{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-06-09","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1940-09-12","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414561\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" wm\nPAGE   EIGHT\nCanada's War Industries Sell What You Don't Want Through The Classified Acts,\nOutput Beats Schedule\nOTTAWA, Sept 11 <CP>.-C___-\nHan war industries, lugmented by\nmore thtn $200,000,000 in capital investments, are pouring out an increasing flood of the implements of\nwar for Canada and Greet Britain,\nMunitions Minister C. D. Howa announced today.\nThe Minister, it a press conference\nIn hit office in thi Wut block ot\ntht Parliament Building!, reviewed\nfor correspondents the progress ot\nwar industry development which,\nhe said, wu highly satisfactory md\nfar ahead of schedule.\nHe mid three large explosive\nplants, located in Quebec, Ontario\nand Manitoba and costing a total of\n$.'18,900,000, art starting to come Into\nproduction.\n\"Wt art entering the period\nwhere instead of building wt are\ngetting production,\" the Minister\nlaid. The first explosive plmt to be\ncompleted, located in Ontario, will\ncome into production Sept 17, 2V4\nmonths ahead of schedule.\nOtheri will be producing before\nthe end of the yur. The Ontario\nplant cost $10,300,000, the Quebec\nplant $19,600,000 md tht Manitoba\nplant $9,000,000.      ,       .\nAll these plants have been built\nby Canada for the British Government md their production will be\nfor the use of both countries.\nA shell-filling plant will be ready\nfor partial production In Quebec In\nNovember after which flllad shells\nwill be sent to Great Britain. Until\nthen explosives and shells will be\nchipped separately.\nMr. Howe described tht progress\nIn fitting out ihipi for auxiliary\ntervice with the Navy, in tht manufacturing of torpedoei, tanks, corvette! for the Navy, and in tht\nbuilding of automotive equipment\nriflea, anti-aircraft and anti-tank\n' guns, aerial bombs, chemicals md\nuniforms.\nTotal ctpltal expenditure on\nplarit and equipment In Canada by\ntoe Dominion and Great Britain\nJointly, was given by the Minister\nas follows: Explosives and chemicals, $58,400,000; armament $67,000,-\n000: ammunition $19,000,000; ihells,\ncartridge cues tnd fuses, $11,400,000;\nautomotive equipment Including\ntanks, $4,800,000. bate metals and\n- aircraft $62,000,000; a total of $222,-\n\u202200,000. 1  \u2022\nThll capital Investment to estimated to add about $800,000,000 annually to the value of production\nin Canada, directly, exclusive of\nthe supplementary production they\nwill stimulate, the Minister said.\nBritish purchases in Canada\nthrough the Munitions md Supply\nDepartment to date, since the war\nstarted, amounted to about $208,000,-\n000, exclusive of lumber and food-\natuffs, the Minister uid. Canadian\npurchases, on account of the war,\namounted to about $315,000,000, exclusive of plant extensions.\nThe pew shell-filling nlant in Quebec, costing about $8,000,000 would\nbe in production in November and\nwould employ about 12,500 men. It\nwould be on the British system of\nscattered buildings for reasons of\nsafety.\nOther developments described by\nthe Minister included plants for\nmanufacture of chemicals in British\nColumbil, costing $8,500,000; Quebec, three costing ibout $10,500,000;\n\u00abnd Alberta, costing SlO.000,0%\nRifle cordite and T.N.T. were being produced In Quebec plants, md\nmachinery was being Installed in\na Quebec plant for the manufacture of heavy coastal defence guru.\nThis type of gun was still arriving\nfrom Great Britain to meet immediate needs, he said.\nA $13,000,000 olant for manufacture of 3.7 anti-aircraft guns was\nbeing constructed in Quebec to\ncome Into production the middle of\nnext year, and a plmt would soon\nbe completed for the manufacture\nrt 40 millimetre mtl-alrcraft guns\nlit a capital, cost of $11,000,000.\nAlso under construction and expected to produce before the end of\n3940 were a 25-oounder gun plant\ncosting $10,000,000, md a two-\nfounder anti-aircraft gun plmt\ncosting $5,000,000.\nProduction of automotive equipment. Including universal carriers.\nwas well ahead of schedule, and\nprogress in this direction wu highly\nfatlsfactory.\nThe Depirtment, Mr. Howe iddeW,\nwu lining up planti for manufacture of depth bombi tor anti-submarine warfare and wu ilready\nproducing torpedoei.\nOTTAWA, Sept 11 (CP). r- The\nDepartment of Munitions ud Supply has a clothing bill of $35,000,000,\nMunitions Minister C. D. Howe said\ntoday. '  '\nThi Minister uld orders on hand\nwould bt completed by Oct 25 tnd\nproduction wu wtll forward. Here\nare the figures for the current military order: battle dress 325,000,\ngreat coats 316,000, boots 491,000,\nblankets 897,000.\nChurchill Speech\nCuh Ral y Short\nNEW YORK, Sept 11 (AP). -\nPrime Mlnitter Churchill's prediction thit Germany seems ready to\ntttempt the invasion of Britain\nbrought t stock mirket rally to t\nJarring halt today.\nTht Prime Miniiter'i speech ceme\nlltt in the session while leading\nshires, particularly aircraft!, steels\nmd other war babies, wert engaged\nin a slow but fairly steady rise\nwhich had carried some issues more\nthan a point ahead.\nBut when Mr. Churchill ipoke\nmoit prices broke md it tht last,\nonly a few Issues held above water\nlevel.\nSperry, Douglas, Boeing, United\nAircraft Eutman, Johns-Manvllle,\nWestinghouse md Chesapeake b\nOhio were among those holding.\nFalling behind were U. S. Steel,\nBethlehem, Youngstown, Union Carbide, Kennecott, American Smelting\nmd Standard Oil of N. J.\nBonds, which hid tended higher\nthrough most of the day, also exhibited mixed trends at the last\n' In the Cmidian group Dlitlllers\nSeegrim idvmced 1 friction while\nCanadian Pacific held unchanged.\nCanada 4s, in the bond market,\ngained   Vi  point\nActive Golds Take\nFirm Trend. Oils\nOff ot Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 11 (CP). \u2014\nGolds came out for more active\ntrading on the Vancouver Stock\nExchange today and closed with a\nfirmer note. Oils were down slightly\nu transfers totalled 53,580 shares.\n' In the golds Island Mountain at\n80 gained 12 from yesterday's closing bid and Cariboo Gold Quartz\nwas up 5 at 2.15. Hedley Mascot rose\n4Vi to 50 and Premier Border closed\nfractionally higher at It's after trading 23,000 shares. Premier lost 4 to\n04 and Big Missouri wu down a\nfraction to 4V4 while Bralorne remained unchanged at 10.00.\nCalgary k Edmonton at 1.50 fell\n34 from Tuesday, bid and Calmont\neased a cent to 23Vi. Royal Canadian wu off Vi at llVi while\nAnglo   Canadian   Wu   unchanged\n\u2014rraxeON DAItY N1W9, N-LSON, B. C-TrlUBeDAV MORNINO. SEPT. 12, 1940-\nManx BaUtr-fatta\nTelephone 144\nTrill: K. Lowdon. 716-Y\nRpsslond: F. E. Piper\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per tint per Initrtlon.\n44c ptr lint ptr week (8 consecutive Insertions for colt of 4)\n$1.43 pt! lint 1 month (28 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines ptr Initrtlon)\nBoa number! lie extra > This\ncoven my number bt times.\n,   LEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, flnt Initrtlon md\n14a itch subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATES\nNon-commerclil   Sltuitloni\nWinted  for  -80  tor tny   required number of lines for six\ndiyi. piyible In idvince.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\n. $   .05\n.25\n.   13.00.\n-$.75\n_ 2.00\n. 4.00\n_   8.00\nAbove rates apply In Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere tnd In Canada whtrt\nextra postage il required. 0110\nmonth $1.60, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, ont yeir $15.00.\nSingle copy _____\nBy carrier, per week .\nBy carrier, per year _\nBy Mall:\nOnt month \t\nThru months ,-\nSix months  ,    , ,\nOm year\nHELP WANTED\nCIVE NEW TESTAMENT\nTO INTERNED ALIENS\nOTTAWA, Sent __ (CP)-Ap-\nproximately 100,000 copies of the\nNew Testament have been given to\nthe Canadian troopi by the British\nand Foreign Bible Society. Another\n2000 have been requested by the\nDirector of Internment Operation!\nfor distribution among war prisoner! and Interned aliens.\nRAIDS DONT DAMACE\nPLANE PRODUCTION\nLONDON, Sept 11 (CP Cable)-\nIt wu learned on good authority\ntoday that the German air offensive\nhu made practically no difference\nto the rate of,plane production in\nBritain. It was admitted that there\nhad been slight damage to some\nplmts but none of great consequence.\nMONTREAL\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAssoc Brew of Can _\t\nBathurst P _ P A  _.\nCan Car k Fdy Pfd ._\t\nCan   Celanese   _.\nCan Celanese Pfd\t\nCan North Power \t\nfan Steamship  \u201e..\nCan Steamship Pfd \t\nCon Min _ Smelting\t\nDom Steel k Coal B\t\nDominion Textile :\t\niDryden Paper\t\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatineau Power  \t\n,Gurd   Charles    _..\nHoward Smith Paper I.\nH Smith Paper Pfd _\nImperial Oil  \t\nInter Petroleum \t\ninter Nickel of Can\t\n(Lake of the Woods \t\nNational Brew Ltd . \t\niNational Brew Pfd \t\nOgilvie Flour new \t\nPrice Bros  \t\nQuebec  Power  \t\nSTOCK   QUOTATIONS\n17\n11V*\n18H\n32\n130\n11\n4\n14\n38 V.\n8\u00bb,i\n90\nOH\n11%\n11\n4-\n15V.\n101\n12\nIB\n37%\n19 V.\n30\n40\n27 Mi\n13V.\n16\nShawnlgan W It P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp \t\nSt Lawrence Corp Pfd .\nSouth Can Power\t\nBANKS:\nCommerce __\nDominion .__     \t\nImperial    \t\nMontreal\nNova   Scotia    \t\nToronto    __\t\nCURB: ,\nAbitibi 8 Pfd\t\nBathurst P _ P B \t\nBeauharnois   Corp   \t\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packers \t\nCons Paper Corp __\nFairchild Aircraft \t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nInter Utilities B\t\nLake   Sulphite\t\nMacLaren P _ P\t\nMcColl Frontenac Pfd\t\nMitchell  Robt    \t\nWalker Good _ W  _\nWalker Good Pfd\t\n19V4\n8Vi\n15%\n12\n158\n185\n187\n187\n275\n215\n.65\n3Vi\nm\n19\n11\n4_\n3\n1m\n.20\n2\n164.\n100 v.\n10V4\n38\n19\nCONTRACTOR TO CUT SHIN-\nglei by the thousand. Furnish all\nnil own labor. Run by separate\nengine. We furniih power. Fan\ntimber. Steady run until Winter\nand might run all Winter. Apply\nChU. 0, Rodgers Ltd., Creston\nMAN FOR RANCH WORK. ABLE\nto milk tnd drivt car. 3 roomed\nhouse (water laid on). Good job\nfor married man over military\nage. Box 4073 Daily News.\n_\u00a3&__\u00a7r feap-5 txmvt\ntor'.mill mixed dliry farm. Both\nmust milk. Permanent If utisfac-\ntory. Box 88, Cranbrook, B. C\nWAtrfED - BOY FOR DAIRY\nfirm. Near Nelson. Must be good\nmilker. Steady job. $10 month\nBox 4071 Dally News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nAN ALL AROUND HANDY MAN\nwant! work by the hour or job\npalatini, calsomtnlng, itovt ind\nfurniture repairing, alio carpentry\nPhont 1020R, 311 Union Streit.\n_atp.\"__&-Mfl-_\u00ab Hc-USB-\nwork morning! or afternoons, by\nthe hour or full -time work for\n\u2022n idutt fimlly. Apply to Box\n407S Dally Newt.      \u25a0        -\nwAtff_a. - mtmkL Housework. Phont 416Y.    .\t\nPERSONAL\nWHIN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Nottl Opp. C. P, R Depot\n-TlRLiN- HOT-U CORNER OF\nCambie md Cordova, Vancouver.\n78c night weekly ratet.\n. AND 4 BURNER _UARANT__D\nelectrlc range. Al condition. J.\nChen, _nd Hind Store, Vernon St.\nlie - FliMS PRINTED POSTAGE\npaid. Reprlnti 8c. Lions Photo\n' P. O. Box 434, Vancouver, B. C.\nSaLVATUMJ ARMV - tf Vol)\nhive old clothing, footwear, furni-\nturt to spsre pleise Ph. us 618L.\np_\u201ed_tA-_\"_6-R prows AND\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Al-\nwiys fresh In modern refrigeration\nA PORTRAIT 15 McGR-GOR i-\n1 Portrait ot Distinction. Phoni\n224, 577 Ward Street\nHAVE -OU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop pricu paid for antiques at\nThi Homt Furniture, 413 Hall St.\nCHOQU-TTB BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry,\nHATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED.\nCleaning, pressing, repairing and\nalterations. H. J. Wilton, Josephine\nStreet. Phone 107,\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES ETC.\n25 best quality assortment tor $1\npostpaid with price list under\nplain sealed cover. Western Sup-\nply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver.\nMEN'S DRUG SUNDRIES. S-ND\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price list\nPrinceton Distributor., P. O. Box\n61, Princeton, B. C.\nFISHERMEN! THE TROUT ARE\nbiting it Allsebrooki' Cimp,\nKaslo. Same comfortable old-style\nlog-cabins, plus gu cooking, electricity, good boats. Cabin with\nboat $14 per week.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT*\nPursuant to the provisions ol\nSection 11 ot the \"Pound District\nAct\", Chap. 220, R. S. B. C. 1936,\nnotice ll hereby given of the resignation ot Albert Men, ot Balfour.\nu pound-keeper of the pound established at Balfour, and of the appointment, In hli itetd of Verner\nMelvln Northcolt Hoskln, of Balfour. B. C.\nTht location of tht pound premt\n\u25a0et It on District Lot 7800, Kootenay District.\nK. C. MacDONALD,\n'\u25a0 Minister of Agriculture.\nDepirtment of Agriculture,  '\nVlctorii, B. C,\nAugust 24th, 1940.. .\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F.)\n(Section 68 (d) )\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION\nFOR CERTIFICATE OF\nIMPROVEMENTS\nNivida Fraction Mineral Claim,\nSituate In the Nelson Mining Dl-\nvllon. Where located: Between Na\nvada L.8869 and Dixie L.14231.\nLawful holder: Gold Belt Mining\nCo. Ltd. <N. P. L.)\nTake notice that I, A. L. Purdy,\nSurveyor, acting as Agent for Gold\nBelt Mining Co. Ltd. (N. P. L.)\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 43367E\nIntend, at the end of sixty days from\nthe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a \u25a0 Certificate\nof Improvements for the purpose\nof obtaining a Crown grut of the\nabovp claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 of- the \"Mineral Act\", must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 2nd day of September\n1940.\nA. L. PURDY.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\n\u2022nd SUPPLIES, ETC.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1934 OLDSMOBILE 6, SPACIOUS\n5 passenger' DeLuxe sedan. Built\nIn trunk. Thll it \u25a0 General Mo-\ntori car that \"Hu Everything.\"\n' Durable whip, cord upholstery,\nsmooth L-head motor, hydraulic\nbrakes, finished In tht smart\nRoyal Blut enamel. An exceptional value it only $575. Our\nReputation ll your Guarantee\nNelion Transfer Company Ltd,\n1937 Nuh LiFayette .Coupe De-\nLuxt. Cruising geir, healer md\nlicensed. Good rubber; perfect\nIn every rupect\u2014$69-00.\nINTERIOR MOTOR FINANCE\nCORP.\n554 Wird St Nelion.\n1986 INTERNATIONAL K-l TON\nwith 8 foot steel expreu box.\n- Good rubber, new paint, excellent\nmechanical condition, $625.00.\nSowerby-Cuthbirt Ltd.\nFOR .SALE OR RENT. 25 H. P.\nDiesel engine ind pulleys. Ltke\nnew. Centril Truck k Equipment\nCo. 801 Biker Street Nelson,\nEfcukfe bAr c. c. m. trUSs\nforkTjicyclt, 22\" x 20\". $22.30, also\n2 mort bikes in good condition,\n$15. H. R. Kitto.\t\n_J__ULL-IN-\"lN HL-CTRIC is\nacetylene welding. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, Nelson, Phone 98,\nGIRL'S C. CM. BICYCLE FOR\nsale. Phone 811R after 6 o'clock.\n_8 CHEV. COUPE, LICENCE,\" $6S\nNelson Auto Wrecking 613 Vernon\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS, TIRES.\nglass, parts. 180 Baker St Ph. 447\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT\n, FOR RENT -\nFurnished and Unfurnished\nApartments\nMedical Arts Building\nFive   roomed   house,   Cedar\nStreet .\"'.        $25.00\nSix roomed house, Carbonate\nStreet     $35.00\nSix   roomed   houie,   Stanley\nStreet          _   .   $25.00\nCHAS, F. McHARDY\nBUENA VISTA APTS.. 1023 STAN-\nley St. New, modern 4 room apU.\nBest view in city. Frlgidaire and\nelectric ranges. Separate front and\nrear entrances. Phone 542R.\nFOR RENT, PARTLY FURNISHED\nor unfurnished modern home.\nThree bed rooms. Furnace, garage\n524 Robson Street Phone 513R.\nFOR RENT\u20141, 2 AND 4 ROOM\ncabins, Winter rates. Shardelow's\nAuto Camp, Phone 864,\nHOUSE FOR RENT - 1104 Mc-\nquarrle Avenue. Apply to\nBrown & Dawson\nFOR RENT - OCT. 1, 5 ROOM\nbungalow, bath, on 3rd StPh.JgOR\nFOR RENT, MARSDEN APTS.,\nfurn, hskg, rms., $10 per montn.\nNEWLY DEC. FURN. HSKPG\nsuites, resnbl. 617 Ward Street.\nFOR RENT NEW 6 RM. HOUSE\nGd. location. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L\nFOR RENT, 6 RM. HOUSE, FUR-\nnace, 1013 Stanley, Widdowson.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG. MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNEW 2 WHEEL TRAILER, $20;\nNew 30 inch saw, and new Mandrill, $20, or tny reuonable offer for above. Apply William\nShorrocks, Box 34, Michel, B. C.\nDOUBLE BARREL SHOTGUN,\nhammerless, L. C. Smith, 12 gauge.\nTwo pair of barrels. A bargain for\nanyone who wants a high grade\ngun, H. R. Kitto.\nWANTED -GIRL FOR HSWK. IN\nTniUfl- \u2014 _,\u00bb._- - w\u00ab *\u2014...--. \u2014-\ncountry. Fond of children. Apply\nMrs. V. R. Johnson, Boswell,\nWANT-b -, EXPERIENCED'WU-\nman for cleaning, 312 Silica Street.\nROOM AND BOARD\nNICE ROOM AND GOOD FOOD IN\npleuant home. Rates reuonable.\n312 Carbonate Street.\nVANCOUVER  STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nBid\nAsk\nMINES:\nBig Missouri  \t\n~4Vi\njOS\nBralorne  . ..'\t\n9.75\n10.25\nBridge Riv Con ....\n\u2014\n, .01\nCariboo Gold   \t\n2.10\n\u2014\nDentonia\t\n\u2014\n.01\nFairview Amal\t\n.00'.\n.01\nGeorge Cop  _\n.05\n\u2014\nGolconda   \t\n.Oil\n.03%\nGold   Belt\t\n.20\n\u2014\nGrandview   \t\n.15\n.16\nGrull  Wihksne  ....\n.03\n.03 V.\n.49\n.53\nHome   Gold   \t\n.no 14\n.00'A\nIndian Mines \t\n.06 Vi\n\u2014\nInter   Coal    \t\n.27\n.36\nKoot  Belle\t\n2b\n.30\nMinto   Gold   _\t\n01\n.01V4\nMcGillivray   \t\n.16\n\u2014\nNicola M k M\t\n.01 '4\n.02\nPac Nickel  \t\n.06 V4\n.08\nPend Oreille  \t\n1.45\n1.55\nPioneer   Oold   \t\n2.10\n2.20\nPorter  Idaho  \t\nXI1V.\n.01 Vi\nPremier  Border  ....\n.01%\n.01 \u201e\nPremier  Gold  \t\n.95\n\u2014\nPrivateer\t\n.41\n.44\nRelief   Arl  \t\n.02 Vi\nX)2Vi\nReno Gold    \t\n.15\n.19\nSalmon Gold  \t\n.03 Vi\n.05\nSheep Creek \t\n.90\n1.00\nSliver Crest \t\n\u2014\nm\nSurf Inlet\t\n.08\n\u2014\nTaylor Bridge\t\n.02\n\u2014\nWellington   \t\n\u2014\n.01\nWesko Mines \t\n\u2014\n.00 Vi\nWhitewater\t\nYmir Yank Girl .\nOILS:\nAmalgamated \t\nAnaconda \t\nAnglo Can  \t\nBrown Corp \t\nCalgary _ Edm .\nCalmont  \t\nComoil    ,\nCommonwealth   ...\nDivies Pete \t\nExtension  \t\nFirestone  Pete  ...\nFour Star -Pete ...\nHome  \t\nMadison\t\nMar Jon \t\nMcDoug Seg \t\nMercury    _.\nMill   City    \u2014\nModel\t\nNordon   \t\nOkalta com  .....\nPac Pete    ....\nPrairie Roy \t\nRoyal Can \t\nRoyal Crest Pete .\nSpooner       \t\nSouthwest Pelt'...\nUnited        \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital Est \t\nCoast  Brew  \t\nGrowers Wlnt ...\nPic Coylt .....'\t\nUnited Dist\t\n.01\n.04\n.03Vi\n.55\n.06\n.00 Vi\n.65\n.12\n1.45\n1.50\n_3\n\u2014\n.22\n_rr\n_2\n20\n.13\n_\n.17\n.18\n.05\n,05'A\n.11\n.12\n188\n1.90\n02\n.02 Vi\n01 Vi\n.01%\n.07\n\t\n.04\njM\n.01\n\u2014\n.18\n.21\n.04\n\u2014\n.65\n\u2014\n20\n\u2014\n.12\n\u2014\n.ny.\n.11 Vi\n.07 V4\n.09\n.02\n\u2014\n.20\n\u2014\n.03%\n\u2014\n1.00\n1.25\n1.28\n1.32\n__\n1.25\n.20\n\u2014\n.70\n\u2014\nPostpone Decision\non King Haakon's\nReturn to Norway\nOSLO, Norwiy, Sipt 11 <AP via\nBerlin) \u2014 The German-domlnited\n.Norwegian Parliament today declared King Hiikon li no longer\ntble to function, but decided to\npostpone until after the war the\nquestion of whether he will be\nallowed to return to his country.\nHe Is in London.\nBy the decision, the Norwegian\nGovernment in London, where the\nKing took refuge after his country\nwas occupied by the German army,\nis considered here to have resigned\nand a new \"Government\" is named.\nThe chief of the new \"Government\" is Ingolf Elster Christensen,\n68, u Regent\nGermans Announce\nGreater Air Losses\nfor the First Time\nLONDON, Sept 11 (CP)--For\nthe first time British and Germin\ncommuniques todiy showed tht\nGermans \u2022\u2022 announcing thi loss\nof mort of thtir planes thin tht\nBritish Air Ministry hid claimed\n11 destroyed.\nTht Qtrmtn high commind innounced thit thrtt of Itiplmei\nwere lost In action against Britain\nTueiday; tht London Air Ministry\nhid sild thit two German bomberi wtrt shot down.\nUsually tht Germans declare\nthey hivt lost ibout one third of\nthi planes whose wreckage Ilea\nscattered ovir thi British countryside.\nCanadian Export\nBoosts Chicago Price\nCHICAGO,   Sept   11   (AP).  -\nWheat prices rose - cent 1 bushel\ntodsy on reporti of Improved Ca-\nnadlan export business and strength\nin securities bated In more confidence In British resistance but quite\na bit of the gain was lost later.\nOfficial reports showing U. S.\nwheat export! got off to a poor\nstart In July with clearances only\nhalf that of July last year attracted attention to lagging International\ntrade.\nWheat closed V. to Vi higher than\nyesterday, September 75V4, December 76% to 76%; corn unchanged to\nVi up, September 6-Vi, December\n57V4 to 57%; oats % off to Vi upp.\nPromoted to B.C.\nCourt of Appeals\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP).-Mr.\nJustice D. A. Macdonald of the\nSupreme Court of British Columbia has been -promoted to the\nCourt of Appeals of that Province\nJustice Minister Lapolnte announced today. The vacancy thus\ncreated on the British Columbia\nSupreme Ciurt will be filled later, Mr. Lapointe said.\nBRITISH FREIGHTER\nSUNK IN ATLANTIC\nNEW YORK, Sept 11 (AP).-\nThe British freighter Earlsptrk,\n5250 gross tons, hai been sunk In\nthe Atlantic by a German U-boat\nmarine circle! reported today.\nThey said the captain went down\nwith his ship md that the crew\nwai rescued by in unidentified\nihlp ifter rowing five days In\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY, VIG-\nor, pep. Try Vitex 25 tablets $1.00,\nHO tablets $2.00. Guaranteed, 24\npersonal \"Drug Sundries\" $1.00\nFree price list of drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324, Vancouver, B. C.\nMEN  - HEALTH  -  REGAIN\nvigor\u2014pep,   try   Dupree-wheat-\nperlei 25 for $1.00 postpaid. Send\n$1.00 for 30 samples ot drug specialties \u2014 tested \u2014 guaranteed 5\nyean against deterioration. Paris\nNovelty Co, Dept \"N\" 24 Aikins\nBuilding, Winnipeg, Man.\nMEN OF 30, 40 50! VT-t PEP,\nVigor subnormal? Try Ostrex tablets. Contain tonics, stimulants.\noyster elements, aids to normal\npep. If not delighted with re-\nsuits first package, maker refund, low price. Call, write Mann\nRutherford Company, and all\nother good drug stores,\n.ODAY PERSONS WHO HAV-\nsuffered from rheumatic and arthritic pains for years are finding\nrelief by using\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nThe long proven formula should\ndo the same for you. At Mann-\nRutherford Co., Nelson, and other\ndrugstores.\nANY S1Z1. 6 6R 8 KXPOSUR!\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed tin very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will send a 5 by 7 enlargement free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\npacking. Krystal Photos, Wilkie.\nSaskatchewan.\nBIO HUSKY PIGS, NINE WEEKS\nold, $5. Also young boar and\nsome splendid brood sows to farrow soon. Reasonably priced\nErindale Ranch, Harrop.\nONE HORSE FOR SALE. WEIGHS\n1600. Sound, good worker and lots\nof lite. Chas. O. Rodgers Ltd.\n' Creston. B. C._\t\nWRITE TO GEORGE GAME, TRI-\nangle Poultry Farm, Armstrong\nB.C., for prices, on'R. i. Red Pullets\nFLEMISH GIANT RABBITb\nadult breeding stock $5. Junior\nstk. $1.50. W. Colllnson, Blueberry\nFOR SALE, COW AND CALF, 2\nyein, 7 month!, three quarters\nJny. Fred Hawes, Silver King Rd\nFOR SALE, 1600 LB. 10 YEAR OLD\nhorse, with wagon md harness\nA. P. Boolinoff, Thrums, B. C.\nFOR SALE - 8 GOOD GOATS, 2\nmilking,! to freshen Oct. 12, Mrs,\nV. R. Johnson, Boswell, B. C.\niTOR SALE-1 GREY GELDING, 8\nyears old. Apply to Jamei P\nPoopow, Glade, B. C.\nFOR SALE - JERSEY COW JUST\nfreshened, A. Hucal, Blewett B.C.\nFOR SALE. 6 WEEK OLD PIGS $4\neach. F. G. Shiell, Needles. B. C,\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid. A c t i v 1 Trading Compmy.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nPl^E, TUBES.  FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE V ARD\n1st Avenue tnd Mlin St\nVincouvtr, B C.\n4 TON 12 LB. RAILS, 300 FT. 2\"\nair plpt, 220 ft. IVi\" pipe, 1 car,\n1 timber truck, %\" hand steel and\nventilation pipe. Louis Aurelia,\nSavoy Hotel, Nelson.\n30:30 WINCHESTER RIFLE $25,\nperfect shape, 6 M M Winchester\nrepeater $30, Mossberg .22 repeater\naa new $12. H. R. Kitto.\n17 FT.  V-BOTTOM BOAT WITH\n4% H. P. twin cylinder motor,\nfood condition, $95. Apply to J\n. Kingsley, Crescent Bay,\nPIPE-FITTINGS. TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n916 Powell St, Vancouver. B. C.\nFOR QUICK SALE - PIANO. NO\nreasonable cash offer refused.\nMrs. G. H. McLean, Birchbank.\nFOR SALE, ICE REFRIGERATOR\nand baby carriage. 8}2 Kokanee.\nMAHOGANY CANOE, COMPLETE\nwith cushions, gramphne. Ph, 672X\nUSED WESTINGHOUSE E LEU\nrange, perfect condition. Ph. 260.\nUSED CONNOR WASHER, OVEU-\nhadled, $30. McKay & Stretton.\nFOR SALE, BABY BUGGY, GOOD\ncondition. Phone 433L2.\nLOANS, INSURANCE, ETC.\nMR. BEVINGTON. MANAGER Ol\nYorkshire Savings and Loan Assu\nVancouver, will be in Nelson on\nSeptember 17 for a few days snd\nwill be glad to interview any one\ndesirous of arranging a loan on\nthe Yorkshire Plan. C. W. Apple\nyard, 392 Baker Street\nFOR RENT FUR. HSKPG. ROOMS,\n1 and 2 roo 's. 37 High Street\nFOR RENT 4 RM. HOUSE PARTLV\nfurnished. Apply 718 Baker St.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED COT-\ntage In Fairview. Phone 328L3,\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\nFOR RENT 6 RM. HOUSE. 715~30\"-\nsephine St. or Phone 377X.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARIi\n(Continued)\n$325 FOR 3 CHOICE BUILDII\nlots, corner Gore md Hill Stre\nWill sell to buy wir bondi. i\nply 621 Gore Street\nFOR RENT - FARM ON MA\nhighway. Cheap to right pal\nTake ovtr 17 goats. Apply I\n4112 Daily Newt.\nWANTED - 5 ROOM MOM!\nbungalow. State full particul\nmd cash prict to Box 41\nDally Newi.\nSMALL HOUSl TO RENT ' I\nsell, furnished or unfurnished, i\nply J, Campbell, 8th tnd ElW\nFOR SALE CHEAP FOR CAS1\nten land. Sml, cottage tin. V\nMil furniture. Cor. 8th & Kokn\nLAKE FRONTAQE OPPOSll\nNelion. Terms. Johmtom Estt\nBox 198, Nelion, B. C.\nYOU SAW FT IN THE DAILY Ntf\nLOST AND POUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephom\nThe Daily Newa. A \"Found' Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost f\nyou. Wt will collect from tt\nowner\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTOI\nA8SAYERS md MINK AGENT\nE W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCL\nAnalyst    Assayer,    Metallurgi\nEngineer,  Sampling  Agent!\nTrail Smelter. 304-305 Josephl\nStreet Nelion, R C\nHAROLD S. ___-__, ROSSIJC!\nB. C. Provincial Assayer. Chem\nIndividual repreientatlvt for t\n\u25a0pers at Trail Smelter.\nFOR RENT 2 RM. FURN. HOUSE,\nApply 125 Silica Street,\nFOR RENT \u2014 FIVE ROOM~56T-\ntage. Phone 778X,\nHOUSE FOR RENT. APPlV .14\"\nKootenay Street\t\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE.\nStirling Hotel.\nFOR RENT - GARAftE. APPLY\nPhone 252.\nSee KtRR APARTMENTS First\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nNEW SUBDIVISION RESIDENT-\nial lota. 6 miles Iron, ferry many\nwith lake frontage, some with\norchard, soma near lake, ample\nwater record, also one with ID\nacres In hay and potatoes Also\norchard of size to suit witn buildings and four teres potatoes. J. J\nCampbell, R. R No 1, Ph. 462L3.\nGOOD RESIDENTIAL PROPERTK\nis a tangible asset Buy a home-\nsite on Fairview properties, Nel\n- son's best residential lots. All city\nservices. Easiest of terms. R W\nDawson, sole agent Hipperson\nBlock. Phone 197.     ^^\nNOW IS A GOOO TIME TO PUR-\nchase that house or country property you have been thinking about\nLook over our list. Likely some\nproperty will suit you. H. E. Dill.\nFire and Car Insurance,\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908, Dept ol Natural\nResources, C. P. R, Calgary, Alta\nCHOICE,  LEVEL ACRE LOTS.\nfrom  $200  up,  water  available.\nlight soon, low taxes, good schools\nW R. Nelems. Real Estate Agent\nCastlegar, B. C.\nFARM  FOR RENT, TWO  COWS\nfor sale, Mrs. A. Jeffreys Ph. 576L1\n(Continued in Next Column)\nA. J. BUTE, lNB-\u00bbfflH>l!NT _-_\nrepresentative.  Full  tlmt ittt\ntlon given shippers' Interests.\n54, Trait B. C. \u2022\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj r McMillan, d. c, neur<\ncilometer, X-ray. McCulloch 1\nDR WILBERt'BftOCKR\n542 Baker Street Phont MB.\nENGINEER8 AND 8URVIYON\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. O. BOX tl\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and 1\nglneer. Phone \"Beaver Falli*\nR W. HAGGEN Mining k B\nEngineer; B. C. Land Surveyi\nRossland and Grand Forin.\nINSURANCE AND REAL E8TA1\nFRANK  A.   STUART,  BUSINEJ\nEstate, Insurance Service. PhO\n1, 577 Baker St., Nelion.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Imurmct'\nevery description, Retl Bit Ptk\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANT.\nReal Estate. Phone 133.\nR W. DAWSON, Rea< Estate, ]\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hippers\nHardware, Baker St Phont 1\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and elect\nwelding,   motor   rewinding'\ncommercial refrigeration    I\nPhone 593 324 Vernon\"\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I.\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Ci\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd St\nCalgary. Advice free, confident\n8ASH FACTORIE8\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTO!\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker\n8ECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY,  SELL & EXCHANf\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. f\nTHE. -EVJEL\u00ab.r _H,\nYES-OFC^OKSS-.-\n\u2022URMS Tto MOO- AR\nMl    ,Hp\u00bbA\u00bb^T\u00ab>\nRE-SET IK MMCS. \/.\/_\nuuatTAW-xrwk I 1OU\n-TOKEHOi*AWj_t-|k>>\u00bb4i\n\u00bb*_moN-A Boyp\n'   ^l-1_t1i_ft--ii.ilfl\n. ,1    \u201e.'-*tt_-^-.\u201e:_\u201e...'.\u201e;^^^\n route Slocks\n(lose Higher\n\u25a0ONTO, Stpt 11 (CP).-Des-\nt mild display of weakness in\nHunt hour, today's Toronto Exit market closed on the up side.\nIns of a point or mort were\nd by Canada Packen, Canada\nK Bell Telephone, Canada Ct-\npfd\u201e Simpsons B. H:me\nGoodyear Tin tnd several\nink stocks. Brazilian, C.P.R.,\n\"A\" cloud up.\nntyre, Dome md llolllnger\ngilners in the senior gold\nI and thi close wu up 4 to\nnts for Wrlght-Hirgreaves,\nlughes. Aunor, Kerr-Addison,\nJ md Malartic Gold Fleldi.\nr goldl wtrt irregularly higher.\n.. tone of Western oils improved\ngllnl of t tew cents were show-\nit tht close tor Homt Oil, Cil-\n1 k Edmonton, Foothills and\nlo-Canadlan. Davies firmed Vs\nm -\nI Saw It In thi OAILV NEWS\nMETAL   MARKETS\nLONDON, Sept. 11 (CF): - Bar\nsilver 23 7-16i', off 1-16. (Equivalent 42.50 cents.) Bir gold 168s, un\nchanged. (Equivalent $33.85)\nTin easier; spot \u00a3248 bid, \u00a3240\na_ked; futures \u00a3290 li bid, \u00a3290\n10s asked.\n. MONTREAL, - Bar gold In London wu unchmged tt $37.54 in\nounct In Canadian fundi; 108s m\nBritish representing _ . Bank ol\nEngland's buying price. Tht fixed\n$35 Wuhlngton prlet amounted to\n$38.50 In Canadian.\nSpot: Copptr, electrolytic 12.79;\ntin 61.00; lead 5.50; line 5.65; antimony 19.29.\nSilver futures closed unchmged\ntoday. Bid: Sipt 37.79.\nFinancier Dies\nTORONTO, Sept, 11 (CP).\u2014Former President ind organizer of the\nMining Corporation of Canada and\nwtll known Canadian financier,\nJimu Perry Wttion. 77, died yes-\nterday it bis Summer homt it\nPtnetangulihtnt.\nTORONTO. STOCK QUOTATIONS\nLittle Long Lac\t\nMacassa Mines\nlit!\nermac Copper\nflo-Huronian .\nitfield Gold\nWit Rouyn Mines\t\naor Oold\nikfield GoU? \t\nII Metals Mining ..\t\nS'Ua Gold Mlnu \nood Kirklmd \t\n> Missouri \t\n\u00bbio Mlnu ...............\nilorne Mines \t\nKilo Ankerite _.\nnker Hill Extension ...\naldian Malirtlc \t\nriboo Gold Quartz .._\nitle-Trethewey\t\nromium m \u00ab \u00bb ...........\nkx Copptr \t\nnlaurum Mlnu\t\nnsolidited M - S\t\nime  Mlnu  \t\nirval-Siscoe\t\nIt Malartic\niorado Gold  \t\nkonbrldge Nickel\t\nderal Kirklmd\t\ncoeur Gold  ....\nles Ukt ......\t\nj'i Ltki Gold\t\nJ Belt  \t\nnndoro  Mlnu ______\ninnir Gold _\u201e.__._.\nP Rock Gold\t\nGold\t\n,   Oold  \t\nlion Bay M b S\t\nmationil Nickel\t\n! Consolidated\t\nWaite\t\nGold\t\nAddison\n_nd Lake\t\n\u25a0 Shore Mlnu\t\nItch Oold  \t\nbfl Oro Mlnu ,.\t\n.19Vi\n1.69\n.01 Vi\nam\n1.55\n.04\n.09Vi\n.09 Vs\n22\n.12\nM\n.09\n10.00\n3.65\n.01 V\u00ab\n.90\n2.01\n.56\n1.89\n.18\n.85\n1.30\n38.00\n22.00\n.01 Vs\n. 3.00\n.39\n2.63\n.03*\n_8\n.04\n2b%\n.20\n.04*\n.30\n.85\n.041.\n.25\n36.25\n37.50\n_0H\n.17-\n.02\n2.84\n.05\n21.10\nM\n.01_\nH\"l\u00abtll\u00abttll\u00bbt\u00bbll\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbttl\nrenville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYTOS\nOtTALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 116\n9 Baker St.     Nelion, B. C.\nMMi*nt\u00bbtiit\u00bb\u00abimim\nCHANCI IN SERVICI\nARROW LAKES\nEFFECTIVE SEPT 17\nSteamer Mlnto will leave\nRobson Weit Tuesdays md\nFridays it 7:00 un., tnd arrive Nakusp 9:00 p.m. stmt\ndays. Balance of schedule il\nunchmged.\nJ. Q. WATSON\nCity Ticket  Agent\nNelion,   B.C.\nGmLi^\n*\nMacLeod Cockshutt    \t\nMadsen Red Lake Gold\nMandy     ... _\nMclntyre-Porcuplne   \t\nMcKenzie Red Lake\t\nMcVKtle-Graham   \t\nMcWatters Gold \t\nMining Corporation\t\nMoneta Porcupine  \t\nMorrls-Klrkland \t\nNlpisslng Mining \u201e\nNoranda \t\nNormetal  .......\nO'Brien Gold\t\nOmega Gold \t\nPamour Porcupine\t\nPaymuter Corn \t\nPettd Oreille  \u201e_\nPerron Gold\nPickle Crow Gold ..\nPioneer  Gold  \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPowell Rouyn Gold\nPruton Eut Dome\nReno Gold Mlnu ...\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold ..\nSheep Creek Gold\nSherrltt Gordon _..\nBlscoe  Gold    \t\nSltden Malartic\t\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury Buln\nSulllvm Consolldited .\nSylvmlte  \u201e\t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Mlnu _.\nTowtgmic  _\nVenturu\nWaite Amulet  \t\nWright Hargreaves   \t\nYmir Ymkee Girl\t\noils:\nAjax\t\nBritish American\t\nChemical Research _\t\nImperial  \t\nInter Petroleum  \t\nTexas Csnadlan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi  Power   \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian T L b P \t\nBrewers 8t Distillers \t\nBrewing Corp   \t\nB C Power A \u2014\nB C Power B  \t\nBuilding Produeti \t\nCan Cement  _\t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Pac Railway \t\nCan Ind Alcohol A \t\nCom Bikeriei  __\t\nCosmos   .\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion  Stores \t\nDom Tir k Cham \t\nDistillers Seagrams\t\nFinny Firmer .\t\nFord of Canada A \t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypsum L b A\nHamilton Bridgt\t\nHiram Wilker  \t\nImperial Tobacco  \u2014\nLoblaw  A   __.....\nLoblaw B  -\nKelvlnator   \t\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey  Harris   \u201e _\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car  _\nPage Hersey  \t\nPressed Metals _\nSteel of Csn    __\nStandard Paving  _\n2.10\n3.75\n2,14\n.41\n.06\n48.00\n_7\n.08\n.28\n.70\n.50\n.021,\n.00\n88.00\n.30\n.85\n,17V.\n1.00\n.23 V.\n1.48\n1.50\n2.85\n2.15\n1.00\n.85\n1.85\n.18\n.03\n1.90\n.94\n.70\n.59\n.44\n.11\n1.10\n.80\n2.25\n3.15\n1.25\n.15\n2.50\n3.46\n6.15\n.04\n,10V.\n19.00\n.21\n12.00\n17.00\n1.15\n.60\n156%\n4'\/.\n5\nlVi\n27 Vi\ntvl\n15'\/,\n4V4\n13\n5V.\n1.05\n14\n25 V4\n28\n4%\n5%\n34 v.\n25 Vi\n16ft\n70\n3*.\n4tt\n38\n14%\n25%\n24%\n7\n2V,\n3Vt\n28 Vi\n44%\n44%\n104\n9\n71%\n.55\nLet U$ Chrome Plate Your\nPlumbing Fixtures\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nliurlti Bldg-    704 Nelion Ave,\nTrain No. 12 Eaat Daily\nStandard Sleeper \u2014 Air-conditioned Day Coach.\nDining Sen\/ice\nCONNECTS AT MEDICINE HAT WITH\nThe DOMINION\nFOR WINNIPEG, TORONTO, MONTREAL AND\nUNITED STATES POINTS\n(Alr-Condrtlonid Equipment.)\nAttractive Low Fares\nNow in Effect\nPtpultr priced table d'hote tnd t li carte meali urvtd In\ndiners. Economics! trty ttrvlet In cetchii ind tourist can (on\nTrilhi g tnd 4 only) nrved by attendant.\nPrepaid Ticket deliveries arranged to any point.\nBicycles Checked Free en All Tickets\n' Except \"Btrgtln Excursion\"\nFor further ptrttculin sn your local ticket agent, or write:\nJ. a. Wntion, City Ticket Agent, Nelson, B.C.\n, 601 Bikir St Phont 203\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. SIPT. 12. 1940\u2014\nOctober Wheal\nPurchases Liven\nWinnipeg Trade\nWINNIPEG, Stpt. 11 (CP). -\nMills mtde numerous purchases ot\nOctober whett futurei on Wlijni'\npeg Grain Exchange today to provide mort activity In tht w'leat\npit thin hu bttn leen in miny\nweeks. Prices, however, filled, to\nrise from fixed minimum levels of\n73 _ cent! i bushel for tht October\nfuture tnd 74\", cents for December.\nFurther sales of Canadian wheat\nto Portugal amounting to 300,000\nbushels were confirmed, but no\nnew domestic or export flour business wu  indicated.\nThere wai little activity in tht\ncash whttt mirket. Spreads win\ngenerally  unchmged.\nAustralia Wool\nClip Was Offered\nat Fixed Price\nTORONTO, Sept 11 (CP) .-Australia's entire wool clip was offered\nto Great Britain at the start of the\nwar, Sir William Glasgow, High\nCommissioner In Canada for Australia, said today in a speech prepared for delivery oefore the Women'! Canadian Club; It was made\navailable at a fixed price for the\nduration of hostilities and the first\npost-war year.\nThe United Kingdom ia free to\nre-sell as much as she wishes of\nthis wool which totals more than\n800,000,000 poundi annually and It\nworth neary (200,000,000, ht laid.\nAustralia forbade auctioning of\nwool or sheep iktm In 1018 to ensure that the Allies in the Fint\nGreat War obtained all the wool\nthey required for blankets at a\nfixed price for 3V. seasons and it\nexpiration of the war contract there\nwere nearly 2,000,000 surplus bales\nof wool In Australia.\n\"To deal with this enormous\ncarry-over, \u25a0 composite body known\nas the British-Australian Wool Realization Association was formed,\nwhich controlled for a time the\nmarketing and price of ww>l,\" he\nsaid. \"Thli wis the only occislon\non which any attempt haa been\nmade to peg the price of wool.\"\nSince 1920. prices have been determined by bidding at the great wool\ntiles.\nStocks Gain Action\non Calgary Trade\nCALGARY, Sept 11 (CP).-Trad\nIng showed slightly more activity\nand prices for the most part unchanged on Calgary Stock Exchange today. Transfers 5725 shares\nMadison, today's heaviest trader\ngained Vi to IH. Monarch, Mar-Jon,\nExtension, Arrow and Model traded practically unchanged.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Sept 11 (CP). -\nGnin futurei quotations:\nWHEAT    Open High Low Close\nOct.  _   73%   7344   73tt   73tt\nDec _  \u2014     \u2014     \u2014     74%\nOATS\nOct    29_   JOys   !9%   30\nDec.       28      28tt   27%   27%\nMay       28%   28%   28%   28%\nBARLEY\nOct _   3jy4   33%   33%   33%\nDec    34      34%   33%   33%\nMay       35%   35%   35%   35%\nFLAX\nOct   124%   -      -    124%\nDec.   _  124      \u2014      \u2014    124\nMay      125     \u2014     \u2014    125\nRYE\nOct.     42%   43%   42%   43\nDec.       44      44%   43%   43%\nMay       \u2014     -     -     45%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT - No. 1 hard 73; No.\n1 nor. 73; No. 2 nor. 70%; No. 3\nnor. 67%; No. 4 nor. 83%; ,No. 5\nwheat 59%; No. 8 wheat 56%; feed\n52%; No. 1 garnet 64%; No. 2 garnet\n63%; No. 1 durum 65%; No. 4 special 63%; No. 5 special 58%; No. 6\nspecial 56%; track 73%; screenings\n75 cents.\nOATS - No. 2 C W. 30%; No,\nex. 3 C. W. 29%; No. 3 C. W. 28%;\nEx. 1 feed 28%; No. 1 feed 27%; No.\n2 feed 25%; No. 3 feed 23%; track\nat 29%.\n. BARLEY - No. 1 feed 33%; No.\n2 feed 32%; No. 3 feed 31%; track\nat 33%.\nFLAX - No. 1 C. W. 124%; No. 2\nC W. 119%; No. 3 C. W. 110%; No.\n4 C.W. 99%; track 124%.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 42%.\nEXCHANGE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Stpt.  11   (CP). -\nBritish and foreign exchange, nominal rates between banks only:\nArgentina, peso, _B81.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, _S44.\nIndia, rupee, .3364.\nJapan, yen. .2605.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2530.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound: Buying 4.43\nselling 4.47; U. S. dollar: Buying\n1.10, selling 1.11.\nAt New Ybrk-Pound 4.03%; Canadian dollar .88%.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 11 (CP)-The\nCanadia\/i dollar fell another half\ncent in relation to the United States\ndollar on the foreign exchange market todiy when it clostd it i discount of 14% per cent\nThe free pound sterling rose %\nof \u2022 ctnt to $403%. New pressure\ndeveloped against the Hong Kong\nind Shanghai dollars.\nCALGARY  LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Sept. 11 (CP). - Receipts, cattle 280; calves 20; hogs\n207; sheei nil.\nMedium to good heifers 6 to 6.50;\ncommon down to 5; good to choice\ncows 4.75 to 5; medium 3.75 to 4.25.\nGood vealers 7 to 7.50; stocker and\nfeeder steers 5.50 to 6.25. Good to\ntcp lambs 7.28 to 7.50,\nLast bacons 8.38 to 8.48.\nDIVIDENDS\nCanada Cycle and Motor Company, Ltd., 30 cents ind preferred\n$125.\nDominion Clan Comr-ny, Ltd.\n1% per cent, tnd prefer-d 1% per\ncent \t\n\u25a0\u2014-_-i--l_---t__-______-____--_t-a\nFOR RENT\n4Room Furnished\ner Unfurnished Sulfa\nSingle Housekeeping Rooms\nANNABLE  BLOCK '\nLondon Recovers\nBalance at Close\nLONDON, Sept. Ji <\/P). - Thi\nsecurities mirket recovired balance\nlate today after an early renewal\nof thll wttk'l downward trend.\nTht rally wai led by British Government bonds which In some cms\nhtlvtd morning declines with gilm\nof % to % point Kaffirs, depressed\nat tht outset by South American\nofferings, tlso came back.\nOils converted small losses Into\nidvances. Other Industrial and commodity stocks showed minor variations.\nStock closings, In sterling: Austin\nA 13s; Ctnt Mining \u00a310; Coniol\nGold Fleldi 30i; Courttuldi 27s\n13%d; Crown \u00a312%; East Gtduld\n\u00a39%; H B C 23s; Mining Trust\nll l%d; Rtnd \u00a35%; Rhodes'an\nAnglo Am 14s 3d; Rhokana \u00a37%;\nSpring! 21s 10%d.\nBonds: British 2% per cent Consols \u00a373%; British 3% per cent\nWir Loin \u00a3101; British Funding\n4s 1960-90 \u00a3112%.\nPapers Lead Gains\non Montreal Exchg.\nMONTREAL, Sept 11 (CP). -\nPaper! led the stock market to\nsomewhat higher ground In quiet\nlate trade today although some declines spotted the list.\nPrice Brothers, St. Lawrence Corporation preferred and St Lawrence\nPaper preferred showed fractional\nImprovement\nCanadian Car displayed a slight\naddition while Dosco was off narrowly.\nOn the upside were Nickel, Dominion Coal preferred and General\nSteel Wares. Dominion Textile gained a ftw points.\nBonds Mark Gains\nNEW  YORK, Stpt 11  (AP). -\nBondi tilted higher with t gently\nruing stock market today.\nRill loans wtrt among tht leaden.\nSelected industrials tnd utilities\nalso advanced.\nA shade ahead In tht foreign dm\nlir division wen Canadian 4s of\n'80, Australian 61 of '66, Belgium\n6%s ol '49, tnd Norwegian 4s ot\n'63. A little lowtr were German 7s\not '49 ind Japanese 6%s.   ,\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Sept 11 (CP). -\nSpot: Butter, Que, 23%; Eggs, Eait-\nern A Large 33 to \"3%; sales: Butter 100 boxes Qut. 23%.\nButttr futures: Nov. 23%; Dtc.\n23% to 24.\nJohnion, Gillette\nRemanded Again on\nMine Theft Charge\nFacing a charge of stealing rails\nand pipe from the Enterprise mine\nat Slocan City September 2, Richard Johnson of Nelson snd Glen Gillette of Balfour were remanded for\neight days or sooner, when they appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate Willlira Irvlnt In Provincitl\nPollet Court Wedneidiy morning.\nArrested lut Friday, they wen\nflnt reminded until yesterday\nmorning. '   -\nBOOTIJ-, (CP)-Whtn air nld\nsirens tre sounded it thll little\nEnglish village, 8000 radio subscribers heir the warning through\ntheir loud speakers.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industriili\n20 rails\n15 utilitlei \t\nHigh\n131.21\n23.39\n22.49\nLow Close Change\n129.07 129.36 off    .25\n27.92 27.95 off    .17\n22.27 22.27 off    .04\nQUOTATIONS   ON  WALL   STREET\nOptn\nAm Smelt b Ret      38\nAmer Ttl\nAnaconda   \u2014.............\nBaldwin    \t\nBait b Ohio\t\nBeridix Avl \u2014.\t\nBeth  Steel\t\nCan Pac  _____\nChrysler   \t\nC Wright Pfd\t\n164%\n22\n15%\n4%\n31\n79%\n2%\n77%\n7%\nDupont    ;  170\nEast Kod  \u2014 131%\nGen Elec       34\nGen  Mot  47%\nHowe   Sound   .-  32\nInter  Nickel  27%\nJCenn   Cop  29%\nClose\n88\n184\n21%\n15%\n4%\n31\n78%\n2%\n76\n7%\n168%\n133%\n34%\n47\n32\n-714\n28*1\nMont Wtrd   41\nN Y Central  14%\nPack Mot           3%\nPtnn R R    21%\nPhillips Pete  88%\nPullman      20%\nRadio Corp       4%\nS Cal Ed      27%\nStan Oil of N J   35%\nStudebaker      7%\nTex  Corp    _ 36%\nUn  Carbide      72%\nUnited Aircraft   40%\nUn Pac    \u2014 86\nU S Rubber  23\nU S Steel  55%\nWoolworth   33%\nYel  Truck     14%\n41\n13%\n3%\n21\n36%\n20%\n4%\n27%\n35%\n7%\n36%\n72%\n40%\n86\n23\n55%\n30%\n14 Vi\nPAQB   NINI\nCanadian Munitions Makers Io\nGel Depreciation Allowance\nOTTAWA, Sent 11 (CP).-Ctn-\nada'i wir effort is to be encouraged\nby generous depreciition allowances\nto firms engaged on manufacture ot\nwar essentfils lor the Government,\nand machinery to handle applications for wrlte-offi li reidy to function, according to Revenue Minister\nColin Gibson.\nA complete write-off ot capital\nexpenditures essential to carrying\nout war contracts may bt effected\nin from one to,three years. A Wir\nContracts Depreciation Board was\nrecently set up under Chairmanship\nof Mr. Justice C. P. McTigue of tht\nOntario Supreme Court, and is\nready to operate.\nThli hoard will receive application- from firms desiring to take\nadvantage of the depreciation concession and make arrangements for\nagreement on the amount of depreciation to be permitted. Its office\nil in the Munitions tnd Supply\nbuilding in Ottawa.\nA Una recognized by tht board\naa a war contractor may arrange\nto havt capital expenditures incurred purely beciuse of the wit\ncontract deducted from gross profits to an extent whereby the total\nexpenditure may be written off in\na ihort tlmt.\nThus, if a firm spends (300,000 on\ncapital costs In order to carry out a\nwar contract and the board rules\nthli may be written off in three\nyean, the firm may deduct up to\n$100,000 a year from gross profits\nand reduce its Income and excess\nprofits tax accordingly,\nThla provision Is made because\nmany firms manufacturing war essentials must make heavy capital\nexpenditures which would become a\ntotal loss if their mirket tor such\nmaterials wit lost by terminition\not tha-wir.\nDepreciation allowance will go\nto firms hiving tctutl contricti\nwith thi Govtrnmtnt \u2022 wir _\u25a0\u2022\nsentials, their sub-contractors, tnd\nothers Indirectly engaged on wir\nessential manufacture for the Government\nNormally the depreciation allowance for Income tax purposei is 10\nptr cent on machinery, flvt per\ncent on frame buildings, tnd 2%\nper cent on building! constructed\not steel, stone or concrete.\nDepreciation concessions will be\nbased upon the reasonable post-war\nvalue of the assets concerned, provided no other provision is mada\nwhereby the contractor recovers his\ncapital expenditure tnd that tht\ncapital assets irt not ptld for before\nby tht Government under any \"cei-\nsation ot hostilities\" clause In tht\ncontract\nVancouver Firms\nGive Over $100,000\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP). - Subscriptions of (100,000 or more to\nCanada's Second War Loan, ll innounced today by Bank of Canada\nofficials, Include:\nBritish Columbia:\nPowell River Co., Ltd., and affiliates, $225,000; City of Vancouver\nSinking Fund, $150,000; Woodward's\nStores, Ltd., $100,000; Pioneer Oold\nMines of B. C\u201e Ltd, f.:X),000, all\nof Vancouver. .   . ,\n3% Bonds due October 1,1952\nCallable on or after October 1, 1949\nIssue Price: 98.75% and accrued interest\nYielding 3.125% to maturity\nDenomination If Bearer Bonds: $100, $500, $1,000\nArrangements have also bten mtdt to convert into 2nd\nWir Loin the 4tf% bond| due September 1,1940 which\nhave not yet been presented for payment Subscriptions\nmty be mtde through any approved investment dealer\nor stock broker or through tny branch in Canada oi\nany chartered bank.\nYour Dollars Urgently Needed Today\nTo Help Win The War!\nOur armed forces must have the equipment with which to win.\nCourage, brains and ability are not enough... it must be plane\nfor plane, tank for tank, gun for gun! Then the proven ability\nof our men will have a chance.\nThey have no one else to turn to but you! You cannot\nfail them because in so doing you would sacrifice your right to\nfreedom, your home and all you hold dear. You cannot, must\nnot, let happen here the tragedy which has already engulfed so\nmany people Just like you!\nCANADA'S 2nd WAR LOAN\n PAQI TIN\nIVIC\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nCompute Shows 7:00\u20148:28\nAMECHE - LEI\nPlus\u2014The Bumittidi\nIn\n\"Blondle Bringi Up Baby\"\nnuTJAY-SATURDAY\n\"The Fighting 69th\"\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. - Mlsi A.\ntodglni has returned to Medicine\nat after visiting her brother-in-law\nand litter, Mr. and Mrs. C. Pleas-\ntnce.\nMrt. N. Johnson was at Nelson\nlor the funeral of her brother-in-\nlaw, Mr. Jerome.\nC Itnobloch and son, Richird,\nhavt left for the Prairies.\nMn. J. Stainton visited TraiL\nMiss Norma Petterson hai return-\nad to her home.\nMr. tnd Mrs. J. W. SImllley, md\nMr. md Mrs. Everett Smilley md\ndaughter of Nelson, were guests ot\ntheir son-in-law md diughter, Mr.\nand Mri. R. N. Dorman.\nMra. R. N. Dorman md son, Richard, visited Mrs. Dormant parenti\nat Nelson.\nMiss Doris Palls md Betty Wit-\nton of Indian Head, Sask., were\nguesta ot Mr. md Mrs. D. A. Shea.\nMr, and Mrs. Yates md ion were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. R. West\nMin. H. Olson md son, Buddy, Mr.\ntnd Mrs. Leslie, Mrs. Carrie and\nton, David, were guesti of Mr. md\nMn. E. Wallner.\nTn* St. Alban's Guild met at the\nhomt of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bloomer.\nHostesses were Mrs. Bloomer tnd\nMri. Cornwall\nTbt United Church Ladles' Aid\ninet at the home of Mrs. Shafonsky.\nHostesses were Mrs. Shafonsky\nand Mn. Easton.\n' Load Your Camera With\nFresh Film\nat\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONI 11 NELSON, B. a\n1931 CHEVROLET\nCOACH\nMany Miles of Satisfac-     CVJC\ntlon for only \u00a5*\/-\u00bb\nSowerbv-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Offlot tnd Humt Hotel\nttes*9Stseee)e*tme*90teMte*ststm\nCUT FLOWERS, WEDDING\nAND FUNERAL DESIGNS\nPhone KITCHENER\n\u00abK--4*--\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00abS\u00abK-\u00abS\u00abJ_\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nTry Our SPONGE CAKE\n(dial  for  Strawberry  Shortcake\nIndividual tnd Ltrgt Sizes\nHOOD'S\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\nteetestwtxeeecHMexmeoeeeotxes\nQonslLcL fluwnsAL\nArt now accepting Fill top costs for\ncleaning, it JI.25 up.\nDelivery it your convenience\n1042-PHONE-1042\nllS__S\u00abS\u00ab-\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab-\u00ab\u00ab\u00abJS\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS\u00ab\n1935 Terraplane\nSEDAN\nGood Rubber, Real Value.   C_)__A\nAt only 9iT*\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St     Limited    Phont 119\n.\t\n\u2022-NELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON, B. C-THUR8DAY MORNINO, SEPT, 12. 1MO\u2014\nRossland Parent-Teacher Body Is\nWith Project for District Nurse\nGREENWOOD\nGREENWOOD, B. C, - Mist Co-\nrinnt Wright returned after several\nweeks with Mr. and Mrs. Ii. H.\nWilki of Grand Forks.\nMri. W. M. Gowini of Grind\nForks villted Mri. M. L. Kendal.\nMill Mollie Bailey returned after\nt few weeki in  vineouver.\nMn. A. MacMlllan ot Grand\nForks visited town.\nCorry Wright returned after a\nfew days In Grand Forks.\nMrs. G. Inglls ot Beaverdell visited her daughter, Miss Irene Inglls.\nMrs. J. Morrison of eBaverdell\nIs visiting her parents, Mr. ind\nMn. H. H. Setler.\nMrs. G. Jones of Allenby Is visiting her parenti, Mr. and Mrs. H\nMadden.\nMiss Bernadlne Brown of Penticton Is visiting Mrs. N. Brown.\nMrs. E. Hay returned after several weeks at Vancouver.\nErnie Berg of Trail is spending\na few days with Mrs. W. Berg.\nMiu Marian McLean returned\nafter several days with friends at\nPenticton.\nMrs. E. Cliffe attended the Women's Institute Convention at Vancouver.\nMrs. W. Madden returned after\nthree months in Toronto.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Legault left for\na two-week vacation in Vancouver.\nMiss Milva White returned from\nVictoria to resume teaching.\nNeil Russel of the Bank of Commerce has been trinsferred to Vmcouver,\nJim Brown, who visited Mrs. N.\nBrown, left for Metaline Falls.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. McLean and\nson Keith and daughters, Mama\nand Audrey left for Revelstoke\nwhere Mr. McLean has been transferred. Mr. MacLean was Game\nWarden here for five yeirs.\nMr. and Mrs. Lynn Thompson of\nGrand Forks visited Mr. and Mrs.\nC. -Wright\nG. Ruzlcka and Miss Loretta Ru\n-Icka of Grand Forks visited Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Ruzlcka.\nMrs. H. Matthews and daughter,\nParma Lou md son Chippie of\nGrand Forks visited town.\nJ. P. C. Wright visited Grsnd\nForks.\nPrivate Eddie Chamberi of the\nDuke of Connaught Regiment's\nspecial drill group of New Westminster visited  town.\nMr. and Mrs. V. Forrrester snd\ndaughter Lois are visiting Mr. and\nMrs. J. P. C. Wright.\n.WARDNER\nWARDNER, B. C\u2014Mrs. N. Newman and daughter have left for\nCanal Flats.\nMiss Geneva Lovick hu left for\nLibby, Mont.\nH. Renstrom visited here.\nMr. md Mrs. F. Thompson visited\nCranbrook.\nMrs. H. Haney ud Beverly, Miss\nSwea Moberg md Ruth Hamrin, G.\nThompson and D. Hamrin, visited\nLake Louise and Banff.\nMr. md Mri. C. Himrln visited\nCranbrook.\nM. RothwelL visited Calgary.\nMr. and Mn. L. Flesberg, md Mr.\nand Mn. A. Kievill md family visited Cranbrook.\nA. Jones hai arrived to teach\nschool here.\nMiu A. Sandberg of Waldo has arrived to assume her dntles as\nteacher.\nV. Lundbom motored to Fernie.\nMr. md Mrs. W. Mulr of Skook-\numchuck, were guesti of Mr. md\nMn. W. Mulr, Sr.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Jacobson and\nfamily of South Slocan, visited the\nlatter's parenti, Mr. md Mn. 0.\nHolm.\nL. Flesberg motored to Cranbrook.\nMrs. 0. Holm returned from e\nvisit to her daughter at South Slocan.\nMr. md Mrs. J. Muir of Waldo\nvisited here.\nMiss H. Johnson visited Cranbrook.\nV. Lundbom motored to the\nCrow's Nest Camp.\nS. Rowland visited here.\nB. Embree, G. Johnson and A.\nMoberg villted at Gold Creek.\nMr. md Mra. C. Nelion md Eve*\nlyn, md Mill Gamon, of Cranbrook\nvisited Mr. and Mn. G. Johnson.\nMn. C. Mohels of Sand Creek\nvisited Mn. F. Anderson.\nE. Johnson and G. Carlson spent\nthe weekend at Gold Creek.\nThe Red Cross meeting wai held\nat the home of Mn. F. wellander.\nSweater wool wai distributed and\nit wai decided to bold an apron sale\nsoon.\nWill Cooperate Upon\nthe Girls' Cadet\nCorps\nROSSLAND, B.C., SepL 11-Ser-\nvlce to the schools was the keynote\not the Rossland Parent-Teacher executive meeting held Tuesday evening.\nOPTICAL-DENTAL\nCLINIC\nMrs. Edgar Jamleson, convener\nof tht committee on the establishment of in optical and dental clinic\nreported on her correspondence\nwith centres already possessing one.\nThit give helpful suggestions concerning the formation, md what\nwas being done by such clinics In\nother placet,\nIt was decided tht first greet need\nhere was to obtain the services of\na district health nurse, who could\ndo the valuable and necessary preclinical work. The executive li-lt\nthat Rossland should make known\nIts desire for such a nurse and see\nlt lt would be possible to cooperate\nwith other districts on this.\nThe meeting was in agreement\nwith Principal Wesley McKemie's\nplan to teach home nursing to the\nGirls' Cadet Corps, and was willing to cooperate with him and the\nRed Cross in obtaining a qualified\nInstructor for this coune.\nReporting on the work of the\nSunshine Committee, Mrs. Fraser\nMitchell explained that two scrap\nbooks had been completed for use\nof children In the hospital. Also\nSnow White cut-outs had been donated for the same purpose.\nCHILDREN'S\nLIBRARY PLAN\nOne' of the most Interesting reports of the evening was that on library work, given by Mrs. H.\nFkury. She told of a new system\nbeing inaugurated in October, for\nthat month only, designed to foster\na love of good reading in children\nand to enlarge the children's section of the Rossland Library. Children may obtain a six-month membership of $1.25, or a year's for $2.90.\nWhen the membership has been\nbought, the parents or If so desired,\na member of the library committee\nmay choose from an approved list\na book whose value Is equal to that\nof the membership procured. Ths\nbook will be the property of the\nLibrary, but will be stamped with\nthe child's name. When the book\narrives the parents may take it\nhome to keep until Christmas. It\nIs then to be presented to the child\nfor use during the period of the\nChristmas holidays, and in Janu.ry\nwill be exchanged for the membership card. In this way, the card is\nreally the gift given to the child,\nwho In return makes the book a\ngift to the Library.\nAs the fund increases the Library\nwill cooperate with the teachers in\nbuying books needed by the schools.\nAt the present time teachers may\nobtain through the Rossland Library\nfrom the Open Shelf of the Library\nin Victoria.\nTeachers were asked to encourage\nchildren to use the Library on Saturdays, when specially qualified\nassistants were there to help them.\nBRIDGE COMING UP\nThe Parent-Teacher Association\nwill again this Fall sponsor a bridge\ntournament. Registration closes on\nOctober 1, and the first draws will\nbe published October 4. The committee is convened by Mrs. T. Holland, assisted by Mrs. R. W: Hsg-\ngen and Mrs. E. McGauley.\nThe first Fall meeting of the Association will take the form of a reception to welcome new teachers,\nand parents of new pupils especially\nas well as former members,\nBEFORE THE\nCOLD WEATHER\nARRIVES\nIs the time for you to\nhave us quote on a\nMcClary\nHot Air\n\u25a0  Furnace\nWe alto repair all make, of Hot Air Furnaces\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nFRUITVALE\nFRUITVAIX-, B. C - Mn. A.\nSmith who has bten a guest of relatives here, returned to Nelson.\nMr, md Mn. Glen Wick visited\nNelson. ,\nC. Dobie who hat been visiting\nOntario for the Summer hai returned. '\nMr. tnd Mn. A. Nuttall and sons\nJack and Raymond, htvt returned\nfrom a holiday at Coast points.\nMr. md Mn. W. Farquahar havt\nreturned from i holiday at Coast\npoints.\nMin C. Johnion of Kulo hai returned to take up her duties at tht\nFruitvale school.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Keighly left to re\nside In Trail for the Winter.\nMiss A. Sutherland of Salmo has\njoined the staff of the Fruitvale\nSuperior school.\nMr. md Mn. V. Mills md daughter are holidaying at Goodlands,\nMan.\nMrs. J. Matthews who has been\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Hepburn, has returned to Hamilton.\nOnt\nMiss A. Nelson of Trail has Joined the staff of the Fruitvale ichool.\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Sprinkling and\nsons Paul md Ian have returned\nfrom a two-months vacation at\nCoast points.\nMr. and Mn. R. Kidd are holidaying with relatives at Lethbridge,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Dobie md sons\nhave returned from a vacation at\nCoast points.\nMr. and Mn. T. Anderson and\nfamily left to vacation at Yahk.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Yak and son\nGlen, have returned from a vacation in Banff and vicinity.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Lamont returned from a holiday at Coast points.\nMr. and Mn. J. Austed and son\nRonald, who have been holidaying\nhere, have returned to Trail.\nMr. and Mn. R. Langland and\nfamily have left to reside in Trail\nduring the Winter.\nMrs. D. Knowler md tons Bobby\ntnd Alfred left to holiday in Nelson with her parents, Mr. md Mrs.\nR. Vyse.\nMr. and Mrs W. Partridge of\nYmir visited Mr. and Mn. J. Bond,\nMrs. Partridge' -parents.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MIU FLORENCE BIRD\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. ll-Mlts Maud,\nStewart ot Salmo villted Trail\nMonday.\nGeoffrey Haszard has left for\nCalgary, where ht hai been transferred by the C. M. k S. Company.\nMn. Haszard md children will leave\nshortly to join him .\nJack Moran has returned to Trail\nfrom Vmcouver, where he visited\nhis parenti for two weeks.\nMiss Mary O'Donnel visited Nelson during the weekend.\nMr. md Mn. A. Lauriente had as\ntheir guest during the weekend,\ntheir nephew, Joseph Capozzl, also\nMr. and Mrs. Carl Ghezzi and\ndaughter, Linda, all of Kelowna.\nMn. E. S. McDaniel md baby of\nVmcouver have arrived in the city\nto join Mr. McDaniel. They have\ntaken up residence at 1707 Bay Avenue.\nMr. md Mra. T. H. Mather of\nVancouver are visiting in Trail for\na few days.\nJack Margeson, ion of Mr. md\nMrs. K. A. Margeson, IBM Pine Avenue, left today for Vmcouver,\nwhere he will resume hli studies\nat the University of British Columbia.\nMr. md Mn. Marcui of Revelstoke visited Trail Monday.\nMiss Margaret Best, daughter ot\nMr. md Mrs. J. G. Best, 904 Nelson\nAvenue, left todiy for Vmcouver\nto attend business college. During\nthe weekend Miss Best was the recipient of a gift from St Andrew's\nSunday School teaching staff.    .\nJack Robinson and Charles\nThring of New Denver are visiting\nin Trail for a few days.\nArt Bent of Assiniboia, Sask., visited Mr. md Mn. Mirk Devlin, -SO\nSchofield Road, Mondiy.\nG. B. Fordt of the Liquor Control\nBoard it Vlctorli was htrt Monday.\nMlsi Jean Marie Bausana, who\nhai been the guest of Mr. md Mrs.\nClifford Morgan, returned Monday\nto htr home in Cle-Elum, Waah.\nMiss L. Hayes has left for i vacation at Lethbridge md Medicine\nHatt\nMill Betty Pearson hu left for\nLethbridge, where ihe will bt tht\nguest of her grandparents tor two\nW. R. Dunwoody ot Nelson wu a\nbusiness visitor to Trail Monday.\nLloyd Crowe, G. A. Wallinger and\nF. A. Fortler were in Kimberley\nSaturday to attend the funeral of\nE. E. Jackson. ,\nDr. M. E. Krause md Dr. E. S.\nHoare visited Ndson Wednesday for\nthe B. C. Medical convention.\nMn. S. A. Bock, who leaves this\nweek to Join her husband In Vmcouver, wu the guest of honpr at\na farewell party given by Mrs. R\nW. Ferguson. Bridge was the featured entertainment dainty refreshment! being served at the close of\nplay. Mra. C. F, Armstrong won\nfirst prize at bridtre, with the consolation going to Mn, L. Denmore.\nAfter supper a presentation was\nmade to the guest of honor. Guests\nwere Mrs. E. B. Quayle, Mn. Armstrong, Mrs. M. Mason, Mn. Denmore, Mn. H. S. Allen, Mra. I.\nTrembath, Mrs. R. P. Crawford, Mrs.\nL. Reid, Mrs. E P. Crellin, and\nMrs. A. 7,. Kern*.\nWatches\nPOCKET WATCHES\nf 1.35, t) 1.75, ?2.50\nand up.\nWRIST WATCHES\nf3.95, ?4.50 \u00ab\u00abl fS.OO\nCity Drug Co.\nMOYIE\nTwo Boswell Men Are\nin Forestry Company\nBOSWELL, B. C.-C. Holden and\nF. D. Cummings left for Cranbrook\nhaving joined the Forestry Company. They expect to go on to Victoria at the end of the week.\nMOYIE, B.C. - Milt Margaret\nRoope, of Creston, visited Mr. md\nMrs. V. H. Sanders and family.\nMrs. J. Whitehead returned from\nKimberley.\nMrs. Herman Peterson of Yahk\nis visiting her aunt, Mrs. H. M.\nPearson.\nMrs. Phil Conrad and family are\nvisiting at Kellogg, Idaho. Phil Conrad, Jr., accompanied them md will\ngo to Washington to resume his\nstudies.\nMr. and Mrs. Soleckl visited in\nthe West Kootenay.\nMr. and Mn. Fritz Johnson of\nRossland, were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Algot Johnson.\nBud French, Creston, visited the\nLanders family.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley James, Mr.\nand Mrs. Algot Hendrickson md\nfamily, Mrs. Oscar Hendrickson md\nson Ray, Mrs. James, Cranbrook;\nRoy Buick, and Luclen Fortin,\nTrail; Mrs. H. Hogg and children of\nKingsgate, visited Sunnyside Ranch,\nMr. and Mn. Frank Harding and\nMr. and Mn. Ronald Harding of\nRegina visited the Sander's family.\nMrs. George Whitehead and family were guesta of Bill Whitehead\nat Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy James and family, Mra. Alex Fraser and Frank\nLlvesly, of Kimberley, visited here.\nLeonard Verden of Fort Steele\nis visiting here.\nMrs. Mary Desaulnlers Is a guest\nof her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nmd Mrs. Louis Desaulnlers, Chapman Camp.\nErnest Howard visited here.\nFloyd and Laura Fiset of Lumber-\nton are attending school at Moyie.\nMrs. Adam Barr is visiting at\nCranbrook.\nMra. Ernest Danielson and son,\nPaul, have taken up residence in\nthe Windermere.\nMr. and Mn. Foote and Chris,\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nRossland Social...\nROSSLAND, B. C. Sept. 11\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Black, accompanied\nby their three sons, are leaving for\nBeausijour, Man., where they will\nmake an extended visit with Mr.\nBlack's parents.\nMrs. Arthur Whittred and young\nson Donnie, have left for Medicine\nHat to stay with Mrs. Whittred's\nfather, Mr. Whittred, who has joined\nthe C. A. S. F\u201e stationed in Calgary.\nMiss Mabel Wilkie wai hostess at\nher home on Columbia Avenue on\nTuesday evening to the Pioneer\nCircle. It wu decided to hold the\nmeetings on the first and fourtn\nMondays, instead ot the customary\nsecond Tuesday. Regret was expressed over the loss of' a former\nmember, Mrs. William Swanson who\nhas left to reside in Alberta. Following Red Cross work, refreshments were served by the hostess,\nassisted by Mn, C. Dally. Members\npresent included Mrs. L. E. Gil-\nmour, Miss Jennie Henderson, Mrs.\nE. Atkinson, Mrs. Edgar Jamieson,\nMra, V. Sorenson, Mrs. H. Mellor-\nLangdale. Miss Ethel Jamieson, Mrs.\nJ. Wright Mrs. D. B. Jones. Mrs.\nJ. Gordon, Mrs. J. Shearer, Mn. C.\nDally and Mrs. W. Hedley.\nMra. William Swanson and son\nRobert left today for Calgary, following Mr. Swanson's departure\nfor the Coast to join the C. A. S. F.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Mitchell have\ntaken up residence in their new\nhome In Coronation Heights.\nMr. and Mn. Jack Peachey have\nvisiting them Mrs. Peachey's brother\nand sister. Her sister plans to spend\nthe Winter here.\nA farewell party wu held Tues-\ndsy evening st the home of Mrs.\nJohn Berg In honor of Mrs. William Swanson, who Is leaving to reside In Calgary. Gladioli and dahlias\nin deep-toned shsdes decorated the\nrooms, where two tables of bridge\nand ont of whist were In play. Firs;\nprize for bridge went to Mra. G\nAlbertson, and the consolation to\nMn, S. Palmquist. The high scorer\nin whist wu Mrs. J. Jensen, and\nthe low. Mn. M. Albertscn.\nDuring the evening Mrs. Swanson wu presented with a travelling\ncase by the assembled guests. Following this refreshments were\nserved by the hostess assisted by\nMn. J. C. Wilkie. from a tea table\ncentered with a low bowl of multi\ncolored nasturtiums. Those present\nwere Mrs. E. Lynderup, Mra. G.\nLindquist Mrs. M. Albertson, Mrs.\nJ. C. Wilkie, Mrs. S. Palmquist Mrs.\nG. Albertson, Mrs. George Fred-\neriksen, Mrs. J. Jensen, Mrs. Dorothea Fredericksen, Mrs. F. Knuds-\ngaard and Mrs. T. Nora.\nThe Women's Auxiliary of St.\nGeorge's Anglican Church met on\nTuesday afternoon at the home of\nMn. S. E. Wilson. After a discussion\nof routine business, wool wu distributed for Red Cross knitting.\nThe hostess wu assisted in serving\nrefreshments by her daughter, Miss\nDoreen Wilson. Those present were\nMn. J. Butcher, Mn. F. Newell,\nMrs. R. Berry, Mrs. E. Jewell, Mrs.\nM. Storie, Mrs. J. Thomu, Mrs. A.\nSlater, Mrs. T. Tongue and Mrs. S.\nWilson.\nMrs. J. A. Hendenon entertained\nthe members of the Government\nSquare Circle on Tuesday evening\nMn. C. H. Clegg presented a report\non the St Andrew's Women's Auxiliary meeting held In the afternoon\nArrangements were made concerning Red Cross meetings. The next\nmeeting will take place In three\nweeks. During the evening refreshments were served by the hostess\nusisted by Mrs. Sorenson, Members present included Mrs. A. Freeman, Mn. C. H. Clegg, Mn. W. M,\nCameron, Mrs. J. C. Urquhart Mrs.\nWilliam Inglis, Mrs. E. E. Perkins,\nMrs. R. Morin, Mrs. H. Bathle and\nMrs. Sorenson.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Yolland have as\ntheir guest Mrs. Yolland's father, R.\nG. Christie of Fruitvale, who is\nen route home from a trip to\nVictoris.\nJ. Gendle Is at Sheep Creek for a\nshort visit.\nThe Women's Auxlliiry of St An\ndrew's United Church met Tuesdiy\nafternoon In the church annex. Rev\nW. M. Cameron thanked the ladles\nfor the work accomplished md co\noperation shown during the put\nyear. Arrangements were made for\na party to be.held the evening of\nSeptember 25, to which members\nof all Circles would be Invited\nThose present were Mra. A. Freeman. Mn. F. Blackwell, Mrs. Howard Hayden. Mrs. M, A. Hender-\nson, Mrs. C. Troset, Mn. A. Coombes.\nMrs. J. Shearer Mn. C. H. Clegg.\nMrs. R. Clelland, Mn. H. Bosworth\nmd Rev. W. M. Cimeron.\nConfribulion of C. M. t5, S. to War\nEffort Two-Fold Declares Beatty\nMaterial   to   Britain;\nShipments  Aid\nExchange\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept 11-Trenwnd-\n:us material contribution to the Empire wer effort by the Consolidited\nSmeltera plant wu referred to in\nan interview here today by Sir Edward Beatty, President of the Cans-\ndlan Pacific Railway, who is making his annual Inspection tour of\nthe West.\nThis contribution, Sir Edward aald\nwas two-fold; Direct and continuous supply of buic war materials\nto the embattled Motherland, and\nheavy shipments of by-products,\nsuch u fertilizers, to the United\nStates, forming a valuable part of\nCanada's foreign exchange control\nplan. _     ,\nWhile National Defence Regulations made it Impossible, Sir Edward said, to reveal in detail the\nexact scope of the first contribution, it could be said it was tremendous. Lead and line were finding their way in huge quantities to\nseaboard and thanks to the efficiency of the British convoy system,\nin an uninterrupted stream to war\nindustries in the British Isles. U\nanything Trail's output would be\nincreased as the war went on.\nThe fertilizer export lituation, he\nsaid, wu such thit steady increase\nin demand promised to keep pace\nIn part with the inevitable increase\nin required purchasing power on\nthe other side of the line. California\nhe said, wu notably providing a\nheavy export demand for this nurn-\n\u2022ber one by-product of war time\nproduction.\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nR. White motored to Penticton to\nvisit Mn. White's parents, Mr. and\nMra. Nesbitt,\nJ. Walker visited Nakusp en route\nfrom Nelson to his home in Burton.\nW. Rogera and G. Misculin motored to town from Arrow Park.\nT. Allehouse hu left for Steele,\nNorth Dakota.\nG. Palethorpe of New Denver\nvisited town.\nWalter Miller il holldiying In\nMichel.\nJ. Cann and Ross Chiles left for\nthe Cout\nMr. and Mra. P. Leib of Salmo\nare visiting Nakusp.\nJ. Cann of the Home Defence\nPlatoon at Nelson, wu home on\nleave.\nRev. and Mn. 0. Grandahl, Miss\nA. A. Allen and Miss J. Fawoett\nmotored to New Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. Bredy of Carrolls\nLanding motored to Nakuip. On return they were accompanied by\ntheir sons, Lawrence and. Wilfred,\nwho spent a weekend at their Home.\nMrs. F. Rushton has returned\nfrom the Women's Institute convention at Vancouver.\nMrs. A. Middleman and young\ndaughter of Rock Island shopped In\nNakusp,\nG. W. Battershall of the Home\nGuard Platoon, Nelson, wu In town\non leave.\nJ. Robins and daughter, Miss\nEvelyn Robins, were in town from\nArrow Park.\nMra. W. Morgan left to spend *a\nfew days in Victoria, where her\nhusband Is stationed.\nMr. and Mra. A. Lidberg have as\nguest their daughter, Mrs. L. Perdue of Lethbridge.\nL. Montibetti and J. Rabasso of\nBurton passed through town.\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LISTER, B.C. \u2014 Miss\nMartha Marshall of Alice Siding is\nvisiting her uncle and aunt Mr. md\nMrs. John Rlngheim.\nMiss Margaret Huscroft has left\nfor Victoria to attend normal school.\nMr. md Mrs. Al Wilion and children of Cranbrook were gueiti of\nMrs. Wilson's fither, George Hurry.\nCol. Frsd Lister returned from\na visit at Kelowna where he attended a Tree Fruit Board meeting.\nMr. and Mn. W. Miller and daughter of Alice Siding were guesti of\nMr. md Mn. James Huscroft\nAleck Demchuk Is residing it\nMedicine Hit, Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Williams of Car-\nmangay, Alta., were guests of Mr\nmd Mrs. Herbert Yerbury.\nMr., md Mrs. Bob Marshall of\nAlice Siding were guests of Mn. M.\nRoss.\nHarry md Frank Yerbury visited\nCreston.\nFred Kapola of the Bayonne mine\nvisited here.\nMiss Gloria Foss of Creston wu\na guest of her parenti, Mr. ind Mrs\nGarfield GorrJI.\nMin Irent Rutledge returned to\nAlega Lake after visiting Mr. and\nMra. A. W. Sincliir.\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B. C \u2014 S. Deilretu-,\nreturned to Nelson sfter \u2022 visit\nto his grandparents, Mr. md Mn.\nDeslretu.\nMiss June Wlgen hu left for\nGolden.\nD. Taylor and H. Sllngsby hive\nleft forjrtll.\nSidney Davldge is visiting it\nCrmbrook.\nMr. md Mn. Fred Hagen visited\nVancouver.\nMiss Isabel Hagen and Miss Gen.\nMortimer have left for Victoria to\ntake a course in domestic science.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Allen of Trail,\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. M.\nWigen.\nM. Olson visited Nelson.\nNels Winlaw has returned to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Hindley, Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Andestad and Mr. and\nMn. E. Andestad were weekend\nvisitors at Nelson for the Andestad-\nRosten wedding.\nMrs. J. C. MacFtrlant tnd two\nchildren returned to Trill tfter i\nvisit to the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. A. Davis.\nMrs. Rumsey and children, who\nhave spent the Summer here, have\nreturned to Creston.\nSergt Mirgiret Bithle, of C. W.\nT. C returned to Vmcouver ifter\na visit wilh her pirents, Mr. ind\nMrs. H A. Btthle.\nMr. and Mn. Eric Wood of Kimberley visited here.\nMaster Jimmy Allen of Trail, who\nhu been a Summer guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Wigen, has returned.\nM. Hackett visited TraiL\nMr. and Mrs. Burch md son,\nGary, and Mr. and Mn. Halnet and\nPaul visited at Ainsworth.\nMra. L. A. Davis is a patient in\nthe Creston Valley Hospital.\nMrs. Mosley of Calgary Is visiting\nher parents, Mr. and Mra. S. Moon.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C- Mra. J.\nDowlirlg entertained at tea in honor\nof Miss Eileen Johnstone of Cranbrook. Guests were Misses Eileen\nJohnstone md Joyce, Mrs. George,\nMiss Greta Sinclar, Miss Rose Za.l-\nra, Miss Dacey Browne and Miss\nRuth Alywln.\nH. Blumaneur of Merrltt Is visiting the Aylwin home,\nMr. and Mra. E. Aylwin of Sydney, V. I., are visiting at the former's mother, Mrs. Aylwin.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Dowling had as\nguest on the weekend R. Dowling\nof San Francisco.\nPhont 34\nBox 480\nRossland Court\nWithout Fines\nDuring August\nROSLAND, B. C, Stpt. 11 - Following Ii the report for August\npresented to the City Council it\niti meeting Monday night by Constable J. 0. Hall, in charge ot the\nRos and detachment of the Provincial Police:\nMiscellaneous complaints reciv-\ned and attended to: Highway Act\nbicycles, 3; Curfew Bylaw, 10; Domestic trouble, 3; Motor Vehlrle\ncheck-ups, 7; Undesirable residents,\n2; Fire cells 2; Disturbing Religious\nmeetings 3: Dog Tax Bylaw \u2014 no\nlicence 1; Public disturbances 9:\nSprinkling Bylaw 1; Wilful Damage\n1; Missing persons 2; Juveniles \u2014\nmischief, etc., 2; Traffic Bylaw 4;\nAnimals Act 1; Miscellaneous 2.\nThere were no Police Court fines\nimposed or collected during Aug.\n1140.\nRESTITUTION  MADE\nValue of'property stolen totalled\n$87.50. Value of property recovered\nor restitution made totalled $87.90.\nDurln- the coune of patrols, the\nfollowing occurrences were noted\nmd duly attended to:\nStore doors found open 2; globes\nburnt out on Memorial 2; proprle\ntors were notified and stores were\nchecked; Fire Depirtment advised\nmd replacementi made.\nOne motor-vehicle accident wai\nr .orted during the month, thli\naccident resulting In property damage of $49.\nAn offence committed under the\nMotor Vehicle Act by the Rossland\nCooperative Transportation Society'! gtrage for having no dealer's\nlicence was withdrawn by the Motor Vehicle Brmch.\nConvictions under Section 498 of\nthe Criminal Codo were obtained\nagainst two juveniles for theft\namounting to $8.90. Tht lads wert\ngiven one year suspended sentence,\nwith provision that they were to\nreport at the police office every\nsecond Saturdiy, tnd not ittend\npicture shows during period of suspended sentence. Restitution wu\nmide by the parents.\nRestitution is being mtdt for t\ntheft imountlng to $80. No formal\nchirge was laid.\nDOVER, England (CP)- Light\ntrailers which can be attached to\nmotor cars or drawn by hand are\nmuch In demand for South Coast\nresidents who may be called upon\nto evacuate my moment of m air\nraid.\n*oea&)eese&etie*\u00ab*s**9t)i\u00bbteoms\nFleury's  Pharmacy la open this\nevening. Phone 25\nCheap ticket for one from Nelson\nlo Suk. Box 90, Procter.\nHarold Foulds - Electrician House\nwiring, baseplugs. Phont 944.\nGrand opening tonight. Eagles\nwhist drive and dance. Progressive\nWhist. Admission 29c.\nLittle Theatre general meeting.\nCm. Leg. tonight, 8 p.m. Members,\nand   all  Interested,  please  attend.\nWe are local distributon of Burgess Batteries, flashlight, radio, ignition, trainmen's\u2014We have them\nall. Hipperson Hardware Company.\nThere must be something In your\nhome that you don't need. Donate it\nto the Kinsman Ambulance Fund\nPh. 527 and a Kinsman will call\nCribbage Club starts Fri., Stpt 13,\nLegion Hall. Join now for Gup series. Membership 25c. Adm. 29c.\nEats. Prizes, 8 o'clock sharp.\nI. O. 0. F.\nEncampment meets tonight, 8 p.m.\nCome md welcome the Grand\nPatriarch.\nOnly Duo Therm Oil Heaten htve\nthe Power Air unit. With this won-\nderfol Improvement you live up to\n25 per cent on oil. Nelson dealers\n\u2022rt Hipperson Hardwire Co.\nNoreen Hillenn, A.T.C.M.\nTeacher of piano and rhythm bands\nBeglnnen' piano lessons 90 cents.\nGrade 2 and over piano lessons 79\ncents. Rhvthm bands $1 per month.\nFree rhythm bind for piano pupils\nC. C. Halleran, L. Mui. (McGill)\nTeacher ot pimo, pipe organ and\ntheory. 30-minute lessons. 79c. 49-\nrnlnute lessons $1.\nJANTZEN\nSWEATERS\nfor FALL\nTht ntw sweaters irt\nhere, Pullovers, zipper\njackets md cardigans.\nPlain shades and two-tone\neffect!.\nf3.95 to S7.95\nEMORY'S LTD.I\nTry Ntwtpiptr Advertising Fin\nIt Geti Rtsultll\nmi CHEVROLET\nMASTER DELUXE SEDAN\n8 Wheeli In Fender Weill\nNew Motor \u2014 New Tiret\nOaeeit City Motoi\n561 Josephine St    Limited     Ph.\nAT YOUR PALM DEALERS\nREVEL CH0C0UAT>\nSUNDAE\nIceCre,\nBULK i\nPHONE 815\nfor better ind prompter ier-\nvice In plumbing repilri ind\nilttr_tl.nl.\nVIC GRAVE.\nMASTER PLUMBER\nA GOOD CUP OF\nTEA or COFFEE\nIt  So Refreshing it\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING\nAND REPAIRING\nHOUSE WIRING.\nStandard Electric .\n483 Josephine St. Phont 838\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nTht Most Modern Plmt\nIn the District\n327 Biker\nPhoni 288\nI\nQuality Tested\nDoughnuts OC.\nper doien   LoV,\nThe PERCOLATOR\nJ. A. C. Laughtof\nOptometrist\nSUITE 209 MEDICAL ARTS BUX\ni______________________H_______i\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Matter\nPhont 855        510 Kooteniy\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS' 8YNDICATI\nMonthly Savings Pltn\nr. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representitlve\nBox 61      Hipperson Blk.      Ph.\nFIRE INSURANCE\nRATES ARE DOWN\nSet Ui for  Fire tnd Automob\nCovir.\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nPrescription!\n\u25ba|  Itttv Compounded\nAccurately\nThere's a Big Difference\nBetween a Grease job and\nGuaranteed Lubrication\nSKY CHIEF AUTtl\n200 Biker St  SERVICE   Phont 11\nMatch Block Wood\nWe have a good supply of\nDRY CLEAN BLOCKS\nAdvise ordering now for Immediate delivery\nbefore the Fall rush starts.\nDO NOT DELAY     ORDER TODAY\nW.W.Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nFoot of Stanley Street Phone 176\ncthbuftl\nTonlghVs Radio\nHighlights\n6:00 to 6:30\u20141_ W. Brockington\u2014\nTalk.\n6:30 to 7 p.m.\u2014Summer Symphony\nConcert\n9:30 to 9:45 p.m.\u2014Conservation in\nB. C.\u2014Talk on the conserva*\ntion of the forests, the game\nand fish life.\n11111-11  :\t\n\u25a0\u2014-\n Depreciation Allowance for\nMunitions Men.\u2014Page 9\nKing and Queen Diah for Shelter\nDuring Alarm.\u2014Page 5\nBritain Ready for Any Naiii\nWho Reach Coast.\u2014Page 5\nVOLUME 39\nFIVE CENTS PIR COPY\n-hurehlll Wants Germany Near\nPoint of Invttlon.\u2014Page 6\nPalace Swimming Pool Wrecked\nby Time Bomb.\u2014Page 5\nCanada's War Industrie! Output\nBeat Schedulei.\u2014Page 8\n\\m\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-THURSDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 12. 1940\nNUMBER  121\nSHELLS, BOmBS BLAST INVASION-SET NAZIS\n_____ \u25a0   \u25a0\"\"\u25a0\"\u25a0lf>;    '   i\u2014 .     \" 4 \u2022 * a. _\nIntense Gunfire Too\nMuch for Nazi Fliers\nRuins of School\nHarboring 500\nPersons Probed\nLONDON, Sept. 11 (CP) .-Alternating between frantic effort! to\nmove tons of masonry and silent\nlistening for the tapping of entombed men and women, demolition squads still probed tonight the\nruins of an East London school\nbombed Monday night when it\nsheltered nearly 500 persons.\nThey had taken temponry\nshelter on the first floor of the\ntwo-storey concrete building\nwhen in enormous bomb struck It\nand tumbled wrecktge, deed tnd\nwounded Into \u2022 huge enter opened up by the bomb.\nTht men. women md children\nhid been quartered there, awaiting removal to the country after\n( their own homes were wrecked by\nSaturday's raids. Re?cue workers\nalready have brought out two\nbabies, still alive.\nPhysicians and nurses, working\nby torchlight in the hours of dark-\nss gave first aid to the living\nand supervised the transportation\nof the dead as the debris was gradually cleared from the bomb crater,\n20 feet deep and 40 feet wide.\nThe Daily Herald asked;\n*Who is to be held responsible\nfor this appalling tragedy in which\nwhole families from wrecked homes\nin the worst raided area of East\nLondon were left by official neglect\nto die In a bombed refugee centre?\"\nNew Conscription\nBill Is Lined Up\n\u25a0 W___jn_f_TO\u00ab-,-8-irt.i'fl^Ai,T>*\nA Joint United States Senate and\nHouse of Representatives Committee approved tonight a compromise\nversion of a peacetime conscriwtion\nbill making approximately 16,500,000\nmen Immediately liable to call for\nt year's military training.\nThe revised measure, to be polished up finally by the Committee\ntomorrow, goes first to the Senate.\nThe House then Is expected to give\nfinal Legislative approval before\nthe end of the week. Both Houses\nSreviously had passed the bill,in\nliferent forms.\nStriking out a House provision\nto delay the draft for 60 days while\nattempts were made to fill the\narmy's quota of 400,000 trainees by\nvoluntary enlistments, the Joint\ncommittee voted to fix the age\nlimits of those subject to the draft\nat from 21 to 35, inclusive. The\nHouse had adopted a 21-to-44 age\nbracket after the Senate had fixed\nthe ages from 21 to 30, inclusive.\nWar Loan Passes\n$200r000r000 as\nNew Drive Opens\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP). -\nCanada'! second war loan crossed the $200,000,000 mark today\nand tonight's preliminary figures\nfor total cash subscriptions in the\nfirst three days of the campaign\nreached *2Ol,949,000. The objective\nis  $300,000,000.\nThe day saw the start of a renewed drive by the entire selling\norganization to put the loan \"over\nthe top\" with popular subscriptions.\nOne of the largest private subscriptions to the loan was made\ntoday by H. S. McLaughlin of\nOshawa, Ont, President of General Motors of Canada Ltd. He\napplied for $1,000,000 ot the 12-\nyear three per cent bonda.\nIn Toronto seven people refused\nto pay lest than par for the bondi\nind Insisted on giving tht dealer\ncheck, for the lull face value. Tht\nbonds are .on sale tt $98.75. which\ngives an actual yield of 3 _ per\ncent\nThe largest conversion application yet. received came today from\nthe Metropolitan Life Insurance\nCompany, Ottawa, for $6,000,000.\nThe Company held that amount of\nDominion of Canada bondi which\nmatured SepL 1 last.\nIn Montreal the Southam Company Ltd., increased its subscription from $100,000 to $150,000.\nLabor Department Official Tells\nSmellermen C.M.&S. Wages Tops;\nCompany Could Ask for Reduction\nROSSLAND. B. C, Sept. 11 -\nFraser Harrison, Western Representative of the Federal Department ot\nLabor, addressed an audience of\nabout 250 smelter employees and\ntheir wives in the K. P. Hall, Rossland, Wednesday evening.\nGerry Thomson, Chairman of the\nWorkmen's Committee who presided over the meeting, explained to\nthe gathering that Mr. Harrison had\ncome to Rossland and Trail at neither the insistence of the Workmen's\nCommittee, nor of the Consolidated\nMining k Smelting Company of\nCanada, but had been sent by the\nFederal Department of Labor to\ndiscuss the present wage dispute\nexisting between the Compaoy and\nIts employees.\nMr. Harrison told his audience\nthat so far as he was aware, the\nsituation regarding working conditions was not very serious, as the\nmen were working on an eight-hour\nbasis, but Ihe question of wages was\nundoubtedly a serious one. The\nspeaker explained that if the matters at issue in regards wages and\nworking conditions were not satisfactorily disposed of between the\nCompany and its employees, then,\naccording to statute, the matter\nwould have to be referred to a\nboard of conciliation which was\nnothing more than a board of enquiry.\nHIGHEST UNSKILLED SCALE\nMr. Harrison pointed out that the\nwage paid to unskilled laborers by\nthe C. M. k S. was aoDroximately\n57 cents an hour, or $4.50 a day. and\nthat the rate of pay being paid\nelsewhere throughout Canada generally for unskilled labor was lower\nthan this figure. The Government,\nhe said, was Daying only $3.56 per\nday on i!s ronslri'-tion cnntraela,\nand the Government rate of nay was\nusually considered the yardstick for\nwages to unskilled laborers through,\nout the Dominion.\nCommenting on the rale paid by\nthe Consolidated for skilled labor,\nIhe speaker said he understood the\nPlanes Scattered, Turned Back as Stream\nof Fire Poured Out by London Guns;\n90 Planes Destroyed Wednesday\nTOTAL DEAD SINCE SATURDAY 1000\nBy DOUGLAS AMARON\u2014Cimdlin Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Sept. 12 (Thursday) (CP Cable)\u2014Hundreds of German\nraiders converging on London last night and early today were scattered\nby the heaviest anti-aircraft barrage In history and their activities limited to the dropping ot little more than 20 bombs In the nine houri ol\nthe fifth consecutive dusk-to-dawn assault on this city.\nThe all-night alarm lasted exactly nine hours. The all-clear algnal\nW<\" \"The raiders, meeting the hottest reception since the start of their\nnightly maraudlng-an apparently new type of sky defence-flew at\ngreat speed to escape the wall of flame from the ground defences thrown\nup to meet them. At least two met their end in the terrific barrage.\nF -  -i  London ipent the noliieit night\n\u25a0Ince the nidi started. Tbt batteries kept up their almost ceaseless\nbarking, but it wu t welcome nolle\nfor those In tht raid shelters.\nTht anti-aircraft symphony Instead of the thud of shells told them\nthat the defence! wert on tht Job.\nTht Germtni perilitently kept returning for mort punishment, but\nfled again ind again without unloading their bombi.\nSome incendiary bombi and Mol-\notoff bread baskets were dumped,\nmd probably t number of time\nbombs, since there was an absence\nof explosions after some of them\nscreamed to death.\nReport! of damage as dawn netted were small and observations\nfrom a mid-town building showed\nfew new scars on the fact of the\ncapital.\nTht technique of air defence of\nLondon has been altered, A. G. Mac-\nDonell, British writer, reported In\na broadcast from London picked up\nby the Columbia Broadcasting System In New York. He added that\nnew batteries were in action at different points and that the gum kept\nup their barrage instead of trying\nto find the Null before aiming al\nthem.\nTht dusk-to-dawn attack, which\nwai started by masses ot Nail\nplanet, begin to die down aa tht\nseventh hour tpprotched. For half\nan hour, relays ot single raiders\nflew at ibout 10-mlnute intervals\nover- tht- metropolitan irea.\nAl Londoners combed through\nscattered buildings for tht shattered victims oi Germany's merciless\nraiding the Air and Rome Securities Ministries innounced 18 killed\nand 280 injured in Tuesday night'!\nraids, according to incomplete reports.\nCasualties Mondiy night were\nplaced it 400 killed, 1400 Injured,\nrilling thi total dead since nightlong bombings stirted lilt Saturday to mort thin 1000. Total Injured In thi ume period wis\nplaced it mort thin 4000,\nTwice during the dusk to dswn\nattack the German planei approached the city in massed formation\nready to deal the same death tnd\ndestruction of the previous nights.\nEach time the thunderous barrage, fired with the aid of only a\nfew searchlights, scattered the Germans.\nThe Air Ministry, giving Indication of the heavy toll exacted of\nthe German raiders, announced\nthat at least 90 enemy planes were\ndestroyed Wednesday in the increasingly-heavy resistance to the\nair siege.\nOnce the diminishing drone of\nmany planes indicated a heavy\nsquadron of Germans had withdrawn without dropping a bomb.\nWith a shattering and almost Incredible roar the guns spoke at the\ninstant a single plane, or a group of\nplanes, was heard. Their booming\nwas so heavy that many at first\nthought bombs were falling.\nIt was a clear moonlight night;\nshells broke Into red constellations\nagainst the background of the stars.\nSome of the guns In action appeared heavier than any heard before. The banging was so vigorous\nthat sometimes not even the planes\naloft could be heard. Shrapnel\nshowered the street outside the\nbuilding housing the office of The\nCanadian Press.\nThe gunners, favored at last by\ngood weather were shovelling\nshells Into their guns and putting\nup an unbroken curtain of steel.\nJust before midnight, as the\nnoise of anti-alrrcaft and bomb\nexplosions grew even higher, the\nrolling thud of bombs could be\n. heard to the North. A thick barrage hung in the sky in front of\nseven planes.\nThere was s shrill whine of a\ndiving plane and shortly afterward\nso many planes were aloft that their\nroar rose above the sound of the\nguns.\nA blue light swept across the\nhorizon. There wss a vivid splash\nof light In mid-air; a tearing, rending sound, a tierce whining and a\ngrest crash followed by three or\nfour smaller explosions. This noise\nmight have come from a plane\nbursting apart in the sky.\nTrail's War Loan\nTotal Is $97,000\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 11\u2014Subscriptions to Canada's Second War Loan\nreached the $97,100 mark at Trail,\nWednesday.\ncompany was paying 72 cents an\nhour. In Vancouver, he said, skilled\nlabor was being paid 75 cents an\nhour, with the exception of the\nship-building industry which was\npaying 90 cents. This 75-cenIs-an-\nnour, ne said, was the highest paid\nin Canada, but it should be remembered that the extra enrolments\ngiven by the Consolidated Company\nmore than made up the difference.\nHe said that if the men took a\nstrike vote and it is passed, then a\nboard of conciliation consisting of\none representative of the company,\none from the employees, and one to\nbe chosen by mutual agreement\nwould investigate, and If its findings were not satisfactory to the\nmen, they might, 30 days after its\nfindings had been released, go on\nstrike.\nBOTH SIDES GIVEN RIGHTS\nMr. Harrison emphasized that as\nthe employees had a right by law\nto press for an adjustment of wages,\nso the Company had an equal right\nto press for an adjustment, and he\nhad been told by Company officials\nthat the Company would, if such\naction resulted, press for an adjustment downward. This is could do\nin view of the fact that its wsges\nwere above the prevailing rate\nthroughout Canada. However, h.\nsaid; \"My duty is to present the\ntruth of the matter in a neutral\nmanner, and I have no brief for\neither the Comoany or the employees. The whole question is one\nwhich will have to be decided by\nthe men themselves.\"\nMr. Thomson spoke to the men\nin a vein similar to that of Mr. Harrison. He reminded them that if the\nmatter camo before a board of arbitration, that board would consider\nsuch Items as the Chr'rtmns bonus\nas being oarl of the dally rale of\npay. He emohaslzed the fact that\nIf the men became affiliated with\n'.he C.I.O. or anv other similar labor\norganization, after they have been\nhurt they need not come crying to\nIhe Workmen's Committee and\nComoany official!.\nKootenay Men Vernon Training Camp Of'fleers\nMajor A. C- Sutton, abovt left, former Rossltnd Government AgenL ind lately Recruiting Officer- for Weit Kooteniy, hai been appointed Commanding Officer of Training Centre No. 110 (Vernon).\nAdjutants named were Captain R. Tait, centre, Captain Martin (Monty) Montgomery, right, former Nelson City Electrical Engineer and now Consulting Electrical Engineer, and Lt.-Col. T. B. Monk, not\nshown in the picture.\nRT. REV. TUTTLE OF\nEDMONTON   IS\nMODERATOR\nWINN-PBO, SepL 11 (CP)-\nRL Rev. Aubrey S. Tuttle of\nEdmonton tonight wis elected\nmoderator of the United Church\nof Canada at the ninth general council.\nThe ntw moderator who Is\n.'resident of St. Stephen's College, Edmonton, succeeds Rt.\nBev. W-Jgptfijda of C^ilmer't\nelecWwPTwo-year 'term\nafter the council had set aside\nunder the new session, t resolution 'recommending thit two\nmoderators be elected at eich\ncouncil, eich moderator to serve\none year, terms running consecutively.\n$600 000 M~nHr.fi\nHoH Hft bv *Sre\nBILLINGS, MonL, SepL 11 (AP)\n\u2014Tire swent through Ihe $600,000\nNorthern Hotel In the heart of\nthe Billings business district tonight and threatened other establishments.\nNorman Thomas. Socialist can\ndldale for president, was among\nthe 75 guests of the 200-room,\nfour-story hotel. All the guests\nescaped unhurt as employes rushed from room to room to warn\nthem.\nWarships Flying\nFrench Flag Sail\nInto the Atlantic\nCEUTA, Morocco, Sept. 11 \u2014\n(AP).\u2014Three cruisers escorted by\nthree destroyers, all flying the\nFrench flag, were reported heading\nfor tht Atlantic through the Straits\nof Gibraltar today\u2014unmolested b>\nBritish batteries at Gibraltar.\nThis raises tht possibility that\nsome of the French fleet units based\nat Toulon have escaped from that\nRiviera naval base and are Joining\nBritain.\nThe Berlin radio today broadcast\na dispatch from Milan claiming that\na British fleet had sailed into the\nMediterranean from Gibraltar. The\ndispatch claimed also that \"several\" British cruisers previously had\nsteamed from Gibraltar into the\nAtlantic.\nDisposition of the French fleet\nfollowing the Franco-German armistice, has been a war secret since\nthe now-historic engagement between the Royal Navy and French\nships loyal to the Vichy regime off\nthe North coast of Africa last July 3.\nMln.Mlx.\nNELSON  52 83\nVictoria     53 68\nNanaimo    55 80\nVancouver  56 71\nKamloops     -  55 91\nPrince George   45 82\nIstevan Point  58 62\nPrince Rupert   50 56\nLangara  _ 53 57\nAtlin   41 57\nDawson  40 55\nSeattle     81 75\nPortland  59 82\nSan Francisco   58 73\nSpokane     56 92\nPenticton  51 \u2014\nVernon  -.  57 \u2014\nKelowna  _._ _  54 85\nKaslo        _._  51 -\nCranbrook  46 84\nCalgary     _  47 70\nTWmonton       48 72\nSwift Current  _  4. 81\nRegina             .._ _  38 81\nPrince Albert   40 80\nWinnipeg  26 69\nForecasts; Okanagan and Kootenay \u2014 Moderate shifting winds,\nmostly fair ind warm.\nNelson witer level Wednesday 5.83\nTRAIL, B. C Sept. 11\u2014Maximum\ntemperature at Trail, Wednesday,\nwas 88 degrees.\nBomier Fund Is\n$100 Over Top;\nTo Remain Open\n\u25a0 Tht Bomber Fund is over the top for its first ob]te- '\nfive of $2500. .   .\nWith only four cheeki needed to reach the objective\nof $2500, West Kootenay tent in six cheeki Wednesday\nto push the fund over the top by $100. The contribution!\ncame from six district points.\nAt the instance of a number of the donors, it hai\nbeen decided to keep the Fund open, en the lines fint\nsuggested by the Fund's originator, A. R. Moore, of R. R.\nNo. 1, Nelion, the proposal of Mr. Moore being that the\nfint $2500 would be a good start, from which Nelion and\nDittrict, or the Weit Kootenay, ihould proceed to run it up\nto large dimensions, to a figure where it would purchaie\ntome major piece of war equipment, a bomber or letter\nunit. From now on, donation! may be of any dimensions.\nInformation ii now being tought in regard to the\ncosts of different kindi of equipment, and when thit ii in\nhand, a deciiion can be reached ai to the Fund'i final\nobjective.\nCONTRIBUTIONS\nWedneiday'a total wai made up as follows:\nKootenay Belle Employees, Sheep Creek  $   50.00\nMr. and Mri. H. Roiling and Mr. and Mn. T. D,\nRoiling, Willow Point         50.00\nMedical Staff of the Kootenay Lake Ceneral\nHospital, Nelion -.       50.00\nSalmo Lodge No. 59, Knights of Pythias         50.00\nWomen'i Institute, Ymir         50.00\nMr. and Mn. T. L. Bloomer, Castlegar         50.00\nTotal     $ 300.00\nPreviously acknowledged     $2305.25\nCrand total       $2605.25\n\"Mri. Bloomer and myself with to add our contribution to the Bomber Fund, and trust that whatever use\nii made of the fund, it will help win the war,\" wrote\nT. L. Bloomer in spending a $50 check,\nSalmo Knights of Pythias, sent their check \"with the\ncompliment! of Lodge No. 59,\" and added: \"Wishing\nyou luck.\"\nLight Naval Units\nBegin Offensive;\nLand Guns Blaze\nBerlin Factory Burns in 92-Minute Attack;\nHamburg, Bremen Under Fire; French Ports\nBlotted Out by Smoke After Raids  '\nJ3ERLIN, Sept. 12 (Thursday) \u2014(AP).\u2014Royal Air Force\nnight fliers in a 92-minute air raid early today dropped numerous incendiary bombs on Berlin and caused at least one factory\nfire.\n'Other bombs fell in the famed tiergarten Park In mid-\nBerlin. The Tiergarten is several blocks from Hitler's official\nresidence. The planes apparently remained at a considerable;\nheight.\nAnti-aircraft artillery put up a vigorous defence, authorities claiming a \"curtain barrage\" prevented most of the planes\nfrom reaching the central district of Berlin.\nHowever, the humming of some motors was heard over\ndowntown Berlin.\nBritish raiders bombed Hamburg and Bremen, also, during\nthe night, informed German sources said today. An unknown,\nnumber of civilians were said to have been killed when bombi \u25a0\ndestroyed apartment houses and caused many fires In the two\nNorthern cities. \"\t\nAntonescu Will\n(rush Anarchists\nBUCHAREST, Sept. 11 (AP).-\nGen. Ion Antoescu. Rumania's military dictator, announced in i broadcast tonight that an anarchist movement has spread throughout the\ncountry and that he is liking the\nmost drastic steps to crush it.\nA Government ipokesman denied\nreports that 23 secret police hid\nbeen slain by members of the Iron\nGuard.\nAntonescu made no direct reference to the Iron Guard, but It\nwis uld thit his warning wis directed especially it thit green-\nshirted organization.\nAlthough Antonesru hu Issued a\ndecree against any public demonstrations, an Iron Guard leider said\nthe organisation Is planning i greet\nthree-day manifestation, beginning\nFridsv\u2014the birthday of the sliln\nGuirdlst Corneliu Codreinu\u2014in\nmemory of thousinds of ill members who were executed during the\nregime of the deposed King Carol.\nConsular Man Issues\nVisas at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. 11\n(CP)\u2014A. C. Owen of the American\nConsulate staff at Vancouver spent\na week in this Kootenay city, issuing visas to persons authorized by\npassport to visit the United States\nfor business or educational reasons.\nFormerly CranbrooTr passport holders had to Journey to Trail or Calgary to obtain visas.\nLittle Damage by-\nItalian Raiders\nCAIRO. Sept 11 (AP)-A British\nSsneral headquarters communique\n\u2022ued Wedneidiy:\n\"Yeiterdiy (Tuesday) Matruh In\nEgypt was raided by enemy aircraft,\ncausing one casualty and no damage.\n\"In the Sudan, Khartoum was\nbombed with no damage or casualties.\n\"In Palestine the casualty list for\nMonday's air raid on Tel Aviv Is:\nkilled 104 Jews, seven Arabs; Injured: four British, 149 Jews, two\nArabs\n\"In Kenya all quiet\"\nLONDON, Sept. 11 (CP) .-German dive bomberi md long-range\nguns united tonight In i heavy bom-\nbirdment ot the English coast to\nprotect Nazi ships manoeuvring in\nthe Channel in apparent preparation lor the expected attempt to invade Britain \u2014 but Britain beat the\nenemy to the punch.\nThe Admiralty tnnov_iced that\nlight British naval forces had begun \"strong and repeated offensive action\" against Nazi ship,\nping movements and ports which\nare vital to Hitler \"jn the event\nof an attempt to invade England.\"\n\"Further details,\" it was added.\n\"cannot bo given without disclos.\nIng information which would-bt\nuseful to the enemy.\"\nThe Dover iret trembled under\nthe war's grettest shelling- tnd\nbombing.\nBritish land guns made powerful\nretort; they centred their fire.upon\nthe German convoy in the Channel\nwhile swarms of British planes from\nboth the Royal Air Force and the\nNaval Air Arm, leaped up into the\nengagement.\nThey roared In force across the\nChannel and shortly the German\nguns fell silent after hours of intermittent shelling from emplacements\non the Nazi-held French coast.\nGreat columns of black smoke\nrose from the sea between Calais\nand Dunkerque, blotting out visibility from the English side.\nThe R. A. F. struck mighty blows\nearly today_snd last night at key\npoints of Europe's coastline where\nthe Nazi invasion attempt is poised.\nThe Air Ministry announced that\nR. A. F. and naval planes had\nblasted barges and merchant ship-\nall along the coast.\n\" British planes ilso poured explosives on the nests of Nazi ar\ntlllery icrots. tht Channel;\nsmashed for three houri it the\nCalais docks; punished Ostend\nHirbor for eight consecutive\nhours; heavily bombld Avint ind\nBoulogne.\nFar inland the British pilots\nrained tons of bombs on Berlin,\nwhere the Air Ministry said direct\nhits were scored on the Potsdam\nRailway station. The Wilhelmshaven\nnaval barracks also were bombed.\nIt was also announced that two\nNazi \"-E-Boats\", little torpedo boats\nof the sort that would be used in\nany attempt to cross the Channel\nwith soldiers, were believed sunk\nin an attack on the ports of,Calais\nand Dieppe.\nAn Important target was the\nFocke-Wulf airplane factory at Bremen and docks at that city.\nFour of the British bombers were\nlost but the crew of one bomber\nreported lost yesterday was saved\nafter floating in the Ntrth Sea in t\nrubber boat\nThe Air Ministry's news service\ntold a dramatic story of the series\nof raids \"on the concentrations of\nbarges and other ships lurking in\nharbors and docks.\"\n'The Calais dock bore tht brunt\nof one of the heaviest attacks\"\nwhich were pressed home In bad\nweather, it stated. For three houn\nconstantly after dusk tht dock,\nbasins and shipping of Calais wert-\n\"heavily pounded.\nOne pilot \"spent in hour ovtr hli\nobjective, dodging shells tnd weaving his way in end out of tha\nclouds.\"\n\"Biding his time, the bomb-timer\nlet go his bombs ind the sticks wert\nlaid accurately across tht docks.\"\nHeavy fires and explosions oc-\ncured it the Carnot Basin when\n\"high explosives poured Into tht\nbacked vessels which lined tha\nwhole East side of the Basin and\nextended three quarterj of the waf\nicrott It Chunks of debris wefl\nflung into the sir.\"\nIlsley Appeals\nIo Canadians Io\nPut Over Loan\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP). \u2014\n\"Canada's second war loan, novr\nbeing sold, is a direct emphatla\nappeal to the people of this country for money to arm and equip\nour fighting forces,\" Finance Minister J. L. Ilsley said In a statement\nto The Canadian Press today.\n\"I hope there is no misunderstanding ot the fact that support it\nneeded from every man and woman\nwho is able to subscribe.\n\"Here is an opportunity for tht\nmany to show how they feel about\nthe few whose courage is winning\nthe day for us all.\n\"Can any one of us forget for ont\nmoment of our waking hours what\nis taking place In England at thll\ntime; in London where millions\ncount their waking hours almost tl\nthe sum of the 24? No contribution\nthat we can offer will compart\nwith the sacrifices being made by\nthose in the line of fire, including\nour own Canadian airmen, soldieri\nand seamen. But they need and\nmust have all the help we can give.\n\"Canada will want it to be said,\nnot that this loan was moderately\nsuccessful, not that it was subscribed by relatively few of our people, but that it went over the top\nbecause of the whole-hearted support of great numbers of Canadians.\n\"I address the many patriotic\ncitizens who all along have Intended to subscribe, but who for one\nreason or another have not carried\nIntention into effect. Time has now\nbecome important. There is still t\nbig Job to be done. Buy your War\nLoans Bonds now!\n\"I urge all who are able to participate in this campaign to take\ntheir places without delay, and subscribe to the limit of their ability.\"\nDental Council Wins Suit Restrain\nDr. Cowen From Advertising in News\nAppeal   to  Court  of\nAppeal Likely\nNext Step\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 11 -\nMr. Justict Murphy today found in\nftvor of tht B. C. College of Dental\nSurgeoni In Its iction to restrain the\nSpokane dentist Dr. David Cowen\nfrom advertising In The Nelson\nDaily News for patients to have\nwork done In Spokane.\nHis Lordship found that authority to bar advertising in British Columbia by dentists not registered\nwithin the Province, was within\nthe scope of the. Legislature.\nThe Dental College lost a similar suit two years ago. when both\nthe B. C. Court of Appeal and the\nSupreme Court of Canada found In\nfavor of Dr. Cowen.\nLast Fall, however, it secured in\namendment to the B. C. Dentistry\nAct under which no dentist outside of British Columbia may advertise within the Province, snd tht\nnew suit was brought under Jhe\namended legislation.\nIn both suits, Dr. Cowen and Tht\nNelson Daily News were co-defendants. Their defence to the present action was that the legislation\nwas ultra vires of the Legislature.\nR L. Maitland, K. C, represented\nthe Dental Council in the case Just\nconcluded, while Senator J. W DeB.\nFarris. K. C, represented tht\ndefendants.\nThe next step is likely to be an\nappeal by the defendants, to tht\nB. C. Court ol Appeal.\n-_liM--ly-_tllkl_-.-\u201elii---il_i(i1ti          i\n.__,   _ j._----__,._;-.j|jyW||.[.)|-i. ,..\u201e...- _-n1iiM.ni.-l-\"'-\" \"--'\u25a0\u00bb\u2014^--.\u25a0'\u25a0\u2014'\n-'\"_-.it-._ra\n _____ ___\u2014\n^^^\n WM1L...,\n\u201e,\u201e.\u00bb\u201e,. ,\u201e.\nPAQE   TWO\ntOGRESS OF MEDICINE MAKES ONE\nLIEVE IN MIRACLES ARCHDEACON\nIHAM TELLS DOCTORS AT DINNER\nvdds    Responsibility;\nClose Connection\nBody and Spirit\nIt there wu one thing In tht na-\ni rural progression of tht world that\nwould mike one believe in miracles.\n' It wu tht progress in medicine, declared Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\n: Graham in in tddrtu it tht an-\n.nuil dinner of the B. C. Medictl A\u00bb-\nloclttlon, closing function of a three-\nday convention in Nelson, it the\nCanadian Legion Wednesdiy night.\n:Dr. F. M. Auld of Nelion. Pa-t\nPresident md Dr. Murray Blair of\nVineouver, newly-elected Preiident,\nthared thi chairmanihip.\nFrom i liymin'i point of view\nArchdeieon Grihim expressed the\nopinion thst no one came Into\ncloser contact with t man thin his\ndoctor, ind for -thli reison I mm\ndeiired thit hli doctor should bt a\nmm ind \u25a0 gtntltman. Most ley-\ntnen would like to have their doctor\ntike them into their confidence\nmore, ind till them what tiled them,\nbut this wis rare.\nTht iptaker declared there was\nstill much to be written of the\ntacrlfi-e and lervice of members\nof the profession and their devotion to duty, much more than had\nbeen written so fir.\nNO WAR HERE\nIt wu i tremendous ind humilt-\n' etlng thought {hit \"whllt you ind\nTRUSS FITTING\nLIMBS    \u2022    BRACES\nP. V. RIESSEN\nPiulitn M. 4 D. -Ida.   -poktnt\nCheck Discharges\nFrom the\nBowel troubles, although happening it my tine ot tht year, art\nmort prevalent during tht hot summer and early fill months.\nSummer Flu It out of thi wont\ntroubles, but di-whoa, dysentery,\neolic, cramps and pains in tht in-\ntestuus, or any looseness ot the\nbowels should hare immediate attention,\nTht iction of Dr. Fowler't Extract\nef Wild Strawberrr is pleut-t,\nitpld, reliable md effectuil in help-\ning  to   check  the   unnatural   dis-\nIt his been on the market for tht\nput SI yuit, w why experiment\nwith new ud untried remediest\nGet \"Dr. Fowler's\" ud feel safe.\nT_\u00bb T. llllb-r- Co. Ui.. Toronto. Out\n, ,        (AdvU\n1 trt enjoying ourselves htrt witn\nno ctre or fear In tht Homt Land....\nsuch \u25a0 muting u thli would bt\nunder the threat of wtr with its\ntear md bitterness.\" It wu t good\nthing to remember this, and to remember the opportunities it offered.\nThere wu no question possible\nIn the mind of my Britisher, no\nmitter where he wu but thit \"wt\nshall win the wir,\" declared Archdeacon Graham.\n\"You have it your command\ntoday til lorti tf knowledge, Instruments, preventives, correctives ind curatlvis,\" ht told tht\ndoctors. Thtt plioii upon you\nin 1'ncreulng burden of responsibility. Thi more you hivt, tht\nmort you hive tt give; tht more\nyou know, thi better you do.\n\"Don't forget,\" hi  urged, \"the\nImmensely subtle but  nont tht\nless powerful connection between\nthi body ind thi spirit,\"\nDeclaring that tht greatest thing\nin the world wu individual personality, the speaker uked: \"What\nis that? Whin ii tbt-itat ol personality?\" He continued: \"When do 1\ngo  when I'm isleep?  Whit hap-\npeni to my own personality during\nthat   suspended   consciousness   we\ncall   sleep?   What   happens   after\ndeath?\" Some day he would, know\nthe answers to these questions.\nHe could not see why dbctors\nshould put such tremendous energy\ninto living \u2022 lite unless there was\nmore to it than mere extension of\nlife. ,      _\n\"I believe in miracles because\nI've seen the work ot doctors and\nbecause of things that doctors hive\ntold mt,\" isierted Archdeacon\nGraham.\nDR. AULD LEAVES\nCHAIR\nDr. Auld eraphasi-td tht prln-\nclplt thit one ihould consider more\n\"Whit ctn I put Into thli\" rather\nthin \"Whit cm I get out of lt.\"\nGreat changes were liking plice\nIn tht prolusion ind its members\nmust witch md guide themselves\naccordingly. Fint tt all times must\nbt tht service which could bl given\nto pitienti. The opportunltiei were\nbroadening and extending ind the\nprofession wu beginning to align\nitself with these changes.\n\"If you leek fint what you cm\nput into it, we shall adjust ourselves correctly,\" he declared.\nThe  economic   relationship  of\nRttlent ind doctor WU changing,\nleans of providing care for pa-\ntlinti of lower Income wtrt to\ntht fori. Hi hoped tht Medical\nStrvlct Assoclitlon It thi Com\nwould bt successful ind would\nspread throughout tht Province,\ntnd thit full services could bt\ngiven through It to persons In\ntht lower ind moderate Income\ngroups,\nDR. BLAIR'\nTAKES OVER\nDr, Blair, taking the chair, paid\ntribute to Archdiicon Graham ind\nlo Dr. Auld. Hi praunted golf tournament prizes to winners, uilittd\nby Dr. ti H. McKaaiit, Golf Committee Chairman.\nDr. MacKenzie expressed appreciation to visiting docton for thtir interest ind asstrted \"You don't know\nwhat a boost it has been to us.\"\nThtnai of the vmcouver men io\ntheir hosts were voiced by Dr\nGeorge Seldon of Vincouvtr.\n\"We've ntvtr had a meeting\nwhen 1 hive enjoyed myself mort\nthan here,\" ht asserted. \"The mm\nwho ittyed it home will regret It\nwhen they hear of tht wonderful\ntime wt htvt hid.\"       .\nGreetings of Okanagan doctors\nwen received by telegram.\nDr. C. H. Hankinion of Prince\nRupert ind Dr. A. H. Spohn of\nVancouver cirried the greetings of\nthe doctors to the ladies who were\nholding thtir dlnntr In tn tdjolnlng\nhall. .....     .\nBoard ot Tradt bookltti depleting Kooteniy icenei were distributed to guests.\nAT HEAD TABLE\nStittd it tht held table were: Dr.\nC. M. Ktriiton, Grind Forks, Honorary Preiident W-M Kooteniy\nMedictl Anoclition; Dr. A. A. Mac-\nUchlan, Vmcouver, Registrar College of Physlcitni ind Surgeons ot\nBritish Columbil; Dr. H. McGregor,\nPenticton, Preiident of District No.\n4 Medical Assoclitlon; Dr. Osborne\nMorris, Vernon, College Councillor\nfor District No. 4; Dr. A H. Spohn\nVancouver, Second Vice-President\nB. c. Medical Association; Dr. M.\nG. Cody, Calgiry, fraternal rtpre-\nsentitlvi of Alberta Medical Anoclition; Dr. O. F. Amyot, Victoria,\nProvincitl HttHh Officer; Dr. L. H.\nAppleby Vancouver, President College of Physicians md Surgeons of\nBritish Columbia; Dr. Murray Blair,\nVancouver, Pmident, B.C. Medical\nAssoclitlon ind Dr. F. M. Auld,\nNelion, Put Pmident, Joint chilr-\nmm; Ven. Archdeieon Fred H. Grihim, Nelson; Mayor N. C. Stibbs.\nNelson; Dr. C. H. Hinklnson, Prin.e\nRupert, First Vlce-Pmldmt 9.C.\nMedictl Assoclitlon; Dr. 3. S. Daly,\nTrail, Pruldtnt Weit Kooteniy\nMedical Assoclitlon; Dr. G. F.\nStrong, Vmcouver, Program Committee Chilrmin; Dr. P. A. C. Coui-\nlmd, Vlctorli. Vlctorli Medical Society; Dr. George H. Anderjo.i,\nSpokane; Dr. H. H. Mllburn, Vineouver, Executive Committee Member B. C. Medical Association: B-\nA. H. Meneeley, Nanaimo, Upper\nIsland Medical Association; Dr. Wil-\nlice Wilson, Vancouver, Chairman\nrf the Economics Committee, Canadian Medical Association.\n\u2014NlUoN DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. --THURSDAY MORNINQ. SEPT. 12. WO-f\nYUKON MEN TOO PAR\nPROM TRAINING ARIAS\nMeet Nelson for\nSoftball Title\nCastlegar Edged,Out\nin Third Game of\nSemis\nTRAIL, B.C, Stpt. 11 - Trail\nCrown Points won tht third -md\ndeciding game of the semi-finals in\nWest Kootenay men's loftball playoffs 8-8 from the Castlegar Millionaires at Victoria Pirk Wednesdiy\nevening to advance into tht Rowling\nMemorial Trophy final bracket\nagainst Nelson. The finals start with\na doubleheader at 1 and 4:30 p.m.\nat Victoria Park Sunday.\nHome runs were hit by Cronie\nwith two on, Rico Hartin, two by\nN. Anguilli. Two-base hits by Magee md Holden. Parkhurst, pitch'\ning for Trail, itruck out ll ind\nwilktd two. Cliff Wmleu, his op-\nponent, fanned thru tnd issued\nfour passes.\nScon by innings:\nCutltgir ....... 010 004 001\u2014\u00ab 10\nTrill 008 320 OOx-6   8  3\nLlneupi follow:\nCastlegar\u2014Zebin rf, G. Wmleu\nc, Migee 3b, C. Wanless p, Gripich\nss, Verlgln cf, Worowby lb, Oborne\nIf, Moore 2b, Samson md Holden.\nCrown Polnti\u2014Anielmo c, Morris cf, Jonei 2b, Cronie lb, Pirk-\nhurst p, R. Martin II, N. AngerlLi\nIf, Ftlrbiirn rf tnd S. Martin 3b.\nUmpins\u2014Al Hall, plate; W. Wid\ndell md Wilh Mllburn, bases.\nBeatty Will Be\nHere in Passing\nSir Edward Beatty, Pruldtnt of\ntht Canadian Pacific Railway, will\narrive In Nelson tt 9:18 thli morning by hli special train, from the\nWest ind will Ittvt a few minutes\nlater for the Crow.\nTrail Policeman\nWins Promotion\nTRAIL, B.C., Stpt. 11\u2014Constable\nJ. McMillan, of the Trail city Police force wu promoted to sergeant,\neffective September 1, by the police commission today.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP).-tf the\nYukon's single mtn or widowers\nwithout children want military\ntraining they'll have to scout about\nfor it thtmalvM. For them then\nwill be no compulsory call to training because they in too fir from\ni training centre.\nTht nearest centre li Grand!\nPrairie in tht Peace Rivtr Country, A mtrt 300 or 100 milts de-\nending on the starting  point\n armigan   flies \u2014 tnd\ntough miles!\n,e  Arctic ptarmigan\nthey in\nBurrards Coast\nBoxla Champions\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 11 (CP) -\nVmcouver Burrards tonight won\ntht inter-city box lacrosse lttiut\nchampionship downing tht Canadian Champion Ntw Westminster\nAdanacs 13-8 in thi fifth gimt of\na scheduled beit-ol-itvtn series.\nBurrards wqn tht flnt three\ngames md lost the fourth.\nThey will rut until Sept. 18 when\nthey .again take the floor against\nthe winners of tht Wut Kootenay\nleigue in a best ot three series tor\nthe British Columbil crown and\nthe right to represent thll Province\nin the Canadian playdownt.\nSecond game of the Provincial\nseries will be played Sept. 20 tnd\nIf i third game Is necessary lt will\nbe played Sept. 21.\nBurrards grabbed \u2022 3-2 lead In\nthe first quarter ind held I 6-5 advantage it half time. They outicored\nAdanacs 2-1 in tht third md rammed in five to the champions' two In\nthe final canto.'\nDoctors' Ladies Meel al Dinner as\nMedical Convention Draws to Close\n.THE CRESCENT\nAUI.JJ4I  ElvmSlDB'MAIN-WAa  hmHonn WOttSiO\nYou Are Cordially Invited to the\nVogue Fashion Show\nThursday and Friday\n. September 12 and 13\nAn Interesting showing on living models of sixteen\ngarments, made in bur own dressmaking class from\nfabrics from our own fabrics sections, using Vogue\nPatterns\u2014Mrs. Aho, Vogue Stylist and Commentator\nwill be in charge.\nOn Thursday at 2:30; on Friday at 12:30 and 2:30\nTht Crescent Abiorbi Up to Six Per Cent of\ntht Currant Dlsoount en  Canadian Currtnoy\nTHE CRESCENT     SPOKANE, Wash.\nAustralia Pushes Aid\nfor Bomb Victims\nMELBOURNE, Sept 11 (AP) -\nProposals to aid victims of the Germin Air Force'i repeated bombing\nof London hai evoked an enthusiastic response throughout Australia.\nMelbourne City Council has voted\n$90,000 to the Lord Mayor's Fund of\nLondon and the Lord Mayori ot\nAdelaide, Brisbane, Perth and Ho-\nbart are alio opening appeals. Nearly $38,000 was received one hour\nifter the Brisbane appeal wa.\nlaunched.\nAustralian children are also doing\ntheir bit. Children of Camberwell,\na Melbourne suburb, are sending\n$4470 to children of Cimberwell, in\nSouth London.\nNIGHT BALL\nWESTERN  INTERNATIONAL\nVancouver ._    J 10   2\nSpokane  _    8 11   1\nOsborn,    Holmes    and    Lloyd;\nO'Flynne and McNimee.\nTacoma       4 11   2\nYakima  10 13   1\nIsekite and Medlghini and Brenner; H. Johnson ind Emans.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSeattle 3, San Diego 1.\nPortland 1, San Francisco 10.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nToledo 3, Indianapolis 14.\nColumbus 0, Louisville 1.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL. Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME-T. A. Wood, Mr. and Mri\nI. H. Watson, D. A. Pennicuick, Mr.\nuid Mn. T: E. Nasymlh, O. Nowell,\nA. G. Anderson, S. R. Tout, F. H.\n3ow, Vmcouver; D. J. McAlmon,\nU. B. McCtllum, G. M. Thorn, Penticton; Mn. Millar, Kootenay Bay:\nM. F. McPherson, Cranbrook; H.\nWinston, A. O. Mann, Mr. and Mn.\nA. 3. Noble, Montreal; G. L. Carson.\nRegina; F. C. Barnes, Calgary; Mr.\nand Mrs. Royce Bierrim, Colville;\nR. Steedman, T. A. Burns, Medicine\nHat; W. Shaw, Calgiry; O. A. Mc\nKeriham, Toronto.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK. PROPS.\nIn our new wing you miy mjdy the finest\nrooms In the Interior - B_th or Showtr.\nROOMS 11 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nINTERNED MAYOR'S\nSAURY NOT TO BE\nINTERFERED WITH\nOTTAWA. Sept. 11 (CP). - The\nCustodim of Enemy Property has\nno interest in the salary of Mayor\nCamlilien Houds of Montreal, interned recently for subversive ac\ntivities, md the City of Montreal\nhas been advised accordingly, Hon.\nPierre Casgrain, Secretary of State.\nsaid tonight.\nNormally the property of any person interned in Canada is taken\nunder the care of the Custodim of\nEnemy Allen Property, t brinch of\nthe Secretary ot State Depirtment.\nLegil advisers of the department\ndecided that if the City ot Montreal desired to continue payment df\nMayor Houde's salary for the bat\nance of hit term In office, which ex\npires shortly, the Custodian would\nnot interfere.\n-\nIROM ACID STOMACH\nl*    io:\nI\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nAvoid ernel slomirh pilni,\ndiiUttli-l flatulence, heartburn,\nhot or lour taite, mid-afternoon\ndrowsiness ud other disorders\ncauied by acid stomach ... DO AS\nHOSPITALS DO-uie M-claoi,\n-rand Stam-ch P.wdit to neutral-\nla. pain-rau\u00bbi.g acids . . . tt help\ndeans, your system ... to assist\nnature restore yo_r stomach to\nnoma!. ...\nBa soot to your stomach\u2014Uka\nMask*, Iran. Slams! fernlm and\nMt what Jo. Uk. witkbut payuuj\n\u2022 pa-alty.\nMACLEAN Brand\nStomach Powder\nGreetings,   Tributes;\nTapers  Light\nTables\nAt dinner tables simply but beautifully decorated with bowls of\nAutumn blossoms, and with tapers\nshedding a soft light over the scene,\nladies attending the British Columbia Medical Association convention\ngathered Wednesday night at the\nCanadian Legion building for a dinner that marked the close of their\nthree days together,\nCovers were laid for 60. Upon\neach table were low bowls of colorful flowen. with the tapers set In\nthe. bowls md burning tbove the\nblossoms. Place csrds with flower decoration! were used.\nMn. F. M. Auld presided, tnd\nfollowing the opening tout to \"The\nKing\", she extended greetings to\nvisitors. Similar addresses of greeting md thanks were expressed by\nhostesses and guests. In the absence of Mrs. Murray Blair of Vancouver, wife of the new President\nof the Medical Association, the\nthanks of the vlslton were expressed by Mrs. D. E. H. Cleveland, wife\nof the President of 1939.\nDOCTORS' GREETINGS\nDuring the dinner greetings of\nthe doctors were extended by Dr.\nC. H. Hankin-on of Prince Rupert\nand Dr. A. H. Spohn of Vancouver. First md Second Vice-President respectively, Mrs: Auld replying.\nGreetings were alto extended to\nMrs. M. G. Cody of Calgiry, whose\nhusand was fraternal representative of the Albertt Medical Association to the B. C. Association meeting, md Mn. Cody replied.\nThe gathering sent a teltgnm of\ncongratulition to Mra. Blair, wife\nof the new Association President.\nSpeakers included Mrs. Arnold\nFrancis of New Denver; Mrs. C. F.\nYoung of Sthno; Mrs. F. L. Wilson\nand Mrs. J. S. Daly of Trail; Mrs.\nL. E. Borden, Mrs. H. H. MacKen-\nlie, Mrs. J1. P. Spirks, Mn. Wilfrid\nLaishley, Mrs. Kingsley Terry snd\nMrs. N. E. Morrison of Nelson.\nAT HEAD TABLE\nSetted tt the heed table were\nMn. Auld, presiding; Mn. George\nH. Andenon and Mrs. J. W. Lynch,\nSpokane; Mrs. D. E. p. Cleveland,\nMn. J. H. MacDermot, Mrs. Russell\nPtlmer, Mrs. G. F. Strong, Mrs.\nMT W. Thomu and Mra. Wallace\nWilson, Vancouver; Mn, jj. G.\nCody, Calgary; Mrs. P. A. C. Cous-\nland, Victoria; Mrs. J. S. Daly, Trail-\nMr|. C. H. Hanklnson, Prince Rupert; Mrs. W. J. Knox, Kelowna; Mrs.\nH. McGregor, Penticton; Mrs. A. H.\nMeneeley, Nanaimo; Mrs. Osborne\nMorris, Vernon; Mrs. N. E. Morrison, Mrs. Wilfrid Liishley and Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts, Nelson.\nHonorary guests Included Mn. N.\nC. Stibbs. Mist Vera B. Eldt, Miss\nNmcy Dunn, Mrs. Gladys Webb\nFoster ind Miss Margaret Arthur.\nNelson.\nPreceding the dinner Mrs. Fos\nter entertained with plino selections.\nApple Industry\nUnder War Ad\nKELOWNA, B.C., Sept 11 (CP)\n\u2014The apple industry of the Provinces of Novi Scotlt md Brltiih Columbil has bten placed undtr the\nWir Mttiures Act, according lo\nword received here today by fruit\ngrowers.\nConfirmation also wu received in\nKelowna todiy thit an order in\ncouncil hu bun pissed empowering the British Columbil tret fruit\nboard to control the harvest selling\nof the apple crop In tht interior\not the province,\nAn administration committee\nconsisting ot George Barr.it,\nChairman of the Fruit Boird; A.\nK. Lloyd, General Manager ol\nB.C. Tree Fruits Limited, md E.\nJ. Chambers, General Manager of\nAssociated Growers Limited, will\nhave pricticilly full control over\nthe apple deal for 1940.\nThe jurisdiction of the committee extends over the entire trei\nwhich comes under the control of\nthe Fruit Board, Including the\nOkanagan, Kamloops, Grind\nForks md Ihe Kootcnays.\nThe administration committee under the act his tht exclusive right\nto control the' Sl1e of' ipples,' on\neither the domestic or export markets tnd authority Is also given for\nthe idminlstrttion of \u2022 pool for the\nequalization of returns on the basis\nof the same grade snd viritty.\nThe committee his already starlet! to function md his held i meeting with Kamloops representatives.\nCharity Bodies Seek\nUnited Drive Rather\nThan Variety for War\nOTTAWA, SepL 11 (CP)-Advlsi-\nbility of curtailing some ot the\n.varied appeals now being made tor\npublic support in fivor of i concerted drive on behilf of i united\nwir services campaign wu discussed today at a conference where\nWar Services Minister Gardiner\nmet representatives of Canadian\ncharitable organizations.\n\"The cenference had an exhaustive discussion ot the necessities for\ncutting down the number of appeals\nmade to the public on behilf of\nwar and community services,\" Mr\nGardiner said in a statement issued\nafter the meeting. \"It wu the general opinion that lt a united drive\nfor war services could be mide it\nwould meet with the approval of\nthe Canadian public.\"\nThe Minister uid tht fict that\nthe Red Cross appeal is already un\nder way \"made It ' difficult\" to\nundertake such \u25a0 united effort\nimmediitely.\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\n-.Serin Hotel\n800 Seymour St Vineouver, B.C.\nNewly renovated throughout Phones and tltvtter.\nA. PATTERSON, late of\nColeman. Alta., Proprietor.\nII   la** (or IH.\nll   I   $\/|~l.r.\u2014\nScribe Reports no\nDamage to Potsdam\nRailway Station\nBERLIN. Sept. 11 (AP). \u2014 An\nAssociittd Priu correspondent to\nday inspected the main building and\nloading platforms of the P6tsdam\nRailway station in Central Berlin,\nand took a train trip through the\nyard without finding evidences of\nany British bombardment.\n(A London; Air Ministry communique said thit \"tht Potsdam\nstation, one of the mainline terminals of Berlin, was bombed by the\nRoysl Air Force\".\n(Shown the dispatch from Berlin.\nAir Ministry officials uld \"we have\nno comment other tha ft 6ur\ncommunique.\")\nGhirardosi Gets\n30 Days lor Nol\nShowing His Card\nTRAIL, B.C., Sipt. 11-Tht Hrst\ncut under tht National Rtf_rfltttn\nAct wu tried bttort Mlglstnie\nParker Williams In city police court\nWednesday morning, when Charles\nGhlradotl, of Trill wu convicted\nof failing to product hit national\nregistration card whtn requested\nto do so by i peace officer, and wis\nfintd tht maximum ptnalty ot $30.\n\u2022nd costs, with tht option of 30 days\nIn Jill.\nGhiradosi elected the jail sentence\nind ll being escorted to Nelson\nThursday morning.\nIceland Patrol\nTough Business\nBy FRANCIS STEVEN8\nSOMEWHERE ,JN ICELAND,\nSept 11 (CP).\u2014_\"rom dmk to dtwn\nCanadian troops tre engaged in pa-\ntrools etch night u they guard\nthll sub-Arctic outpost of the Dominion against possible enemy attack. -.\u2022\u2022\u2022; i\nThis correspondent accompanied\na French Canadian major as he led\nhis men on a recent patrol over\nrough, rocky country while Ice-\nlinden slept.\nTht major wai t member of t\nregiment which provided t guard\nof honor in Montreal during the\nRoyal visit of lut year. Thtn ht\nwort a brilliant dress uniform tnd\nbusby. But on the night patrol his\nkhaki brought tht same dish to\nmore austere duties.\nThe patrol visited lonely posts\nwhere troopi manned gum In the\nteeth of a cold wind, meanwhile\nwarming their feet at charcotl\nburners. Another post visited wis\non t mountain-top 'overlooking the\nocean ind so hard to reach thtt\nlt takes three houn to haul water\nup to It\nU. S. lo Tighten\nNaturalization\nWASHINGTON. Sept 11 (AP).-\nUrgcd by President Roosevelt to\ntct with \"tl little delay ii possible,\" the House ot Representatives\nEassed today legislation designed\ni help rout \"fifth columnists\" ud\nprevent alien Communists, Nazis\nand Fascist from becoming United\nStatu citizens.\nThe measure, t proposed new nationality code, now goes to the Sin-\nate.\n' The measure tightens provisions\nregarding eligibility for naturalization. Sponsors said It would withdraw citizenship from \"thousands\"\nof \"nominal\" citizens who havt not\nbeen in the country in years.\nIt also would take away tbt citizenship of Americans who serve in\nthe irmed forces ot mother country, or vote in \u25a0 foreign election.\nLate Flashes\nLONDON, Sept 11 (CP)-Wortd\nfimous Bond Street md the roofed-\nin Burlington Arcade off Piccadilly,\nIn London's Miyttlr, were dimaged\nduring lut night's Germin air raids.\nLONDON, Sept 13 (Thursday).\n(CP)\u2014A high explosive bomb crashed early today. on tht roof of a\nLondon newspaper building without inflicting my casualties. The\nmissile cut through i 15,000-galloo\nwater tank on tht root md dropped\nto \u2022 car parking space In the well\nof the building.\nHAMILTON HELD. Calif.,\nSept 11 (AP).-The 18th pursuit\nsquadron of the army air corps\nis to be transferred to Alaska, lt\nwas learned authoritatively tonight is the first fighting squadron assigned to thit territory\nunder tht Unlttd States defence\nprogram.\nBURCHAREST, Sept. W (Thura-\nday)\u2014(AP).\u2014Release from prison\nof t number ot pro-Nazi Iron\nGuirdlati convicted of plotting\nigiinst former King Cirol was ordered tonight by young King Micheel\nIn whit observers regarded aa a\nfurther attempt to placate the nationalistic organization which forced the abdication ot his father.\nTrail Police to\nReceive Gazette\n\u25a0TRAIL, B.C., Stpt 1}\u2014A lu-scnp-\ntlon to tht Canada Gtztttt, for toil\nCity Pollet Depirtment, hu been\nauthorized by the police commu-\ngov Acting Pollet Chief r. H\nSteele told tht commission tht Gazette would tntbli tht dtptrtmiot\nto ktip up to dlte with amendments\nto tht Federal statutes.\nS-ATTO-C, Sipt. 11 (AP).-A vlo\nlent electrical storm tonight inter\nfered with electrical service tnd\ncommunication lines from Olympia\nto Bellingham tnd \"blacked out\"\nseveral radio stations temporarily.\nSadtj, ThdtotL\nHOSIERY\n$1.00\nLtdltr  Wur\nBurnt Block\nBruins Go Game Up in &\nTitanic Overtime Boxla\nStruggle With Rossland\nTrail Hammers Home\n4 Overtime Goals for\n17-13 Win\nTRAIL,  B.  C, Stpt 11-Four\nSerlods, tnd in overtime unto of\ni      \t\nbreathless   lacrosse   thit   picked\nthrllli Into iviry minute from the\nopining whlstli te thi final gong\n \"\" R(\n17-13 lead established by four hoi\nthtt ring a deith knell on Ron\nchi\nland'*  chances  tf overcoming\ngtlli thrown In by Jim Kendill,\nGillloino, Pignan, tnd Bob Kendall, left Trail tut In front two\ngarnet to ont In tht brat tf flvt\nurln for tht Witt Kooteniy senior Itorem chimplonthlp here\ntonight     \u2022 V\nTbt Tribe from tht hill thot into\ntheir stride tt tht outlet, driving\ntheir plays with terrific speed md\nprecision to leave tht Bean behind\n6-1 at the end of tht tint Jack Cox\nwhirled the rubber put Moro In t\nsensational full-length ruth down\nthe floor thtt brought tht fans\nstanding up and cheering. Sym-\nnithy of the fani wu ill for Rossland tnd tht rafters resounded\nagain and again as each successive\ngoal seemed to forteil a successful\nOfficials\u2014John Gidinskl, Referee;\nLen Wilson, Judge of Pity; Lornt\nMirk, Scorekeeper; J. Schofield,\nTimekeeper.\nShot! stopped: by Saprunoff 40;\nMoro 38.\nScore by periods:\nRossland .._    8   1.2   0-13\nTrail     17   14  4-17\nscalping foray,\nA pretty three-wi;\nItaly timed from 1\n-way goal deliberately timed from Laface to Carkner\nto Sitton while Jim Kendall and\nMarcus Smith were doing time In\nthe opining period, wu matched\nby \u25a0 similar play by Bob Kendall\nfrom Temple md Turik In tht second.\nThe Bears cime up from behind\nIn the second, to tie the score 7-all\nwith Temple's goal, md then Pagnan whipped one past Saprunoff to\nput Trail ahead 8-7.\nEach succeeding period gathered\nspeed, and the pact tt tht outset\nof the third showed the boys wire\nstraining every nerve md muscle.\nSaundry scored the equalizer, tieine\nthe score 8-all ind mother goal\nfrom, Sitton was matched by Pagnan. Play went wild, the teams\nthreatened to sacrifice plays tor\nsolo flights, md tempera were hard\nto control. Joe Laface icored ont ol\nhis famous trick goals, slipping out\nin front and beating Moro to the\ndraw.\nA frantic retaliation around the\nRossland goal kept Saprunoff doing\na wu dance, and he stopped four\ndirect shots In succession. Slmcock\nfinally bore down on the Bear's den\nto end the period\u2014Rossland 11,\nTrail 8.\nTht fourth period climaxed the\nterrific pace and tht playing became dangerous, u sticks or no\nsticks, the tangle of orange and\nblack, and red and white raced back\nand forth. Ernie Carkner turned a\ncomplete somersault and came up\non hli feet Both goalies turned in\nsuperlative performance! u shots\nwere fired in quick succession.\nGallicano scored the first counter\nmd Joe Laface added one more for\nthe Redmen. Hood registered next,\nind Saundry retaliated a second\nliter. Two quick goals from Smith\nmd Gallicano ended the period 13\nall.\nThi strain wu obviously telling\noh the Redmen in overtime md although they played gallantly, they\ncould not push any more shots past\nMoro.\nNazi Prisoner Lists\nDeclared Unreliable\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP) .-Persons who have relatives fighting In\ntht trmy, ntvy or ilr forct over-\nstet should place nd reliance on\nannouncements of list! of prisoners\nof wir broadcast by German wire-\nless stations, according to a mem\norandum from tht Wir office ai\nLondon tnd mtdt known tonight\nby Nitionil Defence pepirtmeht\nSuch lifts ire brotdcut merely\nto. Induce people to listen to Gt.--\nmm views, the announcement md\nmd ire Incomplete - and otter\ninaccurate.\n\"Relatives may rest assured that\nwithout my application on their pant\nevery endeavor il being made both\nabroad md it home to trace missing personnel,\" the memorandum\nHited\nRoosevelt Cheered\nby Labor Audience\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (AP).-\nPresldent Roosevelt tonight reviewed the New Deal's social and\nl.bor measures and - to the climor-\nous applause of i convention of the\nteamsters unions \u2014 lished out it\nthose whom he charged with tint\nseeking to obstruct and now endeavoring to repetl them.\nTo the further acclaim ot hit audience, he addld a hearty endorsement ot the principle, thtt tbt G6v-\nernment must hivt \"power to acquire tbt services of any plmt or\nfactory for adequate compensation,\nlt th* owner refuses to mikl its\nservices iviil_.lt. t. th| dtdnct\nneeds of thi nation.\"\n1940 Fines Are\nAhead in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Stpt. li - City Po\nlice court fines for 1840 htvt exceeded fines tor the same period\nlut yeir by $318,88, Acting Police\nChief F. H. Steele Informed the, police commiisibn Wednesday.\nLONDON, Sept. 11 (CP).-The\nAssociated Press correspondent it\nBelfast slid tonight thtrt Is no\ntruth In t radio report, tht source\nof which wu said to bt Moscow,\nthit Qermtn troopi wtri landing\nIn Northern  Ireland.\nRapley Pays Fine $25\non Charge Improperly\nAccosting a Juvenile\nFred Blplty paid i fint ef 325\nIn Pollet Court Wtdnesdiy morning\nin \u2022 charge of improperly iccostini)\na juvenile girl. He pleaded guilty\nTuesday to the charge.\nS0,000 Rifles\nBought From Ui\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP).-Pur-\nchut of 80,000 rifles from tht\nUnlttd Stales, announced todiy\nby Munitions Minister Howo,\nsolves tht problem of rifle supply\nfor troopi in training in Canada\ntor tht tlmt being.\nAt the same time It creates t\nproblem of ammunition supply in\n(hit the American rifles are a different calibre to those in tut in\nCanada. Arrangements ut already\nunder wiy to deil with this problem.\nAlong with the rifles the Canadian Government bought t supply\nof United Stitea ammunition enough\nto carry on with until cartridges to\nlit tht American rifles can be mide\nIn Canada. Mr. Howe said 1 new\nsmall arms ammunition plant now\nbeing fitted up will bt equipped\ntd make the cartridges.\nTbt standard calibre small arms\nammunition in use by tbt Cimdlin md British armies ll 3.03.\n\u25a0lightly larger thin the standard\nAmerican army calibre.\nThe expansion ot tbt Non-Permanent Active Militia by tbt recent recruiting drive and now by\ncompulsory calls, coming on tht\nheels of the equipment tnd despatch Overseas of two divisions\nmd equipment ot two divisions\nserving in Canada, created a shortage ot rifles,\nSt. Catharines\nWins Two Straight\nST. CATHARINES, Ont, Sipt 11\n(CP) - St Catharines Athletics,\nEastern Canada champions, swept\ntheir Ontario Lacrosse Association\nsenior best of three semi-final series\nwith Orillia Terriers in two straight\ntonight with an 18-12 victory. Thi\nAthletics won the tint game 12-7.\nWOODS\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\nTRAIL\nMoro, g  \t\nB. Turik, d ...\nCasey, d\t\nJ. Kendill, d .\nMerlo, d\nG A Pt. P\n0   0  0  0\ng. Ktndill, r  1\nGilllcino, r _ 4\nB. Sammartino, c  0\nPignan. w .__  . 4\nTemple, w  _   1\nR. Sammartino, c __. 0\nSmith, w  _. 1\nHood, w .., _.,.\u201e_\u00bb\u2014_. 1\nTotlli     17 10 27 38\nROSSLAND\nSiprunoff, g _  0  0 0  0\nCarkner, d .... ,  0   2 2   3\nSimcosk, d  3  0 2   8\nR. Scott, d ....,.::  10 18\nSiundry, r   2 2 4 6\nJ. Scott r _... 0  0 0   7\nLifiee, c  _ 2   2 4   0\nDougin, w  _, h  0  0 0   0\nMcG-tre. w  3  0 3  8\nSitton, c   3   0 2   2\nMcDonald, w  0  1 1   J\nCox, w   10 12\nErart W , .. 0   110\nTotals\n.13  8 21 37\nKITCHEN  CUPBOARDS\nAND CABINETS\nBuilt u pretty as \u2022 picture\nMail orders will receive prompt\nsttention.\nKootcnav Sash & Deer Wor|ci\n(01 Ward St.   .    Opp. Oily Hill\n-\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundltrand Adding Midlines'\nOFFICE SUPPLIES   *\nUndtrwood Elliott Fisher 111.\n53b Ward St Phone M\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCimpsny.  Limited\nCanada Proud to\nStand by Britain\nOTTAWA, Sept 11 (CP).-Primt\nMinister Mackenzie King tonight\ncabled Prime Miniiter Winston\nChurchill expressing the loyal support of the Canadian people and\ntheir pride In standing shoulder to\nshoulder with Britain at this time\nof emergency.\nLipka Acquitted of\nIndecent Exposure\nTRAIL. B. ft, Stpt ll-Chirlei\nepki tf Trill, wis dismissed by\nitritt Pirker Wllllimi Ll City\nJoint Court Wednesdsy morning,\non t chirge of Indecent exposure.\n,        ti   ail    i, ->\u25a0\u00ab,!    -\u25a0    , ,.\nPays Fine for\nTrail Speeding\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept  11\u2014Arnold\nLiirz, Trail, pleaded guilty to\nspeeding on Nelson Avenue, ind\nwu fined (10 tnd costs by Magistrate Parker Wililami In City Po*\nlice Court Wednesday morning.\nGLASSES ON 10-DAY TRIAL FREE!\nDon't Sena1 \u2022 Penny\u2014Juit Mill Coupon. Juit tfy thlffl, Provt\nit our risk how ireitly our tint gliisel WU1 improve your\nappearand, enable you to MI fir or nor, read thi smallest\nprint or thread the finest needle Perfect satisfaction guar'\ntntled, dr the 10 day trial costs you nothing. Direct From\nFictory to Yoi(-u-Wbtn you nt llttttl from ut. you trt\n not With ortt of thi largest optical laboratories\ni. YOU siv\u00ab tbt middlerAm's profit. Classes in\n>s for t| littll u :_7_r..._l.; ...;. .,.;,.:,.,\ntitling din\nii.Cmadi.\nlitist stylei\nPty   Nothing   Unless   aitlsflid.- \u2014 \u2014 -FREE COUPON--- \u2014 \u2014\nTry  our   glutei   10   diys   tfid|  Vlctorli Optical Co.,   Dipt. J-11,\nnights tt our risk. If not imazed       273 Yonge 8t, Toronto, Ont\nmd  delighted,   they  cost  you 11 would like a pair of your stylish\nnothing. Mall the -TUt-. COU-.glas-es on 10 day Free Trial. If not\nPON today! perfectly  satisfied,   they   colt  me\nVICTORIA OPTICA!, CO.' j_2\u00a3!L_, , An.,\t\nDipt J-11 ' Addrest \u201e__. ..; \u2014\u2014\n273 Yongt 8t, Toronto, Ont    |P. 0  ProV.\nEfc_\n mmmmmmm-\" ' . ....   II    I   \u2014\u2014 .       -\n!ip\u00abI!IW^ ...JIJHiii.iHiljii.i- Ji i\n!4|UP^|P|PP||P^\nTODAYS News Pictures\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-THUrt-DAY MOWNiMa \u00bb_rt, n. raw-\n1&.\n -7 :\u2014: :\u2014:\u2014rr.\u2014rr- \u2014\nV.S. Destroyers Arrive In Canada\nVichy Envoy\nShown In this photo Is one of the 80 destroyers\nturned over to Great Britain by tht United Statti\nshortly after the craft hid dropped anchor In in\nEastern Canadian Port\nThe Petain Government In\nVichy is lending Robert Giyet to\nthe United States on in Important\neconomic tnd financial million,\nFrench authorities reveal. Giyet\nformerly wu French financial attache In New York.\nSeven Sites for New Vnltcd States Air Bases on British Soil\nSt. John, Antigua\n\\Port Au Prince, Trinidad .Georgetown, British Guiana\nNazi Gets \"One on the House* Clock-Watcher In the Desert\nA Gtrmtn lirman. ihot down somewhere-ln-England in fight with\nR.A.F. fighters, gets a \"drink on the house\" as he tilts a British soldier's\nwater-bottle skywards.\nTime doesn't mem much in the desert, but time aiF\nmetns s lot to thli Arab sentry, \u25a0 member of the Arab Legion\nthe British Near Eist Army, who ke*DS en ilarm clock on his\nto inform him when hli trick of duty Is up.\nJ\n9.\npost\nUnited States to Turn Over Tanks to Canada\n\u00bb*\u00ab\u00bb' THRU\nCELANESE HOSE\nTry this serviceable hose for housework. They\nhave the appearance of silk ones and will be a\ngreat saving on your better hose. Favorite    OC -\nshades. Sizes 8Vi to lOVi. Pair ODC\n3 pair for  S 1.00\nChildren's Ribbed Hose\nA popular light weight lxl ribbed hose for school\nwear. Fawn shades. Sizes 8Vi to 10. OC\nPair OOC\n4'Thread\nChiffons\nThe right number for those,\nwho prefer a slightly heavier hosiery for* sports wear.\nThey're well reinforced.\nSmart, new Fall shades. All\nsizes. QCA\nPair       03C\n2 pairs     $1.65\nChildren'\n% Cotton\nHOSIERY\nFor early Fall this Is a popular\nweight. A sturdy ribbed hose with\"\nlastex tops for school wear Sizes\n6Vi to lOVi. Brown heather,\nblue heather and grey QQa\nheather. Pair  OV\\t\nGeneral George C. Marshall, Chiif of Stiff of the U.8. Army, negotiations wert still under wiy, but commented thit \"we are very\nrevelled thit the \"army is going to release several hundred old World favorably considering turning over the tanks.\" Some of the old rolling\nWir tanks to Canada for training purpose!. He stressed the fact thit     fortresses In question trt shown hert.\nAfrica and Egypt\nScene oi Raids\nROME, Sent 11 (AP).-The Itsl\nian com mnique Issued Wednesday:\n\"Our air detachments carried out\nrepeated raids in the tones of Sal\nurn, Sidl Barranl and Merit Ma\ntruh (Egypt), bombarding, scitter-\nbombing md michine-g u n n I n g\nworks, mechanized equipment and\ntroops.\n\"The damage seen wu consider\nable.\n\"Two enemy pursuit planes were\nshot down. Two of our planes are\nmissing.\n(The British command tt Ciiro\ndid not comment immediately on\nthese Italian claims.)\n\"Tht enemy mide ilr raldi on\nBardia, Tobruk and Derni. The material damige to non-military objectives wu comlderible. Altogether 13 persons were killed and 21\ninjured.\n\"An enemy plane wu hit tnd fell\nInto the lei. Three officers of in-\nother pline ihot down during one\nof the ictions mentioned in yesterday's bulletin were captured.\n\"In East Africa, English plsnes\ndropped bombs on Kassali, wounding three. One plane wu ihot down\nby our chasers. Of its crew, two ire\ndead tnd one wu Uken prisoner.\"\n177 ITALIAN\nPLANES DOWNED\nCAIRO, Egypt, Sept. 11 (AP).-\nBrltlsh ilrmen end Frenchmen\nfighting with them hive definitely\ndestroyed 177 Italian lir-rift md\nDrobibly deitroyed 90 more In near\nEastern wir ooeratlons In the three\nmonths ilnce Italy entered the war.\nan authorltatlvq British survey said\ntoday.\nDuring the three month! more\nthan 600 tons of bombs were dropped\non objectives in Italian territory.\nAntonescu Warns\nAgainst Anarchy\nBUCHAREST, SepL 11 (AP). -\nRumania's military dictator. Gen.\nIon Antonescu, broadcast t warning\ntoday against \"dissatisfaction in.\nanarchistic movement!,\" which he\nsaid hsve begun to show themselves.\nPolltlcil circles believed the wirn-\ning wu Intended especially tor\nmemben of the pro-Kui Iron\nGuird.\nPartial demobilization of the\narmy hai ben ordered, the general\nstaff announced.\nThe resignation from the army of\nthe former naval ind ilr minister,\nGen. Piul Teodorescu, wu iccepted\nby Antonescu.\nVictoria Pilot Is\nR.A.F. Squadron Ace\non Libyan Frontier\nLONDON, SepL 11 (CP Ctble).-\nA pilot officer from Vlctorli, B.C.\nll ihe ice of on* of the Royal Air\nForce squadrons operating on the\nLibyan frontier, md hu I big of\nfive of Mussolini's bombers ind\nfighters. It wts disclosed todiy.\nTht Canadian jointed the Royal\nAir Force two yein igo. Hli iqui-\ndron iltogether hu accounted for\nmore thin 30 Italian nlanes. The\nCanadian hu \"two kills\" to his\ncredit In i single diy\nSees Eight Planes Shot\nDown in Ten Minutes\nTORONTO, Sept 11 (CP). -Pte.\nJames Biker of Vmcouver, now\nstationed in Englind, taw eight\nNtzi planes shot down in 10 minutes during the tint man air raid\non London s Croydon airport, he related in a letter received here by\na relative, Junes McMullen.\nThere were ibout 39 ralden, Pte.\nBaker's letter said, and the entire\naction last only 20 minutes after 10\nBritish Spitfires went Into action.\nOnly one British tighter wu dawned In the engagement\n\"They did not damage the air\nfield at Croydon but they did set\nfire to a hangar and \u25a0 perfume factory,\" the letter said.\nRaid Victims\nBurled al Tel Aviv\nTEL XVTV, Palestine, Sept 11 \u2014\n(AP). \u2014 Rescue worken searched\nthrough the ruins ot numerous\nhomes today for additional bodies\not victims of yesterday's bombing\nby Italian planes in which the list\nof known dead has reached 112 persons md the wounded 131.\nThe flnt official check showed\nthere were 55 children among the\ndead.\nMany of the victim! hive already\nbeen buried. Crowds followed the\ncoffins u they were borne through\nstreets and squires.\nBefore the funeral processions the\nbodies lay tn state in the Balfour\nMunicipal School md were viewed\nby nearly 200,000 persons.\nA noted cellist, Joichlm Stut-\nchewsky, was among the wounded.\nBritish officials reiterated t charge\nthe Italian bombing wu \"indlicrim-\ninite,\" declirlng there are no military objectivei within 30 miles of\nTel Aviv.\nCONVOY ATTACK-D\nON SCOTTISH COAST\nLONDON, Sect. 11 (CP)-Germtn\nplanes attacked a convoy off the\nEast Scottish coast lut night md\netrly May, but tht ships reached\ntheir destination.\nBrigade lo Have\nCanadian Tanks\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP) .-Canada'! tank brigade now being trained will eventually be equipped with\nmachines manufactured within the\nDominion, Munitions Minister Howe\nannounced at a press conference today.\nProduction of several classes of\ntanks, including one combining British md American design, will be\nstarted soon, he said, and some machines will be delivered in February.\nSome experimental, light highspeed tanks will be ready for testing within 60 days, the Minister\nsaid. The Dominion heavy industry\nhas developed \u25a0 new and highly satisfactory cut-steel armor plate for\ntanks, md il also producing rot\nsteel armor.\nq\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed in th*\nMorning Ruin'to Go\nThe liver ihould pour out two pounds ol\nliquid bile Into four bowels daily. If this bill\nIs not flowing freely, yojur food doesn't digest.\nIt just decays In the tpwela, Gu bloat* up\nyour \u2022 tomnch. You ret constipated. Harmful\npoisons bo Into tha body; and you feel tour,\n\u2022unit and the world loolu punk.\nA mere bowel movement d oei n' t el wayt ftl\nat the cause. You need something that worka\non the liver aa well. It take* those food, old\nCarter*! Little Liver Pills to get these two\npounda of bUe flowing freely and make you\nfeel \"up and up\".Hnrmleaa and gentle, they\nmake the bile flow freely. They do the work\nof calomel but have no calomel or mercury In\nthem. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pllla by\nname 1 Stubbornly refuM anything alee. U*\n(Advt_j\nMagnificent Quality\nConsistently Maintained\nHaig\nHaig\n.%*$%ar\n\u00a5\u00a5\u00a5*\u00a5\nTHE OLDEST NAME\nIN SCOTCH\nWTOl--, -UNDID AND BOTTtlO\nMSCOUAND\nIlils idvtrtlitmtnt It not published or displayed by tht Liquor Control\nBoard or by tht Government of British Columbia.\nR. E. Crerar, C.L.U.\nBRANCH MANACER,\n208  Medical  Arti  Bldg.\nNelson, B. C.\n\"i4M*W font Jfutute'\nl   pTo fits   for   policyholders\n____\u00bb__..'' -'''''_ujbi_hiisi\n-.I.-:;;:.....*..-.:,.d_iJ__A\n 'AGS   FOUR\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. ..-THURSDAY MORNINO. SEPT. 12. 1148- i\nIPOKANE AND ROCHESTER DOCTORS GIVE LECTURES\nr. Lynch Tells B.(. Doctors ol\nProgress In Treating Headaches,\nDiscusses Surgery and Medicine\nimon  Complaint;\nSymptom of Many\nAilments\n?:Projnu In trtitmtnt of hud-\naches, a common complaint upon\nwhich literature wu voluminous\n! And theories wtrt many, was tha\ntubject of tn address \"Heidiches\n\u2014Diagnosis ind Treatment,\" by\nI J. W, Lynch of Spoktne whin\ni spoke it tht British Columbia\n. lidlcil Association convention tt\ntht Humt Wtdntidiy morning.\nHt gave details of treatment particularly oi dealing with migraine,\nwhich until, recently wu not well\nunderstood; and discussed tht value\nof mrgical md medical treatment.\nHeadache, ht uld, wu a symptom\nof miny ailments.\nHeadachu wert produced In two\nways. Ont wu distortion of tht\ncerebro-splnal fluid; tnd tht other\nwu distension ot tht blood vessels\nof tht cranium.\nHi discussed trtetlon upon\nnervei or stimulitlon of nerves;\nbrain tumor, of which one characteristic was headache In tht early\nmorning, and so on.\njury as Cause\nol Diabetes\nLOGAN CLENDENINQ, M. D.\nSou in injury iver ctuu diabetes?\nKhtoretlcally, yes; prtctlcally, no.\nbetes cm be produced in labor-\ntory animals by injuring a certlan\nKit on the brain. Medical reports\nequcntly appear which claim that\nHer a fractured skull, diabetes de-\ntloped suddenly. But diabetes flirt develops suddenly anyway and\nKte is little direct proof linking\nse accidents with the develop-\ntent of the disease. Dr. Elliot Jos-\nft, who hu had an enormous ex-\ntrlenee. writesi \" So far as I csn\n__ember no definite cise in which\nconsidered injury a cause of dlab-\ntts hu occurred among approxi-\nittely 19,000 patients with diabetes\nto have consulted me. I know of\n\u00bb surgeon who hai postponed in\njeration on t patient became of\nle possibility that Injury would\nring on diabetes.\"\nDo prunes cause acidity?\nSomt weeks ago I wrote In thL>\nolumn in answer to a question ask-\nIMPROVE SOUP\nEW or GRAVY with\nJUILLON\nCUBES\nSertoli's\njOt0S>\nt il self\n;. Quickly\nI to I be.uti-\nI gleaming Ins-.\nr. Mo robbing\u2014\nbsrffing. rro-\nifloorssgiinjt\ntr\u2014keeping\ni like newi\n%*\nJ. C JOHNSON\n6 JON, LTD.\nBRAHTKIRD,\nCANADA\nIng for l lilt of acid-producing foods\nthit tht only vegetables that trt\nacid-forming art prunes md cranberries. I hive received t protest\nfrom tht Ctlliornlt Prune Grower! Auoclttion, giving me specific\ndata on tha subject, md I im glad\nto make t correction hert. Various\nfood experts have analyzed prunes\ntnd their effect in tht body tnd\nfound thit they affect the acid-\nbase balance very little, and if at\nall they tend to product flight alkalinity, not acidity, u was once\nthought\nThis universal breakfast dish also\nhis energy vtlue, mlnertl ind vitamin content. Tht laxative effect\nhas long been recognized. Research\nhu discovered thit tht laxative\neffect of prunei Is not due entirely\nto bulk or roughage, but that prunes\nhave a chemical incorporated In\nthem which hai cathartic properties\nsimilar to many drugi.\nWhtt is the best dentrifice?\nDentifrices are generally thought\nof by the average penon u divided\nInto powders, which hive an ibru-\nivt action, and putes, which ire\ncleansing. But there ii really not\nmuch difference between moit of\nthe powders and pastes. The basis\nof most dentifrices is loap. The\nabrasive materials are powdered\nchalk, pumice stone and orris root\nalthough the American Dental Association's Council on Dental Therapeutics will not now approve of\ndentlfricu with orrli root, beciuse\nmany people are allergically itn-\nsltlve to lt. They also disapprove of\npotassium chlorate, sodium perborate, which may give rise to bums of\nthe mouth, and drugs relited to\ncarbolic acid.\nDentifrices are usually made alkaline, and flavored with oil of\npeppermint or oil of cinnamon. A\nhome-made dentifrice can be mdde\nby using hard soap In fine powder\n50 parts, precipitated calcium carbonate 935 parts, oil of peppermint\nor oil of cinnamon, 2 parts, methyl-\niillcylate 8 parti. The powder\nshould be stirred while adding the\nflavoring oils a little at t time tnd\nthen sha>en vigorously In \u25a0 Jar.\nVALLICAN\nVAJ-LICAN, B. C.-L. Roy md\nGarth Strong who visited their aunt\nMri. T. Brook! of Appledale, have\nreturned.\nJ. D. Innls left to work In Trail.\nMrs. G. S. Strong attended the\nWomen's Institute conference in\nVancouver.\nMlu Jean Innei of Trail villted\nrelatives here.\nG. S. Strong left with the C.A.\nSI\", for Vlctorli, where he will\ncommence training.\nGeorge Munch visited Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Rozinkln visited here.\nT. D. Edgar visited Nelson.\nE. rink of Trill vtalted hii fith-\ner here.\nMrs. William Innes villted her\nson. J. D. Innes it Trill.\nD. Colemm Is visiting Trail.\nMiss E. Colemm left for Trail.\nB. C. Health Officer\nMember of Executive\nof B.C. Medical Body\nKeen Interest of Dr. F. G. Am-\nyot. Provincial Health Officer, in\nthe British Columbia Medlctl Association was reflected In hli attendance at the annual convention\nand hii election to the executive,\nuid convention officials '.Yedncs-\ndiy.\nIt wu tht flnt convention since\nDr, Amyot's appointment u British Columbia Health Officer,\nYou Saw It In thi DAILY NEWS\nBoat Trip Among\nFeatures of the\nMedical Meeting\nOnt of the outstanding features\not tht British Columbia Medical\nAuoclttion convention was the\nscenic drive along the West Arm\nto Fraser- Landing, and a trip\nacross Kooteniy Lake aboard the\nmain lake ferry.\nIt wu perfect weather for such\na trip, and with the atmosphere\ncleared of forut fire smoke by recent rains, tht glorious scenery of1\nNervous Manifestations Brought by\nModern Life Are Described for B. (.\nConvention; New Test Is Explained\nKooteniy lake ud tht Wut Ann\nwu presented In tha full (lory of\nearly Fall.\nThe beauty of many of tha residences md Summer homei along\ntha West Arm attracted many of\nthe visitors; md the boat trip won\nrepeated expressions of delight md\nappreciation. Tea wu served on\nboard.\nMany of the lady visitors enjoyed\ng_:atly their drive to Trail io bt\nguests of the wlvu of Trail doctors\nat. a luncheon at tht homt of Dr.\nand Mrs, J. Bain Thorn. They passed\nthrough the beautiful valleys ot\nthis route, with their mountain tod\nriver icenery, to the buttling home\ncf the Consolidated Mining _\nSmelting Company Works.\nTht beautiful homu Of their\nhosts In Tadanac and Nelson, the\nindustrial activity at Trail, the developed and natural beauty spots\nof the district md the grandeur\nof its mountains, lakes and streams\nprovide memorira that will live\nlong with convention visitors.\nSerial Story \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 By Helen Welshlmer\nLOVE WITHOUT MUSIC\nKDFY\nC0FFKo\nFLAVOR\nDelicious Dr. Jackson's Kofy\nSub supplies the rich satisfying flavour and aroma of coffee . . . but none of the caffeine that upsets nerves and\ndigestion In so many people.\nMake Kofy Sub exactly as you\nmake coffee ... and note\nthe low cost per cup! Produced\nentirely from Canadian grains\nand soya beans, Kofy Sub Is\nrich In alkaline minerals and\ncan be given safely to young\nchildren. Buy Kofy Sub today\nand drink it freely for health as\nwell as enjoyment.\nOVER 500,000 COPIES ALREADY SOLDI\nof Dr. Jackson's famous 438-page book \"How To\nBe Always Well\". Send $3.00 for this invaluable\nguide-book to vigorous health.\nDr. Jtckion'i booklet on Food ami H.illh. Addrta raqittk te\nFREEI\nDr. J.ekion Foods Limited, 392 Vial Avtn-t, Toronto\n\u00bbJJ>\nCHAPTER FORTV-ONI\nFor a moment, a'long moment, no\none in Llnda'i living room spoke\nas the bathroom door opened md 1\nwoman emerged.\nThen Sarah found her voice, \"But\nSue Ackerman went Into that room,'\nshe said wildly. \"And you\u2014you're\nMina Nevins!\"\nThe prosecutor had motioned 1\npoliceman to the outer door. How\nhe looked into the bathroom, M\nthough he expected to find the siller of the murdered girl somt\nplace in hiding.\nWhen his search revealed noth\nIng he came back. \"Miss Nevins,'\nhe began, \"where did you come\nfrom?'r\nThe woman smiled, Mlna's curious, impersonal smile, but did not\nanswer.\n\"Are you and Mina Nevlni the\nsame person?\" he uked, his eyes\npopping in hli round young fice.\nLinda aniwered the question. \"No,\nthey are not. I've seen them\ntogether.\"\n\"Then how can Miu Ackerman\nbe herself one minute and Mina\nNevins, the actress, a little later?\"\nThe woman spoke. Not In Mina\nNevins' voice, but in Sue Acker-\nman's. \"Suppose you stop asking\nquestions while I tell the itory.\"\nSomeone pulled the chain In another lamp u though the eerie\ntelling of the story wu frightening\nenough In itself without 10 much\nof darkness.\nSue began her itory. She started\ntt with a question.\n\"Did any of you notice that on\nthe night Clarabell Ackerman, my\n\u2022liter, wu murdered, Miu Nevins'\nvoice wu not u glorious is usual?\"\n\"Yes, I did,\" Linda answered,\n\"And Clarabell was a little diup-\npointed, too. Mina Nevini was an\nidol of here.*\n\"Did the voice sound like this?\"\nSue Ackerman repeited 1 few Unci\nfrom the play in such an exact reproduction of Mina Nevins' tones\nthat only those who were unusually\nfamiliar with the rich huiky quality\nof1 tht woman's voice on the itage\ncoul* see that these tones were\nnot so deep in quality,\n\"Vet,\" Linda answered again.\n\"That is the voice Clarabell and I\nheard. But how\u2014\"\nThe woman nodded\/ her head\nslowly and raised her hand for\nsilence. \"Back in Hollywood I often\nwas used u a stand-in for Mina\nNevins. She got to the top. I didn't\nCall lt what you will. Fate, life,\nluck. Her voice wu better than\nmine, I knew, but I thought I deserved better breaks than those\nwhich I received.\n\"She used to hire me sometimes\nto Impersonate her when there\nwu 1 bit to be done or she hid to\nmake an appearance at a premiere\nand didn't want to. She paid well,\nand it wu something to do. When\niht begin to slide down hill she\ncame to me. frantic, uklng me to\nhelp her. There wun't much I\ncould do, except take her place\nwhen she was sick. She often was,\nbut she didn't went .he public to\nknow it. Nobody ever guessed who\nI wu when I wu made up to re-\nlemble her.\"\nShe paused and the prosecutor\nipokt itemly, \"Go on!\"\n\"The evening of the murder Mini\nwu ippearing in a radio broad-\ncut You know all about that She's\nestablished tht tact that she wu\nlocked in a studio during the time\nneeded for the killing. Only she\nwasn't I wu impersonating her and\nshe wu perfectly tree all evening!\"\nThere wu a silence so penetrating, so electrifying, thst it was\nbreathless as Sue Ackerman made\nher statement\nMina\u2014free, Linds wss thinking.\nThen she could have come to the\noffice. Sht could have walked up\ntht long fllghta of stairs unseen\nand walked down again. Her handkerchief and her perfume hid been\nleft behind. She could have itolen\nthe gun from the yacht\nAll of the pieces were beginning\nto fit Into the pattern u though\nlt were \u2022 jig-saw puzzle.\nBut why did Sarah carry the\ntime kind of htndkerchitf? That\nwu lrrelevint She leaned forward\nto hear the prosecutor's questions.\n\"Mlu Ackerman, why did you\nlmptrion-te the actress ihat\nnight? Did you know where she\nwu going?\"\nThe woman's eyes were scornful.\n\"I don't Know yet where she wu\ngoing or what she did. She told me\nshe was .ill and needed help. She\nhad been having such bad headachu lately and I felt rather sorry\nfor her. Then, too* she was willing\nto pay me md unfortunately I\nhaven't learned to live without\nfood. And It's also nice to have a\nroof over one's head.\"\n\"What made you suddenly decide\nthat Mina Nevins might have killed\nyour sister?\"\n\"A tirade she put on agtlnit\nLinda Avery two days ago, She\nhates her. She isn't safe while\nMina is around.\"\nLinda shivered, remembering the\nodor of that chloroform ana the\nemerald that had been hidden in\nher stateroom on the yacht\n\"Has she confessed?\"\n\"To killing my' sister?\" Sue\nAckerman asked. \"Certainly not!\nShe hu no Idea that such an idea\nhu crossed my mind. But I've been\ndoing some private Investigating\nand I found out that the police\nknow of her attitude toward Linda.\nMaybe I'm til wet\u2014maybe ihe wu\nIn bed that night But I don't think\nso.\"\nLinda apoke iwiftly u the wom-\nm paused. \"Was there a night when\nshe was talking over her contract\nwhen she couldn't go. either? When\nshe had you go with Terry en-\nsome other people?\"\n\"Yes.\" Mlu Ackermen uld.\n\"Why?\"\n\"Because that night eomeone entered my room md 1 smelled chlor-\noform. I found out from the Jinltor\nthit he hid given Miss Nevins I\npau key to enter Mr. Barton's\nan\u00bbrt~ent above mine\u2014they are\nold friends\u2014she knew hie uncle\nwell\u2014and I've wondered.\n\"You see, I traced her whereabout! and if she had been In the\ngroup with Terry the couldn't have\nreached home In time. But if she\nwasn't, a quick taxlcab would get\nher there In time to answer when I\ntelephoned her.\"\n\"Mina Nevins, the actress!\" one\nof the policemen was saying. \"But\nshe wps \"lorlous. You're all half\ncracked! She couldn't do this.\"\nA younger officer of the law corrected him. \"Better map out of It\nRegan. Maybe you did keep her\npicture in your mirror, but It looks\nv, ti,-..-'- tm old girl It off her\nnut now.\"\nThe prosecutor wu beaming.\nHis case wu cracking wide and Tt\nwould mean a promotion on the\nstaff. \"You'll have to come along\nto headquarters. Miss Ackerman,\nand swear to all of this,\" he uld.\n\"And the rest of you, too. Everybody here. By he way, Where's Burton? He ihould be In on lt\"\nRobert wun't In, but hit mm\nhad returned tnd promised to ask\nhim to come to headquarten when\nht returned.\nIt wu more thin in hour liter\nwhen he Joined the group. Mint\nNevini hid been brought in tnd\nsat In regal dignity, answering no\nquestions. Rob looked from one\nface to another In questioning. His\neyes retted briefly on Linda's face\nand he smiled.\nThen he sealed himself across\nthe room from htr, but she knew\nthat he wu witching her.\nThen were so many things that\nihe wmted to my, but there were\n10 many people around and the\nofficers were uking tot order.\nLatar, though . . .\n(To Be Continued).\nDr.  Anderson States\nEmotions Simulate\nReal Symptoms\nNervous minlfutitloni resultln.\nfrom tht modern mtdt of lift,\nparticularly mxlity tension, win\ndescribed for tht British Columbil Medical Autolatltn convention at tht Humt tn Wednesday\nmorning by Dr, George H. Anderson of Spokane. Hit tubjtet\nwu \"Hyptrvtntllatlon Syndrom!.''\nEmotions could simulate real\nsymptoms. Dr. Anderson stated.\nThese Included cardiac pain, headachu, dizziness, tenseness, prickly\nsensation, and so on.\nTht patient might face hit affliction and find a solution, or might\nattempt to ignore it but it still remained and needed help.\nDr. Anderson described tht ntw\nhyperventilation tut and tht use of\ncarbondioxide in treatment.\nFunctional nervous disorders could\nbring about, In the blood, chemical\nchanges associated with physical\ndisease, he said.\nDr. Autd's Work as\nMedical President\nWins Warm Tribute\nWarm tribute! '..are paid to Dr.\nF. M. Auld of Nelson, immediate\nPut President of the British Columbia Me ''cal Assoclitlon. \u2022 tht annual meeting of thll body drew to\na close.\nDr. Mumy Blair, who succeeded\nDr. Auld u President, told members\nthit the Association hid ..--fitted\ngreatly in the year under Dr Aui-i's\nleadership, ud thit hii keen interest In cancer control, public\nhealth md medicine generally had\ngiven a ntw Impetus to thue fields\n0' ehdeivor in British Columbil.\nThe B. C. Association Is In Its\nfc '.y-flrtt yetr. It wu crginUtd\nin 1900.\nBoarding . . .\nHard Io Get Out\nof In-laws' Home\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Miss Chatlleld:\nI mtdt ont big mistake In my\nmarried lift md It seems I will\nnever quit paying tor it I agreed\nto live with my in-laws. We pay\nboard and I itay at homt while my\nhusband lopes around u If ht\ndidn't have 1 wife. Any questions\nabout his business ind I am told lt\nis hit business. Even hit mother\nind sisters disapprove of the- wiy\nhe treats me but they don't tell\nhim 10.\nMy husband hu promised ma\nseparate home several times but\nthe other day he bought an automobile md thit means mother\nbroken promise. With tht money\nhe spends for such things tnd tht\nboard wt pay, wt could euily get\nalong by ourselves.\nI Juit long to bt off with him\nwhere he would havt'the responsibility ot me md the baby, where\nwt would be t hippy little family\ninstead of inmates of t big boarding house. Do you suppose he will\never see it my wiy?.\nANSWBUi      ~\n_ of selfishness, tht ill-\ntime high Is tht selfishness of 1\nman who dumps hii wife in the tap\not hli family, pays them to tit,\n\u25a0leep tnd entertain her while he\ntakes off down the big road to hive\nbig time.\nWhy ihould he pay attention to\nhis wife's begging for a separate\nhome whtn he hu til ht wants\nright where he Is? Why ihould be\nmove out to assume troublt tnd\nresponsibility when, by staying\nwhere he It, he hu tree time on\nhis hands, loose change in hit\npunt, a car to ride around in,\ncompanions to ride with him? Ht\nhu the idetl set-up for hli selfishness which ha isn't likely to relin\nquish exctpt under high pressure\".\nA wife In tht middle of such a\nmess hu one chance in a million\nto move into the homt ihe aches\nfor; It is to get her husband'! parents on her side, coax them to ex-\npress their disapproval of lon'i\nbehavior and serve notice on him\nthat .he must make hla plans to\nmove out. This will require patience,\ntact diplomacy of high order, none\nof which comt naturally to a wlft\nwhy ll being treated with outrageous lnconsldtration by a selfish,\nheadstrong husband.\nCONGREGATION TAKES\nPART INTERCESSION\nSERVICE AT BOSWELL\nBOSWBLL, B. C\u2014A tpeciil Intercession service wu held In the\nMemorlil Hall, conducted entirely\nby members of tht congregation.\nMassage . , .\nDonrf Let Hollow\nCheeks Change\nFacial Contour\nBy DONNA GRACE\nSunken cheeks ind hollow eyes\nire not attributes of beiuty. There\nire 1 few girls who may hive \u2022\npeculiar appeal with thll wan look\nbut they irt thou whole facial\ncontour is slender md delicately\nslim. For example, the lovely Mar-\nltnt Dietrich hu no rounded facial\ncontours. Although wt would not\nsty htr cheeki irt hollow, thty\nhivt an ethereal thinness thit\nwould look fir too delicate it htr\ncheekbones tnd chin curve wert\n1-rger. \u00ab\nThll thinness, while ttraetlvt for\na few, is not so for others.\nWt havt found that those who\nIndulge in regular exercise trt\nuiuilly in good proportion. Women\nwho go. On rutrlcted diets without\nmy exercise will bt quite likely\nto low thi facial roundness before\nthtrt ii 1 noticublt change in the\nhips md thighs. Wt never saw m\nathlete nor a really active healthy\nperion with lunken cheeki md\nhollow eyei.\nActivity stimulates the circulation md burns up fat and when\none sits or rests most of the diy the\nlow of weight will show in the deli-\ncite facial muscles.\nIn massaging hollow cheeki, begin very gently and stroke from the\nchin up to the temples. Never, use\nthe downward strokes on the face.\nTht neck may be stroked in this\nway but never use heavy pressure,\ntvtn If there is loose tissue.\nHett miy be applied with folds ot\nsterile gauze wrung out of \u25a0 hot\nsolution of boric add. This is placed\non over the last application of\ncream. Sponge oft ind cover a cube\not let with the gauze or 1 thin\nSheet ot cotton. After dipping it in\niced astringent, go over the fice\nand neck with the usual up strokes.\nTbii, ibng with plenty of leg and\nbody exercise, will prevent tht\nhollo wi.\nModern Methods Bring Big Advance\nin Diagnosing and treating Hernia\nMayo Surgeon Tells B. C. Convention\nOperative   Technique\nIs Demonstrated\nby Film\nGreit advances hive been mtdt\nIn treitment tf dlaphragmatlt\nhernia In rtotnt vein. Whin 1\ndecade and a half ago It often\nwtnt unrecognized In t pttltnt,\ntodiy It wss frequently recounted, treated and cured, ind It\nremained cured III result of modern methods.    .\nIllustrating thll declaration with\na moving film of trii actual operative technique, Dr. Stuart W. Harrington, Professor ot Surgery it tht\nMtyo Clinic, Hocheiter, spoke Wednesday morning it the British Columbia Medical Auociation convention on \"The Differential Diagnotor Diaphragmatic Hernii from other\nAbdominal md Intrathoracic Conditions, ind Surgical Treatment In\n290 Cases.\"\nDr. Harrington described hernia\nof tht abdomiml contents, on both\ntht right md lift sides of tht dii-\nphrtgm ugi, Into the thoracic basin.\nU revealed in 290 successful\noperations.\nX-ray examination attar giving\nthe patient barium had greatly advanced diagnosis, ht stated.\nHU film of tht operative technique wu of great interest to tht\ndoctors.\nMayo Professor of Medicine Tells\nof Modern Treatments of Jaundice\nMRS. MATHESON HEADS\nNAKUSP DRAMA CLUB\nNAKUSP, B. C-At the mnual\nmeeting of the Nakusp Dramatic\nClub Mri. A. Mttheton wu elected\nPresident Mrs. W. Wright Vlce-\nPrettdent tnd Mlu N. Johnson, Secretary-Treasurer. Mist B. White md\nMlsi M. Kirk wert appointed to the\nexecutive committee.\nThe report of the pity reading\ncommittee wu heard ind the secretary wai instructed to order four\none-act plays selected by the committee. The hostess Miss N. Johnson, served refreshments with tht\nassistance of Mlu M. Kirk.\nBOSWELL\nBOSWl-X, B. C\u2014Private Kenneth Wallace of the Home Defence\nat Nelson wu home on leave.\nMr. and Mri. C. Chaub and ion\nKenneth arrived homt from La-\nmond, Alta. where they hivt been\nsupervising harvesting operations\non their firm. Kenneth leavu immediately for Creston, to attend\nhigh school. Mr. Chaub expects to\nreturn to the Prairie to complete\nharvttting.\nMri. Kirkpatrick hu returned after t visit fo friends in the Slocan\nValley.\nMrs. Fred Oheeton md two children have returned to Natal, after\nvisiting Mrs. Cheston'i parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. Meter.\nMr. md Mri. Hawkins of Calgary\nand their daughter Mrs. Moore, are\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. J.\nCummings it Silver Birch Ranch,\nGoat Creek.\nRTADYTOMiU.    -\nCOOKIES\nWINDERMERE RED CROSS\nSPENDS $83 ON MATERIAL\nLAKE WINDERMERE, B. C '\u2014\nThe treisurer of the Windermere\nDistrict Red Cross reports that total receipts for the month ot August\namounted to $93.:7. Ot t'-is amount\n$83.81 goc. for materials of which\nthe Edgewater Red Cross raised\n$42.61. The remaining $13.00 is for\nRed Crou funds. The crochet-id\nbedspreid added $49.30 to the funds.\nFruitvale Institute\nResumes Its Meetings\n-_tUITVA_E, B. C-The Worn-\nen's Institute resumed its meetings\nIn the Institute Hall. A feature of\nIhe Summer wu a special meeting\nbad when Mra. J. T. Wood, Mrs. K\nBurns and Mn. T. Kimmel ot the\nTrail Red Crou motored out to\nFruitvali to give lesions on knitting\nmd tht shaping of heels md ton of\nsocks.\nA dance to take plact In 1 few\nweeks wu arranged. Classes tor\ntint tld were also discussed but\nnothing definite wu arranged.\nDainty refruhments were served\nby Mrs. A. Ransom md Mrs. C. A. I\nScott\nSurgery Not Employed\nas Often Now Says\nDr. Snell\nModern treatments for Jtundlcl\nwin outlined by Dr. Albert M.\nSnell, Professor of Medicine tt\ntht Mtyo Foundation, Rochester,\nIn in address to tht British Columbil Mtdlotl Anoclition at thi\nHumt silver room on Wednesday\nmorning.\nBt described a comprehensive\nsurvey of ill types ot Jaundice tnd\nthe knowledge gained through it\nSurgery wu not employed u often u in former years, he stated,\noutlining present methods of both\nmedical md surgical treatment.\nChronic painless jaundice In older\npersons often filled to yield to lur-\nSery. Vitamin K, ht uid, hid proved\nelpful in hemorrhigic etiu.\nLONDON (CP)-Ttia Brltlih Government hu received mother \u00a3(_,\u2022\n000 ($391,000) from tht Eut Indlt\nFund for British Wir Servicu,\nHabitual Constipation\n1$ a Danger Signal\nConitipition i \u25a0 shrtyi bsd enough..',\nit drigi you dom; mikei you feel\nheidichy, dull, irriuble. Bet -hea\nco-niptoon becomes a -shit, look\nout! It uiuilly tendi to get worn ind\nFrequent resort to hirih pur-\ni other emergency treatments only nukes you tne more de-\ngitive*\npendent on them.\nThe one sensible wiy to crest cat-\nitipition ii to get it the ciuie. Common ranitipition often reiulti from\nnot gttttni enough of the kind of food\nthst will help form t \"bulky\" mus\nit the intestine.\nIf thii is yew case, yoo should est\nKellogg'1 All-r--. It only takes \u25a0\nmull amount\u2014in ounce I day is\nenough for most people\u2014int you\nmult hive it regularly ud drink\nplenty of witer. Get \u2022 pickige it\nyour grocer's todiy ind just lee whit\n\u00ab wet- of difference it mikei when\nyou keep \"rrgu!\u00abr-\" Made by\nKeUogg'i in London, CuucU.\njf&\u00bb\nrU&J\ndUniLftft\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nX\nTODAY'S MENU\nBeef Slew with Vegetables\nBoiled Potatoes\nMixed  Vegetable Salad\nDate Tortt\nCoffet\nBEEF STEW\nTwo pound! diced beef chuck,\nthree tableipoou lard, ont cup water, one pound green beans, seven\ncarrots, six small white onions,\nIh: wholl Clbbtgt leaves, salt, pepper.\nBrown mtlt In hot lard. Add\nwater. Cover md simmer tor 45\nminutes. Add fresh beans, carrots\nmd onions md continue to limmer\nSesson. Fifteen mlnutei before the\nmtlt is done idd separated cabbage\nleaves md continue cooking. Thicken liquid left in kettle and serve\nwith stew.\nDATE TORTE\nSix eggs, one rounded ttupoon\nbiking powder, ont cup chopped\ndates, ont cup sugar, ont cup chop-\nperl nut meats, 12 tablespoons of\ncrumbled rusks.\nBut eggs well, beat In sugar. Sift\n\u25a0baking powder with rusk crumbs.\nAdd other Ingredients md bike in\nmoderite oven (390 degrees F.) md\nserve either hot or cold with whipped cream.\nTEMPTING TUTS FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES!\nII\n\u25a0\u25a0\nHEINZ\nTOMATO   \/\nKETCHUP V\n___3->'T'r\"i\nGlVE Ntw Gusto To School-Day\nDlshii Wilh Ruddy, Racy Hiini\nTomato Kttchup\u2014The Cookod-\nDown Rlchntst of Holnx Prlit\nTomatoei, Holm Vinegar And\nRant, Zesly Spices.\nBarb-cued Hamburg Paftfef\n# Combine }. cup soft bread crumbs\nand ii cup milk. Add '\/_ lb. ground\nround iteak, J _ tip. salt, dash of pepper.\nForm meat into pattiei and brown on\nboth sides In 2 tt*. fit. Combine 1 tbt.\nX, 2 tbt, Heini Worcestershire Sauce,\nHeina Cider Vinegar, 'A cup Heiruc\nTomato Ketchup. Pour ovtr meat.\nCover ind simmer -lowly ibout 10 to 15\nmlnutei. Serve hot between heated or\ntouted bun halves. (Recipe makes g.)\nHungarian Goutath\n\u2022 Cut Ji lb. ult pork ot bacon Into\ncubes ind brown. Add IK lbt. cubed\nraw beef, 2 onions, chopped, 1 clove\ngirlie Cook, stujgng frequently, until\nonioni trt slightly btbwned. Sprinkle with\n9 tbt, flour tnd continue cocking till flour ,\nbrowns. Add 2 cup} witer, M Cup Heini\nTomito Ketchup, % tip. ult Simmer\nilowly, coveted, -bout IM hours\u2014or until\ngravy livery thick. Add H *>P- paprika and\nsave over noodles. (Recipe for i.)\n\u2014\t\n mm.\nw\n\u25a0 \u00bbmi ii i*WSi.SON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. & C.-THUMDAY MORNING, SEPT, 12, 1940\t\n\u2014\u2014\nMr. 0. A. McKerihen\nDirect from the Clinic of the famous\nDr. M. W. LOCKE\nAt Williamsburg, Ontario.\nWill Be in Our Store\nTODAY\nFOR FREE CONSULTATION\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\n>alace Swimming Pool\nWrecked by Time Bomb;\nloyal Family Not There\nBy SAM ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Stpt 11 (CP Cable)\n\u2014A small wing of Buckingham\nPalace which oontalned tht Roytl\nswimming pool his bttn wricked\nby t German tlmt bomb but Thtir\nMtjestlet wert not there tt thi\ntlmt tnd no member of tht\nhousehold staff was Injured.\nTht bomb burled Itself In tht\nptlsce grounds during Sundiy\nnight's dusk-to-dawn raid ind exploded Tuesday.\nBit tury ot tht txploslon hurled\nne-ton blocks of masonry ibout\nit lawn tnd ihot t jagged section\nf i stone pillar weighing t nun-\nredwelght over the broad root of\nhe palace into the courtyard. At\nlilt 100 windows were smashed.\nNo member ot the Roytl Family\nras in residence tt the palace\nrhen the bomb tell or when it\ndonated.\nILL WINDOWS SMASHED\nTht wing of the massive stone\nbructure which was scarred by\nlying fragments lost ill Its win-\nows. It contains no sleeping qiur-\n\u25a0rt so member! of the Royal staff\nnd the household were not en-\ntngered by the blast.\nThe bomb fell 10 pices from the\nwimming pool. Eighty feet long,\n) feet wide ind one storey high,\ntt wing containing the pool Juts\n\u2022om the palace's Northwest corner,\nr eonservitory in Queen Victoria's\nme. it was converted into i pool\ni 19\" 1 ind il one of the favorite\nliyrooms of the Royal Princesses.\nThe blast demolished half ot the\none md glass walls ot the pool\nHi left remnants of Iti glass sky-\nght hanging  crszily. Tne  metal\nNOW JJndtr-arm\n.ream Deodorant\ntafelj\n(tops Perspiration\n1. Doei not rot .rases, does\nnot irriute skin.\n2. Nowiitingrodry.Ciabtused\ntight after shaving.\n>\u2022 Instantly stops perspiration\nfor 1 to J -ivs. Removes odor\nfrom perspiration.\n4. Apate,white,gt\u00abseless,stiin-\nless vanishing cream.\na Arrid has been awarded tht\nApproval SealoftheAmerican\nInstitute of laundering for\nbeing harmless to fabrics.\nSB MILLION Jin ol Amd\nhm bttn Mid. Try \u2022 |ti today I\nARRID\n*9t.f\naoUsi\n.M_\u2014M\nmat\n(.-\u00bb-, _ls-\u00bb_H^i_n)\nALWAYS DELICIOUS\n4X CAKES\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nMilline\/y Special\nNew Fill Hati \u2014 $2.49\ntyilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St. Phone 874\ndiving tower, painted set green to\nmatch the rest of the inerior, wjs\ntwisted .grotesquely.\nShower curtains fluttered in the\nbreeze in the middle ot the gaping\nhole as footmen and housemaids\npeered down from broken windows\nof the three-storey palace. It was\nststed the household stiff was in\nair raid shelters when the bomb\nfell. An empty shelter dln.tly\nunder the swimming pool wu not\ndimiged.\n\"There wu very little d.mige\nInside the palace,\" tn official\nspoker-nsn slid. \"It wis mostly from\nflying glass md soot from chimneys.\nPilntings and other art objects were\nremoved long igo.\"\nAmong tht window! blown In by\nthe concussion wert those of tht\nKing's study and the Queen's sitting\nroom, is well si the Belgian suite\nwhich in the words of '.he palace\nspokesman \"wai occupied by visiting Royalty In happier timei.\"\nGlass splinters were imbedded In\nmany of the walls but there wis\nno material damage to furnltute.\nSoot shaken down through fire-\nplsces when the building trembled\ncoated furniture and hangings.\nFragments of stone and brick md\ntorn splinters of wood were sprayed icross the North lawn. Rubble\nalmost filled in the enter 35 feet\n\u25a0cross md IS feet deep torn by\nthe bomb. Branches of trees were\nstrewn about.\nThe wreckage was In strange\ncontrast to the unmatched beauty\nof the rest of the 43 acres of St.\nJames' Pirk In which the Royal\nResidence stmds near the centre\nof London. Pink genniums md Ihe\nsoft tones \\>f other late Summer\nflowers rtlieved the drib greynesi\nof the palace terraces. Trees from\nilmost every pert of the world\nstood like regil sentinels ibout the\nbroad, lawn and pirk beyond.\nA glazier among the corps ot tne\nworkmen cleiring iwiy the debrii\nstopped to siy: \"We'll 'ave everything shipshape before you' can\nblink your eye.\"\nWINNIPEG APPROVES\nSCHOOL CADET CORPS\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 11 (CP)-Plms\nfor formation of cadet corps in\nWinnipeg publlo tchooli wtrt ip-\nproved by the School Board lut\nnight. Flam call for i junior group\nfor boys 12 to 14 years of age md\nt senior group, 14 to 18 years of age,\nBritain Ready\nlor Any Nazis Who\n(an Reach Shores\nLONDON, Sept 11 (CP Ctble)-\nSpeculation that Hitler It preparing to launch hii threatened invasion brought tht tent comment\nfrom \u25a0 high British source todiy\nthtt \"Whenever thty come thli\nisland fortress ll ready for in*\nNazis able to battle thtir wiy\nuhort.\"      .\nWhtn the fuehrer dccldei to\ntike the big gamble it Is generally\nagreed he will make his push across\nthe Channel md use1 Norwty u I\nsubsidiary base.\nBritish airmen ire keeping in\nintense watch over ill areas from\nwhich the thrust might come.\nBirge concentrations hive been\nobserved at Hamburg, Bnden, Dun-\nkerque, Ostend md Boulogne tnd\ndeilt with accordingly.        ,  \\\nTht Fleet Air Attn bat been carrying out offensive reconnaissance,\nover the Norwegim cout\n\"The Fleet Air Arm is witching\nup there,\" one source commented\nliter the disclosure yesterday et\nwidespread activity of Skuas\u2014naval\ndivt bombers\u2014attacking oil stores\nand hutments in Norwty.\nSomt circles regard u \u2022 certain\nsign of Getmm ictivity in Norwiy\nthe, greet length! the Null wtnt to\ndeny thit Bsitish nival force! sink\ni troop transport In Skagerrak on\nSeptember 1.\nThis lots wu reported from Swt-\nden from which country came i\nreport thtt Germans trt offering\na reward for recovery of equipment from thi ihlp.\nCompared with tht short crossing\nof 20 miles in tht Channel, tt Is\nabout 250 miles from tht nearest\npoint of Norway to Scotltnd. The\nNazis would need big ships to try\nt thrust from Norwiy but many\nobservers believe they miy hivt to\ntake this chance it \u25a0 Channel forty\nfailed\u2014as ill British officials in\nconvinced it would.\nKing and Queen Wail lor Tea Alter\nTaking Shelter Under Police Station\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nCanadian   Press  Stiff  Writer\nLONDON, Sept 11 (OP Ctble)-\nCaught by alarm sirens In a street\nduring a tour of i bombed area\not London, the King md Queen\ntodiy took shelter under i police\nstation, 1 few yards away from a\nheap of rubble which was t court\nhouse before a Nizi airman dropped\ni bomb Saturday night\nIn a bleak, poorly lighted shelter\nthere was one of the strangest assortments of humanity these class-\nlevelling sirens ever brought together.\nTheir Mijesties sit on bare wooden chairs in the centre of the room,\nthe King in -service dress of i Field\nMarshal, the Queen weiring t two-\npiece suit in almond blege. On\nforms iround the walls were policemen, court officials, overalled Air\nRaid Precautions workers fresh\nfrom the ruins next door,, and\nwhite-smocked women from the police canteen.\nTheir Majesties, who tpent the\nmorning inspecting bomb damage\nin the outer suburbs of Southeast\nLondon, were driven to the police\nstation, led by cars which had been\nescorting them.\nWhen they wilked into the ihel-\nter about 30 people already there\nstared in istonishment, then clapped\ntheir hands. The King leaned back\nin his chair, crossed nil legs comfortably snd lit a cigarette. The\nQueen sat composedly, with a fox\nfur across her knees.   .\nOne canteen woman bustled\nabout making tea. It was not quite\nready when the sirens sounded\nagain. The King who was the first\nto heir them remarked: \"It'i ill\nclear but I am going to wiit tor\ntome of thli tei.\nIn I few moments thty were\ndrinking lt from heavy china cupi\nbearing the mark of the police canteen.\n\"This is delicious,\" uld tht\nQueen. \"I should never htvt\nthought you could product tea io\nicon. The smiling woman replied:\n\"It'i Just i method we havt\/\nTears were near the Queen's eyes\nduring the morning when Their\nMajesties saw dozens of scenes ot\ndevastation md talked sympathetically with women who hid lost\nloved ones or had homes shattered.\nAt they came from a bomb crater\nin the middle of i block ot workers' flits, men md women pressed\naround, cheering, md began to\nsing \"There'll Always Be an Bng-\nDust gathered on the Queen's\nshoes and stocking u they climbed\nover great heaps of rubbiffi which\nonce made i dozen small homei.\nHere an old woman told Her Majesty that her diughter md grind-\nson had been killed while mother\nwoman told the Queen \"Hitler can\nknock our houses down but he\ncan't get us down.\"\nThe Queen told the people: \"We\nthink you ire ill wonderfully brave\nmd we ire very proud of you.\"\nOne woman iniwered \"And wt trt\nproud of youl\"\nAt mother block of flats where\ni bomb had fallen t woman told\nthe King: \"Hitler hai to hive \u2022\nbodyguard wherever he goes. You\ndon't need a bodyguard when you\ncome down here. God bless tnd\nkeep you both.\"\nrCCL welcome to visit\nand inspect our big plant\nYou will find our modern printing plant of utmost interest, tt is enlightening. When you think of Printing, do\nyou stop to realize the many phases that it goes through\nbefore the work is complete? Come in, we would like\nto show you around and explain the various departments\nof our modern Printing Plant.\nJMBim lathj JfetM\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\nPhone 144\n266 Baker St.\nCreston Schools\nWill Sell War\nSavings Stamps\nCRESTON, B. C. - Silt of War\nSavings Stamps in eich ot thi 18\ndivisions in the eight sections of\nCreston Valle United School District elementary schools, will get\nunder wiy at once. Decision to Duy\n1100 of these, to bl distributed\namongst tht 18 teachers, wu niched it tht September meeting ot the\ntrustees Mondiy, Nwhlth wu- in\nchirge of Chilrmin H. A. Powtll,\nwith D- K. Archlbild, D. Bndlty,\nE S. McCreath and Hilton Young\nin   attendance.\nTht Boird will attempt to htvt\nHon. G. M. Wilr, Ministtr ot Edu-\ncation, visit Creston following hii\nippearenci it tht Nelson convention Sept. 34. It li proposed thst\nhe should bt guest speaker it the\nttion ot certificates, then will bi t\nmusical program.\nJohn Birrlgan, high ichool bandmaster, hiving deelintd rttppolnt.\nmen at i ittarj o| HU ptr tnnum,\nthe truitttt decided to confer with\nW. G, Htndy, who hu hid prtvioui\nleadership experience with the former Legion Bind, with thi idea of\nhaying him tike over tht work. \u2022\nA Acdouhti passed for ptymtnt wtri\n\u00bb3720, moit of which wu for iup-\n5lies required prior to school optn-\nig.A fee of |3 will be chirged\neach of five graduates who trt taking work in the commtrciil room,\nbut tht board will not bt responsible tor payment of yearly charge\nof $8 midt students taking a correspondence course with the De-\nptrtmtnt of Idu-ition, Vlctorli.\nMlsi McClure, teacher of Division\nJ at Creiton tltmenttry ichool, wu\ngiven leeve of absence until October 1. Her doctor wrote asking\nfor thll consideration.\nI^AkmWn\nSteretor J. W. Himllton, will represent Creston tt thi Trustees' Association convtntion tt Ntlton, Sep.\ntembtr 33\u201435. \u25a0\n, Tht afternoon bus to Alice Siding will extend Itt run ibout t\nmilt to thorttn tht wtlk somt of\nthe puplli from thit tret htvt to\nmike to secure but connection.\nSix of thi tight schools to tht\nconspliditlon requlrt fuel ind ten-\nders'will be celled for 150 cords on\ntht basis of 80 eordi for \u2022 two-room\nichool, md IS cordi for t one-room\nschool. Arrow Crtek, Huscroft.\nCimp Lister, Cmyon, Erlckion and\nwynndel require lupplles, md ten\nders will be celled for eich indi\nviduil school district.\nBook Learning . . .\nWaif Till Child\nGoes lo School\nBy Girry Cleveland  Myers, Ph.D.\nIntelligent parents irt eager to\ndo something it homt to prepare\ntht child before he enteri ichool\nto get on well with booki ifter hi\nbegins school.\nAbout the moit Important thing\nhit parents can do lor him is to\ncultivate good health habits in\nhim, good routine!, self-reliance\nand responsibility ind skill it being hippy with other children of\nhit age.\nYtt loot parents think they must\ndo mort. A few, alas, will try to\nteach hint to reid, spell and do\nnumber work. I wish they wouldn't\nAll too toon ht will htvt such\nformil teaching it ichool. Wt ihould\nremember, too, thit hii eyes ire\npoorly coordinated. Why tax hli\ntender nervei to tarty?\nHii parents should, however, If\nwithout undue stimulation, help him\nwidtn tnd enrich hii experiences\nind keep alive hit curiosity. They\nshould answer ill hii questions and-\nencourage him in fret convent\ntlon and creative pity.\nLEARNING AT PLAY\nIf it play ht learns somi or ill\ntht letters of thi alphabet tnd\nnumber symbols with their mem-\ning up to 10, very Well. If ht likts\nto draw just for fun, he might\ntvtn profit from printing very large\nt. ftw of tht letters md number\nlymbols. Unfortunitely, however,\nsome parents will lit the little\ntyke to do such thing! u tasks\n\u2022nd to tax him with the making of\nsmall letteri ind figures. It he\nmakes them it ill before going to\nschool, let lt be for fun tnd let\nthem be severil inches In dimension.\nThe wilt, calm, gentle parent\nmiy properly help tht tot before ht\ntnteri ichool to gain numbtr concept! it play, even to match some\nof the smaller digit symbols with\nmeming. One good wiy for him\nto learn simple number miming\nil to amuse himself in hii own way\nwith dominoes u tomeone casually calls to his attention tht dots\non each block. Alto i good wiy to\nhelp him grow familiar with the\nnumber md relative order of the\nnumber symbols up to nine in,\nelusive li to play Flinch with him.\nI ooniider thll \u2022 very viluable\ngame for tht child from four to\ntight or 10.\nReport Questioning\nof Italian Nobleman\nROME, Stpt 11 (AP)-An authoritative wurce uid todiy Prince\nAlessandro Torlonli, wealthy young\nRoman nobleman, hid bttn released after detention for questioning.\nFriends of she Prince, whost\nmother ii tht former Elsie Moore\not Niw York, said yttttrdty ht\nhid been arrested in \u2022 roundup of\nItillim suspected of \"inti-Fuclst\nor deftttilt tendencies.\"\nTht same iuH*ority uld Prince\nttlipOni Dorii-Pimphlll, 54, owner\nof txttntive property, hid beta\nsent into \"ptlltlcsl confinement\",\nbut claimed thtrt wu no wldt-\nspread roundup of defeatists in\nItaly.   ,.?V\\ \u2022\nTECHNICAL MEN SENT\nTO ROYAL AIR FORM\nOTTAWA, Stpt 11 (CP)- Cir-\nlain technics! personnel trained In\ntht schools of tht British commonwealth Air Training Plin irrlv-\nId In England recently tor service\nwith the Roytl Air Forct.\nAn officii; of the Royil Cansdisn\nAir Forct todiy uld thi flnt grid-\nuatei of tht plin would bt t diss\nOf lir observers who wOuld leave\ntht schools lltt thli month.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. V1GNEUX\nt Mri. A. O. Gtlinu tnd Mri\nGiorgi & Gelinsi Jointly enter-\nttined tt tht homt ot tht tormtr on\nVictorli Street it the tta hour yes-\nttrdiy, complimenting tht former's\ndaughter, Miss PrisciUa, whose marriage to It. F. Cornwall takes place\nSaturday morning tt Cathedral ol\nMary Immaculate. Tht ecru lice\ndoth, ctnttred by i bowl of varicolored rose buds tnd flanked by\npure white lighted tapers, wu presided over by Mrs. M. Scally, Mrs\n3. P. Duffy and Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, who poured tea tnd cut tht\nices. Others assisting included Mrs\nM. 3, Vigneux, Mil. C. A. Ltrion,\nMrs. Douglis Malt, Mn. F. B. Willi\nand Milt Mirgiret Meyer. Guests\nIncluded Mri. Lttlit McEtchern,\nMri, Bruno Bourgeois, Mrs. T. H,\nWlllits. Mri. L. H. Choquette, Mn.\nC. V. Gagnon, Mlu Julia Potosky,\nMiu Emily Himson, Mri. t. McKinnon, Mrs. John Phllbert of Vincouvtr, Miu Mollie Irving, Miu\nQueenie German, Mn. T. E. Livii-\nseur, Mn. L. A. Glllii, Mrs. I.\nBourke, Mrs, A. McLtin, Mn, O.\nM. Btnwtll, Mn. Douglu F. Cum-\nmini, Mn. Robert Rititertr, Mn. F.\nB. Whltuldt, Mn. Wtlttr Duckworth, Mn. Harold Dixon, Mn,\nDaniel MacDougall, Mn. Derek Tye,\nMrs. Archie Hardy. Mri. Errol L,\nWright,- Min Jeanette Ltrigtr, Mrs.\nR. R. Brown, Miu Ethel English,\nMn. Ltrigtr, Mlu Albertlne Choquette, Mn. N. O. Choquttte, Mrs.\nM. Deagon, Mn,' J. F. Gamble, Mri.\nRonald Waters, Mlu Oloria Vingo,\nMn. D. D. McLean, Mn. A. W.\nRash, Mn. Q. F, Stevens, Mn. Colin\nMacDougall, Mra. Kirby Grenfcll,\nMn. M. J. Vintveld, Mn. P. J.\nRahal, Mn. Henri Gagnon, Mn. A,\nW. Stubbs. Miu Helen Stubbs, Mn.'\nQ, P. Simpson, Mn.- A. T. Noxon,\nMlu Lucy Poirier. Mrs. Maude Sewell, Mn.'P. E. Poulln, Mrs. T. McMil-\nltn, Mrs. R. Byrnes, Mrs. George\nFleury, Miss Miry Potosky, Mill\nMiry McDonald and Miu Sybil\nMcLtin.\nt Mn. K. Scatchard md ion\nClirence htvt returned from Vincouvtr ind wire in Nelion tn routi\nto Ntw Denver. Thty wtrt jutiti\nOf Mr. md Mri. H. Cecil Gnz.elle\nwhilt In town. Miu Shirliy Scitch-\ntrd, who accompanied them to the\nCtut, remiined In Vancouver md\nwill enter U. B. C. for tht Fall\ncount.\nt Mr. and Mn. Louis Sinter,\nHoover Street, had u guests Mr.\ntnd Mn. Archie Lensrducci ind\ndiughter Frances of Trail.\nt Mri. J. M. Gordon, Jostphtne\nStreet, left yesterday for Winnlpei\nhaving been called through the deal\nof her mother, Mn. J. Robinson.\nt Mlu Frances Chapman, Sixth\nStreet, Fiirvlew, hu returned from\n\u2022 motor trip to Revelstoke.\nt Mr. and Mn. J. Dolman ol\nNakusp visited\" town Tuesday.\nt Tuesday afternoon Mri. R. A\nPeebles md Mrs. Harry D. Harrison wtrt co-hostesses it t smart\nlei in compliment to Mill Phyllis\nGray, whose msrriage takes place in\nNelson Saturday. Littlt Mary Lou\nHarrison presented the bride-elect\nwith I handsome chenelle \u2022 spread\nwhich-wis cleverly concealed in a\ncarriage decorated in Summer flowers. Thli gift wu froi\nAn address wu rotd\nGibbs. Mn. Griy presided it the\ndainty tta table which was cen\ntered by i rote bowl of red md pink\nrose buds on in oblong shaped mirror. Auistlng M servlteurs were\nMn. Charles Kelman, Mrs. Vincent\nFink, Mn. G. K. Burns, Mn. R. M.\nMcNaughton md Mn. Alfred McD.\nNoxon. Guests alio included Mrs.\nJ. E. Bedford, Mn. N. R. Freemsn,\nMn. O. W. Steele, Miss Miry Bell,\nMlsi Miisie Grimes, Mn. L. L.\nBoomer, Mrs. Gordon Allin, Miss\nJun Boomer, Mrs. Foster Hilliard,\nMn. N. Murphy, Mn. Htrry Burns,\nMri. Donild McLeod, Mrs. E. Strom-\nsteid, Mn. W. O. Rose, Mn. G. S.\nGodfrey, Mn. Oeorgt Johnstone,\nMn. Arthur Likei, Mn. Wilfrid\nLtiihley. Mn. C. H. Himllton, Mn\nAlex Carrie, Miss Elizabeth Carrie,\nMrs. A. N. Winlaw, Mrs. Stuan\nRussell, Miss Jeannette Winlaw, Mrs\nF. A. Jewitt Mn. W. E. Wasson,\nMn. Jimei Cherrington, Mn. R. D.\nBirnei, Mn. J. R. McLennan, Mrs\nJ. B. Stark, Mrs. H. H. Pitts, Mrs. L.\nM. Virner, Mn. Margaret Bennett\nind Min Alison Younger.\nt Mn. Willttm Enton of Castlegar Is viiiting her parents, Mr. md\nMri. W. Byru, Hill Mines Road,\nassisting In the prepirition of the\nwedding of her i-rfer, Miss Betty\nByres ind Frits Roie Stturdiy\nifternoon.       \u25a0 ,\nt George Brown of Nikuip visited town yeittrdty.\nt John Bereiu, plonter of Ymir,\nshopped in town yesterdsy.\ni Mr. ind Mn. F. Matnfrold ol\nEdmonton have returned after i\nbrief visit in Nelson.\nt Mrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite ol\nWillow Point shopped in town\nyesterday.\nt Robert E. Wright, pioneer\nresident of Nelson, now of New\nWestminster, wu in the city yesterday. He wis tccompmied by his\nson-ln-lsw md daughter, Mr. md\nMn. Wilfred Whiteley md Mr. md\nMn. Erlckson, ill of Sheep Creek.\nMr. Wright wu foqnerly C. P. R.\nAuditor with heidquirten in\nNelion.\nt Mn. A. Pirhln of * Creston\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\nt A cruise to Gray Creek Tuesdiy ifternoon wai enjoyed by members of the B. C. Medicil convention\nmembers md their wives, guests of\nthe locil members. They were driven to Frisers Lending where they\nboarded the \"Nasookin\". In waiting were \u25a0 capable committee of\nthe Hospital Auxiliary who served\ndelicious tei ind coffee under 'ho\nsupervision of Miss Glidys Ewing,\nwho wis assisted by Mrs. H. M.\nWhlmster, Mrs. R. B. Morris. Mrs.\nM. J. Stallwood. Miss Carmen Horton, Mrs. Charles Brett Mrs, T. Germin, Mrs. N. C. Stibbs, Mn. W. Jiffs,\nby. Mrs. M.\nidtd\nMrs. W. M. Wright ind Mrs. Alex\nTulloch. Invited to preside win\nMrs. N. E. Morrison md Mlu Vera\nB. Eidt ind Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, who\ninvited the visitors to tea. A huge\nbowl pt pastel colored larkspur md\nclarkia composed the attractive\ncentre for the tti table.\nt m. Ztttoni was in tht city from\nNew Denver, Tuesday.\nt The hime of Mrs. A. T. Richards, Observitory Street, wu tht\ngathering plice of members of St.\nPtul'i Excelsior Club Mondiy eve-\nning, whtn i miscellaneous shower\nwis given tn honor Cf Miss Mtrion\nMclnnes,    when   marriage   takes\n6lice In Nelson tht litter pirt cf\nit month. When   tht gifts wert\nSresented to the bride-elect In \u25a0 gay\necorated  wagon,   Mn. Richards\nplayed i wedding mirch. Another\npreienation ot i gift wu mide by\nMlu Grict Liugl'\nwho il leaving s!\nMlu Grict Laughton to Mn. Tough\nwho ll leaving shortly to mike hit\nhome in Rossland. Guesti Included\nMlU Nellie Mct.tn.tt, Mlu Tina\nMcKtmlt, Mlu Ivy Spit\", Mn. E.\nBoyts, Mrs. W. Hirkness, Mn. L. W.\nBales, Mrs. J. H- Argyle, Mlu Con-\nnit Gtngt, Mn. Nettle Johnson,\nMn, Vernon Young, Mn. T. Ttmplt,\nMn. N- G. Elder, Mrs. J. Rich, Mrs.\nWalgren, Mn. Arthur Olivtr, Miss\nEileen Mackenzie, Mrs. W. Graham,\nmd Mrs. W. Anderson.\nt J. J. Campbell cf Willow Point\nipent yesterday In town.\nt Mn. L. Smtor, Hoovtr Street\nleaves today for Vincouvtr, where\nhtr husband ii % pttltnt in t Vmcouver hospital.\nt Mr. md Mn. Robtrt Vyse,\nFairview, havt u guest thejr\ndaughter, Mn. Robert Knowler\nind her two children- ot Fruitvale.\nt Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nye ot\nSlocan City visited Nelson Tuesday.\nt Tuesday Mn. H. H. Pitts, Mrs.\nW. O. Rose, ind Miss Vera B. Eidt,\nwere co-hostesses it an Informal\nmorning coffee gathtring at the\nhome of Mn. Pitts, Nelson Avenue,\nFairview, when those assisting n-\nduded Mrs. H. McGregor of Penticton tnd Mri. W. J. McLean, who\npoured, Mn. John C. Waldie, Miss\nHelen Holmes, Miu Ethel Smith,\nMlu Nancy Dunn, Miss Betty John-\nton, who served. Among thoit calling included Mn. Brydon-Jack,\nMn. D. E. H. Cleveland. Mn. Strong\nMrs. S. A. Mcfertrldgo, Mn. M.\nW. Thomas, Mn. Grafton, Mn.\nGreenberg, Mn. MicDennot of\nVmcouver, Mn. White ot Penticton,\nMn. W. J. Knox of Kelowna, Mrs.\nOsborne Morris of Vernon, Mrs. O.\nW. Green of Cranbrook, Mn. Burnett ot Greenwood, Mrs. H. L. Bur-\nria of Kamloops, Mrs. A. Francis of New Denver, Mn. F. P,\nSparks. Mrs. W. Laishley at Nelson ind others.\nt G. Hindle of Ymir visited Nelson Tuesdiy.\nt Dr. md Mn. H. W. Wookiy of\n:tdi.el\nthe\nToronto, who sttended the Me\nConvtntion left Tuesday for\nEut\nt Mr. tnd Mrs. D- Aurtlli ind\nMrs. Vito Romano, who have been\nholidaying in Vancouver, have returned.\nt Mrs. E. S. Hoirt of Trail visited the City.\nt T. W. Ledlnghtm, former rti-\nlilent of Nelson, now of Vtncouver,\nit In town.\nt Mrs. W. Byres of Trill Is in\nthe City for the wedding ot her\nsister-in-law, Mils Betty Byres, and\nFritz Rose Saturday.\nt Mri. E. Y. Brake, Baker Street,\nhu as guest her daughter, Mn.\nPercy Coulter of Moose Jaw.\nt Miu Harriet Alexander, 221\nMill Street, plans to leave this\nmorning for Winnipeg to tike her\nsecond year in home economics it\n-University of Manitobe.\nVANCOUVER TO OPPOSE\nTELFORD PROPOSALS\nAT REVELSTOKE MEET\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 11 (CP). \u00ab\u2022\nThe Vancouver City Council today\ngive orders to its delegates to the\nUnion of British Columbia Municipalities meeting at Revelstoke next\nweek, to oppose the national reform\nproposals Mayor Lyle Telford plans\nto make to the convention.\nThe Mayor's proposals include advocation of an immediate reorganization of Canada's entire financial\nstructure. I nationally-managed\nlystem of flnince ,of 'bookkeeping',\nmobilization at all natural md industrial resources. A large unemployed cooperative md expenditure\nof fundi for youth centre! at freely\nas tor war purposes.\nRalston Praises\nCanadian Morale\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 11 (CP) -\nHon. J. L. Rilston, Miniiter of Ni-\ntionil Defence, praised Canadians\ntoday for the way they hive ficed\nand met the burdens of a country it\nwir, ind Issued i new appeal for\nsupport of Canada's second wir lorn\nby way of i wirning to Hitler.\n\"I hive heird a few gromi ind\ngrumbles,\" Ihe Minister said in i\nluncheon iddress here, \"but I think\nthe way In which the people havo\nshown they cm 'take It' is nothing\nshort of in Inspiration\u2014I cill it\nmorale.\"\nCol. Ralston said thit 10 months\nigo the forecast wu for in expenil-\nture of $1,000,000 i diy by Canida.\nFor the present fiscal yeir the fore-\ncist Is for more than double thst\namount.\n''The size of the Job hu Increiscd\nsnd the time for doing it his shortened since the swift turn of events\nlist Spring,\" he said.\nNew Wall Paint .\nDestroys Germs\nU.S. Society Hears\nBy HOWARD W. SLAKSSHE\nAssoclitid Prut Selenet Editor\nDETROIT, Stpt 11 (AP)-Four\nntw chemicil miracles\u2014will paint\nwhich kills discut germs, t terrific\nexplosive, electrical weaving, tnd\ntht fint step in synthetic quintal\nfrom oil wells\u2014were innounced to\nthe American Chemicil Society today.\nTht intiitntlc paints, mide with\n1 little chlorine or lodint, were reported by S. S. Epstein ud Foster\nD. Snell, Brooklyn, NX\nThen pilnts kill typhoid ins\nsome other germs fcr nine wltki\n\u2022nd retain somi killing powir\ntftir ilx ytw an tht will. Thiy\nkill molds tnd yiuts. Uses in\nchildren's rooms, hospltili tnd\ndimp placet like breweries where\nmolds and yeiiti spoil bur.\nThe' wploilvt ll t combinition\not Butadiene, tht stuff with which\nGermany makti synthetic rubber,\ntnd Ozone. It wu discovered it\nSyracuse University, md ll io sensitive its power hu not been measured.\nTht electrical weaving machine\nmikes the velvet typi of fibrics.\nVelvet li ordinarily made by sewing in threads ind cutting off their\nends like mown gnu. In thi ntw\nwiy electrostatic forces nick up\nihort threads, ind ihoot thtm like\narrows to stand on their heads,\ntheir tips sticking into i ntw type\nof resin costing the but fabric.\nThe quinine diicovery, vital to\nwir because tht United States' supply  comes from  the  Netherlands\n'     .in.,     ii     \u25a0aor nvi\niniMiitniminmm\nOwl\nVYlaqk,\nTTlaJuL\n1940 VERSION\nThis new dress is tha miracle of figure flattering\ndesign. Centra bodies fulness. 24 gore in remarkable skirt Black and navy.\nVt lleevas for Fall. Two\nbelts.\n(f) finHnlbnt ||\nPhone 200. Baker St.\n<\u25a0\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666 H4\u00bb\u00abii ate nee i itt\nEut Indies, wu reported by Dr.\nH. B. Hit! md H. C. Huffman.\nPurdue University, Out of natural\ngll ipd cthtr oil will gases they\nmike i molecule known to bt\nthe ustntlil thing In tht synthetic\nquinines, itebrin ind plismochen.\nTYPHOON KILLS 22\nTOKYO, Stpt 11 (AP)-A ty\nphoon which iwept today ovtr Ky\nuihu, Southwestern island of Japan\nproper, killed it lent 22 persons,\ndestroyed SO houses, disrupted com'\nmunicatlons tnd damaged crops.\nOn, JhiL Qjjl\nTHURSDAY, SEPT. 12,1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:27\u20140 Canida\n7:30\u2014Tout tnd Coffee Club\n(CKLN)\n8:00-BBC Newt\n8:30\u2014Al GUbert't' Trio\n8:45-Thi Newi\n9:00\u2014Ktybotrd Capers (CKLN)\n9:15\u2014Ift Danet Time (OON)\n9:80\u2014Pelhim   Richardson's  Orchestra.\n10:00-Our Half Hour\n10:30\u2014U.S. Marine Bind\n10:45\u2014Tht Ntwi\n11:00\u2014Kooteniy  Lake  General\nHospital Prognmmt (CKLN)\n11:30\u2014U. B. C. Music Hour\n12:00-Club Matinet\nAFTERNOON\n12:4o-Muilctl Melodies (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014Tht Ntwi\nl:H-Ttlk\n1:30\u2014Closing Stocks\n1:45-BBC Ntwi\n2:15\u2014Guilllo Girl, Ttnor\n2:30\u2014Talent Parade\n2:45\u2014Organ Melodies\n3:00\u2014London Calling\n3:15\u2014Novelty Program\n3:30\u2014Recital Stritl\n3:45\u2014Toplcilitiu.\n3:57-Newi Bulletin\n4:00\u2014English News Letters to\nCtiiaa\n4:15-NBC Conctrt Orchestra\n4:30-Plino Recital\n5:00-Slngin' b Swlngln\"\n5:30\u2014Concert in Minltturt\n5:45\u2014Pacific Paradise (CKLN)\nEVENING\n.:oO-Ttlk\n8:30\u2014Summer Symphony Coneert\n7:00-The Newi\n7:15\u2014\"Britain   Speaks,\" J. B.\nPrlutly\n7:30-BBC Ntwi Reel\n8:00-Stig Pirty\n8:30\u2014Bmd Concert\n9:00\u2014Jick Avison's Conctrt Orch.\n9:30\u2014Coniervitlon In B.C.\n9:45\u2014Hawiiiin Trio\n10:00\u2014Jan Girber'i Orch.\n10:15\u2014Thi Newi\n10:30\u2014Diryl Hirper'i Oreh.\n10:45\u2014The BUtmore Boys' Orch.\nIl:00-God Save Tht King\nCJAT^TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Church In thi Wlldwood\n7:15-Brukfut Club\n8:30\u2014News Magazine ot tht Air\nll:30-On With tht Dince\nAFTERNOON\n13:\u00bb0-Sunny Side Up\n12:45-Tropicil Moods\n3:30-On tbt Mall\n4:00\u2014Riilto Radio Rtvut\n4:15\u2014Song Btvltw\n4:30\u2014Organ Rtvtrlu\n4:45\u2014Trolse Mandollen.\nEVENING\n8:00\u2014from A to Z In Novelty\n8:15\u2014Conctrt Music\n8:15\u2014Your Mseatro\n10:00-The Old Rtfrlint\n12:00-Sign Off\nOthir Ptrlodi-CBC  Programm-i\n-\"-\n\"_B\n.?nil\nMILK\nAT ITS BEST\nRaw and Pasteurized\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nPHONI 118\ntttttit*Mtlmttmlltmtitttistit\\\nNew Fall Blouses\nAll ihidu, styles tnd sires. Price\n$2.50 t0 $2.95\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nPh. 1047    Opp. Ctpttol Theitrt\nA RIAL BUY\n\u00ab CU. FT. Q. t\nREFRIGERATOR\n9200.00\nNelson Electric Co.\n174 Btkir It Phent 280\nH. H. Sutherland\n345 Biker It\nWhen Sutherland repairs yo_.\nwatch, It's on time, all tha time\nNBW SHIPMENT OT\nSPORT JACKETS\ntt tht\nFashion First Shop\n434 Biker St Ntlton, B.C.\nThey're So Convenient\nmh k\\mkw\n PAGE SIX\nEstablished April 22. 11103.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n' Published every morning except Sundiy by\ntht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Biker Street Nelson British Columbil.\nMEMBER Of THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1940.\nHOLDING HITLER'S LEG\n\"If he can't skin the hog, he can hold a leg while some-\none else skins it.\"\nThis homely expression, one of thousands attributed\nto Abraham Lincoln, quaintly portrays how the small man,\nthe helper, may count in an enterprise, small or large.\nGeneral Grant quoted it at least twice in his \"Memoirs.\" On one occasion, at President Lincoln's request, he\nhad explained a certain contemplated operation, one phase\nof which- was an attack by a small force for the purpose of\nkeeping the enemy in his position while the main force\nprepared and delivered a crushing blow elsewhere. \"I ffee,\"\nsaid Lincoln. \"If he can't skin the hog himself, he-can hold\na leg while someone else skins it!\"\n, At another time some dignitary reported to Grant\nthe President using this expression about something that\ncontributed to an important objective, though itself not\ndoing the major part.\nAnd doesn't this apply most aptly to the individual\nCanadian with the savings account, in this operation of\nfinding the money for ships, tanks, planes, guns?\nWe can't do the whole thing, but we can help hold\nHitler's leg while the Grand Alliance of British Peoples\nand the Small Nations give his anatomy the necessary\nthumping.\nCollectively, we can take and hold a death grip on\nthe Hitlerian leg, and hang on, the way the British Bulldog\nis going to hang on\u2014until a badly beaten marauder is\npenned up where he belongs.\nEvery -$1000 bond, every $500 bond, every $100 bond\nmeans a new grip in a strategic place.\nAnd these will mount into the millions, to carry the\ntoar to the enemy.\nOttawa reports that the large sources of lending capital, the banks, the insurance companies, the industries with\na reserve laid by, the organizations with sinking funds or\nother inveBtable money on hand, are subscribing as expected to the Second War Loan.\nBut the millions of Canadians with savings accounts\nare not showing up in the expected numbers, to lend their\nbit to the Government. Too many are figuring that their bit\nisn't needed.\nEvery Canadian who has money laid up, every Canadian in fact who can finance the buying of a bond, should\nconsider it his or her duty to participate in this War Loan,\nand help swell the total.\nThe larger the proportion of the $300,000,000 required\nthat the every day Canadians find, the better will be the\ncountry's financial position for meeting unforeseen demands of the immediate future.\nLOOK ING BACKWARD...\n10 YEARS  AGO\nFrom Daily News of Sept. 12, 1030\nMiss Agnes Webster of Trail Central School, writing on \"The History\nof Trail\", won the Trail Rotary\nscholar-hip of $29 for entrance class\nessays... Mrs. B. Bridge has moved\nto Nelson from Appledale.,.. Early\nmorning fire,at the Ideal Grocery\ncaused damage amounting to $9500.\n,.. Preliminary construction work\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"A widow has one advantage. (She\ncm brag about her dead husband;\nbut when you brag about a live one\nother women can see he's got you\nfooled.\"\nof the new West Kootenay Power\nk Light Compmy plant at Corra\nLinn is under way. . . . Archie\nCorrie of Fernie is now Manager\nof the Zenith Cafe in Cranbrook.\n. . . D. McNaughton of Nelson, now\nteaching at Rossland, has received\nword from Victoria that he has\npassed his first year in Arts and\nScience.\n25  YEARS  AGO\nFrom Daily News of Sept. 12, 1915\nA. B. Godfrey, Manager of the\nB.C. Telephone Company for Nelson and district, says the company\nwill spend upward of $15,000 improving the Nelson system this\nyear.... Roselia Murray wai elected Lady Commander of the Rossland Maccabees with Sarah Ellis\nLady Lieutenant Commander. . . .\nGladstone Wood has been placed in\ncharge of the Presbyterian Mission\nat Procter. . . . J. M. Turnbull,\nC. M. k S. Mining Engineer at\nTrail, has been appointed Professor\nof Mining at the new University\nof B.C. at Vancouver.\n40 YEAR8  AGO\nFrom Daily Tribune of Sept. 12,1900\nW. A. .McLean of Nelson, who\nhas been in charge of the Nelson\nrock crushing plant, has been appointed Superintendent of -Roads\nand Trails In the Nelson riding. .. .\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. William Paris,\nCarbonate Street a son .'. . D.\nRutherford was elected Secretary\nof the Nelson Lacrosse Club. . . .\nJ. W. Stewart, Balfour extension\ncontractor, has received the contract for construction of a 100-mile\nsection of the Canadian Northern\nRailroad\nFormer Minister\nBrought to France\nVICHY, France, Sept. 11 (API-\nGeorges Mandell, former Interior\nMinister, who gave himself up to\nFrench authorities at Meknes, Mor-\nrocco, has been brought to France\nand placed under guard at the Chateau de Charzeron near Chatel-\n, Guyon in the \"war blame\" cases, it\nwas announced today.\nAlso h;ld at the Chateau are former Premiers Paul Reynaud and\n, Edouard Daladier and Gen. Game-\nlin. former Commander-in-Chief.\nThe arrest of Aviation Officers\nMendes France and Philippe de\nRothschild, a son of a member of\nthe Rothschild banking family, also\nwas announced. They were said to\n, have been taken into custody in\nMorocco on charges of desertion.\nMandel was one of the prominent\nFrenchmen who went to Africa, in\nJune, An article in. the newspaper\nLe Temps charged he attempted\nto seize power in Morocco to continue the war. He gave himself up\nwhen a charge he was plotting\nagainst the French State was lodged\nagainst him in a military court.\nThe outcome of these charges has\nnot been disclosed.\nThe Petain Government, which\nhas already barred foreigners and\nnaturalized Frenchmen from practising the dental, medical and pharmaceutical professions, added the\nlegal profession to the list today.\nBritain Now Stronger\nin Mediterranean\nLONDON, Sept. 11 (CP).-A. V.\nAlexander, First Lord of the Admiralty, told the London Rotary\nClub today \"we are stronger in the\nMediterranean than we were 10 days\nago.\"\nHe also made a reference to press\nreports of \"mass concentrations by\nthe enemy making his dispositions\nfor entrance into Ibis country\" and\ndeclared:\n\"I can promise that If the enemy\ncomes across In surface craft they\nare going to get something to go\non with.      ,\nWILKINS ESCAPED FROM\nPARIS ON BICYCLE\nHALIFAX, Sept. 11 (CP)-Slr\nHubert Wilkins, in Halifax today\nfor a brief visit, described how he\nescaped from Paris just before the\nNazis marched into the city. \"I was\nable to purchase t boy's bicycle,\nwhich I pushed ind rode to Touri,\n200 miles away. Then I jumped i\ntroop train md got as far as Nantes,\nwhere I was given t lift by an\nR.A.F. plane tt London.\"\nEARL IS PRISONER\nLONDON. Sept. 11 (CP Cable)-\nEdward Earl Due of Halifax, N.S.,\nis included in a list of British prisoners in Germiny, the Ministry of\nInformation announced today.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B, C-THUR8DAY MORNINO, SEPT. 1.2. 1)40\u2014\nGiving Hun the Other Barrel\n\u2014Cartoon by Boothe, Vincouvtr Province.\n>smfmt4eM*M*MtMtMtmtos4st,\n?? Questions? J\nANSWERS\nOpin to any  reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not\nbl  published.\nL. E., Sheep Creek\u2014Where would\none write for informitlon on re-\ncuring employment in construe-\ntion work in the plinti md factories that are being built in vir-\nious parts of the country? The\none I have in mind Is the chemlcil\nplant under construation new\nCalgary.\nWrite Dominion Employment Bureau, Nelson or Department of Industrial Relations, Consolidated\nMining b Smelting Company of\nCanada, Ltd, Trail.\nH. B\u201e Nelson\u2014How can I remove\npaint from a window pane?\nHot vinegar will usually remove\npaint from glass.\nM. M, Nelson\u2014Could you tell n.e\nwhat date the first group of signallers left Nelson for Kingston\nlist yeir?\nOctober 2, 1939.\nCould you tell me how to pack\nand wrap a parcel for a soldier\noverseas, and what I could put in\nsuch a parcel?\nParcel! for overseas must be securely wrapped and tied, preferably in a tin box, or cardboard box\nreinforced with corrugited cardboard. Write the address plainly\nboth inside and outside of parrel.\nFor soldiers overseas there is a\nspecial postal rate of 12 cents per\npound up to 11 pounds. Socks,\nsweaters, fruit cake and candy ire\nimong the most acceptable gifts\nto send. Cigarettes miy be ordered\nfrom i dealer and sent direct.\nfu4   sys-tion  edifrtorcaswe\nB. S\u201e Trail\u2014Would you give me the\nnimes of hospitals In B. C. which\ntrain nurses?\nThe following hospitals have student training classes: St. Eugene\nHospital, Cranbrook; Royal Inland,\nKamloops; Royal Columbian, New\nWestminster; Prince Rupert General, Prince Rupert; Vancouver General and St. Paul's, Vancouver; provincial Jubilee \u25a0 and St. Joseph's,\nVictoria,\nG. C, Beaverdell\u2014Could you give\nme the horoscope for August 15,\n1940? I wis born 1898.\nThe next year, for August 15\nbirthday children, will be critical.\nSudden and unexpected events sre\nlikely to cause difficulties. They\nshould make no changes. Elders\nwill befriend them, however. Persons born on this date are clever\nand original, patient, persevering\nand ambitious; dignified, reserved\nand shrewd. Lucky day is Thursday\nand color green.\nActive in\nKootenay Life , ,\nNo. 18\nCHARLES R0MMER9AKL\n. .. joined the C. M. b S. Company\nduring the building of No. 2 generator room at Tadanac. That was\naway back in 1916. Handling large\nsize orders in transportation was\nright in his line and he tied up\nwith the chain gang and has been a\nmember of that department ever\nsince.\nApart from his job his main Interest centres around hockey. He\nhas been associated with the Smoke\nEater Executive for 13 years. \u2014\nCominco Photo.\nS$S\u00ab\u00abS\u00bb\u00ab$$\u00abS\u00bb$W\u00ab\u00abKS$*\nJut youMsdfr\nONE-MINUTE TE8T\n1. Does sound travel faster or\nslower when the weather is warm?\n2. What part of a measuring cup\nis an ounce of liquid?\n3. Which state has the most irrigated land?\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nIn case of a broken engagement\nshortly before a wedding, the wedding gifts should be returned to\nthe donors.\nTODAY'8  HOROSCOPE\nThe prospects for those who have\nbirthdays today are excellent for\nthe next year. Much gain through a\nsecret business matter is promised\nthem, and also happy romance.\nBorn today a child will possess\ngreat moral courage. He or sito\nwill also be far-sighted, very Intellectual and mentally brilliant. A\nremarkable career is foreseen.\nONE-MINUTE TEST  ANSWERS\n1. Faster.\n2. One-eighth of a cup or two\ntablespoons.\n3. California.\nMELBOURNE, (CP). - Most\npicturesque group of volunteers to\nenlist in the Australian Expeditionary Force is an entire Salvation Army Band. The leader offered\nhis 25 players as a body and they\nwere all accepted.\n\"You lit comfortably there tnd write the postcards, dear, and\nI'll go and prepare myself for licking tht stamps.\" Humorist.\nr-\nWHAT THE PRESS j\n[      IS SAYING      !\n; __i\nSTILL NO MIRACLE\nThe difference between promise\nmd performance was well illustrated this week in the efforts of\nthe Mayor of Vancouver to fulfill\nmd oft-repeated boast that he knew\nnot one but several men who could\niay down gasoline in Vancouver at\na fraction of the cost of the present\ntrading price. When the test came,\nthe Mayor was not successful; nor\nhad he been, would the price have\nbeen much different from what it is\nat present.\nSession after session of the Legislature has been regaled with assertions intended to show lhat'gasoline\ncould be -secured for sale in British\nColumbia at prices as low as 0 cents\na gallon, or less than one-quarter\nof the announced trading level.\nWell, this week the barriers were\nremoved. His Worship was invited\nto go ahead, and assured that a licence to import and to sell would\nbe forthcoming from the Province.\nNot only was there no gasoline, but\nit was announced that if any had\nbeen secured it would have cost 23\ncents a gallon wholesale, laid down\nin Vancouver.\nOn that basis, what the Mayor of\nVancouver did succeed In proving\nIs that not one, but several men who\n\u2022had assured him that gasoline could\nbe obtained for 6 cents a gallon\nwere quite badly mistaken; and that\nthe lafd-down price under his own\narrangements would have been 2\ncents a gallon higher than the present wholesale price fixed by Governmental order at Vancouver. It is\nanother instance of the fact that\nany one may think of a miracle,\nbut it is a different matter lo produce one. No doubt His Worship\nwill explain whra the special session of the Legislature opens Wednesday; or could it be that the days\nof miracles are over?\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nCARRY  OUT COMMISSION'S\nIDEAS\nWere common sense exercised and\nthe report of the Rowell-Sirois\nCommission put into practice, the\nax would have to be applied to the\nwhole financial and fiscal mechanisms of the various administrations,\nthroughout the country. And it\nWould be all for the best! Since the\nfar off days of Confederation a\nconsiderable amount of water has\nrun down the St. Lawrence and a\ngreat deal of money has run out of\nthe public treasury. Our debts md\nour expenditures have made a\nsnow ball. Our taxes have formed\nlike the pyramids of the Pharaohs.\nFour or five administrations, Federal, municipal, school corporation,\nreligious, superimposed one on top\nof the other, runs us into debt and\ntax us as much as possible. It was\nthe race to the treasury, a race\nwhich continued up to the present\nday, when it was perceived that\nthe devils of taxpayers had their\nskin stuck to their ribs and thai\nlarge cities, like Montreal, were\nforced into bankruptcy or else\nguardimship.\nIt is possible that there is no\nother country in the world where\nthere is so much disorder and confusion.\nBriefly, the Rowell-Sirois Report\nIs embued, with a spirit of order\nand of economy which. In difficult\ntimes, should guide sll Canadians.\nFor years we have been accumulating expenses, waste, debts and\ntaxes without thinking that we\nwere ruining capital by preventing\nit from producing, and labor, by\ndrying up the sources of employment, and ill this wu accomplished with a complete anarchy, with\na deplorable lack of cooperation-.\nwith unheard of ignorance of economic and social realiUes. Our legislator! have only thought-of small\ntime politics and of sacrosanct patronage.\u2014Le Jour, Montreal.\nMen of the noblest disposition!\nthink themselves happy when other\npeople share their happiness with\nthem.\u2014Duncan.\nCONTRACT....\nCOtTNTTNO A 8Qtn_-_.lt\nFEW SITUATIONS In tht game\nire prettier than those in which a\npltyer counti up tht tuccetsion\not tricks to ascertain whether\nthtrt It t potttble tqueeze In tht\nhand. If he sees that tht running\nof a bunch of them will oblige one\nopponent to diicard until ht cannot adequately guard mort thin\nont other suit, tht Job of guarding\nthe remilnlng two Is put up to the\npartner et that defender. Then lt\nIt time to squeeze tht partner,\nwho may have to unguard ont of\nhit two suits while trying to pro \u2022\ntect the other.\nt) A K\nt\u00bbAKQ854\n4>AK\u00ab\nA*8\n4QST--\nf None\n\u2666 10\nJ.Q J 10 \u00bb\ntt\nS.\n\u2666 So\nt\u00bb72\nU      U]    \u2666J987B\n\u25a0 I       .   ir   i   - a\n4.K.32\n\u2666 J108\nf J109SV\n\u2666 Q432\n-..**\u25a0 I\n(Dealer:   North.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\nNorth      East    South West\nIf         Pau      39 3A\n<\u2666         Pass      8f 6 +\n7f         Put      Pan 7 A\n7 NT      Pitt      Put 8 A\nThtt bidding: ictually occurred\nIn tht recent national championship tournament it Asbury Park,\nN. J. Following tht'tournament\ndirector's ruling on West's Impossible bid, tht declarer selected the\noption of playing the hand it 7-No\nBy Shepard Barclc\nTrumpi with i club lead barred,\nHt could hivt midt tht contract-\nbut failed through lick of i-ffl-\ncient knowledge of squee.e playi.\nAH thtt wu necessary wu for\nNorth to run flnt two ipadei ind1\nsix hearts. Those tight tricks\nwould hivt pared Eut down to\nfive cards. Being marked by\nWest's bidding u tht only ona\nable to guard diamonds, ht would\nhivt hid to hold four of then, so\ncould keep only one club.\nThen the declarer could htvt\ncashed tht diamond A, K md Q.\nTht lut of these, on tht eleventh\ntrick, would htvt ruined Welti\nHt would havt been pared thtn to\ntwo clubs to protect tbt club t,\nand tbt spade Q to guard tht J.\nIf on the third diamond ho totted\ntht spade, the spade J ind club\nA would hivt completed tht\ngrind slam; If ht threw wt of\nhit two clubs, tht club A would\nhivt dropped tht Q ind J, ind\ntht club 8 would hivt been tht\nlut trick.\n\u2666 Q98\n9J988\n\u2666 J 10\nA J 10 7\n\u2666 J73-\n9W\n\u2666 Q652\n+ KQ9?\n9Q782\n\u2666 AK83\n+ 654\n(Dialer:  North. Neither side\nvulnerable.)\nWhat ll the sound bidding ot\nthla dealt\nChurchill Warns\nGermany Prepares\nto Invade Britain\nHundreds of Barges Move Into Position on the\nFrench and Norwegian Coasts; All\nAsked to Prepare\nLONDON, Sept. n(CP).-Prime\nMinister Churchill broadcast a\nwarning to this fortress nation today that Hitler's long projected attempt at Invasion appears to be at\nhand md that the next week may\nbe the most critical in Britain's history.\nThe Germans already are moving\nself-propelled barges and convoy, of\nlarger snips from Northern ports to\nthe whole French coast, he said,\nslipping along from port to port under the protection of German coastal\nbatteries. The attack, he warned,\nmay be made on England, Scotland\nor even Ireland, or on all three,\nwith forces concentrated as far\nNorth as Norway.\nBut Britain is ready, he said,\npraising the Air Force, the Navy\nand the Army.\n\"This is the time for everyone to\nstand, to hold firm, as they are\ndoing,\" Mr. Churchill said.\nThen, as he spoke ot \"these cruel,\nwanton, indiscriminate bombings of\nLondon,\" as a \"part of Hitler's invasion plan,\" the Prime Minister\ncontinued:\n\"This wicked man, the embodiment of many forms of .hatred, this\nmonstrous product of former wrongs\nmd shame, is now resolved to try\nto break our famous island race by\na process of indiscriminate slaughter and destruction.\n\"What he has done is to kindle a\nfire in British hearts, here and all\nover the world, which'will glow\nafter all traces of the conflagrations\nhe has caused in London have been\nremoved.\n\"He has lighted a fire which will\nburn with a steady and consuming\nflame until the last vestiges of Nat i\ntyranny have been burnt out of\nEurope, and until the Old World\nand the New can join hands to rebuild the temples of man's freedom\nand man's honors upon foundations\nwhich will not \"soon or easily be\noverthrown.\"\nMr. Churchill compared Hitler's\nanticipated attack with the threats\nof Napoleon, the Spanish Armada\nand other historic adventures aimed\nagainst the British Isles.\n\"No one should blind himself to\nthe fact that this German invasion\nis being planned with all the German craft and method characteristic\nof them,\" he declared.\nThe next week, he said, \"must be\nregarded as a very important one\nfor us In our history,\"\n\"Every mm and woman must\nprepare to do his duty, whatever\nit may be with special pride and\ncare,\" he said.\n\"Our fleet is very powerful, . . .\nour shores are well fortified and\nwell manned, md behind these lines\nwe have a better equipped and far\nstronger army than we have ever\nhad before.\"\nThe Prime Minister described to\nthe Empire the Nazi air attacks and\ndifferentiated between attacks oil\nmilitary objectives and the \"bar\nbarous\" assaults upon civilians.\n\"So far, they have failed con\nsplcuously,\" he said of German attempts to obtain mastery of the air\nin daylight raids. The Royal Air\nForce, he said, is stronger than at\nthe start while the Nazi force was\nbeing worn down by Hitler's attempts.\nTo attempt to invade this country\nwithout gaining mastery of the air,\nhe said, would be. \"a very hazardous undertaking.\"\nNevertheless Germany is preparing for such an invasion. In addition\nto the barges and vessels moving\ntoward the English Channel under\nprotection of Nazi batteries on the\nFrench shore,..there were some preparations being made to carry an\ninvading force from Norwegian\nharbors,\" he said.\nHe said Britain could not be sure\nwhen an order for invasi-n would\nbe given but \"it may be launched\nat any time now on England, Scotland, Ireland or on all three.1' .\nIf it is to be tried at all, he said,\nthe invasion must, it seems, come\nsoon because of the weather, and\nbecause, too, of the constant bombing of the German vessels by the\nR. A. F. Everyone of the Isles must\nprepare to do his duty In the face\nof this invasion, he said. The defence forces have been augmented\nby the 1,500,000 men of the home\nguard who will fight every inch of\nthe way in every street.\nThe \"Indiscriminate\" bombings of\nthe Nazi air force were part of a\nplan to cow the British people.\n\"Little does he (Hitler) know the\nspirit of the English people,\" he declared, people whose ancestors started parliamentary government.\nWhat Hitler has done has been\nto \"kindle a fire in British hearts\nall over the world which will last\nlong after the fires he has set in\nLondon.\"\nThese fires will last until Hitler's\ngovernment is \"burnt out\" of Europe.\nThe world that is still free \"marvels at the spirit of the citizenry\nof London in the midst of bombing\nwhose severity may not be foreseen.\nThe spirit of the people of London, he went on, is a fine message\nto the men on the British ships al\nsea.\nThe victory is to be won \"not only\nfor our own time but for the time\nto come.\"\nU.S. Ports Hove More\nFreight During War\nOTTAWA, Sept. 11 (CP).-De.-\npile the tremendous increase in\ntraffic since the start of the war\nand interruptions resulting from\nthe conflict, the, flow of commercial\ntraffic at American ports has. continued without congestion or delay,\nG. C, Randall of New York said\ntoday in an address prepared for\ndelivery before the Tejegraph and\nTelephone section of the Association of American Railroads in annual convention here.\nIt had not been necessary to\nplace any control over movement\ninto any port except in one instance, and then only for a tem-\nfiorary period, \"and some of the\nirger ports like New York, Philadelphia nd Baltimore had a volume\nof traffic is much is 100 per c.pt\nIn excess ot list year.\"\nWAR - 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy The Canadian Press\nSept. 12, 1915\u2014Greeks and Bulgarians engaged in sanguinary frontier fighting in minor Balkan campaign, Germans won victory over\nRussian forces it Muezagolt In\nEastern \"-\"-\u2022\nNot Much Chance for\nU. S. War Millionaires\nNEW YORK, Sept. 11 (AP). -\nWall Street seems to think the\nchance of an Amtrican becoming a\nwar millionaire is about one in\n5,000,000 under present United\nStates tax laws.\nIndividual income taxes, Wall\nStrecters figure, will plough under\nmuch of the major part of what\nremains of the War millionaire crop\nafter the treasury has taken its cut\nof -corporate profits front levies\nenacted or proposed.\nA lucky market plunger with\n$1,000,000 profit gained in a sudden\nrise in speculative values would\nhave to hand over about $800,000 of\nhis winnings to Federal and State\ncollectors, tax experts calculated.\nBusiness profits in the United\nStates have increased since the war\nbegan. A compilation by the National City Bank of New York\nihows profits of 304 minuficturing\nconcerns in the first half of 19+0\nwert up 60 per cent over earnings\nfor the comparable 1939 period.\nMulti-billion dollar defence expenditures, plus British war purchases, may bring further expansion\nIn earnings.\nYet stock prices on that average\nended the first year of the wir at\nlower levels thin when the conflict started.\nSell-Governed\nGheftoes for Jews\nLiving in Polam\nBERLIN, Stpt. 11 (AP). - Th\n'Jewish problem\" in Poland hi\nbeen turned over to self-govenit\nghettoes, it Is disclosed in one <\nDie few script of informitlon pu\nhitted to come out of thit neti\nSahara.\n(Government-General Poland, thi\npirt of the Germin-occupied com\ntry which hai not been inntW\noutright to tht Reich, Is closed .1\nfoieign reporters.\nBut tbt \"correspondence of mt;\nSenBtic iction,\" a ntwly creited pi\nginT of lnfluentitl Jew-baltln\ncircfei in the territory, mnounci\nthitPfor the Germsns, the seen\ningljl unsolvable Jewish prob-H\nIn Ptlihd wu- \u25a0 question of orgq\nnltttlpn only.\"\nOf two suggestion!, for creatlo:\nof a separate Jewish state, or set\nting up of ghtttoes, the.\"correj\npondence\" seyi, \"the litter wt\nchosen because it proved more prac\ntical ind can be carried out mo!\nquickly.\"\nAn earlier German plm for tl\ntablishing a separate Jewish stil\nwith Lublin as a centre appirenll\nhis been abandoned, but neverthi\nless thousands of Jews who lived i\nGermany have been transferred I\nthe Lublin region.\nEmphasizing the speed of tt\n\"AryanizattonTl of Germin-held P<\nland, the paper nys \"distrlcts'.wit\na mixed Polish-Jewish populate\nhave disappeared.\"\nCompulsory labor Is the ghetl\ndenizen's first duty. \"Work wll\nthe spade\" must be done by I\nmile Jews for two yeirs. Each con\npulsory labor squid'll supervise\nby a Jew, who is re-.>onsible tt\nexecution of the work assigned b\nGermans.\nThe Pole his been \"freed froi\nunwilling participation\" in polHM\nGovernor-General Hans Frank a\nplained recently. His sole interes\nnow is weaving together tgiin n\n\u2022griculturt tnd economic structur\nsmashed by wir.\nBusiness is on three distinct lev\nels; German, Polish ud Jewuti\nwith each store clearly designate:\n13 to nationality.\n3 Liners Added\nlo Canadian Mav]\nOTTAWA, Sept 11 (CP). \u2014ThN\nconverted liners will be iddedl\ntht Royal Canadian Navy this Ft\nas auxiliary cruisers, beginnln\nwith the Prince Robert which hi\nbeen delivered from the yards, in\nfollowed in October by the Print\nDavid tnd the North Star, Muni\ntions Minister C. D. Howt an\nnounced today.\nThese vessels, altered tnd irmt\nto meet requirements of the Navn\nwill form the largest units in Cll\nIda's navil service.\nConversion of these well-know\npsssenger linen wu carried out i\nshipyards on the Pacific md A\nUntie coasts tnd on tht St. Lis.\nrence River.\n\"They ire splendid Nivy boiti\nMr. Howe uid. \"Thty hive gre\nengine power, md in fist ii\nuseful,\"\nThe whole shipbuilding progrt\nrepresents a cost of about $63,00.\n000, the Minister said. All shipyiri\nwere occupied and would be unt\nthe end of 1941 with present order\nThe program was well sheid <\nschedule.\nOf the 10 Corvettes (small ant:\nsubmarine craft) ordered by tl\nBritish Admiralty, eight had bet\nlaunched and of the 54 ordered b\nthe Canadian Government it leil\n18 would be in service before th\nend of 1940.\nThe smaller boit program, Indus'\ning. fast motor boats for airplin\nsilvage work, tenders md lighter\nwis progressing sstisfactorily, M\nHowe said.\nParliament Houses\nThreatened as Nazil\nConcentrate Raidj\nNEW YORK, 8ept 11 (CP). -\n\"Well-Informed\" German lourott\nIn Berlin thrtittmd todiy thtt\n10,000 plint-loidi of Germir\nbombs will bt sent to thi Londor\n\u2022ret In tht ntxt (ew days.\nLoull Lochntr, Thi Assoclitei\nPrtss correspondent In Berlin\nquoted these sources u MyllN\nthit 2500 planes will mike foul\ntrips dally between French tuppl]\nbises ind the British capital.\nA Nul spokesman told Lochntl\nthit tht planes wllPstart elthti\nlate todiy or tomorrow. Hi iddtt\nthit thiy irt buid. In Germans\nbut will fly to thi French tow\ntaking off for London.\nTht Nul spokesman, chirglnf\nthit the Reichstag building Ir\nBerlin wu hit by British bombi\nlist night, Indicated thi House!\nor Parliament In London woulc\nbe in objective of tht bombers.\nMtiii;,\u00ab_-iifi#_M--*-.i\nsiMnirlililiifc.\n_\n.  \u25a0\u25a0   i\n________________\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls-\nIdeal for\nWhipping\nMrs. H. D. S. write.\"from\nVictoria: \"I have used P\u00ab\ncific Milk in my cooking foi\nmany years. I have a large\nfamily to cook for and I find\nit both healthful and economical. I think it unsur\npassed, \u25a0 and for whipplnl\nideal.\"\nPacific Millc\nIrradiated ind Vacuum Packed\niiilliliillillliilililiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nlUUi\n________\u25a0\n i ,,,,,\u201e,,.._.,,.\u00bb,\nIJIWIIIIUIIIIII       iiiu. l.iun  .1 ii.w W . m UJiJ.ll\ni\nBBBBmmmmmnM^\nmmmmmfm.\nT ^El\nSPORTS\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. Cz-THUMDAY MORNINO, SEPT, 12, U4o\u2014\nud Ward Slides Into Third Round\nof Tourney With Under-Par Goll\n-,        By BILL BONI\nAssociated Press Sports Writer\n, MAMARONEOK, N. Y, Stpt 11\n[AP). - Mtrvln (Bud) Wird,\nIrtltid Statu imltiur chimplon\nkm tpoktni, With,, todiy time\nIhrough with 80 holes of three-\njnder-par golf thit tent him Into\nIhi third round of tht 1940 national tournament.\nWird knocktd out 54-year-old El-\nRnOwlei of Rye, N. Y, In the\nit round of match pity by 6 and\ntnd then whipped Freddy Haas\nNew Orleans, t former Walker\n\u25a0ttr  and  Canadian   amateur\nnpion, 3 and 2.\ntht 16 players who survived\n^i \"sud-tn death\", program,\nn are from the Far West\u2014Ward\n4 Pat Abbot, of Pasadena, Calif.,\n6ner-up In 1938; five are from the\niddle West \u2014 Including former\nlampion Johnny Fisclier of Cln-\nnnati, and nine ire from the East,\nlong them two other ex-tltle-\nWers, Willie Turneit (1938) and\n\u00abs Swoetser (1922).\nThere was a surprise of sorts In\nt first-round defeat of Art Doer-\nIfr-Chioago lad who carried Ward\nto 26 holes In the 1939 semi-finals\u2014\nby 20-year-old Otto Greintr of Baltimore. Greiner wan by 4 and 3,\ntnd proved bis victory was no fluke\nby beating Jack Hoerntr ot Glen-\nview, 111., two up in tht afternoon.\nFor sheer fight tht performances of Frank Strtfaci of Brooklyn undoubtedly took the prize.\nOne down through the 13th In tht\nmorning to Doug Ford of Tucka-\nhot, N. Y\u201e New York State junior\nchampion, Frankie squared the\nmatch on the 16th and won it on the\n18th with a par.\nHli lecond tlmt around, Bob\nCochran ot St. Louis hid him\nthree  down  with three to  go\nfut Cochran lost the 18th to a\ntrafaci birdie four, stumbled to a\nfit six md s bid five on the\n17th md 18th, md lost out on\nthe 19th when the Brooklyn lad\nlaid him a stymie.\nThe Easterners who qualified tor\ntomorrow's round of 16 with StrafacI\nand Greiner Include Medalist Dick\nChapman;  Metropolitan  Champion\nJohnny Burke; Sweetser, Turnesa,\nDuff McCullough of Phllsdelphla,\nRay Billows of Poughkeepsie and\nHarry Haverstick of Swarthmore.\nKail Hagen Ranks\nfardon as Most\nAccurate Golfer\nYORK (CP). - Looking\n, ovtr t quarter-century ol\nr_ Walter Hagen singles out Her-\nr Vardon of England as tht molt\nicurate player he evtr saw.\nHagen'i career covin most of\nle yean since golf hai been tn\nittrhatlonal sport. He has seen all\nI the great shooters, md beaten\nloet ol them at one time or other.\n\"Vardon should top my all-star\nIt,\" Hagen said. \"He hid marve-\nUI accuracy with both woods snd\nins. If he Could have putted, few\nMid ever have beaten him.\n\"You hive to think about the\nhers,\" he uld. \"There've been\nBt tint players.\nTor his length, ind iccurtcy,\n0, Sammy Snead must be chosen\nthe driver. Gosh, he hits 'em\nmile, doesn't he? And Bob Jones\nr the brassie. He was a steady,\ni the greatest of the amateurs.\n) one has ever been able to\nBdlt a spoon any better than\nml Runyan. He's short off the\n1, you know, tnd has to hit a\nl of those spoons.\n\"No one could make a tnashle\nhave like Vardon. I like Jock\nitchlnson ind Chick Evans among\nI older playen for the short irons,\nck was ^particularly good with the\ntie and Chick with the niblick,\nck Met. md Jimmy Demaret ot\nyoungsters are just about aa\n_ON, Texas,  (CP)-Bobby\nillace, 16-year-old high ichool\ndent struck out 16 bitten and\nowed three hits in pitching his\nlior leigue team to an 11-2 vic-\nl b In Bobby's blood. He'i\nitphtw of Gus Mincuso, veteran\nijor league catcher now with the\nklyn Dodgers, and Frank Man\nl catching fc ljie Western letgut.' Carl Hubbell.\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nFred Perry won the United\nStates single tennii championship\nfor the third time md became the\nfirst invader to gain permanent\npossession of the trophy four years\nigo today it Forest Hills,-1 N. Y.\nThe blickhaired Briton \u2014 now a\nprofessional \u2014 defeated California's Don Budge 2-6, 6-2, 8-6, 1-6,\n10-8.\nNelson Loses In\nLawn Bowls, Kaslo\nMemben of the C.P.R. Lewn\nBowling Club made an unsuccessful\ninvasion of Kaslo Sunday, returning home with but one victory In\nfour matches.\nFour Kaslo rinks are expected\nto play in Nelson this weekend.\nResults follow:\nRichards   (N)   .... 000 000 103 0- 4\nShandler (K)  Ill 413 010 0-1?\nMrs. J. T. Sindel, J. Graham, J.\nP. Morgan and Mrs. A. T. Richards;\nJ. Giegerich, A. B. Robertson, F\nS. Rouleau and Miss Chandler.\nTemple (N)  010 000 020 1- 4\nExter (K)  101 111 201 0\u2014 8\nJ. Simmons. A. T. Richards, A. G.\nHarvey and Mrs. T. A. Temple; Miss\nWatts, G. H. Wellington, W. L.\nBillings and A. S. Exter.\nMorgan (N)  032 010 000 0- 6\nExter (K)  100 101 231 2-11\nJ. Graham, J. Simmons. A. G.\nHarvey and J. P. Morgan; J. Giegerich, MacDougall. G. H. Wellington and A. S. Exter.\nTemple (N)  101 103 110 0-8\nPapworth (K)  030 010 001 1-6\nJ. Simmons. A. T. Richards, A.\nG. Harvey and Mra. T. A. Temple;\nMiss Clarey, Dunn, F. S. Rouleau\nand Mrs. Papworth.\nRichards 000 222 110 3\u20147\nChandler  212 011 002 0-9\nMrs. J. T. Sindel, J. Graham, J..\nP. Morgan and Mra. A. T. Richards;\nJ. Giegerich, McDougall, A. S. Exter\nand Miss Chandler.\nCINCINNATI. (CP). - Johnny\nHutchings, rookie Cincinnati pitcher, has a screwball that compares\nfavorably with that thrown by King\nlixed Doubles and Junior Tennis\nTourneys at Trail Later in Month\nPB.C, Sept. 11-The West\nTennis Associstion will\nt Kootenay junior tennis\nir mixed doubles tourna-\nre later this month, it has\nnltely announced,\nday, September 22. a mlx-\ns tournament will be play-\nfCoil and Condenser\nTESTERS\nShorty's Repair Shop\n1 Baker St Nelson, B. C.\nAL MORSE\nICLUB AND GYMNASIUM\nSpokane, Wash.\n[Spokane's Sports Headquarters\nBoxen Train Daily\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nADMISSION FREE\ned on the Tadmac courti, and is\nopen to members of all West Kooteniy Tennis clubs, affiliated with\nthe West Kootenay Association, or\nplayers resident In the district.\nEach team will play a round-robin\ns lies In Its own section, thus assuring several matches for each\nentry. Individual cups will be presented to the winning team, which\nwill also hold for a year a trophy\nrecently posted by Mrs. A. M. Chesser of Trail.\nThe Association will sponsor a\nJunior tournament for West Koi-\ntenay players on the Trail and Tadanac courts Sept. 28. The competition will be open to players under\n18 years of age January 1.1940, and\nentries will close at noon Sept. 27.\nCONSOtATION EVENTS\nBoys' and girls' singles will ba\nplayed, with a consolation flight\nscheduled in each event Silver cups\nwill be presented to the winners of\nprimary events who hold challenge\ncups for one year.\nIn both cases the tournaments wl'l\nget under way at 8:30 a.m., and in\ncase of bad weather or wet courts,\nwill be postponed a week.\nA. M. Chesser, Association Secretary, is handling entries for the\nJunior tournament, and C. L.\nKnowles, Secretary of the Tadanlc\nTennis Club, Is taking entries for\nthe mixed doubles competition.\nBURNETTS\nLONDON DRY\nGIN\n|l2or *1.20. 25oi $2.30- 40oi $3.40\nMUST THAT MUCH BITTER'\n111\nDean Returns to Action to Whip\nDodgers; Tigers Regain League Lead\nas Yankees Split Two With Indians\n|y Thi Cimdlin Prsu\nDhay Dun rtturrlid to tht Nt-\ntlonal Leigue yttttrdty tnd whip-\nBid tht second  pint  Brooklyn\nodgers 3-2 ifter  Chicago  Cubs\ntook tht opener 8-5.\nHt rilled almost exclusively on\na sldeirm motion thit biff led tht\nBrooks ind showed good control\nexcept for t temporary lapse In\nthi ilxth, when he lnusd two of\nhis four walks.\nBucky Wtlfert and Ptul Derrin-\nJim Poole (23), of the Ntw York professional\nfootball Giants, makes a leap for Merlyn Condi I,\n(30), ot the Eastern College All-Stars In the annual\nclarity football gimt which inaugurated the Eastern states 1940 football season at the Polo Grounds,\nNew York City. The All-Stars led, 6-0, at the half.\nCondlt is from Carnegie Tech.\ni advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by tht Government of British Columbia.\nReiser Figures\nin Next Year's\nDodgers'Plans\nPHI-ADELPHIA-Looklng ahead\nto next year, Leo Durocher hu\nmade up hit mind on one matter.\nHe hai decided on steady employment in a Dodger uniform for Pete\nReiser, the daisy rookie who 'wis\nbrought up to Ebbeti field from\nthe Brooklyn dub's E-mira firrn\nteam in July.\n\"I'vt got anothtr greet prospect\nin ttiat boy,\" laid Durocher today.\n\"He can hit md he cm field. And\nwhat m arm he hail When wt go\nInto training next'Spring Pete will\nbe my right fielder. He is fitted for\nthat position, and if he comes along\nas I think he will a lot of my problems will be solved. I know now\nthat I've got to keej> him. Look\nhow well he's filling in at third\nbase for Cookie Lavagetto. He'i a\ngood ball player. Young fellowi\nwith the ability he hai are scarce.\n\"If the plans I have to make him\nmy right fielder go astray ht his\nto be reckoned with u an extra\nInfielder. He has proved he can\nplay in the infield. What haa made\nhis work around third base more\nremarkable is the fact he never\ncovered that position until I put\nhim there to give Lavagetto a\nshort rest. He had covered shortstop and second base before, but\nnever third base.\"\nReiser is' a product of the Municipal League In St. Louis, the organization which has turned out\nmany more successful big leaguers.\nHe Joined the Dodgers in the Spring\nof 1939 as a nineteen-year-old\nrookie. He wai a shortstop ind\nsecond baJeman. He was termed\nout to Elmira, moved tlong to\nMontreal and then back to'Bhnira.\nHALTED BY ARM INJURY\nThe youngeter was converted into\nan outfielder, but his progress wis\nimpeded when he injured the elbow of his throwing arm. A' year\nago last June a successful operation\non his arm wss performed and he\nresumed his career ai an outfielder.\nFilling In tt third bate for Lavagetto, the rookie, who will not become of voting age until next St.\nPatrick's day, has made onlookers\nmarvel at his prowess as \u25a0 thrower.\nChicago\nBrooklyn   \u201e\t\nPasseau and Collins; Wyatt Tam-\nulis, Head, Carleton md Phelps.\nSecond\nChicago      3   6   1\nBrooklyn     _.   3   6   1\nJ. Dean and Todd; Grissom, Carleton and Franks.\nCincinnati     8 10   0\nBoston     0_4  1\nWalters and Lombardi; Salvo,\nPiechota and Berres, Broskle.\nSecond\nCincinnati       3  8  0\nBoston        1   6   4\nDerringer and Wilson; Strlnce-\nvich and Berres.\nSt. Louis     7 17   2\nNew York    4   7   1\nShoun and Owen; Melton, Dean,\nJoiner and Danning.\nSecond\nSt Louis     3 10  0\nNew York    2  9   0\nMcGee, Lanier and Padgett,\nOwen; Gumbert and O'Dea,\nPittsburgh   9 12   1\nPhiladelphia       3 11   3\nBrown and Lopes; Peanon, Beck\nand Atwood.^\nAMERICAN\nNew York    3  5  0\nCleveland    1   5   2\nBonham and Dickey; Feller, Dob-\nson and Hemiley.\nSecond\nNew York    3   5   3\nCleveland  .,    5  6   1\n(Called end 6th-darkness)\nRuffing, Sundra, Hadtey and R0-\nsar: Smith md Pytlak.\nBoston    7 14   8\nDetroit  11 18  0\nWilson, Fleming, Hevlng, Gale-\nhouse, Johnson and Foxx; Hutchinson, Qorslca, McKaln and Sulivan.\nPhiladelphia      0   5   2\nSt Louil   3  5  0\nCaster and Wagner; Auker and\nSwift.\nWashington    4 11   0\nChicago  :    7 16   3\nLeonard md Firrell; Rlgney md\nTresh.\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 8-6, Minneapolis 11-7,\nKansas City 1, St. Paul 2.   .\nBants. Prefer Fists\nSo Trail Rossland\nBoxla Series Is Off\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 11-Owlng to\nfrequent free-for-all fights Indulged\ntn by the Rossland and Trail Bantam lacrosse teams, the Inter-city\nplayoffs  have  betn   discontinued.\nMen's Singles Play\non at C. S. Courts\nAt the Civil Service tennis courts\nt men's singles tournament is in\nTogreu tor a cup presented by\n.larold Hinitt The competition is\nexpected to be completed within i\nweek.\nGames yet unplayed In the first\nround are Bob Schwengeri vi R. R.\nHorner, Cameron vt McQueen,*Barwis vi Simpson. Harold Hinitt vi\nJ. R. Fleming, Maurice Major vi\nDr. Mturer, Dr. Jennejohn vi Dewdney, and Sua Algar vi Peel.\n \u25a0   \"  .  \u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0'\",\u25a0 .,\nAMERICAN\nW L Pet Bhd.\nDetroit    78 58 .574 -\nCleveland    77 H -70     Vt\nNew York    76 58 .567    1\nBoiton  .....   78 63 23\/1    5\nChicago    71 64 IBM    0%\nWuhiniton     58 78 .426 20\nSt. Louis    58 81 .409 22>A\nPhiladelphia     50 79 .388 24'.\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati    86 47 .647 -\nBrooklyn    78 57 J78    9\nPittsburgh     70 61 _S4 15\nSL Loull   68 62 \u201e23 16%\nNew York     86 67 .496 20\nChieigo    88 70 .485 21 tt\nBoston     56 79. .415 31\nPhiladelphia     43 90 .323 43\nTIGERS ON TOP AGAIN\nDetroit Tigera' pennant aspirations got a lift yesterday when they\ntumed In a victory over the Red\nSox while the Indians md Yankees,\ntheir Chief rivals, prevented each\nother from advancing by splitting a\ntwin bill. *\nSo the four first division clubs of\nthe American League go Into the\nsecond act of then- crucial, series\nschedule today. Boston moves from\nDetroit to Cleveland, md the Yanks\nfrom Cleveland to Detroit The Red\nSox fell dangerously bick out of\ncontention through yesterday's loss,\nbut If they cm take care of the\nIndians, they might come back\nwhile the Yanks and Tigers meet\nIn a three-game cut-throat series.\nThe schedule for the next three\ndays in the majors follow:\nAMERICAN\nNew York at Detroit.\nBoston at Cleveland.\nPhiladelphia at Chicago.\nWashington at St Louis.\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati at New York.\nPittsburgh at Brooklyn.\nChicago at Philadelphia.\nSt. Louis at Boston.\nThe starting pitchers for Detroit\nagainst New York will probably be\nSchoolboy Row., who haa periodically shown flashes of Detroit's pennant-winning days of '34 md '35,\nTommy Bridget md Buck Newsom.\nIn thit order. Southpiw Harold\nNewhouser might be given m assignment, although tne Yankees\ndfovc him oft the hill last tlmt\nthey faced hlrfi. the New Yorkers\nwill counter with Mtrlui Russo, At\nley Donald, tnd Spurgeon Chandler, who have bten really hot since\nthe turn got rolling. Newsom did\nnot get into the list series when the\nDetroit club lost three straight, and\nwill not make an appearance until\nSaturday, the rioting diy of the\nseries. He worked 12 innings sgainst\nBoston Tuesday in a game that saw\nthe Sox pull Out a win In the thirteenth.\nREDS NEAR PENNANT\nThe American Leigue rice hit\nnow mathematically narrowed\ndown to five teams, while In the\nNational your pencil can give four\nteima to overhtul the mighty Reds,\nwho ire now nine games in front\nof runnerup Brooklyn md 20 ahead\nof fifth-place New York. A Red victory and i Giant lou cm push the\nGlints out along with Chicago, Boiton md Philadelphia.\nTht Rtdi ire so fir out In front\nIn their league thit my cemblnt-\ntlan of victories md Brooklyn defeat* thit adds up to 11 will clinch\ntheir lecond straight pennant.\nThis ihould happen by September 22, er t week before tht clou\nef thi lesion.\nGonzaga Bulldogs\nto Have a Great\nLine Combination\nSPOKANE, Wath. - Take 1554\npqunda of brawn arid muscle, distribute evenly among seven ambitious young men, and youhave It\u2014\nGonzaga University's 1940 football\nline, with a weight average of 222\npounds per mm.\nFrom item to stern, the Bulldog\nforwards tre highly reminiscent\nof the famous Fordham Seven\nBlocks of Granite of t ftw years\ntgo, md are expected by the experts to prove Juit u efficient\nPlaying the end positions will be\nNick Dtvlscourt 207, lightest man\nin the line, snd handsome Dick\nJordan, 216, senior from Long\nBeach, Calif. Bill Tessendorf md\nbig Jim Bryant resemble two Gibraltar, in the tackle holes. Bryant,\n248, It a quiet-spoken Texan, and\nTessendorf, 219, is tn ex-all star\nChicago prep school lineman.\nGerald (Buck) Baker, 246, and\ntruculent 210-pound Larry Connors\nwill team at the guard positions md\nare expected to be two of the Northwest's outstanding linemen. Playing\ntht pivot position will be suave\nTom Lee, Seattle junior.\nThe huge Bulldog forward wall\nwill have Its first chance to display\nbulk September 21, when Gonzaga\nfaces College of Idaho at night Tn\nSpokane in the season's opener. After that game the Conusant take\nto the rotd for teven weeki, playing in order St. Mary's in San Francisco, Idaho in Moscow, Portland\nin Portland, Montana In Butte, Willamette in Longview, Washington\nfnd Arizona State Teachers in\nempe, Arizona.\nThe team returns home Nov. 16 to\nplay University of Detroit in the\nhomecoming contest and the following week faces Washington State\nin the annual Cougar-Bulldog battle, Nov. 23.\noperated effectively, and Cin\ncinnati Reds uid their 1940 farewells to Boaton Bees by sweeping\na double header 8-0 and 3-1. It wu\nthe 18th victory tor each of the\nReds' act moundsmen.      i\nTht big bats of St Loull Cardinals spelled them a double victory\nover Ntw York Giants today 7-4\nand 3-2. ,\nPittsburgh combined t walk md\nfive straight hid to turn what had\nbeen a tight game into a decisive\n9-3 victory over the Phillies.\nNtw York Yankees wtded\nthrough a fruit barrage for a 3-1\nvictory over Pitcher Bob Feller, but\nCleveland Indians Jumped on old\nCharlie Ruffing In the six-Inning\nafterpiece of a rain-dampened doubleheader for a 5-3-triumph to even\nthe day'i American League pennant\nhostilities.   ,\nTht standoff allowed tht winning Detroit Tigers to regain tht\nleague leadership from tht Indians, who now trill by one-half\ngame, left the Bomberi t full\nconteit bthlnd.\nErnie Bonham, 27-year-old rookie\nwho hu been with the Yankees\nonly five weeki, exhibited masterful control to outpltch Feller in\nthe opener. Bonham was touched\nfor one run and five hits in tht first\nthree Innings but settle- down tnd\ndidn't allow another blow. Ht killed\noff the last 29 Indians In t row to\nturn In his fifth straight victory.\nSYDNEY. N.8.W., (CP) .-Arthur\n(Bluev) Wilkinson, world's speedway champion In 1938 md Australian Tut captain on miny occasions, hu met death In in automobile accident. He Wu one of the\nplonetrt In speedway racing In Brit1\nOne of the big disappointments\nin the National League is Kirby\nHIgbe, tht Phillies' rl.ht-hihder\nwho started out to burn up the circuit and could hive brought $100,-\n000 in mid'Miy. Baseball mm now\ncall him t throwtr-aays he hunt\nyet learned how to pitch.\nNew York'i revenue from parl-\nmutuel belting on horse rices hu\ngone over the $2,000,000 mirk. Thi\n{2,055,735 total tor thi tint 60 days\nof tht 1940 racing season wu reached with receipt of $206,393 from tht\nAqueduct\" trick.\nCubs Even Trail\nBant Ball Series\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept 11\u2014The Cub-\nevened the Trail bantam baseball\nurlu one-all Wednesday afternoon\nby defeating Giants 12-7, avenging\na 7-2 beating taken at the hands of\nthe Giants lut Wednesday. The\nthird and final game for the league\nchampionship will be played at\nButler Park next Wednesday.\nThe Cubs spurted into a seven-\nrun lead in the opening inning and\nadding one more In the second and\nthree in the fourth, stood out in\nfront 11-2 at the opening of the\nfifth. Then Melatlni, discarding a\nmuch worse for wear catcher's\nglove and borrowing the Cubs' mitt,\nleft a score ot four errors behind\nhim, and settled down to business,\nholding the Cubs down to on:\nmore run in the sixth.\nWith their own score standing\nthree runs at the beginning of the\nseventh, the Giants put on a scoring spree, registering six tallies,\ntwo men coming across the plate\nwhen Jack Little, pinch hitting for\nZecco, connected for a three-bagger.\nZInio also hit a triple, and Turik\nand Palex doubled.\nMcKinnon. pitching for the Cubi,\nstruck out 12, and walked two, and\nCavallin struck out'll md walked\nfive. Magliani, taking over from\nCavallin in the seventh retired three\nin three straight strikeouts.\nLineups follow:\nGianti \u2014 Pitex cf, Zlnlo lb. De-\npaolis If, Magliani 3b, Cavallin p,\nMelatlni c, Turik is, Secco rf, Nutlnl\n2b, md J. Little.\nCubs \u2014 V. Bilesky 2b, Desantis\nIf, Desblsio If, McKinnon p. McLaughlin ss, Moro cf, Tysoh c, Spain\nlb, Dala Lana Jb, Pasqualotto rf and\nClark rf\t\nDraper Rink Wins\nJtck Draper'i rink took two victories in matches of the C. P. R.\nLawn Bowling Club's triples competition Wednesday, night. Hi defeated E. L. Wright'i ilde 10-8 after*\novercoming in 8-1 deficit ctrriid\nInto the ninth end, tnd then took\nJ. P. Morgan'i rink handily 17-2. In\nmother mitch Chartai Sewell defeated W. Wood 11-8.     \u201e\nResults follow:\nDraper  000 010 002 332\u201410\nWright HI 102 110 000- 8\nMrs. A. T. Richards, Jack Draper\nand W. T. Ctlbick; Mri. T. A. Tern-\npit, J. Graham, and E. L. Wright.\nDraper  \u201e 342 HI U_ 001-17\nMorgan  000 000 000 110- 2\nMri. T. A. Templi. Mn. A. T.\nRichards md Jack Draper; J. Graham, A. T. Richard! md J. P. Morgan.\nSewell  202 100 002 04-11\nWood   010 Oil HI 20- 8\nN. B. Bradley, J. Simmon! and\nCharlei Sewell: J. P. Morgan, A.\nG. Harvey md W. Wood.\nBonham hasn't given i wilk to tht\nlut 160 bitten who faced him.\nFeller, trying for hli 25th triumph,\nalio allowed only five hits but they\nwire at untimely ipoti. Ht left the\ngame for a pinch batter In the eighth\nwilh his ninth setback of this turbulent ealpptlgn,\nLemons, ripe tomatoes, ont banana and one bottle were thrown by\nthe fans, who made Art Fletcher,\nIndian-riding Yankee coach, thtir\nparticular target Mmager Jot McCarthy emerged from tht dugout\nto protest to the umpires and also\nducked several lemons. So did a\ncouple of other Yanks. Tht umpires\nwent Into t huddle tnd decided the\nfruit was nont of their business.\nDetroit Tigers levelled an 18-\nhlt attick to defeit Boston Red\nSox 11-7 tnd vaulted, back Into\nflnt pilot In tht American\nLeague pennant not.\nCoupled with tht split it Cleveland between the Indians and New\nYork Yankees, thi victory left the\nTigers a halt-game md four percentage points up on the Tribesmen\nand 1 full game and seven percentage points on the champion Yankees, who open a three-game serlei\nhere tomorrow.\nThe Tiger blows Included Hank\nGreenberg's 31st homer of the season. Facing Detroit'! attack wu\nCharley Gehringer, who rapped out\ntwo doubles and; three singles In six\ntrips to the pitta tnd drove in four\nruns.\nPhiladelphia's effort to pull up\nfrom tht American Letgue cellar\nwas foiled 3-0 by the Browns, who\nwidened their margin over the A'a\nto two games.\nChicago's White Sox, beaten five\nstraight times by Washington's\nDutch Leonard, turned loose a 16-\nhlt attack against tht knuckle ball\nhurltr to defeat the Senators 7-4.\nJoe Kuhel led the wiy with hli\n23rd home run, t triple snd two\nsingles.\n\u25a0 t\u00bbA_l SEVEN\nFreeman Furniture\nCompsny\nTht House ot Fumiiurt Stylu\nEigli Hook    Nelion    Phoni 115\nTrad* in Your\nOLD FURNITURE\nAt Part Payment on Your\nNEW FURNITURE\n1,250,000 Eggs\nKokanee Redlish\nCollected So Far\nApproximately half of tht 1940\nKokanee redfish egg collection!\nhave been completed for the Provincial Fish Hatchery it Nelson\nfrom Meadow Creek In tht Lardeau.\nSinct September 4, when the collection! started, 1,243,000 egg! havo\nbeen stripped from parent fish at\nMeadow Creek, where tht run It\ndescribed as exceedingly good. Officials expect no difficulty in\nreaching their goal ot 2,500,000 eggs.\nBud Thompson is in charge of tha\nstripping operations at Meadow\nCreek, and Game Warden Mas\nEwart hu been transporting tha\neggs to Nelson. Some of tht egg!\nwill be distributed in tht eyed\nstage, which will be reached toward middle of October. Tht rest\not the collection will be sent out aa\ntry, although shipping lists haven't\nyet been completed, Hatchery Su\u00ab\nperintendent E. Hunter states.\nDr. H. H. MacKenzie Wins Doctors'\nGolf In Playoff Wilh (oasl Doctor\nWinning \u25a0 three-bolt playoff by I\nthe slight margin of one itroke with\nDr. F. W. Brydon-Jick of Vancouver, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie of Nelson\nbecame the 1940 holder of the Mead-\nJohnson Challenge Cup Wednesday afternoon in a B.C. Medical\nAssociation golf tournament at the\nNelson Golf & Country Club. Thirty-\nthree doctors competed.\nDr. MacKenzie-toured 18 holes In\nmedal play in 42 and 40 strokes for\na net score of 64, two under par,\nwhile Dr. Brydon-Jack posted\nscores of 38 and 41, but his handicap\nwas three strokes lower than the\nNelson golfer. A replica of the cup\nwill be retained by Dr. MacKenzie.\nOther winners with scoru follpw:\nLow gross\u2014Dr. L Appleby of\nVancouver, 78.\nLow net score (Cout doctor)\u2014Dr.\nBrydon-Jack, 69. ,\nLow net score (Interior doctor)\u2014\nDr. Wilfrid Laishley of Nelson, 68.\nHidden hole event\u2014Dr. W. Wilson\nof Vancouver.\nLongest drive\u2014Dr. Crawford of\nTrail. 275 yards. Approaching competition\u2014Dr. S. A. McFetrldge of\nVancouver.\nLow net score (under 16 handicap)\u2014Dr. George Seldon . of Vancouver, 69.\nLow net score (over 16 handicap)\n\u2014Dr. E. H. Funk of Vmcouver, 68\nVisitors' prize\u2014Dr. George Anderson of Spokane, 89.\nOldest player\u2014Dr. Lockhart, 72\nscore.\nHiddtn-holt (b) competition\u2014Dr.\nF. H. Green of Cranbrook.\nHighest gross\u2014Dr. M. Schwartz\nof Cranbrook, 131 strokes.\nA special prize wu awarded to\nDr. Funk of Vmcouver for the\nhardest drive to the course. He\ndrove 88 miles, ill Ihe wiy from\nNakusp to Nelson, In low gear when\nhis gear shift Jammed.\nNet scores, with handicaps subtracted from the gross number of\nstrokes, follow: Dr. George Anderson 85-14\u201489; Dr. Arnold Francis\n\u00a3\" 18-71; Dr. H. H. Boucher 100-20\n\u201480; Dr; W. W. Simpion 97-18\u201478;\nDr. W. H. White 98-24-15; Dr. J.\nH. MicDermot 90-16\u201474; Dr. Wallace Wilson 93-15\u201478; Dr. S. A. Mc\nFetridge 89-14\u201475; Dr. F. W. Bry-\ndon-Jsck 79-14-84; Dr. Wilfrid\nLaishley 98-25\u201468; Dr. Murray Blair\n95-24-71; Dr. D. J. M. Crawford\n85-18-67;Dr. H. H. Bllburn 98-18\u2014\n80; Dr. George Seldon 81-12\u20141\nDr. H. H. Plmcht 100-24\u201476; Dr.\nJ. C. Poole 117-24-83; Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie 82-18-64; Dr. E. H.\nFunk 2.-4-66; Dr. W. T. Lock-\nhtrt 92.20\u201472; Dr. T. McPherson\n96-22-74; Dr. F. H. Green 102-22\u2014\n80; Dr. J. W. Lennox 106-22-84; Dr.\nE. H. Clevelmd 103-24-79; Dr. J.\nM. Burnett 120-28-82; Dr. W. N.\nToone 93-14\u201479; Dr. L. Appleby\n78-12-88; Dr. M. Schwirtz 151-28-\n123; Dr. R. Glugow 106-28\u201474; Dr.\nC. Hinklnion 134-28-106; Dr. M.\nA. Cody 126-24-102; Dr. H. R. Christie 93-24-^9; Dr. F. Wilion 114-28\n-86.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n(Assocllttd Prtu Sports Writer)\nNEW YORK, Sept 11 (AP).-Ty\nCobb's reason for not buying a\nminor league club (in which he was\nvery much interested) wu beciuse\nit would Interfere with his golf. . ..\nJick Dempsey Is hiving tough luck\nwith hii little girls. No sooner had\nhe rushed Barbara home by plane\nfrom Salt Lake City with an Infected throat than Joan fell in Central Park and broke a leg. ...\nQuestion of who is the power\nhitter in golf has been settled for\nthe time being, anyway. Down at\nScranton the other day, Jimmy\nThomson, generally recognized as\nNo. 1, and pretenders Sam Snead\nand Ed Oliver held a contest. Etch\nwhanged three bllitering drives\ndown the filrway. . .. Thomson\naveraged 288 yards, Snead 266, and\nOliver, 265..\nLlfE-BEQINS-IN-1840\nUntil he went to the Piratu thll\nyear, Debs Garma' status as a major\nleaguer was only that of a lowly\nutility infielder and pinch runner.\n. . . But under the magic touch ot\nFrankie Frlsch, the speedy Tcxis\nCollegian his developed Into one of\nbaseball's prize package surprises.\n... Hit iverage prior to yesterday\nwu a nut .388. . .. And the fact\nthat he won't retch the 400 times\n\u2022t bit (necessary to qualify) may\nbe all that would keep him from\nwinning the National League batting crown.\nJersey City In\nPlayoff Berth\nJERSEY CITY, N. J., Sept 11\n(AP)\u2014Jersey City defeated Syn-\ncuse 8-2 today to clinch an International League playoff berth.\nSyracuse   3   8   1\nJersey City     8 14   3\nTising, Hlnckle md Hartje; Feld-\nman and Epps.\nBaltimore    0  4   2\nNewark     3   9   0\nChelinl, Mldklff and Kracher;\nBranch and Padden.\nRochester    0  4   1\nBuffalo      2   8 0\nBrumbeloe and Mueller; White\nand McCullough.\nMike Deian, the Reds' new outfielder, led the Southern Assocl\nitlon for the tint half of the seaJ\nson in hitting, home rum, runs batted in, puses, total bues md runs\nscored.\nBy Thi Assoclited Prttt ,\nBitting (three leaden tnd tilt\nIn tach league)\nG AB R H Pet,\nRadcliff, Bmi. 123 515 72 179 _4\u00bb\nDimaggio, Yank 114 437 82 150 .34}\nAppling, W. Sox 131 444 77 169 .342\nWilliams, R. Sox 126 489119167 .341\nWalker, Dodgers 126 490 65 157 J32.\nHack, Cubs 131 527 88 168 \u00bbXt\nMize. Cardinals 132 495100158 \u201elt\nGleeson, Cubi .. 110 417 69 133 _1\u00bb\n\u2022 Home runs: American League \u2014\nFoxx, Red Sox, 35; National League\n\u2014Mile, Cardinals, 41.\nRuns batted In: American Leagua\n\u2014Greenberg, Tigers, 124; National\nLeague\u2014Mize, Cardinals, 117.\nU.S. HUNT-RS TRY FOR BIO\nCAME IN WINDERMERE\nINVERMERE, B. C\u2014Two hun*\nten from California have arrived\nto try their luck with big game in\nthe district They are W. I. Alab.->\nter of Lot Angeles and W. J. Fo.--\ntier of Fresno, Calif. They left ea.-'y\nSunday morning for a month'!\nhunting with Gordon Mackay at\nguide.\nCOURTENAY, B.C., Sept 11 (CP)\n\u2014Marcel Clement, former intermediate hockey player of Medicine\nHat Alta., wu killed Tuesday when\nfie fell into 25 feet ot water at\nnearby Rock Bay, Vancouver Island,\nBritish Columbia Police reported\ntoday.\nBill** Harry\nUIRICH\nv \".in AVE. Uiv\nSpokane, Wash.\nThis advertiiement Is not published or displayed by tha Liquor,\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia   '\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_09_12","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0414561","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1940-09-12 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1940-09-12 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0414561"}