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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":" ss^\nWW\"T\"\"*T*\"\nQueen Presents Colors to Saskatoon\nLight Infantry Unit. Page 4.\nTime Bomb Kills Rumanian Ceneral\nand 50 Officers. Page 3.\nDiplomats Bring Boom to Ancient\nVolga Trade Post. Page 9.\nDtt 1\nCollision in Far East Inevitable\nDeclares Knox. Page 3.\n50 Hostages Shot and 50 Reprieved\nTill Next Monday. Page 3.\nNaples Included in British Raids\non Italian Cities. Page 3.\nVOLUME   40\nFIVE   CENTS   PER   COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 25. 1941\nNUMBER   131\nSOUTH\nOBJECTS OF HI\n\"wo in B.C., and Five\nU.S. Army Planes\non Missing List\nBUSINESS LEADERS\nAMONG MISSING\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014\nTwo privately owned airplanes,\none carrying a California mining\nmagnate and the other piloted by\na Seattle man accompanied by a\nPortland business man, were the\nobjects of a widespread aerial\nand water\" se'arch along the British Columbia coast tonight.\nA single motored Belfahca\" plane,\ncarrying Livingston Wernecke of\nBerkejeyj - GMif,, manager of- the\nTreadw'ell Yukon ..Mining. Corpor-\nltion t$nd Pilpt' Ghuroh Gropstis\nif San. Franc\\scq_ has not been re-\n'orted since leaving* ttySer', Alaska,'\nor Alert, B. C, last Tuesday. It\n\/as dufephe same day at the-small\nettlement on the Northern end of\nrancouver   Island. avjip\nThe other plane,. \u00ab. W\u00abeo -machine, piloted by Bud Bodding\nand ,with a Mr- Sherman of Portland as passenger, left Alert Bay\nTuesday. It has not been reported\nsi&e. The Waco plane Was ' en-\nroute to Ketchikenr Alaska where\nBodding was to turn it over to\nanother pilof to take. to a firm,\nat Petersburg, Alaska.\nRoyal Canadian Air Force planes\n'rom Patjricia Bay air field near\n'ictoria, combed the Strait of Georgia and wafers farther .North, .during the day for signs of the miss-\nng aircraft.\nSACRAMENTO,   Calif.,   Oct.  24\n1(AP).\u2014Five U. S. army pursuit\nplanes were missing tonight after\n19 ships became separated in a\nflight from March Field, Calif.,\nto McClellan Field here, and at\nleast one of the five crashed after\nIts pilot bailed out.\nAnother of the planes cracked up\n} landing at an emergency field\n, Smith, Nav., but its pilot was un-\nurt. slali\n[ ea'tiglW*?'16*S\u2022, fog that'-\"\"gcattei,ed\nle P-40 pusuit ships over a wide\ntea. a plane piloted by Lieut. J.\nL Pease developed motor trouble\nnd Pease was forced to  abandon\nMcClellan officials said five ships\nyentually made their way here,\night landed at Smith and one\nmded at Tulare. %%$.\nLieutenant E. F. Carey of Harnp-,\n\u00bbn. Va., a pilot of one of the ships'\nhich'made its way here, said they\nit March Field around 11:30 a.m.,\nvith gas for about three hours'\ntight.\n80 MAROONED ON\nISLAND CAIN\nSAFETY\nRIO RICO, Mexico, Oct. 24\n(AP).\u2014Eighty persons marooned on a crumbling island in the\nmiddle of the ram-swollen Rio\nGrande   reached   safety   today.\nRescue boats removed some of\nthe endangered nersons, while\nothers waded to shore.\nLove's Margin in\nBoundary Riding\nCut lo Four Vote\nIG BOMBER CRASHES,\nCREW OF FIVE KILLED\nHAMILTON FIELD, Calif., Oct. 24\nAP)\u2014United States Army officers\neported a B18A bomber crashed on\nhe highest of Twin Sisters peaks 25\nniles from here today, killing its\ncrew of five officers and men.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Oct. 24\n\u2014Absentee ballots- in Grand\nForks-Greenwood have reduced\n' the lead held by T. A. Love,\nConservatvie, over E. C. Henni-\nger, Liberal, from 22 votes to\nfour. The figures now are 641 for\nLove and 637 for Henniger. A. E.\nClapp, C.C.F., is in third place\nwito 370.\nThe telegraphed absentee and\nactive service reports were check-\nFriday by the Returning Officer\nin the presence of the candidates.\nCanucks Greeted\nby King and Queen\nSOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN\nENGLAND, Oct. 24 (CP Cable J.\u2014\nHundreds of' Canadian-trained airmen were given a royal welcome\nto England when the King and\nQueen visited a personnel reception centre Thursday where the\nairmen are waiting to be posted\nwith operational training camps\nand   squadrons.\nTheir Majesties spent nearly an\nhour with tnese new recruits for\nthe Empire squadrons most of whom\nhad arrived in Britain less than a\nweek  ago.. iJtS&J\nThe talked with the young men\nfrom the\" Dominions, colonies and\nthe Uijited States, who were\ndrawn up in a hollow square.\nSenior Royal Air Force and Empire air force officers, including\nAir Commodore L. F. Stevenson,\nofficer commanding Canadian air\nheadquarters in Britain \u2014 who had\nlearned only a few hours earlier\nof his appointment to a Western\nCanada command\u2014welcomed their\nMajesties who drove to the parade\nground amid thousands of cheering\ncivilians.\nHanson Prepares for\nParliament Opening\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24. (CP).\u2014Armed\nwith information obtained on his\nrecent' vj[sit to the United Kingdom, Conservative House Leader\nHanson is preparing for the reopening of Parliament Nov. 3 and for\nthe National Conservative party\nconference shortly afterwards..\nMr. Hanson said- tonight he expects between 150 and 200 Conservatives will attend the conference,\nNov. 7 and 8. Final details now are\nin preparation.'\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\u2014Associated Press Staff Writer\nConflicting reports concerning the Battle for Moscow\nnake it difficult to assess the actual situation there; but Southward at Rostov a crisis is imminent.\nThe  silence  of German  officials'^\ntoncerning the Moscow battle seem\nO support Russian assertions that\n*Iazi spearheads East of the Moz-\nlaisk-Maloyaroslavets line have\nieen broken or hurled back. If so,\nhe wide break-through, which Hit-\n,er announced only a few hours ago\niris been countered.\nIt is only in that sector that Ger-\nnan  tank  units  could  have   come\nwithin  38  miles  of  Moscow   itself.\nTerman    Press    claims    of    street\nighting in the outskirts of Moscow\nin be discounted, since there has\nsen no word that the Nazis have\niptured   any   road   or   rail   junc-\njn which would open the way to\ne outskirts.\nIn the South, however, Russian\ntewscasters themselves express\nalarm. at the portents. Another\nient in the Red defences ringing\nRostov to the West and North is\nadmitted in Kuibyshev, new Russian seat of Government. The actual scene of action was not revealed, nor the depth of the re-\n' porter   Russian   retirement.\nSince German  and Allied forces\n.-e admittedly within  30 miles  or\nEss <of Rostov on the extreme South\nad of the line on the Sea of Azov\n*ast,  every  foot  of  ground  there\nrrendered by the Russians means\nmuch as a mile of retirement on\niy   other   front.   Rostov   and   its\n[ihs factories and oil- installations\nready are at the mercy of close-\np   Nazi   air   borribing   except   as\nghter- planes or anti-aircraft guns\nm defend them.\nIf cutting Russian armies off rich\naucasus oil sources was the prime\n)erman objective in the South it\njbviously could be accomplished\nargely by air attack alone. There\nlas been only one recent Nazi re-\niort of bombing attacks at Rostov,\nowever. That said that armament\nplants, not oil service installations,\n\/ere blasted.\n) Hitler's' own great need is oil,\njrobably   incalculably   greater   to\nday than it was only four months\nago when he risked two-front war\nto get it by attacking Russia. Only\nby rounding the Rostov corner into\nthe Caucasus can he approach it\nby land.\n* The Nazis' reluctance to bomb\ntransit installations or rail yards\nat Rostov has been significant for\nthat reason. Those facilities will\nbe urgently needed by the Germans themselves if they swing\naround the Rostov pivot to attempt conquest of the Caucasus\nto the Caspian. However, if the\nRussians are forced from Rostov,\nthey probably will do their best\nto destroy the facilities, thus delaying the German advance into\nthe Caucasus.\nHitler's armies will need elbow\nroom for that swing in any case.\nRostov itself and a narrow coastal\nstrip about it would not afford sufficient room for massed military\nmovements. Nor can Hitler have\nany doubt that both his. Russian\nand British foes have taken full\nadvantage of the time he has lost\ntaking the vital Rostov corner to\nprepare for his reception beyond it.\nAt least the lower portion of the\nDonets Basin, from Stalino, 100\nmiles Northwest of Rostov, down to\nthe confluence of the Don and\nDonets 100 miles East of Rostov, is\nvitally essential to the Germans for\na march in force around the Rostov\ncorner.\nThe Russian stand at Moscow\nand Rostov has been long enough,\nfor Red reserves to have been assembled not only along the Rostov-\nStalino-Kharkov front itself but in\nthe Caucasus. Three river routes,\nall navigable waters well-equip .oe 1\nfor the purpose, supplement rail\nand road transportation facilities,\nthe Donets, Don and Volga. Nor is\nthere much doubt that British army\ncontingents are standing by in Iran\nto march to Russian support in the\nCaucasus at need. lis\n\u25a0<$>\n.AILS\nEAL PLANS\nFERENCE\nHouse Meets Dec. 2;\nAction Wanted\nSays.Winch\nPREMIER GOING TO\nOTTAWA WEEKEND\nVICTORIA, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014\nPremier TV D. Pattullo's plans for\nthe future Government of British Columbia remained undisclosed tonight despite a press conference and the issuance of a\nstatement by the Premier.\nAt the press conference Mr.\npattullo announced the zutn\nProvincial Legislature would be\nsummoned to meet Dec. 2 and in\nhis statement he disclosed that he\nintends to leave for Ottawa this\n\u25a0weekend to discuss with Federal\nauthorities the Province's surrender of the income tax field for\nthe duration of the war.\nHis hold on the Legislature\nweakened by the election of 14\nC.C.F., 12 Conservatives and one\nLabor member, compared with 21\nLiberals, Mr. Pattullo made only a\npassing reference to proposals that\na. Conservative-Liberal coalition or\na union of all three parties be\nformed.\nIn his statement he declared \"attempts are being made to do a\n'rush act' and precipitate some action by , myself in the way of a\nCoalition' Government.\"\nBut he failed to indicate his reaction to a proposal advanced yes\nterday by R. L. Maitland, K. C,\nConservative leader, that a Union\nGovernment of the three parties be\nformed. The proposal 'was turned\ndown yesterday by the C.C.F. on the\ngrounds that the C.C.F. differed too\nbasically from the old-line parties\nto cooperate;*, with them success\nfully.\nNeither did Mr. Pattullo indicate\nwhether he had offered or received\nany suggestions- for the establish\nment of a Liberal-Conservative co-\nalition. He declined to comment\nwhen asked at his. press conference\nwhether there would be any im\nmediate changes in his cabinet^M1\nview of the fact two of hisJjKmfc\nisters \u2014 Provincial Secretaarir G. M.\nWeir and Attorney-General G. S.\nWisraier \u2014 had been defeated at\nthe polls Tuesday.\nMr. Pattullo also said that any\nagreements which might be reached\nat Ottawa regarding the income tax\nfield would be subject to ratificb\ntion of the Legislature when it\nmeets.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP).\u2014\nHarold Winch, C.C.F. Provincial\nleader, said in a statement today\nthat Premier T. D. Pattullo's decision to leave for Ottawa this\nweekend without announcing his\nintentions regarding the future\nGovernment of British Columbia\n\"clearly indicate why the Liberal\nGovernment was refused a further\nmandate by the people of British\nColumbia.\"\n\"The electors repudiated both\nNational and Provincial Liberal\npolicies at the polls this week,\" Mr.\nWinch said. \"Democracy therefore\ndemands that definite^action should\nbe taken now to establish the Government that will take over the\nreins from the part administration.\n\"National and Provincial welfare\ndemand that the Provincial representations to be made at Ottawa in\nthe immediate future should be the\nconsolidated opinion of the citizens\nof British Columbia and not just\nthose of Mr. Pattullo.\"\nROOSEVELJ ENDORSES\nLACUARDIA THIRD TERM\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (AP) \u2014\nPresident Roosevelt endorsed the\ncandidacy of Mayor, Fiorello La-\nguardia, Republican and American\nLabor nominee, for a third term as\nmayor of New York today, declaring\nthat LaGuardia's administration had\nbeen the most honest and most efficient within his recollection.\nABERHART SEES B. C.\nVOTE AS   PROTEST\nEDMONTON, Oct. 24 (CP)\u2014Premier Aberhart in a prepared statement said today that gains which\nthe'Conservatives and C.C.F. made\nin the British Columbia election indicated a strong protest vote and asserted there was no clear policy before the people.\nTo Refloat Tug\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP)\u2014The\n200-foot Victoria tug Snohomish,\none of the largest seagoing towtooats\non the Pacific coast, whiqh struck\nSkipjack Island, 20 miles from Victoria in a thick fog and sank early\nThursday, is to be raised and repaired.\nReports reaching Vancouver today said that the Island tug and\nbarge vessel was not seriously damaged and is down in shallow water.\nAUTO  MEN  END  STRIKE\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (AP).\u2014\nSettlement of the United Automobile Workers (CIO) strike at the\nplant1 of Air Associates, Inc., at\nBendix, N. J., was announced tonight by Robert Patterson, Under-\nSecretary of War, and William S.\nKnudsen, Director of the Office\nof Production Management.\nBODY   IDENTIFIED\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP)\u2014The\nbody of a man found in three feet\nof water in.a ditch on nearby Lulu\nIsland, was identified today as thai\nof George F. Adams, 76, former\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police\nofficer, who came here from Edmonton just prior to Oct. 4, when\nhe   was  reported  missing.\nDEFENDERS OF TOBRUK RELAX BETWEEN RAIDS\nBesieged in Tobruk for many months, these boys look as if the experience is agreeing with them. They are Scottish anti-aircraft gunners, knocking off 40 winks between\nAxis raids. The cots on which they do their napping were captured from Italian posts.\nSay Petain Wants\nto Be Hostage to\nPrevent Reprisa\n.VICHY, Oct. 24 (AP) \u2014 The\nPetain Government announced\ntonight\u2014without confirmation or\ndenial\u2014that a rumor was circulating that Marshal Petain himself wished to become a hostage\nto cut'short the Germans' mass\nreprisal executions which have\ncost 100 French lives since Wed-\n. nesday at Nantes and Bordeaux.\nThis cryptic announcement was\nissued tonighi^^p^'the firjJiJSmiver-\n'0^f^Sr^S!\u00a7 rTnM'torre\u2122*t^TJfebTO^\ntion\" meeting between Petain and\nHitler:\n\"It is rumored in Vichy that Marshal Petain wished to give himself\nup as a hostage in the occupied zone\nto prevent additional executions\nplanned as a result of attacks at\nNantes and Bordeaux.\n\"The Marshal's Cabinet has no\ndeclaration'to make on the subject.\"\nThe 85-year-old Chief of State\nhas made repeated futile appeals to\nthe people to halt attacks on German soldiers rnd to denounce the\nattackers. . ^j^,\nProtests Loss of\nVote for Veterans\nVICTORIA, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014 A.\nJ. Cowan, Vancouver lawyer, protested to election authorities today\nthat soldiers of No. 11 Company,\nVeterans Guard of Canada had lost\ntheir vote on election day through\nbeing transferred outside the Province.\nCaptain W. R. Webster, special\nofficer in charge of service voting,\nsaid the men had been located in\nVancouver up to Oct. 14 when they\nwere shifted to an Alberta camp.\nSince active service voting took\nplace outside the Province Oct. 14,\n15 and 16, no provision could be\nmade for the men of No. 11 Company to cast their ballots.\nBank Head Dies\nPRESTON, Ont., Oct. 24 (CP) \u2014\nFrank Augustus Rolph, 73, Chairman of the Board of the Imperial\nBank of Canada and well known\nToronto business man, died here\ntonight.\nHe formerly was Chairman of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' Association and past President of the Canadian Lithographers' Association.\nHe was a member of the Canadian\nWar Mission at Washington in 1918.\nLate\nLONDON, Oct. 24 (CP) -An\nItalian armed merchant cruiser\nhas been torpedoed by a British\nsubmarine in the central Mediterranean and probably sunk, the\nAdmiralty announced today.\nTOKYO, Oct. 24 (AP)\u2014The newspaper Nichi Nichi said tonight that\nAdmiral Kichisaburo Nomura, Japanese Ambassador to Washington,\nwould return to Tokyo to confer\nwith the new Tojo cabinet. There\nwas no officvl confirmation.\nROME, Oct. 24 (AP)\u2014Japanese\nraids on Hawaii, California, the\nPanama Canal and Alaska were\nforecast today by the Italian magazine Oggi in case of a Japanese-\nUnited States war.\nNEW  YORK,   Oct.  24   (CP)   \u2014\nThe BBC tonight quoted Moscow's\nair defence commander as saying\nthat the Germans have lost 305\nplanes in the fighting near Moscow. 1C0 of them in the last few\ndays.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24 (CP) \u2014 The\nWartime Prices and Trade Board\nannounced tonight no further sales\nof \"budget coupons\" exchangeable\nfor listed goods on the instalment\nplan will be allowed.\nHERTZOC REPUDIATED\nJOHANNESBURG. Oct. 24 (CP\nReuters) .-^The Afrikander parly\ntoday repudiated the declaration\nof 1Sen. J. B. M. Hertzog, honorary leader of the party and former Prime Minister, who announced Thursday he was in favor of establishing National. Socialism in South Africa.\nThe party reaffirmed its adherence to democratic principles.\nMen KillecTin R.C.A.F.\nPlane Accident\nDEBERT, N.S., Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014\nThe Command of the Royal Air\nForce Navigation School here today\nissued the names of four men killed\nin a crash- of a twin-engined plane\nat ajireat VillagSja^fw miles from\nhej#, earlY^jffigterdav^y!,\n' \"Trie'men TaTfeof^weSe:-   -\nPo.   Charles   Beeching   OHanley,\nYarmouth, N. S.\nPo. Richard Aubrey Luard, Bur-\nford, Ont.\nSgt. Robert Frederick Kelly, Toronto.\nSgt.   Norman   Leonard,   Hornsey,\nEngland.\nDumping Complaints\nCome From Oriental's\nVICTORIA, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014 Most\ncomplaints about dumping of vegetables come from Orientals, J. A.\nGrant, former Provincial Commissioner testified today before the\nCommission .inquiring into the operation of the Marketing Act.\nHe said Orientals have no chance\nto dump as they are not mixed\nfarmers as the whites are. He also\nsaid that prior to the Act. dumping, in the sense that farmers have\nused lower grades for feeding of\ncattle, was very common.\nNow 70 per ,cent of potatoes\ngrown in the Coast marketing area\nare produced by whites. Before the\nBoard was established, 90 per cent\nwas grown by Orientals. Fifteen or\n16 Oriental producers supplied half\nthe sales for Vancouver and Victoria.\nBelgians and French.\nExecuted by Nazis\nBERLIN, Oct. 24 (AP).\u2014Newspapers of German-Occupied Paris\nBrussels announced today the execution of six men on charges of\nviolation of occupation decrees.\nThe Parissr Zeitung reported the\nexecution of three Frenchmen \u2014\nHenry Tirole, Georg-e Bourotte and\nJules Steinmetz\u2014for possession of\nforbidden weapons.\nThe Brusseler Zeitung said three\nBelgians \u2014 Camille Mogenet, Jean\nDerave and Albert Dehavay\u2014had\nbeen shot on charges of espionage.\nFISH SECRETARY HELD S\nON  PERJURY CHARGE\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (AP)\u2014A\nFederal Grand Jury today indicted\nGeorge Hill, a secretary to Representative Hamilton Fish (Rep-New\nYork), on two charges of perjury\nbefore the Grand Jury while it was\ninvestigating the activities of foreign agents in this country.\nHONORED AIRMAN LOST\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014 Sgt.\nJames Douglas Woodburn, 26, of\nnearby Glen Ogilvie, who was\nawarded the Distinguished Flying\nMedal in September for conspicuous\nbravery, is reported missing, \"and\nbelieved killed in action,\" according\nto an Air Ministry cable received\nby his parents today.\nBABY BOY LEFT ON STEP\n' VANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP).-A.\nday-old baby boy today cuddled\ninto the soft flannelette blankets of\nhis crib in the Haro Street Infants'\nHospital here, unaware he had been\nabandoned on the hospital's steps\nin last night's dense fog wrapped\nin nothing more than an old piece\nof pyjama leg.\nCOAST FLIER  MISSING\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014\nFo. Garson C. Proby, 27-year-old\nVancouver flier, was reported missing in flying operations overseas\nin a cable received today by his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank H.\nProby.\nPlane Intending\nto Visit Nelson\nLands in Idah\nCOEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, Oft. 24\n(AP).\u2014A twin-engined Royal Canadian Air Force seaplane astonished two North Idaho towns and\nits own crew today by winging in\nfor landing on Lake Pend Oreille\nand Coeur d'Alene Lake.\nPilot Officer J. L. Francine, stepping from the plane at Sandpoint\nafter the>^stftaffiilng, said the ship\n\"got oh the wrong leg of the beam\"\nlfj\u00a3u}& from Calgary. Crew mem-\nbffiS^said trrey^EflSfught '-mey were\nlanding at Nelson, B. C.\nThe ship hopped to Coeur d'Alene\nLake to- take on fuel and the officer said-he would resume the journey tomorrow. The crews reported\nit was bound for Vancouver, B. C,\nfrom Halifax, Nova Scotia.\nFrancine said he and one other\nmember of the crew of six, Aircraftman E. A. Kershaw, were from the\nUnited States. Others in the crew\nwere Navigator J. G. Kee, Sgt.\nR. Mangus, Corp. E. Kaine and Aircraftman J. D. Duncan.\nCure, Not Punishment\nfor Young Criminals\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP) \u2014\nCity Police Magistrates and officials\nof the John Howard Society of\nBritish Columbia, have launched a\nplan under which they will attempt\nto cure, rather than punish young\n\u2022criminal  offenders.\nUnder the scheme, youthful offenders and others placed on probation or given postponed sentences\nby the Magistrates will be given\ninto the care of the John Howard\nSociety and trained workers of the\nSociety will generally supervise the\nyoungsters, paying them regular\nvisits and reporting to the Magistrates.\nPARACHUTIST JUMPS\n30,000 FT., MAKES RECORD\nCHICAGO, Oct. 24 (AP)\u2014Arthur\nStarnes, a 36-year-old parachutist,\njumped from an airplane at an altitude of approximately \u2022 30,000 feet\ntoday, opened a pair of chutes at\nabout 1500 feet and landed safely to\nclaim the record for the longest free\nfall ever made in the-United States.\nWith a jumping weight of 275\npounds, including his scientific\nequipment, Starnes was estimated to\nhave fallen at speeds rising to 180\nmiles an hour. He remained conscious throughout the plunge and\nupon reaching ground he grinned\nand said he felt fine.\nAMERICAN LINERS\nTO MISS SHANGHAI\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 24 (AP).\u2014The\nUnited States President Lines today quit accepting bookings for\npassengers sailing from Shanghai.\nNo further American liners are to\nCall here for an indefinite period.\nJ.   H.  WARD,  CRANBROOK,\nAWARDED   HIS WINGS\nMACLEOD, Alta., Oct. 24 (CP)\u2014\nGrouD Captain D. A. Grei of No. 3\nService Flying Training School,\nCalgary, presented wings this afternoon to a class of pilqts who graduated from No. 7- Service Flying\nTraining School, operated here\nunder the Empir6 Air Training\nScheme.\nIncluded in the graduates was Lac.\nJ. H. Ward of Cranbrook.\nDIES AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP). \u2014\nFuneral services will be held here\ntomorrow for Reginald W. Purves,\n63, Manager and Founder of the\nVancouver Map and Blueprint\nCompany, who died suddenly yesterday.\nSENTENCED TO HANG\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Oct. 24\n(CP). - Frank Patrick, 40, late\ntoday was convicted of the murder\nof Mrs. Grace Millikin, 38, and sentenced to be hanged Jan. 16 at\nPrince  Albert  jail.\nierce\nMoscow Repulsed;\nAdmit South Crisis\nNazis Claim Army Closing in oh Moscow and\nPushing Into Rich Donets Basin; Reds\nCall on New Fighting Forces\nMOSCOW, Oct. 25 (Saturday) (AP).\u2014German forces\nstabbing across the Donets Basin encountered stubbornly resisting Red Army defenders Friday in the vicinity of Makeevka,\n10 miles East of the iron-producing centre of Stalino and about\n70 miles Northwest of Rostov, gateway to the Caucasus, the\nSoviet Information Bureau announced today.\nThe communique, broadcast by Tass News Agency over\nthe Moscow radio, said another German force farther South\nwas heavily engaged in the direction of Taganrog, a port on the\nSea of Azov some 40 miles to*\nthe West of Rostov.\nThe announcement indicat\ned the fighting had progressed\nbeyond Stalino, the loss of\nwhich the Russians have not\nannounced, although it has\nbeen claimed by the Germans.\nOn the Moscow front, the Russians said fierce German attacks\nhad been repulsed near Mozhaisk\nand Maloyaroslavets, 57 miles and\n65 miles West and Southwest of the\ncapital. Here the Nazis were declared to have lost heavily in men\nand machines.\nIn German air attacks on Moscow\nitself 17 of the raiders were declared\ndown near the city.\nA later announcement raised\n.this figure to 20. It said most of\nthe German planes were dispersed\nby anti-aircraft fire before reaching the city, but acknowledged\nthat \"a small number of bombs\nwere dropped at random on\ndwellings\" and that there were\ncasualties.\nsnip,, acknowledging hard going ;at\nthe Red centre and crisis on the\nSouthern flank, began assembling\nvast new armies among Russia's\nmillions'who have yet to fire a shot\nin this war, and thus challenged the\ninvaders to a total struggle of annihilation. \u25a0 \u25a0\n\"We shall see how long they can\nlast. We can last for years!\"\nThis was the grand tactic prepared in Kuibyshev and in Moscow\u2014^two shadows of the same\nauthority of Joseph Stalin as they\nwere described by officials. Stalin\nhimself remains in Moscow, to\ndirect the battle for the life of\nthe Soviet Union.\nSomewhere back of the swaying\nlines before Moscow and before\nRostov in the far Southern Ukraine,\nthe Red marshals, Semeon Budenny\nand Klementi Voroshilov, set out to\nforni the great, fresh fighting forces.\nFor the first time, Russian accounts, spoke of Finnish and Rumanian, troops as fightihg alongside\nthe Germans in the Moscow theatre;\nthe two apparently were serving as\nreinforcements to fill the widening\ngaps in the Nazi lines.\nIn the Ukraine the Germans were\nacknowledged to have smashed\nthrough at one point toward Rostov,\nwhich lies orr trie Don River at the\nentrance to the Caucasus, but subsequent Nazi charges into new Russian positions were reported to have\nbroken under heavy fire, the Germans being forced to the defensive.\nThe Soviet position generally\nin this great struggle for the Donets River basin was summed up\nby the Communist newspaper,\nPravda, as ''alarming in all sectors\". Fighting was reported especially violent about the cities\nof Stalino (which the Germans\nclaimed some time ago) and\nnearby Makeevka.\nContinued heavy fighting about\n100 miles South of Leningrad, where\nthe Rusians were holding a line\nEast' of the Volkhov River, also\nwas reported. Pravda asserted that\nnew German thrusts had been\nsmashed with at least 2500 Nazi\ncasualties and that two villages \u25a0&!\u00a3&\u25a0\nbeen regained in Russian counterattacks.\ning buildings to open firing fields\nand to destroy cover which might\nserve the advancing Germans, said\nD.N.B., Nazi news and propaganda\nagency.\nPolish Fliers in I\nRAF Down Seven\nin Daylight Sweep\nLONDON, Oct. 24 (CP) \u2014 The\nRoyal Air Force tonight followed\nup a daylight sweep in which it\nbagged seven German planes by\nstarting huge fires on the French\nshore at Cap Gris Nez where German long-range guns are located.\nFlames from the fires shot 100\nfeet   into   the   air.   The   British\n; bombers drew one of the heaviest\nNazi  anti-aircraft  barrages  ever\nseen from the Folkestone area.\nIn the- i-afterfteoft--' sweep over\nNorthern France, the seven German\nplanes were shot down by seven\nPolish pilots, the Air Ministry said.\nNo R.A.F. planes were lost in this\nengagement, although one craft on\npaf\/oi was shot down.\n\"One after another, at the rate of\none a minute, the German fighters\nwent down in flames or shot to\npieces,\" the Air Ministry said. \"Not\na Pole followed them.\"\nA grinning young Pole told reporters: We beat them so thorougn-\nly because our machines are better\nthan theirs. They dived on us but\nthat saved us trouble going to look\nfor them.\"\nTonight there were German raiders over areas in Southwest England. Some persons were trapped\nin the wreckage of their bombed\nhomes. Other raiders were over East\nAnglia, South Wales and the Mer-\nseyside.\nLONDON, Oct. 25 (Saturday)\n(AP)\u2014An authoritative source\nreported \u201e today ithe Royal Air\nForce attacked objectives in\nWestern Germany overnight.\n\"A ring is rising around Moscow,\na colossal ring of fortifications,\"\nhe Moscow Radio said Friday night\nin a broadcast heard in New York\nby CBS.\nTens of thousands of Muscovites\nhave jointed a vast civilian army\nand are doing the job, the an-\nnouner said.\nBERLIN, Oct. 24 (AP>\u2014German\nwar dispatches claimed tcviight\nthat Nazi troops are closing in on\nMoscow across a maze of snow-\ncovered land mines and village\nstreet baricades, and driving into\nthe rich industrial Donets basin\nin the South.\nMilitary sources who yesterday\nclaimed their troops were within\n37 miles of Moscow on the South\nand Southwest contended that a\ndecisive hour for the Soviet capital\nis near, and argued the shakeup in\nthe Red Command was \" a declaration   of  military  bankruptcy.\"\nGerman reporter, however, told\nhow the Russians were ''throwing\nconstantly fresh troops\" into the\nbattle for Moscow.\nThe High Command had little to\nsay about the entire front.\nThe Russians were reported blast-\nProsperous Tourist\nSeason Despite War\nSMITH FALLS, Ont., Oct. 24 \u2014\n(CP).\u2014Despite wartime handicaps,\nCanada enjoyed one of its most\nprosperous tourist seasons during\nthe Summer, D. Leo Di'lan, Director of the Canadian Travel Bureau,\nsaid in a speech at the annual\nmeeting of the Smith Falls Chamber of Commerce tonight.\nTravel prospects for 1942 are uncertain, he said, due to the intensification of war activity in the United States. They present a challenge\nto travel agencies which may be\nmet by stressing the idea that rest\nand change are necessary to efficient work.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON        36       55\nVictoria .\u201e .._    45       62\nNanaimo  .    40       61\nVancouver       40       62\nKamloops       40       49\nPrince George      32       62\nEstevan Point  :    45       59\nPrince Rupert ...j'^-i.\",    48      50\nLangara     47       52\nAtlin   \u201e    25       40\nDawson          18       24\nSeattle         44       66\nPortland    - \u2022 43       69\nSan Francisco      48       61\nSpokane   ...zX&tfcfsSx*.    39       \u2014\nPenticton         42       52\nVernon  ..   36       \u2014\nKelowna     .    40       \u2014\nGrand  Forks      32       \u2014\nKaslo    _-. \u201e_   34       \u2014\nCranbrook    \u201e    28       56\nCalgary        33       68\nEdmonton  :...   29       59\nSwift Current  _    32       65\nPrince Albert     35       49\nWinnipeg        34       42\nRegina       29       59\nForecast for Kootenay \u2014 A few\nlocal frosts tonight especially in the\nEast Kootenay. Tomorrow light\nSoutheasterly winds, fair and mild\nexception  in  local \u25a0 morning  fogs..\nLevel of the West Arm at Nelson\nFriday was 7.66 feet above the low\nwater mark, unchanged from Thursday's level\/\n1\n1\n - ; 7\u20147-\u2014%r^r\u2014\\T3^~^~\u2014^T-\nPAGE   TWO\nCHURCHES\ni'VJ.<i\u00ab<iifk.A^kA ****** sW>\n6>t Paul*0\nHttttrt (Mjurrf>\nStanley and Silica\nRev. F. Hilliard, M.A., B.D.\nSUNDAY SERVICES\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday, School. Please\nbe prompt.\nlliOO a.m.\u2014\"Be Ready to Give &\nReason\". The Girls' Choir.\n7:80   p.m. \u2014 Illustrated   lecture,\n\"Serving With the  Sons  of\nghuh\". Senior Choir.\nTues., 3 p.m.\u2014W.M.9. Autumn\nThank Offerings meeting in\nTrinity.\nWed., 8 p.m,\u2014Y, P. S. exee. in ;\ncharge.\nFri\u201e 8 p.m.\u2014Bible Course.\nCOMING: Anniversary Sunday,\nNov. 2, Rev. Callum Thompson of Cranbrook. Anniversary Dinner, Nov. 3. Hear\nRev. Thompson sing.\n3fftart\n\\   ffrwfojfcrtatt\nCWjurrlj\nVictoria and Kootenay  Sts.\n11 a.m'. \u2014 Sermon, \"When Jesus\nStayed With Zaecheaus\".\n7:80 p.m.\u2014\"A God in the Making\"\nEverybody Welcome.\nA. Stewart, Minister. Ph. 5*8R1.\n708 Baker Street\nRev. and Mrs. C. A. C. Story\nEvangelist   and   Mrs.   Joseph\nWilderman \u00abof  Vancouver   Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7:30. p.m., also\n1 Thursday and Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Pecota, Su-\neprintendent of Pentecostal work\namong  the  Russians in  United\nStates, will preach Tuesday and\n, Wednesday.\nEverybody welcome.\nSrinftg llniteft\nJosephine and Silica\nRev. Gordon G. Boothroyd.\nB.A., M.D., Minister\nC. C. Halleran, L.M.\nChoirmaster and Organist.\nMusic by Senior Choir\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m,\u2014Evening Worship, Ser\nmen   Subject:   \"Temnaranee\nand the War Effort.,f '\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Young People's Meet\ning.\nTuesday, Oct. 28, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Re\ncital by Luther King.\n3fmt QM|ur4 nf\n209   BAKER  STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday  Service   H  a.m.\nSubject   Lesson-Sermon\nPROBATION  AFTER   DEATH\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM   Cordially  Welcome\n2&\nU\nWtJfaifti'a\nttanley and Silica\n!. Hopka, Pastor.\n&):1B a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00    a.m.\u2014^Christ,    the    Solid\nRock.\n7i80  p.m.\u2014Without  Money  and\nPrice.\nRossland Students\nWin Poster Priies\n* ROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014Two\nart class, students at the Rossland\nJunior-Senior High School have received prizes for designing posters\n&n the Province-wide competition\n|ponsored by the B.C. Tuberculosis\nSociety. The winners were Enid\nJMarsters and Jimmy Waldie, both\nof whom received $5 awards.\nI Jimmy Waldie has now won three\nposter competition awards, having\nwon first prize ih the poster adver-\nBaker and Hendryx Streets\nC. Cecil Osterberg, Pastor.\nSun., 10:00 ,a.m.-HSunday School.\n11:00   ajn,\u2014Morning   Worship.\n7:30  p.m.\u2014-Evening  Service.\nTuesday,   7:30   p.m. \u2014Young\nPeople's Meeting.\nWe Welcome You\n3fftr\u00abl IfapttBt GUpirrif\nRev. H. R- Stovell, B.A., B.D.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Church School,\n11:00 a.m.\u2014An Evil We Must\nFace.\n8:00   p.m.\u2014Shirley   Hall.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Some Marks of a\nChristian.\ntizing contest for the recent Victory\nConcert, and also first prize when\nhe submitted beautification plans\nfor tfhe High School grounds in a\ncompetition sponsored by the School\nBoard.\nHerridge Reception\nat Rossland Tonight\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 24 \u2014\nPlans have been completed for a\npublic reception to be held in Odd-\nFellows Hall Saturday evening in\nhonor of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Herridge, the member-elect for the\nRossland-Trail riding, and his wife.\nHad Another Bad Night?\nCouldn't You Get Any Rest?\nTo those who toss, night after night, on sleepless\nl beds. . To those who sleep in a kind of a way, but\nwhose rest is broken by bad dreams and nightmare.\nTo those who, wake up in the morning as tired as when\n'they went to bed, we offer in Milburn's Health and\n. Nerve Pills a tonic remedy to help soothe and strengthen the nerves.\nWhen this is done there should be no more restless nights due to bad\n1 (beams and nightmares.\nPrice 50c a box, 65 pills, ait all drug counters, .\nLook for our registered trade mark a \"Red Heart\" oa the package.\nIi ^\u25a0*;\\*\nThe T. Milbura Oo^ Limited, Toronto, Oat'\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel\u2014Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL,  Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS\nEXCELLENT DINING ROOM\na^^*t0*M0k\/6lp*^a*\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME \u2014 W.   R.   McDougall,   H.\nCharlesworth, J. G. Rutherford, R.\nL.  Smith,  F.  W.  Dimmick, W.  C.\nGarbutt, Frank McDonald, S. P.\niMdlveen,   Vancouver;   K.   Harris,\nD. Mead, D. Williams, Ethel Moody,\nMrs. R. H. Lowe, G. A. Begg, J.\n' Murphy,  Miss K. Matheson,  A.  E.\nAllison,    Miss   Florence   Rutledge,\nMrs. T. J. Morrish, Miss C. P. Murray, Trail; G. M. Thom, N. E. McCallum, Penticton; Miss L. Barton,\nMrs. R. Smales, Miss E. Vance, Walter Scott, Cranbrook; John C. Lawrence, Kaslo; Mrs. A. L. MacMillan,\nGrand Forks; R. G. Hughes, Castlegar; Mr. and Mrs. L.Koch, Kitchener; Mr. and Mrs. H. Barnet, Miss\nGwendolyn Rogers, Pendleton, Ore.\nHEW GRAND HOTEL\nPHONE      MR, AND MR8. PETER  KAPAK, Props.      PHONE\ny 2 A     &1 our new wing you may enjoy the finest     7 3 A\n^3\u2122        rooms in the Interior\u2014Bath or Shower-       ^3^\nSPECIAL. RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"\nill\n=\u00abr\n900 Seymour St.        Vancouver, B. C.\nNewly renovated through\nout.   Phones  and  elevator,\nA. PATTERSON,  late of\nColeman, Alta., Proprietor.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON,  B. C\u2014SATURDAY   MORNING,  OCTOBER 25. 1941\nMcGerrlgle New President of Trail\nCurling Club; Consider Formation\nSubsidiary Club for Morning Play\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 24\u2014Robert\nMcGerrigle was elected President\nof the Trail\u00abCurling Club at the annual meeting held in the City Hall\nFriday night. Other officers elected\nwere John Campbell, First Vice-\nPresident; David Balfour, Second\nVice-President; Robert Dockenll,\nSecretary-Treasurer and Rev. J. L.\nClerihue, Honorary Chaplain.\nWilliam McLeary, retiring President, was elected Honorary President, and S. G. Blaylock, was elect-\neft patron.\nA. E. Allison and E. Jones were\nelected to three-year terms on the\nexecutive, and A. W. McDonald and\nE, Rice were elected to replace Mr.\nCampbell and David Balfour on\nthe executive for two-year and one-\nyear terms respectively. The other\ntwo executive members are A.\nCreighton and Frank Strachan.\nDonald MacDonald and Waiter\nBrown were elected delegates to\nthe B. C. Curling Association, with\nMr. Campbell and Mr. McLeary as\nalternates.\nA. M. Chesser was elected to the\ncalssification  committee.\nBefore the business of thei meeting proceeded, one minute's silence,\nin respect to Dr. J. B. Thom and\nArthur Harrod, two late members,\nwas observed.\nThe main discussion centred\naround the formation of a secondary shift club, open to Smelter\nworkers on graveyard and afternoon shifts with play to take place\nduring the morning only. The executive was empowered to appoint a\ncommittee and set fees, to investigate the possibility of organizing\nthe  subsidiary branch.\nP. F. Mclntyre, as representative\nfrom the Trail Rink Company,\nbrought forward the suggestion\nfrom the Rink, Company, as a solsi-\nticn to the need for more funds to\ncarry on rink activities this season.\nIf the Curling Club, which had\nalways contracted for 100 per cent\nof the rink time, was unable to\nform a morning club, a new agreement regarding the time arrangement would have to be drawn up,\nhe stated.\nFees, as last year, will be $15 5or\nthe men and $3 for the ladies, an i\narrangements for lockers and free\nrocks will also continue as formerly.\nA pre-season bonspiel was also\nproposed and left in the hands of\nthe executive.\nCARRY  ON  WITH  JUNIORS\nA vote of thanks was extended\nto A. E. Allison for his work with\nthe .junior curlers last season, and\nha will be asked to carry on the\nsame supervision this season. Saturday morning will be again reserved for the junior club.\n. A letter was received from H. C.\nCaldicott regretting his inability to\njoin this year, owing to ill health,\nand three- new members, M. Fleg-\nel, Thomas Brown, Charles Strachan were 'accepted, the executive\nbeing empowered to deal with all\nother applications.\nE. Montpellioer announced that\nhe was obtaining moving pictures\nof the 1940-41 MacDonald-Brier\nplaydowhs, and arrangements will\nbe made for a club showing.\n\u25a0 -Committees appointed by the executive were as follows: E. Jones, E.\nRice, A. Crighton, competition committee; Frank Strachan, A. W. McDonald, E. Jones, ice committee;\nA. W. McDonald, J. Campbell, entertainment committee.\nThe executive decided to -interview men on shift work regarding\nthe secondary shift club, and will\narrange a meeting of those interested Jn the near future.\nDelegates of 13\nCentres Invited\nRecruiting Meet\nTRAIL, BjC. Oct. 24\u2014The roll of\ndelegates invited from the Kootenay District to attend the recruiting\nconference to be held in Victoria\non Nov, 8, issued by Lt. Col, Daivid\nPhilpot, follows:\nTrail \u2014 Dr. M. W. Lees, W. A.\nCurran, Editor Trail Times; G. F.\nReimann, Presiden Canadian Legion and Chairman Civilian Recrut-\ning Committee; E. W. Campbell,\nAssistant Supervisor C. M. & S.\nCompany Industrial Relations Department.\nNelson M Mayor N. C SUbbs;\nH. E. Thain, Secretary Canadian\nLegion and Chairman Civilian Recruiting Committee; F. F. Payne,\nPublisher Nelson Daily News.\nRossland \u2014 Mayor J. E. Gordon;\nE. M. Daly, Editor Rossland Miner.\nNakusp \u2014 W. G. M. Hakeman*\nChairman Civilian Recruiting Committee.\nNew Denver \u2014 C. Clifford, Chairman Civilian Recruiting Committee.\nEdgewood \u2014 J. H. Naylor, Chairman Civilian Recruiting Committee,\nKaslo \u2014 F. McGlbbon, President\nCanadian Legion; William Dunn,\n(Editor Kaslo  Kootenian.\nCreston \u2014 Lt. C\u00b0l. E. Mallandaine,\nChairman Civilian Recruiting Committee and President Canadian Le-,\ngion; R. Joyce past-President of\nCreston Board of Trade, C. F, Hayes,\nCreston Review.\nCranbrook \u2014 Mayor A. J. Bal-\nment, President Civilian Recruiting\nCommittee; Rev. F. V. Harrison,\nHon. Capt. Chaplain 24th (K) Field.\nBrigade; D. M. Miller, Past President Canadian Legion.\nKimberley \u2014 Lt. C. D. Backstrom,\nChairman Ciyilan Recruiting Committee; A. P. Lye, President Canadian Legion; Rev. S. T. Galbralth;\nUnited Church.\n\u2022Invermere \u2014 Major T. C. Bell,\nO.B.E., Chairman Civilian Recruit--\ning Committee.\nFernie \u2014 G. E. Elkington, General Manager East Kootenay Power\n& Light Company and President\nRotary Club; Thomas Uphill, M.L.A.\nelect and member Civilian Recruiting Committee; B. Drew, President.\nLegion, and J. A. Wallace, Editor,\nFernie Free Press.\nCranbrook \u2014 Lt. Col. D. Philpot,\nD.S.O., O.B.E., and recruiting staff,\ncomprising Sgt. E.C.S. Freeman, of\nCranbrook and Sgt H. P. Kingwell\nof Trail.\nKASLO\nKASLO, B.C.-Mrs. C. J. White\nhas returned from a visit to her\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Floyd Garrett of Wells, B.C.\nMr. White met his wife in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Billings, their\ndaughter, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess, her\nson Jimmle and Mrs. E. A. Hendricks formed a party visiting Nelson.\n.Miss Lorna Speirs has returned\nfrom a visit to relatives in Trail,\nMrs. C. E. Wilson has returned\nfrom a visit to Slocan City. She\nwas accompanied home by Mr. and\nMrs. Walter clough, who have now\nreturned to their Slocan City home.\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerich has returned from Kimberley, where she\nvisited her brother asd sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Giegerich.\nJ. MaoNleol of Johnsons Landing\nwas a visitor to town.\nMr. and Mrs. M. G. Randell of\nKimberley and Mr. and Mrs. E. G.\nRandell of Trail are spending a\nshort holiday in town.\nMrs. J. E. Papworth has returned\nfrom Nelson where she was a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. J, R. McLennan.\nH. S. Whellams has returned to\nSheep Creek after visiting his old\nhome here,\nH. A- Newcomen has returned to\nMarblehead after visiting Mrs.\nNewcomen, who is a patient in Victorian Hospital.\nMrs. O. Stenberg of Johnson's\nLanding was a city visitor.\nMrs, J. McHardy was a visitor to\nNelson.\nHope George of New Denv\u00abr visited Kaslo Tuesday.\nH. Beck has returned from a visit\nto Coast points,\nJ. MacGillivray has returned from\na visit to Calgary.\nArchie Greenlaw of Lardeau was\na recent city visitor,\nMrs. George Abey of Nelson spent\nTuesday at Mirror Lake with her\nsister, Miss Olive Link.\nSTOCKHOLM (OP) \u2014 Several\nGerman warplanes flying over neutral f weden have been driven off\nby Swedish anti-aircraft defences,\nHouse A Winners to\nBe Entertained by\nLosers,, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, Oct. 24 \u2014 House\nA, the winner of the Cranbrook\nHigh School Inter-House Track\nMeet, will be entertained by the\nlosing Houses B and C at a bonfire\nand social Monday night. House A\ngot 52 points, one more than House\nB and four more than House C.\n8 R.A.F. Men\nWelcomed Here\nEight Royal Air Force men from\nthe 34th Service Flying Training\nSchool at Medicine Hat were welcomed to Nelson for a 5%-day stay\nFriday morning. A ninth member,\nAc. J. Bloor, wUT join the group\nthis morning.\nFriday night the Old Country men\nwere guests at the West Kootenay-\nBoundary Teachers'. Convent!^\nbanquet and dance; while Monday\nevening they will be entertained by\nSt. Saviour's Young People at a\nHallowe'en party.\n. The visitors are Fit. Lt. Knite- of\nthe Medical Corps, who wiil be the\ngueat of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hoover;\nAc. I. A. McBinnie of Scotland, who\nwill be the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nReginald H. Dill; Lac. E. J. Askey\nof Liverpool and Lac. W. N.'Formby\nof Berkinhead, who will be the\nguest of Mr. ahd Mrs. A. Clyde\nEmory; Acl. R. Latnond of York\nand Acl. C. A. Richardson, who\nwill be the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. C. Hughes; Acl. P. Nlcholl of\nAberdeen and Aol, <R. D. Walker of\nGlasgow, who will be the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Cunllffe.\nAc. Bloor will be the guest of Mr-\nand Fred Fred Nicholls.\nCanvassers Downtown\nTrail for War Saving\nDrive Are Announced\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 24 \u2014 Can-\nViSSJrs in the Trail downtown district for the War Savings and Patriotic Campaign are Thomas Laurie, J H. Curtis, B. S. Thurber, J.\nW Brown, J. A. Nash, James At-\nwell, J. D. Hartley, W. E, 'Jackson,\nD. W Forteath, F, R. Scott, George\nWoods, Luigi Tognotti T, E. Duffy,\nG. E. Clvldin, >-Pete Lauriente, A.\nB. Thompson and Fred  Edmunds.\nTrail Motorist\nCollides With\nPolice Patrol\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 24\u2014A colll-\nslo nbetween the Trail City Police\ncar, driven by Constable Rowland\nHill, and a car driven by Fred Pearson of Trail,, which occurred in\nfront of the Kootenay Hotel, on\nRossland Avenue,' about 1:20 Friday morning, resulted in Pearson\nappearing before Magistrate Parker\nWilliams Friday morning, on a\ncharge of reckless driving.\nThe case was adjourned until\nMonday  morning.\nPolice Sgt. Joseph McLillan, who\nwas called to the scene of the accident, and. who arrested the accused at that time, Is prosecuting.\nEvidence given by Constable Hill\nin court Friday, was to the etffect\nthat Pearson swung wide coming\naround the corner on to Rossland\nAvenue from Weir,Street, and was\non the wrong side , of the road at\nthe time of the crash. After colliding with the police car, Pearson's\ncar veered across the street and\ncrashed into lamp standard, tearing\nthe fender off from one side.\nDamage to the police car was\nabout $75, arid to Pearson's car, an\nestimated $300.\nPearson has been released on his\nown recognizance.\nMayor to Head\nCranbrook War\nSavings Drive\nCRANBROOK,   B.C.,  Oct.   24 \u2014\nMembers of the Cranbrook Branch,\nWar Savings Association of British\nColumbia, met in the City Hall\nFriday evening to reorganize and\nmake campaign plans.\nT. M. Roberto, Chairmian, remarked on the splendid cooperation given by the people of Cranbrook during the last campaign. He\nthen declared the meeting open for\nnominations  for   officers.\nMayor Balment was elected\nChairman, W. Taylor was again\nelected Secretary, and Alan Graham was elected Vice-Chairman.\nWalter Mansfield retained the position of Chairman of the Advertising and E. W. Sjodin was elected\nSales Chairman. Bert Sang was\nelected Vice-Chainman for the outside district. Each Chairman will\nelect his own committee. Bob Laurie was elected Chairman of a\nspecial committee.\nCranbrook and district objective per\nmonth has' been set at $5000 which\nis the price of a universal earner.\n\u2022The campaign will extend over the\nperiod of four weeks.\nLONDON OOP)\u2014The crew of a\nBritis\"h ship disabled by a German\nair bomber, painted barrels red,\nwhite and 'blue, marked them SOS\nwith their ship's location and tossed\nthem overboard. The barrels eventually brought them rescue.\nProtected by three mountain ranges, Southern Crimea has virtually\nno Winter.\nPray Not for Success but for Chance\nto Go Out After Success Dr. Smith's\nAdvice, Teachers Convention Dinner\nFINK'S FALL SPECIALS\nHATS\nNew felts in off the face\nstyles. Pork pies, and turbans.\nFelts or velvets.\n$2.75 \u00bbo $4.95\nDRESSES\nSilk    crepes    and-    woolens,\nsizes 14 to 44. A grand selection of new styles and shades.\n\u00abpO\u00bbjJ\nFeather Flannel\nDRESSES\nIn two piece and tailored\nstyles. Sizes 12 to 20. Special\nly prices at\n$0.95 and $8.95,\nHandbags\nNew shapes and &\"i Op?\nall colors    <Dl**ftJ\nSkirts\nComplete stock of skirts.\nMany shades including black,\nbrown and grey. d\u00bbQ rtff\nPrice       OUt^U\nWool flannels in checks' and\nplain  colors.  Sizes  12 to  20.\n$4.95   and   $5.95\nPyjamas\nNew styles of floral patterns\nIn   flannelel\nUp from   ..\nIn   flannelette. (PI   QC\nCoats\nTweeds,   boucles,   untrimmed\nand chamois lined. 12 to 46.\n$17.50 and $19.50\nMany other coats to choose\nfrom,, at\n$21.50 to $49.50\nFlannelette Gowns\nWhite with fancy trim. Short\nSSr 1 95c\nLong sleeves.\nPrice   ... \t\n$1.49\nDresses\nNovelty crepes in black,\nbrown and new Fall shade*.\n12 to 20 and 38 to 44.\n$7.95 .\u00bb* $9.95\nSpecials in Children's Wear\n$1.59\nEsmond cloth bath robes. With <M AC\nsilk cord ties. Sizes 2 to 6 ... \u2022<J)l.*'v\nFlannelette pyjamas in \"butcher boy\"\nstyles-. White, pink and maize. fl*1 OQ\nSizes 8 to 14. tPl.Jl\/\nBaby shoes with soft soles, Patent leather\nin white, black, pink and blue. 7Q\/\u00bb\nSjzes 0 to 3  Ivt\nCotton corduroy overalls. Teal, scarlet,\nbrown, green and rust. fl*1   A A\nSizes 1 to 6 \u00abP1\u00abTV\nCotton sweaters with crew necks and\nzipper styles. Multi color AC- <M 1A\nstripes  *JuL q)J..lcJ\nAir Force dresses in soft doeskin. Sizes 3 to 6\t\nPure wool half sox. White, scarlet, sky,\nsand, brown, navy, green and QQa\nstripes. Sizes 4 to 8Vi OVQ\nFelt hats In many styles. Navy, scarlet,\nrust, wine and brown. ^O *)J*\nSizes 19 to 22 $L.LO\nGirls' coats In shades and styles to suit all\ntastes. Sizes 2 to 14x. (\u00a3\/? \"71?\nPriced up from \u00abPUf I D\nSweaters for boys and girls. Brushed\nwool cardigans in scarlet and Royal. Sizes\n4 to 14. fl|1 AC\nPriced at $1.2J\nFINK'S LADIES' WEAR\nA tribute to Canadians for their\npart in the Empire's war effort, and\nthe advice to pray not for success\nbut for a chance to go out after\nsuccess, highlighted addresses at a\nbanquet tendered Friday night at\nthe Canadian Legion Hall to teach-\ners attending their annual West\nK o o t e n a y-JBoundary convention.\nThe tribute and advice were delivered by Dr. W. Wayne Smith,\nAssociate Professor of Education\nat the University of Idaho, Moscow.\nMore than 260 teachers and guests\nwere seated. A dance followed.\nDerek Tye, toastmasfer, welcomed visiting Royal Air Force and\nRoyal Canadian Air Force members,\nwho were guests, and stated Gerald\nLee of the High School had only recently enlisted in the R.C.A.F.\n\u25a0 Dr. Smith, replying to the toast\nto visiting speakers, proposed by\nEldred Evans, President of the Nelson Teachers Association, expressed\nappreciation of the proverbial \"gracious hospitality\" of the Britisher\nas exemplftied in the convention,\nand paid tribute to the damaraderie\nand solid Interest of teachers in attendance.\nHAT'S OFF TO SERVICEMEN\nRemarking that \"You didn't ask\nfor this war,\" he declared \"My hat's\noff to the men in service and I\nthink they are doing a grand job.\"\nWhile the United States had not\ngone to war \"it has gone to everything else but. war\" and was now\nbuilding up its army. \"You know\nwhat an army is for,   he added.\n\"I think' if 1 were you I would\nnot pray for success; I'd pray for\n.the chance to go out after it,\" he\nconcluded.\n\"Let's be discontented until such\ntime as we have, together, develop*\ned our schools to such a degree\nthat they are second to none, not\nonly in the Province but in the Dominion, Together, let's try It,\" urged R. B. Morris, Chairman of the\nNelson School Board, replying to\nthe toast to School Trustees pro-\nnosed by Miss Alma Smillie of\nNelson. Miss Smillie described Kootenay trustees as \"true friends\" of\nteachers.\nTO ENLISTED TEACHERS\nAn unanswered toast was that to\nteachers on active service, proposed\nby W. H. Gray of Nelson, a veteran\nof the last war. He appealed to\nteachers   remaining   at   home   \"to\ncarry on the arts of peace; to do\neverything in our power to make\nthe efforts of those who have enlisted sucsessful; and to assure their\nsafe return as soon as possible.\"\nA. B. Thompson of Trail, prosing\n\"The Department of Education,\"\nfound in it a demonstration of true\ndemocracy in the manner in which\nofficials and teachers' worked together to improve the education\nprogram, a method which made the\nB.C. standard the envy of all Canada. The speaker paid tribute to the\npersonnel of the Department and\nwelcomed C. J. Frederlckson of\nRossland, newly appointed inspector for Tfail-Rossland-Boundary\ndistrict.\nJV-B. DeLong, High School Inspector, replying, emphasized the\nduty and privilege of training young\nminds for the world of tomorrow,\nThe varied war effort of B.C.\nschools was \"one of the good things\nv.'.:ich has come out of the war,\"\nsince it taught consideration of\nothers.\nFLAG-WAVING WORTH\nWHILE\nThe Inspector also commended \"a\nlittle more flag-waving\" in the\nschools since the outbreak of war,\n\"And why not?\" he asked. Britain\nwas the bulwa'rk of freedom, the\nchampion of the downtrodden, and\n\"young people of our schools must\nglow wife pride\" to know they were\nkin of the people of Britain.\nJ. C. Loomer, new member of\nthe Nelson High School staff, proposed \"The B.C. Teachers Federation.\" W. R. McDougall of Vancouver, President, replied, indicating he and Harry Charlesworth,\nSecretary, had much to take up\nwith teachers today.\nMrs. James Johnston, accompanied by C. C. Halloran, and E. P.\nBaker, accompanied by Mrs. C. W.\nTyler, sang solos and Sector Angus\ngave piano solos.\nThe banquet was prepared and\nserved by members of the Junior\nRed Cross, under direction of their\nteachers, and won many compliments.\n. Decorations in a patriotic motif\nwere also the work of students.\nOverhead they arranged a canopy\nof red, white and blue streamers;\nwhile on the walls were British,\nCanadian and American flags, huge\nCanadian maple leafs, and a combined \"Victory V\" awd torch of\nfreedom.\nCatholic Mission\nOpens on Sunday\nA week-long mission under Rev.\nFather Connolly of San Francisco\nopens at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate Sunday mowing. Three\nmasses will be held Sunday morning, while through the week two\nmasses and short instructions will\nbe held every morning and devotion will be held every evening.\n'Father Connolly is of the Dominican Fathers Mission Band in California, and has been in charge of\nmission work on the Pacific Coast\na little over a year. Previously he\nwas known as an outstanding\nspeaker at New York.\nCreston Hospital\nSets Date for Fruit,\nVegetable Shower\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014The first Saturday in November is the date set\nfor the annual fruit and vegetable\nshower in connection with Creston\nhospital. This was agreed upon at\nthe October meeting of the Creston\nHospital Women's Association on\nThursday afternoon. The President,\nMrs. J. P. MacDonald, nresided.\nThe pommlttee in charge of the\nshower was named and will include\nMrs. F. V. Staples, Mrs. W, L. Bell,\nMrs. MacDonald, Mrs. Hipwell,\nMrs. C. W. Allan and Miss Irene\nLaBelle.\nIt was also decided to have the\nusual series of bridge parties and\nthe committee to arrange these is\nMrs. C. H. Hare, Mrs. C. H. Messin-\nger, Mrs. MacDonald and Miss M.\nHamilton.\n'MXS- Bell reported for the gocd\nchder committee and Mrs. C. H.\nMessinger for the buying committee.\nThe tea hostesses were Mrs. J. V.\nMurray and Mrs, H. H, Johnson.\nPRETORIA (CP) \u2014 Arising from\nthe dearth of a roan in a motor-car\naccident, Miss Melania Camp, 27,\nwas fined \u00a350 ($225) or three\nmonths, for sulpable homicide.\nClearance Sale of\nLINOLEUM\n$2.19\n5 rolls 2nd gauge inlaid Linoleum.  Reg.  $2.75  per square\nyard.\nSale   I\n3 rolls 3rd gauge inlaid Linoleum.   Reg.  $1.95  per  square\n\u00a3\u00a3\u2022.... $1J9\n3 rolls British Inlaid Linoleum.\nSale per ||pi <|\u00bb1 A(\\\nsquare yard \u00abP * \u00bbHcD\nji\nFINK'S Furniture\nPoster Winner Is\nLongbeach  Pupil\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u20141 beg to call your attention\nto a slight error in today's paper,\nwith reference to the \"T. B. Poster Contest\".\nThe winner of this award, Miss\nMargaret Ward, living In Long-\nbeach, Is a pupil at the Longbeach\nSchool, not Balfour school, as stated. She is under the tuition of -Mjss\nWilfiscroft and is in Grade VII.\nA. P. HUDSON.\nHon Secretary, Longbeach School\nBoard.\nLongbeach, Oct. 24, 1941.\nThe first patent for an electric\nheadlight for locomotives was issued in 1881.\nFALL    RLSULTS    IN    DEATH\nKAMLOOPS. B.C., Oct. 7A (CP)J\n\u2014Donald Peter Allan, WS-year-ok\nson of Mrs. Robert M. Allan oi\nKamloops, died today of head inJ\njuries suffered when he was throwq\nfrom a horse yesterday at a ranc\n23 miles from here.\nChildren\nRossland Social.. 1\nBy MRS. LORNE V. McLEOD\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014The\nDorcas Circle met at the home of\nMrs. Lipsetts Tuesday evening. The\nonly item of discussion was the\nsending of Christinias boxes to the\nsoldiers overseas. Those present\nwer\u00ab Mrs. W. Blackwell, Mrs, Waldie, Mrs. Roscorla, Mrs. Corbett,\nMrs. Churchill, Mrs. W. Arrow-\nsmith, Mrs. S. H. Hayden and Mrs\nKeffer. Tea was served by the\nhostess, assisted by Mrs. Arrow-\nsmith.\nThe Government Square Circle\nmet at the home of Mrs. H. Lefevre\nTuesday evening, Routine business\nwas discussed. Tea was served by\nthe hostess assisted by Mrs. J.\ntjnjuhart. Those present Included\nMrs. A. H. Freeijaan, Mrs. Ethridge,\nMrs, Fraser, Mrs. Kettlewell, Mrs\nG. Joss, Mrs. R. Morin, Mrs. Ur-\nOUbWt, Mrs. C. H. Clegg, Mrs.\nPerkins. A report of the Women's\nAuxiliary was read, and the group\ncontinued reading of the book, \"Invitation to Live\", by Lloyd C.\nDouglas.\nMiss Jean Holbrook, Child Welfare Representative of Nelson and\nDistrict, spoke on \"Child  Welfare\"\nat the Parent-Teacher AssociatjflB\nmeeting in the Court House, Monday evening. Mrs. Fleury spoke\nbriefly on the Library drive, and\nasked' for more merooers for the\nLibrary. Mrs. J, A. Thomson of th\u00ab\nWays and Means Committee, mentioned plans for a dance to be held\nin the near future.\nMrs. H. L. Christie returned to\nthe city this week after having\nresided at Vancouver since early\nSummer.\nMrs. Hawthorne Dunn of Nelson\nis visiting Rossland, owing to the\nillness of Mrs. G. W. Dunn.\nMiss Jean Allison, R.N., who has\nbeen selected for the second group\nog Canadian Nursing Sisters to\nleave Canada toward the end of the\nyear for South Africa, has returned\nto the city from Victoria, where\nshe was attested, and expects to\nleave shortly for her home in Eastern Canada.\nRobert Saxton left Sunday for\nKimberley, to which point he was\ntransferred by the Bank of Montreal. Mr. Saxton's position here\nhas been taken over by M. L. Cof-\nfield of Nelson.\nLove to lake ill\nDr. Chase',*\nSyrup\nis pleasant\nthe taste <\nremarkab\neffective fn t\nrelief of\nCoughs, Cold\nBronchitis, el\nTHE BEST IN\nCOALS\nDRUMHELLER\nGLO-COAL\nMERCURY\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\n\u25a0iiiii'i\nmmm^\n ,' l\n'P'P^ps^l\nCollision in Far East\nInevitable Says Knox\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 24 AP). -\nNavy Secretary Frank Knox said\ntoday that a \"collision\" in the Far\nEast Is virtually Inevitable.\n\u25a0 \"The situation In the Far Beat\nis extremely strained,\" Knox told a\nSoup of naval munitions manufac-\nrers.\n\"We are satisfied in our minds\nthat the Japanese have no intention\not giving up their plana for expansion. If they pursue that course a\ncollision is Inevitable.\"\nThis description of conditions involving the United States and Japan, coming from a Cabinet member after weeks of Washington-\nTokyo efforts to find a formula for\nsettlement, was prompted by a discussion of waya by which munitions\ncan be delivered from the U S. to\nRussia.\nKnox said he had \"Just hurried\naway from a conference\"\u2014he did\nDot say with whom\u2014at which British and Russian needs for war materials had been stressed as matters\nOf great urgency.\n' The \"\"\nTlie Navy Secretary declared that\nthe manufacturers, including the\nchiefs of naval yards, must miss no\nopportunity to speed up production.\n\"Keeping the Russian Army fight-\ntrig is one of the most vitally important things we have to do in\nthis war,\" he said emphatically.\nThere are, Knox continued, \"just\nthree ways,\" of getting supplies to\nRussia.       , *\nThese he named as: Across the\nNorth Atlantic to the Arctic port\nof Archangel, across the Pacific to\nthe Far Eastern port of Vladivostok and down through the South\nAtlantic and around Africa to\nPersia.\nTOKYO, Oct 24 (AP)-Domei,\nJapanese news agency with close\nofficial connections, quoted \"observers\" today as saying that the\nsuccess of negotiations between Japan and the United States \"now\nentirely depends on the sincere attitude of the United States\" and\nthat Japan doubts that the United\nStates is sincere.\nIn the same radio broadcast Dome! quoted its sources as saying\nthat the situation had worsened as\na result of economic pressure, including the freezing of Japanese\nassets.\nThe United States must realise\nthe limit to concessions which Japan\ncan make, the Domei commentary\ncontinued.\nThis Domei review, which coincided with the summoning ot the\nImperial Diet for a five-day special\nmeeting Nov. 15, followed a statement by a Japanese Government\nspokesman that the situation between Japan and the United States\nhad been eased by an American\ndecision to send Russian war aid\nvia the Northwestern port of Archangel rather than the Pacific port\nof Vladivostok.\nThe statement was made by Kon\nIshii, spokesman for the Cabinet\ninformation Bureau, in a conference wiUi foreign correspondents\nin which he said Japan had \"explained every point Df her stand in\nrecent talks at Washington and now\nawaited the reaction of President\nRoosevelt and State Secretary Hull.\n\"You'd better ask Mr. Hull, since\neverything was explained to him\nand Mr. Roosevelt,\" was Ishii's reply to a question whether Japan\nwas hopeful of settling her differences with the United States.\nSO Hostages Shot\nand 50 Reprieved\nTill Next Monday\nVICHY, France, Oct. 24 AP). -\nFifty French hostages were shot today as forfeit for .the killing of a\nGerman officer at Bordeaux but 60\nothers at Nantes, who were to have\nneed a firing squad at dawn, were\n.'ifreprieved until next Monday.\nThe reprieve*  were  granted  by\nAspirin-oneo\u00bb\nsafest, fastest reliefs known\n-\u00bb now featured by druggists\nin bargain bottle\n100 Tablets 98<\nNo retton now why anyone should suffer\nneedleaaly from \"heid*chri, rheumatic\npain, or neuralgia. For todiy you can\nget reel Aspirin ... one of the fittest,\nsafest reliefs from pain ever known ...\nfor leaa then 1 cent a tablet! So get this\nbargain today. See\nhow Aspirin goea to\nwork a\/moat in-\nttmntfy, to relieve a\nsevere headache or\npain of neuritis in\nminutea. Millions\nnow uae It and gladly\nrecommend it. At this\nlow price, why take\nanything else? Aak\nyour druggist for the\nbig economy bottle of\nAspirin today.\nlook \/or This Cross\/\nEvery tablet you buy must be stamped\n\"Bayer\" in the form of a cross, or it is\nHot Aspirin. And don't\nlet anyone tell you it\nis. Aspirin is made in\nCanada and it the trade*\nmark of The Bayer\nCompany, Ltd.\nGerman authorities at personal requests of Chief of State Petain and\nVice-Premier Derlan.\n\"Resulting from appeals by Petain and Darlan as well as pressing demarches made to German\nauthorities,\" a communique said,\n\"these latter willingly consented to\na delay of grace for compentary\ngroups of hostages whose executions, were designated following the\ntwo assassinations at Nantes and\nBordeaux.\nThe 50 shot at Bordeaux were\nexecuted in reprisal for the fatal\nshooting of a German officer there,\nand those slated death at Nantes\nwas stayed were to have died at\ndawn because the gunmen who killed another German officer have not\nbeen given over to Nazi Occupation\nauthorities.\nFifty French lives already had\nbeen taken for the fatal shooting\nlast Monday of the Nazi Commander\nat Nantes, Lt.-Col. Paul Friedrlch\nRota.\n(German authorities announced\ntoday in Berlin the victim of the\nshooting in Bordeaux wu the counselor of the military administration,\na high-ranking officer named Rei-\nmers.) <\nBERLIN, Oct. 34 (AP). - Nasi\npropaganda spokesmen asserted today that Gen. Charles de Gaulle's\nrequest to Frenchmen in France not\nto kill Germans Indicated that the\nFrenchmen ordered shot for two\nrecent assassinations of German officers were \"tha right persons.\"\nTwo Norwegians\nFace Firing Squad\nOStO. Norway (Vis Berlin), Oct.\n14 (AP).\u2014Two Norwegians were\nexecuted today by firing squad after conviction Oct. S by a German\ncourt martial on charges of espionage. They were Identified as Kar-\nsten Wang and Ivar Dueland.\nLONGER NIGHTS TO\nMEAN HEAVY RAIDS\nOVER CERMANY\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14 (OP)\u2014Air\nChief Marshal Sir Frederick Bow-\nhill, officer commanding the Royal\nAir Force Ferry Command, predicted today that longer nights on\nthe European continent would bring\nheavier and more severe raids by\nthe R.A.F. over Germany.\nBOARD TO HEAR\nWARSPITE BATTLES\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP)-An\naccount of the part played by\nH MS Warspite in the battles of\nNarvik, Bardia, Mattapan and Crete\nwill be given by Commander Sir\nCharles Madden, executive officer\nof the battleship, In an address to\nthe Board of Trade here Oct. 31.\nSixty officers and men of the\nwarship, now at Bremerton. Wash.,\nfor repairs, will be entertained here\nand at New Westminster this weekend with a program at New Westminster and a mass luncheon in\nVancouver.\n- NBLSON DAILY NlVVfJ. NILSON B. C-SATURDAY MORNINt). OCTOMR \u00bb \u00ab4l\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nManufacturers ot\nProducers sod Refiners of\nElephant       Tadanae\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium  Phosphate\nSulphate ot Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\nMonocalelum  Phosphate\n\u25a0rang\nMeials\nLEAD\u2014ZINC\nGOLD-SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nMERCURY\nAlto Sulphuric Add and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and.Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilixer  Sales\u2014Marina   Bldg.,   Vancouver.   B.   C\nMetal and Fertiliser Sales   -215  St.  |amtl St.    Montreal\nBRITISH PENETRATE\nTO ITALIAN OUTPOST\nLONDON, Oct'. 24 (CP).-An authoritative source said today a British patrol had penetrated to Am-\nbouoj 10 miles North of Gondar,\nthe last remaining point ot Italian resistsnee In Ethiopia.\nThin source said the British\" estimated 19,000 Italian and native'\ntroops still were In the Gondir\nana.\nFive Young Boys\nCross Channel lo\nJoin de Gaulle\nBy WILLIAM STEWART\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nMALVERN. England, (Oct. 24 r-\n(CP).\u2014Five \"eager French youngsters who crossed the Channel by\ncanoe to Join Gen. De Gaulle have\nbeen enrolled In the Free French\ncadet school In this Worcestershire\ntown.\nThe daring escape of the five\nnewcomers now Is the talk of other\nstory-telling cadets.\nThe boys\u2014Pierre. 19, Jean, 17,\nChristian, 17, Guy, 16, and Raynald,\n16 \u2014 started talking early in the\nSummer of attempting to reach England.\nSept. IS, the weather was fair.\"\nAfter nightfall they slipped out of\nwindows and crept from their\nhomes past Nazi guards to their\nconcealed canoes.\nThree in one canoe, two in the\nother, they paddled down a little\nstream and out into the blackness\nof the Channel.\nOnce they saw German E-boats,\ncrouched low and stopped paddling. Or another occasion, a German plane flew overhead. But they\nwere not spotted.\nTime Bomb Kills\nRumanian Gen.\nand 50 Officers\nBUCHAREST, Rumsnia, Oct. M\n(AP)\u2014Fifty Axis officers and men,\nincluding the Rumanian General\nGlogojeanu, have been killed by\nthe explosion of a time bomb in\ncaptured Odessa, Rumanian military dispatches said today.\n(Other dispatches identified the\ngeneral us the Rumanian commander of Odessa.)\nTwo Germsn naval officers were\nlisted as victims; the others were\nbelieved to be Rumanians.\nThe diipatchea said that the bomb\nhad been planted near a former\nsecret police headquarters by the\nRussians before the port city was\ncaptured.\nAllies Attack\nFrench Colony\nVICHY, Oct 14 (AP). \u2014 The\nVichy regime's Governor-General\nIn French lemallland reported In\na dispatch frem Jibuti today that\nBritish and Free French troops\nhad started an attack en tha colony.\nThe announcement said tha attack\nbegan Thursday and had been pushed some 30 miles Into French territory.\nThe Allies occupied Dasenaito.\nonly 18 miles North of Tajura, an\nImportant port Just across the gulf\nof the same name from Jibuti, the\nGovernor said.\nThe litle French colony on the\nGulf of Aden has been surrounded\nby the British snd Free French\nsince Italian Eritrea and nearly all\nEthiopia were wrested from the\nItalians last Spring.\nLONDON, Oct. 24 (CP)\u2014Authoritative sources ssld today there was\nno confirmation of s Vichy report\nthat British and Free French troops\nhad attacked French Somaliland.\nRather, they expressed the opinion that the report was put out \"In\nan effort to distract attention from\nreprisal shootings In France.\"\nU.S. to Double Army\nTank Production\nWASHINGTON, Oct. M (AP). -\nWithholding all figures. President\nRoosevelt announced today the\nAmerican program for producing\ntanks tor United States armed\nforces would be approximately\ndoubled at once.\nThe President told a press conference the projected expansion\nwas part of an over-all revision of\nthe defence picture.\nMr. Roosevelt would not say what\nthe present tank program called for\nnor what the Increase would provide. That, he asserted was information which the Axis would like to\nhave.\nTraffic Is Using\nNew Grade on the\nTaghum Hill Road\nTraffic is now travelling over the\ntha last sections of the Nelson-Trail\n1(0\nnew grade on Taghum bill, one of\nthe last section! of the Ni\"\nHighway to be permanently improv\ned. The project is not complete yet,\nthe lower part ol the new section\nbeing unfinished, bit \u25a0 temporary\n\"hookup\" with the old road has\nbeen cut through. This section will\nbe completed next year, lt la anticipated.\nWith the new grade the Taghum\nHill road has been straightened out\nto a considerable extent and the\nclimb is more gradual. One oi the\nmajor Improvements is the elimination of a sharp turn hear the top\nof the hill, and a more sweeping\ncurve at the top.\nThe new grade Is on the river\nside of, and largely lower than, the\nold road.\nNaples Included\nin British Raids\non Italian Cities\nROME, Oct. 24 (API.-The High\nCommand announced today the\nBritish Royal Air Force raided\nNaples again last night for the third\ntime recently.\nDamage was claimed to be alight\nand there were reports of only five\nwounded. In contrast to an admission the aerial blow at the coastal\nmanufacturing centre last Tuesday\nnight caused huge damage. One\nweek ago there was a raid in which\nthe Italians acknowledged 12 killed\nand 37 injured at Naples.\nThe attack on Naples followed\ns daylight raid yesterday afternoon\non the port ot Crotone, at the mouth\nof the Gulf of Tarsnto in Southern Italy, the communique said.\nBritish fliers bombed the Axis-\nheld cities of Bengasi, Horns and\nTripoli In North African operations\nand the High Command said three\nbombers were shot down by the\ndefenders as well as a fourth over\nBritish-held Tobruk.\nItalians again claimed they had\nbombed the Micabba airport and\nValletta naval base of Malta, British\nisland In the Mediterranean.\nBroadwater Sunk\nin North Atlantic\nLONDON, Oct 84 (CP)\u2014The\nBritish destroyer Broadwater haa\nbeen torpedoed and sunk while on\nescort duty In the North Atlantic,\nthe Admiralty announced tonight\nThe Broadwater Is the former U.S.\ndestroyer. Mason, built In 1919.\nA brief Admiralty announcement\nfailed to mention any survivors.\n\"The next of kin of casualties have\nbeen informed,\" It ssid.  ,\nOn the day before her sinking\nthe Broadwater had attacked and\n\"probably destroyed a U-boat,\" the\nAdmiralty said.\nThe Broadwater was of 1100 tons.\nMining Child Found\nin Parked Auto\nVANCOUVER, Oct M (CP) -\nEric Cutchpole, a bewildered but\notherwise unharmed IVi-year-old\nboy, wss back with his mother and\nfather today after Delhi missing\nfor nearly 36 hourl while one of\nthe largest search parties in the\ncity's history groped through heavy\nfog*in search of him.\nThe litle fellow was found by a\nneighbor, Gordon Marshall, In an\nautomobile in a garage a few doors\nfrom The home of Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Catchpole from which he\ndisappeared Wednesday noon.  '\nLeu Than Half B.C.\nSoldiers Voted\nVICTORIA, Oct 24 (OP)\u2014Fewer\nthan half o( the soldiers,, sailors and\nairmen on active service outside\nBritish Columbia marked ballots in\nthe Provincial election.\nComplete active service vote returns today showed that of 12,542\nellglbls to vote only 4748 voted.\nCArT. SWIMS TO SAPITY\nKETCHIKAN. Alaska. Oct. 24\n(AP)\u2014One msn was drowned and\nthe captain barely escaped with alia\nlife after swimming an hour and a\nRCAF Casualties\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24 (CP) - The\nRoyal Canadian Air Force announced in an official casualty list\ntoday the death of one msn overseas on active service, seven men\nmissing overseas after sir operations\nsnd seven men killed on active\nservice In Canada.\nToday's list brought total R.C.A.F.\ndead reported officially since war\nbegan to 860.\nFollowing   is   the  latest  official\ncasualty list and next of kin:\nOVERSEAS\nKilled on active service\u2014iMoMil-\nlan, Alexander Teryl, Sgt, Windsor, Ont\nMissing afterr air operations\u2014IMac-\nDonald, George Sinclair, Po., Edmonton; Ray, Howard Stanley, Po,\nToroneo; Marclay, WjUiam Scott,\nSgt, Toronto; Cameron, Donald\nArchibald, Sgt, Glace Bay N.S,\nJacques. John Allen, Sgt Tampa,\nFar; Molntyre, Ronald Maltland.\nSgt.. Okotoks, Alts.; Weir, John\nEmerson, Sgt, Wroxeter, Ont.\nCANADA\nKilled on active service\u2014Boyd,\nJohn Fisher, Po, Collingwood, Ont.;\nLusrd, Richard Aubrey, Po, Bur-\nford, Ont; O'Hanley, Charles Beech-\ning. Po.. Yarmouth, N.S.; Waln-\nwright Alan Ewart Gilbert Po,\nToronto; Kelley. Robert Frederick,\nSgt, Toronto; Kirsch, Able, Sgt,\nMontreal; Burna, Robert William,\nLac, Toronto.\nDangerously Injured \u2014 Ritchie.\nJames William, Sgt, Bowsman\nRiver, Man.\nSeriously ill\u2014Knight, 3, Lac,\nWalmer, Kent Eng.\nZamiam Survivor\nEvades the Draft\nNEW HAVEN. Conn, Oct. 24 -\n(API\u2014George M. Butcher, 21, who\ninterrupted a Yale career to drive\nan ambulance for the Free French\nArmy but was prevented from doing1 so by the sinking fo the Egyptian steamer Zamzam. was lodged\nIn a police cell today for refusing\nto register for the draft\nThe Yale Junior slid:\n\"It's a hell of a note to think that\nthree montha ago I was a prisoner\nof Germany, presumably because I\nwanted to fight the German people.\nTonight I have been arrested by\nAmerican police because I do not\nwant to fight against the German\npeople.\"\n'Sabotaged' Razor\nInfuriatei General\nLONDON. Oct. 24 (CP)-Troops\nIn the Midlands on manoeuvres\nhave been ordered In their simulated warfare to engage in acta of\nsabotage, \"however \u2022mall.\"\nA soldier rummaging In a staff\ncar of the rival forces reported to\nan officer that he blunted the edge\nof the \"enemy\" general's razor.\nThe General later was captured\nand the officer, who saw him use\nthe razor, said:\n\"It was a good piece of sabotage.\nBesides hacking his face the General was so furious he could scarce\nhall to reach shore\" when the can\nr\\ery ship Tondeleyo slipped off i\nrock   snd  turned  turtle,   survivors I ly have thought clearly lor the rest\nsaid yeiterdey on arrival here. of tha day.\"\n' \\yfo\\\nare Now\nFALL\nAfternoon Dresses\n$6-95\nSmartly styled dresses for the mature figure. Regular sizes and\nhalf sizes. V neck lines, gored skirts. Short snd *A sleeves.\nBlack, wine, navy blue. Each\t\nFlette Gowns\nand Pyjamas\nRoomily cut, so cosy and warm to wear.\nAttractive printed flette in sizes of\nmedium and large.\n$1*95\nSnuggie\nPanties, Vests\n15% wool. You'll appreciate the light\nweight and snug fit of these panties\nand vests. Built-up-shoulder, vests.\nSizes small, medium and large.\n69c\nExcelsior\nScotch Fingering\nA four-ply fingering suitable for heavier garments.\nComes in khaki, Air Force blue, navy and other popular\nshades including heather mixtures and white. Put up in\n4-oz. hanks. Cfl*\nPer hank' DUC\nPatriotic \"SJmibvf Cauk.\nSee our display of Patriotic Greeting Cards. Overseas mailing date to ensure delivery is Nov. 14th.\nHalloween Candies\nJelly Beans. Lb.\nGums. Lb.   ...\nLicorice Allsor.s\nKisses. Lb.\nHallowe'en Mix\nGet Your Supply Early\n.. aw\nLb. 40*\nLb\n2,V\n20<\nHallowe'en Stick. Ea le>\nBrownies. Lb 29a*\nCrunchies. Lb 40e*\nHumbugs. Lb 19e>\ntffl*\nFlannelette\nSheets\nSaturday only. 100 only white or'grey flannelette\nsheets in size 66x76. Whipped singly. Limit of\n4 to a customer. d\u00bbs aa\nEach   tpl.UU\nOccasional Chairs\nA new shipment just in. Walnut finish hardwood\nframes. Seats and backs of buttoned tapestries in\ngood shades. &H QC\nOne price <P I \u2022\u2022\/*)\nChinese Cloisonne Ware\nBeautiful work in the characteristic Chinese style\nbowls, jars, cigarette sets, ash trays, etc.\nThese make ideal gifts.\nAsh Trays. Each 25r 75<* fl.00\nVases. Each  $1.00 $1.50\nCigarette Boxes 75\u00ab* $1.50 $2.50\nCigarette 3-piece Sets  $3.05\nTravel Twin\nSets\nFor ladies. Matching Aero-\npack and overnight cases.\nGenuine tweed covering.\nNicely lined and leather\nbound. Set\n$19-95\nTravel With Strong Baggage\nSturdy Suitcases\nMade of heavy fibre on wood frame. Strong handles and\na^!L... $4.50\nAnnamation Shoes\nfor Girls\nThe school shoes you've been waiting for have just arrived. Low heeled shoes for the growing girl. Black calf\noxfords. Low rubber heels. Smart pattern and quality\nthroughout. Widths A and C.\nSizes 4 to 7. Pair\t\nWomen's and Girls' Shoes\nLady Hudson\nA new shipment of\nwalking shoes Just\narrived. Black or\nbrown calf oxfords.\nSmart stitching snd\ntrim. Medium heavy\nweight with Goodyear welted soles.\nMedium heel and\nrubber lift. Sires B\nSo 8Vj. AA to C. Pr.\n$5-75\n^ttotfrT^ ditmjiattg\naw mm fro-\nAxis Planes Bomb\nU.S. Ships in Red Sea\nHONOLULU, Oct. 24 'AP) -A\nquartermaster of a U. S. ship which\ncarried supplies to Britain's Middle\nEast armies ssld today thst freighters flying the United States flag\nhad been repeatedly bombed, fiercely and deliberately, in the Red Sea\nby German and Italian planes.\n'The only thing that saved our\nlives said John Stowe of Brooklyn,\nN. Y\u201e \"was that the Nazis didn't\nseem able to hit a bull with a brass\nfiddle.\"\nStow* told interviewers seven or\nmore American merchantmen were\nin Suez harbor during a terrific raid\nwhich damaged the Iberville and\nthe West Zlta. The following week\nGerman planes sowed the harbor\nwith mines which tore holes in the\nAmerican freighters' steel seafarer\nand steel Inventor.\nHe added that a tug towing the\nSteel Inventor to dry dock struck a\nmine and blew up, killing all Its\nnative crew.\nAUSTRALIA AIR\nSTRENGTH CROWS\nCANBERRA Oct. 14 (AP).-Air\nMlnlster A. S. Drakeford said today\nthere were 80.000 men In the Royal\nAustralian Air Force at present and\nIts strength Is 30 times greater than\nu wu at tha outbreak of war.\nOFFICERS PROMOTED\nOTTAWA, Oct M (CP)\u2014Col. R.\nI. Smythe, Toronto, who has been\nattached to No. a district depot there\nhas been appointed commandant,\nHamilton-Niagara area, it was announced in Canadian (Active) Army\norders today.\nOther appointments:\nMa). AXM. Bell-Irving, Vancouver, Is promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel and to command an anti-aircraft regiment.\nCURFEW FOLLOWS\nOUTBREAK IN BOMBAY\nBOMBAY, India, Oct 19 (CP) -\nA 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew was imposed today on Bombay following a\nHindu-Moslem outbreak last night\nwhich resulted In the death of 11\npersons and injury to 41. In another\nclash, also over religious differences\nat Dacca, In Bengal, two persons\nwere killed and 71 injured last\nnight\nBRITISH ARMY CHIEF\nVISITS 3RD DIVISION\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND\nOct 14 (CP Cable)-The first British Army chief to visit the Canadian 3rd Division, Gen. Sir Alan\nBrooke, today saw the regiments\nfiring on the ranges and hard at\nwork at a rigorous training schedule as the troops prepare for action\nwith the Canadian Corns.\nCanadian Party   \u2022\nArrives in Dublin\nLONDON, Oct 14 (CP Cable).-\nA Canadian Parliamentary delegation landed at Foynes airport today after a flight from Canada and\nproceeded to Dublin, planning to\nremain there overnight before going to London.\nThe party consists of W. Ross\nMacDonald (Llb.-Brantford), Al-\nphonae Fournler (Lib.-Hull), Henry\n~GoodW\u00bbky-\nJOHNNIE\n\/MM*\nOeetM, \u00ab\u2022\"*\u00ab\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nR. Jackman (Cons.-Rosedale), M. J.\nColdwell (C.C.F.-Rosetown-Blggir),\nJohn H. Blackmore (Ind.-Leth-\nbridge), ana ArthuDG. Slaght (Lib.-\nParry Sound.)\nPERHAPS\nthe vital spots of your homer-\nthe plumbing and heating, require attention. A timely checkup now may save damage and\nannoyance.\nOur wide experience enables is\nto make sn Intelligent survey,\nand the cost Is nominal\nConsult us tor sll plumbing and\nheating   requirements.\nPhone 666\nKootenay  Plumbing\nfir Heating Co., Ltd.\n367 laker \u00bbt\n'I .     I\nii'irssaiar'sH\"'-'\u2014 -\u2022    \u25a0 ->\u25a0\u25a0 - \u25a0\"' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\t\n . ,\t\n\u25a0    \u25a0\n____s^\u2014\n faof *nti*\nptarriage...\nlove Matches Hold\nBest fhances\nforHannlness\nBy  BEATRICE  FAIRFAX\n' Marriages made tor love are the\n.marriages that last. Perhaps you've\ngone cynical about love and rnar-\ni Mage, as so many young people\nhave.\nit' Love, you hear people say, Is the\nI most transient thing In the world.\nt jt you marry for Jove you fool your-\nI self. Then someone will probably\nquote the college professor who\nurged the struggling young man to\nmarry the boss daughter. Later, the\nprofessor admitted he was joking\ni tyhcn he made that speech.\nI There's also the well-to-do old\nisunt\u2014few families escape her \u2014\nwho urges her nieces and nephews\n' to marry for something sensible.\nMoney, for Instance. Social position.\nA comfortable home. But not for\nlove, that's all nonsense.\nDo you happen to remember that\nquestionnaire sent out about three\nyears ago by a certain publication,\nto over a million husbands and\nwives? To both partners in every\nmarriage, the question wu put:\n\"Did you marry for love? Or for\ngome mltertal advantage?\" To\navoid all possibility of domestic\nembarrassment, husbands and wives\nreplied separately as the replies\nWere written.\nThe triumph of love was not lost\neight of because in certain cases\nboth partners admitted that while\nthey were in love they had second-\n. any motives which inspired marrl-\neuje. They wanted homes, companionship, and children. They wanted\n\u00a3hlp,\nrlr lo\nblessings a happy marriage promises.\nJust u interestlnt as lite record\nof these thousands of true love\nstories is the a&nltikm that In\ncertain cases this married happiness\nhad to be fought for to keep It\ngoing\nElderly  couples   had  their  mo\nid pain do t\nmagnetism \"of an attractive person like.\nments o! temptations, it seems, lust\nas young married pairs do today\nBut the minute they Felt the\nly to break up the comfortable\nlittle Eden, that wea going along ao\nsmoothly on its own power, they\ndid not leave a note on the pincushion and say they were leaving\nimmediately.\nInstead, they had a spasm of hard\n    inae, They recalled the\nof   broken   homes   and\ncommon-sense,\nwreckage  of      ___  ___\nunhappy, neglected children. So\nthey held fast to their marriage\nvows and to their married happiness, and later they thanked their\nlucky stars that they bad withstood the temptation.     ...\nOne woman wrote: \"The temptation just faded from lack of\nnourishment\"\nA husband wrote: \"I knew discretion was the better part of valor,\nand I ran like a rabbit\"\nAnother had kept a scrap-book of\nall the high-powered romances\nwhich had wrecked homes, families,\ncareers and then gone on the rocks.\nHe concluded his letter with \"It had\na mighty sobering effect on me,\nJust to realize what a little hone\nsense would have, done tor these\npeople in time.\"\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014Winnen at\nthe Scandinavian Brotherhood card\nparty Friday evening were: bridge,\nMrs. W. Taylor first and George\nLarson second. Thomas Stanley was\nfirst in whist and Mrs. E. Eberllne,\nsecond. Convenors for the evening\nwere Mr. and Mrs. 0. Jostad.\nSoy beans and by-products, 81-\n, berlan timber and dried fish are the\ntheir love to flower with all the' principal exports of Vladivostok.\n|. Queen Presents Colors to Crack\nSaskatoon Light Infantry Unit\nBy ROSS MUNRO\nCanadian Press War Correspondent\n. SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nOct. 24 (CP Cable). - The Queen\npresented colors today to the Sas-\nkatoon Light Infantry, crack machine-gun regiment of the Canadian 1st Division, in a traditional\nceremony attended by a distinguished Canadian gathering.\nWith the battalion under its new\nLieutenant Colonel, E. J. Scott-Dudley of Saskatoon, drawn up In an\nopen square, the Queen gave the\nregiment its two battle flags, one\nan embroidered Union Jack adorned with the regimental crest and\nthe other a dark blue ensign with\nfold and red Inscriptions of the\nregiment's 19 battle honors of the\nFirst Great War.\nThe flags were gifts of the cltl-\ntens ot Saskatoon.\n\"I know how much your dear\nones must be praying for you and\nbow they are thinking with pride\nof the part you have been called\nupon to play in guarding these\nshores,\" trie Queen told the bst-\ntalion.\n\"I know you will remember that\nthe defence of this island la vital\nno less to those whom you love\nthan to the cause for which we of\nthe Empire fight.\"\nThe battalion gave the Royal\naalute as the Queen appeared on\nthe parade square dressed in pale\nheliotrope crepe, three quarter\nIngth coat and gown with straw hat\nwith veil and a pert quill of the\ngame color.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nu PILLS\nShe carried a bag of this shade\nand wore a pearl necklace and grey\nshoes.\nCol. Ralston, Gen, McNaughton\nand Gen. Peakres walked on to the\nsquare with her.\nThe Queen first Inspected the\nregiment snd then the color party\nwhich carried the encased flags. The\ncolor party marched forward, unfurled the ensigns snd placed them\non the regiment's drums before Her\nMajesty.\nCept. M. J. D. Carson ot Saskatoon, the regimental padre, assisted\nby another chaplain, Capt E, P. M.\nOrme of Kinderaley, Suk., consecrated the flags.\nThen the smiling Queen stepped\nforward and handed over the colon\nto Lieut. R. C. MacDonald and\nLieut. L. P. J. Marr, both of Saskatoon.\nFollowing* a general salute after\nthe colore had been carried back\nto the centre of the battalion, the\ntroops gave a resounding cheer for\nthe Queen, warring their steel hel-\nmeta in the air.\nAs a band ot 2nd Division Saskatchewan Regiment under Cpl. A.\nE. Mundy'of Calgary played a lively tune, the battalion marched past\nthe Queen In a column ot route.\nAfter the ceremony the Queen\ndrove to 1st Division Headquarters\nwhere before lunch she inspected\nthe gusrd from a Central Ontario\nRegiment and a British Columbia\nRegiment. Ma]. W. B. Crelghton of\nVancouver commanded the guard.\n-NILSON DAILY NIWS NIUOH \u2022, tV-SATVRDAV M0RNIN9  OOTOBIR 28 1W\nApple a Day .\u00bb.,\nOld Saying Is Full\nol Ripe Wisdom\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M.D.\nEvery year la the Fall my grandfather used to send us a barrel of\napplet, We nit tha barrel of apples\nIn the cellar and every evening\n(nights when he was home) tether\nwould go down just before bedtime\nand bring up two or three apples.\nThere was a regular ritual about it;\nyou would hold the apple to the\nlight and slowly polish it with your\npocket handkerchief until it looked\ngood enough to eat\u2014to coin one of\nmy original phrasal. Skin and all,\nof course, usually core and all, were\nthen eaten and there waa very\nlittle need for the caecara bottle\nin the households where there was\na Winter barrel of apples.\nRICH IN MINERALS  ,\nThat isn't the only reason that\nthe old wheeze, about \"an apple a\nday keeps the doctor away,\" la full\not ripe wisdom. The apple has\nminerals the body needs\u2014you need\nnot worry about potash or calcium\nor magnesium or phosphorus as\nlong as you have applet.\nRecent feeding experiments indicate that its protein, though small\nin amount, it particularly fine in\nquality. The apple possesses antiseptic, germicidal and alkaline\nqualities and the proportions of its\ncomposition are said by one enthusiastic nutritionist to be more clearly\nadapted to the human constitution\nthen any other single fruit.\nCONTAIN SEVERAL\nVITAMINS\nAs for vitamins, you don't have\nto pay four or five dollars for a\nbox of the artificial kind so long\nas your apples contain Vitamins\nA, B and a good deal of C. Apples\nhave a preponderance of alkaline\nforming elements.\nThe laxative effects of the apple\ndo not depend on the roughage\nalone, because apple Juice alone\nproduces undulating movements of\nthe upper and lower bowel.\nThere Is a note ot maturity In\nthe remark \u2014 \"Comfort me with\napplet for I am sick ot love,\" The\nlady wee laid that had at least got\nher feet on the ground.\nCocktails and other alcoholic beverages are forbidden during reduction periods. Without obvious overindulgence, you can get a thousand\ncalories a day from them.\nBreakfast:\nSliced pears.     ,\nOatmeal with skim milk.\n1 cup black coffee.\nLunch:\n1 plate vegetable soup.\n1  slice  whole wheat toast and\nbutter.\n1 cup black coffe or clear tea.\nDinner:\n1 small glass tomato juice with\nsalt.\n1 smsll serving lean fish  (haddock, halibut or blue fish).\n1 small potato.\n1 slice bread and butter.\n1 serving carrots and peas,\nVj stewed apple.\n1 cup coffee with 1 lump sugar\nana 1 teaspoon cream.\nLONDON   (CP).  -  Dr.   Esther\nKillick, lecturer In Industrial physiology st the London School of\nHygiene and Tropical Science, has\nbeen appointed professor of physiology at the London Royal Free\nHospital School of Medicine for\nWomen.\nOn* JAc Ovl\n1   SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25,1$41\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n8:00-BBC News\n8:15\u2014Greetings From Canadians In\nHospital\n8:48\u2014Newa\n9:00\u2014Toronto Trio\n9:15\u2014Peter Dawton Records\n\u00bb:30-Chlldren't Scrapbook\n\u00bb:Se-Offlclal'Tune Signal\n10:00-Talk\n10:15\u2014To Be Announced\nAFTERNOON\n12:80-News Bulletin\n12:3J-BBC Programme\nl.-00-\"Be Prepared\"\nl:18-Newi\n1:30-Letten From Britain (BBC)\n2:00\u2014Glen Millers Sunset Serenade\n2.15-Afternoon Varieties\n2:30-rttcltal (NBC)\n2:46\u2014BBC Newt\n3:00\u2014Canada Calls From London\n(BBC)\n3:15\u2014Girl Guides Broadcast\n3:30\u2014Halifax Orchestra\n4:00\u2014With the Troopi In Britain\n(BBC)\n5:30-iReglmental Concert\nEVENING\n\u00ab:00\u2014Lulgl RomeneuTe Orch.\n6:30-Frsnk Blade Presents\n7:00-Newt\n7:15\u2014\"That English Nervous\nSystem\"\nSUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1941\n7:00-CBC National Newt\n7:30-Wlth the Troops In Britain\n\u2014rebroadcett\n8:00-JMutical Mirror\n8:30\u2014Red River Barn Dance\n9:30-BBC News Reel\nlOtM-Newa\n10:15\u2014Dal Richards' Orch.\n10:30-Reld Tanner's Orch.\nIl:00-Martha Mean and Irvln Yeo\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES AND\nTHE FOLLOWING:\nMORNING\n7:87-0 Canada\nAFTERNOON\n4:30\u2014Songs of the Range\n5:00-Radlo Birthday Party\nEVENING\n9:00-CKLN't Monthly Dance\nFrolic\n1:00\u2014God Save the King\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RED\n7:30\u2014Grand Ol' Opry\n8:00\u2014Truth or Consequences\nNBC-BLUE\n8:00\u2014The Bishop and the Gargoyle\nCOLUMBIA\n8:00\u2014Guy Lombardo'a Orch.\n880-Hobby Lobby\n9:00-Your Hit Parade\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n8:00-Thc BBC Newt\n8:15\u2014Between Ourselves\n8:30\u2014Greetings From the Beavet\nClub\n9:00-Hello Children\n9:15\u2014 Just Mary\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\n9:55\u2014CBC News Bulletin\n9:59\u2014Official Tiros Signal\n10:00\u2014OM Country Mall\n10:S0\u2014Styled by Laval\n11:00\u2014Tunet For Today\n1L27-CBC Newt Bulletin\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014New York Philharmonic\nOrchestra .\n1:00\u2014Meet the Mutlc\n1:30-Church of the Air\n2:00\u2014From  the  Bandstsnd\n2:45-The BBC Newt\n3:30\u2014Weekend Review\nJ:45\u2014CBC Newt Bulletin\n3:50-Talk\n4:00\u2014Neighborly News\n4:!5-Melody Album\n4:80\u2014Carry On, Canada!\n5:00\u2014Edgar Bergen,  Charlie  McCarthy\n1:30\u2014We Have Been There\nEVENING\n8:00\u2014CBC Drama Hour\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014The Song Album\n8:0O-Clatslca tor Today\n8:30-What Did They Think?\n9:00\u2014Sanctuary\nB:30-BBC Radio Newsrtel\n10K\u00bb-The CBC Newt\n10:15\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\nCKLN^NELSON\nCBC PROOAMME8\nAND THE FOLLOWING:\nMORNING\n7:55\u20140 Canada\n2:15-Organ Melodies\n3:00\u2014Sunday Melodies\nEVENING\n\u00ab:30-Stlon Music\n11:00\u2014God Save Tha King\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RID\n7:00\u2014Hour of Charm\n7:30\u2014Sherlock Holmes\nNBC-BLUE\n8:00\u2014Inner Sanctum Mystery\n8:30\u2014Jack Benny, Mary Livingston\nCOLUMBIA\n8:00\u2014Sunday Evening Hour\n7:30\u2014Helen Hayes Theatre\n8:30\u20141 Wu There\nInfjueriet...\nNoted Doctor Put\nCharacter First\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nOver a million mothers, Including\ntome who read this column, have\nused The Care and Feeding of Children, that famous book by Dr. L.\nEmmet Holt. When  Dr, Holt re-\none out of four babies in New York\nCity died before the end ot their\nfirst year: and In many other places\nin the United States the death rate\nof infants was still higher. By 1924,\n6t the time of Dr. Holt't death,\nlftnt mortality had been tteadily\nreduced to one-third of the rate of\ni860, and it baa been going downward since.\nMOTHER'S  INFLUENCE\nDr. Halt came front a religious\nhome and adhered to hit parents'\nfaith. The mother once wrote to her\nton, Emmet: \"Let lt not be enough\nthat you observe the outwatd forms\nof religion, but remember God looks\ninto the heart, and He hat given you\npower to be employed tor Him. My\nearnest and dally prayer for you a\nthat you may be an instrument In\nthe hand of God doing much good in\nthe world.\"\nWe tee this true spirit or religion\nkrevealed in the whole life of Dr.\nf Holt. We also see it reflected in his\nletters to his sons, Writing to Calvert then In a preparatory school,\nand referring to the younger ton\nwho had died, he said:\n\"One great lesson which Kenneth should teach us all Is courage\nand pluck. How much of both he\nalways had. Think of these when\nSou think of him, and try to have\nle tame pluck in your work.\n\"While we remember him dally\nand almost every hour we mutt\nnot grieve, but each of ut try to do\nmore for one another and those\nabout us because he will not be.\nhere to do his part. Let us not be\nsad, but joyful tor such an example\nas he gave ut in many things, and\nthankful that God gave him to ut\ntor to many years. Be t friend to\nevery small boy in the school, and\nmake your Influence felt tor all\nthat is good and true arid noble.\nWhat we are it really vary much\nmore important than what we have,\nor even what we know. Character\nis above everything.\"\nReferring to a talk ha gave at\nthe Y.M.C.A.. \"I told them that\nmora man tall in a profession for\nlack of moral character Utah for\nlack ot scientific training. I want\nto tay the same to you. Keep your\nmoral standard* high,\"\nSOLVINO PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. What about the ten-year-old\nwho eats too fait?\nA. No ute to keep nagging him.\nThe child it probably rather excitable. ' Try to cultivate in him\nmore poise and calm between\nmeals, and more in yourself, Keep\nthe radio silent at mealtimes. Announce to him he may not leavt the\ntable till the end of twenty minutes.\nKnowing he cannot return to play\nuntil the time it up, he will have\nless occasion to hurry.\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. F.\nFowler were motor vlsltort to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs, G. Ferguson of\nEdgewood spent Tuesday In Ntkutp\nMrs. A. McGuire and Mite K. Ot-\nraud were visitor! to New Denver\nTuesday. ,\nMrs. A Bradshaw ot Nelson was\na visitor to Nakusp for a few days\nMrs. George Balrd tnd ton, Douglas, of Salmo are visiting relatives\nin Nakusp.\nK. Kolthammer Wins Creston Scholarship,\nMrs. Miles Addresses Student Graduates\nSERIAL STORY ...\nBy LORENA CARLETON\nCastle of Contentment\nSYNOPSJfl\nKLENA VARANOJT, young and\npretty ex-wife of\nTHEODORE VTNCENT, wealthy\nEasterner, arrives in La Madera\nwith\nROSE, housekeeper for\nVERNON STONX, Vincent's attorney.\nYESTERDAY: Ylens tells Rose the\nmust return to the East\nCHAPTER TWO\nYlena met Taylor Cromwell, Jr.,\nthat tame afternoon when the\nwalked into the real estate offices\nof Cromwell and Cromwell, a place\nof lush synthetic tiger-skin carpets, pale modern furniture, native\nstate copper and bizarre paintings.\nTo the receptionist, the made\nknown \"her desire for a email ranch,\nwas carefully appraised and ushered\nInto a private office with the remark, \"I think Mr. Cromwell, Jr., is\n\/Radio,\n%lhDfL\nCKhl\nPRESENTS THE MONTHLY\nmojk\nDtL yjDWL\n(Dial\nRadio Dancing Party\nTONIGHT, Sate, Oct, 25\n9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.\nWith Music by These Famous Orchestras\n\u2022  Ray Heatherron\n\u2022   Mart Kenney\n\u2022 Will Bradley\n\u2022   Lud Gluikln\n\u2022   Bob Crosby\n\u2022  |ack Tearardan\n\u2022 Abe Lyman\n\u2022  Freddie Martin\n\u2022  Henry Butae\n\u2022 Alvino Rey\n\u2022  Duke Ellington\nandl others\n\u2022 Will Otborne\nOn the last Saturday evening of each month,\nCKLN broadcasts muiie for dancing between\n9 00 p.m. and 1:00 a.m. (Except from 10:00\nto 10:15 p.m.) Arrange your own party, and\nenjoy the best in dance music from the C.B.C.\nnetwork and our own transcription library.\nRequests will be accepted by telephone after 9:00 p.m.\nKM J.\ndtiniLpft\nKnuMwivaL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 The spacious\nHigh School auditorium wu well\nfilled with students and parents for\nthe graduation exercises Wednesday night, many from the rural\nschool sections being in attendance.\nPrincipal S. J. Graham opened\nproceedings with a few appropriate\nremarks. Reeve Col. E. Mallandainc\nS.ve the address of welcome which\neluded i reference to tha one-\nroom school with ten pupils to start\nwith contrasted with the present\neducational plant with a staff of 17\nHigh School teachers and a ttaff of\neight in the village elementary\nschool.\nD. Bradley, Chairman of the\nBoard of Trustees, wu assigned the\ntalk of presenting the Board scholarship of t one-year tree attendance it Oride IS. It comet to the\nstudent making highest standing In\nGrade 12, and wat won by Doris\nBaskervllle, a student from Kings-\ngate, who is taking a course at the\nUniversity of Manitoba, allowing\nthe scholarship to revert back and\nwu presented Kenneth Kolthammer, a Canyon ttudent, who stood\nsecond highest, two points less than\nthe original winner.\nMrs. r. B. Miles, well krown in\ntchool trustee! circles at Cranbrook\nTODAY MENU\nRout Breast of Lamb or\nCtsserole at Lamb\nPotatoes Carrots\nBaking Powder Biscuits\nCabbage Salad    Caramel Custard\nCoffee or Tea\nROAST BREAST OF LAMB\n1 poundt breut of lamb, Vi cup\nwater, ] or I bacon ttrlpt, seasonings.\nWuh lamb with damp doth, place\nIn routing pan. cover with bacon\nstrips, season with salt and pepper,\nadd water to pan, cover and bake\n'i hour. Pare potatoes, place around\nmeat, teuon and cook with lamb, I\nbasting them once or twice while1\nroasting. Make gravy from juices\nleft in pan by adding 1 tablespoon\nflour to each cup of liquid. You can\nadd an onion to pan if you like\nthe flavor.\nCASSEROLE OF LAMB\n1 pounds lamb breut, 1 cups diced\npotatoes, 1 finely chopped onion,\nflour, l cup canned tomatoes, 1\ncups diced carrots, 1 cup hot water,\nbacon fat\nHave Iamb cut in small pieces\nfor serving, roll in flour and brown\nwell In bacon fat with the onion.\nPut in greased casserole with tomatoes and hot water, and bake 1\nhours. Add potatoes and carrota\nand bake y, hour longer. Add more\nwater from time to time, and thicken gravy, if lt it too thin, after meat\nand vegetables have been removed.\nCARAMEL CUSTARD\nVi cup sugar, caramelized, ] cups\nmilk, 3 eggs, V4 teaspoon salt, Vi\nteaspoon vanilla.\nButter four or five custard cups\nCaramelize sugar by putting in a\nheavy flat pan. Spread evenly over\npan and place on low heat, without\nstirring until \"Brown syrup Is formed. Scald milk, beat eggs, sddlng salt\nto them: stir caramelized sugar very\ngradually Into hot milk, then add\nto eggs and salt. Add vanilla and\nturn Into custard cups. Set cups in\nhot water and bake at 380 degrees\nF. about 1 hour, until firm. If you\nart not sure custards are done, insert a silver knife In the center of\none, tnd if it comet out clean the\ncustard is done.\nfor 20 years, deliveied the address\nto the graduating students, \u00abnd also\nprttented the certificates, Ber talk\nwas practical, tnd the wu presjnt-\ned with a boquet by Phyllis Wilk\nPrincipal Graham  introduced  a\nnew feature, tha Roll ot Honor,\nwhich showed a list ot about BO\nnames ot Creston High students who\nhave already joined up for active\nservice.\nShirley Macdonald made her debut at President ot the Council in\ncreditable fashion, presenting\ntwardi in drama, basketball, badminton and track and field ath\nletics, in moat cues the letter \"C\nand in others a distinguishing fig'\ntire to wear with the latter.\nInterspersed with the talks and\npresentations were musical numbers. The Treble Clef Girls' Choir,\nunder the direction of Miss Hlen\nMoore, musical direction, presented\na group of three numbers. Reens\nLachat and Joan Langston had \u25a0\nduet, and Ronald Hart a solo num.\nber. Mist E. Pritk was accompanist\nfor the evening.\nThe stage wss attractively decorated, the School colon being much\nin evidence. After the exerclsei the\nfloor was cleared for a few hours'\ndancing under the direction of the\nStudent Council.\nDaily\nPronar Nulrlflon\n\u25a0y IDA JEAN   KAIN\nThe average homemaker wouldn't\nhave tha illghteit Idea ot how. to\n' ordering\n(o about\nwould\nfamily\nwould supply etcS member ot her\nimily with 75 milligrams ot ascor-\nIc acid, 0.8 grama ot calcium, and\n. J grams ot protein, which art the\ndietary allowances ot these protet-\ntlve elements set by the nutrition\nyardstick. In tact, these figures are\napt to confound rather than help.\nTo make sure of getting the 78\nmilligrams of ascorbic acid, or Vita*\nmin c, needed In the dally diet,\nsome fresh fruits and vegetables\nshould be selected from the list high\nIn Vitamin C: Oranges, grapefruit,\ntangerines, tomatoet, and lemons.\nOne of these foods must be used\nevery day. The author gives the\nume pattern for all the ettentttls.\nWhether you eat at home or in\na restaurant, this nutrition plan\nshould be followed:\nOne pint of milk dally tor adults.\nOne quart of milk dally tor children.\nOne generous serving ot meat,\nfish, or poultry dally, with a serving ot liver once e week.\nTwo tip or one en and an extra\nserving of meat daily; or one egg\nand st least in ounce of cheese.\nTwo tervlngs of vegetablei dally,\none a green leafy.\nTwo serving! of fruit daily, one of\nthem citrous.\nDark whole grain bread and\nbreakfast cereals.\nAt least three pats ot butter.\nSix to eight glasses of water.\nBy conscientiously following that\nplan every adult and child It assured of a diet that supplies the\nrecommended sllowancet of ill the\nvitamins, minerals, and body build-\ning proteins.\ntiwienmieenswaipiaeeetiiesjsj   i\n\"BvM B. C. Payroll^\nAlways\nRich,\nTop\nQuality\n\"It'i always rich, pure,\nfine flavored, freih\u2014top\nquality.\"\nMn. R. M. T. It writing\nof its uniformity, one of\nthe features that gives\nPacific Milk its place with\nto many patrons.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Picked\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0eeetjMstttststaMB^M^\nthe tone to take care of you.\"\nBack of a wide, pale desk ut a\nyoung man, absurdly handsome,\nYlena thought briefly. He wu sound\nasleep. The office girl awoke him\nwith an indulgent toft pat on tha\ncheek. Eyes still closed, he pulled\nat her hand and burled his mouth\nIn the palm. As the Jerked it awty\nhit eyes snapped open and he became aware of hit client Blushing,\nthe receptionist fled.\nYoung Cromwell looked embarrassed, but only mildly to, u ha\nleaped to his feet and escorted the\nblond girl to k chair on hit tide of\nthe desk. He ut down again and\nlooked at Ylena. She wu wearing a\ntailored cotton suit ot pale topaz,\nwith green-stitched lapels. Her hat\nwu the same thtde ot green, which\nalso matched her extraordinary\nlong narrow eyes and the tremendous square emerald, worn on her\nleft hand.\nSomeone newl Sparkling interest\nfilled him. Then the handed him\nthe $10,000 check and hit opinion\nchanged to one of even greater\npleasure. Someone new with some\nmoney!\nImmediately Tate Cromwell became the business man. In no time\nhe had Ylena in his maroon and\nchromium convertible coupe, hurtling her all over the valley that\ncradled the entire town and outskirts ot La Madera.\nShe knew It wu the place aha\nwanted when she ssw lt About a\nsmsll cottage wu a whitewashed\nfence and a taw acres of citrus\ntrees. There wu a little cactus garden, alto zinnias and other flowers\ntough enough to endura the desert\nheat\nRoaming through the four-room\nhome, the distressed girl realised\naha would be u nearly nappy there\nu possible. Some former occupant\nhad left a little broken clay ash\nreceptacle In the kitchen; an Indian\ntray shaped like a turtle. Ylena\npicked It up and turned to make\ntome remark to the young real\nestate dealer.\nBut, before ike could speak, he\ncaressed the toft beauty of her un>\nderllp with nil fingertip* and whit\npared hoarsely: \"I'd rather kite you\nthan any woman I've aver known.\"\nImmediately ha backed away and\njust stared at her, hit eyu a dark,\ndark blue.\nUncertain and perplexed, Ylena\nstared back at this crazy young\nman in the loose-fitting white Jacket suit and open-necked sports\nshirt who wu to certain of the\ncharms of wavy, almost black hair\nand those dark blue brooking eyes.\nSuddenly she burst into uncontrollable laughter. In a fury, Tate\nCromwell turned and stalked out to\nhit machine. The ride back to the\nAlvarez Hotel wu a bitterly silent\none.\nAt hit home that night Taylor\nCromwell reported the deal to bit\nparents. He uld with a chuckle,\n\"When I uw that check, I thought\n'Sweet, you wont get away from\nme without a struggle.' Not that she\nput up one.\" Except in the kitchen\not the little ranch house, he suddenly remembered with chtgrln.\nHer rejection of his favored, romantic approach\u2014the one he used\nrepeatedly and with success-\nbrought a blazing warmth to the\nback ot his neck. Nevertheless he\nmaintained with shameless egotism,\n\"I landed her eeelly.\"\nOld man Cromwell asked, \"What\nplace did the buy?\"\n\u2022 \"That ranch on the corner of\nMain Boulevard and Ron Lena.\nShe wu tickled silly. I uked\nninety-five hundred.\" Hit eyes\ntwinkled. \"Rock - bottom, you\nknow.\"\nHis mother asked: \"What's her,\nname, Tate?\"\nHe frowned with self-disgust.\n\"Now that's a dumb one for you.\nI dont even remember without the\npapers It wu tome craiv name\"\n\"You should have paid more attention to tha check. Sari Cromwell accused.\n\"The check was made to 'cash.'\nI limply can't remember the endorsement\" After a moment of\ndeep thought he managed: \"It wat\ntlgned by Vincent\u2014Theodore Vln\ncent\"\n\"Maybe the't Mrs Vincent\n(To Be Continued)\nif I I\" \u00bb \" \u25a0 \"I'.\" ' !'.\u25a0*\u25a0> \"\u25a0  \"\"\nI.     i. W   ' US'  \"\n    \t\n_^______^__^___\n You'll be in a dancing\nmood when you see our\nnew collection of smart\nsandals. Come in today for\nyour selection,\nR, Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nC.Y.O. Head Tells\nYouths Dedicate\nLives to Faith\nRev. H. W. Daly, S.J., of Montreal,\nC.Y.O. National Director, Thursday\nevening when addressing the combined Senior and Junior Catholic\nYouth Organizations of Nelson,\nurged the young people to live dedicated lives closer to their faith, to\nthus gain a richer and fuller spiritual lite.\nFather Daly, who Is making a\nDominion-wide tour of Catholic\nYouth Organizations, spoke at Cranbrook and Trail previous to visiting Nelson. He planned to visit next\nthe C.Y.O. of Regina.\nCourage, unselfishness, charity\nend kindness were all part of Catholic life, he said*, and he urged the\nyoung people to make these things\npert of their lives. They should\naeek to develop themselves In mind,\nheart and outlook. Development of\na closer Catholic way of life could\nbe gained, he said, by closer association among Catholics, and by frequent meetings of the young people.\nA  Catholic   wu   necessarily   an\n\u00a7 jostle, snd should direct his ac\nvitlea    toward    bringing   others\ncloser to the Church, he said.\nFollowing his address, Father\nDaly answered questions put by\nHie members. Most Rev. M. M\nJohnson, D.D, Bishop of Nelson,\nexpressed the appreciation of the\nyoung people to Father Daly.\nButcherteria\nHejwi 'JS*\n29c\n22c\n28c\nPhone\n527\nRolled Veal Roasts:\nWith dressing, lb. .\nPot Roaitt Steer\nBeef: Up from lb. ,\nOven Pork Roasts:\nLb.\t\nVeal Rump Roasts: Of\nSpecial, lb LDC\nPork (owls:\nSmoked, lb.\nHamburger:\nGood, 2 lbs.\n25c\n25c\nBonelesi Stew Beef:\nLb\t\nMinced Steak t\nLb\t\n23c\n25c\nCorned Beef:\ncured In sugar,\nboneless, lb. . .\nSpecially\n25c\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B, C.-SATUBDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER K. 1Mt\nEducation Preparation lor Living,\nDr. ludwig, Cheney, Tells Teachers;\nHitler a Product of Environment\n\"How to live\u2014that It the essential\nquestion tor ut. Not how to live In\nthe mere tense of the word, but in\nthe widest tense. The general problem la the right ruling of conduct\nIn all directions, under all circumstances. In what way to treat the\nmind; in what way to treat the\nbody: in what way to manage our\naffairs; in what way to bring up a\nfamily; in what way to behave at a\ncitizen; how to use our faculties to\ngreatest advantage of ourselves and\nothers; how to live completely\u2014this\nis the great thing which education\nhas to teach. To prepare us for\ncomplete living is the function that\neducation has to discharge.\"\nThis, a quotation from an essay\nwritten by Herbert Spencer In 1859,\nwas the main issue in education,\nstated Dr. Albert P. Ludwig of\nthe Eastern Washington College of\nEducation, at the general session of\nthe West Kootenay and Boundary\nTeachers' Convention held, in the\nJunior High School Auditorium Friday morning, the second day of the\nconvention.\nPREPARATORY TO LIFE\nThe school existed primarily to\nprepare boys and girls for complete,\nhappy and socially efficient living,\nDr. Ludwig laid down. Modern, up-\n-to-date schools and colleges were\ndirectly concerned with the personal self-development of the learner;\nwith his home, his family and community relationships; with his economic efficiency as a producer, a\nconsumer and investor; and with his\nvarious civic and social responsibilities.\nBut today, true liberal education\nwas far more than this, Dr, Ludwig\nargued. Education began in the\nhome. There was still no more important educational institution than\nthe family. The family wat the\nthreshold of democracy. Home and\nfamily were the first condition of\nlife for the child. They were first\nin importance for his growth, de^\nvelopment and education. His education began in the home, where\nhe learned to speak, to walk, to\nhandle objects, to play, to demand,\nto give, to experiment. Religious\nfaith was imparted in the family,\nthe roots of character or lack of it\nwere established in the home environment\nAll this was preparation for the\nneighborhood, community life.\n\"Can we stretch our minds to\ncover not only our city or our prov.\nince, but the globe, the world of\nhumanity?\" the speaker asked. \"Na\ntionalism is a curse, it is tribal\nvanity, collective egoism that divides the virtues and vices of th\nworld along geographical lines. It Is\naggressive, overworked patriotism\nclothed in ignorance and prejudice\nperverted to selfish ends.\nA LIBERAL EDUCATION\n\"An an educator, I am interested\nin method and content of educa\ntion. I often disagree with my col\nleagues, but that is freedom of\nthought\u2014that is democracy. There\nI is no royal road to education, lt is\nnot easy, it Is a lifetime task and\n| job, one of the greatest stimuli that\nI has com to h inanity.' I am im\nj pressed by this defintion of a liberal education: 'A liberal education\nshould Include those matters every\nhuman being thould know, is a\nhuman organism, as an intelligent\nctir.cn, and as a spiritual personality, about himself, his body, his\nmind and his emotions; about the\nhuman race, its origins, and historical development; about the economic and political structure of\nsociety and its human implications;\nsome languages, the essence of the\ngreat literatures, arts, philosophies\nand religions ot mankind; there\nshould be adequate provision in\nthe curricula for breadth of learning to a certain point, and finally\nthere should be ample opportunity\nfor depth of concentration in a\nfield of special interest.\"\nDEMOCRACY WALKS\nWITH  BRITAIN\nIn the course ot his talk. Dr.\nLudwig traced a series of revolutions, ethical, intellectual, commercial and industrial, which had occurred throughout the ages, declaring that \"we cannot understand\nwhit is going on today, unless we\nknow the early history of England.\nI base my remarks on history, that\nFree Delivery\nAnnouncing . . .\nSkirts and Man-\nTailored   Jackets\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIQNEUX\nSHAW-HOULE\ne A quiet but pretty wedding\ntook place October 33 In Vernon,\nB.C, when Rev, Barber united in\nmarriage Lena Valerie, second\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Houle\not Nelson, to Dr. Raymond Cox\nShaw, first ton of Mrs. V. Klep-\nlnger and tha late John H. Shaw\not Lafayette, Indiana. The bride\nlooked chaming in a mots green\njacket dress, trimmed in brown\nsquirrel, with wood brown accessories, Her corsage wat ot Johanna\nHill rotes. The brida't only attendant wat Mrs. Mary Russell, who\nchose a honey beige crepe dress\nwith moss green accessories, and\ncorsage of bronze chrysanthemums.\nHarry H. B. Horton supported the\ngroom. When they return from their\nhoneymoon spent In the Okanagan,\nDr. and Mrs. Shaw will take up\nresidence in their recently completed home on the North Shore.\ne Miss Beth Hicks ot Slocan\nCity vitited Nelson yesterday,\ne Miss Rita Weatherhead, Fourth'\nStreet, has as guests over the weekend Miss Doreen Curran and Miss\nIsabel Crowe, who teach in Trail\nand are here to attend the Teachers'\nConvention.\na Mise Margaret Arthur, Silica\nStreet, has as guest Mrs. Sinclair\nwho teaches at Wynndel and is attending the Teachers' Convention.\ne Miss Therza Rossman.o! Trail\nis a guest of her parents, Mr. snd\nMrs. Frank Rossman, Nelson Ave-\nHONOR BRIDE-EILECT\ne Miss Jessie Richardson, whose\nmarriage takes place in the near\nfuture, was honor guest recently\nat a non-host handkerchief shower\nat the home on McQuame Avenue\nof Mrs. D. McGinn. The rooms\nwere beautifully decorated with\nbronze, yellow and white mums\nand golden rod. The bride-elect was\npresented by her sister Miss Dl-\nvana, with a decorated umbrella\nfilled with lovely handkerchiefs.\nThe guests present included Mrs\nDavid Richardson, Mrs. A. Andi-\nson, Mrs R. Carlson, Mrs. R. C.\nHoward, Mrs. R. Winfield, Mrt. G.\nAtkinson, Mrs. D. KUen, Mrt. S.\nBall, Mrt. F. Thompson, Mrt. J.\niHelscher, Miss Jessie Gentles, Miss\nJessie Byres, Miss Lydia Miller,\nMiss Richardson, Mitt Bessie Hooker, Miss Lillian Fisher, Mrs. Rose\nsnd Mrs. McGinn. Assisting were\nMiss Winfield, Mrs. Anderson and\nMrs. Carlson.\ne Mrs. T. Olson of Erla visited\nNelson Thursday.\ne Thursday afternoon Mrt. J. C.\nHlelscher, 524 Robson Street, was\nat home to members of Circle No. 2\nof St. Paul's when her guests included Mrs. A. Anderson, Mrs. F.\nThompson, Mrs. G Atkinson, Mrs.\nD. Klein, Mrs. Davided Richardson,\nMrs. J. M. Armstrong, Mrs. J.\nCornfield, Mrs. J. Small, Mrs. A.\nSpence, Mrs. Angus Shaw, Mrs.\nJohn Lundie, Mrs. W. Dtvies and\nMrs. Ferguton of Longbeach.\n* e Shoppers in town Thursday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. C. Jensen\nof Sheep Creek.\na Miss Norah Ryan, who teaches\nat Slocan City, It ittendlng the\nTeachers' Convention In Nelson.\ne Mr. and Mrs. A. Forbes of\nValllcan visited town yesterday.\nnet ot\nwherever England hat gone, tolerance and tha democratic idea have\ngone with her \u2014 she may have\nslipped back occasionally, but if\nEngland had not been mistress of\nthe teat, Spain or France or Germany might have been. Under\nQueen Elizabeth in 1588, England\ndestroyed the Spanish Armada, and\nit was then that her rise of sea-\npower began. Now Hitler would\nlike to smash that tea-power, and\nEngland is damned for her imperialism \u2014 condemnations which\nare ignorant, biased and prejudiced.\n\"Hitler speaks ot a new order In\nEurope, Japan speaks of a new\norder in Asia, it is all a new despotism. 'We are apt to think ol\nCommunism, dictatorship and totalitarianism as something new, but\nit it as old as man, and today Is\nmerely garbed in new clothes. We\nare all to blame for the Second\nWorld War, we are to blame for\nallowing the existence of environments which produce such at Hitler\u2014eomething must be done about\neconomics.\"\nPRESIDENT\nHARDING'S WORDS\nIn speaking of his first visit to\nCanada, Dr. Ludwig told ot his\ntrip up from Chicago to Winnipeg,\nRegina and Vancouver, where he\nembarked for China to teach at\nTientsin, and expressed the privilege and pleasure he still experienced on visiting Canada again.\n\"We are a part of you,\" he said,\nand I can best express it in the\nwords of a great American statesman\u2014President Harding\u2014who In\n1923 at Vancouver said: 'What a\"\nobject lesson ot peace is shown today by our two countries to all the\nworld. No grim-laced fortifications\nmark our frontiers, no huge battleships patrol our dividing waters, no\nstealthy spies lurk in our tranquil\nborder hamlets.\n\"'Only'a bit of paper, recording\nhardly more than a simple understanding, safeguards lives and properties on the Great Lakes, and only\nhumble mile-post! mark the Inviolable boundary line for thousands\nof miles through farm and forest.\n'\"Our protection it in our fra-\ntemitv, our armor Is in our faith,\nthe tie that binds more firmly year\nby year is ever Increasing the acquaintance and comradeship\nthrough Interchange of citizens, and\nthe compact is not of perishable\nparchment, but of fair and honorable dealing which, God grant, shall\ncontinue for all time.'\"\nMayor N. C. Stibbs opened the\nsession with a welcome to Dr. Ludwig, and R. B. Morris, Chairman\nof the Board of School Trustees,\nalso spoke a few words of welcome.\nRev G G. Boothroyd offered the\ninvocation, and Roy Temple was\nChairman.\nPupils of the Hume School under\nthe direction of Miss Greta Cur-\nwen, entertained with a patriotic\nprogramme, consisting of a recitation by Robin Terry, \"In Praise ol\nEngland\" and a musical pantomime\nof a ball game, which was very\namusing.\nH. Charlesworth, General Seere-1 from Balfour yesterday. ,. , -iwij;-   hT\u00abr-.J|; Si\u2014 J,l\ntary of the B.C. Teachers' Federa-;    ,   Mr. and Mrt. W. Batten of  Ued \"\"Stives in the city Thursday,\ntion, gave a short resume of the  Salmo spent yesterday in Nelson\nout's Pro-Cathedral, when those\npresent were Mn. S. S. Brltrd, Mrt.\nBarrett, Mrt. F. P. Sparks, Mist\nFences Lincoln, Mrt. John Morey,\nMrt, Norman Roaeoe, Mrs. E, S.\nPlanta, Mrt. John Erb, Mrt. R. B.\nProctor, Mrs. W. J. Leigh and Mrs.\nFlnjt.\ne Mra. C. S. Price and her ton\nMichael and niece Margery Ann ot\nProcter vitited town yesterday.\nRETURNS TO BALFOUR\ne Mrt, D. Campbell, who spent\nseveral dayt at the home of Mrt,\nE. Y. Brake, Baker Street, has returned to Balfour.\ne Mitt Mary McQuaig and Miss\nMary O'Donnell, both of Trail are\nattending the Teacher's convention.\ne A. Warner was In town from\nSlocan City yetterday.\ne Mra. Thomta Brenllson of\nBalfour Is a city visitor.\ne. Shopper^ in Nelson yetterday\nIncluded Mrt. Thompson of Sheep\nCreek.\ne Mr. and Mrt. Edward (Teddy)\nRomano have returned from spending their honeymoon at the Coast.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Maglio and\nMiss Florence Maglio were in Trail\nThursday to attend the funeral ot\nMiss Eliza Finlay.\ne Mrs. Margaret Peters, pioneer\nof Ymir, visited town yesterday.\n\"   Shoppers In the city yesler\nday  Included Mrt.\nWillow Point\ne Mrs. E. Y. Brake, Baker Street,\nhas u guest Mrs. J. Johnson ot\nCalgary.\ne Miss Coleman, who teaches at\nBrilliant, It a city visitor.   .\ne E. H. H. Applewhaite of Willow Point spent yesterday in Nelson.\ne Miss Clara Johnson, Frultvale\nteacher, is visiting Nelson over the\nweekend.\nMOVING TO ALBERTA\ne Mrs. Walter Crowther and her\nchildren, Observatory Street, left\nyesterday for Vancouver to spend\na few days with relative! en route\nto Coronation, Alts., where Mr.\nCrowther has recently been promoted at C.P.R. locomotive foreman.\ne Mist Joyce Sutherland, who\nteaches at Frultvale, is attending\ntire teachers' convention.\ne Mr. tnd Mrt. Archie Bremner\nof Salmo are guests ot Mrt. Brem-\nner-t sister, Mrt. W. H. MiUer, Carbonate Street They are accompanied by their daughter.\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ashby of\nHarrop visited Nelson yesterday.\na Johnny Bremner of Ymir\nspent yesterday In town.\ne Dr. and Mrt. N. E. Morrison,\nMaple Avenue, had as guest Mrs.\nW. Ormand of Salmo, who visited\nhere while her btisband, Dr. Ar-\nmond, was on a business trip to\nCalgary.\ne Mrs. William Mlddleton and\nMrs. W. G C. Lantkall were joint\ntea hostesses Thursday afternoon In\nMemorial Hall when St. Saviour's\nMothers Club met. Those attending\nwere Mn. E. J. Boyce, Mrs. Frank\nPhillips, Mrt. George A. Fletcher,\nMrs. F. B. Ptirce, Mrt. Thomu\nGerman, Mrs. George Joy Mrs\nJasper, Mrs. J. Cadden and Mrs\nLund.\ne Miss Norma . Irving who\nteaches in Ymir, It spending the\nweekend in the city.\n\u2022   Mr. and Mra. George H. Avis\n.\" RoberBellwaYm *T City  \u2022\u00ab WWgr\u00abW*-.\n\u2122  Ralfmir vesterdaT. .. *.    G.e?f\u00abe    \"aTOm-Of  Tnti   V1S-\naddress he will give today.\nI.O.D.E. Sends\n$50 In Tobacco,\nSmokes Overseas\nA $50 order by Kokanee Chapter, I.O.D.E.. and I17.S0 in other\norders during the past week boosted\nthe October subscription to the\nOverseas Tobacco Fund by Nelson\nand District citizens to J113.50.\nPersons wishing to send tobacco\nor smokes to men in the active\nforces overseas may do so by placing orders with merchants. Weekly\nthe orden are collected by a committee ot the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Active Service Forces, and\nforwarded to Victoria. Recipient of\nthe gift may be designated when\nordering.\nPentecostal Worker\nAmong U.S. Russians\nWill Speak, Nelson\nCELEBRATES BUtTHDAY\ne On the occasion of her Mth\nbirthday anniversary, Mrs. D. G\nSmith was at home to a large lumber of old friends at the home ol\nher son-in-law and daughter. Dr\nand Mrs. F. M. Auld, Nelson avenue, Wednesday afternoon when\nabout 75 guests called to offer their\ncongrstulations. Many lovely gifts\nand messsges were received by Mrs,\nSmith. The living rooms were\nadorned with a bower of lovely\nAutumn flowers while the tea tabic\nwas dainty with a centre of rose\nbuds. Invited to pour were Mrs.\nM. Gibbs and Mrs. J. H. Lawrence\nwhile serviteurs Included Mrs. D.\nMalonev, Mrs. C. M Young, Mrs.\nH. Cecil Grizzelle and Mrs. David\nLaughton.\ne   Mr. and Mrs. Davis of Ymir\nspent Thursday in town.\ne   Miss Dorothy Bowker has left\nto' take a position In Trail\nRETURNS TO AIR POST\ne   Sergeant  Wirelest  Air  Gunner   G.  E.   (Chubby)   Greenwood,\nwho spent six days' furlough with\nrelatives In Nelson, planned to leave\non the Eastbound train this morning,\ne   Club No. 16 of the W.B.A. met\nat the home of Mrt. Frank Phillips\nwhen members present were Mrs,\nG. Fletcher; Mrs. J. Annable, Mrs.\nJ. J. Foote, Mrs. W. Mlddleton, Mrs.\nDavid Laughton, Miss Grace Leugh-\nA   E. Pecota, Superintendent of! Mise Irene  Laughton, Mrs. W.  E.\nPentecostal work among the Rus-1 Coles and Mrs. J. E. Ludlow. Thev\nsiens In the United States, will come had been previously entertained a:\nto Nelson Tuesday to take part In\nSPECIALS\nTea: Nabob, lb.\t\nToilet Tissue: Fraser, 4 for\nCorned Beef: 1's, tin\t\nMolasses: 15 or. tins, tin\n83c\n15c\n22c\n22c\n77c\n19c\nMarmalade: Shirriff's, 4 lb. tin _\nChocolate: Fry's cooking, Vi lb....\nPaper Towels: Pkg    16c\nPork and Beans: 28 ox. tins 22c\nWhite Beans: 2 lbs  15c\nShaker Salt: 2 lb. pkg  10c\nRice: No. 1,2 lbs  15c\nKetchup: Clark's, bottle   18c\nCoffee: Chase and Sanborn, lb.  57c\nPHONE MS\nHorswill Bros.\nthe   evangelistic   campaign   under  when Mrs. Wheatley of Loysl Club\nway at the Bethel Tabernacle since\nTuesday. He will hold services Tues\nday and Wednesday.\nSir\n.Ince the start of the campaign,\nEvangelist and Mrs. Joseph Wilder-\nman of Vsncouver have been conducting meetings here, and will\nlikely remain another two weeks.\nseveral\nT\nthe   members'   homes\nMontreal, and her sister, Mn. Cro\nnin of Procter, were present.\ne N. Swanzey, who teaches at\nYmir, is attending the Teachers'\nConvention. ,\ne Mrs. G. N. ColviUe, Silici\nStreet entertained members of Mrs.\nVincent Fink's Circle of St. Savl-\nMoss in Canada's Peat Bogs Mean\nValuable Reserve in Medical Chest\nBy JAMES McCOOK\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer1.\nOTTAWA. Oct. 24 (CP). - Sup-\npliet of Canada moss found in peat\nbogs represent a valuable reserve\nin the mighty medical chest ot the\nAllies, to be drawn upon for the\nhealing of wounded men when\nother supplies run short\ntime off from classes vltlt peit\nbogs md pull handfula of the loose,\nsoggy moss and throw lt on hard\nground where lt dried in a few\ndays.\nThe dried mosi wat tent to hot\nVISITORS FROM ROBSON\ne Mr. and Mrs. D. McKay, Silica\nStreet have at guests Mr. and Mrs.\nL. Spearing, who are attending the\nteachers' convention from Robson,\nwhere Mr. Spearing is principal.\ne Honoring G. K. Greenwood,\nSergeant Wirelest Air Gunner, who\nwas wis home on lesve, bit brother\nand slster-ln-liw, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nA D. Greenwood, entertained on\nThursday evening at their home,\n416   Maple   Avenue,   when   their\n-paai rivr\nPutnam's Plurality on Official (heck\nof Ballots Is 12 Over Donaldson and\n30 Over Frisby; Final Count Hov. 12\nMaking their official check of\nballots cut In Nelson-Creslon-a\ncount based upon tha itatementa of\npoll prepared by each Deputy Returning Officer when ha completed\nhit count election night, plus absentee and active service votes at telegraphed\u2014W. E. Coles, Returning\nOfficer, and David Laughton, hit\nassistant, announced Friday that\ntheir figures gave Frank Putnam,\nLiberal, a margin of 12 over M C.\nDonaldson, Conservative and of 30\nover Frank Frltby, C.CJP.\nTheir final tabulation wu:\nLib. Con. C.C.F.\nRegular vote   2005 1990 1973\nAbsentee (including\ntoldiert)      180  128   128\nTotals       MJ5 2H! JOSS\nThese figures Included the single\nadditional telegraphed report received Friday, that of the Bay\nStreet Armorlet, Victoria, which\ngave Putnam one, Donaldson four\nand Frisby two.\nFINAL COUNT NOV. \u00ab\nThe returning officers final count\nwill take place Nov. 12. At that time\nthe absentee ballots, now arriving\nby registered mall, will be opened\nand counted again. Absentee figures\nat present ara btsed on telepgraph-\ned reports.\nMr. Coles' check ot statements ot\npolls gava Putnam two lata at 2005\ncompared to 2007 previously reported; Donaldson three last at 1900\ninstead of 1093; and Frltby fix less\nat 1973, compared to 1979.\nThe total telegraphed report, Including the overseas vote, gave\nDonaldson 129, Frltby 122 and Putnam 120\u2014only three votes between\ntint and thirl\nSUMMARY\nSummarized, the vote was:\nL.b. Con. C.C.F.\nRegular vote   2005 1900 1073\nActive service overseas and\nextra-provincial ... 40 23 27\nActive service (B.C.) 12 13 21\nAbsentee      SB    SO    74\nTotals  2125 2113 2005\nThe absentee vote includes several\nmen on active service who, being\nunable to oast their ballots at special\nactive service polling booths, voted\ninstead at regular booths u absentees. The majority, however, are\nthe votes of sbtentee civilians.\nCourl Finds Williscroft Guilty of\nObstructing Officer; Fines Him $25\nguests included Mr. snd Mrs. Harold\nLakes, Mr. and Mrs. James McGregor, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McPhail,\nLac Arthur T, Godfrey and Mrs.\nOodfrey, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. M.\nGreenwood, Mr. and Mrt. G. M.\nHilton, Mn. J. B. Greenwood, Mrs.\nC. McLcod, Mrs. Miles Riddle, Miss\nD. Robinson Miss C. Ferguson. Miss\nMae Fotos, D. Miller, R. Porter snd\nD, Cameron.\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct 24\u2014Judgment\nhanded down In City Police Court\nFriday morning by Magistrate Par-\nker Williams, after being several\ntimes reterved, convicted George\nWillircroft of Trail .and Nelson ol\nobstructing an officer in the performance of hit duty. Williscroft\nwu fined \u00bb25 and costs. He paid\nthe fine under protest.\nThe case wu heard September 18\nand 10, with Acting Chief of Police\nF. H. Steele prosecuting, and C. B.\nGarland of Nelton u defence coun-\ntel, decition then being reterved.\nThe charge arose from a complaint laid by Constable J. E. Gor-\nSon of the City Police that Willu-\ncroft had refused to put out a cigar\nwhich he was smoking in the Trail\nRink on the evening of Sept. 0, and\nhad resisted when he wu being\nejected for falling to comply with\nthe  non-smoking regulations.\nWitnesses heard during the trial\nwere Rudolph Moen, rink doorman;\nConstable Gordon, Alex Bremner,\nand William Ramsay, Maniger ol\nthe rink, for the protecutlon: tnd\nDr. T. J. Mulr of Trail, ind Mr.\nWllltacroft for the defence.\nOn request of Mr. Garland. MaSt-\nttrite Williams, in his summary,\nstressed the fact that no evidence or\nsuggestion whatsoever of liquor had\nentered into the case.\nMagistrate Williams' written Judgment follows:\nTHE JUDGMENT\n\"On the evening of September 0,\nMr Williscroft, the accused, and\nDr, Muir left the Crown Point Hotel\nto attend a lacrotse game at the\nTrill Rink. As they walked ilong,\nthey were so absorbed In the discussion of i topic of mutual Interest\nthat Mr. Williscroft apparently\nceased actively smoking his lighted\ncigar, and In fact, we hive no evidence to show that the clpr wu\nI ever seen in his mouth after the\ntime of his departure from the\nhotel, while we do have the evidence of Mr. Williscroft that he did\nnot even once put the cigar In his\nmouth after leaving the hotel, and\nthat he had no Intention of smoking\nhis oigar within the Rink. Further\nwe have the evidence of Mr. WUls-\ncroft that he believed his cigar had\ngone out or wu dead before he\nentered the Rink.\nDIDNT LOOK AT CIQAR\n\"I experience no difficulty in\nreiliilng or determining whether a\ncigar I rurve once lighted is in fact\nSurgeons lo Do\nWork In Cellars\nLONDON, Oct. 24 (CD-Underground operating theatres and bigger rotas ot raid surgeons sre included in new plans which Great\nBritain's hospitals hive made tc\nmeet possible further heavy air\nattacks. '\nThirteen months ago Queen\nMary's Hospital, Stratford, became\nthe tint London hospital to be\nbombed and since then 409 more\nhospitals all over the country have\nbeen damaged.\nMany lessons were learned from\nthe frequent raids and the new\narrangements mean hospitals will\nbe better equipped for future emergencies. Spare rooms are being tet\naside for operations where there\nareno faciUtlet for underground\ntheatres and portable apparatus is\nbeing Increased.\nHospitals found that raid victims\nsuffering from bomb shock often\nneed the attention ot five or six\nsurgeons at the ume time, to more\ndoctor! ire being placed on the\nrotas.\nDamage to hospitals ran Into millions of pounds. St. Thomas In West\nmuster, bombed eight times In nine\nmonths, wss the heaviest sufferer,\nbut although lou there amounted to\nmore thsn \u00a3li)00fl00, not a single\npatient was killed.\nIn 400 hospitals In greater Lon\nlighted or not but even If no\nthought hid been directed to the\npoint, the warning by Mr. Moen at\nthe door ol the Rink thould hive\nwarranted a glance.\n'The purpose of prohibiting\nsmoking within the Rink is possibly\nthreefold: To leasen tire hazard; to\nkeep the air as clear and pure u\npossible so u not to impede pliyert\nparticipating in ttrenuout tportt;\nand for the comfort and benefit of\nthe spectators generally.\n\"Keeping in mind the above purposes, the end Is lott if i distinction be drawn between puffing or\nholding a lighted cigar or cigarette\nwithin the building.\n\"I find from the evidence that\nMr. Williscroft wu aware ol the\nsmoking restrictions.\nNO REASON FOR\n\"I tee no reaton why a spectator\ncarrying a lighted cigar and knowing of the tmoking restrictions\nshould not be evicted from privtte\nproperty it he persists in hit refusal\nto refrain from tmoking or cirry-\nlng tuch lighted cigar or cigarette\nand resists an effort at the instance\nof, and on behalf ot, the owner or\nmanagement to extinguish such cigar or cigarette.\n\"I am satisfied that the Trail Rink\nCompany have the power to prohibit smoking without splitUng\nhairi and In ib\\broad tense, ind to\nevict thote who refute or neglect to\nobserve tuch restrictions.\n\u2022The holding; of a cigar with the\nlighted end down while both hands\nare placed or resting on a fence\nseems not only an unnatural ind\nawkward position, but is possibly\nthe way I would hold one if 1\nwere to find myself with a lighted\ncigar in such a place.\nACCEPT8\nCONSTABLE'S ACCOUNT\n'There is s direct contradiction\nof evidence on the manner of Con-\ntable Gordon's ipproach, and on\nthis point I am accepting the constable's version In 1\u00bb entirety, keeping In mind the evidence of Mr.\nMoen that he taw the constable tnd\nMr. Williscroft conversing for a\nminnte and a halt before the evlc-\nton commenced, and having in\nmind the insufficiency of Dr. Hut's\nevidence on this point. I do not feel\nthat Gordon should have made in\nundignified and hasty retreat the\nmoment the cigar might have been\nextinguished.\n\"I believe that whatever the predicament wu that Mr. Wlllseroft\nTRAIL SOCIAL\n\u25a0y MISS KAY LOWDON\nFREEMAN\n\u2022    FURNITURE CO.   *^\nThe Houta ot Furnitura Valuta\nMono 115 lagle Block\nSEE OUR. DISPLAY OP\nNew Rugs\nOver 100 to ChooM\nFrom\n\u25a0\nV \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .'\u25a0..\nLUTHER KINO V\nNelton la In store tor a musical treat when on Tuesday, Oct.\n28, Luther King, distinguished\nnegro tenor, accompanied by hit\nwife, Jean Houston King, will\npresent a recital at Trinity\nUnited Church under the sponsorship ot the Trinity Choir.\nMr. King was born in the statt\nof Georgia, tnd received hit.\nadvanced musical training In\nNew York City. Ha wu a soloist with the Fitke Jubilee Sing.\nen, soloist with tha Sherman-\nWilliams Orchestra and took\ntha part of \"Boy\" in the Negro\nopera \"Tom Tom.\" These ara\nonly -a tew ot Mr. Klng't\nachievements.\nIn 1036 Luther King made hit\nCanadian debut in Toronto and\nwu received with much\nacclaim. '\nMost recently Mr. and Mrs.\nKing have been performing in\nthe Okanagan, Vancouver,\nLethbridge and Calgary and In\neach place before capacity\nhouses.\nfound himself in on that evening.'\na simple utent or gesture followed\nby a tlmple effort to extinguth tha\ncigar would have avoided the whole\ntrouble that followed.\n\"I would mention that there la\nno evidence or suggestion whatsoever thit my liquor entered into\nthis whole matter.\nWAS ONLY DOING DUTY\n\"I believe lt was th* duty ot 010\nconstable to enforce the smoking\nregulations tnd I further believe\nthat the constable resorted to force\nonly when hit proper requests had\nbeen refuted tnd tfter he had ret*\nsonable cause to believe that Mr.\nWilliscroft did not intend to ax*\ntinguith hit cigar.\nThe rest follows, the constable\nwu resisted while executing the\neviction and the resistance turned\nInto an stuck upon the constable\nbefore he could extricate himtelf\nfrom his first mission.\"\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014In one month 76,\"\n548 Canadian troops were enter*\ntained it 414 concerts tnd movie\nshows arranged by the Canadian\nY.M.CA. overseas.\nNew It the Time to Consider\nNew Electrical\nAppliances\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n574 Baker St Phent 2*0\ntteVwleVldeVo\"' \"\"\" \"\"  \u00bb\"tlSiWaS&Tw    *\nbandages were made up. .\u201e,,   ,.,\u201e',,   \u201e,.,..   ,4.1.5  ^\u201e-in\u00ab\nndages were made up\nArmy  Medical  Services officials\n\u201e ..\u201e\u201e \u201e\u201e,,.. ., .\u201e,.\u201e  said  here  that  supplies of cotton\nLf.JL\u00b0\"\u00b0!1.\u00b0...r.u.?pl!\" \u00b0Llih.\" and compounds In the present war\nabsorbent materials run short wa\nanticipate that sphagnum, which\ngave such good service In the\nlast war, will be used again,\" a\nmedical authority told The Canadian  Press.\nIn the First Great War sphagnum\nmoss waa placed within bandage\ncloth and employed to replace ab-t\nsorbent cotton. It was found to be\nof special value because o( Its antiseptic qualities.\nA recent order-ln-council added\nsphagnum moss to the list of commodities which cannot be tent from\nCanada without an export permit\nThit insures that the moss will be\navailable for the use of Canada and\nher Allies when required.'\nIn the last war the collection of\nsphagnum moss became a major activity In Northern Europe and Scotland. School children were allowed\nwere sufficient to meet the needs\nof the services, but they recalled\nwith appreciation the contribution\nof sphagnum in the last war.\nPeat bogs and sphagnum are\nfound in every Canadian Provlnee\nand surveys concerned with the\ncommercial utilization of peat\nhave located bogs within convenient distance of several major\ncities from which volunteer parties could go to pick the moss,\nofficials Hid.\nUntil recent years the mosi wat\nregarded as having little commercial value but considerable quantities have since been sold for poultry litter and horticultural purposes\nThe United States Is reported to\nhave made Inquiries respecting possible Imports In connection with\ndefence activities,\nand injured were treated during\nthe period under review. Forty\nnurses of the 20.00c serving In London, three doctors and 15 porters\nreceived fital Injuries.\nDick Dcnnes It Now\nin the Air Fore*\nDick Denntt of Nelton, who underwent four months of trmy train-\ning at Vernon, hu enlisted in the\nR.C.A.F., ind It now stationed at\nToronto In a mechanics department.\nHe wu employed u a mechanic at\nNelton before donning \u2022 uniform.\nCH1LLIWACK. B.C., Oct. 24 (CP)\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Lockwood of\nChilllwack have been advised by\ncable that their son, Sgt.-Pilot John\nLockwood, one ot the first men of\nthis district to go Oversees with the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force, Is missing In air operations of Sunday,\nOct. 10.\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 24 - A. H.\nNlcholls is spending a two week!\nholiday in Calgary-\nMr. and Mrt. H W. Herridge of\nNakusp sre spending the weekend\nin Rossland snd Trail, u gueitt of\nMr. and Mrs. A. F, G. Drake of\nRossland.\nA. G. Cameron is in Vancouver\non business.\nPte. Robert Musk who hat been\n-\u2022lilting Trail for i few dayt on\nletve, returned to the Coast Thursday.\nMr. snd Mn. William Flemming\nsnd family are moving from Tad-\nanac to Lower Warfleld. Mr. Flemming it Deputy Chief of the Tad-\nanac Police Force.\nTrail teachert attending the\nTtacheri Convention it Nelson this\nweekend are Mrs. L. J. Morrish,\nG. A. York, Miss K. M. Cairns\nMiss Betty Anne Harrop, Miss Iris\nWilllsmson, Miss Mary A. Powell,\nMiss S. A. Pilmer, Mist Psullne\nPrescott. Miss Margaret Thompson,\nMiss Mary O'Donnell, and Miss\nIsobel Hirst, from East Trail School:\nMiss Florence Rutldge, Miss Pesrl\nMurray, Miss Severina Pearson,\nMiss Rita WaU, Miss Marjory Gor-\nringe, Miss Joan Hudson, Miss Dorothy Mead. Milt Betty Kerr, Mitt\nKathleen Harrit, Miss Wilms Csm-\nplon, Mist Doreen Curran, Mist\nMargaret Barclay, Mist Therta\nRossman, Miss Marguerite Sander-\ncock, I. H. R. Jeffery, William Frora-\nson, David Tully, and Walter Mat-\nthews, from Central School; Miss\nMiry McCsgue, Miss Jesn Ferguson end Miss Emily Lemmon, from\nTadanac School; Miss Margaret McDonald and Mist Joyce McRse, from\nAnnable School; and Mrs. R. H.\nLowe. Miss Nettle Llngle, Mist Mary\nLsmont Miss Kiy Mitheton, Mist\nD. K Johnston, Miss Ruth Bryson,\nMiss Msrjetn MoLure, Mist Dor-\n\"\"'lllai\n\\\nGtgrton. E.\n. .jy Minshull, F. C. \u00a5...\nchsrd, A. E Tweeddslt, H. Pirker,\nR. Neabitt, W. M. Cameron, B. B.\nCrawford, H. F. Hutchinson and\nw. S. Gibson, from Trall-Tadanac\nHigh School.\nF. A. Btalev leaves Saturday to\nreside it Victoria. He hu been\npreceded to the Cout by Mrs. Bad-\nley and family.\nMn. Charlei Thom of Winnipeg\nlt the guest ot Mn. J. B. Thom. She\n\u2022 ttended the funeral ot her brother-in-law, Dr. J. B. Thom, Wednei-\ndar.\nCharles Duncan, who became 111\nwhile on a hunting trip In the\nBoundary country. U a patient In\nGrand Forks Hospital\nMitt Lois Hunter naj returned to\nMedicine Hat after a month's visit\nhere u guest of her brother-in-law\nind sister, Mr. and Mrs J. Talbot.\nThe Lower Anntble Circle of St\nAnthony of Padua Church met it\nthe home of Mra. George Lacey on\nThursday afternoon. Attending were\nMra. J. Sukolic, Mra. E. Romino,\nMn. F. Benedettl, Mn. S. Rella,\nand Mra. Fred Arnot\nMr. and Mn. T. Maglio of Nelson\n\u2022ttended the funeral of Miss Eiza\nTinlay Thursday afternoon.\nJ. Stranchler of Prince Albert\nvisited Trail Thursday.\nW. E. Wmon and E. A. Mtnn of\nNelsonattended the funeral ot Dr.\nJ. B. Thom Wednesday.\nC.. B. Garland ot Nelson wu \u2022\nbuslnest visitor to Trail Friday.\nMist Helen Dipple snd Miss Eva\nFredericks, of Stranraer, Suk, are\nvisiting Miss Fredericks' mother and\nbrother, Mn. J. Fredericks ind John\nFredericks.\nStyle Leaders In\nClothes for Fall\nFashion First Ltd.\nMILK\nAT ITS  BEST\nRaw arjd Pasteurized\nIxootenay Valley Uairy\nmit^tmmttmtttamttmimiit\nWATCHES  DIAMONDS.\nWEDDING RINGS\nH. H. Suthcrlond\nfeu*))    msHjctait    \u00abvui\u00ab\u00ab,    \u20141    *-*\u00bb\u2022\nothy Williams, Mist Irene Savird,\nMiss Ethel Moody, A. E. Allison.\nA. B. Thompson, J. H. Gignon, E\nDavies. Ray Minshull, F. C. Pril\n'\/\u2022 W\nBRADLEY S\nMEAT MARKET\nBACON INDSt\nSliced, lb\t\nMEAT PIES:\nEach \t\nHAMBURG:\nFresh, 2 lbs\t\nBREAKrAST\nSAUSAGE: Lb. . .\nPOT ROASTS:\nGood, up from, lb.\n15c\n5c\n25c\n15c\n22c\n25c\nFOWL: Fresh\nkilled, lb. ...\nSHOULDER VEAL      ir\nSTEAKS: 2 lb, 4dC\nVIAL OVEN OCA\nROAST: Lb *WC\nCHOfPED SUETt       OtV\n2 lbs MC\nBUTTER: First\nerade, 3 lbs.  . .\n$1.17\nRecipa for Veal Steak with Mushroom Gravy\nlt\u00bb pounds Veil Sink, brown on both sides, then add 1 can\nMushroom Soup and 1 cup water. Simmer to heat through tad\nterve hot.\nWATCH FOR OUR WEEKLY RECIPE\n p\nPAG* SIX\nP?iK*';!^i^r*rt''tc\nMum 8 atljj Jfoma\nEstablished April tt 1901\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\ntha NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED 266 Bakei St Nelson British Columbia\nMEMBER Or nth CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDI1  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nSATURDAY, OCT; 25, 1941.\n| Oil for the Lamps of China\nThe trend of military operations in\n\u25a0 China is enshrouded at the moment in\n'a fog of more than usual density. The\nJapanese with great fanfare announo\n* ed that they had captured Changsha.\n'The Chinese countered by asserting\nthat Changsha was still in Chinese\nhands. The Japanese then announced\nthat, \"having attained their objective,\"\n* their troops were withdrawing. The\nChinese version was that the Japanese\nwere retreating with Chinese troops\n\"in hot pursuit.\"\nRegardless of what has happened\naround Changsha, or what may be happening at the moment, the Chinese\narmies have proved themselves to be\namong the world's finest fighting men.\nAccording to European standards\nof discipline, training, equipment\nand knowledge of orthodox tactics,\nthey may be a nondescript rabble of\nragged Irregulars. But the final test\nof an army is its ability to accomplish\nits purpose at the particular time and\nplace it is called into action. By this\nstandard, the Chinese have performed\nsuperbly, against overwhelming odds.\nThere is no front In this war-torn\nworld where a machine gun and a few\nrounds of ammunition, an old airplane\nand a few bombs, or even a sackful of\nhand grenades can be used to greater\neffect.\nAs a matter of fact, the Chinese\narmies, both regular and guerilla, have\nstood off the well equipped and conventionally trained Japanese forces\ninto now practically the fifth year of\nthe \"Chinese incident.\"\nChina, the China under the Nanking Government, the China defended\nby Chiang Kai-shek, is the ally of the\nBritish Empire and the United States\nin a world war against aggression and\nusurpation.\nIf Japan fails to strike at Russia\nor to tangle with the United States and\nBritain, China will be a large part of\nthe reason. And if Japan does strike\nin Siberia and does wage a Pacific\nwar in consequence or by volition, then\nChina will be a nemesis on Japan's\nheels, to stay with the fight until the\nerstwhile conqueror has been ejected.\nPapers in the United States are\ncalling on their Government to increase American aid to China, aid with\nequipment and munitions, including\nmotor fuel; and from now on, unless\nJapan manifests a plain intention of\nkeeping the peace, the door is shut to\nher obtaining war material from the\nold sources.\nDust of Gold\n\"Whotoever drlnketh of the witer thit\nI ihall give him shall never thlrtt.\"\nJohn 4:14.\nA mlstlonary in Chins, (Dr. Hudson Tay-\nlorl sfter miny hird ind successful yeirs,\nsuddenly lost his faithful ind beloved wife.\nHe was grief stricken, yet thit Is how he\nwrltet to a friend, when he too wat taken ill,\nlater: \"How lonesome were the weary hours\nwhen confined to my room! How I misled my\ndear wile and the voices of the children fir\niwty In England! Then It wu I understood\nwhy the Lord had made the passage to real\nto me, \"Whosoever drlnketh of the water thit\nI thill give him shall never thirst'. Twenty\ntimes a day, perhaps, ae I felt the heart-thirst\ncoming back I cried to Him, 'Lord, you promised! You promised that I should never thirst'\nAnd whether I called by night or day, how\nquickly He came snd satisfied my lorrowlng\nheart! He did literally fulfil the prayer:\nLord Jesus make Thytelf to me\nA  living bright reality;\nMore present to faith's vision keen\nThan any outward object teen;\nMore dear, more intimately nigh\nThan e'en the tweetett eirthly tit.\"\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpan to any reader, Namaa at penone atklni\nquestions will not be published.\nL. M., Kimberley\u2014Will you please tall ma who\nand what tha \"Mad Mullah'' was?\nA nickname given ona ot the leaden ot\ntha natives who revolted In the Sudan and\nwere defeated by Lord Kitchener. Other Moslem leaders have been similarly named.\nInformation, Trail\u2014Will you kindly tall ma\nwhat la the amount ot starch apart from\ntha tugar content In paanutaT\nWrite Department ot Agriculture, Washington, D. C.\nInterested Student Trail\u2014Would you please\nteU me what hat happened to the aerltl\nbomb which Allan Ramaden Invented?\nThe aerial bomb invented by Allan Ramaden wu sernt to the Wsr Inventions Board\nand according to the policy observed by thit\ndepartment no information will be given out\nduring wartime.\nX. R, Cranbrook\u2014I have a very Important\nquestion regarding tha Dominion Housing\nprogram. To whom thould I address lt?\nCommunicate with F. W. Nicollt, director,\nDominion Housing Act Department of Finance, Ottawa.\nReader, Trail\u2014Whit it the belt type of pafnt\nto uee over gypsum wallboard? Will' lt\ncover nillheadt?\nAny type of good quality paint can be\nused. If an oil paint finish it desired, It Is\nnecessary to apply a coat of sizing first. Sizing\nIn most Instances It not required, if a catein\npaint is to be used. Nailheadt thould be driven\nslightly below the surface of the boards; then\nfill the slight Indentation with a speckling\ncompound. Thit compound can be purchated\nat your local paint store.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELtoN. B. C.-8ATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER \u00bb, 1*41\nthe Si\nCan It Be True?\nIt it reported that a California horticulturist hat succeeded in creating an odorless\nonion .states The Christian Science Monitor.-\nWe view this information with uncertain feelings, even when told the new onion It descended from a lily bulb of the tame botanical\nfamily.\nThere are potential repercutslont of fir-\nreachlng import lp this announcement of a\nscentless vegetable. Onions are a completely\nsatisfying entity, boiled, fried, baked, or broiled. In the American way of life, they hava\nbuilt up a close and affectionate relationship\nwith hamburger, sometimes called chopped\ntir)oln. \"With or without?\" it an Indigenous\nquestion. We hope gastronomic folklore founded In the needs of our people wlU not disappear. \"Hamburg with\" Is a peculiarly happy\ndescription of a satisfying food. It the onion\nloses its savor, will it still be an onion? Do\nyou like yours with or without?\nPress Comment\n\"ICICLE\" AND \"BICYCLE\"\nOne of the children who contributed to\nthe school anthology of poetry discovered that\n\"icicle\" and. \"bicycle\" rhyme. That discovery\nhas been made by many earlier poets, who\nhave failed to discover I plausible way ot\ngetting them In the tame story.\u2014New York\nSun.\nPlace the ban on non-defence housing\nalongside the passenger car production slash\nand the two match In objective ind need.\nThe motor Industry uses materials on\ndefence priority lists; so does housing. Auto\nproduction Is already feeling the pinch;\nOPM talks of a SO per cent reduction In non-\ndefence construction next year. Employment\nwill suffer drastically In proportion. And\nautos and houses, of course, are only two of\ndozens of Industries in a similar situation.\nThus arrlvet one more abrasive reality\nto demonstrate the violent changes war Induces. The Government is hopeful that some\ncommunities will \"benefit\" by the shift of\nconstruction emphasis, non-defence to defence, but admits generally that \"construction will be very hard hit.\" Again, is with\nthe motor Industry, there Ii neither ability\nnor adequite plan to cope with the problern'i\nill-too-human ramifications. War can be heU\nto millions on the home front\n\u2014Detroit Free Press.\nEhould husky young Canadians be allowed to enter the United Ststes to play hockey\nfor the next six months while the Canadian\nGovernment Is Imploring fit youtht to Join\nthe colors? isks the Calgary Herald.\nIt Is noteworthy that Western Divisional\nBoard! of the National War Service! set up\nIn the different Provinces show more realism\nto this regard than similar Boards In the East\nwhere presumably, the seriousness of the\nwar should be more apparent\nIn Manitoba there hat been refusal of\nseveral application! from hockey players to\nenter the United States to play hockey during\nthe Winter. In Saskatchewan, the Boird hai\nruled that no hockey players, or any other\nyoung men, liable for call Into the Canadian\nArmy, will be allowed to depart to the United\nStates. A tlmllar attitude hat been observed\nIn Alberta.\nYet In Ontario, the banner Province, the\nDivisional Boird has granted permission to\nhockey pliyers to crost the border, with the\ntole proviso that If their tervlces are needed\nthey will be subject to recall.\nAt a time when the Federal Government\nhu all but admitted the futility of the volunteer lyttera of recruiting, the Ontario ruling\nis to be questioned, and thit of the Western\nHoards strongly commended. The wsr far\ntranscendi hockey In .importance these days,\nand the tooner this Is realized the better.\n\u2014Brandon Sun.\nWarT?h5cYdeaprsAg0 Today's Horoscope\nBy The Canadian Prut \u00bb\nBy The Canadian Prut\nOct. 2S. 1916\u2014Bulgarians under Gen. von\nMackensen captured Czernavoda, Rumanians\ndestroying bridge over the Danube. French\nrepulsed five German counter-attacks at Verdun.\nOct. 26. 1916\u2014Ten German destroyers raided English Channel; two disabled and the rest\ndriven off. Greek King Constantlne gave Al-\nliet fresh guarantees* of neutrality.   .\nWords of Challenge\n\"The task of today Is to marshal! our\nmanpower and our material resources tnd to\nhurl them at the nelarioui foe until he Ii\ntoned to yield, until he glvet up his mid\ntally of trying to dominite the world.\"\u2014Iin\nMackenzie, Minister ol Pensions ind National\nHealth.\nYour business ind love affairs forge ahe.-.d\nduring the next yeir if your birthday Is today.\nGiln comet through tdvertlslng, correspondence, agencies, and travel. Excessive expenditure on pleasure tnd frlendt of the opposite\nsex thould be checked. An eventful life lbs\nahetd of the young person born on this dat\".\nIt will be full of sdventure. Care will be ad-\nvlssble when neir fire and witer. Many love\naffain Involving monetary lost ire foreseen.\nHOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY\nGiln from unexpected sources tnd through\nelders\u2014perhipt by Inheritance and beneficial\nchange* are promlted to those who have birth,\ndayt today. They thould, however, curb a\ntendency to extnvagance on tdornment and\npleasure. Born on this date, I child will bo\nvery tactful tnd diplomatic; ilto contemplative, precise, original, clever. Industrious and\naffectlonite. He or the will be Inclined to\nover-generotlty with lovers ind friends.\nBy t. V. DURLINQ\nFor I'm not to fold,\nAnd-I'm not to plain,\nAnd I'm quite prepared\nTo marry again.\nW. 8. GILBERT.\n(In nothing, with tha possible exception\nof horse-playing, It tha triumph ot hope over\nexperience so great u in matrimony. No matter, how unhappy a woman's tint marriage hat\nbeen she-is always ready to try again. And\neven those who have had u many aa three\nunhappy marriages are eager and willing to\ntry a fourth one. I know a woman Who hu\nhad six unhappy marriages but It not discouraged. \"Ill find tha'right man yet\" aha says).\nWe art moving today, but everything la\ncalm and peaceful around the house. My girlfriend it the most efficient mover of a household I hare ever known. In tact she Is a genius\nat lt Mutt be the Gypsy In her. The pup it\nvery worried, however. And hat been pacing\nthe floor nervously for several hours u ha\neyes the trunks, boxes and bags. He evidently\nthinks we may go on a long journey, and\nleave him In the kennel. But he hat nothing\nto worry about He it going with ut thit time.\nASIDES\nSam Goldwyn once hired Mussolini for $2\na day. Benito was an extra in Goldwyn't film\n\"The Eternal City,\" which wat mada in\nRome\u2014\"I Would Like to Shoot the Man Who\nWrote the Merry Widow Waltz\" wat title of\na popular tong Inspired by fact that at the\ntime you could go hardly anywhere without\nhearing the \"Merry Widow Wilts\". \"Poor\nButterfly\" wat another song repeated so much\nit drove people slightly screwy, \"Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean\" wat another, In recent\nyean \"The Music Goet Round and Round\"\nwat played to the point where lt got on the\npeoples' nerves. And \u2022 long Just about getting\nto the ume point now ia that gay ninety\nditty, \"A Bicycle Built for Two.\" I heard that\nat least ten timet yetterday.\nPLEASE  NOTE\nA very successful husband lays when hit\nwife becomei angry and talks to him in a\nloud voice, he answers In whispers and this\nquiets her down snd sometimes makes her\nlaugh. Try lt out tome time, air. And If it\nworkt let me know and we will file the information under \"How to handle a wife\" in\nour horses ind women research filet.\u2014\"So it is,\nclaimed all persona named Taylor are des-'\ncended from tailors,\" writes a Bostonltn named Taylor. \"What tailor Is Robert Taylor, tho\nIdol of forty million women, descended from?\"\nRobert (Idol) Taylor's real name lt Spangler\nArlington. Brugh.\nALMOST CONFIDENTIAL\nFlo Zlegfeld, whom no current producer\neven nearly equals at a picker of beautiful\nwomen, laid:. \"It is the way a girl carries\nherself that counts most\" A girl who carries\nherself well usually makes a good wife because a good carriage requires strength of\ncharacter.\u2014Sodium thlocyanate, a new chemical may Increase man's span of life to one\nhundred and eighty-five years. How would\nyou like to live to be a hunded and eighty-\nfive years old, mister?\u2014Get this from a Lon^\ndon newspaper: \"During the past twelve\nmonths, thirty-three British manufacturer!\nhave lent overseas in average of 1,125,000 razor blades a day!\" I thought Britain wat thort\not tteel and other war materials.\nADDED  DETAILS\nHave heard of three career girls of Manhattan who are about the same size who ha ;e\ntaken sn apartment together to they can\nwear each other't clothes. They are all five\nfeet, ten Inches tall\u2014\"Too Many Blondes\" Is\nthe title of film. This title is unfair to blondes.\nAccording to students of the subject history\nreveals brunettes are much more dangerous\nand more like to disturb a man's peace of\nmind than blondes\u2014Give me entertainers\nwith it least two namet. I don't cire for the\nIdea of in actress or night club singer calling\nherself Just Hildegarde, Annabella or Margo.\nLet the head-waiters and hairdressers have\nthe exclusive on that one-name thing.\nPASSING  BY\nFred Astaire .song and dance man, the\nonly actor who Is a member of the still exclusive Racquet and Tennis Club of Manhattan. That Maxfield Parrish painting of Old\nKing Cole once on the wall of the old. Hotel\nKnickerbocker bar it now at tha Racquet and\nTennis Club\u2014Ada Leonard, imart-looklng\nleader of an all-girl band. The best all-feminine band of all time wat the Fadettes, of Boston.\nHitler's Reason\nWilliam Henry Chambirlln, In the\nAtlantic  Monthly\nWhy did Hitler attack the Soviet Union,\nthe power which he hid immobilized at the\nbeginning ot the war, and which was only too\nwilling to remain immobilized? His move\nhas been variously Interpreted, at t desperate\ndrive for food and oil, and aa a confession\nthat England could not be conquered, at leut\nIn any near future. The Fuehrer himself and\nhis Foreign Minister, Von Rlbbentrop, cited\nas an excuse for the invuion a series ot pinpricks in Soviet-German relations, cases where\nStalin had seized more thin his convenanted\nshare In the loot, subterranean Intrigue in the\nBalkant. There is t measure of truth In ill\nthete explanations. But the principal reason\nwhy Hltier struck at Russia was perhaps too\nsimple and obvious to be readily recognized.\nThe Soviet Union, and more particularly the\nmost productive region! ot European Russia,\nUkraine and the Caucatut, represented fsr tnd\naway the richest economic prize within Hitler's retch. Here, and here alone, he could\nhope to find the rich colonial empire, capable\nof being held by land and air power, which\nwould fill out the requirements of highly\nindustrialized Germany.\nTest Yourself\n1. What modern author it identified with\nCape Cod through hit books?\n2. Name the author, now deid, of 'The\nLand of Oz,\" \"The WJzird of Oz,\" and other\nfairy tales\n3. Is an Irish potato Irish? Is It a potato?\nTEST ANSWERS\n1. Joseph C. Lincoln. \u2022\n.2. I. Frank Bsum.\n3. Neither. It belongs to the nightshade\nfamily, botanlcally related to the tomato; it\nwai culUvated by the South American Indiana,\nfrom where It was taken to Europe ind liter\nintroduced into North America.\nWords of Wisdom\nA reputation for good Judgment, fair\ndealing, truth, and rectitude, Is Itself a fortune.-H. W. Beecher.\n-\ni ' \" \u2022 '   n .i i     I'     j ii\n\"Personnel Selection\" Staff Officers\nTHE NEW ARMY DIRECTORATE OF PERSONNEL SELECTION will have a large corps ef psychologist!\nand vocational advisers situated across Canada to place recruits hi the service and arm where their background,\ntraining and temperament promises greatest efficiency. The above officers serve on the staff ot CoL G. Brock\nChlsholm, M.C, M.I), the Director, at National Defence Headquarters.\nLeft to Bight: Major Janet Howard, a teacher with psychological and vocational guidance experience;\nCapt. Wm Line, former Professor of Psychology at University ef Toronto; and Lieut J. D. Griffin, former\nmedical director, Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene.\nHEADS  CANADIAN\nFIREFIGHTINO UNIT\nFire Chief D.' A. Boulden, of\nWinnipeg, who has been chosen\nto head the fire-fighting unit\nwhich will be sent over to England by the Canadian Government. Chief Boulden was recommended for the post by a committee of his fellow fire chiefs.\nDirector of Personnel Selection\nWin Appointments\nBroodier A E. NASH, MC, ED,\nDeputy Adjutant Gentra! at National\nDeftnct Headquaittrs, who, tt was announced by Col the Hon- I. L Haltton,\nMinister of National Defence, has been\nselected for an Important pott with the\nCanadian Forces la England.\nBrigadier O. M. H. EAT, whose\nprevious appointment was Director la\nthe Branch ol the Adjutant Oeosral at\nNational Defence Headquarters, has\nbeen appointed Deputy Adjutant General rice Btlqaditr G. H. Cassels, CM.\nG. He was a pilot In the Hoyal AH\nForce during the Great War.\nCOL. fl. HOCK  nugHOi.M,  MC,  Mil,  MernUtsnBy  known\nMseihsjsst sad ityeriotoiWt, sad a veteran of inwmally lout front-Una\nthe ntaka sad aa an \u2022ffleer to tha last war, win direct the\nanecaa et rfMeattr ptactag the right mast aa the right Job in th.\n, highly nut Mated Caaadata Amy.\nEtiquette Hints\nA vegetable thould be buttered with lis\nfork, not the knife.\nBriaodi.r E. H. PEMY, D5.0, wko\nhas beta appointed Deputy Adjutant\nGeneral at National Defence Head-\nquartan. Brigadier Perry was bom at\nMacLeod, Alia. Ha tarred with dit-\ntindlon in tha Great War. Baiore going to Ottawa he was on th* Start of\nH.Q, M.D. 4, Montreal. For lour yean\nhi wat Professor ol Tactics at R.M.C\nIJ.ui.-Col. W. McNEIU, ED, Ants.\nKmt Adjutant Central at National Dt-\nitnet Htadquarttrt, who has been\nulacttd lor on important pott with\nsot at the overttat military ettabUth-\nttents. CoL McNeill has more than 20\nftart military tervtct, having \u2022\nIn the ranks at Toronto. Ht i\n\u25a0utalontd In 1924.\nVARSITY SOLDIERS KEEP FIT\nCanadian universities have played an important\npart in the national war effort since the start of the conflict in training their students to become fit army men.\nUnit* of the Canadian Officers Training Corps have\nincreased their activities and have been a rich source\nof officer timber for the Canadian services. Reserve\nBattalions have also been organized to give university\nstudents basic training. McGill University's contribution is typical. This photo shows members of the M. R.\nT. B.'(McGill Reserve Training Battalion) during a P.T.\nsession.\nMACHINE THAT MAKES MACHINES\nAn AsquitK drill in a West Coast aircraft plant is\nemployed in Jhe building of a 16-ton sqtieezc-rjvetter\nwhich will be used to fasten the various parts of the huge\nflying boats being manufactured there.\ni- \u25a0 m .i iJbMb-oMdtmm\n \u25a0    \u25a0\nf\n_\u25a0_\n \\*mm*\nn*mmmmmim.*m\\>wmw\nPat Egan Is Quite a Lunch-Counter\nRomeo; Dresses Part of Big-Leaguer\n(By Ray Girdlnar In Vancouver\nNews-Hinld)\nit wat Thanksgiving Day, 1940.\nPort Arthur, \"at tha head of-tha\nlakes,\" wat about to dig in for the\nWinter.\nYou took a deep whiff of the cold,\nfroth wind off Lake Superior and\nyou knew that the freeze-up and\nthe hockey aeaton were about to\n(rip thli immaculate little town.\nYou knaw the Now York Americans\u2014the Brooklyn Dodgers, the\ngreat unwashed of big league hockey\u2014were in training here under\ntha firm hand of Red Dutton, at\ncolorful a charcter u Lippy Lee\nDurocher, the Babbling Brook ot\nbaseball.\nAnd you thought how fitting It\nwat that Dutton and hit almleit\nhirelings thould choose Port Arthur to pitch thalr training tent\nBEGINNING AND IND\nPort Arthur, where the East endt,\nInd tha West begins.\nThe American!, the dead-end of\nhockey's glory road for many of Itt\nKeats\u2014Charley Conacher, Harvey\nckson, Hooley Smith snd Dutton\nhimself. Tha beginning ot the rocky\nroad, perhaps an endless detour, tor\na half doren ttarry-eyed rookies-\nPat Egan, Squee Allen, Pete Slo-\nbodzlin, kids whose names have no\nfamiliar ring for we long-dlitance\nhero-worahlnoert.\nAndy Lytle, the former Vancouver sports editor, now is much a\npart of the Toronto scene as Eaton't\nsprawling department ttore, hu\npenuided me to lay over In Port\nArthur for a couple of days for my\ntint look at a big league hockey\nteam In the making.\nI am all eyes and ears but mostly\nyou feel what's going on about you.\nThtre'i Pat Egan, a supremely\n, confident\u2014cooky \u2014 well-set kid\nand the world's his oyster, he\nthinks, You oan tell that by the\nway ha thrusts hli hand In hit\npocket, Jingles tha loose change.\nEddie Shore, the greatest defence-\nman ot them all, nat Just vitited\nhit old pal, Red Dutton, and hat\nlaid for publication that Egan promises to become one of hockey's all-\ntime greats. This It not newt to\nEgan. He hat heard lt doseni of\ntimet before. Pat Egan hu been\ntelling himself thit since the day\nhe wu a rookie sensation in our\nPacific Coast League. Pat Egan\ncould have told Eddie Shore that\nmonths, teaaons ago.\nBut despite hit keen telf-assur-\nance, hit firm belief In Pat Egan,\nthere It the apparent ttamp of the\nNouveau Riche on thit dark, hand-\naome kid.\nLUNCH-COUNTER ROMEO\nBack to tha hotel after tthe workout, down with the grub and Pat\nhot-foots tt to his room, to reappear like s page out ot Esquire,\nHarlem edition. Pat la a big-league\nhockey player and he over-dresset\nSt part\nHa saunters acron the street to\n\u2022the coffee shop. Swaggers In,\njingling the chicken feed In his\nJems, and starts to kid -th* wait-\nrente with amazing succeit.\nThit't Pat Egan, National Hockey\nLeague rookie, Thanksgiving Day,\n1M0. You wonder how that swagger\nhow that cooky, \"I'm Pat Egan,\ntha hockey player\" attitude will\nwear when they put him\u2014and lt\u2014\nthrough tha mill You wonder, be-\nSuae you're tlretdy'seen the hard-\ntren veterans, the Conachers, the\nJackson and the Hooley Smiths,\ntrying to cut their brash team-mate\ndown to tlze In. that empty Arena\nJutt oft Port Arthur main drag.\nBut when the china really fo down,\nwhat chince doea this kid ttand\nthen?\nUfa Is but a play ... Act One,\n\u25a0cane One (The Training Camp) is\na ihinlng success for Patrick Egan\nand the other Juvenile leads.\nBut tor the Conachers, the Jackaona, the Johnny Sorrells, the Hool-\nay Smltht this la \"The End.\" The\neurtaln la about to fall.\nLytle, myself and three kids are\nthe only audience u tha Amarkt\nwork out In this cold, dank and\ndark arena.\n40 oz. $4H\nUNITED DISm.LLRS LIMITED\nVAMCOUVIW. SIC.\ntii-ee\n(hit idvertisoment  Is not  published\nf displayed  by  the  Liquor  Control\nBoard  or  by  tha Government  of\nBritish Columbia\nWa listen to tha kids.\nThat'i Charley Conacher,\" tayi\nona ot them. \"He used to play tor\nthe Mapla Leafs.\"\n\"Did hat\" breaths another kid,\nawed,      *\nThen they begin to talk of their\nbeloved   Maple   Leaft,   Sylvanut\nAppt, Gordie Drlllon and Bob Davidson.\nCONACHER-A HAS-BEEN\nThey know Conacher only because ne'i an ex-Maple Leaft. These\nkids < don't remember him at the\ngreat goal-geter of ona of hockeys\nmost illustrious forward lines, the\nKid Line. And wa know that older\nfolks, with longer memories, tea\nConacher now at only a has-been.\nAnd Harvey Jackson, too, although\nLytle assures ut that Jackson it u\ngood u ever, that he left Toronto\nfor companionate reatont.\nOf courte, you cant be too\ntorry for guyt who hive made\nthe kind of money Conacher hat\n\u2014and blown\u2014but still he Is a\nhas-been and there Ii room for\nsentiment.\nConicher, Jickion, Smith, Johnny\nSorrell ind Art Chapman ire, of\ncourse, right at home in this training camp atmosphere. They don't\nmake a game of it at do Egan and\nhis set.\nSmith and Sorrell, dretted In\ndark business suits, kill the time in\nthe hotel lobby, reading the papers,\ntalking thop. They're Inconspicuous,\nlike the potted palms.\nConicher, a reitlesa soul who\ncould paper every room in the\nhotel with the tickets he his for\nspeeding, cin't tit still.\nHe stept out of the elevttor looking like t magazine Illustrator's\nidea of The Hunter, shot-gun under\narm. Jackson is with him and'they\nare off tUl supper time after grouse.\nConacher has been kicking aU\nthrough morning workout because\nDutton Is working them too hard,\nbut he it hippy now is he strides\nacross the lobby with Jackson in\ntow.\nTwo-thirds of the Kid Line is out\nfor the kill.\nA Second Harry\nWatson Comes Up\nlo the N.H.L.\n(ly The Canadian Press)\nThe greatest amateur left winger\nof his day, Hirry Witson of Toronto\nGranites spurned aU often to turn\npro In the etrly \"20s. Now there it\nanother Harry Watson on his wty\nup but unlike his predecessor he tl-\nretdy hai succumbed to the lure of\nthe money game. An 16-year-old\nyoungster from Saskatoon, he Ts\nunder contract with New York\nAmericans. Like Harry of the Granites he, too, it a left winger.\nCut tyebrows are tha -fashion\naround the Toronto Mapla Leafs\ntraining camp at 6L Catharines.\nHank Goldup it the latest to yield\nto the trend. It look three ttilchet\nto close the gap after Nick Knott\naccidentally clipped Goldup on his\nleft eyebrow with his stick.\nFrankle Eddolls it tlso sporting\nadhesive on his eyebrow as a result of \u2022 collision with Billy Taylor,\nhis erstwhile Oshawt buddy. Others\nwho hive been nicked on the face\nare Goalie Turk Broda and Nick\nMetx.\nEmll \"Butch\" Bouchard, who\nbroke into professional hockey near\nthe close of last teason with Philadelphia Ramblers, may land a regu-\nJar berth on Canadiens' defence.\nBouchard hat been paired with\nTony Gribotkl during recent practices. Jack Portland and Ken Rear-\ndon are the other defence duo with\nCliff Goupille aa tpire.\nTRIM NEW COMBINATION\nEver on the lookout for new\ncombinations, Irvui yesterday sent\nMurphy Chimberlaln out to centre\nRay Getllffe and Bobby Walton.\nWalton played with Sydney Millionaire! last year and before that with\nKirkland Lake Blue Devils. The\nthreesome worked well together,\naccording to onlookers.\nA yeir tgo ill talk at the New\nYork Americana' camp centred\naround five new players' whicn\nManager Red Dutton was grooming\nfor N.H.L. compeUtion. Now Dutton is bereft of sU five because the\nplayers, all of military age, were\nunable to get passports. They are\nBus Wycherley, Saskatoon, Billy\nBenson of Winnipeg, Norm Larson,\nMoose Jaw, Pete Slobodian, Regina,\nand Gotlie Charlie Raynor of Winnipeg.\nTo soften the blow somewhat, the\nredoubtable Dutton has obtained\nPete Kelly, Fred Thurrier, Ken Mos-\ndell and Jimmy Peters. Kelly formerly played with Detroit Red Wings\nana is a famous Maritime golfer.\nThurrier was with Springfield Indians in the American League lut\nyear. Mosdell and Petert were members of the smart Montreal Royals\nJunior Club last year.\nCheevers, Noble\nLead Boxla Scorers\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 24 (CP) -\nOfficial statistics on the recent Canadian Mann Cup lacrosse play-\ndowns, released today by Lyle Barr,\nsecretary of the Canadian Lacrosie\nAssociation, thow thit Joe Cheevers of St. Citharinet was tied with\nRichmond Farmers' Art Noble for\nhigh point man In the best-of-five\nEast-West series which the Easterners won three games to two.\nOn a percentage basis, Cheevers,\nwho sank 10 of IS shots, was ranked\nlecond to Noble, who fired 14 ol 20\nbut the pair broke even with 13\npoints each in the total column\nwhich includes assists.\nOf the regular goalies, Bill Whit-\ntaker of St. Catharines, was the\nstandout. A total.of 172 shots were\nfired at him. 82 scored while he\nsaved 110 others, giving him a record of 64 per cent. Richmond's Herb\nDelmonico stopped 89 of 128 shots\nfor a 34 per cent record.\nOther interesting mathematical\nsidelights of the series show that\nRichmond outscored St. Kitts 62-39\ndespite the tad the lost out in the\nodd gamt In five.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON  B. C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER \u00bb  1M1\nMax Bentley Stiffen\nBroken Right Arm; It\nOut at Least 6 Weeks\nMax Bentley, brother of Roy ana\nScoop Bentley, now Trail Smoke\nEaters, hat tuffered a broken right\narm In tha Chicago Black Hawki'\ntraining camp at Hlbbing, Minn.\nThe accident occurred is tha Hawki\ntintl drill at tha Hlbbing camp, and\nwill keep Bentley out of the lineup\ntor at least ilx weekt.\nTha mishap wat a big reason why\nthe Hawks came to terms with their\nstubborn centreman, Cully Dahl-\nstrom. With Bentley reducing ma.\nttrlal for centre ice, tha Hawki\nhad to come to terms with Dahl-\nstrom In the latter's salary holdout\nMinnesota Pits\nPowerjkgalnsl\nTricky Michigan\nANN ARBOR, Mich, Oct 24\n(AP)\u2014The renowned powtr of\nMinnesota'! Qolden Gophers\nraogrti thl versatile attack of\nMichigan Wolverlnea tomorrow\nto decide which team rolli on toward Western Conferenci and\nmythical national football titles.\nTo see if Coich Fritt Crlalers\nvariations from straightaway foot\nball to modified \"T\" formation tub\nterfuge can match the crushing machine of Bernle Bierman't favored\nGophers, 85,753 fans are expected\nin Michigan Stadium.\nThe Gophcri invade Ann Arbor\nwith the wreckage of Washington,\nIllinois, and Pittsburgh in their\nwake and with a string of 11 victories in the 31-year-old history of\nthe series.\nThe Wolverines, who have tlad\nMinnesota twice and won 18 times,\nsubdued Michigan State, Iowa,\nPittsburgh and Northwestern thit\nseason.\nOLD HOME WEEK\nNEW YORK, Oct. 24 (AP)-Ex\ncept for i few tcattered inter-tec-\ntional <basms, like Fordham\ntgiintt Texas Christian, Oklahoma meeting Santa Clara and\nDuke taking on Pitt tha United\nStates collegiate football program\ntomorrow settles down to in old-\nhome-week affair,\nEvery section ot the country features conference cluhea rather than\nextra-curricular garnet.\nNebraska and Missouri are tangling for what may mean the big ttx\ntitle; Texas throwing its unbeaten\nri-i >rd at Rice In the Southwest\nconference heedllner; unbeaten-but-\ntied Georgia meeting Alabama and\nTuline tackling Mississippi in the\nSoutheastern conference.\nWith league affairt ot chief inter\nest, the lntersectional ind Independent pickings are slim. Id addition to\nFordbam-TCU, Santa Clara-Oklahoma ind Duke-Pitt, there ara the\nEast-Sou th standout between\nPrincetons big, alow Tigers and\nundefeated Vandtrbllt; Duqueine't\nrow with Marquette, in which the\nDukes might get their clean slate all\nmarked up: Kentucky againtt West\nVirginia and Tennessee* with a soft\ntouch against Cincinnati. On Use\nindependent list, Notre Dame should\nknock off Illinois to remain in the\nselect set.\nTrail Bowling\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct. 24-Ruults of\nTrail Men's Bowling League games\nFriday night follow:\nTRAIL HOTEL NO. 2\nA. Canclan     143 1S8\nR. Bertuluzzl ...    189 188   163-300\nF. Zenturlnl     172 146   231-349\nB. Merlo     174 174   114-022\nTotals         680   644   783 2087\nCANADA BILLIARDS\nH. Ciavarro\nP. Angerilll\nR. Martin\nI. Cantaruttt\nSpot\n... 171\n... 122\n.\u201e     21\nl.'l   143\n179   175   158\u2014610\n193 200\u2014586\n148 209\u2014479\n21     21- 83\nTotals         846 882 734 2062\nCROWN POINTS\nT. Grieve         180 154 178-4H0\nG. niott        144 184 187-485\nD. Dalles .   175 118 198-512\nN. McArthur       132 182 132\u2014438\nTotals\n631    59S   893 192S\nTRAIL TIMES\nT. Smith   1J0 124 in\u2014383\nD.-Milnt ...._  IS 111 106-343\nG. Fawcett  124 148 188\u2014440\nP. Groves   184 189 179-512\nSpot   -.- 18 39 34\u2014117\nTotals    680   396   819 1797\nLADIES OAMES\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct 14\u2014Results of\nthe Trail Ladles Bowling League\ngames Friday night follow:\nDEVITO'S\n2T8 114 200-530\nti 148 231\u2014481\n127 183 188-461\nP. Charleton\nL. Sharetta\nH. Velluntlni\nB. Haggarty\n188   171   182\u2014*03\nToUla       803 390 788 1981\nSANDY'S\nG. Duffin  Ill 128 124-183\nN. Haight    94 120 90-304\nF. Illott  99 119 130-348\nB. Barr  120 120 120-3CX)\nSpot         91 91 91\u2014279\nTotals\n317   580   551 1654\n73\nWOOLWORTH'S\nJ. Gall\nP. Lawther \t\nD. UBelle ... 128\nM. Mclnnls . .. 48\nSpot      29\nI\n108    172-354\n88 88\u2014263\n182 129-438\n106   124\u2014276\n29     29-87\nTotals\nVOGUES\nC. Talek  108\nL. Grl        187\nD. Smith   120\nM. Upton  112\n883   614   540 1419\n128 142-178\n132 109-388\n74 141-337\n104 91-307\nTotals\n497   439   483 1421\nBrothers Monopolize\nNo. 13 Ot Washington\nSEATTLE, (AP)\u2014There's no Jinx\nconnected with the number 13 for\nthe Wiatrak brothers.\nIn 1931-32-33. Joe Wlstrak wore\nthe number as t University of\nWashington football lineman.\nIn 1934-33-36, hit brother John\nhad .the same number.\nIn 1940-41 the number fell to the\nyoungest Wiatrak, Paul, a light but\nscrappy centre.\nIn golf, a caddy it rtttd it in\namateur.\n-\u2022' i stishsu    i    i 'it thi\ns\nColob and McCarthy\nNominees for Trophy\nOTTAWA, Out, 24 (OP)-Otttwa\nRough Rlden tonight named halfback Tony Qolab arid outside Tony\nMcCarthy\u2014ooa of lut year's nomt-\nneet-as Ottawa candidates for the\nJeff Rustel Memorial Trophy,\nawarded annually to the player\nadjudged moat sportsmanlike and\nmost valuable to hit team.\nGolab, who blossomed out u a\nkicker thit aeaton in addition to\nhis other recognised talenta, It training u a Pilot Officer and this will\nbe hit last teaton in football, at\nlaaat temportrlly.\nMcCarthy Joined Riders in 1933\nand hu developed into ont ot the\nsureet-tackllng ends In tha game.\nThe  selections  ware made just\nbefore Riders stepped out for light\nin final pi\nfor  tomorrow't   flnt-plaoe  battle\nsignal practice in final preparation\nwith  Lew   Hayman'a  undefeated\nToronto Argonauts.\nThole Quits Job\nat Regina; Out\nHockey lor Year\nBy DICK MATTHEWS\nIn Lethbrldgo Herald\nNews of Herman Thole's resignation u manager of Regina Rangers\nwat not unexpected. In recent\nweeks Herman had dropped a long\nway from the optimistic peak he\nreached in midsummer when prospects for his dub looked fairly\nbright There la plenty of hockev\ngrief around these dayt and Thole\nreceived an extra doae when he\nhitched his wagon to a club which\nrid Jutt won the Allan Cup. Past\nexperience Tiaa' proved that there\nit invariably an exodus of playing\nmaterial from the city or town\nwhich copa tha silverware and Regina has proved no exception.\nHerman blew into town Tuesday\nand hinted that he wu about ready\nto ton In tha towel at Regina. Actual announcement ot hit withdrawal from the Queen City scene\nfollowed by Just a few hours\nThole's resignation ends, at least\ntemporarily, a hockey career which\ncommenced here In meteoric fashion lix years ago when Herman\ncame from Milk River to take over\nthe Maple Leaf franchise. He operated the dub for ona year u an\nIntermediate squad, his team cooping the Western Canada intermediate title. That wu in the 1936-37\nteaton.\nNext year he promoted the Idea\nof artificial Ice for Lethbrldge and\nfollowing installation of a plant he\ngot together this city't first senior\nhockey dub in 22 years. Refuted a\nfranchise in the Alberta league, he\nentered Leaft In the Kootenay cir-\ncrult\nFABULOUS \"6ATES\nNext season Leaft were invited\nto compete in the Alberta loop, finishing first in the league and copping the Alberta title. Leafs played\nto fabulous gates In those first two\nseasons of senior competitor establishing some kind of record for\nconsecutive sellout!.\nHerman was swept along on the\ncrest of the enthusiasm which was\ngenerited by Leafltn succesaes.\nLethbrldge continued to occupy a\nprominent spot in the Western\nhockey world In 1939-40, but the\ndub finished second in league play\nand wat knocked out In the first\nround of playofft.\nThole, who had kept a controlling\nInterest in the rink, gradually unloaded most of his stock and the\nArena became more of a community project u numerous local snd\ndistrict businessmen purchased\nshires.\nLut year he wat retained u manager and wu with the club when it\ntopped tht Alberta title and advanced to tha Allan Cup semifinals before being knocked out bv\nRegina Rangers.\nHerman'! plan! ara Indefinite at\npreterit, but It appears he will forget about hocxey for thit year it\nleast\nDouble-Linesman\nSystem Planned\nTORONTO, Oct. 24 (CPl-Trmk\nPttrlck, General Manager of Montreal Canadiens In the National\nHockey League, today recommended thit the N.H.L. adopt the double-\nlinesman system, tried out by Canadians in two exhibition games.\nThe suggestion wu made before\nthe League Board of Governors\nwhich mat here today.\nTht plan, u outlined by Patrick,\nveteran former Pacific Coast hockey\nmogul, calls for one linesman to\nhave charge of each blue Una. The\nGovernor! decided that the experiment thould be given a teat In\nexhibition garnet still remaining on\ntha training programs of N.H.L.\nclubi and a telegraphic vote be\ntaken before tht season's opening\ngames.\nIt favorable, President Frank Cal-\nder will authorise the introduction\nof two linesmen to work with the\nofficial referee.\nCoich Red Dutton of New York\nAmericans tnd Bill Tobln of Chicago Black Hawks slid they favored\nthe Patrick recommendation. Coach\nHappy Day of Toronto Maple Leafs\nwill try the tystem in the Leaf exhibition games and other clubt also\nhave agreed to test the system.\nCOWLIY TURNS OUT\nHER8HEY. Pi.. OCL 24 (AP) -\nBUI Cowley, vetertn centre end last\nseison's National Hockey League\ntop scorer, arrived in Boston Bruin's\ntraining camp today and went\nthrough two long practice sessions.\nCowley will take his regular\nturns tomorrow night when the\nBruins engage the Henhey American League club In an exhibition\ngame.\nNEW HAVIN TIES ACES\nQUEBEC, OcL 24 (CP)-A third\nperiod goal with leu thin a minute\nto play tonight gave New Haven\nEagles ot the Amerlcin Hockey\nLeague a 4-4 draw with Quebec\nAces of the Quebec Senior Hockey\nLeigue In an exhibition contest before 2300 persons.\nGEORGE BOOTHMAN\nOeorga Boothman of Calgary, the\ntall curly-headed bridegroom who\nplayed on the blue line for Nelson\nMaple Leaft last season, left Nelson\nthli morning en route to Sydney,\nN. S., where he will play for the\nMillionaire! this Winter.\nBoothman, who married Olga\nKorolak, a Nelson girl, a ihort\ntime ago, wu wired Information\nWednesday night that hia Weat-to-\nEast transfer had been okayed after\nall by the C. A. H. A. Secretary, ind\nwu asked whether he was still\navailable Roy Bentley. Trail's new\ncoach, had betn over the tame afternoon in an effort to sign up\nBoothman, and the ex-Leaf nearly\ndid agree to play for the Smoke\nEaters.\nHowever, when the Sydney offer\ncame again, Boothman decided to\npass up the chance to go to Trail.\nHe left with his wife, and on the\nway to Sydney he will-go to his\nhome at Calgary to pick up his\nequipment and other belongings.\nBesides Trail and Sydney. Booth-\nman also received offers from Baltimore, Moose Jaw, Lethbridge.\nRed Deer, Kimberley, Nanaimo and\nVancouver.\nBoothman hat until the end of\nthe month to beat the branch-to-\nbranch player deadline.\nWolves Finish in\nSecond Place in\nFirst Half Bowls\nLeo Nicholson lo\nVoice Canadiens'\nGames This Winter\nVANCOUVEB, Oct, 24 - Lao\nNicholson, ona of Western Canada't\nleading sport announcers, will leave\nSunday for Montreal to assume an\naaalgnment u announcer tor Montreal Canadiens In tha National\nHockey League thit Winter. He will\nbroadcast all the Canadiens' homo\ngames, and it expected to do work\nin other sport fields at well.\nNicholson came to Vancouver in\n1930 from California after a colorful career which induded air force\nduty In the last war and production\n\u25a0work In tha early dayt of the movie\nindustry. Ha bat broadcatt baseball,\nhockey, boxla, Canadian football -\nin tad nearly every tport but horse\nracing.\nThompson Feels\nBad About Losing\nStar Dave HacKay\n. Here it what Paul Thompson,\nManager of (he Chicago Black\nHawki, hit to tay about Dave Mac-\nKay, hit brilliant young detence-\nmaji, who cant get a passport to\ncross the Una to pity for tha Chicago  team:\n\u25a0There'! no question but what\nMacKay represents the molt serious lota wa could have tuffered.\nHe was one of thote hockey play,\ners with no limit to his ability.\nIn baseball he would be a Joe Di-\nMaggio or a Pete Reiser, coming\nup with the sky the limit. We\ncouldn't have lost anybody to hurt\nus worse. He was at his peak against\nDetroit in the playofft lut Spring.\nand he Just about ruined those\nguys single-handed. It's tough to\nlose such a prospect.\"\nThe rumor still persists that Mac-\nKay, a graduate mining engineer,\nnow at Edmonton, will turn out\nwith the Kimberley Dynamiters\nthit Winter.\nWolves clinched second place, two\npoints behind the leading Truckers, Friday night at the Gelinas\nAlleys when they took three points\nout of lour from Dodge in the final\nmitch of the first half schedule.\nEarlier in the evening, the Daily\nNewt team had taken three out of\nfour from the Cherry Pickers, and\nthus ended up In a tie with the\nDodge for third place.\nScores follow:\nCHERRY PICKERS\nSpot\nD. Bush    .\nT. Romano ...\nLow score\t\nLow score\nB. Vecchio \t\nTotals\nDAILY NEW8\nA. Brown\nF. Brown \t\nTim Mosses.\nW. Brown\nW. Gallicano    .\n25 25 25- 75\n83 142 151\u2014370\n101 115 171-387\n101 115 133\u2014346\n83 131 137-351\n132 131 140-403\n525 959 757 1941\n151\n1M\nlit\n15.1\n183\n137-403\n133-414\n158-411\n142\u2014453\n188\u2014513\nLois of Kootenay\nPlayers at Royal\nCity for Hockey\nThere li I big representation of\nKootenay puck talent trying out\nwith New Westminster Spitfires in\nthe Pacific Coast Amaitur Hockey\nLeague.\nFor goal there ire Stubtjy Mu-\non, Jess Seaby'i understudy with\nthe Nelson Maple Leafs last Winter, and Jack Button, former Trtll\nand Kimberley senior netminder.\nOn defence there will be tuch plsy-\nert u Jerry Pettigrew with the\nLeafs last Winter and previously in\nthe West Kootenay League with\nGonzaga and Rossland, and Cliff\nGannon, last year of Vernon. Gannon was brought in a year ago to\nplay hockey for the Leafs, but he\nchose to continue on to Vernon after\nworking In the Salmo Valley for a\nwhile.\nAmong the forwards are Pete\nBonneville and Stewie Peterson,\nformer Nelaonitei; Eddie Burke, a\nspare with Trail Smoke Eaters last\nWinter and previously with Detroit Pontlacs; Ken Hall, former\nGonraga University pliyer; ind\nArt Forreit. who has played with\nboth the Dynamiters and Smoke\nEaters. He also played a couple of\nyean in the English National\nLeague.\"\nTney are coached by Don Mc-\nLeod, who hat hid previous coaching experience in Coast baseball,\nsoccer and hockey.\nPete Ettinger to\nPlay for Calgary\nPete Ettinger, rugged Turner Vil-\nley defenceman who wit recruited\nby the Kimberley Drnanartert for\nTotals      732   724   738 2194\n5    5 6 A\nHigh individual score\u2014W. Gallicano, 163.\nHigh aggregate tcore\u2014W. Gallicano, 513.\nWOLVES\nT. Romano\nA. Arcure\nW. Meakini\nE. Nadeau\nJ. Himson ...\n178 155 202-535\n132 132 177-441\n140 143 1\u00ab3\u201444fi\n147 126 151^3\n173 155 147\u2014475\nTotals     770 710   840 2320\nDO DOE\nSpot   .     ..      .      \u00bb 30     30\u2014 90\nF. McClement . 1\u00ab8 143 183\u2014157\nW. Muraro 108 117 131-354\nJ. Aurelio        .   179 168   164\u2014511\nG. Cuthbert 108 107 135\u2014400\nJ. Stewart            1S7 95   120-382\nTotals                808 \u00ab0   783 2228\nHigh individual score\u2014T. Romano, 202.\nHigh tggregate icore\u2014T. Romano, 535.\nScorer\u2014Bill Freno.\nUpheld Protest Leaves\nBombers, Roughriders\nTied  for  First  Place\nREGINA, Oct. 24 (CP). - By\nunanimous vote, Regina rough-\nriders won their protest over lut\nSaturday's W.nnirjeg-Reglnt football game and have been twarded\nthe points, N. J. Taylor of Regina,\nPresident of the Western Provincial Football Union, announced today after receiving votes from Vancouver, Winnipeg tnd Begins clubs\n'The decinon wu unanimous,\"\nsaid Taylor \"and was based on the\nagreement between Regina and the\nWinnipeg club whereby Backfielder\nKen Preston would not be eligible\nto play against Roughrideri.\"\nBombers uied Preston lut Saturday and Roughriders immediately uked for a showdown, playing\nthe gamp under protest.\n\"Preston will not be eligible to\npity igiinat Regini again this season because of the existing agreement.\"  said  Taylor.\nThe points awarded to Regina\nleave Houghrlders ind Bombers tied\nwith four wins tpiece and Saturday'! flntl leigue game In Winnipeg\nwill decide top place In the Union\nstanding. \u2022\nChicago Cubs won the National\nLeigut pennant three yean in t\nrow 1980-7-8.\n-PAGE SEVEN\nDelroll Red Wings Expected to Pick\nUp Where They Left OH Last Spring\nthe Kootenay playoffs against the\nla\ni lay\npeders this' Winter\nTrail   Smoke   Eaters   last   Spring,\nhopes to pity  for  Ctlgary  Stam-\nEttinger wu I replacement on\nthe Kimberley defence for Bill\nBurnett, the Dynamiters* captain\nwho went into the Air Force midway through the schedule.\nAt present he is hiving difficulty\narranging hit working hours it\nTurner vtlley, but he may still\ndon the Stampeder colors.\nSports Roundup\nBy HUGH  FULLERTON, Jr.\nAssocltted Prett Sport Wrlttr\nNEW YORK. Oct. 24 (AP). - Ben\nJones ii going to unveil i half-\nbrother to Whirlaway In California\nthit Winter\u2014tha col, named Duit\nBy, will become t two-year-old\nJan. 1\u2014Although Johnny Ray, Billy\nConn's manager, and Jimmy John-\nton have been carrying on one of\nthe fight business' hottest feuds tor\na long time, Ray was out In Cleveland the other night hollering lor\nJohnston's   fighter,  lsrge  Abe  Si-\nODDS\u2014AND SOME  ENDS\nIrving Jaffee, the speed skater,\nwill speak at the convention of the\nnational dunking tssoclitlng of the\nrhythm acquired from dunking\u2014\nnow to get Johnny Welsmuller (s\ncharter member) to tslk on \"sinker\nswim\" \u2014 the report that Arky\nVaughan won't be with the Pirates\nnext season teems to be the odds\nand the latest story Is that he may\nturn up in the Dodgers' infield.\u2014\nSubstitution for Parsons U. vs Grin-\nnell  last week:\u2014\"Rott for Pugh.\"\nThey Change Tuamt\nbut Three-Year Cycle\nStill Works for Them\nears.    Johnny    Corrlden,    Larry\ninch. Angle Gilan ind Billy Her-\ntY\nCHICAGO, Ill.-The Cunt won In\n1932   1938  tnd   IMaV-every   three\nFrei\nmm were Cubt then\nNow they ire Dodgers, so it fir\nas they are concerned the three-\nyear cycle still held twty. But the\nCubt' string wu cut.\nJoe McCarthy nevir hit lost a\nWorld Strict tlnci hi'i been In tha\nAmerlcin League . . . never won\nont in the National.\nQITROIT, Oat 14 (CP)-De.\ntrolt Tlaere reached bettbtU'i\nworld series In 1940 and then fold-\nad, but the experts have t seemingly sound argument to ahow\nwhy tha tame fata shouldn't befall\nthe Red Wlngi who fought their\nway to hockey'i world lerlet \u2022\nfew months later.\nTht dopesters who follow the\nfortunes of bother Detroit clubt\nwill till you that the Tlgert were\nfading when they entered baseball's elastic, whereas the Wlngi\nwere Jutt beginning to fly whan\nthey bowed to Boston Brulnt In\ntha Stanley Cup finals lut Fall.\nManager Jack Adams declines to\nmake any fancy predicltloot other\nthan \"We may be the surprise\nteam,\" The rebuilt Wings finished\nthird In tha regular National League\ncampaign, scoring 21 victories and\n11 tits In 46 starts.\n\"Lut teaton was Just one experiment after another,\" laid Adams.\n\"Now we know what our lines are\ngoing to be and Jutt about what we\ncan expect ot our players. The\nsquad is in great shape and with\nany luck at all, we could get off to\nour bett start in yean.\"\nGenial Jack plant to carry 16\nSlayers, with ont goaltender, five\nefencemen and 10 forwards. Later\nIn the teaaon he will either have to\nIncrease the rotter or make a\nchange\u2014for on the sideline! at pret-\nent is Detroit's playing coach, Eb-\nble Goodfellow. One ol the game's\nall-time greats and mainstay of the\nDetroit defence, Ebble it still nursing leg injuries received last season.\nWhen the Wings met the Canadiens In Montreal Nov. 1 in their\nfirst league contest, they will have\nthe sensational Johnny Mowers In\ngoal. Mowers Just missed the Vezlna\nTrophy for goalies tnd the Calder\nrookie award last season and much\n!\u2022 expected of him in his sophomore year.\nIn front of Mowers will be Doug\nMcCalg tnd Jack Stewart at one\ndefence combination and Jimmy\nOrlando and Alex Motter ai tha\nother, McCiig, a smooth-tkatlnj\nhusky from-Brentford, Ont., Is tha\nonly newcomer to the blocking department. He starred last teaton\nwith the Wings' American League\nfarm team, Indianapolii Capitol!.\n8HUFFLE FORWARDS\nUp tront the Redthlrti won't present much change In personnel but\nthere has been considerable shuffling. The Wines' first line for in-\nstance will find versatile Syd Howe\ncentering Mud Bruneteau at right\nwing and Dutch Hiller at left.      *i\nBruneteau tnd Howe were line-\nmates last teaton but Howe played\non the left boardt. The juggling hat\nbeen necessitated by the acquisition\nof Hiller from New York Rangen\nIn the Detroit club't only intra-\nleague purchase of the off-season,\nThe lecond string will 'iave Con-\nny Brown making plays for Joe\nFisher and Carl Liscombe and tha\nthird attack will comprise Centre\nDono Grotto, Eddie Wares and Sid\nAbel. Qui Gletebrecht, who playa\neither at the pivot'position or left\nwing, will be carried it an extra\nforward.\nIf and when any changes ara\nmade the best gets u replacement!\nare Joe Carvelh, a right winger,\nand Bob Whitelaw, a defenceman,\nCarveth is billed to start with In-'\ndianapolis and Whitelaw may not\nplay hockey at all. Of military age,\nhe has not yet been able to obtain\na passport to play In the United\nStates.\nAlthough there is slight chanoa\nthat any of them will see major\nleigue action this Winter, Adams\nwill have a number of rookies in\nthe minors for observation. Eleven\namateurs have been signed and will\nbe sent to farm teams for seasoning.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy Tht Anoelattd Praia\nELIZABETH,   N.   J.   \u2014   Danny\nCox,   178,   Ntw   York,  outpointed\nCharlie Wright 191, Newark (6),\nPHrLADELPHU - Freddy Da-\nmico, 142V4, Philadelphia, stopped\nJohnny Dean, 148, Philadelphia (3).\nHARRBBURG, Pa. - Billy Morris, 151 Harriaburg, outpointed\nMike Dettepano, 199, Philadelphia (10).\n(alder Is Given\nthe Final Say In\nPlayer Disputes\nTORONTO, Oct. 24 (OP). \u2014 The\nNitional Hockey League Board of\nGovernor! decided today at a meet.\nIng here to give President Frank\nCalder sole authority in dealing\nwith player disputes between dubt\nin the N.Hi.\nThe governors also gsvt the\nLeague \"resident sole power to rule\nin disputes between N.Hi, clubs\nand teams In affiliated Minor\nLeagues. Mr. Calder's decisions will\nbe final. He was vested with the\npower following an amendment to\nan N.H.L. bylaw.\nHeretofore, such disputes were\nput in the hands of the governors\nwho, if they could not agree, pasted\nthe cases on to President Calder\nfor decision. Either ekib then couM\nappeal the President's ruling and\nthe Board would hive to make a\nfinal decision.\nIt wu announced that the American Hockey Association and the\nAmerican Hockey League, leading\nminor loops, had agreed to the ruling. At the same time, the governors upheld President Calders ruling In awarding to New York Rangers pitying rights to Angut Cameron with Regina Rangers last tea-\nson. In t dispute between Boston\nand Rangers ,the President ruled in\nfavor of the New York team but\nBoston hid appealed to the Board.\nThe Botton club wis without representation at today's meeting and\nthe resignation u a governor of\nArthur H. Ross, manager snd coach\nof the Bruins, wu accepted.\nSevtrtl tmundmtntt to tha\nplaying rules were approved.\nIn future when I turn pitying\nIhorthlnded makes a deliberate\noffside It will bt ptnillttd with\nlose of territory. If tht offildi\noccurs it the ihorthtndtd ttam's\nown blut lint the puck will bt\nfaced at the spot where the Infraction occurred Instead of at a\npoint batidt the net at heretofore.\nWhtn tht infraction occurs at tha\nother team's blue line the puck\nwill be field when thl Infraction\noccurred Insteid of at tht short-\nhanded   team's  blut  line.   -  -\nJack Pratt Now   j\nLiving al (oast\nJACK  PRATT\nJack Pratt, ex-coach and player\nof the Kimberley Dynamiters, It\nnow residing at the Coast, where\nhe has secured employment. Hia\nwife and children left Kimberley\nlut week to Join him. *\nCincinnati has Junior baseball\nleagues with teams named for Red\nplayers, using equipment handed\ndown by the Reds.\nIt wat decided to mark N.H.L\nice surfaces with six new faceotf\nmarking!, three on the centre ice\ntret aide of each blue line. The\nmarking! will be 10 feet out from\nthe blue lines, one In the centre and\non on each of the sides. This is to\ngive officials definite places it\nwhich to make ticeoffs.\nMontgomery Wins\n12th Time in Row\nCHICAGO*, Oct. 24 (AP) - Bob\nMontgomery of Philadelphia, top\nranking contender for the lightweight championship, registered his\n12th consecutive victory tonight by\npounding out t 10-round decision\nover Julie Kogan, New Haven.\nConn., it the Coliseum. Montgomery\nweighed 137 pounds, Kogan 134.\nVeteran Hurler Dies\nJOHNSTOWN, Pa, Oct 24 (AP)\n\u2014 William H. Llppi, SI. former\nhurler for Cincinnati Reds and vit-\neran of Minor League baseball, died\nlast night\nHe became ill shortly after the\nend of the baseball seuon in which\nhe had pitched regularly for the\nRelvoc Rovers, semi-pro outfit. Hi\nhid been pitcher and manager of\nthe Rovers for 10 yesrs.   .\nG. Littleton Rogers, an Irishman\nwho hu been playing tennlt In the\nUnited States for several years tnd\nwho It thl tallest man in the game,\nhat applied for American citizen-\nthlp.\nSHORTY'S\nREPAIR SHOP\nFor Reliable Car Service\nPHONE 171\nTAKE\nCHANTS\nFOR\nTUl advtrtliiment It not publlrttd\nor dltplaya] by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBrttlih Colomtira.\nT\n TOTS THREEPIECI\nINSEMBLI\nWtcuriajL  WlwditL\nPATTERN 9688\nShe'll feel \"grown-up\" In thit\ndrett, Jacket, and cap ensemble\ncopied from a birg girl's style1 In\nPattern 9688, Marian Martin uses\ncontrast effectively for the Peler\nPan collar, the bodice back and\nfront, and the sleeves ot this cunning frock, or makes It all of one\nfabric. R opens in the front\u2014notice that the lix little buttont are\nonly trim! The hip-length Jacket\nit collar-lew and long or thort-\n\u25a0leeved . . . cunning In plaid with\nt plaid beanie to match! With the\n6ew Chart't expert guidance you\ncan easily stitch up two versions\nfor s good little girl . . . why not\nmske them both now to wear all\nseason long?\nPattern 9888 may be ordered\nonly In children's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8.\ntnd 10. Size 8, jacket and nat, re-\nauiret   %   yard   54   inch   fabric:\nreal, 1H yards 33 inch fabric and\nIi yard contrast.\nSend twenty cents for thli Mar-\nIan Martin pattern. Bt turt to\nwrite plainly your SIZE, name,\naddress  and style  number.\nSend your order to Thi Dally\nNewt, Pattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be tent to your\nhome within 10 dayt.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\n\"I made Pi do \u2022 lot o' oourtin',\nbut HI be honest about it. I knew he\nwu goln' to msrry me long before\nbe did.\"\nTHERE ARE tames when your\npartner will make plays which at\nthe moment teem to be definitely\nIncorrect Tou will wonder why in\nblazes he failed to do aomethlng\nwhich to you appeared to be ob-\nrtoualy the winning move. Are\nyou going to consider that he still\nla the tame good partner and had\na special reason for what he did ?\nIf the latter, you may catch hia\nIdea and make the ultimate winning movt yourself.\n\u2666 KOI\n\u00bbA8\n\u2666 J85\n4 A J 10 11\n\u2666 \u2022\n\u2022 Q J Hi\n4\n4>A2\n487143\nM.\nS\ns)AII\n\u2022 07 0\n\u2666 Q 9\n43\n+ K\n8 7\n4 J 10 7 4 I 3\n\u2022 K32\n4>K 10\n*Q\u00ab\n(Dealer   North Both sMei vul\n\u25a0arable.)\nEast    South\n1\u00ab)       \u2022\u2666\n!\u00ab       3*\nWeat\n4\u00bb\nNorth\n\u00bb +\nAgainst this bidding Weat led\nhis heart Q The declarer won the\ntrick In his own hand and tmmedt-\natelv decided he would try to get\nprevent the possible loss of two\ndiamond tricks. Accordingly, ha\nled the dub Q and let It side\nthrough to the K\nEaat naturally wanted to get\nWeat into tht lead to that he\nmight get a club ruff, to picked\nthe diamond 3 to return. He waa\noverjoyed- when hit partner\nshowed up with the diamond A,\nbut hit happiness wu abort lived\nwhen Weat returned the heart 10.\nThe A won that and there waa ao\nway that the defenders could get\nmore than one other trick, with\nthe spade A, aa lt waa. Impossible\nfor East to put West into the lead\nagain.\nThe trouble with West anas that\nhe wu angry because his partner\ndid not return a heart to knock\nthe heart A out of the dummy at\na re-entry for the clubt, and did\nnot stop to think why the diamond had been led.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nYour Weck-End Leeaoa\nWhat would you do in fourth\nhand position after three passu\nwith both tides vulnerable, holding\neither of the two hands given below\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManui\nrve oar TO GIT l*o OF\nSlS \\jr\u00bb P1_ATTER-HE\nIS A PEST- I HA\/E WV\nBECEPTOJ gov U-\nSTHUCTEP TO TELL\nUSA rM MOT M - JUST\nL^ IN CASE HE CAUJ5-\n1.\n\u2666 \u00bb\u00bb\n\u2022 762\nt> A K 63\n4 A852\nDistributed by Kins Teatureb Syndicate. Inc\nt) AK\u00ab3\n\u2022 A 8 5 1\nt)7<2\n<>93\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nBefore\n22. Plunder\nJumbled\n23. A morsel\ntype\n25 Threshold\nA border\n26. Choose\nClassify\n27 Shaded\nJog\nwalk\nCavities\n20 Large\nWeapons\nscissors\nMoney\n29. Containers\nSea eagle\n30. Erase\nBed\n22. Excess of\nNative of\nchances\nDenmark\n33. Sneer\nHah ap-\n37. Vehicles\npendagea\n38. Below (na\nTaijeet   ,\n39. Factor\nHMIBW UUMU\nHHMHH   I'llJWHBl\nl-JIrlHiaiK'HITiV:!,\"!\nMUlil   la'-ltt   J-1l'l\nl\u00bbhslsHI:i\nurimm -I'.wyw\nasauiai hiimhmuj\nHirM hbh mass\nBMUKMr-1 tarjims\nlaiiisian    ihhijih.\niHM'JMH\nHBI4  MHH     tl'J\nmnwuiiiiii-viiiiniw\nL\u00bb:ni:u)-'. :>jii'iim\nmiiuui      niyww\nFOC DISRUPTS\nCOAST TRAFFIC\nVA^OOUVBR, Oct. 24 (CP). - A\nruth of traffic accidents broke out\nIn Vancouver today as i reiult of\na thick fog which mantled the city\nand hundreds of citizens walked\nto work when a traffic pileup of\ntt least I dozen cars on Carobie\nbridge, one of the main traffic arteries, tied up transportation aerv-\nicei and tent three persons to hospital.\nThe fog which has lain over the\nVancouver area with only intermittent breaks since the first of the\nweek has disrupted plane and shipping schedules.\nPolice received several reports\nof strong-armings and purse-snalch-\nings by thugs working under cover\nof the fog.\nFormer Employee\nAdmits Shooting\nWINDSOR, Ont, Oct. 24 (CD-\nShot in the back as he sat at his\nlunch counter. Nathan Vwsler. 63,\nof Detroit, Manager of the employees' restaurant at Consumers\nWarehouse Limjted here, died in\nhospital shortly after noon today.\nSoon after the shooting a Chinese, giving his name aa J. Shan\nSwiy, 22. and describing himself as\na former employee of Vecsler's who\nwas discharged three months ago.\nsurrendered to police and said he\nhad shot Vectler.\nKEARNY SERIOUSLY\nDAMACED IN ATTACK\nWASHINGTON. Oct 24 (AP) -\nThe destroyer Kearny, torpedoed\nby I Ntrl submarine off Icelind\nlust i week ago was described by\nPresident Roosevelt loday as seriously damaged.\nWhile details of the attack are\ncoming in, mostly ot a technical\nnature, he slid there was nothing\nabout them which he could discuss\nat this lu-ii.\nACROSS       3.\nI-Of greatest     4\ndepth\n8 Halls 5\n10. Light boat      6\n11 Feel one'i      T\nway 8.\n13. Macaws 9.\n14. DMastefal   10.\n1* Title ef 12.\nreapect 14.\n14. Demand       M.\npayment\n17 Indefinite     it.\narticle\nM. Hebrew        It.\nletter\nIt. Long, attar*\ntooth\n20. Danish eeta\n21. Lark\n23. Vehicle\n24 Undivided\n28. Short foe\ntitter\n34. Dint real\nstfital\nJT. Hand\ncovertaagt\n\u00bb Back\nJt.Yaley\n(poet.)\n31. Exclamation\n23. staacutine\nname\n34. Addition to\nabotlding\n30. Gave food to\n36, Remember\n.It. Pleased\n40 Climb\n41 Nohleme*\n42. Barbed Bnei\nacroas water\n44 More saigary\nDOWN\n1. Thunder god\nI God of low\nCWXI.PLA     llfLT    ll\u00abL    SIIW    CSZI\ntXPL   KACb   xxri- V AXCVS VK.\nTtj *wf luny ft l ^ry^^otptewty;    l>Bsl*afni|rj 1\nCIJAGE OF MANKIND\u2014 I.OaKlFKI.LOW\nrim si si 11 by ttsaa Hulas \u25a0 \u00bbaaaata, a*-\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disncv\nHOW TO WORK. CRYrrOQUOTES\nCryptoquotes ire quotation! ot famous person! written In cipher.\nA substitute character hat replaced tha original tetter For Instance,\nan \"R\" may substitute lor the original \"K\" throughout tht enure\ncryptoquote, or a \"BB\" may replace an \"LL\" find tht key and follow\nthrough to tht solution.\nNew York Press\nPraises Canada\nEffort in War\nNEW YORK. Oct. 24 (CP).\u2014The\nNew York Herald Tribune, analyzing Canada's war effort In a lengthy\neditorial, came to the conclusion\ntoday that \"in relation to Canada's\nwealth and abilities, that country it\ndoing Its pirt well.\"\n\"The tax purden Is becoming Increasingly oppressive ind Canada\nis being forced to borrow heavily\nfrom lla own citizens,\" the Herald\nTribune aaid. \"but never a word of\ncomplaint Is heard.\"\n\"Mistakes have undoubtedly been\nmade-as they have in this country,\" the editorial added. \"But no\none can say that Canada's effort\nhas not been whole-hearted.\"\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zone Grey\nKK5'TU8Cm\u00ab8E\u00ab10MO8      TIN ASECOO-wt\nADE M DCX16T-&UT WOkIN  A WAV be AftLE TO\nkjOSE iS CUAU-EnawG ^^M Htl-P H60, klD'\nI    \u25a0\u25a0\nWH,' \u2022?\n(VV\nFak\nT>\nBam  y\u2014\nLjkC \u2022\/\n'il jJsW;'\nA    \u00ab*-^.\nnlr tta^r1\n1'i^saf\n\u25a0jf\ni           1 \u2014\n\\vf%r\n_i.Cr. i-*-na\nW^f^\nP%\nBL0NDIE\nBy Chic Younc\n NELION DAILY NIWI. NELSON B 0,-4ATVWAY HOBNIN*, ootoser \u00bb, 1M1\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\nPhons\n144.\nBIRTHS\nSEWCOMEN-To Mr. and Mrt. H\nNewcomen  of  Marblehetd,  In\nttorlan Hospital, Kaslo, Oct. 19, a\nlflrT\u00a5\"Jl'v Mr.' Iu1 Mrs: IT M\n\u25a0tt) Duffy, at Kootenay Lake\nineral Hospital, Nelson, Oct. 28,\ndaughter. Mrt. Duffy wat lor-\nirly Miss Join Waters.\n-\nHELP WANTED\nApplications will not be con-\nildered from persons engaged id\nthe production ot war supplies\n3iUN<3 WOMAN AS HOUSE-\nkeeper for bachelor (railroader)\nQuiet plant, No outside work\nWrite Box 3507 Daily Newt.\nBHBRrTEn \u00a3:tmHlN'CBD\ntook, general maid or widow\nMutt be able to take charge. Box\nIBM Daily News,\nANTED-PENCE POST\"\" MAK-\nera, Glood timber. Steady work\ntor five men. Batch, Box 3361\nDaily Newt.'\nLJSeRlTMAN TO FKfTCH'lCK'-\nant. Free rent. Small salary Box\n8487 Daily Newt.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nWEEKEND\nBARGAINS\nIt's grand to get out In tht country In- October\u2014Make it even\nmore pleasant In ona of these\nwonderful bargains! Also others\nto choose from.\nQ7   PLYMOUTH   4-Dr.   SEDAN.\nOl Heater, good tiret. (jWrJC\nQQ PLYMOUTH DELUXB SI-\n,00 DAN. Shinlngly new with\nIresh simonlze, heater, defroster,\nheavy duty tiret, flJaWK\nOnly gone 23,000 miles.      tDQ i O\nQQ CUSTOM PLYMOUTH 81-\nijV DAN. In lovely thape,\nHeavy duty.tlrei. ' (\u00a3QQK\nPrice        w%rVO\nICHOOL8 AND INSTRUCTION\nOW IS THE TIME TO OET A\nGovernment Job as Clerk, Postman, Customs Clerk. Steno etc\nSix Dominion-wide exams helo\ntinea war began Free Booklet\nM C. C. Schools Ltd . Winnipeg\nOldest in Canada. No Agents\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratet for noncommercial advertisements under thit classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncoven any number of required\nlines Payable In advance Add\n10c if box number desired\nlOTrailSNCED TRUCK DRIVER\nwith Clatt \"C ehtuffeur*! licence\nwould like steady position. Also\nthree years' experience in retail\ngrocery store. Age 25 yeirt. married. Reference Will take other\nwork. Box 3496 Daily_News,\nlOR ClCSflRTY SWEEPING,\ncletnlng of furnaces, main flues\nand pipes, also wood splitting,\nJutt phone 530. W. Robert.\ntO*IRTY, HOUSIS, FARMS\nOft PLYMOUTH DBLUXB BE-\nd\u00ab7 DAN. Radio, heater, defroit-\ner, good tiret, seat CQ7K\ncovert. . w V IU\nPEEBLES'\nMotors Limited\n153 Baker St. Nelton.\nUSED TRUCK - IN FIRST CLASS\ncondition 1 3-ton Internationa)\nlong whtelbttt; 1, 1-ton Interna\ntlonal long wheelbaae; 1, - 2-ton\nInternational 155 Inch wheelbate;\n1. 4-ton International long wheel-\nbase; 1. Vi-ton Ford, like new; 1\nVl-ton Dodge, like new; 1, 1U,-\nton Dodga. Central Truck is\nEquipment Co., 702 Front Street\nNelson. B. C.\n\u202238   CHEVROLET   COACH.    AU-\nothor of General Motors' famous\ncars, In perfect condition. Beautifully finished In Romey Green\nenamel. A retl bargain at $350\nNelson Traniltr Co,, Ltd.\nFOR SALB-'sV tltiJEV*. tdAlfflHl\nDeLuxe Coupe, In A-l condition\nSacrifice   for   cash,  Gone   only\n25,000 milct. Box J541 Dtlly News.\nFOR SALE: 'So FORD~DeLUXE\nSedm. Good rubber. Excellent\ncondition Good price. Box 3537.\nDilly News\nIUNGALOW - 5 ROOMS AND\nbith. All new plumbing. DinttCt\n: Cement foundation. Furmct.\nLarge ecreenid porch. 4 lots tnd\ngarige. Thli property la tt good\nU new. A reel snap at $1450\nTerms arranged. F. A. Whitfield.\n417 HaU Street.\nSodb raaTTJOBH for sale\n[on aaty ttrnu in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full In-\n1 formation to t98 Dept. of Niturtl\ntBesoureea, CJ^R., Cal|ary, Alts\n., Cilgar\n\"vTTOjc\nl-ROOM HOUSE, VERNON ST\nClose in. Concrete foundation\nfurnaoe. In first-claat condition\nSS000.   Terms.  Robertson   Realty\nI Co., Ltd.\nI Terms. Apply Rueckert's Apiary\nI Mill   St   Box  126   Nelson. B   C\nfBR SALE, TRADE OR RENf: 40\nacres   In   fruit   and   dairy.   E\n! Nouqular, Canyon, B.C.\t\nIrVISTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC\nWhtTSD - DAIRY COWB, GIVE\n1 ptrtlculsrs tnd prlca to Columbia\nDairy  Trail. B\u25a0 C.\n\\tik   BALE:   BfGrTr-VJISBKS-OLD\nYorkshire pigs, $5.00. J. S. Knaut\n| R.R. No. 1 Nelson.\t\nft. OLb THREE PART JERSEY\neow for tela. Just freshened. Sam\n[ Wlnarakl, Appledale. B.C\nb)G   SAANAN BUCK  AT STUD\nH. E. Chickerlng. Upper Granite\n[ Boad.\t\nIMALL, rRESrTJW-\nI aey cow. Quiet, suitable for\nI wornan to handle. Ph. 08TLJ\nfOR SALE: ONE MILK COW\"\nfreshened. T.R tested, M. Kozloy\nCrescent Valley. B.C.\t\n; SALE- 100 HAMPSHIRE ANTJ\nI Lagnern Pullets. R k S. stock\ntl 35 each. Box 3480 Daily News\nfSR\" SALE: 9 WWOCTTYORr?.\nthlre pigs. 1600 each Phone 4X\nD. Cameron, Balfour. B.C\nlOR     SALE - YOUNG     H5RSE\n1 with harness. A. Brown. Taghum.\nMt%, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nfOR SALE. PURE-BRED ST\/BER -\nnard Puppies from the best of\nbreeding. $20 00 for males. $15 00\nfor females. Abey't Rtnch, Mirror\nlake, B.C.\nIffotann Daihi NfttiB\nTelephone 144\nTrail: K. Lowdon, 718-Y\n| Classified Advertising Rates\nlie per lint per lneertion.\n44c par line per week (0 contec-\n' utlve Insertlont for cost of 4).\nI $141 a line i month (20 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion)\nBox number lie extra. Thit\ncovert  tny number  of  timet.\nPUBLIC NOTICES, TENDERS,\nETC.\nHe per line, first Insertion and\n144o each subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nNon commercial   Situations\nh Wanted for He for any required\nI number  of  lines  for  six  diys\npiyiblt In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nSingle copy $   05\nBy caiTler. per week 25\nBy carrier, per year     13 Ofl\nBy mall:\nOne  month           $  75\nThree months         2 00\nSix months           400\nOne year 8 00\nAbove rites ipply In Canada.\nUnited States and United Kingdom to tubscribers living out-\naide regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required one\nmonth $1 50. three months $4 Ofl,\nalx months $8.00, one year $15 00.\n1930 MODEL A POTtD BKBaN\nCompletely overhauled. Nelson\nAuto Wrecking.\nroR sAl* -'liObiL \"A\" W1B\nCoach, low mileage, Just like new\nBox 3224 Daily Newt,\n\u00ab chev. sabAN. ilBM   City\nAuto Wreckert, 180 Biker St.\n1930 FORD MODEL\nMl to IV2 Ton Truck\nDual wheals, overload springs. 4-\ntpeed transmission. Excellent motor, cab and body, \u00a391 K\nSOWERBY*\nCUTHBERT\nOpp. Hums Hotel and Post Office\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER 8TOI\u00bb gt\nAimer Hotel Opp C P R Depot\nonrTfflrTOffi r\u00abfSJto to\ngratefully racalvad at tha Suva-\nUon Army, 118 Victoria Street\nWANTslD _ GOOD CLEAN COT\",\nton rati, not last than 1! mchei\nSiuart. M lb. r, 0. B  Nelson\nilly Ni\nYOU\niy Net\nCAN!\n[tfLWi\n tnjrT...r.\ngartap. with our help Canadian\nKindergarten Institute care M.CL.\nSchools, Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nped Tested. Guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price lilt\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O  Box\n&3ia<\u00a3Sggyy$\niit\n-'The rWoBUl - iaV\nP O BtwBJfc Vanawa?\nRolls developed and printed, lie\nI X 7 Enlargement Free\nH reprints 8x7 enltrgemint, 35c\n\u2014mmwPfSm\nI for new ow price  1st 1\nouAJiAwtimj ma wihwh\nSend for new low price list with\n\u2022ample, or Sl.00 (or 18 super fine,\nI'.paid.   Western   Supply, Bug\n\" Vancouver, B. Q.\nSB!\nYOUR SICK FRIEND Oil RELA-\ntlve In the hospital will enjoy\nreading Tha Daily News Phone\n144 and have a copy delivered\neach morning.\nMEN - REGAIN \"Vk56R.\"P\u00abP S\ntry Vitex, 25 tabled $1.00, Personal drug sundries, 24 for $1.00. Supreme Razor Blade Sharpener 36c\nSharptnt blades perfectly. J. Jensen.  Box 324, Vancouver, B. C\nINTRODUCTION BUREAU- OR\nganlzed for the purpose of introducing men and woman, who\nthrough laok of opportunity find\nIt difficult to meet one another.\nHighest references given. P. O.\nBox 385^ Victoria, B. C.\nTurI\nKeep warn with Polar Furs\u2014guaranteed and always In style\u2014the\nlowest prices in town\u2014prompt attention to all tnrjuirlot\u2014expert\nrtilyling and rapaitln|.\nPolar furs Ltd., Vancouver,  B.C\nBUSINISS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nWMMPT1\nHAROLD S, ELMES, R08SUND\nB.C. Provincial Aitaytr, ChimUl\nIndividual representative for ship-\npert at Trail smelter,\nnil\nII! I\nF\nCORUTIIRII\nSPENCER CORSrrrtRE, MISS\nShirley Boomer, 217 Gore. Ph. 648L\nENQINEIRt AND SURVIVORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK. P.O. Box 104\n.Trail, B.C. Surveyor and Jnglueer,\nPhont \"waver FtUa\\\t\nEngineer; B, C. UBd Survajoi.\nRotsand and Orand Forki, B.C.\nKgC^r^es^Kar^ZXsKsaMsas^aaaaaaCaTtxaaWaaaBaM\np FOOT SPECIALISTS\na J. OILLI3, r>S,C, R.0JP, RWD,\nChiropodist, root Speelalujt. Bar-\ngeron Block, Ph, 11W, Trail, B.C,\nINSURANCE AND RIAL IITATI\nft W. DAWSON, Real 555T]to;\nturanct, Rental!. 657 WardStrett.\nAnntblt Blook. Pbom 197,\nzr^rWhWmtTimm\nInsurance, Real Eitatt, Phone jj,\n\u2022 Real Estate. Phoni 135.\n\u00ab.\"Y. mar ifm'auto Ata-\ndent Iniurtnct. IS) Ward Sttiet\nMACHINIST*\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT\ntd <t or I exboturt roll) Mc lit\nprints 3o each For your vacation\ntnapshou), choote Kryital Finith\nGuaranteed non-fads prlnta\nKryital Photos Wilkle, Satkatcbt-\nwin. Established over 30 yttrt.\nFOR SALI MISCELLANEOUS\nRtdueed Prleti or>\nPIPE and\nFITTINGS\nAU Sires.\nVi-inch to 8-inch standard.\nGet your requirement! now.\nCall, Phone or Write\nNelson Machinery\nand Equipment\nNelson, B. C.\nPhont 18 P. O. Box 23\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT OR SALE - WILL\nlocated excellent family house. 4\nbedrooms, furnace heated. A imp\nto the fight party, either monthly\nterms, cub or rental basis. R. W\nDawson, Annabla Block.\t\nFOR RENT, $22 PER MONTH: J.\nroom limits, good condition, 824\nCirbonate, Corner Cedtr Street,\nfrom Nov. 1. Phont M busmen\nhours.\nCOMFORTABLE STEAM HEATED\nhouse kttping rooms In Annable\nBlock for rent R W Dawton\nAgent. 557 Ward Street.\t\nFOR RENT: S-ROOM NEWLY DEC.\ntuite. Large private bath. On car\nline tnd near HUrh School. $14\nmonth. Apply 9)5 Observatory 31\nFOR REM SMAIX HOUSE, TWTj\nbedrooms. Fairly close in. $2000\nper month. C W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT: FURNISHED HOUSB-\nkeeplng rooms and suites. 705\nVlctorli ^Alley.\nA    HOME   FOR   THOSE   AWAY\nfrom home Strithconi Hotel'Apia\nFOR  RENT  -  I  ROOM   HOUSl1\nelose_ln   D  Mtgllo   Ph   8O8L\nTeRRACK APYS Beautiful modeA\nfrigtdilre equipped suites\n3 ROOM FURN SUITE FOR kKMT\nClose in. $15. C. W^Appleysrd\nFOR RENT-2 RM. SUITE, ALL\nfurn'shed  711 Vernon Street.\nFOR RENT: 3-ROOM FURN OH\nunfurn. suite. 311 Vernon St,\nFOB RENT: SMALL COZY HOUSE\nApply Mrs. C. Becker.\nSee Kerr Apts.  First\nFARM, GARDEN O NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nALL KINDS FRUIT fTREES, 1 YB\nold 50c. 2 yr. old 75c, climbing ind\nbush roses, grape vines, 3 for $1\nBlack currents, white, red cur-\nrantt. 15c ttch Apply to Eugene\nHammer-r   PO Taghum   BC\nNO 1 SECOND CTIT ALFALTA\nHav; No 1 Timothy Hay. Full\nPail Dairv Mash; Bran; Shorts;\nPulverized Oit-s: Oilcak\u00bb Meal;\nFlax M-il. The Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co, Ltd.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTO FINDERS\nIf you find snylhinR telephone\nThe Dally Newl A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nynu We will collect from the\nowner\t\nLOSf^OUTRING IN BOXTUVT-\ntwopn West Carbonate and Pott\nOffice. Valued as keepsake Kindly ]?avr at Dailv News\nLT^t^ON CEDAR-STREET BE\"-\ntween Mill and Civic Theatre\nDair of sllver-rlmmed (lasses\nPlon>\u00bb return 'o 90S Mil!  St\nFOIINIV-PP piMMED GLASSES\nApplv Daily Ntws.\niJBBER STAMPS FOR UNEM-\nployment Insuranct Thast art re-\nquired (or cancelling stamps by\neroployert In employees Bookt\n05c each. Postage 5c extra Nelson\nDtlly Newt Commercial Printing\nDept.\nfoRSALH-oTrtSurfOLTCXT.\nerpillar, one Steam Pump. 2 cylinder 6x10, ont Bowier Gat Pump\nand 600-gal tank. Call or enquire\nat the Nelson Equipment &\nMachinery, Box 23, Nelson.\nPIPE. TUBES. FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED      \u2022\nLarge stock lor Immediate thipmen:\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenut tnd Mtin St\nVancouver, B   C\ni HOLE GAS COOKING RANGE,\nlgt. oven tnd brpiler. $20 Excel,\nltnt cond. Would mike good lpcu.\nbator, cap. 200 eggs. 01 High St\nPIPl! - FITTINGS \u25a0 TUBB8 - SPE.\ncial low pricts. Active Trtdmg Co\n918 Pcwell St.. Vancouver. B C\nFAWCsTTT COAL AND W6oT5\nRange. New list year. Phont\n802L, mornings.\nFOR SALE-USSD WOOD AND\ncoal range, Excellent condlUon\nPhone 21\nX\"-i SECOND CutTinC. ALFALFA\nhay, $14.50 fob Errckson, B.C\nF  Hollaus, Camp Lister, BC.\nRTffltJlLT WAWETtS\" Af EAT7\nterms. Beatty Washer Eton.\nPhont tl.\t\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP MTTALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prlcet\nptid A c 11 v \u2022 Triding Comptnj\n816 Powell St., Vincouver, B  C\nwTOTED~TT5~BTjY^TBarra\none-horse   disc  harrow   In  good\nshape.   C.   W. Mswer,   Frultvale\nw\/mEy-sEroBTPKicrserst\nwhite and gold \"Limoges\". Apply\nBox 3J7JJDallyJJewv\nSHIP' ITS  V6UR  HIDtil   ft\nMorgan   Nttson   B C\nFOLDING GO-CARTTv5r SMATI\nbaby. Phont H\nSWAPS\nWILL TRADE OR SELL 8EPAR-\nately a 1929 Essex Sedan (1941\nllecince) and pure-bred Guernsey bull, 8 months, for cloied\nlight delivery, Faultiest ttump\npuller or Ensilsge cutter. W. H\nMole.  East Arrow Park.\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE: 18-FOOT 8QUARE-\nttern boat. Light to row. Ideal for\noutboard. $20. Box 3484 Daily\nNews\nFOR  WANT   AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nEconomic Index Up\nOTTAWA. Oct. 24 (CP)-Tht Dominion bureau of statistics today\nreported its economic index for the\nweek ended Oct, 18 (on the bate\n19M equals 1001 was 112 9 compared\nwith ill 0 in the previous week tnd\n102.8 In tht tame week last year.\nEXCHANGE MARKETS\nBy tht Cintdlin Prist\nClo\u00abin( exchtngt rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound, buying 4.4$\njelling is\". U8, dollar, buying 1.10\nse\"'ne   1 11.\nAt New YnrV-Pmmd 4 03\u00bbi; Ci-\nnadian dollar 88 15-18 cents.\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene tnd electric\nwilding, motor rewinding,\ncommercial refrigeration,\nPhone 393 lie Vtrhon Bt.\nOPTOMSTRISTS\nW. (. MARSHALL\nOptometrist!\n14.58 Bay Ave, Trill        Phont 177\nSASH FACTORISS\nKOOTENAY SASH U DOOB FAC\ntory, 907 Front It. Nelioo. Phone\n530. No Job too small or too big.\nCaWJWs TAb\u00ab TACf 6RY.\nHardwood merchant. 273 Baker 81\nSECOND HAND STORM\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhat have yout Ph. 114. Ark Store.\nMETAL MARKETS\nLONDON, Oct. 24  (AP)   - Bir\nsilver J3V|d; unchanged. (Equivalent 42.82 cents )\nNEW YORK - Copper tttady;\ntlectiulvtic tpot 12.00; export, fas\nN.Y. 11.50 notnlnil.\nTin Sieidy; tpot ind neirby, tnd\nforward 5200.\nLetd tttady: tpot, New York >83-\n3.90; East St. Louis 5.70.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis tpot,\ntnd forward 8.25.\nPig Iron, ilumlnum, intlmony,\nquicksilver, platinum, Chinese wolframite and domestic tehtelitt unchanged.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 24 (CP).-Grtin\ntuturet quotation!:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT'\nOct '72H     T2H     72Vi     T2V4j\nDec     73V4     73H     73%     73H\nMay 77 K    77ti    Tit's    77V,\nOAT8:\nOct. 44H     45',     44H     43Vi\nDec. 44V,    4S\u00ab*     4l'i     45-tt\nMay' 441,    48H    44 V*    45Vs\nBARLEY!\nOct. 53Vt    58       65V\u00ab     55*t\nDec. Hit    H        55'4     55%\nMay M       87 V,    M       56H\nFLAX:\nOct   .      148',,   148V,   146*4   147V,\nDec. 1444,   148'.,   14451   144V,\nMay 148t,   14744   141      1475,\nRYE:\nOct , -        -       -        53%\nDec      M'i     54\",    54',     54V,\nMay 88        88       57V4     57%\nCASH PRICES: Basis In store it\nFort Willlim and Port Arthur:\nWHEAT-N01. 1 hard and 1 Nor.\n7J%; No. J Nor. 89%; No. 1 Nor\n87%; No. 4 Nor. 88%; No. 5, 84'.,:\nNo. 8. 83%; feed 88%: No. 1 Oirntt\n67%: Nos. 1 tnd 3 Garnet 88%; No.\n1 Durum 78%.\nOATS-No. 3 C. W. 44%; Ex. 3\nC W 48; No. 3 C. W. and I feed\n36%.\nBARLEY-Maltlng gradet: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 C. W. 85%: 2-row Nos.\n1 and 2 C. W. 88%; 6-row No. 3\nC. W. 53%. Othen: No. 1 feed 51%;\nNo. 2 feed 80; No. 3 feed 40.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 147%; No. 2\nC. W. 143%; No. 1 C. W. 127%; No.\n4 C. W   122%.\nRYE\u2014NO. 1 C. W. 83%.\nThe firtt whltt child born In\nAmerica wu Snorre Kirltefne,\nborn in Nova Scotli In 1008.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nBathurit P U P A          m\nCan Car !\u2022 Fdy pfd     \u00bbH\nCtn Celanese     ,....1    \u00bbJj\nCtn  ateimihip  - --    \u25a0*\nCons M * \u00bb   --    \u00ab.,\nDom Coal pfd \u201e -    J\u00bbW\nDom Textile     \"J\nDryden   Piper          J\nOitlnttu Power , - -    J\nImperial   OH -\u25a0\u2022   ,JH\nInt Petroleum .             19\nInt Nickel ot Canada    Jj\nNat Braw Ltd  --   \"Jj\nOgilvle Flour ntw    J0%\nShtwnlnn W Ii T>    K*\nBANKS\nBank of Comtntrct _ 150\nDominion  Bank     -.-  \u00bb\u00bb\nImperial Bank 200\nBank of Montreal      JJ\nBank of Nova Scotia 2*9\nRoyal Bank ., - JW\nBmk of Toronto  J4d\nCURB\nAbltibl I pfd     \u2022\nBeauharnoli   Corp     9%\nRrlt  American  Oil     \"H\nCtn Industrie, B     1%\nCons Piper Corn  _..     3%\nFa'.rchlld   A'rcr-ft         \"4\nWilker Good k W  _-    45%\nDetails of Wage\nControl Plan to Be\nMade Public Today\nOTTAWA, Oat 24 <CP).-La,t\nminute ravltlont af the Govirn-\nmint'i Ordir-ln-Councll covirlng\ntha forthcoming waeee tUblllta-\ntlan program hive nectiiltitid a\npottpontmint until tomorrow\nmorning tf tht innouncemint of\ndttallt of tht Plan, Labor Minister\nMtUrty Mid it noon today-\nTha Minlttcr said ha would make\nthe datilli public at 1 prias conference at t  a.m.  HOT-  (I i-m.\nP*T.) toaiorrow.\n\"Tha delay It ciusid tlmply by\nhaving la make lome litt-mlnute\nCsvlslont and doet not mum then\ntl been a change In'the order approved by Cabinet,\" ona official\nHid, \t\nCoarse Grains Up\non Winnipeg MM.\nWINNTPEO, Ott 14 (CP).-A rt-\nported lane export builnest In Canadian wheat and higher print at\nChicago filled to Induce large-icale\nbuylnf on tha Winnipeg Grain tt-\nttbang? today with whaat futuret\nclosing % lower to unchanged, October 72% centt, December 73% and\nCash wheat demand continued\nfrom ihlpeprt and' mills for tha top\nthrte gradii with fair amount!\nchanging hands Spretdt on tha\nlower grtde whutt were eatler\nmar tha, clote.\nCotrte grain, trading, after a alow\nstart, came In volume near tha\nclost with oatt, barley and rye up\na cent or mart tt top leviU. Flax\naaaad through lack of demand.\nEarly Rise in Chicago\nWheat Lost at Close\nCHICAGO, Oct 24 (AP)-A quick\nJump of three cents t bushel at the\nexhausted buylnf energy in wheat\nstart of trading today apparently\nand most of the idvance subsequently faded gwiy in lethargic\ndialing.\nWheat cloied %-J cants a buthel\nhigher thin yetterdty's finish, December- 1.16%-%, corn 1%-1% up,\nDecember 76%, Mty 82%, oils %-%\nhlfher.\nTWO GIRLS TAKE\nPLOWING HONORS\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) -\nWho, besides Hitler, who doesn't\ncount anyway, taid the woman's\nplica Is In Ibt home!\nAt tha International Plowing\nMatch sponsored by tht Ontario\nPlowmen's Association, two girls\nwalked iway\u2014or should wt tay\nplowtd away\u2014with tht honort of\nthe class In which they wert tntir-\ned. They were Dorein Seeney, 16-\nyear-old plowgiry from Ida, Ontario, and 17-yiar-old Frances McMillan of Bttvtrton.\nDoreen won firit prise In her\ndiss driving a team of horses. Although a veteran plnwgtrl, this was\nher ftrit competition, She was the\nsole girl entrant In the horse-plowing section tnd her excellent work\nWon tht approval ot every Judge.'\nFrances wat tht only girl to take\npart in tht tractor evinu. She carried off top honors, defeating nine\nothers to take first prize In bar\noliss.  -\nWhen there's batter plowing W\nbe dent, women will do it.\nmontriaT produce\nMONTREAL, Oct. 24 <CP),-Spot:\nButter, Que. 32% - 32% (fresh)\n32%, tales 100 boxes Eggs. Eastern\nA-ltrgt 50; A-medlum 48; A-pullett\n36; E-B 36-17: E-C 24-rJ8.\nFuturet: Butter, Oct. 12%; Nov.\n32%-3!%, Dec. 3J%-M; Jan, 31%-\n31%; contracts, ont Dec. 13%, ona\nNov, 12%; exchange!, four Nov.-\nJan. at ont cent spread; egg,, Oct\n3\u00bb. '\t\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALQABY, Oct 24 (CP) .-Receipts: Cattle 100: calves 5; hogs 200;\na few early shtcn.\nMedium to fair butcher tteert 7\u2014\n7.80. Common to medium cowt 4 50\u2014\nS.50; cannert ind cutten 350\u20144.25.\nOdd common to good bulls S 50-\n6.71. Medium to good vealers 7.80\u2014\n1.80. Common to fair feeder steers\n6-7; beat 7JO.\nMedium to good Iambs Thursday\n650-850. Hogi IS.40-.50 for B-l\n\u2022t yardt and plants.\nBIRMINGHAM. England (CP) .-\nComldtred too trill two yttrt tgo\nto operate 1 lithe In 1 munitions\nfactory, 19-year-old Evelyn Duncan is credlttd with a world's record for hiving turned out 6110\nanti-aircraft thill components in 1\ntix-diy work week.\n. 147V4 147%\n135% 136\nltlW   YORK   STOCKS\nAmerlcin Can\nAm Smelt k Rtf\nAmer Telephone\nAmerlcin Tobeeco\nAntconda \t\ngtldwln       \ntit k Ohio    \t\nBendlx Aviitlon ...\nBeth Steel\t\nBorden    .j-.\nCanadian Pacific ...\nCarro de Pateo\nChryaltr      \t\nCon Oil N Y \t\nOupont \t\nEattmtn Kodak\nFreeport Texas\t\nGen Electric\t\nGen Foods\t\nGen Moton \t\nQoodrieh  -..\nGrtnby \t\nGreat Nor pfd\t\nHowe Sound \t\nInter Nickel     \t\nInter Til 81 Til ........\nKtnn Copper\nMontgomery Wird\nNtsh Motors\t\nNYCtntral \t\nPtcktrd Moton \t\nPeon R R     .   \t\nPhiUipt Pitt \t\nPullmin\t\nRadio Corp\t\nStfeway Stem\t\nStan ofl of N J ......\nStudebtker \t\nTeats Corp\nTtxaa Gulf Sul\nUnion Ctrbidt\nUnion OH of Ctl\nUnited Alrcrtft,.\nUnion Pacific \t\nU S Rubbtr\t\nU S Steel\nWest Electric\t\nWest Union    \t\nWoolworth\nYellow Truck \t\n72%\n2!)>i\n90%\n13%\nButter Out put\nUp, Cheese Down\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24 (CP).-A mark-\nad Increase In butter production\nduring September compared with\ntha tami month lut year tnd 1\ncorreiponding, though much smaller, drop in output of cheese waa\nreported today in the Agriculturi\nDepartment'! dairy newt letter.\nProduction of creamery butter\nlut month WW 32,150,274 poundt,\nup 12.2 par cent from September,\n1940. Tht Increaie wu general\nthrough tha Dominion, ranging\nfrom 64.5 par cent in Stikatchewan\nto 6,5 pir cent In Ontario.\nFor thl tint nine monthi of\nthe year, total butter output wat\n333.64)43,824, up 9.1 ptr cent. All\nprovince! but Ontario reported in-\ncreatet during thl nine-month period and in Ontario tot dtcrtut\nwu only 0,8 ptr cent.\nProduction Increase (or thl other\neight provinces were: Prince Ed-\nward gtahfTl?* Novt Scotlt tl\nNew Brunswick 11.6, Quebec 5.8,\nManitoba 18.1, Saikatchewm 31.4,\nAlberts 14.1 and British Columbia\nTht report thowed butter stockt\nIn store at Oct, 1 amounted to 88,-\n862,831 poundt, an increase of almost 10,000,000 poundt from the 59,-\n133,204 pounds reported at the tame\ndata In 1140.\nRecovery Note\nlnWallSf.Tr.de\nNBW YORK, Oct. 24 (AK-Bld-\nding for steels, oils and specialties\ntoday gavl a further recovery tinge\nto the stock marktt. Top advtnoe*\nware reduced in soma cases at tha\nclose.\nInternational Mercantile IfarlM\nposted a ntw high for the yatr as\nthe company's timing! ettlmatat\nwire revised upward.\nCanadian stockt wtre higher.\nHiram Walker gained %, Distiller,\nSeagram %, Lake Short Mines %,\nwhile Dome Mines wu off Vi. In\nthe bond marktt Canada tt wen\n% point lower.\nReno Up 2, Gold Belt\n1 at Price* Steady\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24 (CP) -\nPrices held genertlly tttady during\nlight trading on Vincouver Stock\nExchange todty. Transfers totalled\n12,446 shares.\nReno Gold it 11 was up 1 from\nThursday's closing bid and Gold\nBelt firmed a cent at 21. Premier at\n71 tnd Privateer it 49 both slipped\na cent while Brtlorat tt 10.78,\nCariboo Gold Quaru it 220 and\nPioneer at 2.20 wert unchanged.\nIn the base metal group Pend\nOreille it 1.70 roil 1 form yesterday's bid while Nicola, wu unchanged it 2.\nHome Oil at 1.28 and Pacific\nPetroleum it 10 remained unchanged, Other oils wert Inactive\nBOOK NOT WRITTEN\nIN INTERNMENT CAMP\nLONDON   (CP)-RepJylng  to  a\nqueition in tht House of Commons\nWar Minister Margeeson uld inquiries had eetiblished thit the book\nentitled \"I Wat a Nazi Flyer\" tnd\nsupposedly written by i Germin\nprisoner of war interned in Canada\nwu tht work of fiction by a Germin\nfrtt-ltnci writer la Ntw York.\n\"No Oirmtn prliontr bearing the\nname ittributed to tht author la\nknown to the War Office or to tha\nCanadian authorities,\" ha aid.\n\"Numerous inaccuracies in thl book\nmake lt clear that its oontttitt art\nwholly lmtgiptry except where\nthty art based on facts already\nknown to tht public.\"\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Oct 14 (AP) .-British\natock closings, In Stirling: Austin\nA 17s 3d; Boots 33t 8d; Contol\nGold 40, 9d; Crown \u00a310%; Hut\nGeduld \u00a310%; London Midland\n\u00a315; Mex Eagle 13s 6d; Rand \u00a37.\nBonds\u2014British 1% per cent Consols \u00a381 9-16; British 3% per cent\nWar Loan \u00a3106 7-16; British Funding 4s 1900-90 \u00a3114%.\nOpposition Asks\nCash for Lease\nLend Food Supply\nWASWNCrTOJi, Ott, 24 (AT). -\nSenator Arthur Vandanbarg (Rap.-\nMichlgan) demanded today that\nBritain bt required to rcimbuw\nthtjnlted Statu In oath for \u00bb1,-\n000,000,000 in food to be furnished\nunder tht new ttW,000,000 Lend-\nLease approprlatlon,whlch the Sen-\nItt approved yeiterday by vote ot\n59 to 13. - .\n\"If we are furnishing materia.1i\nunder thit bill that are told tor\ncash by the British Government,\nthat cash belongi to the United\nStatu Treatury,\" tha Michigan Senator daelarad,\nProponent! replied that negotiant were progressing for British\nrepaymente on material! thui fir\nfurniihed.\nGolds Heavy at\n.Toronto (lose\nTORONTO, Oct, 24 (OPl-Oold\nahirei turned heavy in tha final\nhour today on Toronto Exchange\nand tha telling oarrlad prices back\nfor an index loss of dole to half a\npoint A rumor that the miners\nwould call a strike it Kirkland\nLake evidently intpired the tilling.\nHollinger and Teck-Hughet told\ntt new low prlcet tor tha year,\nUpper Canada slipped badk 18 or\nmore to clou around 1.48 and lotset\nof t to 10 cents win showing at\ntht close for Macaita, Preston, Kerr-\nAddison, Lamequo and Wright-\nHargreavM.\nNickel, Noranda and Hudson Bay\nmilntained a firm to strong front\ntnd cheaper base metal* to pott\n\u25a0mall gains were Steep Rock. Sner-\nritt and Venturei. Ban Metals Corporation weakened 1% to 7.\n' '    ' i1 '\nPrices Widen in Late\nTrade at Montreal\nMONTRBAL, ott. 34 (aP)-flilni\nwin uppermoit In trading todty\non thl stock exchinge up to tha\nfinal half hour but uvtral Issues\nlost a part ot their profits towtrds\ntht end.\nWinnipeg Electric \"A\" wu the\nmarket leader tnd recovered tome\nof Thursday's slip. On the upgrade\nIn industrials wert Canada Cement\npreferred, General Steel Wins. Dominion Coal preferred tnd Canadian Industrial Alcohol.\nCanada steamship issues met pro-\nprovementt in transportations. Ttx-\nflt taking and dropped early lm-\ntiltt wtn out in front til day,\nDominion holding to \u2022 three-point\nlift and Celaneie potting t major\nfraction advance.\nBARITE AIDS SEARCH\nFOR OIL SUPPLIES\nOTTAWA, Oct M (Ot) - The\nempire's search for vital oil supplies\nis being assisted by the development of Canadian write deposits\nand the 1940 output of ISO tons Is\nlikely to bt increued a hundredfold\nofficial! uld today.\nSAW*LY OUT WHIAT\nBY 50,000,000 BUSHELS\nLETHBRIDGE Alta, Oct. 24 -\n(CP).\u2014Dominion Government entomologist! estimated hen today that\nWestern Canada'! 1941 wheat production wu nductd by mort thin\n50,000,000 bushels It I result of the\nwont lnftttatlon of the whut item\nsawfly In the agricultural history\not thi plains aria.\nMORS CHEESE FOR BRITAIN\nSYDNEY, NB.W. (CP) \u2014 Butter\nexports from Auttrtlla to Britain\nwill be cut 50 per cent under a ntw\ncontract, but mort cheese and dried\nand condensed milk will be sent.\n      i .M\u00ab\u00bb NINi\nDiplomats Bring\nBoom to Ancient\nVolga Trade Post\nBy  HENRY  C.  OAS5IDY\nAttoolattd Pratt Stiff Wrlttr\n(Delayed) (AP) w Ettablilh\nhere of tome of Soviet Rustia'i noit\nImportant leaden and many tonign\ncmbotsiei md legations hu given\nthit old Volga River trading pott\nboom-town vitality.\nShiny new automobiles iplash\nalong roadt long used by horse-\ndnwn droshklet and tltlgna. Tha\nbroad avenues of Central Kulbythiv\nare lined by modern, will equipped\nbuildingi In which Rutlian leaden\nnot directly engaged in the derenco\nof Moscow have made their offices.\nTheir identities cannot bt disclosed\nbut some of them are highly Important.\nBesides thl United States and\nBritish Embassies tha city now\nhouses the Japanese, Chinese, Turkish, Iranian, Afghan and Polish\nEmbasalat and the Bulgarian, Swedish. Norwegian, Catch, Yugoslav\nand Greek Legations, Foreign Commissar Vyachealav Molotov and hit\naides, A\"S. Loiovwy tnd Andrei\nVishinsky, have moved in.\nOne ot Molotov\"! tint acta waa\nto receive tha dean ot the diplomatic corps, Iranian Ambassador\nLaurence Stcinliardt, Steinhardt\nand hit staff art established In a\nformer sohooihouse, tt an foreign\ncorrespondents who moved from.\nMoscow with the diplomats,   \\\nKuibyshev wat founded u tha\ncity of Soman In 1588 to lerve at\na trading pott and communication!\nlink between Kuan tnd Astrakhan,\nIt wu renamed for tha Bolahevlk\nrevolutionary leader, Valerian Kuibyshev, Chairman of thl State Plan-.\nning Board which carried out Soviet\nRussia'! tint Five-Year Plan,\nIt liet on the East btnk of thl\nbroad, gray Volga, whtri for centuries it hat bean I grain trade\ncentre.\nB.C. MINING MEN\nASK OTTAWA FOR\nTAX CONCESSIONS\nVAireoUVXB, B,C.-Brltlah Co-\nlumbia mining men are making\nrepresentations to thl Ottiwa Gov*\nernment in thl hope that UK eon-\ncessions may be made to the In.\ndustry in such a form that proa*\nptctlng and research will be la*\ncouraged.\nDuring the recent testion tf tha\nWestern branch, Canadian Institute\nof Mining it Metallurgy, amphtlut\nwu laid on the need for dlscovirtnti\nnew mines If the Industry it to re.\ntain Ita high place in British Co.\nlumbia u a revenue producer.\nVarious means of subsidizing\nprojpectort have been discussed,\nbut majority opinion is that lt la\nnot pricticablt for governments directly to embark on tha nectnery.\nexpenditure.\nTha Institute has gone en record u favoring a proposal whereby th* Dominion Qovtrnmant wpuldi\npermit operating mining companies\nto add an amount not more than\n10 per cent nor leu than I per\ncent of the amount permitted annually tor depletion, this sum to ha\ndeductible from their taxable Income, provided that said amount\nbe actually expended ill either re-\nteerch or exploration ind prospecting projects which havt been approved by tht minister! of finance\nand of mines and resources.\nU.S. STEEL STRIKERS\nRETURN TO WORK\nOTIfvOtT, Oct. 14 (AP).-Whlla\nState Police stood guard, striking\nemployee! of tht Great Ltku SUal\nCorporation returned to their Jobs\ntodty, terminating in eight-day\nwork itopptge thit had halted production of irmtment steal.   '\nDOW JONEl AVERACES\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES                       Bid Ask\nBnlome Qold   10.50 11.00\nCariboo   Gold       2.15 226\nDentonli  M   01 OlVs\nTalrvlew Amal  OOUi .01\nGeorge Copper  .....    .12^4 \u2014\nGolconda     .05ft MH\nGold Belt     2\\ -\nGrandview ..   _    .15*4 .18\nGrull Wlhktnt      ,02Ui .02*\nHedlty Mucot     .45 JO\nHome   Gold    00% O0H\nladim Minu     j01 \u2014\nInt Coil St Coki 30 12\nIsltnd Mountain    1.21 \u2014\nMmto Qold     jOlt* 02\nNicola M k M  01% Ol\nPtnd Oreille     1.82 1.88\nPionter Gold     2.15 220\nPremier Border      .Olty 02\nPremier Gold     71 .75\nQuaUino Copper   ..     ill1* \u2014\nRtllef Arlington ....     M \u2014\nReno Gold     f)l Olt,\nRiwtrd    11* .11\nSalmon Gold   00H -01V,\nSheep Creek    :....._    tl 94\nSilbak Premier 70 \u2014\nSurf Inlet           - .IS\nTaylor BR 02* -\nWhitewater        . ...    .01U, 02\nYmir Yankee Girl .    .04Vi 08\nOILS\nA P Com      Mtt -\nAnglo Ctn     tl \u2014\nBrown Corp 06ti \u2014\nC At E Corp    122 1.30\nCalmont Oil 18 20\nCommonwttlth Oil     .23 .11\nCommoll            JO \u2014\nDalhousie Oil     JO -\nDtvles  Peui   11 \u2014\nFdbthilli O * O 80 -\nHighwood Sareea .    .12 \u2014\nHVuni Oil    1.20 2 30\nMadison Oil          - OHi\nMir Jon Oil      01 -\nMcDougtU  Sefur ..     .04 08\nMill City Pete 08 \u2014\nModel Oil       18 \u2014\nOkalta com _,     .40 .48\nPanlU   ,     jOlti .03^\nRoyil Can     SX ,08\nRoyallte Oil            - 18.00\nSouth End Pete 01 V\u00bb -\nSpoontr Oil         .01 \u2014\nUnlt*d Oil           .. .     04 .08\nVnntlti  Ltd         .OJUj 04\nINDUSTRIALS\nraolttl  Estates          1.10 \u2014\nCoi>t Breweries     l.T 1 ?0\nPacific Coyle   ...    .32 \u2014\nSO  Industrials\n10  nils  \t\n18  utllitltt  .   .\nHigh\n...\u201e. 12189\n _    2818\n.....     17.55\nClou\nLow\n120.62\n28.51     28.81\n17.34     17.44\nChinge\n121.11   up     .71\n.02\n.04\nTORONTO  STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nMINES\nAldermu Co-\nAnglo Huronfan\nArntfiild Gold\t\nAunor \t\nBagamac Rouyn  -\nBankfitld Gold   -\nBase Metals Mining \t\nBeattie Gold Mines\nBldgood Kirkland\t\nBobjo Minet  -\nBnlome Minei \t\nBufftlo Ankeritt\t\nCanadian  Malartic    \t\nCariboo Gold Quarts ....\nCastle-Trethewey\t\nCeptral Patricia  \t\nChromium M at S \t\nConiaurum Minn   \t\nConsolidated M St S .....\nConsolidated M at 8\t\nDome Mlnu ,...\t\nEast Malartic \t\nEldorido Oold        \t\nfalconbridge Nickel \t\nFedenl. Kirkland \t\nFranootur Gold  .....\nGilllet Lake      \t\nGod's Lske Oold\t\nGold Belt   ...... \t\nGrandoro Minet \t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHard Rock Oold \u2014\nHtrker Gold     -.\u2014\nHollinger    \t\nHowey Gold      -\nHudson Bay M k S \t\ninternational Nickel \t\nJack Waite  \t\nJacola Gold  \u2014\nKerr-Addison    \t\nKirkland Lakt  \u2022\u2022\nLake Shore Mine* \t\nLamaque Contact \t\nLaps Ctdillac     ...\nLeitch Gold\t\nLebel Oro Minet  \u2014\nUtile Long Lac \t\nMacatta Minn   \t\nMacLeod Cockshutt\nMadten Red Lake Oold\nMandy\nMclntyre-Porcuplni   \t\nMc.Ktntie Red Lain\t\nMcVlttie-Grtham   \t\nMcWiten Gold      \t\nMining Corp\t\nMonet! Porcupine \t\nNlpiislng Mining \t\nNoranda \t\nNormettl \t\nO'Brltn Oold     \t\nOmegt  Gold \t\nPamour Porcupine \t\nPiymuter Com     \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPtrron Gold \t\nPickle Crow Oold   \t\n\"loneer Oold        \t\nPremier Gold   \t\n15\n281\n07 K\n1.80\n.10\nM't\n.07\n1.06\n.11 Vi\n..08 V.\n10.50\n4 15\n.68\n2 15\n50\n157\n230\n1.20\n1.20\n18 80\n19 50\n2.10\nXI\n140\n03\n,48\nJ0S14\n.27\n.23\n.04 VS\n.23\n.70\n.01 tt\n1180\n24\n28.75\n35 i\u00bb\n.16\n01 Vi\n455\n.86\n1100\n4,\u00ab\n.43\n01V*\n1.81\nJrT)\n2 08\nM\n.08\n48.78\n1.04\n05\n18Vi\n138\n32\n116\n52.25\n.79\n1.28\n,15V.\n108\n19Vi\n181\n155\n2 75\n215\n.71\nPowell Rouyn Oold\nPntton But Dome\nReeves MacDonald ..\nReno Oold Mines ....\nRoche Long Lac .....\nSan Antonio Gold ...\nShiwkey Gold . ....\nSheep Creek Gold ...\nSltcoe Gold \t\nSladen Malartio ......\nSt. Anthony\t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite      \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold ...\nToburn Gold Mine* .\nTowigmac   \t\nVentures\nWaite Amulet\nWright Hargreavei,.\nYmir Yanket Girl ..\nOILS\nAJix    \t\nBritish Americaa \t\nChemical Research\nImperial       \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nTexas Can .  -\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian T L 8s P\nBrewers k Dittillert\nBrewing Corp \t\nB C Power Tk\" \t\nBCPowtr'*B\" \t\nBuilding Product! ...\nCantda Dread  \t\nCan Bud Milting\t\nCan Car k Fdy\t\nCtn Cement\t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Milting \t\nCm Pae Rly     \t\nCtn Ind Alcohol A ....\nCons Bakeries\t\nCosmol      \t\nDora Bridge  -\nDom Ttr k Cham\t\nDistillers Seagram .....\nFanny Firmer     \t\nFord of Canada A ....\nGen Steel Wiru  \t\nGoodytirTin   \t\nGypsum L k A \t\nHtmilton Bridge \t\nHinm Wilker\nImperltl Tobacco 4...\nLoblaw \"A'' .\nLoblaw \"B\"\nMaple I .'.if Milling ...\nMtssey Hirris\nMontreil Power\nMoort Corn      \t\nNil Steel Cir \t\nPige Hersey\nPower Corp      \t\nPressed Metili \t\nSteel of Can \t\nStandard Paving\n,.:..-*.._ H\n\t\n PAGE TEN\nCIVIC\nLast Times Today\nShowi at 2:00-7:00-8:45\nII FAMOUS\nrllffts\nIHEATRF\nAt 2:57-7:60-9:24\n* '\nI\n\u2014Extra-\nMarch of Time\nColored  Cartoon\nUniversal Newt\nMON.-TUBS.\n\"Flame of New Orleans\"\n\"Dance Hall\"\n' \u2022\nm\nNEW YORK (CP) - An all-,\nweather stadium, with hydraulic-\nremovable dome walls-roof, to seat\n190,000 people, and cost $25,000,000\nhu been suggested for New York.\nGRENFELLS\nTODAY\nFRIED CHICKEN\nDINNER\nGuaranteed\nMechanical Work\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nHive the Job Done Right\nSei\nVIC GRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nI\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nSATURDAY SPECIAL\nHand Dipped\nCHOCOLATES\nCRAY'S\u2014580 Baker St.\n\u2014\u2014          ' NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON  B. tV-SATUROAY MORNINO. OOTOBSRSB. W41\nIs Protection of Grower Against\nUneven Demand and Price Culling\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct: 24\u2014The Interior\nVegetable Marketing Board, at pre*\nent under much controversial dlt\ncutsion in the Wett Kootenay District, first made- its appearance in\nthli district in 1936.- Vegetables\ncoming under control are tht\n\"heavy\" class tuch u potatoes,\nonions, cabbage, beets, carrots and\nparsnips.\nGrowing dissatisfaction Wat climaxed at a meeting held In Trail\nSept, 15, when Dr. K. C. McDonald,\nMinister, of Agriculture, who wu\nspeaking in tupport of the Marketing Act, wu the object of \u25a0 verbal\nattack from sevenl district firmert.\nwho took the view that the Board\nwas monopolistic!, and operated on\na policy of dictatorship.\nFacts given below are from a\nletter from O. T. Jewell, Secretary\nof the Interior Board, and from J.\nM. Wheeler, the Board's Dlttrlct\nInspector here. '   (\n' Altogether there are three boardt,\neach being an entirely teparate\norganization with different personnel. All three work, however, under\nthe same principle, regulated by the\nB.C. Marketing Act, respecting\nwhose working a Commission it\nholding hearings at Victoria,\n-iWr^FOR\/MM VAIUE\n\u25a0ai saam stus it unn os\nCollinson's\nThe House of\nFine Diamonds\nHHUII11. IURIIHTH'\n\u25a0i hit ^(j'f* 11\nIt's SMART to Co\nDATES FROM 1935\n\"The British Columbia Interior\nVegetable Marketing Board wat organized in 1935 by vegetable producer! In the Interior of this Province,\" says Mr- Jewell't letter.\n\"At the present time It la ont\nof three boards regulating fruit\nand vegetables under the Natural\nProducts Marketing (British Colombia) Act. The other two Boards\nare the B.C. Tree Fruit Board and\nthe B.C. Coast Vegetable Marketing Board, neither of which has\nany direct connection with this\nBoard, eaoh being an entirely separate organization with different\npersonnel.\n\"Many people, Including producer!, fall to differentiate between\nthese three boards, and miny misunderstandings irise due to the\nfact that criticism of the operations\nof one of the boards Is construed tt\nbeing applicable to any and all\nboards, and even the Act itself It\nblamed. Especially tre these misunderstandings prevalent among\nthe unknowing members of the\npublic in the Interior, as they read\npropaganda and letters in the Coast\npapers (which we know In many\nInstances to be but l\/lf-truths)\nwithout endeavoring to enquire,\nImmediately condemning all marketing boards.\n\"The underlying principle ot ill\nmarketing boardi is to ensure to\nproducers the right of collective\nbargaining with a view to obtaining for themselves at least the cost\not production of commodities which\nthey produce. Previous to the setting up of marketing control, producers were scalped time without\nnumber for the benefit of a few\nunscrupulous profiteers.\nPLAYED AGAIN8T\nEACH   OTHER\n\"Advantage was always taken of\nthe fact that agricultural products\nwere perishable, and, without organisation, buyers played growers\nagainst one mother in order to get\ntheir buying prices as low u it\nwas possible for them to do.\n\"Even today the farmer is tt the\ntail end of the list, for a recent\nsurvey made by the Dominion Government has shown that farmers\nconstitute 30 per cent of the population ot the Dominion ot Canada,\nyet their receive only 10 per cent of\nthe tot3l national income.\nj \"Coupled with the object of cost\ncf production, is the necessity for\nregulated rrisrketing to ensure t\nsteady flow of produce to our markets at prices which give to the\nproducer the desired return and\nyet which arc reasonable to the ultimate  purchasers.\n\"Nc one can deny that the pro-\n. ducer should be entitled to t rea\nsonable living, and Just u It la\nnecessary for Minimum Wage legislation to protect office and factory workers, and organizations of\nworkers In their own interests, to\nshould farmers be entitled to or\nganize (or their own benefit\n. \"Legislation It necessary In order\nto give effective control, u, without\nregulations covering all producers,\na few selfish individuals could, by\nunfair practical, benefit by the\numbrella being held over them by\nthe majority of producers, and thus\neventually wreck any stabilization\nwhich had been effective.\n\"In to far u this Board's regulations In the Kootenay markets are\nconcerned, they were instituted in\na minor way in 1936, and have been\ncontinued ever since that time up\nuntil thit past Spring. The only\nregulations were the naming ot\nprices which retailers thould pay\nfor produce delivered to them by\nthe grower. The prlcet named were\ntuch it would enable tha farmer\nwith a fair standard ot living to\nproduce hit crops without lost to\nhimself.\nKOOTENAY ACREAGE\nNOW  LARGE\n\"Steadily tinea 1930, tha acreage\ndevoted to vegetable! in the Kootenay District tnd the resulting tonnage hu increased, due to thit protection, and leu and less vegetables\nwere imported from outside sources\nLast year the production ot vegetable!, especially potatoes, wu the\nlargest on record, and then wu .a\nconsiderable surplus in excess of\nthe requirement! of the Nelson and\nTrail markets. This surplus led tome\nproducers, whose standard ot living\nis classed u being below that qf the\naverage Canadian, to sell their\nproduce at lest than prlcet named\nby the Board, tnd resulted In tome\nof these producers disposing of\ntheir entire crop at the expense of\ntheir fellow producer! who complied with Board regulations and\nrefused to market their produce below costs.\n\"Accordingly, lut Spring, the\nBoard instituted regulttlont designed to give ill producers In the dlttrlct a fsir there ot the business\nthat wu offering. Unfortunately\nthese regulations which denied producers the right to market direct\nto retallen, came too late to effect\nmuch good.\nTO BE FAIRLY SHARED\n'This yetr there ire indlcitloni\nof another good-sized crop of potatoes and other vegetable! in the\nKootenay District, and the Board\nhas resolved to see that ill producers who have crops of good quality,\nmarket their fair share. The only\nway that this can be accomplished\nis to eliminate the possibility of\nprivate deals which a few selfish\nIndividuals would otherwise make.\n\"It la not tht Intention of the\nBotrd to eliminate either the small\ngrower, or the largi grower, or to\nfavor the small grower, or the larger grower. The sole purpose of our\nregulations it to see that no one\nproducer markets hit entire crop\nwhile others dump theirs in the\nSpring.\n\"The regulitlons of the board are\ndesigned sito, to protect consumers,\nii ill produce bu to come up to\nGovernment grades. In addition, the\nboard it setting minimum tno maximum resale prices for the benefit\nof retailers and consumers. In the\npast lt wu the practice of some\nproducers to obtain'groceries, and\nin order to collect bit tccounti the\ngrocer wu more or less obliged to\n\u2022ccept whatever produce wu dumped on hit doorttep. This produce\nwas ol necessity sold-at low prices,\nwhich undermined the sale of good\nproducts, which did not do anybody\nmuch good.\n\"Thete regulations will doubtlets\nhave the criticlim of those individuals who are all in favor of controll-\nDANCING\nAT THE BEAUTIFUL NEW\nPLAYMOR\nONE Of WESTERN CANADA'S\nFINEST NEW BALLROOMS\nTake   advantage  of   this  grand   Indian\nSummer weather and join the gala\nweekend crowd\nTonight\ned marketing Is long as they are\nto do\nregi\nlations will prove to everyone that\nallowed\nwe ftel sure that trial\nas they please, but\nof the regu-\nSAFETY\nFIRST\nFor Cleaning Clothes of All\nDescription Be Sure and Use\nSHELL SOLVENT\n50c Per Gallon in Your Own Container\nPined by the Fire Underwriter Association\nDon't take chances with highly inflammable material,\nthe safety of your family and home demand you always\nask for\nSHELL SOLVENT\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nthey are both reasonable snd fsir.\n\"By cooperating with each other,\nproducers can better their lot more\nthan by bucking each other,\" Mr.\nJewett'i letter concluded.\nFACTOR OF WHOLESALE\nHOUSE\nOne of the most strenuous objections levelled sgainst the Board\nhu been the utilization of the\nwholesale houses, snd tht payment\nto them of M per ton for vegetables\nAt the recent-Triil meeting, teveril\nfarmers expressed hot recentment\nat unloading their produce it the\nwholesale houses, 'merely to have\nit transferred to the wholesale truck\nand taken to the retail market.\nMr.  Wheeler,  dealing  with  this\nphase, point* out thtt In iddition\nto serving as a medium of control,\nthe wholesale house, assumes the\nloss ot sny produce held In storage.\nIt also Is in inspection centre to\ninsure thit the produce is up to\nstandard, serving, therefore, as a\nprotection to both the retailer and\nthe consumer,\nTht price paid to the wholesiler\ndoes not effect the price to the producer, inumuch u it It absorbed\nby the cost to the retailer. If, for\nInstance, a ton of potatoes Is delivered, the firmer receiving $20,\nthe potatoes will in turn be sold to\nthe retailer for fM.\nPrice fixation governing the retailer, recently amended, allow! a\nprofit of not mort thin 30 per cent,\nind not leu than 30 per cent. Thit\nprevents retallen from underselling\netch other to obtain larger tales, or\nthe smaller storet from overcharging on goods bought In smaller\nquantitlu it consequently higher\nprlcet.\nPREVENTS UNDUr PROFITS\nThe let price illowed wholesalers.\nsafeguards against undue profits\nby the wholeulen. Dr. McDonald,\nwholesaler hid paid M for t ton\none Instance in Vincouver where i\nduring his Trill iddreat, referred to\nof potatoes, snd hsd. In turn, resold It for $\u00bb. making t $20 profit.\nGovernment control over tht\nwholestleri extendet a further\nbenefit to the farmers, eliminating\nthe poulblllty of outside msrkett,\npreviously encourtged to but down\nthe price asked by local producer!.\nAt the time time, arrangements can\nbe made to distribute B.C. turpluiei\nthroughout the Provlndil mtrkett.\nto point! where shortages art reported.\nVlolitlons against marketing control by a wholesale houte, rendert\nthe houtt liable to ctncellttion of\niti licence.\nUnder the provlsloni of tht Act,\nfirmtri ire required to register\nwith the boird, stating tht tpproxl-\nmite iret, tnd tht amount of produce ftrmtd. Ont of tht ehltf dlffl-\ncultitt faced In tha Kootenav dlt\ntrlct, Mr. Wheeler states It that\nfact that a largt number of farmers hive not cooperated, and the\nBoard, In to far ai ordering and\ndistribution la concerned, It acting\nin the dark.\nBOARD PLACES ORDERS\nA demand for produce, relayed\nto tha wholesale houte from the\nretailer, results in a notification being lent to the District Agent, (in\nthe Kootenay - District, A. II.\nKoakes.) With Information of all\nfarms and tht quantity and type of\nproduce being raised, In hand, the\norder It distributed throughout the\ndistrict, the farmers being notified\nto deliver the produce to the designated wholesale house. The order is\ndistributed according to the crop.\nBefore bringing the goods into tht\nwholesale houses, the ftrmers ara\nienulred to tag the goods, according to standard, and tha goodl are\nliable to Inspection either en route\nto the market; or in the wholesale\nhoute. Failure to turn in produce\nof the required standard results In\neither the cancellation of the order\nor the farmer bcinr\" requested to deliver another order ot the necessary\nspecifications.\nBOOTLEGGING PREVENTED\nThe market price Is fixed on the\ngeneral average throughout the\nProvince. The setting of a uniform\nprice standard wat t move to prevent bootlegging within the Province. With an organized system of\ndistribution throughout the Province, the market can be kept stable,\nbut In order to hive the scheme\nwork according to plan, the cooperation! of all farmers it absolutely\nnecesttry.\nAlthough the headquarters of the\nInterior Board It In Kelowna, an\ntgent la potted In etch district to\nsupervise local operations.\nDiscussing the Trail market, Mr,\nWheeler stated that telling In the\nopen market, Frldtyt, wu not restricted, although If was necessary\nto have the vegetables tagged according to standard.\nAsked regarding the issuance of\npeddlar's licences, Mr. Wheeler said\nthat those obtaining licences still\ncame within the provitlont of the\nMarketing Act.\nMembers Spokane\nGirl Scouts Are\nVisiting Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., OcL M\u2014Nina members of No. 23 Compiny, Girl Scouts\nof Spokane accompanied by their\nCaptain. Mrs. O E. Bowers, paid a\nsurprise   visit   to  Trail   Thursday\nSight and are remaining until Sun-\nay, the guests of Mrs. Bowert'\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrt E. D. O'Nell, of Upper War-\nfield.\nA special Guide party, with Mrs.\nArthur Evans, Trail District Guide\nCommissioner, and Mrs, J. T. Mil-\nlictn tupervising, was held In the\nTtdanac Community Hall In their\nhonor Friday evening, with Guides\nfrom all the Trail companies attending.\nRoberts Head of\nCo-Op Transport\n.ROSSLAND, B. C, OcL 24,\nGeorge Roberts has been appointed\nManager of the Rossland Co-Opera-\ntive Transportation Society, succeeding Harold S. Taylor, former\nmanager.\nMr. Roberta hu been employed\ni the Society'i Secretary for\nnearly a year, and will retain thli\nposition in hii new ippolntment.\nA further 24 persons hive been\nadmitted to membership in the Society. They ire Mrs. Belle Nesbitt.\nR. Tillotson. E. Thorbeck, C. A.\nOsllng, D. F. Mclntyre, W. P. Hawe,\nBernard Fourt, W. Turner, Stanley\nGreen, J. S. Bowden, James Leeson,\nJames Alton, Walter Reld, J. C.\nBellingtley, N. P. McLeod, J. W.\nCildwell, Arnold Vannets, Ralph\nMcMillan, Michael Moran, Douglas\nSadler, G. M. Lister, Albert\nSchwark, C. DeKuysscher and R.\nWheattcroft.\nLt. Edward Sutton\nQualifies at Camp\nShilo for Captaincy\nTRAIL, B. C, OcL 2V\u2014Lt. Edward Sutton, son of Lt.-Col. and\nMrt. A. C. Sutton, of Vletorii, has\nqualified for a captaincy. He is with\nan artillery unit at Camp Shilo.\nLieut. Sutton enlisted shortly after Christmas, 1M0, and attended the\nofficers training school at Gordons\nHead.\nHe It well known In Rotiland,\nwhere hit parents reilded previous\nto the outbreak of wir. His father\nwu the Government Agent it\nRossland.\n(ol. Fairey Here\nNextWeekUpon\nTraining (lasses\nCol. T. T. fairey, Director of\nTechnical Education for British Columbia, will be in Nelson next\nThursday night to interview applicant! for the projected War Emergency Training Class, thl second in\nNelson. Tha first class completed\nits course during the Summer and\nmolt of its member! an now employed in wartime industry at tha\ntout\nB. B. Clark, Manual Arts Instructor at tha Nelson Junior High\nSchool stated Friday night he hu\nreceived 25 applications to data.\nColonel Fairey it alto Interested\nIn obtaining young men for Royal\nCanadian Air Force classes for air\nframe, aero engine and wireless\nmechanics, and a meeting will be\nSeld the evening ol bit arrival to\niscustthla.\nPatrick J. Long\nPasses After 38\nYears in District\nPatrick Joseph Long, 'widely\nknown throughout the Kootenay\nwhere he had lived for the past 38\nyetrt, died Friday morning at Kootenay Lake General Hospital. He\nhad been ill about two months\nBorn in Milltown, PJS.I, In March,\n1868, he came Wett in 1103. For\nseveral yean he worked In lumber\noperations throughout the Kootenay, and about 20 yeart tgo Joined\nthe C.P.R. u a carpenter at the\nNelson shipyards. He hid been retired for about eight yean. He wat\na member of the Catholic Church.\nA single min, ht it survived by\na brother, Philip H. Long tt Nelson;\nend a titter, Mrs. William McDonald of Randolph. Miss.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nCOLT RISmO THREE, ALSO OLD\nhorse cheap for quick sale.\nDominion Dairy,\nBINDER\nReward.\nLOST - ONE   METAL\ncontaining     invoke*.\nNational  Fruit.\ntekmttittttiitettmtottt\u00abttt$ttm\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nmttstttttttttttittmiuomettm\nA Canada-Wide\nBlanket Appeal\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct M \u2014 The\nlocal Red Crost Society hu Just\nbeen tdvised by Nttionil Heid-\nquirteri that i second blanket appeal Is being made across Canada.\nFor this campaign, new woollen\nblankets sre being requested, but\nused blsnkets thit in in good condition will be iccepted. During the\nlut appeal many people dontted\netih, earmtrked for the purchate\nof blankets, and my cash donated\nfor this appeal will be used to purchase blankets. It it stated that\nquilts will slto be received.\nThe blankets and quilts will be\nforwarded to Britain for the use ot\nchildren there.\nSutton in Trail to\nConfer With Philpot\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct 24-Lt-Col.\nA. C. Sutton of Military District No.\nII It in Trail conferring with Lt-\nCoL Dtvld Phlllppot on marten In\nconjunction with tht formttlon of\nunits of the Second Battalion,\nRocky Mountain Rangen. He expect! to remtln In Trill for a few\ndays.\nColonel Sutton wu former Government Agent In Rossland, and\nwaa, until being transferred to Military Headquarten, Officer Commanding the Military Camp at Vernon.\nMichael Adams joins\nUp  at Smelter  City\nTRAIL, B. C. Oct. 24 - Mlchitl\nAdims, of Trill, left the Smelter\nCity Friday morning for tht Dlttrlct Depot after enlisting at thl\nTrail Recruiting Office.\nPLAYMOR TONIGHT\nBig Weekend Dance\nPlant  a  \"MAGLIO\" Plum Tree\nnow. S2 00 and 13.00. 820 Robton St\nGet your films, tlso developing,\ndone it VALENTINES'.\nWtnted\u2014<3utllfied     bookkeeper.\nBox 35S\u00bb Dally Newt.\nRemember St Paul's Anniversary\nDinner, Nov. 3. Price SO cent*.\nRotary Luncheon, Monday, 1:18\np.m., Joint meeting with Gyro Club.\nRed Croat Shop reopened tn\nAnntble Block. Tea postponed.\nSEI A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING tnd DRAPERIES. 120\nHIQH STREET.\nNelion Ski Club Meeting Monday\nnight I p.m., City Hill. All Interested welcome.\nFor best results try Underwood\nTypewriter ribbons tnd carbon\npaper. Phone N. P. G. Pltnte.\nA shipment of crocks Just received\nfrom Medicine Hat Potteries. Size*\nfrom 1  to 10 gallons. Hipperson't.\nPHONE PHONE\n77        TAXI        77\nBob Relsterer        Angus Ctmpbell\nBring Your Film\n\"to US for\nDevelopment\n8-hour service. Best results.\nKODAK  FILM, ACCESSORIES\nFree enlargement with each 19\nworth of work done by ut.\nCity Drag Co.\nYour Rexall Store\nPhona 34 Box 4M\nROTARY\nLuncheon,   Monday;   Oct  27,\n12:16 p.m., Hume Hotel.\nLumber tnd Shingles,\nMouldings, Sash snd Doors\nBURNS   LUMBER   A   COAL   CO.\nPORTRAITS   FOR   CHRISTMAS\nSpecial  offer   it  McGregor's.\nPhone 224 for ippolntment,\nHawaiian  Guitar  Instructor\nPrivate tuition.\nReaionablt   rates\nW. D. Matthews        SUB, HaU SL\nSave 15% on Christmat Portrait\nSpecial at Vogue Studio Nelson, or\nHughes Studio, Trail, if taken between October 7 to October 25.\nFurniture Van leaving for Calgary\nand Lethbndge Nov. 3rd. Have\nroom for more furniture.\nWILLIAMS TRANSFER\nQuiet Hour of Musk, St. Stvlour't\nChurch tomorrow, 3-4 pm. Artittt:\nMrs. Robert Wildie, Margaret Graham, Daisy Norrls and Ernest Smith.\nFather Connolly of the Dominican\nOrder will begin t mission for\nCatholics of Nelson it Cithednl of\nMiry Immtculite Sunday. Masses\nit 7, 8 tnd 10:30.\nWi tlwaya hive In stock typewriter ribbons for tny make of\ntypewriter, adding machine ribbons\nfor any make of adding machine.\nD. W. McDerby, The Typewriter\nMm\", en Baker St, Nelton, B.C\nComplete itock ot RCA-Vlctor\nradios, record plsyers, radio-phonograph combinations tnd record* at\nMcKay k Stretlon. Nelson's oldest\nradio store. Buy quality tnd buy\nfrom t reliable dealer for complete\nsatisfaction. Phone McKiy k Stret-\nton at 544 and be assured of friendly\nservice.\nCARD OF THANKS\nMn. D. G. Smith wishes to express her thinks to ber many\nfriend* who called on her on htr\n5tth birthday ind tlso her spprtcii-\ntlon ot the many flowers and gifts\nihe received.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nLONG\u2014Patrick Joseph, owed\n\u2022way Friday. Body rests it Somen\nFunenl Home until Monday, thence\nto Cathedril of Mary Immaculate\nwhere Mau will be tung at 10 in\nRoary will be recited tt Somen\nFunenl Home Sunday at 8;40 pm.\nSavings Campaign\nfor Trail Plans\nto Employ Radio\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 24-The Sneak-\nen Program, over CJAT, planned\nin conjunction with Trails War\nSavings and Patriotic Society campaign, commenced with a speech\nfrom H. W. Herrldge, newly-elected\nC.C.F. representative for the Ross-\ntand-Trall dlatrlct, Thunday evening. Mr. Herridge spoke at 8:45\npjn,\n'Sunday a special nttionil program will be featured on the\n\"Carry On Canada\" feature, over\nthe Canadian Broadcasting Corporation network.\nOther Trail speakers, and times\ntcheduled, follow:\nNov. 24 \u2014 7:45 p.m, Frank C.\nSharp*.\nNov. 27 \u2014 7:45 p.m., Mayor Herbert Clark.\nNov. 28 \u2014 1:45 p.m., Oliver\nD'Andrea, President of the Italian\nCanadian Legion.\nNov. 20 \u2014 4:45 pm., Horace Simp\nton.\nNov. 30 \u2014 8:45 p.m., Mitt Jeanne\nLevesque and Mist Jeanne Caatel-\nlanl.\nRev. E. H. Lewis\nInducted Trail\nTRAIL, aC, Oct. 24 - Induction\nservices for Rev. E. H. Lewis were\nheld tn Emmanuel Baptist Church\nThursday evening, when the Rev.\nDr. Albert Paull, D.D., Pastor ol\nthe First Baptist Church in Van\ncouver, and Preaiderit of the Btp\ntilt Union of Western Canada, gave\nthe Induction service ind sermon.\nRev. H. Stovell, of Nelson, give\nthe charge to the congregation, tnd\nDr. Paull gave the charge to Mr.\nLewis. K. A. Msrgeson wu presiding officer.\nRev. Dr. M. W. Leet, of Knox\nUnited Church, led the prtyer, tnd\nMr. Lewis gave the benediction.\nThe addreu of welcome from the\nCity wu given by Mayor Herbert\nClirk, tnd Rev. L. A. C. Smith, of\nSL Andrew's Angllctn Church, retd\nin tddress from Ihe Trail Ministerial Association.\nBrymor Smith wis orgtnltt and\nMiss Jean Mcintosh tang two solos.\nTht tenlor choir wu In tttendtnee.\nIt's Smqrt to Be Tailored by\nEMORY'S Ltd\nWhat makes us think we can satisfy' you\nwith our clothes? Because we take a personal\npride and a personal interest in every garment\nWe sell. The fit, the style, the fabric, the\ntailoring \u2014 alt must be \"just so,\" or we won't\nlet you take it with you.\nHeadquarters for LEISHMAN CLOTHES\nNow It tht time to select a\nReconditioned Car\nat\nQueen City Motors\nH1 Josephine tt    Limited    Ph. 43\nm\nMILK\nDelivered to Your\nHome .Every Day\nPHONE 900\ninniniiiMinniin\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Widdowson\n301-305 Joiephlm St     Nelion, B. C\nIlllllllllliimiimm\nIts' a Dote\nFOR DINNER at\nButler's Cafe\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nYour Home Independent\nGrocery Store.\nFree deliveries in city and\nup-lake daily. PHONE 110\nSOAP FLAKES: Mtplt mmj,\nLeaf, 4 lb. pkt *3r\nSUNLIGHT   SOAP: -> C*\n4 for        *3y\nSUPER SUDS: with 1 10c ukt\nof Palmollvt soip, 2fS\u00a3\nPACIFIC  MILK: t\u00bbf nn\nTill tint, 11 for    \u00ab?*\u2022\u00bb*\u00bb\nBUTTER: Tht fimous Of ftj\nQltndalt, 8 lbs. .        9*\u00ab*\/\nAPPLES: Fine cookers, \u25a0%*A\nLarge, 7 lb*. *Jt\nPEACHES:  Lynn  Valley,   *\u25a0%*\n5 tint for   W\nSUGAR:   Qrtnuilttd,    \u00a3f mg\nM  lbs. 9**i3\nCABBAGE, PARSNIPS or TUR\nNIP8: Fresh ind firm, j-4\nLb.  3\\\nCANNED VEGETABLES: Put,\nBunt and corn, OC\/*\nS tins >JV\nSTRAWBERRY   tnd    APPLE\nJAM: j**\n4 lb. tin     #Ji*\nRED PEPPERS: -tnj,\nLb. ****>\nVINEGAR: Pun cider, \u00a3\u25a0>**.\nGallon \u00ab\u00bbJ*\nPOTATOES: Really good, ggtA\na ibs. _ _ IPy\nKLEENEX: j-yA\n500 tin   _.. 33y\nPUREX: Agu\nt roll!   93>\nPRUNES; Largt slit,        <**A\nt lbs. *3>\nAPRICOTS: Drltd, y^f,\nCOFFEE: Nabob, Victory, M\/4\n\u00bb  Ibt.    \u00bb\u25a0>\nOpen an account with us\nTODAY. You will be pleased\nwith  our  Personal Service\nand prompt delivery.\nFresh Cakes, Milk, Cream,\nand Ice Cream.\nHOOD'S\nDainty Pastries\nWEEKIND gPIClAL\nMACO CLEANERS\nTHI MOST MODERN PLANT\nIN THE DISTRICT\n127 Baker Phona ESS\nLAMBERT\nShingles\nLath\nMoulding\nVeneer\netc\n-DUCO-\nDRESS UP THE OLD CAR\nMake It look Ilka new.\nRamp Body fir Fender Works\nPhont 195\nA. Firenholtz.\nDo You Need Another BASE PLUG\nin your Living Room. Kitchen, etc.?\nThen Call\nF. H. SMITH\nElectrical Contractor\nPhone StS SS1 Baker St\nFOR RENT\nLight Hoasekkeeplng Roomt\nAmiable Block\nR. W. Dawson\nA broken winged wild goose nun\ned to health by a Maryland (arm\nIn 1(28 now rules the barnyard.\nSB\nCLARK'S FUNERAL\nCHAPEL\nW. L. THOMPSON\nDay ind Night Service.\n' 24-hour Ambulanct Service\n515 Kootenay St. Phona SSI\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Art* Building\nI i ..I\nWATCH\nA Meal Prepared to Order\nTHE PERCOLATOR\n\"PICK\nOF THI\nMARKET\"\nUSED CARS\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd,\nOpp. Hum* Hotel and Peat Oftlo\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nMed Arts Bit\nHetdwork Thit\nCount*.\ntHai&h Tru-Art\nPhont 327\nJohnstone Block\nACETEX   INSULATING\nLUMBER\nCREIN TINTED\nWELTERWEIGHT\nCELLU-BOARD\nSYLVAPLY\nSYLVACRAPT\nSYLYATILt\nWEATHER IOARD\nMASON1TE\nTEXA IOARD\nBURNS\nLUMBtH '\u2022     -\u2022\nCard of Thanks\nTO THE ELECTORS OF THE\nKASLO-SLOCAN RIDING\nI wish to thank the many citizens who helped '\nme during the campaign also those who supported\nme at the polls.\nTo all I say \"Keep up the fight, our turn Is\ncoming.\" Timidness and fear of reprisal must be\novercome before those who do the work, whether\nin the agricultural or industrial field, receive their\njust share.\nWe have made wonderful gains in Ihe Province\nat this election and are that much nearer Security\nat Home and Victory Abroad.\nYours Sincerely,\nH. E. Nelson\nIf You Like the Better\nThings in Life Then\nYou'll Really Enjoy\n&\n,#\n\\K\n&\nIt's\nBEER\nAt Its Beat\nKootenay Breweries Limited\nrhts idvtrtisemenl tl not published or ditpltted bj tht Liquor ContI\nBoard ot bj tht Government ol British Columbia\n I !_\t\n\t\n\t\n.*_ i aa\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_25","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\/1.0415272","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":"1941-10-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1941-10-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson 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":""}]}