\nJohnson fr MacUan Motors  TRAIL. B. C.   Grand Forks Garage ... CRAND FORKS, B. C.    Daiall'a Carago Co., ltd. .. CRANBROOK, B. C\nRed Star Motors\n503 Vernon Street\nTclcphono 75\nNelioni B. C.\nl,i-iW'l..r---t-d---l-^l-M--\n ________________\u25a0\n \t\n\t\n*\nTHIS SMART\nMODEL  \u2022\nIn Wick, brown, blut\nMaracain Leathers.\nPrice\n$4.95 ,nd $5.00\n, Andrew & Co.\nMen in Footfashion\nALWAYS DELICIOUS\n_X CAKES\n--NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 1I. 1M0-\nWomen's Institute Assembles Recipes\nal Meeting lo Make Mouths Water\nFavorite recipes of Nelaon Women's Instituto member! wera the\nfeature of the meeting Friday afternoon in the Institute Roomi. Each\nmember who bad brought a recipe\nwai called upon and many new and\nInteresting dishes were jotted down\nby the memben tor future reference.\nFirit on the list were Scotch Pan-\ncukes, submitted by Mn. H. H.\nCurrie: Two cups all purpoie flour,\nVt cup white sugar, pinch salt. 2\nteaspoons baking powder. Sift dry\nIngredient! together. In a leparate\nbowl beat well 2 eggs, add 1*. cups\nmilk and beat thla mixture into the\ndry ingredient!. Add two table-\nipooni melted butter and cook on an\nungreased griddle iron.\n\"Snowball!\" lubmitted by Mri.\nM. F, Croll: Two eggs, H cup sugar,\n1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1\ntablespoon melted butter or shortening, 2Vt, cups flour, 2 teaspoons\nbaking powder, Vt teaspoon salt.\nBeat eggs till light then add sugar,\nmilk, shortening and vanilla. Mix\nCUTS\nBURNS\nWOUNDS\nAXE SOOTHED AT A\nTOUCH -     '\nANEW\nSTUDIO\nof FURS\nFur Fashion news of the moment Is the story\nof the rare and dramatic collection of furs in the\nnew, smartly cosmopolitan Fur Studio of R. ).\nPop Ltd., Granville at Fifteenth, Vancouver.\nHert Is the suppleness of Siberian Squirrel,\nths slenderizing sleekness of Hudson Seal, Mus-\nkrat In youthful designs and a host of other lovely\nfurs . .'. iff designed to the latest decrees of\nfashion, all offered at low introductory prices.\nR. J. Pop Is a furrier of life-long experience,\nwell known In Vancouver for more than twenty\nyears. He Invites you to take advantage of his\ncomplete fur service to out-of-town customers\n\u25a0 . . coats on approval, re-styling, cleaning, making up your own raw furs, mounting trophies.\nWrite your requirements to- R. J. Pop personally. He will provide easy terms and give you full\nco-operation.\n'%\nVfijrrieks\nBAYVUW83II*\nGKANVILLC ^Fl FTCCNTH\nVancouver, B. C.\nSPECIALS\nFOR SATURDAY ond MONDAY\nI Cut Green Beans: 2 tint\t\nBaking Powder: Magic, 12 oz. tint.\nTomato Soup: Campbell's, 3 tins _\nTea: Nabob, Ib.\t\nCoffee: Nabob, lb.\t\ni Fancy Free Desserts: 3 for\t\n1 Soap: Fels Naptha, 3 for\t\nCocoa: Cowan's, 1 Ib. tin..\u2014\nSalmon: Sockeye, l's, tin\t\nKetchup: Heinz, 8 oz. bottle.\nCrackers: Family pkg.\n23c\n23c\n25c\n64c\n52c\n23c\n22c\n28c\n40c\n12c\n21c\nPork and Beans: Aylmer, 15 oz., 3 for 25c\nm\nIETTUC--\n2 for -.          -.\nw\nSPINACH-    '\nt lbt.\t\nCELERY-   '\nLb ....__\n___23<\n8QUASH-\nLb.   \t\nTURNIPS\u2014\n10 Ibi, \t\nSWEET SPUDS-\n3 Ibi, ._ \t\nHorswill Bros.\nPhone 235\nwell then lift flour, baking powder and salt together and add to the\nabove mixture. Drop batter by, '\u25a0_\nteaspoons into deep hot fat and cook\nuntil-brown. Cool and iprlnkle with\npowdered sugar.\nSAUSAGE APPLE PIE\n\"Sauiage and Apple Pie\" lubmitted by MB. W. E. Colei: Brown ai\nmany sausages ai required In a trying pan, remove and lilt in halt\nand arrange in a casserole with layers of sliced apple, sprinkling of\nbrown eugan, between each layer.\nTop with a blicuit crust and cook In\na moderate oven*for 35 mlnutei.\n\"Ripe Tomato Chutney\" wbmit-\nted by Mn. J. A. Fletcher: Two\npoundi ripe tomatoei peeled, 2\npounds apples, 1 pound onioni and\nchop fairly fine. Add 1 pint of vinegar and 1 pound sultana raisins.\nCook thii mixture -lowly until pulpy and then add 1 cup brown sugar,\nVt teaspoon cayenne pepper, Vt teaspoon ground ginger, Vt tablespoon\naalt and cook two houri longer.\nCool and put Into clean Jara and\nseal.\n\"Romance Cake,\" submitted by\nMrs. J. Pox: .One cup all purpoie\nflour, 2 tablespoons sugar, Vt cup\nbutter. Mix these ingredients and\npress down In cake pan, size 8 x 8\nlnchei. Make a filling with Hi cups\nbrown sugar, 2 well beaten eggs, Vt\ncup cocoanut, cup chopped walnuts,\nVt teaspoon baking powder, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix\nall ingredients together, place on top\nof mixture in pan and bake 'it\nhour in a moderate oven.\n\"Shortbread\" submitted by Mrs.\nC. F. Hunter: One-half pound butter, Vi cup berry augar, Vi cup corn\nstarch, 2 cupa flour. Beat the first\n3 ingredients together .and gradually work in the flour. Bake in a cool\neven.\n\"Cheese Rellih\" lubmitted by\nMri. Hector MacKenzie: Put one cup\ncanned tomatoes Into a laucepan\nto heat and when very hot ttlr in 1\nlevel teaspoon of baking soda. Add\nVi cup milk, % cup grated cheese, a\nlittle cayenne pepper and ult to\ntaste. Lastly itir in 3 well beaten\neggi and put Into a double boiler to\ncook. When thickened remove from\natove and serve immediately on hot\ntoast\n\"Coffee Cake\" lubmitted by Mn.\nW. Carruthen: Two Ubleipoons cf\nbutter, 1 tablespoon white lugar, 1\negg, Vi cup flour, 2 teaspooni baking\npowder, Vi cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cream butter and lugar, add\nbeaten egg. Add lifted dry ingredient! and milk to thii mixture alternately. Put half ol batter In tin\nthen a layer of filling, then other\nhalf of batter and top with a layer\nof filling. Bake in a moderate oven\n40 to 60 minutes. For the filling use\nVt cup brown sugar, 2 teaspooni\ncinnamon, 1 cup chopped walnuts,\n2 tablespoons flour and two table-\nspoons- melted butter,\n- \"Pear Marmalade,\" submitted by\nMn. H. B. Penny: Ten poundi peari,\n6 oranges, 3 lemons, 8 pound] lugar,\nVt pound preserved ginger. Grate\noranges and lemons, both rind and\nput fruit through the food chopper.\nChop pears and ginger and add sugar and cook one hour.\n\"Standard Cookies\", submitted by\nMrs.' H. H. Pitts: One cup butter, 1\ncup sugar, and pinch salt, add 2 eggs\nand 1 level teaspoon baking soda\nand 3V. cups flour. Roll out and cut\ninto cookies and bake in a moderate\noven. These cookie mixtures may\nbe rolled and put in refrigerator and\nused as required.\nEGG-CHEESE DISH\n\"Eggs in Casserole\" submitted by\nMrs. W.. H. Rixen: Take required\nnumber of egg! and put into a casserole dish, add 1 tablespoon milk or\ncream, salt and pepper and cover\nwith grated cheese. Bake In a moderate oven until eggs are cooked.\n\"Succotash\" lubmitted by Mn.\nA. Terrill: One can lima beau, one\ncan, corn, generoui lump butter,\na little milk, salt and pepper. Mix\nwell together and bake in a moderate oven 30 mlnutei.\n\"Cornflake Macaroons\", submitted\nby Mrs. F. E. Wheeler: Beat whltei\nof 2 eggs until very still and add\npinch of salt, 1 cup Icing sugar,, 1\ncup chopped dates, 1 cup chopped\nwalnuts, t_ cup cherries, Vi cup cocoanut, 2 cups cornflakes and 1\nteaspoon vanilla. Drop spoonful! ot\nmixture on < buttered tin and bake\nin a moderate oven till brown,\n\"Porcupine.\" lubmitted by Mn.\nW. H. Walker: Three egg white!\nbeaten with a little salt until very\nstiff, add 1 cup icing augar, 1 cup\nchopped walnuts, 1 cup chopped\ndates, 1 cup cocoanut Mix together\nand roll about a spoonful In shredded cocoanut and bake in a moderate oven.\nMrs. H. B. Penny was tea hostess\nand Was assisted by Mn. W. E. Bell\nand.Mrs. J. Fox. '\nRoutine business was.attended to\nand Mra. H. B. Penny reported that\nthe tea held at the home of Mrs. H.\nH. Pitta had netted over $30. Mrs.\nH. Mackenzie reported that over\n$07 had been realized by the Women's Institute tag day.\nMrs. F. E. Wheeler, President,\n\u25a0conducted the meeting.\nJAPANESE CORPORAL\nSHOT BY GUNMEN\nSHANGHAI, Oct 18 (AP)- A\ncorporal of the Japanese gendarmes\nwas shot in the head and wounded\nseriously today by three Chinese\ngunmen in the badlands near\" the\nheadquarters of Wang Ching-Wei,\nhead of the Japanese-sponsored\nGovernment at Nanking.\nFOR HEALTH - USE\nPASTEURIZED MILK\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nPHONE 116\nO-TO-HffiUfEK?\nWATCHES, DIAMONDS,\nWEDDING RINGS\nH.\nH. Sutherland\n345 Baker St.\nButcherteria\nPhone   Nowc   Phone\n527.   *WW\u00bb    528\nFREE  DELIVERY\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nSPECIALS\nCHOICE BOILING FdVVL:\nNo hcadi or feat,       OC\nGOOD OVEN VEAL   OP\nROASTS: Lb CdZ\nSHOULDERS OF OC\nLAMB: rolled, Ib. .. Ml\nNO. I BACON: OC.\nSliced, Ib ...*>*Jt\nRUMP ROASTS:       OC -\nChoice ateer. Ib tLtJZ\nCHOICE SHOULDER  OA\nROASTS: Lb taVl\nMINCED ROUND      OA\nSTEAK;Lb. ....... faUt\nBONELESS STEW and OC\nKIDNEY: 2 Ibi..... ODl\nDELICIOUS BREAKFAST\nrAC1: i5c\nNELSON SOCIAL\n, By MRS. M. J, VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mlu Kate Scanlan, who spent\na few days in the city, plana to return today to Vancouver\/\n>\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  J. H. M. Greenwood left yeaterday tor Vancoiiver.\na H. F. Wilmot waa In town\nfrom Gray Creek yeiterday.'\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs. F. S. Downing,\nwho have been in England ilnce\nlast Christmas, have returned to\nAppledale,        \u2022\na Mill Frances Paterson of\nPerry Siding vlalted Nelaon yeaterday. *\u2022'<'.'\n\u2022 F. Tanas wai in town from\nSalmo yeaterday.'\na Mn. Rose Dearln of Slocan\nCity ipent yeaterday ih Nel\u00bbon.\n. a Tbe Sodality of the Blessed\nVirgin enjoyed their annual\nThankigivlng hike by an outing to\nTroupe Junction. A' group of about\n25 left by way of the Great Northern track. At the Junotion hot dogi\nand coffee were enjoyed. Among\nthoie in the outing were Ml-a Mol-\nlie Klrkpatrick; Miss Mary. Ling,\nMist Dorothy Trainor, David Lunn,\nMiss Kathleen Trainor, Miss Jean\nSpencer, Miss France! Peitley, Miss\nEleanor Vecchio, Miss Frances Hor-\nricks, Miss Louise DuMont, Miss\nMarjorie Kubin, Mlu Jean Logan,\nLouis Gagnon, Michael Prestley,\nBernard Jarbeau, Jack Jarbeau,\nJohn Blazina, Connie Cassios,\nGeorge Lunn, Jack Kubln, John\nBlaney, Robert Raih, Miss Margaret\nCoates, Silvio Bragagnola and John\nLang.\ne Mn. Harry Burns and Mn.\nN. Murphy entertained Circle No.\n4 of St. Paul's United Church Thursday afternoon ot the home of the\nformer on Carbonate Street. Mrs.\nDavid Laughton presided- at the tea\nfttjfe^i\nNEW OPPONENTS FOR  MCCARTHY\n\"Choo-choo Train\" comedian Reginald Gardiner and that dashing\nIrish hero of the screen Errol Flynn will overwhelm Charlie McCarthy\nwith a visit on Sunday at 5:00 p.m. PST over the coast to coast network of the NBC and CBC networks.\nCharlie will have to sharpen his wits to keep up. with both these\ngljb-tbngued young men. He will be aided and abetted by Edgar\nBergen who supplements his ventriloquist activities on the program\nwith smooth \"master of ceremonies\" duties, Donald Dickson, the\nyoung Metropolitan Opera baritone and Robert Armbruster and his\norchestra who supply the musical' background.\n. \u2022 \u2022\n\"ONE MAN'8 FAMILY\"'\n\"The Barbours Write Their Names\" will be the title of the third\nchapter of book 36, In the serial \"One Man's Family\" which will be\nheard on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. immediately following Charlie McCarthy.\nAutumn has brought a nostalgic note into Carlton E. Mone's\nstory of the Barbours. Teddy, who becomes more sentimental as she\napproaches her sixteenth year, has caused consternation In the family\nby urging Paul Barbour, her adopted father, to marry Beth Holly\nwith whom he has been in love for years. Apple harvesting and the\napproach of Thanksgiving is being looked forward to by the fanf.ly\nwho will all be present at the annual gathering on that day at Sky\nRanch. ', ,\nMORE SERIOUS LISTENINQ\nProgrammes designed for more serious listening on Sunday include the second concert thii aeeaon by the New York Philharmonic\nSymphony Society\"! Orcheitra under John Barbirolli, (12 noon) 'and\na Canadian Welfare Council Programme from Ottawa at 2:00 p.m.\nThe latter will feature such noted speakers as the Princess Alice: Most\nRev Darwyn T. Owen; Most Rev. Alexander Vachon, and L. W. Brock-\nington K.C. Music will be by Lees Concert! Symphoniques de Montreal: Arthur Carron, tenor; and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police\nBand. '\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER  19,  1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:57\u20140 Canada\n8:00\u2014BBC New!\n8:15\u2014With the Guards\n' 8:30\u2014Musical Tete-a-tete\n8:45\u2014Toronto Trio\n9:00\u2014The Newi\n9:15\u2014Musical Recorded Program\n9:30\u2014Children's Scrapbook\n10:00\u2014Talk\n10:15\u2014Closing Slocks\n10:30\u2014Address by Pope Pius from\nVatican Cily\n11:00\u2014The News\n11:15\u2014Musical Programme\n11:30\u2014News Bulletin\n11:33\u2014Musical Programme\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014Musical Programme\n12:15\u2014Hollywood American Legion\nBind (CKLN)\n12:30\u2014The News\n12:45\u2014Musical Melodies (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014London Calling\n1:30\u2014Quiz for the Forces\n2:00\u2014Dance Moods\n2:15\u2014School Choirs\n2:30\u2014Popular Songs\n2:45\u2014BBC News\n3:00\u2014Topical Talk\n3:15\u2014Musical Recorded Program\n3:10\u2014Recital Series\n3;45-Talk\n4:00\u2014Vocal Parade\n4:15\u2014Organ Souvenirs (CKLN)\n4:30\u2014Radio Birthday Party\n(CKLN)\n4:55\u2014News Commentary\n5:00\u2014Festival Chorus\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014Let's Go to the Music Hall\n6:30\u2014Don Turner'! Orch.\n6:45\u2014News\n7:00\u2014NBC Symphony\n8:30\u2014Red River-Barn Dance\n9:30\u2014Musical Mirror\n10:00\u2014Piano Rambling!\n10:15\u2014The News\n10:30\u2014Jackie Sounder's Orch.\n11:00\u2014God Save The King\nCJAT- TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00-Church In the Wildwood\n7:15\u2014Roundup Time\n7:30\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014News and Music\nAFTERNOON\n12:00-On With The Dance\n2:30\u2014Home Folks Frolic\n3:30\u2014Music Graphs\n5:15\u2014Organ Reveries\nEVENING\n8:00\u2014Concert Music\n10:00\u2014Serenaders' Orch.\n12:00\u2014Sign Oft\ntable and wrviteurj were Mn. Er-\nrol L. Wright Mra. Guy Browell,\nMri. E. R. Hart and Mn. \u00bb, D. McLean. Otheri preient were Mrs. Foster Hilliard, Mrs. J. A. Ballantyn.,\nMri, W. E. Soman, Mra. W. Eisen-\nhauer, Mn. Bunel Winfield, Mn.\nLloyd Catley, Mrs. W. T. Calbick,\nMri. Alfred Wood, Mri. C. I_ Cow-\ndrill, Mra. 3. H. Argyle, Mrs. R. R.\nHorner, Mrs. J. I!. Ludlow, Mn.\nCharles Morris and Mra. George F.\nLynch. .  % \u25a0\n\u2022 Mra. E. H. Applewhaite and\nher grandson of Willow .Point -\/hopped yesterday In Nelaon.\na Mr. and Mra. T. G. Laughton\nat Castlegar, Mr. and Mra. Fred\nChapman, gehnsen Street and Harold Chapman bave returned from a\nvacation In Vancouver.\na Mn. P. W. Green wai In town\nfrom Willow Point yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mn. John McPhail\nand \u25a0daughter' Alice, Silica Street,\nhave returned from Kimberley,\nwkere they vlalted their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mri. Don\nMcNab.\na Schyler Club, past Noble\nGrand and memben of Queen City\nRebekah Lodge apent a social afternoon' Thunday at the home of\nMn. J. T. Brown, Victoria Street\nin honor of Mn. C. M. Boyer of\nMillion City, President of the Rebekah Assembly, I.O.O-T. Vice-\nPresident of the Club', Mn. Thomas\nMcMillan, on behalf of the gathering presented the honor guest with\na gift Multi-colored mums graced\nthe living rooms. Member! present\nIncluded Mn. Dacy. Petty, Mn. Annie Peters, Mra. Maude Travel, Mn.\nJoseph Bradshaw, Mn. J. Lundie,\nMn. J. L, Lemmon, Mra. T. Dins-\nmore, Mn. C. R. Hanna, Mn. David Proudfoot, Mn. McMillan, Mn.\nG. Langrldge, Mrs. Percy Andrew!,\nMra. C. Robinson, Mn. F. M. Er-\nskine, Mrs. H. C. Clements, Mra.\nBrown, Min Marjorie Todd, Min\nRhone- MCLendere, Mra. J. Wood,\nMra. H. A. Parker and Mra. J. Turner.\ne Miu Jean Dayman and her\nslater, Mlsi Loy Dayman of Willow\nPoint, were city shopper! yesterday.\ne F. Jackson of White Rock,\nnear Vancouver, spent yesterday in\nNelson.\ne Mn. Henderson of Vancouver,\nwho spent a few weeks with Mr.\nand Mn. W. J. McLean, left yeiterday for home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Harry Allan, who\nhave been gueiti of Mr, and Mrs.\nAlex Allan, Carbonate Street, have\nleft for their home in Winnipeg.\ne Mn. George M. Benwell,\nHume Hotel entertained memben ol\nthe Junior C. W. L. when those\npresent were Mn. Douglas Cummins, Mrs. C. A. Larson, Mill Mar-\ngaret Meyer, Mrs. J. P. Duffy, Mri.\nDaniel McDougall, Mrs. Walter\nDuckworth, Miss Kay McDougall\nand Mrs. Harold Dixon.\na Captain Kirby, pioneer resident Of Slocan City, now of Vancouver, wai In town* yesterday en\nroute home.\ne Mrs. A. Men of Queemi Bay\nvisited town yeiterday.\ne Thursday afternoon Mn. J.\nLundie, High Street, was at home\nto members of Circle No. 2 of St.\nPaul's Chtlrch. Present were Mrs.\nC. Leggitt Mn. J, M. Armstrong,\nMn. Angus Shaw, Mrs. A. E. Cornfield, Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Mrs.\nDavid Richardson, Mn. C. H. Le-\nquereux, Mrs. William Seaman,\nMn. J. Kline, Mrs. Belle Tate, Mrs.\nM. Martin and Mrs. H. C. Hielscher.\n\u2022 R. L. McBride, Hoover Street,\nhas returned from a business trip\nto Hamilton, Toronto and Montreal.\ne Mr. Johnson of Erie visited\nNelson yesterday. .\ne Mn. W. R. Jarvii and Mary\nof Procter shopped In Nelson yes-\nThanksgiving Day, memben of\nSt. Agnes' Sodality enjoyed a hike\n-cross the lake to the grounds of\nMre. A. A. Perrier. After lunch all\nsat around the bonfire and sang\nsonga and played gamei. In the\ngroup were: Giovanna Davis, Lorraine, Jeannette and Rosella Pou-\nlin, Louise Carey, Maxine Cady,\nVivien Monteleone, Betty Jane\nDodd,  Mary  Kubin,   Ellie  Marie\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1940\nCKLN and\nCBC Programmes\nMORNING\n9:57\u20140 Canada\n10:00\u2014Old Country Mall\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014And It Came To Pass\n11:00\u2014Chamber Music Recital\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n11:57\u2014News Bulletin\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014N. Y. Philharmonic Symphony\nOrchestra\n1:30\u2014Church of the Air\n2:00\u2014Canadian Welfare Council'\n2:45\u2014BBC News \u2022\n3:00\u2014Modern Music (CKLN)\n3:30\u2014Weekend Review\n3:45\u2014The Newi\n4:00\u2014Boston Pops Orchestra\n4:30\u2014Let's Face The Facta\n5:00\u2014Edgar  Bergen  and  Charlie\nMcCarthy\n5:30\u2014One Man's Family\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Carry On Canada\n6:30\u2014Salon Music (CKLN)\n6.45-Treasure Cheit (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014The Newi\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaki\n7:30\u2014BBC Radio News Reel\n8:00\u2014For Friends of Music\n8:30\u2014What Do You Think?\n9:00\u2014Organ Recital\n9:30\u2014Sanctuary\n10:00\u2014Clement Q. Williams\n10:15\u2014The Newi\n10:30\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\n11:00\u2014God Save The King\nCJAT\nMORNING\nll:q0*-Knox United Church\nAFTERNOON\n\u00ab:30-Shall We Waltz\n4.4J-_Aloha Land\nEVENING\n7:45\u2014 Sunday Serenade\n11:00\u2014Sign Otf\nOther Perlodi CBC Programme!\n-NOW-\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nGOLDEN TONE RADIO\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nand Thereea Eccles, Joylise Ciepe,\nDoreen Donovan, Jenny Trainor,\nAntoinette and Irene Viau, Sheila\nTarllng, Violet D-Lucrezio, Georgina ud Flora DeGirolamo, Margaret Maco, Maria Stangherlin.\nEleanor Gillis, Agnes Kuntz, Katherine Morrison, Amelia GlUis, Mary\nDavia.\nMIGHT ASK RUSSIAN\nSHIPS BE USED TO CARRY\nCHILDREN OVERSEAS\nLONDON. Oct 18 (CP).-A campaign to enlist the aid ot Russian\nships In removing British children\nto places ot safety overseas was\nInitiated today by .Rev. Reginald\nSorensen, Labor Member ot\nParliament\nMr. Sorensen announced he will\nask Prima Mlniiter Churchill in\nthe House of Common! to invite\nRussia \"to become officially associated\" with Britain In the removal\nplan by furnishing ships.\nDavid Rees of Nelion\nIs Wireless Officer\nDavid Reel, elder son of Mr. and\nMrs, Gerald S. Reel, 309 Robion\nStreet, who recently received hii\nGovernment certificate as a radio-\ntelegrapblit and hai been working\nin the navy dockyard at Esquimau,\nil now wireless officer on a ship\nplying betwene Victoria and Weit\nCoait ports.\nONTARIO EXCEEDS\nRED CROSS OBJECTIVE\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP). - Ontario today pushed over the top in\nthe Red Cross campaign, carrying\nthe Dominion contributions to date\nto a total of $4,552,488. The objective\nfor the whole country is $5,000,000\nin a campaign that won't be wound\nup for another three weeks.\nOntario returni today reached $2,-\n401,888, topping the Provincial objective ot $2,400,000.\n\"What a Terrible\nBusiness\" Says Queen\nLONDON, Oct 18 (CP)-\"What\na terrible business It li,\" laid Queen,\nElizabeth, gazing at a scene ot bomb\ndestruction In London todiy.\nThe King, watching a busy demolition iquad, phllosophled, \"At\nany rate, I am glad the work ot\nclearing up is going on io well.\"\nTheir Majesties were shown by\nAdmiral Sir Edward Evans, Air\nRaid Director, a spot where an air\nraid shelter had received a direct\nhit\n\u2022AW\nr?&>'\nREDC D\nCROSS\n<5ferm\nClothing for Refugee\nChildren Is Shown by\nWist Arm Auxiliary\nLONGBEACH. B. C. - A plea-\naant function took place at th>\nhome tt Mra, Burrard A. Smith\nLongbeach, Thuraday, In connection\nwith a display ot clothing whleo\nhai been made for refugee children\nby memben ot the Weit Arm Auxiliary. There were many Ingenious\nexamples showing how cast-off garment! and remnants could be made\nover Into warm and uaeful clothing tor children.\nMra. J. Brewer, who hu charge\nof thia branch of Red Crou work-\nin Nelson, -was preient and alio\nMn, Leo Gansner, Secretary of Nelson and District Refugee Committee, who both expressed pleasure In\nthe work that had been dope.\n1 About 50 ladies called during the\nafternoon, representative of Nelion, and the West Arm trom Wil-\nlow Point to Procter. Tea wai\nserved by the Longbeach group of\nthe Auxiliary.\nSale of home-grown walnuts and\ntulip bulba, together with a illver\ncollection, realized a gratifying sum\nfor Red Croat fundi.\nLONDON (CP)-The Mlnlitry of\nSupply ia salvaging carbon, tine\nand other Important materials trom\ndiscarded flashlight ahd high ten*\nlion batteries.\nSPECIAL SHOWING\nSMALL SIZE DRESSES\n$6.95 to $15.95\nMilady's Fashion\" Shoppe\n449 Baker St.\nPhone 874\n<\u00ab\/sstt!sttsttsstsst\u00bbssssstsossssotst\nSUPER SILK HOSIERY\nNew Fall Shades\nChiffon 89*. and $1.15\nCrepe 81.00 and $1.15\nFashion First Shop\n438 Baker St Nelson. B.C\nsstsess&sexsaeetssssowsMsssss&s\nyoicli Amity, \u00a3njoif.\nIf Tbey Coma From\nFourex.\nBAKERIES\nThe flneit ot Ingredients expertly baked make them Just\nthat much better,\nAt Your\nGrogers\nWHICH ARE THE\nHAPPIEST HOMES\n- i\nSURELY, THE HAPPIEST HOMES ARE THOSE\nWHERE PARENTS AND CHILDREN TOGETHER\nSHARE THE JOYS OF LIFE!\nIt ll ne coincidence that In many auch homes there ll a\npiano. Thli noble Instrument le a real source of life's\ndelights: The first lesson ... the hrave aonga of youth '\n... the gay houn when friends come In to ling and dance\n.,, all theie are memories of the piano woven tightly. Into\n{he labrlo of living.\nINVEST IN A PIANO NOW! You can find few possessions more valuable to your children , , . to yourself.\nPrices are lower than you may have thought. Terms of\npurchase make buying easier.' Let's talk It pver soon!\nSEND THIS COUPON FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE\n\" AND PRICE LIST\/\"\nHllNTZMAt* * CO.,\n329 Eighth Avtnue Wen, caigary. N\nPleaie send me further partlcul.ariTrtoyJ^Jia-oTjsffw\npianos.'\nNAME __...-.._--.-_;\nAddress ....\nwn~*i.*tJa>mnM*+^.tm*mm*jetm.\n''\"'\"mmm3&\u2122aXm VrjJ - -VT<?*\u25a0\"\nHEINTZMAN & CO.\n329 EIGHTH AVENUE WEST, CALGARY ALBERTA\nBRADLEY'S '\u20ac\u00ab\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nSATURDAY BARGAIN\nTHISTLE BUTTER: No. 3 ... 2 Iba. 57<*\nVEAL STEAKS)\n2 lbs\t\nKOKANEETROUT:\nLb\t\nBOILING BEEF:\nlb.\t\nBEEP DRIPPING:\n3 Ibi\t\nkilled, Ib.\nor     BEEF SHOULDER ROASTS:\ngjE^**- 22c\n10a Tender, lb\n25c\n20c\n22c\n38c\n32c\n25c\nand\nCROSS JUB ROAST;   OO\nPORK ROAST)\nLb\t\nVEAL OVEN ROAST:\nLb\t\nCORNED BEEF:\nP0rwL':Pmhkillid.' OC. [J1C!D HAM:\nCHICKEN: Freih       OO    EGGS: B grade,\nDoi.\n.\u25a0\t\n.....\n \u25a0W v-.m'<pwwwhipi|..^ui-\nStorm lathj Npuis\nEstablished AprU 22. 1903.\nBriMa* Co'uw-t'a'a liott Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n288 Baker Street Nelion British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY, OCT. 19,1940\nWILL THE UNITED STATES COME\nUP FIGHTING?\nIs the failure of the American people to be fighting\nmad over what Germany la doing to formerly free peoples,\nand their failure to demand a place in the battle-line against\nthe perpetrators of these atrocities, the result of \"shock,\"\nthe shock that at first stuns and numbs the faculties? That\nis the question asked by Ralph Ingergoll, Editor'of the\nNew York PM, in a signed editorial Will the American\npeople presently wake up to what is going on, and have\nnormal reactions, and assert themselves?\nThe editorial, written in the first person as are all\nPM's editorials, is as follows:\nWith the news of each day's bombing of London, that\nold sense of wonder at what terrible things have to happen\nbefore this country is moved to violent and immediate\n\u2022ction returns to plague me.\nAs a journalist I am familiar with the phenomenon\nof people being shocked into correcting a wrong or a stupidity or-an injustice about which they have for years been\ncomplacent'. River steamers fall into disrepair, become\nhazardous to travel in. Easy going picnickers, ignorant\nof naval architecture and trusting of authority, continue\nto crowd their deckB, Until one day one of them turns over\nand the innocent and trusting are drowned. Then comes\nthe sense of outrage and the moral indignation, the inquiries and the editorials and thereafter river steamers\nare kept in better repair. People live in tenements that are\nfire traps, grow up and die in them. Then one burns at\nnight and there are no fire escapes and women die screaming. Fire laws are passed, something's done about it. Banks\nmust fail before the law moves to protect people from\nbank failures. Gangs must go in for massacres with machine guns and explosive pineapples and children must die\nfa kidnappers' hands before there's an FBI. This is the\nprocess of democracy, perhaps of humanity.\nBut now what has happened to it?\nWhat terrible things must the Fascists do before we\nturn upon them? It's been years now with one outrage\ncapping another\u2014years that streteh from Mussolini and\nhis castor oil treatment to the destruction of the greatest\ncapital in the world, building by building, human life by\nhuman life. And we Americans are standing on orie side\nof the street arguing about politics while on the other side\na man who has knocked a woman down is calmly and purposefully kicking her in the face.\nIt is as if, our first indignation over the capsized\npicnic ship subsiding, every Summer from now on'dozens\nof them, loaded with men, women and children, capsized in\nthe harbor and drowned half the holiday makers. And we\nshrugged our shoulders and said, \"Well, that's ships for\nyou.\"\nOr each year a dozen tenements burned and scores\nwere scorched and suffocated to death for want of fire\nescapes and decent policing of building laws. And again\nwe shrugged our shoulders and said, \"Well, that's life in\nthe big city for you.\"   .\nWhat is this quality of complacency to terrible news?\nThe Press of the world\u2014and I include the radio Press with\nthe newspaper\u2014has never brought us news more ably,\ncensorship or no censorship. Not in my memory have there\nbeen more intelligent and informed commentators writing\nand talking, stimulating our imagination, giving us background and perspective. Yet somewhere, way back, the\npeople who are making these terrible things happen have\nfound some way of stopping up our ears and glazing our\neyes. So that we seem to see and hear, but have no reaction\nto sights and sounds.\nI cannot really believe that we as a people are not\nreacting. It must be some phenomenon of lag, delayed reaction\/Something that would also explain the inane remarks people often make right after they have been in a\nterrible accident, reflecting the fact that they have not\nyet understood what h_s happened to them\u2014understood\nemotionally.\n\u2022 I know that we do not want to live in a civilization\nthat is unmoved by the news that millions of men\u2014literally\n\u2014are in slavery behind barbed wire and under the muzzles\nof machine guns, in a world in which in the capitals of\ngreat countries like China and Great Britain people must\nlive underground to live at all, in a world in which murder\nis toasted in champagne and theft is an organized governmental function.\nIt can only be that in the pace of history, and to 130,-\n000,000 people, the eight years that Fascism has grown are\nbut those few seconds after the accident when people say\nstupid and silly things because they do not understand.\nWhat has happened around them is too terrible to grasp.\nThey ask,,\"What time is it?\", or \"Where is my pocket?\"\nor \"What do you think of Willkie?\"\n-NILSON DAILV NIW*. NELSON, B, (..-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 19. 1940- \u25a0\nBook on Birth and Growth of A.P.\nTells Story of Early News Gathering\nBy CHARLES BNtOI\nCanadian Pratt Stiff Writer\nHEW YORK, Oct 18 CCP'-Moit\nbooks about neWipaperwqrk centra around the achievement., the\nexperiences, the foibles of some one\nman, a giant ot the newsdesk or\ncavalier of the diplomatic beat In\nwriting \"AP^-The Story of Newi,\"\nOUver Gramllng faced a far harder\njob than thli recording of a personality. Hla taak waa to make a\nbook about the development ot ah\nidea\u2014the idea of cooperation an\/1\ntruth in newi.\nIn that development not ona personality but hundreds are concerned, and Ih Gramlin's hands their\nhistory tells the story of The Associated Pren: Dr- Alexander\nJonea, tint \"general agent\" tor the\nsix New York papers which banded\nin the selfish old forerunner bt the\npreaent AP; Daniel Craig, the genius of old-time newi transmission;\nMelville Stone, who embodied the\nidea of accuracy and whoie name\nwill be forever connected with -that\nIdea; Kent Cooper, infusing the\nhuman touch into the tactual newa\nreport fighting lor the great development of a wired photo lervlce.\nBut behind then moves a throng\nof purposeful, shadowy figures: the\nmorse man at his key, the teletype puncher, the \"pony\" editor\ntalking into hli telephone, a string\ncorrespondent riding to death on\na gray mule beside Custer; dispatch\nboat crews under Uie gum of both\nfleets at Santiago; a San Francisco\neditor cabling around the world\nto get news of 'an earthquake to\nessential to-the story as any \"name'\"\nNew York. These figures' are as\nin news.history, and this the book\nrecognizes.\nNEW8 OF 1811\nThe itory of news gathering is\ntraced in action. In 1811 young Sam\nTopliff was in charge of the Exchange Coffee House Reading\nRoom in Boiton. When a brig waa\nsighted chancing the harbor entrance at night, Topliff climbed\nInto a rowboat and went out to\nlearn that Britain wai concentrat-\ning naval vessels in American waters. \"Topliff in his rowboat had\nstarted systematic news gathering,\"\nwrites Gramling.\nSimilarly, when David Hale, in\n1828, had trouble in New York with\nthe nine original New York papen\nwho were \"served by the toughest\ncollection of rowboaten who ever\npulled an oar,\" concerned more\nwith crushing opposition than gathering intelligence, Hale itarted us\ning a sloop. \"Hale and his Journal\nof Commerce had introduced the\nvital stimulant of competition into\nthe sluggish world of news gath\nering.\"\nIt was Hale who first went to\nJames Gordon Bennett to talk news\ncooperation. They pooled their resources to cover the Mexican War\nin 1947, and out of that idea a. year\nlater came the old New York Al-\nsociated Press. Halifax was Uie\nfocal point for the gathering of for'\neign news, and there Daniel Craig\nwas established as the first Associated Press Foreign Correspondent.\nCraig had introduced the use of,\ncarrier pigeons in American news-\ngathering; he was full of ideas. He\nis credited with being the first man\nto \"send the Bible\" in order to\nhold a telegraph wire. That was at\nHalifax, about 1849. Before the ex\ntension of the wire from Saint John\nto Halifax he had organized the\nHalifax Express, a horse-and-rider\nnews relay service between Halifax\nand Digby, where fast boats waited\nto carry the copy to the wire terminal across the Bay of Fundy.\nIt was Craig also who issued the\norder, after he became \"general\nagent\" that if a story was important enough to warrant details the\ndetails were worth the wire costs,\nThis put an end to sending bare\nfacts for an editor at the other end\nof tha wire to pad out trom Imagination. It wat a leniatlon at the time.\nBy thla Ume the New York Associated Pren had begun- to expand\nand sell ita newa to a number ot\noutside papers, but theie still had\nlittle or nothing to uy about the\nnewa they got no shadow ot control In the organization. Reorganization came In 1858, but Gremlin\nwrites; \"It wu a union ot teven\nmorning papen . . . and the newi\ncollected wai designed solely to\nmeet their needs,.without any consideration tor wants of subscriber\npapen.\"        . \u2022\nWAR CORRESPONDENTS\nJoseph Medlll, Publisher of the\nChicago Tribune, wai agitating for\na better news service and Western\nrepresentation aa early ai 1862, but\nit waa not until the early 90s that\nVictor Lawson led the successful\nfight which resulted in formation\nof The Associated Pren as lt ii\nknown.today, cooperation fully established and the last veaUge of\nprivate Interest removed from\nownership of the newe report\nIn the meantime, the Civil War\nhad come. In the light of present-\nday war reporting, Gramlin's description of the men who covered\nthat conflict li Interesting:\n\"They were a pictureigue lot\nthese correspondents, some smooth-\nshaven youths, some with long\nQuaker-like beards, lome muitach-\ned in the approved style of the\nday. Kossuth hats and fancy vests\nwere universal favoritei and all\nwore stiff collars. Campaign kits\nwere not elaborate\u2014revolver, field\nglassei, notebook, blanket haversack\u2014although a good mount was\nindispensable. For the risk! and\nerduoui living demanded, the monetary return was not great. Salaries ranged from $10 to $25 a week\nfor the men of the field, out of\nwhich they had to pay their own\nexpemei to a miximum of $35 for\nkey man in such centrel ai Waihington and Louisville. General\nAgent Craig received $3000 an-\nnuaUy.\"\nThroughout this book one geti a\npicture of the changing times as\nwell as the new departures in the\nhlitory of The Associated Press\nresulting from those changes. For\ninstance, when Htlstead and White,\ntwo Western publishen, came East\nin 1888 to demand concesiions:\n\"They found New York an Industrious city with a population close\nto the million mark. The wires\nfrom telegraph poles laced through\nthe branches of shade trees along\nBroadway. Office forces worked\n10 hours a day, six days a week,\nand there were no female employees. The basement of the modest\nJ. P. Morgan - building in Wall\nStreet was stacked with the wares\nof a retail wood and coal dealer,\nand inflated bosom pads were the\nlatest boon to the feminine figure.\"\nEARLY CABLES\nOn Aug. 19, 1958. President Buchanan, sitting in Washington, was\nhanded this message:' \"The Queen\ndesires to congratulate the President upon the successful completion of the great international work\nin which the Queen has taken the\ndeepest interest.\" Cyrui Field's\ncable wai talking, from Valentia\nto Trinity ,Bay. To the AP came\nthe first European news by cable:\n\"Emporer of France returned to\nParis Saturday. King of Prussia\ntoo ill to visit Queen Victoria. Her\nMajesty returns to England 31st\nAugust. SetUement of Chinese\nquestion; Chinese empire opens to\ntrade; Christian religion allowed.\nMutiny being quelled, all India becoming tranquil.\"\nWithin a few days the cable\nfailed, and it was not until eight\nyears later that Field was finally\nsuccessful. Some idea of how important news had to be to rate\ncabling appears in the note that\n\"although cable rates had been re-\nCONTRACT ,..\nKNOW YOU** SCO-UNO\nONE ADVANTAGE posseised\nby, true experts la that they hava\nfigured oat the number of polnta\nproduced by various results, and\nknow tha relative value of such\nthingi aa redoubling, when a\nsmart Alack haa doubled them, th-\niteadof going ahead to hid a\nslam they are. attaining The average player haa to atop and figure\nout such things, which Is sometimes awkward, especially in a social rubber bridge game\n\u2666 A7643\nVA8S\n. >t\u00ab.i ;\n. - .     *io     ' ...\nTT.\nAlioa\nVQ109 3\nr  _,   i   \u2666**\"*\u2022 *\u25a0\nW 1\n\u2666 985\n:J742\n189 82\n*7\u00bb\n\u2666 AS\n*   4.AK.QJ865\n.Dealer*-  South.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\nSouth Weat North Eaat\n2 A Pan -\u2666 Paaa\nSa\\ Pan 3t> Pan\n4N1        Pasi      51* Pan\n8 N1 DM Pan Pan\nRdbl\nAfter the Blackwood response\nof  8-Hearta  by North  ihowed\nBy Shepard Barclay\nSouth two acei, he could count\nthirteen let-up trlcki, and oaad\nhia king-aiker of 6-No Trumps\njuit for the fun of It, Intending to\nbid the 7-No Trumps when North'!\nresponse came around to him. But\nWeit waa having some fun, too,\nand also knew hla scoring. Seeing\ntht' grand alam looming up, ha\ndidn't care It South did redouble.\nIt turned out that South icored\n840 for making 5-No Trumps redoubled, p)us 400 apiece for two\novertrlcka. total 1,440 Weat beat\nhtm out of 300 polnta,. aa the alam\nbonus would have been 1,-00,\nseven club trlcki 140, plus 100\nhonors, a total of 1,740, tha game\nbonus, of coune, not btlng Influenced .\nAn elaborate table shows what\nto do with such doubles. Bidding\nand making a grand siam counts\nmore than redoubling in all caaea\nexcepts when No Trump la doubled at four. Bidding and making\na small alam counts len than redoubling In all cases except when\na minor suit bid li redoubled at\ntire five level. Try to remember\nthese figures.\n\u2022   \u2022  \u25a0'\nYour Week-End Leaaon\nDo you understand the \"suicide\nsqueeze,\" sometimes called the\n\"cannibal squeeze?\" Can you aet\nup an example to ihow how lt\nworki?\nSurvey of R. A. F. Raid;\nShows Vital Germai\nIndustries  Cripplei\nduced from $10 to $5 per word,\ntransatlantic dispatches I remained\nthe most cosUy convenience in\nnewsdom.\"\nSo the itory goes; the AP sent\nmen -to Europe to gather its own\nnews there; began to lease exclusive wires; the telephone came, the\nairplane, and the First Great War;\npolitics and depression, life and\ndeath and birth.\nThis a book that will never be\nfinished. It is a story of continuity\nas the closing words Indicate.\n\"Britain fighte on . . .\n\"So the Second World War continued, past the time when these\nwords' were written, past the time\nthey were sent to pren. As a climax\nto almost a century of reporting\ndaily history, Munich's. 'Peace for\nour time' had seemed a' beautiful\nnote on which to end any story of\nnews.\n\"But over the world AP men\nwere busy\u2014and the newi went on.\"\nCONFER ON POSSIBILITY   '\nOF COORDINATING\nWOMEN'S SERVICE CORPS\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 18 (CP) - Mrs.\nNorman R.'Kennedy of Victoria and\nMrs. A. F. Nation of Vancouver\nconferred with military authorities\nhere today on the possibility of coordinating Women's Service Corps\nin Canada and obtaining official\nrecognition by the Department of\nNational Defence.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It's natural for little boys to\nbust and dirty things, and I don't\npretend mine was different. But I\nkept 'em at home so nobody had\nto suffer except us.\"\n\"She always does it is sht leavei the parade ground  She usid\nto be in the chorui.\" -Humoriit.\nistsssssxxssssttsttttsttstss\n?? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot\nperioni asking question! will not\nbe publlihed.\ntottott\nG. C., Nelson\u2014If I Joined the Royal\nCanadian Navy at the, age ot 18\nyears, could I to time work up\nto be a captain or a very close\nrank?\nYei.\nCould you tell me what options to\ntake and how far I should go In\nschool?\ntyith regard to educational facilities write Officer Commanding,\nRoyal Canadian Navy, Esquimalt,\nB. C.\nK, Brilliant\u2014What days did March\n10, 1909; May 22, 1911 and July\n22, 1921 fall on?\nMarch 19, 1909 was a Thursday;\nMay 22, 1911 a Monday; and July\n22, 1921 a Friday.\nHow do you clean dry paint from\npaint brushes?\nIf paint brushes have become\nhard with paint, allow them to soak\nfor an hour or so In turpentine;\nthen iqueeze the bristles between\nthe finger! until all the paint has\nbeen removed. After this treatment\nrinse the brushes in a fresh bath ot\nturpentine.\nA. W., Nelson\u2014Will you pleaie\ngive me a recipe for hominy?\nCook as you would any other\ncoarse grained cereal; about one\ncup of hominy grits to four parts\nwater; add a teaspoon salt to each\nquart of water Cook slowly for a\nlong period to Wing out the flavor\nof the cereal.\n.\nM. E. B\u201e Arrow Park\u2014Could you\ntell  me  where  I could send  a\nsample of well water to have it\nanalyzed?\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nPathological Laboratory.\nS. P., Nelson has called our attention to the typographical error\nin the song published for E. B.\nEriekson, and sent us the correct\nversion, which follows:\nI  WONDER  WHO'S  KISSING\nHER  NOW\nI wonder who'i kissing her now,\nI wonder who's showing her how,\nI wonder who's looking into her\neyes\nBreathing sighs, telling lies\nI wonder who'i buying the wine\nFor lips that I used to call mine\nI wonder if she\nEver tells him of me\nI wonder who'i kisiing her now.\n.______-________--______-. .\nWAR - 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy Tha Canadian Press\n-OCT. 19, 1915\u2014German army under von Hindenburg advanced to\npoint 12 miles Southwest of Riga,\nBaltic port. Italy declared war on\nBulgaria. Anglo-French soldiers\npoured into Saloniki to reinforce\nSerbians retiring before Austro-Ger-\nani in Southern Serbia.\nOCT. 20, 1915\u2014Extensive gains\nmade by the Germans on the Dvlna\nRiver in their advance on Riga.\nBulgarians occupied Radovitch in\nSerbia close to the Bulgarian frontier. Russians attacked successfully\nEast of Baranovitchi, North of the\nPripet River.\nDANCER HEADS LIST\nFOR \"PUBLIC DRUNKS\"\nBUCHAREST, Rumania, Oct. 18\n(AP)\u2014Maria Carteanu, 25-year-old\nvaudeville dancer, became the first\nwoman in Rumania tbday to have\nher name posted In front of all\ninns, taverns and drinking places\nas a \"public drunk,\"\nUnder a new law, anyone selling\nher even a glass of beer will be subject to heavy punishment.\nAuthorities said the had been arretted, fined and imprisoned five\ntimei for drunkenness.\nLONDON, -Oct. 18 (CP) - The\nRoyal Air Force's \"master icheme ot\nbombing Germany,\" the Air Mlnlitry Newi Service laid today, haa\n\"partially wrecked several wtr factories In Berlin, almost gutted the\nBerlin general post office tnd seriously affected rail and water transport ai well at damaging great industrial plant! over a wide area.\"\nThe Information service said Ita\nstatement was baaed on fresh information drawn trom \"reliable\nneutral sources.\"\nThe Ministry's review of the\nR.A.F.'s achievement! wu inued\nafter a night during which the offensive against Germany was suspended.\nThe newi lervlce lummary aaid\nthat \"fire itarted by R.A.F. bomberi during an attack on tbe Lehrter\nrailway itation (in Berlin) apparently burned for many houn and\nsmoke from it covered a large, area\nof the capital.\"\n\"One traveller, letting out trom\nBerlin for a town in the Rhineland,\nhad to spend three dayi Instead of\nthe customary 12 hours on, the\njourney,\" It declared.\nOn the Matteland Canal traffic\n\"was interrupted for five dayi after\nthe destruction of two sluice gates,\"\nand on the Dortmund-Ems Canal\nthe Eaat wall immediately North\nof the old aqueduct has been broken,\" said the lervlce.\n8 SHIP8 SUNK\nDURING ONE RAID\nAt Hamburg, the newi lervlce\nsaid, \"five ships are nid to have\nbeen sunk In the harbors during\none raid.' At the time this news wai\ngathered only seven out of the 78\ncranes on the quay were working.'\"\nThe news service added that \"confirmation has been received of damage done to petrol and synthetic\noil plants at Politz near Stettin.\"\nop|\n1*\nAt Bitterfeld large alumtol\nworks \"were closed for some wti\nafter a heavy raid,\" It Mid, andf\nthe Rhineland, \"the \u2022 Westph*\nElectric Works have been so ba|\ndamaged that it will ba soma tl|\nbefore they come Into full\nation again.\"\nAt Bremen  the output of\nDuett motor car factory \"haa 1\ngreatly reduced by bombi\" and J\nWiimar \"one hangar wai complef\nly gutted and all aircraft inside i\nitroyed.\" '\nAmong other examples' ot\nR.A.F. effectiveness wai cited\ncase of a tanker which \"has]\npostpone ita vliit to Stettin\nport for Berlin) as the petrol ]\nit wu to have shipped wai\navailable.\"\nGRAIN SHIP BURNED\nFrom the ume source the ien|\nlearned that \"on the night ot I\n2 a large ihlp, fully loaded\ngrain, received a direct hit cauj\nfire and still was burning two Y\nlater.\"\nOn the Dortmund-Ems Canal, |\nnewi  lervlce reported,  there\ntwo fresh bomb craters on tha '\nembankment while in the harl\nloading   installations   and   bar!\nmoored nearby have \"all been daj\naged.\"\nSome railway passengers rej|\nthey have \"had to change more \u2122\na .dozen times on what wu\nvlously a straightforward trip I\neven then there were long del|\noutside some of the stations,\"\nnews aervice added.\n\"From  these  reporti  and\notheri now received lt Ii clear I\nthe Fuehrer, by expressing a I\nthat all algm of bombing should)\nremoved as quickly as possible,\nset his workmen a difficult task]\nis unlikely to be carried out to (\nI full satisfaction.\"\nt***0$*-*6\nW^VWWW.\nBOMBS DEMOLISH\nCONDEMNED BUILDINGS\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP)-Demol\nitlon workeri found todiy that a\nbomb dropped during the night had\ndone their work for them on two\ncondemned structures.\n\"Thia il the first time Jerry hss\ndone ui any good.\" one of the laborer! laid.\nttttts s&m\nONE-MINUTE  TE8T\n1. What itate bought another itate?\n2. H6w much does the blood in a\nhuman body weigh?\n3. How many eggi doei a queen\nbee lay?\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nGreat trials seem to be a necessary preparation for great duties\u2014E. Thomson.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nA birthday today means that you\nihould beware of entanglements in\nyour loce and business affairs in\nthe next 12 months. Avoid precipitate conduct A itranger will help\nyou. The child born on thli date will\nwin much popularity and good fortune. Hii or her disposition will be\nwarm-hearted and good. Such a person will have a refined, artistic and\nmusical nature.\nHINT8 ON ETIQUETTE\nIt is not .lecessary to reply to an\ninvitation to a tea given by an organization unless such reply is requested.\nHOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY\nIs your birthday today? You will\nencounter opposition on the part of\nan elJer during the next year, and\nyour health may be Indifferent, but\nbefore the year has run its course,\nyour fortune will Improve, io be\nnot downhearted. Born today a\nchild will be refined, humane, intellectual, energetic and ambitious,\nespecially If born before noon. Genial, urbane, an excellent conversationalist and ' possessed of much\nworldly wisdom, popularity and success through travel or politics is\nindicated.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. In 1677 Massachusetti bought\nMaine    for\npounds.\n2. About seven pounds.\n3. About 2000 a day.\nOwners Asked Why\nCargo Not War Pri_j\nHAMILTON,  Bermuda,  Oct\n(CP.-Cable) \u2014 The Bermuda\npreme Court today issued a noj|\ndemanding   owners   of   goods\nmoved from the American exp|\nliner  Excalibur early  this\nshow cause why tha seized cafj\ncan not be considered a prize\nwar.\nThe notice did not directly\ntify the gopdi,, removed from\nship when ihe' called at Benn*\non her way from Lisbon to N\nYork. It wai generally bellei\nhowever, they constated of maal\npieces of modem French art wi*\npossible value of $500,000.\nid\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll]\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls*\nabout   1250   English\nHitler Arch Enemy\nof Creative Writers\nBY TED FARAH\nCanadian Preii 8Uff Writer\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (CP)-What-\never new country Hitler conquen,\nthe writers are the first against\nwhom he directs the full impact of\nhis brutal weapons, sayi Lion\nFeuchtwanger, novelist and poet.\nThe German-born writer, hardly\nmore than five feet tall, Just arrived in New York after an adventurous escape from a Naz( concentration camp, spoke to 1500 persons\nlast night at a Pan-American dinner\nfor writers in exile.\n\"... a thin line of writers protects the cultural inheritance of all\nof us,\" he sale\n\"A few thousand writers from the\nmoral front in this decisive struggle. The enemy knows this as well\nas we do, and this is why he persecutes this wretched little heap\nof writers wlth.the whole forcu of\nhis gigantic apparatus . . . Fascism\nleei in the creative writer the natural born enemy.\"\nThe gathering contributed about\n$15,000 to a fund to bring exiled\nwrlterl to the United Statei. It\ncosts $400 for each one.\nLEICESTER, England (CP) \u2014\nBlood-poisoning that let in after he\nhad been bitten by a dove beetle,\nnormally harmless, caused the\ndeath of five-year-old Anthony\nBancroft\nIn the\nWest It's\nPacific\n\"The largest selling brant\nof milk in all Western Ca\nada is Pacific Milk. WM\nis ]ust another way of st\ning most women prefer P\ncific Milk because of i\nrichness and most natui\ncream flavor.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Pack\nIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nPERHAPS\nthe vital spota ot your homo-\nthe plumbing and heating, tl\nquire attention. A timely check\nup now may save damage ao\nannoyance. ,\nOur wide experience enable! a\nto make an Intelligent survej\nand the coit is nominal.\nConsult ui for all plumbing ap\nheating requirements.\nPhont 666\nKootenay  Plumbin*\n& Heat-ilia Co., Ltd\nS57 Baker St\n\u25a0\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u25a0\nPHONE 144 for\nRESULTS\n'\ni-_-_i^iai--hiiMiiii-faii--itii-rtii--MaM\n pm\n\u25a0 \u2122  \u2022;.> \u25a0 t*\nwmm\n....... ...\nSPORTS\nirnon Hockey Executive Resigns;\nTurns Things Over to Arena Board\nBRNON, B..C, Oct 1,9- The\nion Newi hai the following on\nlocal Intermediate hockey slt-\n\u00bbn: *\nie pre-ieison activities of the\n-on Hockey Club usually create\nilderable interest among the\n'\u25a0 large body ot hockey fans.\ni year the Club'i executive hai\nlone all otheri In providing a\nact for discussion, however. It\nresigned.\nart Saturday night the two week\nexecutive met following a meet-\nwith the Arena Commission pn\nlay night and passed the fol-\ning resolution ot resignation:\nthe executive of the Vernon\nkey Club resigns tn a body due\nUie tact that they cannot see\nr way to financing the calibre\nwckey which Vernon fans have\nie to expect and it is recommend-\nthat the operation of the hockey\n) be turned over to the Arena\n.million.\"\nARANTEE NOT GIVEN\n\u2022it year it coat $3300 to pro-\n:e Vernon'i Coy Cup winning\nm. The executive therefore deal that in order to carry on thii\nX they would need at least $3000\n1 they asked the Arena Commls-\n1 to guarantee them this amount.\n! Commission on the other hand,\nI that lt was not possible to do I\nthii aa revenue from hockey lut\nyear waa Just $3700 approximately.\nThe Commission did volunteer to\ngive the Club about $1500 and aid In\nrailing whatever money waa necessary by other means. Thia suggestion did not meet with the favor\nof the Hockey Club. Resignation\nof the. executive followed.\nThe Commission met Tueiday\nnight to coniider the matter'and decided that it would begin immediately to institute steps that would\nauure Vernon Its hockey thii Winter and hockey of the standard fans\nhave come to expect. In order to do\nthli the Commission li going to solicit the help of many citlzeni who\nhave ihown their Interest In the\nsport in previous years. A meeting\nwith these citizens is to-be held next\nMonday. It li reported that leveral\nof the executive now resigned have\noffered heir aervices in this way.\nLUMBY AND\nKELOWNA  CLUBS '\nWhile .the method of lecuring lt\nappean rather unorthodox compared with that of other yean, there\nis no doubt that Vernon will have\nhockey this Winter. Lumby has\nelected C. D. Bloom to the head of\nIta Club and he and his executive\nhave been authorized to go ahead\nwith the formation of a strong team.\nIn Kelowna also activity is evident.\nucky Harris May\nManage Indians\nBUCKY'HARRIS\naUVELAND, Oct 18 (P).-The\niln Dealer said today it learned\nxn an authoritative source -lu\nlahington that Stanley (Bucky)\nirrii haa been ottered a one-\nar contract to manage the Cleve-\nld Indiana of the American Base-\n11 League.\nHarris' contract as Manager of the\nlahington Baseball Club expires\nla Winter.\nthe Plain Dealer said lt wai relied Harrli expressed willingness\nsucceed Oscar Vitt aa Cleveland\nE;er, but Insists on a three-\nontract\nkey Champions\nPlay Bears Tonight\nHERSHEV, Pa, Oct 18 (AP)-\n18 same playen who carried Bos-\nn Bruini to tha National Hockey\naague championihip last season\nstore bowing to New York Rang-\n* bi the Stanley Cup playoffs will\ntint Into action tomorrow night\n. the opening exhibition game\n[ainst Hershey Bean of the Amer-\nan League.\nManager Art Ross laid he would\nlay Frank Brimiek in goal, Dlt\ntapper, Jack Shewchuk, Desse\ntilth, and Jack Crawford on deuce, and uie hli three regular\nrward linei with Flash Hollett as\nillity player.\nThe Bruins probably will open\n(th their famous Kraut Kidi, Milt\n\u2022hmidt Bobby Bauer and Woody\n-mart, and thoie forwardi will be\nMeved by Bill Cowley, Mel Hill\nid Roy Conacher and Art Jackion,\nerb Cain and Eddie Wiseman.\nMcMillan Ring Free\nMOTOR OIL\nCosts you less.\nIhorty's Repair Shop\n1 BAKER NELSON, B. C.\nHorse Racing Has\nResumed in Paris\nPARIS, (Via Berlin), Oct 13 (delayed) (AP)\u2014Hone recing wai returned today after a lapse of lix\nmonths.\nVariatloni from the old icene Included German officials In the\nTribune formerly reserved for the\nFrench preiident and diplomatic\ncorpi, program! in German ai well\naa French end the presence of interpreters with identifying hras-\ntardi at the entrance! to the\nground!.\nThree of leven rvn run were\niteeplechaie eventi.\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. \u00ab. 1M0.\nKress Given Release fey Tigers\nSTEVE O'NEILL\nDetroit Tlgen have given Ralph\n\"Red\" Kress hli release and rumors in baseball circles have it\nthat Steve O'Neill, who managed\nthe Buffalo Blsoni in the International League, will be named\nDetroit coach. Kress, lilted aa\nplayer-coach, In the early season,\nwas taken oft the active Hit to\nmake way for Second Baseman\nL. D. Meyer.\n\"RED\" KRESS\nttessmtssessososooiiisottetsotsttti\nnest Canadian  Guaranteed  Non-\nSag Chesterfields at'\nOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nTrade In your old tor new\nHomt Furniture Exchange\n'hone 103. 413 Hall St\nmsttssxxtt\u00bbst&\u00bbxttzs$tt?xss\nUSE THE DAILY NEWS\n\u00a3    ' CLASSIFIED\n^ADVERTISEMENTS AND\nSave Money\nRiders, Beaches\nloWin-Gruson\nBy SYDNEY QRUSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer   -\nThe Eait'i leading football teams\nget all mixed up tomorrow in two\ngames that ihould unscramble the\npicture somewhat and preaent a\nclearer view in looking for the aec-\ntion'i champion. Thii ii the weekend to ihow lust who has what in\nthe Interprovincial and Ontario\nUnions.\nThe main battles are at Ottawa,\nwhere the Champion Rough Rideri\nconfidently await the charge of\nLew Hayman'i double-blue brigade,\nand at Toronto, where Balmy Beach\nwill aee if it'i true what they're\nlaying about the battery boys from\nSarnia. The victors\u2014as this corner\nsees them \u2014 will be Riders' and\nBalmy Beach.\nTwo tougher games to call Involve the four clubs which have\nyet to get a victory. The Tigers\nmake a stand In their Hamilton\nlair against Montreal while Hamilton Alerta round out the O. R. F. U.\nichedule against Camp Borden in\nthe University of Western Ontario\nStadium at London.\nWith fingeri crosied, the corner\npicks Hamilton, who have shown\nsteady Improvement learning the\nArt Massucci way, and Camp Borden because of their stronger line,\nGord Melkle'i kicking and Eddie\nThompson's running.\nAnother Boucher\nStars In Hockey\n(By ANDY GARRETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG, Oct 18 (CP) -Another Frankie Boucher ii coming up\nthe New York Ranger hockey ladder In the aame ipot where the origins made hii name famoui as the\ncentre for the great Cook brothers.\nFrankie Boucher, Jr., li the\nnephew of the Rangeri' former\ncentre, now the team'a coach.\nYoung Frank haa a background\nittjeped in hockey. Hii father,\nGeorge, waa' a defenceman with\nthe old Ottawa Senator! and two\nother of hii unclei, Bob and Bill\nBoucher, alio were professional\nitan,\nTwo yean ago young Frank'i\nheady centre playing won him a\nplace with New York Rovera, the\nRanger amateur team in the Eastern\nUnited Statei Amateur Hockey\nLeague. In hii first full ICaion with\nRovers the tirst rung on the Ranger\nladder, he led the club with 18\ngoals and 3- assists for SI pointi,\ngood enough for seventh 'in the\nLeague icoring.\nHe hit the top of hii amateur\nform last season, scoring 30 goils\nand getting 57 assists to finish third\nin the League scoring. He aet a\nLeague record in one game by making the plays for six goals. Young\nFrank has his uncle's same imooth\nstyle and his knack of siring up a\nplay swiftly.\nIrvin Predicts\nBig Puck Year\nfor Canadiens\nBY  ROBERT  CLARKE\nCanadian Praia Staff Writer\nST. HYACINTHE, Que., Oct 18\n(CP)\u2014The walli ot the hotel\ntrembled and the cutlery In the\nkitchen itarted to dance tonight\nwheu Coach Dick Irvin, who can\ncount the optimistic hockey predictions of a life-time on the flngen of one hand, itated casually\nthat Montreal Canadiens will finish \"no wone than fourth\" in the\nNational Hockey League race thli\n\u25a0eason.\nThe. Habitant!, 38 strong, wera\njust about to lit down to lupper in\nthe hotel dining room when Irvin\nmade hli nonchalant prediction.\nThen, Just to prove that he meant\nevery word of it Irvin added: \"And\nyou can quote me on that.\"\nTo understand the full significance, one has only to realize that\nCanadiens finished a bad last in the\nLeague last season and an almost-\nas-bad leoond-lo-lait the season\nprevious. Yet Irvin, who never won\nprizes for optimism, is confident the\nclub will be battling it out with recognized power-house squads like\nBoiton Bruini, New York Rangen,\nand Toronto Maple Leafi,\nNever in the last ilx seasons hive\nthe Flying Frenchmen had to work\nso hard as under their new coach.\nGone li the \"hang-dog\" attitude in\nthe dressing room, noticeable last\nleason. The coach meani business\nand the playen mean business, ai\nthey demonitrated in a tough hour-\nand-a-half of drill at St. Hyacinthe\narena thli afternoon.\nDUTTON SIGNS\nALL AMERICANS\nPORT ARTHUR, Oct. 18 (CP).-\nManager Mervyn (Red) Dutton tonight announced he had signed all\nof hla regular New York Americans\nfor the 1940-41 leason. The full\nteam coniliti of ll veterani and five\nrookies\u2014greateit number of freshmen Dutton has ever carried In\none seaion.\nLast to sign contracts were Buzz\nBoll, Hooley Smith and Johnny Sor-\nrell, all veterani.\nThe amateura who made the\nJump are Forward! Bill Benson,\nWinnipeg; Bus Wycherley, Saskatoon; Squee Allen, North Battle-\nford, Saik.; Jack (Peanuts)\nO'Flaherty, Toronto, and Defence-\nman Pete Slobodzian of Regina.\nItalian Newspaper\nBuilding Wrecked\nby Two Explosions\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 18 (API-\nTwo explosions, which police said\napparently were caused by \"Incendiary bombs\", early today wrecked a\ntwo-storey brick building where\n\u25a0everal Italian language newspapers\nare printed.\nFire quickly followed the blasts'.\nThe flames iwept through the itruc-\ntura into an adjoining plant\nThe blasts, ibout 3:30 a. m\u201e shattered Wtndowi of homei near '.he\npubliihlng building, at 803 Waihington Avenue, In the heart of a populous Italian diitrlct.\nThe building Is owned by the Me-\ntropolli Printing Company. Amonj\nForte, owner of the plant, laid he\ncould give no Immediate explanation Of the blasts.\nAmong the newspapers printed\nin the plant la the dally (1 Popolo\nItaliano. '   i\nPheasant Shooting\nin Nelson-Creston\nCloses for Season\nPheasant shooting seaion In tho\nNelson-Creston Electoral District\nclosed Friday, but will remain open\nin a section of the Grand Forki-\nGreenwood District until October\n31. In the latter area pheasants can\nonly be taken East of a line North\nand South through Eholt in the\nGrand Forks-Greenwood area.\nThe season for the Nelson-Creston District opened October 9, but\ndid not open until October 13 for\nGrand Forks-Greenwood. Bag limit\nfor both Districts was two for any\nsingle day and a total of 12 for the\nseason.\nChicago Rookies\nPlease Thompson\nHIBBING, Minn., Oct 18 (AP) -\nThe Rookies of Chicago Black\nHawks impressed Manager Paul\nThompson with their speed in two\nlong and strenuous workouts today.\nThompion was particularly pleased with the form ihown by his new\nforwardi, Johmton, Paul Plat-, McKay and Herbert who were working on a good coating of ice tor the\ntint time lince the drills began.\nThe Hawki also got their flnt\nlook at Johnny Marlucci, football\nand hockey itar at the University of\nMinnesota, who reported late yesterday.\nB. C. STUDENTS AWARDED\nMUSIC FELLOWSHIPS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (CP)- The\nKuillard Graduate School of Music\nhas awarded 81 fellowships carrying\nfree tuition in the graduate school,\nit was announced here ..today bj\nOscar Wagner, Dean.\nJanet Pltton,- Vancouver, formerly the pupil of Mrs. W. D. Patton,\nVancouver, has been awarded a fellowship in piano.\nMary Josephine Walton, Victoria,\nhas been awarded a fellowship in\nvoice. She was formerly the pupil\nof Mme. Eva Balrd, Victoria.\nLONDON (CP)-Prlnclpal Al-\nslstant Secretary J, Innes, of the\nPost Office 'Administration Department, has been promoted to Director of P.O. Telecommunication., in\nplace of F. W. Phillips, retired.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nAssociated Press Sports Writer\nN.TW YORK, Oct 18 (AP).-\nYour old pal, Lefty Gomez of the\nYanki, la trying to peddle a radio\nserial called \"Lefty Gomez' Hot\nStove League\" and lt looki like it\nmay grab off a iponsor. . . . The\nprice tag on Kirby Hlgbe of the\nPhils Is exactly $150,000 of which\nat least $100,000 must be cash on\nthe line. , . . Max Baer breezed In\ntoday to start rehearsals for his\nforthcoming Broadway ahow.\nTODAY'S QUESS STAR:\nC. E. McBride, Kansas City Star:\n\"I can't pick long shots for myself,\nio why ihould I be doing it tor\nyou. . . But I give you Alabama ai\nthe team moit likely to upset the\ndope: .. Tennessee Is a 1-4 favorite\nout here.\"\nCreston Basketball\nLeague Hopes to\nRevive Interest\nCRESTON, B. C. - Wedneiday\nnight's turnout tor the reorganization of the Commercial Basketball\nLeague waa disappointing, and in\nview of a lack at enthusiasm it wu\nagreed to adjourn until early In\nDecember. The preient officen will\ncarry oh and an effort will be\nmade to arouse some ot the old-\ntime Interest In the hoop sport, and\nreorganize the league fof three\nmonthi' play at the fint of the year.\nFor 1940 the hoop tana will have\nopportunity to aee the game as\nplayed in the East Kootenay High\nSchool League, f6r which a ichedule\nof games for five teami haa been\ndrafted and will provide contests\nuntil late In November.\nThe meeting wai In charge of\nLeague Preiident Syd Rogers, and\nthe balance sheet on 1939-40 operation! wu presented by Secretary-\nTreasurer L. Gillis, and ihowed a\ncash balance ot $8 after all expenses had been met Gate receipts\nwere the lowest ever, and it wai\nlargely due to playen' fees that\nthe league waa able to complete the\nsesson.\nA survey ot tha league iltua-\ntlon dlacloiei the possibility of three\nteami In the men's section and\nplenty ot material tor tour pee wee\nsquads, but two qulntettea la the\nbeit that can be looked for In the\nladles' division.\nAt the December meeting, If no\nleague appean feasible, lt Is likely\na senior men'i and ladies' teami\nwill be got together and a series\not fortnightly games arranged with\noutside\nOld-Timers and\nFirst Kootenay\nTake Odd Games\nTRAD., B. C, Oct 18\u2014Oldi-meri\nand Kootenay Hotel No. l^wera\nwinnen In the Men'i City Ten Phi\nBowling League, Thunday night,\ndefeating the Union Hotel and Canada Paint by odd game scores.\nN.  Mc Arthur   of  the  Old timers\ngained the high ilngle of 202, and\nhigh three game, count of 924.\nResults were:\nKOOTENAY NO. 1\nD. Orlando 110 14. 136\u2014 388\n\"M. Parleotta 144 167 182\u2014 443\nV. Paollnl  IM 169 189-500\nB, Porcellato ... 178 181 134\u2014 493\nTotala   564 649 -9.-1824\nCANADA PAINT\nti. Cadden 138 119 184- 4U\nJ. Moran .149 144 173\u2014476\nD. Gun  107 142 108\u2014 357\nF. Latham _ 116 163 179\u2014 457\nSpot    49 49 49- 147\nTotals  568 617 663\u20141648\nUNION HOTEL\nP. Chriitante .... 166 159 149\u2014 473\nW. Weitweod .... 170 165 159\u2014 494\nP. Hamen 133 184 122\u2014 389\nF. Vellutinl  181 138 138- 467\nSpot    37 37 37- 111\nTotali  .-. 696 633 605\u20141634\nOLDTIMERS\nN. McArthur .... 160 180 202\u2014 842\nJ. Marki  115 159 140- 414\nF. Woodall  _ 187 167 173- 507\nB. Forreit _ 163 153 158- 464\nTotals  565  859  673\u20141927\nTORONTO LEAFS\nDEVELOP ACHES\nBy DICK SHERIDAN\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nST. CATHABINES, Out, Oct 18\n(CP)\u2014Achei and pains were a\ndime a dozen at the Toronto Leafs\nhockey training camp today u\nbruliei incurred in the. first two\ndays of scrimmaging came to the\nsurface.\nJack Church, with a shoulder Injury, was the chief casualty. The\nrugged defenceman suffered the\nhurt in the morning but turned up\nfor the afternoon seision after taking a treatment\nBlink Bellinger and Dick Kowcinak, Kirkland Lake atari last\nyear, needed attention alio. Bellinger'! leg muiclei knotted on him\nwhile Kowcinak itralned hla back\nmuscles.\nBob Copp, the tint caiualty, returned to action after being on the\naidelines with an Injured thumb.\nBuddy Hellyer and Nick Knott\nfrom Oihawa'i Memorial Cup\nchampioni, paired with Normie\nMann and were pitted against the\nace linei ot Syl Appi, Bob David\nion, Gordle Drillon and Red Her-\nron, Sweeney Schrlner and Lex\nChliholm. The rookiei combination clicked like clock work.\nU\u00abS. Diving Start\nThii trio of fair divers, ihown aa they did a triple dive during\na workout at Lot Angeles, are the front-rankers ot American women\ndiving atari\/ Left to right they are, Ruth Nurmi, Margaret Rein-\nhold and Marjorie Geatring. >   ^\nBreeders' Futurity\nFeatures Fait Stars\nLEXINGTON, Ky, Oct 18 (AP)\n\u2014 Our Booto, Belmont futurity\nwinner, and Whirlaway, Calumet\nFarm star, were named today with\nthree other ipeedy two-year-olds\nto race again tor the Juvenile crown\nIn the $5000 added Breeden' futurity at Keeneland race coune tomorrow.\nTheir opposition In the alx-fur-\nlong dash will be Mn. Isabel Dodge\nSloan's Mettlesome, which finished\ntilth in the Belmont .uturlty; Hal\nPrice Headley'i Alaklng, and Blue\nPair, owned by Kentucky'i C. C.\nVan Meter, John Wiggini and\nThomai B Cromwell.\nPeden-Cyr Team\nTakes Bike Lead\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (Saturday)-\n(CP).\u2014The favored Torchy Peden-\nRene Cyr team moved back Into the\nleadership in Montreal'! six-day\nbike race early today, as the riders\nmoved into the final day of pedalling.\nArchie Bollaert and Charley\nBergna, leaden throughout most of\nthe day, fell back to last place when\nthey were penalized lor breaking\nthe rules. They had a lap taken\naway from them for not chasing\nin a Jam during the evening, and\nthen lost five more when they dropped out of the race as a protest for\nthe flnt penalty, and then changed\ntheir minds.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Tha Canadian Preaa\nFrank Boucher, famoui Ottawa-\nborn former centreman, waa appointed assistant manager and coach\nof the New York Rangen of the\nNational Hockey League a year ago\ntoday. The appointment waa announced by Manager Lester Patrick.\nEastern Game to\nFeature Football\nBy GAYLE TALBOT\nAssociated Press Sporti Writer\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (AP)-Un-\nbeaten Tennessee and untested Alabama, from all appearance! two of\nthe moat powerful eleveni In .United Statei college football, open the\nSoutheastern Conference race at\nBirmingham tomorrow in a battle\nthat headlines the day'i far-flung\nfootball ichedule.\nTennessee, coming back itrongly\nafter iti rout by Southern California in the last Rose Bowl classic,\nenters the game with a victory over\nDuke to its earlyieaion credit\nAlabama disclosed little of Its true\nstrength In romping over three preliminary foes but the team is reputed to be loaded.\nMississippi, another member of\nthe Southeastern group, facet a\nitrong non-conference foe In Du-\nquesne, while the thrice beaten\nTulane team meets the Rice Owli\nof the Southwest Conference. Georgia Tech and Vanderbilt meet at\nAtlanta.\nStanford has been made a alight\nfavorite over Waihington State in\nthe Wset Coast's leading tussle at\nPullman. U.S.S. playi Oregon, California meets U.C.L.A. and Washington engages Oregon State to\nround out the Far West ilate.\nConn Power Too\nMuck lor McCoy\n\\T0\\\nMSI SEVEN\nJock Tomson Goes\nto Seattle Puckers\nSEATTLE, Oct. 18 (API-Manager Danny Cox telegraphed Seattle\nHockey official! today he had obtained Jack Tomson, 180-pound\nwing man, from the Springfield club\not the International League.\nOther newcomen obtained to date\nare Paul Lord, Herman Gruhn and\nHerble Burron. Seattle practice begins next Tuesday.\n(ILLY CONN\nBOSTON, Oct 18 (AP)-Light-\nheavyweight champion Billy Conn,\nfrom Plttiburgh, cut loose with all\nof hii power tonight to gain a unan\n,imous decision over Al McCoy, the\nveteran Boston heavyweight, in a\n10-round non-title' bout at Boston\nGarden,\nConn spent the last half ot the\nbruising bout trying tor a knock\nout, but the only damage hli opponent -Uttered was a half-dosed\nleft eye.\nConn, who started as a top-heavy\nfavorite, displayed a marked weakness for McCoy'! left Jab, which\nthe latter worked ,to good effect\nduring the early rounds, and then\nalmost ignored that potent weapon.\nBoth itarted ilowly and. when\nthey came out for the fifth round,\nthe action wai even. Conn then\nstarted to close in and slug with\nboth hands, however, a change ot\ntactics that rendered McCoy's light\nleft harmless. The Bostonian tried\na few lefti and wai punlihed ic\nverely about the body every time\nhe mined, which wai often.\nConn, who haa yet to suffer a let-\nback from a heavyweight scaled\n172*4 to MeCoy'i 161*..\nThe bout drew a crowd ot 15,523\nwhich contributed a gross gate ot\n$213,00.\nFURNITUR. COMPANY\nThe House oi Furniture Valuei\nEagle Break    Nelson    Phoni 115\n1940 Roundup\nof Bargains\nBALTIMORE, Md. (CP) - The\nMartin 167-F bomber planei being\nconstructed here for the British\nGovernment mount eight gum, four\not which ere in the wings and\noperated by the pilot\nUnion Hotel and\nFamous take the\nGirls Five-Pins\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct 18 - Tha\nUnion Hotel beat the Sanitary\nCleaners, and the Famoui took the\nbeat two out ot three games trom\nWoolworthi In the Girli' Five Pin\nloop Thunday night Helen Rothery, with 616 pointa, won the high.\nest total pointa of the evening's\ngames.\nThe scores follow;\nSANITARY CLEANERS\nF. Corneliui ..... 116   123   169- 406\nS. Jon\u00abl  177   161   125- 461\nK. Graham    163   112   196- 491\nA., Melbourne .. 115   156   133-404\nA. Blaine    77   166  179-852\nTotali  688 708 742-2118\nUNION HOTEL\nE. Erlckaon I 105 116 85- 398\nK. Almqulit .... 176 178 61- 431\nT. Harrlion ....... 215 169 115- 499\nA. Almqulst  179 143' 166- 468\nJ. Gall  114 96 100- 810\nSpot       28 28 26\u2014  84\nTotala  769 780 \u25a0\"\u25a0fr-flOS.\nWO0LW0RTH8.\nD. Edward!    97 166' 181- JM\nH. Rothery 160 276 161- 616\nE. Wilson   137 141 160- 428\nA. Spowart 112 130 161- 408\nR. Miller Ill 109 128- 348\nTotala  _ 617 820 751-2188\nFAMOUS\nM. Ford  118 186 201- 499\nL. Muirhead 178 142 105- 425\nD. Swinburne ..   62 150 145\u2014 377\nE. Hall   135 187 99- 871\nE. Bradley  156 137 111- 424\nSpot  -    56 56 58\u2014 168\nTotals  719   828  717-4464\nHockey Training\nCamp Holes\nBy The Canadian Pren\nThe \"Joe College\" of the Toronto -\nMaple Leaf Club is Defenceman\nWally Stanowiki, who specialize! in\nbow.tiei and wide-brim hati. The\nWinnipeg boy claims hli ties thil\nyear are an inch wider and two\nSnchei longer than usual, and those\nhats, why they're almost as wide aa\nthe goal-mouth.\nOne Of the best conditioned playen with Toronto Maple Leafi at\nthla early date in the training period\nat St Catharine!, Ont, U Reg\nHamilton. He and Jack Church\nform one ot the best defence palra\nIn the Toronto camp.\nJoin the army and put on weight\nDefenceman Cliff Goupllle of tha\nMontreal Canadiem says he worked\nhimself down to a snappy 185 poundi\ndoing heavy chores on his farm during the Summer. Then he ipent\nthree weeki in training with tha\nN. P. A. M. at Faroham, Que, reporting Immediately afterwards to\nCanadiens' camp at St Hyacinthe,\nQue. Goupllle ate so heartily at\ncamp that he put on an extra IS\npounds.\nL. P. SULLIVAN HEADS\nCRANBROOK BOY SCOUTS\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 18 (CP)\n\u2014L. P. Sullivan was re-elected aa\nPresident when the Cranbrook Boy\nScout Assoclgtion*-an adult organization which eaten to Boy Scout\ninterest!\u2014 held ita annual meeting\nhere. Rev. Callum Thompion waa\nchosen Vice-President and Sam McLeary was elected Secrelary-Treii-\nurer.\nThia advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boird or by the Government of British Columbia\n* S-\n PAGE   EIGHT\nR. A. F. Smashes Nazi\nAttempt at Invasion\nLONDON, Oet. 18 (CP). - The\nbomb-smashing of a German attempt at sea-borne Invasion of\nEngland on Sept 11, with Nail\ntroopi forced by the Royil Air\nForce to disembark before their\n\u2022hlpi could ihove Off from the\nInvulon cent, wu officially reported today.\nA brief mention by the Air Min-\njatey Newe Service and ilight elaboration by authoritative aviation\neourcei and the Pren Asioclatlon,\nbelatedly filled out announcement!\n, at the time'to present a picture of\na terrific assault on the German-\nheld invasion ports in which several German ship* were sunk or\ndamaged.\nFull credit for nipping the budding Invasion and throwing Hitler-\ntimetable completely out of kilter\n\u25a0went to R-A.F. bombers for \"the\nferocity of their attack.\"\nPieced together as well as possible considering official reticence,\nthe itory of the invasion-that-might-\nhave-been showed that the elements\nconspired with Britain's defenders. The R.A.F. struck about the\nsame time that a gale in the English Cruvinel scattered parts ot\nGerman'! potentian invasion fleet.\nA full moon, the brightest of the\nyear, had shone on the invasion\ncoast \u2014 an ally of the embarking\nGermani but also an aid to the\nwatchful R.A.F.\n, \"This combined with other factors, such as high* tide and the\nfact that on the preceding day there\nwas an exceptionally heavy air attack in which 185 German machines\nwere destroyed seems to indicate\nbeyond a doubt that Sept. 18 was\nchosen as Der Tag cf Hitler,\" said\nthe Press Association.\nThe Press Association's thesis was\nthat the tremendohs aerial pounding of Britain on Sept. 15 \u2014 incidentally marked by a reported\npersonal reconnaissance of London\nby Goering \u2014 was intended to dismay and soften the British defences.\n3ut, authoritative quarters indicated, the R.A.F. was in full touch\nwith the situation.\n\"After German troops were loaded onto their ships preparatory to\nbraving the Channel crossing, R. A.\nF. bombers sped over and made\ntheir departure impossible by the\nferocity of their attack,\" these\nquarters declared.\nOn Sept. 16 the R. A. F. communique told of a direct hit on a German warship, severe damage to\nan oil tanker and supply ship and\nthe sinking of three supply ships1\nand damage to others.\nAlso attacked that day were concentrations cf war supplies, barges\nand shipping at Hamburg, Wilhelm-\nshaven, Antwerp, Flushing, Ostend.\n. Dunkerque, Calais. Boulogne and\nLe Havre \u2014 virtually the entire invasion coast of Germany and the\noccupied Low Countries and France.\nWhether the pounding of Germany's invasion facilities was believed sufficient to cause the Nasis\nto give up their long-range plan,\nthe aviation sources would not say.\nThe sucinct account of the British success was given official status by the Air Ministry News Service which first reported it.\nThe Service quoted \"a reliable\nneutral source\" as saying that \"on\nSept. 18 many German troops were\nembarked but were later taken off\nthe ships . . . because of the lus-\ntained offensive by the Royal Air\nForce.\"\nIt wai the flnt official acknowledgment that Nazi troopi had\ntried to crou the Chinnel.\nIf the Germmi ittempted Invulon on dates other than Sept.\n16, the aviation sources laid, the\nfact It did not develop \"can only\nbe attributed to reputed performances of a similar nature by\nthe R.A.F.\"\nThese quarters kept close silence\non the details of the Sept. 16 engagement. Their silence left only\nthe R-A.F. communique for that day\nto hint the place or places of the\nasserted German defeat\nThe R.A.F. communique of Sept.\n16 and Air Ministry News Service\nannouncement of the succeeding\nday told in detail of a big-scale assault and of a reconnaissance to\nascertain dispositions of \"the German sea forces\" the day after \"harassing* bombing action\" and a Channel gale which had scattered the\nNazis' surface craft.\nThe two British announcements,\nIn lieu of a more detailed account,\noffer the best picture of the attack credited with smashing the\ninvasion attempt\nDuring the night of Sept. 15-16\nthe R.A.F. bombed Berlin and \"further heavy attacks were made on\nconcentrations of war supplies,\nbarges and shipping at tha dockyards and porta of Hamburg, Wil-\nhelmshaven, Antwerp, Flushing. Ostend. Dunkerque, Calais and Boulogne,\" the communique aald!\n\"Other forces of R.A.F. bomberi\nattacked distribution centre! at\nHamm, Osnabruck, Soest and Kre-\nteld. Good yards at Hamburg and\nthe railway junction at Rlieine were\nalio bombs*-.\n\"A direct hit wai made on an\nenemy warship off Terschelllng (an\nisland off the Netherlands coaat)\nAn oil tanker and a supply ship In\nthe Elbe Estuary (Northwest Germany) wera severely damaged\n\"Aircraft of the Coaital Command\nsank an enemy aupply ship off\nIjmuieen (The Netherlandi). Con-\nvoyi off the Dutch coait were' alio\nattacked. Two supply ships were\nsunk and otheri severely damaged.\n\"Attacki were alio made on the\nshipping and docks at Le Havre\nwhere ships alongside the quayi\nand the quayi themselves were repeatedly hit .\n\"From these extensive and iuc-\ncessful operation! all our aircraft\nreturned safely.\"\nStarting   at   dawn   on   Sept   17\nMOR MOR MOR MOB MOR MO\nBritish reconnalasance planes combed the German-held coastline of\nthe Channel area for signs of any\nGerman invasion fleet, the Air Ministry News Service said.\n\"Search*! on a large scale had\nbeen organized overnight to ascertain sudden changes in the dispositions of the German sea forces,\"\nthe News Service went on.\n\"These change! were imposed on\nthe enemy after a day of harassing bombing action and In consequence of the strong Westerly wind\nwhich swept the Channel through\nthe night\n\"It blew with gale force In exposed places where the German\nsurface craft had been last lighted.\nMost of the Channel wai very\nrough and, as wai expected, the\nenemy ships and small craft had\nscattered arid scurried to seek shelter.\n\"Their positioni were quickly located today by the Coastal Command . . . Today the Coastal Command aircraft escorted many large\nconvoyi  of merchant vessels and\nthere was not a single enemy attempt at molestation by air or sea.\"\nThe day of the now reported\nInvasion smashing wu marked by\na   German   announcement   that\nGoering personally scouted  London the night of Sept 15 at the\ncontroli of a Junken pline ind\nby, \u2022   new  Ger.man   shelling   of\nDover which Injured 11 penoni.\nSeveral ferioni arriving in New\nYork from Europe recently have\ntold of seeihg bodies.of German\nsoldiers washed ashore at French\nChannel ports.\nThere hive been repeated reporti than Invasions had been attempted.\nA highly-placed Government.\nofficial of a- conquered nation,\nwho aiked that hli Identity be\nwithheld, said when ha arrived\nSept. 20 that German officen had\ntold him practice mmoeuvrei for\ninvulon had coit tha Germans\n10,000 men.\nNine dayi earlier, the New York\nSun said letteri had been received\nin New York by French residents\nIndicating that the Nazis alreadjr\nhad atterrmted to land forces in\nEngland.    \"\nThese letteri, the Sun laid, related disastrous results tor the German thrust but gave few details.\nSome said that the German invading fleet put out from St. Malo\nwith the West coast of England as\nthe goal.\nOne letter, said by the newspaper to have been written by a\nFrench official acting In liaison\nwith the German army of occupation, said that German officen were\nhappy in Pari! and that they especially hoped they would \"not be\nchosen to participate in another disastrous attempt to disembark troops\nin England.\"\nOn Sept 20, Capt Carl Ter Weele,\n37, a former Netherlands Artillery\nCaptain, told on hii arrival from\nEurope that Nazi troopi under\ntraining for invaiion were rebelling.\nColumns of mutineer! were marched back to labor camps, their hands\ntrussed behind their backs, he said.\nBERLIN, Oct 18 (AP).\u2014\"Nothing\nis known here\" was the comment of\nNazi spokesmen today when uked\nabout Londor.'s announcement that\na Nazi attempt to invade Britain\nhad been thwarted September 16.\nRegister Change\nal Nearest P.O.\nOTTAWA. Oct. 18 (CP) - A\nchange in the method of notifying\nthe Dominion statistician of loss of a\nnational registration card or change\nof postal address or martial status\nwas announced today by the Department ol National War Services.\nStarting Nov. 1, Canadians desiring to -place information before\nthe Dominion statistician will do\nso through their nearest post office rather than by direct correspondence with the Dominion statistician as has been the rule.\nStarting Nov. 1 any persons losing\na registration cerlficate ihould fill\nout forms available in the nearest\npost dffice and mail them to the\nDominion statistician.\nIn case if marriage, partlei concerned will visit the post office and\ncomplete a form available there.\nFor change of address persons\nwill fill in forms, available at post\noffices and mail them to the Dominion statistciar\nRules and Rumors\nCauses Decrease of\nTourists to Canada\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP).-Pail-\nport regulation! laid down by the\nUnited Statei and widespread circulation of false rumors concerning\nconditions in Canada caused a decrease of 2,143,865 In tourist travel'\nfrom the United States to Canada in\nthe first eight months this year,\ncompared to the aame period a year\nago, a Dominion Travel Bureau official said today.\nIn the eight month! ended August 31, 9,825,240 people entered Cmada from the United States in comparison with 11,968,905 in the lame\nperiod last year.\na\nLIFE OF PARLIAMENT\nEXTENDED ONE YEAR\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP).-The life\nof the present Parliament will be\nextended for one year under the\ntorms of a bill announced today. The\nmeasure wa\u00bb Introduced in the\nHouse of Commons yesterday by\nPrime Minister Churchill.\ni'nHiiifiiiiil\n.   ii iimjji Munpijini^ppi-p^wTOipuun puimmimi iijiinuwwiDwiipi\n-i\u2014-NILION DAILY NEWS. NILION. B, C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. tt. 1M0-\u2014\u2014\nProof of the Profits Is in Answering These Advertise*\nSrlaon Bailu JJnaa\n<; Telephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon. 716-Y\n.   Rossland: F. E. Piper\nClassified Advertising Rates\nHe par line per insertion.\n44c per line per week (6 consec-\nutive insertions tor coil ot 4)\n?143 per line a month (28 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion) '\nBox numben lie extra. Thii\ncoven any number af times.\nLEQAL NOTICES\n18c per line, tint Insertion and\n140 each subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10-t, FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW  RATES\nNon-commercial  Sltuatloni\nWanted  for 28c for any  required number of lines for ilx\nday\u00bb,  payable  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  '$, .05\nBy carrier, per week      20\nBy carrier, per year    13X10\nBy Math-\nOne month .  \u201e, $ .75\n,, ,       401\nOne year \t\n.     _   8.00\nAbove rates apply In Canada,\nUnited State-, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three monthi $4.00,\nilx monthi $8.00. one year $15.00.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertiiementi under this classification to assist\npeople leeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 day!)\ncoven any number of required\nlinei. Payable in advance\nWOULD LIKE ODD JOBS\naround a house such as garden\nwork and so on as money Is badly\nneeded for a Bick penon. Please\nphone or write to Peter W. Cher-\nkashoff, care of F. J. Marsden,\nTaghum, B. C.\nYOUNG LADY-DESIRES WORK\nIn nice home, no imall children;\nor work in itore. Thoroughly experienced in both. Particular! lo\nBox 44, Kelowna, B. C.\nSTORE KEEPER, WAREHOUSE\"-\nman, Supply Clerk, Timekeeper,\nexperienced, with reference!\nwants work Box 668, Fernie, B. C.\nNazi Bombs Kill\n6,954 in September\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP) - The\nMinistry of Home Security announced that during the month of\nSeptember 6954 civilians were killed\nand 10,615 seriously injured in air\nraids on the United Kingdom.\nThe Ministry said classified returns, so far as received, were divided thui:'\n1920 men killed, 4178 seriously\nInjured.\n2210 women killed, 3629 seriously\nInjured.\n694 children under 16 killed, 675\nseriously injured.\nOf the remaining 2130 killed, 1157\nwere males and 973 were females.\nOf the remaining 2133 seriously injured, 1231 were males and 902 females.\nPrime Minister Churphill announced in the House of Commons\nOct 8 that British civilian casualties\nfrom the start of the war up to\nOct. 5 were 8500 killed and 13,000\ninjured.\nLess Damaging\nThan Expected\nLONDON. Oct. r (CP)-German\nbombs are causing less damage\nand lesi loss of life than might be\nexpected, according to a Home Office leaflet on emergency protection in factories.\n\"It ii generally imagined that In\nthe caie of a direct hit the building and ita ocupanta are doomed,\"\nthe leaflet itated. \"Thli ii not lup-\nported by the evidence obtained\nfrom a study of recent air raid damage.\n\"There have been many cases of\nlight 50-kilogram (about 22\npounds) bombs detonating on the\nthin corrugated roofing of single-\nstory factory buildings with little\ndamage other than to the roof covering, and with very ilight casualties.\n\"Similar bombs detonating on\nthe floor of the shop removed the\nfloor covering over a wide area\nbut did surprisingly little damage\nto machines. One heavy bomb, 250\nkg (about 110. pounds), exploding\non the floor, caused only local damage to machines and personnel.\n\"There is very little danger of\nletloui structural damage from a\nnear mill. Very heavy bombs, 500\nkg (about 220 pounds), falling within 33 feet of a workshop with corrugated iron walli did no more\nthan itrip the iheeting from the\niteelwork.\"\nThe leaflet urged that water,\nelectricity and gas services be duplicated to prevent complete stoppage) of work by a bomb.\nGERMANS LEVY FINES.\nFOR SABOTACE ACTS\nBRUSSEL (Via Berlin) . Oct. 18\n(AP). \u2014 A fine Of 3.000,000 francs\n(approximately $100,000), payable\nNovember 1, has been levied by\nGerman authorities on the Dlson\nDiitrlct in Liege Province for alleged act! pf labotage, reportedly\non the Increase throughout Belgium\nwith the return of many refugee!\nfrom France.\nWar prisoners In the Dison area\nwho were released aeVeral weeks\nago were ordered re-arrested after\nfive German military telephones\nwere found oat\nI\n ....-       .:. ..,._-.__._^.\nBIRTHS\nTURIK \u2014 To Mr. and Mra. John\nTurik, Trail, at Trail-Tadanac Hospital, October 12, a'ion.\nMASON - To Mr. and Mri. Gil-\nbert Mason, Fruitvale, at Trail-Tad-\nanac Hospital October 15, a daughter.\nTATTREE \u2014 TO Mr. and Mri.\nGeorge C. Tattree of the Second Relief Mine, Erie, at 101 Union Street,\nNelion, October 17, a ion.\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\nceived for a temporary poll tlon\nof part time assistant Librarian,\nas from November 18 at the Nelion.\nMunicipal Library. Apply up to\nthe 28th instant, with recommendations to Fred L. Irwin,\nSecretory, City Hall,\nNOV. FIRST: EXPERIENCED-GEN-\neral farmhand on poultry farm\nMilker. Steady work, $25. board\nand cabin. State age, nationality\nand experience. Write to Box\n4770 Daily Newi.\nWANTED - RELIABLE MAN FOR\ndairy, muit be good milker. Apply Fruitvale Dairy, Fruitvale.\nWANTED AT ONCE, A SHINGLE\n. picker, phone Chas. O. Rodgers,\nLtd., Creiton, B. C.\t\nGOOD PROPOSITION FOR FIRST\ndaai bodyman. Ph. 1, Trail, B. C.\nSCHOOL8\nNOW IS THE TIME TO GET A\nGovernment Job as' Clerk, Postman, Cuitomi Clerk, Steno., etc.\nFour Dominion-wide exami held\nilnce war began. Free Booklet.\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest in Canada. No Agents.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Dally News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\n\u25a0 owner.        \t\nFOUND - ORANGE AND BLACK\nkitten. 417 Victoria St Suite 3.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES, ETC.\nLAYING LEGHORN PULLETS,\nMarch hatched $1.50 ea. May 2nd\nhatched* $1.20 each. Lota oyer 30\nreduced. Two yr. hern SOc each.\nP. W. Green, R. R. 1, Nelson.\nA. B. C. FOX AND MINK FOOD IN\n18 oz. and 52 oz. tins; N tt P Mink\nMeal; Salinax; Swift'! Laymore\nMeat Scraps; Alfalfa Meal. The\nBrackman-Ker Milling Co. Ltd.\nWANTED, LIVE MARTEN. QUOTh\nquallty and price to Box 804.\nVancouver. B. C.\nCOW, JUST FRESHENED, PRICE\n$50. Bentley, Riverside .Ranch,\nPerry Siding.\t\nSELLING 20 EWE LAMBS. APPLY\nW. G. Bateman, Moyie, B. C.\nOTTAWA TRAINING\nCENTRE NEEDS MEN\nOTTAWA, Oct 18 (CP)-Ottawa's\nCivilian Training Centre had one\noutstanding need today\u2014more men.\nThe Centre was formed early this\nweek to give courses on civilian\nwartime preparedness. Courses are\ngiven in first aid, physical training,\nand- air raid precautions work, but\nso far enrolment is 90 per cent women.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n\u25a035 INTERNATIONAL TRUCK THE\npride of International's fleet ot\nsturdy trucka. 114 tone, built to\nhaul all types of loads. A truck\nthit can make good money lor\nyou. Only ISM. Our reputation\nii your guarantee. Nelion\nTransfer Company Ltd.\n1938 DODGE SEDAN DELIVER*,\nthoroughly reconditioned, new\nsmart paint jobi new Goodyear\ntires. Dodge dependability $595 00\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd. Opp. Pott\nOffice and Hume Hotel.\nGOOD CONDITION REPOSSESS-\n-ed car. \"3- Chevrolet Standard 4,-'\ndoor sedan,, built in trunk, new\npaint, good rubber, licensed. Snap\nfor $595. Interior Motor Finance\nCorp Ltd., 654 Ward St., Nelson\nFor\nord SI ton,. A-l condition. 1935\nChevrolet 2 ton, A-l .condition.\nCentral ', Truck & Equipment\nCo.; Nelson, B. C.\nREBUILT GENERATORS AND\nitarteri.. Nelson Auto, Wrecking\nand Garage,\t\n1930 CHEV. COACH. IN G05D\nshape. Nelson Auto Wrecking and\nGarage, Phone 946.\n3 USED CARS FOR SALE. CITY\nAuto Wreckers.\t\n1940 PONTIAC DELUXE SEDAN,\nipcl price. Sky Chief Auto Service.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES. FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge itock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St-   i\nVancouver. B. C.\nROSS 303. GOOD CONDITION $20.\nMossberg .22 repeater, as new, $12.\nRemington repeater, good ahape,\n$12. H. R. Kitto.\nEXTRA SPECIAL. QUI!' BHACH\nOil Burning Range complete with\n$54.50 Imperial unit $25 cash\nMcKay k Stretton.\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, 8. C\nAGENTS FOR ANGLO-CANADTAT,\nWire Ropes. Stevenson. Machine\nShop, Vernon St Nelion. Ph. 98.\nFOR SALE 2 BRICK LINED HEAT-\nen, excellent condition, 819\nJosephine Street Phone 860X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 110 VOLT D. C.\ngenerator, will run 8 lights, nearly\nnew, $25. Porteous, Queens Bay.\nSIMPLEX IRONER FOR BALANCE\nowing, new guarantee. Call or\nPh. 91, Beatty Waiher Store\nUSED COAL RANGE IN EXCEL-\nlent condition. Phone 260.\nMcLARY GARRY RANGE. 601\nLatimer Street or Phone 455R.\nFOR SALE, SET OF WORLD BKS.\nEncyclopedia, A-l cond. Ph. 667L3.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, etc\nWIRE HAIRED FOX TERRIES\npuppies. Finest registered stock.\nMales. H. Harding, 903 Josephine\nStreet, Nelson. Phone 110.\nFLYING BOAT RESCUES\nMEN IN MID-ATLANTIC\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP).-One of\nBritain's great Sunderland flying\nboats was reported today by the Air\nMinistry news service to have\nalighted on the Atlantic and rescued 21 surviyors of an unidentified torpedoed ship.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel Opp. C. P. R, Depot.\nSEE \"CONVO*K AT THE CIVIC\nTheatre tonight.\nCHESS PAYS~C\"ASH\" FOR USED\ntools, trunks, men's' suits and\nshoes. 924 Vernon Street\nTHE.PERFECf'triRISTUAS GlfT\n' A portrait ol yourself. Special offer at McGregors, Phone 224.\nSALVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear, furniture to spare please Ph. us 618L\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph 258 lor daily dlvry\nYOU CAN RUN A HOME Kindergarten with our help. Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Win-\nnipeg, Manitoba.    \u25a0\nHATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED\nCleaning,, pressing, repairing and\nalterations. H. J. Wilton, Josephine\nStreet, Phone 107,      _   '\nTEA FOR ENGLAND - PACKED,\nready for mailing, Murchie's de-\nlicious cup quality. Orient Tea Co..\n720 Homer St., Vancouver, B. C.\nHAIRQOOlSS\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwig! and toupees\u2014fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue\nHanson Company, P. O. Box 601\nVancouver, B. C.\nLOOK YOUR BEST FOR THE\nFall dances and parties, visit\nMilady's Beauty Parlors at 577\nBaker Street for hair styling at its\nbeat Phone 244 for appointments.\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY. VU--\nor, pep. Try Vitex 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablet! $2.00. Guaranteed, 24\np e n o n a 1 \"Drug Sundriea\" $1.00\nFree price list of drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES. SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price Hat.\nPrinceton Distributor!, P. O. Box\n61, Princeton, B. C.\nSUPERFLUOUS HAIR SAFELY,\nprivately removed, Face, arms,\nlega; treatment $2 postpaid, plain\nwrapper. Guaranteed to kill roots\nwith one application. Canadian\nChemistry Co.,, Wilkie, Sask.\nFOR RHEUMATIC AND ARTHRI-\ntic pains. It's proven. It'a endorsed. What it has done for others it.can do for you. \"It works\nwhile you sleep!\"\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nAt Mann, Rutherford Company,\nNelson, and other drug stores,\nWIDOW DRAWING PENSION OR\nother income but feeling lonely\nshould be greatly comforted if shi!\nwill communicate with elderly\ngentleman subjected to same conditions with a view of making one\nhousehold out of both for the\neconomy of each. Address Bok 12,\nNelson Daily News.\t\nMEN OF 30, 40, 501 VIM, PEP,\nVigor subnormal? Try Ostrex tablets. Contain tonics, stimulants.\noyiter elements, aida to normal\npep. If not delighted with result! first package, maker refund! low price. Call, write Mann\nRutherford Company, and all\nother good drug stores.\nANY -SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed and printed\n25o. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 6 b\/ 7 enlargement, free .with each film developed. Include 5c for1 postage and\npacking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie.\nSaskatchewan:\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nfor children 6 and 4, with family'\nBox 4735 Daily News.\nPOR and WANTED TO RENT\nBUENA VISTA APTS. 1023 STAN-\nley St New, modern 4 room apti\nBest view in city Frigidaire and\nelectric ranges. Separate front and\nrear entrance! Phone 542R.\nFOR RENT - 419 MAPLE R-C-R\n', \u2014Modern, two bedrooms cement\nbasement furnace, $32.50 month\nApply W. W. Ferguson, Ph. 662.\nFOR RENT \u2014\u2022 112 HIGH STREET.\nfive, room house, also 706 Silica St,\nlix room house, each $20 monthly\nPhone 662.\nFOR RENT,\"2 FURrHS.fl-6 R06-B\n$10 a month, light. Apply to 507\nRailway Street.\nWANTED TO RENT - FURN. OR\npartly furn. mod. house. Centrally\nlocated. Box 4783 Daily Newi.\n2 RM. FURN. HOUSE NEAR LAKE-\nlide Park. $14 month. Apply to\nMn. Hall, 818 Gordon Road,     ,\nCOTTAGE TO RENT ALL YEAR\nround. North Shore at ferry; H. H\nDill, Phone 558R2.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG., MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suitei.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOMED HOUSE.\nD Maglio, Phone 808L.'\t\nFOR   RENT - GARAGt   AfPL-\n318 First Street.\nFOR RENT-5 ROOM BUNGALOW\nwith bath, on 3rd St Phone 859R.\nFOR RENT - ByNGALQW $25 A\nmonth. C. W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT -\nPhone 778X.\n5 ROOM HOUSE.\nTO RENT - UP TO DATE BUNGA-\nlow, garage. 705 Stanley Street\n6 RM. HOUSE. FUIWTCErNEXR\nschools; Widdowson Assay Office.\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOM HOUSE,\npartly furn. Apply 820 Victoria St.\nFOR RENT FURN. 2 RM. APT. $10\nmonth'., Light. 507 Railway Street\nSee KERR APARTMENTS First\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nGOOD RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY\nis a tangible asset Buy a home-\nsite on Fairview properties. Nel-\nson's best residential lots. All city\nservices.. Easiest of terms. R. W\nDawson, sole agent Hipperson\nBlock, Phone 197.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non eaiy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908. Dent of Natural\nResources-C- P R., Calgary, Alta\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson: Terms. Johnstone Estate,\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR  SALE - TWO LOTS. AP-\nply 318, First Street\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nFUNDS FOR 1st MORTGAGE, NEL-\nson or Trail property. Yorkshire\nPlan, repay monthly. Let us re-\n- finance your mortgage and save\nyou money. C. W. Appleyard.\nWE RESPECTFULLY. SOLICIT\nyour Fire and Car Insurance, highest standing companies. H. E\nDill, Ward Street.\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS\nAND REPAIRS\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, ALL\nkinds, strings, fittings; repairs.\nWebb's, 806 Baker St., Nelson,\nnext Scandinavian Church.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSER\nPRODUCTS,   FERTILIZER\nALL KINDS FRUIT TREES, 1 Y\n50c, 2 yrs. 75c, roses, floweri\nshrubs, grapes, 3 tor $1. Eug*\nHammerer, Taghum, B. C.\nORDER NOW FOR FALL PLAS\ntng, Fruit and Ornamental Tr\nand Shrubs, Privet Hedge-\nsmall fruits at reasonable pric\nT. Royion, Nelaon, B. C.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOl\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP META\nor iron. Any quantity. Top pri<\nSaid. Active Trading Compai\n16 Powell St., Vancouver, B.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTOR\nASSAYERS and MINE AQENTI\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCl\nAnalyst. 305 Josephine St- Nela\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAI\nB. C, Provincial Assayer, Chem\nIndividual representative (or ih\npen at Trail Smelter.\nA. 3. BUIE. INI.EPENI.tOT\nrepresentative. Full time ati\ntlon    given   shippers'   inten\nBox 54, Trail, B. C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. mcmillan, d. c, netji\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulloch I\nDR.  WILBERT BROCK, D.\n542 Baker Street Phone 969.\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETIERE, MBS,\nJohnstone, 105 Kerr Apta. Ph, (\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. 0. BOX 1\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and\nglneer. Phone \"Beaver FaJIa.\"\nR. W. HAGGEN. MINING de CIV\nEngineer; B. C. Land Survey\nRossland and Grand Forki, B.\nINSURANCE AND REAL E8TA\nFRANK A. STUART, BUSINH\nReal Estate, Insurance Servi\nPh. 980,577 Baker St., Nelion.\nC.   D.   BLACKWOOD  AGENCll\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phon*\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURAN*\nReal Estate. Phone 139.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Eitete,\"\nsurance, Rental!. Next Hlppen\nHardware, Baker St Phone 187\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine ahop, acetylene and elect\nwelding,  motor  rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 924 Vernon\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVM ,\nForest Lawn Memorial Park. (\nprice list trom Bronze Memorl\nLtd., Box 726 Vancouver, B. C\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I.\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Ci\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd St '\nCalgary. Advice free, confident\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTO!\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker\nSECOND HAND STORES\nTO -LEASE  FURNISHED HOTEL  WE  BUY,  SELL  k  EXCHAN'\nrooms. Apply Box 4762 Daily News     furniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 6\nWOW'. I SOT THE WRONG ENP OF TH6 CI6A1T\nOH-HE'S ASLEEP.\nDO VOU THINK\nHE'D BE VER\/\nANGRY IF WE\nWOKE HIM UP-\nOH! MY-YES -HE'D BE\nCROSS ASA BEAR-I CANY\nUNDERSTAND HIM LATELY-\nI'M ACTUALLY AFRAID\nOP HIM-WE HAD BETTER\ntET OUT OP HIS (?OOM\nEFORE HE DOES WAKE\nWELL-I 6UESS WE'LL\nJUST HAVE TO\nW1NDOV\/-SHOP-\nWEU.-I\n60TOUT\nOPTUAT-\nf\n \u00bbRW^!ip'^B\u00bbm.iJiJl!lllP.... J WUHMPHPIIMlllIii \u00bbPM-HWU-inwpi,ILiaiwi\nt**!*******\n-NEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON   B. C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 19. 1940-\nPAOf    MIN'\nazi Ships Scurry\nAfter Skirmish\nIn Channel Area\n\u25a0ONDON, Oct 18 (CP). - A'\n.(ht brush\" between Britiih and\nman warships occurred yester-\nr in the English Channel, Britiah\nDrees aaid today. .\nlerman warships, they said, fled\nm the encounter toward Brest\nil British planes chasing them,\nftspite the proximity to the Nazi-\nd French shore, they declared\nire wai no counter-attack from\nrman bombers \"although Britiih\nrships expected to be attacked.\"\n-hey thus dismissed a Nail High\nmmand claim that a Britiah na-\nI force broke off an engagement\nthe mouth of the Bristol Chan-\nI, on the English Wait cout, after\nI Britiih ihip wai hit by a tor-\ndo.\nBritiih authoritiei called the retted torpedo hit \"Imagination,\"\nJ emphasized that the Germans\u2014\nt tbe Britiih\u2014ran and that the\ntlon wai \"nowhere near the spot\njgtioned by the Germans.\"\nSiere wai no comment on the\nI communique in official quart-\nInterpret Naval\nChanges as More\nIntensive Warfare\nLOUDON, Oct IB (CP). - Great\nBritain made two changes in the\nRoyal Navy Command today which\nthe London Press regarded ai highly important\n- Vlce-Admlral John C. Tovey, a\ndestroyer expert, and hero oi Jut-\nSIR HENRY\npISH CRUISER\nft BY TORPEDO\nJB-LIN, Oct 18 (AP). - The\n\u25a0rman High Command issued the\nBowing communique Friday:\n(\"German destroyers advanced to\na battle at the exit of the Bristol\njanncl with a British cruiser unit\nStarted by destroyers. Our  delayers attacked the mperior ene-\nw and scored SLtorpedo hit on one\njemy warship. The foe thereupon\nnke off the fight. Planei chased\nI enemy. The German destroyers\nturned undamaged to their base.\n\"Light fighting units renewed\neir assault on the Britiih capital\nd militarily important objectives\nsre destroyed in East London, at a\nII station, Extord, Victoria docka,\nWell aa sections ot the city North\nthe Thames,\n\"Off Le Havre, an army battery\n\u25a0ad on an enemy U-boat There-\nion dive bombera attacked the\n\u2022t with bombi. Strong detonations\nsre heard and boat wreckage was\nought to the surface io it Is as-\nrued the submarine was destroy-\nL\n{A similar claim wu advanced\n\u25a0 tbe Germani yeiterday).\n\"Marine artillery tire forced back\nlemy speedboats which tried to\n\u00a7ieh the Flanders cout Con-\nin Dover harbor came under\nIva tire ot our marine ar-\nling of British harbors was\nIn stride. British planes did\nIt enter Reich territory yesterday.\nm yesterday's air fights tho enemy\n|it 17 planes. Seven German planet\n\"e missing.\"\ne\u2122~* Britiih  Air Ministry  put\nn losses over Britain ye'iter-\nfour planei. Three British\niei were lost)\nriSH VESSELS\nLOST RECENTLY\niKEW YORK, Oct. 18 (CP) - The\n^eighter Oringemoor, 5,775 tons,\npld three other British vessels have\nten lost recently in the war at\nla, maritime circlet said today. \u2022\n-Th\u00ab Orangemoor, which traded\nBetween Great' Britain and Africa\nBefore the war, was sunk by a submarine 1 nthe English Channel. The\nlassenger ship Queen of the Chan-\nTel, 1,162 tons; the freighter Mavis,\nJ35 tons, and the trawler River\nDyde, 278 tons, were alio listed as\nland, was appointed to the supreme\ncommand of the Home Fleet. The\nappointment generally wai Interpreted as a forerunner of Intensified lea warfare. The new job cor-\nresponds to that held ny the late\nEarl Beatty in the first Great War.\nRear Admiral Sir Henry H. Harwood, hero of the Battle of the\nRiver Platte, was promoted to the\npost of Lord Commissioner of the\nAdmiralty and Assistant Chief of\nNaval Staff.\nVlce-Admiral Tovey lucceedi the\nAdmiral of the Fleet Sir Charles\nM. Forbei while Sir Henry succeeds\nVice-Admiral Sir Geoffrey Blake,\nselected for \"a ipecial duty\" at the\nAdmiralty.\nWall SI. Slocks\nStage Comeback\nIn late Trade\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (AP).-The\nitock market bumped Into conald-\nerable profit taking' today but managed partially to regain ita balance\nafter a forenoon ttumble. Transfers\nwere around 600,000 shares.\nBelated purchasing ot the nils\nput several ot theie behind moderate plus signs, Aircraft! experienced a brief upward flurry and\nterm Implements tilted higher on a\nlight turnover. A number ot specialty displayed strength.\nThe morning set-back wu attributed by brokers mainly to the\ncustomary cubing in on tha eve\nof a weekend alter three successive\nrising sessions.\nActive Canadian issues steadied\nGaineri Included Hiram Wilker,\nDiitlllen Seagram and Lake Shore\nMines, Canada 4i, among bonds,\nrested unchanged.'\nGov't. Wakhlng\nPacific Coast\n30  induitrlali\n20 ralla _\n15 utilitiei _\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh   Low\n',, |    13250   131M\n  \u201e\u201e.    ,    2J.8*    2f.1t\n\u2014\u2014i     2147    HIT\nCloae\n2223\nChange\nup .40\nHP .\u00bb\nup     .01\nQUOTATIONS  ON  WALL  STREET\nAm Smalt k Kef\nAmer Tela -\nAmer.Tob .\nAnaconda -\t\n$endix Aviation\nBeth Steal\nCerro da Pasco\nChrysler _____\nCon Gaa N T\nC Wright ptd\nDupont  _\u2014\nEastman Kodak \u2014\nGen Elec \u2014\u2014...\nGen Foods -\nGen Moton\nGoodrich \u2014-\nGranby..\nHowe Sound\nHudson Motors\nInter Nickel\nInter Tel k Tel.\nKenn Copper.\nMont Ward _..\nNash Moton\nN V Central __\u2014\nPackard Moton _\nPenn K R \u2014\u2014\u2014-\nPullman ' 1-\nRadio Corp\t\nShell Union\t\nStan Oil of N J ...\nStudebaker _ ...\nTeaai Corp -,.,.... ,\nUnion Carbide _...-\nUnion Pic  .._.\nU'S Rubber\t\nU S Steel _\t\nWest Bee  __\nWeit Union -. -.\nWool worth ..,-._,..\u2014\nYellow Truck' \u2014.\nStudy Plan to Reduce\nCanadian Whisky\nPrice for Americans\nTORONTO, Oct. 18 (CP)-Actlng\nPremier Harry Nixon laid today\nconsideration had been given by the\nOntario Liquor Control Board to a\nplan whereby United Statei tourists\nmight be attracted to Ontario by a\nlower price on Governrnent-aold\nwhiikey. Such a icheme would\nhave the dual effect of increasing\ntourist business and the flow of American exchange.\nMr. Nixon said that to hii knowledge details had not been worked\nout, but it was proposed between\nO. L. C. B. and Dominion authorities\nto eliminate customs and excise taxes -on import whiiky to American\ncustomers. This would reduce the\nprice of best grades from around\n*6 to \u00bb2.\nA danger, however, which would\n_>ve to be guarded agalnit, wai the\nre-sale ol the whiiky in this country. Unless some way were arranged\nthat the tourist did not obtain ihe\nliquor until he reached home he\nwould have a \"fine chance of becoming a bootlegger.\"\n(Officials of the National Revenue\nDeparlment et Ottawa suggested\nthe liquor might be kept in bond.)\nIRITAIN TO USE NEW\n!>- TYPE OF PLANLSOON\nLONDON, Oct 18 (AP). - The\ntrman Air Force's tactics of uting\nIt fighter-bombers against Great\nJritain   \"will have  the  effect  ot\nlurrying into action our latest types\nIt planes,\"  the Press Association\n|ald today.\t\n\"Aa with the fighter forcei, so\n\u25a01th the bombers. To increase the\n-\/eight ot our offensive it la now\n[me to send cut new squadrons of\nmr heavy bombers accumulated\nluring recent months. These planei\njre very lecret.\"\nAIRMAN HONORED\nLONDON, Oct. IB (CP.-Cable)-\nBergeant Francis Bevin-S m i t h,\nTloy-' Air Force, Middle Eait Com-\nJnind, was awarded the Distin-\n|ulihed Flying Medal today. He ll\nnative of Kingston, Jamaica.\nNazis Report British\nShip Badly Damaged\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (AP) - The\nGerman Radio, in a broadcut heard\nhere, said today it waa reported\nfrom Aigeclras, Spain, that the Brit-\nIsh battleship Barham had been\ntaken into drydock at Gibraltar apparently suffering heavy damage.\nLONDON, Oct 18 (CP)-The Admiralty said today that to comment\non a German radio report from Al-\ngeciras, Spain, that the battleship\nBarham was \"apparently heavily\ndamaged and drydocked at Gibraltar\" would be \"playing the German game,\" since they \"obviously\nonly put out these reports to find\nout where the ship is.\"\nCANTERBURY BOMBER\nBLOWN TO PIECES\nCANTERBURY, England, Oct\n18 (CP).-One of the German aircraft which yesterdsy attacked\nthe 700-year-old Canterbury deanery was blown to pieces In the\nair when machine-gun bullets\nfrom a Royal Air Force fighter\nhit lis bomb rack, it waa disclosed\ntoday.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP) - Government ts watching the Pacific\nsituation cloiely, Navy Mlniiter\nMacdonald told a Press conference\ntoday.        \u2022\nHe said not material changes In\nWest coast naval establishments are\ncontemplated at the present time.\nFuture developments there will be\ninfluenced on a considerable degree\nby recommendations of the Canadian-American Joint Defence Board\nwhich will pay a further visit to\nthe Pacific coait next month.\nMr. Macdonald told reporter! the\ncaptured German, freighter Weier\nhai been turned over to the merchant marine and renamed the\n\"Vancouve- Island.\"\n\"Ai I itated in the Weit,\" h\u00ab remarked, \"the nation muit get ai\nmuch itrength as possible ahd dls\npose of lt to the best advantage as\nindicated from time to time. The\nsituation on the\" Pacific coaat may\nbe different a week from now or a\nmonth irom now but at the moment\nwe are -not contemplating any important change in our dlspoiitloni.\"\nThe aix former United Statei destroyen obtained by the Canadian\nNavy are still In Canadian waten.\nThe Minister announced Cmdr.\nHarry Kingsley of Vancouver had\nbeen appointed commanding officer ot the St. Croix, one ot theie\nilx destroyers. He lucceedi Lieut.\nM. A. Medland of Toronto, who hai\nbeen relieved of the command he\nassumed a few weeks ago owing\nto ill health.\nMr. Macdonald said the navy now\nhad 1377 officers and 11,069 ratings on active service. During the\npast .three months the average\nweekly increase of officers and men\ndratted to active service wai 30.\nWithin the next year and a half\nthe Minister said the navy would\nincrease its personnel by 10,000.\nStocks* Show Even\nTrend at Montreal\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (CP)-The\nitock market continued to display\nan even trend today,\nShawlnlgan Power eaied a imall\namount while Brazilian waa slightly better.\nSt. Lawrence Paper pfd advanced a point while St Lawrence Corporation tacked on a imall fraction.\nNational Steel Car and Asbestos\neased slightly.. Imperial OU chalk-\ned up a small gain.\nTORONTO\nmines:\nAldermae Copper \t\nAmm Gold \u2014i\u2014-\u2014\nAngOo-Huronlan   _..\t\nArntfleld Gold\u2014\u2014\u2014\nAstoria Rouyn Minei\t\nAunor Gold ....__-_\u2014\u2014\nBagamac Rouyn ' \u25a0\u25a0\nBankfield Gold.._\t\nBaie Metals Min .-,,, i~\nBeattie Gold Mlnea ,\t\nBIdgood Kirk ..._\t\nBig Miss .\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\nI Pioneer Oold ...____-__\nI Premier Oold.\n.17\n.01'\/.\n1.95\n-06\n.oiy*\n1.00\n03%\nBobjo Mines \u2014\nBralorne Mines\nBuf Ankerite .\nBunker Hill Ex-\nCan Malartic\nCariboo Gold Quart. .\nCaitle-Treth  -.\nCentral Patricia\t\nChromium M & S \u2014\nCoait Copper \u2014__-.\nConiaurum Mines ....\nCom M k S ._\u2014.\nDome Mlnea \u2014_\u2014.\nDorval-Siicoe   \t\nEatt Malartic\t\nEldorado Gold ______\nFal Nickel ..._\t\nFederal Kirkland \u2014\nFrancoeur Gold -.._....\nGillies Lake ...\nGod'i Lake Gold _\nGold Belt\t\nCrandoro Mlnea \u2014\nGunnar Gold  \u2014\nHard Rock Gold _-\nHarker Gold\t\nHollinger\nHowey Gold\nHudion Bay M de S\nInt Nickel \t\nJ M Com .\nJaek Waite\t\nJacola Gold _\t\nKerr-Addllon   \t\nKirkland Lake\t\nLake Shore Minei\t\nLeitch Gold ....\t\nLebel Oro Minei\t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nMacassa Minei._.  ... __.\nMacLeod Cocklhutt \t\nMadsen Red Lake Gold.\nMandy \u2014 \t\nMclntyre-Porcuplne _.\nMcKen-ie Red Lake ...\nMcVlttie Graham\t\nMcWatten Gold __\nMin Corp  \t\nMoneta Porcupine\t\nMorrli-Kirkland ______\nNlpiislng Min - \u2014\nNoranda  \t\nNormetal   -\u25a0\nO'Brien Gold - \u2014.-\nOmega Gold\n.10\n.02\n.14*.\n.04\n.081.\n10.25\n4.40\n.01*.\n.55\n2.20\n.60\n2.03\n.15\n.80\n1.44\n38.25\n23.50\n.01%\n3.40\n.32\n2.75\n.04*.\nfi\n.36\n23\n01%\n.41\n.98\n.04'..\n13.00\n20\n24.25\n37.00\n.01\nM\n.02\n3.05\n1.00\n^2.00\n.55\n\u2022   OlVt\n2.25\n3.53\n2.50\n.  .49%\n.07\n.   52.75\n1.12\n.      .05\n.      .31\n.75\n.60'..\n.      .03\n.    1.00\n.   67.00\n.      .26\n.      SO\n.18'.')\nPowell Rouyn Gold-\nPreston East Dome\nReno Oold Mines .\nRoche Long Lac ....\nSan Antonio Oold\nShawkey Oold -\u2014\nSheep Creek Oold.\nSherrltt Gordon .....\nSiscoe Oold \u2014\u2014-\nSladen Malartic .....\nSt Anthony _.___\nSudbury Basin _....\nSullivan Com ._\u2014,\nSylvanite -\nTeck-Hughes Oold\nToburn Oold Minei\nTowagmac _.'-__....\nVenture!\nWaite Amulet ..-_._\nWright Hargreavei.\nYmir Yankee Olrl.\nOILS\nAjax\nBrit Amer \u2014~~\nChim Jteiearch\nImperial ..............\nInter Pete \u2014,.\nTexas Can\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power \u2014\nBell Tele.. ._.\nBrazilian T L & P .\nBrewen k Dist .....\nBrew Corp.\nB C Power A .............\nB C Power B .........\u2014\nBuild Prod\t\nCan Bread ....................\nCan Car k Foundry\nCan Cement\t\nCan Dredge.\nCan Malting .\nCan pac Rly :...___\nCan Ind Alcohol _\nCom Bakeries\t\nCoimoi ....\t\nDom Bridge ..\nDom Tar k Chem _\nDiit Seagrami ........\nFanny Farmer \u2014\nFord ot Can A \t\nOen Steel Wares ...\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGypsum L & A ......\nHam Bridge\t\nHiram Walker .\t\nImperial Tobacco\nKelvlnator\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\n2.50\nSO\n1.06\n131\n.14%\n.01'\/.\n2.25\n.02\n.95\n.80\n.60\n.53\n.OO\".\n1.13\n.60\n2.50\nS.15\n1.40\n.13\n2.73\n3.73\ni30\nOlVt\n.11\n18.00\n.18\n10.60\n15.00\n1.30\nThree Months Net\nIs $90,898.42 for\nSheepCreekGold\nAn estimated net profit ot $90.-\n898.42, or 4 8(0 centa a share, for\nthe Uvea months of the fiscal year\nending August 11, 1840, la reported\nby Sheep Creek Gold Mlnea, Ltd.,\nSheep Creek.\nIrom 14,535 dry torn milled In\nthis period bullion production waa\nvalllld at $267,225.67. Miscellaneous\nincome amounted to $2189.36, making total income $269,415.23.\nCoat of production, including mining, milling, currant development,\nmarketing and refining and general\nadministration, waa $86,264.50. Provision (or Income and excess profits\ntax wu $68,162.20.\nThe estimated profit before depletion and depreciation waa $113.-\n893.42, or 4 8-10 centa a share, for\nThe Company allowed $17,732.70\nfor depletion and $4300 (or depreciation, and then deducted $1157.41 fdr\noutside exploration and prospecting\nin arriving at the estimated net\nprofit tar three months ot-$80,898.42.\nPamour Porcupine   1.32\nPaymaiter Com  _._-     20V,\nPend OreUle _ 1.75\nPerron Gold  ,  1.78\nPickle Crow Gold   2.99\nMaple Leaf Milling\nMassey Harris __..._\nMont Power\t\nMoore Corp\nNat Steel Car\nPage Horsey __\nPower Corp ._\nPressed Metali.\nSteel of Can .\nStandard Paving _\n.65\n155 V.\n5H\n4V)\nt%\n26\n1%\n16%\n1.85\n714\n5%\n18\n85\n5\n1.85\n14Vi\n25V.\n27\n5\n24',.\n26*.\n17\ntv,\n73\n3*.\n5\n39%\nis*.\n8\n26*.\n25\n3%\n3%\n29\n!3Vt\nm\n106\n7*4\n8%\n74\n.60\nMETAL   MARK.TS\nLONDON, Oct 18 (AP). - Bar\nsilver 13 7-16d, unchanged. (Equivalent 42.50 cents). Bar gold 168s,\nunchanged.\nTin quiet; ipot, \u00a3258 10s bid,\n\u00a3259 asked; future, \u00a3259 15s bid,\n\u00a3260 uked.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Bar gold tn London wu unchanged at $37.64' an\nounce In Canadian fundi; 168a In\nBritish representing the Bank ot\nEngland's buying price. The fixed\nI $35 Waihington price amounted to\ni $38.50 In Canadian.\nSpot; Copper, electrolytic, 12.75;\nUn 82.73; lead 6.50; line 5.65;\nantimony 15.15.\nSilver futurei cloied unchmged\ntodiy. Bid: Oct 87.75.\nNEW YORK \u2014 Copper iteady.\nelectrolytic ipot Conn Valley, 12.00:\nexport F. A. S. N. Y. 10.75.\nTin easier, ipot and nearby\n51.62-4; forward 50.37*..\nLead iteady, spot, New York 5.50-\n55; Eut St Loull 5.35.\nZinc iteady, Eait St Louis ipot\nand forward 7.25.\nBar illver 34%, unchanged.\nGranby Has $93,000\nIncrease in Profit\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (CP). - Increase ot $93,248 wu reported today by Granby Consolidated Min*\ning. Smelting k Power Company In\nestimated profit of $504,250 for the\ntint nine monthi of the year, compared with $411,002 in tha corresponding period of 1939.\nNew York Export\nReport Falls to\nLltt'Peg Wheat\nWINNtPEO, Oct. 18 (CP)-New\nYork reports today aald approximately 160,000 bushels of Canadian\nwheat had been sold for export\nto Ireland, but thia business was\nnot reflected in the wheat pit at\nthe Winnipeg Grain Exchange.\nPricei cloied Vt lower to unchanged with the October future at 70Vi\ncenta a bushel, December at 71%\nand May at 75%.\nMills purchased a moderate\namount ot No. 2 Northern In the\ncuh wheat market but buslneu in\nother gradei wu restricted to odd\ncan by light offerings.\nGeneral buying appeared in oats\nin the coarse grain pit, aome of\nwhich wu believed to h?ve made\nagainst sales at Chicago There waa\nfa,r buying demand tor barley and\npricei advanced one cent during\nthe session. Approximately 100,000\nbuiheli of malting bafley were reported sold to United States maltsters.\nSupport from crusheri lent flax\npricei up more than one cent. Rye\ntrade wu routine.\n'No Conference\nBetween Russia\nand Axis Powers'\nMOSCOW, Oct 18 (AP).-Soviet\nRussia disavowed tonight any Intention ot having a conference here\nwith the Axia Powera-Germany,\nItaly and Japan,-\nA communique distributed by tha\nofficial newi agency, Tass, said:\n\"The Japanese newspaper Hochi\nof October 6 reporti that the 'Government of the U.S.S.R. hat decided to call in Moicow a conference of lour powera\u2014The U.S.SJL,\nJapan, Germany and Italy.' Tass ia\nauthorized to state that thla report\ndoei not correspond to reality\"\nSeveral Golds\nPost New Highs\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP) .-Trading on Toronto Exchange today waa\nthe heaviest in six weeki, Several\ngolds posted new highs for tha year.\nGalm of 10 to 15 or more were\nnetted by Aunor, Lamaque, Kerr-\nAddison and Toburn and galm of t\nto 7 by Macassa, Teck Hughes,\nWright-Hargreaves, Central Patricia, Cariboo, Upper Canada, Eut\nMalartic and Senator, Preiton\nposted a new high for the year.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Oct 18 (CP)-Graln\ncloie:\nWHEAT:\nOpen High Low\nOct. .._.. 70*4 T0% 70%\nDec. .__ 71% 71*4 71*\nMay  __  76       76       75%\nMinimum prices:  Oct 70;\n71*; May 75%.\nOATS:\nClose\n70 V,\n71%\n75%\nDec.\n33%\n30%\n30%\n39\n36%\n39\nOct _\nDae. _\nMay  ..\nBARLEY:\nOct.  ....\nDec.  \u2014\nMay .._\nFLAX:\nOct  ...... 117%\nDec.  ..... 115*\nMiy -._ 118%\nRYE:\nOct  _  44\nDec.  \u2014  45*\nMay     48%\n34\n31%\n31\n40%\n39\n39%\n118%\n116*\n120\n33%\n30*\n30%\n39\n38%\n39\n117%\n115%\n119%\n33%\n30%\n30%\n39%\n39\n39%\n117*\n115%\n119%\nSeamen Eligible\ntor Honor Awards\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP) - Memben of the Royal Canadian Navy\nserving in home waten ire eligible\nfor awardi of honor by King George\nJuit u are their comrades serving\nin Canadian ships In United Kingdom waters In cooperation with the\nRoyal Navy, Navy Minliter Macdonald told a Press conference today.\nShould a Canadian eailor In Canadian vaters perform a service\nmeriting an award of honor, the\nrecommendation would come trom\nhia immediate superior officer and\ngo to the Chief ot the Naval Staff\nat Ottawa and on to the Navy Minliter. If the Mlniiter agreed with\nhe recommendation he would tend\nit to the Britiih Admiralty.\nRAILS AND UTILITIES\nLEAD AT NEW YORK\nNEW YOBK, Oct. 18 (AP).-Ralli\nand utllltiei led the bond market\nhigher today. Fractional galm wers\nin the majority at noon.\nLatin American Government dollar loam gained.\n' RUSTPROOF ING\nSCREWS, NAILS, BOLTS, Etc.\nAt Low Coat\nLC.M. Electroplating\nUurlta Bldg. 704 Nelson Ave.\nt\u00bb-H-\u00bba-i-i\u00bb\u00bba 11 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0!*'\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666-\u2022\u25a0\nGranville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 616\n189 Baker St.     Nelaon, B. &\n\u25a0\u2666oa\u00ab* i iaa\u00bbi i\u00bb*HUH-t-M\n44\n45%\n48V.\nFor Sale\nAll the Machine Shop and\nFoundry equipment of ths\nNelson Iron Works, Including Lathes, all sizes, Planer,\nDrill Press Shear, Plate\nRolls, Punch, Hydraulic\nPress, Crane, Power Hacksaw, and general machine\nshop and foundry Equipment. Prices and _^^lars\non application.    ^^^%..\nHARRY P. LAZIER,\n370 Baker St., Phone 1075.\nGold Belt Up 3, Reno\nUp 2 at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18 (CP). -\nTrading picked up on Vancouver\nStock Exchange today but prices\nwere Irregular with galm in the\nmajority. Transactions totalled 20,-\n575 shares.\nPrivateer Oold Jumped 3 to 85\nwhile stocks closing above Thursday'! final bids included, GoM Belt,\nup 3 to 34 and Reno, up 2 to 15. Pioneer dropped 10 from the previous\nclosing bid to 2.15 and Fremir eased\nito\u00bbe.\nCalgary k Edmonton Oil gained\n1 at 1.31 while Home dipped 3 to\n2.02.\nMONTREAL\nIndustrials:\n^Ita Pac Grain  \t\nHtaoe Brew of Can\n1%\n___ _ \u201e    .     15\nUtbunt'p -PA     12%\n.    38%\n.   102\n,     18%\n.    30%\n.   123\n.     10\n3%\n. 15%\n8%\n. 40\n. 20%\n.      0%\nuidlan Bronie\nKan Bronie Pfd\t\n_ Car k Fdy Pfd .\nBan Celanese \t\n__. Celanese Pfd ...\n!an North Power ..\nCan  Steamship\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nSouth Can Power \t\nSteel of Can Pfd \t\nWestern Groceri \t\nBANKS:\nCommerce   \t\nDominion   - -\t\nImperial\nKan Steamihip Pfd \t\nBockihutt plow \t\nIon Min k Smelting ....\niminlon Coal Pfd ....\njm Steel k Coal B ..\nlominion Textile   88\n'ryden Paper  i  5%\nfoundation C of C  11\nletlneau Power  11\nlattneau Power Pld  89\nftltd Charlei  4\n[award Smith Piper  14\nSnilth Paper Pfd  100\niparlal Oil   ...      10%\niter Petroleum    15%\niter Niekal ot Can   37%\nte of the Woodi  17%\n jll  Frontenic      5%\natlonal Braw Ltd   \u00bb%\national Brew Pfd   38\nllvie Flour pew  25\nfice. Broi    14\nuebec  Powlrf    13%\nhawnlgin W*P ,.._.  17\nI Lawrence Corp     3\nI Lawrence Corp PM  17\n.*_.-. .-.-\u25a0   .>r|   .........\n11\n74\n50\n154\n185\n195\nMontreal   _ _   185\nNova Scotia -   277\nRoyil ...:..    155\nToronto      228\nCURB:\nAbiUhi 6 Pfd  _.     5\nBathunt P k P B \u201e      3%\nBeauharnois Corp ...'.      5%\nBritish American Oil      19\nB. C. Packers \t\nCan Industries B ..\nCm Marconi :...\nCan Vickera _\nCons Paper Corp\nonnacona Paper A\nDonnacona Paper B\nFairchild  Aircraft\nFraser Co Ltd \t\ninter Utilities A\nChicago Dull\nCHICAGO, OcL 18 (AP)- The\nwheit market drifted around with a\n\"what's the use\" air todiy.\nPrices eased downward fractionally In a listless session. Trade wai\not narrow proportions. The market\nrallied weakly one. to exactly yesterday'! doling level!, but loon relapsed.\nAt the cloie.'wheat wai %\u25a0% cent\nbelow yesterday's finish, December\n85%-%, Miy 84%-%; corn was %-\n% down, December 80%-%: May\n81%, oats *.-% off, and lard 3-7\ncents down.\n12%\n2%\n1\n3%\n4%\n5%\n5%\n3V.\n12%\n   8%\nInter Utllltiei B    20\nLake Sulphite          1%\nMcColl Frontenae Pfd _    98\nMitchell  Robt       9%\nPower Corp Pfd     98\nROy.llte OU       22\nUnited Diit of Can    .70\nWalker Good k W     40%\nWalker Good Pfd     19\nEconomic Index 104.9\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP). - The\nDominion Bureju of Statistics today\nreported Ita economic index for the\nweek ended Oct. 12 waa 104.9 compared with 109.3 the previoui week\nand 101.1 in the same week last\nyear.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP).-Spol:\nButter. Que. 28-21%; Que. regarded\n28V.A. Eggs, Eastern A large 42-43:\nA medium 40-41.\nButter futurei: Nov. 21-28%; Dec.\n28%-%: Jan. 28%-%.\nJapanese Bonds\nUn Aqain at London\nLONDON, Oct 18 (AP).-Brlt-\nIsh Government bonda loit % point\ntoday.\nHeavy manufacturing and provision stocki tended upward. Electric equipment and aome communication Issuei ihowed imall losses.\nRalli advanced aa much u %.\nA few gain! spotted the Kaffir\ngroup. Coppers were slightly lower.\nIn the foreign bond market Japanese obligations rose sharply again,\ngaini extending to 2 pointi.\nCARLOADINGS UP\nOTTAWA, OcL 16 (OP). - The\nDominion Bureau of Statistics today reported carloadlngi In Canada\nIn the week ended Oct 12 totalled\n84,522 can compared with 83,578\nthe previous week and 60.079 in\n, the same week laat year. Tha index\n|<rose to 85.9 from 84.4 the previous\nweek and 88.1 in tha aame week\nlut year.\nLoadings In the Western division\ntotalled 23,906 can compared with\n23,163 the previoui weak and 23,209\nin the tame week last year.\nEXCHANGE MARKETS\nMONTREAL. Oet'18 (CP).-Brit-\nish and Foreign Exchange, nominal\nratei between banka only:\nArgentina, peso, .2642.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .2566.\nIndia, rupee, ,3364.\nJapan, yen, 2603.\nSweden, krone, .2650.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2576.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rata:\nAt Montreal: Pound, buying 4 43,\nsoiling 4.47; U. S. dollar buying 1.10.\ntelling 1.11.\nNEW YORK, Oct 18 (CP). - Tha\nCanadian dollar cloaed % cent lower at a discount of 13% per cant on\nthe Foreign Exchinge Mirket today.\nThe tree pound sterling dipped %\ncent to 84.63 IA Telitlo nto the United States dollar.\nArrow Active\nCALGARY, Oct. 18 (CP)-Ar-\nrow, with a gain of >% pointa and\na turnover of 6600 shares, wai the\nheaviest trader in an otherwise\nlight trade on Calgary Stock Exchange today. Transfers 9700\nlhares.\nAnglo-Canadian wu bid up 3\ncenta, Okalta 6 cents and Extension % over previous bids.\n46%    41%\n-.,       ....    48%    48%\nCASH PRICES: |\nWHEAT\u2014No. 1 Hard 70%; No. 1\n69%; No. 3 Northern 66%; No. 4\nNorthern 63%; No. 5 Wheat 60%;\nNo 6 Wheat 57%: Feed Wheat 53%;\nNo! 1 Garnet 64%; No. 2 Garnet\n64%; No. 1 Garnet 64%; No. 2\nGarnet 64%; No. 1 Amber Durum\n82%; No. 4 Special 63%; No. 5\nSpecial 60%; No. 6 Special 57%;\ntrack, bull No. 1 Northern* 70%;\nscreening., per ton 4.50.\nOATS-No  J C.W. 33%; No. Ex.\n3 C.W. 32%; No. t C.W. 81%; Ex.\n1 Feed 31%; No. 1 Feed 31; No. 2\nFeed 28%; NO. 3 Feed 27; track\n31%.\nBARLEY: ETA\nBARLEY-No. 1 Feed 39; No   2\nFeed 38%; No. 3 Feed 37%; track\n38%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C.W. 117%; No. 2\nC.W. 113%; No. 3 C.W   103%; No,\n4 C.W. 92%; track 115%\nRYE-No. 2 C.W. 44.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\n\"CALGARY, Oct 18 (CP). - Receipta: Cattle 171; no calvu; hop\n40; iheep 1092.\nCommon to medium butcher\nsteers 5-6.35.\nGood limbs 8.00.\nInsufficient salei in other claaiai\nto establish quotes.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Oct 18 (AP) .-British\nstock cloilng-, in iterllng:\nBel-cock <i Wilcox 35s 8d; Car-\nreras A \u00a34; De Been Dfd $3%; Salt\nGeduld \u00a39%; Mining Trust Is U%d;\nRhodeilan Anglo m 13s; Rio Tlnto\n\u00a37.\nBonds\u2014Btit 2% pc Consols \u00a375%;\nBrit 3%  p c Wir Loan  \u00a3102%;\nI Brit Funding 4a 1960-90 \u00a3112.\nVANCOUVER   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nKING SEES GARDINER\nLONDON. Oct 18 (CP.-Clble)-\nfhe Kin. todiy received Hon. James\nGardiner, Canadian Minister ot\nAgriculture, In audience at Buckingham Palace.\nBid       Aak\nMINE8:\nBig Missouri  \t\nBralorne - \t\nBridge Riv Con ......\nCariboo Gold     120\nDentonla _\nFairvtaw Amal \u201e\nGeorge Cop\t\nGolconda   \u2014\nGold Belt \t\nGnndvlew \t\nGrull Wlhkane\nHadley Mascot .\nHome' Gold .....\nIndian Mlnea ...\nInter Coal k Coke     .30        -\nbland Mount  82        \u2014\nRoot Bella      30        -\nMcGlUlvray       JO\nMlnto Oold       .01\nNicola MAM      .01\nPae Nickel      .07\nPend Ofellle     1.70\nPioneer   Gold   __.    2.15\nPorter Idaho _     .01%\nPremier Bordir ....      .00%\n.04%\n.08%\n9.95\n10.35\n\u2014\n.01\n2.20\n2.30\n\u2014\n.00%\n.00%\n.01\n.to\n\u2014\n.05\n.07\n33\n.25\n.15%\n.17\n.02\n.03\n.44\n.47\n\u2014\n.00%\n.01\n.01%\n.02\n.04\nDIVIDENDS\nGranby Consolidated Mining,\nSmelting k Power Comanv, 15\ncents, payable, ip Americin fundi\n(Subject to approval' by the For.\neign Exchange Control Board)\nPremier Oold    .98\n<4ua\u00aba__o - \u2014- \u25a0\u00ab%\nPWvatHt   **\nKeevee Maep \u2014 \u25a0\u00bb\nRelief ArJ ...  \u00ab%\nReno Oold _,  .H\nSally Mlnu \u201e\u2014K ~\nSalmon Gold '-_\u2014 A3\nSheep Creek   .\u00bb3\nSllbak Premier .__ r Ot\nTgyler B R   .03\nWellington    - -00%\nWeiko Mlnea.-\u2014 -\n.01%\n1.80\n02\n.01%\n.97\n.03\n.65\n.30\n.04\n.06\n.04\n.95\n.01\n.00%\nWhitewater\nYmir Yank Girl ....\noils:\nAmalgamated  -      \u2014\n\u25a0Anaconda _ \u2014     .03%\nAnglo Can  58\nCalgary Sr. Edm _    1.50\nCalmont   __     Jl%\nCommonwealth  ._     .20%\nCommoil   --      \u2014\nExtension   \t\nFireitone Pita \u2014\nFoothilli  -\nFour Star Pete \u2014\nFederated Pete\t\nHighwood Sarcee ..\nHome  \t\nMadison     \u2014\nMar Jon  _\nMcDoug Sag \t\nMercury   -..--\nMill City Pet* ...\nNat Pete \t\nMonarch Roy \u2014\nNordon Corp\t\nOkalta com \t\nPic Pate \t\n.02%\n.06\n.00%\n.04%\n.63\n1.52\n.25\nat\n.17% -\n- .05%\n02 -\n- .13\n20 -\nBARGAIN FARES\nto\nVANCOUVER, VICTORIA, NANAIMO\nGoing October 24 and 25\nFrom Nakusp and South, Procter to\nMidway, Trail to Castlegar\nRETURN FARES\nFrom; To:  Vancouver        Victoria\nProctor    $13.55       $15.55\nNelion       13.05 15.05\nTrail      12.70 14.70\nCrand Fork 10.45 12.45\n\u2022Nakusp       14.55 16.55\n\u2022\u2014Via Robion West\nFares from Arrow Lakes apply October 24 only, returning\nNovember 5.\nCorrespondingly low fares trom intermediate polnta.\nFinal Return Limit November 6\nTicket! good In day coaches only. No baggage checking privileges. No stop overs allowed. Children 5 and under 12, half fare.\nRegular train service in each direction.\nFor further Information apply to aeareat agent or write\nJ. O, Watson, City Ticket Aoei-r M2 Baker St., Nelion.\nNanaimo\nS15.05\n14.55\n14.20\n11.95\n16.05\n2.02\n.01\n.01%\n.07\nM\n.04\n.04\n.85\n.28\nPacalta\nPrairie Roy.\nRoyalite   \t\nRoyal Can .\n.pOofter\n.12\n2.05\n.02\n.01%\n.08\n.05\n.04%\n.05 Vs\nU\n.30\nMV,\nUnited \t\nVana|U -\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Est\nCoast   Brew  _\nPic Coyle' ....\nUnited Diit _\n.07\n21.00\n.08%\nm\n.03%\n1.30\n.09\n.05\n1.25\n1.31\n .70 -\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nManufacturers ot\nElephant\nBrand\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nArAmenlum Phosphate\nSulphate ot Ammonia\nProducers and Refiners ot\nTadanac\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD-ZINC\nGOLD-SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nZINC UU8T\nMERCURY\nSuperphosphates\nMonoealclum Phosphate\nAlso Sulphuric Acid and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFcrtilixer Salsa\u2014Marina Bldg.. Vsneouvar, B.C.\nMetal and'FertlllMr Sales\u2014215 St  |amea St.. Montreal\n- I, ,iiiiMMHII_^M , m^\n__\u25a0!____\n --!_._._____--_______-________----_\u2014.\u2014-\n~lippi!Pl|Ppp!i ' '\u2022'\u25a0'l\"1111\n\"\nMOI TIN\nCIVIC\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nComplete Showi at 2, 7. 9:02\nrlATINEE TODAY AT 2:00\nACTION  -   ADVINTURI\n\u2014All It takei to make a\n. grand plcturo\nPLUS-\n'Spots Before Your Eyei'\nUniversal World Newi\n. Serial \"Wild West Dayi\" at Matinee Only\nMonday: Twenty Mule Team' and 'We Who Are Young'\nm\n-NELSON DAILY NIW*. NILMN. i. C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 11. 1948-\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Camp chain,\nrubber mattresses and deck chairs\nfor use in air-raid shelters ire a\nCHRYSLER 4-DOOR  SEDAN\nGood   tires,   leather   upholstering,\nmechanically  perfect CI\"\u00bbC\n\u2022ale prlee _. 9**3\nSiieen City Motors\nMM 41    Limited    681 Josephine\nMACO CLEANERS\nWe Call and Deliver\nFree of Charge\n827 Baker        Phone 288\nI\nMOTHERS!\nHorehound Honey and\nMenthol\nTor That Tickling Cough\nat SmjytiwL\nPrescription Druggist Phone 1\nsellout In moit London shops. One\nitore turned down more thin 300\norden for mattresses and beds.\nBLANKETS\nBeautifully  Dry  Cleaned\nSingle, 75c    Double, $1.25 up\n1042   Jonella  Cleanen   1042\nCall arid Deliver\n>StttttttttS*Ott>tttttStSSStSt!)StSti\ntt\u00bbtststststttttstttttttstttttt\u00bbti\nHOOD'S\nBOSTON BROWN BREAD\nand CHEESE BREAD\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\ntstettsttttttttttottsstttttsstssstst\nREFRIGERATORS, WASHERS,\nRADIOS. RANGES\non Sale at the\nStandard Electric\n483 Josephine St Phone 838\nKinauction Rooms\nCLOSE TONIGHT\nEVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD\nNO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED\nCOME IN AND SHOP AROUND\nOPEN ALL DAY\n_HI\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 $10.00\n[GREENHIlLr-$J0.50|\nBIRCH, FIR, CEDAR and MILLWOOD\nBURNS\nLUMBER \u00a3, COAL CO.\nQiu'MtJt NEeLSc0N\nATTENTION\nBadminton Players\nOur new stock of Slazengers\nRackets and shuttlecocks\nhave arrived.\nPriced, up from .\nSlazengers    Rackets   were\nused by 100% of the Canadian Badminton Champions\nlast year.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nSTARTS WEDNESDAY\nAT 2:00 P.M.\nCjyjC\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nFresh itock\nAssorted Fruit\nJellies\n40*lb.\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug. Co..\nPHONE 81 NELSON. B. O.\nDOCTOR WARNS ACAINST\nNIW \"SHELTER PALSY\"\nLOtJDOlt, Oct 18 (CP). - Dr.\nSimon Behrman, prominent London\nspecialist, today cilled attention ot\nLondoners to the danger ol \"shelter\npalsy\" u a result' o. sleeping on\nconcrete floor..'\nIn i letter to tbe Medical Journal Dr. Behrman uld: \"During the\nput few weeks I have observed\nfiv. cases of sleep palsy of the musculospinal nerve. All cases were flrit\nobserved after sleeping on the concrete floors of shelters.\"\nCANADIAN FLYER MISSING\nST. THOMAS! Ont, Oct 18 (CP).\n\u2014Mri. I. T. Campbell uld today\n\u25a0he had received a cable from the\nBritish Under-Secretary of State for\nAir itatlnj thet her ion, PO. Norman\nK. Campbell of the Royal Air\nForce, la reported missing as a result of an air operation on Oct 17.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Mn. WUUi\nof Saskatoon li a guest ot her parenti, Mr. and Mra. G. H. Irving.\nMia Emma Hayden of Grand\nRapids, Mich., is vlilting her parenti, Mr. and Mrs. 3. E. Hayden.\nMn. E. Martin of Sirdar viiited\nMr and Mn. Jamu Cook.\nJack Connell hu returned to Kimberley after-vliltlng hii parenti, Mr\nand Mra. J. G. Connell.\nFred Payne of Cranbrook viiited\nhla eprenti, Mr. and Mn. E. W\nPayne.\nMr. and Mn. C. H. Hare viiited\nCalgary.\nMin Edith Couling of Vancouver\nli vlilting her parenti, Mr. and Mrs\nA. N. Couling.\nMr. end Mn. W. Belanger of Jeffrey villted the latter'i parent!, Mr.\nand Mn. George Johnion.\nMiss Nell Payne ot the nursing\nitaff of Gait Hspltal, Lethbridge.\nwas a guest of her parenti, Mr. and\nMri. E. W. Payne.\nMils Fanny Lewii, R. N., who\nRossland Social...\nROSSLAND, E C, Oct. 18-Misi Mn. F. MacTetla-d, Mill S. Jack-\nCurtit Triggs, whose marriage to\nrmglas Joss takes place Saturday\nwai the gueat of honor when Mri.\nH. Met-gar, Mn. K. McGuire and\nMrs. A. Hocking entertained at a\nkitchen shower Thursday evening.\nDeep toned Fall flowen decorated\nthe home of Mn. Met-gar tor the occasion. A novel method for presenting tha gifti wu the large sized\ncardboard kitchen stove which contained the many useful presents.\nActing aa aervlteun were Mrs. J.\nCarr, Mrs. R. Saundry, Mrs. W.\nHocking and Mn. K. McGuire. The\ngueiti preient were Mill May Martin, Mrs. H. Murdoch, Mri. R. Pitt,\nMin L. Irvin, Mn. K. G. McTeer,\nMrs. T. Triggs, Mrs. R. Saundry,\nMiss Myrtle Dally, Mias Miriam\nDally, Mrs. C. Blaihut, Mn. J. Carr,\nMill M. Dickinson, Miss L. Holden,\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR  RENT - PARTLY  FURN-\nished house. Phone 377X.\nFOR SALE - COFFEE SHOP,\nLunch Counter, well equipped,\ngoing concern, Good living. Ideal\nlocation, low rent, progressive.\nSteady payroll town, $690 cash\nBox 4839 Dally Newi.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nottossososessesstsmtsosss^oxstti\nhat been a guest of her father, Mr.\nFred Lewii, returned to Tnil\n\u2022Dr. and Mn. J. V. Murray and\nchildren have returned from vacation at Toronto and Detroit Mich.\nMr. and Mn. G. R. Thorpe have\nleft for Summerland, where they\nwill remain for ilx monthi, where\nMr. Thorpe will be on the staff at\nthe experimental farm at that polnl.\nMr. and Mrs. Allan J. Gilroy\nreturned after a vl-H to the for-\nmer'i parenti at Willow Point\nMr. and Mn. W. Turner nave returned to Blairmore, Alta. after \u2022'\nvisit to Dr. and Mra. W. N. Fraier.\nMrs, W. Johnion and Mn Bert\nHawkey ot Fernie are guesti ot the\nformer'i ion and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mn. Lloyd Johnion.\nPte. Raymond Bevan of the\nRocky Mountain Rangen hu returned to New Weitminiter, after\nvisiting hii parenb, Mr. and Mri.\nR. S. Bevan.\nJack Byen of Trail viiited at\nCreiton.\nLet MADAME RING  read\ncardi or cup. CLUB CAFE.\nyour\nion, Mn. O. Osing, Mri. S. E. Wilson,\nMiss V. Woodward, Mrs. S. Irvin,\nMn. H. Met-gar, Mrs. K. McGulre,\nMn. J. Harry, Miss Betty Lewis,\nMn. W. McNeil, Mlu E. Mara, Mlu\nE. Seccombe, Mn. H. Beckman, Mrs.\nB. A.' Lini, Mlu Verna Lins, Mill\nAudrey Lini, Mrs. C. Olsen, Mri.\nA. Dixon, Mn. M. Dixon, Mrs. W.\nHocking, Miss Norma Inglis, Mrs. T.\nFisher, MUi C. Eccles, Mrs. L. Lins,\nand Mrs. E. Triggs.    :\nMn. C. Blaihut wu hosteu Thunday afternoon in honor of Mlu\nCurtis Triggs, when deep-colored\ndahlias and uten were used tor\ndecoration. Mn. F. Bradley assisted in serving refreshments. Tha invited guesti Included Mrs. P. Shim-\nell, Mn. A. Harvey,\" Mn. S. Hep-\nworth, Mrs. C. Perkins, Mri. -L,\nBrekken, Mn. W. Savage, Mn. N.\nCooper, Mlu Sheila Harvey, Mri.\nF. Bradley, Miu Connie Hepworth,\nMiu Blanche Blaihut, Mlu Sova\nRutin and the guest of honor.\nTbe Women'i Missionary Society\not St Andrew's United Church will\nhold its annual thank ottering meeting Oct 24 when Rev, T. J. S, Ferguson of Nelion will be speaker.\nA Thanksgiving meeting wai en-\nJoyed by the Dorcas Circle, whan\nIt wai entertained Wednesday evening at the manse. A devotional\non this subject wai given, and alio\nan interesting reading by Mri. H.\nFerguion. Mn. w. M. Cameron served refreshments, assisted by Mrs.\nH. Hayden. Thoie present were Mri.\nH. Hayden, Mn. W. Blackwell, Mn.\nG. Craig, Mn. E. Siccombe, Mn. F.\nGrlmard, Mn. W. Arrowimith, Mrs,\nH. Ferguion, Mn. W.* McNeil and\nMn. I. Corbett    .\nSee Ua for Your\nHallowe'en Need.\nFIREWORKS\nBALLOONS\nNOISEMAKERS\nMASKS, ETC. ETC.\nYOUR REXALL STORE\nCity Drug Co.\nOet Yeur Correct Weight Freo\nGUILD TURNS SEWING\nIN FOR BOSWELL SALE\nBOSWELL, B.C.\u2014Mn. C. H.\nBebbington waa hoiteai to the\nChurch Guild at the October meeting. Those attending were Mri. J.\nKirkpatrick, Mra. M. McGregor,\nMn. K. Wallace, Mra. A. Kennedy,\nMn. C. H. Bebbington, Mn. A.\nHepher, Mra. C. Chaub, Mn. H.\nSpence, Mn. C. Holden, Mrs. D. V.\nWest and Miu E. Holiday-Smith.\nMany piecei of completed sewing\nwere turned in for the uie which is\nplanned for about the middle of\nnext month. Final arrangement!\nwill be made at the next meeting.\nKADI, India (CP).\u2014Four women\nwere crushed to death and aix otheri seriously injured in thil Baroda\nState town, when the terrace ot a\nihop collapsed and tell on the\nvictims.\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nPHONE no\nCor. Joaephlne and Mill St.\nYour Independent\nHigh Cla.i Grocery\nEGGS\u2014Local   Fresh A-%*\nGrade A large; Doz. \u2122_ar\nBUTTER\u2014Glendale, Famoui for\nIts uniform Quality;    jOf a\/1\n8 Ibi. for  9*,W\nBACON\u2014Premium freih\n\u2022Heed; Per Ib \t\nTOMATO CATSUP- -jOA\nHeinz large bottles; 2 for -J\u00b0r\nVINEGAR\u2014Heinz, quart   fjo_\u00ab\nbottles; 2 for  *****\nPICKLES\u2014Heinz  quart\nsize, Reg. 40c for \t\nCANNED CORN, TOMATOES\nOR  PEAS\u2014 AC.*\n8 tins for  -._\u2022\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00bb>\nMILK\u2014Canned,  Pacific,\nUH tins; 10 for\t\nFANCY  FREE  DESSERT-Van\nIlia, Caramel or Butterscotch; 4 pkti. for\t\ntUSHUS  JELLIES\u2014\n4 pkti. for \t\nDOG BISCUITS-Dr.\nPuppy Cakes;\nPer bag \t\nDOG BISCUITS\u2014Dr,\nCharcoal  Biscuits;\nPer  Ib.   \t\nCOFFIE-Vletory, Na.\nbob quality; 2 Ibi. for\nTEA\u2014Nabob; '\n2 Ibi. for  \t\nPUREX TI8SUE-\n6 rolls, for   ,\t\nPORK SAUSAGE\u2014Freih\nPure Pork; 2 Ibi,\t\nWEINERS\u2014\n2 lbs. _\t\nBOLOGNA\u2014Fruh sliced; 2 lbs. for  :\nPOTATOES\u2014Flneit\nquality Gems; 20 Ibi. ...\nSALMON\u2014Red Sookaye,\nVt Ib. tlm; 2 for _______\nORANGES\u2014Flneit qua!-\nIlly; 2 doz.\t\nPEARS\u2014\n4 lb, basket ._\t\nFresh Fruits, Vegetables, Cakes\nand  buna, Freih- Milk, Cream,\nIce  Cream,  Revels, etc,, etc.\nAll Delivered Free\nm\n35*\nATOES\nm\n-Van-\nm\nBallard's\n\u201e**\nBallard's\n.*\u00bb\n$1.25\n351\n451!\n35*\n451\n35*\nm\nm\nMackenzie King\n\"Amazed\" After a\nVisit to Air Base\nBY R. C. BLACKBURN\nCanadian Praia Staff Writer\nHALIFAX, Oct. 18 (CP) -Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King, displaying the enthusiasm ot a schoolboy,\nimpeded a huge Royal - Canadian\nAir Force base near here today and\nlater told reporten that he was\n\"amazed\" at what he had seen.\nThe Prime Mlniiter diicarded all\nsemblance of hii dignified poiition\nai he crawled under, around and\ninto every type of warplane.\n\"The work of construction here ii\nadmirable.\"\nThe itart of hli two-day inipec-\ntlon tour ot Canada'i men and machinery of war waa in contrast to\nduties at Ottawa and Mr. King enjoyed every minute of it\nHli first call wai a visit to Government House to pay hla reapecti\nto Lieut. Gov. F. F. Matheri. He later went to the Legislature buildings\nto meet Provinolal officials and\nothen. It was in thi shistorlc structure that he met Rear Admiral\nF. L. Relchmuth, United Statei Naval Officer commanding the U, S,\nAtlantic destroyers.\nDinner at Cathedral Hall Thunday, October 24, 5:30 p.m.\nPay your bids for the Kinauction\nof the Air at the Butcherteria.\nYou'll enjoy afternoon tea at\nGRAY'S. It'i different 580 Baker St\nGet your films and developing done\nat VALENTINE'S\nTurf Cigarettes, 23 for 25c, at\nMADELINE'S, 618 Baker St\n\u2022 St  Saviour's  Men'a Club\nafter  Evening Service,\nmeat!\nC. Y. O. Whilt Drive and Dance,\nTuesday, Oct 22 hai been postponed\nCrocheted cloth raffled- by the\nW. I. wai won by Mn. Poitle-\nthwalte, ticket No. 3.\nCOMING: Oct. 28, Monday, Toll\nBros Travelogue, St Paul'a \"Hiking\nThrough South America.\"\nSTANLEY CONFECTIONERY\nFRESH FRUTIS, VEGETABLES\nS52 Baker St. Ph. 585\u2014We Deliver\nContract Signed.\nfor House Eve of\nMr. Hunt's Death\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct 18\u2014Rcbert\nMoncrieff, Jr., local contractor, who\nla at preient supervising the construction ot an addition to the Trail\nTimes building, signed a contract\nWednesday evening to build a house\nfor Jerman N. Hunt In Nelion, only\nto receive newi later that Mr. Hunt\nhad died Thursday.\nItalians Bomb\nFlying Fields)\nROME, Oct, 18 (AP)-Friday's |\nItalian High Command communique:\nn North Africa our air formations successfully renewed, despite\nunfavorable weather conditions,\nbombardments ot air fields at El\nDaba and Mersa Matruh. They hit\nthe flying field El Dl Kheila at\nAlexandria and enemy fortifications\nand motorized columns along the\nMersa Matruh-El Daba road. All pur\nplanes returned.\n(Britiih advices indicated the raid\non Alexandria wai unsuccessful.\nOne of the Italian planei wai hit\nand badly damaged by anti-aircraft\ntire.)\n\"In Eait Africa our planei bombed\nthe airfield and Port of Aden, cauilng big fires at both objectives.\n\"An enemy air force bombed a\nresidential Quarter of Neghelli, causing slight damage.\"\nDEATHS\nOTTAWA\u2014William Robert Qem-\nents. 80, veteran ot the Fenian Raids\nOTTAWA - Dr. Charles A. Mar-\nshall, 68, well-known In Regina and\nCalgary sports circles tor hia activities in connection with lacrosse\nand hockey teami.\nFamily Dies in\nFire at Kelowna\nKELOWNA, B.C., Oct 18 <CP>-\nThe bodies of Mr. and Mn, K. Jewett and their ion were found today\nin the burned ruins, of their home\nat nearby Winfield,\nWhen the tire waa discovered Juit\nbefore midnight last night lt was\nnot known that anyone wai trapped\nin the house. The blaze wai in an\nadvanced stage.\nWinfield il about 12 miles North'\nof Kelowna.\nThe Women'i Hoipltal Auxiliary\nwould like donations of canned\nfruit jams. etc. Phone 868.\nCalling all Presbyterians to Service. Church Services U o'clock\nSunday, October 20. Rev. J. Forbes\nRobertson, Preacher.\nTable Tennis Sets from (1.75 up\nBeit English Table Tennis balls\ntrom 10C up. Bats at 60c and $1.00.\nHlppenon Hardware Company.\nNAKUSP CHILD HAS\nHER FIRST PARTY\nNAKUSP, B.C-Excltement\n.reigned at the home ot Mr. and Mn.\n\u25a0Clarence Plcard when their daughter Betty celebrated her fifth birthday at her tint party. Gamea and\ncontests and the birthday supper\nwith ita birthday cake and candles,\nwere enjoyed by 20 little guests.\nDANCE TONIGHT\nEagle's   Hall.  Troubadours,\nJoin the Crowd and Have Fun.\nST. JOHN A. A. HOME NURSING\nmeeting (ladles), Central School, on\nMonday, OcL 21,7:45 p.m. All Interested pleaie attend.\nMilitary Districts\nto Have Libraries\nBy  GLADYS ARNOLD\n(Canadian Preaa Staff Writer)\nOTTAWA, Oct 18 (CP)-Wllliam\nShakeipeare  and Johnny Canuck\nare getting their relations on a better organized footing.\nA Canadian War Servlcei Library\nCouncil hai been established to\nunite the efforti of five organization! which supplied Canada's\narmed forcei with prose, poetry md\nmore academic atudy manuals during the first war, year.\nSeveral hundred thousand books\nand magazine! hava been collected\nfor distribution amongst the forces.\nThe aim of the new council Is' to\ncoordinate the work and eliminate\noverlapping ot services In some\ncamps while othen are neglected.\n' Even before Canada began compulsory military training ot young\nmen ,the report of one week's operation! ihowed 81 libraries had been\neitabllihe* for the armed forcei,\nwith 18,000 booki, 8,500 magazines\nand 1.680 newspapers distributed.\nLibrary committee! will be let up\nIn each of Canada'i 1! military districts. The voluntary assistance of,\ntrained librarians Within each district will be sought to help organise the committee! and select boojji.\nMANY PARTICIPATE IN\nFERNIE CHURCH PARADE\nFERNI*_, B. C.-Fernie'i monthly\nchurch parade was held to the Knox\nUnited  Church.\nThose participating were: the\nFernie Veterani Guard, under Lt.\nHlgglni; Mias Winnifred Seymour,\nrepresenting the Provincial Public\nHealth Service; Mlu Young, matron\nof the Fernie Hospital, with a\nnumber ot her itaff; and members\nof the Volunteer Veterani Guard\nled by Officer Keith M\u00bbckim.\nThe minister, Mr. Matthews,\npreached a Thankigivlng sermon\nand tha choir wu composed of\nabout 24 teen-age girls.\nReserve Monday evening, Oct. 21\nfor free concert, staged by Bill\nHouston, Castlegar, I. O. O. J. Hall,\ndoon open 7:30. The bigger the\ncrowd the better the fun. All Oddfellows, Rebekahs, Theta Rho Girli\nand friendi invited.\n\u2022itottststtssttstttxotsottossstttttsoi\nFOR RENT \u2022\nSTEAM HEATED SUITE\nAnnable Block\n&tstst}sssttstt\u00bbssstsst$ttssttss&.\n____\u2014!_<_\u2014__________1_______J_\u2014_,_..: \u2014_-\nFried Chicken. CA-\nSouthern Style \u00abWv\nSUNDAY SPECIAL - Chicken or\nTurkey and Pumpkin Pie\n*****n>r***+1 *** H*******\nFleuVy s Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nGet the\nFURNACE\nPut in working order NOW\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 658    610 Kootenay SL\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE -OS MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nPHONE 815\nfer batter and prompter service In plumbing, repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nQuality Tested\nDoughnuts   OC\nper do-en   LOZ\nThe PERCOLATl\nDeal at the New \"DUNLOP\"\nNeon Sign for SERVICE\nAnother Nelion  Bright Spot\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker SL       Limited       Phone 119\n\u25a0 Lambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS  SYNDICATE\nMonthly.Savingi Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded  Representative\nBox 61      Hlppenon Blk.     Ph. 19?\nCHOCOLATE DAIRY DRINK\nAT YOUR PALM DEALERS\nCANADIAN DOCTORS CO\nOVERSEAS FOR TRAINING\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP). - Navy\nMlniiter Macdonald announced today\nin a statement at a Press conference\nthat 12 young Canadian doctors\nhad been commissioned as surgeon\nlieutenant! in the Royal Canadian\nNaval Reserve and lent to England\nfor a period of training in naval\nhospitals prior to being detailed\nfor service afloat,\nThey are the fint Canadian medical men to be aent overaeaa ai member! of the Canadian Navy Service.\nThe medical officen Include: W.\nO, Love, Penticton, B. C,\nALL THI NEWEST\nMEN'S FASHIONS\nSUITS\n$29.50\nConsider your appearance\nthis Fall\u2014it means \u00bb\nmuch to your complete\nsuccess In your business\nand personal life.\nSee Emory's today\nPMORY'C\n*\u25a0*\u2022' LIMITED )*~V\n\"The Man s Store\"\nLONDON (CP)-An order Ian\nby the Admiralty require! that el\nmerchant ship while in port al\nhave oh board a sufficient num.'\nof men to man fire-fighting app\natui.\nWINTER OVERCOAT\nYOUR   CAR\nNOW\nAT\nSowerbv-Cuthb-irt L.\nOpo. Poit Office and Hume Ho\nFIRE INSURANCE\nRATES ARE DOWN\nlea Ui fer Plra and Automat\nCover.\nRobertson Realty Co., Ltd\nGuaranteed\nMechanical Work\nSKY CHIEF AUT\n20. Baker St. SERVICE   Phone\n<\u00a3L&kth!\n10:30 to II:00 a.m.\nSPECIAL PROGRAMME FROM\nVATICAN CITY\nINCLUDING ADDRESS BY\nHIS HOLINESS THE POPE\nFinal Fire Sale Bargains ;\nOF BUILDERS' SUPPLIES\nTO LAST ONLY  A FEW DAYS MORE\nPAINTS: Enamels, Varnish, Shellac, Paint Remover, etc\n50% Reduction. J\nDRAB CREEN PAINT: Per gallon  91.25\nCEMENT PAINTS: 50 Ib. tin  %5.00\nREZICOTE: 5 gallons, reg. $21.75\u2014NOW .... $6.00\nSCREEN: Calv. and Black. All sizes. By roll or yard.\n50% Reduction.\nSASH WEIGHTS: All sizes, per Ib  Z*)\nBUILDERS HARDWARE: Real savings.\nROOFINC: 2 ply, per roll  f 2.5\nI                  SPECIAL\nI barrel\u20144S \"illonr. Drab Green Paint\n       WHAT OFFERS?\t\nNelson Sash & Door Co., Ltd.\n701 Front St. Phone 292\n\"Please Deliver Three Cases of\nColumbia Lager to My Home\"\nJust phone the Vendors for\nyour needs in Kootenay Breweries Products.\nDellveriei Will Be Made Promtply\nto Your Home.\nOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis \u00bbdvt is not DubUibtd or diipUytd by tbe Liquor Control Botrd or by tin Govt ol BrltUh Columbi\n... ...'..\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_10_19","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\/1.0414505","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":"1940-10-19 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":"1940-10-19 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":""}]}