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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":"  '\n6\u00a30\nRuss Through Hun\nLines in Baltic\nRed Army Has Solid Advancing\nFront Swinging Over 300 Miles\nBy W. W. HERCHER\nAneciatcd Pratt Staff Writer\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Propelled by a double breakthrough in Estonia by 4th Army Group, the Red Army's grand\noffensive to rid the Baltic States of Germans before snow flies\nhas engulfed nearly 2,000 more towns and reached within' 50\nmiles of Tallin, Estonian capital, Moscow disclosed tonight.\nAn order of the day from Premier Stalin to Marshal Leon-\nId A. Govorov of the Leningrad Front forces and the midnight\nMoscow communique announced a break-through North of\nTartu,   East-Central   Estonian\nrail city, had gained more than\n43 miles on a front 75 miles\n\u2022vide and had taken more than\n1500 towns in four days.\nA northern wing of the same\nIrmy thrust westward from Narva\nIn a 37-mile advahce in three days,\ntaking more than 300 communities.\nTheAe forces stood less than 65\nmiles East of Tallin at Rahkla and\nless than 50 Southeast of Nava.\nWidth of the latter front was\nnot disclosed,.but the list of cap.\ntured towns made-evldent that\nthe two wings of tne Leningrad\narmy were joined and that the\nRussians now had a solid, ad-\nvanclng front swinging more\nthan 300 miles southwestward\nfrom the Gulf of Finland to pointi\nWest of Riga, with the Leningrad,\n3rd, 2nd and lit Baltic forces all\nIn action.\nOn the Riga front, where only\nTuesday the Russians announced\npenetration by the 1st Baltic Arti..\nto six miles South of that capital\ncity of Latvia, the communique\nwas silent except to mention repulse\nof German counter-attacks West\nef the city.\nThe Jnd Baltic, operating about\n85 miles East of Riga, seized another 100 towns In the area North\nof captured Plavinas ana the 3rd\nBaltic, pressing northwest and\nSouth from the newly-captured key\nrailway junction city of Valga, took\nmore than 50 additional places in\nEouthern Estonia and northern Lat\nvia.\nAdded to the nearly 3000 towns\n. listed by the Russians Tuesday as\ncaptured in the great offensive to\nkill or drive Into the sea the Naris\nremaining ln Estonia, Latvia and\nLithuania. These German troops\nrecently were estimated to num\nber possibly 200,000, certainly nu\nmerlcally Inferior to the Soviet\ntorcet opposing them.\nTht Gerrnans acknowledged that\nRussian and Polish troops under\ncover ol artificial tog Wasted the\nVUvlt Rlvtr in\u00bbp.Warsaw, jbut rt-\ndl. wmtethtatofs contended -hese\ntorces .were wiped out, while the\nHifh.Command communique said\nthey were \"cut off.\"\nMajor L. McBrlde\nPrisoner of War\nSMASHED GERMAN\nATTEMPT TO GET\nOUT OF BOULOGNE\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014German attempti to stage a Dunker-\nque-like evacuation from Boul-\nogrte on the night of 8ept 1 weft\nsmashed by British coastal gum\nwhich sank 11 German ships try.\nIng to run the gauntlet to Cap\n\u2022 rii Nez, it wai disclosed today.\nEvery available gun of the Dover coait artillery opened up at\n11.30 p.m. on the leading group\nof the enemy flotilla and when\nlight naval forces closed, In for\nthe kill the guni were turned on\nthe lecond group of enemy vessels.\nObservers said this action was\nthe most ipectacu.tr of the two-\nweek gun duel that raged across\n22 miles of sea. England's Mh\u00abl|\nfire corner\" wai pounded with\nlong barrages but the Germans\npaid heavily In men and materiel,\nSmashing Blow\nIn Calais Area\nLONDON, Sept 20 (AP) - A\nstrong force of R.A.F. Lancaster's\nand Hallfaxei late today dropped\nbetween 3000 and 4000 tons of\nbombs on the German garrison\nbesieged by Canadian forces at\nCalali In what might be she prelude to a land assault    '\nFor 2.4 hours explosions rained\ndown on the Germans hemmed in at\nihe historic port dm ing the lait\nfortnight by the Canadian advance\nthrough Pas de Calais. Slmi!<n. air\nMojcpf wet. delivwt-J -JtWrt_WRfii\nal assaults were launchd on Le\nHavre and Boulogne., .\nThe air attack was centred on\ngun emplacements and underground\ntroop shelters.\nMeanwhile (he flay and night aerial campaign to prevent the enemy\nfrom moving troops or supplies to\nthe Siegfried line or Holland continued in full swing along 100 miles\nof the German frontier.\nFighters escorting carriers to tha\nAllied airborne army in Holland\nencountered no enemy plane* but\nran into heavy anti-aircraft fire\nfrom position! which the pilots \u00abtd\nhad been heavily strengthened since\nSunday Fog and heavy ground mist\npreventt-d ground strafing.\nTen main traffic centre* along\nthat border have been subjected to\nconcentrated attacks In the pajt\ntwo days and pilots reported large\nfires still blazed tonight in the latest\nCities raided, Rheydt, Munchen-\nGladbarh and Bitburg\nGov't Would Bt Taking On\nC.C.F. Promises Says iTiUy.\u2014Pago 7.\nConsider Amendment to Allow\nRefusal of Eviction Permit.\u2014Page 7.\nLittle of Vernon\nU Fire Chief Head.\u2014Page 7.\nMum\nAMERICANS BUST\nGOTHIC ON\nSIX MILE FRONT\nCanucks Clean Up\n\u25a0 Pockets and\nClose in on Rimini\nROME, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014Strong\nforces of. Canadian and Greeks of\nthe British 8th Army tonight Were\nbattling on the outer defences of\nRimini, Adriatic .port at the Southernmost tip of the Po Valley, after\ncapturing important positions ln a\npush which threatened the whole\nGerman Gothic line position.\nWith Rimini airfield already in\nAllied hands, the Canadians fought\nfiercely to clean up remaining defence pockets Southwest of the port\nadvanced 1000 yards beyond the airfield and were directly threatening\nRimini itself.\nAmerican troops of the Allied\n5th Army In tha eantri of the Italian front mtinw_.lt breached the\nGothic Lim tn I six mile front\nNorth of Florence, opining the\nway for another but less promising descent on tha Po Villey, tome\n23 miles distant.\nCapture of Rimini would mean\nthat tanks and Infantry could spretd\nout on to the Po Valley in a huge\nflanking movement, Troops in the\narea of Rimini today were assaulting the village of San Fortunate, and\nnearby had reached San Marino and\ncaptured Serraville.\nMeanwhile, another strong Bth\nArmy force of Canadian, British md\nIndian units were hammering a\nwedge towards the Mire__.it River\nWest of Rimini which might outflank the'port.\nAll day long thi R.A.F.'t famed\nDesert Air Fores and .British naval guns battered the Rlmlnl area\ndefences as nine German divisions\nput up strong defensive fight on\nthe final lint of hills West of Rlmlnl barring tha entrance to tht\nPt Valley.\nThe breach In the massive, fierce-\nty defended Gothic line was not a\n\u00bbtetk<fbwB, btlt\" 1\u00bb. kard,'bloodn;\nlighting it took lh| AQitt opt tlep\n,_.r _ to We 'inbimtm ahowda-wn\n'bittlt at tht v__itjr.    '*\nWith tht battle for the Po Valley\nnear, the Italian general stiff broadcast an appeal to patriots in Northern Italy to rise against the Germans.\nShuttle bombers from Russls landed at Italian bates after attacking\nrailyards in Hungary, and other air-\n1 tratt from Italy bombed communl-\n\u25a0' eatlons. shipping and port Installations tn Yugoslavia. Two Allied\nplanet trt missing and ont enemy\nmachine wu destroyed.\nNew Ferry When\nType and Route\nFixed\u2014Anscomb\nBritish Race to Rescue\nIsolated Air Troops\n8PUFIRE HAS FIVE-BLADED PROPELLER: Above li th.\nnew Spitfire, Mark XIV, the R.A.F.'i late.it development In fighter\nplanei, equipped with \u25a0 5-blnde propeller. It li powered by _ new\nmodel Rdllt Royce engine, the Griffin 66, developing over 2000 hone-\npower. The new featurto makeJt the faiteet Spitfire In eervloe. It le\nute at a fighter-bomber carrying either a 260 or 500-pound bomb\nor a drop tank, ltt armament may eonilit of four 20 mm. earmon or\ntwo 20 mm. cannon and either two .60 or four .308 calibre machine\ngunt.\nFascist Property\nto Be Confiscated\nROME. .Sept. 20 <APt - The Kalian government announced today\nthat the properties of the late Count\n1 Gh1_ _7Zo C'iano and SH. prominent\n, Fasrists will be confiscated Ciano,\n| former foreign minuter, wai exec-\nj uted by the Fascists Uit Jan 12 for\n' the part he plaved an a member of\nR.    L.    McBrldge,     708     Hoover \\ th.    Faicist   Grand   Council   !n   tbe\nStreet   received    word   Wednesday | runt in* of his father-in-law. Benito\nnight  that  their   son   Major   I .ugh   Mussolini, as Dictator of Italy.\n1'iorgiiii McBride was a prisoner of - \u2014\nwar  In   Italy.   Major   McBride  wai\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'ith  the   Seaforth   Highlanders  of\nCanada and has been missing since \u25a0\nMay 23, the day  that hii battalion ,\nplayed  such   an   important   role  in i\nthe   offensive   that    finally    broke\nthrough   the   German   defenses   a.\nCasiino\nMajor McBride has been overseas\nsince December 1M2 and took part\nIn the Invasion of Sicily and  Italy\nHe wai wounded in the fighting in\nSicily   but   later   rejoined   his   unit\nIn Italy after recuperation In North\nAfrica   His  younger   brother,   Captain   K    t.     McBiide   is   also   with\nthe  Seaforths   in   ItJ.lv\nVICTORIA. Sept 20 'CP) -The\nBritish Columbia Provincial government will build a modem ferry\nfor Kootenay Lake when a type has\nbeen decided on and a reasonable\ntender ii made on the craft. Works\nMinister Anscomb said today.\nThe present ferry, the Nasookin,\ndoes not meet the needs of the traffic and must be replaced, the Minister  added\nType of ferry will be determined\nwhen the route ii selected. Mr\nAn*comb said The present route\nIs from Traser's Landing to Gray\nCreek and it has been suggested a\nshorter   route   ihould   be   chosen\nHITLER'S TRAIN\nIN TUNNELS\nDURING NIGHT \u2022\nFuehrer Reported\nExtremely Dejected;\nMay Flee Abroad\nZURICH, Stpt. 20 (CP Heutcr.--\nHitler it prcsint il living.In a Pan\ntar train travtlltng all over Germany ar. W-kiM_ac_tti_.nally .n\nBaSffiJ-SOTPV e_*_$_i\u00bb_\u00ab-. \u00ab<\n\"J-fnal ie Geflevt,\" who htd an opportunity te talk with the officers\nof Hitler's immediate entourage.\nThe officers told the correspondent thst Hitler is extremely dejected snd press chief Dietrich does\nnot dsre to address him.\nAccording to these officers, the\nW itzlebtn family, ont of whom was\nleader of the assassination plot\nagainst Hitler, has been exterminated even to tht most distant relatives.\nThty give these additional reports of life in Germahy:\nSaboteurs in .the German foods\nand mountains are being fed and\nsheltered by the mountain population.\nBombed out victims after the last\nair raids in Munich totalled 400,000.\nHimmler is organiiing underground guerilla fighters and all Russian, British, French and American\nuniforms are geing collected for the\nuse of the saboteurs who will continue the guerilla war after the armistice.\nHigh Gestapo officials have transferred large sums of money to neutral countries\nTht correspondent wss told Hitler\nhimself h|S decided to flee abroad\nbut will ktep Kls flight secret, thus\nenabling s legend to be built up\naround him.\nWarn Londoners\nlo Stay Away\nLONDON, Sept. JO (CP Reuter)\nHenry Willink, Minister of Health,\nissued a new warning tonight to\nLondoners evacuating from the capital to stay away, a few hours tfttr\nthe metropolis suffered its third robot bomb attack in three nights.\nMr. Willink disclosed thlt some\nrobot bombs destroyed or damaged\nas many as 1500 houses each and a\nnumber of them destroyed or damaged 1000 etch.\nI Thoie which landed lit the Lon-\nttttt area destroyed or damaged 400\nhouses per bomb on the average,\nthe Health Minister said.\nTuesday night's attack was not\nheavy compared with previous robot assaults but considerable damage\nwas done.\nCanada's Rubber\nSupply Eases\nWant Huns Warned\nto Save Machinery\nFrame New Contract\nDemands at\nU.M.W. Convention\nCINCINNATI. Sep! 2.1 \u00abAD\nTbe United Mine Workers c_mver.\nlion ended today with lhe framing\nOf new contract demands and an\nappeal by President John 1. t-ewis\nfor the same measure nf support\nnext year which the mine, i gave\nhim tn the four-strike wane fight\nnf 1P43 and IM4\nWhen the wage agreements ex\n,piri next Spring, said the miners'\nchief, \"I wtl Irely upon you Jus. a<\n! relied upon, you in 1_4_ md 1W4'\n\"V.e are going I\" rarry nn.\" lew\nIs continued, 'and bow' A\u00bbd if\n*1tJ*t* tre any in this rountrx who\n\u2022tlftltl like that and van! to -hed\nttWi ttmms It, let them begin to\nft.*-.  t_wn do*.\nMONTREAL, Sept  20 (CP) -The |\nPolish delegation to the United N .- i\ntlor.s  Rrlief _i d  Rehabilitation  Administration  Council  meeting  today j\nproposed   adlon   tn   prevrnt   further\niicslruction by --rrmain in <*< .spied\nPvi lions of Europe\nThe   p.i posal,   placed   before   the,\nmuncil   in   rinsed   session,   raid   the\nAllied  governments  should   l>\u00ab  ask- .\n1   t\"   warn   Germany\nmil  destruction of mini\nif.tr wl     machinery     m\noni which thr German\ntire\ni     refrain\n.g and In-\ncountries\narmies re-\nid*\n'I he \\i arnii'g shmild\ntice that m cas* 11 vvrrp d.M efcjrd-\nrd lhe German nation would be\nhe'd    responsible    and    required   to\n\u25a0 make restitution not only nf manu-\nfa-luring facilities hot nf relief\ngoods such as fuel, clothing, footwear, and ihe like, the Polish res\nI olution said\nCouncil decision on the suggest-\nInn will be made later Jan Ciech-\nr.owski, the Polish delegate, uld In\na statement that the suggestion waa\ngiven strength hy report* fmm combined b\"\u00bbrds which Indicated that\nraw materials such as wool and co,-\nlOD.  could  be  supplied  by   UNRRA\n! more easily than rmiM the menu-\nI lectured foo<J\u00bb IVs me de nrnttpsmry\nthe preservation of existing production fact.litiei in countries such\nus Poland, Norway end Ciechoilo-\nvakla.\nAll counril md committee trnt-\nlions of the 44-nailom conference\nwere in camera today.\nA suggestion that India be Included in the scope of UNRRA will\nbe dealt with liter, with the posst\nbility a resolution will be pa\u00abed\ndealing with supplies for that country  in  the event of famine\nHerbert H Lehman, UKRRA Director-general, said that the administration would not operate in India\nor elsewhere except at the recjueet\nof the government of the country\nconcerned\nMr l^hman said that Russia hed\nnot made any itatement of her UNRRA requirement! to the administration, although u e country that\nhis suffered occupation by the\nenemy she would be entitled to aid\nAn UNRRA minion la baflnl sent to\nRussia to dlicviu iuch Implies _U'd\n\"many oth#r (juetttont\"\nIn l report on edm.nltrativ* ex\nyn i- Mr Lehman Mid that f'NR\nHA expenditures on supplies end\nMfvicet will total at least fl.OOn.-\n000,000 In 1043. with the admlnistia\nHon budget totalling $10,000,000 plus\n11.MO.000 tor :u\u00abv\u00bb\nLANE NAMED U.S.\nENVOY TO\nGOV'T OF POLAND\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (AP)\n\u2014 In a diplomatic move with a bearing on the domestic political picture, President Rooievelt today\nnamed Arthur Bliis Lane as Ambassador to the Government of Poland, thereby suddenly reaffirming\nUnited States support for the regime which Russia decllnei to recognize  or  deal   with,\nMr. Lane is one of eight Am-\nbauadori whose namei the President submitted to the Senate today\nfor confirmation   Five of the men\ndrew European assignments, cover-1 pfr cent more labor than the natur\nIng six countries  now  being  liber- j al product.\nConsumption of rubber for cMl-\nlan purpose! in Canada has been\nslashed to about 10 per cent of the\npre-war figure, and that includes\nthe rubber that goes into tirei for\ncivilian cars Of the total available\nrubber supply, both synthetic and\ncrude, more than HO per cent ii being used for tirei, but most of them\nare needed to keep the armiei of\nCanada and ber  alhei rolling.\nBy JACK WILLIAMS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Sept 20 (CP) \u2014Can-\n\u2022da'i rubber supply situation has\neaiod considerably so far as requirements which can be met by\n\u2022ynthetic rubber are concerned;\nbut for other goodi\u2014particularly\ntlrei,\u2014other facton are limiting\nproduction,\nThe queitlon of Just when tlrei\nare likely to become generally\navailable is one officials are not\nyet prepared to answer. Rubber\nwith other supply situations, li\nunder current review.\nThe government-owned Polymer\nCorp., synthetic rubber plant near\nSarnia, Ont., is turning out Buna-S\ntype rubber at its rate capacity of\n3*i,000 tons a year: but some crude\nrubber is needed for the manufacture of tires and the crude rubber\nsupply ii extremely tight,\nAdded to that U the labor shortage common to most industries,\nmaking the general tire outlook a\nsomewhat complex picture.\nCanada's normal peacetime consumption of crude rubber run about\n35,000 tons a year. In 1041 under the\npreuure of war production it shot\nup to 80,000 toni. This year the Dominion will have to get along with\nabout 10,000 toos of crude.\nSynthetic rubber has confronted\nsclentuU and production men with\nnew problems, particularly ln the\nmanufacture of tires. The processing\nof synthetic tirei requires about 2U\nCANUCKS OCCUPY\nBOULOGNE;\nNAZIS FIGHTING\nEnemy Guns Still\nin Position to\nfire on the Town\nNORTH AND SOUTH\nWITH THE 1ST CANADIAN\nARMY, Sept 20 (CP Cable) -\nBoulogne wu entirely occupied by\nCanadian forces tonight with the\nclean-up of tht remaining few pockets of enemy resistance but the\nFrench channel town and iti port\naria rtmiit within shell firt of\nGerman gum ln position! to the\nNorth md South.\nCtniditn Infantry supported by t\nbig artillery concentration engaged\nin stiff fighting around these positions today.\nMeantime, Polish forcei which\nhave driven acrou the Belgian-Netherlands frontier pushed forward\nelement! to the town of Temeuien\non the South side of tht Schelde\nEstuary, IS airline milei from the\nNorth Sea. Pollih patrols reached\nthe estuary at several other pointi.\n(Supreme Allied headquarters\nuld Terneuzen hat been captured\nby Polish forces.)\nIn generally clear weather bomb-\ncarrying Typhoons operated over\ntht Canadian area and made successful attacks on German batteries\nat Calali, 20 miles. North and slightly Eut of Boulogne, and Dunkerque\ntO milei Northeast of Boulogne.\ninfantry pushing North trom the\nseized port within ilgh* of England's Kent cout occupied Wimllle,\n2H milet North md slightly Eut,\nbut fighting continued around Wun-\nereux, on the cout 2 Vi mllei North\nof Boulogne, into which maritime\nformations drove Sunday night\nGerman resistance still wai strong\ntonight in the defence area South\nof Boulogne where both Ontario\nand Maritime infantry art fighting\nCamdian formations art fighting\nthrough these Southern defences\nnearly two milei from Boulogne'!\nSouthern outskirts and are closing\nin on the Germani from two sides.\nArtillery concentritloni supporting\nthe Canadians outweigh the German\nguns several timet over.\nCanadian infantry and armored\nforces on the left flank of the Pollih\nunits are facing determined German\ntastern branch of the Leopold Canal, which they have not yet croased.\nNews of Allied\nSuccesses Will\nBombard Axis\nHuge  Pocket of Allied  Troops\nBattle Furiously Against Germans\nBy HOWARD COWAN\nAiiociated Rrett War Correipondent\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014British 2nd Army troops fought\ntonight to cross the Rhine River at Nijgemen, Holland, in a row\nto rescue a huge pocket of Allied airborne forces isolated'In\nthe Arnhejm sector and under slashing German attack.\nThe oil-important concrete bridge, IVi miles long 0^4\n600 feet above the swift flowing Waal Rhine, still is intact,\nHeadquarters declared officially at midnight, but it was firmly\nheld by the Germans, and a great, swirling battle was raatna>\nA heavy engagement also was in progress in the Arnneim\nsector, eight miles to the North, where the pocketed Alli-d\nairborne troops battled furious-?-\nly against German forces which\nsurrounded them.\nThe German! increased their air\nactivity greatly and threw plane!\nInto heavy bombing and strafing op-\neritlom both it Arhnhelm ind Nijmegen, tnd tlio it British-held\nEindhoven.\nThe greit bittle acrou the Rhine\nDelta, the German radio laid, might\nprove a decisive Western-front engagement\nSeventy milea to the South United\nStates lat Army troops reached\nGressenich, four miles East of Stol-\nberg. in Germany. German torces\nIn thla area fought furioualy and\nwith better coordination'than at\nany tirat ilnce the Battle of Nor-\nmandy, tront diapatchei said.\nTht   Americans  were   hinging\ngrimly to thi breaches In thi Siegfried   Lint,     They   repelled   re-\npeated  fierce  Infmtry and  tink\nattacks, tnd 3\u00ab tntmy tanks were\nknocked out by tha 1st Army In\ntodty'i-flgMltg'ilont.   Thi Oar-\nWtnt wire throwing In rei-.vei\nIn tn tftort tt  prevent further\npenetration Into Germany Eut of\nAachin.. ..\u00bb \"J,^M\nSupreme Headquarters. had ' no\ncofiflrmttlon of a r\\e\\il*tt Newi\nAgency front dlipatch that British\nforcea had reached the Waal River\nNortheast of Nijmegen, near the\nGerman border.\nHeadquarter! laid Polish forcea of\nthe 1st Canadian Army have captured the Netherlands port of Ter-\nneuien on the Scheldt, Estuary. 15\nairline milei from the North Sea\nafter mopping up Hulst and Axel.\nreipectivtly 15 and 22 miles Weit\nof Antwerp.\nTht Germin DNB. Agency\nelllmed Allied patrols from the\nAmhtlm sector which had driven\n\u2022crou the Netherlands-German\nfrontltr wtre puihed back in sharp\ncounttr-attacks. Allied reports said\nluppllei and reinforcements continued to be flown to the sky troops\nin this.area, despite heavy flak and\ndismal weather.\nLt.-Gtn. Dernpsey's British Snd\nArmy merged with the other two\nairborne task forces in the snow-\nballing drive across Southern Holland. Several clashes occurred, particularly at the town of Best, where\nconsiderable Britlih troops were occupied in dealing with a strong German counter-attack.\nfailure to take the Waal bridge\nwould mean it least dayj of delay\nwhile engineers Install pontoons\nacrois the wide, deep stream. This\nbridge and one steel rill ipan alongside  are  the only  available  cros-\nCINCINNATI. Sept. 20 (AP) \u2014\nNews of Allied successes will bombard Axis citizens on a 24-hour basis from the most powerful short\nwave transmitters ln the world, the\nOffice of War Information disclosed\ntoday. Three new short wave sta-\nHone, WLWL, WLWS and WLWR, j .jngs in the vicinity\neach capable of in output of more Nijmegen, i city of ipproximately\nthan 200.000 watts, have gone into I 50,000. Is sltusted on a high bluff\noperation 20 miles North of here ' on the Southern bank of the river,\nto disseminate nelvs and entertain- and once Gen Dernpsey's main\nment to Europe and to Africa and , forces have crossed the way will\nSouth America. be open lo them through a rolling\nvalley into the Ruhr, scarcely tour\nmiles to the East.\nAllied airborne forcei from tht\nEindhoven and Nijmegen landing\nareas South of the Waal Rlvtr,\nswelled ln size for the fourth\nstraight day by a sky armada nf\ntransports and gliders, wu fighting\nalongside Gen. Dempsey'i forcea to\nan effort to save the vital span tor\nmiles of British tanki ind Infantry\nchurning up from Belgium tor t\nsmash into the Ruhr.\ntudwlg Sertorlui, German military commentator, laid \"the fighting In South and Central Holland\nli continually Increasing In grim-\nneii, ilnce It It qultt evident thtt\nthe further development of tht\nwir on thl whole Western front\nwill depend t\u00bb a very gnat IX-\ntent on the outcome of thli struggle.\" \/\nBoth at Nijmegen ind Eut ot\nAachen is Germany Allied forett\nwere within 55 milei of Euen, homt\nof the great Krupp Armament Worki\nand heart of the Ruhr.\nA thick ground haze and muddy\nterrain provided a grim, bleak isj\nfor ti* fighting la ii, main battle)\nareairSOong the  German  frontltr.\n___A.trtill.frry roared conitantly\nfrom end (o end of the front, inter,\nspersed occasionally with the maddening   screams   of   charging   S.S.\nElite Guard Nazi  youth! ai thty\nthrew themselves against Allied ________\nchine-gun emplacement!.\nA field dispatch said Canadian\ninfantry and armor captured Aisen-\nede on the Betgian-Netherlindt\nfrontier near the Coast.\nDon Whitehead, Aiiociated Prott\ncorreipondent with American\nforcei Eait of Aachen, tald: \"There\nIt little doubt now that the \"Ger.\nmini are making their major\nitand it tha Siegfried tine.\"\nThe US. 3rd Army wai locked ln\na similar bitter struggle Eait of\nthe Moselle River in Northeaitem\nFrance agaioit German opposition\ndescribed by Headquarters aa \"hla*\nvy and determined.\"\nThe Allied 7th Army still wu at\nleast 12 miles from the Belfort Otto\nentrance into the Southern Rhine'\nValley and wai meeting iteidily\nstiffening resistance.\nThe great Brittany port of Brett\nmost of it reduced tn ruins by Allied\nbombardment and German demolitions, finally fell to American troopi.\nIt was estimated the count of Nazi\nprisoners might run as high at\n17,000,\nAustralian Ships\nin Morotai Fight\nN[W YORK, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014\nTwo Aultrlllin crullin ind two\nAultriliin deitroytri took plrt\nIn the bombing of Morotil llllnd\nIn lhe Molucca! Group South of\nthe Philippine! prior to thi Am-\n\u25a0rlein lindlngs there lut Frldiy\ntht Aultriliin Newi ind Infor-\nmitlon  Burlau  Mid  tonight.\n16,800 Cholera\nDeaths in India\nLUCKNOW, India. Sept 30 (CT-\nR-tutir)\u2014During Um 24 monthi\nfrom tha beginning of July to mld-\nSeptember, ItJOO penom died of\nrholtra In tht Unlttd Province*.\nIt waa announced today Alto-\ng*th-r M.000 per. mii were taken\nill during thla period ind It. i\ndlathl wtrt reported  In on* \u00ab**k\nCracks Churchill\non 4th T\u00abrm Talk\nWASHINGTON. Sept 20 (AP>-\nPrlm* Miniiter Churchill'! Quebec declaration of fjlendihlp for\nPreildent Rooa*velt wai daacrlbed\ntonight by Representative E M\nDlrkwn iRep-llll \u25a0\u25a0 i \"fourth\nterm ipeeeh\"\n\"Th* peopl* of thli country.'\" Mr.\nDlrkwa Mid. \"are quite capable _\nrunning thtlr own affair*, and selecting thtir Pr*ildent without out\nlid* idvic*.\"\nCaruso Turns Pale\nAs Details Told\nBy   GEORGE   IRIA\nAiiMlattd Prni Staff Writer\nROMI. Stpt \u00bb (AP)\u2014Pletro\nCar-lie, former Roma pollca chief,\non trial for hla Ufa In an Impro-\nvlied courtroom elaborately\nguarded to protect him from mob\nviolence, turned pale and tremb\nled today aa a medical expert\ngave ttark deicrlptlon of the bod-\nlea of executed hoiUgea recovered from Rome'i \"Smolenik Forett\"\u2014the Ardeatlna Cavea,\nTb\u00bb husky dfffndant told thr\ncourt that Field Marshal Gen. Albert KeiMlrlna. Nail commander\nIn Italj, ordered him to furnuh\nhoiUf\u00ab for execution in reprisal\nfor tht bomhlng of an SS   column\nHe uld, however, that he waa\naware of tht gravity of tht rtqueil\nand cut tht numberi of hoilafles\nturned over to the Germani from\ntht 80 demanded to-M.\nProfewor Attlllln AicartlU, director of tht medical-legal tnvtstl-\ngitioni it tht miaaaert actne. told\ntht court 31 of the total of Hi hod-\nlea exhumed out of the dank caves\nnetr Rofftt'i indent Appian Way\nwert fou.id beheaded Thtir necka\nhtd bwn imaahtd by high tuploj-\nIve bullets and time had dnne the\nrest.\nAscarelll said the bodies \"were\npiled up in two gallrrir-g like sardines ln a tin.\" that all the bodies\nwere found with their hands t:ed\nbehind their hncks and thai the\nGermans who rarned out the executions htd mined the cives to oh\nstruct  recovery of the victims\nThe trial was adjourned until tomorrow after several witnesses\ntestified agamit Caruso. They included the preterit Police Chief Enrico Moranin. who said Musv.lmi\ncongratualtcd Caruso for breaking\ninto  St.  Paul's  Church\nThree witnesses testified In his\nfavor. Including an 84-year-old bishop said Caruio once released n\npriest from Regina Coell prison\nupon  the  bishop's  request.\nThe first round went against Caruio when the court overruled a\ndefence motion for a p^sinonemrnt\nof the trial until nix months after\ntht war\nIn contrast to the violence marking the original effort to brum thr\ntrial Monday when one of the kr\\\nwitnesses was healrn to death hy\nan angry mob, the he,.ring began\nquietly  ind  without disturbance\nJaps Strike\nToward Wuchow\nCHUNGKING, Sept 20 lAP) \u2014\nJapanese bent on splitting that\nhard-pressed country in half were\nreported moving tonight toward tht\nstrategically-important port of Wuchow,\nFar to the West, on the Yunnin\nfront, a Chlneie communique announced, the heavily-reinforced\nJapanese were compelled to withdraw from some positions around\nLungling in the fighting for tb\u00ab\nBurma Road.\nAppraising development! In Cut*\n| em China, P. H. Vang, Chinese Cabinet spokesmnn, said \"It cannot b\u00ab\ndenied that the military altuation\nia very serious.\" He inflated, however, that ample preparations wert\nbeing made for the defence of Kweilin, where the United States 14th\nAir Force has destroyed and aban\ndoned most of its instnllations.\nConsul Learns\nParts of\nGreece Freed\nHALIFAX. Sept M tCPi -Lt.\nCmdr. Basil Hanldei. Greek consul here, aaid tonight he had received a wire from the Grtt .\nconsulate at Ottawa advising him\nthat parts of Greece had been liberated.\nThe consul said he undentood\nlhe southern half of Greece, Including Athena, had been freed.\nHt did not know how the hh*ra\n(Ion had been accomplished, ht\nsaid\nHa announced that Greek ship*\nIn the har .or here would fly tht\nflags of the United Nations in\ncelebration tomorrow,\n_________\n____.\n r\n\u25a0\"-\u25a0^pp\n ,\u2014\u201e ,\u2014, ,..,\n\u2014\n\t\n>\nt - NELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SIFT. \u00bb., 1t44\nUrges Development of Secondary\nIndustries After War\nat B.(. Products Exhibition\nConcentration on secondary Industrie* after the war, and support\not Britlih Columbia products were\n}{ urg-d or A. C. Foreman, Field\n' Secretary of the B. C. Products\nBureau, who addressed a large\ngathering at the Eagle Hall Wednesday night. Samples of scores of\nB, C. made goods were exhibited\nand films showed processes ot varl-\n\\\\ ousB. C. factories.\nMr.  Foreman  felt  the  work  of\nboating of B. C. products should\n' btcarrled Into schools by means of\ntd .rational   films.   It   would   givt\n\u2022tutfents some Idea of the 1900 ln-\ni  dustrics of the province and also\nln vocational  guidance. Stu-\nlmbued  with   the  spirit  of\nprovince  who   left  for  other\nof the continent would carry\nthem   enthusiastic  praise  of\n\u25a0rovince.\nprovince now had the four\nprimary Industries \u2014 fishing,\n,g, lumbering and agriculture\nle secondary   Industries now\nyed _,000. After the war the\n[ary Industries should be ex-\nAsfan example of the employment spread around by one Industry, he showed how a can of tomatoes Involved the work of the farmer and his Investment in machinery,\nthe truck for carrying the product\nto the factory, the cans, labels, Ink\nand cartons needed for packing,\nall providing work.\nWAR ROBS SUPPLY\nOne of B. C'l natural Industries\nwas that of manufacture of furniture and 1200 were employed In\nthis work. Many Industries were\nunable to supply the domestic market because they were fully employed ln filling war orders, and\nmany would be producing far more\nlt workers could be obtained. This\nmeant that goods from Eastern\nCanada filled Western shelves.\nHowever, he urged his audience\nto first buy from local merchants\nToast-Tea\nIVt'ARF.1\nBe\u00ablng a pert orm__noa of Hamlet\n__ot long ago, we could sympathize\nwith the Pnlll-ttnt who witnessed\nthe play for t__s first time. Ha\nWM asked what He thought ol It.\nC ,_p___. hla dlaguat. partl.u-\nly at what he thought waa Its\nfntlr. lack of oOgtaailty. \"Why\"\nha explained indignantly, \"Hi\nBottling- but a itrtng of quota-\nItmi from first to latt.\" Hot long\n\u2022a- w\u00bb wen reading about Baron\nJtartin. a ootid 19th century\nJudj., who la laid to ha _ lead\nnothing but law. All other llttrt-\nlti_ he Q____d_r-d a waste of\nHot. But finally oni of Ms\n_______ Mr. Justice Talfourd, Induced htm to read Romeo and\\\nlull et, which Talfourd knew al-\n\u25a0 _ by h-art Hi awaited with\nstatu Interest thi verdict of hli\nltarned brother, who reported ln\ndu* _-Ur-t. Ha aaid: \"I find that\nH la Juat a tli-ni- of lmprobablll-\ntm from _\u00bb_ nnina to end.\" few\ntan douM tha truthfulnMa ot the\narlt-_!_m, however much we may\ndepltre Ita lnad-qna _'.\nCoODIRHAM\/Woi-Tf\nLimited\nTORONTO, ONTARIO\nwho were all taking pert ln civic\nlife and had a good variety of goods\nto offer.\nDespite word to the contrary, he\nsaid Coast business men wanted the\ngood will of the Interior. The Vancouver Board ot Trade, which sponsors B. C. Products Week, was at\nthe service of the people of the Interior, he said. An example of this,\nhe said, was ita sponsoring ot Apple Week, which had In one seaion\nboosted apple sales from 25 carl to\n75 can a month. This had taken\ncare of fruit surpluses in the Okanagan and won the good will of fruit\nmen.\nFirst job'of industry after the\nwar would be. to develop Its plants\nand payrolls. A lurvey had shown\nthat many planned to double the\nsize of their plants as soon as materials and workers were available.\nEMPLOYMENT IMPORTANT\nH. B. Gore, President of the Nelson Retail Merchants Association,\n.which sponiored the exhibition, was\nChairman of th* meeting. The moit\ndifficult and important post war\nproblem would be employment, he\nsaid. Production In B. C. now wa\nat it* maximum stage just a* market* were limitless. After the war\nthey would not exist and there was\nbound to be some unemployment\nHe urged study of the meaning of\nthe llogan, \"Buy B. C. Producta and\nBuild B. C. Payrolls.\" Here was one\nanswer to the problem. Women of\nCatiada ipent 85 per cent of pay\nchecks, and he felt thla meant they\nhad 85 per cent of the responsibility\nof putting the paychecks ln the proper channels. If B. C. goods were\ndemanded, the dealers would stock\nthem. Demand created production\nproduction created payrolls.\nBuyers could also be sellers, he\nsaid. Boosting of products sold them,\nand people could also be sold on the\nwonderful Summer season! and\nscenic attractions of B. C.\nMayor N. S. Stibbs welcomed Mr.\nForeman on behalf of th* citizens,\nexpressing their appreciation of Mr.\nForeman's tremendous efforts in\neducating citizens as to what B. C.\nindustry could do.\nDuring a quh contest, about K\ncitizens carried off cash and crate*\nof fruit as prizes, while several\nyoung speakers alio won money for\ngiving their viewi on B. C. product!. Among the speakers were Jimmy Ballantyne, Mlsi Eileen Almony,\nBob Edgar and Miss Betty Riley. A\ncrate of fruit wis won by T. H.\nGlover was auctlon'ed oft far |8. It\nwent TO Mayor Stlbbs, who donated\nthe money to the Salvation Army\nand uked that the fruit bt aent to\nKootenay Lake GenerBl Hospital.\nAmong is great diversity of product* displayed around tha hall were\ncanned vegetablea and milk, coffee,\nand tea, (lour, fruit, candy, cheese,\njams, paper and canvas goods, shoes,\nmattresses, rooting materials, leather goods, gloves, floor wax, nails,\npaint, anti-freeze, deodorizers and\ndisinfectants, rubber atampi and\nseals, Ink and paste.\nChurch Leaders\nta Plan for\nPort-War Britain\nLONDON, Sept. 10 (CP Reuter)\u2014\nChurch of England leader* will be\nasked at their mid-November ai-\ntambly-ont of tht moit important\ntVtT held\u2014to approve and act upon\na Chrlltlan venlon of poit-war Brl-\nMoot Rev. William Temple, Arch-\nbiahip of Canterbury, _taoie Sir\nMontague Barlow to head a committee* of social tnd technical expert*\nto prepare I full scale rtport on\n\"the church and the planning of\nBritain.\"\nJudge Nlsbet\nTries (hernenkoff;\nFines Him $25\nROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. JO- In\ncounty court here Tuesday, the case\nof Rex vs Nick Chernenkoff was\nretried by His Honor, Judge W. A.\nNisbet, on appeal, with Leo Geni-\nner of Nelson, solicitor for the appellant, Chernenkoff, while R.J.G.\nRichards of Trail appeared for the\nCrown. The charge wai of Indecent\nexposure.\nChernenkoff wai found guilty by\nHis Honor, and waa fined $115 without costs.\nDouglas Refuses to Take Blame\non Seed Grain; Says\n\"Quarrel\" Is With Sask. People\nRIGINA, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014 Premier T. C. Douglas of Saskatchewan\nsaid ln a statement tonight that\nFederal Finance Minister Haley's\n\"quarrel\" over the collection of\noutstand 1938 seed grain advances\ntn the province waa not with the\ngovernment but with the people of\nSaskatchewan. Seed grain notes\nfalling due Oct. 31 total $17,700,000.\nMr. Douglas' statement said Saskatchewan people had endorsed\ntwo C.C.F. proposals for settlement\non the basis of 00 per cent of the\nprincipal.\nHe said Mr. Haley'* letter dealing\nwith the Dominion government's\nstand ln the seed grain situation had\nreached him late today.\n\"Mr. Haley in hi* letter contends\nthat we went to tht country and\npromised the people we would make\na settlement on the basis of 50 per\ncent of the principal and that now\nIt Is up to us to pay for lt, not tht\nFederal government,\" said Mr.\nDouglas.\n\"The truth la we went to the country and said that we considered the\n1938 drought wa* a national emergency and therefore a federal rea-\nponilblllty. But wa were prepared\nNew Cream\nDeodorant\nSafely helps\nStop Perspiration\n1. Doa not tot dram or Bifn'i\nihmi. Doei not if. Kite skin.\nL KoTsidngtndrr.CinbcuM-\nright .Iter sharing.\nS_  PfeTCnti un_rr-_.rm odor,\n[   _dpi itop penpir. .ion iifel)..\n*. A pare, white, inn _eptic_j\nj     I __ inleil vif.il-Uf-\u00a3 crriin.\nm. Awirde . t\\yy _o?\u00bbl Sol of\n.    \/(iiriuiii [ruMuWo. Ij-ijulrr.\n- inj\u2014hirmksi to fibria Um\n- Am _ regularly i\n, -, ,t,e large\"\n____-*-_!\nSloan Forestry\nCommission al\nNelson Oct. 27-28\nVANCOUVER, Sept JO (CP) \u2014\nThe Sloan Forestry Commission will\nvisit the Interior next month and\nwill sit at seven centre* between\nOct 13 and 31, lt was announced\nhere today.\nIt is believed there will be no\nfurther hearings ln Vancouver until\nafter Mr. Justice Gordon Sloan,\nthe Commissioner, and H. W. Davey\nof Victoria, the Commission counsel, return early ln November.\nTheir itinerary Is as follows:\u2014\nPrince George, Oct. 13, 14; Kam-\nloop*. Oct. 18 to 18; Vernon, Oct.\n19, 20; Kelowna, Oct 31 to 23; Penticton, Oct 24, 25: Nelion. Oct. 27,\n28; and Cranbrook, Oct 30, 31.\nMorotai Based\nPlanes Let\nLoose on Japs\n39*\nAln 1V iivl S9f Jtfi\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nNEW GUINEA, Sept. 30 (AP) -\nOne of the heaviest air attacks yet\nunleashed by land-based planes\nagainst the Philippines smashed\nDavao, on Mindanao, on Monday,\nheadquarters reported today. There\nwas no enemy Interception.\nIt was the second heavy blow at\nthe Philippines since the Allies\nachieved a new air base at Moratai\nin the Mohiccai, 300 miles Southeast of Mindanao.\nThe new blow by heavy bombers\nfollowed the first low-level attack\non the Philippines by mediums Sunday.\nOne hundred and twenty torn of\nbombs were dropped by the heavies\nat Davao, starting many fires and\nexplosions.\nHeadquarters announced another\nair attack on Celebes. South of the\nPhilippines. In day and night attacks Monday, raiders destroyed\nfour enemy planes and sank a lugger.\nCharge American\nBusiness Men\nSlip Into Paris\nLONDON, Sept. 21 (Thundiy)\n(AP)\u2014The Dally Mall chargtd\ntoday that American representatives of big buslneu wen riding\nInto Paris on a Supreme Allied\nHeadquarters \"magic carpet\" and\nIn the uniforms ot \"comparatively\nJunior officers,\" and that certain\nAmerican Interests wen exploiting military agreements with Britain for purely commercial purposes\nBritlih subject* and even British\nofficials wait in vain for permission to enter France, the newspaper\nsaid, and are amazed at the alacrity\nwith which American businessmen\nire given facilitiei for travel to\nBrltalh and transfer to France.\nThe Mail prefaced the article,\nwritten by Colin Bednall In London, with a note that it wai expected the chargei would be assailed both ln Britain and the United\nStates and added: \"We feel only\ngood can be done by bringing Into\nthe open a subject which already\nhas caused serious damage to Anglo-\nAmerican relations.\"\n\"We do not believe the American\nauthorities can be fully aware of\nthese charges.\" the Mall laid. \"We\nhope they will be thoroughly Investigated.\"\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (AP)\n\u2014Charges appearing In the London Dally Mill thit American\nbuslneu representatives wen ap-\npiarlng In France upon the permission of Supreme Headquarter!, while British lubjeeti an\nrtfused entry Into France, met\ndenial   here.\nThe War and Navy Departments\ntook no official action but their\nspokesmen indicated their belief\nthat the London paper's chargei\nwere in error.   \u2022\nto collect 90 par cent of the principal from the farmer. The principal amounts to $14,000,00.\n\"We were prepared to make an\nadjustment to tht farmer* who paid\nln full which coat u* approximately\n$3,000,000. But thlt wa\u00bb all we wert\nprepared to collect and all we were\nprepared to pay.\n\"On June 15 the people of the\nProvince gave ua a mandate to collect 50 per cent an no mora Thla\nmandate was ln line with the lentl-\nmenta expressed year after year by\nrural municipalities assemble, ln\nthe Saskatchewan Association of\nconvention.\n\"Mr. Ilsley'* quarrel la with the\nSaskatchewan people who endorsed\nthe proposal we made for eettlement\nof the seed grain debt.\"\nEarlier Mr. Douglas criticised Mr.\nIlsley for releasing the letter to the\npress before lt hod reached the premier at Regina.\nMr. Ilsley turned down proposal*\nfor settlement of the leed grain advances and said acceptance of them\n\"would throw upon the Dominion\nGovernment the cost of carrying\nout your (Mr. Douglas') election\npromises.\"\nGats Five Years\nFor Stealing\nAllowance Cheques\nWINNIPEO, Sept. JO (CP)-Ar-\nthur. Evans, former Toronto policeman, today was sentenced by Judge\nJ. C. Cory ln county court to five\nyears ln penitentiary when convicted of theft of soldiers' dependents'\nallowance checks, and for possessing blank national registration\ncards. The checks were valued at\n$\u00ab08.\nEvani Ii also awaiting trial at the\nnext assizes on a charge of murder\nin connection with the death of a\nbank accountant during an attempted holdup lait June 2.\nOrders Granted\nfor Winding Up\nTrail Estates\nNo Surprise Over\n(losing oi\nSask. Gov't House\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) - Governmental circles here expressed\nno surprise or comment on the announcement of Premfer T. C. Douglas of Saskatchewan's Government\nHouse will be closed.\n1^ Is understood, however, there\nare constitutional barriers to the\nFederal Government complying\nwith Mr. Douglas' request that after\nthe retirement of the present Lieutenant-Governor, Hon. Archibald McNab, the Chief Justice of the Province be asked to perform the functions  of the  Lieutenant-Governor.\nThe British North America Act\nIn Section 58 provides that \"For\neach Province there shall be an\nofficer, styled the Lieutenant-Governor, appointed by the Governor-\nG^peral-ln-Council by instrument\nunder the Great Seal of Canada.\"\nThe action in Section 87 also provides that the Govemor-in-Council\nROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. 20 - A\nnumber   of   order,   were   made   In from   ,       t    M ^ an\nCounty Court here Tuesday by His   adr\u00a3inUtrator to execute ^e func-\nHonor, Judge W. A. Nisbet, in\ndealing with chambers applications.\nLetters of administration were\ngranted to Peter Scott Work, for\nthe settling of the estate of hli\nbrother,  David  Work,  ot  Trail\nR. J. G. Richards of Trail was\nsolicitor for the petitioner,\nValue of estate was $.1648 80. A\nnephew, James Work of Vancouver, receives $1800. The balance is\ndivided, one-sixth each to three\nbrothers and two sisters in Scotland, and one brother, Peter Scott\nWork, Vancouver.\nR. J. G. Richards appeared for\nRichardi Investments Ltd, which\nmarie application for extension of\ntime for filing with the Registrar\nof Companies, the return of allotment of shares. The order was\ngranted by Judge Nisbel.\nC. H. Clegg was solicitor for the\nofficial administrator, James Skinner, for the settling of the estate of\nBessie Victoria Broa'dfoot, of Trail,\nwho died at Oliver, June 21 last\nThe order was granted to administrator of the estate, the value of\nwhich is $1420 45. Beneficiaries are\na lister. Agnes Flewltt, and brother, William Wallace-Broadfoot, who\nshared equally.\ntions of the Lieutenant-Governor\nduring his \"absence, illness or other\nInability.'*\nAs the two sections are Interpreted they are taken to impose a\nduty on the Federal Government to\nappoint a Lieutenant-Governor for\neach Province, from which the Government can not relieve itself without constitutional change.\nThe appointment of the Lieutenant-Governor and the fixing and\npayment of his salary are matters\nfor the Federal Government, but\nthe provision of an official residence, usually called Government\nHouse, is a mutter for Provincial\nauthorities.\nThe Dominion, accordingly, Is not\nconcerned with whether or not\nSaskatchewan provides a Government House,\nCOLDS\nRelieve misery, tt most moi\ndo. Rub the\nthroat, client\nand back with\ntime-tilted\nf VapoRub\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI        -YOUR  VANCOUVIB  HOMr\nDufferin Hotel\n\u2022eymour 8t Vsncouver, i. C\nNewly rtnevatad th rouih\nout   Phonti   ind   \u2022levator-\nA.   PATTERSON,   lata   of\nColeman. Alta, Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\n|.C. MUIR\nPhones-. Ntlion 77; Roiiland 2liL. Trill 1180\nConntction* For:\u2014\nSALMO    -   KASLO   -    CRISTON\nNAKUSP\nMiss Parsons to\nVisit Nelson for\nConsumer Branch\nVANCOUVER, B C, Sept 10 -\nHarriet Panons, Edunitlonal Secretary of the Consumer Branch of\nthe Wartime Prlcei and Trirle\nHoard li to visit Prltlsh Columbia.\nAi educatlonil lecretarr she\nworki with the preild.nti of the\nwomen'i nitlonal organization! In\nCanidi. She li tn meet provincial\npresidents of these jtroupi In British Columbia.\nMiss rarsoni will tie In Victoria\nSept 29 ind 3(1. Vancouver Oct. 2,\n8, 4, and 5. and In Nelson Oct fl.\nIn Victoria she will meet the presidents of nine wnmen's groups and\nIn Vinrouvir _< orfanliatlnna will\nronfer with her (tnough their presidents.\nMen. Women Over 40\nFeel Weak,Worn,Old?\nWant Normal P*f>, Vim, Vitality 7\n\u2022 ihtu-l-1   ftattUm   rtmjtt\nMl   Tr; Oitftt   Oniithi\nit.. __*\u00bb M-M in*. \u00bbo m\nOttt  -_\u00ab_,  ttn. 1\ncm f**i ttkl*i m... _\n\u2022 \u25a0\"\"*_ l  l..n-r<-._llt-i'_l\u00abp)(\n4fi     H-jupIlN I run, fnlrlni.1\nHi   n4it ftm |-i nanttj im\t\ntr-Mlut-li . , Hi* 'min Tr.nl,. TftMtM *nlr tit   FW\n-tie ti \u00bbU fnatl ituf tlcutt \u2022 r\u00ab7wW\u00ab\nReserve Decision\non Barilla Appeal\nVICTORIA, tept M (CP)-The\nBritlih Columbia Appeal Court\ntoday re\u00bberved decl\u00bblon on the\nappeal of Albert Barilla againit\nthe death aentenca Impoied on\nhim after ha wai convicted of\nmurdering Wellington B. Wallace.\nIn the Oraycourt Hotel In Vancouver,  April  2.\nBarilla wai aentenced tn be hanged Oct. 31.\nStuart Henderson, Barilla'! roun-\nlel, told the Court he waa given no\nopportunity to go into a pre-dcath\nitatement by Wallace reportedly\nmode to a police officer who found\nthe wounded man lying In a corridor tn tha Oraycmirt The itatement had b+tn brought out while\nth* Jury waa excluded and wai\nruled Inadmissible by the trial\nJudge on the (roundi it waa nnt\na dying declaration lince Wallace\nhad not anticipated death from his\nwounds whan he made it.\nMr. Henderson rend excerpU from\nthe itatement which quoted Wallace ai laying, in part, \"I went out\nInto Ui* hall and he ahot me.\"\nActing Chief Justice Gordon\nSloan aaked Mr. Hendenon if he\ncould ihow where he hai sought to\nbring the matter up In croas-exam-\ntnatlon.\n\"It waa ruled out.\" in!d Mr Henderson, \"before I had a chance tn\nask a question \" He had not investigated thr statement and had not\nbeen pYrpared to ssk questions on\nit at th* time, h\u00ab said.\nCounsel contended any mistake\nh* might hav* made on th* Issue\nrould not militate agalnat thr prisoner.\nFinally, Mr- Henderaon turned to\nthe self-defence alternaltve he railed In the defence. Evidence, he\nlaid, showed hii inmate In the suit*\nwher* the fatal shooting allegedly\noccurred hsd left the room to get\nn psrtv to come n_c_ and start *\nrow. He contended Wallf.ce, a member of the returning partv, had\nstarted towards Barilla That point,\nhe said had not been stressed suffi-\nclenlly to the Jury,\nHere Is Your\nFur Coat\nChoose your Fur Coat now...\nStart paying for it and you will\nhave it paid for when winter\ncomes.\nFrench Seal\n(DYED RABBIT)\nGoney\n(DYED RABBIT)\nOpossum\n(GRAY)\n^ Wallaby\nPersian Lamb\nSIZES 16 TO 20.\n$110.\u00b0\u00b0 to S350.00\nFink's Ready*to'Wear\nAIR COMMODORE McLEOD\nPROG.CONS. CHOICE\nIN FRASER VALLEY\nMISSION, B. C, Stpt. JO <CP.-\nAlr Commodort Earl McLeod of\nChllliwack, B.C., today waa nominated Progressive - Conservative\ncandidate for Fraier Vallev Riding\nIn the next Federal electton. Air\nCommodore McLeod, formerly Com-\nmandint: Officer at Patricia Bay,\nB.C., resides in Chllllwaclc.\nFinland Starts\nTask of\nQuiz (onfest and Round Table\nDiscussion Close Third Day\nof Fire Chiefs College Here\nB.C. Units of\nW. Can. Hydro\nAll Show Gains\nVANCOTrvn_R, Sept. 20 (CP)\nWest Canadian Hydro-Electric Corporation. Ltd., annual statement for\nyear ending June 30 reports all\nthree major units in B C. showed\nincreased revenue.\nA special redemption fund has\nheen set up for meeting the $200,000\n6Mt per cent debentures maturing\nJuly 1. 1945. Ross Peers, President,\nsaid today. During the year $131,000\nhas been set aside fbr this purpose.\nWest Canadian Hydro distributes\npower and light In the Okanagan\nfrom a recently enlarged plant at\nRhuswnp Falls. Its contract with\nWest Kootenay Power __ Light for\npower from Shuswap Falls has aided in establishment of the redemption fund.\nThe company also owns Okanagan Telephone Company, nnd the\nPacific Power & Water Co. Ltd.,\nserving Chllliwack through the Elk\nCreek Waterworks Co. Ltd., Hope\nthrough the Hope Utllltiei, Ltd.,\nand Quesnel through Quesnel Light\nft. Power Co., Ltd., and Quesnel\nTelephone   Company   Ltd.\nIn Chllliwack, layi the report, a\nM0,000 expenditure hai been approved for an alternative 12-inch\npipeline to increase the pressure as\nBonn   as   manpower   Is   available.\nTotal gross revenue for the year\nwas $7 Hi .WW. against $_70,.VH) Customers increased from 13,150 to 13,-\n851. Depreciation writeoffs were\n$177,319. against $149,737. Capital\nadditions were $121,554, against\n$134,405. funded debt rose from\n$2.fMA,0.tfl to $3,090,000. Net profit\nwas  $59,973.\nSI. Paul Ties\nUp Series 3-3\nST. PAUU Sept. 10 (AP) - St.\nPaul came from behind lonljlit m\nicon t 5-1 victory ovtr Toltdo In\n10 Innlnfi tnd lend thtlr lemi-\nflml play off atrial Into thl levinlh\nuamt. ie. for tomorTO-. nl|ht. Btch\nlearn now haa won thrte gimn\nToltdo 1   S   1\nSt.   Paul J   I   J\nWhitehead,     Miller     (10)     and\nSilii-ll\/., Buktr tnd Caatro.\nSTOCKHOLM, Sept JO (AP)-\nThe Finnish people turned today\nto the task of fulfilling the terms\nby which their country obtained an\narmistice with Ruisla\u2014terma whose\nfull weight became apparent with\nMoscow's announcement of details\nof the agreement\nThe most optimistic Finnish view\nof the situation probably was rimmed up best by one of the Parliament's leading peace advocatei, Ar-\ntos Virtanen, who told a correspondent of the newspaper Aftonbladet:\n\"Peace has come late\u2014very late\u2014\nbut if we do our best, 1 am lure it\nwill  not  have come too li_e.\"\nTht newspaper Aftontldnlngen\nsaid lt was undentood that the Allied Control Commission under\nRussian General SJdanov already\nhad arrived at Helsinki and had\nbegun administering the armistice\ntermi.\nMeanwhile, the resldenti of\nPorkkala Peninsula, which the Soviet! obtained as a naval base, began evacuation of that territory,\none of the oldest settlements In\nFinland which was pioneered and\nIs largely populated by Swedish\nFinns.\nThe iltuation ln Northern Finland, where Finnish troops with\nRussian help might disarm and\ncapture all Germans remaining In\nthe country, remained obscure. Although there wai no official confirmation, the Finns were reported\nmoving northward close on the\nheeU of the retiring Germans.\nSettlement ol\nCollision Case\nGives Child $500\nROSSLAND, B.C. Sept. 20 - Before Ills Honor Judge W. A. Nlsbit,\nIn County Court here Tuesday,\nParker Williams of Trail appeared\nfor the petitioner, Katie Antlfaeff,\nInfant, ln the application for approval of settlement of damages, and\nrelease of Western Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd, and Driver Andrew John Miller, also the Burni\nLumber St Coal Co. of Nelson, and\nthe driver of lis truck, Konkin\nThr accident took place Auguit 9,\n19.3.\nHla Honor granted \u00bb.WO and coitl\nand disbursements fixed at $25.\nMr. Williami wai authorised by\nthe Court lo purchaae a $..0fl educational policy for the benefit of\nKatie  Antlfaeff.\nA quit contest and round table\ndlicuailon ended the third day of\ntht B.C. Fire Chiefs' Association\nFire College being held in Nelaon\nthli weak.\nTht quiz contest wu ln the form\nol two paptra, tht fint a drawing\nof tht Nelaon Tin Department\nPumper tn which tht delegate! put\ntht name of thl equipment, and a\nqueitlon paper. Judges for thla\ncontest were T. Ttylor, Deputy Fire\nChief for Victorit; T. F. Dowllng,\nChief Engineer of the B.C. Fire\nUnderwriter!; and A- A. MacDonald of CP. Airliner Winner! of\ntht contest will bt announced tt\ntht banquet Thuraday evening.\nConsiderable discussion wu held\non equipment used ln fighting chimney fires. N. U. Mathtton, Fire\nChief of New Westminater, told\nhow on several occasions they had\nhad trouble with chlmneyi iplit-\nting due to the ute of too much\nwater. It wu the general opinion\nof several of tht chiefs that the use\nof the finest spray possible was the\nbeat lolutlon to this problem. Several used tht method of lowering\ntht nozzle down Inside the chimney\nand few reported any trouble of\nsplitting chlmneya.\nFire Chief E. G. Clayard of Oak\nBay brought up a discussion about\nuse   of  ambulances   in   connection\nf Tt nam -Wrm tt MOHTULY\"^\nFemale Weakness\nr.y.ll\u00bb E Plnkham'i Tattttbll Con-\npound la mtdi *ip--i_li_- fr uvman\nto bilp rallari pirlodlo pain with\nnt, nervous, tired, irrlubli r<_-\nInfi -due lo functional monthly\ndm urban -aa. Plnkhanfa Compound\nhele* nature aad that*t iba _r_4\nof madlclua ta burl Follow latxl\ndlrictlona. Worth Ujlngl\nLYDIAE. PINKHAM'S SSSJK\nDouglas Favors\nRe-Confederation\nREGINA, Sept. 20 . CP) - Premier T. C. Douglas said in a national\nCBC broadcast tonight that there\nare three objectives in Canada that\nonly the C.C.F. party can achieve.\nTheae were:\n1. Tru* national unity In Canada.\n1 \"A itrong and liable government\n3. \"Prevention of another depression,\"\nThe Saskatchewan C.C.F. Premier\nsaid OCX, maintained harmony\nbetwaen Provincial and Federal\nGovernmenti could only be brought\nabout when \"we are prepared to\nreallocate constitutional powers and\nfinancial responsibilities.\" Canada's\nconstitutional requirements had\nfailed to keep pace with economic\nneeds, he claimed.\nThe C.C.F. believes that the post\nwar era should be^in with a period\nof rewnfederatioi- in which such\nthings as a national labor code, standardization of health laws and national reaponiibllity for unemployed\nshall be assured by the Federal\ngovernment.\"\nCanada could v'^ct a multiplicity\nof partlei none itrong enough to\ngoven. or have a coalition of the\nold parties or elect the C C F. to a\nclear majority, he added\nwith the Fire Department!. *_\u00bb\nNew Westminster Mr. Matheion\nreported that ihis had been found\nunsatisfactory while at Kamloops\nIt had been reported most satisfactory.\nA discussion was held on the color of fire boxes in relation to letter mail boxes, and It was suggested\nthat the Association write the Government to see what could be done\nin this matter.\nFire Chief H. H. Miller of TraU\nasked if the delegates had another\nmethod beside the use of grappling\nhooki in recovery of drowned bodies. He'stated that the Trail Department was called out on a number of these cases to help the City\nPolice. Considerable discussion waa\nheld but no better method could be\nsuggested,\nFire Chief E. G. Clayardi of Oak\nBay suggested that the meeting go\non record as supporting the resolution of the Union of B.C. Municipalities that fi-emen continue with\na 48-hour week after the war. It\nwas felt that this would help to\ngive employment to the temporary\nfiremen now employed .and the\npermanent ores returning from\noverseas.\nPictures were shown on the construction and care of hoses. .Ther*\nwas also a shcrt film on the modern method of fighting oil fire*.\nChief E. G. Clayard of Oak Bay\nacted as Chairman of the meeting.\nD0DDS\nKIDNEY\n_, PILLS\nTHE SUPERIOR\nBATHROOM\nTISSUE\nYour Crocer hai\nIt now.\nSOVEREIGN\n mar\nBrest fo Be\nHuge Allied\nSupply Base\nALLIED SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, Sept. 20 (AP).- Steel-torn\nBrest, France's fourth port, was held\nby Americans today after a bitter\nilx-weeks liege, and now it is to be\nconverted into a great new funnel\nfor supplies to the German invasion\nline 500 miles to the East.\n\"All organized resistance\" by the\n\u25a0trong, stubborn garrison that had\npledged Hitler to hold out to death\nceased last night, Supreme Headquarters said. But there still was\nsporadic shooting likely against isolated pockets.\nThere was no announcement immediately of the number of prisoners\ntaken from the garrison, which once\nnumbered up to 18,000 men.\nBrest has been under determined\nAmerican assault since Aug S, when\nan armored column assisting in the\nsealing off of Brittany punched into\nthe city, but then withdrew. Hundreds of tons of steel from bombs and\nartillery coupled with troop assaults\nfinally beat down the enemy.\nA German broadcast that Hitler\nhad awarded one of the highest\nHermann Ramcke, enemy commander at Brest, indicated the value\nthe German Command placed on\nhis stand, delaying by weeks Allied\nuse of Brest to feed '.he armies battering in the doors of the Reich. The\naward was the Oak Leaves with\nSwords and Diamonds to the Knight\nCross of the Iron Cross. Brest is\n389 rail miles from Paris.\nIts fortifications were started by\nRichelieu in 1631. The Germani\nmade it a submarine nesl. It is rated\nas one of the finest naval stations\nof Europe, with a mile of deep-water quays and excellent deep-water\nanchorages.\nWOMAN'S MANGLED\nBODY FOUND\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Sept.\n20 (CP) \u2014 The mangled body of a\nwoman identified aa Mrs. Margaret\nRoberts. 60, of New Westminster\nwas found on the Great Northern\ntracks here last night.\nChurchill Lauds\nCanadian\nDivision, Italy\nBy   BILL   B088\nWITH THE CANADIANS ON\nTHE ADRIATIC FRONT, Sept. 26\nICP Cable) - Tribute to the part\nplayed by the Canadian diviSons\ncommander by Maj.-Gen. Vokes of\nWinnipeg and Ottawa, and Maj.-\nGen. Hoffmeister of Vancouver, in\ncracking open the Eastern sector of\nthe Germans' Gothic line defences\nwas paid today.\nThe praise was contained in messages to the British 8th Army from\nPrime Minister Churchill and Allied\narmy headquarters in Italy.\nMr. Churchill sent a message to\nLt.-Gen. Leese, Commander of the\n8th Army of which the Canadian\nCorps is a part, congratulating Gen,\nLeese's force on the storming of the\nCorano Ridge and the crossing of\nthe Marano River, Nazi strongpoinls\nSouthwest of the Adriatic port of\nRimini.\n\"I can see that this has been a\ngrand feat of arms on the part of\nthe troops involved,\" Mr. Churchill\nsaid. Lt.-Gen. Leese immediately\nforwarded the congratulations to\nLt.-Gen. Burns, Canadian Corps\nCommander, so that it should reach\nthe Canadians who had earned it.\nWASTE NOI WANT NOT\nSave Food for Fighter*.'\nHere are\n10 FOOD-SAVING ROLES\nFor Wirtim\nl\nPUM FOOD lUYtNQ CAKIFULIT\ntkjy wily tht food, you know your _jrr tty wit)\n\u2022of. C-'-ulo.i quant it m n that then -on no\nleft __wn\nFUHT A V1CTOIY GARDEN\nHelp to incriOM Canodo'i food production by\nPTtwino your own V-_0t.at.lM and trmtt. _\u25a0;\u25a0\u2022*,\nchick** and any other itock you con.\nAVOID WA3TI IN PREPARINC.\nMwsurt ol! ingredient. WatdS vaottobl. or*.\nfruit peeii_g_-\u2014\u00bb\u00bb-\u00abl them thin. Cook pototow in\nWir*\ncoo* foom wormy\n-Olio* your cook book eonfilty r n to ovoid\nwortt ond nrtain maximum toofl *_li_\u00bb.\nWtV! SMALLER PORTION!\nStart a Cleon Plate Club h your home' Don't\nurge _icond h\u00ablpings\u2014-let them a* tor mort.\niavi Ltrr-oviiu\nWhtn you do cook too i-njrfi   *ivt ___\u00bbo.  ond\n' vegtjtablt   remnants   for   .tr*.,   bone,   for   ioun,\nbrtod-CAjmbt for ituf.ir_g_.\nuvi summ FATS\nUm what you need In your own cnoVi .g Whot'i\nleft ovtr tu\/n in with your other wivogt.\nDO NOT HOARD\nConodo ho_ o m ffic lancy nf oM fve .iod\u00bb you\nn#td. Don't hoard or txrv food, for ti__ ta.e of\ntwng up your ration ecu.>oro.\nINCOUftAGI OTMIS TO JAVI\nShort with your fritndt any fortd tnvfng tip. you\nhtor or read. Don't <_\u00ab__ qou<. nbout ' _w_-\nngt\\\" or tipf that may ifort runt on unrationed\nfooot,\nRIDUC1 YOUt KX>0 IILL\n(_ho_i* tKonomical foo.1i ttvxt witb rone\nf*d nu'fiment Try to ketp ikiwn u'vl rtduft\ntotal food bill.\nTHE FOOD situation in Canada, ai\nthroughout tho wo rid, remaini\ncritical. Nothing muit bo waited.\nEvery lait pound of vegetable! and\nfruiti from homo garden! mutt bo\nhanretted and itored. In addition\nto canning, preserving and pickling\nthtra are leveral other ways to ttoro\nfruitt and vegetable! for future uie.\nThe housewife li urged to consult\nan authoritative book on the subject. The following methodi ihould\nbo investigated:\n1. 5ALTIN<J. Such vtgt.iblM \u25a0\u25a0 ubtttfl*\n(uutrVrtur),  beam,  grttmt  tnd  corn   mat\nbe prtitrytd with uit, In itont trockl or\nflat!  |\u00bbr\u00bb.\n2. DRYING. A long 111. ol fruiti tnd\nvegetable* may bt dried in ont of thrtt\nwtytt .Sun Drying, Cabinet Drying, Ovtn\nDrying.\nI. PIT STORAGE Opm tlr ito.jga In pit,\nmound or bjrrel It luitjblt for iuch vtgt-\nttblot It pofjtoti, cirroti, turnipi, cabbage,\nboot!,   par .nip\u00bb;   tl*o applet.\n4. tELLAR STORAGE. Product itored in\ntht cellar requirti good ventilation iwiy\nfrom furnico artl. Condltioni and metbo.fi\nviry ovtr wide rjngt of fruiti and vegetlblti.\nAVA1LARLR    IN    1-I.B.,    5-1. B.     AND    10-1. B.    TINS _, \u25a0-\n\t\nJaps Urged lo\nRegister\nDesire to Enlist\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP. -\nA plea to Canadian-born Japanese\nto record their desire to enlist In\nthe armed forces is made In an editorial in a recent issue of the New\nCanadian, Japanese-Canadian newspaper published in Kaslo.\nThe editorial states that special\napplication forms, on which Canadian-born Japanese may express a\ndesire to join the forces, are available in Toronto.\nThe form, consisting of five pages\nwhich cover a considerable amount\nof detail as to the personal history\nof the applicant,\" are being handled\nby the intelligence department.\nA number of young Japaneie\nhave filled out these forms ln the\nEast, the paper says.\n\"As further word is spread and the\nrealization of the significance of the\nmatter grows, lt is anticipated that\nan increasing number will sign the\nvolunteer form,\" says the editorial.\nllllllllimMINIIIIlllllMII1l.IM1.il.1111111\nCanada s\nRoll of Honor\n_\t\n\t\niHtiiii\niiiiiui\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 - Namea of\n16 British Columbia men appear on\nthe latest casualty lis. Issued tonight by the Canadian Army. Pte.\nA. S. Furman of Sunshine Bay, is\nlisted  killed in action.\nDied of Wounds:\nRoyal Canadian Artillery\u2014Clark,\nJamea Esmond, Lieut., Kaleden,\nB.C.\nKilled In Action:\nManitoba Regiment -Blatt, Louis,\nPte., Vancouver, B.C.\nBritish    Columbia    Regiment \u2014\nPlester. John, Pte., Newton, B.C.\nSaskatchewan   Regiment\u2014\nFurman, Stanley Anthony, Pte.,\nMn. Mary Furman (Mother) c-o.\nMn. Francen, R.R. No. 1, Sunshine\nBay, via Nelson, B.C.\nAlberta Regiment\u2014Fellers, Ralph\nPaul, Pte., Fellers Heights, B C.\nDangerously Wounded:\nCanadian Armored Corps\u2014Strachan, Harvey George, Tpr , Hornby\nIsland, B.C.\nWounded:\nReconnaissance Units \u2014 Ltvers,\nRalph Edward, Cpl., Vancouver,\nB.C.\nCentral Ontario Regiment\u2014Stakt,\nHelnhardt, Pte., Victoria, B.C.\nManitoba Regiment \u2014 Baeble,\nCharles, Pte., Vancouver, B.C.\nRoyal Canadian Army Service\nCorps\u2014MacKinnon, Donald Alexander, Cpl., Millardvllle, B.C.\nReconnaleaance Unlta \u2014 Bennett,\nThomaa Francis, L.-Cpl.. Vancouver,\nB.C.\nCanadian Armored Corpt \u2014 QUI,\nHubert David, L.-Sgt., Vancouver,\nB.C.\nKestar, Frank, Bft., Vancouver,\nB C\nPoland, Arthur Alexander, Tpr.,\nGolden, B.C.\nBritish    Columbia    Regiment \u2014\nWounded, Ptmalnlnj on Duty:\nBritish Columbia Regiment \u2014\nTutte, Kenneth Gordon, L. - Sgt.\nSidney, B.C.\nUrea, Gordon Rowan, Ptt., Vancouver, BC.\nOTTAWA, Sept. X \u2014 Namea of\nsix British Columbia airmen appear on the latest casualty list Issued tonight by the R.C.A.F.:\nOVERSEAS\nKilled on Actlvt Service:\nFletcher, Leonard Franeis. Sft,\nPenticton, B.C.\nPreviously Reported Mlselnj on Active Service\u2014Now Reported Safe:\nWallace, Philip,  Fo,  Vancouver, .\nBC.\nPreviously Reported Missing on Ae-\ntlve  Service  \u2014  Now  for  Official\nPurposes  Presumed   Dead:\nFrampton, John Albert, Fo, Vancouver.   B C.\nMorgan, John Robert. Sgt, Norln\nVancouver, B.C.\nPreviously Reported Missing on Ac-\ntlve Service\u2014Now Reported Prisoner of War\u2014Germany:\nGreer,  Clifford.   Fo .   Vancouver, |\nBC.\nPreviously Reported Misting on Active  Service \u2014 Now  Repor\ntlvt Service\u2014Now Reported Safe:\nEvans.   D.mald  Angus,   Fo.,   Vancouver,   BC\nEnglish Bishop\nAttacks Vatican\nLONDON, .'.cpl  >0 <Cr-Renter)-\n\t\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SIPT,\n^ Fall\nShowing of\n%*\nTASK-ON CXNT-Ut\nWKBU- _E___Orrs\nFASHIONS BBGII-\nValue Winners in\nMen's Suits\nThis year, even more than before, you'll want to buy o Fall\nsuit that will be durable, well styled and finely tailored\u2014You\ncan be sure that our \"Bay\" branded suits are.\n\u2022 Stylecrest * - $32*50\n\u2022 Hudsonia* \u2022 $27\nYourFal\nTopcoat Favorites\nYou'll be heading for success\nwhen you keep the pace in our\nhandsomely-tailored, high-quality\ntopcoats. Designed for duration\ndurability from high - quality\nTweeds and Coverts.\nft Swaggers   in\nNovelty Tweeds\n$19.95\n# Swaggers irt    ffTl   Ef\\\nRich Velours _      4>_-l._\u00bbU\nFull  range of sizes and colors.\nMen's\nFall Shoes\nMade from fin* quality .ecther\nthat lasts longer and looks so distinctive. They'll give you pleasure indefinitely. Bluchers or Balmorals in Black or Brown.\nFall Felts\nTop off your Fall wardrobe with a new hat,\none that will fit your personality and that will\nsuit the shape of your head. Smartly styled\nand considerately priced in a variety of interesting colors to choose from. Better get your\nhat today.\n$5-75\n$5.00\nMEN! Watch This Space for Important\nAnnouncement Tomorrow\nufottiifotil ^ompanw\nIHCAmPOKATSD    tr?   MAY 1*70.\nSTORI HOURSi\nMon.-Tues.-Thurs.-li-.\n9 s_r_.-5 p.m.\nWednevlaj: 9 sm.lt noon     I\nSaturday: 9 a.m. . p.m.\nBRIGHT Vl\n\u25a0tvitJ?\n_    _:\nZEBRA\nLIQUID or PASTE\nSTOVE POLISH\nThe Bishop ot Chelmefnsd, Dr.\nHenry Wilson, writing In the\nChelmsford Diocesan Chronicle today, sttacked the Vatiran snd the\nPope's recent utterances thst Londoners should show Christian sentiments of charity, forgiveness snd\nmercy towards the Germans\n\"It Is difficult to remember one\nsingle word from the Tope in condemnation of Ihe Na\/.l* whrn they\nswept London with destruction.\" he\nwrote\nDr Wilson declared thst \"thr\nbest interests of the Church, ar-\ncording to the Roman view, arc\nserved by s Government which\napproximates to a dictatorship par-\ntlcularly If. \u00bbs in Spain, the dictator Is himself a Unman Catholic\"\nDr Wilson claimed that there\nwas s widespread uneasiness Irs'\nthe Vatican suthorltles should have\ns say in the pei.:e settlempnt \u00bbnd\nadded that one of the surest ways\nto lose the peace would be to prr-\nm! ihr dubious counsels of the\nVatican diplomatists' 'to hjive any\nband ln  Ihe  business.\n\"If It Is eontrary to Ihe Christian\nreligion to punish evil-doers, then\nsli law courts and police forces\nshould st once be hroughl to an\nend In a country which claims tn be\nChristian and burglars, thieves,\nmurderers and footpads -bould be\nallowed to do as thry plespo,\" he\nuld.\nWOULD ISTABLISH\n6831 MILE AIR\nR0UTI TO CHINA\nNEW YORK. Sejt. 30 IAP) -\nPan-American World Airways had\nfiled applications with the civil\nAeronautics Board to establish a\n\u00ab_l mile-long air route connecting\nSeattle with Canton, China.\nStops would be made at Nome,\nAlaska, a point In the Kunles Is\nlands Tokyo and Shanghai\nMri. D\u00abw\u00aby'i Pearls\nStolen\nPORTLAND. Ore, Sept. 10 (CD\nMrs   Thomas  Dewey, fresh from\ns train  wreck  snd a near automobile   crash,   reported   still   another\nmishsp here  today.\nAs she cllmb-fl rrom tne car that\nbrought her from the train wreck\nscene, her costume pearls fell off\nA man. whom she took for t mem-\nber nf the Dewey entourage, retrieved them, swung them In the\nsir with a friendly \"look what I've\ngot\", and itartstd to carry them In\n' i the hotal for har.\nBut when tht Republican nominee's wife reached the hotel, the man\nwss gone- and so were the pearls.\nSask. Member for\nArmed Forces Named\nREGINA, Sept 20 (CP) - Lt -Col\nH. Austin Hunt, 3fi. of Regina has\nbeen nominated as candidate to represent Saskatchewan members of\nthe armed forcer stationed In Can- |\nada   outside   the   province   in   the j\nprovincial   legislature,   Capt    P.   S. I\nDeis, returning officer for the service vote  in  Canada, announced  today\n1,1 -Col Hunt now It on thr staff\nol the Inspector nf Ordnance and\nwas formerly of the RcKina Rifle.\nRegiment.\nJ. A. P0IRIER, LIB.\nMEMBER, DIES   j\nBON A VENTURE, Qur S4pt 10\n(CP.\u2014J, Alphw Pol-Tier, 43, pMnl\nmember of parliament for Bont-\nvanture, died it nearby Pupeblic\nlflst night after a heart itUck. Funeral servlcei will be held hex* Friday. The late Mr. Poirier ii lurvived\nby hii wife and three young children, twn daughters and a aon. He\nwas an avianst in agriculture\nCommoni itanding:\nLiberal! 162. Prog. Con. 39, OCT.\nlfl, Social Credit 10, othen 14, Varan!  10\n*Vta*ie tymOtw(facot<iteScf>tufi\nFRY'S\nThe jnrient Egyptian, are .aid tn\nhave performed amp.it a limn and\nvanoui operation* on the eye,\nTakt H \"ip ft rST'fl\nCOOOA \"vI \u25a0 i <\u25a0-tw.f. ,..\nHil - -11 torHt-M- ilr v _ Inwty\n__- Vi nip ft b<\u00abilint \u25a0.***.\nin* mamnwhil*. Poll trtr\nth inns'\" Than pour Into a\nCOCOA\nIDEAL FOR\n\u2022UrHu  mamnwhil*.   Poll  trtr\num.\" T__n pour Into  .\nwJT_?JS-il7_S      CHOCOLATE MILK,\n_?-S^\u00ab __^1_-_<\" ICE CREAM AND DESSERTS\nJ\n tuumea\ntmmmmm\n'\u25a0ip.'f _\u00bb'-\u25a0_\nimmmm*tWrW^mmmw.\nmmmmmkrWimwtmmmmm^\nWW. \u25a0\u00bbWfll.Wli  .if'>aai!<Ji|ip\nn,.pji_fiijpi\u00bbi|tmm. ui..\u00bb \u25a0i\"'^i^p'iia..i|\u00bbiii*i..tMaittjttiM\n4 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY  SBPT. _M, 1944\nPersonalities...\nt Menial Altitude\n[ Important\n| During Illness\nBy   LOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.\nPsychosomatic medicine Is a field\ni   of practice which has lately received\n'   a great deal of attention from the\nleaders of the medical profession.\nIt* fundamental concept is that\nIt U just as Important to know what\nkind of a man the disease has as\nwh\u00b0t kind of disease the man has.\nTo show how wide are the applications of this branch of medicine\nI review some of the articles in a\n\u25a0 recent 8v^.no.li\u2022\u25a0\"'\n1. Circulatory disorders.    Blush-\n\u25a0\nBLUE RIBBON\nBAKIHG POWDER\nSttAUhtV, Bdiiay SuC&M.\ning. pounding oi the heart, fast\npulse are all physiological accompaniments of psychic states. Translate these into hot flashes and palpitation and you have the functional\ndisease equivalent of a psychosomatic state.\nBlood pressure la an deal example\nof a condition where there are both\nphysical and spiritual sides to the\nproblem. Calm people are not\nlikely to have high blood pressure:\nI do not believe this is cause and\neffect, but that both arise from a\nbasic personality pattern. The high\nblood pressure people are those with\nthe driving force an denergy. To\ncalm them down Is to improve their\nstate.\n2. Digestive disorders. Juit as ln\nthe circulatory field there are high\npressure and low pressure groups,\nso in the realm of digestive disorders we find whole blocs of sluggish and other blocs of over-responsive persons. They are both expressions again of fundamental personality patterns. The extreme examples in both groups are doomed\nto go through life trying either to\nhitch up or calm down their alimentary canals.\nThe sluggish ones are not much\nInterested In cooking or the pleasures of the table. For them, the\ndinner bell tolls not rings. They\nare constipated. They eruct, \"Oh!\npaidon me,\" is often on their lips.\nThey drink beer.\nThe over-responsive ones have\nheartburn and good appetites. In\nfact they have hunger pains. Their\nintestines    are    forever    rejecting\nRomance...\nMarriage Minus\nLove Is Mistake\nfor Young Girl\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nOught a girl to marry a young\nsoldier just because he Is deeply\nin love with her?\nGreat pressure, \"Romantic\" says,\nfa being exerted upon her by both\nfamilies. They remind her that the\nboy is about to risk his life, and to\nrisk it for hji county, and that she,\nwho isn't asked to risk anything,\ncan make him supremely happy.\nAlso, that the marriage would solve\nher own life-problem because, while\nher family Is always hard up, that of\nher lover Is extremely well-to-do.\nWhy, then, has she so far refused to\nconsent?\nJust because she is, as she describes herself, \"Romantic\". \"1 believe in love,\" she writes. \"I have\nto, because I know I have the capacity for it. But I'm young, only\nnineteen, live in a small place,\nand so far nobody has aroused In\nme that sense of romance that I\nknow I shall experience sooner or\nlater. At present, I merely dream\nof it. But wouldn't it be a very unwise and even dangerous thing for\nme to marry a man who doesn't\nmake love seem real to mc even\nthough I'm sure he feels it himself?\nIn fact, the more he talks about it,\nthe more I shrink from him.\n\"Nobody understands my way of\nlooking at this question. But perhaps you. Miss Fairfax, will understand. Perhaps you will agree that\na girl can't marry a soldier In the\nsame spirit In which she might give\nhim sweaters or cigarettes. Do sup\nport me if you can, for I am ter\nribly alone.\"\nIs there any real reason why this\ngirl should marry the soldier for\nwhom she merely feels a tepid liking? Does patriotism, or the desire\nto do what one can for servicemen,\nenter Into a question like this? Has\nnot \"Romantic\" a right, as she herself puts it, to her own life.\nI believe she has. Also that she\nhas a truer idea of marriage than\nthe older people who are trying to\npersuade her against her will.\nMarriage Isn't or shouldn't be, a\nJ.L.TRyMBBLLLTD..Vancouver,B.<;\nwaste. \"Let's go to a night club\"\nIs too often on their lips. They\ndrink anything, but secretly prefer\nsoda water.\nNearly all forms of colitis belong\nln the psychosomatic group.\nAmong the queer things that the\nnew specialty has dug up is that a\ntendency to colds, proneness to accidents, stuttering and allergy tend\nto n^cur !n personality pattern\ngroups.\n\\\nCfa\/rpe\/to ffihso \"\n^0   YOU'LL   WHISTS\n^WM-Z   YOU   WA5*\nSI <?\nDFCAUSE ii washes clothes lhe whitest,\nulely\u2014all leading washing midline\nm-ikrrs recommend Rinso. Wonderful\nfor luh washing, loo. Soaks on! dirt\u2014\nsx-.es hard rubbing ind boiling. Thai\nsaves lhe clothes!\nRinso gives hrapi of loapy-riih suds\neven in hardest watrr. Safe audi that get\nwashable colors bright is sunlight. liner-\ngctic ludi that wish even grimy work\nclothes ipotlrssly clem. Mirreloui ludi\nfor dishwashing and ill cleaning.\nYou'll ntvar bt latlifltd with\nanything tilt onct you ltt\nRlnto whttintn.\nRINSO GIVES THE WHITEST WASH!\nitvn\nnooucr\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii\"\"\"iiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii\nQ^t_________ By \"T8V NtWMAN\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiii um\ndUnt&toA\nsKouAmvwfUi\nTODAY'S MENU\nClaim Julct or\nTresh Truit Cocktail\nChicken a la King or\nMolded Chicken Salad\nOlives, Pickles, Celery\nHot Biscuits or Rolls\nIce Cream Wedding Cake\nCoffte Punch\nCLAM  JUICE COCKTAIL\n3 cup clam liquor\n1 stalk celery\n1 teaspoon grated onion\nSalt\n2 tablespoons catsup\n2 or 3 drops Tabasco sauce\nLemon juice.\nAdd to clam Julct celery cut In\npieces, onion and catsup, and bring\nslowly to bollng point. Remove\nfrom (ire and cool, then strain; add\ntabasco and lemon juice,-salt and\npepper to taste. Chill thorough ln\nrefrigerator and when ready to\nserve pour into orange juice glasses.\nServes   6.\nPRISM FRUIT COCKTAIL\n1 cup white grapai\n1 cup honey dtw melon\n1 cup plumi\nSugar and lemon Julct to season.\nCut fruit in uniform plecei,\niweeten -lightly and add lemon\njulct. Chill. Serve ice cold ln cock-\ntall glasses. Serves 9.\nMOLDED CHICKEN SALAD\n1 cup mayonnaise or cooled salad\ndressing\n2 cupi chicken cut in imall pieces\n1 tablespoon gelatin\nV, cup cold water\nVi cup chopped cilery\nV. cup chopped pimento.\nSoak gelatin ln cold water and\ndissolve over boiling water; add to\nsalad dressing: fold in chicken,\ncilery and pimento and more\ndressing if necessary. Turn into\nlarge or individual molds and place'\nIn cabinet to chill. Unmold on crisp\nlettuce and garnish with fan pickles,\nstuffed    olives    or    radish    roses.\none.ilded affair. To be successful, lt\nmust be an eager partnership. No\nman ought to be willing to accept\nan unloving bride, or one concerned only with financial security. His\nhappiness would be short-lived.\nIn thli caw, I hope that \"Romantic\" will be able to hold firmly to\nher refusal ot marriage-to-please-\nother-people. Next, that she will\nachieve independence by getting a\nJob for herself. And finally, that she\nwill discover, in actual life, the romance she has merely dreamed\nabout.\nPut Rhythm\nin Your Workout\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nSome figure experts, the ones who\nbelieve in doing things the hard\nway, insist that exercise is belter\nwithout music. They claim that\ncount is more accurate than rhythm\nMaybe so. But rhythm has Its own\ncount. And anyox. who has rhythm\nusually has a nicer figure. Anyway,\nexercising to music is more fun.\nAccuracy is Important. But exercise can be Just as accurate to\n\"do-re-me\", as to \"one-two-three\",\nprovided the right technique is used. In stretching and twisting for a\nslim waistline, it's just as easy to\npull slim through the midriff and\ntwist smack at the waist to a lovely\nwaltz tune.\u2014\nOf course start ln good posture,\nand stretch arms above head, pulling slim thru the middle, shoulders\nrelaxed tnd easy.\nHolding the stretch, circle at the\nwaist, swing to the side around to\nthe other side and up.\u2014Casey would\nwaltz with the strawberry  blonds\nirele around and up back and\ndown\u2014as the band plays on! In\ncircling, do not let the hps sway,\nthis Isn't a rumba. Circle at the\nwaist band.\nNow just waltz around the room\nwith the arms stretched overhead,\npulled slim thru the middle and\nlfght on your feet. Sway to one side\nand then to the other, all with the\nrhythm. Side bending gives one\nsuch a nice slim feeling through\nthe middle, and done to music it\nmakes one feel so graceful!\nThe stretch-flex-con tract combination Is very streamlining, and\nthere is no chance to go wrong\nwith the following exercise, whether done to music, to count, or just\ndone.\nPosition: Lying on back on floor,\nfeet resting on coffee table, or about\nthat level, arms on floor at sides.\nMovement: To an easy rhythm\nlike \"Oh, What a Beautiful Morning\"\u2014flex one knee to chest as\nboth arms are stretched back on\nfloor overhead. Now the other knee,\narms stretched overhead again\u2014Oh\nWhat a Beautiful Day. To get that\n\"beautiful\" slim firm feeling thru\nthe mid-section, pull up and ln with\nthe muscles that form the muscular\ngirdle, and press the small of the\nback against the floor that brings\nin the contact part of the exercise\nmovement.\nHips can be slimmed with swing!\nPosition: Standing, one hand on\ntable or chairback for balance.\nMovement: Swing outside leg up\nin front, then up and out in back\u2014\nMairzydoats and Dozeydoats, da-de-\nda\u2014wouldn't you?\nElsie Olson, Mrs. W. Miller. Servl-\nteurs were Mrs. Hazel Herridge,\nMrs. W. Shield. Salesladies were\nMrs. Larry Ward, Mrs. Lawrence\nOtt.    Raffle, Mrs. C. Horrey.\nGuidance ...\nTeacher Helps\nChild's Speech\nDifficulties\nBy Garry Cleveland Myers, Ph.D.\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: I am writing\nyou for advice in regard to a 0-year-\nold in my first grade ln public\nschool. This child is In great need of\nspeech correction. His parents are\nEnglish, so English is spoken in his\nhome. He is the youngest of three\nchildren, and unlike the older ones,\nIs very shy.\n\"f have tested him on all sounds\nfin word form) and am enclosing a\nlist of hli difficulties,\n\"Among them are: V gives b\nsound, s gives ch sound, school\nsounds like kool. He doesn't sound\nfinal t or d.\"\nSince you so clearly diagnose his\nspeech sound difficulties you, better\nthan anybody else, perhaps, can\nhelp him. You can dot it in effective\nways and at moments when he will\nnot be'embarrassed. Also you can\nshow his parents how to do likewise. Attack only a few sounds at\na time. Don't correct him in class.\nMake all corrections in private and\ntry to make him feel he is not unusual,\nBe sure this child is examined\nfor hearing by a competent special\nist. You say he Is very s\\\\j. Being\nthe youngest, too, he may be babied\nat home. Urge the parents to try to\nattract other children his age to the\nhome to play with him. Plan that he\nshall be absent from class on an errand some time, and take the other\nchildren into your confidence, appealing to them never to make fun\nof him, bat to try to n\u00ablp him tt\nplay, to feel happy. Havt tha pt*\nrents or older children at home read\naloud to this child very distinctly.\nWork in this direction a few monthi\nbefore the help of a speech expert\nis sought. If you find slight Improvt-\nment you will know you trt on tht\nright track.\nfor a fine\ncup of tea-\n(anterbuiy,\nFuturt-. a SAFEWAY STORES, LTD. >\n\u2014alio in\ntea bap\nCANTERBURY Te. gha\n(TO! -virythiiig you   __l\nexirllenl quality, dxp holly\nflivor, full vigoroui lUtnjth-\nOnt of lhe boi ttu p_k_|\nBlended from choka young\nleaves, fash and tender. If\nyou enjoy a rich u-iifying\nblend, traditionally fine,\ndon't miss Canterbury!\nBRILLIANT\nBRILLIANT, B. C.-Fred Ubebt-\nsoff spent the weekend at Brilliant.\nPeter Anutooshkln returned home\nSaturday from Fife.\nBill Masloff returned from Midway for the weekend.\nBill Kunigan returned home on\nSunday   from   Penticton.\nMary McKortoff has returned\nfrom Penticton.\nRalph Fletcher was a visitor to\nBrilliant Sunday.\nNick Voykln visited Brilliant\nfrom Nelson last week.\nMr. Macdonald and family have\nmoved Into thair living quarters at\nBrilliant P. 0.\nJohn J. Popoff was i visitor tn\nNelson.\nMr. Dimlck of Thrums was a visitor to Brilliant.\nPete Chevrldavp has returned\nfrom hospital in Vancouver.\nPete 7-oob.cnff spent the weekend at Brlllint.\nMr. and Mrs. Alec Plotntkoff visited Trail on Sunday.\nNakusp Pythian\nTea Is Success\nNAKUSP. B.C.-Tht Pythian Sisters sale of work and taa held on\nSaturday afternoon was a great\nsuccess Sales of aprons and novelties were brisk. Tea conveners\n1 were  Mrt.   Warrtn   Larson,   Mra\nFor big commercial bakers\nregular (lour is fine...BUT\nyou home bakers\nneed a home-type flour\nWhy this fine\nhome-type flour\nguarantees you success\nevery baking\nIn all your home baking you already\nuse home-type shortenings and baking\npowders \u2014 not commercial bakeshop\ningredients. Because home baking is\ndifferent from commercial baking.\nFor the same reason you need this\nnew flour\u2014home-type Kitchen Craft!\nKitchen Craft Flour is made specially\nfor your home baking \u2014 gives you\nlight, tender baked foods every time.\nKllchan Craft li llght-bodlad. Mlies smoothly\nand quickly with other home-type ingredients to\ngive fine even texture in all your home-baked foods.\nKitchen Craft ll propariy mlllod: Retains desirable moisture in your paatriei, cakea and breads\nin rpitt of the drier heat 0\/ home ovens.\nKitchtn Craft It dapandably uniform: Absorbs\nthe same amount of water each time \u2014 so ynu\ncan always follow your recipes to the letter.\nCakes, pies, breads, biscuits \u2014 they all\nturn out perfect every time with this fine\nhome-type flour. Try it and see. Your grocer\ncarries Kitchen Craft Flour in a variety of\neconomical size sacks. Get some today.\nI'M CONVINCED!\nleerUSHTDfiUCATE\nBAKED FOODS\nEVERY TIME WITH\nHOME-TYPE\nKITCHEN CRAFT\nFLOUf.\nYour choice of 2 finest-grade white flours\nBOTH made specially\nfor home baking\nBOTH made of top-\ngrade Canadian\nwheats\nBOTH guaranteed to\nplease you with better baking results\u2014,\nor your money back\nat SAFEWAY\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nBUY WAR SAVINGS\nSTAMPS AND\nCERTIFICATES\n The Best\nGOOD\nSHOES\nFor\n\u2022 Men\n\u2022 Women\n*\n\u2022 Children\nAre at\u2014\nR, Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nGasoline vapors have been found\nto have anaesthetic effects similar\nto those of alcoholic vapors.\nTailored and Dressy\nBLOUSES\nIn white and colors.\nSizes 12 to 40\n$1.95 to $6.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nWATCH TOMORROW'S\nPAPER   for   our   GROCERY\nSPECIALS\nR.&R.  GROCERY\nMr. R. R. Horner\nMra. Thea. A Gibson\nNelson and District Representative\nfor\nSpencer Corsets and\nHealth Garments\n110 Kerr Apartments\nwmuMumt\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP. ac\u2014Mm. Robert Mc-\nWhirter returned from Vancouver\non Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Somera of\nNelson arrived Saturday and are\nguests of Mr. Somers' brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nMaxwell.\nG. Livland of Lumby was a Nakusp visitor.\nEnsign Helena Newbrand of the\nNaval Air Station, Alameda, Calif.,\nwho has spent a week visiting her\nUjtei\/OHlMdteJl\nTry Hew, Improved OVALTINE\nChildren who are thin, nervous and\nunder par, science haa discovered, are\noften found to be eating foodn which\ndo nnt give them enough (if the essential\nfood elementa everyone needs for\nhealth.\nAs a \"prolec,'n_t1 food-IrinW, AW,\nImproved Ovaltine adds to a child's\nmeals the esswilial food elements most\nlikely to he deficient\nThree servings of New. Improved\nOvaltiuo furnish a child with a significant portion of his dailv rcuuirenient of\nVitamins A, ll| and 1), Calcium,\nPhosphorus and Iron \u2014 all from\nOvaltine alone. Also quick food-\nenergy elements and high quality\nproteins for building sturdy bodies.\nSo \u2014 if your child is thin, nervous,\nunder par, or eats poorly, start giving\nhim AW, Improved Ovaltine regularly.\nGet Ovaltine today at drug or food store.\nNEW. IMPROVED\nOVALTINE\nTHI riOriCTINO FOOD DRINK\nWool and\nCrepe\nDRESSES\nfor Fall\nOne and Two-Piece Wool\nDresses for cool Fall evenings ... Lovely Crepes for\nevery occasion \u2014 All in\nthe newest shades for Fall.\nSizes'12 to 20.\n$10.95\nto\n$29.50\nJotikuHt JiaaL\nLIMITED\nMm\nparents, Mr. and Mri- K Nuabrand.\nleft Wedneiday.\nMrs. Harold Coate. of Edgewood\nwas a visitor ln Nakusp.\nCpl. E. Newbrand, Aerial Gunner\nInstructor, who has spent several\ndays furlough a guest of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. K. Newbrand,\nleft Tuesday for Lethbridge, Alta.\nO. Swanson of Lumby was a visitor to Nakusp.\nPetty Officer I. R.*Dev_lin and\nMrs. Develin, who were visitors in\nNakusp, returned to Kamloops on\nWednesday.\nT. Blacklock of Lumby waa a\nvisitor in Nakusp.\nW. Carruthers was a visitor ln\nNakusp from Nelson.\nMrs. Johnson and daughter Mm.\nA, Kay of Arrow Park were Nakusp shoppers.\nLorn Miller of Lumby was a visitor in Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Hunter Gardner\nleft Tuesday for Trail where they\nwill be guests of their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dougan,\nand will attend the marriage of\ntheir granddaughter, Miss Patricia\nDougan to Lindsay MacDougald\nCross.\nThe young women's evening aux-\nIljary meeting was held at the home\nof Mrs. Q. P. Horsley on Monday\nevening, Mrs. E. J. Oxenham presiding. Final arrangements were\nmade for the Thanksgiving chicken\ndinner. Those present were Mrs.\nE. J. Oxenham. Mrs. R. McCulloch,\nMrs. Butler, Mrs. L. Embree, Mrs.\nIt*. S. LaRue, Mrs. H. G. Gardner,\nMrs. I, Ward and Miss M. Kirk.\nMrs. L. Ward and Mrs. Oxenham\nserved.\nDr. N. A. Carter of Vancouver is\na visitor in town.\nThe United Church Ladies Aid\nmet on Tuesday afternoon at the\nhome of Mrs. H. L. Miller with Mrs.\nMiller in the chair. Mrs. McRobert\nacted as Secretary and Mrs. H.\nSundstrom gave ihe Treasurer's report. Miss Jean Fawcett led the\ndevotional period. Arrangements\nwere made for the annual Harvest\nHome service and the tea and sale\nnf fruit, flowers and vegetables, to\nhe held this month.   Afternoon tea\n\" '\nvu served by tha hostess, assisted\nby her daughter, Miss Betty Miller.\nNAKUSP. B.C. - Johnny Yurik.\nR.C.A.F. arrived on Wednesday to\nspend leave with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Yurik.\nCaptain and Mrs. Walter Wright\nreturned from a holiday at Nelson.\nMiss Gladys Olsen returned to\nVancouver after visiting her mother, Mm. J. Olsen.\nDavid Johnson, who spent two\nweeks as a guest of his parents, Mr.\nand Mm. E. C. Johnson, has returned\nto Vancouver.\nThe Misses Olive and Margaret\nWoodman, R.C!.A.F. (W.D.) left Saturday for Salmon Arm after visiting\ntheif brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Johnson.\nG. P. HoMley left Saturday for\nRevelstoke.\nMrs. H. G. Gardner entertained\nThursday afternoon for her young\nson Wayne's 6th birthday. Games\nwere played and tea with a big\nbirthday cake was served. Guests\nwere Doug Embree, Sonny Embree.\nBryon Mosley, Allen Mosley, Bobby\nGaites, Jackie Millar, Glen Olson.\nBuddy Aalton, and Douglas and\nWayne Gardner.\nMrs. M. Daley, Mrs. M. Donselaar\nand Mrs. W. Shlpmaker were Nakusp visitors from Edgewood.\nJ. French of Trail was a Nakusp\nvisitor, leaving Saturday for a two\nweeks' visit to Halcyon Hot Springs.\nJ. C. Vipond of Trail showed local\nend district colored photographs of\nInterest in Nakusp on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Bell left Saturday for Brule, Minn.\nMrs.' L. J. Edwards left Saturday\nfor Calgary.\nSgt, Peter Miller, of Kingston,\nOnt, is spending two week's furlough with his parents here.\nJ. Brady and sons, Albert and\nRobert, of Carroll's were visitors\nin Nakusp.\nDr. Norman Carter who visited\nhere for a few days, left Saturday.\nE. W. Somers left for Nelson on\nWednesday.\nLac. Everett Nelson o! Canyon,\nis spending leave as a guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. N. A. Herridge.\nm.-iaie'i^ifiji Miimpuwu-m. iPimpn\nmm^atfa\n^JMV'MilJ. A'lWHWyVIIWSBJIj;^!,.. -fllWfilli^\nlO<_\nOn, J he. Ok,\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21\nVersatile Leader heard on the\nC.B.C. and C.K.L.N., HARRY\nPRYCE, the orchestra leader,\nwho makei hot and sweet music\nHarry Pryce, who started out\nin the cisslcsl field with his two\nsisters as the Pryce Trio, with\nHarry at cellist, drifted Into ths\ndance orchestrs field more years\nigo than Harry cares to recall.\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\n3:00\u2014Weat-rn Jive\n!:1-\u2014Piano Rambllnga\n3:30\u2014Curtain Echoes\n3:46\u2014 BBO News\n4:00\u2014Musical Magic   (CKL1.\n\u20224:08\u2014Vol\u00a3e o( Memory  (CKLN)\n4:30\u2014Carl Kal_h ___; Orch.\n4:45\u2014CBC News Roundup\nB:0O\u2014Musical Programme iCKLNi\n8:30\u2014Third Naval District\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014Sunset Serenade\n,0:15\u2014 Family Album\n0:30\u2014peerless Presents\n6:45\u2014Cavalcad* of Melody  (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014 A Bummer Tala\n7:30\u2014Two-piano Team\n8:00\u2014Drama\n8:30\u2014Night Train   (CKLN.\n8:45\u2014Music of the New World\n9:00\u2014BBC News.\n9:15\u2014London Letter\n9:30\u2014Revlewi and Previews\n9:45\u2014Serenade In Rhythm\n10:00\u2014CDC Newa\n10:l.i\u2014CBC  Newa  Roundup\n10:30\u2014God Bava the King\nNELSON SOCIAL\n\u2022y MRS. M. J. VIQNIUX\nCharga (or Engagement Announcements on thla pig* la II.60\nMORNINC\n7:30\u2014O Canada\n7:31\u2014Tosat ii Coffee (CKLN)\nB 00\u2014CBC News\n8:1-\u2014Pront Line Family\n8 .0\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014BBC Ntws\n9 1.. -Melody   Inrorp   (CKLN)\n9 23\u2014 Voice of Memory   (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014On Parsde (CKLN)\n9:46\u2014 Music from Britain\n9:59-Time Signal\n10:00\u2014 Skeu-h - In Melody\n10:15\u2014Tin Phi. Alley does to Town\nICKLNI\n10:30\u2014Musical   Programme   (CKLN)\n10:4..\u2014Keyboard Cle-slos\n11:00\u2014Muslrnl  Americana\nIMS\u2014Dan Barry   (CKLN)\n11:_ -Wendell   Hall   (CKLN)\n11 30\u2014Soldier's Wife\n11.45\u2014Dancing Till  Noon\n\u2022 A pretty wedding took place\nSept. 12 in the Cathedral oi Mary\nImipaculate, when Rev. Father\nFlynn united in marriage Carmela\nMarie, second daughter of Mrs. At-\ntelio C. Calgaro and the late Frank\nDelpuppo, to Bruno Rodger Kenneth Lupien o( Montreal, now of\nVancouver. The bride, given in\nmarriage by her stepfather was attired in a dusky rose dressmaker\nsuit 'on Princess lines with white\nflowered hat and white accessor-\nries and corsage of pink rosebuds.\nFor something borrowed she wore\na beautiful gold locket and chain,\nworn by her mother at her wedding. The matron of honor, Mrs.\nLionel Somers, was attired In dark\ngreen dressmaker suit with tan accessories and corsage of bronze rosebuds, also a gold locket and chain,\na gift from the bride and groom.\nThe groom was supported by Santo\nDelpuppo of Trail, whose gift from\nthe bride and groom was a pen and\npencil set. A reception was held at\nthe bride's home on Hall Mines\nRoad, where the bride and groom,\nassisted by the bride's mother and\nfather, received the guests. Refreshments were served from the\nbride's table, which was covered\nwith a satin damask cloth, and centred with a beautiful three-tiered\nwedding cake surrounded by pink\ntulle and pink rosebuds and tall\nwhite candles in silver candle sticks.\nThe bride nnd groom left for a\nshort honeymoon at Ainsworth. The\nbride wore a two-piece suit ot blue\nand beige and small beige hat for\ntravelling. They will later make\ntheir home in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A. Tulloch, 302\nWard Street, have returned from\ntheir holidays.\n\u2022 J. B. Ward, general chairman\nof the international organization of\nlhe Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers of Montreal was a visitor\nto town Tuesday, addressing members of the C.P.R. employees association that evening.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hufty, 415\nFalls Street, have as a guest their\ndaughter-in-law, Mrs. W. F. Hufty\nof Seattle, who Is spending a few\ndays in Nelson.\n<__ The Martha and Mary Circle\nof St. Saviour's Church Helpers met\nat the home of Mrs. R. G. Dray-\nson, 302 Vernon Street, this week.\n\u2022 Mrs. John McPhail, Silica\nStreet, has left tn spend a few\nweeks visiting relatives and friends\nin Cochrane, Calgary and Strath-\nmore, Alta.\net Mrs. Roy Graham of South\nSlocan visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nIncluded Mrs. J. B. Fletcher of Ainsworth.\n\u2022 Miss Mary Ling and Miss Sue\nVecchio spent Tuesday in Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. Rowley of Harrop visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u00ab_ Mrs. A. E. Parker was ln town\nfrom Bonnington yesterday.\n% Lac. Joseph DeLucrezia Is\nhere from Comox to spend a leave\nRt the home of his mother on Hoover\nStreet\n\u2022 Mrs. H. _>. Craig, Carbonate\nStreet, has taken up rrsidence nt\n_ 10 Vernon Street,\n\u2022 Morley Shier ol Vancouver la\napending > few daya In NeUon.\n\u2022 Mrs. Vernon Young and .Wig\naon Ray, Ward Street, returned\nTuesday from Cranbrook, where\nthey spent a week at the home of\nher mother, Mra. Q. Swope,\n\u2022 Carl Mohr of Ainsworth waa\namong ahoppers ln the city yelterday.\n\u2022 Vislton in Nelaon Included\nHugh Meddleton of Willow Point\n\u2022 William McLaughlin of the\nR.C.A.F. from Whitehorae, la here\nspending hla leave.\n\u2022 Jerry Whitfield, R.C.N.V.R.,\nwho spent his leave with hla wife\nat the home of her parent. Mr. and\nMrs. Charles Norrls, Fifth Street,\nalso with hla parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nF. A. Whitfield, Hall Street, haa\nreturned to Cornwallia, N.S.\n\u2022 W. J. Kerr, Kamloops, Is a\nvisitor ln Nelson.\n\u2022 J. R. Hunter, Kerr Apartments, is spending a few daya ln\nEast Kootenay.\n\u2022 Robert Quln waa a visitor\nfrom Harrop yesterday.\n\u2022 (!. S. Baker of Kaslo waa a\nshopper in Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Marlon Boates of the\nR.C.A.F. and her brother. W. Boatee,\nwho Is ln the Army, have arrlvefl\nfrom Hamilton, Ont., passing\nthrough Nelson enroute to Sandon\nto spend leave at the home of their\nparents. They were Joined ln Nelson by their sister, Mrs. Walfram\nof Grand Forks, who accompanied\nthem to Sandon.\n\u2022 Mrs. Yeatman and daughter-\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 21, 1944 \u2014 1\nin-law of South Slocan, apent yesterday ln town.\n\u2022 H. B. Chase, Chairman ot the\nBoard of Governors, of the C.B.C,\nwho spent a couple of daya ln Nelaon, hu left for the Coast.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Nick Sardlch\nhave returned from two weeks'\nvacation at Ainsworth.\nEngagements\nRev. and Mra. D. N. Erlcaon announce the engagement of their\ndaughter,' Evangeline, to Lac. Vernon Dennia, of Meeting Creek, Alberta. The wedding will take place\nSaturday evening at 8:13, at the\nMission Covenant Church, Nelson.\nWATCH  FOR THE\nOVERWAITEA\nSPECIALS\nIN   TOMORROW'S   PAPER\nRobson W.I. Gives $17\nto Othoa Scott Fund\nROBSON, B.C.\u2014The Robaon Women's Institute met Wednesday at\nthe home of Mrs. Honcher, with\n14 members present. Mrs. F. R.\nFoxlee, President, was In the chair.\nThe aum of $17 was voted to the\nOthoa Scott Fund.\nAlong with our own local overseas boyi, it was decided to send\nparcel* to an airman who has not\nbeen receiving parcels from any\nsource.\nMrs. Tutt was appointed to the\nRed Cross Committee in place of\nMrs. Mitchell, who has resigned.\nMrs. Foxlee was appointed delegate to the W.I. District \"Rally.\" ip\nNelson.\nHostesses were Mrs. Osborne, Sr\u201e\nand Mrs. A. J. Marten.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllillll\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nRepalri \u2014 Alterations\nStorage\n659 Baker St.      Phon* 960\niiiiiimmimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\npREEMAf|\n*     FURNITURE CO.*\nThe House ot Furniture Values\nPhone '.19 Nelson\nALL-WOOL\nGREY BLANKETS\n$11.95 pair\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nMalta has had more than 3500 air\nalerts and 1200 actual raids during\nthe Second Great War.\n.llllllllll-IIIIMllllllllllllllHIIIIIMHim\nBUILD B. C. PAYROLLS\nSUCH\nPROOFS\nMAKE\nFRIENDS\nA lady living In Summeriand\nsays this ln a letter to Pacific\nMilk: \"It's a privilege to write\nyou extolling the merits of^pur\nwonderful product. For all\ncooking purposes one tunjl to\nthe familiar can with cwifl-\ndence. \"I don't know how \"people ln the big cities do witn'out\nit, even during the war.\"i.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum PackM\nlllllllllllllll-IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIMIIIMIillM\nHOI}RI$0*HT\nTht 0GILV1E HOUR\nMILLS COMPANY LIMITED\nA good ctreol .rsollmt\n\u00ab\u25a0_. \u2022_**\u25a0 i\npays In health. 5\u00bbrve\n-T\nOaMvU Oats - TUy're        _- EXTRA tWftftV\nnutritionally right - ond\nbetter voloe in every woy.\nAFTERNOON\n12 00 -B. C. F-UTn Bro\u00bbdt4it\n12 'J .\u2014Notice   Board   (CKLN)\n13 30\u2014CBC Nrv._\n1_M. \u2014MaUuM Memnrlei\n1 (..\u2014Stanley  Hobtn, bar.tor_i\n1 IS\u2014Interlude\n1.18\u2014Talk\nI 30 -Music for Summer\n1 45 -Song Recital\n\u25a02 (Kl\u2014Invitation to th\u00ab Walt.\n2 15\u2014Great Rlngera\n'J It) \u2014I iitrn to lotldnn\n_ I.) -1 _i.tener'i Favorltei\nConsider the\nfood Value in\nK. V. MH.K  F\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nYOU\ncnn'T buy\nBETTER, RICHER\nCOFFEE\nFor Kcliablo Watch Repairs\nConsult \u2014\nFIR ESAFE   ROOF\nFor (Ut\nfOR  EVERY  PURPOSE\nor table rood, to protect your home,->\u00abm or 3\u00abn_l,\nDUROID provides lower Insurance rates\nand maintenance costs.\nS\u00ab\u00ab .out Local Hardware or Lumber Dealer\nor write\nSidney roofing t paper company ltd.\nVANCOUVER VICTORIA\nAjenti lot Ten Tail and Msirnila\nOT-m_r,ii. iiii.xiiix_-J_-i__i---_--it_iiit'\u00bb\nj    ENGLISH TWtED COATS\nSues 14 to 20.\n$22.50;o $39.50\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n-v'!i!iaif ymsiii^siiiiiyiiiiisiiiniS-ftT\nHsvw   an   Indlvltlusl\nPermanent Wave\nlo suit .nur type\nat\nn    lAiKVIEV.   BEAUTY bHOPPfc\nEDWARDS COFFEE\npdtktddt\nSAFEWAY STORES, LIMITED\nThis luxury blend guarantees you better-tasting\ncoffee... rich, Invigorating, roaster-fresh!\nEdwards Is a blend of the finest codec* grow tt,\nflavor famous for ovtr 40 years. Coffee that is loyal\nto your taste demands because every frai_;t,int cupful\nhas the same full-bodied richness and stimulating\naroma. Try vacuum-packed Edwards today.\n , Established April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia*1\nMort Interesting Newspaper\nPublished ever, morning except Sunday by\nthe -TEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY UNITED, 261 Baker St.. Nelaon. Britiah Columbia.\nMEMBER Or THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU 01\" CIRCULATIONS\nTHURSDAY, SEPT. 21, 1944.\nIs the Burec_iucratic Attitude\nEdging Into the W.P.T.B.?\nThe Wartime Prices and Trade\nBoard has done a great job for Canada. It has brought about a stabilization of prices which has been more\nsuccessful than in any other country ln\nthe world in preventing inflation.\nIt has been operated by competent\nofficials, the great majority experienced in the problems of manufacturing, of wholesaling, of retailing and of\ndistribution generally.\n. In the course of its operation, it\nhas had to institute prosecutions\nagainst violations of price ceilings, but _\nthe policy that was inaugurated in this\n-respect was a sensible one. I* was\nbased upon the belief that the overwhelming majo'rity of manufacturers,\nwholesalers and retailers wished to\nobey the law; that they believed that\nprice ceilings were very much in the\nnational interest and, taking the long\nview, in their own as an integral part\nof our national economic structure.\nBoth merchants and general public\nwould suffer under the destructive influence of inflation. This being so, en-\nforcement policy was safeguarded\ncarefully against arbitrary action. It\nwas realized that many of the regulations were not easy to interpret, that\neven officials sometimes had to ask for\nclarification and that sometimes\namendments had to be passed to make\nthem workable.\nThe policy was to avoid prosecutions unless there was evidence of wilful evasion or of neglect to carry -out\nthe law after inspectors had checked\nor warnings had been given. One precaution against arbitrary action that\nwas wisely instituted was that prosecutions were not entered without prior\nconsultation with local officials, the\nmen on the ground who were best acquainted with all the circumstances.\nThere are indications that this precaution against arbitrary action is being abandoned,\nIn a number of Kootenay cities\nprosecutions have recently been en-\n1 tered in cases of which some bore all\nthe earmarks of technicalities rather\nthan deliberate Violation of the price\nceilings laws. They suggest that the\nbureaucratic mentality is getting into\neven the Wartime Prices and Trade\nBoard.\nThe deliberate violator of price ceilings, the man who takes the attitude\nthat he doesn't give a hoot, that the\nregulations arc all hooey anyway, deserves no sympathy. He should bo\nbrought into court and punished. Tho\nman who is honestly doing his best to\nobserve the law is in a different class\n, He should not be brought into court\non purely technical violations. Recently, in various parts of British Columbia, magistrates have intimated clearly enough that they regarded the offences as technical or due to misunderstandings rather than to intent to violate the price laws. But magistrates\nhave no real option; they must inflict\nfines even if the offense lacks intent.\nUnless we are to face chaos in prices\nand the worst evils of inflation, price\ncontrols must be continued during the\nreadjustment period after the war.\nDonald Gordon, the very able Chairman nf the W.P.T.B., has clearly stated\nthe necessity. Yet, directly the war\nends, there will be a strong public demand to get away from all the controls\nwhich have irked us during the war.\nWe will stand for much if it is necessary for our defence against the Nazis,\nbut when peace comes it will not be\nso easy to convince the public that\nsomr control.'-, must continue until we\nare apain on solid ground. War needs\nare obvious; the perils of inflation are\nless generally understood and consequently less generally feared,\nIf price controls are to he successfully continued for the minimum period necessary after the Nazi peril has\nbeen destroyed, It can only be if the\npublic remains sold on the idea. Arbitrary action, any indication nf unfalr-\n\u2022 ness in administration, at this stags\nwould make the task of the W.P.TJ3.\nall tht mora difficult after Germany\nhas surrendered.\nThe W.P.T.B. hu bean wisely operated. It has been directed by strong\nmen of unusual capacity, who have\nbeen firm in their purpose but reasonable In their attitude, As a.consequence\nthey have won the priceless asset of\npublic goodwill. Any indication of a\nturn in the direction of arbitrary or\nbureaucratic methods would de incalculable damage to the chances of an\neffective price control organization in\nthe readjustment period.\nLight At\nEventide'\nBy 0, 8. REES\nBeacon light* of Britain\u2014under cover-\nhave been burning clearly and cleanly these\nfive yeara of the world'i wont war through\nblitz and bedlam, and we appreciate the metaphor of Prealdent Roosevelt, \"She la nobty\nshielding the flame of Democracy from the\nblack-out of barbarism\"!\n\"In thla quiet loom beyond the aurglng\nocean\nWhere  lamplight gleam* through  uncurtained pane,\" ,\nwe can hardly gauge Immeasurable relief\nfrom halt a decade of an unrelieved Impact\nof the black-out, lighted dnly through thunderbolts from the night skies and Incendiaries\nwhich consume with rending flame and which\nproved such a balm for Teuton souls!\nLIGHT ILLUMINATE\nThis tiny Te Deum from overtea* ahould\nhave been timed for September 17, which\nmarka a pleaaant prelude to the hour when\nthe light* go on again all over the world and\npresage the dawn of a happier day for the\nharassed human family, They will be beacona\nof gladness, not of dire destruction.\n\"The little limp* that mark the homea of\nmen ,\nHold more of love than tvtr poatft pen.\"\nOnce heard, never forgotten, the left call\nof a warrior's working day\u2014\"Light* Out,\"\n\u2022till echoes In slowly measured meter over\nbivouac and barrack, but Lights On will be\nthe Order of the Night when Victory bell*\nring out\u2014\"For Me and My Gal\"\u2014and yours\ntoo! There will be light at eventide with\nwindows flung wide to the dusk and evening\n\u2022tar . . \u2022 lights, green and red ln busy traffic\nlanes, a twinkling gleam ln square and alleyway, on moor, hill and valley-way . , . harbor lights to guljp tall ships to their haven*.\nLights too in Westminster tower, golden and\nglowing after set of sun where Big Ben has\nboomed defiance through totalitarian age of\nmight and night, and along the Thame* embankment\u2014like string of beaded pearl* \u2014\nwhere ol' man river rolls right along through\nLondon town.\nBY DOVER'S STRAIT\nWithin the confines of Dover Castle stands\nth* oldest building In tha ancient Kingdom.\nThe Roman* built It\u2014an octagonal Pharoa, or\nlighthouse, atop the chalk cllffa that guard the\ngarden gate of England. It has resisted the\nravages of time and lethal liquidation alike.\nIt js emblematic of our guiding star In the\never-old, ever-new Crusade for mankind's\nBill of Rights, visible and invisible, to which\nwe of this generation have set heart and\nhand, a symbol of the invincible free heart of\nman. In Armageddon, the only darkness one\nneeds to fear is a mental black-out, but there\nIs no darkness that can extinguish the light\nof tiniest candle.\nNIGHT f*UST FALL\nBritain has been very dark these five\nyears of war, but its darknes* 1* not comparable with the \"black-out\" ln Germany, even\nbefore blockbusters blasted the blaring street\nlamps In Berlin's Unter den Linden. There Is\nthat which Is far worse than the British type\nof blackout! One would think that Germany\nwould now be compounding her felonies, and\nworking her passage In the hope of getting\nmore lenient treatment than her people deserve\u2014that she would commit no more atrocities and cease cold-blooded murder, spare the\nwomen and children, at least; and even protect the workers in occupied territory, instead\nnf adding error upon error thst will inevitably\nharden retributive action and prolong the\nreformation.\nIt looks as If a Junker general knew\nwhereof he spoke: \"We Germans do not know\nhr_.v to live, that Is why the- rest of Europe\nhas to dip!\" But he spoke too soon; it Is the\nWehrmacht that is now adjing It must be\nnearly twelve of the clock for the misguided\nmen who spawned, not spurned, the cruel\ncreed of Nazilsm, as voiced ln Nazi radloganda\nand Goebbels garbled gabble! The long starless night Is fast falling over the Fatherland\nand Its Herrenvolk. It may destroy their\nnational nostalgia for war. Stern Nemesis has\ncaught up with them, and the would-be thousand year old HItlerlan Reich Is dlaappearln*\nfrom the world scene.  Thus perish all tyran-\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any ruder. Name* of persons\ntaking questions will not be published.\nThere I* no charge for thl* service. Queitlon* will not be answered by mall exoept\nwhen thtrt I* obvious necessity for prjv-\ntoy.\n\"Wondt_ng.   Stlmo\u2014I wlah to know If lt 1*\nnow compulsory to teach religion ln Brltlth Columbia ichool*?\nTeaching religion In B.C. aehool* ll not\ncompulsory. Legislation passed at tht last session authorized that, beginning with tht 1944\nterm, t passage from the Bible la to be read\naloud every morning before regular classes\nstart. The passage is selected by the Department of Education at Victoria. Student* whose\nparents do not wish them to hear the passage,\nmay absent themselves trom the room while\nIt 1* being read,\nS. L, Klmberley\u2014Where should I write for Information regarding coins of value? I\nwould tlso like to know where to write\nfor Information on gardening?\nFor Information on coins write to Col. R.\nA. Wllion, Box 385, La Tljera Station, Los Angeles, California.\nFor gardening, write to the Department\nof Agriculture, Parliament Buildings, Victoria.\nHousewife. Nelson\u2014I would appreciate a\nrecipe for green tomato relish, not the\npickle. Can you supply me with one?'\nGreen Tomato Relish: 30 medium-sized\ngreen tomatoes (7V4 lbs); _i cup salt; _ medium cabbage; 8 sweet red peppers; 3 medium\nonions; 0_ cups vinegar;, 2 cups sugar; 1\ntablespoon celery seed; 1 tablespoon mustard\nseed; tt tablespoon whole cloves. Put toma-\ntoei through food chopper, using coarse blade.\nCombine with salt and let drain over night In\na cheesecloth bag. In the morning put cabbage,\npeppers and onions through food chopper.\nCombine vegetables, sugar, vinegar and add\napices, tied loosely ln a cheesecloth bag. Cook\nover low heat until vegetables are tender,\nabout 20 minutes. Remove spice bag; pack\npickles ln hot sterilized jars; seal. Yield t\nlo 7 pints.\nThis Army\nPress Comment\nA DEADLY SPIRAL\nTIip   argument   against   inflation   U   \u00bbuc-\nrintly -t.ited In ndv_rt_spn_ent_! now app#\u201er-\nJng across the country. \"Hlghrr costs of pro-\n[i.idlon would require higher prices for th*\nthings you buy. Higher prices would require\nhigher wages and salaries. Higher wages and\nsalariai would mean higher coiti.\" That li\ntht inflationary spiral, and once It ftta a head\n-\u2022art, nothing can (top ft.\u2014Montreal Star.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEAR8 AQO\n(From the Nelson Dally News, Sept 21, 1934)\nWinter came to Klmberley last night with\na stiff snowfall and a strong wind. It lasted\nmore than two hours, then the sun shone\nmelting most of It, but all day lt was very\ncold and night brought 1J degrees of frost.\nKay Weller and Sammy Anderson of Trail\nwere successful tn writing their stationary\n\u2022team engineering examination, the former\npassing his first class and the latter his fourth\nclass papers.\nTravelling alone, five-year-old Trails\nKrlnhaug yesterday completed a Journey of\nover 6000 miles from Norway to Trail to Join\nher parent*.\n2S YEARS AQO\n(Frem The Dally News, Sept 21, 1919)\n(Dr.) A. H. Wallace, M.C., of Nelson, left\nfor Vtncouver last night, to receive the Military' Cross at the hands of His Royal Highness,\nthe Prince of Wales.\nAccording to the Kootenay Valley Times\nof Bonners' Ferry, the new chimney of ore In\nthe Electric Point Mine near Laurie, Wash,\nIs being developed satisfactorily.\nGunner Williams, who enlisted in Nelson\nwith the first contingent, returned to the city\nfrom overteas Wednesday night.\n40 YEARS AQO     .\n(From tht Dally News, Sept. 21, 1904)\nWinter mtln line service of the C.P.R.\nwtnt Into effect last night. The Imperial Limited will now be discontinued.\nVancouver's Junior lacrosse team wound\nup a successful tour by defeating Medicine\nHat senior* yelterday 4 to 2.\nGeorge McLaughlin will manage the Nelion lacroise team In their forthcoming tour to\nthe Coast. He Is well satisfied with the makeup\nof his players.\nToday's Horoscope\nA birthday today means that you \u00abre\nblessed with an indomitable spirit and will\nnever acknowledge defeat. You are far-sighted,\nresourceful tnd Intellectual, and have good\nexecutive ability. You also are affectionate,\nloyal and fond of your home and friends. During your next year your affairs will progress\nwell, employers and those In authority proving helpful. You may prefer requests, push\nbuilne**, only beware of giving offenie\nthrough thoughtleisness. Born on this date a\nehlld ihould ali_ for a medical career, oul-\nitandlng luccen therein being evidenced. He\nor she will be exceptionally capable, shrewd,\nadaptable, energetic and self possessed.'\nWar -r- 4 Years Ago\nBy Tha Canadian Praia\nSept. 11, 1M0\u2014France and Japan resumed\nconversations over Japanese demands for military facilities in French Indo-Chlna; Japanese\ndemands backed by presence of their warships\ntn Tonkin Bay. Eleventh Newfoundland naval\ncontingent arrived ln Britain.\nHOW ONI TOWN FEELS\nNsturally we are sorry to see the aoldlers\nand their wives leave town, but their absence\nhas Its compensations\u2014 We may be able now to\nget a box of Kleenex -Corvsllls Gazette-\nTlmei.\nTest Yourself\n1. What famous U.S. nations! psrk Is located tn California?\n?   Where are the Leeward IslinuV\n3. What town Is located at the tip of rap-\nCod1\nWords of Wisdom\nPerseverance Is s Roman virtue, that wins\nrarh godlike net, and plucks success even from\nth* spearprool crests of rugged danger. \u2014\nHavard.\nTEST ANSWERS\n1   Yosemlte.\n3. In tht Caribbean\n3   Provlncetown.\nEtiquette Hints\nWhan you have callers let your imall\nchild come Into tha room and meat them, that\n\u00bbh* may learn the social amenities Do not\nhava her stay to listen to the conversation or\nto \"show off\" before your frienda.\nMonty Glad Hitler\ns a Lunatic\nLONDON, Sept JO (CP) -rield\nMarshal Montgomery Indicated In a\nipeech to troops ln Belgium yesterday that Hitltr might bt taking\ncloser control of fighting ln the\nWeit.\n\"The Allies have a lot to be thankful for ln that Hitler has taken\ncharge of the operations, la lt\nmeans the enem; is being commanded by t lunatic,\" Montgomery laid.\n\"In that respect I am glad that the\nGerman generals failed ln their\nbomb attempt against the Fuehrer.\"\n\u2022 Montgomery did not go into detail.\n\"I truit the chain, but how about tht pole?\"\nONLY 3000 SHIP\nWORKERS IN B.C.\nNEEDED AFTER WAR\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nNot more than 3000 workers will be\nrequired in B. C. ship yards after\nthe war, W. D. McLaren, Manager\nof West Coast Ship Yards, said ln a\nservice club address yesterday.\nThose 8000, which is an optimistic\nfigure, Mr. McLaren said, would be\nemployed in repair work and required replacements of ships which\nwould be approximately 40 in 23\nyears, or roughly two ships per year.\n\"Building of coast-wise ships\nwould not keep our yards busy,\" he\nexplained, \"because after the war\nwe will still have more ships than\nwe started with, despite submarine\nlosses.\"\n\"We will not have the facilities\nto make ships of the Empress size,\"\nhe added.\nlimply,\nuJopicA.\nGARDENING\nSpring and If the bloom* are picked an dthe seed pods removed they\nwill continue to flower all summer.\nCompiled In the Interest! of\nBetter Gardening by the\nNelson Garden Club.\nTHE  FLOWER GARDEN\nAs I look through my window\nand think of the pleasures I htve\nhad in seeing the maise* of flow-\ners I do not begrudge tht time I\nspent ln the Spring. All tht edits\nand pains of 'digging and planting\nare forgotten and I can now see my\nmistakes and must plan to do bet*\nter next season. I can see that I\nhave made the same.mistake that\nmost of us do and that 1* ovtr\ncrowding. . The plant* have not\nspace to breathe. Also In ttveTal\nplaces I have small plants In behind\nthe tall ones. That lavender plant\nmust have something done to it It\nis getting too big for that particular spot. The row of Delphiniums\nover by the fence will, I hope, do\nbetter next year. They were spilt\nup and were kind ot spindly looking.\nThe Gladioli are t failure owing\nto using fresh manure which rotted\nmost of the bulbi and hu taught\n\u00bbrie a very expensive lesson. Dotted\nhere and there are cockcomb which\nare self seeded from last year. The\nCosmos will have to be taken better care of and not be allowed to\ngrow all over the place. The Balsam which is past its best has done\nvery well. The row of Perennial\nFlax and Forget-me-nots have been\na source of pleasure. I can see an\nAster which I have not noticed before. It Is single, a lovely rose-\nmauve shade with yellow centre\nand about three and one-half Inches\nacross. Tht Stocks with their colors ot rose, red, pink,-and white are\na great favorite. I like old fashioned flowers. Dlmorphotheca or African Golden Daisy Is good and I\nmust makt a note to re-order next\nseason.\nThe Sweei Pia\u00ab hava been very\ngood, but I must give them more\nwater. The rockery looked better\nall through the Summer. I planted\nNasturtiums (iweet icented), Golden Gleam, Orange Gleam and Sar-\nlet Gleam. Also dwarf annuals and\nI have been well repaid. Asters are\nanother favorite and this year have\ngrown very welL Marigolds, Butter Ball, Gypsy Jewels, Pot of Gold,\nSpry, a French dwarf and Mission\nGrant have'all done well.\nThli Is what I see as I look\nthrough my window. 1 can see my\nfaults and can plan to Improve\nthem so that I can get greater enjoyment next year. Are you satisfied with your garden br are you\nplanning bigger and better gardens\nnext year? Most of us can only allow a small space for flowers but it\nIs better to use such space to the\nbest advantage.\nPLANT IN  AUTUMN\nLarkspur makes a most effective\ndecoration both in the border and\nhouse and gives far better results if\nsown in the Autumn. I have prov.\ned that Autumn sown plants do\nbetter than those sown in the\nSpring and are mostly ol a finer\nquality. Larkspur may be obtained\nin many delightful shades and ln\nhabit is either stock-flowered or\nbranching. A vase of Larkspur is\ntn excellent decoration for your\ntable. Another splendid flower (or\ncutting is the double Cornflower.\nFrom an Autumn sowing, large\nclumps result which can be plan.-d\nout ln the Spring. They may be obtained In pink or blue shades and\nproduce hundreds of blooms which\nmay be gathered for many week*.\nGodetia sown now flowers much\nearlier that Spring sown onei.\nThey come ln a- vast amount of\nshades Lavatera (Mallow) should\nhe included In every garden.\nThe deep and pale pink flowers\nare moit ihojvy tnd keep (or a long\ntime In vaiei Indoors. The sweet\nicented bltnnltl Brompton Stock\ncan also bt sown In Ihe Fall and Is\ngood for Spring flower. So too 1*\nthe charming old fashioned Candytuft which makes sturdy seedlings\nfor transplanting in early Spring. 1\nthink one of the best cutting flow-\ners Is the well known Calendula\n(Marigold). The lovely shades of\norange and lemon are an addition\nto any garden. If lown in tht Autumn they begin to flower _p tht\nGOVT HOUSE IN\nSASK. TO BE\nWELFARE HOME\nREGINA, Sept. 20 (CP) - Government House in Saskatchewan\nwill be closed when LL-Gov. A.\nP. McNab steps out of office, Premier T. C. Douglas saltT Wednesday.\nTht building will be overhauled\nand converted into a home for the\naged or tor delinquent girls, said the\nfremier.\nHe disclosed that the Saskatchewan government had recently rec-\nommtndtd to Prime Minister King\nthtt In tht event of Lt.-Gov. McNab retiring, the chief Justice of\nSaskatchewan ahould be asked to\ndischarge the duties of lieutenant-\ngovernor ln addition to hi* other\nduties.\nClosing of government house ln\nRtglna will save the provincial\ntrea*ury $17,000 annually, said Premier Douglas. And lt the Dominion\nGovernment acted on the Provincial\nGovernment recommendation and\nasked the chief Justice to carry on\nthe dutle* of the lieutenant-governor It would save the $9000 salary\npaid by the federal government to\nthe Lieutenant-governor In Saskatchewan.\nTurn Against Huns\nGen. Alexander\nUrges Italian Patriots\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP) \u2014Gen.\nAlexander, Allied Commander In\nItaly, broadcast Instructions today\nto Italian patriots to turn agalnit\nthe Germani In Northern Italy.\n\"Hit at once for the liberation\nof Piedmont and Italy,\" said hli\nbroadcast.\nCRERAR MAY BE\nA SENATOR\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) - Resources Minister T. A. Crerar, Liberal member of Parliament for Chuf-\nchill constituency, has been mentioned as a possible appointee to the\nSenate where there are 13 vacancies\nit was learned here today.\nMr. Crerar, who was first elected\nto the Commons In 1917 and who is\nsenior privy councillor ln the government, recently notified the Churchill Liberal Association that he\nwould not be a candidate for reelection In the next Dominion general\nelection.\nMr. Crerar Is 72.\nWinnipeg Newsman\nNamed Legion P.R.O.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) - Don\nBaldwin, Winnipeg newspaperman\nand former aide-de-camp to Maj.-\nGen. C. F. Constantine, former district officer commanding, Military\nDistrict No. 2, Toronto, has been ap\npointed Public 'Relations Officer\nfor the Canadian Legion, it was an\nnounced here today.\nMr. Baldwin, veteran of the pres\nent war, left the Winnipeg Free\nPress in 1940 to Join the Queen's\nOwn Cameron Highlanders and\nJust missed the Dieppe raid when\ninjured during training exercises.\nHe was invalided home and sub\nsequently appointed aide-de-camp\nto Maj.-Gen. Constantine. He rejoined the staff of the Winnipeg Free\nPress in 1943.\nTwo B.C. Airmen\nReturn From Overseos\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP) -\nPo. J. Allen of Quesnel, B. C, and\nFit. Lt. H. B. McGregor of Penticton\nhave arrived in Canada and are on\ntheir way home from service over-\nlea* with the R.C A.F., Western Air\nCommand officials announced today.\n\"Gentle AU-Bran\nkeeps me regular\"\nfree of that Now I'm regular ti a\ndock\u2014and I Uke AU.HRAN l lot.\"\nIf your constipation la due to lack\nof \"bulk\" In toe diet, limply eat\nKtUooai ALUHtAN regularly (as a\ncereal or In leveral AU. HUN muffin*) tad drink plenty of water. Remember, At.i. bran ii a Wholesome,\ndeHcioua cereal\u2014not t medldnef Get\nit it your grocer'*. 1 handy \u2022!_\u2022. Made\nby KeOoM'a in London, Canada.\nJaps Not Out\nby a Long\nShot Says Green\nVANCOUVER. Stpt. 20 (CP) -\nWarning that Japanese surfict\nraiders must still be reckoned with\nai a possible menace along tht)\nBritish Columbia coast wu voiced\nby Howard Green, Progrei*lvt Con.\nservatlve MP. for Vancouver South,\nwhen he ipqke last night to members of the Vancouver Bracktn\nClub. Mr. Green declared that tht\ndinger of attack on this coast 1*\n(\u00abr from .ended.\nHe criticized the government'*\nmanpower policy, Its foreign policy\nand the handling of the family allowance act.\nHe read press reports of a statement by Major Connie Smytht\ncriticizing the type of reinforcement troopi being sent overseas,\ncharging untrained general \u00bbervict\ntroops were being rushed overseal\nwhile 50.000 fully trained men remained for home defence.\nDealing with the war agalnit\nJapan, Mr, Green tald, \"we underestimate difficulties that art\nahead In fighting the Japaneie. I\nam afraid that wa art In for a\nnasty time. The Jap fleet li per-\nhapi stronger than when war\nbroke out and ll juit waiting to\nget the American fleet In tht\nmost favorable poiltlon to fight\nThe Japs are not out by t long\nshot. After thtlr main fleet I* destroyed by the Allied navies thtlr\nraider* will be free to attaok -\nanywhere In the Paclflo and on\nthli ooait.\n'They have a far greater fleet)\nthan the Germani ever had.\"\n\"The tint troops to go to flght\"\nthe Japj| should be the home d*\u00ab\nfence troops, who should be sent\nbefore our boys overseas art\nbrought back and sent across tht\nPacific or are sent direct through\nthe Mediterranean,\" he said.\n \t\n ,.,\u201e,-..,ls\nPIPPPPP\nI\u2014\u25a0\nLiHIe of Vernon Fire Chief Head;\nEamloops Chief a Life Member;\new Constitution, Bylaws, Adopted\nB. C. Fin Chilli Alsoclatlon In\nheir Mth annual meeting in the\n_n_Uan Legion Wedneiday morn-\nng elected Chief Fred Little of\nftrnon to tht preiidancy (or 1944-\nII. Chief Little wu Vice-President\nluring tht put term.\nPreiantatlon of in honorary\nlift mimbtrihlp ctrtlflottt tt\nChltf W. _ Kerr of Ktmltipi,\ndoan of Britlih Columbia firt\nchltft, wu \u2022 highlight Reeve W.\nL. Woodhoutt of Oik ity midt\ntht preientatlon, Itudlng Chltf\nKerr for hit contributions during\n47 yean li active haid of \u2022 fire\nfighting ttrvlct.\nlilt growth of tht fire service\ntrom tht old hind reel diyi to Us\n.resent poiltlon u t highly iclentlf-\n: tlrt protection and prevention or-\n[anizatlon u well u a (Irt fighting\nMm wu tractd by tht veteran.\nkDOPT NEW\nJONST1TUTION\nA redraft of tht Association con-\nititution and bylaws, drawn up by\n-eputy Fire Marshal W. A. Oiwald\ntt Vtncouver ind ipproved by tht\nonitltutlon committee, wu adopt\ned. An aim of the conititutlon wu\nto encourage firemen to particlpttt\nIn tht bentfits of tht firt chiefs\nbody u tliociitt memben.\nOther officer! elected wen Chief\nW. M. Thompion of Wilt Vincouvtr, Vice-President; Chief A. A.\nMcDonald of Ctnadian Pacific Airline! of New Westminster, Secretary; and Deputy Fire Marshal W.\nA. Oiwald of Vtncouver, Treasurer. Named to the directorate wert\nChief E. G. Clayards of Oak Bay,\nPast President; Chief N. M. Mathei-\non, of New Westminster; chief G.\nA. McDonald of Nelson, Chief H.\nH. Miller ot Trail and Deputy Chief\nRobert Taylor of Victoria.\nDecision as to the venue of tht\n1945 tire college wa: left ln tht\nhands ot the directors.\nAn association crest, embodying\na beaver rampant, a chiefs' shield\nwith a maple leaf superimposed\nwith chiefs' trumpets, was adopted.\nIt was suggested that the crest bt\nembodied in a lapal button to be\nworn by life numbers of the Assoc-\nlitlon.\nTht Oak Bay luxlliary firt lervice team, that, lacking competition\nin tht B. C. Challenge Cup fire drill\n<-d\u00abLu**- ______^__S\nWo*t* oi momsC\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy KIRKS L. SIMPSON     \u2022\nAiioclatid Pren Wtr Anilyit\nThi Allied combined ground-tir\nassault boring through tht Brabant\ngateway to tht flit Northern plain\nOt Germany ll taking on triple\nthreat valuei. It not only hit polled\na well developed fluking move\nagainst the whole Siegfried Line\nand \u2022 direct menace to Berlin; but\nil evolving swiftly into \u25a0 vast new\nentrapment mnneouvre designed to\ncatch tht German gtrrlson of\ncoastal Holland ln its clutch.\nThe latter ii implied in Field\nMarshal Montgomery'! calm suggestion to hii forcei that thtre\nwould be \"no point ln rushing\nstraight away to Berlin today or\nthis week.\"\n\"If you first defeat tht German!\nor collect them in at prlioneri,\" he\nadded, \"you will makt the Job\ntailtr.\"\nNor can If be doubted that another 20-mile jump northward from\nthe Arnhem crossing of the lower\nRhine, already in the grip of Allied\nsky troopi, would effectually teal\noft the Nazi garrison ln Northern\nHoU*ed from eictpe except by sea,\nt desperetely htiirdout builness.\nIt ll I reasonable assumption that\nwhatever resistance Allltd forcu\nmay meet ln driving northwtrd to\nout tntmy communlcttloni with\ncoastal Holland, lt will not Include\nslegi operation! against prepared\nstrongly fortified poiitions. Whatever northward extcmlon thtrt\nmay be ot tht Siegfried Lint, it\nmutt be behind Qtrmtn border!,\nnot ln the northeast provinces of\nHolland. And It ll thtrt ln Holland\nthat the road to Zwollt Invites Allied entrapment manoeuvring.\nTht Netherlands coast, Its offshore Islands tnd tht mouths of Its\ngreit tstutrlu and Inland seas\nhavt been heavily fortified since\nNail occupation. The Allied move\nthrough the Brabant gateway,\nhowever, by-passea both those\ncoastal dtfence worki and tha Nazi\nflooded regions. It promises early\nseizure ot many well sheltered\nport! ln Holland to speed up, the\nflow of reinforcements and supplies for the full scale invasion of\nGermany itself along the shortest\nroute to Berlin.\nConsider Ruling to Allow Rentals\nJudge lo Refuse Eviction Permit\nVICTORIA, Stpt. 20 (CP) -At-\ntornty-Otnertl Maltland said todty\nthe B.C. Government it considering\namendmtnt to the Landlord and\nTenant Act which would tllow a\nJudge of rentals court to refuit\npermit for eviction if of, tht opinion\nsuch eviction would ctusi suffering\nor hardship.\nThe Attornty-Oenertl discuiied\neviction in Otttwi earlier this\nmonth with Finance Minister Ilsley\nand suggested to him, on behalf of\nthe B. C. Ooverruntnt, thtt pro vlt-\nion ihould bt mtdt immedlittly\nprohibiting iny tvictlon without\nfirst obtaining t permit from tht\nrental Judge.\n\"Mr. Alley's proposal Is thlt Ottawa doei not agree with our contention that the homing situation it\nvery bad in B. C, but If wt will undertake to pau legislation, the Dominion will ln the meantime mike\nregulation to take care of the situation,\" Mr. Maltland said.\nIf the B. C. Act li amended the\nrental! Judge would be able to have\nregard   for   all   the   circumstance!\ncontest Tuesday, staged a display\nfor visiting delegates, would be presented with first prize money of $75\ntt was decided.\not itch cut uid my order refusing\ntn tvictlon permit would be Just\ntnd equitable, Mr. Maltland said.\nMr. Iltlty tlso suggests that the\nPrices Board would conilder favorably any rtqutit for tn order requiring renttl of vtctnt houies, after they havt bttn vtctnt three\nmonthi. Onttrlo now hu such an\norder.\nMr. Maltland s_.d hi Ii giving\nconsideration al to whether this\nparticular condition exit ta to any\nextent in B. C.\nConvicted on\nWounding Charge\nTORONTO, Stpt 20 (CP) -Nick\nBuduk, 47, today wu convicted of a\ncharge of wounding Ann Kindret, 18\nformerly of Edmonton ind Vancou-\nvtr, who was stabbed in the abdomen in a Toronto hotel last April\n14. He will be sentenced by Mr. Jus-\ntlce _ A. Hope tomorrow.\nMiss Kindret testified that she\ntravelled with Buduk u his wife\nduring a trip from Vancouver to\nToronto lut April and said the was\npacking her bagl after telling Buduk she intended leaving town\nwhen he stabbed her. She spent 27\ndays ln hoipital.\nGov't Would Be Shouldering C.C.F.\nElection Promises but If Might\nBe Lesser of Two Evils Says Ilsley\nOTTAWA,  Stpt.  _   (CP)-Fln-\nance Miniiter Ilsley today made\npublic tht text ot t letter to Premier T. C. Douglu of Saskatchewan\nreviewing proposal! made by that\nProvlnct for ttttltmtnt of $17,700,-\n000 In 1938 tetd grain notei falling\ndue Oct. 31.\nTurning down tht auggutlom\nmadt by Mr. Douglu, Mr. Ililty\nuld:\n\"The tooiptltiot of your pro-\npoul would throw upon tht Dominion Government tht coit Of\ncarrying out your election prom-\nItu.\nIn hli litter, tnd ln t statement\niiiued to The Ctniditn Presi lut\nnight, Mr. Ilsley uld tht plan outlined by tht Sukttchtwtn C.C.F.\nOovernmtnt would mttn tha Provlnct would bur no burdtn of debt\nand the Dominion would assume\nthe entire balance left unpaid by\nfarmers.\n(In a itatement In Saskatoon lut\nnight Mr. Douglu uld under hii\nGovernment's plan the coit to the\nProvince would be $7,000,000 ind\nthe Federal Government'! cost $10,-\n000,000. He said Mr. Ililey'i itatement that the Provlnct would not\npay anything wai not correct. Some\n$4,000,000 had already been paid\nand $3,000,000 would havt to be\nfunded to fanners who hid paid ln\nfull If lettlement wu made it 50\nper cent of the prlnclptl.)\nMr. Ililey, referring to t letter\nfrom Mr, Douglas dated Sept. 11,\nsaid the Saskatchewan Premier had\nthreatened to advise farmers not\nto make any further payment! on\nthe loans unless the Province's plan\nwas accepted by the Dominion.\nThere had alio been- a threat to\nhave municipalities return money\nalready collected.\nMr. Ilsley laid thli wat \"t proposal which, ln the light of your\npublicly announced attitude to the\nTreasury Bill obligations of your\nProvince, would involve a loss\nto the Dominion Treasury of $10.-\nSOO.OOO.\"\nMr. Ilsley said such an attitude\nwas a contradiction of the solemn undertaking of the Province\nln the agreement and with a\ntense of responsibility to Canadian taxpayers it would be wrong\nin principle to submit to such a\nthreat.\n\"It may be that your Government Is in a position to cause\naome loss to the Dominion if we\ndo not respond to the whip which\nyou are proposing to apply, but\nI think if this is the case It will\nbe the lesser of two evils,\" said\nthe Minister.\n\"If you advlie tht farmtri not\ntt pty anything mora on theie\nnotei, tvtn though thty htvt tht\nmoney In thtlr htndt with which\nto do io, your aotlon cannot bt\nregarded it otherwlii thin un\nwarranted and rtpnhtnilblt. It\nwill bt in affirmation of thl principle of repudiation whloh ihould\nnt mora tpply In ralitlom __>-\ntwttn Provincial Government!\n\u2022nd thli Government thin In\nother relation!.\"\nMr. Ilsley uld Press statements\nof Mr. Douglu indicated hi regarded Treaiury notes u little mort thin\n\u2022crept of piper.\n\"Your-offer means thlt so far as\ntht discharge of-the obligation to\npay tht banks $17,000,000 la concerned, tht Province will assume nont\nor prtctlcilly none of thli obligation, wherett you expect the Dominion Government to assume $10,-\n-00,000 of It and tht farmers to\ndischarge $7,100,000,\" Mr. Haley uld\nat mother point ln hit 2400-word\nletter.\n\"For your own purposes, u \u2022\nmatter of Saskatchewan Government policy, you Intend to return\naome money to farmer! who already have paid the whole or at\nleast mort thin SO per cent of the\nprlnclptl. Thli propoied rebate\nhu nothing to do with the discharge\nof tht previoui obligation under the\ncontract\u2014the obligation to pay the\nbanki $17,700,000.\nMr. Ililey said the settlement\nplans were based on the Government's election promises to Increase\nassistance being given by the Patterson (Liberal) Government The\nprevious Government had set aside\nfunds for this purpose and presumably they were still In the Provincial Treaiury.\n\"You will forgive me for uy-\nIng thit I cannot believe you tnd\nyour ptrty did not then (during\nthe election) intend thit the Province ihould bear tht remainder\not the coit Just u tht Patterson\nGovernment wu paying tor the\ncoit of voluntary tdjuitmtnti It\nwu miking,\" Mr. Ililey continued.\n\"Any other Interpretation would\nmean thtt you were mtklng an\nelection promise which you must\nobviously hsve known was completely beyond your cipaclty to\ncarry out\u2014becauie lt lay wholly\nwithin the power of another Government.\n\"Certainly If you Intended ai a\nGovernment not to bear the coit\nof the adjustment you were promising you did not make that clear\nIn your pre-election advertisement I therefore prefer to believe that your pretent propoial\nto throw on the Dominion the\nS_5^\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SIFT. 11, .944 \u2014 7\nErnie Gordon,\nFormerly of\nNelson, Is Killed\nSgt Robert Ernest Douglas\n(Ernie) Gordon, RCAF, former tn-\nnounctr for CKLN tt Nelson,, hu\nbeen killed on active aervice according to the official RCAF casualty lists.\nSgt. Gordon was on the itaff of\nthe radio station from September\n1941 to July 1D42. Ht wu t mtmber\nof CHOV at Pembroke, Ont, when\nhe enlisted. His parents, Mr. and\nMrs. E. D. Gordon, reside it Kelowna.\nwholt coit or practically tht\nwholl coit ot carrying out tht\npromises thtt you madt wu t\npost-election development.\n' \"Whether or not thlt It to, there\nwu, needleii to ity, no coniultatlon\nwith the Dominion Government before these promliei wtrt mtdt tnd\nI do not feel thtt ln fairneis to\nyour predecessors, who were filth-\nfully carrying out their agreement\nwith, tht Dominion Government\nwithout any suggestion ot rep-dia-\ntion ot this agreement, we can, as t\nmatter of principle, complv with\nyour request thtt we bear the full\ncash burden ot making good your\npromises to the electorate.\"\nLONOHOPE. Orkneys. Bootland \u2014\n(OP)\u2014Tht Longh-pe lliaboat reicuid\na steamer and .her craw of 71 ln I\ndenie fog and piloted har to Longhope,\nCl.AHJ.LII.ES!\nKEEP ME FIT\/\nTHESE days ereryono hu\nto bt In tip-top shape to\ndo hit job. And Inner ciemll.\nnets it very helpful for fitness;\nThe use of Eno't 'Fruit Salt1\nwill help you gain freedom\nfrom constipation, headaches;\nindigestion and that listleu\nout-of-sorti feeling thtt to\noften slows you down. ed\nTake i dish of sparkling, refreshing\nEno in i glut of water before break.,\nfut. You'll like ltl plena nt tut*\nbeet uit Eno It free of hirth, bitter!\nsalts-its action It gentle but effect! .e.'\nTo help keep jots fit, take Eno't'\n'Fruit Silt' Buy a large, economical'\nbottle today from any druggist.\nNOS\niw.       aj*\"\">er\n\/ *\u00ab. \\\nIA  WAR SAVINGS',\nSTAMPS\nAT Y01H DSIIQ J\nFRUIT SALT'\nLING AND REIFR\n*.    owing    *i\n\\_P__SH.,'\nPLUS\n* CAN HELP PROVIDE MAXIMUM\nEMPLOYMENT IN POSTWAR CANADA\nHarnessed to Canada's vast material resources\u2014by Canadian workers and\nCanadian machines\u2014there is almost no limit to the benefits which this country's\nmighty reserves of electric power can bestow upon us all.\nAlthough only one-fifth of our available water power is yet being used, electricity already has played a big part in developing industry and agriculture\nthroughout the Dominion. It has helped raise Canada to fourth place among\nthe anas producers of the United Nations.\nTomorrow, when Victory permits a return to peacetime enterprise, our\nabundant electric power, coupled to our great raw material resources can help\ncreate maximum employment and a higher standard of living for everyone.\nBut PLANNING is needed for such achievement! While not forgetting war\ndemands today, we must blue-print the needs of tomorrow. We must plan\nNOW to be able to swing into postwar action\u2014action which will promote the\nforward development of a sound and prosperous \"After-Victory\" Canada.\nFor 5, years Canadian General Electric has played an important part in\nCanada's expansion aa an electrified nation. Now enQatjed almost entirely\nin vital war production, the Company's 7 jrcat plants and 10,000 skilled\nworkers are aaierly awaiting th* opportunity to concentrate then energies\nand enthusiasm on putting electricity to work n^ain lor Canada at Peace.\nCANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC\nCO.\nLIMITED\nHEAD OFFICE -TORONTO\nm\nUMtrnt\n .  !\u25a0__._\u25a0       I  L_l_|\n a \u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 21, 1944\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nCANADIANS ON GUARD\u2014DEATH CLOSE BY: L.-Cpl. W. H. Harris, ef Calgary, Alta., stands\nguard at a street comer In a liberated town near the Seine, completely oblivious of the two dead Germans at hit feet\nIX-BOXIR RIOPINS IN PARIS: Andre Rovitle, 44, the Bordeaux, Franct, bantam who went on to win the world's featherweight\nchampionship by declslonlng Tony Camonerl In New York In 1928,\nie ehown In Paris after he had reopened hit bar which wu closed\nduring the Ger\/nan occupation. Routlt lost hla erown to Bat Bat-\ntallno at Hartford In 1929 and fought In the U.S. the last time In\nNovember of thit yetr.\nUNIQUE WELCOME: Here Is\na sample of the welcome tht\n'Brltlth troope received from the\nBelgians when they liberated\nBrussels. It thowa young Belgians\nextending a warm welcome to\nTommies from the eover of a silt\ntrench during the advance to\nBrussels. The girls throw kisses\nat their Allied liberators.\nNEW COMMAND: Lieut.\nCmdr. Ian Angus, R.C.N.V.R., who\nhas been appointed commanding\nofficer of H.M.C.8. Prestonlan, is\na native of Victoria, B.C., where\nht was \u00ab wholesale merchant before Joining the Royal Canadian\nNaval Volunteer Reserve.\ntyjautflth~etlei\nAUNT   HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEI-\nre\n\\i?\nTH'MONSTCR\nIt LOOSf\/\n-Lao\nCROCHET THAT'S FUN: It\ncoats io tittle to crochet scarfs\n\u25a0nd matt in double string\u2014they\nlook io luxurious when done.\nWhy not start a let now?\nThey're eaiy to do and you'll\nfind them so useful. Pattern 913\nhas directions for scarfs, mats,\nstitches; list of materials.\nSend 20 cents for tnia pattern to\nThe Nelion Daily News, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelson. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Patterns will be mailed\nto your home In about 16 days.\nThere may be some further delay in delivery because of the\nlarge Increase In orders during the\npresent season.\nTnojuon.   majdin\nONE-YARD PATTERN: Spirit-\nlifting apron tlther for K.P. at\nhome or hostessing at the can*\nteenl Dainty, yet sturdyl Pattern\n9109 makes a welcome glftl\nPattern 9109 comes In sires:\ntmall (14-16), medium (18-20),\nlarge (40-42). Small size requires\none yard 35-Inch fabric; [\/_ yd.\ncontrast.\nSend 20 centt for thlt pattern to\nThe Nelson Dally News, Needle-\ncraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddreii. Patterni will be mailed\nto your home In about 15 days.\nThere may be some further delay In delivery because of tht\nlarge Increase In orderi during tht\npretent teaton.\nHUNTERS-^IUST A REMINDER: Hunters-Be careful of your\nthot. It's scarce. In the picture 8ophlt Courtney, ammunition Inspector for a cartridge company at East Alton, III., spells out for\nnlmrods how many shots they can takt at predators and game until\nDec. 31.   It's the U.S. quota\u2014Just 100 shotshells.\n'Me and Pa always tried to help\nneglected younguns. We figured the\nbest legacy we could leave to ours\nwas educated and well-behaved\nneighbors.\"\nCRERAR AT VIMY MEMORIAL: Lieut-Gen. H. D. G. Crerer,\nCtnadian Army Commander, in conversation with Maj. W. Austin,\nat tht hase of the Vlmy Ridge Memorial. In World War I Lieut..Sen.\nCrerar fought en these grounds as a gunner.\nCOLLABORATOR. The Mayor\nof Olloy, Belgium, ebove, been\nevldenoe of the rough hendllng\nby the P.I.N, Belgian resistance\ngroup, for having collaborated\nwith tht Germani during tht occupation of that country. He It reported to htvt turned over several Belgian youths to the Gel\ntapo.\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LISTER, B. C\u2014Mr. nnd\nMrs. Fred West were Sunday\n\\ guesti of Mr. and Mrs, F. C. Yer-\nI bury.\nMr. and Mrs Alex Horn nf Vancouver were weekend guests of Mr\nand  Mrs.  Herbert Yerbury.\nMr. and Mrs. Pat Holland and\ndaughter Mane were weekend visitors with relatives in Lister and\nHuscroft\nMr and Mrs. J C. Helme and\nMrs. S. Staite and son Jerry were\nvisitors to Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. Alvln Gorril arrived to visit this district\nAlvin Gorril who is with the\nRCAF has left (or LethbridRe\nwhere he is stationed. Mrs. Gorril\nwill remain to visit her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Garfield Gorril\nBruce Nlblow of the RCAF at\nthe Coast visited Mrs. Niblow and\ndaughter.\nMiss Irene MrKee of Creston was\na gueit if her parents, Mr. and\nMrs   D. J. McKee\nMrs. W. Woodall and children of\nNelson were guests of Col. and\nMrs.  F.  Lister\nMr and Mrs Mnno Llndh..rs1 and\nchildren   of   Ynhk   were   weekend\nTJ\nPIN\nBOY\nWANTED.'\nKTTt\n~~3\n'_\u00ab_,\u00ab\u00a9\nSALLY'S SALLIES\n_\u00abiwuwj u. 1 rum Mm.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. A moral\nfault\n6. Watery part\nof blood\n(var.)\n10. Country\naummer\nhome\n11. Firearm\n5. Guarded\n6. Coin (It.)\n7. On fire\n8. Astringent\nfruits\n9. Fixes\nlO.Glrl'a\nnickname\n15. Male\noffspring\n12. Small island 16. Perform\n13. Constella      17. Sketch out\nThe only thing wrong about your picture Is that there Im't\nt fanny loke under It\"\nguests of the former's parent!. Mr.\nand Mrs William Llndhorat of Huscroft\nPte S. Kopp of CA.S.C. al Chllll-\nw_irk was a weekend visitor al his\nhome here.\nMr*. Grace Jones and two children of Red Deer. Alta. are visiting\nthe former's uncle and aunt. Mr\nand Mrs. W. J. Skerlk.\ntlon\n14. Doctrine\n15. Gazed at\n16. Cloae to\nIT. Female deei\n18. Large worm\n19. Begin\n23. Pathwaj\n24. Tapestry\n28. Free\n30.111 (comb.\nform.)\n33. Boy'i\nnickname\n34. Half an em\n35. Leaves off,\nes a syllable\n57. Prickly envelope of\nfruit\n39 Skin disorder\n40. Rlghteoua\n42. Occurrence\n43. Choice group\n44. Meaning\n45 Large volume\nDOWN\n1, Gueit\n1. Trouble!\n3. Boy's\nnickname\n4 Devour\n20. Masurium\n(sym.)\n21.1\/1000 of an\nInch\n22. Organ of\nhearing\n25 Father\n26. Repeat\n27. Coin (Jap.)\n29. Cod of\npleasure\nSO. Apportion!\n31. Having life\n32. Cloth\n36. Lairs\n37. Weapon\n(Phil.)\n38. Objects on\npriest's breast,\nplate (Bib.)\n1\n*\np'aI-\nTwrrrm\nA\nP\nA\nCM\nlUr.'i\nu\nS\ne\nE\nL\n1\neBmIa\nT\nT\nE\nE\n1_\nI\np\ne|a|m\nA\n5\n5\nOB    _E_D_-_-\nEnnn   am\nwm   ee__\nHcanra   m\n\u25a0 c._P\nW.\nOK\n\u25a0 '\n9-20\nVe.tcnlsy's Aniwee\n40. Encountered\n41. Article (Fr.)\n_______\n\u25a0mjmjLu. __iii*____i___ffc_*-- -_ra__fl_\ntt.l_.__.__._M\n__\u25a0\n a\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nWanted\u2014rem qbneiul hous\u00bb-\nwork trom Not. 1Mb to lia-ch lit,\nreliable girl, will pa; (ara and return to Vancouver, plus Mi a\nmonth. Apply Boi 1926 Nelson Newi.\nWan r ed   imj-U-Diatrlk - good\nclean capable girl or woman to help\non imall dairy farm. Oood with\nohlldren. S35.00 per month Boi\nISO, rernle. B.C.\nWanted - man to work on\ndairy farm, must be able to milk\nState age Wagea 175.00 month,\nroom and board, no tax. Apply Boa\nS7B Klmberley. B 0.    \t\nRanted\u2014caretaker for island\nhomi. Prefer man and wife. Tor par-\ntloulara apply National Selectlm\nService. Nelaon. ^^\nWanted full time houskkjepkH\ntor couple, light work, good wagei\nBoi 1814 Dally Newi.\t\n_____ FOH GENERAL WORK IN\nhospital Apply National Selective\nService, Nelaon.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAHSAYKKS AND MINK\nHUPKLHENTATIVEa\nB.  W. WIDDOWSOR. PROVINCIAL\nAssayer, 301  Josephine St.. Nelaon\nB     8     ________..     ROSSLAND,    B.C\nAaiayer, Chemist, Mine repreeenve\nTHE WEST  KO01ENAK  ASWS  OP-\nflee. 410 Kootenay 8t., Nelaon, 11 G.\nA J. BUIE Independent U'no Bepre.\nsentatlve   Box 94. Trail, BC\nlll'll.l.INO CONTBACTOKH\n0ONTRA0TOB8\nNEI_ON   UU1LUINC1\nNo jobs too email or too large.\nPhone 530 907 From St.\nC-UttOPHACTOS-\nWanted\u2014waitrbss for slocan\nmining camp. Oood wagei. Apply\nSelective  Service* Nelaon.\t\nWanted\u2014first cook for slo-\noan mining camp. Apply National\nSelective Service. Nelson.  ,\nWANTBD\u2014ONE ALL ROUND WET--\nder tot local machine ahop. Apply\nSelective Service, NeUon.\t\nf ANTBD - HOC8_-___-PB_. APPLY\nPO, Bdgtwood Ave.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rata\u2022 tor noncommercial advertisements under\nthla classification to assist peopli\n_ee_lnj employment Only JSc for\none week (8 dayil coveri any\nDumber ot required Unci Payable\nIn advance Add 10c If box number dealred        \t\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nrOR  IMMEDIATE  PLANTTNO\nBULB8\nleveral hundred Bronse Darwin Tu-\nBpi and Daffodils. Jonquils, (jarcls\n\u2022ui (latter three are mixed) at 50-\ndoaen prepaid.\nPLANTS\nClumps of the newest kind r_lph.nl-\nv_ma IPaclflo hybrids all colors, white\n\u2022to.), bloom spikes to > ft and (lowers\n1 to S In acrosa Would cost you up to\n\u00abc a clump anywhere elie, J5o clump\najmHIlini of newest (Buas-tl) Lupins\nMe each.\nSeveral different kinds ot perennials\n(\u2022lat* what you want) 15c per clump,\nitrawberry runners (Early Bird etc.)\n$1 per hundred.\nPlan te  ixprcai collect\nAndrew Cant. Appledlle, 8.0.\nJ. COLIN MCLAR&N, DC, CHIRO-\npractic X-ray Splnography Strand\nTheatre Bldg.. Trail. B.C Phon* 328\nMACHINIST\n_S__Sim5>. . iih_-w_>._\u00bbi<__w-_iiii_m\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n114 Hall St. Drawer 190\nNELSON, B.C\nMining.    Milling    and    SawmlU\nMachinery\nLawrence industrial Power Unit*\nHeaps   Engineering   Oo.   SawmlU\nMachinery\nSpear and Jackson, \"Th* World'*\nOldest Makers ot Saws.\" Saw\nBits. Holders, Circular Saw.\nPower Saws. .Mollne and Electric. \"The Saw Without a Flaw.\"\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP OS TOUB tma MITALS OR\nIron. Any quantity, rem prtoe* raid\nActive Trading Company. 018 Pow-\nall St- Vaaeoua-t. B O.\nmm^^mm im aa\none horse preferred. Moat any condition. Box 1933. pally News.\nv.aKt_- .': t&iVcCiaM oot-\nIon rata, not lew than 11 lnchu\nMM. -0 Ui  PgJ.. W__p Dally\nWAMTtD   TO   TOT \u2014 10\nmantle ilectrle radios, a.\nham, Slocan City. .\n8B1P TOUR HIDES TO J. P\npn. Nelson. B.O.\n~a_A_z\na. Ora-\nMOR-\nF0R SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nI_.NU1M_.KHB ANU gtlBVEYOttS\nR W HAOOEN. ______-__XS5 __vn.\nEngineer,    B.C.    Land    Surveyor\nRowland and Orand Pork*, B.C\nBOYD  C   AFFLECK, 118  GORX 8T\nNelBon. B.C Surveyor and Engineer\nINHUIUN, T. AND HEAL KHTATK\nCHAS.   P.   MCHARDY,   1N8UKANCK.\nReal Eltate   Phon* 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS  LUUTE)\nMaohlne Shop, acetylene and electric\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 334 Vernon Si\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP -\nSpecial lata in mine and mill work\nMachine work, light and heavy\nElectric and Aoetylene welding.\n708 Vernon St.. Nelson       Phone \u00bb\u00bb\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW. E. MAltaHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave.. Trail phone 177\nHASH  FACTORIES\nLAWBON'B SASH PACTORT _\t\nrlsrdwood merchant       178 Baker 8t\nSECOND   HANI)  81 ORES\nWE   BUY.    SELL  AND  EXCHANQE\nWhit hsve vou? Ph   534   Ark Store\nPERSONAL\nWHEN   IN    VANCOUVER    STOP   Al\nAlmei Hotel  Opp C  P R Depot\n-iny---. -ia.. _.-____\u25a0-, ._..-.\nBULBS FOR PALL PLANTING. DAR-\nwln Tullpa. largo size bulha, any\noolour, per doz. 11.35. Daffodils.\nUrge bulbs, colour yeUow. Per _____\n\u00bb1.00. Peonies, fine varieties. 3 tor\n'11.00, Poet Paid. Kuyper'i Bulb*.\nHatalc, B.C We atow the beet only\nFAU. BULBS\nTulip and Dattodll bulb*. 60e do_*n\nMailing charge lOo dozen extra.\nMac'a areenhouaea. Nelaon. B. C\nLIVESTOCK, POUL.RY  AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nfOa SALB-ONE TEAM HORSUS.  4\n\u00a3\u25a0. old weighing 1500 lb*. Purebred\nlglums. Colour, grey. Both mare*\nMr. P. Rozarorf. Procter. B.C.\nfOR SALE\u2014YOUNG HORSB8. BRO-\nken for harness. Cheap tor ca*h\nApply J Shoustoff. Salmo. B.C.\nS_>K SALE\u20141 MILK OOAT AND TWO\nyoung nannies. Apply Thompson's\nPoultry Farm or Phone 828R1.\nKrlaon Satly Urns\nTelephone 144\nTrail  Circulation:  Phona  1834-1\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per Una per Insertion.\n44c per Une p\u00abr week (8 cona*o-\nuuve inaertlon* for cost of 4)\n81.43 a Une a month 129 time*).\nMinimum 3 Unes per Inaertlon\n\u25a0ox number llo extra Thl*\n\u2022overs any number of times\nPUBLIC (LEOALl NOTICE.\nTENDERS. ETC.\nl\u00bbe per Un* tint lna_t-(m, and\n14c each subsequent Insertion\nALL ABOV_ RATES LESS 10%\nFOR  PROMPT  PAYMENT\nBPEC1AI. LOW RATM\nNon-ininmerclal >il.nii\u00ab\"'\nWanted for IV for any required\nnumber of lines Tor six days, payable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nSingle copy   _  8    08\nBy carrier, per week\ntn   advance      _ 15\nBy carrier.\u25a0 per year   1\u00ab 00\nBy iiislli:\nOnl  month   \t\nThree  months \u2014_\nSix   month*   \t\nOn* year \u2014\n \u2022    78\n     300\n     400\n t.00\nAbove rates apply n. Canada,\nUnited States and United Kingdom to subscribers living ouUld*\nregular carrier area.\nKl.swher* and to Canada wher*\nextra postage 1* required: Oni\nmonth 11 50: three month* 84.00:\nits month*. 88.00. on* year. 815.00\nCryptoquotes\nCAHBON AHC WELDER AND HKi.-\nmet. first class shape t Chess 814\nVernon St .\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EFFECT^\nIve 2 weeks supply 81. 11 week*\n\u00bb5 at Fleurys Pharmacy\t\n10 KODAK   PRINTS 8<\n\u2014 Refunds on tallurea \u2014\nIn Today\u2014Out Tomorrow\nFilm Exchange. Caitlegar or\nPostmaster,   Brilliant\n25c L'0NS PH0T0 25c\nP   O   Boi 434, Vanoouver\nAny 8-etp roil developed uid printed\n25c ReprtnU 8g   Free M coupon\nSPECIAL\nLIMITED NUMBER\nHorn*  Work-Shop  Mandrells\nComplete with Beatlaga and V Pulley\nShaft li approx. II ln. long. _\" round.\nwith V4\" thread, 2 ln. collars\nPRICE  PREPAID TO TOU 85.88\nSend Post Office or Bank Money Order\nwith order\nto\nAOME  MACHINERY\n1647 Main St Vanoouver, B.C\nCORDWOOD SAW  MANDRELS\nSaw Bladea\nUrge Stock ot Pip*, Fittings,\nBelting, Pulleys, Conveyer Chain.\nShafting and other Supplies.\nACME MACHINERY  LIMITED\n1547 Mala Bt Vancouver. 11 0\nquick DeUvery\nLONDON B.B. HOISTS\nIn stock. Immediate delivery.\n1 and 6-ton. all steel, hand and power\nPurves E, Ritchie & S6n.\n858 Hornbv Vancouver, B.O\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nUsed Cars\n1935 HUDSON SIX SEDAN\n1936 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n1929 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nAlio on* only, new\n2V_ TON G.M.C. TRUCK\n2 speed axle, 8.25x20. Dual tlrei\n10-ply.\nGovernment permit  necessary.\nButorac Motors\nHudson, Packard, Ponttac, Bulck,\nCadillac, G.M.C. and White dealers.\n1225 Pine Ave., Trail, B. C.\nSTORE POTT-TUB POR SALE\u2014J\ndouble tided twinging rtoka w\/lth\nglass eliding doors. Suitable for\nmen's and ladles' cout* and suit*\nDouble adjustable nek* on each\n\u2022Id*. Baae It\" by 38\" Thene cases\nare high class hardwood fixtures ot*\nfered at a ridiculous low price. Inquire at Millers Btore, 130ft cedar\nAve., Trail, B.C.\nPOR SALE AT BARGAIN TBlOttS-\nS section Qnrney rang*, OJ. refrigerators, counter and stools, 80\ngal. cap. soda fountain, showcase*.\nNational cash register, Royal type\nwriter, restaurant table and chairs,\netc. Apply Mrs. A. D. Papatlan, 415\nHall St.. Nelson.\n.loaM'\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 21, 1944 - \u00bb\nPIPE - P-TTINC_- - TUBES SPECIAL\nlow price* Actlvi Trading Co., 918\nPowell St.. Vancouver. B. O\t\nONE 4-WHEEL TRAIL1R. OOOD RUB\nber.   Enquire\nShop\nat   Shorty'*   Repair\nPOR SALE - PORTAb-J- PHONC.\ngraph, excellent condition, 20 rec-\ncords. 418 Victoria Bt\t\nDURHAM CONDENSATION PUMP. IN\ngood condition. Apply Mac'a Greenhouses.\nELECTROLUX CLEANER. OUA-tAl.-\nteed service, supplies a. R. Fraser,\n1104 McQuarrle Ave.\t\nPOR SALB\u2014 ROGERS 9 TUBE EUSC.\ntrio radio, table model, In good oon-\ndltlon. Ph. 38_-_ after 5 pm.\nFOR SALE \u2014 OOLD RAILROAD\nwatch ln good condition, 125. Boi\n51 n, Nelion Newi.\nFOR SALB- BED OUTFIT WITH\nspring-filled mattreaa. 410 Josephine\nStreet.\nRUBBER   STAMPS   FOR   MARKD.-!\nFruit Boxes  Nelson Dally Newi.\nHALF  SIZE  VIOLIN  WTTH   CASE\u2014\nPractically new. \u00bb15. Phon* 794R3.\n8-HOLS ECLIPSE RANGE, WARMING\ncloset.   Phone  303L.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINTEu\n(6 or 8 exposure roll) 25o Reprint*\n8c each For your snapshots. chouM\nKrystal Finlah Guaranteed non-fade\nprlnU Krystal photos. Wilkle. Saskatchewan. IMabUeb-d oni M\nveara\nFOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY-ONE\nNo 3-3 cream separator, capacity\n800 lbs. call, wire or writ* Central\nTruck ts Equipment Co.. 702 Front\nSt., phons 100. Nelaon, B. C.\nSTOP SUFFERING PROM FOLLOW\nIng stomach Disorders. Acid Stota\nch Indigestion Heartburn, Coated tongue. Bad Bteath Sick Head\nai'hea, etc Cae Ellk'a stomact pow-\nto . 1. prepared by ixpetienced\nPharmacist It must give Immediate\nresult* or money back. II 00. 12 00\nEllk'a Medicine Company. Dept 43\nSaakatoon   Saak.\nSTOP rrCHlNG TORTURES OP\ne.zema. psoriasis, ringworm, athletes foot and other akin irritations with Ellk'a Ointment No a\nprescription of noted skin specialist itch relieved promptly\nikin healed quickly or money refunded 1100. 12 00 Mall orders\ntilled promptly Order today from\nEllk's Medicine Co. Dept 42 Saak-\nItoop   Sask   \t\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014SMALL SUITE\nor room for elderly lady. Apply Box\n1823 Dally News.\t\nWANTED To RENT OB BUT\u2014Modern house, 8 rooms preferred, Ap-\nnlv Box 1924 Dally Newi.\nWAMTTD TO RENT\u2014 FOUR OB FIVE\nroom house Immediately. Apply 902\nPni'rth Street.\nTORN. APT. SUITABLE POR ONE.\navailable for Oct. and Nov. Apply\nPhone 70\nPOR   RENT\u2014FURN.   LIOHT   HOUSE-\nV-_nln- Tom   Phone 723R.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED\u2014ROOM AND BOARD POR\nquiet High School girl. Horn* weekends   Applv C, Holt. Balfour.\nIBDS   50c\nlines at\nA  NIOHT.   CLUB HOTEL\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST SOME TIME AOO A BOX CON-\ntslnlng money and Jewelry (heirlooms), Owner Is ln the Army. Reward Is generous. Write Box IB27\nIisllv News.\nPHONE 144 FOR WANT AD 8ERVICI\nMW    IA    Puna    OBim*\nK R B V B\nXTK     H     LMTKTVB\nHVMWKXKQR\nx c\nPMK1V\nL H I Z B W W -\nYesterday's Cryptoquotei   LUST OP POWER 18 THE MOST\nTLAGRANT OF ALL THE PASSIONS-TAr.n_.il\nCryptoquotes ar* quotation! of fimooi persona written cipher A\nlubatltute character has replaced the original letter For Instance, sn\n\"It\" may substitute (nr the original \"E\" throughout the egtlre crypto-\nmiote. or a \"BR\" may replace an M.L\" Find tho key and follow\ntlirouyh to lhe solution.\n1937 DELUXE AUSTIN \"10\" SEDAN.\nfor economy and high gas mileage\nyou can't beat thl*. 1933 Ford\nCoast, Model B. Queen City Motors\nLtd.. Phon* 43. Nelson, B.C.\nDunlop\nTIRES AND TUBES\nPull stock! on  hand\nFactory warehouse representatives.\nOfficial Tire Inspection Depot\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS LTD.\n1MB CHEV. SEDAN, SERIAL 4774884.\ntn good running order. New hat-\ntery. good rubber. Would make light\ndelivery. Hit or best off\u00abr. Can be\nseen at Beacon Servloe.\nPOR SAIJ_\u2014CHEVROLET. SERIAL NO.\n676384.   Model   169.  Tear   1932.  Price\n1375. Extras, heater, epotllght. New\nrubber. 119 FWls Street.\nFOR SALE\u2014A 32-VOLT MOTOR AND\n2 lacross* shoulder psds. Writ* Box\n5118. Dally Newi.\t\nFOR SALB-1935 PANEL DELIVERY\ntruck. Phone Mac's Greenhouses.\nTOU PAY LESS AT TRE ARK STOR1\nStock Reducing Sale now on.\nCIDAR   PRESS,   OOOD   CO]_>r_-0-..\nPrice 120.00 Box 1992 DeJly Newa.\nSUMMER RESORTS\nBALFOUR BEACH INN\nVacuoles now nvMlah.e for rooms and\nm\u00abalB, cottages, rowboat*. Writ* or\nphone Balfour 811.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\n-XI.UHTHIAI-H\nWV_\nr:_n Car & frty Pfd _ \u201e ,..\n28'i\n7an   Celaneie  Pfd    _.\t\nl_H\n10.\n4B  _\nHorn Steel St Co-1 B\t\nHi\nH Smith Paper Pfd\t\nuovi\nacColl Frontenao\t\nt\nQuebec  Power    \t\n12%\nShawnlgan WAP _ \t\nH   .\nBANKS\n>imlnl_n       \t\n18\nIB\n18\nNora  Scotia     \t\n28\nIS\n26 tt\nNEW YORK STOCKS\n69 Mi\n39 .\nAnacnnrla _.\n-Ti\n3eth Steel    \u201e\n81 Hi\nCanadian Pacific ... .    _..\n10'i\n3upont \t\n150 Vi\n3en Motors \t\n81%\ninternational Nickel _ \t\n2-r,\nInter Tel as Tel ._ \t\nR2>.\n-Mon   Parltle   ... . ,\t\n104K\nITS Rubber    ,,\t\n4-1.\nDS Steel __ \t\n61%\nMAKES MATRIMONIAL TOUCHDOWN: Michigan* atar football player la married to on* of Hollywood's loveliest actreuei. Lieut.\nThomu Dudley Harmon and hli bride, Elyie Knox, ar* ihown after\ntheir marriage, In th* St. Mary's student chapel. It WM th* largest\nwadding ever performed In th* student chapel, and large orowda had\nto be kept back by the police.\nTigers Hammer\nYanks lo Put\nThem Four Down\nDETHOIT, Sept. 10 (AP)\u2014Hammering out a dozen hits, all but one\not them figuring in the scoring, Detroit Tigeri today handed New\nYork Yankeei their filth straight\nlos!, 8-2, to shove the Yank! four\ngamei off the American League\npace and virtually nhother New\nYork pennant hopei.\nPaul (Dizny) Trout, scoring hli\n25th pitching victory againat a dozen defeat*, scattered aeven Yankee\nhits in chalking up his jlxth straight\nverdiot over <he World Series champions this season.\nTrank Crosettt bdted hli fifth\nhomer in the seventh Inning with\nNick Etten aboard for New York's\nonly run*.\nDick Wakefield led off th* Tiger\nsecond with an lnside-the-park\nhomer, his ninth circuit swat .this\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nwnnnPK-., Sept. 20   (OP)\u2014Oraln\nquotation*:\naYB:\nOct  .\nDec. .\n(.lay\n1)3%\n0311\n92%\n92%\n_H\nB0%\n00%\n91S\nDO'..\n91 _\nOATS\nOct. .\nDec. .\nMay\n49%\n61%\n51%\n59%\n50 60\nBarley: All futures at celling prlcas\nof 64%B. ,\nCASH PRICSS:\nOats: 2 C.W. 81%; e\u00ab. S C.W. JlVi;\n3 C.W. 51%; ei. 1 feed \" _: 1 t\u00ab*d\n61%; 2 feed 50, I feed 48%; ttack\n51%.\nBye: 2 C.W. 91.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALOABT, Sept. 20 (Of)\u2014 T_d\u00bby\u00bb\nreceipts: 381 cattle, 99 calve. 48\nbogs. 15 sheep.\nCatUe market active at steady\nprices. Good to choice butcher steers\n10.-0-1125; common to medium --\n10 25. Oood to choice butcher heifers\n9.25-10.25. Oood oows 7.50-825. Oood\nbulls 8-6.50. Stocker and feeder steers\n8.-0-9.50.\nOood to choice veal calves 0-10;\ncommon to medium 750-8 60.\nHogs yesterday 16.70 for A's at yard*\nand plants Sows 9-9.2S live weight.\nStsgs 6 50 live weight.\nI.vnli, e.75*J0.\nWflohkeL JhendL\nyear. Singlet by Roger Cramer,\nMike Hlgglna, Rudy York tnd\nWakefield accounted for two Detroit runs ln th* fifth, tnough to\nwin behind Trout\nQueen weakened ln th* eighth,\nai 1 th* first five Tiger batters\nreached tint lately\u2014four on hiti\nand one on Crosetti'i error \u2014 and\nall scored ai 10 men came to bat be-\nfor righthander Floy Bevena came\nIn to Tetlre the last man. Four of\nNew York'i seven hits off Trout\nwent for extra bases, but Dizzy\nnever was in real trouble.\nNew York     >    T   1\nDetroit        .   11  0\nQueen, Bevens (8) and Garbark;\nTrout and Swift\nPOR AUTOMOBILE PARTS\nCikv Auto Wreckers\nMODEL A PORD. PRICE 1100 CASH\n1980. Bnnlne ln tqpd order. Ph. 677\nNSW   AND  USED  BATTERIES   NEL-\n\u2022on  Auto  Wrecking  and  Oarage\n?ROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nReal Estate\nOne of the most stable and reliable Investments. We have\nhouses ranging trom $1800 to\n$6300 all paying 10 per cent or\nbetter.\nFor further particulars call In at\nT. D, Rosling\n568 Ward St\nNelson, B, C.\nFOR BINT\u2014 riVI-ROOM UODCtN\nh(.u.ie, furnt-)-od. for S-moott. period, North Shore. Available Octo-\nbar 1. References required. T. D.\nRosllni, 688 Ward St. Ph. 717.\nHtK U8  IF YOU  NKKt) A OOOD AC-\neident  or   ilckneaa   poller   O    w\nAppleyard,  393   . _kr>_   St.\nWK   SPBCIAUZE   IN   FARM   LANDS\nSee our lint\u2014Robertson  Realty Co\nLtd    M2 Ward Bt\nFOR BALE\u201430 ACRK FARM, 7 ACRE.)\nclear. 3 roomed houae. John Bengti-\nberg. Blewett.\nLONDOW, Sept. SO (CP)\u2014Appearance of buying orders lata In the\nsewilon brought a rally on th* market\nand prices closed generally higher.\nNEW YORK\u2014Desplte backwardnees\nof rails and a few other key groups\nthe market ahowed a fairly ntes-dy tone\nwith narrow pins eatabllabed ln favored Issuer\nCanadian Iseuee were quiet. C.P.R-\ngained Vi and Walker added \\4.\nMONTREAL\u2014PIusot were alwad of\nlosses.\nNoranda waa softer In Metals. ,\nWasa, at a new top led a -.nihil\ngroup of stronger Mines which Included O'Brien. Labrador, Francoeur. Bla-\ncoe and Perron. Aubella, and Arno dipped.\nTORONTO\u2014The gold stocka apurted\nInto a considerable rally while trading ln heavier than average volume\nIn the higher prlw Hat the Yellow-\nknife stocks were leaders. Giant advanced 00 cent. to 10.  Problsher 35\ncents to 16, Bear 16 cent* to l.M. Oon-\nwest 11 to l M and Negus 11 to 117.\nLake Shore firmed  _..\nLabrador advanced 9 cents to 3JK)\nand fraction* of si to H were added\nby Nickel and Norand*. Steep Rock\nworked back 10 cents to 3.53.\nVANCOUVER\u2014 Both Min*. and Oil*\nmade a few acattered gains.\nCHICAGO\u2014Com waa slightly higher\nbut other grain fu _prea markets were\nweak with oeak and rye breaking a\ncent or more in quiet trading.\nAt the finish wheat was unchanged\nto H lower than yeatetxdey'a clo**,\nSeptember $1.60 _%. Corn wu _\u00bb Icjw-t\nt to H higher. December 1.09.4-%. Oite\nwere unchanged tm 1 lower, September\n84S-V. Rye w_n U, higher to % lower,\nSeptember 9fi%. Bar_ey was _ to H.\nlower, September |l.06M_..\nWINNIPXO\u2014Rye future* prloee eas-\n-d following a firm opening. There\nwin fair ahlpper buying but weaknesa\n*t Chicago and American selling here\ndepreuod prlcee.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINKS\nAiut-o-Huronlan   \t\nBan Utlali Mining\nBra-til Oold Mlnea\nCol-K>ll_at__ H k 8\nDome Mlnea \t\nEut   Malartlc\t\nPalconbridg-   Nickel   .\nHard Rocli Oold  _\nHolllnger \t\nHudaon Bay MAS.\nInternat   Nickel   \t\nK-rr-Addlaon\t\nKlrkland Uke     \t\nUki Shor* Mlnw .._\nl_imaque Contac \t\nMacL Cockihutt \t\nMadaen  Red  Lake  \t\nMalwtlo Oold  \t\nMrTntyre-Porcupln*  ...\nMcKciir.li Red Lake .\nTV)\n11\n1 u\n<\u00ab 00\nau.oo\n2 38\n900\n.\u00bb-\n11-5\n30 00\n92 SO\n10 lt\n10-\n19.90\ne 20\nno\nJ 30\n:i '.i\n80.90\n183\nMining C-poratton          1 90\nNoranda  __      99 85\nNormetal  \t\nPamour Porcupine \t\nP-Tron   Oold   \t\nPickle  Crew  oold  \t\nPowell   Rouyn   Oold\nPresta. Saat Doom \t\nflan Antonio Oold ....\n1-lerrlu Oordon \t\nflladen   Malartlc   \t\nSullivan Oon* \t\nTeck-Hujch-B Oold \t\nToburn  Oold Mlnea .\nVentur_    _. .\u201e.\nWalle  Amulet   \t\nWright Hargreavei .\nAunor \t\nAiimaque   .\nC.ichenour   \t\nOlant  T   K   \t\nO'Brien \t\nUpper Can  _ _..\nNelll*  \t\nBleep Hock     _..\nOnlden Oal. \t\nTrana C II\nniia\n-Ti-_.lc_l Re-Wu-ch .._-\nImperial  \t\nInt*r P-Bol\u00abum  \t\nRoyallte      -\t\nTeaa* Canadian.  ....\nVermllata  _...\nINIHIHTRmj\nBell   Telephou*    \t\nBra*  Trie . _. .\nllrr\u25a0'.\u2022_\u00ab  *  Dlatlllrn\nAC Pow*r \"A\"\nCan Car \\ foundry\nCm Ualtlnt    \t\nCan  Plll-lc  Ply  .   .\nOomlhlon Brtdg*\nDtltlllari  Beaarama\nMontreal   Wm*t   \t\nNat Sttel  Car   \t\nPowtr Oorp -, ...-._..\n99\n1 SO\nIM\nl.K\n1 19\n1 90\n(OS\nao\nss\n1 S9\n3 00\n100\n1100\n_ ro\nj on\n3 113\nao\n\u2022 10\np 00\ni n\n1 TJ\n1 19\n\u00ab 59\n.10\nnn\nJill 00\nll on\n1. a\u00bb\nlit\nBl\n..    199\nJOS\nIS\n-.     JOH\n-       \u2022 H\n48\n...      US\n\u00bb\n_     V\n...    Jl _\n_      18^\n_      IVk\nRED SOX SIX GAMES\nBEHIND TIGERS\nCLEVELAND, Stpt. JO (AP) -\nCleveland Indian! pushed \u00bbcroea\ntwo runs ln the lSth Inning to edge\nout Boston Hed Sox 11 to 10 today\nbefore tn estimated 500 fana. The\nloss put the Red Sox six gamea\nbehind tht Tiger., with 12' games\nleft to play.\nBoth team* used four hnrlers,\nJim Bagby receiving credit for the\nvictory and Yank Terry being\ncharged with the lots.\nThe Sox garnered one run ln their\nhalf of the I3th, to lead 10-9. Manager Lou Boudreau'i playeri came\nback with a pair of tallies, however,\nto take the gimt.\nBoston  \u2014   10   18   '\nCleveland    -    H   18   1\nDreisewerd, Hauimann (3) Terry\n(6) Barrett (13) and Conroy, Partee (4); Harder, Poat (3) Heving\n(4) Bagby <\u00bb) tnd Rosar, Schlutter-\n(3) Suace (4).\nBROWNS ON TIGERS' HEELS\nST. UIUIS, Sept JO (AP) - St\nT\/iuls Brown, battling to itay In\nthe race for th* American League\npennant, defeated Waahlngton Sena-\ntort tonight S-J lu Jack Kramer\nwon hla 19th game of the yetr. The\nBrowns now trail Detroit by 1H\ngamet.\nThe victory was the eighth for fhe\nBrowne over the last-plac* Sena-\nton airnlnit two losaei ln Sportt-\nman'i Park. It waa Kramer's second decision against four defeats\nby the Senators.\nThe right hander walked only on*\nman and struck one out while giving up eight hit*. Stan Spence\nnoted for his jpeetawlsr hitting in\nthe Browns' park, hit two double*\nto bring hil batting total for the\nseries to five, four of them extra\nbase blows.\nChet Laabs, who replaced Al Za-\nrlUa ln the St. Louii outfield, led\nthe 11-hit attack on Mickey Haefner\nand Alex Carraiquel with three\nlingltt. two of which icored run*.\nWashington  _.._  J   8   J\nSt   Louii           5 11   0\nHaefner, Carrtsquel (T) and fer.\nrell; Kramer and\" Hayworth.\nWHITE SOX WALLOP A'S\nCHICAGO, Sept. JO (AP)-After\nbeing shut out for lix lnntnga, the\nWhite Sox ganged up on Ruaa Christopher for ilx rum In the seventh\nInning tonight and defeated Philadelphia Athletics. 9-1. Third Baseman Grev Clark singled twice In\nthe big ' Inning.\nOrval Grove, who retired for a\npinch hitter during the rally, wis\ncredlied with his teteon'a 14th victory.\nrhilndclphla         18   0\nChicago .872\nChristopher. Berry (81 and Hayes;\nGrove, Maltzberger (10 and Jordan.\nSPORTS\nBall Standings\nNATIONAL LEAQUE\nSt. Louii\nPittsburgh\t\nCincinnati  ,\t\nChicago\t\nNew York\t\nBoiton       88\nPhiladelphia _    M\nBrooklyn     81\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDttrolt     SO\nSL Louli \t\nBoston  \t\nCleveland \t\nPhiladelphia\nChicago    -\nWashington   .\nPirates Shade\nDodgers lo Stave\nOff Card Coup\nBROOKLYN, SepL JO (CP)\nPittsburgh Piratea delayed St. Louis\nCardinals' pennant clinching today\nby taking t close 2-1 game trom\nBrooklyn Dodgen.\nBob Elliott, returning to the regular lineup after t layoff due to an\ninjury, drive ln both Pirate runs,\nsending home Jim Russell with a\ndouble in the third Inning and icor\nIng Pete Coscarart ln the seventh\nwith a single. <\nNick Strlncevlch held th* latt-\nplace Dodgers to six bits, betting\nRookie Fred Wells, who gave up\nboth Pirate runs in the leven innings he worked.\nPittsburgh  .'..- -    >   <\nBrooklyn\nStrincevich   and   Lopez;\nWebber (8) and Owen.\n1   8  2\nWells,\nREDS LOSE AND WIN\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. V) (AP)\u2014\nBucky Walter! won hla 22nd victory of the National League reason\ntonight aa Cincinnati Reda annex*d\nthe second game of t twl-nlght\ndoubleheader from Philadelphia\nPhils 6-4 after the Phllt took the\nopener 3-1\nCharley Schani outlasted Ed\nHeusser ln a pitching duel in fhe\nopener aa tht Phils ran up their\nwinning itretk to six straight gamea.\nWalters wai in trouble frequently\nIn the second game, but weathered\ntht ttorm tnd outltsttd three PhO-\nlies' hurlcri. Eddie Miller1! homer,\nwhich pushed acrosa three runs ln\nthe fourth, gave the Re* tht winning margin.\nPlrsfr garnet\nCincinnati f T  0\nCanucks to Keep\nRed Sleeve Badges\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP) - After\na brief wrangle between recruiting\nofficers and the General S__ff lt has\nbeen decided to let th* Canadian\nActive Army personnel keep their\nGeneral Service (GS1 Badge*.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINIS\nBayonue           .08 OS\nBralorne        H 99       14*0\n-,'artboo Qol_ _.\n3 10\n\u25a01 30\nOolronrla  \t\n09   _\n\u2014\nClrandvlew    \t\n10U,\n13\nHedley   Muot\t\nnil\n.70\nWand  Mountain __\n1 11\n1 19\nRoot Belle  \u2014\n39\n90\nPar.lllo   KlrM   \u2014\n.13\n19V,\nPioneer Ooltf\t\n. 10\n\u00ab 19\nPremier O-ld      .\n130\n1 1-\n.01\n\u2014\nSheep C-eili   \u2014\n1     .\n1 10\n31lbt\u00bb Premier\t\nI.\n\u00bb\u2022\nWhlWv-ter       \t\nfit VI\nor.\nTmlr Tan_-i OM ....\n-\n\u2014\nOILS\nAnilo Can  \u2014\na.\nna\nCal ft Mm onion    ..\n1 Tl\nIN\nCommoll    _.._\n10\n\u2014\nCo mmon WMl-h\t\nM\n\u2014\nPHothllli   \t\n1 \"..\n\u2014\nHorn* .._ \t\n199\n100\nHotel  -\n1     .\nn\nNational T*us\t\nUS\n--\n.\u2022soldo Pel* \t\n99\n(IS\nRoyal 0*n  -\t\n09   _\n04\nItovilltl    _.\nl\u00bb 00\n10.00\n_>nl\u00ab_Kl     -\n.01U\n01 tt\n\u2014\nfanalla\t\n\u2014\n_ilc_>   \t\nIIH\n\u2014\nIMWHTnl-tU\nCapital lit      \t\n( 00\nIll\n.Viwt Brtw      _\nl M\n1 TO\nlllllleil    IVatlll\t\nson\n4 110\nPhiladelphia ,\nHeuaser and Mueller; Schani tnd\nrtnley.\nSecond game:\nClnclnnttl  8  11\nPhiladelphia  tit\nWalteri and Mueller; Raffena-\nberger, Shuman (8) Karl (7) and\nPeaeock.\nChietgo tt New York, po-tponed,\nwet grounds.\nSt. Louis at Boston, postpontd,\nweather.\nTier, Broughton\nWin New Denver\nGolf Tourneys\nNEW DENVER, B. C\u2014 Both the\nladiei and men's golf tournaments\n(or the club cup* took place Sunday, bringing tournaments to an\nend for this season. Twenty-one\nmembers took part In the men's\ntournaments for the cup donated to\nthe club by W: E. Graham of Slocan City. J. Tier who carded a net\n70 won the cup. The ladles' cup,\ngiven by Neil Tattrie, was won by\nMri P. Broughton, with a net score\nof M. There were six competitors.\nAt th* conclusion of play both cups\nwere presented to the winners by\nthe President, Trink Broughton.\nThe ladies lerved tei.\nPortland Takes\nPlayoff Opener\nTiOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (AP) -\nEddie Adam, batted in three runs\nwith a homer and a slnRle ai Portland took the first |*\u00bbirvt of the\nRhauRhne-iry playoff series tonight\nfrom Los Angelei, Pacific Coast\nI_eag\\ie champion. The score was\n41\nThe series will be resumed tomorrow night with the team that\nwins four nut of nrven Rames facing the winner nf the Oakland-'\nRan rranrl.ro serlr..\nPortland 4   T    1\nI\/is  Angelei .'       19   0\nLinks and Adams; Prim, Com*\nellsfl  (8>  and Fen.an.iet.\nBaseball Stars\nto Entertain\nOverseas Troops\nNEW YORK. Sept. 30 (API-\nFive troupe* of major league\nbaseball start will head overseas\nshortly after the World Series to\nentertain soldiers tn front line\nbattle areas under the ausplcet of\nthe United Service! Organization\ncamp shows.\nEleven active playeri tnd lis\nmanagers, including Mel Ott, playing pilot of the New York Gianta,\nwill be included on the roster el\nvolunteers who will visit the flv*\ntheatres ot war on tours lasting\nfrom two to three months.\nLeo Durocher of the Dodgers,\nFreddy Fitzslmmona of the Phllllee,\nFrankle Frlsch of the Pirates, Luke\nSewell of the Browns, Steve O'Neill\nof the Tigers and Ott will five the\nGI's the inside on the master minding that goes on behind the big\nleague scenes.\nDixit Walker of Brooklyn, who\nappears to be headed for the National League balling title, win\nhead a delegation of senior circuit\nperformers that includes Billy\nJurges and Joe Medwick of New\nYork, Rip Seweli ot Pittsburgh and\nBucky Walters ot Cincinnati\nA Yankee contingent of Nick Etten, Johnny Llndel land Tuck\nStalnback heads the Americas\nLeague group. Others Include Dom\nQutteridg* of St. Louis tnd Jo*\nKuhel and Dutch Leonard of Washington.\nToronto Softball.\nTeams Eliminated\nCLEVELAND, Sept'*) (AP) -\nBoth Toronto soft bin teami wen\neliminated today at th* world's\namateur loftball tournament narrowed iti field ot both men'i md\nwomen'i teams for semi-final play\ntomorrow.\nPhoenix Ramblen won t women'i\ndivision game trom the i Toronto\nSunday morning clan, 1-1, <h_*\nping the Canadlani from the tour*\nnament despite t 15-strlkeout performance by Toronto Pitcher Elm*\nW11 son.\nThe Ferguion Auditors ot Colur*.\nbui, O., bumped Toronto'* Tip Tope\nfrom the men'i division with t 4-1\nvictory u Warren Gerber pitched\nI no-hit game.\nBisons Make it\nTwo Straight\nBUFFALO, Sept. 30 (API -\nWnlter Wllion held the Internatlon-\nal League champion Orioles to\nthree hit! tonight a* Buffalo defeated Baltimore 1-0 in a semifinal play-off serlei game curtailed\nto leven Inning* by rain. Th* victory g*\u00bb tht Biaoni their eec-in\nstraight In the b_t-nf-i*vtn game\nlerlee.\nBnltimnre 0   S   a\nBuffalo 1    .   0\n(Called end i-venth\u2014rain.)\nF.mbre*  and  Kahn;   Wilson  and\nUn**r.\n______\n\"TT'S one thing to product\nA t> truly fin* blade) gad\nquite another to make tor* k\nreaches you In perfect condition. The Blue Gillette\nUlade Is oMcbereJ Ink* wrapper to prevent the edges (rota\nrubbing against the pip\u00ab_\nThus It comet to jonjactotj\nsharp\u2014rtidj to give jmi all the\nextra share! and extra ihtv-\nIng comfort Gillette tech.\nnicitns hive built into ItP\n 10 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, SIFT, 11,1944\n=\nTONIGHT \u2022 FRI. . UT. \u2014 Complete Shows Ol 7:00-8:51\nfgjB*\/ \"Speaking of Animals\"\u2014Latest World News\nHelena Rubinstein\nHand Lotion\n63c\nMann. Rutherford\ndrug CO.\nDoukhobor Test\nCase Appeal\nIs Dismissed\nVANCOUVER, Sept. JO (CP) -\nJudge C. J. Lennox dismissed in\ncounty court todty a test cue appeal of Tlm Samarodin, Doukhobor\ntrom a police court conviction for\npublic disrobing.\nHearing of appeals by 19 other\nDoukhobors serving penitentiary\nterms for similar offences hai been\nadjourned until Sept 26.\nC. W. Hodgion, who appeared for\nthe Doukhobors, said he would ap\npeal from Judge Lennox's decision\nto the Court of Appeal.\nFire Chiefs See Chemical KIE1 Oil\nBlaze in Seconds, New Equipment\nlire fighting Is ltt true light u t\nhighly scientific, technical operation wat thrllllngly. revealed in t\ndemonstration of modern fire suppression equipment tnd apparatus\nat tht Recreation Grounds Wedneiday by V. H. Brown ot Vincouvtr,\ndealer's representative, ind by the\nNelion Fire Department. The demonstration wu part of the program\nof the 13th annual B. C. Fire Chiefs'\nAssociation College, ln session here.\nFog noztles that blanketed a\nblaze-filled room and killed' raging\noil-fed flames as a fireman walked with It Into the midst ot fire\nand smoke; Foamite chemical\nequipment that spread bubbles of\ncarbon dioxide gas over a billowing\noil pit to quell it ln 110 seconds;\nand Nelson's efficient new 700-\ngalion pumper and aerial ladder\ntruck, were seen. Fire Chiefs and\nfiremen trom throughout B. C. and\na large crowd of citizens, Watched\nthe display.\nVersatility of fog and ipray\nnozzlei wai illustrated ln a variety\nof tests and Conditions. Two huge\nboxes representing blazing rooms,\nand an oil filled trench arid larger pit were employed.\nA side glance htto ent of tht services often performed by firemen,\nthe living ot pets, wu afforded\nwhen \u2022 big Labrador tumbled Into\nthe oil pit left afloat with water\ntnd chemical. Firemen went to the\nrescue, and yanked the big canine\nto safety, to tht high glee of the\ncrowd.      '\nJunior High Bugle Bind tnd Kelson Schools Band paraded tht\ngleaming new apparatus of tht Ntlion Department Into thl grounds.\nThen, city firemen, under Captain\nW ,C. McDonald, put tht equipment\nthrough Its paces, while Fire Chief\nG. A. McDonald described the evolution oven a public address system.\nUse of the ladder truck in fighting\nfire by employing the turret hose\nlet atop tht glint Udder and in\nrescue work wat demonstrated.\nGreater range and power in throwing streams of water derived by\nuse of the pumper were also revealed.\nAfterwards visiting firemen Inspected the equipment ln preparation for a quiz at the evening session.\nA number of musical selections\nwas played, by the Schools Band.\nVancouver Man\nCharged\nWith Murder\nVANCOUVER, 8ept 10 (CP) -\nJoe FiposIto. 64, wu charged with\nmurder today in connection with\ntht thootlng ot Kevin Thompion,\na, tt Btposito'i latt End residence\nearly thli morning. Esposlto appeared ll Police Court tnd wu reminded t week.\nlive other men tnd women tre\nE. A.CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountants\n'     Auditor*\nMl Biker St \"ftom 135\nheld for questioning In connection\nwith tht dttth which occurred In\nthe immediate vicinity of the fatal\nbeating of Thompaon'i brother,\nFrandi June*, Dee. J, 1841 A\n-oroner't report of the latter death\n\u25a0aid Francli James \"wu beaten up\nIn a quarrel with a woman and a\nman.\"\nSEAT COVERS\nto fit most mokos of cart.\nCuthbei. Motors Ltd.\nKelson, B. C\nPayi $50 Fine for\nFoiling to Give\nSeparation Notice\nKarl Schweitzer of Osoyoos, paid\na fine ot (BO when he wu found\nguilty on the charge of terminating\nemployment without giving employer \"notice of separation\". He appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate G. A. McLelland at Penticton\non Sept 16.\nH. W. Mclnnei of Penticton wu\ncouniel for the protecutlon; while\nMr. Schwtltier ippeired tor himself. \u2022\nGrounds of defence were that ht\nhad given notice oj itparation that\nwu refuied; alio that othen had\nleft work without giving any notice\nof separation.\nInformation wu laid on Sept. 1 by\nDiitrict Entorciment Officer R. E.\nRead.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONI815\ntatataet^ttttsaethettttuaatat\nDAILY FLA8H\nOur contract provides doctor md\nhospltil expenses Incurred through\naccident or sickness. \u2014 Do you\ncarry one of our hospital and medical contract!?\nSTUART AGENCIES\n577 Baker Street Nelaon, B C.\nPhone 980\nJ. D. MUIR\nHerbalist\nNATURI HEALTH CLINIC\nStomich, Liver, Kidney, Nervt,\ntnd other troubles yield to the greit\nrtttorttlvt power of herbal treatment!.\n(CONSULTATION   FREE)\n163 Ward Street Nelson, B.C\nOpp. Capitol Theatre\ni>h-fw\u00ab_____i\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbwi-_\nSOMERS\" FUNERAL\nSERVICE\nIM Biker St Phoni Ml\nOpen, Day tnd Night\nCrematorium , Ambulant*\n-_-_-__-,amauuauuamatmauaumauhmamt\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arti Building\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\n.   QARAOEMEN\nSKY CHIBF AUTO SEHVTC.\nPhont 121 Hilton. BC\nDAVENPORTS\n$26\"\nHOME FURNITURE\nGIRLS-\nWt hart ttveral good paying Dolly Ntw* paper routei\nnow open' If you would like to makt your own money\nhtrt  _ tht opportunity\u2014\nGirl Carriers havt proved thtlr ability\nin many Canadian cities.on both morning and afternoon papers\u2014\nROUTES AVAILABLE ARE IN UPHILL AND FAIRVIEW\nApply to:\nCirculation Dept.\nNptean latlg 5faui 0\nL\nKing Farouk Injured\nWorking in Lab.\nALEXANDRIA, Egypt, Sejt. 20 (CP\nReuter)\u2014King _ arouk of Egypt, a\nkeen amateur icientlst, has badly\nburned hit left hand while working\nln hii laboratory.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRatei: 22c Mm, _7o Mm black taw\ntypt, larger type rtttt on requeit\nMinimum two linn. 10% discount far prompt payment\nllllllllllllllllll-HII IIIIIIII.-IIII-IIIII1III\nI.  A.  Saunders,   chimney  B*-tp,\nphont 897.\nRevising your iMurance?    I_st us\nhelp you. BLACKWOOD AGENCY.\n_______  cigarettes,\nrAL_a_T__rs,\n30'l tor 93c, at\nBrlgp and Stratum engine repairs\nat B-atty Bervlct. Phone 91.\nChuroh  of The Redeemer, Fairview\nSunday next: Harvest Service!\n11:00 and 7:80.\nWanted, boy or girl for Dally Province paper route to Fairview. Valentine'!.\nModern and Oldtlme Dance Sept. 21\nEaile Hall, from 10 P. M. to 1 A. M.\ntome and enjoy a good tquire lance.\nCHEBNIAVSKY RECITAL\nmtay, Oct. 18th, Trinity Church.\ntee tomorrow'! tliplay adv't.\nFlneit duality circular aawa now\nln itock\u201480 and 38 Inch diameter.\nAlso Swedish pattern buckiaw ln 8\nand 4 foot length!. Hlpperaon'i.\nPat year-old boiling fowl, 80c lb.\nSpring roasting chicken. 4-8 lb*., 40c\nlb. Cleaned, dreaaed and delivered.\nPhone Hall-Tin's, 794R-.\nDealt blotter., pen triya, letter bu-\nketa, Ink well!. Everything tor that\noffice d_ak of youn. D. W. McD. by,\nThe S_tlon-r and Typewriter Man.\"\n8M Baker Street. Nelaon.\nRanch for aalt. Best bargain ln the\nKootenays. 1>S acres, about 80 ln alfalfa. Oood building. Herd Jersey cattle. Peed for Winter. All Implement!.\nA going oonoern for 18000 on terms\nBOBKRTSOt.   REALTY.\nCapt. C. O. Bowen, who haa been\ntwice torpedoed In Atlantic, will ipeak\nIn Scandinavian Chorch on rrldi.v\nnight, Sept. 88, at 8 P. M. HU experiences as a Goipel Messenger on board\nthese shlpi are moit Interntlng. He\ncrarvtred itnklni of S.S. Athenla In\n1989. Do not fill to hear him.\nNEWS FROM SINGERS\nSeveral new treadle machines; also\nae _rsl old heads for Jigsaws.\nFOR Rim', electric snd tmdle\nmachine!.\nREPAIRS: We repair all make! of\nsewing machines.\nFOR CHRISTMAS QDTS. Sewing\nbuketa, aewlng boxea and aewlng\nstooli.\nHOMI DRSSSMAKINO COURSE.\nEnroll now for sewing cllues. 8 lesions for 110 You csn arrange to par\nu you -earn for this course.\nSDfOER SEWING MACHINE CO\nNelson \u2014 Trsll\nBalanced Values In Technical,\nAcademic Education Seen P. T. A.\nA symposium on the relative\nvalue of technical and academic\neducation was the feature of a\nParent-Teacher Association meeting at the Central School library\nTuesday evening.\nThe discussion was conducted by\nF. Dickinson, the discussion group\nbeing composed of Bill Crossley,\nsenior matric; Miss Kitty Wilson,\ngrade XI; Miss Margaret Affleck,\nGrade X; Bill Horner, junior matric; Allan Hood and Miss Nancy\nRobert! both of Grade IX.\nBill Croisley said Nelson has a\ncombination of the two types of\ntraining. He believed that in this\nmachine age and In this country\nparticularly a technical education\nwas most necessary. Usefulness of\nacademic training was limited to\nthe few who go ln for research or\nphilosophy.\ntie drew a parallel between ancient Greece where the academic\nfew ruled the slave technicians and\nmodern Russia where technicians\nhad as much if not more political\npower than the highly cultured.\nBOTH REQUIRED\nBill Horner stated Churchill and\nRoosevelt had ma'de excellent use\nof academic education and need\nof such men was great. Men should\nmake a greater study of languages\nto speak and direct.\nMiss Kitty Wilson thought that\nstudents should have both but that\nit depended on the type of student\nas to which one should be stressed.\nTechnical education Is very useful even if it is not chosen vocation, Miss Nancy Roberts said.\nMiss Margaret Affleck maintained that a person should have both.\nWomen always needed them and\nthey were handy for men. It all depended on the aim of the person.\nBill Hood Bald that some technical training would help a boy to\ndecide whether he wanted to pursue that or an academic education.\nCREATE UNITY\nIn reply to Mr. Dickinson's question as to what value a technical\neducation would hcjin regard to\nCommunity and national life, Bill\nCrossley said that every student\nshould have a chance to take some\nof each. If the academic student\n'learned something about both and\ntherefore developed a respect for\nthe technical work the result would\nbe better feeling and more unity\nbetween the two.\nMr. Dickinson stated that under\nthe apprenticeship system, youngn\nmen would spend several years\nlearning a trade, but modern youth\nwas too impatient to do this. He\nasked If the technical training\nwould have any bearing on this. It\nwas thought technical study would\nmake for more Interest\nJ. A. Ballantyne of the Wartime\nPrices and Trade Board at Nelson\nremarked that the fact that no definite conclusion had been reached\nwas ln itself an answer to the\nquestion. There wai danger ot becoming too highly specialized. Mr.\nChurchill turned to hit trade of\nbricklaying when In need of an\noutlet. He thought thtt monetary\nreturns wert t big factor ln choosing an education and that tha economic balance which it it present\nhigh ln the favor of the technician,\nwill be righted.\nEarning power, commented Mr.\nDickinson, cannot be divorced from\neducation.\nThere was a wrong sense of values wai the view of Mrt. Ballantyne. The war proved thtrt wai a\ngreat lack ot technicians. She\nthought the schools were placing\ntoo great a value on academic teaching. In Russia labor had been glorified.\nIn summing up, Mr. Dickinson\nsaid he thought, too, that there\nwas a wrong sense of values. His\nconclusion was that there should\nbe sufficient of eich to fH t boy or\ngirl to take his or her proper place\nin the social sphere.\nThe program was In charge of\nMr. Ballantyne. Tea was served by\nthe Executive. Mn J. Longden\nwon a cake prize.\nMrs. J. McDonald wai in the\nchair for the business side of th\/.\nmeeting and the Nutrition Committee report was given by Mrs. C. E.\nBradshaw.\nHuns Claim Subs\nin Indian Ocean\nLONDON, Sept. JO (CP) - The\nGerman communique claimed today\nthat German submarines were operating in the Indian Ocean. Possibly\nsuch craft could use Japanese bases\nin Burma or the Andaman Islands.\n65 Killed in Raid\non Eindhoven\nEINDHOVEN, Holland, Sept 20\n(CP-Aneta)\u2014Sixty-five Holland,\nera were killed and 160 itrloui\nly wounded In Eindhoven Tun\ndiy night when more thin 80\nGerman   planei  raided  tha  city.\nfUNIRAL NOTICE\nBWN. JOHN J.\u2014Plated iwiy Saturday. Sept. IB. Funeral services will\nhe held st Kaslo on Friday. Sept. 83, at\n8 P. M. Funeral arrangements have\nbeen sntnutsd to Son. ra Funeral\nHome. Nelson. Interment wilt be In\nthe Masonic Plot, Ksslo Cemetery.\n\u00abs_s_SS_s_\nM_4H\n\u00ab_>--_S_SM*\nKEEP  YOUB\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nm GOOD REPAIR\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nPhont MO 974 Baker St\n\u00bb5_\u00ab_S_\u00bb_\u00ab_e_!_\u00bb5S_S_!_\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbS.\nN you value your watch\nconsult\nHARVEY\n684 Baker St\nF. H. SMITH\nIf lt'i Electric\nPhont 666 351 Itktf St.\nFOR HOME COOKED MEALS\nLunches, Pastries, Cold Drinks\nDrop Into\nLarsons Lunch\n(CIom to Greyhound Depot)\nOpen 8:06 to 1200\nDying Seaman Writes Tragic Story\nef Last Days Adrift\nELKHART, Ind, Sept. 20 (AP) \u2014\nAn airman's last days adrift in the\nPacific on a life raft, with a Japanese plane diving at the raft, piercing his legs with machine gun slugs;\nHis love for a sweetheart he planned to marry on his next leave;\nJust before death, his longing for\n\"Mom's cooking.\"\nAll thii was unfolded by Mrs\nHenry Clevenz, mother of Jack\nCooper, 23. of Elkhart, a radioman\non a navy torpedo plane which was\nshot down June 15. The mother\npieced together the story from Seaman Cooper's sketchy but graphic\nlog released by the U. S. Navy.\nSprinkled through the notations\nscratched laboriously on paper\nleaves of his wallet were frequent\nendearments to \"Helen\" or \"Big\nEyes\"\u2014Helen E. Checchlo of Elkhart. She and Seaman Cooper had\nset their wedding date for his next\nleave.\nThe log as released by the Navy\nread! as follows:\nJuly 0\u2014Mom: Wings are In sewing kit, am entitled to all stars\nand more. Be sure to check ins\netc. 10,not) Ins. (Roses) to remind\nme of Helen I've always loved\nher. Love kisses tame for you\nMom. Dad and all.\nJyly 8-Weak. Can't catch fish\n... no rain . . . love Big Evea.\nJuly 9\u2014Little \u2022 rain. Headed\nWest  Weak.\nJuly 10\u2014Rain lait nlte very\nweak, land cloae somewhere.\nJuly 11\u2014Mavis flew over ...\n\u2022 No see . . . Left eye bad ahape. .\nStll lhave water. Drifting NE.\nJuly 12\u2014Little cloudy no planei\nno land headed NoHh P.M. Jap\nNell saw ma . . . strafed, hit mt,\nin both legs . . . bandaged them\n. . . drifting E.\nJuly 12 (sic)\u2014Very weak from\nloss of blood . . . land ln sight\nno food since the ith ... 8 ounces\nof water left . . . going East.\nJuly 14\u2014Caught one amall fish\nlast PM. . . . Very slight breeze\nSE. If this is my last day tell my\nBig Eyes to be happy with some\none else. I'm back to nit witer\u2014\nGod bless you all.\nSurprise July IS tell Helen I\nfound God be happy love. No\nrain for 2 weeks ... to Helen I\nloved her until the end\u2014Jack. I\nlove Mom Dad and all wish I eat\nsome of her cooking.\nThe log stopped here.\nDIES IN PRANCE! Cpl. Stanley\nSmith of Nelion tnd Trill, who\nwtl killed In lotion In France\nAug, 28. Son of Mr, tnd Mri,\nStanley Smith of Ntlion, Cpl,\nSmith wu \u2022 native Ntlion boy\nind ittended publie tnd high\nHhooli htrt. At the time of hli\nenllitmtnt In tht Canadian Army\nIn June, 1940, ht wu tmployed\nIt Trill.\nIn Nelion, ht wai employed ai\na fireman by tht C.P.R. for eight\nor 10 yttn until 1934. He wu i\nmember of tht City Bind it the\ntime, pitying thi clirlnet. Pre-\nvlouily, he hid belonged to the\nTuxli Rangen tnd pltyed bue-\nball frequently. In 19S4 he went\nto Trill where he worked In the\nSmelter ind wu in active member of Loctl 480 of tht Inttrm-\ntlonal Union of Mine, Mill and\n8melter Worken. He alio played\nIn a Trail band.\nCash and Carry Dry Cleanert\nMen'i tnd ladles C\u00ab 9K\nwitter coats *}a\\utn\nMen's, ladies' lults, ladies'     OA.\ndresses, pliin. *WV\nEMPIRE DRY CLEANERS\n327 Biker St Nelion\n^\nSurprise  tht  party\nwith i Permanent\nHaifrh Tru-Art\nBeauty Saloo\nPhont 327\nJohnstons Block\nDON'T SAY BREAD\nSay Hood's\nSUPREME MILK IREAD\nKOKANEE\nSERVICE  STATION\n-M Baku SL\n\"Adam\" and \"Arnold\"\nComplete Union Servlot\nMotor Tuneup tnd Braku\nour Sptcltlf\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescription!\nCompounded\nAccuritely\nMed Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nJ. P. Walgren\nCenertl Contractoi\n301 Carbonate St.\nEtty to Digest tnd\nPittltnt to Tike\nat Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Go.\nPhont 34\nBox 480\nStiff Fine for\nCeiling Violation\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (CP) - A\n$100,000 fine, described as the largest ever Imposed here for federal\nceiling violations, was levied by\nJudge James Leamy today against\nREVERSIBLE\nRAINCOATS\nHere Is on all-purpose\ncoat, Tweed with a Gator.\ndine lining. A raincoat\nand Topcoat combined.\n$--.50\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nTHE MANS STORE\nHyman Karl In, 49, tnd tht Equitable Trading Company, wnoleitlt\nliquor firm of which ht ii Pretldent. In addition, Karlin wu ient-\nenced to 30 dayt' imprisonment\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL    HOME\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n\"Distinctive  funertl   Service\"\n91S Kootenay St Phont Ml\n_.\n-S\u00ab-SSS_SS\u00ab_S_S_e_\u00bbSe_J\u00bbJ_\u00bb\u00bbl\nFOB A\nGOOD MEAL-IN A HURRY\nEAT AT THE\n\u2666Melon Dew \u2666\nx&tMttttumeatettm\nST. JOHN AMBULANCE ASSOCIATION\nFIRST AID\nAND\nHome Nursing Classes\nFirst Aid Classes\nWill Commence Tuetdey. Sep*. 26th et Hie City Hell\nHome Nursing Classes\nWill Commence Thunday, Stpt. 28th, et tht City Hell.\nThou Intereited In tlthtr or both of thtit olt_tn miy rts'tttr |t\ntht Koottnty Flowor Shop btfort tht tbevt datei-Fii . *\nB. C. Products Week-Buy B.C. Products\nWEEKEND FOOD VALUES\nFOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nNABOB\nTEA\npet lb.\nCOFFEE\nNO CQUPONS NECESSARY\nMIRACLE WHIP SALAD   .Q_i   KRAFT DINNER: A meal tor 4   MACARONI:     Quaktr,     Qulok\nDRE88INQ: I oi\u201e 2 Ian   \"^V   [n \u00ab mlnutii, 35^  Cooking,\nw ,K\u201e _\n2 pkti.\nKRAFT  CHEESE:   VelveaU   or\nLb. pkti., 2 for\n290\nCanadian, OAv. STAFFORD'S   SOUPS:   Noodle.  \u2666>\u00b0U\"^T'v- *\"\"\u2022         790\n'\/, lb. pkt x\u2122 Vegetable,   French   Onion,   Old  \" iD' \"\nALL BRAN: Kellogg'i,      Oli\nLarge pkt          ***\n8HREDDIES:\n2 pkta\t\nRINSO:\nGlint  iln\nVegetable,\nr\"hJ'\"\"\\B\"\"' P\"' 290 LARD:  M.pl.  Litf,          IK*\nall klndi, 3 pkti.              . -\"f r                         iOtf\nSODAS: Red Arrow, 7%* TEA BALLS. Tendirluf, I 0-t\n230   plain or lilted, pkt. **V Pkt of 18, each                     * \u00abr\nSCRATCH COVER POLI8H: Old PALMOLIVE  SOAP'.  Glint  lilt\n49<i En\u00abll,h' 25<_ J*.\"'                  250\n^\u00b0'i   4 oz. bottli  *\"t   J for    __ ,....   \"vr-\nSTAR QUALITY PRODUCE\n?RAPES: Okanagan Concord,\nlb. baiktt\nPEACHES: No. I Frtlitone,\nlarge 4 lb. baiketa, each   .    \t\nAPPLES: Wealthlei or\nQraveniteln'i, 6 lbi.         _\t\nAPPLES: Mclntoih Redi,\n4 lbi. \t\nORANGES:  8unklit, 221.1,\n2 doz\nCRAPES.   Rid   Mllaga  or  Slick\nRlblen, 2  lbi.\nSWEET POTATOES:\n2 lbi.\nPARSNIPS: Wlihed,\nJ lbi. \t\n750\n450\n250\n250\n850\n45?\n350\n170\nCABBAGE: Solid head!,\nLb.  \u2014\nBEETS. CARRC-TS:  Freih\nbunchei,   lb. \t\nRADISHES,  GREEN   ONIONS:\nBunch  -\n8PINACH: Freih local,\n2 lbi. \t\nINDIVIDUAL   SQUASHl\nLb.\nCORN:  Exceptional qmllty, from\nBlrchbank,  dot.\nTOMATOE8: Locil field,\n3 lbi.\nCAULIFLOWER:  White   headi.\nLb.\nCELERY:  Local, crlip green\nitilki, lb.\n40\n50\n50\n230\n100\n390\n190\n120\n120\nGreen Peppers, Red Peppers, Hubbord Squash, Lettuce, Dry Onions, Cucumbers, etc.\nNELSON'S FINEST FOOD STORE\nService\nPhone 10 or 11\nFree Wartime Delivery\n  .___\n __...______ _____\n.*.\u25a0   ':.   ...'....', :.\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_1944_09_21","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\/1.0417016","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":"1944-09-21 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":"1944-09-21 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":""}]}