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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":" Britlih Order for 4000 Tanki\nPoint* to Naw Wir. Page 2.\nMorals of Britoni Unshaken by\nCeaieleit Raids. Page 6.\nSeveral Killed in Poorhouie    \u2022\nby Nasi Bombi. Page 3.\n\u25a0  '\nVOLUME 89\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nAXIS POWE\nNavy Strikes Hard at\nNorth Africa Ports. Page 8.\nSix Tom of Bombs Dropped on\nItalian Factoriei. Pago 3.\nBritain to AM All Loyal French\nTerritoriei. Psgs 3.\nNILSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. AMD. 28. 1940\nNUMBER   110]\nFirst Single Men to\nBe Called Up Oct 1\nWorst Drought in\nYears Hits Farm\nAreas, Australia\nBy J. D. HOLOSWORTH\nCanadian Pren Correipondent\nSYDNEY, Aug. 27 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Australia is suffering from ita\nmost serious and widespread Winter drought In many years. It extends all across Australia and unless there are good rains within\na fortnight, thousands of farmers\nwill be faced with ruin.\nThe drought is affecting all\nkinds of production\u2014wooL wheat,\ndairy products and orchards \u2014\nwhile domestic water shortages\nare acute ln many areas.\nThe New South Walei Agriculture Department reported today the\nposition of the State's wheat crop\nis serious and the yield ia bound to\n\u25a0 be considerably reduced. There will\nalso be reduced production in all\nother wheat growing areas.\nFrom the point of view of the\nWheat Board responsible for tales\nany lower wheat harvest will not\nbe unwelcome owing to the heavy\ncarryover and the difficulties of\nfinding overseas markets and ships\nto carry grain. But unless rain rap-\nIdly changes the prospects, the Government is sure to have to come to\nthe reicue of many wheatgrowers.\nWeights of fleeces of new wool\nire five per cent under last year's\nand on that basis Australia's wool\ncheck will be \u00a357,000,000 (Australian) $190,950,000) instead of last\nyear'i \u00a365,000,000. ($217,750,000)\nSubmarine Lost\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)-The\nSpeartilh, ndventurous British\nsubmarine which torpedoed the\nGerman pocket battleship Admiral\nScheer latt April 11, Is \"overdue\nand presumed lost\" the Admiralty\nannounoed tonight\nThe Spearfish was a 670-ton vessel normally carrying 40 men. Her\nCommander was Lt. Cmdr. J. H.\nForbes. She carried six 31-Inch torpedo tubes and was capable of making a crash dive in 30 seconds.\nThe Spearfish had one narrow\nescape last October on a raid on\nHeligoland Bight Sighted there,\ns' ; made a crash dive to the bottom, German depth charges blew\naway her periscopes, wrecked her\nwireless and disabled her engines.\nThe crew, counting the depth\ncharges, held a sixpence sweepstakes on whether each successive\none would split the hull. But the\nsubmarine survived, even though\nthe wires of German sweeps\nscraped her  conning tower.\nWhen the Germans left, she returned to the surface, repaired the\nradio and obtained aid from a destroyer.\nThen, In the fighting that marked\nthe Nazi invasion of Norway, the\nSpearfish had her revenge. The Admiralty reported that more than\none torpedo from this venturesome\nunderwater boat had hit the prized\nAdmiral Scheer on April 11.\nJoint Commission\nto Come to Nelson\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Aug. 27\n(OP)\u2014Members of the International\nJoint Commission, headed by Hon.\nChas. Stewart, former Premier of\nAlberta, continued to survey the\nIrrigation projects and irrigation\npossibilities of South Alberta today.\nOn completion of studies ln this\n\u2022rea, the Commission plans to leave\nfor Nelson, B.C., Wednesday night.\nLate Flashes\nLONDON, Aug. 28 (Wednesdiy).\n(CP)\u2014The Government charged\nGerman night raiders wilh \"Indiscriminate bombing attacks\" in many\nsections of Britain today. Raids on\nLondon Itself, the Government said,\ncaused slight damage and no casualties.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP)-\nMacKay Radio tonight Intercepted \u25a0 short wave broadcast from\nEire reporting that the Finnish\nfreighter Elie had been torpedoed\noff Malinhead, the Northernmost\npoint on the Irish Coast\nThe message said the vessel was\nwithout lifeboats and that her\nreceiving set had been put out of\norder. The exact position of the\nElie was not given, MacKay Radio\nsaid.\nNBW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP) -\nAmerican carriers of mail between\nthe United States and Lisbon are\nstopping at Bermuda because the\nAmerican export lines chose that\npoint for examination by British\nofficials In preference to Gibraltar\nor other ports, it was learned tonight\nNumber of Age Classes for First Year May Be\nAnnounced in'Few Days; University\nStudents Exempt From First Call\nEMPLOYERS MAY SUBMIT PLANS\nTO EASE BUSINESS INCONVENIENCE\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)\u2014The Department of National War Ser'\nvices tonight promulgated tne regulations governing the calling up of\nsingle young men for military training\nAn explanatory note by the Department said that under the reg-\nns medically fit single men t\t\nup for a 30-day period of training.\nulatlons medically fit single men throughout Canada would be called\nduty either with military or civil\nauthorities.\nEmployers are obliged to reinstate\nemployees without loss of status or\nfavor on pain of imprisonment for\nilx montha or a fine of $500, or both\nNelson Worker\nDies High River;\nFamily Wanted\nNelion Povlnclal Police are trying to locate relatives of William\nRochet, late of Nelson, who was\nfound dead beside his team ef\nhorses on a farm Hi miles West of\nHigh River, Alta., Tuesday morning, the reins still clutched in his\nhands.\nRochet was believed to have\ncome to Nelson early in the year,\nand resided on Vernon Street, until leaving a week ago to leek work\non the Prairies as a harvest hand.\nPapers in his possession indicated\nhe was about 85 years old, and that\nhe wu born in Switzerland.\nAfter Investigation end an autopsy, a coroner said death wu due\nto;a fcwrt-attack aM an .inquest\nwould not be necetrary.\nHe wai ( feet, 5 Inches, and had\na moustache, and very bushy eyebrows.\nWithin the space of a few dayi, we will know, ai a result ot\nnational registration, the number of single men ln Canada and ln each\nProvince ln Canada and in each administrative district under these\nregulations. We will also know the number in each age group, 19 to 45,\n\"The Minister ihould be able to<j -\nmake an annbuncement later in tho\nweek as to the number of age\nclasses likely to be called out due\nIng the first year. It hu already\nbeen announced that the fint clasa\nwill be the 21 year class, and so on\nln consecutive classes until the\nnumber to be trained hu been\nprovided.\n\"A general proclamation will be\niuued calling out age classes and\nthen a notice will go to each individual within the age clan. The\nnamu and addresses of these individuals will be procured trom the\nregistration cards. Should any person have failed to register, then\nhe is still subject to the call provided in this-proclamation.\"\nNoting that the first oall would\nbe made about October 1, the explanation nld itudenti would not\nbe Included In the flrtt call In order to give universities a chance\nto furnish a Hit of their itudenti.\nExemptions are listed u Judges\nof the Superior Court, District or\nCounty Courts, members of the\nclergy and religious orderi, members of the naval, military or air\nforces on active service and cadets\nentered at the Royal Military College, memberi of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Provincial\nPolice Forces, members of Police or\nFire Departments In cities, wardens and officers of penitentiaries,\nKrisons, lunatic asylums or mental\noipltalj.     '\"     '\u25a0:\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 -'\nThe Dominion U divided Into 13\nadministrative divisions. For each\nthe Governor-ln-Councll may estab-\nUsh one or more National War Service Boards.\nEach Board shall consist of. three\nmembers one of whom shall be a\nJudge of the Superior or other Court\nwho shall be the Chairman ot the\nBoard. Decisions of Boards' shall\nbe final. No legal action is permissible against a member of a\nBoard for diacharge of his duties\nNo proceeding of a Board may be\nstayed by legal process, including\nhabeas corpus.\nThe Governor-ln-Councll It empowered to appoint a Regiitrar\nfor each administrative dlviilon.\nHii duties thall Include Immediate preparation of lists of mm\nwho on July 1, 1940, had attained\nthe age of 21 yeari ind who were\non July 15, 1940, unmarried or\nwidowers without children.\nThe Registrars will prepare four\nlists:\n1. Men 21 to 24 not engaged In\nagriculture, fishing, trapping, lumbering or other occupation of a\nseasonal character.\n2. Students of those ages.\n3. Men in the active forces who\nhave served in those forces.\n4. A list of all other men of those\nages to be called \"the immediate\ncall list.\"\nThe Department of War Servicei\nwill instruct any Registrar to call\nout any number of men from h.s\ndivision for any period of military\ntraining at any place and time.\nThe Registrar will attempt to\ncall out men proportionately from\nall parts of the division.\nHe will notify each man called by\nregistered post to submit himself\nfor medical examination withiai\nthree days and if he is found physi*\ncally fit to report for training within\nthree days after second notification.\nAfter the calling of first classes\nthe Registrar will compile lists of\nthe men between 25 and 29 and\nafter that of the men up to 45.\nProvision is made for appointment\nof examining physicians. If doubt\narises as to the physical fitness of\nthe man the Registrar may decide on\nanother examination.\nProvision Is made for Registrars\nto furnish manufacturers, financial institutions and employers\ngenerally upon request the numbers of men in age classes likely\nto be called out for military training during the year and employers may formulate plans to enable employees to take training\nwith leait inconvenience to the\ncarrying on of business.\nThe Boards will approve or\ndisapprove the employer's plan.\nStudents taking military training\nat universities may have tnelr training periods postponed it discretion\nof Boirds.\nDoukhobors and Mennonites who\ncame to Canadi under tgreement\nwith the Government they would\nnot hive to take military training\nwill be entitled to indefinite postponement of their training,\nConscientious objectors who\nlong to tenets or sects which\nJect to bearing armi may ipply\nan order for postponement\ntraining.   Boards   or   Courts\nmake a final decision.\nSuch conscientious objectors will\nbe compelled to do non-combatant\nName War Boards\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP). - The\nDepartment of National War Services tonight announced personnel\nof Boards appointed under the National War Services Regulations.\nCanada wu divided into 13 administrative divisions by grouping\nthe Federal electoral division! into\n13 groups.\nThe list of divisions with personnel of Boards and Divisional\nRegistrars includes:\nDivision \"K\", Headquarters, Vancouver: Board, Mr. Justice A. M.\nManson, Vancouver, Chairman; Alex\nMcKelvie, Vancouver, and T. Barnard, Nanaimo, members; Divisional\nRegistrar, Charles G. Pennock,\nVancouver.\nTo Probe Charges\nPaish Said He'd\nGet U. S. Into War\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (AP)-A\nJustice department official said today that'an Investigation would be\nmade of charges voiced in the Sen-\natethat Sir George Paish, 72-year-\nold British economist, came here\nto try to get the United States into\nthe war.    ,\nIf the Investigation reveals that\nSir Geojge was here for such a\npurpose and failed to disclose it 'n\nhis application for a visitors' permit, this official said, that could be\nmade the grounds for revoking his\npermit\nSenator Burton Wheeler, Montana\nDemocrat said in the Senate yesterday -and Sir George subsequently\ndenied the charge\u2014that the Briton\nhad told him in \u2022 conversation:\n\"I am responsible for getting this\ncountry into the last war and I\nIntend to get lt into this one.\"\nIndian Troops lo Fight for England\nKing George piyi a visit to the troops of the\nRoyal Indian Army Service Corps now traln'.ng in\nEngland. The troops are easily identified by their\ncolorful lurbans and white Sam Bywne belts.\nNazi Raid Activity Lightens;\nR.A.F. Sets Fire to Factories\nSynthetic  Fuel  Plant\nand Other Nazi\nTargets Hit\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP). -\nPrincipal target of heavy Royal\nAir Force bombardment ln Ger\nTRAIN ATTACKED,\nBY NAZI PLANT\nA NORTHEAST TOWN IN ENG-\nmany last night and early today j LAND, Aug. 28 (Wednesday) (CP)\nwas the I. G. Farben industries _A German plane swooped ind\nplant at Leuna, 20 miles West of machin(a.Bunned . t,.in nMr herf\nLeipzig,  which produces  400,000, machine-gunned a tram near here\ntoni ol synthetic motor fuel an- \u2022\u2022*\u00ab t0(lay-\nnually, the Air Ministry News Bullets ripped through the tops\nServlBe itiS -tonight; \u25a0\u2014 -\u2122A\"^- -jf 'tfwto_<*ei, hm ho \"casuiltle't\nwere reported. At leut two pre;\nviout attacki on traint hive oc\"\ncurred ilnce the Qerman air it-\ntiultt on Britain began June 18\nElaborating on a bulletin Issued\nearlier in the day. the Newa Service declared several bombs were\ndropped directly across the target\nby one plane.\n\"Another   pilot   observed    vivid\n\"The train raced to shelter In a\nunnel. Passengers said British Spit-\n-Anotner   pilot   ooservet,    vmo llre lighler5 imie \u201e,      ,dft.    \u25a0\ngreen flashes soon after his bombs  .      J\nhad fallen,\" it said.\n\"Fires broke out in various parts\nof the target area, and there were\nseen to blaze up as further incendiary bombs were unloaded.\n\"A third pilot scored hits on the\nmain buildings, and the rear gunner   reported  seeing  a   large   ex\nplosion.'\nBesides Leuna the bombers\nmaintained \"systematic attacks\"\non other German industrial targets and harassed \"many enemy\noccupied Netherlands and French\nairdromes serving as bases for operations against this  country.\"\nObjectives \"ranged from Leipzig\nthrough the .Ruhr and down Into\nNormandy and Brittany.\"\nOn the outskirts of Frankfurt\nfires were started at a large munitions factory at Griesheim, and\n\"the explosions which followed\nlasted for several minutes.'\nAn oil refinery at Frankfurt also\nwas successfully attacked.\nNearly 400 i\/icendiary bombs\nwere dropped.\nGENEVA, Aug. 27 (AP). - An\nair raid alarm sounded briefly\nhere tonight but there was no antiaircraft fire.\nNine Killed in\nCoal Mine Blast\nBATES, Ark, Aug. 27 (API-\nNine men were killed late today\nand a 10th was still unaccounted\nfor late tonight after an explosion\nat the Bates Coal Corporation\nmine near here.\nBodies of the nine men, all reported badly burned, were taken\nto Heavener, Okla.\nPUN BIG PART\nFOR CANADIANS\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP).\u2014Before\nnext Spring Lieut.-Gen. A. G. L.\nMcNaughton may command an\narmy ccrps almost entirely com-\nposed of Canadians, it was learned\ntoday.\nAt present his corps is made up\nof the Canadian 1st Division under\nMaj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes and other\nCanadians, and British troops. However by Spring Maj.-Gen. Victor\nOdium's Canadian 2nd Division will\nhave completed its training and\ntaken ita place alongside the 1st\nDivision.\nIt was authoritatively stated the\nCanadian Active Service Force,\nwhich crossed the Atlantic for service ln France, may be expected to\nplay an important part when the\nEmpire opens its big offensive push\nagainst Germany and Italy which\nPrime Minister Churchill has lore-\ncast for 1941 or 1942.\nArgentine Cabinet\nMinisters Resign\nBUENOS AIRES, Aug. 27 (AP)\n\u2014Argentine Cabinet Ministers under President Roberto Ortii submitted their resignations today to\nActing President Ramon Castillo\nas a sequel to the land purchase\nscandal which precipitated a political crisis.\nCastillo is expected to deslgnit*\na new cabinet.\nCanadian, U* S* Officers to See\nEast Coast Canadian Defences\nOpening Session Very\nSatisfactory Says\nLa Guardia\n\u2014  Vv\u2014        oiaei.   cuHii\n\u00bbhoV- PreParatior\nlich o% a defence of\npply fo? ^ This ann\n\u00b0t.\"wm  V\u00bbt\u00ab;h.\ndttence bo,\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)-Na-\n,val an^alr officers of Canada and\nthe United Statei will leave tomorrow to Inspect existing Canadian defence {laUltiei on the\nEist coast in cdphection with\npreparation of plant for the joint\nthe two countries,\nannouncement was made\nen the permanent joint\nboard.adjourned to meet\nagain Sept 9 in Washington. The\nboard, appointed lut week, open\ned ita first session here yesterday.\nThe inspection tour will be made\nby three service members of the\nUnited States section of the board,\nand two from the Canadian section,\nall representatives of the nival and\nilr arms. They will travel by Royal\nCanadian Air Force planes.\nNo details were innounced but It\nwas assumed the tour would extend\nto Newfoundland where there ire\nimportant tlr and seaplane bases\nand where, It is understood, a United States defence force is most\nlikely to be sent\nMayor Florello la Guardia of\nNew York, Chairman of the United States section, aald the opening sessions of the boird todiy\nand yeiterday were \"very satis\nfactory, \u00bb\u2022 of course we ill expected.\"\nWith Col. O. M. Biggtr, Ottawi,\nChairman of the Canadian lection,\nMayor la Guardia received newspaper correspondents late today.\n\"Service members ot the board\nare proceeding on a tour of Inspection of existing Canadiin defences\non the East coast in connection Mith\npreparation of a plan of defence for\nCanada and the United States,\"\nMayor la Guardia uid.\nHe uid this tour by service\nmemberi would be confined to the\nexisting Canadian stations and did\nnot contemplate any study of proposed new defence sites which\nmight be taken over by the United\nStates. No United States defence\nwould be ttudled it this time, he\nadded,\n:epy Londoners Go\nto Shelters Twice\nFrom Beds\nBy HAROLD PAIR\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 28 (Wednesday)\n(CP Cable)\u2014Hitler's night raiders twice tent ileepy Londoners\nto their shelters late last night\nand early today, dropped a few\nIncendiary bomb clusters but failed to penetrate the main defences\nOf the Empire capital ^ r\nThe raiders ranged also over\nwide areas ln other parts of England and Wales at the end of a day\nof \"very light\" air \u25a0 activity in\nwhich three Nazi planes were\ndowned. No Royal Air Force\nlosses were reported\nAs far as Central London was\nconcerned it was Just another series\nof \"nuisance\" or \"insomnia\" raids,\ndisturbing the slumber of millions,\nbut achieving little else. There was\nless anti-aircraft activity and fewer\nsearchlights lit the sky. Many\nyawning householder refused to\nleave his snug bed.\nAt one time bomb flashes could\nbe seen in the distance extending\nin a semi-circle and an enemy plane\nappeared over a red glow where\napparently a fire started.\nIncendiary bombs fell without\ndamage in one area, but were\nknown to have caused some fires\nin other areas which were quickly\nextinguished.\nThe raiders again operated singly\nor in small groups, Dut threw in\nthe pace-changing \"all-clear\" period\nin contrast with their chain raid\nmarathon of the previous night\nSimilar harassing raids were conducted through the dark hours over\nnearly all of England and Wales.\nEverywhere searchlight and antiaircraft fire was at a minimum.\nBombs fell North of one Midland\ntown, and Germans were reported\nover several other communities in\nthe same area.\nIn Southeast England, incendiary\nbombs hit two churches. A large\nfire in the roof of one was extinguished.\nAlso in the Southeast, a raider\ndropped high-explosive and Incendiary bombs Just as searchlights\npicked him out and guns hammered\nat him.\nThe punctuality of the raiding\nNazis occasioned comment; they\ncame within two or three minutes\nof the time of Monday night's\n\"visit.\"\nA plane dropped a high explosive\nbomb on one Northeast Scotland\ntown ind hurled a number of incendiaries down on flower gardens.\nA Midland town had its longest\nalarm of the war during the night\nExplosions were heard and it was\nannounced about 100 incendiary\nbombs fell In open country\nIntermittent raids kept one Southeast England area awake most of\nIhe night. Fire brigades dealt wilh\nIncendiary bombs. One big fire lit\nup the surrbundlng region for several miles, but firemen got it under\ncontrol in ibout an hour, they announced.\nTimber Outfit Wins\nAward of $92,000\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 27 (CP) -\nThe Elk River Timber Company\nhas awarded $92,594 in Supreme\nCourt here today for loss of logs\nand logging equipment In the\nCampbell River, forest fire of 1938.\nThe amount of damiges was assessed by J. F. Mather, Registrar\nof the Court igaimt Bloedel, Stewart It Welch Ltd., defendants in I\nSupreme Court action won by the\nElk River Compiny.\nThe original Judgment wu given\nagainst the defendant company\nwhich wis charged with responsibility for the fire. It was .left to the\nregistrar to fix the amount of damages.\nSeek Quick End\nto Balkan Crisi\nLest Russia Move*\nAxis Ministers Rush Home to Tell of Figl\nBetween Rumanians and Russians in\nWhich Hundreds Are Killed\nBUDAPEST, Aug. 27 (AP). \u2014 Rumania and Hungary]\nhave been summoned to a conference with the Rome-Berlin!\naxis at Vienna in an apparent move to obtain a quick settle^\nment of the mounting Balkan crisis, lest Russia seize the op\u00bb\nportunity for further penetration into that area, it was learned\ntonight.\nThe Hungarian and Rumanian Foreign Ministers hav<i\nbeen called to Vienna, where they will meet the Italian Foreign?\nMinister, Count Galeazzo Ciano and the Cerman Foreign\nMinister, Joachim von Ribbentrop.\nJust before this became known, the Cerman and Italian-\nMinisters to Rumania left Bucharest by plane for consultation*\nwith their Governments, car-^ ' \u25a0\nWar Committee\nMembers Go to\nImportant Post!\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)-Mun.\nltions Minister C. D. Howe an*\nnounced tonight tha Executive\nCommittee of the Department of\nMunitions and Supply hai been\ndissolved and IS memberi hava\nbeen appointed lo important ad*\nministralive posts within the De*\npartment\nCol. W. C Woodward of Vaal\ncouver, former Chairman of the\nExecutive Committee, and Col, W,\nA. Harrison of Saint John hivt\nbeen appointed executive issiit*\nants to the Minister.\nMr. Howe explained the\nCommittee, formed of dot\nmen, Had been created to undertake\nthe development and expansion of\nthe Department during tha initial\nmonthi of the Department's opera*\ntions.\n\"The members of tht former eon*\nmittee now will continue to lervt\nin the various divisions of the De\u00ab\npartment they have helped to\ncreate,\" said Mr. Howe. \"In ihort\nthe growth of the Department hu\nmade it neceiiary further to ia.]\npartmentalize its efforts.\"\nDuties now assigned to other fof\nmer members of the committee art\nlargely those which they fulfilled\nhn the committee. Posts now tilled\nby them are: .   i\nRalph P. Bell, Halifax, Director\nGeneral of Aircraft Productions\nHenry Borden, K.C, Toronto, Gen\u00ab\neral Counsel; R A. C. Henry, Mon*1\ntreal, Economic Adviser; J. P. D.\nMalkin, Vancouver, Director General of Purchaser Lt.-Col. W. &\nPhillips of Toronto and Oshawa,\nPresident of Research Enterprise,\nLtd.; Hon. Gordon Scott, Montreal,\nFinancial Adviser; and E. P. Taylor,\nToronto, Joint Director General ot\nMunitions Production.\nrying detailed reports of a\nsharp clash between Soviet and\nRumanian troops. ,\nAt about the lame time, the German and Italian ministers to Budapest also left here.\nThe Vienna meeting waa understood to be designated to force a\nsettlement ot Hungary's clalmi upon Rumania for Transylvania which\nwould avoid a conflict disturbing\nto the Balkan productivity so necessary to Hitler and Mussolini in\ntheir war with Britain.\nAccount! of the Soviet-Rumanian\nclash first reached Budapeit in diplomatic dlipatchet from Rumania\nand subsequently were confirmed\nby Soviet circles ln Bucharest.\nThese dispatches Indicated the fight\nin which teveral hundred troopi\nwere killed, had begun after Russians overstepped the Rumanian\nfrontier at a point where Rumanian troopi had been removed for\nlervice in Transylvania.\nThestaffofthe Soviet legation\nin Bucharest iaid a bloody dash\nbetween Soviet and Rumanian\ntroops occurred Sunday and Monday with heavy caiualtiei oh both\ntidet.,\nThe cilling of the Vienna conference wai the latest In a chain\nof events which began Saturday\nwith the breakdown of a Hungarian-Rumania   conference  on   the\nTransylvania dispute.\nRumania  Immediately countered\nHungarian   strategic   measures   by\nmoving thousands of troops from\nMoldavia to Transylvania.\nNo sooner had King Carol's Government taken this action than Red\narmy units penetrated Rumanian\nsoil.\nThe opinion was expressed ln\nquarters cloie to thc Governments\nIn Budapest and Bucharest that\nSoviet troops crossed the Rumanian frontier in a major \"scouting\nexpedition\" to prepare the Red army\nfor the possibility of a real push in\nthe event that Hungarian-Rumanian\ndifferences over Transylvania develop into open warfare.\nThus, iome foreign military observers conjectured that perhaps\nthe Soviet's ultimate plan was to\nprofit directly from the current Rumanian-Hungarian crisis over Transylvania.\nSoviet informants in Bucharest\nsaid \"several hundred\" Russian\ntroops had been slain by the Rumanians.\nIn a tecond Incident further\nthreatening the uneaty peace of\nSoutheastern Europe, the Hungarian Foreign Office accuied a Rumanian pilot of ihooting down a\nHungirlin bomber on Hungarian\ntoll today, and protetted angrily\nto Buchirett agilnit whit wit\ntermed thit \"unprovoked ind\nmurderoui ittiek.\"\nAtter Hungarian officlall had\nbeen in communication with Berlin, however, the Foreign Office\nspokesman said:\n\"The attack was provocatory, but\nwe ourselves will not provoke \"\nBUCHAREST, Rumania, Aug.\n27 (AP)\u2014A Rumanian Government spokesman said tonight a\nHungarian plane had dropped\npropaganda leaflets ln Transylvania Sunday and that this probably was the craft which the Hungarian Foreign Office asserted had\nbeen shot down.\nDUNNING TO HEAD\nNEW WAR LOAN\nCOMMITTEE\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)-\nHon. Charles Dunning, former\nMinister of Finance, will be\nChairman of the .lational Subscription Committee for the\nlecond war loan. A post which\nhe filled with the first war\nloan, Finance Minister J. L. Ilsley announced tonight\nBooks for the second war loan\nIn which a total of between\n$250,000,000 and $300,000,000 will\nbe sought, will open Sept. 9.\n\"We are delighted that Mr.\nDunning has again agreed to\nassume this responsibility,\" said\nMr. Ilsley.\nCreston Wheat Quota\nfor \"Local Situation?\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 27 (CP) -i\nGeorge Mclvor, Chief Commissioner\nof the Canadian Wheat Board, said\ntonight the order permitting delta*\nery of 18 bushels per seeded acr*\nto the elevator at Creston, B.C., waj\nprompted by a local situation and\ndoes not affect the Prairies.\n\"It is purely a local situation,*\nMclvor said. \"There is enough ele*\nvator space at Creston to providtj\nfor the local wheat production*\nCreston is in the Interior of BrltiiN\nColumbia, where it would not b#\nlogical to ship grain for storage,\nand the storage situation there doefl\nnot affect any other point,\"\nWeajt%\nNELSON\t\nVictoria    \u2014\nNanaimo .... \t\nVancouver _\t\nKamloops\t\nPrince Georgi ..\nEstevan Point ...\nPrince Rupert ....\nLangara  ... ...\nAtlin _\nDawson  . ,\nSeattle \t\nPortland\t\nMin. Max,\n66      60\nM\n53\n56\n55\n45\n52\n54\n53\n40\n37\n57\n67\n72\n71\n71\n66\n62\n65\n64\n62,\n71\nSan Francisco . ....\nSpokane   . ...\nPenticton -\nVernon    _\nKelowna   \t\nGrand Forks  - -.\nKaslo ! \t\nCranbrook   . -\nCalgary\t\nEdmonton\nSwift Current  - -\nRegina  - -\nPrince Albert \t\nWinnipeg   _.\nForecast: Kootenay -\nSouthwest winds, fair\nwhat warmer.\nNelton water level Tuesday, 6.78,\n... 60      74\n.... 52      68\n_ 62      74\n... 52      -\n.... 51\n,_ 52\n... 50\n  53\n... 52\n.. 49\n.... 49\n.... 58\n... 57\n54\n54\n71\n80\n74\n93\n85\n76\nModerate\nand son--:.\n-\"\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0    ' -**-\u25a0-'' Um\n\t\n  \u25a0\n\t\n TWO\nH. Maloney of Ballour, Fire\nChief al Nelson 192W9, Dies\nurdock Henderson Maloney.\nta Chief ot Nelson from 1924 to\nitober, 1939, died Monday night\nKootenay Lake General Hospi-\nL He had been in the hospital\nout two weeks. He was aged 63\nJorn in Dingwall, N.S., Mr. Ma-\ny worked as a sailor on the\nntic coast before coming to '.has\nvince In 1911.\nt a later period he was Assistant\n. Chief at New Westminster, and\nras his able work in luinuliiy, a\ndock fire there that won him\na recommendation for the post of\nFire Chief here. He held the posl-\ntion of Nelson Fire Chief from 1924\nuntil October, 1939, when he retired\non superannuation, and made his\nresidence at Balfour\nHe was a member of the Nelson\nMasonic Lodge and of the Maritime\nClub.\nHis widow, and a son, Norman:\nfour brothers, T. J. Maloney of Vail,\nWash, David H. Maloney of Nelson,\nF. J. Maloney of Dingwall, and\nGeorge Maloney of Indiana; and\ntwo sisters, Clara and Effie. of\nLynn, Mass., survive.\nrail Football\ndub Disbands;\nto Forfeit (up\n' TRAIL, B. C, Aua. 27 - The\nTrail Football Club, holder of the\nBlaylock Bowl for the East-West\nKootenay football championship,\nhas disbanded for the duration of\nthe war or until such time as sufficient interest snd financial backing justifies Its reorganization,\nJames Simpson, Secretary of the\nWest Kootenay Football Association, announced Tueiday,\nMr, Simpson stated that lack of\nIjferest, coupled with the fact that\niveral players enlisted leaving\nIly three of the original players\na the team, had caused the decls-\nin.\nThis decision also carries the\nrice of forfeiting the Bowl to Kim-\nirley. only contender in the field\nILCAZAR\nHOTEL\n>9R. DUN8MUIR A HOMER ST8,\nVancouver, B. C.\n1 Block From Bus Terminal.\nMODERN\u2014CENTRAL-QUIET\nlargest Family Hotel in the West.\n200 ROOMS\nSingle and Eniulte\nwith Private Bath.\nRatti from $1.00 per day\nCAFE IN CONNECTION\nall at Nelson Daily News office\nfor folders.\nthis year, should the East Kootenay\nteam demand the silverware.\nAn invitation had been extended\nto the Trail and Kimberley teams\nfrom Fernle to stage the title game\nas part of the sport celebrations at\nFernle on Labor Day in aid of the\nRed Cross Society.\nBondholders of\nRossland Agree\nlo Refunding\nROSSLAND, B.C., Aug. 27\u2014McDermid, Miller Sc McDermid have\nadvised the City Council of Rowland that content of bondholders\nrepresenting 51 per cent of Rossland's debentures, to the refunding\nproposals, has been obtained.\nThis means that the City can now\ntake further steps with the refunding, which is one of the means\nto be employed to place Rossland\non its feet financially.\nNo New Fires;\nGuards Holding\n\"Nothing new\" was the report on\nthe Kootenay-Boundary forest fire\nsituation Tuesday as light rains fell\nin some parts of the District, aiding fire fighters somewhat against\nexisting blares.\nWhile there was some wind, there\nwere no reports of fires jumping\ntheir guards, and the B.C. Forest\nBranch crews were making progress\nagainst fires generally.\nNITE BALL\nWE8TERN INTERNATIONAL\nWenatchee     1   4   2\nSalem    7  7  2\nBaker and Volpi; Oliver and Barker.\n\u25a0, Guide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C,\n. GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME - Mr. snd Mrs. R. V. Bor-\ncske, Walla Walla; J. M. Lee, F.\n}. Applegate, Alan Applegate, R.\nJ. Bottgar, F. W. Howe. A. S.\nyoung, D. Finlayson, P. B. Duffy,\n). E. Larson, Vancouver; F. Gwinn,\nt. E. Soal, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs.\nW. McLachlan, Winnipeg; A. L.\nParry, Ontario; J. W. Lewis, Medicine Hat; D. L. Hawkins, Calgary;\nR. Eland, Kamloops; J. F. Donaldson, Salmo; R. D. Askey, Trail;\nMrs. W. G. Whitely, Sheep Creek;\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Thompson, Ok.\nlahoma; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Oeib,\nSt. Louis.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nrooms In the Interior \u2014 Bath or Shower.\nROOMS $1 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY  RATES\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS, BOATING, FISHING\n20 miles from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, 6. C.\nRates reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODCE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn This Space\nWhere Thouiandi Will Read It\nCAMP PARADISE\n4 miles North of Kaslo, B.C\nModern cabins, electricity,\ngas,  running   water.   Inner\nspring r^ttresses. bedding, linen, cooking utensils furnished, meals\nfurnish iV\nCabins lor 2 to 6 People: Wk.   $12 to $18\nPhone or Write Camp Paradise, Ksslo, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n[\n\u25a0YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME\"       Newly renovsted through-\nDUllGPlll  HOl6l   A.   PATTERSON,   late   ol\nWO Seymour St.        Vancouver, B.C. Coleman. Alta., Proprietor.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nHOTEL RIDPATH\nW. 514 FIRST AVE., SPOKANE\nThe Hotel Canadians Like to Call Home\n190 Outside  Rooms and  Apartments\nAt.L AT MODERATE RATES\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nT\nNELION DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B, C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. AUG. 28, 1940-\nAuxiliarytoUHh\nPresenti Parting\nGift to Mrs. Harlow\nMrs. John Harlow was1 presented\nwith a farewell gift ot a lonely\npurse by the Women's Auxiliary to\nthe lllth at the Auxiliary picnic in\nLakeside Park Monday afternoon.\nMrs. Harlow, a member of the\nAuxiliary since its inception, and\nher daughter leave shortly to re,\nside at Kelowna.\nThe presentation was made by\nMrs. t M. Glllott. Mrs. Harlow in\nher reply expressed the hope that\nAuxiliary members would visit her\nshould they be in Kelowna on any\noccasion.\n75 Events Are\nProgrammed In\nPark Swim Meet\nSeventy-five swimming and diving events are billed for the annual\nNelson aquatic meet at Lakeside\nPark this afternoon starting at 2\no'clock under the direction cf Brian\nGore, Llfe-Guard, and Martha Rogers, Swimming Instructress.\nThe swimming competitions will\nbe run off first, and in the intermission before the diving classes,\nthere will be a life-saving demonstration by Miss Rogers' pupils in\nthst class.*\nIn the event of wet weather, the\nsports will be cancelled altogether.\nThe program, which entails events\nfor both boys and girls with the exception of a mixed group for beginner swimmers, follows:\nSwimming-\nFree style, 7 and under, 3D yards.\nFree style, 0 and under, 28 yards.\nFree style, 11 snd under, 211 yards.\nFree style, 18 and under. 23 yards.\nFree style, 18 and under, 80 yards.\nFree style, 17 ahd under, 80 yards\nFree style, open, 180 ysrds.\nBackstroke, 16 and under, 80\nyards.\nBackstroke, open, SO yards\nBreast stroke, 18 and under, 80\nyards.\nBreast stroke, open, 80 yards.\nBreast stroke, mixed beginners, 38\nysrds.\nLife-saving exhibition.\nDiving\u2014\nOne-metre board, 9 and under.\nOne-metre board, 12 and under.\nOne-metre board, 14 and under.\nOne-metre board, 16 and under.\nThree-metre board, open.\nFeatures\u2014\nAcross-lske swims, 16 snd under.\nAcross-lake swims, open.\nRossland Water\nDown Four Feel\nROSSLAND, B- C, Aflg. 37-Al\nderman Leo Nlftislck, Chairman of\nthe Fire, Water and Light Committee, reported to the City Council\nMonday night that two weeks ago\nthe water in the reservoir was dbwn\n9 inches, but on Monday It had fa]\nlen 4 feet\nE. A. Manning's bid ot $15 for\nthree lots was rejected, in view of\nthe fact that Mr. Talbot had already\noffered $40 for one of the lots, and\nthe Council voted that a value of\n$10 each be placed on two of these\nthree, numbers 18 and 19, snd Mr.\nTalbot be sold the remaining one\nfor $40.\nDonald McDonald, who had paid\n$80 for an option on 4 lots, numbers\n11, 13, 13 and 14, Map 671, and now\nis unable to build, asked that they\nbe transferred to Norman Cunning\nham. This was approved.\nA. H. Keffer's offer of $10 for a\nlot on which he proposes to erect\na garage, was approved, with the\nstipulation that the front 10 feet be\nreserved by the City for road clear\nanee.\nThe Council accepted an offer\nfrom A. Duclos ot $35 tor an option\non lots 21,23 and 23, His house, completed value to be $1050. is to be\nfinished soon in either stucco or\ncedar siding.\nTO PROTECT BRIDGES\nA bylaw designed to regulate thc\nweight of vehicles snd the loads\ncarried thereon on city streets snd\nbridges was given first and second\nreadings. This bylaw is designed\nparticularly to ensure that no excessive loads be carried on the Columbia Avenue and Durham Addition\nbridges It provides for a penalty of\n$100 or 80 days in jail, with or without harb labor.\nTrail Man Fined\nfor \"Possession\"\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 27 \u2014 John\nPhillip Fetter of Annable pleaded\nguilty to a charge of unlawfully\nretaining possession of certain car-\nDenter tools, the property of T. T.\nLean, of Rosslsnd, \"well knowing\nthe said tools to be stolen,\" and was\nfined $35 and costs by Stipendiary\nMagistrate Parker Williams, in the\nProvincial Police Court, Tuesday\nmorning.\nThe tools had been stolen from\nMr. Lean's residence in September,\n1938.\nDoubinin Case Is\nAdjourned Again\nTRAIL, B. C Aug. 37 - Further\nadjournment to Friday, of the\ncharge against John Droubinln, of\nPass Creek, of violating the Defence\nof Canada Regulations was msde\nMonday.\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding Machinei\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n836 Ward 8L Phone W\nWOOD SAW\nWORKINC        PILING\nReasonable Rates\nKootenay Saih (r Door Work*\n101 Ward Si Opp, City Hall\n-___\nas\n_5\nH5\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing * Heating\nCompany, Limited\nBritish Order for tNO Tanks in\nU. J. Points lo Future Offensive\nBy EDWARD I. BOMAR\nAssociated Press Statf Writer\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (AP).-\nThe attitude of unruffled assurance\nwitn   which   beleaguered   Britain\nfiroceeds With preparations tor a\nong war must be somewhat dls\nconcerting at times to her foes.\nAs bombs rain on London, the\nBritish Government hu an official mission of experts ln the\nUnited States quietly completing\narrangements for the manufacture\nof some 4000 medium tanks.\nBritish orderi in the United\nStates for other munition! are approaching a $2,000,000,000 total.\nThousand! of warplanes hava\nMen ordered from American aircraft plant;. More than 300 were\nscheduled for completion this\nmonth.\nThe urgent need for planes in\nthe detente of the BrltUh Isles and\ntor counter-raids on Germany and\nItaly ii obvious, but what about\nfleets of 25-ton tanks, the first of\nwhich probably cannot be completed tor a year?\nFour thousand Is a tremendous\nnumber of this particular weapon, presumably far more than\nwould ever be required for the\nhome defence of the United King\ndom Itself In any type ef conflict\nman hinted by Nail-Style\nblitzkrieg.\nThe projected acquisition ot 4000\nof the 38-ton monsters indicated\nfurther the intention to build up a\nforce of several times that many\nimaller and faster light tanks, The\nratio in modern armies ia five or\nmore of these to one medium tank\nThe explanation of this long-range\nattitude is suggested by Prime Minister Churchill and statements of\nhis War Cabinet. It ls that they regard the aerial siege as only a temporary phase ot the conflict, destined to be succeeded by a decline\nin Nazi fortunes \u2014 a decline ot\nwhich Britain must prepare to\ntake advantage ln ways which can\nnot be clear at this time.\nThere la expectation It) Britain\nthat next year, in 1143 or IMS, Britain will gain powerful Allies, In\nsoma way; that perhaps conquered\nnations will turn on tha Germans,\nthe Balkans will blsie, or the United\nStates will enter the war. Any Allies other thsn the United States\nwould have to be largely armed by\nBritain, and there would thus be\nample demand for tanki and all\nother weaponi. In the meantime\nthese are. urgently needed in the\nland warfare on other Empire fronts\nif not in England Itself.\nAll Rossland Employables Who\nWere on Relief Are Now Working\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 37 -\nAnnouncement was made at Monday night's City Council session that\nevery man who recenty was on\nrelief, and was capable of employment was now working. This not\nonly relieves the City of a heavy\nfinancial obligation, but also means\nmaterial and mental benefit for the\ncitizens concerned.\nAlderman R. T. Fraser, who has\nbeen called up for army service,\nwas granted three months' leave\nof absence, and the Council agreed\nthat his position could be filled\nat the elections in December unless he should return in the meantime.\nWilliam Yawney was granted an\nnual holidays from his duties with\nthe Fire Department.\nBUY UNION JACK STICKERS\nThe Council voted to purchase\nan initial quantity of Union Jack\nstickers, which are being made\navailable through the Union of Ca\nnadian Municipalities to every city\nand town desiring them, Theie\nstickers are made In the form of\na Union Jack, and bear the words\n\"There'll Alwayi Be an England.\"\nThey are designed for affixation to\nletter-heads and other papers.\nThe Council accepted Robert Bar,\nrle's bid of $137.60 to supply lumber\nwith which to effect repain to\nthe Columbia Avenue and the Durham Addition bridges.\nKimberley Girls\nWill Play, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C. Aug. 38 \u2014 The Mu-\nrases Huskies, Kimberley's girl!\nsoftbail team, are planning a visit\nto Nelson and Trail for the Labor\nDay weekend. Tentative arrange-\nments are for a game Sunday at\nTrail according to T. H. Negus,\nSecreUry of the Trail Girls Softball\nAssociation.\nMr. Negus had suggested a double-\nheader for each city, the schedule\nproposed being a game in Nelson\nearly Sunday and a second game\nat Trail, at 8 p.m. the same afternoon, a stay overnight in Trail, the\nthird game to be played at 12:30\np.m. in the Smelter City and the\nfourth at Nelson on the Huskies'\nreturn home.\nBeatty Starts\nWestern Tour\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont., Aug. 27\n\u2014Sir Edward Beatty, president of\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway, accompanied by Col. Henry Cockshutt,\nof Montreal, a director, arrives at\nFort William tomorrow for a three-\nweek inspection trip through the\nWest. He will be met at the lake-\nhead by W. M. Neal, Vice-President\nof Western Lines.\nThe railway head also functions\nin another role this year, as representative in the Dominion, of the\nBritish Ministry of Shipping, a wartime post\nSir Edward reaches Winnipeg late\nWednesday evening, but leaves\nagain for the West Thursday horning, reserving a day for the Manitoba capital on the homeward journey, September 17.\nHe will be st Regina and Moose-\njaw on Friday, Calgary on Saturday and will spend the weekend at\nBanff, Lake Louise and on the\nBanff Jasper highway. The following weekend will be spent at the\nPacific Coast and Sir Edward will\nvisit Lethbriige, Calgary, Edmonton and Saskatoon on his way back\nto the East. Mr. Neal will accompany him throughout his Western\ntrip.\nPIONEER LADY OF\nNAKUSP IS DEAD\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Sophis Bergwerf,\nwife of Cornelius Bergwerf of\nBrouse, died In the Arrow Lakes\nHospital, Nakusp, August 28, aged\n76. Her death followed an illness\nof some months.\nMrs. Bergwerf was born in Vlaar-\ndlngne, Holland. Her marriage to\nMr. Bergwerf took place In Holland\nSO years sgo and -the couple came\ndirectly to Nakusp in 1908, where\nfor many years Mr. Bergwerf was\na carpenter in the CP.R. shipyard.\nMrs. J. Reyden of Brouse Is a\ndaughter. Funeral services were\nheld from the Nakusp United\nChurch Tuesday, Rev. O. Grandahl\nofficiating.\nTotal Damage in\nTrail Business\nBlock Fire $4000\nTRAIL. B.C., Aug. 27-'Estimated\ndamage in the fire which broke out\nin the Owen Block, 1486 Bsy Avenue, early Friday morning were\n$41*4. This figure ls given on smoke,\nfire, and water damage to the building and contents, including damage\ndone to the furniture ln McDonald's\nfurniture store, sdjolning.\nMore Firearm\nForms Received\nTRAIL, B.C., Aug. 37\u2014Provlnclsl\npolice at both Trail and Rossland\nnave more firearm registration\ntorms on hand, and are again busy\ntaking registrations. Owing to the\nsudden rush, both offices were temporarily out of forms.\n\"Hitler\" Sends\nIn Registration\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP).-In _\nbig brown envelope addressed directly to him and marked \"personal\"\nMr. Justice T. C. Davis, Associate\nDeputy Minister of National War\nServices, today received a registration form made out and signed by\n\"Adolf Hitler.\"\nThere was an amused twinkle in\nthe eye of Mr. Justice Davis as he\nscanned the form, for the envelope\nwas postmarked Regina, where hit\nserved on the bench on the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal!. He\ngave the impression that he might\nhave known who prepared and\nmailed the form but if he did, he\nwas saying nothing about lt.\nOn the  form,  \"Adolf  Hitler\"\ngave his sge as 49 and hia de\npendents the Gestapo. Under the\nsub-heading dealing with the\nnumber of child dependents, tho\n\"Fuehrer\" wrote in \"thousands\nin Poland, Norway, Belgium and\nFrance.\"\nAnswering the question, \"Art you\nan employer of labor other than\ndomestic, \"Hitler\" Jotted down:\n\"Yes, Henri Petain of Vichy.\"\nTo the \"can you milk\"? question\nthis neat answer was jotted down:\n\"Yes, all the conquered countries.\"\nColombos Beat Golden\nEagles, Trail Junior\nSoftball League Game\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 27\u2014The Sons\nof Colombo gained an 8-6 win over\nthe Golden Eagles in a Trail City\nJunior Boys' Softball League game\nTuesday night.\nMatteuccl's three-tagger in the\nColombo first time st bat brought\nin Maglianl and the Tognotti brothers, while the one homer of the\nsession was batted by Ius at the\nopening of the fourth inning.\nMartin, pitching tor the Eagles,\nstruck out one and walked four. L.\nTognotti, moundsman for the Colombos, fanned eight and walked\nthree.\nLineups:\nColombos \u2014 Maglianl rf, lui rf,\nDardi c, A. Tognotti as, L. Tognotti\np, Matteucci lb, Costanza cf, N,\nTurik 3b, R. Sammartino If, F. Angerilli 2b.\nGolden Eagles \u2014 Monoid! c, Toffolo If, Krowvesky ss, Pagnan lb,\nEfmacora 3b, Sovran cf, Martin p,\nCavalin 3b, Little rf.\nArbour and Minchuk\nSentence Suspended\nSo They Can Enlist\nThe sentence on Cecil Artwur,\nex-Prairie man, and Mike Minchuk of Fernle on a charge of\nbreaking, entering and stealing\nfrom the John Burns home on the\nNorth Shore wss suspended tor\nthree months by Judge W. A. Nisbet in Provincial Police Court Tuesday morning to give the men sn\nopportunity to enlist.\nBoth pleaded guilty. Constable G,\nA, Brabazon prosecuted,\n1400 Children Are\non Canadian Soil\nOTTAWA, Aug. 37 (CP)-Some\n1400 children have been moved\n(rom their homes in the United\nKingdom to Canada under the \"assisted\" or Government scheme, Resource! Minister T. A. Crerar announced tonight\nThe Minister slid the majority of\nchildren now in Canada had come\non transportation provided by parents or friends snd -came to homes\noffered by relativei ln Canada. Ht\nwas now glad to iay the Government scheme had got under way.\nMr. Crerar spoke over the Nstlon-\nal Network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.\nGirls' Fellowship\nFirst Baptist .(ClurW\nHas. Children's Party\nThe Girls' Fellowship, formerly\nthe GirU' CluKt tba Fir'\ntlst Church, hW'tH tint\nIng of the season at the.home of\nMr. and Mrs. T. Dodman, 408 Huston Street, Tuesday night.\nThe gathering took the form of a\n\"kiddle party,\" all the girls wearing rompers. The room was decor,\nated in accord with the apparel,\nhigh chain, rubber dolls and io on\nbeing used. Divided into two groups\nthe girls enjoyed children's games,\neach trying to Win a point tor her\nside.\nBefore lunch was served the\ngroup was led in a short devotional\nby Miss Geraldine Dodman. Choruses were sung.\nThe group planned a hike and\n_ean feed on _*bor Bay. The following Monday the Fall program\nwill be launched.\nIs Rossland to\nHave Skunk Farm!\nCouncil Debates\nROSSLAND, B C, Aug. 27-The\nquestion of garbage collection again\ncame up for discussion by the Rossland City Council Monday .night,\nsnd it was decided to continue during September the twice-monthly\ncollection employed during July and\nAugust. September collections will\ntake place on the 3rd and the 16th,\nand garbage containers are to be\nplaced at the edge of each property.\nA complaint that someone in the\ncity was maintaining the nucleus of\na skunk farm was under discussion.\nAlderman J. R. Corner stated that\nhe had received the complaint, and\nwished to know what action would\nor could be taken.\n\t\nFINK'S\nWEDNESDAY A.M.\nSURPRISES\nNOet\nWomen's smart style dresses that for- a ^    >>\nmerly sold up to $6.95. 9 J \u2022\"***\nNow\nno. a\nChildren's Dresses. Novelty waih printi,\n\u2022tc. Sixes 1 to 14. Formerly to $1.95.\nNow  \t\n6*\nJuat Arrived\nSMART NEW\nAMERICAN SHOES\nFor Fall \u2014 Newest Stylet, Heeli.\nPhone\n73\nBumi\nBlock\nLADIES' WEAR\nNO OTHER TIRE LIKE IT !\nfitestone\nCHAMPION\nv <' *k\n. *'''\n_ \/ \/ -.\n(HI\n-* J \/ ** { '\nrMtD\u00bb\u00bb0,\nPlOM the innermost fibre\nto tbe sensational new\nGear Grip Tread, every,\nthing in this smart, stream*\nlined Firestone Champion\ntire is new and different It\nsets up entirely new stand.\nards of safety and long mile*\nage because it is the result\nof Firestone's quarter-century of experience in build*\ning tires for race track\nspeeds.\nHere are some of the things\nyou get in Firestone\nChampion tires\u2014new\nSafety-Lock cords treated\nwith a new and advanced\nGum-Dipping process; 27%\nstronger bond between\ntread and body; 35% greater heat protection against\nblowouts; an amazing new\ntread with thousands of\nsharp-edged angles for quick\nstops\u2014a tread that gives\n11% more non-skid mileage.\nNot only is the Firestone\nChampion an engineering\ntriumph but it is super-value\nas well\u2014for, with all its\nextra value, it does not cost\none cent more than ordinary tires. Have your near*\nby Firestone Dealer put\nthem on today.\nSAFETY-PROVED ON THE   SPEEDWAY  FOR  YOUR   PROTECTION  ON  THE  HIGHWAY\nFirestone  Tires  Sold  and  Recommended  by\nThe Smedley Garage Go.\n508 VERNON STREET TELEPHONE  71\nNELSON, B, C.\nWa Carry i Complete Stock of Firestone Tlrti and Tubei In All Siiei\nSky Chief Auto Service\n200 Biker St.\nYOUR TIXACO DEALERS\nPhone 122\n=\n=__\nWe Carry t Complete Une of Firestone Tlrei and Tubei\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nPhone 77\nDODGE \u2022 DESOTO\n503 Vernon St.\n___________\n -NILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. AUO. _l. 1940-\n^nra\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nBoard of Defence Speeds Through Worfc\nrr_sss\nNelson Recruit\nCol. 0. M. Biggar\nThe Canada-U. S. joint Board\nef Defence yesterday sped through\nt great mass of plans end documents relative to strategic military positloni on the North Atlantic cqast in two long sittings. Col.\nBiggar heads the Canadian section of Capt Murray of the Canadian Navy, H. L. Keenleyside,\nCounsellor of External Affaln\nand Air Commodore Cuffe. Mayor\nLa Guardia heads the United\nStatei lection. The Board is pej-\nmanent and will function u long\nas necessary to complete the task\nassigned to It Mayor La Guardia\ndeclared\nCapt L. W. Murray\nH. L. Keenliyildt\n' PRIVATE ALFRED BALL,\nion of Mr. and Mn. Sidney Ball,\nGore Street Nelson. He enlisted\nat Calgary and was transferred to\nEdmonton. Returning to Nelson\nrecently on Bick leave follcAving\nan operation, he was again transferred, thia time to a Saskatchewan training post, after rejoining\nhii unit\nNew Minister\nMayor F. H. La Guardia\nStudent Pilots Get First Instructions\nAir Commodore A. A   L. Cllffe\nThe King Inspects\nAnti-Aircraft\nPosts\nDr. Duncan McArthur, Deputy\nMinister of the  late  Dr. L. J\nSimpson. Ontario Minister of Education,  has been  sworn in as\nMinister of Education.\nStudent pilots of the R.C.A.F. receive initial flying Instruction\nat elementary flying training schools with Fleet Finch trainen which\nhave 125 h.p. motors and a top speed of 105 m.p.h. Aircraftman Clau\nI, G. F. Maffrey, of Montreal, is shown receiving final instructions\ntrom Don MacPherson, of Glaco Bay, N.S\nWonts to Fight for Canada\nHis Majeaty King George makei a clAie icrutiny of anti-aircraft\nihelii during his visit to anti-aircraft posta in Kent recently.\nFirst to Be Decorated\nCaptain Maximilian Mautner. and Mrs. Mautner, pictured on the\nPortuguese sleamer Quanza on arrival in the United Slates. Captain\nMautner once fought In the Czecho-Slovakian and French armies\nand now is en route to Canada to try to enlist in the Canadian army.\nAssistant Section Officer Joan Daphne Mary Peanon, the first\nwoman of the Britiih fighting servicei to be decorated for gallantry,\nreceives the medil of the military diviiion of the Order of the British\nEmpire from the King at Buckingham Palace. A.S 0. Pearson saved\nthe life of a pilot whose aircraft crashed in flames.\nBritain Will Extend Aid\nto All Loyal French\nOverseas   Territories\nLONDON, Aug 27 (CP) .-Prime\nMiniiter Churchill today gave an\nassurance to Gen. Charles Dt Gaulle\nthat economic assistance comparable\nto that granted to British colonies\nwill be extended to all French overseas territories loyal to (he Allies\nuntil an independent and constitutional authority has been re-established on French toil.\nThe Prime Minister's itatement\nfollowed an announcement by General De Gaulle that the Governor\nand Commander of Chad Territory\nin French equatorial Africa had\ndecided to fight on with Britain.\nGen. De Gaulle leadi all Free\nFrenchmen who are continuing the\nwar against Germany..\nDe Gaulle in a broadcast utd the\nGovernor of tha Chad territory had\nissued a declaration at Fort Lamy\nyesterday saying the territory refused the French capitulation and\nwould remain in the war. He laid\nthe declaration was alio ilgned by\nColonel Marchand, commanding\ntroops in the territory.\nFrench circlei in London considered 'he Chad deciiion as of the\ngreatest importance since the territory of 461,202 square miles in area\nborders Libya and the Sudan and\nis a key to equatorial Africa. It was\nthought certain-other French African possessions may follow suit\nR. A. F. Drop Six Tons of\nBombs on Big Italian\nArmament   Factories\n\u2022LONDON, Aug. 27 (CP). \u2014 The\nAir Ministry made the following\nannouncement Tuesday:\n\"Industrial targets in Northern\nItaly were again succesfully attacked last night when, for the fifth\ntime in a fortnight, R. A. F. bombers\nmade the double journey over\nFrance and the Alps.\n\"The objectives on this occasion\nwere the Sociota Aeronautica Italia\nFiat works at Turin and the Magneto Marelli factory, which makei\nIgnition generaton, and Sesto San\nGiovanni, near Milan\n\"The raiders arrived over these\nfactories just before 12:30 a.m. In\nthe next 40 minutes they dropped\nsome six tons of bombs.\n\"The log of one pilot who made\nthree attacks on the Marelli works\nitatei: 'Weather hazy. No clouds.\nVisibility showed up target to advantage. First stick of bombs started\nfour fires and two large explosions.\nSecond stick caused bright blue and\nwhite explosions. Third stick caused\n14 fires in a line.\n\"Another pilot arrived 10 minutes\nlater. He had had an exciting journey, for his oxygen lupply diminished when he wai over the Alps\nand  he was able  to  obtain very\nlittle while flying three milea up,\nHe carried on, however, and got\nover safely.\n\"Fires already were burning at\nSesto San Giovanni and a great\ncloud of white smoke which waa\ndrifting upwards to nearly 6000 feet\nguided him to the target. The moon\nwas covered by a layer of high\nclouds and there was a haze partly\nshrouding the factory, but he made\nhis attack and his bombs caused\nnew fires on the West side of the\nworks.\n'The Fiat works at Turin were\nalso set on fire early, and guided\nlater arrivals promptly to the scene.\nOne pilot who made a 10-minute attack observed explosions for some\ntime after he had left\n\"Bomba from another aircraft\nwere dropped on the Southern end\nof the target. While these attacki\nwere being made, two Italian fighters appeared, but did not interfere\nwith the proceedings.\"\nROME, Aug. 27 (API-British\nbombs scored hits on the Fiat airplane, automobile and tank factory\nat Turin in a night raid, the Italian\nHigh Command announced today.\nThe High Command did not disclose the amount of damage done.\nCanadlan-U.S. Defence Board Seen\nas Most Important War Development\nBy SAM ROBERT80N\n(Canidlm Pren Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP Cable). -\nRecent formation of the Canadian-\nAmerican Joint Defence Board Is\nviewed in official British circles\nas one of the most important international developments which has\ntaken place since the outbreak of\nwar.\nThe new phase of cooperation between the Dominion and the Republic might be only the first of a\nseries of steps toward greater cooperation not only between those\nneighboring countries but between\nthe United States and other parts\nof the Empire.\nUnofficial quarters believe that\none development might be enlargement of the already large flow of\nwar supplies coming to Britain from\nAmerica.\nThe sale to Canada of iome of\nthe hundreds of over-age destroyers\ngathering barnacles in U. S. Navy\nyards is discussed in these quarters\nas one possibility.\nIf the Royal Canadian Navy did\nsecure a sufficient number of these\nwarcraft the Dominion might be able\nto take over the policing of the\nwaters of the Western hemisphere\nand released for action on this sea\nfront the British warships now stationed ln the Caribbean and elsewhere.\nOfficials here frown on suggestions which have appeared in some\nsections of the press that the defence facilities offered to the United\nStates in the British West Indies\nand Newfoundland are part of a\nlarger deal by which America will\nwipe out the British war debt and\nmany other concessions.\nIt is emphasized that the defence\nfacilities\u2014and they are facilities\u2014\nnot necessarily bases\u2014were a free\noffer by the British Government\nNo strings, financial or otherwise,\nwere attached and the sovereignty\nof the territories would be in no\nway affected.\nNinety-nine-year leases would be\na guarantee to the United States\nwhich might spend considerable\nsums preparing the facilities to meet\nits special needs.\nThe lease would guarantee that\nthe British \"landlord\" would not ask\nthe American \"tenant\" to vacate the\npremises on short notice.\npast\nImportant Newsf\nTHE \"BAY'S1\nHome Furnishings\nand\nBack to School Circular\nIN YOUR HOME TODAY\nSee \"Bay\" Windows Today anti\nShop for Savings)\nThursday, Friday, Saturday]\nCUSTOMER CHARGE ACCOUNTS\nNow Open\u2014Payable Sept. 10th\nHospital Patients Put Under Beds,\nBombs Hit Poorhouse, Several Kille\nIllusion of Garden Vanishes During\nRaid as Planes Find Objectives\nBy M1LO THOMPSON\n(Aitoolated Prett 8taff Writer)\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (AP)\u2014Half ot\nmetropolitan Londonis population\nhad to ask this morning how long\nthe night's air raid lasted.\nThey had given up the show and\ngone to bed.\nHow can one go to bed with the\ngrinding beat of a German bomber\noverhead? At any moment a blast\nmight end your existence.\nBut so might a bolt of lightning\nin any thunderstorm.\nYou think of the odds, shrug and\nturn in.\nWatching the show wesries you\n,ike sitting at a grand fireworks\ndisplay for hours.\nFor those who do watch there Is\na horrid splendor about these nlghl\nraids.\nYour feelings are mixed. For\nshort periods you feel that you\npersonally are the hunted one\u2014but\nmost of the time it is the fellow\nsomewhere up above who is hunted.\nThe black sky becomes a garden\nof unimaginably tall flowers, usually in swaying clusters. The items,\nof course, are the searchlight beams\nand they blossom where' they touch\ndowny clouds.\nThe heads come together as if the\nflowers are reaching unnaturally\nfor a bee buzzing above.\nThe droning bee up there ls the\nhunted thing now and you belong\nwith those who are stalking it.\nDiscretion comes to you when\nthe stalks and blossoms are all\nabout you and you look up into a\ncone of light and hear the bee almost directly overhead.\nThe illusion of a garden vanishes.\nSo you seek shelter a moment\nuntil your bee discloses he thinks\nhe has found an objective and\ndropped a bomb \u2014another \u2014two\nmore.\nSomewhere unlucky watchers\nwho stood as you did may be dying.\nThat's a side of it you cannot dwell\nupon.\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)\u2014Houses\nwere damaged in London suburbs\nin last night't raid but casualties\napparently were few.\nA bomb demolished a house In\none London area. Air raid wardens\ndug the occupants from the debris.\nThe householder was killed but\nhis wife and two other occupants\nsurvived.\nThere were leveral casualties In\nthe neighborhood. Two were taken\nto a hospital and the rest were\ntreated at first aid posts.\nOne Associated Press employee\ntelephoned his office from his suburban home that he and his wife\nhad arrived home Just 10 minutes\nafter a bomb fell 10 yards from\ntheir home. The explosion shattered\nall the windows, shooting splinters\nof glass Into the walls like arrows.\nOne corner of the brick house was\nblown away.\nFourteen bombi fell In this neighborhood but there were no casualties.\nConvalescent patients ln a London hospital were taken to trench\nshelters during the raid and others\ntoo ill to be moved out of the buildings were placed on mattresses under their beds. The hospital wss\nshaken by the explosion of tVo\nbombs in the vicinity but no damage was done to it.\nOne of the attacks on the fringe of\na London suburb was made by a\ndive bomber which lossed three\ncomparatively light bombs. Tie\nonly damage was done to roads, in\nwhich craters were dug, and to\nan indoor bowling green building,\nt'-': glass roof of which was smashed.\nIn another London suburb four\nb.mbs fell in a residential district,\nbreaking windows end blowing in\ndoors. Little other damage was reported in this area.\nIn a Southwestern town, described as h ving had its \"worst raid of\nthe war,\" two bombs fell on a poor-\nhouse, killing several people and\ninjuring others.\nA number ot casualties wera re\nported from a midland town whl\nhad \"iree heavy raldi during t\nnight. High explosive- . -d inc.\ndiary bombs were dropped.\nThere were a number of repo\nof persons being machine-guns\nfrom the air during raids ln _\nmidlands and the Southwest, 1\nonly one death was listed. Sew)\nwere reported wounded.   -\nBuildings were demolished In O\ncoastal town and a woman w\nkilled. It was feared that ott\nbodies might be buried under t\ndebris.\nAt another town ln the Northei\na large number of houses w\u00ab\nrazed, but only five personi w\ninjured. Incendiary bombi fell ov\na wide area.\nNavy Air Guns Get 12\nNaii Planet by Aug.\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (OP)\u2014T\nAdmiralty stated today that na,\nanti-aircraft gum had account\nfor 122 German planes up to Aug.\nand that an additional 64 probal\nhad been destroyed and 43 damaft\nThe fleet air arm shot down'i\nadditional 28 planes and damag\n25 others, many of which \"can '\nconsidered lost,\" the Admiral\nsaid.\nCONSTIPATED'\nT_k_ This Modirn Vsgitsbts Until*\nton* tht liver and get ths Blls Juice ftowlr\nImproves digestion snd enei away dom\nv>iitei. Ask for the genuine Dr. M oris's Inad\nRoot Pills, \u2014 at your druggist's.\n56HUS-2I\n13 SHIPS LOST\nIN AUG. 18 WEEK\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)-Thir-\nteen British, Allied and neutral\nmerchant ships totalling 52.899 tons\nwere sunk by the enemy during the\nweek ended Aug. 18, the Admiralty\nannounced today.\nThe Admiralty said: \"The enemy\nclaims to have sunk 151.711 tons,\nor nearly three times the actua.\nreported losses\" for the period.\nThe total tonnage lost was slightly above the weekly average for\nthe previous 49 weeks since the beginning of the war, the Admiralty\nsaid.\nAxi: losses to Aug. 28 totalled\napproximately 1,187,000 tons, the\nAdmiralty reported. German losses\nwere 923,000 tons and Italian 264,-\n000.\nNeutral shipping seized by \"the\nenemy\" amounting to 32,000 tons\nalso has been sunk, the Admiralty\nreported.\nThe German claim that a British\ndestroyer of the Viscount class had\nbeen sunk and authoritatively denied.\nKENDAL, England (CP)--John\nFrancis Smith, wireless dealer, wai\nfined \u00a310 ($44.50) on a charge of\nmaking statements liable to cause\nalarm and despondency, although\npreviously warned.\nSummer Campers!\nMove Back to Town\n\u2022 PROMPTLY\n0 EFFICIENTLY\nt ECONOMICALLY\nPHONE 33 AND OUR MEN WILL\nLOOK AFTER THE JOB POR YOU\nWest Transfer Co.\nestablished In 1899\nSun life _____m\n*.\n\u2014-\u2014.\u2014.\t\n\u2014i  \u2022\t\n \u25a0   POUR\n-NILION DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. AUO. 26, 1940\u2014\n>T STAR CRAVES IGE CREAM SODAS BUT MUST FOREGO THEM\nlish Children\niced in Canada\non Quota Basis\nBTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)\u2014Diatri-\non of 1,285 guest children, by\nthe largest party yet to arrive\ner the British Government\npile, is being made now on a\nta basis throughout anada, Dr.\nC. Wallace, Chairman of the\nlonal Advisory Committee for\nbeas Children and principal of\n\u25a0O's University, Kingston, said\nin interview today,\nich province is receiving num-\n> of children based upon the\nuncial population and number\nnvilatlons making homes avail-\n!. The total previously diitri-\njd has not been announced.\nIked the exact function of the\nmittee, Dr. Wallace referred to\n_ giving \"personal;. \" to Can-\nlln respect to the children and\n| problems. As human and ma-\nal problems arise, the Federal\nprovincial authorities may con-\nl the advisory committee, the\nladlan counterpart of a similar\nInizatlon in England,\nne of the problems is the rals-\nof funds for extra assistance to\njlren if hospitalization 'or medi-\nattention became necessary and\ncases of transfer or transporta-\n|which are now a charge on the\nleral Government,\nhe committee will have a small\nland permanent secretary. Conations will be held when neces-\nt with child welfare experts and\nBiologists. Among other things\nCommittee considers working in\nie co-operation with the Calm Nitional Committee for Re-\nees, suggesting that the latter\nar concern itself principally with\n[tlcal refugees while the ad-\ntoy committee deal with chilli.\nKit only those children evicu-\n1 under the government plan,\nI those sent.privately, are re-\nMng the attention of the com-\nIttt principally t should like to\nke clear the quality of the chil-\nn which have betn selected to\nne out under the government\nUnt,\" said Dr. Wallace.\nBorne of the children, we may\nJalnly hope, will wish lo remain\nCanada as the forerunners of\naldersble British Immigration\nsr the war.\"\n0.1\nbrses Firs! on\nLOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nn these early autumn days when\nhum of anapheles is heard in\n[\u25a0till evening air. the plaint goes\n.^These mosquitoes just love me\nter than anything on earth.\"\nH't flatter yourself. As a choice\ndiet you rank quite low ln the\njguito's preferred list. Horses\nid the list ot the kind of blood\nt Jnosqulto likes, then cows, then\ns, then dogs, then you, then chick -\n!. These conclusions were ar-\n\u00abd at by government entomolo-\nts who subjected thc blood ln a\nwed mosquito to precipitation\nte which make it possible to tell\nat animal it came from.\nik> Incubator babies attain full\nrelopment or are they likely to\nundersized?\nplants born at seven to eight\ninths have such a low vitality\nit if they are handled in the or-\ntory way they lurvive but a few\n*ks. The incubator takes the\nice of the mother's womb\u2014poor-\n'Of course, but for practical pur-\nMl in a good percentage of cases\nSerial Story \u2022 \u2022 - By Helen Welshlmer\nLOVE WITHOUT MUSIC\nCHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT\n\"Could anyone have wanted your\nlife?\" the commissioner had asked\nLinda Juit aa she saw the initial in\nthe handkerchief which ihe had retrieved from the floor of the office.\nA small, hand-blocked iniUal an\npeared in one corner. It was an C |\nEnglish \"M.\" It might have itoo_\nfor Mina or lt might have stood for\nMarkley or maybe lt Juit represented a Margaret or a Mary.\nShe gazed at lt, fascinated. Still\nnot answering the queition, ihe\nlifted the small square to her nose,\nand the scent was stronger now.\nShe handed the object to the commissioner, \"I found thii on the floor\njust now. I thought it wai mine until\nI picked it up.'\n\"An 'M',\" the man said. \"And\nyour name is Linda Avery and the\ndead girl is Clarabell Ackerman.\nDo you know an enemy whose\nname begins with 'M'?\"\nLinda hesitated. If only she had\nsomeone to guide her. If Ronnie\nwould come, or Rob had been present they would answer for her. lt\nwas quite possible that the murderer nad mistaken Clarabell Ackerman for her. but that murderer\ncouldn't be Mina Nevins. She had\nbeen on the air at the time of the\nmurder.\nHer hesitation was noticed by the\nSolice. \"Better answer all questions,\nliss Avery. It will be easier. And\nsimpler.\"\n\"Could I see you alone?\" lhe\nasked, and her voice sounded imall\nand tired even'to her own ears.\nShe dared not mention Mina Nevins front of these reporters. Some\nof them had gone, scampering to\nthe nearest telephones to tell their\nnight editors to change a page.\nWhether the commissioner would\nhave said that he would talk to her\nalone or not. Linda never knew,\nfor at that moment the door opened\nand a tall figure appeared.\n\"Oh, Robert!\" She wai across\nthe room, and hit strong irms were\nsteadying her, before the words had\nleft her lips.\nThere was peace and poise and\ncomfort in hit presence. She was\nso joyfully, tearfully gild that he\nhad come,\n\"Someone sent word to your\napartment that you were here. No\none wai home, but I hippened to\nbe passing,\" he said. \"Of course I\ncame right away.\"\nBriefly Robert was informed of\nthe events of the past hour. His\neyes sobered at the sight of the\ngirl who slumped over the desk. No\nmove had been made to conceal her\nor take her away.\n\"Couldn't we have a conference\ncommissioner?\" Robert aiked. \"You\nslid thit this murder might be a\ncase of mistaken identity. It's quite\ntrue, and yet\u2014\"\n\"May I talk alone to Mr. Barton?\" Linda asked. \"For just a moment, please?\"\nThe man hesitated. From the canyon of the streets below there came\nlhe subdued sound of the night traffic. The theatres were long ilnce\nout and the play spoti were giy\nend crowded, and the taxlcabs carried groupi from one to mother.\nThe rain was growing iteidler\nand harder, and It beat against the\nwindows. Grateful as the wn for\nRobert's protection. Linda wished\nanxiously that Ronnie would come.\nMaybe he hadn't received any message. And why didn't the commissioner give his consent?\n\"Everything will come out in the\nInvestigation and the coroner's inquest,\" the official aniwered. \"Any\nlight you may throw on the happening now will uve you ember-\nrassment later. However, If you with\na conference, the inner office will\ndo nicely, I'll itay on guard.\"\nIt wu Robert who aniwered. \"I\nthink you had better comt with\nus. I've a pretty good idea what\nMill Avery hesitates to uy. It Involves a third party, and on the\nsurface' sounds ridiculous.\"\nRobert took the lead in the conversation, but lt wai Linda who\nmentioned the fact that Mina Nevins\ncould not have left the room where\nthe wai broadcuting to come to the\noffice, do a murder, leave, and continue with the program.\nIn the first place, there would not\nhave been time tor her to even\nreach the place, let alone return.\nIn the second place, the doors alwayi were locked during a broadcast and the could not hive left\nthe auditorium where she was\nspeaking during the musical intermission.\n\"And in the third place, there\nwill be dozens of witnesses to testify she was on hand all the time,\"\nthe commissioner added. \"I'm afraid\nshe's out. But that 'M'\u2014 itandi for\nMina. How many girli ln your office have the initial 'M'\u2014models,\noffice force, anyone?\"\nLinda thought carefully. There\nwun't an \"M in the group, She\nwould have declared that there\nwere several, speaking off-handed-\nly, but the inventory snowed none.\n\"Could a model, applying for a\nplace on the Bagley list, neve dropped It?\" the query came.\n\"Probably, but the charwoman\nwho cleaned the office earlier in Hu\nevening would have found It.\"\nThe charwoman, aummoned,\n\u25a0knew nothing. Her eyes were a\ntired blue and she looked often at\nthe night watchman.\nBack In the larger room, Linda\nnoted that a sheet had been thrown\nover the dead form of the girl.\nThere wu someething more frightening In that disguise than '.here\nhad tjeen in the figure of the girl\nitself.\n\"Didn't you bring anyone up here,\nanyone outside of Miu Avery?\" the\ndetectives kept asking the elevator\noperator, who persisted In his denial.\n\"Nobody but the watchman.\"\n\"And you took nobody down?\"\n\"Nobody.\"\n\"Then how could anyone get in?\nTwelve flights are a long distance\nto climb. Humph! If someone did\nthis as an outside job, that person\nmust have been on the stairs while\nthe commotion was going on and\nmade an escaDed while the door was\nunguarded. Well, we'll have a coroner'! Inquest in the morning.\"\nRonnie came then, face white and\nworried. \"They held me up to\nquestion me about all this,\" he iaid.\n\"I didn't know what had happened.\nSeems that you were supposed to\nbe killed and somebody else got it.\"\nHe nut his arm around Linda,\nsearched her face. \"All right, Linda\nsweet?\"\nSuddenly she knew where Ronnie had been. Someone had taken\nhim to the police station, remembering that Linda stood In the way\nof any profitable marriage he might\nwish to make with the daughter of\nthe man who was giving him a fling\nat stardom.\n(To be continued).\neffectively. It provldei an even temperature and other protection. The\ntwo other problems of the premature Infant are to keep it breathing\nand to provide nourishment. The\nbreathing centre is not well developed in prematurity because such\ninfants were not prepared yet for\nan atmospheric existence. Suckling\nand swallowing reflexes are also at\nlow ebb, and digestion poor, so\nfeeding is always difficult to manage.\nIf these are overcome, however,\nthe premature Infant develops quite\nnaturally. There it a lag In development in the first few monthi, and\nBack to SCHOOL\nRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nFALL TERM\nOp.ni September 3rd\nFRANCES   _.  COOK,  B.A.,   Principal\n648 Weir St.\nTrail, B. C.\nQueen Margaret's School\nDuncan, Vancouver Island, B, C.\nCountry Boarding School for Girls, Beginners to Matriculation. Own chapel, swimming pool, farm, ponies.\nPrlnclpali\nMI88 N. C. DENNY, A.R.R.C.      MIS8 D.R. GEOGHEGAN, B.A.\nSt Joseph's Academy\n523 Mill Streit, Nelson, B. C.\nBoarding School for Girls and Young Ladies\nDay School for Girls and Boys\nPrimiry, Elementary and High School Department*. Pupllt\nprepared for Matriculation Examination). Complete Count\nIn Muiic leading to London College tnd Toronto Conurvatory\nol Music Examination\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\nTermi Moderate Address\u2014Sister Superior\nnutritional diseases, iuch as anemia,\nrickets and tetany are frequent. \"By\nthe end of the first year,\" write\nHolt and Howland, \"many have\ncompensated for their early handicaps and are as large and vigorous\nas other Infants. There seems to be\nno lasting result produced by prematurity.\nWhat are the commonest cauies\nof piinful, weak feet?\nBad ihoes! The barefoot savage\nnever hai broken irches, while\namong ihoe wearing civilians\nthirty out of every hundred rejections for army service are due to\nflat feet\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nA.D.\u2014\"Will you pleue explain\nsomething? If a perton hu tuberculosis and it li iaid to be 'inactive,' whit does It njean? Whit\nli the meaning of active and inac-\ntibe tuberculosis. Can a person with\nInactive tuberculoiii be cured? And\ncould you tell me if it ii possible\nfor other people to get the disease\nfrom that person?\"\nAnswer\u2014Inactive tuberculosis is\ndefined as tuberculosis in which the\ndisease Is not progressing and no\ngerms can be found In the sputtum\nor from stomach washings. It Is\nreally the sage of active tuberculosis In which cure hu begun. If\nwe accept the definition literally,\nthat there are no germs being cast\nout, other people cannot get the disease from a person with Inactive\ntuberculosis.\nRefugee Committee\nNamed at Robson\nROBSON, B.C.\u2014At a meeting of\nthe Robson Refugee sub-committee\nat Mr. Mitchell's home, a committee\nwas elected as follows:\nM. Quance. Secretary; Mrs. R.\nBerry, Health; Mrs. Humphries, Education; Mrs. Gopp, Convener, public entertainment; Mr. Mitchell,\ntransportation.\nApplication forms for those wishing to -receive children are ready.\nClothing will be sent to the Nelson\ncommittee.\nDies Exonerates Film\nPeople From Charge\nCommunist Leanings\nNEW YORK. Aug. 27 (API-Representative Martin Dies (Dem. -\nTexas), Chairman of the Congressional Committee Investigating Un-\namerlcan activities, todiy exonerated Francli Lederer and Franchot\nTone, actori, and Lulie Ralner.\nscreen actreis, of accusations they\nwere Communlit sympathizers.\nOf Film Actor Lionet Stander,\nwho alio ippeared before the Committee today in private hearing.\nDiet laid:\n\"I'm not prepared it thli time to\nmike a itatement with respect to\nMr. Stander. I detire additional\ninformation and Investigation ai to\nhim.\"\nLITTLEHAMPTON, England (CP)\n\u2014Lady Ann Mappln, of Apiley\nHouse, St. John's wood, was fined\n\u00a310 (|44.90) costs for having a\nwireless set in her automobile con\ntnry lo Defence Regulations.\nFashions\nEars Beautified\nfar Decoration\nBy DONNA ORAM\nThii li going to be an \"Ode to\nthe Ean\". Theie little appendages,\nbecauie of their modest undercover\nhablti, are usually ignored when we\ntalk of facial beauty. It la true they\nare now ln evidence, but until this\nseason, we haven't thought them\nimportant enough to glamorize.\nNow according to faahion editors\nand the smart Ball shows, eara have\ncome Into prominence. Earringi of\nunusual design will be worn. Instead of the pendants, buttons or\nclips, we may expect to see jeweled\nollpi covering the top as well ai the\nelaborate pjndants fastened to the\nlobe.\nBecauie of the lack of loft tissues\nand nourishing blood vesiela in the\nears, there is sometimes a tendency\nto dry scales. For thla we uie plenty\nof soap and warm lyater. It will\nremove the fine dry mrface and\nhelp to prevent the tenie little linei\nand wrinkles.\nAfter a gentle but thorough waih-\ning, rinse with clear water. Do not\nlet water run into the paraage.Uie\na wuhcloth to cleanie the little\ngroove! and do not twist or pull the\nean vigorously.\nFor the massage, cover the ear\nwith a light film of cream and with\nthe flngertipi stroke gently until\nthe surface ls smooth and pliable.\nRemove cream with soft tissue, then\nsqueeze out pads of cotton or fresh\nwashcloth in skin freshener or diluted cologne and wipe carefully. The\ncool freshener will impart a feeling\nof coolnesl.\nWhen uilng dark powderi or\nrouge, do not make the mutake of\nleaving the ean white. They will\nlook complcuoui ind detached from\nthe face. Cover with the powder,\nand for the glpty roie type of meke-\nup or any dirk one, a bit of rouge\napplied to the lobe and about the\nrim will complete the ememble.\nThii eer consciousness will be\neure to prepire thtm for imart\nadornment and will keep them In\nharmony with the well-groomed\nface. \t\nSecond Childhood . . .\nLife Wilh Aged\nMay Be Problem\nBy Garry C. Myen, Ph.D.\nA Chicago mother wrltei; \"Lut\nAugust I wrote you for help and\nreceived such excellent advice, that\nI feel you cm help me straighten\nout my present problem. ... I ctn't\nget along with my father ... he\nlives with my husband, my three\nchildren and myself. . . .\n\"He must be the cock-of-the-walk.\nHe must be consulted and included\nin all our plans\u2014or else. He must\nbe the whole thing, or he is not\nhappy, ind If he isn't happy no\none else will be either. We all bend\nover backwards trying to please\nhim, and heaven help us when we\nfail. . . .\" More and more letters\nlike this are coming to me.\nSPOILED CHILDREN\nIn contrast with this case I wish\nI had space ind adequate words\nto describe a man 85 years old who\nused to play games with Mrs. Myers\nand me nearly every evening. I\nwish I might be half as easy to live\nwith if or when I reach that age.\nI just wonder what kind ot persons you and I will be when we\nare in our eighties or beyond. If\nwe should have to be cared for\nand linger long, long years, I wonder how Irritable or good natured\nwe will be; how morose or cheerful: how stubborn or cooperative.\nWill we be spoiled children during\nour second childhood? Yes, if we\nwere spoiled children during our\nfirst childhood, no doubt\u2014unless we\nmade improvement in the meanwhile.\nThere miy be a few people hird\nto manage in old age who had a\nchildhood of wholeiome, happy\nguidance ind discipline. But this\nnumber must be very imall, indeed.\nKnowing now that we have ugly\ntraits which make it hard for others\nto live with us, or minister to us\nwhen we are ill, let us struggle\nwith ourselves daily to Improve.\nYou are rtaring your child not\nonly to live well In the family, but\nto prepare to be a good wife or husband, father or mother, and good\ncitizen; you are also rearing this\nchild to grow old igreeibly and\ngncefully.\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ\u2014 My nine-year-old   boy bolts\n_-. _\t\nJackets Co to New Lengths\n\u2014m   A-\nAlice Marble Restores Health and\nKeeps Beauty by Following Rules\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Alice Marble,\nquean of Uncle Sam's tennii courti.\nwants an ice cream soda. Before\nevery match iht says: \"This time\nI'll really have my let cream loda\nif I wlni\" She usually wlni. But\nihe never gets the toda.\nHer coach, Eleanor Tennant. always layi, \"Now Pinky, you know\nyou'd rather have a rire beefsteak.\"\nAnd Pinky (Alloe to us) uyi, \"Y-\nyei,\" I would.\"\nMlu Marble hu found her way\nto tennii championships, restored\nhealth ind continued beauty by\nlistening to her coach.\n\"I never overeat,\" she explains. \"J\nchoose a lot of vegetables and drink\nlemon Juice in water\u2014not hot water.\"\n\"I practice the year round, play\ngolf for exercise and fun, and jump\nrope dally to keep my figure trim\nand to improve my breathing.\"\nShe listens to a teicher who it\ndetermined that ihe shall keep the\nsleek beiuty ihe began with. Her\n\u25a0kin U even better than lt used to\nbe.\nAlice never grips the racket and\nntvtr contracts htr muscles, but\nplayi an eaiy game with good\nrhythm and timing. Such a system\noften makes the difference, lhe says,\nbetween imitating men ahd holding\nyour own ai a woman.\nThe champion'! legi are Nearly\nperfect, with a grand Summer tan,\nand in free of hair. Her toenails,\nbright red, match finger nails and\nlipstick. She hai learned how to utt\nmakeup since ihe wai called down\nfor using too much during an Eng*\nlish match.'   '\nHer only rigid muscles are of the\nwaist and diaphragm, which ought\nto be the envy of every girdle-clid\nwoman.\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nJackets go to new lengths to give smsrtnets to iult\u00ab now being\nshown for early Autumn wear. The long line is molded to give a\n\u2022lim, snug effect that is flattering to meet figures, and of coune,\ndivine on the slender girl.\nThii suit it of finely ribbed inky bleck woolen, ind the tunic\njacket is fastened with sparkling jet buttons. The reven show original\ndetail. They are of white bengaline cut out In a leaf motif.\nThe breton sailro Is of black and white taffeta with while stitch*\ning to form a scalloped line. Gloves, shoes, bag ire of black suede.\nhis food and will finish a meal ln\neight minutes and run out to play.\nA.\u2014Say nothing about his ipeed\nof eating. Merely tell him he shall\nremain at the table for exactly\n20 minutes. With all this time on his\nhands, he will hardly find so much\nurge to eat rapidly.\nHousehold Fly Is\nDisease Carrier\nThe common housefly is notorious\nfor the part It plays in spreading\ndangerous diseases, such u typhoid,\nInfantile diarrhoea, tuberculosis,\ncholera, and dysentry. It is a men-\na* to health because it breeds in\nfilth and may pass directly to foodstuffs. Particles of decaying organic\nmatter) bacteria, or other living\norganisms cling to its hairy legi\nand body and iticky feet and mouth\nparts. It il commuted that one fly\nmay carry as many ai 1,000,000\ngermi, and that female houseflles\nmay become a great grandmother\nin 60 dayi, laying around 2700 eggs\nduring a lifetime of three months.\nHouseflles are particularly dangerous during warm weather from\nmid-Summer to Fall, when they are\nmost numerous. The most effective\nmethod of controlling them consists\nin eliminating or reducing their\nbreeding places by properly treating or disposing of manure and garbage. In the cities, garbage Is an\nImportant factor in fly production.\nControl measures to be fully effective should be organized on a community basis, because one neglected\ngarbage dump or manure heap may\nInfest a whole neighborhood. Collections of manure should be re-\ncHmiLfot\nJfouABwwaAm\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nTuna Fish and Corn\nBaked New Potatoes\nStuffed Green Pepper Salad\nFresh Sliced Peaches\nSalted Peanut Cookies\nHot or Iced Coffee\nTUNA AND CORN LOAF\nQuirtcr cup butter or thortening,\n4 tablespoons flour, .i teaspoon dry\nmustard, 1 tablespoon onion juice,\nsalt and pepper, two cups milk, two\negg yolks, 1 cup flated tuna, 1 can\ncan No. 2 coin, if, cup bu'.tered\ncrumbs, pimento, parsley.\nCover bottom of buttered casserole with buttered crumbs. Make\na sauce by melting butter; add\nflour, then milk, cook until smooth\nand thick, season with onion juice\nand ult and pepper, one pimento\ncut fine and one tablespoon chopped\nparsley. Add beaten egg yolks alter\nremoving mixture from heat.\nCombine tuna fish and corn and\nmix aauce thoroughly through them.\nSprlpkle with rest of crumbs and\nbike 30 to 40 minutei at 375 degrees\nF. If you like you may add the\nstiffly beiten whiles of eggs last\nbefore baking, folding them Inlo\nthe mixture. Corn cut from cob may\nbe used.\nCheeie-Stuffed Green Pepperi\nTwo or 3 green peppen, illced\nripe ollvei, one cream cheese, chopped pimento.\nWash and remove seeds from\npeppen, cutting slice from top of\neach. Stuff green peppers with the\ncream cheese which has been seasoned well with sliced ripe olives\nand a little chopped pimento for\ncolor.\nChill thoroughly. When ready to\nserve slice peppers and arrange on\nbeds of lettuce. Serve with French\ndressing to which a smallamount of\nchili sauce and a few drops of onion\njuice have been added.\nSALTED PEANUT COOKIES\nOne cup shortening, 2 cupt brown\nsugar, 2 eggs. 2 cups sifted flour,\n1 teaspoon sods, 1 teaspoon baking\npowder, 2 cupi fine oatmeal, 1 cup\ndry cereal, 1 cup peanuts, Vt teaspoon salt.\nCream shortening, cream in brown\naugar gradually, then beat In eggi\nOne at a time. Sift flour, soda, baking powder and salt together and\nadd to mixture, then add balance\nof ingredients, using crushed wheat\nor corn flakes, In the order given.\nPut imall mounts of dough  on\ncookie sheets, flatten lightly wi\"i\nfork and  bake  in 350 degrees\noven. Spanish peanuts, brown s_* j\nInd all, should be used whole.        '\n*\nmoved from city stables and disposed of at least twice weekly.\nIn rural sections, where practicable, the manure ihould be removed\ndaily and spread thinly on fields\nwhere the drying effect of sun\nand wind will prevent breeding. An\nalternate method consists ot taking\nadvantage of heat produced by fermentation when manure li placed In\ntightly packed piles. Tht heat produced by fermentation destroys all\nfly eggs, larvae, and pupae, except\nperhaps those close to ihe surface\nof the top layer The application\nwith a watering can or sprayer of a\nsolution of borax consisting of one\npound of borax to lix galloni of\nwater will destroy any ily stages\nln the top layer of the packed ma\nnure.\nArrow Lakes Group\nStages Big Carnival\nEDGEWOOD, B.C. \u2014 The Edge-\nwood, Needles, and Fauquier Red\nCrou Aiiociation held a carnival\nat Whatahan Lake. Mrs. Janet\nCoates had charge of the organization. There were games of various\nkinds, including ping pong, swimming racei, diving competitions, fortune telling, teas, ice cream and\nmany other attractions. A steady\nflow of visitors assisted In the railing of funds for the Red Cross.\nMn. Coates was assisted by a number of othen. M night there was a\ndance.\nSlocan Branch Plans\non Canning Fruit\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C \u2014The regular meeting of the Women'i Initltute of Slocan City wu held at the\nhome of Mrs. K. Popoff with Mn.\nJ. H. Pinchbeck, Vice-President,\npresiding. Mrs. H. C. Nye and W. E.\nGraham represented the Slocan City\nBranch of the Canadian Red Cross.\nIt wu decided that the Initltute\nwork in conjunction with the Red\nCrou ln canning fruiti and vegetablei. Mn. A Y7 Rae, Mn. F. Stor-\ngard, Mn. J. Marchl were appointed\nto work with memberi of the local\nRed Crou.\nA muilcal and social hour wu\nspent. Others present were Mn. T.\nMcNeish, Mrs. J. H. Pinchbeck, Mrs.\nK Popoff, Mrs. Margaret Terry,\nMn. E. Reynolds. Mn. W. E. Graham, Mrs. M. shannon and Mn.\nSwedenbourg.\nMcLENNAN REPRESENTS\nROTARIANS IN ANNUAL\nDRIVE OF RED CROSS\nJ. R. McLennan was mmed representative of the Nelson Rotary\nClub to a finance committee composed of members of Nelion organization! to aid the Red Crosi ln\niti annual drive, starting September 23. Mr. McLennan represented\nthe Rotariani list yeir.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD  BAY,  B.C. - Mri.\nBarnett, who visited Mr. and Mrs.\nHedstrom, hu returned to Turner\nValley, Altl.\nMri. Hilmes of Nelson ipent I\nweekend here.\nMrs. Heywood is a patient in, Trill\nTidanac Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Piete of Trail are\nguesti of Mrs. Plete's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Hedstrom.\nR. Bayllss left for Trail.\nMr. and Mri. C. Millar and ion\nFinlev, Mr. ind Mrs. H. Richardson\nand P. Legg motored to rCeston\nan<\" then to Camp Lister, -where\nthey visited Mrs. Millar's siiter,\nMrs. Jameson.\nMiss Betty Pilmer left for Winnipeg to tttend High School.\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Capi, tanu,\nand hats of various design worn by\nsoldiers from the Dftminloni art\nbeing copied by fashionable milliners. These new hats are called Dominion hats, are made ln almost\nevery shade of felt you can thin*\nof, are claimed to look equally well\non debutantes and older women and\ncoat about lis lid (J3.38).\nLondon Fosters\nDustbin Brigade\nLONDON, (CP)\u2014London bouts a\n\"Dustbin Brigade\" of 250 women\nwho have undertaken the task of\ncollecting waste food and bones\nfrom neighbors ln their respective\nstreets.\nThe \"salvage mothers\" u they\nhave been called by their neighbors,\nwere organized at the suggestion of\nCleansing Superintendent Eric Bell\nof the Borough of Walthamstow and\nthey receive no remuneration for\ntheir services.\nEa:h of the \"mothers\" was given\ntwo dustbins labelled \"waste food\nand bones.\" The bins were set up in\nconspicuous spots in front gardens\nso that neighbors can bring along\ntheir kitchen waste and bones. Duly\nthe bins are emptied.\nIt Is estimated that when the\nscheme ls working fully Walthamstow will collect enough waste food\nto feed 4000 pigs.\nHOW TO FIX UP\nA STEW THAT\nTASTES FLAT\nWHILE the stew is simmering on\nthe stove, tdd ibout a teaspoonful\nol H. P. Siuce ind stir it in thoroughly. By the time the stew il\ndone, the flavouring power of the\ntt P. Siuce will have enriched\neverything with a freth delicioui-\nnets. You'll have no trouble in\nmaking tasty stews If you uie H.P.\nAnd thli thick, fruity English\nsauce will help you with ill your\ncooking tnd serving of meils. Try\nit with meat leftovers, meat pie,\nbeef huh, minced steak, hiked\nbetas, fish, cheese and mtcaronl\ndishes. Miny i time a few dropt\nof 11. r. Sauce will make all tht\ndifference between a commonplace\ntood ud one that the family wUl\nenjoy with great relish.\nA\n0Se\\ \u00abMW\n*5$l\n?*\nORDER GRAPE-NUTS TODAY\nLOWEST PRICE\nIN HISTORY!\n\t\n Ill'\nMEN\nOur Scott McHals\nFall Shoes\nHaye just arrived, featuring heavy storm calf and\ngrained leathers. Drop in\nand see these new high-\ngrade styles.\n>. Andrew &. Co.\nLtaders in Footfashion\n00D CONDUCT\nADGES FOR CASF\nHTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP).-Good\niduct badges, as \"mark of high\nUnction,\" will be awarded to\nfilers under the rank of corporal,\npombadier, it was announced to-\nf by the National Defence De-\ntaent.\nase badge, a grey chevron, will\nI worn on the left forearm of\n(Ue dress and service dress jackets\n[ point uppermost. One badge is\nbe granted after two years' ser-\nK two after five years, three\nBr 12 years, four after 18 years,\ne after 23 years and six after 28\nlervicea counting towards the\nint of these badges Include: All\nniees in the Canadian Active Ser-\n[e Force; service of personnel\nStag in the Permanent Force\ng. 31, 1939; former Permanent\nree prior to Sept 1, 1939; service\nJill Majesty's naval, land or air\nsea during the first Great War\nween the outbreak and Aug. 31,\n1, and service in regular Perman-\nnaval, land or air forces other\nB those mentioned.\nI soldier shall forfeit his good\niduct badges, the announcement\n1, if discharge with a character\nI than \"good,\" on conviction by\nllvil power, on being sentenced\npenai servitude, or for giving\nie information.\nrederick Niven to\nMake Ethnological\nStudies in Alberta\nItr. and Mrs. Frederick Niven of\nBow Point are leaving for a va-\nion at Lake Louise, Emerald\nie ind the Blackfo.ot Indian Re-\nVe in .Alberta. At the Reserve\ni famous Canadian author will\nitinue some ethnological studies\ntt he has been making.\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe Home of Better Foodi\nQUALITY GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Delivery\n,JV CINNAMON\nH*A ROLLS\nARE REALLY GOOD\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nBale Now on\nHlady's Fashion Shoppe\nfc Biker St Phont 87.\nbotenay Valley Dairy\n1 QUART OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH CHILD\nPINT OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH ADULT\nHorswilFs\nCROCERIES\ni _ho beit service in town.\nPHONE 235\n\u25a0nnw.'iMs.\nEW FALL COATS\n\u25a0MMD MILLINERY\nfashion 'First Shop\nI Baker st       Nelson, B. C.\nRotary Musi Carry Torch In Posl-War\nAdjustment Declares Rotary District\nGovernor in Address lo Nelson Club\n\u2014NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. AUG. 28, 1940\u2014\nRecalls   Days   Played\nBaseball for\nMoyie\n\"Wherever there ii opportunity\nfor service there ls opportunity for\nRotary and in this time of war and\nin the ensuing period to come when\nthere will be an adjustment, you\nmust be the standard-bearers of\neverything the government requires.\" This was the keynote of\nan address by R. Vincent Borleske,\nDistrict Governor, to the Nelson\nRotary Club at a luncheon meeting\nat the Hume Tuesday. Mr. Borleske\nis Director of Athletics at Whitman\nCollege, Walla Walla, Wash.\nRotary had the greatest opportunity of any organization in the\nworld today, Mr. Borleske said, for\nin the club were the best business\nheads and resources of each community. And there was a bigger\nneed for Rotary now, he emphasized, because of Ms fundamental\nprinciples.\n\"Rotary is still young enough to\ndream and doesn't limit its dreams.\nIt has ideals'of service to its fellow-men and other nations,\" the\nGovernor said.\nPATTERN  FOR 8ERVICE\nRotary developed fellowship and\nIn turn friendship, which was the\ngreatest thing in the world. After\nPaul Harris, a lawyer, founded the\norganization Rotary became a service club early in its life, and set\nln motion other service clubs patterned after Rotary\u2014a world movement\n\"Rotary demands you give service. Rotary wants as many roots\nin the community lite as possible.\nThat's why every profession is represented in the club. And your job\nis to continue to extend its influence,\" Mr. Borleske saij as he explained how the organization gradually spread out to include cities\nof 1000 population.\n\"In the adjustment to come you\nmust create a continuing environment in which Rotary is to work.\n\"It's the natural instinct of man\nto grab what he can, and that's the\nreason for the work of Hitler, who\nwas not educated to what was right.\nVINCENT  BORLESKE\nAmong the first things that Hitler\nand Stalin did when they essumed\npower was to kick out Rotary, because they realized its potential\npower.\"\nOLD WORK AND NEW\nMr. Borleske said in his duties\nat Whitman College he naturally\ncame in contact with young people\nfacing the future, and in his present\nwork as Governor of No. 101 Rotary\nDistrict, he wished to tie it up with\nhis old work. He had just been up\nto Alaska\u2014\"a new country,\" on\nhte first leg of his visits to 84 Clubs\nin the district.\n\"When I used to play ball In\nNelson and Trail with Moyie 30, 31,\n32, years ago, I tried to form a\npermanent memory of each town I\nvisited. There were two germ that\nstood out in my mind. One was\nNelson, still the beautiful gem it\nwas when I first saw lt nestling in\nthe green hills; and the other was\nWallace.'' .\nTuesday night he met the directors and chairman of the various\nNelson Rotary committees at the\nhome of the President,' H. W. Robertson.\nA Londoner Sees Nelson\nBy LILLIAN A. H. DILL \u2022\nOf Nelson and the Kootenay as seen through the eyei of an exchange teacher from London to Winnipeg, Man., Miss Sophie Norvick\nfor the past three weeks the guest of Miss Vera B. Eidt gives us her\nobservations Miss Norvick is a widely travelled, Interesting young\nwoman whose experiences as an exchange teacher in foreign lands,\nmakes her competent to express an opinion about our own\nWith refreshing charm in delic-.-., \u2014 ,\u2014\nious brogue whose cadences echo\nthe rugged speech of Welsh ancestry and the more dulcet tones of\nEnglish associates, with here and\nthere e word of fluent French, Miss\nNorvick tells us:\n\"Through membership in the\nSorobtimist Club I chose Nelson for\nmy holiday, because I felt that I\nwould not be coming to an unknown\nplace where there would be no one\nto welcome me, and I have not\nbeen mistaken. I have never met\nsuch whole-hearted charm and\nfriendliness as has been shown ,j\nme by the people of Nelson. The\ncity and its environs ranks in\nbeauty with the lovely fjords of\nNorway, the fields of sunny Franoe,\nthe mountains of Switierland, and\nmy own beloved country.\nANOTHER PICTURE FOR\nMEMORY'S ALBUM\n\"From the North Shore,, where 1\nhave been staying, this lovely city\nnestling at the foot of the kindly\nmountains\u2014by day a green jewel\nenhanced by the blue and shimmering lake; and by night a fairyland\nof sparkling reflections\u2014has given\nme one more picture for my album\nof memories of'beautiful places\n\"During my stay here, I have visited as many as possible of the\nlocal industries and thoroughly enjoyed my trips to them all. Particularly interesting were the Chamber\nof Mines and the gold mines themselves at Sheep Creek; the sawmill\nat Castlegar; tne local match block\nfactory at Nelson; the Doukhobor\nfarm settlement at Brilliant; the\ngreat industrial centre at Trail; and\n\"MISS SOPHIE NORVICK\nthe series of power plants along\nthe River Kootenay.\n\"I am amazed at the speed of development of this new country and\nI have been especially struck by\nthe justifiable civic pride of the\npeople of Nelson, culminating in the\nvery fine Civic Centre.\"\nMiss Norvick. who goes this weekend to Banff and Jasper before taking up her duties In Winnipeg,\nleaves this wish for our prosperity:\n\"I hope that peace and prosperity\nwill always smile on you\u2014that you\ngrow from strength to strength,\nnever losing that wealth of charm\nand beauty.'\nIronside Testifies\nat Strange Trial\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)\u2014Field\nMarshal Sir Edmund Ironside testified today at the strange court\nmartial of a man who wished to\ngo to fight.\nThe case was that ot Major A. D.\nWintle. accused of feigning poor\neyesight and threatening Air Commodore A. R. Boyle, director of\nintelligence at the Air Ministry,\nlast Winter.\nThe major denied threatening the\ncommodore and said he pleaded bad\neyesight so that he could get out\not the British service and go to\nFrance \"and fight\"\nSir Edmund Ironside  said  that\nSAFEWAY\nWEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nCaches v\u00b0- \\ F\"M*n\u00ab $1.15\n,ornco,den Bamam Doz. 15c\nampbell'i Vegetable Soup. Tin      >     .\u2014\n(wedded Whot. Pkt \"1   l\\r\ntundry Starch. Pkt     I   I   I1\npit. Prairie Maid, tin   \u25a0*\u25a0 V\/\n>RK LOIN CHOP: Lb  25c\nIUMP ROAST VEAL: Lb.   19c\nHOULDER VEAL STEAK: 2 lbs. 35c\nOLOGNA: Lb.     15c\n\u25a0APtWAY   ftTORES LIMITED\nWintle was disappointed when given charge of a cavalry depot at\nhome and that his \"chief anxiety\nappeared to be to get into the firing line.\"\n\"To put it plainly he became to\nme a little bit of a nuisance like\nmany people with guts who wish to\ngo and fight,\" he added.\nIt took the court only 15 minutes\nto acquit Major Wintle of feigning\ndefective vision, it announced that\na sentence on the second charge of\nassaulting Air Commodore Boyle-\nwould be promulgated \"in the due\ncourse.\"\nWintle has been confined to the\nTower of London for 69 days ia\nmilitary custody.\nFood and Water\nLimit in Nazi Camp\nGENEVA, Aug. 27 <AP_-\"Short\non food and water but long on entertainment\" is the description\nby an American or a German internment camp where he was held\nfor three months.\nThe former prisoner is Alfred R\nRaymond of Chicago one of the organizers of the American Volunteer\nAmbulance Corps which served\nwith the Trench army.\nRaymond and three comrades-\nMurray Shipley of Cincinnati; Louis\nWchrle of Ft. Wayne, Ind., and\nMarcus Clark of Hollywood, Cal.,\nwere released from the camp near\nDresden last Friday and reached\nGeneva yesterday. They had been\nprisoners since they were captured at Monteomet, in N&rthirn\nFrance, last May 17.\n\"Our camp which was divided\ninto three parts, contained 18,000\nFrench, Polish and Belgian officers\nand men,\" Raymond said.\n\"Daily rations were a fifth of a\nloaf of bread, small rations of soup,\none vegetable and sometimes coffee. That wasn't enough for active\nmen. but I suppose the Germans\nwere doinc the best they could.\n\"We had lectures by French officers who in civil life were experts in their own fields\u2014ranging\nfrom business management to architecture.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mn. Glenn Huxtable,\n711 Nelson Avenue, Fairview, have\nea luest Mr. Huxtable'i sister, Miss\nJessie Huxtable of Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Beattie\nand children Pauline, Mollie and\nPaul, ol Trail viiited town.\n\u2022 Mr. Miller ol Kailo ipent'yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mri. Clifford Steeper\nof Seattle are viiiting the former's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walker at\nBalfour.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shell and\neon Mack, and Mr. McKinnon, of\nCranbrook, were guests of Mrs.\nShell's brother-in-law and lister,\nMr. and Mn. A. C. Fournier, Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 J. M. Budd, Great Northern\ntrain muter, Spokane, visited Nelaon yeiterday.\n\u2022 Mn. David Lumiden returned\nyeiterday to Salmo after being in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nwith a burned hand.\n\u2022 Bert South wai in town from\nKailo yesterday.\n\u2022 lit. and- Mrs. Ronald Greyson\nof Bonnington ihopped in town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Grace Leonard of Cranbrook who has been at the Coast,\nil in the city for the funeral of the\nlate Mrs. Duncan McLean.\n\u2022 Maurice Major of Procter\nspent yesterday In town.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. F. Chapman of South\nSlocan visited Nelson Monday.\n\u2022 George Reed, son of Mr. and\nMn. Herbert Reed, Mill Street, has\nleft for Toronto, where he attends\nuniversity.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. A. M. Robinson\nof Tacoma, Wash., are guests of\nMrs. Dacy Petty, Petty Apartments.\n\u2022 Miss Pat Campbell who formerly taught at Nelson High School,\nleft Tuesday for Vancouver,\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Goucher, 416 Park\nStreet, is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital with an injured foot.\n\u2022 Mrs., Duff Matthew - and son\nRobert, who visited*the former's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. W. M. Walker, Stanley Street,\nleft yesterday for their home in\nVancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. R. Moreberg of\nSheep Creek visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 .Mrs. Ida Gray of Salmo shopped in Nelson.\n\u2022 George Porteous of Queen's\nBay spent Monday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mra. W. A. Talbot of\nGrand Forki are city visiton.\n\u2022 Leilie Fogle of sheep Creek\nshopped in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. Sage and\ndiughter v.ere in the city from\nSheep Creek.\n\u2022 Rev. Earl E. Llndgren and Mri.\nLlndgren and children, Vancouver\nStreet, left via Great Northern yeiterday for Highland, near Seattle,\nwhere Mr. Lindgren haa been appointed.\n\u2022 Misi Kay Niibet who has been\nholidaying at Mirror Lake, with her\nparenti, Judge and Mn. W. A. Nisbet returned last night.\na Mn. A. W. Stubbs, Nelson\nAvenue, Fairview, is visiting her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Herbert Grutchfield, Salmo.\ne Mrs. P. Morin, who has been\nvisiting at the Coast, was in the\ncity en route to her home at Sheep\nCreek.\n\u2022 C. A. Anderson was in town\nfrom Salmo yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. B. McCreight,\n405 Second Street, Fairview, had\nas guests Mr. McCreight's nephew,\nRev. A. C. Huston, principal of the\nRound Lake Indian residential\nSchool at Stockholme, Sask.\n\u2022 Miss A. Coulter, assistant post\nmaster of Salmo, visited Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 E. F. Swanson, Great Northern\nauditor, Spokane, is a city visitor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Denison,\nCarbonate Street, are visiting their\nson-in-law and daughter, in Kimberley, Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Blaine,\nand relatives in Cranbrook.\n\u2022 Mrs. Harry Besner of Sheep\nCreek spent yesterday in town.\ne Ted and Jack Burns of Ainsworth were city visitors yesterday.\ne Alex Campbell of Creston\nshopped in town yesterday.\ne Dr. and Mrs. Francis of New\nDenver visited town.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. P. Garret was in town\ntrom Sheep Creek yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. Sister Mary Eileen of\nFernie is visiting at St. Joseph's\nAcademy, also her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Philip Rahal, Josephine Street.\nShe has been attending Summer\nschool at Holy Name College in\nSeattle.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott and\ndaughter Shirley ol Pincher Creek,\nAlta., who visited her brother-in-\nlaw, and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil\nRamsden leaves today lor her home.\ne Mrs. Sutherland of Vallican\nwas in town yesterday and later\nleft for the Coast.\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Hutchinson\nof Winnipeg are spending a few\ndays with Mrs. Hutchinson's brother-in-law and sister, Mr* and Mrs.\nL. Maddin, 412 Mill Street. Mrs.\nHutchinson is Worthy Grand Matron\nof the Manitoba Order of the Eastern Star and is en route to San\nFrancisco for the triennial assembly\nof the Qeneral Grand Chapter.\nCosts Sixpence\nto Watch Raid\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP) - It\ncosts sixpence (about 11 cents) to\nwatch an air raid in Wembley,\nlite of one of Britain's biggest\nfootball stadiums.\nAir raid precautions wardens\nurge spectaton to take cover\nwhen a warning sounds and then\ntake up a sixpence collection\nfrom those who prefer to watch.\nThe money goes to buy Spitfire fighting planes.\nBritons also are turning German raids to account in these\nways:\nNazi planes which have been\nshot down are placed on exhibition to raise defence funds.\nWomen are using the hours they\nspend in air raid shelters to knit\n\"comforts\" for service men.\nIn Chatham, air raid wardens\nare growing Winter cabbage\natop their lookout post in an\nearthworks barricade.\nMISS ). LEAHY\nOF SHEEP CREEK\nGOES TO CONVENT\nMiss Jeannette Leahy, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leahy of\nSheep Creek, Tuesday received the\nhabit of the Sisters of St. Joseph at\na Reception in the Sacred Heart\nConvent, Edmonton. She was the\nsecond member of her family to\nenter the convent. Mother Mary\nRose, Superior at Wetaskiwin, Alta.,\nis a sister.\nMiss Leahy spent her early life\nin Nelson, later moving to Salmo.\nand then to Sheep Creek with her\nparents. She entered the novitiate\nat Edmonton last Winter.\nAIRMAN RECEIVES\nSECOND HONOR D.S.O.\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CD\u2014Acting\nSqdn.-Ldr. Michael Crossley, who\nalready held the Distinguished Flying Cross, was awarded the Distinguished Service Order today.\nCrossley was credited with having\nshot down 18 to 23 German planes\nin action at Dunkerque and St. Valery, France, twice helped defend\nPortsmouth and was said to have\nhad part in destroying two Nazi\ndive-bomben over Croydon Airdrome near London.\nDuke of Bedford Dies\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP). - The\nDuke Of Bedford, 82. died today at\nWoburn Abbey. He served in the\nEgyptian campaign of 188! and in\nthe Fint Great War. He wai aide-\nde-camp to King Edward VII and\nGeorge V. He wes also one of England's four richest dukes.\nThe Duchess of Bedford, a noted\nlong distance flier, disappeared in\nher plane off Ihe British coast in\n1937 and was given up for lost\nBishop Expelled\nFrom North France\nLYONS, France, Aug. 27 (AP)\n\u2014Memlgnor Helntx, Bishop of\nMeta, In Northern Frince, wis\nexpelled from the city on two\nhoun' notice by Germin authorities and arrived today In the unoccupied xone ef Frince.\nThe reaion for hli expulilon\nwai not disclosed.\nCASUALTIES\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)- Three\nfatal casualties in the Canadian active Service Force overseas were\nreported today in a casualty list\nissued by the Defence Department.\nPrivates George Edward Dowell\nof London, Ont., and Wesley McAllister of St. Thomas, Ont., were\nreported killed. Private James Gor-\nrie of Nanaimo, B. C, was reported\nas dead.\nPrivate Elmer James Lee of Eston\nSask.,  is   dangerously   wounded\nLt-.Col. W. G. Colquhoun of Winnipeg and three others are listed as\nseriously ill.\nThis was the 14th list issued by\nthe Government. The total dead and\nmissing since the C.A.S.F. went\nOverseas is now 52.\nThe latest list of casualties with\nregimental number and next of kin\n(not dates reported) includes:\nKILHD\nInfantry:\nPte. George Edward Dowell, Mrs\nMary Gwendolyn Dowell (wife)\nLondon, Ont.\nPte. Wesley McAsslister. Mr6. Alice   Pickles   Pound   (motheV)   St.\nThomas, Ont.\nDEAD\nBritish Columbia Regiment:\nPte. James Gorrle, K18024. Capt.\nDavid Frank Gorrie  (father)  care\nJudge Barker, Nanaimo, B. C.\nDANGEROUSLY WOUNDED\nInfantry:\nPte. Elmer James Lee, A3247, Mrs,\nRuth  May  Watson   (mother)   Box\n115, Eston, Sask.\nSERIOUSLY ILL\nRoyal Canadian Engineers:\nSapper    William    Parker    Ross,\nM5395,   Mrs.   Marie   Mildred   Ross\n(wife) 1510, 3rd St. S. E., Calgary,\nAlta.\nInfintry:\nLieut.-Col.\" William Gourlay Colquhoun, Mrs. Jean Isobel Colquhoun\n(wife) Bank of Montreal, 9 Waterloo Place, London, W. W. 8, England.\nRoyil Canadian Army\nMedical Corpi:\nCorporal John William Sharley,\nH-33037, Mrs. Frances Mary Sharley\n(wife) Suite 20, Afton Block, Ellice\nAvenue, Winnipeg, Man.\n'R.A.F. Are Supermen'\nTORONTO, Aug. 27 (OP) \u2014 Rt.\nHon. R. B. Bennett, former Prime\nMinister of Canada, wrote in a letter received by a Toronto resident\ntoday that members of the Royal\nAir Force \"are not airmen but\nsupermen.\"\nHis letter written Aug. 13 jeads in\nparts as follows:\n\"It is quite clear that every ounce\nof energy of the Empire will be\nnecessary before the conflict is\nended. We are not suffering from\nlack of food, Despite the raids,\npeople remain calm, determined\nInd courageous.\n\"The superiority of the British\nairmen over the Germans was made\napparent during' the last few diys.\nThe truth is that these ire not airmen but supermen, ar I it is a\nmatter of greit pride and satisfaction that there is a large number of\nCanadlani In th* British Air Force.\"\nlondon, Front Line Cily,Jlakes\nIts Life on Five-Layer Defence\nPailern Which Features Offensive\nBy ROBERT E. BUNNELLE\nAssociated Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (AP).-Thli\nfront line city \u2014 an Empire's nerve\ncentre only 20 minutes flight from\nthe nearest German air bases in\nFrance \u2014 is staking its life on a\nfive-year defence pattern.\nThose defences are:\n\"Nighthawk\" bomber patrols\nwhich attack German bases and\nmilitary objectives \u2014 an \"offence-\ndefence.\"\nInterceptor planes working with\nobserver posts to pounce on the\nraiders before they get here.\nAnti-aircraft and searchlight\ncrews to harass them when they\narrive.\n\"Our fat friends\" \u2014 high-flying\nballoons trailing lengths of steel\ncable, as well as other snares.\nSwift Hurricane and Spitfire\nfighter planes.\nThe underlying principle Is that\na good offensive is the best defence.\nThe job of the Royal, Air Force\nbomber \u2014 its crew of highly-trained\npersonnel winging far over Germany and into Italy \u2014 is to freeze\nor destroy the enemy at his bases,\nkeep him busy at home to sap his\noffensive strength.\nWhen observers catch the sound\nof approaching enemy planes they\nnotify interceptor planes and inner\ndefences. The interceptors whirl\naloft, the \"inners\" get ready.\nThese observer posts and interceptor bases are scattered up and\ndown the Channel coast to the East,\nthe West coast and throughout rural\nEngland.\nSearchlights and anti-aircraft batteries ring' London so that when\nboth go into action aa lait night,\nbeams and gun flashes resemble a\nhuge wide-spaced picket fence. Inside this big ring are nests of other\nguna and searchlights.\nThen guns and lights work together io that when light beimi\nconverge on a raider the gum\nautomatically get hli range and\nlet go. Eyewitnesses saw a bit of\nthli lait night \u2014 the big beams\npicking out their target and shells\nscreaming aloft up a silvery path\nto itrike a plane whoie crew took\nto parachutei.\nThe fourth defence layer ii the\nballoon barrage and secret airplane\ntraps \u2014 both to protect objectives\nand catch unwary low fliers.\n\"Hundreds' of these \"floating elephant\" balloons encircle London,\nprotecting particularly the central\narea, and they have won a pat on\ntheir broad backs from military\nexperts.\nThis stockade of balloons swings\naloft on Ihe end of 10,000 to 25,000\nfeet of heavy cable, raised or lowered by mobile ground crews. German flien interviewed at their\nhome bases, have admitted how\nmurderous these \"sausages\" can be.\nThen there are finally the fast\npursuit planes stationed at scores\nof concealed airfields. They operate\nin close coordination with the antiaircraft and searchlight units under\na plan which divides the skies like\na checkerboard, worked out square\nby square.\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666\nROSSLAND, B. C, Aug. 7-Mr.\nand Mrs. Wesley McKenzie and\ndaughter Donna, have left for a\nholiday at Banff and Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs, James Smith, accompanied by Miss Margaret Smith,\nhave returned from Vancouver.\nMiss Dallas Smith left Saturday\nfor Vancouver, where she will spend\nthe next two weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. Bangor Jones and\nfamily were Robson visitors on the\nweekend.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Marions and\nfamily have returned from Christina Lake, where they apent a few\nweeks holiday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Thompson and\nfamily of Trail are spending the\nweek with Mr. and Mn. James\nThompson of Coronation Heights.\nThomas Knight left on Saturday\nfor Vancouver.\nVisiting Rossland on the weekend\nwas Mrs. Swartz of Trail.\nMrs. James Shellard entertained\nrecently at a miscellaneous shower\nin honor of Miss Honora Freeney,\nwhose marriage takes place Thursday. Games and contests were\nplayed during the evening, the prize\nwinners being Mrs. Harry Smith, Sr\u201e\nMiss Madeline L'EcIuse, Mrs. Harry\nSmith. Jr.. and Mrs. A. Santori. The\ngifts were presented to the guest\nof honor in an attractively decorated box, whose color scheme of\nI pink and white was repeated in the\nfrilled costume of the dainty doll\nwhich was placed on  top. Acting\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C. - Mrs. Perley\nPutnam and Mra. Robert Crawfurd\nwere Joint hostesses at the former's\nhome Sunday at a kitchen shower,\nhonoring Mrs. Jake Fritz, nee Olive\nHipweU. The shower.was on Ihe\ntreasure hunt pattern, the contents\nof mlnisture balloons revelling the\nlocation of the various gifts. The\nhouse  decoration waa  in  militiry\nfashion   and   the   same   idea   was\nfollowed in the serving of lunch.\nMiss Hughena McCreath, whose\nmarriage takes place shortly, was\nhonored Friday when Mrs. J. Johnston and Miss K. Messinger were\njoint hostesses at the former's home\nit \u2022 miicellaneous shower. Tn \u25a0\nevening wis apent it gimes and\ncontests.\n\u25a0I serviteurs were Mrs. George Fit-\nzer, Mrs. F. Thompson, Miss Katie\nThompson and Miss Cleo Nyman.\nThose present included Mrs. M. McCallum, Mrs. Harry Smith, Sr., Mn.\nH. Swedeborg, Mra. Thederahn, Mrs,\nG. Fitzer, Mrs. Donnelly, Mn. F.\nParker, Mrs. A. J. Vetere, Mrs.\nHarry Smith, Jr., Mrs. A. Santori,\nMrs. N. Martello, Mrs. D. Rossi,\nMra. F. Thompson, Mn. John Vetere,\nMrs. J. Besso, Mrs. Kay, Mn. P.\nCorrado, Mrs. H. Douglas, Miss\nEda Vetere, Miis Florence Corrado,\nMiss Madeline L'EcIuse, Miss Cleo\nNyman, Miss Clara Simmons, Miss\nKatie Thompson, Miss Delphine\nVetere and fearl and Bonnie\nDonnelly.\nMiss Lillian Buick Is expected\nto return Wednesday from Christina Lake, where she hai been vacationing for two weeks.\nMajor A. C. Sutton left on Monday to report at Military Headquarters in Ottawa.\nRelatives from England arrived\ntoday to be the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Harold Bailey of Coronation\nHeights.\nA group of friends paid a surprise visit to the home of Mrs. Fred\nMazurchyk, the former Miss Jean\nEwasuik, and honored her with a\ncup and saucer shower. Those pres-\nI ent were Miss Irene Besso, Miss\nEdo Vetere. Miss Madeline L'EcIuse,\nMiss Delphine Vetere. Miss Flor-\nnce Corrado, Mrs. Leslie Neil and\nMrs. Albert L'EcIuse.\nRev.). Cheevers at\nFuneral of Brother\nin Brantford, Ont.\nRev. John Cheevere, Editor of\nThe Prospector, and member of thc\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate staff,\nis at Brantford, Ont., where Monday\nhe attended the funeral of his\nbrother Sergeant-Instructor Thomas\nFrancis Cheevers.\nSergeant Cheevers died last week\nin the Royal Military Hcspital, Toronto, from internal injuries sustained in a motor accident August 4.\nFernie C. Y. O. to Be\nHost to Kimberley\nLabor Day Weekend\nFernie Catholic Youth Organization members will entertain the\nKimberley C. Y. O. on the Labor\nDay weekend. Softball and tennis\ntournaments, a corn roast and dance\nare planned for the .two days.\nMichael Ross is in charge of entertainment, and Miss Louise Pul-\nlone and Miss Colleen Hughes tbe\nbilleting.\n33,923 at Opening\nof Coast Exhibition\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 27 (CP) -\nArmed with raincoats and umbrellas a crowd of 33,923 persons, young\nand old, flocked through the turnstiles for a glimpse of exhibits and\nmidway attractions on the opening\nday of the Canada Pacific Exhibition here yesterday. Attendance on\nthe opening day last year was 50,-\n691.\nC.A.S.F. Commander\nIs Seriously III\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)- Lt.-\nCol. W G. Colquhoun of Winnipeg\nis reported seriously ill In England.\nin a casualty list issued today by\nthe defence department\nHis promotion to Brigadier to\ncommand the 7th Infantry Brigade\nof the third division was announced\nSaturday.\nLt.-Col. Colquhoun went oveneai\nwith the first division as Officer\ncommanding the Princess Pats light\ninfantry. He was with the same regiment during the last war when he\nwon the M. C, and was mentioned\nin despatches.\nHe was taken prisoner of war in\n1915. In 1937 he was appointed to\ncommand the Princess Pats which\npost he held continuously since\nthen.\nHis wife, Mrs. Jean Isobel Colquhoun is living in England.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014   PAGE \/IVt\nmnMfi\u00bbM'H*M'i _\u25a0\u2666>\u2666.\nRINGLESS\n35c\n. New Fall colon In Celanese\nFlexible Top Stockings.\nGood for School or morning\nwear. Sizes 8Vj to 10V4.\nGorman 7i_\nPhone 200\n'unt\nBaker St.\n' _ ' _it   '   '_'._!  ' _:!\u25a0_,'  T _ J !  T J 1m_\nFormer U.S. Diplomat\nand Russian Girl\nto Stand Trial\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP).-Tyler\nKent, former clerk at the United .\nStates Embassy here, and Anna\nWolkoff, daughter of a former Russian admiral, were committed for\ntrial today at the conclusion of a\nhearing on charges of violating the\nOfficial Secrets Act.\nKent is 29 years old and was born\nat Newchwang, Manchuria, of American parents. His father, A H. P,\nKent, is dead. His mother lives in\nthe United States.\nDEATHS\nVICTORIA - Lieut. Col. Jamea\nAlexander Murray, 61. Until his\nretirement a few months ago he\nhad been District Medical Officer\nfor M. D. No. 11. From 1831 to 1936\nLieut. Col. Murray was Medical\nOfficer for the Calgary Military\nDistrict.\nHe was born at River John, Pic-\ntou County, Ont.. and served Overseas in the Fint Great War with the\nCanadian Army Medical Corps.\nWATCH FOR THI!\nOVERWAITEA\nCIRCULAR\nFor Thii Weekend\nA REAL BUY\n6 CU. FT. G. E.\nREFRIGERATOR\n^209.00\nNelson Electric Co.\nS74 Baker St.\nt----**-*****\nPhone 2M\nThe\nButcherteria\nBetter Meats for Less\nPHONE 527 FREE DELIVERY\nFOR FALL\nSMART BLACK AND\nWHITE SHEERS\nSizes 14 to 20\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nPh. 1047    Opp. Capitol Theatre\nWednesday Morning Special\nCORNED BEEF: IQ\nBRADLEY'S\nLb\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONE 831    832\nBE__i_____-r\u00abaH_\u00ab_ff__\u00ab_i___i\nWATCH REPAIR\nli \u25a0 Job for experti. Our work\nassurei  your  satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Baker St.\nBE\nShowers Fall After'\nCloudy Day, Nelson\nHeavy showers follcrwed a day of\ncloudy, threatening weather in Nelson and vicinity Tuesday evening.\nThe rainfall began just after 5:00\np.m. and continued, intermittently,\nthroughout the evening.\nThe mercury ranged between a\nminimum temperature of 58 degrees,\nand a maximum of 80 during the 24\nhours ending at 5:00 p.m. '\nCatholic Young People\nPlan  Retreat,  Nelson\nTentative plans for a Catholic\niToung Peoples retreat here are being laid by the Nelson Catholic\nYouth Organizations, Young people\nof Ihe Nelson parish would attend.\nNo definite date for the retreat\nhas been set, but it ii proposed to\nhold it in the second week of\nSeptember.\nDokkie Ceremonial at\nSalmo Is Called Off\nProposed district Dokkie ceremonial at Salmo Saturday has been\npostponed because of war conditions. No plans to replace the ceremonial have been laid as yet.\nDokkies from Spokane. Rossland,\nTrail, Salmo and Nelson were to\nhave attended the event.\n- \"^'MODERN\n\"'   MArfJ\nPHONE 1009 omm\nPRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY ONLY AUCUST 28\nNABOB COFFEE.... Lb. 51c\nLIMIT 1 LB.\nAPPLES:\n9 Ibi\t\nGRAPEFRUIT:\n4 for \t\n25c\n18c\nORANCES:\n2 dox. ...\nLETTUCE:\n2 headi ..\n55c\n15c\nBANTAM CORN... Doz. 18c\nQUICK TAPIOCA:\nPkr\t\nMUFFETS:\nPkt\t\n10c\nUc\nPORK AND BEANS\n16 ox. fin \t\nSOAP: Fels Naptha,\nbar\t\n8c\nTht\nNABOB TEA Lb. 58c\nLIMIT 1 LB.\nQUALITY MEATS\nSHOULDER VEAL STEAKS:  Lb  IS,*\nLEAN MINCED BEEF: Lb  I ..,*\nDEL|CATIZED STEAKS. \"No Waist\", Ib  28c\nFRESH PORK TENDERLOIN: Lb  2S<*\nLITTLE PIC SAUSACE: Lb  20*\nA full line of Cooked Meats always on Hand\n_____\n __,\t\ni ilftf'fllilif'ntmt -*\u00aba___._________-_i_,_.__,\niiiir__i__n_ifi__l\nm_____m__k\n_________________________\u2022!\n ii.\u00abWip|ippi..i||i|l|ii\nip\u00ab\u00abw\u00ab\/JI\"\nWf^irs*^!!?\u2122\n\u25a0\n\u2022tfw**^;-\n9f>||^!MPf.ll.^fA>*! ;ij.i|i,l\u00ab^|P_ppiip!\nuuawp|_yj|\nPAGE SIX\nJfetam latlij Jfatua'\u25a0\u25a0.\nEstablished April 22. lm,\nBritish Columbia's,Mott Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n268 Baker Street Nelion British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   Of CIRCULATIONS.\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1940.\nHITLER'S ADVENTURE IMPOSSIBLE\nThere exists in Britain an association or organization\n. calling itself the Imperial .Policy Group, which for some\nyears has had its representatives studying foreign opinion,\nin all strata of society in European countries. Its studies\nwere communicated to British leaders. In its latest \"Memorandum of Information on Foreign Affairs and the World\nCrisis,\" Memorandum No. 20, it discloses some of the reports it had made on France, which showed that there was\nsuch division'in France that it was unlikely it would remain\na combatant long, if war should be declared.\nIn spite of its established aim, however,\" of seeking to\nhave correct information, and of avoiding all self-deception,\nThe Imperial Policy Group entertains no doubt of Germany's coming defeat. In Memorandum No. 20, the one\n. issued in July, it observes, regarding Germany:\n\"The Germans are, not unnaturally, somewhat elated\nby their successes, which have followed swiftly one upon\nanother in recent years. We venture, however, to recall\nthe concluding paragraph of our last issue:\n\" 'Those who regard the British Isles as the last outpost of the Continent are wrong. It is, of course, nothing\nof the sort. These islands do not represent the geographical and political extremity of Europe; they are not the\nlast corner of a continent in which the remnants of a well-\nnigh shattered European civilization now repose. They are\nrather the first line of defence of a great world system,\nmade up of an Imperial Commonwealth, and the freedom-\nloving countries of the new world.\n\" 'He who attempts to invade these shores dare not,\nand must not, regard his expedition as one rounding off a\nseries of European conquests, but rather as the beginning\nof a great and terrible adventure which offers not the\nslightest prospect of final success, against an Imperial\nsystem, and great continents possessed of illimitable man\npower and resources. They, command the oceans and\nspirited peoples who do not know defeat, and if necesary\nwill blockade the whole continent of Europe so that Germany and her allies would perish in their very, triumphs.\nMilitary success on the Continent is one thing; sometimes\nin the past we have failed to prevent it. Conquest of the\nworld is another; no one has yet achieved it.'\n\"If Hitler goes plunging from one dangerous adventure to another, leading his forces ever further from home\nand ever deeper into hostile countries and perhaps continents, where the' love of liberty has deep roots and finds\nvigorous expression he, like Napoleon, may find himself\nanxiously asking himself day by day what his own capital\nis thinking. A military campaign to conquer the world\nmust involve Germany in hostilities of unpredictable length\nduring which the Nazi leader will be obliged to neglect the\nhome front, and lavish ever more attention upon the creation of huge military forces.\n\"As weeks drag themselves into months, and then into\nyears, the enthusiasm of his peoples may flag, and the\nresentful foreign populations which his troops have to hold\ndown become ever more revengeful. Rivalries at home and\nenmities abroad will plague him. His main centres of production and channels of communication will be persistently\nharassed from the air. Whatever foreign lands he conquers,\nso long as Britain commands a single aircraft, each morning he will receive a report about some new devastation\nwithin the borders of the Reich. No amount of glory far\nfrom home will console the civilian population of Germany,\nwhich must inevitably suffer.\n\"With the transport facilities of Europe devoted to\nmilitary purposes, and with the oceans commanded by the\nfleets of Britain, shortage of raw materials at least in certain parts of Europe may become acute. Peoples desperate\nand hungry, torn from their liberties and under the oppressor's yoke, may well perform feats of revolt which we\nnow regard as unthinkable.\n\"Even though these Islands of Britain be overcome,\nit is difficult to know how Herr Hitler could bring the war\nto an end, and consolidate his gains. If his forces venture\ninto Africa or Asia, he will find himself confronted with\nnew and terrible problems which will defy solution. While\nwith his forces far from home he may find that even the\nmost carefully calculated strategy has flaws from which\nan enemy commanding the great communications can\nsnatch victory. The mastery of Europe is a hollow sham,\nunless that continent is in friendly relations with the rest\nof the world. A conquest of Europe alone then can bring\nno permanent gain to the victor. The conquest of the world\non the other hand, is impossible.\"\n\u2014NIU80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. I. -.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. AUO. \u00bb. U*\u00bb-\n\"Yei, he'i digging tor victory, all right. That girl's the little boy's\nsister.\"-Humorlst.\nOn, Jmha QJjl\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1940\nDEVIL'S ADVOCATES\nReports Newsweek, the Dayton, Ohio, weekly:\n\"Denouncing Democrats, Republicans, Jews, Negroes,\nand newspaper reporters and praising Fritz Kuhn, Adolf\nHitler and Charles A. Lindbergh, several hundred members\nof the New Jersey Realm of the Klu Klux Klan met with\nabout 700 members of the German-American Bund at the\nlatter's Camp Nordland, near Andover, N.J., Sunday, for\nan alKday 'Americanism' rally.\"\nIt is an inspiring thought, the mental picture of the\nKlan and the Bun,d joining hands to build Americanism.\nA somewhat comparable picture in Canada would be\nthe sight of Adrien Arcand, head of the owtlawed Canadian\nFascists, now out of harm's way in an internment camp,\nand Howard Scott of New York, whose Technocracy, Inc.,\nwas dissolved in Canada under the Defence of Canada\nRegulations, deliberating on how to build up \"Canadian-\nism.\"\nAs exemplars of Americanism, and of Canadianism,\nrespectively, the elements named bring to mind the classic\nexample, of \"Satan rebuking sin,\" the absolute peak of\ndissembling.\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n6:57\u20140 Canada\n7:00\u2014Toast and CoHee Club\n(CKLN)\n8:00\u2014BBC Newa\n8:30\u2014Joyc'e Trio\n%\u25a0.-\u2014The News\n9:00\u2014Jacques Abfam\u2014Pianilt\n0: IS\u2014Jack McLean's Orch.\n0:30\u2014The BaUadeer\n9:45\u2014Melody Rendezvous\n10:00-0ur Hall Hour\n10.30\u2014Favorite Waltzes\n10:45\u2014The News\n11:00\u2014K.L.G.  Hospital  Programme\n(CKLN)\n11:30\u2014Concert HaU\n12:0O-Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\n12:45-Gypsy Strings (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The News\nl:lS-Talk\n1:30\u2014Closing Stocki\n1:45\u2014BBC News\n2:15\u2014NBC Concert Orchestra\n2:30\u2014Mirror For Women\n2:45\u2014Organ Melodiea\n3:00\u2014Music You Like to Hear\n3:30\u2014Recital Seriei\n3:45\u2014International Commentary\n3:57\u2014News Bulletin\n4:00\u2014Dance Music\n4:30\u2014Gentlemen Relax\n5:00\u2014The Question Box\n5:30\u2014Serenade for Strings\n5:45\u2014Songs of the Range (CKLN)\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014\"They- Shall Not Pass\"\n6:30-BBC NeWs\n7:00\u2014The Newi\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaki\n7:30\u2014International Exchange\n8:00-Clement Q. Williams\n8:30-Popular Music (CKLN)\n9:00-String Ensemble (CKLN)\n9i30-Talk\n9:45\u2014George Coutts, Organist\n:00\u2014Harry Owen's Orch.\n:15\u2014The News\n:30\u2014Mart Kenney and Hli\nWestern GenUemen\n00\u2014Gary Nottingham's Orch.\n:30\u2014News   Roundup   and  Talks\nRebroadcasts\n00\u2014God Save the King\n\u20acJAT-TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00-Church In the Wildwood\n7:15-Breakfast Club\nll:30-Ofi with the dance\nAFTERNOON    _\n12:45\u2014Dance Orch.\n3:3C\u2014H6me Folks Ffblic\n4:00-Theatre News\n4:15\u2014Dance Music\n4:30\u2014Melody Time\nEVENING\n6:30\u2014I'usic Graphs\n8:15\u2014Happiness Revue\n8:00\u2014Popular Vocal\n12:00-Sign Off\nOther Periods\u2014CBC ProgVammes,\nCONTRACT...\nCONSIDER DISTRIBUTION\nHONOR TRICKS, quick tricki.\nsure tricks, high cud tricki\u2014or\nwhatever you Uka to call them\u2014\nconstitute only one of the thingi\nyou take Into account when deciding whether or not to open tha\nbidding. The length of youi1 suits\nta another tutor, and still a third\nla the queition of what suits contain your greateit length. A hand\nwhich is predominantly major\ntult ln nature takes great preference over one which haa most\n'of lta carda in the minora.\n\u2666 9 7\n\u00bb8742\n\u2666 K1093\n*AQ8\nl*Q\u00ab2\n\u00a5 J 10 9 5\n3\n\u2666 AT\n*K 43\nt      **\n-__-\n\u00ab\\A5\n\u2666 \u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\/\nfJ 10 0 6\n82\nAKJ1084S\n\u2022 A6\n\u2666 QJ\u00ab4,\n*T     \u2022 }\n(Dealer: East North-South vul-\nKible.)\nt    . South    Weat     North\nIPaes 1 *      2\u00bb 3 4\n(Pass 3 4      Pais       3 NT\n{Fan        _\u2666     Paaa      4 a)\nSouth, a canny carSaman, knew\nthat North, a keen partner, would\nmake the correct deduction from\njhls takeout of the No Trump\nfame\u2014that he had greater distributional values than ahown, but\njlesi honor power than at flnt Indicated. He was, of courie, dead\nright. South Is one of those analytical fellows who haa learned that a\nBy Shepard Barclay\nhand Uke thli, ilighUy below rigid\nhonor trick requirements, makei\na much mora profitable opening\nbid. In tha long run, than a 4-3-3-3\ndistribution with a tiara four-card\nault. beaded by ace-klng and a\naide ace, or containing three acea.\nGood play wu necessary to\nmake the contract. West's heart\nJ to the Q and A left South in a\nposition where the defenders could\npeel off ona trick tn diamonds,\nona In hearts and two In spades\nu soon aa they got the lead. Then\nwu Just one chance\u2014to get rid\nof the heart loaer before, they\nscored lt So ha tried for It by\ntesting the club finesse successfully, then parking tha heart on\nthe club A. That made hla game\nsure\u2014a game whloh depended on\none finesse and therefore ihould\nbe bid\n. \u2022  \u2666   \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n4.Q932\n\u00bbK62\n\u2666 KJ83\n+ 95\n\u2666 10 5\nVA43\n\u2666 Q1094\n4.10 7 62\n1*7.\nPE \u25a0'\u25a0'\nSt\n\u2666 A864\nVQJ10\n\u2666 52\n+ AJ84\n\u2666 KJ7\n\u2666 9875\n.     \u2666A76\n*KQ3\n(Dealer:   West   North-South'\nvulnerable.)\nIf Eait bldi l-Club to open thli\ndeal, Weat 1-Dlamond, East 1-\nSpade, Weat 1-No Trump and it\nIs .passed around to South, who\ndoubles, what ahould Weit do?\nVERSE\n$5\u00abS$\n****\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abW$\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*5*\u00abK\nV* Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\nperioni asking queitiom will not\nbe publlihed,\nJ. G., Slocan\u2014Please tell me how\nto take dry putty from a window\nsash.\nPutty may be softened by using a\npaste of caustic potassa, easily prepared by mixing the caustic alkali,\nor even carbonate of potash or soda,\nwith equal parts of freshly burned\nquicklime which has been previously sprinkled with water so as to\ncause it to fall into powder. This is\nthen mixed with water into a paste\nand is spread on the putty to be\nsoftened. Where one application is\nnot sufficient it is repeated.\nSoft soap, rubbed on pretty thick\nand allowed to stand about 12 hours\nor more, will soften putty so that it\ncan be cut out quite easily with a\nknife.\nS. W., Nelson\u2014When was the British aircraft carrier Courageous\ntorpedoed?\nSeptember 18, 1939.\nF. R., Kimberley\u2014When did the\nfamous singer Patti die? What\nnationality was she?\nAdelina Patti was Spanish. Sho\ndied in 1919.\nG. K., Trail\u2014What is  the Jewish\npopulation of Rumania?\nThere   are   728,115   Jews   ln\nRumania.\nR. D\u201e Cranbrook\u2014In Idaho does\none have to wait three days to get\na marriage licence or is there any\nwait after obtaining a marriage\nlicence?\nNo. There is no wait either before or after obtaining a marriage\nlicence in Idaho.\nD. K, Nelson\u2014Could you give a\nrecipe, for an uncooked cucumber\npickle which I have heard called\n'Lazy Housewife Pickle\"?\nCucumbers, dill weed, one hall\ngallon white vinegar, one half gal\nlon water, one cup salt, one cup\nmustard,   three   clips   sugar,   one\ntablespoon mustard seed, one table\nspoon celery seed, garlic.\nPacjt pickles or cucumbers in jars\nalong with dill weed and a clove of\ngarlic. Mix the other ingredients\ntogether and fill jars, then seal.\nD. H. , Kimberley, requests the\nwords to the songs \"The Man\nThat Comes to Our House\" and\n\"Be Nobody's Darling But Mine\".\nCan any Daily News Reader supply these words?\ns\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbs\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbws*s\u00bb\nJjat yojuAAfilfc\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Jim is rich now, but he'i poor\nin hii mind. Think of havin' a\nmillion and not bein' able to\nthink of anything to buy except\n30 pair 0' pants.\nossm\nONE-MINUTE TE8T\n1. Where, on the earth, does day\nfirst begin.\n2. Do any birds have teeth?\n3. How did Sing Sing get its.name?\nWORD8 OF WISDOM\nHe who prays as he ought will\nendeavor to live as he prays. \u2014\nOwen.\nHINT8 ON  ETIQUETTE\nIf a friend tells you how much\nhe or she likes one of your possessions, don't say you dislike it. That\ninfers your friend has poor taste.\nIf you do not like the article, say,\n\"I'm glad you like it,\" or merely,\n\"thank you.\"\nTODAY'8  HOROSCOPE\nIf yoyr birthday is today you can\nrely on your domestic affairs running smoothly and happily during\nthe next 12 months. Sudden and unexpected reversals in business are\nindicated, however nake no changes. Born today a child will meet\nwith much success and popularity\nthroughout life, gaining promotion\nrapidly. He or she will be a great\nhome lover, and fond of science\nand antiques.\nONE-MINUTE  TEST  ANSWERS\n1. At East Cape, the Eastern-most\nextremity of Siberia.\n2. No, none now exist.\n3. The name is derived from the\nIndian words for a stony place.\nWAR \u2014 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Presi\nAug. 28, 1915\u2014Italian airmen\nwrecked air base at Divassa, East of\nTrieste. French airmen bombarded\nrailway station at Chattel-en-Ar-\ngonne. Austro-Germans in Eastern\nGalicia broke through Russian defences on the Zlota Lipa River.\nBANBURY, England (CP). - An\nink bottle, thrown at Magistrate\nNorris of the Juvenile Court by a\n16-year-old London boy, missed his\nhead by inches but spattered his\ncoat with ink. The boy had been\ncharged with bicycle stealing and\nwas remanded.\nTHE BATTtE OF BRITAIN\nThli ii not J_it another war; it is\na fight to death.\nThe world's two greateit forcei\nare itanding face to face.\nOn one aide standi a people to whom\nliberty's life's breath,\nAgainst them is a mechanized.\ndebased, degenerate race.    ,\nThis is not lust another war, wi'_i\nglory for ths brave,\nA war of flaunting banners and\nbrilliant martial show;.\nTis not a war on Britain's part soma\noutworn creed to lave\nBut war against the brutal might\nof a morally putrid foe.\nThe vile saprogenous leader of t\nnation lost to truth\nWould to hii own foul level the\nwhole wide world reduce:\nThe filth of his own birthright he\ntaught to German youth       1\nTill they became a docile tool for\nhis envenomed use. \"\u25a0\nHis aim is just destruction of everything that'i good,\nOf the nonor, truth and Justice\nthat through ages we attained,\nOf liberty of thought and speech\nfor which our race has stood\nAnd make us rotten as himself\nand   the race  that  he   has\ntrained.\nIn ages past Attila, known as, \"Tlte\nScourge of God.\"\nWove for himself an evil fame\nthat centuries cannot.span\nBut we could by comparison hia\ngentle kindness laud\nFor he, compared with Hitler, was\na polished gentleman.\nHis   greatest   prototype,   Genghis\nKhan, a foul inhuman beast\nTraced a fierce trail of blood and\ndeath across a continent\nI But never in hfs orgies nor in cele-.\nbrating feast\nDid he call his pillage crusades\nnor proclaim his good intent\nThe foul thing we are facing now,\nthis wave of blood and lust\nHas rolled o'er most of Europe as\na juggernaut of crime,\nTis up to us who view its trail with\nhorror and disgust\nAt any cost to sink it In its own\ndeep putrid slime.\nThe   British   people   stand   alone\nagainst this horrid thing\nAl 'gainst hydra-headed dragon\nActive in\nKootenay Life\nHarold S. Elmes of Rossland,\nwell known In West Kootenay\nmining circles.\u2014Photo by Rossland Fotoshop.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\n\u25ba ____\nNOT EVEN  PEA 80UP\nof old stood valiant knight:\nThe world is looking to her hoping\nshe relief will bring\nAnd slay the grisly monster in\nthe impending fight\nThe question oft arises, \"Why' is it\nall the world\nLooks to that little island tieir\nlands and lives to save?\nWhy is it Britain, only, will face\ntwo forces hurled\nInto this Armageddon that would\nthe world enslave?\"\nWhatever be the reason and whichever side survive\nWe know the British Empire will\nfight to its latest breath.\nThese' different ideologies  cannot\nboth be left alive\nAnd the loser in the struggle must\nbe surely put to death.\nSimple Sam.\nCAPE TOWN (CP). - Hev. A. J.\nvan Wyk, Moderator of the Dutch\nReformed Church in the Cape, haa\nappealed for ministers of his church\nprepare to serve as chaplaim with\nthe Union Forces anywhere in\nAfrica.\nLOOKING BACKWARD .\n10 YEARS AOO\nFrom Dally Newi of Auj. 28, 1930\nThe Nelson branch of the Blackburn relief fund lor sufferers of the\nreoent mine disaster at Coalmont\nhas now reached $95. \u2014 J. Wood,\nW. Rigby, Dr. J. B. Thorn and W.\nDavjes were judge^ for the Trail\nMemorial Hall annual aquatic meet.\n\u2014 Fred Martello of Trail defeated\nFred Large of Cranbrook in the\n100 yards dash of the eighth Trail\nCaledonian Games yesterday. \u2014\nBlowing in of the new $2,000,000\nslag-treatment plant at Trail will\nsoon take place. \u2014 B. T. O'Grady\nhas left on a trip to Arrowhead.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally News of Aug. 28,' 1915\nThirty men from Nelson have received their certificates to travel\nby special rates for harvesting jobs\nin Saskatchewan. \u2014 The Creston\nPublic School hss, an enrollment of\n130. - The Canyon City Lumber\nCompany has resumed operation\nof its sawmill, with a daily out\nput of 48,000 feet. \u2014 The wife and\nfamily of D. Maeleod, who li the\nChief Engineer on the Steamer\nSlocan. have left Nelson to take\nup residence in Slocan City. \u2014 E.\nNorman of Mirror Lake has been\nappointed to succeed Dr. N. Wolverton as Manager of the Kootenay-Boundary Fruit Growers' Union.\n40 YEARS. AGO\nFrom Dally Tribune of Aug. 28,1900\nDr. Hall took first prise at fhe\ngun club's traps with a scora of 18\nout of 20 in the first button competition, with Alex Carrie and George\nSteele second and third with 15\nand 14 respectively. \u2014 The choir\nrecently organized under G. _,. Lennox made iti first appearance Sunday night in the Methodist Church.\n\u2014 Henry Roy, Manager of the London Consolidated and Richelieu\nMines on Coffee Creek, itatei that\nas soon as a road is completed to\nthe mine, shipping from the Richelieu will start, following develop-;\nment work for the past three years.\nWhen one comes from other coun\ntries to the Province of Quebec one\nexpects to find the gastronomic\nqualities of the old Mother Coun\ntry. Our outside publicity to for\neigners in order to attract visitor.\nnever stops saying that we have\nkept our French atmosphere, our\ncustoms, our traditions, our architecture, our modes Of living. So,\ntouriits, relying on' this publicity,\ncome here to find something different from what they have at home,\namong other things, French cooking,\nor at least French-Canadian co iking. Unfortunately, they may be\ndeeply deceived on this score.\nWe are forever deploring our la;k\nof hotels and restaurants. Meanwhile Montreal, with its 800,0)0\nFrench-language Canadians, can list\nonly one or two places where ot.e\ncan eat suitable French-style dishes,\nthe City of Quebec only boasts of\none restaurant worthy of mention.\nEverywhere else, in the small towns\nand Important villages, not only is\none badly lodged, in genera], but\none eats badly, very badly.\nOne is constantly served with om\nelets, pork and beans, ham .na\neggs, steaks toughened by bad cooking, One 9an hardly find, from one\ntime to another, some real Canadian\npea soup. We don't even know how\nto deserve our nickname, \"pea\nsoup\".\nWe wouudn't want this article, for\nanything in the world, to iall into\nthe hands of tourists. Our aim is to\ninspire- French-language Canadians\nto take advantage ot the treasure\nthey possess in French cooking.\nThe cities of Montreal and Quebec\nat least should be the two centres\nin Canada where one east best. And\nour country hotels would be reorganized from top to bottom. Our\nduty and our interests demand that\nwe give tourists a good reception, if\nwn want them to bring us each yuar\nthe millions we need more than\never.\u2014Le Jour, Montreal.\nLondoners Dance Till Dawn and\nTheatres Stage Impromptu (oncer\nto the Drone ol Aircraft Overlie.\nBy DWIGHT L. PITKIN\nAssociated Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (AP)-Robbad\nof their sleep by nocturnal Nazi\nbombers, thousands' of Londoners\ndanced and sang until almost dawn\ntoday, ignoring intermittent sounds\nof gunfire and the drone of airplane motors overhead.\nThe air raid alarm came as home-\nbodiei were retiring and as West\nEnd theatres were thronged with\namusement seekers. When the German bombers kept sweeping over in\nrelays and the all-clear signal failed to sound, many decided to make\na night of it.\nIn most theatres, many stayed on\nwhen the shows were over and responded with zest to stage managers\nsuggestions for impromptu concerts.\nAt the Hippodrome Prime Minister Winston Churchill's son-in-law,\nthe comedian Vic Oliver, organized\nan informal \"songfest\". At Price's\nTheatre Arthur Riscoe called for\n\"partners for the girls,\" and generals, officers and naval men stormed the stage. Riscoe said it \"was\nmore like a new year's eve party\nthan an air raid.\"\nAircraftsman H..Kaplnsky of the\nRoyal Canadian Air force, selling\nshoes in Cleveland, Ohio, sxl months\nago to earn money for a musical\neducation, was the life of the party\nat the Hippodrome where he got\na chance to display his tenor voice\nby singing \"Irish Eyes Are Smiling.'.'\nFamily groups had singing parties\nor played cards in air raid shelters.\nMany persons caught away from\nhome when the sirens shrilled their\nwarnings went without supper be\ncause the larga restaurants clc\ntheir doors during the raid.\nlations compelled pubs to close aU\nbut cafes and milk bars remains\nopen and did a rushing business.- <\nHundreds defying' possible das\nger,-remained on street corners I\nwatch the ipectacle as searchligh\nand bursts from anti-aircraft gut\nlighted the skies. Many walked le\nsurely home when they were ut\nable to get transportation.\nBuses and taxis reappeared aa\nby magic when the all-clear algn\nfinally was sounded at about 3:1\na, m.\nI had a half-hour's ride in 01\nfrom \u00a7 hotel in the Weitern ra\ndential district to Fleet Street wh(\nthe raid was at its height. Whe\never we came to anything that lob\ned like a military objective the 4\nver who seemed to know his wi\nby Instinct in the blackout, pt\ned the accelerator down to the lj\nand took the corners on two whe\nWhen we reached my dettinat\nhe' seemed to lose all Interest\nspeed and sauntered off to the nil\nest shop for a cup of tea\u2014althou\nthe sky was still bright with pyi\nthechnics.\nHenry Jackson, an Assoclil\nPress employee, wss in a bus .\nroute to the office when the 1\nraid warning sounded. Escorted\nthe bus conductor, playing a hi\nmonica, the passengers marched '<\nto an air raid shelter singing T\nperary\" and \"Pack up Your Troul\nin the Old Kit Bag.'r\nThey continued the journey, wt\nthe conductor announced \"Jei\nseems to have buzzed off,\" but\ntook Jackson five hours and 20 m\nutes to complete a 10-mile jourr\nthat normally takes in hour.\n~r\nMorale oi Britons Remains Unshake\nby Days of Ceaseless Nazi Mr Rail\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nAug. 27 (CP Cable) \u2014In spite of\ndays of ceaseless air raids climaxed\nby last nights most sustained offensive since the outbreak of the\nwar, the morale of the British people remains unshaken.\nThat is the impression gained after a personal tour covering several hundred miles through areas that\nhave been special targets in Hitler's latest aerial war of nerves.\nWith Maj-Gen. Odium we have\nbeen privileged to visit practically\nall the so-called hot spots which\nhave been bombed, shelled and\nmachine gunned without let-up for\nweeks. Wherever we went citizens\nhad accepted the ordeal with calm\ncoolness and resolute determination\nto carry on.\nThere is no evidence of devasa-\ntion. A number of houses and shops\nlay in ruins and some roads were\ntemporarily blocked by craters but\nin the bulk of the explosives apparently had been dropped harmlessly in fields and gardens.\nTaking into consideration the vast\nnumber of bombs dropped in that\nsection of the country, the damage\nis considered exceedingly small.\nAlthough we passed through fivi\nseparate tones of attack, the w\nof the sirens produced only an 1\nderly movement to shelter. Thl\nwas no sign of panic and for I\nmost part clusters of people st<\nin the streets peering into the s\nAt Heme Bay hundreds of j\nsons lihed the boardwalk to wa\nthe progress of a dogfight be\nwaged high in the air between\nsquadrons of Nazi bomben 1\nBritish fighters. A motorboat a\ndenly sped to sea to rescue a B\nish pilot who had bailed out a]\ndestroying four enemy macblj\nThe crowds gave a roaring cheer|\nhe was brought ashore.\nIn a field near Dover lay I IB\nserschmitt whose pilot escaped!\njury after making a pancake lad\ning. A bent propellor appeared^\nbe the only damage to the maebjj\nOn the way back to camp 1\ntravelled more than 200 miles du\ning the time of a six-hou_ warn!\nbut the only result of the bombi]\nwe could 'so ewere flamei whi\nshot up from incendiary bom\ndropped on Woodlands some mt\nfrom the Canadian encampment\na western Ontario Scottish regimi\nhad the fire under control befc\nit made any appreciable headwi\n\"R.A.F. Are the Best\nFliers in the World\"\nCALGARY, Aug. 27 (CP,\u2014James\nR. Reilly, of New York, world\ntraveler who arrived recently from\nRome declared here today that the\nwar was not popular in Italy and\nthat \"only the fanatical Fascists\nare in favor ot it.\n\"The Italians were greatly sur-\npr!:cd when the British airmen\nflew over Milan and dropped several tons of bombs in the industrial\nareas of that city. They had been\nled to believe that the R.A.F. had\nbeen wiped out by the Germans\nduring the invasion of the low countries,\" he said.\nMr. Reilly said the men of the\nR.A.F. \"are the best fliers in the\nworld right now. I saw two Spitfires attack eight German bombers\none morning and they shot three of\nthe Germans down, an 1 drove the\nremainder out to sea. One of the\noilots then dropped into a field\nto have a look at a big Dornier\nthat he had shot down. He was as\ncool and unconcerned as if he had\ndropped into his home airdrome for\ntea after a practice flight. I'm \u25a0telling you, those chaps are wonderful.\"\nPenalties Follow\nFailure to Register\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 27 (CP)-Penalties for failing to register were\nimposed on two men and a woman\nin police court here today.\nArthur Hollingsworth. who said\nhe had not registered because he\ncould not get British justice in Canada, was fined $100 and costs with\nthe option of spending three months\nin jail. Mary Somich told the court,\nthrough an interpreter, that her religion prohibited her from registering, and was fined $50 and costs\nwith the alternative ot two months\nin jail.\nPaul Solohub said he did not\nknow whether he wanted a chance\nto register dr not and wased fined\n$50 and costs.\nShip Survivors\nLand at Gal v. e.\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)- R\ncued at sea after being adrift it\nlifeboat for six\u00abdays in the No\nAtlantic, 25 survivors of a torped(\nvessel were landed yesterday;\nGalway, Ireland.\nSeventeen of the men were Bi\nIsh sailors. The remainder **\nother Europeans. They were pii\ned up by the Norwegian ven\nVaregg.\nFor 12 of the 25 it was the sect\nescape from death in a torpedo!\nin the Atlantic. One of them 1\nthe second wireless operator abo\nthe Montreal-bound liner Athi\nsunk Sept. 3, first day of the war\nThe men were at sea in a ll\nboat last week from Monday\nSaturday. An officer said the 1\nboat had in tow a raft with 30 i\nbut was forced to cut it loose. I\nname of their vessel was not giv\nWHETHER\nIT BE\na humble repair or a hl|\nclass installation we are'\na position to serve the mc\ndiscriminating taste.'\nConsult ut fint for plum\ning and heating and furni\nwork.\n1\nPhono 666\nKootenay Plumbii\n& Heating Co., Lt\n357 Baker St '\nGET qua^ty printing that\ndone by Daily News expet\nYes, you get quick service when you let your printing ]\nto the Nelson Daily News. And, in addition, you get thJ\nsame care and workmanship as if the job could takd\nweeks. Try us for Printing Service.\nJMamt Bathj Ifoma\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\nTelephone 144 266 Baker Street\nMgjjjjjygj|lj^j^^vj\n    \u25a0 t,',^^, riiM___r______r_i_____ril____l_i\n \u25a0   '   \"'VW\"\n-NILSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON\nSPORTS\nasseau Builds\nUpWIn Siring\nby Beating Cubs\nfonkees Push Upward\nI by Beating' Sox in\n10 Innings\nBy The Canadian Press\nWorkhorse Claude Passeau, who\nii been doing as much pitching\ni resting la the Cute' drive to,\naid a first division berth tn the\n'ational Leegue, won his fifth\nMM In 13 days yesterday with a\nBin-hit 3-1 victory over the New\nork Giants. It was his 17th vie-\niry ot the year against 11 defeats,\nMartin Marlon's first home run\n. his major league career In the\nmrth Inning turned out to be the\nin needed by St. Louis Cardinals to\nefeat Boston Bees 4-3.\n; M\u00abW York Yankees continued\ntheir belated drive toward the\ntap In the American League by\nturning beck Chicago White Sox\nIn 10 Innings 6-4. The victory\nadvanced the champions within\nWt gsmes of the Idle Cleveland\n1 Indians and 214 games of the\n.likewise Idle Detroit Tigers.\nBabe Dahlgren was the hero ot\nie 10th inning uprising atter Joe\nifltaggio, in the role of pinch hit-\nir, had struck out. Dahlgren drop-\nsd a single into short right to\nare Red Rolfe with the winning\nttt. It was the only game played\nthe junior circuit yesterday.\nKimberley Women's\nSoftball Team May\nPlay Trail, Nelson\nTony (Chum) Arcure Tuesday\nmorning received a wire irem Tony\nMuraca of Kimberley requesting\nthe scheduling of a game ln Nelaon Sunday afternoon between thc\nNelson reps, West Kootenay Women's Softball Champions and hir\nSlrls' team, the Huskies, trom Kim-\nerley.\nThe Kimberley team haa already\narranged for a game in TraU later\nIn the day.\nIt ls doubted arrangements can\nbe made to play In Nelson Sunday\nbut it may be possible to bill one\nfor the following day, Labor Day,\nwhen the travellers are on their\nway home.\nBombers Win In\nTwo Overtimes\nIn Salmo Boxla\neh Brilliant\nin Pro Tourney\nQualifying Round\nJOStSHEY, Pa., Aug. 37 (AP) -\nMck Metz of Chicago, one of the\nion popular of professional golf-\nti, \u2022practically wasted two grand\nminds of 89-71 here the lsst two\nays to capture medalist honors in\nhe qualifying round ot the annual\n'.G.A. tournament.\nTor all his deed-eye shooting\nthrough the slanting rain arfti his\nInspired putting on a water-logged course, the former Texan received a medal for his pains and\n\u2022 trophy for his mantel. When\nthe real shooting begins tomorrow\nIn the first two rounds of match\nplay, he will be starting from\nscratch, Just like the other S3 who\nqualified for the main event\n\u25a0 Mete's two round totsl of 140,\nfact might have the distinction\nIf being the last In P.G.A. play.\nfom Walsh, President of the body,\nthinking seriously of abandoning\nlhe preliminary skirmishes here-\nIfter and having the boys start ln\npatch play trom the first day.\nPursuing Metz to the wire\nthrough today's steady rain was\nHarold (Jug) McSpaden, the old\nKansas boy who now plays out of\nlainchester. Maas. He shot rounds\nIf 70-71-141. Henry Picard, the lo\nBal professional who knows every\n\u25a0lft of clover, took third place\nIrith 7349-143.\nToday's activity, slready dreary\nJnough because ot the weather,\nftras saddened further by a late\nAnnouncement  that Denny Shute\nid been taken to tbe hospital for\nemergency appendectomy.\nBRITISH\nEMPIRE\nWINES\nA tasty table Wine-\nCocktail Ingredient\nMUSCATEL\nSALMO, B. C, Aug. 37-r-Lacrosse\nfans really got their money's worth\nin the Salmo Rink Monday night\nwhen they saw the Sheep Creek\nBombers punch out a thrill-packed\n25-20 victory over Salmo-Second Relief tn two overtime sessions. The\ngame was the second ln a series,\n8roceeds of which will go to the\n'elson District .Bomber Fund.\nThe power of last year's champs\nasserted Itself in the second bargain period u the Bombers out-\nscored their opponents 8-0, largely\nthrough the prolific scoring of\nYounie, who counted eight goals\nduring the night.\nTba referees were kept on their\ntoes throughout the game, particularly in tha second period when 41\nminutes in penalties ware handed\nout, Including a 10-minute stretch\nte Keith Younger ot the winners\nfor slashing Tommy Newton across\nthe nose and drawing blood.\nMyers co-starred with Younie In\nkeeping the Bomber cause alive.\nFor the losers Guy Cawley and\nCoach Pro Dingwall worked fine\ntogether again, with Dingwall in\nthe role of playmaker and Cawley\ndoing the sniping.\nBOX SCORE\nSALMO RILIEr-\no\nD. Hambly. g  0\nP. Dingwall, d  4\nR. White, d  \u2014 0\nJ. Bohan, d \u2014 1\nT. Matheson, d \u2014 S\nE. Berrington, r  0\n0. Cawley, c  1\nHartnett to Be Held\nat Chicago Manager\nCHTCAOO, Aug. 17 (AP).-P. K.\nWrlgley, owner ot Chicago Cubs,\nannounced today that Charles Leo\n(Gabby) Hartnett w|U be retained\nas Manager of the team.\nWrlgley aald ha wa convinced\nHartnett had done a good job this\n>n. Hartnett, now serving hia\nH season with tha club, suc-\ned -Charlie Grimm In mt.      I\nInterest Drops\nin U.J Journey\nas Ferrier Out\nBy HUGH  8. FULLERTON, JR.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP). -\nThe United States Golf Association\ntook all the International flavor and\na lot of tht interest out of the\n1940 National Amateur Championship by ruling out Jim Ferrier yesterday.\nCounting out Ferrier and the 10\nformer champions who don't have\nto play in the sectional rounds, 747\nplayers remain on the list. After\ntoday's 36-hole tests ln 28 locations, only 140 of them will remain\nto go into the championship tourney at New York's Winged Foot\nClub Sept 9,14.\nThe last-minute disqualification\nof Ferrier, amateur and open champion of Australia, was based upon\nthe publication in Australia of a\nprofusely illustrated book called\nJim Ferrler's Golf Shots.\"\nThe XSSH.A. contention ls that\nit Is a book of instruction and as\nFerrier receives royalties from it,\nthst makes him Ineligible under the\nU.S.G.A. amateur rule. Ferrier argues the book merely analyzes his\nown unorthodox style without trying to tell other golfers how to\nplay.\n'The U.S.G.A. haa a right to its\nown opinion,'' Ferrier conceded.\n\"But I think lt is mistaken. The\nbook is not ot an instructional nature. The Australian Golt Union\ncertified me as an amateur In good\nstanding when I came to this country in March.\n\"And the Royal and Ancient\nGolf Club of St. Andrews, England's\ngoverning body, has sanctioned by\nmylcurnalistic work.\n\u25a0\"What are they trying to do to\nHoliday Weekend\nBall Tournament\nPlans Abandoned\nCords Though Come in\nPlayoffs, Indians\nfor Benefit\nCon Cummins, Manager ot tha\nNelson Baseball Club, aald Tuesday thst preparations for an inter\nnational baseball tournament ln\nNelson over the holiday weekend\nhad terminated, and instead local\nball fans will likely witness a pair\nof games with the Cardinals and\nIndians from Trail.      ,\nThere were too few entries received up to yesterday to make the\nstaging of a tournament feasible, so\nCummins decided to drop the idea.\nIt had been hoped to secure eight\nteams for the tourney, but definite\nacceptance was heard only from\nthree other clubs.\nCummins is also anxious lo continue tha West Kootenay playoffs,\nso the second game of the semifinals with the Cardinals will probably be played here Sunday afternoon, in spite of his efforts in conjunction with George Petrunia ot\nthe Indians to have the Cards\nthrown out because of their insistence on using imports. However,\nthe Csrds are defending champions\nand they lead 1-0 in the semis, so\nit wouldn't be very satisfactory to\nleave them out of it\nThe Nelson Manager is also dickering with Petrunia, Indian playing boss who hss Just returned to\nTrail from a holiday at the Coast,\nto hold a benefit game Labor Day\ntor Nelson's injured Coach, Ray\nHumble, whose knee haa forced him\nto the sidelines for the rest of the\nseason. The Nelson-Indians game\nwill be sn exhibition, and net proceeds will go toward paying Hum-\nble's hospital btll.\nIf the Cards take Nelson Into\ncamp Sunday, the final best of five\nseries between them and the Indians\nwill start the following Sunday. If\nthe Nelsonites square the semis, a\ncoin will be tossed to decide where\nthe deciding game will be played on\nthe Bth.\nB. C-WIDNMDAY MORNINQ. AUO. IS. 1W*\nLongacres Title\nRace Labor Day\nSEATTLE, Aug. 27 (AP)-Long-\nacres today announced Labor Day\nracing shenial \u2014 tha Longacres\nchampionship\u2014an invitational mile\nlimited to aix thoroughbreds who\nbatUed it out in the 810,000 added\nLongacres mile here last Sunday.\nTie'entries in the order they crossed the finish line Sunday: pala\nSquaw, Dandy, Olimpo, Mr. Grundy, Exploded, Rolling Ball,\nMet iron\nFoster Mills to\nRow ior Kelowna\nin Nelson Regatta\nKootenay Champs\nStart Series al\n(oast Sept.t8\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 27 (CP) -\nThe British Columbia senior lacrosse championship finals, between\nthe champions of the West Kootenay League and the Intercity\nLeague winners, are slated for the\nCoast this year.   -\nIf the Canadian champion New\nWestminster Adsnacs win the Intercity League title, the Kilmarnock\nCup games will be plsyed In New\nWestminster but if either Vancouver Burrards or Richmond Farmers triumph, the two-out-of-thr*e\nseries scheduled for Sept. 18, 20 and\n21, If necessary, and will be held\nin Vancouver.\nTrail Golden Bears are strong\nfavorites to represent the interior\nln this play-off series to determine\nBritish Columbia's representative\nfor the Canadian championship in\nthe Mann Cup finals to be held in\nthe East this year.\nB. Phillips, c\nT. Newton, w .\nN. John, w \t\nF. Graves, w ,\nC. Hooker, w\nPtPn\no   o\nTotals\t\nSHEEP CREEK\u2014\nE. Elliot, g ............\nF. Thompson, d ....\nR. Moir, d ..mm\nV. DelPuppo, d ....\nW. Ucbaca, d \t\nW. Thompson, r ..\nT. Foreman, c \u2014\nA. Myers, c \t\nM. Feeney, w .\u2014\nK. Younger, w ....\nJ. Brown, w \t\nJ. Younie, w \t\nTetals\t\nScore by periods:\nSalmo-Re_ef - 8 8\nSheep Creek .... 4  8\nReft\n20   11   Jl   \u00ab\nme? Have I been playing too well\nrecently? I can't understand their\nattitude.\"\nNATIONAL\nR H E\nNew York     1  7  0\nChicago   _    8  8   3\nLohrman and Danning;. Passeau\nand Collins.\nBoston      8  7   1\nSt. Louia  l    4 18   1\nTobln and Berres, Mail; Bowman,\nShoun and Padgett, Owen.\nCIn c 1 n na t i-phlladelphia,  and\nBrooklyn-Pittsburgh, postponed.\nAMERICAN\nAppendicitis Throws\nShute Out of Golf\nHERSHEY, Ps., Aug. 27 (AP)-\nDenny Shute, P.G.A. champion in\n193. and 1937, waa taken to hos-\n\u25a0ital for an emergency operation\n. . lampi-\nonshlp.\nShute had been out of competition for nearly a year because\not wrist trouble that necessitated\nan operation, and this was to have\nbeen his return to active play In\ntha United States, He scored rounds\nof 79-76 to quality handily for match\njjlay stsrtlng tomorrow.\n_.&_t_I\\$\nLeaders\n.. \u00a9\t\nBy Tha Associated Press\nBatting (first three In each league.\nG AB R H Pet.\nRadcliff, Bwns 120 462 66 183 .393\nWilliams, R S 113 439 108 190 .345\nAppling, W S .. 118 433 68 148 .344\nRowell, Bees .. 90 396 39 117 .329\nDanning, Giant 112 427 98 137 .321\nWalker,   Dodgr 110 420   98 138 .321\nHome runs: American League \u2014\nFoxx, Red Sox, 34. National League\n\u2014Mize, Cardinals, 37.\nRuns batted in: American League\n\u2014Greenberg, Tigers, 108. National\nLeague\u2014Mize, Cardinals, 100.\nChallenge Softball\nSeries Is Delayed\nBecause of unsettled weather conditions, tha opening game ot the\nchallenge softbail aeries between\nthe Savoy and Hume Hotela will\nnot be played until the weekend.\nThe proceeds ot the game, and the\ngates of other gasnea in the best of\nthree series, will go toward some\npatriotic purpose.\n' Since tbe evenings are now too\nshort to hold full nine-inning games,\nthe whole aeries may ba run off on\nSundays.\nIt bad been originally planned to\nstart tha serlea thla evening.\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nTha Home of Furniture Values\nRagle Ilk.\nNelson   v Phona 118\nTakt Advantage ef Our Big\nAuguit Sale\nSAVINGS\nLacrosse Interest Reaches Feverish\nPilch as Playoffs Open in Rossland\nLeafs ta Play Redmen\nTonight in First of\nSemis\nLacrosse playoff fever grips the\nKootenays again tonight aa Nelson\nMaple Leafs and Rossland Redmen\nstart duelling In Rossland ln a best\nof three semi-final bracket that\nwill send the survivor against the\nTrail Golden Bears tor the right to\nrepresent the Interior against the\nCoast winner.\nWhat has happened ln the long\nLeague schedule matters little except to determine how the teams\nmil be lined up in the playoffs. For\nInstance, Jock Walmsley has been\nPHOTO FINISH WINNER\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont., Aug. 27\n(CP)\u2014At Stamford Park race track\nhere today Chief Richie, Western-\nowned, waa declared the winner of\na six-furlong dash after Judges saw\na photo of the finish. He covered\nthe distance In 1:13 3-8 over a fast\ntrack and paid 812.20, 84.10 and\n(3.29. Four Clubs was third In the\nsame race and paid (3.99.\nChicago  ....:    *\nNew York\n28    8  38   38\n\u25a0,_-:\/   ft.  i\n4 '8\n3   7\nC\u201420\n5-25\nand\n\u00ab2s\nPAARL\nTAWNY\n-\\ (JORT Wine\nof delicious flavoi\nity. COOPER AllVt .\u00a3>\nI advertisement is not published\n> displayed by the Liquor Control\nBid or by tbt Govirnmrnt of Britiih\nambia\nReferees - Eddie Leeming and\nW. Batten. Timekeepers \u2014 Richard\nTurner and Sadie Hamberg. Scorer\n-Maudie Stewart\t\nSports Roundup\nBy EODII BRIETZ\n(Associated Press Sports Writer)\nNBW YORK. Aug. 27  (AP)  -\nStesmbost Johnson, the veteran\numpire, hsd his feelings hurt when\nhe reached Birmingham the other\nday and found one of his books,\n\"Standing the Gaff?\" being advertised for a dime. . . . One of Ben\nHogan's admirers figures that prior\nto the start of the P.G.A. tourney\nyesterdsy, Ben, who hu won (9403\nIn purses this year, was paid off at\nthe rate of (liO for every shot ...\nTony Canioneri ls doing s little\nlight work in the gyms here, but\nhe's promised he won't try another\ncomeback. ... The Tigers are\ngrowling about the American\nLeague schedule which gives the\nIndians four days' rest between\ntwo three-game series with De-\ntrott\nTODAY'S QUIBT STAR\nNixson Denton, Cincinnati Times-\nStar: \"Jock Sutherland can't seem\nto remember thst he no longer ls\nCoaching s college football teem.\n. . . Aaked to describe the pros-\npacts of ths Brooklyn Dodgers, he\nasserted they ware tar trom bright\"\nTennis circles are debating whether Palfrey wu smart in abandoning the rythmical, canny style of\nteals, taught her by Mrs. George\nWIghtmsn, for the flat, amsahlng\ngsme featured by the Callfornlans.\nREMEMBER  THESE?\ntest night's Petty Sealse-JImmy\nPerrin fight show was ths moit\nelaborate New Orleana hu staged\nalnee ths three-day carnival ef\nehamplens baek In 1892, whan all\nthis happened:\ntept 8: Jack M'Aullffe, world'i\nlightweight champion, kayoed\nBUly Myer In 18 rounda.\nSept 8: George Dlxen knocked\neut Jaek Skelly In eight rounds\nto defend his featherweight title.\nteat 7: JaAtas J. Corbett knock-\ned eut John t. Sullivan In 81\nrounds to win the heavyweight\ntitle.\n9   1\n8   7   2\nRigney,   E.   Smith   and   Tresh;\nChsndler, Murphy snd Dickey.\nDetroit-Philadelphia and\nCleveland-Washington, postponed.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nColumbus  \u2014    7 13   1\nMilwaukee     8 13   1\nBrecheen, Barrett and Cooper;\nBlaeholder, Makosky and Garbar.\nColumbus      6   8   1\nMilwaukee    8   7   1\nSunkel, Curlee and Cooper; De-\nshong and Hanklns.\nToledo  -    3 10   1\nKansas City    411   2\nGill, McDougall, Kramer, Wirk\nkala and Grube; Wensloft, Gear-\nhauser, Stanceu and Riddle\nINTERNATIONAL\nToronto \u201e     3   7  0\nRochester     1   9  0\nFischer and Heath; Roe and Mueller.\nSecond:\nToronto\nWinnipeg Opens Football af Calgary\nFriday But Hanson Won't Be There\nFOSTER MILLS\nThere hava been countless cues\nof boys leaving their.home-towni\nand then bobbing-up unexpectedly\nIn other fields as a star In some\nsport or other.\nThis time It Is Fester Mills, who\nleft Nelson to reside In Kelowna\nlast Winter, and he Is returning to\nthe Lakeside City tabor Day ta\nteam with Bruce Paige In representing Kelowna In the rowing\ndoubles event of the Nelson Kins\nmen \"Win the War\" regatta.\nMills was initiated into the sport\nbefore he left Nelson, and this Summer he developed into quite a rower\nunder the tutelage of crack oarsmen at Kelowna. Paige stroked the\nKelowna fours to victory ln lut\nyear's Nelson regatta and was\nmember   of   the   doubles   which\nbowed to the superior ability of the\nNelson team, Art Godfrey and Bud\nGreenwood, perennial champions in\nthis event. Godfrey and Greenwood\nare all set to defend their laurels\nagain.\nArrangements are under way to\nadd spicy entertainment to the program by the holding of a \"war canoe\" race across the lake between\nJunior Chamber of Commerce and\nKinsmen quartets. That will provide lots of comedy, and besides\nthere will be mens and mixed canoe\ntilting competitions.\nRochester   _\nAves,   McLaughlin\nLyons and Mueller,\norrtreal  _\t\nBuffalo\nand\n1 7 2\n4 9 0\nHeath;\n4   8\n9 10\nCoil and Condenser\nTESTERS'\nShorty's Repair Shop\n\u00bb1. Baker It Neieen, a, c\nWicker and Becker; Cook and McCullough\nBaltimore     3 10   2\nSyracuse    0   4   1\nStromme and Redmond; Rambert\nand Hartje.\nChalledon Forced\nto Break Record\nto Win Whitney\nSARATOGA SPRINGS,    N.  Y.,\nAug. 27 (AP)\u2014Challedon won the\nWhitney stakes today, as everyone\nhad expected, but he encountered\ndifficulties no one had expected.\nWilliam I.. Brann's handicap king\nhad to run the fastest IVi miles ln\nthe history of the event to beat out\nWilliam Woodward's Isolator in a\nphoto finish. His time wu 2:03 1-9.\nDusky Fox, Isolator's stablemate\nand the only other horse to run,\nfinished 10 lengths behind the battling pair.\nChalledon, ridden by Jockey\nGeorge Woolf of Cardston, Alta.,\npicked up (2728 for his third victory In four starts this year. With\nstrslght betting only Challedon paid\n(2.40 for S3.\nCampbell Wins Entry\nInto Amateur Tourney\nSEATTLE, Aug. 27 (AP)\u2014Against\nonly two competitors, Albert (Scotty) Campbell of Seattle, former\nWalker Cup team member, eully\nwon the Northwest qualifying round\ntoday for entry in the National\nAmateur Golt tournament He shot\na 8 under par 72-89\u2014141 over the\nSeattle Golf Club course.\nCampbell will be the No. 2 representative of the section which bouts\ntha .National champion. Marvin\n(Bud)  Ward of Spoksne.\nThe Only other competitors were\nBud Haskell, s former golfing buddy of Wsrd at Olympla, who shot\n79-74\u2014198, and Vaughan Spalding\nJr., a vacationist from Fort Sheridan, 111., with 83-81-184.\nThe National amateur is scheduled for September 9-14 at Winged\nFoot Country Club, N.Y.\nBy CHARtES  EDWARDS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 27 (CP)-Mel-\nvln (Frits) Hanson, on whose flying heels Winnipeg Blue Bombers\nrode to the only two Canadian\nsenior football championships ever\nto come West, said today he has\nno Intention of changing his decision to retire,\nA hslfback choice for every Western Interprovinciel Union All-Star\nteam since The Canadian Press\nselections were instituted in 1937,\nhe announced his retirement In Ottawa last December immediately\nafter Winnipeg beat Ottawa Rough\nlders 8-7 in the Dominion final.\nThe blond bombshell said then\nhe wanted to quit the game while\nhe wu still \"on top\" and because\nhis job ot selliiftj bonds and insurance wu taking more and more of\nhis time.\nIndication that Hanson actually\nwu \"on top\" when he made that\ndecision wu given two weeks later\nwhen he wu chosen Canada's No\n1 athlete ot 1939 in The Canadian\nPress' year-end , poll of sports\nwriters.\nMost Winnipeg fsns refused to\nbelieve the 27-year-old halfback\ncould resist the pigskin's lure but\nthe season opens with Winnipeg\nat Calgary on Friday and Hanson\nhaa msde no move to don the\nmoleskins. He removed the laat\ndoubts today.\n\"If I had any Idea of playing again\nI would have turned out for Spring\npractice and I certainly would have\nchecked in for the Fall workouts,\"\nhe said. \"It's suicide to play in this\nleague without intensive physical\npreparation.\"\nBorn at Perham, Minn., Hanson\nwu a star halfback at North Dakota\nState College but It wu not a well-\nknown football school and he received no national prominence. He\ncame to Winnipeg in 1933 with five\nother United States players end\npromptly caught the fans' fancy\nwith his terrific speed, his deceptive\nchange of pace, his swivel-hipped\nelusiveness.\nIn five seasons of Csnadlan football Hanson scored 178 points in\n32 games. He ran for 32 touchdowns,\nseveral counting six \"points under\nAmerican rules as Bombers played\nexhibition with U. S. Colleges.\nAME\nRICA\nW\n,N\nL\nPet\nClevelsnd\t\n. 72\n50\n.590\nCD\n53\n.566\nNew York\t\n65\n54\n.542\n. 66\n57\n.531\nChicago   \t\n.. 62\n57\n.521\nWashington \t\n. 52\n68\n.433\n51\n73\n.411\nPhiladelphia   ....\n46\n71\n.393\nNATIONAt\n..78\n44\n.630\nBrooklyn \t\n.. 67\n51\n.568\n55\n.530\nNew York\t\n61\n88\n.521\nPittsburgh \t\n.. 59\n58\n.504\nChicago   -\t\n.82\n61\n.504\n. 47\n72\n.395\nPhiladelphia .....\n..39\n75\n.342\n3\n814\n6'A\n81!\n19\n22\nm\n7',.\n12\n13\n15\n15\n28\n33 _\n-v...  .   gl __.\nln rebuilding his lacrosse machine\nthis Summer, and the lineup he will\nsend out tonight, and lt is at full\nstrength, la one that hu not been\nplaced on the floor in Its entirety\nrevlously this seuon, Then the\ntedmen, who slumped after a furious mid-ccason pace, ran into a\nflock of Injuries, and tonight will\nbe the first time since early in July\nthat they will have all their stars\non hand. In that way It Is difficult\nto draw accurate comparisons.\nThe Nelson-Rosslsnd series la going to be a tough one There's no\nmistake about that, although five\nfull games sepsrated them over a\n21-game route. Although their seasons records ah6w Rossland with a\ncomfortable margin of seven victories to four in gsmes with the\nLesfs and a lead of 183 goals to\n138, their showings in the latter part\nof the second half Indicate that tha\nseries will be a toss-up.\nR08StAND FAVORITES\nThe wise guys undoubtedly have\nthe Redmen tabbed aa favorites to\nwin the semis, and their logic ls\nprobably the same as Jock Walms-\nley's\u2014that home floors will go a\nlong way to settling the issue. The\ntwo squads have displayed decided\nsuperiority lately in their familiar\nhaunts,, and the fact that if the\nseries goes three games, the deciding one will be played to Rossland,\nif for no other resson swing? the\nbelting the way of the Golden City\nrepresentatives. On the spacious\nNelson floor with perfect fighting\nconditions, the Lean count on vie\ntory, but the Rosslanders are used\nto their own band-box open-air affair, and things are bound to be dif-\nflcult for Nelson up there.\nHowever Walmsley is secretly\nwishing these days that Jupe Pluv-\nius turns on all faucets full for the\nnext couple ot weeks, and ln that\nway it will be necessary to switch\nthe Rossland, home games to Trail.\nThe second game in the series will\nbe plsyed in Nelson Friday night,\nand if a third ia needed it will be\nscheduled for Rosaland tha night of\nLabor day.\ntOTS OF SPIRIT\n\"Until our gang began to come\nalong ln the later stages ot the\nschedule, I didn't expect too much\not them until next season,\" Walmsley said Tuesday, \"But besides polishing up their offence and defence,\nthe boys have acquired a fighting\nspirit that you can't help noticing\nas soon as you go into the dressing\nroom. And WHIN we get past the\nRedmen, those Trsil guys better\nlook out They were just u confident last year-end what wu it?\nThree straight\"\nLineups follow;\nett Kuhn, detence; Bill Townsend\nand Jock Walmsley, rovers; Jack\nBishop and Pete Bonneville, centres;\nHarold Mayo. Ian Dingwall, Art\nHill and Harold Tapanila, wings. ,\nRosslend-Sam Sapronoff, goal;\nSid Simcock, Ernie Carkner, .Ralph\nScott Ross Saundry, George Ander.\nson, Ken McGuire, Gordon Ezart,\nJoe Laface, Jack Cox, Ferguson,\nAngus McDonald, Jim Scott, Al\nSitton and Paddy Dougan, wings.\nJohmtf Gidinski anif Len Wilson\nhave been named referees for thla\nseries and also tor tha finals.\nRossland, Nelson\nContinue Softball\nSeries on Sept. 8th\nThe Rossland-Nelson serial In\nWest Kootenay men's softbail playoffs will be resumed in Nelson\nSeptember 8, Jimmy Allan, in\ncharge of playoff arrangements,\nsaid Tuesday. The first game of\nthis semi-final bracket went to\nNelson 20-12 ln Rosiland August 18.\nIf a third game Is necesiary lt\nwill be played the same afternoon\nin Nelaon, <nd the winner will advance against either Trail of Caatlegar, whose series will be decided\nabout the same time. The final\nwill be best of five games.\nBefore engaging Rowland, tha\nNelion team eliminated Salmo in\nthree games of a preliminary round.\nNo Men's Rep Softball\nPractice for Tonight\nThere will be no practice of tha\nNelson men's rep softbail team tonight at the Recreation Grounds,\nand instead one will be held Friday,\nCosch Louis Aurelio said Tuesday\nnight\nHarry Stella, captain of the U.\nS. Military Academy football team,\nwas chosen the most valuable all-\nround Italian-American athlete of\n1939-40 In a poll of college and university sports officials. Stella, 23,\nand native of Kankakee, 111., is the\nheavyweight champion of the Eutern Intercollegiate Boxing Association.\nNelson \u2014 Dave   Gibbons,\n\u2014 - ___'\nRe'gie'Miller, Bud Cooper end Ever-\nCnanteeie-i\nCIGARETT. PAPER\nDOUBLE *\u00ab\nTOMATIC\nA FAMOUS SCOTTISH REGIMENT\nThe Black Watch\n(Royal Highland\nRegiment)\nGabby Street owns one manager-\nlal record which standi by itself\nHe has managed St. Louis baseball\nteams in the Amercian. National,\nand Indoor leagues.\n26V_ oi.\n13.75\n40 oi.\n95.60\n\u2022 First battalion formed In 1729 and originally known as tha\n42nd Foot. Became the Black Watch subsequent to 1749 and the\nRoyal Highland Regiment in 1798. The 73rd Regiment was\nincorporated as tha 2nd battalion in 1786. 27 battalions serred\nin tbe Great Wsr. Canadian affiliates: The Black Watch (Royal\nHighland Regiment), The Lanark aod Renfrew Scottish Regiment,\nThe Prince Edwird Island Highlanders.\nBattle Honours\nGufcloept, 17)9    Minlnlqoe, 1781    llmr.Mli   Noith AsMtica, t76)-\u00ab4\nMtesalora    Mrsort    SariogSMtaja    Con_u_    Buaeo    Potntti d'Ooor\nPjreneej     Ni.elli    Nin     Orthrj    ToolouM    PtaJonll     Witerloo\nSouth Africa, 1144-7. tall-2-S    Alms    Smitopol    Luciano..\nAihsnlM, 1875-4    TcMK.hir    Esrpf, 1ISM4    Kirbekin    Nilt,18S4H\nPmdtbiti    Sooth Africa, 16991. OJ    Hunt. 1914,'IS\nYpra, 1914, '17, '18    Loos    Soramt, 1916, '18    Arm, 1917, '18    Irs\nHiadc-busUas    Doirto. 1917    Metiddo    KutelAmm, 1917\nA FAMOUS  SCOTCH\nDEWARS\nTO GET THE BEST\nBE SURE TO SAY       ,  ___\ndewu'i'S    gfaeaa&Jffaewv\nOLD SCOTCH WHISKY\nDISTILLED, BLENDED AND\nBOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\n<8S_\n\"'MU     I\n_F*\u00a3j\u00ab.\n__\u00a3\u00a3___=__.\nIhu advisement is not published or displayed by the Llquoi Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\u2022\n**-...\n_________________________\n \"\nPAGE   EIGHT\n\u2014NELSOII DAILY NIWS, NILION. B. C.-YYI       SDAY MORNINQ, AUG. 29. 1940\u2014\nmm\nrF7W>r\nBritish Navy Strikes\nForcefully at Italian\nAfrica  Ports\nCAIRO. Egypt, Aug. 27 (AP). -\nBritlih naval blowi againit Bardia\nand Bomba in Italian Libya waa\nreported today to have Inflicted a\nsevere aetback on Italy'i North\nAfrican forces.\nThi Navy announced that Ha\nforces Aug. 24, tor the iecond time\nwithin a week, had \"successfully\nbombarded\" both Libyan \"war porti,\nmaking the Bardia attack \"at point\nblank range.\" Full details have Dot\nb: ~n dischsed however.\nMany observers here believed\nMarshal Rodolfo Graziani, Italian\nCommander, will be forced to start\na drive against Egypt soon despite\nany reverses because, they say, constant British air and sea bombardments, with consequent disorganization of war preparations, cannot\nbe withstood indefinitely.\nGrarianl, they said, la known to\nhave concentrated on re-garrlion-\nIng bomb-blasted Fort Capuzzo u\na possible front line base but,appar-\nently, at the cost of leaving his\nrearguard unprotected.\nROME, Aug. 27 (AP) \u2014Tuesday's\nItalian communique:\n\"In North Africa mechanized\nequipment at Bir Sceferzen and\nbarracks at Sidi Barrani were\nbombed by our aviation.\n\"An enemy convoy escorted by\nwarships wai repeatedly bombed\nby our air formation! in the Eastern\nMediterranean.\n\"In East Africa an attempted air\nraid at Asmara (Eritrea) failed because of Ihe quick reaction of our\ndefence. Enemy planes dropped\ntheir bombs in open country without causing damage. Our pursuit\nplanes shot down one plane.\n(UF Would May\nProminent Pari\nin Army Attack\nBy SAM ROBERTSON\n(Canadian Preu Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP Cable).\u2014\nWhen the Empire opens its big offensive push against Germany and\nItaly, it is authoritatively stated,\nCanada's overseas forces may be expected to shed their present role\nof defenders of the United Kingdqm\nfor a prominent place in the army\nof attack.\nPrime Minister Churchill has said\nthat the military machine is being\nbuilt with a view to transforming\nBritain's defensive war into one of\noffence in 1941 and 1942.\nA high official who discussed long\nrange strategy paid the Canadians\nthe compliment of classing- them\namong the \"best trained and best\nequipped troops we have to hurl\nagainst the axis.\"\nIn the present phase the Canadian\n1st Division under Maj.-Gen. G. R.\nPearkes and other Canadians in the\ncorps of Dominion and British troops\ncommanded by Gen. McNaughton.\nare filling an important role in the\nArmy now defending the British\nIsle?.\nHowever, if Hitler's air offensive\nfails to knock Britain to her granite\nknees\u2014and officials are ultra-confident it must fail\u2014the axis powers\nare expected to try a military adventure ln another direction and it\nmust be recognized that a lapse of\nair attack will not mean the end of\nthe war but only of one phase of\nthe war\nThe possibility is foreseen of Hitler striking at Gibraltar through\nSpain in an effort to slam that doorway to the Mediterranean. While\nGen. Francisco Franco and the Span,\nish Army are understood to be opposed to German orientation, Spain's\nFascist Falangists are itrong for it\nIt is Dossible that Italy's feints\ntoward Greece may be a cloak for\na thrust in some other direction.\nFor Instance, Mussolini could be\npreparing a push on Egypt, where\na military reverse to Britain would\nstrain the fabric of the Eastern sector of the Empire.\nNazis Rage Over\nRaids on Berlin\nBERLIN, Aug. 27 (API - The\nGerman Newi Agency D.N.B. raged\ntoday at the Royal Air Force, ac\ncOsing it in yesterday's raids over\nBerlin of having dropped incendiary\nbombs on non-milltary targets in\nthe outskirts of the capital and\nthreatening reprisals on London.\nThe agency, with the customary\nbombast drilled into Its staff by\nChief Goebbels, declared apparently for home consumption only:\n\"London knows very well that the\nGerman air force has confined It-\nnelf to military objectives in the\nvicinity of the English capital.\"\nThese military objectives so far\nhave included a theatre, empty fortunately, St. Giles' Cripplegate\nChurch and a non- military warehouse near St. Paul's Cathedral in\na district where the streets are so\nnarrow and tortuous they could\nnot be used for military purposes\nand where there are no war industries.\nThe agency added: \"All these\ncriminal assaults are manifestations\nof the well-known British theme\nthat the war is not to be waged\nagainst the armed forces of the\nenemy but against the enemy people Itself\u2014against aged women and\nchildren.\"\nIn contradiction to this attitude\nef which they now apparently disapprove after declaring \"total\" war\non Britain, the German air force\nyesterday bombed the market place\nat Folkstone on the Channel, killing at least 50 persons. Today they\nbombed a poor house further along\nthe coast, killing several aged persons. Folkestone, in peace time*at\nleast, was not a military town but\na fishing port and port of clearance for Boulogne and Dunkirk.\nPeople machine gunned in midland towns today, or relatives of\nthe three women blown to pieces\nby a bomb as they walked along\na midland country road, a few days\nago, probably will be unimpressed\nby DN.B.'s  outburst.\nREPORT AXIS WILL\nINTERFERE IN HUNCARY\nRUMANIA DISPUTE\nBERLIN, Aug. 27 (AP).-Inform-\ned sources said tonight Germany\nmight arbitrate in Ihe Hungarian-\nRumanian territorial dispute over\nTransylvania, possibly with Italian\naid.\nThe long-drawn-out Turnu-Severin negotiations are irking the Axis\npartners.\nVienna would be the site of the\narbitration meeting and German\nForeign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop would preside, it was said.\nKINC Sits CHURCHILL\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP). - The\nKing received Prime Mlniiter\nChurcill ln audience today.\nPEASANTS CLOG\nROADS AS TREK\nFROM DOBRUJA\nBy ROBERT ST. JOHN\n(Aisoclated Preu Staff Writer)\nSILISTRA, Rumania, Aug. 27\n(AP)\u2014Roads leading out of Southern Dobruja are clogged with peasant caravans and the bank of the\nDanube is jammed wilh refugees\nseeking to leave districts they fear\ntoon may be occupied by the Bulgarian army.\nAbout 190,000 Rumanian! live in\nthis borderland which their government took from Bulgaria in Ihe\nsecond Balkan war 27 yean ago\nand now haa agreed tentatively to\nrelinquish.\nIgnorant of the exact status of\nnegotiations between the two countries, peasants and ownfolk trudge\nshoulder to shoulder toward the\n\"old kingdom.\" They have received\npermission to carry with them\ngrain, furniture, clothing and anything else they want to save.\nBoth Rumania and Bulgaria hope\nfor the proposed transfer of territory \"to proceed smoothly but already refugees are reporting bandit raids In small villages resulting\nin deaths and pillaging.\nSix Rumanian gendarmes were\nreported slain at one place and their\nbodies hung from trees.\nRadio Station on\nScilly Isles Hit\nSays Nazi Report\nBERLIN, Aug. 27 (AP)\u2014 Tuesday's German High Command communique:\n\"German flying units again raided air ports ana troop concentrations in Southern England as well\nas thc naval base at Portsmouth.\nThe radio station on the Scilly\nIslands was destroyed*\nThree convoyed merchantmen\nsustained heavy bomb hits North of\nFreserburgh. In the course of fighting several air ^battles developed\nwhich lhe Germans won.\n(The British Air Ministry said the\nattack on Portsmouth met with no\nsuccess. In the Scilly Islands no\ncasualties were caused.)\nLast night larger fighting plane\nunits carried out attacks on the Plymouth naval base, the Cornwall\nairport, Coventry and Birmingham\nairplane works as well as port facilities at Hull and Newcastle\nFires and explosions were started\nby numerous bombs dropped, especially at Plymouth and Hull.\n\"Mining of Br tish seaports by\nairplanes continued.\n(A British statement said that ln\nthe midlands fires were caused and\nindustrial property damaged in two\ntowns. Elsewhere damage was described as slight.)\n\"British planes last night dropped\nbombs at several points in the Reich\nterritory. Damage was unimportant.\nTwo civilians were killed and eight\ninjured.\n\"The enemy's total losses yesterday were 70 planei, 91 shot down ln\nair fights and nine on the ground.\nTwenty-one of our own planes are\nmissing.\"\n(The British Air Ministry said\nthat at least 46 German aircraft\nwere destroyed yesterday. British\nlosses were put at 15 planes with 11\nof the pilots safe.)\nEnglishman First\nto Register in U.S.\nSEATTLE, Aug. 27 (AP).-E. A.\nSleigh, a native of London, England, was the first to be registered\nhere today in the nation-wide tabulation under the Allen Reglatra-\ntion Act. He arrived an hour and\n20 minutes before registration headquarters opened\nAlthough It took him 35 minutei\nto register, Sleigh did not complain.\n\"I think it's a wonderful idea,\"\nhe said, wiping the fingerprint ink\noff his hands.\nDozens of persons were on hand\nwhen the office opened, eager to\nanswer questions put to them. Most\nwere British subjects, the first\ngroup called, although aliens of\nany nationality may report any\ntime they wish. Several Interpreters\nwere on hand.\nRegistration will continue until\nDec. 28 and. over the country, an\nestimated 3.800,000 foreign subjects\nwill be tabulated.\n900 FAMILIES JOIN\nBODY FAMILY ASSOC.\nHARDING, 111., Aug. 27 (AP) -\nThe Body Family Association, in\norganization of Canadian and\nAmerican kinsmen of the celebrated\nIndian scout. Buffalo Bill Cody, announced today Its registration had\nreached 900 families.\nThe association, holding lis 15th\nannual reunion, voted to meet next\nyear in Beverly, Mass. Spokesmen\niaid 120 members were preient today, from widely scattered parts of\nthe United States and Canada.\nSome of the Opportunities Here Are Just What You Neei\nNrlooit Bailti Nriun\nTelephone IM\nTrail: K. Lowdon. 719-Y\nRossland: Call 64-X\nClassified Advertising Rates\nHe par line par Insertion.\nUo per line par weak (9 consecutive Insertions for colt of 4)\n91.43 pel linea month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox  numbers  He extra. Thia\ncovers any number of tlmei.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, firat insertion and\n14c each subsequent lniertion.\nALL   ABQVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROJIPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon-commercial   Situation!\nWanted  for Stt  for any  required number ot lines for ilx\ndaya, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy __..._..___.. $   .05\nBy carrier, per week _.\nBy carrier, per year\t\nBy Mail:\nf1n\u00bb month\nThrea montha           -\n\u201e      3S\n-   13.00\n9 .79\n_   2.00\n4.00\nnn\u00bb y.f*       \t\n9.00\nAbove ratei apply ln Canada,\nUnited Statei, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth jfl.50, three monthi 94.00,\nsix monthi (SAO, one year $15.00.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - MAN FOR RANCH.\nMiddle aged man preferred. Good\nwith horses and cattle. Milk when\nnecessary. Steady job for the right\nman, all Winter. Wagea i-fOO\nper month, board and room. Apply Box 40. Creston, B. C.\nWANTED - MAN AND WIFE FOH\nranch work.Would prefer no family. Must be experienced and must\nhave references. State nationality.\nage and experience. Apply to\nBox 40, Creiton, B. C.\nWANTED - MAN FOR DAIRY\nfarm, must know how to milk, do\nfarm work. Box 3772 Daily News.\nGIRL TO TAKE FULL CHARGE\nof small house at Fruitvale. Family of9Box3933DailyNews.\nWANTED - A YOUNG WOMAN\nable to milk and do odd\nchores. Box 3837 Daily Newi,\nWANTED, GIRL FOR HSWRK\nFond of children. Write lmmedi-\nately to P. O. Box 130, Nelson\nWIDOW, 45-50 FOR RANCH HOME\n\u25a0mall remuneration to start, Ap-\nply Box 3839 Daily Newi.\nWANTED - QUALIFIED HAIR-\ndreiier for part time. Apply to\nBox 3945 Daily Newi,\t\nAGENTS AND SALESMEN\nEXTRA MONEY EARNED QUICK'\nly. We offer Christmas Card tales\npeople the highest quality cards\nwith customer's name. Also 91\nline and 19 beautiful boxed assortments (the largest in Canada).\nThese exclusive designs will sell\nthemselvei If shown. Bonui to\nproducers. Experience not necessary. Write for samples on ap'\nprdval today. British Canadian\nPublishing Company, Room 19,\nToronto, Ontario,\n8CHOOLS\nCIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYMENT\nExamination for Clerks announced. Open to alt Applications to reach Ottawa by Sept. 15.\nOur advice has helped hundreds\nobtain Civil Service positions as\nClerks, Postmen, Customs Examiners, etc. Free booklet on request. M. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg. Oldest in Canada. No agents\nPlan Check Up\nOn Registration\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)-Federal\nProvincial and Municipal police ill\nimmediately begin an Intensive\ncampaign to trace persons who have\nfailed to register, according to an\nannouncement by the Department\nof National War Services.\nThe Department announced that\na letter had gone forward to the\nattorney-general of each province\nrequesting the police to conduct\nsuch a campaign.\n'They are being particularly asked,\" the announcement said, to have\ntraffic officers require the production of registration certificates.\"\nThe R.C.M.P. are conducting a\nsimilar campaign.\nThe law provides that persons\nwho without a Heil excuse have not\nregistered are liable to a fine of not\nmore than $200 or imprisonment for\nthree months or both and an additional penalty of $10 a day for every\nday following \\the date on which\nthey should have registered.\nSwiii Want R.A.F.\nto Cease Flying\nOver Country\nBERNE, Aug. 27 (AP)-The\nSwiss Government today asked\nGreat Britain \"immediately and\nscrupulously\" to enforce orders\nglvei. to the Royal Air Force to\ncease alleged continued violation\nof Swisi territory in flight to Italy.\nThe request was made In a note\nto the British Foreign Office.\nThe Swiss Government met to\ndiscuss the \"repeated violations\" of\nCwiss territory after a night of\nflights across Switzerland, presumably by British planes, In which a\nnumber of perioni were injured by\ndropping fragments of anti-aircraft\nshells fired at the high-flying craft.\nIn a dawn communique the Swiss\nhigh command stated that the times\nthe pUnes crossed Switzerland and\ntheir direction made it \"perfectly\nclear\" violation of Swiss territory\nwis \"Intentlphal.\"\n(Switzerland already has protested twice to Britain against the\nflight of her bombers over this\nneutral state.)\nTwo air alarms were sounded In\nvarious Swiss cities during the\nnight and anti-aircraft batteries\nfired as planes crossed and re-\ncrossed the land.\nPERSONAL\n25c - FILMS PRINTED POSTAGE\npaid. Reprints 9c. Lions Photo\nP. O. Box 494, Vancouver, B. C.\nSTIRLING H<m. CORNER 01\nambie and Cordova, Vanoouver.\n75c night weekly ratea.\nSXDfXfRMl ARMY - VT YOU\nhava old clothing, footwear, turni-\nture to ipare pleaae Ph. ua 619L.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R Depot.\ntWCHAS* K>U&, MJlTS ANC\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Al-\nways freih In modern refrigeration\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR IS\na Portrait ot Distinction. Phona\n294, 577 Ward StreeL\nj ANb 3 fiuftNEh Oil STOVES\nand camp stoves. J. Chess, 2nd\nHand Store, 924 Vernon StreeL\nHAVE YOU ANY.ANTIQUES?\nTop pricei paid for antiquei at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall SL\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps budd healthier bays\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry.\nHAIRQOODS\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs and toupees\u2014fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue.\nHanion Company, P. 0. Box 901,\nVancouver, B. C,\nMEN'S DRUG SUNbRHS. SEND\nfl.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price Iisl\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O. Box\n91, Princeton, B. C\nMEN-REGAIN VITALITY, VIG-\nor, pep. Try Vltex 25 tableU $1.00\n60 tablet! $2.00. Guaranteed. 24\npenonal \"Drug S u n dr I e a\" $1.00\nFree price list of drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324 Vancouver, B. C\nHYGIENE AND SANITARY SUP-\nplies. Write for free price lilt, or\nsehd $1 for special saihple assortment of 25 best quality latex\npostpaid' under plain sealed cover.\nWestern Supply Agency, Box 667\nVancouver, B. C.\nMEN - HEALTH - REGAIN\nvigor\u2014pep, try Dupree-wheat-\nperlei 25 for $1.00 postpaid. Send\n$1.00 for SO samples of drug spc-\ncialtiei \u2014 teited \u2014 guaranteed 5\nyears agalnit deterioration. Paris\nNovelty Co., DepL \"N\" 24 Aikins\nBuilding, Winnipeg, Man\nANY SIZE 6 OR 9 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed tbe very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will lend a 5 by 7 enlargement, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\npacking. Krystal Photoi. Wilkie,\nSaskatchewan.\nMEN OF 30, 40. 50! HEALTH (VIM,\nPEP) subnormal? Try Oitrex tablets of tonics, stimulants, oyiter\nelementi to aid recovery of nor\nmal pep. If not delighted with re\nsuits first package, maker refunds\nits low price. Call write. Mann,\nRutherford Company and all\nother good drug storei\nWHAT IS THE MOST 1MPORT-\nant thing in life7 Health! Don't\nneglect your rheumatic and arthritic pains. Let thii medicine\nwhich has helped io many othen\ngive you tbe relief from pain you\nwish for.\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nAt Mann-Rutherford Co., Nelson\nand other drug itorei.     \t\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company\n915 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nPHONE  144\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Law Ratea for noncommercial advertisements under thla classification to assist\npeople sacking employment.\nOnly 29c (or one week (6 daya)\ncovers any number of required\nlinea. Payable in advance.\nENERGETIC YOUNG MAN OF 17\nrequirea an opening aa an apprentice ln any line'of business\nWill be genuinely ambitious if\nprospect of advancement aeems\ngood. P. O. Box aULNetgm.\nHIGH SCHOOL STUDENT, GIRL\ndesires room and board for help.\nA willing worker. Write to Box\n3749 bally Newi,\nSlRlTEXP. IN HOUSE WORK,\nplain cooking, care of children,\nwants wdrk. Box 9907 Daily Newi\nmam, willing youth of h\nwith over two yean' experience\nln general (arm and dairy work,\ngood milker, requires a position on\nranch or dairy, near Nelion preferred. P. 0. Box 312, Nelion,\nEXP SECOND COOK OR FLUNKV\nwants work In camp or mine or\nanywhere. Box 3603 Daily Newa.\nEXP. PASTRY AND GENERAL\ncook, very clean, good references,\nwants work. Box 3609 Daily Newa\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nLIVE DOWNTOWN tt SAVE CAR\nfare. You'll enjoy living in our\ncosy furniihed suites. Drop In and\niee the attractively unfurnished\nfront apartment, if you are looking for lomething especially nice\nWhen you live at the Kerr you\nenjoy the personal supervision and\nunexcelled comforts of Nelson's\nmost popular apartment houie.\nSee KERR APARTMENTS First\nFOR RENT, 2 LIGHT HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms. Private home,\nclose to Senior HlglrSchool. Fine\nfor atudenta to batch. Ph. 969\nTO RENT - 4 ROOM NSW BUN-\n\u25a0galow, cement basement, lewer\nconnected, $13 month. 214 Morgan\nSL Phone 434X3 mornlngi.\nFOR RENT 2 CHARMING DUPLEX\nhouses. 4 rmi. each. Elect, equipped, open fireplaces, central\nheating. -Phone .942R.\nHOUSES FOR RENT MONEY ON\nhand for Mortgage!, Yorkihire\nPlan or private funds. C W\nAppleyard.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED AND\nunfurnished suites in Medical Arts\nBlock. Chas. F. McHardy.\nFOR RENT 2 RM. FURN. SUITE.\nReasonable,  916 Edgewood Ave.\nFOR RENT 2 RM. SUITE, REASON-\nable price. 919 Edgewood Avenue\nREDECRTD. HSKEEPING ROOMS\nfor rent. 686 Baker St. Ph. 852L.\nFARM FOR RENT. THREE COWS\nfor sale Mrs. A. Jeffreys, Ph. 979L1\nFOR RENT 6 RMS. STANLEY ST,\nfurnace. Widdowson's'Assay office\nFOR RENT - FURN. COTTAGE,\nlight, water, garage. Phone 928L9\nFOR RENT 3 P.M. HOUSE $10 PER\nmonth. Apply 1024 Carbonate St.\nFOR RENT NEW 6 RM. HOUSE.\nGd. location. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG., MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped imtea.\n_ERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFURNISHED HOUSE KEEPING\nroomi. 711 Vernon Street\nFOR RENT FURN. HOUSE. AP-\nply 204 Kerr Apartments,\t\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP.\nrooma. Strathcona Hotel.\nTHREE ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nwith garden. Phone 394Y2.\t\nFOR RENT \u2014 3 ROOM FURNISH\ned flat. Phone 572R.\nTWO ROOM FURtflSM) SUITE.\nStirling Hotel.\t\nHOUSE FOR RENT. APPLY TO\nPhone 806L1.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE IS HEREBY 0I7JN' that\nI will hold a sale of the Penonal\nProperty of the Western Canada\nTimber Co., Ltd., at my Office in\nthe Government Building at Kailo.\nB.C. on Wedneiday, September 25,\n1940, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock in\nthe afternoon. Copy of Inventory\nmay be aecured from my office, and\npenonal property may be inspected\nit Gerrard, B.C.. Terma of Sale\u2014\nCASH\nCLAUDE MACDONALD.\nProvincial Collector.\nKaslo, B. C Aug   24, 1940.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nAnother Score with the offer of a\ngood buy. Confidentially priced at\n$990.00 below assessed valuei Terraced loti, grand view, polished\nfloors, electric range, close to hoipital. Phone 990 for details of thli\ngood buy.\nFRANK A. STUART\nFor a Real\u2014Real Estate Deal\n977 Baker SI. Nelson, B. C.\nNEW SUBDIVISION RESIDENT-\nial lota, 9 miles from ferry man;\nwith lake frootage, iome with\norchard, some near lake, ample\nwater record, also one with 10\nacres ln hay and potatoes Also\norchard of size to iult witn build-\n- inga and (our acres potatoes J. J\nCampbell, R. R No 1, Ph. 462L3.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nYOU'LL BE PROUD TO OWN\nONE OF OUR FINE\nUSED CARS\nHere' ara a few:\n'37 DeSoto Sedan\n'34 Oldsmobile Sedan\n'35 Studebaker Sedan\n'39 Oldsmobile Coupe\n\"37 Chevrolet Sedan\nand many more makes and models.\nNelson Transfer\nCompany Limited\nChevrolet and Oldsmobile Dealen\nPICK\nOF  THI\nMARKET\nNOW\n1939 Dodge Custom Coupe, Radio, Heater and Defrosters, good\ntlrei, at a laving of $430.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nDodge, DeSoto Dealers\nOpp. Poat Office St Hume Hotel\nti FO-.D CFaLUJtt fOMtOh SK\ndan $499. '35 Studebaker Dictator\nsedan $595. '30 Pontiac Coupe.\nThe tlrei are nearly new, good\nbody and upholstery, $169. \"30\nDodge 2 ton duals $900. Butorac\nMoton, 1225 Pine Ave., Trail, B.C.\nHudson, Pontiac, Buick, LaSalle,\nCadillac, GMC aittt White Sales\nand. Service.\n1937 Nash LaFayette Coupe De-\nLuxe. Cruising gear, heater and\nlicensed. Good rubber; perfect\nid every respect\u2014$695.00.\nINTERIOR MOTORS FINANCE\nCORP.\n554 Ward SL Nelson.\nGOOD RESIDENTIAL PRO. JSHTK\nIa a tangible asset. Buy a home-\nsite on Fairview properties, Nel\nion's belt residential lots All city\nservices. Easiest of termi R W\nDawion, sole agent, Hipperson\nBlock, Phone 197.\nCHEAP FOR QUICK SALE SMALL\nmodern ranch, 2 itorey frame\nhome. Water rights, electric light,\ntelephone, Vt mile from itreet car.\nCow, calf, chickens included\nPrice $1950. Box 67, NeUon, B. C.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terma in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write (or full information ts 90S. DepL ol Natural\nResources, C. P. R., Calgary, Alta\nCHOICE, LEVEL ACRE LOTS,\nfrom $200 up, water available,\nlight soon, low taxes, good ichools\nW. R Nelemi, Real Estate Agent,\nCaitlegar, B, C.\nPRODUCTIVE 12 ACRE FARM, 10\ncult. Water piped for irrigation.\nOrchard, hay, etc., 5 rm. house,\noutbuilding, Main Highway $1100.\nH. E. Dill.\nHOUSES FOR SALE, BEST BUYS\nin town, easy terms. Car, Life\nand Fire Insurance. C. W Apple-\nyard, Established 28 years.\nFOR SALE - SIX ROOMED MOD-\nern houie on Victoria Street, in\nfint clisi condition. Price $2300\nC, F. McHardy, Nelson.\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson. Terms. Johnstone Eitate.\nBox 199, Nelson, B. C.\t\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nROOM AND BOARD\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL WOULD\nlike place to room and board in\nreturn for light lervicea. Apply\nJoyce Riley, Blewett, B, C.\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR HIGH\nSchool girl in exchange for help\nwith children. 912. Baker, Ph. 703R\nWANTED HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS\nCloie to schools. Phone 981R.\nFOR SALE OR RENT, 25 H. P.\nDiesel engine and pulleys. Like\nnew. Central Truck & Equipment\nCo., 801 Baker Street, Nelson.\nFOR SALI MISCELLANIOl\n____\nFOR SALE - AN UNUSUAL _\nBin. .Kodak Auto-Focus Enlai\nodel B. Complete with\nAstigmatic lens and necessary\ncessories. Will make beautiful\nlargements of imall films or\nfilms of to 4 by 5 in size. Machn\nls in new condition. Ii being M\nonly   because   we   have   largi'\nmodel.   See   Wilfrid   Robmioi\nDally News photo engraving dap\nPIPE, TUBES.: FlWlNfl \"\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock (or Immediate snipmi\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\nfeLKCfWC  Wm i PCA1\nhigh ipeed Chromalox element\noven and broiler. Excellent com\ndition $95. McKay and Stretton,\nPIPfc-FltTtNfi-. TtlSES - SPJ\ncial low pricei Active Trading\n919 Powell St.. Vancouver, B.\nMASON St RISCH PIAN071\ncond., quick aale, bargain. Ph.   _\nFOR SALE H6\u00a7Plf AL WfOi\nplete. gd cond $15. Office Kerr 1\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTOR\nASSAYER*\nE W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINClA\nAnalyiL Aaiayer, Metallurgy\nEngineer, Sampling Agenti f(\nTrail Smelter. 304-309 Josephln\nStreeL Nelson, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist,\nFall StreeL P. 0. Box 9, Nell\nB.    C.    Representing    shipper\ninterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELNttS, ROSSUNJ\ni B. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemi\nIndividual representative (or ihi|\npen at Trail Smelter.\nSPECIALIZING IN ELECTRIC St\nacetylene welding. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, Nelson, Phone 98,\nDOUBLE BAR 22\" X 20\", SINGLE\nbar 20\" x 13\", bicycles, also lingle\nbar Hlslop, $15, H. R, Kitto.\nFOR SALE, STAR MARINE CON-\nverted engine and marine\nclutch. Phone 353R.\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS. HUES,\nglass, parts. 180 Baker St. Ph. 447.\n1935 FORD TRANSMISSION. NEL-\nlon Auto Wrecking, Phone 948.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found' Ad.\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner. ,\nLOST - GREEN SAIL BOAT. ANY\none finding it please notify Mrs.\nGeo. H. Thompson, 513 Nelion Ave\nLOST - GLASSES IN A LIGHT\nbrown lilver trimmed case. Ph,\n450L. Box 3829 Daily Newa.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE 3 MILKING COWS,\n1st and 2nd galf, one bull 18\nmonths, 2 calves, cheap. Fred\nPozdnikoff, C mile, Salmo, B. C\nWANTED, HEREFORD BULL, 4-5\nmonths old, prefer registered\nstock. SUte price in first letter.\nGust Anderson, Salmo, B. C.\nFLEMISH GIANT RABBITS, 2 TO\n4 monthi. W. Mawer, 2042 Falli St.\nSUMMER  RESORTS\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS,\nAppledale. Ratei by day week\nor monthL Fully furnished Apply\nAppledale General Store.\nCHIROPRACTOR8\nj k mcmillan, d. c, neun\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulIoch Bl\nDR WILBERT BROCK. D. (\n942 Baker Street. Phone 999.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR!\nR W. HAGGEN, Mining St Civ\nEngineer: B. C. Land Surveyo\nRossland and Grand Forki.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C\n. Surveyor and Engineer. Phon'\n\"Beaver Falli\".\nIN8URANCE AND REAL E8TAT1\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance\nevery description. Real Elt Ph.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. tNSUJLUK\nReal Estate. Phone 139.\nR. W. DAWSON. Rea' Eitate, |\n\u25a0urance. Rental!. Next Hipp\nHardware, Baker SL Plione\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine ihop, acetylene and el<\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I\nReglitered Patent Attorney, Ca\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd M\nCalgary. Advice free, confident!\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTOM\nhardwood merchant, 273 Baker SI\n8ECOND HAND 8T0RIS\nWE   BUY,   SELL   tc   EXCHANG,\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph.-59\nWant to Sell Something? i\nDaily News Classified Ad wil\ndo it. PHONE 144.\nYOU TWO-FIRST, YOU GIVE HIM MEAN NICKNAMES\nTHEN YOU 6IVE HIM SARCASTIC ONES.8ARRYM0RE\nGREAT PROFILE\/IF YOU'RE GOING TO GIVE HIM A\n\" NICKNAME.GIVE HIM A FRIENDLY\n_,\"_. ._.\u25a0..\u25a0\u25a0 .....'.n nfcift, ^m^.:-..,.-.-.A,-...,..,_ ,_ \u201e... _________ _m\n\u25a0r,,,^,,,-\u25a0\u25a0^^iiM-rtira! .91 \u25a0\u25a0 H - .i^^^^^a^^Mg^^iMifciBMi^i^aai^a^jBaMlfa\n ighler Planes\nfi) Be Shipped\nlo Britain Soon\nBy 8AM ROBERTSON\n(Canadian Preu Staff Writer).\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP Cable).-\nlarge and ever increailng flow\n! the sort of fighter and bomber\nIota known in the Britiah Air\nnet as \"wizards\" will soon ba\niming to the United Kingdom aa a\nault of giant strides being made ln\ne Empire Air Training scheme, it\nas learned authoritatively today.\nThe quickening pace at which\nie acheme ls going forward means\n\u25a0t hundreds of the fliers needed\n, match the numerical itrength of\nte Italo-German Air Force\u2014event-\nIlly to surpass tham numerically\n> they do now ln skill\u2014will be\naching combat stations ihortly.\nThe tcheme, which originally pro-\nided (or 67 training schools ln\nanada and 35 ln Australia, ia well\nMad of ichedule.\nIt was anticipated that there\nould be 15 schools in Canada by\nug. 1 but instead there were 22.\nUot trainen have rocketed (rom\nbout 500 on June 1 to 3600 today.\nAuitralia hai already eatabllahed\n) school! and pilots are being taken\nl-at a rate of 500 monthly.\nWhen the ambltioui scheme wai\nlunched, it embraced only Canada,\n.ustralia, New Zealand and the\ntalted Kingdom. Now the Union of\nouth Africa and Southern Rho-\neiia are cooperating in a big way,\nTraining penonnel numbering\n900 are understood to have left for\nIhodesia lince Spring. It is Intended\ns establish seven schools there\n\u25a0 Pilots turned out by the schools\nave itarted reaching here and\nfare ii not the slightest chance\nhat the British training period for\nijlots might be shortened to meet\nM axis air thrusts.\nAirmen of the British and Dominion Forcei are given twice the\nlying experience Nazi airmen re-\nalve before going Into action. This\nI considered one important reason\n\u00bb_y British, Canadian and other\nbnptre fllen have been able to out-\night the numerically superior foe.\nNo Shortage of Help\nin Alberta Harvest\nCalgary, Aug. 27 (CP)-Har-\n_it hands are being lent out to\n[berta farms, particularly ln the\n..jthern part of the province, at\n,e rate of about 50 per day and no\nlortage of help has devoloped to\njte, officials of the Government\n(mployment service stated here to-\nlay.\n\"We've been able to fill all the\nsrders we have received. There ls\njo apparent surplus of men and\nrtlll there is no ihortage. We have\nbeen able to clean up our orden\nby nightfall up until now and If\nthli lituation continues there will\nba no harvest help crisis,\" one\nbureau official said.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 97 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low 'Close\n73K\n74K\n29H\n27\n28 Vt\n34H\n34\n35 Vi\n133%\nmv,\nWVt\n4314\n43H\n46\n28%\n*tVri\n34%\n34%\n89%\n29%\n27\n28%\n34%\n33%\n95%\n133%    -       -\n139      197%   199\nWheat:\nOcL        79%\nDec    74%\nOati:\nOct    29%\nDec     27\nMay  ,   29% .\nBarley:\nOct     34%\nDec     94\nMay    ..:   39%\nFlax:\nOct. ..\nDec. .\nMay\nRye:\nOct     43        43%     42%\nDec    43%    43%    43%\nMay ......   -       -       -\nCA8H PRICES\nWheat\u2014Nos. I hard and 1 north'\nern 72%; No. 2 northern 70; No. 9\nnorthern 86%; No. 4 northern 62%;\nNo. 5. 58%; No. 6, 69%; feed 52%;\nNo. 1 garnet 64%; No. 2 garnet\n62%; No. 3 garnet 61%; No. 1 durum 63%; No. 4 special 62%; No. 5\nspecial 58%; No. 6 special 56%;\nNo. 1 mixed 57%; track 72%;\nscreenings 25 cents per ton.\nOats\u2014No. 2 c.w. and track 28%;\nEx. 3 c.w. 27%; No. 3'c.w. and Ex.\n1 feed 26%; No. 1 feed 25%; No. 2\nfeed 23%; No. 3 feed 21%.\nBarley \u2014 Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 c.w. 34%; 2-row Nos. 1\nand 2 c.w. 38%; 6-row No. 3 c.w,\n33%. Others: No. 1 feed 32%; No. 2\nfeed 32%; No. 3 feed 31%; track 34.\nFlax\u2014No. 1 c.w. 133%j No, 2 c.w.\n127%; No. 3 c.w. 119%; No. 4 c.w.\n108%; track 132%.\nRye\u2014No. 2 c.w. 42%.\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILSON B. Ga-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. AUO. 29. 1940\u2014\nCreslon Fanners\n(an Deliver II\nBushels an Acre\nCreston Approves\nC. P. R. Special Rate\nCRESTON, B. C, - The Canadian Pacific Railway, Monday,\nimproved its special express train\nservice at freight rates by reducing the maximum car load from\n10,000 to 5000 pounds for any one\npoint\nThe old rate has been effective\nfor two yeari and haa been popular, averaging two carloads daily\nfor a two-month period in 1938 and\n1939.\nThe new rate ihould be a still\ngreater favorite. On a 2% ton basis\nmany retailers will be able to\nhandle carloads direct and can cut\nout the jobber.\nThe territory In which the apeclal rate prevail! Is quite extensive. It applies at practically all\nstations as far as High River, to\nMedicine Hat, to Lethbridge and\nCardston, and East on the Leth-\nbridge-Shaunavon branch as far aa\nPontiex, Sask.\nKennecott Copper\nIncome Jumps Up\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP). -\nKennecott Copper Corp. and iub\nlidiariei reported today net in\ncome after depreciation but before\ndepletion for the aix months ended\nJune 30 of $24,787,364, or $2.29 a\nshare, compared with $10,112,169, or\n93 cents a share, In the like period\nof 1939.\nTORONTO   STOCK\nINE8:\nlermac Copper  14\nGold  .01\n\u2022o-Huronian   - 1.45\n.'Weld Gold  _... .06%\n_.\u00bbia Rouyn Minei  .02%\n.unor Gold  _ 1.42\n;amac Rouyn    .03%\nlkfield   Gold      j08V4\ne Metali Mining \u2014 .07\n_ttie  Gold   Minei   ...._. .90\n\"dgood Kirkland 12\n\u2022\u2022Missouri ~~...... \u2014 MVi\ndo Mines   .04\nlome Minei   9.50\n!alo  Ankerite   _ 9.25\nker Hill Extension --,-\u25a0- -01%\nadian   Malartic  .38\n_.boo Gold Quartz   2.00\nCastle-Trethewey    _ .56\n\"   tral Patricia  _. 1.78\njomium M St S _ .20\n\u00abst Copper    .50\ninlaurum Minei  1.20\ninsolidated M It S  85.50\nie Minei  \u2014 21.00\nirval-Siscoe      .01%\nut Malartic   _- 291\ndorado Gold  _  .34\nalconbridge  Nickel   2.70\nWeral Kirkland  03\ntancoeur Gold \u201e,   S3\ntlllies Lake   .04\nod'_*Lake Gold .. .32%\nold Belt  ,. ...... .20\nIrandoro Mines   .04%\nlunnar Gold    _. .33\nard Rock Gold  .73\narker Gold ....\u2014  .04\nohlnger  __.... 11.40\nbwey Gold  22%\nludson Bay M & S   24.00\nnternational  Nickel    36.50\n-M Consolidated .................. .00%\nicola Gold    .02\nEerr-Addtson  2.46\ntlrkland Lake ..- 69\n*ttch  Gold      .48\n*bel Oro Mines  .01%\nilttle Long Lac _  2.05\nacasia  Mines  3.40\nicLeod Cockshutt  1.80\n'aisen Red Lake Gold 39\nlandy     05\nslntyre-Porcuplne    41.75\n.cKenzie Red Lake  96\ntcVittie-Graham    .05%\ncWatteri Gold  \u201e._ .28\nining Corporation  .66\nloneta  Porcupine   44\norris-Kirkland    .03\nlplislng Mining _ .86\noranda   53.00\normetal  ___...__..  _3\n'Brien  Gold   70\nhncga  Gold     .19\namour Porcupine    .90\naymaster Cons    .23\n\u00bbnd  Oreille     1.20\nerron Gold    1.60\nlckle Crow Oold   2.09\nloneer Gold  2.20\nQUOTATIONS\nPremier Gold  _\nPowell Rouyn Gold \t\nPreston East Dome \t\nReno Gold Mines  \t\nRoche Long Lac ......\t\nSan Antonio Gold \t\nShawkey Gold \u201e\t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt  Gordon   \t\nSiscoe Gold  \t\nSladen Malartic \t\nSt Anthony\n.75\n.05\n1.80\n.14\n.03\n1.85\n.01%\n.57\n.34\n.09\nCRESTON, B. C., Aug. 27 (CP>-\nThis diatrlct'i grain storage problem ti expected to be solved by\nthe Increased delivery. quota tor\nthis area which now permlta farmers to deliver 18 buiheli per seeded\nacre. Thli is two bushels more than\nhad been requested before an Inspector was lent Into the district\nto investigate storage facilitici and\ncrops.\nThe three elevators here can hold\n200.000 bushels and new and old\nfarm itorage li expected easily to\nmeet the estimated 40-bushel crop\noff 13,000 acres.\nCanadian Crop\nYield Favorable\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)-Cana-\nda'i 1940 harveit il in fijll iwing\nwith generally latlifactory yleldi\nreported from all Drovlncei, the\nDominion Bureau of Statiitici reported today in the last of \u2022 leriei\nbf fortnightly telegraphic reports\ncovering crop conditions throughout Canada.\nCutting and threihlng li general\nin Ontario and the yleldi and quality of grain cropi are latlifactory.\nAbout one-quarter of the total flue-\ncured tobacco crop wai damaged\nby frost ln the Norfolk district.\nTruck crops are doing well, though\nsomewhat late.\nIn the prairie provinces, temperatures moderated during the pait\nweek and cool weather and raini\nwere experienced ln Manitoba and\nEaitern Saskatchewan in the latter\npart of the week. Threihlng wai\nwell advanced in Manitoba and ln\nthe extreme South of Alberta, but\neliewhere in the Prairiei it wai\nJust nicely started. Wheat yleldi\nare good on the whole In Manitoba,\nand are very favorable in Saskatchewan with some notable exceptions\nbetween Mooie Jaw and Saskatoon,\nNortheait of Weyburn, and ln tha\nextreme Southwest where the cropi\nare poor.\nThe yield and quality of iprlag\ngrains in British Columbia was not\nup to earlier expectation! due to\nthe prolonged drought in July and\nwet weather at harveit. Apples have\nmatured earlier than usual and will\nshortly be moving to market ln\nvolume.\nOnly Few Trades on\nWinnipeg Exchange\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 27 (CP)-The\nwheat futures pricei remained fixed\nat Government minimum levels of\n73% cents a bushel for October and\n74% for December in a lifelesi lei-\nsion of Winnipeg Grain Exchange\ntoday, marked only by a few early\nsales believed to have been made\nto Southern interests.\nIn cash wheat there wai a good\ndemand for moit gradei, especially\nNos. 2 and 3 northern. Spreads\nwere unchanged to fractionally\nbetter.\n'Domestic buyers gave good support to barley but prices did not\nadvance. Local interests and mills\npurchaser! some oats.\nEXCHANCI MARKITS\nMONTREAL, At* IT (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange:\nNominal rates between banks\nonly:\nArgentina, peio, .2520.\nChina, Hbng Kong dollars, Mtt.\nIndia, rupee, .394.\nJapan, yen, .2905.\nSwitzerland, franc. .2530.\nCompiled by the Royal Bank ol\nCinada.\nCLOSING RATIS\nAt Montreal: Pound, buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U. 8- dollar buying\n1,10. selling LU.\nAt Naw York; Pound, 4.08, Canadian dollar .87%.\nNEW YORItf Aug. 21 (AP) -\nAlone of the- important world currencies the Canadian dollar gained\nground today in relation to tha\nUnited States dollar In \"free\" trading on the foreign exchange market\nhere.\nTha Canadian mc.iey rose % cant\nto a discount of 12% centi.\nThe only other International currency to change its relationship\nto United Statei money wn the\nHong Kong dollar which gained\n.05 of cent. The free pound iterling\nremained at $4.03.\nHIM Flurry Ih\nToronto Golds\nSudbury Basin  JW\nSullivan Consolidated _ .63\nSylvanite    2.20\nTeck-Hughei Gold   3.05\nToburn Gold Minei   1.25\nTowagmac   ~ .15\nVenturei  2.20\nWaite Amulet    2.95\nWright Hargreaves  5.80\nYmir Yankee Girl  .04\noils:\nAjax      .11\nBritish American   16.75\nChemical Research .\u2014  .20\nImperial    -  10.25\nInter Petroleum   14.75\nTexas Canadian .\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power    \u2014\nBell  Telephone   \t\nBrazilian TL4P\t\nBrewers it DlstiUen ..\nBrewing Corporation\nB C Power A \t\nB C Power B \t\nBuilding  Producti  ....\nCanada  Bread   \t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car It Foundry ....\nCm Cement  -\nCan   Dredge\n1.10\n.75\n149%\n4%\n4%\n1.3\n24 Vi\nIV,\n14\n2%\n3%\n7\n4%\n13%\nCan Malting  :       84\nCan Pac Railway\nCan Ind Alcohol A .\nCons  Bakeries   _\nCosmos \u2014\nDominion Bridge ....\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar & Cham ..\nDlstiUen Seagrams\nFanny Farmer\nFord of Canada A\nGen Steel Wares ....\nGoodyear Tire   -\nGypsum L St A ......\nHamilton Bridge \t\nImperial Tobacco ..\nLoblaw A  -\nLoblaw B\t\nKelvinator\nIJ\nTORONTO, Aug. 27 (CP) - A\nmild flurry In the golds lifted volume to about 160,000 ihares on Toronto Stock Exchange today.\nBroulan Geld traded about 40,000\nshares and firmed 9 ta 9, closing\naround 98. Small losses ihowed for\nCentral Patricia, Preiton, Pickle\nCrow, Eait Malartic and Leitch.\nSigma tinned 45 to\nBate Metals Corporation weakened \u25a0 cent to 7, lta low mark for\nthe year. Steep Sock Improved a\nfew.\nHome Oil held at 1.51 and Anglo\nCanadian wai off 2 to 55 for broken\nlota. : ' '\nC. B. Twigg Judgei\nat District Fairs\nCRESTON, B, C, - C. B. Twl\u00ab,\nDistrict Agriculturist, returned on\nSiturday from Kimberley, where\nhe had been Judging at the Kim-\nberley-Chapman Camp Horticultural Anoclatlon exhibition, which\nrum heavy to flowen, with vegetable! from C. M. Sc S. employees\ngarden trada at Maryivllle. The\nfair features iome classes In poultry. Mr. Twigg reporta a large\nentry in the flower clasiei and exceptional quality throughout.\nHe lett Tueiday for Hirrop where\nhe will complete hli allotment of\nthe fruit and flower Judging In .time\nfor the fair opening on Wedneiday.\nFriday he la at Invermere taking care of leveral of tha clasaes at\nthe old time Fall fair that haa bean\nstaged continuously in tha Windermere country for about 10 yean\nand which,'tnli year, plane to nay\niome ot ltl prlzei in War Savings\nCertificates.\nMonday morning ha will place\ntha red and blue tickets at the\nGolden Fair. This exhibition wai\nrevived in 1939 after a lapse of\nmora than a dozen yean, and ln\n1939 attracted a fine entry in the\nagricultural sections from the farmen in the district surrounding Go!\nden.\nPound Notes Up\nto Bid of $3.57\nNEW If OK, Aug. \u00ab (AP).-The\nprice of an English \u00a31 bank not*\nsoared to a closing bid price ot $3.57\nlate today aa holden all over the\nUnited Statei deluged money broken to escape tha deadline on a\nBritish ban agalnit current imports.\nLut week the Britlih Treasury\nannounced that' attar Auguit 27 no\nEnglish currency could be imported\nThe move wai planned to circumvent Nazi use ot huge amounts of\nEnglish currency circulating in German-controlled areai in Europe.\nA few montha ago a \u00a31 bank\nnote wu worth between $2 and $2*9\nIn the local market At the time the\nimport announcement wu made\nlut week the price had reached\naround $3.90. The quotation broke\naharply. then abruptly ihot forward\nwhen holden learned London had\nallowed until today to dispose of\ntheir money.     . _  ,\nVeteran money dealen estimated\naround \u00a3900,000 In currency reached\ntha market ln the laat week. A liveable portion of thla. they aald, came\nfrom war retugaea holding the\nmoney ln the hope of getting a bet-\nterfylce. Ai the 3 p.m. deadline approached iuch offeringi lncreued\nto about \u00a375,000. _[lt_     .    .      '\nThe price of Entflah nctei hu no\nrelation to the quotations for the\nfree and tha official;poundi. currently around $4.03. The two latter,\nin which the vait buiineai between\nEngtad Sd th. United States 1.\ncleared, are tranaferred by cables\nand Check! which merely aatabllah\ncredit! and deblta here and In\nLondon. '\nFarmers Ask Change\nIn Grain Policy\nOTTAWA. AUf. tl (CP) - The\n\u00bb&\u25a0\u00bb$\u00a3\u00a3\nSon? probably will meet early next\nweek to deal with problems arising\nout of the large grain cropi In\nWeitern Canada and the lack ol\natoraga (acillUei. ____i\nOne prtiiing quution !\u2022 wlietbef\ntanner! will ba advanced money on\nnato itored on tarmi becauie of\nlack of elevator accommodation.\nOfficial! close to the situation expect the committee will urge the\nProvincial Governments to take\nthe initiative in thli matter, with\nthe Dominion lending lupport.\nThe belief Is that ipeclil legie\nlatlon on the part of the, provlncei\nwould be necesiary.\nOn hli return to Ottawa today after a trip to Prince Edward Island\nwith a batch of petitions from the\nPrairie tarmen asking several chin-\nset in the grain policy. The Miniiter\niisued a itatement laying the petition! were comlna In from different parti of Sukatchewin and\nwhile they were ilgned by many\nperioni molt of them gave no Indication where a reply ihould ba\naent.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh    Low Close Change\n30  lnduitrtali    125779   124.99 125.33 ott     88\n20 raili   _ .\u201e     26.96    26.90 26.95 unchd.\n15 utililtiei   ..\u201e    22\/16    11.95 22.00 unehd.\nQUOTATIONS  ON  WALL  STREET\nNew York Central\nPackard Moton ...\nPenn B R\nOpen\nAm Smelt Sc Ret \u2014   36%\nAmer Telephone ..... 160%\nAnaconda  20%\nBaldwin      14%\nBendix Aviation  29%\nBeth Steel  _ 76%\nChryiler    71%\nC Wright pfd  7\nDupont  164%\nEastman1 Kodak   127\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral  Motors  \t\nInternational  Nickel..\nKenn Qopper  _\nMontgomery Ward ....\n33\n46%\n26\n27%\n39%\nClose\n36%\n160%\n20%\n14%\n29%\n76%\n71%\n7\n164.4\n127\n32%.\n461.\n26%\n27%\n39V.\nPhillipi Peta , ..\nPullman    \u2014\nRadio Corporation\nS Cal Edison _\nStan Oil ot N J \u2014\nStudebaker\n11%\n3%\n19%\n32%\n19%\n4%\n26%\n33%\n7%\nTexu Corporation _  35%\nUnion  Carbide\nUnion Pacifio \t\nU s Rubber \t\nU S Steel .. \t\nWoolworth \t\nYellow- Truck ~-\n72\n95%\n17%\n51%\n33%\n13%\n11%\n3%\n19%\n32%\n19%\n4%\n26%\n33%\n7%\n35%\n72\n85%\n17%\n51%\n32%\n13%\nMONTREAL   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nDominion -  \t\nImperial  ...\nMontreal      mr\t\nNova   Scotia    _,\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc Brew of Can\nBathurst P1PA..\nCan Car It Fdy pfd\nCan Celanese\nCan Steamship\npfd\nIting\n17\n11%\n15%\n29%\n14%\nMaple Leal Milling \t\nMassey Harris    -\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corn   .\nNat Steel Car -\nPage Hersey  \u2014\nPower Corp  \u2014\u2014\nPressed Metal!  -\t\nSteel of Can    \u2014\nStandard   Paving   \t\n13'A\n24\n25\n9%\n5 V.\n24%\n24\n10%\nl_\n68V.\n1\n3%\n13%\n23%\n22%\n7\n2%\n3\n27',_\n41V.\n43\n99%\n6%\n8%\n69%\n.65\nCity\nHolders of\nof Rossland, B*C\u00bb\nBONDS\nAre requested to get in touch\nwith.the undersigned regarding Rossland's Refunding Plan.\nMcDermid. Miller & McDermid\nLimited\nFiscal Agenti\n525 Seymour Street,\nVancouver, B. C.\nCon Min It Smelting  - 35\nDom Steel 4 Coal B  7%\nDom Textile  61\nFoundation C of C    10%\nGatineau Power pfd  99\nImperial Oil  10%\nInter Petroleum     14%\nInter Nickel of Can  36%\nLake of the Woodi   16\nMcColl Frontenac   5%\nNational Brew Ltd  27\nPrice Bros   12%\nShawnigan W It P  16%\nSt. Lawrence Corp _ \u201e.. 8\nSt. Law Corp pld     15%\nBANKS\nCommerce    149\nRoyal\nToronto\t\nCURB\nAbltlbl pfd \t\nBathunt PtPB..\nBeauharnois Corp\n175\n183\n. 183\n270\n150\n.205\nBritiih American Oil .\nB C Packet!\t\nCan Vicken  ...:\nCom Piper Corp .......\nFairchild Aircraft ..!....\nFraier Co. Ltd. \t\nInter Utilities B\t\nMacLaren J Sc P\t\nMcColl Frontenac old .\nMitchell Robt ,\nRoyalite Oil \t\nWalker Good It W\t\nWalker Good pfd \t\n.85\n3\n5\n17\n12\n3\n4%\n2%\n11%\n.25\n14\n93\n10\n_2\u00ab\n37%\n19%\nVANCOUVER\nBid\nMINES:\nBig Missouri       .09\nBralorne     9.79\nBridge Rlv Con       \u2014\nCariboo Gold      2.00\nDentonla       \u2014\nFairview Amal       .00%\nGeorge Cop  _.      .05\nGolconda    02  \u2022\nGold  Belt       .20\nGrandvlew       .11\nGrull   Wihksne   .      .02%\nHedley Mascot 97\nHome   Gold          .00%\nIndian Mines :.._.'_      .00%\nInter Coal  27\nWand Mount  70\nKoot Belle         \u2014\nMinto   Gold          .01%\n\u25a0McGillivray       .10\nNicola M Sc M       .01\nPac Nickel       -\nPend Oreille      1.20\nPioneer  Gold        2.20\nPorter Idaho    01%\nPremier Border ....      Ol\nPremier  Gold   80\nPrivateer   40\nReeves Mac         \u2014\nRelief  Arl 07%\nSalmon Gold  04\nSheen Creek-       .98\nqilbak Premier ....      -\nSilver Crest          \u2014\n\u25a0Tiylor Bridge        .82\nWellington           \u2014\nWesko Minea        \u2014\nSTOCK  QUOTATIONS\nAsk\nj07\n9.78\nm\nM\n.00%\n.03%\n.22\n.14\n'.03\n.83\n.0(1%\n.01%\n-09\n1.30\n2.25\n.01%\n.01%\n.85\n.43\n.25\n.08%\n.03\n.90\n.60\n.00%\n01\n.00%\nWhitewater    fll\nYmir Yank Olrl _ .03%\nOILS:\nAmalgamated  . \u2014        .00%\nAnaconda  .09%\nAnglo  Can  - .53\nBrit Dom     .05\nBrown Corp  _ .07\nCalgary & Edm . 1.38\nCalmont     \u2014\nComoil    _ JO\nCommonwealth  .. Jl\nDalhouiie  \u2014\nExtension  .18%\nFireitone Pete   .03\nFour Star Pete .._ .10\nHighwood Sarcee .. .09\nHome    - 1.94\nMadlion     .01%\nMar Jon  - j01 \u2014\nMcDoug Sag  \u2014 .09%      \u2014\nMercury     M \u2014\nMill City  M -\nNational Pete  -        .09\nNordon     .04\nOkalta com   M\nPac Pate       Jl\nPrairie Roy     \u2014\nRoyal Creit Pete .. .07%\nRoyalite  90.00\nSpooner     .02\nUnited    .94\nVanalta    .09%\n.09\n1.42\n.23\n.30\n.13%\n1.56\n.27\ns\nTrucki Prominent\nin Creiton Business\nCRESTON, B. C, - Trucke of\nvarioui capacitiei play a prominent part in the traniport builnau\nat Creston. At the end of June licenses for J04 had been Usued at\nthe local Provincial Police office.\nWith the grain and fruit haul now\nIn full swing the number will have\nbeen poMibly Increaied to the 1939\ntotal of Juit over 280. At the lime\ndate license platei had been Iuued\nfor 818 autoe, which la ln line with\n1089\nRevenues from the Motor Vehicle\nAct had reached $13,298 at the middle of the year. Along with car and\ntruck platei, 698 drivers' licenses\nhave been iuued, and 109 chauffeur Heeniea.\nUp to July 1 the Provincial Police\noffice intake from all lourcei wai\n$14,292. Of thii $160 wai from police\ncourt flnei and costs, $399 from the\nGame Act Tax, and at tha end ot\nMay there was demand for Free\nMlnen' Licenses that accounted for\nfor an intake ot $339, which U a\ngain over the lame period in 1930.\n47 BIRTHS\n, In the vital itatiitici branch the\nrecordi ihow 47 birthi, of which\n27 are boyi. There hava been 26\ndeaths recorded to the end of June,\ntnd 14 marriage licenses issued.\nFew Changes in\nLight Coast Trade\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 27 (CP). -\nTrading continued light on Vancouver Stock Exchange today as\ngold prices remained generally unchanged and oils were up slightly.\nTransactloni totalled 17,949 shares.\nAnglo-Canadian OU at 69 wai\nup 9 trom yesterday'i dosing bid\nand Calgary Sc Edmonton gained 2\nIn the gold! Kootenay Belle at\n29 illpped 3 from Monday'! bid.\nBritiih Govt. Bonds\nShow General Gaini\nLONDON, Aug. 27 CAP)-Scour-\nIty prlcei held up well today. Brit-\nlib Government bonds showed gen'\neral gains ot 1-16 point. A tew lossei ipotted the industrial group although textiles attracted buying favor. Kaffirs recovered after a lhaky\nitart Trinidad louei again took\nleadership ol tba oils. A few provincial orden auitalned domestic\nrills. Foreign bonds coasted along\nevenly.\t\nLONDON   CLOSE\nLONDON, Aug. 37 (AP)-Brltlih\nItock doling!. In sterling: Austin\nA 14s; Babcock & Wilcox 31s 9d:\nCarrerai A \u00a34%; Central Mining\n\u00a310; Consol Gold Fields 28s 9d;\nCrown \u00a312%; De Been dfd \u00a34:\nEut Geduld \u00a39%; HBC 22s; Metal\nBox 60s; Mex Eagle 4s 11 _d; Mining Trust la 3d; Rand \u00a39%; Rho-\ndeiian Anglo Am 13s 6d; Rhokana\n\u00a37%: Sprmw 20s; Vantenpoit 22s\n6d: West Wltwatenrand \u00a39%.\nBonds: Brit 2% per oent Consols\n{78%: Brit 3% per cent War Loan\n100%; Brit funding 4's 1990-1990\nlift\nMITAL   MARKITS\nLONDON, Aug. 27 (CP)-Bar lilver 23 7-16d, up % (equivalent 42.50\ncenta). Bar gold 199s, unchanged\n(equivalent $33.85). Exchange $402.\nTin easier; ipot \u00a3268 6a bid; \u00a3298\n10a asked; future \u00a3298 15s bid, \u00a3299\naaked\nMONTREAL\u2014Bar gold In London\nwu unchanged at $97.94 an ounce\nin Canadian funds; 169s in Britlih,\nrepresenting the Bank of England'!\nbuying price. The fixed $39 Washington price amounted to $33.50 In\nCanadian..\nSpot: Copper, eectrolytlc 12.73;\ntin 91.90; ead 5.60; tine 5.69; antimony 15.25 per 100 lbl. f.o.b. Montreal, five-ton loti.\nSilver futurei closed unchanged\ntoday   Bid; August 97.79.\nNEW YORK-Copper steady: electrolytic spot, Conn. Valley, 11.00;\nexnort FAS. N.Y.; 9.90.\nTin ateady; apot and nearby\n50.82%; forward 50.20.\nLead steady; ipot New York 4.90-\n95: Eait St. Louii 4.79.\nZinc iteady; Eut St. Louli ipot\nand forward 9.90.\nQuicksilver 183.00-185.00.\nBar alive. 84%, unchanged.\nLivestock Demand\nPuis Prices Up\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP)\u2014Wartime increase In the consumer demands for meats hai put millions\nof additional dollan Into the pocket! of Canadian livestock producer!,\nboth through Increaied marketings\nand lncreued prices, lt waa cal'\nculited here today.\nHog ralsen along have received\n$14,000,000. or $15,000,000 more In\n1840 so far than they did In the\naame period of 1939. Cattle men\nhave benefitted ilmilarly under\nmarket condition! which ara tbe\nbeet in aeveral yean.\nAgricultural economists here feel\nthe Improvement ii directly traceable to the war. Employment and\npurchasing power generally hava\nlncreued. Then the defence forcei\nare buying a lot of good quality\nmeat and paying \"decent prices''\nfor it.\nCattle pricei have lncreued iub\nstantially since the flnt of the\ncalendar year, although marketings\nhave increaied only illghtly the\nrise in good butcher steen is typical. Priced now at $8.26 a hundred\npoundi, iuch iteeri were $6.59 a\nyear ago and $6 two yean ago.\nThe Chicago market hai been\nitrong in recent weeka but' not\nsufficiently itronger than the Canadian market to attract the maximum number of Canadian cattle\npermitted under the quota system,\nHogs are about $1 a hundred\nabove the price of a year uo, averaging now about $9 compared to\n$6 then, On top of that price rise,\nmarketing! have lncreued greatly,\nfrom 2,022.000 head In the tint 94\nweeki of 1989 to 2,937,000 head in\nthe fint 94 weeks of 1940. When\nthe average hog weighs about 200\npounds, those additional 915,000\nhoga mean a heavy increase In\nfarm Income.\nFraneiico Sugar\nReacti to Cut in\nU.S. Import Quotas\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP) -\nFrancisco Sugar 8's broke 5 to 99\non tba bond market today atter\nannouncement of cut In U.S. augar\nImport quotas.\nAustralia 4%'a fell more than a\npoint. On the uie of one bond,\nBelgium 6%'s tumbled 7,\nWall St. Suffers\nFrom \"War Nerves'\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP)-Ao-\nprehemlon over tha war wu the\nprincipal excuse given by broken\ntoday tor another dragging and un,\neven itock market performance.\nA few rails, coppers and ipecial\nties managed to take on a mild re<\ncovery tinge but many leaden were\na shade under water when the final\nSong lounded and numerous itocki\neld at Monday'i level! or never\neven opened.\nDealing! picked up at intervals\nand tramfen of around 225,000\nshares compared with .161,000 yesterday which wu the second smalU\neat turnover for a full session ln\n24 yean.\nIndividual iharea were propped\nby good business items, including\nearnings and dividends. Tax problem!, at the same time, clouded the\nspeculative icene.\nCanadian issues generally were\nInactive. Canada 4'i, In the bond\nmarket, dipped illghtly.\n'Time Hai Come for\nDeeiiive Action\"\nMONTREAL, Aug. 27 (CP)-The\ntime bu come for \"bold and decisive action\u2014let ui have it,\" Maj.-\nGen. L. R. LaFleche, Joint Deputy\nMinister ot National War Services,\nnld here today In an address before a service club.\nGeneral LaFleche, military attache at the Canadian legation ln\nParis, aald tha proposed joint detence measures between Canadi\nand the United Statei came \"as a\nrefreshing breese following defeat\nafter defeat of tha Alliei\"\n\"A few more iuch moves and wa\nwill hava the enemy on the run,\"\nbe aald.\nThe ware bad advanced \"a long\n\u2022tap\" towards Canada. North America wu ln danger and Its one bulwark wu Britain. \"Wa muit be\nrudy to carry our burden.\" -\nSpeaking of tha preparations\nmade In France, General LaFleche\n(aid France wai \"not Inspired, wu\nnot arouied to reiiit.\"\nResignation of\nEgypt Premier\nQuickly Denied\nCAIRO, Au$. 27 (AP).-\u00bb\u00bbpfi\npolitical iltuation wu confused today when Premier Hassan Sabry\nPuha announced that his cabinet\nwaa holding office despite an earlier\nannouncement that lt had resigned.\n\"There ii no change,\" the Premier\ndeclared. \"The cabinet hu not resigned. I did not go to the palace\nIn that connection and I have told\nthe preu not to anticipate events.\"\nEarlier lt had been aald that hla\ncabinet, after less than two montha\nIn office, had submitted lta resignation and that the Premier had begun Immediately to form a new\ngovernment at the requeit of King\nFarouk.\nThe Premier's itatement mystified\npolitical circles, but Informed\nsources expressed belief that differences within the cabinet probably\nhad been quickly patched up ana\nthe resignation withdrawn.\nDiscuss Plant for\nCentral Church\nin New Japan\nTOKYO. Aug. 27 (AP),^-Japaneie\nrepresentatives of 40 Christian denominations are discussing the elimination of foreign Influence trom\ntheir administration and tha unification of all sects in a Japanese central church to conform to Japan'a\nnew nationalistic and totalitarian\nIdeals.\nDomei, Japanese News Agency.\nsaid today that an agreement la expected next week.\nForeign clergymen and officials\nexpressed belief a growing campaign to eliminate all foreign financial aid and direction from Christian religious institutions ln Japan,\neven. Including hospitals and\nichools.\nThere are iome 300,000 Japaneie\nChristians.\nACTOR DENIES MEMBER\nOP COMMUNIST PARTY\nNEW YORK, Aug. 27 (AP) -Ac\ntor Francis Lederer anpeared at hla\nown requeit before Representative\nMartin Dies todiy, and after a 20-\nmlnute cloied hearing aald an allegation that he wu a member of tha\nCommunist party \"ia a complete\nand vicious lie,\"\nDiscuss Market\nfor Boiwell Applet\nCRESTON, B. C, - A. Mackie,\nPreiident, and A. Hepher. Manager,\nof Boiwell Fruit Growerr Auocla-\ntlon, Boiwell, viaited Creston, Monday, conferring with 0, W. Hembling, manager of Creiton tub central of Tree Fruiti Ltd.\nThe marketing ot the Bosweil\noutput li not an euy one thli year.\nThe district is heavy to Cox Orange\nand Jonathan apples, which are\npopular for export, but up to the\npresent there ls nothing definite\nu to what tonnage can be moved\noveneu. Along with these two varieties Boiwell ii noted tor the\nquality of its Gravenstelns, but th{\nplanting of theie is limited. According to the visitors tha apple crop la\nheavier than In 1039.\nBoswell'i sweet cherry crop wai\nhandled thli year through Creiton\nCooperative Fruit Exchange and\na faw thousand dollan will be placed In circulation at that point before the week ii out The cherry\npooli have been closed and payment will be made at once.\nWheat and Corn Gain\nBriskly at Chicago\nCHICAGO, Aug, 27 (AP)-Both\nwheat and corn pricea rallied briskly in the final hour today, Traden\nreported the upturn wai due to a\nrush to novel commitment! by local\nshorts. December and May wheat\nand May corn touched new highs\nfor the day.\nFlrmneu In the Northweit markets and slackening of liquidation\ncauied iome of the earlier sellers to\ncover and wheat advanced u high\nu 1% centi trom the day'i low\npointi.\nSoy bun futurei ihot up 3-3%\ncents a bushel.\nLIFT BAN ON PRESS\nATTACK ON RELIGIOUS\nBELIEFS IN FRANCE\nVICHY, Franca, Aug. 2_ 1101\u2014\nThe Vichy cabinet tonight annulled\na law which forblda newipaper attacks on any penon on account of\nhis religious beliefs.\nNo detail! were given on thli Important itep regarding racial and\nreligious questions ln unoccupied\nFranoe. A communique after a\ncabinet meeting Hid the annulment\ndecree had been ilgned and would\nbe promulgated tomorrow ln the\nofficial Journal.\nHEADLIGHT REFLECTORS\nSILVER PLATED\nLC.M. Electroplating\nLaurlte Bldg.   704 Nelson Avi.\nNEW AND USED\nPORTABLE COMPRESSORS\nAND ROCK DRILLS\nJACK ANNABLE\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital Bit \t\nCoast   Brew  ....\nUnited Dist\nSI\n1.00\n1.25\n.70\n1.2S\n1.30\nOo bt Train- CI*tm,Comlortebla\nLOW\nRAIL FARES\nLABOR\nDAY\nMONDAY, SEPT. a\nHim Ui. 37>TIWI II _____\nONE-WAY FARE\n\u2022nd ONE-QUARTER\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n(Minimum Para Ilo)\nGOlNGi\nAUO. 10 TO 2 P.M. SEPT. t\n(tf aa Train Am. 30 tickets will bi told\nfor Aug. 29)\nRETURN.  Lv. destination until\nTUESDAY, SEPT. *.\n(If ae Train Sept 3 tickets will be good\nin flnt available train)\ny\u00aba fn\/omati\u2122 \/rem ear Aimt.\nWU -41*\n\u2022-AMXiIIqa. (io^tC\nDIVIDENDS\nCo.,\nCanadian  General  Electric\nLtd, 12.\nCentril Patricia Oold Minei, Ltd.,\nfour centi plus ona oent.\nCanadian Celanese, quarterly 28\noenti a Ihare orf common stocks plus\nan extra dividend ot 30 centa a\nahare.\nCanadian Celaneie, seven per cent\npreferred, $1.75.   <\nDeclines General\non Mti. Exchange\nMONTREAL, Aug. JT (CP) -\nScattered decline! outweighed the\ntew advances boarded on the itock\nmarket today,\nNickel and Hudion Bar backed\nfractionally. Price Brother! alio\nsold off.\nBell Telephone advanced mora\nthan a point while Brailllan wai\nanother gainer.\nCalgary Strengthens\nCALGARY, Aug. 37 (CP)-Pricei\nwere illghtly itronger ln oil issues\non Calgary Stock Exchange today.\nTransfer! WIS.\nSuniet at 20 was threa points up\nfrom prevloui bid; Extemion at\n18H wai ona up, and Coronation\nat 12*4 was fractionally higher.\nHome sold at $1.50, unchanged.\nCALCARY  LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Aug. 27 (CP) .-Receipt!, cattle 375; calves 30; hogs 75;\niheep 12.\nGood butcher iteen J.7S-7; plain\nto medium S-S.50. Good heifen 8.50;\nodd choice light up to 7.25; medium\nheavies 5.50-6. Good cowi 4-4.90;\nlightweight! 4.75; common to medium 3-4. Good to choice bulls 4.S0-\n5. Common and > plain 3.75-4.25,\nGood to choice vulen 8.50-7: plain\nand medium 8*8. Common and plain\nstocker steers 4.50-5.50; good uo to\n8.25. Good Iambi yesterday 7.25\n7.80. Last bacon hogs 8.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL.  Aug.   27   (CP)   -\nSpot: Butter. Cjuebec 22V4--4. Eggs,\nEastern A-large 37B; A-nullets 25B.\nButter futurei: November 22H-23.\n\u2022\nSERVICE\nBETWEEN\nNELSON and\nTRAIL\nProviding Two Trips\nEach Wsy Daily\nLv. NELSON\nA.M. 6:30 P.M.\nAf.TRAH.    _\u201e\nP.M.        8:30 P.M.\n10:06\n12:05\nVt. TRAIL\n10:00 A.M. 6:25 P.M.\nAr. NBLBON\n12:00 Noon        8:45 THI.\nJ. Q.'WATSON\nCity Ticket Agin*\nNelion, B.C. Phone 203\nTRAVEL BARGAIN\nto the. PmdViiQS\nRETURN FARES FROM NELSON\n30-Day Return Limit\nTo! Coach     ' Touriit 'Standard\nIEPT.\nI\nti\nI\nfneluilre\nCalgary .\nEdmonton\nSaikatoon .\nMooie Jaw\nRegina   ...\nWinnipeg  .\nPort Arthur\n.$11.45\n. 16.85\n. 24.70\n. 19.55\n. 20.75\n. 30.45\n42.10\n15.95\n49.75\n7H3T\n22.85\n33.45\n26.50\n28.05\n41.85\n57.20\n* Plui Regular Berth Charge\nHoliday In the Rockies\nStopovers permitted at all points.  Plan to apend a tttt\nday. in the mountain!. You will enjoy the change ot eeeno.\nIt ean ba aa ineipen.lve ea you wiah.\nPropprtUmattly Lower Fartt from Interior Points\nChildren ( Yeari and Under 12, Half Fan.\nGw^fci4< kwfyc\n_s\t\n \t\nTHEIR GREATEST TRIUMPH!\nYOUR GREATEST MUSICAL\nCIVIC\nMary Boland George Zucco\nH.B. Warner Grant Mitchell\nUSiD OH THC MUSICAL OKMTTA\n\"NEW MOON*\nBoo* 0 Lyrics by\nosesa nAM uuacaci\nHAMMERSTEIi.fi. MANDEL & SCHWAB\nMatlneee Today and Sat. Only\nToday Through\nSaturday\nComplete Shows 2:00, 7:00, 8:55\n\u2014NELSON.DAILY NEWS.\nVACUUM\nBOTTLES\nPinta\n49*\nQuarti 75f\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nVermilion Favorable\n' for Oil Development\nVANCOUVER, B. C Aug. 37.-\nVermllion area appears favorable\ntor future development according to\nDr G. S. Hume, senior oil geologist\nof the Dominion Geological Survey.\non his return frtom the srea. He said\nthe field will be controlled by local\nstructures, and that wells not closely\nrelated to local structures are likely\nto have little success.\nReviewing the field, Dr. Hume\nsaid Battleview No. 2 crude discovery well which was drilled by Franco Oils Ltd., ia producing oil stead\nIly. This well was brought Into production May 13, the producing sand\nhaving been contacted at 1853 feet.\nBattleview No. 3, also drilled by\nFranco Oils, ls being given a production test\nDr. Hume ia now preparing a report which will be based in part on\nthe results of recently completed\nwells and which will supplement his\nreports of 1829 and 1935.\nJ\u00bb Ae C\u00ab Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 209. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nFour C. & E. Weill\nat Substantial Depth\nVANCOUVHL B. C, Aug. 97.-\nWella now drilling on   C.  Sc E.\nSround Include tour at substantial\nepths In addition three new locations are scheduled for an early\nstart on drilling. The four wells now\nat substantial depths indicate further new sources of gross revenue for\nC. tt E. These are Royalite 92, below 9900 feet: Pacific Pete No. 9\u201ebelow 7900 feet: Arrow No. 2, below\n9000 feet, and Twin Valley Syndi\ncate No. 1, below 9669 feet. .\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nROOM AND BOARD, CLOSE IN\nRatea reasonable. 803 Victoria St.\n\u00abtsss&tsstS3soi>tioems)s&t\u00bboK)&\nNEWS OF THE DAY\ntWWItWWMWtWWMtHWMMtt.\nSpecial \u2014 Hardwood slabs MM a\nload. Phone 163 or 434R1.\nHarold A. Foulds - Electrician\nContracting, Repairs. Phone 941\nSmythe's Pharmacy Is open all\nday and this evening. Phone 1.\nWanted plums and early apples at\nonce. McDonald Jam Company Ltd\nEAGLES   MEET  TONIGHT\nAT 6 P. M.\nBAND CONCERT, Nelson Brass\nBand, Vernon Street Bowl, 9 p.m,\nElectrical Contracting, P. H.\nSMITH, 891 Baker St PHONE 666.\nRemoving Children From War Zone\nlo Give More Freedom tor Fighting\nCherry Slugs are bad this year.\nFor efficient spraying, Telephone\nT. Roynon.\nSave on Washers. Our sale continues\nuntil the weekend\nBEATTY WASHER STORE\nYou'll Really Enjoy\nOUR SPECIAL\nAFTERNOON TEAS\nQrenfell's Cafe\n1937 FORD COUPE\nRun only 10,000 miles. Had a\ncareful owner. Runs and looks\nlike new.\nQueen City Motors\n991 Josephine St.    Limited    Ph. 43\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 91      Hlpperson Blk.     Ph. 197\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655        610 Kootenay\n____________ * * ________________L4__J____,\nREAL ESTATE\nSPECIALIZED SERVICE\nand\nBusiness Management\nRentals  and  Sales\nFrank A. Stuart\nExperienced tlcenced Agent\n977 Baker St   Nelson, B.C.   Ph. (90\n......    \u00bb    I   . I\\   -   .    ._*_.    .   _ A   .    \u00ab.\u00bb__\nffSflTaTW  1 \u2022 ^\"* l  |f^l  | s\/TT\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 The aluminum\ncollection here has been Increased\nby the presentation by Alderman G.\nA. Bock,-Be_ley Borough Council,\nof two artificial limbs.\nCOOL OFF ON HOT DAYS\nVisit the\nPERCOLATOR\nFOUNTAIN\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nHats Cleaned and\nBlocked\nPhone 219\n827 Bakar\nI\nTill I III I III IIIIII III III\nHood's Supreme\nMilk Bread\n\"Your Homa Bakery\"\niiiiiimiiiiiiitiniii\nFriendly Service\nFor Every Motorist\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Poet Office and Hume Hotel\n.   1   \"fr\nBrighten Up!\nOUTSIDE paint\ntakes an awful beating. Use Bapco paint\non your house and\nbe s\\ire of a paint\nthat will last for\nmany years. It costs\nless in the long run.\nINSIDE paints need\nto be full \u2022 bodied,\nbrilliant. Use Bapco\nSatin Glo inside for\nthe best, results.\nCome in tomorrow\nand see the many\ncolqrs available.\nUse\nBAPCO Pure Paints\nQua rtg\nfrom\nVi Cal.\nfrom\n1 Cal.\nfrom\n$1.40 $2.35 $4.50\nMADI IN B, C.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nLOTS FOR SALE\nIV, acre lota at Balfour 100 feet\nreal sand beach, and trees tor shade.\n$250 each Easy terma.\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\n1940 PONTIAC\n0AH--tixl_-_ $*3to\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n809 Baker 8t, SERVICE   Phona 122\nAT YOUR PALM DEALERS\nDrVPf   CHOCOLATE\nmilY ______ SUNDAE\nbl'Ice Cream\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\n29 girls wanted for 3-day banquet\nwork. Apply Grenfell's Cafe between 9 and 12 Thursday or Friday.\nTo make your Fall cleaning easier.\nCurtain stretchers at *1.79. Easily\nadjusted and strongly made. Hipper,\nson Hardware Company.\nSHIRLEY'S LUNCH BAR\nNow open. Opp. Daily News. Spe\ncisllzing ln tasty snacks and bust,\nness men's lunches. Open 9:90 ajn\nto 12 Midnight.\nPRESERVING PEACHES\nNO. 1  ELBERT AS   VJ_\nNO. 1  ROCHE8TERS   $1.19\nPhone 10 or 11. Have them delivered\ntodayr-The STAR GROCERY,\nTONIOHT \u2014 Citlzena meeting at\n9 p.m. Special speakers on Moral\nRe-Armament at large bonfire An\nnable's Beach, end of carline, Fair\nview. Bring rug to sit on.\nThrills, spills and comedy for all\nwho attend tha Kinsman \"Win The\nWar\" Water Carnival Labor Day.\nTickets 25c from any Kinsman. Pro,\nceeds In aid of Bomber Fund.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 27 (CP) \u2014 Wa\nbringing of children trom tha United Kingdom to Canada has practical strategical significance, R. Keith\nJ _ son, representative ot the Children's Overseas Reception Board of\nthe United Kingdom, told Canada\nover a National Network of the\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation\ntonight. H. waa Introduced by resources Minister T. A. Crerar.\nHe hoped the evacuation of the\nchildren might be the beginning of\na better distribution of the population of the British Commonwealth\not Nations.\n\"The mora non-combatants that\nara removed from the war zone,\ntha mora freedom there will be\nfor tha movement of troopa; the\nleaa mouths there will be t feed\nwithin our fortress; the more currency and ships will be available\nfor the purchase and transport of\nmunitions ef war; and the less\nstrain there will be on Island\nTransport snd Air Raid Precautions Services\", he said.\n\"It ls no small thing for parents\nin the Old Country to send their\nchildren abroad perhaps for a lengthy period, perhaps forever, to be\ncared for hy foster parents whom\nthey do not-know and have never\nseen ... but the'parents will be\nfortified In the certain knowledge\nthat Canada will amume this role\nof foster parent with a full sense of\nthe grave responsibility of this trust;\nthat she wili give to'these children\nevery bit as much care and loving\ndevotion as she would to her own\nsons and daughters.\"\nThe children at an Impressionable age would form sssociations\nand    friendship    which    would\nNow If the time to fumigate\nWith SMUT HE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugs\nstrengthen the ties of the British\nCommonwealth of Nations. Their\noutlook would be broadened and\nthose that returned would be imbued with new Ideas and Impressed with wider horizons. Those\nwho remained would contribute\nto the prosperity and greatness of\nthe Dominion.   ,\n\"The mathematical chances of being killed by a bomb are small.\nThat Is not the reason we are sending our children to Canada, It is\nbecause we want to protect them\nfrom the nervous and physical\nstrain of taking them from their\nbeds, night after night, and some-\ntimes several times a night and putting them into an air raid shelter\nln the back yard. And there is\nanother potent reason. It Is because\nwe parents feel that once we have\nput our children into rafety we can\nroll up our sleeves and make a bet\nter Job of dealt g with the Nails.\"\nYou Saw It In the DAILY NIWS\nREFRIGERATORS. WASHERS\nRADIOS,  RANGES\non Sale at the\nStandard Electric\n493 Josephine St Phone 838\n\u2014\nRegesan\nFRUIT SALINE\nContaining the natural fruit\nacids of the Grape and Cf A\/)\nthe Lemon. Bottle 9--****\nMade by Boots of England\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 94 Box 490\nConstable Asel Joins\nNelson Provincials\nConstable N. E. Asel has been\ntransferred from the Burnaby district to tha Nelson detachment of\nProvincial Police, and lut Thursday commenced his new duties at\nthe Nelson district office. He succeeds Constable A. E. Spall, who\nhaa left the aervlce.\nLONDON (CP). - The Eaatern\nRegion ot the Ministry of Information has Issued a statement appeal\ning to farmers to take every precaution to protect crops against fire.\nFall\nTopcoats\nIt wont be'long now untU\nSou win be needing one of\niese coats. Drop In and lat\nus hold ona until you are\nready for tt\nf_)S ta |40\nEMORY'S LTD.\nHave You Read tba Classified.\nDunlopltlo\nCUSHIONS\nOnly   93.95\nDrive In Comfort\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBakar St  \u25a0 Limited     Phona 11*\nLOOK YOUR BEST IN\nCLEAN CLOTHES\njjonsdLcL tfjkuuwiL\nOpp. Palm Dairies Ph 1042\nSmyiihiL\nPrescription Druggist Phone 1\nArrange to meet your friends at\nthe Harrop Fair, today. There'll be\ngrand exhibits and barrels of fun\non the midway for young and old\nalike. Tea and supper will be served\nPres. Peaches, No. 1, caae $1.29\nCauliflower, pure white, lb      9c\nGolden Bantam Com, doz. ..   29c\nButter, 1st grade, 9 lbs    99c\nR & R GROCERY\u2014PHONE 191\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nMcLEAN, Mrs. Lillian Leslie -\nPassed away Monday. Body rests at\nSomers Funeral Home where service will be held Thursday at 3:15\npjn., Rev. Foster Hilliard officiating.\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nMALONEY, Murdoch Henderson\n\u2014Passed away August 29. Funeral\nservices will be held at St. Paul's\nUnited Church Thursday, August 21),\n2 p.m\u201e Rev. Foster Hilliard officiating. Clark's Funeral Chapel In\ncharge of arrangements.'\nAUCTION\nTODAY, AUG. 28th\n402 CORE ST.\n2 P. M.\nFavored with Instructions from\nMrs. J. C. Harlow, I will offer\nthe following: Garden Hose,\nDishes, Utensils, White Enamel\nRange, 2 Kitchen Tables and\nChairs, Vacuum Cleaner, G. E.\nWasher, Baby Bath Tub, Walnut\nDining Room Suite, 2 Winnipeg\nCouches, Doll Buggy, Fawcett\nCirculating Heater, Curtains,\nBooks, Floor Lamp, Easy Chairs,\nWalnut Bedroom Suite, Iron Bed\nSpring and Mattress, etc.\nGoods on view morning of sale.\nTerms: Cash Q. Horstead,\n< Auctioneer.\nVIC\nSEE\nGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needa In plumbing   repairs,   alterations,   end\nInstallations.\nPh. 919 901 Victoria 81\nLACROSSE\nPlayoff Game\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA: Friday Aug. 30\nNelson vs. Rossland\nDoors Optn at 7:30. Cams at\nUSUAL ADMISSION PRICES\n3:15\nReserved seats will be available fer this game In Section 9,\nPRICE 40 CENTS\nThla ls the second\nteama tor\ntame ln the best ot 9 aerlea between these\nbe right to meet Trail in the Finals\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nThe College Y\/ith a Provincial Reputation\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION      COMMENCE ANY TIME\nThe demand for competent stenographer) will be very\ngreat during the coming year.\u2014Prepare yourself now.\nComplete COMMERCIAL COURSE\n107\nBAKER ST.\nNew Term Commences\nTuesday, Sept. S, 1940\nPHONE\n603\nFor the\nHoliday Weekend\nWhether you're playing golf, tennis,\nfishing, boating or loafing,\nDon't Forget to Stock Up on\nColumbia Lager Beer\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nJjabtfi, (bay.\nTo help you en)oy this holiday to the fullest\nextent we suggest for your ear a\nCertified Lubrication\nand a\nMotor Tune-Up\nEnjoy your holiday by being auured of having\n'     NO MOTOR TROUBLE\nNelsonTransfer\nCompany, Limited\n35\u2014PHONES\u201436\nSale Opens Thursday-8:30 a.m.\nMen's   Felt   Hats,   new\nshadea, (1 QQ\neach   fll.JO\nMen's Fur Felt Hats, all\nsites, reg. *Q OQ\n$3.95 Qd.LU\nMen'a   Sleevelets   Pull-\nto clear  OtfC\nPolice OQ\nSuspenders OUi*\nMen'a Heather Dreta Sox,\ncurrent OQ\nprice 50c   v9C\nSpecial Values In Sox\u2014\n4 p.,, 98c\nAlso 3 Lines at\n23c 33c 53c\nMen's Work Sox, 2 Vi-lb.\nA special 07\nat, pair  fall\nThree Lines Mottled Sox\n39c 49c 59c\n89c\nA Wo* Shirt\nSpecial\t\nSee Tham and Be\nConvinced\nBoys' Navy Pants, with\n#\"::\u2022... 89c\nMen'a Tiea, all good value\n49c 39c 19c\nMen's Belts\n49c ,nd 25c\nWell Folks! You know how it is: as for as\nthis store is concerned\nA Sale Is a Rare\nEvent in This Store\nWhen we say SALE it means something\nunusual and big. A troubled world, a topsy\nturvy market, means higher prices. This\nis No Ordinary Bargain Event.\nTHIS IS NEWS\nPenmans Botany Wool\nPullovers. Crew Neck.\nWine, royal,\ngreen\t\n$2.98\nPenmana   Pure   Wool\nbarrel sweaters, aleeve-\nleas.\nPriced at\n$1.49\nPenmans Crew Neck Pullovers. __ $2.49\nGood Shacfei\nSweaters for men. Broken  lines.   Values  to\n$3.95.\nPriced at\n$1.98\nMen's    Leather    Wind-       Men's Flannelette Nlght-\nbreaker. Zipper (7 QQ       robes. <T]  fQ\nfastening  ^l.VO       Cood value ...<P1.1?\nMen'a Tweed Rain Coats. Creen or grey. tPC AQ\nA very good buy at \u25a0pU.'K.\nMen's Nary Trench Coats $5.98\nBoys' Black       (0 QQ\nRaincoats *pt..jO\nMen's Stylish\nCaps\t\n$1.00   Sleeveless\novers\nto clear \t\n98c\nPull-\n49c\nMen'a Sport Shirts. Loop\nfastening. Short    QQ\nsleeves *70C\nWhite   Towels.   36x18.\nThese are seconds.\nEach ..\nMen'a   Cloves.\nPalm. Cotton\nback. Pair ...\nMen's Cloves. Split 40   \u2022\nPeccary. Pair .... 4JC\nCotton Cloves.\n2 pairs\t\nBoss Walloper White cotton gloves.\nPair \t\n:0,,.d.,. 36c\nLeather\n..35c\n35c\nte cot-\n23c\nDress  Shirts  In   new\nshadings with attached\n98c\nPriced at\nA little better quality\nin ahlrts as\nabove for .\n$1.29\nBoys'     Brushed     Wool\nPullover Sweaters, xipper\n\u201er. $1.39\nBoya' achool\nSweaters with\nV-Neck  \t\nPullover\n..98c\nMcn'i Heavy Work Shirts 1.19,1.49,1.98\nBarrel Sweater! for boys.\nStriped. 59c\nYoung    Men's    School\nPants, up to 32 waist,\nbelt loops,\nfive pockets\nBoys' Full Zipper Brushed\nWool Sweater   tl QQ\n$2.79\nCoats\nPriced at ...\nBoys' Polo Collar Jerseys.\nZipper at neck. QQ.\nPriced at \"5\nOne Lot of Boys' Odd Jerseys 49c\nRegular to $1.25\nSUCH BIG BARGAIN\nDATS CAN'T LAST LONG\nIn eplte of swiftly advancing costs, our bargain knlfo\nhaa cut deeply. Cot your share of these enormous savings. Don't Miss the Boat.\nMen's Work Pants. With\n$1.65\nOxford\nStripe ...\nMen's pants  In  Oxford\nwhipcord and gold stripe.\nMade to wear (1 QQ\nA bargain at ...\u00abP J'70\nMen's Tweed     frO 4Q\ndress pants ... yL.'iJ\nlO-ounce cottonade panta\nthat are vary itrong.\nMen'i pan ti In d\u00bb0 iQ\ntwill fancies\n8-ounce blue\noverall pants ..\nRed back overall\npants\t\n$1.49\n$1.23\nCharles Morris\n.._..\u25a0__..\u25a0\u25a0____., .\u25a0_..\n\u2022\u25a0  , ._iT,w.__a___i\u2014\u2022 \u2022 - -:-\u25a0 \"^'irtirill\nt\n m\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_08_28","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\/1.0415294","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. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1940-08-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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