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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":" s*\nGala Diy Marki launching ef Flnt\nB.C. Steel Vtml. Ptge 7.\nRail wayi Playing. Vital Part in '     '\n.War Effort\u2014Vaughan. Page 11.\nCanadlani Aiked to Deuble Thtir\nWar Investment!. Pagt 7.\ns   I   s   S   1   .   S.i   ,,,\nVOLUME   40\nFIVI MNT8 PER COPY\nCanada's Output ef War Mate:'\nHigher Than U.S. Pagt tt.  ,\nRusiiam Move Planti Nearer\ntht Caucasus. Pagt 7,\nTobruk Successfully Resists\nPamtr Attacks. Paga S.\nm\n>.'*.-\nNAZIS BREAK in\nI**\/\/ ***       y*'TI\u00abH COLUMBIA, CANADA-THUR8DA* MORNINQ, OCTOBER 16, 1M1\nNUMBI\nsns\nWESTERN\nFixed Ceilings on\nPrices, Bonuses to\nFarmers Planned\nPrices on Finished Products Generally to Be\nAffected; Bonuses, Freight Payments\nto Boost Farmers' Assistance\nBy R. K. CARNEGIE\u2014Canadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15 (CP).\u2014A Government program to\nprovide for fixed ceilings for most commddity prices, additional\nacreage bonuses to Prairie grain growers and full freight payments on Western feed grain moving East will be announced\nthis week, an authoritative source tonight told The Canadian\nPress.\nThe Wartime Prices and Trade Board will have the responsibility of fixing the ceiling on prices, this informant said.\nGenerally the ceiling prices will be on finished products\nrather than raw materals. For instance, the price of flour will\nbe  frozen  instead of wheat,\"\nTHREAT OF RAIL\nSTRIKE IN\nBOLIVIA\nLA PAZ, Bollvlt, Oct. 15 (AP)\n\u2014The army occupied al' rillway\nproperly in Bolivia todty to\nprevent a threatened strike and\nthe Government announced it\nwould not lift a atate of siege\nunlil the nation returns to normalcy.\nThe slate of siege was imposed\nthree months ago after the Government had uncovered an alleged revolutionary plot and had\nousted the German minister,\nErnst Wendler, on accusation of\ncomplicity.\nthe price of meats instead of\nlive animals, the price of finished manufactured goods instead of the materials which\ngo into their manufacture.\nThe bonuses and freight payments will bring to |110,000,000 the\nassistance Canadian farmers will\nreceive from the Federal Treasury\ntor this year's crop.\nThe \u00bb110,000,000 figure includes\npayments already provided for under Uie Prairie Farm Assistance Act\nand the wheat acreage reduction\nbonuses along with one-third of the\nfreight on Western feed grain moving Eut which the Government\npreviously had agreed to pay.\nIn the matter of meats, the informant said. It would be necessary to keep maximum prices in\nline with those ln the United\nStates. It the ceiling were set\nhigher than thote across the border than tht export of live cattle\nto the. United SUtes would fall\notf tnd caute t surplus in Canada; if ttt too low tnd abnormal\nexports  would   retult\nSo far as firm products are concerned it was said that, whilt no\nminimum prices are planned, the\nvarious boards In the Agriculture\nDepartment probably will see to it\nthat there ls no great spread between the maximum price and the\nmarket price. To this end, it ia anticipated, steps will be taken to\nset that surpluses are exported.\nWhen Agriculture Minister Gardiner was in the West recently and\nwas met with a demand for Jl-a-\nbushel wheat he said the policy of\nthe Government wu to assist farmers on an acreage basis Instead of\non the price of a product.\nThe snnouncement of policy\nwhich will come this week-is be-\nable Indicate tha Dominion will\npay the Prairie farmeri bonuses*\nof slightly more than $30,000,000\nfor reducing their wheat acreage\nthis year and leaving the ground\neither In Summer fallow or In\ngrass or coarse grains,\n\"The Government feels,\" this in-\nformant said, \"that the Prairie\nfanners are entitled to an addition.\nal bonus. Last Spring the Government asked them to cut down their\nwheat growing to an acreage which\non a normal crop would have\nbrought them about $111,500,000.\n\"However, It was a bad crop and\nthe wheat pools now estimate it\nwill bring tbe farmers no more\nthan tt5.0O0.O0O so it la a Government responsibility to make up the\ndifference.\"\nCeilings will be placed on prices\nof coarse grains, the Canadian\nPreu was informed, because, except for oatmeal and barley used in\nbeer, little of the coarse grain crop\nIs processed.\n16-FOOT ELECTRIC\nVICTORY \".\" SIGN\nSHINES FROM BLUFF\nNelson's 16-foot electric victory\n*V\" shone out from Gyro Park for\nthe first time Wednesday night\nTravellers coming to the City from\nthe West said the \"V\" was visible\nsome miles away.\nThe sign, erection of which was\nauthorised by the City Council recently, is situated near the tree\nlighted by the City during tho\nI Christmu season.\nFour Airmen Hurt\nin Explosion of\nPlane al Halifax\nHALIFAX, Oct. 1\u00ab (CP) - A\nbomber reconnaissance plane of\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force was\ndestroyed in an explo; on at the\nnearby Eastern . Passage field today and four airmen were injured,\nnone seriously.\nTlie machine ran off a runway\nant1 caught fire before exploding.\nThe members of the crew were\nburned before they managed to\nleave the plane and retreat to a\nsafe distance in time to escape the\nforce of the blast.\nAn R.C.A.F. official said tonight it\nhad not been determined whether\nthe plane's gasoline tanka or its\nload of bombs had exploded. An\ninquiry was being held.\nThe airmen, who were described\nin an R.C.A.F. itatement tonight u\nreceiving fairly severe burns, were\nPo. P. W. Porter, Hamilton, Ont.*,\nPo. L. F. Haggman, New Westminster, B.C.; Sgt D. F. Quirt, Peterborough, Ont., and Lac. G. C. Merrill, St. Thomas, Ont.\nFor Lac. Merrill, a wireless operator, It wu this third similar brush\nwith detth in recent months. Lui\nMay li. he escaped unhurt when a\nplane caught fire and a bomb-exploded at the Eutern passage bue\nafter t cruh landing.\nGOERING NEPMtW 0IE8\nBERLIN. Oct. 1\u00ab (Thuriday) (AP)\n\u2014Peter   Goering,    19,    nephew   of\n..   Reichs-Marshal   Goering,   wai  kill-\nlleved to bear out thli statement   I\"1 M\u00b0nday when hii pursuit iquad-\nn.N-h   ...i-,.._.        . ,'. ron '0UJhl wl,h Br;'*ish airmen, it\nRough   estimates   io   far  tvtll-1 wu announced today.\nApple Shipment\nby Mail Hailed\nOTTAWA. Oct 15 (CP). - Shipment of fresh fruit to the United\nKingdom by mail wu prohibited\nunder post office orderi iuued to-\nThe ban on such ihipment extends\nto other countriei except the United\nStatei.\nThe p^tal announcement nid\nthat means of sending applei to\nthe United Kingdom were available\nou'j.de the po\u00abt office under a ape-\n' jre   De-\nBrilish Warships '\nThrow OH Two\nTorpedo Attacks\nBy  LARRY   ALLEN\nAuoclated Prett Stiff Wrlttr\nABOARD FLAGSHIP WITH\nTHE BRITISH MEDITERRANEAN FLEET, Oct. 18 CAP) .-The\nBritiah wtr fleet, steaming top\nspeed tnd tossing up huge masses\nof spray over the bows, has beaten off two fiercely-pressed attacks\nof torpedo bombers after an unsuccessful ittempt to bring elusive Italian warships to battle.\nThrowing out a terrific barrage\nfrom their 45-lnch and six-Inch\npompoms, t battleship cruisers and\ndestroyers sent a hall of hot lead\nInto oncoming squadrons of Italian\nbombers which attacked within\nsight of the Alexandria coastline.\nItalian bombers of ont squadron\nsent three torpedoes swishing harm-\nleasly past this flagship.\n(An Italian communiqut yesterday claimed a battleship and a\n10,000 cruiier wert hit In a torpedo\nattack Monday afternoon. Stefani,\nItalian news agency, 'stld today\nthat an Admiral's ensign indicated\nthe battleship wts a flagship of the\nBritish unit and that the attack occurred Northwest of Alexandria,\nThe IUllans uld all thtlr aircraft\nreturned from the attack).\nTha other squadron of bombers, untblt to ftee the terrific\nfleet fire, veered off Wtstwtrd,\npurtutd by British  pilots flying\nAmerican-made   planei.\nA.R.P. Stations to\nHave Residential\nTelephone Rales\nROSSLAND. B.C., Oct. 14-MayOr\nJohn E. Gordon, who ii Chairman\nof the Rossland Civilian Protection\nCommittee, told the Council Tuesday evening that he had been advised by the Assistant General\nManager of tht B.C. Telephone\nCompany 1 thatJtm Company will\nintttl arxPBroWde telephone ter-\nvu_- at retftstotitl, rather thtn buslneu, rates ln civilian protection\norganizations' main stations.\nj TT*.e main station, in the case of]\nRosilind, Is at the Armory.\nj At the same time, His Worship\nannounced recelpU of a |10 check\nI from S. T. M. Moodie. Chief Civilian Protection Officer, to assist in\n1 defraying   out-of-pocket   expenies\n; incurred In organii.ng Rossland's\nprotection committee, together with\nI lhe assurance that monthly cheeki\nfor the same amount would follow\nduring tht balance of the fiscal\nyenr at least.\nThis money, said Mayor Gordon,\nwill be eipended at his discretion\nFORMER PANAMA PRESIDENT JAILED\nDr. Arnulfo Arias, right, deposed President of Panama, yesterday was sent to jail after surrending to police. He recently fled from the country following a bloodless coup d'etat in which Dr. Ernesto Jaen Guardia, left,\nbecame President.\nWestern Germany\nBombed by British\ni and he suggested that part of the\n! monthly cheeki could be usei} for\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nly KIRK! U. SIMPSON-Assoti.ttd Pre.. Stiff Writtr\nThe deadly danger in which Moscow stands within an\never-tightening German siege ring is obvious to every student\nof the war dispatches. \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2014 ___\t\nAccording lo German statements.! ,\u201e,._  ,h_  M-.,v,..__,       .  \u201e,   .\nnndenied in Moscow, the great city I \u00a3\u00b0,     ,thf  Nol}h\u00bb\"-  \u00abnd  West, or\ni, already half-encircled except   or I '\u00a3\u00b1\u2122\"'J?,'*'*''i   b>H i\"'   \u00b0\u00ab\nt gap or  two. Nan  lank columns I \\\"T' A'       ' \"s ' *\"rd R*\u00bb\"n\nire menacing it from the banks of      --    \u25a0 \u00b0\"\ncial   plan   of   Lhe   Agricultu\nparunent   by   which   shipments   of\napples, not weighing more than 15 [ telephone service\npoundi,   may   be   ordered   through\nwholesale or retail merchants who\nmaintain a stock of certified ipples\nfor export.\nApplei purchased under this\narrangement may be ihipped in\nbulk-lot by freight or express to\nGreat Britain  and  then  distributed\nbr   parcel   post   to   the   consignee\ntnrough a distributing agent.\nThe post office announcement\nsaid the prohibition on fresh fru.t\nihipment by mill \/as Imposed because of iti perishable nature and\nthe likelihood of It damiging other\nparceli in the nme mailbag\nseeing\nthe Volga,  due  Northwest,  lo  the\nsprings of the Don, due South, at\nAlready the Rihev-Kalinin bastion of the Volga defence line to\nthe Northwest along the Upper\nVolga is tottering, according to Russian admissions. If Kshnln fill., at\nIt may have already, the Rzhev position on Ihe Volga to the South- \u00a3.\",,,\nwest would become s dangerous \u00bb\ntallent for its Russian defenders. It\nprobably must be evacuated, open-\n>l_ a new road lo Moscow along\nthe Rihev-Moscow  Railroad.\nP\nIr\nIn the K.Mnin sector, alio, the\nOermini appeared to have broken\ndirect rill communication! between Moscow and Red forcu to\nthe   North.   The   miln   Moscow.\nNorth of Tula - on the Smo.\nlensk-Vyszme, R.'slavl-.Medln and\nBryansk-Ka!uK*a n.i lines converging on Moscow \u2014 Nan forcei aie\nbattering at the inner ring of the\ncapital'] defences, 60 miles or less\nfrom the city If the Germani are\n.n fact in Tula in force, the next\nwave of attack is likely lo ire\nthat inner ring beset Irom the\n11 as the Weit\nThen li mother grin menace\nfor the Ruulani In the reported\ncapture of Tula. After the fill of\nOrel, TOO mllei or more South-\nweet of Tula, \u2022 itubborn defence\nwai organised along the Oka\ndrainage bllln North ind North-\nweit of Orel.\nAt   Tull   the   Nail   would appear\nLenmgrid    Railroad   crone,   the [ to  he well  in reir of the Russiins\nvelgs  nur  thit   Importint  river   in  the Orel  region.  Another encir-\n\u2022nd rill Junction. , clement pocket could develop there\nThere  li  i  possibility, however.   J\"\"1    __'   th'   Bryinsk   pocket,\nthst  the  German   forces attacking   'rom wh'ch long tripped Red forcei\nKilinin ire is yet only i ipeir-head   5.\" b\"n lr-vm\u00ab '\"cut their way\nItrength. The  intimations ire thit   \u00a3\"'*\u2022\"<-\u25a0   u     liquidated    n   the\nthe thrust came from the region of   Germans phrase it\nUke  Seliger   to   lunge  Southeast-       \"\"VT,  ', '*' L \"other   ominoui\nwird    down    the    Torjok-Kalinin   \u00a30**'b'*.;y f\"r 'h' \"\"\"'\"\u2022 on the\nbnnch nilroad. If so it wu a iur-   Sou,b Moscow fron:   At Orel their\npriie ittlck ind  crossed  a 40-mile   Quick   ind   direct   c.immunici'inn\nFIVE HUNGARIANS DIE\nFOR  FAVORING RUSSIA\nBERNE. Switzerland, Oct. 15 -\nrAP) \u2014 The Hungarian newi agency\nsaid t-sday that five persons have\nbeen hanged in the Hungarian village of UJ\/idek ifter being condemned for espionage In favor of\nRussia Two others were sentenced\nto 15 and 12 years respectively on\nthe same charge.\nGERMANS KEEP UP\nEXECUTION RECORD\nPARIS. Oct\/ 15 (AP).-The Germans announced today the execution of the 79th firing squid victim\nin Occupied Frince.\nThe innouncement sild Leon Ll-\nouit of Le Havre was shot for complicity with the enemy ind Communist agitation against the Germin Army'i occupition. Hi wu\nlentenced Oct. 7.\nFormer French Head-\nFace Punishment\nVICHY, rrince, Oct  15 (AP).-\nAn Suthoriied source slid tonight\nthat Marshal Petain tfbuld announce the punishment of two\nformer premiers and other leaders\nblamed for Trance's defeat ln a\ncommunique Friday.\nThe cases against ei-premlers\nLeon Blum ind Edouard Dilidier.\nGen. Gimelln. former Allied commander in chief, ind Ex-Mlnlsters\nGuy la Chambre and Pierre Jaco-\nmet were placed ln the Chief of\nSlates hindi by the Council for\nPolitical Juitlce with lta recommendations.\nFrench Coast Raided\nfor Third Night\nin Row\nBERLIN, Oct. 18 (Thuriday)\n(AP)\u2014Incendiary md explosive\nbombi were dropped by the Royil\nAir Forct In Wutern Girminy\nlilt night, German lourcu slid\ntodiy.\nThey  clilmid  \"ilight  dirnige\",\nwu cauied and that three bomb\n\u2022 n were downed.\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (CP) - The\nRoyil Av Force, said to be tying up\nmort than half of Germany's fighter strength by its Wettern air offensive. Waited tonight tt the Nazi\nirmed tnd occupied French coas.\nfrom Boulogne to Dunkerque foi\nthe third consecutive evening.\nThe flashes of the bombs and the\nanswering anti-aircraft guns were\nreflected sbove the fog bank over-\nhinging the French cliffs, ind a\nterrific explosion was heard from\nthe itretch between Calan and Cap\nGris Nez. Later a big fire was visible for a considerable time.\nThe night attack followed a d,sy-\nllght sweep of the coast be,ween\nthe Netherlands and Northern\nFrance, in which the RAF. lost\nseven bomberi and a f.^hter and\nshot dnvn four German fignters.\naccording to the Air Ministry.\nQuays and ships al Le Havre were\ntombed.\nThe Air Ministry said the German! up lo no a* had f-unJ it mcrs-\nsary to use more than half tneir\nfighter srength against the K A.F\nin the West, thus weakening the\nGermans' aerial punch aga.nit Russia.\nAt the same time it wai indicated\nthat Britain is gaining strength in\nproduction and impor.ation ot combat aircraft.\nttrltch of roadless and marshy\ncountry to reach Ihe rail terminus\nNorthciit of Torjok.\n.th Kharkov ind Russisn irm.es\ndefending the Doneti Bai.n were\nalready cut. From Tula commun.-\ncilion llnei firther Eutward leed-\nNo adequate communication ing to the South ire endingered\nline lupporti thit Northern In effect, the hilf encirclement of\nflanking operation unless Rzhev.' Moicow has split the whole Rus-j\n75 miles South of Torjok, ii alto | ilin fronl into three huge sec tors J\ntaken There is rail connection Communlcition between M icow\nbetween Rzhev ind Tor)ok ei; and Ruulin irmiei either North-\nwell is direct between Rihev and ' wird lo l,e ningnd or Southward in\nMoicow The fall of Rzhev would ' the extreme Eutern Uknlne or on\ngive the Germim two routei to , the tei fink before Roi'ov ind in\nMoicow   from   the   Northweit, the Crime!  h\u00abi been  rendered  In-\nBerlin    contended     ..-nifw.ii. . cr*\u00bb\"ngl.v difficult\nNEW ZEALAND ELECTION\nTO IE POSTPONED\nWELLINGTON. New Zeilind,\nOct 15 (CP Oblel.-Prlmi Minuter Peter Fruer innounced In\nparliament today thi general election due to be held thle yeir will\nbe postponed for 12 monthi beciuu\nof tne iltuition on the virloui bittle\nfronti.\nSAWDUST MAY BE CAUSE\nOF COAST FLEA EPIDEMIC\nVANCOUVER. Ort 15 (CP). -\nVancouver ii suffering from I flei\n. epidemic .Dr Stewirt Murriy. City\nj Heilth O\/flcer, reported to the\nI Metropolltin Heilth Committee todiy, ind he luggeited the uie ot\nuwduit for fuel miy be \u25a0 contributing factor.\n75 YOUTHS CO TO All\nFORCE AFTER TRAINING\n;    VANCOUVER,  Ot.   15   (CP>.  -\n( GradutlM of the Domlnlon-Provin*\n\u25a0 ciil    youth    triinlng    ichooU.    75\nyouthi Joined  the   Royil  Cinidlan\n\u25a0 Air Forct today ai air frame and air\n; engine mechanics, ground ind wirt-\nlen operaton. About 100 trained\nI men gradutte to the RCAF. each\ns month from Vincouver achooli.\nunofficially. I\nthat on the Southwestern fronl Tula\n110 mtlei due South of Moicow ib\nin Nan hand* That w\u00bbi rumored in\nBerlin ae-veral dayi ago but never,\nconfirmed Tula ta a mott Imp^r'ini I\ncog In the defence ay\u00bbl*m of Mftv'\n'cow than Kalinin In the Nor'h It\ncould be a lumn-off fnr a direct\ndrive    Inward    Mngrow    from    the [\nThe breadth md ferociW of tht i\nGermin mirk from North of\nMoirnw lo Ihe Aiov Sea rout hJi\nmade il impowible fnr Ruanian\narmiej in the three itctori tn nd\neach other effectively I! ii only I\nfrom S ber a that fresh troopa ar*'\navailable, and reporti thai ther1\nare being  brought   up  cannot  be\nBRITONS SHOW LESS\nHYSTERIA IN WAR\nMONTREAL. Oct. 15 (CP)-Dr\nWider Penfield, internationally\nknown neuro-iurgenn and Director\nof the Montretl Neurological Institute, retried today that leai piy-\nchon enrol u and hyiterii rxlati\namong Brittin'i civilian population\n'-htn  in  p**c\u00ab time.\nJAILED FOR SMOKING\nIN PROHIBITED AREA\nNIAGARA FALLS. Ont, Oct. IS\n(CP) \u2014John D. Flnliyion. JJ, of\nKincardine wn lentenced to i Jill\nterm of 90 diyi when he pleided\nguilty todiy to imoklng In \u2022 prohibited irei it i wir Induitry.\nSouth,   lupplimenting   the   ittickj'    rigirded u encouriglng\nACTRESS REFUSES MEDAL\nKEW YORK. Ort  IJ (CPI.-Gertrude  Liwrence   British itige ic-\ntre\u00bb. todiy declined \u25a0 medil from\nthe rinniih Government honoring\nher for her Tlnnlih relllf irtlvltlw\nduring   thf   Ruulin   cimpalgn   of\nmt-tl.\nITALIAN CARRISON\nAT TOBRUK SURRENDERS\nCAIHO. Oct 15 (AP).-A Britiih\npitrol iwept down upon in Italian\noutpoit ficlng thi defmcn of be-\nileged Tobruk yeitirdiy, forcing\n14 of tb\u00ab girrlion to itirrender, \u25a0\nBritiih communique uM todiy.\nMENINGITIS CASE ~\nRieORTID AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Oct IJ (CP)-A\n-0-year-old girl wu Uktn to hoipt-\nUl htre todiy luffering from iplnil\nnvnlr.gltu whlli \u2022 nlm-yeir-old\nlid impsKUd of hiving Um i.it tir\nU under obiervition.\nROSSLAND DEFERS\nCHAIRS' PURCHASE\nROSSLAND, B. C. Oct. 15 - The\nCity Council'Tueiday evening deferred until 1942, on recommendation of Aid. A. Y Snowball, the\npurchaae of a quantity of chairs for\nthe High School auditorium. Aid\nSnowball |.a>d that it wai impossible to tecure collapsible tteei\nchairs, the most desirable type, at\nthe preaent time, and said he did\nnot think the need for chairs, even\nwooden collapsible ones, wu urgent.\nLate Flashes\nTOKYO, Oct 1\u00ab (Thundiy)\n(AP)\u2014Thi Japanese ForilQn Offloe announced todiy thit the\nRutilan forilfn cemmlwrlit hid\n\u2022 dvltad thi Japintla imbiuy\nitaff to prepira to withdraw Irom\nMoicow.\nLONDON. Oct 19 (Thundiy)\n(API\u2014The Stockholm correipond-\n\u2022nt of the Diily Herald reported todiy thit \"Voroihilov'i Leningnd\nirmy ii miking \u25a0 determined effort\nto relieve Timoihenko'i hird-preu-\n\u2022d forcei in the centre.\"\n\"They ire reported to be idvinc-\nIng on \u2022 broad front ind crouing\nthe river 'tf. preiumibly thi Neville wrote. \"Three placea on the river\nsvere ciptured \u25a0 leet diyi ago.\"\nAir Leader Dies\nas Walks Info\nPlane Propellor\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15 (CP)\u2014Sqdn.\nLdr. Charlea Eirdley Wilmot, Officer Comminding No. 2 Squadron\nit No. 2 Servlci Flying Tnining\n8cho_l it nearby Uplanda airport,\nwai killed today when hi walked\nInto the propeller of a taxiing\nplane an an Uplanda runway.\nSc.dn. Ltd. 'Wilmot, 49, wu a former alcerman and mayor of Belleville, Ont.. and waa Conservative\ncandidate in Brantford during the\n1040  Federal  elrc'.ions.\nA court of inquiry will be held.\nThe ace.dent occurred wnile Sqdn i\nLdr. Wilmot was walking from a\nfl.gnt office t.'A*ard a waiting plane\nwh:ch he in; Mded to take aloft. He |\nwalked across the runway directly!\nmio the pa'.h of the taxiing plane,\nRoyal Canadian Air Force headquarters raid.\nRossland Court\nFines Are $91.50\nROSSIAND. B.C. Oct. 14\u2014 ToUl\nPul.c--- L'jurt fines paid during the\nminlh of S?p'.embsr were $9150.;\nis well as court casts uf $2.50, ac-,\nrord ng \\-> the summary presented!\n.. th * Citv C-uncil* Tuesday evening by Constable William S'.ark j\nof tne :o:al Pr_vincial Police de-\nta:hment.\nTwo mrtir vehicle accidents were i\nreported during the month, with;\npriperi.v damiijo am >unting to 1130 \\\nThe va.ro cf property stolen in two\ntheft cas-i wis $4 Dr. E. F, Toplifi\nwas g.ven assistance regarding\nehfckuju undeT the Sanitary Regulation?, and several youths were\nwarned reg.irding ihe use of *ir\nyum in and outiide the City limits\nM scMlaneous duties performed\nincluded the following: Traffic Bylaw checkups 9. Trades Licence\nBylaw checkupa 2, lights reported\nout 2, Curfew Bylaw checkups 14\nMotrr-\\'ehicle Act regulations 14.\ntransier'J given bed 2, juveniles'\nmischief, etc, 8; trUoxica.ed per-\n%.r*i 4, and Highway Act, cychstj 3\nTo'j.1 miscellaneous duties per-\nfrmed  were M.\nMIGHTY FORGE\nPUTS RUSSIANS\nINTO  RETREAT\nHour of Supreme Crisis for Moscow Now at\nHand; Great Force of Tanks, Motorized     7.\\\nInfantry Thrust at Russians\nBy HENRY C. CASSIDY\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nMOSCOW,Oct. 16 (Thursday) UP).\u2014\nA vast Cerman force of tanks and motorized\ninfantry has broken through the defences to\nthe West of Moscow, forcing the Russian\ncentral armies into retreat, it was acknowledged officially early today, with the hour of\nsupreme crisis for the Soviet capita, admit*\ntedly at hand.\nThe communique announcing this staggering blow to the\nRed armies of the centre was issued two to three hours later\nthan the usual post-midnight report by the Soviet Information\nBureau.\nAlthough yague as to details, it left no doubt of the peril j\npressing'on Moscow and of the Soviet Union with these three\nsharp sentences:\n\"During the night of Oct. 14-15, the position in the West-,\nern direction of the front deteriorated.\n\"The Cerman Fascist armies hurled a large quantity of \u25a0\ntanks and motorized infantry against our units, and irvon*\nsector broke through our de-* \" *       \"-\nST JOHNS. Qu\u00ab, Oct. II\niThurfdjy) (CPI-Pml B\u00ab\u00bbull\u00abu,\nUnion Nitionalt cindidtU In the*\nprovinciil byi-lMUon In SI. Johni-\nNiplcrvillss rldinf, wis declared\neltHtd by ntn\u00ab vo(\u00ab?i il the conclusion of > Judical recount ttrlj\ntodtjr.\nHOWC5 KONO. CK* II (Thun-\n4\u00bbyl I API - Merle Cochrane, \u2022\nUnited Stitei Treiiury currency\nlulhority. ind Sir Otto Nlemeyer.\nBenk of Bnjlind director, lefi by\nplint todiy lor Chunrtlni on \u2022\nflnnnclil muiion lo the Chinese\nGovernmenU\nAUSTRALIAN MINISTER\nARRIVES IN 'FRISCO\nSAN rRANCISCO. Oct. IJ (API.\n\u2014Sir Eirle Pige, Austnllan Minister to BriUin, irrived here todiy\nby Clipper end declired \"Americi\nis giving us tremendoui help in win-\nning the wir.\"\nPOPE APPOINTS NEW\nCRANC PENITENTIARY\nVATICAN CITY. Oct. IS (AP) -\nPope Piui XII today ippointed Nic-\nolo Cirdlnll Canill Grand Peniten-\ntliry to lucceed the lite Lorenio\nCirdinil  Liurt.\nREEF OPENINCS MINED\nBRISBANE, Aus. Oct IS (API -\nAll openings in Ihe greit Barrier\nReef along the Northeast Coist of\nAustralia from the Arlington Beef\nto Anchorcay, New Guinea, hive\nbeen mints), the Australian Navil\nBoard announced today. Two other\nminefields hive been Isid West of\nThursdiy Island, lituated In Torres\nStrait between Queenilind ind\nNew Guinea.\nfences\n\"Our forces opposed the\nenemy, heroically, inflicting\nheavy losses, but were compelled to retreat in this sector.\"\nThsre was no phrase to relieve\nHit itark Impact of the announce-\nment, no word U h-Umate that the\nNazis might have Bten checked\nafter 'iiis break-through which occurred more than 24 hours ago.\nFrom that point the communique\nwent in merely to detail destruction of 31 German planes Monday\nand nine Tuesday in the approaches\nto M:scow.\nOthir and less official accounts\nof thi great Western bittle. Isauail\nlut night, portriyed tht Germans\nas Imperilling the Red line along\nthe   Upper   Volga   and   pushing\nwith steady powir from the West\nTheir present whereabouts and\nthe scene cf the break-through\nwere not disclosed.\nIn the Northwest about Kalinin,\n95 miles Northwest of the capital.\nthe invaders struck will) tanks, armored cirs, planes and infantry\nspearheaded by psrachutiiti dropping b:hind the Russiin formitlons.\nand while a force of theae later wai\ndeclared annihilated it wis admitted thit isolated Nui lalienu were\nbeing extended.\nTo the West, from the theatre\nof   Vyasma,   which, itself   is   US\nm.les fr.m Moscow, even greater\nGerman    forces   were   pounding\n.   forward in the most terrible fighting  of   all   the   wars-advancing.\n\u25a0nd   the   official   Soviet   Army\norzan Red SUr \"only aerou the\nhcjp- of their own dead.\"\nThe situation, the paper added\nplainly, was now more serious than\nat any time . . . M.icow is in\ndanger!\"\nThe Soviet Press urged a peoples defence of Moacow-such as\nhas helped in holding Leningrad\nso long\u2014and appealed that not a\nsquare yard of tha city be abandoned.\nThe capital remilned \"'m. Peo-     NANAmo  B c   ^ \u201e (Cp) _\npie no   r^u'red,for.*e^f;n^.c0k''Bernard Adolf Steeger,     . ratlred\nlhe   city   were   leiving.  The   J'\"\u00ab, ,\u201e\u201e\u201e- wt,\u201e ,\u201e\u201e-M   *\u201e\u00a3\ntomb of Nicolal Lenin, one of  the\nfounders of Bolshevism, wu closed\n(It was not sttted whether this had\nany direct connection with Moscow's\nmili'-ary peril).\nJust how far the Oirmini hid\nprogressed In tba drive from tha\nWest wai not known hare, but \u25a0\u2022\nfar \u25a0\u25a0 could ba liirned they had\nnot yet reached Borodlltb, 70 mllei\nWait  of the ciplUI, where   Na*\np.ienn fought his lut great battle\nshort of  Moicow In 1112.\nthe High Command that a rut\ndouble battle of encirclement wu\nso nearly ended that tie majority\nof strong German lorcea already\nwere freed \"for a continuation of\noperations.\"\nDaring the day, It wn idded, Bed\nJeUcbmenU  surrounded  North  \u2022(\naSFbtoodylSK'' Whfl^a 'woof.\ned region South of Uu town t*-\nmained to be mopped up.\nThe toUl number of Rod p_*\noners in hand In both the Bryansk\nand Vyazma areas had reached\n4580,(XT, the High Command\nclaimed, and Ml unks and 41SS\ncannon had been taken dr do*\nitr.yed.\nReleased from then btttla-\ngrounds, the Nazis claimed thtir\nreinforcing columns wtrt moving\nInto a broad segment alongsidt\nothers already engaged ln what\nBerlin ipoketmtn ttrmtd \"pursuit\" engagement!.\nThe High Command ww silent U\nto the progreu of tht forward\ntrcops, but D.N.B. clalmtd tht advance wis sttady boward reglorj\nwhich the Ruuiana tlwayi had rt-\ngarded is Invulnerable, including\nthe upper reach*! of the Volgi.\nSpokesmen, howtvtr, declined Wu\nindicate exact Germin potltiona\nabout Moacow.\nMilitary dispatchea claimed alM\nthe crushing of heavy Ruisian coun-\nter-atucks on tht Northern and\nSouthern extremitiet of tht 7M-\nmile active front. Involving la tha\nlatter region ust of the hatvitat\nRussian  Unks.\nBack of thii front, in tht Vya\u00bbD\u00ab\n\u25a0 nd Bryinsk areas, dlapatchei uld\nmany bands of Russiins wtrt moving ibout \"itmleuly\". Son)* of\nthem, it was acknowledged, presented an element of danger to tha\nGermani, OUwri, it wu alattd, had\nthrown away their arms and wtTa\nwandering about to find food and\n!o seek out lomeone to whom thty\ncould surrender.\nIn T.e air. German clalmi aald M\nRussian planei were dettryyed\nTuesdiy.\nlogger who fought with an Ontario\nregiment In the Riel Rebtlllon, died'\nIn hospital here lut night.\nMin Maa\nCOAST CADETS CRADUATE\nVANCOUVIR. Oct. It (CP) - A\ntotal of 174 cadeta attached to the\nCanadian Offlctn' Training Corpi.\nUniversity of Britiah Columbia de-\nUchment, hive been gnnted cer-\ntlftcitei of qualification for the\nrank of iecond lieutenant, reserve.\nIt wu announced today.\nNEI.SON\nTRAU\nMiliUry dUpitches from the Vy- v Xo^M\nlima sretnr reports cold wwthrr. ^ jmo\nwaj aiding the Ormini to iomt1\nextent\u2014permitting them to u$* not\nrniy the highwivs but thoie dirt\nroadi which in the past hid been\nmud  bop.\nIn '.he Bryansk and Orel i*ctnn\nSouthwest and South of Moscow,\nlhe icene of earlier major offen-\njives, tction ippeartd to hive ilack-\nened At one point above Bryansk,\nthe Nizts were nid to hive been\nthrown bick ifter i single itUck\nVincouver\nKimloopi\nPrince  George\nEitevan  Point\nPrince   Rupert\nLangara\nAtlin\nDiwion\nSeittle\nPortlind\nSan Franci-sco\nhie* mer i single \u00bb^\u00ab.' ;\"\/.\u201e,\n1000 in killed md woundM.  J?\u2122\"1;,\nlosing\n30 tinlu md 10 field guns\nBERLIN.   Oct.   15   (AP)-Ger-\nm.vi rrnforrements were Mid to-\nnight to hivt moved into the\nforward wall of the drive on\nMoicow ind offlclil\nclaimed the Naii armlu were\niteadily p'nlf.! ground, eipectil-\nIt ifl1 rul lhe defencei of tht\nUpper Volgi Northweit of the Red\ncap;tal\nThe iddltionil troops were mov-\nint Cast from Vyitmi ind Bryansk\nreflons.   W\u00abt   ind   Southweit   of\nPenticton\nVernon\nKelowna\nGrand forks\nKulo\nCnnbrook\nwLrc\u00ab|Cil\u00ab\u00abrv\nEdmonton\nSwift Current\nPrince   Albert\nWinnipeg\nRtilni\nToreeist Kootenay: Light South\"\nerly winds partly cloudy ind mild\nbecoming cloudy with rain In th\u00ab\nifternoon: few scattered light (rofU\n41\n61\nts\nM\n49\n57\nM\n59\nb.l\nN\nM\n71\nJS\nM\nSI\n57\n11\nN\n1*1\n54\nX\nH\ns\nII\n.Vi\nM\nU\nM\n10\nHI\nw\n711\n54\nas\n\u00abt\n\u2014\nto\n\u2014\nsa\n\u2014\n40\n\u2014\nM\nISS\nM\n\u00ab9\nn\nM\nSI\nH\nVI\nn\n37\ntti\n52\nn\nMoscow, where it wai clilmed by  in the Koottnay tonight.\n_\n __\n'.'     \u2022 '  \u25a0'\"-\nPAGS   TWO\n'.\u25a0*      ' \u25a0\"'....\u25a0*..'<* * I *\u25a0 *i -    :\nNILION DAILY NIWS  NILSON, B.C-THUMOAY MORNINO, OCTOBER tl. 1941 \u25a0\nill Paris ol Cranbrook District\nal Rally lor Dr. and Mrs. Green,\nOver 450 People Participating\nJ CRANBROOK, B. C, Opt. 1\u00bb-At\ndne ot th* molt enthusiastic rallies\n\u2022ver held ln Cranbrook,' over 490\njiedple from all parts of the district\nlathered in the K. P. Rail Wednesday night to do honor to Dr. F. W.\nCreen, Conservative candidate at\nthe forthcoming Provincial election.\nI Th* guesta were greeted at the\n\u2022loor by Dr. and Mra. Oreen and\nyer A. J. Balment, Bert Sang\nmaster ot ceremonies, and be-\nthe numben on the nro-\nA____**.'-iH*-l\u00abWW\n,._,*lded music, as well as dance\nmusic later on in the evening.\nTha program opened with the\nplaying of the first movement of\nBaithoven'i Fifth Symphony by\nMra. Douglas and Vic Edwards,\nwhich la symbolic of the \"V\" slo-\nfan. Thia was followed by > vocal\niolo by Steve Manson; tap dance\nby Miss Margo van Braam; piano\naolo, Vic Edwards, pltno iolo Miss\nBarbara Fink; violin aolo, Mrs. Oil*\npliant, Kimberley; sword dance ac-\ncompanista, Vic Edwards and Miss\nJoan Pearson; cotplc skit \"The Girl\nat the Ironing Board\", Malcolm\nMcPhee, accordian duet, Reno and\nJoe Bigattini.\nDr. Green spoke for a few minutes and said Canada was faced\nwith a terrible struggle, and that\n\"we are fighting for the future of\nthe world.\" He said \"It Is up to ua\npay and pay\" for rehabilitation after the war, and to avoid a depression, such as followed the last\nWorld War.\nRefreshments were served after\nthe program and the remainder of\nthe evening waa apent in dancing\nand \"visiting\".\nHancock lo Handle\nitossland Building\n; Inspector Dulles\n-WXSIUM),  B.   C,   Oct.   IB  -\nfhree recommendations from Aid.\nKidneys Must\nClean Out Acids\n..*\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u00bb Midi, polmns and mitta in jour\nmd chllflr br jour kldrnji.\nIts, Burning Passim, Bael-\n-**\u25a0\u00ab, Rheumatic Piliu, in-\ni, ind >Mltii| worn out. olfis\nier and Bladder trouble!.\nat, th; vary Jrit dole ot\nrliM to work helping the Kiit-\nr 111 sueh ciaei, tin\nI olein out esceii icldj ind iutn. And\nI delnelns, purlryin| Kidney action, ln\ni* tat or so, mty euslly mike you feel\ntronser tsti betUr thin ln yetri.\n\u2022freemen! wripped iround eich\nCjitet insure! in Immediate ra.\n1 cost unless you sre oom-\nTOu baTl e vr r>th In, to fain\n.  .- low under  thli poslllvi\n' bick oiler io tet < sties, from your\ntoday tor only J So,\n  (Advt)\nWhat's Tour\nTrouble . . . ?\nCMntae Kerb, an used In\ntmtaent ot Constipation,\nArthritis,   Lung   Trouble,\niea.     Rheumatism.\nTrouble,   .Heart\nEczema, Impetigo,\ntie. See\nWING WO\nOHINISE MEDICINI CO.\nOffloe Houn: to to )\nN1M% Wall Street, Neir Main\nSPOKANE, WASH.\n1. M. Ethridge, Acting Chairman of\nthe Board of Works Committee,\ngained the Council's endorsation\nTuesday evening. These recommendations were that the hiring of a\nbuilding inspector, a matter which\nhas been under consideration for\nseveral weeks, be deferred until\n1MJ and that Acting City Foreman Roy Hancock assume these\nduties ln the Interval; that W. Schu-\nbert be given four weeks' work,\ntwo weeks with the Parks Board\nand two weeks with the Board ol\nWorks; and that brush and trees be\ncut down at the intersection ot\nFifth Avenue and Queen Street.\nSome discussion took pl.ee regarding beautlfication work the\nBoard of Works Department has\ncarried out at the MacLean Schoo)\ngrounds. The Council decided to\nsend a summary of the work done\nas well as a statement of'the cost,\nto the School Board, as it was felt\nthia work should be paid for out\nof  School  Board  appropriations.\nThe Council also instructed the\nBoard of Works Department to remove the lacrosse floor at the Second Avenue rink and store it for\nthe Winter.\nFour recommendations by the\nFire, Water and Light Committee\nChairman, Aid. Leo T. Nimsick.\nalso met with the Council's approval. Aid. Nimsick recommended that\nenquiries be made as to the cost of\n2000 feet^f steel, wood and secondhand pipe with a view to installing\na separate pipe line and thus better\nwater service for residents of the\nPlaner Hill ares; that a light be\nInstalled at the corner of Third\nAvenue and Washington Street, the\nCity to pay the cost of the pole;\nthat the water service to J. J, Milli-\ngan's and A. Holoboffs residences\nbe altered in order to provide better pressure; and thst 10()0 feet ol\nvarious-sized water pipe be purchased, after quotations were received, In order to have a good\nstock of pipe to meet future requirements.\nLONDON (CP). - Masters and\ncrews of ses-going ships may drive\nunlicensed cars snd motorcycles\nwhen on l<S-ve, the Ministry of War\nTransport announced.\n14 Persons Receive\nRelief in Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. It-Four-\nteen penons received relief ln Rossland during the month of September, compared with 11 ln the preceding month, Aid. William Cunningham, Chairman of the Relief\nCommittee, informed the Council at\ntheir Tuesday evening session. Total relief* coat for September, he\naald, wai $101, of which the City'i\n\u25a0hare is $41.\nAthletics Pound\nRichmond tlto9\nto Take 2-1 Lead\nVANCOUVER, Oct. It (CP>-\nSt. Catharines Athletics, Eastern\nCanadian lacrosse champions, battered their way to 17-9 victory\nover Richmond Farmers, BriUin\nColumbia champs, here tonight in\nthe third game of a best-of-five\nCanadian Mann Cup finals, giving\nthem a lead of two games to one\nin the series. An estimated crowd\nof W00 saw the game.\nBehind the airtight netmlndlng ot\nGoalie BUI Whittaker who turned in\na brilliant performance and on numerous occasions turned out seemingly sure goals, the St. Kitts had lt all\nover the Farmers.\nSt. Catharines won the opening\ngame 10-9 but Richmond came back\nto take the second 21-10.\"The fourth\ngame of the seriei will be played at\nNew Westminster Friday night, and\na fifth, if necessary, in Vancouver\nnext Monday.\nThe Kittens presented an entirely different lacrosse machine tonight\nas they refrained from rough tactics and concentrated on a fast clever game.\nDo Yoa Suffer\nFrom Headaches?\nSfcMtHlWh-hi Wttt ahead that achee\naat un J the W.\nA headi Ai need not be an Wtorm In ltaelf, hut it\n\u2022 __*% eymptoa that there la Intestinal\naa *__\nbeJp oeaaraoe tha eaoae o. headache It is\nto eliminate tho wute matter from the system.   Burdock  Blood\n^ to noon the muk of headachea by regulating the digeeti-re\norgans,neutralising acidity, regulating the constipated T\u00bb,wels\ntip the sluttish liver, and whssn thia has been accomplished the\n_ abotdd diaappnr.\nGet B. R B. at any drug eoanter.   Price $1.00 a bottle.\nTsss) T. -tlltxra (V, Usalud. Tonssto. On.\nSs5\nTHE BEST COAL FOR YOUR\nMONEY.\nWestern Monarch\nLump $11.25 ton        Stove $10.00 ton\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\nFall Bridge to\nOpen This Week\nFirst round of the Fall Bridgt\nTournament, sponsored by Mrs. Vin-\ncent Fink's Circle of St. Saviour'i\nChurch Helpers, gets undtr way\nthis week. Games will be playea\nup until next Tuesday at noon,\nplay being limited to 2V_ hours.\nWinners of each game will phone\nthe results to Mrs. John Morey. and\nlosers of the first week's play will\nbe entered in a second flight.\nFirst round  draw  followi:\nMr. and Mrs. E. S. Planta vs\nMrr F. C. Rowley and Mri. F. M\nErskln.\nMn. R. B. Proctor and Mrs T H.\nBiurque vs. Miss Connie Hickman\nano  Mrs   A   T. Godfrey.\nMis. W. J. Leigh and Misj Greta\nCurwen vs. Mr. and Mri. Robert\nSt. Denis.\nMr. and Mrs. John Morey va. Mr\nar.d Mrs. R. Strachan.\nMr. and Mrs. John Cartmel vs\nMrs George Lambert and Mri. W\nLushley.\nMri J. A. Ballantyne and Mrs\nK. Terry vs. Mrs. A. M. Noxon anil\nMrs   B. H. Schwengers.\nMrs. F. P. Sparks and Miss M\nMcKenz.e vs. W. Holmgren and K\nC   McCannel.\nMrs. A. G. Mckay and Dr, H F\nCameron vs. Mrs. D. Wro'.nowski\n.Ml Miss Nancy   Dunn.\nMrs R. Watson and Mn P. O\nLawrence vs. Mrs Gordon Hailett\nand Mrs   Leslie Craufurd,\nMrs. Vincent Fink and Mrs O R\nBarrett vs. Mr. and Mn. E. C\nWraggo\nMr and Mrs. E E L, Dewdney\nvs   Mrs. Janet C *at?s ana partner\nMr* R. H. Dill and Mrs. K. Gren-\n(el! vs Mrs. W. O, Rose and Mrs\nri, Thunrps^n\nMr and Mrs G N Colville vs |\nMri. J B, Stark and Mri Lou J\nChoquette.\nMrs, H. Chester and Mrs A C\nFournier v., Mrs. L V. Rogers and\nMrs. H. Rosling.\nMr   snd  Mrs   John  Erb vs   Mrl\nH.   M    Whimster   and   Miis   Jean,\nGilker.\nMr' T. H. Johnstone and Mn J\nN. Hon', vi M'is Bc'.'.y Johnson ana\nMn, K. C   McCannel\nTo Investigate Pool\nLicence Application\nROSSLAND.   B.C.,   Oct,    lS-An\napplication from Louie Schnurr of\nOsoyooi f tr permission to operaie\nmme pool tables in the defunct\nSilver Dollar Pool Room was referred by the Citv Council Tuesday evening to the Pol.ce Depirtment  for  rsecessary   investigation.\nLeaiy In Radio Address al Trail\nReads Letter Written lo MalUand^\non Mine Capital, Finance, BridpJ\npick up MM of theie propertiei\n''off the bargain counter.\n\u2022tad Cros\nRotsli\ni CroilJh\nAististtina\nhanks the\nuncll. for\nin Drive\nROSSLAND, B.\n.0. \u2022'\nTRAIIs, B.C., Oct. ltV-Hon C. I.\nLeary, Flnlater of Public Works,\nspeaking over the radio from Station CJAT here tonight, read a\nletter he aald he had written to R.\nL. Maitland, K.C., Leader ot the\nLeary   told   the   Opposition\n... \"for deliberately trying to inure our mining induitry ln thf\nchieftain he would never forgive\nhfii\nlure\t\nKootenays\" by stating that capital\nhesitated to come into the country\nthrough a lack of confidence ln the\nsecurity of investments under the\nlaws and government of the Province.\nSCARED OPP INVESTORS\nHe laid Mr. Maitland overlooked\nthe probability of higher pricei for\nbaae metals due to the war, and\nscared off investor! at a time when\ncapital wu looking at properties to\ndevelop   and  suggested   that   Mr,\nMaitland'i   action   might   make   lt\nposalble   for  ehrewd   investors, to\nMr.   Leary   suggested   inconiis-\nl.n   Mr.   Maitland   speaking\nteocy\nglowl:\nLucky\n\u25a0lowingly of the reopening of the\n.ucky Jim Mine by A. I. Jukei\nConservative candidate for Kailo\nSlocan, since this action waa proof\nthat capital did not feel lnaecure.\nThe Miniater of Public Works\nalso referred to the financial record\nof the Coniervative Government,\nin which Mrr Maitland wai a member, and luggested that the Conservative Leader waa not proud of\nit.\nMr. Leary concluded with a\nlengthy defence of the building of\nthe Marblehead bridge, and of the\nrelation of his lumber firm to it.\nand stated that his firm tendered\nonly when the bridge timbers could\nnot be obtained elsewhere in the\ndistrict! and thanked Mr. Maitland\nfor revealing that he wai \"against\nthe construction of bridges and\nroada to serve tha isolated communities of our rural areas.\"\nRossland Woman\nIs Uid al Rest\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 15 -\nRev. D. S. Catchpole was the officiating clergyman at St. George's\nAnglican Church this afternoon\nwhen funeral rites were conducted\nfor Mary Wilmott, wife of John M.\nWllmott of Rossland.\nMrs. Wilmott died Monday morning at the Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nafter a lengthy illness. She was\nborn af Nottinghamshire, England,\nand had been a resident of Rossland\nfor 29 years. She was in her fifty-\nsixth year.\nSurviving are her husband, a\ndaughter, Mrs. E. Robertson of\nKimberley and a brother, Bert\nStrawbridge at Vancouver.\nFloral tributes were numerous.\nIntertaent was in mountain View\nCemetery.\nProgram on B.C.\nProducts Popular\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 15 - Seating accommodations at the Pariah\nHall were taxed to the utmest on\nTuesday evening for tho big B.C.\nProducti display. Colored motion\npictures of British Columbia Industrial concern* and the main\nevent of the evening's entertainment, the Quiz contest, proved popular with the audience. Quiz contest prizei were in the form of\nhampers of groceries and miscellaneous articles produced in BC,\nand even though a question was\nmuffed there was always a generous\nconsolation award. A total of thirty-\nfive prizes was given in this cm-\ntest, the questions of which related\nto B.C. industrial concerns.\nA. C Foreman conducted the display, and Gilbert F, Hunt wa\u00ab the\nChairman for the evening's program.\nTrail Bowling\nPlan to Collect Bonei\nond Animol Fats li\nShelved ot Rouland\nRO&3LAND. B.C., Oct. 14-The\nCity Council Tuesday evening\nshelved a suggestion received some\ntime ago from the Depirtment of\nNational War Services, which is\nconducting a nation-wide salvage\ncampaign to reclaim materials valu-\nable tor war purposes, that the\ncity undertake the collection of\nbones and animal fata, upon receipt frem William Knlghtley, Supervisor of the salvage campaign.\nthat the only place in Canada thus\nfar where bones and fats can be\nprocessed is at Vanoouver.\nWhen the Idea was tint broached\nIt was suggested that the benes and\nfats could be gathered at ths same\ntime as garbage.\nLONDON (CP). - Dr. Welling.\nton Koo, Chinese ambassador, accused the Japanese of encouraging\n\"gambling, drugs and prostitution\"\nin China \"to enslave and destroy\nthe Chinese race.'*\n14-Ap-\n1   of   Roaalaod  local   Red\nfi .''fuMtnce render-\norks De\nalumln-\n\u25a0 Sy the Red\n. ln a letter re-\n__ Council Tuesday\nMias Helen Mitchell\nOl the Society.\nime BM pounds of old aluminum wai collected by the Society foi\nwar purposes.\nClearance Sale Bargains\nTABLE OILCLOTH. Ysrd  34*\nDRAPERIES. Regular $2.50. Yard  95*\nKROEHLER 3-PIECE SUITE. Reg. $175. Now $130.50\nCHAIRS, MIRRORS, SMOKERS \u2014 REDUCED!\nFINK'S Furniture\nPallullo, Leary Pledge Aggressive\nPaving Plan on Nelway Road Slates\nPutnam; McLean Backs Him al Ymir\nBRIGHTON, England (OP) -\nGeorge Hole, an auxiliary fire lervice dan wbo la a member of the\nBritish Astronomical Association.\nhas completed, after three years'\nwork, a 14-inch reflecting telescope\nvalued at about \u00a32,000 ($8,900).\nHe had the pledge of both Premier\nPattullo and the Miniiter of Works\nHon. C. S. Leary, that an aggre i\nIve policy would be followed in\nsurfacing tha Nelson-Nelway Road,\nFrank Putnam told a Ymir audience Wednesday night.\nSupporting Mr. Putn&m on the\nplatform were W. H. Patterson of\nVancouver and D. D. McLean of\nNelson. A. Blane of Ymlr was\nChairman.\nThe candidate expressed his\npleasure in having been at least\npartially reaponalble for the appointment of the commission Investigating the Workmen's Com-\npenlation Act. One of the contributing factors was his presentation\nto tne House of complaints by the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nat Nelton that the Compensation\nBoard wai reducing accounts presented by the Hospital.\nDemocracy need not be slow, the\ncandidate oeclarW.\n'We must expand and strengthen\nour social services ln cooperation\nwith the Dominion to meet the\nneeds of men and women who will\nbe released from the war and war\nindustries, and guarantee them economic security,\" he said.\nLABOR  BACKING\nMr McLean stated labor was not\naffiliated with any particular political party but It did tupport ad\nministrations which were genuinely\ninterested in its problems. In Brit-\nish Columbia labor had Sound a\nfriend ln John Oliver, and thi\nsocial and labor legislation of late*\nLiberal Governments had provet,\nthe party's concern In the welfare\nof the working man.\nMr. Patterson declared the B.C\nSecurities Act wu designed to assist prospectors and mines and dio\nnot need amendment. It wai \u00bbnact\u00abn\nby the last Conservative Govern\nment and Liberal administrstions\ncontinued to enforce it\nThe act provided a code tor thoar\npromoting development, with safe-\nguards against fraud. What wu re\nquired was not amendment cf the\nAsCt but vision and enterprise or\nthe part of officials and of the mining fraternity in using the machinery  of the Act.\nElected members ahould be truly\nrepresentative of their oonstituen\ncies, Mr Patterson held, contending\ndemocracy would be vitiated if a\nmajority of the Legislature consisted of carpetbaggers sent out to\nconstituencies which had Insufflcl\nent spirit to represent thenuelvef\nHe prophesied no Kootenay oon\nstituency would be la this catcgorj\nREVBLSTOHE, B.C. Oct. 16 (CPi\n\u2014Thomas Edwards, 81 -year-old retired Canadian Pacific construction\nworker and pioneer resident of the\nBig Bend country, died here today.\nTRAIL, BC, Oct. 15\u2014Trail men's\nbowling   score*   Wednesday   night\nfollow:\nTRAIL NO. 1\nC. Bisaro   \t\nL. M^rro\nC.  Vlah .vich\nM. Turik  \t\n172 181 135\n181  140 14\u00ab\n143 170 176\n196 175 1\u00ab\n4\u00abfl\n470\n4b:i\n4.1 i\nTotals\t\n962 688    .\n1931\nCANADA PAINT\nB. Kirby .\nJ. Cameron \t\nN. Turik     \t\nLow score  \t\nSpot   \t\n138 180 131\n187 140 183\n140 151 221\n138 140 131\n28   28   28\n429\n5'.0\ns:2\nVi'i\n71\nToUls ...\n628 617 9\u00bb2\n'.988\nTRAIL NO. 2\nR   Ber'.ciuzn\nA. Canaan     \t\nA    Ber'.oluzzi   ..\nF. Vcn'.ur;ni \t\n138 1*3 180\n151  136 175\n156 174 158\n180 190 137\nin\n441\n490\n\u00ab7\nTotals    \t\n608 862 850\n\u25a0Xt)\nUNION  HOTEL\nW.   Weslwood   \t\nW    R.isj   .\nA.   Cashola   \t\nA. Hail\nSpot\t\n163 165 128\n185 130 147\n156 168 124\n14.1 l!8 131\n64   64   64\n4M\n482\n441\n:<.*).:\n182\nTotals     714 835 5\u00ab 1M1\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nMarket Act Protects Producer and\nConsumer Captain Bull Tells Trail;\nC.C.F. Unable Effect Reform-Gould\nHume Hotel\u2014Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  BENWELL   Proprietor,\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHWffi-D, C. Stinson, W. Frsier,\nH. Hnyhnd, L. Harvey. Vanoouver;\nT. S, Harmon. Victoria; R. L. ros\nter, Penticton; A. Anderion, Medicine Hat; Mr and Mrs, R. A. Bay-\nlis, Montreal; Mrs. T. Front, Seattle\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONI      MR  AND MRS. PETIR  KAPAK, Prop*.      PHONI\n534     In rur new winf you may enjoy the finest     \u2022\u00bb*\u00bb*\n\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb '        rooms in the Interlor-Bith or Shower        Ol\n\u2022 PICIAL RATES BY THE WEIK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\nI \"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"\nDuff erin Hotel\n800 Seymour St.        Vincouver, B. C.\nNewly  rinovated through\nout   Phonti  and  tlcvitor.\nA. PATTERSON, late o(\nColeman. Alta., Proprietor\n]\nTRAIL. B.C . Oct, 15\u2014\"It amiuea\nme that ao many people should\nattack the Marketing Act with the\naccusation of dictatorship when Uie\n\u00abct is based on Uie same principle\n\u00bb! the Minimum Wsge Act snd the\nWorkmen's Compensation A*ct,\"\nstated John G. Guuld, speaking\nifter Capt. Cecil Bull, Liberal can-\ndidate for South \u00a9kanagan had\n\u2022(iven an address on the BC. Marketing Act at Uie Odd Fellows Hall\nWednesday evening.\nThe Act was simply a minimum\nwage bill for farmers and anyone\na't.u-k.***! It was, In his optnlon.\n'scabbing\"\nCaptain Bull stated a stable market In 1921 hsd given him return\nof $140 a box for his apples; but in\nths year following a surplus had\nreduced the returns to 10 cents a\nbox, snd the market finally became\n,o demoralised that not only were\nthere no returns, but it cost the\nproducer money to ship his products.\nThe Marketing Act resulted In a\ncontrolled market and controlled\nprice, and security heretofore entirely unknown to the producer.\nMen of 30, 40, 50\nPEP. VIM, VIQON, lubnermalf\nWant normal pep, vim, .Igor, vitality? Try Ostrex Tonic TableU. Contains tonics, stimulants, oyster elements\u2014aids to normal pep after 30.\n40 or 50 Oet a special Introductory\nsm for only Me Try this ild to\njaormal pen and vim today For sale\nat all food drug stores.        (Advt.)\nIt assured the retailer and consumer of quality articles and safe-\nfuariied the market against violent\nfluctuation in price.\nPOSTWAR   PLANNINO\nCaptam Bull described a reaolu-\ntlon presented by fflmself and\npassed by the B C. House in November, 1938. petitioning the Dominion Government to plan a con-!\nstruehve post-war program. In January. 1940, the Federal Government,\nact up a Committee of Demobilisation and Rehabilitation, end In February, 1941, after representations,\nfrom BC, extended Uie scope of\nthe committee and set up a special\ncommittee to Investigate ths problem of post-war reconstruction ln\nIts entirety.\nSEASONID  MEN\nMr. Gould stressed Uie need for\nseasoned men in the Oovernment\nduring the post-war period. He de-\naorlbed the Conservative Party u\ncontrolled tn the main by a group\nof Vancouver lawyers, whose attitude was analytical snd critical,\nrather than  constructive.\nThe C.CF, was an honest political\npartr, he aaid, but had three peat\nweaknesses at present; The atUtude of tha leaders at Uis start of\nthe war regarding Canada's participation In the conflict; the fad that\nsocialization could not be carried\nout without the contusion which\nmust at all coiU be avoided now;\nend the reform suggested could hot\nbe constitutionally accepted under\nthe British North America Act.\nDon ild MacDonald was Chairman\nDEFEAT\n\/\/\nTHE \"OBSTRUCTION\nGOVERNMENT\nREPUDIATE THE GROUP OF\nWILLFUL MEN WHO WANT\nTO DIVIDE CANADIANS INTO\nSEPARATE PROVINCIAL TRIBES'\nTHE ONLY WAY\nVOTE\nCONSERVATIVE\n W1 \"IPP^P^^ \\7U0\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ. OCTOBER 11. 1M1  .1 \"    \" I1      '       '     '   ,''\t\n-PAGE THREE\n3-DAY\nThursday-Friday-Saturday\u2014Every Item a Smash Value!\nPricei are cut, and cut again to giv* Nelton tht\ngreatest turnltur* values on record.\nWalnut Bedroom\nSUITES\nNever such value as this. A handsome 4-piece suite\nof matched walnut veneers. Table top vanity with\nheavy plate glass mirror, 4-drawer chiffonier, double\nbed and vanity bench. Anyone would be proud to\nown this. 3-Day Sale, price per suite\n$6250\nDeferred Payment plan $20.85 cash. Balance in\n8 equal monthly paymenti of $5.42 including carrying charge.\nThe \"Bay's\" Deferred Payment and Budget Plans\navailable on all jilt itom*. Act quickly tnd lav*.\n9-Piece\nDining Room\nSUITE\nHere's sky-high value. High walnut finish in a dignified design, A substantial suite for a lifetime ol\nuse. Modern extension table, 6-foot buffet, arm\nchair and 5 dining chairs with blue leatherette\nseats. Just one of these. 3-Day Sale, price, suite\n$77.00\nConvenient Payment Terms may bt arrangtd.\nChesterfield\nSUITES\nThree only slightly rubbed\nin transit. A comfortable\nchesterfield and wing chair.\nColors rose, rust or green.\nRegular value $69.50.\nTo clear, suite\n4 xxxx VALUE\n1941 DICTATOR RADIOS\nA lovely mellow tone instrument in\nmodern walnut cabinet. Thii has\neverything you would expect in high\npriced receiver. 6-tube with 8-tubt\nperformance. Push button tuning. Tone\ncontrol. Long and short wave bands.\nRegular $79-50. 3-Day Sale, each\nS\/IQ.50     DINETTE SUITE      $59-50\n\u25a0Ml     m, lust one only in the smart ivory and Chinese red   Full ^J    J\nB extension table. Beautiful buffet and 4 chairs with r\u00bbrl\nlust one only in the smart ivory and Chinese red   Full\nextension table. Beautiful buffet and 4 chairs with red\nseats. Made to sell at a much higher price.\n3-Day Sale, suite\nDeferred payment plan. By\ncash $16.50. Balance in 6\ntqual monthly paymenti of\n$5.66 including carrying\nchargt.\n$6600\nDeferred Payment Plan. $22.00 cash. Balanct in 10 tqutl\nmonthly paymtntt of $5.11  including carrying chargt.\nDeferred Payment Plan $19.85 cash.\nBalanct in 8 tqual payments of $516\nIncluding small carrying charge,\nSale of\nTnliqht LAMPS\nMore light at less cost\nhere Heavy bronze bases\n\\\\ and stems 100. 200 and\n300 candle power in direct light with 3 shade\nlights Complete with\nparchment shades 3 Day\nSale, each\nJ\n$8.95\nPottery Table Lamps\nAttractive bases in brown, green or yellow. With\nmatching shade. A regular S2.95 value tfJO OQ\n3-Day Sale, each   *)L.LJ\nFloor Covering (Remnants)\nA complete clearance at these prices   Pieces up to\n6 square yards\nInlaid Linoleum.  Regular $1 69. (1  Or\nSquare yard .})_.__ J\nPrinted Linoleum, Regular $110\nSquare yard   \t\nPrinted Rexoleum. Regular 45c.\nSquare yard  \t\nTable Cloth Millends\nLengths of 1, 1 Vi and 2 yards in 45\" width, P\ning slightly imperfect.\n3 Day Sale, yard  \t\n75c\n29c\n30c\nWindow Blinds\nCream or green fibre blinds witb strong spring rollers. Siie 36x72. iA\n3-Day Sale, each  'WC\n1 Winnipeg Couch\nA drop-s'de couch that is easily converted into a\ncomfortable double bed. Cover of attrac- ffi J QT\ntive dark cretonne 3-Day Sale, each . . <P14.\u00ab7J\nBudget Pitn. SSOO cash, balano* In 2 tqusl payments et\n16.00.  No  Carrying Chsrgo.\nSimmons Leader\nMATTRESS\nChilds' Cribs\nStandard steel cribs  Siie 27x51. Finished in brown\nwith \"teddy bear\" motif. Complete with a good\nmattress.\n3-Day Sale, each   \t\n3-DAY i\n$18.90\n3-Piece Chesterfield Suites\n1 only handsome Jacquard velour Chesterfield Suite in\ndusky rose. 7-foot chesterfield and wing and club chair.\nA reg. $139.50 value. 3 days sale, to clear .'\t\n.00\n$119\nA bniHoin. ban (lamumui. fel\n, *\ni\nA limited number of these fine inner spring mattresses\nat a bargain price Heavy covers of novelty damask.\nYears of comfort for the price of an ordinary felt mattress. Sue 3'3\" and 4'6\" only.\nIN . | j    , \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*.* ..\n\t\n*\n-\n__________\n'\n \u25a0mmm\nnat rou*\n|gtter ond Sugar...\nCoring Helps\nthe Overweiahls\nBy  IDA JEAN  KAIN\nAn amusing bit of Information\nleased along by Bebe Daniels In\nier recent flying trip from England\nIU to do with slimming Some of\nhe wealthier women who had been\nlomlderably too fat are losing\nvelght on the war rations and their\nihysician, a prominent Harley\nStreet specialist, observe! that \"they\nire doing lust what I have been\nJ-ymg to get them to do for years.\"\nAs it happens, the snack they miss\nnost, a heavy afternoon tea, Is a\nn\u00bbla reason for their weight loss.\n'It Is what I call a 'starch tea'.\"\niliss Daniels explained, \"because\nhere were always scones, crumpets,\niread and butter, rolls and pastries,\nfou weren't supposed to eat all\nBiose things. But you would eat\njuite a lot,\"\nButter and augar are among the\njcarcitles. \"We are allowed a very\ntiny pat ol butter and one lump ol\nlURar al a meal In the restaurants\nind I haven't had cream lor so long\nthat although I was looking lorward\nto some. I lind it much too rich\n(or me. MUk is still available tor the\nChildren but we expect that it^ will\nloon have to be rationed, too.\"\nBy good fortune and the hard\n*ork of the \"land girls.\" for whom\nMils Daniels has unlimited information, there were plenty of green\nvegetables this Summer and the\ntrend was toward the use of more ot\nthese foods in the menus. In spite\nM all the hardships, it would aeem\nthat the dietary hat Improved in\ngome respects.\nOne of the less desirable phases,\nhowever, ls the shortage of meat.\nHiss Daniels is a good practical\ndietitian when she says that \"Everyone is working harder than ever\nbefore In her life snd needs meat.\"\nAll the women in England, Miss\nDaniels told me, are helping in one\neray or another. One o! their moit\nImportant Jobs ls to act as \"spotten\"\ntor enemy planes and to watch the\nroofs for incendisry bombs. In\ngome of the factories, 80 per cent ol\nthe workers doing hard manual\n'labor are women. They serve as\nmessengers, riding motorcycles.\nSometimes the messengers are on\nthe lob for so long that when they\ndo get through, they simply pull\ntheir machines oil the road and go\nto ileep.\nWhimster, Miss Eidt\nNamed Delegates to\nHospital Convention\nH. M vVhlmster, Preiident, tnd\nMits Vert 3. Eidt. Hospltil Superintendent, will represent the Kootenay Lake General Hotpital Board\nof Dlrectori at the annuil B.C. Hoipital Auoclition Convention in\nVictoria -October 30 to 22. Thiy\nwere named delegatei by the Board\nTuesday night when a letter notifying the Board of the convention\ndates and arrangementi wu received.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS   NELSON  B.C.-THURSOAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 11. 1(41\n780 Pounds ofClolMngWIo\nBritain by Nelson Ref uoee Body\nWON'T YOU\nJOIN ME?\nHOT BOVRIL\nIS DELICIOUS\nTyphus. . .\nDisease and War\nGo Hand In Hand\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M.D.\nWe are getting reports of sporadic\nepidemics of typhus lever in Europe.\nBasic conditions just now in Southeastern Europe and Ruula are ideal\nfor severe epidemics.\nTyphus fever is the old Jail fever,\nor war fever, or camp fever. It ls\nspread by the rat, the louse and the\nIlea.\nThese associations were discovered in an historical incident con\ncernlng how Rowland Jcncks lost\nhis ears. He wai t bookbinder who\nwas brought out of Jail to itand trial\northodox religious views. This was\nbefore the Chancellor of Oxford\nUniversity for having expressed un-\nback in the days of Queen Ellubeth.\nwhen not io much was known or\neven suspected about the spread of\ndisease by Insects.\nIn the iall where Jencks was confined had been a number of cases\nof \"jayl\" fever. Jencks ln court\nwas a deplorably filthy figure; the\nstench from hii perion filled the\nroom. But this was not unusual for\na prisoner ln those days; they didn't\ncoddle prisoners. He was condemned\nto have his ean cut otf. But he got\na private revenge, because a number\nof the august members of the court\nand the spectators, fellows of the\ncolleges of the University, came\ndown with Jail fever, contracted\nfrom his person. As Dr. Zinsser said\nIn Rats, Lice and History we are\nforced to conclude that a number\nof the faculty of Oxford were\nlousy.\nThe disease flourishes whertver\ncrowding, filth, disruption of populations, and the breakdown of\nhygienic precautions occur. War\nconditions constitute an ideal pre-\npirttory field for this tnd many other diseases, as Dr. Ralph Major describes in his fascinating book Fatal\nPartners; War and Disease. Deaths\nfrom typhui during and after the\nlast war reached figures as high as\n3*00.000.\nThe rat, that ancient and unwanted companion of man, has\nadapted Itself well to the life work\nof spreading disease. About the\nmiddle of the Thirteenth Century\ncame out of India the black rat\n(Mus ra'.tus with long ears and\na glossy black coat. It was adaptable; It learned how to travel in\nsailing vessels; It followed commerce; it established itself in the\nnew commercial cities of Europe,\nkilling off the local native ipecies.\nIt became the world rat.\nLater came the other world nt\n\u2014the brown rtt. They ire sciv-\nengers They live otf filth. They\ncarry lice and fleas from house to\nhouse, man to man. Whenever there\nis trouble, conllagration, disruption\nof sewage, abandonment ol lood\nsupplies, rotting grain, this hardy,\nsuccessful animal swarms out ol its\nholei, thrives, breeds and spreads\npestilence and lamine.\nRussit, Greece. Jugoslsvis tnd\nChlnt ire today perfect breeding\ngrounds for rat borne epidemics\nI never iee the photograph of i\nwar-torn Russian village, but I see\nIn my mind's eye the rates coming\nout of their holes, spreading pestilence. In thr Western Hemisphere\nwe have endemic eras in Mexico\nand we must exercise every precaution rh these troublous times not\nto let our war-lever prevent our\nefforts at control of these feel pests,\nEALL   REDUCING   DIET\nBreakfast (MS):\nHalf grapefruit\u2014unsweetened,\n1 like toait with butter.\n1 cup black coffee.\nLunch 1800):\n} hard-boiled eggs on lettuce, with\ntomatoes, 1 teaspoon Mayonnaise.\n1 slice toast with butter.\n1 glass milk.\nDinner (780):\nSmall Sea-Food Cocktail. Oocktall\nSauce.\nAverage helping lean meat.\nChlffontde Sa'.a-i-l dessertspoon\nTrench dressing\n1 slice toist\u20141 butter ball\nTea with lemon, 1 lump sugar\nAgain, through the wonderful cooperation of the donort and worker! of the Clothing Committee ot\nthe district branchei and local hetdquirten ot the Nitional Committee, on Refugeei, a very large ihipment of good uied and made over\nclothing has been lent to England\nfor distribution to the sullercrs ln\nthe bombed areas.\nThe ihipment consisted of 1080\ngarmenti\u2014and weighed 780 poundi\n\u2022nd wu mtde up ot 110 garmenti\nfor men, 358 garments for women,\n387 garmenti for children, 178' garmenti for lnfanti, 29 large quilts,\n18 small quilts, three afhgani, one\nbaby blanket tnd four shelter pillowi. ' . \u25a0'\u25a0\nIt ll stated that washable doth\nIng il coming ln ln t much cleaner\ncondition now, but there is itlll\nroom for Improvement. Donon are\nuked to launder washable' clothing\nif possible before turning lt In.\nMn. T. W. Brewer, Chairman of\nthe NeUon Refugee Committee,\nstates thtt tht itock of flour tacks\ntor lining boyi' panta li practically\nexhausted, and donations would be\nappreciated. Thli alio applies to\nwool for knittings over.\nThere ii to be mother display\nihortly to demonstrate what ia being done with cut off garment!\ncontributed.\nIn the workroom there ll i grett\ndeal of ripping to be done and it is\npropoied to itart an afternoon ex-\npreitly for thii work. Mn. Brewer\nwill arrange an afternoon for those\nInterested.\nSERIAL STORY\nBy RICHARD HOUGHTON\nDeath at the Switch\nCHAPTER FORTY-NINI\n'Heavens!\" gasped Henry. \"Jones\nmust have gone to my room. He\nthinks I ran away. He's set the police\nafter me!\"\n\"Looks like it,\" agreed Spinelli.\n\"But who could have told them you\nwere at King's place?\"\n\"Mr. King didn't have a chance\nto. He fled into Uie woods. The old\ngardener, Mrs. Willett's father, must\nnave seen me and telephoned.\"\nSpinelli grasped Henry by an\narm. \"Let's get out of herel That\nold man may be watching us right\nnow\u2014with a gun!\"\nThey ran across the drive away\nfrom the garage and Into the bushes.\nWhen they were safely out of sight\nof the building, they halted, listening.\n\"I hear a car coming up from the\nvillage,\" announced Henry.\n\"Probably one of the sheriffs cars.\nSafest thing Ior you to do is to go\nout and hail it.\"\n\"Hail lt! But suppose . . .\"\n'They'll see you're unarmed. Tliey\nwon't shoot. II you try to hide, it\nwill go herder with you when they\nfind you\u2014and they're sure to lind\nyou.\"\n\"I\u2014I suppose to. You'll explain . . .\"\n\"Of course. I'll take the blame\nfor your being here. Alter all, it\nwas my Idea.\"\n\"Okay.\" Henry stepped out Into\nthe road, Spinelli behind. Blinding\nheadlights, one ot them a bright\nred, came around the bend and\nbore down on them. Gravel skittered\nunder the tjres as ths car came to\na stop.\n\"Just the guy we're looking Ior!\"\nexclaimed one ol the deputy sheriffs, climbing out ol the car, rifle\nin hand.\n\"Looking for me?\" asked the little clerk Innocently. \"I\u2014I haven't\ndone anything.\"\n\"Oh, no? Sneaked out of your\nhouse when you weren't supposed\nto. 7. led to put ont over on the\nsheriff, that's all!\"\n\"But he wouldn't listen to me. 1\nhad to get away for a little while\nto\u2014to run down a clue\u2014didn't I,\nMr. Spinelli?\"\n\"That's right, officer. 1 asked him\nto help me tonight. We've discovered\nsomething that will interest you.\"\n\"Oh, yeh?\"\nThe other deputy spoke from Inside the car. \"Give him a chance'to\nexplain, Sweeney. He sure wasn't\nrunning away.\"\nHenry swallowed. \"We've learned\nthat Mr. King's old gardener ls the\none who rigged up the gun trap the\nsheriff discovered. He rigged up another this afternoon, alter the sheriff left, and it almost killed Mr\nSpinelli.\"\n\"That old guy? He's no murderer!\"\nThe voice fronr the car spoke\nagain. \"The old guy's nuts, Sweeney. No telling what he would do\nWon't do any harm to hunt him up\nand learn what he has to say for\nhimself. Just a minutei I'll report\nthat we've picked up Potter.\" Apparently he switched on the short\nwave transmitter, because a moment later he was talking with\nheadquarters. Ttien he climbed out\nof the car. \"Hand over that gun\nSpinelli.\"\nSpinelli surrendered the revolver\nThey walked back together to\nward the dark garage. Henry noted with surprise that the old man's\nradio was no longer going\u2014indicating that he was home and had\nshut it off.\nOne of the officers pounded a fist\nagainst the panels of the living\nquarters door.\n\"Who's there?\" croaked the old\nman from inside. Who comes around\nin the middle of the night to wake\ninnocent people?\"\n\"It's not the middle of the night.\"\nthe other oflicer told him roughly\n\"And we didn't wake you! Come\nout, Grandpa. We know you're\ndressed''\nTO   BE  CONTINUED\nlit Pounds Jam\nFromDenverW.lt\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-The regular meeting of the New Denver\nW. I. wai held In the Legion HaU\nwith 21 members and four visitors\npresent.\nThli meeting was given over to\nRed Cron work and tea money'\ndonated to this cause.\nMr* Balbcrnl reported 8M pounds\nof Jam had been ient to Vancouver.\nMn. A. Francis ipoke on \"Bundles for Britain\". She Is in charge\nof this work. Miss Clever reported\nfor the Library and Mrs. Crellin\nfor the Visiting Committee,\nMrs. Beggs gave a detailed account of the September articles\nsent to Slocan which was as follows:\nOne khaki turtle neck sweater,\ntwo blue teamen's scarfs; one pair\nseaman's locks, nine face cloths,\ntwo girls' slips, three pairs air force\nblue mitts, 4 pairs khaki gloves,\nthree grey service socks, three ladies' gowns, one pair refugee child's\nsocks,  one pair chiid'a mitts  (do\nnated).\nSixty-four pounds ol aluminum\nhad been collected by the Junior\nRed Cross. The proceeds from the\npicture show was $18.85 and tea\nmoney collected was $3 80.\nArrangements have been made\nto hsve sewing and knitting bees.\nArticles handed in at this meet\ning wer^*\nFive pain grey service socks, two\nface cloths, 6 girls' slips, four la\ndies' gowns, one pair civilian de^\nfence socks, two pairs air force blue\nmitts.\nAt the close of the business ses\nsion, Mrs. Crellin spoke for her\nhusband and C. Clifford gave a\nUlk on behalf of the Red Crou on\nactual help given them when prisoners of war.\nMrs. H. Pendry, Mn. Belle Pen-\ndry, Mrs. D. Peanon and Mn.\nBeggs served refreshments.\nAVERAGE TOURIST TO\nB. C. SPENDS $7 A DAY\nVICTORIA, Oct 15 (CP). - The\naverage tourist in British Columbia\nspends $7 t day snd stays here for\nthree days. Major Gordon Smith,\nDirector of B. C. Government Travel Bureau haa discovered in a special questionnaire survey.\nIron Duke to Coma\nto Nolson in Tour\non Behalf War Fund\nThe part ot the Nelson Rotary\nClub ti sponsoring tha visit ot tha\nmobile tea canteen, the Iron Duke,\nln aid ot the Queen'i Canadian Fund\n\u25a0ome time in November wai referred Monday to the club'i director!.\nThe Iran Duke as. one ot the\ntint built, and It the tint war relic\nto make a tour ot Canada. A lady\nfrom England will accompany the\nIron Duke to act as hoiteso.\nEducational...\nPel Club (ould\nBe Good Hobby\nBy GARRY C, MYERS, Ph.D.\nRecently ln a fifth grade clasi I\nwitnessed a pet club in action. They\nwere conducting a \"quiz\" about\npets based on newspaper clippings\nwhich the club had collected.\nI asked the children to write\nand send me an account of their\nclub. Here is what they wrote, in\npari:\n\"In lhe Pet Club we try to learn\nmore about the care of animals,\nwhat they like, how to make them\nfriendly as well as to find out unusual things about them. We try\nto teach others to be considerate\nand kind, by our acts, pictures,\nstories or playi.\nPETS STUDIED IN CLASS\n\"This year our club has studied\nseveral pets in our own school\nroom. We've had rabbits, kittens,\ndogs, gold fish and even a young\ngoat. Owners have explained how\ntnese animals should be handled\nand fed. Children ln the lower\ngrades seem to enjoy hearing these\naccounts as much as our own mem-\nbers do.\n\"This term we have collected\nnewspaper and magazine articles\nabout pets. Stories about animals.\nPupils in other actlvltlei have\nlaved many clippings for us,\n\"A committee studies the clippings, the best ones being read and\nstudied in class. Some are posted\non our bulletin board. Those we\nfind most interesting and unusual\nare placed in a scrap book. Some\nof our clippings were used by other\nchildren in an auditorium program.\n'Toward the end of the term we\nworked out a 6hort program, so\nwe could pass on some of our In\nteresting stories.\"\nAny child who wished to develop\nan individual hobby at home or\none *A*ith several other children\nmighl be able to use the best plana\nof this club, especially thet of keening a scrap book with clippings\nfrom newspapers and magazines\nabout pets.\nLONDON (CP). - Because of a\nshortage of male drivers, women\nmay soon take over the wheels of\nbuses in provincial cities and rural\ndistricts.\nDecisions. .,\nMake Up Mind\nBefore Marriage\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nDear Mlai Fairfax:\nI'm a girl of 20 and have been\nkeeping \"steady\" company with' t\nyoung man tor three and a halt\nyears, and am very much in love\nwith him. He seems the same toward tat. However, we quarrel a\nlot and he stays away tor * week\nor two. But when he returni to\nme I always Uke him back. He\nseems to expect that, so doesn't\nhesitate to quarrel and leave me. I\nthink I'm making a mlatake some-\ntimes and ought not to let him\ncome back\nWhen he comei back after one\nof these qdarreli, bi uiually wanta\nto get married right away, but after\na few weeks he forgets all about\ngetting married. He never wants\nme to go anywhere without him.\nlikes to do as he pleases.\nWhat is your opinion? Do you\nthink he lovei me? Or am I Just\nwasting my  time?\nAa this young man wants to marry\nyou Immediately after a separation\nor quarrel, It looks to me as if he\nreally cared a great deal about you\nYou are the uncertain one by raising the question if you are \"just\nwasting your time.\" If you really\ncared enough about him to stand\ntbe \"storm and stress\" that arise\nIn even the best of marriages. I\nthink you should itart shopping for\nyour trousseau Immediately.\nUnder the circumstances, the best\nadvice I can give you  is to wait\nuntil you are a little more sure of '\nyour feelings,\nBOYS OFFER NO DATES\nDear Miss Fairfax:\nWe are two girls, seniors In high\nschool, and very much interested\nin two boys wno go to another\nschool. Sometimes they seem interested, and again they're indifferent.\nWe all go to the same dances, and\nthey always dance with us, and\nenjoy themselvei.   .\nOur problem Is: How can we get\nthem Interested enough to ask u;\nfor at date?\nTwo Anxious Olrls.\nSometime! when boys hang back,\nit's up to the girls to use their\nfeminine Intelligence In such matters and suggest the \"dates\" first.\nWhy not given an out-of-door picnic, not restricted to these two\nboys, but ask a dozen or more to\njoin in the fun?\nLast year I sent out hundreds of\nleaflets about old-fashioned picnics,\nand everyone seemed to have t\ngood time. These picnlci kept up\nthrough October, and actually into\nNovember until tbey had to build\nbig bonfires to keep lhe picnickers\nwarm.\nInvest In an out-of-door grill. It'i\nlots of fun to broil the chopi, the\n3usages,   or   whatever   you   take\nong, over theie grills. Play gamei\nand ling songs, why not get up \u25a0\nBlcnlc? Send me a self-addressed\ntree-cent itamped-envelope, and\nI'll send you a leaflet about theie\njolly, out-of-door affairs.\nLONDON (CP) -Inve|tlgatlon by\nthe Retail Distributor!' Association\nShowed after a heavy raid the greatest demand In shops was for can\nopeners.\nSince December cellulose hu\nbeen mixed with flour ln Norway'!\nbread.\n\u2014\nSAFEGUARD FINE CAKE\n_W& INGREDIENTS\n\\\\_W\n1 *\"***\u00ab*.\nm\nMAG\/C\nRIADYTO lUltl    \u2022\nmm^\n*\u00a3\u00a3\/\n\u2022 A thrilling\nflavour in a nourishing, quick B>\nserve, quick to\neat cereal _ made\nfrom TWO\ngrains \u2014 sun-ripened whett tod\nmalted barley.\n^M6RAP\u00a3NUTS FLAKES\nCOOKIES\nSmooth, soft skin\nwins! I ALWAYS\nuseLux Toilet Soap'\nkMJA\ndiLntLJjcfL\ncKDllA_WW(_\\,\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nFruit Crop\nChickpn-Tnmsto  Ring\nPotato Chipi or Creamed Potatoes\nOlivet Tiny Picklet\nCelery Ginner Pear\nHot  Bltcuitt        Trench Apple   Pie\nCoffee\nThii popular tcrrrn ttar\ntelli you how to kr-rp ikin\nmonth with Lui Toilet Soap\nfacial cleanting: \"Fint pat the\nlather lightly in Rinaa with warm\nwater, thm ront Pat lightly todry.'* Try L__\neart fnr 30 dayi' It'i a wnndf-rful beauty aid.\nCHICKEN-TOMATO RING\nRed Layer\u20141 cup boiling water.\n1 cup canned tomato toup, 1 pkg.\nlemon-flavored gelatin.\nPour boiling water over gelatin\nand rtlr until dissolved, then add\ncanned soup. Pour Into mold, and\nwhen firm, cover with the following;\nWhite Layer\u20142 teaspoons plain\nRflatin, 2 tablespoons salad dressing or mayonnaise. 3 ounces cream\ncheese, 1 can chicken soup.\nHeat the aoup and pour over the\ngelatin, which has b-een softened ln\ntwn tablespoons cold water, stirring until di.nolved. Add to cream\ncheese, which has been well mixed,\na httle at a Ume, stirring sfter\neach addition until creamy. When\ncool, add naiad dressing or mayonnaise Pour over red layer and\nchill until firm. Turn out on lettuce.\nServea six.\none cup flour to make s crumb\nmixture, and sprinkle said mixture\nover apples. Bake IS minutes in hot\noven 1450 degrees F) then reduce\ntemperature to 350 degrees and\nbake 20 minutes to 30 minutes\nlonger. Cool slightly before serving.\nYou can serve with plain or\nwhipped crwm or just as it comes\nfrom oven. If pie browns too quickly while baking, cover with piece\nof paper during last few minutes.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nAn Extra\nTaste\nAppeal\n9 out of 10 Screen Stare use Lux Toilet Soap\nFRENCH APPLE Pll\nPastry (or deep 8-Inch pie tin,\n6 apples, pared and sliced, -rt tn 2-3\ncup sugar. 1 Ublespoons (lour, I\nteaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg, 4\ncup butter, H cup (packed) brown\nsugar,  1 cup flour.\nLine pie pan with pastry, then\nchill same while preparing apples,\nslicing them thinly. Mil together\nsliced applet, sugar, cinnamon and\ntwo tablespoons (lour and place In\nchilled pastry. Cream together soft-\nened butter and brown sugar. With\nfork or putry blendir mtt In th*\n*m\n\"Pacific Milk Is invaluable fo\nthe busy cook,\" wrifej Mrs.\nM. R. \"It adds flavor, food\nvalue, makes for attractiveness\nwhenever used. Cakes and\ncookies are improved by it;\nmayonnaise is made richer;\nmilk puddings take on an extra\ntaste appeal. And how it glorifies that commonplace cup of\ncoffee.\"\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated (ltd Vacuum Packed\n\u00bb\u00ab.-.\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbl--.M.lsi*M.*\u00bb*\u00bb1*\n*mnKE THE DOT'\nft far\nStay en tha \"tunny side'!\nwith Edwards coffMl\nSuperb matched flavor and\ngenerous savings In every pound\nNo guessing I Poond after pound, yoa get\nidentical richness and eicellent quality\nwhen you buy Edwardi. It's imIcW coffee,\nthat's why! Checked time and time again\nby experts who make sure its famoui flavor,\nIts golden brown rout, Its luxury never vary.\nBut that's not ail! We hurry Edwardi to\nyour grocer with a minimum of delay and\nhandling. Thli way you're ipared many\nin-between expensei and enjoy worthwhile laving! on every pound.\nNext time, get Edwardi. Coffee io fine,\nio loyal it'i ijusmwlrt-l Your money back\nIf you don't agreel\n* Special Nit* tt nstrs oj flats\ntactum etgit makers! Y.lt.ar.lt\nits} fli** is exactly ri\/,kl ftr\nthe ttittm milhod tj naktnf,\ntejjee. It fins yt* maximum\nfavor tai astern ex, riitnt malts.\n\u25a0H\nSOLD BT\nSAFEWAY STORES, LTD.\n1\n [J)|jllllWlll:p|l*i,!f(|Ii^\u00bbWV'\u00abV''\u00bbr\nT&*.\nThe Smartest in\nFall Shoes\nNo matter what your costume\nfor Fall may be, the footwear\nto give it that finished look is\nit Andrew's. Smart styles for\nboth afternoon and evening\nwear.\nR. Andiew & Co.\nLeaden in Eootlashwn\n33 Polling Centres\nto Record Votes\nfor Nelson-Creston\nCRESTON, B.C. - The total oi\n8481 votes shown on the voters' list\nfor Nelson-Creston will be recorded\nat 5.1 polling places, according to the\nofficial proclamation of W. E. Coles,\nReturning Officer. Nelson with a\nlist ot 3980 names is the largest\ncentre. Creston is next with a voting strength ol 1201.\nH. H. Taylor is lending a hand\nwith arranging for polling places,\nand the list of deputy returning\nofficers and their clerks is about\ncompleted. In the area East of Kootenay Lake the school house will\nbe used at Arrow CTeek, Erickson,\nInd the Reclamation Farm. At Creston there will be a central poll in\nthe United Church Hall. At Kite!,,\nener the Senesael building will be\ntiled, tnd the tourist cabin at Sanca.\nAt all the other points the Community Hall has been hire!\nYou never go to putiei?\nYou never have a friend?\nPerspiring is essential\nBut it'a needleae to offend I\nSath tonight with LIFEBUOY\n-the gjtj sow\nBPKIUIY MUDE TO PHEVHtT \"1.0.\nPublic Opening\nior Isolation\nHospital Od. 29\nOCTOBER 29 waa set Tuesday\nnight by the Kootenay Lake General Hospital Board for the public\nopening of the modernized Isolation hospital.\nA tentative program for the opening had been arranged, Miss vera\nB. Eidt, Superintendent, reported.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs will likely officiate, and Rev. Foster Hilliard will\nbe requested to give the opening\naddress. Tea will be served oy the\nWomen's Auxiliary, it is planned.\nA letter was received from\/ Dr.\nC. H. Halfifld, Provincial Medical\nDirector oi Tuberculosis Control,\nstating that if at all possible he\nwould attend the opening, while\nletters from Dr. G. M. Weir, Minister of Health, and Dr. G. F. Amyot\nProvincial Health Officer, expressed\ntheir regrets at being unable to\naccept the Board's invitation.\nThe isolation hospital has been\nclosed since July while the renovation ond modernization has been\nunder way.\nMrs. Burkitt Is k\nHead of Hospital\nAid at N. Denver\nNEW DENVER. B.C.-The annual meeting of the Hospital Aid\nwas held at the Hospital Oct. 10\nwith 12 members present, and one\nvisitor. The President, Mrs. J. Greer,\npresided.\nMrs. Pendry reported for the\nBuying Committee and Mrs. Taylor\nfor the Sewing Committee.\nThe President presented her reported and gave an outline of the\nyear\"s achievements.\nMiss Butlin presented the Secretary's and Treasurer's annual report.\nMrs. J. Taylor gave a report ot\nall donations for the year, also individual sewing and mending done\nMy the members.\nMrs. H. Pendry presented the\nBuying Committee's report for the\nyear.\nElection of officers then resulted\nas follows:\nPresident, Mrs. Gtorge Burkitt;\nVice-President, Mrs, W. F. Jeffery;\nSecretary-Treasurer, Miss M. H.\nButlin; representative to Hospital\nBoard, Mrs. J. Greer; Buying Committee, Mrs. H. Pendry and Mrs. G.\nPalethorpe.\nNELSON DAILY NIWI NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. OCTOBER 16   1941\u2014\nHarvest Services\nHeld at Creston\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Harvest thanksgiving services were held at Preibyterian and United Church worship at Creston Sunday, with appropriate music and addresses, and\nboth edifice* attractively decorated\nwith fruits, vegetables and flowers.\nLarge attendances were features of\nthe day.\nAt Trinity United Rev. A. A. Fulton was impressive in his address\nfrom the text, 'Thanks be to God\nfor His Unspeakable Gift.\" The choir\nhad two special numbers, \"Sowing\nthe Seed,\" with W. J. Truscott taking the solo part, and \"The Sower\nWent Forth Sowing.\" in which Mr.\nR. McMillan was soloist. The congregational singing was particularly\nbright, the audience entering wholeheartedly into such old favorites as\n\"Come, Ye Thankful People, Come,\"\n\"We Plough the Fields and Scatter,\"\nand 'UJnto the Hills Around.\"\nAt St. Stephen's Presbyterian the\nthanksgiving offering was for the\nnew hall building fund. The wetk\nprevious Christ Church, Anglican,\nfea'Mred its special harvest service.\nand the Sunday previous the rector,\nRev. A. S. Partington, officiated at\nsimilar services that were well attended, at Camp Lister and Wynn-1\ndel.\nImitation   leather  can  be   mar.U'\nfac'.ured from f.shskins.\nAdministration of S.\nSlocan Man's Estate\nGranted M. E. Harper\nLetters of admlniitration to the\neitate ot Adolph S. Antosh, late ol\nSouth Slocan, were granted by District Registrar William Sturgeon to\nMontague E. Harper, official administrator. Personal properties\namounted to (83.27. Beneficiaries\nwere Mrs. Antonette Antosh of\nEsterhazy, Sask., mother of the deceased, Joseph Antosh, also of Esterhazy, brother, and Mrs. John\nJurlck of Trail, sister.\nMr. Antosh died July I ot this\nyear.\nElbow Taps to Be\nPut in Operating\nRoom al Hospital\nPurchase of an $85 microscope attachment, authorized previously by\nPresident H. M. Whimster, was approved, and the purchase of two\nsets of elbow taps for operating\nroom bowls was authorized by the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nBoard Tuesday night. The elbow\ntaps will cost \u00bbbout $60.\nPurchase ot the microscope attachment which will bring the\npresent Hospital laboratory scope\nup to the standard of new equipment, was authorized, Mr. Whimster reported, when it was learned\nthe attachment was the only one\navailable, and the comoany supplying it wanted immediate notification if it was to be purchased. The\nHousing Committee report, presented by John Cartmel, recommended\nthe purchase of the elbow taps.\nReport of Dr. F. P. Sparks, Medical Health Officer, on the cost of\na centrifuge for the laboratory, was\nreferred to the executive. Previously Dr. Sparks, after requesting\nthe Board to purchase such equipment, had been asked to obtain\nprices on it, and he had found the\ncost would be close to $\u00abX>.\nlODlGirl Guides\nAwarded Badges\nlor Proficiency\nAt their weekly meeting the Nelson Company No. 32, I.O.D.E. Girl\nGuides received proficiency badges\nwon at Guide Camp during the\nSummer. Badges were earned as\nfollows:\nAthletics\u2014Peggy Grimes, Dolores\nJohannsen, Dorothy Wallace, Grace\nStewart, Mary Lou Donaldson, Bernice Burgess, Frances Boyes, Joyce\nDennv and Edith Heddle.\nEntertainers\u2014Grace Stewart, Peggy Grimes, Verna Blackwell, Joyct\nDenny and Edith Heddle,\nLifcsavtrj\u2014Margaret Donaldson,\nMary Lou Donaldson, Bernie! Burgess, Ann Hamilton, Pat Birbeck,\nFrances B-iyes, Verna BlaekweU,\nPeggy Grimes, Edith Heddle and\nMargaret Campbell.\nSwimmers\u2014Mary Lou Donaldson,\nPeggy Grimes and Edith Heddle.\nPioneers\u2014Frances Boyes, Verna\nBlackwell, Grace Stewart and Peggy Grimes.\nNeedlewoman\u2014Verna   Blackwell.\nHomemaker\u2014Verna   Blackwell.\nAll of these girls were of Nelson\nexcept Joyce Denny, Edith Heddle\nand Margaret Campbell, who were\not Willow Point.\nMiss Shirley Boomer examined\nthe g.rls in Lifesaving and Swimming, assisted by Miss Betty Holt.\nThe athletes were also passed by\nMiss Holt. The entertainers and\nPioneers were passsed by Mrs. J. E\nHolt and Miss Mae McFarlane.\nThe Nelscn Guides are having a\nsjyx.al program f:r Hallowe'en,\n\u2022rfiev will have a Christmas Tree\nIor Br.'.ish children and each Guide\nwill bring a gift for a British child\nThese will be shipped to Britain in\ntime far Christmas.\nAt present the Guides are studying First Aid underthe instruction\nol William Wood. The girls are still\nwcrking en Refugee knitting Thev\nhold a meeting each week in one\nanolher's homes.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 In honor of Mlai Betty Kraft,\nwhose marriage to Alan Harper\ntakes place at St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral Friday, Mrs. F. C. Rowley\nand Mra. C. F. King entertained on\nTuesday evening at a miscellaneous\nshower at the home of Mra. Rowley\non Stanley Street when they were\nassisted by Mrs. H. Cecil Grizzelle.\nAmong the invited guests were\nMrs. W. A. Harrison, Mrs. W. R.\nDunwoody, Mrs. Alex Dingwall,\nMrs. Archie Hardy, Mra. Reeve\nHarper, Mrs. M. Harper, Miss Isabel\nMcRae, Mia Sybil McLean, Miss\nAlma McDonald and Mrs. A. Kraft.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Grummett, Silica Street, have as gueat\nMrs. G. F. Cunliffe of Vancouver,\nan ex-resident of this city.\n\u2022 Miss Margaret Johnson of SUverton is a Nelson visitor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldle\nof Robson spent yesterday in town.\nHERE FROM CROWS NEST\nMrs. Gillis Rosemont ,who is now\nresiding at Crows Nest, is spending\na few days in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George Forbes\nof Passmore were city shoppers\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Cady and family\nhave taken up residence at 20\u00ab Victoria Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bachynski of Trail were recent guests of\nMr. Bachynski's niother, Mrs. P.\nWerstmk, Silver King Road.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. L. Boomer, Baker\nStreet, returned last night from\nVancouver where she spent a few\ndays with her daughter Lois.\nTO ATTEND WEDDINC.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Cartwright\nof the Kootenay Belle mine plan to\nattend the afternoon wedding at\nQueen's Bay today of Mrs. Cart-\nwright's brother, Frank Phillips,\nto Miss Phyllis Hirst.\n\u2022 H. J. Watson of Vancocvcr,\nwho is a holiday guest of his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. G. Watson, Vernon Street, returns today from a brief visit to\nNakusp.\n\u2022 Frank Phillips of the Bayonne\nmine at Tye is in town to attend the_\nwedding today of his son and Miss\nPhyllis Hirst at Queen's Bay.\n\u2022 A. B. Baillie of the Alpine\nmine Sitkum Creek, who has been\na patient in Kootenay Lake General HospiUl following the amputation of a finger, has left for nis\nhome at 502 Second Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. Bessie Dennes, 103 Chat-*\nham Street, has returned from the\nCoast, whert (ht accompanied her\nson Richard, who haa Joined the\nR.C.A.F. and haa since left tor Edmonton.\ne Mr. and Mn. Alex H. Allan,\nMrs. Wilfrid AUan and Mrs. R. L.\nMcBride motored to Trail yesterday\nto attend' the funeral of Howard\nAnderson.\nBRIDE-ELECT HONORBD\ne An attractive kitchen shower\nwas held at. the home of Mrs. P.\nWeratluk, Silver King Road, Tueiday night with Mra. W. Stefluk and\nMrs. A. loboy as co-hostesses. It was\nin compliment to Miss Doris Apostoliuk whose marriage will be taking place shortly. The invited guests\nwere Mrs. S. Zabawa, Mrs, O. Frederick, Mrs. N. Selinger, Mrs. P.\nBialkowski, Mrs. G. Stoli, Mrs. Harry Korolak, Mrs. V. Doyle, Mrs. N.\nMorris, Mrs. B. Carlson, Mrs. J.\nCarlson, Mrs. F. Sokolowskl of\nProcter and Mrs. J. Apostoliuk.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Oilker of\nBonnington were city visitors yesterday.\n\u2022 Charles Holt, merchant of\nBalfour, visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. R. Brown, Baker\nStreet, entertained members of the\njunior C.WL. at her home when\nthose attending were Mrs. J. P,\nDuffy, Mrs. P. C. Laurence, Mrs.\nDouglas Cummins, Mrs. Dan McDougall, Mrs. Walter Duckworth,\nMiss Margaret Meyer, Mrs. A. J.\nRomano and Mrs. D. Tye.\n\u2022 J. Gallo has left for his home\nin Procter afler spending a couple\nof weeks at the home of Mr. and\nMn. R. Allen, Carbonate Street\nSPENDING LEAVE HERE\n\u2022 Sergeant Wireless Air Gunner\nGeorge E. (Chubby) Greenwood\nhas arrived from Mossbank, Sask.,\nto spend six days' furlough with\nrelatives and friends in Nelson.*\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Phillips.\nBaker Street, have as guests their\ndaughter, Mrs. Reginald Heaven of\nGrand Forks, who is here to attend\nthe marriage of her brother Frank\nto Miss Phyllis Hirst at Queen's\nBay today.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George McKay\nof Trail were recent guests of Mrs.\nMcKay's father and sister, Gregoire\nChoquette and Miss Albertine Choquette.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ralph Gillette, Strathcona Hotel, is a patient at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\n\u2022 Miss Catherine McCallum returned to Kimberley after spending\nihe holiday weekend with her moth-\nr, Mrs. McCallum, 820 Silica Street,\n14 Babies Examined\nat W.I. Baby Clinic\nAt the Women's Institute monthly Baby Clinic, held Wednesday at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\n4 babies and four new ones were\nexamined by Dr. F. P. Sparks, as-\ns.steci bv Miss Nancy Dunn. Two\nbah cs  were   vaccinated.\nThe committee in charge was Mrs\nT. B. Tallvn. Mrs. PosUethwaite\nMrs F. E. Wheeler and Mrs. J. C\nRobison.\nFlag Presentation\nfor Cranbrook Cuides\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The Local\nGuide Association met Tuesday afternoon in the City Hall with the\npresident, Mrs. Mackenrot, in the\nchair. Miss Baxter, secretary ol the\nAssociation, reported that the World\nflag had arrived and was ready for\nthe I.O.D.E. presentation. Mrs. L.\nPockett volunteered to procure a\nstaff for the flag. November 2 was\nset as the date for the presentation.\nMrs. R. Simpson reported that approximately $40 was made at the\ntea Saturday. The subject of a hall\nfor the Guide meetings was discussed and Mrs. Ernest Laurie was\nmade chairman of a committee to\ninquire about some ot the lwlls mentioned.\nMrs. F. V. Harrison, Girl Guide\nCommissioner, thanked the new\nGuiders for their volunteer work\nand said there were 4 new Guiders;\nMrs Bruce Laurie. Lieutenant Company No. 1, Mrs. Lorne Pockett,\nLieutenant Company No. 3. and Mrs.\nErnest Laurie and Misi K. Dezal in\ncharge of Company No. 2.\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B, C. \u2014 Miss Dorothy Angus of Saskatoon, Sask., ia\na guest of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Loraoss.\nDr. and Mrs. D. W. Davis and son,\nJack, left this week for Vancouver.\nIvan Smyth has left for Calgary\nto Join the RCAF.\nMrs. D. McKinnon returned last\nweek from a holiday at Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and New\nBrunswick.\nMiss Ina McKinnon of Montreal\nis a guest of her parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Dan McKinnon.\nMr. and Mrs. John Clark were\nCranbrook visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Beasley of To-1\nronto. Ont. are visiting tneir  sun-'\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mra.\nP. Barron.\nA. Nicnl of St. Paul. Minn . and C\nM. Nicol of Cipp, Alta , are guests\not Mrs. F  C. Clark.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Turner visited,\nat Creston Sunday.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   J.   M.   Pharis   of\nChampion, Alta,  Mr.  and Mrs.  W.\nA.   Williams  of   Calgary   and   Mrs.\n\u00a3  R.   Willis  of  Chilliwack.   were'\nguests of A   Kvelberg Friday.\nMr.   and  Mrs.  Fred  Leggett.  ac- I\ncompanied by Mr  and Mrs. Brown\nand son. Buster, spent the weekend\nat Nelson.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized\nat Christ Church. Cranbrook, October 6. when Rev. F. V. Harrison,\nunited in marriage Jeannette Retor.\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. Perron,\nof Cranbrook. and Felix Lanthier\nof Kimberley. son of Mr. and Mr*\nF. Lanthier of Leask. Sask. The\nbride was attired in a floor length\ngown of white satin, and carried a\nbouquet of orchids, and roses. Mrs\nH. Rhodes, who was matron of\nhonor chose a gown of blue satin\nH. Rhodes was best man. Following\na honeymoon in Creston Mr and\nMrs. Lanthier will reside in Kimberley.\nWATCHES  DIAMONDS,\nWEDDING RINCS\nH. H. Sutherland\nCEREALS AND FRUITS\nan twice at good with\nRICH CREAM\nfrom\nkOOTENAY\nValley Ua\nStyle Leaders In\nClothes for Fall\nFashion First Ltd.\nCRESTON\nCRESTON, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs\nAl \"Speaker returned Tuesday from\na visit with friends in Nelson and\nthe Slocan.\nR. E. Flower, B.A., of the high\nKhool teaching staff, was at his\nhome at Cranbrook for the Thanksgiving Day weekend.\nMiss Shirley Wilton was a guest\nat her home in Cranbrook over\nthe weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Speers got back\nSunday from Nelson.\nConst. Cunningham, RCM.P., ls\nexpected back this week after almost a month's holiday, which he\nspent ct the old home in Nova Scotia, and on visits at points in tne\nMaritime   Provinces.\nMr. and Mrs. M Amatto, who have\nbeen residents at Creston for the\npast few years, have returned to\niheir former hume at Coleman,\nAlta., where they will again reside\nMiss Marion C. Miles, B.A., R.N .\nspent the weekend with her parents,\nDr. and Mrs. F. B. Miles, at Cran-\nbrooli. Miss Miles has recently sr-\nrived from Abbotsford to take up\nwork in Creston Valley United\nSchool District, aa public health\nnurise.\nJim Bourdon, principal of West\nCreston Schdol, was here for the\nThanksgiving weekend with his\nparents, Vr and Mrs. J. H. Bourdon\nMiss Betty Stace Smith, who\nteaches at Arrow Creek, was the\nweekend guest of her mother, Mrs,\nG\"rdnn   Stace   Smith.\nRobert Broder of New Westminster visited Creston over the week-\nrr.si. He stopped off on a return trip\nfrom Taber. Alta.\nMiss Margaret Forbes Robertson.\nwho is on the elementary scho.l\nteiching staff at Gran* Forks, spent\n[he weekend with her parents. Rev\nJ. W, and Mrs. Forbes Robertson\nat the Pre*yterian Manse.\nLac. Cyril Bird cf Virden, Man,\nwas a visitor to Creston. He is\nspending 111 days' leave with his\nparents. Mr. and Mrs. John Bird,\nCamp Lister.\nNew Denver Hospital\nAid Has Card Party\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-The HospiUl Aid held the monthly card\nparty in the Legion Hall with Miss\nR. Zadra as hostess.\nBob White was master of ceremonies. Seven tables were in play.\nPrizes were won by Miss M. H.\nButlin and Mrs. Greer, tied; Miss\nButlin winning the cut; Miss B.\nBell, F. Crosby and J. W. Butlin.\nTotal  receipts  were $1080.\n-PAOI PIV1\nR. Huffersty\nof Elko, Panes\nELKO, B.C.-R. Hubbersty of Elko\npasted away Thursday morning in\nthe Fernie Hospital.\nMr. Hubbersty who Was 57 yeara\nof age was well known ln Fernie\nand district. He came to Elko some\nyear* ago and had resided in Coal\nCreek and Fernie and Roosville\nbefore coming to Elko.\nHe leaves to mourn his wife snd\ntwo sons and one daughter, Robert,\nnow employed at Trail and Chris\nwho la at present taking a course in\naviation at Calgary and Mrs. George\nRldout of Seattle and three grand-\nchUdren.\nMedical Service\nPlan Progressing\nAuld Tells Beard\nA plan to privde medical services\non a monthly payment basis, similar\nto that in effect to provide hospitalization, was progressing satisfactorily at Vancouver, Dr. F. M. Auld\nreported Tuesday night to the Kootenay Lake General Hospital Board.\nDr. Auld recently visited the Coast.\nRecently a committee of the Nelson Medical Association presented a\nreport on the scheme to the Board,\nasking if it would be agreeable to\nthe publicizing of such a scheme\nfor Nelson and District. The Board\nraised no objection,\nSOUTH SLOCAN NETS $20\nBY SPONSORING FILM\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.-The Red\nCross Auxiliary sponsored the motion picture show which was presented in the Community Hall Saturday evening before a crowded and\nappreciative audience. The Red\nCross funds were augmented by $20\nafter all expenses were paid.\nSouth Slocan Plans\nChristmas Parcels for\nSoldiers Overseas\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C. - The\nRed Cross Auxiliary met Friday\nafternoon with Mrs. P. O. Bird in\nthe chair.\nMrs. F. H. Russell reported that\n400 pounds of fruit and 570 pounds\nof sugar had gone Into the making\nof 872 pounds of Jam recently made\nby the auxiliary. Those donating\nfruit were Mrs. L. G. Cox, Mrs. M.\nEdwards, Mrs. H. Nixon, Mrs. F.\nTopiiss, Mrs. F. Murray, Mrs G. R.\nSweet, Mrs. C. Gray- and Miss M.\nTaylor.\nIn order to assure early mailing\nof Christmas parcels lo soldiers\noverseas it was decided to hold the\nnext meeting a week earlier on Nov-\nember 7 when the parcels will be\nwrapped.\nIt was also requested that old\nwoolens for blankets be ready by\nthe first week in December.\n207 Patients in\nHospital in Menth;\n2 Infectious Cases\ny&t* Vera B. Eidt, Superintendent, reported Tuesday night to the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nBoard that 207 patients had been\nadmitted to the Hospital during\nSeptember, and 185 had been discharged. Fifty-seven had remained\nfrom August, while 79 remained\nover into October. Some 129 outpatients were treated.\nTwo reportable disease cases, one\nof mumps and one of erysipelas,\nwere also treated.\nNinety operations, 77 requiring a\ngeneral anesthetic, were performed\ntn the month. The X-Ray Department treated 88 patients, making\n252 exposures.\nSome 688 laboratory tests were\nmade. There were 21 obstetrical\ncases.\nTwo deaths occurred among Hospital patients.\nThe Dietician's report, presented\nby Miss Eidt, showed 9323 meals,\namong them 402 special diets, were\nserved during the mont>. Some\n1210 quarts of fruits, 80 jars of\npickles and 30 tins of jam were\nprepared.\nHOSPITAL BOARD\nTO OBTAIN COST\nNEW STERILIZER\nD. D. Townsencl Tuesday night\nwas appointed to obtain prices on\nthe purchase and installation of\nnew sterilizing equipment for Kootenay Lake General HospiUl, and\nto report next month his findings\nto the Hospital Board. Prices for\nboth steam and electrical equipment will be obtained.\nInstallation of new equipment\nhas been incessantly recommended\nby varioua Housing Committees,\nand has been under consideration\nby the Board for some time. Last\nprices obtained for such an installation was about $9000.\nFreeman\nFURNITURE CO.       ^\nThe House ot Furniture Valuei\nPhone UB\nEagle Block    ^* |\nSEE OUR DISPLAY OF\nNew Rugs\nOver 100 to Choose\nFrom\nWOMEN AIR RECRUITS\nTO TRAIN AT TORONTO\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 15 (CP) -\nTwenty-three women will be attested into the Royal Canadian Air\nForce at the recruiting depot here\nSunday as members of the Women's\nCanadian Auxiliary Air Force. They\nwill leave shortly after for training\nin Toronto.\nGETTING\nONLY TEMPORARY\nRELIEF?\nCorrect Constipation\nWithout \"Dosing\"\nLONDON, Canada:\u2014Your constipation may be cansed by lack of the right\nkind of_\"bulk\" in your meals. Cathartics give only temporary relief.\nKELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN helpi you\nret regular, naturally. But remember,\nit doesn't work like purgatives. ALL-\nBRAN takes time.\nTry eating delicious ALU. RAN, as\na cereal or in muffins, every day, and\ndrink plenty of water. Buy _d_L-BRAN\nin two convenient sires at your grocer's,\nDr in individual serving packages at\nrestaurants. Made by Kellogg's in\nLondon, Canada.\n(Advt.)\nM. E. HARPER CRANTED\nADMINISTRATION OF\nESTATE OF S. MICHICH\nMontague E. Harper, official administrator, wai granted letters of\nadministration to the estate of Stanley Michich of Nelson, by District\nRegistrar*-William Sturgeon. Personal property amounted to $266.92,\nhrirs unknown,\nMr. Michich died June 13. 1941.\nMRS.  SADD CHRISTENS\nNEW RESERVE CRAFT\nA WEST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT Oct. 15 (CPi\u2014Christened by\nMrs. F. R. Sadd. H M.C.S Moolock\nwas successfully launched here\ntoday.\nIt was the last unit of the Fisher-\nmTi'.** Reserve type nf craft built\nunder the current program for the\ncastal  service. ,\nMoolock. it was explained at the\nreception held subsequent tn the\nlaunching, is the Chinook name lor\nelk.\nWoman fo Mirk  1 Mth Yeir\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Oct, 15 (CP\nCable)\u2014One of the world's oldest\nwomen, Mrs. Ellen Carroll of North\nRiver, will celebrate Oct. 20 what\nrelatives believe to be htr 114th\nbirthday.\nCastlegar Girl Is\nWed at Vancouver\nCA_rn,EGAR, BC\u2014A wedding\nof interest took place September\n26 when Lillian, y.ungeet daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. Moroso of Ces-\nllcgnr, became the bride of Henry\nArthur Carlson, son of Mr, snd Mrs\nH. Carlson of Vancouver. The wedding ceremony took place in the\nBethel Evangelical Free Church,\nVancouver. Rev. A. Uring officiated.\nThe bride, who was given in\nmarriage by J. Preston, wore a\nwhite chiffon gown with floor-\nlength veil held in place by the\nconventional orange blossoms. Her\nbridal bouquet consisted of roses\nand gladiolas. She was attended by\nMiss Margaret Benntt In pale blue\nchiffon carrying a bouquet of carnations and gladlolu.\nW. Parks was groomsman.\nA wedding reception waa, held at\nthe home of the groom's parenti,\n208S Charles Street.\nFollowing the reception the bride\nand groom left to honeymoon in\nVictoi .a. For her going-away cos-\ntume the bride chose a black tailored suit with matching accessor-\niei. On their return, lhe young\ncouple will reside in Vsncouver,\n1   \"\u25a0Wi\nftr*\/, mmm\n$yt-    mtsar?\nQUICK*, -\u00a3V*\nCouf h Checkers!\nCOUGH\n_0~_mi_LWI5I_LTIZ\n85c\nDRY CLEANING SUITS,\nLadies' and Men's ....\nNELSON CITY LAUNDRY\nind Dry Cleaners\nNow It lh* Tim* lo Consider\nNew Electrical\nAppliances\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n674 Baker St. Phone 2(10\nAnnouncing . . .\nSkirts and Man-\nTailored   jackets\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\nFor That Quick Pot of Tea\nw\n.\nmm\nTEA BAGS\nV     X^\nto l\nWe urge you to buy now . . . because\nwe don't know when this investment\nopportunity will occur again. . . In spite\nof advancing fur markets, we are still\nable to cater to modest clothes' budgets . . . Fine pelts are increasingly\nhard to get . . . Choose from our large\ncollection of FINE FURS of every description. Goods sent on approval if not\nconvenient  to  select   coat   in   person.\nFurrier\nHead   Off.ce\nBranch Salon\nMain at Sixth Ave.     Hotel Vancouver\nVancouver, B.C.\n MOI SIX .. i       i\nJf ilium Saihj Newa\nEstablished AprU 22  1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMott Inttrttting Ntwtpaper\nPubliihed every mornlni except Sunday by\nth* NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED 2M Baker St NeUon. British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THI; CANADIAN PRESS ANO\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS,\nTHURSDAY, OCT. 16, 1941.\nCanada's Farming Diversity\nWide variation in the soil and climate of Canada have permitted a great\ndiversity of farming enterprise.\nWheat and grain are produced\nmainly in the Prairie Provinces.\nDairying is centred largely in Quebec and Ontario with a marked expansion taking place on the Prairies.\nLive stock, including poultry, likewise has its chief development ln central Canada and the Middle West.\nOntario, Nova Scotia and British\nColumbia, going by volume, are the\nleading fruit growing areas.\nPotatoes are a special crop In New\nBrunswick.\nMaple products come chiefly from\nthe Eastern Townships of Quebec.\nFibre flax is grown mainly in Eastern Ontario and Quebec.\nHoney is produced chiefly in Onterio and on the Prairies.\nFur farming took its rise in Prince\nEdward Island, but has now extended\nte all Provinces, \u25a0 with Ontario and\nQuebec In leading positions.\nThe varied climate of British Columbia provides for a greater diversity\nof farming thaft In any other Province,\nranging from fruit growing and truck\nfanning ln the Okanagan and Kootenay valleys, to cattle ranching in the\ninterior, and large scale wheat growing in the Peace River Country.\nNtLlOV MIIY NIWS  NILION. S.C-THUR8DAY MORNINQ. OCTOBER 19. 1941-\nOctane\nHopes should not be raised too high\nby reports of a new super fuel for\nfighting planes which increases their\nmanoeuvrability and their effectiveness to a point far beyond that of the\nGerman machines. If this were a secret that could be kept by Britain and\nthe United States, we might be justified in believing that the higher test\ngasoline would, within a measurably\nshort time, win the war for us.\nIt is, however, no secret. It is admitted, in fact, that the Germans already know how to make the new fuel,\nthough their apparent shortage of petroleum supplies, and the fact that the\nnew gas does, not lend itself well to\nsynthetic production, gives rise to the\nhope that they will not be able to make\nthe best use of it. Meanwhile, there\nare stories that the Nazis have a mysterious pill which, when dropped into\na tank of gasoline, considerably increases the efficiency of the fuel.\nIt is a race in which neither side\nis ever likely to gain a commanding\nlead\" through scientific development,\nbecause each side has its gifted scientists. We must just go ahead, using\nour best brains, training our pilots\nbetter, and producing more machines.\nThat is what will eventually win, not\nany secret scientific invention.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Preii\nOct. Ifl, 1919\u2014Transylvania cleared of Rumanian tronps. Russians struck hard in Gal-\nlcia and Volhynia to divert Germm. divisions\nfrom the Rumanian front French, North nt\nthe Snmme, penetrated village of Sailly-Sail-\nlisel and made gains further South.\nTest   Yourself\n1. What are a cat's setae*1\n2. What is a scalene triangle\"\n3   What  two  animals  do  nnt  seem  able\nto swim, and are easily drowned1.\nTEST   ANSWERS\n1. Its whiskers.\n2 A triangle whose three sides are all of\ndifferent lengths.\n3. Camels nnd monkeys. Rome cats like\nto iwim nnd nil can be forced to\nV\ncrsc\nTRUST WE  IN THE LORD,  FOR THE\nLORD IS EVERLASTING STRENGTH\nGive Britons calmness I_nrd,\nIn  this their grim  dark  night.\nGrant  they  may  turn unto Thy  Word\nTo arm them for the fight.\nAgainst the powers of darkness Lord,\nThnt wnntnnly destroy.\nTheir homes, their freedom, and their ri^'h\nTo live, and life enjoy.\nWe know the enemy Is strong,\nBut we shall stronger be,\nIf we hut trust God's Mighty Tower\nHe will give victory\nHU promises will never  fail.\nHis  mercies never cease,\nTo those  whose  raith  ts steadfast\nHe  will grant  a  lasting  peace\nMRS   ANNE  JENNER\nErickson, B. C.\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOptn to any reader, Names tl pinom uking\nquestions will not bt publlihtd.\nReader, Nelson\u2014Will you please tell me what\nDNB (Nail Newt Agency) means?\nDNB  stands lor Deutichta  Nachrtchttn\nBureau  which  meani   German  Information\nBureau.\nT. E., Salmo\u2014Could you pleaie tell me how\none can rid hla cellar ot slugs?\nSprinkle lilt on the slugs to destroy them.\nReader, Nelson\u2014Are there any lawa agalnit\nChineie going down to Uie Statei?\nWith a few exception!, iuch as the diplomatic service, Chinese are excluded from tht\nUnited States insofar ai Immigrant! or vlilton\nare concerned. ,\nReader, Nelson\u2014Can a poling itation be held\nln a club hall where a beer licence ll held?\nThe polling itation would be ln a separate room, away from where the beer ls\nserved. Are clubs closed for serving beer\non polling day?\nThe Provincial Electloni Act contalni no\nrestrictions as to the location of polling places.\nLiquor stores and beer parlori are cloied on\nElection Day.\nN. R., Creston\u2014Would you pleut tell me the\ndays the following dates fell upon: March\n9, 19.0, and March 22, 1917.\nFirst on a Tuesday; second on Thuriday.\nCurioiis, Trail\u2014Would you please name the\nCatholic members ln the Dominion Cabinet?\nThere ire seven Cabinet memben who are\nRoman Catholics, they being: Rt. Hon. Raoul\nDandurand, minister without portfolio and\ngovernment leader ln the Senate; Rt. Hon.\nErnest Lapointe, Minister of Justice; Hon. P.\nJ. A. Cardin, Minister of Public Worki and\nTransport; Hon C. G. Power, Minister of National Defence for Air; Hon. JuE. Michaud,\nMinister of Fisheries; Hon. P. F. Casgrain,\nSecretary of State; and Hon. Angus L. Macdonald, Minister of National Defence for\nNaval Service.\nOur Political Railway\nBy   HARRY   8TEPHEN\u00bbON\nPreildent of Th* National Union of\nRailwaymen In  Labour Review\nLast may 20th saw a move in Ottawa calculated to give the Canadian National Railway\naystem a greater share of government-controlled business, Inasmuch as a recommendation to this effect apepared ln the report of\ntht House of Commons' Standing Committee\non Railways and Shipping. ... every Cana-'\ndian Pacific employee and many an ordinary\ncitizen will want to ask the Standing Committee on Railways and Shipping: What real\njustification exists for the granting of special\nconcessions and government subsidization to\nthe National Railways any more than to the\nprivately-owned railroad? Why, if ... the Canadian National now receives fifty per cent\nof the volume of government business available to the railways\u2014does the state-owned\nrailroad require 75,000 employees to handle\nits traffic as compared with 53,000 employees\non the Canadian Pacific?\nFrom the viewpoint of a taxpayer and\nCanadian Pacific employee, the resolution in\nquestion appears to be in the nature of a\nstab in the back for private enterprise generally, and a breach of confidence with employees of the Canadian Pacific in particular.\nIf the government line is not satisfied\nwith a fifty-fifty \"break\" with its competitor\nand if it cannot get more business on the basis\nof service \u2014 and efficiency, it haa no legal\nor moral right to expect business to be taken\naway from Canadian Pacific employees and\nhanded to Canadian National employees vhs\nthe political Interference route. If the government road cannot compete with the private\nroad or, a fifty-fifty bass, then it needs an\necnom.c overhauling, not a hand-out from\nOttawa And if the powers that be at Ottawa\nar*1 statesmen and not just politicians they\nwill \u00abee t j ;t that tho National is operated on\na business basis, not on political patronage.\nThat the Canadian National has 21.790\nmiles of track against the Canadian Pacific's\n16.8__0 track miles, that there are 73 000 National employees in comparison with 53.000\nnn the competing line, and that the fixed\ncharges of tlie state system are 53 as against\n26 for the private road, apptar to be the only,\nand r.-1. too sound, arguments advanced by\nthe Railway & Shipping Committee to justify\ntaking fifteen per cent more government business away from the Canadian Pacific employees f >r the benefit of their Canadian Na-\ntional br. '.hers. Taking the same line of\nreasoning, Canadian Pacific employees might\nwell inquire why the Government road requires 22,000 employees more than the C.PR.\nto handle the .same volume of business. H\nshould be pointed out that track mileage does\nnot have much bearing on the case. Whst\ndoes count is the volume of business that\ngoes over the track.\nAfter forty-seven years of experience on\nBn efficient railroad the writer is not convinced that it requires 22,000 employees to\noperate slightly over 4000 miles of railroad,\nas the difference in the statistics of the two\nrailways would suggest. Like most government-owned and operated utilities, the Canadian National Railways would appear to\nbe  overstaffed.\n. . . Tlie mileage which the Canadian National political officers want taken into account. In alMtting business, includes the duplicate Canadian Northern-National Transcontinental line from Winnipeg East, and the\nformer Grand Trunk Pacific line from Edmonton to Prince Rupert. The facts are well\nknown In a moment of what the Winnipeg\nFree Press has referred to aa \"mistaken enthusiasm\", the people of this oountry unwisely\nsupported railway schemes which gave us a\ntremendous mileage of useless line. There\nmight be some Justification for one Canadian\nNational l;ne between Winnipeg and Quebec.\nThere ran he nn justification for two. The\nline from Edmonton to Prince Rupert never\nhad any ri^ht to exist . . . Yet. because the\ncountry made the mistake of building these\nunnecessary lines, the workers on the Ca-\nnadian Pacific system are to have the bread\ntaken out of their mouths, by an unfair division of traffic for which they and all other\nCanadian citizens are paying.\nOn the question of fixed charges, the\nsuggestion Is even more ridiculous. Because.\nthrough a chequered history, the Canadian\nNational system has built up a debt of over\nthree billion dollars, for which only a portion\nrepresents intelligent investment of money, it\nis to have more of the public business In war\ntime than is a railway which has been conservatively capitalized, efficiently operated,\nand Is not dependent on the state for subsidies. According to that line of reasoning,\nif some of the fool schemes which have been\nprojected in the past had been carried out.\nand the Canadian National had another or\ntwo more useless transcontinental lines, it\nwould be entitled to 75 per cent of the country's business.   When did waste and folly be-\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetters may bl published over I nom da\nplume, but tltt actual nam* ef the writer\nmust be given to the Editor aa evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymous letters go In the\nwaste paper basket\nAsks Questions of\nLiberal Candidates\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The Liberal candldatei In the Kootenays appear to unduly advertiie and talk\nabout political things of long ago. What the\nvoters want to know ls what has been taking\nplace during their period of office.\nIs lt true someone purchased an old ferry\non the Arrow Lakea for a few dollan and recently hired lt back to the Government for\nuie at Needles, at a very heavy dally rental?\nIl lt true lumber purchased ln Nakusp\ntor a bridge at Salmo, cost when delivered\nthere, twice the amount lt could have been\npiirchaaed from sawmills at Salmo?\nIs lt true a drag-line has been hired from\na firm in Creston at a dally rate which up to\ndate has cost more than the purchase price\not a new complete drag-line outfit?\nIs lt true shovels for road work cost not.\nleu than $1.69 in Nakusp?\nIs it true Mr. Leary, Mr. Putnam and\nMr. Burns voted against giving specific information on the Government oil drilling operations in the Peace River?\nIs it true the same members voted against\na resolution that the Public Account! Committee be uuthorlred to examine Into Public\nAccounts ptior to April 1st, 193B and denied\nthe Public tlie right to examine these accounts, and are now devoting much attention\nto the public accounts of 1929-1933?\nIa it true the. Minister of Public Works has\nIn many cases adopted the practice buying\naupplies from and giving of contracts to a\nfew men and firms Instead of by tender?\nTheie are things the voter wants to know.\nMr Learys' statement ln an election circular a few years ago ls drawn to his attention:\n\"Who will fight against the patronage system\nand uphold equal rights of all in the distribution of Relief or Public Works monies?-Sid\nLeary\". That is not true today.\nFAIR DEAL.\nNelson, B. C, Oct. 14.\nToday's  Horoscope\nVaried influences prevail today to affect\nthose who are celebrating birthdays. They\nwill gain considerably in business or professionally, but elders, strangers and unexpected\nevents will cause them annoyance or loss.\nBorn on this date a child will be lucky flnan-*\ncially, and although receiving benefits from\nelderly relatives, will encounter their opposition. Such a personality will hold an important position, it is foreseen.\nWords of Challenge\n\"We are fighting to defend democratic\nand Christian ideals. We believe that everything which free men value and cherish on\nthis side of the grave is ln peril In thii war.\"\n-W. L. Mackenzie King.\nWords of Wisdom\nThe two powers which in my opinion constitute a wise man are those of bearing and\nforebear ing.\u2014Epictetus.\nEtiquette  Hints\nDon't bore a mixed company with conversation proving how clever your children\nare. Discuss the children only with friends\nwho are interested and ask about them.\ncome good reasons for giving an enterprise\nspecial consideration7\nThis is all a most dangerous state of af'\nfairs The employees of the Canadian National must realize it Their brothers on the\nCanadian Pacific have, even at the cost of\nrefusing to cooperate with their officer*, in\nwhom they have every reason for confidence,\navoided participating in all the attempts made\nto correct our past railway extravagances\u2014\nlest this be done at the expense of the workers.\nThey have to bear the blame for the unfortunate situation in which all railway workers In Canadian are tagged as being paid\nhigh wages out of the public purse. They\nhave had to a\u00abs:_t their Canadian National\nconfreres in obtaining provision for comorn-\nsation when the inevitable consequence of the\nextravagances of the past comes around, and\nboth Canadian Pacific nnd Canadian National\nemployees have to bf removed from the service, in order to permit an intelligent readjustment of the railway stiuation. Had\nthey not put loyalty to their organizations\nahead of common \u00abrn_e and loyalty to the;r\nown interests and to their employers, the\nCanadian Pacific employees would, long ago,\nhave backed Sir Edward Beatty in his unification fight, and. had they done so, the Canadian National employees would have lost it.\nNow. and not for the first time, soma\npolitically-minded officials of the Canadian\nNational\u2014playing on the folly nf their employees and the weakness of politicians.\u2014ari\ntrying to rob the workers on the Canadian\nPacific of their employment. As we have\nsaid, it is not for the fijst time. It was by\nsuch trickery, by such organizing of pressure\nthrough political channels, that the unnecessary duplication of terminals in Montreal waj\nperpetrated. It was by organizing railway\nworkers to pull chestnuts out of the fire for\ntheir officers that Canadian National influence, in the famous St. Henry by-election,\nforced the Government into recommencing the\nconstruction of the abandoned terminal pro-\nJect. As a former mayor of Vancouver has\nrecorded, it was by such means that the late\nSir Henry Thornton\u2014unable to convince the\nHon. C A. Dunning that he ihould have tix\nmoney to build a duplicate hotel in Vancouver\n\u2014persuaded the citizens of Vancouver to use\ntheir political influence to force the Government to accede to his extravagant plans.\nThe employees of the Canadian National\nare now not the dominant political influece\nin railway matters If they were, we should\nexpect that, ai decent railway workers, they\nwould be in favor of Justice to fellow workers.\nThey are the stooges of a political group of\nCanadian National officers\u2014not all the officers\nof the public aystem, who Include some fine\nrailwaymen They ara the tools of a small\ngroup in the McGill Street offices who sepnt\ntheir time planning schemes to stir up weak-\nminded politicians to do their work for them,\nand to use governmental power to obtain\nbusiness.\nCanadian Pacific Railway workers have\na right and it is becoming a duty, to say to\ntheir Canadian National brothers that, if the\nsolidarity of the Interests of labour Is not to\nbe respected, then it is time for the Canadian\nPacific employees, to organize themselves a*\na political unit and to see that they receive\nat least common justice from the Oovernmfnt\nto whose support they contribute in full\nmeasure.\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nt.    *___*\nWINS AIR HONORS\nLac. Sydney Horswill of Nelson, who is the second Nelson\nyouth to win highest average\nmarks in Canada's air training\nschools. Highest in a class of 84,\nLac. Horswill was presented with\na gold bracelet. lie trained at\nManitoba and B. C. air schools.\nThe other Nelson winner of the\ngold bracelet was Lac. Len Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G.\nStewart. Silica St. Lac. Horswill\nis the son of Mr and Mrs. A. T.\nHorswill, Silica St.\nBIG CONTINGENT OF EMPIRE AIRMEN IN CANADA\nThia happy group is part of a detachment of 589 fledgling fliers from Australia\nand New Zealand shown on their way to flying schools in Canada.\nT. S. ARMY'S NEWEST TROOP CARRIER\nHere is the new Curtiss transport plane which has been accepted by the U. S. army air force as the first of a larw\nnumber of such craft to be produced. The plane is a 20-ton craft, powered by two 1700 Wright Cyclone engines.\nDOWNED NAZI PLANE VIEWED BY SOVIET CHILDREN\nThis Heinkel 111 bomber, shot down ln Russia, has no terrors for the Russian\nchildren who cluster about it. The photo waa radioed from Moscow.\n\"BLUES\" SINGER DEAD\nHelen Morgan, sad-voiced bluet\nsinger, died in Chicago following\nan operation. She had been crlti*\nnliy ill since mid-September,\nwhen she clLipsed during a per*\nfurmance at a Chicago theatre.\nNEW YORK'S AIR DEFENCE HEADQUARTERS HUM AS \"RAID\" STARTS\nUis not permitted to give the exact location of the building housing the elaborate air-defence centre of which\nthis \"filter hoard\" is a part. Women work at the board, moving miniature airplanes about as information comes in.\nIt is called a filter board because reports received are filtered and only those confirmed acted upon. The board actually\nis a huge map. It will be tested in tactical exercises when \"enemy bombers\" will stage a theoretical raid on the Atlantic\nseaboard.\n\t\n. ,,, \u25a0\n i\u00bb\nRumors of Expeditionary Force in\nNorth Russia Recalled lo Maloney\nHis Experiences There In 1918-19\nNelson    Artilleryman\nAwarded Military\nMedal\nReports suggesting a British expeditionary force might be sent\u2014\nor pouibly haa been lent\u2014via\nArchangel ta aid Russia In her\nfight agalnit Germany bring vivid\nmemories to David H. Maloney of\nNelion. For he wai a member of\nthe 16th Brigade, Canadian Field\nArtillery, which served with the\nAllied Expeditionary Force lent\nto North Russia In 1918, and won\nthe Military Medal In the campaign which followed. The Canadian artillerymen were in Russia\nfrom September, 1918, to June,\n1919, occupying .sositiona on the\nDwlna River.\nAnother Nelson man saw action\non this front-Flying Officer C. F,\nKearns, now an R.CA.F. instructor\nat Macleod.\nReading his newspaper or listening to hu radio, Mr. Maloney can\npicture immediately where and how\nan expeditionary force today would\nland at Archangel, and the territory\nthrough which it would have to\npass on its way to help the Russians.\nThe story of the part played by\nthe Canadian brigade in 1918-19 is\naet force in an iHustrated booklet\nwhich now is one of Mr. Maloney's\nprized possessions.\nPURP08E OF EXPEDITION\nPurpose of the expedition was\noutlined by Col. C. H. L. Sharman,\nC.M.G., C.B.E., in \"A Word From the\nColonel\" with which the history of\nthe Brigade begins, and is of extreme interest In view ot current\nreports. Ha said:\n\"In May, 1918, the Alliei decided\nto seize the Murman Coast, far Iniide the Arctic Circle, and the Port\nof Archangel on the White Sea. The\nmain reasons for this decision were:\n\"1. To stop the heavy tranrfer of\nGerman divisions from the Russian\nto the Western Front, which had\nbeen proceeding at the rate of lix\ndivisions per month. In this they\nwere completely successful as no\nfurther German divisions were\ntransferred after the landing of the\nAllies ln Northern Russia.\n\"2. The prevention, by seizing the\nMurman port of Kola, of the Germans using it as a submarine base\nand thus turning the flank of the\nImmense anti-submarine mine barrage running from Scotland to Nor-\nCRISP OUICK-TO-SERVE\nQUAKER\nCorn FLAKES\nDOUBLY\nDELICIOUS\n4\n\\I)teauie-t_tfkf,\nway. This Would undoubtedly have\nhappened, as the Germans controlled the Bolshevik Government ln\nPetrograd and hid ample means ot\ntransport by rail to Kola, which wai\nan open port ill the year round,\nGERMAN  ATTACK\nEXPECTED\n\"There were it least 1)0,000 Qerman troops in Finland, on the West\nflank of the Murman Railway, and\nit is probable that but for the armistice, big efforts would have been\nmade by them from the West, aided\nby troops shipped by rail and from\nPetrograd, to occupy the Port even\nafter its seizure by the Allies.\n\"3. To open up a channel of communication with England for the\nCzecho-Slovaks, who were there in\nthe interior of Russia, hostile to the\nBolshevik Government and badly in\nneed of arms and equipment. It was\nmiped that the Eastern Front might\nbe reconstituted with Ihe aid of the\nCzecho-Slovaks and the anti-Bolshevik Russians, who were to be\norganized and trained by the Allies,\nand that the large quantities of war\nmaterial shipped to the Russians via\nKola and Archangel before the revolution mi^ht be available.\n\"Consequently in August, 1918,\nthe Canadian authorities were requested to send a field artillery brigade to Northern Russia as a part\nof the Allied forces and I was offered the command.\nMEN VOLUNTEERED\n\"Volunteers were called for from\namong the officers and men ln the\nReserve Artillery who had had service in France, and the applications\nwere far in excess of the number\nrequired. Majors F. F. Arnoldi,\nD.S.O, and W. C. Hyde, D.S.O.,\n,vere selected to command the two\nsix-gun batteriei, the 67th and 88th\nrespectively. A very iarge portion\nof the men selected were chosen on\naccount of their good fighting qualities In France under the same officers who would command them\nin  North  Russia.\n\"The Brigade sailed from Dundee, Scotland, on September Jilt,\nand on arrival at Archangel some\n10 daya later was transhipped to\nbarges and consigned some 250 mllei\ninland  up the River Dwina.\n\"The 'front' at this time was a\ncurious one. Looking South from\nArchangel, the Allies held Onega\nalmost due West and Pinega to the\nEast. On the railway which ran due\nSouth from Archangel, the front\nwas some 50 miles away, while the\nforce to which the Canadians were\ndespatched was fighting along the\nDwina River over 250 miles due\nSouth. Our force was, therefore,\nmany miles in advance of the railway front and was more or lesa 'in\nthe air'.\nFLED AT  FIR8T\n\"On the arrival of the Alliei ln\nArchangel the Bolsheviki had fled\nprecipitately, but on realizing the\nlize of the small forcea opposing\nthem had begun to rally and were\ndefinitely oppoiing any further advance. Aa our forces on the River\nDwina were aided by a monitor of\nthe Royal Navy, they made correspondingly greater progress than\nwas possible on the railway front,\nhence the great disparity in their\npositions. . .\"\nThe brigade left the Dwlna Force\nJune 6. 1919. on barges, for Archangel en route home. At Archangel the Canadians were paraded\nbefore the Russian Oovernor-Oen-\neral. Colonel Sharman continue!\nhis narrative ln then words:\n\"Although four of tbe officeri\nhad been awarded Russian decora-\ntiom during the Winter, he itited\nht would not allow a ilngle officer\not th* Brigade to leave Ruasia without iome mark of appreciation from\nbis Oovernment. All offlctn not\npreviously decorited wert thto\nawarded tht Order of SL Anne or\nthe Order of St. Stanislaus.\nAWARD8 FOR MEN\n\"The Governor-General also presented to tht Brigade 10 St.\nGeorgo'i Crosses md 10 St.\nGeorge's medals (the Ruisian equivalent to the Victoria Cron and\nD.C.M.  respectively).  Then  were\nSiven to the mtn in recognition of\nteir splendid work tnd following\nthe - Russian custom, the mra of\neach Battery chose the 10 bravest\nfrom among themselves as the recipients:\n\"General Ironside, the Commander-in-Chief, also paraded the Brigade and told them that they knew,\nmore thin he could tell, what the\nCanadian irtillery had meant to\nhim during the Winter. Over and\noyer the C.FA. hald saved the\nForce from destruction and the\nhlgheit traditions had been fully\nmaintained.\"\nMaior T. T. Arnoldi, D.S.O., commanding the 87th Battery of the\nBrigade, concludes hii account of\nthis Battery'i work with the following;\nTRIBUTE TO MEN\n\"I would like to say \u2022 word about\nour men. Many times ln France I\nhad talked with other cliapi and\ndiscussed what a corker of an outfit one could make if one had the\nchoice of men from the whole\nCorps. Well, I had them. Men frpm\nevery unit, at leist every brigade,\nIncluding new men from Canada,\npicked from a reserve of some 8500,\nincluding the cream of the School\nof Gunnery. The men were even\nbeyond my expectation and never\nduring our eight months' eiflstance\non the front were there iny algns\nof discontent among them. Always\ngame for \u2022 fight or \u2022 laugh and lt\nwn generally both.\"\nMajor Walter C. Hyde, D.S.O., !n\nthe diary of the 67th Battery, said\nthis:\n\"First of all, no finer group of\nmen, no finery Battery, ever sup-\nSrted a battery commander ln any\naatre of war.\n\"Secondly, no battery commander\nwai ever more loyally supported\nunder conditions as tryinj as could\nwell be imagined: conditions which\ncalled for utmost trust, endurince,\n\u2022nd itrength of character; condltioni which almoit hourly made\nbattery spirit de corps more impossible. Vet the bettery iplrlt in\nthe end prevailed \"\nNILION DAILV NIWI. NILION. B.C.-THUMDAY MORNINO, OOTOBER 18.\nILLEGITIMATE BIRTHS\nRussians Move\nNearer Caucasus\nTEHERAN, ban, Oet IS (AP).-\nEighty Russian .bombers ind fighters bind at Kazvin for the Sovltt\nArmy ot occupation were tram*\nftrred today at Tabriz, ln North*\nweitern Iran, 300 miles nearer tbt\nCaucausui.\nBritish military tourct! laid they\nwtre not informed tl to whether\ntht Russian! were abandoning construction of a big air bile at Kazvin. It wis reported that 38 single-\nseat tighten ire itlll maintained by\nthe Russians at the Caspian port of\nPahlevi, 80 miles from Soviet territory.\nThe four squadrons of bomben\nand lighten sent to Tabriz Will be\nwithin 00 miles of Russian territory\nLfor ult in the event the Germani\nshould extend their galna toward\nthat oil-rich territory.\nUnder agreement with the Iranian Oovernment the Russian and\nBritish occupation troops are due\nto leave Teheran ln a few dayi.\nGrowing rural lawlessness reached a climax today when Iranian\nArmy deserter! robbed three buses\nind two trucki cirrylng Moslem\npilgrimi from Teherin.\nTribal brigands ilso were reported to have mide two uniuccesiful\nattacks on 'British Army trucks near\nKermanshah.\nLISTEN IN FRIDAY\nRadio Broadcast over Station CKLN,\nNelson at 7:30 p.m.\non Behalf of\nM. C. DONALDSON\nConiervitive  Candidate for Nelton-Creiton  Riding\nSpeaker Will Bt\nC. B. GARLAND\nBt Sure and Tell All Your Fritndi\nCANADIAN CORPS LEADER\nPRAISES LECION POLICY\nTORONTO, Oct. 15 (CP)-Col. C\nE. Reynolds. President ot the Canadian Corps Association, made public\na telegram he sent today to Alex\nWalker of Calgary, President of the\nCanadian Legion, which said \"accept my congratulations for determined itand you have taken reference total conscription for Can-\nidi.\"\nARIAS LOCKED IN\nPANAMA JAIL\nPANAMA, Oct. 15 (AP). - Dr.\nArnulfo Arias, ousted Preildent of\nPanama, reached Panama early today and wai locked up ln tke city\njail after lurrenderlng to Panama\nPolice in the Canal Zone.\nFive vam filled with police met\nthe ipecial motor railway car in\nwhich Arias Journeyed to the capital from Cristobal where he had\nsurrendered from aboard the steamship Cetalu.\nSerb Rebel Forces\nNumber 80,000\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (OP)-A Yugo-\nilav legation spokesman today ssid\nSerbian resistance to German rule\nhad reached the status of rebellion\nwith in armed force of 80,000 led\nby Yugoilav army officers.\nArmed bands are making travel\nImpossible on roads in Serbia by\nfiring on every automobile, the\nspokesman said. He said one group\nrecently fired a munitions dump\nIn an attack on Smederevo, only 20\nmiles  from  Belgrade, the  capital.\nB. $. TROOPS ENTITLED\nTO VOTE ANYWHERE\nVICTORIA, Oct. 15 (CP) - All\nservicemen, registered before or\nafter enlistment, are entitled to vote\nanywhere in British Columbia Oct.\nJl. Capt W. R. Webster, Special\nElections Officer for Servicemen's\nVoting, said today. If no active service polls are available where a\nserviceman is stationed, he may cast\nhis ballot at a civilian poll.\nClaim Destroyer\nSunk at Gibraltar\nBERLIN, Oct. 15 (AP). \u2014 The\nGerman High Command claimed\ntoday a German submarine operating In the Strait of Gibraltar sank\na British destroyer yesterday. Ttie\ndeitroyer was not identified.\n(British comment on this claim\nwas not immediately available.)\nDECREASE DURING WAR\nVICTORIA, Oet 15 <CP).-A dt-\ncrtut In tht ratio of illegitimate\nblrthi in British Columbia since\nwar itarted ll ihown by lateit figurei ot the vital statistics branch.\nIn 1990 out of 13,814 reglitered\nblrthi 509 wtn Illegitimate or 3.88\nper cent. In IMS the rata wai 3.80\nper cent\nIn 1940, flnt full year of the war\nthtre wtrt 531 illegitimate births\nout of 15,616 reglitered, or 8,4 per\ncent\nIn tht fint ilx monthi of 1941\n3M out of 8108 regiitered blrthi\nwtrt illegitimate or 325 ptr ctnt.\nCanadians Asked\nto Double Savings\nTORONTO, Oet 15 (CP)-Flnance\nMinister llsley today called on Canadlani to doublt their per capita\ninvestment of 00 ctnti a month ln\nWar savings stampi. Here to addreu workeri ln the war savings\ndrive which opem in Ontario Oct.\n?0, the Mlnltter discussed it a press\nconference the vital pirt of the\nwir living! cimpalgn In financing\nCanada's war effort.\nIt is estimated that 1,400,000 in\ndividual! now are taking part ln\nwar aavings. Their total of 10,044,416\napplications represents an investment of $91,403,841 by the Canadian\npeople.\nEfforts of some 30,000 volunteer\nworkers, described by Mr, Ililey as\ns \"most Inspiring thing\" ilone made\npossible the remarkably low cost to\nthe Government, 3.38 per ctnt, of\nthe loans over the leven-year period.\ni~Tht Canadian people face an unprecedented financial condition,\neven for a wir period. We need to\nraise $900,000,000 this yeir to enable Great Britain to buy goods in\nthis country and thit is in iddition\nto our nomlnil expeditures ind our\nown war expenditures which this\nyear will be between $1,300,000,000\nand $1,500,000,000.'\nA lystem of compuliory uvlng\nhad been \"considered but not contemplated.\" fear of an Increasing\ncost of living ihould not be a factor ln deterring people from investing in wir saving!. \"We have\nevery expectation of effective control on prices,\" the Minister added\nTwo Hits Scored on\nMediterranean Ships\nCAIRO, Oct, 15 (AP)-The R.A.F.\nMiddle East Command announced\ntoday that Britiih naval aircraft\nscored two hits on a medium sized\nmerchant ship which wai let on\nfire ind later ieen low down in the\nwater.\nIt wai part of a convoy ittacked\nby the planes in lhe central Mediterranean. An escorting destroyer\nwas seen picking up survivors from\nthe sea, said i communique.\nThe R.A.F. ilso bombed an tirdrome at Castelventrano in Sicily\nand three large ships In Tripoli\nharbor, it added.\n1M1-\nGala Day Marks\nLaunching of B.C.\nFirst Steel Ship\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C,\nOot 16 (CP)\u2014British Columbia'!\nfirst iteel oarge veutl of tht wir\n\u2014a giant 10,000-tonner \u2014 wai\nlaunched today amid the icream\nof whittle! signalling \"V-fOr-Vlo-\ntory\" ind the kell for another\nwai laid on the same wayi almoit\nbefore tugi eould take tht new\n\u2022hip to i flttlng-out dock.\nThouiandi of guesti swarmed\nthrough the humming plant of the\nBurrird Drydock Company, Limited, where aa in other Canadian\nyards, the huge merchant shipbuilding program of Wartime Merchant\nShipping Limited is ln full swing.\nIt wai a gala day and workmen at\nBurrard and other yards dropped\ntheir tooli momentarily to lliten to\nthe ceremonies which were broadcast over tha national network of\nthe Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.\nGuesta headed by H. R. McMillan, President of Wartime Merchmt\nShipping Limited stood in the shadow of huge ways where more of the\nbig ships are in various stages ot\nconstruction. They watched as Mrs.\nW. C. Woodward, wife of Lieut.-\nGov. Woodward, smashed a bottle\nof British Columbia champagne\nacross the broad bow and christened\nthe vessel for St. James in honor\nof a historic Hudson Bay post established in Wis province in 1806\nand still operated by the company.\nA nlna-year-old evacuee girl,\nAnne England, whose father is a\nJournalist at Wellington, neir Croy.\ndon, England, was co-sponsor. She\npush\u00abd the button that sent the\nbig hull on Its way toward the lea\nLaid down last Spring and conitructed in record time, the Fort\nSt. Junes is 95 per cent a product\nof British Columbia and the firit\nsteel cargo vessel turned out here\nIn 20 years. Officials said that in 1\nfew weeks she will take her plice\nin the \"bridge of ships\" keeping\nopen the wartime lifelines of the\nEmpire.\nThe Fort St. Jame! is the second\nsteel cargo ihip to be launched in\nCanadi under the wartime shipbuilding program. The first went\ndown the ways at a Montreal yard\nlast week.\nVery Rev. Dean Cecil Swanson\nread the blessing and Jock Melville, a Burrard workman, speaking\non behalf of the men who built tRe\nbig vessel, welcomed Mrs. Woodward and little Anne England to\nthe christening stand high in front\nof the vessel's broad bow.\nLEAGUI PRINCIPLES\nNECESSARY FOR PEACE\nLONDON ,Oct. 18.(CP).-Clement\nAtlee, Lord Privy Seal, uid today\nthat although tbt League ot Nitioni filled, Iht principle! on which\nit wai toundtd muit be und In tht\nreform of the post-war world.\nThere muit be wmt collective\nforce to enforce, world peace,\" ht\nsaid in a speech to the National\nDefenca Committal before preparing to leave for the United Statet\nto attend the International Labor\nconference.\nR.C.N. Casualties\nOTTAWA, Oct IS (CP). - Two\nmemberi of tht Royal Canidlan\nNavy were reported dead ln tht\n56th official cuualty lilt of tht wir\ntoday. The deathi brought the total\nnumber of navy dead and mining\nsince the beginning ot tbt wir to\n422.\nFollowing ll tht llit:\nHodgion, Edwird, Leading Stoker, Dartmouth, N. S.\nMcNab, Arthur A., Ot, Cilgary.\nBRITISH GOVT UNAWARI\nOF JAPAN PROPOSAL\nON PHILIPPINE TO U.S.\nLONDON, Oct IB (CP).\u2014Foreign\nSecretary Eden told the Houtt of\nCommoni today tht Oovernment\nhad \"no detailed information\" on\nreports that Japan had propoied to\nthe United Statea a standstill agreement concerning the armament'of\nthe Philippine Islands, Singapore,\nAustralia and to Netherlandi Eut\nIndies\n-JAOI SEVEN\nHospital Drive\nBrings in 15r636\nPounds ot Produce\nKootenay Ltkt Ckntrtl _--_.__.\ndrive for fruit and vegetablei last\nweek netted 15,636 poundi of produce, P. C. Richards, Drive Committee Chairman, reporttd Tuesday\nnight to tht Hoipital Board. Thli\nwas tht greateit amount donated\nIn tht seven-year hiitory of tht\ndrivt, and wu valued it $2*6.25.\nComparative figurei reported\nihowed 15,334 poundi of product\nwtrt received in 1M0,14,449 poundt\nIn 1938, 14,554 pounds ln 1936, 15.142\npoundi In 1937, 13,231 poundi ln\n1936, 15,538 pounds ln 1935, and\n15,583 poundt ln 1831\nWhile no drive had been held for\ncanned fruits thii year, 12 quarti of\nfruit hid tlto been rtetlvtd.\nThe drive wu conducted October\n>, 9 md 10, ind took in Weit Arm\nind Kootenay Lake sections,- a portion of tht Slocan, and .the area\nbetween Nelion and Robton on tht\nKootenay River.\nACI BRITISH PILOTS\nMAY COME TO CANADA\nLONDON. Oot 1\u00bb (CP Cablt).-\nSlr Archibald Sinclair, Secretary ot\nState for Air, li considering I plan\nto tend to the Dominion! iome ot\nthe Royal Air Force's ice bomber\nand fighter piloti who could be\nuied to triln ind stimulate recruit*\nIng, lt wu learned reliably today.\n;f: v* 'at\n* \"J\nLEADER CHARCES UBOR\nIGNORED BY GOV'T\nVANCOUVER, Oct, 15 CP)-Alex\nMcAuslane, Vice-President of the\nCanadian Congress of Labor, charged in address before the Vancouver\nLabor Council here last night that\norganized labor in Canada was being \"ignored, spurned and scorned\"\nby the Federal Government.\nJAPANESE-RUSSIAN\nBLAMES PUBLICITY\nFOR PRISONER MIXUP\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (CP Cable) -\nLord Newton, who wu controller\nof prisoners from 1918 to 1919, raised In the House of Lords today the\nquestion of the breakdown In negotiations with the German Government for repatriation of sick and\nwounded prisoner!.\n\"I am afraid the desire for publicity unconsciously hss been partly\nthe ciiue of the deadlock which\nhas now arisen,' 'Lord Newton said\nSOLDIERS ASKED TO\nAID WAR SAVINGS  reported today from Blinking that\nVICTORIA, Oct. 15 (CP) - All\nranks in Military District 11 are to\nbe asked to contribute to the War\nSavings campaign, Military Headquarters announced today. The appeal is made by Maj. Gen. R. O i\nAlexander, C O.C.-in-Chief, Pacific\nCommand.\nBORDER DISPUTE ENDS RALSTON CONFERS WITH\nTOKYO,   Oct.   15   (AP).-Domei! WM  SECRETARY\nNEW JAPAN AIRLINE\nan agreement filing the frontier1 LONDON, Oct. 15 (CP Cable).-\nbetween Manchoukuo and Outer'. Hon. J. L. Ralston, Canadian Min-\nMongolia had been ilgned by Ja-: Uter of National Defence, inter-\npanese and Russian delegates, end- rupted a seriei of conference at\ning a border dispute which flared Canadian military headquarters torn to open fighting at Nomonhan in day to visit War Secretary David\n1939 -Margesson at the War Office and\n  i later to call on Viscount Cranborne,\nSecretary of State for the Dominion!.\nBRITISH RAID BENGASI\nROME, Oct. 15 (CP).-The Italian |\nTWO RCAF MEMBERS\nAWARDED MEDALS\nOTTAWA, Oct. IJ .(CP)- Two\nleading aircraftsmen of the Royal\nCanadian Air Force who have been\nawarded the British Empire Medal,\nmiliary division, for bravery, earned\ntheir award In Canada and are still\n:n the Dominion as members of an\nair force motor boat crew, it was\nsaid at headquarlers today.\nThe awards for P. C. Conlin nl\nVictoria, B. C, and C. R. James of\nSeamans. Sask.. were made known\nlast night in the London Gazette.\nU.S. PLANES FOR PERU\nWILL CO TO RUSSIA\nNTW YORK, Oct. 15 (AP).-Mnre I\nthan $1,000,000 worth nf bombing!\nplanes and equipment destined for '\nPeru have been removed from two ,\nfreighters for diversion to Soviet\nRussia, marine circles reported today.     \t\nCITIES RIVAL FOR HONOR\nOF NAZI EXECUTION\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (CP). -Aneta.\nNetherlands Indies news agency, today reported rivalary among Netherlands cities for the honor of executing Anton Mussert, Nazi leader\nin Holland, when the German occupation is ended.\n\u2022\nPR\n0 Sweet Caps giye greater pleasure becauBe\nthey're \"group blended\" from 38 choiceat Virginia\ntobaccos. Every Sweet Cap enjoys all the special\nsmoking qualities of the 38 classifications. That's\nwhy they give you such unique mildness, taste,\naroma \u2014 why they're so uniformly good.\nIt's not too early to order your Sweet Caps now,\nfor the boys Overseas, for delivery at Christmas.\nSWEET CAPORAL\nCigarettes\n\"Thr pur*$t form in wkick tobttoaB cm b* woW\nworries Australia $&\u00a3\u00b0A**1l_T% <w. I Heroic Navigator\nMANILA, Oct 15 (AP).-Auftral\nian air observer! here expreued\ndeep concern today that Japan'i\nextension of an airline to the Island\nof Timor, on the Southeastern rim\nof the Netherlands East indiea only\n500 miles from Darwin, Australia.\nraids In quick succession on the.\nLibyan town of Bengasi. The corn- i\nmunique said that high explosive j\nand Incendiary bombi were drop-1\nped\u2014\"particularly on Arab reii-1\ndential quarters,\" the Italian claimed\u2014with 23 deaths reported.\nand\nEvery Thursday\n9:00 fo 9:30 p.m.\nCKfal\nOn, Jk-z OJjl\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 194\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n80O-BBC News\n8:15\u2014 War Commentary (BBC)\n8:30-Front Line Family\n8.45-News\n9:30\u2014Nellie Revell\n.Alt\u2014 International plowing\nmatches.\n9:50\u2014Off.c al Time Signal\n10:W-For Our Listeners\n11:00\u2014Vincent Lopez Orch\nAFTERNOON\n12.30-News\n12:45\u2014Composer'i  Corner.\n100\u2014Talk\n1:1S\u2014Club Matinee\n1:30\u2014Columbia School of the Air\n2:00\u2014B. C. Schools Broadcast\n2*30-Wishart Campbell\n2:45-BBC News\n3:00\u2014Salon Music\n3:30\u2014In The Newi\n!H5-ReoHal Seriei\n400-Annlversary   ol   48th   Highlanders.\nt A New\t\nffad\/o Variety Shot.\nMMUSKUm\nBEAUTY BOX\n4:30-CBC Strings\n4:55\u2014 News Commentary\n5:30\u2014CBR Presents\n5:45\u2014Here We Go Dancing\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014To be announced.\n7*00\u2014National News Summary\n7*15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30-The Choristers\n7:45\u2014Generally Speaking\n8 0O\u2014Slag Party\n8:30-Liberal  Party  Broadcast.\n0 00\u2014John Avison's Orch.\n9 30-B B. C. Radio News Reel\n10:0O-Newi\n10:15\u2014Generally Speaking\n10 45-Out Of ThU World\n11:00\u2014String Serened,\nSaves Plane Crew\nBy   LOUIS   HUNTER\n(Canadian Prttt Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (CP Cable).-\nThe   crew  of  a   Royal   Air  Tenet-\nCoaital   Command   Beaufort   owe *\ntheir ufety today to the heroism of\na  young Canadian   navigator  who\nsuffered   in   silent*   for   an   hour\nTuesday   while   ha   navigated   th<-\ndamaged   aircraft   through   heavy\nweather across 300 miles of treacherous sea after  scoring a torpedo\nhit on a German supply ship off the\nNorwegian Coast.\nThe coursgeous nsvlgstor, Sgt. D.\nC. Martin of Brantford. Ont. suffered three wounds in the lag.\nwhich wu also lacerated by numerous cuts when the torpedo-carrying aircraft wu struck by \"flak''\nfront a vesael sailing with the one\nthe Beaufort attacked and damaged\nTONIGHT\nC) AT\n5 p.m., PST\nCashmere Bouquet Cosmetics\nCKLN-NELSON\nCBC   PROGRAMMES  AND\nTHE  FOLLOWING:\nMORNINC\n757-Slgn On\n9:00\u2014Morning Parade\n10 00\u2014Mid-morning Musicale\n10.15\u2014Music Lover's Corner\nAFTERNOON\n12:25-The Notice Board.\nS:0O-Radio Birthday Party\nEVENINC\n8:30-Llberal  Party Broidcwt\n900-The Myslery Club\n11 30-Sign Off\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC\u2014RID\n700-Cugat Rhumbs Revue\n9:30--Tommy Riggs and Belly Lou\nNBC\u2014BLUE\n8:0O-The March of Time\n9.15- Ah.'isd of the Headhnu\nCOLUMBIA\n6;0O-Malor Bowe's Amateur Hour\n9:00-Duffy't Tavern\nCONTAINS ELEMENTS\nVITALLY\nIMPORTANT\nTO YOUR BABY!\nFor a strsight back, strong chest,\nsturdy left, sound teeth and a\nhusky frame resistant to colds and\ncerttininfections.yourbabyneerli\nan abundance of A and D Vltamina,\nsuch as Scott's Emulsion contains.\n4 TIMES EASIER TO DI6EST\nTHAN PLAIN COD LIVER OILI\nThis gnat took is highly recommend ed\nbecause It is eo easy for sven delicate\nsystems to taka and retain. Pleaatnt-\nlasting, economical too. Boy today I\nAll druggists.\nSCOTT'S\nEMULSION\nTOUR AFFAIRI IRI KEPT\nfttlvatQ\nWhtn yen become s cnitomet of the Bank, \u2022 prints relsrionshrp h at\nonce established and you can be perfectly tun thtt your business wick\nthe Bank will be held in tuictttt confident\nYour bank balance mty be smill or large-, bat no one wfll know what\nIt is\u2014unlet! yea tcIL\nYou msy berritt tt the Rtnk tnd no one will be tbe wiser\u2014unlets yt*\nreveal it.\nYon mty place securities with the Bank for safekeeping and no one site\nwill know\u2014unlets ye* tell them.\nNo one b pririltged to intrude upon this confidential relstionihip of\nihe Bank tnd in customers \u2014 t relationship which comperes with that\nbetween doctor tnd patient\nBANK   OF  MONTREAL\nI1TABLIIH1D  HIT\n\"A bani whibi small accounts abi wiicomb-\nASSETS    IN   IXCISS   Or   ONE   BILLION   DOLLARS\nNelion Brsnchi H. RADCLIFFE, Manages\nTrtil Branchi W. H. RAIKES, Manager\nRo\u00abl.nd Brinchi J. N. CRAN, Manager\nNr\u00bb Denvtr Branch; j. BURMAN. Managrr\nKaties Branch         A. B. ROBERTSON. Maniger\n . .\n_____\n \u25a0rr.\nJohnson, Victoria, Asks Cranbrook\nReturn Government and McGrath;\nOpposition Criticisms Generalities\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 15 -\nUrging his audience to support \u2022\nGovernment which had showed systematic cooperation with the national war effort, charging that criticism from both opposition parties\nconsisted of generalities and not\nfacts, and suggesting that the system of national financing could be\ncontinued through the post-war\nperiod to the betterment of Provincial Government,. Byron (Boss)\nJohnson, ex-M.L.A. for Victoria, addressed a Cranbrook gathering on\nTuesday night on behalf of Arnold\nMcGrath, Liberal candidate.\nTracing the history of cooperation between the Churchill Government and Ottawa, and the cooperation between Canada and the United States, although lhe latter country was.not at war, Ml. Johnson\npointed to the criticism levelled at\nthe Ottawa administration, which\nhe itated consisted of nothing but\ngeneralities, particularly at a time\nwhen the BritUh Government was\ndepending on Prime Minister Mackemie King to secure fullest cooperation with President Roosevelt\nand Mr. Hanson was demanding\nthat Mr. King go to London.\n\"How can there be any cooperation ln Provincial circles if the Coniervative Party is not cooperating\nnationally?\" he asked.\nCriticism of the Pattullo Government on the Sirois Report was along\n-tha same lines, the speaker asserted\nnothing but generalities. Adoption\nof the report would mean taking\naway the social services, and depressing labor legislation to the\nlevel of a standard based on the\nwhole of Canada level, and \"as a\nBritish Columbian, I am not prepared to accept a lower standard,\"\nMr. Johnson declared. As IJritish\nColumbia was the first province to\naccept Ottawa's deal on the relin-\nquisning of the Income tax field, on\nthe basis of 1940 revenue pegg.d\nfor the war duration, and the gasoline tax revenue was also pegged\nfor the duration of the war, Brilish\nColuTrtbli would now be able to\nmaintain the high standard of social\nlervice and workmen's legislation\nwhich the Sirois Report would have\ntaken away.\nDOMINION   FINANCING\nTurning to financing, and the outstanding record of Hon. John Hart\nfor the past eight years. Mr, Johnson pointed out that from 73 to 78\nper cent of the total war and ordinary expenditure of the Dominion\nwu being financed out of taxation\nthereby   preventing   inflation   and\nhigher coit ot living even than now\nexisted. The municipal loan assistance, guaranteed by the Provincial\nGovernment, had made possible\nmany extensive undertakings which\nnow, In time of need for war ier-\nvices, were Invaluable, and If the\npost-war financing were continued\non tha same basis, funds for reconstruction and post-war needs would\nbe available without undue difficulty.\nCharging that the C. C. F. policies\nbeing advocated were not consistent with a Provincial war effort,\nMr. Johnson quoted from the Comox Argus a statement allegedly\nmade by Colin Cameron, M.L.A.\nfor Comox-Albernl, urging the\npublic to not purchase war savings certificates or war bonds.\nThe speaker asserted the platform\nof the C. C. F. could only be carried out if and when control of the\nFederal Government was attained\nand possibly not even then.\nPaying a tribute to the cooperation ahown in the United States by\nWendell Wilkie and his support of\nPresident Roosevelt, Mr. Johnson\nclaimed that the Conservative opposition in Canada had taken the\nopposite stand, and that Mr. Maitland ,if elected as Premier, would\nbe Inconsistent if he did not follow\nhis Federal leader's stand,\nThe work of Hon. Geo. Pearson\nwae highly praised by speaker, who\nstated he was a member of the Legislative Assemly when the first\nmaximum hours and minimum\nwage legislation was Introduced by\nthe Liberal Government, and that\nas a result strikes and labor unrest\nhad been saved to a great extent,\nMcGRATH VALUABLE\nIn uking for support for Mr\nMcGrath as Liberal candidate, Mr.\nJohnson pointed to the valuable\nexperience which Mr. McGrath\nwould bring to the House if elected,\nand stated that as an ex-service\nman himself, he could understand\nthe value of his services to Cranbrook nding during war and postwar periods. The parly which has\ncooperated with the Federal Government to the utmost, and with\nwhich Government Mr. McGrath\nwould be associated, was the Government to return to continue in\ngiving British Columbia progressive\ncooperative administration.\nJ. A. Genest acted u chairman,\nand paid a tribute to Mr. McGrath's\naervices u member for Cranbrook\nriding, and to his abilities, which\nhad Men acknowledged on many\noccasions, which would be even\nenhanced by his experience in connection with military affairs.\nNewqale Woman\nDies of Burns\nELKO, B C.-Mrs. Muir, who was\nfatally burned in her home at\nNewgate while cleaning clothes,\ndied in the Fernie Hospital Saturday morning,\nMr. Muir found Mrs. Muir lying\non the floor with her cloths almost\nburned off. He rushed Mrs. Muir\nto  hospital.\nMrs. Muir lived In Elko some\nyears ago From here she moved to\nWaldo where she lived for some\ntime.\nShe leaves her sons and daughters, Aulton, Jimmy and Alex and\nMrs. Metzgar of Waldo, Mrs. H\nMcNab of Waldo. Mrs. Crawford of\nCreston and  Laura.\nINTERNAL UNREST\nCROWS IN ITALY\nLONDON, Oct. 13 CP Cable) .-\nReuters News Agency reported from\nthe \"French frontier\" today that\nMussolini, believed to be combatting a difficult internal situation\nand growing unrest, has dismissed\nprefects of 10 Italian districts and\na number of Fascist federal secretaries.\nThe   agency   said   lt   understood\npopular discontent to be more acute\nin  Tuscany than othe* Italian dis-1\ntricts.\nThe Ministry of Corporations,\nReuters added, has ruled that heating in Northern Italy will start\nDec. 1 and will be allowed only between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m., but it is\nexpected that before the end of\nJanuary the whole of Northern Italy\nwill be deprived of heating because\nthe quantities of fuel available are\nonly 30 per cent of 1940 supplies.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON   B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. OCTOBER 11 1941\n_______\nJVALKE\nBUCK LABEL\nam 12 years old\nIt is called for by\nmen of experience\nBecause they\nknow their\nScotch\nNEW YORK. Od. 15 (AP) -\nIn the most complete glossary of\nRoyal Air Force slang compiled\nsince the war began, Lester D.\nGardner, Executive Vice-President of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences, reported here\nthat to a flier a tank ls a \"roller\nskate.\"\nRopey means unsettled weather.\nCheesed  means depressed.\nGardner's list In the Aeronauti-\ncsl Review section of the Institute\nJournal also Includes these terms:\nBilly can\u2014Mess tin In which aircraftmen can cook ln an emergency.\nBrock's benefit\u2014Heavy anti-aircraft fire after Brock, fireworks\nmanufacturer).\nConfetti \u2014 Ammunition for machine guns.\nContour chasing\u2014Low flying\nCrabbing\u2014Limping home with a\ndamaged plane.\nDirt-Much anti-aircraft fire.\nDust bin\u2014Retractable under-tur-\nThls advert'iement Is not published or displsyed by the Liquor Control I ret for gunner.\nBoard or by lha Government of Britiih Columbia. I    Erk\u2014An aircraftman novice.\n J    George\u2014The automatic pilot.\nIAPANESE LEADERS\nCONTINUE CONFERENCES\nTOKYO, Oct M (AP). - Jipan.\nese leaden continued today a series of conferences believed to be\nconcerned with matters of high Importance.\nThe Prlv* Council met ln the\npresence of Emperor Hlrohito. Later\nMarquii Klochl Kldo. Lord Privy\nSeal, held consultations at the palace with Premier Prince Fumlmaro\nKonoye and Lt.-Gen. Tellcht Suzuki, head of the Cabinet Planning\nBoard. Secrecy wai maintained on\nthe tubject matter of theae discussions.\nFIRE DESTROYS\nSALMO HOUSE\nSALMO, B.C.\u2014fire of unknown\norigin razed the home of Robert\nHale here last Friday night about\n11 o'clock. House and contenti were\na complete loss.\nTwo houses on either side of the\nHale home were saved by the efforts of a few fire fighters. The\nforestry pump and hose were\nbrought Into action and did not\nleave the scene until the fire waa\ncompletely out\nAt the time of the fire, Mr. Hale\nwas living alone In the house and\nhad left home only a short while\nbefore the fire was noticed by\nneighbors.\nTobruk Resists\nPanzer Attacks\nMELBOURNE, Oct. 15 (AP)-The\nTobruk garrison has shown how\npanzer units can be repelled by\nresolute men, lays an Inspiring report of the six-month siege, longest\nin the war, received at Army Headquarters at Melbourne today from\nthe Information section of the\nMiddle East.\nThe value of the defence cannot\nbe assessed too highly. Tobruk was\nthe rallying point for Cyrenaican\nforces during the March retirement\najid the presence of the garrison\nastride lengthy German communication lines contributed materially\nto cutting ln half their swift advance early In the siege.\nDuring the time this valuable\nport has been denied the enemy lt\nhas required a force of 20,000 Germans and Italians to encircle the\ndefences. These men have been\nsupplied and provisioned through\nthe already congested ports of Tripoli and Bengazi.\nTobruk throughout thla period\nhas been the key point of the Western desert defence but this value\nhas not been earned lightly. The\ndefenders have endured days, weeks\nand months of ceaseless fighting,\nbombing, shelling, patrolling, attack\nand counter-attack. There has been\nconstant vigil until a relentless sun\nand in the face of biting dust.\nAnderson Crash\nShowed Signs of\nGlassy Landing\nEDMONTON, Oct. 15 (CP)-The\nairplane crash Sunday at Sylvan\nLake which killed Pilot Howard Anderson, \u00ab, aircraft superintendent\nfor Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, Ltd., had all the earmarks of a glassy water landing,\nCivil Aviation Inspector Kenneth\nSaunders of Edmonton who investigated the crash said on hn return\nhere today.\nMr. Saunders ssid complete results of his findings were being\nsent in a report to the Department\nof Transport at Ottawa and dther\nthan the remark of glassy landing,\nhe declined to make a statement.\n\"A glassy water landing,\" as explained by pilots, is treacherous.\nIt means that the water on the lake\nis glassy, without a ripple or wave,\nand from the height of a plane\nabout to land it appears like a mirror and makes it extremely difficult\nto Judge height above the level of\nthe water surface.\nTrail Legion lo\nRaise $800 lor\nOverseas Gills\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 14 - Tlie Canadian Legion Christmas Cheer\nFund, for men who have lett Trail,\nCastlegar, Fruitvale, Beaver Falla\nand Casino, is now under way, and\nthe objective li $800.\nThla year the list is much heav*\nler, and a great amount of work\nhas been expended ln trying to locate addresses ot men who have\njoined up ln other cities. Letten\nhave been lent to many of the\nhomes, hut have been Ignored, so\nthe Legion has decided to discontinue, this method of locating the\nmen, aa lt has been done by one\nLegion member at his own expense,\nand it wai felt that If the friends\nand relatives were not sufficiently\ninterested to respond, the effort\nwas  wasted.\nAddresses of the following men\nserving in the Canadian Forces are\nwanted: M. H. Aldersmith, J. y.\nAllard, A. W. Anderson, H. Adams,\nJ. K. Bourne, D. Balfour, M. Bud-\nnarchuk, C. Buchanan, A. B. Condy,\nA. H. N. Cully, F. Christensen,\nS. J. Clark, J. Campbell, J. B.\nDuffy, J. A. Dotten, L. T. Davis, I.\nJ. Dunn, R. Dibasia, T. Fraser, W,\nFedorchuk, George Fillion, B. B.\nGreen, J. L. Hiscock, R. Halgh, J.\nHudson, D. Hinch, L. Jestley, Russell Jones, S. Jurlk, W. Kemp, L. J.\nKalvlsk (Fruitvale), L. V. Letourneau, R. S. Lymbume, R. H. Lowe,\nW. Lypchuk, L. C. Martin, Bob\nMarshall, D. J. Mauro, J. R. Miller,\nRon Matthews, J. L. McKay, McCabe, J. L. McKenzie, J. P. McCafoe,\nR. M. McLagan, D. J. Patterson,\nJ. R. Page, D. H. Padley, G. Patterson, J. T. Proudfoot, R. Paton,\nJ. Pascuzzo, J. A. Phalman, W. Rae,\nD. Redmond, J. B. Richardson, H.\nSutherland, J. M. Skilling, G. Simp\nson, M. C. Smith, D. J. Sheehan,\nRalph Temple, Bill Turik, E. Tade-\nvic, James Walker, A. Williamson\nand P. Whitby.\nSubscriptions to the fund may be\nsent to the Canadian Legion, Trail;\nthe Trail Daily Times; Herbert\nJackson, 2170 Daniel Street, Trail;\nor E. L. Hodge, 1396 Cedar Avenue,\nTrail.\nAMERICANS ABOARD\nIAPANESE SHIP TO U.S.\nTOKYO, Oct. 15 (AP). - The\nTatuta Maru, first Japanese vessel\nto sail for the United States since\nlate last July, departed for Yokohama today carrying, Domel News\nAgency said, five Americans and\n300 American-born Japanese.\nApproximately 250 of the latter\nare expected to disembark in Honolulu, Die Agency declared.\nSPANISH BLUES AID\nAXIS FICHT IN RUSSIA\nMADRID, Oct. 15 (AP).-A War\nMinistry announcement said today\nthe Spanish Blue Legionnaires sent\nto aid the Axis fight against Russia\nhad engaged ln their first action\nand thrown back the first Soviet\nattack on their sector.\nRCAF Casualties\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15 (CP)\u2014Deaths\nof two Canadians ip service over,\nseas and one in an automobile acei\ndent In Canada were reported in a\ncasualty list Issued today by the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force. Seven\nwere reported missing in overseas\noperations.\nFollowing is the latest list;\nOVERSEAS   .\nKilled on active service:\nDunlop, James Lennox Scott, Sgt.,\nNiagara Falls, NY.; Mokanyk, Alexander Elliott, Sgt., Winnipeg.\nMissing after air operations:\nHegarty, Hugh Francis, Po, Sarnia, Ont.; Patterson, Thomas Clayton, Po., Windsor, Ont.; Childs, Alfred Joseph, Sgt., Woodstock, Ont,;\nHumphreys.   Francis   Ridout,   Sgt.,\nToronto;   Hunting,   William   Kare,\nSgt.,    Lennoxville,   Que,;    Mather,\nDonald Stewart, Sgt., North Gower,\nOnt; McCrum, Charles John Fred,\nSgt.. Ottawa.\nCANADA\nKilled in automobile accident:\nJohnson, Oliver Charles, Ac2, Uphill P.O. Ont.\nSeriously ill on sctive service:\nMartin, Orvin Elwood, Ac2, Gan.\nanoque, Ont.\nIt's Fall! And high time to get\nready for the long Winter\nmonths ahead. Cool evenings\nconvey to us that the gentle\nseason, Summer, is over; the\nnext major season is Old Man\nWinter. Winter sports require\nequipment that is the best.\nMeals will be affected and\nwhen, in the last six months\nwe would enjoy crisp green\nsalads we now prefer roast\nbeef. The merchants of Nelson\nare ready and waiting to\nsupply you with all the necessities in changing from one\nseason to another in every\nphase of the change.\nAIRMEN AWAIT ACTION\nON PASSPORT CHARCE\nDETROIT. Oct. 15 (CP)- Aircraftsmen William Slusiak, 21, ol\nWinnipeg, and James Sklaer, 19.\nof Edmonton, today awaited action\nby American authorities following\ntheir attempt yesterday to enter the\nU. S- without passports. Immigration\nofficials ordered them held in the\nWayne County Jail.\nThe airmen are not nearly as\nworried about what action the\nAmerican authorities will take as\nwhat will happen to them when they\nare paraded before their commanding officer at their Royal Canadian\nAir Force station in St. Thomas.\nDo Your Shopping in NELSON\nThe Nelson Stores Will Assure You of\nSatisfaction With Every Purchase\nMacdonalds\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholesale Grocers\nPhone 28\nFRONT ST. NELSON\nDEATHS\nBUCKINGHAM. Que. - Mrs.\nJames B. MacLaren, 88, widow ot a\nmember of one of the Ottawa Valley's best known lumber familiee.\nHONORS CONFERRED ON\nFREE FRENCH SUB CREW\nA SCOTTISH PORT, Oct. 18 (CP)\n-Sixteen members of the crew of\na Free Frpnch submarine which\nattacked a German convoy off the\nNorwegian coast and then crawled\nhome 500 miles through enemy\nminefields after being shaken by\ndepth charges, received the Croix\nde Guerre with Palm today from\nGen. Charles de Gaulle. The order\nof liberation was conferred upon\nthe vessel, the first Free French\nnaval unit to be so honored.\nVOTINC FOR B.C. SOLDIERS\nSTARTS IN EDMONTON\nEDMONTON, Oct. 15 (CP). -\nAbout 200 men from British Columbia now serving with the army and\nair force in Edmonton, began voting\nyesterday in special advance polling booths which have been set up\nfor balloting in the British Columbia election.\nSet ut FIRST for your Heating,\nPlumbing   md  Ventilation\nRequirementi\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nind HEATINC CO., LTD.\nMother's Bread\nPhon* 210 for Delivery\nChoquette Bros.\nBakers\nTHE MAYOR\nand\nALDERMEN\nof the\nCity of\nNelson\nInvite You to Do\nYour  Shopping\nin Nelson\nTHE\nLD.\nNelion'i Mott Popular\nRESTAURANT\nCOOD FOODS\nCOOD SERVICE\nMODERATE PRICES\n77 TAXI 77\nBob Riesterer ind\nAngui Cimpbell\n24-HOUR SERVICE\nStand it Gelinai'\nA. H. GREEN\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nCONTRACTORS\nWard St. Nelion, B. C.\nBoost Your\nHome Bakery\nHOOD'S\nMcKay & Stretton\nLEADERS IN OUR LINE\nKelvinator        Connor\nR.C.A. Victor\nR. W.\nDawson\nReal Estate\n\u2014 Insurance\nPhone 197\n557 Ward\nNelion, B. C.\nCtll Ui Flnt for Coal, Wood,\nCokt, Moving or Tranifer\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhono 33\nMen'i and Boyi' Wur\nat Popular Prices\nCharles Morris\nThi Home of\nTender Meat\nBradley's Meat\nMarket\nRoyal Air Force Slang Explained\nin Compilation by Air Executive\nGet the Moit for\nYour Dollar\nRtad all the adt In the\nNelson Daily News\nSKY CHIEF\nAUTO SERVICE\nA  Good  Garage\nNorm   Rotcoe and   AH Fournlar\nOpp. Savoy Hotel\nPHONE 22 FOR\nLetterheads.     Envelopes    and\nall   kinds  of   Business   Forms.\nH. M. Whimster\nJob Printing\nRandR\nGROCERY\nNelson's Progressive Food Store\nOet cracking\u2014Get going.\nGo to the movies\u2014Go into action.\nGong\u2014To  get a  medal.\nGreenhouse \u2014 Plsstic cover for\ncockpit.\nHip flask\u2014Service revolver.\nKipper control \u2014 Coastal command aircraft convoying fishing\nboats.\nKites \u2014 Airplanes, a mechsnlc's\nterm.\nMae West\u2014A chest life preserver\n(Inflatable waistcoat).\nMein Kampf\u2014leaflets to be\ndropped  In  enemy  territory.\nMouse   traps\u2014Submarines.\nMickey   Mquse\u2014 Automatic   lever\nreleasing bombs.\nPut up a black\u2014Poor attempt.\nRoller skate\u2014A tank.\nScrambled eggs-Gold oak leaves\non an air marshal's hat.\nShot down In flames - Reprimanded by a superior officer or\ncrossed in love.\nSquirt\u2014machine gun burst.\nTaped\u2014Solved.\nWalling Wlnale\u2014Air raid siren.\nWufis\u2014Gun noisti.\nBUY . . .\n\"NELSON BRAND\"\nJAMS AND JELLIES\nProducts of the\nMcDonald Jam\nCompany,  Limited\nBROWN\n& Co. Ltd.\nMen'i  Furnishing!\nmd Clothing\nGttf\nTea\nShop\nThe Coolest Fountain and\nTea Room in Nelson\nJlappy. l__h_uiq.\nHeadquarters\nPeebles Motors\nChrysltr       Plymouth        Fargo\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelson's Popular\nRestaurant\"\nThe Beit for Leu\nEnquire  About It at tha\nBEACON\nThe Convenient Service\nStition\nBiker ind Hall Streeti\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCompany\n\u2022\nHome Owned\nt\nHome Controlled\nThe Stirling\nThe Family Hotel\nNext to the Civic Centre\njj_tw__z \u00a3_an__.\nNelson's Modern Plant\nIndividual Attention to\nEvery Garment\nGELINAS\nTh* boit Hilted Milks at\nNelion'i Mnt Popular\nFountain\nRead the\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nDeveloping \u2014 Printing\nind Enlirging\nBring or mall your films to\nBILL RAMSAY\nBsker St. Nelson, B. C,\n\t\n__________\n m$m*_^^\n-NILSON\nI.H.L. Officials Discuss Passport\nProblems With Board af Winnipeg\nirouse Protected\nAgain in Kootenay\nGrouse are sate from the fire of\njotenay nimrods till another hunt-\n1 aeason rolls around.\nThe laat varieties available to\ninters, Blue and Franklin's, are\notected again today after a\nonth's season. Ruffed or willo*\nouie were available from Sept. 20\nSept. So.\n}ele Bonneville\nGoes lo Victoria\nto Play Hockey\nPETE BONNEVILLE\nTateran of aeveral seasons In Nel-\nlacrosse and hockey. Pete Bon-\npville has packed up his bags and\nI gone to Victoria to play hockey\ntbe new Pacific Coast Amateur\nlockey League thia Winter.\n\u25a0nil won't be Pete's first season\n1 Co_lt hockey for he was with\nIe Vancouver Canadians in 1936-37\npien they met Nelaon Maple Leafs\nsre in the B.C. finals.\nBonneville first camt to Nelaon\nir the  1999 lacrosse season, and\nbeen her* mostly eyer alnce.\nIt hu been utility man with the\n\u25a0elson senior hockey team nearly\nMJ season, and has been one ot\npt boils  team's aces up to  this\n', wben ht quit the lamt beof lnterfersmce with his work.\nlirly Getting\nLong Rest Before\n19(2 Competition\nBONOTON, Ky., Ort. IJ (AP)-\nrlaway, at three years of age\nbiggest money winner in the\nory of racing, now is leading the\nof an ordinary saddle horse.\nCalder Names Egan as\nOne Affected if\nRules Remain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 15 (CP)\u2014Mr.\nJustice J. E. Adamson, chairman\nof tht Manitoba Divisional War\nServices Board, said tonight that\nht had \"a frltndly oonveraatlon\"\ntoday with Frank Calder of Montreal, National Hookey League\npresident\nMr. Justice Adamson, who on\nSept. 12 refused to approve applications for passports presented by\nsix hockey players seeking to play\nwith professional teams ln United\nStates, refused to comment further\non the meeting with Calder, who also refused comment.\nLt.-Col. C. D. McPherson, Mani-\n;oba board registrar, also attending\nthe meeting between Calder and the\nchairman and said tonight they\n\"just met for a little introductory\nUlk.\"\n\"The Judge agreed to meet Mr.\nCalder and Mr. Coyne (J. D. Coyne,\nWinnipeg lawyer) in a friendly\nway,\" the registra; said.\nAsked tonight if the board is reconsidering its ruling on pas_port\nauthority for hockey players, Lt.\nCol. McPherson said: 'There has\nbeen no change in the board's ruling\nas far as I know.\"\nToday's meeting was not an official meeting of the board, the registrar said.\nThe Winnipeg Free Press said\nNational Hockey League officials\nmet earlier to discuss status of many\nof their players who have come\nunder Jurisdiction of the Manitoba\nDivisional War Services Board.\nTht Frea Press added:\n\"In the conference, besldea Mr.\nCalder, wert Col. John R. Kilpatrick, President of Madison\nSquare Gardens, and Mervyn\n(Red) Dutton, owner ot New York\nAmericans. . . .\n\"After a brief conference . . . Mr.\n| Calder went  to the office of J. B.\nCoyne, Winnipeg lawyer. . . .\n\"Speaking for his club, Red Dutton said, 'All we want to know is\nwhere we stand. I have the best\nlooking hockey club I've ever had\nin New York American colors but\nif the rulings of the Manitoba and\nSaskatchewan boards are final, then\nI know where I'm getting off at.'\n\"Continuing, the boss of New\nYork Americans said, \"There have\nbeen different interpretations and\nrulinp across Canada and we're\nhere to ascertain if the decision here\nsticks. If it does I lose, between\nManitoba and Saskatchewan, eight\nof my players.'\n\"You can quote me on one thing\u2014\nthe most war-ridden country in the\nworld, outside of Russia today, is\nGreat Britain,\" said Mr. Calder.\n\"And Great Britain is carrying on\nwith sport in typical British style.\nSurely therefore there should be\nno reason why we, on this lide,\nshould not follow stilt In the tame\ntradition.\n\"Ht declined to enlarge upon tht\npassport regulations situation, intimating that untU some definite\nunderstanding waa reached, comment might be more detrimental\nthan good. . . .\n\"Players who would be lost to tht\nNew York Americans If the regulations are not changed would include Pat Egan, Charlie llayner,\nBilly Benson. Murray Armstrong,\nWilf Field, N Larson. Pete Slobodan, Bus Wycherley, Harry Watson\nand G. Bush.\nRed Carr and Hoppus\nStill With Nanaimo\nBoth Hed Can, Nelson veteran\nhockey player, and Hoppy Hoppus,\nwho triad out with the Nelson\nMaple Leals a year ago, will be\nNanalmo   Clippers,   Weitern\nIaplt\n.\/ith        __\u201e_ _,    \t\nCanadian  Intermediate  hockey  fl.\nnalists, again this Winter.\nDAILY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, OCTOBER 1*,\nSPORTS\nAmerican Kldllne\nShows Up Well\nIn Hotkey Drill\nPORT ARTHUR, Oct. 15 (CP) \u2014\nCoach Art Chapman ol Winnipeg\nsent the New York Americans\nthrough a lively two-hour workout\nat the National Hockey League\ntraining camp here today.\nGarth Buih, strapping llx-foot\ndefenceman for Reglna Rangert\nDominion tenlor amateur champions, and Wlngman Wally Koiter\nare the only two amateun itlll\nleeking a berth with Amerlcani,\nTwo Port Arthur Juniors, Steve\nWichy and Joe Gollat, were cut\nfrom lhe squad yesterday while\nPete Slobodian, 23-year-old rookie\nrearguard with Americans last season, IsJt for Regina to recuperate.\nSlobodian suffered a chipped elbow\nbone in a workout at the camp.\nChapman said that during recent\nworkouts the American kidline of\nBiUy Ben_on, Bus Wycherley and\nNorm Larson gave an impressive\ndisplay.\nBerjson and Wycherley teamed\nup twice in quick succession yesterday to knife through an opposing team and only goalkeeper\nCharlie Rayner's alertness prevented Benson from scoring on\nboth occasions.\nHooley Smith, expected to report\nto Americans camp for a week, has\nnot yet reported although Manager\nDutton forwarded transportation to\nSmith at Montreal several days agp.\n(Dutton said in Winnipeg that he\nhas not heard from Smith, the veteran utility player who was an ace\nforward with the old Montreal\nMaroons for years).\nDame Is Headed to\n(anadien Contract\nWHIRLAWAY BOWS TO MARKET WISE\nThe thrilling finish of the two-mile Jockey Club Gold\nCup race at Belmont Park showing Whirlaway, the\nthree-year-old champion, literally \"bowing\" in defeat to\nMarket Wise, owned by Louis Tufano and ridden to victory by Basil James. Market Wise clipped one second off\nExterminator's 21-year-old record, in winning. Whirlaway is on the rail, Market Wise being nearest the\ncamera.\nBunny Dame Shines in Tryout on\nForward Line With Benoit, Quilty\n\"Ht'i out of training at prtient\nland   we're  going  to  give   him  a\n[\u2022ouplt of monthi of rut\u2014he won't\nany more before 1942,\" Train-\n|er Ben Jonei ttld today.\nPatrick Sends Oilers\nThrough Workouts\nST. HYACINTHE, Que., Oct. 15\n(OP)\u2014Coach   Dick  Irvln of Montreal Canadiens today put one of\nhis outstanding rookies of the season on a forward line with two ot\nhis rookie stars of laat year  and\nthe new line turned Into a high-\nacorlng trio on its first attempt.\nIn hli flnt reihuffllng of llnei\nilnce the training teason opened,\nIrvln put Bunny Dame of Trail,\nB.C.,  on  with   John   Quilty  and\nJot Benolt, and tht line account-\ntd for three goali ai the Whitei\nand  Redi went 60  minutei to a\n6*6 draw.\nBenolt scored two of the counters,\nWith Dame and Quilty assisting,\nand Quilty bagged the other. The\nline's   performance    was   equalled\nonly by the White combination of\nElmer Lach, Jack Adams and Tony\nDemers, with Demers collecting all\nthree counters.\nVeteran Murphy Charr*erlain\ncontinued the sparkling play that\nhe had been displaying during the\nweek, sniping a goal that appeared\nto give the Whites Lhe game witn\n90 seconds to go. Chamberlain left\nthe ice convinced that he had scored\nthe winner, but Ray Getliffe tied\nit up again for the Reds with 35\nseconds to go, with his second goal\noi the day.\nTwo rookies combined for the\nether White goal, when Jim McFadden scored on a pass from Mar-\ncil Dheere. his Portland, Ore., teammate in the Pacific Coast League\nlast  year.\nW41\nREFEREE APPOINTED\nHOCKIY MANAGER\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct. U (AP) -\nJohn Getchell, Minneapolis football\nand basketball referee, has been appointed general manager of the\nMinneapolis Hockey Club, Preildent Frank McNally announced today. Getchell hai levered bis connections with a securities firm.\nBombers Rise Up\nIn Last Period lo\nDefeat Grizzlies\nBy HERB JONES\nCanadian Preu SUff Writer\nVANCOUVER, Oct. IS \u00ab3P).-\nAfter three quarters of air tight\nfootball the big Blue Bomberi of\nWinnipeg  produced   two   touchdowns and a rouge ln the final\nperiod to hand Vancouver Grizzlies a 12-0 defeat on a muddy\nfield here tonight and took over\nthe lead in the Western Inter-\nProvincial Football  Union  from\nReglna    Roughriders    against\nwhom they complete their schedule in the Prairie city Saturday.\nBig Art Stevenson went over for\nthe first Bomber touchdown after\nGrizzly Coach Greg Kabat fumbled\nStevenson's  kick  on   the   Grlzzlie\none-yard  line, the  starry  Bomber\nbackflelder   also   did   the   kicking\nfor the extra point.\nGrizzly halfback Jimmy Gilkes\nwas rouged behind the line for another Winnipeg point at mid-quarter and near the game's end Bomber half-back Nate Shore Intercepted an attempted Grizzly forward\nand ran more than 50 yards for another Bomber touchdown. He crossed the line standing up.\nThe score went unconverted as\nChes McCence'i attempted place\nment was blocked.\nIn was a ihaky triumph for the\nWlnnlpeggers aa they were completely stopped for three periods.\nIn the three scoreless quarters the\nWinnipeggen came tantalizlngly\nclose to pay-dirt several times, only\nto be held or to see fleet Jimmy\nGilkes run out their dangerous\nkicks.\n-WOI NINI\nFinal Tribute Is Paid at Trail lo\nUte Howard Andersen, Popular Filer\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 13-Tributc to\na great filer, a loyal friend, and a\nmau whose character and personality had made him one of the\nmoit papulae memberi ot the Consolidated Mining It Smelting Company itaff, wai paid to Howard D.\nAnderson, late Superintendent of\nAircraft, by a large gathering of\nfriends, relatives and co-workers,\nat funeral services held Wednesday\nafternoon in both the Masonic\nTemple, under the auspices of Ft*\ndelity Lodge, No. 32, A. F. and A. M.\nand In Knox United Church.\nMr. Anderson was killed in an\nairplane accident at Sylvan Lake,\nAlta, last Sunday afternoon.\nDr. M. R. Basted, Master of Fidelity Lodge, had charge of the\nMasonic services, both at the Ma-\n\u25a0onic Hall and at the graveside,\nwhere the aervices were completed,\nDr. M. W. Lees of Knox United\nChurch making the final committal.\nThe active pallbearers, M. M.\nO'Brien, William Wood, W. C. MacKenzie, J. W. McKay, C. W. McBey\nand R. R. Burns, formed a guard\nof honor at both services, marching\nin a body from the Masonic HaU,\nwhere the rites began at 1:15, to\nthe Church, where the public ser\nvicci were held one hour later*\nDr. Lees officiated at the public\nlervice, and two hymns, \"Abide\nWith Me\" and \"Guide Me Thou\nGreat Jehovah\" were sung.\nSpeaking to a congregation of\nfriends who packed the church,\nDr. Lees dwelt on the type of life\nled by Mr. Anderson, His wai an\nadventurous life, and he belonged\nto the class of men, of whom Winston Churchill had said \"Never had\nio many owed so much to ao few,\"\nDr. Lees.iald. A skillful, efficient\npilot, be, too, had died on duty, tn\nlervice agalnit the common foe.\nA cortege Including over 40 cars\nwended Its way up the Schofield\nHighway to the Mountain View\nCemetery, where the final servicei\nwere held. Floral offerings were\nsent to the graveside in a special\ncar.\nHonarary pallbearers Included S.\nG. Blaylock, President of the C. M.\nSe S. Company; James Buchanan,\nGeneral Manager: R. W. Diamond,\nAssistant General Manager: H. B.\nFuller, G. A. Walllnger, W. Lindsay Superintendent of the Kimberley mines; James Millen W. A.\nCurran, R. E. Hawkes, J. K. Cran,\nW. D. Burgesi, John Hill, Walter\nBrown, A. W. McDonald, A. H.\nAllan of Nelson, W. G. Jewitt, Su-\nperintendent of Northern operations and fellow-flier of Mr. Anderson: Mayor Herbert Clark, A. J.\nMcDonnell, P. T. Bloomer, Superintendent of Northern Properties;\nF. W. Jackson, D. Ohlihelm of Vancouver and B. Aird of Edmonton.\nOther honorary pallbearers were\nW. A. \"Wop\" May and Mat Berry,\nwell known Northern bush filers.\nwho had been associated with Mr.\nAnderson when he was employed\nas bush pilot, and Kenneth Dewar,\npioneer Northern flier for the Consolidated Company. Mr. Andenon\nwas flying Mr. Dewar'i plane at\nthe time of the crash.\nAlthough the general otfloei at\nTadanac were not closed for the\nfuneral, open leave waa extended\nto those wishing to attend tha\nfuneral.\nBUNNY DAME\nBruins Are Last\nN.H.L. Team lo\nReport toCamp\nBy Tho Canadian Prow\nThe last ihall be first, etc.\" as\nthe old biblical quotation reads\nwhich mayhap explains whj Boston\nIs the only National Hockey League\nte*m yet to report for pre-season\ntraining. Bruins won all the honors\nIwrt year and no doubt are content\nto make a slow gtart in order to be\nsure oi a good finish. They report\nat Hershey Oct 30.\na)bino rookie, have another unusual\nfeature \u2014 a predominance of right-\nwingers. Of the 17 players at camp.\n15 Players Can\nBe Stripped In\nBoxla Hereafter\nAmong the amendments to the\nrules of the Canadian Lacrosse Association at the annual meeting\nthis week at Vancouver is one thst\nprovides for the increasing of the\n\".  ;\u00a3 .  \"-\"- \u2014\ngoalie, instead of  13\nHereafter if a goalkeeper is penalized, the man who replaces him\nwill have the option of putting on\nWholesalers Ration Small Shipment\noi New Pack (anned Salmon; Tea Up\nFtrrt ihipment of the 1941 pack\nof canned salmon, released recently by the Government, arrived at\nNelson during the week, and iome\nwholesalers reported Wednesday\nthey were rationing to spread the\nsmsll shipment over.\nThe Government until recently\nheld up the release of the salmon\npack until It had ascertained the\nlikely size of the pack becauie of\ncontracts to supply the United\nKingdom.\nWholesaler! were also advised\nduring the week by fish canners\nthat there would be no canned her-\nings with tomato sauce for Canada\n(his year, the United Kingdom having placed orders for the entire\npack.\nDATE  SHIPMENT SMALL\nThe arrival of bulk dates, declines\n.  _.      .       ..-_- .in the price of butter and of flour,\nn a game to.IS. including a spare : ,,-<\u2022\u25a0 increases In the price of teas,\nhave been buying tomato soup, two\nwell known brands ln particular,\nIn order to have sufficient itocki on\nhand to carry them over.\nCarlot arrivals included two can\not flour and feed, and one car each\nof mixed fruits, of California oranges, of meats, of groceries, of\nmeat scraps, of sugar, of itraw, ind\nof aalt.\ngers. Of the 17 players at camp,   ^-- \",:,.   ..g.\nhr-t\\f '\u00b0 *\u00b0\" ,r\u00b0m \"\"I    K\"^( \u00bb'\u2022?\" \"\u00ab\nI with a player taking a penalty shot,\nno\nstarboard ,\nAnd   peaking   of   right-winger*\none just couldn't overlook Mush\nMarch. One of the smallest men in\nthe League, March is starting his\n13th  season   with   Chicago,   which\n^\u25a01^:^^^\na goal will automatically be award\ned.\nAnother amendment is that \"the\nball will be white instead of gray.\"\nHowever ln the Kootenay circuit,\nballs  have been  used  the\nisn't everything in hockey.\nMotter Hurt in\nDetroit Training\nWINNIPEG. Oct. 15 (CP).~Guy\nPatrick of Vancouver, recently appointed manager-coach of Tulsa\nOilers of the American Hockey Association, sent sue professionals and\nfour amateurs through a workout\nrink   here   today.\nThe vanguard of Oilers reporting\nto Patrick included two holdovers\nfrom last year's Oilers team and\nfour players from the disbanded\nPacific Coast Hockey League. Another five Pacific Coast phivers are\nexpected tomorrow in addition to\nfour or five who were with Tulsa\nlast season and two more amateurs, Patrick said.\nPlayers  reporting today  are  Defencemen   Jack   Tuten   of   Oilers.\nDave   Desreux   of   Vancouver   and\nRod Jensen, an amateur from York-\nton;   and   forwards,   Sonny   Wake-\nford of Oilers, Lude Palm  of Spokane,  Bus  Wood and Bud Gourlie,\nStill, Jones admits, Whirlaway did \u25a0 both   of   Vancouver,   Alex   Riston,\n'kind of tired\"  when  he ran] amateur   from   Pioneer,  R.  C,  and\nnd to Market Wise in  his last   Ken   Hage,   amateur   from   Clares-\nLting in the Jockey Club Gold Cup ! holm.  AlU.  The other amateur  is\n\\ Belmont, Sept. 27. i...... .\n[*We\"rt treating him Jutt like a\nddle horse. He'U get a lot T)f ornery riding to keep tiim legged\nbut he won't be breezed fo* a\ntuple of months yet.\"\niTnat may be good newi for Mar-\nWise, Fenelon find Big Pebble,\nlo*ie entries so far for the Pim-\n\u00bb special Oct. 30. A decision is yet\nbe made on whether Alsab, the\nir\"* outstanding two-year-old, will\nn.\n|Jonet insists that Whirly \"shows\neffect*\" from his strenuous lec-\nyear   of   turf   campaigns,   in\nalch ht tucked away the triple-\nown   by   winning   the   Kentucky\n\u2022rby, the Belmont and the Preak-\n^u, among other races,\nIt appeared yesterday that Aurelia Napoleon (Bunny) Dame is almost certain of being offered a contract by the Montreal Canadiens.\nHe has been the outstanding man\nExtending the comparison further\none could use Toronto Maple Leafs.\nhas been found that they are much\nmnre satisfactory for vision of the\nplayers and spectators alike in the\nK-otenay rinks. But in the BC.\nfinals, which were played in the\nTrail and Nelson arenas, white balls\nwere utilized.\nWhile tbe proposed changes are\nnot complete, a new faceoff circle,\nr 10 feet from each comer will here- j\nM\u00b0w b\u00a3i\u2122 DcitroifRed W:\u00a3 I \u00a32, ^HtJ V2S, C2\u00a3!r .M\nfirs', training camp casualty today    i \u2122* J>r *)< <\u00bb\u2122\" *\"\u00ab the *\u2022\u2022*\nMotter,   who   has   been   dropped , >\u00b0a out \"' bour\"i3*\nback from centre to defence as\nof lard, of barleys and of candies\nwere also reported.\nThe shipment of bulk datei which\narrived here was \"extremely\nsmall\", and it wai said they would\nbe the last to be received this year.\nSome lines of tea had advanced\nas much as 5 cents a pound In the\nlast few days. Lard was up slightly,\nwhile prices of pot and pearl barleys increased 20 cents a 100 pounds.\nWelcome news to the housewife\nwas the report of a decline ln the\nprice of butter. Flour and feed were\ndown 10 cents a 196-pound unit.\nLocal egg supplies were still\nscant, and stocks from Alberta were\nsupplying the demand. There was\nno change In price.\nBecause of the unusually small\npack of tomatoei, the retail trade\nWeather Ends\nE. Trail Paving\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct 15 \u2014 The work\nof paving Third Avenue, from\nStewart Street to Bailey Street, hu\nbeen completed, and all further\npaving work on the East Trail itreet\nImprovement program hai been discontinued owing to cold and wet\nweather, announced J. P. Coatei,\nCity Engineer Tuesday.\nThe itorm aewer behind the Kootenay Breweries, from Rosslsnd\nAvenue to Binns Street, ls slmost\nfinished, and rock paving of Spokane Street is still in progress.\nThe Welsh have an unusual iport\nknown as slun-kickin, and while\nit is not widely participated In today there was a time when It was\nunusually popular. The contestants\nstand close together snd with their\nheavy boots begin kicking away at\neach other's shin. The first to make\nan outcry or break away is declared\nthe loser.\nOil.   CUUUl   lis.    s.uv.i.u   ..sops-   _-.-..,.           -- ._\nThe  Leafs  finished  second   to  the ' running ma'.e  to  Jimmy   Orlando,, I OTOnto  Leafs Ge.\nBruins  in  last  year's  race  and  it   National Hockey League \"bad man\"'\nwas onlv yesterday that they turned   last  year,   was  struck   by\nat St.  Catharines  for traimn-\nDown to Hard Worki\nJoe Buckna Tells of Wonderful Sights\nHe Sees in Tour of London on a Leave\n.\u201e--.,     \u2014   _ .        stick\n...    - __ _ .       \u201et _.    ,    ___     _ in the afternoon workout and two\nin  this  year's   rookie   crop   in   the j *f^e   other Tive   clubs* have   been ! stitches were necessary  to  close a      _.. c       .   _      \t\n~J   1~~* ' \u00abash over his left eye. 1 (CP)\u2014Toronto    Maple    Leafa   got1 England, writas of hit third week\nDefenceman    Hugh'   Miller,    the   down to serloui  *\"\"'  '\" *-J-- J-             \u25a0     \u2022-- \u00bb- ^-\"- \"\u2014\nsquad's tough-luck player, received   preparation   for\n,    Gunner   Joe   Budkn*   of   Trail,\nST. CATHARINES*. Ont., Oct, 151 serving in the Canadian.Army In\ntraining season to date, and last\nnight he was awarded the left wing\nspot on the line with his former\nfellow right winger, Joe Benoit, and\nyoung Johnny Quilty.\nworking out fur aome time.\nCHISHOLM  QUITS\nThe Leafs have lost one of their\nmost rugged players  \u2014  Lex  Chis-\nThe new string came through with , holnv Tfie best golfer on the club,\nthree goals in a 5-5 draw at the j he his decided to retire and devote\nCanadiens' camp his time to business. The club added\nToe Blake, League scoring cham- another member, however, who is\npion two or three years ago, held \u25a0 lust as broad-beamed as Chisholm.\ndown left wing on that Ime last \u25a0 He U Johnny (Peanuts) O'Flaherty\n\u25a0yVm'er I on ^oan *\u00b0 \"ew York Americans all\n' las*   season.   This   is    O'Flaherty's\nsecond year as a professional.  ,\nLester Patrick, silver-haired mentor of New York Rangers, admitj he\nia partial to blonde. Which is one\nway   of   Indicating   his   liking   for\nSports Roundup\ngood news today when Manager\nJack Adams announced the youn J\nWinnipeg player had been signed\nto a professional contract.\nThe hard-working amateur started with a two-stitch gash over his\nleft eye, then received two stitches\nover the other eye before a front\ntooth was knocked out.\nAlso in the Red Wing camp are\nthe   down to serious training today in i end visit to London to Dally News\ntheir   Na t lona 1 readers:\nHockey League opener at Toronto\nagainst New York Rangers. Players'      P\nand candidates arrived here yester-'      *\nday.\nThe squad started the day's training program early this morning with\nan hour's drilling of calisthenics and\nSwedish drill.\nLater with Coach^Happy Day and\nJoe   Brown  and   Jerry   Brown   of ; his chief atjviser. Eddie Power, on\nEdmonton.   Jerry   performed   with ' hand, the puck-chasers were parad-\n'   ed on the St. Catharines Arena ice\nsurface for a 73-minute session. No\nNorm Tust.n, the Owen Sound boy\nplayed with  Minneapolis Millers last year and finished second\nHector Hlghton, Calgary goalkeeper.\nime Considered a (inch to Make the\n[anadiens; Bicknell Shows Promise\nBy  HUGH  FULLERTON, Jr.\nAuoclated  Prtu 8ports Writer\nNEW   YORK.   Oct.   15   (AP). ---   \u2014. ,     .\n\u00a3bbie Goodfellow, whose idea oi for the League's scoring honors\nuct in a hockey game was to skat*- Patrick says lie considers Tustin\u2014\nup to an opposing player and knock l one of the \"blondest blonds\" he has\nh.m fait, i.s serving as Detroit Red | ever seenL~ one of the most prom-\nWings' diplomatic representative ln\nWindsor, Ont., smoothing  the  way\nising of the rookies in camp\nLOTS OF RIGHTIES\nThe Rangers, in addition to their\nCornwall Flayers lwt season and\nJoe was with Edmonton Flyers of\nthe Alberta senior circuit.\nAdams received word today that\nGuh Glesebrecht will report for\npractice tomorrow after receiving\nthe necessary permission from military authorities to cross the border.\nDeienceman Bob Whltelaw, however, is missing, being uneble to\nreceive approval of his War Services Board to Join the Wingi.\ncasualties were reported.\nDay used three goalkeeper*\u2014Ted\nGosskurth of St. Catharines Senior\nOntario Hockey Association club alternating ai relief for Waller (Turk)\nBroda and Bar Bastlen,\n\\8T. HYACINTHE, Que, Oct. 18\nP). \u2014 It might last happen that\ni teason Montreal Canad.ens will\nup with a rookie cr-jp that\nalmost equal the standout\n__i they sprung on their National\nkey league rivals lut year.\n[Coach Dick Irvin isn't aaying\nyet how many of the young-\n_l trying out with Canadiens are\niing to stick, but some of them are\nowing a lot of promise and are\nIng to be hard for the regulars\nshake off.\nApparently the Canadien front\nfice watnt fooling when it an-\nlunced sfter the conclusion of a\nstrous 1939-40 season that the\n\u2022m was going to be made over\nmaking-over   process   started\nBunny   Dame  of Tral\none of them.  A formei\n.  B.C.,  li\ntinemate\nof Benolt, the tricky left-winger\nhis been showing plenty of stuff\nduring the lait -keck and It considered i cinch to gain \u25a0 regular\nberth.\nWOULD  FILL  HOLE\nIf Dams does gain a regulsr\nberWi, he msy Indirectly help Cs-\nnsdlens fill a weak ipot on the\noppoilte wing. The club needi s\ngood right-winger. They'll buy\none If they can find one, but\nfailing thtt they might ihlft Ray\nGetliffe over to the right bosrdi\nand maybe put Dame si a line-\nmate at left.\nfor the boys to cross the border,\nMickey Anderson, Southern Cal-\n.forma quarterback, had to join the\nUnited States Navy to get to play\nagainst Oregon las. Saturday . . ,\nHe wuuld have been called for induction into the army Friday if ha\nhadn't signed up the day before\nwith the Naval Reserve Air Forces.\n, . . Dan Topping has hired Glenn\nMiller's orchestra to play between\nthe halves Dodgers-Card in a Is nro\nfootball game Sunday. With Mrs.\nTopping .Sonja Henie) ae a regular sideline attraction, all Dan has\nto dp now is borrow the four bruis-   _\ners from Somja'i ice show and then I Five-Pin League when tney cap-\ninflict them on the opposition . . , turcd their matches in an opening\nWhen Mickey Owen got home from j triplcheader on the Gelinas Bowling\nhe World  Ser.es  he found his  fa-   Ahcy Tuesday  night\nA daily medical checkup of lock-\neys before racing is proposed in\nAustralia\nNew Eight-Team Ladies' S-PIn Loop\nGets Under Way Wilh a Tripleheader\nTeami skipped by Mrs. Ouy\nBrowell, Mn, Eddie Waterer and\nMrs O. Smith drew first blood ln\nthe  newly  formed   Nelson   Ladies'\nvor;te wa'.chdofj had given birth to\niwo Utter* during tlie ball season,\nune of 11 pups and one of seven-\nnumbers that are considered pretty\nlucky by certain sportsmen . . .\nThen   there'i   Legs   Fraser.   who\nth  a  bang  last   yeer   when  the I played >  bang-up game for  North\nIbitanls produced such voting i',ars , Sydney in the Cape Breton League       \t\nJack Adams. Joe Benolt, Elmer' last  season,  and  has continue^   to | Apostoli.   1S9,  S.m   Francisco,   won\nh, Tony  Demers,  Ken Reardon i display  plenty  of gialing  prowess\n~ \"* with  the  rookies trm season.  He's\nt   out   wilh   veteran   Bert\nwho  made  a   hit   with   Mon-i Cfar(!lnf ,to 5M, .,-\nthe twins regular goalie.\nJohn Quilty.\nbe process is still going on. The : battling\n.   Zur,  m_H.   _   h\"   _.V   m\u201e\u201e. i C.ardiner to see who Is going to be\nFcrty ladies have Joined the\nleague, making eight teams in all.\nThe seventh and eighth teams will\nget into action Thursday night, and\nfor the present games are scheduled\non following Tuesday* and Thursdays.\nMrs. Gviv Browell, one of the\nWASHTNCsTON. D C. \u2014 Fred i founders of'the new circuit, took the\nhonors In the first night's play by\nrolling 189 and 18S in her two games\nto take high Individual and aggre-\nBOXING RESULTS\nfans ss rookies  last  year are\nWins  of   the   chib   now.   but   a\nbunch   of   rookies   have   rfia*\nrfalized  and  .\u00abome  of   them   liwik\nthough th*y will be staying for\nseuon.\nFOR GAS, OIL\nLUBRICATION\nShorty's Repair Sho\nBaker SL\nr ihop\n-mr\nTht team may have a new face\nor io on defence too. Olen Har.\nmon. who wat with tha Winnipeg\nRangert when they won lhe Memorial Cup latt teaton, Len Bick.\nnell of Nelton, B.C., and Leo Lt-\nmoureaux, who playtd latt tea-\nion v Ith Hamilton, all are thow\nIng promlte.\nFighting for positions on the forward line in addition to Dame-are\nHoward Rlopelle, who used to plav\nfor Ottawa Si. Pals with Quilty. and\nHerman Gruhn, a winger with Regina's Allan Cup team Iut teason.\nby technical knockout over El\nBrookman, 182. ^Vashington, in the\n'nKW BFDFORD, Mass. - Howell\nKing, 150, Detroit, won by technical\nknockout over Eddie Gucrr, 150, of\nJersey Cilv.  in  fifth.\nPHILADELPHIA - Mike Evans,\nPhiladelphia lightweight, outpointed Slugger White. Baltimore, (10).\nNEW YORK - Sidney Walker,\n1354 Aurusta. Ga , outpointed Tom-\nmv Spiegel. 131, Uniontown, Pa.,\n(8).\nLOS ANGELES - Cosby Linson,\n2W. New Orleans, outpointed Lefty\nLouie Flyer, 1+4Vi, Lot Angelei,\n1101,\nSEA1 n.t - Kennv Lindsay'.\n121'<. Vancouver, B. C. drew with\nLitUe Black Joe, 121 h. Manila (10).\ngate scores.\nScores follow:\nNO. 1\u2014Q. Smith\nM   Hardv            155 140-295\nJ. Woodall          85   BS\u2014170\nD. Farenholti     117 153\u2014270\nHigh Individual score\u2014M. Hardy.\n155; high aggregate, M. Hardy, 2\u00bb5.\nNO. 3-t.  Fliher\nMrs. E. Fisher ..   M 112\u2014196\nE. McLellan . 115 62-177\nG. Phillips           ... _ 83 100-183\nB, Simpson                71 86\u2014180\nMrs W. Brown Sr. .. It, 38\u2014 94\nTotals            ..   . 379 401, 780\nNO. 4-F. Waterar\nMrs, F. Waterer ,     ,   128 16\u00bb-296\nM. Paterson       ... _     M   9\u00bb-194\nJ. Wat<on      87   +8\u2014133\nR. Rose      _  136 140-276\nLow score            26   38\u2014 64\nTotals 475 48E   963\nHigh individual acore. F. Waterer.\n168; high aggregate, F. Waterer, 296\nNO. \u00ab\u2014T. Browell\nT. Browell\nJ. Byers\nG  Smith\nToUls\nNO. 2\u2014D. Fotttr\nD.   FostCT\nB. McKinney\nD  Fox   .\nM, McDougall ......\nN, Phillipa\n110 82\u2014192\n105 114-219\n57*2 574 1146\n111 141-252\n109 100-209\n84 117-20!\n54 130-184\n59   36-115\nTotala - \u00ab\" *..   Ml\nK. McDougall\nN. Rychman\nM  Vaneveld\nE. Smith ..\nTotals\n189 183-374\n97 78\u2014175\n92 124-216\n46 124-172\n66   71-137\n492 582 1074\nNO. 6-D. Wettrer\nD. Waterer ......        122 149-271\n1.. Hoogerwerf  38   5>- 90\nJ.  Gentilit   .     106 113\u2014219\nH. Sabeeh       130 113-243\nE   Rahal         139   93-232\nToUls S35 520 1035\nHigh individual ,core, T. Browell,\n189; high aggregate, T. Browell, 374.\nRandall Is Dua\nin Trail Today\nFrom Sylvan Lake\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. IM. G. Randall, Assistant Chief Aooountant ot\nlhe Consolidated Mining Se Smelting Company, who was accompanying Howard Anderson, C. M. Se S.\nAircraft Superintendent, when' Mr.\nAnderson waa killed in an airplane\naccident at Sylvan Lake, Alta..\nSunday, It expected back ln Trail\nThuriaay.\nMr. Randall remained at Sylvan\nLake as chief witness ln the Investigation conducted regarding the\nfatality.\nWage Prosecution\nof Lazaref. Fails\nBuckingham Palace followed, and\nthere ls usually quite a crowd of\nalghi-aeeln)   people.   Tb*   flowen,\nneatly arranged, were in full bloom,\nmaking   a .pretty   picture.   Taking\nArriving at Waterloo Station. 11 J|>\u00ab \"\"\u00ab\u00ab \u2122*4 our ng th. corona-\no,.k   the   underground   for  North | ti\u2122 of our present Majesties, w,\nLondon some four mllei out. and! J\u00bb\u2122 ,\u00a5\"  >B\"   M,U   Arch   \u2022\"*4\narrived  at  my  destination.  Satur- [ Whitehall.\nday evening my friends, who arc \"We came upon historic weapon*\nresidents ot much-bombed London. In a square roped off but on view\ntook in a few of the bright spots.. to the public. An old Russian gun\nand we all had a pleasant evening, captured at Sebastapol was on view\n\"Sunday about 11 a.m. I went on I also an old anchor used on soma\nanother of my sightseeing trips. boat during the Spanish Armada\n\"On Sundays people of London days. It was a good souvenir, but\nreally and truly go in for walking I the fence was too high,\nand cycling. Everyone seems to be: -Then we came to No. 10 Do-am-\non the street or highway since |ng Street. Soon after w\u00bb were look-\nJerry ls getting it from the Russians ing ,t the Home Offlca with tha\nand British. Hence, no air raids for cenotaph In front. Nearby wu tha\nsome time. headquarten of the Scotland Yard\n\"A great deal of the debris la be- police.\ning   cleared   up.   Sunday   work  Is     \"Walking through the Weat lata,\nmuch   in   evidence   and   although  we   entered    Westminster   Abbey.\nscarred,   London   is  looking  much i What a thrill! Due to a bomb dam\nbetter these days.\nSEE  FREE   MASON\naging it some time ago, we did not\nhave the opportunity to ie* all we\nwould have liked to.\nMEMORIAL I    \"The Unknown Warrior Memorial\n\"We took a tram from North | had poppies and wreaths neatly ar-\nLondon to Bloomsbury, the train i ranged around the tablet. The me-\nterminus district, and went through 'dal presented by General Pershing\nKlngsway to Queen Street to have ( was oir display. Alao the Union\na look at the Free Mason Memorial, i Jack that had covered the' coffin\ncosting \u00a31.000.000, which means ] during Its removal to the* Abbey.\n15,000,000 to us Canadians. Beyond the roped-off area, was the\n\"Covenant Gardens was the next! burial place of many fornwr Kings\natop.   It   is   a   well-known   market and Queens of England.\nplace. The buildings here were built\nmany years ago, and are practlally\nall windowi.\nNearby ls the old Royal Opera\n'In one corner the flags of the\nDominions were hanging with the\nTree of Knowledge directly belew\nthem. Small bronie statues were on\nHouse where many opera stars have : the iimb- of ,hr lr(,ei wjth a can(jie\nperformed.   Quite   a   building.   Di-: nMr eic|, 0; ^em.\nrecti?-across the street Is the fam- \\ Margaret', Church we had\nous   Bow  Street   police   court   and , m\nstation,   once   the   headquarten   of mtrrUta-*,Tr ^rloTcnctX. Next\nthe Bow Street runner\n\"We   walked   over   to   Charing\nTRAIL, BC, Oct. 13\u2014A charge ot Cross hoipital and gazed upon the\nfalling to pay the minimum wage\nto an employee, against William\nLazareft of Trail, was dismissed by\nMagistrate Parker Williams In City\nPolice Court Wednesday atternoon.\nThe case was tried before Magistrate Williams on October 7. and\ndecision was reserved.\nBliss W. Dysart, Provincial Wage\nInspector, prosecuted, Mr. I^azareff\nwr.s defended by Donald MacDonald.\nThe world record for the 100-yard\ndash is 9.4 seconds. The sprint\nrecord was first set by Frank Wy-\nkotf. of the University of Southern\nCalifornia, In 1930, The mark was\nequaled by Jesse . Owens, Ohio\nState's Negro star, in 1935. Former\nrecordi were 9.6 lecondi, held by\nCharley Paddock and othen, and\n9,3 lecondi held by Eddie Tolan,\nUniversity of Michigan. 1929 Last\nyear Clyde Jeffrey unofficially\nequalled the world mark of 9.4 .seconds.\nstatute and memorial erected in\nmemory of Ntirso Cavell. On the\nopposite aide of the street was St.\nMartins-ln-the-Fields Hospital. Dick\nSheppard preached here.\nNext on our tour was Trafalgar\nSquare. Many Canadian soldien\nwere feeding the pigeons Across\nthe itreet ls the well-known Beaver\nClub. As per usual, it was quite\ncrowded with our lads having a\nsnack, writing letters home and so\nforth.\n\"To Pall Mall, we went then tn\nSt. James Square. Erected here was\nthe home of three early day Prime\nMinUten of England, William Pitt,\nEarl of Derby and Ewart William\nGladstone.\n'Christies, home of the well-\nknown auctioneers, now bombed\nout was next on our tour. Then the\nConservative Club. Through the\nyard way of St. James Palace, we\nthen gazed upon Queen- Alexandra's monument.\n\"Queen   Victoria   Memorial   and\nages are perfc\ncame the Parliament buildings.\nCrossing the road we came upon\nCleopatra's Needle erected ln Egypt\nln 1500 B.C. but brought to England last century. A sphinx was on\neach aide. A few feet away we\ncame upon another memorial\nerected to thoie airmen of the last\nwar From there we left for home.\"\nAL MORSE\nPromoter and\nMatchmaker\nAl Morse\nClub and Cym\nSPOKANE.\nWASH.\nCAFE\u2014BAR\nTOBACCOS\nCARD ROOM\nw   K'i Main Ave.\nWelcome,\nCanadian Boys!\n PAOF TEN\nNEL80N  DAILY NEW8   NE> \u00abON   B.C.-THURWAY M6RN1NQ   OCTOBER  10; 1M1..\n\u2022VFOR-VICTORY\"  KIDDIE\nFROCK\nm_h_vt -ynaxibt\nPATTERN 9878\nEven a little youngster feelt\npatriotic these days . . make her\nthis \"V-for-Vlctory\" frock by\nMarian Martin! Pattern 9873 includes transfer motif and there\nare easy-to-follow directions\nfor embroidering it in the Sew\nChart. Vex \"Victory\" idea is carried out in the V-neck and the\npointed waistline seam which\ndovetails neatly with the panels\ntn the front of the skirt. The sailor\ncollar and the sleeves have two\nnautical rows of braid or ribbon\ntrim; or make the sleeves long\n\u2022 nd gathered Into a wristband.\nMake this up in navy-blue serge\nor cotton broadcloth with bright\nred accents\u2014including the five\nlittle buttons on the bodlcel\nPattern 9873 may be ordered\nonly in children's sizes 2. 4. 6. 8\nand 10 Size 6. shnrt-sleeved dress,\nrequires l'\u00ab yards 35 Inch fabric;\nlong-sleeved dress, .*_ yarda 54\ninch fabric.\nSend twenty cents for thla Mar-\nIan Martin pattern. Be sure te\nwrite plainly your SIZE, nsme,\naddress and style  number.\nSend your order to The Dally\nNews, Pattern Department, Nelaon. Pattern will be sent to your\nhome within 10 days.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\nBABY DOLL\nKHVICt. WC\n-PATTERN . 2982\nLAURA WHEELER SLEEPING BABY DOLL\nCAPTIVATES LITTLE GIRLS\nAny little fir! would be delighted to find this sleeping baby doll under the Christmas tree. Make a wideawake doll, too, from the same pattern! Both dolls and\nclothes are easy to make. Pattern 2982 contains a transfer pattern and directions for making the doll and\nclothes; materials required.\ntend twenty eentt for thli pattern te Tht Nation Dally Newt,\nNtedlecraft Dept., Nelton. Write plainly pattern number, your nsme\ntnd addreu. Pattern will bt mailed to your home within 10 days.\nCONTRACT\n\"Pa never could ime.I hard elder\nwithout  gettin'   tipsy;  but   to   hear\nhim   talk   about   h:s   young   dap j\nyou'd think he wai wild and woolly\nin his cups \"\nMaitland Scores\nOil Speculation\nVAVCOUVrR, Oct. 15 (CP).-R.\nL Maitland. Provincial Conservative Leader, told electors in Van-\ncnuver-Point Grey Riding last night\nthat he had recently visited the\nBritish Columbia Government's oil\ndrilling operations at Commotion\nCreek, in the Peace River Di\u00abtnct,\nar 1 that \"there was quite a com-\nni\"tion when I arrived \" .\nHt1- said nearly all the questions\nhe pu* to the men tn charge of the\nop ration received the answer \"You\nnvM ask Mr. Pattullo I am not\na!' <*.-.r(\\ to give information.\"\nMr Maitl.ind criticised the Gov-\ner, merit's spending policy and what\nhf t-rmed \"gambling in the oil business with public money \"\nWinnipeg Airmen\nGet Bar to D.F.C.\nLONDON. Oct 15 (CP Cable).-\nWV.g C'ndr J A Kent of Winnipeg, \"V.<- of Canada's outstanding\ncontributions to the Royal Air\nForce, has been aw-irded the bar to\nthe Distinguished Flying Cross he\nw.i'i ;n 'hr Bat'le if Rr tain last\nAutumn, when he led a Polish squadron.\nITALIANS REPORT\nPRISONERS   CAPTURED\nIN TOBRUK SKIRMISH\nROME. Oct 15 (APi -The Italian Huh Command claimed t\"d\u00bbv\nthe Ttritifh Inrrris had been repulsed\nin \u00bb fre<sh attack ugainst Italian position's in the Axis siege llnet ab-Mit\nTobruk.    Libya,   and    reported   the\n\u25a0 ot -\n-a' pr '\nIlisciiF'Ins an Ethiopian cngagc-\nn.cnt at Ami*** (sporitia, first re\nported Inst Thiirtdav. the Hi8l*\nr.-mmai\"i claimed mors- than 2.V1\nBritish troopt had been killed.\nIT PAYS In tsto.long run to he\ncareful of yonr assets, risking\nthem only when by doing so you\nstand to gala something aoauaen-\nwrate wtt* the risk. That Is trut\nIn buatneea, In Ute ordinary affairs\nof every department ot lite, and\nin all gamea. In bridge tt applies\nwith great force to Uie matter of\nleading Intermediate cards, which\npiay therefor, be sacrificed to\nhigher ones, whereas holding them\ns while might result hi their being\npromoted to trick taken Even\nJacks, tecu and nine, may ulti-\nUmately take tricks If they are\nplayed only at the right time.\nf 174\n4>A\u00bb7\u00bb\n+ KJ II\nI\n\u2666 K J\nT I\nVK\n\u2666 QJ\n4 lu 9 7 4\nM.\n.        '\n_.\n|HI1\n9 A 6\n\u2666 10 S R\nI\n***\nVQJMIill\n+ KI4I\n+ Hone \u201e\n(Deater    Cm\nWaste.)\nCast stosath    Wei       Heetk\n1+ 1 \u00ab       14\nPass I\u00ab       I A 4 f\nBlddiBg et that Mture cave tt\nduplicate tar-lea which presented\nt wide contrast In defensive play,\nsnd ta resulU. too One single fic-\nt?r wai disregarded by tbe ae-\nfenders at one table,\nby thoee tt lhe other\nla tach Iratance Wi* chow tec\ntit opening lead the 4 of hia part*\nter'i elub suit, the J going oa\nIrom dummy. Eaat playing the Q\ntnd South ruling with the heart\nt The -fait Q was Ineteed and\nPsaieOsitll tr W_< ft.\nBy Shepard Barclay\nne Mil 4 no. mgm met* came\nthe firat difference by the defense\nIn one case Eaat played his A, and\nlt dropped hla partner's K, limiting the defenders to one trick in\ntrump.. Thereupon East made another costly play. Ke led the diamond 10. West having to play the\nJ and the A winning. The heart 8\nnow dropped the laat trump, the\ndiamond 3 to the K dropped the\nQ. and th. 9 and 7 both scored.\nThe spade A and trumpt ended\nthe play, South having lost only\none trick.\nAt the other table, whan the dst-\ndarer led Uu heart 4 to the third\ntrick, from dummy. East played\nlow and Weat won with the K. He\nreturned the dub 10 to the K. A\nand a trump. The heart Q next\nlost to the A, and the spade 9 was\nled to the A Declarer then led\nditmondi himself from the dum-\nmy. Eaat playing low. So the de-\nclarer wound up losing a diamond\ntrick, making barely his game in-\nstesd of two extras aa had been\nt* Ute other South.\nCOMIC AND ADVENTURE STRIPS . .\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cus Edso\nNeTsCAU.-\nNtfrjkTsMJL.\nPROFESSOK-\n.JUSTNAME\nYOUR\n7:\nYOUR6ENEROSITY \"\\\nIS KNOWNTHEWORLP H\nOVER,SAHIB-l WO-LP\nPREFER   _ HAVE *0\nname me PRICE-JUST\nWHW^eskpOTOll\nTWNKg Al DE&ERVE\nffl   ABOUT        \u00a7>p\n\u25a0      TEW   \u201e   m?\n<___-\n\u25a0-\n__\\\n\u25a0 Kk   Jtjs ' ?\/'\nj ________ e\"   _T_y_?\/ Milli   _Vn\/lnh\n*  ?___W__n___\nfn\nJANE ARDEN\nBy Monte Barrett and Russell Rot\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManu\n9V GOLLy-f VE CAL-LED OJ\nMJ 'PHOUED EVECVBOI7V I\nkwow aw war owe op'eia\nAI?E KI-JUSTWVLUCkC-Wl-eM\nMAQeiE IS \u00bbMAV\/\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1 Pi-eased\nI Ready\nmoney\n\u2022 Deatre\n16 Mobtmm*\ndan deity\nII  Made of\noats\nIJ Moon\ngoddess\n14 Unroll\n15. P-nushs*.\n16 Draw up the 14\n4 Lak- IT. Italian river\nI bounder 28. Spigot\n6 Foreign 30. Spanish\n7 Cant article\n8. Part of arm tt. Dkiymlum\nfl Dove sou-ads       (sym\n11. Owns tt. Severe\n17. By degree* critic\nshoulders\n11\nAct of\nliraffixl\nII\ntslascullM\nname\nM\nAlabam-M\n(sym 1\nn\nMineral\n^etng\nM\nDexteroMty\nM\nWorn out\n31\nBrag\n3]\nContain\n34\nExclamation\n38\nMusic note\n36\nAffected\nmanners\n.tt\nEntire\nid\nShining\n41\nInfant\n46 Keel-billed\ncuckoo.\n17\nHaving life\ni.\nStep over\na fence\nM\nOne whole\nborne\n.1\nEel catcher\nM\nNothing\nmore than\nU\nThree, la\ncard.\nDOWN\nt\nDiagram\n2\nTardier\n3\nStreet\nCBTPT04JCOTC\u2014A isryptagiaf\nSXO   BC    PR    WPI    MBCRCW\nS R T R O     U fl X T R 11     PBLCBXA\nwRgszcxa\nQUENCB    OFTEN     flPfUNO\n8TA_NCE8\u2014UVY.\nDtitrtbutoi br King r\u00bbatnTM 8ndicau Ine\nHOW  TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTE8\nCryptoquotei are quotation! of tiruoua peramu written in cipher\nA lubstitute character has replared the original letter For initioc*.\nan \"R* may substitute lor the or.final '\u00a5.' throughnul the enura\ncrypU)qu(itc,>)r t \"BB' may replace an \"LL\" Kind the Key aud follow\nthrough to tha eolulioa.\n f.\n\\Wt\n\u25a0NELSON  DAILY NtWI, NELSON   B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINQ.  OCTOBER  18. 1941\nPhone  Classified Advertising.. Phone\n144\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\n144\nBIRTHS\nDENT-To Mr. and Mrs. J. Dent\n! Nakuap In the Arrow Lakes\ncapital, Oct. 8, a son.\nkENETT \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nkarles Kennett at Slocan Com-\nlUnlty Hospital, Oct. 10, a daugh-\nHELP WANTED\nApplications will not be con*\ntldercd (rom persons engaged in\ntha production ol war supplies\n-_\nrANTED-THRIFTY AND REL1\nable middle-aged couple to take\ncharge ot larm during Winter\nmonthi. Write for particulars,\ngiving experience, if any, with\ncare of different farm animals.\nApply Mrs. A. B. Willford, Winlaw, B.C,\nWANTED AT ONCE - EXPER1-\ntnceij farm hand on poultry farm\ntble to milk and handle horses,\n$30 monthly, board and cabin. A\nyear round job. State age, etc. to\nBox 3292 Nelson News.\n'ACANCY FOR EXPERIENCES\nItenographer who likes interesting, stimulating work, witn\nopportunities for advancement.\nWrite full particulars to Box 1197\nDaily News.\nPUBLIC NOflCES\n\"GOVERNMENT  LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 28)\nNOTICE   _   APPLICATION  TOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nBEER LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby given that on the\n21st day of October next the\nundersigned intend to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence No 5612,\nissued In respect of premises being\npart of a building known as\n''Queen's Hotel\", situate at 621\nBaker St'eet, Nelson. B. C upon\nthe lands iesenbed as Lot 11 in\nBlock 2, Official Plan ol the City\nof Nelson, Nelson Land RegUtratlon Dlitrict, in th_ Province ol\nBritish Columbia, from Adolpn\nLapointe to Hans Sigurd Matheson\nand David Thomas Benjamin Powell,\nboth of Nelson, British Columbia,\nthe transferees.\nDated at Nelson, B. C., this 22nd\nday of September. A D. 1941.\nDAVID T. B POWELL,\nHANS S. MATHESON,\nApplicants and Transferees\nl|CBKTARIAL VACANCY FOR\nilrl who ls fast and accurate typist, la quick with figures and has\nfood general knowledge of cur-\nrent affairs. Box 1167 Daily News\nTENOGRAPHER WANTED -\nThoroughly competent stenographer Ior typing and filing\nReply to Box 3388 Nelson Daily\nNewi.\t\ntt__ix - .tiN-Oft    s-TEn-\nographer. Write Box 1173 Daily\nNews\nfANTED\u2014Radio technician for\npart-time work ln city. Apply\nBox 3409 Daily News,\nrANTED-rA CLERK, MALE OR\nfemale. Apply in person to Hume\nHotel\ni6Y   F6R   DAIRY   WORK   #OR\nColumbia Dairy. Trail, B. C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nIpeclal Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under thia classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\nKen any number of required\na. Payable In advance Add\n10c tt Dm number desired.\nOSmON   WANTED   BY   OEN-\nSal blacksmith, electric and acety-\nna welder, with considerable\nexperience ln sawmills and B. C.\nlumber oainne. Write Oharlee\nKelllngton, Marquis, Saik\nSSAVEtt, ChhmiSt. MttAL-\nM-glit, B. C. licence, 10 years\nexperience, aeeka employment\nAvailable at short notice. Box\n33S9, Daily News\nIBPENDABLE, CAPABLE WOM-\nu seeks position u caretaker\n-t apartment, hotel housekeeper,\nor  position   of   trust.   Box   3388\nQally Newa.\t\n\u00bb CHIMNEV SWHiPINU, PUR-\naaot cleaning main flues and pipes\nPhene 530, W. Robert\nHOPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nUNGALOW  -  I  ROOMS  AND\nbath. All new plumbing. Dinette^\nCement foundation. Furnace.\nLarge ecreened porch. 4 lots and\ngarage. This property Is as good\nu new. A real snap at $1450.\nTerms arranged. F. A. Whitfield,\n417 Hall Street\nOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\ntn easy terms in Alberta and\nlaakatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. ol Natural\nResources, C P R. Calgary, AlU\nbft SaLe-my EQUITY IN LETI\nhall ol Lot. No. 8788, Kootenay\nDistrict, lituated near Willow\nPoint. Apply to 1. R. Oaakell.\nAlert Bay, B.C.\nW __. - sfrvism MBXrON\nfett of timber and 467 acres ol\nland near Silverton. Apply to\nArchie Glbb, Corunna. Ont,\nRDF ACRE ADJOINING THF.\ncity, I rm. house, elec. light city\nTJ\u00bbt\u00abr, W00 Easy terms. Write\nBox 3319 Dally News\nbR SALE-HOUSE 4 ROOMS\nTerms. Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nKill St   Box  126. Nelson. B   C\n\/ANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nHIP US YOUR SCRAP MFTTALS\nor Iron Any quantity Top prices\npaid Active Trading Compsny\nfit Powell St.   Vancouver. B   C\n_f Its \"VOUR   HIDES   J   P\n Morgan   Nelson   B C\t\n>AOT\u00a3[>-CHrLD'S   CRIB.   Apply\nBox JS67 Dally News.\nfol00tt SaUy Nft\u00bbB\nTelephone 144\nTrail: JC Lowdon, 718-Y\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUe per line per Insertion.\n44c pef line per week (8 consec-\n\u25a0Btlve insertion! for cost ol 4).\nIt 43 a line a month (24 times).\ntMlnlmum 1 llnei per Insertion)\nBox number lie extra. This\ncoven   any   number  ol  times.\nPUBUC NOTICES, TENDERS,\nETC.\n18c per line, lirst Insertion nnd\n14c each subsequent insertion\nULL ABOVE RATES LESS\n|\u00bb% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW RATES\n\u25a0Non-commercial   Sltuitloni\n^Winted for 25c tor any required\nnumber   of   lines  for   six   dsys\npayable  In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nSingle copy $    ns\nBy carrier, per week .25\nBy carrier  per year 13U0\nly   nnil:\n\"ne  month       S  75\nhree months 2 no\nBix months            4 00\nTie year 8 00\nMwve rates apply in Canada.\nUnited States and United King-\n\u25a0\u25a0iniii to subscribers living out-\ntide regular carrier areas.\n^laewhere and In Canada where\nixtra postage is required one\nmonth SI 50 three months S4 no.\n! months 18.00, one year 115.00.\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nUSED TRUCK - IN FIRST CLASS\ncondition. 1, 3-ton International\nlong wheelbale; 1, 2-ton International long wheelbase; 1, 2-to.i\nInternational 155 Inch wheelbase;\n1. 4-ton International long wheel-\nbase; 1, 4-ton Ford, like new; 1,\n44-1-ton Dodge, like new; 1 Hi-\nton Dodge. Central Truck te\nEquipment Co., 702 Front Street,\nNeUon, B. C.\n,\u201e CHEVROLET SEDAN WITH\nheater. Powerful Chev. super\nhydraulic brakei. Arlitocratic\nbody by Fisher, Mechan I illy\nperfect Canada cloth upholstery\nlike new. Only J1050. Nelaon\nTransfer Co., Ltd.\nFOR SALE\u20141938 FORD V-8 80 H.P\nTudor. Mileage under 11.000 Private owner. Excellent condition\nLike new Price on application.\nApply Box 5, New Denver, B.C.\nor phone New Denver 4.\nRARGAIN FOR QUICK SAL&-'40\nFord Tudor. Perfect condition\nPhnne 279R\n1937 WILLYS SEDAN. GOOD\noondition. Nelson Auto Wrecking\nand Garage,\nFOR SALE - MODEL \"A\" FORD\nCoach, low mileage, Just Ilka new\nBox 3224 Daily New*.   \t\n14-TON G.M.C. TRUCK, TOR\nquick sale. $100.00. Apply 808\nStanley St\t\n\u202220 CHEV. SUDAN. $188.00 City\nAuto Wreckers, 180 Baker St.\nPICK\nof tht\nMARKET\nUSED TRUCK\n1M7 FORD DELUXE PANEL DELIVERY. Thoroughly reconditioned. Excellent tlrtt. (JCOK\nNew paint sT)0__i)\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Poit Office and Hume Hotel\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nRUBBER STAMPS FOR UNBM-\nployment Insurance These are re-\nquired for cancelling stamps by\nemployers ln employee's books\n05c each. Poetage 5c extrs Nelsoc\nDaily Newa Commercial Printing\nDept\nPIPE. TUBES. FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate thlpmer.i\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue and Main St\nVancouver.  B  C\nFOR SALE - ONE 30 HOLT CAT-\nerplllar, one Steam Pump, 2 cylinder 6x10, one Bowser Gas Pump\nand 500-g\u00bbl. Unk. Call or enquire\nat the Nelion Equipment is\nMachinery, Box 23, Nelson,\n4 HOLE GAS COOKING RANOl\nlge. oven and broiler. $30 Excellent cond. Would make good Incu-\nbator, cap. 200 eggs. 91 High St\nfOft SALE-16 *_m HAV AT 18\nnear Blewett. Or contract for\nhauling to TraU. Apply Box 17.\nTrail, B.C.\nPipe - frrntfas - WBH, SF\u00bb-\nclal low prices. Active Trading Co\n918 Powell St.. Vancouver. 8  C.\nRebuilt Washers at easV\ntermi.    Beatty    Waiber    Store,\nPhone 91\nUsed WASriKfl W 8XCHXKJT\nr-nndltlon   Phone 260\nGOOD WOOD HEATER FOR SALE\n\u2014Phone 58TL2.\nFOR SALE-300-AMP. D.C. WBLD-\ner. Mrt. Harry Shafer, Cretton.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel Opp C P R Depot\nUSED CLOTHING WOULD BE\ngratefully received at the Salva-\ntion Army, 513 Victoria Street\nWANTED - dtoOD CLEAN COT-\nton ragi. not leas than 12 Inchei\nsquare, 9c lb. F. O. B. Nelson\nDaily Newi,\nare  \u00a5<MT Wbflftlfcb\" ABOUT\nsome thing*! Lei me solve It. Send,\nonly 10 centa pec question, birth-\ndata and pottage. Oretta. 1012 Haro\nVancouver. Satisfaction assured.\n*^0UNG~StArJ  sfEAMlA   em-\nploycd,\\ would like to meet girl\nwith kind and amiable disposition.\nAge between 25 to 35. Introduction\nBureau, P.O. Box 388 Victoria, B.C\nMEN'S (.RUG SUNDftlBS. SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Teited. Ouaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price list\nPrinceton Diitributon, P. O Box\n81, Princeton, B. C,\n25c - The Photo Mill - 25o\nP O Box 335. Vancouver\nRolli developed and printed, 25o\n5x7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement, 35c\nOUARANTEED DRUG SUNDRIES\nSend for new low price list with\nsample, or $1.00 for 18 super fine\npos'.otid. Western Supply. Box\n'.83. Vancouver, B   C.\nYOUR SICK FRIEND OR RELA-\ntive In the hospital will enjoy\nreading The Daily News Phone\n144 and have a copy delivered\neach morning.\nMEN - REGAIN VIGOR, PEP -\ntry Vitex, 25 tableU $1.00. Personal drug sundries, 24 for $1.00 Su.\npreme Razor Blade Sharpener 35c\nSharpens blade* perfecUy. J. Jen-\nsen,  Box 324,   Vancouver, B.  C\nFURS\nKeep warm with Polar Furs-\nguaranteed and always in style\n\u2014the lowest prices in town-\nprompt sttention to al! enquiries\u2014Victory Bonds accepted at\npar.\nPolar Furs Ltd , Vancouver, B C\nINTRODUCTION BUREAU. OR-\nganlzed lor the purpose ol Introducing men and women, who\nthrough lack ol opportunity (ind\nlt difficult to meet one another\nHighest references given. P. O\nBox 385, Victoria, B, C,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND.\nB.C. Provincial Asstyer, Chemist\nIndividual representative for ship-\npera at Trail Smelter.\t\nA. J. BUIE, Independent Mine Rep-\nreaentatlve, Box 54, Trail, B.C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. R. McMILLAN, D.C, NEURO-\ncalometer, X-Ray. McCulloch Blk.\nA. B. McDONALD, D.C, Palmer\nGrad. X-Ray. Strand Blk., Trail\nCOR8ETIIRES\nSPENCER CORSETURE, MISS\nShirley Boomer, 217 Gore. Ph. 869L\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYOR!)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. P.O. Box 104\nTrail, B.C. Surveyor and Engineer\nPhone \"Beaver Falla\"\nR. W. HAGGEN, MIHitfG tt CIVIL\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyor.\nRnssand  and  Grand Forki, B.C.\nFOOT  SPECIALISTS\nS J. GILLIS, D.S.C., R.C.P., REG'D\nChiropodist, Foot Specialist. Ber-\ngor.n Block. Ph. 11W, Trail, BC\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATI\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate In.\nturance, Rentals. 557 Ward Street\nAnnsble  Block.  Phone  197\nC.   D.   BLACKWOOD  AGENCIES.\nInsurance, Real Estate. Phone 99.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Eitate. Phone 135.\nH   E.  DILL,  FIRE,  AUTO ACC1-\ndent Insurance. 532 Ward Street.\nMACHINI8T8\nBENNKTTS LIMITED\n.Machine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593\nc*mmercial refrigeration\n324 Vernon St\nOPTOMETRISTS\nfxTM bftf&LOPEb aNdTMJT\ned (8 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c etch. For your vacation\nsnapshots, choose Kryital Finish\nGuaranteed non-lade prints\nKrystal Photos, Wilkie. Saskatchewan  Established over 30 years\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1468 Bay Ave . Trail Phone 177\n~8ASH FACTORIES\n3 GOOD PRODUCTS! - LIQUID\nComplexion Cream. 6 ounce bottle\n$1.25. Orange Cretm with Muscle\nOil, 4 ounce ]ar $1 50. Follicle Oil.\nHair Conditioner. 6 ounce bottle\n$1 25. Llbertl tample 25 centa each\nNurse Smythe Company. 12\nRoslin Avenue, Toronto, Ont.\nKOOTENAY SASH it DOOR FAC\ntory, 907 Front St., Nelson. Pnone\n530. No job too small or too big\nLAWSON'S SA=H _\u2022* r.Cf7) R Y~\nHardwood merchant. 273 Baker S'.\nSECOND   HAND. 8TORE8\nWANTED - DAIRY COWS, GIVE\nparticular! and price to Columbit\nDairy. Trail   B  C\n5 YR. OLD TKTffl PART JERSEY\noow for sale. Just freahened. Sam\nWlnarsiki, Appledale, BC\t\nstLLiNa Bhwcma \u00abwk km\newe lambs. W. G. Bateman, Moyie,\nLOANS, INSURANCE, FTC.\nWHY PAY MORE FOR YOUR\nFire Insurance' You will never\nknow what you csn save unlesi\nyou ring up for a quotation\nRobertson Realty. Phone 68\nFARM. GARDEN tr NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nALL KINDS FRUIT TREES, 1 YR\n\u25a0 Id .->0o. 2 yr old 75c, climbing inn\nbush roses grape vines. 3 lor $1\nRl.ick currents, white, red cur-\nmots 15c each Apply to Eugene\nHammerer. P O.'Tagrium   B C,\nLOST AND FOUND\nTO FINDERS\nIf you find anything leirphone\nThe nillv News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill br- inserted wlthoui rosi to\nyou We will collect frnm 'he\nowner\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SAI.F-27-FOOT CAI'TaTn\nctn'sr-r F*r-t clafs c-dition\nWrite Box 3370 Daily News.\nSPECIAL!\nMem personal drug sundries,\nfinest quality, tested, guirtnteed, 12 for Ac, 23 for $1.00, assorted. Including world's lunni-\nest joke novelty free, and catalogue  ol  sundries.\nMen! Send 10c lor world'i funniest joke novelty tnd catalogue\nof novelties and specialties.\nLADIESI DELAYED? Dupree\nPills\u2014Quick, reliable reliel (or\ndelayed, overdue periods\u2014$1 50\n(Double-strength $2 50),\n\"Facts About Birth Control\"\nbooklet, by Rev A H Tyrer,\nMailed postpaid Ior 10c coin.\nWESTERN   DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 24  Dept   NC Rogina, Sask\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhat have you' Ph. 534. Ark Store\nBralorne OH 5 in\nLower Coast Trend\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 16 (CP). -\nTrading continued light and pricea\nwere generally lower on Vancouver\nStock Exchange todty. Transfers\ntoUlled 14.968 shares,\nBralorne Gold at 11.00 dropped\n5 and Reeves McDonald waa off 2\nat 30. Privateer at 52 and International Coal at 31 both slipped a\ncent. Premier at 75, Hedley Mascot\nat 46 and Vanalta at 4 were* unchanged.\nAmong the oils Calgary H Edmonton at 1.26 eased * cent while\nModel at 17U, Home at 2.50 and\nPacific Petroleum at 20 remained\nunchanged. Other olla and base\nmetals were inactive.\nCanada Output ol\nWar Materials\nHigher Than U.S.\nBy J.  r.  SANDERSON\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (CP). -\nHigh officials ol the United SUtes\nGovernment, Including President\nRoosevelt, are said to be dismayed\nby a report on the American war\nellort which shows that, despite billions of dollars being appropriated\nby Congress, production lags far\nbehind the combined output of Canada and Great Britain.\nNot only is present American production of guns, shells, planes, tanki.\nships and all the other Implements\not war considerably below the combined production of Canada and\nBritain but it will be throughout\nmost of 1942. unless it can be\nspeeded up.\nUntil I lew weeki ago\u2014and it\nmay be true today\u2014Canada's aggregate production ot wtr lupplies ol\nall sorts, with the exception of aircraft, wti .higher thtn that of the\nUnited States. Even today Canadt\nis producing shells tt the rate of\n2,500,000 t month, considerably\nhigher than the American output.\nThe most significant revelation\nol the report il thtt Britain and\nCanada In 1942 will be turning out\nmore medium and heavy tanks snd\nmore heavy bombing planes than\nthe United States.\nNEW RULES CONTROL\nSALE OF GLYCERINE\nOTTAWA. Oc:. 15 (CP)-Muni-|\nt. mi Minister Houe today announced regulations lor control of\nsale, distribution, consumption and\nuse ol glycer.ne under an order issued by J. D. Lorimer, Chemicals\nController.\n'\u2022Canadian glycerine supplies are\nrequired lo make '.he expioiive\nwh ch sends shells to blast the hun,\"\nMr. Howe said.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT OR SALE - WELL\nlocated excellent lamily house. 4\nbedrooms, lurnace heated A snap\nto the right party, either monthly\nterms, cuh or rental basis. R. W\nDawson, Annable Block\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse keeping rooms ln Annable\nBlock for rent. R W Dawion,\nAgent   557  Ward Street\nWARM SIX-ROOM HOUSE. AU,\nmodern conveniences. Apply to\n620 Robson Street,\n{\u25a0OR tlMt-X, 2 AND 4-ftCK.MB-\nfur. csblnt. Wint\u00ab rates. Shtrde-\nlow'i Auto Camp. Phone 864\nA    HOME   FOR   THOSE   AWAY\nfrom home Strathcnm Hotel Apt'\nf5R Rfctrt' - 3 h6<_M\"\"rti_t._t\nclose In   D   Maglio   Ph  808L\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modem\nfrii'dslre .quipped iuites\n3 ROOM FURN SUITE FOR RENT\nClose In $18 C  W. Appleyard\nKir fttrJt-i RM. Slfflt. ALL\nfurnished. 711  Vernon Street.\nSMALL  l_6!vff(Mt1'A_a.E  \\ibx_t\ntor rent. Ph. 364Y2\nSee  Kerr  Apts.  First\nswaps\nPIANO TO EXCHANGE FOR SET\nof harness or anything uselul on\na  larm.  Mrt.  A.  J. Crack,   1909\nFills St.\nU.S. TANK OUTPUT CAINS\nWASHINGTON. Oct 15 (AP). -\nProduction ol tanks increasod substantially In September, the United\nStites War Department reported today, with output ol medium tanki\nnearly double that of August and\nmanufacture of light tanks also\nmade a \"good gain \"\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON. Oct. 15 (API-Britiih\nstock closings, ln Sterling: Austin\n\"A\" 17\u00ab 9d: Bsbcork fe Wilcox 45s\n3d, Consol Gold 42s Rd: East Ge-\nduld f 10-V Metal nox 77s 6d; Rand\n\u00a3fl 15-16\nBonds-British 2*. per cent Consols \u00a382'.. Pritlsh iU, p\u00bbr cent Wit\nLoan \u00a3106; British Funding 4s i960-\n90   \u00a311,1,.\nTHREE WORKMEN HURT\nIN PLANT EXPLOSION\nDEEPWATER, NJ, Oct. 15 (AP)\n-An explision in the naphthalene\nreducer house at the DuPont Dye\nW rks today injured three workmen and caused minor property\ndamage.\nWINNIP-.C GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Oct. 13 (CP). -\nGrain lutures quotations:\nOpen    High    Low     Close\nWheat:\nOct. 73S     73'i     73        72'.\nDec. 74ti      75 74 74\nMay 78S     78'.     77H     7T.\nOats;\nOct. 47H     48        46*\u00ab     46*i\nDec. 46        46        431*     45'.\nMay 44H     44^     43't     W*\nBarley:\nOct 58        581,     53H     55H\nDec 56't     571\u00bb     35',     55S\nMay 561,     57\u00bb,     55S     53*,\nFlax:\nOct. 149 W    150       145       145\nDec.        '!4I>_     142        14?'.    141\nMay 141        141'i    1401,    140V,\nRye;\nOct. 561.     -       \u2022\u2014        56V4\nDec. 57'.      58 57\\i      57\nMay 60Mi     80Vi     H>>.     5\u00bbti\nCsssh prices:'\nWheat: No. 1 hard and No 1 nor\n72'\u00bb; No. 2 nor. 6Jt\u00bb; No 3 nor.\n67't. No. 4 nor. 66'i; No. 5 wheat\n65*i. No. 6 wheat 64H; leed 58ti;\nNo. 1 amber durum 77%.\nOaU: No. 2 C. W. 47*; Ex. 3\nC W 45ti; No. 3 C W. and Ex. 1\nleed 44; No. 1 feed 42\u00bbi; No. 2 leed\n40',; No. 3 Ieed 39'i.\nBarley: No. 1 tnd 2 C. W.. 6-row\n55V No. 1 and 2 C. W., 2-row 5844:\nNo. 3 C. W, 6-row 33S; other\nother gradei-No. 1 feed 51H; No.\n2 leed 50',; No. 3 feed tV...\nFlix No. 1 C. W. 145Vi; No. 2\nC. W. 141%; No. 3 C. W. 125; No.\n4 C  W   120.\nRye: No. 2 C. W. 56'.,\nUtilities Lead Trade\non Montreal Mkt.\nMONTREAL. Oct, 13 (CI3). -\nUtilities in fractionally mixed price\nchanges held the centre of the stage\nin today's trading on the Stock\nExchange.\nLosing utilities were Gatineau. at\na new low. Montreal Power, Power\nCorporation, Bell Telephone and\nBrazilian.\nSt Lawrence Corp \"A\" wai I\ntrifle harder.\nAUSTRALIA WORKMEN\nBACK WAR EFFORT\nMEIJIOURNE. Oct. 15 (AP). -\nConfidence in Australian workers\nis the keynote of a solidarity message which Prime Minister John\nCurtin has cabled to British workers.\n\"Australian workers are ol the\nstme blood, lighting Ior the seme\ncause and the same free institutions\ntnd there is nothing that they will\nnot do lor Australia in this itruggle,\" the message said4\nExport Business\nFalls lo Boost\nWinnipeg Prices\nWmNriTK., Oct. 18 (CP). - A\nbig Canaditn wheat export trade\novernight tailed to encourage large\nscale buying on' Winnipeg Grain\nExchange today. At the clote wheat\nfutures were 1-% cente lower, Ot-\ntober 72'\/, centa, December 74 and\nMay 77%.\nSale of 2.000.000 bushels ot Canadian wheat to the United Kingdom wis reported. The busineu,\ntraders said, included 1,000,000 buahels of wheat now in itore at\nDuluth,\nBarley future! eased about 2 centi\nnear the clote after gaining more\nthan a cent in the previous seulon.\nA few sales pushed flax futurei\ndown more than five centi. Oats\nheld firm most of the session while\nrye wat off % cent.\nToronto Prices\nWiden at (lose\nTORONTO, Oct. 15 CP).\u2014Trtdei\ncame in dribbles today on the Toronto atock market tnd prices were\nincluded to eailneu in the late action, eliminating the bulk of the\nearly modeit gttnt. Only about 115,-\n000 ihtret chtnged handt in the\nsix-hour session.\nIn the gold section imall gains\nwere netted by Macleod-Cocksnutt,\nPreston, Pickle Crow and Little\nLong Lac against minor losses for\nPamour, Malartic Gold Fields and\nChestervllle.\nTrading was on a small icale In\nthe base metal. list. Three senior\nissues, Noranda. Smelters and\nNickel, firmed fractions and Steep\nRock weakened 5 cents to 1.65.\nSmall gaini for Anglo-Canadian\nand Alberta Pacific Consolidated\nwere the only changei in the Weitern oil list.\nCANADA LOOKS FOR\nPEACETIME MARKETS\nIN SOUTH AMERICA\nRIO DE JANEIRO. Brssil, Oct. 15\n(CP Cable).\u2014Hon. J. A. MacKinnon, Cantdiin Miniiter of Trade\nand Commerce, declared in an interview today that future peacetime outleti in South America for\nCanada's at present booming war\nproduction machinery are now being assured.\n\"Development of the Canadian\nproduction system to such a high\ndegree because of the war meant\nthat we must think beyond the war.\nwe must look to peacetime pursuit,\"\nMr. MacKinnon laid.\nThe Trade* Mission headed by the\nMinister is due to leave shortly for\nTrinidad, where it will spend lour\ndays.\nSALE OF MOTOR FUEL\nIN N. BRUNSWICK DROPS\nSAINT JOHN, NB, Oct. 15 (CPi\n\u2014Estimates by lour ol the six oil\ncompanies   supplying   gasoline   in\nNow    Brunswick    indicated    today\nthere had been a drop of between\n' 10 and 12 per cent in the amount ol\nmotor fuel consumed in this Prov-\nI lnce   since   Federal  regulations  re-\nI stricting   gasoline   sales   went   into\neftect\nVICHY MONUMENTS\nTO MEET METAL SHORT ACE\nVICHY. Oct. 16 (AP).-The Petain Government ordered today that\nles| valued bronze monuments\nthroughout the country be melted\ndown to help meet a metal shortage.\nAnother law mide all allocations, whether de lacto, authorized\nor even recognized to be ol public\nservice, liable to dissolution, with\nconfiscation of their property, by\ndecree.\nTIMBER CREW BACK TO\nWORK ON HICHER WACES\nNORDEGG. AlU, Oct 15 (CP).-\nAcccpting a wtge increase of 48\ncents a day whfch represents a cost-\nof-living bonus, the Brazeau Collieries timber crew resumed work\nyesterday at the high scale.\nLABOR CONSCRIPTION\nUNDER DISCUSSION\nTORONTO, Oct. 15 (CP)-Con-\nsenption of labor in Cantda Is\n\"under discussion\" by the Government, W. C Coulter, member of the\nNatiunal Labor Supply Council, said\ntoday in a luncheon addresi to i\nservice club here.\nAthletic persons, as l rule, poi-\nless the longeit and most beautiful eyelashes.\nKEW   VORK   STOCKS\nMETAL  MARKETS\nLONDON. Oct 15 (AP). - Bir\nsilver ?\".d. unchanged. (Equivalent 42 62 rents )\nLFISTON England TP) - The\nlocal Constitutional Club ha, de-\nmandp*' the s-es'fnatton of Edgar\nGrsns'llle, I\/beral Nat'nnat MP.\n'or Eve bT-ii'r he rro\u00ab\u00abcd the\nUouie to tit in opposition.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc Drew o! Can  16\nCan   Celanete    _  26\nCan North Power     5\u00bbi\nCockshutt Plow        5\nCon  Mm }t  Smelting  30%\nHoward  Smith Paper  -  1444\nImperial 0:1     >*.\nInter Nickel ol Can  M%i\nLake ol lhe Woods    -  16W\nNaunnal   Brew   Lid     27\nPrice   Bros       10>4\nQuebec  Power     12V*\nShawnigan W k P ..- __.. 15H\nSteel of Can pfd   75\n\u00bbANKS\nCmimerce       149\nDominion   _    186\nImperial       _  1944\nMontreal      _ 182\nNova Scotia  - _ 267\nRoval         _   IU\nToronto         246\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 nfd        _  Ti,\nCan Industries B     1 79\nCorn Ptner Corp   *lVt\nFsirchild  Airrrsft     '    2M>\nFraser Co Ltd.  11\nRoyallte OU ,  2tV_\n_. nt......   . ______ *i '        hiMli\nAmerican Csn\n824\na: 4\nAme Smelt & Ref\nW-t\n39 V<\nAmer Telephone\nAmerican Tobacco\nXM.\n132\n70\n714\nAnaconda\n26 H\n23 4\nBaldwin\n144\n144\n1 BtU St Ohio\n4\n4's\n1 Bendix Avittion\n...   364\n374\nBeth Steel\n.   624\nK\\\nBorden\nX-'t\n21-t\nCm Pacific\n44\n444\nCerro de Pasco\nS1'4\n32\nChrysler         \t\n....   55\n354\nCon Gas NY\n...   154\n154\nC Wright pfd\n...     94\n10\nDupont\n146\n147\nEastman Kodak ..\n1344\n13!\nFreepOrt Texas\n364\n37\nGeneral Electric\n204\n2944\nGen Foods       \t\n....   40\n404\nGen Motors \t\n.   394\n,W4\nGoodrich\n..    19',\n20\nGranbv\n44\n\u25a014\nGreat Nor pld\n....    24',\n24 Vt\nHowe Sound\t\n....    314\n32\nInter Nickel     \t\n...    27 4\n274\nInter Tel Se Tel\n...      24\n4\nKenn Copper\n...     324\n324\nMontgomery Ward    .\n....    314\n32\nNash Motors              *\n...      44\nft.\nN Y Central      \t\n.   114\n114\nPackard Motors\n....      24\n2H\nPenn R R      \t\n224\n22 U\nAI-]\nPhillips Pete   \t\n....    444\nPullman             \t\n. .    244\n25\n34\n14\nSafeway storei   \t\nStan Oil o( N -   \t\n...   444\n43\n..    404\n40',\n....     SU\n544\n...    40\n40 Vi\nTexts Gull Sul   \t\n344\n:i!4\nUnion Carbide     \t\n....   754\n76\nUnion Oil ol Cal   \t\n14\u00bb,\nU4\nUnited Aircraft \t\n364\n384\nUnion Pacific      \t\n734\n7444\nU S Rubber      \t\n..     234\n24\nU S Steel\n514\n514\nWeit Electric   _.\t\n76\n784\nWest Union\n294\n294\nWoolworth\n\u2022     304\n30',\nYellow Truck ..    \t\n....    IMk\n13-fc\nNAVAL CLOTHINC\nCONTRACT AWARDED\nVICTORIA. Oct. 15 (CP).-Gor-\ndon Campbell Ltd. of Vancouver\nhas been awarded a contract for\nsupplying 2000 navil overcoats to\nthe Department of Munitions tnd\nSupply at in tpproximate cost ol\n$40,000, the Trade and Induitry De\npartment here wai tdviied today.\nU.S. BANK TO CLOSE\nCHICAGO. Oct 15 (AP). \u2014Stockholder! ol the First Nttiontl Bank\nol Englewood have approved Preildent John M. (100 per cent) Nichols' plan to liquidate tnd clote up\nshop \"at least lor the duration ol\nthe Roosevelt concocted emergency.\"\n\u2014\nWholesale Commodity\nPricei   Indtx   Climbs\nOTTAWA, Qrt. 15 (CP)-s-The Dominion Bureau ol Statiitici reported today lti general wholesale commodity pricei index advanced to\n93.7 in the week ended Oct. 10 from\n93.3 the previoui week end 83.1 in\ntht correiponding week lut year.\nIncreased prlcet were noted for\nwheat, raw rubber, green collee\nbeans, cured meeti, eggi and cotton\nthread, vrtiile lower quotatloni prevailed for oati, (otatoes, steers, butter and cotton fabrics.  .\nRussian News\nHilsWall SI. Trade\nNEW YORROct. 16 (AP). -\nShare leaden fell back today under\npressure of newa trom the Russian\nfront and commodity prices slumped In sympathy. Only about 500,000\nshares changed hands.\nSome of the better known issues,\nsuch ts Consolidated Edison, Union Pacific and Weitinghouse,\nreached new lowi for the year.\nTraders wert keeping close to\ncover, awaiting developments which\nmight signalise a turn in the tide\nof battle on the Eastern front. Almost equally as Important in their\nminds wat the defence labor situation in the United SUtet. Neither\nprospect wu adjudged pleasing.\nAmong Canadian stocks, Hkam\nWalker advanced ft and Lake Shore\nMines 4k. In the bond market Canada 4t were unchanged.\nEire Plant Large\nCattle Shipment\nLONDON, Oct. 15 (CP)-Eire agricultural official* arrived in London today to complete arrangemenU for shipping \u00a315,000,000 ($66,-\n000400) worth of Irish cattle tnd\nshtep to Britain. Tha deal wai iald\nto be the largeit tale of Irish livestock ever trranged.'\nChicago Prices Off\nCHICAOO, Oct IJ (AP).-Wheat\nprices fell more Ultn two cents\nand soybeans four to almost six\ncents a buihei In late trading today\nto lead a general decline of grain\nvalues. The downturn carried wheat\nand beam pricei to the lowest\nleveli since late ln August.\nWheat closed 14\u201424 lower than\nyesterday. December $1,154 \u2014 4,\nMay $1,204-4: com 4-4 down,\nDecember 744-4, May 80%-**;\noats 14-2 lower; rye 1\u2014IVi down\nand soybeans 344\u201444 lower.\nMILK SHIPPERS DEMAND\nHICHER BUTTERFAT PRICE\nABBOTSFORD, B.C., Oct. 15 -\n(CP).\u2014Fifty Independent milk shippers, meeting at nearby Sumai lait\nnight, decided to dilcontinue shipment of milk to city milk distributors unleu they receive 70 centi\nper pound butterfat, f.o.b. farm, non\nquota baili, by Nov. 1.\nThe ihipperi also decided to give\nleader to organization of a dairy\nfarmers' union and named Reeve\nAlex Hougen, of Sumas, and J. L.\nStarr and Charlei Beynea, to t provisional executive.\nA. JONES ELECTED PRES.\nOf WARDNER P.T.A.\nWARDNER, B. C. \u2014 Tht regular\nPTA. meeting wai held Thursday\nwith A. Jonet presiding.\nElection of officers wis held.\nPresident, A- Jones; Vice-PresI\ndent, Mrs. C. Hamrin; Recording\nSecretary, Mrs. R. Thompson; Corresponding SecreUry, Mrs. B. Embree; Treasurer, Mre. O. Sinclair.\nThis position hai been held by\nMrs. Sinclair for about 13 veers,\nTea was aerved by Mrs. R\nThompion and Mrs. A. Kievill.\nAll African Buthmen prey to the\nmoon and other celeetial bodiei, and\nhave an extensive seriei of myths\nand legejids relating to them.\n-PAOI  ILIVIN\nRailways Playing\nVllalPartinWar\nEffort\u2014Vaughan\nVASCOtrVKR, Oct 18 (CW.-R.\nC. Vaughan, President ot Canadian\nNational Railways, told the Vanoouver Board of Trade today Canadian Railways are playing a vital\npart ln the war effort and that the\nDominion's two great rail syitemt\nprovide the lowest per ton mile\nfreight rate of any country in the\nworld except Japan.\n\"Our average fer ton mile rate\nil less than half that enjoyed by\nrailroads in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and England,\"\nhe said.\nThe Canadian Natiogal President\nsaid the outbreak of war threw a\nsudden burden on the railways in\nheavy transport of war materials\nand troops, but they were prepared\nto handle lt. Freight traffic increased he said, until in the month of\nSeptember this year \"it surpassed\nby 80 per cent the movement in\nthe peak year of the last war,\" but\nit had ben handled safely and expeditiously.\nHe fbld how Canadian National\nRailways aided in the war ellort by\n\"lending\" economic and purchasing\nexperts to the Dominion Government and by turning over some of\nIts shops to the manufacture ot war\nmaterials.\n\"Quite apart from their normal\nfunctions, locomotive and car shops\nare assisting directly in the war effort .by undertaking the manufacture of numerous Items required by\nthe various combat services,\" he\nsaid.\nIn addition, he said, Canadian\nNational Railways Is also building\nminesweepers and cargo vessels in\nits plant at Prince Rupert, B.C.\nCanadian National Steamships, in\naddition' to its own boats, is \"operating Danish, French, Finnish, German and Italian vessels seized by\nthe Canadian Government,\" the\nrallwiy President said.\nThe railway President said he'\nfelt confident In a prediction that\nthat net earnings on operatloni of\nthe C. N. R. would reach $63,000,000\nthli year. Thii, he satd, would be\nsufficient to pay fixed chargei tnd\ntaxei. .\nV>lNCOUVER, Oct. 18 (CP).-R.\nC. Vaughan. President ot the Canadian National Railway told the\nVancouver Board of Trade ln a\nluncheon address today that the\nsystem's 678-mile branch Une to the\nNorthern port of Prince Rupert was\n\"not yet profitable to the railway\"\nbut abandonment of the line aa\nhad been luggeited in tome quarters wai \"unthinkable.\"\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Oct. IB (CP). - Receipt!: Cattle 360; calvei 35; hogs\n150; sheep 1140; iome cattle and\nbulk of iheep through-billed.\nCommon to medium butcher\niteen 6\u2014T.50; lew good MO-lb.\nkinds IX. Medium \u00bbo good belferi\n8.50\u20147.75. Oood eowi SI*-*; top\nlight 6.25; oommoB to medium 4.50\u2014\n5.50; ctnneri tnd cutteri J.50\u20144.25.\nMedium to good built 5.50-6.75;\ntop Tueidaj** 7. Medium vesleri 7\u2014\n8. Few medium to good feeder\nIteen 7\u2014750.\nOood Iambi Tuesday 930\u2014Hogi\n13.40\u201418.80 for B-l at yardi and\nplants.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Oct. 15 CP).-fpo*\nButter, Que. 324-324. Eggi, Bilt-\nern A-large 42\u201443.\nFutures: Butter, Oct. 1244, Nov.\n334-324. Dec. 334-4, Jan. 334-\n334; eggs, Oct. 28.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\n(By Tht Canadian Preu)\nCluing exchange rater\nAt Montreal\u2014Poued: buying 4Ml\nlelllng 4.47; VS. dlr 1.10, telling 1.11.\nAt New York\u2014Pound $4.04; Cdn\ndlr .88*4 \u00abe\u00ab)ts.\nDOW  JONU AVERAC61\nHigh    Low\nVANCOUVER   -STOCKS\nBid Ask\nBralorne                    10.90 11.00\nBridge R Con C     .     ,004 \u2014\nCariboo  Gold          .   2,10 125\nDentonia                         ,014 .01.4\nFairview Amal       .     .004 .01\nGeorge Copper      ..     .124 \u2014\nGolconda           4...     .034 .06\nGrandview      .154 \u2014\nGold   Belt 21   ' -\nGruil-Wihksne        .024 .03\nHedley Mascot  45 .47\nHome Gold                   ,00 4 .004\nIndian   Mines    01 \u2014\nInt C & C            ...     - .35\nIsland   Mount           122 126\nMcGillivray       23 -\nMinto Gold        024 M\nNicola M St M    ....     .02 .024\nPacific Nickel           \u2014 0\u00bb\nPend   Oreille   ..........    165 1,75\nPioneer  Gold               2 30 2.35\nPremier Border    ...     .014 .02\nPremier Gold ........     .72 .75\nQuatsino                 .     .014 02\nReeves-MacDonald       .30 \u2014\nReliel Arlington  ....     .0044 .014\nReno Gold          10 .12\nSalmon  Gold 004 014\nSheep Creek      .  _     .91 .94\nSilbak  Premier ..  .     .70 \u2014\nSurl Inlet            \u2014 .12\nVidette Gold       24 -\nWhitewater             .     .014 lot\nYmii\" Yankee Girl        .044 .08\nOILS\nA P Con    064 -\nAntcondt             03 \u2014\nAnglo   Canadian   .        .58 .62\nBrown  Corp        ....     .064 \u2014\nCal  St Ed               1.25 1.30\nCalmont             16 .20\nCommonwealth    26 .32\nCommoil        .19 \u2014\nDalhousie 20 -\nFoothllli   _..     .60 \u2014\nHome  .       2.26 1J0\nMadison           \u2014 .014\nMar-Jon            01 \u2014\nMcDougall-Segur   .      .0444 06\nModel                17 -\nOkalta Com      40 \u2014\nPacalta               f\u00bbH 034\nRoyal Can  04 .08\nRoyallte'             20 00 2500\nSouth End Pete           ,004 -\nSpooner             ...        .02 \u2014\nUnited                          .044 -\nVanalta                         .034 05\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital   Est 1 '5\nr0fi Brew        .,      1.32 1 to\nPacilic Coyle           - 32 *\u25a0\n30 industrisls\n20 raili     \t\n15 utilltlei\nClose   Change\n121.36   120.19   12052   off   l3o\n\u2022-\u25a0 j-n\n28.45\n17.89\n28.23\n11.70\n28.34   off - .01\n17.75   off    .12\nTORONTO STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nMINES\nAldermac Copper  -\t\nAnglo Huronlan  ~\nArntfleld Oold -\u2014\t\nAunor    -\t\nBagamac Rouyn .._ ...\nBankfield Gold  \t\nBase Mettls Mining \t\nBidgood Kirk \t\nBeattie Gold\t\nBobjo  Mines   - \u2014\nBralorne  Minei  _.\t\nBuffalo Ankerite \t\nCan Malartic \t\nCariboo Gold Quirti\nCastle Trethewey    -\nCentral   Patricia\t\nChromium M St I  _\nConiaurum Mines  \t\nConsM StS  -\t\nDome Minei \t\nEast Malartic  \t\nEldorado Gold \u2014\nFaloonbridge Nickel -\t\nFederal Kirkland  -\t\nFrancoeur Gold   -\t\nGillies Lake  :\t\nGod's   Lake    .\nGold Belt   \t\nGrandoro Mines \t\nGunnar   Gold\nHard Rock Gold \t\nHarker Gold\nHollinger Com\t\nHowey  Oold     \t\nHudson Bay M fc S\nInt Nickel    \t\nJack   Waite   \t\nJacola   Oold   \t\nKerr-Addison -\nKirkland Lake    \u2014\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nUke Shore Mi\"e\u00ab \t\nLamaque Contact  \u2014\t\nLana Cadillac \t\nLeitch Gold  \t\nLebel Oro\t\nLittle Long Lac -\t\nMacasia  Mlnei    \t\nMacLeod Coekihutt\t\nMadsen Red Like  -\t\nMandy Minet\t\nMcVittie Grihim \t\nMcWaVters Gold\nMining Corporation  \t\nMoneti Porcupine\t\nNipissing Mining\t\nNoranda  ..\nNormetal \t\nO'Brien   Gold\nPamour  Pdrcupine   .   ..\nPaymaster  Cons       \t\nPend Oracle\n\"erron   Gold\n\"ickle   Crow   Gold\nPioneer Gold     \t\nIT\n1.73\n.074\n1.70\n.094\n.054\n.10\n114\n106\n064\n11.00\n3.90\n.58\n2 IKI\nax\n1.61\n2.25\n121\n40.00\n20.50\nm\n.39\n3 40\n.034\n.45\n034\n.294\n.%.\n.06\n244\n.74\n,034\n12.50\n.2(1\nM.50\n35,00\n.18\n014\n4.65\nm\n1425\n4.40\n.124\n.40\n.014\n1,70\n3,78\n2 02\nHi\n09\n054\n.15\n1.35\nS3\nI 17\n54 00\n.80\nI 39\n1 11\n194\n168\n140\n2 75\n.70\nPowtll Rouyn GoM .^\nPreiton Eaet Dome _\t\nReevei Mac \t\nReno Gold Mlnu ,....-.,\nRoche Long Ltc \t\nSan Antonio Gold .....\nShawkey Gold    \u2014\nSheep Creek Gold \t\nSherritt Gordon .. ..\u201e..._\nSiscoe Gold\t\nSladen Malartlc  ..._\nSt   Anthony\nSudbury   Basin    \u201e\t\nSullivan Cons\t\nSylvanite\nTeck  Hughes Gold  ...\nToburn Gold Mines \t\nTowagmac   \t\nVentures       \t\nWaite   Amulet    _.\nWright   Hargreavei   .....\nYmir  Yenkee Girl ,\t\nOILS\nAjax   Otl   .\t\nBritiah Americin  -\t\nChemical Research _.\t\nImperial  Oil        \u25a0\u25a0\nInternational Petroleum\nTexas -Canadian \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   Power\t\nBell Telephone   m\nBraillian Traction  \t\nBrewers   St   Distillen  .\nBrewing Corp\t\nB C Power A .   _\t\nB C Power B      \t\nCanada Bread \t\nCan   Bud  Malting   _\nCan Car Se Foundry \t\n.Can   Cement    \t\nCan   Dredge\t\nCan   Malting\t\nC  P  R\t\nCan Ind Alcohol A .\nDom Tnr Si Chemical .\nDistillers   Seagrams\nFanny   Farmer      \t\nFord of Canad.i  A   \t\nGeneral Steel  Wares\nGuodyear Tire       ..   ..\nGypsum L Se K\nHamilton  Bridge    \t\nImpeniil   Tobacco   .\nLoblaw  A   .        ..  \t\nLoblaw   B\nMaple Leaf Milling\nMassey   Huris\nMontreal  Power\nMoore   Corp\nNational   S'cel   Car\nPage    Heney    \t\nPower    Corp\nIteel   ol  Cnnsda\nStandard Paving ..\n103\n1.5\n.25\n.1<>4\n03\nJ ll\n.01\nao\n33\n_\n\u2022J\n07\n1.48\n.624\n2 33\n2 IS\n1.21\n.15\n425\n4 40\n8.65\n.044\n.13\nnis\n.17\n\u00bb.50\n1510\n.75\n\u201e      M\n.... 1524\n5    74\n44\n.\u00bb   115\n.\u00ab   -34\n14\n,    8\n.    44\n.     64\n5\n.   12\n.   364\n64\n.    24\n44\n22\n204\n.    17 4\n54\n754\n34\n3\n124\n25\n24\n3\n2\n224\n454\n34\n'.\"\"\u25a0I\n34\n874\n \u00a5AHi fWELVI-\nMIMOUS\nFulfil\niftkii\nLost Times Tonight\nComplete Shows, at\n7:00 and tf:24    .'\u25a0.\u2022*,\nA\/SS\nWtBOVS\neoowe\n\"\"\u2022\u2022ss.-.\nAdded Hit\n\"Tall, Dark and Handsome\"\nwith\nCesar Romero, Virginia\nGilmore, Milton Berle\nFrlday-8aturdiy\n\"One Night in Lisbon\"\nwith\n(red MacMurray, Madeleine\nCarrol\nPlus \"Girls of the Road\"\nCanada's postal system developed\nfrom a post office established in\nHalifax In 1775, six years after that\ncity was founded.\nKaslo-Slocan\nMINING\n11. \\k_\\\nwia AID\nMINING\nElect\nJUKES\nAnd let's take the\nconstruction of\nour highways out\nof politics.\nOn October 21\nVOTE\nJUKES\nThe Conservative\nCandidate\n\u00ab&\nNELSON DAILV NEWS, NEL80N   B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINQ. OCTOBER\nColone\nells Rossland ol\nPlans for Reserve Army Unit; One\nPlatoon Is Proposed lor Rossland\nEOSSLAND, B*C., Oct. Vtr-U.\nCel. David Philpot.-D.S.O., O.B.E.,\n\u2022peaking at a public meeting, in the\nArmory \u2022 tonight, pfeaented an outline of tha plan under way for the\nformation in the Kootenass of reserve infantry units of the Rocky\nMountain Rangers. One platoon,\nconstating 6f 36 Dr 40 men, will be\norganized ln Rossland for the present, said Colonel PhUpot. It Is expected that two platoon* will be\norganized in both Trail and Nelson\nfor a start.\n\"These units,\" said Colonel Philpot, \"will be organized and trained\nso that they can, in event of some\nsuch emergency as a real or apprehended cjvll commotion, sabotage\nor any other enemy action, operate\nas a military unit, not as a mob. We\nwant mert who Join thla reserve\nunit to take their duties seriously,\nand we are not particularly anxious\nto have men between the ages of\n23 and 30, tor in that case a howl\nwould go up as to why they did not\njoin the active army,\" he said.\nCANNOT DODQE TRAINING\n\"Older men medically unfit for\noverseas service with the active\narmy, or younger men ln the same\n.   Guaranteed\nMechanical Work\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nFOR RENT\nLight Housekeeping Rooms\nAnnable Block\nR. W. Dawson\nHOOD'S\nDOUGHNUTS\nSUPREME QUALITY\nYour Home Bakery\nChocolate\nMilk\nFor Pickup and Pep\nOur Ham Sandwiches\nAre Delicious\nBUTLER'S\nHavt the Job Don* Right\nSe*\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nLUMBfR       LATH\nSHINGLES\nWholesale snd Retail\nTelephone  176\nFoot of Stanley Strttt\n2 *\u00bb l SALE\nSTARTS TODAY\nMann, Rutherford Drug Co.\nPhone 81\nNtlion, B. C.\ncategory, are the ones wt most\ndesire, and while we will accept\nmen who are physically tit and subject td the provisions ot the Natural\nResources Mobilization Act, it\nshould be emphasized that men will\nnot be able to dodge their compulsory military training by attaching\nthemselves to a reserve army unit,\nhe continued.\nColonel Philpot explained that\nthose applying for enrolment in a\nreserve unit must be between the\nages of 18 and DO Inclusive. They\nwill sign up for three years. If, how\never, he explained, _ man ahould at\nlain bis fiftieth birthday before his\nterm has expired, he would hot be\nimmediately discharged from his\nunit, but would serve the balance of\nthe term.\n46 DRILLS YEARLY\nAll men serving in the reserve\nunit would be required to attend 45\ndrills per year, and those drawing\npay would alao attend two weeks\ncamp in the Summer. Colonel Philpot explained that only half of the\nplatoon would draw pay, and suggested that the difficulty of this\nsituation could be taken care of by\ndesignating for pay the first JO men\nwho indicated on a waiver form\ntheir willingness to turn a certain\nportion of pay over to the regi\nmental funds.\nNo man would be accepted for\nservice in a reserve unit if ha was\nbelow Claas C medical category,\nand while he would in spirit be\nliable for service anywhere in Can\nada, it was not likely that reserve\nunits in the Kootenays, for example\nwould operate anywhere but ln\ntheir immediate areas, he jtated.\nColonel Philpot itated that if all\nwent well, he hoped to commence\nattesting men for the Rossland platoon Oct. 22.\nTrail Rector Is\nRotary Speaker\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 15 - Rev. L.\nA. C. Smith, Rector of St. Andrewi\nAnglican Church, addressed the\nfrail RoUry Club Tuesday afternoon, choosing for his subject\n\"Children, Their Training and Our\nResponsibility.\"\nFrank L. Fournier, recently re\nturned from Cairo, Egypt, was a\nvisitor.\nCRESTON NURSE AMONG\nCOAST AWARD STUDENTS\nCRESTON, B.C.-Miss Laura I.\nHolmes, R.N, daughter of Mr. E. N.\nHolmes Is among the class of graduates of Vancouver General Hospital,\nto win the award of the Registered\nNurses' Association. She passed m\nthe first class with 80 per cent and\nover. She is remaining on the itaff\nof the General Hospital at Van\ncouver for the present.\nTOO UTE TO CLASSIFY\nGOOD PACK HORSE FOR SALE,\nalso good for other work. Reason\nable price. Apply to Mr. F. Picun,\nSalmo, B.C.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNEWS OF THE DAY\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\n\"Old   Plantation\"   Pipe  Tobacco,\n85c for  Vi-lb. tin at Valentines'.\nSpecial Mixed Darwin Tulips to\nclear, J2.50 per 10O. Ph. Kitchener.\nBoard of Trade Luncheon, today\nnoon, Home Holei.\nWomen's  Institute regular meeting Friday, 2:30 pm. Tea.\nFleury's  Pharmacy  Is  open  this\nevening. Phone 25.\nPrompt,  efficient  typewriter  repairs.  Underwood  Agency. Ph. 99\nRemenVber Harvest Home Cooking\nSale In S A. Hall. Saturday, Oct.\n18th.  Opens  9:00  a.m.\nNelson Badminton Club play\ncommencea tonight at 5 p.m. All\ninterested welcome.\nH. W. Herridge, C.C.F. candidate,\nnonlandTr.il, CJAT, Sat, Oct U.\nat 8:45 p.m.\nAnnual Dinner tonigju at Cathedral Hall 5 to 7. Tickets 50c. Special\nmenu includes delicious lemon pies\n8YLVATILE  FIR  VENEER\nScored  in  tile design.\n4x8 sheet $3.20\nBURNS  LUMBER  A COAL CO.\nTRAPPERS\nNow Is the Timt to Cat Your\nLonger Life Victor Traps\nWelded cross and bottom. Cannot be loosened by rust.\nWide face, close fitting jaws. Greater holding power.\nNon-freeze, non-clog \"humped\" cross. Direct pan fastening. Does not tighten when rusty. Non-twisting\n\"kinkless\" chain.\nVICTOR. No. 0  $3.20 Dox.\nVICTOR. No. 1    $3.60 Dox.\nVICTOR. No. 1 Vi   $5.85 Dox.\nTRAPPERS WISE, VICTORIZE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nBuy that typewriter now. We have\nwhat you want. Cash or on easiest\not terms. D. W. McDerby, 'The\nTypewrit-r Man\", 664 Baker St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nEverything for Fall cleaning-\nFloor wax, paint cleaner, floor mops,\ncurtain stretchers, window brushes\nand rubbers, wallpaper cleaner, etc.\nHipperson's.\nCome up tonight and enjoy yourselves at the Eagles' Whist Drive\nand Dance. Admission canned gootli\nto the value of 25 centa to help out\nthe bombed areas of Britain.\nWith the return of the Liberal\nGovernment now conceded. Nelson-\nCreston must not have a Member\nIn Opposition VOTE FOR FRANK\nPUTNAM, THE LIBERAL CANDIDATE.\nThe Board of Directors of Kootenay Lake General Hospital wish\nto thank all those who so kindly\ndonated fruits and vegetables to\nthe K o ot e n a y Lake General\nKs>apital.\nMake your own entertainment at\nhome this Winter. Use RCA-Vlctor\nRecords to supply the music you\nwant when you want it. RCA-Vlctor\nRecord Playing Machines ara priced\nfrom $16.99 up. Ask us to show you\nthe many models to choose from\nMcKay le Stretton.\nMACO CLEANERS\nTHE MOST MODERN PUNT\nIN THE DISTRICT\nW Bakir Phone 2M\nAURORO CRISAFIO\nPRESIDENT FERNIE\nCATHOLIC YOUTHS\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014Aurora Crlsafio at\ntha first meeting of the Fall season\nwu elected Preildent ot tht Catholic Youth Organization hera. Armando Bossio waa elected Secretary-\nTrataurer, and John Sherolla, Albert Marasco, LouUe Pallone and\nJosephine Megale ware elected\nCouncil members.\nEight Maids Are\nPall Attendants\nof Elda Mondin\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. IS - Last rites\nwai held Wednesday for Elda Mondin, daughter of Mr. and Mra. Rlc-\ncardo Mondin, who died ln the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital Monday\nmorning.\nRequiem High Man was iung ln\nSt. Anthony of Padua Church at\n9 o'clock in the morning, with Rev.\nS. Balo, O.F.M., assisted by Rev.\nVictor Cesario, O.F.M., and Rev.\nW. G. Harrison, officiating. The\nbody then lay in atate ln the Italo-\nCanadese Hall until 4 o'clock in\nthe afternoon, when further services were held and Interment was\nthen made ln Mountain View Cemetery.\nE. Berno, A. Leechin, A. Pas-\nqualotlo, A. Geronazro, G. Berno\nand A. Secco were active pallbearers and eight glrla, Miss Mela Makay, Miss Albin Makay, Miu Mary\nSammartino, Mias Ida Sammartino,\nMiss Glna Sammartino, Misa Rose\nSammartino, Miss Rena Martin and\nMiss Mary Blanchi, all dressed In\nwhite,  were  honorary  pallbearers.\nBONNINGTON\nBONNINGTON, B.C.-Mrs. Alan\nWilley had as guest during the\npast week Mrs. J. Kilpatrick of\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Graham attended the Murrell - McAstocker\nwedding in Trail Friday and were\nguests of their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Murrell.\nMajor and Mrs. Turner Lee attended the Murrell - McAstocker\nwedding in Trail.\nMrs. Robert McFadden is a patient in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Nelson, having undergone\nan operation,\nMr. and Mrs. John Hawkins were\ntjelsofi visitors Saturday.\nBALMORAL, Scotland (CP) -\nPrincess Elizabeth bagged a grouse\nwhen she had her first shooting lessons during the Royal Family's\nholiday here.\nWW\nwmmimmmm^\u2014m^m    t I sssss    |' \u2014\u00ab\u2014-\u00bb_^\u00ab--_---_^-\u00bb_\u00ab\nInduction Service\nlor Mr. Donnell\nat Prince Rupert\n(From Prince Rupert Dally Newt)\nPRICE RUPERT \u2014 There were\nlarge congregations yeiterday at\nboth services ln the First United\nChurch. In the morning the sacrament of the Lord'i Supper wu\nobserved with the local minister.\nRev, J. A. Donnell, officiating. In\ntha evening the Induction of Mr.\nDonnell u Putor wu carried out\nby members of the Presbytery.\nRev. T. C. Colwell ot Port Simpson\nwu Chairman.\nThe leuon wu read by Rev. J. A.\nFlndlay of Hartley Bay, prayer was\noffered by Rev. W. H. Pierce and\nthe Induction lermon given by Rev.\nPeter Kelly.\nIn hli lermon Mr. Kelly ipoke of\nthe duty of the congregation. The\nresponsibility ot the success of the\nchurch rested on the membets of\nthe congregation u much u on the\nshoulders of the minister. The minister needed the support of the congregation ln attendance, in social\nactivities and above all, ln their\nprayers. To the minister, Mr. Kelly\nemphasized the need for close fellowship with God as a dally requl-\nsie for the carrying out ot the grave\nresponsibilities of the charge and\nthe great opportunities of service.\nHe knew of no other calling that\nmade such demands on a person.\nSpecial musical numbers were\nprovided.\nFoUowing the evening service a\nsocial was held at which many members of the congregation and visitors met the newly inducted minister and Mts. Donell.\nMr. and Mrs. Donnell were formally welcomed by the chairman.\nJ. S. Wilson. He assured Mr. Donnell of the desire of the congregation to cooperate fully in the work\nof the church. Leadership and service would be looked for.\nMr. Donnell said that already they\nhad felt warmly welcomed. From\nthe day of his arrival he had appreciated the kind consideration of\nmany members.\nIn a few words, Mrs. Donnell\nalso thanked the people for their\nfriendly greetings.\nRev. W. H. Pierce assured the\nminister of the desire of the native\npeople to be Included in the welcome given to him. Mr. Donnell\nthanked Mr. Pierce for thia expression of good will, asking him to\ntake to the native peoples his words\n**.f appreciation.\nHORSHAM. Sussex (CP). - Beatrice Hedworth was fined the equivalent of $00 When she pleaded\nguilty to 12 charges of acquiring\nmore than the normal quantity of\nfood allowed under the rationing\nscheme.\nGerry Thomson Goes\nCalgary for Course\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 15-G. M. (Gerry) Thomson, Preildent of the Consolidated Workmen's Committee,\nwith Mri. Thomson and children,\nleft list Saturday for Calgary, where\nMr. Thomion ls taking a courae of\nstudies. He plam to return to Trail\nnext May.\nDavid Kenneway has been elected\nPresident of the Workmen'i Committee pro-tem until the annual\nmeeting next month.\nRii. Visitor\nHere Learns oi\nHis Promotion\nFlying Officer Ronald Arlett of\nNo. 34 Service Flying Training\nSchool at Medicine Hat, a visitor\nhere since Oct. 4, received a wire\nfrom his Commanding Officer Wednesday notifying him of his promotion to Flight Lieutenant.\nThe R.A.F. officer received the\nwire at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, where he has been a patient since Monday. He has been the\nguest of Col. and Mrs. G. A. Hoover\nwhile here.\nIMIIIIIt II II1IIIIIIIIII\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Widdowson\n301-305 Josephine St.    Nelson, B. C.\nllllllll I nil I llllllll I t\nHIGH ORADE\nCEDAR SHINGLES\nLAMBERTS1\nLUMBER LTD.\n1931 Ford Town Sedan\nGood tires. Nice <.1Q1\nrunning. Full price    V*73\nQueen City Motors\nPhone 43     Limited     561 Josephine\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MISS KAY LOWDON\nTRAIL, B. Ch Oct. 15\u2014 Mr. and\nMrt. Parker Williams and Mrs. Orville Cusack have returned from\nthe Coast, where they were called\nby the death of Mrs. Williams'\nmother.\nCharlea Appleby has returned to\nTernie after a two weeka' visit here.\nMr. Appleby was called to Trail by\nthe serious accident to his son.\nKenneth Appleby, who ls still a\npatient in the Trail-Tadanac Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Allan, Mrs.\nWilfrid Allan, Mr. and Mrs. R. L\nMcBrld* and George Pearson of\nNelson, attended the funeral of\nHoward Anderson Wednesday afternoon.\nMrs. M. Comazzetto, R. Comazzet-\nto and A. Commazzetto, of Kamloops, attended the funeral of their\nniece, Miss Elda Mondin, Wednesday afternooq.\nFrank Tornier returned Saturday\nfrom Cairo. Egypt. He was met at\nSan Francisco by Mrs. Fornier, who\nwith their two children, has been\nstaying with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. S. S. McDiarmid, since .the\noutbreak of the war.\nMr. and Mrs. Melatini gave a delightful shower Friday evening,\ncomplimenting their daughter, Emily Melatini, whose marriage took\nplace in Nelson Wednesday. Marlene Ruelle and Kathleen Maza presented the gifts and those assisting\nthe hostesa were Mrs. G. Payette,\nMiss D. Lenora Layborn, Miss Dora\nMelatini, and Miss June Wright.\nOther guests were Mrs. T. Mat-\nteucci, Mrs. D. Orlando, Mrs. A\nMazza, Mrs. J. Simone, Mrs. P.\nChristante, Mrs. O. Basso, Mrs. T.\nRuelle, Mrs. A. Begg, Mrs. E. Ruelle, Mrs. I. Lillijord, Mrs. M. Cu-\ntillo. Mrs. O. Sammartino, Mrs. A.\nPeterson, Mrs. L. DePrimo, Mrs. H.\nDeadmarsh, Mrs. G. Payette, Mrs.\nL. Bertois, Mrs. T. Decembrini,\nMrs. A. McArthur, Mrs* 6. Paolini,\nMrs. E. Pisapio. Mrs. I. Martin,\nMrs. Graham, Mrs. M. McArthur,\nMrs. C. Deadmarsh. Mrs. R. Martinelli, Mrs. T. Crlslofoll. Mrs. S\nCaputo, Mrs. P. lauriente, Mrs. J\nMelatini, Mrs. G. Nutini, Mrs. R\nLauriente, Mrs, T. Tonelli, Mrs. W.\nCaputo, Mrs. P. Martini, Mrs. M.\nRandall. Mrs. E. Trevison, Mrs. B.\nPerri, Mrs. M. Agostinelli, Mrs. J\nBasso, Mrs. L. Benuslk, Mrs. M.\nSimmonetti, Mrs. L. Pantusso, Mrs.\nS. Martini, Mrs. F. Fabbro, Mrs, M.\nBenedetU, and the Misses Gena\nPagnan, Eda Tatangelo. Duillia Nan-\nnini, Anne Priore, Mary Borsato,\nInez Vanelli, Jennie Thompson,\nHanda Oerace, FausU Matteucci,\nMary Cabana, Delphine Vetere,\nMary  Vetere,  Alice Baldassi,  Eda\nRomano, Frances Taverna, Barbara\nJohnson, Pearl Mcintosh, Bessie\nDoig, irma Salsiccioli. Evelyn Salsiccioli, Margaret Salsiccioli, Celia\nSmith, Uly Adamchuk, Esther DeStefano, Fermi DeStefano, Gena\nConstanzo and Lena Toti.\nMrs. W. D. Smith and Mrs. Glen\nManlay of Grand Forks, visited\nTrail Tuesday.\nCpl. S. A. Tucker and Sgt. S\nDavis of U. S. Army Air Corps,\nFort Wright, Wash., spent the\nweekend in Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. William Forrest\nspent the holiday weekend at Christina Lake and Grand Forks.\nMr. and Mrs H. Brook of Nelson\nvisited Trail last weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Beare of Toronto are visiting Trail this week.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Johns of Creston  spent the weekend  in Trail.\nMiss Catherine McDonald of\nGrand Forks visited friends here\nduring  the holiday  weekend.\nMiss Ann Morrison, October\nbride-elect, was honored Friday\nevening at a miscellaneous shower\nat the home of Mrs. J. Murray,\nMrs. A. Murray was co-hostess.\nGames and contests were enjoyed,\nprize winners being Mrs. J. Kirk-\ner and Mrs. J. Shaw. Mrs. J. MacDonald. Mrs. A. MacLeod and Mrs,\nD. MacDonald, of Rossland. assisted\nin serving refreshments. Guests included Mrs. William Ramsay, Mrs,\nN. Buchanan, Mn. William Barber,\nMrs. William MacLeod, Mrs. Dan\nMacLeod. Mrs. Gordon Ward, Mrs,\nA. Ross, Mrs. Donald MacLeod, Mrs.\nJ. Newman, Mrs. J. Shaw, Mrs.\nKirker, Mrs. J. Maclnnes, Mrs. J.\nFerguson, Mrs. S. Young, Mrs.. W.\nHollman, Mrs. A. MacLeod. Mrs\nMacDonald of Rossland, Mrs. J.\nMacDonald, Mrs. Alex MacLeod,\nMrs. J. Murray, Mrs. A. Murray.\nMrs. William Morrison of Rossland. Mrs A. Bennedetti, Mrs. N.\nMorrison, Mrs. A, Munroe. Miss J.\nNewman and Miss N. MacKenzie.\nEda Phyllis DelBucchia, and\nMario Nonis, both of Trail, were\nmarried in St. Anthony of Padua\nChurch, at 7:30 Tuesday morning.\nRev. S. Balo, O.F.M.. officiated. The\nbride is the daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Pietro DelBucchia. and the\ngroom, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Silvio Nonis, of Undine, Italy. Miss\nGlna Pellegrini was only attendant\nand Sam Allegretto was best man.\nA reception was then held at the\nhome of the bride's parents, the1\nguests being received by the bride's\nmother, and her aunt. Mrs. G. Cris-\ntofoll. Mr. and Mrs. Noni are making a three-weeks' wedding trip to\nthe Coast and will reside at 693\nRouland Avenue.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedicil  Arts Building\nCLARK'S FUNERAL\nCHAPEL\nW. L. THOMPSON\nDay and Night Service.\n24-hour Ambulance Service\n615 Koottnay St Phone 301\nORIGINAL\nlcSale\nNOVEMBER 5, 6, 7, 8\nCity Drug Go.\nPhone 34 Box 480\n\u25a0\nMIDDLESBROUGH, England\n(CP).\u2014Beer is \"reserved\" (or dock\nand shipworlterj In pubs here and\nwhen supplies are scarce lt is only\nserved when the workmen are coming off shifts.\nPhone\n199\nRAMP pr\nBody & Fender Works\nDenied fenders restored like\nmagic.\nTHE BEST IN THE WEST\nPERCOLATOR\nHOT CHOCOLATE\nR HL SMITH\n\u25a0Up to the Minute\nin Electric Instalations\nPhona 666       351 Baker St.\n1934 CHEVROLET COUPE\nSee this economy car. *C_|Cfl\nFor only VH-f*\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Post Office\nDrop In for\nAFTERNOON TEA\nIn the peaceful surroundings\nGray's, 580 Baker\nLovely to look at\nStyled at\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhone 327\nFleury's Pharmacy\nProscriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nMed. Arts Blk.\nThree Way\nStetson\n$7,50\n... a style you'll wear\neverywhere. Wear it brim\nup for business, brim\ndown for sport. In finest\nfur felt with plain silk\nband.\nOthar hats from f 3.95\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Stort\nFOR WANT AD SERVICl\nPHONE 144\nTry\nGrenfell's\nHot Chocolate Sundai\nWith   TOASTED   ALMOND!\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nLISTEN IN\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nand Haar\nR.L MAITLAND, K.C.\nSPEAKINC ON BEHALF OP\nA. E. JUKES\nAND OTHER WEST KOOTENAY CONSERVATIVES\nCJAT\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 17th, AT 8:00 P.M.\nMASS MEETING\nat SALMO TONIGHT ~ 7:30 P. M.\nSPEAKERS:\nBYRON\nJOHNSON\nW. H. Patterson\nFrank Putnam\nLiberal Candidate\nThe Qarage of Friendly Service\nThe Red Indian-Texaco Service Station\nONE STOP SERVICE SAVES\nYOU TIME AND MONEY\nSky Chief and Red Indian Gaioline \u2014 Aviation and Red\nIndian Oili \u2014 Cuarantaad Lubrication \u2014  Firestone\nTirei \u2014 Willard Batteriei \u2014 Accessories and Storage\nBody Repain.\nSowerby Cuthbert Ltd.\n\u2022503 Vernon St.\nPhone 75\nNelson, B.C.\ni\nt\n-___\n________\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_1941_10_16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0415221","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":"1941-10-16 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. 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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":""}]}