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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":" Boeton Maintalni Tie With Leafi\nDespite Loti.\u2014Paga 5.\nRed Winn Win 6-1 From Hawki to\nCrib Third Piece.\u2014Pago 5.\nBattered Rangen Play Old-Faihloned\nHockey to Beat Leafi.\u2014Pago 5.\nVOLUMt 41\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\ni... i. in immi .,.\u201e..-,.,\u25a0\u25a0,,        if|\u00bbppniwwiwiwpi.iw mmm\nfo*\n\\(olSt-\nAlliei Reiume Pounding of Tunliian\nNaval Docki.\u2014Page 2.\nU.S. Fighter Planei Win Hot Air Battle\nin New Guinea.\u2014Page 2.\nUnited Statei to Ration Canned, Dried,\nFrozen Fruiti, Vegetablei.\u2014Page 2.\nISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNINQ. DECEMBER 21, 1942\nNUMBER 114 I\nBRITISH GUARDS WIN NEW TUNISIA POSITION\nFamous Warrior,\nGen. Giraud,\nSucceeds Darlan\nBy HAROLD V. BOYLE\nAnociated Preu Staf Writer\nALGIERS, Dec. 27 (AP)\u2014Gen. Henri Honore Giraud,\nfamous French warrior who escaped from German prisons in\ntwo wars, was named unanimously today by the French Imperial Council to succeed Admiral Jean Darlan as High Commissioner of French Africa and was granted full military and\ncivil powers.\nThe selection by the Council governing the vast African\nEmpire of the French was made a few hours after an impressive\nfuneral was given his assassinated predecessor, a funeral in\nwhich Giraud himself paid his\nfinal  tribute   to  Darlan.   The believed here that Giraud's acces-\nassassin of Darlan was executed yesterday.\nGiraud, thus given lull power aa\nHigh Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief o( the French land, sea\n\u00abnd air forces in French Africa, called for unity In an order of the day\nIssued immediately fetter his selection was announced.\nA French spokesman said Giraud\nhas yet to select his cabinet of advisers.\nAttending the council meeting at\nwhich the famous soldier, now in his\n60's, was chosen were Giraud, Gen\nAuguste Nogues, Governor of\nFrench Morocco, Pierre Boisson,\nGovernor-General ot French West\nAfrica who recently opened the important port of Dakar to the Allies,\nYves Chatel, Governor of Algeria,\n\u2022nd Gen. Jean Marie Bergeret, former Aviation Secretary in the Vichy\nFrench Cabinet.\nTht selection of Giraud put at\ntha helm In French Nvth and\nWeit AOIc\u00ab \u2022 hero of three darln.\netcapei In two war*\u2014once from\nGtrmanv In the Flnt Great War,\n, gain .rtrn Germany In tne present war, and finallv hli ipectacu-\nlar flight via mbmarine and plane\nfrom Franca to Join Lt Gen,\nDwlght D. Eiienhower a few houri\nbefore the Allied landing! In\nNorth Africa Nov. 8.\nThere was no immediate an-\nnouncement whether Giraud would\ncontinue in active command of thc\nFrench army, which already is an\nimportant factor in the Allied campaign in Tunis.\nThe announcement also failed to\nIndicate whether active steps would\nbe taken toward unification ot all\nFrench colonies in Africa under a\nsingle leadership during the war,\nbut this slep is expected to be taken speedily if thc divided French\nfactions can get together.\nThe Fighting French under Gen.\nCharles de Gaulle now administer\nEquatorial Africa and the Chad\nareai adjoining Giraud's new domain as well as Syria and other\nscattered portions of the French Empire.\nDARLAN WAS SQUARE\nGen. Eisenhower today expressed\n\"delight\" with the selection of Gen.\nGiraud. At the same time, the Allied j\nCommander-in-Chief, at a press con-\nference said that Darlan had played\nsquare in everything he said he\nwould do for the Allies\nThe attitude of the Fighting\nFrench toward Gen Giraud has not |\nyet been clarified officially but one\nfollower nf De Gaulle who worked\nIn the underground movement here\nbefore the arrival nf the Alliei win: -\n\"All factloni can and will unitt\nbehind Giraud. He'i itrlctly a toldler tnd not Intereited In poll-\ntIct. Ht will uie hli poit to liber-\ntte Frince, not to coniolldtte him\ntelf In power tn. we have filth\nIn hit Integrity.\"\n(In laondon. authoritative British\nquarter! said Giraud's elevation wai\n\"entirely latlifactory\" to Uie British\nGovernment \"1\nEXECUTE  ASSASSIN\nThe aisasun was executed by a\nfiring iquad a few houri befaire the\nImperial council met wittr the rea-\nlon for hii net nn Christmas Eve still\nofficially   unexplained\nThe French  withheld  Ihe  Identi'y\nof the BSlAtlln as a itate secret for j\nreiioni  of  \"national   icnirily\"   lut\nhe  was described  a* of Frenrh   nationality  with  an  Italian  mother      '\nMAY CLOSt  GAP\nLONDON.  Dei-   27  K'PI    -  Gen I\nHenri   Hnnnre   Giraud   wai   named\ntoday to lu.reed Admiral Jean Dar-\nVan ai French High C<>mmi..inner In\nNorth Africt and it wai generally\nslon to the position assumed by the\nassassinated Darlan would tend to\nclose the gap hitherto existing between the French African regime\nand the Fighting French led by Gen.\nCharles de Gaulle. There was no\nconfirmation, however, that the\nbreach had, in fact, been healed.\nDe Gaulle had lunch todty with\nPrime Minister Churchill tnd they\nwere assumed to havt dltcutted\nthe tubject of French unity. Neither Iuued any statement but those\nfamiliar with De Gaulle'i basic\npoliciei had predicted he would\nbe ready to cooperate with Giraud\nIn the event of hit telectlon at\nFrench leader In Africa.\nDe Gaulle and the Fighting\nFrench Council met Saturday and a\ncommunique today said merely that\nthe latest events were discussed\n\"from the point of view of the union\nof the French people and thd French\nempire in this war.\"\nFrom the Fighting French atand-\npolnt, there was sa'd to remain the\nquestion of Giraud's relations with\nthe aged Marshal Petain, nonrnal\nhead of Ihe Axis-controlled Vichy\nadministration, and the Quisling\nPierre Laval.\nShould Giraud declare his opposition to Petain and Laval, It\nwai believed, the last obttacle to\nFighting French collaboration\nwith the North African regime\nwould  be removed.\nThe full strange story of Darlan\nmay never be told now that he has\nbeen killed. .The little Admiral\nhimself declared there was noth'ng\ninconsistent with his allegiance to\nthe Allies after his Vichy days.\nThose days at Vichy, he said, were\nvaluable time-saving devices that\nprevented the Germans from taking\nover control of French Africa long\nago\u2014before the Alliei were ready.\nHe professed he still was speaking\nin the name of M_r;Ji _1 Pelain when\nhe ordered the French Fleet (0\nleave Toulon and not be canturod\nby the Nazis who overran all of\nFrance after the Allied African\nstroke.\nRommel Reported\nAlmost Caught\nin British Trap\nLONDON, Monday, Dec, 28\n(AP)\u2014A Dally Herald correipondent In North Arlca quoted Axli\npriionen today at laying that\nMarshal Rommel wat almott\ncaught himielf In a Britlih trap\nat Marble Arch.\nThe trapped unit, theie cap.\ntured Qermant aald, ipllt up In\n\u25a0mall groupi and the German\nCommander wat lucky enough to\nbe In one which broke through\nthe Brltiih linei.\nIt wat the tecond time within\na year that Marihal Rommel hai\nbeen reported etcaplng from the\nBrltlth graip. The lait time British Commandoi raided hli deiert\nheadqaurtert In a ipectacular\nforay but Rommel wai away at\nthe time.\nGuadalcanal Planes\nSink 3000-ton\nlaoanese Ve-sel\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 27 (AP)-\nThe Ur.iled States Navy announced\ntoday that dive bombers from\nGuadalcanal had sunk a 3.000-ton\nJapanese vessel near Wickham Island ill the Central S.lomons.\nTiie type nf enemy vessel sunk\nwas not identified by a naval\nspokesman here said it apparently\nwas not a combat ship.\nThe destruction of the ship reported today raised the number of\nJapanese vessels sunk in the Solomons to M. This, with f.ve probably sunk and 8.. damaged, raised\nthe;r total ship casualties in the\nSolomons campaign to 1...\nStranded Prospector\nand Geologist\nGroup Reaches Town\nENDAKO. It. C, Dec. 27 (CPI -\nSeveral trucks stranded In the Nt-\ntion I,ake divide while carrying\nprospectors and geologists have\nbeen rescued by equipment from the\nBritish Columbia Department of\nPublic Works\nTbe prospectors tnd geologists\nwho had been stranded several days\narrived it Fort SI. Jai-M Christmas\ni Eve.  They   had   been   Investigating\nj the  upper  Omineca   Mountains  for\nj strategic minerals.\nThe trucks had been stranded on\nthe   Germtnsen   Trail,    used   t_   l\nI routt to the Yukon In  Ihe 1B91 gold\nruih but now little used in  Winter\nI months.\nH DIE AS TROOP\nTRAIN (RASHES\nINTO PASSENGER\nAll Killed Were in\nStanding Civilian\nPassenger Train\n114 INJURED\nMONTREAL, Dec. 28 (Monday)\n(CP) \u2014 Indicated toll of a wreck\nat Almonte, Ont., lait night now\nitandi at 23 dead, 114 Injured, Canadian Pacific Railway Officials\n\u2022aid early today.\nMONTREAL, Dec. 27 (CP)-\nCanadlan Pacific Railway officlall\ntonight placed the toll of a wreck\nat Almonte, Ont., at 12 dead and\n75 Injured.\nOfficials previously had laid fro*\n10 to 12 persons were fatally injured, but later cut the death toll to\nfive, saying that later reports indicated \"the situation is better than\nat first believed.\"\nThey said that a troop train had\ncrashed into the back of a local passenger train standing in Almonte\nStation, and that all the dead and\ninjured were persons aboard the\npassenger train.\nThey added that the last two cars\nof the passenger train took the full\nshock of the collision and that the\ncoaches of the train were not injured. The front part of the train\nhas since continued on its way to\nOttawa.\nIt wai believed that the troop\ntrain, Itielf hardly damaged, would\nalio be able to continue on iti\nway to Ottawa ihortly. Officlili\niaid nobody aboard the troop train\nwai hurt.\nALMONTE, Ont, Dec. 27 (CP)\nFrom 15 to 20 perioni were killed\nand 50 Injured when a Canadian\nPacific Railway train carrying\ntroopi from Petawawa Camp, Ont.,\ncraihed Into the rear of the Sunday evening Pembroke-Ottawa\nlocal  In Almonte itation tonight.\nThe dead, reported to be all civilians were in the three rear coaches\nof the passenger train. The wreck,\none of the worst disasters in the\nhistory of the line, threw the town\ninto confusion as citizens-a.ad soldiers from the troop train carried\nthe dead and injured -in a steady\nstream into the City Hall nearby\nO'Brien Theatre, which was turned\ninto an emergency hospital.\nThe conductor on the local had just\nsignalled his engineer to pull gout ot\nthe station after a brief stop but\nthc train had not started to move\nwhen the troop train piled into tbe\nrear end.\nAll the dead and Injured were taken from the three end coaches. No\none in the troop train was injured\nseriously\nALLIED PLANES IN\nINDIA, CHINA\nHIT JAP BASES\nWavell Consolidates\nPositions 45\nMiles North Akyab\nDOWN 23 PLANES\nLONDON, Dee. 27 (AP)\u2014Allied\nbomben, reaching out In three-\ndirectional thruitt from thalr baiei In India and China, imathed\nhird at the Japi at Heho In Central Burma, and Bangkok, Thailand, lait night and bombed their\nYunnan bate of Tungyueh In\nChina Chrlitmai Eve.\nFor three hours long range R.A.F.\nbombers circled the Japanese base\nat Heho IOO miles southeast of Mandalay, to rain several tons of high\nexplosives on enemy installations.\nThe official communique Irom allied headquarters at New Delhi said\nit was believed considerable damage had been done. All the raiding\nbombers were said to have returned\nsafely.\nThe German radio broadcast a\nmessage from Bangkok saying that\nhigh altitude allied planes, bombing\nthe Japanese-held Thailand capital\nand nearby villages, caused \"very\nheavy casualties but slight damage\"\nlast night.\nThe Paris radio, failing to reconcile, its account with the German report of a hign-oltitude\nbombing, laid the raiders also\nmachine gunned the streets yesterday,\nBritish and American reports had\nfailed to mention the raid on Bangkok which probably would entail a\nround-trip flight of 1600 milei from\nIndia for an attacking force, The\ncity, site of the only oil refinery in\nThailand, was bombed by an American force Dec. 9.  .\u2022  .... '\nDlspatchea from China today revealed that a flight of bombers manned by Americans carried out a\nnight raid on Christmas eve against\nthe Jap base of Tengyueh on the\nBurma Road cut off in Western Yunan Province.\nEvery bomb reported was declared to have burst inside the walled\ncity, destroying Japanese barracks\nand warehouses.\nOne bomb made a direct hit on an\nanti-aircraft battery. Despite intense fire from ground defences,\nevery bomber was said to have returned safely.\nThere wai no report of further\nground operationi in Burma to\nwhere Gen. Sir Archibald Wavel'i\nBritlih troopi apparently were\nconsolidating their newly-won poiltloni .6 milei North of Akyab,\nBty of Bengal Port A communique from New Delhi headquarten\nSaturday dlicloied that Britlih [\n\u25a0tabi at Burma extend 110 mlleti\nNorthern of Akyab In the China\nhilli.\nAn Indication that the R.A.F. had\nestablished an air base in Burma\nwas found ln a Berlin broadcast of\na Tokyo dispatch saying 23 enemy\nI aircraft were brought down or destroyed on the ground in Burma between Dec. 21-28.\nI The Toungoo airdrome in Burma\ni was raided again Friday and several Japanese planes were destroyed on the ground. An oil tank at\nI Chauk, railway cars at Akyab, trains\nI and locomotives near Monywa and a\nj large river steamship and other\nboats on tile Chindwin River were\nhit.\n\\ The action in the China hills oc-\n! curred two days ago. British troops\nhad captured high ground and Jap-\nanese patrols attempted to rout them\nwith crossfire. The Japanese were\nrepelled with losses. The China hills\nlie along the Indian frontier North\nand slightly East of the Arakan\narea where the British are nearest\nAkyab.\nBRITISH ON OFFENSIVE IN BURMA\nA new Allied thrust is under way against the Japanese army in Burma, where Gen. Sir Archibald Wav-\nell's Allied forces are driving toward Akyab. The Allies\nhave passed Maungdaw, indicated on map.\nRed Army Batters\nWay Forward in\nUkraine. Southwest\nBy EDDY GILMORE\nAssociated Prtu Staf Writer\nMOSCOW, Dec. 28 (Monday) (API\u2014Red Army troops\ncontinued to smash their way forward in the Ukraine and\nsouthwest of Stalingrad Sunday,-the Russians- announced today;\ncapturing additional villages and killing several thousand more\nGermans in their effort to bag the entire Nazi Army anchored\nbetween the Don and Volga Rivers and deep inside the\nCaucasus.\nThe regular Sunday midnight communique said Sazonov,\n20 miles north of Kotelnikovski, was taken in advances southwest of Stalingrad ranging from six to nine miles. Kotelnikovski is 90 miles southwest of;\nWin Objective in\nBitter Cold and\nMud on Christmas\nBy BLAKE SULLIVAN\nAssociated Pren Staf Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 28 '.Monday) <CP)\u2014Tht;\nAllied - controlled  Morocco  Radio reported'\ntoday that the bulk of Cerman Field Marshal\nRommel's Africa Corps now is streaming into\nTripoli in its long retreat westward from Egypt\nbefore the British 8th Army.\nLONDON, Dec. 27 (AP)\u2014British Guards fighting a 4\nhour see-saw battle through the Christmas holidays drove f\nGermans up to the topmost heights of a ridge northeast $fr\nMedjez-EI-Bab and gained new positions along an arc six milei\neast of that vital junction point, reports from North Africt\ndeclared Saturday night.\nAn Allied communique said  that units of  the  British\nbrigade of Guards went  into\nStalingrad, and the Russians' ments the Red Army now controls\nsay they have trapped perhaos | a sizeable chunk of territory on bovh\n300,000 Germans between I s[i\u2122 \u00b0.f\u201estalin^ad\u201eas *'e!1 \"\u201e fa'\nthere and the Don-Volga River\npocket.\nThe Red Army striking southward along the Moscow-Rostov\nrailway is far beyond Millerovo on\nthe way to Rostov and is believed\nto be le?s than 100 miles from thc\nlatter point.\nRostov's capture would cut off I\nthe retreat, except by sea, of thc j\nGermans now reported abandoning j\ntheir positions deep in the Caucasus.\nto the West in the Don River Bend\n\u2014at the rear of the Germani stalled\nbefore Stalingrad. The capture of\nRostov would throw an even larger\nring around these Nazi troops.\nTh. Russians said today that in\nLhe last four days they have gained from 34 to 37 miles in the drive\non Kotelnikovski south west of\nStalingrad, and this offensive was\nsecond only to the pace set by the\nRussians in the Middle Don drive.\n(The   Germans   claimed   Russian\nattacks were repelled in the Stalin-\n. grad and mid-Caucasus sectors and\nrailway   nto the Ukraine toward | .   , .,     .. .     m. _ _   __   %i\n' between the Volga and Don.  Thty\nOther Red Army unlti are itrik- j\nIng  weit   of   the   Moicow-Roitov 1\nGermans Replace\nItalians in\nMOSCOW, Dec. 27 (AP)-Tiss,\nRussian news ngency. reported in a\ndispatch from Geneva today that thr\nItalian troops In the French prov-\nI Ince of Savoy on the Italian bor-\n] der. had been replaced by German\nforces, despite the fact Premier Benito Mussolini ha* long claimed this\nFrench region as properly a part\nof Italy.\nThe move Is regarded is a result\nof the recent conferences between\nAdolf Hitler and French chief of\ngovernment Pierre I.nvnl. at which\nnrrnngemrnts for closer French-\nGennnn collaboration were reported to have been completed.\nKharkov. Advince Ruuian unlti\n\u25a0re believed to be only about 130\nmliei from Kharkov, bifl Ukraine\niteel centre. Approximately 120,-\n000 Germani have been killed or\ncaptured in this Middle Don!\n\u2022weep.\nThe Russians also were reported]\nadvancing southeast of Nalchik-in j\nihe Caucasus.\nOn the Central front northwest'\nof Moscow the communique said\nthe Red Army smashed enemy re-,\nsLstance at another strong point In\nthe Velikie Luki area.\nIn  another   sector  on   this  front\n\"the enemy attempted to drop ammunition for his garrison by parachute but the whole of it w.u cap- j\ntured.'\nSoviet troopi northweit of\nStalingrad alio were hammering\nthe 22 diviiioni reported trapped\nbetween the Don snd Volga rlv- [\nera.\nOn the busL* of Russian announce-\nEnemy Loses 277 Planes, Allies\nIH in African Campaign\nWASHINGTON, Dee. 27 (API-\nAllied air ind ground forcei In\nNorth Africa hive deitroyed -77\nenemy pltnei ilnce the beginning\no the campaign againit a (oil of\n114 Allied craft, 69 of them Am.\nerlcan, the United Statei War\nDepartment reported tonight.\nA comfaunique, one nf the moat\ndeailed yet issued, told of Increasing\naerial activity with Flying Fortresses, fighter planes and Hurricane bomb_ri in aclion.\nKaidi weit itaged on liie harbor\nJ \u2022\nat Blzerte and Sf_x, other targets\nIn Tunisia and nn enemy gun post\nnear Modjei El Bab.\nThe communique reported that\nFrench forces \"w'hlch are actively\nprotecting the south flank of the\nAllies Army, are being reinforced\narid reequipped\". nnd added:\nThese troops have displayed\nhigh fighting qualities and despite\ntheir Initial weakness In modern\nequipment, especially artillery and\ntanks, have successfully repulied\nevery Alls altack, and hive pushed\ntheir advance with speed and (kill.\"\nclaimed thc capture of several lo-\ncalities In the Don Loop and said\nj the   Russians   were   being   driven\n| North.\n(Admitting  by   Implication   their\nperil, the German communique Saturday said  transport planes   were\n! supplying   the   \"various  sectors  o(\nI thc  front  by  day and  nigh'.\"\u2014lhe\n! first   acknowledgement   by   Berlin\nthat Russian offensive hid lo crippled land communications that the\nNazis were forced to resort to les.\nspacious   sir   transport,   cnttly   In\nplanes ahd precious aviation ga.*o-\nline )\nADMIT WITHDRAWAL\nIaONDON. Dec 27 ICT1- Ttie\nBerlin Radio sa;d tonight that \"German forces in the Torek-Caucasua\nsector have withdrawn to new positions\" in the Russian Caucasus\n\"This straightening of the German lines which was carried out\naccording to plan was concealed for\nthree days,\" the broadcast quoting\na DNB. dispatch claimed \"The\nground gained by the Russians ai\na result of this German manoeuvre\nlias come to them without evtertions\nof their own.\nWhen after three days they tried\nlo catch up with the stronger forces\ntheir tanks were trapped and some\nof them were destroyed \"\nCalcutta Raided\nby lap Planet\nNIW DILHI. Dec. !t (Mondayl\n(CP) \u2014 Japaneie planu raided\nCalcutta early thli morn'ng, it\nwai announced here.\nThe big Indian city wai raided\nthree nighti In luccesilon lait\nweek but only minor dimage and\ncaiualtiei wire reported.\nthe battle Christmas eve despite mud and cold, driving rain\nand finally gained their objective late on Christmas Day.\nElsewhere ln the North African\narea, the communique said, British\nsubmarines patrolling the Axis supply line to Tunisia sank two merchant ships of 8000 tons and possibly\nsank a destroyer while Allied aircraft attacked enemy troops at Sfax,\non the Eastern Tunisian coast, and\nobjectives near Gabes, also ln Eastern Tunisia,\nEarlier Britlih tnd American\ntrogpa were reported to have\nthruit to within 12 milei of the\nAxle itronghold of Tunli but\nthere wai n6 offlcitl \u00abtltm-*Tfueh'\nantdvtnce, which would reprs-\nlent t leniatlonal development In\nthe muddy campaign.\nThe terse, official phrasee of tonight's Allied communique told this\ngripping story of the action in thc\nmud and cold of the holidays:\n\"Despite bad weather units of a\nBritish brigade of guards on Christ-\n! mas Eve attacked the summit of a\nhill occupied by the enemy Northeast of Medjez-el-Baba (35 miles\nSouthwest of Tunis)\n\"The action, strongly supported by\nJ artillery, was successful and the\ncrest was captured in nearly all\nplaces.\nj \"The enemy, after being rein-\nI forced, counter-attacked six hours\nlater.\n\"The enemy had some initial success but our forces then regained\n'their positions except for the high-\njest ridges.\n1 \"The same hill was the scene ol\nfurther fighting on Christmas Day.\n\"At dawn the enemy counter-attacked strongly and wc lost thc\nj crest of the hill.\ni \"Then our troops carried out a\nsuccessful counter-attack and restored the situation.\"\nThe Allied torcei were reported\ntonight from North African headquarten to be holding their galni\non the height!.\nThe communique declared that\nthe French forcei at the lower end\nof the Tunliian front repulied attacki on Pichon, .3 milei South of\nMedjez- el- Baba.\nThe Algiers radio broadcast thc\nreport of an Allied thrust to within\n12 miles of Tunis but It gave no indication from what direction thc\nAllies had struck: whether from the\n\u25a0West against the main arc of Axis\ndefencei before Tunis and Bizerte or\nfrom the South, where little previous action had been reported\niThe Algiers radio Is controlled\nby the American occupation authorities and is used by them at times for\ni transmission   of   official   messages 1\nSIRTE   OCCUPIED\nContinuing Its relentless pursuit\nof Marshal Erwln Rommel's elusive\nj Africa Corps across Libya, the British 8th army had occupied Sirte,\nonly 210 miles Fjst nf Tripoli, nnd\nwas hacklog steadily away at Rommel'i rear guard\nSirte. iome 10 milei Weit of El\nAghella, whire the current phaie ,\nbittle  ot  deitruetlon  began, wai;\nof Gin. Sir Bernard Montgomery'! '\nentered et noon Chrlitmai Day. a I\nCairo communique laid. Sirte hsi\na  imall   harbor  uieful   for  bargei\npoor facllltlei for targer veiieli.\nand liunchei and imall rra't hut\nI To have reached a point 12 milei\niWeit of Tunis the Biitish 1st army\n1\nand its American Allies would ha^f\nbeen forced to throw the Nazis odjfr\nof their formidable emp lac emeriti'\noutside Tebourba, 20 miles from t|Hf\ncapital city, to have recaptured thit\nhotly-contested point and to* havif\nswept on Eastward another elgftt\nmiles to Dejedeida.\nSuch a major break-through for'\nLieut,-Gen. Kenneth A. Anderson!*'\nforces, observers said, would almost\ncertainly portend the immediate\ncapture of Tunis and the rapid &&\nstruction of Axis troops defending\ntheir last foothold In Northern 1%\nnisia.\nThe Algiers report thus was\nv iewed with some skeptlclm\nthough it was pointed out that.a'\nsmall Allied column might well\nhave swept up from the South ttf\nwithin a dozen miles of Tunis' or\neven that a sizeable Americaa\nparachute force might have been\ndropped close to the capital.\nIn 11 days the pursuing British\nforce had covered 180 miles. Should\nit maintain a similar pace the troopi\nwould require only 13 more days to\npush the remnants of the Africa\nCorps on past Tripoli and thus de*\nprive Rommel of his last great port\nof supply,\nSearch lor (oast\nPlane Shifts\nto Spuzzum Area\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 27 (CP).\u2014\nThe search for the Canadian Pa*\nclfic Airlines plane and the 13 perioni aboard waa concentrated to*\nnight In the Spurzum District 121\nmilei by rail East of here.\nDespite an intensive hunt through\nSoutheastern British Columbia and\nNorthwestern Washington State nc\ntrace has been found of the Lock*\nheed transport which failed\nreach Vancouver a week ago tonight\non a flight from Prince George, B. C\nThe deci.slon to concentrate ttM\nhunt m the Ciscade Mountain!\naround Spuzzum was made nftel\ncorrelating reports and rumors. Thu\ncorrelation nf the times at whlcJ\npersons said they heard planes wil\nbelieved to give an indication of thl\ndirection thc ship was flying.\nA settler in the Columbia Valla]\nreported finding duby ;i film of ol\nnn a stream flowing into Cultfc\nLike, about fiO miles Southwest o\nVancouver. Weather prevented\nthorough investigation of the arti\ntoday. However, plans were matij\nfor a ground party to cover the C9\nlumbia Valley tomorrow In seafc]\nof the sourer nf the nil,\n3000 Houses Wrccke<\nin Third\nQuake in Turkey\nLONDON, Dec. 27 (AP)\u2014 ffl\nGerman radio iaid 3000 houla\nwar. deitroyed In a third etltt\nquake Saturday In the MuQhll dli\ntrlet of Turkey, 100 mllti SoiMI.\neait of 8myrna. Somt ptri\nwere believed trapped In tht di\nhrli. the hroadcait laid.\nQUEBEC   MEMBER  DIES\nMONTREAL,' Drr    Jt,   (CD '\nPe'.er  H'r.-jvilrh, Bit. Literal  Mtir\nbor   r,f   Parliament    fnr   Moplrrtl\nTaitier, d;(\\I in hospital here tod*]\n \u25a0\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1942\nLcvon Papazian, Due to Graduate\nSorfly as Doctor, Dies\nddenly at McGill University\n; Word of the death mddenly at\nMontreal on Christmas Day oi he-\ntttt Papuian of Nelson, medical\ntodent it McGill University who\n.rat to be graduated early ln the\npew Year, has been received In Nel-\nBtt. Detail! were not available.\n' The young man and hli siiter, Sat-\n(nlg. were Armenian refugee chll-\ndren who escaped the Turklih massacre it the end of the last war.\nihesy were adopted by Mr. and Mrs.\nA. D. .Papazian of Nelson and came\nhere to make Iheir home. Each attended Nelson schools and the lad\ndetermined to become a doctor.\n-Be wai exceptionally keen, and\nInstead of returning home for. hli\nvaoatlona ipent most ot hii holidays\nin hospitali as an interne.\nHe had Indicated, In recent letters\nhome, that after receiving hia degree he planned te enlist. Ultimately he planned to become a brain\nspecialist\nL. V. Rogers, Principal of Nelson\nHigh School, described him as a\nbrilliant student keenly Interested\nln science courses.\nHis father, A. D. Papazian, la a\npatient In a Montreal hospital, recovering from a series of serioui\noperations. It is understood Mrs.\nPapazian li on her way East.\nHay Extend\nTerms ol\nChief Justice\nBy C.  R.  BLACKBURN\nCanadian  Preu 8tiff Writer\n' OTTAWA, Dec. 27 (CP)-The\nquestion whether Chief Justice\nSir Lyman P, Duff will continue\nJ-ver the Supreme Court of Can-\n\u25a0 Jlda or will be replaced by a new\nfjpointee is expected to be de-\nded at one of the meetings of\nafcinet Council which are keep-\nj nig   Prime   Minister   Mackenzie\n\u25a0 King and his colleagues busy dur-\n'i\\ Ing the holiday season.\n1 The Chief Justice was due for\nilrtomatic retirement Jan. 7, 193\u00bb,\njfhen he reached the age of 75 years\ntfut By Act of Parliament his term\nwas extended three years. The\ntttension expires next Jan. 7, and\nttere has been much ipeculation\nat to whether Sir Lyman, who will\nllien be 78, will remain on the\nBch.\ni lome quarters it is believed he\nChinese Shoot Down\n8 Jap Bombers\nin Christmas Raid\nCHUNGKING, Dec. 27 (AP)\nChineie tlr defimi headquirten\nat Kunming In 8outhweit Chlni\ntonight innounced t smithing succeu over 21 Japaneie heavy bomb\nen which swarmed over Yunnin\nProvince todiy,. declaring eight\nwere shot down.\nThe attack, according to the\nChinese Central Newi Agency\nwas part of a new Japanese aerial\noffensive unleashed Chrlstmu\nDiy, when the Nlpponne tent over\n80 big planei In I iweep concen\ntrated mainly In the Salween Rlv\ner Diitrlct In Southwestern China\nand Northwestern Burml.\nChineie troopi ire fighting the\nJipanese South of Shayang, a Han\nRiver town In Hupeh Province, after halting an enemy thruit In\nthit arei.\nia prepared to atay In harness and\nif that ii true there ii little doubt\nthe Government would be glad* to\nmove for an extemion of hii term\nIf the Chief Juitlce desirei to\nleave office, It li expected that hii\nsuccessor will be Mr. Justice Thi\nbadeau Rinfret, Senior Puisne\nJudge of the Court\nIa. real treat\nTo men who have an\nappreciation for fine\nwhiiky,\"Black & White\"\nii always a real treat.\nBLACK&\nWHITE\nStage Concert\nTwice, N. Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C.\u2014Tht annual ChriatmaLs concert waj twice\ngiven by the pupils of the high\nschool and public achool. in the Bosun Hall. One performance waj for\nJapanese and when Rev. Nomoto\nwas chairman,\nDr. A. Francli prwtded it the\ni second program. The unior gradei\nwere trained by MUi Joyce Butlin,\nGrades 6-9 by Ernest Ball, Principal.\nThe High School wu under the\ndirection of Mr. Wells. Accompany\ning for drills and aorygs were Miss\nFlorence Moss, and Mrs. A. R.\nHarrii.\nAt the close of the concert to the\nringing bells of Santa Claus, each\nchild received a bag of candy, nuta\nand an orange.\n361 Die in U.S.\nAccidents;\nHoliday Toll' Down\nNEW YORK, Dto. 17 (AP)-Ho|.\nIdty fatalities In tht U.S. mounted\nto M1 Ittt todty ti tht Chrlitmu\nweekend draw to 1 cloie but tht\ntoll from accldenti wtt below thtt\not lut yttr whtn 411 psriom died.\ntighter traffic on tht hlghwtyi\ndui to tin tnd gtiollnt rationing\ncontributed to tht ftet thit 219\nwera killed In motor accidenti thli\nyeir co'mpared with 334 traffic\nvictim! In 1941.\nThe opposite wil true, however,\nIn fatalities from othir cauiei, 142\ndying In mishaps In the homi or\nelsewhere ll comptrad to 97 i\nyeir tgo.\nALLIES RESUME\nPOUNDING OF\nU.S. TO RATION\nCANNED,\nDRIED FRUITS\nVegetables Also on\nList; 200 Kinds\nof Foods Affected\nTO START FEB. 1\nWASHINGTON, Deo. 27 (AP)\u2014\nAgriculture Secretary Claude\nWlckard announced todty thtt ht\nhli directed the Office of Price\nAdministration to ration ill canned, dried tnd fronn fruiti ind\nvegettblei u toon n tht ration\nmichlnery ctn bt lit up.\n\"Increaied requirement! of canned   fruiti  tnd   dried   fruiti  for\nTwo Negroes Shot\nin Rioting\nVALLEJO, Calif., Dec Tl (API-\nTwo NegTo lailors were shot by\nMarine Military Police tonight in\nrenewed rioting,imong Negro sailors, white sailors and soldier!'\nCivilian Police said about 400 8er-\nvice men were Involved ln the dis-\nturbance. ft began, they iaid. when\nMilitary Police, advised that aome\n200 Negro Sen-ice men hid gathered in i downtown night club and\nwere planning tn \"clean up\" the\ntown, advanced on  the club.\nGreat Fires Left\nBurning at\nBig Bizerte Docks\nNEW HAWKS UP\nBy NOLAND NORQAARD\nAuoclited Preu Stiff Wrlttr\nAtLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nNORTH AFRICA, Dec, 27 (AP)\u2014\nPiced by Amirictn Flying Fort-\nreiiei, which ipread deitruetlon\nIn the Axli-hild porti ot Blzerte\ntnd Sfax the Allied tlr foroii\npitched Into the bittle for Tunlili\nin urneit again today tfter t lull\nenforced by torrentlil nlnitormi.\nEscorted by twin-motored Lock-\nheed Lightning Fighters, the Fort,\nresses concentrated their mighty\ndaylight assault against the ntvtl\nstronghold of Blzerte, leaving great\na'res burning at the docki where\nAxii troop .reinforcement! ind sup-\nplies from Italy have been unloaded.\nTwo of the big fortresses were\nloit in the allied raid on Bizerte and\nSfax. One wai ihot down by Bl-\nzerte's tnti-aircraft defencei and\nanother wai leen to fall after being engaged by enemy fighters.\nTWO 8HIP8 8UNK\nCurtisi P-40 Warhawk fighting\nplanes, the newest of the P-40 line,\nmaking their fint appearance in\nthe North African war zone, escorted another flight of Fortresses ln a\nraid on the Southern- Tunisian port\nof Sfax. Two large enemy shipi were\nsunk in the harbor, i medium vessel damaged and the docks heavily\npunished.\nOperating- on their own, Llght-\n. ning Fighten destroyed a locomotive North of Hammamet, near\nTunis, ind another at Kerker in\nSouthern Tunisia. They slso shot\nup enemy trucki at Side Bou All,\nWest of Sousse, and it Enfida-\nville.\nThe newly-arrived Warhawks had\nstrafed several self-propelled enemy\nbarges North of Sousse, destroying\none that apparently wis loaded with\ngasolnie. Other P-40s were Mid to\n| hive damaged troop vehicle! on\nroadi in the vicinity of Kairouin,\nwhere the French credited U. S.\nair lupport with having broken up\nrecent enemy attempt! to ouit their\ntroopi from hird-won poiitloni.\nhli advertisement is not published\n\u25a0 displayed by the Liquor Control\nCard  or   by  the   Government  of\n[Jrltiih Columbi.i.\nINFANT SMOTHERED\nVICTORIA. Dec. 27 (CPI -War-\nren Albert Riges, five months old,\nwas smothered to death in the blankets from his carriage after another\nchild overturned the carriage yesterday.\nSay Mobilization\nof Spanish\nArmy Is Ordered\ntONDON, Dec. ttt (AP)\u2014Thl\nGerman-controlled Peril ridlo reported todiy thit Qiniralliiimo\nFranclico Franco hid orderid mo.\nblllzltlon of thl small SpanH\"\nNivy. Ther. wti no Immediltl\nconfirmation from iny othir\ntource, ind thi ilgnlflcinoi of thi\nraport wai not Immidlitely clear.\n600 III After\nEating\nCaterer's Dinner\nLOS ANGELES, DN. 17 (AP)-\nF.B.I. lgent\u00bb malntilnld llltnot\ntonight on rtporti thty hid ittrt-\ntd in Inveitlgitlon of thl food\npolionlng of (00 employeei ot thl\nHtrviy  Machine Comptny.\nThe workeri btotmt III after\ntttlng Chrlitmu lve turkty din\nmn prepared by t catering concern.\nGeneral Miniger Lawrence A\nHtrvty Itld operation! It both\ntht Loi Angelei tnd Long Beach\nplanti were curtailed yeiterdiy\nbecauie io miny workeri wen\nmide III by tainted food, None\nrequired hospitalization, however,\nind til wtrt expected to rtturn\nto their Jobi tomorrow.\nUnsuccessful Search for 6old Led\nto Rossland Scheelite Claims\nNow Under Option to the Bayonne\nU.S. FIGHTERS\nWIN HOT NEW\nGUINEA BATUE\nShoot Down 15 Jap\nPlanes; Four\nShips Are Damaged\nBUNA PRESSED\nSIRDAR\nGuide for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOMf\"\nDufferin Hotel\nSeymour Bt. Vancouver. B   C,\nNewly  renovated  through\nout   Phonei  end  elevator\nA   PATTF.RSON, lite ol\nColeman, Alt*. Proprietor\nSIRDAR,   B.   C.   -   Mrs.   I,   K.\nHnynos was the guest of- Mr, and\nMrs Vic Mawson at Creaton recently\nMiss Sandberg. achool miitresi\nnerr, left Saturday to spend a vacation at Vancouver,\nBil Armstrong, rancher of Twin\nBays, was a visitor hare.\nRill Rohaci apent a vacation with\nCreek.\nEugene, Rimer, and Robert Eakin\nof Wynndel fpent the weekend at\nSirdir.\nrRANSPORTATION\u2014Motor   Freight   Lines\nl Tm thc tlr*. time on record eln-\ngle-englned tighten btled on Eng-\n, land [>cn-l. ated Into Germany on\nOct Jl, when MuiUngi ot Army\nCooperation Command included ttie\nDortmund-Ems canal among their\nobjectivea.\nWICKARD\nmilitary purpoiei make It eiaen-\ntlal that our atocka be conaerved.\"\nWlckard atld In \u00ab itatement\n\"While our total auppllei o( canned fruits and dried fruits are the\nlargest in history, they are among\nthe foods most urgently needed by\nthe fighting men of thii nation and\nother United Nations.\"\nIt ii expected the rationing will\nstart around Feb, 1,\n\"On the average, 33 poundi of\ncanned, frozen, or dried fruiti and\nvegetables ate expected to be available for each person ln 1943 as\ncompared with an average of about\n4a pounds a year from 1937 to 1941,\"\naaid Wlckard.\nA8K8 SUPPORT\n\"With respect to the total food situation, I would like to stress the\nfact, that, despite the heavy need for\nfood on the fighting fronts, our total\noutput is so large that more than\nenough foods remains to give civilians a well-balanced and healthful\ndiet. To get this well-balanced and\nhealthful diet to our people, our\nfood rnuit be fairly and equitably\ndistributed. Rationing ls a means to\nthat end. It is a means of seeing that\na small minority does not hoard or\nwaste food at the expense of the\nrest of us. When that fact is realised. I know that artioning of the\ncomparatively few foods that need\nto be distributed in this manner will\nhave the wholehearted acceptance\nand support of the American people.\"\nMora than 200 kinds of foods,\nranging from apple tauce te loup,\nwlll be strictly rationed,\nA point system of rationing, similar to Britain's will be used by means\nof the new war ration book No. 2.\nEach Individual will have a certain\nnumber of points to spend every\nmonth. In buying a can of corn,\nfor example, the purchaser will give\nthe grocer a coupon carrying the\n\"point value\" fixed for corn at the\n: time of the purchase.\nThe long -list of processed fruits\nand vegetables thus will join sugar\nand coffee among foodstuffs under\nI rationing. Meat and certain food fats\nproducts, such as butter and shortening, ire generally expected to be\nadded to the list later.\n\"Here,\" said Wlckard, \"are the\nproipecti for lome of our foods:\u2014\n\"Dairy products\u201490 to 95 per cent\n\u25a0I much per capita for our civilian\npopulation In 1943 aa wai consumed\nln tha 1933-39 period. Meats-100\nto 10S per cent of the 1935-1939 period. Poultry\u2014150 to 180 per cent.\nEggi\u201490 to 95 per cent. Potatoes\u2014\n95 to 155 per cent. Fresh cltrui\nfruiti\u2014IM to 130 per cant. Fresh\nvegetable!\u201490 to 95 per cent. Cereali\u2014Abundant auppllei, we can\nhave all that we want to eat.\n\"In general, then, we can be 'airly well latlsfied with the prospects\nfor food suppliei. But we muit be\ndeeply concerned about food distribution.\"\nBy  C.  YATE8   MeDANIEL\nAnoclated Praia Staff Wrlttr\nALLIED HEADQUARTER8 IN\nAU9TRALIA, Monday, Dtc. 28\nCAP)\u2014Ripping Into a formation\nof 40 Japaneie planet supporting\nbtletgured troopi In tht Bunt\narea of New Guinea, 12 Unittd\nState. P-38 fighters In their flnt\nappearance on tht Bunt front\n\u2022hot down 15 tntmy planta and\nemerged from tht furious battlt\nwith only lllght damtgt to ont\nplane, tht Allied Command announced today.\nThis sharp air victory was fought\nout over the battleground of Buna,\nwhere General Douglas MacArthur's\ntroops were said to have taken important enemy gun emplacements\nand driven a wedge into the enemy'i\ndefense system.\nIn another action, Allied airmen\nheavily damaged four enemy ihips\noff Rabaul, New Britain, the High\nCommand announced.\nThe communique gave thii graphic\ndescription of the extremely bitter\nfighting in and above the Buna sector:\n\"The struggle to breach the enemy's last line of defense is continuing In a progression of sanguinary local actions for the reduction\nof the bunker-type strong points.\n\"On the right, Important enemy\ngun emplacements have betn taken.\n\"On tht left, t wedgt hat been\ndriven Into the enemy'i deftnit\n\u25a0yitem. Eait of 8anananda track\nwe have made small but Important galni.\n\"In previous air combat our medium bombers shot down three enemy fighters and our anti-aircraft\nfire shot down one.\"\nIn the Northwestern sector, the\ncommunique said, \"our planes strafed supplies and a road transport\nnear Lalval on the Island of Timor\".\nAn Allied reconnaissance unit ma-\nchlnegunned an enemy schooner in\nJacquinto Bay, New Britain. Five enemy planes ineffectively attacked\nthe unit near St. Georges Channel.\nThe airdrome at Cape Gloucester\nwas bombed by an Allied heavy unit.\nOne of the ihlpi damaged tt\nRabaul was a 15,000-ton traniport.\nDirect hits were icored on tht\ncraft, the communique laid, and\nIt was left lying on Its side In the\ncentre of tht hirbor.\nTwo oargo vessels, eitlmited at\n8000 toni each, wera ut afire.\nIt wai believed much additional\ndamage wai done In the flarbor.\n\"In St. Georges Channel,\" the communique continued, \"an 8000-ton\ncargo vessel was succeisfully struck,\nreduced to flamei and abandoned by\nthe enemy,\"\nDescribing tht discovery of ichee-\nUtt clalmi at Rouland, recently optioned by Bayonne Coniolldated\nMines Ltd., for $92,500, the Roisland\nMiner reported: '\n\"Three yeari tgo Pete Radich was\ndoing a little prospecting out beyond Stoney Creek way. He found\na bit of quarti, but on aisaylng, the\nlamplea ihowed no gold. No gold,\nno more prospecting there.\nBETTER THAN GOLD\n\"That was three years ago, but\ntoday those same quartz deposits,\nbecauie they contain a rather high\npercentage of scheellte, a much-\nneeded war metal, are far more valuable than gold. Pete remembered\nabout that quartz thli Summer after\nhe was discharged trom tht army\nbecause of ill health, and with his\nfather, Antont Radich, and Louis\nProfili, did a bit more prdspecting,\nthli time for ichetlite. It now looks\nas though the^ htve itruck lomething good.\n\"Tuesday, December 15, they, signed the papers, along with Holgar\nBeck, who also has some claims in\nthe same locality, with Bayonne\nConsolidated Mines Ltd., which\ngives the Bayonne Company an option at $92,500 on the 12 claims involved. A substantial down payment was paid.\nGOOD SCHEELITE A8SAY8\n\"In September the trio staked\ntheir fint claim, the Lucky Three.\nThen in October they staked three\nmore claims, Blue-eyei No. 1, 2 and\n3. Looking for icheelite, they borrowed a fluorescent light from Harold timet and did iome prospecting.\nResults seemed to be pretty fair, and\nthe first sample showed .69 per cent\nscheelite. They uncovered a lead 28\nInches wide, tnd sarrfplei from thtl\nhave shown 1.5 to 3.0 per cent icheelite in the quartz and 1.15 per cent\nin the granite.\n\"It happened ln October that\nLloyd Smith of Penticton was In\ntown on business for the Mayflower\nMine in the South belt. Dr. Victor\nDolmage was with him at the time,\nand Louis Profllli was talking to\nthem about their claim. Dr. Dolmage\nbecame interested and said he'd be\nback again. They sent a 141 pound\nsample to the coast and these\nsamples showed 4.92 per cent of\nscheelite. Just the day before tht\nfirst snow came down on the hills,\nDr. Dolmage came back to town and\nthe prospecting trio, with Dr. Dolmage went out with the fluorescent light Bayonne wanted an option and this week the agreement\nwas signed.\nCONTRACT FOR TUNNEL\n\"Development of -the property ll\nto begin at once, and Ole Osing haa\nbeen given the contract to drive a\n500-foot tunnel. A crew of some\neight men will start to work ln tht\ninitial stages. The Bayonne Company will send a bulldozer to open\nup a road to the properties.\n\"All three of the original group\nhave done considerable prospecting\nlately. Mr. Radich was employed In\nthe mines as motor man while the\nmines were operating here. He wai\nlater transferred to Trail and aev>\neral years ago retired from the com.\npany. When the leases were in oper-\natlon here he took his son Pete ln\non a lease and they worked lt for\nseveral yeari. Louii Profilll, who\nworks at the Smelter, doei his pros\npecting on spare time.\"\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAf  10:30 .im.   -Except Sundiy\nTrail Livery Co.\nM    H    MclVOt.   Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nI\nCurb Pyorrhea\nBlwdlni taau. looee Ml) eai mm ami.\nm-T mt.n that ran art a tfctlm at trarrh..\nar OlnalvHIi that mar iootmt or laUr eauM\ntr. i ]\u25a0 -\u25a0 i -mt ot raise Stash and la v\u00bbir\n!_}M t.'ili tmlara your time. OrarootM th.M\ntreubln no* wllji Amoaan. Araoaan mm.\na.ltalf rurti ini. mouth, blwdlni |umi and\nhilp nadir* tlfhtan Ioom teetn, or your\nmontr bach on rtturn ot tmptr clrtrm\nOtt Amoian today from lour drui-\nAfMACQM mi..\nemeernvmrnemm   \u201e,\u201ei f,au,u\nFor Fr\u00bbltM-3-_|M*     im.\nJohnson's Landing\nHas Concert\nJOHNSON'S LANDING. B. C. -\nTne annual school concert tnd the\nChrlitmai tree, under the supervision of the teicher. Mrs. V. dreen-\nltw; Jr.. was heljl In the ichool\nhouae\nA number ot visitors arrived from\nLsrdo tnd Argents to enjoy tht\nprogram provided by the itudenti.\nA ipecial feature wai I playlet written by Lirry McNicol.\n. Stnta Claus dlitrlbuted gifts tnd\nee*i__ from tht tree which wert\nglvtn by the teacher. After nipper,\ndancing took place Mr. and Mri.\nOreenla* ind Mf. Miller of Lardo\nand Raymond Rnp.'r provided the\nmusic\nMiners' Children\nReceive\nChristmas Treat\niJATAL, B. C\u2014Some 800 mlnen'\nchildren received their annual treat\nof $1.90 from the Michel Local thli\nyear.\nMichel local has also sent out a $5\ncheck lo over 200 Natal-Miehel and\ndistrict men serving In the arme^d\nforces.\nThe ladiei of the 107th Club ind\nthe Michel Legion have sent cigarettes oveneai and a imall donation\nto thoie in Canada.\nService Over Self\nForbes'Theme;\nRotary Present\nNelsoh Rotary Club, with Its\nguest, District Governor Fred K,\nJones of Spokane, attended the\nevening service at St. Paul's United\nOhurch Sunday. After the service\ntht Club met ln'the Church Hall,\nand with the District Governor\ndiscussed affairs pertaining to Rotary.\nThe music was by members of\nSt. Paul's Choristers, who sang two\nanthems, and Misi Catherine Argyle, who on her violin, rendered\na prelude and a solo. Noticeable\namong the congregation at both\nmorning and evening lervlces were\nvisiting Service men.\nRev. H. Stewart Forbei, Pastor,\nspoke on the Rotary slogan, \"Service Above Sett.\" He ipoke from\nthe text: \"He hath ihowed theo, O\nman, what is good; and what doth\nthe Lord require of thee but to do\nJustly, and to love mercy, and io\nwalk humbly with thy God!\"\nRELIGION IN ACTION\nMr. Forbei said that religion was\nnot merely a matter of sentiment,\nbut of action, and that that action\nmust be )us(. If the social itate\nit ever to be set right along Christian lines, it would be through the\nnew and larger conception of Justice toward others. The wrr w__\nbeing waged because certain individuals and nations had lost all the\nIdea of Justice they ever en ertain-\ned. 'ft.eir ilogan was \"self above\nall.\" And the peace would be won\nonly lf it was a Just peace, \"just toward! ourselves, pur friends tho\nneutrals, if there are any, and toward our enemies.\"\nLove of mercy, the preacher sa d,\nwas a quality of character, an atmosphere of the miaid, which m_de\nmen ever ready to deliver tho:e\nwho were overburdened and handi.\ncapped, thoee who were living in\nsuch ctnslitions that not merely\nhappiness, but goodness was impossible.\n\"The Important matter howev r,\nll that we walk humbly wilh our\nGod, which means learning of God,\nasking God to teach us how to live,\nand to give us power to live aright,\"\nMr, Forbes said. This Ihe modern\nman teems to find difficult. But\nthe beginning of all true religion is\nin penitence. To get this we must\nget a right view of God. We need\ntht mind of Christ 'who humbled\nHimself, and became obedient to\ndeith, even the death oil the\nCross',\"\nThe object of all religious t?arh-\ning, and the aim of all rel.g on;\nliving was to do the will of Oud,\nand this could be done nnlv by\nrrten setting them,.Ives in true relationship with God through Jeiu.\nChrist, the preacher concluded.\nMOYIE CONCERT\nIS GREAT SUCCESS\nMOY.E, B. C.-Moyft School children's Christmas concert was a fine\nsuccess. The schoolroom was crowded with children tnd adults.\nThe program\u2014Sonii by clasi, re\ncitation Richard Stanton, tong by Elsie Poelco, recitation Arnold Champion, comedy, Lloyd Poelco and R.\nStanton, dance Gladys George, and\nJoyce Champion, mouth organ selections Lloyd and Lawrence Poelco,\naccompanied by Elsie Poelco who\nsang; song Gladys George and Joyce\nChampion, carol by clasi with iolo\nby Stella George.\nLater refreshments were enjoyed\nand Santa Claus arrived with presents for all the children.\nDECEMBER\nLUCKY DRAW\nMRS. A. M. BANKS,\n904 Silica StrMt\nFINK'S\n.LADIES' WEAR\nDistribution ol\n10 Cents Share\nYankee Girl Plan\nVANCOUVER\u2014A distribution o_\n10 cents a share is planned by Ymir\nYankee Girl Gold Mines Ltd. as\nsoon as a ruling it obtained trom the\nfederal tax authorities regarding\nthe amount of the undistributed surplus. Shareholders were advised at\nthe annual meeting that directors\nproposed to recommend this course.\nThe distribution they explained, will\nbe partly aa a dividend and partly\na return of capital.\nAfter making the 10 cents per\n\u25a0hare distribution, amounting to\n$222,500 the company will still'havt\nadequate working capital to proceed\nafter the war with investigation of\nthe optioned placer properties on\nBallarat Kirktnan and Buick Hilli\nCreeks. Yukon Territory.\nNet current assets at August SI.\n1942, were $279,052. Additional cash\nhas lince accrued from disposal of\nmill and mine equipment at Ymir,\nso that after making the distribution\nto shareholders the company will\nhave a substantial caih balance on\nh aid for its poit war development\nproject\nWhen the federal ruling has been\nobtained it is proposed to pay a cash\ndividend and call a special meeting\nto authorize a capital distribution.\nFruitvale Ladies'\nClub Has\nChristmas Party\nFRUITVALE, B.C. - The Ladiei'\nFriendly Club met for their annual\nChrlitmai party at the home of Mrs.\nB. E. Johnson. A. decorated Christmas tree and greenery decorated the\nliving rooms. Games and conteit!\nwere enjoyed.\nPrizes were won by Mri. L. Ayre,\nMrs. F. W. Cole and Mri. J. MeCannon. Gifts were exchanged by\nthe menfbers and refreshments were\nserved. Mri. S. Mclsaac assisted the\nhostess In serving.\nTojo Warns Japs Allied Counter-Blows\nComins; \"Real War Starling Now\"\nNEW YORK, Dec. 27 (AP) -\nGen. H'deki Tojo in his capacity\nas War Minister warned the Japanese people today that the United Nations are preparing to deliver counter-blows of \"great importance\", and said the ilgm art\nthat \"the real war is starting from\nnow.\"\nThe little premier's addresi, delivered before the Japanese diet\nand broadcast by the German and\nJapanese radios, appeared obviously\naimed to remove any thoughts ot\nan early victory from the minds of\nthc Japanese people.\nTo]o was followed to the Roi-\ntrum by Naval Minister Sh-getaro\nShimada who softened the Impact\nof the premier's words somewhat\nby claiming that 38 per cent of the\nAmerican, British and Netherlands\nnavies has been sunk since the war\nbegan.\nThe ever-present threat of Russian Siberia to thc Japanese wai\ntacitly acknowledged by the premier\nin hii promise to ihe people that\ntheir forces had been strengthened\non the Soviet border.\nRussia and Jnp.n are uneasily\nbound by a treaty of non-iggresslon\nbut the Japanese are aware of the\naerial proximity of their cities and\nindustries to the big Soviet air\nbase at Vladivostok in Siberia.\nIn pointing out tha enormity\nof tha talk facing Japan In Ent\nAlia, Tojo estimated that tha Unit\ned Natloni have about 1,000,000\ntroopa tnd M0 a'rplanei In India,\nwith the numben \"continually Increailng.''\nIn the past six months he iaid t\ncombined American and Chinese\nair force of 300 plsnei had carTied\nout 30 attacks on Japanese hutaUa-\ntlom ln Chim. He estimated the\nChlnfse srmy at 3.600.000 men a_id\nsaid about 250 large and small battlea\nhad been fought between them and\nthe Invading Japanese.\nUnited Nations air bases In the\nSolomon Islands, Tojo sa;d, have\nmade \"extremely difficult\" the reinforcement and supplying of Japanese forces in those \"unhealthy\nregions\" He claimed-that Japan-\nanese reinforcements had reached\nGuadalcanal but did not specify\nthe number nor the date\nBecause of frequent attacks by American planes based on Dutch Harbor In Alaska, Tojo said, \"the privation! and difficulties which Jspaneie\ntroopi have had to endure In the\nAleutian Islands ire unimaginable\"\nThe Aleutiini were mentioned,\nalong with Burma, the Solomons\nand New Guinea, al probible Utes\nof Allied Ntiioni -counter-attacks\"\nOn the profit side of the Japanese\nleadger. Tojo said traniporti return-\n.ng from plundered countrlei in the\nSoiAh Pacific had brought 1.800not.\ntons of raw materials to Japan, or\n70 per cent more than the najion'i\nrequirements for an entire year.\nFour Killed as\nBomber Crashes\nSYDNEY. N. S.. Dec. 17 (CP) -\nThe RCAF tonight releaied the nsme\nof four tirmen killed when t bomber crtihed ntir tht Sydrtey RCAF\nstation Chrlitmu Day.\nTht viitlmi:\nFit Sgt. Robert McCrtnlchan of\nFort Warrtn, Mtn.. FH. S\u00abt. Wlllltm\nB. E. Bailee, Victorlt, B. C, Sgt.\nJoieph Camlre, St. David, Que., Wo\n2 Lome Greene, MtcTler, Ont,\nThere   ire   tpproxlmately   15,000\nnatives on thc Solomon lilandi.\nWar Leaders\nPresented Globes\nLONDON, Dec. 27 (AP)-M\u00abJor\nGeneral Ruuel L. Htrtle, Field Commander of the American troopi in\nOreat Britain, preiented Prime Miniiter Wlmlon Churchill odty with\nt terreitlal globs weighing 800\npounds snd measuring JO Inchei n\ndiimeter ti a Chrlstmis preient\nfrom the U. S. Army.\nTht globe wu flown from Waihington. At the umt time Preiident\nRooievelt received t similar globe\ntrom the army.\n7k\u00aecd\nJMom\/i Jtovowi\n13 ox.     26 ox.    40 ox.\n$1.65   $3.75   $4.65\nKuvperc;\nin (.AhaDAiu.'(win io,) .i;m\\    ***Wm*\\m \u25a0\nWHN * Ht-YPIS \u2022 MN. \u25a0_____\u00bb\nThis advertiiement It not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Oovernment ot British Columbia.\n\t\n lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSkiers\nI\nSee Our Selection of\nSki Boots\nMEN'S\nWOMEN'S\nR\u00bb Andrew\n& 'Ca\nLeaders In Foot Fashion\n.ililliimillHlimimilHHimitllHHt.nl\nIn the first eight months of 1942\nthe Red Cross and St. John packed\nind dispatched more than 3.500,000\nparcels for British prisoners in Germany and Italy.\nYq0\nBURNETT'S\nGIN\nBecause Burnett's is an\nEXTRA DRY (unsweetened) Gin, you can idd\n\u2014or leave out \u2014 sweetness, when mixing\ndrinks, and suit every\nindividual taste.\nBe a wise host-\nserve Burnett's.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nPLEASE SAVE THE BOTTLE!\nCanada naadi glass 1 Save all bottlei.\nYour Sal vagi Committee will colled.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by \u25a0 the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\u2022 A wedding of intereit In Nel\nion, Eut Kootenay ind the Okan\n\u2022gan took place it tive Rectory of\nthe Church of the Redemptorlit Fathers Saturday afternoon at 3:30\nwhen Mill Marcelle Nedelec, only\ndaughter of Mr. and Mn. Joseph\nNedelec of Nelion became the bride\nof Pte. Irwin G. Black of the office\nstaff of Q.M. Storei, R.C.O.C., Bar-\nrlefleld Camp, Kingston, Ont. He\nil the only ion of Mr. and Mri. Irwin Black of Kelowna. Rev. Gerald\nMurpby, C. u. R., officiated. Entering the Rectory on the arm of her\nfather, the bride looked lovely ln a\nfloor-length dreu of white chiffon\nwith \u25a0 wide midTiff, full ikirt ind\nBishop's sleeves. She wore white\nshoes to match. Her floor-length\nveil of white lace wai held In place\nby a coronet of orange blossoms,\nand she carried a shower bouquet\nof American Beauty roses and Lily\nof the Valley. Her bridesmaid,\nMiss Louise Coletti, was becoming\nin a Minuet Blue dress of the same\ndesign as the bride's. She wore\ngold slippers, and a clip of gold\nflowers held In place her ihoulder.\nlength veil of blue net. Her shower\nbouquet was of pink carnations.\nAcl George Nedelec, brother of\nthe bride, supported the groom. A\nreception was held at the home of\nthe bride's parents, 302 Second\nStreet, where a number of friends\ngathered. To assist in greeting the\nguests, the bride's mother donned\nan afternoon dress of black and\nwore a corsage of red carnations,\nwhile the groom's mother chose a\ntwo - piece afternoon dress of\nQueen's blue with white collar, and\nwore a corsage of pink carnations.\nA toast to the bride was proposed\nby Father Murphy, responded to by\nthe groom M'rs. Frank Slater presided at the urns while the leei\nwere cut by Mrs. Marcelle Le-\nMoigne. Serviteurs wefe Miss Stella\nPaterson and Miss Bunty Paterson.\nA three-tiered wedding cake was\nembedded in blue tulle, flanked by\nblue tapers. For her going-away\nensemble, Mrs. Black chose a Navy\ndress with torso lines trimmed with\nwhite, over which she wore a box\ntweed coat. Her accessories were\nblack. A number of well-wishers\nsent the happy couple on their way\non the Fast train, bound for Kingston, The couple were both for-\ni merly employed on the staff of the\nHudson's Bay Company at Nelson.\nMrs. Black is formerly of Yahk\nand Cranbrook. Besides the parents of the bride and groom, invited\nwedding guests included Miss Grace\nBlack, sister of the groom; Mrs. M-\nLeMojgne, Henry LeMoigne, Mrs.\nE. H. Paterson, Miss S'ella Paterson. Miss Bunty Paterson, Mrs. E. A.\nRyley, James Ryley. Mrs. W. Cunning and Mrs. C. Irvine.\nRETURNS TO ALBERTA\n\u2022 Ac. 2 George Lapointe left\nSunday morning for Edmonton after spending his Christmas leave with\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. George\nLapointe, 705 Stanley Street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Bud Maynard\nof Trail visited Mrs. Maynard's\nparents. Mr. and Mrs. A. Shrlevei\nafter which they visited Mr. Maynard's parents at Balfour.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J, Bowles and\nchildren visited her parents, Mr, and\nMrs. A. H. Noakes, at Balfour Christmas Day.\n\u2022 Pte. Cay McLeod, who ipent\nthe holidays with her parents, Captain and Mri. A. McLeod, Mill\nStreet, has returned to the Coait.\n\u2022 Sgt. B, Hill of Penhold, Alti.,\nis a guest of his aunt, Mrs, A. Major, Procter.\ne Bert Wickstrom of Lethbridge\nvis'ted Nelson over the holiday.\n * \/ o\n\u25a0y MRS   M   J   VIGNIUX\n\u2022 Mill Jessie Fraser leivei today\nifter viiiting her parenti, Mr. and\nMn. S. S. Itiier, Fruer'i Landing.\n\u2022 Lince Cpl. I. J. Boyce ot\nVancouver viilted Balfour over thl\nweekend. Hli wife It it preient\nvisiting relative! in  town.\n\u2022 George Conrad of Bonnington\nwai i recent viiltor to hli home on\nLitimer Street.\n\u2022 Mn J. P Bourne of Procter\nwai \u25a0 ihopper, in town.\nHOME ON LaEAVE\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mri J. R. McLennan,\nHoover Street, have ai guut their\nion, Ac.2 Martin McLennan of Edmonton.\n\u2022 Pte. md Mw. Norman Ganiner of Vancouver ire gueiti of Mr.\nGamner'i mother, Mrs. P. Gansner, Granite Roij, over the holiday.\n\u2022 Pte. Matthew Aylmer of Vernon returned yesterdiy ifter 1 few\ndayi at the home of hii parenti,\nHon. Baill Aylmer and Mri. Aylmer\nof Queen'i Bay.\n\u2022 W. E. Lutei, Silici Street, li\na patient in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\n\u2022 Cadet C. F. Jewett of Gordon-\nhead spent Christmai with his parents Mr. and Mn. F. A. Jewett,\nRosemont.\n\u2022 Pte. N. Apostoliuk hai returned to the Coast ifter spending\nChristmas with hii parents, Mr. and\nMrs. James Apostoliuk, Granite\nRoad.\nANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. W. J. Waten,\nSecond Street, Fairview announce\nthe engagement of their iecond\ndaughter, Olive Florence, to Pilot\nOfficer Gordon Mitchell Smith, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Smith,\nFairview. The marriage is to take\nplace ln the' neir future.\n\u2022 Pte. Jesiie Harrop ii here\nfrom Victoria viiiting her parenta,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Harrop, Fairview.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Jack Teague, 131.\nWard Street, had as gueit their\ndaughter, Pte. Eileen Teague of the\nC.W.A.C, Vancouver, who returned\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Jack Bird, Victoria Street, il\nconfined to his home by sickness.\n\u2022 Miis Fnnces Lincoln of Spokane spent the holiday with her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lincoln,\nStanley Street.\nLEAVES FOR COAST\n\u2022 Lance Cpl. Esme Meggy of\nVancouver barracks left yesterday\nfor the Coast after visiting her\nparents, R, A. Scott-Lauder md\nHon. Mn. R. A. Scott-Lauder at\nQueen'i Bay.\ne Miis Christine rornelll and her\nsister, Miss Jean Fornelll, hive rtturned from Fyfe where they ipent\nthe weekend with their mother.\n\u2022 .Sheriff M. E. Harper md Mn.\nHarper, North Shore, had as guests\nover Christmii their son and daughter-in-law, Lac. Allan Harper and\nMrs, Harper, who leave today for\nLethbridge, also Pte. Oswald. K.\nHarper, who returned Sunday morning to Red Deer.\ne Lac. Stanley Horswill, who\nspent the Christmas weekend at the\nhome of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. T Honwill, .12 Silica Street hai\nreturned to his station at Winnipeg.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Pearce have\nas guest Lac. Geoffrey Hug of\nClaresholm, who returni this morning.\nLEAVES FOR COAST\n\u2022 Mill Olive Witen, who ipept\nthe holiday with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs, W. J. Wateri, Second\nStreet leavei today for Vincouver.\n\u2022 A Shrieves of Bonnington wai\na recent gueat of hii family in Nelson.\n\u2022 Major Oolliion of Trill li vis-\ntcocfofc\nYes, and shell continue to keep a budget because\nthe wartime edition of the Royal Bank family budget book is io oimy to use, so practical and works so\nlimply in adjusting Living habits to war conditions.\nGet your copy right away.\nIjigpyiil any branch nf The Royal\nBank. Anyone can have a budget book for Uie asking.\nTHE ROYAL BMK OF CANADA\nS. A. MADDOCKS. Miniger\nItlng hli funlly, Litimer Streit.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mn. Colin Cimpbell\nof Wynndel viilted Ntlion it tht\nweekend.\n' t Mrs, 3. N. Hunt, Johnitone\nBlock, ipent the weekend it the\nhome of Captain ind Mn. P. Hir^\nridge it Balfour.\n\u2022 Mill Audrey Hudion ot the\nC.W.A.C., Calgary, viilted her parenti at Balfour over the weekend.\n\u2022 Mr. md Mri. Peuchell of Balfour were shoppers in town.\nt Mn. Ctiarles Hooking! hid is\ngueiti her ion, Piul Hooklngs, who\nittends U.B.C. ln Vancouver, ilso\nher nephew, Fred Linei of Cal-\n\u00abiry.\nMOSESON-EH-CSON\nt A lovely candlelight wedding\nwai solemnized it the Million Covenant Church, Saturday, Dec. 26,\nat T o'clock when Helen Olive\nEither of Wetaiklwin, Alta., daughter of Rev. md Mn. D. N. Ericion,\nof Nelion, formerly of Wetaiklwin,\nand Gordon Daniel Moseion, ion of\nthe lite Mr, and Mn. K. A. Moseion of Seattle, formerly o< Wetaiklwin, were united In holy matrimony. The bride entered on the\narm of her father, while the groom\n\u25a0ang \"Because\". The bride wore\na gown of white figured latin, with\nfitted bodice, and leg of mutton\nsleeves, and brocaded sweetheart\nneckline. She wore a floor-length\nveil held In place with I halo of\nwhite rose buds. She carried a\nbouquet of pink carnations. The\nsister of the bride, Mrs. Frits Einar-\nson, was matron of honor. She\nwore a floor-length white chiffon\ngown and carried i bouquet of\nwhite and red carnations. The\ngroom wai attended by Pte. Frlti\nEinarson, also of Wetaikiwin. Mils\nDelores Stenberg, cousin of the\nbride, wai flower girl. She wore\na lovely pink floral gown, and\ncarried a baiket of baby mums.\nG. Stenberg piayed Lohengrin's\nWedding March. The wedding was\nperformed by the bride's father,\nRev. D. N. Ericson, assisted by Rev.\nMelvin Pederson, of Ericson, B.C.\nDuring the signing of the register,\nMiss Anne Busk sang, \"I Love You\nTruly.\" The ushers were Abe DeHaan and Tom Wilkinson. The reception was held at the Church,\nwhere \u2022 large number congratulated\nthe couple. The bride's mother\nwore a floor-length blue gown with\nblack icceiioriee. She ind Mr.\nEricson milted in welcoming the\nguests. Refreshments were served,\nfollowed by talks by Mr. Pederson,\nG. Stenberg, uncle of the bride,\nPte. Einanon md Mr. Ericson, the\ngroom replying. Many telegrams of\ncongratulation were read by Mr.\nPederson. Musical numbers included a trio of the bride's sisters, Lillian, Mae and Evangeline, who sang\n\"Wedding Bells\". Pte F. Etnirson\nsang a solo. Thoie assisting with\nthe lerving Included Jean Hammer,\nAlice Stevenson, Hazel Nelson, Lillian Ericson, Ida and Hanna Busk.\nHERE rROM ALBERTA\nt   Cpl,    George   Thompson    of\nOiada Camp, Alta., visited hli family tn the Annable Block over the\nholiday.\n\u2022 J. A. Stewart of Salmo Is\nspending   the \"holidays   in   Nelson.\nt Sgt. Joseph Holland was here\nfrom the Prairie, visiting his family on Silica Street.\nt Benjamin Sutherland Is here\nfrom Medicine Hat visiting his\nmother in the Kerr Apartments.\n\u2022 'Miss Winnie Kinahan and her\nsister, Mrs. F. Boyd, have returned\nfrom Trail where they spent Christmas with their brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. md Mn. iSmest Kinahan.\n\u2022 ' Wiss Katherine Pearce of the\nR.CA.F. is visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mra. F, B. Pearce over the\nholiday\n\u2022 W. R. Jarvli and Miss Mary\nJarvis, Kerr Apartments, sppnt\nChristmas at Farron it the home of\nnillllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMMinillMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\ncKoiL-mviuQA.\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\niillllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllll.lllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWe miy emerge from thii trigic\nwar better cooki and home manager! Having kept houae for iome\nyeara. it ii the unusual womin who\nhasn't gotten inlo lomething of \u2022\nrut with her meal planning. Now\nli the time to map out of It and tr}\nnew food combination!. i\nTODAY'S MENU\nCrab Meat Cocktail   Cracken\nRoast Chicken       Maihed Potatoes\nBroccoli        Waldorf  Salad\nOlivei, PIcKlei, Celery\nWATCH REPAIR\nli \u25a0 Job for ixperti. Our work\ninures your Mtlifaetlon.\nH. H. Sutherland\n491  Biker It\nNilun, B  C.\nFOR   MILK-TRY\nK. V. D.\nPHONI 118\nNew Shipment of\nSKIRTS\nJunt In\nFashion First Limited\nSpiced Prune Loaf Cike or\nJam Cake\nIce Cream Coffee\nSPICED PRUNE LOAF CAKE\n1 cup cooked prunei, _ cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaipoon cinnamon, 1 teaipoon nutmeg, V, teaspoon clovei, 2 egg!, V. cup cold\ncoffee, . teaspoon loda, 2 cupi lifted all-purpose flour, 2 teaspoons\nbaking powder, _ teaspoon rtlt, V,\ncup coarsely chopped nut meats.\nPit prunes and cut into very imall\npiecei. Creim butter, idd sugar ind\nspicei ind cream thoroughly; add\nwell-beaten eggi and beat. Add coffee In which loda his been dinolved,\nalternr.tely with flour lifted with\nult and beit. Add prunes and null,\nand stir to blend. Pour Into greased,\npaper-lined pan and bake about\n35 minutes in moderate oven (375\ndegrees F.). Frost with mochl frosting\nJAM CAKE\nI cup lugar. If, cupi flour, 1 cup\nJelly or jam. 1 teijpoon nutmeg, 1\nteaspoon lodi, 4 eggs, 4 tibleipooni\nsour cream. _-J cup shortening 1\nteupoon illiplce, 1 teupoon cinnamon.\nStir ill Ingredients together except eggs, adding soda to lour creim\nJust before blending with other Ingredient*. Rent eggi separately, add\nyolki flnt. then fold In whltei.\nBike In moderate oven (37- degreei\nT.l in liyer cike tlru ind put together with boiled froiting.\ntht former'i lon-ln-liw ind daughter, Mr. and Mn. WlUUm Watkini\nAjtoOUNCE ENGAGEMENT\nt Mri. F. Seton Fox, 4C4 Howtop\nStreet, innounce the engagement\nof her eldett diughter, Dorothy\nEvelyn, to Sergeant E. Thome.\nR.C.E, Chilliwack, only ion of Mr.\n\u2022nd Mn. I,. Collins of Alexander,\nMm. The wedding will tike plice\neirly in March.\nt David Hale ind Kenneth McDonald of Procter vUited town yei-,\nterrday.\nt Miu Faith Ritchie, who it-\ntend*\"U\\B.C. In Vincouver, ii viiiting her liiter, Mn. A. Appel, in\nNelion.\nt Lac. William Holland of Saskatoon, Sask, li \u2022 guest of hi!\nmother, Mn. Joieph Holland, Silici\nStreet, \"over the holldayi.\nt Willlam Gordon, ion of Mr.\nmd Mri. W. A. Gordon, Third\nStreet, who ittends U.B.C, ll spending the holidays at) the home of his\nparenti.\nt Mr, and Mn. B. Hotkin Jr., of\nBalfour .vere recent ihoppen in\ntown.\nt Pte. Edward and Pte. Peter\nLutkvitch returned yesterday ifter\n\u25a0pending the holiday it the home of\ntheir mother end litter, Mn. Lut-\nklvltch end Beatrice, on Stanley\nStreet'.\n\u2022   Mr. and Mrs. Harry Merrifield\nand baby son of Castlegar returned\nlast night after visiting their lunt,\nMra. A. Jerome, 1012 Hoover Street.\nRETURNS TO BRANDON\nt Lie. John Dilgas, who hai\nspent a couple of dayi with hli mother, Mre. A. Ei Dalgas, it the home\nof Mn. W. O. Rose, Vernon Street,\nhas returned to Brandon, Man.\nt Mayor N. C. Stibbs and Mre.\nStibbs, Silica Street, have as guest,\nLac. Jack White of Calgary.\nLac. Robert Collinson returni thj;\nmorning to Coal Harbor after\nspending a few days furlough it the\nhome of hli parenti, Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur Collinion, 812 Hoover Street.\nUp to Oct. 18 there were I960\nbombing attacks on Malta md 1069\nenemy aircraft were destroyed. One\nthousand, three hundred and eighty-\nsix civilians had been killed on Oct,\n20, and 8704 building! destroyed or\ndamaged.\nBritish sailors' neckerchiefs were\nchanged to black In 1805, in honor of\nthe death of Lord Nelson.\nPKEEMAM\n*    MJRNITURI CO.\nThi House ot Furniture Vilue!\nPhone 115 NeUon\nTRAM IN YOUR\nOld Furniture\non NEW\nFine Concert at\nSouthSlocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C- The\nCommunity Hall presented a very\ntine appearance for the annual tree\nmd concert. Harry Jamei wai Chairman.\nThe program opened with a trio\nof choruiea by the ichool. Pianoforte\nioIoi were given it Interval! by\nDixie Kennedy and Joyce Blind.\nTaking part were Bob McDougall,\nJohn Golik, Ronnie Jacobson, Ron\nO'Genski. Frank Radelja, Eddie Olson, G. Davis, Bill Bennett, Olga\nGolik, D. Kennedy, Roy Jamei, J.\nGolik. In a pantomime Alvin Olson\nmade a hit with his guitar and Ron\nO'Oeraki with a vocal.\nTaking part in an operetta were\nArthur Barreli, Lily Golik, M. Dunsmore, Mary Whyrei, C. Rogen and\nBill Lamson.\nThe accompanist! were Mia Hoffman and Mrs. Russell. Santa Claus\nin the penon of Stan O'Genski gave\nout 102 gifts, every child in the district.\nThe teachers, Miss Freda Hoffman and Miss Ruby Palmer, were\nassisted ln the presentation of versions of various numben by Mrs.\nJohn Murray, who looked after the\nscenery and the children's makeup.\nOthers assisting were Mrs. Kennedy.\nMn. Walkley, Mn. HUU, Mrs. W. P.\nRogeri, Mn. C. Bland Mri. McDougall, Mn. E. Marihal and Mn. H.\nJamei.\nW. W. Bennett and itaff were responsible for the decoration!.\nThe name Marine comes from\nan old French word \"marin\" meaning aea iQldier.\nSERIAL   STORY ...By Marie Blizard\nMARK'S WIFE\nCHAPTER  FORTY-TWO\n(Continued)\nThere had been no dramatic incident to make her aware of Tom\na* a man, u her hiwband. It waa\nnothing more than that they were\ntwo people in the same room, living\nund*r the aame roof and that she\nwaa constantly aware of hia presence. The physical fact of hia\npresence came between her and\nevery memory that rose. And soon\nother men, other women's marriages, other pursuits filed by, one by\none, and diminished aa Claire Kilcran aeed the questions and found\nthe answers that made up her final,\nmature values.\nHis step or the rtairs, the echo of\nhis voice, the lingering scent of hia\ntobacco, the sight of his breadth\nfilling a dorway, reached through\nto something dead In her since her\nhoneymoon days. Something that\nmade her understand the note that\ncrept, into Pamela's voice v\/hen she\nmentioned Tony Bradshaw's name.\nthe light that mad* her look as If\nshe had a glowing candle back of\nher eye* when they looked at\nTony.\nClaire's voice was maternal and\nrather sweet when she thought of\nPam. Some day she must sp*ak\nwith Pam aibout Tony. .It would\nbe hard for both it them to find\nthemselves on the unfamiliar footing of a mother and daughter relationship. Even though Pam had\ngrown away from her this last year,\nshe hoped it was not too lata. Peril a-ps today-\nShe got up and went to the window,\nIt was the hour of dusk, but there\nwas no lingering light in the sky,\nIt was gray and heavily overcast. It\nwould snow before night, she\nthought. There had been little\nsnow this year, unlike the last when\nshe'd given the carnival, It was\nJuat a year ago this last we-ek in\nFebruary.\nShe caught her breath and it\ntabbed her like a dart.\nIt was just a year ago that Tom\nhad met the young widow. He'd\ncome straight acroaa the room to\nh*r to ask her name.\nClaire had hardly noticed what\nthe girl looked like at that time,\nbut now she could remember her\nquite clearly. She had an attractive air of who les omen ess and eagerness.   None of the marks of an\nadventuress, of a woman who would\n\"go after\" a man.\nNor was Tom the kind of a man\nwho would fall in love with a cheap\nwoman. No, Tom had been ready\u2014\nstill young and neglected\u2014to find\na woman like Mrs. Wister. Claire\ncould understand.\nShe turned away from the window, reminding herself that she\nhad come to find a box of rare laces\nwhich were to be her contribution\nto the Red Cross sale at the Wintridge Country Club. They ahould\nbring a pretty penny.\nHer thoughts veered to the coming sale. Lucille Hichens was determined to have the sale in the\nmorning, but Claire Intended to be\nqui* aharp about having H after\nlunch when the women were in a\nmore mellow mood. Lucille really\nshould not have been mad* chair-\nbeen running ttie affaif.\nQuite suddenly Claire's thoughts\nturned in again upon herself and\nthe change that had come over her.\nCould this Claire be the same\nwoman who' less than two years\nago had made a program for living\nout of dancing and roulette and\ndreasmalwrs' fittings. She saw her.\nself as one sees old .snapshots hastily flipped in an Impatient hand.\nOn the moonlit terraces. On yacht\ndecks. At the Casino-at Monte\nCarlo. At Slaparelli's openings. Ofl\ngang-planks and coming Intd the\nGre du Nord. On flying fields and\nin crowded cocktail rooms.\nShe looked down at herself, dressed in a slim frock of beige wool,\ndust-streaked now. She looked the\nsame, but she was not. Not the\nClaire of other years, of the last\nyear. The new Claire, planning\nmenus. Making an inventory of her\nlinen closets, Ordering curtains,\nand aoap, and keeping an eye on\nthe butcher^ bill, Bedding bulbs\nand planning her own herbs. Talking to and listening with interest to\nwomen she used to call **hens\" at\nthe club. Serving on committees\nand raising money by her own efforts for charity. Listening for\nher man's step.\n(To Be Continued)\nSufferers of I\nSINUS PAIN!\nGet Real Relit.\nWilk 3-Purpoie Medicine\nHelpi Clear Out Sinui Arm\nNOW dont niffer tbe torturei of ilnui\npain when you may relieve U\u00bb piln\nat eleulac the congwtlon ind giving\nnnuiei\u00bb chance to drain. One powerfully helpful treatment li 1 few drop!\nBl Vlcki vi-tro-nol tn etch noitrll.\nVi-tro-nol U n\nhelpful becauie tt\ndou thm three\nImportant\n_____________\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0_ uuiMiMuu hum;\n(1) ihrlnki nroll-ii membranea of thi\nme: (J) helpi clear out paln-camlng\ncongMtlon ind (3)\nloothei Irritation. A.A\nMany ilnui Differ- _mt_*m ( JD\nen ny lfi but re- TICKS \u25a0_mW\nHit they've found, um mmm. mau\nity ttt wOTWMHH\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, DECEMBERW&\nattowoaNna tn hm- .am\ns\nFur-Trimmed Coats\nSpecial Prices\nIH Off\n10 COATS. Reg. $19.95. Special  915.95\n2 COATS. Reg. $25.00. Special  -f.__0.00\n6 COATS. Reg. $29.50.' Special     $23.60\n1 COATS. Reg. $39.50. Special $31.00\n1 COAT.   Reg. $49.50. Special $39.60\nRomance...\nSecurity Not to\nBe Despised\nBy BEATRICI FAIRFAX\nA girl who ii about to marry a\nSecond-Lieutenant\u2014write! me that\nher marriage muit not be \"the boiled-dinner affairs\" her mother and\nfather have itood for the past 25\nyeari. Sh^ hai known her young\nsoldier only ten weeks.\nAnd she goes on to iay: \"Not that\nMother and Dad aren't devoted to\neach other ie their own way. Dad\nwai almost crazy when mother had\ntyphoid fever Summer before last,\nbut they've let the kind of love I\nwant slip out of their lives entirely.\" It leemi her parenti have\nbrought up three children and educated them well on a small salary.\n\"Dad's a bookkeeper with the same\nfirm for the last 15 years, and mother has done all the work for a family\nof five, including sewing and making over clothes for the girls.\"\nThe daughter thinks there isn't\nany romance left in her parents' I\nlives, and she wants something entirely different when she goes up\nthe aisle with her Second-Lieutenant. I hope this girl won't think me\nme to unsympathetic when I say the\nsmall salaried man, a hard-working\nbookkeeper, and his work-a-day\nwife wbo've lived together for 36\nyears and brought up three children\ncreditably, have done very well\nfor themselves indeed.\nSolid people of thl, type, the backbone of the country, don't rush to\nReno when they find crumpled rose-\nleaves in the pattern of their daily\nlives.\nThe reason that the majority of\ndivorces are granted to people in\ntheir late 'teens and their early\ntwenties is that they are always\nlooking for the Never Never Land\n. . . They expect life to continue a\nHollywood Rhapsody; they forget\nthat we love people for their faults\nand that trials like sickness, privation and even economies for charming ends' bind people more securely.\nThe flowery terrain very young\npeople expect to open before them\nwith marriage exists nowhere outside of the pages of the old-fashioned love-story. Even well-written\nnovels today are beginning to tell\nthe truth about married life. They <j\ndon't stop when the last notee of the J\nwedding march dies away and the\nbride throws her bouquet.\nThe youngster takes war ll file\nGreat Adventure. He never expecti.\nto   die   and,   ai   Kipling  slid,  he :\ntakes  his  fun  where  he flndi It.'\nut such fun doesn't appeal to the\nolder man. The man of 30 has formed his pattern of life. Home, wife\nand  children   are   the  realitiei to\nhim, and he wants to get back home y\nto that satisfying pattern,\nGATHERING MORE STORIES-BEHIND-\nTHI-STORT POR YOU EVERY DAY,V |\nCtme WALLACE\nDON'T Mil!\nfvary *,\nCKLN, 10.45 om\n~~TOJ\nGOOD\nLIGHT\nFOR WAR WORK\nEDISON\nMAZDA\nLAMPS\nMADE IN CANADA\nNELSON\nIf it li on the air i\nC. E. RADIO\nwill get It\nELECTRIC CO.\nSMART NEW  DRESSES\nAND HATS\nMilady's Fashion Shop\nNew Reduced Pricei on   '\nEDISON   MAZDA   LAMPS\nPopular Sixes\u201415f\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St.      Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 260\nWARMTH  is ESSENTIAL to i\nGOOD HEALTH\nGET YOUR COAL TODAY\nPHONE 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished In 18.N\n\t\n\t\n\u25a0   .   \/\n'-\u25a0_-L *.'V..___'...'.,\n.     JP\n______________________\n r\n3Mam Bailii Him ? ? Questions ? ? On the Side !    TOD A VN Nam tc iiMi^c\nfauMUM April U UO. A   1\\JCDI7I?D Q \u00bbl* DUUHIM X  V\/ JL\/JTIl   X       Vj       IX  C WO       1      IL t li I   CO\nEstablished April 22  1903.\n'Britiih Columbia'i\nMost Interesting Newipaper\nPublished every morning except Sundty by\ntht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANV LIMITED 216 Baktr St.. Nelson. British Columbia\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nMonday, dec. 28,1942.\nMadagascar's Fighting\nFrench Governor\nGeneral Paul Legentilhomme; who\nhas been appointed High Commissioner of Madagascar, is a soldier of distinction and one who has had ldhg experience of French eolonial administration. He was born in March 26th,\n1884. He entered the well known military school of Saint Cyr in 1905,' to\nleave that school two years later, after*\na final examination in which he passed\nout No. 1 'among the young officers\ndestined for the colonial infantry. He\nfought in the last war, and won the\nrank of captain after a year's active\nservice in France, where he was highly\nmentioned in dispatches.\nCollaboration with the British is\nnothing new for him, for in 1918 he\nwas attached to the general headquarters of the French forces fighting under the command of General Allenby in\nthe Near East. There he made the acquaintance of General Wavell, who\nthen held a post on General Allenby's\nstaff.\nIn 1937 he was back at hia old\ngchool of Saint Cyr, of which he was\nsecopd in command. Promoted General\nin 1938, he entered the Centre des\nHautes' Etudes Militaires, knowns as\n\"the school of future Marshals.\"\nThe war found him at Djibouti,\nFrench Somaliland, where he was ap-.\npointed commander of the war zone of\nDjibouti. He was the first French commanding officer of the Empire to throw\nin his lot with General de Gaulle. General Legentilhomme will worthily represent his great country.\nThis appointment of the French\nGeneral to his post at Madagascar has\ncaused great satisfaction among all\nFrench people and definitely settles a\nquestion which presented some difficulty. It is known from reports from\nFrance that there was some surprise\nat the delay in making a clear cut decision regarding the administration of\nMadagascar. The solution is a compliment to the clearsightedness of British\n< diplomacy, for with a Frenchman in\nthis high position, Goebbels is robbed\nof .an opportunity to put over propaganda to the French people that Great\nBritain has designs on Madagascar.\nNext to France, Great Britain in\npeace time was the biggest customer\nof Madagascar, taking \u00a3221,600 worth\nof her exports, while other members of\nthe British Empire took \u00a371,260 worth.\nMadagascar, in turn, imported from\nGreat Britain \u00a377,200 and from other\nparts of the British Empire, \u00a383,160.\n\u2022 These are the statistics for the year\n1937, drawn from the \"Bulletin de la\nStatistique Generale de la France\" and\nthe \"Annuairc Statistique.\"\nToday's Horoscope\nIf your birthday Is today, you have a magnetic personality that attracts many friends,\ngenerosity, fortitude and p warm disposition.\nYou have a strong will. You speak your mind\nfreely and put forth much effort to make your\nhome life pleasant. During the next year exercise due rare and attention in all things,\notherwise sudden business and domestic\ntroubles may arise. One in authority will aid\nyou, but you should avoid quarrels and litigation. Born on this date a child will be liable to\nlove troubles and reversals in business, but\n\u00bbn  employer will prove most helpful.\nTest   Yourself\n1. The War Department has taken over the\nlarKe.t hotel ln the United Statei, What hotel\nIs that?\n2. What li Ihe nickname tor the City ot\nAlgiers In North Africa?\n3 Who held a limllar post to thc one lormer Gnvrrnor Lehman now holds as Administrator ol Rrllet (or Europe, in the first Worl .\nWar?\nTEST   AN8WERS\n1 The Steveni. ln Chicago\n2 The White City, became Its buildingi\nire while.\n3 Ha-rbrrt Hoover.\nANSWERS\nOptn *to any reader. Namei of parioni\naiklng queitiom wlll not bo publlihed.\nThere ll no oharge for thla urvlco. Queitiom wlll not be aniwered by mall except\nWhen there li obvious naoosslty for privity.\nBusy Bee, Slocan City\u2014To settle an argument will you please tell us it profiti accruing from business ut subject to income tax if suoh profits or part of thtm\nare Invested in. War Bonds?\nYes, if it ls treated exactly at any othtr\nnet income.\nCurious Trallltei, Trail\u2014Could you pltiat till\nua how the Trans-Atlantic Cable ls repaired, and it It lies on the ocean bed. If so,\nhow ls lt brought up to the surface for repairs?\nIt lies on the ocean bed, laid by a cablt\nship whose holds are full of drums of cable\nwhich Is paid out over the stern. The cable Is\none continuous piece from shore to shore.\nBreaks are detected by electrical instruments\nand the brolfen ends are picked up by grapples\nand brought up to the ship for repair.\nD. C. D., Trail-Where would I write for re-,\nfund of National Defence Tax which was\nover paid through payroll .deductions for\nthe year 1JI41.\nWrite  Inspector of Income Tax, Winch\nBuilding, Vacnouver for refund form.\nKootenays Still\nWait\n(Laetter In Vancouver Sun)\nWha^ a spectacle amidst this all-out holocaust throughout the world. The Kootenays\ngoing through the greatest opportunity ever\nIn her mining career, but seemingly her handi\nare tied and she ls definitely prevented from\nenjoying the opportunity and thereby helping\nthe Allied Nations with Increased production\nof our silver-lead and zinc.\nWe have at Ottawa some 245 M.P.'s and\n90 odd Senators and boards of divers sorts, Including the Metals Controller and his board of\ndollar-a-year men (and ln B. C. we have a\nMines Department and an expensive system o!\ngovernment mining engineers which has functioned ln a sort-of-a-way since 1917 to the present time, but oh for a Wm. A. Carlyle at\nthe helm of B C. mining, he was our greatest\nmineralogist and secondly, the late Wm. Fleet\nRobertson, and \"there\" it all ended, the vis-\nIon of B. C. mining)\u2014but alas, no one has the\ncourage and Independence to demand that\nKootenays shall have the opportunity to take\nadvantage ot this shortage of zinc and lead.\nWe read of the Progressive Conservative\nconvention at Winnipeg lately, but no intimation whatsoever that decentralization of industry shall take place throughout this great\nDominion of Canada, and we in the Kootenays have waited many years for that very\n(hing and there will be precious little help\ntill that is realized. __\nIs it not a shame that this great area (Kootenays) is kept depressed\u2014and where are our\nfriends\u2014and the time is far overdue for our\nM P.'s M.L.A.'s and Senators to wake up and\nshow some semblance of responsibility. We are\nfed up with submitting to a private reserve\nin the Kootenays.\nMore action and less hot-air would help\nus. The only wrong we have committee is, If\nanything, that we, all these years, sat dumb\nand allowed \"the privileged few\" to keep us\nsubmerged. Is this economic domination, democracy? We think not; it is Plufocracy-Bu-\nreaucracy. We are said to be fighting for Democracy; well, what's the matter with us getting\nsome of that wished-for article right now?\nPicture a country so depressed that the\nLucky Jim zinc mine and 200-ton mill, said\nto have been sold for a mere $10,000, and the\nlate Lieutenant-Governor's one-time mine, the\nParadise Mine! with its huge development program between 1926 and 1930.       KOOTENAY.\nPress Comment\nNIGHT CLUB NEGLIGENCE\nComing within a couple of weeki after the\nhorrible Boston tragedy, the Newfoundland\ndisaster should make people everywhere stop\nand think. Are our lire precautions adequate\nto deal with special conditions created by wartime congestion? The regulatloni which might\nmake for reasonable safety in buildings designed to accommodate 200 people are not\nnecessarily adequate when the same buildings\nare Jammed by double thc normal number.\nThere is nothing much that can be said\nabout the new tragedy on the Atlantic seaboard, except that our authorities here ihould\ncheck over their own regulations in the light\nof new conditions\u2014Vancouver News-Herald.\nWhit ti tht tougheit civilian Job? That WU\n\u2022 query recently advanced. A former coil\nminer states hit belief thit tht Job of i coil\nminer Is molt difficult. Thli rttdtr outllnti\nhli dutiei. Whit followi wai only part of whit\nht states he had to do: \"I hid to cnwl for 200\nfeet on my belly, tike my Jickhimmtr, hoie,\ndrills, dynamite, proper steel chutes, shovels\nand picks. I htd to drill about 10 holes nine\nftet deep ind put ln the dynamite, make ill\nnecesaary electrical connection!, crawl back\n200 tttt and explode tht dynamite.\"\nAll DIS\n'. Thtrt will bt no tulip time In Holland\nthis yen. Tht Null hive taken tht tulip bulbi\nIn Holland md fed thtm to the cattle or uied\nthtn to make ersatz coffee\u2014New York City\nhu 150 policewomen, most of thtm young uid\ngood looking sod tht majority of Irish dticent.\nMmy of these policewomen are detectives and\nwork ln their regular clothei. Before the war\nParts hid i number of feminine detectives.\nThe wardrobes of these Parisian female sleuths\nwere paid for by the government and are iaid\nto have been very extensive. For example each\nfeminine detective had about a dozen evening\ngowpi.\nASKING\nQueries from clients\". Q. What hu your\nhorie and women department found out about\nTaurus women? A. Our horiei tnd women department states that ai a rule Taurua women\nare excessively sentimental and usually affectionate. They are easily flittered anckfall for\na smooth line. They would rather eat In a restaurant than at home. They play longihots for\ncurious reasons. For example, a Taurus woman\nwill play a hone named Wild Moment or Flnt\nKiss because she likes the name. Taurus women are gr^rt torch carrien. They enjoy having their hearts broken a few times.\nSIDELIGHTS\nAt St. Helena tn 1815, writing about his\ncampaign in Russia. Napoleon aald: \"I hid\ngone to fight men In irmi, not angry nature. I\ndefeated their armies. But I wu unable to conquer fire, froit, numbneii ind death. Tate wai\nstronger than I\"\u2014Jot Midden, something of an\nauthority on the subject, uyi the Irish and,\nthoae of Irish deicent are the greatest gamblers. I always thought the Greeks were the\ngreatest gamblers.\u2014In discussing Leonardo Oa\nVinci's painting Mona Lisa, the subjecfi imile\nis alwayi mentioned. Her hands are rarely dls-\ncuiaed. Yet it is said the right hand ot the Mona\nLisa Is the most perfect hand ever painted. All\ndiscerning judges of feminine beauty place\ngreat Importance on a woman's hands. However, a woman may have only average symmetry of hand and still be a beauty. But if her\nnose ls not good she can never rightly be\nclassed as a smart looker.\nFEMININE TRIUMPH\nIsn't it unwise to place a wager on a thoroughbred of the female sex at any time? Thii\nwu a query recently advanced. I itated at the\ntime that iuch a belief wai a fallacy. I was reminded of this query lait night when looking\nthrough my souvenir's. I found a news photo of\nColonial Girl defeated the great Hermls in tha\nWorld's Fair Handicap ln SL Louis In 1904. At\nthat time Hermis had a rating similar to tha\ncurrent one of Whirlaway. Thli photo wai\npresented to me by Campbell McGavln, the\ngreat Jockey of yesteryear. On the photo, Mr.\nMcGavln has written: \"Hermls wa* In front\nai the head of the stretch but the old mars\ncaught him it the wtre.\"\nALMOST CONFIDENTIAL\nWhenever I mention our pup lingi an accompaniment to the piano, somebody wrltei\nand says he li not ilnglng but Is howling because the noise hurti his ean. An eminent authority on the subject hai itated that the howling a dog does when he hears certain Instruments played ls his \"Instinct Inherited from\nundomestlcated anceston. In other words, lt Is\nthe call of the wild.\"\u2014A San Franclican discussing the matter of parents giving their male\nchildren female namei sayi he went to Khool\nwith a lad named Claire O'Dell. The procesi\nof thought that would incline pirents to name\na child Claire ls beyond my understanding.\nPROPOSALS\nOne Dr. Paul Popeno If itill claiming thit\n70 out of 85 women who propose marriage to\na man are successful In getting him for a huiband. The good doctor's claim leemi to beir\nout the report that many women are propoilng marriage to men theie dayi. That Is, directly proposing. The Indirect proposal of marriage.has always been used by moit women\nAs a matter of fact about 90 per cent of married\nmen were Indirectly proposed to by their\nwives and don't know It. TTiInk It over carefully, mister. Try to recall the events leading\nup to your marriage and you will probably\nrealize it wai the little lady who really popped\nthe question.\nMR. BRACKEN'S TASK\nThe Manitoba premier has faced a number\nof difficult political tasks In the pait, but the\none he undertook at Winnipeg may well prove\ntoo much for his admittedly great ability. He\nhas been given the Job of revitalizing in policy and method an old political party at a time\nwhen the emphasis is all on the new In politics,\nas ln most other things His Job wlll be to try\nto convince the majority of his fellow-Canadians that the party under his direction can\ndo more for Canada than any alternative\ngroup. He will bring to it a large ston of experience, a sound knowledge of his country,\nan accurate acquaintance with weitern agriculture, and profound conviction of the greatneu\nof Canada. He will be an acquliltlon lo the\nHouse of Commons and hii progretl there will\nbe watched with keen Intereit.\u2014Red Deer\nAdvocate\nEtiquette   Hints      Words of Wisdom\nLooking  Backward\n10 YIARS  AGO\n(Prom Dally Niwi, Dto. 2S, 1ISJ)\nSamuel Iniull ate dinner with friendi tonight, a free man alter a Greek court hid refused to lanction hli extradition to the United\nStatei to anrwer Cook County, 111, chargei ol\nmUn.anjgen.tnt of the fundi of hli utllitiei\ncompany.\nAn electric ilgn bearing the word \"Kailo\"\nll to be erected on the newly cnnitructed\nbridge over Kailo Creek.\nDavid Allan, Wird 8.reet. left yesterday\nfor Victoria to attend tha floyi Pullament.\nMr and Mri. John Wonfold and torn\nHugh. David and MlchaeL of Willow Point,\nart tht futtts ot Mr. and Mn. S. W. Davli,\nPine Avenue, Trill.\nThe agreeable person is always courteous,\nfor courtesy supposes the ability In consider\nthe olhrr personi' condition and deter lo bis\ndHlrei flnt.\nNothing will ruin thc country If the people\nthemselves will undertake III lafety; and nothing can save II It they leave that nfely In any\nhandi but their own.\u2014Daniel Wtbittr.\nWar-25 Years Ago\nBy Tha Canadltn Preaa\nDtc. 21. 1B17.\u2014British forcei In Palestine\ncaptured Ramal and Beltunla. Austrian airmen\nbombarded Padua. Italy. Special conference of\nBritlih Labor accepttd Labor memorandum on\nwir mm\nAIDED   GIRAUD   ESCAPE\nShown here Is Capt. Gerauld\nWright, of the United States Navy,\nwho successfully took famed Gen.\nHenri Honore Giraud, pro-Ally\nFrench leader, and prime escapist, out of France in the face of\nthe onrushifig Nazis, and transported him to Algiers via submarine, arriving in Algiers on the\nday the North African invasion\nstarted.\nCHRISTMAS SPIRIT IN WARTIME CANADA\nto the boys in the services as he helps\npretty stewardess of the Colonial Airways, Myrtle Clark, at Dorval airport,\nMontreal. Right, Corporal M. D. Mitchell\nof Hamilton, Ont., trims the Christmas\ntree in the recreation centre of a R. C.\nA. F. bombing and gunnery school\nPretty cuddly is this mascot of a\nRoyal Canadian Air Force bombing and\ngunnery school. Left, as he patiently lets\nLeading Airwoman E. M. Westover of\nVancouver, tie a Christmas wreath of ribbon around his chubby neck. Centre,\nSanta is shown speeding Christmas mail\nASSASSINATED\nAdmiral Jean Darlan, High Commissioner of the\nFrench Africa colonies, who was murdered by a young\nassassin Thursday night.\nTELLS OF RESCUE FROM DEATH\nPictured here is Captain Eddie Rickenbacker, as h\u00ab\ntells reporters and friends about his adventures and his\nrescue at sea, on his return to the United States.\npya,     i     '*fm'          '    '   .   '      '\n_\u2014   \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014__-.\nTSSBff^^m\n1\n1\nA\n\\       t-**^\n______\niLi\u00a3j_r\u00a3|\nW^nt^_t*r-m~^>\n\u25a0..\n^^*                tj\n^Cl_\"\n*           ,\t\n_____k^9ft_L''*\n__M              ___'\nHHH&iHflH\niil\nFALLS FROM BOMBER, SKIDS TO SAFETY\nHarry Griffiths, Toronto, Royal Air\nForce Ferry Command had a narrow es-\nca|>e from death when he fell through the\nescape hatch of a speeding <Boston bomber, above. The nccident occurred when the\nbomber was 500 feet in the air above the\nOttawa River. Griffiths clung to the, edge\nof the escape hatch, arrow, while Pilot\nSidney Gerow brought the plane down\nclose to a snow drift and Griffiths dropped off. Griffiths, left above, was not\nseriously injured.\nRUSSIAN ACTIOS IS STALINGRAD THROUGH CAMERA EYE\nThin picture was made in the heat nf\nbattle by a cameraman whom- film was\niiften jarred nut nf focus by thc concussion of German guni. Ths seen* is Stalin\ngrad. A fighting squadron is getting\nthrough enemy barbed wire while under\nfire.\nBOMB STUDENT\nAptly enough, bombardlen of\nthe U. S. Army Air Forces, start\nther careen In \"high chain\" at\nthe bombardier school. Midland,\nTax. Theie \"chairs\" are high plat-\nformi, representing planes from\nwhich the students sight their ob-\nJectlvei ind \"lay their eggs.\"\nAbove Bombardier Cadet DanlcU\nE. Puitln. Wichita, Kan , Is sighting D-8 bombsighl* on electrical-,\nly-actlvated targeti to perfect hit\nilm.\n Red Wings Win (-1 From Hawks to\ndrab Third Place Position\nDITROIT, Deo. 27' (AP)-Dl-\ntrolt Red Wingi itlltd tola pollution of third place In tht National\nHookey League by aubmerglng\nChicigo Black Hiwki 6-1 tonight\n' before 10,388 ipectiton. Syd Howt\nand Sid Abtl each baggtd two\ngoal! ai Dttrolt boat Bert Gardiner thrtt tlmei In tht iecond and\nthird perlodi. ,\nThe Red Wings gained a 2-0 margin early ln the second period on\ngoals by Howe and Connie Brown.\nOeorge Allen poked in Chicago's\nmarker in the second period but\nAbel matched that before the Intermission,\nIn the final period, Howe Abel\nand Mud Bruneteau connected,\nThe victory gave the Red Wings\nan advantage of two victories against\none defeat and a tie in their series\nwith the Hawks who slipped back\nInto fourth place.\nLineups:\nChicago: Gardiner; Selbert, Tuten;\nDahlitrom; March, Hamill. Subs\u2014\nPurpur, Allen, D. Bentley, M. Bentley, Mitchell. Johnson, Thorns. Wlebe\nDetroit: Mowen; Simon, Stewart;\nHowe; Bruneteau, Wation. Subs \u2014\nMotter, Orlando, Groiio, Abel, Carveth, Brown, Warei, Liicombe,'\nReferee - BUI Chadwick; lineimen \u2014 Doug Young and Stan McCabe.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalties\u2014Howe, Seibert.\nSecond period\u20141 Detroit, Howe\n1:54; 2 Detroit, Brown (Wares, Liscombe) 7:48; 3, Chicago, Allen (Selbert) 8:40; 4, Detroit, Abel (Grosso)\n17:36.\nPenalty\u2014Wiebe.\nThird period \u2014 5 Detroit, Howe\n(Bruneteau, WatsiJn) :36; 6 Detroit,\nAbel (Grosso) 12:31; 7 Detroit, Bruneteau (Howe) 18:16.\nPenalties\u2014Simon, Orando, Abel,\nMitchell.\nBattered Ranpers Play Old-Fashioned\nHockey to Beal Toronto 3-1\nNEW YORK, Dec. 27 (CP)-An\nInjury-riddled New York Rangers\nteam defeated Toronto Maple Leafs\nJ-l In a National Hockey League\ngun. here tonight.\nOut manned and generally outplayed, New York capitalized on\nold-fashioned dtfenilvt hockty to\ndefeat Toronto befort 15,626 ipec-\ntaton, tht largest crowd of the\nlocal National Hockty Leigue\nMaion.\nBecause of injuries, Rangers had\nonly 12 men in uniform and three\nof these weren't In top shape.\nPhil Watson, Ranger first-string\ncentre, was missing from the lineup because of a broken bone in his\nright hand that will keep him out\nof action for six weeks and defence-\nman Gord Davidson was benched\nby a nine-stitch over his left eye,\nAlf Pike played with a bruised\nknee which didn't prevent him from\n\u2022coring two goals.   Bryan Hextall\nOriginator ef\nVolley Ball Dies\nLOCKPOBT, N.Y, Dt\u00ab. XI (AP)\n\u2014William Q. Morgan, 72, originator\nof the game of volley bill, died today.\nMorgan deviled tba game in 1896\nwhllt physical director at the' Holy-\noke, Mui., YMCA.\nFour yeari earlier, hla friend, Dr.\nJamei A. Naismlth, had originated\nthe game of basketball. Morgin and\nNalsmith pliyed football together\nat the ichool of Christian Workeri\not Springfield, Mass., now the International YMCA College, under\nAmoi  Alonzo  Stagg.\nBoston Maintains Tie With Leafs\nDespite Deleal by Canadiens\nhad a notable black eye and Ott\nHeller an injured hand. Hextall\nscored the third Ranger goal.\nLome Carr counted for Toronto.\nLineups:\nToronto\u2014Broda; Hamilton, Pratt;\nAppi; Hill, Davidson. Sub\u2014McDonald, Taylor, Carr, Stewart.\nPoile, Forsey, McLean, Copp.\nNew York\u2014Franks; Girrett, Heller; Kirkpatrick; Hextall, Patrick.\nSubs\u2014Pike, Warwick, Smith, Goldup, Cameron, Myles.\nReferee\u2014King Clancy. Linesmen\n\u2014John Wilkens and Dom Baolto.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014Scoring.' none.\nPenalties\u2014none.\nSecond period \u2014 1, New York\nPike (Goldup, Hextall) 12:48; 2, Toronto,   Carr   (Forsey)   15:52.\nPenalty\u2014'Hamilton.\nThird period\u20143, New York, Pike\n(Patrick, Kirkpatrick) 5:14; 4, New\nYork, Hextall (Patrick, Kirkpatrick)   15:39.\nPenalty-Pratt.\nOrders Inquiry on\nNon-Appearance\nof Baiiqh at Game\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27 (AP)-\nElmer Layden, Commissioner of the\nNational   Football  League,  tonight\nordered an investigation to deter-\nting out the Dodgers in a Bantam j mine why Sammy Baugh, star for-\nHockey   League   game,   the   Duffy war(j fasseT on the Washington Redskins,  failed to appear at today's\nPro Bowl football game for charity.\nIt was learned that Baugh iaid\nhe was unatle to make plane con-\nF.A.C. Bantams\nBlank Dodgers\nOn six goals icored by FAC Bantams   Saturday ' morning   in   shut-\nClippers Trounce\nV.M.D. to\nCrab Third Spot\nNANAIMO, B. C, Dec. 27 (CP) -\nShowing tremendous power from\nthe start, Clipper! handed Victoria\nMachinery depot puck chasers 110-2\ntrouncing here last night in \u2022 Vancouver Island Senior Hockey Leigue\nfixture befort a capacity holiday\ncrowd.\nClipper!' convincing victory boosted the Nanaimo Icemen into sole\nownership of the third ipot In the\nLeague standings. Three joints be-\nhind the R.C.N, sextette, whom they\nmeet at Victoria Mondiy night.\nResult of the loss dropped V.M.D.\nInto the basement with the Air Force\nholding down fourth apot by virtue\nof their win over Army Squad on\nChristmas Day at Victoria.\nLineups:\nClippers\u2014Kneeshaw, D. Mickay,\nB, Mackay, Klein, Williamen, Mann.\nSubs\u2014Smith. McClure, Roach, Carr,\nKwong, Sutherland, Wilson.\nV.M.D. -Harney, H. Sutherland,\nMcFadzien, King, Brayshaw, Duffy.\nSubs\u2014Kllpatrlck, Gourley, Beattie,\nWarshawikl, Euereby.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141 Nmiimo, D. Mackay (Roich) 14:21, 2 Naniima, Mann\n(Klein) 17:47.\nPenalties\u2014None.\n.Second period\u20143 Ninalmo, D.\nMackay (Mann) 1:28, 4 VMD, Brayshaw (Duffy) 3:17, 5 Ninilmo, D.\nMackay (Carr) 12:5J, 8 Nanilmo,\nCarr (Sutherland) 14:00.\nPenalties\u2014Carr, Warshawikl.\nThird period\u20147 Nanaimo, Minn D.\nMackay, 2:35, 8 Nanaimo, Sutherland\nCarr (Wilson 11.33. 10 VMD, King\n(Brayshaw) 12:30, ll Nanaimo, Mc\nClure (B. Mackay) U:10, 12 Nanal\nmo, Kwong (D. Mackay) 17:25.\nPenalties\u2014D. Mickay (2 mins.)\nMONTREAL, Deo. 27 (CP) -\nMontreal Canadleni defeated loi-\nton Brulni 4-2 In a N.H.L. game\nhere tonight\nAlthough thty wtre defeated,\nBruini continued In I- firat plice\ntie with Toronto, while the Habitant* advinced to within two gamei of tht fourth plice Chicago\nBlick Hiwki.\nItle 0842 fani saw thl Flying\nFrenchmen ln tctlon. The Canadian! brought up Johnny Mahaffey\nfrom tbe Montreal Royali of the\nQuebec Senior Hockey League, an\namateur loop, tor a one-gime appearance. Mahaffey assiited ln one\nof the counter! for tbe Canucks.\nMaurice Richard opened the .coring for the Habitant! after nine\nminutei of pliy when he stole the\npuck from Dit Clapper inside the\nBoston Blue line. Richard circles\naround to the right and tore directly at the net to icore. Gordie Drillon and Leo Lamoureux were given assists on the play.\nBENOIT 8C0RE8\nJoe Benoit scored the next goal\nwhen he picked up a imp pass from\nMahiffey after Butch Bouchard had\nihot the puck down from the blue\nline.\nIn the lecond period Bill Cowley\naided by Jack Shewchuk and Art\nJackson succeeded in breaking the\nice for Boaton on a close-in passing\nplay in front of Paul Bibeault. A\nminute later Gordie Drillon wai aided by Buddy O'Connor and Richard\nln giving the Canucks a 3-1 lead.\nO'Connor slipped in the final\nMontreal goal after he had been giv\nfamily obtained 10 scoring points,\nSt. Clair Duffy got three goals and\nthree assists, and Earl Dully two\ngoals and two assists. The remaining point was a goal by Dennis nections,\nColeman\u2014which wai good for two Many -f the Wa!n|ngton piayer,\nof the Duffy assists. were reported \"sore\" at Baugh for\nThe Dodgers often threatened, but failing to appear for thc All-Star\nfailed to bulge the net. John Holmes show. The entire proceeds of the\nof FAC, received thc only penalty.; game were given to the United\nJack Whitehead refereed, Larry Seaman's Service. Players were not\nHunter kept score, and John Leem-'paid.\nIng kept time. Teams were: \u25a0\t\nFAC\u2014R. Brooki. J. Holmes, A.'\nClark, Jim Todd. Jack Todd, E.\nDuffy, S. Duffy, J. Wilson, T. Ratcliffe, and D. Coleman.\nDodgers\u2014J. Bachynskl, L Chaluck, D. Stainton, A. Kennedy, J.\nStaples, R. Carman, J. Wa'llicb, W.\nGoggin, A. Nelson, H. Nielsen.\nGerry Berthiaume, former Cana-\nPittsburph Stays\nin First Place\nINDIANAPOLIS, DeV 27 (API-\nPep Kelly rifled home a goal ln\nthe third period tonight to give\nPittsburgh a 1-1 tie with Indianapolis Capitals and thus keep the Hornets In first place In the-Western\ndivision  of  the  American  Hockey\nHockey Results\nBy Tht Cinidlin Prtu\nSATURDAY\nAHL\nIndianapolii 4, Cleveland 8.\nBuffalo 0, Pittiburgh 0.\nNew Haven 1, Herihey 1\nProvid.nce 4, Waihington 1\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nCornwall Flyera 4, Ottawa Commandos 7.\nSUNDAY\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nMontreal   Canadiens   3,   Quebec\nAces 4. -    \u25a0\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nHershey 6, New Haven J,\nCleveland 2, Buffalo 4\nWashington 3, Providence 7.\nPittsburgh 1, Indianapolii 1\nEASTERN  U. 8.\nBoston 0, New York 6.\nep a pass by Richard near the Boston blue line.\nArt Jackson icored the final tally\nln the third when Cowley ind Buzz\nBoll lucceeded ln breaking the Canuck defence and illpped the puck\nto jackion who' worked hli way\nln cloae before firing n ihot.    '\nRlchird wu Injured In tht third\nframe whtn elbowed by Johnny\nCrawford ind hid to bt cirrled\nfrom tht Ict. He wn traniferred\nto hoipital where hi wlll be X-\nnyed for a pouible fractured ankle.\nLineupi:\nBoston\u2014Brimsek, Shewchuk, Boll,\nCrawford, Cowley, A. Jackson. Subi\n-Hollett, Clapper, Schmidt, Gal-\nlinger, Guidoiin, H. Jackson, Chamberlain.\nMontreal\u2014 Bibeault, Lamoureux,\nPortland, Hiller, Sands, Getliffe.\nSubi\u2014Benoit, Blake, O'Connor, Drll\nlon, Phillips, Richard, Bouchard.\nMahaffy.\nReferee\u2014Mel Harwood, linesmen,\nWilcox and Joliit.\nSummary\u2014\nFint period\u20141 Montreal, Richard\n(Drillon, Lamoureux) 9:00, 2 Montreal, Benoit (Mahaffy, Bouchard)\n14:01.\nPenalty\u2014Lamoureux.\nSecond period\u20143, Boston, Cowley\n(Shewchuk, A. Jackson) :41,4 Montreal, Drillon (O'Connor, Richard)\n5:10, 5 Montreal, O'Connor, Richard, Drillon) 12:07.\nPenaltlea\u2014Shewchuk.\nThird period\u20146 Boston, A. Jackson (Cowley, Boll) 8:29.\nPenaltiei\u2014None.\ndian  heavyweight amateur boxing' League by only a single point. A\nchampion, ls in the army and is taking part in benefit boxing shows at\nMontreal. \u2022\ndefeat would have left Pittsburgh\nIn a first-place tie with Buffalo\nwhich  defeated  Cleveland  tonight.\nBEAUTY HOLDS HER OWN IN THE WATER\nGloria ('nllen of Nyack, N. Y., schoolgirl swimming\ngensAtion, li.ts lieon .selected by sports experts ns the\noutstanding woman athlete of the year\u2014thc vote was\noverwhelming. Gloria, who holds something like 31 to 35\nnational swim marks--oven she isn't sure exactly how\nmany\u2014is pictured here with her collection of medals.\nAberdeen Retains\nNortheastern\nLeague Championship\nLONDON, Dec. 27 (CP Cable) -\nAberdeen retained the Scottish\nNortheastern League Football Cup\nSaturday by whipping Dunfermline\n6-1 in the seoond of \u2022 home-and-\nhome-total-goals series. Beaten 3-2\nat Dunfermline the previous week,\nthe Aberdonians won 8-4 on the aggregate.\nBlackpool Wins\nNorthern\nLeague Crown\n.LONDON, Dec, 27 (CP Cable)-\nFootball Stadiums throughout the\ncountry were favorite gathering\nplacea for British holiday merry,\nmakers. Big crowds reported for\nnearly every game.\nFor the second straight season,\nBlackpool captured the Northern\nleague championship. The seasides defeated Blackburn Rovers 7-2\non Christinas Day and wound up the\nleague ichedule four pointi ahead of\nLiverpool Tranmere Roven iut-\nprlsed a crowd of 8000 by trouncing Liverpool 8-2.\nSheffield Wedneiday wu shut out\n3-0 by Sheffield United which finlihed In third place. Ttie b\u00bbge\u00bbt\ncrowd of the day, 38,000, watched\nthe Sheffield rivali battle it out.\nLovell's Athletic won the Weitern\nleague title j>y defeating Abermin\nAthletics 5-0. Bath City took down\niecond place, completing iti ichedule with a convincing 5-2 victory,\nover Bristol City.\nArsenal, Southern league leaders,\ndropped-a pair ot holiday matchei.\n.Chelsea trounced the pace-ietters\n5-2 on Christmas day and came\nback Boxing Day with a repeat 5-1\nwin. Queens Park Ringeri, in second place, divided two gamely with\nFulham, winning 2-1 yesterday and\nlosing 4-2 today.\nBury accomplished a great scoring\nfeat in two games, overwhelming\nRochdale 7-3 on Oh.lat.nas and then\nwhipping Stockport County 10-0 ln\na Boxing Day game. The first con\ntest was a regular Northern league\naffair but the second was ln quali\nfylng competition for the cup which\nthe 32 top teami in the Northern\nand Western Leagues will play for.\nOther cup scores included Blackpool 1, Southport 1 (tie); Brlitol\nCity 4, Bath City 2; Blackburn 3,\nBurnley 1; Tranmere 2, Everton 1.\nProulx Scores Three\nin Alberta Game\nCALOARY, Dec. 27 <CP>-Calgiry K\nArmy defeited Red Deer Army\nWh'eeleri 10-8 ln overtime here Siturdiy night to regain firit place ln\nthe Alberta Service Senior Hockey\nLeague.\nPte. Andy Chikowikl, Pte. Don\nCulley, Pte. Alex Kaleta and Pte.\nKen Stewart, two goals each, and\nPte, Harold Scott and Pte. Doug\nLine -were the Calgary marksmen\nPte. Bob Proulx. with three, Cpl.\nDick Mllford, Pte. Eddie O'Keefe\nind Pete Yanew tallied for Red\nDeer.\n200 See Forces\nPuck Squad\nTrim Home Guard\nTwo hundred Nelson hockey fans\nBoxing Day cheered a squad made\nup of members of the Armed Services, home on Christmas leave, as\nit trimmed a local team, dubbed the\nHome Guard, 6-4. A skating session\nfollowed the hockey entertainment.\nThe Armed Forces players, most\nof whom only a season or less back\ntraded their sport gear for tho\nkhaki or blue, started out like a\nhouse afire. They built up a two-\ngoal lead In the first, stretched it\nto four in the second, and to six ln\nthe third before the Home Guard\nreplied.\nBorgstrom and Mayo teamed up\nfor the opening goal, Bergstrom\nscoring. The Matheson brothers,\nWally and Art, brought the next\nForces' 'counter, Art scoring.\nOpening the second Joe Gallicano\nbanged one In alone, and then Bergstrom and Mayo got together again.\nArt Matheson ended the lervlce\nlads scoring parade by rapping In\ntwo In the early part of the third.\nDoug Winlaw and Walt Wait were\nthe big guns as the Guard opened\nltl attack late In the third. Winlaw\nbanged In three and Walt one, all\nunassisted.\nArt Matheson served three penalties, and Joe Gallicano one,\nLineups  were:\nService team \u2014 George Bishop,\nGoal; Howard Campbell, Dick Wallace, Arthur Matheson, Wally Matheson, John Milne, George Milne,\nHarold Mayo and Bergstrom.\nHome Guard\u2014Jesse Seaby, Goal;\nTy Culley, Walter Wait, Ernie De-\nJong, DeGirolamo, Doug Winlaw,\nJim Leeming, Harry Haines, Jack\nWhitehead, John Dunnett and Jack\nMorrison.\nReferees were Slim Porter and\nBill Brown.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1942\u20148\n1\nToronto Blasts Boston M; Jack\nForsey Picks Up Goal\nTORONTO, Dec. 27 (CP)-Toron-\nto Maple Leafi eailly conquered\nBoston Bruina -2 before 14,071 fim\nSaturday.\nSo pronounced was Toronto luper-\nlority thit Goalie Frank Brimsek of\nBrulni handled 45 ihoti, compared\nwith 28 blocked by Turk Broda for\nLeafa.\nGaye Stewart led the Toronto\nattack with two goali.\nStewart also drew an assist on a\nthird-period goal by linemate Bud\nPoile. Other Toronto inipers were\nBud Poile, Syl Apps, Billy Taylor,\nand Jack Forsey, formerly of Nelson and Kimberley.\nDonny Gallinger figured In both\nBoston goals. He scored the first\nBruin tally and passed to veteran\nDit Clapper for the second.\nLineups:\nBoston \u2014 Brimsek; Shewchuk,\nCrawford; Cowley; Boll, A. Jackson,\nsubs \u2014 Hollett,   Clapper,   Schmidt,\nGalllnger,   Guidoiin,   H\nChamberlain.\nToronto - Brodi; Himilton, Pritt; i\nAppi; Hill, Davldion, iub\u00bb-Copp,\nMcDonild,   Taylor,   Birr,   Foney,\nStewart, Poile, McLean.\nOfficial!\u2014Referee, Norm Lamport; ,\nlinesmen, Bert McCaffrey, Red Hor.\nner.\nSUMMARY\nFirit period \u2014 1, Toronto, Cmt\n(Tiylor)   2:38;   2  Toronto,  Tiylor\n(Cirr, Foney) 0:88; 8 Toronto, Api '\n(Hamilton, Pratt) 13:29.\nPenaltlea\u2014Shewchuk, Hamilton,\nBoll.\nSecond period\u2014i Toronto, Stew-\nard 12:05; 5 Boiton, Galllnger (Guidoiin) 15:20.\nPenalty\u2014Shewchuk.\nThird period\u2014fl Toronto, Stewart\n(Poile)   5:33;   7   Toronto,   Foriey  .\n(Pratt, Carr) 8:01; 8 Toronto, PoUe\n(McLean, Stewart) 10:35; 9 Boiton,\nClapper (Galllnger) 16:06.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nCurlers Extend Welcome Members of\nForces; Resume Trophy Play\nNelson Curling Club for the next\nthree days will extend a hand of\nwelcome to members of the armed\nservices, pne sheet has been left\nopen, available for scratch games\nby members of the forces. It Is expected . visiting airmen and members of the Veterans Giyird will\ntake advantage of the opportunity\nfor a night on the iheeti\nCollinson Trophy will resume with\neight games tonight and will continue Tuesday and Wedneiday. Play\nwill be suspended during the New\nYear recess.\nThe draw followi:\nMONDAY\n7 p.m.\u2014T. S. Jemson vs A. H.\nWhitehead, Leo Desireau vs John\nTeague, J. A. Smith vs Dave Laughton, and E. A. Murphy vs Ted Swen-\nson.\n9 p.m\u2014P. E. Poulin vs T. R.\nWilson, L. S. Bradley vs S. P. Bos\ntock, Dr. W. Hishley vs H. B. Horw\nton and G. S. Godfrey vi J.'H.\nLong. -,,---\nTUESDAY\n7 p.m.-A. B. Gilker vi M. Mich- .\nelion, R. E. Horton vi J. ft Gray,\nR. D. Wallace va R. D. Hill ind1\nA. R. Moore vi H. A. D. Greenwood,'\n9 p.m.\u2014A. G. Ritchie vi Dr. T. Ht\nBourque, H. J. Witchell vi A. S.\nHorswill, J. P. McLiren vi Syd\nHaydon, ind W. Brown vi E. C^,\nHunt.\nWEDNESDAY\n7 p.m.\u2014William Mitt vi W. B.;\nDunwoody, C. H. Marshall vi AUf\nJeffs, Fred Ewing vs A. G. Harvey,,\nR. D. Hickey vs F. D. Cummlni.\n9 p.m.\u2014H. H. Sutherland vi J. A.\nSmith, T. A. Wallace vi H. M. Whim-|\nster, R. A, Peeblei vi J. J. Me-,\nEwen, and J. H. Allen vi T. 8.'\nJemion. '\nFranks Just\nMisses Shutout\nas Rangers Win\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCinadiin Pren Staff Writer\nJILL-OF-SPORT8\nIe there anything this young\nlady can't do? None, she docs 'em\nall. She's a star dancer, world's\nchampion drum majorette, top-\nnotch skater and plays golf, tennis\nand basketball. Oh, yes, she's a\ngood swimmer and also an outstanding bowler. She ls Betty Atkinson, Ice revue star.\nM.R.K. Midgets\nEdge All Comers\nM. R. K. Midgets, with one re-\nenforcement, took on All-Comers\nThursday morning In replacement |\nof their game scheduled with the\nPanther Midgets\u2014who had only\nthree players able to appear\u2014and\nemerged victors 3-2.\nWassick scored twice for the\nM. R. K.'s, and Jack Lang once, the j\nlatter on a pass from McDowell and\nWassick. Boyer and Whitehead net-;\nDodgers Defeat\nM.R.K. Bantams\nLOBERT TO MANAGE\nPHILS AGAIN\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27 <AP)\"-\nHans Lobert will manage Philadelphia Phils again ln 1943, Gerald P.\nNugent, President of the Phlli, announced today.\nHockey Schedule\nIce ichedule of the Nelion Ami-\nteur Hockey Aisociation for the\nweek ls ns follows:\nMonday\u2014\n9-9:30 a. m\u2014Dodger practice.\n9:30-11:00\u2014MRK  pnctlce.\n11-12 noon\u2014Panther practice,\nTuesday\u2014\n9-10:30 a.m.-FAC practice.\n10:30-12 noon-MRK vs Dodger\nBantams.\n7-8:15 p.m.\u2014MRK vs FAC Juv-\n-anilcs.\n8:30-10 p.m.\u2014Commercial League.\nWednesday\u2014\n9-10:30 a.m.\u2014MRK vs FAC Bantams.\n10:30-12 noon-MRK vi FAC Midgeti.\nThursday\u2014\n9-10:30 a.m.\u2014Bantlm Pool.\n10:30-12 noon-FAC vi MRK Bin-\ntams.\nSaturday\u2014\n9-10 a.m.-FAC vs Dolgcr Bantams\n13-11 a.m.-MRK vs Panther Midgeti.\n11-12 noon-Bmtam Pool.\nScrapping of South\nTraining, Later\nBall Opening Urged\nNEW YORK, Dec. 27 (AP) -Ed.\nBarrow, PreaideBt of New York\nYinkeei. suggested Siturdiy that\nAmerican League BaiebUl clubs\nscrap their usual training campaign,\ntrain on their home fields, and, If,\nnecenary, postpone the opening of\nthe season until April fl-\nPreiident Ford Frick of thc National League, informed of Barrow'i\nproposal, declared:\n\"Naturally, I cannot ipeak for the\nclub owneri on something I have\nnot yet dlicuiied with them, but\npersonally I feel that what Barrow\nsuggests will eventually be done in\niny event.\"\nMaking themselvei popular in\nboxing shows being held at thc Toronto Manning Depot by virtue of\ntheir fistic abilities are Ac2. Anderson of Prince Albert, Saak., Pet.\n(Lucky) Ellis of Hamilton, Ont.,\nGnr. Seep of Port Colborne, Ont.,\nand Ac2. Trudeau of Montreal.\nTORONTO. (CP)-Out of Eaitern\nOntario a few weeks ago came the\nRutter twlm of Bloomfield, Ont.,\nformer Ontario Hockey Aisociation\nhockey playeri. Leon md Leo, have\nenllited ln the R.CA.F.\nLance Hudion, former Vancouver\nbaiketball luminary, Is In the Air\nForce itationed it Edmonton and\nis rtarrlng on one of the R.C.A.F.\ncige teimi thin.\nChicago Bears\nSpark\nAll-Stars Win\nBy TED MEIER\nAuoclited Pren Sport Writer\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27 (AP)\n\u2014Chicigo Beiri got bick it Wuhlngton Rediklm todiy by marking the Nationil Leigue All-Stars\nto \u25a0 17-14 victory over the leigue\nchimplom In the annuil Pro Bowl\nfootbill cliiilo before 18,671 it\nShlde Pirk.\nThe deciding three points came on\nthe lecond play of the lait quarter\nwhen Lee Artoe, Big Bear tackle,\nbooted a field goal from the 43-yard\nline that shattered a 14-14 deadlock.\nThese three points climaxed a\nthird period of furious action that\nsaw three touchdowns scored with-\nn six mlnites, one on a sensational\n97-yard run by Bill Dudley, Pittsburgh iteeler halfback after he Intercepted a pass.\nThe Redskins played without their\nstar passer, Slingin' Sammy Baugh\nwho failed to make airplane connections and was unable to get here\non time.\nFeeling ran high with the Bears\non the field. Savage tackling and arguments with officials characterized\nthe Rears' play as they gained a\nmeasure of revenge for the 15-6\nlicking Ihe Redskins administered\nto them two weeks ago in Washington.\nIt was the first time lince the Pro\nBowl wns inaugurated in 1938 thai\nthc All-Stairs have won.\nted for the All-Comers with assists\nto Whitehead and Clark. I Detroit Olympia, Franks rose and\nSantor, Longden and McDowell, smote his former pals, narrowly\nMRIf's, served the only penalties, missed the season's third shutout as\nTeams were:    ' ! Rangers thumped Wings 3-1 for their\nMEK\u2014Bob Wassick, Rich Was- j first victory since Nov. 29. He miss-\nsick, J. McDowell, D. Longden, W. I ed the shutout when Referee BUI\nOpenshaw. D. Santor, D. Kraft, J. j Chadwick over-ruled a New York\nLang. protest that Detroit'i lecond-period\nAll-Comers\u2014B. Shields, A. Clark, j tally by veteran Mud Bruenteau had\nF. Boyer, J. Perrier, R. MacDonald,' failed to enter tbe cage.\nR. Brooks, p. Smith, T. Shrieves.\nComing from behind, Dodger.\nBantams secured their flnt win ta,\nthe Bantam Hockey League Thunday morning, when they noied out\na 3-2 victory over the M.R.K.\nIn the first minutei of play Doug-\nie Spien put the M.R.K. ln the lead\nwith an unassisted goal. Midway\nof the first period, however, the\nDodgers got on even termi when v\nArt Nelson drove in a ihot that caromed into the net off IHfenceman\nBob Jones' stick. Nelson netted twlca\nagain for the Dodgers, ln the aecond\nperiod   one goal being unajiiated.\nBefore a holiday crowd of 7899 at ^ ^ othc_ betag Qn a flne ^\nWhen James H. Franks rode the\nbench for Detroit Red Wings, his\nteammates regarded the Melville,\nSask., netminder as an affable sort\nof fellow who would go out of his\nway to do a good turn. They're not\nso sure today.\nTo demonstrate their feeling for\nFranks, members of the Detroit\nclub went so far as to present hm\nwi'.h a war bond Just before Friday\nnight's National Hockey league game\nagainst New York Rangers. Franks. I\nrecently optioned to Rangers, did!\nnot reciprocate the Detroit spirit.\nMay Train Clubs\nat Philadelphia\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27 (AP)-\nof combination play that embraced Donald Stainton, John Bachyn-\nski and Joe Staples, the litter two\nbeing credited with asslsti. M.R.K.\nreduced the lead ln the third period\nwhen Floydie Irwin batted ln at\nclose quarteri a pasa from Neil\nHood. There were three penalties,\nChaluck, Dodgers, being off once,\nand Jones, M.R.K., twice the lat-\nlet time for five minutes for \u2022\nsevere boarding.\nJack Whitehead refereed, Grihim\nAvii judged play. Bob Brooki kept\nscore, and H. H. Currle timed the\nplay. Teams were:\nDodgers\u2014A.  Kennedy. D. Stain-\nPhil Watson's\nHand Is Broken\nNEW YORK, Dec. 27 (CP)-New\nYork Rangers of the N.H.L. suffered\nSpokesmen for this city's two major! a blow today when X-rays disclosed\nleague baseball teams. Phils of the, Phil Watson's right hand had been [ton, L. Chaluck, J. Wallach, G. Tur-\nNatlonal League and Athletics of | broken ln the Christmas night game, ner. 3. Bachynski, A. Nelion, J.\nthe Americans, said Saturday night against the Red Wings in Detroit. Staples, W. Goggln.\nthey are considering establishment I Watson centres the Rangers' ace M.R.K.\u2014D. Kraft, J. Valentine, R.\nof Spring training camps here and line with Lyn Patrick and Bryan Ross, N. Hood, F. Irwin, J. Meagher,\nabandoning plans for the usual trek Hextall. He will be out of action G. Pickering, E. Milton, D. Spiers,\nto the South or Far West. I about six weeks. ' F. Smith.\nMidgets Have\nPickuo Came\nSaturday morning's icheduled\nhockey game between the F.A C.\nMidgeti ind Panther Midgeti wai\nturned Into a practice period when\nIhe Panthers could not field a team.\nAn elght-mlnute game, with the\nF.A.C. Midgets playing AU-Comen\nwound up the session, with one goal\nchalked up,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed 'by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n_________________mm_m\n fyjautflllicctu\nSPRINGTIME  DESIGN\n\u2022Tour bedroom will look bright\non the gloomiest of days with\n~ih_e chirping bluebirds decorating the spread! Their perch is a\ngraceful branch of lilacs. Easy to\nembroider; lovely in natural ool-\nors. Wttern 516 contains a transfer patten, of a 15x15 inch motif;\nlour motifs, averaging 6x7 inches;\n111. of stitches; materials required.\nSend twenty cent, for thla pattern te The Nelion Dally Newi,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelion. Write\nplainly pittern number, your\nmme tnd tddreu. Pittern wlll\nbe milled to your homt within\n10 diys.\nSLIMMING BIAS PANEL\n\"The most slimming dress I've\never owned!\" you'll iay about this\nMarian Martin style, Pattern 9106.\nThe bias front panel and the long-\nwaisted bodice give flattering up-\nand-down lines. Use buttons for\nsmart accent at both sides of the\npanel top. Collar is optional.\nPattern 9106 may be ordered\nonly in women's sizes 36. 38,10. 42.\n44, 46, 48 and 50. .Size 3d requires\nJV, yards 35-inch fabric.\nSend twenty centi tor thli Merlin Msrtln pittern. Be lure to\nwrite plainly your SIZE, name,\n\u25a0ddreaa and atyle number.\nSend your oroer to The Dally\nNewa. Pattarn wlll be tent to your\nhome within 10 days.\nBATH. Eng. (CP)\u2014Four members\nof the Home Guard have been hon-\noied for bravery in the blitz on\nBath last April. The decorations include one George Medal and three\nBritish Empire Medals\nAUNT  HET\nRy ROBERT QUILLEN\nmv:\\-i\nSALIYS SALLIES\nC^jilaWH..,\nTl DOKf SUPPQ5t'\nCOMIC  AND ADVENTURE STRIPS ..M\n'.   \u25a0        . .. *   _ - i ' t *\nfojri\/Lcudt...\nBy Shepard Barclay\nTHE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT        hit last stopper there, he scored\nYOU ARE under no compunc\ntlon, on this day of days, to play\nhands carelessly and thoughtlessly\u2014for fear your opponents might\nthink you unkind If you do a little\nhard work to accompliah your\npurposes. No real bridge player\nenjoys winning on that basis, simply because you were not doing\nyour best. Fundamentally, It ta\nmuch more fun to take a licking\nfrom someone who Is putting forth\nhis utmost than to win from somebody mort or lesi by default\n-   4 A J 8 0\nf 10 7 4\n4Q964\n472\n\u00ab75S\n\u00bb85-\n\u2666 K5\n+J9864\nN\nW E\nS\n+ K4 I\n\u00bbK Q6 3\n4832\n+ Q 10 5\n4Q109\nf AJ\u00bb\n4 A J 10 T\n+ AKS\n(Dealer: South. North-South\nvulnerable)\nSouth     Weet    North       Eut\nINT      Pass      34 Pass\nSNT\nSouth had enough technique to\nknow he should hold up on the first\nround when East played his Q on\nthe opening lead of the club 8.\nAfter winning the second club, he\nsaw two chances to gain tricks by\nfinessing \u2014in spades and diamonds. Deciding lt would be nice\nto try both finesses and that his\nonly way to do this\u2014considering\nshortage of dummy entries\u2014was\nby taking the spade finesse first,\nhe tried It and lost to East's K.\nAfter the club 10 knocked out\nthree spades In the dummy and\nthen tried the diamond finesse.\nWest, of course, won this and then\nset him with two more club tricks.\nCompetitive thinking would\nhave shown South that his contract depended entirely upon West\nnot getting tht lead except when\nclubs were still stopped. If the diamond finesse toward him could\nhave been taken first, It should\nhave been. But the dummy had not\nenough entries. Consequently, he\nshould have given up a diamond\ntrick as soon as ht was ln the lead,\nwithout ever finessing the suit and\nnot caring who won It. Then, after\nwinning the club return, he could\nhave finessed spadea toward East.\nEven losing that, he would be'\nhome. If East had a club left, he\ncould have afforded to let lt score\nthe fourth trick for the side. If\nWest had five. East would then\nhave no more and could not return\nths suit.\n...\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u2666 QOS\nf 86\n\u2666 KQ54\n+ A932\nf K 10 5 3\n4A 62\n+ KQ86\nN 9J97 2\n\"WE     4 J 10 9 8\nS 3\n, 1 +7\n4AK1082\n*AQ4\n\u2666 T\n4, J 10 5 4\n(Dealer: North. East-West vulnerable.)\nIf South bids l-Spade on this\ndeal, West doubles and North redoubles, what should East do t\nDistributed by King Featurei Syndicate, lac.\nDAILY CROSSWORD    _WE___m__\\\n22.\nACROSS       7\n1. Mineral g\nsprings        10\nI. Needy\n9. Jason's ship H\nIposs.) 15.\n11. Freight\n12. To woo 17\n13. Apish action\n14. Rot 18\n16. Muse ot        19\nlyric poetry 21\n17. Supematur- 22.\nal being\nN. Goddess of\ndawn\nJ4. Viscous\n26. Bring into\nbeing\n26. Macaw\n27. To go to\ncourt for\nredress\n28. Whirling toy\n29. Mode of rult\n31. Depression\n32. Dropsy\nS3. Fertile spots\nin deserts\nJ4. Shrimplike\ncrustacean\n36 Feigned\n40. Way\n41. Young eel\n43. Foretell\n44. raaa 1 rope\nthrough\n46 Titles of\nfrlari\nMCUp\nDOWN\n1. Indian\nJ. Poke\nI. Chilli tnd\nfever\n4. Witchcraft\nV Indian baby\n6 Metallic rocki\nMonster       28. Hint\nMalt namt   *t. More clever\n30. Incentive\njSl. Playi with,\nat a baby\nMasurium    33. Possessor\n(sym.)        85. Pseudonym\nSudden of G. W.\noutburst Russell\nVentilated   36. Cause to\nSemblance        flow\nDetests        37. A wrinkle\nMake 38. Level\namends tor  39. Hindu deity\nClans, in'     40. Royal Air\nEire Force\nTale\nSeize\n__<___ i_i*\\___\n___._.__a mwm\nIfflBl     |gHI\nKS.i_if.CT-B\naeii qyaa nto\ngas _\\_w___m\na_nt-     6ii\nwmn\n_.a:.     _w__\nW0__ ____m\nmt--- '_!\u25a0:_-_\nlEIAlRIElD^NIt-ISITejl\nVcitrrd.) 'I  Aon.fr\n42. Twilled\nfabric\nll-JA\nCRYPTOQUOTE\u2014A cryptognun \u00abuoUtl\u00ab\nC I. D     IJ     OTJR.     RE     RUEJN     RE    6UIC\nGLD     (J      INMNJJLDK-WIBK.\nYeaterdty't   Cryptoquote-    IN   LIFT.!,   MORNINC   MARCH,\nWHEN MY BOSOM WAS TO'WV CAMPBKU-.\nOtatrttKited by King Features Iradlcitt. Ina\nCryptoquotta are quotation! of ftmoui perioni written cipher.\nA lubsututt chtrtcttr hti replaced the original letter tot initanee,,\n\u2022n   If  miy substitute for the original \"E\" throughout tbt tntirt\ncryptoquote or t \"BB\" may replace in \"LL\"  Find tbt key tnd follow through to the aolu'ton\nLI'L ABNER\nBy Al Copp\n\u25a0 N ONE OF\nMILLIONS\nOF TYPICAL\nAMERICAN\nHOMES-\nA FAMILY\nHAS BEEN\nWAITING TO\nHEAR THE\nPRESIDENT\nSPEAK\u2014\nSUDOCNLY\nA BUV'S\nVOICE IS\nHEARD -\nCRYING OUT\nHIS HOPELESS\nLOVE FOR\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nEXHIBITION OF\nMODERNISTIC\nART\n*>i\" .'; .\"\",\nEXHIBITION OF\nMODERNISTIC\nART     iCT)\n'   \u25a0\n\u2014!\nC3    If\nC_fi. Ittt. Kh| \u00bbear_w \u00bb,,*..... t\u00bb . (Mliqhli\njt-\u2014^i\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\nI LL GO DOWN\nIN THE OLD     u-\nNEIGH BOR HOOD\nTO MONAHAN'S-HE\nWILL HAVE THE\nBOOK r-P-\"jr.\nYOU\nWANT-\nITS A LONSWALK-\nBUT IT'S GOOD TO\nBE RACK IN THE\n~ .DNiKSHBOR-\nMONAHAN HAS A SIGN\nON HIS DOOR-*WILL BE\nBACK IN PFTEBN\nMINUTES'-'VEBEeN\nMERE AN HOUR-DOMX.\nKNOW WHERE HE IS ?\n4\n1\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\nI'LL Re sia\u00a3> whem\nI THIS   DANCE IS OVER.'\n\u2022I'M TKED,DRAGGlkjG\n\" ' AKOUNP THB\ntv-vPIOOR.'\nThe Nutlve Artificers' Traimni! British railway! MVe lott M.000\n\"Folki around here tinnlly got depot at Kibcte In Kenya ii now! men to the colots. Another M.000\ntheir doctor bills nettled They tl-1 turning out about 300 trained Afri-iore liable to be called op. Over\nways figure everything li paid up]_ran artlsani a month (or Ihe Eait \\ K0.0O0 women brought Into the acr-\nv. hen y (loi lor d es * I Africa Army Service Corpi. ' vlct are doing good work.\n *-\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zone Grey\nBLONDIE\nARE NOU SURE\nTHIS FURNITURE\n6LUE WILL WORK\nALL RIGHT.\nALVIN?\nBy Chic Young\n<_ BLONDE\/ W\\\\   j\nf^tm>{ WWATONEARTU J\n'**'*)   >     ARE VOU    -C *\nr> -t axMtn_ for )\niiL V SUPPER* \/\n,\n\t\n !i.i,;ii.i^\n\u25a0 .\u25a0 \u25a0. .......\nW\nmm-\nPHONE 144\nClassified Advertising\nLook Down These Want Ad Columns for Bargains\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\nWALDIE-To Mr. and Mrs. Hob-\nart Waldie of Robson, at Kootenay\ntake Oeneral Hospital, Nelson, Dec.\n25, a aon, Robert Leslie. Mrs. Waldie!\n\"Wjf'formerly Misa Ruth Craufurd.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nassavers and mine\nrepresentatives\nDOVLE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Harold\nDoyle, 204 Nelson Avenue, at Koo-\n. tenay Lake General Hospital Dec\n25, a daughter.\nMAKEIN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. P.\nMak^In of Salmo, at Kootenay Lake\nQ.neral Hospital, Nelson, Dec. 24, a\n\u25a0on.\nMORTIMER\u2014At the Creston Valley Hospital, to Mr, and Mrs. J. H.\nMortimer, Wynndel, Dec. 16, a son.\nHAROLD    S     ELMES.    Rouland\n11C   Provincial Allayer   Chemut\nIndividual representative tor\nshippers at Trail Smeller\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP Al\nAimer Hotel, opp   CPR   Depot\nPETS. CANARIES. BEES, ETC\nHIDES\nShip to J   P   Morgin. Nelion.\nSTILL A FEW SKATES LEFT TO\nHELP WANTED\nApplications wlll not be considered fro.n persons in the employment\nof any firm, corporation or omer\nwnployer engaged in the production of munitions, war equipment\nor supplies for the armed force'\nunless such a person Is a skilled\ntradesman not aciually employed al\nhii trade\nWANTED\n,      FIRST  AID   ATTENDANT\nFor   imall    Mining   Camp   in\nSalmo District. Must be able to\nhandle general work in addition\nto First Aid Duties. Apply\nRATIONAL SELECTIVE SERVICE\nIn Trail or Nelson\nSCHOOLS  AND  INSTRUCTION\nBTENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS\nneeded badly by Government tor\nwar work. You can train at home\nfor Job. as Stenographer, Typist.\nOffice Clerk. Letter Carrier Mall\nClerk, Customs Examiner, etc.\nFree advice and record of appointment of our students from\nM.C.C. Civil Service School Ltd.\nWinnipeg. The oldest ln Canada.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisements under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days!\nCovers any number of required\nlinei Payable In advance Add\n10c If box number desired.\nLivestock, poultry and\nfarm supplies, etc.\nTHE WHICH M(lim\nCHICti GIVE ,^UlT>\n1943 IS ACTION YEAR\nGet action from your poultry\nby raising \"The Chicks Which\nGive Results.\"\nBarred Rocks, R. I. Reds, New\nHampshires, Light Sussex,\nWhite, Black, Buff, and Brown\nLeghorns.\nOur \"Action Year\" Book will\nbe ready In January. Write for\nyour copy,\nRwropfeSeodaH\nBoj N     Langley Prairie, B. C.\n\u2022WANTED: LIGHT HORSE FOR\nsaddle and single harness   Must\n'be quiet for ladies. Geo. Thody,\nHobson, B.C.\nFO-TSALlF YOUNG HORSE-TFOR\nwork of all kinds. Abey'i Ranch\nMirror Lake\nliEAVY HORSES FOrTtaOGGING\nFarm and saddle at Perry Siding\nF. Hlookoff, Castlegar, B.C.\nA J  BUIE  Independent Mint Rep.\nresentatlve.  Box 54 Trait  B.C\ne w widdowsoh. _-rov.ni.ial\nAssayer. 301 Josephine St. Nelson\nTHE   WEST   KOOTENAY   ASSAY\nOffice 550 Stanley St. Nelion B L\nKOOTENAY    MINES   ASSAYEHS\nBox 308. Nelson. B.C.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nA,   B.\nGrad\nMcDONALD.   DC.   Palmer\nX-Ray   Strand Blk., Trail\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nR  W  HAOGEN. MINING & CIVIL\nEngineer;   B.C.   Land   Surveyor\nRossland and Grand Forka B.C\nBOYD C AFFLECK. 218 Gore St..\nNelson. BC. Surveyor and Engineer.  Phone 669-R\nINSURANCE  ANO REAL ESTAIE\nCHAS F McHARDY  INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding,   molor   rewinding,\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernoa St\nSTEVENSON'S   MACHINE   SHOP\nSpecialists in mine and mill work\nmachine  work  light and  heavy,\nElectric  and   Acetylene  welding.\n708   Vernon   Si.   Nelson,   Ph   91\nOPTOMETRI8TS\nW  E   MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1438 Bay Ave., Trail       Phone 177\n8A8H FACTORIES\nLAWSONS    SASH     FACTORY\nHardwood merchant. 273 Baker St\nSECOND HJ.ND STORES\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANUE\nWhat have you? Ph 534 Ark Store\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nWE C-^RRY A COMPLETE STOCK\nof \"heavy duty\" International\nbrake lining. Central Truck and\nEquipment Co., Ph. 100, 702 Front\nStreet, Nelson,\nWANTED: ELECTRIC MOTOR    .\nor H h.p. for 220 volt. Shorty's\nRepair Shop, 714 Baker St.\nNEW    AND: USED   BATTERfl-T.\nNelson Auto Wrecking Sc Garage\nGenerators and springi\nCITY    AUTO   WRECKERS\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY IMMEDIATE-\nly for cash: Good pricei paid-\nall wave battery radios, 1936 to\n1939 models only, muat be 7-tube,\neither DeForest Crosley, Majestic\nor Rogers. Please give all Identification numbers on back of radio.\nCons. Min. Jt Sm. Co., Radio Dept.,\nTrail, B.C.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron Any quantity Top pricei\npaid Active Trading Company\n918   Powell   St..   Vancouver   BC\nWANTED-GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not less than 12 inches\nsquare. 9c lb. F. O. B. Nelson\nDaily News.\nLUMBER WANTED, PLANED,\n(boards, shiplap or dimension)\nIn carload lots. Write Royal Lumber Yards L:d., Calgary, Alta.\nsell or exchange. Chess 2nd.\nStore, 624 Vernon, Street\nHand\nTOP PRICKS PAID FOR USED\nfurniture, stover heaters, toon\nmusical Instruments Ph 534 Ark\nBEAUTIFUL SPRINGER SPANIEL\npups. Field trial champion stock.\nBoth colors. 9 weeki old, J. Rowlands, Silverton, B.C.\nRENTALS\n'WE COLLECT YOUR DEBTS\" III\npeople In Brjtish Columbia owe\nyou money, we will colled tt\nSanoard Ratei; Highest references. Commercial Service Corporation Ltd. 850 West Hastings\nStreet. Vancouver, B.C.\n6-RM, HOUSE ALL ON 1 FLOOR.\n714 Silica St., $23 mo. McHardy,\nIi)s. & Real E^t. Phone 135.\nhoWekITpTnT^oTJms^fOr\nrent, single and double.  Morgan\nBlock, 305 Baker St.\n25f-THE PHOTO MILL-i_5#\nP 0  Box 335. Vancouver\nRolls developed add printed 2_c\n12 reprints 5x7 enlargement. 35c\nI PAY CASH FOR ALL LIQUOR\nand wine bottlei \"Mickies\" 6c\ndoz.. 23 and 40 oz.. 16c dot Deliver to J  P Morgan.. Neiion. B.C\nhome furniturTTTxchanGE\nWe Always Sell for Lesi\nTop prices paid for used furniture\nSEE US before you BUY. SELL\nOR EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. PHONE 1032\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, B. C.\n25e Any lize roll developed 25c\nand printed\nReprints 3c or 40 tor 1100\n48 hours required on all work\nSend In your friends films' too\nFILM EXCHANGE\nP. 0 Box 50 Castlegar. B C\nLONELY? JOIN A RELIABLE\nclub. Hundreds ot Western members. Many with means. City and\ncountry girls. Widows, housekeepers, business girls, waitresses,\ncooks. Particulars 10c; ladies free.\nCanadian Correspondence Club\nPO Box 128, Calgary, Alta.\nTERRACE APTS  Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire  equipped  suites.\nTRM    HOUSl^OR'RENTTTT.\nFall St. Phone 1062-R.\nFOR   REOT~6~IWOM~DUPCt.X\nhouse   Phone 316\nFOR~TO:NTrintObM    MODERN\nstucco hse. 308 Hoover. Ph. 484-R2.\nSEE KERR APARTMENT^\nOF FIGHTING FAMILY\nR. Oliver High\nMan at Gray\nCreak Turkey Shoot\nORAY CRfcEK, B. C.-The Oray\nCretk and District Rod and Gun\nClub held its annual turkey snoot\nwhen the high man wu Ralph Oliver who won a turkey, a chicken, the\nprone match tint and the Vice-\nPresident's shield. William Burge\nwaa second. W. Fruer of Kootenay\nBay wai third with a turkey and\nthird place in prone -natch, Other\nwinners were Margary Fraier, Hilary May, Joan Burge, Fren Benthien,\nFred Simpton and A. Hawkins. A\nnovelty match waa won by Hilary\nMay.\nA lunch wu ierved in Uu hall by\nMisses Jean McGregor, Joan Burge,\nMargaret Clark and Beth Oliver.\nAmong guests were Jim McDonald and W. H. Cartwright, game warden, of Creston, George Donaldson\nand sons of Procter, Bosweil was\nrepresented by three Cummins\nBrotheri. Paratrooper L. Johnson\nof Crawford Bay also shot.\nVIGORINFr-FoR LOWtRED~vT-\ntality and Physical Exhaustion.\nRegain your vigor, vim and energy. Month's treatment $125 a box\npostpaid. Razor blades and Ding\nSundries. Write for price list.\nWest\"\u2122 Supply Agency. Box 363.\nVancouver\nSPECIAL!\n8end 10c for world's Funniest Joke\nNovelty   Sc   catalog  of   sundries,\nTiooks on all subjec s, such as. sex\nbirth   control,   humour,   art,   romance, educational etc\nWESTERN DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 24NF Regina. Sask\n25c L,CNS PHOT(^25c\nP O Box 434, Vancouver\nAny 8-exp roll developed and printed 25c Reprints 3c Free 5x7 Coupon\nPersonal CHRISTMAS CARDS 50;\ndoz Made from your own negatives\nSpecial.! 5x7 enlargements, 9c each\nCRAY CREEK CHILDREN\nSTACE CONCERT\nGRAY CREEK, B.C.-The annual\nChristmas concert was presented at\nGray Creek Hall by the children\nunder the direction of Mrs. Reilly,\nteacher. The hall was beautifully\ndecorated, a feature being tiny\nChristmas trees each decorated by\na child. The program was opened\nby a welcome verse by Kathleen\nReilly, This was followed by aongs,\ncarols and recitations and two plays.\nAfter the performance, a vote of\ntha.iks wai tendered Mrs. Reilly.\nSanta Claus distributed gifts and\ncandy to every child. Bags of candy\nwere also given to expupll Joan\nBurge, Alice Lymbery, Margaret\nClark and Aircraftman Lyle Oliver.\nTurkey*, Geese\nSell Well\nFarmers' Market\nSpirit of the holiday pervaded the\npre-Christmas Farmers' Market nn\nThursday. While trade wai not brisk\nthe movement of turkey, geese, chicken, duck, lausage meet and vegetables for the festive board wai the\nheaviest. Cut flowers were also popular.\nThere were a few price adjustments, and no new arrivals on the\nstalls. Hothouse tomatoes were up\nfive cents to 23 cents a pound, endive sold higher at 15 cents a head\nand garlic was up five cents to 25\ncents a pound. Field tomatoes ana\nBrussels sprouts were no longer offered.\nQuotations were,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1941\u20147\nVEGETABLES\nHothouse tomatoes, lb.\nArtichokes, lb. .10, 3\nEndive, head \t\nSwiss chard, head \t\nChinese  cabbage  each\nSavoy  Cabbage, 'each   \t\nHorse  Radish, lb\t\nCelery, bunch \t\nLeeks,   bunch \t\nCarrots, 8 lbs  \t\nBeets, 8 lbs\t\nParsnips, 8 lbs     \t\nNetted Gem potatoes, 8 lbs, .\nPumpkin, lb.\t\nGarlic,  lb\t\nOnion, 7  lbs ,\t\nSquash, lb \t\nFrench beans, 2 lbs. .  \u201e.,\nRoman beans, 2 lbs\t\nParsley, bunch\t\n.. .   .23\nfor   .25\n.15\n.10, .15\n.10\n.10\n 13\n.05,  10\n..      .05\n 25\n 25\n 25\n.25\n.1)2\n 25\n 25\n 03\n. .25\n.. .25\n 05\nCarloadings\nin Canada Climb\nOTTAWA, Dec. 27 (CP)-Cir-\nloadings In Canadi during Uie\nweek ended Dec. 28, amounted to\n95,160 can compared with 61,790\nIn the corresponding week a year\nago, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today, The figure\ntor the week ended Dec. 12 was\n86.724 cars.\nThe carloadings Index was 158.0\ncompared with 142.0 fn the same\nweek last year and 148.8 ln the\nweek endtd Dec. 12.\nEastern Division loadings dropped from 40,815 cars ln lint to\n40,277 cari. There was an even bigger drop from the preceding week\nwhen loadingi were 42,628. In the\nWestern Division loadings were\n24.888, compared with 20,943, because of substantial Increases In the\ngrain, coal, livestock and miscellaneous categories. Western Division loadings In the week ended\nDec. 12 were 24,096.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT\ned (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c each For your vacation\nsnapshots, choose Krystal Finish\nGuaranteed non-fade prints\nKrystal Photos. Wilkie Saski'.c.e-\nwan    Established  owr  30  years\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIt you find anything telephont\nThe Daily News A \"Found' Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou We will foiled trom tbt\nowner\nWILLIAM\nBut the story is only one-fifth\ntold  with  these  two  photos, for\nMrs.  Buchanan   h_s  a  s ster  and\nfive brothers in the Armed Forces,\n,   and    two    brothers-in-law    have\nbren  discharged  because of poor\n!  health. The other uniformed mem-\ni bers of this fighting family are:\nI T.ra.dine Airwomsn Edna Cousins,\nRCAF.    Women's    Division,\nGurlph. Ont:   Lance-Bombardier\nAvlmrr Ton.ins, instructor, Van-\ncouver:   Lance-Bombardier   War-\nI   ren Cousins, Rnyal Canadian Ar-\n'  tillery.    Victoria;    Pte.    Gordon\nI   Cousins.   Royal   Canadian   Engineers.    Chilliwack;    Pte.    Harold\ni Cousins. Royal Canadian Artillery,\n| Victoria' and Leading Aircraftman\nI   Irvin\" Cous es, In RCAF  bomb-\nI   ing school. Edmonton.\nP  JPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nCOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy erms in 'Alberta end\nSaskatchewan Write for full information to 008 Dept ol Natural\nResources CPR Calgary Ana\nA WHITFIELD HEAL ES'lAil\nand Insurance. 417 Hall St Nelson\nTelephont  144\nTrail Circulation: Phone 1378-R\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per insertion\n44c per line per week (6 consecutive insertioni for cost o! 4)\n$143 a line a month (26 limes)\n(Minimum 2 lines Der insertion)\nBox number lie extra Tins\ncovers anv number nf time*\nPUBLIC   NOTICES   TENDERS\nETC\n16c per line, first insertion and\n14c each subsequent irni'itiot.\nALL ABOVK HATES -LESS\nWt   FOR  PROMPT PAY MEN'I\n8PECIAL   LOW  RATES\nNon   commercial   Situation!\nWanted for 25c for any required\nnumber   of   lines   for   ilx   dayi\npayiblr In advance\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nSingle copy S    (11.\nBy earner   per week 25\nBy rarrier. per year 1300\nBy mail:\nOne  month   ...      S    75\nThree months             2 00\nSix  monthi , _..      4 00\nOne  vear fiOO\nAbove   rntes   apply   In   Can.'rta\nUnited Statei nnd United Kmr-\n[ dom  lo   <ub_rrihern   I'vnig  outiide regular rnrrirr nreai\n' Jlwwhere an,l to Cunaaa where\n' txtra   postnue   ii   rrqiiirwl   one\n, month $1 V). three non hi.HOO,\nfix  monthi 1800. one year $13\n\/OK   SALE   MISCELLANEOUS\nWE MAKE HEAVY FREIGHT\nTRUCK BOXES\nMade to every detail.\nFree estimates gladly given\nKootenay\nSash and Door\nFactory\nPhont 530 907 Front St\nNelson, B. C.\nPIPE FITTINGS \u25a0 TUBES SPE-\nci,.l luw prices Active TradinR '_o\n.18   Powcl!   Si    Vancouver    m\nLARGE SAKE. DOOil MEASURES\n31 in  bv .8 m .1  P Morgan. City\nFOR SALE:- HATI5\u2014iTIM&tHY\nhay, T   Cl   F.shrr, Grand  Forks\nINSURANCE\nLOST: ONE 7.50 BY 16 TIRE AND\nwiic. 1 between Thrums and Lemon Creek. Apply Nelson Traniler\nMISSING FROM 513 FIFTH ST,\ngray  Persian  cat.  Phone 896-11\nSIRDAR SCHOOL\nPACKED FOR TREAT\nSIRDAR. B. C.-The school house\nat Sirdar was packed to the doors\nwilh Khool children, parenU and\nvisitors on the occasion of the annual school treat. Under th\u00ab management ot Miss Sandberg, Principal, the children's part ln the program was cxctllently carried out.\nFIRE INSURANCE\nIs   like   everything   else\u2014You\nJust get what you pay tor.\nWE SELL\nTHE SAFEST AND BEST\nand we hava done so for over\n30 YEARS\nBe sure and get Ihe BEST\nC W. APPLEYARD 6 CO. ltd\n.192  Baker  St. Phone  269\nDEATHS\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., (CP)-Hon.\nDr. Murray MacLaren, former Miniiter of Prmlons and National\nHealth for Canada and former Lieu-\ntenant-Civernor of New Brunswieie,\nGRAY CREEK\nGRAY  CREEK,  BC    Gunner  H\nF. Wilinj- is hrre on leave from\nCamroie, Alta,\nAc. I.yle Oliver spent hii furlough\nhere with lui relative*, Mr and Mis\nOeorge Oliver\nThr Fr-isfM pf Ledlanet wtre Gray\nCioek vultori, meeting their daughter Margery who returned from\nUnivenity of Edmonton for ihe vacation.\nWilliam Burge Is home Irom University of Alberta\nM:n Owen Burge hu obtained \u25a0\npoj t on it Vancouver In a wir induitry\nLtonarri Clark wai n Nelion ihop-\nping visitor\nD'iirry Bir.'ii rpent Saturday In\n,('.'.:.. with Di   und Mn   Fi.< \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, Bf.- Mr   and Mri\nJ. Karr-owirh of Blue Point, have\nreceived word of the marriage of\ntheir daughter. Miss Irene, to Peter\nCylka of Vancouver. Thc wedding\ntonk pVct* at Vancouver, where the\nbride has been working in thc Boe-\n:nj*  aircraft plant,\nFollowing their wedding at Nelson, Mr and Mrs. Roy Pollard ol\nNtlscn visited Mn Pollard\"! parents. Mr'nnd Mrs Thomas Wall, La\nFrance Creek, and friends in Boiwell\nj Mrs Peters, Mi\u00abs Joan Burge and\n| Miss Ruth Burg1, all nf Gray\njCrrek. and Mrs. Gordon McGregor\n, of Crrwford Bay wer\" in Biswe'l\n| Saturday\n| Arrold Cummings. who (..tends\nhl'sh School at Rossland, Is home for\nthe Chrls'mas holidays\nI Kenneth Chaub ii home from\nCrestnn, where he attends Hljli\njPrhoo!\nG. Dennis has arrived from Cal-\n-Tnrv tn sDend the Christmas vara-\nj \u2022'nn w '. h\\% family *\u2022*\u25a0 Sanca\nMiss RM.T Denn's is home fr>m\nCruton  for  the holidays.\nM:\u00ab Horn** and son of Edmon'on\n,-irc the fifst.s of Mr nnd Mrs Den-\ni nl* at  San-a.\nMr and Mrs Nvstrom and family\nh?.vr moved to BoswHl Mr Ny-\n\u2022=trom rlflns to rut nolrs from the\nGoat Crr^k timber limits\ntn r recent flight over Europe\n\u25a0onn-ri In a fl'ght of B-lTi engaged\n40 German flghwi Ten Eocke-\nWulfi were kn^rkM down and atght\nm >re claimed as pn>bnblep All 'he\nB 17'n relurn'd, though one of them\nhad been hit hy |!x cannon ihelll\nnnd  over ?00  marine-gun  bullet*\nSailors' nrckerchiefi were originally deiigned to be turd aa filings or\nUurniqueti fur bailie Injuries.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Mn. I. Flint\n_nd son Ivan visited Nelson to meet\nMiss Hazel Flint, who is here for the\nholidaya from Normal School, Vic\ntoria.\nConstable and  Mrs. John Dowl-\nnfl shopped in NeUon .\nJack Huntly was a Nelson visitor.\nLieut.   C.   B.   Browne   visited   to\nNelson\nPte. S. C. Aylwin of Vernoii Is\nvisiting relatives here.\nMr. tnd Mrs. George Telr of Calgary are holidaying here with relatives.\nB_au Harding of Burton was here\nfor a few days.\nLess Balbirnie of Medicine Hat,\nspent Christmas with his parents.\nMr. and Mrs W. Balbujnle Sr.\nArthur Jeffery, Kimberley, ipent\nChristmas with his little daughter\nFaith and his parenta, Mr, and\nMr'. W. Jeffery.\nMr. nnd Mr... Hope George were\nNelson visitors.\nPat I.aunderville was here from\nthe S:andard mine, Silverton, for\nthe holidays.\nLaurie Croft, Edmonton, spent\nChristmai with his mother, Mrs.\nGrace Croft.\nAlbert Avison was a visitor to\nNakusp.\nMiss Annie Kcnnett, Glscome, BC\nis spending the holidays with her\nparents. Mr. and Mrs, Ed Kennett.\nJoe Launderville, Van Roi mine,\nwai home for the holidayi.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Thompson were\nv'sitors from Zincton.\nMrs. Arthur Ham, Silvertln, wai\na viiitor here.\nJ. Cechelero went to Roasland and\nTrail for the  holiday.\nPte. Dacey Browne, Victoria, spent\nthe holidays with her parenti Rev.\nand  Mrs.  F.  Browne.\nMr. and Mrs. Charlie Kennett\nspent Christmas with Mrs. Kennett'a\npaients, Mr. and Mrs. St. Thomai,\nPerry Siding.\nMrs. Hilda George wai a NeUon\nvUitor.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Burrow o_ Nikusp were visiton here.\nWilliam George spent, a few daya\nIn Trail.\nMr. md Mrs. Leo Beggi spent\nChristmas with Mrs. Beggs' parents,\nMr. ind Mrs. J. Bengsberg, Blewett.\nMrs. D. Petty of Nelion wn \u25a0\nguest of Mr ind Mrs. Doney Sr for\nChristmas.\nJ B Telr of Vancouver il spending his hol'days here\nMr. and Mri. Thomu Avison ipent\nChristmas in Silverton with their\nion and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\n| Mrs Ritchard Avison.\nI Mm Hilda Crellin of Trill ii \u2022\nguest of her pirenU, Mr, ind Mri.\nRobert Crellin.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Vandergrift and\nfamily of Nakusp are gueits of Mr.\nard Mri. H. H. Pendry.\nMr.   tnd   Mn.   W.   MacKay   and\noaby of Silverton were vliltori here.\nG    Norberg   of   Silverton   wai   \u25a0\nvis,tor here\nP'.e Eugene Launderville of Vancouver wai a gtieil of hii parenti,\nMr. ind Mrs Joe Launderville, for\nChristmas.\nPte. Ole J,ohnirm of Vancouver\nspent Christmas with hU mother,\nMn. D. Johnion,\nChrll Hambling of Nakuip li In\ntown for a fiw dayi.\nEirl X\u00bblr visited to Nelion Thundiy.\nWiUlam   Jupp   of  Nikuip   ipent\nChrlitmai it the Butlin homt htrt.\nMiit Joyct Butlin rtturned from\nNakuip.\nMi tnd Mri. R. Humphriti of\nNakusp wtre guesti of Min M. H\nBu'lln. Thty wtrt icoompinied by\ntheir diughten. Mlu Htlen Humphries, who teachei in Waldo, and\nMin Alice Hunvphrlei, nurse-ln-\nIralnlng in Kamloopi.\nFRUITS\nNorthern Spy, 7 lbs\t\nDelicioui apples. 6 lbs.\nJonathan apples, 6 lbs\t\nWagener apples box     \t\nOntario apples, box    ..\nWinter p^ars,  b\t\nDAIRY PRODUCE\nHead cheese, lb \t\nCottcge cheese, lb\t\nSauer Kraut, lb.    \t\nDairy butter,  lb \t\nFLOWERS\nEverlasting'flowers,  bunch\nChrysanthemums, doz\t\nEGG8\nGrade A large, doz.   . .._\t\n.25\n.29\n.25\n1.50\n1.50\n.05\n.25\n.15\n.10\nJ5\n.75\n.50\nRoyal Bank\nProfit\nThree Million\nMONTREAL, Dec. 27 (CP)-Roy-\nal Hank of Canada today reported\nnot profit for 12 months ended Nov.\n30 a'. $3,390,123, equal to $9.69 per\nshare, compared with $3,535,929, or\n$10.10 per share, In the previous\nyear.\nTotal assets were at a record high\nat $1,201,615,947 against $1,075,119.-\n761. Liquid assets were $906,440,239\nvenus $681,918,309 and \"represented\n74.55 per cent of the bank's liabilities t\" the public as against 69.56\nper cent.\nTotal deposits were $1,181,217,192,\nan increase of $225,000,000, and public deposits established a new all-\ntime high at $1,002,567,405, versus\n$902,152,676, \"despite withdrawaU for\nsubscriptions to the recent victory\nloan,\"   the  bank  announced.\nNATAL\n 55\nMedium   .doz.     .50\nPullets, doz 47\nMEATS\nBeef, lb   -..   .15 to     .35\nVeal, lb 15 to     .35\nUmb, lb 20 to   .40\nBeef liver, lb 25\nCalf liver, lb 35\nBologna,   lb -   XI\nLiver sausage, lb      .30\nPork lausage,  Ib 25\nPork heads, lb  .08\nFowl, lb 20 to    .35\nPork, lb 08 to    .35\nJellied chicken, cup, 2 for  15\nRabbit, lb 30\nBlood sausage, lb.  25\nCelluloid, In the 1870'i, became\nthe world's first lynthetic organic\nplastic.\nNATAL, B. C\u2014Miss Alice Brown,\nMatron of the Nakusp Hospital 1_\nspending the holidays witti her paients at Michel.\nMrs. C. Billy and family were\nrecent guests of Mr. and Mri. J.\nEckersley, Fernie.\nPte. Andrew Davty of Chilliwack\nIs spending furlough with his parents at Michel.\nSgt.-Pilot Steve Kuleskl of Maeleod is spending a few days at the\nhome of hii parents.\nGus Qualtieri of Natal, and Alex\nMuskuk of Michel, who have be\u00abn\nI on leave from the Navy, have returned ta their base,\n|    NATAL, B.C.\u2014Kenneth Galla of\nMedicine Hat arrived home.\n',    Bill Tustian Is spending leave with\nhis parents.\nj Sgt. J. Henderson, itationed it the\nCoast, la spending the holidayi with\nI his family.\nPte. John Mukuk irrived home\nafter receiving honorable dUcharge\ntfrom the army.\nOft JhlL dot\nMONDAY, DECEMBER 28\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:55\u20140 Canada\n8:00\u2014CBC  Newi.\n8:15\u2014Master Musicians\n8:30\u2014Front  Unt  Family\n8:4S-Goodmorning, Maeitro\n9:00-- BBC Newi\n9:15\u2014Youi ftvorlte Hymns CKLN\n9:30\u2014Concert Timt (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014The Record Cabinet\n9:59-Tlmt Signal\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10.15\u2014Half St  Half  tCKLN)\n10:45\u2014They Tell Mt\n11:00\u2014 Songi by Nancy Martin\n11:15\u2014Variety  Time   (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014Soldier's Wife\n11:45\u2014Your Hollywood News Girl\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Firm Broadcast\nI2:30-CBC Newi\n12:45\u2014Midday Matinee\n12:25-The Notice Board (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The Balladeer\nl:15--Int-riude\nlit\u2014Talk\n1:30\u2014Club Matinee\n2:00\u2014To Be Announced\n2:30\u2014Tea Timt\n2:45\u2014Llstener'i Favorltti\n3:0O\u2014Mesier'i Islanden\n..:15-'Mirror for  Women\n3:30\u2014Music for Brazil\n3:45-BBC Newi\n4:00\u2014Petite  Muslcalt   (CKLN.\n4:15\u2014Piano Recital\n4:30\u2014The Dinning Sliten\n4:45\u2014 Recital Series\n5:00\u2014Nowi   Comment\n5:05\u2014Serenide for Strings\n5:30\u2014Impreiilom by Green\nEVENINC\n6:00-Just Relax (CKLN)\n7:00-CBC News\n7:15\u2014Canadian Roundup\n7:30\u2014The Radio Forum\n8:00\u2014BBC Newtreel\n8:30\u2014Babei In Toyland\n9:30\u2014Reviews and Prevlewi\n9:45\u2014 Vagabond'! Road\n10:00\u2014CBC Newi\n10:15\u2014The Story Teller\n10:30\u2014Interlude\n10:35\u2014Gene Krupa'i Orchestra\n11:00- Ood Stve tht King\nKaslo Ships\nSecond\nSalvage Car\nKASLO B. C\u2014Kailo Red Crou\nSociety, meeting with Mn. J. N.\nMurphy in the chair, heard Mn. R.\nFahrni, Treasurer, report that $20\nwai raised by the Shutty Bench\nladiei when Mrs. J. Bendis had a\ntea and bake sale. This was sent in\nto the Kaslo Branch in addition to\n$1.59 from Riondel and $13.25 from\nu whist drive,\n' Mrs. J, Keen for the s\u00bblvag\u00bb Committee reported that $240.86 had\nbetn realized from the flnt car ot\nsalvage sent from Kailo md that a\nsecond car had been ihipped. A\ntotal of 30,831 pounds of piper had\nbeen collected. The rest of the ship,\nment consuted of metaU. rubbel\nbottles, fats and bones.\nOver 200 articles of clothing, In.\neluding knitted garments, were now\nready for packing, Riondel ladiei\nsent in a large parcel of completed\ngarments and the United Church\nJapanese Women's Mlislonary So\u00bb\nciety In Kaslo gave valuable assistance by sewing and knitting.\nA vote of thanks was passed to\nRonald  Hewat for wood supplied.\nThe Red Cross whist drive on\nFriday was an enjoyable evening,\nMrs. A. F. Stephenson had high\nscore for ladies, and J. McPhenon\nmen's high. Prizes were war itampi\nMrs. Papworth and Mra. R. Fihrlnl\nwere the Committee in chargt.\nHE'S A TOUGH CANADIAN SOLDIER\nCpl. Bill Underwood, of the Queen's Own Canadian\nRifles, does a bit of pointing nut to Elaine Shepard, pretty\nPowers model, ln New Yo^k, us he puts a class through\nhis \"combutto\" Uicti-u.\nKASLO STUDENTS\nFEATURE\nCOMEDY, CONCERT\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Kailo High and\nPublic Schools brought the 1*11\nterm to a close with a fine Christmas concert. Principal H. McArthur welcomed  the vliltori.\nJunior High presented a play,\n\"Mother Runs the rtmily.\" The\nPrimary Clasi gave a variety of\nnumben, recitations, a pliy and\ndrill. A comedy by the, Junior\nHigh, \"The Concert Party\"' wu a\nburlesque.\nThe Senior Division ot 9t\u00bb Kt-\nmentary School gav\u00bb a Chrlitmai\nPageant, aasisted by a. \u00abhorui of\nJunior High girls. The Junior High\nthen presented a \"black tact comedy\" and t hilarloui comedy followed, entitled, \"Hert Comet tht\nBride.\"\nThe grand flnatt ot tttt evtnlng\nwu a Chrlstmu drama preiented\nby tttt High School itudenti, \"Tht\nLight on Beacon HlU.\"\nThe High School auditorium wai\nfilled to capacity.\nFERNIE, MICHEL MEN\nRECOVER FROM INJURIES\nMICHEL, B. C.-Mllta Gilla of\nMichel wai able to reiume his dutlM\nIn the Michel minei after being laid -\nup with a broken toe for Clva woeki.\nBuck Buchanan of Femie working\nin the minei waa able to reiume hla\ndutiei u a car-distributor after being laid up with in injured hand\nwhich kept him off work for ilx\nweeki.\nTht nativet of tha Aleutian! art\ncalled Aleuti.\nTiie Wise-birds Cry:\n13 ei.       25 oi.     40 ox.\n$1.45   $2.70   $4.15\nItlTIIH COLUMtIA  111,111 I MT CO   I.TO\niavi mr.  rmm.ri u_mi a mmm,\nam_*.   It..   -Jl   baallln   -aa!   |l|\nm_ tan T*mi ItS.w Cmmmlstm\nThli advertisement li not publlihed or displayed by the Liquor Control Boar*, or by tho\nGovernment of Hritish ColumbU\n'* , : .1\nmm\n 8-NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 28,1942\n^\nIT'S MICKEY'S i\nALL-TIME TOPPER.'\nTONICHT \u2014 TUESDAY\nComplete Showi 7.0O-8:M\ncmc\n* fAMOUl fUm. IHIATM\nNEW YEAR\nCARDS\n10c and 15c\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nNelson Opens Homes and Hearts lo\nVisiting Airmen; Everything\nFits Christmas Picture, Even Snow\n2 Rossland Boys\nSeriously\nHurt, Sleighing\nROSSLAND, BiC, Dec. J7-Eon-\n\u2022ld Wllllim Tweed, nlne-yeir-old\nson of David Tweed, ISIS Davli\nStreet, leriouily Injured in I ilelgh-\ning accident Wednesday, wn reported Sunday night to be recovering\nHe wai injured on tiie itreet\nat the Irvln Hotel when he was\nunable to control hii sleigh owing\nto ley conditioni and craihed Into\na parked car. He suffered concussion, i large scalp wound and a\npunctured kidney, and was badly\nbruised.\nIn mother ilelghing accident\nThuriday afternoon Valmore Berry,\nyoung son ol Mr. and Mra. Peter\nBerry, Seventh Avenue, who recently arrived from Northern Ontario, received a aevere scalp wound\nand bruliei, Sunday night he wai\nreported to be out of danger. It\nwas not knowrrhow he wai hurt but\nIt wai iurmised that he ran into\nan ley mowbank.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy JOHN  M. HIGHTOWER\nAuoclited Preu Wir Analyst\nAccording to the best Information\n\u2022vallable ln Washington, the Tunisian front has been ilmost a stalemate, because of tbe weather.\nTill ii the rainy reason In Tun-\nllll md the countryside Is a waste\nof mud.\nIt wil not until Sunday that word\nfrom Allied Headquarters Indicated\nthe ilr wir had been resumed as i\nresult of improvement ln the weather.\nUnlen this Improvement continues m long that ground conditioni ire greatly improved the Tunliian itilemate may remain unbroken for at least several days\nmore, disrupting to that extent the\nAllied timetable and delaying thc\npromlied day when Axis Air Forces\ncan be engaged In full-scale combat\nover the Mediterranean and the\nAllies' African positions can be prepared ** jumping-off places for an\nattack on Europe.\nNOT YEAR FOR VICTORY\nThli unavoidable disruption of\nthe    timetable    by    bad    weath-\nGRENFELL'S\nFOR A HOT SNACK\nAFTER THE SHOW\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedicil  Arti Building\nFOR RENT\nBright, newly decorated 4-room flat\nclose ln. Ph. 358R. Annable Block\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nW. L THOMPSON. Prop.\nDay and Night Service.\n24 Hour Ambulance Service\n615 Kooteniy 8t.     \u25a0   Phone 361\net offers \u2022 good argu-\nment against confident predictions\nabout thi ipeed with which the war\ncan be won in Europe.\nThere ire so many specific obstacle! to be overcome, that surely\nno military leader would describe\nfhe new year at hand as the year\nof final victory.\nTruly enough, Germany has suffered setbacks on the Russian front\nand the current encircling movement by the Red Army west of\nStalingrad Suggests that a Nazi\ndefeat of vast proportions Is in the\nmaking there. Moreover, the doom\nof Axis forces in North Africa appears to be sealed and It Is only\na question of time until it will be\naccomplished.\nYet, from \u25a0 military point of\nview at this time, the only thing\nwhich could bring in eirly end\nto the wir would be \u2022 complete\ncollapse of Germin power it\nhome ind thit would be the reiult of too miny uncertiln elementi to Justify more thin in ex-\npreulon of fervent hope thit\n\u2022oon or liter It wlll happen.\nOptimism for the New Year must\nbe tempered by some cold realities\nof the present, Including:\n1. The determination of the present German Government to make\nEurope a fortress, which means,\nif It means anything at all, that\nwhen sufficiently hard-pressed thc\nGermans will conserve enough of\ntheir still mighty forces for most\nstubborn defence.\n2. The relatively limited nature\nof the United Nations North aVfrica\ncampaign as compared with the gigantic operations involved ln Invading fortified Europe.\n3. The fact taht United Nations\nstrategy calls for crushing Nazi\nGermany completely while the Germans certainly would hope, and\nvery probably fight for, something\nShort of that, even though Hitler\nand his henchmen were thrown out\nof power.\n4. The fact that the European war\nIs only one of two wafs we are\nfighting simultaneously and while\nGermany conceivably might collapse afler a while, Japan seems\nlikely to fight on to the last man.\nKASLO\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 Visitors ln Kailo\nfrom Riondel at the weekend included, Mrs. T. Dumai, Mrs. J.\nSimes, Mlii Carol Davis, Mrs. R.\nPaterson and Mrs. E. Osier.\nMrs. Colin Cameron and jon Ted-\ndie of Fort Steele are holiday gueiti\nof the former'i mother, Mrs. Margaret McQueen.\nMrs. Clara Moore, who ipent\nsome time ln Calgary, hai returned\nto her home at Mirror Lake.\nMrs. Jack Hendron wai ln Nelson at the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Fahrni motored\nto Nelson.\nMiss Dorothy Amas ls visiting her\ngrandmother, Mrs. Bertha Sims of\nNelson.\nMrs. E. Bray hai left for Arrowhead, where ahe will make her home\nwith her brother-in-law and. lister,\nMr. and Mrs. George Wellington.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Dunn and Mr.\nand Mrs, Gordon Leonard motored\nto Nelson.\nMiss S. Kydd wai a shopepr ln the\ncity at the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Bannon have left\nto spend the Christmas holidays\nwith friends at the Coast.\nTed Horner left for Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Vande Casteyen\nwere in Nelson at the weekend.\nMrs. Boyd Paul of Trail Is a guest\nfor the Christmas holidays of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Roberts.\nSpr. F H. Olsen was In Kaslo vls-\nAlrmen from flt* BrltUh Isles,\nfrom Auitnlia, ind New Zetland,\nand trom Poland, numbering 100,\nknow now whit \u2022 reil Cinidlin\nChriitmii li like. For thli number\ncoming from Alberti training\nschools of the Commonwealth Air\nTraining Plan, icqulred new homei\nln Nelion at Chrlitmu ind found\neverything Juit u It ihould be\u2014\nopen homei and open hearts, Chrlitmu treea end gifts, tables laden\nwith moit of tbe traditional food,\nand weather thit wu nippy but not\ntoo cold, with Juit enough treih mow\nto complete the Chrlitmu picture.\nThey arrived by train Chrlitmu\nEye from Medicine Hat, Calgary.\nClaresholm and Maeleod, tlong with\nmany Nelion soldiers and airmen\ncoming home on leave. Over New\nYears another similar group, this\ntime Including British airmen, Australians, Norwegians, an Esthonlan,\nAmericans and Eastern Canadian!,\nwill be guesti similarly.\n81 PLACED BY COMMUTE..\nA total of 81 men came to Nelson\nunder sponsorship of the Citizen's\nCommittee accepting billets offered to tiie committee by citizeni. And\nmany more, Introduced to Nelson\nthrough this committee, returned on\nprivate invitations.\nThe entertainment ot the ilrmen\nwu u typical u their Chrlitmu\nwelcome. When they were not ln\ntheir holidiy hornet, they were ikit-\nIng, ilelghing, engaging ln snowball fights, curling ihd bowling\nThi Citiieni Committee sponsored \u2022 dince it the Legion for the viiiton tnd their hosts ind hostesses.\nTtie Civic Centre opened ltl doon\nfor them to iee Nelion lads ln uniform pliy hockey igilnit the home-\ntownen ind win 6-4. They were\n\u25a0kiting gueiti of the Civic Centre\nof the Skating Club it Its Bunday\nifternoon skating session. In 'between they tailed In the odd theatre\nparty, bowling and vliiti to friends\nof their hoiti md hoi'-euei.\n8LEIQHING A HIGHLIGHT\nActuilly they didn't hive much\ntime to figure out whit they were\ngoing to do next. Probably the highlight wu to borrow a sled and go\ncoasting on Nelson hillside streets.\nThen at 1:30 a.m., Monday they\nboarded the Eastbound train out of\nNelion, armed wtth lunches and\ncarrying gifts, to return to their\nschools and pass along the word to\nfriends who have New Year's leave\nthat Nelson's welcome is warm and\nreal.\nRUSSELL CLARK\nIS OVERSEAS\nPilot Omen Rumll Cltrk, recently In Nelion on leive, has irrived\noveneu. Ht wu t former member\not the.itiff of tbt Imperial Btnk ln\nNelion.\nTht young tlrmin cabled to hli\nmother tt Creiton t dty or two before Chrlitmu to let her know he\nhtd landed. Hli mother lent the\ngood newi on to Mr, end Mn. G. S.\nMclntoih, whoie gueit he wu t\nihort time tgo, so thit they hid the\ngood newi tor Chriitmii,\nChristmas Tree Lights Cause $1400\nBlaze in G. Cuthberi Apartment\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBuy your pipe tobacco Vj lb. 88c\nfrom VALENTINE'S.\nC.C.F. Whllt tonight, 8 p.m., Eig-\nlei Hill, 25c. Bring Sugir,\nLtrge  house  for  rent.  Close  t\u00bb\ntown. $50. mo. Blackwood Agency.\nFor Safe Furniture Moving\nPh. 106 WILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nH. A. Saunden, chimney sweep.\nEntire systems $2 to ti. Phone 00.\nCleaner overhauled to run like new\nBEATTY REPAIR 8ERVICE Ph, 91\nACE TEX INSULATION BOARU\n$7.25 per 100 sq. ft.\nBURNS LUMBER Sc COAL CO\nSkates sharpened while you wait.\nWork guaranteed or money back-\nIll   CHATHAM   ST.  FAIRVIEW\nWEEK DECEMBER 28\u2014JANUARY 3, INCLUSIVE\nICE SCHEDULE\n'MONDAY-\u00ab:O0-12 00   Junior   Hockey;   2:00-5:00   Chlldren'i   Ice\nSports; 8:00-10:00 Adult Skating\nTUESDAY\u20149:00-12:00 Juplor Hockey; 1:30-3:00 Tiny Tots; 3:00-5:00\nChildren's Skating; 7:00-10:00  Juvenile  and  Commercial  League\nGimes.\nWEDNESDAY\u20149:00-12:00 Junior Hockey; 2:00-4:00 General Skating;\n1:00-7:00 Figure Skating Club; 8:00-10:00 Skating Club.\nTHURSDAY\u20149:00-12:00 Junior Hockey; 2:00-4:00 Children's Skating.\nFRIDAY\u20142:00-4:00 Children's Skating; 8:00-10:00 Adult Skating.\nJATURDAY\u20149:00-12:00 Junior Hockey; 2.00-4:00 Children's Skating.\nSUNDAY\u201412:00-2:00 Figure Skating Club; 3:00-5:00 Skating Club.\nGYMNASIUM SCHEDULE\nMONDAY\u20147:30-10:00 Basketball.\nTUE8DAY\u20147:00-10:00 Badminton,\nWEDNESDAY\u20147:30-10:00   Volleyball   Tournament   and   General\nActlvitiei.\nSATURDAY\u20147:00-10:00 Indoor Track and Field Meet.\nIUNDAY\u20142:00-5:00 Badminton.\nAvoid dluppolntment it New\nYuri. Begin now to collect your\nclothei for clunlng. JONELLA\nCLEANER&-Ph. 1042\nAn early morning blue, itarting\nfrom a short circuit ln Chrlitmai\ntree lighting, Christmas Day damaged two rooms and content^ of\nthe Gordon Cuthbert apartment ln\nthe Patenaude building, 370 Baker\nStreet, to-the extent of $1400. Ceiling of the J. O. Patenaude optometrist office below wai ilso damaged\nslightly.\nNelson Fire Depirtment, called\nat 4:05 a.m., by a long, ditficult\nfight confined the flames and damage to kitchen and living room ot\nthe four-room itilte. Despite the\nseverity of the battle with the\nflamei, becauie of precautions\ntaken to protect furniture of other\nroomi and instrument! in the office below there wu no water damage. Tar paper carried on the fire\ntruck wai uied u t covering.\nThe Cuthbert family, returning\nfrom a Chrlitmu viiit to friendi,\nfound the iptrtment ablaie, and\nphoned ln the alarm.\nDamage to both the building and\ncontenti wu covered by lniurance.\nItlng hia sister, Mlu Daymar Olsen.\nHe left for New Denver en route to\nVernon.\nCaptain S. W. Gulsple of Vancouver wae a recent gueit at the King\nGeorge.\nMayor and Mn. E. H. Latham\nhave u guesta for the Chrlitmai\nholidayi their ton-ln-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mn. Frank Mar-\nleau ot Kimberley.\nMiss Clara Johnson of Trail is\nipending the holidays at her home\nin Kaslo.\nA. Vande Casteyen hu left to vis-\nIt relatives at Ladysmith.\nFlight Sgt. Ronald Matthewi of\nEdmonton ls spending hla Christmai\nleave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. A. Matthews.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Chandler\nhave as their Christmas guest Lac.\nFrank Nelson of the R.A.F. at Calgary.\nStaff Sgt. Donald Gibson, wn of\nDr. and Mrs. George Gibson, who\nis stationed at Vernon, is in Kaslo\nspending his leave with hli family.\nKailo High School itudenti held\nan enjoyable dance ln the auditorium. There as a fine crowd. Music\nwai lupplied by Mn. Bert South.\nMrs. Frank Hill and Gussle Carney.\nRefreshment! were in charge of\nMiss S. Kydd.\nMiss Margaret McDonald of Trail\nis a guest of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. W. McDonald for the Christmas\nholiday.\nCharles Adams, who hai been a\npatient In thc Kootenay Lake General Hospital for iome week!, has\nreturned to his home in Kaslo.\nMrs. T. Beck ind daughter Beverley of Trail are guesti of Mr. and\nMn. Harry Beck.\nSgt. Arthur Morton of Victoria Is\nspending his Christmai leave with\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Morton.\nMr. and Mn. Fred Spiers have as\ntheir guest their daughter Lorna of\nWilliami Lake.\nGet our new Dwelling and Furniture Policy. It is right up-lo-date\nNo extra cost\nROBERTSON REALTY\nClan McLeary Dance, Civic Centre, New Year's Eve. Margaret Graham's Orchestra. Dancing from 9\np.m. Admission 75c each.\nUse the CRY8TAL LAUNDRY\nand escape washday drudgery.\nQUALITY ind 8ERVICB it a low\ncost. Just PH. 7! Driver will call.\nFiling cabinela, tnnsfer cases,\ncard files, alio file indexes and fold-\nen. D. W. McDerby, \"The Stitloner\nand Typewriter Mm\", 854 Baker\nSt., NeUon, BC.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOStTmAN'S BLUE-GREEN OV-\nercoat it Eigle Hill, Sit. night.\nPleaie return Club Call. Biwirl.\nSILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B.C.-G. Munch was\na visitor to Nelson.\nMrs. S. E. Wition ls spending the\nholidays In Vancouver with her son\nand daughter, Darcy and Audrey.\nMiss Harel Flynn Is ipending the\nholiday with her pirenU, Mr. ind\nMrs. B- Flynn of Castlegar.\nA. G. Erickson Is \u2022 holiday guest\nof his son ind diughter-ln-liw,\nMr. ind Mri. E. Erickion ot Salmo.\nClaudius Martinson hu left for\nVancouver, where he wlll be i\nguest of Mr and Mn. A. Linon,\nformer -reeldenti of Silverton.\nMra, H. George ol New Denver\nwas i visitor to town.\nMrs. E. Kynoch of the Villlcan\nteaching stall Is holidaying at her\nhome here.\nMri. F. MIUi and Mri. K. Livingstone were visitors to New Denver.\nMisi Mirguerlte Campbell of New\nDenver was In town Thundiy.\nGeorge Gordon wu holt to t number of friendi it \u2022 itig party on\nWedneidiy night, the occulon being hli 81it birthdiy. A social time\nand refreihmenti wire enjoyed by\nthe gueiU.'who Included D. Mic-\nDeirmld, L Shantl, H. Elsmore, F.\nMills. S. I. Wition.,(\\ Htfburg, C.\nLin, D. Deane tnd 3. Mitheion.\nCRANBROOK\nAcl Arlhur Driper, ion ot Mr.\nmd Mn. C. W. Driper left Friday\nmorning for the Cout u i wlreleis\noperator. He ipent two weeki'\nfurlough here with hli parenti.\nMin Elizabeth Williams of Chapman Camp hai been holidtying\nwith Mr. ind Mn. C. W. Driper.\nMn. C. E. L. McKinnon arrived\nfrom Vancouver to spend the holiday season Mlis Margaret attends\nLord Byng High School tnd George\nis it U.B.C. The McKinnon family\nwu accompanied by Mlu Peggy\nGelgrlck, alio of Vancouver, niece\nof Mrs. McKinnon.\nHenry Nelson arrived home from\nCalgary Tuesday morning to spend\nfour days leave.\nLieut Don Sneath, R.CA., ion\nof Mrs. C. A. Sneath, arrived from\nPetawawa, Ont. He has been transferred to Brandon.\nJack Caldwell, ion of MT. and\nMn. Harry Caldwell, arrived Irom\nUB.C. to spend fhe holidays. Bud\nCildwell ilso arrrved from Vancouver nid will remain here for\naome time.\nMiss Marjwy Bronsdon, daughter\nof Mr. and Mn. T. H. Bronsdon,\nwho teachei it Invermere, ls holidaying,with her parenti.\nMn. Dan Campbell left Sundiy\nmorning for er home at Balford,\nafter spending a few weeks in the\nCity.\nMisi Elizabeth Spireull, daughter\nof George Spreull, md Mils Isobel\nSneath, daughter of Mrs, C. A.\nSneath, irrived from Missouli.\nMont, where they ittend Montina\nState Univenity,\nSgt. L. E. (Corky) Cox. son of\nMr. md Mn. L. Cox, left for Montreal to take up hli duties. Corky\nli with the R.CA.F. and recently\nreceived hli tir gunner wing.\nWalter C.x, son of Mr. ind Mrs.\nL. Cox. irrived home tnd received\nword Mondiy thit he has been msde\na Pilot Officer In the R.C A.F.\nMiss Norma Walde ind Miss Idi\nMann were co-hoitesiei at i miscellaneous shower at the home of Misi\nWilde, Monday evening, In hpnor\nof Mrs. Henry Nelson, nee Helen\nCaldwell. Cards were played md\ni lovely lupper served it cird\ntablei. The glfti were presented\nIn \u2022 buggy decorited with blue\nand white crepe paper and Miss\nNancy Haddad made the presentation. Invited gueati were Mrs.\nHenry Nelson, Misses Vclmi, Nin-\ncy ind Geraldine Haddid, Miss\nEleanor McKowan, .Miss Ann Grahim, Mm Clilre 1%plln, Misi Ruth\nVeeberg, MUi Evelyn Nelson, Mrs.\nJ. Mann md Misi Mirgiret Scott\nFor  that   troublesome  itomach,\nheartburn tnd tdd stomach,\nBISMA REX\n75c and $1.75 bottle\nSold only tt your Rexall Stort.\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone J4\nBox 400\nMorgenthau Asks\nSuspension\nof Silver Laws\nNEW YORK-Wlth any leglilatlon\naffecting illver apparently dead for\nthli \u00abesslon of Congress, Secretary\not the Treaiury Henry Morgenthau\nJr. luggested that all lawa pertain\ning to lilver be itrlcken from the\nitatute booki.\nVirtually from the inception of the\nNew Deal, the queition of silver\nlegislation hu been before the Congress and several lawi affecting the\nmetal have been' paised, Including\nthe Silver Purchase Act in 1934.\nSince that date, the purchase of silver, of both foreign and domestic\norigin, have amounted to $1,454,900,-\n000.\nAlthough the Treasury has not acquired any foreign-mined silver\nsince June when $700,000 was expended for that purpose, the purchase of the domestically produced\nmetal has continued and ln October\n$1,400,000 waa expended for the\npurchue of 2,000,000 ounces.\nFor several montha there hai been\na shortage of illver for arti and industry, and there haa been an effort\nby iome memberi of Congreis to get\nlegislation pMsed to release some of\nthe metal now held by the Treasury\nand on which currency hu not been\nissued.\nSLOCAN  CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-Mrs. J. H.\nPinchbeck ls spending a short holiday at Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. F. M. Hufly and\nfamily were Nelson visitors.\nMurray McNeish of Victoria U\nrenewing acquaintances in town.\nE. R. Adariis of the B. C. Security\nCommission ls spending the holidays with his family at Penticton.\nMiu G. Tucker of the Social Welfare, hu gone to Vancouver to\nipend Chrlstmu.\nW. Elder of the Treasury Department of the B. C. Security Communion, hu left to ipend Chriitmai at hli home In Vancouver.\nMr. and Mri. B. E. O'Neill were\nNelson visitors.\nThe U.S. B-17F. Fortresses and\nB-24D. Liberators have great highflying ability, with a normal operating height of about 30,000 feet. An\nFW-190 takes about 15 minutes to\nreach 30,000 feet, and by that time\na Fortress formation cruising at 220\nm. p. h. has covered more than 50\nmiles.  (Peter Masefield.)\nHEADLIGHT\nWORK CLOTHES\nSHIRTS, TROUSERS,\nOVERALLS\nEvery  Garment   guaranteed to give\nSatisfaction.\nEMORY'S\n****       LIMTOD\nThe Man's Store\n..r\nPIONEER DEAD\nDr. J. W. Browning, 90, oldest\npractising physician in Canada\nand one of the world's first telegraphers, is dead at his home tn\nExeter, Ont.\nBritish Airmen From\nCalgary School\nAre Guests of Brown\nTwo old country airmen from No.\n37 S.F.T.S. at Calgary were the\nChristmas guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Brown Sr., 708 Third Street,\nThey were Lac. A. W. Smith of Ipswich, Suffolk, and Lac. H. Rook of\nLondon. Both had previously visited\nNelson.\nFiremen Answer\nAlarm But\nFind No Flames\nDisturbed by chimney smoke from\na neighboring house ln the 600 Block\nFairview, a neighbor put in a call\nto the Nelson Fire Department at\n3:,15 p.m. Boxing Day. The Department responded, but there was no\nfire.\nRossland Man Breaks\nKnee Cap in Fall\nROSSLAND, B. C, Dec. 27- Jack\nVarcoe suffered a painful accident\nthe evening of Christmas Day when\nhe slipped on an icy porch at the\nhome ot friends and broke hi* kneecap, Mr. Varcoe was taken to hospital by ambulance. Sunday night\nhe was reported to be resting com\nfortably.\nSalvation Army\nOfficers\nBusy, Christmas\nCelebrating Ohrislmai In Ihe tradition of the Salvation Army \u2014\nbringing glfta to those who would\nnot otherwise receive them\u2014officers ot the Army at Nelson ha,Ye*\nhad a busy Christmas season. It\nhas extended even longer than tht\nlong weekend of this Christmas, and\nhas been in addition to their regular work.\nMajor Marjorie Flnnie reported\n$35 was spent to provide grocerlei\nfor the needy. Over 80 articles ot\nclothing were distributed ln a period of threei weeks. Sleeping accommodation wu provided for\neight nights, and 19 meals were\ngiven during Ihe .Christmas season.\nThe officers and their aids dll-\ntributed treati.to prisoners at tht\nProvincial Jail, to patients at Kootenay Lake General Hospital and\nto a large number of shut-ins. A ,\nlarge number of donated toys were\npassed on to poor children. Over\n50 copies of the Christmas edition\nof War Gry, the Army magazine,\nweTe distributed.\nBenjamin Orames, Territorial\nCommander for Canada, Alaska,\nNewfoundland and Bermua, defined\nChrlstmu u \"the day when othen\nare remembered, especially those\nwho would be remembered least.\"\nThis was the spirit of the Army'i\nChristmas throughout Canada.\nAs at other cities, Salvation Army\nofficers here had \"Christmas Cheer\npots\" on the street corner at Baker\nand Ward, and the fundi tossed in\nby passersby to keep them \"boiling\"\nwere used to buy groceries, coal\naaid so on for the needy,\nAustralia'i production of flax,\nwhich is used for tarpaulin canvat i\nand webbing equipment, la now efficient not only for her own requirement!, but also to fulfil orderi front\nthe United Kingdom.\nLIVERPOOL (CP)-Under a new\nrule no hotel porter or any other\nporter may reserve seats for railway passengers in Britain by placing luggage on them unless the passengers are present when this is\ndone.\nRossland Social \u2666.\nBy MR8. HARVEY FLEURY\nROSSLAND, B.C., Dec, 27-Pte. TSaturday to spend the Christmas\nJamei Wright arrived In Roisland j vacation wilh his wife and family,\nTuesday to spend the Christmai va- i 2334 Butte Street. He plans to go to\ncation with trrs parents, Mr. and Mrs. [ '.he Coast, following the New Year,\nJ.A.Wright. t jto receive medical treatment\nRico Mauocehl left for Fife to Bruce and Dale Ackerman are ex-\n\u2022pend the holiday with his parents, p._ted to _rriv_ ln Rossland in time\nwho reside there. |.\u201e   spend   the   Christmas   vacation\nMrs, Richard Ayres arrived Tuei- j with  ,h_ir  par_ntS]  Mr   _nd  MrJ\nday from Ottawa and will spend a Roy Ackerman.\nmonth'i holiday with Mr. and Mri.\nJ. A. Ayrei.\nPte. George Fitier ls spending his\nleave In Rossland.\nMlu Irene Kiway, of Nelson, ls\nspending the Christmas holidays\nwith her family here\nMrs. S:d Simcock, Sr., has return-\nimwvwwwwatwwv\n\u2014FAIRVIEW\u2014\nFor good groceries, fresh fruiti\nand vegetables, go to the\nLakeside Service\n1936 CHEVROLET\nAuxiliary Seat Coupe. Paint,\nUpholstery, Tires, Mechanical\nCondition\u2014Good.\nCuthbert Motors Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel tnd Poit Office\ned from Spokane\nAc2. Don Simms of the Royal Canadian Air Force at Edmonton is\nspending Christmas in Rossland.\nNorman Gallie, student at U.bt.\nis spending the holidays with his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Gallie.\nMiss Belle Nichols, who teaches\nat Crawford  Bay, is spending the\nFleury's\nPharmacy\nCompoundefl\nt_ fit\nPrescription!\nukflss.\nAccurately\n_V*yim>r\nMed   Art! Blk\n\u2022W.W*\nPHONE 25\nther, Mrs. E. Nichols of Rossland\nLeslie Foster, of the Royal Canadian Nr-.vy, and his bride, nee Miss\nFlorence McLaren of Victoria, are\nAidemaTand Mri. William Cun-1 Christmas jacation visiting her mo-\nr.ingham   \u00bbre   ipending   Christmas\nvisiting In Spokane with their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs\nJack Longstaff,\n\"Red\" Hadtield, of Courtenay Is spending the Christmas holiday visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Foster,\nparents of the groom. The wedding\nwas last Saturday.\nStaff Sergeant and Mrs, E. E. Waggoner ar.d baby* son of Colorado\nSprings are spending the Christmas\nholidays with Mrs. Waggoner's parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Vetere, of\nthis city.\nSANDON\nSANDON, B. C. - Mlu Dulcle\nJonei of New Denver Is i guest\nof Min N. Forreit\nMr, ind Mn. Fnnk Skinner motored to Nelion over the weekend.\nA. Fonythe wu \u25a0 visitor to New\nDenver.\nA. H Honibergir wis \u2022 New Denver visitor during Ihe wiek.\nA. A. Robblm left Wedneidiy\nto ipend Chrlitmu with hli fimily\nit NeUon.\nSldne Normin li \u25a0 Chrlitmu\ngueit of Mr. and Mri. J. M. Harris.\nMn. I. Peterson his returned\nfrom Nelion, where ihi wu vltltlng.\nspending the Chriitmai holiday In\nRoisland.\nMrs. R. W. Whittaker and small\ndaughter, Jerry, are guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. E, V. McGauley,\nSgt. Joe Rowling of Victoria, is\nspending the Chrislmai holidays\nvisiting his wife and family ln Trail.\nRichard Fowler of Trail was a\nN.lson  visitor  Wednesday.\nMri. Belle Cusack of Grand Forks\nvisited her brother and siiter-fn-\nliw for a few diy! the beginning of\nthe week.\nMiss Mom Connor will spend the\nChristmas holidays with her parenti,\nMr, and Mrs. James Connor, Castlegar.\nLac. Joe Fertich Is spending hii\nleave In Rosslmd with his ptrents.\nJick McDomld plans to leave for\nlhe East at the end of the month,\nwhere he will report to the Royal\nCanadian Navy.\nMr and Mn. Fred Mirtelln of\nWynndel ire ipending the holldayi\nvltltlng the former'i parents, Mr.\nmd Mn. N. Martello.\nPte Edward Paul, of Calgary, il\nipending hli leive with hli wife and\nparent!\nSgt Guy Cooper, who went over-\n\u2022eai with the flnt contingent three\nyetn tfo, arrived In tht city lut\nWhen your hair Is\ndressed nicely, you\nfeel confident.\nHaigh Tru-Art\nTREAT YOUR VISITORS\nANYTIME AT THE\nMelon Dew\nThe Popular\nKOOTENAY\nPRODUCT\n(f\nSeason's Greetings ...\nHOOD'S\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\ntkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkMMI\nHave the Job Done Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nF. H. SMITH\nIf It's Electric\nPhone 666        351 Baker St\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home ot Good Lumber\nLUMBER      LATH\nSHINGLES\nWholesale and   Retail\nTelephone 176\nFoot ot Stanley Street\n\\\n\t\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_1942_12_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\/1.0415419","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1942-12-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1942-12-28 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]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}